Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1945 — Page 2

t -

Planes Roar Overhead in Navy Day Fete. (Continued From Page One)

» beautiful to watch those lads fly. Mastery is at the controls. And jp flying escort to Halsey was duck soup for them—after the Japs. Praises MacArthur Following the parade the admiral " held a press conference at the © Athletic club . where he praised ‘Gen. MacArthur and expressed ' : opposition to current congressional proposals for a unified army-navy command. “CGieneral MacArthur's doing a perfectly superb job in the oceupation of Japan,” said the “Bull” 4 puffing leisurely on a cigaret. “I ¢ can't see anything he's done wrong and I can see a lot of things he's doing right.” He said he opposed combining the army and navy under a single command because of differences in their tactical operations. Furthermore, he pointed out, maintaining the individuality of the two services is “very important to their esprit de corps.” Loves the Army

Then he jokingly remarked:

Od

»

The official welcoming party swarmed Weir Cook Municipal airport to greet are (eltf to right) Walter I. Hess, Harvey C. Bradley, Robert Scott, Adm, Halsey, Governor Gates and

Mayor Tyndall,

Reception Committee Welcomes Admiral

at

Adm. Halsey. Shown

“You know, they say the armypavy football game engenders * jealousies. Nothing could be further 4 from the truth, I ought to know, | + because I played on the two worst | teams navy ever had. And nobody! loves the army better than I." { When asked his opinion of the | effect. of the atom bomb on the| U. 8. navy, he implied that more , wars are inevitable, i “When man first threw a stone, Killing, Has No Remorse. they probably said fighting would » become a thing of the past,” said] NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (U, P).othe admiral. “They undoubtedly Civic and youth leaders appealed | {iy sald the same thing when he first | today efor more attention to the | «swung a club, shot gunpowder and | [problems of a confused juvenile . draw your own population after police arrested 16|yeas- -0ld Lena Therese Neinstedt Opinion of Japs Is Same jus a truant and found she was 3 Has his bitter attitude toward|omOrseless hatchet-slayer. . | The girl yesterday admitted kill““the Jap changed now that we're on| ling John-Wagner, 71, a tailor, be- ” & 40F% of semi-peaceful footing With | cause he, attempted | to caress her

when, seeking to escape the bore{dom of an idle afternoon, she went | {twice to his shop and asked him to! {drink with her. My opaten) Police said the girl was neither

CRITICS ROUSED BY GIRL'S CRIME

Delinquent, 16, Admits

il

He ground his cigaret into an] “ashtray, hesitated, looked up with! © twinkling eyes and observed, “There “rare ladies present,

“hasn't changed." . fan egomaniac nor a depressive. er Ho} saa he'll soon go on the! she had no feeling of persecution. it A eps : . { “She's pretty, she's got poise, and : ¢I'm looking for a job, el " fe ipped, “know where I © find | she's quick on the uptake,” said Reg eds an. Bn | Detective Tom Coote, who arrested ‘ { her, ¥ ’ » Guadaleanal Toughest Miss Neinstaut's : dark : hair tel) T

In answer to a question, he it 28 her shoulders in an attracs «he “belleved Guadalcanal was the! | tive bob, She ‘might have been

toughest battle of the Pacific war. | |a high school beauty queen as she “That marked the first time the | hosed smilingly for news photog-

Japs had been stopped,” he coms. | a mented, “Before that they were! Hpi arraigned on a mur ‘ running wild.” | The “Bull” also lauded Lt. Cmdr. Afraid of Petters ohn Hughes of Indianapolis, hig | None of her relatives wefe In ar plans aide in the Pacific for{court yesterday, and none’ had and a half vears. |visited her today in the Women’ “For a local boy, he's a pretty | Detention house, ‘where she was good fellow.” beamed Halsey. {held without ball, She lived with What about complaints over the | {her mother and stepfather two

navy's point system?” he wag blocks from where the slaying oc- .. Asked. | curred last Sept. 13. “Nobody knows less about that! The girl, who sald she quit school

than 1,” he replied. because she was bored, gdmitted

operations,

sidered “in,” chance now, years to retirement, to Adm. Leahy's job as presidential chief of staff,

WASHINGTON

A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

(Continued From Page One)

hood now is‘that both will go about Jan. 1. to retire on his birthday, Nov, 27,

King originally planned

At stake 1s appointment of King's successor as chief of naval

Adm. Chester Nimitz, once con« is not given too much Nimitz, only two more likely

Although Porrestal-King rela-

tions have sometimes been called “bitter” and “strained,” they actually aré on good personal terms, “Friendly rivals”

comes close to Priends of both say Forrestal els King is too stodgy; King

thinks Forrestal is too impetuous.

ruman Must Act CONSCIOUS that uncertainty

about wages and prices is delaying reconversion, President Tru-man-is preparing to take the big jump Tuesday on an issue likely to make or break his administra« - {ion on the domestic front, However he does it, he can't please everybody.

People close to White House

fake dt face value his statement Thursday that the policy was not complete then. But he will not postpone this time, as he has done twice previously. Meanwhile he is listening to plenty of advice.

He has important meetings

King leans toward Adm. Spruance.. to lop off the top 10 per cent of seniority list and pick a younger man.

Forrestal wants

picked out East Coast as next best. Russia pressures for San Francisco because West Coast is closer to Pacific problems. Other aspiring cities have little or no chance, : » .

» Roosevelt Papers STATUS of Roosevelt papers remains in doubt because some of his heirs insist on profiting financially from them, insiders say. A codicile to President's will had named three close friends to separate persona from state papers, but codicil is not being recognized by courts, which ruled that all papers belong to heirs. Most of the family is willing to make State papers public property, but some are not. . » »

Marine Decorations LOOK for the navy department, prodded -by house naval affairs committee, to name commission to investigate marine corps method of awarding decorations. Marine Col. Melvin Maas, formerly ranking Republican mem

"the airport by Governor ,. Mayor Tyndall, ©. Harvey Bradley,

Adm. Halsey was welcomed at|that she was a heavy drinker and Gates, |# thief, but was afraid of petters, She carried the 14-inch steel-

scheduled Monday and Tuesday, They will include officials who have been watching the reception

ber of committee, appeared before it in uniform few days ago, complained that while reserves

* Navy day chairman, and other no- [handled hatchet in her purse, she “4 tables. | sald, to keep playful youths of her '. Japan was not licked by one OWN age.at a distance. She sank| ¢ secret weapon, declared the acmiral [its blade into the tailor's head| at the luncheon at the I. A. C. when he grabbed her by the arm

nC J

Chief Magistrate Edgar Brom-| Milli ja - Hillions of Weapons {berger sald the public schools) "We didn’t have one secret Weav-|ghould be alerted to the fact that| gt on—we had scores of them. OF |the nation was facing a “real youth

,oounting each of our magnificent | problem.” fighting men as a secret weapon] {and they were), we had millions") * he said. "i Adm. Halsey began with a tribute fo Indiana's share in victory, “As a sailor who has spent his whole life—or the better part of it -at sea, I am indeed happy to be able to be with you today in the| center of a great inland area which | produced so many of the vital things we used out there in the|

| st

wherewithal to continue fighting, | | That meant that we had to sink his! | navy, “I personally was gratified to be! able to take the Third fleet. out! of Leyte last June, with instruc-| tions from Adm. Nimitz to eliminate | the remainder of the Jap navy, to destroy as much of the Nip air] force as we could find, and to con- |

8C

w

a1

Isle to Isle Warfare When the huge combined allied | “Looking at this beautiful state| Net made rendezvous off Japan| of yours, it is not difficult to per- {sald Adm. Halsey, “there was the __celye why these brave lads from | PICUWe: a harassed Japan rocking Indiana fought so hard to keep it| on its heels, hard-pressed for fuel * that way—and to ward off the ter-| ‘Of iS planes, unable to burst out| * rible events that might have veut! the steel band we had thrown | us had we not won the grim war| round it—and damned hungry to|

fo

the enemy's homeland. that destroyed the enemy's military “We had to destroy thes enemy's | POWer, external strength — his mobile]

phiS al

# Still a Troubled World Warning against sidered decisions,” Adm, Halsey { concluded: “Perhaps selfishly, 1! | trust that the planners for Amer- | fea’s future defense force will weigh |all that has gone before in judging | our needs for tomorrow. The navy's| | place In the scheme of things must | be accorded the same sort of ma- | ture, careful consideration that will go into estimating the sort of | ground forces and air forces we win | | require, | “Its easy to talk glibly about) these matters. But I feel that the (tremendous advantage we hold in| | ships and men cannot justly be nul-| {lifted now without betraying those | | men who fought and gave their | a

“hasty, il-con-

Pp 0

fi

(INNS CAEN ot

n

Filtered Hin Cleaning MEANS BETTER CLEANING

The very Mina cleaning that money oan + + that's

competition, tually,

Rr and inflation, according to this

out

in Germany

for various trial balloons,

Practically certain: Congress will ob extend price control beyond ine 30; majority there believes

we must reinstate law of supply

1d demand, get back to normal Argument . reported rong with Mr, Truman: if evenwhy not now? Moderate ep could be taken now with no eat danger of runaway prices

hool of thought, which claims to

be middle-of-the-road,

50, informed men forecast

price increases. Employers ho can raise wages while hold-

ing prices will be urged to do so,

1d ways will be pointed out to

Western Pacific: Machines, food, duct simultaneous raids on the them. and some of our most stalwart/enemy’s homeland industrial tar-| The door will be left open for “fighting men themselves, | gets. | moderate price increases by others, )

New Qil Council

OIL industry is trying to work some peacetime substitute r the petroleum industry war

council which oan act for it In cooperation with. the government

* just ended.” | boot!" | but still escape ‘prosecution une Citing our tnitial setbacks, Adm.| Adm. Halsey listed “thé world's, der the anti-trust laws, ; Halsey drew a picture of the care-| Pest Weapons,” the American ability) PIW.C. has appointed a com- .. fully planned and executed prog-|!0 Improvise, and team work as be-| mittee to report at its next meet ress from island to island towards | in among the “secret weapons”| ing Dec. 11 on whether a purely

consultative industry agency can be created.

5-Year War Trials?

OFFICIALS look for war trials to last five years, reparations indicate it. Length { job is discouraging some of« cers army would Jike to keep in

to work on it.

New York Dark Horse

NEW YORK is a dark horse

candidate for headquarters of the United Nations organization and

ow has the inside track, ace

cording to reports here.

Great Britain is putting on

heavy pressure for New York. It wanted headquarters in Europe,

: the | President will yleld on some items be thinks safe, give some latitude for

buy Filtered Alr Cleaning.

Satisfaction fuaranteny or mon- [lives that America might be Stone |

¢7 refunde ~and stay strong. Plain 1-pe. “This is still a troubled world. | We must continue to be able to! DRESS speak with authority, in full]

knowledge both of the justice of our position and of our ability to uphold that stand. “We have that able strength now, | in ships, bases and men, Let’

keep it!” CITY-WIDE)

I 02 sranches ¥ [etcher 2 rUS! (0. x

COAT or

ie 04

Felt Hat—a3c STORES ALL OVER IND

Open Toot

lar

outrank regular marines 17 to 1, they outdistance the career men in decorations only 1% to 1. Chairman Vinson endorsed Col. Maas’ request for an investigation, This may be first of a long series of protests by citizen-offi-cers against wartime behavior of regulars in all armed services. It may sproad to include promotions, general efficiency, of regulars, .

» ”

Home Price Ceilings LEADERS of construction Industry, called here for “emergency” meeting next week, will

offer government their own plan for holding the line on prices of new homes. They'll come out strongly against OPA Chiet Bowles’ proposal for rigid pricefixing and may urge more speedy easing of rent controls. Meanwhile, builders warn that bulk of new homes will be built for sale rather than rent. They estimate rental units won't represent much more than 25 pet cent of total, though more than 50 per cent of city population are tenants,

Stassen Weak?

STASSEN lacks strength In his own state for Republican presidential nomination, say politi« clans just back. In other midwestern states, voters talk most of Stassen, line up for and against him, Opposition, which Is strong, feels he's too internas

tional in viewpoint. In Minnesota, feeling still’ runs high Against Senator Ball, too, for

leaving Dewey in 1044.

INDIANAPOLIS OLEARING

HOUSE

a

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

|FUND CAMPAIGN

‘lute three-day extension of the

| received only

|

FAILS ON QUOTA

Warn Tough Year Lies ‘Ahead of Local Services.

The close of an 18-day intensive campaign found the United War and Community fund reaching 87.5 per cent of its goal yesterday. Although 4000 volunteer workers raised $377,874.12 in the last-min-

campaign, the grand total reported in last nights meéetifig in the Clay~ pool was $1,593,343 46, instead of the $1,821,000 armed at. “This is one of the toughest years the fund will ever have” J. G. 8Sinclair, campaign chairman, said, “We not only faced a general let-down attitude because the war is over, but many new economic problems in business and industry.” Try To Make It Do

Harry 8. Hanna, president of the fund, sald: “We will do our utmost to make the amount we have raised to go just as far as possible in meeting the needs of all the agencies.” Calling attention to the failure to reach the goal, Kenneth W. Miller, executive secretary of the fund, declared: “If this campaign has to be short more than $200,000 because of V-J day, it is well forth the price.” Two divisions of the campaign organization subscribed their quotas 100 per cent, They were the residential division, Mrs. R, J. Hudelson, chairman, and individual gifts division, Ford Kaufman, chairman, Praising Mr. Sinclair and the volunteer workers, Mr. Hanna said: “This has indeed been a victory campaign. Success is best measured by the difficulty of any undertaking, and with the changing conditions we have faced, I think a truly remarkable job has been done.” Over 500 workers atiended last night's’ final fund meeting.

FIVE ARE KILLED IN ARMY PLANE CRASH

(Continued From Page One)

from the plank to the nearby farme house of Bert Davenport, but they bruises and shock. They were unaccounted for ~ for some time, after it was established that 18 men were in the plane. In Rear of Plane -

Bluffton sources reported that one of the injured mefi iff & ‘hospital there believed Wis ~Iife" “was saved because he had just walked to the rear of the plane before the crash. Lt. Fred Hickman, Jamestown, N. Y., air corps officer, said he watched the plane fly over Fron. ville at a height he estima! at 800 feet, “The landing wheels’ had been dropped and the plané seemed to be having motor trouble,” Hickman said,

The leutenant, foreseeing a crash, jumped in his automobile and headed in the direction the plane “was flying. He said it

crashed less than two miles from Pennville and he reached the scene a few minutes later. The pilot of the plane was reported to be a major and the copilot a lieutenant-colonel,

jade and raw materials.

Let Nations

(Continued From Page One)

“we are now passing through a difficult phase of international relations.” But he said the current nternational differences among the victorious allies were not “hopeless or irreconcilable.” “There are no conflicts of interest among the victorious powers so deeply rooted that they can not be resolved,” he said in apparent reference to current policy diffences with Russia. The 12-point foreign policy he outlined was not completely new, but it was an up-to-date summary of the position of the Truman administration.” It follows: 1. No territorial expansion or “selfish advantage.” 2. Self-government and sovereign rights for all peoples deprived of them by force. 3. No territorial changes unless the people involved approve. 4. Self-selection of government by all peoples without foreign interference, this applying to Europe, Asia, Africa and the western hemisphere.

5. “We shall try to attain a world in which Nazism, Fascism and military aggression cannot exist.” 6. No recognition of any government imposed by force on any nation by a foreign power. 7. Freedom of the seas for all na~ tions and the rights to boundary rivers and waterways. 8. Equal access for all nations to

9, A solution of common problems within the western hemisphere without interference fgom outside. 10. “Pull economic collaboration” between all nations. 11. Freedom of expression and religion throughout the world. 12. The preservation of peace depends on a functioning united nations organization. “That,” the President said, “is the foreign policy with which it (the United States) confidently faces the future.” ~

“Sermon of Peace” Declaring that the atomic bombs which fell om Hiroshima and Nagasaki served as a signal for a new era—hopefully an era of peace and infernational unity—the President admitted that his foreign policy might not be put into effect today or tomorrow, “But none the less,” he said, “it is our policy; and we shall seek to achieve it. It may take a long time, but it is worth waiting for, and it is worth striving to attain.” Aside from Mr. Truman's definition of the country’s current foreign policy, his speech preached an emphatic sermon of peace through confinuing military power, He renewed his plea for universal military: training. “We must be prepared” he said, “to fulfill our responsibilities as best we can, within the frmework of our fundamental principles, even though we recognize that we have to operate in an imperfect world.” No Faith—Biggest Threat

The President said that . the “greatest threat to us is the threat of disillusionment, the dangef of insidious skepticism-—a loss of faith in the effectiveness of international co-operation.” “Such a loss of faith would be

Truman Warns World o

| eign policy, but does produce a situ-

|

| He dismissed the idea that the

Govern Selves

an atomic age it would be nothing iby of ous.” He recalled that there was talk about the atomic bomb scrapping all navies, armies and air forces. “For the present, I think that such talk ‘is 100 per cent wrong" he sald. “Today control of the seas rests in the fleets of the United States and her allies. There is no substitute for them. Navy Fundamental “What the distant future of re search-will bring to the fleet which we hotior today, no one can foretell. But the’ fundamental mission of the navy has not changed. Control of our sea approaches and of the skies above them is still the key to our freedom and to our ability to help enforce the peace of the world.” Mr. Truman. said that, “No enemy will ever strike us directly except across the sea” and that “we cannot reach out to help stop and defpat an aggressor without crossing the sea.” “Therefore,” he sald, “the navy, armed with whatever weapons science brings forth, is still dedicated to its historic task: cortrol of the ocean ‘approaches to our country and of the skies above them.” Discusses A-Bomb , Devoting the latter portions jof his 25-minute address to the atomic bomb, the President affirmied his prior declaration that this country will not reveal the industrial knowhow of atomic bomb production. He emphasized that the atomic bomb does not alter our basic for-

’,

ation where we must approach international problems “with greater speed, .with greater determination, and with greater ingenuity in order fo meet a situation for which there is no precedent.”

Even after naval derflobilization, he said, “the United States will still be the greatest naval power on earth.” And, he added quickly, in “addition to that naval power, we shall have one of the most powerful air forces in the world.” Pays Tribute to F. D. R. Commissioning the giant aircraft carrier Franklin. D. Roosevelt at Brooklyn Navy yard, Mr. Truman warned that the United States is committed to fight international

. SATURDAY, OCT.

27, 1045 |

NEWBURGH MAN DIRECTS DRAFT -

Lt. Col. Summers Succeeds Col. Hitchcock.

Appointment of Lt. Col. Lyle Sum mers of Newburgh as director of In diana selective service was ane nounced yesterday. Col. Summers was appointed by May, Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, nationSl seldctive service director, to suéceed Col. Robinson Hitcheock, now transferred to duty in the Philip. pines. - A world war I veteran, Col. Sum= mers has been serving at the New Jersey selective service headquarters for the past three years. Former prosecuting attorney of Warrick county, Col. Summers has been active in the Indiana depart ment of the American Legion. He is married and has a son serving in the army.

PURDUE GIVES FIVE HONORARY DEGREES

Times Speci} LAPAYETTE, Ind., Oct. #Four Hoosier graduates of Purdue university and a former Purdue facule ty member will receive honorary degrees here tomorrow, The occas ston is the 81st commencement. Named for academic honors by Dr. A. A. Potter, acting president and dean of engineering, are: Col. John W. Wheeler of Crown Point and Chicago, executive ase sistant to the president of the C. B, & Q. railroad, doctor of engineering; Dr. Ira L. Baldwin, native of Oxford, Ind. dean of Wisconsin university’s agricultural school, doe« tor ‘of science. Clinton R. Hanna, native of Ine dianapolis, associate director of Westinghouse research laboratories, Pittsburgh, Pa. doctor of engineering; Dr. Clifford C. Furnas, native of Sheridan, director of research

vision, Buffalo, N. Y., doctor of en«"

ton,. former assistant chief of Pure due’s dairy department, now direce tor of the animal industries department at North Carolina university, doctor of science.

recent Curtiss-Wright research reby pilotless flying devices.

arrests esrpmm—

INJURED BY TRUCK

gangsterism anywhere, While 10,000 persons jammed the!

deck and the vessel's complement | of planes rcared overhead, the chief executive paid tribute to the late] President—for wham the mighty] ship was named—as the architect of history's greatest fleet. " T h e ship's bright pennants snapped dns’ brisk ‘wind ‘as. Mr, Truman was piped aboard at 9:56 a: m. (Indianapolis time). oe] jackets stood at attention: and al navy band blared as the President went to the blue-draped speaker's!

structure.

stand in front of the island Super

Among those on the speaker's |

Fred Pollard, 57, of 302: Blake st., received leg injuries today when

45,000-ton carrier's 900-foot flight | ® city truck operated by Lloyd Robe

inson, 37, of 439 W. McCarty st, | backed over him. Mr, Pollard was taken to City hospital where his | condition is described as not serious.

“6.6 6

| Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops

COLD PREPARATIONS

USE ONLY AS DIRECTED

IAPER RASH

Not this baby!

|

i At first of chafing, nen ot

were Mrs. Eleanor: Roosevelt, Mrs. | Truman, Secretary of Navy Charles ||} V. Forrestal, Adm. William Leahy, | \

Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, and 33 tor.

dangerous at any time,” he said. “In

eign attaches.

PROBATION SUBJECT OF LESSON SERMAN

“Probation After Death” is the!

{subject of the lesson-sermon in all

Churches of Christ, Scientist, to-|

|

| morrow.

The golden text is: “He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.” Matt. 24:13. ! The lesson-sermoh also includes the following passage from the!

| Christian Science textbook, “Science |and Health With Key to the Scrip-

{ tures,”

|

by Mary Baker Eddy: “Death will occur on the next plane of existence as on this, until the] spiritual understanding of life is reached” p. 177.

{

MRS. CLAPPER AS GUEST Mrs. Raymond Clapper, widow of | the late war correspondent, will be | the guest at an informal reception | of the Indianapolis Press Club at| 8:30 tonight. The reception will be open to membery of the club, their | wives and guests,

BURTON NOLMES

FIVE SUPERLATIVE EVES.

All New Color Motion Films ~~ Vivid Descriptions by Burton Holmes in Person

Oct. S1Gay and Glamorous * GUATEMALA Nov. T—Gergeous : BRYCE and ZION

Nov. 14=The Grand Canyon and

COLORADO RIVER Nov. 2l—Gleriea of Our

NATIONAL PARKS

Seats for each Tra

EFROYMSON'S| # Ss.

APPLY ELT LILLY & CO. | 20 East. McCarty St. ni

Opportunities for Women

In Night-Shift Jobs

”»

[emp MURAT § 3%", 8:30

i “EGYPT OF MEXICO .

[ ‘STARTING Ea ONLY ANNIVERSARY Doriar Days

BE PHOTOGRAPHED NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

OUR LOVELY

(8x10 SIZE)

SEPIA VELOUR PORTRAIT [. |

No Appointment Necessary

$150

Reg. $4.50

3

Ras

,

-

.tfor Curtiss-Wright's airplane di-

gineering, and Prof. James H. Hil- '

Dr. Furnas has been engaged in

sulting in 1400-mile-an-hour speeds *

- 3

aq

SATURT

OLD

Fight on H To Ot

WASH! posing legis folllowing a government Yet mu the Americs many intere sition today the very la The list of is long: Treg commerce, ant food and drus lishing the pa Norris = La Gus act, the Tenne act, stock exc utility holding original wagemany others. Assail Lal Today Presi the C. I. O. ¢ Burton bill “a and ‘“unquestic faced attemp unions,” and “ cratic devices To the Unit bill is a “sche: the poor and rich,” and a * per bill.” Th “obnoxious” a dangerous ant introduced.” That is the that the big before to resis Back in the idea of federa state commer larruping bef such a law, Has Wi For years no merce commis ally credited w Regulation in patterned on i cedure. Yet when th fore congress Brown of Geo you pass such derange the w! the country, railroads gene or prohibit i modities at a 500 or 600 mi would not on commerce but our foreign co: Many feared mission that 1 The bil] forbs sioners from I terest in railro Rep. Grosven that the n “tramps” or “ Senator Ri could take thr commissioners, railroad magn: them on thei display them f country.” He asked hc pect much of “pockets will 1 Senator Mor as a product saw it confer oligarchic pow Fought In 1906, whe drug act was congress, the made by one s that if a certa cluded “it will store in the U The parcel harmless part operation toda thorizing law in 1912, oppon general parcel to concentrate cities and inj towns and citi nalistic and d encies; that i mous postoffic ed that it wc commercial s) States; seriou legitimate mai the prosperity try villagés a therefore it m menace to th people.” “Class legis criticism again Flayed When the menting the act, was befor minority comn “No possible constant inter: It is our belie have a rest fr and be given itself to the er existing anti-f very undesirab riod of w to the country ness of the co L. P. Loree, | ware and Hue in opposing # restricting int that “curtailn rights of owne

" number willin

. and the enough to cri fected.”

CHICAGO C "CHICAGO, - cagoans will tomorrow as t