Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 100, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1932 — Page 2

PAGE 2

HIT-RUN TRUCK VICTIM DEAD; DOYS ARE HURT Traffic Accident Toll Climbs to 61 in County Since Jan. 1. Traffic accident deaths in Marion county since Jan. 1 reached sixtyone Sunday when Wilbur McDonald, 28, of 375 South Illinois street, succumbed to injuries incurred Friday night when he was struck by the truck of a hit-and-run driver. His skull was fractured. The accident occurred at Kentucky avenue

and Drover street. Police have found no trace of the truck. McDonald, an orphan, is believed to have no relatives here. His foster

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parents are said to be residents of Shelbyville. Severe head lacerations was incurred by Donald Dunn, 59, Salvation Army hotel, when he was struck at Capitol avenue and Michigan street, by an automobile driven by E. G. Gerske, 45, of 5248 College avenue. Ruth and Everett Stevens, twins, 1007 River avenue, were cut and bruised when an automobile in which they were riding, driven by Leroy Reuter, 24, of 2320 West Morris street, overturned at Oliver and River avenues, due to locking of the steering geer. Cuts and bruises were incurred by two boys struck by automobiles. Marvin Johnson, 6, of 1114 Eugene street, was struck by a car driven by Arthur Combs, 21, of 1009 West Thirty-sixth street, on Clifton street, near Thirtieth street. The second boy injured was Robert Witzig, 5, Peoria, 111., who was struck by a car driven by Robert W. Quinn, 15, of 2380 Adams street, in the 2700 block North Davidson street. William V. Weeks, 38, of 1033 East Ohio street, suffered injuries of his shoulders when the bicycle he was riding was struck by a Greyhound bus driven by Leonard Horner, Dayton, 0.. at Ohio and East streets. DESIRE TO SEE FAIR MAY CUT RIGHT ARM Youth Says He Was Beaten, but Police Think He Slept Near Track. Desire of Louis Schipley, 18. of Terre Haute to see the state fair will cost him his right arm. according to physicians at city hospital. Suffering a compound fracture of the arm, a head injury and lacerations on most of his body, Schipley was found this morning at Thirtyeighth street and the Monon railroad by two boys, who sent him to the hospital in a taxicab. It will be necessary to amputate the arm, according to doctors. Although Schipley told a story that indiactcd he may have been beaten, with robbery as a motive, police are inclined to a theory that he fell asleep near the track and was struck by a projecting part of a train.

RECORD ATTENDANCE AT CELEBRATION IS SEEN Southern Indiana Labor Day Rites to Be Held at Washington. By Vniled Press WASHINGTON, Ind., Sept. 5—A record attendance was expected at the annual celebration of the southern Indiana Labor Day Association here today. The program included a parade in the morning followed by speeches during the afternoon and evening. Speakers included Clifford Townsend, Marion, director of the Indiana farm bureau; H. W. Browm, Cleveland, vice-president of the International Association o‘s Machinists; Representative Arthur Greenwood, Washington, and George A Henley. Bloomington. MARION'S NEW LABOR TEMPLE DEDICATED Replaces Old Structure Wrecked by Bomb With Loss of Three Lives. MARION. Ind., Sept. 5. —The new Marion Labor Temple was to be dedicated today. Senator Arthur R. Robinson headed the list of speakers which included: Glen Griswold. representative in congress; M. J. Gilhooley. president American Flint Glass Workers’ Union, and Louis Hart, Lafayette, vice-president of the Indiana Building Trades Council. The old temple was wrecked by a bomb blast Oct. 3, 1929, which killed three men. 4,000 at Church Farley lift United Press WINONA LAKE. Ind, Sept. 5. Bishop H. H. Fout of Indianapolis delivered the annual conference sermon of the St. Joseph conference of the United Brethren church which closed here Sunday. Nearly 4,000 members of the church attended the meeting, which was the eighty-eighth annual session.

Whose Brown Derby? What Indianapolis man will be crowned with the BROWN DERBY at the Indiana State Fair on Sept. 8? What man will win the plaque that goes with the derby? Clip this coupon and mail or bring to The Indianapolis Times Just write your choice on the dotted line. Vote early and often OFFICIAL BROWN DERBY BALLOT Monday, Sept. 5, 1932 To the Editor of The Times: Wease crown with the Brown Derby as Indianapolis’ most distinguished citizen.

CAPT. RANDALL TO THE RESCUE

Leviathan Skipper Justly Famous for His Exploits

In responsibility *nd authority few posts that men can All exceed the captaincy of a great ocean liner. With thousand* of lives and millions of dollars’ worth of property in their keeping, the masters of such ships -enjoy absolute sovereignty aboard their vessels. The captain * word is law, reinforced by a pontiAcal quality that no mere legal decree possesses. Only one who can meet the most rigid tests of character, training and general Alness can aspire to such command. Outstanding among the men who have met such tests are the captains of half a dozen great liners running In and out of New York. In a series of articles, of which the following is the Arst, George Britt describes these master mariners and their careers. BY GEORGE BRITT Times Staff Writer tCopyright. 1932, by the New York World Telegram Corporation) “T WAS sitting up in the Elks X Club, months later,” said Albert B. Randall, the very Yankee skipper of the Leviathan and commodore of the United States ■Lines, ‘‘when I got one of the surprises of my life. Here came a letter from Josephus Daniels, commending me for that Standard Arrow business.” Commodore Randall had been telling how he raced an oil tanker across the ocean during the war, and reached the Portsmouth naval base in England just when the oil supply was exhausted. To hear him talk, there was nothing to it. He was waiting for orders in New York when the need arose. The convoy had sailed at noon, and if the Standard Arrow waited until morning she couldn't overtake the others. She wouldn’t be loaded, full, until after dark. And there was a rule that no deep ships could be moved from Bayonne through the kills at night. The towing companies refused to take the risk. “§pre, I’ll try her,” said Com- ‘ modore Randall, undaunted by the thought of a ship drawing thirty-two feet of water in a channel only thirty-two feet one inch deep. “Send me some tugs from the navy yard at 9 o'clock tonight, and put on the pilot.” a tt a THE darkness made no difference. as it turned out. The tanker slid out of the harbor as if on a track and overtook the convoy two days later. The commodore laughed. There’s another war story he enjoys telling, about the time he was sunk on the President Lincoln, returning as a passenger after commanding a convoy of fifty-two ships safely across. At the explosion his first reflex was to save the new uniform he just had bought in London. He hung it carefully on a coathanger in his stateroom closet, put on an old uniform and took to a lifeboat. One of his fellow oarsmen was “Cupid” Black, old Yale football player, then a navy ensign. As the boats floated away from the wreck, the U-boat came to the surface amidst them. Commodore Randall shed his coat with the gold stripes of rank none too soon.

The U-boat drew alongside and handed over an American sailor picked up in the water. “Them Heinies ain’t so bad,” the sailor remarked later. "They give me two big shots of cognac.” manded the German skipper, “Where’s the captain?” delooking fqr a captive souvenir. “He tvent down with the ship,” shouted Randall, and the others eagerly lying. “Don’t worry, Black,” said the German; “we don’t want you.” Black swore. The enemy he recognized as an old prep school classmate of his. tt a DURING the war Randall stepped into Newport News and performed an act of friendly piracy for the navy, taking the freighter Theresa away from the shipping board by cajolery and assertiveness when red tape was holding things up. Asa boy sailor he froze stiff receiving the signal halyards through the lofty main truck of a sailing ship and had to be lowered to the deck by his shipmates. He sailed before the mast on army transports in the Spanish war. He was with the navy auxiliary fleet for years. Once he was the black sheep of the merchant marine when it was charged lie had passed up a fisherman in distress. After his vindication, within a year he saved so many schooners and dories and coast guard cutters that they nicknamed him “Rescue” Randall. An old tub, which bore the names of Powhatan, Hudson, New Rochelle. President Fillmore and two or three others at various times, which he commanded for years by whatever title was current. probably tried his patience and seasoned him and brought him fame and credit more than any other ship he ever knew. When she finally was broken up. he salvaged her steering wheel

j. L." ■*****'-’ *■■■

and Mrs. Randall had it made into a light chandelier, in which guise it hangs in their home at Whitestone Landing today. tt u u A S the Powhatan the ship made her fame in a storm January, 1920, 500 miles off New York. First, the ash ejector from the fire room clogged and began shipping water. The furnaces were flooded, not only stopping progress, but cutting off light and heat. Coal shifted in the bunkers and the ship listed heavily to starboard. It seemed a good chance the transverse bulkhead wouldn't hold, whch would mean going to the bottom immediately. For eleven days in winter storms various ships essayed towing the Powhatan. Almost miraculously she finally reached Halifax. The 274 passengers were transferred in small boats to another ship without loss of a life. Commodore Randall admits now to being in a tight place on the Powhatan and knowing it at the time, but the passengers issued a statement attributing their safety to his “unfailing optimism.” “American” is the word for Commodore Randall, in the same way that one says “German” of sauerkraut and beer, or “Broadway” of Texas Guinan. He’s as typical as pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving dinner. His stories and exploits, whether early adventures or running his present floating palace hotel, all savor of the Stars and Stripes. There's a shrewd knack for getting things done, a disregard of swank, a heartiness and humor to the man w'hich his countrymen would insist is American. a OUT of uniform and talking easily, Commodore Randall could pass for a golf-playing fellow townsman who loves the front porch of the country club, or for a crack insurance salesman or the boss politician of his state. But one couldn’t mistake him long. He reeks of the sea, just as much as his hard-cussing parrot, Barnacle Bill, who'd be damned if he'd sail the Leviathan and so retired to Whitestone Landing. Notable passengers give him a kick. He enjoyed Dwight Morrow and the other delegates to the London naval conference, and Aimee McPherson cruising to the Holy Land. But he insists he’s no celeb-rity-chaser. To his table he invites old friends whose talk he enjoys. Commodore Randall is frankly given to flesh. A good eater, a good laugher, he has plenty of shock-absorbmg bulk, plenty of energy stored up there. His features are finely modeled. He belongs to many lodges and to the Sons of the American Revolution. Family means much to him. His ancestors settled in Long Island 250 years ago, and more. One fought with Paul Jones. Many were master mariners. He carries the Randall and Corwin genealogies, bound volumes, on the ship with him. Proud, but not snooty. A BOVE the mantel in his cabin hangs an oki-fashioned print of the three-masted bark Obed Baxter, 877 tons, on which he sailed as ordinary seaman at sl3 a month, down to Santos and back. Before that—born 1879 at Brookhaven. L. I.—he had sailed his sloop, the Clara B, along Great South bay, many's the time. But the Obed Baxter, when he was 13, was his first ship. She was the one he froze on. “A great school, the sailing ship, if you can hold on,” he remarked.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Albert B. Randall, commodore of the United States lines arid skipper of the Leviathan, witji Barnacle Bill, erstwhile seagoing parrot now turned landlubber. Inset, the bark Obed Baxter, on which he first went to sea in 1897, and below at left, the Leviathan, his present command.

“As the saying is, one hand for yourself and one for the owner. “What a ship teaches, really, is patience, economy and self-reli-ance—especially patience.” The way he earned his four stripes twenty-six years ago was an exemplification of those virtues, plus continued use of all the “American” elements in his makeup. It came about while he was chief officer of the navy collier Caesar. He got his promotion with the aid of his Chinese bo’s'n and also three ships and a tug, by a feat of main strength and awkwardness, yanking a* drydock half around the world, which he has the nerve now to call a pleasurable experience. He wouldn't take too much credit to himself. He was but one of the crowd, and as he said, *‘All of us were treated pretty well for that trip.” His reward was to be made captain of the Hannibal and sent down to Trinidad with a load of coal for Admiral Evans’ globecircling fleet. a a THE drydock Dewey was the farthest thing afloat from the swift and sensitive Leviathan. The Dewey was the size and shape, of a factory shed, 500 feet long,’ with square ends, a plaything for cross winds, in corrigibly drifting to leew'ard and yawing from side to side. It had to be towed from Baltimore to Olongapo, Philippine islands, 12,000 miles. “No can dp,” grunted the Chinese bo’s'n, when he heard the order. “Sure can do,” answered Randall. But the young mate foresaw at least some of the troube ahead. The towing hawser was Manila line fifteen inches in circumference. There would be at least 200 fathoms of it, water-sodden, dragging from the ship. That would require some heavy spars for levers when they came to shift it around. But spars were not regulation equipment fdr colliers. The navy yard chief diapproved. Randall told his bo's'n. "Me savvy,” answered the Chinese. tt a tt WHEN thpy got to sea with the Dewey Randall found the hold jammed with spars, dozens of them. They were the fruit of nightly thefts by the bo's'n around the navy yard, one or two every night. The big hawser always was

Specier of School Desks Over Frolics of City Children

It’s only a bad dream today, but in a few hours it will be reality. Apparently it didn't disturb the younger generation of Indian-

bucking, often breaking. On one escape the drydock drifted back over its course 100 miles before it could be made fast. Again it got loose in storms twice within five days. It strayed off in the Mediterranean and also amuck in the darkness amid the harbor currents of Singapore. The engines of the towing ships broke down in midocean. Some days, the ships pyffing ahead at full speed and the Dewey dragging back under adverse winds, the net distance logged would be forty miles or fifty-two miles backward. The Atlantic crossing alone, Baltimore to Gibraltar, required fifty-seven days. The whole trip, six months and ten days. But at length they were rid of the Dewey. Chief Officer Randall reminded the bo’s’n. “Can do one time,” the Chinese admitted—“maybe.” Next—Pugnet of the Paris. ' YEGG SUSPECTS NABBED Three Negroes Are Accused of Burglary at Bottling Works. Three alleged Negro yeggmen today are under arrest, charged with burglary of the Nu-Grape bottling works, 1438 North Senate avenue. They are Jess Bunkley, 42, of 444 West Vermont street; Edward Charles Taylor. 36. of 237 '£ Indiana avenue, and Delmar Perkins, 42, of the same address. Bunkley and Taylor were arrested Sunday by Sergedht Edward Hueber and squad three minutes after attempting the burglary. They were equipped with safecracking tools. Perkins was picked up by Lieutenant Leo Trautman on information obtained from Bunkley. VETERAN EDITOR IS DEAD Funeral Rites for W. W. Kellams Are Being Arranged at Roekport. By United Press ROCKPORT, Ind., Sept. s—Funeral arrangements wefe being made today for W. W. Kellams, 74, for thirty-five years publisher and editor of the Roekport Democrat, who died at his home here Saturday. Kellams retired from newspaper work three years ago. He was a former auditor of Spencer county. Cigarets Are Stolen Cigarets valued at S6O were stolen from the restaurant of Fannie Lieber, 533 Indiana avenue, Sunday.

apoiis as water splashed in municipal pools and beaches, held open several days for their benefit. The specter that hangs over the

FINAL TOUCHES ARE GIVEN TO CnTSJUDGET City Council to Get Finance Plan at Special Meeting. Tuesday Noon. City .officials were busy today putting the finishing touches to the city's 1933 budget, which will be submitted to city council at a special session at 12:30 Tuesday. While it was reported the budget virtually had been completed, no information could be obtained from officials as to its probable total, and the levy that will be required to raise it. However, it was known that, despite salary reductions of more than $500,000 and heavy slashes in other items, the net decrease is not likely to be heavy, probably resulting in a substantial levy •hike. The levy this year was SI.OB. This is accounted for by an 18 per cent assessed valuation decrease, heavily increased tax delinquencies, necessity for including an item of $72,000 for the 1933 primary and general election, and increase of more than $200,000 in the amount of bonds and interest maturing next year. In addition, city officials were faced with the necessity of adding $150,000 in the light and water items. Last year these two items were reduced from the requested $890,000 to only $610,000, in anticipation of rate cuts. However, only $133,000 reduction was obtained in the utility bills, leaving a deficit this year. An ordinance approprating $143,000 from the anticipated unexpended balance to meet the deficit in the light and water budget items this year was to be introduced at the council session Tuesday. The council also was to receive a proposed ordinance placing the salary cuts included in next year's budget, in effect the remainder of this year.

Hiner Addresses Labor Rally

Ward B. Hiner, Liberty party Daly. Music will be furnished by candidate for Governor, addressed Mrs. Ruth Moon, Walter Tuttle and a Labor day rally at Ft. Wayne to- John Allen Walker Sr. day. Other prominent party mem- Mrs. Mabel Dobbins is president bers from Indianapolis took part in of the auxiliary and Miss Kersting the parade at Washington, Ind. chairman of the meeting.

Maine’s Election Next Week Is Weather-Vane

Good Indication of Trend on

Prohibition, President to Be Given. BY HERBERT LITTLE Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. s.—Maine’s state election a week from today is looked to here as a weather vane both on the presidential election and prohibition. Not that any serious observer believes any more that “as Maine goes, so goes the nation.” Maine cast her electoral votes Democratic only once since the Civil war and that was in 1912, when the Roosevelt split gave Wilson a plurality with 47 per cent of the state’s popular vote. The elections are for Governor, other state offices and three house members. Reapportionment under the new census has eliminated one of Maine's congressmen. State Strongly Republican The important political symptom in the Sept. 12 Maine returns will be how much stronger the Democrats have become, and whether the wet Democrats have made much of a dent in the huge Republican majorities. In 1928, Maine gave Hoover 179.923 votes, to 81.179 for Smith and 1,068 for Norman Thomas. In 1924, the state gave Coolidge 138,440; Davis, 41,964, and La Follette, 11,382. In most presidential elections since 1900, Maine has been at least two to two Republican. But the state has showed some independence by electing Democratic Governors four times since the Civil war, in 1878, 1880, 1910 and 1914. John Moran, one of the strongest of the Democratic candidates, is running, not for Governor, as he has in previous years, but foi congress. He is opposed by the strongest of the Republican candidates, Representative John Nelson, who has represented the Second district for years. Hoover Supporters Run Ip the First district, Representative Carroll Beedy, a strong* Hoover supporter, is opposed by Joe Connally, who emphasizes the Democratic Wetness. In the Third, Democratic Mayor Utterback of Bangor is campaigning against ex-Governor Ralph Brewster, who has been defeated by Republicans in two tries for the senatorial nomination in recent years. The guberpatorial race is between Burleigh Martin, candidate of the regular Republican organization, and Louis Brann. Democrat.

swimming pools is one of desks, which will be realized Tuesday. At those desks, boys and girls who are splashing in Rhodius park pool in the photo will spend several months.

Chairman for , Sahara Grotto Group Session

W r ■> ft yfl K' iigSpfc? .Hn ; : A

Ruthanne Kersting

Robert Daly, London, England, will give a lecture and exhibition of European soft shoe dancing at the home-coming of the ladies’ auxiliary of Sahara Grotto at the Grotto home, Park avenue and Thirteenth street, at 2 Tuesday. Daly is affiliated with the Ruthanne Kersting dance studio. Others who will speak at the meeting are Mrs. Myrtle LeFeber, Mrs. Dora Birsfield and Mrs. Ann

GETS TEACHER POST

Joseph R. Friend to Be Extension English Instructor. Appointment of Joseph R. Friend, University of Wisconsin graduate, as instructor in

English at the Indiana university extension school, was announced today. Friend will teach classes in English composition and contemporary drama for freshmen. The latter course will include a study of continental writers with empha- * sis on criticism and upon new developments in stage technique.

POLICEWOMAN QUITS Mrs. Mary Moore Resigns Rather Than Face Trial. Mrs. Mary Moore, veteran policewoman, today no longer was a member of the Indianapolis police department, resigning rather than face what she termed would be a “cut and dried .safety board trial” for insubordination. Suspension of Mrs. Moore was ordered Saturday by Chief Mike Morrissey after a clash between Mrs. Moore and Lieutenant Ralph Dean when Dean accused Mrs. Moore of riding her beat in an automobile. Dean said Mrs. Moore refused to accompany him to headquarters in a police car and later came in voluntarily, turning in her badge to Captain Jesse McMurtry. The third policewoman to leave the departmnet in ten days under fire, Mrs. Moore said she considered the action against her was part of a department policy to "get rid of policewomen.” CONVENTION DATE IS SET Indiana Nurses’ Association Will Convene Here Oct. 5 to 8. Convention of the Indiana State Nurses’ Association will be held Oct. 5 to 8 in Indianapolis. Members of the committee in charge of the program will be Miss Frances MacMillan, chairman. Miss Beatrice Gearin, Miss Rose Johnson. Miss Eva MacDougall, and Miss Helen Teal.

With them will go thousands of others—back to the daily grind of learning under the guidance of teachers who already have their instructions for the coming

JIM FERGUSON REAL VICTOR IN MATTRIUMPH Vote Half Million Strong for Man Treated Worse Than Condemned Criminal. BY MAROELLI S E. FOSTER Editor, Houston Press HOUSTON, Bept. s.—Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson was nominated for Governor of Texas by the Democrats one week ago, but the thrilling, remarkable, historical thing that happened was this: A man impeached while Governor, kicked out of office, denied the right ever again to hold that office, treated worse than any condemned criminal in that he has no chance of a pardon or any hope that his sentence will ever be rebuked, went before the people of Texas and asked them to vote for his wife—and they did so. It was not because they wanted Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson as their Governor, but because they knew her husband would be the guiding hand, or brain. They voted nearly half a. million strong for Jim Ferguson. Two Camps in Texas There are two camps in Texas. One believes that Jim Ferguson is a shrewd, cunning conspirator, a demagog and a politician without scruple. They think he is dishonest in both public and private life, and that when his wife is Governor he will use the office for his personal profit. - The other camp believes Jim Ferguson shamefully has been misrepresented; that his impeachment was a political manipulation, and that his every heart-beat is for the common people. Another reason for Mrs. Fergjison's victory was Ross Sterling, the Governor who ran for a second term. In the opinion of many he was as great a failure in handling the states affairs as he was in his private business. Sterling Is “Broke'* Ten years ago he was worth at least $10,000,000. Today his big buildings are being taken over by bondholders, and his saved from being wrecked when the big business ’ men of Houston took it over. They did it to save the name of this city, and the name of the Governor. They claim that had the bank failed the disclosures, would have ruined the Governor, who had borrowed too much of the funds for himself, his relatives and his companies. Nearly half the people of Texas believe Ross Sterling is honest, though broke. The other half believe he is guilty of every crime charged against Jim Ferguson and more. Contest Is Promised Sterling had the support of every large daily in Texas except the Houston Press. He had two exGovernors on the stump for him, and he was backed by the shrewdest politicians in the state. Sterling and his backers say they will contest the election. Jim Ferguson's friends on the farms, in the factories and in the villages say if the Sterling crowd tries to overturn the people's vote they will narch on Austin, throw Ross Sterling out of and put Jim Ferguson and his wife in charge.

BONUS MARCHERS GET VETERANS’ LEGAL AID Thirty-Seventh Division Memberi Hire Attorney for Indicted Trio* By Rrripps-Hoirartl Xrirspaprr Allinnnj WASHINGTON, Sept. s.—Vetererans of the Thirty-Seventh division of the A. E. F„ Ohio unit, which saw service in French and Belgian fronts, have come to the defense of the three bonus marchers indicted on assault charges in the disorder* here July 28. Dan C. McCullough. Toledo attorney, was here today to offer hi* services on behalf of the Toledo veterans of the Thirty-Seventh In defending the indicted ex-soldiers, Bernard McCoy, Chicago; Broadua Faulkner, Kentucky, and John O. Olson, Indiana. The Toledo veterans’ organization was one of the first in the country to go on record as condemning the administration for the bonus eviction. Later the association voted to employ counsel to defend the indicted men. The indicted veterans are free under bond arranged by the American Women's Legion, pending their trials in October. FEAR SON IS DROWNED Boy, 11, Fails to Return Home After Visit to River. Fear that his son Richard, 11, was drowned in White river near Riverside park was expressed to police today by Theodore Hardesty, 219 East North street. Hardesty said Richard and another boy went to the park Sunday and when they did not return, a search was made revealing the Hardesty boy s shoes had been left at the Thirtieth street bridge. HEAVY LOSS IN BLAZE Half-Million Damage Caused by Blast at Lawrenceburg Plant. By United Press LAWRENCEBURG, Ind., Sept. 5. —Plans for possible repair of tha main plant of the Rossville Commercial Chemical Corporation hero were being considered today following a fire that was caused by an explosion Saturday night. Officials estimated that the loss would exceed half a million dollars. Approximately 100,000 gallons of alcohol were in flames after the explosion of one of the alcohol drums. Mexico Topic for Speech Jack Harding of Indianapolis will speak on “Random Impressions of Mexico,” at the Kiwanis Club session Wednesday at the Columbia Club. Apartment Is Looted Removing a screen from a window of a second-floor apartmpnt, a thief obtained a purse containing $155 and some toilet articles from the apartment of Miss Ruby Morton, Spink-Arms, Sunday.

Friend

.SEPT. 3,