Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1938 — Page 3

TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1938

G. 0. P. TO PROPOSE PROGRAM OF ‘REFORM’

Republican State Senators and Representatives, who today went into the Special Session of the Legislature determined to introduce minority business, last night prepared an eight-point program in caucus

at the Claypool Hotel. »

Legislature Gets

They called it a “reform” program,

Townsend Recovery

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THESE DEMOCRATS CONFER . .

After the Democratic caucus last night, Rep.

Paul B. Sturm, Dana

(left), the Democratic caucus chairman, and Rep. Harry Hill (D. Edin-

burg) held a conference, »

Asks $5,300,000 Appropriation for Building

Aver » Flavare nal that the resignation of Thurman | computing the amount ot relief the | District Court of the Southern DisGovernor Favors Revision | Gottschalk, Berne, had vacated the | State is tos provide counties on the | trict of Indiana.

In Windshield Title

Holder Law.

(Continued from Page One)

lishment of a new tuberculosis hospital in Southern Indiana. It would empower the Governor to appoint a five-member commission to select a site for the hospital and the site must be somewhere south of Road 40.

i Upon selection of a location, and

acquisition of property, the Governor would be empowered to appoint a board of trustees of four members. At least one member of the site commission and one of the trustees would be a licensed physician. The proposed amendment to the windshield Title Holder Act was introduced by Rep. Winfield K. Denton (D. Evansville), and was referred to the committee on roads. Changes Card Display It would provide that the certificate of registration would be displayed any place “in the driver's compartment of the motor vehicle” in such manner and position so that the registration number, description and identification numbers of the vehicle and the name and address of the owner are plainly legible to a peace officer on the outside of the vehicle. In the event the motorist would choose the certificate on the windshield, it would have to be placed

in the lower right hand corner, as |

Is now provided in the law.

The bill to appropriate $2,000,000 !

annually in State funds to 1elieve

counties of a portion of social se- |

curity costs is based on a State aid system. Remibursement by the State would be made monthly, It provides an emergency clause to onanle the act to take effect immediacely ailer passage. Introduced by Rep. Paul B. Sturm (D. Dana), this bill also went to the Ways and Means Committee Governor Townsend was greeted by loud applause when ushered into the House chambers by a joint committee of Representatives and Senators Lieut, Gov, Henry FP. Schricker, who presided, introduced the Governor, The Joint meeting was delayed several minutes when the House Committee appointed to invite the Senators merely announced that the House was prepared to hear the Governor, Senator I. Floyd Garrott (R. Battleground) then took the floor and said: “I don't like to raise a point of order on the first day but it doesn't

look to me like we've been invited.” |

The Senate was then recessed for five minutes while the House Committee returned to receive further instruction from Speaker Edward Stein (D. Bloomfield).

House Meets First

The House was called to order at 10:10 a. m. and Lieut. Gov. Schicker convened the Senate eight minutes later, Roll calls showed 91 represeniatives and 45 Senators present. Invocations were read by the Rev. W. E. Carroll of the Northwood Christian Church, Indianapolis, in the Senate, and by the Rev. O. P. Niles of Winona Lake, in the House Resolutions were passed in bo'h Houses to prohibit the consideration of the unfinished business of the last regular session. House Republicans responded with a chorus of “nos” when the voice vote was taken.

In Senate, the chair explained

and the

| office of president pro tem. |called for nominations for | office. The Democratic officially ratifying its caucus action { of last night, nominated Senator E. | Curtis White (D. Indianapolis). { The nomination was made by | Senator Jesse E. Wade (D. Mt. Vernon), new Democratic caucus chairman. Senator William E. Jenner (R. Paoli), minority floor leader, then moved that Senator White's selection be by acclamation, His motion was greeted by applause from the Democratic ranks and Senator Jenner said: “I guess you know what acclamation means.”

Thanks Jenner

“I'm not going to take up much of your time with a jong speech.” Senator White said when he was brought to the rostrum. “However, | I want to express my deep appre-

ciation for the honor you have con- | Particularly do I]

| ferred on me, want to thank Senator Jenner, who serves with distinction on the minority side for his motion.” In the House, Rep. Harry Hill (D Edinburg) was appointed ranking member of the Ways ard Means Committee. New members named were Reps. C. G. Ballard (D. Bicknell) and William J. Black (D. Anderson). The following comittee chairmen also were appointed: Rep. Michael F. Schaeffer (D. Evansville), Bank and Trust Funds; Thomas W. Cal-

lahan (D. East Chicago), Organiza-

tion of Courts; Arthur J. Gladieux (D. Ft. Wayne), Penal and Reform Institutions; Fred C. Rowley (D. Muncie), State Medicine and Public Health, and C. G. Ballard Bicknell), Legislative Apportionment. With overwhelming majorities in both houses, Democratic leaders ization as the Republicans outlined a general “reform” program. | Predicting the Democratic major- | ity “will stay hitched,” party leaders in both houses believed ministration program enacted in eight days. The Republican ovposition program also includes proposals repeal of the weight tax law and the act | legalizing the “Two Per Cent Club,” | and appointment of a commission to investigate the State Alcoholic Beverage Act. They have not yet been introduced. Although the Governor did not include the proposed $3,000,000 State office building in his list of recommendations, Carl Mullen, State Federation of Labor president, indicated that labor groups might fight for its inclusion. This would place the labor group in each house in opposition to farm iegislators. The Indiana Farm Bureau opposes the office building plan.

could be

League Asks 10 Millions

While most lobbying groups decided to remain quiet on the beliel that the session will remain “limited,” the Indiana Municipal League. an organizatizon of City officials. prepared to ask the Governor to support a measure to distribute $10.000,000 from the State Treasury to purchase WPA materials for municipalities, The League also is seking introduction of a hill to repeal present State laws placing taxes on municipally owned utilities.

Both Republicans and Democrats |

are agreed on the proposed redistribution of welfare costs. measure 1s expected to pit legislators of large, industrial against those from poorer areas. The measure sets up a method of

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here ls the Traffic Record | | Lions Club. luncheon, Hotel Washington.

County Deaths (To Date) 1938 . 64] 37 .....2.. 58

City Deaths (To Date) 1938 103% ...

July Accidents ... Injured Dead Arrests

Speeding .... %

———— Reckless Driving .... 1

Running Red Light

| Drunken Driving .... 2

Others ...... 20

MEETINGS TODAY

Rotary Club. luncheon, Claypool Hotel, noon, Lutheran Service Club, uncheon, Canary Cottage, noon Gyre Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel noon Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, noon Universal Club. luncheon. Columbia Ciub. noon. University of Michigan Club, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Delta Kappa, Washington, noon.

luncheon, Hote!

MEETINGS TOMORROW Kiwanis Club. luncheon, Columbia Club, oon. Property Management Division, Real

Estate Board, luncheon, Canary Cottage, noon,

Running Prefer- | ential Streets 9

Beverage Credit Group. wuncheon. Hotel |

Antlers, noon Young Men's Discussion Club, dinner, Y. i . Purdue Association, ‘uncheon, | Severin Hotel noon | Twelfth District American Legion. lunch- { eon. Board of Trade, noon Sigma Aipha Epsilon, of Trade. noon Loyal Order of Moose Luncheon Club, | luncheon, Moose Hall. noon.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

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

_ Luther Holland, 31. of 2618 N. Rural St.: Lula Buford. 35, of 1617 N. Jefferson Ave. Walter Dunn. 37, of 2846 Northwestern Ave.: Cora Gorden, 29. of 2619 Ethel St, Robert Greggs. 37. of 1645 Yandes St.: Hester Taylor. 32. of 1645 Yandes St. | «,Raloh Harwood. 26. of 625 N. Coiorado , St.: Mildred Smith, 27, of 24112 N. Jef- | ferson Ave. Harry Gilbert Ragsdale, 21. of 2014 N

| Olney St.: Leona Mildred Suesz. 20, of 2330

La Salle St. i B. Moore. 22 of Wilmington Beatrice Hepbron. 28 N. Au-

of Canter, Nl.: ose, 65, of Indianapolis Robert T. Wolf. 21. of 1619 Pleasant St : Marcella Gardner, 17. of 2118 English Ave James Dani. 21. of 1217 Reisner St.: Rebecca Pavne. 16, of 1809 Lambert St. Charles F. Johnson, 23. of Catoivn Linasey. d $ . ester F. Harris, 54. of Lansing. Mich. : Sarah Harris. 37. of 226 W. 9th St. John O. Burns. 49. of Jamestown. Ind.: NE Zelher, 34, of 2359 English Ave.

el.: Ann dubon Road. Paul Fortenbach. 68 Carolyn

¥

ma jority, |

| completed the formalities of organ- |

the Ad-!

This |

counties

luncheon, Board |

| counties’ ability to carry social security costs unaided. In counties with relief rates from (10 to 15 cents on each $100 of taxa-

| ble property, the State would pay 23 per cent of the rate in excess of 10

cents, multiplied by one-hundredth |of the assessed valuation of the | county. { When the relief rate exceeds 15 | cents, the reimbursement would be on the basis of one-fourth of a 5 | per cent rate, multiplied by onehundredth of the assessed valuation, plus half the rate over 15 cents times one-hundredth the assessed valuation. The bill limits the State aid to $2,000,000 annually beginning | Jan. 1, 1939.

Resolution Beaten

The unsuccessful Republican resolution seeking an investigation of Senator VanNuys' charges of several months ago against the Administration, said: “A resolution providing for the appointment of a committee to in-

| vestigate certain charges of corruption and malfeasance in the State of Indiana. “Whereas on several occasions in the year 1938 in public utterances, the Honorable Frederick VanNuys, senior U. S. Senator rem Indiana, charges malfeasance and corruption in the administrative cepart[ment of the State, and “Whereas, the Senator by reason of his long acquainta.ace with the incumbent officers, his close asso-

ciation with them, and his thorough |

knowledge of the affairs of cur State, was in position to know whereof he spoke, and

Probe Called Duty

“Whereas, it is the duty of this House to investigate the Senator's charges, and to exonerate and hold blameless the officers accused, should the charges prove false and unfounded, or, if true, to hold them to their merited punishment, now | therefore, Section 1. Be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the

(D. |

General Assembly of the State of |

Indiana: That a select committee

of 11 members so far as possible |

evenly divided between the two political parties, and to serve without pay, be appointed forthwith by the Speaker of the House to investigate the charges made by Senator Van Nuys of corruption and malfeasance in the administrative department of the State of Indiana, and any matters properly therewith connected,

Would Make Report

Section 2. Be it further resolved that, after completing its investiga-

tion, such committee shall make its | detailed report in writing to the |

Governor of Indiana, and which report shall be a public document. Section 3. Be it further resolved that all information obtained by such committee shall be made available to the Grand Jury of any county and of any court in State of Indiana, and of the U. 8. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, and of the U. S.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

= United States Weather Rorean cee

INDIANAPOLIS nicht and tomorrow: cooler tomorrow, ——————————————

coer 4:32 | Sunset ...... ne

TEMPERATURE —July 19, 1937— . . RO h.couuis I

| BAROMETER

Sunrise

Ta om

Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m... | Total precipitation since Jan. 1...... | Excess since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Generally tair in south, pos-

sible local thundershowers in north por- | tion late this afternoon or tonight, becom- |

ing fair tomorrow; cooler tomorrow in central and north portions.

Illinois—Generally fair tonight and tomorrow, except probadly thundershowers this afternoon or tonight in extreme north | portion; cooler in extre:ne northwest portion tonight and in central and north | portions tomorrow.

Lower Michigan — Thundershowers this afternoon or tonight, becoming generally fair tomorrow; cooler tomorrow and in

| extreme north portion tonight.

| Ohio — Showers tonight and tomorrow; cooler tomorrow afternoon and aight,

Kentucky—Showers tonight and tomorrow; slightly cooler in west and central portions tomorrow afternoon; cooler to- | morrow night.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 5 A. M. | Temp. | 66

| Station. | Amarillo, Tex. Ro .02 | Bismarck, N. D, . Boston | Chicago .. Cincinnati Cleveland Denver atripsaravaci Dodge City, Kas. .. . Helena, Mont. Jacksonville, Fla. ansas City, Mo. Little Rock. Ark. Los Angeles Miami,

Okla, City, Omaha. Neb. | pittsburgh ........... Cloudy | Portland. Ore. | San Antonio, Tex. | San Francisco uis

TAPE, Fil. o.vic nes Clear Washington D.&. ....PiCldy

| man-hours of work. | 4,800,000 will be man-hours in direct

the

FORECAST—Fair fo- |

| Members ot both parties and both | houses caucused last night to com- | plete organization.

House Leadership Same

House leadership remains the

THEY WANT MEETING

TO BE LIMITED .

4

Times Photos

The Democratic members of the House of Representatives caucused in the House Chambers at the State House and considered ways and means to limit the special session to the three-point program which Governor Townsend has outlined and which leaders cstimate will require eight days.

Plan: ‘NEIGHBORS’ PAY France Greets British King and Queen:

LAST TRIBUTES U.S. Girls’ School at Hankow Bombed:; TO QUEEN MARIE Rebels 26 Miles From Valencia in Drive

|

‘Be Strong,” Are Her Final

same, with Rep. Frank G. Thomp- | | son, Bluffton, majority floor lead- |

jer, and Rep. James | Hagerstown, minority | Minority leader in the Senate is | William Jenner,

M. Knapp, floor leader. |

Rep. Elam Y. Guernsey (R. Bed- |

| ford)

and Senator Perry Johnson |

(R. Atlanta) will serve as Repub- |

| lican caucus chairmen in their re- | spective houses. Rep.

| Sturm (D. Dana) is House Demo- |

| cratic caucus chairman. State Budget Director

ing program will provide 14 million Of that total,

| construction. The remaining em-

| ployment will be provided :n fabri-

cating industries. State Fund Bids Listed

| Administration leaders are to ask |

| for the following appropriation of | State funds from the $24,000,000 | general fund balance to match an- | ticipated PWA grants for the building program: Anticitate pated WPA Appropriation Grant $ 300,000 § 430,000 300,000 450,000 128,000 189,000

Requested

Institution | Indiana University . Purdue University .... Ball State College | Indiana State Teachers ollege ......00000 | Women’s Prison Boys’ School | Girls’ School | Central State Hospitai | Logansport Hospital . | Logansport Hospita) .. | Evansville Hospital ... | Richmond Hospital ,..

125.100 172,922 458,332 R2,500 304,282 311,250 49,500 106,150

189,000 141,482 375,009 61,500 248,858

1,033,650 114,760 292,500 24.335 144,900

«+ 1,263,350 110,263 357.500 29,885 135,100 293.000 275,000

| Muscatatuck Colony | Epileptic Village | Tuberculosis Hospital . | Deaf School . | Hea!th Board Building Armories 1-H Building Landscaping

235,000

Totals Federal funds are not to be received for the landscaping at all State institutions. The $300,000 ! listed as an extra appropriation is | designed as a ‘‘cushioning fund” required by PWA regulations over and

Edward | ie coffin was transferred from the |

| Brennan said State leaders have es- | oy at0ay Pelesnor to the King's Pal-

| timated that the institutional build- |

| {

| |

|

303,350 | manian royal family. 11,500 | Queen will be laid to rest alongside

i

$5,100,034 $4.111.184 , ment against which Europe's best

above the regular State matching |

| funds.

| For all institutions but. the four | State colleges and universities the | State appropriation is to represent 55 per cent of the total cost and the | Federal grant 45 per cent. | The Federal Government also is to furnish 45 per cent of the funds for the State universities and col‘eges. are to provide 25 per cent | the State 30 per cent.

|

|

| |

Words to King Carol; | Burial Sunday. |

(Photos, Page 11)

BUCHAREST, July 19 (U, P).The body of Dowager Queen Marie, | whose final words to her son be- | seeched him to be a just and strong | monarch, was taken today to King

| Carol's palace at Penesh, outside |

Paul B.| Sinalia.

There it will lie In state | for two days. { Thousands watched bareheaded as

ace. Until tomorrow night the Queen's “neighbors” will be admit- | ted to the castle to pay their final | respects. Thursday morning a special train | will carry the body to Bucharest, | where it will be laid in state at the Queen’s city residence, Castle Co- | troceni, a former monastery. { Purple Mourning Color In accordance with a wish ex- | pressel by Marie in a will dated in | 1933, purple rather than black was |

| used as the mourning color, and the |

castle had was draped in that color. | The Queen requested that her |

| heart be preserved in a silver urn, |

which will be placed in her favoriie | residence, the Baleric Castle over- | looking the Black Sea. On Sunday the royal family will | accompany the Queen's funeral train to the monastery Curta de |

| Valencia, but claimed to have dis-

Eight Dock Workers Killed as Shell Hits British Freighter.

(Continued from Page One)

tioned Viscount Halifax against paying too much attention to! French views and too little to German views.

lowed yesterday's on Nanchang which Japanese authorities claimed was “the most daring attack in the annals of war aviation.” Of the bombs showered on Hankow, the Chinese provisional capital from where the Government was expected to move shortly, one

{ struck the wall of the compound

around the American Catholic girls school.” Part of the wall was demolished and pieces of debris and

| fragments of shrapnel were scat-

| tered about a wide area. The school

Loyalists Dislodged

From Mountain Line HENDAYE, French-Spanish Fron- | tier, July 19 (U, P.).—Spanish Rebel | forces showed up today in their | campaign to capture Sagunto and

lodged Loyalists from mountainous | positions on the outskirts of Viver. Rebel reports said their air force opened the way for an infantry assault that resulted in capture of the heights domination a large part of the Sagunto road on the edge of Viver. Viver is 25 miles inland from Sagunto, which in turn is on the Mediterranean Coast 16 miles north of the former Loyalist capital of Valencia. Another Rebel column checked 10 miles from Sagunto.

was |

American Catholic School in China Bombed

SHANGHAI, July 19 (U. P).—| Students at the American Catholic

Girls’ School in Hankow narrowly |

staff and students were indoors. Another bomb fell within 50 feet of Feng Yu-hsiang, China's “Chris-

| tian general” as he darted along a

street to a place of safety. He is a member of the Chinese Government's board of strategy.

Drive Held Up

Foreign observers believed the raid retaliated for recent Chinese bombings which were chiefly

sponsible for holding up the Japanese advance up the Yangtse valley toward Hankow. For a week the Japanese have been held up outside Kieukiang., 135 miles below Hankow. Police estimated persons were Killed during Hangyang raid. A Japanese Navy communique as-

that over 150 the

| serted that an undetermined num-

ber of Japanese planes had landed at Nanchang, where China's biggest airport is located, and set fire to a number of Chinese planes based there.

Eight Killed as

Arges, about 45 miles from Buchar- | escaped injury or death today in a | British Ship Is Bombed

the burial place of the Ru-| There the |

est,

devastating Japanese air raid. Twenty-seven planes, operating in |

VALENCIA, July 19 (U. P).—

| squadrons of nine each, dropped | The British freighter Stanland was

86,850 | her late husband, King Ferdinand, [ more than 150 bombs in one of the | bombed and set afire today by five 110,000 90,000

who preceded her in death 11 years | biggest raids of the war on the so-| Rebel airplanes in a raid over Va-

0. The highest clergymen in Ru- | mania will perform the funeral ceremony, according to the Greek

243,000 | Orthodox rite.

The dowager Queen, famous for her beauty and charm, died vester= day at the age of 62 of a liver ail-

medical men had struggled vainly for years.

STICKER RECEIPTS UP 286 PER CENT

Gain for June Reported to Board by O’Neill.

Collection on stickers issued by |

The educational institutions | police for traffic violations increased and | 286 per cent in June over the pre-

ceding month, City Clerk Daniel J

Total cost of the school projects | O'Neill Jr, told the Safety Board to-

| are Indiana University, $1,000,000; day.

| Purdue University, $1,000,000; Ball

| |

Mr. O'Neill said 2057 drivers paid

State College, $420,000, and Indiana | $4114 for $2 stickers last month

State Teachers College, $420.000.

Grand total cost of all projects, including Federal, State and university and college funds, is $10,819,218.

| |

|

while in May, 718 offenders paid

Chief Morrissey explained that police were without a supply of stickers during the early part of May. He also said that the City

G. O. P. legislators will “go along | Prosecutor's office had been unable

| with the building program

to ato enforce sticker payments until

rrudent degree,” they agreed at last | City Council amended the ordinance

| night's caucus.

to “put teeth in it.”

12 Oil Companies Fined |

| - — |

| |

For Trust Law Violation

MADISON. Wis, July 19 (U, P.) —

Judge Patrick T. Stone fined 12 | major Midwest oil companies the maximum of $5000 each and five executives $1000 each, a total of $65,000 and costs, in U. S. District Court today as the climax of the Government's antitrust prosecution of the oil industry in this region. The verdict convicting 16 companies and 30 executives of a criminal conspiracy to raise and fix gasoline prices, returned by a jury of farmers and small-town business-

Judge Stone in the case of one company and 10 high-ranking executives, and a new trial was ordered for 15 other executives and three companies. “That the jury was in a position to make the complete and critical study of the proof as it applied to each defendant separately is at | least doubtful,” Judge Stone stated

{in his decision today. “It has taken | Oil Co. president and brother of | the Court a considerable time to do | former Vice President Charles G.

|

briefs.

problem.”

Judge Stone said he was com- | ward G. Seubert and Allan Jackson pletely satisfied of the guilt of, and | of Chicago, president and vice presiaccordingly fined, the following ex- | dent of Standard Oil (Indiana.)

ecutives: Charles E. Arnott, New

York, Socony-Vacuung vice presi- of the firms granted a new trial,

| men here Jan. 22, was set aside by |

|

| | | |

(it with the aid of the record and | Dawes; former | The jury, acting in an effort | France, once candidate for Presi- | | to do justice, did get the larger view | dent against Herbert Hoover of the case, and is to be commended | Mid-Continent for its handling of a most difficult | among those dismissed for lack ot

dent; H. T. Ashton, St. Louis, general manager, Lubrite division of Socony-Vacuum; P. E. Lakin, Shell | Petroleum Corp. sales manager; | Robert W. McDowell, Tulsa, Okla, | Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. vice | president; R. H. McElroy Jr., Chi- | cago, Pure Oil Co. tank sales man- | ager. Companies fined $5000, in contrast | to the lesser amounts imposed upon | the executives who faced a possible | penalty of the same amount plus | year in jail, included: Contmental Oil Co., Empire Oil & Refining Co., | Globe Oil & Refining Co., Lemont, | Ill.; Globe Oil & Refining Co. | Blackwell, Okla.: Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp., Phillips Petroleum | Co., Pure Oil Co., Shell Petroleum | Corp., Sinclair Refining Co. Skelly | Oil Co., Soconoy-Vacuum Oil Co, | and Wadhams Oil Co, Socony-Vac- | uum subsidiary, Milwaukee. Henry M. Dawes of Chicago, Pure |

Senator Jacob 1.

and

president, were

substantial evidence, along with Ed-

Standard Oil of Indiana was one

| airfields in the tri-city area and fol-

2 HURT AS CONVICTS

guard, was stabbed in the back with

| witness before a Federal

called Wuhan District, comprising the cities of Wuchang, and Hankow. A semi-official Chinese estimate said there were 1100 casualties from the bombing, including 500 killed in Hankow.

Hanyang

in Wuchang. The attacks were directed against

TRY PRISON BREAK

COLUMBUS, O, July 19 (U. P.). —An Ohio penitentiary convict was shot down while trying to escape today and Raymond T. Thornton, a

a butcher knife during the attempted break. The wounded convict was Clyde Staup, 28, of Allen County, O. Charles Menges, Hamilton County convict, also fell when Staup was shot, leading to reports that both had been killed. Both Staup and Thornton are in serious condition. Prison officials said the prisoners pressed a knife against the back of William Walker, assistant superintendent, and forced him to walk toward the guardhouse, as a way out of the walled interior. As they approached the guardhouse, Thornton tried to stop the march toward freedom. He was stabbed.

ICE CREAM ISSUE IN MONOPOLY INQUIRY

CHICAGO, July 19 (U. P.).—Government attorneys called an attorney for the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers, Washington, today as the second Grand Jury hearing evidence gathered in a year-long investigation of an alleged milk monopoly in the Chicago area.

The Popular Girl

Does not reduce by artificial means . . , she is not under nourished for she is the active athe letic type in 1938 , , , by natural activity she keeps trim and graceful . . . she eats well to keep well . . . and keeps active to keep

More than 60 civilians | were killed by bombs which struck | the sixth municipal primary school

fit . . . Seville meals are properly balanced meals , , , the kind she chooses.

TOWNE DINNER, 50¢

(Complete)

%

re- |

lencia port at 9 a. m. There were no victims aboard ship but eight dock workers in the vicinity were killed. One bomb struck a part of the Stanland’s cargo which had been set ashore, igniting the ship 10 feet away. The fire spread quickly to the bridge and members of the crew and dock workers spent several hours putting it out. It was badly damaged, Two observers of the Internation al Nonintervention Committee were aboard the Stanland. They wers Albert Wyjker of the Netherlands and Salvadore Cirrincione of Italy.

Germans Execute Youth as Spy

BERLIN, July 19 (U. P.).—Helmut Kuhlmann, 24, was executed today for “espionage in behalf of a neighboring power.”

Report Arrest of

Four Sudetens by Czechs

PRAHA, July 19 (U. P.).—Ger- | man sources asserted today that | four followers of Konrad Henlein, | German minority leader, had been arrested at Eger after a skirmish with policemen.

British Troops Clash With Arabs

JERSUALEM, July 19 (U. P.).— Newly arrived British troops were reported today to have engaged in four clashes with Arab rebel bands in the Nazareth district, Reports indicated that there were at least 12 casualties among the rebels. There were no casualties among the troops.

All Out!

Out

they Go!

All our DOBBS $4, $5 and $6

Sailors help yourself at—

All our

2

WEARINGTAHN

1.95

SAILORS

Choice—

Plenty of hats hurry Sirs . . . sail right out!

DOBBS $7.50, $10 & Better Panamas $3.95

°1

vs bit they'll (No

exchanges or refunds.)

i:

—The Man's Store