Evening Star Newspaper, December 2, 1934, Page 5

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PRISONER SURVEY REVEALS 7 TYPES Officials Report Majority Can Be Deait With in Routine Way. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. Beven or eight curious “personality | types” found among the country’s criminal population—all of which afford special problems—are described from studies of the Public Health Service in Federal penitentiaries. The studies reported were made by Warden F. G. Zerbst of the Leaven- | worth Penitentiary and Acting Assis- tant Surgeon D. E. Singleton of the Public Health Service. i These types are designated as “re- i action types,” differing from the nor- mal and vet not over the borderline where they could be called insane.| The great percentage of the prison | population, Warden Zerbst and Dr.! Singleton point out in their report | just issued by the Public Health Serv-' ice, are normal and can be dealt with in a more or less routine fashion. | These even include the so-called “re-| cidivists,” the perpetual offenders who are no sooner out of one jail than | they are in another and the mechan- | ism of whose personality is a mystery to psychiatrists. Their long jail ex- perience has taught them that the! easlest way to get along is to obey rules. and they always seck the casicst way. In Jail Through Accident. The majority of men in jails. any- way. it is stressed. are there largely through unfortunate accident. rather than through any intelligent anti- social conduct. They are known as the minimum custody group. capable of trust and of filling responsible posi- tions This leaves a smalil residue with whom the ordinary rules don't work Efforts to discipline them into form only make them worse than ever. As classified in the report they are The vicious mental defective, able to tell right from wrong. but unable to | profit by experience, profuse of prom- | ises, but with a short memory. who | is almost sure repeatedly to violate rules. No way is suggested of deal- ing with him | The docile mental defective, about whom there is nothing malevolent. but who can't resist a suggestion from some other criminal to break rules. | He can usually be trained to monot- onous routine and behaves well | enough so long as he is kept from | bad associations. Inferior Group. The constitutional psychopathic in- ferior group. which provides the greatest problem of all “The abnormal conditions imposed | by prison life tend to place an unusual tension on this type of person.” savs the report. “In civil life such a man | had devised numerous ways in which he could escape from the pain of mental conflict. or condition incom- | patible with his personality. As a| class, these individuals overcompen- | sate for their shortcomings. Their boastful attitudes and are well known. Because of the repressed environment t able to escape the mer and intolerable situations that arise and mental disturbances may break forth in many ways from minor in- fractions of the rules to vicious and | unprovoked attack upon a guard or | other inmate. | “Fortunately, there is usually some warning of such an outbreak. They | may become dissatisfied with their work. restless, ask for frequent inter- views about minor details, appear fre- quently in the sick line with vague complaints, and grumble about the food. Hospitalization for a few days, | until the symptoms pass, has proved | quite effective.” “Extroverted Psychopaths.” The fourth type listed are the “e: troverted constitutional pyschopaths.” | These are men who cannot stand be- | ing cut off from their associations with other people. They are extremely | overactive, are often instigators of | petty complaints, write lengthy let- | ters to officials, and are active in | organizing recreational activities. | When isolated for discipline they us- | ally suffer mental breakdowns and | have to be taken to the prison hos- ! pital. The fifth type listed is the “sneak- Ing introvert,” who tries to get what he wants through trickery. They are often cunning, keep themselves in the background and egg on the less intelligent to carry out their schemes, When interviewed they are clever in covering up their deeds. Others usu- ally take the punishment they deserve. The paranoid is the sixth type. He Is the fellow who always insists he is being discriminated against, having IREQUESTS Life-Termer i | i [ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., DECEMBER 2, 1934—PART ONE. on Vacation Good behavior in prison earned for Matt Kimes this brief respite from his life sentence for the slaying of two officers. He is pictured (right) holding an iron while learning to brand a “doggie” under the tutelage of Col. Zack Miller (center) of the 101 Ranch. Looking on is Sid White, son of Kimes’ attorney, at whose ranch, near Oklahoma City, they are shown, Kimes' temporary freedom was granted by Gov, Willlam H. Murray —Associated Press Photo. BOLIVIA MILITARY AIDS NEW REGIME Political Convulsions in Peru and Uruguay Not of Serious Result. By the Assoclated Press BUENOS AIRES. December 1.—A week of political convulsions in threc Scuth American countries, Bolivia Peru and Uruguay, tonight apparently had produced serious results in Bolivia alone There the Bolivian Army. facing another major Paragt offensive which may settle the Cl the resignation of President Daniel Salamanca. Vice President Jose Luis Tejada Sorzano replaced him After two cays of uncerta.nty, it be- came apparent today that the mili- tary bioc which ousted Salamanca was backing the new regime. and Tejada Sorzano appealed to all factons to unite behind him in the cause of nation2l defense Siles Seeks Refuge in Chile. Former President Hernando Siles deposed by the 1930 revolution, echoed ppeal from Santiago, Chile, where 3 ace, at least, Bolivia's pecliticians. with most of the members of the Salamanca cabinet, were col- laborating with Tejada Sorzano, for .- . getting their differences for the time being in order not to embarrass the army in its conduct of the war A series of crises had faced the ousted President’'s government. despite | the war. Should these crop up again. | it was forecast here, Bolivia's troops might be seriously hampered, facing as they are the Paraguayan drive at their principal base, Villamontes, only | 40 miles from the lines, and the rich | Bolivian oil fields behind it. | | Benavides Claims Victory, In Peru the government of President | Oscar Benavides claimed to have | crushed an insurrection of opposition | elements, including partisans of the! late former President Augusto B Leguia, who was depcsed in 1930, and the Aprista party, which came to| pominence in the last few years. | In Uruguay. where the opposition | has been restless since President | Gabriel Terra in March, 1933, effected | his coup dissolving the National Council, which previously shared exec- | utive powers with him, the govern- | ment’s opponents became vociferous at public rallies and Terra ordered arrests of the leaders. FOR SEATS. AT TRIAL MOUNTING Thousands Will Be Denied Ad-| mission to Hauptmann Hear- ing, Officials Say. elson’s Sister WOMAN TESTIFIES IN SLAYING PROBE. MRS. JULIETTE FITZSIMMONS, Sister of George “Baby Face” Nel- son, is shown here testifying at the inquest held for her brother No- vember 30. She said she had not seen her brother for some time and clzimed it was she who called an undertaker to remove his builet- riddled body from a roadside —A. P. Photo. elson’s Riddled Body Lowered Into Unblessed Grave U.S. Agents Hunt Widow ith Wreath Slim Clue. as By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, December 1.—At the head of an unblessed grave in St Joseph’s Cemetery tonight stood a telltale wreath inscribed “To Our Loving Husband Father." It was the newly George “Baby-Face killer felled by the guns of his own victims, two Government agents. They laid him away today while a handful of mourners. a handful of vigilant detectives, and a handful of morbidly curious shivered in a brisk December gale and odded grave of Other Federal men were busy hunt-; . g T llis | farm, about 60 miles from Tulsa. ! ing the gunman’s widcw, Helen Gil —heirass to the notoriety of her dead husband. Branded the first woman public enemy, she was in hiding and in that wreath of red and yellow roses sent to the funeral of “Our Loving Husband” the Government agents saw a clue, howaver thin. Presuming the hunted woman had sent the flowers. the officers made a strenuous =ffort to t:ace the florist who nad delivered them. SCHUTZ EVIDENE REPORTED HSSING New York Paper Says Im- portant Federal Data Is Gone From Files. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, December 1.—The New York American says that evidence essential to the prosecuticn of Dutch has been reported missing from the files of the Treasury Department and Federal officials. Schultz surrendered this week and is held in lack of $100,000 bond. Several sheafs of documents, the including confidential reports on Schultz’s financial activities used in presenting the case to the grand jury. The American adds there was no indication whether the files were mis- laid or stolen and also declares that ) Department of Justice agents have under surveillance a Broadway build- connection with the case. United States District Attorney Martin Conboy. informed earlier in the day of similar reports on the Schultz case, declined to comment. Agents of the Internal Revenue Bu- reau asserted the files were complete and in geod order and that, to their knowledge, nothing was missing from them. FEDERAL JUDGE SURRENDERS SON IN (Continued From First Page.) unless it was a life-and-death strug- gle.” The youth declared he shot Gorrell in self-defense. to reveal details of his encounter in a sparsely settled, exlusive residential section here Thanksgiving midaight, beyond saying that the boy shot to preserve his own life Father Spoke of Scuffle. However, Judge Kennamer boy's father. spoke of a “scuffie Gorrell's body, shot twice in | head, was found in his motor car here Thursday night. The pistol with the in the rear seat of the car and had been wiped clean of fingerprints. Kennamer's alleged confession fol- lowed closely upon a report by Floyd J. Huff, Kansas City pilot Higgins. chief of Kansas City detec- tives, that the youth had told him he once intended to kill Gorrell by knock- ing him unconscious in a flying plane and bailing out Higgins and Anderson also quoted Huff as reporting a conversation he said he had with Kennamer in which Kennamer revealed a purported ex- tortion plot against Homer F. Wil- cox, wealthy Tulsa oilman. Kennamer Opened Letter. | Huff. the | stood from Kennamer's conversation | that Gorrell had given Kennamer a i letter to mail to Wilcox from Tulsa | The pilot said the letter, however. was opened by Kennamer, who d.s- covered it contained a Jemand for $20.000 and a threat against Wiicox |and his daughter Virginia, 20. with whom Kennamer has been friendly Kennamer was quoted by Huff is | saying that this letter was one of his | reasons for wanting to kill Gorreil. Huff's story. as related to Higgins, [ was that Gorrell and Kennamer went | to the Kansas City Airport November 22 and sought to rent a plane. He | refused to rent them a plane because !of unfavorable fiying conditions. but volunteered to drive Kennamer to Tulsa in his automobile “It was on that ride that the youth prosecutor said. under- 1 {and Gorrell,” Higgzins quoted Huff as ) saying. Went to Atterney’s Office. Flinta Moss, the boy's attorney, sald Kennamer carge to his office this morning, told him of what had hap- pened and asked his advice. “He drove with me to his father's | where Judge Kennamer was quail | hunting. and we conferred with his | father.” said Moss. “Judge Kennamer advised the boy to come directly back to Tulsa and surrender, and that is the whole story.” ! Young Kennamer had not been regularly employed for some time. He left school some years ago. and at 17 he had tried to establish and operate | Schultz on income tax evasion charges | newspaper asserts, cannot be found, | ing, housing many lawyers’ offices, in ! OKLAHOMA SLAYING Kennamer and his attorney refused i the | which he was believed to have been | slain had been restored to a holster | to T. J.| PLANS FOR RELIEF | AROUSE DISPUTE Bitter Battle in Congress Looms on Proposals of Roosevelt Aides. By the Assoclated Press. Proposals by administration aides for enormous relief expenditures be- | came the center of a congressional dispute yesterday that forecast a bit- ter parliamentary battle should Presi- dent Roosevelt formally recommend their approval. Harry Hopkins, relief administrator, wants to appropriate as much as $8,000,000,000 or $9,000,000,000 for | work-relief, building new houses for the low-wage group, and an expansion of the subsistence homestead projects. Secretary Ickes has an outlay of | from $5,000,000,000 to $7,000,000,000 for public works and housing in mjnd, backed by a contention that business is unable to provide a quick solution | for the depression problem of restoring { employment. Both in Warm Springs. Both are in Warm Springs for the week-end ready to urge these plans jupon the President. The Chief Exec- utive has given evidence that he in- tends to reserve final judgment for | the time being. He has promised only to have a relief plan ready to send to Congress a day or so after it meets in early January, but may give some hint of his plans in an- other radio “fireside chat” some time after he returns here this week. Without awaiting a final presiden- | tial decision, however, some members | chambers yesterday leaped upon the issue. House leaders quickly manifested concern over the size which present disbursements have at- tained. Anathema to Old Guard. To what is left of the Republican Old Guard, the idea was anathema. | Senator Dickinson, Republican. of | Towa, said such a program uld ! give the financial world heart failure, | 1f any heart is left” and would “scare” | private industry. Representative Snell, Republican | floor leader, said that while a certain | amount of relief could not be avoided, the effort should be to decrease un- | employment by encouraging private | enterprise, especially the building in- dustry, to undertake new projects. A faction led by Senator La Follette, Republican. of Wisconsin, and Sena- tor Wagner, Democrat, of New York, has long contended for a public works and housing program of even greater proportions than that advanced by | Ickes. They have a substantial fol- lowing Parleys to Draft Program. ‘The program finally to be submitted | will be worked out between now and | the first of the year in conferences |the President will have with both | these and other advisors—including | | James A. Moffett, housing adminis- | trator, and Secretary Roper, who want | private rather than Government cap- | ital to bear the load—and with repre- | sentative congressional leaders. The result might well be a com- j promuse, but however low -a spending | figure is proposed a controversy cer- ! tainly will follow. for the Republicans {and a group of conservative Demo- ! crats will be satisfied with nothing | less than an outright retrenchment on the part of the administration. |of both Suspicious cf Dairies. Local doctors of India refuse to recommend unrestricted use of prod- ucts from ihe dairies, even when the | proprietors claim their milk is fully | pasteurized. | e oL | Airmail Increases. | Airmail carried from England in the | quarter ending September 30 weighed 71,220 pounds, compared with 54.720 in the corresponding period of 1933 | & gain of nearly 30 per cent. Nelson, ruthless | related the ill feeling between himself | | | | TIGHTGR | sire of the admini Threatened Wealthy Uncle George A. Carpenter, 34, and his 29-year-old wife Bernice pictured just before their arraignment before a United States commissioner in Detroit. They pleaded guilty to a charge of attempting to extort $10,000 from Daniel Sorenson, wealthy Toronto manufacturer and Carpenter’s uncle, under threats of kidnaping his young son and daughter. They were arrested shortly after a dummy package had been delivered at the hotel where they lived letter Sorenson received in accordance with instructions contained in a on November 24. —Associated Press Photo. PURGED ON RESERVE BANKS Administration May Ask More Control to Assure Ease in Loans. The conviction has spread through most of the administration that the should seek from the ress sufficient control of Tve system to assure that the Government's borrowing and program will meet no Although no final word on the sub- ject has come from President Roose- velt, with whom the decision rests. the Senate Banking Committee. ap- parently at the instigatio the ad- ministration. soon will b of the changes in Federal Resers which would be necessary to give such assurance. Few Changes Believed Needed. Experts within the administration are reported to believe comparatively few changes in the law would be necessary. Probably the most impor- tant would be the investiture of the Federal Reserve Board with the pow- er to select the governors of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks. The prevailing opinion in the ad- ministration appears to be that a somewhat firmer control over the Federal Reserve system is the only practicable alternative to the creation of a central bank apart from or over the Federal Reserve system. The de- ration. as indi- cated by the President and other officials in their talks with business and financial leaders in recent months. is to aveid banking and fiscal legislation which would further un- cettle “confidence.” | “Central Bank” Avoided. Thus talk of a “central bank” has been soft-pedaled and the word has gone out to administration supporters in Congress that a central bank is not on the administration program { WAIT FOR the NEW 1935 Plymouth! Trade Your CAR Now You Will Get a Better ALLOWANCE At This Time for the coming session. However, im- portant administration officials are firm in their determination to free the Government's financing program of the hazards which they think lie in the present Federal Reserve set-up and the control of so much of the| banking system by men whom they | regard as fundamentally distrustful of the New Deal. A greater degree of control of the system by the Federal Reserve Board, which now operates in the closest harmony with the Treasury. is re- garded in the administration as all the more important in view of the turn toward a policy of larger ex-| penditures for public works. housing. rural electrification. grade-crossing elimination and related enterprises. (Copyright. 1934.) HAZEN LAUDS HACKER FOR SERVICES TO CITY Retired Refuse Supervisor Is Highly Praised for 34 Years of Work on Many Jobs. Morris Hacker, who resigned re- cently as supervisor of city refuse, was praised for his many years of District service in a letter sent to him vesterday by Melvin C. Hazen, presi- dent of the Board of Commissioners. “Few employes of the District have uch an enviable record of public vice.” Hazen wrote. Hacker had completed 34 vears of service, during which he was assist- ant engineer of the Engineer Depart- ment, superintendent of county roads, inspector of buildings and supervisor of city refuse. All these positions, Commissioner Hazen said, had been filled faithfully by Hacker. . Flaps for Bicycles. As the result of the order of the minister of transport that after dark every bicycle in England without a tail light must carry 13 square inches of white surface below the reflector, 8,000.000 white rubber tail flaps are being manufactured. in. boiler, 6 radiators, ft. rad and clock automatically opens drafts. Installed in 6 Rooms. 3 Years to Pay We can finance your order on the Y Use Your Christmas Savings Check to Buy an American Radiator Co. HOT WATER HEATER This price includes 17 Jjanitor s A5 TIRE MEN SILENT ON LABOR RULING Promise Later Answer to U. S. Order for Bargain- ing Election. By the Assoclated Press. AKRON, Ohio, December 1. —Offi- cials of two large rubber companies, ordered to hold collective bargaining elections for their 21,000 employes next Priday, were silent tonight as to whether they intend to comply. Both firms, the B. F. Goodrich Co., and the Pirestone Tire and Rubber Co., received the order late yesterday from Ralph A. Lind, regional director |of the National Labor Relations Board, and both promised answers “as soon as possible,” Lind said. In addition to settling the date for the elections the order requested the companies to supply copies of their pay rolls showing the names of all employes eligible to vote. | With an estimated 12,000 employes | at Goodrich, and 8,000 at Firestone, | the order for the election is believed to be the largest issued by the Labor Board in the number of men affected | By the elections, the American Ped- eration of Labor unions which in- clude many of the employes in both | concerns, hope to establish their right | to deal with officials of the companies for collective bargaining. BARTENDERS WILL SCAN REPORT ON OPEN BARS Alliance Also Will Discuss Pro- posed Liquor Tax Reduction at Meeting Today. ‘The Bartenders' Alliance at a meet- ing today at 3 p.m., at 1412 I street, will hear the report of its Legislative Committee on the advisability of re- questing Congress to ask the District Commissioners to permit service bars in the open. The tax on import spiritous liquors will be discussed when the committee presents a proposed bill to reduce the ‘present tax of $5 per gallon. Bartenders’ schools that are allegedly | turning out untrained bartenders and | are promising jobs on completion of | their course will be investigated by the association. ENGINEERS WILL VISIT ANOTHER POWER PLANT | Association Members Will As- semble Tonight to Continue | Educational Trips. Another educational trip to a Wash- | ington power plant will be made t | morrow evening by members of t | National Association of Power Engi- neers. Samuel A. Jacobs, State deputy president for the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia, said the party would assemble at 808 Eye street at 8:15 pm. and then visit the Capitol power plant. The trip is not confined to members, he said, and any in- | terested person may join the party. | The association makes weekly visits | to plants in Washington and vicinity. Several Army engineers have been included among the visitors. Camel Is Good Jumper. | Ina recent Arab gymkhana at Tel- | Aviv, Egypt, a dusky rider made his | camel jump through the “eye of a | needle” by vaulting one man stretched between two benches, at the same time | passing beneath another held horizon- tally by two others mounted on stools. , 300 ation 5289 that THE 1935 PLYMOUTH will be a better and more beautiful car. National Housing Act’s liberal finance plan—the lowest terms ever offered. In addition, we will loan the money to make other necessary home im- arrived at this conclusion through a | process of rationalization to get away | from a disagreeable job. He is never | willing to accept the blame for his . Church :ervices were denied the|an advertising agency here. By the Associated Press. | slain outlaw, and the undertaker, | FLEMINGTON. N. J.. December-1.— | Philip Sadowsk'. read a half-dozen misconduct. Punishment only makes him more bitter because he believes, honestly enough, that it is only ad- | ditional persecution. Must Be Isolated. The seventh type is that of the “fear-reacting individual." He is de- &cribed as “the fellow who will fre- quently appear before some officer, | usually very much excited, stating | that one or more inmates are threat- ening him bodily harm. The idea may be real or imaginary,-but in either case it is very real to the man himself. Real or fancied, the effect | Is the same. This individual even- | tually will break down under the strain. The only recourse is isolation.” By studying the reaction types of eriminals in the Federal prisons the | Public Health Service doctors hope | to arrive at some clearer understand- Ing of the psychological mechanism | which precipitate persons into lives ©f crime. TOWS SAVE TWO BOATS Assistance Also Rushed to Trawl- er in Distress Off Virginia. NORFOLK, Va., December 1 (P).— Two small boats were towed to safety today by coast vessels and assistance was being rushed to a helpless trawler tonight. The cutter Travis picked up the two- masted schooner yacht Indra off the North Carolina Coast today and towed her into Morehead City. The cutter Apache this afternoon floated the oil screw Havana, which stranded off Annapolis in Chesapeake Bay. The fishing trawler America, with disabled engine, was sighted this afternoon near False Cape, 30 miles below Vir- ginia Beach, and the cutter Acushnet was dispatched from Norfolk to take her in tow. Plea for Bell Fails. Found during the demolition of the work house at Ballina, Irish Free State, a bell, 160 vears old, was claimed by the rector of Enniscrone on the ground that it had belonged to an old church in his parish, but the Board of Health presented it to Dr. M. Hardy, s chairman. Instead of abating, Sheriff John H. Curtiss said today. the flood of re- quests for seats at the trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann is rising. However, there will be many disap- pointed, the sheriff said. when the ex- | German machine gunner comes to | trial next month on an indictment | charging murder of the Lindbergh { baby. The court room is fairly small and after arrangements have been made for seating the press there will be room for only about 250 spectators. A number of prominent magazine writers have asked for seats, the sheriff said, and at least one judge. R. H. Mur- ray of Halifax, Nova Scotia, would | like to attend. Until the jury has been selected— | and Sheriff Curtiss thinks his task will take up most of the first week of the trial—the entire panel of 150 men | and women will be seated in the court, | thus further reducing the available | seating space for the merely cuiious. In order to relieve the crush which | would result from bringing in all of | its witnesses daily from the beginning, the State expects to “stagger” them, calling only those whose testimony wili be necessary as the trial progresses. EER T S Royal Residence Doomed. Blysthwood House, in Renfrew, built in 1820 and for many years the | recognized royal residence of the west of Scotland, is to be razed. t prayers over the caskel while Nelson's mother, Mrs. Mary Gillis, and a sister and brother of the dead man, wept. Two hundred persons crowded the little mortician’s parlor, but few fol- lowed the casket to the cemetery. As the widow was being hunted. Chief of Detectives John L. Sullivan declared the dead bandit had planned a $150,000 Loop daylight hold-up to outshadow in ruthlessness anything his late chief, John Dillinger, had attempted. Sullivan said Nelson was to have been accompanied by a dozen men | wanted for murder or other long- term crimes. He said the robbery, set for before December 1, was to be in Wild West style. With guns blazing, the ma- rauders were to swoop down on the noonday crowd of a department store, and as the people fled in panic, snatch | the money from a bank-bound mes- senger. Sullivan said he plan a week ago. learned of the Held in Son-in-Law's Death. MULLENS, W. Va, December 1 (). —Randolph Canada, 30, was slain tonight at the home of his mother-in- law. Chief of Police Paris Belcher, who arrested Mrs. Myrtle Thompson, said she told him she shot Canada after he struck her daughter, who was his divorced wife. Night Final Delivery The “Pink Edition” of The Star, known as the Night Final, printed at 6 p.m., is delivered throughout the city at 55c per month or, together with The Sunday Star, at 70c per month. This is a special service that many people desire for the very latest and complete news of the day. Call National 5000 and say that Final” delivered regularly to your will start immediately. {Su want the “Night ome, and delivery {WEDS DETROIT WOMAN By the Associated Press. OLD POINT COMFORT, Va. De- | cember 1.—Rear Admiral Johnston Cheatham, supply officer of the 5th Naval District and orficer in charge of the Naval Supply De- partment at the Hampton Roads naval operating base, and his bride, ar- rived here tonight on their honey- moon. Mrs. Cheatham was Mrs. Irene Hoag, formerly of Detroit, Mich., be- fore their marriage. The couple would not reveal when or where the cere- mony took place. It is believed here, however, that they were married this afternoon. Admiral Cheatham will be eligible for retirement March 1, 1936. Shop at the friendly store— youre always greeted with a smile—with no obligation to buy. Specializing in Perfect Diamonds And All Standard American Watches g The Finest Genuine £ CULTURED e PEARL NECKLACES $14.00 up. SOPRPPODHE Complete Line of .- Gifts M. 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