Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1949 — Page 1
He...
60th YEAR—NUMBER 199 ’
The Indi
ea
OER UL LT ALANINE
~
napolis Times |
FORECAST: Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and tomorrow. Low to night, 48; high tomorrow, 68.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1949
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postofice Indianapolis.
Ind . Issued Daily
HOME |
PRICE FIVE CENTS
a
| The Forgotten Men of Marion County— = Prisoner Says Bond Could Be Cut
¥
‘Quietly’ for *150
Declares Defender Told Him ‘It’s Tough’
When He L
Charges He Was Offered Chance to Get Out If He Could Produce Money
Prague Arrests 20 Czech Reds; Arms Seized
acked Cash
5
By PHILIP F,
“JOE DAVIES has been a member of Marion County's |
- colony of Forgotten Men si with robbery.
Davies received a postcard from Criminal Court 1, ;
last Saturday morning. It
stand “trial by court” at 9:30 a. m., Oct. 20. The word |
“jury” had been inked out. Davies and his co-de-fendant, Fred H. Clymer, were taken into custody in Richmond, Feb, 12, They were returned to Marion County by the Grand Jury and held in $7500 bond. Davies’ lawyer is John O. Lewis, who was appointed to defend him as public defender in Court Room 1. At no time since his arrest and the appointment of Mr. Lewis as counsel, has he been advised of action taken by court,” Davies ‘charged. He said Mr. Lewis “visited mie” several times in the past few months, but at no time, Davies said, did the lawyer indicate that he was preparing a defense; He insists the attorney has tried to persuade him to “cop a plea” (plead guilty to the charge), and take his chances with the court. He said his demands for a jury trial were rejected by the attorney. Ld » ”
DAVIES has a long. criminal record. He admits it readily. But like others, he believes he is being held vithout trial be‘cause he can’t’ pay. Joe Davies speaks softly and weighs his words carefully. During his stay in the jail, Davies, and “old hand” in the angles and chicanery of prison life, said he has had his share of “opportunities” to breathe “free air.” : “Although my bond is marked up at $7500,” Davies told me, “I could have had it cut a long time ago. It would have been relatively simple if I had $150. That was the amount required.
(Third of a Series)
CLIFFORD JR.
nce Feb. 16. He is charged
notified him that he was to |
New GOP Group Hints at Fight
Formation Indicates
| Anti-Innis Move The .organization of a new |group of Marion County Republi|can leaders indicated today that {another factional fight was taking, !shape against the regular party organization headed by Chairman John E. (Jack) Innis. The new group has been in{corporated under the name of the | “American Way Republican Com- { mittee, Inc.” at the secretary of state's office. The listed incorporators, James F. Durnil, former Butler University student; Glen W. Funk, former chief deputy prosecutor under Judson L. Stark and Lewis A. Madison, former ninth ward chairman, have opposed the “regu-
lar organization” on several occasions. .
Fought Against Innis They fought against the elec-| {tion of Chairman Innis last spring {after former Chairman James)
parking meters. "=
Mechanical C
Hand Shows Ten Min
1 PARKED an hour and a ha
Ingles was forced to resign in & \jhrary on St. Clair St.—in front of one of the new parking meters—
{bitter factional battle” Same of the “weight” behind {the new committee is composed {of the Ingles associates who con{trolled the party organization in
the 1948 eleftion. House Approves | Members of the new committee, however, denied that they intend | ) to wage an anti-organization fight : : | lat this time, explaining that the| ervice dy | g {committee was formed as ‘sort {of insurance” for. party workers.
for a penny.
|
Reporter Gyps Meter
Russ Move Troops After Hungarians Oust 10 Tito Aids
a |munists have been arrested and a {hidden cache of arms confiscated
21 {district, a reliable source said to- ¥ day, rushed to the-scene from Prague, {61 miles away. The cache was |said to have been found beneath {the floor of a Sokol (community |athletic) building. | The raid in Hradec Kralove“folod lowed numerous reports of “ar: a rests of high-ranking Communists {In Prague, including two top police officials. ! Those arrested in the provincial district were described as leading party members. Most were in!
government. Russ Tighten
Squeeze on Tito
| BELGRADE, Yugoslaia, Sept. [27 (UP) — New Soviét troop movements were reported in| {Romania today in the wake of! | Hungary's demand that 10 Yugo-| islav diplomats leave Budapest! | within 24 hours.
{by police In the Hradec Kralove | Need o Doctor—
Senators Call
\ PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Sev. U r 27 (UP)—=A score of leading Com-
The informant said police “He Puts in Far More
Minton on Packing’
© Seeks Views
Than 40-Hour Week Of U. S. Jurist To Earn Large Income (pn FDR Plan
Has Heavy Expenses Which May Cut Gross Revenue of $15,000 a Year to $10,000 (This is the third in a series by Times Writer Robert Bloem v 3 [charge of departments in the local, © the doctors and National Health Insurance.) i yo | By ROBERT BLOEM
A good doctor can gross from $12,000 to more than
|$50,000 a year, depending on circumstances, but he can't do it in a 40-hour work week.
| Two Republicans
Start Unusual Step
By Comm
. By EARL RI T Seripps-Howard | Writer
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27— ‘The Senate Judiciary Com ‘mittee today voted to call Su
To be a good doctor, fof example, he may never Per-| breme Court-designate Sher mit-himself to stop studying medicine. If he did stop, he... Minton of Indiana befor: could save himself many hours of non-income-producing ; to find whether he sti
work. But it wouldn't take
» . . long to lose his practice and Fi Socialized The quarrel between Hungary therefore his income to sonic)
and Yugoslavia ‘appeared head- other doctor who kept abreast
Ing rapidly toward a break in of the rapid wth of medical diplomatic relations, Pe Jo @
Jim Heyrock shows Patrolman Red Haugh how to gyp the new
By Bright Idea and Penny
Possible to Shop All Day and Still Be Safe
By JIM HEYROCK
The newly-installed meters have one big flaw. gyp them. You can park literally forever on only a penny.
informed Western sources said. | | This latest maneuver, these {sources said, brought to seven {divisions the total of Russian {strength ringing Yugoslavia in a {semi-circle extending through Romania, Hungary and the Soviet |Zone of Austria. i The 10 orderéd out were be{lieved to comprise virtually the, entire staff of the Yugoslav lega-| . s&s =» (tion, leaving Yugoslav Minister : | B. Jovanovic practically without op amme |an ald of any description. The Hungarian government announcement accused the Yugoslav | diplomats of maintaining a spy network in Hungary so that H garian military secrets could be |passed on to the Americans and | British in Budapest. |
| | un-|
utes Left After 1/2 Hours;
1
China Accuses | Russ Before UN
It's possible to) ; AKE SUCCESS. N. Y.. Sept. This is how I did it: 27 (UP)—China today formally ONE: After parking my car be-| accused Russia of aggression in side one of the new meters, I in- 3/ding the Chinese Communists serted a penny in the proper slot In their conquest of that country. | in the back of the machine above, Chinese delegate Dr. Tingfu F.| the crank. Tpiang appeared at the office of| TWO: 1 gave the crank a Tull United Nations Secretary-General turn to make the coin .drop into 11Y8Ve Lie shortly before noo to |file the charges.
If yesterday in front of thé public
| }
| . | knoviedge * Medicine Plan
What's more, there is a sharp) difference between gross income and net income. A general practitioner grossing $15.000 a year in a medium sized city may be able to keep only $10,000 of it. for his own use. The rest he must pay out to keep his practice going—office rent, telephone bills, special insurance, a “spare” automobile, an office girl or technition, drugs, equipment, Sizeable Investments perat-
Besides these current “o) ing” expenses, most doctors have a sizable training and equipment. As was pointed out in yesterday's article, he may have been 30 to 33 years old before he was able to start
investment in their he
Sovietism Lurking in
State, Dr. Hauss Says
By JOHN WILSON “Scientific American medicine must not die on the desk of a President of the United States.” With this keynote, Dr. A. P. Hauss, president of the Indiana State Medical Association, warned
guard against the socialized medicine in the nation. In a less critical
medical science under the free en-
[maintains the political views k advocated during his 1935-41 ter] in the U, 8. Senate. Chairman Harley Kilgore (I" W. Va.) made it clear that Judg
«Minton is not being subpenae«
but merely being asked to Date will be set at Judge Minton convenience and the hearing wi be closed to the public, Sen. Ki gore said. The motion to call Judge Mi | ton was sponsored by Republics | Sens. Homer Ferguson of Mich |gan and Forrest Donnell of Mi
|souri, who contended they wes - entitled to. know whether Jud; °
Minton still maintains such viev ! as he expressed when he advoca’
n's nomination to the Supren
terprise system in the last cen- ourt appiazed, ok
tury.
earning. A “family doctor” easily HAve $1000 to
{$5000 invested in instruments, of-/m. 1
fice furniture and the like, and a specialist may have been re-| quired to invest still more. In-| vestment in schooling ranges)
from $2000 to $10,000 and up. | One Indianapolis specialist esti-| mated his expenses to run more than 20 per cent of his gross in-
come. A local “family doctor”|
(Continued on | Page 83—Col. 2)
ne and the reign of
. } “1 can see in the breakdown of in medical practice the
Gives Testifying In Judge Mintor behalf were Senate majority lea: er Scott Lucas (D, Ill.) and Hem
charlatans and quacks, a simi-|J- Richardson, Indianapolis atte
larity to the onward march of the cults today,” Dr. Hauss said “Each legislative year they come a little closer to their goal.” Chides Dectors As president-elect of the Association last year, Dr. Hauss severely criticized members of his own profession. He chided doctors who he said by refusal to
‘ney, speaking for the Nation: Bar Association, Inc. | Also introduced into the reco were letters recommending co firmation from the American B: | Association, the National La: |yers Guild and individual atto neys, including Bartley C. Cru New York and West Coast la: yer. ; Sen.
|
William KE, Jenner (
TA
.
.
My bond would have been os . the box. ; make night calls were “foregoing quietly reduced to $2000. Sim- -s * $302 Million Bill |. THREE: Then. I turned the He Peiuged io disectone the exact 3 . responsibility” to their patients; Ind.). a_mewber of ithe comm ple as that. 3 : | . : crank about : h tii 10 Particulars of the charges, but and he criticized some in their tee, made a s » 4 Five Chilly Days Goes to White House ee Da a as nl face Promised a statement at a press [ee an S ine “economic relationship” with pa- saying, “I am inclined to fay
conference later in the day. tients. ; his confirmation.” Also placed | Dr. Hauss asserted that Soviet-/the record was a letter from St {sm “is lurking and hiding its Homer E. Capehart (R. In fugly face here in Indiana in Stating his approval. |1949." He said the same Sovietism| In his statement, Sen. Jenr (UP) —/had “destroyed all of the great deplored the lack of political b {medical centers of Europe, the ance on the Supre e Court.
HE SAID the public defender approached -him about two weeks ago, and asked if he “was ready to get out.” “I didn't have the cash nor the immediate = prospects of | getting, that kind of money,”
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (UP) lot the meter.
On Tap Here —The House today unanimously | Left Crank Stuck | Tussle look. another blow in ; passed and sent to—the White! I left the crank stuck in that .'¢ world organization with the Pollen" Count. ..4 per cubic yd. la bill providing for a $302 Position. The meter was jammed. | disclosure from a high source that ouse a p 4 IT attended a meeting, returned an|the United States had decided to ,
| Five “days of slightly chilly million pay raise for the armed, and a half later and the 10|SuUPpPort Yugoslavia in its cam-| CHICAGO, Sept. |early autumn weather are in store forces. |minutes were still: showing. The Pain for a Security Council seat
27
Davies said. “I told Mr. Lewis so, and he. just shrugged and said it was tough.” Davies, 'a sick man, knows he has a tough road to face. He complains that like other inmates, he is being ‘“‘ratlroaded” into a trial without jury. - . .
“I MAY get kicked from pillar to post up in the big place,” he said, “but I have ceased to care. If what I tell you and The Times will help other fellows get a decent break, I'll feel the beating was well worth it.” Mr. Lewis flatly denied Davies’ accusations. He said at no time since he was assigned to the case, did ‘they. eyer discuss payment of money by Davies to get out on bond. “During the last few months,” Mr. Lewis sald, “I've had numerous conversations with Davies. At no time was money mentioned. Davies is a poor man and I know it. If he
was asked for money, I know |
nothing about it.” Mr. Lewis said he spoke to Davies at the jail yesterday and began making plans for his defense. He said Davies suggested a motion be filed on the day of the trial, asking for a trial by jury. “I told Davies it was his right to ask for a jury trial I also advised him to let me file the motion now, instead of waiting for the trial date.”
TOMORROW-—The Case of the Missing Entry.
for the city, Weatherman Paul] The Senate had approved the | Miller said today. bill by voice vote late yesterday, Light showers late Friday over With “clarifying” amendments)
| ,. | [the state will bring less than .1/ Which the House accepted. The| {Inch of rainfall, forecasters said
House originally had approved a Increasingly cloudy skies will military pay bill
several weeks] be accompanied by a high of 73 today, a low of 48 tonight and warming to 68 tomorrow, according to the Weather Bureau. Bright sunshine pushed {mercury to 76 by 1:30 p. m. yes- ” top brass gettin, {terday. The low reading this the inrease wit top cent Ske hd morning was a mild 57 degrees at 1,0 pay. |S s m. : | Enlisted men previously had emperatures will average three ,...eived a separate pay boost. {degrees below normal through| mhe new measure, which now Sunday in the state, forecasters aoe to President Truman for said. |signature, provides that recruits Readings will range from 44 to with five months’ service would 68 north and from 50 to 75 in|get a $5 a month pay hike. the southern portion of the state, 1t was empected the incréases the Weather Bureau said. |would become effective Oct. 1. Warmer weather Thursday was | expected to be followed by cooler Friday and little change in temperature over the week-end.
gO. | The bill, granting the first gen-| eral military pay increase in 40|
Saves Baby's Life By Breathing
| LOCAL TEMPERATURES
i i i i mother was credited by police Admiral Kilpatrick Dies with saving the life of a 2-month-
OAKLAND, Cal. 8ept. 27 (UP) old infant today. —Funeral services will be held| Robert Jack Scharringhausen, Thursday 'in San Francisco forbaby son of Mr, and Mrs. J. R. Rear Adm. Walter K. Kilpatrick Scharringhausen of 1936 N. King (retired), 62, wartime chief of|Ave. almost suffocated when he staff to the commander of the At- turned over in his carriage and lantic fleet. He died yesterday at buried his head in a pillow. Oakland Naval Hospital from a : “a 9 -® heart ailment. His widow, Ethel] THE MOTHER said “he was survives. {blue and not breathing” when she
‘On the Inside
ldiscovered the baby had wriggled over while playing in his carriage in the yard. Mrs. Scharringhausen's screams brought Mrs. Helen Sterger, of 1932 King Ave, who revived the child by “breath-
Salvation Army dedication details ................Page
Another in the series on fair
Pictures of the medical convention, Ed Sovola, Bob
2 ing into his mouth.” | © When a General Hospital amemployment. Sa Page 8 bulance physician arrived at the scene Robert Jack was crying lustily in the arms of a fright-
‘Ruark, Fred Othman....... ...Page 1, Second Section ened mother.
Editorials and other medical news ............Pages 16-23 / Classified Advertising ......s.....c0vvuvi... Pages 24-26
Other Features on Inside Pages
Amusements . 8 Hollywood ... 8 Othman .....15 Leech ...... 16 Stinesville ® ...v00 7 Inside Indpls, 15/ Pattern v.... 7 Sports ....12413 elected head of the Tri-County| than one.” y
Bridg. Childs. ‘sasess lB} snes 4 Comics ......27/Mrs. Manners 4
Heads Tri-County Group.
Times State Serviee
{Clarence Leuck, principal of the; Schools, has been|
{ Radio «sssss 9 Teen Prob, .. 7| Athletic Association. A. E. Ruark seseni25) Weather Map 10/Brooden of Unionville will serve
years, means that every rank in downtown or omen sxtenide ie Army, Navy. Air Force, Coast ShOPPIng tours would par eir Sjpositiy the Guard and Marines will share in|CArs early in the morning, give|fOr® deciding on their own votes.
; ) GOSPORT,: Ind. Sept. 27—| he and his wife “didn't expect
time would have remained indefi-|!n OPPosition to Russian-sup-nitely or until somebody finished Ported Czechoslovakia. turning the crank. I first discovered this method delegation was expected to give in Columbus, O., where the In.|tremendous impetus to the Yugo-
dianapolis-type meter was in- SIV campaign. Sianapol ype Many of ‘the smaller nations, Persons working in offices ®SPecially those from Latin ed! America, have been
word of Washington's position be-
the meter the one snd a quarter Reliable Chinese sources said turns and remain #ll day. When that Dr. Tsiang will ask the [they returped: to their cars jn United Nations to’ put the ques the evening the same amount of tion of Russia’s support of Mao {time would be showing. |Tse-tung’s Chinese Communists | Police Got Wise jon the General Assembly agenda.
But the police department fi-
nally got wise. They instructed Report New ‘Cold |
(foot patrolmen to ‘turn those ,,, ’ cranks” during their rounds, After Killer Developed NEW YORK, Sept. 27 (UP)—
|each crank was given a full turn, the time began clicking off nor-, y i | any and many motorists wére The U. &. Medical Bulietin today | Sa LERY. anti-cold tablet which brought remake lief to 90 per cent of experimental patients treated within an hour
ew meters at least might or increased employment {on the police force. When motor-
, PRA (veloped after numerous doctors 11 KILLED BY-CAVE-IN ferried that patients given CAIRO, Egypt, Sept. 27 (UP)~|chlortrimeton for.hay-fever also Eleven persons were killed and obtained relief for cold symptoms. seven injured yesterday at Abu-| The new tablet is called “cori-
lapsed. The dead included four “cold killer.” It may be obtained women and three children. only with a doctor's prescription.
President William Harridge of the American League today fined
of the New York Yankees a total of $500 for their demonstra-
during and after yesterday's
awaiting game with the Boston Red Sox.
Stengel was fined $150 for his conduct in pushing Umpire Grieve
and whirling him. around after Grieve called Johnny Pesky of the Red Sox safe at home plate’in a
close play in the eighth inning of|
the game. Pesky scored Boston's
the plate. Catcher. Ralph Houk, who vigorously protested Grieve's deci-
{®on, was fined $150 for -his “un-|
called-for demonstration” over the decision at the plate. i The largest fine was against Cliff Mapes, New York outfielder, He was fined $200 for his remarks to Grieve after the.game,
WILLIAM CARR DIES
ARDMORE; Sept. 27 (UP)William E. Carr, president of the Anderson Knife and Bar
47 years ago. :
Co.,| hammad, Sharkieh province, when cidin,” from the word coryza, the the city's oldest industrial plant. jcal Association at its convention expressed by Judge Minton as a new three-story house col-medical term for cold, and means! died today. He was. a native of|in December. He is credited with Senator and said he had no dou Hanover, N. H,, and came here
continental democracies and taken away the freedom of many
The decision of the American Manager Stengel and two players of the peace-loving nations.”
Enters 2d Day The centennial convention en-
[tion -against. Umpire Bill Grieve|tered its second day today with the initial showing of surgical
operations on television. More than 2000 visiting doctors were told this morning that the death rate from cervical cancer can be lowered when women are educated to have early and frequent pelvic examinations. Dr. Charles C. Crampton, Delphi country doctor, was honored
winning run with his slide across With the title of “Family Doctor bem lo
the Year.” The 77-year-old physician has delfvered more than {1400 babies in 55 years. | | Two South Bend physicians, Drs. David A.:Bickel and, Carl 8. Culbertson,“ told the convention
read statistics showing ‘that t |8-t0-1 Democratic majority whi {the court has had for the I {three years and will have ag: {with Judge Minton's approval the most “over-balanced in h
y. 1 He said that comments comi to him from Indiana were abt 50-50 in regard to the Mint appointment and that he had be importuned by many leading | diana attorneys to support cc firmation, : ‘Hoosiers Proud’ “My interest lies solely in wh is best for the general welfare the people of my country,” said. “I have balanced his pol ical record against that which has made as an Appeals Co judge, ‘adding the weight of { honor that comes to Indiana his present appointment. I am ,
that the uterine cervix is one of ] the most frequent sites of the ¢lined to favor his confirmatio: dévelopment of cancer in the fe- Sen. Donnell and Fergus male. protested that the nomine
that disease.” As “Family Doctor of the Year,” Dr. Crampton omes a candidate for a nation honor
bestowed by the American Med-
assisting in the state's first Caesarean delivery,
Life Makes Way for Life—
Mother, 3 Babies
‘How Am | Going to Raise These Babies?’ Asks Father Left With Four Children
CHICAGO, Sept. 27 (UP)—A young mother who had received no prenatal care gave birth to quadruplets and then died with three of the babies, Holy Cross Hospital officials announced today. 72 » Two boys and two girls were born last night to Mis. Berniece Ecker, 33, wife of a furniture truck driver. Her husband, Vernon, 20, said ~ ~ " children by a previous marridge. The family lived in a crowded three-room apartment on the South Side. © Mr. Ecker said his wife had planned to start pre-natal
the baby until January and had no idea there would be more
One of the boys was stillborn and the other two died today.
YESTERDAY, she became-ill and called Dr. Krol, who advised her to go to the hospital as quickly as possible. Before leaving the house with her dister-in-law, Mrs. Madelyn Fitzgerald, she.told her mother, Mrs. Clara Fitzgerald: “I don't think the baby is going to be born row, but I may need a rest and it'll be good for me .to. stay at the hospital a while” " Shortly after entering the hospital at 6:15 p. m., however, she-went into labqr and the first boy was born at 8:55. A girl
Die In Birth of Quadruplets
MEANWHILE, doctors administered transfusions in an attempt to save her life. Despite their efforts, she died at 11:40 p. m. Dr. Leonard Kokalski, who attended, sald the mother's death apparently was due to severe bleeding and shock, Mrs. Ecker's . mother and sister were taking care of the three older children, Mary, 11; Fred, 10, and Anna May, 8. Mr. Ecker was at his wife's bedside when she died. Sitting In the living room with his head in his hands today, he raised his face tearfully
+ “How am I going to raise all
| these babies alone?”
Editorials ...16 Med. Sect, 17-23 Scherrer ....16 Earl Wilson 11(as vice ‘president and R. J. One of the girls djed late last treatments next Friday ar had and another boy fellowed with : " Fashions .... 5 Movies ...... 8 Society ...... 6. Women's .... 7/Worshing of Paragon as secre-| night, «six minutes after the made an appointmen inf Fog lowed band anked: Forum ......16,Novel ....... 5 Side Glances 16,Your Job :... 4 tary-treasurer, * | mother, Edvary Krol.’ a Cy ryiows bY the id 3 fen ’ go f : pt 7
.
home state should have no be:
! after they s red signs . Harridge warned Mapes in a Majority Die ing | 6a m.. 58 10 a. m... 71 Into His Mouth |ists become wise to the “gyping” Te Howth ome a telegram that he must apologize. “The tragic situation is,” they we Hoosiers are awfully pro Ta m.. 5 11a m.. 72 = |procedure, a new title in the po- chlortrimeton, an anti - allergy He warned Stengel that,any repe- said, “that with. most adequate of each other,” retorted 8 8a m.. 68 12 (Noon) 74 | PROMPT action on the part of lice department might be neces: jg i, aqdition to aspirin and tition of such conduct by any present:day treatment, the ma- Jenner. “And this is the first ti 9a m.. 68 1p. m.. 78 a neighbor responding to the sary — patroiman in charge of... compounds generally pre- member of the Yankees would re- jority of women with clinically our state has been so honored ——— {hysterical screams of a young meter cranking. |seribed for colds. It was de- sult in automatic suspension, manifested cervical cancer die of Yes, ‘but there are 47 oth
states,” said Sen. Ferguson, “That's your problem,” Mr. Je ner replied. Sen. Lucas agree with all the political vie
said he did. nr
that Judge Minton had matur during his years on the Circ Court of Appeals bench.
| He said the Senators shovi:
|question only the Judge's judic! |record. He said he had heard (complaints = about the Judg judicial temperament or depo. - ment on the bench. Serving as Whip | Sens: Ferguson and Donns | referred repeatedly to statemer | made by Mr. Minton, while ser ing as a Senator, in favor of t | Supreme Court packing plan a: {a bill to provide fines and J | éentences. for newspapers kno! | ingly publishing untruths, : Sen. Kligore poinf®d out th
Judge Minton was serving as ¢ -
sistant Democratic whip dur | the Supreme Court packing ph fight and that the bill he su [ported was an administratic:
measure. i
he was a member of the Indiar (Continued on Pages 2-—Col (
