Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1938 — Page 1

The Indianapolis Times

FORECAST:

Partly cloudy; showers and thunderstorms probable tonight and tomorrow; cooler tomorrow.

FINAL HOME

SCRIPPS — HOWARD

VOLUME 50—NUMBER 154

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1938

Entered at Postoffice,

as Second-Class Matter Indianapolis,

Ind.

PRICE THREE CENTS

CHILD INJURED

BY AUTO ON HIS WAY T0 SCHOOL

Eight Die in State Accidents; 60-Year-0ld Man Dies In Hospital Here.

10 VIOLATORS PAY 852

Suspended After 12 Are Hurt in Accidents In County.

er $72

(Photos, Page 18)

ar-old Myron condition

r bei

critical

nor i

Bonwell,

It’s Payday tor "Workingman’ John Roosevelt

i

i

BOSTON, Sept. T (U. P.).—This was pav day for John Roosevelt— his first as a working man. When he compiges his eighthour shift as a stock clerk at Fi

VANNUYS GIVES 1ST CAMPAIGN TALK TONIGHT

Senior Senator to Speak at

ene’s Bargain Basement todav, the |

son will containing $13

| President's | ceive an {in cash. Young Roosevelt began work Aug. 29, soon after he and his bride, the former Anne Lindsay Clark, re- | turned from their Bermuda honeymoon. At first, in his $2000 sedan, but he found that garaging the car was too ex- | pensive and latelv he has been commuting by train.

SUDETENS HALT PEACE PARLEYS

voungest envelope

he !

to |

of the

six to

eight persons, en were added : toll. In ther persons were injured, in 22 police arrested -affic violation charges.

of Poplar Bluffs, |

Meth Hospital s received in

He

a boy f car 220 R BR. He

house,

reported. nearby B possible fractures a fractured skull . Mrs. Edith Bon76B, said they few minutes the Crooked arrested on

a charge

They said the thrown 20 feet bv the

the bovs road Wavne hurthat Myron he attempted to avoid ut was unable to left because of heavy hat n’s parent

uvre

w hen

hesihe bov bh He live on the Frank estate, south of the Golf and Country Club. Arthur Bonwell. convicted of n charges in Municiand were fined $52, 1 $72 suspended. rgements wo schoolboy brothllv Monday

SIC

were

1 an outing with their a bridge on r Stilesville. ton Duane Parris, ugene Parris, 12, sons Imer Parris, 3003 bf whom were inreecived

eo} 3 int nea into

Methodist

reported

Hospital, she would er persons were injured r crashed into the rear They were Harh, 22; John Ernest Wade, 22; er Dun 827 N. East St. s Helen Wade, 2039 Lee Ave.

Miss and

Die in Methodist Hospital

thers died at Meth- |

family was revisit with relatives n, Putham County, at the accident. The boys classes at School Ellis in the fifth grade on in the eighth are tomorrow 2 p. Belle Un Belle Union. he parents, survives them s Wilson, 73, of 52 W. 30th brought te City today a critical condition being struck by a car while ng on Road 29 at 60th St. Hosattendants multi

ipl

for

to be held. at the resiat Walnut ion. Burial

Ser

‘ices

m.

a brother,

IN

fered e fractures. State investigated reported W. R. Ramsay, 26, of 828 S. Roena Ave. was driver of the car. Theodore P. Farrington, 74. Nord Ave, is reported have walked into the path of an the S. West St. 1700 block (Continued on Page Three)

¢ who

of

336 vke

alto in

LOCAL HOG PRICES UP 15 TO 25 CENTS

Hog prices climbed 15 to 25 cents here today as receipts sagged cultural Economics reported. I'he practical top reached $9.15 as ights above 160 pounds made the

‘ent gain.

realized by lighter weights and pigs.

NEW YORK, Sept. 7 tocks drifted irregularly higher in eatureiess dealings today. Traders

Indianapolis, |

31]

Hen- |

Blakeslee said he |

of |

g bv deputy sher- |

have been |

only | 2 1 i the mother was |

Paul !

Hospital |

said he had suf- |

to |

IN EUROPE— PRAHA — German planes re- { ported over frontier. LONDON—The Times suggests alternative to war. NUREMBERG—Hitler host to Henlein. PARIS—France hints at calling of 200.000 reserves. CASTEL GANDOLFO—Pope raps extreme nationalism. HENDAYE Spanish Rebels break Ebro River line. IN THE FAR EAST— SHANGHAI—Crack division reported routed. CHUNKING — TU. S. check Jap munitions. MOSCOW—Far Eastern expert removed from post. IN THE AMERICAS— WASHINGTON Foreign agents ordered to register. PRAHA, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—Sudeten | German Party executives announced in a communique today they had suspended their

|

asked to

that

study of the Czechoslovak Govern-

ment’s new proposals because of further incidents involving Sudetens. Meanwhile, the Government ported today that six German planes—at least five of them military crait—flew over territory and then Germany. Henlein leaders said the incidents included the death of a Sudeten Party member, Alfred Kloll, who

re-

returned to

| had been accused of spying.

Another incident cited was the complaint of two leading Sudeten Deputies, Fritz Koellner and Karl May, who charged that police at Maehrisch Ostrau had threatened to | beat them and intimidated a crowd of Sudeten Germans who turned out | to welcome them to the town,

| Demand Punishment

when | in which they were

The Deputies, in a telegram to the Czechoslovak Interior Ministry, demanded severe punishment of the | policemen. Government circles indignantly protested suggestions in the London Times that it might be necessary to

| cede the Sudeten territory to Ger- |

many. Premier Milan Hozda had handed { the new “last word” proposals, designed to make the Sudeten Party's | own demands an acceptable basis of negotiation, to Deputy Ernst Kundt, Sudeten parliamentary leader, early today. Concession Made

It was asserted that the Govern- | ment offer accepted all of the de-

{ mands either wholly or in part, and was regarded as being the maximum possible without endangering the | country’s territorial integrity. Sudeten German leaaers still asserted that the Government must accept their demands in full. Usually reliable informants said that the new Government plans accepted demands Points 1, 5, 6 and 7

of the so-called “Carlsbad” demands |

of the Sudeten Germans. These are: (1) Full equality of Germans with Czechs: (3) specific guarantees for those Germans who live outside the Sudeten German area in Czecho- | slovakia; (8) removal of all “injustices” suffered by Sudeten Germans and reparations for them; (7) | Germans to be employed in state posts in German areas. Point 2, calling for recognition of Sudeten Germans as a unified part of the German race was accepted, informants said, with the reservations that the would be recognized as comprising a unit within the Czechoslovak state. As regards Points 3 and 4, calling for recognition of the boundaries of the Sudeten area and for (Continued on Page Three)

7

|

to! about 3000 head, the Bureau of Agri-

| |

The full advance was |

(U. p).—|

appeared disposed to withhold com- | nitments pending further develop-! :

rete is 3 11

BISHO

the Czechoslovak situation.

P WARREN DEAD SEATTLE, Sept. 1 (U. P)— Bishop Robert H. Warren, 62,

i

of | E

re- |

he drove to work |

Willis’ Manager Completes | Arrangements for Drive In Third District.

| mond.

Czechoslovak |

Germans |

Miami Jefferson Club

| Picnic in Peru.

STATE TOUR ARRANGED

i

U. S. Senator VanNuys is to make the first political speech in his cam- { paign for re-election tonight at the annual picnic of the Miami County Jefferson Club in Peru.

ator spoke at the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association meeting at French Lick, Aug. 27, his address there dealt chiefly with his fruce with Governor Townsend and did not deal in detail with campaign issues. Senator VanNuys also is to ad-

the in

ocrats of District night. Robert

Democrats’

10th Congressional Connersville Friday

Pilton, Indiana president,

Young today an-

organization.

Other Rallies Arranged

{ Democratic Rally will be held at | Bloomington. The Sixth District picnic will be held at Shades, 10 miles west of Crawfordsville, Sept. 14. The Third District Rally at South | Bend is to he held Sept. 20, and jon Sept. 22, the Ninth District i Young Democrats will meet in Donner Park at Columbus. {| A rally will be held at Ft. Wayne, { Sept. 29, by Fourth District Young | Democrats. Oct. 4 has been set for | the Second District Rally at Lo- | gansport, and the First District | Rally will be held Oct. 11 at HamThe Fifth District will be held Oct. 19 at Kokomo.

Harvey Cole to Preside Prior

to each meeting State

| Chairman Omer Stokes Jackson is to

discuss organization with | committeemen,

| candidate will be given an oppor-

precinct

state ticket candidates will be in- | troduced. { Marking the opening of the Miami | County campaign, the picnic at Peru tonight is to be held at Ma- | comaquah Park.

Although the senior Indiana Sen- ;

dress a rally of Indiana Young Dem- |

nounced plans for eight more dis- | trict rallies to be sponsored by that |

On Sept. 13, the Seventh District

CAPITAL ARGUES

Rally |

| | | | |

|

|

The congressional |

Weds 4th Time

Merry Fahrney

NEW YORK, Sept. 7 (U. P.).— Merry Fahrney, patent medicine. ‘heiress, today revealed that she was married again. Her new husband is her fourth in six years. The heiress eloped to Elkton, Md. last Friday with Count Oleg Massini, Russian dress designer. The marriage was announced by the Count’'s mother, Countess Margaret Cassini.

‘PURGE’ FAILURE

NATIONAL POLITICS ROOSEVELT expected fo lose in three primaries, SENATOR M'CARRAN renominated in Nevada primary. DAVEY charges Social Security Board “politics.” ARIZONA Gubernatorial candidate killed in crash.

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Snecial Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.— The stormiest debate since the Supreme

| Court fight is going on among the

| tunity to speak in his district and |

parlor New Dealers, the Democratic conservatives

parlor and

| back-parlor practical politicians on

|

the question:

“Is the purge a mistake?” The debate waxes hot and furious

A Harvey Cole, president of the |as primary day nears in Georgia,

Indiana State Bar Association, is to | Maryland and New York—the three | Fifth District Rep. Glenn | localities of concentrated interest— Gov- | because indications are that Presi-

preside. | Griswold, and Dick Heller, ernor Townsend's executive retary, also are to speak.

G. 0. P. Candidate To Consult Leaders

The Republican campaign to elect Raymond E. Willis to the U. S. Senate took shape today as Judge Noel Neal, his campaign manager, arranged the details of a Third District tour Oct. 21-25 with Frank M. Smith, Elkhart County chairman. Mr. Willis said he would confer | with other county and district lead(Continued on Page Three)

{ ————————— ee ——

SHOWERS PROBABLE “TONIGHT, IS FORECAST

|

sec-

TEMPERATURES m.... 10am... m.... 11am... mi... 12 (Noon). mi... 1pm...

R1 85 RY 89

a. a. a. a.

cloudy weather, showers and thunderstorms able tonight and tomorrow forecast bv the today. Lower temperatures tomorrow were predicted.

‘AID TO FIRST LADY GRANTED DIVORCE

Partly probwas

| HYDE PARK, N. Y. (U. P.).—Mrs. Malvina

Sept. 7 Scheider,

day in response to an inquiry, that

Weather Bureau

1

170.5. PLANES SET RECORD ON HONOLULU HOP

Span Pacific in 17 Hours, 30 Minutes, 21, Hours Under Old Mark.

119 MEN ON FLIGHT

Bombers Ordered Out Day Early; To Be Stationed At Pearl Harbor.

HONOLULU, Sept. 7 (U. P).— The 17 new Navy bombers, ordered out of San Diego on short notice yesterday, presumably to test their efficiency in an emergency, landed here today after a quick flight from the mainland. The first of the planes, the flagship of Lieut. Com. Aaron P. Storrs, landed on Pearl Harbor a. m. (Indianapolis Time) and the others were all down safely within a few minutes. The elapsed time from San Diego was 17 hours 30 minutes, two and a half hours better than any previous mass flight time for the 2750mile trip. | The squadron had been ordered away suddenly. First plans were to | start the flight today, but a report of “fair weather along the entire route” caused officials to cancel earlier arrangements and order the planes into the air. {| The 17 ships, without confusion | or delay, were fueled and on their way less than five hours after receiving word to start the flight. It was believed that the order

| of testing the effectiveness of the

j aircraft scouting force to reach its |

| distant bases in the Pacific on short notice.

Naval officials said the hop was “merely a simple and economical manner of transporting new equipment to distant bases.” The 17 planes carrying 119 officers and men compose Squadron 4 and are of the consolidated PBYtype. twin-motored. They carry full crews of seven. They will be stationed at the fleet air base in Pearl Harbor,

FAIR IS TAKEN OVER

|

BY SCHOOL CHILDREN

the 30,000 Throng Grounds as

Boy, Girl Bands March.

(Another Story, Page 11; Photos, |

| Pages 3 and 11; Harness Racing

| Stories and Photo, Page 8.)

| Thirty thousand Hoosier school

| dent Roosevelt will lose out in his | children this afternoon took over | efforts to unseat Senator George, | the Indiana State Fair.

|

|

Senator Tydings and Rep. John J. O'Connor, House Rules Committee chairman. Interest has been intensified by the extra curl the President has put on his “purge™’ philosophy—the new open-door policy for “liberal” Republicans in preference to conservative Democrats, which has shocked the practical politicians. This is too idealistic, too fancy, too effete, if you please, for the

| hard-headed politician. He sees Mr.

| party nationally and,

Roosevelt as a disturber, stirring up animosities that will divide in the end,

come back upon the local organ-

| izations,

‘Vengeance’ Talked

When Congress those who deplore there will sit the

assembles, say the “purge,” “purged” com-

| pletely unpurged, filled with spleen | toward the President, readv to do | mischief at every opportunity, another “little group of willful men.”

with |

| point

Other conservatives, they say, will he encouraged to come into the open and raise a breastworks against the President's legislative program. New Dealers concede the strength of the vengeance motif, but they out that those whom the President opposes unsuccessfully

{| would have fought him in the Sen-

|

{ |

secretary to Mrs. Roosevelt, said to- |

she had obtained a divorce from |

Frank J. Scheider. It was granted | vesterday in the District of Colum- | bia {| Mrs. | ment further.

FRENCH MOVE TROOPS TO RHINE FRONTIER

ate anyhow. Thev would he the same George of Georgia, Tydings of Maryland, Smith of South Carolina, and so on, whether the Presi(Continued on Page 10)

DU PONT TAXES HELD SHORT

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U. P.).— Treasury officials estimated today the total tax deficiencies of Pierre

| S. du Pont and John J. Raskob on

Scheider declined to com- |

their 1929 incomes will approach

1 $2,200,000, including interest.

the |

A parade of boy and girl bands | which lasted an hour received an | ovation from more than 20.000 | adults watching from the grandstand and grounds. | About as many persons were | scheduled to see the Grand Circuit { harness races later today. { Governor Townsend in a short | address delivered from the platform {across the track from the grand- | stand, pointed out that no Educa-

| tion Day at the State Fair ever has |

| been rained out. “You will notice,” he said, | the skies are smiling again today as | Indiana school children take over | the Fair. It has always been so {since we first had an Education | Day.” Lieut. Gov. Henry F. Schricker, | Floyd I. McMurray, State superin{tend of public instruction; BE. | Curtis White, State Fair president. land other public officials spoke | briefiy.

Yesterday's crowd was estimated | at 65,000, which included 50.409 paid |

| admissions. Last year on the same (Continued on Page Three)

1200 MEN RETURN TO JOBS IN BEECH GROVE

Twelve-hundred men returned to | work today in the locomotive, car | and storage departments of the | Beech Grove shops of the New York | Central Railroad, Ferdinand Bauer, | superintendent of the motive power | department, .announced. According to Mr, Bauer, the majority of the men are employed in | the locomotive and car depart- | ments, with between 50 and 60 in the | storage department. Payrolls will | be increased, Mr. Bauer said from | about $2000 a day to $11,000.

I

ROADS FILLED AS GUNS ARE SHIFTED

To Turn Left Isn't Right—

Even on Bike

The only way to make a left turn at Illinois and Washington Sts., and

at 9:09 |

was given for the primary purpose |

“that |

| not wind up in court, is to make it on foot. That's what William Alexander of 1727 N. New Jersey St. a bicycle messenger, learned today when Judge Charles Karabell fined him $1. The left turn is banned, the judge explained, by auto, bicycle or horse. Court attaches said so far as they | could recall, no cyclist was ever ar- | rested for this violation. | Traffic Officer Harry Smith who | made the arrest told the judge, “that corner is making an old man

GRADE SCHOOL

FUNDS GRANTED

$108,515 Project Here One Of 25 in Indiana Allotted Money by PWA.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. T— Twenty-five Indiana projects, calling for Federal grants of $1,677,150, | are on a list of 317 allotments announced today by the PWA, Included is $108,515 for an Indianapolis grade school and $26,427 for replacing boilers at the Indiana School for the Deaf. Crawfordsville received three grants amounting to $463,295. Of | this total, $112,500 is for a high | school addition; $204,545 for a new | jail and Court House, and $146,250 for the municipal power plant, Other large grants were the Marion disposal plant, $336.272, and East Chicago Municipal Building, $108,338. | The list included school improvements, bridges, swimming nools, fil- | tration plants and a grant of | $11,025 for an Anderson church,

‘New School Location

Still Indefinite

| A. B. Good, public schools busi- | ness director, said the $108,515 PWA grant announced today in Washington is to be used for con- | struction of a grade school here | where the need for one is found to { be most urgent. No location has been |the School Board, Mr. land no decision will be | after further study of school needs.

Nine WPA Projects ‘Approved for State

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U. P).— Senator Minton (D. Ind.) today an- | nounced presidential approval of nine WPA projects in the state to cost $921,939. They include $299,664 for construction of low dams on small streams in Knox County, and grants of $349.608 and $99,888 for similar work in Vandenberg and Grant Counties, respectively. A grant of $115,200 was made for cleaning and renovating Indiana University buildings at Indianapolis.

WITNESS CALLS HINES GASH INTERMEDIARY

Claims He Obtained $11,000 To Help Dodge.

selected by Good said, made until the grade

NEW YORK, Sept. 7 (U. P.).— The man who managed William C. Dodge's successful campaign for district attorney in 1933, testified today in the James J. Hines trial that he obtained $11.00 of campaign funds through Hines. The witness, Henry Sobel, said that some of the money was handed to him in a sealed envelope after several conversations with Hines by a man whom he could not identify. Members of the Dutch Schultz lottery gang, which Hines is accused of protecting, had testified previously that Schultz and Hines were eager to elect Dodge because he was a man Hines could “handle.” They said that altogether the Schultz mob gave Hines about $30,000 for use in helping elect Dodge, a Tammany man who preceded Thomas E. Dewey as district attorney. Following Sobel’s testimony, Dewey announced he would conclude his case today. A recess was taken until later in the day.

| |

COUNTY'S LEVY 92 CENTS, UP 3

CENTS

Council Adopts Ordina Rate After Maki Nearly All

GENERAL FUND 1 $60,585 Slashed From

OVER "38

nce Calling for Higher ng Reductions in Estimates.

TEMS CUT $243,361 Share of Welfare De-

partment Proposal; Gravel Road

Sum Factor

An ordinance fixing the 1

| 52 cents, 3 cents higher than

the County Council today.

in Increase.

939 Marion County tax rate at the 1938 rate, was passed by

Budget requests as originally submitted to the Council

called for a levy of 60.7 cent tax rate. Original county general

s, 12 cents above the current

fund requests of $1,596,090

were cut to $1,352,729, which is $93,530 less than the general fund appropriation for this year.

The entire budget is su

bject to the approval of the

County Tax Adjustment Board and the State Tax Board. A reduction of $243,361 was made by the Council in the general fund requests, reducing that levy from a proposed

25.2 cents to 19.5 cents.

Cuts were made in nearly every County department budget, including reductions in salaries and in office supplies

allotments, equipment and tr

FRISCO STORE CLERKS STRIKE

THE LABOR SITUATION

7000 SAN FRANCISCO department store workers strike. ROOSEVELT reported against major Wagner law change. STEEL minimum wage agreement reported reached, U. A. W. board to study Lewis’ peace plan, INDIANAPOLIS Lewis,

local suports

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7 (U, P.). —Several thousand salesgirls and clerks went on strike in 35 of San

Francisco's largest department stores today. Their action practically paralyzed the city’s famous shopping district. The stores opened for “business as usual,” but hundreds of pickets, mostly women, made shopping difficult. They booed persons who attempted to enter the stores. Scores of police patrolled the district. The A. F. of 1. Retail Clerk's Union called the strike in a dispute over preferential hiring. Store executives said that the union's demand was tantamount to the hiring hall. Union leaders charged the stores refused to arbitrate. The union said that 7000 of its members were out and that 24 other unions, including teamsters, elevator operators and janitors, agreed to observe the picket lines. Store executives said the number of strikers was “far below” the union's estimate.

F.D. RB. Reported Against

Wagner Law Changes By HERBERT LITTLE

Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.— The Roosevelt Administration is opposed to any major amendments of the Wagner Labor Relations Act, it was learned today. Neither the A. F. of L. proposals nor those of the National Association of Manufacturers for revising the act have a chance of receiving President Roosevelt's favor, important Administration advisers said. These advisers feel strongly that the Labor Board's 100 per cent record of Supreme Court victories places the Wagner act in a strong | position to be defended. Any proposal to amend will bring a pitched battle between the A. F. of L. and C. I. O.,, plus a threecornered struggle in which antiunion employers would support the (Continued on Page 10)

>

¢

| propriation.

‘aveling expenses, The controversial gravel road fund request was reduced from 2.4 to 2 cents.

Legality of the levy has been | questioned but Council members x= plained they decided the money was necessary to maintain roads. The council slashed $272,300 off the requested $2,960,900 County Welfare Department budget. This general reduction brought a cut of $60,585 in Marion County's share of the budget reducing it from the requested $942,037 to $881,452. This calls for a county levy of 14.9 cents, compared to 13.8 cents this year,

Comparison of Rates

The 3-cent increase in the total county rate is due to a 1-cent flood control levy provided by law and the 2-cent road levy, the councile men said. Proposed new 1939 rates compared with those requested and the 1038 levies follow: 1939 Rates Fixed by Council

| General Fund... 19.5 | Sinking Fund...12.1 Gravel Roads .. 2 | Tuberculosis + 3 4 1

1939 Rates Originally Proposed 25.5 12.7

1938 Rates 20 13.3 | Hospital ..... 2.5 Dept... 14.9

Welfare Flood Control ..

2

2. 3. 5. 13.8 1 Seve

60.7 cents 49 cents

Welfare Estimates Cut

In the Welfare Department esti= mates the Council reduced the reequested $1,855,000 for old-age as ‘sistance to $1,663,500. The child welfare assistance re= quest of $1,020,000 was deduced to $939,200. The Council eliminated $68,000 from the County Auditor's request for tax duplicate machines. Mem-« | bers said this will be raised by bond issue. | Another item pared from ths budget was $58,000, set up to oper< ae the County Infirmary on Tibbs ve, Harry Barrett, infirmary Supere intendent, told the Council that ar< rangements had been made to transfer infirmary inmates to Julietta by Jan. 1. The County Jail request of $70.< 290 was reduced to $60,440 and the request for Julietta Hospital, which will take over Infirmary inmates, was reduced from $66,355 to $57,000, which is $2500 higher than this year’s appropriations.

Salary Is Reduced

Despite pleas made by a delega« tion representing the Colored Ore phans Home, the Council cut the budget proposal for that institution from $60,223 to $48,590 which is about $1500 less than the 1938 ape The superintendent's salary was cut from $1800 to $1200 and the total pay of other employees was cut from $13,000 to $9000, Courthouse operating expenses were trimmed from $65,438 to $61,778, eliminating the electric clock Sys= tem in the building and the night« watchman. The County Detention Home re= quest of $14,345 was cut to $13,470. A request of $7500 to revive the County Planning Commission was reduced to $550. In the County School Su rine tendent’s budget, a $4300 re mn the superintendent's salary was ree (Continued on Page Three)

52 cents

TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES

Books sceress Broun ceesese Clapper Comics vee... Crossword ... Curious World Editorials Fashions ....

11 12 11 16 13 | 16 12] 7

JONSON .ees's Movies ...... Mrs. Ferguson Obituaries ... Pegler «...c.. Pyle ...coo0es Questions 11 iRadio ....... It

12 14 12 13 12 11

Financial .... 17 Mrs. Roosevelt 11 12 | Serial Story.. 16 12 | Society ......" 8 16 | Sports ...... 8.8 3 | State Deaths 13

11| Wiggam esese 13 *

the Free Methodist Church of North | Flynn America, died here last night of | EE ! og > = SS ie 5 Sa SAR : A S RAR Forum leukemia. His home was in Seattle. | Si ® : Grin, Bear It but his headquarters were at Wi- | Countering Germany's shift of troops to her Siegfried line across the Rhine, France sent these speedy Heavy machine guns fill this road to Strasbourg as French defenses are strengthened against German | In Indpls ... nona Lake, Ind. tanks from Besancon northward to Strasbourg, key defense point on the Maginot Line. x concentration across the Rhine in extensive maneuv (Story on Page Three.) & Jane Jordan.