Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1942 — Page 3

SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1942

SURVEY OF SEWERS URGED BY C. OF C.

Disposal One of Chief News in Expansion Program, Bulletin Says; Study of New Development in Suburbs Is Also Being Conducted.

Probably foremost among the needs of this community is a unified, co-ordinated sewage disposal plan, the Indianapolis chamber of commerce asserted today in a bulletin discussing the trend toward suburban districts. The chamber stated that a complete survey was needed to determine the extent and capacity of the present sewerage > Say and that from this a

Kl STOP ON Ha sewer plan could be |evolved to form a unified pro-

|gram of the plans for each \phase of community developTrackless Ti Trolleys to Be on War-Time Plan

/ment. Tomorrow. present and future developments of Final conversion of city trackless|this community: trolley lines to the selective- stop, | 1. Annexation. Adjacent areas to war-time service program will be-|the city closely built up and pos-| come effective tomorrow when five i sessing characteristics of continuous | lines change over to the new sys-|~ity development should el tem. The lines are the Northwest- brought within the corporate | ern, E. 10th. S. East, English and! boundaries. In return for annexaCity hospital. { tion and a broader tax base, the city No changes will be made in the should be prepared to extend imestablished stops in the downtown mediately the needed urban services. | area bounded by St. Clair st. No-! ble st, South st. and West st. The selective stops are as follows:

Suggests 3 Measures

The builetin suggested the foli lowing measures toward which citizens and public officials should di-

All

rect their attention and efforts in| order to safeguard more completely

100 SOUGHT FOR

|

Planning Urged

2. Metropolitan districts. In the interim, between the building up of ak Wye yg th & now sparsely settled suburban nate ave. an air s 5 12th st. 14th st. and 16th st. ‘Boulevard | COMMUunities at some distance from piace and 18th st. 20th st. and 21st st.:| the City’s corporate limits and their 2ist st. and Highland place, Allfree ave. | possible tie-in with the city at a Northwestern ave, and Landsdale ave,| future date, there needs to be a coNorthwestern ave. and Fall Creek park-| way, north drive, 23d st. 24th st. 25¢th| |ordinated program of metropolitan st. 27th st. 28th st. 20th st. 30th st. | community planning. This does not 31st st. 32d st, and 34th st: 34th st. and: involve just the zoning of property Rader st. and Clifton st.; Chfton st. and | for its various uses, but also proper | 33d st. Congress ave, 30th st, 28th st, | provisions for some city services. Udell st. and 27th st.: 27th st. and Rader; 3 City & Annette st. and Frankiin place. i . ¥ services on a contractual - SOUTH EAST basis. As an alternative to the Virginia ave. and South st.: East st. and| suggestions of annexation and South st., Merrill st, Stevens st, McCarty | metropolitan districts outlined above. Bicking st, Buchanan st rospect Tarr Sree a jit is possible that the central city Parkway ave. Cottage ave. Lincoln st. Might provide essential services Towa st. Caven st. Belt railroad, Stokley | Out outlying districts upon a cost Bros, LeGrande ave. and Raymond st.!' basis. Raymond st. and the loop ENGLISH Virginia ave. and South st.;

st..

st

st.

Study Suburban Areas Fletcher, A special commitiee, headed by ave. and Virginia ave. Park ave. Noble Paul L. McCord, is studying the | st. and Pine Si) oe. hi! Pe development of the rapidly growing; - Jeaar or Br For Tale, Rano | Suburban districts in the Indian- | Harlan st. St. Paul st. Keystone ave. apelis area. i and the loop In a report on the suburban Chir © | situation, the committee stated that Fulton Ninth st. Davidson st. and from April, 1940, up to July of this 10th st: Rocsevelt ave. and Lewis st.|year, approximtaley 10.000 new!

st st.,

st

EAST TENTH Massachusetts ave. and St.

st.,

st.,

PAGE 3.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . . . . a. ’ Taking Their Tests to Serve in Second ‘Indianapolis’ Own

NEW AIR SQUAD

Recruits Must Be Perfect in| Both Physical and Mental Fitness.

(Continued from Page One)

exacting requirements are 20-20 vision in both eyes, a perfect heart, perfect blood pressure and the abil-

{ity to hear a coln click at 20 feet,

Long Way to First Ride

Then the perfect specimens go to work. For the first three months the fledglings see neither strut nor fuselage of a plane. They rise at 5:30 a. m., go through a haif hour of calesthenics, take time out for breakfast and then go straight hours of sports.

Ranging from football, baseball

and basketball to tumbling, hand] {wrestling and

jujutsu, they aimed at improving eyesight, ‘action and co-ordination—in shor: to make it tough on the axis.

Academic subjects

are

but by 3 p. m. the sports program is resumed. Bedtime is 10 p. m. if the “hay” was not hit long be-! fore. And it gets tougher every week | from all reports.

Some Drop Out Along Way

Those chosen for the new squadron will get this training in Iowa

City under the sharp eve of Ensign Tommy Deckard, former two-miler of the University of Indiana and member of the ’36 Olympic squad to

‘Berlin.

Then follows three months each at a reserve base, ground work and |

The new Zion Evangelical and preliminary flight training; advance | ELEVATE OFFICERS

base, regular navy planes of all | types, and the final step, operations base. It is at the last base that the! men gain experience in dogfighting

—how to meet the enemy in the air. Along the way men are washed!

out. The 100 who start their training here will probably number but 80 when the coveted wings are passed out. But they will be 80 more tough ensigns for the axis to meet.

Only 10 Passed So Far

into two!

re- |

and military, drill come in during the mid-day,’

| { | To date only 10 men have passed {the preliminary physical and mental

Nazis Seized by

and Columbia ave.: 10th st. and Highland | homes will have been built in and + kc < ena "Woe plans w| around, Indianapolis drive, Woodruff place middie drive, Wood-| A great many of these homes. ruff place E. drive. Jefferson ave. Key-| perhaps 50 per cent, have been and Sie ave Tempe tees Rha) ho os are being built outside the city Sane iy ne Oh : Olney limits, the committee said. st. and 11th st. 13th st, Nowland st 16th st. and the Brookside loop The Arlington ave. branch will be as NEW LION CHURCH follows: 10th st. and Kealing ave., Sherman drive, Denny st., Grant st, Euclid | ave, Linwood ave., Bosart ave. DY) 10 UE DEDICATED st., Brancroft st., Emerson ave. Butler ave, Hawthorne lane, Irvington ave. tter ave, Leszlie ave, Graham ave, Campses Wve te me TT {Reformed church at Troy ave. and Indiana ave. and West st., California st.. | the Ft. Harriscn road will be forSt. Clair st., Blake st. 10th st. and the! mally dedicated at services at 9:30 City hospital loop a. m. tomorrow at the church. The Rev. Robert R. Groves, pastor, will ! | preside. WABASH MAILMAN | A dedicatory fellowship service ‘will be held at 2 p. m. with 15 INDICTED IN THEFTS guest speakers. Tomorrow's cere{monies commemorate the 85th anSOUTH BEND. Ind. June 20 (U. | niversary of the church's founding P.).—Less than 24 hours after os we i wo arrest, Theodore R. Gassoway, 37,! g Per Wabash mail carrier, was indicted | by a federal grand jury on charges of violation of postal statutes in-| volving theft of money from letters at the Wabash post office over al period of three years. Gassoway’s indictment was one] of 81 returned to Judge Thomas W. Slick after three days of hearings. Sixty-nine were secret. All named defendants in cases from the South| Bend, Hammond and Ft. Wayne! divisions. Postal inspectors arrested Gasso-| way Thursday after months of in-| vestigation when they charged they! spotted him pocketing three “de-| coy” letters in the dispatch bags. They said 141 thefts of money from|

letters were reported from the Wa-j bash post office in the past two i

years. REPORT SWISS PROTEST | BERLIN, June 20 (U. P.. Al Transocean agency dispatch from| Switzerland said today that the Swiss government had protested to! the United States against the enlistment of Swiss citizens in the! American armed forces.

Invasion Jitters

LONDON, June 20 (U P.).— Germany had a seizure of invasion jitters tcdav as it watched the talks between President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill. It reported that Britain was clearing a big area of eastern England wihch would be a logical | concentration point for invasion troops and warned that it was | sowing a gigantic mine field to clcse off the entire Skagerrak, en-

{| trance to the Baltic sea.

The Berlin radio reported that persons “living within a certain district in the heart of East Anglia” were to be evacuated. East Anglia is that part of England north and east of London directly opposite Holland and Belgium, an area in which hundreds of thousands of troops might be massed if a big scale continental invasion were undertaken.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here Is the Traffic Record County City Total

35 67 36 55

1941 ...

—June 19—

Accidents . .. 39 | Arrests Injured 1 Dead FRIDAY TRAFFIC COURT

160 0

Cases Convic- Fines Paid | S129!

Tried 22 7

tions 21 3

Speeding . Reckless driving Failure to stop at through street 1 Failure to stop at signals . Drunken driving All others .. . 38

27

1 3

2

0 21]

$222

3

Totals . 98 MEETINGS TODAY pal Order of Job's Daughters, 10th ani Convention: Claypool hotel, all day. Fal J orerity. convention, Hotel My “all & Hoosier Boys’ State. Indiana State School for Deaf, first day Mexican Border Veterans’ convention, Claypool hotel, all day Nature Study club of Indianapolis, picnic, Woollen's gardens, afternoon National Association for the Advancement of Colored Raple, Seetng, Senate | ave C. A. Bul 5 Stein elu, Ey otel Severin. noon

MEETINGS TOMORROW otic program,

atshciation,

Indianapolis Red Cross ara Rape: Sar x

Kappa Delta put Sorority, Hotel Lincoln, all day. Joy Lodge, Setense meet: ng, Municipal gardens. 2p Meridian Sills Country Club, buffet supper, club, night.

convention,

BIRTHS

Girls

John. Ruth Toole, at St din anc is, Marilyn Lynch,

“William. Christine Whitaker,

Vincent's. at St.

at

VinMeth-

at Methodist. at Coleman.

Don. Eloise Hendricks, Verlie, Mary ane

Byron. Helen Bales, at Coleman. John, Mary Townsend, at Coieman. William, Violet Norris, at City. John, Agnes Dithley, at City. John. Rose Wittkamper, at Methodist. Anthony, Madonna Rea, at St. Vincent's. ert, Georgette Jones, at St. Vin-

* Derrell, Elizabeth Nipper, of 1254 W.|

Lane.

cere-

DEATHS Della Bolander, 5 74, of 229 Reisner,’ hronic myvocarditis. William Christian. 55, of 543 W. { New York, anem 48, St r Aileen Nelson. 48. Methodist, bral hemorrha Alton, bert Mller, 3, Cit idine

Thurman Puckett, 22, City, streptococcic | chronic nephritis. Santford Pitts, 68, Long, coronary gto. | cerebral hemorrhage. | of 1044 W. Elizabeth E. Pe Albert Newton Short, 68. of 4061 Byram, | pulmonary | g, embolism age Carolyn Ann hilds. 13. of 1715 N. Gera

mehingits s 79. of 720 EB. 25th; | Rueben Short, | sion 27th, | Mmhie L. Thompson. 65, Vincent's, | pelvic abscess | ctrenent hemorrha Richard P. Dodd. 90. Methodist, acute endocardit i ! v, cirrhosis of liver. eber, 48, Si.

{ will never deport me; { done.”

{the C. 1. O.,

{ Precipitation 24 hrs. gnang

| Excess since

Vin-! ton

2xams now being given in the fed- |

eral building, but the selection’ board hopes to have it all cleaned up by July 22 when the Chicago] ‘examining board, making the final]

check, will be in the city for that! |

day, 23 and 24. And another thing, fellows, don't show up if you're married. In fact, the rules are—np wife until you win | your wings. And if you are under] 121 be sure you have the consent of | at least one of your parents. And that's the stuff the new] i pilots of Indianapolis’ Own will have |to have to go into a screeching, 500 {mile-per-hour dive upon Hirohito’s | Walls

‘BIDDLE WILL NE) NEVER DEPORT ME'—BRIDGES

SYRACUSE, N. Y. June 20 (U.| P.).—An appeal in behalf of Harry Bridges was on its way to President Roosevelt today after the west coast C. I. O. leader declared that “Biddle it can’t be

The appeal was in the form of a resolution adopted by the New York State Industrial Union Council of in convention here, before which Bridges mace a surprise visit. President Roosevelt was asked to intervene to “prevent a miscarriage of justice.”

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. S. Weather Bureau

STORY OF NALI'S FALL IN POLAND

Letters Reveal How ‘Subdued’ Finally Dealt Justice to One Terrorist.

By UNITED PRESS The story of the rise and fall of one German officer in Poland was disclosed today in a series of pere

l [sonal letters smuggled out of Gere

many. The letters, made’ public by the Polish information center in New York tell the story of Poland's struggle against the Nazi invaders, Written by Lieut. Friedrich Toll from Warsaw to his cousin Helmuth Toll, who was ill in Germany, they said in part:

FIRST LETTER: “I wish you had been here when we came in. We snared nobody and nothing. Wherever we saw a Polish head we struck it regardless of whether it was black or gray, male or female. We starved them out. We marched through ruins like men inspired. I was given a billet near Marszalkowska st.” (One of Warsaw's principal streets.)

SECOND LETTER: “There is no doubt we are completely subduing the Polish race. We will eliminate all antagonistic elements, liberals, na=

: |tionalists, everything. We will shout

them all. The rest, the great stupid

This Plot i

The page girls have put their

tomato yields its first tomato. Then they will rush out and seize the beautiful “love apple” and eat it. Library pages, it might be explained, are girls who go from place to place in the library, picking up a piece of literature here, another there, and depositing them where they will better serve the reading public. This entails numerous trips through the underground places at the library where literature is kept and so that way they get a

|

1. Lieut. J. S. Ferebee, member of the naval aviation cadet selection board, Chicago, checks the papers of Eugene McCarty, 1036 High st, after he passed his preliminary physical and mental examination for “Indianapolis’ Own.” i chance to hold plotting parties. 2. Bud Colen, Butler university sophomore, puzzled over one of | Naturally, of course, it would the questions on the mental test, gets it straightened out by Lieut. be silly to say what my line of de- | Don Oren who will be directly responsible for the second “Indianapolis’ | fense will be, except to point out | squadron. | that the tomato’s department's : 3. The height and chest measurements of applicant Clifton Russell | motto is: “When they get snicky are taken by Virgil Vaughn, pharmacist’s mate, second class, as Lieut. | with you, get snickier with them.” Everett Case, former Frankfort coach (left), and Ensign Tommy There are, or were at last in-

Deckard, Towa City reserve base, look on. spection time, three blooms on

the tomato plant, and so I've got JOB'S DAUGHTERS

Is Fight New Foe Kangaroo Army |

MELBOURNE, June 20 (U. P.). —Farmers of the Grippsland area east of Melbourne appealed to | the government for aid today | against an invasion of kangaroos whieh, they said, were so thick in their fields they looked like regiments of soldiers. | Messages to the government said the kangaroos were ruining | acres of crops and it had been | necessary to abandon one big | farm. | Each dawn, farmers said, thousands of the kangaroos could be seen in the fields. They askea that the govern-

the bloom (if you care for that kind of talk). James, me trick mustache and black glasses, if you please! « u # EVERYBODY, THOUGH, has his troubles. Whereas I have a page plot on my hands, Andy McQuat, of 58 Union st., Southport, has a mole on his—an animal, that is. The tragedy is that Mr. MecOuat has what is probably the most thriving plant put out under the special Times method in the state. He used the corn cob and deep hole plan and after nearly four weeks, his plant is now 28 | inches high and, he said, busily ' producing a tomato that already is “bigger than a silver dollar.” Now Mr. McOuat is afraid the

Highlighting the final session today of the 19th annual convention of the Order of Job's Daughters in the Claypool hotel was the elevation of Mrs. Marie Gerber, Hart-!: ford ‘City, to the office of grand| guardian and Ben Pawlik, Jeffer-| sonville, to associate grand guar-! dian. | Mrs. Gerber replaces Mrs. Hazel | Reithmiller, Ft. Wayne, and Mr. | Pawlik succeeds Dean H. Craft of Indianapolis. At 6 o'clock tonight a dinner honcoring the grand officers will be

‘crepancies. |is being contested by Jesse Hutsell,

| Quick, Fremont! Nip

in the om

By FREMONT POWER

Times Tomato Editor BY HOOK AND CROOK and a few other devious means, we have learned that there is an anti-tomato plot being mapped in the dark underground tunnels of Central library.

pretty heads together and agreed

to bring salt shakers to work, pending that fine day when The Times’

REFERS FRAUD DATA T0 BLUE

Cox Tells Recount Boards

To Give All Evidence To Prosecutor.

Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox told recount commissioners to refer to Prosecutor Sherwood Blue all evidence of fraud found during the recounting of primary ballots. Watchers for Otto Petit, Repub-

lican sheriff nominee, reported to

to get out and nip this plot in [Judge Uo late yesterday that there ‘were wide discrepancies found

in the ballot totals of two precincts

|of the 11th ward.

Mr. Petit informed the court that

the total number of ballots cast in the precinct was much greater than the canvassing board total shown

on the outside of the ballot bag. Mr. Petit said that he had notified Prosecutor Blue of the disMr. Petit’s nomination

who showed a gain of 20 votes in a recount of 155 precincts.

Technicality Raised

{mass of people, will obey us. . *

| THIRD LETTER: “I write in haste. I have been working hard. There are certain subversive elements at work among these Poles. Today there was an assassination. One of four majors was shot. We arrested | everybody in the locality, about 13 | men and two women, and shot them fall. I trust we shall have no more | trouble from Polish fanatics.”

FOURTH LETTER: “I work day and night. There seems to be an epidemic of extremist outrages but | we are wiping that out.”

| FIFTH LETTER: “More upheave

als! Today somebody fired a shot at | me. I reported it and you may rest ~ |assured reprisals were taken.”

SIXTH LETTER: “It is I now who write you from bed of pain. It | happened in Marszalkowska st. I say we had been warned not to go out alone after dark. Many of our officers and men have been | foully murdered. “I had been at a cafe. Just out= side, a man whose face I could not» see said: ‘Lieut. Toll?’ I said ‘Yes.” And then he shot me in the left side. My landlady and her family were questioned and denied complicity, but they were shot. I am very sick, so now we are fellow invalids. Heil Hitler.”

SEVENTH LETTER: “Because of me 10 hostages have been shot. I thought you would like to hear this.” Cousin Helmuth never received an eighth letter. But here is this fragment of an official report: “Lieut. Friedrich Toll died today as a result of wounds inflicted by an unknown terrorist in Marszal- | kowstal i

PREPARE J0B Quiz FOR 45-65 GROUP

Occupational questionnaires will be sent within the next few weeks to men in the 45 to 65-year-old group who registered under the selective service act on April 27, Col. Robin=-

The checking of ballots in the : recount instituted by Toney E.| son Hitchock, state selective service

Flack, defeated candidate for the girector, said today.

Democratic nomination for county |

While n.en in the 45 to 65-year

ment lift restrictions against de-

held in the Claypool. The program : stroying the new enemy,

will include an invocation, “The | Lord's Prayer,” and musical selec-' tions. Mrs. Mae Marcum “Mother” Ja{cobs and Mrs. Edna E. Pauley, both Indianapolis and past supreme | guardians, will be honored prior to!

sesame ooo. FLYING HERE JULY 5

| ficers. An eight-plane “air cavalcade,”

The session will close with dane- including a German Messerschmitt | ling from 9 o'clock to midnight. It was estimated that approximately 1200 delegates and members! of the Masons and O. E. S. were in| 000st the sale of war bonds. atten.

HENDERSON PUSHES FIGHT FOR SUBSIDIES

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U. P)).

|

| (July 5 for a three-day stand to

| German war plane has been seen St:

in the skies over the United States Sie the war began. The cavalis making a tour “in flight,” tong at 15 cities over the coun- | try.

. Vik fighter, which was shot down over —Price Administrator Leon Hen-| ober England and rebuilt, the derson said today he would be will-| cavalcade includes a British Spit-' ing to resign if that were necessary| fire which saw service over Eng-

to obtain congressional enactment| land, a British Beaufighter, twoof subsidies which he contends are) engined plane used for night fight-

{ ing, American P-39 necessary to assist certain indus- | American P-40 Curtiss-Wright, tries in observing price ceilings. He told a- press conference that| a glider and a transport plane.

subsidies—a plan which congress | Piloting the Curtiss-Wright P-40| has rejected once but is reconsider-| will be Lieut. T. B. Marxson, ing—are necessary to support price| native of Lafayette, Ind,

vent SUptorine among consumers! versity team.

"he "ia GIVE GUIDANCE BOOK

in the idea of subsidies that he,

(Central War Time)

Sunrise 5:16 Sunset ...

TEMPERATURE —June 20, 1941 — “3 2p m. 90

Yam.

Ys mn a. m. Total precipitation since ev 244 i2

Jan

The following table shows temperatures | in other cities: Stations

{Atlanta Bismarck, N. D.

Boston { Chicago { Cincinnati Cleveland

Denver ig ayne AMAL Kansas City, Miami, Fla | Minneapolis-St. New Orleans .. New York Oklahoma City, Pittsburgh |S an An ionic. Tex. | Washington,

INDIANA WEATHER

Scattered showers and Cg igh ow forenoon; not m

1 1dea oa into effect.

. 4.87) |

would quit if necessary to see that!

He said he believes so strongly TO NURSING HOMES :

In an effort to better

DEAF-MUTE INNOCENT, 1. ; BLIND JUDGE BELIEVES seq and bind. the stare depart:

BUITE, Mont. (U. P.).—A deaf- ment of public welfare today mailed |to operators of all such homes in ‘mute was arraigned before bhizd ‘the state a handbook setting out deJustice of the Peace D. F. Shea on ‘sirable standards of operation, a burglary charge. i Substandard living conditions in

T t wrote out his “not Several Marion county nursing ‘ ve fezentiant Weole his {homes for old and blind persons guilty” plea, and the town consta- pave heen under attack several

|ble read it to the sightless judge. weeks by various private groups | The judge questioned the deaf-mute headed by a committee appointed | by asking his questions of the bail- | by Virgil Shepard, director of the iff, who wrote out the questions and | {division of public assistance. ‘read the written, answers to the Jurist. | formation and recommendations on After a sizable crowd of city various phases of nursing home hall employees had gathered to operation and emphasizes the im- | Watch ie unusual proceeding, the portance of adequate financing, nerJoin “And the deef-mute was sonnel; fire precautions and sanitary

= ot ity an esd i. | regulations.

any HO

| fighter, will fly into Indianapolis|

Airacobra, |

conditions |

| mole

8-PLANE GAVALCADE

| to the Rush-Henry county joint

al resignation of Fred Goddard, cerWho | tified Republican nominee, in favor ceilings at March levels and to pre-| played football on the Purdue While) of Ray Morgan of Knightstown,

The booklet includes general in-'

is going to scoot along underground and snip it in two. And that plant is far out in front of all the others he planted in the regular way. Ring that raid alarm!

BEATEN AND ROBBED | AFTER GETTING RIDE

Beaten by two men with whom he {had accepted a ride, James Adkins,

0120, Avon, Ind, was robbed of $35 | yesterday. | Ii will be the first time that a condition by police in S. Meridian Is

He was found in a dazed

1300 block. Mr. Adkins was en route to his | home from Camp Atterbury, near | Columbus, when the attack took place. He told police the men|

| "stuck a hypodermic needle in my|

. : farm.” Besides the German single-seat!

He was taken to City hos- | pital.

SEEK SETTLEMENT IN RUSH-HENRY DISPUTE

NEW CASTLE, Ind. June 20 (U. |

| é . : | P.y~—AtH XI be- | | American L-1A for towing gliders, P)--Atiorneys hers expressed

lief today that the only solution

representative mixup would be the

who actually received the larger number of primary votes. Mr. Goddard, a Rush Jor

county

stdate’s office as G. O. P. ras through an error in the county clerk’s office nere. Indiana | aw makes no clear provision, lawvers said, for procedure in event the wrong candidate is certified as the winner. The procedure suggested teday would call for resignation of Mr. Goddard, followed by action of the| Republican chairman of the two counties to appoint Mr. Morgan as| the candidate. Law provides for | such an appointment in case of) retirement or death of the certified | candidate.

City-Wide |

BRANCHES

Fletcher Trust Co.

was certified to the secre-|?

auditor, against Auditor Glenn B. | age group are not liable for military Ralston was adjourned yesterday | service under present laws, they are until Monday because of a tech- | required to fill out occupational nicality. | questionnaires and return them to Mr. Flack asked to see the voters’ |local boards as soon as possible. poll lists in the fourth precinct of{ Information gained from the | the 15th ward but County Clerk [questionnaires will be used by three 'Cherles R. Ettinger ruled that since | agencies: (1) by the national roster they were impounded by Judge | of “scientific and specialized per= Cox that he could not turn thom sonnel in locating persons with cer over to the recount board until the! tain professional and scientifie judge ‘issued an order. The judge | qualifications, (2) by the U. S. em= could not be contacied at once and | ployment service for locating per= the recount commissioners ad- | sons having skills in critical or es journed pending a conference with | sential occupations, and (3) by the Jigs Cox Monday. bureau of census.

10% to 40% SAVINGS on FURNITURE During Fairway’s 6th ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL LOW TERMS

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL

9PM.

p

pr 5 W. WASHINGTON ST

1 PY i - - Ne . Eu uy e

1.4

Small Budget 132.13 Charge 1