Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1933 — Page 1

CLOSED BANKS TO PAY OFF IN FULL, ROOSEVELT’S GOAL President Working on Plans to Free Frozen Assets, Aid Discloses; RFC to Finance New Unit. IMMEDIATE ACTION IS POSSIBLE Announcement to Be Made Before End of Week, Is Assertion; Leaders Confer at Washington. By United Prens WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—President Roosevelt is workin# out plans for a giant corporation to liquidate frozen bank assets, Henry Bruere, New York banker who is co-operating with the President’s financial program, said today. Several billion dollars of bank deposits still are frozen since the March banking holiday and the President is anxious that these funds be released as soon as possible. The release might be made through formation of a huge governmental liquidating corporation which would take over slow assets of

closed hanks and hold them j until they could he liquidated. The hank depositors would i he paid in full immediately. Bruere conferred at length today j with Treasury Secretary William I Woodin, Eugene R. Black, federal reserve board governor, and other financial advisers of the President j with respect to plans to set up the government liquidating corporation. Bruere said that the plan had not been completed and that "we're still working on it.” When completed the plan will be submitted to the President, who is expected to announce it to the public before the end of the w r eek. Under the plan being worked out with Bruere, the government would set up its liquidating corporation with funds supplied by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. RFC debentures would be turned over to receivers and conservators of closed banks in exchange for their frozen assets. The RFC paper then w’ould be turned into cash by the government and this paid to depositors. GRAIN FUTURES ACT UPHELD BY COURT Chicago Brokers Lose Battle on Law's Constitutionality. By United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—An attack by member brokers of the Chicago Grain Market on" the tutionality of the grain futures act was rejected today by the supreme court. Although the suit was instituted in 1928, the court's decision was regarded as highly significant in view of the fact that agriculture secretary Henry A. Wallace has invoked the powers of the act to curb speculation in commodities. Both the orders requiring brokers to report grain futures commitments of more than 500,000 bushels of wheat, corn or oats, and the validity of the entire act were brought into question in the proceedings. COURT FREES OWNER OF SERVICE STATION Former Employe Admits He Hit Boss First in Row Over Wages. Sam Trotcky. proprietor of the Indianap Auto Service station, 1121 North Meridian street, today was freed by Municipal Judge Dewey Myers on assault and battery charges. Complaining witnesses against Trotcky was Daniel Bishop, Negro, 816 West Twelfth street, former Indianap employe, who filed an affidavit Saturday against Trotcky. alleging the latter slugged him in an altercation over Bishop's pay. Today, Bishop admitted he struck Trotcky first when Trotcky told him he was “too busy and to see the bookkeeper” about $2.34 due Bishop. Testimony of other Indianap employes corroborated Trotsky's story that he struck the Negro with a grease can in self-defense. H U MPHREY I BARRED BY TRADE BOARD’S VOTE Federal Commission Takes Unanimous Aetion at Session. ' By United Pram WASHINGTON. Oct. 9—The federal trade commission by unanimous action this afternoon barred William E. Humphrey, who was ordered removed from the commission by President Roosevelt, from participation in its affairs. Humphrey, who refused to quit his post at the White House order, was present at the commission's meeting. Times Index Page. Bridge 14 Broun Column 4 Classified 11-12 Comics 13 Crossword Puzzle 14 Curious World 13 Dietz on Science 14 Editorial 4 Fishing 14 Financial g Hickman. Theaters 8 Industrial Page 8 Lodge Page 6 Serial Btory 13 Sports 10 State News 14 Radio 14 Womans Page .... 5

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VOLUME 45—NUMBER 129

MARKET HALL FATE DISCUSSED Works Board Talks Proposal to Overcome Burden of Building. Following publication in The Times of statements that Tomhnson hall, Market and Delaware streets, costs the city $10,500 a year to maintain and brought in only $245 in revenues in 1932, the works board today started an investigation with a view to ridding the city of the burden of maintaining the hall. After a general discussion among members of the works board at the meeting at city hall today, Edward H. Knight, corporation counsel, was ordered to Investigate the city’s contract to maintain the hall, in which the city market is located, and report his findings. Participating in the discussion were Walter C. Boetcher, Charles Britten, Louis Brant and Ernest E. Frick, all members of the works board. Several of the members suggested giving the hall to the state declaring that the land on which the building is located belongs to the state. Another proposal was to obtain Cadle Tabernacle at nominal rental for any meetings which the city may wish to hold in the future, if Tomlinsbn hall is abandoned. SUNDAY DEADLINE FOR INCOME TAX PAYMENT No Time Extension to Be Granted Says State Collector. All quarterly gross income tax payments must be made to the state by next Sunday, as no extension of time is to be granted, it was announced today by Collector Clarence A. Jackson. He estimated that collections thus far are in excess of 40 per cent over the first collections.

Medical Scientists of Nation in Session Here

Discuss Ways to Combat Disease and Add to Span of Life. Grandma and grandpa's longevity is being looked at through professional nose glasses. Mortality's sands have shifted. Early in this century the cry was to save babies, banish heart disease in adolecsents. But now the chronic diseases of later life are being combated in a fierce offensive. Delegates to the American Public Health Association's opening meetings today heard this clarion of new medical war in a talk by Dr. Louis I. Dublin of New York, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company statistician, before the health officers section of the convention. Three thousand delegates are expected to attend the four-day conferences. Reduce Childhood Ills General session will be held at 8 tonight in the Riley room of the Claypool. The statistician urged health officers to combat infections such *s scarlet fever, rheumatic fever,Jpd other similar diseases causing JRart disease. “The enormous reduction in mortality from diseases like typhoid fever and cohimunicable diseases of childhood and tuberculosis has shifted the emphasis to the chronic diseases of later life," he said. "Organic heart disease is responsible for one-sixth of the nation's deaths." Calvert on Program Dissemination of disease through human carriers, employed as fcod and drink handlers, was discussed by Dr. Ralph Emerson Duncan, Kansas City, in a paper today be-

The Indianapolis Times Partly cloudy and continued cool tonight and Tuesday with light frost probable if sky clears.

INDICT RAHKE IN BASEBALL LOTTERY CASE Grand Jurors Act After Huge Seizure of Pool Tickets. Emil Rahke, whom police term Marion county’s baseball lottery king, was routed out of bed shortly before noon today and placed under arrest following his indictment by the grand jury on charges of selling a baseball pool ticket. Armed with capiases, John Dugan and John Dalton, detectives assigned to criminal court, first visited the Silent Salesman Company, 14 North East street, Rahke's establishment, where thousands of baseball pool tickets were seized in a police raid this summer. He was not there and Dalton and Dugan found him at his home, 4146 North Meridian street. He came down in pajamas, heard the capias read, dressed and was taken to the sheriffs office where he was to be held until he posted $1,500 bond. Two Others Named Two other indictments on baseball pool ticket selling were returned by the grand jury today, it was learned, in its report to Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker. The true bill against Rahke specifically charges that he ’’sold a 25-cent baseball pool ticket June 3.” The complaining witness is Edward H. Little, whose address in the indictment is listed as 5109 Park avenue. Names of other witnesses contained in the indictment are Albert Beedy, 812 South Illinois street; William Fifer, 222 East Wabash street; George J. Schmidt, 3909 Winthrop avenue; William J. Wallace, 230 East Washington street, and Joseph Grotendick, 2955 Broadway. Freed in Municipal Court Schmidt, charging Rahke has failed to pay SI,OOO on a basketball pool ticket, has a civil suit- on file against the alleged ’’lottery king.” Beedy and Fifer were sent before the grand jury by’ Judge Baker when they were arraigned in criminal court on pool selling charges. Judge Baker, at that time, announced he was “not interested so much in the little fellows.” Rahke was freed on a technicality when he was arraigned in municipal court following the raid and ticket seizure at his Silent Salesman printing establishment. FLORIDA READY TO VOTE Wets Favored on Eve of Balloting on Repeal. By United Prcsx TALLAHASSEE. Fla., Oct. 9. Florida votes tomorrrow on repeal of national prohibition, with wet leaders predicting it will join the thirty-two states which already have ratified repeal. Cotton Production Drops Bit United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—The agriculture department today estimated 1933 cotton production at 12,885.000 , bales, compared with 13,002,000 bales 1 last year.

fore the laboratory section of the association. He urged physical examinations for food handlers. C. K. Calvert, Indianapolis sanitary district official, and L. A. Geupel, chief engineer of the state* sanitary engineering department, were speakers today before the meeting of state sanitary engineers. A radio forum will be given at 4:30 today over the National Broadcasting network through WKBF with Dr. James P. Leake, St. Louis, discussing "The Last Word About Sleeping Sickness.” Sectional meetings will break up this afternoon for a trip to the Greenfield biological laboratories of Eli Lilly & Cos. Women will be entertained at a tea and travel talk at the John Herron Art Institute. A dance tonight will follow* the general session and the address by Dr. John E. Ferrell of New York, national president, on “America’s Contributions and Problems in Public Health.”

BY AL LYNCH Times Staff Writer Another “trick clause” benefiting a public utility has saddled Indianapolis taxpayers with an increase of .approximately 40 per cent in city water bills during the last ten years, it was pointed out today by budget experts. Members of the public works board cite monthly charges in 1923 of approximately $20,000. compared with provision in the 1934 budget for payment of an average of $34,650 a month to the Indianapolis Water Company.

U. S. Sees War Ahead as Nazis * Insist on Right to Re-Arm; Chance of Collecting Debts Dim

Surplus Pipe and High Cost of Fire Hydrants Cause 40 Per Cent Increase in City Water Bills in Last 10 Years, Works Board Charges

INDIANAPOLIS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1933

FIGHTING FOR PEACE

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Norman H. Davis

CONRAD MANN LOSESAPPEAL McGuire, Hering Also Are Refused Review by High Court. By United Prats WASHINGTON. Oct. 9.—Conrad H. Mann, Kansas City, Mo., financier and lodge organizer, today lost his appeal to the supreme court from his conviction in New York city federal courts on charges of violating the lottery laws in connection with fund raising activities of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. The court also sustained, by refusing to review their cases, the convictions of Bernard C. McGuire and Frank E. Hering, South Bend, Ind., in the same case. They were associated with Mann in the purported lottery activities. The court’s ruling requires that the men begin, serving thei/ sentences shortly. Mann was sentenced to serve fifteen months in jail and to pay a fine of SIO,OOO. McGuire received a sentence of a year and a day and fined SIO,OOO, while Hering was given four months in jail and fined $2,000. MOTHER, 6 CHILDREN PERISH IN FLAMES Home Burned During Night; Father Absent. By United Press PEQUOT, Minn., Oct. 9. A mother and her six children, ranging in age from 7 months to 5 years, perished today in a fire that destroyed their home while they slept. The cause of the fire was undetermined. The victims were Mrs. Sadie Johnson, 29, and her children, Roland, 9; Warren, 7; Shirley, 4; Keigh Leroy, 3; Beverly Fay, 2, and Elden Alfred, 7 months. The father, Roy Johnson, was at work when the tragedy occurred. Attempts by neighbors to enter the fast-crumbling frame structure were futile. Mrs. Johnson's body was found at the foot of a stairway, indicating she had attempted to arouse the children sleeping upstairs/ STATE TREASURER - ILL William Storen Recovering After Heart Attack. State Treasurer William Storen today is recovering from a heart attack with which he was stricken Friday night. He is confined to bed at the home of relatives here. Mr. Storen's home is in Scottsburg. SIX MADMEN ESCAPE Club Guard. Steal Keys; State Troops Called Out. By United Press SALEM. Ore., Oct. 9. State troopers and deputy sheriffs led by bloodhounds today trailed six inmates of the state hospital for the criminally insane who escaped after clubbing a guard and stealing his keys. Hourly Temperatures 6a. m 46 10 a. m 47 7a. m 46 11 a. m 50 Ba. m 46 12 (noon).. 51 9 a. m 47 1 p. m 53

The increase in water rates to the city was granted by the state public service commission in 1924, during the administration of former Mayor Samuel Lewis Shank. Declaring themselves ‘•helpless,” present works board members compare the water company order with a contract of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company, described previously, which forces the city to pay a high rate for light cable. The water company order specifies that the city shall pay a 1-cent and 1 mill rental annually on each “inch foot of pipe” in water mains.

Negotiations at Capital Made Crucial by German Action. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—War debt negotiations and the disarmament parley at Geneva today entered a crucial period against a world background blacker and more streaked with lightning than at any time since 1914. While Sir Frederick Leith-Ross, representing the British, and Dean Acheson, treasury under-secretary, chief negotiator for this country, were engaged in their first real discussion of Britain’s $4,600,000,000 debt to the United States, very deep concern reigned at the state department over events 3,000 miles away. Nazi Germany’s apparent determination to obtain arms equality with France and her other neighbors at once, or wreck the Geneva conference, is regarded here as bringing the world face to face with its gravest major crisis since the World war. Agree With Henderson Officials are inclined to agree with Arthur Henderson, British chairman of the disarmament conference, who told the United Press that unless a real arms convention is adopted shortly anew armament race would start and “the world would be headed straight for war.” The United States, through Norman H. Davis, ambassador-at-large, is making its full force felt at Geneva to obtain such a convention. On the one hand, it has made known to Berlin its unalterable opposition to Germany’s rearmament, while it has urged upon France the necessity for maximum concessions to Germany. Now or Never, Says U. S. Washington’s position is that it is now or never. Unless Germany car*, be brought within some general arms limitation agreement very soon, she will proceed to rearm. France, in turn, confronted by the inevitability of one day having to face anew Germany, armed to the teeth, in sheer self-defense would be led to strike before Germany became invincible. While this view is being urged upon the nations directly concerned, and with the utmost earnestness, the United States has nq intention of joining the European powers in anything smacking of a threat to Germany for violation of the treaty of Versailles. Closely Associated Though it might seem a far cry from the war talk in Europe to the conversations going on today at the United States Treasury building here, the two really are closely associated. If the disarmament conference goes on the rocks and anew race for weapons begins, as predicted, every centime France, Italy, Belgium, Poland and the rest of Europe can raise will be required for national defense. There is not a government in Europe that would dare add another extra penny to the bent backs of already grumbling taxpayers for the purpose of paying the United States—even if the debtor nations wanted to pay, which frankly tlTy do not. Collection Hopes Fading Great Britain’s position is not vastly different from the others. Her leaders are convinced of the likelihood of anew war in Europe. The war fever almost certainly would spread to the Far East and involve Russia and Japan. India and other British interests would be in peril, not to mention the United Kingdom itself. Thus, Britain will not only pay further installments under the present debt arrangement, but will refuse to commit herself to the payment of anything more than a few cents on the dollar, at most, in any new settlement. Behind the scenes here, therefore, it is admitted that whatever chance the United States ever had of collecting Europe’s $11,000,000,000 war debt to this country, today seems fast fading. STEEL FIRM HEAD DIES Stewart H. Chisholm Was Founder of Many Large Companies. By United Press CLEVELAND, Oct. 9. Stewart Henry Chisholm, one of the nation’s leading figures in the steel industry, died at his home here last night. He was 86 years old. Chisholm was instrumental in founding and directing several companies, including American Steel and Wire Company, Cleveland Rolli ing Mill Company, H-P Nail ComI pany, Long Arm Company and | American Grass Twine Company.

The charge also is made that the total feet of pipe in use was boosted about 3.000,000 feet only a few* months before the service commission's order went into effect in January, 1924. Greatly increased revenue from the surplus pipeage was augmented by the installation of water hydrants under the guise of an economy. The rate order reduced the rental from S6O annually for each hydrant to sl2, which fact was used to justify the additional pipe and hy-

TROOPS ARE RUSHED TO SULLIVAN COUNTY AFTER MINE WARFARE FLARES

SHUSH cun’ nun ENDS M Hr Both McNutt and Peters Factions Claim Victory After Session. BY DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer Selection of a sub-committee by the state Democratic committee, which will handle the much disputed funds of the Hoosier Democratic Club, was the solution arrived at by the state committee meeting early this afternoon at the Claypool. At the close of the executive session both Governor Paul V. McNutt’s and Chairman R. Earl Peters’ forces were claiming the action as a victory. Personnel of the sub-committee consists of A. N. Pursley, Hartford City; Omer S. Jackson, Greenfield, and Miss Florence Smith, La Porte. Looks Like a “Tie” The McNutt group assembled seventeen state committee members in a caucus before the meeting and the personnel of the sub-committee was decided on with both the Governor and Mrs. Peters present. Thus, McNutt backers pointed out, the Governor won and Mr. Peters is now a chairman without powers. Mr. Peters’ forces declared that the main attack of the state chairman was to take the funds away from the club treasurer, Bowman Elder, and that this had been accomplished. Attention Is Attracted They also claimed the subcommittee personnel favored Mr. Peters, while the other side said it was selected by Governor McNutt, who checkiriated an attempt of Mr. Peters to make the appointments. Due to the public debate regarding club collections, precipitated by the open political breach between Mr. Peters, Democratic state chairman, and Governor McNutt, the meeting attracted almost as much attention as a party convention. The subcommittee plan first was advanced by the McNutt forces Saturday. At that time the Peters’ brekers said it would be o. k. if the state chairman made the appointments. Meanwhile, many members of the state committee, as well as rank and file Democrats, were expressing disapproval of the entire PetersMcNutt scrap. They were pointing to Senator Frederick Van Nuys as a party leader who could avoid factionalism. Car Overturns on Road Mrs. Russell E. Field, 37, Plainfield, Ind., escaped with a cut on the head today when the automobile she was driving turned over after skidding on Road 67 near Maywood, Ind.

Cops Quiz Pretty Blond in Search for Convicts

Released by State Police Without Bond After Lengthy Quiz. The police search for six escaped convicts from the Indiana state prison yielded another pretty young woman Sunday as state police searched in vain for Mrs. Mary Kinder, said to have harbored the desperadoes in Indianapolis. In a raid by city police on a house at 1111 Spann avenue, Mrs. Ethel Powell, 30, was arrested on a charge of vagrancy and held under high bond. Police believed she knew something of the visit of the convicts to Indianapolis the day after the prison break, when they kept Ralph saffell a prisoner in his home at 343 Laclede street. Several money wrappers were found in Mrs. Powell’s home. She told r#}lice she got them in Chicago. After several hours of questioning, Mrs. Powell suddenly was released on her own recognizance. “We didn't want that woman,” said A1 Feeney, state safety direc-

drants as obtaining greater service at lower cost, with no mention made of the pipe rental, it is charged. According to figures in the works board files, there now are 5,813 water hydrants throughout the city, and only 300 have been placed in the three years and nine months of the Sullivan administration. Records of the number of hydrants in use before tjie order was granted are missing from the board's files, the members say, but the increased feet of pipe in indicative of the suddend increase in number of hydrants immediately 1,-

Entered a* Second-Class Matter at I’ostoCice, Indianapolis

Two Companies Rule Two-Mile Sector; Arrival at Scene of Outbreak Averts Bloody Conflict. EXTRA SOLDIERS ARE HELD READY s McNutt Takes Action Following Dynamiting and Firing of Shots; Situation Quiet This Afternoon. BY ARCH STEINEL Times Staff Writer SULLIVAN, Ind., Oct. 9. Sullivan county is under martial law and two troops of national guardsmen this afternoon were patrolling a two-mile sector at the Starburn coal mine near here, following outbreaks of violence between union and nonunion coal miners at the mine. Governor Paul V. McNutt’s declaration of martial law and arrival of the guardsmen from Terre Haute brought to a quiescent stage a situation which threatened a bloody clash early this morning when more than 500 union miners began forming picket lines at the co-operative Starburn mine.

CITIES URGED TO USE lU. FUNDS Deluse Warns Money May Be Exhausted Prior to Dec. 1. Speedy draining of the $3,300,000,000 federal public works appropriation may find slow-thinking communities and governments in Indiana unable to obtain finances for much needed revenue-producing projects. This declaration was made today by Otto P. Deluse, chairman of the state advisory board of the public wosks administration, as he urged governments in city, county and school city to gear up their application for loans from Uncle Sam. “The deadline on applications is Dec. 30, but there’s a possibility that the entire government appropriation may be allocated to worthy projects before that date,” Deluse said. “Approximately, one-half of the $3,000,000,000 appropriation has been spent, and, up to now, only about $15,000,000 in public works applications have been approved in Indiana’” Mr. Deluse said. MERCURY SLUMPSTO 43: FROST PROBABLE Lowest Temperature of Autumn Is Recorded During Night. Temperature of 43 recorded at 11:15 Sunday night, was the lowest so far this fall and only 11 degrees above freezing. Forecast of the local United States Weather Bureau was for light frost tonight, if the sky clears.

tor, refusing to amplify his reasons. It is believed that the state police hoped to capture Mrs. Kinder in the raid on the Spann avenue house. Mrs. Kinder is alleged to have driven the six convicts to Saffell’s home, where they hid all day Wednesday, Sept. 27, following their escape from the Michigan City prison. According to Saffell’s story, Mrs. Kinder also bought them clothes to enable them to discard their prison garb. While police continued their search for Mrs. Kinder today, her sister, Mrs. Margaret Behrens, “Silent Margaret,” was held incommunicado in the county jail “to cool off” before being questioned further today. Mrs. Behrens, according to police is the sister of Mrs. Kinder. Mrs. Behrens, an attractive blond of 22, was arrested last year as the "stickup moll,” who, with her husband and another woman, were tried for the Amo State bank robbery, April 27, 1932. “Silent Margaret” at that time kept quiet and “beat the rap” in the Hendricks circuit court. The other two were convicted.

prior to effective date of the rate order. An additional charge of SIO,OOO annually for water used in street flushing was included in the 1924 order, although it never had been included before and should have been taken care of in the fire hydrant charge, board members allege. Elimination of ‘‘hydrants protecting open prairie” is expected to result from a survey ordered by the board to determine the number of useless hydrants for which the city annually is paying sl2 each. y

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents

While the two companies of guardsmen on duty here apparently have things well under control, additional guard companies are under arms at Martinsville, Evansville, and Attica for a dash to the mine zone, if there are new outbreaks of violence. Adjutant-General Elmer F. Straub, who scouted the sector by plane at 3:30 this morning, returned to Indianapolis shortly after noon to report to the Governor that he did not believe additional troops would be needed. Despite bombings at two homes here, firing of several shots and hurling of bricks at the mine, no one has been injured. Dynamiting Is Reported Deputy Sheriff Alec Schafer said that he believed the shots were fired by non-union men, but apparently were fired in the air. "The firing occurred when pickets massed at the mine shaft early today as approximately 100 workmen prepared to enter. Several bricks were thrown by the mob, but the outbreak was halted when the miners entered the shaft. First dynamiting occurred last night when a stick was hurled on the porch of the home of Charles O. Fox. The porch was demolished and several windows broken. Fox and his son Cecil, both are employes of the Starburn mine. A stick of dynamite also was thrown on the lawn of the home of Roscoe White. It did no damage except to break several windows, and White said he believed it had been intended for someone else. He has not been employed for twenty-one months. DePrez Is in Command Governor McNutt’s martial law order forbids any one to leave or enter the trouble area except by military authority or command. The order also prohibits the carrying of arms by persons other than guardsmen or commissioned county officers. Troops on guard include companies C and I of the One hundred fifty-first infantry and are under command of Brigadier-General D. Wray DePrez, Shelbyville, commander of the Seventy-sixth brigade. Violence flared last week at the Starburn mine when pickets gathered near the shaft to protest employment of nonunion miners. One man was killed when he was run down by an automobile and another mine employe was beaten. KELLY TURNS VIOLENT; SLUGGED BY OFFICER Federal Agents Warn Terrorist He Will Be Shot. By United Press OKLAHOMA CITY, Oct. 9.—The terrorist, George (Machine Gun) Kelly, replaced threats with violence today as he and his wife, Katherine, went on trial as accused major conspirators in the $200,000 Urschel kidnaping. Federal agents warned him, as a tentative jury was chosen, that he would be shot the next time he acted as he did today. The manacled gangster fought with a federal agent in federal building and was beaten on the head with a pistol.

Fill Vacancies the Easy Way! More and more people are turning to The Times to place rental ads BECAUSE they produce results at the lowest Want Ad rates in the city. If you have a vacancy it is easy to see that the cost of advertising your place in The Times will be only a small percentage of the income it will earn if rented. Phone Your Ad Now! Riley 5551