Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1933 — Page 12

PAGE 12

TEMPTING CHANCE TO WIN PROGRESSIVE BLOC FROM G. 0. P. GIVEN DEMOCRATS Invitation to Hiram Johnson May Be Followed by Advances to La Follette, Cutting:, Norris and Others. BY WALKER STONE Tim** Special Writer WASHINGTON Sept 16—The political pot. quiet in recent months, has been stirred by the offer of California Democratic leaders to make a Republican senator. Hiram Johnson, the Democratic nominee for the senate. The California development is regarded by a few as the first outcropping of an under-surface movement directed by Democratic strategists to woo the progressive bloc away from the Republicans and merge it into the Democratic party.

Besides -Hi” Johnson, two othei progressive Republican senators who bolted from Hoover to Roosevelt last fall—"Bob’ La Follette of Wisconsin and Bronson Cutting of New Mexico—are up for re-election next year. Like fiejiator Johnson, both La Follette and Cutting face stiff primary fights if they choose to remain In the Republican party. In all three states conservatives are in control of the Republican party machinery and are determined to punish the bolters. Situation Like 1850. 1890 This situation is believed by some strategists to provide a perfect setting for another of those rare major political shifts, such as was accomplished in the 1850s, when one wing of the Whig party was absorbed by the Democrats and the other was recruited into the new Republican party. One was achieved again in the 1890s. in the fusion of Democrats and Populists in the farm belt. It is the kind of opportunity that naturally must appeal to President Roosevelt, whose leadership has started the Democratic party on a progressive road. The outstanding progressive Republicans are all friends of the man in the White House. He sees eye to eye w'ith them on most economic and social problems. Moreover. Mr. Roosevelt is a party builder, a political organizer. Except in a few states in the northeast, he holds the Democratic party in the palm of his hand. Other States Affected Should such a major political shift be attempted seriously, the movement would not be limited to California. Wisconsin and New Mexico. It undoubtedly would spread into Nebraska, where Senator Norris,; who led the progressive Republican bolt away from Hoover, has a large and faithful following: into Minnesota. where the Farmer-Labor party is dominant and the Democrats rank in strength beneath the Republicans; into Pennsylvania, where a progressive Republican, Governor Gifford Pinchot, is reported to be planning to wrest the Republican senatorial nomination from conservative David A. Reed, and, failing that, to seek Democratic support as an independent; and even into the Dakotas, where the dominant progressive faction is much more in sympathy with Rooseveltism than with the reactionary' creed that I guides those who control the policies of the national Republican organization. In all of those states the Democratic party for years has been a weak minority party, sadly lacking in the vitality that a fusion with Kie progressives would bring. Obstacles Are Faced Definite practical obstacles, of course, stand in the way of such an amalgamation. In most of the states mentioned, fusion would mean that the present Democratic leaders would be stripped of party control. Democratic precinct, county, and state bosses would be certain to resist any movement calculated to weaken their own powers. Moreover, men like Johnson. Norris, La Follette and Pinchot are not likely to relish the thought of burning their Republican bridges behind them. They long have distrusted the Democratic party, and fear the Roosevelt type of Democratic leadership may be but temporary. The fusion would be easier to achieve in New Mexico than in any other state. There Senator Cuttings personal friends are in complete control of the Democratic organization and the senator resigned as Republican national committeeman and walked out of the Republican state convention last summer when control of the convention was seized by the conservative element, led by former Representative Albert Gallatin Sims, husband of Ruth Hanna McCormick.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong 10 Wilton Richie. Depute Ind Ford coupe. Irom Tenth street and Capitol avenue Charles B Graham. 2:i East Ninth s'reel Ford roadster, from in front of 221 East Ninth s-reet. Virgil Bulmell. 1520 Hiatt street. Chevrolet coach, from garage In rear of 1520 Hiatt gtreet. Glen P Eite!. 24 Kenyon street. Ford coupe. 116-007. from Wabash street and Senate avenue. Harry Roonev 4511 Schofield avenue. Ford Tuck. T 11-522. from Indiana avenue and North street.

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belong to F A. Jacobs. 51 East Thirtv-fourth street, Buick sedan, found at Noblesville, Ind Samuel E Jones. Ft Harrison. Ford coupe, found at Northwestern avenue and Pali Creek boulevard Clay Bush. 1107 North Colorado avenue. Pontiae coach, found at Fifteenth street and the Menon tracks Charles Antle. 5726 University avenue. Ford roadster, found at Ravmond street and White river. O B Hamel. 2014 Park avenue. Chev-1 Toiet coupe found in front of 2210 Kenwood avenue • H Cole, 1554 College avenue. Chevrolet roadster, found in front of 1619 Arsenal avenue. John Adams. 2605 North Keystone avenue. Ford tudor. found in rear of 520 West Michigan street, stripped of battery, hot water heater. radiator cap and generator. EmwooA B Auvell. 5514 Ralston avenue. Oldsmobil* sedan, found at Thirty-eighth street and Northwestern avenue Chaadls R Davis. R R 3 Mooresville. Ind Ford coach, found at 845 Charles street. Ford eoupe. 1931 model, no license plates. Motor Ho. A 2939784. found at 1544 Belle fonts me street Arline Heese 1942 North Alabama street. Ford roadstar. found in rear of 1207 Broadwav, stripped two wire wheels and five tires Mrs. Robert Smith. 401 Guilford avenue. Peerless sedan, found in rear of 1104 East Thirty-fifth street, stripped two wheels and two Urea.

CITY MAN TO FACE KIDNAPING CHARGE Two to Be Arraigned in Terre Haute Monday. By I nit ft! Prrm TERRE HAUTE. Ind.. Sept. 16. Charges of kidnaping, auto banditry and robbery will be lodged formally against two Indianapolis men when they are arraigned Monday in connection with the kidnaping of Evelyn Hyslop. 17, Terre Haute. Elmer Davis, 22, and Garfield Kelly. 27. are said to have admitted kidnaping the girl and her export, Frank Whalen. 18. Whalen was tied to a fence and the girl was taken to East St. Louis, 111., in his car. , Prosecutor Charles C. Whitlock and Detective Chief Sam Burk brought the suspects here from Union, Mo., where they were apprehended after attempting a similar kidnaping and automobile theft. ANNUAL NOVENA TO START ON SEPT. 25 Services Will Be Held in Little Flower Church. Services to mark the start of the annual public novena*to will be held in the Little Flower Roman Catholic church at 8 o'clock Monday night. Sept. 25. Services will be held thereafter for nine cons°cutive nights, closing Oct. 3. Special services will be held each afternoon at 2:30 for school children and others. High mass will be read each morning of the novena and relics of the saint will b? exposed during the entire nine days. The Rev. Charles Duffer, pastor, will officiate at the devotions, assisted by the Rev. Raymond Marchino and the Rev. John Shaughnessy. THREE ARE ARRESTED IN FT. WAYNE STRIKE Two of Trio Charged With Carrying Concealed Weapons. By I nitr<l Prm* FT. WAYNE. Ind., Sept. 16. Three more arrests growing out of a strike at the Ft. Wayne Tailoring Company were made Friday. Peter Gramlich. 50. and Anton Lombardy. 21. were charged with carrying concealed weapons. Roy Gramlich, 22, was charged with inciting to riot, when he is alleged to have tried to prevent arrest of the two other men. The Elder Gramlich, father of Roy. said he armed himself with a blackjack as protection against pickets at the plant. Lombardy also was charged with carrying a blackjack. Peter Gramlich is one of the original organizers of the tailoring firm three years ago. INSPECT 3 HATCHERIES State Conservation Commission to Bass Lake, Wawasee. Visits to the Riverside hatchery here and those at Bass lake and Wawasee are scheduled for the sixteen members of the new conservation commission who left the statehouse this morning for a week-end tour with conservation department officials. Tonight will be spent at Wawasee hatchery. The Jasper-Pulaski county game preserve will also be visited. Officials on the tour include Virgil Simmons, conservation director; Kenneth M. Kunkel. director of fish and game, and James Vanderbark. assistant director.

Contract Bridge

BA' W. E. M’KEXNEY Secretary American Bridge League I AM wondering if my readers give sufficient thought and consideration to the "timing factor." We know that the timing factor plays an important part in football, baseball and tennis, and it plays just as important a part in bridge. A hand which explains this timing factor in a simple manner is given below. In addittion to the timing factor element, the hand also is interesting from a bidding angle. The hand was played in the recent national championship tournament at Asbury Park. N. J. The majority of East and West players secured the contract for game in hearts. However, the bidding at one table was rather interesting and was as follows: South and West passed. North made a weak third bid of one club. East overcalled with one heart. South bid one spade, and West jumped to three hearts. North had made an original psychic opening bid and decided, as he was not vulnerable, to carry his psychic through. He jumped the contract to four spades. East felt that North and South were trying to deprive him of a game, so went to five hearts, which South doubled. It was South's opening lead, and when a contract is being played at five or six. we know that the opening lead determines the success or failure of the contract. a a a lET us take the suits in turn— South had bid spades and this suit had been supnorted by North. However, in inspite of the spade bid, East had gone to five hearts,

GOERING IS RIGHT BOWER OF HITLER

Real War Hero Plays Prominent Role in Gernum Government

BY GEORGE BRITT Times Special Writer % A BERLIN friend of mine last Jan. 30 pushed his way through . the crowds which for weeks had been standing outside the Hotel Kaiserhof—crowds of Hitler devotees thirsting for one moment's look at their idol as he might come and go at his headquarters in the hotel. "Wie gets der Shone Adolf today?” he asked one of the tiny redcoated. brass-buttoned bellboys who swarm in the lobby. It was the common term, "Shone Adolf.” and the boys had bandied it about as freely as any other current slang. •'Ach. der Reichskanzler!” gasped the youngster in awe. That was the day on which Hitler assumed office. Only an hour before this he had moved diagonally across the Wilhemplatz from the hotel into the chancellery, and exactly then "Schone Adolf ceased to be. It is unheard today, even from opponents in their private homes. Instead, there is heard *the Reichkanzler.” "the Leader, Herr Hitler” and the “New Regime.” Men have been beaten since Jan. 30 for saying “Shone Adolf.” All Germans, anti as well as pro, take him seriously. Adolf Hitler today is regarded with a bright and blinding devotion, a fever of adoration of more intensity and by more millions of people, I suspect, than any other living man. Hitlerism is a religion. Hitler is not the chief priest, for General Hermann Goering. minister president of Prussia, has that role. Hitler already is the exalted, all-pervasive Great Spirit.

A Nazi of at least average intelligence was asked, "Who are the four greatest men in history?” At once he answered. "Jesus, Confucius. Frederick the Great, and Hitler.” "But,” objected the bantering questioner, "aren’t you too hasty? What about Mussolini?” "Oh, no!” the Nazi replied, suspecting no joke, 'Mussolini is*a great man, but he isn t in the class with those four.” 800 EVERYWHERE in Germany, in large towns and small, the faces of three men look out from shop windows with a dominating assurance—Hitler, Goering, Goebbels. For in the rear by this test of popularity would come Von Hindenburg. Almost as frequently as Hitler himself appear Goering and Dr. Joseph Goebbels, minister of propaganda and public enlightenment. “Is this government a triumvirate?” I asked. "Not at all, not at all,” said the older inhabitants. ”It is only Hitler and Goering.” Little Dr. Goebbels, by the same opinions, has no power except over the press, a large but secondary power. He struggles to keep the limelight, issuing statements and inventing stunts. He is the greatest press agent of his day. He is one of the, best oratoii; and radio speakers. He is a likable fellow and intelligent, although an unmitigated fanatic. But he does not control Germany, nor shape the state policies. Goering is different. He was a real aviation ace and war hero, holder of the best decorations, badly shot up in the fighting. He is handsome and theatrical, addicted to gaudy uniforms, unhampered by contemplation. He dominates by a violent energy. The worst said about him personally is the documental story that lie spent some time after the war in a Swedish hospital, undergoing treatment for the drug habit.' Since he came into power, rumors have it that the excitement has thrust him back again into the habit, The rumors have not been confirmed. n ts n HITLER spends less time in Berlin than any chancellor within memory. He weaves across the country by airplane, passes most week-ends in his Tyrolean cottage at Berchtesgaden, dislikes executive detail. Goering takes care of the routine, runs the government. Whatever Hitler wants, he gets without question, for he is master. There is no friction, no grudging, no opposition. He and Goering are good friends, personally fond of one another, and have worked together for years. The normal exercise of power is Goerings, the inspiration. Hitler’s. Another personality of commanding influence is Dr. Alfred Rosenberg, the cold and ambitious Esthonian who is the Nazi party's chief expert for foreign affairs. He has written more books attacking the Jews than any of his associates. Some admirers call him the brains of the Nazi movement. On the other hand, there is remembered the fiasco of his famous visit to London last spring and the apparent absurdity of his scheme for detaching the Ukraine from Russia. The chief point of agreement is that he leads all his fellows in unpopularity. To German eyes, Hitler has a cosmic charm. The foreign correspondents in Berlin who know him well seem impervious. I was not

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therefore the spades should be a bad lead. Naturally, South could not open hearts. To open diamonds looked as though he wtre sacrificing a trick, therefore South should reason as follows: His partner may hold the ace of clubs and the ace of spades. However, supposing that he does hold the ace of spades and only the queen and ten of clubs —then if a spade is opened his partner's ace will be knocked out and the de clarer will probably make his contract, while if a club is opened, he can establish a club trick, get in with the king of hearts and then lead a spade which will put his partner in with the ace. Os course, when he does lead a club, he finds a more fortunate situation —his partner holds the ace of clubs which is immediately cashed, while South makes the king of clubs and the king of hearts, defeating the contract. (Copyright. 1983. by NEA Service. Inc-J

THE INDIANAPOLIS TTMES

S' problemiftatellectually, to nnimM D||C nDIWCDC

Alfred Rosenberg aware of his great appeal, for I saw him but briefly, a middlesized man becoming slightly heavy, making a few' courtesy remarks in a crowded hall. 808 BUT the Germans lost the war and were crushed by a bitter peace. Their statesmen attacked their problems intellectually, to discover no way of reasoning themselves out. Hitler came along w'ith anew panacea, an emotional one, soothing Germany’s tragic inferiority complex, making the people feel again tlyt it was great to be German. He made them a present of hope and confidence—never mind how real it was—and they responded with their devotion. He gave away the whole shrew'd secret of his campaign success in his book. “Mein Kampf.” in the passage praising the English in wartime for “their brilliant understanding of the primitiveness of sentiment in the mass of the people.” He always has worked upon that same understanding. Hitler’s ideal I heard him state frankly and probably accurately in Munich in addressing a group of visiting young Fascists from Italy; —“our movement is endeavoring to make Germany exactly what your great leader, Signor Mussolini, has made Italy.” . In his private life, Hitler is a famous ascetic, abstaining from tobacco, alcohol, and meat. He is a w'orshipper of speed, loving the airplane, ordering three racing automobiles for himself as a boost

3TSGDR APT *Y BRUCE CAJTON

MR. STUART CHASE, having been high up on the mountain tops seeing a great vision, comes down to tell us about it in “The Promise of Power,” one of the John Day Company’s 25-cent pamphlets; and in the telling there is a good deal of genuine excitement. So far. says Mr. Chase, we have hardly scratched the surface in our use of electric power. We began by using it to light our lamps and we wound up by making it run street cars and turn factory -wheels. But eventually it will remake our whole society, free the laborer .of drudgery, emancipate the farmer, build up our small towns, reduce the swollen size of our great cities, redesign our homes, revolutionize our transportation system and put poverty on the scrap heap. In fact, Mr. Chase asserts, “if it is not wrecked by the brute claims of an obsolete financial system, it promises a world replete with more freedom and happiness than mankind has ever known.” Mr. Chase's pamphlet does not explain just how all of this is to be worked out, in a world burdened with human greed, stupidity and prejudice; but that it will be worked out somehow in the near future he is quite positive. “Electricity,” he declares, “can give us universally high standards of living, new and amusing kinds of jobs, leisure, freedom, an end to drudgery, congestion, noise, smoke and filth.” There's a joker in the deck, however. Your engineer is the true revolutionary. Mr. Chase concludes with the remark; "But the price of this bright Utopia is an economic system which is based on use and function, and not on debt and profit.”

Attend a Good School If you are interested in business opportunities, attend a good business training school, prepare thoroughly, and you’ll find your place. Many of the country’s successful business and professional men and women got their start in this way. "Central” is the Indiana Business College of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion. Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette. Columbus. Richmond and Vincennes—Ora E. Butz. President. For Bulletin, giving full particulars, get in touch with the I. B. C. school nearest you, or see. write or telephone Fred W. Case, Principal Central Business College Architects & Builders Bldg.. Pennsylvania & Vermont Sts. Indianapolis.

Dr. Joseph Paul Goebbels to the fast car manufacturers. He passionately admires Wagner's music, and after dining late, seldom before 10 o’clock, he likes to summon Ernst Hanfstaengl—the jittery and cunning Putzy Hanfstaengl, who once pulled a Harvard oar and ran an art shop in Fifth avenue—to play Wagner and Bach on his piano. BUB HITLER, the bigot, the tyrant; Hitler, the menace and scourge, also is very much the self-effacing, hard-workng, everserious common man. In the midst of astonishing fame and elevation, he has carried himself with a dignity that is all to his credit. He is not swollen by pride and is no publicity seeker. He probably has grown considerably as responsibilities increased. And even his bitterest critics in Germany credit him with political finesse supreme. Those who hate him find their outlet in jokes, sotto voce. The briefest is this: A Jew met a compatriot and said, “I had the strangest dream last night. You see, Hitler was dead, and—” “Stop, stop.” said the friend. “It's too beautiful.” Then there’s another: What is the definition of a German? He is a man with English mustache, Italian salute, Russian ideas, Spanish uniform and was born in Austria. Hitler’s distinctive Charlie Chaplin mustache, indeed, appears a trifle less absurd after the Tyrol, w'here every third yodeler sports a toothbrush of that identical pattern. b b a ONE thing in particular about Hitler I asked about in Germany; What foundation is there for the morbid stories so prevalent in America as to his alleged abnormal taste in sex matters? I came away believing the sophisticated gossip columnists were mistaken. The stories are not prevalent in Germany, not even sub rosa. Not one German whom I asked said he believed them.

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Ernst Roehm Many never had heard them. Not one American correspondent said he believed them. They strongly disbelieved them. The origination of the stories can be traced directly to the history of Ernst Roehm, organizer and commander of the brownshirted storm troops. Roehm was a war captain, later a military instructor in South America, one of the original Hitler men, a near personal friend of Hitler, supposedly the only one who still calls him by the intimate form “du” instead of “sie.” Through the storm troopers he is the one most directly responsible for putting Hitler in power. B B B ROEHM is stocky, hard-boiled, heavy-fisted, badly scarred from the war and a genius for military organization. Several years ago during an election campaign an anti-Hitler newspaper published a series of sensational and juicy letters, not to Hitler, allegedly written by Roehm. The intention was to besmirch the whole party to which Roehm belonged. The country rocked with off-color jokes at Roehm’s expense. Roehm was tried on criminal charges and acquitted, the court ruling that the letters were not evidence of overt illegal acts, whatever intention they might show. Hitler, like a good politician, stood by his old friend loyally through all the mudslinging and still makes use of his eminently valuable services as a soldier. State Road Pleas Heard The state highway commission today was cdhsioering requests of two delegations which appeared Friday asking state roads. One, from Floyd county, asked relocation of State Road 64 between New Albany and Milltown, while the other, from Sullivan county, asked extension of Road 48 from Shelburn to the Illinois state line.

Fletcher Ave. Savings & Loan Assn. SS/skb. 10 E. Market St. H “ ‘

HEIRLOOMS OR PUPPY DOGS are usually easily found If a Times LOST Ad is used to find them, JUST PHONE R-l-L-E-Y 55 5 1

SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS WARNED FEENEY Safety Director Points Out Duty on Warrants. Drivers of school busses must swear warrants for arrest of motorists alleged to have violated the law in passing. A1 Feeney, state safety director, ruled Friday. In a circular letter to township trustees, Feeney pointed out that many arrests have been made on the charge of school children who get wrong license numbers. Under the law, no car can pass a school bus that has halted. Feeney’s letter also called attention to the law which makes trustees responsible, even to the extent of criminal prosecution, for an improperly equipped school bus. He cited the safety appliances, such as proper lights and arm signals, that are required as equipment. MOTOR LINE APPROVED Service Allowed Between Indianapolis and Lawrenceburg. Certificate ’to operate a motor service between Indianapolis and Lawrenceburg was granted the McNaughton Transportation Service of Indianapolis Friday by the public service commission. Claude S. Smith of Bicknell was denied permission by the commission to operate as a contract carrier of freight between Bicknell and Terre Haute. Contract carrier’s permit also was denied Atlas Greenfield of Liberty.

Fidelity Trust Cos. General Banking Licensed in Class A Fire Insurance And AH Other Lines Except Life 14S Ktott Market Street

SE>T. lfi, 1933

BUS HITS GUARD IN SAFETY ZONE AND 7 ARE HURT Tire Blows Out and Driver Loses Control: Woman Injured by Cyclist. Seven persons were injured two severely, early today, when a Greyhound bus struck a safety zone guard and broke off a fire hydrant and utility pole at Cruse and Washington streets. In other traffic accidents Friday and early today, four persons were hurt. Wayne L. Williams. 26. of 51 North Sherman drive, who was driving the bus, told police he lost control when a tire blew out. Those most severely hurt were David S. Resnick. New York, who incurred internal injuries and bruises, and Mrs. Sarah M. Moore, Columbus. O, who suffered injury of the face, and bruises. Five other passengers were shaken severely. They were John Benke. Sr. [ Louis; C. E.' Kennedy and Mrs. George Killesky. Pittsburgh: R F. Adams. San Antonio, Tex., and ; Joseph Palin. Passaic, N J. Injured by Bicycle Resnick and Mrs. Moore were, taken to city hospital. Struck bv a bicycle, Mrs Martin Rehfuss. 55. Spink-Arms. incurred i a fracture of the right, ankle and her condition was aggravated by a i severe case of shock. She is in St. Vincent's hospital. A boy responsible for the accident was a hit and run rider. Witnesses told police that he ignored a trafflic signal, his bicycle striking Mrs. Rehfuss as she crossed Meridian street in front of the hotel. After waiting a few minutes, the boy rode away. Severe injury of an ankle was incurred by Effie Short, 11. of 605 South East street, as she ran against the side of an automobile while hurrying to a street car at Woodlawn and Virginia avenups. She was taken to city hospital. Charles Cavender. 25, of 1646 Gimber street, w'as the driver of the automobile.

Hit by Automobile Max Sasower, 40, of 1343 Charles street, incurred deep lacerations on his arms as the result of being struck by an automobile as he left a street car at Arizona and Meridian streets. Mark Demaree, 24, Franklin, driver of the automobile, was arrested on charges of reckless driving, destruction of property, and operating a car with faulty brakes. After striking Sasower, the automobile broke a light standard and fire hydrant and ran thirty feet on a sidewalk before it came to a stop, i Slight wound on the head was incurred by Margaret Brown. 4, of 1434 Laurel street, when she was struck by an automobile in front of her home. Charles Wagener, 62, of 1510 Spruce street, was the motorist. Hunt Negro as Paint Thief A Negro is sought today by police as the burglar who stole a large amount of paint Friday night from the store of Emil Litchenower. at 1705 North Alabama street. Residents of the vicinity told police the Negro used a taxicab driven by a white man to haul away the loot.

|jP|S The new autotinned. You’ll o oua the country hut take along: your own air. a an Don’t try to get the very last mile out of your tires. It’s risky business. If you could X-Ray a tire that has worn thin and smooth you would see the danger of further strain on cords and plies that have been subjected to terrific punishment for thousands of miles. You would be afraid to put those tires back on the wheels. Be safe! Ride on new. fresh tires that are really built for today's hard driving Miller Geared-to-the-Road. They offer you DOUBLE PROTECTION against Blowouts, easier riding and longer service. Generous allowance for your old tires and the balance in small convenient payments. n n n Today's simile: As out of date as a straw hat on Sept. 16th. * ana Now is the time to give serious thought to your battery. We have a department that specializes in battery rebuilding and recharging. We believe it to be one of the finest in the country. It is staffed by men who really know batteries. Drive in anytime for free inspection service. It’s yours for the asking. This includes testing, adding distilled water, greasing terminals, etc. non We are open tonight until 9:30 p. m. and all day Sunday until the same time. U U * CHIEF TIRE CHANGER MILLER TIRE DISTRIBUTOR