Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 April 1940 — Page 13
The Indianapolis
oosier Vagabond
MIAMI, April 10—If IT am| not badly mistaken, iami is headed into another boom. On second ought that is a ridiculous statement. For Miami is ready in another boom. The tourist season just closing was not a whit short of - terrific. They figure close to two million visitors here last winter, and the visitors spent $200,000,000. Which proves that times certainly are hard. Miami has never had such a season as this one. Oddly enough, they ascribe hardly any of it to the war having cut Europe off from travelers. The city lists the reasons for it as three, in this order: 1. All-around better times. 2. The cold winter up north.
3. Publicity. They're counting on it again next winter. Miami nd Miami Beach are putting up buildings as though ey were fighting a fire. Last year 52 new hotels ent up. More than 40 are scheduled for this year. Now suppose the war ends. - All the experts I've ead figure we'll have a collapse of sorts after the war. d further, Europe will again be open for tourists. The Miami influx falls off. ‘How about all those otels? More than 400 of them in this area right now. obakly 500. within two more years. That's a lot of Nokals if they're empty. ”
» »
No Frenzied Speculation
That's the only bad thing I can see in the Miami splurge—just this heavy building to take care of fourmonth tourists. All the rest of the buying and building seems to be sound and sober. There isn’t that frenzied land speculation of the ’20s by Northerners who expected to make a million overnight on a halfacre orange grave. Miami's real growth now is from people who have chosen this for their permanent home and who have enough money to support themselves. Retired people. Pensioners. People with a small stake who can scrape along even if things don’t go Just right, They're building up thick, inland from
Back-Pay Rumpus,
! WASHINGTON, April 10—Efforts to emascilate the Wagner Law and Labor Board will be intensified by the U. S. Supreme Court's refusal io hear Republic Steel's appeal in the several-million-dollar back-pay
case growing out of the 1937 strike. Logically the Labor Board's victory, on top of its many other Supreme Court successes, might Le expected to offset frequent complaints of its alleged bias. .Wagnerites make this court record a major defense of the
“ing we get in the feost
* Where did the 1,676,000 others stay?
- | |
By Ernie Pyle
8) Miami. Nice little] white homes in the sunshine. rly 3000 of them did it last year. ‘Those are the people that really make Florida. And to tell the |truth, three-fourths of the Miami vigitors are people like that too. They don't make s, but theyre the majority. ‘I had a letter along | ‘this line today from a man in Miami. He tells it so much better than I can that ‘m going to copy part of it down. He says: “Miami! Meeting place for leaders of the nation?! Fashion and society at de-luxe hotels and clubs? If, jai-alai ahd fesing? Sure. Everybody is told ik 3 | “And when a columnist needs a little special sensation, he can always show up Miami's terrific gambling or other sins. . Why, fiversixths of our people wouldn't know a thing ‘about them if it wasn’t for the lambast-
The Real Miami |
i “But not a ‘word about the real Miami—or call it the Miami area, or south Florida. Not a word about the closeness to] nature which life here means, the freedom of spirit which, once attained, is so hard to forego. J “Yet it is something | like that which must account for the thousands of people, both rich and poor, who are taking up new homes here. And for the hundreds of thousands coming in an ever-widening circle as winter visitors, many of whom will stay. Good, decent, active individuals of many types.” There is truth in everything he says. And it applies to the visitors just the same as to those who settle here. Miami isn’t alP just sport coats and sun glasses. Here's proof: They estimate 27,000 hotel rooms in Miami and Miami Beach. Counting two to a room, that’s 54,000 people. The average turnover is 1,5 per month. That means the hotels could accommodate 324,000 people in four months. But there were 2,000,000 visitors last winter.
They stayed around the corner, that’s where. In little places, cheap places. They never saw a horse race, a dog race, a night club, or felt the pull of a marlin on a $75 line. They didn’t have on a tuxedo and they weren't in Winchell’s column—but they had
a good time.
By Ludwell Denny
tion's compromise Norton bill. But it has a fair chance of House passage this month. Senator, Wagner, in opposition to the amendment to limit back-pay awards to six months, says: “This would make the wrongfully discharged worker bear the burden of the inevitable delays of legal process. It would encourage dilatory tactics by employers with greater economic staying power. The Railway Labor Act provides no such limitation. By arbitrarily limiting the remedy. no matter how great the wrong, this provision violates the fundamental conception that the law delights to do justice and not by halves.”
strue statutes and state rules of law without recourse being provided for
no right of appeal for remonstrators
HIGH TRIBUNAL BROADENS ITS APPEAL POWER
State Court Reverses Self To Deny Control by Legislature.
The Indiana Supreme Court, in an unprecedented opinion, has declared its own Jurisdictional powers on appeals to be above legislative control. The opinion, written by Chief Justice Curtis G. Shake, reverses a 19-year-old decision of the Supreme Court which held that litigants involved in cases under the Workmen’s Compensation Act had no right of appeal from the State Appellate Court. “The evils that may flow from such a conclusion are innumerable,” the opinion stated,
“Court Judge of Jurisdiction”
“We therefore disapprove of the language contained in the opinions of many cases which seem to suggest that the right of | appeal to this Court exists only! by the grace of the legislative branch of the Government. “In the final analysis, this court must be the judge of its constitutional jurisdiction.” The decision continued: “Uniformity in the interpretation and application of the law is the keystone of our system of jurisprudence. Refers to Several Cases
“If the courts other than :this Court are to be permitted to con-
review by this court, the result will be as destructive to uniformity as if the Legislature was permitted to enact local and special laws for every county in the state.” The Court's decision referred to numerous cases in which the right of appeal was denied in the past, citing a decision in 1913 when the Supreme Court held that there was
against a highway improvement project. “When proper showing is made
Boy Injured a
Edgar Johnson, left, and Virgil Underwood, bo! h 7, piece together the corrugated box in whic h LeRoy Underwood, was injured.
playmate, Kenne|
Viking istory, Link Danes
Norway, Land of Rugged Terrain, Is Larger but Denmark
Has Greater
By UNITED PRESS
The 16,000,000 people of Scandinavia, peace-loving
descendants fof the earliest who generall
German inv.
have avoided all European wars since Napoleon, were [drawn into the new war’s orbit today by the ion of Denmark and Norway.
Blood Ties
and Norsemen Population.
Teutons and fierce Vikings,
s Auto Goes Through Bo»
YOUTH
Montgomery, |
TRUSTEE VOTE
Cox Sets Hearing for Today;
Similar Petition Was Denied Yesterday.
Two suits seeking to throw the Center Township Trustee and
County Assessor offices open to elec-
tion this year were filed in Circuit
Court by Republicans today.
Maude G. Hobson, 1321 Edgemont Ave, and Samuel L.
real estate dealer, (Circuit Court Judge
Mrs.
asked that
Earl R. Cox mandate County Clerk
Charles R. Eftinger to accept their declaration of candidacies for the
', [trustee’s and ‘assessor’s offices re=
Times Photo. their
HIDDEN
UNDER GARTON
Auto’s Wheel Playing Back o
Before school t dren in the 900
Strike ‘Yard’ f Home
pday, all the chillock W. Washingoutdoors to ask
Lad.
spectively. | Judge Cox set the hearing on the two suits for 3 p. m. today.
Rules Office Not Open
In a similar. suit| yesterday, brought by Elder C. Zaring, who also declared his candidacy as a Republican candidate for county assessor, Judge €ox ruled that the office is not subject to the primary and general elections [this year. It was anticipated | that both cases filed today eventually will be taken to the Indisils Supreme Court. The decision made oh Mrs. Hobson’s suit also will affect Mrs. Myrtle Buehl, a Democrat, who also has declared her candidacy for the trustee's office.
Petitions Refused
The conflict arises over the fact that Center Township Trustee Henry Mueller and County Assessor Ira IIaymaker were appointed by County Commissioners last year to fill vacancies. Before the deadline for filing declarations of candidacy Saturday, Mr. Zaring and Mr. Montgomery sought to file for the Republican nomination for County Assesor. Declarations for Center Trustee were submitted by Mrs. Buehl and Mrs. Hobson. : All four petitions were refused by Mr. Ettinger and the candidates
The four| countries—Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland—are allied geographically, economically and by the inter-relation of their ruling houses. King Haakon VII of Norway and King Christian X of Denmatk are
essential soundness of the law land the Board. | Bit to the Smith-Cox group in the House—with its sweeping amendments w hich Senator
Shea
” »
Prepared for Reverse Republic Steel is not waiting for a change in the
2 then mailed their declarations to
the County Clerk, who again | rejected them.
that the Appellate Court has failed to consider and pass upon a substantial question duly presented to it, this Court will examine the record in the same manner and to the
Wagner describes as er” legislation—almost any det€ision penalizing an employer for unfair ~ labor practices is evidence that the Board is unjustly making the company a victim. Board opponents inside and outside of bohgress however, now recognize that their chief complaint is with the law °rather than with its administration. This was clear in the early days when employers deliberately disregarded the law on advice of lawyers that it. was unconstitutional. After the Supreme Court
upheld the law, the technique was to attack the Board.
Wagner Fights Change
But as the months passed antl the Board built up the best court record of any administrative agency, the opposition began working also for basic change in the law itself. One of the amendments introduced by. the Smith investigating committee to help employers like Republic Steel would outlaw back-pay penalty payments after six months. The House Labor Committee rejected this, along with most of the other Smith proposals, and it is not contained in the Administra-
# =
(Mr. Anton Scherrer was Whable to write a column today because of illness.)
Washington
NEW YORK, April 10.—Politicians in both parties may well take note of the Presidential boom which has made a political lion of Wendell L. Wilkie, the big woolly, good-natured utility man. Not that he has the slightest chance in this campaign, or even thinks he has. He would take a nomination—it would be in the Republican Party, in which he registered a few months ago after a life as a Democrat. - But he knows, as do the politicians, that nothing is likely to happen. No, the significance of the Willkie-for-President boom is not in its practical character - in the light which it thro upon the public mind. . People in T York wib ; might be expected to be boostg Thomas E. Dewey, their favorite son |who has a
eal shot at the nomination now, are belittling him
nd talking for Mr. Willkie, who has no practical hance. Mr. Dewey may bel the New York glamour y out West but he ought to be jealous in New York, * where or Willkie Is introduced at luncheons with flattering (references to his Presidential stature, is ‘listened to as an oracle and is mobljed afterward by adoring ladies. And he’s reveling in it. ‘Senator Taft may have important New York mdney behind him but it’s Mr. Willkie who lights up the eyes ahd makes ~ men murmur, “I'd vote for him for anything from dogcatcher on up.” |
fo 11 2 = Backs Secretary Hull - This comes from businessmen who will find in Senator Taft, and probably in Mr. Dewey, policies more to their liking than some that Mr. Willkie espouses. In his quasi-politidal speeches he kicks the New Deal around and talks about how ‘Washington is trying to get him..
My Day
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Tuesday.—Saturday evening, one of the ranger photographers and one of the naturalists showed us some marvelous colored
pictures of the scenery, flowers and animals of Yose‘mite National Park, which we had observed during
the day. They also ran off some -
movies of my trip [in the park in, 1934, which brought back pleasant memories. | We spent Sunday “in the Yosemite Valley, catching up on
‘the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin
law. It even foresaw the possibility that the Supreme Court might uphold the Board in this particular case. To protect itself, the company last May filed a
counter-suit, for $7,500,000 damages arising from the so-called Little Steel strike of 1937. v In this pending suit the company named the C. 1. O, the Steel Workers Organizing Committee and
Workers, besides John L. Lewis, Philip Murray and approximately 700 individual strikers and union officers. : The exact amount of back-pay due Republic Steel workers, as a result of the Supreme Court’s refusal to review the Circuit Court decision upholding the Labor Board, is not known. Many, perhaps most, of the 5000 strikers were soon re-employed at the seme or comparable jobs. They will receive back pay only for their idle time. Several months of careful checking by the Labor Board in the field will be required to fix and total the individual claims, which may be smaller than expected. Incidentally, the board's division of economic research, in charge of this checking, will be abolished in June unless the Senate can restore its appropriation which the Smith-Cox House group killed.
By Raymond Clapper
But he is with Secretary Hull 100 per cent on the reciprocal trade program and against the whole Republican attempt to scuttle it. "He would take a great deal more of the New Deal than Senator Taft would take, I suspect. He plays not so much with the Wall Street crowd and the N. A. M. as with the Town Hall kind of liberals, who eat out of his hand and with the literary people in New York. He delights in taking the debating platform with Norman Thomas for a polite game of intellectual tennis and he-is the only Wall Street spokesman who can get his line printed in Bruce Bliven'’s left-wing New Republic. » » 2
Not Forgetting His Job In fact I suspect that Mr. Willkie is tearing himself a bit between two impulses. Don’t think for a minute that all of the time he isn’t sawing wocd for Commonwealth & Southern and trying to pull a tooth out of TVA and SEC whenever he sees a. mouth open.
At the same time he appears to be looking for broader horizons, possibly like the late Dwight Morrow, who grew tired of being a Morgan partner, wanted to go into public life and did, with enormous success and popularity. At any rate, Mr. Willkie is doing more than anyone else to bring businessmen back into political respectability and out of the role of whipping boy acquired by the activities of such men as Insull, who incidentally once lectured Mr. Willkie for his ideas as to how utilities should conduct themselves. | Mr. Willkie, without any political or literary assistance except a couple of research girls, is producing a volume of speeches and articles which have won him a national and respectful audience as a ‘pleader for American business. On his new plush-upholstered soapbox he speaks frankly, and until some of his very latest political-type speeches he displayed a calm, broad sweep that makes the utterances of the ordinary conservative politician sound childish and too primi
ti e for the modern world. |
By Eleanor Pooseuelt
We’ left a 3 o'clock and drove to Palo Alto. The press conference was extremely informal, attended by only one photographer, the acting mayor, two or three press representatives, together with Miss Gene
because the Legislature has not provided a means for bringing it here.”
collision,
‘York and New Jersey Sts. as the
{C. V. Smith, 41, Dies i in
Charles V. Smith, 41, a Linton coal
same extent as if it had been brought up by a writ of error,’ the opinion stated.
Rule in Injury Case
“It follows that the appellant may not be denied the right to present his case to this Court: for review
The decision was handed down in the case of Jacob K. Warren, who was refused compensation for an alleged injury while working for the Ingigna Telephone Co. at Madison,
Ie Appellate Court upheld the State Industrial Board in denying the compensation. Seeking to test the law that vests in the Appellate Court the exclusive right to review all Industrial Board cases, attorneys took the case to the Supreme Court on a writ of error. Lower Court Upheld
The Supreme Court upheld the Appellate Court’s ruling on the merits of the case. The Appellate Court was'createc by the Legislature to perform limited functions in certain appealed cases while the Supreme Court was createa by the State Constitution with broader jurisdictional powers. The Workmen's Compensation Act, passed in 1915, specified that the Appellate Court shall be the last court of appeal for compensation cases. There are several other state laws that limit the appeals to the Appellate Court.
OFFIGER INJURED AS GYGLE, CAR COLLIDE
Motorcycle Officer Harry F. Nolte, 1431 Richard St., was in a serious condition in City Hospital today with injuries received last night when thrown from his cycle after a
The officer's cycle and an automobile driven by Herschell Golden, Zionsville, Ind., collided at New
officer was en route to headquarters. Witnesses said Officer Nolte was thrown against the windshield of the automobile and then fell about 15 feet. Police charged Mr. Golden with reckless driving, failure to have a driver’s license and disobeying a traffic signal. a Thelma Latham, 20, of 132 N. Elder Ave. was injured seriously when the auto in which she was
riding with her husband, James, |qlast common heir to both Den--
and another, driven by Morris Levie, 1314 Union St., collided last night at Union and Morris Sts. She is in City Hospital.
Linton Auto Crash LINTON, Ind. April 10 (U. P).—
‘before the Viking Age. Her con-
| next year, Austrian and Prussian
lin, who represented the Theta Sigma Phi and
Sigma Delta Chi.
A little later my son, Jimmy, motored down from San Francisco and Miss Chaney also joined us with al friend, so we were a small party for dinner. We then proceeded to the lecture, after which there was a; question period and a reception for the 20 more the
“City.
4-Year-Old Dies Beneath
miner, was killed last night when his car and a machine driven by D. S. Swazee of Linton collided at a highway intersection near Switz,
SENATOR URGES U. S.
brothers. orway’s Crown Princess Martha of Sweden. navian democracy, has much
and is only| beginning to recover from the Russian in-
vasion.
Here are brief descriptions of Denmark and Norway,
“both occupied by Germany.
Denmark
A kingdom | of 16,568 square miles, slightly [larger than Maryland; 3,550,656) inhabitants; (1930 census) comprised of Jutland Peninsula and [a group of :islands; ruled by 70-year-old King Christian X; a low, glaciated country of corn fields, meadows, beech woods and dune islands.
OCCUPATIONS — Agriculture, fishing and industry; main ex-
ports are animal products: horses, cattle, pigs, sheep and fowls; nowhere can coal or metals be mined profitably, although deposits are known to exist.
GOVERNMENT — By Constitution laid down June 5, 1915, and amended in 1920 on the restoration of North Schleswig by Germany in accordance with Treaty of Versailles. Legislative authority is divided between Crown and Parliament (Rigsdag) which is elected under franchise granted to all persons over 25.
RELIGION—Church of Denmark is Luitieran,
HISTORY—Once the dominating power of north Europe, she ruled Norway for 125 years, battled Germans in the country north of the Elbe from time immemorial. Her people came from the Eastern Baltic region in the sixth and seventh centuries, moving west as the Frisians destroyed the Pranks who had inhabited that region earlier. Little is known of Danish history
structive history began in the 10th Century under the reign of Gorm, “The Old.” His son, Harold “Bluetooth” claimed to have conquered all Denmark and Norway and made the Danes Christians. Warred with Sweden continually in the 17th Century; was devastated in the 30 Years War. Her recent history is featured by the dispute with Germany over the Schleswig-Holstein district, which developed into a crisis in 1863 when King Prederick VII died without a male heir. He was the
mark. and the Elbe Duchies (Schleswig-Holstein) and when the “Protocol King,” Christian IX, succeeded him in Denmark, Saxonian and Hanoverian troops occupied Schleswig - Holstein. The
troops moved in. Denmark fought them and this was the last war in Scandinavia, outside of Finland. Germany won Schleswig-Holstein in the Treaty of Vienna in 1864 but lost most back to Denmark in plebiscites after the World War.
ACQUIRE GREENLAND
Prince, Olav, is married to Finland, the lone Scandiin common with the others
Norway A kingdom of 124,964 square miles; 2,785,550 people; (1930 census) ruled by 68-year-old King Haakon VII. It is the land of the fjord; the midnight sun; with mountains falling abruptly to the sea, a cliff bound coast and 150,000 islands fringing the mainland. Its population is settled, 22.3 per square mile, the thinnest popu-
lated country in Europe. Women predominate because of the migration of males and their high mortality rate on the dangerous seafaring business. Drunkenness was a strong national characteristic until the middle of the 19th Century, which finally led to prohibition in 1919, with only wines and beer sales permitted since then. There are 400,000 Norwegians living abroad; 6497 in the United States. The country has wide appeal for tourists, especially in the far north where the sun’s disc is visible above the horizon continuously from May 12 to July 29. The whole country, in fact, has no real darkness from the end of April to middle August, and in winter there are two months when the sun never rises over the north capes and there is only a mid-day twilight.
OCCUPATIONS — Agriculture, mining, forestry, fishing, shipping. Her shipping channels, traversing the calm waters of the fjords, where steamers move between cliffs overhanging on both sides, seldom encountering the open sea, were one of the chief points of dispute between Germany and the Allies that led to the |invasion.
GOVERNMENT—By Constitution of May 17, 1814, amended since, especially after the dissolution of the union with Sweden on June 7, 1905. The executive is the Crown, who rules through a Council of State. Parliament (Storting) is elected every three years,
RELIGION—Episcopal Lutheran, The king nominates the clergy. In 1920 there were only 71,062 dissenters.
HISTORY-—Archaeologists have found traces of a fishing and hunting population dating back to 6000 B. C., a people believed related to the ancient Finnish race. The Teutonic element entered the region in 1700 B. C. The English poem “Beowulf” mentions the region as Finnaland in the Sixth Century. The first king under unification was Harald (872-930), who reigned a century after the Viking raids on Ireland. She was ruled by Denmark for 125 years beginning in 1524, regained prestige under Dutch and English influences and in 1814 became “a free and independent nation united with Sweden under one ” - She broke from Swedish
.gil Underwood,
"| had made no decision. The children
this morning, t triangle area could be mistaken for].
a driveway. &'
y, his cousin, Vir7, and a neighbor, 7, were on the e yard. tumbling in led paper box. They and as they made es all at once in one pox tumbled them
Edgar Johnson.
other side of th a large corruga were inside it, somersault mov direction the end over end. Finally, the Box tumbled into the path of a fe) which stopped be- | fore it hit the/'box. Two of them got out—Virgil and Edgar. The driver, apparently believing no one else was inside] started his car and ran a front wheel into the box. He stopped at the|shouted warnings of Virgil and Edgar and a cry from
Kenneth was taken to his home and a neighbor called City Hospital. A doctor found that he couldn’t stand up. The| doctor hit his knee= cap with a rybber hammer, pondered the reaction, and called an ambulance. Af the hospital today they said his [condition is fair and that apparently - no bones are broken, but that his hip is injured.
Boy's Father Jobless
The members of the early morning sidewalk Conference agreed that the driver would have had to run over the box if he was going through the yard, because if he had turned out for it he might have hit some of the marble players. “But that’s supposed to be our backyard,” one girl said. “They teach us not to play in the streets, you know.” Kenneth’s father, William Underwood is unemployed and ifl. Kenneth has six other brothers and sisters. Virgil is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Underwood and he has four brothers and sisters. At school time, the conference
counted up and found Kenneth was the second of their group to be injured at play this year. Henry Underwood, his 14-year-old brother, broke his arm coasting two months ago. There are about 20 children in
SYMPHONY PRAISED OFFICIAL
BY CBS
Praise for the Indiznapolis Symphony Orchestra-iand the place it has made for itself among the nation’s broadcasting orchestras was expressed today in a telegram received at the orchestra office from W. B. Lewis, vice president of the| Columbia Broadcasting System. Mr. Lewis sent the network’s good wishes and congratulations to workers in the orchestra’s maintenance fund campaign, which is to close Friday. . His telegram read as follows: “Our best wishes to the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in their annual fund-raising campaign. During the past three seasons the|
MEXICANS AROUSED | OVER HULL OIL NOTE
MEXICO CITY, April 10 (U. P.. —Secretary of State Cordell Hull's strong note demanding immediate arbitration of American , claims
‘|against’ the Mexican government
for expropriated properties, was expected today to strengthen, instead of diminish, Mexico’s determination not to be pushed into a settlement. Mr. Hull's note, handed to the Mexican ambassador at Washington, was couched in $uch strong terms that it aroused immediate resentment in the public, The tone of the note surprised even American business men. Criticizing Mexico for being unwilling to make “just and adequate compensation,” the note proposed an “honorable” procedure of arbitration, suggesting that all questions involved in the oil controversy be submitted to impartial arbitration and that all unadjudicated claims be submitted to an umpire. Political demonstrations were called tomorrow to. protest American “imperialism.” - |
CITY OF FLINT PUT ON AUCTION BLOCK
BALTIMORE, April 10 (U. P.).— The U. S. freighter City of Flint, whose release from a German prize | crew by Norwegian officials con- | tributed to difficulties between the two nations, went on the auction bloc today. f The City of: Flint was set free near a Norwegian port last fall after her German captors had taken the ship first to Murmansk, Russian Arctic port. | The vessel was ‘traveling toward ermany when Norwegian authorities ordered her release. The ship is one of five ‘which the U. S. Maritime Commission has plated on auction. .It hopes to sell them into the U.. 3 = South” American service.
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE
1—-What is the name of the holiday that falls on May 30?
2—Is Boulder Dam the. ‘highest dam
in the world?
3—What is the Septuagint?
4—Ambassador Laurence A. Steinhardt represents the United States in Finland, Sweden or Russia? 5—Do thunderstorms cause milk to | sour? 6—sSofia is the capital of which | country? 7—Which President of- the United | States alluded to hime ‘as “Old , Public Functionary”? | r
F-Whin of these three cities on
. the Pacific Coast is farthest from | Washington, D. C., as the crow | flies: Vancouver, Canada; Tii juana, Mexico; Etireka, Cal.
” ” ” Answers
1—Decoration or Memorial Day. 2—Yes. 3—A Greek version of the Old Testament.
Blade of Road Drag
LINTON, Ind., April 10 (U. P.).— Jerry Lee Wills, 4-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul I. Wills of Jasonville, was killed yesterday when he fell in front of the blade of a Jasonville city road drag near his
young people representing the groups sponsor lecture. This is not a universily responsibility, but a direct responsibility of the young people themselves. A new and interesting activity in the fie a
orchestra has been broadcasting over CBS and has made extraordinary strides. We have expressed our congratulations to Mr. Sevitzky as conductor and Mr. Miner as manager. Indiana can be proud of the place the orchestra is making
4—Russia. .5—No. 6—Bulgaria. 7 mes Buchanan. 8—Eureka, Cal.
rule ‘in 1905, without war.
EXHIBITORS ATTEND -HOME SHOW DINNER
our: work in the morning and taking a walk before lunch. In the afternoon, we went with Superintendent and Mrs. Merriam .to the museum and the Indian village and ‘then to their
WASHINGTON, April 10 (U. P.). Senator Ernest Lundeen (FarmerLaborite Minn.) who advocates acquisition of Bermuda as a payment on Great Britain’s war debt, pro-
posed today that the United States =
home for tea. We hated to leave on Monday, but were grateful for two glorious days. Seven o'clock Monday /morning saw us on our way to San Mateo where we lunched with Mrs. Edward MacCauley and several guests, among them the authors of “American Exodus,’ Dorothea . Lange and Paul S. Taylor, whom I .wasdRrticularly glad to meet. It seems to me that i e pictures ~and in the spirit, this book marks a high point in - artistry and shows us what life means to some of [2 citizens, #%
‘build model airplanes that will interest handicapped
the possibilities of establishing an organization to
youngsters in crippled children’s hospitals, orphan-
ages, and reform schools. This work will be pr ately |
financed. It appears to be a valuable hobby for/both ls and girls, for it will teach them craftsmanship nd patience and give them free play to the inventive instinct without involving much expense or any personal risk. : | We are about to leave by car for Reno, Nev., where 1 speak tonight. At last my diary is caught up again,
which is a considerable schiefement "Jot
Fr
home. He had jumped on the drag to hitch a ride.
6 FACE LOTTERY CHARGE SANTA FE, N. M., April 10 (U P.).—Mrs. Oliver Grace Harriman, wealthy New York philanthropist, and six members of her “Institute
eral Court today for promoting | a $10,000,000 lottery in He Injerests charity,
buy Denmark’s major possession, Greenland, possible.”
“as soon as humanly
He renewed his appeal for control
of British and French possessions|ip in the Western Hemisphere, contending that it would enable this country to throw a ring of strong for Social Research” go on trial in [defenses around the Caribbean “that will forever insure us dgainst attack.” * He Ded that the Sake
More than 250 exhibitors, builders and realtors held the annual preHome Show “Pom Pom” dinner last night in the Manufacturer's Build-
g. ; Before. dining, they inspected the three model homes which rapidly are nearing completion. The nineday show opens Friday night. Verne K. Reeder was general chairman for
the dinner and Norris P. She by was committee’
for itself in the musical:life of the United States.” In‘ the past two seasons the
Indianapolis orchestra has been aj
sustaining feature of the. CBS ‘music program in an 18-week series of broadcasts. During the 1937-38
season, its first under: Fabien Sevitz-|. ky’s direction, several of the con-}| broadcasts from the|
certs were | Murat by. the Mutual
ASK THE TIMES
question of [fact or information dianapolis Times Washington! Service | Bureau, 1013 13th St, N. W., Washington, D. C.. Legal and medical
‘advice cannot be given nor can
