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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 9

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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9
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9 THE ENQUIRER, CINCINNATI, SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1938 Barkley Is Optimistic On Future Of Business; REICH PUSHES For Action On Helium "BANK NIGHTS" Are Lottery, Ruling REQUEST MADE For Five Dams Predicts Congress Will Adjourn By May 15 Prophetic Ability Tested With Deck Of Cards-Second Sight, Psychic Influence On Shuffling Indicated. Durham, N. April 15 (AP) The first scientific test of prophecy was announced today at Duke University. It appears that: (A) Either some persons can prophesy how cards are going to lie after they are shuffled. (B) Or else, some folks have at least a slight ability to wish the cards into the order they want when shuffling.

The tests of prophecy were made by having 49 persons predict how the cards would be distributed. The predictions were made before shuffling. Sometimes the person making the predicition did the shuffling. At others someone else shuffled them. There were 25 cards ln each pack.

There were five "suites" of five cards each. If the predictions were mere chance the average of the guesses should have been five. More than 100,000 times this prediction was made. The exact number of decks "prophesied" was The average correct for this large number of trials was 5.14 fourteen-hundredths of one card better than chance. But, says Dr.

J. B. Rhine, in charge of the experiments, announcing them in the Jounrnal of Parapsychology, a Duke University publication, the odds against this small margin being chance are 400,000 to one. More striking was the fact that a few persons, who had shown extra ability at second sight, were the best also at prophecy, and well above this 5.14 average. Second sight at Duke is the ability to call the order of cards in a deck, without looking at the deck, or having anyone else see it, until after the calls are complete.

One of these best prophets averaged 7.1 cards right in 106 calls of a full deck of 25 each time. Dr. Rhine concludes definitely something besides chance is at work in this card prophecy. But he says before concluding it is really prophecy he wishes to investigate a more surprising possibility. This is that the shuffler, without trying to do so, and without knowing how to do so, was able to make his cards lie somewhat in the positions he had foretold.

"This alternative," he says, "is not entirely unheard of but never before seriously considered." He says this possibility must be considered despite the fact that in many cases the "prophet" did not shuffle his own cards. New Auto Tags Free If Your 1938 "Ox-Yoke" Plates Are Rusting, Registrar Announces. The Democratic leader of the United States Senate, Senator Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky, left, and Aubrey Williams, Assistant Federal Relief Administrator, arrived at Lunken Airport last night by plane from Washington. Senator Barkley left a few minutes later by plane for Louisville.

Williams proceeded by train to' Nashville. Agreement Is Assured On New Program Of President Senator Alben W. Barkley, ma jority leader in the-United States Senate, stepped from one airplane to another last night at Lunken Airport, pausing only long enough to speak optimistically of the country's business future and to reiterate his prediction that Congress would adjourn by May 15. The Kentucky Senator, whose fight against Governor A. B.

Chandler for the Democratic nomi nation for the Senate is being viewed with nationwide interest, was on his way from Washington on a week end campaign trip which will take him to Owensboro today. Senator Barkley's plane, encoun tering headwinds over the mountains, was 30 minutes late in arriving at Cincinnati so that the Ken-tuckian remained at the airport only 10 minutes before boarding another plane for Louisville. He was accompanied from Washington by Aubrey Williams, Assistant Relief Administrator, who left last night by train for Nashville, Tenn. The gray-haired legislator, one of the administration's wheel horses, declared that the President's huge recovery program represented "a sane approach to the muddled economic situation." He predicted that the Chief Executive's suggestions would be well re ceived by Congress. In answer to a question whether the recovery program was likely to encounter the stubborn opposition from within the Democratic party which spelled failure for the President's hopes for the Supreme Court and reorganization bills.

Senator Barkley replied, "positively not. 'There is absolutely no similarity between the situation in regard to those two bills and the program suggested this week by the Presi dent," he added. The Democratic leader said he still believed Congress could wind up the present session by May 15. Differences between the House and Senate over the new tax bill will be ironed out satisfactorily, he predicted. "No tax bill ever was offered where compromises and changes were not necessary, and this bill is no exception," he stated.

"I am confident that existing differences will be worked out." When asked to comment on state- JUDGE DISMISSES JURY In Assault Case Against Cincin- natian To Be Retried. Unable to reaifi a verdict in the case of Joseph Richter, 41 years old, Cincinnati, members of a jury were dismissed yesterday by Judge Johnst Northcutt in Kenton Circuit Court. Richter's case was assigned to the docket for a new trial. When he was dismissed the jury stood nine to three for acquittal, It was reported that at one time the jury stood eleven to one for acquittal. Richter was charged with assault with an offensive weapon, the indictment growing out of the alleged robbery of Frank Frederick, Kenton Station cafe operator, August 28, 1937.

Furnace Cleaning Urged To Curb Winter Smoke Renovation of furnaces was recommended yesterday as an important part of spring house cleaning by Frank H. Lamping, Supervisor of the Smoke Abatement League. Lamping said renovation of furnaces would help effect a reduction of next winter's atmospheric pollution. He recommended also that persons buying fuel now invest in coke or better grades of coal. Lamping reported that public sentiment against smoke pollution had increased in the last two years, with many civic groups cooperating with the league in an effort to foster the movement.

HEADS ELECTION GROUP. Dr. Henry Freiberg is Chairman of the Nominating Committee for the election of the United Jewish Social Agencies, it was announced yesterday. Date of the election will be announced later. Aiding Freiberg on the committee are Gus H.

Hilb, Mrs. J. Victor Greenebaum, Mrs. Sidney Deutsch, and Harris Hutner. With Dirigible Made Over To Use United States Gas Answer Is Likely Next Week.

Washington, April 15 (AP) Germany has asked the United States to say exactly whether this government intends to sell its helium. The German Foreign Office, it was said here, has called in Ambassador Hugh Wilson at Berlin to know what the United States policy would be. This nation has a monopoly on the gaa The American Ambassador was told Germany had gone to considerable expense in transforming the new dirigible LZ-130 to enable it to use helium for its lifting power instead of hydrogen-nitrogen. The transformation, required because helium is one-third heavier than hydrogen-nitrogen, has necessitated the cutting down of passenger quarters from 70 to 40. In view also of Germany's desire to start passenger service to the United States early this summer, Wilson was told, German wanted to know at once whether she could count on helium supplies.

President Roosevelt said at his press conference this morning he would take up the question of helium sales next week. Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes has delayed signing a contract with the German Zeppelin Company until, he said, he could obtain an ironclad agreement that the helium would not be used for war purposes. OUSTED CHIEF APPEALS From Civil Service Board Buling Lockland Fight Kenewed. A few days ago Leroy B.

Heine, Lockland, filed his petition in Common Pleas Court, seeking to man damus Mayor Frank Reed and the Lockland Civil Service Commission to restore him to his position as chief of Lockland police. Yester day he filed an appeal from the Civil Service Commission's ruling sustaining his dismissal. Heine was discharged following the settlement of a suit in which an insurance company sought $750 it had paid to Heine for the loss of his automobile, alleged to have been stolen from a garage, then wrecked by being run over a steep cliff after hr.ving been set on fire. The pompany claimed Heine hired a man to dispose of the machine, so he could collect the insurance. Following the plaintiff's testimony, in which a witness testified to this, Heine settled the case for $600, it was claimed.

Mayor Reed then discharged Heine. CITY BRIEFS Sentenced For False Alarm. Three months in the Workhouse was the sentence imposed by Muni cipal Judge William Handley yesterday upon Jeanette Green, 21 years old, Negro, charged with having sent in a false fire alarm. Marshal William Hilsinger testified the woman sent in an alarm from Fifth and Cutter Streets Thursday night. Woman Lose $1,250 Diamond Loss of a $1,250 diamond was reported to police yesterday by Reca Waller, 420 Riddle Road, who said the stone dropped from a ring mounting somewhere in the city Thursday.

W. P. A. Check Is Stolen Carl Brooks, 535 West Sixth Street, reported to police yesterday that his $46.85 Works Project Administration check was stolen from a mailbox at his home Thursday. Case Deferred Again Another continuance until April 22 was granted yesterday by Municipal Judge William E.

Handley to' John W. Sprinkle, operator of the Merchants Cooperative Advertising enterprise, 817 Main Street Sprinkle and four others are charged with promoting a scheme of chance. Sprinkle denied that his business is a chain letter scheme, as charged by police. Woman Injured By Fall Mrs. Minnie Wells, 54 years old, 2154 Kendall Avenue, was treated for fractures of several ribs and ft broken left leg at General Hospital last night.

Police said Mrs. Wells fell down a flight of stairs at her home last night. FARMER LEAPS From Loft With Rope Around His Neck As Wife Opens Barn Door Strangles To Death. STEC1AL DISPATCH TO THK KNQPIHM. Augusta, April 15 When Mrs.

Charles Pel singer went to the barn today to see why her husband failed to answer her call, the slxty-five-year-old farmer leaped down from a loft at her with a rope about his neck and strangled himself to death. The suicide veredict was returned by Coroner Porter Wells of Brooksville. Persinger's wife told the Coroner her husband had been 111 for several months. She could ascribe no other reason for her husband's act, the Coroner said. Persinger, a Bracken County farmer of near Wolcott, went to the barn, his wife said, and when he did not return nor reply to her summons, she went to the barn.

As she opened the door, she said, Persinger flung himself down and dangled from the end of the rope, made fast to a rafter. His body was left hanging until the Coroner arrived. ROBBERS' TRAIL HUNTED. riCIAL DISPATCH TO TUB I.NDIK. Portsmouth, Ohio, April 15 Sheriff Jeff Cramer of Jackson County was in Portsmouth today checking clues in connection with a recent robbery of a residence in Jackson.

The Sheriff said the loot. Including a $10 rare coin and a woman's watch, was believed to have been disposed of in Of Farley In Barring Colorado Concern And Its Officers From Use Of Mails. Washington, April 15 (AP) Postmaster General A. Far ley ruled today that "bank nights" are lottery and barred Affiliated Enterprise, Denver, ana its officers from further use of the mails. Farley named Charles U.

Yaeger and Rick Ricketson. officials Affiliated Enterprises, as origina tors or a patented plan under which the concern sold licenses to thousands of motion picture theaters, hotels, and stores throughout the country since 1935. The licenses permitted these businesses -to hold bank niehts acporHinB- rn rho Yaeger-Ricketson plan. Under that plan, a person participating in a bank night drawing enters his name and address in a "register," receiving in return a numbered slip. At the drawing, all the stubs are mixed and the winning number drawn.

Substantial cash prizes are paid to winners providing they are present. Many theaters regularly hold bank nights as a weekly or semi-weekly attraction. A recent audit of the. Denver firms books by postal inspectors showed a gross income of $1,250,000 in two years, the Post Office Department said. Walter Kelly, Assistant Solicitor, said shortly after Farely's order was issued that the department probably would not interfere with theaters and other establishments operating bank nights provided they did not distribute circulars advertising the drawings.

Newspapers will be subject to confiscation, however, if they are placed in the mails when containing bank night advertisements. FOUR CAFES LOOTED. Three Cases Of Beer Too Heavy, So Thieves Abandon One. Four cafes were looted by burglars early yesterday. One of three ca3es of beer taken from the Big Apple Cafe, 3711 Cole-rain Avenue, was abandoned by the thieves who apparently had stolen moie than they could carry.

A cigarette vending machine also taken from the same place was found, minus its contents, rca- the cafe. Andrew Allgeyer, 3099 Colerain Avenue, reported that 550 and a small quantity of whisky and cigars were taken from his cafe. Wilbur Bird, proprietor of a cafe at 2208 South Street, told police a burglar took $3.50 from a refrigerator meter box and $22 from a cash register. Contents of a music mach'ne and a marble game were stolen from the cafe of Arthur Pachoud, 1827 Vine Street. Three revolvers, a shotgun, three boxes of cartridges, and two suits were stolen from the home of Albert Lohman, 3001 Vaughn -'Street, early yesterday.

Lohman said the burglar left a trail of burned matches in the house. The loot waa valued at $157.50. WPA CHECK CHEWED UP When Cafe Man Refuses To Cash It Stolen, Police Say. A Negro registered as Walter Alexander Delaney, 47 years old, 560 West Fifth Street, identified as a former convict, was arrested yesterday by Patrolmen Stanley McGurn and Alphonse Geers in connection with the theft of a Works Progress Administration check from Walter Blotch, 675 West Fifth Street. The patrolmen arrested Delaney after they were called to a restaurant at 108 Sycamore Street, by Thomas Graves.

Graves said that when he refused to cash Blotch's check for $22.38, Delaney put it in his mouth and started to chew it. Part of the check was recovered. Numbers obtained from it by Richard G. Pfeffer, Secret Service Agent, showed the check was Blotch's. Delaney denied he had ever been arrested until Captain Robert L.

Dunning, through fingerprints, found his record, which showed arrests for mail thefts, robbery, and burglary. The record. Dunning said showed that Delaney had served nine years in prison. Delaney was held for Federal authorities. PUP TOSSER JAILED On Cruelty To Animals Charge-Dropped Collie From Porch.

Charged with cruelty to animsla because he tossed a collie pup from a porch Thursday night, Thomas Gaines, 57 years old, 914 Wad Street, was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to 10 days in the Workhouse vesterday bv MunicipalJudg William Handley. Two membei'3 of Five Company No. 29, Wade Street and Freeman Avenue, testified that Guines dropped the pup 15 feet to a concrete walk. The dog was injured. JOLLY POLLY A LITTLE CHAT ON ETIQUETTE By Jo.

J. Friich IN ORDER TO GET EVEN WITH MOTHER TOR DRIVING FROM TrtE BACK SEAT, DAD IS NOW D0IN6 Trie COOKING FROn THt DINNER TABLE. F. F. T.

Luncheon napkins spread out to their full extent over the lap, but the large dinner napkins pre not completely unfolded. Rather they are laid double across the knees. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to JOLLY POLLY for her interesting leaflet, "Manners At Table." And $250,000 For Final Ohio Flood Survey. Scioto Sandusky Officials File Brief With Congress For District Funds. Columbus, Ohio, April 15 (AP) Scioto-Sandusky Conservancy District officials asked the House Flood Control Committee in Washington today for $250,000 to complete a final, authoritative survey of the district, designed as the final link in a program to rid Ohio of flood disaster.

Requested also was authorization for the immediate construction of at least five of the 10 contemplated dams in the proposed district which embraces 17 Central Ohio counties between the Ohio River and Lake Erie. The requests were contained in a brief submitted by C. E. Sherman, President of the District Board and Chairman of Ohio State University's civil engineering department. Sherman, who appeared recently before the House committee to request approval of the project, predicted favorable action on the requests.

DRILLINGS HAVE BEGUN. Engineers already have started drillings at the proposed sites of major dams in the district to determine foundation requirements and the proximity of construction materials. Sherman's brief estimated the cost of the proposed district at less than $40,000,000, excluding approximately $5,000,000 already expended on flood control measures in the Scioto and Sandusky River basins. "The reservoirs in this district," the brief stated, "have been designed to furnish the maximum of control of water as it affects the Ohio River, and to secure likewise the greatest local benefits for the two river valleys. "The three largest reservoirs in the district are the Summit Level Reservoir (in Marion which can snunt neaawaiers entirely away from the Ohio River; Paint and Salt Creek Reservoirs, only 50 miles from the Ohio, which can be shut off entirely and retain 600,000 acre-feet of impounded storm water until dangerous floods have passed in the Ohio River.

RESERVOIRS RETARD FLOODS "TViprp rnsprvnirs rfln mnrfi p.ffpn- tively mitigate floods on the Ohio River than any other three reser voirs thus far proposed in the Ohio River basin." Sherman said reservoirs in the area would have a controlled basin area of 4,180 square miles and would have a total capacity of 1,500,000 acre-feet of water. An acre foot is the amount of water required to cover an acre to a derjth of one foot. Reservoirs and their capacity in acre-feet were listed as: Tiffin, Bucyrus, Summit Olentangy, Big Walnut, Darby, 125,000 Deer, Paint, 380,000, and Salt, 107,000. Sherman said the district in' tended to utilize the best features of the flood-retarding reservoirs of the Miami Basin to the west and the gate-controlled reservoirs of the Muskingum Conservancy District to the east, which can mitigate floods and also store water for dry weather. PAIR HELD In Eaton Believed To Have Robbed Cincinnati Victim After Stealing Auto.

Detective Sergeant George Eb bers said last night he believes two Negroes under arrest at Eaton, Ohio, after they wrecked an auto mobile stolen from Cincinnati, were the robbers who bound James Smith, Negro, 934 Linn Street, and left him under a trestle at Third and Smith Streets. The automobile was reported stolen yesterday afternoon by Jerry owor, 509 Richmond Street Power said he left the keys in the car while he went into a drug store at Seventh and Mound Streets. As he came out of the store he saw the thieves driving away. An hour later Smith said he was accosted by two Negroes at George Street and Central Avenue. They pulled him into the machine and took him to Third and Smith Streets.

After taking $22.06 the pair bound him with rope. Sergeant Ebbers learned from Sergeant Moon of the State Highway Patrol that the two suspects, registered as Elmer Young, 26 years old, and Robert Hoskins, 27, both of Hamilton, were arrested when they abandoned the car after driving it against a bridge just out side of Eaton, near the Indiana border. The pair answers the description upplied by Smith and Power. Detectives will be sent to Eaton today to question the prisoners, Sergeant Ebbers said. Attends Nephew's Funeral Youngman, associated with an oil firm in Los Angeles, came to Cincinnati last week to attend the funeral of his nephew, Ervln Dietz, 4526 Smith Road, Norwood, who was injured fatally in an auto mobile accident last Saturday.

Fol lowing his stay in Cincinnati, Youngman will visit his son, Frank Youngman, New Orleans. Visit Former Associates A. G. Corry, Los Angeles, former newspaperman of Cincinnati, vis- ited several of his former associates on The Enquirer staff yesterday. Corry, who is in the city on a business trip, will leave today for his ever, said W.

I. Bishop, chief clerk at Ohio Penitentiary, where the tags are made. It comes off if the motorist attempts to clean the tags with any alcohol solution or to shellac them, he said. Plain soap and water work fine, he declared. The thinner metal, designated as 26-gauge, is standard in many states, he said, but Ohio always has used a 24-gauge material in the past and will return to it in 1939.

Dies for stamping the ox and legend cost more than those for the plain tags of former years, but this was made up by the slightly lower cost of the metal, bureau officials stated. Incidentally, Columbus police to day admonished and discharged a high school student who displayed a skillfully made set of counterfeit tags. He said he made them by hand in two days just to see if it would be a difficult task. TRIPLE SLAYING Is Confessed By Farmhand, 23, Taken On Ohio Woman's Tip-Killings Attributed To Urge. Youngstown, Ohio, April 15 (AP) A tip from an observing housewife caused the capture today of Norman Smith, twenty-three-year-old farm hand sought since January 4, for the slaying of Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Baumeister and Baumeister's father, Theodore, at their farm home at North Lima, near here. The tip, Sheriff Ralph Elser said, was supplied by Mrs. Lua Anderson, who told officers that a younic man visiting her home resembled Smith. In his signed confession Smith attributed the murders to "an urge," Elser said.

"I hid in the barn and when Mrs. Baumeister entered, I hit her over the head with an iron pipe," Smith said. "I hit her several times, then I drew a knife and slashed her. I hid her body under some corn stalks. "A few minutes later, Theodore entered, and I did the same to him.

I went to the house and waited 15 minutes for Henry to return home. "When he entered I pointed a shotgun at him and pulled the trigger. The shot hit him in the stomach but he didn't fall right away. I grabbed the barrel of the gun and hit him over the head several times before the gun stock broke. Smith said he fled in the Baumeister car, which he abandoned a few days later in Indiana.

defer the formal opening of his campaign until after that date. However, if it appears that the session will be prolonged beyond that date, he indicated that he may begin his formal campaign before adjournment. He intimated that he likely would launch his campaign with a speech at Lexington. He said he expects to make a etatewide speamng tour, but had made no definite plans. The Senator said he did not know whether his colleague, Sena tor M.

M. Logan, would take the stumn in his behalf. As he boarded the plane at 8:19 o'clock, he expressed the hope that he would reach Louisville in time "to look in" on a dinner for Judge Elwood Hamilton, recently elevated to the Federal Circuit Court of Ap peals bench at which Senator Logan is a guest. BEER BILL Is Signed By Governor Chandler --Prohibits Sale On Sunday And Election Days. Frankfort, April 15 (AP) Governor Chandler sent to the Sec retary of State today with his sig nature a legislative act prohibiting the sale of beer at any time on Sundays and election days.

The bill was signed last night before the Governor left for a vaca' tion trip. It becomes effective the first Sunday in July. Whisky sales on Sundays and election days already are banned by law. The beer ban bill was one of the most controversial of the recent special session and was finally approved by the General Assembly on its closing day. ECVrts to amend it to permit limited Sunday sales in larger cities were made by urban representatives and were successful in the Senate only to be rejected in the House.

COURT UPHOLDS AWARD Of $6,500 In Radio Operator's Death On Coal Boat. The Cleveland Cliffs Iron Com pany of Cleveland lost in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Covington, yesterday, its appeal from a $6,500 award in tne fleam October 21. 1933, of Alfred G. Mar tini, a radio operator aboard one of the firm's lake coal ships. In an opinion by Judge Florence E.

Allen, the Court sustained Dis trict Judge S. H. West, who had modified an original award of George Martini, administra tor of the estate, sued for $25,000. Alfred Martini was killed aboard the coal carrier Ishpeming. His body was found in the hold, below an open hatch, a few minutes after the ship cleared Ashtabula for San dusky.

ments of a number of Senators and Congressmen that "there was no use priming a pump when there was no water" a frequently quoted simile of those opposing the President's recovery program Senator Barkley said: "It's all in the point of view. Some people are opposed to everything on general principles. There is still 'plenty of water in the pump' and we are approaching the situation in the only intelligent and practical manner." Senator Barkley said pressure of duties as Senate Leader had made it necessary for him to confine his campaign for renomination to week-end visits to his home state. Next Saturday, he said, he planned to be in Covington to confer with Northern Kentucky political leaders. If Congress adjourns by May 15, the Senator said that he would For 13,670 Meals! Boston, April 15 (AP) A police squad car rushed to a Huntington Avenue restaurant In answer to a radio report that a man was causing a disturbance by refusing to pay a seventy-cent food check.

When offender was booked his pockets were found to contain $9,569. It took Lieutenant Morris Murphy nearly an hour to count the pile of bills. Senators Opposed To House Expenses When Not Traveling Washington, April 15 (AP) The Senate Appropriations Committee went on record today against paying travel expenses for members of Congress who do not bother to go back to their home districts between sessions. The committee approved a $444,000 appropriation for members' mileage allowance, but inserted a provision that no part of the fund be paid to members who did not make the round trip from the capital to their home between the close of the special session last December and the opening of the regular session, January 3. The House previously approved the mileage appropriation without any such strings tied to it, although some members had argued against allowing 20 cents a mile for the brief interval between the two sessions.

ITS THE WEVE HERE 1 1 wrT 7 ft AND HAVE A LITTLE BEEN I rOKER LtAMc. ill Columbus, Ohio, April 15 (AP) If your 1938 "ox-yoke" automobile license plates go bad, the State Bureau of Motor Vehicles is prepared to issue new ones free, Registrar Frank West announced today. The statement was in response to reports by automobile clubs in Toledo, Cincinnati, and other points that motorists were complaining that Ohio's new tags were falling an easy prey to rust, that they lost their paint easily, and were hard to keep bolted on. It's the ox and wagon silhouette that's mainly responsible, the bu reau reported. In order to get a clear imm-int of the figure and the legend honoring the 150th anniver sary of the Northwest Territory, it was necessary to use a ngnter- weight metal than in past years.

The paint is just the same as Total Now 49 Billions Loans; One-Twentieth OhWs Washington, April 15 (AP) Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley told the' Senate Federal expenditures totaling $17,000,000,000 show "the present administration has carried out the principal of Thomas Jefferson that we should unite for the common good." Barkley said the expenditures from March 4, 1933, to December 31, 1937, were made from the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, Farm Security, Civil Works, Federal Emergency Relief, Civilian Conservation Corps, Bureau of Public Roads, Social Security, Public Works Administration, Reclamation Service, and public building funds. Barkley said the expenditures were made "to hold our union together and for benefit direct and indirect to 130,000,000 people." Barkley also cited loans, giants, and insured loans totaling through the Reconstruction Corporation, Farm Credit, Commodity Credit, Farm Security, Home Owners Loan Corporation, PWA, Rural Electrification, Federal Reserve Board, and Federal Housing Units. Barkley, in figures published in the Congressional Record today, listed the expenditures and loans for Ohio as $786,675,819 and ESCAPED CONVICT CAUGHT. George Angilan Arrested At Liberty Nearly Two Years.

George Angilan, 27 years old, one of the group that shot and killed Mrs. Shirley Reardon, Hartwell, in an attempted holdup in 1927, was arrested early this morning at 1208 Vine Street as an escaped convict from Mount Vernon Honor Farm. He escaped July 22, 1936. He was nrrpstpd hv Detective Sereeant George Ebbers and Detectives Louis Backmier, Fred Brown, and Walter Carney. ALECGREAT silence that's scathing, To people wbo ssk me What I think of bathing.

JIMMY HATLO THEY'LL DO IT EVERY TIME TELLING" A 1 YOU BET GOING TO BE. YOU WANT lO BEST SHOW BE SURE TD COME TD THE HAD AROUND IN CLUB NEXT WEDNESDAY NIGHT. fSEH, BOXING FAN DANCER. MATCHESiP DINNER. I'VE JJViCN.

I'LL BE St I INVITED THEM TO XT N' JY HERE WITH BELLS ll COME NEXT PRIZE CLASS ENTERED By Central Grills With 2,771 Score In A. B. C. SPECIAL ptSPATf'H TO THK Et)flnKR. Chicago, April 15 Central Grills of Cincinnati rolled into the prize class in the American Bowling Congress championships tonight, totaling 2,771 on games of 824, 1,014, and 933.

George Ruff hit 243 in the second stanza, and John Wagner contributed 208, as the Cincinnati entry the coveted 1,000 figure. Cincinnati Butchers Supply finished out of the running with 2,526. Scores: DOl BI.KS. J. Retman 173 191 170 E.

Haslem 164 215 183 Totals 337 406 3521,096 E. StronR 158 191 1R4 W. Hauenstein 171 179 147 Totals 329 370 3311,030 L. McLean 140 143 17ft S. Buttcrfteld 148 135 183 Total 288 278 361 927 81.NGI.ES.

E. Strong 131 lfl 144 444 W. Haumstein 159 220 1B7 546 L. McLean 211 194 175 58n S. Butterfield 159 209 164 532 FIVE-MAX TEAMS.

CENTKAL GRILL, CINCINNATI. H. Crowley 168 192 179 C. Ruff 157 243 178 H. Quint 171 183 196 J.

Knowles 172 189 J. Wagner 176 208 191 Totals 824 1014 CINCINNATI BUTCHERS' SUPPLY. C. Hueljebusch 139 169 190 A. Schwiih 174 191 176 F.

Stothfang 148 H9 170 C. Clcmser 168 143 189 L. Nordmann 1K6 186 168 Totals 795 838 893 2,526 Dome..

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