Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 February 1940 — Page 1

FORECAST: Fair. and colder tonight with lowest temperature 5 to 10 degrees; tomorrow fair and cold.

N SCRIPPS — HOWARD §

VOLUME 51—NUMBER 281

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1940

Entered. as at Postoffice,

Second-Class Matter Indianapolis,

Ind.

PRICE THREE CENTS

CLOSER RELIEF WATCH URGED

C. of C. Advises Central Agency for Investigations To Prevent Waste.

Establishment of -a central in- " vestigating agency for all forms of relief and welfare in Marion County

is recommended in a review of poor relief administration in Center Township issued today by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. Creation of such an agency, according to the Chamber's report, not only would correct the problem -of inadequate investigations in Center Township but also the problem of “dupicate, and oftentimes wasteful, investigations that are now being performed separately by each of the authorities administering. public relief.” Other recommendations by the Chamber based on its investigation include: 1. Adoption of improved business methods by opening up relief- business to all firms, allowing reliefers free choice of stores and giving the purchase order to the reliefer instead of the store. 2. The improvement of administrative authority through a selfimposed budget plan by which the public might be apprised of the ex- - act nature of the township's financial operations. 3. Working out of a reasonable |? work-relief program under which reliefers would perform some work for the public in return for assistance. : 4, The complete elimination of - political influence from the administration of relief.

Henry Mueller, who became Cen-|

ter Township Trustee in December following the indictment of his pred(Continued on Page Six)

SECURITY EXTENSION URGED ON CONGRESS

WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (U. P.) — The Social Security Board today suggested that Congress consider ex- . tending provisions of the unemployment compensation laws to cover all persons facing risks of unemployment. " Specifically, it recommended that consideration be given to extending state laws under the unemployment insurance system to include small firms. The Federal tax provision now is applicable only to employers of eight or more workers. The suggestion was made in the Board's annual report to Congress.

FLOOD MAROONS 25 CALIFORNIA FAMILIES

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 2 (U.P). Rain drenched southern California again today, marooning 25 families and- covering streets and highways with earth and rock. Heavy seas pounded a large section of the coast. In the Montrose area north of Los Angeles, 25 families were marooned when three bridge approaches over the big Tujunga River were washed away. Santa Monica lifeguards rescued a family from a home in Topanga Canyon. Many Los Angeles basements were flooded.

Round 3— It’s Round 3 coming up tonight in The Indianapolis ‘Times-Legion Golden Gloves tournament at the Armory. Two weeks of battling have eliminated 49 of the large amateur field. Thirty-six survive ing fighters in the open class and 81 in the novice division are ready to answer the bell tonight The first of an estimated 25 to 30 bouts is scheduled for 7:30 o'clock. The lads who will perform this evening have the advantage of another week of training and promise plenty of fast and clever glove-throwing. All bouts will be to a decision over me three-round route. (De-

J

The Allison -powered Airacobra shown in a recent training flight.

» = #

Al Williams Says—

® ® =

Allison-Powered Warplane World’s Fastest Fighter

He Gloats in Knowledge That U. S. Cannon-Carrier Beats

Any of Europe’s Mystery Craft.

By MAJOR AL WILLIAMS Times Aviation Editor At long last America has a warplane capable of an honest 400 miles an hour, with guns and full war load on board. It is the single-engined, single-seater Airacobra, built to Army ie fications for the U. S. Army Air Corps by the Bell Aircraft Corp. { Butalo, N. Y. Here at last we have a fighter that can outspeed the

3 MUM ON QUIZ ‘BY DES GROUP

Rep. Laralsee Among House

Members Questioned About |

Jackson Dinner.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (U. P).— The Dies Committee today questioned That Congressmen who attended a dinner at the home of an avowed foe of the committee. The Congressmen who appeared before a closed committee session Hex Reps. Robert Ramspeck (D. al), William H. Larrabee (D. Ind.), in John M. Coffree (D. Wash.). None of them would discuss their appearance, but Rep. Joe Starnes (D| Ala), acting chairman of the Dids Committee, premised to make a statement on the House Floor later today. The three Congressmen were among a group which attended a dinner party at the home of Gardner Jackson, legislative representative of the C. I. O._Labor’s Nonpartisan League, Jan. 9. Myr. Jackson, the committee has revealed, paid $105 for purported letters from William Dudley Pelley, Silver Shirt leader, indicating some unwritten understanding with Committee Chairman Martin| Dies. David Mayne, Mr. Pelley’s Washington representative, since has testified the letters were forgeries which he manufactured and supplied to Mr. Jackson. The current controversy started 10, days ago when Rep. Frank E. Hook (D. Mich.) inserted [in the Congressional - Record a statement attacking Rep. Dies. Rep. Hook included in his address excerpts from purported | Pelley letters. The Dies Cominittee launched an investigation of the Hook material. This revealed that the purported Pelley letters were given Rep. Hook by Mr. Jackson.

PSST! GROUNDHOG

HAS SEEN SHADOW

Weather Bureau Predicts 5 To 10 Degrees Tonight.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES 6 a. m ...15 10a. m ... 19 Tam ...15 11 a.m ... 20 8 a. m. ... 15 12 (noon)... 23 9 a. m 11 1p.m.....

(Joe Collier, Page Three; river conditions, Page 15)

| The groundhog saw his shadow today, for whatever that’s worth. { Of perhaps more immediate in-

rest is the prediction of the :

Veather Bureau, which said temperatures. tonight will be from- 5 to 10 degrees. Tomorrow will be fair and continued cold. The minimum of the last 24 hours ‘was 15 at 6 a. m.

| QUARRYVILLE, Pa., Feb. 2 (U. B.).—The worst of the winter is over. { That's the report of top-hatted and night-shirt clad members of the slumbering groundhog lodge. | According to the “official comnunique” issued at noon, “the roundhog came out of his hole at 11:09.75 minus,” meaning that just as the marmot came out, the sun peeked through for a second and y r’ Ma Saiyan gti i SE Lat

prize gun-wings of Europe. I believe it is the fastest fighter in the world. ‘I have seen, admired, and even flown Europe's fast single-seater fighters.* A month before Munich I. sat at the controls of ‘a Messerschmitt M-109 single-seater, and my. heart. aghed as I. watched the {speed indicator climb toward 400

‘miles per hour, knowing: we had no

such fighters. The Airacobra is powered by a streamlined, liquid-cooled the Allison 12-cylinder “V” made in Indianapolis—which develops more than 1000 horsepower.

Speed Essence of Fighter

Speed is the essence of a singleseater fighter. It must be able to overtake the bomber, and maneuver for attack when it does. In addition to speed, the fighter must carry maximum gun power, The Airacobra has both. With speed to burn—400 miles an hour—it ‘also nas four machine guns and an inch-and-one-half cannon which fires explosive shells from its singing nose. Airacobra is an appropriate name. , The Airacobra’s design is built around the Allison streamlined engine. For 20-odd years finance and politics steam-rollered the streamlined engine design and flooded us with big, round, air-cooled motors. As a consequence, we have been 60 to 100 miles an hour behind Europe for 16 years. All the fast foreign fighters are powered by liquid-cooled, streamlined engines. So Larry Bell took the trouble to visit and study foreign warplanes. I ran across him several times in Europe. He told his engineers to create a new design, embodying the streamlined Allison engine. Result: The Airacobra.

Engine in Fuselage

The Airacobra is a low-wing monoplane, with: retractable tricycle landing gear. It has a sleek, clean fuselage, flush-riveted. The Allison engine is mounted in the fuselage behind the pilot, with a power shaft running forward beneath the pilot’s feet to the nose, where it is joined to a gear box. A stub shaft from the gear box carrics the propeller. The location of the engine near the center of gravity means localization of weights, which in turn means high maneuverability. The pilot, seated close to this concentration of weights, is also enabled to withstand the physical strains of sharp turns at high speed, a feature not present when engines are mounted far forward and the pilot proportionately far aft, as in the case of orthodox fighter designs. The fuselage is comprised of two sections \ that can be bolted together for quick disassembly, repair or shipment. Forward of the pilot, the ‘ultra-clean nose permits maximum visibility. In the extreme nose are located four machine guns, (Continued oh Page Six)

DELAWARE HOMES DAMAGED BY FIRE

Fire believed to have been caused by ‘a defective flue today caused an estimated $700 damage to the double house at 2442-44 N. Delaware St. Firemen said the flames started in No. 2442, the half occupied by Glenn C. Osborne. The other side was occupied by Meyer Ladin. The blaze was confined to the roof and attic. Falling’ slate broke windows in the home of Mrs. Frances Neiman, 2438 N. Delaware.

FIRE DAMAGE SET AT $10,000 LOGANSPORT, Ind. Feb. 2 (U. P.).—Fire early today destroyed a large incubator in an abandoned school building at Bringhurst, Souths

Times-Acme Telephoto,

HINT RUMANIAN TIE WITH NAZIS

Belgrade Conferees Upset; Possible Agreement With Reds Also Mentioned.

(U. P.).—Rumania was reported today to have threatened new complications at the Bafkan Entente meeting by indicating that Bucharest might seek some: agreement with Germany and possibly Soviet Russia unless she obtains guarantee of her frontier with. Hungary. Considerable official secrecy surrounded developments at the first session of the Balkan ente—Rumania, Jugoslavia, Turkey and

Greece—but there were persistent

hints. that the attitude of Rumania was_ creating concern among the representatives of ‘the other.s0l ir eastern states. £ According to unofficial sources, the Rumanian Foreign . Minister; Grigore Gafencu, indicated in preliminary discussions that unless the Entente states acted to make secure the Rumanian fronfiers with Hungary and with Bulgaria as well, Rumania intends to obtain these guarantees from Germany in return for full economic sosoperation with: the Reich. In addition, it was reported, Gafencu indicated that Rumania might seek some sort of an understanding = with Moscow, acting through Berlin. This, it was suggested, might be {Continued on Page Three)

STREET EMPLOYEES HELD TO 4-DAY WEEK

City Street employees who have been demanding a five-day week in order to support their families will work only four days for the rest of

for them, the Works Board decided today. The Street Department workers have twice made massed protests against failure of City officials to employ them for a five-day, 40-hour week, claiming they must work at least five days to make a living wage. Board members said they “wished” they could give the men more work, but this was impossible because of the limited budget. The workers get about $12.60 for a fourday week.

SWEDEN NEGOTIATES

WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (U. P.)— Swedish representatives were disclosed today to have virtually com-= pleted arrangements to order 144 single-motored American - Vultee pursuit planes. The planes are considered -among the finest fighting craft in the world. They reputedly are capable of speeds in excess of 400 miles per hour. They are powered with Pratt & Whitney engines, and an additional 72 motors for replacements are understood to be included in the deal.

By NOBLE REED

‘A total of 11,502 drivers, found to be dangerously unfit to operate automobiles, were taken from behind steering wheels as a result of driving tests conducted by the State! Motor Vehicle License Bureau during 1939. Of these defective drivers, 3144 were found to have eyesight so limited that they could not determine which direction a car was ‘traveling a block in front of them. The remainder failed in the tests because many of them couldn’t operate a car properly or didn’t know

What all the traffic signs meant.

ther group: of 10,025 . dri

BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, Feb. 2

EL ee

the winter because of lack of work

TO BUY U. S. PLANES ™

FINN DEFENSES WITHNEW FURY

Big Guns, Massed Bombers Aid in Mannerheim Attack; Raid 20 Localities.

By JOE ALEX MORRIS United Press Foreign News Editor

The Red Army renewed a powerful frontal attack on the center of the Mannerheim Line today, with the support of artillery and massed bombing planes. The Russian attack was in great force and again involved the use of “Trojan horses’—armored sledges pushed ahead of tanks. The fighting on the Karelian Isthmus line marked the second day of furious attack—in the Summa sector—by Red Army forces which in the past repeatedly have failed in thrusts at both ‘ends of the Mannerheim Line. Fighting was in | progress almost all of last night.

Bomb 20 Localities

The sky was clear and Russian airplanes operated not only over the front lines but deeply into southern Finland. At least 20 localities including Helsinki were’attacked. An official communique said that Russian parachute troops had been “captured or annihilated” during yesterday’s fighting when the Red Army attacks were repulsed on the Karelian Isthmus and northeast of Lake Ladoga. Five to eight airplanes were shot down in the Karelian Isthmus fighting, the Finns said. Webb Miller, United Press correspondent, who said he was held up four times during a 150-mile drive on the Isthmus front in 10 below zero weather, said that in the Summa sector the Russians, were using planes, tanks,' armored sledges and the most powerful artillery barrage he had seen since the World War. The: drive there . apparently was aimed at the coastal city of Viipuri (Viborg) on the road to Helsinki,

Sky Like Football Gridiron

Writing from the Karelian front, Mr. Miller said: “The massed operations of Russian planes gave the sky the apthe white

pearan times fr e aircraft criss-crogsed above (hon: lines. Often the streamers vapor vere ‘miles long and Tin= sky. ala ing our automobile “trip. we same evidence of the bombardment of towns behind the lines. In some towns, the main buildings had ‘been blown to bits and debris ‘still littered the streets which were crowded with Finns in white parkas. “The roads over which we traveled were often covered with fresh dirt thrown up by bomb explosions. Some bomb craters were far from human habitation and it was difficult: to guess why they had been dropped. interrupt road traffic by bombardment was combated by Finnish crews who were almost always able to make necessary repairs within an hour.” From the Swedish frontier, Hubert Uexkuell, United Press corre(Continued on Page Three)

MORRIS ST. BLDG. TO GET THIRD STORY

Light Co. to Spend $100,000 for Addition.

. Plans for adding a third story to the Morris St. administration building of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. were announced today. The cost of the construction work and new equipment to be housed was estimated at nearly $100,000. Work on the new floor probably will be under way late in March and is to be completed by July 1. The two-story administration building, which is 180 - by 60 feet, was built in 1928 in such a manr that additional stories could be added. The present roof, of concrete, will serve as the floor of the new third story. The new floor will be built without interfering with the regular wolk!of the offices beneath it. It will be occupied by the engineering department and probably by the property records department, Vice President Dan C. Hess said. Company * officials described the Morris St. plant as the company’s nerve center. It houses the construction, maintenance, service, shipping, employment, engineering, garage, mechanical and similar de-

periments,

~ {bles - only when they wore glasses)

to correct defective vision or when they equipped their cars with side mirrors to overcome the hazard of deafness. “Nine thousand of the: restricted drivers were ordered to wear glasses while driving or face arrest, while more than 1000, suffering from deafness, were warned to install mirrors. The report, covering the first full year’s enforcement of the 1937 driver's license examination law, was issued by Frank Finney, License Bureau director, on the findings shown in 161,724 tests. Drivers required to take the tests

ers were physically handicapped. |: cl

SOVIETS BLAST |

of a football gridiron at}: exhaust smoke

The Russian attempts to

appreciation campaign.

¥® =

Dr. Erskine

Begin in State

By JAMES One of the most extensive and education in Indiana’s history—a

launched today.

Claypool Hotel last night. ‘A throng of 1800 diners, representing the state’s civic and cultural leaders, thumbed through a 14-page seating plan. to. find their places in one of the eight dining rooms utilized for the: vast-gathering. .. ‘Here, through loud speakers, they ‘heard a program of speeches culminating in the evening’s principal address by Dr, John Erskine, writer, musician, educator, former: president

member of the Metropolitan Opera executive board. Hear Speech Program At the speakers’ table were Robert A. Adams, toastmaster; Mrs. H. H. Arnholter, the Music Appreciation Committee's Indiana organizer; William H. Ball, Indiana chairman of the committee and host at last night’s banquet; Bernard Batty, trustee of the Arthur Jordan Foundation: Richard Crooks, Metropolitan Opera tenor and soloist at the week-end symphony concerts; Dr. G. H. A. Clowes, the Indiana State Symphony Society vice president; Dr. Edward Elliott, president of Purdue University; Felix A. Grisette, the National Committee's executive secretary. Edward T. Ingle, national director of the committee and former Indianapolis newspaperman; Mrs. Charles Latham, of the Indiana State Symphony Society women’s committee; Mrs. James Lowry, Matinee Musicale president; Dr. DeWitt Morgan, Indianapolis Public Schools superintendent; Dr. L. A. Pittinger, Ball State College president; Dr. Daniel S. Robinson, Butler University president. Ferdinand Schaefer, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s founder and conductor emeritus; Louis Schwitzer, Indianapolis Symphonic Choir president; Fabien Sevitzky, ¢onductor and musical director of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra; Elmer Andrew Steffen, K. S. G., director of the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir; Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan; Dr. Clyde E. Wildman, DePauw - University president, and Ralph 'W. Wright, Indianapolis Public: Schools music. supervisor, Schaefer Wins Ovation

Each of these honor guests was applauded vigorously upon introduction by Mr. Adams, But the ovation of the evening went to’ Mr. Schaefer. A few whistles and shouts mingled with prolonged hand-clap-ping, and finally the entire group in the Riley Room and adjoining mezzanine .rose to their. feet and redoubled their cheering.

win the statement that “this evening is important not only in Indianapolis, nor in this country where we live, but for all the people in the world who are interested in a civilization and in keeping it. “Music,” he continued, “is a language, not an accomplishment. (Continued on Page Six)

11,502 Indiana Drivers Taken From Behind Steering Wheels by 1939 Tests

applications reveal facts that justity an examination. ‘Licenses were issued last year to 1,326,917, an increase of 72,900 over 1938. Of the total licensed drivers, 129,120 have been placed on the official “black list” for close surveillance by all traffic officers. Getting on the black list means a driver has committed some driving error, had an accident or violated any one of the many traffic laws.

| Many of them were found driving

with whisky breath. “This group of drivers, which

comprises ‘about: 10 per cent of all operators in includes those |

Good Music Campaign

of thie Julliard School of Music andi

. Erskine opened his address|

Launched

Times Photo.

John Erskine (left), noted novelist and educator, was the principal speaker at last night's dinner inaugurating Indiana's musie He is shown with Richard Crooks, concert and grand opera singer, well known to Indianapolis music lovers.

Hails Sale

Of Recorded rded Symphonies

Twenty-Week Program Disseminating Masterpieces to

Next Thursday.

THRASHER ambitious programs of civic musical 20-weeks program of disseminating

master works through the medium of photongraph recording—was

The formal opening of activities of the National Committee for Music Appreciation in Indiana took the form of a banquet at the

GABLE AND WIFE REPORTED SAFE

Missing Hollywood = Stars ~Are Located at Gun Club.

ENSENADA, Lower California. Feb, 2 (U. P.).—Clark Gable and

today at the La Brea Gun Club, 24 miles south of here, after the couple were feared to have been lost in the gale-swept country of rugged Lower California. The Gables left the ranch of Hattie Hamilton, 115 miles south of here

station wagon to drive here.

hours. Heavy rains began soon after they left and fell all day. Otto Winkler and Erick Carpenter, of the M-G-M Studio, flew to the ranch, where the stars had been duck hunting, and discovered they had left. Studio officials here waited anxiously for word of them until midnight when they hired a taxicab, and, with searchers in other machines, started out along the road they would have traveled. The searchers finally learned they were at the gun club.

WOMAN STRUCK BY 2 AUTOS NEAR DEATH

Second Car Runs Over Victim of Hit-Skip.

Mrs. Margaret Payne Butler, 29, of 1808 N. Illinois St. was near death at City Hospital today after she was struck by a hit-and-run driver at 16th and Illinois Sts. and

then was run over by another car last night. Her room-mate, Miss Dorothy Marcelle, and two male friends had their blood typed last night and stood ready to offer bl for a transfusion if necessary. ° Mrs. Butler received a possible fracture of the skull and right arm, lacerations and abrasions. A student at the Approved Beauty College, she had just gotten off a street car en route home when the

|| accident occured at about 8 o'clock.

There was no withesses to the first ‘accident, but friends said the hit-and-run driver apparently backed into her, throwing her to the pavement and’ that she was then struck by a car police said was driven by James Williams, 2117 N. Talbott St. Her mother, Mrs. C. N. Lowey, was summoned from Anderson after the accident.

WIDOW OF T. R. SHAKEN UP

NEW YORK, Feb. 2 (U. P.).—Mrs. Edith Kermit Roosevelt, 78-year-old widow of President Theodore Roosevelt, was severely shaken up today when her automobile was struck by another car in suburban Hollis, The car, operated by a chauffeur, spun around several times, throwing Mrs. Roosevelt about the back seat.

BLAST EEL RIVER ICE

LOGANSPORT, Ind, Feb. 2 (U. P.).—Workmen are blasting the ice from the Eel River here today for the second Yims -in three weeks to ble flooding of

Carole Lombard were reported safe

at 8 a. m. yesterday in Mr. Gable’s | The| drive ordinarily requires but six}

{Crossword

JUDGE CLAIMS BARBER BOARD

ACTION ‘MESS

Cox Lifts Writ to Restrain Violations of Price and Hour Regulations.

Circuit Court Judge Earl R. Cox declared today that the State Bare ber Board had “created a mess by proceeding illegally” in its proe mulgation of a price and closing hour agreement for barbers in the Marion County trade area. : Judge Cox dissolved an order he had previously granted the Board restraining independent barbers from ignoring its regulations. Those regulations consisted pri marily of a 6 p. m. closing hour and a 50-cent minimum for adult haire cuts, issued by the board on Nov. 3,

Board Powers Unquestioned

Dissolution of the restraining order throws into status quo the dispute which has raged between the Barber Board and independent barbers since: isuance of the price and hour fixing order. The board’s power to revoke the license of violators of its regula= tions has not been questioned. Testimony given before Judgs Cox by Frank McKamey, board secretary, stamped the board’s evere cise of its power as illegal, Judge Cox maintained. The judge particularly stressed | the revelations that the board had not notified all licensed barbers in the county of the public hearing upon the price and hour schedule as required by law. Mr. McKamey said on the witness stand that the Board had made no investigation to determine the reasonableness of the new price and closing hour schedule after a peti< tion asking for such a schedule had been submitted to the Board. : Under the 1939 Barber Act, the Board is empowered to promulgate any price and hour schedule requested by 80. per cent of the bare bers in a trade area. Lacks Record of Names Mr. McKamey claimed the petition contained the names of 80 per cent of the Marion County. bare bers but declared he had no records to prove it. Judge Cox asked Mr. McKamey whether the hoard had: attempted

signatures on the petition. “We attempted to check thé petie tion,” Mr. McKamey said. The board secretary declared that

in the new law was held at the local barbers’ union headquarters. - Judge Cox asked Mr. McKamey if the board ever sought advice as to how to operate under the new

office. Mr. McKamey said it had not. “That is certainly apparent,” Judge Cox said.

Nothing Illegal Is Gobd

“There is a way to operate this law legally, and that's the way it should be operated, ” Judge Cox said. “There is nothing good that is illegal. It makes no difference what inducement is made to you by groups. Let these groups go to the Legislature.” Mr. McKamey, before becoming board secretary, was for 25 years secretary of the local barbers’ union. Judge Cox last year declared ths new Barber Law constitutional. The litigation which reached a climax today in his court, began last fall when the Board attempted to carry out the act's provisions for the first time .in Marion County.

HAUPTMANN CHILD AWARDED $25,500

NEW YORK, Feb. 2 (U. P.).—A jury in Bronx Supreme Court late vesterday awarded Manfried Haupte mann, son of Bruno Richard Haupte mann, executed slayer of the Linde bergh baby, $25,500 for injuries the

cident two years ago. The sum asked in the suit was $100,000.

HOGS UP 10 CENTS; STOCKS $1 HIGHER

Hog prices at Indianapolis ade vanced 10 cents today in all weights as 6000 head were shipped in for sale, the Agricultural Marketing Service reported.

New York stocks firmed and leading shares gained more than $1 but trading continued light. Steel shares were in good demand 2-1 autos gained on reports that January output set a new high,

A. F. L. SCORES HITLER

MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 2 (U. P.).— Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin wers denounced today as “the enemies of mankind” by the A. PF. of L, which asserted “as lang as their creed of totalitarianism rules ih Germany .and Russia, the peace of the world is in jeopardy. ”

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

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Books ....... 18]Ji Ered 18 Clapper ..... 17 Movies A Comics | 27| Mrs. Ferguson 18 . 25 {Pegler . Curious. World 27 Pyle... Editorials ..... 18 Questions sees 17 Financial “00s 19 Flynn ....... 19{Mrs, Roosevelt.

ise esen

a Forum ....... 1 In Indpl

to verify the authenticity of the =

the only public hearing required

law from the Attorney General's *

child received in an automobile ac=

A SE EA AER