Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1932 — Page 1

GUNMEN BIND 3, LOOT VAULT OF AMO BANK Woman Missed by Inches as One of Young Bandits Opens Fire. GET AWAY WITH $1,427 Score of Citizens Outside, Unaware of Raid Until Shot Is Heard. By Timet Special AMO, Ind., April 27.—Raiding the Citizens bank of Amo early today as townspeople looked on, two youthful bandits terrorized three employes of the institution, scooped $1,427 from a vault, and escaped. Two persons narrowly escaped being shot when one of the bandits fired into the street as the robbery was staged. The town is twenty-five miles southwest of Indianapolis. Entering the bank a few moments after it was opened for th& day by Morris J. Hadley, assistant cashier, the bandits bound Hadley and two other employes, ordering them to lie on the floor as the vault was looted. The two other employes were Miss Elsie Phillips, 35, bookkeeper, and Chaunccy Phillips, her brother, a clerk. Misses by Inches W. B. Lewlin, vice-president, parked his car in front of the institution just as the bandits entered. At the same time Miss Cleo Lambert, 30, clerk in an Amo department store, walked into the bank. One bandit flred a shot at her, missing her by inches, as she turned and fled. Hadley, Miss Phillips and her brother were bound with shoestrings carried by one of the gunmen, and were forced to lie face downward on the floor. “It’s a stickup,” ’one of the bandits said as they entered. Hits Door Frame Lewlin, still in his parked car, did not know of the robbery until the shot was fired. The bullet crashed into an iron door frame and fell to the floor. More than a score of Amo residents were standing on the sidewalk near the bank during the robbery and were unaware of the raid until the shot was fired. After scooping the pioney into a bag, the gunmen ran into the street where a small sedan, with the motor running, was parked. Two Plainfield men, delivering ice, heard the shot and drove to the front of the bank as the bandits leaped into their car. Turn Toward Indianapolis The Plainfield men pursued the bandit car northward a short distance to the Danville, road, where the bandits turned east toward Indianapolis and outdistanced their pursuers. * Phillips said the raiders came into the bank about noon Tuesday and inquired for a person, whom none of the employes knew. When they left, Phillips said he noted the license number of the auto. The bandits reappeared at the bank in a different car today, Phillips said. Hadley just had opened the door of the large vault when the bandits entered. His arms were cut severely by the strings. Lewlin said the lass is covered by Insurance and that the bank will be opened Thursday morning. It is the first raid on the bank, Lewlin said, and the fifth within a few months in this vicinity. FOUR DIE IN OHIO FIRE Mother, Two Children Burn to Death; Heart Failure Claims Man. By United Tress PORTSMOUTH, 0.. April 27. Fire choked and burned to death a mother and her two small daughters here today, whipping through four residences before firemen could arrest its spread. Fred Buckley, 75, a spectator, fell dead of heart disease at the height of the excitement. Mrs. Mary Bentley, 41; Edith, 9, and Luta. 8. were burned in their beds. NO TOGS; NO SHOWUP Woman Prisoner Removes Clothes in Cell, Won’t Put Them on Again. By United Tress CHICAGO. April 27. Lucille Strong, 27, arrested on shoplifting charges, effectively prevented police from putting her in the “showup.” Placed in a cell, she took off all her clothes and refused to put them on again.

HOOVER SPOKESMAN ‘LOCKED OUT’ OF STOCKS QUIZ GROUP

By United Press WASHINGTON, April 27.—President Hoover’s spokesman in the stock market investigation, was locked out of the inquiry's inner council today when Chairman Peter Norbeck completed his “board of strategy” without including Senator Frederic C. Walcott (Rep., Conn.) Norbeck selected Senator John G. Townsend (Rep., Del.) for the remaining Republican vacancy on the inner council of five men. Norbeck and the four others who will plan procedure and policy met today to map their program. Plans to recall Richard Whitney, president of the New York Stock Exchange, for further testimony before the committee were revealed by Norbeck when' the board of

The Indianapolis Times Fair and continued cool tonight, with frost; Thursday fair and somewhat wanner.

VOLUME 43—NUMBER 302

Twins! Now 21 By United Press DOWAGIAC, Mich., April 27.—Mrs. Fred Hungerford and her twentieth and twenty-first babies—her first set of twins—were resting easily today. Sixteen of the first nineteen still live at the Hungerford home.

ADJUST TAXES, HOOVER'S PLEA President Speaks at 24th Parley of Governors* By United Press RICHMOND, Va„ April 27. President Hoover today urged upon the nation the necessity of adjusting taxation and governmental expenditures as “the sure highway toward national recovery.” Mr. Hoover addressed the twentyfourth conference of Governors here this afternoon after coming by motor and train from Washington. The President gave the Govgathered from all over the country, a message to be carried home and applied through every phase of government from the town council upward. Among the President’s specific recommendations was a plea for lower taxes, elimination of duplication in taxation, and discovery of new revenue sources. “One of the taxes which is responsible for a disproportionate part of the hardship of our present tax system, is the present property tax,” Mr. Hoover said. “Decreasing prices and decreasing income result in an increasing burden upon property owners both in rural and urban communities, which now is becoming almost unbearable.” Mr. Hoover pleaded for co-opera-tion in every phase of government. He emphasized that the stability of the republic can be maintained only through the “financial integrity of every state, county and municipal government.” COHEN NOW SENATOR Atlanta Publisher in Seat of Late W. J. Harris. By United Press WASHINGTON, April 27.—John S. Cohen of Atlanta was sworn in as senator from Georgia today, succeeding the late William J. Harris. Cohen was escorted to the rostrum by his colleague, Senator Walter F. George. In the gallery was a large delegation of Georgians, each wearing a huge white carnation. Cohen, publisher of the Atlanta Journal and Georgia’s Democratic national committeeman, was appointed to serve until the next regular election.

How Uncle Sam Lost $200,000, 000 in the Market Three stories on the federal farm board, the government’s $500,000,000 attempt to “save the farmer,” which is soon to be investigated by congress. (T~ ;CotVon|" \{ | LOSS'J rtTTir The First Will Appear Thursday in The Times

strategy adjourned after an hour’s conference. "The first witness we called after Mr. Whitney ruined his testimony in five minutes,” Norbeck said. “That witness was Matt Brush. Mr. Whitney wanted to come back and we promised him he could come back. “These fellows like Mr. Whitney came down here and told us that Wall street was a second heaven, as near perfect as it could be made. “We had to listen but we knew better. The worst things we suspected gradually are developing now.” Norbeck said the evidence of “ballyhoo” publicity offered Tuesday by Representative F. H. La Guardia (Rep., N. Y.) "had an important _ bearing in showing that

INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1932

STATE BOARD PLOT CHARGED IN INJURY SUIT Carpenter Hurt in Plunge Claims Conspiracy With Company Doctors. $5,000 IS DEMANDED Compensation Case Alleges Contractor, Insurance Firm Aided Fraud. Charge that state industrial board members conspired with construction and insurance company doctors to cheat Cornelius King, an injured workman, of “just compensation” wus made today in a damage and injunction suit filed in superior court 2. Defendants named are the William P. Jungclaus Company, Builders and Manufacturers’ Casualty Company, Drs. Norman E. Jobes and Murray N. Hadley and industrial board members. Board members are Roscoe Kiper, chairman; Harry J. McMillian, Horace G. Yergin, William A. Faust and Walter W. Wills. The latter heard the case which resulted in the damage suit filing. Charles A. Rockwell, secretary of the board, also is named defendant. Injunction Is Granted A restraining order to prevent the board from hearing the King case was issued by Judge Joseph R. Williams. The hearing had been scheduled for this afternoon. It also is asked that the compensation order by Wills, entered Dec. 29, 1930, be declared void and that defendants be required to pay King $5,000. King, employed as a carpenter by Jungclaus, incurred spinal injux-ies in a fall from the second story of a Ladywood school building to a concrete main floor Sept. 22, 1927, the complaint sets out. It charges that from that time defendants did “unlawfully and knowingly unite, combine, conspire, confederate, and agree to and with each other for the object and purpose and with the unlawful intention of fraudulently depriving the plaintiff of his lawful rights for compensation.” Charge Agreement Broken Allegations in the complaint involve alleged failure to abide by an agreement to pay $16.50 a week to King during a period of total disability, not to exceed the 500 weeks provided by law, or not exceeding $5,000. Two appeals to the board to show that he was partially disabled, resulted in the damage suit, it is alleged. The first was dismissed when King was prepared to produce Xray photographs supporting his case, it is charged, and the second was ruled on by Wills, which ruling it is sought to set aside. Wills ordered a $16.50 weekly award for 175 weeks, beginning Sept. 30, 1927, with credit to the company for all former payments, the suit alleges. HEFLIN CHALLENGED Bankhead Avers ‘Some of Statements Untrue.’ By United Press WASHINGTON, April 27.—Senator John H. Bankhead (Dem., Ala.) today in the senate said that “many statements made here Tuesday are not supported by fact in the record” of the Heflin-Bankhead election contest. Former Senator Heflin, who challenges the 1930 returns in Alabama, spoke more than five hours Tuesday, pleading that Bankhead be ousted and alleging fraud in counting the Alabama senate poll. HE WOOS WITH FIRE Sets Bonfire in Vestibule When Girl Refuses to See Him. By United Press DETROIT, April 27.—Alfred Hill went a wooing at the home of Miss Jenny Reynolds. Miss Jenny refused to come out of the house. Undaunted, police say, Hill lighted a bonfire in the vestibule, and sat down to await results, which came suddenly in the form of arrest on a charge of arson. Stimson to Sail for U. S. May 4 By United Press GENEVA, April 27.—State Secretary Henry L. Stimson plans to sail for home on the liner Vulcania from Cannes May 4, it was announced today.

certain financial writers can get into reputable papers with propaganda." A Newton Plummer was named by La Guardia as a publicity man who had distributed $286,000 among newspapermen for stock blurbs. “I believe Plummer is a piker compared with what will be shown later,” Norbeck said. The chairman said the board of strategy would meet again Thursday. “We will meet in secret on a program that will best develop the abuses of the system that are known to exist but that are hard to prove,” he added. William A. Gray, committee counsel, will m*et with the strategists Thursday.

Gold Pieces Won by Twins

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Beth and Betty Dodge, the Dodge twins of stage fame (standing, rear), pose with The Times-Lyric party winners, Mrs, Lena Newhouse and Mrs. Nora Groves, left, and Mr. and Mrs. Alee, 242 South Fifth street, Beech Grove, right, holding their twin babies.

Two shining $lO gold pieces were presented the oldest and youngest pairs of twins present at The Times-Lyric Twins party Tuesday night at the Illinois street playhouse. More than fifty pairs of twins

BATTLE ON ECONOMY BILL OPENS ON HOUSE FLOOR

Gag Rule Draws Fire as Measure Comes Up for Debate. By United Press WASHINGTON, April 27.—The house of representatives today began the preliminary maneuvering toward passage of the $200,000,000 omnibus economy bill, and immediately signs of revolt against the socalled “gag rule” became evident. The bill was brought forward by the house leadership under a rule restricting debate. Protests from both Democrats and Republicans opened the battle over the rule’s adoption. Chairman Joseph W. Byrns of the Democratic house appropriations committee said today that house leaders plan to pyramid house and senate economies upon each other rather than accept just one budgetcutting plan. Adoption of the house economy committe bill will not halt acceptance by the house of all the senate’s 10 per cent cuts in appropriation bills, he said. Republican leaders have been telling members that passage of the economy bill is the only way to stop the senate cuts, which are so drastically reducing personnel and functions of the executive departments. Try All Economy Plans Byrns’ statement indicates, however, that there will be no change in the determination of the Democratic leadership to push through all economies. “I do not believe the tax bill will give us sufficient revenue for the coming year, even if” the savings planned by the house are made effective,” Byrans said. “In any case, I object to letting the house be used by the senate to save it from its own economy plan. It may be we shall have to provide additional funds later for some of the departments, but we’ll try out all the economy possible first.” Those who oppose adoption of the “gag-rule” under which it is proposed to force the house to accept the economy bill with little or no amendment are confident they have it beaten. Those who favor the rule are just as confident. Blocs Fighting Slashes It seems evident, howover, that the maximum strength opposed co various items in the omnibus bill, will be mustered on the vote upon the rule. Blocs fighting the pay cut, the veterans’ cut, the consolidation of army and navy, are all going to vote against the rule, and Tammany's strength will be thrown against it according to present indications. Republicans, who don't want to Vote for the bill, are attempting to brand it as a purely Democratic measure, amended into a form far from that proposed by President Hoover. However, Republican leaders are urging their party members to vote for the bill. CAR VICTIM NOT "NEGRO George Basey, 18, Killed in Crash, Was White Man. Error in The Times Monday made it appear that both of two persons killed in week-end traffic accidents were Negroes. The dead were George Basey, 18, white, 53 North Jefferson avenue, and A1 Jordan, Negro, who lived at the Negro Y. M. C. A. WILLYS TO QUIT POLAND Ambassador Will Resume Control of His Industrial Interests. By United Press WASHINGTON. April 27.—John N. Willys, who announced late Tuesday he will retire in June as ambassador to Poland, intends to resume active control of his automobile and other industrial interests.

■ were present in the reserved section of the theater, and they were given a big hand by the audience, after being welcomed officially by the Dodge twins. Mrs. Lena Newhouse and Mrs. Nora Groves of Lawrence, 63

Takes 1,000-to -1 Chance on Thirteenth Operation By United Press NEW YORK, April 27—Patrolman Jack Kennedy of the Nassau county police, is staking his life Thursday on a 1,000-to-1 chance ‘of living through his thirteenth operation. Kennedy, once a strapping six-footer weighing 240 pounds, has been helpless since the summer of 1928 when he entered a thicket near Woodmere, L. 1., to learn why an automobile was parked there without lights. A voice asked what he wanted. “I am a patrolman,” Kennedy replied, and a bullet went through his body and flattened against his spine. Down to 130 pounds now, Kennedy has undergone operation after operation to escape the complete paralysis which has settled upon his body since his shooting. Doctors have told him he can not win. “What chance have I?” he asked them. “It’s 1,000-to-l,” they answered. “I’ll take it,” Kennedy said.

HONOR DEATH TRIAL IS NEARING JURY Four Americans Place Final Battle for Liberty on Weary Shoulders of Darrow; Doctor Beside Him in Courtroom. BY DAN CAMPBELL United Press Staff Correspondent HONOLULU, April 27.—Four Americans, charged with Honolulu’s honor slaying, placed their final battle for freedom today on the weary shoulders of Clarence Darrow. The jury is expected to get the case for deliberation late today. In possibly his last appearance before a jury, the fiery 75-year-old chief defense counsel was to present the closing plea for the accused before a mixed island jury when court convened before Circuit Judge Charles S. Davis. With a dootor beside him to guard his failing strength, Darrow planned an address of “two or three hours” summing up the case for Lieutenant Thomas H. Massie; his society matron mother-in-law, Mrs. Grace Bell Fortescue, and two navy enlisted men, Albert Jones and Ed-’ ward Lord.

His argument, undoubtedly imbued with all the emotion at his command, precedes the territory’s closing plea by Prosecutor John C. Kelley and Judge Davis’ instructions. The panel of seven Caucasians, three Hawaiian half-castes and two Chinese showed more outward interest in the proceedings as the time approached for their momentous decision as to whether the four are guilty of slaying Joe Kahahawai, himself a mixed blood islander. The dozen men of many different colors—no unusual thing in this island “melting pot” listened with eager attention as Assistant Prosecutor Barry S. Ulrich pleaded for a conviction and George S. Leisure of New York, defense aide, vigorously demanded an acquittal. Suave and concise, Ulrich presented a dispassionate array of facts which he said amply support second degree murder charges against (Turn to Page Three)

‘DISHONEST DOLLARS’ WOULD PAY BONUS, MILLS CHARGES

By United Press Washington, April 27.— The administration leveled its most forceful attack on the Patman $2,000,000,000 soldiers’ bonus bill today, when Secretary of Treasury Ogden Mills and Governor Eugene Meyer of the federal reserve board charged the measure was fraught with danger to the currency, and would bring harm to the veterans themselves. The two administration figures appeared before the house ways and means committee. Secretary Mills led the attack with a stem denunciation of the bill as a “proposal to pay off the veterans in dishonest dollars.”

Entered as Second -Clasa Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolis

years old, received one $lO gold piece and the other sent into the little bank for Marilyn and Carolyn Alee, who seemed to enjoy the performance mightily, though only 2 months old..

TAX FIXING TO JURY Probe Reported Being Made of ‘Assessment Racket/ The Marion county grand jury today was reported to be considering evidence on alleged Center township tax assessment “fixing,” bared to them Tuesday by John C. McCloskey, Center township assessor. McCloskey is understood to have told the jurors a group of “xers” have gone to industrial factories and corporations in the township and ocered to “fix” the assessments and, in return take 20 per cent of the total reduction in taxes. McCloskey’s story was “only the start” of an investigation into alleged fixing, county officials said today.

Both said the mere knowledge that such a bill to issue $2,000,000,000 in new currency was being considered is retarding public confidence, at a time, according to Mills, “when banks have stopped failing, and currency is coming out of hoards.” Meyer brought out that the federal reserve board has not taken advantage of the provision in the Glass-Steagall bill providing for use of government bonds as a base for currency. Mills said proponents of the measure would “set the printing presses to work printing dishonest dollars” and that “deliberately to adopt this insidious and essentially dishonest device would to my mind be worse than an act of financial

ROOSEVELT’S LEAD GROWS IN PENNSYLVANIA; SMITH WINS, 3 TOl, IN MASSACHUSETTS Al’s Tremendous Strength in Bay State Is Surprise; Mayor Curley’s Slate Goes Down to Defeat by Huge Margin. DAVIS HAS BIG EDGE OVER BUTLER Mrs. Pinchot Concedes Renomination of McFadden in Congress Race; Rural Votes Help New York Governor.

By United Press BOSTON, April 27.—Alfred E. Smith still held a lead of almost 3 to 1 over Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt when final returns from the Massachusetts presidential primary Were tabulated today. Complete returns from the state’s 355 cities and towns gave United States Senator David I. Walsh topping the Smith slate 153,267 votes, as compared with 56,620 votes for Mayor James M. Curley of Boston, who headed the Roosevelt ticket. Smith-pledged candidates for dele-gates-at-large polled an average of 141,200 votes each, as against an average of 48,200 for the Roosevelt group. By making a clean sweep of the delegates-at-large contests and the fifteen congressional districts, Smith won all of the Bay state’s thirty-six votes in the Democratic national convention. A1 Carries Every City He carried every one of Massachusetts thirty-nine cities, and all but a handful of the 316 towns—in one case by a margin of 10 to 1. Smith’s tremendous strength surprised even his staunchest supporters. The general opinion had been that Smith would win a majority of the delegates in this state, which he carried in the presidential election of 1928. Few thought, however, that he would make a clean sweep. The successful Smith fight was waged under the leadership of United States Senators David I. Walsh and Marcus A. Coolidge, and Governor Joseph B. Ely, while in the Roosevelt campaign, Mayor Curley was aided by 24-year-old James Roosevelt, son of the New York Governor. Whiting Wins Victory Featuring the Republican primary was the victory of former Commerce Secretary William F. Whiting in the First district delegate contest. Though insisting he was not opposed to Hoover, Whiting had refused to pledge himself to the President, declared he wanted to be free of obligations to vote for any particular candidate in the Republican national convention. All thirty-four of Massachusetts’ votes in the convention, except that of Whiting, are pledged to Hoover. Back Hoover, Roosevelt By United Press JUNEAU, Alaska, April 27.—Delegates pledged to support Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt for the Democratic presidential nomination and President Hoover as his Republican opponent today were believed to have been chosen in Alaska’s primary election Tuesday. Two Republican and six Democratic delegates to the national conventions were named. WANTED—A SOLOMON TO DECIDE BABY CASE “Objectionable Noise” or “Joyous Cries?” That’s Court’s Problem. By United Press KINGSTON, Ont., April 27.—An Ontario supreme court justice was considering today whether a crying baby makes an “objectionable noise” or a “joyous outpouring.” Professor A. L. Clark, dean of science at Queen’s university, charged that crying babies at an infants’ home near his residence clamored uproariously, to the injury and detriment of the neighborhood. He sought an injunction prevent- , ing the infants’ home from further I expansion. PAVING JOB AWARDED Mead Company to Pave Sixteenth From Illinois to Capitol. Contract for widening and paving Sixteenth street from Illinois street to Capitol avenue, as part of the Sixteenth street widening project from Delaware street to Northwestern avenue, today was awarded by the works board to the Mead Coni struction Company on a bid of sll,1539.

bankruptcy. It would constitute moral bankruptcy.” Because the certificates do not mature until 1945, the treasury secretary charged the bill “is designed to pay an obligation not due.” He denied there was a currency shortage, said such inflation as proposed in the Patman plan would be “latal to the treasury budgets,” and held that the way to put credit to work was by maintaining public confidence. Mills, himself a World war veteran, referred to the present large expenditures for veteran benefits and said he believed there was no evidence to indicate “the veterans as a class are suffering more than any other group of individuals in the country."

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS' Outside Marion County, 3 Cent*

By United Press PHILADELPHIA. April 27.—Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt was extending his lead over Alfred E, Smith in the Democratic presidential preferential contest early this afternoon as returns from rural counties began to swell the New York Governor’s total. The vote was: Roosevelt, 58,625; Smith, 52,497. James J. Davis, running for Republican renomination of the United States senate, continued to gain over Major Smcdley D. Butler and with 4,655 precincts reported the vote was: Davis, 528,116; Butler, 267,843. Davis Claims Victory Davis claimed victory and thanked “the people of Pennsylvania for the record breaking majority they have given me.” Butler declared he had no intention of conceding defeat. Davis, who recently came out against prohibition, immediately took a lead over Butler, the famous marine who says “I am dry now, and will be dry forever.” Persons familiar with Pennsylvania politics said they were surprised by the strength developed by Joseph I. France of Maryland, only Republican presidential candidate to file for delegates. He already has 19,228 votes. State Republican leaders already are pledged to the renomination of President Hoover. Predicts 20,000 Plurality The Smith-Roosevelt race had swung first to one candidate and then to the other throughout the forenoon. In Harrisburg, Warren Van Dyke, president of the Roosevelt forPresident League, predicted the New York Governor would defeat Smith by 20,000 votes, and get fifty delegates outside of Philadelphia. It is possible, of course for Smith and Roosevelt to split the seventy-six delegates. No delegate is bound by the primary vote and even if he is pledged to a candidate, the law allows him the right to change his mind. In Pennsylvania, the purpose of the presidential primary is to sound out the sentiment of the electorate, and tTie delegates then are at liberty to follow the popular will, or to ignore it. Delegates are being chosen today from state senatorial districts, but it will not be known for several days to whom the majority is pledged. Mrs. Pinchot Concedes Defeat Thus it would be possible for either Smith or Roosevelt to get a minority of the popular vote, and still obtain a majority of the delegates, provided the delevate vote properly was distributed. Smith’s strength in the state’s popular vote of the state was somewhat of a surprise to politicians, who could give no reason for it except that John R. Collins, state Democratic chairman refused to indorse Roosevelt’s candidacy. Mrs. Gifford Pinchot, wife of the Governor, conceded at noon the renomination by the Republicans of Representative Louis T. McFadden in the Fifteenth congressional district. At that time she was approximately 4,000 votes behind McFadden, who acquired national publicity some time ago for attacks on President Hoover. SHANGHAI COMPROMISE IS ACCEPTED BY JAPAN Proposal Provides Complete Cessation of Hostilities in District. By United Press GENEVA, April 27.—Japan notified the league of nations today of acceptance of a compromise proposal for settlement of the dispute with China at Shanghai. The proposal was drafted principally by Sir Miles Lampson, British minister to China, and Nelson T. Johnson, United States minister. It provided complete cessation of hostilities; the Chinese will not advance; the Japanese will withdraw troops Inside the international settlement; a joint commission will supervise withdrawal; the agreement will become effective immediately after it is signed by both governments. Irish in Economic Conference By United Press DUBLIN, April 27. President Eamon De Vaiera informed the Dail today that the Irish Free State would be represented at the imperial economic conference at Ottawa in July. U. S. Honors Swedish Architect By United Press WASHINGTON, April 27.—Ragnar Ostberg of Stockholm has been awarded the American Institute of Architects’ gold medal for “most distinguished service to architecture,” it was announced today at the institute’s sixty-fifth annual convention. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 35 10 a. m 44 7a. m 36 11 a. m 46 Ba. m 39 12 (noon).. 46 9a. m 42 lp. m....* 50