Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1937 — Page 3

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SFRIDAY, DEC: 10-1987 Ll iiesbiitmiimiiioiome lt LOCKEFIELD NEEDS TREATMENT, HE SAYS

TOKYO'S TROOPS BREAK THROUGH NANKING WALLS

Fierce Street Fighting in . City Begins; . Clashes . Are ‘Hand-te-Hand.

(Continued from Page One)

atop the battlements and set up light artillery. Down in the streets bayoneis flashed as the invaders swarmed in through the breach.

Berlin Would Welcome

Italian Action

BERLIN, Dec. 10 (U. P.) —Ifaly’s reported intention to leave the League of Nations was welcomed today by German politicians although well-informed perséhs believed Adolf Hitler already had been notified of Premier Mussolini's program, : Premier Mussolini's decision was seen in Berlin as further dissatisfaction with the League’s present make-up which German politicians regarded as attached too greatly to the principles of‘ the Versailles Treaty and therefore an obstacle in settling European difficulties.

Fear Crumbling of

Peace Program

LONDON, Dec. 10 (U. P.) —Italy’s reported determination to abandon the League of Nations will result in further deterioration of Anglo-Ital-ian relations and indefinite postponement of European peace conversations, diplomatic sources asserted today. As a result of Premier Mussolini's : action, well-inform persons declared, there was tle likelihood that Great Britain "and France would recognize Italy's conquest of Ethiopia in the near future.

———

Rumania Gives’

Pledge to France

BUCHAREST, Rumania, Dec. 10 (U. P.)—Foreign Minister Yvon Delbos of France had Rumania’s assurance today that she would continue to collaborate closely with the League of Nations and a policy of collective security.

Reports Continue’ Italy Will Quit League

ROME, Dec. 10 (U. P) —Tthly will announce her withdrawal from the League of Nations Saturday, it was reliably reported in diplomatic quarters today. : | The withdrawal, it was said, will be the first step in a complete change in foreign policy, and will be approved at an extraordinary meeting of the - Fascist Grand Council Saturday night.

Leon Joyce, project at Indiana

have to be waterproofed on the outside.”

masonry contractor for the Lockefield Gardens housing Ave. and Locke St. said today the buildings “will

He is shown in his office.

House Leaders. Push Farm Bill for Passage Today

WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—A revolt of a House corn bloc, dissatisfied with marketing quotas for corn, threatened the Farm Bill .today as Administration leaders pressed to complete action on the measure by nightfall. The bloc, numbering about 40 members, decided to vote to

recommit the Farm Bill because

they believe its marketing quotas

would be applied too late to prevent marketing of price-depressing

corn surpluses. '

(Editorial, Page 16; Another Story, Page 31)

WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (U. P.).—House leaders threatened to hold a night session if necessary to get a final vote on the Farm Bill today. Chairman Marvin Jones (D. Tex.) of the House Agriculture Committee and Majority Leader Sam Rayburn (D. Tex.) predicted passage of the bill by tonight. They were confident that revolting Democrats would forget sectional differences and vote for the measure with every major

featuring restored. Strengthened by almost complete success in heating down partisan and regional amendments for two days, Rep. Jones believed that a “party vote” would remove earlier floor amendments which weakened the bill’s basic principles of production control through soil conservation and marketing limitation only in bumper years. The Senate Farm Bill, however, appeared destined to several more days of bipartisan attack on its more drastic provisions for crop control and “parity payments.”

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here's County Traffic Record

Deaths ‘(To Date) - 1937 . 150 Deaths in City 1937 ......... 96

1936 ....... 120 ist

Accidents (Dec. 9)

Accidents .... 3 Injured ...... 1 Dead ens evs 1

Arrests . (Dec. 9) Speeding

Reckless Driving 0

Running Preferential Street

5 Running Red Light 2 Drunken Driving 0 Others 0 : I \J MEETINGS TODAY

Indiana History Conference, joint state meeting of historical societies, Lincoln and Claypool Hotels, all day. Indiana Society of Professional En- . gineers, meeting and dinner, Claypool Hotel, afternoon and night. Indiana Intercollegiate Coaches, meeting, Claypool Hotel, 4 m. Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon, Kappa Sigma, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Optimist Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon.

~ Reserve Officers’ Association, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Phi Delta Theta, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Delta Tau Delta, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon. : Beta Theta Pi, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Indianapolis National Poultry Exposition, Manufacturers’ Building, ‘State Fairgrounds, all day. ;

(Also See Women’s Events, Page 25)

MEETINGS TOMORROW

| | Indiana History Conference, joint state meeting of historical . societies, Lincoln and Claypool Hotels, all day. ara | Nature Study Club eof Indiana, annual Resiing and election, Cropsey Auditorium, 45 p. m.

Indiana State Federation cf Labor, meeting, Claypool Hotel, 10 a. m. Indiana Schoolmen’s Club, anniversa meeting and luncheon, Claypool Hote morning and afternoon. Alliance Francaise, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon. Indianapolis National Poultry Exposition; Manufacturers’ Building, State Ya unds, all days

. MARRIAGE LICENSES

| (These lists are from official records at the County Courf House, The Times, , therefore, is not ble for essors in names or addresses.) :

Jack C. McCormack, 22, of 1127 'N. - stor Aver: Tra br Hosa, 2.061 631 N. Pine

Clifton Moore, 24, of 308 N. Ni st. 0 a: 21, of 1383 Nordais

Ave. . Edward D. Oliver, 44. of 1212 Windsor St.; Florence Irene Webster, 36, of 400 N. Delaware St. ‘Theodore 19, city. Sison; Lenora . y y. James Ward, 25, of 6420 Cornell Ave.; Mary Harrison, 18, of 1219 E Siow St

Harry tein, Of St.; Ann Becker, 20, of 1326 Union geiarold Tanselle, 32, of 4003 N. St. Lucille McKinley. 27. of 2426 C rank ‘Wood, 20, of 1306 Burdsal Par way; June Melton, 13. of 428 N. Fulton St ngbo ,” 0 dianapolis McLaughlin, 49

St

obstruction.

Fair-| m

Chersy. 21, city: Louise Krug, | Bouton ‘Myron B. Collins, 31, Ft Benjamin Har- | RIC DB ehbart, 21 it ar

New Jer- | : ol-

i St. |]

BIRTHS ; Girls Harold, Dorothy Davidson, at 71 E.

ller a Perry, at 2356 Stuart. ianners, at 2830 N. Olney. red Irwin, at Methodist.

. { h . Irving, Genevieve Schultz, at Method~ Phillip, Laura Jarrett, at Methodist. Richard, Mary Collester, at Methodist. Richard, Mary Barnes, at St. V Albert, Marie Donato, at St. Vincent's. Denver, Ruth Barnes, at St. Vincent's. Daniel, Jo Dunbar, at St. Vincent's.

seph, Donald, Hilda Newman, at St. Vincent's. Russell, Ruth Smith, a ncent’s. Joseph, Louise Sietzel, at St. Vincent's. Boys Louis, Vivian Fosgate, at Methodist. Chester, Ida Hammond, at Methodist. Hugh, Thurza Dickey, at Methodist: Buser, at thodist. [ethodist. e: Methodist. Roxie Evans, at Methodist. y g Methodist. Stanley, Mary Stro . Vincent's. Harry, Ruth McCready, at St. Vincent’s. Henry, Dorothy Kuerst, at St. Vincent's. Joseph, Edith Eade, at St. Vincent's. Lawrence, Mary Barton, at St. Vincent's. ceo aries, Carolyn Schuesler, at St. VinJohn, Mary Sullivan, at St. Vincent's. Ivan, Jo Ulmer, at St, Vincent's.

DEATHS

Merritt Barker, 67, at Methodist, pulmonary embolus. mma Green, 67, at Central Indiana, chronic myocarditis. Clara Levy, 69, at Methodist, intestinal Carter Robinson, 58, at 3740 Kenwood, coronary occlusion

ane Morrison, 50, at 520 E. Vermont, cardio vascular renal disease. May Bussell, 36, at Coleman, bronchial pneumonia, Charles E. Bundy, 79, at Community,

‘acute cardiac dilatation

Elizabeth Graves, 66, at 1079 River, carcinoma. Omer Johnston, 58, at- Methodist, coronary occlusion. George G. Schall; 42, at Veterans, lobar pneum r

onia. Mary Mulrey, 49. at 37 E. 11th, coronary occlusion.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

ames United States Weather Bureatl cue

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Fair tenight and tomorrow; continued cold with lowest temperatures tonight about 12 degrees above.

Sunrise ......6:56 | Sunset ......4:20

TEMPERATURE —Dec. 10, 1936— 1p. M..ooses 41

BAROMETER 7a m......3022

Precipitation 2¢ hrs, ending 7 a. m... Total precipitation ... . cassescesasnrasvas cusseesveniney 3.88

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana — Fair tonight and tomorrow; continued cold.

Illinois—Fair tonight and probably toOrrow; not ite .so cold tomorrow in southwest portion.

Lower Michigan — Considerable cloudiness tonight and tomorrow; probably occasional snow tonigne along Lake Michi-

gan; continued col Ohio—Fair and continued cold tonight: tomorrow fair, followed by 'increasin cloudiness and not s0 cold in southwes portion. entucky — Fair, not quite southwest ‘ portion toni ht Ee rors on creasing cloudiness and slightly warmer.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Station. Weather. Bar. Temp.

Amarillo, Tex. .. Bismarck, N. D. .

ses em

ver 1319 Charles | Dodge

~ Senate leadership also was considering night sessions if debate does not end soon. : Blocking House passage were three or more hours of debate to complete reading for floor amendments to the House version of the President’s No. 1 emergency measure for the special session. : Rep. Jones said there would then be “four or five” roll calls, requiring 35 minutes each, in an effort to remove amendments distasteful to the committee majority. He said he would demand such votes on amendments which would: 1. Remove soil conservation benefits for soil-restoring crops to be’ used as -dairy feed. The amendment was introduced by Rep. Gerald J. Boileau (Prog. Wis.) to prevent price-denressing expansion of the dairy industry. 2. Exempt wheat from marketing quotas and penalty taxes. As amended through efforts of Rep. Harry B..Coffee (D. Neb.) the measure would not limit what farmers may market, as in the committee bill, when the supply reaches 1,050,000,000 bushels—50 per cent above normal domestic con-

5 | sumption.

TWO MEN HERE DIE IN CRASHES

Wreck at Traders Point Is Fatal to Lebanon

Driver. (Continued from Page One)

die. Two other passengers in the car, Roger Groine, 21, and Helen Barnhiser, 20, received only slight injuries. They were returning from a dance to thejr homes in Lapel. Robert Armington, Madison County coroner, said an investigation to determine the cause of the accident will be started immediately.

on the automobile probably obstructed the view of the driver, who apparently failed to see the approaching train. The deaths brought to 59 the Madison County accidént toll for Fourteen-year-old Richard Bitner, Newcastle, was killed instantly when struck by an auto at a highway intersection last night. The boy and his brother were walking to a nearby pond to skate. Max VanHoose, the driver, said lights of an approaching car blinded him and he did not see the youths. A hit- run. motorist was blamed by authorities in the highway death of Everett Martin, 20, last night. Mr. Martin’s body was, found at the roadside. : Elmer Newby, 50, Spencer, was killed in a truck-train crash northwest of Oxford. :

224 Clothed

Link Belt Dodge Workers Take 10 More to - Make Total of 45.

b HE number of children cared ‘for in The Times Clothe-A . Child campaign today had reached 224. Today's donors’ list: G. E. Dienhart

Anonymous Miss Lucia Helms

Capsule Plant De “In memory, of Irvin

A Se Towel Supply C Link Belt—Dept. 2e8—Dodge cared for previously, took an ditional

cesseea cnssesc ees 1

si

It was believed that frosted windows |:

hildren

3

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CRACKS IN WALLS ARE CALKED .. .. .

The white lines in the walls are calking material put in cracks. The N. P. Severin Co., general contractor, says the faults were caused

by expansian of the concrete slabs that form the floors,

FREIGHT APPEAL DECLARED PERIL

Differential Rate for South Would Harm North, C. of C. States.

‘(Continued from Page One)

teis, most of which are in its own territory. The difference, Mr. “Hollopeter said, is the principal factor that has enabled the North to hold its manyfacturing establishments. “This is the sole balance against the cheap labor and power costs of the South,” he added. “This alone enables the Northern manufacturer to compete in the - same market against South-produced goods.” Mr, Hollopeter, heading the Cen-

tral Freight Association Defense |

Committee of the Middle West, returned yesterday from Washington where he met representatives of the East and New England states to

SPECIAL PURCHASE

8. u

map plans to block the South’s rate application. ’ He charged the apparently innocuous complaint, seeking freight reductions on but a few items, “is the entering wedge by which the South hopes to wrest industrial supremacy from the North.”

Predicts Other Pleas

Mr. Hollopeter predicted a flood of new applications, covering every possible product, would follow in the event the South wins rate reductions. The South admits its roads would lose heavily at first with such a reduction, but promises the increased volume of business in the future would more than overcome losses,

he said. The roads, by refusing to}

fight the application, are indicating they are willing to gamble on the increased business, the traffic director asserted. ; _ He said the South’s increased business, however, could come only through manufacturers deserting their plants in the North to take advantage of low prodiiction costs. Labor has a heavy stake in the ight, Mr. Hollopeter said. Beside e general threat that cheap labor of the South presents against the wage scales of the North, there is the danger that whole masses of

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*. BLOCK ABSORBS WATER

' Times Photes.

Miss Martha Bullock, 2102 Brookside Drive, Mr. Jo ce’s secretary, pours a cup of water on a Haydite block, used at Lockefleld, to demonstrate that it soaks through the eight-inch depth in 15 seconds.

workers may be thrown out of jobs through abandonment by a manufacturer of plants here, he added. Mr. Hollopeter said this had happened in many instances, citing that of a clothing factory in Indiana being deserted by its owners to reestablish in the South. “Where a community depends on a single industry for its existence, the one-plant town, the result of abandonment would he catastrophic,” he asserted. . The general effect on all communities in the North would be to lower living standards to enable local manufacturers to compete with the South, he claimed.

Freight Traffic Here Shows Decline Freight traffic on railroads oper-

‘ating through Indianapolis has de-

creased about 20 per cent recently, J. J. Liddy, Indianapolis Union Railway superintendent, said today. Pointing out that passenger traffic also had declined, Mr. Liddy said comparison with last year’s figures reveals “that the sudden drop in revenues here is more’ than a seasonable flurry.” - Railroads are not spending money for ties, rails and. new equipment,

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and as a result of this retrenchment, railroad employment has been re-

[| This might be true

{ BOB BURNS

Says: | oLLTwol

-—

| Some of these old sayings are

pretty one-sided. . For instance— row you take the one that seys “Competition ‘is the life of trade.” : ‘as long as the competition. is fair—but eo se Well, jest look what happened to my Uncle Sanky. He went up to a little town to open a news-

month—a fail- * ~~ ure. I asked him what the trouble was and: he says: “Well, I thought I had picked 2 place where I'd have no compeon.” ‘ i And I says: “Well, Uncle Sanky, there ain’t no other newspaper in that town,” and he says, “Yes, 1 knew there wasn't any other news-

-

| paper there, but I didn’t know the

dog-gone town

seven sewin’ circles!” had, :

(Copyright, 1937)

|4 INDIANA COUNTIES ~ GET TENANT LOANS

Times Special WASHINGTON, Dec. 10. — Four Indiana counties have been selected for tenant loans under the new plan to aid tenant farmers, Senator Mine ton announced today. They are Fayette, Gibson, White and Whitley. The $185,582 available

duced, he declared.

is’ expected to provide 31 loans, he said. g

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