Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1938 — Page 1
VOLUME 50—NUMBER wl
BIKE RDERS
ARE SENTENCED BY JUDGE, 17
Novel La Porte Court Opens ~ As Young Jurist Lectures, Fines Defendants.
‘NO FIXING,’ HE SAYS
City Seeks to Meet Juvenile Traffic Problem; 47 Face ~ Bar Today.
LA PORTE, Aug. 23 (U. P.) —“The State vs. Raymond Wood,” piped freckle-faced Freddie Dunham, 14-year-old prosecutor of La Porte’s experimental “bicycle court.” Judge Joseph Daley, 17, frowned at the 15-year-old defendant. The first session of the special municipal court with which La Porte hopes to meet the growing juvenile traffic problem was’ “under way. > “You are charged,” said Prosecutor Dunham, “with riding sa bicycle double while going swimming: Gulity or not guilty?” “Guilty,” Gulped Raymond. “The purpose of this court,” said the |. Judge Daley sternly, “is not merely to inflict punishment, but to teach a lesson in the value of human life and to instill in every. citizen the need of cooperation in observing the city ordinances which are designed to protect human beings.
Orders Biweekly Report
«1 sentence you to go- see the March of Time movie ‘The Man at the Wheel.’ You:will report to the police station twice a week and tell them how you are observing traffic
- ordinances.”
Mayor Alban. Smith sat on the bench with Joseph, beaming as he . observed the profound impression the court’s words had on the boys and girls hailed before him. court is Mayor Smith's idea. He conceived it in an effort to halt the mounting toll of death and injury to “bike” riders—700 were killed and 35,000 ‘injured in collisions between . bicycles and. ‘automobiles. last year. Twenty-seven children faced the bar in the morning session with 20 mare summoned for this afternoon. Many" were fined amounts ranging from 15 cents ta 50 cents and their. bicycles taken away for periods up to a week! Judge Daley: warned the defend-. ants that this court would tolerate “no fixing and no favors’ . Norman Williams; 13, pled guilty to riding on the wrong side of the street and was ordered: to report twice & week to the “police station. Janice Hays, 13, with a long braid and snapping ' black eyes, hadn't thought she was endangering life _ when she rode through a stoplight. The bike she earned taking care of babies was ordered impounded at the police station “until Monday.”
Curls, Giggles of No Avail
Barbara Larson, 11, had brand new Shirley Temple curls and a fetching giggle but Judge Daley wasn’t moved. He rapped for order and sentenced her to learn all the bicycle ordinances, report to police and stop giggling. ' With the aplomb of an experienced jurist—Joseph hopes to be a lawyer some day—Judge Daley rattled off the cases. “I think,” said Mayor Smith, “that we may have the answer here.” - “The problem we face is faced to a greater or lesser degree by every town and city in the country,” he explained. “One out of every three versons in La Porte rides a bike so we think our problem is more difficult than most. “We are going to experiment with a juvemnile traffic court and see if we can make the boys and girls more respectful of traffic regulations. The bicycle riders of today are the motorists of tomorrow, so we hope to have long range results.” W. H. Cameron, managing director of the National Safety Council, commended Mayor Smith’s plan. - “La Porte’s bicycle court is a top notch idea and we hope its example il be followed by other cities,” he sa :
INDIANA TO BE NAME
OF NEW BATTLESHIP |2°
HYDE PARK, N. Y., Aug. 23 (U. P.) —President Roosevelt, today approved Indiana, Massachusetts, Alabama and South Dakota as names for four battleships whose construction will begin soon. He agreed that four light cruisers yet td be started would be named © Atlanta, San Juan, Juneau and San Diego. Battleships are ramed for states; cruisers for cities. In selecting names, the Navy Department chooses those which have been entrar in the Navy the longest time. The last Indiana was decommissioned Nov. 1, 1920,
TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
Johnson ..... 10 Movies ...... 12 Mrs. Ferguson 10 Obituaries... 16 Pegler ....... 10 Pyle ....
: 4 4 15 4
Curious World 14 Editorials
Forum Gna, Bear. It
5 | Presbyterian Church
FORECAST:
Auto Industry Prepared To Set Boom Pace With ‘New Models, Says Ward's
Detroit Statistical Agency Reports Improved Cars
And Reduced Prices Will Stimulate
N
Motor Market.
(Business gains expected to improve U. 8S. budget: status, Page Five) :
DETROIT, Aug. 23 (U. P.).—Motor industry observers today predicted a booming market this fall in the wake of anticipated radical changes
in the 1939 auto.
Reports drifting from tle engineering '1aboratories indicate that the new models will have extreme “eye appeal.” Manufacturers, according to reports, are hoping that a radically different 1939 car will serve
as the sparkplug to
lift the industry out of the recession and start it
and many allied industries toward better times.
PAIR WOUNDED FLEEING POLICE
Officers Fire on Car During 80-Mile-an-Hour Chase; ‘Bandit Sought.
aT
Two alleged thieves were shot and wounded critically and two’ others were captured early today after an 80-miles-an-hour chase by Deputy Sheriffs who said they found them ‘stripping an auto. Critically wounded by rifle bullets fired by the deputies were Ed White, 43, Negro, of 863 Indiana Ave., and Thomas Hill, 33, Negro, who gave a N. Senate Ave. address. Both are in City Hospital. : Held in County Jail were two other Negroes, Lloyd Thomas, 21, who gave his address as 406 N. West St., and Theodore Bibbs, 36, of 632 Darnell St. None . of the suspects was armed, according to the deputies’ reports. At the same time, police continued their search for the: blond. young bandit who yesterday held up four persons in an East Side store and abducted a motorist in his flight. A series of overnight petty crimes also was investigated.
Trio Flees Ffom Car Participating in the pursuit and.
capture of the. alleged thieves were
Deputy. Sheriffs Hubert Stevens, Frank Britton and Harry Wechsler. They had been called to the home of Roy Blankenship,” 5000 S. Harding St.; at 3 a. m. on the report that 100 spring chickens had been stolen from the home. While cruising -in search: of the chicken thieves, .the . deputies approached a partly stripped sedan
parked beside the road near Troy |.
Ave. and Bluff Road, and saw three, men run from the car, climb into another car and drive away. A fourth man remained in the car. Deputy Wechsler - jumped - from the Sheriff's car and: -captured Thomas, who had remained in the other car. The other two deputies pursued the fugitives’ car a mile and a half out Bluff Road. Several times the deputies attempted to force the fugitives’ car to the side of the road but were forced to fall back as the (Continued on Page Three)
PWA GRANT FOR. U. AUDITORIUM MADE
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23. (U. P.) —- The Public Works Administration today made 70 allotments to local governments, including a grant for a $1,100,000 Indiana University Building at Bloomington. The grant: was for 45 per cent of the cost.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Aug. 23. — A $495,000 PWA grant for Indiana University, to match $550,000 in State funds appropriated by the Legislature recently for the comnstruction of a $1,100,000 auditorium, was announced in Washington today, it was learned here.
School officials said work on the new building will start this fail. Speech department offices also will be housed in the new building.
Times Special - PLAINFIELD, Aug. 23.—A $237,027 grant for a new dormitory at the Plainfield Boys’ School, was announced today by PWA officials in ashington. The t is to meet state funds. The new building will cost about $526,000.
© More optimism ‘than has been seen seen. in months prevails in the industry and facts and figures support that attitude. Already thousands of workers idle during the summer slack period and the annual changeover have been called back to. work. Within another month, final assembly lines at all plants are expected to be in full
swing. Seen As Pacemaker
Because the auto is the No. 1 customer for raw materials of the 48 states, A. H. Ward, president of Ward’s Automobile Reports, predicted the industry would be the pacemaker in leading the nation out of the recession.
ton, mohair, gray iron, lumber and a half dozen other metals have been placed or are being drawn up bx the car manufacturers. Mr. Ward pointed out that in addition to these purchases, the anticipated boom in auto sales would have a vital and stimulating effect on gasoline, rubber and advertising. Railroad and motor freight lines also will reap benefits.
Used Car Flood Recedes
An additional stimulus to new car sales may be price decreases. Ward’s reports predict the price tags of some cars will be under those of the 1938 models. Flood of used cars such as the one which paralyzed the industry during the past year is hot expected during the coming season. Since the auto industry passed its low point of the summer a few weeks ago, it has continued to provide the nation’s business with encouraging news. Hundreds of small plants which make sueh parts as ; . ‘seat cushions, electrical
and: capa
now arg running at fear + Thdiatia Plants Aided
industry in the future was reflected ‘in the money spent on major alterations in the car. ‘The changes were made in supply plants throughout the nation as well’ as in ‘the final assembly plants in- Michigan. At New Castle, Ind., a millionrdollar tooling program has Deen
completed by Pl ivision of Chrysler Corp, “At. Kokomo, Ind. another ha on dollars was
spent for new machines for gear shiffs’ and transmission . parts for Plymouth. Plymouth changes also entailed a million dollar paint setup in Detroit and a $6,000 factory for body moldings.
COOLER WEATHER FORECAST FOR CITY
Showers Likely Late Today, Bureau Says.
TEMPERATURES
1 10a. m 61 11a. m.... .... 66 ' 12 (Noon).. arose 71 1p wm...
~Cooler weather is probable tomorrow, following -thundershowers this afternoon or tonight, the Weather Bureau forecast today.
+ ‘A light shower shortly after 6 a. m. today caused a four-degree temperature drop within an hour. The Weather Bureau predicted, however, that the maximum today would approach that of yesterday— 86 degrees. Temperature fomorrow is not expected to exceed "80. :
NEW JERSEY FEELS QUAKE TRENTON, N. J., Aug. 23 -(U. P). —Southern New Jersey and adjacent parts. of Pennsylvania near Philadelphia were jarred by a series of four minor earthquakes last night ane today. There were no casualies
76 78 82 85
Blythe Hendricks Dead:
Burial Here
Times Special CULVER, Ind. Aug. 23 ~Blgine Q. Hendricks, secretary of the Indianapolis Safety Board, died here today at the summer home of his
on Thursday
mother, Mrs. John E. Hendricks. He
was 58. He had been ill for many
weeks. He was the brother of State °
Senator Thomas A. Hendricks.
Blythe Q. Hendricks, who dled to-
day at Culver, had been seéretary of the Safety Board for the last three years. Funeral services will be a“ 2p m.
Thursday at the Flanner & Hy 4
chanan Mortuary, with the Rev, J Ambrose Dunkel officiating.
of Tabémacle
Burial will be at Crown Hill Ceme- «
He was a lawyer, but was known vities in
more Widely, for his acti
ey
Thundershowers : this “afternoon. or tofig
Heavy orders tor steel, glass, cot-.
‘4nd dashboard equiphient, castings | were: A) his ad.”
Optimism on the part of the auto
) pening. | atiged to. more than 3 pointe,
; F108 Brices declined 1 2k 28cents | Eo re
foo
TUESDAY, AVGUS? 23, 1988
\SPAYKTIN
Coroner Hints " Disclosures in Probe of Fatalities. 8
ARRESTS MAY - BE MADE|
Bodies Too Easy Identification, Relatives Claim.
. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 23 (U. P.). —The bodies of four convicts found dead in the Philadelphia County Prison were so battered and disfigured that it was difficult to identify them, their relatives said today. A preliminary examination of the bodies indicated the men died. of asphyxiation, Coroner Charles H. Hersch said. Predicting “startling disclosures,” the Coroner previously had said it appeared the four victims, hunger strikers, had died from beatings or been .scalded to death.
He announced later that, if re-|
sults of an autopsy being performed on the bodies of the four victims warrant, “I will make some arrests.”
Bodies Look Scalded
The Coroner declined fo elaborate on the indications of asphyxiation, emphasizing that it was not a final conclusion and that the autopsies had not yet been completed. He would not say whether death might have been caused by steam, water or tear gas. The dead convicts were Josph Walters, 28, serving 20 to 50 years for burglary; Harry Osborne, 22, serving 10 years for burglary; Frank Comodeca, ‘46, serving 10 to 20 years for burglary; Joseph McQuade, 26, three years for larceny. “Frank's head was flattened out as though he had been hit with a
‘sledge hammer,” Joseph Camodeca,
brother of one of the prisoners, said. “Their heads were battered and their bodies looked @&s though they had been scalded with steam. 1 had trouble identifying h: : Michael McQuade, father of ‘one of the dead convicts; bow tered:
head was his eyes
33 oo
” Mother Collapses
Mrs. Mae Osborne, mother of the third man, came out. of the morgue sobbing: “Oh ‘my baby, oh my baby,” and collapsed. ' She was accompanied by his ‘attractive blond wife, Helen, who also was crying. No one appeared to identify Walters. He was from Pittsburgh. Two State investigations began today into the strange deaths in the crowded prison which terminated a noisy hunger strike of 650 convicts against the quality of prison food. The naked bodies of the convicts— two ‘in each of two adjoining cells —were found yesterday morning. (Continued on Page Three)
KLAN MEMBERSHIP CHARGED TO M’ADOO 1L.OS ANGELES, Aug. 23 (U, P.) —
Pierson Hall, former United States District Attorney for Southern Cali-
fornia, charged today that Senator |”
William Gibbs McAdoo of California was a member of the Ku-Klux Klan in 1924. Mr... Hall displayed an enlarged photo, ic reproduction of a KuKlux Klan membership card made out to “William G. McAdoo” and signed by “H. W. Evans, Imperial
"| Wizard and Imperial Cyclops of the
Ku-Klux Klan.” The card was dated “the 29th day of February, 1924.” Senator McAdoo said the charges were - “utterly and wantonly false” and that the Klan membership card was “just plain forgery.”
FIRST PAYROLL GAIN
“IN YEAR REPORTED
WASHINGTON, Aug. ‘Aug. 23 (. P)— Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins reported today that factory employment increased 40,000 in July and that weekly factory payrolls increased by nearly $500,000. She said that the report marked a definite improvement in the employment situation and that it was the first employment gain shown in any month since September, 1937.
GRONAUER LEADING PUBLIC LINKS PLAY
HIGHLAND PARK COURSE; CLEVELAND, Aug. 23 (U. P)— Fred Gronauer of Indianapolis took the lead today in the National Public Links golf tournament with a 145 at the end of 36 holes. He posted 37-36—173 on the links’ old 18 holes to add to his 72 of yesterday. Gronauer, a member of the Pleas-
ant Run club of Indianapolis, is Tn-
district ‘champion.
QUINS TO RESUME
DAILY. APPEARANCES
GALLANDER, Ontario, Aug. 23 w. P.)—The two. daily “personal aps” of the Dionne quintup-
4 Jets wi will be resumed today, it is
after 7 two-weeks inter-
| ruption due to slight sore throats.
‘STOCKS GO HIGHER
‘NEW. YORK, Aug. 23 (U. P).— The stock market was strong in
‘{gylet fading. today after milying
Pel a Gain
‘starting’ |
_ Battered for |
John A. Watkins
Dr. 0. T. Turflinger
t, Semin fa fair ¢ tomorrow; cooler tomorrow. 2
Entered as ir Seni ce ty
ig
Seek State Legion Leadership
Harold A ‘Shindler
Hungary Disavows Force,
Wins Consent to Rearm
HELGOLAND—Hungarian Regent
unimpeachable source. "BLED, Yugoslavia, Aug. 23 (U. Hungary to rearm for the first time
rw siatement of China. policy ‘expected.
IN THE . AMERICAS— MEXICO CITY—New. U. 8. note on land seizures studied.
BULLETIN LONDON, Aug. 23 (U. P.).—~Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian Foreign Minister, has definitely admitted to Sir Noel Charles, British charge @’Affaires, that Italy has been sending .officers and men. to. Spain, in addition to war material, it ‘was learned today from ‘an
Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and Rumanja—
IN EUROPE— : BLED, YUKOSLAVIA—Little Entente-Hungary pact falls,
entertained,
LONDON-=Soviet envoy asks nonintervention meeting. PARIS—Blum warns Daladier on 40-hour week. HENDAYE—Loyalists get new artillery, Rebels say. WARSAW—Tension grows over Daydy incidents.
“(U. P) ~The Little Entente nations— today recognized the right of since the World War.
© In return, Hungary: to
FURTHER CITY TAX RATE CUT EXPECTED
County Council Also to Hold Special’ Session.
Further reductions in the : eight milion dollar City budget were ex-
this afternoon and tonight. The proposed budget calls for a tax rate of $1.3615, an. increase of about 11 cents.- ‘Budget reductions thus far, amounting to $2500, have Supine levy only a fraction of a cen Meanwhile, - the County ‘Counil meet in special session today for a preliminary review of ed budgets which indicate a total County rate of 61.1 cents, an increase of 12.1 cents over the 1938 County levy. Council members said they would set a public, hearing on requests after another session tomorrow. : On the basis of the tentative estimates the total 1938 rate for Indianapolis in Center Township would be $3.60, an increase of 40 cents, Proposed le levies comprising the estimated $3.60 rate for Indianapolis in Center Township, compared with the 1938 rates, include: 1038
, 1939, City LC S138 Schools . srecseseasse 97 1.00 Township cesssssenee’ 251 1 tacos sce 61 49 15
pe ko. $3.60 $3.20 The Beech Grove School Board announced its proposed 1937 levy|I as $1.10, the same as this year.
pected to be made by the City Coun-' cil, meeting in special session again.
15
agreed avoid’ armed force in settlement of international problems. “The decision of the Entente nations was. announced in a .communique issued at their conference here. # The Hungarian Minister to Yugoslavia had been in close contact with ‘the copferences and originally it had been intended .to
field ‘in Central: European relations. ‘The plan for a “pact of Bled” was abandoned, however, due to- failure of Czechoslovakia and Hungary to agree on the problem of the Hungarian. minority: in Czechoslovakia.
Hungarian Regent
Sees German Forts
ILSE, Helgoland, Aug. 23 (U. PJ). — Admiral Nicholas Horthy, Regent of. Hungary, who yesterday reviewed the new .Nazi Navy at Kiel, today inspected the fortifications and garrisons of the Island of Helgoland in the North Sea. .Fuehrer Adolf Hitler alcompanied Admiral and Mme. »Horthy.
Russia Demands Spanish. War Parley
LONDON, Aug. 23 (U. P.).—Ivan Msisky) Soviet Ambassador, visited e Foreign Office today and dete I immediate summoning of the Nonintervention Committee on Spain, in view of the crisis caused py the Rebel rejection of Britain's proposals for withdrawal of forvolunteers. t was reported ‘that when Ambassador Maisky proposed that the committee meet at the. end of this week, Lord Plymouth, its chairman, replied that it would be impracticable, declaring that further preparation would be necessary. ae was learned that Guido Crolla, charge. d'affaires,
Continue on Page Five)
negotiate in accord, covering a wider
PUB IC APA I : S PERIL T0 U.S.
American People Will Not Lightly Surrender Liberties but Need to Be Aroused, U. S. Legion Commander Says.
ELECTION TODAY TO END CONVENTION
Four Candidates in Field for State Leader- ~ ship; Parley Votes to Purge Ranks of Those Found to Be ‘Disloyal.’
: (Other Photos, Page 3; Auxiliary Election, Page 11.)
While Indiana members of the American Legion prepared to select new leaders this afternoon, National Com mander Daniel 4. Doherty warned in a convention address that “America’s democracy is endangered by the smug ine difference to activity of subversive forces.” Four candidates were seeking the post of Indiana commander. They were: Harold Shindler, Newburgh attorney; William Hyland, Evansville police captain; John A. Watkins, Bloomfield publisher, and Dr. O. T. Turflinger, Bloomington, Its celebrating ended for the year and its three-hour pa<
URGES SCHOOLS FIGHT INSANITY
Dr. Anita Muhl, Here on Visit, Relates Progress Under Psychiatrists.
By VIRGINIA M. MANNON
assisted by practicing psychiatrists,
thé insanity in the country, Dr. Anita Muhl, formerly of Indian-
{| apolis, said today.
In the 18 Soa since she left Indianapolis, Dr. Muhl has become one of fhe. “country’s leading psychiatrists. She is here from San Diego, Cal., for a short visit. In the late fall she is to sail for Australia where she will lecture on psychiatry and criminology for three years at the University of Melbourne. She also is to be a director - of a foundation for psychiatric education’ there. Based upon the modern concept that ‘a co-ordinated pattern of constructive thinking is n ry for the development of the community at large, the Australian psychiatric education plan is being launched in Melbourne with the hope that it will be adopted generally. Dr. Muhl explained. It is designed to link the various factors dealing with the . development of child life, such as preschool education, school social service, medical, teacher and student groups and the juvenile court. “Australia 'is full of independent thinking and in Melbourne there is ay nice combination of American progressiveness and English love of tradition,” Dr. Muhl said. “All holidays are celebrated on Monday, which is merely practical mental hygiene, since everyone comes back to work really refreshed after nearly three days’ rest. “Doctors, educators, lawyers and social workers in the United States are interested in mental hygiene, but most important is the idea of prevention of mental illnesses. In round numbers, 75 per cent of insanity is preventable.” In discussing methods for pre(Continued on Page Three)
SMITH SLATED FOR NEW TERM ON NLRB
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (U. P).— Reliable Administration sources said today that President Roosevelt has decided to reappoint Donald Wakefield Smith to another five-year term on the National Labor Relations Board. His term expires Saturday. Mr. Smith, who would not comment on the reports, conferrred with the President last week and pre-
ted | sumably received: some indication
then of Mr. Roosevelt’s plans.
Employment in Indiana dropped 3.3 per cent and payrolls 2.6 per wpe from June 15 to July. 15,. the monthly survey of the State ‘Employment Service showed today. dustries showed a 14 per cent rise 7 per cent dip in ‘employment.
reporting showed that business had | reported RE oct Pores THe | sored July and and that while statistics indicated a continuation of the re-| ceding trend that began - | autumn, they" gave Xd 5
In ‘Indianapolis, 595 reporting in.in payrolls for 36,135 workers and a | Analysis of 3056 Indiana concerns | jn
Improved August Business Indicated For- Indiana Despite Midsummer Dip
factories throughout the state, a 37 per cent decrease from the number employed in. these same plants in. mid-June. : )
a 18 he cent employment drop throughout the state. Cities hit hardest. by steels retrenchment were Bast Chicago, and 'Hammond, which felt employment de-
® rade
Properly trained, supervised and|’
“| the nation’s teachers and psrents ing o - | coulg. prevent. about 75 per cent of . | any a change.
yesterday still the talk of the town, the Legion was to close its 20th annual session following the election
and installation ceremonies.
In yesterday's busines meeting, the Legionnaires resolved to purge their membership of “those whose loyalty to and. patriotism for the United States” can be questioned. + Terming America the “last citadel} of democracy” in' a “rapidly change ing world,” Commander Doherty declared many are now alarmed by the belief that democracy is in retreat and that “disintegration impen “Our people,” he said, “with their deeply rooted convictions of personal liberty na appreciative understand : tic processes of gove ernment, ‘not readily submit to Raps Subversive Groups
“The great danger, however, lies in the tendency toward smug indifference and the belief that America will be safe because we entrtain that hope. “This citadel is today ' being stormed by forces of every description, but all having a common characteristic as representative of the very antithesis of democracy.” Commander Doherty warned the Indiana Legionnaires that sube versive groups are concentrating on “implanting radical doctrines and fallacious theories” in the minds of “the youth of America during the impressionable period of their lives.” Student organizations, he said, under the guise of professed inter est in world peace and liberalism, actively work to destroy or impale national defense programs, and to support philosophies of government inimical to the welfare of this country. :
Claims Tyranny Ignored
“It seems to make but little dif ference to them,” he said, “that such systems of government have been productive of tyranny, destriction of relifion, and reduction of the individual to economic and political slavery.” He asserted that the Legion’s re< sponsibility is to carry forward “with equal industry a sound and cone structive program of Americanism in the field of youth so that a stron bulwark may be erected. which the waves of radical propa= ganda will beat to no avail.” Mr. Doherty stressed the need for enlisting co-operation of all patrie otic, fraternal and civic organizations in the Legion’s Americanism program, asserting that the promo tion of Americanism is not the exe clusive obligation of any one organe ization. . : “The worth of the nation is only as great as the collective merit of its citizenry,” he said. “That in turn depends upon the recognition by the (Continued on Page Three)
FRENCH SEAPLANE STARTS TO NEW YORK
LISBON, Portugal, Aug. 23 (U, P.)—The French flying boat Lieut. de Vaisseau Paris landed here at 8 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) today en route to New York via the Azores on an exploratory transe Atlantic commercial flight. The big plane, forced to abandon a similar attempt last week, will fly first to Lisbon,- Portugal. It probably will remain there a dwg before resuming the flight, stopping to refuel at Horta, Azores, and then going on to Port Washington, N. Y, New York City’s seaplane base.
LIGHT MISSISSIPPI Rl VOTE IS EXPECTED,
JACKSON, Miss, Aug. 3 (. ey 3
| today to nominate | Congres and ints Judicial puts.
