Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1939 — Page 11
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INNOGENT PLEA T0 BE ENTERED BY HARTENFELD
Swindle Suspect Declares He and 3 Others Are SEC Victims.
Edward J. Hartenfeld, 47, of Henderson, Ky., and Chicago, today said he was innocent of defrauding 200 Indiana investors of $640,455 as charged by the Government.
Mr. Hartenfeld said he would plead "not guilty” when arraigned before Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell tomorrow and that he and the other three named in the same indictment “are victims of the Securities and Exchange Commission.” The others being held under $10.000 bail are Mrs. Ethel Pitt Donnell, 3715 N. Meridian St.; Robert Beckett, 5520 College Ave., and John K. Knapp, 2703 Washington Blvd. Deputy Marshall Julius Wichser said he attempted to arrest Mr. Hartenfeld Thursday night but Hartenfeld eluded him. “I asked him to show me his credentials to prove he was a Deputy Marshall,” Mr. Hartenfeld said. “This he was unable to do and was unable to show a warrant for my arrest. I have been in Indianapolis since last Thursday night. No one aided or abetted my escape for I have not been away. I was so astounded to learn what had happened that I felt I owed it to all parties interested in cur compailes to get certain affairs in shape.” Mr. Hartenfeld said ‘‘certain representatives of the SEC have abused its power and the case is one of relentless persecution on their part with no intent to give our companies and creditors a square deal.” The flood of 1937 damaged mines of the companies, Mr. Hartenfeld said, and “that being without money we were later compelled to cease operation during that year. There has been no scheme to defraud anybody.”
HELD ON GAMING COUNT
John Oglesby. 24, of 1519 Colum-
to
HOOVERS FETED BY GOODRICHES
Ex-President to Deliver Commencement Address At Earlham.
Times Special WINCHESTER, Ind, June 12.— Former President Herbert Hoover
guests today at the home of James P. Goodrich, former Governor of Indiana.
Mr. Hoover today was to motor to Richmond to deliver the com-
'mencement address at Earlham Col-
lege. Mrs. Hoover, their son Alan, and his wife were members of the party. Last night the Hoover party was introduced to nearly 100 Republican workers in the Goodrich home at a reception. The Hoover family met at the Goodrich home, Mr. Hoover coming from New York and the
others from Dayton, O., by motor.
U. S. WORK PROGRAM
and members of his family were :
indoor sports, meetings, glee clubs a
away the after school hours.
in the Little Flower recreation room find little time to gather dust. | Y. O. leaders hope that eventually a summer camp may be established near the city where outdoor as well as indoor play may be had.
Below, softball at the Little Flower Parochial diamond is one of the many outdoor activities used by the C. Y. O. for the benefit of youths who cannot find employment and who have a difficult time in whiling
Fight ldleness
Top, as a substitute for the corner poolroom the C. Y. O. offers
nd other activity. Ping pong tables C.
C. Y. O. to Assist Those Who Want Jobs and Games
EARNINGS SHOW DIP | The future of its youth facing a jobless, idle future has prompted the
WASHINGTON, June 12 (U. P). Earnings of persons employed on
" THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Catholic Church to organize a program which is today making itself known in Indianapolis. Created by the Most Rev. Bernard J. Sheil, auxiliary bishop of the
MONDAY, JUNE 12,1936
LANDON URGES LIBERAL 6. 0. P. POLICY IN 1940
‘Too Conservative Program’ After Victory Termed ‘Dangerous.’
BOSTON, June 12 (U, P.).—Alfred M. Landon of Kansas today had advocated a “liberal Republican Party of 1940” and warned that the advancement of a “too conservative program” in the wake of a Republican victory next year would be dangerous. Speaking of the possibility of a return of a Republican to the White House in 1940, the 1936 G. O. P. Presidential candidate warned that there would be a tendency to throw all New Deal social reforms ‘out the window.” “This danger of swinging back too far to the right is just as apparent now as it was in 1936,” he said in an interview yesterday. In his Boston University commencement address today Mr. Landon indicated forcefully: that he does not want his party to turn toward communisms He insisted it keep “the middle ground.”
Cites Need For Modification
Emphasizing that by “too far to the right” he did not mean a form of fascism ideology, Mr. Landon said in the interview the danger was in “too conservative a program.” “We must reform, improve and make necessary modifications in New Deal legislation,” Mr. Landon said and added: “There has been considerable talk of such modifications and improvements, but that is as far as Congress has progressed.” He warned that “a swing too far to the right would take wus far] beyond any reforms of which Presiden¢ Roosevelt has ever thought or dreamed.” This danger, he said, was feared by him when he was candidate for President and “the picture has not changed.”
On Commencement Program
He declined to comment on the | possibilities of a third term for Mr.
Stands High
Boy With Useless Legs Grad of School He Never Attended.
TP ROOKVILLE, Pa, June 12 A» (U. P).—James Michael Boyle is. graduating with honors from a high school he never attended. The 18-year-old youth didn't allow the fact that his legs have been useless since birth discour=age him. The instructions of his mother, Mrs. Leo 8. Boyle, a former school teacher, enahled Jimmy to pass the eighth-grade examination at the Jefferson County school four years ago. Their, Boyle “entered” Sigel High School. near here. With the co-operation of a neighbor, Phyllis Miller, who took him high school lessons and assignments, Jimmy went right along. When the results of final examinations were announced, he was one of four honor students. ” ” ”
OMPLETION of high school is not Jimmy's only accomplishment. He has built airplane and ship models and collects stamps. He takes greatest pride, however, in his construction of a small “automobile” which enables him to get around his father’s 110-acre farm. Powered with a washing machine motor, it has a top speed of 10 miles an hour. He built it two years ago. Jimmy's friends are certain he will realize his greatest ambition —to be an advertising expert.
FINAL ARGUMENTS DUE IN MOORE TRIAL
Final arguments by Government and defense attorneys were to he heard in Federal Court today in the trial of three persons charged with violating or aiding violations of the National Banking Act. Those on trial before Judge Robert C. Baltzell are Elmer Kerr, former president of the Commercial Bank & Trust Co. of Union City, Ind. directly charged with the /io|lations, and John W. Moore and his
OPEN NOTRE DAME SESSION ON JUNE 20
NOTRE DAME, Ind. June 12, — The 21st annual summer school session of the University of Notre Dame is to begin June 20. A total of 226 courses will be offered by the
colleges of arts and letters, science, commerce, law and engineering. Enrollment last year was 949 and is expected to be slightly larger tais year, according to Maj. Robert Riordan, registrar.
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bla Ave, was to be arraigned IN pejera) work programs and public json, John W. Moore Jr. former
Municipal Court today on a charge . of gaming and keeping a gaming assistance to others totaled $308.house. He was arrested vesterday at a pool room in the 800 block! Martindale Ave, Fifteen others were charged with visiting a gaming house.
archdiocese of Chicago, the Catholic Youth Organization is the Church's) poosevelt and at the same time Continental Credit Corp. officials of
' ~' answer to enforced idleness among its children, : ; wci. | Winchester, charged with aiding 088,000 in April, the Social Security| ., . led With the knowledge {Youd in: giseuss POSUNe fred: on abetting the alleged violations. Board reported tonight. tl ha ie des erately | ; ; |dential timber in his own party. At the close of the presentation This is approXimately 3 per cent brani better Pie and finally ee i tae / pre Mr. Landon referred to the Wag- of evidence Friday, Judge Baltzell| DL helper om inexpensive recreation,” Bishop on rare occasions and a loose-knit | | a, 1abop Aci 0 U1 Waseriieut said:
March. ‘ . i : |Law as “commendable.” Though he| “All there were irregularitie y reb n| ; [31 SH agree ihe rregulal Ss Sheil conceived a plan whereby anip,t harmonized movement will be said there were possibilities of im-| at the bank. But the question is
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advisory group could be formed 88 instilled in the agenda of the dif-
proving them, he pleaded lack of whether Kerr had any intent to de-
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advise and harmonize the varied
| grade to men of 30,
a “loose federation” to encourage,
clubs and groups already established in the Church. This was the beginning of the C. Y. O. which includes as its members children from the seventh
Being actively organized in n-| dianapolis by the Rev. Fr. Charles T. Schoettelkotte. M.S.S.W.. director of the movement here; Patrick Rooney. C. Y. O. worker, and the city pastors. it is estimated that there are 15,000 Cathclic youth to be served by the organization. The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, bishop of the diocese of Indianapolis, who commissioned Father | Schoettelkotte in February of this) year to establish the C. Y. O. lo-| cally, has said that any Catholic
the C. Y. O. by merely voting among | its members to join.
Priests to Advise
The group then sends four repre- | sensatives, two boys and two girls, | to the City Youth Council meeting, | held each month to devise ways! and means of stimulating local] projects and planning city-wide | activity. In each of the 26 parishes in the] city, the paster will act as chief adviser and chairman of the Par-| ish Youth Council which will meet monthly as does the Council. The C. Y. O. leaders do not yin to be considered the controlling force of the affiliates but as a clear |
Sa
for the parish activities. “It is the belief of youth leaders, Mr. Rooney said, “that the young people themselves working under guidance are best equipped to devise and run their own program.”
No Dues, No Badges
There are no dues in the C. Y. O. nor are there membership cards, badges or any of the other vestiges of the ordinary organization. Operating on a $6000 budget raised in a recent drive, the C. Y. O. in In|dianapolis will have no financial worries in the near future. Organizations such as the Knights of Columbus will be looked to when needed for monetary support. Using as a motto, “The C. Y. O. fs a helping agency, not a governing body,” leaders outline as their purpose: “To provide wholesome outlets for those activities which youth demands—To further develop spiritual, recreational, vocational and cultural capacities of youth—to plan and assist in programs that are adequate, interesting and attractive—in short to help Catholic youth live religion.”
Decentralization Stressed Here
Two methods of organizing activity are used by the C. Y. O The first, used in Chicago, is formed around a central meeting place to which all activity flows. The second, proven successful in Ft. Wayne, is to be used in Indian-
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CAPITOL DAIRIES
| 1S
ing house, a co-ordinating Agency)
ferent parish groups. While the C. Y. O. outwardly stresses recreation, all phases of life are considered by the advisory board. This embracing of all of youth's difficulties was prompted by His Holiness Pope Pius XI, who died this year and who pointed out in his encyclical on education that the whole process of education of youth must be considered, not only the formal aspects found in a class= room. Meet Challenges
The Church has long recognized |
another danger which feeds upon idle youth. “Approximately four million young people have nothing, absolutely nothing to look forward to. No future, no work, no ideals, no stimulus to achieve,” Bishop
group may become affiliated with] Sheil said speaking on the modern |
problems of youth. With the problem of idle youth the Church has seen numerous challengers of the church spring up on every frontier, it is said. “The totalitarian states, Soviet Russia, Germany and Italy, have developed youth programs based upon the philosophy that youth is the property of the state and that the people exist but for the perpetuation of that governmental philosophy. Théir youth programs become programs of mass regimentation, of indoctrination and—what is most important—of the denial of the teachings of religion to the young,” one spokesman of the Church said.
“With the curtailing of Church
| activities in some nations and the outright denial of worship in others, the Church now through the C. Y. | O. is calling on its youth of today to fight the battle the Church may face tomorrow.”
MM Nature ¥ provides” the
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time to explain what changes could | be made to better them. He told the Boston graduates today that the New Deal attitude toward property rights smacks of communism and fascism, “The New Deal . .. believes that the rights of the users are greater than the rights of the owners. . This belief is also identical with the belief of the Fascist and Communist governments,” he said. Speaking on “The Educated Citizen and Property,” Mr. Landon continued: | “In the actual practice of govern- | ments today, the rights of the user |are made superior to the rights of |the owner. We old ‘bolsheviks’ of | 11912, who were called Socialists and | | radicals because we believed that | the rights of the users must be con- | | sidered in relation to the rights of, the owners, are now in 1939 classi- | fied as ‘reactionary,’ because we are still standing our middle ground be- | tween the two extremes.” |
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fraud the bank.”
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