Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1927 — Page 1
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WSCRIPPS-HOWARD
LOUIS EWBANK APPEARS FOR GOVJACKSON Executive, Coffin and Marsh Are Not in Court on Arraignment Day. TENTATIVELY SET NOV. 7 Counsel Files Appearance and Is Given Copies of New Indictment. Louis Ewbank, former Indiana Supreme Court judge, filed appearance in Criminal Court today as attorney to defend Governor Jackson, Robert I. Marsh and George V. Cofflnd against the charge of conspiracy to offer a bribe which they , face. None of the defendants was in court. Judge James A. Collins told Ewbank it would not be necessary for them to appear for arraignment today as scheduled, because of the new indictment returned by the grand jury last week, to correct minor errors in the original charges. Ewbank obtained copies of the new indictment and told the judge his clients would appear in court for arraignment as soon as possible. Nov. 7 Tentative Date Collins said he would expect them on Nov. 7, but said they might plead sooner if they desired, and offered to hear any motions in the case any time. The three are charged with con- , spiring to offer, in 1923, to Governor Warren T. McCray, the sum of L $lO,Ci 3 and a promise he would not I be convicted of crime in any State 1 court if he would name a man of Bfcheir choice Marion County proseBrcutor. ■ The new indictment merely struck ■>Ut the title “chairman of the Hnrion County Republican central Hmmittee,” in reference to Coffin. Hd referred to him as a politician. W Vandagrifft Gets Stay W Virgil Vandagrifft, board of works ■ president, under indictment on a of violating the State securiBkf law, was in the courtroom early, ■fcrvMayor John L. Duvall and HPiiam C. Buser, former city conHAler. ■Vandagrifft, charged with selling units of stock in an oil Hll rejuvenator, obtained postponeHnt until Nov. 7 of his arraignHnt, pleading he had not yet obHied an attoney. Huvall’s attorneys filed motion for Hnge of judge for trial on the inKrnent charging that the mayor the corrupt practices act. Hffe Collins will submit names of from whom a special He will be selected later in the H Arraignment Date Wrong Medal Judge Cassius C. Shirley, ■presided at the trial of the corH practices act violation charge Hrhich Duvall was found guilty sentenced to thirty days in jail H fined SI,OOO, announced arraignHr.t of Duvall and Buser on charge ■ conspiracy to commit a felony Hi been listed for today by error. H§oth these charges and. five other Hndavit charges against Duvall are Htsed on various specific acts in conHjction with his failure to list a $14,Hio gift from William Armitage on His election expense statement and Hs alleged promise of city jobs to ■merous persons before his elecBn. ■fcxt action on the Duvall case H be Saturday, when arguments be heard on his plea for anew on the charge on which he was Hrnnd guilty, Shirley said. H Because of absence from town of Hpeclal Judge Lew Wallace, arraignment of John J. Collins, city agent, charged with Hciting a bribe, was postponed Wednesday. Rtal receipts drop Hirease Largely in Postage on Periodicals. Hdianapolis postoffice receipts for Hember showed a decrease of 1.69 Hbent. Postmaster Robert H. BryHreported today. for the month were $384,which is $6,638.60 less than month last year. Stamp of $338,193.23 showed an inH?ed of $2,802.38 over last year, the H?ase being in newspaper and postage and permit, or ad■ing mail without stamps. ■nAMAGKIOTTO N H Hard Hit in Texas; Two ■V Deaths in Flood. Press H\LLAS, Texas, Oct. 3.—Heavy rains over Texas caused deaths and great damage to H cotton crop. Walter McElhaH-, 37, fireman on the Owl Creek Hithern Pacific passenger train, Hs killed when his train struck a Hshout caused by a cloudburst Hee miles south of Mexia. IBeven inches of rain fell. Hlharles Goocher, Holland, Texas, H: drowned when he tried to ford ■'ollen stream near Temple in his pa&M Hourly Temperatures ■ a. m *5 10 a. m 64 H. m 64 11 a, m 66 Ha. 63 1 2 (noon> ... 68 ■a. ra 62 Ip .m 71
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The Indianapolis Times Unsetled and cooler tonight, probably with showers; Tuesday partly cloudy.
VOLUME 39—NUMBER 125
The Mayor Shows Us An Easy Way Out
MAYOR DUVALL T 7[ \ ARSAK<,ES TO TURK AVIIiiTVVA, ~ _ HIS \JOB OVER TO HIS > > / C'^\ ■WIFE IF HE HAS TO j^g| iiahrktah MOIEEREF x -J$- 7fifcw / Sp\ WAIT 1\ [ /// , E SwG Y A MINUTE-, A //// yt^ciitL
DEATH CLAIMS GOVERNOR PEAY Tennessee Evolution Foe Is Stricken Suddenly. By United Preis NASHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 3. Governor Austin Peay of Tennessee, famous as an advocate of statutes forbidding teaching of evolution, died suddenly last night, following a. cerebral homeorage. The governorship of Tennessee for Peay’s unexpired term fell to H. H. Horton, president of the State Senate. Although Governor Peay had been prominent in Tennessee politics for twenty years, he first attracted national attention when he advocated and signed a bill passed by the Tennessee Legislature which prohibited teaching in public Schools the theory that man is ascended from lower animals. The statute provided penalty of a fine or imprisonment for any person violating it. It became a matter of national and international debate and Governor Peay, a college graduate and member of the Protestant church, was called upon to defend it. So the “Scopes Trial” in the little town of Dayton two years ago became a battle of the forces of religious fundamentalism, led by Peay, against modernism, as represented by the American Civil Liberties union. Peay was born in 1876 in Christian County, Ky., and attended Washington and Lee University and Centre College. He was married to Sallie Hurst in 1859 and the following year admitted to the bar. FILM PLAYER IS SUICIDE Spanish Actress Leaves Note Saying Husband’s Friends to Blame. Bu United Press HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Oct. 3.—Mrs. Guillermo Gallardo, beautiful Spanish film player known on the screen as Celia Delargo, committed suicide here today, police announced. The girl, a bride of two weeks, inhaled chloroform, because a note she left indicated, her husband had been influenced against her by his friends. The young woman’s mother found her unconscious in the bedroom of her home, a chloroform-soaked towel wound about her face. She died without regaining consciousness. $1,000,000 STRIKE BILL Cost of Erecting Separate Schools • ' for Negroes at Gary. By United Press ♦ GARY, Ind., Oct. 3.—Settlement of the Gary school strike, brought about by refusal of white students to attend school with Negroes, will cost the city $1,000,000, Mayor Floyd E. Williams estimates. That amount, he said, will be required to construct separate schools for Negroes.
Tickets were placed on sale today at the W. K. Stewart Book Store and Clark & Cade’s, Washington and Illinois Sts. for the lecture by Prince William of Sweden in the Armory Oct. 12. The Swedish royal visitor will be here under auspices of The Indianapolis Times. Receipts from the-lecture
Bound to Win Bu United Press NEWTON, Mass., Oct. 3 While in a police cell, Raymond Dunn, alleged chicken thief, asked for a fried egg sandwich. Just then one of the hens he was supposed to have stolen laid an egg. Police used it for the sandwich.
POPE GREETS LEVINE Flier Praised for Courage of His Feats. ROME, Oct. 3.—Charles A. Levine was received in audience by the Pope today. The wealthy American aviation enthusiast, who attracted world fame when he crossed the Atlantic with Clarence D. Chamberlin, was greeted cordially by the pontiff. The Holy Father congratulated Levine on his feats and expressed admiration of his spirit and initiative. After wishing him success in his future enterprises, the Pope bestowed the papal blessing on Levine and his family. TAX SLASH ASSURED Madden Says Plan Feasible Despite Revenue Loss. Bu United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.—Despite increased Government expenditures and expected loss in some revenue, tax reduction of $300,000,000 will be feasible next year, Chairman Madden of the House Appropriations Committee declared today after a conference at the White. House. He expressed the belief that the reduction bill would center around a 1 per cent cut In the corporation’s tax. CITY FIRE LOSS DROPS $51,154 Lower in First Nine Months of This Year. Fire loss in Indianapolis was $51,154 lower for the first nine months of this year than the same period last year, members of the Are prevention committee of the Chamber of Commerce were told at a meeting today. Loss for the nine months of this year was $520,644, according to figures of the Indianapolis Salvage Corps, Chairman Frank C. Jordan said. The committee made plans for Fire Prevention Week Oct. 9-15. V Templar Grand Master Is 111 Bu United Press DENVER, Oct 3.—G. W. Vellery. grand master of the Knights Templar of the United States, was removed to a hospital with chronic bronchitis. His condition was serious.
TICKETS PLACED ON SALE FOR LECTURE BY PRINCE WILLIAM
INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, OCT. 3, 1927
MERCURY WILL HIT TOBOGGAN Drop of 12 to 15 Degrees Is Tuesday Forecast. • Temperatures will be 12 to 15 degrees lower here Tuesday than today, according to J. H. Armington, United States Weather Bureau head. The temperature drop will start tonight. Tempe’atures today were about 10 degrees above normal. Sunday the mercury rose to 83 degrees at 3 p. m. Armington’s monthly report for September showed a temperature of 94 Sept. 14 and 43 degrees on Sept. 2i as the highest and lowest marks of the month. It was a dry month, wich 4.09 inches of rainfa)l, compared to the average of 4.49 inches. There were 281.9 hours of sunshine and only six days when there was more than .01 inch of rainfall. Hazy on Series Weather B u United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 3. The United States weather man todav was cautious about Pittsburgh world series wfeather, but gave cheering indications for tomorrow, at least, when he forecast partly overcast weather, with somewhat cooler temperatures. The first forecast on Wednesday weather will be available tonight. ‘GRANDMA’ WANTS WINE Woman, 106, Eager for Birthday and Real Treat. By United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—On the eve of her 106th birthday tomorrow, “Grandma” Francoise La Vaspresto is impatient for the first time in her life. On a shelf in her modest little brick home in Staten Island is a bottle full of red wine, a gift from a well wisher who will attend the three day celebration in honor of her anniversary. A native of Brittany, she is eager to sample it. “I can hardly wait to open it,” said “Grandma” today. “I expect a happier birthday than I have had in ten years. Prohibition wine is terrible, and I like genuine vintage with my meals.” COOLIDGE PLANS TRIP President May Attend Congress in Cuba in January. By United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.—Despite traditional objections against a President leaving the United States during his term of office, President Coolidge is planning to visit Havana in January to attend the sixth PanAmerican congress, it is learned at the White House.
will go to the camping fund of the Campfire Girls and the Girl Scouts of Indianapolis. The executive committee in charge of arrangements for the lecture and reception is as follows: Wallace O. Lee, chairman; Mrs. Hall Harmon, secretary; Arthur V. Brown, treasurer; Mrs. Charles B. Rush, Edgar Webb, Boynton, JohnJC.
DEMOCRATS LINKED WITH KLAN DRYS Gilliom Answers Challenge of Peters; Shows Sway of Kluxers. CANDIDATES ‘CLUBBED’ Aspirants for Office Kept Silent on Hooded Order, Says Critic. Attorney General Arthur Gilliom added anew chapter to his controversy with R. Earl Peters, chairman of the Democratic party, today when he filed his "bill of particulars” of charges of Klan association with Democrats and again asked that Peters openly denounce Imperial Wizard Hiram W. Evans, the Klan, and the Anti-Saloon League. The letter sent by Gilliom to Peters was an answer to a speech.delivered by Peters last week at Brookville, in which he denied that the Klan had influenced Democratic affairs and asked for a bill of particulars. The letter of Gilliom. giving details, charges that both the Klan and the Anti-Saloon League had been active in Democratic circles, and again invites Peters to join in a denunciation of these forces in the coming campaign. 1 Bill of Particulars The “bill of particulars” demanded by Peters and furnished by Gilliom, shows that candidates for the State Supreme Court, Auditor of State, Attorney General, and many county offices on the Democratic ticket had the full and complete support of the Ku-Klux Klan. That Indiana Democrats treated with Imperial Wizard Hiram W. Evans and Southern Klan delegates for support for their candidate for President is mentioned by the Attorney General. * Klan Publicity Failure of Albert Stump to menthe Klan publicly, “although Importuned,” in his campaign against Senator James E. Watson in the 1926 campaign, and the fact that the Democratic candidate carried many counties where the hooded order was strong at the time also is set out in the letter. Full text of Gilliom’s letter will be found on Page 2.
HEAR TAX PROTESTS Hearings on Marion County Levies Set for Tuesday. Objections to all Marion County tax levies except Warren Township, are scheduled for hearing before the State tax board, Tuesday. The school city levy, set at $1.45, will be heard at 9 a. m. Civil city, $1.08%, will be heard at 1 p. m., Marion County at 2p. m.. Perry Township at 3 p. m., Center Township at 3:30 p. m., and sanitary district at 4 p. m. Warren Township will be heard at 9 a. m. Wednesday. Objectors to the school and city levies include the civic affairs committee of the Chamber of Commerce, which has submitted an itemized budget asking specific reductions and anew rate to be set by the board. Harry Miese has filed objections for the Indiana Taxpayers’ Association. Several oitizens’ petitions are on file. TRIO DRINK AND DROWN Motorboat Capsizes After Party Aboard Yacht. By United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 3.—Returning to shore after an all-night drinking party on a yacht anchored in the harbor, Otto Rasmussen, 19; Arthur F. Smart, 24; and Joseph Linstra, 24, were drowned when their motor boat capsized. The owner of the yacht, Joseph F. Sturdy, said he had not given the youths permission to use the vessel and did not know of the party. ADMITS SLAYING CHILD Boy, 15, Changes Plea to Guilty in Trial for Death of Girl, 6. By United Press CEDAR RAPIDS, lowa, Oct. 3. Lyle Messner, 15, confessed slayer of Kathleen Forrest, 6, changed his plea of not guilty to guilty when his trial opened here this morning. Taking of testimony to determine extent of the punishment was expected to be completed by afternoon.
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis
Kills Self for Murder He Failed to Commit By United Press EPSOM, N. H., Oct. 3.—A mistaken idea that he had killed a man caused Bert Stanley, prosperous Epsom chicken farmer, to take his own life with a shotgun. Stanley disappeared following a pitched battle with a neighbor and his wife. Orrin L. Davis accused Stanley of flirting with Mrs. Davis when he came to deliver eggs to tne Davis home. Davis was said to have admitted asking $1,500 “solace” for the alleged alienation. Thursday, Stanley went to the Davis home and a quarrel resultefi. The men adjourned to the woodshed to settle their differences and a fierce battle ensued, during which firewood and shovels were employed as weapons. Mrs. Davis joined her husband in the fight. Davis was knocked unconscious and Stanley fled to his home, where he took a double-barreled shotgun and disappeared. His body was found Sunday in his own back yard. The shotgun lay beside him. "Needless suicide,” was the coroner’s verdict.
S7OO PRICE ON SLAYER’S HEAD Rewards Offered at Vincennes for Rhoades. Bu United Press VINCENNES, Ind., Oct. 3.—Posting of rewards totalling S7OO and proposals for an investigation of prison conditions in Knox County were outstanding developments of the day as the result of the escape from the Knox County jail here Sunday of Dreyfus Rhoades, convicted murderer. Sheriff Henry Mack personally has offered S2OO for Rhoades’ capture, dead or alive, and the county commissioners have offered SSOO for his arrest and conviction. Investigation of conditions at the jail was recommended by county officials and civic organizations because of the ease with which Rhoades escaped. He was awaiting retrial on charges of having killed Simon Carrie, Vincennes policeman. He was sentenced to death on a previous trial, but gained another hearing on appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court. Two hundred dollars reward, dead or alive, is the offer on Rhoades, Sheriff Mack advised the Indianapolis police department today, in PASTORS HOLD RETREAT Prominent Chicago and New York Ministers Are Speakers. City Protestant clergymen are holding their annual retreat today at the Boy Scout reservation. Dr. John Timothy Stone, pastor of the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago, and Dr. Robert E. Speer of New York, secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions, were speakers.
RED CROSS CONVENES Coolidge Will Address 7th Annual Convention Tonight. By United Pr\ss WASHINGTON, Oct. 3.—The American Red Cross today opened its seventh annual convention, at which for four days plans will be laid for anew year of disaster and other relief preparedness. A feature of the opening sessions will be an address at 8 ’oclock tonight by President Coolidge, who also is president of the Red Cross. Flood relief problems will be discussed tomorrow night by Secretary of Commerce Hoover; Red Cross chairman, John Barton Payne; Lieut. Col. George R. Spalding, U. S. engineer corps; Dr. William R. Redden, National Red Cross medical officer, and T. J. McCarthy, Louisiana reconstruction officer of the relief organization. EXTRADITION REFUSED Ohio Man Accused of Embezzlement by City Firm. Governor Vic Donahey of Ohio today refused to grant Indiana authorities extradition of D. Nelson James of Xenia, Ohio, charged with embezzlement, according to a United Press dispatch. Extradition was sought by the Eagle Stock Remedy Company, 1857 Gent Ave., Indianapolis. Lase Goldman, secretary for the company, was chief witness, dispatches said. Donaheyin rendering his decision said the charges brought by Goldman were not made in good faith. AUTO LICENSES ON GAIN Total State Collections Far Ahead of Last Year. Indiana traffic licenses increased $46,165 during the first nine months of this year, as compared to a similar period last year, License Bureau Director Mark Rhoads announced today. The total for 1926 was $807,341, while for this year it was $853,506. Passenger cars totalled $685,132, as compared to $650,033 and trucks $113,802 as to $103,510 for 1926.
Ruckelshaus, Jr., Miss Emma Gardner, W. H. Stout, Eric Leth, Boyd Gurley* The Prince, famed as a big game hunter, author, scientist and connoisseur of art, will speak on his experiences in Africa, especially in the “Land of the Pygmies,” where he investigated the life and customs of these little-known people
RAINS HAMPER ST. LOUIS WORK
Homeless Suffer; Last -of Dead Buried. Bu United Press ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 3.—Suffering was increased today in the tor-nado-swept sections of St. Louis by week-end rains which drenched the ruins and hampered relief work. But work of Red Cross volunteers and State and Federal troops continued tirelessly, as did rehabilitation. Thousands of families had been placed in temporary quarters or their homes had been made habitable. Trucks furnished by volunteers moved other hundreds to vacant quarters in undamaged sections of the city. Apartments were offered rent free by owners in most instances. Last of the eighty-five dead whose bodies have been recovered was to be buried today. Thirty funerals were held yesterday and fifty more were to be held today. Twentythree persons still are unaccounted for. Five hundred injured are in hospitals. Authorities estimate 700 others suffered lps serious hurts. Property damage estimate, made by insurance underwriters, was between $50,000,000 and $75,000,000, exclusive of private property lost in the tornado. Doubts Value of Long Prayers Bu United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—The “joyless” long drawn out prayer was attacked as a detractor from God by the Rev. Dr. Malcolm MacLeod, pastor of the Cc’legiate Reformed Church. No prayer in church, he said, should last more than fifteen minutes.
RAID MERIDIAN FLAT Big Liquor Haul Reported by Sponge Squad. Police and Federal agents went into the exclusive residential and apartment district Saturday night to stage a raid at 3015 N. Meridian St., Apt. 212. Mrs. Florence Dickson, 34, and Forrest Meyers, 32, of R. R. A., Box 142, were slated at city prison on vagrancy charges. Eight quarts of gin, four pints of barrel whisky, three quarts of alcohol, two quarts of Johnny Walker, five quarts of Three-Star Hennessy whisky and twenty-four quarts of beer were confiscated, they reported. George Thomas, Negro, 340 W. Sixteenth St., walked from the home of James Merryweather, Negro, 315 W. Fifteenth St., carrying a quart of alcohol and was arrested by Sergeant O’Connor and squad. He said Merryweather sold him the liquor. FIND FIRE UNDER PORCH State Probe of Night Blaze at Lloyd Smith Home Asked. Lloyd Smith, 1257 Calhoun, asked detectives and the State fire marshall’s office to investigate a fire at his home at 4 a. m. Sunday. Smith said he was awakened by smoke and found a blaze under the front porch. Paper had been stuffed under the porch and lighted, he said. POLICE HALT LYNCHING Crowd Attempts to Hang Park Lounger for Annoying Small Girls. By United Press BROOKLYN, N. Y., Oct. 3.—An infuriated crowd of men and women intent on hanging a middle-aged park lounger for annoying two little girls, was broken up by the police today. Rushing through the crowd when shouts of “lynch him” were heard by passersby, the police arrived just in time to save Max Fischer, 48, of 14 Stagg St., Brooklyn, from being hanged.
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DOCTORDEATH CASE SOLVED, SAY SLEUTHS Police Claim Beach Had Designs on Property Possessed by Slain Man. FEARED FOR HIS LIFE Aged Physician Planned to ‘Clear Out,’ Affidavit to Officers Shows. Bu United Press HAMMONTON, N. J., Oct. 3.—Out of the conflicting clues surrounding the murder of Dr. William Lilliendahl, Atlantic County authorities today announced they had drawn evidence which “solves” the crime. Investigators will appear before the grand jury with their completed case next Wednesday and Thursday. Willis Beach, silver-haired chicken fancier, who has eluded State troopers since he was released on bail as a material witness and disappeared, will be confronted by two affidavits when the group convenes. One, police said, purports to show that he had designs on Dr. Lllliendahl’s property and had made veiled threats to “put him out of the way” and another is to the effect that the aged narcotic specialist himself felt he was in danger from the poultryman, who was friendly with his middle-aged wife. Two Warrants for Beach Mrs. Margaret Lilliendahl, who was with her husband when he was killed on an unfrequented road near South Vineland, was arrested and released in $25,000 bail as a witness. She said two Negroes killed her husband in a hold-up. Beach has two warrants against him. one charging that he “aided and abetted in the murder” and another in a different charge that he “had threatened to kill.” The latter complainant is Frank Sheppard, who signed one of tho affidavits, charging that Beach, pressed for payment for work done on a chicken coop, said: “When I get rid of the old doctor, I will have plenty of money and will be sitting pretty.” Changed Bank Account The other affidavit quoted the doctor as saying to Frederick R. Anthony, a business man: “I have changed the bank account held jointly by myself and wife to a personal account. "I have dene this as a precautionary measure, because I intend to leave Mrs. Lilliendahl. I will make her dependent upon me for every penny. lam ready to sell my property and clear out of here, go my way and let her go her’s. “Beach is running around with my wife. I am afradi of him, because I have been threatened.” Authorities said they have sixty witnesses ready to go before the grand jury. Two indictments are expected by the authorities from the grand Jury Thursday. When that information was passed on to Mrs. Lilliendahl by newspaper men, she appeared nervous, spoke rapidly and said: “It is dreadful—all this talk, Ido not know what it is all about. I feel sorry for the Beach family. I hope the authorities find the two Negroes who did this terrible thing to my husband.” DIES BY FRIENDLY BLOW Would-Be Prize Fighter Killed in Scuffle With Brother. Bu United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—Lured to America from hLs home in Germany, six months ago by tales of fame and fortune in the prize fighting profession, Joseph Winnbauer, 18, Is dead from a blow over the heart delivered by his brother, John, 21. After dinner last night, Joseph picked up his brother as the pair walked from the dining room, lifted him high in the air and dropped him to the floor. As John rose to his feet the brothers prepared for a friendly bout as was their custom. John aimed one blow—not hard. Joseph collapsed under the punch and was pronounced dead a few moments later. NINE INJURED IN CRASH Farmer Dies of Shock Following View of Illinois Wreck. Bu United Press EDWARDSVILLE, 111., Oct. 3. Nine persons were injured, two seriously, when three coaches of Peoria Limited, crack Illinois Trac-ji tion Company train, were derailed! here Sunday. Reinhardt Dohmidt, 50, a farmer, died from shock after viewing the wreckage. GLOBE FLIERS HOP OFF Schlee and Brock Leave Dallas for St. Louis. Bu United Press DALLAS, Texas, Oct. 3.—Edward F. Schlee and William S. Brock left Love Field in their around-the-world monoplane. Pride of Detroit, at 7:45 a. m. today for St. Louis. % The fliers, en route to Detroit from I/\x Angeles. extracted to ri“V, P*. T,puis and fly '*> L > ,troit tomorrow.
