Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1946 — Page 1
AY 170 | I ; rite
ips 44 Mark
ride in history on 1 on that recordwin the 500-mile
rage in yesterday's | ‘man to beat” on
1e third lap. And | in after the quali- | er that had ground | the turns lay like on the back axle, | ” . 'ARTING field for | y chase more than two more qualify~ | vere open today to ie 10 vacancies in track was to be 1. to 5 p.m. today m noon until sun |
EJ » e engineering specar that Hepburn new records. The e and weighs 1874 | infield V-8 engine | 25 and a stroke of ement is 180 cubie
VAS thé best day |
d in qualifications successful qualifiers les an hour. Rex the straight-eight t Special through 129.608 and had a of 128.861. George second Thorne ear
with an average of |
received the mug-
the blackboard—a
of success in the immy Wilburn, the
ster, did his four- |
13, and Chet Miller TY McQuinn drove
afternoon mist to |
the field with an 9. = »
SSIPERS late Sat- |
ng «to guess wno four-cylinder Aute At the time the
ither George Con=- |
Winnai as ths vy Banks brought it
line yesterday and | ).220 miles an hour, |
lool Special, which
‘rank Brisko's six-
under its hood, lified at a speed of ed the first lap at gressively bettered he was clocked | lap at-120.408. : '-hour of the quali-
eran Shorty Cant- |
the four-cylinder entry to the starte through the four
» » COVERALL CUFF n Speedway figure onsidered a smart e race, says Hep1e lead in the secre's little likelihood garage buying the aserati in the Italprice is said to be Valve trouble prearringer from take ualifications in the Special over the ter Rex Mays qualsunday was testiig rear tires on the Before the rail d, Cotton Henning o Massachusetts as for some Maserati scars involved - in week are up, and These include she the Chai Special Special. . .. An unveals there are 21 k now as possible 10 openings left in The power plant in nd Special is fashe wrysler engine. . . « s have had unsuetion attempts so er made good, One her Hepburn.
{onors
by 2
Ind., May 27.—Two rch rivals, Indiana | to be satisfied to-"* 'or Big State traok honors. rsities tied with 66 re Dame ran third jutler made a good 1; points. six firsts. Notre ana each had’ four { only one record 11 Bangert, Purdue aved the 16-pound , 45% inches. Sum3 er Thompson (Notre , Giinther (Purdue), Bradley (Indisnel, ney Gerrish: (Butien, Mitchell (Indisne), Mitchell (Indiana), ym Mitchell (Indiana), O'Neil (Notre Dame), y Blum and Dick Kil« rey (Notre Dame), 11 Miller (Purdue), 3 sngert (Purdue), WW agert (Purdue), 49 1y (Purdue), V0’ 3". ¢ Dame. (Broast | thold, Pat Kenny,
SCORIN
G due, 66, Notre Di - 1 State, 10; Indinng }
EIN NAMED , former Southpor$ Indiana university en appointed head , Washington (Ind) e coached st Terre or last fol,
¥
»
Seg
¢
. -
4
” "The Indiangpolis
. FORECAST: ‘Fair tonight and tomorrow; warmer tomorrow.
VOLUME 57—NUMBER 67
’
RT
Banker Refuses DE, LOSSES
I'm Guilty," Avers Evansville Man:
‘Jail Me.'
Sterling Perry, Evansville socialite banker, stubbornly refused assistance from any quarter when placed under $10,000 bond today on charges of embezzling $143,000. The bank official, who voluntarily walked into the federal building and confessed here yesterday, declined to post bond. He also refused to allow .anyone else to post it for him. “I'm guilty and I want to be sentenced,” he murmured. “Take me back to jail” He shook his head negatively when asked whether he desired the counsel of Ed Ortemeyer, prominent
Evansville attorney, who had offered his services, He also refused to see C. F. Enlow, president of the National City bank of Evansville, which Perry admitted defrauding over a period of “two. or three years.” Wife Comes by Plane
Perry accepted consolation from|
only two persons: his young wife, Dorothy, who came to Indianapolis
by plane this morning,’and the Rev. >
Walter T. Pearcy, pastor of the Westminster = Preshyterian church here. ; Mrs, Perry, attired in a white blouse and greygsuit, conferred with her husband in"the federal building detention cell. They held hands and wept softly. Perry told U. S. District Attorney B, Howard Caughran, in his confession yesterday, that his wife was unaware of his guilt. He had not told her he was going to surrender, he said. This morning Mrs. Perry said she had no reason to believe she and her husband were ‘enjoying a living standard higher than that sup-
. ported by his regular income from
the bank, Quizzed on Disposal
Perry remained . tight-lipped on]. disposal of ‘the funds as FBI agents quizzed him on this angle of the
case,
“What's the use of dragging any-
one else into this?” he moaned.
Previously he had informed District Attorney Caughran that there was “no feminine angle” connected with disposal of the allegedly embezzled money. He also denied he
had lost it gambling.
Perry this morning was cleanshaven and apparently refreshed despite the ordeal of spending his
first night behind bars.
The arraignment was before U.S. Commissioner Fae Patrick in the marshal’'s office at the federal building, where Perry walked in and told U, S. District Attorney B. How-
ard Caughran yesterday:
“I'm tired and I waht to give my-
self up.”
Highly distraught, the Evansville man voluntarily poured forth his admission that he had embezzled] funds for two or three years from the National City Bank of Evansville, of which he is vice president.
No Sleep for Weeks “I haven't slept for weeks.
“Aid in $143,000
Embezzling Case
Sterling Perry
ICE-AGE TOOTH FOUND IN STATE
years.
out that
perts.
|
SOUTH BEND, Ind, May 28.— A large mastodon tooth found asi Aj Williamsport business was sustwo meh excavated for a house here pended when the water reached a today had been identified as that|depth of two to three feet in the of an ice-age elephant, extinct in Midwest for some 25,000 or 50,000 Cross reported six cases of measles
Two Notre Dame professors, the Rev. Fr. Raymond W. Murray and| a; nearby Lock Haven, the main Knowles Smith, said the tooth Was|gi eet were under from four to six a rare speciman, in unusually well|¢.o¢ of water and about 5000 per-| preserved condition, They debunked a theory that the]
It was found Gustafson saw Mr. Shafer’s shovel glance off of a hard object and put it in a pail of water.;, A number of communities were When the dirt washed away, they inundated throughout western recognized it as some sort of tooth! Pennsylvania after three days of and had it examined by the ex-| heavy rain sent streams in the Al-
The tooth, base, is seven-pronged.
given to some institution, Shafer said.
HOWE SCHOOL HIT
FLOODED EAST
‘Pennsylvania Hardest Hit
As Continuous Rains Send | Streams Over Banks.
+ By UNITED PRESS | Flooded rivers and streams swept | through central and western] Pennsylvania today, inundating ex‘tensive areas and leaving thousands | homeless. The foods followed in the wake {of widespread thundershowers which also brought heavy damage in New | York, New Jersey, Connecticut and | lother eastern states. | At least six deaths were reported. Communications were disrupted by | the swirling waters of the Susque-| hanna and its tributaries in central | | Pennsylvania. A number of towns| | were cut off * from highway. and] railroad connections. | Rains Continue ! Continued heavy rains last night | and today were forcing the flood) waters higher in some areas around | the Susquehanna. In several areas
corfiitions were reported worse than |
in the disastrous 1936 flood.
The weather bureau pfedicted| continuing rain for most of the day|
South Bend Men Uncover in Pennsylvania, with clearing) 25,000-Year-0ld Fang.
weather late tonight. Heaviest damage was in a 50-
‘mile area around Williamsport in|
central Pennsylvania just south of |the New York state line.
|streets. Four inches of rain fell since Saturday night. The Red
lin one of the three shelter areas. Fear 5000 Stranded
Isons were believed stranded there.
| of the Susquehanna still were rising
and state officials warned that the crest possibly would hit the 1936 record of 33.6 feet. Western Area Hit
legheny river watershed over their
inches banks. Heavy damage was reported long and four to five inches at the in farming districts, It will be; Charles Gilmore and Richard Mr.| Bowman, both of Mill Hall, Pa., lost|: | their lives in a flash flood on Fish-| ing creek. George R. Barton, 6, of | sas Harrisburg, drowned in swollen gpeedway classic Thursday.
| The weather bureau predicted fersonian Democrats and oldest showers would fall tomorrow night man in the senate, had been in
{ Paxton creek.
. | A washout caused by the rains|
| was blamed for derailment of a| 3 marine troop train at Falmouth, °o
Pa., near Harrisburg, resulting in three deaths and injuries to 22.
Early Morning Fire Sweeps In Bradford, Pa., water was sev-
Military Academy.
HOWE, Ind, May 28 (U., P.).—A|
{ fire of unknown origin destroyed the! A six-inch downpour washed out at | Sections of three parkways in West-
academic
classrooni” buiiding
eral feet deep in the streets, and | | property damage estimated at
$500,000. Binghampton Flooded
T had to get this off my chest,” Howe Military school early today,|chester county, New York. Four causing an estimated $300,000 dam-| inches of rain fell in Fairfield
Perry sighed.
Marion county jail attendants|ages in property and equipment. said Perry appeared rested and in|
consumed his jail breakfast of corn- | Sturgis, Mich. flakes and milk, coffee and bread,
ties said.
ately, asserting, “I don't want to g0|can never be replaced. No one was
back to Evansville.”
Driving here from the southern
(Continued on Page 12—Column 3)
INAUGURAL OATH
TAKEN BY "ROXAS
MANILA, May 28 (U. P.).—President Manuel Roxas of the Philippine commonwealth took his inaugural oath today with a plea to his people to reject the fears of al-
leged United States imperialism.
He urged the Filipinos to ‘“repose our fate in the understanding and comradeship which exists between the Philippines and the
United States.” .
As president of the commonwealth, Roxas automatically will become president of the PhHippine republic when the act of inde-
pendence goes into effect July 4.
TIMES INDEX
Amusements ..16 Inside Indpls...13
Aviation ...... 13 Jane Jordan...23 Eddie Ash ..... 9 Labor .........13 Jack Bell ....11|Bill Mauldin...13 Business +e... 10 Movies ....... 16 Classified... 20-22 | Obituaries ..... 7 Comics ..ess..23/Dr, O'Brien -,.13 Crossword ....20 Radio ...... eld Editorials .....14 Reflections ...14 Europe Today.14|Mrs. Roosevelt, 13 Fashions ..,...18{8erial ......... 5 Mrs, Ferguson 18|8ports ...... 8-9 Forum ,....... 14/Bob Stranahan 9
G.1. Rights... 5{Teen Talk ....19 Meta Given ..18 Troop Arrivals 11 Don: Hoover ..14 Women's ...18-19 In Indpls......, 7 World Affairs 14
rn
: ~ i
| county, Connecticut. 8ix inches
The fire broke out shortly after| Was reported at Montclair, N. J. comparatively good spirits when midnight | taken by U. S. Marshal Juliusiplazeq until 5 a. m. despite the ef-| swollen . creeks and rivers had Wichser to the federal building. He | forts of firemen from Lagrange and flooded areas of Binghamton,
and| New York state police reported
volume library destroyed in the fire dollars. He asked to be arrested immedi-|included 3000 first editions which| At Binghamton the Chenango
injured.
stage.
| ry ——N> TORT : AMERICANS TO VISIT SIAM WILL SEEK UN
‘RUSS AREA IN KOREA
Times Foreign Correspondent
Soviet general
cupied Korea.
-“
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway came into its own foday,
Ny .
TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1946
or
Carter Glass Is Dead at 88
. : A Red Cross disaster unit reached | remainder of the mastodon’ might! Renovo, just west of Williamsport. | be buried in this vicinity, pointing|¢oday and began evacuating 4000 ice-age a! residents. Heavy rains for 60 hours glacier river covered South Bend. jad caused landslides which blocked The tooth was carried into this highways and railroads into Renovo. | area by the river, Fr. Murray said. _.Both the north and east branches’ Eight Inches Long Two South Bend men, Leo H. Shafer and Erick W. Gustafson, un-| covered the tooth while digging at Mr. Shafer’s home. when Mr.
At Williamsport the north se
branch topped 28 feet this morning’ failure at 1:15 a. m.
RAIN ON SPEEDWAY DAY SEEN. ‘POSSIBL Predict Showers “Foniond
Night or Thursday.
Possible thunderShowers were fore- | tery there. the Indianapolis |
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
ANES NOT Waverly and Elmira. Hundreds FAST, SAYS MAN. 717
| Col. B. B. Bouton, superintendent evacuated their homes. Damage with obvious relish, sheriff's depu- of the. school, said that a 10000- was estimated at thousands of
|enough for Hubert Lemanager, 77. river was 16 feet above the flood |
PROBE OF BOMBING *
} LONDON, May 28 (U. P.). — The EOUL, Korea, May 28.—Edwin| foreign office said today Siam, W. Pauley, America's quiet-spoken| would ask the United Nations seenvoy for Far Eastern reparations,| curity council to take up the al-| today received permission from the|leged bombing of Siamese border commanding towns by French troops from IndoNorthern Korea for a limited visit| China. into the closed area of Russian-oc- A spokesman indicated Britain | today. would support the Siamese request.| fing
JOCKEY LOSES FINGERS A
LONDON, May 28 (U. P.).
He bit off two of Maher's
Speedway Car Lineup Begins—Ohio Couple in Lead for bth Straight Year
}
'Lion of Virginia' Served U.S. 46 Years; Life Spanned 4 Wars
By DONALD J. GONZALES
United Press Staff Correspondent
rer
| peacefully.”
At his bedside was his wife, the J former Mrs. Mary Scott - Meade, {whom he married when he was 82.
She had shared Mr. Glass’ seclusion during the last years of his life.
Ww Funeral services will be held at
3 p. m. Thursday at Montview, Mr
| Glass’ home in Lynchburg, Va.|
| Burial will be in Spring Hill ceme-
In Failing Health The elder statesman of the Jef-
{in the government-operated soft| | coal mines.
| was postponed until 2:15 p. m. be-| | cause, according to a spokesman for has no anti-eyebrow regulations. | Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug,
¥ | 20 ‘minutes during the morning with | Adm. Ben Moreell, who is operating
of alleyed discrimination against WASHINGTON, May 28.—Senator Carter Glass (D. Va.), the pep- miners in government operation of | pery, little “unreconstructed rebel” who devoted 46 years to Public! the goal fields.”
rvice, died here early today following a long illness, He was 88 nL A Pe ie Lees Se
Entered as Second-Olass Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Ind. Issued daily except Sunday
EUS Gas Ban Called Off Here; | Layoffs Expected To Halt
MINE DISPUTE [Utility Warns Curb May Be
MAY COME TO AN END TODAY
‘Hint Signing of Contract] Between Union, U. S.; lends, the ban may be ‘imposed again soon,
Accord Believed Near. |
‘expected to send several thousand Indianapolis workers back to their jobs and halt layoffs that were expected by the Ins
{Read Fred Perkins’ Story, Page 13) |
By RAYMOND LAHR United Press Staff Correspondept
WASHINGTON, May 28.—Nego- DRAFT MR. LEWIS? tiations between the government! 1 and John L. Lewis, president « What S Future
the United Mine Workers (A. F of |
L.»» were delayed momentarily to-| day. An agreement appeared near to end the two-day strike, however |
Some government officials thought there was a possibility—but no assurance — that a contract could] be signed today between the union and the government. They believed it would provide a $25,000,000 annual contribution by the industry to a welfare fund for the miners. A negotiation session scheduled for 11 a. m. (Indianapolis Time)
“neither side was ready.” Meet With Moreell Four mine union officials met for
the mines for Mr. Krug. Mr. Lewis
of a three-day ban on the use of gas by 600 industrial and 1800 commercial customers.
Buck Private ?| me commee sim sever
Jom L Lewis appreciates my ef-|ply forts in trying to find out about his| On May 12 service to industries possible future as a buck private.!was cut to three eight-hour periodd Partly the news is gpod and partly each week. Today's order restores it is bad. industries to that schedule and lifts
drafted under President Truman's mercial users.
emergency labor legislation, the ur over nis peepers is safe. The army
have to go.
did not participate in the confer-
ence.
sion concerned “a couple of cases
_ He apparen
Felonnd fo opera“of | truce which ended at midnight Sat-
as summoned to Mr. Glass’ hotel suite|yrday. The 400,000 members of the —, when he appeared to be sinking Uy, M. W. refused to work for the [said the end came “quietly and
government after the truce expired. Mr. Krug and Mr. Lewis spent six and one-half hours in conference yesterday. They reported prog-| ress and said government and union!
attorneys were “working on details.” soldier who weighed about 245! that if the total ban would last for
Negotiations Continue
The negotiations continued although the miners’ “no contract, no work” policy closed about 70 per cent of the industry yesterday.| President Truman told congress
last week that negotiations should stop when workers struck “against the government,” but the administration made no move to halt the
or Thursday. Temperatures ranging | failing health for nearly five years.| x uo-Lewis discussions. the seasonal He had not appeared on the sen-| | normal today’ and tomorrow will gate floor since 1942. |drop again Thursday, the bureau
The solid fuels administration
| estimated yesterday's coal produc-|
Some of his constituents tried to! tion at 200,000 tons, less than 10!
have him removed from office last per cent of a normal day's output. . The temperatures are “scheduled” | voor on grounds that he was pe Pull py —Industry was stalled and alll phe clerk, Paul Dohanyos, 35, was
to rise again Saturday and remain kph isically unable to perform his warm over the week-end. More rain | 4. ties. {is forecast for Sunday.
the move,
The senate was expected to eulogize Mr. Glass today and then adjourn out of respect for his memory. {, Mr. Glass" life spanned four wars,
{He was a newspaperman-turned-|
half his life to public service, Proud of Newspaper Career
Although he attended public and private schools, Mr. Glass was alKANKAKEE, III, May 28 (U. P.). ways proud to include in his brief, —Modern transportation is not fast senate biography that he was educated in the newspaper business as Returning froth a 56th-wedding well. anniversary plane trip to Los An-| {geles with his wife, 74, Lemenager| from Dec. 2, 1901, until his death | He first was elected representa“Next time I hope it's a jet or|tive from Virginia and, with the This one was 100 [exception of two years when he was |secretary of treasury in the Wilson administration, remained in the house until 1920 when he was. elected
to the senate
He was re-elected eyery time his) 5-year-old gelding, Senor Braume, senate seat was at stake. His curobjected to being ridden by Jockey yent term would have ended in 1949 | Peter Maher at Hamilton race track
The supreme court rejected
| The SFA said about 20,000 miners— |
|
| Workers . (independent) and nonunion workers—were on the job.|
The strike involved 400,000 U. M. W.| { members.
(Continued on Page 12—Column 3)
MARITIME UNION
TURNS DOWN OFFER
Mr. Glass served in Washington |
Hope Fades’ for Averting Scheduled Tieup.
By UNITED PRESS f | Hope dimmed today for averting {the scheduled June 15 strike of the
[nation’s 200,000 maritime seamen and longshoremen, as the National Maritime union (C, I. O.) réjected an offer by steamship operators of
Six years ago, Mr. Glass surprised | $12.50 monthly raise.
(Continued on Page 12—Column 5)
N
The cars: were beginning to line up on 16th st, opposite the Speedway entrance. For five years Bud and Nell Thayer, of New Paris, 0. have b een first lin line and now it's six. They attended the past 12 races. The Thayers hope to get a spot in the infield on the southeast turn. i vo
{ U.—~meeting in New York early [today—had been accepted ténta-| |Uvely yesterday by union nogotia: |
® (30 per cent wage -increase and
The offer, unanimously voted)
35 f . M.| ’ ike , down by 3500 members of the N. M.| Truman’s ‘emergeney strike control Senate Democratic Leader Alben {bill promised today to delete its|w Barkley (Ky) fought valiantly
{tors headed by Joseph Curran,
‘The membership meeting In structed negotiators to press for a
Speedway Souvenir—
# The Indianapolis Times Speedway Souvenir section will accompany every edition of The Times tomorrow. It tells the complete story of the world’s greatest auto race in pictures + . . features ... . history . records . , “everything you want to know about «the 500 mile classic , . . past and present.
ww Watch for. The ‘Times Speedway Souvenir tomorrow;
The spokesman skid the lscus-| tagon. voke the ‘Civilian Production Ads
two-week | XNSKI of gentlemen like Mr, Lewis.
most of them Progressive Mae!
A government contract would
represent a first-round victory for| . enti bv Governor | . Mr. Lewis bcause it would provide, Tniuie Intervention Db! THOT | Hammerland and Assistant Manse { ; : Thomas E. Dewey ana the state ger Maurice Knudsen | statesman. who devoted more than! Sovernment sanction for a more | federation of labor, was called .at| :
| administration's refusal .to permit
| (Continued on Page 12—Column 6) and October, 1944.
union president. | p _|that the proposal to draft recal-
| seized industry seemed doomed.
“an| o— | They hoped to salvage the rest of . v (Continued on Page 12—Column 4) | Semi-Suburban Eastside Home
.|cans on common ground with New|’ :
| joined conservative Southern Demo-
PRICE FIVE CENTS |
we
Imposed Again Unless Coal Walkout Is Settled Quickly
The Citizens Gas & Coke utility today announced the end
The utility warned, however, that unless the coal strike
Effective at 7 a. m. tomorrow, the announcement was
. nn dianapolis Chamber of Commerce to total 8000 by the end of the week. ; Layoffs Began Yesterday : Twin de | hundred Nett — ; Of John kL. as eo expected to be without work today as a result of the dras-
on, the utility records was a result By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN of the coal and rail strikes which United Press Staff Correspondent reduced the gas company’s coal WASHINGTON, May 28.—1 hope| piles to less ha a three-week sup~
If the king of the coal miners Is| restrictions completely from com
.Coal Is On Way - “Coal mined during the truce But thet gray mane of his may| Period and caught in transit by the | rail strike is on its way to the utile Maa . |ity’s manufacturing plants,” a com= WHEN a G. I barber goes to pany spokesman said. « work on a head of hair like John| “The gas utility is taking this Ls, he uses a lawnmower and turns step now because it recognized the his victim loose three minutes iater| hardship created by the restrie~ looking like a peeled Bermuda onion. | tions on the use of gas. , In my efforts to be helpful I gar-! “Should the coal strike continue nered these facts and others at the it may again be necessary to ine
This was hot easy. You'd be ministration's utilities order.” the amazed how many officers of the| spokesman said. U. 8. army refuse flatly to talk Depends on Supply 4 about the “sartorial problems In| po id that the removal of x x x pends on how soon a full supph HAVING been rebuffed by brass of coal will be available after the all the way up to lieutenant col-| coal strike is settled and how quick= onels when 1 mentioned the name, Jy production facilities can be Lewis, I grabbed me a second loole| brought back to a normal rate. in the quartermaster corps and kept| Many industries have been on a personalities out of it. | restricted schedule as a result of I told him I had a prospective the May 12 order. It was feared
fh l h of time, 92, (Continued on Page 12—Column 2) my lengths of me, 50% aut
EE, Bi
believed he was discharged from a
Plants Close, Transportation department store here for dishons ; esty fatally shot the manager and Halts in Rochester. assistant manager because they “picked hig te h ROCHESTER, N. Y., May 28 w)] FE RO ei ® had withe
public transportation was halted) got in the head by a passing teaffie today in this eity of 325,000 popu-| policeman and died 8 pen hours lation as the result of a general geier the running gun battle walkout of 48,000 C. I. O. and A. F.| through the store. Terrified emof L. union members, Iployees and customers crouched The strike, ordered by a joint| under counters. strategy committee despite last-| A150 dead were Manager Harry
dawn in protest against the city FOUR JAPS ACCUSED IN FILIPINO DEATHS
TOKYO, May 28 (U. P).—A Jap~ anese ex-lieutenant, a sergeant and two privates were named war crim-
municipal workers to organize. The Times-Union, daily -fter-| noon newspaper, .was not expected to publish. No. composing room or|
news roo loyees reported for. . Te YY "linals by allied headquarters legal
Union leaders said food deliveries|Section today and will stand trial in would continue unmolested. All|Manila for alleged complicity in the trucks transporting medicinal and|d9eaths of nine noncombatant Filipinos in Cebu province in March
Labor Draft Seems Doomed: Forces Merge to Defeat Bill
WASHINGTON, May 28 (U, P).—(and pass the so-called Case bil Swelling opposition to President |embodying severe restrictions om labor unions.
“work or draft” principle and tone|to push through the house-approved down other drastic provisions. emergency measure, ‘which would Administration sources conceded | apply only in the reconversion pe-
citrant strikers in a government-| (Continued on Page 12—Column 4) .
the emergency powers. The President's request for the| Has 4-Bed Rumpus Room
most stringent anti-strike laws since This extra large upstairs room the birth of the New Deal drew * 3 is adaptable to a variety of uses: denunciatory blasts from not only Dormitory style sleeping facilities, organized labor—the A. F. of L,| recreation room, studio or den. C. I. O. and independent railroad It's fully insulated and has a separate lavatory . . .
122 N. HARBISON (8700 Rast) surrounded by lov ab od
(Editorial, Page 14)
brotherhoods—but from liberals and conservatives in both the Republican and Democratic parties They called the bill fascist and unconstitutional. It provided a rare sight in the senate with conservative Republi-
Deal Democrats. \ R Only. last week Republicans| . Times Classified sb ———
crats to override. the New Dealers ie ii Y
