Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1931 — Page 9

MAY 19, 1981

MANY EVENTS 1 ON PROGRAMS FOR GOVERNORS Executives of Thirty States Meet in French Lick June 1-3. “Business of State and How It Should Ba Administered’’ is the keynote of all speeches and discussion on the business program, completed today, for the Governors’ conference. Indiana is to be host of the thirty-third assembly of Governors at French Lick Springs hotel, June 1-3. In releasing the business program for the three-day meeting, Governor Harry G. Leslie announced that at least thirty Governors will attend. State executives of national note will not speak on subjects on which they are considered authorities. Formal programs will be held each morning and governmental topics will be discussed during informal sessions each afternoon. Leslie Opens Program Governor Leslie will open the program with an address of welcome at 10 a. m. Monday, June 1. Governor Norman S. Case, Rhode Island, chairman of the executive committee of the conference, will preside and give the response. “State Supervision of Local Expenditures” will be the subject of an address by Governor Wilbur M. Brucker of Michigan. Governor Harry H. Woodring of Kansas will talk on “Responsibility of Local Units of Governments”; Governor Joseph B. Ely of Massachusetts on “Highway Safety and Motor Traffic,” and Governor O. Max Gardner of North Carolina on “County Government and the New Road Program of North Carolina.” Governor Henry S. Caulfield of Missouri will preside over the Monday afternoon discussion of these subjects. Roosevelt to Speak Governor Stanley C. Wilson of Vermont, will preside at the morning session Tuesday, (governor George H. Dem of Utah will talk on “Executive Duties and Powers Governor William Tudor Gardiner of Maine, on “Administrative Reor- ! ganization;” Governor George F. I Shafer of North Dakota, on ‘Veto and Extradition;” Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York, on "Land Utilization and State Planning;” and Governor Gifford Pinchot of Pennyslvania on “Timber Needs of the Future.” Governor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland will preside Tuesday afternoon. A business session is on the Wednesday morning program, with Governor Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota presiding. The Governors will j leave at 10:30 a. m. for an inspec- I tion tour of the stone industries in the Bedford-Bloomington district. Luncheon will be served on the train and the party will return to French Lick at 4.30 p. m. Banquet Closes Conclave Governor Leslie will preside over the state banquet at the hotel, which closes the conference Wednesday night. All the Governors have been invited to come to Indianapolis on Friday, May 29, and a week-end I social program has been arranged. They are to assemble at the Columbia Club for the trip to Highland Golf and Country Club, where they will be Governor Leslie’s guests at dinner Friday night. Reception will be held by Governor and Mrs. Leslie at the state mansion at 5$ p. m. On Saturday, the visitors . will be guests of the Governor at the 500mile race, luncheon to be served for them in the paddock at the track. The Governors will be taken to the Speedway by bus. Dinner on Saturday night will be in the grand ballroom at the Columbia Club. President Eddie V. Rickenbacher of ’the Indianapolis Motor Speedway will be the speaker. Return to French Lick The party will leave by bus for French Lick *at 11 a. m. Sunday, May 31. Luncheon has been arranged at the Home Lawn hotel, Martinsville. An informal dinner and luneheon is on the Sunday night French Lick program. ' A special program has been arranged for the women at French Lick. On Monday there will be a luncheon bridge at the Golf Club clubhouse. Strickland Gillilan is to entertain with an address at the dinner that night. Tea at the home of Thomas D. Taggart is on the Tuesday afternoon program and a party in the Japanese garden at night. A carnival dance will feature the closing hours on Wednesday. SUSPEND 2 OFFICERS ON NEGLECT OF DUTY Accuse Pair of Failure to Report Liquor Law Violation. Patrolmen Arthur Reeves, chauffeur for former Mayor John L. Duvall, and Virgil Davis today were convicted of neglect of duty by the safety board, and were suspended, from the*police force thirty days each without pay. They were accused of failing to report to superior officers suspicions that the liquor law was being violated at a house they were charged with visiting several times. Later the house was raided by other police squads and a quantity of home brew seized. TEST TRAFFIC SIGNAL New Automatic Light at Fourteenth and Meridian Is Put Up. Anew type automatic traffic signal designed to speed up traffic, which has been installed at Fourteenth and Meridian streets, was to be tested at 2 p. m. today before safety board members and other city officials. With the new signal. Meridian street traffic will have the green or “go” signal until a car going east ox west on Fourteenth passes over a trip in the street. Then Meridian street traffic will be halted long enough to permit the Fourteenth street traffic to erase.

8A Graudates of School No. 62

forwent SneU

Eay Elliott

Richard Geckler

Charier, Merer

Rath Webber

Wanda Btumenaner

James Alien

Eusrene Smalley

Aletba Cox

Robert A. Hodapp

Mildred Bond

Helen Dean

Marion M. Moody

REBEKAHS WILL END ASSEMBLY Reception for New Chiefs to Close 47th Session. Reception for incoming and retiring officers of the Rebekah assembly, Order of Odd Fellows, at 8 tonight in the Lincoln formally will close the forty-seventh annual state assembly of the order. Installation of officers elected this morning at I. O. O. F. lodge rooms, Pennsylvania and Washington streets, was to take place late this afternoon. Mrs. Iva E. Herriott of Franklin is the new president. She automatically succeeds Mrs. Mary I. Mater of Rockville in this office. Mrs. Revah Presser is vice-president. Mrs. Grace Child of Indianapolis will begin her seventh year of service as secretary. Mrs. May WHershman of Crown Point was unopposed candidate for treasurer. Announcement of successful candidate for office of warden was to be made this afternoon. Thirteen nominees are in the field. Many of the 1,500 Rebekah women attending will go on an excursion Wednesday to the Odd Fellow home at Greensburg. Visitors will take a special train shortly after the noon hour. Under the direction of Charles E. Travis, superintendent of the home, guests will be escorted through the building. Ninety-fifth semi-annual communication of the grand lodge of Indiana will begin at 9 a. m. Wednesday in I. O. O. F. lodge rooms and will continue through Thursday. ‘PHILADELPHIA LICKED . ME,’ BUTLER ADMITS Call on Oregon People to Lend Him Their Support. By United Press PORTLAND. Ore., May 13. Major-General Smedley D. Butler admitted today he had “taken a terrible beating” as a police organizer in Philadelphia and called upon the people of Oregon to lend him their support in his efforts to build up the state police force. “I was fired from my post in Philadelphia because I believed that the laws were made for all men to observe —be they rich or poor,” he said. Returned to Reformatory William Mueller, 27, of 720 West New York street, today was returned to the Indiana state reformatory at Pendleton to serve a year remaining of a burglary term. He escaped from the institution in 1926 and was arrested as a fugitive by police Monday. Fanner Kills Self By Times Special KENDALLVILLE, ind., May 19. A suicide note left by Martin Halferty, 68, fanner living near Albion, before he shot himself to death, said he had outlived his uuftfulnfas, -

Edwin Dahl

William Kroeher

Charles Spiegel

Lois Smith

Earl Roob

Marie Irwin

Betty Noonan

Max Woodruff

Robert Lnnte

Mary Posha

Aurora Patrick

Dorothy Stanley

FIRST SAIL HOISTED ON ‘OLD IRONSIDES’ Hope to Have Historic VesseV in Shape by July L By United Press BOSTON, May 19.—The first sail was hoisted today on Old Ironsides, the famed 134-year-old frigate, under reconstruction at Boston navy yard. The other sails will be fitted as soon as possible and naval officials hoped to have the historic vessel, officially known as the U. S. S. Constitution, recommissioned by July 1. S9OO TO BLIND MAN Wins Verdict in Suit for Accident, Injuries. A jury verdict that awarded him S9OO damages brought gladness to a blind newspaper vender today in superior court four. The intermittent tap, tap, tap of a cane by which Carl A. Guthrie finds his way about downtown streets was punctuated with throbs of happiness in his voice that called “Extra!” “Extra!” to paper customers this afternoon. Guthrie was awarded damages against Jlalford Hattery. Noblesville deputy sheriff, because of injuries received when Hattery’s automobile crashed into a taxicab at Twenty-third and Delaware streets, March 2. *The newspaper vender who with two blind companions was riding in the cab, alleged he suffered injuries of the head, neck, back and chest, and asked $7,500 in the suit against Hattery. All of the three blind persons were returning from a class reunion at the home of another blind member of their graduating class at the Indiana School for the Blind, when the accident occurred.

Elder/ly Ex-Governor Adopts Secretary, 37 By Times Special . SYLVESTER, Ga., May 19. —Miss Stella Lee Brunt publicly became Miss Stella Lee Osborn today with the revelation that former Governor Chase S. Osborn of Michigan, 72, had adopted his 37-year-old Canadian secretary. The adoption was made known as the Governor was en route to Michigan and Ohio. . The former Governor decided during a recent illness at his camp here that he needed a constant attendant, due to his advanced age and the scattered nature of his family. Judge R. Eve granted the application here two weeks ago. Miss Osborn, a native of Hamilton, Ont., has been employed by Osborn for more than a year. She has applied for American citizenship. She did not accompany Osborn north. “Governor Osborn for some time has felt the need of a constant companion because of his advancing years and the increasing press of his literary work,” a statement by his attorneys said, “his new daughter will serve both as secretary and nurse. “This adoption was due in part to the high esteem in which the Governor holds Miss Brunt, now Miss Osborn, because of her extraordinary scholastic and literary attainments in the face of the greatest handicaps. “Without the aid of relatives and with no money, she has attained a high place in education, and from humble beginnings has attained true culture and an amazing knowledge along many lines.”

Robert Edwards

Robert Reno

Evelyn Coffman

Joe Kelley

Elisabeth L. Quick

Thomas Hendricks

Mary Campbell

Mary Byers

Rose E. McClure

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

John W. Freeman

Billy Fischer

Carl A. Louts

Bobby Neill

Lenora M. Sharp

Dorothy Smith

Raymond Jerge

John Springer

Luella. Baker

Eleanor Schnltz

Talmage Smith

Dtto Krause

Vera Bowers

Mary Johnston

Richard Stafford

Mary E. Hitch

ASSAILS STATE FREE DENTISTRY Foreign Invasion Is Branded Communistic. Communism has touched dentistry and, touching it, called down the ire of the president of American Dental Association today in the Claypool. Colonel Robert Todd Oliver, senior ranking officers of the United States dental army corps, told members of the State Dental Association to resist any invasion of tsate dentistry. In the dental profession the free treatment of children by state dentists as in Europe is termed “panel” dentistry. “Fight off this invader, panel dentistry,” urged Colonel Oliver. “The spirit o fthe old country is different from ours and dentistry by the state might be all right for England or Germany but not for America,” he said. He attacked the dentist who seeks to gouge his patient with high prices in times of depression by declaring that “those men seeking high fees are forced to close their offices.” * He asserted :: supersalesmen” in the dental profession were harmful and urged against “high-pres-sure” sales talk of practitioners. WHITE HOUSE DOG GONE Irish Terrior of First Lady Missing, Police Aid in Search. By United Press WASHINGTON, May 18.—Terrie, the frisky Irish terrier belonging to Mrs. Hoover, was missing about the executive mansion today. Local police were asked to watch out for the dog. Truly Irish, Terrie wears a green collar.

THOUSANDS OF CHAIN STORES TO PAYTAXES Supreme Court Decision Is Hailed as'Salvation by Leslie Regime. Chain stores officials frowned, but Governor Harry G. Leslie’s administration and Indiana’s bankrupt schools rejoiced today over the United States supreme court decision, which, Monday, held valid and constitutional the state’s 1929 chain store tax act The Republican state administration was jubilant because the sfbre licensing revenues may remove necessity for another 3-cent boost in the state tax rate, already increased from 23 to 29 ce&ffi under the Leslie regime. State aid public schools, many of which have closed their doors, reduced teaching staffs, or left without teachers payless for months, welcomed the decision, which promises a source of revenue sufficient to erase speedily the $1,000,000 school aid deficit. Has Bearing :n Election Both Republicans and Democrats concede the decision will have an important bearing on Indiana’s 1932 election by its effect on taxation and virtual elimination of the controversial school aid problem in southern Indiana, heavily Democratic. \ The act, upheld in the supreme court decision which reversed federal court here, levies an annual license fee of $3 on stores singly owned or operated, with fees ranging upward to $25 each when more than twenty are in one chain. Powerless to appeal further in views of the highest court’s ruling, chain store operators today were predicting the decision would pave the way for what they termed further “raids” on chain establishments throughout the nation. They have contended as unfair and unconstitutional the levying of a $3 tax on a singly operated, huge department store while each small store in a large chain must pay a $25 license fee annually. Thousands to Pay Effective as of July 1, 1929, administration of the act by the state tax board will require early payment of two and one-half years’ license fees from, it is estimated, 40,000 or 50,000 Indiana stores The sum already due, and to be collected as soon as the machinery can be set up, is estimated roughly at $1,000,000, the approximate school aid deficit The act provides that in 1929 school aid should receive $250,000 from the store license revenues; in 1930, $550,000; in 1931, $500,000, and each year thereafter $300,000. Until the chain store decision came down, further increase in the state tax levy by at least 3 cents was contemplated, William Cosgrove, assistant state auditor, admitted today. Levies Are Increased The 1931 state budget increased special levies by 5% mills. The board of agriculture levy was increased 1 mill; the George Rogers Clark levy by 1% mills, and the state library and historical building levy by % cent. The World war memorial levy was reduced by 2 mills, so that the net increase was 5V6 mills—a little more than 6 cents. Until the store licensing revenues were assured, the state’s school aid deficit could be met only by the 45 per cent of the 7-cent state school levy made available for that purpose. In three years the deficit has mounted to $1,013,584.71. James Showalter, chairman of the state tax board, said today that plans are being advanced for administering the store license tax, but that it will be some time before forms can be printed, rules prescribed, and forces augmented to tackle the huge task. “Store” Is Defined Attorney-General James M. Ogden doubtless will be asked for rulings on types of firms coming within the act’s definition of “store” and liable to payment of the tax. Says the act: “The term ‘store’ as used in this act shall be construed to mean and include any store or stores or any mercantile establishment or establishments which are owned, operated, maintained, or controlled by the same person, firm, corporation, co-partnership or association, either domestic or foreign, in which goods, wares or merchandise of any kina are sold, either at retail or wholesale.” Large companies operating scores or hundreds of filling stations are expected to insist on a. ruling before complying. SPEEDWAY’S REPLICA IS GIFT FOR FRANCE M’Kinney Cables From Paris for City’s Token From Mayor, Replica of the Indianapolis Motor speedway will be Indianapolis’ gift to the French government. E. Kirk McKinney, works board president, w’as in mid-Atlantic on the lie de France bound for Paris with mayors of American cities as guests of the French government, when he discovered his luggage contained no gift for his host. McKinney cable Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan’s office Monday; the mayor’s secretary telephoned “Pop” Myers, general manager of the speedway, and within a few hours photos of the speedway were en route to McKinney’s Paris hotel, where the replica will be made. VETERANS TO CONVENE Rainbow Division to Hold State Conclave at Spink-Arms. Rainbow Division Veterans’ , Association will hold its twelfth annual state convention in Indianapolis with headquarters at the SpinkArms, May 23 and 24. This will be the third successive year that the Marion county group, numbering several hundred members, has been host for the state convention. Principal meeting will be a banquet May 23, at which Major-Gen-eral Robert H. Tyndall, commander of the One hundred fifthieth field artillery during the World war, will be guest at honor.

Famed Eccentric Drawn in Ludwig Chronicle

TJERHAPS somewhere in Indianapolis there are men and women, they must be beyond middle age now, who remember in their youth the visit of a rich, eccentric financier and master of languages to Indianapolis. Perhaps they can recall his recitation of classic Greek by the hundred lines, his versatile lapsation into any of more than a half dozen modem languages, learned from the time he broke away as a German grocer’s apprentice boy to become a financier and master archaeologist. He was Heinrich Schliemann, the subject of the latest biography of Emil Ludwig, who has chronicled lives of many of the world's great in recent years. Amassing a fortune in Russia,

GERMANY LAUNCHES ‘VEST POCKET’ SHIP

10,000-Ton Warcraft Is Within Arms Limit, Yet Mighty. BY HAROLD A. PETERS United Press Staff Correspondent KIEL, Germany, May 19.—Germany scrupulously has observed treaty obligations concerning disarmament, but will exert utmost efforts to achieve “that minimum security permitted us by the treaties,” Chancellor Heinrich Bruening said today at the launching of the new 10,000-ton ‘‘vest pocket battleship” Deutschland. He declared that today’s celebration showed the world that Germany, “even under limitations and the greatest economic distress, is finding strength to safeguard peace and its honor” and in referring to German observance of disarmament requirements, he added that “we await others who should follow our example.” President Paul von Hindenburg christened the “mystery” ship in the presence of 50,000 formally-attired spectators. The vessel slipped from

Women Will Run Store of Pettis Cos. for Day

Men Executives Given Jobs as Messenger Boys and Porters. Three hundred women employes of the Pettis Dry Goods Company store will direct activities of the establishment Wednesday, conducting a ‘Woman’s day,” planned, promoted, and executed hy women for the women of the city. All male executives of the New York store will vacate their offices Wednesday, and all have been assigned to lesser tasks by the Women’s day committee. President Robert B. Gable will operate a passenger elevator from 10 to 11 a. m., and during another hour in the late afternoon. W. Stanley Truby, merchandise manager, will serve as package pickup boy on the main floor throughout the day. Karl S. Isenberg, sales promotion manager, will be a porter on the street floor. C. F. Stewart, controller, will be street floor messenger.

SOVIET ASKS WORLD FOR TRADE PEACE

Russian Envoy Is Placed in Leading Position at Geneva Parley. By United Press GENEVA, May 19.—The European federation commission had before it today a broad scheme offered by Maxim Litvinoff, Soviet foreign commissar, for the complete cessation of all forms of economic aggression. Litvinoff, invited to the commission’s meeting to discuss only the economic phases of the federation plan sponsored by France, immediately seized a dominant position in the gathering of Eureopean diplomats. His speech in the openlhg session Monday denying charges of Soviet “dumping” and calling on the nations of the world to co-operate in a move toward economic nonaggression caused a profound stir. It did more than that—it gave the OFFICERS ARE ELECTED Clearing House Chiefs Aae Named; Stainaker Is President. Officers of the Indianapolis Clearing House Association were re-elect-ed today at the annual meeting of the association, Frank Stalnaker, president of the Indiana National bank, heading the organization. Other officers: Elmer W. Stout, president of the Fletcher American National bank, vice-president: Arthur V. Brovm, president of the Union Trust Company, treasurer, and George C. Calvert, secretary-manager. Fred C. Dickson, president of the Indiana Trust Company, was named a member of the executive committee with Stout and on which Stalnaker acts as ex-officio member. Promotion of Harold S. Cross as examiner for the association was announced. He will be aided by Don Warrick and Ewing Cox. WATCH DOG IS MISSING “!Vlajor,” Wearing Brass-Studded Collar, Has Disappeared. Has anybody seen “Major”? Well “Major” is a 6-year-old Spaniel that’s been watch dog and play-pal at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herschell P. Blackwell, 2018 Boulevard place, and he’s disappeared. “If anyone sees him bring him to us. He’s got a brass-studded collar and the children are lonesome for him,” the Hlackwelsay.

Schliemann came to Indianapolis to obtain a divorce from the Russian wife and mother of his three children. His classic Greek became an obsession, and while here, Ludwig recounts, Schliemann wrote his Greek tutor in Athens that he must marry a Greek girl, and no other. The tutor, then an archbishop, sent pictures of one of his fairest cousins, Sophia, and, enthralled with her beauty. Schliemann shook the Hoosier dust from his feet and tramped to Athens to wed her. It was Schliemann who uncovered the seven levels of Troy, and claimed vindication of Homer, the Greek poet, as well as possession of jewels of Helen of Troy, with which he adorned his bride.

the w r ays prematurely and entered the w’ater before its name could be pronounced. During the course of his address, the chancellor said: “Our proud fleet, created when we were a rich and free nation, remains unforgotten. Today we are poor; nevertheless we know that same sense of duty, that same bravery and capacity for invention, which enables our present fleet to make the highest achievements.” Conforming strictly to conditions of the peace treaties and recent naval agreements, this “baby” war boat—first named Ersatz-Preussen —combines features which raise its effectiveness to a par with first class fighting ships of any class. When its machine work and defense installations are completed a year from now’, the cruiser will stand as a tribute to German craftmanship. The ship, a 10,000-ton cruiser, when completed Will cost 75,000,000 marks (about $13,750,000). It will be propelled by the largest Diesel engines in the world and will have a cruising range of 10,000 miles without the necessity of refueling.

H. C. Wheeler, display manager, will join the group of passenger elevator operators for the day, and A. D. George, house manager, will serve as porter. Mrs. Rissa Thompkins, secretary to President Gable, was selected by the women employes as general manager for Wednesday. She has chosen, as women executives, Mrs. Margaret Woemer, merchandise manager; Mrs. Marie Bussell, general superintendent; Mrs. Lucille Forler, sales promotion manager; Miss Elaine Hendricksen, advertising manager; Miss Leona Scholl, controller; Miss Freda Scheck, display manager; Miss Opal Correll, credit manager, and Miss Laura Fields, house manager. Extensive preparations have been completed by the women’s committee and they are making every effort to have a record-breaking throng of women patrons at the store early Wednesday morning. Appropriate souvenirs will be distributed to the first thousand women in the store before 9:30.

Soviet chief delegate a leading position in the parleys, and again marked him as one of the outstanding figures at this European conference. Litvinoff in his speech defined “dumping” as the maintenance of “high monopolistic prices in home markets with low exports prices.”. He charged that capitalist countries were guilty of “dumping” and in his counter-charges cited the recent sugar accord under which sugar producing nations will seek to regulate prices upward by control of production. The Soviet delegate attacked the French scheme of international industrial cartels which he said “keep prices high in the teeth of overproduction.” FOR WOMEN ' AND 6IRLS WHO ARE RUNDOWN —Photo by Cain. Mrs. ALICE BARNHART “I was all rundown and the only thing i found to restore my health and strength was Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Two bottles of the ‘Prescription’ made me a perfectly well woman. I could not say too much in praise of this remedy if I tried. I am confident that it will be of great benefit to any woman or girl who gives it a fair trial.” —Mrs. Alice Barnhart. 611% N. Bth St., Richmond, Ind. All druggists. Write to Dr. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y. Send 10c if you want a trial package.—Advertisement.

PAGE 9

ASSESSMENT LISTSCHECKED Special Investigators Work in Center Township. Special investigators were dispatched over the city today by John C. McCloskey, Center township assessor, to check assessments lists which have outward indications of having been reported in too low. McCloskey said he had evidence persons have not reported personal property and, in many cases, real estate and Industrial assessments have been too low. Several industrial firms have been asking decreases, McCloskey said, and these will be checked carefully. McCloskey said he hoped to reduce taxes by getting “everything on the books that should be taxed and to establish an equitable levy.” Board of review to hear appeals from assessments established bydeputy assessors will go in session June 1. MADAME WALKER’S HOME IS ON BLOCK Villa. Won’t Be Made Hotel for Negroes, Announcement Says. By United Brest IRVINGTON-ON-THE-HUDSON. N. Y., May 19.—The villa Lewardo, the mansion that Sarah Walker built with the fortune she created through the manufacture and sate of her famous anti-hair kinker for Negroes, is not to be turned into a high-class hotel or an apartment house for Negroes. The villa will be put up at auction Saturday, May 30, it was announced today. The huge mansion, fitted out splendidly by the St. Louis Negro washerwoman after she had become a millionaire, contains, among other things, a built-in $25,000 pipe organ.

these are the 2 fastest Long Distance trains in the World The Southwestern Limited amd Knickerbocker to New York attain unequalled long-distance speed- over the only water level route to the East. Nature herself gives a big advantage in ease and dependability of operation ... and best of all, in COMFORT for the passenger. The de luxe Southwestern Limited now offers travellers ;he comfort of the new Private Bedrooms, at a cost of only $59.00 for railroad and Pullman tickets (single occupancy), Indianapolis to New York.

INDIANAPOLIS TO THE EAST 1:45 p.m. Southwestern Limited At. New York Ax. Boston 9:05 a. m. 11:56 a. a. 5:10 Knickerbocker Ar. New York Ar. Boston 12:09 noon 3:10 p. m. 3 Other Favorite Trains . T1:30 cum. Fifth Avenue Special Ar. Now York *3O an. 6:00 p.m. Hudson River Express Ar. New York 6:06 p. m. 10:55 pan. The Missourian Ar. New York Ar. Boston C:SO p. m. ®;35 p, m. All Schedules Standard Time New York Central Lines Big Four Route The Water Level Route a # - you can deep City Ticket Office: 112 MonmnenS Circle. Tele phone Riley 3121.