Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
PROPER TRA VEL TOGS ADD TO JOYOFFAIR VACATIONIST
SEAGOING GARB 1$ OFFERED IN WIDEMRIETY Tweed Suit, Topcoat and 4-Piece Ensemble Are Required. COLORS CAN BE GAY Deck ‘Sport Things’ Also Will Be Needed for Ocean Trip. BY JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer NEW YORK, May 31.—Picking successful travel togs brings the same joy as hitting on the right trip and the same rule obtains for both. Be sure to patronize the right lines! Os course you will need certain first-essentials to a sea travel wardrobe. A tweed suit and top-coat, perhaps one of the new four-piece ensembles that has a Jacket and pleated or gored skirt, a tuck-in-crepe or jersey blouse and a raglan or directoire coat of the same material interlined for warmth. This year you do not need to stick to somber colors. Beige tweeds, shot with soft color, are becoming, can stand a lot of dust without- complaining and hold fast to their pleats without having to be pressed each day. Bright blues, soft greens ruddy rose tones make a bright contribution to any travel group, too. Runabout Frocks Needed Next in Importance to your goingaway costume, comes your printed or plain silk frocks for runabout wear. A silk ensemble or two solves many a short trip problem for the cruises aud many a case or sightseeing problem in Paris, Berlin or Moscow. You will want one good-looking chiffon gown, at least, for dinners and Informal afternoons. If you get one with its own Jacket, it will suffice for either afternoon or evening wear and be flatteringly suitable at all times. For dances, nothing stands up so under ocean dampness as lace and - an. excellent choice is black. If, however, \you resolve not to be somber one single moment and feel that black might just happen to make you feel that way, beige lace is second choice. You can wear it again and again and always look right and feel right. Lounging Togs Essential All these clothes you know you will need and accordingly you step out and get them. But in your pursuit of necessities do not overlook certain types of costume that get you a place in the sun on the shuffle-board or deck tennis court, and do not forget to include some lounging togs which you may need to impress a rival who happens to drop in for a bedtime chat, to sound you out, or who develops a five-day habit of coming in at tea- time to see what you plan to wear for the evening. The first togs mentioned are the deck sports things. This year you can be charmingly feminine at the same time you play your game with masculine accuracy and skill. For a deck stroll or game, you might choose one of two types of costume: The wash frock with silk or Jersey jacket and the jersey sports suit, with washable blouse. A white pique and blue flannel outfit is a charming solution to the deck problem. The frock is normal waisted, with double rows of buttons decorating the skirt and pleats giving it fullness. Cardigan Is Worn Over this sleeveless frock, a cardigan of navy blue flannel is placed and a sarf of blue taffeta ribbon knots at the V neck of the frock. A packable little white pique hat tops it. Mustard yellow jersey fashions a sport suit in jersey, with a white tuck-in blouse and a long coat that belts at waistline. A little felt hat in matching tone is ideal to complete it. For travel, crepe pajamas are first choice. A picturesque ensemble in red and white polka dots is particularly pleasing. The flaring trousers and tuck-in blouse with a tie are of white crepe with a big coin dot in red. The collarless jacket is of red with coin dots in white. An effective lounging set uses floral print for basque trousers, plain crepe for the long coat and twotoned chiffon for the tuck-in blouse. The trousers are an all-over design in wisteria, pinks, beige and a little dull blue and are bound around the bottom edges in the blue. The blouse is lavender and blue, with beige pipings and the coat is the dull blue crepe, piped* in beige. The coat is a regular mandarin cut, with little Chinese collar and flaring cuffs.
Bus Business Eight Years Old
Bus transportation, less than eight years old, is operating regularly over 290,000 miles of bus routes, as compared with 250.000 miles of steam railroads and 45,000 miles of electric railways.
Overseas Tips THE A. A. A. makes these suggestions to moioHsts taking their car* to Europe: “Declare all spare parts and other valuable objects before leaving the United States. “Keep all papers on your person. “Keep to the left in England, Norway, Austria, but to the right in most other countries. “Get a triptyque for each county, such as Spain, where the carnet is not applicable. “Be sure to have your tryptlque discharged at the frontier when leaving a country for the last time, or your carnet noted. “Don’t sell your car abroad.”
Lounging Garb Is Lavish
/ PAAjjft - BNHb Vtß )
Sea-going lounging costumes deserve real consideration. Coin dots enliven a Chinese red and white suit. A rich and handsome lounging suit has all-over printed trousers and a blue jacket. (All costumes from B. Aultman & Cos. New York. Scenes about liner Mauretania.)
STATE IS PROUD OF BEAUTIFUL PARKS
Especial Care Is Taken of Recreation Centers by Department. A state park in Indiana consists of an area of natural landscape largely wooded and preferably having within its boundaries unusual scenic features. The area should be not less than 500 acres. Accessibility by automobile is indispensable. A railroad or an interurban running to or near the park is desirable. The park having been designated, the problem of development begins. Not the planting of flowers in geometrical beds, no ornamenttaion with whitewashed boulders and iron mongers’ statuary, not cement walks, not whitewashed tree trunks nor driveways other than for utility. The task is to make available to the public the beauties and sights of the area, preferably on foot, without despoiling the natural landscape. Landscape can not be appreciated and studied intimately from an automobile. One real motive in visiting such a park is relief from the hustle and hurry and ugliness attendant upon our civilization. Must Have Pure Water Water must be provided. Springs are not reliable for purity. This often presents a serious problem. Sanitary arrangements are important. Visitors must be protected from danger of bodily injuries. The department has developed and successfully put to test a plan whereby the park pay their own way. The state, with what assistance can be secured Ideally (often very material) first must invest the capital in procuring paths, water, essential roads and sanitary facilities and an adequate hotel building. Up to this point the funds are derived from appropriation and popular subscription. Having provided for visitors, a gatekeeper is installed during the park season and a charge of 10 cents a person is levied. No charge is made for smalll children, and during a continued stay at the park the dime only is paid upon first entrance. This charge for entrance upon a public preserve is collected because the citizen who has the op urtunity and desires so to use it s .ould pay more than the taxpayer .vho does not. Likewise, many vis. ors from outside the state contribute. Comfortable Hotels Built The state erects buildings for hotel purposes and leases them to carefully chosen concessionaires. Hotels are indispensable for the housing of the many who use the parks for vacation purposes. Complete control by the state of prices charged is embodied in the leases. * . The hotels are extremely simple in construction and furnishings. They are in no sense fashionable resorts. Guests lounge and eat in their hiking clothes. Accommodations are to be had as low as $2.50 per day, including both room and meals. The people and the state hold the common stock in a going concern which has sufficient income for operation and pays huge dividends in health and happiness. PROTECT RUMBLE SEAT Rubberized Slicker Guards Outside Passengers From Weather. Protection for passengers in the rumble seat of the auto during a sudden shower is afforded by a rubberized slicker installed in a few minutes without the aid of snaps, hooks, buttons or strings, says Popular Mechanics magazine. When not in use, the slicker fSids into a compact bag and iff placed in position with s.-'Zige-rubber cleats. They art orodeled so that an openiny & provid**i for the face ands h'iXi for the* /lead. ANI3LERS _ FIND _ PARADISE Hundred-Foot W’ell Another Attraction at Palestine Lake. Palestine lake, in a secluded section of Kosciusko county, is a fisherman’s paradise. Every provision has been made for the comfort of j Isaas Waltons and their fishing luck ' as welL Water for drinking purposes comes from a hundred-foot well and lias given this resort the' reputation of the finest drinking water in the county. Fewer Solid Tires Sold In 1921 almost 30 per cent of the commercial vehicla tires were of solid rubber. In 1929 this had decreased to about S per cent.
VACATION HAVEN MAYJEJAVED Huge Forest Preservation Asked of Congress. B i/ Science Service WASHINGTON, May 31.—A great stand of virgin forest, dotted throughout with hundreds of lakes, will be preserved as a great recreational area, if the Shipstead-Nolan bill is passed by congress. This wildwood region, abounding with fish, game, natural camping sites and beautiful scenery, is partly in northern Michigan and partly in adjoining Canada. It includes In its area the present Superior natioal forest, but takes in much more territory. laws that have been passed and forgotten are the following: Missouri law says that speeds in excess of twenty-five miles an hour are unlawful for passenger cars under any conditions. Yet forty miles an hour is permissible for busses. Mississippi provides that any one driving a car who fails to come to a full stop when passing a church, a school house, an animal or pedestrian is liable to be fined or given a jail sentence or both. PHARMACY COLLEGE TO GRADUATE 69 STUDENTS Albert Stump Will Be Speaker at Exercises Monday Night. Indianapolis college of pharmacy will graduate sixty-nine students as commencement exercises at 8 Monday night in Caleb Mills hall, Shortridge high school. Albert Stump, attorney, will be the speaker. Gradutes are: Degree of Pharmaceutical Chemist — Harry Adkins. Robert L. Anderson. Frederick W. Baker Clarence R. Beck, Shannon M. Bell. Glenn W. Benton, Glenn Boyd. Leslie L. Burns. William B. Cronin, Carl Cross, Moody Cross, A. Lloyd Culley. Scott L. Deputy. Earl J. Doyle. Maurice A. Drain. Julius Dulsky, Graham M. Elliott, Lewis M. Fahl Joseph B. Farmer. Roy E. Ferguson, Franklyn N. Gates. George W. Ginn, Charles Hider, James C. Hill. Paul A. Hollsapple, James D. Kiefner. Robert C. Kramer, Burton L. Krone. Lawrence Lamborne. Harold Large. Louis Leerkamp. Marvin V. Limeberry. Z. Francis Loscent, Francis J. Lyons. Earl F. McClelland, Clarence McClure. Howard McCord, O. Earl Miller, J. A. Miller, Ora G. Miller. Robert Mills. W. Bateraan Parker, Byron J. Pence, Orla D. Phillips, Elijah E. Ptlman. DeForest Prentiss, Stanley Proctor. Allen G. Reitz. Charles R. Rogers Guy E. Rogers, William F. Sandner. Roger B. Simpson, Melbum N. Soechtig. John R. Stafford. Ronald W. Starkey. Robert F. Stephenson. Merlin A. Steuerwald. Edward Stiver, Max Stockton, Elsworth K. Stucky. Orville Thistlethwaite, Ray V. Thompson, Frank W. Turley. Horace A. Veit. Thomas Wooters and Harold Wurster. Degree of Bachelor of Science—Donald Grainger, Michael Hogan and C. Garrett Willis.
Inn Rates Low Rates at the six inns located in Indiana’s state parks are from $2.50 to $3.50 a day, American plan, which includes room and meals. The weekly rate is from sls *■> $24 a week. . Neither luxs* / nor elaborate service is available; out the inns are noted lor good beds, good housekeeping, wholesome and coo Ls-4 food in plenty, and the great beauty of their environment.
Protection During Vacation Time Why take a chance when for a small sum you can keep your valuables, such as small jewelry and important papers, safe in our vaults. A sure guarantee against fire and theft. $3 a Year and Up Fidelity Trust Cos. 148 E. Market St.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TURKEY RUN IS TYPICAL BIT OF EARLYINDIANA 285 Acres of Virgin Timber in Park; Inn Is First of Park Hotels. The many thousands who come back to Turkey run every year are ample evidence of its many interests and beauties. Turkey Run State park represents the finest of that interesting landscape for which Sugar Creek is famous. The park of 1,070 acres, practically all of which is heavily wooded, contains 285 acres of absolutely virgi- timber in which there has never been any cutting. It is of supreme interest because it represents a typical bit of Indiana before the white man. Scattered through this primitive area are great walnuts, yellow poplars, white oak, red oak, wild cherry, beech, sycamore and maple. Running back from the creek proper are deep gorges cut into the sandstone at the time of the glaciers. These are characterized by high walls cut into rock, deep clefts retiring beneath the walls and the beauty of the many different types of plants and small trees which cling to the-faces of the cliffs. Turkey Run inn is the original state park hotel and has been noted for years for the excellence of its simple service. It has an overnight capacity of 150 guests in its two large brick buildings and cottages. The cottages contain sleeping rooms only. Its famous chicken dinners are served on Sundays. Reservations should be made to Turkey Run inn, Marshall, Ind. In the park are thirty miles of foot trails which lead to the njany points of scenic and historic interest such as rocky hollow, turkey run hollow, Lusk house, log cabin, log church and walnut grove. Trails are plainly marked with numbers which are followed easily. Small trail maps may be had at the hotel. Ample parking space Is provided. Fireplaces, water and . wood are ready for campers, dressing rooms for bathers and absolutely pure drinking water from driven wells. A playground is provided for small children. The park is reached over State roads Nos. 47 and 41. Train service is available to Marshall, Ind., over the B. & O. railroad and thence service to the park, three miles, by motor livery. GAME IS PROTECTED State Buys 12,000 Acres of Brown County Timber. Through the great increase in the sale of fish and game licenses the division of fish and game of the department has secured sufficient funds to purchase approximately 12,000 acres of timbered land in Brown county, lying just south of Nashville. This is known as the Brown county game preserve. No hunting of any sort is permitted and it is expected to become a great breeding place for game, animals and birds of all sort from which thy will migrate to replenish surrounding counties. By an act of the last legislature the state was authorized to sell the meander lands of the Kankakee river in the old English Lake districts. A portion of these, consisting of approximately 2,500 acres, lying between the great levees in this district, has been deeded to the state by the adjoining owners and is now known as the Kankakee game preserve. This district, before its desecration by drainage, was the resting and feeding place of myriads of waterfowl, the habitat of thousands of fur-bearing animals, the greatest fishing grounds in the mid-west and contained a magnificent flora. LANDLADIES ORGANIZE TO BATTLE ‘GYPPERS’ Form Group for Protection Against Fly-by-Night Roomers. 811 Vnitcd Pres* NEW YORK. May 31.—“ United we collect; divided we get gypped,” is the motto of the United Furnished Room Association, which has been organized to protect landladies and boarding-house proprietors from fly-by-night roomers. The group received a charter to “disseminate information as to credit, and otherwise maintaining a service for locating and tracing individuals who may leave furnishedroom houses without paying their rent and owing rent in arrears.” REAL TREAT AT HOTEL Scottsburg Hostelry is Famed for Sunday Chicken Dinners. Tourists and vacationists headed south on the road to Louisville will find a Hoosier welcome waiting them at the Commercial hotel at Scottsburg. Noted for its meals, the chicken dinner at the hotel on Sunday is an unusual treat. The hotel provides, conveniences and quiet comfort for all who plan to spend the night in Scottsburg.
CLIFTY FAILS SHOWS VALLEY ATJTS BEST Great Sweeping Panorama of Ohio River Afforded at State Park. At Clifty Falls the Ohio valley is seen at its finest. The view of the gteat valley from the headlands of the park is a great sweeping panorama with the Kentucky and Indiana hills rising on either side from the broad second bottoms. In either direction the river disappears beyond great bends. The park hotel, Clifty Inn, is situated on the crest of the steep slope, four hundred feet above the river. Immediately below on the east lies the town of Madison. At one’s very feet is the river, and on the west is the great mouth of the Clifty Hollow and in the distance the heights upon which Hanover college is situated. The front porch of Clifty Inn .ommands what is undoubtedly one of the most magnificent views in the whole country. Clifty Inn is representative of the state park hotels, which are planned and built to furnish simple, wholesome and economic service. It is characterized by comfortable beds, immaculate housekeeping, well-cooked food and is in no sense a luxurious resort. Here visitors may find complete rest and enjoyment of the out-of-doors. Clifty Falls state park includes six hundred acres of wild, rugged and majestic landscape. Foot trails lead to all points of interest, winding through the bottom of a great hollow and along the side of the precipitous cliffs, giving ready access to the wooded ravines, the twenty waterfalls of varying size, and leading eventually to the feature of the park, Clifty Falls, where Clifty creek drops seventy feet from a stone ledge. There is provided in the public service area in the north end of the park ample parking space, shelter house and refreshment stand. Scattered through the park are ideal camping spots with fireplaces and excellent drinking water. Reservations for meals or rooms at the Inn should be addressed to Clifty Inn, Madison, Ind. The park is reached over State Roads Nos. 56, 59 and 7. Train service over the Pennsylvania from the north is available to Madison, where automobile livery is always available. Bus service is provided on all highways. NIGHT POLICE PATROL PROTECTS MOTORISTS California Plans to Safeguard Her Visitors. SAN FRANCISCO, May 31.—California is organizing a night police patrol to protect motorists along its highways. About 120 men will be used in this patrol which will ansVer emergency calls and chase traffic offenders trough the night in last white automobiles. It is hoped that by this additional means of highway protection traffic accidents and deaths will be reduced. “While most accidents occur in the late afternoon when traffic is at its peak, the accidents involving the greatest number of fatalities'occur at night,” says Roy Youngblood, assistant superintendent of the California highway patrol. FIELD OF TIPPECANOE PRESERVED BY STATE Monument Marks Site of Battle, Momentous in Indiana History. The battle of Tippecanoe was one of the momentous events of Indiana’s early history. The field where it occurred has been preserved for many years under the care of the county commissioners. The legislature of 1925 passed it to the custody of the department of conservation. A tall monument occupies the high point on the reservation and numerous markers indicate the points of interest. It is reached by county road known as the River road, running north from Lafayette. The battlefield lies in the southern edge of the town of Battleground.
k Ladies’ and Gents’ Guaranteed Wrist Watches llf|a ture. Daintily on- atflillflSSh, ESB graved models’ for m iiSSk women. Handsome. aH kEH A wi mannish • PAY 45 c DOWN r Gorgeous Genuine ‘Eastman’ ““— I DOnCICQ Vest Pocket Folding __ _ _ # .Tsiag roU r fllm tUre A J 5 JEWELRY COMPANY —Sparkling diamond I *• TW- - ‘ 25c Doto! fV7 W WSh St- W \ moun,in *- 25c a Week! 4=3 VT •VT cftSJU* 04* E==3 51.00 a Week! lha— 4 a Daa—lu G■ LA fit—— r. V. ■ —J
‘Yosemite of Indiana’
V-. I- - • i' " l I3gg KKif - ft mßmm
A side view of Bridal Veil falls at the Shades, a secluded Indiana resort of 600 acres, often called the Yosemite of Indiana. Here are wonderful rock formations, rippling cascades, deep gorges and giant trees. The hotel is open from May to November, and is equipped for motion pictures, dancing, concerts, box ball, pool and billiards. There is boating, fishing, swimming and hiking.
LIGHT THAT ‘THINKS’ CONTROLS TRAFFIC
Intelligent Direction of Motorists Is Achieved by Mechanism. BuNEA Service NEW HAVEN, Conn., May 31 A mechanical traffic light thJtt “thinks” is the latest traffic regulator to be put on the market. The invention, that of a young Yale professor, through an ingenious electrical hookup, is said to regulate traffic much more efficiently than police officers or ordinary timed traffic lights. Operated electro-magnetically, this device operates a system of traffic lights with what resembles careful thinking. If the light is in favor of thoroughfare traffic and a car on a side street wishes to cross, the light gives it the opportunity at the first break in the thoroughfare traffic. Uses Its “Brains” If no traffic is on the main street, the car on the side street finds the light in its favor. Lights are operated directly from the road. At a set distance before a road intersection, the “eyes” of the system are placed in the road. These “eyes” respond to the pressure of cars passing over them and transmit signals to a control box. The control box notes the presence of every vehicle on each street as it arrives and it knows the speed of every approaching car, the order of arrival, traffic density, and which car should have the right-of-way. Sifts Out Cars A single car approaching the light receives the green signal immediately. If two pass over the “eyes” simultaneously, one is given the right-of-way and the other remembered, receiving the green light as soon as the first car has passed. A continuous stream of traffic is not interrupted unless a car wants to pass. The vehicle is given the green light in the first gap of the continuous stream and if no gap occurs within a maximum period, traffic is stopped long enough to allow the vehicle to pass. In addition to motor cars, the light takes into consideration street car and pedestrian traffic. Special overhead attachments are -'onnected to control trolley traffic. Pedestrians have the same opportunity to cross as the cars going their direction. Pennsy Builds Fine Highways Pennsylvania will possess the best highway system in the United States in the near future, according to General Edward Martin, state treasurer.
COUNTIES BUY PARK Shakamak Will Be Made Recreation Center.
Shakamak was the Indian name for Eel river and, freely translated, means the River off the Long Fish. Shakamak state park is being purchased by three counties, Greene, Clay and Sullivan, and the park lies where the three conjoin. The citizens of this area long have felt the need of an outdoor recreational area for the welfare of the large working population. The area of„ over 1,000 acres, which the park will include, consists of rugged and wooded country. The timber is not virgin, but fast is approaching the aspect of a fine woods. In the area is an old railroad fill upon which the road was never built and which is intended to be used as a dam for the formation of an artificial lake of about sixty acres; first, for its scenic value and secondary for the use of fishermen. This park will be developed for the use of large crowds and this will mean shelter houses, adequate water supply, sanitary conveniences, swimming pool, camp sites, picnic groves and possibly a large outdoor amphitheater. The town closest to the area is Jasonville and good highways lead directly to it. LYTLE OPERATES HOTEL Former Race Driver Is Host to Vacationists at Tippecanoe. The North Shore hotel at Lake Tippecanoe is operated by a former race driver, Herb Lytle, who was entered in the first 500-mile race run on the local speedway. The hotel is Ideally situated in a wooded section of the lake shore. With cottages adjacent to the hotel, every type of convenience is offered the vacationist. Beside bathing, boating and fishing, guests of the hotel also may enjoy golf and tennis. REAL REST IS OFFERED Dillsboro Sanaitarium Famous for Its White Crane Water. In Dillsboro is located one of Indiana’s famous health resorts, the Dillsboro sanitarium, the home of White Crane water. Since vacation is a time of rest and recuperation, Dillsboro offers an ideal spot. Carefully trained employes are interested watchfully in the comfort and enjoyment of visitors and every effort is made to,make a vacation here one that will be long remembered.
MAY 31, 1930
MANY DETOURS CAN BE DODGED BY MOTORISTS Detailed Information on Travel Conditions Is Easy to Get. An average of 850 detours Is found on the highways east of the Mississippi river throughout the year, ( with an even greater number at this season of the year when motor touring is at its height, according to the national touring bureau of the American Automobile Association.* The national motoring body, which maintains a telegraphic serv- . Ice on highways and publishes bi- 1 monthly detour maps, said this condition emphasizes the importance of obtaining adequate highway information in advance of a contemplated trip. “Detailed information in ad- < vance,” says the statement, “aside from avoiding delay and inconvenience, greatly reduces the cost of motoring. Especially is this true in the spring and summer season when road builders are pressed to meet the need for highways. “Although detours are now provided at almost every place where construction is under way, these> points often can be avoided entirely. An inquiry at the nearest A. A. A. motor club will assure up-to-the-minute information.” The A. A. A. said that In 1929 there were an average of 327 detours throughout the southeastern section, ranging from 274 in January to 357 in August. In 1928 there were an average of 381, ranging from 319 in December to 408 In February. ’ ’ > The survey revealed similar conditions in the northeast.
|^aitions Ea9t, West, North, South Greyhound Buses go everywhere. For real travel enjoyment nothing equals a trip by Greyhound. These big, luxurious parlor cars of the highway are the last word in comfort and safety. Save Money Greyhound fares save you onethird to one-half usual travel cost Before planning a trip, be sure to find out what Greyhound can save you. Every day new'thousands are learning the many advantages of travel by Greyhound Lines. Note these sample low fares: CHICAGO $4.00 DETROIT 6.00 PITTSBURGH 8.00 Greyhound Lines cover 36,000 miles of route and reach practically every city and vacationland of importance. Study these fares: NEW YORK SIB.OO MINNEAPOLIS .... 14.00 SAN FRANCISCO .. 56.00 See America from a Greyhound win. dow. You learn anew the romance of the open road. Save money la traveling to these and other points. BUFFALO $12.00 WASHINGTON .... 15.00 PHILADELPHIA .. 16.00 You can go further afield op your vacation ii you ride the Greyhounds of the highways. Here are tramp leal COLUMBUS $4.50 DAYTON 2.20 LIMA 4.95 Each turn of the -road means new tights —new delights. You'll enjoy every hour and every mile of the trip. And see what you save. ST. LOUIS ’.s 5.00 KANSAS CITY .... 10.00 LOS ANGELES .... 52.00 Greyhound drivers are noted for safety —neatness —courtesy. You will travel at ease and in comfort with them. Note savings in fares quoteC below: CINCINNATI $2.75 TOLEDO 5.00 CLEVELAND 8.00 For full travel enjoyment insist on Greyhound Lines. There is no substitute for Greyhound Lines service. Get information and tickets at TRACTION TERMINAL BUS DEPOT’ Illinois and Market Sts. Phones—Ll. £222 or RL 4501
