Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 226, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1935 — Page 3

NOV. 29. 1935.

ROOSEVELT BACKS ECONOMY, SEES CRISIS SPENDING NEED AT END IN ATLANTA SPEECH Bankers Criticised as Executive Reviews and Defends Acts of His Administration; Greater Progress Is Predicted. r.'i' n/vr*. would have to put more acres than ATLANTA Oa.. Nov. 29 Th" we have ever cultivated into the romplete text of President Roose- production of an additional supply velt - address follows: of things for Americans to eat. I am happy to be in Georgia. I

am proud of Georgia. Happy because of this moving reception which my friends, the Senators and Representatives in the Congress from thi s'ate. have tendered me. and hirh you. the good p ople of this •♦ate. have responded to with such warmth and hospitality. Happv beeause i meet again so manv old triends and neighbors. Proud becau.se I see signs on every hand that, the overwhelming majority of the people of this, state are keeping pare with the millions of others throughout the nation who believe in progress, are willing to work for progress and are going to get progress. Proud because I sea clear . igns of a revival of material prosperity in country and in city, and especially because I sense a swelling prosperity of the spirit that spells a greater help and a deeper happiness for our fellowmen. "Eleven years ago I came to live at, Warm Springs for the first time. That was a period of great so-called prosperity. But I would not go back to the conditions of 1521. and I do not believe that you people would want to go back, either. Os that year and ol the five years that followed, I have a clear recollection which you can verify for yourselves. Tn that orgy of ‘prosperity’ a wild speculation was building speculative profits for the speculators and preparing the way for the public to b° left holding th° hag.' In that org\ of prosperity' banks, individually and by chains, were closing their doors at the expense of the depositors. In that orgy of prosperity’ the farmers nf the South had become involuntary speculators themselves, never certain when they planted their cotton whether it, would bring 25 cents or 15 cents or 5 cents. In that orgy of ‘prosperity’ the poorest vied with the richest in throwing their earnings and their savings into a cauldron of land and stock speculation. In that orgy of prosperity’ slum conditions went unheeded, better education was forgotten. usurious interest charges mounted, child labor continued, starvation wages were too often the rule instead of the exception. Mammon ruled America.

TEARS OF FOOI/S PARADISE

"Those are Ihe years to remember those Fool's Paradise years before th? crash came. Too much do we harp on the years that followed, when from 19*29 to 1033 this nation .lipped spirally downward ever downward- to the inevitable point ' hen the mechanics of civilization came to a dead stop on March 3. 1033. "You and 1 need not rehearse the four years of disaster and qloom. We know the simple fact that at the end of those years America acted before it was too late, that we turned about and by a supreme, well-nigh unanimous national effort. started on the upward path again. “I have reason to remember the past two and a half years that have gone by so quickly, reason to remember th# fine spirit of the average of American citizenship which made my task lighter. Memory is short but yours is not too short to recollect those great meetings of the representatives of the farmers, regionally and in Washington, in the spring and summer of 1933, when they agreed overwhelmingly that unfairly low prices for farm crops could never be raised to and maintained at a reasonable level until and unless the government of the United States acted to help them to reduce the tremendous carry-overs and surpluses which threatened us and the whole world. "You and 1 can well remember the overwhelming demand that the national government come to the rescue of the home owners and the farm owners of the nation who were losing the roofs over their heads through inflated valuations and exorbitant rates of interest. You and I still recollect the need (or the successful attainment of a banking policy which not only opened the closed banks but guaranteed the deposits of the deposit trs of the nation.

(UIILD labor is ended

"You and I have not forgotten the enthusiastic support that succeeded. and still in part succeeds, in ending of children in mills ..nd factories, in seeking a fairer wage level for those on starvation pay and in giving to the workers hope for ihe right collectively to bargain with their employers. "You and I have not forgotten the long struggle to put. an end to the indiscriminate distribution of fly-by-night' securities, and to provide fair regulation of th* stcr.c exchanges and of the great interstate public utility companies of our country. "You and I- yes. every-Individual and every family in the land—are being b;ought close to that supreme achievement of the present Congress—the Social Security law. which will set up a national system of insurance for the unemployed and will extend well-merited care to sick and crippled children. "Y °u and I are enlisted today in a great crusade in every part of thp land to co-operate with nature and not to fight her. to stop destructive floods, to prevent dust storms and the washing away of our precious soils, to grow trees, to Rive thousands of farm families a chance to live, and to seek to provide more and beiter food for the cirv dwellers of the nation. In (his connection it is. I think, of Interest to point out that national surveys prove that the aver°ce of our citizenship lives today on what would be called by the medical fraternity a third-class diet. If the country lived on a second-class diet we would need to put many more acres than we use todav back into the production of foodstuffs for domestic consumption. If the nation Uvea on a first-class diet, we

PURCHASE POWER DEFICIENT

Why, speaking in broad terms in following up this particular illustration. are we living on a thirdclass diet? For the very simple reason that masses of the American people have not got the purchasing power to cat more and better food. "I mentioned a few w'eeks ago that farm income in the United States has risen sincp 1932 a total of nearly three billions. That is because wheat is selling at better than 90 cents instead of 32 cents: corn at 50 cents instead of 12 cents; cotton at 12 cents instead of at 4 \-t cents, and other crops in proportion. I wonder what cotton W'ould be selling at today if during these last three years we had continued to produce 15 or 16 or 17 million bales each year, adding to our own surplus, adding to the bankruptcy and starvation. The additional three billions of farm income has meant the rebirth of ritv business, the reopening of ciosed factories, the doubling of automobile produc r ion, the improvement of transportation and the giving or new employment to millions ot people. ‘‘That brings us squarely fare to face w r iih the fact of the continued unemployment ot many million per sons of whom approximately three and a half million arp employables in need of relief. When some of the people of a great and wealthy country are suffering from starvation an honest government has no choice. At first, realizing that we were not doing a perfect thing, but that we were doing a necessary saving and human thing, we appropriated money for direct relief. Thar was necessary to ward off actual starvation. But as quickly as possible we turned to the job of providing actual work for those in need.

DEFENDS SPENDING POLICY

“I can realize that gentlemen in wpll-w-armed and well-stocked clubs will discourse on the expenses of government and the suffering that they are going through because the government is spending money for work-relief. I wish I could take some of these men out on the bat-tle-line of human necessity and show them the facts that we in the government are facing, if these more fortunate Americans will come with me. I will not only show them the necessity for the expenditures of this government, but, I will show them, as well, the definite and beneficial results we have attained with the dollars tve have spent. Some of these gentlemen tell me that a dole would be more economical than work-relief. That is true. But the men who tell me mat, have, unfortunately, too little contact with the true America to realize that in this business of relief we are dealing with properly- self-respecting Americans to w’hom a mere dole outrages every instinct of individual independence. Most Americans w’ant to give something for what they get. That something, in this case honest work, is the saving barrier between them and moral disintegration. We propose to build that barrier high. "Last April I stated what I rnve held to consistently ever since—that it was the hope of the Adminisoration that by some time in November of this year we would substantially end the dole and offer in place of it employment to bv far the greater part of the three and a half million employable persons we estimated to be on the relief rolls in the United States. "Week after week since then some individuals, and some groups, careless of the truth and regardless of scruple, have sought to make the American people believe that this program was a hopeless failure and that it could not possibly succeed. "Today is the twenty-ninth day of November It gives me a certain satisfaction to be able to inform you. and through you the nation, that on Wednesday, two days ago, there wete three million one hundred twenty-five thousand persons at work on various useful projects throughout the nation. The small remaining number have received orders to report to work on projects already under way or ready to be started. This result. I believe you will agree with me. constitutes a substantial and successful national

SLUM PROJECTS LAUDED

"Aside from the tremendous increase in morale through substituting work for a dole, there is the practical side of permanent material benefit. Within sight of us today stands a tribute to useful work under government supervision—the first slum clearance and low-rent housing project. Here, at the request of the citizens of Atlanta, we have cleaned out nine square blocks of antiquated, squalid dwellings, for years a detriment to this community. Today t hose hopeless old houses are gone and in their place we >ee the bright cheerful buildings of the Teehwood Housing Project. Within a very short time, people who never before coula get a decent roof over their heads will live here in reasonable comfort amid healthful, worthwhile surroundings; others will find similar homes in Atlanta's second slum clearance, the university project; and still others will find similar opportunity in nearly all of the older, overcrowded cities of the United States. “I take it that it has been equally worth while to the nation to give jobs to the unemployed in the construction of a vast network of highways, including thousands of miles of farm to market roads, in repairing great numbers of schools and building hundreds of new ones in city and country, in helping cities to put in sewers and sewage disposal plants and water works; in constructin'? cold storage warehouses ai'ri county recreational buildings; in creating aviation fields; in giving a million boys a

The scientists of the world will turn their laboratories over to the study of God and prayer and the spiritual forces.

Yesterday Miss Pickford related of her tardy discovery of the tme nature of God. Today she put sues her spiritual exploration. CHAPTER II HUNTING for truth. Hunting for it myself, in my work, in those I came in contact with, in everything. And God ceased to be a formidable, threatening Deity up in the skies. Instead, as I explored mentally, He came to be an all-wise, loving, friendly presence, filling all space everywhere and closer to me than the very air I breathed. Then I began looking for the God-element in people, in circumstances and in events; and the more I looked, the more I found and, correspondingly, the greater happiness I experienced. God became not only my Big Boss, but my unseen Good Companion, my Silent Partner, my Counselor. He was always by my side. Tt became increasingly clear that creation was the work of but one Mind, or intelligence, and that this Mind belonged to you and to me and to every one, governing us all with perfect understanding and in perfect harmony. This may seem extremely doubtful to someone who. at the moment, may be encountering great trials and tribulations. But let me relate this: A California teacher was explaining to a group of boys that Good, or God, was everywhere. On? of them asked, "Well, is He in the jails and prisons?” Before she could get an answer ready another boy said. "God is in them but those guys don't, know' it.” And that's just what I had to find out for myself—that God really w’as around everywhere but I didn't know’ it. tt a a ALL the Good that there is can be ours right now if we but tune in w’ith God. And the only instrument with which we can tune in is our own thinking. But w’e can’t get any more good out

chance to go to CCC camps and to work on forestry and on soil erosion prevention; in controlling malaria; in pushing health projects; in putting white collar workers into jobs of permanent usefulness to their communities, and in giving youth an opportunity for better education.

ANSWERS BANKERS ON DEBT

"Into the ears of many of you have been dinned the cry that your government is piling up an unconscionable and backbreaking debt. Let me tell you a simple story. 'ln the spring of 1933 many of the great bankers of the United States flocked to Washington. They were there to get the help of their government in the saving of their banks from insolvency. To them I pointed out. in all fairness, the simple fact that the government would be compelled to go heavily into debt for a few years to come, in order to save banks ana insurance companies and mortgage companies, and railroads and to take care of millions of people who were on the verge of starvation. Every one es these gentlemen expressed to me the firm conviction that it w T as w’ell worth the price and that they heartily approved. "In order to get their further judgment, however, I asked them what they thought the maximum national debt of the United States government could rise to without

Thousands Massed in Atlanta Hear Roosevelt Open Campaign

•• •I s 5 '* v -V • H'- ' . ? 4r p ■!' care x- | : dium of Georgia Tech at Atlanta. 1 / r”verGeorgia New D-alrrs to show sup- j ~,, Itoth promo/-' port of Rooseve t desp.te opposi- ing th , At|anti| Armnt J XrJkUon% tion of Gov. Talmadge. Senator W. F. George President Roosevelt Senator R. B. Russell Talmadge being ignored.

Grant Field, vast football stadium of Georgia Tech at Atlanta, was the seen* this afternoon of the huge demonstration by Georgia New Dealers to show support of Roosevelt despite opposition of Gov. Talmadge.

WHY NOT TRY GOD?

serious danger to the national credit. Their answer—remember, this was in the spring of 1933—were that the country could safely stand a national debt of between 55 and 70 billion dollars. I told them that a vise in the national debt to any such ! figure W’as. in my judgment, w’holly unnecessary, and that even if they, the bankers, were willing I could not and would not go along with i hem. I told them then that only a moderate increase in the debt for the next few’ years seemed likelv and justified. "That objective holds good today; but remember that at that time many bankers and big business men w’ould have been willing to put , the country far deeper intoddefb f than I shail ever let it go. "Ts the bankers thought th? country could stand a debt of 55 to 70 billion dollars in 1933. with values as they were then. I wonder w’hat they w’ould say thp country could stand today, in thp light of an enormous increase of value of property of all kinds along the line since 1933.

SPENDING PEAK REACHED

“Your government says to you; 'You can not borrow’ your way out of debt; but you can invest your way into a sounder future.’ "Asa matter of actual fact, of course, the gross national debt under the last Administration rose

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.. BY MARY PICKFORD of the pow’er of God unless we do tune in than we can get out of electricity if we don't turn on the switch. If Edison had never set up his laboratory the electric light W’ould be there just the same. If Marconi had never lived, a wireless would still be possible. If there had been no Alexander Graham Bell, the principles that make our telephones would exist just the same. But we wouldn't be able to use them because w r e w’ouldn’t, know’ how. Now I believe, and in a relative degree have been able to prove, that God is a greatpporerw r er which we can use whenever and wherever we choose, by our owm right thinking. Certainly w’e have nothing to lose by just trying it. i Sometimes w’e may fail. We may even do a lot of failing. But that is because we haven't learned yet how to work it perfectly. But we wdll succeed often enough to make us want to go on and on and, in time, become perfect operators. tt u a npHE great electrical genius. Charles Steinmetz. w’as once A asked by Roger Babson. the business statistician, what line of research w’ould see the greatest development in the next 50 years. Instead of mentioning some line of electrical application, as one*would have thought, he said he believed the greatest discovery w'ould be made along spiritual lines. "Here is a force,” he said “w'hich history clearly teaches ; has been the greatest power in the development of men !

from a little over 17 billions to 21 billions. The day I came into office I found that the national treasury contained only $158,000,000 or. at the rate of previously authorized expenditures. enough to last the treasury less than a month. Since March 4.1933, the national debt has risen from 21 billions to 29’* billions, but it must also be remembered that today, included in this figure is nearly one and one-half billions of working balance in the treasury and nearly four and one-half billion dollars of recoverable assets w'hich the government will get back over a period of years, and w’hich will be used for the retirement of debt. “As things stand today, and in the light of a definite and continuing economic improvement, we have passed the peak of appropriations; revenues without the imposition of new' taxes are increasing, and we can look forward with assurance to a decreasing deficit. "The credit of the government is today higher than that of any other great nation in the world, in spite of attacks on that credit made by those few individuals and organizations which seek to dictate to the Administration and to the Congress how’ to run the national treasury and how to let the needy starve. "In the spring of 1933. if you and I had made a national balance sheet, we would have found that if we had added up the values of all of the property of every kind in the United States ow'ned by American citizens, the total of those

and history. Yet w’e have merely been playing with it and have never seriously studied it as we have the physical forces. Some day people will learn that material things do not bring happiness and are of little use in making men and women creative and powerful. "Then the scientists of the world will turn their laboratories over to the study of God and prayer and the spiritual forces which as yet have hardly been touched. When this day comes the world will see more advancement in one generation than it has in the past four.” Why shouldn’t we be that generation? Why shouldn't that time be now’? a a FOR too long a time w’e have been trying the other way. We have followed the jungle method of the survival of the fittest fighting, struggling, ruthless and cruel! Result? Look around you—despair, confusion, dishonesty, failure, economic wreckage and almost utter collapse under trials. Nearly all of us are beset by trials and tribulations. Why not try God? The lisp of each one of us is a continual process of thought. That's all there is to us anyway. When we think, w’e experience; w’hen we don’t, think, w’e “just, ain't.” Thought is the most vital and powerful thing in the entire universe. All the good and evil in the world is the result of right or wrong thinking and each of us is contributing something to the sum total one way or the other every second. When our thinking is clear enough we become a transparency for God, or the Mind of the universe, to shin? through. Then we experience good results and we have real and lasting prosperity, success, happiness and health. But when we are not tuned in the troubles come to us. TOMORROW—Your Choice to See (Copyright, 1935, by the Pickford Corporation. Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, i

values, w’hich we would call assets, would have been exceeded by the figure representing the total of all the debts owed by the people of the United States. In other words at that time our national oalance sheet, the w’ealth versus the debts of the American public, showed that we were in the red.

WANTS FURTHER PROGRESS

"Today, less than three years after, it is a fact that the total of all of the debts in the United States is lower than it w'as then. Whereas on the other side of the picture you and I know’ that the values of property of all kinds—farms, houses, automobiles, securities and every ether kind of property, have increased so greatly since 1933 that today w’e are once more in the black. We were insolvent; today w’e are solvent. "In this faG most of us find a deep satisfaction. But recovery means something more than getting the country back into the black. You and I dc not want to so back to the past. We w’ant to face the future in the belief that human beings can enjoy more of the good things t>f life, under better conditions. than human beings ever enjoyed in the past. American life has improved in these two years and a half and if I have anything to do with it. it is going to improve more in the days to come. The

word ‘progress’ is a better word than ‘recovery,’ for it means not only a sound business and a sound agriculture from the material point of view’, but it means, with equal importance, a sound improvement in American life as a result of continuing and forceful effort on the part of our people, and. through them, on the part of their government. I am certain that that is .vour purpose; and that is w’hv I continue my confidence, my faith in the people of America.” PICKETS STONE TRUCKS AS PLANT IS MOVED Outbreak of Violence Prevents Removal Temporarily. S'j Imtrit Prnt*. MINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 29.—Four trucks were stonec today by pickets seeking to prevent removal of the Strutwear Knitting Cos. plant to St. Joseph. Mo. A United States marshal supervising the removal w’as struck in the face by a rock. The outbreak of violence halted removal operations at least temporarily. The plant is being removed after a long siege of labor trouble. Mexicans to Hold Celebration Hy Lulled Press MEXICO CITY. Nov. 29.—Arrangements are being made to celebrate the four hundredth anniversary of the introduction of the printing press in Mexico next spring.

At the President'* side in hi differences with Georgia's Governor are Georgia's two United States Senators, shown (inset, left). Both were active in promoting the Atlanta demonstration. Talmadge being ignored.

PAGE 3

BLOND AGAIN LINKS GANG IN MURDER QUIZ Lie Detector Shows Girl to Be Untruthful, Says Officer. (Continued From Pace Onl ent occasions. "Do you know who killed Officer Levy?" She would make no audible answer either time. Capt. Leach hopes to connect Willard Carson, sought nine years as a cagey Indian killer, with the gang that the blond describes as having made many forays in three states in the last few months. The blond, who is unattractive. has lied blandly about h e r name, and even went to the ridiculous extreme of denying that she had been shot when physicians found a bullet wound in her shculder that was not more than three weeks old. She did not deny, however, that she has a tatooed butterfly on her upper right arm. and police have that as a cletv to her identity, for whatever it is worth. Killed Father in 1916 Patrolman Levy was shot summarily apparently when he went to investigate a man and woman who had been sitting for two hours in a car parked w'ith its engine running in the residential section of Anderson. Because of the wantonness of the crime, police have connected Carson with it. Carson began his life of crime by killing his father in Liberty, Ind.. in 1926 and is suspected also of having shot Patrolman Norman Schoen in Indianapolis in March. 1928 The blond w’as found Wednesday by Vincennes policp in a fainting condition and told them in semidelirium that she had been abandoned by a gang of gunmen and another girl named "Dot" w'hom she implicated in the brutal Anderson slaying. Insists She Won’t Talk She sticks to the name she gave when arrested, even though the real .Janet Henderson is a patient in Cook County Hospital in Chicago and has been there continuously for the last two months. This morning in her cell she said she was not afraid of the lie detector test. "Why not?” she was asked. ‘‘Because I'm not going to answer any questions.” she replied. “Are you afraid of Tony?” (the name she gave the boy friend she says beat her un in Vincennest. “No.” she said. “Are you in love w-ith him?” •‘No.” ‘Then why won't you talk?” ‘Because I don't want to,” she replied. Last night she told the iail matron that she had knowm Tony for about tw T o and a half years and that, during thmr “friendship” Tony had shot her twice, hut neither resulted in the w r ound she denies having. She said she came from Chicago with the gang, and she previously had told state police of a career of crime that extended through Indiana. Illinois and Missouri.

OFFICIAL WEATHER _l'nitrd States Weather Borean_

Sunnri*e 6:46 Sunset 4:2$ TEMPERATURE —Nov. 29, 19,"4 * • m '... 41 1 p. m 4* —Today—a. m 20 10 >. m 20 T a. m 20 11 a. m 21 oa. m 19 12 (Noon) 21 9a. m 19 Ip. m. 13 BAROMETER • a. m. .. 30.00 I p. m. 36.05 Precipitation 24 hrs ending Tam. 01 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 30 <57 Deficiency since Jan. 1 9 OTHER CITIES AT 7 A M. Station. Weather. Bar Temp. Amarillo. Tex Clear 30.40 40 Bismarck. N. D. Clear 30.04 20 Boston Rain 29.54 40 Chicago Clondv 29.90 22 Cincinnati Snow 29 90 20 Denver Clear 30.30 30 Dodge Citv. Kan. . Clear 30 2R 30 Helena. Mont. .. Cloudy 33.20 .30 Jacksonville. Fla PtCldv 30 12 43 Kansas Citv. Mo . clear .30.10 33 Little Rock. Ark. .. Clear 30.18 38 Los Angeles Clear 30.12 62 Miami. Fla Clottdv 30.00 62 Minneapolis Clear .39.00 6 Mobile. Ala Clear 30 10 46 New Orleans Cleai 31.24 44 New York PtCldv 29 00 aj Okla. Citv. okla. Clear 30.2* 44 Omaha. Neb Clear 30 12 20 Pittsburgh Snow 29.73 30 Portland. Ore Cloudv 39.38 33 San Antonio. Tex. Clear 30 32 52 San Francisco . Clear 30.22 54 St Louis . Cloudv .39.00 20 Tampa. Fla. . Cloud” .39 14 54 Washington. D C Cloudy 29.73 42 Vital Statistic* Births C,irl Ranzel. Alma Ferguson. Co'sman. Natu. Thelma Hill, Coleman Stephen. Velma Carrigg, 1433 Fariowe. John. Marie Angestine. 419 N. Walcott, Frank, Mary Monow. 1441 Gross Charles. Marv Miles. St Vincent . PatricK. Marguerite Walsh. St. Vincent . Emmett. Alma Williams. St. Vincent's. Frank. Anna Otte. St. Vincent’s. William. Marv Minnis. S< incent's Harvard, Gladvs Bluestein. 305 N. Cait. fornia Theodore Ruth Flora. 156 S Harlan. Rota. Richard. Marjorie Irwin Coleman. Frank. Flora Clark. St incant - Cecil. Elizabeth Potter 742 S. Addt'on. Deaths Ella Bvroad. 70 at 2200 Prospect oia. betes Gilbert Thompson 72 at 1944 Perk, acute Uremia. Daniel Frank Hu/fer. 3? at 357 Bickin? cardio vascular renaldi_cas Eliza Crawley. 89 at ioqr College hypostatic pneumonia Joseph Simko. 62 at 948 Ho!m* r s -. finoma. Harry P. Dovle 54 at 1214 N. Rural, roronarv occlusion Marv Jane Swartz. 39 at 3550 Ru<-kl*. looar pneumonia. John Ignatius Sugrue. 39. a 422 S 3*a*a pulmonary tuberculosis Mattie Virginia Noe 21 at Ci’- lobar pneumonia. Lucy Malm. 00 at 2025 Columbia c*tbral hemorrhage Catherine Woodard Allen 77 > 2"2S Ruckle, arterio seta'oriv Robert Field. 67 at Citv. pulmonar" tuberculosis. Vinat Drusilla Bow-r. 52. at M*:hodU* ap r endicitiMartin W. Flum. 41. Veterans edema of lungs Ivah E Dimick 29. at 553 N Grav. coronary occlusion Elizabeth Jones 17 at 436 Minerva pulmonarv tuberculosis Frieda Weiss. 56 of 912 N. Oxford, ch-onic myocarditis Emma Elizabeth Eagler 03 at Methodist. embolism. Carrie L Yancev. 62. at 2919 Guilford, mitral insufficiency. Minnie Marie Kolker 70. at 601 I*. Bancroft, arterio sclerosis. Frank Magee. 59. • Citv skull fracture. Daniel Jones. 69 a' 426 S. Addison, acute dilatation of heart. Amv Eliza Halk 68. at Method!?', lobar pneumonia. BI'II.DING PERMIT* Genera) Outdoor Advertirng Cc Root-. v!' and E. 16th. sign. *25? General Outdoor Advertising Cn 1459 T 16th, sign. $125 General Outdoor Advertising Cos 811 N. Senate sign. $125 Rridgcs nd Gra - -- ll’ ? Wvtff-ld, two.jtorv dwelling $3599 Mrion Apartments. 2902 Col!*ge boner. *1325 Bui*‘s Shoe 3tnr. 35 F Washington, stgr *3OO Kiger Apartments. 115 E. Walnut, boll**, $450.