Evening Star Newspaper, September 4, 1931, Page 12

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SLAVNG SUSPECT ADMIT IENTTY {Denver Officers Recognize Fugitive Indicted in Rochester, N. Y. | By the Associated Press. [ DENVER, Colo., September 4.—Angelo Morcal2, sought for the slaying of Mrs. Angelina Spitale, 16, in Rochester, N. Y., in November, 1928, was held here today. For more than a vear Detectives L. L. Peterson and William Jackson have looked daily at the face of Moreals as portrayed by a New York criminal cir- cular. Last night they went into the N 1E KV VETERANS . IN H ING TERRORS OF WAR IN NIGHTMARES Pandemonium of'Moaning and Screams in Mount Alto Wards Explained by Administration Psychiatrists. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. Night has become a demonic inter- lude for hundreds of World War vet- erans. When sleep comes to the quiet wards | of Mount Alto Hospital, the national | diagnostic center of the Veterans' Ad- | ministratien, it brings a pandemonium | of weird crying, moaning and screams of terror, according to patients rezently | hospitalized there. Many of the vet-| erans are afflicted with a veritable piague of nightmares. A peculiar combination of circum-, stances, it was explained at the psychi- atric division of the Veterans' Admin- | | W WASHINGTON, OSPITAL RELIVE STAR, because of the peculiar nature of their past experience. Thousands of men, he says, passed through terrifying experiences on the | western frort and something of the old | terror is revived when these episodes | flit across the memory. But during waking hours these memories seldom are allowed to come into consclousness. hen they do, they are unreal things | of the ‘past. A man might have an| impulse to scream or run, but is able quickly to restrain himself. When sleep has shut off the controll- ing mechanism, the memories not only | come back much more vividly, so that | the veteran actually lives again in the Vg, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1931. Science Great Mounds in-Asia Area Linked to Early Man. Scattered over a 1.400-mile trail through Baluchistan, Waziristan and parts of Afghanistan are great mounds filled with human artifacts, it is an- nounced in a recently published memoir of the Archeological Survey of India. These evidences of a large and stable population in the distant past were dis- covered by an expedition led by Sir Aurel Stein. The country now supports only a nomadic population, and is dry- ing up rapidly into a desert. Some of the mounds were of immense size. One is reported 113 feet high and a mile in circumference, out of which were se- cured painted pottery, terra cotta figures and beads. It was evidently the ac- cumulation ¢f centuries. ‘Through this 1egion ran the old routes between the Indus basin and Persia and Mesopotamia, and further study of the material recovered from the mounds may shed much light on the wanderings of man just before the dawn of JEWISH FEDERATION BUDGET HAS SURPLUS Contributors to Community Chest Oversubscribe Relief Request by 27 Per Cent.. Contributors to the Community Chest, by designating the charity to which their contributions shall go, have assigned to the Jewish Welfare Federation a little more than 127 per cent of the actual budget requested by that orgzanization, it was said today in a press release. The release further pointed cut that non-Jewish, as well as Jewish contributors have expressed their approval cf the federation’s work | in this way. In 1929, when the federation was organized, only 23 per cent of its budget was assigned by the contributors. Ar- thur Sundlum, president of the federa- tion, sald today: “It is gratfying, jndeed, to see the work of the Jewish Welfare Federation gaining recognition in so practical a | harder to continue to merit the coni dence and good will of our Jewish and non-Jewish fellow citizens.” Plan Spinoza Tercentenary. AMSTERDAM (#).—Celebration of the tercentenary of Spinoza’s birth will be held here next year. Part of the observance will center about the house where he lived at Rhijnsburg, after he was turned out of Ams‘erdam for phil- osophical writings which offended of- ficers of the synagogue. v | ASK BAN ON WIVES SAN FRANCISCO, September 4 (/).— A resolution asking the United States | Civil Service Commission to drop all im;nlxed women from the rolls to give | unemployed men Post Office Gepart- | ment jobs, was adopted with acclaim | by postal supervisors in national con- vention here yesterday. A clause to allow women to regain their jobs in case of adversity or mis- fortune was inserted. STILL GREATER TAILORING VALUES ON CONNECTICUT AVENUE at 1024 For All Day Friday Until 6 P. M. and For All Day Saturday Until 6 P. M. istration, may make the Washington past, but this is distorted and made history. R Vi jon: bscripti to it. hospital ‘& favorite gathering place for | even mcre terrible and there is nothing T RS | ¥ay as desiansting subscriptions to it. | Th fact that these designations have For These Two Days We Are Offering Your Choice of Our Bertillion Bureau “show-up.” (Covyright, 1 Eruaco BY £R - BUSCHI O b | | | E A%\ %fl;’vdfivén.:n M MAMUFACTURED BY Mgy Se B STLOUIS MO-USh:* EUS | C 5,1iOP FLAVORED Budweiscr: AEY MALT Y sasuric rim e me AN"E}JS‘ER “BuscH.M LOUIS.MO-USA. B3 HOP FLAVORED , L udiweisel ; EY MALT SYH! Avng INC NG ULSOE Buschfl P ((j HOP'FLAYORED. & WY MaLT SV SUSER Bl BM-174 Budweiser Barley-Mait Syrup LIGHT OR DARK—RICH IN BODY =FLAVOR JUST RIGHT It pays to buy the best Use qucliiy products from the House of ANHEUSER-BUSCH S$T. LOUIS . Makers of Busch Extra Dry Ginger dle the Original Budweiser The face of Angzlo Moreale appeared on the platform above them. Confronted With Circular. “The New York kid killer,” whispered Detective Jackson. “Rochester, not New York,” said Dotective Peterson. Ten minutes later Moreale, con- fronted with the circular, confessed he was in the motor car from which bul- lets were fired into a car driven by Sam Spitale, fatclly wounding the wife, ‘Angelina. Spitale escaped. Mrs. Sptale named three men, in- cluding Moreale, as the slayers before che died, and all were indicted. Two temain at liberty. Police expressed the cpinion th2 attack had resuitzd from a bootlegging fcud. The prisoner signed extradition waiv- ers last n'ght to return to Rochester for trial. He was booked under an alias, but police said he admitted his identity | rezdily under questicning. Denies Slaying. “You've got me all right,” police said he told them. *I was in that car, but I didn't kill that girl.” Moreale was arrested last week with two other men in a raid on a sill in which one man was shot by 8. A. Bon- ney, Federal prohibition agent. With the others h> was brought to Denver to be run through the criminal identifi- cation room. p Morzale said he had been living in Colorado for more than a year. His wife and children are here. FOUR MINE UNION - LEADERS INDICTED Kentucky Jury Adds Perjury Charge to Three Murder Counts. By the Associated Press. HARLAN, Ky., September 4.—Indict- ments charging perjury in connection with trials of mine iabor cases were re- turned yesterday by & grand jury here 2gainst W. B. Jones and W. H. High- towner, former secretary and president, respectively, of the United Mine Workers at Evarts. Both men are in jail under taree murder indictments each in con- nection with a ‘clash, May 5, near Cvarts, b2tween deputy sheriffs and miners in which four men were slain. The indictments charge Jones and Hightower made misstatements in in- cucing accused miners to sign an a ! fidavit requsting Circuit Judge D. C. Jones to vacatz the bench. They are ged to have been instrumental in having four of the approximately 30 de- ‘endants, chargsd with murder, swear that Judge Jones had termed all miners “reds.” Judge Jones denied having made such a statoment. The four men vesterday withdrew their names from the affidavit. COUPLE FOUND DEAD IN SUPPOSED PACT Dedham, Mass.,, Collector Leaves Note—Accounts Recently Checked by Auditors. By the Associated Press. DEDHAM, Mass, September 4.— Ceorge C. Ingraham, 67 years old, tax collector of Dednam, and his wife, Dorothy K., 65, were found dead today in their gas-flooded home. Police said the_‘;‘ fzund a note indicating a suicide pac Auditors had recently been checking the town's accounts. They lay side by side on a sheet on the floor, with gas pouring from the tube of a gas heater. Beneath a bunch of keys the police found this note in Ingraham’s handwriting: “Keys to n~fe. Nothing ahead.” State audi\:rs have been at work on the town's b>ks since Monday, but no report of their progress has been made public. Friends said Ingraham recently had undergone an operation and had been in_poor health. Ingraham had been town tax col- lector fcr three years and for many years before had been employed by the Dedhem Naticnal Bank. Both he and his wife had bzen prominent in civic affairs and she was a member of the Town Warrant Committee. S “POLITICAL HOLIDAY” WITH GERMANY SOUGHT French Want Campaign for Revi- sion of War Treaties Halted for Ten Years. PARIS () —Intense partisans of the statu: . the French.are working tow “10-year political morator- ium” with Germany. By a “poltical moratorium” the French understand complete cessation of the campaign for revision of the ailles and other treaties resulting the World War, which the Ger- mans, Austria. Hungary and, in a smaller way, Bulgaria and Turkey, ars carrying on, This is the principal thorn in tha French side: Such a moratorium would mean that the Polish Corridor would not be touched, thet Germany and Austria would drop all ideas of an economic union hetwen them, or of any other sort of union; that the German Army and Navy would remain what they are today, unless lowered py the general d’'sarmament conference scheduled for next February. It would mean also that Germany would make no direct or indirect de- mands for a return of part or all of her colonies lost by defear. ‘There are other things. France would want & complete change from what she regards as Germany's present attitude. DIES IN FALL FROM CAR John Cavanaugh Fatally Hurt as Truck Makes Left Turn. John Cavanaugh, colored, 58, of 217 Lowriz place noriheast, was fatally in- jured yesterday when he fell from a motor truck as it made a left turn the black ghosts of war as they arise | to prevent the man from obeying his from their graves in the subconscious |impulses. He again faces machine guns memories of ‘the veterans. First, it was |and gas attacks, Airplanes again show- stated, many of the patlents are not|er him with bullets. MAKES QUAILS LAY EGGS increased from 23 per cent of its needs | in 1929 to 127 per cent of its required | budget in 1931 is an eloquent tribute Entire New Stock of Fall and Winter Weight on Howard road southeast. He died in Casualty Hosvital an hour later of a fractured skull. Simon Vincent, colored, 5015 Hayes street northeast, was driving the truck. He was held by police pending & coro= ner’s investigation, very ill. ‘They are brought to Mount Alto from all parts of the country for diagnosis of lingering and often ob-| scure ailments rather than for actual| medical treatment. So they are in| fairly good physical condition compared |tice when many are gathered in ons to the patients in most hospitals who | are =0 sick they hardly have energy enough to dream. Sleep does not come from physical weariness. Otherwise, it was explained, other hospitals would present a_very similar picture in the hours of darkness. The men have been away from the war for a long time, so that much of it has becoms vague in their memorics. It is recalled by coming to a veterans' hospital. Patients are naturally un- easy over the diagnosis of their cascs. Besides, as a general rule, they h had a greater store of terrifyine ex- periences than ordinarily would be found in a hospital population. Out of these circumstances arise the | nightmares Many of the men are nervous patients, but behave normally during waking hours when they ha control over the activities of minds. Sleep, in some manner clearly understood, switches off the emotional control of the cortex of the brain, the seat of the intellect. i The cerebral mechanism of the night- mare, it was explained by a Veterans'| Administration specialist, does not dif- fer essentially from that, involved in any other intellectual process. probably more common among veterans Off with the old love ...on with the new! A new girl se.& new face...new kisses eesnew ecstasies! Her arms, once heav- en to him, were now like strong white chains. $tions of everyday life. 1t ds! Warden of Florida Prison Farm Takes Nest Clutches Daily. RAIFORD, Fla. (#).—Warden John | :;lue. such as a vlelemtx;,a' ho}:plul. and | Blitch of the State prison farm has in- s an easily explainable phenomenon troduced mass production methods into 8y 4 - | in the psychology of dreams. Ordinar- | S0 b P00 PO ily it involves nothing more than the distoriion of terrifying memories and| The warden sees to it that eggs are | removed- daily from quail nests on the | uninhibited reaction to them. priscn form preserve Instead of one War memories, it_was explained, are by no means the only sources of night- but the words spoken by the men | clutch of eggs vearly, the females lay vear around, endeavoring to fill the marcs, in the h-spital leave little doubt that |the | they are the most notable cause among | hests. these veterans. The night terrors are | part_of the heritage of the war which | the veteran must endure along with his | | physical wour.ds nd the inroads on his | constituticn. Pleasant dreams appear | to be rather rare. This plague of nightmares, hospital authorities say, doubtless is common | among veterans outside of the hospitals | and may prove alarming to members of their familles. It only attracts ndo- to have their brief lease on life in the | nightjime rather than be intruding | continually into the patient's daytime | existence. | The nightmares, according to Vet- | erans’ Acministration physicians, prs-‘ sumably will pass away cf their own | accord as the memories become dimmer | and the hospital patients become ab- sorbed in the healthy, fatiguing exer- ‘Thus no special | | attention is paid to them. The patient seldem has any memory of them a few moments after waking, so that the strife-torn existence of his dreams and | the placidity of his daytime existence | are things apart, neither intruding upon the other. 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