Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 December 1936 — Page 1
The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Rain tonight; tomorrow mostly cloudy; colder late tonight and tomorrow; Friday fair and rather cold.
FINAL HOME
VOLUME 48—~NUMBER 252
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1936
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Pestoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.
PRICE THREE CENTS
POPE STILL IN U.S. Assures Powers of
Regret Over Plane Deal; BPA Child Labor Ban Sought
Acted Against Its Will in| Experts Working on Plan Cu Issuing Permit, Is Of Legislation to Fix IC . . y Dictates Note to Sisters " Explanation. Hours and Wages. French Convent Asking rin a : / I nited Press BY HERBERT LITTLE Their Prayers. WASHINGTON, Dec. 30. —The Times Special Writer Ei State Department assured foreign WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.—Presinations today that it acted against dent Roosevelt's forceful stand for its will when it granted permission | Federal legislation against sweat-
HIS SLEEP IS RESTLESS
to ship $2,777,000 worth of airplanes | legal experts in a half-dozen deand aviation engines to Loyalist | partments in their search for a new Spain. | and constitutional method of crackMeanwhile it was learned that neu- | ing down on labor chiselers. trality legislation to be placed be-| Use of the Federal Courts’ injuncfore the Congress convening in six | tion power is a new proposal under days may be divided into two parts | study. The O'Mahoney Federal into assure the greatest speed in cut. | corporation bil, if expanded to inting off American supplies to con. clude maximum hour and minimum tending armies In Spain. | wage regulations, is another possiBoth President Roosevelt and con- | Pility. : gressional leaders seemed intent on | Mogi of wage pd oer of the convent of St. Therese. at | Stopping American munitions ship- rill ea Tey Roig Lisieux, France, asking them to | ments, or materials that could be | a el be toe Paid it Si prav God to grant him courage and | converted into instruments of war, | o ssed by the President with Sidney
. | Hillman, head of the Amalgamated hi 5 e ey y he | ; TeNgh to Conte, he Nomad Hn IY, Wiey . WeTURily (Mave, Wwe | Garment Workers, is the basis for life in a manner befitting a ny.
| . : " ' d . the new drive. This slump in wages PS Plon The first part of the legislation } Pope i xs : : particularly among low-paid factory It. was understood that the Pope's oa sive he President Power Jo hands who got $12 to $15 per week was taking a course which | declare an embargo on arms Shib- | ger NRA. started when the Su-
Conia ts heh : ments in a civil war, a power he ; indicated that a crisis might be | ’ preme Court Killed the codes in ted soon. Lights burned | does not have under present law. | May, 1935.
| his would give Congress time to | apartment almost all through | ‘ a z the night in token of his intense | debate the second part, permanent | Standards Sought suffering long as | But this morning when Cardinal ae. (ments, Industrial Co-ordinator Pacelli, Vatican secretary of state, : . . | Berry, A. F. of L. and C. 1.0. experts entered the apartment—the first Hitler Ruling Awaited ‘and others are working on the probvisitor, as usual, except for Prof. | lem of how to establish wage, hour Aminta Milani, the physician, the | ON Volunteers and child-labor standards. Pope asked the Cardinal to take | By United Press The President has now gone behis dictation of the letter. | BERLIN, Dee. 30.—Groups of [Yond the present demands of the The Pope asked the sisters to pray | “volunteers” in various parts of Ger- | A. F. of L. leadership, which do not
Cardinal Pacelli Reports Pontiff Unchanged After Morning Visit.
ted Press VATICAN CITY, Dec. 30.—Pope | Pius, wracked by continuous pain, ! dictated from his sick bed in the Vatican today a letter to the sisters |
of his ness eXDe(
| neutrality legislation, as | necessary.
ardently for him—not for his health | many-—-in some districts numbering | include general minimum standards | or his life but to permit him to bear | several thousands— are being held [to be established by the Federal |
and to conquer his pain in a manner up from going to Spain temporarily | government. that would be pleasing to God. It |pending Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's de- | \ was understood. however, that he cision on Germany's future course ! submission otf a constitutional did not reveal to them his suffering on non-intervention, qualified for- (Amendment if necessary to protect nor did he mention his illness. eign sources understood today. (such legislation against the courts, The convent is particularly dear A reliable German source admit- | the President is reliably reported to in the Pope because St. Therese was | ted that the number of German | be ready for a campaign later in ihe canonized in 1925, soon after his Volunteers now in Spain is about | Session. Tt is understood that he, election fo the papal throne, { 10,000. like President Green of the A. F. spent Restless Night . Hitler has not yet announced his of L., is withholding action on this After leaving the apartment, the | decision but was expected to do so [Point until the Supreme Court rules Cardinal refused to say anything | Promptly. A spokesman for (he OD the Wagner Labor Act and the except that the Pope's condition was | Propaganda ministry derided a re- | Social Security Act. These decisions unchanged. [port that Premier Mussolini had [are expected within four months. Another spokesman said the Pope | urged Hitler to withdraw from Spain | In any event, the Administration was restless at times during the | Rs soon as possible. } 18 ager ined to get something done night because of intense pain in his = (at the session of Congress starting
l¢ Rg swoliiel by var Se ¢ Ss e | Jan i i | . 5. RB, S Hil 1 y Jaricose veins. H - | \
was suffering, too, from neuritic | : pains and particularly in the early MRS SIMPSON NAMED | ' : YEAR'S NO. | WOMAN | the president of the Basque Pro- at | vinces today, demanding the re-| :
morning hours suffered from [fits of asthmatic coughing. | lease of cargo seized from the Ger. | man merchant ship Palos off Bilbao, Honor Usually Conferred on Men by Weekly.
Surrender of Nazi Cargo Refused
Times Special BIARRITZ, France. Dec. 30—
The commander of the German |
ducted by Monsignor Enrico Pucci | eruiser Koenigsberg sent a letter |
announced this afternoon, however, {hat the Pope was appreciably improved after the rupture of several varicose veins and a resultant diminution of pain.
) The semiofficial news agency con- ,_ and the liberation of a Spanish The fact that the Roman Catholic pa
to Robert Cuse, New Jersey exporter, | shops and child labor today sped
The Justice and Labor Depart- |
As to the possible further step |
Church has not vet decided to order |
special pravers in churches, nor to
| passenger held at Bilbao, President Aguirre refused.
publish daily bulletins on the Pope's | condition, was accepted by he pubs | lic here as an indication that the | \ Pope's condition was not yet critical. | Loyalist Attack But many priests on their own| WITH INSURGENT ARMY, initiative offered special prayers in| OUTSIDE MADRID, Dec. 30.— his behalf. Most people of Rome | Moorish troops repulsed a surprise were unaware of the seriousness of | government attack on Villa Neuva
Moorish Troops Repulse
the Pope's condition because news- | de La Canada today in one of the papers continued to assure them that he was not gravely ill. Pessimism Is General
But there was general pessimism |
around the Vatican regarding the Pope's chance tor recovery, A report was spread today but not confirmed that his condition was so serious that he was not expected to survive the end of January. Because of the necessity of conserving the strength of the Pope's heart to combat the growing weakness in his general condition, it was understood, it has been thought ine advisable to administer sedatives to relieve the pain. Instead. it was said, cordials have been given to keep up his strength. Vatican City authorities expressed pleasure at news that diocesan branches of the Holy Name Society in the pravers for the Pope to be broadcast throughout the world. It was explained, however, that the offering of these pravers was due to private initiative and not to a request by the Vatican or the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, because public pravers, in prescribed form, are ordered only when the Pope's condi. tion it considered so serious as 10 lead to certain death,
BOB BURNS
Says, complain be-
cause their wives didn't seem to be as romantic after several years of married life as they used to be before they was married. They don't stop to consider that mavbe they've changed some, 100. 1 asked one of those men one day, I says “Do you ever take your wife flowers or a box of candy, when you go home?” and he said “No, I never think of it.” I says “Did you used to take her candy before you was married?” and he says “Oh, yes, sure!” He also admited that he used
United States had caused |
bloodiest engagements of the eight- | week siege of Madrid, insurgent officers said.
MOSCOW, Dec. 30.—Soviet Rus-
sia is ready on certain conditions to | comply with the Anglo-French ap- |
peal for a ban on the migration of volunteers to Spain, an official comLmunique said today.
COUNTY'S SUPPLIES T0 COST $150,000
39 Contracts Awarded; Tar Bought for Roads.
County commissions today awarded 39 vearly supply contracts involv ing an estimated $150,000. Contracts were awarded on supply and demand basis with departments ordering supplies as needed. The largest was for tar to be used in resurfacing roads. Commission ors said a survey showed tar was cheapest for the purpose and announced they had rejected all bids on other road materials, Several asphalt and bituminous companies protested, claiming their products are as economical. The Reilly Tar and Chemical Corp. was awarded the contract. “We awarded the contract to the Reilly firm, however, because it handles a local product,” Commissioner John Newhouse said. “The other bidding companies do not handle local products.”
| By T'nited Press { NEW YORK, Dec. 30.— Time | Magazine has chosen Mrs, Wallis | Warfield Simpson as the most significant historial figure of 1936 because she raised issues of “profound world import” and represented the
“culmination of a tide of events sweeping the United Kingdom out of ils cozy past and into a more or less hectic and ‘American’ future.” The weekly magazine will say in its issue of Jan. 4 that the woman for whose love Edward VIII gave up the British throne set in motion events of “greater significance” than President Roosevelt, Prime | Minister Stanley Baldwin, Premier | Mussolini, Fuehrer Hitler, Gen. | Chiang Kai-shek, Stalin and other | world leaders. Time annually selects the news | figure of greatest importance as “the man of the year.” Mrs. Simpson, it will say, is “the woman of the year--the figure for whom 1938 | will be especially remembered.” | “An ordinary divorcee of the ine ternational set, definitely not rich [and seldom or never mentioned in society columns, in the single vear | 1636 Mrs. Simpson became the | most talked about, written about, headlined and interest-compelling person in the world,” the magazine will say. “In these respects no woman |in history ever equaled her, for no | press or radio existed to spread the | news.” | Time will say that “it was chiefly ‘the Church of England which was | damaged, in the very fibre of English Christian morality, by the open | scandal of King Edward and Mrs. | Simpson.”
1
"REGISTERS AS LOBBYIST | The first lobbyist for the new General Assembly registered today in the Secretary of State's office and paid his $3.50 license fee. He is W. C. Carpenter, of the Associated Theater Owners of Indiana, Inc. | His official title is legislative agent.
21 INSTITUTIONS ‘ARE PUT UNDER MERIT SYSTEM
{ i
‘McNutt's Order Relieves Executive Department Of Supervision.
COMPLAINTS REPORTED
Some Politicians Said to Oppose Resultant Patronage Loss.
(Another Story on Page 5)
Gov. McNutt today signed an! executive order transferring 21 state | penal and benevolent institutions | from the Executive Department to | the State Public Welfare Depart- | ment, The action brings these institu- | tions under the merit system estab- | lished by Wayne Coy, welfare direc- | | tor, the Governor said. The transfer | { is to become effective Friday. | | The order, issued with approval | of Gov.-elect Townsend, does not | abolish the boards of trustees of | these institutions, Gov. MeNutt said. | According to Mr. Coy, it will take | | Some time before the completed | program of the Welfare Depart- | ment can be put into operation. Two | Surveys looking to establishment of a new system of classification and | employment of prison inmates now | are being conducted in Indiana by | the Prison Industreis Reorganiza- | tion Administration, Federal agency. |
Can Assign Prisoners |
Under the new State Welfare Act, | the Welfare Department has au- | thority to re-assign prisoners and | inmates in various institutions. By | establishing a new classification, it | was said, first offenders can be sep- | arated from hardened criminals, it was pointed out. The transfer had been Yrecommended by the Committee on Gov= ernmental Economy. Single budgetary control for all the institutions wags considered one of the most advantageous features of the transfer. Opposition to the move was re=ported to have come from “organization” politicians who did not want to see the merit system cut into patronge.
Institutions Listed
The 21 institutions are: Michigan City State Prison, Mich- | igan City Hospital for Criminal Insane, Pendleton State Reformatory, | Putnamville State Farm, Indian- | apolis Women's Prison, Plainfield | Boys’ School, Clermont Girls’ School | and Indianapolis Central State Hosital. b Evansville State Hospital, Madison State Hospital, Logansport State Hospital, Richmond State Hospital, Fort Wayne Feeble Minded School, Muscatatuck Colony, Newcastle Village for Epileptics and Rockville State Sanatorium. Lafayette State Soldiers’ Home, Knightstown State Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Children’s Home, Indianapolis Blind School, Indianapolis Deaf | School and Industrial Aid for Blind, Indianapolis.
FRANKLIN JR. STILL IMPROVING, REPORT
By United Press BOSTON, Dec. 30.-Continued improvement was noted todav in the condition of Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr, confined to Phillips House of Massachusetts General Hospital with a sinus since Nov. 25. The President's son hopes to quit the hospital before New Year's Day. Meanwhile his mother, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and his fiancee, Miss Ethel du Pont, have left a Boston hotel for the home of friends near the hospital. They visit him daily.
TRUCK HITS WOMAN: INJURIES SERIOUS
| |
Mrs, Zona Harbaugh, 74, of 501 S.
South-st and Senate av today and was taken to City Hospital with in. juries described by physicians as serious. The truck was driven by Bernard Chambers, 18, of 2849 N.' Keystone. av, who notified police and told them the woman stepped from a curb and walked into the side of the truck. TOWNSEND STATE CHAIRMAN Gov.-elect Townsend today was named honorary Indiana chairman for the third annual Presi. dent's Birthday Balls the night of Jan. 30.
aR
* SHRINE RISES FOR WILL ROGERS . . .
to keep his suit pressed and he |
wore a high collar when he called on her, but now he sits around the house with his suspenders on and in his sox feet, Of course, women change, too, you know, I was talkin’ to one fella and he was tellin’ me that when he
up nerve now after 10
to go in, but narcied life, when he
ii aa
Le
WHERE PARENTS WAIT IN HOP
infection
Senate-av, was struck by a truck at |
Be Gay, But Not Too Gay, Police Advise
OLICE heads today told police officers to allow Indianapolis citizens to hang their clothes on a New Year Eve hickory limb but not to allow them to go too near the firewater. Acting Chief Fred Simon told his force that the citizens were to be allowed to have a good time—within reason. But drunken driving is not within reason, he said, and should be punished by immediate arrest. Taverns must not sell or give away liquor after legal hours, and sharp eyes must be kept on public dancing to see that there are proper licenses. State excise police also said closing hour laws must be observed, Police officers are not to get even close to the firewater, Chief Simon said.
DELAY HEARING
ON HIT-RUN CASE
James Nielson, Held in Death Of Widow, to Be Arraigned Monday.
Arraignment of James Nielsen, 21, on charges of involuntary manslaughter and failure to stop after an accident in connection with the traffic death of a 67-year-old South Side woman, was delayed in Criminal Court today until Monday. Frank Vancel, Nielsen's alleged companion, is to have a hearing in Municipal Court tomorrow, He is held under $6100 bond on charges of drunkenness, drunken driving and failure to stop after an acecident. The pair is alleged to have struck Mrs. Dona Harbin, 1348 S. Sheffieldav, on Dec. 23. She died two hours later. Her leg was severed in the crash. The youths were arrested later the same day at Vancel's home,
Bound to Grand Jury
Municipal Judge Charles Karabeil bound Nielsen over to the grand jury. nd was set at $5000 on each charge. Declaring he had made arrangements with Prosecutor Herbert
Spencer, Judge Karabell said Niel- |
sen would be brought to trial immediately in Criminal Court. “They will not try this boy immediately,” Defense Attorney Clvde C. Karrer said today. “There is too much speed in this action. We are going to demand a continuance.” When Nielsen was taken a few minutes later before Criminal Court Judge Frank P. Baker, he said he would change his previous pleas of guilty on the two charges to not guilty. At the request of Mr. Karrer, the arraignment was continued. Charges of drunkenness and drunken driving still are pending against Nielsen in Municipal Court, and hearing date has been set for the morning of Jan. | 14,
FOR GRAND LARGENY
Trio Allegedly Broke Into Liquor Tavern.
Three youths today were held by police for a crime allegedly conceived in one tavern and executed against another. Clarence Ellis, 18, and Walter | Brown, 23, both of R. R. 18, Box 22D, and Elbert Riche, 18, of 802 Pros-pect-st, are charged with grand larceny, burglary, and conspiracy
to commit a felony. Ellis and Riche were found hiding
liquor tavern at 4617 E. 10th-st, po- | lice said, after a merchant policeman said he had found the tavern door open and four cases of whisky in a position to be carted off, Brown, police said, was found at his home. He was reported to have fled in an auto, leaving his companions, when he sighted the merchant policeman, who fired a futile shot at him. The youths said, police reported, that they conceived the idea of the burglary while they were loafing in | another tavern:
El
early today in the basement of the |
WHOOP PARTED FROM COUGH IN SCIENCE TESTS
‘Exudate, Not the Germ,
Causes Trouble, Parley | Here Is Told.
Material Might Be Used to Prevent Whoop, Ohio | Men Report.
| (Photo, Page Five) { el | By Science Service The whoop of whooping cough has | been captured, so to speak, in a test | | tube in the laboratory. At least, | the discharge, or exudate, that makes the whooping cough patient | whoop has been produced outside | the body and has all the sticky | | qualities of the material coughed | {out by the patients. | Production in vitro of this sticky | exudate was reported here by Dr. John A. Toomey, Western Reserve University and Cleveland City Hospital at the Society of American Bacteriologists meeting today. Dr. Toomey suggested that this material might be used to protect persons against the worst stages of the disease, and that some way might be found to prevent the whoop altogether by vaccinating against this exudate itself. It is not the whooping cough germ but something the germ produces that causes the cough and whoop, Dr. Toomey explained. The | germ of the first phase of the dis=- | ease, which goes by the scientific [name of Hemophilus pertussis, produces nothing more serious in a human being than rhinitis, a nose inflammation resembling a cold in the head. As the disease progresses, the patient gradually becomes sensitized to the germs and the poisons in their bodies. The patient then begins to whoop and the most severe stage of the disease follows. As the patient's condition gets worse, the germs of the first phase of the disease are found less easily. In view of his finding that tne (Turn to Page Three)
HEAT’ PREVENTS 10-INCH SNOWFALL
Lower Temperature Would Make Big Difference.
HOURLY TEMPERATURES a. 583. 10a. m... 60 383 11 a.m... 60 60 12 (Noon) 61 59 1pm... 60
6 m.,.. Tam... 8a m... Sam ..
Here is a weather story that is done with mirrors. There has been one inch of rainfall in Indianapolis in the last 24 hours. The temperature during that time has averaged 46 degrees. If the temperature, roughly, had been 20 degrees lower, and if there had been the same amount of precipitation, then today there would be 10 inches of snow on the ground. It's going to rain some more tonight, the Weather Bureau said, and tomorrow it is to be colder. Friday, | New Year's Day, it is to be fair and “rather cold.”
City Plans
By United Press \ | NEW YORK, Dec. 30-Big cities looked forward today to the time | when their smoke-laden air will be | purified by an engineering device developed by two men spurred to research by the death of nearly 100 persons from gaseous fumes in Bel- | gium six years ago. Dr. H. F. Johnstone and A. D. | Singh, chemical engineers on the | University of Illinois faculty, an- | nounced their discovery at a sym- | posium on “absorption and extraction” sponsored by the American Chemical Society. Their device, developed after the December, 1930, Belgium tragedy, was described as “air conditioning a | eity’s atmosphere.” It passes air | through a “scpubbing” process which | eliminates sulphur chloride, nitrous and hydrochloric acid fumes, the three gases believed to be extremely { harmful in the air over big cities.
—
| his home Sunday night, the father, Dr. W, W,
| status remains unchanged are John | Coleman and Adolph Schreiber,
$28000 RAISED, HER AWAITS KIDNAPER'S CALL
ys at Home, Hoping to Establish Early Contact With Abductor of 10-Year-Old Youth.
OBEYS RANSOM NOTE INSTRUCTIONS
Doctor Stays
Meanwhile, Police Announce They Are Seeking an Alien Missing From His Home Since Day of Crime.
City Attorney Is Appointed ~ Corporation Counsel; Others Promoted.
(Photos, bottom of page; another, Page Three) TACOMA, Wagh., Dec. 30.-—While police sought a fore eigner whom they suspect of kidnaping Charles Mattson from stayed at home today with $28,000 in worn bills ready to pay the abductor. seized at the Mattson home by a bearded man carrying a pistol, Dr. Mattson has followed every instruction contained ~® A police official, who ree MATTICE HEADS | fused to be quoted, said that | rections to the letter, that he | had inserted a want ad in the Se« attle Times asking further directions ——— | bills of small denominations, | Sheriff John Bjorkland said the from his home since Sunday, the { day of the kidnaping. | that the man approached an under- | world figure and invited him to Floyd Mattice, city attorney, as cor- | fused and after the Mattson boy poration counsel, succeeding: James | Was abducted mentioned the ine Deery, whose resignation is to be- |i, ro nation on to the officers. come effective Friday. Mr. Deery is| The gheriff indicated that the practice, he said. | particulars the description officers Michael Reddington, assistant city | have of “Tim,” the bearded swarthy
By United Press Mattson, During the 60 hours since the 10-year-old boy was in the crudely printed and worn ransom note signed “Tim.” ' the father had obeyed the di- | and had obtained the money in used | suspect sought has been missing | The sheriff said he received a tip Mayor Kern today appointed | join in a “snatch.” The man re= cident to a party who passed the to devote all his time to private | “foreigner” answered in many | man who broke into the Mattson
| attorney, was named city attorney |, ... =. 4 carried Charles away 4 and Clyde E. Baker was appointed | oiter tossing a crumbled pockets «ise
worn ransem note on the floor, That the “foreigner” is the man
Reddington., Mr. assistant |
to succeed Mr, Baker's former position,
| city attorney assigned to the Park | suspected of trying to break inte | Board, is to be filled by John Con- | the home of John C. Franklin Sr.
presumably to kidnap his 5-veare whose ld son, was intimated by officers.
Reports Use of Ladder |
Counsel Gets $4500 | Two efforts were made to enter the Franklin house, near that of Dr,
ner.
Assistant city attorneys
The corporation counsel office car- | ries a $4500 per year salary; city at- | torney, $3600, and assistant city at- | torney, $2500. One $1200 assistant | city attorney position remains to be | filled. Mr. Mattice served as Fulton County prosecuting attorney, deputy | Marion County prosecutor under
Mattson, and after one attempt a ladder was found placed against the house and reaching to a bedroom window, Meanwhile official circles indicate ed confidence that Dr. Mattson was ready to deal with the abductor. A personal ad which appeared in the
| Air Purifier Is Clu
Seattle Times was believed to have Prosecutor Herbert Wilson, and as- | been his first overture to the kide sistant deputy United States Mar- | naper. It read: “Mable—Please give shal. He was appointed city atlor- us your name-—-Ann,” ney by Mayor Kern in 1935. | Dr. Mattson denied he knew any The Works Board today approved | thing about the notice but persons appointment of John V. Carton, | close to him said he did not appear chief clerk in the street commission- | so worried today and indicated the er's office. to a similar position in | (Turn to Page Three) the city engineer's office. John A, — Y Weinbrecht was named to succeed | Carton in the street commissioner's | office.
SANITATION ENGINEER RESIGNS POST HERE
Resignation of Robert Kelly as clarification engineer in the Sanie tation Plant was announced today by the Works Board, which ape pointed D. O. Bender, stream pole lution engineer, to succeed him. | Mr, Kelly is taking a position in | private industry. Mr. Bender has been with the department since 1929. William Curran was appointed assistant stream pollution engineer, and will carry on that work under
imed; Smoke Drive
—
Winter months are “smog” months in Indianapolis, and city officials are planning a definite drive, against the nuisance. J. Webster Clinehens takes office | the supervision of Mr. Bender. All on Jan. 1 as smoke inspector, filling | Shifts were approved by Mayor the vacancy left when George Popp Jr. was elevated from that job to | City Building Commissioner. Mr. Clinehens will have charge of the city’s smoke abatement, He plans to check immediately all complaints against city smoke nui- | sances, and then, later, reopen the | “firemen’s school” for instruction 1o men in charge of boilers and heating equipment in buildings and plants. Mr. Popp revealed that Indianapolis’ request for a WPA smoke survey project may be granted soon. The survey would employ 10 or 12 smoke observers to gather data which would be useful in fighting the smoke nuisance, Mr. Popp said. |
READY TO PAY
MARKETS AT A GLANCE
By United Press
Stocks higher in moderate trading, Bonds higher under lead of rails, Curb stocks higher, Chicago stocks firm, Foreign exchange lower; Japanese ven and German “travel” mark weak, Cotton 8 to 12 points higher, Grains irregularly higher. Rubber breaks 39 to 69 points after early strength. Silver at New York up 's« at 45% cents, FIREMEN ARE PROMOTED Theodore Clements and James A, Moore, Fire Department lieutenants, have been advanced to the rank of captain by the fire promotion board, Fire Chief Kennedy reported.
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
Movies 2 Mrs. Roosevelt 13 Music Curious World 19 Editorials ... 14 Fashions 8 Financial Fishbein
Grin, Bear It 18 In Indpls.....
Lm 5 2
