Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1942 — Page 3
Ff
“weighted average”
WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1942
FINDS ASHER X-RAY
‘65% SUBVERSIVE
Scholarly U. S. Researcher
Explains ‘Weighted Average’
System in Describing Study of Asher’s
Publication at Mail Hearing.
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, May 20.—“Weighted average” system, intended to be used in measuring the volume of Nazi propaganda in American publications, was explained yesterday at a postoffice department hearing by Harold D. Lasswell, Ph.D., director of war communications research for the library
of congress.
The system, Dr. Lasswell said, produced a rating of 65 per cent subversive in the case of “the Weekly X-Ray,” published by Court Asher at Muncie, Ind. The hearing was to determine whether the “X-Ray,” having been once
barred from the mails, should lose its second-class mailing privileges." Dr. Lasswell, formerly a Yale professor, was brought to Washington by Librarian of Congress Archibald MacLeish, who also is chief of the office of facts and figures. His formula, Dr. Laswell said, is based on answers to the following questions about a publication under analysis: 1. Does it follow the Nazi propaganda that the United States is economically corrupt? 2. Does it oppose the administration’s foreign policy or conduct of the war? A Guide for Judges
3. Does it assail the president on moral or ethical grounds? 4, Does it disparage Great Britain or other allies? 5. Does it say that Washington is run by Communists, plutocrats, Jews or crooks? Dr. Laswell, who presented his charts and statistics at the close of Asher’s hearing before three assistant postmasters general, said that his system is offered only for suc use as courts or government departments see fit to make of it in determining whether publications are guilty or innocent of subversion. A government aid said that “The Chicago Tribune” is one of the papers now getting the “weighted average” treatment, and that so far its balance is on the pro-American side.
No ‘Petty Bootlegger’
Asher, who was a Ku-Klux Klan lieutenant under D, C. Stephenson,
. the former Indiana grand dragon
now serving a life term for murder, said that he had left school at the sixth grade and couldn’t understand Dr. Laswell’s system. “But I'm an American—a 100 per cent American,” he insisted. “I don’t mind attacks on my reputation, although I did think Time and Life magazines shouldn't have called me a ‘petty bootlegger.’ Why I never sold less than ga case of liquor. “But I don’t like to be called subversive. I've printed information that I got from Father Coughlin’s ‘Social Justice,” and I've seen worse stuff in ‘The Congressional Record.”
INTERNES TO ENTER METHODIST HOSPITAL
A new group of internes will enter the Methodist hospital Monday for their year’s service, and those internes and residents completing their training will be feted at a graduation dinner June 13 in the nurses’ home. . Dr. A. T. Stone, assistant resident for the past-year, will become chief ' resident. He succeeds Dr. Charles F, Seaman, The incoming internes include Jay K. Wisdom, Kansas City, University of Kansas; Harvey B. Eastburn, Iowa City, and Robert Mason, Wilton Junction, Iowa, University of Iowa; James Hogue McDonald, Aurora, Ill, University of Illinois; Roger F. Whitcomb, Knightstown;
Charles D. Williams, Hartford City;
F. C. Whitlock, Fairbanks; Arnold J. Bachmann, Cambridge . City; Harokl F. Burdette, Roachdale; Robert L. Dilts, Ft. Wayne; Charles E. Green, Plainfield; Oscar D. Havens, Cicero; Martin Krajac, Myron Harrison Green, W. A. Kurtz, Frank Cledis McDonald, Richard C. Pryor and Lavid Joe Smit, all of Indianapolis and the Indiana university school of medicine.
WATER FIRM'S
Before End of Year, State Told.
Indianapolis Water Co., today told the state public service commission that it would be impossible for the utility to have its original costs re-
December, 1938, filed before the end of the year,
the company would file a tentative report based on book figures since
next few weeks, Order 4 Years old
The company had been cited to appear before the commission to show cause why it had not complied with the four-year-old order, which set a two-year limit for the compilation of the original cost report. The commission took’ the matter under advisement. The citation was issued by the commission early this month after the company had asked for permission to sell $1,365,000 in 3 per cent mortgage bonds, to be due in 1972. Fears Records Destroyed
Mr. Daniels told the commission that some of the company’s books prior to 1913 were not available. At that time the ownership of the company passed into the hands‘ of C. H. Geist of Philadelphia, and some of the books were taken back to Philadelphia where some were believed to have been destroyed by fire, the utility company attorney said. Company officials pointed out that in compiling the original cost report it would be necessary to go back to 1869 when the company was founded. They said that in those days no record$ were kept of such a nature as required by the commission today and that it would be a long engineering job to determine just how much certain units of property were worth, based on construction costs at the time of building.
Faced Other Problems
Mr. Daniels further stated that the company has been busy with many matters since the commission’s order was issued in 1938. He pointed to the construction of many additional facilities, the estate problems caused by the death of Mr. Geist, and the negotiations with the city of Indianapolis for the sale of the utility’s common stock to it in 1939. All utilities in the state have been ordered by the public service commission to file origibal cost reports. These reports, showing, the actual costs of utility property, can be used by the commission to determine whether proper utility rates are being charged and whether the financial structure of the utility is such as to warrant further bond issues.
N. Y. DARKER AND DARKER NEW YORK, May 20 (U, P.)— More lights were turned off in New York last night, but military observers found that their new, more stringent dimout still didn’t reduce sky glow enough to keep it from betraying allied ships to axis submarines. The next step is a total blackout, and it was feared that unless the new dimout reduced sky glow sufficiently, one would be ordered.
REPORT SLOWED
Can’t List Original Costs|§
port, ordered by the commission in|;
1913 with the commission within the |§
Turn About
Irate Housewife Turns Hose on Street
Cleaner.
IT WAS THE LAST straw when the automatic street cleaner again kicked dirt up on the sidewalk of the home of Mrs. Beatrice Grismore, 1015 Olive st. Mrs. Grismore turned a garden hose on the driver of the vehicle and gave him a good soaking.
Joseph J. Daniels, attorney for the |# LL
Mr. Daniels said, however, that gs
Mrs. Beatrice Grismore . « ‘I let him have a bath.
The driver, Wilbur Noward, 46, of 1420 Dawson st., wanted police to arrest her but they refused, saying he first would have to swear out a warrant. “I can’t say I shouldn’t have done it,” Mrs. Grismore said after the incident yesterday, “but I couldn’t stand it any longer. “The hose was the handiest thing I had and so I let him have a bath.” 2 8 8 ACCORDING TO Mrs. Grismore, the cleaner had been throwing dirt on her walk since last summer and yesterday when she warned the driver about it, he said: “You get up on that lawn or I'll run over your garden hose.” Mrs. Grismore then turned the hose on him. “It was the funniest thing I ever saw,” said Mrs, Margaret Wilharm, of 1012 Olive st., Mrs. Grismore’s-aunt,
POLIGE PLAN READY FOR STATE ALERT
Here’s how the whole state will be put on the alert within a few minutes if enemy planes ever approach, according to plans perfected by the state police: A message will be flashed, via the state police radio here, to the 10 police posts throughout the state. These posts will in turn immediately notify all city police and local authorities in their areas. An alternate plan, which has been perfected, provides for the telephoning by state police here to officials in all large cities in the state who in turn will call smaller towns and localities, Approaching enemy planes will be reported by the army interceptor command at Columbus, O
2 BURNED TO DEATH AFTER AUTO CRASH
PERRYVILLE, Ind., May 20 (U. P.).—Herbert J. Smith, 19, Cayuga, and Vernon Esdel Adams, 18, were burned to death yesterday when their car careened into a bridge abutment and caught fire after striking a 10-year-old girl on Road 34 in Vermillion county. Police said the car, driven by Mr. Smith, struck Anna Beth Turner of Cayuga, and then crashed into the bridge. Both young men were pinned in the wreckage and were unable to extricate themselves before flames enveloped the machine. The girl suffered a. fractured leg
and internal injuries.
0.5. NEAR CLOSE IN BROKER CASE.
Secretary and Ex-Client of McDermott Tell of Pre-Dating Letters.
rest its case in the federal trial of Russell W. McDermott, Indianapolis investment broker, a former secretary in McDermott’s office testified today she had written letters and “pre-dated” them at her employer’s order, McDermott is charged with using
” |the mails to defraud and violation ‘lof the securities exchange act.
Today's witness, Miss Marie McCormick said that “pre-dating” of
‘| letters “frequently was asked of me
by Mr: McDermott.” Tells of $5000 Loss
She said this: went on over a period of a month when the government contends his activities were being investigated. Yesterday a former client, James
Allio of Indianapolis, testified that
he had pre-dated by almost a year, letters written “for McDermott’s
: records and at his suggestion.”
Mr. Allio testified that he lost “more than $5000, all I could bor-
ilrow on my insurance and a $450
diamond ring” in transactions with McDermott.
Letters Introduced
Letters introduced by the prosecution which purported to show that a $10,000 bond had been in the Allio account as collateral for transactions were “pre-dated,” according to Mr. Allio’s testimony. “I never owned a $10,000 bond nor have I ever seen one,” the witness said. He explained that the allegedly fraudulent letters were dictated to him by McDermott and they were written almost a year after the date printed on the letters. He also testified that he wrote a letter, dicated by McDermott, because “McDermott was in some kind of a wrangle with his Chicago partners and I saw no harm in trying to help him.” He said the .contents of the letter were fictitious.
Matched Client’s Checks
The witness said he didn’t remember how many checks he had written and had received from McDermott but he did say that McDermott had matched his checks in transactions and that “on some occasions” Stock was paid for after it had been re-sold. Mr. Allio said that at no time had he carried more than $400 in his drawing account but that he had written checks for “up in the thousands.” He explained that McDermott would match the check amounts so that when it was cashed there would be sufficient funds to honor it. On questioning by B. Howard Caughran, district attorney, the witness said that he was asked to destroy about a dozen checks by the defendant.
Brother Loses $500
Mr. Allio testified that at McDermott’s suggestion he opened an account for his brother Philip which ended in a $500 loss—“all that he invested.” A similar account was opened in the name of Russell Faux, Indianapolis. Mr. Allio said he opened this account at McDermott’s suggestion and that Mr. Faux never invested any money and had never even met McDermott. When transactions were made Mr. Faux would indorse the check and Mr, Allio would cash it. He told the court he didn’t know why the account was opened bub he guessed “because there was too much stock in my account.”
Loss Exceeds $35,000
In previous testimony, Mrs. Marie Hangen Sweeney said that she had lost between $35,000 and $50,000 through her account with McDermott. The government contends that it was her money that was “transacted away” in the Allio account and that it was her $10,000 bond that McDermott had letters written purporting to show that it was the property of James Allio. The government is further contending that the pre-dated letters were obtained by McDermott in an effort to straighten out his books after he discovered that the SEC had investigators on his trail. If convicted on all 14 counts of the indictment, McDermott could receive a maximum of 70 years in prison and $1000 fines on mail fraud charges and $5000 fines on violation of SEC rules. ’
IN INDIANAPOLIS—VITAL STATISTICS
Here Is the Traffic Record FATALITIES ~ County City Total 2981 ..vooiovvne-. 20 30 D9 1943 ........iei 18 0 48 —May 19— Accidents ... 13 | Arrests re. 812 3 | Dead ........
TUESDAY TRAFFIC COURT
Cases Convic- Fines |} Tried tions Paid Speeding ...... 33 21 $254 Reckless driving 5 4 37 Failure to stop at
through street 2 2
3 6 13
15 150 | can 80|m
$543
All others ..... 20
Totad ....... 6 ou MEETINGS TODAY tal association, convention,
11 day os So bogek a1 Op istants association,
nto Hotel Lincoln, = y. in pdians Coal association, convention. oa Severin, i day "y . Indianapo! League omen » ers, iss. m meeting, Centr oy Ww. A,
Irvin 8. Cobb talk jalk. an anlempirary has ortridge I
polls ebapter. Na tant .
Purdue aiversiiy: meeting, Room 434, Federal building, m,
Co-operative ? of Indianapolis, lunchnoon,
eon, Columbia oub., meeting, kinder arien: Re 1i30 Mothers’ ub, Indiana "Pri »
club, dinner meeting. P00 N. nL orne lane, 6:30
Wi A, Smal’s Society of Christian n Service of a Adams Bobbitt lecture misicale Utility cub ot ¢ ‘Indians ndianapeils, June ay on, uncheon, t Men’s Tnaustrist group, {uncheon,
ote] W rit” Regearen oi “elub, dinner, Hotel
LOL Alpha & cha ier, Pht Gamma Tau,~meet-
a Alumni association. luncheon, Hotel Severin, noon, WH club, luncheon, Claypool hotel, OSE ‘ma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board
of Trade, India ana oils "Real Estate Board, property Managers. division, luncheon, Canary cot-
Santor 6 Chamber of Commerce, luncheon,
iH ut aiob. luncheon. ‘Chamber of Com-
< MEETINGS JouMOREOW =
convention, Sf Crote1 Be 5 PE forum, American Ur Uni titio on League of Indiana 1 luncheon, 231 N. Pennsylvania st, noon. Indiana \ section, Society of atomoative eers, meeting, Hotel Antlers, night. vertising club, luncheon, noon.
mapolls. Adve apolis Athletic lub, Root "we I "pall Suaen onan Malle:
J vi
L William George
Pro fessional Assia women’ fe plan, PTE C. A 5) Minnie M
‘United, Elegtrio Radio Machine workers, meeting, Hotel Severin, 7 p Sia eta Pi, Don, Poanary cottage, © Sigma Nu, luncheon, Columbia club, -
BIRTHS
Girls
Donald, Ruth Hauser, at Methodist. John, Mildred Methodist.
rancis. Baker, a t 2429 North:
Boys ward, Grace Devine, at deen. Swinf ford, at St. 4 incent’d. en Churchill, at St, Vincent's. en at. St. Vincent's. ge Abi at St. Vincent's. Fosso, at St. Vincent's. es yn, es, at Methadist, arren, Mild Bocker , at thodist. od lison, Marthabelle Koelling, at Meth-
"a nita Embree, at Methodist. Virgil, Geneva'Cloud, at Methodist, Taraia)
en Hedegarde, at St. Francis. a re | Sed Margaret Austin, at St. FranRobert, Mar at 1652 N. Arsenal 3 piv at 1218 E. Market.
Homer, Mary , Ruby Charleston, at 2473 Barnes
‘DEATHS
William Edward Helms, 72, at 238 N. ' | Pine, cardiac eR Dense on. Spandgel, 54, at 15 8.
Gladstone, Dudding, ‘Methodist 5 De, 5 corona B
w, 3, at St. Vincent's, myo-|c
S. | Cleveland ..
Willie Gearlds, 28, at Flower Mission, tuberculosis.
Ella Maria Mayes, 69, at 2413 Manlove, hemiplegia.
Irene Cota Ratcliffe, 81, at Methodist, coronary occlusion, Rebecca Dessauer, 84, at Methodist, diaRaymond Sevens, po at 1140 E. Market, corenary occlusion.
Frank Kinney, 8, at City, tuberculosis.
As the government prepared to]
2455 Broadway.
glider, saying not much of anything and smiling once in a while if something pleased him, “It was the same way when they were bombing Pearl Harbor,” Mrs. Billings said. She explained that Waikiki, where she and her husband have lived for four and a half years, is considerably down the beach southeast from Pearl Harbor. They were ordered by radio to stay in their home and that night they had a blackout.
Mrs. Billings and Donald. . . . Donald was undisturbed by it all. 8 8 =n 2 = =
N. Side Woman and Son, 2, Forced to Leave by War
Life on the beaches of Waikiki is not the tropical heaven it used to be and so Mrs. Virginia Billings and her son, Donald, 2, are at home at
They were a part of the exodus of American women and children
moved back home, out of the Pacific war zone. This morning Donald was sitting contentedly on the sun room
A few weeks ago, Donald's father,
associated with the Hawaiian Pineapple Co., decided his family had better go to America. He would stay on at his work. First warned by officials to say little of their trip or about Hawaii, Mrs. Billings and Donald boarded a Pan American clipper and winged their way uneventfully home. Donald was particularly careful today to give away no war secrets. He gave an occasion baby-talk grunt, which sounded slightly Hawaiian, but that was all.
Today
likely to open a
army information, Japan has 750,000 troops stationed in the Siberian border region. Russia formerly had about 500,000 in her Far Eastern army, but the number withdrawn for service against the Germans is not known. The maintenance of such a large force on the Russian border, when Japan is supposed to be planning her next main drive either against Ching or Australia, is regarded as
significant. It cannot, be that Japan fears a Russian invasion. Russia has made it quite plain that she wants peace with Japan as long as the dire Hitler menace exists in the west. She was scrupulous to observe international formalities by interning the crew of an American bomber forced down in Siberia after the Tokyo raid. : But Japan evidently fears that if Hitler is knocked back, Russia's attitude will change. Hitler's defeat would enable the united nations to concentrate their full force against Japan, with results Japan well knows. Hence, it is to Japan’s interest to keep Hitler in the war and to help him knock Russia out of it if feasible. If things start going badly for Hitler, or if the allies threaten his position by an offensive in western Europe, it would be logical for Japan to open a second front in the east.
Big A. E. F. Worries Japs
Japan would have to strike soon and hard. Otherwise, she might face attack from three directions at once—by Gen. MacArthur from Australia, the United States navy from the east and the Russians and Americans from Siberia. Time is an important element, because despite some Australian perturbation over the sending of American men and arms to Britain instead of the Orient, Gen. MacArthur is accumulating a striking force that eventually would spell Japanese defeat. The dispatch of a vig.A, E. FP to Britain, with the implied promise of
's War Moves
By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press War Analyst Leslie Hore-Belisha, former British war secretary, said in commons’ war debate today that Japan is
allies start an offensive in Europe to aid the Soviet. It is permissible to reveal that American army men, not talking for direct quotation, have expressed the 4. same opinion, Also, they would welcome it. Russia a bélligerent against Japan, James H. Doolittle in the April raid would be able to operate from Russian bases, enticingly close to the Japanese islands.
second front against Russia if the
With fliers of the type led by Brig. Gen.
According to
turbing to Japan as it must be to Hitler. They both know that we are not sending thousands upon thousands of men, with tanks, artillery and other offensive weapons, for sightseeing or for summer training. They too obviously are for fighting purposes.
Not Scattering Our Shot
There is no military secret about it. Hitler has only to look back to 1917-18 to guess that when American fighting men stream to Europe, they are bent on business. With so many fronts to cover around the world, it must be obvious to Hitler that we are not scattering our shot to put a powerful fighting force in the European zone without purpose. ‘The global war is so inter-related that the movement to the British isles not only foreshadows an attack on Hitler, but an attack on Japan, just as much as though the men and arms were being sent westward across the Pacific.
FLETGHER AMERICAN PAYS NEW DIVIDEND
If you're tired of Yeading such painful headlines as “gas rationing,” or “higher taxes,” this ought to provide a pleasant relief: The liquidating trustees of the now defunct Fletcher American National bank have $262,000 which they're ready fo distribute to the bank’s depositors and creditors. It represents a 5 per cent dividend.
have received, to date, 88 per cent of the balances they had on deposit Feb. 25, 1933, when the bank was
the bank moratorium. Certificate holders should detach coupon 15 and cash it at the American National bank here.’ Out-of-town holders of certificates may present the coupons to their local
more to come, thus may be as-dis-
banks for collection.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
eee U. 8. Weather Bureat ee
Precipitation 24 hrs,; To piscibitation, andy since J
following table oe temperatures
in The olowim Station h Low oR 56
Atlanta ..o.cicesevnsssssncss Boston , evessasshscncesstesecnse 70 0 .esesssesssssssssescees 89 54 Cincinnatl .eeeveceeccsacscscees 52 DENVEr ....eeesesnsavnstonssess Evansville
WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P.)— _ |The house ways. and means com43 | mittee expected today to reach a
DB A Dae anes
after increasing the normal tax from four to six per cent. The committee has set $2,754,000, 000 as its goal for revenue from income faxes—some $50,000,000 less than the treasury’s new goal. ¢ Everyone who earns more than his exemptions—tentatively set for $500 for single persons and $1200|1949
House Group Near Decision On New '42 Income Taxes
Te unt ay ihe normal tax "| Bouse and. senate But 00 the basis
85 per cént. That schedule has been tentatively adopted by the committee but several changes are to be made today. ‘Committee members interpreted yesterday’s action on the surtax schedules as indirect rejection of President Roosevelt’s proposal that no person be permitted to retain more than $25,000 a’ year after taxes. There was no definite way yet to compute the taxes the average American will have to pay on his 1942 income if the cdmmittee program is finally approved by the
With this payment, depositors will |
placed on a restricted basis under| §
Speaker Warns Group to Beware of Post-War Collectivism.
Congressmen who insist on authoritative collectivism after the war is done should be “kicked out,” Charles: R. D’Olive declared before the Indiana Coal Merchants’ association today as it opened its twoday annual convention at the Hotel Severin. Mr. D'Olive is a member of the board of governors of the National Electrical Manufacturers’ association. “At this time in our ‘national emergency, we are merely lending our private rights as American citizens. Let us, however, watch out for ‘planned economy enthusiasts’ who deliberately seek to enforce controls during the emergency without providing for their release after the emergency is over,” he warned.
500 Are Expected
Walter E. Klehfoth, Richmond, state president, formally opened the convention this morning. About 500 merchants were to attend. “Individually and collectively, it is up to us as Hoosier coal merchants to help insure an interrupted flow of solid fuel to the ultimate consumers in spite of many existing handicaps,” Mr. Klehfoth said in his presidential address. “It is a duty we owe as patriots to help serve American interests on the home front here in the state,” he declared. Speakers scheduled for this afternoon were S. Scott Nicholls of New York, Albert R. Arbury of Bluefield, W. Va.; George F. Burnett, deputy administrator of the office of defense transportation, and Harry Gandy, Washington, executive representative of the National Coal association. Party for Wives Wives of visiting coal merchants were to be entertained tomorrow at a luncheon in the Ayres tearoom and a bridge party was to follow. In charge are Mesdames L. Lynn Logsdon, J. Don Ballew and Robert W. Bidlack, all of Indianapolis. The annual golf tournament will be held tomorrow afternoon at the Speedway course, with Dayle Rowland in charge. The annual banquet, will be held tomorrow night at the Severin roof garden. ] Carl G. T. Monninger of Longansport is chairman of the general arrangements committee for the convention.
COLLAPSES AT TRIAL Eli Shonbrun, on trial with Madeline Webb for the murder of Mrs. Susie PF. Reich, wealthy Polish
refugee, collapsed today during cross-examination of his uncle, the
to friends.
STRAUSS
OPEN PARLEY
Oren S. Hack
PRACTICED LAW HERE 47 YEARS
Prominent Democrat Was Member of Board That = Built Airport. !
Oren S. Hack, Indianapolis ate torney for 47 years and prominent in Democratic politics, died at Methodist hospital early today after a brief illness. He was 66. During recent years, Mr. Hack
was receiver for the old Washington Bank & Trust Co. and was presi= dent of the board of works when the city built the municipal airport during the Slack and Duvall admin. istrations. ; He also was city corporation coune sel for several years and once was a deputy prosecutor. Twenty years ago Mr. Hack was. a member of the parole board of ‘the Indiana reformatory and ‘was ine strumental in having the reformae tory moved from Jeffersonville to its present site at Pendleton. Mr. Hack maintained homes here at 3152 N. Delaware st. and’ at his farm at Boggstown, near Shelby ville. . .He was active in Democratic poli= tics in Marion county and the state for more than 20 years and was'®& leader in many civic enterprises. He was associated in law prace tice here with Joseph Collier and John Raftery. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Eliza« beth Jane Miller Hack; a daughter,
Eleanor Hack, a member of the juvenile court staff; three sons,
NEW YORK, May 20 (U. P.).—|John, Stephen, now in the army, a
and Joseph Hack; of Boggstown.
MRS. COFFER DEAD
‘Mrs. Gustava Coffer, of 2513 James st., died in city hospital t=
state’s principal witness against day of burns received -May: 5 when him. He has been a victim of a|she fell against a stove at her home heart ailment for years, according |and her clothing caught fire. ‘She *
was 43.
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