Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 162, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1934 — Page 1
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CITY BANDIT GANG ESCAPES AFTER 2 RAIDS NET $3,750 Police Without Clew? in Hunt for Armed Mob Which Held Up Bank. Cashier for Baking Company. QUARTET FLEES IN SMALL CAR < )uflaws Terrorize Two Employes, Customer, Get $2,160 on South Side; $1,591 Is • Taken on Downtown Street. Police loday were without clews to the identities of med)hers of two gangs of armed bandits who looted a bank and robbed a baking: company cashier to obtain more than $3,750 in two downtown holdups late yesterday afternoon. Threr slender, well-dressed men walked into the Kenlin ky avenue and Morris street branch of the Union Trust Company just before it was ready to close, cowed the two clerks and a customer with a shotgun, a submachine gun and a revolver, scooped up aljout $2,100 and fled in a waiting black Ford sedan driven by a fourth bandit.
Some fifteen minutes earlier. Gerald Miller. 27, of 92fi North Tuxedo street, cashier for the Omar Bakin? Company, 901 East Sixteenth street, on his wav to the bank in hi* ear. had been forced to the curb at North and New .Jersey streets by four men in a black Ford sedan, and two of the men leaped out and robbed him of a satchel containing 51.591.58. At first, it had been believed that the two holdups were the work of the same gang, but Detective Chief Fred Simon said today that he did not believe the same men responsible. Chief Simon pointed out that, from available descriptions, the men who held up Mr. Miller were not as tall and not as well dressed as those aho raided the bank. The three men who robbed the hank sauntered in together. One. dressed in a red jacket, pointed a shotgun at Harold Honderich. 24. of 119 East Fiftieth street, clerk, and at Leonard Meisberger, 34, of 3060 North Meridian street, owner of the Meisberger market, v They both thought the man was a hunter, playing a joke, until they heard his command to lower their eyes, raise their hands and stand back. In the meantime, a second bandit went to the cashier's rage, broke the four foot pane of frosted glass with ;he butt of his revolver, vaulted over the counter and confronted Marshall T. Hawthorne. 30. R. R. 6, Box 513. assistant manager of the branch, who was working on his books. The bandit ordered Mr. Hawthorne to raise his hands and lower his eyes. He then scooped up all the loose money into a zipper bag and ordered Mr. Hawthorne to open the vault- From the vault, the bandit took *4O in pennies which hr dumped into the bag. Covers Entire Rank A third bandit, grasping a menacing submachine gun. covered the entire interior fit the bank during the activities of his companions. The trio retreated through the Morris street entrance and leaped into their waiting car. The holdup car sped toward Maywood after starting east on Morris street Mr. Hawthorne had returned to the branch from the banks mam office a few minutes before the robber' with 51.5*00 in cash, designed to pa* checks for employe* of Chevrolet eommemal hodv division of General Motors, located near the hank. Mr. Meisberger had entered the bank to cash cheeks for several hundred dollars. He was not robbed. Mr. Honderich said that a man resembling one of the bandits had been m the bank aiound noon and changed a $lO bill. The man. he said, apparently wa* observing the routine of the bank in anticipation of the holdup Rank Robbed in 19*6 \|r Hawthorne said that the bank * robbed in 1926 also. Mr. Miller *aid that he was diving south on New Jersev street, when a Ford carrying four bandits rt;t in front of him and forced him to the curb. The driver and the other man in the front seat, both masked stepped out, covered him with revolvers and snatched the satchel containing the money. Mr. Miller said. He said the other bandit pair. al*o masked, remained m the back <eat of the ear. He described the man with the driver as tall, slender and welt dressed According 'o Pern Lewis R R 7. Box 63-B the bandit -ar sped west on North street and north on Deiawere street. On July 25. Mr. Miller was held up also while on his way to the bank. Five bandits forced his car to the curb at Walnut and New Jersey streets and stole Sl.tOO. Mr. Miller was accompanied by George Myers 2* of 1426 North LaSalle street. limes Index . sage Btmge Broun - 21 Comica 33 Crossword Puale * Cunoua World 33 Editorial 22 Financial 32 Fhod Pwgea 25. 26, 27 Hickman—'Theater* 24 Pegler 21 Radio 14 Sports 38. 29 Slate News * Woman a Pages 18. 17
The Indianapolis Times wi eo out r*r
VOLUME 46— NUMBER 162
PRESIDENT ASKS PIONEER SPIRIT Roosevelt Takes Part in Rite at Clark Memorial in Harrodsburg. By I. ail'd Pie** HARRODSBURG. Ky., Nov. 16 Before a crowd of more than 30,000 persons. President Roosevelt today appealed for anew pioneering to meet changing world conditions. Under a warm sun that beat down on historic Ft. Harrod. an ancient frontier stockade, the chief executive participated in exercises commemorating the exploits of George Rogers Clark and his band of early Kentucky explorers. The President brought a roar of laughter from the crowd when he smilingly pointed out that Harrodsburg was the first place “where corn was grown in Kentucky.’’ Mr. Roosevelt spoke from a stand overlooking the rough-hewn timbers of old Ft. Harrod, with its blockhouse. barracks and stockade. The upturned, serious faces below him were those of the rugged ancestors of the old pioneers. They had come miles to hear him speak. At the conclusion of his address, ♦he Clark monument was unveiled. It is a plain granite block with roughly carved figures of the frontier heroes. The President, after interestedly observing the unveiling, drove back to his special train and headed for Coal Creek, Tenn„ to inspect the TV A development.
AVERT NAVAL RACE, KING GEORGE PLEADS British Ruler Hopes for Parley Success. By l ail'd Pit s* LONDON, Nov 16.—Earnest hope tha' the present naval negotiations might succeed, and a naval race, be averted, was expressed bv King George today in his speech proroguing parliament. In the speech which was read to a joint meeting of the house of lords and house of commons in the lords’ chamber, the king expressed hope for anew naval treaty “in order that the world may be spared the evil of unrestricted competition in naval armaments, so efficiently averted in recent year* by international engagements freely entered into by parties concerned.” TODAY’S WEATHER Hourly Temperatures 6a. m..... 38 10 a. m 47 7a. m. ... 39 11a. m 50 Ba. m 41 12 (noon).. 51 9 a. m 45 1 p. m 55 Tomorrow's sunrise. 6:33 a. m.; sunset, 4:27 p. m. In the Air Weather renditions at 9 a. m.: Southwest wind mx miles an hour: barometric pressure. 30 36 at sea level; temperature, 45: general conditions, rlear: ceiling, unlimited; visibility, three mles. smoky.
Whole City to Join in Greeting to Santa Claus Flood of Responses Received to Invitation to Take Part in Giant Festival Parade. Exceeding the fondest expectations of the committee in charge of the great Santa Claus parade that is to be presented in Indianapolis on Friday, Nov. 30. a flood of responses are being received to the invitation
extended local organizations to participate in making the affair truly representative of the entire city. Already plans are being made to have a larger parade than first was anticipated when the announcement •a; made that Santa Clam vu to
Increasing cloudiness tonight becoming unsettled with showers tomorrow ; rising tempeiatme.
CAPITOL'S FACE SCRUBBED CLEAN AGAIN
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The nation's capitol will present a shining face to congressmen reluming to duty in Washington a few weeks hence, its exterior scrubbed and polished to a marvelous freshness. Here firemen are pictured as they play powerful streams of water on the stately structure, in the annual bathing process.
Insull Defense Ends With Dramatic Court Clash Son of Former Utilities Czar Shouts Defiant Answers in Bitter Cross-Examination. By Untied Per** CHICAGO. Nov. 16.—Samuel Insull and his sixteen co-defendants today completed their defense against charges of perpetrating a $143,000,000 swindle after a dramatic clash between government attorneys and Samuel Insull Jr, Leslie Salter, assistant attorney-general, claimed “damaging admissions'* from young Insull that the Corporation Securities Company was insolvent eight months before it crashed with losses of $143,000,000 to investors. ,
The youthful “crown prince"’ of the Insull empire, shouting defiant answers to a bitter cross-examina-tion, was the last witness for the defense'. District Attorney Dwight H. Green said the government's rebuttal testimony would be completed this afternoon. The case is expected to go to the jury the latter part ox next week. The government was prepared to center its rebuttal evidence around the battery of expert accountants who testified previously in support of the charges of market “rigging” and deep financial intrigues. Insull Jr. Loses Temper Judge James H, Wilkerson’s charge to the jury, weary after weeks of involved figures and charts and the closing arguments of government and defense attorneys are expected to consume three or four days. Young Insull. called by his 75-year-old father “one of the smartest utility men in the world today,” became angry under insistent questioning by Mr. Salter. He scratched his head as the prosecutor pounded question after question regarding the condition of 'he Insull companies in the days immediately preceding their collapse. His anger rose each time that Mr. Salter sought to bring out that the pn’ 'ic was deceived and led to contribute money to dying concerns, “That's Not True” “That's not true; you know it isn’t,” the witness almost shouted once. He said, near the close of the savage cross-examination, that he sold $900,000 worth of stocks in Corporation Securities and I. U. I. in 1931 and 1932 when the companies were insolvent. He denied emphatically, however, that he received any of the money. “The sales, for the most part, were for the purpose of closing out various accounts and the transactions netted me no actual cash profit,” Insull said. RAIN PREDICTED FOR STATE FOOTBALL FANS Warmer Weather. Showers Listed by Weather Man. All those who contemplate spending tomorrow afternoon watching two football teams in action, should heed the warning of J. H. Armington, local meteorologist, who, much against his will, foresees a muddy field for the players and wet stands for the spectators. True enough, Mr. Armington said that all those heavy blankets and ! fur coats will not be necessary tomorrow because it will be warmer than it has been in the last three days, but instead of fur coats, rain coats will be in order. The clouds will start to appear tonight and tomorrow afternoon should find most of Indiana's gridirons experiencing showers, he said.
pay a personal visit to Indianapolis. It seems that every one wants to have a hand in organizing a giant reception for good old St. Nick and every one will be given an opportunity.
INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1934
CARDINAL GASPARRI IS SERIOUSLY ILL Former Papal State Secretary Stricken by Influenza. By United Pres* VATICAN CITY. Nov. 16.—Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, former papal secretary of state, was ill of influenza today. His fever tended to abate, but anxiety was felt because he is in his eighty-third year. Cardinal Gasparri remains most active. In the last few days he attended a meeting of the royal academy, of which he is a member, and made a long speech at the congress of the fourteenth centenary of Justinian law. TOWNSEND WINNER IN FIGHT ON JOB Holds Executive Position. U. S. Court Rules. Lieutenant-Governor M. Clifford Townsend is a member of the executive department of the state of Indiana and therefore entitled to hold the post of agricultural commissioner, Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell ruled today. Judge Baltzell’s ruling was in answer to a suit filed by George Armstrong, Marksville. 111., a Knox county find.) taxpayers, in w-hich it was maintained that when Mr. Townsend became agricultural commissioner under the McNutt state reorganization act he became ineligible to hold the position of Lieutenant-Governor. ARMS _ PROBE~Ts TOPIC Dr. E. tlnruh to Discus* Sena if Inquiry at Meeting. Members of the Scientech Club will hear a discussion of senate investigation of the munitions traffic by Dr. E. J. Unruh, Indiana committee of international relations director, at the club luncheon Monday in the Board of Trade.
C’MON FELLAS— Fun and profit for every school child in Indianapolis is promised in The Indianapolis Times’ drawing lessons contest which will begin in tomorrow's paper. Russell O. Berg, Times cartoonist, has prepared a series of simple, easy lessons. One will appear each day for the next five weeks. Each will illustrate how to draw some figure common in life. Study of the entire course should enable any school boy or girl to draw a large number of objects. And, at the same time, the boys and girls will have a chance to earn some money. A grand prize of $25 will be paid the day beforp Christmas to the child who has turned in the neatest series of drawings. Second prize will be $10; third, $5, and there will be ten prizes of $1 each. Weekly prizes include $5 in cash and fifty Apollo theater tickets. Drawings must be turned in each week in groups of six each.
DIVORCEE AT SCENE OF \| MURDER, POLICE LEARN
KIDNAP RAID IS FOILED; NAB 3 IN GUN BATTLE Police Ambush Four Alleged Abductors as They Seek Victim. By United Pres* DARIEN, Conn., Nov. 16.—Police stationed in hiding for three nights in the mansion of Gustave W. Westheim, wealthy steamship brok- ’ er, captured three men in a brisk gun battle today, and charged them with the attempted kidnaping of Mr. Westheim's 12-year-old son. The alleged kidnapers walked into a trap after tney had been advised that none of the family save the bov and his mother were at home. On Monday, Mrs. Margaret Westheim received a telephone call warning her the bov, Robert, would be harmed unless she paid over a ! large sum of money, under ar- ; rangements to be made later. Robert was taken from the private school he was attending, and sent | to New York to safe seclusion with relatives. Police Chief Wounded A second telephone message was received today, and Mrs. Westheim told the caller, on instructions from police, that “only Robert and I are in the house." Shortly thereafter an automobile was driven past the home, several times and then stopped in front of the estate. Four men emerged and walked to the front door. They were admitted by a plain clothes man from the police department, a squad of six police, with drawn guns, surrounded the invaders. The four attempted to shoot their way out of the ambush. Police Chief Edward A. Tinker and Lieutenant Amos Anderson received bullets in the legs, but neither was dangerously wounded. One of the marauders escaped, but the three who were led away to jail gave taeir names as: John Collins, j 33; Joseph Borg, 26, of Providence, j and Edgar La Rose. 38, of Paw- ! tucket. Fourth Member Escapes The fourth member of the alleged abduction party escaped, and police instituted search for him. During the excitement, another man—later released as having no connection wth the case—was arrested after he stopped at a nearby house and asked permission to telephone. The Westheims are regarded as wealthy. Mr. Westheim is proprietor of a steamship agency in New York City, and Mrs. Westheim conducts a dress establishment, known as the Louise Gown Shop. BUTLERCLASS~SEES _ BURGLAR SENTENCED Jack W 7 olfe Given 15-Year Term by Judge Baker. Members of Butler university sociology class were among spectators in criminal court today when Judge Frank P. Baker sentenced Jack Wolfe, 36, of 855 Bradshaw street, to serve fifteen years in the Indiana state prison after Wolfe pleaded guilty to charges of burglary and grand larceny. Known to police as “the society burglar,'* Wolfe pleaded guilty to charges that he had robbed thirtyeight north side homes of $2,000 in gold, silver and trinkets. He is said to have read the newspaper society columns to learn when prominent people were out of town. STREAMLINE TRAINON EXHIBITION HERE Record-Breaking Flier tn Be on View Until 9 Tonight. The ''Streamliner,'* crack Union Pacific passenger train which arrived at the Indianapolis Union Station at 10 this morning, was viewed by scores of interested Indianapolis spectators. Arriving in Indianapolis from Louisville, the train will i remain until 9 tonight, when it will j leave for St. Louis. NOBEL PRIZeTwARDED I COLUMBIA PROFESSOR “Heavy Water” Discovery Brings Distinction to Chemis*. By United Pres* STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Nov. 16. —Professor Harold C. Urey of Columbia university, New York, was awarded the 1934 Nobel prize in chemistry last night. He was honored, it was understood. for his part in the discovery of "heavy water.” POST’S STRATOSPHERE HOP IS POSTPONED Poor Visibility Blocks Attempt to Set New Record. By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 16.—Poor visibility today led Wiley Post, ’round-the-world flier, to postpone his attempted flight into the stratosphere at Curtiss-Reynolds airport. Post said he might take off in his famous Winnie Mae tomorrow.
QUIZZED IN MURDER
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Mrs. Theo Sherman Under grilling
BIDDLE IS GIVEN GARRISON’S JOB
Descendant of Famed Family Appointed Chairman of Labor Board. By United J’res* WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—President Roosevelt today appointed Francis Biddle of Philadelphia to succeed Lloyd K. Garrison as chairman of the national labor relations boa i-d. Mr. Garrison has returned to his post as dean of the law school at the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Biddle, who will join the board on Monday, is a member of the famous family of Pennsylvania Biddles and a great grandson of Edmund Randolph, first attorney-gen-eral of the United States. He is a son of A. S. Biddle, professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania.. He is a graduate of Harvard university and before practicing law was secretary to Oliver Wendell Holmes. Mr. Garrison headed the board during its mast trying period and was active in solving labor disputes in the textile industry and among longshoremen in California. He had planned for some time to leave the board. MISSING CITY WOMAN FOUND IN FT. WAYNE Father Believed Daughter Slain in Kansas City. By United Pres* FT. WAYNE. Ind., Nov. 16.—Mrs. Georgia Belle Neeley, formerly of Indianapolis, missing from her home here since July 12, has been located by Ft. Wayne police, it was announced today. The police disclosure came at a time when her father, T. D. McCormack, Indianapolis, was planning to go to Kansas City, Mo., in an attempt to identify the body of a woman slain there Oct. 6 as his daughter. POSTOFFICE SHOWS $12,161,415 SURPLUS Department Under Farley Profit* First Time in Years. By United Pres* WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—Post-master-General James A. Farley reported to President Roosevelt today that the last fiscal year showed a $12,161,415.03 surplus. It was the first surplus for the postoffice department since the Wilson administration.
* Alice in Wonderland ’ Dies at English Home Little Girl Who Inspired Beloved Fantasy Passes at 82: Had Been 111 Two Weeks. By I nit'd Prr** WESTERHAM. England, Nov. 16.—Alice in Wonderland is dead. The fair-haired little girl of the famous book lives on in immortality, but Mrs. Alice Liddell Hargreaves, who as a child inspired Lewi* Carroll to write his beloved fantasy passed away at 10:30 last night after an Illness of two weeks. She was 82. i
Mrs. Hargreaves was unconscious for hours before her death. Relatives intended to cremate the body and bury the ashes at her former home, Lyndhurst, in the new forest. In her late years, Alice was a placid old lady, living with her memories qf Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) and the tale he wove for her of the little girl who tumbled down the rabbit’s hole into a fantastic wonderland where she was entranced b.v the lugubrious Mock Turtle, the Mad Hatter, the Sleep Dormouse, the Weeping Walrus and the carpenter and other denizens of that Mad Land. Alice, and her two sisters, Lorina and Edith, compelled Dodgson, a dignified mathematics instructor, to write out the adventures he related for them. In the end, the tables were written for the whole world of litlte girls, and for all subsequent generations of little girls. The Alice of late years was a dig-
i> Second-Class Matter ac Postoffice. lndianapolla. tnd.
Callahan Slain By Her Lover, Mother of Six Is Quoted By Detectives After Return From Cincinnati. SUSPECT SEARCH CENTERS IN EAST Alleged Killer’s Sweetheart Bares Details of Fatal Night in Realty Operator’s Apartment. Officers Say. Mrs. Theo Homey Sherman, 13. divorcee and mother of six children, who was arrested yesterday in her Cincinnati home on the charge that she was an accessory in the murder of Bert Callahan, wealthy Indianapolis real estate dealer, has admitted to police here that she was at the Callahan home at the time he was murdered. The Indianapolis Times learned today on excellent authority. Mrs. Sherman, according to The Times’ informant, is reported to have admitted to police that she went to the Callahan home with Charles Streeton. alias C. G. Davis, whom, police said last night, she has named as the actual killer and for whom an intensive search is under way on the eastern seaboard. ——: : —— , . -?
At that time, The Times has learned, Streeton expected to obtain a job from Callahan, 45, an eccentric. She told a high police official here that Callahan started the fight which ended in his death, according to The Times informant. According to Detective Lieutenant Michael Hynes and Detective Sergeant Lawrence McCarthy, who told the earlier story, Mrs. Sherman told them Streeton traveled to Cincinnati April 7 and that night, a few hours after the realty operator’s lifeless body had been found in his apartment here, told her he had slain Mr. Callahan with the latter’s pistol after an argument. Streeton, she is alleged to have confessed, had told her he had interested Mr. Callahan in the manufacture of some baby shoes for which Mrs. Sherman holds patent rights. Mrs. Sherman is quoted bv detectives as saying that she and Streeton had traveled about the country until about two weeks ago, when she became conscience-strick-en about her six children whom she had abandoned to flee with her lover. She told detectives she left CHIROPRACTOR DYING FOLLOWING ATTACK Seymour Man Tossed From Car Near Columbus. By United Pres* COLUMBUS, Ind.. Nov. 16.—Dr. James P. Polsgrove, 44, Seymour chiropractor, was near death today in Columbus hospital after being slugged on the head and tossed from an automobile on Highway 31, five miles south of here. Physicians said he had suffered a fractured skull. Dr. Polsgrove s automobile was missing, but he had not been robbed. J. w. Foust, Bartholomew county sheriff, said he believed Dr. Polsgrove was slugged and thrown out on to the highway by automobile thieves. Toledo Writer Is Dead By United Pres* TOLEDO, 0., Nov. 16.—William Roche, political columnist and member of the staff of the Toledo NewsBee for more than thirty years, died today in St. Vincent's hospital.
nified, Victorian widow of a country gentleman. Two years ago, honoring the centennial of Lewis Carroll, she wer.i to America, and on her eightieth birthday anniversary was given a welcome by New York which was a mixture of tumult and reverence. A feeble Alice, in 1932, walxing with the aid of two canes, she was suffused with embarrassment at American adulation. Columbia university made her an honorary doctor of letter.*. And she confessed. then, that her favorite character in all fiction was the sorrowing Mock Turtle. It was not given to Alice to have little girls of her own. She gave to the world three sons, and of these, two went to the great war and never returned, while the third saw his service and escaped only with his life. Her husband, Reginald Gervis Hargreaves, died irv 1926. He never recovered from what the war had cost him., tm
HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, i Cent*
Streeton in the east and re urned to Cincinnati, where she made her home, they added. Both Streeton and Mrs. Sherman have been sought since two days after the murder, police revealed after her arrest. At that time an indictment charging murder was returned against Streeton, Oscar Hagemier, grand jury deputy prosecutor, admitted today. Sincp then, the chase has been persistent. The pair almost was caught in the east after letters to Mrs. Sherman had been traced to New York City, according to the informant who told The Times of Mrs. Sherman's purported confession. Police claim Streeton lived -n the Y. M. C. A. here between March 17 and April 5. Mrs. Sherman told them, they sav, the missing man met the murdered real estate operator at the traction terminal station and accompanied him to the bachelor apartments at 1636 North Illinois street. Stopped in Tap Room* En route to (he apartment, according to Mrs. Sherman s story, the two men stopped at several tap rooms for drinks. Police say Mrs. Sherman told them that Streeton claimed Mr. Callahan had drawn his pistol and had been shot after a struggle. The. authorities claim some details of the alleged confession do not correspond with known facts. Streeton, Mrs. Sherman told the detectives, remained in the apartment more than an hour after the shooting, unwilling to believe Mr. Callahan was dead. He told her, she claims, that he had wrapped a towel around his victim’s head and used ice packs in an effort to revive him. 'The detectives said that Mrs. Sherman had denied to them she is the mysterious "woman in white” w'ho was brought into the case shortly after Mr. Callahan’s body was found by Lieutenant Chester Butler of the Indiana state police, who lived across the street. Murder Weapon Missing Lieutenant Butler said hr had been awakened b,v a loud pounding on Mr. Callahan’s apartment door. Looking from hi. front window. Lieutenant Butler said hr saw a “woman in white” on Mr. Callahans porch. Thp woman paused a moment, then opened the apartment door and entered. The weapon with which Mr. Callahan was shot still is missing, police said. Shortly after her arrest. In Cincinnati, Mrs. Sherman told a representative of The Times, to whom she denied any part in the crime, she would retain Richard Ewbank, Indianapolis attorney, to protect her interests. No New Developments Mr. Ewbank, whose offices are at Is East Washington street, said ho was acquainted with Mrs. Sherman, whose mother, Mrs. May Cook, wa* an old-time friend when the lawyer lived at Guilford, Dearborn county. Mrs. Cook, Mr. Ewbank declared. lived about three miles from his home. The lawyer said he had not seen Mrs. Sherman for more than a year. He previously had represented her in domestic litigation. Mr. Ewbank declared he does not handle criminal cases and doubted that he would interest himself in Mrs. Shermans case. He said he could not associate Mrs. Sherman with any crime of violence.
YOUR NEW NEIGHBORS THERE'S anew family moving in with you The Joneses. You’ll mee* them first in this newspaper Monday. Theyll be no bother at all, and you’ll learn to like them for what they'll tell you. WatcJ? sot further news about their coming, exclusively in The Times. Watch for The New Deal and the Joneses
