Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1938 — Page 1
on
The Indianapolis Time
3 ho Hl OTR SHE rey
EIN arin tem a re
delle Sa Rn
FORECAST-—Cloudy with probably rain tonight changing to snow tomorrow; lowest tonight about 35: colder tomorrow.
[sowrrs “nowanpdl VOLUME 49—NUMBER 262
Two Escape Injury in Air 1: ank Blast
BILL IS CALLED PARTY'S DOOM
Democrats Have Deserted South, Senator Byrnes Charges.
COALITION IS MENTIONED
| Southerner Opposes Wage Differential; Tax Hearings Set,
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 | (U. P.).—Senator Byrnes (D. | S. C.) charged in the Senate | today the Wagner. VanNuys | Antilynching Bill will create | sectional hatreds and “destroy | the Democratic Party.” Senator Byrnes made new threats of far-reaching strife within the majority party as he took up debate on the fifth day of the fAlibuster, | Senator Byrnes said that the bill | should be called “a bill to arouse ill feeling between the sections” of the country and “to destroy the Democratic Party.” “The Negro has not only come into the Democratic Party but the Negro has come into control of the Demo- | cratic Party,” he said. | “Politically the South has been an | outcast, Today the South may just as well know that it cannot appeal to the Republicans of the North and that it has been deserted by the Democrats of the North.”
Filibuster Widens
Democratic Rift By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 11-—-The Senate filibuster against the anti-
Two men escaped serious injur pressed air tank exploded in the boiler room of the Richardson Co. 3500 E. 20th St. today sought to fix the blast cause. Raymond Bennett, 38, of 2830 N. Olney St, an employee (shown in the picture), had just stepped
y wheh a com- out of the room
Investigators mond Johnson, 22,
F. D. R. CALLS BUSINESSMEN
Five Industrial Leaders Are Invited to White House Conference.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U. P).— Leaders of five of the nation’s largest industries were summoned to the White House today to mest with President Roosevelt at 5 p. m. for a thorough discussion of busi ness conditions. President Roosevelt sent tele graphic summons to Alfred P. Sloan, General Motors Corp. board chair. | man; Ernest Weir, National Steel
Snow to Follow Rain Tonight, Is Bureau Advice
TEMPERATURES . 33 Toa Mm... 398 Mam... 33 12 (Neen). 33 1pm
35 36 3% 3%
m «m Wa » MW
Colder weather with snow fol lowing probable rain tonight was forecast for tomorrow by the Weather Bureau. The forecaster said the lowest temperature tonight would be about 35.
Y
TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1938
LAYOFFS HINT
| |
Times-Photo. when the explosion occurred last
night, but the concussion knocked him down. Ray-
of 244% N. Olney St, a coal passer,
received back lacerations when struck by a piece of glass from a shattered window. | tank was blown through one of the brick walls.
COUNTY WARNED
The head of the
OF DEBT LIMIT
Grossart Cites Rising Rate.
As $680,000 Relief Issue Is Prepared.
County Auditor Charles Grossart | today indebtedness of Marion County eontinues to increase at its present rate, the lithit will be reached in a few
warned that “if the bonded
»
ears, His statement came as officials
|
|
[ fund appropriated for the work.
SMOKE SURVEY END BY MARCH
Force Cut to Two as Funds Are Reported Depleted To Only $225.
$10,000 PLEA IGNORED
Close Leaves Work “Just Lot of Data,” Says Fuel Engineer,
J. W. Clinehens, city combustion engineer, announced today that all but two WPA smoke survey workers
had been laid off due to a lack of funds, “We can see our way clear for only two more months of operating the city-wide smoke survey begun last September,” he said. Four WPA workers inh the engineer’s department were dismissed yesterday when local WPA officials notified Mr. Clinehens there was only $225 left ih the original $10,000
Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Health Board secretary, today blamed smoke as a contributing factor in what he termed an unsearonable increase in diphtheria cases here, He sald IR new caves and two deaths were reported in the last 10 days. Dr. Morgan added that there was ho serious danger of an epidemic,
Asked what effect the lay off would have oh the survey, which | has revealed that more than 2500 | tons of soot fell oh the City from September through November, Mr. Clinehens said: “We wanted to run the survey for a year from Sept. 1. Now we will have to ¢lose it by Mareh 10. Therefore, the survey will just be a lot
Spencer
Entered as Becond-Clasg MW ut
! ter ostoffice. Indianapolis, .
Trattic Court Record
Month Judge Convietions 743 839 1381 1202 1118 1250 125% 658
May Karabell* June Myers* July Karabell August Myers wept. Karabell Oct. Myers Nov. Karabell Dee. Myers
“Note:
3
Fines, Costs Total $ 3,055 2.41% 10,511 mM 11, 9.698 10. 110
Th each month the Judge named tried approximately
Costs Deaths Suspended 3820 %3%0 5010 3890 1450 4540 43540 2420
Average Fine $411 2.712 7.61 8.12 10.03 7.78 8.10 "Y
8 2 9 4 19 8 8
184 ' 12
90 per cent of the cases with judges pro tem. and the alternate
judge trying the remaining cases,
May
Not Press
Law on Titleholders
Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer said today he may not enforce the
regulation requiring motorists to purchase and use the auto title card holder approved by the State
He said he planned anh investigation to determine whether the law
=a
REMOVE BODIES
FROM AIRLINER
U. S. to Probe Montana
Crash in Which F. D. R.’s Friend, 9 Others Died.
BOZEMAN, Mont, Jan. 11 (U. P). Forest rangers and ranchers to-
Winds Driving Stormy
‘Weather Eastward
were planning a $630,000 poor relief bond issue for Center, Derry and
of data,
“We can’t tell anything unless we
day began removing the burned and broken bodies of 10 men killed when uw Northwest Alrlines luxury liner
is constitutional. No action by county prosecutors is necessary until March 1, expiration date of the moratorium on purs chase of auto tags granted motorists by Governor Townsend. We are not at all certain that the new act is enforeeable,” Mr, Spencer sald. “The question is this: Ts the use of any type of eard holder a substantial compliance with the law as long ag the title eard is dis= played in the lower right hand ¢orner of and legible through the windshield?”
Rees Danger ih Act
The 1037 act states that the title card must be displayed ih a “holder approved by and bearing the stamp of approval of the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles.”
FINAL
HOME
PRICE THREE CENTS |
FINES DROP, DEATHS RISE, TRAFFIC SURVEY REVEALS; COUNTY'S TOLL NOW NINE
August and Septems ber Tolls Lowest and Penalties Highest,
JUNE WAS WORST
Karabell to Assess
Drivers Who Lack
Licenses,
(Editorial, Page 12)
Indianapolis’ monthly trafe fic fatality average rose and fell during 1937 in proportion to the rigidity of enforces ment by the Municipal Courts, Marion County's 1038 traffic toll
today stood at nine, following one of the worst 48-hour traffic laughs ters ih Thdiana's history. This 18 seven more thah for the corresponds ing 1837 period. Twenty-three persone died throughout the Btate, five of them in Marioh Osunty while eight others were injured ih wrecks here, While fatalities rose from 8h August-September average of five a month to nine, the average amount of fine assessed motorists convicted of Municipal Oourt traffic violation charges, slumped from $0.04 to 1888 than $8 during the last three Months of last year, a Times survey res vealed today, During August and September, the first two months after the pos lice traffic enforcement eampaigh got fully under way with co-operas tion of the courts, only 10 fatalities
| have a full year of samples ard have pound for Chicago from Seattle | The holder approved and sold by
lynching bill still raging today is
the latest development in the process of cracking political par- | ties which began oh a national! Scale with the election of President | Roosevelt in 1932. The cracking process has continued now until serious observers of the political scene are speculating on the possibility of coalition op-
representative national [leaders fs the first such gathering [summoned by President Roosevelt
Corp. board chairman; M. W. Clement, Pennsylvania Railroad president; Lewis Brown, Johns-Manville Co. president, and Colby Chester,
General Foods Corp. board chair. man and the National Association of Manufacturers head.
The White House conference of industrial
position in 1940 to the New Deal ince early days of the New Deal.
Presidential ticket, whether the latter is headed by Mr. Roosevelt | in quest of a third term, by Rob-| ert H. Jackson, currently reported | to be White House favorite for the) succession, or by any of the other New Dealers who aspire to leadership of the party created by the President, The antilynching dispute cannot fail to draw Southern political leadars away from New Deal leadership. Although Mr. Roosevelt is not personally leading the fight for that legislation, his legislative ants are sufficiently active to identify the bill as an Administration measure,
Negroes Hold Power
As one observer put here the other day, enactment of the antilynching bill might give conservative Southern statesmen exactly the popular issue they would require to win the mass of Southern voters away from Mr, Roosevelt. There is much to gain, however, as well as lose in enacting legislation which would be expected permanently to transfer political al-
legiance of voting Northern Negroes |
from the Republican to the Democratic Party. Postmaster General James A. Farley said in the 1936 campaign that the Negro vote was the balance of power in Pennsylvania, Ohjo, Indiana, New York, Michigan, Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee,
Daniels Opposes Wage Differential
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U.P) = Mexican Ambassador Josephus Daniels, in a letter to Senator Smathers (D. N. J) discussing wages and hours legislation, said today that “it is very shortsighted of the South to wish to continue low wages.” Ambassador Daniels is from North Carolina, His letter was made public as House leaders indicated that revival
of the wage-hour legislation issue
would be delayed to permit healing of sectional wounds.
House Schedules New Tax Bill
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U, P).—
House Speaker William B. Bankhead (D. Ala.) said today that leaders have set March 15 as tentative date for House approval of the
Administration tax bill--designed to
cut the tax burden of 200,000 corporations and become & major factor in the fight against recession. Hearings are to begin Friday.
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
11 | Mrs. Ferguson 11 12 | Music ....... 19 ...18, 19 | Obituaries Crossword ... 17 | Pegler Editorials ... 12 | Pyle Fashions .... 9 | Radio Financial ... 14 | Mrs. Roosevelt 11 Flynn 12 | Scherrer .... 11 Forum .. 12 | Serial Story.. 18 Grin, Bear It 18 | Short Story.. 18 In Indpls .... 8 | Society Jane Jordan. 11 | Sports ... 15, Johnson .... 12 | State Deaths. 14 Movies feeven 13 Seen 18
| Secretary of Agriculture Henry A.
lieuten- | Unemployment | mittee that farm relief needs are
U. S. Spending Held
Key to Recession WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U. P).—
| Wallace today said that “economists
[| agreed” that a decline in Govern-
| ment spending had disturbed the [balance between business income,
sulting in the present recession. Secretary Wallace told the Senate and Relief Com-
rising, Col. Leonard P. Ayres, Cleveland economist, predicted that the nation should reach the bottom of the recession during the first half of 1938. | He suggested a “rather slow” recovery, “The most productive contribution that Congress could make,”
said Col. Ayres, “would be repeal of the undistributed profits tax.”
—“— 250,000 Added to 'U. S. Relief Rolls
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U, P= [Aubrey Williams, Acting ‘Works Progress Administrator, today advised «President Roosevelt that between 250,000 and 300,000 persons had been added to WPA rolls since Dec, 1, bringing the total on WPA relief to 1,760.000.
WAR PLAN BACKERS MAP ELECTION FIGHT
‘Hint Reprisals at Polis for Ludlow Opponents.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U, P).= | Congressmen and peace organizations who supported the Ludlow war referendum proposal promised today that “the fight has just begun"—that they would carry the issue into the Congressional elactions this fall. Four peace organizations oriticized Congressmen for following the Administration's “dictatorial” foreign policy instead of the wishes of the people. In a statement, making known their plan for reprisals against opposition Congressmen, they said: “The fight for the war referendum has just begun. The people will have another chance this year "to make their will known and elect representatives who will respond to the voice of the people and not to the crack of the Administration's whip.” Despite the 209-188 vote yesterday denying debate for the resolution, there were new movments to get consideration of the bill at this session, Rep. Louis Ludlow (D. Ind) author of the proposal, was indefinite fbout his plans, but Rep. Herbert S. Bigelow (D, O.) said he would introduce a new petition to extricate the resolution from the Rules Committee if Rep. Ludlow does not act within a few days. In the Senate, Senator Nye (R. N. D) said he might attempt to
Spikes
obtain consideration for his resolution which is wi the Ludlow's. ;
Central states.
employment and farm income, re- |
CHICAGO, Jan. 11 ((U. P)=— Stormy weather, driven by strong winds, rolled eastward from Nebraska today promising heavy snows in Wisconsin and Michigan and colder weather for more of the North
U. 8. Forecaster J. R. Lloyd said a low pressure area would move straight eastward, bringing unsettled conditions to the entire Middlewest. Snow began falling today in eastern Minnesota and ih Wisconsin, A lighter snowfall was predicted fou eastern Towa, Tllinois and Indiana,
TRADE TO SWING UP, FARM PARLEY HEARS
Forester Speaks at Purdue Conference Today.
LAFAYETTE, Jan, 11 (U, P).— Attendance figures continued to increase today at the second meeting | of the annual agricultural confers ence at Purdue University despite slippery, show-blanketed Indiana highways. Prof, K. T. Cowden, Purdue farm management head, predicted the business recession will be short. lived in an opening session address last night. He said “basic factors are present which should result in a continuation of the recovery movement over a longer period of years.” Registrations were expected to reach approximately 7000 by tomorrow. The conference will continue through the week. BE, W. Tinker, United States Forest Service assistant rorester, was to speak before the conference this afternoon, Annual meetings were scheduled by the Indiana Farm Management, Association, Indiana Horticultural Society, and the Indiana Potato Growers’ Association, Main interest at the conference conceived the progress of judging in the Indiana corn and small grains show which is to determine Indiana's corn king and crown prince for 1937. Champions honored at a dinner last night were William Curry of Tipton, international corn king; George Sauerman, Crown Point, international! hay king, and Ralph Heilman, Hope, the state's five-ncre corn king.
Wayne Townships to defray expenses for December, 1937, and the first six months of 1938
“The County already has floated
more than 50 per cent of its bond
limit of $12,000,000,” Mr. Grossart said,
He declared the present bond is
sue was necessitated by a cut from 47 to 17 cents in the Township budget.
1938 COenter
The present levy, which will raise
£350,000 next July, will carry the relief load for only two months. after which another issue will have to be roid.
| WPA Jast November, but no word
a comparison with each month on how the soot fall rises and declines, In faet, it should be run eontinuously over a period of years to determine whether there has been any improvement.” Ah application for additional funds totaling $10.000 was made with
has been received on it, Mr. Olinehens said. Since November, three cuts have been made in the WPA force, redueing it from 14 to 2 men
—— a A
PASTORS SCORE HAGUE
crashed and burst into Aames during a blizgard ih rugged Bridger canyon,
The bodies of two two pilots and
eight passengers were hauled oh sleds three and one-half miles to a ranch. ¥rom there they were to he removed to a mortuary
here, Sheriff povitt Westlake who, with
Coroner Howard Nelsoh, went to the scene of the erash, sald the plane was “torh up something fierce” and “all But one of the bodies was burned 80 you eouldn’t recognize them.”
Tnvestigators oh Hand On the scene for investigation
to be given the County Couneil for approval at its next meeting, is to provide $600,000 for Center Towns ship, $68,000 for Wayne, and $12,000 for Perry,
Japs Ask Wide Draft Law
HANKOW-Outer TOKYO-<Hirohito presides at Tm-
PARTIS-<Loyalist Government in
The proposed bond issue, which is
P churches joined today in denounce ing Mayor Frank Hague, City, for his war oh the Committee for Industrial Organization.
). Pastors of eight Protestant
Jersey
Beard Wa rms U. S. of War:
Americans File Protest on Basic E
Nipponese Control in Shanghai.
SHANGHAT-Influentinl Americans
oppose increase of Japanese control in International Settlement, | Japanese planes and warships begin action around Canton,
enter war on China's side.
perial Conference on ‘war policy,
Spain reported ready to dismiss Communist ministers in hope of
oconomic Reforms Needed for Peace, Historian Says.
By MAX STERN Times Npeecial Weiter WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.-—Dras-
tic reforms in the seonomic machine Mongolia ‘way | ==or the easier alternative of foreigh war, This is the fateful choice | facing the United States, in the opinion of one of its leading histor. fans, Dr. Charles A. Beard.
In 1934 Dr, Beard told a group of
were J, A. Nee, district teehnteian for the Bureau of Air Commerce; J, T. Tollbridge, assistant to Mr, Nee: R. L. Smith, Northwest Airplanes inves tigator, and Albert Olsen, pilot for the airline. One of the dead, A. L. Croonquist, 47, Billings, Mont, was an official of the airline and a personal friend of President Roosevelt's family Waodsmen believed that Pilot Nick Mamer had tried to bring the plane down in the level clearing because of the storm's high | wind, and that he was unable to [ level it off for a landing. The dead were: Pilot Mamer, Pred W. West, Seattle, copilot. G. A. Anderson, Spokane, Douglas MeKay, Winnipeg, promi nent Candian newspaperman, L. Levin, Butte, Mont, 1. BE. Stevenson, Seattle, W. E. Borgenheimer, Bason, Mont, airline employee, Mr. Oroonguist, Billings, state traffic manager for the airlines, Walter Ton, St. Paul, Ted Anderson, St. Paul, mechanie,
SPOOK THIEF GETS
airline
compromise pence.
VIENNA Austria and Hungary
hesitate to follow Mussolini in Spanish, anti-Communist and League of Nations policies,
BERLIN—Vatican envoy tells Hitler
world wants peace,
Congressmen here that in the past prolonged depressions have often tempted Government into strong foreign policies and wars, and he urged that they keep an eve on this danger. Today he repeated that warning, recalling that since then
$50 LOOT IN HOME
A Burglar garded from head to
foot in a white bedspread took $50 in money and Bates, 919 N, police today.
ewelry, Mrs, Bertha Sherman Drive, told
Mrs, Bates with her two ehildren
Japanese War Office today oalled for a new conscription law to mobil ize additional man power for the war in China, while Emperor Hirohito presided over an Imperial Oonference on the conflict,
Japanese history, hour, Its conclusions were guarded with
INSIDE THE C. 1. ©.’ Needle Trades a Bulwark of Movement, Declares Stolberg,
While Perils Beset the Maritime and Motor Unions
TOKYO, Jan, 11 ©
(U. P).--The
The conference, the fifth held in Insted for one
utmost secrecy. Speculation (Turn to Page Three)
this reforms that will put the Ameriesn economic machihe into high-speed
three things have happened to in-
rease the danger--the war in
China, with its Panay incident: the President's Ohioago speech last October suggesting an alighment of so-called democratic nations against the lawless powers and a recession that has postponed recovery,
“Will we face the challenge of depression with fundamental
(Turn to Page Three)
was sitting in her home last night when she heard a noise ih a bedroom, she said. Going to the bedroom door she saw a figure draped in the bedspread. A man's voice ordered hed to get her money and jewelry under threat of death. When she Tooked for her money, watohes and ring, they were gone, she sald. The Aire slipped out a side door, according to the report to police, still wearing the bedspread,
the State is made of celluloid. “When the law specifies a method ih which to perform provisions of the law any substantial compliance with the method is accepted ar legal if the purpose of the law is carried out,” Mr, Bpencer said, He added that ohe of the "obviously dangerous aspects of the new act les ih its cross purpose with mafety laws of nearby states.” Deputy Proseciter Henry tt sald Kentueky, Ohido and some other states have laws forbidding stickers or other obstructions ih the windshield,
WIFE NO. 1 HECKLES HIM, LAUREL SAYS
Asks Writ to Keep Her From Apartment.
a
HOLLYWOOD, Jah, 11 (U, P) = Htan Laurel met a new orisiz ih his love life today by asking Superior Court for an injunction to keep his first wife away from his apartment, where he iz having a honeys moon with his new bride,
Wife No. 1, who refuses to give him up and has been pestering him for months, he said, has resorted to ringing his telephone and pounding oh his door ih the middle of the night,
These things are disturbing to him ahd his bride, Vera Shuvolova, a Russian eafe dancer with whom he elrped to Yuma, Ariz, 10 days ago the same day he got his divoree from Mrs, Virginia Ruth Laurel, wife No. 1. Mrs, Virginia Ruth Laurel said she was not heckling her former huss band, . “I'm only trying to protect Stan, He's a good boy but he has a mareying complex,” she anid, 8he said she would confer with her lawyer again and file another court pets Hoh to have the divorce decree set aside,
MURDER SUSPECT WELD
HOUSTON, Tex, Jan, 11 (U, P). Cleorge Franklin Matthews, #7. year-old earpenter, was taken inte custody of an Indiana officer today to face a murder charge at Indian apolis ih the slaying of a Ohinese Inundryman, Tom Lee, July 2, 1034,
Editor's Note—In the second of 12 articles on the
C. LI. 0, Mr. Stolberg, for years
affairs, discusses the leadership of the great needle trades unions und the newer leaders of the automobile and West Coast maritime unions—the country ex. preacher Homer Martin and the spectacular long. . Of course Mr, Stolberg’s interpretations are his own, not those of The Times.
By BENJAMIN STOLBERG
NT to the miners, the needle trades furnished most of the top leadership and most of the money to the C. I. O. The International Ladies’ Garment Workers Amalgamated Clothing
shoreman, Harry
uhionh gave some $800.070 and the Workers more than $750,000. These two unions are really in
drive, of which Sidney Hillman of the Amalgamated
Clothing Workers is chairman, just Workers took charge of the ‘David president of the
steel drive,
a student of Inbor
charge of the textile as the United Mine
Internati Ladies’ he.
of the most conservative among the top leaders. He is still more or less friendly with the A. P, of L. oligarchy and for a long time he tried to make peace between the C. 1. O. and the A, F. of L., as did most of the leaders in the needle trades,
With Hillman of the Amalgamated, Max Zariteky ot the Millinery Workers, and Charles P, Howard of the Typographers, he was instrumental in getting the two organizations to appoint negotiating committees, though these negotiations were bound to break down, as they dia,
™ C. 1. O. eannot return into the oraft-fenlous atmosphere of the federation without jeopardizing its industrial union drive. And the A. F. of L. bureau
orats cannot afford to risk their jobs by permitti powerful industrial union tendencies of the ©. 1. O into the fold,
ne
up
proud of being a “lowbrow” though he knows trade-union organization both in theory and practice from the ground
‘Besides his union, to Which he gives some 18 hols & day of his great administrative ability, he i much in-
terested in labor politics, especially ih the American Labor
very active except in a
S' democracy. Hillman's
ng the . back his union into all ing factories,
Party in New York Oity, In the 0. 1, O. Dubinsky 1s not
crisis Then his strategic position
ahd his mixture of great common sense and honest slyness give him considerable power, » » LJ
DNEY HILLMAN fs almost the opposite of Dubinsky. He Incks Dubinsky's good humor, his tough and homely
fault is his own self-overestima-
tion, which expresses itself inh his ambition to be an “industrinl statesman” rather (hah just a unioh leader, His great flair for publicity has given him = reputation which the story of his union does not quite justify. For one thing, Hillman's “statesmanship” made him take sorts of ventures,
banks to cloth. ‘union's prestige
#
-
were recorded. Pines averaged $8.18 and $10.03, respectively, for the twe months, Fatality Rate Thereases Patalitier increased steadily dups ing October, November and De ber with a total of 27 recorded, Meanwhile, the fines for the threes month period averaged $7.80, A Times survey ih July of sk Traffic Oourt conditions during pres ceding months war followed by heavier fines against erring Motors ists, records show, During May and June, 18 motors fate died in traffic accidents while fines averaged $4.11 and $2.72. Tals Ae fatalities dropped noticeably in the following three months, Convictions Total 3100 A check of the records for the Inst quarter showed that Judge Oharles J, Karabell convieted 1401 motorists and Judge Myers, ‘Who presided over Traffic Ootirt 1h Oats ber and December, convicted 1898, Judges pro tem. sentenced 987 bring the total for the period to 3173 Finer and conts paid totaled nears ly #25000, The judges suspended costs fh 1180 eases. Tn oases of 540 motorists, judgments were withheld or dismissed, Jail sentences for drunken andl reckless drivers and spesdars tos taled 1525 days, of which 30 days were suspended, Nine al Seniors were bound to the Grand Jury, A breakdown of the fgures fop
both courts follows: » Ave. (er oh 8!
Number of Casey
a7 187
aa 174
ii 209
Offense
peeding ecklens delving funken driving. mnropar lights
Aft thrn d ed i Y M al : ! FAL HH Judge Myers and judges pro tem, ih Room 3 fined 1000 motorists $18,« 880, or an average of #707 during the three-month period, total of 677 had costs suspended} 202, judgment withheld; 89, judges ment suspended, Jail sentences totaled 380 dwy (Turn to Page Three)
atraet
EX-PRESS BUREAU HEAD HERE IS DEAD
MARTINSVILLE, Jan, 11 (0, BP), Clerald Overton, 41, a United Press staff correspondent for 14 years and former manager of the Indinnapolis Bureau, died ih Mes morinl Hospital here today after & long illness, He joined the United Press in 1003 following his graduation from the University of Michigan and resighed ih 1038 to become an instructor th the University of Missouri School of Journalism,
CARDOZO IS WEAKE HIS DOCTOR REPORT
WASHINGTON, Jan, 11 (U, PP) Associate Justice Benjamin N, dozo of the Bupreme Oourt "is ing his own although a trifle wesker than last night,” his physician Yes ported today, : The brief statement was issued Dr. John Paul Earnest Jr, visiting the 88-year-old Justice day. Mir. Justice Oardoso was ab with a series of heart attacks week while still conva the grippe and shingles, Dr, Earnest reported last that the Justice had spent a “sa factory” day,
W® |
Se ssa da.
SCHOOL BOARD TO ELROT The School Board is to pact 3 cers for 1038 at its regu Alan Boyd, |
'
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