Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1937 — Page 3

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1987

PAYMENT BEFORE

ARE GRANTED 1S AD BY SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE

Slack Tells Associates Only 5 to 10 Per Cent of Fees Are Collected: Says County Failed to Get More Than $15,000 in 1936.

Warns Against Land Erosion

oo

PAGE 3

CHINESE WAR BELIEVED NEAR ITS CONCLUSION

Japan Tightens Grip on. Yangtzi Valley; Many Flee.

(Continued from Page One)

Japanese attack on the capital from |

Aching Tooth [ROYAL BRIDAL

Keeps F.D.R. Inside 2d Day

WASHINGTON, Nov, 17 (U. P). —For the second successive day an aching infected tooth kept President Roosevelt confined to his bed in the White House today. All Presidential engagements were canceled. White House Secretary Stephen T. Early said Mr, Roosevelt spent a more comfortable night last night, awaking only once. However, he

BOB BURNS Says pgm,

was readin’ an article the other day that said that the old-fashioned girl makes the best housekeeper because she learned the art from her mother, while the modern girl has'ta start from taw, with nothin’ to aid her but the cook-book. I think there's a lot'ta truth in that but you have'ta give the modern girl credit for

COUPLE BEGINS SAD HONEYMOON

Duke Will Claim Bodies of Immediate Family, Who Died in Crash. LONDON, Nov. 17 (U, P.).—His|

bride of a few hours in tears and | wearing mourning, Grand Duke |

the Yangtze. | was examined again today by White H. H. Fung, Finance Minister and | House Physician Dr. Ross T. Mc- | vice president of the Executive Com- | Intyre who found the President still mittee, is to succeed him, it was running a slight temperature and said, with Wang Chung-hui, For- | advised him to stay in bed another eign Minister, relieving Fung of | day. the vice presidential duties.

catchin’ on quick and takin’ advantage of every situation. I had a {iriend that

The Grand Duke ‘and ‘his ‘bride, | married one of them modern 80.

cfalites and on her first day in the United Press reports from Nan-|day and it was believed it would not A he oe Cal phel, GE kitchen, she was readin’ the cook-

king said that it was understood | be necessary to extract fit. .' book and she turned to her husi ; vl — were married today at St. Peter's | 4 . De SE a ib ihe Tange Church in Eaton Square, It was a | band and says, ‘Honey, this house | the river this week. Evacuation of less seriously wounded soldiers from |

in Szechuan Province, that the strange wedding. Rejoicing was re. [Work 181% BOI OT fon THR. Health Ministry was moving to new | placed by sorrow and the wedding | “°° . Nanking continued smoothly, the | Stiver and Ray Doubt That dispatches added. . Immediate Increase

i i s done, headquarters at Hangkow, on uf gowns with somber black. do to tell if the pudding is done Forts Believed Fallen Possible.

Ludwig of Hesse started for Ostend | today on a sad honeymoon—to claim | the bodies of his entire immediate | family, who perished in a flaming | | airplane there, |

Adoption of a rule by Superior Court judges requiring payment of costs in divorce actions before decrees are grant-

ed was advocated by Judge L. Ert Slack today. In an informal meeting of Superior Court jurists, Judge Slack said only 5 to 10 per® cent of divorce costs are col- | PLEAS HEARD IN He also disclosed that 2766 di- | vorce complaints were filed in 1936 | and that an average of $5.50 bal- | \ ance of costs in each case Was not | failed to receive more than SS . In revenue IRs Ser Commissioner Takes Under “More than half of the divorce | suits with no large settlements in- Advisement Proposed opinion, if judges would refuse to Service Rules. enter decrees in actions until the full costs are paid,” Judge Slack said.

| The tooth was treated again to-

e Grand Duke and Duchess | out clean left, immediately afterward for Bel- | 20% oe ie gium, where the Duke will supervise | . o. “uno, only that—if the knife epimers, oe es 5 in i, Tick i her. - , sister-in- lg rare the pudding.” and two young nephews for aL (TT Raby 1937) 5 It was a quiet, poignant service al | ———= SE ?

{his church where most of Eng-| land's fashionable wedding are | PLEA FOR LENIENCY

emnized, for the ceremony was held | 'Geckler Suspends Sentence

king, and that foreign advisers and members of the League of Nations Mission at Nanking would go up|

lected in Marion County. | collected. The County consequently | volved, would not be filed, in my _

State Senator Larry Brandon (above) told the Indiana Farm Bureau here today that the nation's farm lands lose annually, through erosion, 21 times as much plant food as the crops themselves use, He is secretary-treasurer of the bureau.

lis to stick a knife in the pudding river between Nanking and Chung- Th Nanking dispatches said that an

Indianapolis Water Co.'s proposed service regulation changes were He explained that either $2 or $3, | taken under advisement by Public |

depending on whether the sheriff | gervice Commissioner Fred Bayes at | A . 1 h . Bi 11 F . 1 mn makes the service in the case, IS | {he close of oral arguments today. nti ync ng 1 111 YUSLCr

in an atmosphere of deep tragedy. Every member but one of the | Duke's immediate family—his elder | brother, Grand Duke George; his sister-in-law, Grand Duchess Cecile: his mother, Dowager Grand Duch-

official announcement on the evacuation program was expected soon and it was forecast that as part of the announcement the Government | — would say that it was proposed to miles defend Nanking even after the en-

Deposit Is Made

(Continued from Page One)

an hour in the 2500 block of

deposited by parties bringing divorce | . ; actions before cases are tried. During arguments, Ralph Hanna, Parties are charged an average of | Public Counselor, suggested changes

$550 in costs at the conclusion of | be made in two of the company's the trials.

| proposed new

“The difference between $2 and |

cost of decree would mean of the unimportant divorce woula not be filed,” Judge

$8 in many cases Slack said. “In this light, adoption of such a rule would be socially advantage- | ous.” he added. | Similar rules are enforced by | judges in other counties in the state, he said.

| feet is necessary, be changed to re- | quire the company to replace all | pipes regardless of length.

| one free thawing.

COMMITTEE STUDIES |

STATE HEALTH PLAN

The Committee was to outline a future program for health units in the state at a meeting in Riley Hospital

today.

The committee is

Indiana nursing and medical units. |

Dr. Verne K. Harvey, State Health Board director, was to discuss progress being made in the

State's antisyphilis campaign, and |

Dr. John W. Farree was to discuss

Indiana Health Advisory |

composed of

|

establishment of local health units | City State Prison on Feb. 4.

by the State Board. | Others on the speaking program |

were to include Dr. EXie

Welsch, | chair last summer Dr. H. B. Mettel and Dr. w. D.|first triple execution.

Gatch, of the Indiana University |

Medical Center.

"IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here's County Traffic Record | § : (To Date) 1937 1936

1937 1936

Accidents (Nov. 18) Injured Accidents

Arrests (Nov. 16) Speeding 12

Reckless Driving 1

Running Preferential Street 11 Running Red Light 13

i Drunken Driving | chronic : 1 Joe

Others 18

MEETINGS TODAY

Lions Club, noon. Indiana n, Tom | Estate Board, luncheon,

p linson Hall, all day. y Rn Property ment Division, Canary Cottage, noon. Indianapolis Amateur Movie Club, meetClaypool Hotel, p. m. Ing. dianapolis Association of Credit Men, electric and appliance group, meeting, Athenaeum, 4:45 p. m.: beverage group, Athenaeum, noon. Men's Discussion . 6 Pp. m. Alumni Association, luncheon, otel Severin, noon. H 12th District American Legion, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, of Trade, noon,

(Also See Womens Events, Page 12)

luncheon, Young E %

Y. M,C Purdue

Club, dinner,

luncheon, Board

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Indianapolis Real Estate Board, luncheon. Hotel Washington, noon, Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., annual convention, Tomlinson Hail, all day. Advertising Club of Indianapolis, luncheon. Columbia Club, noo. Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. American Business Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon, Acacia, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Indianapolis Conference of Bank Auditors, dinner Hotel Washington, 6:30 p. m, Indianapolis Smoke Abatement League, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Indianapolis Association of Credit Men, fine paper group, luncheon, Men's Grille, William H, Block Co. Caravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple, noon. \ Indiana _ Motor Traffic luncheon, Hotel Antlers, noon. Oil Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin, roon. Construction League of Indianapolis, luncheon. Architects and Builders Building, noon. Indiana War Mothers, meeting, Claypool Hotel, 9 a. m. Indiana State Nurses Examination, Hotel Lincoln, all Y. Crescent Paper Co, dinner, Hotel Lincoln, 6§ p.m. Grand Union Tea Co, dinner, Hotel Lincoln, 7 p. Gamma colin, 8 p. m, Universal Spiritualist Church, meeting, Hotel Lincoln, 8 p. m, Mrs. August Julian, luncheon, Hotel Lincoin, 1:30 p. m.

Association,

m. Phi Zeta, meeting, Hotel Lin-

MARRIAGE LICENSES

(These lists are from official records at the County Court House. The Times, therefore, Is not responsible for errors in names or addresses.)

Lee Purvis, Schnaitter., 27.

42, Shelbyville; Indianapolis. Jasper E, Fleming, 36, of 1434 N. Delaware St.; Theora Susan Isaacs, 21, of 1438

N. New Jersey St, Vester Earles. 30, of 924 N. Rural St.; Miss Emma Climer. 29, of 319 E, 13th St. Norman M. Newburg, 23, of 1221 Park Avs sunriorle M. Welch, 23, of 2865 N. ale St.

Alma

BIRTHS Girls

Deaths p

Deaths in City 86 |

3 sastern, o |

| cent's Albert, Mary Blocher. at St. Vincent's, | |

|

luncheon, Hotel Washington, | pneumonia, Farm Bureau, Inc, annual con- |

Manage-

rules. He suggested that the one requiring property owners to replace old service pipes when more than six

Mr. Hanna suggested that another proposed rule that the company charge $5 for thawing pipes be changed to allow property owners

HICKS TO APPEAL SENTENCE OF DEATH

Basing his appeal on the “death house” statements of two alleged coconspirators, Heber L. Hicks, through his attorneys, was to ask the Indiana Supreme Court today to revise the trial court's death verdict. Found guilty after a 13-day trial in Franklin Circuit Court of participating in the “head and hands” murder of Harry R. Miller, retired Cincinnati fire captain, Hicks is under sentence to die in Michigan

Three others convicted in this case preceded him to the electric in the state's They were William Kuhlman, Frank Gore Williams and John Poholsky.

William, Mary Samuels, at 1322 8. Sheffleid, James, Lola Shirley, at 2116 Boulevard lace, Alba, Dorothy Beck, at Coleman. Marion, Eleanor Cooley, at Coleman. Robert, Nellie Evans, at Coleman, Jeorge, Mary Kendall, at Coleman, Irvin, Ruth Long, at Coleman. Ronald, Sylvia Roberts, at Coleman,

Elmer, Helen Wissell, at Coleman. Richard, Rosemary Lee, at St. Vincent's, John, Anna Hyde, at St. Vincent's. Lee, Enid Stark, at St. Vincent's, Lionel, Catherine McCracken, at 1429 E. Market. Boys Herschel, Helen Kitts, at 29048 Brouse, Charles, Bridget O'Donnell, at 560 N

Roy, Ethel Dugger, at 619 Russell. John, Josephine Ellis, at Coleman. Andrew, Narguerite Figel, at Coleman, Harold, Wanda PFrymier, at Coleman. George, Nancy Gable, at 5924 Lowell. Charles, Frances Koehler, at Coleman, Robert, Betty Secor, at Coleman. Albert, Blsa Wurster, at Coleman, Alovsius, Edna O'Connor, St. Vincent's, Charles. Mildred Muth, at St, Vincent's, John. Pearl Warner, at St, Vincent's. Cletis. Ella Robinson, at St. Vincent's, Russell, Cecelia McDermott,

at

at St. Vin-

Lee, Julia Richey, at St, Vincent's,

wins be Dorothy Haase, at Coleman,

DEATHS

Duke F. Watson, 43, at 352 N. Hamilton, valvular heart disease, Hines, 39, at City, arteriosclerosis. William Walter Legg. 63, at 18 N. Me ridian. coronary occlusion. Gost Borovalis, 56, at Hill Yard, Big Four, coronary occlusion, Cora Elizabeth Groves, 36, at City, peri-

tonitis. 70, at 2810 Scho-

Mary Frances Beel, | field, cerebral hemorrhage, | Jefferson Sims, 65, at City: hypostatic Alvin L. Spangler, 21, at 50 S. Belle Vieu, acute myocarditis, C. C, Edwards, 56, at Pennsylvania Rail wav, concussion of hrai Dora Biackwell, 82, cirrhosis of liver, Ida T 62,

n at 2331 Columbia, T. Costelow,

: at 258 W. Ray, chronic myocarditis. Dora Isenhart, 93, at 1657 College, lobar pneumonia,

OFFICIAL WEATHER |

we United States Weather Bureat oo

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Cloudy, becoming fair tonight: followed by increasing cloudiness and rising temperatures tomorrow.

Sunrise ...... 6:33 | Sunset

TEMPERATURE ~Nov. 17, 1936—

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... Total precipitation Excess

Speeds Senate Farm Program

(Continued from Page One)

tire Government had evacuated. A Japanese army spokesman said |

Madison Ave. He was charged with ass Eleonore, and his little nepehews, |

speeding, drunken driving, reckless d i ! ila s enbach who driving, drunkenness and running Sigg ing and Al b

that a column of Japanese troops

Wagner as voting to put Senator Black on the Supreme Court,” Mr. Connally said. “He knew then that Justice Black considered this bill as unconstitutional. “They are just getting ready to give old Rastus the run around by talking about this bill and then voting to put a Justice on the Supreme Court who believes it unconstitutional.”

Adopts Tax Changes

Meanwhile, the House Ways and Means Tax Subcommittee today tentatively adopted changes in the capital gains and losses tax to give taxpayers the option of choosing between two different rates, whichever is lowest, at a saving over present rates. Chairman Fred M. Vinson (D. Ky.), said the plan should accelerate business transactions sufficiently so that any loss of revenue due to lower rates would be recovered by the higher volume of purchases and sales. The plan would, in effect: 1. Give taxpayers in the brackets over $18,000 a year the option of paying lower rates ranging from 30 per cent if the capital gain is made after two years holding of the asset, to 16 per cent if the profit is taken after five years. 2. Give taxpayers in brackets below $18,000 a year the option of counting capital gains as ordinary income and paying lower rates than at present, “We feel,” said Chairman Vinson, “that this is a decided break in the capital gains and losses tax. There's a certainty of tax that's claimed to be very desirable, It's our thought that accellerations in transactions due to this provision will be helpful to business conditions and not cause unseemly loss of revenue.”

Wallace Favors Pope-McGill Bill

WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 (U.P) — Secretary of Agriculture Wallace today told the Senate Agriculture Committee that he favored the

HALF OF RISING SUN PUPILS STILL STRIKE

RISING SUN, Nov. 17 (U. P.) — Seventy-five students of Rising Sun High School, almost half the student body, remained on strike today in protest to the discharge of Cassius Dugel, a janitor. School Principal Alex Conver issued an ultimatum that none of the strikers could return to classes unless accompanied by their parents. The students staged a mild demonstration last night by parading through the downtown streets. School officials refused to state why Mr. Dugel was discharged.

2 ARRESTED IN PLOT ON LIFE OF BATISTA

HAVANA, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—Secret, police asserted today that they had

| discovered a plot to assassinate Col.

Fulgencio Batista, army chief of staff and “strong man” of Cuba,

and a number of other national leaders. A secret organization called the Revolutionary Legion was held to be sponsor for the plot, and it was announced that Carlos Perez, 24, and Antonio Dominguez, had been arrested. Police asserted that both

a | were legion members.

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana—Cloudy, what colder northeast portion tonight; | tomorrow increasing cloudiness, rising | temperature west and south portions in| afternoon,

Illinois—Generally tonight;

becoming fair, some-

fair, continued cold | ) t, tomorrow increasing cloudiness | with rising temperature, followed by rain | or snow at night and northwest and |

| west-central portions in afternoon.

Lower Michigan—Most.y cloudy, flurries tonight and extreme north tomorrow, somewhat colder extreme north and | extreme east tonight. |

Ohio—Generally fair tonight and to- | morrow except snow flurries in northeast | portion tonight; colder tonight.

Kentucky—Fair tonight and tomorrow: | Smet er tonight, slowly rising perature tomorrow in west and { i phy and cen ral

A THER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. | tation, Weather. Amarillo, Tex, ....... PtCldy | he. Bismarck, N. D. 3 2 Boston y 2 Chicago Cincinnati .... Cleveland, O. ...

ao

Helena, Mont, Jacksonville, Fla. ... Kansas City, Mo. ....

Minneapolis Mobile, Ala. New Orleans .....,. New York . Okla. City, Omaha, Neb. Pittsburgh > Portland, Ore, ........ San Antono, Tex. ....Cle San_ Francisco St. Louis

James,

Irene Camplin, thusetts. in

at 2421 Massa- (| T

BRE RES APR ARP DA RDI ASS

AMPA, Fla. vo... even Washington, D.C. .... ww

snow | |

| ECONOMY | WEEK-END TRIPS

COACH SERVICE

| Next Saturday

| CLEVELAND, $5.00

Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train until 2:25 a. m. Monday.

. DETROIT . . . $5.00

|| Pay a visit to the Henry Ford exhibit at historic Greenfield Village in Dearborn. near Detroit.

TOLE!!O .... $4.26 SANDUSKY . $5.00

Leave 10:00 p. m. Returning reach Indianapolis not later than Monday morning following.

Next Sunday

CINCINNATI, $2.50 GREENSBURG ....... $125 SHELBYVILLE $0.75

Leave 7:45 a. m. Return on any train same day.

ST.LOUIS... $4.75

Leave 12:30 % m., 2:45 a. m, or 8:00 a. mm, eturn on any train same day.

NEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM

had attacked the famous Fushun |

Pope-McGill Farm Bill “in principle.” The House Agriculture Committee at the same time adopted for its parmanent farm bill a voluntary cotton-control plan on a tilled acreage basis, Corn and Wheat Subcommittee chairmen said their groups probably would recommend marketing quotas and penalty taxes to make programs for those commodities virtually compulsory. Concerning the opposing views on voluntary and e¢ompulsory crop control, Secretary Wallace advised a “middle-of-the-road” policy. With the Pope-McGill Bill as a “work-bench” measure, the Senate committee moved to speed its consideration in order to meet the demands of Administration leaders for an early report to the Senate.

PHILIPPINE TYPHOON ISOLATES ISLANDS

Cuts Off Communication, Endangers Shipping.

MANILA, P. I, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—A | typhoon raging across the center of the Philippine archipelago tonight isolated all islands south of the island of Luzon, Inter-island shipping was endangered. Fragmentary | reports prior to severance of com- | munications indicated heavy damage. Bureau of Posts officials reported | disruption of telegraph and radio communications with all southern jslands with the exception of Mindanao. The Radio Corporation of America was not able to contact its branch in Cebu, third largest Philippine city, where typhoon signal No. 6 was hoisted. The signal stands for winds of hurricane intensity and warns of the approach of the center of the storm. Shipping in Cebu Harbor was at a standstill. A typhoon that cut across Luzon last week caused more than a score of deaths and property damage amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars.

HINTS VIOLATION IN CORN CORNER MOVE

CHICAGO, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—A report of an investigating committee of the Chicago Board of Trade today charged there were “just grounds for suspicion” that the Cargill Grain Corp. of Minneapolis had violated exchange rules during the recent attempt to corner the September corn market, A complaint filed with directors of the exchange named John H. MacMillan Jr., president of the com-

pany, two aids, Edward J. Grimes and Philip C. Sayles, and the Cargill Grain Co. of Illinois, a subsidiary. A hearing will be held in December,

with bombarding warships. believed the forts had fallen, the spokesman said, The forts are 10] miles north of Changshu, which another Japanese force is investing. | Changshu is 20 miles north of Soochow. More Japanese troops continued their advance on Soochow, the spokesman said, and he predicted an early Chinese collapse. Approximately 60 American missionaries are in the path of Japanese forces driving toward Nanking,

mostly men, were believed in or near danger zones.

Japan Ridicules ‘Action at Brussels

PP) —

authorities estimated. Only a few,|

la red light.

Of Young Father. been pages—were killed at Ostend yesterday in the |

Otto Thomas, 65, of 2510 N. Penn- | srach of a Belgian air liner in

Yangtse River forts in co-operation | sylvania St. was in fair condition | which they were flying here.

It was | today after being struck by a truck | phe wedding was to have been |

in the Northwestern Ave. 2500 block, | neld Saturday, but was put ahead

yesterday.

Witnesses told police the pedesa trackless and failed to see the on-

trian ran in front of trolley coming truck,

Reid Place, train-auto

injured Monday crash, was

accident.

GARY, Nov. 17

| BRUSSELS, Nov. 17 (U

| Some nations attending

condemned Japan for her war on China virtually repudiated own actions, a Japanese embassy spokesman charged today. Referring to those nations which have ceased paying their world war debt payments to the United States,

in the declaration which stressed the sanctity of treaties.

TOKYO, Nov. 17 (U. P.).—A Foreign Office spokesman asserted today that Japan did not intend to occupy the International Settle- | ment at Shanghai or to interfere with its administration. Emperor Hirohito today sanctioned an imperial grand head- | quarters to assume supreme authorlity in war time and on such other | occasions as events may dictate.

EX-CONVICT QUIZZED IN HOSTESS SLAYING

CHICAGO, Nov, 17 (U, P.).—Po- | lice questioned an ex-convict today | about the unsolved brick-bat slay- | ing of Florence Thompson Castle, night club hostess, whose battered | body was found in a hotel room | June 29, 1936. Sergt. John Hanrahan of the [ Detective Bureau questioned Frank | Green when he received .an anonymous tip that Mrs. Castle had been friendly with Green and three members of a robbery gang arrested three days ago.

HULL IS MENTIONED FOR PEACE AWARD

OSI.O, Norway, Nov. 17 (U. P.).— Cordell Hull, United States Secretary of State, was reported today to be a leading candidate for the 1937 Nobel Peace Prize. The peace prize committee was in session last night to consider candidates. Others mentioned were the Nansen Bureau of Geneva, which deals in peace propaganda, and Lord Robert Cecil, British statesman, now visiting in the United States.

JOB OFFICES INSPECTED W. Frank Persons, Washington, United States Employment Service director, was to inspect the new offices of the Indiana Employment Service at 148 E. Market St. today. Mr. Persons was in Indianapolis to attend the American Legion offi-

cials’ annual conferences.

R usset’s Quick Cafeteria

Service Saves Time for

Busy Men and W omen!

we have (and the

especially prepared

ing.

9

East Washington

SECOND FLOOR Take Elevator

No time wasted. Walk in. inspiring!) —so many fresh vegetables, kinds of warm breads, special Russet salads and desserts. you prefer—make your choice in a brief

moment—enjoy your lunch—and you're on your way—no time wasted in wait-

Russet

the Unusual CAFETERIA

SEE what VARIETY of it is

the Far | Eastern Peace Conference which |

help | School

vesterday when struck hy driven by John Benford, 26.

The boy was returning from Riley where he attended KkinderMr. Benford was released on $2000 bond pending outcome of

garten. tiie mnquest. FRANKFORT, Nov. will be asked to

old mother

neth Donoho, today.

oO) trauss says

meat dishes—many

You KNOW what

PLEASE NOTE . .

The MONOGRAMS are twice the size indicated « + + They are done on the premises by a machine that uncannily reproduces fine hand work,

Charles T, Myers Jr. 22, of 1118 in a reported | slightly improved in City Hospital today, but still was in critical condition. Charles C. Edmonds, his hunting companion, was killed in the

(U. P).—A | coroners inquest was scheduled to- | day in the death of John Janosak, 6-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. An-

drew Janosak, who was killed late a car

: 17 (U. P)— the spokesman ridiculed the passage | The Clinton County Grand Jury investigate the death of Mrs. B, H. Sipple, 42-year-of two children, who | died last night after being struck by an automobile driven by Ken19, authorities said | ited

| so that the new Grand Duke might | go to Ostend.

‘Another Victim

‘Found in Plane Ruins

| OSTEND, Belgium, Nov. 17 (U. | P).—A twelfth victim was added today to the list of those who died yesterday in the crash of a Belgian air liner, which all but wiped out the royal family of the German | Archduchy of Hesse. Police, investigating the ruins of the plane, which struck a chimney in fog as it struggled for safety on a flight from Frankfurt to London, found the remains of a prematurely born child, killed at the moment of its birth in the flaming plane.

MILITARY AID RETIRES

PARIS, Nov. 17 (U. P).—Gen. Henri Joseph Eugene Gouraud, one of the most beloved military figures of France, retired from active service on his 70th birthday today. He turned over his command as military governor of Paris Gaston Billotte. During the World War he commanded the Fourth Army which included the famous 42d or “Rainbow” division. He visthe United States after the

war.

1

¥

10

to Gen. |

A plea in Juvenile Court today | for leniency to keep a 21-vear-old father out of jail was based upon the possibility that the Federal | GGovernment might want to call him | for service in the Army in event of war. Juvenile Court Judge John F, Geckler had sentenced the young | father to 30 days in jail on a child | neglect charge. “In times like these the Govern- | ment might want to call him into | Army service but he couldnt go | with a jail record,” Defense Attor- | ney Paul Wetter, former Municipal Court judge, pleaded. “As this is his first offense, I think he ought to | be given a chance to make good. [+0 I always found that many first | offenders often made good if given a chance.” Judge Geckler meditated for a | moment and then said, “maybe | that's right.” Forthwith he suspended the vouth's jail sentence and put him on probation for six | months.

DEATH TERMED MURDER

YOUNGSTOWN, O. Nov. 17 (U, P.).—A murder verdict was returned today in the mysterious death of Thomas Donaldson Kates, 40-year-old Pittsburgher, Kates’ body was found yesterday hanging from a rafter in the coal | shed of the rural Boyer school, five | miles south of nearby Canfield.

|

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