Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1937 — Page 3

2 o- . Y. ‘ L- 8 9

»

- try to prolong any truce for several

"LIQUOR LEVY TOTAL

today that liquor taxes provided al-

, carcinoma, /

TEDL Ea

FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1937

STEEG RUSHING COMPLETION OF SHELBY ST. SPAN

City Hall Deluged With Protests Over Slow Progress.

FO 5%

City Engineer Henry B. Steeg today moved to rush compietion of the Shelby St. bridge over Pleasant Run. Protests have been received at the City Hall ‘that the project has progressed too slowly. Mr. Steeg said workmen will go on a 24-hour basis at once, and that an engineer from his office will be put on the job to hurry completion. He added that the WPA foreman will ‘not be replaced, however. Mr. Steeg said he expected the project to be finished “this year.” The bridge has been under construction nearly a year. §

Labor Lack Held Cause

In explaining the delay to the Works Board today after protests had been received recently from South Side businessmen, Mayor_ Kern said today that WPA labor has been used and that there has been a lack of skilled lahor#in the WPA ranks.

FEAR LEAGUE ACTION MAY BLOCK TRUCE

Britain and Frahce Seek Peace by Mediation.

By United Préss PARIS, May 21.—France and Great Britain fear that the demand of Loyalist Spain for League Council consideration of foreign intervention in the civil war may block their plan for a truce, during which all foreign volunteers would be withdrawn, it was learned today. One angle of the truce plan, it is understood, is that the powers would

weeks in the belief that then, with Loyalists and Rebels left- alone, the war might be ended by mediation. It is feared that if the Leyaiist Government raises the foreign intervention question at Geneva, Italy —already boycotting the League— may resign,

‘BILBAO, Spain, May 21.—-Two German officers who blundered into the Loyalist lines in an automobile six . weeks ago, were sentenced to death by a Loyalist tribunal today on a charge of aiding the rebellion. They will die before a firing squad tomorrow, unless they are reprieved.

NEAR $500,000,000

By United Press WASHINGTON, May Internal Revenue Bureau

21.—The revealed

most $500.000,000 in the first 10 months of the 1937 fiscal year, or approximately 14 per cent of all internal revenue collections. Aggregate internal revenue receipts collected up to May 1 were $3,544.655,191, as compared with $2,859.869,975 in the first 10 months of the 1936 fiscal period. Income taxes totaled $1,548,769,008, an increase of $473,434,704 over the corresponding period last year. Liquor tax receipts amounted to $491,303.029. tobacco taxes $457,689,513, of which $394,040,104 was produced by the levy on cigarets.

FLOWN TO HOSPITAL

CHELSEA, Mass, May 21.—His right arm severed above the elbow when caught in the ship's engines, Chief Engineer Edward R. Johnson, 49, was transferred at sea from the trawler White Cap to a Coast Guard amphibian, flown 55 miles, and hospitalized here early today less than three hours after the accident.

2 SECA 7y

Problem Children on Tnércase

In U. S., Conference Is Told

Unified Economic Service Is Urged for Jewish Youth.

(Continued from Page One)

against Jews and the general premise, no matter how well taken, of anti-Semitism.” Mr. Hyman said: “In the last four years, since the situation developed, in Germany, anti-Jewish feeling has been reflected in metropolitan areas as well as outlying districts, and it is more likely to show itself in large congested areas, but I don’t believe it is serious. One reads of Nazi meetings only occasionally.”

“Nazis React Against Selves”

“It is not only dissipated by reaction against itself,” he said, “but it also is dissipated by the affirmative action of groups such as signified in Brotherhood Day, National Religious Recover Day, ete.” In his speech last night before the conference, Mr. Hyman made a plea for co-operation between Zionist and non-Zionist groups. The one favors a national state to protect the downtrodden and exiled among the Jewish race and the other believes that the Jewish people are too well integrated economically, socially and culturally in their respective countries to be placed in one centralized body. “The speaker deems it futile to attempt to fuse the activities of the two groups,” Mr. Hyman declared. “perhaps one of the greatest practical difficulties experienced in the United Jewish appeal of 1934 and 1935 was the very effort to present to the Jewish communities of this country one common text, one platform, one program that would blend and combine the objectives of the two organizations and yet satisfy, in emphasis and degree, the inner and honest conviction inherent in the minds of the proponents of each program — the one that seeks to make Palestine the Jewish homeland or core and kernel of Jewish conscious objectives; and the other that deems the primary goal the integration of Jews with the life of their lands of birth or of adoption.

Unity Is Asked

“The voices of the many call for unity in Israel. The leaders in communal councils demand unified action. It is too difficult to adjust differences in our communities, they argue. It is not pleasant to have disagreements and conflicts. At the risk of heterodoxy, it is the opinion of this speaker that the tests of ease and comfort, and ever. of harmony, are not conclusive and cannot substitute for the resolving of soul-searching inquiry. “It is significant, it is important, it is essential that Jews shall be honest with themselves and that they should determine the course they would pursue. The intolerable cruelties and prejudices under which Jews suffer in so many lands abroad cry out to us to bring them aid, but how and when and where? “Within the last few months there has been proposed the discussion of another project tending toward the possible co-ordination of activity of organizations of a nonpolitigal character that have a common(approach to reconstructive and relief aeasures in behalf of Jews abroad. It’ is too early to know how soon this may be effectuated; it is in the arena of active negotiation.

“At a time when the whole framework of civilization is being torn

‘asunder by malignant forces, those

who are responsible for leadership in Jewish organizational life have an inescapable obligation ‘to consult each other, to advise each other and wherever possible, to. collaborate.” In a paper on “Jewish Morale in the Present Crisis,” Morris D. Waldman, New York, yesterday pleaded that “we resist efforts without and within to blind us with emotion and to confuse us with demagogic slogans.” . “The Place of Palestine in Jewish Life” was the subject of a paper by Rabbi Milton Steinberg, Park Avenue Synagog, New York, in which he keynoted that “Zionism is a modern expression of a poetic hope of the Jewish people.”

IN INDIA

MEETINGS TODAY

National Conference of Jewish Social Welfare, Severin Hotel, meetings, all day. National Probation Association, Claypool Hotel: meetings. all day. Exchange Club, Hotel Washington, lunchcon, noon. Optimist Club. Columbia Club, luncheon,

noon. “Indiana Stamp Club, Indiana World War Memorial Shrine, meeting, 8 p. m. Reserve Oficers Association, Board of Trade Building. luncheon, noon. P { Delta Theta, Board of Trade Building. luncheon, noon. y Kappa Sigma, Hotel Washington, luncheon, noon. Delta Tau Delta. Columbia Club, luncheon, noon. aa Beta Theta Pi, Board of Trade Building. nncheon. noon. ado Silk Hosiery Mills, Claypool Hotel, meeting. luncheon. dinner. Portland Cement Association, Hotel. meeting. 7:30 p. m. : Eli Lily & Co., Hotel Severin, luncheon,

2:15 1 r Hotel

Claypool

Mm. Indiana Restaurant Association, Severin. directors meeting, 2 p. m. Indianapolis Pressmen’s Union No. 17, Hotel Severin, meeting. 7:30 p. m.

MEETINGS TOMORROW Alliance Francaise, Hotel Washington, luncheon. noon. wh National Probation Association, Claypool Hotel. meetings, dinner. Community Chests and Councils, Claypool Hotel, luncheon. Real Silk Hosiery Mill, Claypool Hotel, luncheon, dinner.

meetings. breakfast,

" MARRIAGE LICENSES

(These lists are from official records at the County Courthouse. The Times §s not responsible for any errors of names or addresses.)

William S. Edwards, 22, Civilian Conservation Camp; Clara Bolton, 17, of 4173

seph’ T. Hines, 21, of 512 Woodlawn Beulah Evelyn Leigh, 18, of 742 Prospect St. Clifford R. Higgins. 23. of 333 Prospect : Mattie Mi Elliott, 17, of 844 W. New

York St. Robert S. Montague Jr., 29. Saginaw. 22, of 9400

Mich.; Mona Lillian Taggart, Spring Mill Road. Leslie W. Smith, 21, of 615 N. Sherman . Grace Elizabeth Boltz, 21, of 520 . Sherman Drive

Harold Walter Layne, 26, of 417 N. Denny St.; Bessie Irene Booker, 24, of 9539

ress Ave. Cogs . Wood, 26. of 237 E. 11th St.;

Edmond R ood, Ann L. Davis, 19, of 1826 Tallman Ave.

BIRTHS

_ Girls Dallas, Josephine Francis, 1701 S. Delarare. : Ferdinand, Ethel Born. at M~thodist. Merrill, Myrtle Waltman, at Methodist. Clarence. Alice Kern. at Methodist. Luther, Mabel Young. at Methodist. George, Josephin= Mitten, at Methodist. Casper, Mildred Kleifgen. at Methodist. John, Miriam Cross. at Methodist.

Boys Jarfes, Ruth Siegfired, at Methodist. | DEATHS Betty Lakin, 3, at Riley, broncho-penu-monia. Anna Nora Peters, 73, at 340 N. Noble,

NAPOLIS

Charles W. Seibold, 54, at 105 N. Wallace, carcimona. Clarice Sexson, 59, at Methodist, coronary

occlusion. James Harvey Brown, 61, at 1130 Hamilton, acute uremia. Mary Jameson, 70, at 1035 N. Pennsylvania, cerebral apoplexy. Patrick J. Kelleher, 80, at St. Vincent's, chronic myocarditis. Lul 61, 1516 E. 23rd,

a . Bunch, at chronic myocarditis,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

——= United States Weather Bureau...

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Increasing cloudiness with thunder showers probable tonight and possibly tomorrow morning, followed by fair and cooler tomorrow.

Sunrise ........ 4:74 | Sunset ........ 6:59

TEMPERATURE —May 21, 1936—

BAROMETER _fam.....29 1pm...

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... .00 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 Excess since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER

_Indiana—Thundershowers northwest portion this afternoon or tonight, and east and south portions tonight and possibly tomorrow morning, becoming fair tomorrow; cooler tomorrow and northwest and west central portions late tonight.

Illinois—Thundershowers this afternoon or tonight and possibly extreme south tomorrow morning, becoming fair tomorrow; cooler tomorrow and central and north portions tonight. Lower ' Michigan—Thundershowers this afternoon or tonight, and possibly extreme southeast tomorrow morning, becoming fair tomorrow; cooler tomorrow and along Lake Michigan tonight. : Ohio—Showers tonight and tomorrow, warmer in east and south portions tonight; cooler tomorrow. Kentucky—Showers and thunderstorms tonight and tomorrow, warmer in east and central portions tonight; cooler tomorrow.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT!7 A. M. Station. Weather, Amarillo,” Tex. Bismarck, N. D. Boston Chicago Cincinnati ... Cleveland, O. . vid Denver Dodge City. Kas, «..... Helena. Mont. Jacksonville, . Kansas City. Mo. Little Rock. Ark. ....C Los Angeles Miami, Fla. . Minneapolis .. Mobile, Ala. . New Orleans New York ..... .sv...C Okla. City. Omaha. Neb. C Pittsburgh Portland. Or=.

San Antonio. Tex. San Francisco St. Louis Tampa, Fla. Cl Washington, D. C, .,..Clear

Dr. Institutions Are Good Influence.

‘(Continued from Page One)

Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of New York founded a child guidance clinic in 1923, only 25 per cent of the resident children were regarded as behavior problems. Today, he said, approximately 55 per cent are so designated, and nearly 90 per cent of all new admissions in the last year have been serious cases of maladjustment. These children, Dr. Oberndorf explained, come to the institution with histories of antisocial activities of varying nature and degree.

Symptoms Vary

“Their maladjustment reveals itself in symptoms which range from an apparent inability to mingle with other children to manifest suicidal tendencies. Severe temper tantrums, prolonged school truancy, habitual lying and stealing and persistent running away from home are frequent. “Severe neurotic symptoms, such as compulsive fears and obsessions, aggressive and destructive behavior, and pyromanic acts are not uncommon. Case histories reveal marital discord and conflict. illicit, extramarital sexual activities on the part of parents, criminal activities and mental disease.” | Dr. Oberndorf said that mere participation in the “orderly and well organized routine of the institution acts as a stabilizing force and provides a sense of security from early surroundings that induced the antisocial outlook and behavior.” “This active participation in the management of the home,” he said, “is a constructive influence and one which stimulates a group feeling and solidarity akin to that of family life.. Every child is given an opportunity to work, play and compete with others of his own age and to continue or to recast his former home ideals.

Ideals Changed

“Even as the sympathetic understanding of the cottage parent fosters a new and healthy emotional attachment for the child, the cottage group offers a changed and stimulating ideal to replace the inadequate one of his former home. “It has been definitely determined that the presence of as high as 40 per cent of problems children of both sexes mingling freely does not undermine the general morale of the situation. At the present time, the percentage of problem children admitted has been raised considerably with no apparent deleterious effects. In general, psychiatric experience and observation would certainly confirm the theory that identification of a well-adjusted child with the individually maladjusted child does not occur readily.” Judge - Myers, chairman of the

Indiana committee on arrangements g#e

described the probation plight of the court presided over by him and Judge Charles Karabell, but added that there seemed nothing at the moment to do about it. He said that although the courts collect fines and costs that more than cover the probation costs and the judges have the power to appoint the additional probation officers, the judges invariably meet with tax board opposition when they try to increase the staffs. 1800 on Probation Judge Myers said the two courts now have on probation about 1800 persons, which is, he said, about average. Of these, he said, threefourths are other than traffic violators. There are, he said, six probation officers, which gives each a case load of 300 cases. Charles L. Chute, National Association director, said the average case load should be around 50. Judge Myers pointed out that the probation department costs $9000, but the fines and costs collected each year average $15,000. Probation costs from the Municipal Courts, he’ said, are $5 a year a probationer. Mr. Chute said the proper amount should be about $70 a year. Incarceration costs $400 a year a person, Judge Myers said.

Urges Education

Judge Myers said that Municipal Court records show that 93 per cent

| of persons released on probation

never again appear in court for law violations. Probation, he said, saves a citizen who might be turned into a criminal by incarceration. When he addressed the conference, Judge Myers urged the probation officers to institute in their own communities educational campaigns to acquaint the citizens with the difference between probation and parole. Probation, he said, is society’s supervision over a person convicted of a crime but not sent to prison. Parole is society’s supervision over a convict on his release from a penal institution. ; Mr. Chute, who yesterday charged that Indiana's solution of its juve-

"| nile delinquency problem has been

impeded by politics, predicted today that the conference would go deeply into the matter in discussions.

Single Hand Needed

Mr. Mead said: “The underlying reason why there is no real fusing of probation, parole and institutional treatment, is that nowhere is there a single guiding hand at the wheel of the correctional machinery. “Probation is considered almost exclusively the function of the court. Parole usually is granted by an independent board or by some special board attached to the Governor’s office, and institutional

Oberndorf Claims|

=

JUDGE DENIES HAPEOOD PLEA FOR FREEDOM

Maine Jurist Rejects Writ For Habeas Corpus At Auburn.

By Uniled Press AUBURN, Me. May 21.—Justice Sidney St. Felix Thaxter of State Supreme Court at Portland today refused to accept applications for writs of habeas corpus designed to free Powers Hapgood of Indianapolis and six other jailed Committee for Industrial Organization leaders of the 57-day Auburn-Lewiston shoe

strike. Hapgood, New England C. 1. O. secretary, and the six other defendants began six-month jail sentences May 6 for contempt of an antistrike injunction issued by Justice Harry Manser, also of the Supreme Court. In swearing out the habeas corpus applications yesterday, it was contended the defendants were unlawfully deprived of their personal liberties and the Court exceeded its authority and jurisdiction.

RITES FOR WIFE OF PASTOR SET SUNDAY

Mrs. Edith Kendall to Be Buried in Floral Park.

Mrs. Edith Pearl Kendall, wife of the Rev. L. H. Kendall, Heath Memorial M. E. Church pastor, is to be buried Sunday in Floral Park

Cemetery. Funeral services are to be held in the Heath Memorial Church-at 2:30 p. m. Sunday. Mrs. Kendall died yesterday afternoon. She is survived by the husband; two sons, the Rev. Charles Kendall, Los Angeles, and William Kendall, and a daughter, Mrs. Helen Link, Stefney, Conn.

treatment is the exclusive function of some bureau or board.” : Mr. Mead questioned whether this situation was due to chance or was “the outgrowth of a long period of trial and error.” “The deciding factors,” he said, “were mutual distrust, and a reluctance to centralize authority. “The tendency to establish independent parole boards complicates materially instituional disciplinary problems because it robs the warden and his staff of the power of rewarding the prisoner for outstandigh services and good behavior. “There is also a perfectly understandable tendency on the part of some parole boards to stand on their dignity and pay too little attention to the problems and views of prison superintendents and wardens. Urges Co-ordination “We can't do the utmost with the offender until supervision of probationers and parolees is intimately interrelated, if not amalgamated into a single service. “To obtain real co-ordination between probation, parole and institutional treatment, which, as I said at the outset, is now almost nonexistent in most instances, I suggest that this association take the initiative in forming a committee to draft a definite program for interchange of services and ideas between all of those concerned. “A definite form of presentence investigation should be drafted which will meet the needs of the institution and the parole board as well as the court. A system of reporting on the conduct and aptitudes of the offender while in the institution should be evolved and piaced in the hands of those who will supervise him on parole, and methods for the current appraisal of conditions in the community should be evolved. “Thus we can establish definite objectives, which will certainly redound to the advantage of the whole correctional process.” Charles H. Taylor, Emergency Conservation Work assistant director, told the conference that inclusion in the membership of CCC camps of probationers or parolees would make more complex and difficult the problem of personnel. “They would be blamed,” he said, “for any camp irregularities.”

State Welfare Department

Free of Politics, Claim

The State Welfare Department is “as free from political interference as any agency can be under our form of government,” Fred . Hoke,

State Welfare Board president, declared in an address before the Indianapolis Real Estate Board in the Hotel Washington yesterday. : * “Under our form of government

it is nearly impossible to keep any

state agency entirely free from politics but the Welfare Department is as far removed from party {nfiuence as is possible,” he said.

‘Mr. Hoke outlined the operations |

of the State Welfare Department in its relation to the Federal Social Security Act. : The realtors discussed the proposal of Fred L. Palmer, president, for reassessment of property in Marion County. Board members were divided on the proposal. !

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"HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

a

C. LO. Wins

: I SEIN

Steel E lection

His face stained with the grime of his day's labor. John Brown, from the open hearth department of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Co. Pittsburgh, pushed his goggles back on his forehead and cast his vote for or against C. I. O. control as the above picture was taken.

un a 2

South Bend Auto Strike

8 u

Ends:

Increase in Wages Reported

(Continued from Page One)

gan conferences with Jones & Laughlin president, Horace E. Lewis. Murray presented a contract patterned after those signed by U. S. Steel Corp. subsidiaries in March, except that the J. & L. contract gives exclusive bargaining. rights to the S. W. O. C. E

Win Bargaining Rights ‘There was only one possible conclusion to the conferences. That was a signed contract in which Jones & Laughlin gives the S. W. O. C. the right to bargain for all the

company’s 27,000 employees. The S. W. O. C. won the election by a vote of 17,028 to 7207 in the two plants of Pittsburgh and Aliquippa, Pa. These comp4nies, employing nearly 200,000 steelworkers in plants scattered over several states, include Bethlehem Steel Corp. RePublic Steel, Youngstown Sheet & Tube, Inland Steel and Crucible Steel. The election—first major test of the Wagner Labor Relations Act as an instrumentality of peace in the steel industry—was decided upon a week ago today in settlement of a two-day strike at the Jones & Laughlin plants. The men struck for union contract. The steelworkers voted on this question: “Do you want the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers of North America through the Steel Workers Organizing Committee of the Committee for Indus-

trial Organization to represent you

as the exclusive representative for collective bargaining?” The S. W. O. C. victory was hailed by union leaders, including Philip Murray, chairman of the year-old union. Of the 27,000 J. & L. steelworkers, 24.412 cast ballots. Thirty-one ballots were blank, 90 were “challenge” votes, 56 were void. It was the largest industrial election ever held in America. The Jones: & Laughlin Corp. was an outspoken opponent of the Wagner act when it was battled in the courts and a Supreme Court decision upholding the act's validity came in a Jones & Laughlin case, involving

the discharge of a number of workmen for union activity. Horace Edgar Lewis, J. & L. board chairman, said his company was “gratified” at the results of the election. The Steel Workers Organizing Committee has given the five independents 10 days to sign. At the expiration of that period—Tuesday, May 25—Murray has threatened to call strikes at any or all of the plants. The union has arranged conferences with Crucible Steel next Monday, in Pittsburgh, and with Inland Steel on Tuesday in Chicago. The National Steel Corp. of E. T. Weir, with principal plants in Weirton, W. Va., has not been asked to sign a union contract, but the company has been charged with violation of the Wagner act and the. case is now being investigated by the Regional Labor Board office here. One Film Union Signs Peace In Hollywood, the striking Fed-

eration of Motion Picture Crafts,

which has been picketing the nine major studies three weeks demanding a union shop, was reduced today to seven of its original 11 unions by the desertion of the utility workers’ group. This union does odd jobs around the studios and comprises the second largest of the crafts. They made peace with producers last night and were granted a union shop and 15 cents an hour wage increases, making the scale 75 cents. In Kansas City cards and phamphlets that bore Henry Ford's appeal to his workers against unions, today were a scattering pile of ashes outside the Ford assembly plant. They were fed to a bonfire last night by a Jeering crowd, from the United Automobile Workers’ Union. An estimated 1500 men stood about the fire while union leaders denounced Ford's labor policy and company officials watched from their offices. :

THREE WOMEN KILLED DETROIT, May 21.—Three women were Killed at suburban Inkster last night when their automobile was struck by a speeding Michigan Central passenger train. They were: Lois Powell Petts of Detroit, Minnie N. Powell of Highland Park, Mich., and Mrs. T. Baird of Windsor, Ont.

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WITH ADVISERS ON BENCH PLAN

Lunches With - Cummings And Farley; Robinson’s Name Brought In.

(Editorial, Page 16)

By United Press WASHINGTON, May 21.—Presi-

‘| dent Roosevelt today called in Post-

master General James A. Farley and Attorney General Homer S. Cummings for a luncheon conference thought likely to concern the judici-

ary situation and appointment of a successor to retiring Supreme Court Justice Willis Van Devanter. The White House conference was scheduled shortly after the President told reporters that he had, as yet, given no consideration to Van Devanter’s succéssor. At the same time he expressed no comment on status of his judicial reorganization fight. Senate sentiment has been strongly expressed in fayor of appointment of Senate Majority Leader Joseph T. Robinson to the High Court vacancy. The White House did not announce the purpose of the FarleyCummings conference. The President, however, would be expected to confer with both Cabinet officers on the High Court vacancy. Cummings’ advice would be sought on legal aspects of the situation and probably on the question of candidates. Farley is concerned as the President’s chief political adviser. On the judicial reorganization front, Administration leaders reportedly were seeking some compromise plan which would avert likely Senate defeat of Mr. Roosevelt's original program.

Love of Grand Old Game Wins Judge's Mercy

Municipal Judge Charles’ Karabell usually is pretty tough cn traffic code violators.

But Judge Karabell also is a baseball fan. For instance: “My mind was on the ball game,” Carl Huesing, 846 N. Gray St. told the judge today when arraigned on a charge of disobeying a traffic signal oni W. 16th St., near Perry Stadium. “How could your mind be on the ball game with the Indians playing the way they are?” asked the judge. “It wasn't the way the Indians are playing, judge,” Mr, said. “It was 8:10 p. m., and the game was to start at 8:15.” “I shall withhold judgment this case,” the judge concluded.

BLAMES BOY FRIEND

By United Press

Counsel for MacKnight today blamed her sweetheart, Donald Wightman, 19-year-old choir singer, for the slaying of the girl’s mother. ! R. Lewis Kennedy, attorney for the girl, told the jury in the murder trial in which Gladys and Donald are co-defendants that Wightman killed Mrs. Helen MacKnight with a hatchet in Bayonne, N. J, last July 31, and then told the daughter he “had here where he wanted her.”

LCOS

Huesing

in

IN MACKNIGHT CASE

JERSEY CITY, N. J, May 21.— 18-year-old Gladys

moe : F

PAGE 3 Wed 56 Years,

Sage y

Divorced, Aged Pair Reunited

By United PressINDEPENDENCE, Mo., May 21.— For 44 years, Fielding S. Neal and his wife lived happily, raised, 11 children. Then they began to quarrel. That was 10 years ago. For two more years they lived ungether unhappily, then they were separated, divorced. & Mrs. Neal went to Nevada, Mo., married Johnson H. Wyatt, but still wasn't happy. . Today, she and her first husban were reunited and happy again, They were remarried yesterday at the Court House. He is 74; his bride 70. Mrs. Neal said she divorced Wyatt at Nevada this winter. She came back, she said, “because Fielding and I were such old friends that we just decided it would be best if we spent our last years together.”

HOLDS SPONSOR OF EX-PRISONER

Judge Binds: Over Parolee And Friend in Adding Machine Theft.

The sponsor of a parolee from Michigan City prison was bound te the grand jury today in connection with an alleged theft by the man he sponsored. Clarence Crowder, 2928 Columbia Ave., the parolee, was bound over to the grand jury on charges of grand larceny and burglary in cone nection with the alleged theft of an adding machine valued at $200 from the Indiana Asphalt Co. 2810 Columbia Ave.,, May 11. Municipal Judge Charles Karabell set his bond at $4000. Appearing in the same case was Mahlin S. Hansen, 35, who said he operates an ink manufacturing plant at 2126 Martindale Ave. and was one of Crowder’s parole sponsors. Detectives testified he gave 4 information leading to Crowder’s ! arrest, and said they found the | stolen | adding machine under. the front porch of Hansen's factory. Hansen told Judge Karabell that on May 11 Crowder told him he had put something on Hansen's porch for him. : Hansen said he told Crowder he didn’t want the gift and to take it away, “whatever it is.” The next morning when he arrived at the plant, Hansen said, he found the adding machine under the porch: - He said he told Crowder to take it away again and to “watch your step.” But he failed to report the adding machine to police, he told the Court today, although he thought it “might” have been stolen.’ Judge Karabell bound him over to the grand jury under $500 bond on a charge of receiving stolen goods.

WGRC, NEW ALBANY, GRANTED MORE TIME

Times Special : WASHINGTON, May 21.—North Side Broadcasting Corp. New Al bany, Ind., operating Station WGRC, has been granted a construction permit by the Federal Communications Commission to change hours of operation and frequency. ‘The frequency change will be from 1370 kilocycles to 880 and operation will be from daytime only to unlimited time. Permission is given to use. 250 watts of power and instal directional antenna for night use.

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