Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1941 — Page 1

~

Sorts hows] VOLUME 52—NUMBER 215

‘BRIT

AIN

FORECAST:

CA

The Indianapolis

| | |

SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1941

Rain or snow, mostly | rain, tonight and tomorrow; warmer tonight, with lowest temperature about 30 degrees.

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Second-Class Matter Indianapolis,

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NEW POLICY IN SHAPING PARTY, ¢ PLEDGES SEEN

Rep. Hiestand Says Platforms Should Be Carried Out—if at All Possible.

(Photo, other Assembly news, Page 2)

By WILLIAM CRABB The “limb” on which the Republican majority in the Legislature finds itself because it probably won't be able to fulfill certain

pledges may bring about a new policy in the drafting of party platforms. The only consoling factor for the G. O. P. is that the Democratic minority and Governor Schricker are. out.on the same limb. The situation is this: Both the Republican and Democratic Parties last summer pledged, among other things: 1. Adjustmeént of the gross income tax rate. 2. Provision for free textbooks for public schools.

Urged Gas Tax Cut

To the latter pledge the Republicans added a recommendation for reduction in the gasoline tax. Both parties likewise pledged “no new taxes.” This was followed by Governor Schricker’s recommendation of the same things plus the elimination of the poll tax. Now preliminary figures for the State budget show that at the end of the next biennium the State will be “just about even” financially, but only if present revenue laws are left alone, Relief to the retailers would cost from $1,500,000 to $4,000,000. It is estimated free textbooks would cost about $1,000,000 to install. Typical of the sentiment among Republican leaders that party platforms should not promise things that. cannot be given is. that of Rep, Howard - Hiestand '(R. Kentland), the G. O. P. House caucus chairman, ‘Seeks Budget Balance

Rep. Hiestand is one of the Republican leaders who are convinced the budget must be balanced. He also is convinced that the party’s Plegges. should be honored if at all

Pe classifies the pledges in two groups—ones that offer “relief” for inequalities and those that would undertake “reform” of certain situations. Under the classification of “relief” he would place the lowering of the gross income tax rate for retailers. As a “reform” he would consider such pledges as free textbooks. Rep. Hiestand said he believed the balancing of the budget should be the first consideration. The first party platform pledge to be sacrificed should be those providing “reform.” The last to be sacrificed should be those. providing “relief.”

Conditions Change

“We are in this situation because changing conditions since the party conventions have made these pledges almost impossible to fulfill,” he said. “In my opinion, and I believe many will agree with me, the platforms never should promise things that an altered financial situation would make impossible.” Mr. Hiestand writes weekly nonpartisan columns in nine newspapers in the two counties he represents. Seven of the papers are Republican, two are Democratic. © In his column for next week, he will point out the seriousness of the _ situation and that the party platform pledges probably will go unfilled. “Party pledges are a contract and they should not be made if they cannot be filled,” he said. “There have been too many platforms drafted without enough consideration of the consequences.”

DERBYSHIRE ENTERS TERRE HAUTE PRISON

Gurney G. Derbyshire of South-

in bructions were being read.

Rooseve

Lord Halifax . . . helps Ropsevelt

By WILLIAM [PHILIP SIMMS limes Foreign Editor

| 25. —Had an American gun fired a shell across the Atlantic and scored a direct hit on Berlin, it could hardly have created more of an international sensation than the unprecedented meeting yesterday between President | Roosevelt and Lord Halifax, Britain’s new Ambsssador to the United States. Normally not &ven the Secretary of State goes to

WASHINGTON, Jan.

Union Station her: to meet an That is the job of an underling.

new envoy calls ¢n the Secretary at the Department.

After another two or three days

White House by the chief lof protocol and is there preThe whole procedure is fixed

sented to the Pre: ident, and formal.

Yesterday’s stertling innovation is regarded in diploIt was so intended by PresiWhen he, the chief of state, journeyed 40 miles by automobile in|4 cold rain to greet the British

matic circles as paortentous, dent Roosevelt.

statesman out on Chesapeake Bay

of international showmanship equal to the best that

contrive.

incoming ambassador, A few days later the

he is escorted to the

, it constituted a piece

importance.

Hitler and Mussolini themselves have ever been able to

It was designed to be, and is hailed here as constituting a symbol of anti-Axis unity—something to _ dramatize the President’s conception of a British-Amer-ican, all-for-one-and-one-for-all, many and her allies. This symbolism, it is remarked here, will not be lost on Berlin, Rome and Tokyo. Nor on those peoples whose countries have been overrun by Axis invaders or who today live in fear of invasion. Even under usual protocol, the arrival in this country of Viscount Halifax would have been of extraordinary He was appointed to the post from the job of Foreign Secretary, one of the two or three top positions in the British Cabinet. chose him because, as Mr. Churchill said, no Englishman could have a more important post outside his country. Moreover, by special arrangement, he retains Cabinet rank. He sat with the Cabinet up to the time of his secret departure, and whenever he returns to London on leave he will do the same.

Prime Minister

crusade against Ger-

the President braved a

It Tops Hitler Showmanship By Trip To Meet New Envoy

It was more than an Ambassador, therefore, that

January storm to meet. It was,

in effect, a division of the British Government whose seat hereafter will be in Washington. Not one, but two, British ministers are attachéd to Viscount Halifax’s suite and these will take care of the normal diplomatic chores.

The Viscount will be free to work hand in hand with the

American Government for Britain.

sion, Lord Halifax was

The whole buildup Churchill

rounding his departure

scenario was first-class

ain’s greatest and newest battleships, predecessor, came and went by American Clipper.

to procure more and more aid

As if further to dramatize the importance of his mis-

sent to America on one of BritLord Lothian, his

of yesterday's rendezvous, there-

fore, was more than impressive, It was like a bombshell. The statesman chosen for the mission, the secrecy sur-

from England, his secret arrival

in American waters on a battleship, and the sudden dash of the President himself, with entourage, to greet him at a spot kept secret until the last minute—the whole

Hollywood.

fire a bombshell.

JURY PONDERS ATE OF 10220

Gels Case at 12 at 12:10. After Hearing 40 Pages of | Instructions.

\ Criminal Court jury retired at | 12:10. p. m. today ti decide whether Fred Tozzo killed Virgil Digher Jr. in a cafe brawl, and if so,/ what penalty he shall pay. n final arguments,

for the killing Oct. 25 in the Iozzo Cafe, 36 S. Illinois ‘St. The defense asked acquittal. pecial Judge Frank A. Symmes read 40 pages of instructions which defined every. type of murder and manslaughter, and gave in lay language the definition of selfdefense and defense of tamily.

Eyes Judge Steadily

red Jozzo- did not take his eyes off the judge for an instant as the He flanked in the cour’ room by entire family. i \{ the prosecutor’s table, Mrs. Virgil Disher Sr. mother of the slain boy, gave rapt’ ‘attention. The court room was jammed. In his last appeal, I'rosecutor Albert Ward brandished he death r. as he gave the State's version of hab happened during the fatal i [ana after he shot thi¢ boy,” he declared, “Fred Iozzo, with a palsied nd, threw the gun fron him.” And Mr. Ward hurled: the gun-to the floor and it clattered iacross the couriroom.

Inconclusive, Says Dean

“We think that what Inzzo did is urder in the first-degree and there's no escaping it,” Mr. Ward id. Russell Dean, defense harged that the State's in conclusive. think the State’s case inconslusive, prejudicial, and circumstantial. We claim there has been no case made aginst Fred {0zzo and therefore we sk for acquittal.” The jury may return one of five verdicts. It may find the 53-year-old defendant guilty of first degree murder, and may determine if the (Continued on Page Two)

Hint Anderson

attorney, case was|

“We was

thie Stale asked that Jozzo pay with his life] #

tinued night after night, week after month, take &

appalling in the intensity of their

How Hitler Stands Now—

RAF Bombers Shatter

llusions of Germans

| cusses “Internal

(Copyright.

spending six years in Berlin.

Hitler Told Them They Had Nothing to Fear From Raiders; U. S. Can Tip Scales for Britain

| This is the fourth of a series of articles written by a correspondent who just has returned after

This article disConditions in Germany.”

l] By WALLACE R. DEUEL

1941, and The Chicago Daily News, Inc .

by The Indianapolis Times

Being repeatedly bombed can be a harrowing experience.

Each single raid | is a magnificent and thrilling spectacle

even if you are one of its objectives, provided you do not get

hit, but bombing raids con-

week, | month after , terrible toll in

nerves.

The warning | sirens ‘alone are screamings and the significance which they bear to the imagination. The raids make you uneasy even when they do nct actually terrify. Not the least | of their effects is that taney rob you ot your sleep when they occugp at night and interfere with your work when they come by day. | The péople bf Berlin have a

special reason for being particularly

# a =|

The Berliners perceived that they had been lied, to about| the possibility of their being bombed, and they were considerably shaken by this alone. pre. They also] perceived that, if they had been lied te about this question, it ‘was highly probable that they hai been licd to about other questions of alinost equal importance and concerij, and they were even mire shaker by this. The rest of the Reich, too, has

As Site of Mint

WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. P.).—Senator Frederick VanNuys (D.Ind.) said today that his bill

-|been shaken Ly the. British bombing

all to look forward with dread to

calling for the establishment of a fourth United States mint was introduced at the request of Secretary of the Treasury Henry Margenthau Jr. It was learned that if the bill passes, the new unit nay be located at Anderson, Ind. Mr. VanNuys’' bill, ‘which was introduced simultaneously in the House by Rep. Williani Larrabee (D. Ind.) has been referred to a Senate banking and gurrency subcommittee, headed by Senator

port was in the Federal penitentiar at Terre Haute today, starting his sentence of a year and a day for ‘conspiracy to divert WPA labor

Alva B. Adams (D, Colo.), who announced he would do everything in his power to secure its defeat. Mr. Adams seid existing coinage problems could be solved

He surrendered yesterday to U. S Marshal Julius J. Wichser. | Carl F. Kortepeter, former Marion County’ WPA co-ordinator and son-in-law of Mr. Derbyshire, was triec in the same case in December, 1939, and both convictions were upheld in higher courts. Kortepeter hay a stay of execution until Feb. 3 for a trial starting ‘Monday. He, Charle " Jefferson and Arthur F. Eickho are charged with WPA fraud.

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

21200 MORE DRAFTEES

6 Mrs. Ferguson 7| Music 6-14 13| Obituaries ... 11 12| Pegler 8 8|Pyle ... 9 | Questions 8 Radio 8| Mrs. Roosevelt 6| Serial Story.. 3|Side Glances. 7 Rociely Sensis 8! Sports .... Sta

Churches .... Clapper ...... Comics

Crossword .. sesrns

...748

p

13 1

Forum Gallup Poll. . Inside ie Toi

an

1ling, railroad and chemical shares 1 best demanil, > i

easily by expansion of the mints at Denver, Philadelptia or San Francisco. Mr. Morgenthau, M: VanNuys said, has transmitted recommendatoins for a -new Midwestern mint to the speaker of the House and the President of he's Senate.

REACH FT. HARRISON

Two hundred more Indiana youths arrived by biis and special train at the Ft, Harrison reception center today for induciion into the Army. The delivery of thes: selectees, a part of the state’s January muster, |will bring to 1883 the number called since January. They are part of the second Selective Service call for 3152 men between Jan. 14 and Feb. 3. i

STOCK TRADING LIGHT NEW YORK, Jan, 25 (U. P.). — Stocks and bonds closed slightly | higher in light trading today. Psck-|as

raids, not shaken to a cegree which endangers the people's ability or their willingriess to go lon fighting the war, but sufficiently affected to have serious misgivings, and above

affected by ihe’bombing: raids which the Royal Air Force began to make on the German capital the night of Aug. 25-26 and have continued more or less regularly ever since. They had been assured officially for months that it would be impossible for a single plane to get to Berlin, even when the French air force was still intact, as well as the British, and even when the Allies could start their raids from the western front on the Franco-Ger-man frontier. When the Royal Air Force alone pegan to bomb Berlin, therefore, and to do it all the way from England, the disillusionment of the Berliners was great.

» 8 »

‘Fear Future Air Raids on Reich May Cause Greater Damage

the time when the British will be able to bomb the Reich in much greater force.

The amount of damage done to material objectives in the Reich is the most closely guarded of military secrets. No more than a dozen men in the Air Ministry in Berlin know the full extent of it. But this much at least is true, that the British have bombed scores of military objectives in various parts of the Reich and of the occupied territories and that in some cases this damage is serious, though in no case comparable to the damage the Nazis have done to Britain. Considerably more important than the material damage caused by the (Continued on Page 11)

NICHOLSON READY T0 QUIT AS ENVOY

Career Man Expected to Get Nicaragua Post.

Times Special WASHING TON, Jan. 25. —Meredith Nicholson, Indiana author and diplomat, will retire shortly from his post as American Minister to Nicaragua, it whs learned today. He and Mrs. Nicholson are expected to return to Indianapolis from Managua and a younger career diplomat frorh the State Department will be named his successor. During his eight years of diplomatic service with | the Roosevelt Administrgtion Mr. Nicholson served at three posts. He first was appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Paraguay and then tran:ferred to Venezuela. In 1935 De took the Nicaraguan assignment, | Mr, Nicholson was born at Crawfordsville Dec. 6, 1886, and gained fame as jan Indiana author along | with Geadrge Ade, Booth Tarking-

ton and the ‘ate great Hoosier poet, James Whitcomb Riley.

7 I] ; 11 PLANES WAIT TAKEOFF Weather permitting, 11 planes of the 113 Observation Squadron, Indiana National Guard, will move out of Stout, Field at 9 a. m. Monday, fly Eo in formtaion

Why Not Say It Yourself, Henry?

WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. P. —Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau conferred today with. President Roosevelt, but when he left the White House he was too “numb” to talk about it. Mr. Morgenthau crashed into one of the water buffalo heads that protrude from the masNve Philippine mahogany table in the reception room of the President’s offices, receiving a crack on the shin that could be heard throughout the offices. “Will somebody please say ‘damn’ for me?” he asked, hobbling about on one foot and rubbing the shin. He explained that he had had an important talk with the President but that the shin accident had knocked it all out of his head.

CHARLESTOWN PLANT CONTRACT IS LET

WASHINGTON, Jan, 25 (U. P). — The War ent today! awarded a $15,227,080 contract for construction and installing equipment in a powder bag loading -plant at Charlestown, Ind. The construction work was awarded to. Winston Brothers Co., Minneapolis, Minn.; C. F. Haglin & Sons Co., Inc, Minneapolis, and the Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. Leavenworth, Kas. Shreve, Anderson and Walker, Detroit, will be the architects and engineers. The plant will be operated by the Goodyear Engineering Corp. Akron, O, as

i- [80 Ae of Em

Smo

[the British. ’ ;

BRITISH CLAIM 130-MILE GAIN

Every Italian Colony No ‘Invaded; Nazis Strike In Mediterranean.

By UNITED PRESS Britain's Army of the Nile, after a 130-mile drive across the Libyan desert from conquered Tobruk, was engaging Italian forces today only three miles outside Derna as German air power returned to the attack on British naval power in the Mediterranean. The Germans were striking in apparent hope of crippling the British naval arm before Italy was eliminated entirely as a colonial power in Africa. But British General Headquarters in Cairo said that in addition to striking successfully at Derna Imperial forces were driving deeper into Eritrea, Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland—leaving not one Italian African colony uninvaded nd In addition to reporting capture of more than 600 Italians, including a brigade commander, in Eritrea, the British at Cairo said officially that revolt in Ethiopia, where Emperor Haile Selassie personally was directing his forces, was spreading. Greek Gains Reported

Despite earlier announcements that revolt in Rumania had been quelled, Bucharest dispatches reported that disorder continued there and that the city was tense. Robbery was reported and the Rumanian general staff announced that all Rumanian reservists would be called up for “training” by the Germans during February and March. Latest reports on fighting in Albania told of new ‘Greek advances, especially in the coastal sector in the direction of the important port of Valona. There was an ominous note from the Far East, where Japan has been accepted as mediator in hostilities between Thailand (Siam) and French Indo-China. A Saigon dispatch reported the presence of a strong Japanese naval squadron off Saigon, capital of Indo-China. A dispatch from Batavia, Java, said that the Netherlands East Indies probably would flatly refuse Japa(Continued on Page Two)

PIGKETS ON DUTY AT BETHLEHEM STEEL

Plant Is Operating Despite Labor Dispute.

BETHLEHEM, Pa. Jan. 25 (U. P.). — The Bethlehem Steel Co.’s plant here operated as usual today despite a picket line which resulted

from a labor dispute described by|-

union leaders as a “lockout” and the company as a “sit-down” strike. Groups of between 25 and 30 pickets were at the plant gates, but did not attempt to interfere with workers. Company officials said the dispute affected fewer than 350 workers, members of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee (C. I. O)). Union leaders said between 4000 and 5000 of the plant’s 18,000 men were involved. : Van A. Bittner, regional S. W. 0. C. director, ordered the men to return to work tomorrow. He pointed out the flareup was. spontaneous by the workers, and that the union was not consulted. “The last thing we want is a strike,” he said. The trouble began yesterday when about 300 workers began a protest demonstration against what they termed the company’s refusal to meet a grievance committee and to admit Federal and State labor conciliators to participate in wunioncompany conferences. Fifteen minutes after the demonstration began, union officials said, company guards forced the men to either return to their jobs or leave the plant. Fighting between guards and workers was reported. The various Bethlehem plants

*| have defense orders totaling $1,185,-

000,000

ROAD 31 DETOUR "LIFTED A-detout vi Road 31 just south of was lifted today by th

Naianapoil

The Weather Suits Melvin |

If you want to know what that great big smile is for, you'll have to ask Melvin Isaac, 3710 N, Keystone Ave., because he owns and operates it. But it may have something to do with’ the weather.

wave that was forecast for today.

dicted. The bulk of the cold mass is hanging around in the Dakotas and Canada and it is not inconceivable that at scme unpredictable time in the: future we may get a touch of it yet, if it decieds to travel. Meanwhile, thousands of Indianapolis children turned the first snow of the year to their own private uses today as they hauled out all manner of winter sports tackle and took the day off from school. Recreation officials reported that the toboggan slides at Coffin Park and the sled trails in other parks were popular.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

6am ...18 10am ... 27 7am ...21 11am ...28 ‘8a. m.... 23 12 (noon).. 30 9am ... 2 l1p.m, ... 31

Moreover, it was reported that many neighborhoods had been turned into battlegrounds with snowballs as ordnance and snow piles as trenches. Conversely, motorists did not particularly enjoy the snow and ice coating that made the streets treacherous. Several accidents were caused by the ice. Flying conditions early today were such at Municipal Airport that no transport plane could land. There was a ground fog and only a half mile visibility. Snow was general from the Rocky Mountains to the eastern coast and rain or snow was reported on the Pacific slope and in the southeast section of the nation. More snow was forecast for the week-end in northern regions. The worst snowstorm of the winter struck upstate New York where the fall ranged in depth from two to 12 inches.

DONOVAN MAY VISIT GREEK FRONT LINES

BELGRADE, Jan, 25 (U.P.).—Col. William J. Donovan, U. S. observer, was reported by reliable sources to have arrived by airplane at Salonika, Greece, today. Donovan left here by plane earlier

in ihe Says I el 0. De

130 1S]

That Cold Wave Spares City; Kiddies Frolic in the Snow

Living a charmed meteorological life, Indianapolis missed the cold

It stayed farther north than had

been expected. The mercury flickered down fo a minimum of 13 at the Airport last night and now it’s getting warmer. There will be rain or snow, mostly rain, tonight and tomorrow and the lowest temperature tonight will be about 30, the Weather Bureau pre-

Slick News

When the rains come tomorrow, the ice that coats Indianapolis streets will be much slicker than it is today, owing to scandalous operations of two laws of nature. No. 1—The water will act as a lubricant on the ice, reducing the friction between tire and ice and making the car do the darndest things. ® No. 2—The water will act as a fusing agent for the ice, lowering ridges that otherwise would give some traction and - sealing cracks to make the surface glass smooth.

BOY KILLED, 4 HURT IN MONON COLLISION

Mitchell Lad Burns to Death As Cars Blaze.

MONON, Ind. Jan, 26 (U. P.).— A 4-year-old boy was burned to death and four persons injured, two critically, today when two auto-

mobiles crashed on Road 43 three miles south of here. The child was Robert Dean Ratliff of Mitchell, who was trapped in one of the burning cars. ‘His grandmother, Lottie Strange, also of Mitchell, and Mrs, Helen Springer Taylor, Jeffersonville, were in critical condition in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital at Lafayette. Everett Hubbard, Monon, and William Brown, Peru, occupants of the second car, were cut and bruised. : Both cars were demolished by the fire which followed the collision.

SEEK TO FLOAT SHIP

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. Jan. 25 (U. P.).—Salvage crews today renewed their efforts to refloat the grounded U. 8S. liner Manhattan,

Which ipten into “an uncharted

BULLIT

i ——_————

Ex-Envoy Declares That France Was Told U. S. Would Not Go to War.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. P.).—Former Ambassa« dor William C. Bullitt told Congress today that Great Britain can defeat Nazi Gere

many “without intervention ;

of American manpower.”

Mr. Bullitt’s opinion, expressed to the House Foreign. Affairs ’ tee, followed his revelation that he told the French Government before the outbreak of the European con= flict that the United States wi qo “not come into the war.” Among other declarations made by Mr. Bullitt during his testimony as an Administration rebuttal witness = in support of H. R. 1776—the “alle out” aid to Britain bill—were: 1. That invasion of the Western Hemisphere by the Axis Powers would be almost certain if the Brit= ish: Navy should be eliminated and the Panama Canal Zone blockaded before this country is prepared for war, 2. That the Americans are depends« ing on the Atlantic for protection just as the French depended on the iv Maginot Line — and just as mise a takenly. ;

Sees Little Chance of War

3. That if Hitler defeats Greas Britain, there will be dictator con= ’ trol of more than 90 per cent of tha

|human race “organized militarily

-

and economically against us.” 4. That no matter how much or what kind of aid this country may furnish the democracies, the dic= tators will hesitate to declare war on the United States unless they: have first smashed Britain. 5. That President Roosevelt “w. rather give away his two eyes give away the Navy, as some

the President to do. Mr. Bullitt’s view on the outcome of the war conflicted sharply with’ that expressed by Col. Charles A, Lindbergh, who told the same coms= ‘mittee last Thursday that Britain and the United States could not invade the Continent and beat Gers many “unless there is a collapse behind the lines.” Mr. Bullitt' declared that if Britain could establish dominance in the air, the German people could not stand up under the bombing and the Nazi system ‘will collapse.” But if aid is not furnished Britain from this continent, he said, the British will “go down.” i

‘Hunger—Then Revolt’

asked Mr. Bullitt if Britain could win without the help of American doughboys. “I believe so, emphatically,” Bullitt replied. “How?” Rep. Vorys asked. “I believe it depends enormously on the production of airplanes in this country at this time,” Mr. Bule litt said. “If Britain can establish dominance in the air, the German people who have suffered terribly under the present regime—30,000,000 Catholics who are persecuted and have to keep their mouths shut; : the decent people there who want. to live in a decent way-—then I (Continued on Page Three)

LAYS SCHULTZ DEATH TO THREAT TO DEWEY,

NEW YORK, Jan, 25 (U. P.).~= The World Telegram said today that Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flege enheimer, notorious gang leader; was ordered slain by members of his own and allied gangs because they feared he had lost his mind when he announced a plan to assassinate District Attorney Thomas E, Dewey. The newspaper said the story he. been given to District Atto: William O'Dwyer of Brooklyn, Albert Tannenbaum, a trigger man for Murder, Inc. Tannenbaum ale legedly named Charles (The Bug) . Workman, reputedly the most exe. pert killer in the underworld, as the actual slayer of Schultz "and three of his lieutenants in a Newark tavern Oct. 24, 1935. Mr, O'Dwyer denied he ever diss. cussed the murder of Dutch Sch with anybody or that he ever heard Tannenbaum had stated Schults wanted Mr. Dewey -killed. ;

CLAIMS ST. LOUIS CUT SMOKE BILLS

PITTSBURGH, Jan. 25 (U. P. —The St. Louis smoke abatem program will save residents of city more than $20,000,000 annu in doctor and cleaning bills real estate depreciation, accord to J. R. Coulter, member of the Louis Abatement Committee. . Since start of the campaign months ago, Mr. Coulter said, lies that had ‘moved, from the ¢ to escape smoke began ni buildings remained clean longer laundry bills decreased. s

BUICK PLANS NEW PLANT CHICAGO, Jan. 256 (U, P.)~ of General

Mr.

“e &

of the bill have said it would permifs we

Rep. John M. Vorys (R. O.) had a