Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 247, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1935 — Page 1

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SENATE FIGHT FORCES CRISIS FOR PRESIDENT New Dealers Confused by Bitterness of Opposition to Relief Bill. RADIO APPEAL IS HINTED Roosevelt May Ask Support of Public to Force Rebels Into Line. IS y s tilled Pr<ti WASHINGTON*. Pcb. 23 President Roost-ell's leadership faced ihe most sev..~ ’e.st of his Administration today as his leaders in Congress. their confidence shaken by a series of reverses, inuiht desperately to put the New Deal back on an even keel. The $4 880 000 000 work relief bill, wrecked at least temporarily by Senate insurgents, was the issue which brought the Administration face to face with the most trying legislative problem it has encountered in its two years of existence. Leaders at the Capitol, somewhat confused at the sudden tutn in •vents, sate conflicting views of the situation. One of them. Senator James F Bvmes D. S C.. said, perhaps sincerely and perhaps to. strategic purposes, that tiie work-relief program was •‘dead." Others privately expressed the view that it might still be possible to rescue the work-relief bill from the tangle which has developed around it in the Senate. Into this situation of uncertainty rame a report that the President, to reassert his pos'tion and to take advantage of the confidence expressed in him at the last election, might carry his cause to the people in an effort to force Congress back n line. The statement of Senator Byrnes the vnrk-relief is “dead” may be tak' n .none or two ways. Either the Administration will abandon the work-relief plan or it will seek, through parliamentary procedure to overcome the stubborn resistance which the Senate has shown. STATE FTING CALLED BY PhOGRESSIVE GROUP Orranliers for Indiana Announced bv John Zahnd. The National Progressive Party, which, in a county organization meeting, recently indorsed Senator Huey Pierce Long. Louisiana's Kingfish. for the presidency in 1936. will hold a state meeting at 2:30 Sunday. March . in tne English Hotel. John Zahnd. national '•hairman. in announcing the meeting. also made public this list of Indiana organizers for the party: Louis Walden. Indianapolis: Virgil Robbins. Martinsville: Le Roy H. Swartz. Ft. Wayne: Edward W. Arnold. Logansport: Burgess P Williams. Fairland: S H Burton. Washington: Charles Hillcn. North Vernon, and Eugene Goffmrt. Magnet. GUN MOLL’S EX-MATE IS DENIED CLEMENCY Former Husband of Vlarr Kinder Must Serve Out Robherv Term. Executive clemency has been refused Dale Kinder, former husband of Mary Kinder, who attained nationwide notoriety as one of the • molls'' of the Diilmger gang Kinder was convicted m Marion County Criminal Court for robbery’ and is serving a 12-year term Other Marion County applicants denied clemency include Albert F. Roth, convicted of collecting for American Legion publications and keeping the money; Herschel Dowty. convicted for a statutory offense and Robert Weathers, serving a burglary term. KING RANGE SOUGHT IN WILD HORSE CHASE Magnificent Animal Has Evaded Capture for Months. P-t l mitf4 Pr-*m REGINA. Sasfc . Feb 23 —King of the Range, a b:c black stallion, leader of what is believed to be the last surviving band of wild horses in the province, is giving cowboys m the Wood Mountain country in southern Saskatchewan a merry chase. The handsome animal, leading a band of 25 has evaded pursuers for months. The hunt for the stallion has beer, going on spasmodically since the beginning of 1934. EXTRA HOURS ADDED BY U. S. TAX OFFICE Staff to Be Kept on Jobs Saturday Afternoons. Says Collector. To accommodate Federal income taxpayers the Internal Revenue Bureau offices here will remain epen afternoons of March 2 and 9. Saturdays. Will H. Smith, collector, announced today. Offices will be open until 9:30 on the nights of March 11 and 14. On March 15 the office will be open until midnight.

COMPLETE SCHEDULES Complete schedules for the Indiana High School basketball title tourneys—sectional, regional and finals —are found on Page., 11 and 12 of this edition.

The Indianapolis Times Fair and warmer tonight with lowest temperature about 32; Sunday increasing cloudiness and somewhat warmer, followed by much colder Monday.

N R A M-M* wt oo out at

VOLUME 16—NUMBER 247

JOINED SISTER IN 4000-FOOT DEATH LEAP

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Heartbroken and apparently determined to suffer the fate of their aviator sweethearts who died in a plane crash. Elizabeth and Jane du Bois. only daughters of United States Consul General Coert du Bois of San Francisco. If aped 4000 feet from a Paris-bound airplane and were killed at Upminster. England. Attractive Jane du Bois is shown above m a picture taken several years ago.

TV A Power Sale Illegal, Ruling of Federal Judge Alabama Injunction Serious Blow to New Deal Project; PWA Loans for Plants, Lines Ruled Out. fig t itd Prr* BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Feb. 23.—Attorneys for the Tennessee Valley Authority. President Roosevelt's first “yardstick” power project, prepared .n immediate appeal today from a Federal District Court injunction prohibiting government power competition with private companies. The decision was a serious blow to the sale of cheap power generated along the Tennessee River to municipalities by the government agency.

'ln effect, it puts the government out of the power transmission busi- ; ness in Alabama. Federal Judge W. I. Grubb granted i preferred stockholders of the Ala- ' bama Power Cos. a permanent injunction nullifying a contract be- ; tween the company and TVA for 1 the sale of its transmission lines and , distribution plants. He granted a permanent injuncj tion prohibiting 14 Alabama mu* ! nicipalities from accepting or using Federal PWA loans to build transmission lines or distributing plants j competing with those of private • companies. TVA attorneys were surprised by i the drastic nature of the rulings and refused to comment. TVA officials said privately, however, that unless . the decision was reversed by the Federal Court of Appeals or the United States Supreme Court, they would seriously cripple the government's project of establishing a powpr east "yardstick” in the Tennessee Valley to determine the fair | cost of electrical energy to the con- ; sumer. Judge Grubb, basing his opinion 'on the tenth amendment, of the Constitution, said the government had no right to conduct a business ■ in competition with private industry. He did not rule on the constiI tutionalit.v of the Tennessee Valley Act. which created ti;c power i authority, in invalidating the specific contract, he held that under the | tenth amendment. The United | States has no right within the limits of a state to conduct any proprietary business, unless tied to some constitutional grant of power and Jif the grant of power existed, it carried with it the right to do busi ! ness.” 2 FLEE STATE JAIL j AFTER SAWING EARS Bedford Men Hunted in Owen County Break. By t mi ted Fret, SPENCER. Ind. Fob. 23.—Two men sawed their way out of the Owen County Jail here last night, it was learned today. They were Roy Mitchell. 25. and Fred Wilson. 28. both of Bedford.

Goes Straight —From Rags to Riches —To Psychopathic Ward

J I'nitrd Prr*t NEW YORK. Feb. 23 —Frank Greges' sudden nse from rags to riches ended in tragedy today. He was taken to Bellevue Hospital psychopathic ward in a strait-jacket, his twisted mind confirmed in its belief that Frank Greges was Deity by a startling and fatal drama. In the dank lobby of Bower\’ flop house, he ranted and screamed for the benefit of bleary - eyed Bowery bums. To Michael J. Geryswacs. 40. he said: "I am God and I'm going to kill you. I can kill any one who looks at me.” Gerysnaca was amused. He

ATTACK CHARGED TO CITY BUSINESS MAN Girl, 14, and Four Others Are Held. Claude I. Brillhart, 58. presidert of the Indiana Asphalt Paving Cos., today was charged by police with having criminally attacked a 14-year-old girl. He lives at 29 S. Highland-av. Police said that Brillhart admitted he had been intimate with the girl in a room he rented at 932 Park-av. William Hinton. 69, and Francis Hinton. 56. who live at that address, were charged with contributing to the delinquecy of a minor. Two others are held for investigation in the case. Brillhart, in a statement which, police claim, he wrote and signed, said he met the girl one day when she came to his car. stopped at. an intersection for traffic, and asked him for a ride. He said, in his statement, that she readily agreed to accompany him. and accepted money from him. The girl, who had been reported as missing from her home by her father, and who later was found by her father wandering on a downtown treet, is in the Juvenile Detention Home. Brillhart is free on S3OOO bail.

TODAY'S WEATHER

Hourly Temperatures 6 a. m 24 8 a. m 26 7a- tn 24 9a. m 27 Sunrise tomorrow. 6:25; sets, 5:31. Sunrise Monday, 6:24; sets, 5:32. Glass Expert to Talk John Ferguson, Indianapolis, will describe new developments in glassmaking in a talk. "The Romance of Glass.” at a luncheon of the Scientech Club Monday at the Board of Trade. Attorney on Radio Tonight L. L. Henderson. Indianapolis attorney. will speak at 9:30 tonight over WFBM in the series of the Indiana Bench and Bar. “Law for the Laymen.”

stepped from the crowd, faced Greges, looked him full in the face. That very instant he fell dead. The audience faded away before him. Men screamed and .sobbed. A half hour later the combined strength of five policemen was needed to put Greges into a straitjacket. 9 m m FEB. 5. Greges. 67. as a Bowery bum of the hopeless order. He carried a sandwich sign through the Wall Street district for a SI a day. which barely sufficed to keep him alive. On that day he picked up a wallet from the sidewalk that contained $45,000 in negotiable bonds and

INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1935

M’NUTT FOES IN SENATE PROMISE PRIMARY SHOWDOWN ON MONDAY

CHAIN STORES FACE TIEUP AS 800 QUIT JOBS Butler Walkout Threatens to Spread; New York Police Alert. by United Press NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—Eight hundred employes of 300 groceries were to strike lousy, inaugurating a new' capital-labor war threatening to spread to thousands of retail grocery. drug and cigar chain stores in greater New York. Officials of the Retail Clerks’ International Protective Association ordered employes of the James Butler Grocery chain not to report for work today. Employes of the Daniel Reeves grocery chain meet tonight to take a strike vote, which officials said would authorize another walkout. Employes of the Whalen, Walgreen, Liggett and other drug store chains, and of several cigar store chains, also meet tonight and possible strike action may be discussed. Violence Outbreak Feared Authorities, fearing a major outbreak of strikes and posible violence, ordered police to guard all Butler stores. The guard will be extended to other stores as fast as their workers leave, it was said. Police are not to interfere with picketing, which will he carried on extensively. They are to protect property and life. While this strike threat brewed, new potentialities of trouble ap- j peared among organized elevator operators and other building em- ■ ployes who staged a short-lived strike last Monday. Building workers in the crowded garment, fur. and silk districts of Manhattan will walk out in a mass strike early next week unless building owners abide by arbitration agreements, union officials said. Ask 15 Per Cent Pay Rise The Butler employes demand a 25 per cent wage increase, a 48-hour week, union recognition and changes in company rules concerning em-ploye-manager responsibility for spoilage of perishable merchandise. These, roughly, will be the demands of the other store employes if and when they leave their jobs. The Butler strike was ordered after a strike vote conducted by mail. It followed weeks of negotiations by city and Federal mediators. The company has been cited once to the National Industrial Relations Board for alleged violation of the collective bargaining clause of the NIRA, but the case was referred back to the regional board. ROOSEVELT WILL HELP INITIATE HIS SON INTO FLY CLUB AT HARVARD />;/ United Pres* ABOARD ROOSEVELT SPECIAL. Feb. 23.—President Roosevelt sped northward to New England today, where tonight he will join Harvard University undergraduates in initiating his aon, Franklin Jr., into the Fly Club. The President retains his membership in the club, into which he was initiated while a Harvard student. His oldest son, James, also is a member. Mr. Roosevelt boarded his special train at Washington Union Station at 9 a. m. He is scheduled to reach Boston early this evening. He will motor direct to the Fly Club in Cambridge, where he will be greeted by club officers. warmer~weatherls FORECAST FOR SUNDAY Mercury to Fall Again Monday, Bureau Indicates. The week-end weather will go all the way from “fair and warmer” today to “still warmer” Sunday, and "much colder” Monday, the Federal meteorologist predicted today. The lowest temperature tonight will be about 32. which may or may not bring the Sunday icy streets that this morning caused some concam to pedestrians, but presented no motoring problem. A sleet storm upstate caused great inconvenience.

promptly turned it over to police. From that moment every condition of life fr.rv’tar to him from | childhood was .jveased. Money i poured in. Reporters interviewed him. He was asked to talk for the sound motion pictures and for the radio. A prominent banker sent a limousine to convey him to a , magnificent office to receive $25 and praise for his honesty. Other Wall Street men took him to a haberdasheiy and replaced his rags with a princely wardrobe—silk underwear, $4 shirts, a sls hat, $lO shoes. And last of all, Belden & Cos., owners of the securities, save him a job as, messenger at 570 a month. Greges' first reaction was giddy | happiness.

PERILED BY FALL

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His life in danger from injuries incurred in a fall from a horse, Richard Bennett (above), American stage and screen notable, is in an English hospital. Two ribs were broken, one piercing a lung. Bennett, 62, for years was associated with Charles Frohman and is the father cf Barbara, Constance and Joan Bennett.

JUNIOR AVIATION LEADERS NAMED First Flight of The Times Section Completed; Move Gains Momentum. The first flight of The Indianapolis Times section of the ScrippsHoward Junior Aviator was completed today as the movement gained momentum rapidly. With Donald Hushed, 3047 Collegeav, and Ward Glenn, 2947 Rucklest, as organizers, the flight now will get underway in the movement which has been launched by all Scripps-Howard newspapers. Members of the flight, other than the organizers, are Jack Sutton, 3247 College-av; Bill Cumming, 3428 Carrollton-av; Bob Fleming, 3004 Central-av, apt. 2; Dick Wilson, 1119 Fairfield-av; Harry McGee, 3450 Guilford-av; Clarence Mills , 3242 College-av; Marshall Maas, 3105 College-av, and Harry Fiftef - , 3352 Broadw’ay, Members are organized for the purpose of building and flying model airplanes in competition. They w’ill receive instructions and plans through The Indianapolis Times, the first which appears on Page two in this edition. Beginning Monday, Capt. Al. Williams, distinguished World War flier and head of the national movement, will have a daily article on model building and flying. Indiana youths who wish to join the movement may sign and return a coupon also on Page two of The Times. N. Y. Stocks 10:00 A. M. Prev. N Y. close Atchison 43% 43% Canadian Pac 11% 12% N Y Central 16% 16% Union Pac 98% 99 Baldwin Loco 2% 3% Chrysler 39% 39% Gen Motors 30% 30% Borgr Warner 31% 31% Douglas Aircraft 22% 22% Anaconda 10% 10% Dome Mines 38% 38% Inti Nickel 24 23% U S Smelting 119 118% Ohio Oil 10% 10% SO of Cal 31% 21% Socony Vacuum 13% 13% Bethlehem Steel 29% 29% Republic Steel 13% 13% U S Steel 35 35% R J Reynolds Tob 48% 43% Am Tel <fc Tel 104% 104% Consolidated Gas 17% 16% North Am Cos 31% 10% Armour 3% 5% Natl Dairv 16% 16% Standard Brands 17% 17% Com Solvents 21% 21% Am Radiator 13% 13% Montgomery Ward 24% 26% Sears Roebuck ... 33% 34% Radio Corn 5% 5% Loews Inc 36 35% Gillette 14 14% Inti Harvester 39% 39% S O of Ind 24% 24% SOof N J 40% 40% J I Case . 57% 57% Caterpillar Tractor 42% 42% Natl Biscuit 28% 29 Conti Can 72 72 Westinghouse 38% 39% Gen Electric 23% 23% Kennecott .... 16% 18% Corn Products 66% 66%

“Think of that! Seventy dollars a month for an old man like me! Why, after 50 years of hard work I’m going to have a happy life. Yes. sir, from now on, life will be wonderful for me.” 9 9 9 W'ALL SiHKET sentimentalized the old man unceasingly. Wherever he went with the securities of his employers, the “big men” of the streets called him into their private offices, gave him cigars, congratulated him on his honesty. Letters arrived from all parts of the country at his Bowery hotels, many containing small checks. His old Bowery cronies soon be-

Entered ? Second-Clars Matter at Postofflee, Indianapolis. Ind.

AUTHOR FINDS ‘LOST’ SECTION OF LIQUOR ACT Missing Paragraphs Turn Up at Committee Session; Coers Critical. | The “lost paragraphs” which per- ! mitted the state administration’s | liquor control act to create a moni opoly for the importation of hard I liquors, appeared today to have been “found.” j The missing paragraphs appear to have turned up at last night's meeting of the House- of Representatives’ public morals committee which considered corrections and amendments offered by Thomas O’Mara. Terre Haute attorney, one of the authors of the original bill. Mr. O’Mara, who spent most of his time since last December writing the bill now pending in the House, intimated to the committee that, as originally draw’n, the bill did not create the monopolistic control of out-of-state whisky importations. Rep. Morris H. Coers <D., Indianapolis), committee chairman, appeared irritated because of the “m%ny jokers” which, he said, had been discovered through examination of the bill. Before last night’s meeting Rep. Coers declared he would see to it that “the people of Indiana get a square deal, let the chips fall where they may.” Additional Bond Required Mr. O'Mara expects to have the whole affair straightened out before Monday. Rep. Coers said. be sere the committee went into secret session, he wanted the bill with all of the “lost paragraphs” and other necessary changes, ready for consideration Monday. The tentative plan is to prepare an amendment which will provide that wholesalers may qualify as importers by posting a SIO,OOO cash bond in addition to paying the S2OOO fee as a wholesaler. Another proposed amendment will re-define the alcoholic spirituous beverages clause to allow 21 per cent alcohol by volume in wines. The first draft permitted only 15 per cent, which would make fortified wines, such as port and sherry, subject to the same tax as whisky. Night Clubs Are Defined Night clubs and roadhouses, banned as retail liquor outlets under the pending bill, will be defined by amendment as places outside city limits, seldom or never patroniized in the daytime, doing most of their business or a considerable part of it at night, and places “conducive to evil practices’ or being so constructed as to “promote immorality.” Another amendment contemplated would make possible the legal sale of beer in unincorporated towns by requiring a. favoring petition of 30 residents of the township. Designed to keep beer and whisky interests divorced, another amendment would prohibit persons having a share in a manufacturing or distilling business from being connected with a retail or wholesale establishment. Other Suggested Changes Other changes suggested by Mr. O'Mara would: Forbid an unlicensed place of business to serve “set-ups” to persons bringing their own liquor; decrease the prohibited zone for retail outlets near schools and churches from 1000 to 500 feet; and prohibit delivery of more than two cases of beer to a dwelling at one time. No method was suggested, however, to keep the delivery boy from calling back the next minute with two more cases. Author Is Rebuked “How long have you been working on this bill?’ ’asked Rep. Coers when Mr. O’Mara had finished. The committee was told the work had gone on since last December. “It seems to me it should be in better form by this time,” the chairman responded. Then the committee retired to study the proposed changes and search for other “jokers.”

gan noticing a decided change in attitude. Slowly he became arrogant, a man of affairs with decided opinions on all subjects. Before he had been meak and retiring. Frank Hughes, night clerk at the Columbia Hotel, No. 7 the Bowery, where Greges continued to live in his 30-cent-a----night room despite his prosperity, watched this change. “I felt bad,” said Hughes. “He couldn’t take it—he couldn’t stand prosperity. And the old man deserved his happiness.” Three days ago, Greges' arrogance became psychopathic. He would race out into the street and push pedestrians about. Thursday he knocked on the door of

VanNuys to Press Action on Proposal to Place Governor and Senator Nominations on Ballot. SUDDEN ADJOURNMENT UNDER FIRS House Leaders Agitated by Action of Upper Branch; Two Weeks of Present Session Remain. Members of the Indiana Senate reiterated today their determination to compel a showdown Monday on the Albright bill placing nominations for the office of Governor and United States Senator in the direct primary. The impending battle will be a test of strength iff the Upper House of the General Assembly between the forces of Gov. Paul V. McNutt and those supporting United States Senator PTederick VanNuys.

PRICE FIXING IN S-NROOOMED Bill in Final Form to Be Simply an Enabling Act, Is Indication. With both houses of the General Assembly in week-end recess, members of the Senate Judiciary B Committee continued to maintain a discreet silence today regarding contemplated amendments to the StateNRA bill. The committee will hold a public hearing at 7:30 Monday night, at which the House-approved Dyer state industrial stabilization act will be discussed. Meanwhile it became increasingly evident that the legislation will be amended to convert it into a brief state enabling act. Such a measure would supplement Federal machinery for enforcing code compliance by authorizing the Governor to utilize existing judicial machinery for enforcement in state courts. Every one is agreed that the “loss leader” and price fixing provisions of the Dyer act will be eliminated. If the measure is converted into an enabling act, there would be no necessity for repeating the provisions of the Federal laws, which, in fact, still are pending before the Congress. It was learned on good authority that the amendments which the committee has in mind -will make the S-NRA bill wholly satisfactory to influential industrial and labor groups which have been displeased with the Dyer bill. STREAM POLLUTION .MEASURE DELAYED House Bill Returned for Second Reading. On the threshold of passage, the administration stream pollution abatement bill yesterday received a sharp set oack when Senators desiring to offer important, amendments succeeded in having the bill returned to second reading. The measure previously was placed in line for final vote yesterday after Senator Ralph H. Jtrnegan (R., Mishawaka) had sought to introduce an amendment. When the bill was handed down for adoption yesterday, Senator Jernegan renewed his effort to present an amendment by moving to set the measure back. He was joined by Senator Charles H. Bedwell ID., Bloomington), who said the bill contains a lot of “unreasonable power.” Senator Leo X. Smith ID., Indianapolis) defended the measure. FASCISM IS PREDICTED Gov. Olson Thinks Present Policies Are Leading to Dictatorship. By United Press ST. PAUL. Feb. 23.—Gov. Floyd B. Olson, leader of liberalism in the northwestern prairies, predicted today on the e* of a finish battle with a hostile legislature that the United States will turn | to Fascism if present policies are followed to their conclusion.

his own room, then bade himself enter. Among his other discoveries. he had rediscovered religion. Because of his shabby clothes, he hadn’t been in church for years. Last night, his crony James Kelley, 67; went to Greggs’ room. Greges pushed him down the stairs. He raced down after him, stood over his unconscious friend, screamed at the loungers in the lobby. “Everywhere I go, people stare at me! . . . I am the man who found the money . . . they stare at me. ... I kill them. . . . I had a bad day today, I kill only three. . . . Most days I kill 15. ... I am God.”

Capital EDITION PRICE THREE CENTS

A few minutes after The Indianapolis Times yesterday disclosed the dissension that has divided the Senate Democratic membership, a group of Senators went into caucus. Following the meeting it was said they discussed only the equitable division of gasoline tax revenue. Members of the VanNuys group openly charged that the unexpected adjournment of the Senate yesterday was a part of the strategy of the Governor’s supporters to block consideration of the Albright direct primary law. Senator Jacob Weiss (D. Indianapolis) president pro tern, of the Senate, defended the adjournment. He insisted every member of the Senate had “at least ten minutes* notice that we were going to adjourn until Monday and nobody objected.” Attack Adjournment Senator Elis C. Swihart (D., Elkhart), committee chairman, said it had been his plan to report the primary bill at the afternoon session had there been one yesterday. Senator John Bright Webb, Indianapolis, charged the adjournment was deliberately taken by the McNutt faction to thwart action on the Albright bill. The precipitate adjournment of the Senate forced the House of Representatives to alter plans for a meeting today. Speaker Edward H. Stein (D., Bluffton) said there was no need for the House holding a meeting today if the Senate did nos assemble. Speaker Stein Agitated “If the Sena.e wants to play, so can we,” said th: Speaker, who held the members in session until ate yesterday, after moving up until Monday the time limit for bills. Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend declared the adjournment was taken because the Senators were tired from a strenuous week. Speaker Stein made no effort to conceal his agitation over the situation. Most observers believe there is s jam of pending legislaton in the Senate. There are tentative plans for a sine die adjournment of both Houses of the general assembly next Friday. The Senate’s adjournment yesterday may prevent this, House leaders asserted. Stop Passing Senate Bills “We have stopped passing Senate bills over here until the Senate passes some House bill,” Speaker Stein declared. Rep. H. H. Evans (R., Newcastle) G. O. P. floor heckler, said 77 House bills are pending in the Senate. “And they won’t take any action on them,” the Newcastle leader shotted. Only two weeks of the limited 61day session remain. No night or Saturday sessions have been held. 500 MEXICAN INDIANS BURN TOWN IN RAID Many Reported Killed; Government Buildings Fired. By United Press MEXICO CITY, Feb. 23.—Fiva hundred Indians in the mountain* of Chiapas State rose, killed nonIndian residents and set fire to government buildings, official dispatcher said today. Meager government advices from the isolated district did not say how many persons were killed. Federal troops, it was said, had been sent in pursuit of the Indians. Times Index Page Bridge 4 Broun • 9 Business News 8 Church Services 13 Comics 15 Crossword Puzzle 15 Curious World 15 Editorial 10 Financial 16 Hickman —Theaters 6 junior Aviation 2 Napoleon’s Letters 9 Pegler 9 Piano Lesson 4 Radio 13 Sports 11-12-13, State New? 8 Woman’s Pages 4-5 Stetson at School Session Paul C. Stetson, City School Superintendent, today was in Atlantic City to attend the sixty-flfth annual meeting of the National Education Association’s department of superintendence.