Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1933 — Page 6

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Today and Tomorrow BY WALTER LIP PM ANN

some time there has been a resolution before congress which would have authorized the President to join with other powers in prohibiting the export of arms and munitions to any nation which he considered a men-

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ace to world peace. The offer recently made at Geneva by the a dmini stration through Mr Davis does not literally depend upon this resolution. But practically it does. The peoples of Europe would regard the offer as of little value if all that, it meant was that congress would in each

case have to make the decision as to whether the United States would or would not assist the blockade against the “aggressor.” The foreign relations committee of the senate now has reported the resolution, with an amendment which provides that the President may lay an embargo only against all the parties m the conflict. He may not single out the aggressor nation, lay an embargo against it, and continue to let arms and munitions be shipped to its opponents. Thus the senate committee has in effect refused to give the President power to join in the so-called sanctions of peace, has refused to let him be the judge as to whether the United States should be neutral. For all practical purposes the amended resolution vetoes the offer recently made at Geneva. The offer to consult would remain, but the offer to do something after the consultation is virtually nullified. a a o 'T'O my mind, it seems clear that •*- to give the President the power to judge which is the aggressor nation and to join in punishing it is almost indistinguishable from giving him the power to declare war. How true this is was borne in upon me last winter when I happened to be at Geneva in the critical days of the Manchurian affair. The sentiment of the smaller powers in the league was strongly in favor of declaring that Japan was the aggressor and of proceeding to act under Article XVI of the league covenant. What prevented this action was that Great Britain would have had to use her navy to apply the blockade. and Great Britain had no appetite for war with Japan. Now, if at that lime the Uniteo States had been under obligation to identify the aggressor in that dispute and then to lay an embargo against Japan, tlie whole responsibility in the Orient inevitably would have been concentrated on us. The last and the decisive word would have been ours. If we refused to declare Japan the aggressor, the other great powers would have said, as in fact they did say, that, they could not act under the covenant. If, on the other hand, we did declare Japan the aggressor, it would have been the United States which had in reality set the blockade in motion, and from the Japanese point of view' we should have become the principal enemy. st st a

THIS practical demonstration convinced me of sojnething which I had previously only dimly suspected, namely, that to stand outside the league mid yet to accept the final responsibility as to whether the league should apply force, was the most dangerous way possible of attempting to organize international peace. We should be creating a situation in which responsibility would not be distributed, as President Wilson originally conceived it, among the members of the league, but where the whole responsibility for what the league did or failed to do was placed upon the United States. The responsibility is too great a one for the United States to assume As regards the Far East, it would, as I have already indicated, isolate us as the principal enemy. As regards the continent of Europe, we should, if we persuaded nations to disarm because they expected our help, be driven into a position where any injury they suffered because they were insufficiently armed was chargeable? to us. It is not a sound foreign policy, as I see it, to attempt to buy the specific disarmament of any nation with a vague and uncertain commitment as to what we might do in the future. But even if the responsibility jvere not too great a one for the United States to assume, it is certainly too great a one for any President alone to assume. u a o e-y-'HE trouble with the American A attempt for the last twelve months to force some measure of land disarmament in Europe has been that, until the underlying political conflicts are mitigated, the armed powers will reduce only if they receive equivalent guarantees. The recent offer at Geneva has' been an attempt to provide them with such guarantees, and yet to keep a free hand for the -United States. It can not be done. A guarantee which meant anything in Europe would mean the abandonment of complete liberty of action by the United States. This dilemma can not be resolved by a diplomatic formula which might mean one thing in Europe and another in the United States, i Copyright. 19331 FOREST^JOB RECRUITS WILL REPORT MONDAY Examination of Final Group to Be Held at Tomlinson Hall. Examination of the final group of applicants for work in the reforestation relief program will be held on the second floor of Tomlinson hall Monday. Applicants must be 18 or older and not more than 25, and can file at Tomlinson hall any week day between 8:30 a. m.. and 3 p. m Pay is S3O a month, of which $25 is to be sent to the worker's family. A five-day work week is in effect. Camp leaders sre paid $45 a month and sub-leaders. $36 a month. Recreational equipment for use of workers in camps is provided by the government. ,

WRANGLE OVER DICTATOR FOR OIL INDUSTRY Strange Controversy Being Waged Behind Scenes at Washington. BY MARSHALL M NEIL Time* Special Writer WASHINGTON, June I.— Behind the scenes here is being enacted one of the strangest of legislative controversies, with governmental dic- | tatorship of the $14,000,000,000 oil industry as the issue. Thus far, the President’s hand 1 has been felt in only a general way; j he has suggested the need of oil legislation, but has not directly used i his mighty influence with congress' to get it. The action of the senate finance I committee Friday or the next day will show whether Mr. Roosevelt has stepped in. The outcome probably will touch the porketbook of every automobile I owner, for governmental control of j the oil industry is expected to mean ! higher prices for oil and its prod- i ucts. including gasoline. Representative E. W. Marland <Dem., Okla.) introduced a bill banning hot oil produced in violation of pro-ration orders from interstate commerce, and hearings were held on it, but when the ad- | ministration began framing an in-dustry-control bill it was sidetracked. Unique Procedure Used Oil men tried to determine whether the general bill would cover their business. Apparently convinced that it would not, they drafted their own measure for outright government control, production-allocation and price-fixing, and through Interior Secretary Harold Ickes this went to Mr. Roosevelt’s desk. It stayed there a week or ten days, while congressmen from oil states and representatives of the oil industry sweated and fumed. Finally, the President adopted the unique procedure of writing letters to Speaker Henry T. Rainey and Vice-President John N. Garner saying there was "widespread demand for federal legislation.” He proposed that whatever oil bill was agreed upon be made a rider to the recovery act. House Fails to Adopt Measure The ways and means committee, hearing the general bill, decided against including the oil dictatorship measure. Secretary Ickes went to Chairman Bob Doughton and said the President wanted the oil bill in it. He suggested Representative Doughton call the President. Doughton replied that if the President wanted to talk with him, he ! could call. The house passed its bill without oil provisions after the budget director said the general measure covered the oil business. Contesting this, Ickes then went before the senate finance committee and said the President wanted wide powers to deal with oil. His solicitor presented a revised amendment to permit the government to allocate production among the states, stop shipments of “hot” oil. Other proposals of the original measure were said to be covered in the general recovery bill.

Lippmann

Former City Man Named to High U. S. Indian Post

OUSTED OFFICIALS PLAN COURT BATTLE South Bend Mayor Facing Legal Contest. By I 'iiilni Press SOUTH BEND. Ind., June I.—A legal contest over the dismissal of six South Bend city officials by Mayor W. R. Hinkle was planned today as a split in the local Democratic party widened. The dismissed officials and leaders of the Democratic faction opposed ! to the mayor discussed plans for j contesting Hihkle's action at a I meeting Wednesday night. Mayor Hinkle announced the dis- ; missal of George A. Knoblock, city controller; Walter L. Clements, city attorney; Herschel G. Wray, city : engineer; M. Edward Doran, works board member; and William H. Trost, Jr., and Valentine Gadacz, safety board members, at noon Wednesday. He issued a statement charging "the old order was out of j sympathy with my program of economies for the city hall.’’ New appointees named by the mayor to fill the vacancies were E. J. McErlain. controller; Iden S. Romig. attorney; William S. Moore, engineer; Joseph E. Neff, works j board, and Louis A. Walker and j Dick M. Johnson, safety board. CURE PARALYSIS VICTIM William Kruman Moved to Culver Home; Now Able to Sit Up. Following two months in the Methodist hospital, where he was brought suffering from Landry’s paralysis, William J. Kruman has been returned to his home in Culver. Kruman is the first person to ! recover from the disease in Indiana. I At one time the paralysis had j reached from his feet to his ab- ; domen. Death ordinarily occurs j when the paralysis reaches the respiratory organs. Kruman was able to sit in a wheel chair when removed from the hospital. It is expected that he I will be able to walk within a short : time. AUSTRIA HITS AT NAZIS Retaliates by Forbidding Citizens to Enter Germany. By Vnited Press VIENNA. June I.—Austria took its turn today in the exchange of retaliatory measures with Nazi Germany. The government decreed that no Austrian will be allowed to go to Germany except on urgent business which must b? proved. A fee of five shillings will be imposed on any one who receives permission to cross the frontier.

Divorce Denied Millionaire After Sensational Hearing

“I can smear all his charges . . . “She bit my ear . . . Charges and counter-charges flew fast in the Newport..R. 1., courtroom where Mrs. Eugene Woodward Jelke, 27-year-old southern belle, fought the divorce suit of millionaire F. Frazier Jelke. Mrs. Jelke is seen, left, in a new' photo as she the courthouse with Morgan J. O’Brien, Jr., of New York, one of her attorneys. Her 53-year-old husband is shown at the right.

43 TO RECEIVE LAWMEES Indiana School to Confer Honors on Graduates Friday Night. The degree of bachelor of laws will be conferred upon forty-three graduates of the Indiana law school at exercises Friday night at the Claypool. Frank H. Hatfield, Evansville, state bar association president, will give the principal address. Richard Hunt Oberreich, Indianapolis, will deliver the valedictory address. Roll call of graduates by years will be held, with some of the school’s graduates giving short talks. Ralph Bamberger. Indianapolis, will be toastmaster. Directors and officers of the alumni association will be elected. Wilmer T. Fox, Jeffersonville, is alumni president. Degrees will be conferred upon: John Lewis Coleman. John Hutchings Daily, B. Nelson Deranian. George Manning Dickson Jr., Robert A. Hendrickson, Rov Oliver Johnson. John Hampden Metford. Lawrence Edgar Newby. Frank Joseph Noll. Richard Hunt Oberreich. Palmer Findley. Bough Padgett. John Timothy Rocap, Donald Richard Schortemeier, Edwin M. Shea. Stephen Patrick Sullivan, Urban Kari Wilde Jr.. Horace Orlando Wright. Frank Wesley Yarbrough and Albert Adam Zimmerman, all of Indianapolis: Virgil Emerson Hire. Harry Hugh Kennerk and John Francis Martin, ail of Ft. Wayne: John C. Armstrong. Auburn; John Engle Bales. Winchester; Andrew Thomas Barrett. W'eatherlv. Pa.: Robert Franklin Charles. Marion: William Francis Conlon. Glassport. Pa.; A. Luke J. Crispi. Red Bank. N. J.; James Frederick Dumas, Fowler; Warren Robert Everett. Terre Haute; Vere Felker. Harrisburg. Pa.: Gerald Edward Fenelon, Peoria. 111.: Ronald Lyndon Gillam. Remington; John Newell Hughes. Rushville; John Joseph Marauette, Carthage. N. Y.: George Rumpler Metford, Madison; William Dale Rafferty. Greenfield; Edgar Davidson Randolph Jr.. Lafayette: John Desmond Rawlings, New Harmony; W'illiam John Schroder. Osgood; Charles Alvin Seal. Washington; Howard Dale Simons. French Lick, and Roy C. Sutherlin. Greencastle.

William Zimmerman One of Columbia Conserve Heads in Early Years. Program of the interior department to train the 200,000 Indian wards of the federal government to handle their property valued at a billion dollars has been given impetus by the appointment of William Zimmerman Jr. as assistant commissioner of Indian affairs. He formerly was connected with the Columbia Conserve Company here. Zimmerman was a vice-president of the co-operatively owned and operated Columbia company three years from 1917 to 1920. He worked with William P. Hupgood and Nor- ; man Hutchings, founders of the j company, which has nation-wide ! prominence as a successful experiS ment in industrial democracy, j In his new work. Zimmerman will | be confronted with problems resembling in considerable degree those faced by the Columbia company founders. Zimmerman is a graduate of the Harvard university graduate school of business administration. Complete self determination, in ' evdry sense “anew deal" for the Indians, is planned, according to Zimmerman’s chief. John Collier, commissioner of Indian affairs. Management of Indians’ property, consisting of timber, oil. coal, water | power, farming, and grazing lands ; has been done by the Indian affairs office in Washington. Among the preliminary steps in i the new program was the appoint - i ment of Wade Crawford, a Klamath Indian, as superintendent of the Klamath Indian reservation in Oregon. one of the largest and richest reservations in the west, with timber resources valued at millions of dollars. ATTACKERS ARE JAILED Fines of SIOO. 120-Dav Sentences Given to Three Men. By f iiif. </ Press j FT. WAYNE. Ind.. June I.—Fines of SIOO and costs and sentences of 120 days each on assault and batI tery charges were given three suspected members of a slot machine ! hijacking ring in city court here i Wednesday. Those sentenced were Robert Mc- . Cune and Norman and Earl Manier. | They were said to have mistreated 1 Mrs. Maud Hiser. proprietor of a : tearoom, and Hazel Hatler. an em--1 ploye. while hijacking a slot machine in the place. Banking Board to Meet Second meeting of the newly appointed state banking commission will be held at the statehouse tonight. it was announced by Governor Paul V. McNutt. The commission has no official status until July 1. when the new financial institution* act becomes ’effective*

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Wife Also Is Refused Decree by Jurist in Jelke Case. Bn United rress NEWPORT, R. 1.. June I.—Judge Charles A. Walsh today denied the petitions of both parties in the Jelke divorce case. The result was that neither F. Frazier Jelke, 53-year-oid New York millionaire, nor Mrs. Eugenie (Nini) (Ala.) belle, obtained the divorce each had sought on a trial W'hich lasted tw'o and one-lialf weeks, and resulted in startling accusations of misconduct and cruelty. They lived together less than nine months. In announcing his decision, Judge Walsh said: “In this case, as it appears that each of the parties hereto has been guilty of extreme cruelty toward the other, we can not grant either of them release. The original petition for divorce is denied and dismissed. The motion in the nature of a cross-petition for divorce is denied and dismissed.” Thirteen-Page Decision Judge Walsh’s thirteen-page decision left both parties with the right to carry the case to the state supreme court. It was filed w'ith the clerk in an empty courtroom. Neither Jelke nor his slender, blond wife was present. Regarding the mutual charges of extreme cruelty, he stated: “There is no doubt from all the evidence that this 53-year-old husoand was deeply infatuated with his young wife, and we are not convinced that the wife reciprocated this affection. “We are inclined to believe that for her it was a marriage of convenience and an opportunity to indulge in luxury rather than an opportunity to become a helpmeet to her husband. Quarrels Were Natural “The wife liked excitement, social affairs and a good time, and no blame is attached to her for that, because at her age such things are expected. “The husband was settled in his habits and was less inclined to excitement or active social affairs. “Under these conditions it was to be expected that the husband’s refusal to partake to the fullest extent in the wife’s pleasures would cause quarrels between them.”

JAIL JUDGE ATTACKER Farmer Gets Six Months for Admitting Part in Mobbing, By T'niteil Press ORANGE CITY, la., June I. Richard Popken. a farmer, began serving a six months’ term in the Plymouth county jail today on a i plea of guilty entered into charges j that he participated in the attack a month ago on Judge Charles C. ! Bradley of circuit court. Popken also received a one-year sentence j on a charge of interfering with le- j gal processes, but the second sen- j tence was suspended. Judge Bradley was jerked from his courtroom and threatened with ! hanging when he refused to promise not to sign further mortgage foreclosures in lowa. Leg Sore Healed and Disappeared Mr. L. H. Nelson. 2SO Charles St., j Providence, It. I„ says this about I I 1 ETERSON’S OIXTMENT. ‘‘Years ago I was going to three dis- ' ferent doctors for a leg sore, but I got j no better. I started to buy salves of all kinds, but with no results. Then a ! friend of mone told me to try PETER- I SON S OINTMENT. I got a 35-cent ! box. applied the ointment and got im- , mediate relief. I had an ulcer as large I as a silver dollar, but in three weeks it j was well.” Get a box of this wonder ointment j and try it now. for that old. stubborn ! sore, for eczema eruptions, itching, j painful piles. It means instant relief j or money hack. Only So cents—large", box—at druggist. And try Peterson's ! Mrdciated Soap—it's great—only 10c a j cake. SAMPLE of ointment FREE. Write j Peterson Ointment Cos., Dept. TANARUS., Bus- j MONEY-BACK ] GLAND TONIC igorous Health We guarantee to restore your pep. 1 vig'T. vitality; or we refund every cent. That’s how sure we are that we have tlie best gland remedy known. Thousands of tests have proved this to our full satisfaction. Now WITHOUT RISK, you can prove it to yours. Glendage is the last word in modern science. In convenient tablet form. Glendage contains extracts from the glands of healthy animals. The effect is astonishing—almost magical! You feel and look years younger! Your interest in life returns. Vigorous health is necessary for success in ail activity today; Do not confuse Glendage with other so-called gland remedies. It is entire- 1 iv unlike others—lS A REAL GLAND ! PRODUCT and carries and UNLIMITED , GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION OR ! MONEY BACK. You owe it to yottr- j self and family to try this new day gland remedy. 30-day treatment. $3. at I Hook Drug Cos.. I.iggetfs and Wal- j green, or from Joseph A. Piuma. Dept. I 13, Los Angeles.—Advertlseaieat* 1 *

41 TO BE GIVEN LAWDIPLQMAS Benjamin Harrison Dinner to Be Held Tonight at Columbia Club. Thirty-fifth annual dinner and commencement of the Benjamin Harrison Law school will be held at the Columbia Club tonight. Starting with a dinner for the forty-one seniors, the faculty and guests at 6:30, commencement exercises will follow at 8 in the ladies’ dining room. Roy O. Johnson will give the class prophecy; Russell A. Furr, class president, the valedictory address, and Everett C. Ballard, Chicago attorney, the commencement address. The senior dance will close the exercises. The LL. B. degree will oe conferred on the following: Mary E. Beale, Frederic Bishop. Robert Carrico, Frances Carter, Rozora Chance, Phoebe B. Comer, Edna Conduitt, Jacob F. Delker. Henry J. Denk; J. Roland Duvall. Darrell A. Endicott. Harry Epstein Minnie Evans. William F. Evans James B. Fenner, Halbert Fillinger, Richard J. Frantz. Furr. Mildred Callagher Olga Geilser, Gaston G. Griffith. Edward J. Hammer. Arthur W. Hendricks Bert K. Heitkam, Albert C. Holman. Maxoseß> Karl M. Jacobs, Johnson “dgar I. Klain, rrzia C. Knoop. Frank A. Mueller, Gus Mueller Jr.. Robert Robbins. Malcolm B. Routt. Irene C. Sanders Leslie W. Schoppe. Jeanette Seaman. Karl Stout, Roscoe Stovall, Leon Sullivan and Frank H. Swindler. Mr. Landlord, if you have vacant property, now is the time to rent it. For rentfl results at the lowest rates in Indianapolis, call Want Ad Headquarters, Ri. 5551.

HANDY RECIPE jlßglfflil 1 CABINET sssfir* . .7 — balanced collection of reci- < <• . pes ranging from appetizers and pllipi - ! beverages to soups and vege- '' \ ! tables. Each one has been tested and apj DoHere are scores of brand-new recipes you’ll want to try. Here are dozens of delightful surprises for the family, for the bridge party, for every menu need. One cabinet printed in four Here, moreover, is a handy place to file all those fav- ouaHtv^pjn^n 1 ?! i f avy ’ hl K h oi its recipes of your own which are now scattered through processed so that finger marks half a dozen cook books. Each cabinet contains 50 extra can be readily removed with a cards. You can write on these extra cards your special damp cloth. Size: 5!->x3!4x3 recipes and file them in the proper compartments, where inches. you can find them quickly the next time you want them. , • -Ninety-one recipes each Once you have one of The Times new Recipe Cabinets, selected, tested and approved you’ll wonder how you ever got along without it. Get by cooking experts—classified yours today. It’s the biggest 25 cents worth of kitchen under the following headings : help and culinary assistance on the market today! Price 25c. By mail, 33c. Appetizers , Beverages Obtainable at the Office of The Indianapolis Times Breads, Sandwiches, Cereals Cakes, Cookies, Frostings * Combination Dishes USE THIS BLANK TO ORDER BY MAIL! !; Confections The Indianapolis Times, • !• Desserts 214 West Maryland St. ;l Lggs, Cheese Indianapolis. j: Meats, Poultry, Fish Inclosed is $ in stamps ( ) money order ( ) for which !> Preservation please send me postpaid Indianapolis Times Recipe I; Salads, Salad Dressing Cabinet(s). j’ Sauces, Dressings Mr Name ij Vegetables Address I; Menus cny state j: Kitehen Bints I; rifty Blank Cards.

—Dietz on Science—‘COSMlC FOG’ FILLS SPACE, SAYSAVANTS Red Hue of Stars Is Attributed to Fine •Mist/ BY DAVID DIETZ Scripps-Howard Science Editor A “cosmic fog" fills the space between stars. It is a fog so tenuous that the average person would be inclined to think of it as nonexistent. However, the astronomers at the’Yerkes observatory, using the forty-inch refracting telescope, the largest of its kind in the world, have measured its density. They find that it is so thin that all the material in the lein of sight between the earth and a star 10.000 light-years away, could be packed into a half-inch cube. (A lightyear is six trillon miles.) Every one knows that the sun appears red at sunrise or sunset. This is because its rays than pass through a longer path in the earth’s atmosphere than they do at other times of the day. If there is a cosmic fog. it ought to affect stars in a similar fashion. Asa result, th more distant stars ought to appear redder than the near ones. Sky Appears Blue Observations made at both the Yerkes observatory, which is in Wisconsin, and at the Lick observatory in California, show that the more distant stars are redder in color. From these observations, the Yerkes astronomers calculated the density of the cosmic fog. The sky appears blue to us for the same reason that the sun is reddened at sunrise or sunset. The sunset always is a little redder in appearance than it should be. This is because the atmosphere transmits the long waves of red light better than it dqes the short waves of blue light. The blue light from the sun is reflected or scattered in all directions by the molecules of air. That is why the sky appears blue to us. The direct sunlight lost by scattering reappears as the blue of the sky. Space Is Illuminated Now, if there is a cosmic fog which reddens the light of distant stars, the cosmic fog must do this by scattering the blue light of the stars. And theoretically, this scattering ought to give rise to a faint illumination of space, furnishing a luminous background on which is projected the more luminous images of the stars themselves. Dr. Otto Struve, the director of the Yerkes observatory, has made calculations to see how great this scattered illumination should be. He comes to the conclusion that interstellar space is actually blue and not black as formerly supposed. Gaseous nebulae within our galaxy may be regarded as local condensations in the cosmic fog. They are objects therefore of particular interest in the present study. Observations at Yerkes indicate that these nebulae are slightly bluer than the stars in their vicinity.

—■- - - fIT-nlßaaifflsrts 1 Jttne ia , 17&5 ’John Adams, ta Arnerican ambassador, ■meet s- Gocigom. reportalas sayirto y/mphf" hoMl ' ’ .a 'SW4A* yoisvt )/ t I r Vt' -T, I Capt. 1 aivr^ip^e tells crew, '£on'i£ivP upth&shipf' i 1935 “Militarists say I thing to arms / Conference levies.

GANG SUSPECTS HELDjN PRISON Five, Accused in Culver Bank Holdup, Moved to Michigan City. Rii United Pr> PLYMOUTH, Ind., June I—Five men charged with robbery of the State Exchange bank of Culver were held in the state prison at Michigan City today as Prosecutor Don Kitch prepaied the case to be presented against them in Marshall circuit court. The body of Joseph Switalski. former Chicago policeman and driver of the bandit car. was claimed by relatives Wednesday. He was shot by a Culver citizen immediately after the robbery. In a surprise move to prevent a possible attempt of confederates to release the suspects. Judge Albert Chipman had the men brought before him last Wednesday. Without asking for pleas, he ordered them transferred to the state prison at Michigan City for safekeeping. They originally were scheduled to appear in court today. All were given one week to obtain counsel and prepare their defense. Meantime, authorities and robbery victims from surrounding states continued efforts to identify the men held. Detective Chief William Shoemaker. Chicago, identified one defendant giving the name of James Davies, Tampa, Fla., as Danny McGeoghegan, Chicago underworld character. Times Want Ads cost only 3 cents a word. Ri. 5551 is the number for results at low cost.

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.JUNE 1, 1933

FRANCE DELAYS ACTION TO PAY DEBT TO U. S. Prospect of Early Decision on Money Due America Is Waning. tin T nited Prtux PARIS, June I.—Praspect of early payment to the United States of either the defaulted December war debt installment or the instalfllment due June 15 waned today when the chamber of deputies adjourned until June 9 after passage of the budge: in an ail night session. When the chamber meets again there will be but six days of debate before the June payment is due. There has been no notice of a motion even to raise the debt question. It i maineci to be seen whether . ome last minute development would induce Premie-; Edouard Daladier to raise the issue in the chamber. But the Socialists were ranged against payment, and might defeat Daladier if he proposed to pay, us they did his predecessor, Edouard Herriot. PAPER PUT ON AUCTION Washington Post Goes on Block by Order of Court. II i Unit, and /’rot* WASHINGTON. June 1 —The Washington Post was put up lor sale at public auction -today, climaxing months of litigation and struggling for control of the property, one of the two morning newspapers in the Capital City. Sale oi the paper, which recently was thrown into receivership, was ordered by the courts at request of the trustee of its owners, the estate of the late John P. McLean. r d p Corns Lift Right Out! FREEZONE does it! Puts the corn to sleep—deadens all pain—and soon makes it so loose in its bed of flesh that it lifts right out! Hard corns or soft—all are quickly ended by FREEZONE. Calluses, too. Get a bottle at any drug store and walk in comfort! FREEZONE