Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 171, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1934 — Page 1

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MILLIONS MAY BE CUT FROM U. S. BUDGETS Drastic Economy Program Under Consideration by Administration. •SLASH* ORDER IS ISSUED Setup May Bring Dismissal to Many Employes of Government. H ff l‘r' ■ WASHINGTON Nov 2" —A drastic economv procram that, might rut millions from government costs, and brine dismissal of many pmpiovfv us being studied by admini?rjr ;ori ffuials, it was learned todas. Many department heads have been r.ntifird b* budget officials to curtail their ro ;.s in submitting estimate of probable expenditures for the new tis* a* year beginning July 1. 193 V The budget for the new fiscal year Is nearmg completion and will be .* übmu ts <i to c If in January- bv President Roosevelt. It Is mo early, however, to judge the extent of the proposed economics or the prospective budgt of the federal government. These questions are largely dependent upon the course of general husmrs which in turn dictates the amount of relief or "recovery” money that must be supplied by the federal government. It .is known, however, that certain reductions in cost have been ordered. 'Th*' government's income, m the new fiscal year will be in excess of tne ordinary cost of tunning the government. Ordinr.rv costs include f'ich function, as the postoflfife. department of justice, the army and nav\ and other permanent operations. The amount of money pent in excess of these functions for "relief and recovery" will tell the extent to which the new budget will be unbalanced.

Ordinary Costs I.rss For thr first four and a hall months of th# e irront fiscal year to n:uo. ordmarv costs of thr govemnhave boon less than its Income. F :pen-es have been $1.343,103.388 nd income $1 417.938.301 ihe ordinary costs. however government so far this fiscal year has spent 51. 430.480.454 for ••relief” ' end "recovery" and this largely rep- ; rr t ms the extent to which the govnnment is "in the red.” In the twelve months ended June 30, 1934. when the government went *m the red” $3 989.496.035. the amount was accounted for by the “relief” and "recovery” expenditures. Income in that period amounted to $3,115,554,050 and ordinary costs of running the government $3.100014.534. By stricter economv of ordinary operations, budget experts hope to increase the marem of income over nrdinan costs and thus make that much more money available for recovery It is heheved that this is ihe procedure being used in the coming budget. Belief Funds fin nulling I’ e government already is amply ipplied with sufficient emergency i| pn pri it ions except for relief. Relief funds will last only until March A T ot:rl of $6,346,632,138 was • ported by the treasury departin'nt ’oda\ as still unspent” for recovery purposes. A large part of this may not be ti ed before the new fiscal year and \ ould be carried over and unbalance “he budget no matter how 'tnct economies are effected. The importance of a conservative bude- • policy in the mind of theadm'.nistr.itton was seen today m the • ■ '.rtment ot A F Buck, a New York government budget expert as an assistant to Daniel W. Bell, acting budget director. Mr Buck, formerly of the New York municipal research bureau, has been assisting Bell in the preparation of the new budget. CHRISTMAS VACATION TO LAST NINE DAYS Thur'dav. Friday Be Holidays This Week. There's a week—and. then, two dav- mire—of vacation for Inriianapolls school children at Christmas time this year. This fact, which should interest most of those children intensely, became known today when Paul C. Stetson, schools superintendent, gave out the vacation dates. Thursday and Friday this week win be holidays because of Thanksgiving day. Thursday. Then, the schools will remain open until Dec. 21 when they will close for the Christmas holidays, not to reopen again until Jan. 2

TODAY'S WEATHER

Hourly Trmprriturf* 6a. m *3 10 a m. . 47 7a. m 44 11 a m. .49 Bam 45 12 <noon> 52 9 a m ... 45 Ipm 52 Tomorrow's sunrise. 6:45 am.; sunset. 4 21 p m In the Air Weather conditions at 9 s m : Southeast wind, nine miles an hour, barometric pressure. 30.24;: temperature. 44 general conditions, overcast, light fog. ceiling estimated 1 500 estbllity. one and a quarter mile*

SANTA CLAI’S, REINDEER, FUNNY MEN AND BANDS. THEY’LL ALL BE THERE. SEE THE TIMES-SANTA CLAUS PARADE AT 9:30 A. M. FRIDAY.

The Indianapolis Times Showers and wanner tonigrht and tomorrow.

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YOU.'ME 46—NUMBER 171

Case Man Defies Jail Threats of ‘Muscling In’ Beer Agents Boasting Political Support

BY GEORGE H. DENNY Time* Staff Writer IkTOBODY is going to tell Joe lN Maier what brand of beer he has to sell. Joe doesn't like it when salesmen for the so-labeled “politidal" brews come to his place and threaten him with jail unless he “get* right.” Joe was born and reared in Germany, the t>eer drinking-est nation m the world He knows beer and likes it It was only natural that he >hould get behind the bar of a little corner tavern the

Seek to Learn Amount of Insurance Carried on Life of ‘Captive Girl ’ Trial of Parents on Neglect Charges Continued After Hundreds of Women and Girls Fight Way Into Tiny Courtroom to Hear Testimony. Juvenile court investigators today were searching life insurance records to determine how much life insurance is carried on the life of 16-year-old Helen Mack, who until last Tuesday was held prisoner in a locked room in her father's home. 1302 West Market street. More than five hundred persons, mostly fashionably dressed women and young girls, milled in the small juvenile courtroom yesterday afternoon as Harry Mack and the girl’s stepmother. Mrs. Ora Troutman Mack, went on trial on charges of child neglect. Aged women and debutantes, social registerites and human derelicts, jammed the small enclosure. Excited, unfriendly conversations directed against the defendants were banned for a moment by the judge. The buzz of feminine voices made it almost impossible to hear the evidence. The crowd surged closer to the little oak desk at which Judge John P. Geckler sat

COURT ENJOINS CAS FRANCHISE Restrains Issued by Ryan Bars Action by County Commissioners. Declaring that a county natural gas contract would benefit, only those seeking it. Superior Judge Russell J. Ryan today granted a restraining order to prevent the county commissioners from granting a franchise to the Users Gas Company. The company has sought a contract for an exclusive contract and indeterminate permit to deliver natural gas in Marion county outside of incorporated towns and cities. In granting the order. Judge Ryan said:

The county commissioners board had m> legislative authority to commit this act. This contract to any lawyer is amazing. As far as the county and the city is concerned, here is a croup asking a tremendous power for nothing. They do not even have to invest anything." Referring to the clause of the proposed contract which specifies that the Users Gas Company must tart operation within five years. Judge Ryan said: "They could dig a ditch ten feet long and keep repeating this every five years and thus keep thp franchise forever. This is a terrific power over the progress of this community. "Granting thp franchise would cause heavy hardships to the existing utility. The court is bound to exert every power to prevent this. I would be allowing a huge damage if I permitted the county commissioners to proceed. I can see no reason for their considering this franchise at all. The contract will only help those seeking it."

CATHOLIC GROUP TO AID MEXICAN WOMEN F. S. Society Pledges Support in Religious Battle. Ft Unit.-. f Pro. CHICAGO. Nov 27—More than 200.000 members of thr Catholic Daughters of America from fortyfive states laid plans today to aid the Catholic women of Mexico. Miss Mary C. Duffy. Newark, supreme recent of the order, said We are not acting as Catholics but as an organized citizenry of a country whose fundamental principles are the antithesis of those of the present government of Mexico. Our campaign will have the support of several women's organizations not affiliated with the Catholic church "

Dynamite Blast Wrecks West Side Tavern , Shatters Windows of Adjacent Establishments; ‘Grudge Act , ’ls Theory of Owner's Son

A dynamite blast which rattled windows in residences for two miles around, early today damaged the Hale tavern. 5320 West Washington street, and breke windows in the* adjacent business establishments. Deputy sheriffs, called to the tavern by reports it had been bembed. were informed by Ralph Hale. 19. son of the proprietor, that he believed dynamite had been exploded at the store by someone with a grudge against hi e father. Charles Hale. 49 Young Hale, who was sleeping in

Schnitzelbank lon. at 1021 Virginia avenue, as quickly as possible. One reason that Joe left German;-’ was because there were too emany “verbotens.” but there was not “heat.” • Heat” burns Joe up Joe only nas been in this country six years. His accent is strong, but he makes himself perfectly plain on his opinion of "muscling'' methods. '"I want no trouble with any one.” ne says. "I have a clean place and I will keep it so I

He rapped with his gavel to get order. It was impossible. Now and then a woman screamed as the crowd trampled on her feet. Outside more than 100 persons peered through closed windows, now and then attempting to raise the sash to hear. Meanwhile. Helen sat surrounded by spectators, clutching the hand ot her maternal grandmother, Mrs. John Miller Both wept. Women Spectators Weep Women spectators cried as Helen, trembling, walked to the witness stand. Helpn was wearing the little green felt hat bought for her by Mrs. Anna Pickard, matron at the detention home. Around her neck was a green silk scarf. As she testified, she nervously twirled a little brown purse. Helen sat before Judge Geckler with eyes downcast. Not once did she look at her pale father, who sat three feet away with bow tie awry. Her black-haired stepmother stared at the pale, nervous child. Helen mumbled her story. She could not be shaken under severe cross-exami-nation.

Judge Geckler abruptly adjourned the hearing until 2 Friday when Deputy Prosecutor Russell Dean drew from Mrs. Mack the admission her stepdaughter is insured for about $730. Investigators made public an anonymous* letter received yesterday claiming the insurance had been increased the day before Helen was libera led by police. Crowd Hisses and Boos As. Mr. and Mrs. Mack entered the crowded courtroom, the crowd hissed and booed. Later in the hearing, booing was renewed as Mrs. Mack denied Helen's testimony that she lived on bread and gravy and cold potatoes while her parents ate choice cuts of meat. Mrs. Mack was the first and only defense witness heard before Judge Geckler adjourned the hearing until Friday afternoon. Earlier the frail blond girl, trembling and testifying in a barely audible voice, had repeated for the court the story of her imprisonment told court investigators and reporters shortly after her release last Tuesday. Mrs. Mack sought to convince Judge Geckler that she and her second husband had moved to Edgewood solely for the benefit of Helen's health. The defense witness. removing her fashionable black hat. said Helen habitually took money from the house and purchased compacts, expensive lip sticks, rouge, perfumes and candy. Miss Kate McGoldrick, Helens teacher when she attended Benjamin Harrison School 2. described the; girl as average, inoffensive, docile and honest. Judge Geckler announced he would make a personal inspection of the Mack name at 1302 West Market street before reaching a decision-. FYed Mack, brother of the girl's father, said his brother first met the present Mrs. Mack when he hired her as his housekeeper.

the store at the time of the blast, but who escaped injury, scoffed at the possibility that it was the work of rival tavern proprietors. He indicated that his father, absent from the tavern this morning, might have definite suspicions as to the bomber's identity. The dynamite was exploded on stone steps leading to the tavern. It wrecked these, blew the heavy wooden door and doorway into splinters, wrecked the first of a number of booths immediately behind the door and Smashed lour

INDIANAPOLIS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1934

try to give my customers what they want.” Joe states that a day or two after the Nov. 6 election a salesman for a firm of wholesale beer dealers came to his place and told him that he had better put in a certain brand of beer. ,‘I refused to do it.” said Joe. "So the salesman took me aside and said to me: You had better keep your mouth shut. You know who is behind us and they won the election They will make you like it.’ “Last Tuesday the salesman came in again with another man. The salesman told me that the other man was a brewery representative. ana ■' A FTER we were introduced, the brewery representative said to me. ‘How about putting r.iy beer on tap here?’ “I answered that I used to sell his beer but tnaf it did not sell well and I took it out. “He said, ‘After January we will make you like it. It you do not put lc on tap. you will spend more time in jail than behind your bar.' “I replied that it was my business; that I had a wife and two kids to support. “Then the salesman said to the other man, ‘Don’t be too hard on him. I will straighten him out.’ “I would not argue with them and in a little while they left.” Joe is slow to anger, but this was too much. The more he thought about it, the sorer he became. He called a Times reporter and told him the story. “That is no way to do,” said Joe. "You print that in your paper.” Here it is.

STATE STUDIES NEW BID MIXUP Furniture Proposal for Library Is Opposed by Code Group. Another mixup in state bids on office furniture was being unraveled today. Herbert Kenney, chairman of the state library commission which recently awarded a contract on 1,200 transfer cases for the new state library, announced yesterday that the commission had received a telegram from the office equipment code authority in Cleveland protesting the award on grounds that the quotation is an “admitted” violation. After a conference today with Cecil S. Ober, president of the Business Furniture Company, the successful bidder, Mr. Kenney said that further action by the commission on the matter would await more definite information from code authorities "At the time the contract was awarded we had complaints from other bidders." said Mr. Kenney. “We protected ourselves by demanding an affidavit from the Business Furniture Company that their price was in accordance with the code. We also inserted a paragraph in the award stating that it was made on condition that, the bid met code specifications.” Mr. Ober told The Times he had submitted the contested figures on advice of the Berger Manufacturing Company. He explained that his company had no authority in the matter and that the responsibility rested with the factory. ‘‘l talked to Berger company officials yesterday in Canton,” said Mr. Ober. "They insist that our bid is not e violation and that the new low prices were filed properly with code authorities. "This protest is by no means the last word in the matter.” Mr. Ober continued. Code authorities in Washington will have the final say. The dispute on the transfer case bids comes on the heels of the "siege" last week of the offices of Paul Fry, state excise director and purchasing agent, and C. M. McAlpin, assistant purchasing agent, by representatives of office equipment companies who demanded that bids they had submitted be opened in their presence. Post Postpones Hop R’i United Pr> BARTLESVILLE. Okla.. Nov. 27. —Wiley Post's attempt to set anew altitude record for airplanes was called off today until tomorrow, because of overcast skies.

windows in the front ot the tavern. Glasses and beer mugs on the bar were jarred to the floor. A few glasses were broken, but most of the heavier mugs were undamaged. A large window, similar to the four shattered in the Hale tavern, was smashed into bits in the barbershop of Herman Hedge. 5318 West Washington street. Mr. Hedge and his wife, Mrs. Ethel Hedge, whose apartment is in the rear of the shop, were awakened by the blast and the choking smoke as young Hale had been. Like him. they at first believed

MYSTERIOUS ‘BABES IN WOODS’ MAY BE HIS DAUGHTERS, ASSERTS OHIO MAN; ‘JOKE,’ RETORTS EX-WIFE

THOUSANDS FLOCK TO MORGUE: FAIL TO IDENTIFY BABES IN WOOD

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Thousands passed the biers of the three little girls found dead near Carlisle. Pa., in a mystery to which no clews have been found, but none could identify the victims. Here is shown part, of the curious and morbid throng which beat at the doors of the Car-

SANTA CLAUS PARADE TlME—9:3ft. Friday morning. Nov. 30. ROUTE From Memorial plaza, south on Meridian street to Monument Circle; Around northwest segment of Monument Circle to Market street: West on Market to Illinois; South on Illinois to Maryland; West on Maryland to Missouri; North on Missouri to Washington; East on Washington to Alabama; North on Alabama to Michigan to starting point. Bring the children to see this colorful pageant.

TIMES AID INVOKED IN SEARCH FOR MAN John Andrew Cain. 74. Disappeared Sunday Morning. The Indianapolis Times was asked today to aid in finding John Andrew Cain. 74. of 921 West Twenty-ninth street, who disappeared Sunday morning from his home. Members of his family said that Mr. Cain, whose absence was discovered by his wife, Mrs. Stella Cain, had a defective memory and was deaf. They fear for his safety. Gray haired and stocky. Mr. Cain was wearing a dark gray overcoat, a dark gray hat and dark suit when he disappeared. He formerly was a planing mill employe. SHOWERS AND WARMER WEATHER PREDICTED High Temperatures to Continue at Least 36 Hours. Occasional showers will continue i today and tomorrow and the temperature will continue to rise under an overcast sky. J. H. Armington, j official meteorologist, forecast today.! The immediate cause of the situation, according to Mr. Armington. is the continued presence of a low pressure area west of Indiana which holds in check cooler winds and gives preference to those from the south. EVICTED TENANT DIES BATTLING CONSTABLES Sympathizers Beaten in Clash to Prevent Home Loss. Hit ( nit< rt Hrrn> PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 27 —One man was killed and others were beaten today wnen a group of men clashed with police and constables. William Heaterly. 35, Negro, was shot and killed in the disturbance. He and several friends had resisted the efforts of constables and patrolmen to evict him from his home.

there had been a furnace explosion and feared firp. A large window in a Standard grocery, 5324 West Washington street, was cracked, a smaller window there was broken and dozens of cans cf fruit and vegetables were , jarred from shelves on the side of the store nearest the Hale tavern. Hillard Wiggam. 5238 Rinehart street, who lives six city blocks from the tavern, reported that the blast shook every window in his home. The total damage in the blast was estimated at more than S2OO.

lisle undertaking parlor where bodies were taken in an effort to establish identity. Several tentative identifications were found to be wrong and appeals were sent to all parts of the country for passible clews.

Distraught Slayer of Wife and Priest Faces Court Young Divinity Student Near Collapse at Arraignment in Homicide Division. By United Prc* NEW YORK. Nov. 2?.--So unstrung that he w’as unable to stand unaided, Joseph L. Steinmetz, 22-year-old former Los Angeles divinity student, was arraigned In homicide court today, charged with slaying his 17-year-old wife and a Roman Catholic priest to whose room she had gone. The hearing, on an affidavit which did not stipulate the degree of the crime, was adjourned until Dec. 3, presumably to permit action by

STATE TO FIGHT COAL TRUCKERS •Wildcats' to Feel Safety Department Lash as Traffic Hazards. A drive against "wildcat" coal truckers, operating between here and equally “wildcat” coal mines in the vicinity of Terre Haute. Rockville and Brazil, was announced today by A1 G. Feeney, state safety director, who lashed out at the truckers as both dangers to oth£f traffic and as unfair competitors in their business. The campaign will be conducted by the state bus and truck department’s inspection bureau, of which Ira Pendry is chief. Mr. Feeneysaid that the "wildcat” operators were doing business without paying proper taxes, including the weight tax, and that, in some instances, their trucks did not even carry license plates. He charged, too. that such truckers almost invariably gave short weight to the consumers here and in other communities where they delivered their coal and that they did not operate under the NRA. $20,000 SSIUIT fTIED AGAINST REALTY FIRM Damage Action Claims Women Tripped On Fence. A suit for $20,000 damages charging negligence was filed in superior court two today by Mrs. Loretta Ferguson, 1116 North Pennsylvania street, against the Northland Realty Company, owners of the building in which she lives. The suit alleges that the night of June 8. Mrs. Ferguson, while crossing a courtyard of the apartment house, tripped over an eightinch wire fence and suffered severe injuries.

The Hale tavern figured in sheriff office reports twice during the last summer. Oscar Hale, 21, another son of the proprietor, shot and killed Harry Clark when the latter entered the tavern through a basement window after it had been closed for the night and then threatened young Hale with a revolver. A verdict of justifiable homicide was returned in the case. Some time later, a lone bandit entered the tavern and took 5256 in a holdup.

Entered 9 Second-Cln Matter at Postoffice. Indianapolis. Ind.

the grand jury which will fix the nature of the offense. Steinmetz entered no plea to the formal homicide charge. The affidavit said Steinmetz, who was araigned under the name of Harry Steinmetz, “discharged several shots” into the bodies of his moviedancer wife, the former Ruth Tiles Armstrong, and the Rev. Joseph J. Leonard. 40. chaplain of the Morris Hall home for the aged at Lawrenceville. N. J. No Further Details Given It gave no further details. FYom Thomas Gonzales, assistant medical examiner, it was learned that Mrs. Steinmetz and the priest were in a state of undress when the student entered the cleric’s room at the K. of C. hotel yesterday after a drinking bout, and killled them both. Steinmetz was distraught when brought to police headquarters. Jail attaches said he tossed restlessly all night. At the same time that Steinmetz. apostate son of an orthodox rabbi, was being arraigned, the county grand jury began to consider evidence presented by Saul Price, assistant district attorney. A firstdegree murder indictment was sought. Called “Mentally Sluggish” The slain priest was 40 and described as “mentally sluggish” in a statement from the diocesean chancellory in Trenton, N. J. He was pastor of Our Lady of the Rosary chapel and chaplain at Morris Hall home for the aged. Lawrenceville, N. J. "Father Leonard,” the statement said, “had an attack of influenza in the epidemic of 1918 and he suffered seriously not only physically, but mentally. At that time he was attached to a parish in Bordentown, N. J., and was transferred then to Lakewood. N. J„ a health resort. He was mentally sluggish and in poor physical shape. "He remained there until 1932 when his mental difficulties—he was not insane, but suffered from mental depression—began to assert themselves. The priest then was transferred to the home in Lawrenceville so he would be relieved of all parish responsibilities. "He was born in Danbury. Conn., and studied at Niagara college.” Married Life Not Happy The short married life of the Steinmetzs had not been a happy one, according to Sam Armstrong, the bride’s father. She was only 17 and aspired to a movie career in Hollywood. The father, in Hollywood, showed a letter from his daughter three days after her marriage. It was posted at Yuma. Ariz., and said: “We’ve tried, but it's absolutely hopeless. I think Harry is tired of being married, too.”

DRAWING WINNERS Winners in the first week of The Indianapolis Times drawing contest are listed on Page 3.

HOME EDITION PRICE TWO CENTS Outside Marion County, 3 Cents

Clevelander Looks at Young Victims. Confers With State Police. SINCERE. SAYS CORONER Long-Awaited ’Break’ in Case Near. Officers Obviously Believe. H’l I >iHtfl CARLISLE. Pa.. Nov. 27.-=-Einmott Hamilton of Cleveland. was quoted by Coroner E. A. Ilae£ele this afternoon as saying he believed the victims of the “babes in the woods” tragedy “may be his daughters.” Mr. Hamilton viewed the bodies of the three young girls, whose identities have been a mystery since they were discovcered under a' blanket in the South mountains on Saturday. He had not seen his daughters in three years, but said his eldest daughter had a prominent mole on the back oh re head. The oldest of the three girls found on the mountainside had a similar mark. “He appears sincere and thinks the girls may be liis daughters,” Mr. said. Almost at. the same time in Philadelphia Mrs. Mary Hamilton, divorced wife of Hamilton, came forward and laughed when informe i that, her former husband thought she and her daughters "might ’e" the victims in the Carlisle myster'. "Tell that former husband of nine *o go lose himself,” Mrs. Hamilton told the United Press. "It's all a joke to me. I'm alive and well and so are the children." Hamilton told police his wife left' him three years ago last Armistice day and took their daughters, Helen, 15; Mary, 13, and Dorothy, 11. They went to North Philadelphia, but Hamilton did not hear from them. When he heard of the discovery of the bodies, he came here in an attempt to identify the children. Police obviously believed the longawaited “break” in the case was near after Hamilton visited the morgue, but at first they told him not to say a word to any one. SLAYER IMPROVING, HAS CHANCE TO LIVE Talbott’s Surgeon May Attempt to Remove Bullet. This Week. Harvey S. Talbott, 46-year-old slayer of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Pauline Williams, has recovered to such an extent from his attempt, to end his life that his physician. Dr. Kenneth Kraning. believes that Mr. Talbott has a chance to live. Dr. Kraning said that if his patient's condition improves further he would operate to remove the bullet this week. He said the bullet was imbedded in the mastoi. area and not in the brain as previously was thought. Crazed with drink, the eccentric Princeton graduate killed Mrs. Williams in her rooms at 30. West St. Joseph street a week ago and then turned the revolver upon himself.

•HERMIT' CASHIER GETS TWO YEARS IN JAIL Absconding Banker Found Living in North Woods. By 1 iiitf.tl Prm CHICAGO, Nov. 27.—Nicholas A. Schwal], 40-year-old absconding bank cashier who was found living the life of a ‘ Robinson Crusoe” in the woods of northern Wisconsin, today was sentenced ir. federal court to a two-year term in the federal penitentiary. Schwall, who lived a s a hermit in the Eagle river country of Wisconsin after fleeing with the bank’s funds, admitted taking the money over a three-year period, from July, 1029. until the closing of the institution SWINDLE PLOT HEARING SCHEDULED FOR DEC. 7 Five Alleged Schpmrrs to Go Inti Municipal Court. By t i,il> it Pr, an CHICAGO. Nov. 27.— Hearing for five men charged with plotting to loot the Abraham Lincoln Insurance Company and three Indianapolis banks was set for I>c. 7 in municipal court today. The five are Joseph Baiata, Gustav Lindquist. Hayden Sanders, W. W. Ehlers and Abraham Karat?.. Lindquist, former president of Springfield. 111., insurance company, is a fugitive. Times Inde/ Bridge 4 Broun Comics I 9 Crossword Puzzle Drawing Lesson Editorial Financial 13 Hickman—Theaters I 7 Pegler H Radio 9