Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1939 — Page 1
The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Fair tonight and tomorrow; continued cool tonight; possibly light frost; slightly warmer tomorrow; Sunday, fair and warmer,
VOLUME
U. S. Offers Slu
LEWIS VICTOR
51—NUMBER 53
MINES T0 OPEN |
AGAIN MONDAY §
Demands for Union Shop Are Met With Support
From Prosident. §
STEEL AND AUTOS NEXT
Wage-Hour Conferees Get Final Details of New | Pact Late Today.
(Another Story, Page Five)
By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, May 12.—-John L. Lewis, backed by the full influence of President Roosevelt, has won a! virtually complete victory in his long battle with bituminous coal operato.s over making a closed shop out of the huge soft-coal industry. This became plain today as con- | tract negotiators for the Appalachian soft coal industry reached a tentative agreement on a union shop contract with the United Mine Workers of America and appointed ra3 | a drafting committee to prepare the proposed agreement for submission | to the full joint wage hour confer- | ence late today. W. L. Robison of Cleveland, chairman of the joint wage-hour conference, made the announcement after a morning session of a subcommittee representing 2000 Appalachian soft coal operators and 340,000 miners who have been idle since April 1.
Last Point of Issue Removed |
£4 it
Inclusion of the union shop in the tentative agreement last point of issue. The agreement, reached after the Administration at Washington had intervened with the full pressure of the Federal Government, meant that the mines in the Appalachian area would be opened Monday and that a threatened nation-wide soft coal famine had been averted. | Mr. Lewis emerges from conflict with his prestige strengthened a labor leader, although there are conspicuous scars remaining among the management representatives with whom he must deal for future bituminous contracts, i
the bitter
as
‘Stop Lewis’ Drive Fails
The “stop Lewis” drive, directed against the big union that is the backbone of the C. 1. O., has failed utterly, and the bushy-browed labor chieftain is expectad to press his advantage by aggressive campaigns for the closed shop in other industries, such as steel and automobiles, when the time appears propitious. A half dozen coal mining districts of the South are thought likely to remain out the settlement which the capitulated operators are readv| to sign the reservation, ex-! pressed privately, that “we might lick Lewis, we can't lick Lewis plus Roosevelt.” The Southern districts have lagged before in accepting agreements of the Appalachian conference, and on the basis of past history they are expected eventually to be brought into line through the workings of competitive forces. For Mr. Lewis there may be future repercussions of the kind that eternally threaten any man of steadily mounting power
of with
but
Nathan Straus (extreme left),
m
Aid
Times Photo. U. S. Housing Authority Adminis
trator, offered the City a slum clearance project after an inspection
tour here yesterday.
With him (left to richt) are Norman E. Isaacs,
The Times managing editor; Adolph Zweraner, U. S. Housing Authority attornev: Thomas Movnahan, State Housing Board chairman, and the
occupant of one of the houses.
“This Isn’t Civilized,’
Straus Says on Tour
Administrator on Visit Here Voices Amazement at with conspiring to defraud the gov-| conditions After Tour With Mayor.
By RICHARD LEWIS The United States Housing Authority has offered Indianapolis a after the government rested.
slum-clearance program.
The offer was made directly to Mavor Sullivan yesterday by Nathan
Straus, U. S. Administrator.
removed the field Gardens, nationally known housi
TURKEY, BRITAIN FORM. ALLIANCE
FOREIGN SITUATION LONDON — Anglo-French military pact near. BERLIN—Nazis resent British Danzig “meddling.” ROME — “War psychosis rules democracies,” claim, PARIS—Daladier wins big confidence vote, 375 to 230. WARSAW — “Smuggler” German killed at border. HELSINGFORS—Nazis agree to forts on Aaland Islands. TOKYO—Mediation of Danzig issue discussed. SHANGHAI—Occupation of U. S. area hinted.
and
LONDON, May 12 (U. P.).—Great Britain and Turkey have agreed to conclude “a definite long term agreement tional security,” Prime Chamberlain announced the House of Commons. The agreement was understood to provide for mutual co-operation in the Eastern Mediterranean. Turkey
Minister today in
would aid Britain in case of an at-|
(Continued on Page Three)
in the interests of their na-|
A. F. of L. May Backfire i
Both men stood on the grounds of Locke-
ng project. 1 Mr, Straus, here on an inspection | tour, pointed across Blake St. to {some ramshackle houses which are (near Lockefield’s modernistic, utilitarian buildings. He said: “We of the United States Housing Anthority stand ready to transforth that into this when you tell us you are ready.” Mayor Sullivan stared wooden shacks and replied: “All right, I'll talk to Tom Moyna{han about it.” | Mr. Moynahan is State Housing | Board chairman. Shocked, Straus Says | In company with the Mayor. several officials and businessmen, Mr !Straus made a two-hour inspection tour of what he was told were “some of our slum sections.” He said, | frankly, he was shocked. “This isn’t even civilized,” he said. “How can you call yourselves civilized in Indianapolis with peo{ple living in places like these? Any {city which permits human beings to | live like this cannot call itself civil(ized. T haven't seen anything quite as bad anywhere. Frankly, gentle{men, I haven't.” After the inspection, the Administrator addressed the Indianapolis Construction League at the War Memorial. He emphasized that the USHA was not interested in the |family that can be housed by pri- | vate initiative. “We're interested in the lowest ‘one-third income group. I assure | you we never will enter the middle {income group. That's your field.”
Looks Inside Home
at the
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1939
FORECAST END
OF WPA TRIAL BY TOMORROW
Probes Reported in 5 Other | Cases Similar to That Alleged in Kokomo.
AGENTS ASSIGNED
15
Didn't Know Disputed Bricks
Were Privately Owned, Defendant Says.
The trial of 11 former Kokomo City and WPA officials on fraud | charges may go to the jury late to- [ morrow, it defense attorneys | their evidence. Meanwhile, it was reported that
|
began speeding
was indicated today as!
investigations have opened into five
that charges
upon are
more cases simiiar to which the Kokomo | based.
Fifteen Government agents have
been assigned to the new pioke, it was said, and the results of their inquiries will be turned over to the | Federal Grand Juries in both the { Northern and Southern Districts. Former WPA Head Testifies
The Kokomo defendants, charged
Indiana
i
|
ernment through use of WPA labor |
in cleaning used bricks and { processing other privately owned | materials later sold to the city, be{gan their defense late yesterday
| First of the 11 to conclude testimony in his own behalf was Lester E. Ratcliff, 2952 Kenwood Ave, former Kokomo WPA superintendent. He was followed by James A. Harmon, former Kokomo sewer project supervisor. Both Harmon and Ratcliff told the jury today that they were unaware that the 150,000 used bricks cleaned by WPA labor were owned bv George Mix, a defendant and former assistant city engineer of Kokomo. Harmon said another defendant, George Morrow, former city engineer, told him the City had some bricks which needed cleaning, so
he went to his superior, Ratclifl, jn the mass murder merchandising |
jwho in turn got permission from | the district office to do the work.
Denning Is Called
Other witnesses called by these defendants were Posey B. Denning, Marion County acting WPA director » was assistant director of the cie office in 1935 and 1936, and Charles A. Wilson, 4112 Boulevard Place, who was assistant State WPA director of the division of operations in the same vears. Both said it was not customary to include in a project proposal everything that had to be done on the project, such as brick cleaning. They said they would not have approved any processing of materials known to be owned privately. S. S. Huffman, former clerk in the Kokomo WPA office, said it was “understood” in the office that the City of Kokomo owned the brick. Harmon testified that, as project supervisor, one of his duties was th» sign certificates that the materials were delivered by the city to (Continued on Page Four)
Entered as
at Postoffice, Indianapolis,
CITY ACTS TO ELIMINATE 13 BELT LINE CROSSINGS
|
ne
This and other South Side railroad grade cross- | put into effect.
ings in Indianapolis will be eliminated if a resolu- | tion adopted by the Works Board today is rinally |
SARSENIC RING
SUICIDE FAILS
Stepmother of ‘Death Kiss’
\ Widow Takes Poison In Disgust.
PHILADELPHIA, May 12 (U.P).|
—The stepmother of a kev fugitive
syndicate attempted suicide unsuccessfully by swallowing poison today Police revealed that another suspect had eluded them after an allnight vigil Seventy-vear-old Mrs. Angelina Ruggerio, stepmother of Mrs. Rose Carina, “the kiss of death” arsenic widow, took the poison Hampton, N. J., home,
Disgusted With Life
“I want to die, I am disgusted.” she sobbed when neighbors found her
Police also revealed that Dominic Rodeo. identified vesterday for the first time as an arsenic ring suspect
during one of the greatest mass ar-
raignments of murder defendants in Philadelphia's history, had escaped their trap.
Rodeo, wanted in connection with
the drowning at sea of Joseph Arena, was named as one who shared in Arena’s insurance and as fone of the companions who was
in her|.-
For Mr. Roosevelt, whose place in the Lewis corner has been evidenced hy telephone conversations between | him and his “conciliating” reprehere, there may be a tackiire from the A. ¥. of L., which has supported the Progressive Miners in that small organization’s effort to get a place in the sun occu-| pied by the great United Mine Workers. Because Roosevelt, through | representatives, is now aligned advocate of a closed shop for Lewis union, despite the protest of its rivals, chances of an early peace between two great branches of organized labor—the C. I. O. and the A. F. of L.—have been lessened Most of the great coal-producing districts are expected to hear whistles Monday calling nearly half a million men back to work This result has been brought by & series of events regarded as material for an epochal chaoter in the history of American industrial relations
sentatives
Mr his 1 &8 8n
the
the
Met Demands of Lewis
letter addressed on Mav 7 bv Mr Lewis to Dr. John R. Steelman. who
has had charge for the Government of the negotiations here.
Mr. Lewis blamed the Roosevelt|ley and oats and five huge wooden | Administration for encouraging the/bins in which it was stored. The]
operators to believe they could “disembowel” the United Mine Workers: explained his demand as being for! & “union shop” with no upon the rights of management; declared that an agreement was being
intrusion
PROBES OPENED IN CHICAGD GRAIN FIRE
Fear Bodies of 8 Dead May Never Be Found.
CHICAGO, Mav 12 (U. P).—The charred remains of 3,000,000 bushels of grain smouldered on the edge of a South Chicago prairie today as = funeral pyre for eight men who perished in a $4,000.000 grain elevator explosion and fire. As Federal, State and City agencies opened investigations, police and firemen were certain the eight men were dead even though still smouldering embers prevented a search for bodies. There was a possibility that no bodies ever would be recovered. The
eight missing men were believed to] have been working high up in af
granary in which the explosion orig-
inated. Four others who had been | Conspicuous in this chapter is a working at ground level were burned |
critically. Seventeen firemen were hurt fighting the blaze. The fire consumed approximately 3.000,000 bushels of wheat, corn, bar-
grain was valued at approximately
$2,500,000 and the buildings at $1-
500,000.
The slight, dapper administrator {surveyed a row of frame houses on | Blake St. The structures seemed to
lean against each other for support. |
|It seemed as if you could pull one
lof them out and the rest would top-
ple down in a pile of old lumber.
He walked through an alleyway {lined with outdoor toilets. Stopping {at a house along the alley, he asked a Negro woman if he could come in (Continued on Page 14)
BULLETIN
Two bandits held up the State Bank at Linden this afternoon, escaping with between $2500 and $3000. Howard Davis, hookkeeper, the only person in the bank at the time, was kicked by one of the band- | its for “looking at us.” The bandits arrived | while the safe was locked for the noon hour and wait. ed 15 minutes until the time lock opened.
|
with him when he was pushed from | a fishing boat off Sea Isle City, N. J. Police said they guarded a Phila- | delphia home throughout the night, hoping to capture Rodeo.
Cancel Exhumation
GIRL FLIER TAKING SUN BATH CRASHES
|
Lands Fully Clothed. but
Last week Mrs. Carina eluded
Shelby St. Railroad.
and
| New Start
Man Freed in Killing Of Imbecile Son to Adopt Child.
EW YORK, May 12 (U. P) .— Louis and Anna Greenfield planned today to adopt a child to replace their imbecilic son, Jerome, whom Louis chloroformed
|
18 years of married life to a hopeless struggle to relieve his misery. A jury of married men and women, all but one of them parents of healthy children, acquitted Mr. Greenfield of a manslaughter charge last night. | The 40-year-old, broken-spirited wife said they hoped to find some consolation in raising an orphaned child, but “we never happy.”
HOOVER TO CONFER WITH STATE LEADERS
Select Group of G. 0. P. Invited to Parley.
A select group of Indiana Republican editors and party officials has received engraved invitations to attend a conference with former President Herbert Hoover at War-|
Second-Class Matter
after they had devoted 16 of their |
can be |
FINAL HOME
Ind.
PRICE THREE CENTS
» 5 »
Times Photo The crossing shown here is at the Indianapolis Union, or Belt
F.D.R. INSISTS ON TAX REVENUE
Drops Opposition to Profits Levy Repeal, but Says
(Other National Affairs, Page Five) WASHINGTON, May 12 (U. PJ. —President Roosevelt reiterated to- | day that if Congress changes the {corporate tax structure it must pro|vide revenue equal to whatever reductions are made. Mr. Roosevelt said that his position on tax revision was the same as it waz several weeks ago. He said that he would not oppose | 3 | Congressional repeal of the undis{tributed corporate profits levy, but | that if this was done Congress would have to provide revenue to make up the loss. It would also, he said, be forced to devise some | method to prevent legal tax evasions (which the present law is designed to halt. The President put responsibility for tax revision entirely on Con- | gress. He said that suggestions | from the Treasury for various re- { visions should not be construed a: Administration recommendations However, he said revision proposals will be presented by the Treasury to | the House Ways and Means Com[mittee soon.
Is First Step to Reopen
‘Resolution
Negotiations.
ROADS NOTIFIED
'S. Meridian to Bethel Area Named by Works Board.
| The Works Board today ree |solved to eliminate 13 Belt Railroad grade crossings from S. Meridian St. to Bethel Ave, The action was a reply to ‘railroad officials who have ase serted the City would have to take the first step in, ree ‘opening negotiations under provisions of a new track ‘elevation law passed by the 1939 Legislature. | The resolution also provided for the elevation of the Pennsylvania [Railroad tracks across seven streets [from Raymond to Orange Sts. The Board ordered City Engi neer M. G. Johnson to notify State | Highway officials and representa tives of all railroads to attend a conference on tiie proposed project at a date not yet set. Details to Be Decided | The resolution constitutes a declaration of intention but does not provide the methods by which the City would proceed on the proe (posed project. This will be dise | cussed at a series of conferences of the Board, Mayor Sullivan and City Controller James Deery, Board members said they would discuss the possibility of seeking Federal aid for the project Mr, Deery has informed the Mayor that | the City can issue bonds up to about $900,000 this year and that the bonde« ing margin would enable the City to float a reasonably large issue for the tracks project. Mr. Johnson, meanwhile, said he would draw up specifications in col laboration with railroad and State Highway Department engineers (from which a tentative cost could be determined. Effective in Near Future The resolution provides that the elevation can be undertaken as soon as the new track elevation law bee (comes effective on publication of the 1939 Acts, probably within 10 days, This law reduces the cost of eleva« [tion to the railroads from 50 to 20 (per cent. The City and County would divide the remaining 80 per cent equally, Where the elevation |is built over a State highway, the |Highway Department would assume {the full 80 per cent of the cost. | This provision would free both the City and County from paying the cost of elevating tracks over Made ison Ave. which is a State Highway,
| Crossings Are Listed
Asked if he favored a new cor-
saw May 21, it was learned today.
Purpose of the secret conference
| porate tax structure at this session, {he said any increase of the flat corporate rate to make up for the
was not revealed, but the sponsors g250.000.000 vield lost by repeal of |intimated it had nothing to do with the capital stock and excess profits
any 1940 Presidential aspirations/tax would bring complaints from
[both big and little business. VT. Fogver usd Wo Suse. | Mr. Roosevelt said that if Con-
| “Couldnt
1 |
Bail Out.
LOS ANGELES, May 12 (U. P).— Bernardine King, pretty aviatrix, wriggled out of her clothes in the | cockpit of her airplane to enjoy & high altitude sun bath when—of all times—the motor failed. “You can imagine what a time I | had.” said Miss King, who is 28, redhaired, and green-eyed. “1 was flying back to Los Angeles from Bakersfield in my open cockpit i monoplane. As I often do, I slipped out of my uniform, and some other things, and was enjoying the sun- | shine. I “At 1000 feet I notice engine trouble. The crankshaft was broken and I had to head for an alfalfa field. “Imagine the time I had. frying to land a disabled ship with one hand, and get back into my clothes with the other.” | Miss King landed fully clothed. {although she wrecked her plane and suffered severe bruises and a finger fracture. “T—well—I just couldn't bail out,” I Miss King said.
| police as they closed in on her in | New Jersey. She lauthorities a letter from Asbury Park, protesting her description as the “Borgia” of the arsensic ring. Later detectives traced her to Lakewood, but arrived there 1D minutes after she had left. The scheduled exhumation of Abe Sherman, whose wife is being held as an arsensic widow. was can(Continued on Page Three)
MERIT GROUP URGED BY WOMEN VOTERS
State Organization Mapped At Parley.
By VIRGINIA MANNON | Times Staff Writer | LAFAYETTE, May 12.—Plans for the organization of an Indiana as|sociation “for the promotion of legislation to establish a merit system in the entire state service” are being promulgated today as the third bi-
| |
had written |
However, party leaders generally
(ing was called to sound out senti-
ment for Mr. Hoover and possibly
to checkmate the efforts being made to groom Homer E. Capehart as a “favorite son” candidate for the Presidency. Neither Arch N. Bobbitt, G. O. P. State chairman, nor other members of the State party organization have received invitations, it was said. | Key figures in arranging the con{ference was said by party observers (to be William Gross, editorial writer of the Ft. Wayne News-Sentinel. In a formal statement, Mr. Gross [said, “No political significance whatever can properly be attached to the invitations which I recently sent to a number of Indiana editors, requesting their presence at an informal party with former President | Hoover as guest of honor. . . . | “Contrary to certain press-wire |reports, no ‘party leaders’ . other than editors have been invited. And nothing could be farther from the (truth than the statement that the |conference will ‘talk over this state's | participation in selection of the 1940 | Presidential nominee.’ ”
were of the opinion that the meet-
{gress adopted the theory of spread{ing the percentage tax there not only would be a squawk but a [revolution on the part of thousands {of little corporations making less [than $10,000 a year. He anticipated that the amount would have to be raised out of the pockets of the relatively small number of larger
| corporations and that a complaint
DOWNTOWN MOVIE THEATER IS SOLD
The Ambassador Theater, 113 N. (Illinois St., changed hands today. Now leased by Manny Marcus, the property was sold to Harry Rubens of Indianapolis, according to W. A Brennan, Inc., which firm represented both parties in the transaction. Mr, Marcus is to continue operating the {his theaters here and at Ft. Wayne. The Ambassador formerly was called the Isis and has been a motion picture theater for nearly 30 years. It has a seating capacity of 1000.
(could be expected fiom them.
theater along with
Besides Meridian St., Bethel Ave, and Madison Ave. streets included in the Belt elevation plans are East, Singleton, Barth Ave., Shelby, Line den, Thaddeus, Draper, State Ave. Villa Ave., Churchman Ave. and Keystone Ave, The elimination of these grads crossings would provide a continue ous elevation more than two miles long, according to City Engineers. The City has pending in Marion | County Circuit Court a suit to com= pel the Belt Railroad to elevate the tracks over Madison Ave. and East and Singleton Sts. under terms of a 1925 elevation contract made be« tween the City and the road. Since the suit was filed last fall, the U. S. Supreme Court has held that a railroad cannot be compelled [to undertake grade separation where the cost would prove confiscatory, The ruling was made in a Tennessee case where the State law was simi« lar to the old Indiana law which provided that the roads pay half of the entire cost. Mr. Deery and Corporation Couns (Continued on Page Four)
COOL AGAIN TONIGHT, BUREAU FORECASTS
LOCAL TEMPERATURES { ws 48 10a. |. 46 1l1a.m.... 50 12 (Noon). 54 1p. Mm...
58 60 63 65
Warmer weather for the week-end was predicted by the Weather Bue reau,
47 in Crews of Two Fishing Boats McNutt College Choice
prevented by a minority of operators The forecast, however, said that
under “the remote control of financial and industrial interests”; andj criticized governmental authorities for “a supine attitude or a lacka-| daisical interest” in the refusal of all affected states except Pennsylvania to give public aid to nonworking miners. Dr. Steelman, giving no impression than that he acted under any authority less than that stemming directly from the President, “came through” on all these propositions.
F.D.R. STATEMEN
NEW YORK, May 12 (U. P).— Stocks staged a mild rally today on the New York Exchange following President Roosevelt's that he is not opposed to of tax revision,
statement Nickerson, died of a heart attack some form (after the col! returned here along with his mates. |vivors.
Reported Safe Ai fter
YARMOUTH, Nova Scotia, May| The survivors had tossed about 12 (U. P.).—Reports from North At-lin open boats for almost 48 hours
lantic coastal ports indicated today |, sore rescue vessels took then
that all hands aboard two fishing schooners scuttled by an early ®8board or they reached the coast
morning collision in dense fog had in their own boats. been accounted for. | Forty-seven members of the cOm- yarmouth, 12 and the body of Mr. bined crews of the fishing vessels, | Nickerson had been landed at WestIsabelle Parker and Edith C. Rose, | port, south of here. Three survivwhich sank 150 miles northeast of lors were said to have landed at Boston early Wednesday, were re- Great Rock Island, on the coast of ported to have been landed along Maine, presumably in their own the seaboard from Yarmouth south boat. to Great Wass Island, Maine. All crew members were accounted The othei crew member, Frank for as the U. S. Coast Guard sent ; 'ships and planes to aid the Canaision, but his body was dian t's search for sur-
At noon today, 32 sailors were in
| proseeden at slow speed through the |'63.” She died Wednesday in Alex-| fog. andris, La. : :
{ennial council meeting of the Indiana League of Women Voters draws | to a close. Miss Marguerite M. Wells, presi- _ (dent of the National League of A coastal steamer, a motor ship Women Voters. will address the final and another fishing vessel picked session following a 12:30 luncheon up the survivors during the night 2t the Purdue Union Building. Mrs. and early today, and hastened for Valter S. Greenough, Indianapolis, the mainland. chairman of the National League's \ ..__ (department of government and its sh : The fishermen told NArTowing | oe ation, is to preside. rae stories of fleeing their sinking iott Purd schooners in night Edward C. Elliott of Purdue Univer-
clothing and drifting in the open boats. United (Continued on Page Four)
States’ citizens among them were “ we taken to the U. S. Consulate here JUICE UF 60° DELP and will leave for Boston tonight| WEST PLAINS, Mo, May 12 (U. aboard the steamer Evangeline. |P.) —PFuneral services were held toEllsworth Buchanan of Everett, /day for Mrs. Alice C. Risley, 91, Mass, a sailor aboard the Edith !said to have been the last surviving 'C. Rose, said the collision occurred Civil War nurse and known to the | without warning as both vessels|soldiers in that conflict of “Alice of
Crash in Fog
»
Ss
If Roosevelt Doesn’t Run
AUSTIN, Tex., May 12 (U. P.).— with 9.7 per cent and Cordell Hull, Paul V. McNutt, present High Commissioner of the Philippines and {former Indiana governor, is first tabulated were Fiorello La Guardia, choice of United States college stu- | Arthur H. Vandenburg, Robert Taft, | Books .... 'dents for President if Mr. Roosevelt William Borah, Harry L. Hopkins, Broun .
is not a candidate in 1940, a poll of Philip LaFollette, the nation's colleges and universities Henry Cabot Lodge, Bennett Clark, Crossword
indicated today.
| Joe Belden, editor of the survey Herbert Hoover, Alfred Landon, J.| Editorials .... ‘conducted by the University of H. Bankhead, Earl Browder, Norman Fashions . | Texas, said 17.7 per cent of students Thomas, (regardless of party picked Mr. Mc- Major Edward Bowes received one Flynn
Nutt, a Democrat.
Thomas E. Dewey, district attorney of New York City, a Republican, lion potential student .voters who|In Indpls. would be of age to participate in|Jane Jordan... 21 State Deaths. 16
r cent.
“ior Preden Gainer an
it would be continued cool tonight and that a light frost was possibile,
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
[Secretary of State, a Democrat, | {fourth with 8.3 per cent. | | Others with enough votes to be
woes Bl vo 22 Farley, | Comics ...... 30 . Bl 30 2 19 31 22
Movies . 24 Mrs. Ferguson 22 Obituaries ... Pegler Pyle Questions , Radio Mrs. Roosevelt 21 Scherrer 21 vote. Forum Serial Story . 30 Belden said there were one mil-| Grin, Bear It 30 Society ..... 18 3 | Sports 25, 26, 27
James
Henry Wallace, Felix Frankfurter, Curious World
Robert M. Hutchins. Financial ..
very al
cera
