Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1938 — Page 3
TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1038
U. S. Warship Sent to Rescue Citizens in Bombing of Amoy; New Zealand Balks British Plan
®
Unwritten War Alliance Between Fuehrer and Duce Reported.
(Continued from Page One)
Mussolini are determined to throw | the incomparable weight of this]
unity and strength into the balance serving the highest aims of peace.” While the press deprecated reports of specific new agreements,
especially the division of Southeast- |
ern Europe into German and Italian “zones of interest,” the newspapers stressed that German-Italian relations could not be closer than they are now, Leaving Italian territory, Herr Hitler telegraphed Premier Benito Mussolini: “The commuinty of interests of the Fascist and National Socialist movements is an absolute guarantee of faithful comradeship uniting us and uniting our nations forever.” Field Marshal Goering, who acted for Herr Hitler during the Fuehrer’s Italian visit, said that the return reception would repesent not only a greeting to Hitler but a thanks by the German people “to the great Italian nation and Il Duce.” Sources close to the Foreign Office said that in the talks between Hitler and Premier Benito Mussolini the possibility of an eventual British-French-German-Italian pe a ¢ e agreement occupied much time, Apparently Herr Hitler favored such an agreement provided that it could be concluded of his terms. These terms include freedom of action in Eastern Europe and the restoration of colonies. The report here was that Germany and Italy would support each others’ demands in any negotiations for a four power pact.
Nazi and Fascist Parties Map Co-operation
ROME, May 10 (U. P.).—Premier Benito Mussolini and Fuehirer Adoif Hitler, discussing a program for intensified fraternization of Fascists and Nazis, agreed on a program Of co-operation, it was reported today in usually reliable quarters. Informants said that the fraternization program included: 1. Frequent exchanges of views between Fascist and Nazi leaders, involving journeys between Rome and Berlin. Propaganda, moral and physical education and other subJects would be discussed. 2. Increased utilization by
intensification of cultural exchanges including more frequent among university students and an increase in the number of German art scholarships in Rome. The art co-operation program would involve use by German students of the magnificent buildings of the Austrian Academy of Art here, completed Just as Germany absorbed Austria. 3. Increased collaboration among industrialists,
Neutrality Revision Held Unlikely
WASHINGTON, May 10 (U. P.). —Chairman Sam McReynolds (D. Tenn.) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee predicted today that President Roosevelt will ask no revision of the United State neutrality law despite strong sentiment in both Houses for revocation of the embargo on arms shipments to Spain. Authoritative evidence was lacking.
RAY TO START OWN NEWSPAPER, HE SAYS
Sheriff Ray today refused to talk with reporters, declaring: “I'm going to give the people the real news in a paper of my own. I can’t get anything in the daily papers. They're as bad as the politicians. “Some friends have decided to put out a paper. The first issue will be out Saturday and it is going to be placed in every home in Indianapolis.”
Ger- i many of Italian agricultural labor, |
visits!
POLAND ASKED T0 MAKE CHOICE
Loyalists Hold Railroad Link To France as Rebels Attack.
(Copyright. 1938, by United Press) PARIS, May 10 (U., P.).—France has asked Poland to say specifically whether she would be on the side of France or of Germany in case of an act of aggression against Czechoslovakia, it was disclosed today. The Foreign Office said that Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet put the question frankly and clearly to Juljusz Lukasiewicz, Polish Ambassador, just before he left for the League of Nations Council meeting and that as the result M. Lukasiewicz went at once to Warsaw to consult his Government and bring back a reply. Poland has a military alliance with France and a nonaggression agreement with Germany and in the minds of French leaders her policy has been somewhat equivocal as regards Czechoslovakia and other problems, M. Bonnet seemed determined to get at the truth and his step was regarded here as a decisive one—a move ranking with the most important in recent months in European politics. Nothing has been announced officially, but it was understood that behind France's frank question was an implied threat to abandon the Franco-Polish mutual assistance alliance, as it is called, unless France can be assured of its value to her.
Loyalists Defend
‘Railway to France
HENDAYE, FRENCH-SPANISH FRONTIER, May 10 (U. P.).- | Loyalist forces at the Catalonian- | French border attacked Rebel positions today and claimed to have frustrated a projected offensive | against the “life-line” railroad from France to Barcelona. The Loyalists took one strategic | hill northeast of Gesa, heavily forti- | fying it to protect main bases at Seo de Urgel and Puigcerda. The surprise attack, denied by the Rebels, was said to have put the insurgents to flight with heavy losses,
| Nazi Probe Resolution
' Reported in House
WASHINGTON, May 10 (U. P.) .— The House Rules Committee today reported favorably a resolution for a House Special Committee investigation of Nazi, Fascist, Communist and other “un-American activities.” The action followed a warning by Chairman Samuel Dickstein (D. N. Y.) of the House Immigration Committee that opening of the GermanAmerican Bund Camp Seigfried on Long Island next week with a parade of 100,000 will cause “bloody riot.” The resolution, introduced by Rep. Martin L. Dies (D, Tex.), would give the proposed seven-member committee power of subpena and authority to sit after Congress adjourns, re —————
DiXON IS CONCEDED ALABAMA ELECTION
EUFAULA, Ala, May 10 (U.P) — Chauncey M. Sparks today conceded the Democratic nomination for Alabama Governor — tantamount to election—to Frank Dixon, Birmingham attorney. Mr. Sparks, who trailed Mr. Dixon in last Tuesday's primary by more than 70,000 votes, announced he would not contest the June 14 runoff. Mr. Dixon lacked only a few
thousand votes of poiling the necessary majority.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Here Is the Traffic Record
County Deaths | Speeding .... 1% (To Date) | Reckless Driving .... © Running Preferential Street 19
City Deaths | (To Date) | 25
39 Running Red | | 4 Drunken 1| Driving ..
May 9 Accidents .... Injured .... Dead .. Arrests
9 51 Others ...
MEETINGS TOMORROW Kiwanis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon Lions Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington. noon. Garden Club of Indiana, convention, Marott Hotel, all day Indiana Medical Bureau to Aid Spanish Democracy, lecture, Hotel Severin, 8 p. m. Apartment Owners’ Association, luncheon. Hotel Washington. noon Indiana State Tvpothetae, dinner, Hotel Washington, 6:30 p. m. Beverage Credit Group, luncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon. Indiana Telephone Association, convention, Claypool Hotel, all dav. Indiana Association of Master Plumbers, state convention, Hotel Lincoln, all day. Young Men's Discussion Club, dinner, YM OC A, 6p m, Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Hotel Severin, noon : 12th District American Legion, luncheon. Board of Trade, noon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon.
MEETINGS TODAY
Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel, noon.
state
Indiana Canners’ Association,
Claypool Hotel, noon. Indiana ee state convention, Hotel Lincoln, all ay.
meeting,
Gardea Club eof Marott Hotel ali da Lawyers’ Association of Indianapolis, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Indianapolis Hunting and Fishing Club, meeting, Hotel Washington, 7:30 p. m, Marion County Democratic Women's Club, luncheon, Hote! Washington, noon. Knights of Columbus, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Alpha Tau Omega. luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Gyre Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms, noon. Mercator Club, juncheon, Columbia Club, oon, Universal
Club, Columbia lub, noon
University of Michigan Club, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Indianapolis Purchasing Agents’ Assoeiation, luncheon, Athenaeum, noon. Indianapolis Home Builders’ Association, dinner, Hoosier Athletic Club, 6:30 p. m al meeting
Indiana Frater Castie Hall 8 P. @m.
Indiana, convention, y.
luncheon,
Association of Master Plumb- |
MARRIAGE LICENSES (These lists are from official records in the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)
| Lee McClung, 23, of Edinburg: Zora Jane | Watkins, 23, of 4051 E. Washington St. | Shirley D. Powell, 19, of 216 S. Walcott St : Ruth F, Inman, 18, of 416 S. Harlan
Harry Trimble, 45, of 221'2 S. INlinois St.; Ethel Irene Waldrop, 22, of 221% S. { Illinois St. | Paul R. Atkinson, 42, of Lafayette; Ethel Jacoby, 33, of Indianapolis. Leo A. Sturm, 25, of 1924 E. Marviand St.; Dorotha Dotson 25, of 405 Bosart Ave. Chris Albert Krauth, 21, of 1123 W. New York St.; Alara Leona Galbraith, 18, of 1123 W. New York St. Samuel Hardy, 27, of 835 W. 26th St.; Dolly Wiils, 28, of 835 W. 26th St. Charles H. Scott, 51, of 1440 N. Alabama St.: Norina Hannah, 56, of 1440 bama St,
BIRTHS . Boys Robert, Georgetta Richey, at Coleman. Cleveland, Bessie Hiott, at Methodist, R. G., Elizabeth Rott, at Methodist. Louis, Della Harris, at 704 W. 24th. Albert, Etta Tichenor. at 415 Patterson. Jerry, Juanita Ricketts, at 2305 N. Capitol. rnest, at 431 Rankin. Clarence, Alice Lair, at 209 S. Detroit. James, Marie Ogden, at 1305 W. 33d. Howard, Olyna Maxey, at 1068 W. 25th. Loren, Leda Fletcher, at 825 College. Girls
Richard, Martha Garvin, at Coleman. Charles, Dorothy Jacebs, at 4929 E. 21st.
Helen Tyler,
DEATHS broncho-pneumonia. Ernest David White, 48, at Methodist, Oliver Pfaffenberger, 70, at 2003 W. VerViolet Beeman, 81, at 2112 N. Delaware. cerebral hemorrhage. ton, chronic myocarditis Julia Blair, 80. at City, fractured Ry . at Harlan, coronary thrombosis. Flora Elizabeth Youngblood, at Fannie O. Gossett, 78, at 1731 N. Capitol, coronary occlusion. 55, at 3540 N. Pennsylvania, carcinoma, Fredrick Armantrout, ancy C. Howard, 89 at 2147 N. HardCharles Edwards, 36, at City, diabetes mellitus. bama, broncho-pneumonia. : Milton Gellman, 15, at St. Vincent's, Albert Malhenny, 80, at 520 E. Vermont, chronic myocarditis. \ 42, at City, lobar p . Stella Ethel Bartlett, 50, at Methodist, diabetes mellitus
Charles Laue, 66, at 523 N. Tremont, duodenal ulcer mont, acute pulmonary edema Joseph Allen Smith, 80, at 6001 CarrollCharles Fredrick Stingle, 58, 40, Methodist Hospital, carcinoma. Nancy Lee Gardner 48. 6170 Cornell, coronary thrombosis. w ing, cerebral hemorrhage, ailey Marietta Sedam, 89, at 2429 N. Alageneral peritonitis Hupke, neumonia elia J. Hough, 83, at 5840 Washingcerebral hemorrhage,
» China’ Demands League
Aid Against Japanese Invasion,
’
GENEVA, May 10 (U, P.).—Great Britain and France, confronted by stout resistance to their plans to recognize Italy's conquest of Ethiopia, defended their policies before the League of Nations council today as China demanded aid against Japanese invasion. Soviet Russia and New Zealand's Labor Government led a fight against the recognition which is an essential feature of the British Italian friendship treaty and tae friendship treaty now being negotiated between France and Italy, V. K. Wellington Koo, the Chinese delegate, asserted proudly that the Chinese armies had “shattered the myth that the Japanese Army was invincible.” He said that despite her stand against the Japanese, she needs material urgently. He called upon the League to take concrete measures in her behalf as a fellow-member defending herself against a nonmember aggressor.
Halifax Defends Policy
Viscount Halifax, British Foreign Secretary, in his maiden speech before the Council at & public meeting today, delended his country’s shift in the Ethiopian policy and said
that the British-Italian treaty was a contribution to the peace not only of Europe, but of the whole world. Georges Bonnet, French Foreign Minister, approved the British-Ital-ian treaty and said his Government also had undertaken negotiations with Italy, Lord Halifax announced that the Balkan Entente (Rumania, Turkey, Jugoslavia and Greece) and Belgium had approved the treaty and added that he was very much gratified by Roosevelt's statement that the treaty was welcomed as evidence of the value of international agreement by negotiation. Maxim Litvinov, Russian Foreign Minister, said that while he welcomed any agreement which might consolidate peace, his country must reserve judgment until it saw how the paces affected the League. Some delegates charged before the session that M. Litvinov was trying deliberately to wreck the British-French plans for raporochement with Italy and a British-French-Italian-Ger-man peace pact that might push Russia out of any participation in Western European affairs. Britain and France hoped, before the session ended to get Council President Vilhelms Munters, Latvian Foreign Minister, to read publicly a statement of their views on Ethiopia and to use this declaration of their argument as a basis for recognizing Italvbs conquest of Ethiopia, but Russia and New Zealand were certain to oppose the plan.
China’ Recalls Resolution
Mr. Wellington Koo pointed out that the League had passed two resolutions asking League members to give China material help. But, he said, no League member had done anything with “one exception.” Apparently he meant Russia. Japan's invading forces, he said, were becoming more and more ruthless and even resorting to unprecedented violence against noncombatants.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
ee United States Weather Bureauo.t
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Fair tonight and tomorrow; not much change in temperature,
Sunrise ......4:31 | Sunset
TEMPERATURE -~May 10, 1937—
‘hava 6:48
BAROMETER Tam......299
Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... Total precipitation since Jan. 1 Excess since Jan. 1
MIDWEST WEATHER
Indiana—Fair tonight and tomorrow: slightly cooler tonight along northern boundary.
Nlinois—Fair tonight and tomorrow, except partly cloudy in extreme south portion; not much change in temperature
Lower Michigan—Generally fair tonight and tomorrow; continued cool; local light frost tonight,
Ohio—Generally fair and cool tonight and tomorrow, Kentucky—Generally fair and continued cool tonight and tomorrow.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 3 A. M.
Station, . Bar. Temp. Amarillo, Tex. 30.14 50 Bismarck, N. D. Boston .......casuune Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland penver ...........sss Clear Dodge City, Kas, ..... PtCldy Helena, Mont, Cloudy Jacksonville, Fla. ....Cloudy Kansas City, Mo. ....Clear Little Rock, Ark, ....Cloudy Los Angeles ........ +.Cloudy Miami, Fla, Cloudy Mpis. -St. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans . New York . Okla. City, Omaha, Neb, Pittsburgh
continued
N. Ala- |S
San Francisco St. Louis . Tampa, Fia, .. Cloudy Washington, D. C, ....PtCldy
Fail 3
Colleagues
Magazine.
stir because it is unheard of that members of the Supreme Court, the brethren, should contribute to publicly branding one of their number as an inferior legal workman. That isn’t cricket in any profession. In politics they call it smearing, I don’t know what you call it in a case like this, The Supreme Court doesn’t have a name for it. In the past the Court has gone to great pains to cover up for lazy or slowmoving justices. I have inquired directly of several members .of the Supreme Court as to the accuracy of the reflections upon Justice Back's ability and in no case has anyone dissented or offered one word in his defense, even privately,
Material Came From Within
From these conversations and from the internal evidence in the article itself, I have no doubt in my own mind that the essential material which reflects upon Justice Black came from within the Court itself, Some of the brethren seem entirely satisfied with the article, as one might infer from the mutual churckles over it between Justice McReynolds and Silas Strawn, former president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, as they sat together at dinner the other night. Not that Mr. McReynolds is suspected of having inspired the article—it contains a sideswipe at him for messing up the maritime law. The author of the article, who is a well-known and highly reputable Washington correspondent, states that he speaks “authoritatively” and proceeds to report that Mr. Black's conduct on the bench has caused his colleagues, both liberal and conservative justices, “acute discomfort and embarrassment” because of “a lack of legal knowledge and experience, deficiencies in back-
39 | ground and training that have led
which have colleagues on the
him into blunders shocked his highest court.”
Claim Opinions Rephrased
Inasmuch as most of the Supreme Court's cases concern intricate points of law, craftsmanship is of the utmost importance. “It is precisely here that Justice Black, in the opinion of his colleagues, has failed,” author Childs reports. “He has been unable to carry his share oi the heavy burden of work that falls on the court nor do his fellow-justices, or most of them, foresee that he will be able
Associate Justice Hugo L. Black ”
Reaction to Articl Idea They Inspired It
By RAYMOND CLAPPER Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, May 10.—There's a good deal of subrosa excitement around here about derogt™ory reflections which some justices of the Supreme Court are supposed to have made upon the judicial competency of their frequently dissenting colleague, Hugo Black. These aspersions upon Justice Black's ability as a craftsman in the law, frankly attributed to his Supreme Court associates and bearing strong evidence of authenticity, have just appeared in an article by Marquis Childs in Harper's
&
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
\
PAGE 38
to Defend Black
¥
E 3
NN
» 8
Gives
The article has created an inside ®
to carry it within any measurable time.” Furthermore-—and this obviously could not come from anyone except a Justice on the Court—“several opinions he (Black) has written have been rephrased by other members of the Court and they have been subsequently released with something less than satisfaction.” These are the statements which, when called to the attention of several members of the Court, failed to evoke the slightest expression of regret or a word of any kind in defense of Justice Black, although one member of the Court did dispute the accuracy of an incidental statement in the article which had nothing to do with Mr. Black. One member of the Court, denying he had any connection with the Black article, suggested that sometimes indiscreet remarks are dropped and given circulation. There are two kinds of indiscretions in Washington. Some are accidental. Some are accidental on purpose. When he was appointed, Mr. Justice Black thought he got a raw deal from the newspapers. Brother, that was just a mild initiation. Now you are being worked on by experts.
It’s Irish Poplin For City Police Summer Attire
The Safety Board today met as a committee of the whole on style. It weighed the summer appearance of the Indianapolis police force on the scales of fashion and found it substandard. “A fashion survey of several metropolitan areas shows our officers fall far short of being the bestdressed,” Chief Morrissey admonished the Board. “It's the shirt that’s outmoded,” he said. So the Board ruled: Gray flannel is out, and, from Memorial Day on, the accepted material for the shirts is Irish poplin, the approved color dark blue and the buttons must be well-shined brass. The collar tabs must be securely fashioned by two buttons and there must not be promiscuous pinning of the badge. The shirt front must be equipped with pin holes for the badge.
And the buttons must bear the
letter “P.”
“TF it’s true, what the doctors
say about worry shortening a man’s life—well, I've just added
ten years to mine!
“Worry had me down, I can tell you! Until a friend of mine showed me how a life insur-
ance policy would give my wife and baby at least some security, if the unexpected happened: Did I sign up? You bet * did— and what a load thet litted off
my mind!
“Then he told me how, by wadding to my life insurance, lie tle by little, I can build vp a plan that will pay me a regular monthly income in later years:
“Believe me—that’s just whas
I’ve been looking forl™
To Create 4
FBI Didn’t Reveal Its Needs.
(Continued from Page One)
Works Progress Administration, including $19,925,000 for administrative expenses; the second appropriates $965,000,000 for the Public Works Administration; the third carries $25,000,000 for Federal buildings.
250,000,000 to continue the work relief program until Feb. 1, 1939. Three general categories of relief jobs are provided for: Highways, $425,000,000; white coliar, $250,000,000, and miscellaneous, $575,000,000.
Woodrum Amendment Stays
Other appropriations in this title are: $75,000,000 to the WPA for the
National Youth Administration; $175,000,000 to the Secretary of Agriculture for the Farm Security Administration; $6,000,000 to the Interior Department for the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administra= tion; $19,925,000 for administrative expenses including $12,050,000 to various Treasury Department bureaus; $3,500,000 to the United States Unemployment Compensation Commission; $250,000 to the National Emergency Council; $250,000 to the National Resources Committee; $120,000 to the Prison Industries Reorganization Administration, and $1,250,000 to the Justice Department, The Woodrum amendment under which the WPA is required to allocate its money so as to make sure it will cover the entire period appropriated for, is continued and its principle extended to the NYA and the FSA. The public works title provides that no funds shall be allotted to any project that cannot be commenced prior to Jan. 1, 1939, or substantially accomplished prior to June 1, 1940, Not more than $100,000,000 may be allotted to Federal agencies for Federal construction projects, which must be projects already authorized by Congress except in the case of veterans’ hospitals and penal institutions. No part of this fund may be used for military purposes except Army housing or the storage of materials at existing establishments,
Senate and House Pass Buck on Shakeup
Times Special WASHINGTON, May 10.—“It's up to the Senate Committee,” says Chairman John J. Cochran (D.
Mo.) of the House Reorganization Committee, “It's up to the House Committee,” says Chairman Byrnes (D. S. C.) of the Senate Reorganization Committee, Thus the informal overtures of various New Dealers for a revival of President Roosevelt's reorganiza« tion program, which the House sidetracked a month ago, appear to be stalemated until such time as the President takes a hand, Rep. Cochran points out that the two reorganization bills passed by the House last year are already on the Senate calendar, ready for action, The Senate rejoinder is that it was the House which killed off the all-embracing bill passed by the Senate,
Ludlow Says FBI
Kept Needs Secret WASHINGTON, May 10 (U. P.).— Rep. Louis Ludlow (D, Ind.) said today reduction of the Federal Bureau of Investigation staff resulted
because the bureau had not made “its needs known.” “I want to correct an impression that seems to have gone the rounds of the country that the Appropriations Committee, of which I am a member, is in any way responsible for the plight in which the Federal Bureau of Investigation finds itself,” Rep. Ludlow whote to Michael F. Morrissey, Indianapolis Police Chief. “If any blame should be attached it should be to the Bureau of Investigation for not making its needs known as Congress has appropriated every dollar requested by the executive establishment. If the Bureau had asked for more money it no doubt would have been granted every dollar it needed. . . .” Chief Morrissey had telegraphed Rep. Ludlow to “do all in your power to block this curtailment. ’
“This moruing I added 10 years to my life!”
&
EMPIRE LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE C
Home Office: Empire Life Bldg. Millions
Paid to Benefi ciaries and Policyholders d MD [President
Indianapolis, Indiana w
2
| Included in the WPA title is §1,-
Debate Started on Bill
Million Jobs;
Pay Bill Loopholes Found
Ludlow Tells Morrissey | Rules Committee Foes of
Wage-Hour Measure Weaken,
By HERBERT LITTLE Times Special Writer
WASHINGTON, May 10.—Two loopholes in the Wage-Hour Bill | were being studied today by cham-
|
| pions of the fmeasure, which was | almost certain of being rushed to | Houses passage next week. One was tne prospective delay of many months in putting into effect the 25-cents-an-hour minimum wage and 44-hour maximum week which constitute the first step in the bill's provision for gradual achievement of 40-cent and 40-hour standards. The other was the disputable constitutionality of the Labor Department procedure provided in the measure, Both loopholes could be plugged, lawyers said, by elimination of the requirement that the Secretary of Labor designate—after hearings— those industries which affect interstate commerce and which therefore must comply with the bill's standards, Appeals Permitted
No such ruling by the Secretary of Labor can be effective until four months after the act is signed, and the notice and hearings required would likely extend this delay to six months or more. It might take
years to put all industries through this mill, judging from NRA's experience. Furthermore, these orders by the Secretary of Labor can be appealed to the U. S. Circuit Courts and thence to the Supreme Court, indicating much further delay if employees are granted stays of execution pending final rulings. The second loophole involves the constitutional “due process” requirement which Chief Justice Hughes explained two weeks ago in the Kansas City Stockyards case, wherein the Court required that a corporation “regulated by a Federal agency be given advance access to “findings of fact” before the agency issues its final order,
Early Vote Assured
The bandwagon procession in the House apparently will shove the bill through in its present form, however, without major amendments. Rules Committee action to bring the bill to a vote next week instead of
a week later seemed assured when two previously hostile committeemen said they were now willing to speed things up for the sake of early adjournment, At the Rules Committee meeting today no action was taken on the Wage-Hour Bill, but Chairman John J. Cochran said he would bring up the matter tomorrow if he had the votes to pass it. Two Republican members—Reps. Carl E. Mapes (R. Mich.) and Donald H. McLean (R. N, J.) yesterday announced they favored the resolution, but it appeared that in return for their votes Administration members would have to promise to make no effort to revivew the defeated Government Reorganization Bill or to jam through Congress in an adjournment rush other legislation opposed by the Republicans,
Committee Approves Lowell Mellett for NEC
WASHINGTON, May 10 (U. P.) — The Senate Finance Committee today reported favorably the nomination of Lowell Mellett, former Indianapolis and Wasihngton newspaperman, to be National Emergency Council director.
SUGGEST NEW HOSPITAL FOR INSANE FELONS
Segregation Plan Offered as Governor Calls for Probe of Salaries.
(Continued from Page One)
sald he was interested in seee ing that “full justice” was done in the Madison incident. The ate tendants are held on manslaughter charges.
“I didn't make up my mind this week,” the Governor said concern= ing the salary study, “I have been contemplating it for several months, We have had complaints from seve eral employees that salaries are too low and the matter has been called to our attention by other groups.” Salaries range from $32.50 to a maximum of $50 a month and maintenance estimated at about $25,
Up to Legislature
The Governor said the results of the survey will be presented to the next Legislature and that the Lege islature will decide whether the salary appropriation should be ine creased. While C. O. Fields, State Welfare Department chief inspector, investi« gated the Madison incident, Everett Devault, 47, of Loogootee, the pa= tient who died after the scuffle, was buried at Loogootee afjer serve ices at St. John's Catholic Church there. The four suspended attendants held on manslaughter charges were Oscar Hook, 49, of Vernon; Byron 31, of Marengo, and Elza Demaree. Craig, 28, of Madison; Everett Zehr, Mr. Gottschalk said that statee ments of all participants and Ine spector Fields’ findings would be available to Jefferson County officials, but would not be made public “in the interests of impartial justice.” “I am interested in seeing that full justice is done, and wish it une derstood that it is a strict regulation of every State hospital that ate tendants shall not strike, abuse qQg use undue force in restraining any patient.” Dr. Anna Goss, Jefferson County Deputy Coroner, held a preliminary hearing yesterday. She said that the patient's chest was crushed, 10 ribs broken and both lungs punce tured, Dr. Guy Hamilton, hospital med ical staff member, testified that Mr, Devault was unusually large and that it probably would require four men to handle him when he became unruly. Hook said that he had been have ing trouble with the patient for about a year, He said that when na asked Mr. Devault to hurry, the latter became angry, struck at him and that he was unable to handle him, He said that Demaree and a Ne~ gro patient, John Coleman, came to his aid and they succeeded in getting Mr, Devault into the hospital and up to the landing between the first and second floors. The attendant said that the pa tient kicked Demaree downstairs and that Zehr and wardmen appeared and succeeded in getting him to go upstairs. Hook testified that the fight started after he ree turned to his detail. Charles E. Anson today was named assistant superintendent of the Indiana Reformatory at Pendleton, replacing Alfred Dowd, who last Saturday was appointed warden of Michigan City Prison. Announcement was made by Mr, Gottschalk. Mr. Anson has been a member of the Reformatory staff since 1917, Luster T. Schug, former B3rne
bank cashier, is to fill his position,
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