Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1937 — Page 1
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Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Increasing cloudiness tonight; probably showers tomorrow; warmer.
Final Home Late Stocks
SCRIPPS — ’ARD VOLUME 49—NUMBER 56 fe
SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1937
Entered as Second-Class Matter Ind.
at Postoffice, Indianapolis,
seve
PRICE THREE CENTS
.. STATETOFIRE .. 20070 TIGHTEN
PARTY, REPORT
Heller, Brennan, Beattey And Governor Confer On Patronage.
LIST BEING DRAWN UP
Heller, Brennan Beattey and Governor Confer on Patronage.
By United Press Approximately 200 employees, none of them holding executive positions, will be dismissed Monday, the United Press was told today by an Administration execu-
tive. Most of the dismissals will be Marion County persons, it was indicated. ’ Changes will he made on the indorsement of county and precinct leaders to solidify party ranks on the basis of returns from last November’s election, it was said. Patronage conferences were held by a group of party leaders yesterday afternoon and the list of dismiss+ Ss was being drawn today in a meeting of Dick Heller, patronage secretary: Ed Brennan, budget director, and James Beattey, secretary of the Democratic State Committee, with Governor Townsend.
Early Resignation of Morgan Expected
(Text of Fenton Statement, Page 12)
By United Press Early resignation of Ivan C. Morgan, Austin, as state Republican chairman was anticipated today as the aftermath of a factional outbreak during the last two days. Although Mr. Morgan emerged victorious from a stormy State Committee session in which Harry Fenton was ousted as secretary, political observers doubted he would hold the chairmanship much longer than four months. They believed he would be satisfied with his victory in that skirmish and eventually resign under pressure of enemies acquired through that meve. Mr. Fenton was regarded one of the most popular leaders of the party, having served as secretary for 12 years.
Removal Unexplained
No reason was given for Mr. Fenton's removal. The movement was led by Ralph Gates, Columbia City, Fourth District chairman, whose fight to succeed Don Irwin, Frankfort, as chairman resulted in the compromise selection of Mr. Morgan. Mr. Irwin had replaced Mr. Morgan three years earlier. Mr. Gates, it was said, still aspires to the chairmanship as a possible stepping stone to the nomination for Governor and may be instrumental in Mr; Morgan's early retirement. James A. Slane, Lafayette, candidate for Secretary of State last No-
vember, was chosen to succeed Mr..
Fenton during the committee session which also brought: 1. Charges by Mr. Fenton that Mr. Morgan and several committee members were guilty of party disloyalty. 2. Resignation of Mrs. Beryl Holland, Bloomington, as state vice chairman and selection of Mrs. Eleanor Barker Snodgrass, Nashville, as her successor. 3. A threat by officers of the Republican Editorial Association that the committee could not expect its members’ ‘support in the next campaign if Mr. Fenton was ousted.
Fenton Ouster 13 to 9
Despite the editors’ threat and a warning from: George A. Ball, national committeeman and heaviest campaign contributor, that the 1938 campaign could not be financed if a split occurred, Mr. Fenton was ousted by a vote of 13 to 9. The two Lake County members of the committee failed to attend or send proxies. Mr. Ball suggested that the committee postpone definite action for (Turn to Page Three) p=
BOB BURNS : Says: Ql0y v oo D.
most professions like bein’ a doctor or a lawyer, people go to school for years and then they expect to open . up an office and start it gradually : and finally build up a pretty good business, but out here in Hollywood, it's different. There’s been so many cases where a person got a good part in a picture and made a success overnight and they’ve jest kinda gotten to be an impatient lot. The other day on the set where we are makin’ “Mountain Music” we were usin’ a bunch of children and I happened to notice one little red-headed boy walkin’ up and down with a worried look on his face and I says “What's the matter. Sonny—you look worried.” And he says, “Yes, I was jest thinkin’ ” he says “I'm four years old today and what have I got to
show for it?” (Copyright, 1937)
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State : 5 Chairman, Here for Parley,
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Ww andering 9-Year-Old
- Comes Home,
ine - year -old Freda stayed away from her home; 508 S. Missouri St., last night and pre-
that lasted until 3 this morning. he wandered in at breakfast time and said she had stayed with friends near an address where the family formerly lived. Mrs. Wagner spanked her and sent her to bed.
That's where she was at press
time.
LANDIS LAUDS WORK OF SEC
Urges Legal Training of "Public Nature.
Securities and Exchange Commission, | today called for legal training of a |public nature and predicted a bright future for the SEC. Before speaking at a luncheon meeting of the Associated Harvard Clubs| 40th annual convention in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, Mr. Landis, in an| interview said that “legal training today must be much more [public than formerly as a result of the extension of governmental functions into business.” Mr.| Landis ‘who will leave the SEC next month to accept a position as dean of the Harvard Law school, declared that law suits are no longer between two individuals, but that today | society as a whole is involved. “We must. train not merely practioners of the law, but men- who will advance the law itself,” he said. He praised the value of the SEC, asserting that more than half a billion dollars in worthless securities have been kept off the market by Commission regulations. The SEC, he said, |“is a great achievement in bringing orderly. sensible procedures into the field of finance.”
cunt M. Landis, chairman of the
Mr.| Landis said the SEC can do |
much to make impossible tremendous price swings and “such fiascos” as the Kruger crash. Market manipulation has been lessened (Turn to Page Three)
THREE STATES WANT
CONFESSED SLAYER
Custody of Triple Killer Not Yet Determined.
By United Press POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., May 15. — Assistant District Attorney Eli Gellert said today he had not decided which of three states will get custody of Lester Brockelhurst, 23-year-old confessed slayer of three persons. “I am not sure even that I have the power to determine which state will get Brockelhurst,” Mr. Gellert said. The youth is wanted for murder in Illinois, Arkansas and Texas. District Attorney John BR. Schwartz will return to Poughkeepsie Monday when Brockelhurst and his 18-year-old companion, Bernice Felton, are scheduled fcr a hearing
‘on charges of illegally possessing a
revolver. : Sheriff Paul Johnson of Rockford, Ill; waited for a decision. Mr. Gellert said “Illinois has the inside track because it has a man here.” Other states mailed warrants. Mr. Gellert said his statement that Illinois would have the “inside track” did not mean that he definitely had turned Brockelhurst over to Illinois. The award must await the arrival of Mr. Schwartz and the hearing on the revolver charge, he said.
COWBOY LEGISLATOR GASSAWAY IS DEAD
By United Press : COALGATE, Okla, May 15.— Percy Gassaway, who wore highheeled boots and a 10-gallon hat into the halls of Congress when a Representative from = Oklahoma, died today of heart attack. He was 52. ' Mr. Gassaway was a caustic speech maker and his attacks on Huey Long brought him into national attention. He championed birth control in Congress—although the father of three sons and three daughters—and hit the picture pages when he posed with his spurred $50 boots propped up on his desk at Washington.
Movie Stars Get Cheers and Wails As Pickets Parade in Tops and Tails
The strike situation today:
HOLLYWOOD—Cheers of fans drown out jeers of pickets as stars attend opening of “Captains Courageous.”
WASHINGTON-—C. 1. O. charters Unions in 21 new fields in its battle with A, F. of L.
DETROIT—Ford opens counterattack on C. I. O. with printed cards.
ST. LOUIS—Employees of seven hote's strike for union recognition.
By United Press HOLLYWOOD, May 15.—Striking movie technicians were undaunted today by their poor showing at the brilliant premier of “Captains Cour-
Wagner
bat Tc a neighborhood search |
EDWARD READY T0 REVEAL HIS WEDDING DATE
Expected to Proclaim Nuptial Plans on Tuesday.
WALLIS FAVORS JUNE
Every Detail of Plans Are Complete; Honeymoon To Be in Austria.
By Uniled Press
MONTS, France, May 15.—The Duke of Windsor is expected to announce Tuesday noon the date for his wedding with Mrs. Wallis Warfield. It was understood the announcement would be published in the Court Circular at London, which records activities of the royal family, and thus accord official recognition of the romance which cost the Duke his throne. Information here is that the Duke and Mrs. Warfield have completed every detail of their wedding plans. They are to be married within three weeks, it is understood, and most probably during the first few days of June. Mrs. Warfield
her third wedding, it is said. Plan Austrian Honeymoon
The Duke and his bride are expected to leave by automobile for a honeymoon in Austria after the ceremony and at Wasserleonburg, near the Italian and Jugoslavian borders, seek seclusion. . A long succession of telephon calls and "visits from secret emissaries is believed to have resulted in an agreement between the Duke and his family regarding the wedding and his financial future. Confusing as rumors make the situation at present, belief is here: 1. That Mrs. Warfield will rank, with the courtesy title of Her Royal Highness, among the wives of the King's brothers. 2. That the Duke will receive a
| 000 in cash and a trust fund suf- | ficient to provide him and Mrs. | Warfield about $100,000 a year each.
Provision for Wife
3. That provision will be made for continuance of the trust fund for Mrs. Warfield’s benefit in event the Dukes dies before she does. 4, That in event a child is born of the union, it will take the customary title of prince or princess and will be provided for by means of the trust fund. The child would not have any claim to succession to the throne.
FRIEND SAW DANGER,
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BUT IT WAS T00 LATE
Warns Mother Baby Might Smother—He Had.
This morning Mrs. Butann Westerfield found she had to g6® down
the home of her good friends, Mr. and Mrs. Carol Dauglussa12 Ww. Minnesota St., just around the corner. She was going to ask Mrs. Douglass to stay with her children. She knocked on the door and Mrs. Douglass arose and let her in. She came to the bedroom doorway and remarked to Mrs. Douglass that it seemed to be dangerous for them to have their four-months-old baby, Ralph Eugene, sleep between them. “He might smother,’ she said. Mr. Douglass, who was still in bed, noticed the child had crawled down beneath the covers. He reached down, found him. The baby had smothered to death,
HOLD JULIETTA SUITS BROUGHT BY ORDER
Marion County Commissioners today denied that County Attorney John Linder was undertaking on his own initiative to collect nearly $100,000 from estates of former Julietta Hospital patients, as he stated this week. 4:1 Commissioners John Newhouse and Clarence Wheatley said that they had ordered him to bring the suits a year ago, and that furthermore the estates would yield no more than $12,000.
ageous,” where only a few of their pickets got within jeering distance of the courtway where the stars posed. Pickets had been ordered out in top hats and tails, or at least in dinner jackets, to detract from the movie stars and harass the producers on “first night.” Only eight pickets were allowed near the Carthay Theater entrance, and only two of the eight complied
both wore dinner jackets. One wore a derby and carried a yellow cane. The main body of 200 pickets was held back 100 yards from the theater, where their boos at arriving stars were often drowned out by cheers from the crowd of admirers. A hundred police were on hand to keep order, Charles Lessing,
tN:
wants to be a June bride in this, |
financial settlement of about $500,- |
town and she went, at 7 o'clock, to | St
with the request to dress. They.
5
Five persons were injured,
LAYS COLLISION TO BAD BRAKES
Motorman’s Theory Denied By Company; Pedestrian | Is Killed.
MARION COUNTY TRAEFIC TOLL TO DATE
Accidents Injured .............
Five persons were injured. and an i estimated 20 others scratched and bruised when two College Ave. street-
cars collided head-on at Fairfield and College Aves. today. A Franklin woman was injured in an interurban-auto collision south of the city. Meanwhile, the Marion County traffic tol! was boosted to 60 for the year with the death of a pedestrian struck Thursday by an automobile, She was the fifth accident victim here since Wednesday.
Four Women Hurt
The four women injured in the College Ave. collision were: Mrs. Carrie Martin, 45, of 370 W. 26th St. Mrs. Rose Cohn, 35, of 4401 E. New York St.; chest injuries. Mrs. Anna Platt, 34, 4002 Broadway; chest injuries. Mrs. Emma Shadinger, 43 of 302 Buckingham Drive. They were under observation at Methodist Hospital, where attaches | said they did not believe their conj«ditions were serious. Sixteen-year-old Jean Dirroh still | was in City Hospital this afternoon, with elbow injuries. Three women were treated at City Hospital and released. They were Miss Ruth Jones, 17, of 2630 Cornell Ave.; Mrs. Sue Moran, 46, of 1229 E. 16th St. and Mrs. Bertha Breckenridge, 41, of 1022 N. West
The south-bound streetcar failed to stop, according to witnesses, ran across a switch-over being used during street paving work, and crashed into a north-bound car which was standing still. Warren Adams, 54, of 1214 Polk St., was motorman of - the southbound car. He told Sergt. Joe Commiskey, according to the police officer. that he “applied the brakes but they failed to work.” Sergt. Commiskey quoted Mr. (Turn to Page Three)
TRACTION DEFENSE WITNESSES TESTIFY
_ Defense witnesses continued toaay to testify before the National Labor Relations Board examiner in the Indiana Railroad case while all parties agreed that no further conferences to settle the Anderson strike of company employees would be held until next week. The proposed settlement apparently was ° checkmated because Amalgamated Association of Electric Street Railway and Motor Ccoch Employees officials said members were unwilling to accept any settlement not including the checkoff and closed shop agreements. Bowman Elder, receiver, said he was unwilling to include those provisions,
leader of the 19 striking unions of makeup men, scenic artists, painters, blacksmiths, boilermakers and others from the nine major studios, had instructed that only the handsomest men be selected for the picketing job, and they were encouraged to take their wives along, in evening gowns. The premier was an orderly success. Irene Dunne, Luise Rainer, George Bancroft, Robert Taylor, Barbara Stanwyck, Clark Gable and many other stars alighted from their limousines at the entrance in their customary dazzling display, spoke their lines at the microphone and
passed unmolested through the courtway.
and several more bruised and shaken, when these College Ave. street-
I
Capt. William F. Hynes, of the (Tum to age Three)
5 Injured as Streetcars Crash
cars collided today. switch at Fairfield and Callege Aves.
The accident occurred on a
—Times Photos.
Workmen are putting a Louisville-bound interurban back on the tracks-after it hit an auto, left the rails, sheared off a utility
pole and injured one woman; -
Jesse Tarleton Moorman And Robert S. Sinclair Die
Chairman of Kingan Board Had Been li 18 Months.
| Robert S. Sinclair, *chairman of | the board of directors of Kingan & | Co., died last night at his home in| Golden Hill after 18 months’ illness. | He was 64. Funeral services are to be held at! 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the home, with Dr. George Arthur Frantz officiating. Burial is to be in Cedar Rapids, Ia. . ] Mr. Sinclair came td Indianapolis in 1930 to become president of Kingan & Co. He retained that position until June, 1936, when ill health forced his retirement. He had been engaged actively in the meat packing business throughout his life. His father was founder of T. M. Sinclair & Co.. a Western packing firm which the son later headed. Mr. Sinclair was graduated from William Penn Charter School in Philadelphia in 1890, and from the University of Pennsylvania, where he was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity, in 1894. A year after his graduation, he returned to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, his birthplace, where he began a husiness career in the firm founded by his father. In 1916, after several years as vice president, he became president of the firm and remained at its head until coming to Indianapolis. Mr. Sinclair was married to Miss Elizabeth J. Alexander of Washington in 1903. Following her death five years later, he was married in 1923 to Mrs. Ethel Heywood Bennett of Jackson, Mich. A son, Thomas G. Sinclair, is treasurer of Kingan & Co. In addition to the son, survivors are the wife and three daughters, Miss Mary Sinclair and Miss Elsie Sinclair, at home, and Mrs. Philip Will II, Chicago.
MERCURY RISES TO NEAR-NORMAL LEVELS
HOURLY TEMPERATURES m... 46 10 a. m... 46 11 a. m... 51 12 (Noon) 54 1p m...
Temperatures started back up to normal levels today with a probable peak of 75 degrees by tomorrow noon, the United States Weather Bureau forecast today. The bureau forecast increasing cloudiness tonight with showers probable tomorrow.
FLOOD PERIL IN EAST HARTFORD, Conn., May 15.—The U. S. Weather Bureau today issued
54 55 55 56
a. a. m... a. m... a. mm...
a general flood warning for lowland residents .along the Connecticut River and its tributaries,
Indiana Businessman and Political Figure Was 67; Lived at Club.
Jesse Tarleton Moorman, widely known businessman and Republican political figure died at the Columbia Club early today. Funeral services arc to be held at 2 p. m. Monday at Winchester. Mr. Moorman, a business associate of former Governor James P. Goodrich, was president of the Patoka Coal Co. He was connected with numerous other businesses and had ‘resigned recently as director of the People’s Loan & Trust Co.
of Winchester, He was 67. ~ Mr. Moorman had served two terms as treasurer of the Republican State Committee and preceding thau he was Randolph County Republican chairman. : Mr. Moorman was born near Winchester, Jan. 6, 1870. He had lived at the Columbia Club about 30 years. He had been president of the Union Reduction Co. Cincinnati; of the Jeffersonville Water and Light Co., Jeffersonville, and the Washington Light and Power Co., Washington. James E. Watson, former U. S. Senator and close friend of Mr. Moorman, is to speak at the funeral services Monday. The Rev. G. M. Payne, Winchester, is to deliver the sermon. Burial is to be in the Maxwell Cemetery, near Winchester. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. John M. Willard, Dobbs Ferry-on-Hudson, New York; a brother, Clyde Moorman, North Liberty; a nephew, Frank Moorman, and a granddaughter, Marie Martha Curtis.
RACE
racer in the May 31 500-mile
GARDNER FIRST QUALIFIER; 10,000 IN STANDS
Veteran Driver Averages 117.3 M. P. H. on 25-Lap Spin; Willman Quits After Failing to Top 112 M. P. H.
OTHERS EXPECTED ON TRACK TODAY,
New Lap Record of 126 Is Expected as Result | Of Big Cash Prizes; Rex Mays ~ After Pole Position.
(Time chart, bottom of page; Photos, Page Three)
Chet Gardner, veteran driver, today drove 25 laps at an average speed of 117.342 miles an hour to qualify his Miller
Speedway race.
Approximately 10,000 people had gathered at noon to watch qualification trials, first of the year. Tony Willman drove four laps of a qualification attempt,
FAVOR ADMIRAL IN PREAKNESS
Odds. Back Derby Winner to Capture Pimlico Classic This Afternoon.
By United Press BALTIMORE, May 15.—Whether the track is mfiddy or lightning fast, Man O' War's hot-footed little boy, War Admiral, will go to the post an odds-on favorite in the 47th running of the historic Preakness at Pimlico track today. |
The weather was cool and] cloudy. With Charley Kurtsinger, the “Flying Dutchman,” up, Samuel Riddle’s Kentucky Derby winner will be no better than four to five when he parades to the barrier to pit his speed and strength against six colts and a filly. Two Derby horses who didn’t pass by the race are Pompoon and Merrymaker. The former, a big and handsome colt belonging to Jerry Louchheim, Philadelphia, was second in the Derby and his owner and trainer think he has a (Turn to Page Seven)
SPAIN REORGANIZES WAR. GOVERNMENT
Cabellero to Head: Cabinet; Dynamiters in Action.
By United Press . VALENCIA, Spain, May 15.—President Manuel Azana held conferences with political leaders today ta form a new Cabinet to succeed the
Popular Front Government headed by Premier Francisco Largo Cabellero, which has designed. Socialist and Communist leaders, after meeting with Azana, said a new Cabinet would be formed along the same lines as the one which quit. Earlier reports said that the Anarchist groups and labor organizations with which they are affiliated would be eliminated. However, Jose Diaz, general secretary of the Communist Party, denied this.
the reorganized regime,
Dynamite Throwers To Attack Rebels
By United Press HENDAYE, Franco-Spanish Frontier, May 15.—President Jose Antonio de Aguirre of the Basque Republic sent the toughest of his allies dynamite - throwing Asturian ‘miners—into the front lines around Bilbao today to stop the Rebel Army. 3 Loyalist prisoners, according to the Rebels, said Aguirre had ordered the execution of all officers whose ‘troops abandoned positions under fire, but gave 24 hours of grace for the troops-to win back the positions.
One Lap,
One Lap Miles an Min. Sec. Hour 1: 107.913 108.173 «re. 108.433 108.695 108.958
One Lap Miles an Min, Sec. H
1 1:28 1:
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123.8 328.6
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om 5 om bk hy kh PINNNBRBREDSBL EP x
Timing Chart
2Y, Miles
One Lap Miles an Min. Sec. Hour
an our
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One Lap Miles Min. Sec. H
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....126.760 127.118 000+. 127.478
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Cabellero is to remain as head of
but could not get more than 112 miles an hour out of his car and gave up. He has two more chances.
Riding with Gardner was Bob Eastbridge. The fastest lap was 118.033 miles an hour. Others were expected to attempt to qualify before sundown. : ; Ideal weather conditions and $5900. prize money offered for the first time were expected to bring out at least 12 drivers. Increasing cloudiness was fotecast, with showers possible tomorrow. Two oil companies offered a total of $1500 for the fastest 10-lan qualifying run and an additional $500 was offered for the fastest single lap. An official lap record of approximately 126 miles an hour wa expected to result. Prize money a} has been offered the nine other fastest cars in today’s runs. . As the track opened at 9 a. m., Several garages bustled with laste minute tuning-up activity. Trials were to get under way at 10 a. in., and continue until 7 p. m. They will end two days before the big race. Cummings Favorite
Wild Bill Cummings, the hometown favorite, and Wilbur Shaw, dapper © veteran who formerly claimed Indianapolis as his home, were ranked as favorites in the pole battle. Rex Mays, 1935 and| 1936 - winner of the No. 1 spot, was another top-ranking contender. Lou Meyer, only three-time winner, who has joined Cummings on Mike Boyle's team this year, also is ‘expected to make his trial run today. ' Veteran Ralph Hepburn said he hoped to qualify in| last year’s winning car, owned by Meyer. Joe Thorne, young New York millionaire, said it was doubtful whether he would send any of his six charges into the official trials today. Mauri Rose, national A. A. A. champion, indicated he might make his bid for a front line position in his No. 1 red racer. Babe Stapp, who led part of last year’s race at a dizzy pace, will show speed fans something new this year. He was to drive an eightcylinder Italian Maserati which- he purchased from a New York sportsman. Rex Mays, California comet, was to seek the coveted pole. position for the third consecutive year, driving Bill White's Italian-made |Alfa Romeo. Disappointing to railbirds was the report that the Art Sparks’ crea« tion, said by many to be ‘the faste est job on the track,” will not be in shape to make an official trial today. Jimmie Snyder, Chicago, is to drive the car, owned by Thorne. It is a 6-cylinder creation and toured the brick saucer the first time out at better than 125 miles an hour, | Billy De Vore May Drive Today Billy. De Vore, son of Earl De Vore, who lost his life when the Vestris sank, is to drive one of the two cars entered by Billy Winn and may start today. - Shorty Cantlon, Mays’ teammate on the White team, also appeared ready to go after warming. his car up yesterday afternoon. Tony Gulotta, another veteran. was expected to make an early appearance in his Burd Piston Ring Special. : Floyd Roberts, who was scheduled to run for the money today, fell out with Kelly Petillo, the little Italian whose car he was to drive, and lit is said that the 1935 winner may drive his own car. Petillo calls his four-cylinder job his “little potato.” Roberts, the husky Californian, said he had been approached by Thorne as, possible driver for one his six entrants.
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
Autos ,.. Books .. Bridge ....... 4 Broun ........10 Churches Comics Crossword ...14 Curious World 15 Editorials ...10 Fashions ,.... 4 Financial
Pe (| sete 9
Johnson Merry-Go-R’d 10 Movies ....... 6 Mrs. Ferguson 9 Mrs. Roosevelt 9 Obituaries ....12 Pegler ....... 10 Pyle .......!. 9 Radio ......{.13 Scherrer ...... 9 Serial Story. .14 Short Story..14 Forum :......10 | Society eels Grin, Bear It 14
Sports ...... eT State Deaths .12 Wiggam .....15 .
In Indpls .... 3 Jane Jordan.. 4
