Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1940 — Page 14
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PLAN HOUSING FOR HOMELESS FARM GROUPS
FSA Officials Here Reveal Building Loans Made Hurt in Fall From Bievele—Leroy|
In Missouri. Overman, 15, of 250 N. Beville Ave, | A plan whereby cottages for was taken to the City Hospital yes-! “displaced farmers” ean be built at terday after he. fell off a bicycle] 8 cost of less than $500 each is being | he was riding near his home. Po- | worked out in Indianapolis. (lice said the boy received a pos-| P. G. Beck, regional director of. sible fractured jaw. the Farm Security Administration |
here, today announced that the first p 30 loans for. the cottages had been IEA OHfitial Recuvel ingeslrve
made to individuals in southeasy|ing N. Larson, of 5245 N. New JerMissouri who are homeless and sey St, was recovering today at living doubled up with other families Veterans Hospital of injuries reor living in shacks thrown together | ceived yvesterafter they became homeless. | day when he Contain Four Rooms 3 was struck by | He said that it was hoped that! an automobile | eventually 200 to 300 such homes | J in front off can be built. The cottages contain! American ° LeTour rooms with a total area of 420 gion headquarSquare feet, The houses are 20 by| ters, TI" N. 26 feet and contain two bedrooms, Meridian St. a 147:x12 living room and a kitchen Mr. Larson is with built-in cabinets. ; national Legion | Fifteen-pound felt is being used| purch asing| between the floor and finish floor § agent. He was! and between the siding and the EN struck by a car studding. The roofs will be of which had | asphalt strip shingles. The ex- | turned sharply |
te y Sars of the houses will be coated {4 avoid striking another car which walls De i Interior siopped suddenly in front of it. treated bli ed and the floors ap. parson was a war-time aviator tine. With linseed oil and turpen-| and ‘served 18 months in France. | wine 490 price includes door and pe 8 TALE 0 Labor, Th, and Ww screens, a sandpoin 3 and a pump of npn ao gion headquarters on the death of
Sanitary WPA outdoor toilets will Grover Workman, last year.
be built. Stationer Before Exchange Club ": Three Plans Offered | —Charles P. Garvin, secretary and | ree principal plans are being general manager of the National | he gpisin acreage for the sub- Stationers Association, will speak | y es pds: Vndiond ‘at the Exchange Club luncheon in| AOTeS e landlord of 10 tye Hotel Severin tomorrow. Memgres Of uncleared land, rent free po... of the local club are to go to,
and taxes paid fo paid for a 10-year period, North Vernon next Thursday even-
the landowner to receive the im-| provements at the end of tl ing when the new Exchange Club 1e period there will receive its charter at a
in lieu of rent. 2. Provision by the landlord of a P2nQuet in the high school audi- . three-acre home and subsistence torium. |
farming site plus two acres of cotton | crop land, rent free and taxes paid,| Jowa Student Heads Butler Coun-
the landlord to receive the improve- Cil—William Ostlund, Webster City, ! ments at the end of 10 years in lieu Iowa, a junior, has been elected of rent. president of the Student Council, 3. Provision by the landlord of a governing body at Butler Univer-three-acre building and subsistence Sity for the 1940-41 school year. farming site, rent free and taxes Council elections for underclassmen paid, with the landowner guarantee- | membership will be May 23. Hugh ing repayment to the FSA of the Smeltzer, Indianapolis, is retiring loan for constructing the cottage. council president.
Mr. Larson
| |
| official line.
lernments in the World.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1940
NORRIS. ATTACK HURTS JACKSON AS CANDIDATE
[Liberal Still Has ‘Hopes’ For Attorney General, Writer Says.
By LUDWELL DENNY
Housing Session Scheduled—Wal[ter E. Stanton, executive secretary of the Indiana State Housing Times Special Writer Board, will be chairman of a seS-| WASHINGTON, May 9. — Bob sion on the state's role in modern Jackson's vresidential candidacy is housing during the eighth annual; suffering from the blows of Senator |
meeting of the National Associa-! {tion of Housing Officials in Pitts- | George W. Norris (Ind. Neb) and
‘burgh, May 13 to 18. Lionel F. Other liberal friends. Artis, housing manager of Locke- | Senator Norris renews the serious field Gardens, will participate in a charge that the Attorney General,
round table discussion on tenant! 3 and management problems at the *Whitewsstet Oe nes
convention. of J. Edgar Hoo-
William W. Suckew, Franklin, ver and the FBI is the new sovereign prince of in the Detroit, Saraiah Council, Princess of Je- and Milwaukee rusalem, Scottish Rite Body. He Spanish recruit- | was advanced during the annual ing . cases. But election last night in the Scottish Senator Norris Rite Cathedral. still has hopes 0; Mr. Suckow succeeds Crawford Jackson. H. Barker, who installed him and Although Mr. other new officers after the elec- Jackson Xs tne tion. Gail H. Moorehead was ZF vesiden marshal. SE ape ol Other officers named include Mr. Denny Sor Ih ir. Roose Site sisulell. high priest; for a third term, there has been Bert C. ‘Co rdle. ’ junior warden, | doubt from the beginning whether and John D. Hughes, master of Mr. Roosevelt could deliver the, ceremonies. John A. Kendall,
nomination to any such left-wing Danville, was appointed master of New Dealer. The cchservative Dem- | entrances, starting point in the
locrats, who hope to have veto power | |at least in the convention, fear Mr.
IJackson. Therefore, without united Mr. Suckow has been a member |liberal backing his chances are|
of the Masons since 1908 and has slight. held Yitce in most of the York | p, ;q0xically, Mr. Jackson is the| roups. {victim of policies of the one person
Smith Explains Job Service — | most eager to nominate him—the George J. Smith, manager of the President. It was the President who |
: ~~ (decreed the drive on alleged sub-| ‘Indiana State Employment Service versive activities, and who author-
| field office here, spoke today to sen- | ized revival of the discredited Hoover |
iors of the Tech High School voca- System for that purpose. That was tional schools. His subject was! 2st fall, months before Mr. Jackson
“What the Employment Service Of-,P¢came Mr. Hoover's nominal boss. {fers to Young Men.” Murphy Took “Rap” |
Butler Professor to Speak—War-| First, Attorney General Frank ren Rex Isom, professor of political Murphy, who had a long record as a science at Butler University, will defender of civil liberties while speak before the All Saints’ Cathed- mayor of Detroit and governor of ral Men's Club at a dinner to be Michigan, had to take the liberal held at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the |Criticism for the Roosevelt-Hoover Cathedral House, 1559 Central Ave | Set-Up. And since Mr. Murphy was
His subject will be “Changing Goy- | Promoted to the Supreme Court, | ‘ {where he has delivered vigorous
feivil liberty decisions, Mr. Jackson
has had to take the public heat for
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a system which he did not originate and which he apparently cannot, control. The much-criticized Detroit and Milwaukee raids occurred within Mr. Jackson's first month in office Under public pressure he dropped the indictments; but later, in reply (to the first Norris charges, he gave, Mr. Hoover and the FBI a clean bl of health. | Again under public pressure Mr. Jackson ordered a departmental, but not an independent, investigation.] | He also ordered Mr. Hoover to stop! illegal wire-tapping. Recently he set | up a new neutrality division which | may or may not curb Mr. Hoover's powers—the White House says not.
| i Issues 2d “Whitewash”
Now Mr. Jackson has submitted to Senator Norris his second “white- | wash.” In his covering letter, which | goes farther than his investigator's | report, Mr. Jackson says: { “That the agents in Detroit acted | within their instructions, and exer- | cised their discretion in good faith | | seems clear to me. , I am confi- | (dent that the more the operations | of the bureau are explored, the more | it will appear that its vigorous and | effective work for law enforcement i5 conducted with a fundamental purpose to observe the rights of] defendants.” | Senator Norris replies that “the facts are not in dispute;” that the FBI method “was inhuman, uncalled for and was what they do under, Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini. ! They had no right to handcuff, chain, strip, and search them at an unholy hour in the night, or to apply third degree methods.”
| Overrules Conviction
{ The Supreme Court in three de(cisions has overruled convictions in| criminal cases where prisoners did not have the benefit of adequate counsel or were subjected to prolonged police questioning before] trial. Mr. Hoover recently charged that| the widespread criticism of his] methods emanates directly or indi- | rectly from anti-American bodies trying to disrupt the entire United | States. |
RAIL PAY RAISE URGED WASHINGTON, May 9 (U. P).—! A wage-hour industry committee | today recommended pay raises for approximately 635,000 railroad emplovees, most of them maintenance of way workers in Southern states. The 12-member committee repre-| senting the public, employers and | unions asked a minimum wage of 36 cents an hour for workers on! Class I railroads and 33 cents = hour for shortline roads.
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