Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1937 — Page 1

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POLICE WAGE DRIVE

= HOWARD

CONSTITUTION DEFENDED AS COURT MEETS

McReynolds Departs From Text; Wagner Act Ruling Withheld.

BUTLER JOINS DISSENT

VOLUME 49—NUMBER 21

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Fewer Homes Here Empty Than Ever-Before, Report; Jobs and Wages Increase

| Vacancy Situation Lowest On Record, Real Estate Body Says.

| The Property Management Divi- |

sion of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board in a report of a survey issued today, said only one and one-

| half per cent of the more than

‘We Believe in Constitution As Written,” Justice Says At Session.

pee

By United Press WASHINGTON, April McReynolds today depaiied from the prepared text of his clissenting opinion in a| Supreme Court minor case today to assert tha: ‘we believe in the Constitution is written | and not whittled away b. tenuous reasoning.” Justice McReynolds’ reriarks, regarded as of significance ii the light | of the present judiciary cciitroversy, were presented in a disient to a | majority ruling which approved a | District of Columbia statiite which | provides for trial without jury of certain petty offenders. =i] Justice Butler joined Justice Mc- | Reynolds in the dissent which was virtually the only business of the Court decision day. |

Wagner Verdict Delz yed

The expected Supreme Court de- | cision on constitutionality of the | Wagn

—Justice

Labor Relations Act was | not presented. Next Mond=y now is | the earliest date at which the Wag- | ner opinion can be announced. Speaking of Ethel Coawans, convicted without jury trial of wunlicensed selling of railroad tickets, Justice McReynolds emphasized the fact that it was a woman who was involved—a fact which immediately brought to listeners’ minds last week's bitter court divisiori over the Washington State Minimum Wage Law for women. “Our social predilections are so strong within us that ve cannot consider this ‘a petty offense,” said Justice McReynolds of tie ticketselling case. “What is to jecome of ‘the other solemn declarations of the amendment? | (Sixth ariendment guaranteeing right of trial by jury). “Does this mean that sie may be denied a speedy trial, a rig hit to appear and make the charges, to be| (Turn to Page Thr:e)

UNDERWOOD ON "RIAL | IN EMBEZZLING CASE

Trial of Harry Underwood on charges of embezzlement began today in Criminal Court before Special Judge Remster Bingham. He is accused of having embezzled $1500 in rent collections from Branit Broth- | ers. realtors. Underwood has been he¢id under high bond since last Jun:. He is said to have confessed tc Sheriff Ray that he lost $60,000 to Indianapolis gamblers. Since thei, it is reported, he repudiated a part of his confession.

ON GARBAGE THIEVES

All police radio cars were instructed today to watch jor North Side garbage thieves. : Donald Bloodgood, City Sanitation Plant manager, said tlie thieves take approximately $30,000 a year from the city’s income. Garbage thieves, he said, sell the loot to farmers for feed. He said it is against the State law for garbage to be taken by anyon: but the city.

2 STREET PROJECTS PASSED BY EOARD

The Works Board today approved §

the widening and resurfacing of 16th St., between Alabam: St. and Central Ave. at an . estimated cost of $14,425. . It approved the removal of streetcar tracks and repaving of Pennsylvania St. between 43d and 46th Sts. at an estimated cost f $15,747. The board also accepted! bids on six trucks. - :

BOB BURNS

o Says. OLI.YWOOD, : Anril 5. Sometimes I think the :ystem of punishin’ law-breakers by ine is not altogether fair. When two people corimit the same offense, they should be punished equally and it hurts some people more to dig up the price of a fine than it does others. That's the reason punishment by fine is never gonna stop erime among people who can af ord it. I knew one old man down home

who use’ta hang out with the boys |

on Saturday night and !ie always

wound up by gittin’ in trouble. He |

was brought before the judge one Saturday; night and the j dge fined him $5. | - The old man dug in lis pocket and eon out a bill and handed it to the judge and he says, “Well, Judge, I'been workin’ preity steady this week—here's $10—that’ll pay to and.includin’ next Satur-

| vacancy ever experienced. {that the ungccupied properties are | in need of repairs and, in many in- | stances, undesirable.

[40,000 rental units it supervises is | | vacant.

The- report said this is the lowest It added

The housing and apartment shortage, the report cited, has caused a minimum of moving. It added that where vacancies are to occur, friends or relatives make application to rent weeks and sometimes months ahead. The division's -survey revealed,

| that since 1935, the number of prop- | erties under its supervision has in-

creased from 30,000. | Rentals collected by ‘the division now total $8,000,000 a year, an increase of $1,500,000 in a year, according to the report.

| 2027 State Firms Show 3.3 Per Cent Gain

In Employment.

The 20-month upward trend in | State payrolls and employment continued last month, according to Martin F. Carpenter, State Employment Service director. A total of 2027 Indiana firms reported an average gain of 3.3 per {cent in employment for March, with 168,532 registered workers. Payrolls increased 9.5 per cent over February, according to the preliminary March reports. Mr. Carpenter co-operates with the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in his compilation. ‘Largest job gains over the previous month in Indiana towns was noticed in Anderson, 12.4 per cent; Marion, 12.9 per cent; New Albany and Jeffersonville, 24.2 pdr cent and Evansville, 104 per - cent. Flood rehabilitation and labor disturbances were said to accoupt for part of the increase. Indianapolis,. with 521 reporting firms, showed a March payroll of $583,931 for 24,766 employees. Em-

In the survey an- increase of 50 [ployment here gained 1.8 per cent

per cent was reported) in the employment of repairmen and craftsmen over last year. Employment of 600 artisans and helpers was reported. : | Ze The report said $1,125,000 was spent last year for repairs and materials.

Home Building Here Triples :

by the Indianapolis today

A survey Water Co.

er this year than last, with 98 per cent of “modern” residential properties occupied. The. company found 126 residential properties under construction in

March compared to only 42 one year

ago.

their study shows a greater occupancy of desirable homes during March than was disclosed by any previous survey. Storeroom vacancies total 454. compared with 633 a year ago, 864 two years ago, and 936 three years ago. Twenty-three vacant factory buildings and ‘warehouses were found, compared to 48 in 1936.

U.S. BOARD MOVES

TO BOLSTER BONDS

By United Press WASHINGTON, April 5.— The Federal Reserve Board's Open Market Committee prepared today to go into the public securities markets as a buyer to support Government bonds, which have been slipping

night. It will be the first time in the Roosevelt Administration that the Committee has announced its intention to conduct open market operations on a broader scale than has been necessary from time to time in

folios.

COURT BILL FOES SAY

Postmaster General Doesn’t Knpw His Votes, Charge.

By United Press WASHINGTON, April 5.—Opponents of Supreme Court enlargement asserted today that outcome of the ongressional battle over President Roosevelt's judiciary program will be a ‘shock’ to Postmaster General Farley and other Administration leaders. Senator Wheeler (D. Mont.), active leader of opposition to the Court bill, and Senator Holt (D. Va.), struck at Administration tactics in the controversy, denouncing Mr. Farley's statement that, after Congress finished talking, “we will call the roll and we will have plenty of votes to put this over.” Senator Holt assailed Mr. Farley’s statement as a ‘dead giveaway” of the way in which the campaign is being pushed.

Water company officials declared |

slowly, ‘but steadily in the last fort- |

connection with readjustment of reserve banks’ Government bond port- |

State Asks Dea th for Case Defendants

and the weekly payroll 3.7 over February. Losses in Terre Haute

Losses were reported in Terre | Haute, with 69 firms, and in ConI nersville, where 11 firms reported. | Apparent wage rate jumps in Con- | nersville brought the weekly payrolls (Turn to Page Three)

ROOSEVELT ASKS PERMANENT CCC

Message to Congress Favors Maximum Enrollment 0f 315,000.

revealed home | construction here three times great- |

| ! (Text, Page 12) | By United Press WASHINGTON, April 5.—President Roosevelt. recommended to Congress today that the Civilian Conservation Corps be made a permanent part of the Federal recovery and relief program. In a special message to congress, Mr. Roosevelt set the maximum enrollment of CCC youths at 300,000, together with 10,000 Indians and 5000 enrollees in U. S. territories and insular possessions. Cost of maintaining about 300,000 CCC youths in camps will be $300,000,000 for the 1938 fiscal year. The President named that figure in his budget estimates last January. In line with the President's rec{ommendations it was believed that | the number of camps would be reduced gradually toward 1500 during the fiscal year. The CCC has established a policy of placing aproximately 200 enrollees in each camp. Congressmen may start a fight on the floor to increase the total to 400,000.

Bright

Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., April 5.— Vurtis Neal, 22, and Hugh Marshall, 19, today sat handcuffed and heard the State’s attorney call them “rats, roughnecks, ruffians and murderers” and ask a Circuit Court Jury to send them to the electric chair. The jury was listening to Fred Cramer, Shelby prosecutor, opening the State's final arguments in the trial of the two youths for the murder of William H. Bright, Indianapolis pharmacist. Conviction as charged carries with it a mandatory death sentence. Marshall chewed gum as Prosecutor Cramer spoke and Neal sat with his hands over his mouth, head down and dejected. Mrs. Lois Cherry Bright, widow of the slain man, cried aloud during Mr. Cramer's hour and a half plea: in which he repeated details of the murder. ~ Attorney Warren Brown was the

plead. George R. Tolen, special prosecutor, is to make the State's closing argument.

first of the defense attorneys to

MONDAY, APRIL 5,

PARIS’ PARENTS OVERJOYED HE

They Believe Son Suffered From Amnesia During Absence.

DISCOVERED IN ILLINOIS

Questioned by Police.

Times Special BARGERSVILLE, Ind. April §.— Mr. and Mrs. James Paris today prepared to welcome home their son, Lawrence, 22-year-old vacuum sweeper salesman, who was found today after being missing since March 24. The youth was found, asleep in his parked automobile, at East St. Louis, Ill. While the parents awaited his return, Capt. Matt Leach of the State Police sent two troopers to East St. Louis to return him for questioning. “I feel relieved,” the mother sobbed when informed of her son's being found safe and unharmed. “I never lost confidence in him. I knew he was all right and true to his girl and to his old mother.”

Happy Prayers Answered

Mrs. Paris said- she was happy that “God has answered my prayers as He always has.” She added that his fiancee, Miss Gail St. John, Morgantown schoolteacher, would be elated over his return. Miss St. John had expressed the fear her fiance had been the victim of foul play. The father said he, too, was relieved. Both parents expressed the belief that their son was suffering with amnesia during his disappearance. : The father said he would pay any bills his son has contracted. He added. that his son's employer had told him the youth could have his job back when he returns. Faces Questioning Although the younger Paris is not wanted for any offense, an investigation after his disappearance revealed he was a youth of exemplary habits. Capt. Leach indicated he would be questioned closely. The State Police captain a few days ago advanced the theory that the youth, who drove to and from Indianapolis daily, was Killed by robbers who probably had stolen his car. It was his theory that the two bandits sought in the holdup murder of Clayton Potts, C. & G. Potts Foundry Co. treasurer, had commandeered Paris’ car in their getaway after abandoning their own. The first trace of the yout since the search for him was instituted on March 30, was found, Saturday. State Police learned that he registered at a leading Chicago hotel the day of his disappearance and remained there until March 31 when he left, hotel officials said, | without paying his $28 bill.

Each side has three hours for argument. Judge Roscoe C. O’Byrne’s charge to the jury will follow and

it is likely that fate of the youths will be placed in the hands of the jury of 11 farmers and a retired railroader before night. At the conclusion of the State's rebuttal testimony late Saturday, Judge O’Byrne overruled a second defense motion for a directed verdict of acquittal on the second count in the indictment. It charges murder in the commission of a robbery. The defense contends the robbery was completed in Marion County. Hugh Marshall's testimony was completed late Saturday and he was followed on the stand by two physicians who said their examinations revealed him a “high-grade moron.” They said his intelligence hardly measured up to that of a 12-year-old child. Both youths are basing their defense on insanity pleas. Two alienists who examined Neal testified that he was mentally unsound, but not insane.

After having occupied Ford’s

¢ t. j . (Copyright, 1937)

of the workers was in good order.

ofl

FORD SIT-DOWNERS MARCH OUT . . . 0

Kansas City assembly plant for 25

hours, 650 strikers marched out on assurances of Ford executives that the 350 men laid off a day earlier would be reinstated. The march-out

1 .

ea

IS FOUND SAFE

Leach Says Youth Is to Be,

1937

More Rain Due In City Tonight, Bureau Says

LOCAL TEMPERATURES 45 10 a, m... 47 11 a. m... 45 12 (Noon) 45 1p m...

a. m... 46 a.m... 46 a. m.., 47 a. m.., 48 More rain was scheduled for tonight by the Weather Bureau, which held out hope for a fair, though colder, day tomorrow. Farmers, who have been waiting patiently to plant oats, will have a few more days of waiting. Fields in this area are entirely too wet to work. The Weather Bureau reported rainfall for the 24 hours ending at 6 a. m. totalled .78 inch. A half inch of that fell in the 12 hours ending at midnight last night.

LOYALISTS: PUSH WAR OFFENSIVE

Hammer at Rebels Over Wide Area; Insurgents Hold Firm at Burgos.

By United Press Spanish Loyalists, dominant in the air and gaining on land, pounded at the Rebels over a widef’ area today.

Air raids “were carried out from the Madrid area to the South Coast,

.causing heavy damage and ‘casual-

ties to the Rebel forces. Loyalists were definitely on the offensive in all the southern region, and making progress. In the north, Rebels were putting up a desperate fight and claimed to be making gains. Lines defending Burgos, Rebel capital in the north, held firm against a Loyalist drive. A parallel situation existed at Bilbao, important seaport on the Bay of Biscay, where Loyalists slowed Rebel drive. Internationally the 27 nations taking part in the nonintervention agreement began organizing their “control” and blockade of Spain by land and sea to prevent the landing of more foreign ‘‘volunteers.”

Reports Vary as to Movie Star's Wounds

By United Press . MADRID, April 5.—Dr. Herman E. Erben of New York said today that Errol Flynn, movie star, Was wounded slightly near the left eye by a-Rebel machine gun bullet in the University City area Saturday night. = “I carried Flynn to a first aid station,” Dr. Erben said. “I do not think the wound will affect his eye, though it was close. Flynn left for Valencia yesterday morning.”

By United Press VALENCIA, April 5.—Errol Flynn, movie star, was in Valencia looking healthy yesterday afternoon. A correspondent saw him buying newspapers at a book stall. Others said they saw Mr. Flynn at the bathing beach during the afternoon, in the best of health.

GREENCASTLE GIR WINS FILM CONTRACT

By United Press HOLLYWOOD, April 5.—A telephone girl, a Hoosier news-reel fashion model, and a Brooklyn show girl won Hollywood movie contracts today after three years’ effort. : The contracts were awarded by 20th Century Fox to Elizabeth Palmer. Greencastle, Ind., who posed for news-reel fashions; Iva Stewart of Hebron, Me., telephone girl who was ‘Miss Maine” in a beauty contest, and Irma Wilson, New York.

DIES AS HE AWAITS 81ST TRANSFUSION

Times Special NINEVEH, Ind. April 5.—Roscoe (Sammy) Hardin. who died Saturaay before he could be given his 81st blood transfusion; was to be buried here this afternoon. * The 38-year-old Shelbyville resident was a victim of Bantis disease. He was taken to Robert Long Hospital last Friday for the transfusion, but died before it could be- given. His body was returned to his home in Shelbyville.

. TIRESOME JOB FOR FIREMEN . . . . . .

For a fire to rubber at, you should have been in Washington, D. C.,

when a big junk yard flamed up! that eddies thickly upward gives you an idea of what it was like. discarded automobile tires fed the flames,

More than 100,000

That huge pall of black smoke

A $41

The Indianapolis Times

FORECAST: Cloudy with rain and colder tonight, becoming fair tomorrow.

Entered as Second-Class Majer : Ind.

at Postoffice, Indianapolis,

F. D, R. FACES SPLIT IN PARTY ON SIT-DOWNS

Senator Byrnes Leading

Rebellion Among Southern Democrats.

C. 1. 0. PUSHING OIL DRIVE

Lewis Group Seeking to Organize Million in Southwest.

. (Editorial, Page 10) By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, April 5.—Rebellion stirring among Southern Democrtaic leaders in Congress over the sit-down strike situation is symp-

tomatic of a condition in the party

which may presage trouble for President Roosevelt, if it does not actually forecast a definite cleavage. When Senator Byrnes (D. S. C)), once the fair-haired “Jimmy” in White House councils, started his move to condemn the sit-down technique, it looked very much like the waning of the cordiality which Mr. Roosevelt and his Southern leaders have shown for so long to a doubting world. ; The sit-down strike, with all its portents to inborn conservatism, is just the sort of issue to crystalize the distaste which some Southern leaders have shown privately for the Roosevelt policies. Senator Byrnes merely became the mouthpiece for many Southerners who, publicly on a small scale and privately in a large way, have been criticizing the President for not speaking out against the sit-down strike and for not, as they express it, putting a check on John L. Lewis. Gathered about the President at the White House a week ago, Scuthern leaders talked plainly and sought a public statement. This having ‘failed, the South Carolina Senator took matters in his own hands. There is a difference of approach which defines the two viewpoints withih the party and which roughly divides the Southern Democrats on one hand from the Eastern, Northern and Western Democrats on the other.

C. I. 0. Enters Picture |

From the Southerners, with a occasional exception such- as Senator Black of Alabama, comes bitter denunciation, with some privatel shouting “anarchy.” The other group insists that the sit-down must be considered in the light of many other things—for one, the failure of industry to obey the Wagner Labor Act. and for another the long-time attitude of the courts o the rights of labor to organize. Senator Wagner (D. N. Y.) gave expression to this second philosophy.. So. alone among Republicans, > (Turn to Page Three)

{11,000 KILLEDIN US. ACCIDENTS IN 1936

400,000 Permanently Crippled, Conference Told.

By United. Press : WASHINGTON, April 5.—The annual conference of state and provincial health officers heard today that the toll of accidental deaths in the United States is growing and that last year 111,000 persons were killed in mishaps. Motor: vehicles alone accounted for at least one death or injury in one out of every 30 families, according to A. V. Rohweder, vice president of the National Safety Council and chairman of the Minnesota Public Safety Committee. Mr. Rohweder said that in addition to accident fatalities, in 1936 400.000 persons were permanently crippled: and more than 10,000,000 others suffered temporary disabling injuries.

Delicious Steaks! Balanced Meals. Charley’s Restaurant, 144 E. Ohio St.—Adv.

ENJOYS VISIT TO SENATE .

The usual intently serious expression of Lord Tweedsmuir, Gov- | Grin, Bear It

HOME

FINAL

a=

PRICE THREE CENTS

Dutch Firm, Unrep

By United Press

was that a mountain top ranger post.

said the boy’s mother confirmed

By United Press

BURBANK, Cal., April

{

| the plane down safely in some

lines, left Saturday afternoon

FORMER TIMES EDITOR I$ DEAD

Talcott Powell, 36, Succumbs to Appendicitis at Greenwich, Conn.

(Editorial, Page 10; Photo, Page 3.)

By United Press GREENWICH, Conn. April 5.— Funeral services will be held temorrow for Talcott W. Powell, 36-year-old author, who died at the Greenwich Hospital yesterday morning following an operation for a ruptured appendix. Mr. Powell, former editor of The Indianapolis Times, is survived by his widow, Helen Ranney Powell; a son, David Talcott; a daughter, Edes Laurence; his parents, Dr. Lyman P. Powell and Gertrude Wilson Powell of Mountain Lakes, N. J., and a brother, Francis W. Powell, of New York City. The services will be conducted by Dr. Powell at Christ Episcopal Church. Cremation will follow at Ferncliff Crematory, White Plains, N. Y. Mr. Poweil was born in ZLans‘downe, Pa., April 27, 1900. He attended Connecticut Wesleyan University. He entered newspaper work in 1921 and in 1933 he became editor of The Indianapolis Times, retiring in July. 1935. He also was formerly connected with the New York WorldTelegram. i From October, 1935, to July, 1936, Mr. Powell was in the tropics and the Caribbean Sea, where he ob‘tained information for his later writings. He was author of the book, “Tattered Banners,” published (Turn to Fage Three)

LAFAYETTE MAN SAYS HE’LL SUE PROMOTER

By United Press MARION, Ind.. April 5.—George Craig, Lafayette. today told authorities he would file charges of swindling against Warren T. Marr, alleged former Detroit millionaire held in jail here for violation of the State Securities Law. Craig said he gave Government bonds and $1000 in cash to Marr in a Detroit hotel in exchange for: 32 shares of stock in the. Great American National, Inc., which state officials say is a nonexistent company.

FIRST LADY TO MAKE WORLD PEACE PLEA

WASHINGTON, April 5.—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will broadcast a plea for peace tomorrow night, on the twentieth anniversary of the entrance of the United States into the World War. ?

»

ernor General of Canada, gave way to unbridled merriment when he was entertained by Vice President John N. Garner during a visit i *~ the United States Senate in Washington,

5.

orted Since Takeoff

From California Field Saturday.

BULLETIN

GALLUP, N. M., April 5.—Wreckage of the Douglas transport plane, missing since Saturday with eight persons, was reported sighted today. The report here, unconfirmed from any other source,

sighted the plane from his signal

A son of the ranger reportedly watched the plane battle through a snowstorm and then crash into the mountains. The telephone operator at St. John’s Ariz., who did not learn the ranger’s name,

that a plane flew over the station

atop Escondido Peak, Saturday afternoon.

5.—Douglas Aircraft officials

today had no trace of a giant airliner with eight aboard which has been missing 44 hours, but they clung to the hope that Pilot Glen Moser and Copilot Joe Wolfolk had brought

isolated field.

The 21-place transport, destined for the Dutch Klim Airfrom Union Air Terminal here on a routine delivery flight for New York. Two Douglas pilots and six others, mostly aircraft company officials or ‘relatives, went along for the pleasure flight. :

© The plane headed east 45 minutes behind the regular Transcontinental Western Air

ing forced to fly “blind” through snowstorms and rain in Arizona. It ‘was believed the plane. may have been forced down in the rugged and sparsely settled Arizona or New Mexico area. | George W. Stratton, assistant to the Douglas Aircraft Co. president, said that a day and night of close watching by T. W. A. pilots on the regular flights over the route had failed to reveal a trace of the ship. It carried no radio transmitter and was not on a scheduled trip, so for more than 30 hours Douglas Aircraft Corp withheld the news, hop= ing it. had landed safely and was

quarters. ; Today the Bureau of Air Come merce directed a search covering the western half of the country from Burbank to Kansas City. If the plane had crashed it would be the nation’s ninth major airways disaster in three months and it might increase the death toll in that time to 66. Passengers. aboard were: Bere nard Troy Jr. 33, Santa Monica, Cal, parking station operator; George Kent, address unknown; Mr. and Mrs. Merl Estey, Santa Monica, Douglas engineer and wife; Mrs. B. B. Brunderlin, Santa Moni= ca, mother of a Douglas engineer, and E. E. Moser, pilot's father.

SIX CHILDREN PERISH AS FIRE LEVELS HOME

By United Press PORT ALLEGANY, Pa., April 5.— Trapped by an explosion and fire in their second-floor bedroom, six chil« dren were burned to death today while firemen, lacking water, looked on helplessly. The victims were the children of Gerald Sweezey, 40, a chemical factory worker, and ranged in age from 5 months to 13 years. Mr. Sweezey and his wife, only survivors of the family of eight, were taken to a hospital with serious burns.

BRIEF SESSION HINTED FOR WELFARE BOARD

The Marion County Welfare Board was to meet in monthly sese sion at 2 p m. today with one chair vacant unless Superior Judge L. Ert Slack reconsiders his refusal to accept reappointment. Board members said only routine business would be transacted. They indicated no action would be taken on approving the salary of Thomas Neal, who succeeded Joel A. Baker as Welfare Director.

$567,978 NET INCOME REPORTED BY UTILITY

Net income of the Public Service Co. of Indiana last year was $567,=

1935, it was reported to stockholders at their annual meeting here today. Gross earnings from supplying utility service in 52 central and southern Indiana counties were $14,132,668.75 compared with $12,« 497,329.22 in 1935.

come was $497,475 less than the ree quirements for preferred dividends,

~ TIMES FEATURES _ ON INSIDE PAGES

BOOKS sessees 8 Bridge veseese - 4 | Broun ..seee. 10 | Comics 14 | Mrs. Roosevelt i Crossword ... 14 | Music | Curious World 15| Obituaries. ... { Editorials .... 10 Pegler ....... Fashions 4 Pyle .... { Financial .... 11| Radio ....... | Fishbein ssees 9|Scherrer ..... {Flynn ....... 9|Serial Story.. | Forum ....... 10| Short Story.. 14 | Society eieices In Indpls..... 3!Sports ..e.... Jane Jordan.. 4|State Deaths. Johnson ..... 10 Wiggam «see

Merry-Go-R’'d Movies ° Mrs. Ferguson

sess esse

transport which reported be-

‘unable to communicate with head-

978.16, compared with $311,498.35 in:

The report said that the net ine.

t

REPORT SIGHTING PLANE WRECKAGE IN NEW MEXICO

Giant Craft, En Route East for Shipment to

i

B