Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1940 — Page 1
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[Scmupne ~owaro) VOLUME 51—NUMBER 254
UT ELECTION . POWER UPHELD
BY HIGH COURT
Ruled
Federal Tribunals Without Jurisdiction to Reverse Orders.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (U. P)— The Supreme Court today confirmed the exercise of broad powers by. the National Labor Relations Board, “holding that Federal Courts have no authority to review a Board election order or a Board certification of a union as collective bargaining agent: The Court upheld the position taken by the Labor Board in a series] of challenges to its powers. It did. 80 in these actions: | Upheld the Board in designating a C. I. O. [union as a coastwide bargaining unit with| employers for some 13,000 Pacific Coast waterfront workers. | Upheld the right of the Board to issue orders for collective bargaining elections) without revision or interference by the Federal Courts.
Rules Power Given Board
The Supreme Court held . that C ess, through the National Labor Relations Act, has vested in the Board itself sole discretion in handling these matters. In the controversial Pacific Coast longshoremen'’s case, the Court held that the A. F. of L. had no right under the Labor Act to attack in court the designation of the C. I. O. union, The Court held that when the Board certified the C. I. O. International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union as representative of Pacific Coast waterfront workers, the A. F of L., under the Labor Act, ‘had no recourse but to accept the finding,
Recalls Intense Rivalry
The longshoremen’s case was the outgrowth of intense C. I. O.- A. F. of L. rivalry ‘among waterfront workers on the acific Coast. The Court’s action came in three cases. In each it was unanimous. Two cases, involving the Falk Corp., Milwaukee, Wis.,, and the Consume ers Power Co. Jackson, Mich., concerned election orders. The longshoremen’s case dealt with a certification order. The Falk case represented an important challenge to the Board's ht to order employee elections ut intervention by courts of review. ~ The Board Had ordered an eléction in which unions affiliated with ‘the C. I. O. and.the A. F. of L. would be on the ballot but in which an independent union, alegedly formed under company domination, would not participate. : The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ordered that the independent union be placed on the ballot. The Board maintained that the lower court’s decree was invalid because election orders under the Labor Relations Act are not subject to court review.
PROBERS DELAY STUDY OF "STATE WPA DATA
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2.—Rep. Clifton A. Woodrum (D. Va.), chairman of the House committee investigating WPA, said that it will be “several weeks” before any further action is taken by the committee. The committee is scheduled to receive the report of its investigators who spent several weeks in Indiana. “We must. get the deficiency appropriations out of the way first,” Rep. Woodrum said.
JAN. 23 ‘LIMIT’ ON ALL-NIGHT PARKING
City and State laws laws prohibiting all-night parking in the streets will « be rigidly enforced effective Jan. 23, } the Safety Board decided today. The Board instructed Chief Michael F. Morrissey to place parking stickers on all cars found in City streets between 2 and 6 a. m. after that date and to enforce the State tail light aw.
LOCAL HOG PRICES DECLINE 25 CENTS
nn By UNITED PRESS Hog prices at Indianapolis declined 25 cents on all weights today as 18,000 hogs were received in the first 1940 stockyards trade here. New York stocks held firm although trading slackened. Steel shares led a recovery as greater steel operations were predicted. ‘Bonds were irregular and curb stocks were somewhat higher. Chicago stocks were higher and wheat gained more than a cent.
Happy 40, Sings FDR to Garner
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2° (U. P.) —President Roosevelt greeted Vice President John N. Garner at the White House legislative conference today by Signe “Happy New Year to
ious Speaker William B. Bankhead disclosed the Presi“dential greeting. It was -the first time Mr. Garner and Mr. Roosevelt .had met since Mr. Garner lounced his Presi= dential candidacy. “1 never a more broth- - erly, affecti e greeting in my life,” Mr. Bankhead said, “and you can quote me on that. “My feeling is that the President and Vice President are on very affectionate terms of mu- . tual regard and appreciation. pe
Where Is U nity?
Hon, Unity Freeman-Mitford . . . ‘to Hitler, the “perfect Aryan beauty,” » ” tJ
MISSING WHEN PLANE ARRIVES
Ambulances Wait Her After Report She Has Left Reich for England.
LONDON, Jan. 2 (U. P.).—The Hon. Unity Freeman-Mitford, young British noblewoman whom Adolf Hitler called the “perfect Aryan beauty,” failed—officials annourced —to come home from Germany today as scheduled, on an Imperial Airways plane. Miss Freeman-Mitford had been mysteriously reported in France, en route home on a stretcher. . The Daily Mail said it was reported she had a bullet wound in her head and had been sent from the Reich on a special ambulance train supplied by Hitler. The airplane scheduled to bring her from France landed at Shoreham, -whers pi ‘ambulance waited, instead _of ¥at. Heston Airdrome, where .an ambulance and scores of reporters and photographers waited. But airport officials at Shoreham said that she was not aboard.
Father Paces Floor The mystery surrounding the blond English beauty deepéned as the day wore on. Her father, Lord Redesdale, paced the floor of his hotel lounge at Folkestone, flanked by reporters and apparently expecting his daughter to arrive at Folkestone by channel boat. An ambulance with blankets and hot water bottles waited at Folkestone landing as well ‘as at Heston and Shorehamn airports but’ there was no sign of Miss Freeman-Mit-ford. After she failed to arrive as scheduled by airplane, reports circulated that she was expected at a channel port but probably would be delayed until Wednesday. Her father, however, waited at Folkestone on the chance that she would arrive during the evening. According to the
Daily Mail, she was believed to be|
very ill. Left Reich on Train The train left Germany by way of Switzerland. A family member said: “We don’t know what Unity is suffering from. I have no knowledge of her suffering from a gunshot wound.” Reports had been circulated by sensational newspapers here and abroad that Miss Freeman-Mitford
had shot herself early in November. This never had been ‘confirmed, nor had there been any word as fo where her sympathies lay in the war,
FINNS CLAIM 16,000 MORE REDS IN TRAP
New Victory Is Reported on ' Salla Front.
(Another Story, Page Eight)
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Jan. 2 (U. P.).—Sixteen thousand Russian troops have been cut off by the Finns on the Salla front near the Arctic circle in a. battle which bids fair to equal if not exceed in impor'tance the Finnish New Year victory on the Suomusalmi front to Ye south, press dispatches said toay. Dispatches to the newspaper Ekstrabladet also quoted reports at Helsinki that a force of 10,000 Russians had been cut off from their bases at Petsamo and Murmansk on the Arctic Coast and were believed to have ,been forced to surrender after a Finnish victory at Nikkelby, the mining center in the Far North. This report, however, lacked confirmation and was doubted by neutral sources that accepted as more trustworthy reports of a big battle on the Salla front. Finns in a carefully calculated and well-timed attack moved in on the Russians from the front and both flanks, forced the collapse of their right and left wings on to their center, and succeeded in cutting off their’communications in the rear, it was asserted. Sixteen thousand Russians would constitute nearly an entire division,
which numbers usually about 18,000 + {Continued on Page Three) ;
HULL DEMANDS | © ENGLAND STOP MAIL SEIZURES
Vigorous Protest Is Made;
Western Powers. Hint Break With Russia.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (U. P).— Secretary of State Cordell Hull announced today that the American Government has . vigorously protested to Great Britain over interference with American mails on the high seas.
made by the American Embassy in
State Department. The instructions were cabled on Dec. 22. The protest, tersely worded, concluded with the Hope that the State Department “will receive early assurances” that this interference with American mails has been discontinued. In his note Mr. Hull cited specific instances in which British authorities had seized mail from aboard American and neutral ships. Some of the mail was addressed to Germany but most of it was addressed to neutral countries. “This Government readily admits the right of the British Government to censor private mails originating in or destined to the United Kingdom,” the note said, “or private mails which normally pass through the United Kingdom for transmission to their final destination. “It cannot admit the right of the British authorities to interfere with American mails on American or other neutral ships on the high seas nor can it admit the right of the British Government to censor mail on ships. which have involuntarily entered British ports.”
Closer Berlin-Moscow
Alliance Is Indicated
By LOUIS F. KEEMLE - United Press Cable Editor .The possibility that Germany and Russia may be compelled by necessity to pool their forces and wage common war engrossed attention in European capitals today. Outstanding on the diplomatic front of the war were mounting indications of a possible break between the Western powers, including Italy, and the Soviet Union, with a wide open question. 28 to whether
many” fighting peside Russia. In Moscow, Sir William Soot British Ambassador, paid formal “farewell” calls before starting for London on leave, but there was much speculation on whether he would ever return. The Ambassador is expected to aid the British Foreign Office in preparing a white paper on the vain Allied negotiations with Moscow for a mutual aid pact and the subsequent action of Russia in making a treaty with Germany that became the signal for the war to start. That the paper would bitterly assail. Russia and open the way for a break in relations was a possibility, but by n8 means a certainty. Both Britain and France ‘have adopted an increasingly cold policy (Continued on Page Three)
$1,800,000 RELIEF FUND GIVEN STATE
Townsend to Release 1933 Unspent Balance for ’40.
An unspent balance of $1,800,000 from an emergency 1933 relief appropriation will be made available for 1940 relief work, Governor M. Clifford Townsend decided today. The money will be spent by the Governor's Commission on Unemployment Relief, recently reorganized with Dudley Smith as director. Mr. Smith said the money will be available to pay the State's expenses in certifying needy persons for WPA jobs and for distribution of surplus commodities provided by the Federal Government, Under an Attorney General’s opinfon issued. today, none of the
emergency, fund can be used for|
Commission operating expenses, so
$20,000 balance in the old Commission’s bludget will be used for ad-
‘I ministration costs.
Governor . Townsend instructed Mr. Smith to draft a budget for the next six months. Mr. Smith said the Commission will ask for $625, 000
Mr. Hull said the protest was|'
London upon instructions from She
Governor Townsend and Budget Committee officials decided that a|
perature was zero.
changes in the Social Security Act
comes the souk of het lives. Abs B gift. T 65 before 1942 would or more who can meét a few simple requirements will be "oe to qualify for a pension in 1940. The principal requirement .is that the worker must have been in' an ‘employment ‘where -he had’ to. pay into the Social Security .fund dur-
ing at’ least six calendar quarters since the start of 1937. -
How Law Is Changed
* You mjght wonder how this requirement could be met, in 1940) by a worker who was 65 when the Security program - started. These workers, under the old law, were not allowed to contribute to the fund. : Congress -took care of that when it amended the Security Act last summer. It ruled that everybody in covered employment, regardless of age, was to contribute to the fund after Jan. 1, 1939. That ruling meant that workers who had not been contributing had to pay some back taxes, but it ‘will allow them to get their required six quarters of coverage by the second quarter of 1940. .Steady Job’ Unnecessary A worker does not have to be employed steadily during a quarter to have that quarter count. If he earns at least $50 during the three-month period, that period will be counted. ‘Workers who became 65 during 1937, 1938 and 1939, and thus passed out of the Social Security retirement system, under. the old law, will be eligible for monthly pensions in 1940
coverage by that time. Most- of these persons collected in lump sums, the money that they and their employers had paid ‘into the fund. But thai will not bar them from monthly benefits, The local Social Security Board office, and others throughout the country, are (Continued on Page Four)
TROLLEY POLE BREAKS Twenty-five passengers on an Indiana Railways interurban {rom Terre Haute finished the last two blocks of their journey on foot today. Aft Maryland St. and Capitol Ave, the trolley pole broke, incapacitating the. interurban, which had to be towed to the Terminal
for this period.
Station.
Now, however, any: worker of 65,
if they have had six quarters of|’
Workers Over 65 Eligible To. Get Pensions for Life
. (This is’ the second of: a series of articles explaining important
which went into effect Yesterday)
‘By GILBERT LOVE Times Special Writer Workers in business and industry around 65, or past that age, will get about the best gift this year that ayope. sould 3 wish Jrongdy m-1
“AS AID AT SPEEDWAY
Auto Engineer ‘Takes Up New Duties Here.
The appointment of Charles Merz, Indianapolis automotive engineer, as assistant to T. BE. (Pop) Myers, Indianapolis Motor Speedway executive vice president and general manager, was announced today by Mr. Myers. Mr. Merz, who until a month ago was president of the Mera Engineering Co, which he organized in 1927, assumed his new post today. He has been connected closely hwith racing and the automotive industry here since the turn of the century. Since 1935, he’ has been chief steward of the race, repre-
In the early days of the Indianapolis Speedway, Mr. Merz participated in numerous races as a driver. He finished seventh in a {Continued on Page Four)
JUDGE SLICK TO TRY CASE OF SHIDELER|
Federal Judge Thomas W. Slick of South Bend today was appointed to try the case of William A. Shideler in Federal Court here Jan. 8, on charges of using the mails to defraud and violation of the Securities Act. Judge Slick’s appointment + was made by Evan A. Evans, seniorling judge of the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in ‘Chicago, after Judge Robert C. Baltzell disqualified himself. Shideler changed his plea of guilty to not guilty on Oct. 6. His father, Fred W. Shideler, pleaded guilty to the same charges and was sentenced on Sept. 25 to seven years in prison and was fined $5000.
“How very lucky you are to be so far away from it all,” writes Miss Stella Draper, a teacher in England who is well known here, to Miss Anna Liess, a teacher at School 30. She closed with a wish she were “in a saner part of the world.”
Miss Draper was an exchange teacher here during the 1937-38 termx She was assigned to School 30 and also taught dancing and physical education .at Technical High School: Miss Liess and Miss Draper have corresponded since the latter left for England. Miss Draper's letter to Miss Liess reads in part: “Christmas, 1939. I know ds will
over here and 1I am .
all have a happier one: of that orld
at least. . . . No one ir
all of us, in if and our lives turned upside down. “You should see London now. It is like a fourth rate city. Every third shop is empty in the West End and the savings and energies
‘of years have just vanished with
the business. All the shops and business premises are boarded up or sandbagged and the basements requisitiohed for air raid shelters.* “Criss<cross strips of narrow paper are pasted over the windows of all houses and shops that cannot be boarded up. This is to prevent glass flying about during. an air raid. The windows display gas mask covers, siren suits, dressing gowns, mally identity discs, army and nurses unie forms and “first aid outfits. All very cheerful and inspiring.
‘Wish I Were in Saner Part of World,’ English Woman Writes Friends Here
out of all cultural activities as well as all light. ... The lighting restrictions have banished street lighting altogether and prohibited the appearance of even a single ray of light from penetrating our starspangled banner.
“Air raid wardens on duty constantly in the streets report the presence of the merest chink to the police and the offenders are heavily fined. Naturally, we all know the necessity for all this,” but, nevertheless, it is quite an endurance test to live under such conditions. ,., , “The journey from . Enfield - to London, about 10 miles, which nox. mally takes 40 minutes, now takes one and one-half hours, and at night two and one-half hours, so
- unless you have the fortitude of a
horse there is nothing to do but sit : Page
= MYERS NANES WERL >
senting the American’ Automobile . | Association contest: board.
Entered ay Second-Class Matter Indfanabolis. Ind.
at Postoffice,
s Photo.
Not the Russian steppes. Not the tana of the winter-long nights. Not any piace but: plain Told "Capitol Ave and New York St, in Indianapolig, on Ye morning of —b-r-r-r-r-r-r-r— Jan. 2, 1940 when the tem-
LOCAL CENSUS TAKING BEGINS
{Business Tabulation First as National Project Gets Under Wav,*
: Count: The busiriess census will last until
April 2, when the census of population, ‘agriculture ‘and housing will begin. These three must be completed within 30 days: « . The business census is to collect reports from all retail, - wholesale and’ service establishments. It is heing made at the request of business itself as well as for the needs of Government, according to W. A. Knight, area census manager. 3 Paul Richey, general chairman of the citizens committee appointed to co-operate in the census by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and C. D. Alexander, €hambe." of Commerce president, urged business and manufacturing executives to give complete answers so that Indianapolis business and industrial activities and resources shall have full justice in comparison with other cities. The 18 workers, all of .Indianapolis, are Herman, K F. Alerding, Harry -C. Baker, Jack Berger, John L. Duvall, George A. Heiny, Charles F. Hilkene, Henry. C. Keith, Francis J. Lenahan, David F. Newman, Fred J. Pflegler, Willard B. Ransom, John M. Rohm, Clarence E. Scholl, Harry C. Sheehan, Almont D. Taffe, Bernard E. Walsh, Charles E. Wehr and Edwin H. Wiles, + These men were selected from a
{group of 30 who were picked from
a list of 200 applicants to attend a school on census-taking in the Federal Building last week.
Four Censuses Begin Mr. Knight pointed out the ques-
held in the strictest secrecy and “not. even the President of the United States can see them unless he becomes a sworn census worker.” Four of seven separate censuses started in the nation today. They include business houses, manufacturplants, drainage and irrigation ey and mines and quarries. n the business-industry censuses, the enumerators will seek facts about payrolls, business volume, expenditures for plant expansion and improvement, seasonal and annual employment, power, raw materials and inventories. The manufacturing census will show whether the nation has fared
- | better or worse since 1937 when the
last such survey was made.: The last manufacturers’ census showed that the output of 165,000 factories in 1937 was valued at approximately $60,700,000,000; that they employed 8,500,000 workers and paid wages of more than $1000, 000,000. Peak of the New Deal covery movement was reached 1937.
Add to Force in April
Enumerators were expected to cover approximately 3,000,000 business firms, 170,000 manufacturing plants and 12,000 mines and quarries By April 1, the force of enumerators will be swelled to 130,000. They will seek detailed information concerning the more than 130,000, inhabitants of the United State and will operate in 143,000 districts specially set up for the task. Statisticians estimated. that each enumerator will have to travel 200 miles in the course of his censustaking. It is estimated they will ask an everage of 200 questions to get the required Jnigrmation concern-
ing every m ber of the nation’s 0,000 or
masiaciuriog. in. , Marion ;
tions asked: by census-takers are|-
PRICE THREE CENTS
It’s Nothing
And Mr. Armington Sticks to It Despite Pleas of Taxpayers.
By JOE COLLIER
MOST.PEOPLE WHO called the Weather Bureau this morning and were told the temperature had reached zero, received the news in a smile-when-you-say-that manner. Which was about as J. H: Armington, Bureau chief, expected, so he refused to cringe in any of his four office rooms or call in the neighboring G-men.’ Mr. Armington has gone through many a 2zero’ campaign with no scars worth mentioning, but he still is pretty curious about the reaction of the public to the weather and to his forecasts. a Bo IT'S NOTHING at all, for instance, for a woman to call in the morning and insist on knowing, as a taxpayer, whet temperature it will be at, say, 3:45 o'clock that afternoon. Mr. Armington never has known, he says, just why women want to know what temperature it will be at a given hour unless, maybe, they intend to start out shopping at that time. There is also the wishful citizen who calls and asks the forecast. Today he was told that it would be fair and continued cold and that tonight the temperature might go as low as zero. “Do you think it will get any warmer?” he asks. . “No,” he is told with firmness, “it will be fair and continued cold tonight and tomorrow, with a possibility of zero temperature tonight.” 1 “Well,” he asks, “it won't be as cold tonight as last night, will it?” “Yes,” he is told again, “it will be fair and continued solder, ete. » 3
that a fotesast 5 a torecast ad not a meteorological 'chameleon. A great many of the neighborhood thermometers are not properly placed and can give only curbstone. opinions, he said.
vidual took his pen in hand recently and unburdened himself on weather in general and the weather man in particular, - “If the United States pays you anything,” he wrote to Mr. Armington, “they pay you too mueh.” In spite of all this, Mr. Armington says: it will be fair and continued cold tonight and tomorrow and that it may get as low as Zero tonight. ;
WINTER LAYS ICY FINGERS ON DIXIE
Below Freezing From Virginia to Upper Florida.
ATLANTA, Ga, Jan. 2 (U. P.)).— Winter bit down on Dixie today with icy teeth, sending temperatures down to below freezing from Virginia to the northern fringe of Florida and endangering crops. Despite clear weather and a bright sun over most of the area,
-|the forecast was for continued cold
through tomorrow; with another general freeze due tonight. Nashville ‘woke up in nine-above-zero. weather, and | the mercury reached 10 at Asheville, high in the Great Smoky Mountairs. Normally balmy New Orleans éxperienced a freezing temperature of 32 while 28 was recorded at Pensacola. It was down to freezing at Jacksonville, indicating possible damage to citrus and vegetable crops. Snow was five inches deep at New Bern, N. C. The second snow in 17 years covered the ground at Beaufort and extensive damage to plants and vegetation was feared in the coastal ‘area which juts out to meet the Gulf Stream.
BICYCLE LICENSING WAITS ON COUNCIL
Bicycle licenses will not be necessary for 1940 unless the City Council passes a new Bicycle Registration, Ordinance now pending, City Controller James E. Deery, said today. A number of persons have called “up~the Controller’s office inquiring about the licenses and have been adviséd that the City is-not now issuing bicycle licenses: this year. A 1936 Bicycle Licensing Ordinance under which the City formerly issued cycle permits has not been enforced because of a pending ‘suit contesting its validity. The City Council now is considering a new bicycle ordinance which would charge a 50 , Tegistratio
County Clerk Charts. was confined at his home, lace St., with an ear infectiof today. Doctors re Mr. Ettinger’s illness as not serious but have ordered him to remain in bed for several more days in order to p ent the spread of the infection, Ettinger Desaspe. ill Sunday. Er
One particularly unstrung indi- .
[Coldest Since 19363 g ‘Flames Rout 3 Families.
LOCAL TEMPERATURES 10 8 a.m. ... : 9a m . a. m, ... a.m ... | (noon)... p.m. ...10 * | pm. ...12 |
me m. me. m. m. m.
12 1 oe e m. ...
~~
a
The coldest Indianapolis | weather in four years will | continue tonight and fomor. row. under - fair skies, the Waather Bureau predicted today. The temperature went to zero at 8 a. m. today, the first time if had gone so low since, February, 1936. It may go as low again tonight, the Bureau said. < Ab the Airport Bureau, the thera mometer registered 3 below at 7: 30 a. m, for the day's minimum. The
Bureau explained the difference between the two official thermometers
qYwas caused by the fact that the
downtown - station is more protected by buildings, and that the smoke that overlies the City pre= venis a lower temperature by not allowing air heat to radiate inte space. 7 : 7 Below at Terre Haute
At Terre Haute it was 7 below for the state’s minimum; at Milroy 4 below, while at South Bend: at 6:30 a. m. it was 15 above and af Ft. Wayne 11 above. As Indianapolis residents battled | the ‘coldest weather in. four years, overheated furnaces ' and stoves started ‘fires which = drove three families into’ the cold. . Firemen also made several other roof fire runs. But the cold seemed to have a heneficial effect on the traffic site uation. No one was hurt fatally n
~toan at the Altenheim Home for “t. |Aged, 1731 N. Capitol Ave. ‘morning, but found the alarm h been . set off by an automa sprinkler system inthe basement, There was no fire.
* Firé Routs Two Families
Two families, including four scantily clad children, were driven from their homes .into the bitter cold at 7:15 a. m. by a fire which severely damaged a double house ab 5604-6 E.- Michigan St. The fire, which . started in the basement of the home of Mr. and . Roger W. Overstreet, at 5608 E. Michigan St., was discovered by Mrs. Edward V. Leslie, living next door in the double. Mrs. Overstreet. and her two children, Eleanor, 9, and Billy, 8, were asleep at the time. With Mrs, Leslie and her two children they. took refuge with neighbors. -
Fight Blaze Two Hours
Firemen and, neighbors last night fought a fire for two hours that drove Carl W. Simmons, his wife and child, from their home at 5143 Matthews St. _The fire started shortly after Mr, Simmons had banked the furnace for the might and the family had retired. His wife and child were housed by neighbors while Mr. Sime mons carried out the furniture. | Fire Company 26 responded with 8 500-gallon water tank and neighe bors formed a bucket brigade. Dur= ing the fire or before it, there was an explosion in the basement that moved the concrete block foundation three inches out of line, Fire Lieutenant Arnold Philips. reported.. He said -he did not know what caused the explosion. The basement, a bedroom and the kitchen were the most seriously damaged. After the fire was X= tinguished, Mr. Simmons carried furniture back into the house. However, the family stayed the night a neighbors, Firemen set the loss a
{holiday traffic here.
Boy Hit by Sled | Three-year-old LeRoy Rusher was in a fair condition today in City Hospital with burns received yesterday when a stove fell on him at his home, 1174 Kentucky Ave. His arms and legs ‘were burned. | Falling on the. ice as she yas crossing Vermont St. at M: chusetts Ave., May Williams, 4 of 430 Massachusetts Ave., was treated at the City Hospital yesterday. e received a cut over the left eye: an injured hip. - Ti Robert Bakin, 7, of 2174 Ringgold Ave., received a gash on his fare head yesterday when ‘he was struck by a sled at the coasting grounds in
a private ‘physician, |
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TIMES FEATURES ‘ON INSIDE PAGES
Books . ....... 10 Chores Lo 9 Comics oes spe 15 Crossword .... 14 Curious World 15 Editorials .... 10 Financial . Saw oh 1
ERR oe
Garfield Park. He was treated by or
