Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1937 — Page 3
MONDAY, AUGUST 2,
GENERAL WAR THREAT GROWS ACUTE IN CHINA
Japanese Army Warns It May Bomb American Area In Tientsin.
1937
(Continued from Page One)
be bombed in Japan's “self-defense” war on China. Fifteenth infantrymen began this afternoon listing names of all Americans in the area, in the belief that a bombardment might be imminent and that lives of Americans would be endangered. United States flags — made in| Japan to retail at 50 cents—sold for | : several dollars each because of the | demand of Americans for something | to display on houses, automobiles | and rickshaws in hope of Japanese | respect. | } |
Food Prices Skyrocket
Food supplies were running low and prices skyrocketed. Many thousands of the Chinese refugees were hungry. Americans, including | the 15th Infantrymen, did inval- | uable service in finding the refugees sheiter in vacant schools and other buildings. But many lived in the open. The refugee situation was bad in Tientin, Mrs. Lin Tung-chi, nee Adeline Gray of San Francisco, alone took care of 20,000 Chinese refugees in the former German concession near the 15th Infantry barracks. Graduate of California University, wife of a Chinese professor at Nankai University, she herself was homeless. Her home was bombed. She organied aid for the helpless Chinese, broke down doors of deserted buildings to give them shelter and donated the last of her money to buy a pitifully small supply of rice for the victims. United Press correspondents whom she took around the refugee buildings told terrible stories of Japanese machine gunning crowds as they fled from the former Russian concession across the river. i
Shanghai Chinese
Quit Native Area By H. R. EKINS
United Press Staff Correspondent
SHANGHAI Aug. 2.-—Thousands on thousands of Chinese residents | of the native Chapei ares began | flocking into the International Settlement today in the belief that an | outbreak of war with Japan Wwas| imminent—an outbreak which, they | feared, would bring warships and airplane bombardment of the city. | Rumors. for which no substantiation could be obtained, caused the | flight. ie But the situation was increasingiy | tense and Nanking, the national capital up the Yanztze River, made | preparations to meet a Japanese airplane bombardment in event of war. Americans in the inferior of Shantung province were advised by consular officials to concentrate at Tsinan, on the Yellow River, and Tsingtao, on the coast. Nanking residents began camotuflaging rooftops and buss2s appeared | on the streets with new brown ca- | mouflage paint instead of the familiar blue and white.
U. S. May Act to Bar Recruiting
By United Press LOS ANGELES, Aug. that 182 American fliers were being recruited for Chinese war serv- | ice may bring a Federal inguiry, United States Attorney Peirson Hall
|
displayed here. North today were confronted with one mile north of Carmel, telling metropolis.
they might expect.
Times Special PITTSBURGH, Aug. 2.—All the tional Electric Co., Ambridge, Pa, | lines of the A. F. of L.. and the C. 1. This firm, with 1800 employees
2. —Reporis either the National Labor Relations Board or the Federal District Court. | ‘The American Federation of Labor holds a court order, just won indicated today. The report was! in U. S. District Court here, comthat 500 fliers are sought from the | nanding the company to abide by a Los Angeles area to fight China's |
air battles and that 182 have been |closed-shop contract with the Inorganized already. | ternational Brotherhood of Elec-
STATE ROAD BIDS DUE “mn. comm:
| The Committee
‘ : . i Organization has Bids on road improvement proj- | ects in nine counties are to be] : tomorrow by the State High- be sympathetic, a charge that the way Commission, according to | majority of the company’s workChairman Earl Crawford. | men belong to the C. I. O. United The projects, which are in Whit- | Electrical and Radio Workers of lev, Wayne, Wabash, Howard, La | America, and ‘hat the A. F. of L. Porte, Morgan, Union, Crawford and | affiliate is a “company union.” If Vanderburg Counties, are expected | the Labor Board, which has set to cost a total of $630.500. "hearings in the case, upholds the
for Industrial pending before
IN INDIANAPOLIS
MEETINGS TODAY Hotel
, Edward H. Camplin, 7i. at Central In-
| diana, hypostatic pneumonia luncheon, 14,
Lincoln, | tu-
James Elmer Hullinger, at Riley, noon, berculosis enteritis Indianapolis Waste erial Dealers’ As- Ruth McCloud, sociation, meeting, H Severin, 8 p. Mm. | heart disease Indianapolis Press Club, meeting, 7:30; Laura Howard. 83, m. cersbral hemorrhage. Nettie Westcott Schneider, 74, N. Illinois, hypostatic pneumonia,
Services Club,
Mat 52. at City, otel . at 263 Trowbridge, p Church of Positive ing, Hotel Lincoln, 8 North Side Realtors, Hotel Washington. noon. Hub Club, luncheon, Club,
noon Board of Trade, dinner, Board of Trade, 8
Christianity, meet- at 1446 b. 'm. luncheon,
Columbia
OFFICIAL WEATHER
«Ns fndiana University Club, luncheon, Co- | | United States Weather Bureaw
Jumbia Club, noon, Scientech Club, luncheon, Board of |. Trade, noon. { Irvington Republican Club, meeting, 544612 E. Washington St... 8 p. m Building Owners and Managers, eon, Columbia Club, noon. { Delta Upsilon, luncheon, Board of Trade, |
noon. . | Junts Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, | noon. Electric Columbia Club, noon
Salesmen’s Club, Nincheon, Hotel Washington, noon.
Sunrise 4:43 | Sunset ....... TEMPERATURE —Aug. 1, 1936—
© 1pm...
BAROMETER 30.18 1m...
nding 7 a. m...
lunch-
Is luncheon, a B= Meoeive
League,
| Precipitation 24 hrs. e | Total precipitation .. | SRCeSS Lo... iain. { MIDWEST WEATHER | _Indiana—Partly cloudy to cloudy. prob- | ably thundershowers northwest tonight or
tomorrow and east and south tomorrow: slightly warmer tonight. Ilinois—Rain with thundershowers tonight or tomorrow, slightly warmer northeast and south-central portions tonight: slightly cooler tomorrow in west-central portion, Lower Michigan—Increasing cloudiness, probably showers northwest beginning late tonight or tomorrow and northeast and southwest tomorrow; slightly warmer northeast and south-central portions tonight. Ohio—Fair tonight and probably tomorrow; not much change in temperature. Kentucky—Fair tonight, tomorrow partly cloudy. posibly local showers in west portion in afternoon; not much change in temperature.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station. J dmarHio, Tex... ....... Bismarck, N. D Boston Chicago Cincinnati ..\ nver
MEETINGS TOMORROW Collage Avenue Civic Association, meeting, 2309 College Ave. 7 p. m, Allied Investment, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. etail Shoe Men’s Association, luncheon,
Hotel Washnigton, noon. Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel,
noon, Alpha Tau Omega, luncheon, Board of Trade. noon. Gyro Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel, noon. Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, on. Universal Club, Columbia | Cai ersity of Michi Club, lunch niversity o Cc an ly c . Board of Trade, noon. " UICAEOn
Gamma Delta, dinner, Athenaeum, § p.m
luncheon,
BIRTHS
Boys Richard, Martha Kriner, at 1633 Chureh-
man. Prank, Ada Steeb, at 815 Lincoln. Hayden, Lula Arthur, at 2915 Wood. Girls Willie, Dorothy Cook. at 1850 Tallman. Twins John, Anna Wessel, at 1750 Morgan, boy and girl, :
«...Clear 10s Angeles .......... Miami, Fla. Minneapolis Mobile, Ala. New Orleans ...
DEATHS
Pearl Phillips, 56, Methodist, cinoma, Ruth Reeves, 37, at St. Vincent's, sub-
hepatic abscess. innfe Behrens, 65, at 1818 Lexington, e
cerebral hemorrhage. Katie Mi al 430 W. 28th, acute uremia
g eeks, 58, Jackie Lee Trussler, 8 months, at Riley. Dons Daas I. ‘at otis, ‘Glhivlc ‘val mmis., 35, a , “Cl ic - wular heart disease. 3 Yai
at car-
San Antonio, Tex San Francisco .. Loui
What's In a Sign’—Truckers Ask
Conflicting evidence in Indianapolis’ truck route controversy is Out-of-town truckers coming into the city
If they did so proceed. they ran into the sign shown below, which apparently fails to fulfill the promise of a hearty College Ave. welcome
Contlicting Federal Agencies Join Labor Factions’ Strife
the Labor Board, which seems to |
thrumatie
- {from Jackson, Mich., where a strike |
"| today were from Jackson. |
+i BUSINESSMEN PLAN
i r
HOUSE HEADS ACT TO SPEED ‘MUST" BILLS
Democratic Bloc Agrees to Push F. D. R.-Sponsored Legislative Measures.
(Continued from Page One)
able to give it a rule for House consideration this week. The Government Reorganiation Rill is likely to be delayed. Senate hearings started today on the measure, but action was not expected. Senator Byrd (D. Va.), charged
give vast power to the President for an indefinite period” and would re-
| to regain the power for itself.
‘Wage Bill Faces Stiff Contest
By RUTH FINNEY
| Times Special Writer | WASHINGTON, Aug. | Wage-Hour Bill faces its hardest | fight next week in the House. Opponents in that body place their | principal reliance on an effort to | toad the Bill down in Committee with liberal amendments which they
believe will handicap it on the floor. Judging by sentiment in the Sen-
| ate, committee changes will not be | | accepted if they survive debate on the | If two very dif- |
fioor of the House. ferent bills go to conference, there {i5 a possibility of a deadlock that | will gravely try the patience of the
| Administration’s most ardent sup- |
| porters. | Senate sponsors of the Bill were | pleased with the form in which it | finally emerged from the Senate. | While numerous exceptions were | added, nearly all of them concern i agricultural products. The new { wording simply makes specific ex-
| emptions which the Senate Labor |
| Committee believed it had included iin the general wording. | Changes in the child-labor pro- | visions took the Bill back to the
; form in which it was originally in- |
| troduced, with two methods of at- ; tack on the problem instead of one. { The amendment retains the ban on interstate shipments of child-labor ! goods, which has been in all along. . (and adds & ban on shipments into * | any state having an anti-child labor law. The bill finally passed the Sen-
ate by a two-to-one vote, after a| | motion to recommii had been de- |
| feated 37 to 47. It was on the re- | commit motion that the Democratic | Party split wide open. 22 Democrats | Joining the conservative Republican ! opposition to the hill.
Times Photos.
from the the sign shown at top, on U. S. 31, them just how io proceed into the
| Further Democratic Defection Feared
Bio United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 2—Coni servative Congressional Democrats | are milling uncertainly today toward | a bolt away from President Roose- | velt’s second New Deal program. So far they have junked
| to be routed by the New Deal when
| they sought in the Senate to add |
| wage and hours legislation to the iroubles of Job jook mild to the Na- | scrap heap. caught midway between the batile ! 0. | bolts and desertions. Governor La and an annual payroll of $5,000,000, | Follette, of Wisconsin, who was Mr.
is caught not only between two warring labor unions but also between | Roosevelt's yachting guest a week |
|
two conflicting Federal agencies. As a result it faces a new strike, similar | ago, made a week-end speech in the | | to one recently compromised in which there was rioting between A. F. of L. | Middle West urging extension of the jand C. I. O. members, and it is also likely to find itself in contempt of | Progressive Party movement which
i eramm———— ——————_———————————————
—-—| he heads. He would raise the pro- | gressive flag in other states. But after losing on the Judiciary Reorganization, Mr. Roosevelt's | Senate come-back on wages and : ; hours was impressive. If the Senate Meanwhile the company can-— | hag scuttled the bill Congress would 1. Observe its A. F. of L. contract | pe ready to wind up its business toand obey the Federal Court, in| gay and start home by the end of which case C. I. O. leaders have an- | the week. > nounced they will call a new strike. 2. Wait for a Wagner aci election and thus defy the Courts order. developin arty split. 3. Recognize the C. 1. O. if tHe | Smaaes it, Toward spending and latter wins the election, in which | New Deal reform or reorganization case it will not only be violating a | jssues in general tie South appears contract and a court order but will | ¢4 pe growing increasingly cold. The be in danger of a boycott by A. F.|majority of anti-New Deal Senate of L. electricians working an build- | votes cast by Democrats this session
C. I. O., the company will have %o defy either the board or the court.
Company Faces Dilemna
Evidence Is Ample
ing projects, and may alse face a have been expressions of Southern |
| strike of the A. .". of L. workers. | 4. Close down and deprive the| These symptoms of Southern unlittle community of Ambridge of one | rest are expected to develop further | of its biggest payrolls until the Gov- | in the House as the Wage and | ernments and organized labor can |Hours Bill is debated. principally { find some solution to the conflict. | because the South fears that rn | Federal board fixing wages might
“Uni | wipe out differentials which now Union Attorney Hurt | give Southern manufacturers cerIn Picket Clash
tain advantages over manufacturers Puy United Press
paving higher scales in the North. Observers attribute part of this | o FENDALLVILLE, Aug. 2.—Harold | party unrest to a cautious conservaSchwartz, Chicago. attorney for the |tjve movement away from Mr. International Ladies Garment | poosevelt and part to Congressional | Workers Union, was hurt slightly | resentment against White
sentiment.
(police at the Trenton Garment Co. ing the judicial reorganization pro-
| opening. posal last February. | The company moved here recently | i,
ARREST IS EXPECTED IN ATTACK SLAYING during a melee which occurred when
the strikers tried to stop workers | gy rnited Press from entering the plant. | NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—An arrest
halted operations. The pickets here |
Mr. Schwartz was knocked down |
| year-old Paula Magagna in a |
| Brooklyn cellar last week was pre- | PRIVATE COLISEUM | dicted by a high police official who | said “this crime is close to home.” T6 Was Verorted thasy Cambs Ero The police official declined to am-
of local businessmen have made | py his ‘statement except to say
pane © HK % en | that he believed the slayer was coliseum and hotel combined into | “someone the little girl knew and one half-block downtown structure. | trusted.” He indicated that an arThe coliseum would be leased to | Fest may be made this afternoon.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
today the reorganiation Bill “would |§
quire a two-thirds vote for Congress |
2.—The
PAGE 3
It’s Licensed and Tagged
Times Photo. :
Among the first to get a bicycle license tag today was Ralph Dean,
73 DRIVERS PAY $521 IN FINES TRAFFIC KILLS 4
Assessments of $304 Are Suspended in Cases Today.
(Continued from Page One)
fined $35 on speeding and running a traffic signal charges after he testified he was driving 54 miles an hour on Indiana Ave. Apparently as a result of Indianapolis’ drive against motorists who do not have drivers’ licenses, the State House license bureau was | jammed today with applicants. | Meanwhile, deaths on Indiana | highways dropped to four over the week-end despite heavy traffic brought out by ideal weather con-
1416 E. Market St. He is shown above kneeling beside his bike in the police station. as Detective Martin Kruse stamps the license seal on with a die. The drive to secure registration of all city bicycles starts Wednesday and is expected to continue until Sept. 1.
bd bd »
® \
Applications for Tags to Be Made
91 DISMISSED
| |
AS TRIAL OPENS
|
Three Baker Veniremen Are
Registration of approximately 20,000 bicycles, preliminary to is-
At Fire Stations
| crash north of Seymour, and Bobby |
Released by Defense
suance of the $1.25 license tags re-
| ditions. | Hale Goodpaster, 42, of Union | City, was injured fatally when struck bv an auto on Road 47 near Union City. Ross Kirk, 19, of Troy, was killed and three other men injured, one critically, when the car in which they were riding skidded in gravel and overturned near Rockport. Louis Woodson, Jackson County was killed in an interurban-auto
Aver, 13-year-old Granview boy, was burned fatally when a truck backfired, exploding gasoline.
Angry Father To Fight Child Thett Charge
By United Press CHICAGO, Aug. 2. — Municipal Judge Lambert K. Hayes today issued a warrant for “child stealing” against John Hayes, 33, Mahwah, N. J, who took his baby daughter from the home of her grandmother and fled by airplane across the country. “A father has the right to his own child,” Judge Hayes said, “and from what I know of the situation, there is no reason for issuing a warrant charging child stealing.” The judge explained he issued the warrant at the request of the defendant's attorney, who explained that it would expedite Hayes’ re= lease from jail. Bond was set at $1000. Hayes, whose grandfather was first Pennsylvania Railroad president, was angry and indignant. He prom=ised he would “fight extradition as long as I can talk.” His mother, he said, promised he could use all of the $15,000 she has in the bank to fight for Patricia Ann's custody.
RULING ORDERS PAY FOR WELFARE AIDS
Salary Claims Held Valid
Continuing their drive on speeders |
Despite Budget Limits.
his! | Judiciary Reorganization Bill only |
There is much talk of party splits, |
Evidence is ample, however, of a Roll calls |
| al
House | today when 50 pickets, mostly wom- | gomination, particularly failure to | ‘en, clashed with special deputies and | consult with leaders before explod- |
| today in the attack-slaying of 8-|
quired under a new City ordinance, is to be started in fire stations Wednesday. Issuance of tags will be started late this week or early next, sn : it was said. 1 during an argument over passage | Registrations are to be held of the State Welfare Department | Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Sat- | Merit, System Bill. Joel Baker op-; urday and Monday between 9 a. m. | posed its passage. | and 1 p. m. and from 2 to 6 p. m. at | Baker was ousted as Marion | these fire stations: | County Welfare Director bv the! Station 1, 445 Indiana Ave.; 21, | Legislature two days after Mr. Coy | 2320 N. Olney St.; 29, 2302 Shelby | was struck. | St.; 18, 3130 W. Washington St.
and 32, 6324 Bellefontaine St. ; 'Excusing of Jurors
‘FARM TENANT HELD | Criminal Court Judge Frank P. | | Baker today criticized excusing citi- | AS OWNER'S SLAYER zens from jurv duty and said he |
would have more to say tomorrow on jury selection when he chooses !
th 7 CG 1 Jury. Si Baker is pit six grand | Quarrel Over Tomatoes Is Blamed for Shooting.
iurors tomorrow from a venire of 35 drawn Saturday to replace the | original pane! thrown out because | ~~ names were not drawn from tax! py t/nited Presa duplicates. | VINCENNES, Aug. 2.—John N. | Judge Baker's remarks were made Bey, a farm tenant, was held in the | before Special Judge James A. Em- | County Jail on a first-degree slaying mert began excusing persons from |charge after the shooting of Harry oy duty for the trial of Joel A.| Taylor, farmer living near here, in | Baker, a p : for ine | Judge Baker said: “I am going a TY veer Wh Bickeq to give some instructions tomorrow | The office of Sherifr C. A. Joice | morning to the new grand jury that | qai4 that Mr. Bey confessed and reought to be of widespread interest.” | q,,, tad the crime when taken to the | He refused to disclose all wna scene by deputies. Mr Bev. ‘almost | tell the jurors, but did say, “I wan Ee fata : S. MT. V. 1 some information from the prospec- ho Ro Ve on property owned tive jurors before I select a new | ' grand jury this time.” He said: “We ought to have a jury drawing
For Cause.
(Continued from Page One)
~ o
| Judge Baker Criticizes
(Mr. Bey and Mr. Taylor quarreled {over a sack of tomatoes, each man and selection system here like they claiming he picked it. Mr. Bey drew
A : a 32-caliber revolver and fired at y ” . QQ haven some of the larger Southern Mr. Taylor, deputies say.
: : Wh 'S s He said he referred particularly en Mrs, Taylor an screaming he to her husband's aid, Mr. Bey point- | to Atlanta, Ga., and added: “No one : . : ‘ ate ed the pistol at her, forcing her to is excused from jury duty down |, .i...t ‘then fired another shot into { there for business reasons. They ,
| stick to the statutory excuses strict- Tay we to bis re- | ly and jurors are selected quickly.” : : pointed out that business | reasons are not statutory grounds | for excuse from service in Indiana | but that many are excused for them.
| ———
E. L. PATRICK GIVES
| NEW CANGER CLINIC SIGMUND ROMBERG TLL SS i By T'nited Press to HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 2.—Sigmund |
| today with influenza. He was | stricken at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (Studio and was ordered to bed by | his physician.
| He
By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Rep. Christopher D. Sullivan today was named leader of Tammany Hall, succeeding | James J. Dooling, who died suddenly week ago.
|
$100,000 Donation Equip City Hosiptal.
| A gift. of $100,000 to City Hospital | for establishment of one of the most
| According to the Sheriff's office, |
TAMMANY PICKS CHIEF.
Romberg, noted composer, was ill |
and “runners,” police arrested 21 on | charges of speeding, 20 on charges | of running stop lights and 41 on, Omer Stokes Jackson, Indiana Ate charges of running preferential torney General, today ruled that exe streets. a ._ | tra Marion County Welfare Dee Ten persons were injured here in| ,..tment investigators must be paid the 14 accidents reported over the |. their salary Clai Towed week-end to ‘police and the sheriff's | I! neil salary ciaiins are al'owed, re. office. | gardless of budgetary provisions for Two Cars Collide a smaller number of investigators. Emerson Leshe, 21, of 3219 w.| Fabian W. Biemer, deputy Marion
Washington St. received chest and | County auditor, at first refused to leg injuries last night when the car | Pay salaries of some Marion County
which he was driving struck another | Welfare Department, but later did driven by Marion Blass, 27, 9925 | make investigators payment under a
Park Ave. The accident occurred COmpromise agreement. on Road 67 at Franklin Road as Mr. | Mr. Jackson ruled that the De : ’ | partment can increase its personnel Blass attempted to turn left into a | disregarding budgetary provisions filling station. made by the County Ciuncil. How- | Carl Lines, 22, of 4937 N. 16th St. | sya; when funds are exhausted, the was treated at City Hospital for in- | .ounei) is mandated to make addi- | juries received when his motorcycle | i na1 appropriations to meet the
| struck a car at Brill and Summer | ,..u qoeted expenses. Mr. Jackson | Sts. The driver of the car, John | gig" DEIISes) Ty Yarus | W. Hall, 42, of 525 Mills Ave, Was | Tne ppinion held that the County | uninjured. | Council has no power to fix salaries Accident | already set by the Welfare Director. Si : ; . | It said the Board cannot exceed its Also struck by a car as he [ide a | appropriation, however, until the motorcycle, James Franklin, 22, of | council makes a new appropriation, 4917 W. 11th St, was treated at which the Board can demand when { Methodist Hospital for bruises. lit sees one will be necessary. | The accident occurred in the 300| nr. jackson also pointed out that block W. 30th St. Ardus E. Brown, | the auditor is not personally liable 22, of 1001 N. Alabama St.. driver of | for salary payments made if the [the car, was held on a charge of | County Commissioners have ap- | reckless driving. | proved the payments. Mr. Biemer at. one time refused payment on | MARION COUNTY TRAFFIC | TOLL TO DATE |
In Similar
By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Sales of American Aircraft, aircraft engines and spare parts aggregated $49,450.114 for the first six months this year, an increase of 53.3 per cent over the corresponding 1936 period when sales totaled $32,218341, Leighton W. Rogers, the Aeronautical Chamer of Commerce of America, Inc., president, disclosed today. June sales established an all-time record at $9,914,402, an increase of 41.7 per cent over last June's total | of $6,997,895.
[ By United Press Ee CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—Claude Dres- | MAKE IMPROVEMENTS sen, 46, East Chicago, Ind. was | BY United Press ‘killed almost instantly yesterday CLEVELAND, Aug. 2—The Re{when his automobile crashed into | public Steel Corp. announced pro='a safety island a few minutes after | jected improvements in its Youngs= lit had struck and injured John |town plants involving a $750,000 ine Mr. Argir- | vestment. | ris was waiting for a street car.| The improvements include ine | Mr. Dressen did not stop after hit- | creasing the capacity of a blast fure | nace and the Bessemer unit.
July 31 and Aug. 1 Accidents Injured ..........
TRAFFIC ARRESTS
| Speeding Reckless driving .......... Drunken driving ... Running red light Running preferential street .. Driving through safety zone Improper parking .. Others
|
'Hit-Run Driver ‘Killed in Crash
|
| Argirris, 60, of Chicago.
I ting the pedestrian.
|
' modern cancer clinics in the coun- |? | try was announced today by Mayor {| Kern and hospital officials. It was given by F. L. Patrick, C. | | B. Cones & Sons Manufacturing Co. | | president, in memory of his wife, | | Mrs. Kathryn Cones Patrick, and | her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. B.| Cones. Modern features are to be deep | therapy X-rays, a radium vault and surgical equipment. Mr. Patrick, who said it should be completed in about | six months, designated that $40,000 | be used for equipment and $60,000 be placed in an endowment fund { for its maintenance. { Mayor Kern issued a statement | thanking Mr. Patrick.
ADMIRAL FITZHUGH DIES By United Press PASADENA, Cal, Aug. 2.—Rear | Admiral Walter Fitzhugh, retired. | died yesterday at the age of 82. Admiral Fitzhugh retired in 1919. He | served in the Spanish-American | War, superintended construction of | Annapolis Naval Academy buildings, and was instructor at Lafayette Col- { lege, Pennsylvania, and Clemson | College, South Carolina.
NINE DIE IN SHIP CRASH By United Press ATHENS, Aug. 2.—Nine bodies | had been recovered today and 30 | persons were missing after a col- | lision between the coastal steam- | ship Anastassis and the steamship | Hydra one mile off Piraeus, the port | of Athens. The Anastassis sank. | Fifty of its passengers and crew |saved themselves by swimming
ashore.
The hotel front would adjoin the | public hall and ground floor rooms | would be used as storerooms. The group has presented its proposal to City officials, including Mayor Kern, the Works Board and the City Council.
YOUTH HELD AFTER COED, 18, IS KILLED
By United Press { HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 2. — Carl Long, youthful escort of Betty | Tighe, , 18-year-old coed killed in the 300-foot plunge of an automobile from a North Hollywood road as they drove from a dance, was held on suspicion of negligent homicide today. : |
the City under the plan, it was said. |
HERBERT
TAREY
TON
CIGARETTES
“There's SOMCINING abot thom
only reli
Distinctive
Fmoke
Exceptional tobaccos plus the nicety of the
Tareyton Lond, lh
(IY DOESN'T STICK TO YOUR LIPS
mPa As Dr RC Fahnbaok
Registered Optometrist—Office at AVE Dr.
wow ony 7.0¢ your eyes today.
youll lik" ged.
00D vision aids good health.
GLASSES ON
Style-vision glasses not eve and correct faulty vision but definitely
add charm to those who wear them.
Fahrbach examine Easy weekly terms will be ar-
