Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1938 — Page 4
——————— a —_—— a
INI ep tet Ep
PAGE 4
Hughes on Perilous | Hop From Yakutsk ¢ To Alaskan Town
— 5 5 4 4 A FR Cd Fairbanks Eager to Greet FLIER IS DARING 3 Record Breakers on | >
Refueling Stop.
(Continued from Page One)
Minneapolis in the event he decides to land at any of those places. In New York preparations were already being made to receive the fliers tomorrow or early Friday. Extra police details have been assigned to handle what is expected to be the greatest crowd in history at Floyd Bennett Airport
Because of the proximity to the]
WITH SPENDING, FRIEND REVEALS
Spends $34 for 13-Block Ride in Taxicab, Then Gives Tip.
Arctic Circle of the region in which |
Mr. Hughes is flying today, fog is
frequent and sudden, violent squalls |
are likely. Another hazard is the danger of ice forming on the wings.
Luck in Weather
Mr. Hughes timed the start of his world flight, however, with the occurrence what meteorologists said was an “exceptional break” in weather conditions over the subArctic, and it appeared probable that he would encounter as good
of
weather as the area ever affords. |
Mr. Hughes planned to fly up to 10,000 feet for about 1500 miles of the middle part of the distance to
At the higher levels, however, the ice danger is greater. By refueling in two hours here
the fliers should be able to get away |
on the New York leg by while the light is still good.
8 p.
Perhaps the busiest man aboard | the crowded plane is Mr. Stoddart. |
In his 9:31 a. m. message he said he was about to take an hour’s nap, the first time since the takeoff last Sunday night that he had announced an interval of sleep Mr. Hughes was believed doing virtually all of the piloting, helped during smooth stretches by a Sperry gyropilot, an automatic device capable of holding the plane in flight under normal conditions. | To Mr. Connor and Mr. Thurlow fell the work of navigation, in| which they were aided by radio|
bearings obtained by Mr. Stoddart. |
Ed Lund, engineer-mechanic, is the fifth member of the crew.
More Than 200 M. P. H.
They made the 2158 miles from Omsk to Yakutsk in 10 hours and 31 minutes at a speed of 205.2 miles | an hour, Russian administrative officials | and airplane experts were waiting | for the fliers when they arrived at Little Yakutsk, capital of the Yakutsk Republic at 3:08 a. m. (In- | dianapolis Time), after a flight down the broad Lena River valley | from the point at which they had left the Trans-Siberian Railroad. Yakutsk lies two miles from the Lena, in an ancient valley along] which no American plane ever had flown before The river, which broadens there to a width of from | nine to 11 miles, had only recently been freed of its ice; the ground had | just thawed to leave roads sticky with mud News of the arrival was an-| nounced at Moscow in a Tass Agency message from Yakutsk “13 July eight mn utes past noon Moscow time Hughes landed Yakutsk.” Left Charted Courses
The news had been awaited eagerlv, for the American fliers had left charted courses and were flying in| dangerous, sub-Arctic country, in which emergency landings would bave been possible at put few places. The American aviators left Omsk | at 4:37 p. m. Tuesday for the 2158- | mile to Yakutsk Russian meteorologists, {isolated for months in the vast wilderness of Northeastern Siberia, were send- | ing in weather reports to central stations from which they were col- | lated and flashed to Hughes and his companions as the big two-| motored plane sped eastward. As the plane, glinting in the sun, passed over the rude mud-hut set~ | tlements and the occasional clean | brick-built towns, people who had! seen only the occasional inquisitiva | Arctic planes of the Russian Far | North Administration, looked upward as they heard the drone of | its motors | For hundreds and hundreds of miles the country was one of gigantic taiga or Siberian forests Rocky mountains, great bogs, an absence of flying fields, over the | last part of the stretch made the flight a hazardous one | The 1437 mile flight from Moscow | to Omsk, third stage of the flight, | was made in seven hours 29 minutes | and the average flying speed to that | point had been 211.49 miles an hour. !
RADIO SURVEY FOR LAKE SHIPS PLANNED
CLEVELAND, July 13 (U Headquarters have been established here for a survey of all vessels which ply the Great Lakes with the! aim of establishing uniform radio | requirements as a safety measure. The survey will be directed by | Col. Thad Brown, Federal com- | munications commissioner. Agitation for compulsory safety measures aboardship was started after an investigation into the disaster of the Morro Castle. Col. Brown, aided by an enpgineer and a staff of four or five will conduct experiments into the practicability of telegraphy, radio and telephone aboardship. Great Lakes boats now are controiled by the ship act of 1912. Bv this act only 12 boats out of 900 that ply the lakes are compelled to carry radios.
i i
eight
P).—|
HOOSIER DIES IN EAST BOLIVAR, N. Y, July 13 (U. P). —A verdict of death due to natural causes was returned today in the case of Perry L. Sisson, 72, former Mayor of Valparaiso, Ind. Mr. Sisson, who came here to attend the annual Bolivar Old Home Week festivities, was found dead in his! room at the Friendship Hotel vesterday. :
MILLER-WOHL'S
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MILLER-WOHL CO.
45 E. Washingt. St.
4 | where else. avoid fog and any chance storms. |
m. |
to be | : iii | ness said, “You're crazy.
| Hughes must be the craziest of all | { the crazy Americans.”
| and quarters.
{ wait for him.
| the office, his cab gone.
| (Continued from Page One) ling to be satisfied with ordinary methods of exploiting it. He put it on in two Times Square theaters in | New York at the same time—the old | Criterion and the Gaitv—and he put up signs that were the talk of the entertainment world. He went to London to see about showing his picture there. The day after he came back, he told me to | leave for London in two days, “I want the London Pavilion in Picadilly Circus,” he told me, “and I won't show ‘Hell's Angels’ anyCharles SO we can get offer him $65,000 rent. Do the thing
| needs place. | four
money You months’
| than you have to. I went over, rented the pavilion with a $65,000 advance payment in full,
the British Empire before or since. The bus companies complained it linded their drivers.
| over big. Everybody in the theatrical busi- |
This man
But Howard Hughes said, “Well I expect to lose money in London. but I'll make the whole Empire ‘Hell's-Angel’-conscious.” He made $49950 in London—and complained because it wasn’t an even $50,000. pire sales
were velvet.
You Stay Here in hunthousands and millions aid I think in dimes He took a taxi to his company’s headquarters in York and told the cabbie to He left his bags and his golf clubs—he's an enthusiastic golfer and carries 30 clubs at a time—in the taxi.
Howard Hughes thinks dreds
where
of
you
movie New
A minor executive, eager to save | the | baggage into |
Mr. Hughes money, off driver and took the the office. An hour later, ready tw go, Hughes discovered his bags in He went into a rage and finally hired another cab. Still fuming, he drove to the Gaiety, one block zway. “You stay here till I come back.” he told the driver, “whether it's this
paid
| afternoon or two weeks from now.
And if anybody tries to take my stuff out, call a cop.” He went into the theater to look
| at decorations, decided he'd like to |
see the picture runoff —that was a
| two-hour job—when he came out.
was driven to a hotel a dozen blocks away. The cab fare was $34 and something, and the cabby got a big tip. Movies to Planes
That's how his big business in
Texas—the source of those innum- | | erable golden dolltars—is run
Hughes picked himself a wise father, old Howard Hughes, who invented the oil-well drilling machinery that is still used everywhere. He inherited his father's Other people run it for him. His interest in fiving stemmed from the making of “Hell's Angels.” He had on his payroll every important stunt flyer in the United
States, and every day he went up in | a plane to watch the air fight scenes |
being shot. When his Midas touch failed to save him from a $1,400.000 loss as a theater-owner and a $750.000 loss in an early color-movie scheme. he
| quit the movie business as suddenly
and as casually as I might decide to have a beer today instead of an ale. From then on he was a rabid fiver, designing and flving his own racers to records that manage to stand for years,
But it went |
British |
Mr. |
business. |
|
£5
B. Cochran | the | for |
right, but don't lose any more money
and ordered a $25,000 electric | | sign such as never has been seen in|
The rest of the Em- |
ol
imes-Acme Photo.
T H. D. Boutall, 63, and his bride, Ann May, 16, emerge from the St. John's Episcopal Church at Athol, Mass, after their wedding. than 2500 persons fought to view the ceremony. hinted they might spend their honeymoon in New York City if they | “could find someone to take care of chickens” on Mr. Boutall's farm.
More Mr. and Mrs. Boutall
Civic Leaders Flay Secret Sessions of City’s Boards
(Continued from Page One)
no way of learning what is said by Board members.” Sessions are announced by the Boards. But the discussions which precede the decisions is carried on behind closed doors. This has been true particularly of the Works Board in recent weeks, and of the Park Board during discussion of the 10 cent pool fee On that occasion, Jackiel Joseph, Park Board president, went into a closed conference with Mayor Boetcher in the Mayor's office. Meanwhile, other Board members and a delegation of citizens who planned to protest the fee system waited for half an hour in the Park | Department offices.
Newspapermen Banned
Mr. Joseph walked into the Park
Board room, and said: “If there are | sonstruction project newspapermen in here, they'll | taken in the Pittsburgh district—is
any | have to get out.” | Indianapolis papers left, the door was closed. | For nearly another half hour, the | citizens’ delegation waited. It was | headed by Mr. Stoneburner, E. 21st St. Civic League public improvements committee chairman, | who presented to the Board a petition demanding abolition of the 10cent fee.. His petition was denied. Mr. | Stoneburner commented: “The public should be kept posted on what these Boards are doing. It cannot be if Board meetings are closed.” Mavor Boetcher usually attends the closed meetings, advising the | Boards on questions of policy. He sometimes suggests that newspapermen be excluded from the Boards’ | deliberations. Mr. Flack declared: “The American people depend { upon legitimate newspapers for en- | lightenment of the character and | conduct of public officials, their | duties and actions. Honest, efficient and broad-minded officeholders and { public employees should welcome | newspapermen to their meetings so | that the reporters can get the rea- | soning pro and con on anv matter {and so inform the taxpayers and voters. “President
Roosevelt indorses
(Game Details, Page Eight)
NEW YORK, July 13 (U. P) —A baseball fan who couldn't take it
{ killed one man and wounded an- { other early today.
Their offense: They had made remarks reflecting on the professional integrity of certain members of the Brooklyn Dodgers of the National League. The tragedy occurred in a Brooklyn bar room. The slayer was Rob-
{ ert Joyce, 33, a Postoffice clerk. The
victims were: Frank Harvey Krug, a clerk in one of the state offices
{at Albany, N. Y, and William J. | Diamond,
the bartender, who was wounded critically and probably will die. “I must have Joyce told police. The trouble started yesterday's game in
gone haywire,”
soon after which the
Dodgers won a long-sought victory |
from the New York Giants, their arch foes. The score was 13-5. Afrer the game, Joyce went to the barroom to chortle. He was unable to convert any of the fans to the Dodgers cause.
By 11 o'clock everybody was ribbing him, so he arose from his stool, announced that he was “going out and get two guns and shoot up the | place,” and walked out. { Two hours later, Joyce returned. | A dozen men were in the place as | he stepped to the bar and shot Mr. | Diamond, Several men pounced upon him { and bore him to the floor. A waiter grabbed the gun and ran into the | street, yelling for police. Joyce, | meanwhile, wiggled free, arose and took another revolver from his pock- | et. He looked about for his antag- | onist and selected Krug and Rob{ert Egan, a Federal clerk, from | among them. | He forced these two into a back | room. Egan darted into a telephone | booth. Krug was trying to crowd in | with him, when Joyce began firing again. Two bullets pierced Krug's heart, Joyce turned then and started toward the street but ran into the arms of three policemen. Booked for murder, he said, “I was only fooling when I shot them.”
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| local
| what
|
more freedom of the press. Surely officeholders and employees would not attempt to change that thought and practice.” Some City Council deliberations are carried on in a caucus session which interrupts the regular Council meetings. Councilmen decide to do on questions before them at the caucus session, then reappear on the council floor and perfunctorily go through the formal action on the questions.
$60,000,000 MILL
NEARLY FINISHED
CLAIRTON, Pa. July 13 (U. P.). —Completion of the huge Irvin works of the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation—the largest private ever under-
expected sometime next August. Work on the $60,000,000 plant bethe first earth was spaded by William A. Irvin, vice chairman of the United States Steel Corp., parent concern of Carnegie-Iliinois. When placed in full operation, the Irvin works will have an annual capacity of 600,000 gross tons of finished steel in sheet and tin plate sizes. Semifinishéd steel will be drawn from a new mill being erected at Carnegie-Illinois’ Edgar Thomson works in Braddock. Completion of the new facilities at Braddock is also expected in August.
NEW ELKS HEAD HITS
CONTROL OF BUSINESS
| C
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, July 13 (U. P.).—Dr. Edward J. McCormick, of Toledo, O., was elected grand exalted ruler of the Elks late yesterday, and in a speech of acceptance opposed “government control and interference in public utilities, railroads, medicine or any other business or profession.” “Medicine is the best example of the mistaken idea that any profession can be regimented by politicians,” McCormick told delegates to the 74th national convention. He succeeds Maj. Charles S. Hart, of New York.
MUNCIE HORSE SHOW TO BE HELD JULY 31
Times Special MUNCIE, July being made today for the seventh annual Muncie Fair Horse Show at the Muncie Fair Grounds Sunday, July 31.
The competition is to include 14 |
classes. Eleven are to be open while
the three classes for horsemanship
are to be limited to amateurs.
LAWN CHAIR TAKES ROOT TOMBALL, Tex. July 13 (U. P)). —Fritz Theis, farmer living miles south of here, astonishes his friends by exhibiting a 2-year-old
turkey gobbler which hatches eges. But his neighbor, Park Mooney, has
a painted lawn chair which has taken roots and sprouted foliage while setting in his yard.
13.—Plans were
two
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | Need Caretaker for Chickens
COURT FORBIDS VOTE QUIZ BY JUDGE BAKER
Indiana Supreme Tribunal Makes Its Prohibiting Writ Permanent. (Continued from Page One)
and who shall not be prosecuted. It he fails to exercise his official dis-
| cretion honestly and impartially the
| remedy is by impeachment.
and courts may not substitute their discretion for that of prosecuting
| attorneys.
“Inquisitorial powers are vested in the office of the prosecutor and in grand juries and not in judges and courts. “It cannot be doubted that where it is established the prosecuting attorneyis an interested party or otherwise clearly implicated, the Court may appoint an attorney to represent the interests of the State. But this may not be done upon mere suspicion or rumor.” The State Tax Board has delayed action on a $15,000 appropriation, approved by Council and requested by Judge Baker to conduct the proposed investigation. Judge Baker already had appointer two special prosecutor, Harold J.
| Bachelder and Fae W. Patrick. The
Supreme Court's action also prohibits them from preceeding in the case.
Meanwhile, net gains for Al Fee- |
ney declared loser in the Democratic sheriff race, were increased to 2247 in the recount, leaving only eight more votes to be gained to overcome the 2255 lead given Charley Lutz by the Canvassing Board. The new recount total for Mr. Feeney for 231 precincts is 15,496,
compared with his original total of |
15,156. Mr. Lutz, recount total is 16,092, compared with his canvassing board total of 17,999. In the recount of Democratic mayoralty ballots, which is expected to be finished tomorrow, Sheriff Ray gained three votes in four precincts for a recount total of 20,259, compared with his original 20,180. Reginald Sullivan, the winner, has a recount total of 37,030, compared
with his canvassing board total of |
38,272.
BIG POWER PROJECT
PLANNED IN ILLINOIS
Jobs for 30,000 Expected If
Work Is Approved.
WASHINGTON, July 13 (U. P) — An official of the Agriculture Department division of land development outlined today plans for a huge electrical power project for southern Illinois designed to pro-
vide jobs for approximately 30,000 |
men. The plans were not officially confirmed. The official, who refused to per-
mit his name to be used, said the |
larger phases of ' the project still were subject to final approval, but that engineering reports on proposed dams had been submitted to the WPA which would provide man power for dam construction. Murphysboro, Ill, would be the key point in the project, it was said, As outlined here a dam system would provide large quantities of water necessary for actual production of electrical energy by steam power,
LETTER CARRIERS ELECT JASPER, July 13 (U. P.).—Garl Collins of Huntington today president of the Indiana Rural Letter Carriers’ Association. Other oflicers elected at the close of a three-day convention were Dewey arant, Birdseye, vice president; Ross Immel, New Paris, secretary and treasurer: uy L. Lonigan,
Milltown, executive committee chair-
man, and C. J. Grubb of Ft. Wayne end C. J. Rushton of Danville, committee members.
JANITOR TAKES MIS-STEP NORRISTOWN, Pa. July 13 (U. P.).—The janitor of the Montgom-
ery Trust Co. looked up from his |
nightly sweeping—into the guns of a corps of policemen, He had accidentally alarm.
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President
Roosevelt Special In Utah.
(Continued from Page One)
request, she President to be a candidate to succeed himself in 1940. “We do now solemnly pledge our | united support to the President of | the United States, should be accede | to our request.”
Corrects Newspaper
[ The President referred ously to a newspaper statement {that this was the first visit by a tresident to Pueblo in 20 years. He ecalled that he was in Pueblo in '936—and well he might recall it. For his campaign sweep through
Jolorado in '36 was one of his most
| Springs that there occurred one do| Tho as Reno nated;
‘Murray Is Beaten
demonstra- |
[riumphant. It was in Colorado
| he most picturesque | fons of gratitude—a field of baners about the rear end of the train hanking the President for various {WPA and PWA projects. This same spirit of gratitude has | been manifest on the current tour {In the smiling throngs wHich have gathered about the train from Kentucky on—just plain folks Roosevelt voters whe marched to | he polls in droves in 1936. Even n isolated mountain regions they cegne for miles just to wave and | watch the train go by. | The President seems as popula | as ever in the Southwest and Wese, |an impression that is supported by | cross-section polls which larger support for him in egions on all counts and issues than { elsewhere.
Effect Is Considered Some who believe he is seeking a third term suggest that the route was carefully chosen for the best public effect, not only for his immediate purpose of stirring up the voters to elect New Dealers to Con- | gress, but also to suggest a popular support for his personal 1840 purposes. What has happened on this trip would be heady wine for almost any
was |
stepped on the burglar |
man. If the President went out deliberatelv to find the answer to the uestion “How'm I doing?” he would be pleased. Whether or not he is pondering a third term, thoughts of 1940 certainly are uppermost on this trip. The President is determined to build a New Deal organization for the 1940 convention. In Kentucky, for instance, aside from his .desire to have a New Deal leader in the Senate for the next two years, his emphatic demand for the re-election of Senator Barkley involved also control of
convention, which he would not get if Governor Chandler should unseat Mr. Barkley. Similarly, his pat on the back for Senator Caraway in Arkansas had the same motive, for her defeat would remove a New Dealer and weaken the chances of controlling Arkansas’ delegation in '40,
Watches Garner
In Oklahoma the President went out of his way to crack down on William H. Murray in an effort to prevent his election as Governor, with the control that would give Alfalfa Bill over Oklahoma's 1940 delegation. Departing from his prepared speech to dub Bill Murray a “Republican,” the President also thus paid back an old score for the Oklahoman's support of Alf M. Landon in ’36. The biggest game of all was in Texas, in the person of Vice Presi-
Ignores
Third-Term Plea; Thomas Is Winner
Senator McCarran Boards |
humor- |
show | those |
Kentucky's delegation to the 1040 |
to prevent the nomination of any Roosevelt New Dealer in 1940. Mr. Garner's range of activity is broader than his own spacious Texas. He is reported seeking to line up delegates from nearby states— Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, Utah. Mr. Roosevelt's appearance in the Southwest has been directed at the Vice President's pretensions in that whole region. In staying aloof from the Democratic Senatorial primary in Colorado, the President also was looking toward 40. Some New Dealers wanted him to take a poke at Senator Adams, who has not been a 100 per cent New Dealer, and to give Judge Hilliard a hand. But all reports indicate that Senator Adams will win, and the President chose not to stick his neck out.
OKLAHOMA CITY, July 13 (U. P.).—Oklahoma Democrats renominated Senator Thomas, President Roosevelt's “old friend,” by a comfortable margin, results of Tuesday's primary showed today. This apparent New Deal preference among Oklahomans was sweeping former Governor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Murray, seeking nomination for Governor, into the political discard. Although a Democrat, Mr. Murray spoke out bitterly against the national Administration. He trailed two vigorous New
Dealers, Leon C. Phillips, a small- |
town lawyer, and W. S. Key, a former state WPA administrator.
Senator Thomas, a liberal New Deal stalwart, said that he was gratified that the people wanted to retain a man in Congress who would fight for President Roosevelt. Senator Thomas gained the lead early during the tabulations and stayed there. U.S. Rep. Gomer Smith, whom Thomas accused of “betraying the President by voting against the farm bill and the reorganization bill, was second. Governor Marland, Oklahoma's proNew Deal Governor, was third, Returns from 2346 precincts out of the state's 3522 gave for Senator: Thomas, 161,883, Smith, 117,478. Marland, 65,315.
Returns from 2567 precincts out of |
the state's 3522 gave for Governor: Phillips, 130,133, Key, 120,367. Murray, 65,315,
Jack Walton, a former Governor, | who was removed by impeachment, | had 27804 votes, and Ira Finley, a |
labor leader, had 20,563. Most of the famous name an eccentric candidates
in the balloting. Will Rogers was
renominated as Democratic candi- |
J
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1938
date for Congressman-at-large, but he insisted that he won on his record, not on his name. Josh Lee, not the Senator, was making a strong bid for the president of the State Agriculture Board. Other colorful campaigners, including Mae West and Mrs. Ruth Johnson, the thought-wave campaigner, were beaten soundly. In the Republican primary the candidates endorsed by the Republican State Convention appeared certain of winning the nominations for Governor and Senator. Ross Rizley was the State Convention's candidate for Governor, and Harry Glasser was the group's candidate for Senator. Since Oklahoma normally is Democratic, it was the Democratic primary that was watched more closely. The Oklahoma election was the first after Mr. Roosevelt started his transcontinental tour. The President stopped in Oklahoma City last Saturday and, in a brief speech, enumerated some of the accomplisliments of Senator Thomas in Washington. He referred to him as “my old friend.”
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‘McCarran Boards
| President's Train
OGDEN, Utah, July 13 (U. P.).—~ Senator McCarran (D. Nev.), a leader in the Congressional revolt against President Roosevelt's court reform program, boarded the Chief
Executive's special train here today. He said that he intended to impress upon Mr. Roosevelt “vital problems that face the West.” The silver-haired junior Senator from Nevada, who faces a hot primary battle for renomination, said that “the President is now in the West and he should be brought face to face with problems which are confronting us.” Senator McCarran planned to rec= { ommend to the President the re- { monitization of silver and ask that the Administration put aside contemplated reductions of tariff rates on lead, zinc and copper. By boarding the train at Ogden, Senator McCarran gained several hours over his prmcipal opponent | for the Democratic Senatorial nomination, Albert Hilliard, who will not meet Mr. Roosevelt until the special arrives at Carlin, Nev. about 200 miles west of here,
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