Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1939 — Page 2
PAGE 2
TWO DIE FROM AUTO INJURIES; | EIGHT ARE HURT|
21-Year-0ld Youth Held in Burglaries, Hit-and-Run Accident.
Two Indianapolis men were dead today as the result of traffic acecidents, one of which happened in the city. Eight persons were reported injured in 13 overnight crashes. Meanwhile, pelice said they had - obtained a confession from a 21- - year-old man arrested in connection!) with burglaries and a hit and run accident in which three persons were injured. Those who died of traffic accident injuries were Claude DeMaree, 48 of 402 N. East St., struck at Michigan and East Sts. Thursday night, -and Daniel Pope, 52, of 3437 W. Washington St, who was injured) Easter Sunday in an- auto accident! near Anderson and died in an An- “ derson hospital.
Car Hits Signal
Indianapolis was
‘Sandhogs’ Near Goal in Tunnel Sewer SUNDAY CROWD
MAY SET MARK
Foley of FHA Calls Local Building ‘Healthy.’
(Continued from Page One)
“healthy” and of real importance by Raymond M. Foley, Federal Housing Administrator of Michigan. Mr. Foley was in Indianapolis to attend the Home Show and last night addressed the Indianapolis Home Builders’ Association.
Claims House Shortage
He insisted he was ho authority on prefabricated houses and said it was too early to say what effect they would have on nation-wide housing. “If all the people in Indianapolis who want and need houses were to
buy them tomorrow,” he said, “the industry could not handle the or-
AT HOME SHOW
Exposition Ends Tomorrow; " ot
described as
Times Photo.
"190 FRENCHMEN
DEAD IN THREE PLANE CRASHES
Rigid Probe Ordered Into Crackups of Old Type Bombers.
PARIS, April 22 (U. P).-Guy la Chambre, air minister, ordered a rigid inquiry today into three plane crashes in the French air force, in which 20 men were killed, All the planes involved were old models not included in the types now being delivered to the air force, e third in the series of disase ters accurred near Oudja in Algeria, where a four-motored bomb.W
BE | crashed, killing the crew of six.
Five were killed when a bombing
a (plane, on a practice flight from Le & | Bourget Field here,
crashed at
Beauvais. Nine were killed when
: [two bombing planes collided 300
feet above Tours Flying Field as they were landing.
AL CAPONE’S PLEA
FOR RELEASE DENIED
LOS ANGELES, April 22 (U. P), =A] Capone received the bad news in Terminal Island Federal Prison
ders, If there were some agency to build the desired homes it would be unhealthy because as soon as the homes were built the emergency organization which con-
Raymond M. Foley (right), Fedetal Housing Administrator of Michigan, is visiting Indianapolis and the Home Show to tell local builders of his experiences in Detroit housing. He was shown the FHA booth at the Home Show by Earl Peters, Indiana FHA adminis trator, and later spoke before the Indianapolis Home Builders’ Ase
pected to be finished about July 15. They are placing the steel liner plates. Straw and boards are used to prevent possible “cave-ins.”
William A. Clark, 25, of 617 W.| working 28 feet underground these WPA “sandVermont St., and John H. Ross, 29,| hogs” have only 500 feet of ground to excavate to of 865 W. 27th St. were treated at| complete the 38th St. sewer project, which is ex-
City Hospital after the car which ® & @® Clark was driving struck a railroad signal abutment and glanced on 38TH ST TUBE into & car driven by Ewing Steel, 40, ¥ : of 310 Lincoln St. READY IN JULY
Mr. Clark is at City Hospital with head injuries. Miss Gertrude Higgenbotham, 19, of 136 S. Sheridan Ave, and Miss Mary Taylor, 16, of 131 S. Sheridan Ave., were treated for injuries at ity Hospital after the car in which they were passengers and one driven by Samuel P. Burch, 41, of 2207 N. Temple Ave, collided at Columbia Ave. and 22d St. The car in which the girls were riding was driven by Marion LeVelle, 32, of 1903 N. Capitol Ave. { St. was nearing completion today as Frank Beatty, 61, of 823 Fowler fiber-helmeted ‘“sandhogs,” working St., received scalp lacerations and a 28 feet underground, mined out the leg injury when he stepped from a last 500 feet of the mile-long tunnel. safety zone into the path of a car| The 10-foot high concrete-lined driven by Dehren Garriott, 13, of tunnel, first of its type in Indiana 626 Massachusetts Ave, at Massa-|sewer construction, is being built by chusetts Ave. and East St. He was the WPA and sponsored by the taken to City Hospital. City to relieve wnreat of flooded % basements and water-choked streets TWO Bled Th Crash jon the North Side. Two men were burned on the| An average of 400 WPA workers hands when they tried to extin- have been employed on the project guish flames which enveloped their 24 hours a day, six days a week truck after it crashed into a con-isince last August, boring ahead at crete abutment on W. Morris St. [the rate of 26 feet a day. When 700 block. {completed, about July 15, it will They were Clyde Ward and {stretch from Fall Creek west to Prince Herzog, employees of A. R. Central Ave. Wilson, piano mover of yi Towa | Section Uncompleted St.. whose truck they were driving. | The uncompleted portion is beThey were treated by the Fire De- tween College and Central Aves. partment first aid squac. | Seven shafts have been sunk at Held for questioning in the hitiggo-foot intervals from Fall Creek and run accident was Lewis Thomp- tg Central Ave. Working in two son, 1337 N. Capitol Ave., who has shafts at one time, crews of sandadmitted both the accident and pegs tunnel toward one another. four burglaries, police said. He is| «gg exact have been the calculatharged with leaving the scene of tions thus far that in ne case when an accident. [the crews met in the center of the
Lies Between Central And College.
The $150,000 sewer project on 38th
ij : : | bh a nose injured in the accident, goo-foot intervals between shafts |
which happened Thursday at Capi- ya there been more than one-half tol Ave. and 12th St, were Martin|,y inch variation in the level of von Behrens, 44. of 226 W. 12th St.; the tunnels.” Mr. Johnson Said. his wife, Hazel, 38, and their daugh- |! Steel Sheeting Installed
ter Mavis, 13. They are in Methodist Hospital. As ‘tunneling proceeds, oth Confession Claimed | workers bolt steel sheeting aroun {the tunnel walls, forming the outPolice said Thompson admitted side core of the sewer. Another and stealing the auto from a parking smaller form sheet is placed within lot and the license plates it bore the outside core and concrete is from a car parked in the 1500 block, | forced in the intervening nine-inch N. Tllinois St. space. George Woods, WPA superPolice said he leaped from the car visor, said it takes three hours to when the crash occurred and ran. (pour 500 feet of concrete from the
er
Only Incompleted Section
|
No Tanks
| Barber's “Home-Made’ Poles Stolen, Stripes And All
I. HOBBS, an energetic Irving. ton barber, is not angry, but he’s pretty puzzled about the way things have been going. For a barber pole, he buys a wornout hot water tank and paints red and white stripes around it. (Total cost 10 cents at a junk yard—mo resale value.) Nevertheless, in ‘the last few weeks, three of these have been stolen. Last time he drove around the entire neighborhood, supposing they had been discarded by the pranksters in a ditch somewhere. But he couldn't find them. What he wants to know is: Who stole them? Why? What did the thieves do with them? And what sense does it all make?
ho
Police today had only a description to aid in their search for the nervous, well-dressed bandit who obtained $125 yesterday in a holdup
of the Selby Arch Preserver Shoe Co., 20 N. Pennsylvania St. The bandit disappeared into the street crowd as the two clerks who were in the store when the robbery
4 Several minutes as he had ordered.
| | | |
occurred waited in a backroom for
The clerks were R. L. Morlock, 1616 Woodlawn Ave. and John Hutchins, 3145 N. Illinois St. Police said the bandit was described to them as about 35 years old, five feet eleven inches tall, dark hair and dark eyes, and wearing a light tweed topcoat.
from
JAIL BERGDOLL CHADWICK ASKS
Legion Chief Says Alleged Draft
Dodger of War ‘Must Be Punished.
Grover Cleveland Bergdoll,
“He betrayed his country in the greatest need,” Mr.
(hour of its FOR STORE ROBBER c= declared.
DIES FROM INJURIES
alleged World War draft dodger, “must be punished,” Stephen F. Chadwick, national commander of the American Legion, said today. His statement follows reports that Mr. Bergdoll seeks to return to America from Germany. Rep. Forest A. Harness (R. Ind.) has introduced a bill in the House which would bar the country any convicted Army deserter, Mr. Chadwick said Mr. Bergdoll’s offense against America was too serious to be mitigated by the passage of time and that if he returns he should serve the five-year prison term to which he was sentenced
CLUES FEW IN HUNT “i seine
structed them would collapse.” While housing is a vital part of any return to general prosperity, he said he did not believe that it in itself would cause a widespread business pickup. “There can be no general prosperity until the heavy industries grow and building is a part of those industries,” he said. “It is the month-by-month building which creates the element of stability and not so-called booms which are dangerous.”
‘End of Fear’ Reported
“For about 10 years the nation built few homes so that now there is a housing shortage, but steadily obsolete homes are being replaced and we are again beginning to meet normal need.” Two factors in the new building, he stated, are the production of low-cost homes built through the FHA and the passing of fear people had about the future. He explained that ‘workingmen’s homes’ are now being built for between $3500 and $6000 which can be paid for in any period up to 25 years. “Not only are these homes cheaner, but they are of a higher standard than those of 10 years ago because of the new method of finaneing. Now it is possible to buy a home and pay for it just as you would pay rent,” he said.
Model Home Praised By the 10:30 p. m. closing, more than 55,000 persons will have visited the “All-Indiana” model home,
AFTER CELEBRATION which this year has drawn more
PLYMOUTH, Imd., April 22 (U. P.) —Everett Holderead, 26, died at Parkview Hospital here last night from a skull fracture he reportedly received during an altercation fol{lowing a wedding anniversary celebration at Wakertown Ind., a week ago. Et. Joseph County police arrested Albin Wilson, 27, Holderead's companion, at the time he was injured, charging him with assault and battery. He was released after posting $1000 bond. Wilson said Holderead became unruly and was injured when he was. trying to take him home.
MIAJA SAILS FOR CUBA
favorable comment than any preVlei house, according to Mr. Cantwell, “This home, designed, built and furnished by Indianans, might possibly establish a truly representative type of Hoosier architecture,” he said. “Typical comment by the thousands who have seen it is that it is ‘just the kind of house’ they'd like to have.” This year’s home, designed by Frederick O. Wallick and built by Forest B. Kellogg, is a low, rambling “ranch-home” type which was designed to typify most nearly the Indiana homes of other days and yet be modern in every detail. Ine terior furnishings were planned by C. F. McKelvy, head of the deco-
sociation yesterday.
today that his plea for release on a
U. S. ‘ONLY HOPE’ AT GOAL PARLEY
Negotiations Resumed but Need of Government Aid Is Felt.
NEW YORK, April 22 (U. P.) = Direct Federal intervention appeared to offer the only practical hope today for settlement of the Appalachian soft coal shutdown which has kept 340,000 miners idle since April 1, choking the flow of fuel to railroads and industries. Whether it would be forthcoming was not certain, but deadlocked wage-hour negotiators indicated that they saw no other alternative to a prolonged suspension and, pos= sibly, a nation-wide soft coal famine. Labor Secretary Perkins was keeping in close touch with President Roosevelt.
Resume Discussions
The two sides resumed their dise cussions today but recessed at noon.
The Appalachian shutdown, which the United Mine Workers of Amer= ica have threatened to extend to 21 other states May 4 if an agreement is not reached by then, followed ex= piration of the 1937-39 wage-hour agreement, Negotiators for the union and some 2000 operators were in virtual agreement on a two-year renewal of the old wage-hour provisions, but were stalemated over the U. M. W. A's demand for a closed shop or an effective substitute.
Agreement Forecast
Miss Perkins believed, or professed to believe, that the negotiators wers near an agreement. In a press con= ference she said there was no great difference between them. But the division, while harrow, was, as an operators’ spokesman put it, “deep as the ocean.”
Thug Robs Bedridden Man of $10
A bandit last night held up an invalid Brightwood man in his bed and escaped with $10.05 as six children slept in adjoining rooms. Willie L. Johnson, 44, a widower, told police that he had been confined with fiu since Tuesday at his home, 3718 Roosevelt Ave. Last night, he said, six of his children — Everett. 16; Jesse, 13; James, 11; Della Francis, 9; Nancy, 7, and Mary Louis, 6—went to a neighbors hood movies to see, “They Made Me a Criminal.” The other two, Eisie, 18, and Marie, 20, went to the Roller Derby and he was alone at home, trying to sleep. Shortly after 11 the six chile dren returned from the movie and went to bed, leaving the door unlocked for the older girls, At about midnight, he said, he heard the door open and called: “Is that you Marie?” A man, who turned on the floor lamp, answered: “No, this ain't Marie this time. Wheres your money?” “Wait a minute,” Mr, John= son said. “All I got is in my jumper coat pocket and it’s on the chair.” The man, gun in hand, took the money and fled from the house.
CHARLES DUMONT, 72, DIES
asin
PARIS, April 22 (U, P.).—Charles |] Fred Dumont, Senator and former minister of finance and of the French
write of habeas corpus has been denied, and that he must serve until next November, at least. Federal Judge Harry Hollzer ruled that the time Capone spent in the Cook County jail in Chicago awaiting disposition of his appeal should not be allowed as time served on the sentence for income tax evasion that has kept the racket King behind bars since 1931,
N. Y. HOOSIER SONS WILL MEET FRIDAY
Dimer Special NEW YORK, April 22 Members of the Sons of Indiana Society here will hold their annual banquet Fri day night. Hoosier . firms are furnishing samples of their wares, including turkey, Ivan Boxell, society presi dent formerly of Marion, also is secretary of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, At the speaker’s table will be Wendell L. Wilkie, Elwood, utility leader; Vincent Bendix, South Bend; Congressman Charles A, Hal leck, Rensselaer; Steve Hannagan, Lafayette, a leading press agent; Don Herold, Bloomfield, noted humorist, and Homer E. Capehart, Washington, Ind. industrialist. Entertainment will be furnished by Joe Cook, Vincennes, Broadway star; Olsen and Johnson, comedians, and others. “Hoosiers Talk Turkey” will be the theme of the banquet.
WILLIAM RANDALL, 62, DIES ELIZABETH, N. J.,, April 22 (U. P.).—William Randall, 62-year-old actor and author, died today in Elizabeth General Hospital after a three-month {llness,
BUSINESS EDUCATION
Strong Accounting, Bookkeeping, Stenographie and Secretarial courses. Day and evening sessions. Lincoln £337. ed W. Case, Principal.
Central Business College
Architects and Builders Building. Pennsylvania & Vermont Sts, Indpls.
Navy, died today. He was 72.
Modernize Your Kitchen
. + + with our modern Efficiency Cabinets
Shortly thereafter he allegedly tried machine stationed on street level to burglarize the apartment of Miss ang 12 hours for it to harden. Nellie German, 1005 N. Pennsyl- | Water seepage was corrected with vania St. She called police and jnstallation of a water pump with a they captured him. capacity of 75.000 gallons an hour. Funeral services for Mr. DeMaree| wr Woods said the groand is soft will be at 2 p. m. Monday in the ang and gravel and care must be Jordan Funeral Home. Burial Will | taken to prevent caveins. be in Memorial Park. Mr. DeMaree was a lifelong resident of Indianapolis and a member of the Heath Memorial M. E. Church. He was employed for many years by the G. and J. Rubber Co. He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Earl Shirrell and Misses Vera | and Olive DeMaree; a son, Lowell; | two brothers, Lowell, of Indianapolis, and Clarence M. of Denver, and a sister, Mrs. Bertha Pelham, Indianapolis. Funeral services for Mr. Pope are to be at 3 p. m. Monday at the Harry W. Moore Funeral Home, and burial will be in Floral Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Frances. who still is in a critical condition in an Anderson Hospital.
MIDWEST COUNCIL TO HEAR WAR TALK
Don Bate, United Press correspondent in Europe and the Orient. is to speak on “America and War —in the Far East, in Europe,” at the luncheon meeting of the Midwest Council on International Relations at the Columbia Club Monday. Mr. Bate was in Shanghai at the time of the first Japanese drive and has traveled extensively over northern China, Manchuria, Korea, Japan and Europe. Eugene C. Foster, Midwest Council vice president, is to preside. Mrs. H. E. Barnard will be hostess.
MRS. LORD, MOTHER OF 4 DOCTORS, DIES
Times Special KEWANNA, April 22 —Funeral services were held today for Mrs. Gertrude Lord, mother of five sons, four of whom are doctors. She was 668 years old. : Survivors include two daughters, | Elizabeth Ann and Mary Alice Lord of 4526 Washington Blvd. Indianapolis and five sons, Dr. Glen Lord of Indianapolis, Dr. Robert Lord of Kewanna, Dr. M. P. Lord of Lafayette, Dr. F. E. Lord of Michigan and Russell J. Lord of Mishawaka.
LLEWELYN FUNERAL WILL BE TOMORROW
NEW CASTLE, April 22 (U. P) — Funeral services ror Edgar J. Llewelyn, 64, superintendent of the New Castle public schools, will be conducted at 2 Pp. m. TOMOITCW. Mr. Llewelyn died of a heart attack yesterday. He came to New Castle in 1917 as superintendent. Previously he had been connected with schools at Fishers, Arcadia, Sheridan and Mount Vernon. “ Su
tailored to fit your individual needs.
Phone for Free Estimate. Easy Payment Plan,
Reliable Rug & Linoleum Co.
203 E. Washington St. RI. 0607
JOR FINDERS UNEMPLOYED | MEMPHIS, Tenn. April 22 (U. P).—Twenty-eight employees of the Memphis public employment
Yesterday James F. Dewey, Department of Labor conciliator, re= turned to the conference for the third time in three weeks and re-, ceived from the negotiators a report, ! that they had made “no progress | whatsoever.” Nai
LA PALLICE, France, April 22 (U. P.).—Gen. Jose Miaja, Spanish Republican defender of Madrid, em- ) \ barked in the steamship Orbita tocenter who had been finding jobs day with his wife and their 10for others found themselves “tem- vear-old daughter, for Cuban and There porarily” unemployed today. There Mexico to start life anew. Gen. {have been no injuries to any Vo no funds to carry on the Miaja was accompanied by 10 Re{men thus far, WPA officials state. !service. publican general staff officers.
HOOSIERS IN WASHIN GTON —By Daniel Kidney
many Democratic minds here, bat
particalarly in the best minds around Senator Minton’s office.
2 =» =
Advent of the Indiana D. A. R. for their annual meeting: here created quite a fuss among ‘the congressmen’s wives. Since Mrs. Charles A. Halleck is an active Daughter, she took the leadership in arranging a reception for the visitors at the Congressional Club. When it began to look a bit too Republican for them, the wives of the Democratic congressmen took & hand under the leadership of Mrs. William H. Larrabee. The upshot was that when the reception came off on Thursday afternoon, one of the guests came over to Mrs. Halleck and gushed: “Bly dear, you look so sweet. Really, you look too nice to be a Republican.” ® ® That Kokomo speech in which Homer Capehart accused Paul V. McNutt of New Dealism has proven quite a boost for the former Hoosier Governor here. For one of the questions which | has Deen raised in regard to the McNutt for President “middle of-the-road” campaign was about his progressivism, According to Mr. Capehary, the Hoosier G. 0. P. favorite son, Paul and not nt Roosevelt was the New Deal pioneer, Hurrah! The New Dealers here shout, but they still are checking the facts. ]
rating department of BannerWhitehill, who furnished the house.
THOMPSON IS "HEAD OF ORCHARD SCHOOL
Gordon H. Thompson today was appointed headmaster at Orchard School to succeed Hillis L. Howie, whose resignation recently was ace cepted by the school board of truse tees. Mr. Thompson has been with the school since 1932 and has been acting headmaster since September. He is a Butler University graduate and did postgraduate work at Northwestern University. He has been assistant director of the Prairie Trek Expeditions and has been active in Boy Scout work here. He is a member of the Progressive Education Association.
STATE BANK HOLDUP SUSPECT ARRAIGNED
EVANSVILLE, April 22 (U. P.).— Ira Tooley, 32, of Somerville, was to be arraigned here today on a charge of conspiracy in the robbery of the Mackey State Bank Jan. 25. Tooley’s arrest was announced yesterday by Sheriff Edwin Diekmann. Carl Smith, 33; Victor Geppner, 26, and Robert Bayes, 26, also arrested for the robbery, waived preliminary hearing and were bound over to Circuit Court in lieu of $25,000 bond each.
WOMAN KILLED, § HURT
DUBOIS, Pa. April 22 (U. P).— Mrs, Mary Lambert, 52, Keyser, W. Va., was killed and six others, including three children, injured when the automobile in which they were riding sideswiped a truck 10 miles east of here.
ASHINGTON, April 22.-— Having heard Senator Taft (R. 0.) deliver something like his Gridiron dinner speech at the “Republicans On The March” dinner here Thursday night, most of the Indiana G. O. P. congressmen today seem to favor ‘Governor Bricker as Ohio's favorite son for the Republican presidential nomination. For Senator Taft's talk took about all of the pep out of the pep meeting at the Williard Hotel. The general effect of it was well Wlustrated by G. O. P. Chairman John D. M. Hamilton, who, although seated at the speakers’ table, divested himself of a whole series of cavernous yawns. The Ohio Crown Prince's unpopular appeal could be summed up by a story which is told of Al Smith going t¢ hear Teddy Roosevelt II, when both were gubernatorial candidates in New York state. The Brown Derbyman emerged with the comment: “The boy ain’t there.”
® ” ”
Of course Young Teddy had a | more difficult and dynamic mark to shoot at when imitating his father. As President of the United States, the father of Senator Taft spent a rather somnolent term. Former Senator Jim Watson (D. Ind.) tells of going to the White House to discuss important business with President | Taft and having him fall asleep in his chair after a very, very hearty meal. Whenever this would happen on nice spring days, the towering Hoosier Senator would quietly send for his hat and soon would be cheering the Big Train from a good grandstand seat in the Washington ball yard. According to “Young Bob” Taft, the New Deal has been a complete flop in both its foreign and domestic policies and something should be done about it. Just what he doesn’t say.
* * »
Indiana’s own “Young Bob” Rep. Robert A. Grant, took a bow at the “Republicans On the March” dinner. He was on the arrangements committee and with the exception of the Taft speech and that of Governor Baldwin (R. Conn.), which was in the best
oo» A
= "sr
wa
HOME LOANS |
Anam \\
Ll
N 8)
“KK NN o CO |
Homer Capehart
wooden nutmeg manner, event was highly successful. In fact the Republicans here are feeling pretty cocky in regard to 1940.
oe FIVE ways that our modern home fi-
nancing plan can save YOU money!
\ I in
SRR
hu I. No charge on loan applications.
HEN Senator VanNuys, D. Ind.) returns from the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn. he will find he is a committee chair man, due to the death of Senator Lewis (D., 1). The chairmanship is that of the Committee of Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Unlike Senator Minton’s chairmanship of the Pensions Committee, which provides a separate office and two clerical assistants, the VanNuys’ chairmanship brings the senior Senator nothing but one extra office file. » » » Since Governor Townsend denied he said that he isn’t going to ran for public office again and since the Constitution of Indiana provides that a Governor cannot succeed himself, what office will he ron for? This question is uppermost in
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
Spring Coats & Suits
MILLER-WOHL E Wa 5.
2. No commission charge.
SE 3.
4, Listen to the Town Crier 11:30 A. M. Daily Except Sunday
WEBM *
Low loan closing expense. Interest rates vary from 5% to 612% and your rate will be the lowest your property can command.
. Our method of including taxes and fire and tornado insurance in months ly payments is a real convenience and it saves you money, too!
4 I
" ® Wn Mr. Capehart slready has be-
2 cette wv CDR
GC. O. P high command here, IRAE REE vey think his candidacy for A : i : Tl Makes Rented and Repaired President or Vice President is 2 oh
too much to ask as & payoff for WOODSTOCK TYPEWRITER CO. one Cornfield Conference, even {§ gc "pl 0 ia st. LIAR
if it did cost $30,000. Chop Suey—Chow Mein ® Steak * Fried Chicken
Delicious food, tempting. ly served or Hehverea 5
JOOA! | Sot. 10 omen your friends, a WHOLESAL AND HAVE SUNDAY DINNER AT
\G KONG AVE. ; :
Obtain these economies plus an opportunity to finance YOUR home with
{Home Folks at Home. This service limited to Marion County.
LL
FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASST.
INDIANAPOLIS RRC RR ERY
Rey
INN
TA. 2838
CO. RI-2250
