Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 229, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 December 1935 — Page 1

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2 DEATHS PUT COUNTY’S AUTO TOLL OVER '34 Aqori Woman Succumbs to Injuries Suffered Aug. 17: Total Now 139. MECHANIC ALSO VICTIM Three Others Are Hurt in Accident on Way to Work. Two riraUr; today brought to 130 the traffic fatality toll in Marion County so far this year, one more than for all of 1034 The dead are Mrs. Belle McLaughlin. 70, of 722 E. Vermont-st, who died in City Hospital of injuries incurred Aug. 17, and David Williamson, 27, of 322 S. Rural-st, injured early today.

TKAI' I 1C DEATHS um cm 1935 to Ore. H |:tl

Mrs. McLaughlin received a fractured right hip when she was struck at New York and East-sts by a car driven by Morris Everett, 35,

of 2902 Woods-st. Mr. Everett told ; police that the aged woman, who was i walking across the .street, stepped directly in front of his car before he had a chance to stop. Barely Missed by Preceding Car Charles Haugh. 2431 Park-av, who was driving in front of Mr. Everett j told Sergt.. Harry Rchlev, who investigated. that he had barely ! avoided striking Mrs. McLaughlin; before she was struck by the Everett car. Mr. Williamson, a mechanic, was Injured fatally in an accident at New York and New Jersey-sts that injured three others. Others injured are John L. Pafenaude, 21. of 525 S. Central-ct; Miss Naomi Walls, 20. of 424 S. Noble-st, and Wallace E. Ingelman, 25 of 40 N. Temple-av. Mr. Ingelman and Mr. Williamson were in the same car on their way to work at the Indianapolis Malleable Iron Cos.. 546 N. Holmes-av, and their car collided with that in which Miss Walls and Mr. Patenaude were riding. Skull Fractured, Leg- Broken Mr. Williamson received a fraclured skull, a broken right leg and ruts on the face and head. Mr. Patenaude was cut on the face and j head and had body bruises. Miss Walls was cut on the face and head and had body bruises and Mr. j Tngelman's right shoulder was; broken. William Endicott Jr.. 9. is reported in a fair condition today, recov- \ ering from injuries he received yes- I triday when a car bearing his school 1 teacher struck him at LaSalle and New York-sts. The boy ran out of a grocery there and into the path of an auto driven bv Miss Helen Earhardt, 2541 Boule-vard-pl. and containing as a passenger Miss Irene Healy, 1807 CYn-tral-av, teacher at School 78 who had, as a pupil, the injured boy. The Endicott boy lives at 3317 E. New York-st. Intel-urban Strikes Auto George Parkinson, 54, of 2159 Parker-av, incurred a slight, neck injury today when the automobile m which he was a passenger struck an inbound interurban car on the Newcastle line at 21st-st and Sher-man-dr Clihord Hite. 50. of 3612 N. Linwood-av. driver of the auto- ! mobile, was not hurt. The interurban was in charge of Frank Shelton. Newcastle. Willie Foster. 56. Negro. 538 W. New York-st. was seriously injured when he was struck by a taxicab m the 900 block. W. Michigan-st yesterday. STOCK PRICES RISE DURING DULL TRADE Case Gains Two Points With Tickers Barely Moving. Vn .*. NEW YORK. Dec. 3.—The stock market showed gains of fractions to 2 points today in dull trading. Early steadiness gave way to fairly good buying in the second hour. But in the tnird hour trading quieted—tickers barely operating—and prices held about steady with the earlier gains. J. 1. Case was 2 points higher at 99 while Western Union and International Nickel showed about the seme advances. Mail order shares were strong. Montgomery Ward gaining a point to 38 and Sears. Roebuck around 2 points. CLIPPER HAS ROUGH HOP TO WAKE ISLAND Encounters Worst Weather While Making Round Trip. By I nil'll !•" v.< WAKE ISLAND. Dec 3 -PanAmencan Airways' China Clipper landed here at 8:58 p. m. (3:58 a. m , Indianapolis time), after a 1560-nhle flight from Guam along a transoceanic course, flailed by a driving ram storm and buffeting head winds. The big ship, commanded by Capt. Edwin C. Musick. completed th? trip m 13 hours 47 minutes. The ship is scheduled to take off at dawn tomorrow for Midway. Times Index Amusements 16 Births, Deaths 17 Budge 13 Broun 13 Comics . 19 Editorial 14 Financial .. 15 Mary Pickford 6 Pcgier 13 Radio 20 Serial Story 3 Sports 10-11 Woman s Pages 8-9

The Indianapolis Times

VOLUME 47—NUMBER 229

Doughnuts WESTWOOD. N J„ Dee 3 Little Mrs. Ellen Acs rman left two important items in her 12room. old-fashioned house when she died at 88. One was a sa (* of doughnuts, the other S2OO oco. Th doughnuts were no surprise, but the fortune that crannies of her dark old home still were giving up today amazed a whole community. Mrs. Ackerman liked doughnuts with a consuming passion. Apparently she ate six. The coroner ascribed her death to a heart, attack induced by acute indigestion.

JURY DISAGREES ON CHILD BRIDE Man Who Took Girl. 6. Wed Her at 12, Still Faces Prison. By I nilrd Press LEWISBURG, W. Va.. Dec. 3. Twelve earnest men from the West Virginia hills struggled for two and a half hours with a strange problem of morality involving the childish love of a girl of 6 that flowered info nuptial love six years later, and reported themselves unable to agree. They had been asked to decide whether William Maven Roman, 34, who took a child from her parents when she was 6, cared for her for six years and then married her, was guilty of kidnaping. Their report was made to Judge Summer H. Sharp last night. Asa result Roman returned to jail to stay until January, when probably he will be tried again. His child wife, now 14, carried her 1-year-old baby back to the home of relatives where she is living. While her half sister held her baby, Mrs. Roman, pretty, darkhaired, assured the earnest-faced miners and laborers in the jury box that she had left home with Roman when she was 6 Because she loved him and that she still loved him. "I loved him and I wanted to go with him,” she said in her thin child’s voice. ‘ He didn't coax me to stay with him and he didn’t make any promises he couldn't keep.” She paused, looked around the courtroom, continued: ”1 still love him and want to be with him always.” Roman was tried on a charge of kidnaping brought by his wdfe’s father, Richard Bradley. In 1f(27 he and Bradley worked together in the mines near Rupert, W. Va., and Roman boarded at the Bradley home. On Oct. 2f> of that year he and the girl disappeared. Last summer they came here, to visit her parents, who had Roman arrested on an indictment returned in 1928. SKATING DERBY NOT MARATHON, IS CLAIM Kern Approves Proposed Soup Kitchen Benefit. The roller-skating derby, city employes hope to promote for the benefit of the Soup Kitchen Fund, is not a “walkathon” in any sense. Mayor Kern said today. Amendment to the ordinance which bans such contests is necessary. the Mayor said, because the ordinance "goes a little farther than the state law. much to the suprise of every one." The amendment was brought before the Cotincil last night, to allow a skating derby in the Fairground Coliseum. Twenty-five couples would skate 12 hours a day at half-hour intervals until figuratively they had crossed the United States. The promoter has offered the Soup Kitchen SIOOO guarantee and 20 per cent of the proceeds. Albert H. Losche. purchasing agent, in charge of soup kitchen finances, told the council that funds are depleted. To Mrs. Edward J. Thompson. Indianapolis 'Parent-Teacher president. the proposed derby does not sound plausible. I have little knowledge of it. but on first thought it seems that city officials are evading the issue. If it resembles a walkathon. I should be opposed to it.’ Mrs. Thompson said. GUFFEY LAW UNDER FIRE Illinois Federal Judge Calls on United States to Explain. FAST ST LOUIS. 111.. Dec. 3 Federal Judge Fred L. Wham today ordered government officials to show cause Dec. 16 why he should not issue an injunction to the Delta Coal Mining Cos. to halt application of the Guffey (little NR A' act to its business.

Bring Warmth and Happiness to a Shivering Youngster — Clothe a Child and Make It the Merriest Christmas of All

A child s Christinas comes to you today' Clothe-a-Chi’.d of The Indianapolis Times opens its sixth year of giving you an opportunity to use heart warmth to put clothing warmth on needy school children of the city. The Purpose: To see that every needy school child of Indianapolis has at least one complete outfit to buff winter winds and cold and keep sickness out of hemes of want. The Need: The Federal government has withdrawn all its direct relief aid to Indiana and Indianapolis. This places the responsibility

FORECAST: Cloudy and occasionally unsettled tonight and tomorrow; lowest temperature tonight about 27; colder Wednesday.

KING PLEDGES BRITAIN'S AID IN WAR CRISIS Promises Firm Support of League at Opening of Parliament. RENEW PEACE EFFORTS Strengthening of National Defenses Also Goal of England’s Ruler. By I mir'd /V. ss WASHINGTON. Dee. 3.—Secretary of State Cordell Hull today threatened a number of munitions manufacturers with Federal prosecution for failure to register with the State Department under the neutrality act. Ilil Unilrit Press PARIS, Dec. 3.—France and Britain today decided to submit anew peace plan to Italy before I embargoing oil and increasing the severity of sanctions. Ilif ( nihil Peexx LONDON, Dec. 3.—King George pledged Great, Britain forcefully and unequivocally today to the government's firm policy in the I'alian- | Ethiopian crisis. In a speech from the throne of j the House of Lords at the state opening of parliament, read in his absence by the Lord High Chancellor, the King committed the coun- ; try to: 1. Firm support of the League of | Nations. 2. Fulfillment in co-operation with other countries of the League covenant, with its Article VI providing for penalization of a war maker. 3. Exertion of its influence in favor of an Italian-Ethiopian peace ■ acceptable to Italy, Ethiopia and j the League. Tragedy Eliminates Pomp. 4. ‘‘.Urgently necessary” strengthening of the national defenses in order to fulfill its international obligations under the covenant and to safeguard the empire. It was to have been a state opening of Parliament, with pomp and pageantry, with the king in his ermine and with his crown, with ; jeweled peeresses in the galleries and I robed peers on the floor of the House of Lords, where the two houses, Lords and Commons, met. in ! joint session for the thirty-seventh British Parliament—one which may ! go down in history as a war parlia- ! rnent. King Absent By D-zath Because of the death today of the king's sister, Princess Victoria, he did not attend and the peeresses j were not present. Lord Hailsham, the lord high | chancellor, read the speech from the throne—a speech from which ! there is no retraction because while ! it is written by the cabinet for the | king, it represents not the pronouncements of a government but a j power which is the symbol of the | national unity. The speech opened with the customary: "My relations with foreign powers continue to be friendly.” It went directly into the Italian- ] Ethiopian crisis: "My government’s foreign policy will as heretofore be based on firm support of the League of Nations. They will remain prepared to fulfill | in co-operation with other members of the League the obligations of the : covenant. In particular they are determined to use at all times the j full weight of their influences for the preservation of peace. "In pursuance of these obligations my government has felt compelled to adopt in co-operation with some 50 other states members of the League, certain measures of an ; economic and financial nature in regard to Italy. At the same time j they will continue to exert their influence in favor of a peace acceptable to the three parties to the dispute. namely, Italy, Ethiopia and the League of Nations.” Five-Power Conference Then the king turned to the fivepower naval conference to be opened Dec. 9. with the United States, Japan, France, Italy and Britain represented. He said: "My government has issued invitations to the government of other countries which were parties to the Washington and London naval treaties. to attend a conference at London this month with a view to conclusion of anew international treaty for limitation of naval armaments. I have learned with satisfaction that all the invitations to this conference have been accepted, and I trust that its labors will be crowned with success.”

of being your brother’s keeper on home folk. The Clothe-a-Child Plan: Telephone Riley 5551 or write and ask for a boy or girl to clothe. Clothe-a-Child will give you your boy or girl and from that moment it is your responsibility and your happiness to see that your boy or girl has at least one warm outfit of clothing on Christmas Day. . You dress the child only as to his needs. If his or her coat is warm , and Will last through the winter then it would not be necessary to purchase a mV co?t. You are the j shopper and you at® the judge.

INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1935

JKe 1

M'NUTT SEES NO ASSEMBLY NOW Hopes Congress Will Vote Fund Riders to Stave Off Session. Back from Washington after a conference with the Federal Social Security Board, w'hich advised him Indiana’s old-age pension law 7 is not acceptable, Gov. McNutt is not yet certain that an immediate session of the State Legislature will be necessary. Possibility of the enactment of appropriation bill riders by the Congress to convene next month was advanced by the Governor as offering a way out of an early session and at the same time open the way for Indiana's participation in Federal security program benefits. The Governor said a rider could set aside funds sufficient to carry on the program until the next regular session of the Assembly, or until such time as a special session would be held. Another rider possibility would be appropriation of funds to cover the ! first quarter of 1936, thus making! legislative action unnecessary until j next spring. PLANT OFFICIAL FOUND OVERCOME BY GAS Harold (). Love Soon Revived and Taken Home. Harold O. Love, 46. of 1141 W. j 30th-st. was made unconscious today by fumes from a gas heater in the plant of the Love Machine and Tool Corp.. 717 W. 26th-st, of wffiich he is secretary. After being revived, he was taken to his home. Employes found Mr. Love near a gas heater. SURVEY AT CHICAGO FAVORS AAA, 6 TOl Farm Program Supported by Livestock Attendance. By I nitrel Press CHICAGO. Dec. 3. —Agriculture Secretary Henry A. Wallace will be on friendly ground when he visits the international Livestock Exposition this afternoon. The average farmer who has enough money to bring "the wife and kids” to Chicago for this great farm and stock spectacle favors the Administration's farm program. An independent survey by the United Press indicated that among the thousands who have attended the exposition thus far, the AAA was favored. 6 to 1.

12 on the Clcthe-a-Child roll. Each child will have been investigated for need by Community Fund relief agencies and the social service division of the Indianapolis public schools. The Christmas Clearing House insures your gift, through The Times, from duplication. If you want to dress a child for Christmas and you just can t afford to do it yourself then organize vour office force, your lodge, fraternity, auxiliary, union, factory department or Sunday School class into a Clothe-a-Child group. Creed, class distinction, racial differences play no part in Clothe-,a-ChiitL When you go to the home;

HIS PIPE LINE

Czech Company Buys U. S. Land to Make Shoes By United Press WASHINGTON. Dec. 3.—T. and A. Bata of Zlin. Czechoslovakia, wwld's greatest manufacturer of shoes, have purchased ground for a giant, factory in Maryland, and plan to invade the American market on a major scale. With a daily capacity of 320,000 pairs of shoes, 30,000 employes, plants in nine nations and 3000 branches. Bata has obtained a 1400acre tract at Belcamp, Md., and has completed negotiations with the state for tunneling underneath the factory a highway which now traverses the land. Bata's agents are engaged in evicting squatters from the area, upon which, it is reported, will be built an ultra-modern, "Fordized” factory, employing about 5000 men and women and producing shoes with the methods used at Zlin, W'here a pair of leather shoes costs 86 cents to build.

WOMAN, OVERCOME BY SMOKE, RESCUED City Woman, Unconscious, Is Carded to Safety Overcome by smoke from a fire in a store beneath her apartment, a woman w r as carried down a ladder early today by firemen and taken to the Methodist Hospital. Mrs. Geraldine Henry. 20. was the smoke victim. Fire of undetermined origin caused a loss not yet estimated at the second-hand clothingstore of her husband. Kenneth Henry, 2202 W. Michigan-st. The couple occupies an apartment above the store. Mr. Henry was able to leave the apartment unassisted and descended a ladder to safety. Firemap Earl Tucker, Cos. No. 9, removed Mrs. Henry, who was unconscious. Her condition is not serious, but she is to remain at the hospital for two days. Another fire caused SSOO damage in the second floor apartment of Harry White. 2131 L Central-av. Origin of the fire has not been determined. SCHOOLS GET $45,589 Sum Represents City's Share of Excise Revenues. Indianapolis school city today was allotted $45,589 from the state treasury, the sum representing the city s share of excise revenues collected in the last six months.

of the child given to you, you'll meet but one thing—NEED. But if you're crowded and rushed for time and just can t find time to shop for your child The Times will do the job for you. Mail a check payable to Clothe-a-Child, The Indianapolis Times, or bring it to the office and the boy or girl you want w r ill be dressed for you. The Times will clothe your child and then the child's name and address will be sent to you as your assurance of being a Santa for 1935. Your s is the choice whether you wish to remain an anonymous donor in the listing of Clothe-a-Child. The Cost: That's a lough one lo

*t Pofunffio*. Indianapnlis. Ind.

POLICE TO SCAN ‘TOBACCO ROAD’ But Play Will Go On, Says Burke, Manager at English Theater. Police will attend the opening here in English’s tomorrow of "Tobacco Road” to watch for violations of city ordinances on profanity and obscenity, Chief Morrissey said today. The play was recently given a clean bill of health by a Federal judge despite a closing order by the mayor of Chicago. It begins the third year of its New' York run tomorrow night. Following a conference with Mayor Kern and the Safety Board. Chief Morrissey said: “If we go to Tobacco Road' and find any violations of any ordinance or any law we will take action. If any one else is offended and later swears to an affidavit, we'll make arrests.” Theodore F. Dammeyer. safety board chairman, indorsed Morrisseys statement. James E. Deery. Corporation Counsel, said the city has ordinances regulating "profanity and obscenity” in stage produtcions. "Tobacco Road” is based on life among the "poor whites” in Georgia, and has been indorsed as a serious work of art by a national committee of famous authors. The play has been advertised for an eight-day run in this city. Although refusing to comment on Chief Morrissey’s statement, Vincent Burke, theater manager, said. "The show wull go on.”

CHRISTMAS SEAIS-!||| ■ its |Q SHOPPING DAYS IO TO CHRISTMAS

answer! Clothing costs are reported at approximately an even keel with 1934. Prices of complete outfits will range from between $5 and sl2. Individual needs of each child, quality of clothing purchased, age of child, quantity of garments, determine your Clothe-a-Child bill. A check of today's marts for complete outfits set an average figure of between $8 and $lO. But the sky and your heart is the limit! There's a phone handy, or there's pen and paper?—tjjen call Ri. 5551 or write Clothe-a-Child, The Inriiananolis Times.

G-MAN REPEATS SLAYING STORY IN U. S. COURT

CONVICT SLAIN AS FIVE MAKE FREEDOM DASH Truck Driver Bludgeoned to Death by Prisoners in Plot. By I nilm Pres* BOSTON. Dec. 3.—A desperate daylight break by five long-term convicts from Massachusetts' cen-turv-old State Prison ended swiftly today with one prisoner and a truck driver slain and three other fugitives and two guards wounded. Within two hours, all the prisonbreakers were captured, dead or alive. While guards chased the escaped convicts along the Boston Maine Railroad tracks toward Somerville, the ancient penitentiary, situated within the shadows of Bunker Hill Monument,, echoed with the yammering of 900 riotous prisoners who were locked in their cells when the trouble broke out. Truck Driver Beaten Louis Richards of Somerville, driver of a truck which had just delivered potatoes to the prison, had his skull bashed in with a bludgeon when the convicts commandeered his truck. Officials said the prisoner slain was Philip Naples, 32. Worcester, sentenced last month to 16 to 20 years for robbery. Seriously wounded was William P. (Red> McManus, 27, Boston, serving a 20 to 24-year term for armed i robbery. Trapped in a freight shed in the railroad yards behind the prison, he was shot by pursuers and lugged back to the penitentiary. It was about 9:30 a. m. when the five desperadoes started swift execution of what was to be the bloodiest escape plot in the recent h‘story of the prison. Outside the walls, the five abandoned the truck and raced into the railroad yard. Guards in coops high on the walls of the prison opened fire with longrange rifles. Scenes of wildest disorder developed as hundreds of police, firemen, railroad detectives. and prison guards joined the chase. Shoots Way Out of Jail By l nilrd Pres* MUSKOGEE. Okla.. Dec. 3.—Four members of the Irish O'Malley gang of St. Louis, aided by an accomplice, today shot their way out of the city jail where they were awaiting sentence for a double bank robbery. Chief of Detectives Ben Bolton, who attempted to stop the prisoners, was shot in the face. He may die. doctors say. One of the prisoners. Dan T. Heady, was shot in the back by officers. TAX GROJP ELECTS NOhii CAROLINIAN Clarence Jackson Named National Secretary. A. J. Maxwell. North Carolina Revenue Commissioner, today was elected president of the National Association of State Tax Administrators in session at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Fred E. Stewart, Sacramento, Cal., is retiring president. A. H. Stone. Mississippi State Tax Board chairman, was elected vice president, and Clarence A. Jackson, Indiana gross income tax and store license division director, secretarv. Directors elected are Mr. Stewart; J. Thayer Martin, Trenton, N. J ; Prof. S E. Leland. Springfield. 111.; T. C. Hutchinson. Des Moines, la ; Forrest Smith, Jefferson City. Mo.; William H. Hackett. Hartford. Conn., and Paul H. Doyal. Atlanta. Ga. In a talk today. Mr. Hackett expressed belief that property levies are to continue to form the backbone of the American taxing system. He said that the Federal government. which minimizes property levies, suffers the most marked fluctuations in tax collections, while local governments which emphasize property taxation have least variable collections. TAXI HEAD CONFIDENT OF PACT WITH CITY Ruckelshaus folks After New Ordinance Hearing. Confidence that an agreement would be reached with the city on a proposed ordinance providing stricter regulation of taxicabs was expiessed today by Thomas Ruckelshaus. Red Cab Taxicab Cos. p-esi-dent. Bitter opposition to Section 1 cf the ordinance, which limits the number of caos on a population basis. was expressed last night at a hearing before the City Council by representatives of the Red Can HooMer and Union Cah companies.

FINAL HOME FRIGE THREE CENTS

Barrett Shifts Uneasily as McGovern Tells Jury of Battle. WIDOW NOT IN COURT Defense Lawyer Dwells on Fact Federal Men Had No Warrant. BV JOE COLLIER As tersely as though he were reporting to a superior officer. Federal Agent Donald C. McGovern today told a Federal Court jury how George W. Barrett killed a fellow agent. Nelson B. Klein, at W est College Cyrner, Tnd., Aug. IC. He remained calm to the slightest detail during a long and persistent cross-examinat ion by Edward Everett Rice, counsel for Barrett, who is on trial for first degree murder with his life at stake. With "G-Man" preciseness, he redescribed in detail testimony he gave on direct examination in answer to questions of District Attorney Val Nolan. From Agent Klein s own dying lips. Agent McGovern testified. he learned of the fate of his fellow officer. After a series of shots. McGovern testified. Agent Klein groaned: ‘‘O, Lord, I’m shot.” McGovern told hi* story to a Federal Court jury that is trying Barrett on a first degree murder charge under a Federal statute that provides hanging if Barrett is convicted. McGovern told the story of the death of his fellow officer clearly and precisely. He identified the guns of both Barrett and Agent Klein. Barrett Stirs Uneasily Barrett stirred uneasily in his wheel chair during McGovern's testimony and conferred frequently with his attorney, Edward Everett Rice, Hamilton, 0.. as District Attorney Val Nolan questioned th® witness. On cross-examination. Mr. Rice dwelt on the fact that agents had no warrant for BaiTett's arrest at the time of the shooting. Mrs. Catharine Klein, widow of the officer, and her three children entered the courtroom, which was packed with spectators, chiefly young women, late in the forenoon. Special Agent McGovern resumed the stand as court opened. As he testified he constantly looked toward Barrett, who continued to stare at his trembling feet. Mr. McGovern told of asking John C. Calhoun Hamilton 'O.) police chief, to have his men arrest Barrett who. he said, was in the Central Motors Cos. office in Hamilton. Tells of Trip to Hamilton The witness said he and Officer Klein were in Cincinnati at the time and had received long distance information that Barrett was at the Hamilton place of business. He said he and Agent Klein motored to Hamilton after they learned that Hamilton police had missed Barrett when they went to arrest him. At this point a large blue print of the streets and buildings of the vicinity of the scene of the West College Corner <lnd.) shooting was placed before the witness. He was questioned about this procedure after they had satisfied themselves Barret’ was not to be found in Hamilton and had proceeded to the Indiana town. Found Parked Car He -aid thev saw a car similar to Barretts parked on a street there and that there was a traveling bag on the rear sheif. He said they were "quite certain" one of the men in the car was Barrett. Barrett was in shirt sleeves, Agent McGovern said. After thev had twice passed the suspected car Agent McGovern said sh y parked just out of sight, of it and that he 1 McGoverni followed Barrett and a companion. Irvin Brockman to the residence of John B. Barrett, a brother of the defendant. Cheeked Motor Number Agent McGovern said he th®n went to the car and examined the motor number on it. and found it to be that of Barrett's car. The defendant, roused from his apparent indifference, stared at the witness during this testimony, then he leaned over and talked to his attorney. Agent McGovern said that the Barrett car had Ohio instead of Indiana license plates. Indiana plates had been issued for it. he said. When he had assured himself th2t it was Barrett s car. they parked their car where they could inconspicuously watch the suspected car, he testified. Walked PaM Car When they had parked he said. Officer Klein called the sheriff for eid. Later they again moved their rar where they could watch the Barrett auto, even more inconspicuous-