Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1938 — Page 2
AIR'S VISITORS
AWAIT JUDGING
OF LIVESTOCK
Record Labor Day Throng of |
116,000 Expected; Harness Racing to Start.
(Continued from Page One)
classes of competition. Among the outstanding winners were the champlons in the 4-H pig feeding and 4-H steer feeding classes. To head the steer kingdom in Indiana, Judge W. J. Kennedy of St. Joseph, Mo., selected a large, deepsided junior yearling Angus calf, named “Shine” and owned by George Howey, West Point, Tippe- * canoe County. George is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Howey. The grand champion steer of all breeds weighed 1170 pounds. George had fed his animal shelled corn. oats, barley, clover and timothy hay, and a commercial protein supplement. The steer recently was awarded grand champion honors at the Tippecanoe County 4-H Fair. Following are the champions of the various breeds of beef cattle ie the 4-H classes: Herefords—Champion, Wayne DeHaven, Logansport, with a summer yearling - Western steer; reserve champion, Philip Combs, Carlisle, with a junior yearling Western steer. Shorthorn — Champion, Allen Creek, Liberty, with a summer yearling; reserve champion, Gerald Clodfelter, Greencastle, with a. junior yearling. Aberdeen Angus — Champion, George Howey’s steer which later was declared the grand champion. The entry of Gene Wakeland, Ft. Wayne, was designated reserve champion. Three steers sired by the same bull; first, O. E. Jones, Whitley | County, the steers being owned by Gene Wakeland, Ft. Wayne, and Chris Doenges, South Whitley.
County Group Awards
Of the county groups of five steers, Hamilton County topped the class with five white Shorthorn ' steers shown by Frank, Herman and Konrad Purdy, all of Noblesville, and Alice and George Nickel, Car‘mel. Second and third places were
awarded to Decatur County. There were 358 steers shown in all 4-H classes under the direction of - J. C. Ralston, member of the 4-H Club staff at Purdue University. There were 78 Shorthorns, 165 Herefords, and 115 Angus. The largest class was the one of summer yearling of the Hereford breed in which 99 were shown. Awards in the State Fair 4-H poultry classes were divided among a number of widely separated counties with several of the placings going to farm boys and girls in Vigo County. . _ W.R. Amick, 4-H Club staff member of Purdue University, in charge of the poultry 4-H show, said that 68 entries, representing several hundred fine quality chickens were shown. Awards for Pouliry
Following are the first and second placings of the seven varieties of club chickens: Barred Plymouth Rocks—Herbert Young, Terre Haute, first; Noelgene Crosby, Flatrock, second. White Plymouth Rocks — Leslie Rawles, Lafayette, first; James Gardner, Indianapolis, second. Buff Plymouth Rocks—Blaine Randolph, Clinton, first; Frederick Rosemeyer, Indianapolis, second. Rhode Island Red—John Schuyln, _ Lapel, first; Owen Dunlap, Greensfork, second. White Wyandottes—Ralph Smyth, Morgantown, first; James Thomas, Reeleville, second. Buff Orpington—Cyril Cole, Terre Haute, first; David Johnston, Lafayette, second. White Leghorns—Kenneth Wintemheimer, Evansville, first; Ellis - Rogers, Bloomington, second.
TESTIMONY: AGAINST HINES NEARING END
Defense Counsel Expects to Take Two Weeks.
NEW YORK, Sept. § (U. P)— District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey expects to rest his case this week against James E. Hines, most powerful individual district leader of
Tammany Hall, accused of using political influence to permit the numbers lottery racket to flourish under the direction of gang leader Dutch Schultz. . Only 10 or 11 of the 50 witnesses Mr, Dewey had ready at the start of the’ trial four weeks ago remain to be called and it was believed their testimony would consume not more than two or three days. Defense Counsel Lloyd Paul Stryker expected to take two weeks for the Presentation of his case. Mrs. Rose Wendroff, sister and former secretary of J. Richard (Dixie) Davis, will undergo additional cross-examination tomorrow on testimony in which she said she delivered sums of money to Hines and gave him a check for $500 in - 1934, Mr. Dewey declined to comment on reports the check had been traced to a boo er who some-
latter received an hongrary degree o
Catholic Charity
Patrick Cardinal Hayes sat with President Roosevelt when the
from Catnolic University in 1933.
Leader, 70,
Dies in Sleep After Prayer
(Continued from Page ( One)
this afternoon. A police escort accompanied them. The body will lie in state in the Cardinal’s residence until tomorrow afternoon. The unit will be transferred to St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The public will be admitted to the residence as well as to the cathedral and it was expected that the scenes following the death of His Eminence Cardinal Farley — almost 20 years ago to the day—would be duplicated. More than 100,000 persons stood along the streets with bared heads when Cardinal Farley: was borne back from his summer home at Mamaroneck, N. Y., Sept. 10, 1918.
‘Three Cardinals May Attend
A number of ceremonials rich in the pageantry of the church will take place during the mourning period, including vespers for the dead tomorrow night by a general choir of priests of the metropolitan area. On Thursday the Right Rev. Michael J. Lavelle, 82-year-old vicar-general of the Archdiocese and rector of St. Patrick’s, will*preach at a solemn requiem mass for’ Cardinal Hayes. He performed the same office for Cardinal Farley. Only about 10,000 persons will be
«| able to attend the final funeral serv-
ice, the solemn pontifical mass at 8:30 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) Friday. But among them will be the highest Catholic figures in the nation, probably including the three remaining American cardinals — Cardinal O’Connell, Archbishop of Boston; Cardinal Mundelein, Archbishop of Chicago, and Cardinal Dougherty, Archbishop of Philadelphia. In addition, high national, state and city personages and Army and Navy officers will be present. Cardinal Hayes had been ill since June, 1932, when he fell unconscious while attending the 31st International Eucharistic Congress in Dublin from an attack of phlebitis. Since then he had been under the constant eye of his personal phyisician, but the gravity of his condition was not made known. So few of his flock knew of the serious nature of his ailment that a startled gasp ran through the congregation in St.
‘Patrick’s yesterday when his death
was made known. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. John J. Casey, private secretary to the Cardinal, found him dead when he went to ascertain why the prelate had not come down to his private chapel for his usual mass at 6:30 (Indianapolis Time.) He found Cardinal Hayes with his hands clasped and a benign smile on his face, giving rise to the belief he had died while at his nightly hour-long prayers about 6:30 p. m. Saturday. Still burning was the light which the Prelate was accustomed to turn down after he had finished his prayers. Blood Clot Given as Cause Cardinal Hayes had been at St. Joseph’s for his customary ‘two and a half months vacation and was preparing to return to New York City.next Thursday to celebrate the 46th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. .He would have been 71 years old Nov. 20 and next March 24 would have observed the 15th anniversary of his -elevation to the rank of cardinal. The cause of death ‘was listed as coronary thrombosis, a blood clot, affecting the heart. on Aug. 10, 1937, the Cardinal was stricken with a recurrence of the phlebitis, a vein inflammation, at St. Joseph’s and was rushed to New York. At that time indigestion was given as the Season. He spent six weeks recuperating.
times handled wag Jor Hines.
Cardinal Hayes presided over a
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diocese comprising 4717 square miles and including the counties of Manhattan and the Bronx and Richmond in New York City and Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster and Westchester in New York State. The Catholic population of the diocese is estimated at one million and it includes 372 churches, 1650 priests, 90,787 students of parish schools, one university, nine colleges, 86 high schools and 266 elementary schools. Fatigued by Speeches Cardinal Hayes retired to St. Joseph’s noticeably fatigued from attendance and speeches at a series of commencement exercises at Catholic colleges in his jurisdicticn. As
late as Aug. 15 he presided at all-.
day ceremonies on the grounds of St. Joseph in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the religious profession of the Rev, Mother Polycarpa, the superior of the Dominican Nuns who manages the sanatorium and school. “I was born very humble,” Cardinal Hayes used to say. The tenement in which his birth took place stood in a shoddy square of the Lower East Side ir a district which oddly enough has given the city many of its great political and church figures. Alfred E. Smith lived nearby and a lively lad named George Mundelein, now the Archbishop of Chicago, was a boyhood friend. - He credited his Aunt Ellen with his progress through the priesthood, for his mother died when he was 4 and his aunt perceived in him what she termed “the callin’” He went to a neighborhood church school where he made friends with George Mundelein and then to De La Salle Institute, where an effective left hook discouraged his schoolmates from calling him “The Little Pope.” He later received an A. B. degree from Manhattan College and an M. A. degree from the same institution four years later, 1892. From there he went to Catholic University in Washington where he received a degree of Bachelor of Sacred Theology in 1894. He had been ordained at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Troy, N. Y, in 1892, and after his studies at Catholic University he was assigned to St. Gabriel’s Church here. That was the turning point of his life, for the pastor of St. Gabriel’s was the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John Farley, later cardinzl, and his interest in the young privst greatly contributed to Cardinal Hayes’ rise. Archbishop Farley appointed Cardinal Hayes his secretary and later made him chancellor of the Archdiocese. In 1914, at the request of Archbishop Farley, the pope elevated Cardinal Hayes to the position of auxiliary bishop of the Metropolitan See. During the war he was bishop ortmaty of the Army and Navy.
Made Cardinal in 1924
His World: War religious and charitable work won him international acclaim. -He was preparing to visit the battlefields in France when Cardinal Farley died and he abandoned the trip to take over government of the archdiocese, His Holiness Pope Benedict appointed him archbishop and one of his first acts was to form the Catholic Charities, with himself at the head. He officially was confirmed a cardinal on March 27, 1924, before
‘the side altar of St. Peter's in Rome
by His Holiness Pope Pius XI. In the same ceremony, his boyhood friend and companion, George Mundelein, also received the red cap. Cardinal Hayes spent half of his life fighting birth control, communism, indecent shows and divorce. He openly prayed for the Victory of General Franco in Spain.
President Roosevelt, who met
Cardinal Hayes during the war, headed a glittering list of notables who expressed :
bishop Amleto CiSOSMAIL, srostelic delegate 5 the United States; Mayor ®. H. LaGuardia, Governor Lehman, retary of Labor Perkins and many others also Sleo extolled Cardinal Hayes’ virtues as man and churchman,
Sec- |
The 70-year-old “Cardinal of charity” is seen bestowing his blessing on Palm Sunday worshippers at St. Patrick's Cathedral services.
U.S. BOOK URGES SOIL RESEARCH
Department of Agriculture Proposes Remedies for Ailing Lands.
(Meeting of Chemists, Page 11)
By Science Services WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. — Uncle Sam, in the persons of Secretary Wallace and his fellow-scientists of the Department of Agriculture, look long and thoughtfully at the fields that raise America’s food and clothing in the new Yearbook of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, published today. The whole book con-
centrates on one subject: The soil and problems arising out of its
group of physicians in consultation. Erosion by wind and water, the invisible erosion that is fertility exhaustion, too large crops and too low prices, share-cropping, pauper tenancy, overload of debt—these and other ailments that have received much attention in public discussion are looked upon ‘as symptoms behind which they are trying to go, seeking fundamental causes that may be treated with basic remedies. The causes suggested are many, end most of them 'interlock—like concurrent pathological conditions in the human body. Our traditional land-tenure policy, has been an outgrowth of eighteenth century liberalism—Ilaissez faire on the land. As an extension of that principle,
farmer work his land any way he pleases, with the idea that if he does so badly or ignorantly he takes the consequences. The trouble, however, has been that resulting bankruptcy hits not only the farmer but the soil itself, and thus becomes a matter of public concern.
Economic Concern Important
Another contributing cause of sickness of the soil has had ifs focus in the pocketbook. Our systems of farm financing and land taxation have tended to bear more heavily just when they should have been lightened, so that the harassed owner and the still more harassed tenant have been pressed into mining the soil, and plowing up sodlands that they usually knew should have been ‘left unbroken, in order to meet fixed charges. These are only a few of the symptoms looked at in the new yearbook. But the Department re= searchers are concerned even more ‘with the. search for remedies. Characteristic of Secretary Wallace’s insistence upon the value of scientific research is the No. 1 position given to research and education in the list of things that need to be done. More facts must be
stare one in the face like a clayhill gully or a dust storm. Out there in the dark, beyond the horizon of things we know, may lie keys to difficulties that now baffle
Many Treatments Proposed But with facts discovered and told to the people through all educational means, the bridge to recovery may still be lacking. Just as it would be of no use to tell a tubercular patient to eat eggs and drink milk when he hasn't even the price
of cornmeal, so it can be of little assistance to the farmer to tell him
put good doctrine into practice. “Here is where the economists have
neglect and abuse. There is about its | contents that which suggests af
we have been content to let every.
found, even where the known facts.
Recalls Date, Fails in Try at Glider Record
FRANKFORT, Mich., Sept. 5 (U. P.)—Mrs. Helen Montgomery of Detroit today holds the women’s American glider duration record and Elmer Zook, also of Detroit, has nothing but a good try at the men’s duration record because he had to keep a date. Mrs. Montgomery soared her sailplane back and forth across Crystal Downs for 7 hours and 22 minutes to surpass the mark of 5 hours and 15 minutes set in 1935 at Elmira, N. Y., by Mrs. Allaire C. Du Pont. Mr. Zook, who recently landed his glider in Edsel Ford's backyard while on a practice flight, went up yesterday morning intending to break the men’s duration record of 21 hours 34 minutes. However, he brought his glider to earth after 10 hours 21 minutes of motorless flight. “I just remembered I have a date,” Mr. Zook said as he climbed from the cockpit. Galen Asher, Chicago, crashed his glider when he was caught in an updraft, swept ‘into a ridge, and lodged in a tree.’ ‘The ship was demolished, but Mr. Asher’s only injury was a torn trouser leg.
SOCIETY TO HEAR OF VITAMIN DISCOVERY
Antisterility - Substance Is
Made in Laboratory.
MILWAUKEE, Wis., Sept. 5 (U. P.) —Laboratory production of Vitamin E—antisterility vitamin—will be announced this week at the 96th meeting of the American Chemical Society, it was revealed today. Chemists hailed the achievement as highly significant, particularly as regards prevention of sterility of farm animals. Seven University of Minnesota chemists, who analyzed and con‘structed * the vitamin material— alpha tocopserol—will make the report before the society’s organic chemistry division.
Alpha tocopserol is one of several
substances known as Vitamin E. The scientists believe the achievement will provide a cheaper source dhan had been available heretoore. The scientists who collaborated in the work are I.ee Irving Smith, H. E. Ungnade, W. W. Pritchard, J. W. Opie, S. Wawzonek, F. L. Austin and H. H. Hoehn. Dr. Gustavus J. Esselen, Boston, who has been studying bubbles and their formations, reported that, contrary to belief of chemists and physicists, bubbles are not perfect spheres bt change their shape constantly throughout the space of their existence. A separate set of forces is set in operation within the air bubble by a globule of liquid which bounces about the walls of the bubble, he said.
TOO NONCHALANT, SO HE GOES TO LOCKUP
OIL CITY, Pa, Sept, 5 — nor Sution, Fo hig Cy was held in jail today because his impress a
Police. said the youth stole an automobile, demolished it without injury to , and then walked from the scene of the wreck to a nearby house—he allegedly never had seen the SWher-and went to
and College Ave. yes:erday.
RES 2 NORE | CHAIN STORES
Autos Parked at State Fair Are Looted of Articles Valued at $125.
. With two more grocery burglaries reported- over the week-end, police today renewed their efforts to trace thieves who already have looted eight chain groceries of more than $1000 in merchandise. Police also investigated thefts of articles valued at $125 from an
automobiles parked atthe State Fair and investigated the robbery of two
persons by holdup men overnight.
The latest grocery burglaries were at Kroger Co. branches at 46th St. and College Ave. and at 59th St. The thieves took more than $230 in
cigarets. Two Stores Robbed Twice Police have reported that the grocery robbers have been known to drink beer in several groceries and in one robbery recently even ignored the shouts of a neighborhood phy-
| sician who saw them inside.
The gang looted a Kroger store at | © 38th and Illinois Sts. twice, and a third time failed to gain entrance. A store at 10th St.and Drexel Ave. was entered twice. Stores at 25th St. and Central Ave. and at Tibbs Ave. and Michigan St. also have been entered. One of the holdups reported over the week-end was the robbing of a 22-year-old woman on E. 28th St. early yesterday. Woman Is Robbed of $10
Miss Sophia Zimmerman of 615 E. 20th St. reported that a young Negro gunman threatened to shoot her unless she threw down her purse. Miss Zimmerman told police she dropped the purse containing about $10. The gunman grabbed it and ran down an alley.
Two men armed with knives held up and attacked Raymond Barnett, 268, of 1634 Carrollton Ave. in an alley near his home and escaped with $10. Mr. Barnett told police the men first asked for a cigaret. When he said he had none, the men slashed him on the arms. He was treated at City Hospital.
St., reported that when he was driving his car into his garage two armed men attempted to hold him up. He said he struck his attackers with a flashlight and they fled down the alley.
MASS ACTION DUE ON CITY BUDGET TONIGHT
Protest Groups Are Expected To Face Council.
(Continued from Page One)
quired by the various local budget proposals for 1939, with the 1938 levies follows: Indianapolis Civil City, $1. 3284, up
"| 7.84 cents; Indianapolis School City,
97 cents, down 3 cents; Marion County, including Welfare, 61.1 cents, increase of 12.1 cents; Center Township poor relief and relief bonds, 51 cents, up 20 cents, and State of Indiana, 15 cents, same as this year. The total, $3.5694, is an increase of 36.94 cents over this year’s $3.20 rate for Indianapolis in Center Township.
ESCAPED OUTLAW GAUGHT BY POLIGE
Couch Is Captured 12 Hours After Bolting Jail.
ST. PAUL, Sept. § (U. P)— James Couch, Southwestern outlaw, was captured by two St. Paul policemen today, only a little more than 12 Lours after he had escaped from the Ramsey County Jail here. Couch was captured as he sat in a stolen car at a street intersection in the western part of the city. He apparently was uncertain as to directions, and did not know what route to take. The two policemen, who had been warned that a car had been stolen at Hastings, Minn., several miles southeast of here, brought their squad car to & stop beside the machine, and covered Couch with re-
| volvers,
The desperado made no attempt to resist arrest. He was not armed. Couch, 22, was the second Federal prisoner to escape from the Ramsey County jail in four days.
He had faced a possible death |
penalty for the abduction Aug. 13 of Peggy Gross, 23, prominent in St. Louis society, and Daniel Cox Fahey Jr, 28, architect at St. Louis.
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to board arranged at
| taxes in Indiana.
Farley Telegram ® Me.
Adoo Conqueror Is Announced.
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 3 (U. P). —Culbert L. Olson, successful candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, today announced receipt of a telegram from James A. Farley, Democratic National Chairman, pledging his support in the November finals. Shortly after Mr, Olson announced receipt of the message, Sheridan Downey, the Democratic victor over Senator McAdoo in the primary, announced that he had received a similar telegram from Mr. Farley. The message to Mr. Downey ended: “If I can serve you in any way, please let me hear from you.”
Legislator Claims New
Deal Laws Aid Recovery
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5 (U. PJ. —Rep. Charles A. Anderson (D. Mo.) said today it was “plain as day” that New Deal’ laws had confinite greatly ‘to business recov-
Tn a statement distributed by the Democratic National Committee, Rep. Anderson chided Senator Vandenburg (R. Mich.) for saying the economic recession would end “within a month” if business were given “a chance to forge ahead in the spirit of free enterprise.” “In the desperate conditions which the Hoover Administration bequeathed to President Roosevelt,” Rep. Anderson said, “business leaders thronged Washington and begged piteously for the Government to come to the rescue of business and save the economic system from destruction. Neither they nor Senator Vanderberg and other Republicans were telling the Government to stand aside and give business a chance to ‘forge ahead in the spirit of free enterprise.’ They wanted help and they wanted it quickly. What's more they got it. . , . “That these measures. were effective is plain as day to anyone we wishes to examine the re8 LD
{DEMOCRATS ADDED
Fred Hibernik, 27, of 1128 Groff |
T0 TAXES. IS CLAIM
Campaign Pledge Broken, Says G. 0. P. Statistician.
Lewis Bowman, Republican State Committee statistician, today declared there has been an increase of $35,000,000 in special tax collections and an increase of more than $2,500,000 in property tax col-
lections in Indiana under the}:
Democratic regime. Mr. Bowman is a former State Auditor: “The most important pledge made by the New Deal Democratic Party of Indiana in the party platforms and in the campaign speeches in the campaigns of 1932 and 1934, was for reduction in property taxes,” Mr. Bowman said. “This pledge was to be fulfilled by doing two things—reducing the cost of government in Indiana and tapping new sources of revenue to be collected by the State and distributed to the local units of government to enable the local units to lower taxes on property,” he said. “Yet in spite of the fact that new sources of revenue have been provided and that the income from the State’s special taxes collected by the State ‘has been greatly increased, there has been no reduction in total amount of property Instead of the reductions pledged, there has been an increase,” he declared. Mr. Bowman added that two of the several revenue laws passed by the Democrats, the Gross Income Tax and the Excise Tax, provided additional revenue of $27,000,000 for the State annually. “The total increase in the net revenue derived from all 12 of the special taxes collected by the State has increased from $27,588,569.74 in 1932 to $62,737,630.76 in 1938, an increase of $35,000,000,” Mr. Bowman said.
REPORT U. S. ENTERS SHIP. BOMBING CASE
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 5 (U. P).
—Dollar Steamship Co. officials said |
today they had been informed unofficially that the U. S. State Department had made representations to the Chinese Government in connection with financial reparations for the bombing by Chinese planes of the Dollar liner President Hoover a year ago.
\ SALISBURY, Md, Sept. 5\(U.P.). President Roosevelt today vtarried his fight to unseat Senator into the heart of Maryland's conservative Eastern Shore. \At Denton, at 1 p. m. (Indianapilis Time) he will restate his phil of political liberalism and age call for the election of “forw looking” candidates. The Chief Executive, suroundel by a small group of ardent New Deal lieutenants, including Rep. Dae vid J. Lewis, primary opponent of Senator Tydings, planned to came paign several communities as a pre= liminary to the major address, which will be broadcast to the nation. Mr. Roosevelt came to the Eastern Shore aboard the yacht Potomae after an overnight run from Morgantown, Md., the proposed site of & $3,300,000 bridge that would link Maryland with Tidewater, Va. He appeared in territory containing sentiment unmistakably Tydings if the number of posters on autos, in shop windows and along the highe ways is any criterion. - Close White House friends were of the opinion that while the President, naturally, would crack down on Senator Tydings as a reactione ary and point to the record of Rep, Lewis where New Deal legislation is concerned, the greater portion o his address would be devoted to an interpretation of his social and economic objectives from the longe range standpoint, with particulay emphasis on what has been done by the Administration for labor,
Defense Needs Cited At the proposed bridge site, Mr, Roosevelt asserted that “there is one other phase of this proposed bridge across the Potomac, and that is the phase of national defense.” “I suppose,” he added, “there is no nation in the world whose people are more peace-loving than the people of the United States. At the same time you and I know what world conditions are and we do have to think sometimes of national dee fense. : “And it is very important in thinking of national defense to see to it that the borders of the United States, the portions of the United States that lie fairly cloce to the seaboard, shall have the proper ace cess in the event of war, access for the conduct of defensive operations.
Therefore the whole Chesapeake '
Bay area is a very vital link in our national defense and the more we can do to improve communications
in this area in peace time, the more |,
insurance we are taking out in the
event of some future invasion.”
GIRL, 13, CAPTURES STATE ESSAY AWARD
Mary Ann Becher, 13-year-old eighth grade pupjl of Ferdinand, is to receive a $50 prize form Governor Townsend Wednesday at the State Fair as the winner of the State Board of Health’s community |, sanitation essay contest. The contest was conducted ree cently in Indiana rural schools, Arlene Bules, 13, Etna Green, won second place, and Richard McWile liams, 13, Evansville, third.
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