Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1939 — Page 1

he Indianapolis Times

FORECAST :Fair tonight, followed by increasing cloudiness tomorrow; moderate temperature.

FINAL HOME

VOLUME 51—-NUMBER 73

WATER EXPERT

MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1939

: Triple Play

Tonsils Out, Louis to Gordon to Ronald

TURNS BACK TO

Entered as Second-Class Matter

at Postoffice, Indianapo

REFUGEE LINER SUPREME COURT

PRICE THREE CENTS

RULES

lis, Ind.

© TOSCAN VALUE OF PROPERTIES

Dickerman Turns From Rec-

HAGUE DENIED LIBERTY;

GERMAN PORT BOR BAN AIDED

ours wm oes CHILD) LA

ords to Look Over Physical Holdings.

CITIZENS’ ADVICE ASKED

Mayor Seeks Committee of

14; Brookside League Holds Forum Tonight.

Judson Dickerman, Federal utilities engineering expert borrowed by the City, was to inspect the Indianapolis Water Co. physical property this afternoon as a part of his survey of the utility's value. His services were obtained by the City in connection with the proposed municipal acquisition of the firm at a price of $22,825,000. Other developments in the proposed acquisition included: Mayor Sullivan awaited acceptance from a committee of 14 citizens named to consult with City officials in studying the advisability of buying the company.

League to Hold Forum

Brookside Civic League officials

prepared for an overflow crowd at the League's open forum on

the |

proposal at 8 o'clock tonight at the

Brookside Community House,

An ordinance appropriating $1500]

out of which Mr. be paid for his services mitted to the City the City Legal Department. Mr. Dickerman, who arrived here from Washington May 22, spent his first two weeks in the City studying annual reports and records of the utility as far back as 1909, as well as records of the last rate case before the Public Service Commission and Federal Court. He also has consulted with the State geologist and other health officials, and made a survey of the lowering of the water table y privately owned wells used for airconditioning downtown hotels and theaters. Mr. Dickerman said he was attempting to “form a judgment as to the usefulness and relative value of the property from a buying standpoint.” “There might be a real difference between the value as fixed in rate cases and what an informed buyer would pay,” he said. Hopes Report Soon The expert said he hopes to start preparing his report the latter part of the week. Compilation of the report will require at leasi a week, it was expected. The report, when completed, will be submitted to the advisory committees of City officials and citizens. Letters to the committee members announcing their appointment were placed in the mail over the week-end. Mavor Sullivan said he decided to appoint the advisory committee in order to obtain the business and professional men not connected with the Administration or with politics. The Brookside forum, public meeting on the water company acquisition, will conclude with a 30-minute question and answer period at which those in the audience will be invited to participate.

was sub-

Snethen to Speak Speakers scheduled on the pro-

gram include E. O. Snethen, Federa-| ports were that the train struck an ——

tion of Community Civic Clubs utilities committee chairman; Fred Bates Johnson, attorney representing the C. H. Geist estate, water company owners, and City Controller James E. Deery. Mr. Deery is to discuss the methods by which the purchase could be financed. Williain Calvin, League president, will preside. The meeting will be open to the public and members of other civic groups. The letter sent to the Citizens Committee appointees read: “You, of course, know that the City of Indianapolis has been considering the advisability of purchasing the Indianapolis Water Co., and, with that thought in view, we have had a number of conferences with C. W, McNear, the representative of the Geist estate. “If the Indianapolis Water Co. is purchased, it would be necessary, under the law, that the purchase be approved by the Common Coun(Continued on Page Three)

WEATHER EXPECTED TO STAY MODERATE

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

. om, . 6% 10 a. m.. 76

Clerk today by |

views of |

the first

Dickerman is to]

| | | | |

The doctor told them. in a sci that with tonsils and adenoids out, fight you'll probably win.” This were

idea. morning they

TRAIN DERAILED,

{ |

SCORES SHAKEN

| Engineer, Fireman Injured

As Locomotive Is Upset | At Shelbyville. |

| Times Special t SHELBYVILLE, June 5.—Scores| of passengers were reported shaken| up and two trainmen, one from In-| {dianapolis, were injured today when | ‘a 13-car Big Four passenger fraini ‘was derailed at the Hendricks St.| |crossing here. | Critically injured was Fireman [Charles Hunt, 40, Indianapolis. He iwas scalded when the engine and, | tender overtrurned. Buried in debris, | {rescuers were forced to dig him out.| The only other person injured, {railroad officials said, was William Moore, 51, Cincinnati, the en-| gineer. Physicians said he was {slightly scalded and was not in | danger. | Eleven passenger coaches stayed | on the tracks and two baggage cars| [were derailed but did not turn over. | |it was reported. First unofficial re-

|

| |

open switch. Railroad men began an {immediate investigation. The fast train was bound from | Cincinnnati to Indianapolis and was| | wrecked as it was slowing down for | |a Shelbyville stop. |

{

‘Probe Derailment

‘Fatal to Brakeman | { NEW UNIONVILLE, June 5 (U. |P.)., — Illinois Central railroad officials today investigated the deirailment of a freight train near {here yesterday which caused the death of one trailnman and injury to two others. Oscar McCully, 49, a brakemen, was crushed beneath the overturned engine. He died in a Bloomington hospital. Charles Stewart, engineer, and Herbert Merriman, fireman, from Palestine, Ill.,, were injured. | Railroad officials were unable to | determine what caused the wreck.| | Twenty-seven cars of the 45-car [train were derailed, and approxi-| {mately 2500 sheep were released! from five of the wrecked cars. { | The train was bound for Indian-| | apolis.

{

‘That sold Louis, 6; Gor- | don, 11, and Ronald Platt, 9'. (left to right) on the | trouble but ready for it. recovering and Mrs. Harold Irving Platt of 5664 Washington oF { from the operations performed Saturday at Method- |

| Howard cities have been placed.

entific interview, , ist Hospital.

“if you get in a

nicely | Blvd.

Woman Hit By Ball Son Couldn't Get

Mrs. Cora Berry, 59. of 113 Elder Ave, was at City Hospital today, injured by a foul ball which her son was unable to catch during a baseball game yesterday. Her condition is not serious. Mrs. Berry was standing about 20 feet away from home plate at the Rhodius Park diamond watching a Municipal League game between teams of the Empire Life & Accident Insurance Co. and the General Exterminating Co. Her son, Edward, 25, of 1542 Harlan St., was catching for the latter club. A foul ball glanced off the hitter's bat and he was unable to catch it. Seconds later he learned that the ball had struck his mother on the left side of the face, inflicting cuts. An ambulance was summoned and she was taken to the hospital. Her son left the game and followed her to the hospital.

N.

AERIAL SCHOLARSHIP JUDGING TOMORROW

Times to Make at Least One Major Award.

Final judging in The Indianapolis Times Aviation Scholarship Competition will be held tomorrow night when the judges meet at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. More than a score of scholarships in aeronautical and mechanical engineering were offered to high school seniors interested in aviation as a career by The Times and other papers. At least one major scholarship will be awarded by The Times in Marion County, although a winner and runner-up will be selected tomorrow night. The runner-up will have his choice of the scholarships

{that remain after the winners in

Indianapolis and other Scripps-

Byv the middle of the week they'll be up; by the end of the week they'll be at the family | summer cottage on White River, not looking for any

Scripps-Howard news-

After Latest Failure to | Land Exiles. |

f | |

CRUISES NEAR FLORIDA

(Efforts Are Pushed by

| Americans to Find ‘Haven For 900 Jews.

| r

Env

oo >

oy to Chile

| NEW YORK, June 5 (U. P.—The| ;

{ liner St. Louis. carrving more than [900 homeless Jewish refugees who | were refused permission to land in | Cuba, is returning io Germany “be- | cause there is no further hope of } | landing her passengers,” the Ham-burg-American Line announced { here loday. E. H. Dedrick, assistant passenger agent of the line, said that the captain of the St Louis had advised the offices here late yesterday that the vessel was leaving Florida waters for Hamburg. He denied reports that the vessel

- | was returning to the German port | :

scheduled cruises the

| because of {said that

| bility of landing the refugees on| | this side of the Atlantic. | | Cruises Ahead for Liner | Mr. Dedrick said the St. Louis | would leave Hamburg June 18 for |

New York from which it will sail] | June 30 on a series of summer

A

Times Photo.

Thev are the sons of Mr.

Proposes to Land

Refugees at New York NEW YORK, June 5 (U. P).-—

denied

POSTMASTER ASKED

Seidensticker’s Name Finally Goes to Senate. |

Times Special WASHINGTON, June 5.—After a vear's delay, the name of Adolph | Seidensticker was sent to the Senate | by President Roosevelt today for re- | appointment as Indianapolis Postmaster. His original upon recommendation VanNuys (D. Ind.) but when the time for reappointment came the senior Senator was in a party row, and Senator Minton (D. Ind.) re-| fused to join in the reappointment recommendation. After Senator VanNuys was renominated and re-| elected, Senator Minton capitulated |

| cruises. [ Dominican Republic to relax its] | said the line had not been notified | |we tried to,” he said, “but arrangeThe St. Louis cruised off Miami, | |sure that none of the ship's des-| | reportedly attempted suicide when] | | refused IN KOKOMO CASE =~ | | St. Louls took his ship out of Ha-' Bru. Years; Record 3 Months. ears; hec d sel for the National Co-Ordinating | | WPA officials, convicted on charges tives conferred with President Bru ernment, ee | Judge J. Leroy Adair sentenced to 13 months in prison he will submit to the Hamburg |Carl J. Broo, former Kokomo City disembark its 922 Jewish refugees | Clerk, and George Mix, former as- with line officials in New York late prison and fined $5000 each. all costs incident to landing the tenced to three months in jail. {migration authorities at Washing- | Circuit Court of Appeals at Chi-| for the others said they would not bonds which eacn of the six has sentenced are due to surrender to Adair that the case “was difficult trict Attorney Val Nolan said that

Asked regarding an offer of the] | $5600 immigration tax in order to| | admit the refugees, Mr. Dedrick| | officially of the offer. “We wanted to land them and] [ ments could not be made.” | Fla., yesterday and was trailed by| c — ————— | @ Coast Guard patrol boat to make | SIX SENTENCED | perate passengers—several of whom | refuge in Cuba—jumped| joverboard in attempts to swim Meet President Bru | | Capt. Wilhelm Schroeber of the M row Get vana Harbor Friday under orders | Holt, Broo, oF {of Cuban President Federico Laredo | 15 Months; Good, Mix 2 : 4 In Havana. Lawrence Berenson, | New York City lawyer who is coun- | Committee for Jewish Refugees, | { Six tormer Kokomo City and|and other committee representa- | : ; and with a committee he had apot conspiring to defraud the Gov- ,inteq to study the situation. | through misuse of WPA (labor, were sentenced in Federal [Court today, : [their motions fcr new trials. Former Mayor Olin R. Holt Was gernard Sandler, an official of the . Knights of Pythias. said today that land fined $5000. The same sentence and fine was imposed upon American line a proposal whereby the line's ship, the St. Louis, may | Attorney, and George H. Morrow, {tormer Kokomo City Engineer. fat New York. Mel Good, former Kokomo City, Mr. Sandler said he hoped to talk sistant Kokomo City Engineer, each | today. He announced that a group were sentenced to two years in of Americans was prepared to pay Lincoln F. Record, former WPA human cargo here and that a com- | project superintendent, was sen- mittee was attempting to have im- | Holt said that he intended to ton grant the refugees temporary ‘appeal his conviction to the U. S. asylum. ‘cago. Broo said he had not decided whether to appeal. Attorneys |appeal. | Judge Adair ruled that the $5000 (posted shall remain the same until next Friday at 10 a. m. when those |U. 8. Marshal Charles James. | Defense attorneys told Judge for a jury to try because the evidence was confusing. U. S. Dishe did not believe the evidence (Continued on Page Three)

$800,000 TAX LOAN SOUGHT BY COUNTY

The County Council today voted [to borrow $800,000 for county genjeral and welfare department oper{ating expenses in anticipation of {fall property tax collections. | It is expected interest bids will be in the neighborhood of 8 per cent.

four-vear term was of Senator

and a joint recommendation for re-| appointment was made.

and ‘ return was decided : | upon because there was no possi-| :

WASHINGTON, June 5 (U. P.). —President Roosevelt today nominated Claude G. Bowers of New York, a Ft. Wayne, Ind., native, to be Ambassador to Chile, Mr. Bowers formerly was Ambassador to Loyalist Spain. Edwin C. Wilson of Florida was nominated to be Minister to Uruguay and Douglas Jenkins of South Carolina to be Minister to Bolivia.

POPE PRESSES

PEACE EFFORT

FOREIGN §& TUATION VATICAN CITY -Pope strives for five-power conference. KASSEL, Germany — Hiller charges encirclement, TOKYO—Russia reported hurrying new troops to frontier. SHANGHAI — 1000 Japanese troops slain, Chinese claim. PARIS—Daladier calls two Cahinet meetings.

VATICAN CITY, June 3 (U.P). —His Holiness Pope Pius XII has forwarded new instructions to his envoys at Rome, Paris, London, Warsaw and Berlin in an endeavor to get the big powers started on a discussion of their problems and a pacific solution of them, it was understood today. The Pope in a speech to the College of Cardinals disclosed for the first time that he had been working on a long-awaited peace program. He then intimated that he was

|so encouraged by responses to his 4, May and October, and Room 3

efforts that he would continue

them. The new instructions. it was

REAPPOINTMENT OF | said, in authoritative quaiters, were term presiding judge, said this plan |

the result. Papal envoys to the five big powers were expected to get in touch with the respective Foreign Offices early this week. Some Vatican quarters hoped that a five-power conference might be the eventual result.

Hitler Hints at New Nazi ‘Purge’ BERLIN, June 5 (U.

statement by Fuehrer Hitler that

he would dismiss instantiy any leader who did not meet the ‘acid

P.).—A

| test” caused speculation in diplo- | matic quarters today as to the pos- |

sibiltiy of a new “purge” in ihe Nazi regime. It had been reported in British ewspapers that Herr Hitler in(Continued on Page Three)

GOOD STEEL REPORT STEADIES MARKET

n

NEW YORK, June 5 (U, P.).—|

)

7 ersey City Injunction Upheld by 5 to 2 Vote; Amendment Ruled Still Valid by 7 to 2; Milk Marketing Law Wins Two Tests. |

HUGHES, ILL, CONFINED TO HOME

Justices Write 14 Opinions and Dissents in Disposing of Four Cases Before Recess;

Reasoning Is Complicated in All. | WASHINGTON, June 5 (U. P.).—The Supreme Court

| Loday upheld an injunction restraining Mayor Frank Hague liberties guaranteed under the Constitution. It held that Jersey City ordinance, prohibiting distri« ‘bution of handbills and leaflets and regulating the manner | in which public meetings may be held, are wholly unconsti« }- tutional. | r su JUDGES ADOPT The decision, one of several oo . COURT AID PLAN i Court’s final session of ran almost unprecedented degree. A————— Five separate opinions were re= | quired to express the differing views pated in the case. The vote to upe Approve System to (hold the injunction against Mayor Hague was 5 to 2 Speed Up Docket. ——— The constitutionality of Federal . . ; a1. | Milk marketing agreements was upProcedure designed to speed trials yd in two cases which found the adopted today by Marion County's! The Court held the proposed Superior and Circuit Court judges. | Child Labor Amendment to the The judges, sitting in general Constitution is still legally open to plan, which was the outcome of ruling was made in a 7-2 decision studies by Indianapolis Bar Asso-|Which brought four separate opine ciation committees. {lons by the Justices. ferences for principals in lawsuits | Refuses Broader Basis and a synchronized system of! |scheduling jury trials. |

{an dother Jersey City officials from interfering with civil major verdicts rendered at ‘this term, found it divided to Superior and Circuit Jurists of the seven Justices who partici= Other nOrIaAL ACHORS! and reduce court expenses Was | court divided 5-4 and 6-". term session, approved the new |latification by the states. That The plan consists of pretrial con-| Discussions Listed

The principal opinion in the Hague case was written by Justice Owen J. Roberts. The decision upheld in whole the Points to be discussed in these!lower cour! injunction against conferences include: | Hague issued by Federal Judge 1. Agreement on certain facts. nism Clark, but modified in cer- ? _ .... |tain respects the broader decree of 2. Desisios On a court or JW the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. rial.

Bl, re . “ dnl ot The Court held: . Agreement on the number { 1. That the Jerse i i ita Se Ol es Xa i y City ordinace

to an ohibiting distribution of handbills jremp. io Lis, Wier 20d eliminate lang leaflets is unconstitutional, up alin of au XY od of ‘ex Hence the Circuit Court should }] 4 4 n aL ta~/ have merely ruled the i > |pediting the obtaining of testimony | void Ror of er raranance | from nonresident and Incapacl- down conditions under which the Jajed Withesses ite SOpolntments aa shoud allow distribution of | 5 Ag he ; iterature. (of a master commissioner to in-| 2 That vestigate highly technical evidence public meetings was equally unconwith the view to making special stitutional and hence the Circuit, findings in fact. | Court should have flatly prohibited Provides Special Order [its enforcement instead of seeking boa m i afer | to Preseribe the manner in which ne conclusion o ne conier- | it should be administered. j enges, he Soult will Second a spe- 3. That the apepals in the lower (cial order in its records. |courts by the C. I. O. and Ameri i In th xed schedule for jury: ivi i ies i ] 8 - e fi 4 Schedule 4 Juty joan Civil Liberties union had been |ca ndars, each c¢ $ as 8 "| improperly received and hence must |two months of each year to hear pe dismissed, whereas the appeals of such cases. The schedule places|individuals against the Jersey City | Jury trials in CRO ou In_Jan- violations were properly made and jasy a Bepeember: ey » were retained as the basis of the m 1, j | case. {Room 2, March and November; 4 That there was no merit in Room 3, April and December; Room | Nayor Hague's challenge to the CLO validity of portions of the lower June and Foor RLY Wik : || court decree prohibiting city officials Judge erbert 1son, generall trom excluding or removing persons |from Jersey City, confining indi{viduals without arrest or inter=

the ordinance regulating

{would eliminate confusion and delay

jin ying Jury Cases. be Vos afidltming with their free movement in / / : “| streets, rks {would be permitted beyond the | places Da and other public | periods set. :

| —

REV, MR, ELLIOTT HEADS MINISTERS

Refer to 1871 Act

Mr. Justice Roberts held that | Jurisdiction for Federal courts to | consider the suits of the individuals was conferred by the 1871 Civil Rights Act, barring enactment of (state legislation depriving citizens {of rights and privileges granted by ‘the Constitution. Freedom to discuss the National | Labor Relations Act and to as= | semble peaceably for discussion of {the act, Mr. Justice Roberts said, is such a privilege. Justice James C. McReynolds in

First Friends Pastor Named By Local Group.

i The Rev. Earl T. Elliott, pastor of | |the First Friends Church, was|a gjseent contended that the ins (named president of the Indianap-| junction was an unwarranted ine |olis Ministerial Association at Rob- | tereference “with the essential lerts Park Methodist Church today. | rights of the municipality to con The Rey. Logah Hall Mondian St. trol its own parks and streets. | Methodist Church, was elected vice jgtice Pierce Butler in a separate

president, and the Rev. Roy E.|gjscent argued that the antimeeting

| Mueller, Wallace Street Presbyterian | , i ; ; : ’ ordinance was - {Church, secretary-treasury. nce Was valid under past dis

Dr. | | William Gear Spencer,

Franklin | CUSsions of the tribunal. . | Justices i {College president, urged Association | Stices Felix Frankiurter ang

‘MW Maw... 7 |

Postmastership

reappointments |

William O. Douglas did not pare

Be 0a 9) The stock market steadied today members to take a greater interest |

tL... 3 1p m....

Fair weather for tonight was pre- | dicted today by the Weather Bu-! reau. The Bureau said the tempera- | ture will be moderate during increasing cloudiness tomorrow.

. | » South Side Club Renews Battle for New Fin rempomnmens A. Donehue. Elwood: Curtis Bennett, | oo jump 2 points this Week. in Mr. Justice Roberts’ opinion, “We want a new station down | Serbst, a DANGEROUS CROSSING

after an easier start when it was/in church-connected schools jucipste In the decision, English; Dorothy C. Prall, Henry- Most issues firmed but were still! die if ministers do not change their | Justice Stanley F. Reed concurred The circulation of a petition ask- The aerial ladder truck which | i , | club members say might be needed | $0 Senatorial spproval,

80 | I rv . . and | ire ta ti n lai . . . for Ralph D. Barry, Crandall; John | the steel-making rate said: Fire S on, Claiming Pupils Periled: Justice Stanley ¥. | | ville, and Thomas W. Hall, Medora. slightly under the previous close. [attitude of indifference.” in an opinion written by Justice | ‘ . . Fin. : : A : i |subject | Ing for a new fire station in the there as badly as the people do, | which is routine. | ee — en ——————————— The elimination of ‘one of the

| announced | Justice Hugo L. Black concurred | “The Church-related colleges will | | One new appointment, Joseph E.| (Continued on Page Three) Lutz Resigns City P vicinity of Prospect St. and Madi- | Fire Department officials said, “It |fOF rescue work now is at the sta- | u < esigns l Y 0st,

TIMES FEATURES

: | | son Ave. was to be started today by | is generally understood that one lion at South and New Jersey Sis.) | South Side Civic Club leaders. (will be built as soon as adequate at

| Other South Side fire stations are | TOWN TERRORIZED

West and Morris Sts, Raymond

ON INSIDE PAGES

At the same time, Charles Fritz. |

| club secretary, said he would dratt a formal demand to the Safety seero0 121 Board. He said he hoped to have Mrs. Ferguson 10 jt ready for presentation at the Obituaries | Board's meeting tomorrow. Pegler Club members claim a new staPyle . tion, equipped with an aerial ladder Questions | truck, is needed to provide adequate |

10 Movies 9

Broun Clapper Comics « 14 Crossword + 15 Curious World 14 Editorials .... 10 Fashions 3 Financial Flvnn

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Mrs. Roosevelt area in which there also are three |

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ground is obtained.” | St., 400 block and Shelby St. 1700 It was always understood that|block. There also is an aerial ladder

the station would be replaced but it truck at the West and Morris sta- |

never has been, ’- Arthur C Paetz, tion. Fire Department officials said club president, said. “There is! : ground for it on the north side of Prospect, west of Madison near where the old station was.” Funds providing for a station were contained in the Fire Depart-| ment’s budget requests for this

are south of the Belt Railroad ‘tracks and two north. He said an{other 1s needed north of the tracks for the area in question, because trucks sometimes are blocked at crossings by trains.

|

METCALF, Miss., June 5 (U. P.).

Mr. Paetz said that two stations —The 62 terrified residents of this as inspector for the City Engineer- during a meeting of the Works

| community asked the help of Na- | tional Guardsmen today in tracking

down a “Mad Phantom of the Ba-|

vous” whom they blame for killing two men. wounding a woman and | sniping at four other persons.

| BY MAD PHANTOM

May Obtain | State Job

The

revealed |

| The resignation of Charles Lutz, resignation was { ing Department was disclosed at|Board when members approved the | City Hall today. |promotions of Mr. Wiegand and Mr. Lutz lost the Democratic William P. Gavin, who is to fill Mr. | nomination for Sheriff to Sheriff |[Weigand’s place. John N. Cornet, {Feeney in a recount last summer. |of 1718 N. Merdiian St, was ap-

|He was appointed inspector at a |pointed to fill Mr. Gavin's place

most dangerous grade crossings in Indiana” was announced today by T. A. Discus, Highway Commission chairman. This crossing, over the Pennsyls vania Railroad on Road 6 in Hobart, is one of two to be eliminated as

part of a 0640,000 road and bridge |repair program, bids for which are [to be received by the Commission

June 29.

Scherrer schools. | year, but the request was eliminated ! last [as temporary inspector at a salary |

“ nf He added that schools which | The mysterious rifleman stalks his|salary of $121.10 a month 10 Serial Siory., A station at Morris St. and Madi- by the the y

14! Society 4 2 County Tax Adjustment new station would serve are School | victims at night, they said, creeping|March' by Mayor Sullivan. His|of $105 a month. The other crossing is on Road 30 3 Spori: ea 7500 Ave. which was removed a year Board, City and club officials said. | 22, Sacred Heart High and Grade|close and firing from ambush. Many |resignationn became effective June 1. It was said at City Hall that |at the south edge of Valparaiso, Of«= 4 State Deaths ’ 7| 289 when Prospect St. was cut | Fire Chief Kennedy ‘will be asked | School and a private school con-| of the community believed he was| Conrad Weigand, an assistant in- |Mr. Lutz was to be given a State ficials said this is a comparatively. 10, Wigeam 10 through. Madison Ave. has never to include the request in next year's|ducted by the Sisters of the Good |a lunatic who had taken refuge in|spector, was promoted -to fill- the job, possibly with the State Elec-|new location and has no serious acs YWIEZRIN. «save U beg replaced, budget which{ he now is preparing.i Shepherd. 3 the swamps. vacancy hy the Mayor. [trical Board. \ cident record.

Forum . 1 Grin, Bear It. In Indpls..... Jane Jordan..

Johnson «eee

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