Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1939 — Page 13
- "FRIDAY, AUG. 25, 1939.
Bureau Rulings Without Public. Notice, ‘A bused Power’ Scored by State Bar
Times Photo.
William H. Hill (left) and. Clarence Merrell , , . talk of ‘a very great need for reform.
S TA TE DEATHS
pene
AKR RON—Mrs. Sarah Shaffer, 88. SurWivors: Daughter, Mrs. Eva Shaffer; halfpister, Mrs. Inez ‘Brundige.
ANDERSON—Mrs. Clarica QC. Sou th, 83. Survivors: Daughters, Misses Rachel and Frances South, Mrs. Rena Vail, Mrs. Della ell; son, William; sister, Mrs. Sarah
Anthon ny. Rober M. Grimes, 61. Survivors: Do oh, Mary Alice, Margarat, Dorothy; eons, Robert, William, Jack, Harry; gister. Mes M Michael Guilfoyle; brothers, C. Lee. James Whjschurst, 65. Surviygrs: Wife, Esza; son, Georg ATTICA —Mrs. ladys E. Linn, 42. SurVivors: Sons. Cecil Mead, Maurice, Wayne and Robert Linn; parents, Mr. a Mrs. Walker Pitzer; brothers, Charles, Lawrence, Herman, Florin; sisters, Mrs. Ruth Harper, Mrs. Maurice Cole, Miss Evelyn
ee OMING TONS Samet S. . Beaumont, ¥ Survivors: Wife, Bertha; sons, Louis nd Raymond Beaumont; daughters, Mts. Chester Yrevior and Mrs. Helen Keilbach; Diothers, I. P., William and Leslie Beau-
I eESTERPIELD.- Samu! B. Boyer, 61. Survivors: Wife, Sarah; daughter, Mrs. Leona Bulen; son, Virgil; stepson, Raymond; stepdaughter, Mrs. Margaret Whit.§ingery brothers, Albert, Earl, Otto; sis Mrs. Maude Day, ‘Mrs. Daisy Olvey.
i ae Dev Jacobs, 70. SurWivors: Sister, Mrs. Laura Tucker.
CRAWFORDSVILLE—Mrs., Clara Northeutt, 72." Yor y Walter: daughte Mae ers, Albert Otte Caldwell: sister, Mrs. Mamie VanCleave,
Thomas iJ. Hughes, 85. Survivors: Sons, Harry, Walter, Leroy; brother, Nathaniel;
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Sisters: Mrs. Navilla ‘Goben, Mrs. Sarah 0 : Mrs, Daisy P. Everett, 61. Survivors: Husband, James; sons Leo, Lester, Louis, Hubert, Morris, Floye: sisters, Armenta Lancaster, Mrs. Lamoureaux, Mrs. opal 1 Dunbar; brothers, Gus and William
ELKHART—Richard Alfred Dickman Survivors: Mother, Carrie; brothers, Erne est, Walter; sisters, Mrs. Gerald Martin, Mrs. Claude Carr, Mrs. Jack Sternberg.
EVANSVILLE—Mrs. E)jzabeut, Meyer, 86. Suryivors: Daughter, Mrs. Frank Hofsister, Mrs. Minnje Yearwood. russell, 50, Survivors: aughters, Mrs. Finis ian; sister, Mrs. Donle ‘McConnell; Sa Edward, John
Ts. Ida C. Melchoir, 56. Survivors: Son, George; stepmother, Mrs. Anna Wemhener; sisters. isses Ella. Mayme, Norma Wemhener, Mrs. Andrew Moll, Mrs. Oliva , Mrs. A. O. Klaser; brothers, Ben, Joseph.
Mrs. Dena Garwood, 77. Survivors: Daughters, Mrs. Bertha Wilshire, Mrs. Anna Eberhart; sons. Elbert, William. Henry E. Engert, 76. Survivors: Wife, Mary; daughters, Mrs. Cora Teate, Miss Viola Engert; sons, Leo, Walter; sister, Mrs. Agnes Mears; brother, Joe. FT. WAYNE—Otho C. Boren, 68. Survivors: Wife, Laura; daughters, Mrs. Berniece Surfus, Mrs. Gladys Harvey, Mrs. Vera Bobay, Mrs, Bessie Freeman; sons, Theodore aya Richard Boren; sisters, Mrs.
» | Alice Copp.
Mrs. Pepa Wuckovich, 46. Survivors: Daughter, Eva; sisters, Mrs. Kate Vincen-
+ ski, Mrs. Sophia Kovaich; brothers, Martin
and George Copas. Frank Johnson, 72. Survivors: Wife, Mrs. Aileen Bethel,
Margaret: daughters, Fred Johnson.
Mrs. Lola Vann; son, Wilson Swihart, 82. JONESBORO—Myrtle E. Heagy. LAFAYETTE—Mrs. Jessie Kuis, 86. Survivors: - Daughters, Mrs. Richard Bart, Mrs. Joseph Galema. LA PORTE—Abram B. Hornbeck, 68. Survivors: Wife, Alice; daughter, Miss Esther L. Hornbeck; sons, Ralph and Roy Hornbeck. MARION—Earl Argo, 45. Brothers, ; The 1, Mrs Gay, Suttle McCulloch: half-sister. Mrs. M garet Bell. NEW CASTLE—Mrs. Pers Aone. 87. Survivors: Husband, Jacob; hy Ben, Robert; daughters, nspach, Mrs. Esther Bauer; Reba Danziger. SUMMITVILLE— William H. Call’ 10: Survivors: Sisters, Miss
Survivors: ; Sisters,
ar-
brother,
rs, Elsie Fennimore: brother,
AL ARAL Frouenick Ww. willis, 81. Survivor: Wife, Abbi
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ACAI SAH ILLINOIS ST.
IRI 5948; [Re N817]
improved Jury Procedure Is Urged by Hill at Conclave Here.
governmental boards and commissions “for promulgating and eniorcing rules without public notice or public hearings” was to be presented to the Indiana State Bar Association today. The report was prepared by the committee on administrative law of which John Rabb Emison of Vincennes is chairman. The Association is holding its annual two-day meeting at the Claypool Hotel.
Mr. Emison reviewed the growth of administrative boards and com-
pointed out the “unprecedented power wielded by them over life and property.” J
Raps “Capricious Rulings”
trary and capricious administrative decisions in which they have abused their authority are legion.” “This administrative. absolutism
posed to both,” he stated. The report stated that administrative law will “inevitably play a large and, probably for some time to come, increasing role in American government,” but “we must see that it properly functions within the framework of the Constitution.”
Public Hearings Urged
The report recommended that published notice be given and public hearings be held on all rules and that the persons affected be given the right of judicial review. Improvement in the procedure of
liam H. Hill, president, in his annual address. The convention will end tomorrow with election of officers. Milo N. Freightner, Huntington, is expected to be elevated from vice president to president, succeeding Mr. Hill.
when he became head of the Association that judges be elected on the basis of qualifications without committment to any political party.
Claims Reform Needed
“To my mind there is a very great need for reform in the method and manner of the selection of jurors,” he said. “. . . What justice is there or what justification can there be for selecting ‘a jury of men picked up from the streets or out of pool rooms who frequently do not represent anything worthwhile in the community and who have no convictions as to right or wrong, trying a case that involves analysis or technical training? “We are not opposed to the sys‘tem whereby a litigant can call for a jury trial,” he continued, “but un-
Mrs. (til we find some means by which
there may be a better selection of jurors, or until our state courts have greater authority and power in di-
a |ecting the trial of a case before
a jury, our courts will not be the instrument to promote justice when
"|they should be.”
Urges Study
He urged the Association to study the present method of selecting jurors and find a remedy that will be an improvement in judicial procedure. Declaring that judges should be selected without regard to political affiliation, Mr. Hill declared that “if the courts of Indiana are given adequate rules of procedure “and the men who grace the bench are selected because of their learning and ability and integrity . . . the judge will- at all times be in active charge of the trial and not merely an umpire.” He said that sectional organization within the Association would provide each lawyer a means of constructive work in the field of his choice. To better operate sectional groups, he suggested that the Association employ a full-time executive secretary with offices in Indianapolis.
Cyclone Kills 50, Paper Told
ARIS, Aug. 25 (U. P.).—A dispatch to the newspaper Petit Parisien today from Algiers reported that at least 50 persons were killed when a cyclone devastated a large area in the vicinity of Tocqueville.
CAPTURE ESCAPED ~ INDIANA PRISONER
LANSING, Mich., Aug. 25 (U. P.). —City police today held Melvin De Long, 22, escaped convict from the State Reformatory at Pendleton, Ind., for state authorities. ° De Long was apprehended here last night on a complaint from a filling station attendant at Mason who charged he failed to pay for gasoline. Police said he was driving an automobile stolen from Auburn, Ind.
TOWNSEND CLUB HAS PARTY Townsend Club 52 will sponsor an ice cream social tonight and tomorrow night at 42000 W. Washington St. Community singing will feature tonight's program. Margaret Covy, 14, youngest Townsend
| | movement speaker in Indiana, will | speak tomorrow night.
FALL FATAL TO BABY
ELKHART, Ind., Aug. 25 (U. P.).— James Edward McCants, 21-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. K. J. McCants of Emporia, Kas., died in a hospital today of a skull fracture suffered in a fall from a fourthstory hotel window.
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A committee report condemning |
missions during the New Deal and |i
He said the “instances of arbi- |
leads to dictatorship—we are op-’
selecting juries was urged by Wil-
Mr. Hill repeated the plea made |}
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