Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1930 — Page 1
SCHRQEDER ON WAY TO CITY WITHJHERIFF Mobile Man Handcuffed in Car as Winkler Heads for Indianapolis. DUE FOR STIFF GRILLING Grand Jury Hears Evidence of Detective, Waitress, Delays Report. Harold Herbert Schroeder, 35, Mobile (Ala.) business man, principal figure in the High School road torch car mystery, will face the real test of his story of the burning of his car after he reaches Indianapolis early Wednesday. Leaving Mobile at 5 Monday afternoon, Sheriff George Winkler, Deputy Sheriff Fred Fox and Detective John Stump of Indianapolis were making a forced drive to Indianapolis with Schroeder handcuffed In their car. Schroeder’s plea that he not be handcuffed was disregarded by Sheriff Winkler after Schroeder had failed to keep his promise to waive extradition to Indiana. At the same time the Indiana officials were taking precautions against any attempt Schroeder’s friends might make to rescue him en route. It was suspected that. Sehroeder’s continual attempts to delay his return to Indiana might presage some rescue effort. Ruse Is Suspected Sheriff Winkler obtained extradition papers for Schroeder at Montgomery, Ala., Monday night and set a speedy pace on the 219mile stretch back to Mobile. With Deputy Sheriff Fox at the wheel the distance was covered in four hours thirty minutes. William Cowley and Alexis Gresham, attorneys f or Schroeder, read the papers and then asked a court hearing. In court Schroeder, however, declared he had been advised by his counsel not to fight extradition and he was released to the Indiana authorities. Suspecting seme ruse, detective Stump, accompanied by Sheriff Pat Byrnes of Mobile county, rushed Schroeder out a rear door of the court room and to awaiting automobile. At a toll bridge over backwaters of Mobile bay, they were met by Sheriff Winkler and Deputy Fox and the trip to Indianapolis was started. Upon arrival in Indianapolis, authorities indicated Schroeder will undergo the first rigid cross-exam-ination of his story that, after he viewed the Speedway races here Memorial day, he left the city, picking up a hitch-hiker. Authorities Deride .Story He claims that he drove through Terre Haute and that, thirty miles west of that city, fell asleep at the wheel and that his car went into a ditch. The hitch-hiker, asleep at his side, was killed in the accident, he claims, and he drove back toward Indianapolis with the body. Fearing accusation of murder of the man, he claims he set fire to the car on the High School road. Authorities deride the story, pointing to the fact Schroeder’s car showed no signs of having been in an accident. Dispatches from Sheriff Winkler today indicated Schroeder was in good spirits on the drive north. He explained sights peculiar to the south and chatted of turpentine camps and pines as the party passed through the country. During the night’s drive he slept at times and apparently seemed little worried at the grilling facing him when he reaches Indianapolis. May Delay Report The county grand jury will not report today on its investigation of the torch car case. Indictment of Schroeder on murder charges may result from the probe. George W. Eggleston, deputy prosecutor, will testify during the day. The grand jury, it was pointed out, may delay a report, however, until Sheriff Winkler and other Indianapolis officers who are bringing Schroeder north reach the city in order to learn any new facts bearing on the case. The grand jury today heard evidence of Thomas Reilly, private investigator for an insurance company; Miss Gene Carson, waitress with whom Schroeder had a “pick up date’’ here, and several other witnesses, whose names were withheld. Schroeder is charged only with arson at the present time. Wife to Lend Aid Bu Time* Special MOBILE, Ala., June 24.—Mrs. Leah Schroeder, worn and haggard wife of Harold Herbert Schroeder, prisoner in the Indianapolis torch car mystery case, will leave her home here to be at his side while he battles for his liberty, and possibly his life, in Indianapolis. When Schroeder was turned over to Indiana authorities here late Monday after an extra Tition hearing in court here, Mrs. Schroeder comforted her husband. “Your brother and I will be with you in Indianapolis by Friday,” she promised. The brother, Ernest Schroeder of Evanston. 111., and Mrs. Schroeder accompanied the accused man into court. Chicago Chosen for Convention B Press ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 24. —The American Society of Testing Materials announced today that the 1931 convention would be at the Stevens hotel, Chicago, June 22 .to 26.
Complete Wire Reports of UNITED PRESS, The Greatest World-Wide News TKS*
The Indianapolis Times Mostly fair tonight and Wednesday; somewhat cooler tonight.
VOLUME 42—NUMBER 38
RAIN BREAKS GRIP OF HEAT WAVE ON CITY
Downpour Brings Relief, Tumbling Mercury 16 Degrees. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 79 10 a- to 70 7a. m 81 11 a. m 72 Ba. m 84 12 (noon).. 75 9a. m 84 Ip. m 77 With the heat wave, that scorched Indianapolis ana the middle west for the last two days, broken by rain today, weather bureau officials predicted a slight drop in temperature tonight with cool and mostly fair weather Wednesday. The rain totaled .22 of an inch and came suddenly at 9 a. m., hurtling downward temperatures that were threatening to smash the new heat record set Monday when the mercury shot up to 96, the hottest in four years. The rain, which resulted in the thermometer falling from 84 at 8 a. m. to 70 shortly after the rain started, was greeted with elation by farmers whose crops had been seared by the broiling sun. Two Prostrations in City The thirty-six-hour heat wave resulted in two prostrations in Indianapolis, more than a score of deaths in the middle west from heat and drownings, one man losing his life in White river and two women narrowly escaping death by drowning at Ravenswood Monday night. Mrs. Mahde Laudenbach, 45, R. R. 5, was overcome at Maryland and Pennsylvania streets, and Mrs. Josephine Aheam, 75, No. 10 Stout block, was prostrated at New York and Meridian streets. Both are recovering at city hospital. Weather bureau officials said they believed the rain prevented the new heat record of 96 from being broken. The 8 a. m. temperature today was two degrees higher than Monday’s. The storm rode on the southwest wind that started late Monday, bringing with it a trace of rain Monday night, which steamed broiling streets, without materially lowering the temperature. Touches 97 in Chicago Throughout Monday night and early Tuesday the thermometer ranged in the eighties and nineties. Thirteen deaths were traced to the torrid wave in Chicago Monday, when the mercury hit 97. Nine persons died from prostrations and four were drowned. Chicago temperature tumbled to 85 today with the advent of the storm and accompanying breeze. The highest temperature recorded Monday was in Centralia, HI., when the temperature was 106, the Indianapolis record established in 1901. WAR ON LOUD RADIOS Boston Considers Penalty for Noise Audible 50 Feet. Bn T'nitrd Press BOSTON, June 24.—Boston s city council has been asked to adopt an ordinance under which a S2O fine would be imposed upon any radio fan whose loud speaker could be heard more than fifty feet from his home.
!•• • -TAC CRIME AGAIN (7 TEMPERANCE fiwJAMEf A. REED former yO / US. SENATOR FBOM WISSOVai-
ARTICLE TWO The Anti-Saloon I/eagne —Born of God (Continued) THE anti-Saloon League was founded upon the theory that the Savior and his twelve apostles had made a “mess ’ of salvaging the human race. Under the teachings of Christ and the preaching of oldtime religion, too many goats were going astray. The preacher who relied upon his Bible was an old fogy. Salvation by education, moral teaching and suasion were a failure. What was needed was a law and a jail. Dr. Russell organized his apostolic staff to put over the law. Christ, with twelve apostles, had wasted centuries trying to reform, redeem, and Christianize the human race. Et. Russell, withe his legion of apostles, would accomplish the whole tldng by act of congress. Those who did not elect to go to heaven ty his route would go to jail under b/S law. It was to be anew order oi things. Let us drop into one of Apostle Russell’s meetings and hear, from his own lips, the magic story—a story without a parallel in human or Biblical history. The scene is the grand ballroom of the Mayflower hotel in Washington. The apostles had come from every quarter of Dr. Russell’s kingdom. There were the nineteen,
GAY BROKER SPENT $1,500 A NIGHT, PROBE OF FIRM’S CRASH SHOWS
B Times Special NEW YORK. June 24.—“0h. I’ve always been the host,” admitted Harold Russell Ryder, the "Kid Croesus Jr.” of Broadway, when confronted by the accusation of attorneys delving into the $5,000,000 failure of his brokerage firm, that he spent an average of $1,500 a night in the gayest haunts along Mazda Lane. "Sure, I’ve been spending about $500,000 a year. What’s the mattar, with that?” was another of A ‘Night Rydtr's' Uses in this
I’ll Go, Too
THE. OLD GrRIPS PACKED POLKS -ftU* I'NN ftLL SET TA CrO ON TOUR- VACATION With
When you leave for your vacation—and may you have one grand time—you’ll surely want to take all of your comic friends along. They will gladly follow you if you’ll just have The Times sent to. your vacation address. Salesman Sam approves the idea.
YOUTH DROWNS; WOMENSAVED Charles Higginbotham Is Outlaw Pool Victim, One youth drowned and two women narrowly escaped death by drowning late Monday. Garland Higginbotham, 19, of 942 South West street, died in White river at the foot of West Ray street while swimming with two companions. Miss Margaret Talley, 28, and Mrs. Nellie Baum, 35, both of 1645 Ashland avenue, were saved at Ravenswood Monday night by a woman companion and a man swimmer who dragged them from the deep water. Higginbotham’s body was recovered today in forty feet of water, about ten feet from the spot where he went down. In the Ravenswood beach accident, Mrs. Baum and Miss Talley were rescued by Miss Helen Parker, 21, of 1645 Ashland avenue, and a man whose name was not learned. Today, Miss Talley said a boy pr-hed her from a raft into deep water. Wililam Keide, 19, of 559 Jones street, and Robert Johnson, 18, of 550 Johnson street, who were arrested Monday afternoon for swimming in the place where Higginbotham drowned, were given suspended fines of $25 each today by Municipal Judge Paul. C. Wetter. They were charged with swimming in an unauthorized place.
comprising the executive committee of the Anti-Saloon League. There were the fifty-two representing the state and territorial leagues. There were the 156 representing the board of directors of the national league. There were the money changers who had been brought to the feast for shearing. There were no fishermen, either of fish or men, among Dr. Russell’s apostolic group. 'Matthew and Luke and James and Peter would have been out of place in such society. The apostles of Dr. Russell lived in luxury at this fashionable hotel, instead of in huts by the sea. These men were gathered there to raise money, to perpetuate the doctrine whereby men were to be made righteous by act of congress. # * a IMAGINE what an ass Paul would have made of himself, if in reincarnation, he had appeared before his company and repeated that out grown bromide from his epistle to the Galatians: “For if righteousness come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.” Or, suppose that the gentle spirit, whose moral and religious teachings had endured for nineteen centuries, had appeared on the scene and performed the miracle of turning (Turn to Page 8)
comedy-drama of "Thirty-Two Ways to Bea Sucker.” Ryder, partner in the firm of Woody & Cos., spender with the “hospitality complex,” and such delusions of grandeur that he offered SSOO bills to night club musicians to play “How Do You Do, Mr. Ryder, Hew Do You Do!” upon his entrance, has been indicted by the grand jury on charges of grand larceny. Ryder admitted buying 200 sham of JJnited States Steel for
INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1930
HOOVER GIVES WARNING OF PENSION VETO Fires Torrid Blast at Measure Given 66-6 Senate Majority. HOUSE WILL PASS BILL Vigorous Language Is Used by President as He Slaps Legislation. BY PAUL R. MALLON United Press S'aff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 24.—President Hoover today denounced the pending World war veterans bill in vigorous language which indicated his intention to veto the legislation. The senate passed the bill Monday night by a vote of 66 to 6 and the house, which previously passed the measure, is expected to accept ttye senate amendments today and send the bill to the White House. However house leaders hoped to forestall this action and announced shortly after Mr. Hoover’s statement that they would propose at a Republican caucus tonight a compromise in the form of a straightout pension bill. Use Forceful Tone This compromise bill, presented early in the session by Representative Swick (Rep., Pa.), was rejected by the house when the matter of compensation first came up for consideration. Mr. Hoover spoke in a forceful tone while delivering his attack upon the veterans bill. His language and delivery indicating he was thoroughly aroused. “The veterans bill,’’ he said, “is bad legislation. It is no more in the interests of the veterans than it is in the interests of the taxpayers.” “Sad for Government” Describing the bill as wasteful and discriminatory, Mr. Hoover said it was a very sad thing for the government to set a standard of subterfuge for the people.” “Furthermore,” Hoover continued, “the very basis of the bill sets up an untruthful and, according to our physicians, a physically impossible ‘presumption’ and pr. iicates its -action upon this. “For instance, a man who has served a few days in the army in his home town or in camp and afterwards enjoys seven to twelve years of good health, then after all that time incurs any affliction, is thereby declared to have a disability due to the war and is to be compensated or pensioned on the same basis as the man who suffered in the trenches and from actual battle.” Plan Not Likely to Succeed If the bill is passed and vetoed it is considered pratically certain both houses will pass it over President Hoover’s veto. The direct purpose of the compromise plan of house leaders is to avert if possible, such an embarrassment to the administration. There was considerable doubt, however, that this plan would succeed as the entire Democratic side of the house is certain to support the compensation bill and it was believed likely that enough house Republicans would join the minority to carry the issue. The six who stood with President Hoover in the senate vote all were Republicans—Bingham and Walcott, Connecticut; Gillett, Massachusetts; Reed, Pennsylvania; Hastings, Delaware, and Floor Leader Watson of Indiana. TWO DIEJN CHAIR Bandits Executed for Killing Mills’ Paymaster. Bu United Press COLUMBIA, S. C., June 24.—Ray Coleman and Paul Johnson, bandits, were executed in the electric chair today for the murder of Earl Belue, Dayton Mills paymaster, in December, 1928. Coleman denied guilt; Johnson admitted guilt and said his sins had been forgiven. Their wives sat outside the penitentiary wall during the execution. MANIAC |N PITTSBURGH Mad Killer Writes Letter to Paper, Signing It “3-X.” Bu United Press PITTSBURGH, June 24.—The maniac slayer who caused a wave of terror in New York City after he supposedly committed two murders and threatened sixteen others, is in Pittsburgh, according to a letter signed “3-X” received by the Pittsburgh Press today.
resenting inking names of other actresses. * * a NAMES of such personages as John F. Curry, Tammany leader; Thomas F. Me Andrews, secretary to Mayor Walker; Charles S. Hand, former secretary to the mayor; Peggy Hopkins Joyce, Betty Starbuck, Jean Ackerman and Irene Delroy were included among “often called” telephone lists and letters in Ryder’s effects. shuffle througir Ryder’s canChecks brought to light in-
Sweltering Crowds Throng to Pool
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The new Garfield park municipal pool proved its mettle Sunday by affording relief from the swelteripg heat to hundreds of bathers, young and old alike. Crowds taxed facilities of the pool, as the top photo shows, and necessitated a waiting line in front of the pavilion, as shown below.
SOUTHERN CROSS WINGS STEADILY TOWARD U. S.
Captain Kingsford-Smith, Mates Are Half Way Across Atlantic. BY GEORGE MAC DONAGH United Press Staff Correspondent . . DUBLIN, Ireland, June 24. Captain Charles E. KingsfordSmith’s famous airplane Southern Cross was flying steadily westward over the Atlantic ocean today carrying her crew of four men on a flight from Dublin to New York. Latest radio messages placed the position of the Southern Cross at a little over half-way across the ocean, and indicated if the present rate of speed is maintained, Newfoundland’s coast will be reached late tonight or early Wednesday morning. The messages indicated the fliers were having an uneventful trip. At times they reported fog. One message reported the ocean “like a mill pond,” and added, “if conditions always were like this, ocean flying would be easy.” Distance 3,380 Miles “Pining for a smoke,” said another message picked up by an amateur. The flight across the ocean itself began at 6:15 a. m. (12:15 a. m., eastern standard time), when the silver-gray monoplane passed the western edge of the Irish coast near Costelloe, on Galway bay. The -distance from Dublin, Ireland, to New York, is approximately 3,300 miles, comprising a flight of 140 miles across Ireland, an overwater flight of some 2,000 miles from Ireland to Newfoundland and a trip of about 1,100 miles down the coast. Kingsford-Smith was accompanied on the flight, rated as the most hazardous in trans-Atlantic flying and which has claimed ten lives, by Captain John P. Saul of the Irish Free State army air corps, pilot; M. E. Van Dyk, assistant pilot, and J. W. Stannage, radio operator. Each Has Whisky The departure from Port Marnock differed from the start of most ocean flights. The 5,000 persons who sat up all night to watch preparations for the take-off sang folk songs and played on musical instruments. Each member of the crew had six sandwiches and a half-pound of chocolate. In addition each was given a quart of coffee, a little cheese and a small amount of whisky. Each also was provided with a pneumatic collapsible lifebuoy, in rase of a forced landing in the water.
teresting disclosures, according to Eugene L. Carey, attorney for creditors of the defunct firm. Among these were: Seven thousand, four hundred dollars to Cartier and $4,500 to Tiffany for jewelry. “What were these payments for?” asked Carey, “Jewelry.” “For whom?” “Gosh, I can’t tell you right now. Td have to look at my bills before I could tell you that,” Carey said Ryder replied.
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolis. Ind.
ALLEGED KNIFE KILLEROAUGHT Brazil Man Is Believed to Have Stabbed Sister. Bu United Press BRAZIL, Ind., June 24.—Fay Williams, 35, World war veteran, who is believed to have stabbed to death his 18-year-old sister Ruth, at their home here this morning, was captured hiding by a posse in a cornfield about four miles south of Brazil today. Officers who made the capture said Williams was armed with a .32-caliber automatic revolver. He offered no resistance. It is believed that the intense heat affected the mind of Williams and caused him to become violently insane. The blood-covered body of the girl was found lying in a bedroom on the second floor of the house this morning by neighbors who investigated screams which emanated from the house shortly before the brother left. Bloodstains through the house indicated she had been stabbed in her own room on the first floor of the home and carried upstairs. A bloodstained butcher knife was found in her room.
GROCERY MANAGER BEATEN BY BANDIT IN HOLDUP Detective Chief Sits Across Street on Front Porch Knowing Nothing of Raid Until Police Arrive.
A 6-foot bandit, believed by police to be the leader of a robber trio which has looted more than twenty groceries during the last three weeks, brutally beat Orville Biackridge, 23, cf 551 South Arlington avenue, Standard grovery manager at 1402 South East street, early today. Across the street, Fred Simon, detective chief, was sitting on his front porch and did not know a holdup was in progress until he heard sirens of police and emergency machines. Dressed in blue overalls and blue overall jacket when he held up Biackridge, the tall bandit was seen to strip off the disguise a short distance from the holdup scene and to walk hurriedly away, clad in white trousers and a white shirt. The bandit was so hurried in his escape that he overlooked the only
FRANK BAILEY, Brooklyn financier, made his entrance into the bankruptcy hearing today on Ryder’s accusations that Bailey “exerted pressure on him for repayment of a loan and that he (Ryder) took between $3,000,000 and $5,000 000 of the Wcody firm’s funds to do it. Ryder admitted his attempts to repay Bailey were net allowed to interrupt the lavish spending sprees along Broadway that were reminiscent of the palmy days of Diamond JinMßrady, Pittsburgh Phil and BetlT-Million Gates.
SOB AS FATHER, MOTHER PART Children Resent Divorce Court Award. Tear-stained eyes and the lust of sobs 6f two young sons accompanied the divorce court separation today of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Garrity, 42 W2est McCarty street. Granted a divorce from his wife, Mrs. Mazie D. Garrity on a crosscomplaint, Thomas Garrity, 34, today was given custody of his two sons when Superior Judge William O. Dunlavy issued the decree. Garrity charged his wife with conduct unbecoming a mother, answering allegations in the wife’s original complaint that Garrity beat her and was unkind to the children. Thomas Albert, 8, and Clifford Lawrence, 4, pleaded frantically, “to go home with mama,” but Judge Dunlavy declared he could “see no other alternative.” Mrs. Garrity stood sobbing in the background when. Garrity shouldered the two sons. He was directed to permit the mother to see the children at all times.
loot he obtained, a S2O bill stuck among papers in a bill fold he took from Blackridge. He threw the bill fold away as he fled from the scene. The bandit entered the store soon after Blackridge opened the doors this morning, the grocer related. The bandit made a purchase which sent Blackridge to the rear of the store. The bandit followed him, threatened him with a revolver, and took the bill fold from Blackridge. “Where’s your auto keys?” the man demanded. “The car’s not locked,” Blackridge answered “I don’t believe it," the bandit replied, and struck Blackridge on the head with a heavy screw driver wrapped in tape. He struck Blackridge seven times with the weapon, cutting his head severely and knocking him to the floor. Mrs. Harold Arnold, 1409 South East street, had entered the store to make a purchase and saw the two men scuffling at the rear of the store. She did not know a holdup was in progress, she declared, until Blackridge screamed. The bandit ran out are r door of the store, through the alle; and was seen by Paul Paul, 13, of *3B Terrace avenue, from his bedrocm window. The lad called his father and the two watched the bandit take off the overalls and emerge in white trousers and white shirt. The bandit threw away the overall suit, the screw driver weapon and a roll of picture wire with which police believe he had intended toj bind the store manager. I
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REPEAL PLANK ASSURED FOR JERSEYG. 0. P. Leaders at Convention Reach Agreement on Platform. WETS WIN IN PARLEY Views of Morrow Will Be Taken -to Voters; Democrats Meet. Bn United Press TRENTON, N. J., June 24.—After a conference lasting an hour and a half at which Dwight W. Morrow, candidate for the senate, was in attendance, Republican leaders came from the conference room just before noon today and indicated they had agreed upon a prohibition repeal plank for the New Jersey Republican platform. They indicated It weld call for repeal of the prohibition amendment and return control of the liquor traffic to state auth itles. The conference was -eliminary to the Republican state convention which convened this afternoon. During the early morning there had been much discussion of the possibility of Frank W. Fort, whom Morrow defeated for the Republican nomination for the senate, leading an effort to place a "dry” plank in the platform. Flank Is Assured The conference was attended by Governor Morgan F. Larson, state Senator Joseph G. Wolber, United States Senator Hamilton F. Kean, Ogden Hammond and several others. It was considered certain it represented sufficient power to dictate the party’s platform. Morrow had been nominated at the primaries on a platform seeking repeal of .he prohibition amendment, but some objection to writing his prohibition views into the state platform had been encountered from candidates for other offices who feared the “wet" plank might alienate votes from them in their respective communities. While Republicans discussed the liquor question, the Democratic convention heard Alexander Simpson, their candidate for the senate, denounce the Hoover administration and the Smoot-Hawley tariff. Flays Hoover Regime “Let us admit,” he said, "that the candidate on the Republican ticket for this office is all that his friends and admirers and some newspapers say that he is; that he has imperial intelligence, impecable integrity, but,, these things will not determine this election. This election will be determined by the people of this state who by now know what Republic), n control of the national government means.” He assailed the administration’s efforts to settle the unemployment situation and predicted that the real issues in the fall will be the tariff bill, “interference by the British government in American armament," and the “world court, which is the advance agent of the , league of nations.” HURT IN DREAM LEAP; Imagined Shipwreck, Jumps Frodb Window With Wife. | Bit United Press g J MONTPELIER, Vt., June 2 f.-i Harold Weising. dreaming that/ hefi was in a shipwreck, hopped out off bed and, with his wife in his arms,! leaped from a bedroom window to* the ground. Both were slightly hurtPl AIR PILOTS KEEP C 00& Fliers on Southern Routes Wwari Bathing Suites to Escape Heat. / ATLANTA, Ga., June 24.-/A il mail pilots are wearing suits to escape the heat on southern routes. Dick Merrill, pilot of the Atlanta-Richmond run, InauguraOed the practice. J DEFERS VACATION PLJ/NS President Hoover May Be Unable j to Complete Western Trip. j Bu United Press M WASHINGTON, June 24.—Prest J dent Hoover has deferred all plank for his summer vacation until tile actual adjournment of congress arad, while still expecting to make the fwll swing of the west's great national parks, may find himself unable/ to complete the entire trip. / PRISON BREAK TOLL, 46 40 Convicts, Six Sentries Kiilied in Burma Outbreak. Bit United Press / RANGOON, Burma, June* 24. Forty convicts and six sentrbes were killed today when several hundred convicts attempted to break out of the Central Rangoon jail. Sixty convicts were wounded in the rioting in the jail. NEW HAMPSHIRE GAINS Census Figures Fix Population at 463,746, Increase of 20,663. Bit United Press WASHINGTON, June 24.—The census bureau today estimated the j population of New Hampshire at | 463,146, an increase cf 20,663, or, 4.7 per pent, ojer the YT 19 ?
Outside Marlrm County 3 Cent*
