Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1952 — Page 8
The Indianapolis Times
A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President :
. Editor Business Manager
PAGE 8 Saturday, Aug. 2, 1952
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Give Light and the People Will Find Thetlr Own_Way
No. 1 Million IN ACCEPTING renomination in 1936, President Roosevelt said: “This generation of Americans haz a “rendezvous with destiny.’ | To milliona of young Americans since that time, the ztatement haz been a prophecy with a vengeance. The Armed Servicez have just inducted the millionth man since ‘the outhreak of the Korean War 25 In World War II, more than 10 million were
one-
months ago. inducted. Call it a “rendezvous with destiny” phrase, as you choose. But to Arthur Weinfeld of Detroit, as to the 999,999 who preceded him since June 25, 1950, t also is a rendezvous with frustration, disrupted education, forgotten job opportunities, blacked-out home life. It is a rendezvous with sacrifice and toil in a job no American ardently ‘accepts, but which every American knows must be done. :
THE NEWS "stories which recorded the induction of Arthur Weinfeld simply because happenstance made him No. 1 million reported that, like the others before him, he neither reluctant nor eager just determined and ready. The world-in- which young Mr. Weinfeld finds himself i= not of his making. It is no fault of his, nor his genera: tion, that the earth's peoples are menaced by a new and greater tyranny, This is not the destiny Ameticans would wish for themselves. It is a destiny thrust upon them.
was
But it is a desfiny only the generation of Arthur Wein:
feld can alter—by their services now in the Armed Forces, by their leadership in the years just ahead. _ _-May they -have, in’ their “rendezvous with destiny,” the fullest support that American genius, industry, morale, unity and political guidance can afford them. They earn— and require—no less. /
Atomic Progress
HE ATOMIC ENERGY program is so secret that few 3 Americans realize how enormous it is. But three out of every 100 construction workers in the nation are now building atomic projects.- A new giant plant vet to be started will require more electric power than all New York City consumes. The Atomic Energy Commission announces ‘‘substantial progress” in weapon development in its new report, and . adds the cheering news that production of uranium in the United States itself is at a record high. This vast and expensive program—it will cost more ‘than $4 billion in the current fiscal year—Ilargely is directed toward weapon production, as it must be in these times of world danger. But atomic energy has enormous possibilities of peace-time use, notably for propulsion and in medical research, where great progress has been made already. Thus it well may be that the billions we are forced. to spend for defense also may assure a better world ‘when peace —fnally comes. — ti RT ATS
What Nuiure Has Wrought
ATURE'S worst disaster, a drought, is searing one of America's most abundant agricultural areas. The great southland, from Kentucky and North Carolina to Texas, is blistered for lack of rainfall. Crops of corn, tobacco, hay and tomatoes literally are burning up. > Officials in the stricken states say it is the worst drought in 20 years, and may turn out to be the worst in the South's history. It is a disaster for which there is no man-made relief. Relief can come only from the heavens. The government is going to the rescue with the only facilities at its disposal-—emergency loans to tide over the farmer victims until they can submit another crop to the vicissitudes of nature. At least these are loans which every taxpayer will liberally indorse.
Back-Alley Stuff
J ARLIER THIS WEEK, the United Press correspondent in- Mexico City, after consulting Ambassador William O'Dwyer, reported the ambassador had discussed the possibility of becoming a Mexican citizen when he retires from the embassy. The next day, Mr. O'Dwyer called a press conference and publicly denounced the correspondent in language described by a leading Mexico City newspaper as ‘“‘equivalent to the maximum insult that would be used in Mcxico." If Mexican officials and citizens were appalled at the public vulgarity of the American ambassador, Americans are no less chagrined. But apparently a presidential crony can get away with it,
Happy Motoring
THE MOTORIST who travels in the East will be greatly assisted by the new Chesapeake Bay toll bridge, opened to traffic this week. The seven-mile, $43 million structure— one of the largest in the world—will enable the traveler to avoid both Washington and Baltimore when traveling from the South to New York and New England, and will be an important link in the Eastern superfighway network which _i8 nearing completion. o “ Traffic hag become so heavy during the summers that it has spoiled many vacations. ~The state of Maryland has done the public a great service in building this bridge. and it will be rewarded in good will as well as in revenue.
Blood Is Needed THE PERUVIAN diplomatic colony in Washington, on Peru's independence day, made contributions of blood to the Red Cross blood bank. : This gracious and practical gesture of friendship should be an example to the American public, for the supply of ~ blood for the troops in Korea is low. During our own va- : tion season, some of us are forgetting that there is no TY ‘vacation for many of tke men who are fighting for us, and a pint of blood can save a life.
or by any other
UNDERCOVER TALKS .
2% Fred W. Perkins
‘Nylon Curtain’ Drawn Over Coal Negotiations
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2-You could hear a lump of coal drop in the 3 of .coal operators waiting for Harry M. Moses and John L. Lewis to announce they have agreed on a new labor. contract, Until last year, the annual tussles hetween the cpal companies and the United Mine Workers were almost wide-open affairs, congiderable publicity. But Mr: Moses. who directs affairs nf the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, has worked out a much more eonfidential system with Mr. Lewis, eb +4 NOBODY knows what's going on except the two principals and perhaps a few close associates, Mr. Moses is in position to make a con-
tract on a personal basis, because his assocla“tion includes companies producing more than
half of the industry tonnage.
The other big organized operator group
SUCCESS? . . . By Richatd Starnes
‘Convention TV
Reforms Fade
» WASHINGTON, Aug. 2--The postmaszters county clerks, mayors, governors, wonl-hat legislators, cement contractors, Senators and:
other professional politicians who make up the dramatis personae of National Conventions are not likely to lose their quadrennial flash of television immortality, no matter how loud the audience groans. It may, In fact, be worse in 1956.
At the conclusion of the sessions in Chicago,
people in both parties admitted that some of their antics had won a bleak reception in most American homes. - Complaints covered almost everything that found its way to the ‘screen, The audience was chiefly disenchanted with:
Speeches that were too long, too hammy, and
which apparently were aimed at an audience
several intellectual euts helow the one that watches wrestling matches, “Démonstrations” for candidates that were
abot a® “spontaneous as zgn atom homh test at FEniwetnk, Endless polling of delegations which aHy-wound-up-with-ne-change-in-the-vote.
Audience Doesn't Count IT NOW appears, however, that. the groundswell of opinion-demanding more streamlined conventions isn't really going anywhere at all. Exverybody liked the shows exespt the audiefice. Sponsors who spent $7.5 million to televise the conventions are bubbling over with glee at the results. Networks, which expected to go into the red despite the whopping fees paid by sponsors, came out about even. CBS says it may even have made money. Ward bosses have found their flocks were deeply impressed by seeing them on ,the screen, usually during polls of delegatifms. They will be back in full cry in ’'56 and doubtless will not, look with charity on any. attempt to muzzle them. a =
Has Low Priority °
THE DEMOCRAT and Republican leaders seem to’be moving very slowly, not to say imperceptibly, in the direction of convention reform. Democratic National Chairman Frank McKinney, who said he was going to have a “study” made of convention television, is on vacation and won't return for a week. When he does come back, a Democratic National Committee spokesman Indicated, he'll have a lot more weighty things on his. mind than how to run a convention four years hence, GOP headquarters also indicated that convention reform was a problem that had an extremely low priority—if any. Television Digest says trade opinion is that
the conventions, video-wise, were a howlipg suc--
cess. “They (networks) won't have a bit of trouble selling the conventions in 1956," a Digester said. "By then the. whole country should be covered. It'll be a big thing then.”
"What Others Say—
—1T- 1S only the tdeotogy of the Soviet Union
and the perverted effort to enslave the world on the basis of that ideology that America must fight—and fight to the death—Francis B. Sayre,
U. 8. representative of the United Nations Trus-
teeship Council.
oe oo on
COMMUNISTS (of all nations) are all tarred with the same brush. All are thoroughly with. out principle and without honor.—Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols. THE Olympics are Dettet all around if-the competition levels out and everybody share because otherwise the rest of the nations hate our guts.—1U. S. Olympic team swimming coach Matt Mann.
“Sh @ WHATEVER happens in November, we cannot and" will not retrace our steps.
Gen, Matthew Ridgway. ’
AFTERNOON OF LIFE
I'm in the afternoon of life . . . the sun is shining bright . . . but I am growing serious +o and thinking of the night . . , for I know well the afternoon _. . . will fleet and pass me by . « and leave me in the darkness of . . . the time that's drawing nigh . .. and so I use my afternoon . . . preparing for the night . . . t try my best to gain the things . . . that will not dim the light . . I strive to cultivate a love . « to which I'll tightly cling . . . a true devoted sweetheart who . . . will bring eternal spring . and with our hands joined evermore . . my life will be a lark . . and I will know no loneliness when daytime turns to dark. —By Ben Burroughs.
SIDE GLANCES
™.
we have to charge a oh price, Mom—we dumped in all the: ¥ Id find in the medicine cabinet!"
vitamin: we cou
with -
UsU-
_ ever, gets a
By Galbraith
iT alamert
U8 Par OH i Corr. 1952 by NEA Servca. ina
is the Southern Coal Producers Association — which represents almost all production from central West Virginia to Alabama. That's about a third of the national production. Historically, the southern group has had annual conflicts with the miners’ unjon. On several occasions, Mr. L.ewia has not dealt with the southerners at all, except to hand them a contract that already had been negotiated with northern operators.
Joseph E. Moody, Southern Association president, says none of the scores of companies in his organization has been served with a notice from Mr. Lewis on a termination of the union's contract Sept. 20. Existence of such a notice to Mr. Moses was not confirmed either by his office or that of Mr. Lewis until the National Coal
—Assoctation—which-includes-all the elements in
the bituminous industry—get hold of a copy and published it a few days ago for the information of its members,
PLANKS AND VOTES
With this letter was Mr. Moses’ acknowledgment, suggesting that further arrangements— where to meet, particularly—‘be reached by direct consultation over the telephone.” It ended with: “We will not have any other negotiators present, except as from time to time assistance from my legal and statistical staff may be indicated and agreeable to you.” ¢ ° » MR. MOSES’ organization includes all the “captive” mines of coal companies, and also large commercial operators in central and western Pennsylvania, northern West Virginia, Ohio and Illinois, Indiana strip mine operations also are included. This means about everything. in the industry except the far west, the: south, Illinois mines that deal with the Independent —Progressive Miners’ of America, and nonunion— operations. The latter have been. showing a
growth disturbing to union officials. The wage of coal miners is now figured at
An Explanation of Those Saucers
By Peter Edson
Republican Platform Doesn't
Echo GOP Legislators’ Acts
'ASHINGTON, AUR. 2—Comparison of the new Republican platform with the actual voting record of Republicans in the last Congress reveals some strange inconsistencies. The only
conclusions that can be drawn from this comp&tison are either that the GOP under Gen.
Eisenhower has turned over a completely new leaf, with the *
‘New Crusade”. running as a rival to the “New Deal”; or else that the platform does not speak at all for the true sentiments of the Republican Old Guard in Congress. Take the farm planks. The GOP platform comes out in favor of commodity loans. But over half the House Republicans and nearly all the Senate Republicans voted against a $2 billion increase in Commodity Credit Corporation horrowing authority in 1951. The platform also offers support for crop insurance, Sen. Everett Dirksen of Illinois, howin both 1951 and 1952 introduced amendments to cut funds for crop insurance administration. And these amendments were supported by majorities of the Republican Senators. The record is the same on “an expanded soil conservation program,” which the platform calls for. Four out of five of the Republican Senators voted to cut =o0il conservation funds from $280 million to $150 million this year. »
Contradiction on Small Business
TAKE THE planks on small business, which no politician would dare say openly he was against. The Republican platform pledges “equal enforcement of the anti-monopoly and unfair competition statutes.” In the 80th Congress, it is recalled, 90 per cent of the Senate Republicans killed a $1 million appropriation for the
‘Federal Trade Commission to enforce monopoly
regulation. And the same Congress voted overwhelmingly in favor of the Bulwinkle bill which exempted the railroads from anti-trust law regulation. Take inflation. The 1952 .Republican platform favors combating inflation by-‘“encourag-ing the full production of goods” but it says later, “We shall remove . . . injurious price and
MA
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2— Rent ceilings will cave in on millions of tenants this fall unless local governing bodies move to keep them.
Congress passed the RentControl problem to local governments when it approved the new economic controls law in June. This law Control will 30 except in Columbia and: ONE--Thoze “eity councils governing agencies federal rent ceilings tinued.» TWO — Places certified as critical defense. housing areas. s “% » v IN SUCH places ceilings will continue through Apr, 30, 1953, when all rent controls will end ‘uhless Congress passes another law,
says federal Rent end after Sept. the District of
where other local ask that be con-
areas nr
™
quired for’ the District of Columbia, wherd many Congress-
living in Washington. A sep-
+» next-April.
units, still are under federal
- a
FEDERAL CONTROLS .
Rent Ceilings Will Affect Millions This Fall
wage controls.” The record here shows that majorities of the Republicans in both Houses of Congress voted last month to kill or weaken the Defense Production Act. This is the act granting authority aimed at inéreasing production and controlling inflated prices. Take Social Security. The new platform
—favors—expanding coverage for-old -age—and
survivors insurance. This is a complete change from the record of the 80th Congress, which took 500,000 people off the Social Security rolls..
Platform Opposes Rent Control ON HOUSING, the 1952 Republican platform says flatly, “We will oppose federal rent control.” Since rent control is about the only one of the anti-inflationary measures which has remained effective since it -was first introduced during the war, this new stand puts the Republicans out on a limb in opposition to keeping down living costs. But this stand is in complete accord. with the vote last month in favor of ending rent controls Sept. 30. On health the Republican platform favors “support of scientific research.” But 80 per cent of the Republican Senators recently voted to cut cancer research funds by $5 million, or 31
per cent.
The new GOP platform now comes around tn support for the Point Four program of aid to underdeveloped countries. But in 1950 threefourths of the Republican Senators voted against
. hts start,
The platform also ealls for giving the Voice nf America “a real function.” Last year 70 per cent of the. House Republicans tried to slash its funds from $85 million a year to $70 million. Take foreign affairs. The platform ‘this time favors aid to collective security forces. The record shows heayy Republican support in Congress for cutting Mutual Security funds over $1 billion. Adequate support for the U. 8 Armed-Forces is called for in the platform, though 90 per cent of the House Republicans tried to limit defense spending next vear to $46 billion.
. By Charles Egger
control, including about 1,250,:
New York is not affected be-
$16.35 a day. But in addition, there is a 30-cent a ton royalty on coal for the United Mine Work. ers welfare and retirement fund, paid vacations and a few other benefits—enough to make the wage about $20 a day. This compares favorably with any other large group of workmen, > > IMPROVEMENTS, as visualized by Mr. Lew. is, are as much a mystery as everything else in " the negotiations. He is expected, however, to ask benefits that could compare with or surpass
® those recently won by the CIO United Steel-
workers. They might be in higher wages or in increased payments to the welfare fund, Government figures, due out today, are exe pected to show the country has about 80 days’ supply of coal above ground. This is such a large supply that if the union leadership feels a strike is indicated to assure a new contract, it would have to be-a long one for the country to feel the effects.
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Hoosier Forum
"I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it."
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Interpret the Law
MR. EDITOR: Our laws, idealistically, -are made for the benefit of the majority. But the best made laws are only as good as their interpretation. If there is a weakness or. error in the practical interpretation they may be harmful to our country as anarchy. The rent control law may be needed in our state to protect the majority. But this rent law, if misapplied or misinterpreted, may be wielded fn a harmful way. There is an’ honest doubt in my mind that the rent law was intended t6 he used to help “drifters” procure sums of cash from landlorda tn whom _they have failed to pay rent for months at a time. The Area Rent office hers has-a-big-file.on.such.a tenant. who has appeared before that office again and again with comaints on over charges. With their aid and sistance. he attempts to obtain cash settleents, all the while living in the property rent free. Ta oo» o
'"' .
THERE IS A doubt in my mind as to the method used by which a “rent period” is‘selected on which to base overcharges. The rent office, seemingly without rhyme or reason, hits upon a period. in which the tenant happens to bs paying rent. But just a bit past this point they would have found a period in which the tenant was not paying rent. To have selected the latter period on which to base overcharges obviously would be giving the landlord a benefit. Likewise, in selecting. the former period they are giving the sole henefit to the tenant. To operate the law fairly they should’ select the entire rent period of the tenant's occupancy on which to compute the overcharges. In my own
' case, the-tenant paid rent for about eight months
and lived in the property rent free for about six months. Add that up and it would be hard to prove that above ceiling rent was collected. There is a doubt in my mind as to the method used by the Rent Office in selecting a ceiling rent. I believe such a formula should be challenged when they place the price at $2 per week on a furnished house for a family of seven, Upon petition to have this lifted to 1952 reality,
they raised it all the way to $4.63 per week. I-
couldn’t operate rental property on this and I soon gave it up. > 5
I BELIEVE it is time we challenge the constitutionality of the Rent office entering a landlord’s. property without his knowledge, permission, consent or presence; taking evidence from a tenant whose dishonesty is a matter of record in the Rent office, and making an initial report
‘based only upon hearsay from the tenant anda *-
rent receipt they inveigle from him. There is an honest and sincere doubt in my mind that the Rent law gives the Area Rent office the power to levy a fine upon a landlord prior to a trial. -But this is exactly what we have in practice of the Rent law here. ~ » I not only doubt the constitutionality of a law that levies a fine against a citizen without trial, but I also doubt the law is being operated correctly when a demand for restitution is lodged against a citizen without benefit of a hearing. But this is exactly what takes place in the beginning of the. case. Not at the end. —Mary E. Studebaker, 515 Tecumseh Pl, City.
‘Gouging the Public’ MR. EDITOR:
As everyone knows, about the costliest item today in most localities is the 10-cent pay telee phone charge for ordinary calls. This charge would not be ton muéh if you could get youre party, but ton often the party is not there and the cost of reaching them is often more than 10 cents. T wish some kindly lawmaker would make legislation designed to put such calls on the same basis as when you make a person-toe person call by long distance and do not have to pay if you do not get your party. The telephone company kept the rate at five cents for many years and any increased cost of operation was well taken care of by the increased usage of the pay phones. Thus, I think the. company is gouging the public by imposing a 10-cent charge without any additional service. —H. F. J, City.
©
ing action faster than other
re
No "additional action is re.
men rent their homes while’
arate hill was passed, extend--ing D. C. rent ceilings through ~~
More than 7 million rental
000 in critical defense areas, so designated by Acting Defense Mobilizer John Steelman
. and Defense Secretary Robert
A. Lovett.>-There are 118 such areas, most of them around expanding military installations. Indianapolis is the only large city among this group. Other big cities still under
‘federal ceilings must take ac-
tion hefore Sept. 30 “to keep controls after that date.
~ a - ONLY FIVE--Boston, Newark, Jersey City, New Haven and Trenton—have done zo. Among those which have not acted, either by resolution or by a vote of the people, are Cleveland. Cincinnati, Columbus, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Denver, Memphis and Albuquerque.
Barbs—
SCHOOL ‘kids in a: North Carolina town are collecting rags for a library book drive. ey, dad, keep your eye on that. other Sui
~ YOU'RE "safer in an auto ‘hat won't start than in one
-
that won't stop at the proper time. a
~
»
-storms,’
cause it has state rent control. Decontrol laws were adopted in Texas and Alabama, Knoxville also no longer has rent ceilings. In all, 111 communities out of about- 2600 have notified the Office of Rent Stabilization
“that they want federal ceilings
after .Sept. 30.
. “IT'S TOO early to tell what
will happen.” said Tighe FE. Woods, Rent Stabilization Director. “But a surprisingiy
large number of requests for housing surveys have been coming in from mayors and city councils and we're told that many councils have scheduled public hearings on rent control. Mr. Woods said that New England and other states on the East Coast have been tak-
ACCORDING to satistics, only two Americans in every hundred have singing voices. Tell “that to, the guy in the
bathtub, 2
& 8 = £ TOO many people spend too much time-chasing rainbows— and wind up running. into
+
ie
i selings.
parts of the country. “A community can't wait une til after Sept. 30 and then de« - cide it wants federal controls if rents go up unreasonably,” he warned. Mr. Woods said he wasn't sure what will happen to rentals because of the new law. The Bureau of Labor Statise tics, however, has that rents in Birmingham went up an average of 30.3 per cent between May 25, 1950, when ceilings were lifted, and May 15, 1952. Eighty-six per cent of all monthly rentals under $30 increased an average of 50 per cent, Hie bureay reported,
IN HOUSTON, “the burean _eaid, rentals went up an avere age 17.6 per cent between Oct. 9, 1949, when controls went off, and last May 15. Congress gave Mr. Woods $11 million to run the “Rent
“Control office, instead of the
$15 million he asked for. Be-
cause of the decontrol pro-
vision, he has notified his 2600 employees that they ' will be dropped from the payroll effective Sept. 30. But that's a precautionary move, The notices will he withdrawn as > local communities send ‘in i requests for continued ren
reported
a
1
neral fro NERAL H Aug. 4. at at B88. P 9:00 a. I Cemetery. neral hom
BLOUCHE! son of Bloucher, and Virgil fuimer, pa ; ir.
Friends in the “Chap BUCHANA of 454 F R., brothel Nell B. M HR day. Servi OF THE ( Friends in *‘Chapel of Baturday. CARROLL 8t,, pass fce ith D: day, 1 CHANAN®
Legal Not
BOARD LEGAL NOT Notice is he petitions hav
of Zoning Ar 362-V-52—M lace Street. (:
requests vari tinued use of paint and la of the reside 381-V-52—M COMPANY, 1 (Zoned U4-A quests varian stallation of storage yard 48,000 gallons 382-V-52—J. Orchard Ave dence), reque occupy a tra 383-V-52—H Btreet, (Zone requests expa building to p addition to
Pennsylvania Apartments), yard and rea tthe conv
<i building into
‘ p - 0,
gs
1500 Southeas H2. First Ind use to perm tanks and, t greater than
of the reside
386-V-52—J, Finley Stree dence), reque
occupy a tral dence. 387-V-52—L pect Street, | requests vari construction story retail b sory sign on wit. offstree! rear of the 388-V-52— Tremont tre ness), reques occupy a tr residence. 389-V-52—1I1 1951-55 - Sheld Apartments), use previous to permit the to the existir
2210 Osouth P Pe A2-H1 Reside building line enclosure of extension of of the reside 391-V-52—G 6002 Windso! Residence), T offstreet park the conversio into a docto! for accessor 392-V-52— 1302 Milburn Residence), r and rear ya the construct storage and |
on the 393-V-52—M Concord Stre dence), reque the operation rear room of 394-V-52—1! PANY by Kile Stadium Drive Teale vari truction fhe manufac commercial 1 cessory offst space provide 395-Y-52—F wood Avenue, requests vari quirements to existing pore! dejice. -V-52—P 30th Street, requests pern
+399-V-52—8 4502 North K A2-H1 Reside 8
CHURCH, 902 east Corner Avenue), (Zc
for offstreet nearby churc
400-V-5. 1848 East. 38 38th Street (Zoned Ul-/ variances of 1 of a modern ‘plating § the
ort Aven dence), requ uirements t ence to be u 402-V-52 — REALTY, IN Street, (Zone quests variar tinued use o [Forgt, Val 8’. for offst sory to the
64th Btreet, Jeatlests Der
existin ng oe Lost
south Eider Residence), r and side ya the conversio ‘esidence in ouse, includ stairway and the north sic 405-V-52—GC INC., 1111- RB U1-A2-H1 Ri of use to per spinning sho previously gr street. loading on the prem} 406-V-52—A 1521 South A3-H1 Resid building line
Bherman Dri dence), requ line requirem of the existir residence. 408-V-52-—W
u center buildir
2872 North Ul-A3-H1 Rt of building | the enclosure front of the 410-V-52 — Northwest Cc Fall Creek | Residence), 1 quirements ti four - double plans filed, 411-V-52—F M
variance of to be used f¢ to the busir property to t
Pirst Industr tn permit the fuel ofl stora 413-V-52—V Arsenal Aver
of a canopy bullding pres this canopy t line. 414-V-52—N Columbia Ave ments), requ yard require struction of oe ide age building. til 5
10th Street,
“eqgests vari 0! requir orters at A ws public h be held by f
; on Monday. i
1 City Ha hteresite be
“5
A
