Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1938 — Page 11
Sei
iene fh a
Be >
at results in another visitation.”
TURDAY, NOV. 2%
am Sua
| CASESREACH 12,
~ WARNING GIVEN
Morgan Urges Vaccination As Precaution Against
| Disease. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, City Health Board secretary, today
warned Indianapolis residents to take precautions against smallpox, as 12 such cases already have been reported to the Health Board this month. . ‘‘While these cases are mild,” he said, “the unusual number has
caused us grave concern that the -
disease may spread, especially if the weather continues cold. “We are taking every possible precaution to prevent its spread and
also urge the public to do so. Those | &
who have not been vaccinated recenily should see their physicians to get proper protection.”
Dr. Morgan said the Health De- :
partment’s contagious disease department will be open for those ‘Who cannot afford vaccinations. e declared that the number of cases reported for the month is higher than for any similar. period fo¥ the past five years. He said the last major outbreak was in 1923.
| Check Vaccinations
The Health Board already has ikon steps to gheck up on vaccinations of schoolchildren and safeguard their health by calling a meeting Wednesday of all public and parochial school nurses at which preventive measures were outlined. _ Adults who have not been vaccinated since childhood should be revaccinated for protection, and the ‘same applies to those of advanced years, according to Dr. Morgan. “We can exp visitation of
this disease about| once cvery 10{—The Securities
years,” he said. * long period of quiescence, during which time people have tended to become careless, thinking the diseq out. «It is this overconfidence which
Meanwhile, Dr. Verne K. Harvey, ate Health Board secretary, said unusual number of cases had been reported throughout the State. He said 12 cases had been reported up to the week ending Nov. 12, compared to 11 during the similar period last year, In November, 1937, 10 cases of
Smallpox were reported in Indianapolis, which was the previous high.
No cases were reported in the same period of 1936 and only one case in - 1935, Dr. Morgan said.
ANNUAL DOG MATCH T0 OPEN TOMORROW
More Than 50 Entries Already Received for Affair.
More than 50 entries have been received for the fifth annual puppy match to be held tomorrow afternoon |at the Hotel Washington. The Wire Fox Terrier Club of Indiana is/sponsor of the affair. Col. R. L. Davis, Ft. Thomas, Ky., is to judge the entries. Col. Davis is th ehandler of Davishill Little Man, national winner of 25 American Kennel Club shows. Dog owners from Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Illinois are expected for the match. Following the judging, Col. Davis will conduct an open forum for fox terrier breeders and owners. Leo Broesemer, noted breeder, is to speak.
~~ ~Officers of the state organization
jnclude Gordon F. Engeler, president; Dr. Frank R. Booth, first vice president; Omer L. Isaacs, second vice president; A. I. Deweese, secretary; Frank J. Ward, corresponding secretary, and Roger E. Williams, treasurer.
TEN FACE TRIAL IN ‘ROASTING’ DEATHS oo
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 26 (U. P.). —Ten officials and guards of Phiadelphia County Prison, including Superintendent William B. Mills, will go on trial Dec. 6 on charges jn connection with the “radiator roasting” deaths of four convicts, it was announced today. Mr. Mills, Deputy Warden Frank A. Craven, Guard Captain James McGuire and Guards Francis J. Smith and Alfred W. Brough were indicted on charges of second degree murder and manslaughter. Guards Robert Morrow, William ‘Staines, Sylvester Weaver, Charles Mulhern and Thomas : Cavanaugh are charged with voluntary and involuntary manslaughter. Four asserted ring-leaders of a prison hunger strike were found “roasted to death” in the institution’s “Klondike” isolation cellblock Aug. 22. Fellow inmates testified at 'a coroner’s inquest that despite high summer temperatures, seven huge
¥_radiators were filled with steam and
‘came separated
¢
?
I &
&
' appeared today.
that the four—— Frank Comodeca, Joseph Walters, James McQuade and Henry Osborne—died of suffocation and the heat.
LOST YOUTH SAVES | LIFE WITH FIRE
HANCOCK, Mich., Nov. 26 (U. P.). —William Thomas, 16-year-old son of a Des Moines, Iowa, contractor, was unharmed by more than 24 hours of wandering in the Misery Bay forest area. He was found late yesterday after having been missing since early Thursday, when he befrom a hunting party. The boy said he had spent the night beside a fire he built in the forest. The temperature was near
| Zero.
ONTARIO CONSIDERING PEDESTRIAN LICENSES
TORONTO, Ontario, Nov. 26 (U.
| P.)—Ontario pedestrians ‘“over a ! certain age” may be required to | take out licenses and all pedestrians
may be forced to carry lights or distinguishing marks when walking on oads and highways after dark, it
The suggestions were discussed by Attorney General Gordon D. Co-
moned to a special meeting to con-
nant and traffic experts he sum-|
1938
FALSITY LAID TO TRANSAMERICA
Firm Expects Vindication by SEC; Hearing to Be Held Jan. 16.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. PJ. and Exchange Commission will decide at a public hearing Jan. 16 whether to remove the capital stock of the Trans-
america Corp. from listing on the New York, Los Angeles and San
| Francsico Stock Exchanges.
Order for the hearihg was issued simultaneously with charges that a series of financial documents filed with the SEC by the corporation, a 100-million dollar Pacific Coast in-
tained “false and misleading statements of material facts.” The SEC named Henry Fitts to preside at the hearing. In San Francisco the corporation said the charges appeared to be “based entirely on a theory of accounting” and expressed confidence that it would be vindicated. A statement signed by A. P. Giannini, board chairman, and John M. Grant,” president, asked that the “public reserve judgment until we can avail ourselves of the right guaranteed to every American citizens by the Constitution, that he shall not be judged except after a fair and impartial trial.”
- Falsity Charged
“We are firmly of the belief that the motive behind this complaint is one calculated to prejudice Transamerica Corp. in the eyes of the public,” the statement said.
| The SEC charged that most of the financial statements of the corporation and its subsidiaries failed to “correctly reflect their true financial condition.” Omissions of material facts were alleged. Most of the challenged statements were contained in a registration statement covering 11,590,784 shares of $2 par value capital stock, filed Aug. 7, 1937, and in the corporation’s annual report for 1936. The Commission found fault with entries in the consolidated condition report of three banks which were subsidiaries
documents were filed, and with the balance sheets of two other subsidiaries. The Commission also said that in its annual report for 1937, the corporation failed to file financial statements for itself and its subsidiaries certified in accordance with the Commission’s requirements. The SEC charged that the registration statement was misleading in that it claimed Mr. Giannini received remuneration of only $1 in 1936, whereas, the Commission claims, he got at least $65.914.
Condition Report Cited
The major portion of the SEC's charges was in connection with analysis of the combined condition report for 1936 of the Bank of America National Trust & Saving Association, First National Bank in Reno, and Bank of America. Pointing out that this document claimed the three banks had undivided net profits of $22,503,612, the Commission alleged that reserves were listed in such a manner as to show a profit larger than it was infact. . The Commission further alleged that it had reasonable grounds for believing that a $539,899,000 loans and discount item in the combined report “includes estimated losses and doubtful accounts aggregating in ‘excess of $8,000,000 and slow accounts in excess of $125,000,000” held by Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association.
WALEY SEEKS FREEDOM SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—Harmon Waley, convicted with his wife, Margaret, and William Mahan of the kidnaping of George Weyerhaeuser, son of a Tacoma lumberman, today filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Federal Court, seeking freedom from Alcatraz Prison.
President Roosevelt carved a Thanksgiving turkey at Warm Springs, Ga., for Mrs. Roosevelt and patients of the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation.
Broker to Take Suit Against James Roosevelt to Court
vestment and holding company, con-|.
of the corporation at the time the|4
"Holiday Smile of Anticipation
#
Shown with the Diary, Page 9).
by ‘James Roosevelt.
A Superior Court auditor found
| that Arthur D. Cronin had no claim-
to the commission, which was paid in 1934 for the placing of an $850,~ 000 insurance contract by the National Shawmut Bank. ° Auditor F. Delano Putnam found that the contract was placed so that young Mr. Roosevelt would share in the commission, but held that the bank was not influenced by the fact that his father was President. Mr. Putnam stated, however, that young Mr. Roosevelt's name was put first in the Boston insurance firm name, Roosevelt & Sargent, “because his father was at that time Governor of New York . .. and his family connection was an important consideration.”
Judge to Decide
Mr. Cronin’s suit tn recover the $31,750 in commissions for time sales automobile insurance policies placed by. the bank now will be referred to a single Superior Court Justice by stipulation of plaintiff’s counsel Romney Spring and defense counsel Robert G. Dodge. The justice will decide the question whether, as a matter of law, there is evidence to justify a finding for the plaintiff. Charging breach of contract, Mr. Cronin contended thatg insurance proposals submitted by him to the bank in 1934 were awarded as a contract to the Boston firm of O’Brien, Russell & Co. with the knowledge that Roosevelt & Sargent would share in the commissign. ‘The auditor's 10,000-word report filed with Suffolk Superior Court yesterday was bassd on a hearing early this summer. Final arguments in July followed closely an article in the Saturday Evening Post titled “Jimmy's Got It,” dealing with the insurance activities of the Preesident’s eldest son.
FORMER TEACHER
A suit in which Mrs. Ethel D. Budd, 5702 Lowell Ave. a former teacher, asks $12,000 damages from the Indianapolis School Board for alleged breach of a tenure contract, was on file today in Superior Court
In the suit, Mrs. Budd charges that although she was given six consecutive contracts between 1926 and 1931, she was given no assignment after that. She contends she is entitled to re-employment under her tenure contract, but asserts that repeated attempts to obtain reassignment failed. She asks that the Board be mandated to reinstate her as a teacher and pay her $12,000 back salary.
SUES FOR $12,000;
President and his wife is Robert
Rosenbaum, a youthful patient from New York. (My
BOSTON; Nov. 26 (U. P.).—A Boston insurance broker has lost the initial skirmish in his legal battle to obtain a $31,750 commission shared.
"IRISTOCRATS OF
‘BARNYARDS G0
12,000 Head of Livestock ‘Compete for Prizes In Chicago Show. CHICAGO, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—The
aristocracy of America’s barnyards— 12,000 strong—jammed Chicago's
i | spacious International Amphithea- | | ter today to compete for the highest honors of the farm world in the
39th International Livestock Exposition. : : : The greatest number of blueblooded livestock ever assembled for the exposition, which annually climaxes fall showing of prize cattle, horses, sheep and swine, Was
|entered in the eight-day competi- “| tion. ? :
B. H. Heide, exposition secretary-
: | manager, said their value was in
excess of $5,000,000. First Prize to Wisconsin
The first blue ribbon of the 1938 show went to Theodore J. Griswold of Livingston, Wis., when judges declared his two-year-old entry the best of the 875-1000 pound shorthorn steer, spayed or Martin heifers in the junior livestock feeding competition. . At stake were championships of all breeds to be climaxed by selection of a grand champion steer, sheep, hog and horse. Each animal is salable at premium prices with those designated grand champion drawing top amounts. Ashbourne Orange, an 1110-pound
DEATH PROBE
“TO END TODAY
Double Murder and Suicide
Verdict Expected in Tragedy at Argus.
PLYMOUTH, Nov. 26 (U. P.)—A verdict of double murder and suicide was expected today in the deaths of a middle-aged widow and two of her children whom she al-
legedly killed on Thanksgiving a the family home at Argos.
Stepsons of Mrs. Della Voreis, 53, said she shot her 19-year-old son, Donald, and a daughter, Lois Evelyn, 27, then turned the revolver on herself, probably during a spell of
insanity.
Coroner L. W. Vore was to cominvestigation today by questioning William Thompson, a neighbor who accompanied the sons He was overcome by
plete his
to the house. shock yesterday.
Believed Deranged
Mr. Vore said the verdict probably will be double-murder and suicide. He said Mrs. Voreis undoubtedly
was mentally unbalanced.
“She brooded considerably since
father died two years ago,” Guy Voreis said, “but lately we thought she was getting over it—the last two weeks she had heen especially cheerful. Yesterday was father’s birthday, however, and that probably brought a recurrence of grief.”
Guy, James and Dale Voreis are
stepsons of Mrs. Voreis. Investigators believed the widow intended ‘to kill all her children. including another son, Orval, 32, before she committed suicide.
Puts Body Under Bed
She is believed to have first shot Donald as he slept Wednesday night, one bullet through the heart and another through the head, then stuffed the body under the bed out of sight of her daughter Lois, a nurse in a Plymouth hospital, who went to the farm home for Thanks-
giving dinner.
Waiting until Lois stretched upon the davenport for a nap, Mrs. Voreis is believed to have crept to her side, shot her in the temple and body
and then wrapped a sheet around the body. >
As her sons returned to the house she placed the gun to her head and
fired, they told police.
shorthorn chosen grand champion steer last year, sold for $2.35 a pound in open auction. He was exhibited by Oklahoma A. & M.
.29 ‘States Represented °
Exhibitors this year came from 29 states and three Canadian provinces, ranging - geographically from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic Coast and from Texas to Saskatchewan. Prideful owners washed, combed and curried them to beauty-shop perfection for show ring appearances. First judging today was in carlots of fat cattle. ‘The 20th annual International Hay and Grain Show and the 17th International Congress of 4-H Clubs opened in conjunction with the Livestock Exposition.
Seek Corn Crown
Farmers from 30 states, six Canadian provinces and Australia competed in the grain show for such titles as the world’s corn king or wheat king. Farm youth, principally 4-H Club members, competed for corn and wheat “prince” ratings. William H. Curry of Tipton, Ind. the defending corn king, is the first exhibitor to win that crown. The wheat title is defended by Alex Steart of Ontario. : The 4-H Club Congress brought 1200 high school boys and girls from 45 states, Canada, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. From among them will be chosen the nation’s healthiest boy and girl. !
t
ON EXHIBITION
“Portrait of a Young Noblewoman,” An Early Italian Masterpiece, Will Be on View Until Dec. 4 at the Herron Art Museum
2
The picture, never before
Of the picture, Mr. Peat said:
on the belt.
‘BLACK SHIRTS’ GET CLEAN BILL
Official Inquiry Over but Parents Cast Longing Eyes on Paddles.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Nov. 26 (U.P) County authorities who investigated a group of high school “Black Shirts” decided today that they were “a pretty clean cut bunch of fellows” who broke no laws.
The official investigation had ended, leaving any further action to parents. —
Mrs. Wade Walser, mother of Milton. Walser, 19, the “commissar,”
years by a family of Italian nbbility. an Indianapolis collector who has loaned it to the Museum. Wilbur Peat, museum director, said the new policy of featuring a picture a month will bring a parade of masterpieces Each will be explained by authorities, he said. The current showing is “Portrait of a Young Noblewoman,” painted by Andrea del Sarto, the “flawless painter” of the Italjan High Renaissance group, probably about 1511 or in the early years of his career.
CLOTHING STOLEN IN 5 BURGLARIES HERE
smilingly suggested that she might “putt a few heads together.” She talked with her son and with Manford Ishmael, 18, the “vice commissar,” and said that “everything is about over.”. : . Central High School authorities
him for absence at classes. They
#
8 2
Italian Painting Is First of Special Monthly Art Series
: Inaugurating a: policy designed to place on public view one painting a month, the Herron ‘Art Museum featured a 16th Italian masterpiece. It will be on display until Dec. 4. n public view, was owned for many It recently was purchased by
“Colors are of an extraordinary beauty—the golden turban, green curtain, ultramarine blue sleeves and the gold and purple bow According to Dr. George Martin Richter, the painting is one of the earliest representative portraits of the Florentine High Renaissance. Bocause it was privately owned throughout the years, it is practically unknown except to students of Italian art.” Sig. De Sarto was born in Florence in 1487. His best-known works are | “Madonna of the Harpies,” and his self-portrait in the Uffizi galleries; «Portrait of a Sculptor,” in the National Gallery; in the Pitti Palace; and frescoes in the SS. Annunziata, Florence.
le
entury
to the Museum.
leaf-
» «John the Baptist”
14-Year-Old - Bride Leaves Husband, 63
1.0S ANGELES, Nov. 26 (U. P.) —Velma Robison, 14, left. her 63-year-old bridegroom today for her Illinois home and
dolls she left a week ago.
At her
Greene, landowner, was not at the station to .say goodby. he bought tickets to Tallula, Ill, for her and Edward Robison, her father. Velma was released to her - father when he promised Juvenile Court: Referee Margaret Pratt that he would sue for an annulment as soon as
they got home.
a
request Wyckliffe,
He said
Jonas Ky.,
But
the
marriage on Nov. 5 was never consummated. “I want to go back to mother,” Velma told the court.
wasn’t happy with Mr. Greene.
“1
questioned Walser pefore suspending
INFLUENZA CASES ARE
It’s winter all right, even in the crime world. Of six thefts reported to police over night, five were thefts of clothing.
Mrs. Pearl Wilson, 44, of 2362 Baltimore Ave., told police someone had entered her house yesterday while she was away, taking a white plumed lodge hat, several medals, brass buttons and a uniform belt, all of which she valued at $250. She said they had belonged to her deceased husband. She said a tablecloth and 10 bed sheets worth $18 also were taken. George Graham, owner of a cafe
It Must Be Winter, Police learned that he was head of the
|“c?c”, a secret “curiosity club” of boys and girls who all attended meetings in black uniforms.
velopment also was important.”
improvement.” Talk to Prosecutor
everyone, “including sexes.”
UP TO 50 PER CEN
He said the group was primarily for “study,’ but that “we believed physical de-
Walser denied that he was a Communist or a Fascist but believed that some American ideals could stand
His group believed in equality for The club studied Aristotle, Plato and ‘Edward Bellamy, who envisioned a utopia. There was talk also, Walser said, of scrip payments for all. Target practice and fencing aided their
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P.).— The U. S. Public Health Service today reported 3836 cases of influenza in the month ending Nov. 5, an increase of about 50 per cent over the average for this period in the five years ending 1937. The service said, however, that there need be no fear of “unusual prevalence.” So far this year, 53,784 cases of influenza have been reported. While this number is not unduly large, the health service said that prevalence has maintained a relatively high level since the latter part of the summer.
Gains 1200 Over Last Year; Record Floor Sales - Reported.
An increase in attendance of 1200 persons over 1937 at the 28th Indianapolis Auto Show was reported today by show officials.
the total to 19,200, C. O. Warnock, president of the Auto Trades Asso=ciation, said. Dealers reported the best floor sales in history. The exhibit closed last night with the observance of “Mexican Night” as Alfredo Peirce and his Mexican artists serenaded the crowd. The
| entertainers were to leave for Pitts burgh for another show.
Large Cars Sell Attendance was near the all-time high set in the late 1920s although Wednesday night’s snow cut crowds, officials said. Attendance jumped again after Thanksgiving Day.
it the best and most beautiful show in many years. The Mexican fiesta theme was used throughout, with entertainers imported from Mexico. Most dealers reported excellent floor sales. The larger lines of cars ‘sold more readily than in years past, Mr. Warnock said, “contrary to the usual trend.”
3000 EXPECTED
County and Township Aids May Map Legislative Program.
A legislative program may be formulated at the Indiana County and Township Officials’ Association con=vention Dec. 8, 9 and 10 at the Clay=pool Hotel, it was announced today. Last year the meeting attracted 209) governmental officials every locality in the state. It was estimated that this year’s attendance would be between 3000 and 4000 persons. : Organizations which are joining for the association’s meeting are the Indiana State Association of Towne ship Trustees, Indiana County As-
County Auditors’ Association and ana, Indiana County Recorders’ Association, Indiana County Highway Supervisors’ Association, Indiana Association of County "Surveyors and Engineers, Indiana County Treasurers’ ‘Association, Indiana County Attorneys’ Association and Indiana School Bus Drivers’ Asso= ciation.
CAMPAIGN HEADS NAMED Gordon Olvey of Noblesville and Gordon O. Thurston ‘of Shelbyville will direct the nation-wide “Fight Infantile Paralysis Campaign” in their respective counties, it was announced today by Kieth Morgan, national chairman of the drive.
LOANS From
$1 Up to $300 on
© AUTOMOBILES @® DIAMONDS ® WATCHES, RINGS ® TYPEWRITERS ® MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ® FUR COATS ® MEN'S SUITS @® OVERCOATS ® SHOTGUNS, etc.
SACKS BROS.
306-10 INDIANA AVE.
in the 500 block of Indiana Ave., told police $180 worth of bottled liquor had been taken from the basement of his business place
OIL WELL EFFICIENCY PROCESS DISCOVERED
BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 26 (U. P.). —Discovery of a process which will
nearly double the amount of oil taken from a field by mechanical pressure. was announced today by Dr. Raymond Nauth, Buffalo chemical engineer. .-Dr. Nauth, discoverer of the process, said that with present methods the average amount of oil removed from the ground by artificial pressure is about 30 per cent. He declared that his process will increase that amount to between 40 and 50 per cent. The new method, he explained, is a process of ‘chemically treating water which is used to force oil to the surface. He said he would reveal details of the discovery next month at a meeting of the American Chemical Society in New York.
Wh
“SINGLE
sider methods of reducing the province’s nt toll,
WHAT INCOMES DO PEOPLE HAVE?
ii
SINGLE MAN ; FAMILY OF 2 $1,331 WOMAN EL ad SCIENCE SERVICE FEATURE:
CRS
(NON-RELIEF)
FAMILY OF FAMILY OF 5—6 FAMILY OF 7
3-4 $1,905 © OR MORE -$1,864 $1.787 AV. INCOME 1935-36 PICTORIAL STATISTICS, ING ~~ 11.
When Chris Wants to Go to School He Means Business
BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Nov. 26 (U. P.).—School officials agreed with 13-year-old Chris Simpson today that he is “as tough as any kid in
Leroy Township.”
When Chris was expelled from
school for fighting he returned a few hours later with a revolver. At gun point he drove the teacher, Donald Mitchell, and 15 classmates from the school and took possession himself.
There he stayed until captured by Sheriff's officers with teacher. and fellow pupils watching at a respect-
ful distance.
Chris’ desire to remain in school was amazing to truant officers who recalled that five years ago he attempted to burn down the school-
house. ;
The boy is an orphan who was taken from the Michigan Children’s Home at Coldwater in 1931 by Mrs. Harriet Atwood, president of the
Bigelow school board.
GETS MINOR CUTS AS
AUTO STOPS ON TRACK
CINCINNATI, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—
Mrs. Rachel Norman, 27, of Herkimer, N. Y., had only minor cuts today after a Pennsylvania freight train had struck her stalled automobile at a crossing: here.
Mrs. Norman, visiting here, got out of her car when it stalled on the Then she throught the train would be able to stop and got back in. When she
tracks late yesterday,
saw that the train would hit th
automobile, she jumped out again. Mrs. Norman was cut on the right She
hand by fragments of glass. also suffered from shock.
sometime yesterday by a thief who entered through a trapdoor in a
physical development. Ishmael, sophomore at Classen High, also was suspended for absence. Both he and Walser refused to reveal the club membership, but E. W. Brown, assistant county attorney, called in the leaders. Six
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AUTO AND DIAMOND
LOANS ;
WOLF SUSSMAN, INC.
23 W. WASH, 8
pa ieniithed 38 ye
rear room. ; ; A $25 fur jacket was taken from other ehib memes nS ay Ms FIORIZONTAL | Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 === was hep a bowling alley in the 1200 block|; "nis automobile and took them 1 A former i DELEISSEPISLITIITIL outstanding of Kentucky Ave. last night, Valera so, 5 drive. They talked for two popular IV ol LE EILLLISIIO 18 a ateriYa Hutchinson. °? Guilford Ave, al noyrs. Mr. Brown followed school! ,, plore star. E IOINIHAIN ME RIE 20 Db ge. employee, { volice. officials’ advice in telling the boys, an, oo P MEILLL : 21 ve SCY Theft »f a $15 overcoat from his|what advantages they had under|13 Hangman’s TI L UB : eval, home, 349 N. East St, last night{the American type of government. knot. ™M I BU - Foo, was reported to police by B. H:| «I disagreed with the boys on 14 Vigilant. Mi pt Enver. Smith. many things,” he reported. “They| 18 Bay windows. THE TITIN FERDINAND 2 eadgeaf, — are a pretty clean cut bunch of fel-| 17 Cowslip. T ~1DeLESSEPS 7 Indian. ; BUILDING PERMITS lows. ‘I am convinced that their ac-| 19 Crazy. C D 28 To ventilate, : ) tivities were not sinister, but at the| 20 To turn S| ; 30 Half quarts, ABOVE 1937 LEVEL [sme time it is a good thing they coarse. RIVE mai EISISE] 33 Heading in ) are disbanding at least for a while.”| 21 Playthings. EIN 7 gE red letters. » Authorities earlier heard reports| 22 To cut off. NGI! RIA 34 Common verlly WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—|that the “Black Shirts” were part of 25 Goddess of 36 Distinctive Secretary of Labor Perkins reportedia “movement” including similar| dawn. 47 Deferred ‘sale. of. theory. today that the value of residential groups in other cities. : 26 Antiquity 49 Gibbon. 3 Fisk eggs, 37 Exclamation buildings for which permits were] Walser and Ishmael said that| 29 Fish. 50 Frolic. 4 Being. of surprises issued in October declined 10 per|their club might be revived. 30 Inner 52 Pitcher part, 5To fare, R2 Tissue. cent from the September level, but — courtyard. 53 Frenzy. ” @Line. 41 Timber. increased 65 per cent over October,/35 NUTRITION CAMP |31Fiber knots. 55 Existed. 7 Electrical 42 Astringeny, 037.. 32Men who 56 She ea. 44 Genus of ° It was the fourth month that De- BOYS ENTE RTAINED commit specialized in SE s frogs. partment of Labor statistics showed| ei treason. ? ing > 8 Indian native 45 Slovak. an increase of more than 50 per| About 35 boys from the Bridge-| 35 Tumultuous §7 she soldiers. 46 Otherwise, cent in the corresponding month of | port Nutrition Camp were guests of disturbance. ~ great success 9'Beasts’ home... 48 To become last year. New nonresidential per-|the Optimist Club at its weekly | 39 Coffee pots. ‘late in life 10 Embryo birds. old. mits decreased less than one-tenth|luncheon at the Columbia Club yes-| 40 Health spring. “11 Drama part, 51 Reverence. of one per cent. Total permits were|terday. : 43 Frozen VERTICAL 312She - 53.Form of “me8 26 ber cont higher than in a 3 iy boys, ranging in ih from 11 dessert. 1 Delay. emphasized 54 Sound of g the first 10 months of 1938, 13 years, were treate urkey . mi —— total permits issued in the 2021 cities| dinner and movies, furnished ‘by a 15Immovable 21n the middle her pleasure, reporting were valued at $1,409,421,-| transportation company. Music was — 000, an increase of one per cent|furnished by Mexican entertainers | —_ 3 4 |5 FT 8 9. 0 . ; over the same period of 1937. from the Auto Show. i [ 4 12 13 4 : » | 17 |I8 new -3 I° £: ou’ br (a\e0 9 gervic® Ra 22 [23 |4 26 [27 |2 . are pul ied | of Pome Le pen 29 30 8 ments ew ys ? ame” . Jl - B&B god v god aM of\e wh 0 0 9 3 vee g_ I [42 43 # 45 146 47 8 49 SO |51 x )
Yesterday's attendance brought
Exhibitors and spectators called
AT CONVENTION
from
sessors’ Association, Indiana County Commissioners’ Association, Indiana
County Clerks’ Association of Indi--
AT AUTO SHOW; TOTALIS 18,200
eterna
re A SENG pp in
DS
