Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1940 — Page 1

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The Indianapo

.

lis Times

FORECAST: Fair and slightly warmer tonight; tomorrow, increasing cloudiness and warmer,

VOLUME 52—NUMBER 41

SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1940

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.

FINAL HOME

PRICE THREE CENTS .

| DEAD, 2 HURT INTWO TRAFFIC CRASHES HERE

Police to Open Vigil at Taverns to Prevent Drunk Driving.

An automobile passenger was killed instantly and the driver was injured early today in an automobile crash at the edge of the northeastern City limit while a motorcycle rider was near death

after a crash in the City. As officials investigated the fatal accident, the Accident Prevention Bureau announced that police will keep a vigil on taverns at closing time and arrest drunken persons who attempt to drive autos. The fatal accident occurred about 12:30 a. m. at 49h St. and Keystone Ave. The victim was identified four hours later as Barl Walter Smith, 22, a hosiery mill worker, of 1115 N. New Jersey St.

Driver in Hospital

The driver of the car, police said, was Paul E. Kotlowski Jr., 26, of 1230 Villa Ave. He is in City Hospital. He was not hurt seriously. Mr. Smith's death was the 10th in Marion County, outside Indian- | apolis, this year. It brought the 1940 toll in the City and County to 34, compared with 28 during a corresponding period last year. Mr. Kotlowski told police that he lost control of the car while driving across the Nickel Plate Railroad tracks and struck a utility pole. The car bounced off the pole and stopped against a fence.

Skull Was Fractured Mr. Smith's body was pinned between the car and the fence. Dr. Norman R. Booher, deputy coroner, said that his skull was fractured, his chest crushed and a leg broken. Mr. Kotlowski was hurled from the auto by the impact. Shortly after the accident, a resident in the 4900 block of Brouse St. about a mile away, said a wrecked

But Don't Get in the Way!

=

CAN SEE HE ISN'T RUNNING! E'S WUST WAITING IN CASE AN EMERGENCY) COMES ALONG:

pg OK .

maroon car had been abandoned in front of his home. Police examination of it and the | car in the fatal wreck showed paint | of each on the other,

Owner Reports Collision |

A short time later, police said, Walter Scarbrough, 5001 College Ave, came to headquarters and reported that he was driving the | abandoned car and that it had been | involved in a collision. Police said they believe that My Restaurant. Scarbrough's car and that driven| a cuit demanding legal review of by Mr. Kotlowski had sideswiped | ro ; ; : Sify. about a half block from the fatal | De ony Zoning Hogi Fg Ws crash. Mr, Scarbrough was held in| Py val 01 5 penn Yo erect & [grive | jail on a vagrancy charge under iD restaurant in the 3700 block of : ; N. Meridian St., was filed in Cir-

$2000 bond pendi h ti [oy : the Ho aending Ute SHH Of | cuit Court today by 71 residents of

Mr. Kotlowski told police that he that vicinity, had met Mr. Smith ne tavern and| _1Lne action, which was brought by knew him only as Smitty. C. M. Cannady of 3742 Salem St. in y _r behalf of 70 other residents, asked | Cycle Rider in Hospital the court to stop any work that may | Barney Sheetz, 29, of 506 E. Mor- | De started on the building, pending | ris St, motorcycle rider, was near| the legal action. death at City Hospital after a col-| Named as defendants were all lision with an auto at Nelson and members of the City Zoning Board Shelby Sts. at 6 a. m. today, (and Paul E. Lundmark, who proPolice said ~ that his cycle| Poses to erect the building. was equipped with a speedometer| Hearings on the proposed buildof the type used on police motorcy-|ing before the Zoning Board recentcles and that the meter indicated Iv precipitated a bitter fight by that he had been traveling at a rate| North Side residents to block the] of 101 miles an hour. project on the grounds that it would They said that witnesses told them | create a public nuisance and depre-

71 North Siders Ask Court Block Construction of

SUITISFILEDIN '3 Towns Split on Merits of IONINC DISPUTE ~~ Proposed Superhighway 31

Southport, Greenwood and Edgewood Disturbed by Fight; Some Feel Present Road Could Be Widened.

By TIM TIPPETT

Southport, a sleepy little village

6.0.P. EDITORS INSIST ONS. 2PCT. REPORT

Exonerate Those Under Suspicion or Prosecute Guilty, Resolution Urges.

(Photos, Page Seven)

By NOBLE REED

The Indiana Republican Editorial Association today was on record with a formal resolution demanding that the U. S. Treasury make public its findings in the investigation involving the Democratic Two

Per Cent Club funds. “If the investigation failed to reveal evidence of guilt against those who are implicated, thev are entitled to be exonerated by a public statement,” the resolution stated. “If the investigation revealed guilt, then those who are guilty should be prosecuted. There is no place in the American system for the ‘whitewashing’ of such investigations.” Hit Bipartisan Members

The resolution, adopted at the Association's 62d annual banquet at the Claypool Hotel last night, also demanded that Republican

partisan activities be banished from the party. “There are reports of bipartisan activity on the part of those who would use positions of influence within the party to further their greed for personal power or gain,” the resolution stated. “Such action cannot be tolerated, and care must be taken that none such is selected for positions of authority within the ‘party organization.” The keynote of the editors’ convention was sounded by Governor Arthur H. James of Pennsylavnia, who declared that a Republican victory’ will bring jobs to the unemployed through restoration of confidence among business leaders. “Jobs can be found for idle men and for idle money only by a new administration in Washington,” said. “They can be found only when new voices of hope, faith and courage take the place of hate, mis-

Within 60 Miles Of Trondheim.

BERLIN, April 27 (U, P.).—The, High Command communique today said that German troops in Norway | had captured almost 300 British | | prisoners, including the “King's |Own” men, and had advanced to within 60 miles of Trondheim after driving back Allied forces. British staff officers and important documents were seized, the High Command said, when German columns defeated and dispersed Allied troops southeast of Dombaas in the Gudbrands Valley and at Steinkjer, north of Trondheim.

leaders who are linked with bi-|

he

The communique also said that {German forces striking up the [Oester Valley had smashed through | Roeros and continued northwest{ward to within about 45 miles of {the important railroad junction of | Stoeren. Enemy Surprised

The prisoners taken in the bat{tle of Steinkjer, the communique | said, belonged to the Royal Regi(ment, “the King's very own” Yorkshire Infantry and to the Fourth Lincolnshire Regiment. “When on April 22 and 23 our troops invaded Lillehammer and Tretten by surprise, they encountered for the first time English forces which had advanced from - Andalsnes and dispersed them,” the communique said. “They compietely surprised the enemy, (which fled in the direction of | Dombaas {important railroad junc- | tion) leaving arms and equipment behind. “Almost 200 prisoners were made. including English troops and staff with their commander, and with them a number of politically and militarily important orders and other documents. Additional English

Berlin Reports Koy! : a

Joachim von Ribbentrop “All lies, all lies.”

ALLIED PLOT IN

‘Nazis Say Norway Connived

With British and French In Planning Invasion.

BULLETIN STOCKHOLM, April 27 (U. P.). —The British legation disclosed today that the Swedish Government—acting “at the request of a foreign power’—had confiscated the legation news summary for this week. The legation said diplomatic action, presumably a protest, would be taken tomorrow,

NAZIS TRY DARING DASH THROUGH MOUNTAIN PASS AS LINES OF ALLIES HOLD

| ‘More Planes Arrive to

Challenge Reich Air Mastery.

BULLETINS

OERSTERSUND, Sweden, April { 27 (U. P).—~A German detachment was reported tonight to have struck westward from the Norwegia Oester Valley through a narrow mountain pass in a bold attempt to out-flank Allied forces blocking the road to Stoeren and Trondheim, The German drive across the | mountains, starting from Tynset, | south of Roeros, was regarded as | extremely hazardous, but it was | admitted that if it succeeded the | Allied positions all along the Dombaas-Stoeren Railroad would be in grave danger. Meanvhhile, the newspaper Af tonbladet reported from Gothen-

burg that a number of foreign airplanes—believed to be French

| —were seen flying toward Den-

NORTH CHARGED

mark,

BERLIN, April 27 (U. P.).=—- | The High Command announced | tonight that twe British cruisers | had been bombed and severely damaged off the Norwegian coast | today and that a 10,000:ton British transport ship had been set afire. !

STOCKHOLM, April 27 (U. | P.).—German bombing planes | led renewed Nazi thrusts up ‘the Gudbrands and Oester Valleys toward Trondheim toe (day but frontier messages reported that Allied forces were

trust and suspicion and greed which prisoners were taken on April 25. has been the theme song of the 1n the Steinkjer sector the enemy New Deal.” was repulsed and two English offiUrges End to Waste cers and 80 men made prisoner, “In both places the superiority of the German armed forces was proved after brief fighting.”

“We urge that platforms be| Claim Voss Occupied adopted that do not compromise The communique said that the

His address, tied in with the Edi-| torial Association's resolution which stated:

of some 1200 inhabitants, lies south

of Indianapolis, about 20 minutes by car on Road 31.

Aged trees line its streets and many family homes, built of brick {confidence in private enterprise.” (burned in kilns on the property, remain amidst sloping lawns and!

tumbling vines, now bright colored

Beneath this calm atmosphere of quiet living there lies perhaps dollars have been wasted in the

the biggest factional fight that has| disturbed this hamlet in its more than half century of life. | Road 31, double lane highway on which traffic flows between Indianapolis and the South, touches Southport on the west edge. The town’s transportation to Indianap-| olis, where most of its populace works, is by automobile and bus on Road 31, and by interurban.

Plan to Move Road

The State Highway Commission plans this vear to relocate Road 31. moving it a. quarter mile west,| missing Southport and touching] only the edges of nearby Greenwood and Edgewood.

he was racing with another motor-| cycle when he collided with a car! driven by Edward Bruce, 1228 Nelson St

Explains Tavern Watch

Capt. Leo Troutman said that the midnight vigil outside taverns was prompted by numerous accidents in which persons who had been drinking were involved. He said that both persons attempting to get into | cars to drive them after drinking and drunken passengers would be arrested. He announced also that beginning Monday, the motorcycle force patroling streets during morning hours while motorists were en route to work will be doubled to curb speeding and reckless driving.

Evansville Woman, 82, Killed by Train

EVANSVILLE, Ind. April 27 (U. P.).—Mrs. Barbara Brescher, of Evansville, was Killed yesterday] when she was struck by an Illinois] Central railroad train as she walked | across the track toward a nearby] grocery. She was 82.

AMERICAN PAPER IN | SHANGHAI IS BOMBED

SHANGHAI, April 27 (U. P). —| Chinese gunmen bombed the Amer- | jcan-owned Shanghai Evening Post | today, wounded three pressmen, shot a French Indo-Chinese policeman dead and killed a Chinese pedestrian in their wild escape im a stolen taxicab. M. C. Ford, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., news editor of the paper, charged that the terrorists were operatives of the Japanese-sponsored puppet regime sct up at Nanking, ordered to wreck the paper because of its anti-puppet policy. Four gunmen visited the Evening Post at § a. m. today. They threw

At. the announcement of this relocation the residents in Southport,

the neighborhood. Riga h Greenwood and Edgewood became The suit charged that the ZOn- | ch arply divided.

Ing Board's approval of the one Some of the Southport citizens one Pears Hae a RE Cause | aver the relocation because it answered “here” on a roll call vote | vould decrease the number of a i ibe a vs 'lautos and trucks which stream past and it ‘was recorded as ‘yes. lat present. The action also raised several thers fear the relocation will legal questions regarding the |inder the now satisfactory trans(Continued on Page Three) portation by bus and interurban.

“Surveys of congested traffic con-

ciate residential property values in

in their spring flower settings.

NICE SUNDAY AHEAD (IT'S ABOUT TIME)

No Rain and 70-Degree Weather Forecast.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

. m. Je 11 h.Mm . m. . 47 12 (noon)... 5% TI. LL. D2 19M ... 58 «. ....5% THM ... 6b LL, DS

56

Tomorrow will be a fine day for Hoosiers to spend outdoors, the Weatherman smiled today.

ness, but there is no indication of any rain, Meteorologist J. H. Armington said. He promised tempera - tures in the lower 70s. The town of Hazelton remained soaked by the White River today.

ditions on the present Road 31 and investigation of the possibilities of widening the highway make us believe that the most feasible plan would be to cut a& new road through,” T. A. Dicus, Highway Commission chairman, said. Fouvr-Lane Highway The highway would have four 22{foot lanes separated by a 30-foot |esplanade. The ‘newest thing” in highways, it would cut a swath 100 feet wide from just outside Greenwood. over hills, through several valleys, farmland and residential

‘FOR A LONG TINE

Injured Ligament Doctor’s Order.

Brings

WASHINGTON, April 27 (U. P). -—Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankee outfielder, returned from Johns Hopkins Hospital today and said he has a torn ligament in his right knee and will be out of the

So | The fist roth estimate of ihe more to be examined by Dr. G ge | COSt made by commission Snfineers Bennett who said the torn ligament | Y6u7 100. « This does ot iciude

r i ; ; +. | right-of-way. : as xmecung the cartilage in Joe S| The Perry Township Business-

DiMaggio was injured in an ex-| (Continued on Page Three)

hibition game on April 14 with the SEE h LA Boon Dears IRATE MOTHER ENDS TAX OFFICE OPEN LATE SIT-DOWN IN SCHOOL

The County Treasurer's office will | HIGHLANDVILLE, Mo., April 27 remain open until 4 p. m. today for| (U. P.).—Mrs. Gladys Towe, who personal and property tak pay-| went on a “sitdown strike, for jusments. The office will remain open | tice” when the School Board refused until the same hour next Saturday | to discipline a boy who broke her and until 5:30 p. m. on May 6, the Son's nose in a fist fight, abandoned final day for tax payments, accord-| the sitdown today and began cir-

i y culating petitions demanding a reSY Treasurer Walter ©. OE the Cae. |

“They shut off the water, switched off the lights and cut off the telephone,” Mrs. Lowe explained. “That left me a nice big corridor ali to myself, but school closed last night

away at Troy Ave.

Ave. (Road 31).

F.D.R.: l-}¥0-2

three hand grenades into the pressroom, wounding the pressmen. Next they killed the policeman. They stole a taxicab and raced for the Japanese-controlled -Hongkew area, which they reached after running

down and killing a Chinese pedes-

! ‘trian,

| with graduation so I guess I can do | better getting out among the folks.” Mrs. Lowe sat in the school building 36 hours. She says her son, Phillip, 15, suffered & broken nose and fractured cheek bone when he was hit by Dale Sims, 18, son of J. E. Sims, clerk of the School Board. *

SAN FRANCISCO, April 27 (U. P.).—Betting Commissioner Floyd Russell of Corbett's, Inc., today quoted the first odds here on the Presidential campaign—“1 to 2 that President Roosevelt will be re-elected.”

districts and emerge 8919 miles] and Madison

more than eight feet over flood | stage and a slow Jise continued.

The Ohio was receding along the {southern Indiana border,

the | Weather Bureau reported. Four southern Indiana roads that have been closed for several days | because of flood waters from the Ohio River and smaller streams were opened to traffic today by the State Highway Commission. | Water has receded from Road 39. |'south of Brownstown, Road 50 in | Aurora, Road 235 east of Medora and Road 250 at Dudleytown.

DEBT HOLIDAY IN NORWAY

STOCKHOLM, April 27 (U. P). |—The Norwegian Government %oday decreed a one month mora{toritum on all debt incurred before {the German invasion, the official | Norge Agency announced.

with the New Deal in state or na-| ’ y 0 tion, but which stand for elimina-| "0% of Voss, northeast of Bergen, tion of waste and graft in govern- |" the southwest coast, had been ment and for re-establishment of Occupied by German troops after a : (battle in which Norwegians were thrown back. In the far northern Narvik zone, it added, a Norwegian battalion | “was wiped out in a counter-attack”

-priming. . [ es is > stop trying north of Narvik port and 144 were i th {taken prisoners.

to prime that pump with the . . us learnings of the years to come and | ine air force bombed a cruiser

ime it inst 5 he warm 2nd badly damaged it and one Briti ish airplane was shot down when | the Allied forces attacked Aalborg | irtrome without success. |

Bitterly assailing the New Deal, | Governor James said billions of |

(Continued on Page Three)

|

MOVIE ‘CINDERELLA’ | ONCE A TEACHER

HOLLYWOOD, April 27 (U. P.).—| Martha Scott of Jamesport, Mo., was today’s “Cinderella Girl.” She

had substituted for Joan Fontaine in the picture, “The Howards of] Virginia,” and was given a three-|

British losses in the Norwegian campaign, claimed today that in 17

had lost 78 naval units and 55 airplanes in and around Norway.

BRITISH SAY NAZIS

The newspaper Zwoelf Uhr Blatt, | which keeps a private scoreboard on |

days ending Thursday, the British |

BERLIN, Aptil 27 (U. P.)—Ger- (fighting back strongly in the many today charged Great Britain |Otta and Roeros sectors. and France with a long-standing | The two German columns. drive plot to invade Norway and declared |. mL. : : that Norwegian connivante and |n® toward Dombaas in the Gude hostility had “created a state of | brandsdal and toward Stoeren in war between Norway and the Ger-|the Oesterdal in an effort to seize man Reich.” the keys to the central Norwegian The Allied powers, seeking to | or g strike at Germany, already had | COmmunications system, were ree started British troops toward the [ported to have encountered reine coast of Norway when Germany forced Allied defense lines and to landed her occupation forces there |, eb halted or forced b on April 9, Foreign Minister Joa- | Save con 'Ta'iee or Tove ack chim von Ribbentrop charged. south of Otta. The German air force intensified its activity over both the Roeros

Calls it State of War

The Foreign Minister's statement |and Otta sectors in an apparent coincided with publication in the | effort to blast out the defending Do Gazette of a decree signed | troops. y Adolf Hitler naming a Reichs- | CT : commissar for German-occupied | Nore lov Up Bridges Norwegian territory and declared| A dispatch from Norlid, in Nor that Norway has “created a state of | way, near the Swedish frontier said war.” | that the German air force was Herr Ribbentrop addressed a | striking continually and with apformal assembly of the diplomatic | parently increasing power against corps. | the Allied and Norwegian troops “All lies, all lies,” he said of | despite the arrival of British fight French and British Government as-| ing planes. sertions that during the Russo-{ “Squadrons of German planes are Finnish war they wanted to land | coming over steadily and attacking troops in Scandinavia to aid Fin-| everything in sight, including indie land. They wanted, he said, to out-| viduals and farm houses,” the mes« flank Germany as part of a delib- | sage said in reference to operations

erately planned campaign to em- |B the Trondheim zone. : broil neutrals on their side in the Reports from Roeros said that

There will be increasing cloudi- |

The stream there was at 245 feet. |

year contract by Frank Lloyd Productions for her performance. Miss Scott is a former Kansas City, Mo., school teacher who abandoned the class room for the New York stage.

PATIENCE TRIED, SO SQUIRE QUITS POST

BLUFFTON, Ind. April 27 (U. {P.). — The Squire of Nottingham { Township—L. A. Nusbaumer—yes|terday turned his records over 0 [County Clerk Chancy Wilson and asked to be relieved of his duties. | The reason: Justice of the Peace isince 1899, Mr. Nausbaunt®r said he had not tried a case in five years.

East Ready for Daylight Time

NEW YORK, April 27 (U.P) .— Daylight Savings Time begins at 2 a. m. gunday. It is effective here and throughout New York State; in most of New England, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and other | sections of the east. Clocks are advanced one hour.

REPULSED AT KVAM

‘Heavy Enemy Losses.’

By WEBB MILLER United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, April 217. British troops have beaten back a German [attack at Kvam, in the Gudbrands | Valley in Norway, with heavy enemy losses, but have retired slightly to {less exposed position under heavy machine gun fire and trench mortar fire, a British military spokesman said today. It was indicated that, after being ‘heaten back, the Germans reconcentrated and, with their great su[periority in automatic weapons, blasted the British ranks. | . British troops are now between | Kvam and _Pombaas, an Allied rail(road junction base 100 miles south [of Trondheim, the spokesman said. | The position on the Namsos front {north of Trondheim seemed im- [ proved, the spokesman said. It was | there, at Steinkjer, that a British advance party suffered losses in a | (Continued on Bage Three)

i

U.S. to Be Financing Allies Within Year, Observers Say in Citing 1917 'Come On’

| By LUDWELL DENNY Times Special Writer | WASHINGTON, April 27. —Many |informed persons here assume that | the United States will be financing the Allies’ war within a year. | Whether that will lead to direct American military involvement is a matter of dispute, Some military men think we will go into the war next year. Others think that, even if we went in, our participation would be limited to naval and air aid. Another school maintains that the Allies will be satisfied to let our navy guard the Pacific, while our war industries supply Allied troops in Europe. But few doubt that the United States will be furnishi the Al-

rials, metals ands food on legans— which probably never will be paid. This may seem somewhat surprising in view of the fact that it is impossible under existing laws. The Johnson Ag¢t and the Neutrality Act prevent such loans and credits. Of course the theory is that those laws will be modified, just as the other neutrality law was amended when the pressure came autumn. Under that revision the arms embargo was thrown out in [favor of a cash-and-carry provision. The Allies can meet the cash requirements of the law for several months vet. But by next winter they will be scraping bottom. Then we will be given the choice of losing their war business or financing it. The arguments for loans will be

last |

ipotent. They will be the same as those used in the last war, brought up to date. Here they are: 1. To shut off the war business would increase our unemployment and disrupt industry dangerously. 2. It also would undermine our own military preparedness by depriving the U. S. Army and Navy of a going war industry, capable of turning out adequate equipment | quickly, if and when needed for | Western Hemisphere or Pacific defense, 3. The American farmer has been the victim of the cash-and-carry Neutrality Act provision. Because the Allies have been forced to use their resources for warplanes here, they had to shift their, purchases of (Continued on

‘Admit Falling Back After

war, Proof Promised

Germany, he said, would publish documents, some captured from British troops in Norway, in serial form, to give “documentary proof” that: 1. The Allies long planned to occupy Norway. 2. Norway knew this. 3. Norway was ready to enter the war on the Allied side. 4 The British plan was frustrated only because Germany intervened at the last hour. Germany made its charges in a perfectly timed series of proclamations, communiques and statements. First came the announcement that Herr Hitler had made Joseph Ter Boven commissioner for Norwegian occupied territories which asserted that Norway “willed to create a (Continued on Page Three)

FRENCH ADMIT BIG LOSSES AT FRONT:

|

Nazis Make Surprise Raid Ih Mountain Sector. 27

PARIS, April Al French outpost suffered heavy losses, a military informant said today, in a German surprise attack west of the Vosges Mountains. German artillery of unusually large caliber for such an action] opened upon the French outpost | and then mine throwers were brought to bear. | German infantry advanced to the attack.. The French outpost, hard | pressed, called for reinforcements | and, with their arrival, the attack was repulsed, it was said. There also was stiff fighting between French and German detachments east of the Moselle River, where patrols fought at close range in no man's land and both sides] suffered losses.

U, PD.

CLAIMS MATTSON “TIPS” OAKLAND, Cal, April 27 (U. P). —Charles E. Lavender, 38-year-old former Federal prisoner, said today

| Norwegian troops had blown up all bridges on roads leading from that sector into Stoeren, the railroad junction on the road to Trondheim. | German soldiers in the Roeros | district were said to be extremely | well-equipped and supplied with | machine guns and field artillery.

More Allied Planes Arvive

Most of ‘the inhabitants of | Roeros left several days before the Germans arrived. Several hundred Norwegian soldiers have crossed the | Swedish frontier in that sector. | Frontier messages gave no definite lindication of the success or failure of British air forces in challenging [the German air mastery over Nore |way, although Allied aircraft care riers were reported to have made [their way into narrow Norwegian [fjords to provide planes and bases, Two and possibly three aircraft (carriers have arrived under heavy warship escort, and have put secrete (Continued on Page Three)

RIBBENTROP FAILS TO ‘EXCITE’ STOCKS

New York stocks were stronger today as Wall Street accepted, with little excitement the speech by German Foreign ‘Minister Joathim von Ribbentrop accusing the Allies of a plot to invade Norway. Most leading issues were firmer although there was some irregularity. Bonds were irregular with U. S. Governments higher. Curb stocks were irregular and Chicago stocks irregularly lower. Hog prices were unchanged at Ine dianapolis. Wheat and corn gained fractionally at Chicago.

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

Churches .... Clapper ..... Comics ...... Crossword Editorials .... Financial .... Flynn ....wne {Forum . .v.uun In TIndpls. ... Inside Indpls.

6 Johnson ..... T"IMovies ...... } 13 | Mrs. Ferguson 12 | Obituaries ... 8 | Pegler .... Si Pyle ......vun 8 Radio ........ 8| Mrs. Roosevelt 7 3 Society ..... 45 8 Sports ....... 10

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he had ‘gew information” about, the Charles Mattson kidnaping

.1 Jane Jordan. .

5(State Deaths. It