Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1937 — Page 3

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THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1937 (

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ITALIAN ARMY ‘DePauw Starts Second

a PRR ER HA Rh NS RG OE eis

PAGE 8 |

LOCAL MAN, 53,

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. INDICT CANCILLA

AND BAKER ON MAYHEM COUNT

G-Men Now May Enter Hunt; Assault and Battery Also Charged.

(Continued from Page One)

of attack by Cancilla, Mr. Spencer said. This statement, and an earlier one, were to be read to the jurors this morning.

Text of Letter In a letter to the prosecutor yesterday, Mr. Nolan wrote: “I have been informed of the assault on Wayne Coy by Cancilla in this county March 1, last. I have been informed by Dr. H. L. Foreman, Mr. Coy’s physician, Thiele Mr. Coy's lip was cut and slit when he was assailed and that he will be disfigured thereby. It seems, therefore, that this statute of Indiana defining the crime of may-

hem may have been violated by Cancilla, that Cancilla is a fugitive from justice, and that he probably traveled from Indiana to some other state. “Therefore, it is my opinion that the Federal statute has been violated by Cancilla. I suggest that if you will institute or cause to be instituted proceedings charging Cancilla with the crime of may-

In the spectator-packed caucus Senate Judiciary Committee, Homer S. Cummings, leaning over

Attorney General

the exponents of the President's Supreme Court measure with an hour's exposition of reasons for

room before the the bill's enactm

the table, led off Borah at the tab

(D. Nev.).

—Acme Telephoto.

ent. When he concluded, his rea-

soning was attacked vigorously by Senator Borah (R. Idaho), seated at extreme left.

Beside Senator le are shown, left to right, Senators

Ashurst (D. Ariz), Neely (D. W. Va), McCarran

hem, din violation of the Indiana statutes, I will call upon the | Federal Bureau of Investigation to | investigate and report to me the whereabouts of Cancilla and other pertinent facts from which I may | determine whether there should be | an inquiry by the Federal Grand | ury.” The penalty for mayhem under the Federal statute is a fine not to exceed $5000 or imprisonment not | lenger than five years, or both. The penalty for assault and battery with intent to kill is a fine not to exceed $1000, to which may be added a one-year prison sentence. An affidavit on the latter charge has been filed in Municipal Court, signed by a city detective.

JAIL CELL APPEALS TO GUN MERCHANT

By United Press | NEW YORK, March 11.— Moe | Saraga, who sold the gun that killed | Norman Redwood, union executive, stayed in jail today by choice. The former gun merchant to the | Arthur (Dutch Schultz) Flegenheimer gang told his attorney that after his disclosures of former customers he felt safer in jail. He expressed considerable anxiety for his wife and three children.

$12,000 COMMUNITY HOUSE TO BE BUILT

A permit for the construction of a Northeast Community House at a cost of $12,000 was granted to the Brightwood Civic Association today. The structure is to be erected at 30th and LaSalle Sts., adjoining Washington Park. Construction is to be under WPA supervision and is to be financed by the citizens of Brightwood.

BOTH PARTIES SHOW CAMPAIGN DEFICITS

By United Press WASHINGTON, March 11.—The Democratic and Republican National Committees showed today in their reports to Congress that they still have deficits, but that they are moving toward balanced budg-

Death Plunge New Idea of D’Annunzio

By United Press GARDONE, Italy, March 11. —Gabriele d’Annunzio, soldier, poet and greav lover, is toying with the idea of plunging to death in an airplane laden with bombs instead of dissolving himself in chemicals to avoid dying unpoetically in bed, his friends said today. Someé of the friends, in turn, feared that he might select as the occasion for his proposed grand exit tomorrow, his 74th birthday. D’Annunzio, according to reports, had fixed on the chemical bath as the best means of anticipating the “agony” of dying “between bed sheets,” as he put it in a recent letter to Achille Starace, secretary general of the Fascist Party. But he visited the Trieste shipyards recently, happened to see an aerial bombing exhibition, and conceived the idea that it might be better to fly high up into the sky in a bombladen plane and plunge down onto an Alp, thus ending himself about as effectively as if he had melted himself.

FASCIST SPIES PLOT

AGAINST U. S., CHARGE

By United Press WASHINGTON, March 11. Chairman Samuel Dickstein (D. N. Y.) of the House Immigration Committee, told the House Rules Committee today that he knows 100 spies in this country who are fomenting a Fascist plot against the Government. Rep. Dickstein appeared before the committee seeking quick action on his resolution for a Congressional investigation into all phases of alleged foreign propaganda and financing of organizations circulating “slanderous or libelous unAmerican propaganda or religious, racial or subversive propaganda” in this country.

IN INDIA

MEETINGS TODAY

Indianapolis Real Estate Board, Juncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Advertising Club of Indianapolis, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon. Indiana State-Wide Rural Electric Membership Corporation, meeting, Hotel Lincoln, 10 a. m. . : Indianapolis Home Show, dinner, Indianapolis Athletic Club, 6:15 p. " American Business Club, luncheon, CoJumbia Club, noon g Indiana Independent Petroleum Association, convention, Hotel Severin, all day, Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade,

noon. i Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

noon Ophthalmological and Otolaryngological Society, dinner, Indianapolis Athletic Club, 6:30 p. m Federation of Federal Employees, Local 8. meeting. Hotel Lincoln, 8 League of Women Voters, lumbia Club, 10:30 a. m, Bookbinders Union, 353, Severin, 7:30 p. m, Acacia, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Foundrymen's Association, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Indiana Retail Coal Merchants’ tion, meeting. Hotel Lincoln, 8 p. m. Caravan Club, lungheon, Murat Temple,

p. m. meeting, Co-

meeting, Hotel

Associa-

noon Indiana Motor Traffic Association, luncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon Community Fund, Club, noon, . Women’s Legal Club, initiation and dinner, Hotel Lincoln, § p. m . . C. Racquet Club. dinner, s Athletic Club, 6:30 p. m. y Central Garage Demo eratic Club, meeting, Hotel Lincoln, 7:30 Pp

luncheon, Columbia

Indian-

ow Ts Riverside Roller Ace Club, meeting, Hotel 7 . Mm.

Lincoln, 7:

MARRIAGE LICENSES

(Incorrect addresses frequently are given to the Marriage License Bureau deliberately. The Times in printing the official list assumes no responsibility for such addresses.)

Bertha 5, Indianap-

Orket Lucas, 23

Harrison; May Lingenfelter, . 3

Ft. 16, R. R olis. William Franzman, Indianapolis;

76. Marie Hofman, 70, of 534 N. Keystone Ave, John Henrv Alexander. 32, of ys h J : of 1905

Thelma Thomas, 27, Ave. Gilbert James Mueller, 24, Norwood, O.: Marian E. Baker, 20. of 1107 Wallace St. Carl Andre. 21, of 1132 N.' Denny St.: 18, of 518 N.

Styictor P. Powers, 28, attendant at Central State Hospital: Opal Fern Bradley, 23, attendant at Central State Hospital. George Hiatt, 50, of 707 Wh Mable Loeke, 48. of 2622 N. Hardi S Lee Allen Carman, 31, 3171 N. | St.: Verna Jean Getz, 23, of 245 W. Maple | Road.

Mildred Kirkman, Alabama

NAPOLIS

Herbert Crawley, 52, at City. pellegra. John Ernest Price, 40, at 1215 S. Meridian, carcinoma. Phillip Polster. 79, at 1040 S. East, chronic mvocarditis Phyllis Johnson, 65, at 802 Torbett, lobar pneumonia Giffor§ Corneil, 15, at City, streptococcic septicaemia. James P. Nolen, 38, at St. mitral stenosis Julius P, Michael, 85 at Methodist, arteriosclerosis. Jacob C. Young, 86, at 1815 N. Talbott, cardiac vascular renal disease. Margaret Ridley. 53, at 1525 Cornell, cerebral hemorrhage. Leon W. Kennerly, berculous meningitis. Eba Austin, 43, at pendicities John Thomas Smith, 77, at 1445 Martindale, cardiovascular renal disease. Barbara Lee Poindexter. 6 months, 2227 Pleasant, broncho-pneumonia. 521 Berdiphtheria.

Vincent's,

40, at Veterans’, tu-

Veterans’, acute ap-

Luella M. Weinbrecht, 36, at wick, mitral stenosis

Naomi J. Garr, 4, at City,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

hee United States Weather Bureau ame

INDIANAPOLIS cloudy tonight and tomorrow: not so cold tonight; lowest temperature 25 to 30.

5:43

Sunset .....

TEMPERATURE —March 11, 1936— . BO 1p. Mmm........ BF

Sunrise

BAROMETER Yam. 900 Fp me... Sore

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending at 7 a. m. 17 Total precipitation since Jan. 10.15 Excess since Jan, 1 3.

MIDWEST FORECAST Indiana—Mostly cloudy tonight and Friday, possibly light snow extreme north tonight; not so cold tonight east and south portions, Ilinois—Mostly cloudy tonight and Friday, possibly light snow extreme northeast portion early tonight; not much change in temperature. Lower Michigan—Occasional light snow probable tonight and Friday; not so cold east portion tonight Ohio—Mostly cloudy. probably light snow in extreme north portion tonight and Friday; not quite so cold tonight. Kentucky—Generally fair tonight Friday, warmer tonight.

and

| WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 3 A. M.

Station Weather. Bar. Amarillo, Tex. Bismarck, N. D

Boston

| termined upon.

FORECAST — Mostly |

Labor's Biggest

Drive Opens

As C.1.0. Enters Textile Field

(Continued from Page One)

[knitted goods. In any case, it will | probably defer for a while the big[gest segment—cotton textiles, in | which nearly 500,000 are curently | employed.

| Closed Shop Demand Unlikely |

| As soon as one of these sub- | divisions is 60 per cent or more or- | ganized union leaders will demand | agreements involving recognition, | contracts, and improved wages and | working conditions. Mr. Hillman's | record suggests that he will not (make an issue of the closed shop, although his own union has many | “preferential shop” contracts. | The mistakes of the 1934 ‘“‘general strike” in textiles, which the United | Textile Workers ran, are not likely [to be repeated. | The unionists will investigate the | competitive situation in each part lof the industry, and then synchro[nize their efforts to avoid establishing unfair wage differentials which | would further the present “runaway” | of textiles from high-wage areas. In | this movement hundreds of mills have left Massachusetts, New York | and similar areas for low-wage re- | gions like Maine and the South. | It is unlikely that “flying squadrons” of unionists in automobiles | will move from town to town trying [to close mills in which unionization | has not progressed. Such tactics | raised resentment in 1934 compar‘able to the resentment against sit- | downs now. A policy regarding sit- | downs themselves has not been de-

‘World Treaty to Be ‘Sought at Conference

By United Press | WASHINGTON, March 11.—The | Committee for Industrial Organiza- | tion will recommend to the forthcoming world textile conference an international agreement regulating working hours of employees in textile mills throughout the world, 1t was learned today. Great Britain, France, Belgium and Czechoslovakia already have indicated that they would be represented at the meetings, scheduled to open here April 2. Officials said Germany was not expected to send a representative. A report by the International Labor Office in Geneva said that “the United States is about the only

now on a 40-hour week. In most other countries the weekly hours range from 48 to 60.” Francis Gorman, president of the United Textile Workers, declared, however, that in many Southern establishments the work-week ranged [Te 55 and 60 hours.

‘Strikers Still Hold ‘Aladdin Plant

country in which the industry is |

of the Commercial Telegrapers’ Union. Mr. Powers, a member of the Federation who has been seeking to bring peace to the organized labor factions, telegraphed John L. Lewis, C. I. O. chairman, suggesting that he meet with the Federation and a Federal mediator. He suggested that either Assistant Labor Secretary Edward F. MecGrady or James Dewey, Labor Department mediator, would be a satisfactory party.

conferring with coal operators on a proposed new contract between them and his United Mine Workers in the Appalachian bituminous fields.

NAZI PRESS REPORTS BRING U.S. ACTION

Dodd Instructed to File

Representations.

By United Press WASHINGTON, March 11.—Ambassador William E. Dodd in Berlin today was instructed to make emphatic diplomatic representations to the German Government over allegedly slurring anti-American articles appearing recently in the German press. The action came less than a week after the German Government lodged an official protest against remarks made by Mayor Fiorello La Guardia of New York, who suggested that a statue of Chancellor Adolph Hitler be placed in a “chamber of horrors” at the forthcoming World's Fair in New York. This Government apologized to Germany at that time, The representations were instigated by a letter from Mrs. Stephen Wise, wife of Rabbi Wise and chairman of the Woman's Section of the American Jewish Conference. Her letter called attention to allegedly slurring and offensive remarks contained in articles which had appeared in the German press. American womanhood in particular was allegedly insulted.

‘FIRE UNDER CONTROL ON SHIP IN PACIFIC

By United Press SAN DIEGO, Cal, March 11.— The Coast Guard station at San Diego said today it had intercepted a radio message from the British motorship Silverlarch, 900 miles northeast of Honolulu, that a fire

By United Press | ALEXANDRIA, Ind. March 11.— | Further court action deferred until | tomorrow, approximately 100 sitdowners today continued to hold the Aladdin Industries Lamp plant here. The strikers defied a Madison Circuit Court temporary restraining order ordering their eviction | and Judge Charles E. Smith has

| indicated he will rule tomorrow on |

| the company's application to make | the order permanent, | Dismissal notices to the sit- | downers, mostly women, were con- | tained in pay envelopes distributed | last week.

Sponsors Labor

“2 Peace Move

By United Press WASHINGTON, March 11.—An 11th-hour effort to bring about a reconciliation between the C. I. O. and the A. F. of L. was sponsored

burning on the ship was under con- | trol and that immediate assistance was not needed. The trawler Normandie of San Francisco was sunk in a collision with the freighter Alamar 11 miles off Humboldt Bar, according to radio reports received today. The crew of 10 was saved.

'MOONEY RESOLUTION DEFEAT PREDICTED

By United Press SACRAMENTO, Cal, March 11.— A resolution seeking a legislative pardon for Tom Mooney, convicted in the San Francisco Preparedness Day bombing, moved to the State Senate today where leaders indicated it had little chance of passage. The resolution, the constitutionality of which was challenged during debate, was approved late yesterday in the House of Representatives, 45 to 28.

BS £3 } t .

today by Frank Powers, president |

Mr. Lewis is now in New York |

IN SPAIN BARD BY PRISONERS

21,000 Aiding Rebels on Guadalajara Front, Say Captives.

(Continued from Page One)

He said he had been mobilized into the Italian Army. The Italian divisions, Placido said, are composed of two or three regiments each; each regiment has three battalions of 60 men each, reinforced with tanks and armored cars, He said Italian tanks were manned by Italian crews. He said he came to Spain on the steamer Lombardia with 4500 to 5000 other soldiers.

Wore Italian Uniform

Sergt. Placido told questioners that he saw other Italian ships with men and war materials at Cadiz and an Italian warship, the Armando Diaz, which had escorted his troop ship. All officers of the Italian divisions are Italians and all supplies came from Italy, he said. When captured Sergt. Placido wore an Italian army uniform, carried an Italian gas mask and camoufiage cape. He said he belonged to the Secnod Division which carried a flag called “termeraria” and was commanded by Gen. Coppi. His major was named Tieri, he said, and his lieutenant, Tiroletto. One captured Italian officer said he had led his men into a Loyalist trap on the right flank of the Guadalajara sector northeast of Madrid hecause he lost his way in the hills.

Lost Map, Says Officer

“I lost my map,” he said, “and | was unable to ask the Spaniards for aid because I cannot speak a word of Spanish.” One report after the capture was that two Italian companies which

wounding several in each company before Loyalists surrounded one company and took most of them prisoners. The 41 Ttalian prisoners whom press correspondents were allowed to see included three officers, grouped together in a room in the basement of the War Ministry. The Italians rose quickly from mattresses on the floor of their cell when the correspondents came in, following eight Loyalist militiamen carrying rifles with fixed bayonets. | The prisoners were patently fright- | ened, but a spokesman of the { Madrid high command reassured them: Denies He's a Fascist

| | “You may be at your ease—we | merely are going to take pictures.” | One answered quickly in Italian: | “Thank you very much. We are not afraid, for we are not Fascists. We thought we were being sent to | Abyssinia.”

{ While they stood nervously with | ree backs to the wall—they wore

regulation Ttalian uniforms and hob-nailed boots—the rest of the 41 Italians were brought into the room. They were unshaven, the eyes of most were sunken and they appeared bewildered as well as frightened. The prisoners were herded into line for the news pictures, their heads bowed, several mumbling.

Easily Identified

The commanding officer of the lost Italians was a squat, swarthy man wearing the stars of a Spanish

colonel. Another officer was a lieutenant dressed in corduroy uniform with snappy officer’s boots and his silver lieutenant’s stars on his tunic. The third apparently was a non-commissioned officer, wearing no insignia of rank. The Italians could be identified easily by anyone familiar with Italians and their customs. Occasionally they mumbled in undertones to one another, but this was stopped by a Loyalist officer. Most of them were the short, peasant type numerous in the Italian army. Their commander carried in his hand an Italian trench helmet commonly seen in military displays in Rome. He wore the colors of an Italian machine gun company on his collar.

Century With Installation Of Her 14th President

Dr. Clyde E. Wildman Is Inaugurated in Colorful Ceremonies Which Are Attended By Representatives of 139 Schools.

(Editorial, Page 16; Photos, Page 4)

GREENCASTLE, Ind., March 11.—With Dr. Clyde E, Wildman occupying the president's chair, DePauw University began its second century.

ceremony colorful with the pageantry of an academic state occasion. To this. little college town came

representatives of 139 institutions of | higher learning, Methodist ministers | ADV Y from widely scattered areas, Gov- | ernor Townsend, three bishops of |’ the Methodist Church, and trustees, | IN LIGHTING ROADS alumni and friends of DePauw, They came to watch the in-| vestiture in Gobin Memorial Church, | M——————. to attend the inaugural luncheon in : Bowman Gymnasium, and for the More Experiments Needed, reception for Dr. Wildman in Rector | : oh | Motor Club Aid Says. Ceremony Is Colorful { ——————— The ceremony started in the| Lighting of extensive highway morning as a processional walked | mileage should be postponed until through falling snow to Gobin Church. Following the Uni- | ough experimentation and study as versity Choir in black robes came to the illumination effectiveness, the presidential party, then the dele- | Todd Stoops, secretary-manager of gates, then the DePauw faculty. |the Hoosier Motor Club, said today. All wore academic robes, with bril- | “Wholesale illumination of a hun-

philosophy, scarlet for theology, pink | has been suggested by some lighting for music, green for medicine, pur- | enthusiasts,” Mr. Stoops said, “would ple for law and gold-yellow for |cost at least $1,300,000,000 over a science, | 10-year period. In charge of the inaugural ex-| “Any such extensive program, ercises was Bishop Edgar Blake. Two | launched on the basis of hysteriaformer DePauw presidents—Bishops | producing propaganda, was conFrancis John McConnell and G.|demned at the American Automobile Bromley Oxnam-—sat beside Dr. | Association annual convention. Wildman while Boston University “That this stand of the national President Daniel L. Marsh pro- | motoring body was sound is demonnounced the invocation and while | strated by the fact that practically Roy O. West, former Secretary of the same position has been taken the Interior and president of the |by the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads Board of Trustees, voiced the in-| which administers the millions of vestiture, | dollars spent yearly by the GovernDr. Wildman Responds | ment in highway development.”

| the new president and Dr. Wildlost their way fought each other, |

Dr. Wildman responded. Bishop | BINED OLIIAINE McConnell delivered the charge «0 CONSIDER SUICIDE IN man delivered his inaugural address, pledging himself to “pre- | serye the best of the DePauw herit- | Ey United Press age.” Bishop Oxnam pronounced | FRANKFORT, Ind, March 11.— the benediction. | Authorities today considered a theThe party filed out of Gobin |ory of suicide in connection with the Church—named for Hillary Asbury | fatal shootintg of Carl Gregg, 46, Gobin, former DePauw president— | night police captain, at police headand entered Bowman Gymnasium |quarters last night. His hand was across the campus for the inaugural stained with powder burns. luncheon. y Fellow officers said Mr. Gregg had With 250 in attendance, 11 wel- |been nervous during the day and coming speeches were delivered. |expressed concern over a political Bishop Oxnam presided. Highlight | dispute involving the Police Departspeeches were those of Governor | ment. Townsend and Dr. William Lowe Bryan, Indiana University presi=dent. Kermit Arnold, Sioux City, Iowa, president of the DePauw

EXPECT SETTLEMENT

Dr. Wildman was inaugurated as the 14th president yesterday in a |

enter | there has been opportunity for thor- |

liant colored hood-linings: blue for | dred thousand miles of highway, as |

SHOOTING OF OFFICER

student body, represented the students, saying, “to the student, the president is above all counselor and mental and spiritual advisor. From our contacts thus far with you, Mr. President, you must realize the confidence we have in you.” Mrs. Rector Present Mrs. Edward Rector, widow of | Edward Rector, attended the cere- | monies. Mr. Rector was the school’s greatest benefactor, having donated three and a half million

IN FT. WAYNE STRIKE

KILLED BY CAR: COLD NEAR END

George Kimbrew Is 26th Pedestrian Victim So Far This Year.

(Continued from Page One)

the path of an automobile driven by [Paul Swain, 33, of 967 Ewing St. | The accident occurred at Sherman Dr. and 28th St.

Watchman Hit

Joseph F. Krebs, 66, of 330 S. Are lington Ave., was hurt yesterday when he was struck by an autos mobile driven by Charles R. Beers, (21, of 2161 E. 2d Ave. | Mr. Krebs, railroad crossing watch | man at 2000 Northwestern Ave., had | stepped from his watch-tower to flag a warning for a train of freight cars when he was struck, police said, He was sent to City Hospital. | Mrs. Effie Carpenter, 55, R. R. 18, | was hurt yesterday when her car [turned over in the 3500 block, W. 10th St. She was taken to Method=ist Hospital. Edgar Carpenter, 57, her husband, was driving the car, she said. Slippery streets were blamed for the accident, police said. Seven persons were being treated | today for injuries received when they fell on icy sidewalks. Oliver Mitchell, 72, of 2362 Enge lish Ave., and Addie Bell, 60, of 243 Virginia Ave., both received broken arms in falls. Mrs. Caroline Olsen, 79, of 923 Udell St. received a broken hip. Others who were hurt are Erie Hall, 66, of 544 N. ShefTield Ave.; Mrs. Henrietta Morris, 68, of 1117 E. Market St.: Eugen Macy, 35, of 1009 N. West St., and William Wintz, 24, of 1101 Central Ave. Mrs. Sadie Vaughn, 28, of 4138 Bowman Ave. was injured today when the automobile in which she was riding collided with a street car at Lexington and States Sts. She was taken to City Hospital. Anthony Domoglik, the driver, said his auto skidded on the ice.

Alabama Ends 22-Year Era Of Prohibition

By United Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala. March 11.— Alabama's 22-year era of prohibition was at an end today as the vote in | yesterday's election stood 89,764 for | repeal, 79,655 against.

a friend, |

By United Press Twenty-three of the State's 67 FT. WAYNE, Ind, March 11—A counties were in the wet column unstrike of 135 dry cleaning plant em- | der the local option measure adoptployees, called last Friday, was ex-|ed by the last Legislature with 22 pected to be settled today after [counties dry, The others were in members of the Master Dry Clean- | doubt, ers’ Association had agreed to grant| Under the law, liquor will be sold workers’ demands for higher wages | in State-operated stores in those and shorter hours. Wage increases | counties which vote wet. The repeal under the proposal range from 11 to |act will become effective as soon as 25 per cent, and maximum hours | Governor Graves proclaims results fixed are 40 for inside workers and of the election. Actual sale is exe 48 for deliverymen. | pected to start by April 1,

dollars. Included in his gifts are the two women’s dormitories, Rector Hall and Lucy Rowland Hall. | Accompanying Mrs. Rector yester- | day from Chicago was her niece, | Miss Mary Rowland. | Of the four living former presi- | dents of DePauw, two were absent. | Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, Wash- | ington, was unable to attend. A | congratulatory ‘telegram was received from the other, George R. Grose, Altadena, Cal. At the reception in Rector Hall, faculty and students congratulated the new president, The receiving line was composed of President and Mrs. Wildman, Bishop and Mrs, Oxnam, Dean of Women Helen Salzer, Prof. Francis C. Tilden, Dean R. G. McCutcheon, and Ralph WwW. Gwinn of New York, who delivered the welcoming speech representing the board of trustees.

SURVEY FLIGHT MAPPED

NEW YORK, March 11.—Pan American Airways announced today that the first survey flight on an aerial trade route across the Southern Pacific to American Samoa and Australasia will start this week from San Francisco.

JEUNE 8.75

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