Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 February 1939 — Page 1
»
‘act which prohibits the interference with the delivery of farm and dairy
un-American” and described by the
. or more than five, years.
sult in a two-to-14-year sentence to
¥ SCRIPPS — HOWARD |
FIGHT AGAINST TRANSPORTING ~ BILL EXPECTED
Senate Measure | to Protect Carriers Gets Open Hearing Monday.
IN THE LEGISLATURE
TOWNSEND budget message due early next week. (Page Two).
SENATOR WEISS to introduce Civil Liberties bill Monday. (Page Two).
PUBLIC hearing on Senate bill governing transportation ~ rights set for Monday.
Organized labor and employer groups today rallied their forces for a public hearing Monday on a Senate bill which would make the in-
terference with the transportation of any commodity on streets or highways a felony. This- measure, its backers said, would be an extension of the 1933
products and was jntroduced last week by eight Senators headed by William Hardy (D. Evansville). The hearing was called/ by the Senate Judiciary “B” Co ttee. Both business and labor have issued calls for representatives at the hearing and one of the bitterest debates of the session is ex d. Branded by labor as “vicious and
Inter-Organization Council, which represents business groups, as “necessary,” this measure would make it unlawful to: “Obstruct, retard, prevent, delay or otherwise interfere with the transportation, shipment or delivery on the public highways or streets in this State; of any product, commodity or articles of trade or commerce whatsoever . . . or coerce, threaten, intimidate any person engaged in the transportation. ...”
Provides $1000 Penalty
The penalty for violation would be a fine not to exceed $1000 and imprisonment of not less than one
Previously, labor groups had introduced in the Senate a bill to repeal the 1933 act and this bill is awaiting action by the Judiciary “A” Committee. Legislative representatives of the Farm Bureau announced they would not officially back the extension measure, but were interested primarily in preventing ehactment of the repealer. Fred Schutz of Gary, who will represent the A. F. of L. Teamsters and Chauffeurs Union, charged the bill “is so broad that it can be used to break all strikes, and the right to strike would no longer exist.”
Enough Laws, He Contends
“We already have sufficient laws to protect the delivery of goods,” he said. “If a truck is stopped, damaged or the driver hurt, present laws can take care of it.” The Inter-Organization Council issued the following statement: “The need for the change in the present law contemplated by Senate Bill 206 has been brought forcibly to public attention in recent years by numerous cases of violent obstruction of the transportation of goods on the highways, carried out under the guise of labor dispute activities. That lawless stopping of trucks, accompanied by physical violence and disregard of property rights, has occurred repeatedly in various parts of the State, is regarded by sponsors of Senate Bill 206 as ample proof of the inade‘quacy of present laws and law enforsement to cope with the situaon ~ “The new Senate Bill 206 is not designed in any manner to intertere with lawful strikes, picketing or other peaceable activities or procedures -in connection with labor disputes. It is designed to impose a heavy penalty on persons who—as a typical example—stop a truck while it is engaged in the regular transportation of goods, attack or intimidate its driver and possibly destroy its contents. “Other than the present limited law being amended, there is now no adequate and effective law in Indiana which discourages irresponsible men from following trucks on the highways and proceeding to stop commerce and to intimidate or coerce operators of vehicles.”
Comment on Proposal
Other comments: Rep. Arnold C. Nahand (D. Indianapolis): “This bill is un-Ameri-can, it’s regimentation, it’s invasion of the privacy which we in a Democratic government are entitled to.” John H. Bartee, Indiana secretary of the C. I. O.: “While the majority of the C. I. O. unions will not be affected directly, if it is passed it certainly would be vicious and our organization is unalterably opposed to any such legislation.” Martin H. Miller, legislative representative of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen: “This bill is the most vicious piece of legislation introduced in the last several years. It has.an excessive penalty and can be construed by the courts to re-
almost any person.”
31 KILLED IN WRECK NEAR BARCELONA
BURGOS, Spain, Feb. 11 (U. P)). —Thirty-one persons were killed and nearly 100 injured today in a train wreck at Sarria, a suburb of Barcelona.
The train, crowded with workers, was en route from Tarrasa to Barcelona. Its three coaches were wrecked. The brakes of the train failed when it approached a stationary rail truck near Sarria, traveling 93 miles an hour. Then it crashed
= VOLUME 50—INUMBER 289
Boom Cools .
FOES SAY CLARK T00 TALKATIVE
Protest Missourian’s Stand Against Roosevelt's Foreign Policy.
(Heywood Broun, Page 10)
By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—The flourishing Presidential boom of Senator Bennett Champ Clark (. Mo.) is beginning to show some symptoms. of collapse, and this is being attributed partially to his fight on the Administration’s foreign policy. This impression does not come from New Dealers, who always have been: cool to the Senator’s Presidential pretensions, but is being conveyed about Capitol corridors by some who only a few months ago were spreading the word that he would make a good middle-of-the-road compromise in 1940. He comes from a border state in the middle of the country; he has a distinguished background ' and name as son of the late Speaker Champ Clark, who almost became President; he has intelligence and aggressiveness—thus ran the claims of his supporters. Vice President Garner was said to look very kindly upon Senator Clark. But something has happened. The Vice President has said nothing publicly, but his friends now are selling the Clark candidacy short, using -as their ammunition the senator’s revolt against the Administration on foreign policy and comparing him to ex-Senator Jim Reed of Missouri, who so bitterly fought Woodrow Wilson's foreign policy. “Bennett talks’ too much,” was the way one detractor put it. , The gentleman belongs to the old school which holds that presidential (Continued on Page Three)
ROBERTSON TAKES TREASURER'S OATH
Feb. 11 Inauguration Follows Old Custom.
Joseph M. Robertson, Brownstown, was sworn in as State Treasurer at inauguration ceremonies at the State House at noon today. - Mr. Robertson, a Democrat, elected last November to succeed Peter Hein, was |given the oath of office by Jackson County Circuit Judge John C. Branaman. State officials followed a custom of many years in inaugurating the State Treasurer on Feb. 11. Mr. Robertson’s term of office is two years.
MRS. STUART, LOCAL
40,000 WAIT
CHURCHWOMAN, DIES
Mrs. Catherine Stuart, Indianapolis churchwoman, died today at her residence, 4130 N. Meridian St. Mrs. Stuart was born at Springfield, O., and came to Indianapolis about 1890. She was a First Presbyterian Church member and belonged to the Women’s Department Club there. Mrs. Stuart is survived by her husband, E. E.; a son, Robert, of Indianapolis, and two sisters, Mrs. Mary Alice West of Indianapolis snd 3 Mrs, Charlotte White of Poteau,
CARDINALS ACT
70 SPEED VOTE FOR NEW POPE
Sn —— Body of Pius Lies in State At St. Peter’s; 6 Funeral Services Planned.
IN PLAZA
Two Princes of Church From U. S, Sail Today; Third Next Week.
(Photos, Page Five. Gen. Johnson, * Page 10)
VATICAN CITY, Feb. 11 (U. P.). —Solemnly and reverently, the body of His Holiness Pope Pius XI was borne today from the Sistine Chapel to the Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament in St. Peter’s, mother church of the Catholic world.
Until the funeral services are completed, Catholics from every walk of life will be permitted to file past
« Ithe catafalque and pay their last
respects to the revered “Pope of peace.” The ceremony lasted almost a full hour. A crowd of between 40,000 and 50,000 covered the steps outside the basilica and part of the vast St. Peter’s Square, waiting for the doors to open. The crush was so great after the doors of St. Peter’s were opened that officials ordered them closed until tomorrow morning.
12 Carry Casket
Changes were made in the dress of the Pope’s remains for the lying-in-state. Over his pontifical white
woolen robe was placed a crimson chasuble, while a striped white and gold cape was thrown over his shoulders, symboi of the Papacy. On his head was a gold miter, symbol of his episcopal dignity, and on one .gloved finger an episcopal ring. Represented in the ceremony were the armed forces of the Papal State in their medievel uniforms and ecclesiastical and lay dignitaries in heavily embroidered robes and uniforms. In the Sistine Chapel, the Papal bier- was placed on the shoulders of 12 pallbearers representing 12 of the oldest carriers of the gestatorial chair, who so many times during the reign of Pius XI.jhad carried him aloft down the center aisle of St. Peter’s .amid the cheers of thousands. As the cortege entered the side portico of St. Peter’s, absolution was given and the superintendent of St. Peter’s property, Msgr. Ludovic Kaas, sprinkled holy water oz the remains.
Six Funerals to Be Held
The remains were placed on the catafalque in the chapel and final absolution given. The Cardinals, diplomats and all the notables in
ithe cortege filed before the bier,
making the sign of the cross. They then crossed the chapel. The body will remain in the chapel, watched over without interruption by noble guards. The public will file past by thousands. * The nine-day ceremonies will begin tomorrow. The first of six funeral services will Peter's and the fic I Sistine Che: i. The Pope. Es ring, testifying to his afthorit’4 was broken at this morning’ ideeting of the (Continued on Page Three)
U. S. ASKED TO MAKE NEW HAGUE INQUIRY
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 (U.P.).— The Workers Defense League of New Jersey asked the Justice Department today to present to a Grand Jury new evidence of alleged “flagrant violation of civil rights” by Mayor Frank Hague and other officials of Jersey City, N. J. Seven representatives of the League, headed by the Rev. William C. Kernan, presented the request to Henry A. Schweinhaut, head of the Department’s Civil Liberties Division. Department of - Justice action against Mayor Hague has ‘been held in abeyance since a Grand Jury last November refused to in-
dict him on charges of violating civil rights. :
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 11 (U. P).— Joan Crawford sought a divorce today from Franchot Tone, who left Hollywood last fall and said he hoped he never had to come back. The red-headed Joan, who rose from $30 a week as a chorus girl to a $1,500,000 movie contract as one of the industry's best emoters, charged her socialite husband with the usual Hollywood divorce-obtain-er: “Extreme mental cruelty.” She accused him specifically of not letting her stay home in the evening and get her rest; of insisting that she accompany him to parties in the mansions of the movie mighties. * Mr. Tone, who is being pushed out ot a boat nightly and drowned in a sea of canvas waves on a Broadway stage, is not expected to contest the divorce. He moved out of her house last July, took an apartment by him-
into_another train which
contract with Metro-Golawyn-
self, and tried in vain to break his|literature
‘He Was Cruel, ’Says Joan; Asks Divorce From Tone
it kept him working on the sound stages until the last day. Miss Crawford told the court she and her husband already had arrived at g property settlement. She said she hoped the judge would keep this settlement secret. She charged Mr. Tone would become sullen and angry and made her life miserable by insisting she wear dancing pumps when . she wanted house slippers. Miss Crawford, a former stock girl in a Kansas City department store, married Mr. Tone, scion of a millionaire abrasive manufacturing family, at Fort Lee, N. J. Oct. 11, 1935. It was his first’ marriage. His bride divorced Douglas Fairbanks Jr. two years before. ‘Miss Crawford became svelte, soft spoken, and suave as the years passed. Her metamorphosis was complete after she married Mr. Tone. She
cial problems, welfare work and
at Mr. ‘Tone’s
helg in St. ee in the}
e interested in so-
e even studied singing |than behest and d a on
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1039
‘Boo, Boo, Boo,’ Sing Bing and Baby
“How's this for crooning?”
That’s what 10-month-old Sandy Henville, baby “find,” wants to know from Bing Crosby. Proud papa Roy Hen-
ville, who submitted Sandy’s photo
beams while Sandy mimics the star, with whom he is to appear in
a new film,
Hollywood's - latest
in a contest with 500 other babies,
COLDS AND FLU
ABOVE AVERAGE
Not Alarming, U. S. Reports; Roosevelt Remains in ‘Bed With Grippe.
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11 (U. P.). —The Public Health Service today warned that between 15,000 and 20,000 persons may ‘“cateh influenza between now and the middle of March, but declared that there is no epidemic.
Head colds and grippe were prevalent in official Washington. President Roosevelt was ordered to bed by Dr. Ross T. McIntire, White House physician, after J F300 de developed intp-a-Dr. McIntire sa ho “President is greatly improved but probably will remain in bed today and tomorrow. His temperature is down to 99.2. A military aid will act for Mr. Roosevelt tomorrow at the: -Lincoln memorial services. Others suffering from colds were Vice President Garner, Secretary of State Hull, Senator Borah (R. Ida.), Postmaster General Farley, Stephen J. Early, White House Secretary, and Miss Marguerite Lehand, the President’s personal secretary. Dr. Robert Oleson, assistant sur-
geon general, said that in the week|
ending Feb. 4—the latest available figures—4310 cases of influenza were reported.
Reports Influenza
Spreads in Illinois
CHICAGO, Feb. 11 (U. P).— Health ‘authorities reported today that there has been a sharp increase in the number of influenza cases throughout Illinois. Dr. Robert A. Black, acting president of the Chicago Board of Health, said the outbreak in Chicago thus far has been mild and that unless the influenza increases greatly in virulence it would not be necessary to close the schools. He said a survey by the School Board had disclosed that 76,547 pupils and 982 teachers were absent yesterday from 648 public and parochial elementary schools. There were 19,326 students and 212 teachers absent from the Sly 38 high schools.
NEW ARMY AIRPLANE
HITS 400-M MILE GLIP
Indidhapolis - Mad Made Motors Increase Speed.
. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 11 (U. P). —A revolutionary new singleseater, twin-engined fighting ‘plane, possibly the fastest in the world, was announced today as a surprise development of the U. S. Air Force. Maj.-Gen. H. H. Arnold, chief of the Army Air Corps, admitted the plane had made nearly 400 miles an hour in tests. He said it “probably exceeded in performance any military plane in the world,” and then added carefully that the ‘new fighter. “opens up - new horizons of performance probably unattainable by nations banking solely on the single-engine arrangement.” The new planes’ two motors are Indianapolis-built Allison cylinder-in-line type, permitting ° better streamlining than with stubby radial motors. Lockheed Aircraft Co. built the ship in secret for the Army at its plant in Burbank, Cal. A month a|ago the plane was secretly removed
to the Army air base at March| Th
Field, 100 miles east of here, for a series of tests that brought jubilation to air force heads. With Lieut. Army pilot at the controls, the twinengined bullet has been hurtling |r through the skies at speeds around 5% Bis a minute. is nearly 100 miles most of
Ben Kelsey, crack crisis.
Indian Sign
Harvard Lads Hang It On Dartmouth, Then - Rub It In.
AMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 11 (U. P)—A clue to the strange disappearance of.a New Hampshire liquor license, depriv=ing the .current Dartmouth College carnival at Hanover of spirituous stimulus, appeared today ‘in the Harvard Crimson, undergraduate newspaper. Printed on Page One was & photo copy of the license issued to J. Wilcox Brown, general man=-
grippe.i-Club, stating that-Hquor-eould-be:| served only if the permit were displayed conspicuously. ; Adding insult. to injury, the Crimson also Sarrien an: editorial, saying in part “It is 00 clear that serious temptation lies in the way of clean American youth at Dart“mouth College. . . . It was well known to Indian scouts of the days of ’49 that nothing is worse than a drunken Indian. . . . Truly the Dartmouth outing ‘has only gained by the spiriting away of its spirit license. . . . All clean livers should rejoice.” The Hanover, N. H., Police Department and the entire Dartmouth freshman class had been searching for the license.
PITTSBURGH QUADS BORN, THREE LIVE
Jobless Truck Driver Gives Blood for His Children.
PITTSBURGH, Feb. 11 (U. P).— Quadruplets were born today to the wife of an unemployed truck driver, but one of the babies died immediately. The other three are given excellent chances of living. “We'll get along. We'll have to. I sure am happy,” said the father, Ralph Pennetti, when he recovered from his surprise after he was awakened to be told of the multiple births, He had dozed in a waiting room, unaware that his wife had been taken to the delivery room. At Magee Hospital, the two girl babies were placed in an incubator, while the boy, the weakest of the three, was. placed in ¢ in an oxygen tent.
GALVESTON, Tex Texas, Feb. 11 (U. BAR —For the first time since they were born Feb. 1, Mrs. W.\E.
t [freakish gales, snow,
ager of the Dartmouth Outing |
FORECAST: Fair tonight and tomorrow; lowest & femperaute tonight about 17; rising temperature tomorrow.
Entered as Second-Class Matter. at Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.
RISING MERCURY BRINGS STORMS KILL 15 IN U.S
Freak Gales sales Hit Area From Rockies to St. Lawrence.
DAMAGE HEAVY
~ Evansville Homes For Safety.
By United Press A severe cold wave attended by sleet, rain, dust and electrical storms, spread from the Rocky Mountains northeastward to the St. Lawrence Valley today. ; The storms disrupted “transporfa-
tion and communications and caused at least 15 deaths. The bitter cold, whith in some sections dropped the mercury to 25 degrees below zero, gripped the middle and upper Mississippi and lower Ohio valleys, the Great Lakes region anf the northern portions of New York and New England. Heavy snow blanketed Minnesota, northern Wisconsin, upper Michigan, the Dakotas and most of the Western plain states. Rain fell from the lower Mississippi Valley eastward to the Middle DD dri states; high winds, in some sections of tornadic force, damaged property and killed livestock in southern Illinois and Indiana.
“Generally Fair” Forecast
U. S. Forecaster H. A. Downs af Chicago expected generally fair weather by tomorrow with rising temperatures over most sections, He said the country should experience “normal - winter weather” the ars;
of next week. : Atlantic seaboard states will escape the brunt of the cold old wave, he will-be con» siderably lower nm that section to-
he 3 Yair brought a slight rise in stages along the swollen Ohio River but the cold which followed precluded another threat of serious floods at present. The stage at Cairo, Ill, where the Ohio joins the Mississippi, was 43.7 feet today—3.7 feet above flood stages—but there was no water in the unities’ streets and conditions were not serious. Approximately 60 families = left lowland homes at Evansville, where the river stage was 44.6, nearly 10 feet above flood stage. Other families evacuated lowland areas along the Cumberland River near Nashville, Tenn. Weather was reported clearing at Utah, hit yesterday by a blizzard which took four lives. Two deaths were reported from the cold wave in Montana, where the mercury dropped to 24. degrees below zero at Ft. Peck. Three persons died from the weather in California, one in Arizona, two in Illinois, and one gach in Iowa, Indiana and Oklaoma.
Lake Freighter Safe
Thousands of dollars damage was left in the wake of storms which struck widely scattered areas in Illinois and Western Indiana.
Several persons were injured, livestock was killed, homes and barns were unroofed and electric power and telephone service were crippled in some communities. Thunder and lightning accompanied the wind. Lightning killed nine cows on a farm near Decorah, Iowa. The 360-foot freighter James Watt arrived in Toledo, O. with the shipping season’s first coal cargo after being unreported since Thursday noon when it left Detroit. The temperature dropped 45 degrees in 12 hours at Chicago and was expected to reach zero today. It was five above zero early today. Other representative temperatures: Devils Lake, N. D., --20;
Bau Claire, Wis.,, —7; Milwaukee,
ott will see her quadruplet girls toYe i
Wis., 9.
Tribute Paid
(Scherrer, Fage Nine; Editorial, Page 10; Photo, Page 3)
A three-day observance. of the 130th birthday = anniversary of Abraham Lincoln, the Indiana farm boy who became the 16th President of the United States, was started
in every Hoosier community today: The. first of a series of Indian-
to Lincoln
An Programs Over State |
for the da The Frid art. lore on ‘the mar-
display at the John Herron Art Museum as a
Lincoln’s life were loaned to the Museum by Mr. and Mrs. William AN Maan %% ere are sev Of Lincoln f:
symbolizing _ tbe
Sotimated dhe plane the
Sixty Families Leave
New Orleans, 82; Ft. Myers, Fla., 84;
with backs and public offices closed | tyred President has been placed on |t]
exhibit. Early ® aDedal depicting
PRICE THREE CENTS
36 RESCUED AS SHIP BREAKS UP ONROCKY REEF
Seamen Climb Down Rope Ladders to Cutter in Fog, High Wind.
‘CHATHAM, Mass., Feb. 11 (U. PJ). —The last 20 officers and seamen of the wrecked tank ship Lightburne clambered to safety down rope ladders, onto the deck of the Coast Guard cutter Campbell at 1:35 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) today. The Campbell had maneu= vered alongside in a fog and strong wind only a few minutes before the tanker broke to pieces. Sixteen members of the crew had been taken off earlier aboard a Coast Guard surf boat and landed at Block Island. The final rescue was completed without a casualty, while the grounded, battered tanker tossed heavily, threatening at every moment to collapse and swamp the Coast Guard cutter, :
Sends Message Asking Aid
The Lightburne, a 417-foot vessel of the Texas Co. and loaded with 72,000 barrels of gasoline and kerosene, was bound from Port Arthur, Tex., to Providence, R. I. It ran aground on rocks off ine clay cliffs of Block Island, a shoaly patch nine miles off the Rhode Island coast, at 6:40 .p. m. yesterday. Her master, Capt. Wolman, called for help. Coast Guard boats put out from Block Island and New London, Conn.. groping through angry seas in the face of a strong sonthents wind.
half hour after the crash. Her holds were filling fast and she was being battered mercilessly when
the rescue.
WOMAN WOUNDED IN HOME SHOOTING
He Tried to Seize It.
A 36-year-old woman lay scriously injured in‘ City Hospital following a shooting at her home last night, according to police. The victim was Mrs. Ruth Owen, 5749 Bonna Ave. James Owen, her husband, was quoted as saying that he and his
wife had spent the evening playing cards with friends. He said they returned home at 1 a. m. and that
home after an argument. Police said he told them she took a gun from a dresser drawer and that as he tried to take it away from her, it discharged. Mrs. Owen was shot three times, twice through the heck, according to police.
BISHOP FRANCIS ILL;
The reception for the Rt. Rev. Richard Ainslee Kirchhoffer, bishop coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese
radio kepb--up a constant stream of urgent messages until her main set failed, a
Coast Guardsmen finally. effected
Husband Says Gun Fired as|
his wife threatened to leave the
of Indianapolis, at John Herron f
Mother Saves Thre Children as Fire Burns Home.
RIVERS DROPPING
Two Die at Crossing In Bristol; Man's ; Body Found.
HOURLY TEMPERATURES Bam... 14 10a. m.,. 7am... 13 11am... 8a.m... 14 12 (Noon) 9a m... 15 1p m...
Higher temperatures brought Te. lief throughout Indiana today from the cold wave that left tragedy n
Thi Weather Bureau predicted warmer weather tomorrow, although escaped the most of the cold snap that chilled /other sections -of the tates last night. Le Fair tonight and tomorrow was predicted here with a low of 17 degrees tonight. No rain nor snow was forecast for the State. A flood threat in Indiana towns was checked as the temperature Simbel steadily from the nights ows. The Wabash and White Rivers. were reported falling below flood stage in most localities. The Ohio River at Evansville was 446 feet and is expected to reach its crest
of 45-feet tomorrow. No
Man's Body Discovered
At Martinsville the charred body of a man was found along the Pennsylvania Railroad. Police said he evidently had fallen asleep be=' side a camp fire. ; At Birdseye, Nancy Bradley, 89, was burned to death in her hom Two persons were tle and dL critically ured 1 Lo
The windstorm ye indefinite of. a school at Burnettesville. 'The ‘building was ° crushed beneath a smokestack that toppled under the force of the gale. In Indianapolis a mother rescued her three small children from a burning bungalow at 1245 W, Michigan St. At 6 a. m., Mrs. Peter Afnand awakened to find the house with smoke and the roof ‘ablaze, She bundled up the children, Sally, 3: Rosie, 4%, and Stephanie,- 18 months, and rushed them to the sidewalk. ; The children were taken to the home of a neighbor, John T. Wile liams Sr., of 1301 W. Michigan St, The cause of the fire was not des termined. The house was badly damaged. So
Two Killed at Bristol Crossing
BRISTOL, Feb. 11 (TU. PJ) persons were killed and a critically injured today when automobile into a New Central freight/train here. Dead were Bruce Correll, 21, his wife, May, 19. Verling 33, Rich Valley, who was di the car at the time of the dent, suffered several a punctured lung and pelvic internal injuries. He was an of Bruce. ’ ;
“ Unable to inty
POSTPONE RECEPTION £
Art Institute tomorrow; has been|,...
postponed, it was announced today. cis, bishop of the Diocese, who i$sued the invitations, is in critical Beslih, ‘the Rev. R. C. Alexander,
Bishop Kirchhoffer was principa! 1 speaker at the St. Matthew Church
Kirchhoffer also spoke briefly. eerste.
STOCKS UP FRACTIONS [is | TO MORE THAN POINT
NEW YORK, Feb, 11 (. P)— fractions to more
The Rt. Rev. Joseph Marshall Fran- |"
fellowship supper last night. Mrs. | ion
