Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1941 — Page 2
nC — —— a ls’ °s Eo
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BRITISH TO NAZIS: |. YOU CAN CHOOSE FIELD OF BATTLE
T-BILLION FUND GETS 1ST 0. K
Approved by Sub-committee In House: Roosevelt On Air Tonight.
(Continued from Page One)
300 Planes From Each Side Give Preview of War This Spring.
(Continued from Page One)
subjected to heavy air attack by the R. A. F. all week. This move could be in preparation for a landing attempt or merely designed to keep enemy air and naval forces inactive while British convoys are moving from Egypt into the Aegean.
Glasgow Bombed Again § provide, according to the President's estimates: Planes, engines and equipment,
As Near Eastern events moved toward a climax, the air war between Britain and Germany gave a foretaste of wh t spr blitzkri tant HP at the spring blitzkrieg $2.054.000.000. The German Luftwaffe attacked] Ordnance, Soy oe second might Tun $1.343,000.000. nin rai seeds, Sh : ' ii : I wr or hefhield | Tanks, motorized equipment, $362,The German targets included pots | 00000, Industrial centers and shipping-f0od | 0, 000 = distribution points, There are indi-| ty riiadthivhs Eh cations that the Germans are con-|.. cv Plants and facilities, $752, centrating on an effort to smash | 000.000 : ports, shipyards and food depots in | Food, machine tools. other comreinforcement of the submarine |Modities, $1,350,000,000. blockade. Repairing and fitting out of forThe British replied with heavy ©18n ships, $200,000,000. attacks upon Gelsenkirchen, Dussel- | Miscellaneous military equipment dorf and Rotterdam and raided | $260,000,000.
armor. ammunition, §
cargo vessels, $629.-
go through gas mask drills given
Today's War Moves—
and are being drilled to use them while at work.
shipping and landing facilities from |
Norway to the Bay of Biscay The British also claimed that their patrol planes had shot out searchlights and machine-gunned antiaircraft emploments at Germanheld airdromes Both sides are using many planes in what the British press calls the “Battle of the Full Moon” but Brit-| ish sources said that Germany has|
Unspecified items, $40,000,000. { Administrative, $10,000,000 The House cleared the way for
BLITZ IN GREECE
avy Yard Employees Test Gas Masks
Here is a scene in the 16-inch gun factory as machinists
by Lieut. Comm. J. P. Wetherell, chemical warfare officer. School Rejects
.. (AGREEMENTS ON omc 1, S, BASES NEAR
DEARBORN, Mich., March 15
STOUT LIQUOR BILL NOW LAW
‘Lacks Governor’s Approval; ‘Fee Grab’ Measure Is Signed. (Continued from Page One)
to bottom . . . which is strictly in accord with the views which I expressed in my message to the Legislature. “This bill carries an appropriation, which, for the first time, provides adequate funds for manning
efficient kind of administration. 1 have long urged strict and adequate enforcement as being the best solution for the vexing problem of administering the sale of alcoholic beverages.” Explaining his objectoin to the provision that two members of the | State Commission must be approved |by the Lieutenant Governor, the Governor said: “It is most unfortunate, in my opinion, that a law | supposedly designed to take politics {out of the alcoholic beverages ai- | | vision, should at its very inception | be clouded by a political effort to) |undermine the executive power of) | the Governor.”
Effective May 1
The law is to he effective May 1. when the present State commission | will be dismissed and the new board | [ named. The tenure of all other em- | | ployees ends June 1, and the new) | selections will be made from merit | examinations. Present employees are eligible for the tests. {
The present excise force of 35 |
this | § department so as to enable the most | §
On Police Board
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1941
LEGION MAY ASK
USE OF CONVOYS
Dr. Max A. Bahr Succeeds DeArmond, Who Was Called by Army.
Dr. Max A. Bahr, superinten&®ent of the Central State Hospital, has succeeded Dr. Murray DeArmond, on the Indianapolis Police and Fire Department Board. Dr. Bahr was appointed by Mayor Sullivan to fill the two-year unexpired term of Dr. DeArmond, now in military service, Another appointment will be made soon to replace Dr. Dudley A. Pfaff, also called to military service. Other board members are W. Rowland Allen, Police Chief Morrissey and Fire Chief Kennedy.
Direct Examinations Board duties include directing
_ Labor Resolution Also Be-
fore Executive Committee For Action.
(Continued from Page One)
ple can do to speed our preparedness effort, our Army cannot train and equip an army of a million and a half until the spring of 1942. “Our air force will have the planes and pilots to meet a major fee until the summer of 1942,
Not 101
Industry Response Cited
“Our two-ocean Navy will not be {complete until the end of 1945.” The survey disclosed, according to [the report, that even so, American
industry has responded to the call for service with “large and almost unbelievably speedy expansion of its plants, facilities and personnel’ Specifically mentioning the new powder plant at Charlestown, Ind, as an outstanding example of this, the report stated that “industry in general has furnished experience, ingenuity and brains to play its part, in out-mechanizing the most mech anized armed forces in the world's history. “To the great forward strides {which have been taken toward mass {production of machines, materiel and munitions, the great bulk of {American working men have con[tributed their skill in preparing our country for defense in the shortest possible time.”
Aircraft Plants Expand
officers probably will be almost doubled with the special tax funds, | which must be used entirely for enThe levy is
examinations and schools for candi-
8
2 OF 1}
|dates for the two city departments | Whereas in 1938 not land the making up of eligible lists. | three major
consideration of the war-aid fund by passing and sending to the Senate a record-breaking $3,446,585.144 naval appropriation bill for 1942. It carries funds to continue construction of the two-ocean Navy, including battle cruisers, a new type of naval fighting weapon for the Unic-
WON'T BE EASY
Either Way Hitler Strikes, Allies Will Have Him
{ forcement.
beth denied sdmitiance w he cent on each gallon of beer, 8 cents |
Henry Fora Trade School. Lease Negotiations to Be rederic . Searle, superintendent of the school, explained that Completed Next Week, was too old for enrollment. Navy Chiefs Told. affect the present office-holders. | | Officials elected in 1942 and 1944, (U. |
he had written Churchill that he Searle's letter went, however,
WASHINGTON, March 15
a gallon on whisky and 2 cents a |V case on wine, ment The Marion County salary bill superintendent o signed by the Governor does not Si
Dr. Bahr, who for the past 42!operation ears has specialized in the treal- | States and that t of mental disorders, has been | practically no ship building for 15 f Central Hospital|y |in every state on salt water except Before joining the Central Hos- | Georgia. [pital staff, he was physician at the however, will be paid higher salar- | Indiawapolis City Dispensary and
nce 1923.
Specifically, the report stated that more than shipyards were in the whole United there had been
in
ears, today shipyards are operating
During 1940, the report said, the
nation’s aircraft industry expanded
At Disadvantage.
(Continued from Page One)
not yet put any new model aircraft ed States. into the attack and so far has not | Willkie to Be Present
used more than 300 or possibly a| few more planes per night The | Such vessels can outdistance bat- t hn Be d th British have put their new heavy |tleships. w . wen | throug elgium an northern bomb-capacity long-distance planes, F cE are do powerfully) gy, nce, is impossible through the into operation and are using about! more heavily armored, mountain passes. Any German prog- | as many planes each night as the and can outshoot any other type | ress wouid be further handicapped Germans {of combat vessel, |by the fact that the Nazi divisions
They are espe- |" : ficul : The British targets in the Ruhr cially useful in tracking down com-| O.d have to make a difficult turn were the great hydrogenation plants
’ ’ [if they overcame the mountain at Gelsenkirchen. where oil is pro- | nerce raiders.
J ¢ | barriers. \ duced from coal. and the industrial| Sitting near the President when he| The drive through the mountains area of Dusseldorf. Oil tanks at g0es on the air tonight will be Wen- | would be southward, and thereafter | Rotterdam were set afire |dell L Willkie, 1940 Republican Pres-|it would be necessary to swing | The Germans said that their idential nominee who recently re-|westward in the narrow area of | planes had seen an “extraordinarily | turned from an inspection tour of eastern Greece. To engage in these large amount of smoke” over the War-torn Britain; British Ambas- tactics under the limited terrain | target areas in Glasgow after the Sador Lord Halifax; Cabinet mem-| conditions would mean subjecting | bombing and that several steel works | bers and Congressional leaders, and the attacking force to devastating | and a gun factory had been hit at 2 host of the nation’s leading news- fire Sheffield paper executives. : . . " The British said that a number of | The President will be mbrodveed | Yyarship: My ven persons had been buried under by Thomas F. Reynolds, United| It may be presumed that British debris in a tenement area of Glas-| Press White House correspondent| warships would take positions along gow, but that damage to shipyards and retiring president of the corre-| the Aegean coast of eastern Greece, | was less than the night before. At Spondents association. The major| forcing the Germans inland and Plymouth, where the Pilgrims radio networks will carry the cere-| further limiting their area of operasailed for America, bombs appar- monies to all corners of the nation|tions. That would entail massing | ently fell on the Sea Front Prome- and Mr. Roosevelt's address will be nade, where Sir Francis Drake was rebroadcast abroad by playing bowls when the Spanish radio. Armada was sighted. | . - London ordered all British sub- | Jugoslav Aid Hinted jects to leave Hungary unless they! Mr. Roosevelt is not expected to had urgent reasons for staying but g0 into detail about the equipment said that the order did not neces-| Which Britain and other democsarily indicate that severance of racies are receiving dr will receive diplomatic relations with Hungary from this Government, inasmuch as is anticipated the has emphasized that this inforA semi-official Belerade news. mation contsitutes a military secrst. paper today indicated that the Some of his Senatorial advisors Jugoslav government was resisting Sd my err WOR BE ay thet Is Comovitize | Gon Of Gk Lend-Lease Bill that he Added to these difficulties is the | oy eR A a has no intention of “giving away”|uncertain position of Turkey. The] protect its “liberty independence part of the Navy or weakening Germans cannot afford to take the and DRHCE.™ asst . United States defenses. | chance that the Turks would reex h | Observers saw in a statement by main quiescent. Heavy German The French food situation re-|the President at yesterday's press forces must constantly remain near Cvs , In Lona where | conference an indication that the the Turkish frontier, on the watch, Yorn RO Sa program would be extended | thus removing them from action in ce ad | goslavia if it becomes involved Greece. been transmitted to the United |jn war with the Axis powers. = States. Vice Premier Admiral Jean . . Francois Darlan will make another Nothing Yet for Turkey trip to Paris Sunday, presumably| Asked what countries other than
shortwave | targets for the Anglo-Greek artillery and aircraft. Should Belgrade agree to German troops passing through Jugoslavia for attacking Greece, while a simultaneous Nazi offensive were started from Bulgaria, the situation still would be difficult. An army moving from Jugoslavia would be |subjected both to frontal and flank | attack and would be confined to a narrow front because of the Greek- | Jugoslav boundary mountains.
|cratic State seph County, Hospital today after an
the Germans in confined spaces as My Payton attended the Senate the first day of the 82d General Assembly. jconfined to his bed which were in- | troduced by fellow Senators.
| vania and came to Indiana as a boy. He is survived by his wife and four| |children. Services will be held here | Tuesday morning.
to confer with German representatives. It was understood that the Britfsh “suggestions” could not be considered “proposals,” although they discussed the supervision of relief distribution in Unoccupied France by British or neutral persons and a Watch on the frontier between Unoccupied and Occupied France to prevent food going into the Ger-man-held territory. The British were said still to be fearful that adequate safeguards could not be provided against the food's being
advantageous to Germany.
ROSICRUCIANS PLAN ANCIENT CEREMONY
The Rosicrucian Indianapolis | Chapter will re-enact a “New Year” [ceremony that is more than 40 | centuries old at 8 p. m. Thursday March 20th at the Hotel Antlers. A non-religious philosophical Some took this to mean that aid| fraternity, the Rosicrucian Order |would be given Jugoslavia if it de-| explains that the tradition origi- | cided to resist German pressure to| nated in Egypt in 1350 B..C. during | sign up with the Axis powers, or 10 the reign of Amenhotep IV. AcTurkey if it became involved as a cording ot C. William Teppig, Mas-
Britain, Greece and China might Ireceive assistance, the President said that it was pretty clear to him | | what countries will be eligible for | assistance. When any one of sev-| eral democracies should decide or be forced to resist aggression, he said, they would automatically fall into a category where assistance could be extended them under] terms of the law.
not to No. 10 Downing St., Lon- | don, but to R. F. D. No. 1, Ionia, | P.).—Reports reaching high naval Mich. The Ionia namesake of the [sources said today that lease negoBritish Prime Minister is 18 years |tiations between the United States old, two years too old for the school.
STA PAYTO
will of
= {U. 8S. Navy then speed construction TE SENATOR Hemisphere defenses. | Work on the bases, acquired from | Britain in exchange for 50 overage destroyers, has been delayed N IS DEAD pending outcome of conferences in London. | President Roosevelt gave the it avy $50,000,000 to start work on . . | the eight bases — Newfoundland Democratic Legislator Ill Bermuda, Trinidad, Bahamas, St. | Lucia, Antiqua, Jamaica and Brit15 Months; Funeral lish Guisng. Toval officials A however, that only about $2,500,000 To Be Tuesday. has been spent so far. y | The program, officials said, has SOUTH BEND. Ind.. March 15 (U.! been slowed down because some of P.).—Eugene J. Payton, 47, Demo-| the lands to be acquired are owned Senator from St. Jo-|by private individuals, and the died in St. Joseph |leasing arrangements have to be illness of | negotiated in London.
4 BRIDGE CONTRACTS ARE LET BY STATE
The State Highway Commission today awarded four bridge contracts in Allen and Marshall Counties totaling $50,571, and a $278.659.39 contract for work on route 62 near Chariestown.
Loses. Army Pay 7 Tr ise coumene oo. And Honeymoon
for bridges over the Conrad Ditch FT. DIX, N. J, March 15 (P.
and Watson Ditch on Route 1, | northeast of I.eo. The bid was P.). — Private Wilson Pershing Canfield, who went A. W. O. L. in
$22,809.00. order to finish his honeymoon, was in the guard house today. Private Canfield must stay there 60 days and also forfeits $9.16 of his $21-a-month pay for the next two months. Canfield was married Jan, 17. ©ast of Bremen, His draft board refused his de- The Calumet Paving Co., Indianferment application and he was lapolis, received a construction coninducted the next week. He re- tract for 545 miles of cement on ported to camp, then joined his |Route 62 between Jeffersonville and wife, They motored to Washing- |New Watson. The project is a part ton and attempted to see Mr. of the defense highway necessitated Roosevelt. Failing that, the Can- |by the powder plant at Charlesfields returned to Newark and (town. wrote Mrs. Roosevelt, but received no answer. As a last chance, Canfield went to the Newark induction station to seek a year’s postponement of his one-year training period. He was arrested.
15 months. Elected to serve from 1938 to 1942,
He wrote several bills while
Mr. Payton was born in Pennsyl-
Elkhart, was awarded a $27,761.17 {contract for construction of bridges (on Route 331, one spanning the south fork of the Yellow River, five miles south of Bremen and the {other spanning the Yellow River just
THE JINX GOT THEM CLEVELAND, March 15 (U. P.) — Two 18-year-old youths admitted to police today to looting 12 Cleveland homes after being captured during their 13th attempt. Guess we just
|and Britain for Atlantic bases will | {be concluded next week, and the] be free to Western |
| The Bontrager Construction Co.,
ies but will not be permitted to re- | [tain fees collected from the public. | These fees will go into the County General Fund. | The Sheriff, Treasurer and Clerk | are to be paid $7500 to $10,000 a | year, the exact amount to be determined by the County Council. The County Auditor is to receive | $4000 to $6000 and the County Commissioners, $2500 each.
| |
K. of C. Bowlers
To See the City
INDIANAPOLIS Knights of Columbus were paging their membership today for automobiles to take care of about 500 visiting | bowlers who will be driven on a tour of the city tomorrow. The tour, first in a series of | Sunday trips, will start from the Hotel Severin between 12:30 p. m. and 1:30 p. m. and will include points of interest about the city. Visiting bowlers will also be driven around the famous Motor Speed- | | way. | In charge of the tours will be | T. H. Barrett, chairman of the | | local reception committee, and | Tony Lauck, chairman of the tour committee. The K. of C. bowling tournament, now in progress, will continue for another five weeks.
| ——
LEGION GROUP SETS | OPEN HOUSE TONIGHT
|
| | | The 12th District, American Le-| | gion, will hold an open house and
dance tonight at the hall of Voiture, the knife was sold, and three days |
| 145 of the 40 and 8 here, in cele-| | bration of the birthday anniversary | | of the Legion. | Broad Ripple Post of the Legion also will hold a party tonight at its | hall and at 3 p. m. tomorrow the, | Anniversary Wreck will be held in|
| Keith's Theater. The grand officers |
| he
also was chief resident physician at a Government hospital in Washington. He is a past president of the Indianapolis Medical Society and is a professor of psychiatry in the In-
|diana University School of Medi- |
cine. Studied in Berlin
After graduating from the Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, Dr. Bahr took post-graduate work at the University of Berlin where he received his degree of doctor of psychological medicine in 1908. He is the author of several books
{on neuropsychiatry and contributes |to leading medical journals.
ARREST IMMINENT IN SLAYING OF HEIRESS
KANSAS CITY, Mo, March 15 (U. P.).—An arrest was believed near today in the murder of Leila
| Welsh, “24-year-old heiress, whose |
killer mutilated her body with a butcher knife, and traced an initial on it in blood. Police Chief Lear B. Reed said his investigation pointed toward one man, against whom he was attempting “to cinch the evidence.”
| After six days of ceaseless investi- |
gation, police believed they had traced the knife. They had found a man who believed he saw the maniac, and Reed said the initial was an ‘invaluable clue.” A second hand junk dealer said sola the hammer, with which Miss Welsh's skull was crushed, to a man on March 6, the same day
before the girl was Killed. Reed declined to reveal the description of the man who bought the hammer.
its plant from 11,983,896 square feet [to 22,530,988 square feet and ine | creased employment from 60.000 to 165,000. When current expansion is completed, aviation’s productive floor space will be 45,166,178 square feet and the industry will employ 500,000 persons, the report said. “While devoting its energies to plant expansion, the industry still was able to materially increase its (output. Seven hundred planes were produced in November and 800 in December of last year, and attained a goal of 1000 planes in January {this year.”
| | |
N/
+ CLEANING | mecialy LADIES’ | SKIRTS
Cleaned & Pressed
19-.
207 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinois at Washington
ZIKER
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l
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EXPORT EXEMPTION
WASHINGTON, March 15 (U.| P.).—The State Department today exempted 113 different articles, ranging from fence gates to thumb tacks, from export license regulations governing iron and steel articles. Among the exempted articles are anchors, rain spouts, insect screens,
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lost count,” they said. “We we're go- | locomotive wheels, galvanized ket-
At the same time an important result of Axis moves. But in con-|ter of the Rosicrucian Indianapolis French official in Morocco said that nection with Turkey, Mr. Roosevelt| Chapter, the ancient Egyptians beif Britain and the United States said he had not considered sending | gan the new year with the change] are to prevent “exploitation” of | material aid at present. He also|of the vernal equinox, near the French Mdrocco by other “inter-|said he knew little or nothing avout| first day of spring, March 21 thus ested parties” they must help North | reports that Ireland would seek de-! coinciding with the “beginning of Africa economically. He said that |fense materials here. life in nature.” Cr “another power ’—obviously Ger- . . The Indianapolis Chapter will inmany or Ttaly—had offered to pro- SENTENCED IN SLAYING stall officers, then hold the tradivide Morocco with sugar, Wheat| WASHINGTON, Ind, March 15 tional communion which consists of and other badly needed supplies and | (U. P.) —Wilbur F. Doane, 28, local | basic foods such at salt, corn, nuts
that if Morocco, Algeria and Tuni- | WPA laborer, today was sentenced and grape juice. sia are to stay out of the war, | Officers to be installed are Ross
Ito life imprisonment in the Mich-| ( “United States aid is vitally neces- |chigan City penitentiary for the Winder, master; Mrs. Norma Beall, sary.” and Newton Lawrence,
| knife slaying of Charles Armes sev-| secretary, In Japan plans for establishment |eral weeks ago.
I chaplain. of a TE One pat SYS | wee ones i Betty Compton Tells All; Wins Divorce From Walker
the probable date for launching the | “Greater East Asia Cong KEY WEST. Fla, March 15 (U.[She said her husband had a vioP.)—Judge Arthur Gomez today lent and ungovernable temper and
granted Betty Compton a divorce “at times appeared to go wild.” | from former Mayor James |
OIL FIRM ACCUSED OF PRICE DISCIMINATION
DETROIT, March 15 (U. | 8ix additional independent filing! station operators testified at at Federal Trade Commission's hearing on charges that the Standard | Oil Company of Indiana engaged in| price discrimination in violation of
|
P)—|
J. Wal- | Miss Compton, discussing her | ker of New York and granted her plans for the future, told the court the right to resume the name that she would open a dancing which she used on the musical studio in Miami soon. i -Patman Fai | comedy stage. <i Miss Compton charged that Mr. the. Rfrason r ne ‘The Circuit Court jurist, who de- | walkers SD was like 2 waiting The operators described the 1938-|nied Miss Compton's original Peg TOO. Crowded by his friends and 39 gasoline war in the Detroit area tition because she had mot Proved ,cociates seeking favors, and that and said they lost business to large | ‘extreme cruelty, granted the de- |, expected his wife to entertain retailers who were able to undersell | cree less than 24 hours after hear- | a= even though some were “rebecause of the alleged price dis-|ing her testify in support of her ulsive.”
crimination. |second petition. | she said Walker changed from a Guy E. Christian, an independ-| Miss Compton and Mr. Walker|,, ;,c pysband into a “tormenter Jeased from Standard, testified that|two adopted children, Mary Ann, 5,1, ce my friends,” and once she the posted pump prices at the chain and James John Jr, 4. and the 4 to get out of their automobile — ee the financial and custody agree- : “ ; d i hi cape him. He “at times appeare 18 DUTCH EXECUTED |ment into which the couple en- eres | the names in the FOR NAZI DEFIANCE | agreement have not been made PUD AL times De would go & | lic. world. ; S March 15 (U. P.).—Eighteen per-|Violet Halling Walker—her real| then Koma speak only in anger, sons have been executed, it was| name. (Se said. of Dutch nationals found guilty by which provided for the care and] a military tribunal of plotting sabo- control of the two children, elim-| German authority. The wife of the former plavboy BOWLING BALLS Five persons given death sen- mayor “told all” yesterday after- 50c WEEKLY from the firing squad by commuta- bers of Judge Gomez, who had de- _ Tilinols St. tion of tris sentences to life im- nied: her first petition on March 5. 3. nn
ent operator in Dearborn who were granted joint custody of their| na bickerer.” that he “damned me stations “never meant a thing.” court reserved the right to enforce |. heavy Broadway traffic to estered last December. Terms of the|to 80 wid . . THE HAGUE (VIA BERLIN), | Miss Compton filed the suit as! Week without speaking to me and announced today, out of the group| The private financial agreement, | BRUNSWICK tage, espionage and resistance to| inated any alimony. tences by the tribunal were saved noon at the hearing in the cham- GRAY, GRIBBEN & GRAY |
ar
FLANNER CAMPAIGN FOR $150,000 OPENS
The drive for $150,000 for a new Flanner House building started last night as Governor Henry Schricker spoke before 400 volunteer workers at the Claypool Hotel. The Governor lauded the accomplishments of Flanner House and said the agency was doing a com-| munity-wide job of vast importance to the city. | The first report moeting of the] drive. which will end March 28 will) be held Tuesday noon at the Claypool. Harry V. Wade, general campaign | chairman, and F. B. Ransom, vice | president of the agency, also spoke | last night. The Flanner House jug band and! the Malleabhle Glee Club entertained before the dinner.
GREENBACK COUNCIL WILL MEET IN JULY
The Greenback Party will hold its yearly council meeting here July 4, John Zahnd, national chairman, announced today. The council will elect a national chairman, vice chairman, secretary and 12 national advisory board members. About 300 are expected to attend. Mrs. Mabel Casady, Indianapolis, is the na-| ticnal secretary.
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[0 MArket 4466 ror LEAT)
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ing to stop at 12. It was the jinx |tles, horse shoe nails and metal that got us.” trays.
PROGRESS LAUNDRY has s8lved the problem of laundering Chenille Bedspreads. MArket 2431.
SUNDAY
BUSINESS EDUCATION
Strong Accounting, Bookkeeping, Stenographic and Secretarial courses. Dav and evening sessions. Lincoln 8337.
Fred W. Case, principal.
Central Business College Architects and Builders Buildin
5:30 TO 6:15 P. M.
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WRIGLEY’S
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