Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1939 — Page 9

IHF INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ©, = = ~~ ee PACE

Boys, 13 and 10, Learn to Fly’ in Dummy Plane REVENUE FIGURE Held in Shooting MEMBERS OF RODEO

- TUESDAY, ATG. 8, 1989

ge 10,000 YOUNG

- DEMOCRATS IN ‘PARLEY AUG. 10

Pepper to Be Keynoter, but New Dealers May Have Hard Battle. |

. PITTSBURGH, "Aug. 8 (U. P).- po “Young Democrats will assemble here 10,000 strong Thursday for the opening of a three-day national convention’ Wick ds expected to bring im-

t preliminary skirmishes of Te

the 1940 Presidential campaign, With a. dozen, or more, national party leaders scheduled to appear, delegates wer for a lively | scramble for advantages to carry into next year’s nominating convention. Senator Claude Pepper of Florida will ‘keynote the convention. Other prominent leaders to appear will be:

reported preparing|

| Assistant War Secretary Louis =

| Johnson; Senator Alben Barkley of I Kentucky; Aubrey Williams, Na- | tional Youth Administrator; Paul V. McNutt, Federal Security Administrator; Robert H. Jackson, Solicitor General: -Senator Josh Lee of Okla- | homa, : and Mayor award J. Kelly | of .Chicdgo. -

Ickes May Attend

Commerce Secretary Harold L. Ickes, Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, Undersecretary of State Sumner Wells and Governor A. B. Chanfller of Kentucky have announced hopes of attending the sessions and #Fequested that their invitations be held open. Backers of Presidential aspirants were expected to utilize the meeting as a sounding board for the coming nominating convention. % Indiana has announced that it will send a delegation of 1500. to oom: the bid of the state's Fo overnor, Mr. McNutt, to head the Sor ’s ticket in 1940. Ii Texas will boost Vice President {John Nance Garner, while Senator {Pepper was expected to draw the support of the Florida delegation, Postmaster General James A. Farley will be advanced by New York’ delegates. ll

Anti-New Deal Bloc Reported | !© Reports have emanated from ‘Washington that New York and yTexas' party leaders were forming \ ‘an anti-Roosevelt bloc and would ‘attempt to overthrow New Deal control of the Young Democrats. | + Joseph ‘A. Barr, Pennsylvanig woung Democrat president an ‘chairman of the convention’s cre-| ‘dentials committee, commenting on| itde reports, said the situation was|| “being watched” in Washington. The District of Columbia delega- || ‘tion was upset at the last minute by | ‘the passage of the Hatch “Clean Politics” Bill. Attorney General

4

‘Frank Murphy ruled that while the]

bill did not bar officeholders from membership in the clubs, it forbade their holding official positions or attending conventions as delegates. . Pitt Tyson Maner of Alabama, “Young Democrats president, called ithe bill “the most un-American en‘actmept of the ‘last’ 25 years.” It was believed that this convention might be a foretaste of the makeup of the 1940 national convention, which will also be purged of officeholders by the Hatch Act.

“". Race Open for Presidency

i ! Outstanding in the battle for ‘control of the organization will be : ‘the fight for the national presi‘dency. In the field for the office .are Homer M. Adams of Chicago, aid of Mayor Kelly; Pat Beacon, ‘of Huntington, W. Va.; John Neff

of ‘Staunton, Va.; Bus Hill of Okla- :

thoma City, and Harry Shank of Ohio. + Other contests will center around ‘amendments to the organization's *constitution. Many proposals al‘ready, have been submitted to the committee on constitutional changes, which is headed by John S. Breslin vof Pennsylvania. Included among the proposals are those made by Mr. Tyson Maner. They provide for placing the Administration of the organization's affairs between biennial conventions in the hands of a nine-member executive committee, instead of .the 96-member national committee, and requiring the national president as a salaried executive, .to maintain

HOOSIERS DRAW CENSUS PLUMS

— Democrats to Divide 3898

q

Jobs in State When - Count Is: Made. |

Times Special WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 ibosier Democrats are anticipating a fat Federal plum in connection | with the 1940 census taking. | | A total of 3898 patronage. jobs are scheduled in Indiana, Rep. William H. Larrabee, member of the Census Committee, was informed by Director William L. Austin of the Census Bureau. The State is to be divided in 13

{districts and the Democratic Con-

gressmen will split the jobs, it was explained. There will be two dis-

il tricts in Indianapolis with Reps. Louis Ludlow (D.) and Rep. Larrabee sharing in dealing out jobs. Throughout the State 3807 enumerators will be employed for 30 days. A state superintendent will be sent fro mthe Census Bureau here to establish headquarters in Indianlapolis with a staff of 78 clerks and stenographers to be employed from 60 to 90 days. In addition there will be a district superintendent appointed for each 13 districts to function until the job is completed. Such plums fall into the lap of the party in power every 10 years, when the census taking is mandatory. The size of the salaries has not yet been determined, Rep. Larrabee was told.

MOTHER SAYS SONS PLOTTED HER DEATH

| LONDON, Aug. 8 (U. P.).—How she overheard her sons, aged 14 and 9, discussing a plot to kill her was described by a mother in the Southend, Essex, Juvenile Court. | The younger brother, said the mother, suggested that they should tell their two sisters when they came in that she had died suddenly. |The brothers were described as “violently minded,” and Inspector or of the National Society for

the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil2 dren,- said that they armed themsselves with brass reds from the staircase and attacked their mother. They had thrown knives at her, and one had injured her head. Both boys were ordered to an approved school in Durham in the north . of England, where their father is working.

| DIES PROBE TO RESUME

WASHINGTON Aug. 8 (U. P.)— Dies Committee today anno! Sond it would resume hearings on

residence in ‘Washington.

Sirerats activities Aug. 16.

Figure Wrong Side Down U psets F risco Art Critics

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8 (U. P)). —All was confusion today under the vaulted roof the San Francisco Exposition’s Palace of Fine Arts where blushing experts and patrons frankly admitted they didn’t know which

way was up. Their dilemma had its inception in a London studio where the noted abstract artist, Naum Gabo, casts aesthetic figures in glass and thin plates of lucite that can be bent this way and that. One of his prize pieces, called “Plastic Abstraction,” was. entered in the decorative arts section at the Exposition. It was something to behold. It had the appearance of a mathematician’s nightmare. -It was a conglomeration of planes, spheroids, solids and angles, and the best way to understand it—those who viewed it suggested—was to be told about it and not look at it at all. ‘Dorothy ‘Wright Liebes, director of the exhibit, thought perhaps Gabo might like to see how his abstraction was displayed and she sent him: an illustrated catalog. Before she had time to give it another thought, came a cable that scorched the wires all the way from London. «Plastic * Abstraction,” it said in part; was wrong side down. Mis. Liebes looked over the swirls and. smooshes and angles and couldn’t make up her mind what to do.. The thing had four sides, all of

aid not claim to know much about

which side was up or down. Pondering the matter, Mrs. Liebes

gray hairs, and inasmuch as Gabo hadn’t informed her - which should be down or up, she cut the Gordian Knot and removed the piece. The judges had not yet got around to that section of the building which housed such abstract sculptuary, and she thought this was fortunate. She had vivid memories of the time a National Academy Award was hung on Edwin E. Dickinson's painting, “The Fossil Hunters,” by a New York jury which later was covered with blushés when it developed the painting was hung upside down. | Advertisement _ Doctor’ s Formula For

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Joe “loops” in the grounded plane his Sather built:

Sons of Test Pilot Get

Training in Contraption

By JOE COLLIER Mrs. Lawrence Genaro, trim and blond, has three flying men in the family. There’s her husband, the Civil Aeronautics Authority test

pilot stationed at Municipal Airport. And then there are 13-year-old Joseph and 10-year-old Carl, her sons. Joseph, called Joe for short, can actually pilot a plane and, has when he and his father have been high in the sky on a mechanical lark. But _here’s a little catch in the rules, and Joe can’t get a pilot's license, for which his father said he now is well qualified, until he is 16. He'll be in line like a World's Series bleacher candidate on the day he is that old, he assures one. So Mr. Genaro, called Gene for short, and his sons set out to build

{the nearest thing to a flying plane

they could. It is powered with a seven and a half horsepower electric motor that spins a propellor to create an air shaft strong enough to cause a regular set of controls to take hold. It is mounted in a giant steel “Y¥” which is on a pivot and the plane “does everything a real plane will do

Mrs. Genare lias three fying men ... one of them is Carl.

but take off.” One who knows how, or wants to learn, can do side turns,

loop-the-loops and all manner of

tricks and straight “flying,” in the machine.

Matter of fact, Wilbur Shaw, Indianapolis race driver and pilot, is planning to use the machine for ground practice in stunt flying before he attempts it in<his plane. It is a matter of record, Mr. Genaro said, -that with-40 hours training in a similar contraption, a man recently became so used to the controlling of a plane that he took his first plane up, flew it around expertly, and landed it on a blind radio beam without ever having set foot in a plane before. : The Genaro boys, their mother says, would rather be in a plane, and next in their practice machine, than at the table, although both’ have healthy appetites. Mrs. Genaro knows something about flying, too. She has 100 hours or more in the air to her credit and “thinks it’s wonderful.” She is thrilled her two boys have every. intention of following their father’s flying profession. And so is the “old man.”

DROPS MILLION

Becrodsé in hip Laid to]

Extension of Time on Capital Stock Levy.

Internal - revenue <oliections in

Indiana during July totaled $7,520,

722.36,. as compared to $8,744,624.15

| during July last yes r, Will H. Smith, U. 8. Collector of Internal Reve-

“ |nue, announced toclay.

Times Photos. -

ST. CLAIR PARKING

CHANGE REQUESTED:

The Safety Board today referred to the Police Department for investigation a petition signed by residents of the 1200 and 1300 blocks on E. St. Clair St. for a change of the no parking rule from the north to the south side of the street.

Harry E. Smith, 1210 E. St. Clair| -

St., spokesman for the group, said that the property owners thought that they should be abie to park in front of their own homes and that

if there was to be no parking it should be in effect on the south side of the street where the Indianapolis Railway has some barns. The no parking rule on the north side of the street has been in effect for two years.

PILOT DIES IN POWER DIVE SAN DIEGO, Cal, Aug. 8 (U. P.). Lieut. Horace P. Houf, 26, a Marine Corps reserve pilot, was killed yes-

terday when his pursuit | plane crashed in a power dive on a hillside 14 miles southeast of San Diego. Fire

“There was a: gcneral extension to Aug. 31 for the filing and collection: of . the capital stock tax which was due the month of July,” Mr. Smith said. “}lad this collec~ tion been made in July, the collections last month would have equaled or exceeded the collections for July, 1938.” A comparison of ‘he two months on some of the more important items of revenue. Distilled spirits. 43,381 785 06 ogee eer oe 6,993.78 - 865,453.83 Social ‘Security ea 1.7

Corporation income

Individual income - 132,754.85

23

81,362.90

230,755.15 64,220.78

48,764.92 59,869.70

53,374.17 40,426.69

281. 1%, 736.5 23,822.44

Electrical one Admissions nd” gy

egra Capital Bek . Gasoline

MAUCKPORT BRIDGE BILL IS APPROVED

President Roosevelt has signed a bill to authorize construction of a bridge over White River at Mauckport, Ind.

LOMBARDO FOEFEITS $20

GREENWICH, Conn. Aug. 8 (U. P.)—Guy Lombardo, 37, orchestra leader, forfeited a $20 cash bond in police court rather than appear on a charge of speeding. Lombardo was en route to New York with hig wife when arrested.

| capitalism.

Audrey Thompson, 15-year-old farm girl,- is held at ‘Ashland, Miss., for the shooting of her great-uncle, 55-year-old Boss. Thompson, at a backwoods home. near Hickory Flat, Miss. The girl’s mother, Mrs. Emma Thompson, says her daughter defended her against her uncle in an argument brought about by Thompson’s-re-fusal to do any more shopping in town for women.

WALLACE SUGGESTS CO-OPERATIVE STUDY

CHICAGO, Aug. 8 (U.P.).—Agriculture Secretary Henry A. Wallace said last night that social-minded corporation officers and directors

“could study with profit” the setups of farm co-operatives to strengthen the ties between democracy | and|

“As they have done in Sweden and Finland,” he said, need to do is somehow to build a stronger bridge between democracy and capitalism. One way to accomplish- that, perhaps, would be to make our corporations more democratic in form.”

“what we] -

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Aug. 8 (U. P,)—Billy Brosby, Texas ranger, and four members of his rodeo troop will be arraigned in City Court to=day on charges of defrauding a hotel and a restaurant. They . were charged with non=payment of a $102 bill at the Coney Island Sandwich cafe and an ace count at the Lincoln Hotel. Brosbhy explained that expenses for a performance ‘sponsored by disabled war veterans had been about $1000 whereas gate receipts had fallen $300 short of that figure.

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FLOYD CHILD at Buffalo Airport, scene of his recent world record power-dive—more than 575 m.p.h. in the Curtiss Hawk 75-A—pauses to give his slant on cigarettes: “I've smoked Camels for about fifteen years. T'knew that they were the long-burning cigarette. That means more smoking for my money. On a pack of twenty, as those scientific reports show, it’s like getting five extra smokes per pack. It’s the right kind of smoking, too—mild and swell, cooler, non-irritating, better for my kind of steady, day-after-day smoking.” Don’t miss the fun of smoking Camels! Enjoy their matchless blend of choice tobaccos . . . while enjoying the . economy of that long- -burning feature that makes Camels * penny for penny yous best cigarette buy.”

LONG-B URNING