Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1938 — Page 3
RANTS 4
\ ~-—— re
FAGE §
SNARES THUGS, 'A. F. of L. Challenges REGOVERS LOOT Roosevelt on NLRB; C.I1.O. Fails to March aD
Guards Are Withdrawn| Nine Sweeping Changes In Nevada; Plans for | In Labor Law Demanded “Invasion” Denied. By Convention.
MONDAY, OCT. 10, 1938 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RUSSIANS CALL LINDBERGH ‘LIAR CATHOLICS RALLY AFTER ATTACKS
Police Term Victim ‘Smart
Moscow Boasts of GEST APO BEGINS Vatican Prepares Pro-| Operator’; Five Held in Strength; Hungarians | | | test; Czechs See Some Theft of $36,500. In Czech Zones. SUDETEN PURGE ' Gains in Loss of Land. (Continued from Page One) HITLER WARLIKE
a strong air force that it could de-| feat the combined air fleets of England, France, Russia and Czecho- | Fuehrer Demobilizes but Orders New Forts on | French Frontier. | | BERLIN, Oct. 10 (U. P.).—Opera(tives of the Gestapo, the Nazi se|cret police, have started a campaign |
slovakia. The letter said: “Lindbergh . . . performed such | a nonstop flight into the realm of! ‘to clean out “Marxists, traitors and {other state enemies” from the Ger- | |man-occupied Sudetenland area, it lwas disclosed today.
calumny and slanderous fabrica- | The official news agency said that
tions that he at once beat all rec- | ords of Baron Munchausen. . . . the Army would co-operate with the secret police. |
VIENNA, Oct. 10 (U. P.).—Roman | Was followed by Detective Viles and
|Catholics predicted today that * Crow
| religious revival wou.d sweep Aus[tria as the result of Nazi riots in| they got there said they would have = 'which a crucifix, prayer books, and to go on to Lansing, Ill, where he pecan disbanding 250 special dep- Ministering the act was brought
| inti the Madonna were (00K her to a secluded room in al 3 administrative justice “into dise |a painting of | roadhouse, He went upstairs, police | uties and volunteers called to hoa os » ive. COmmitiee. ail said, and returned with the $5000 off what was reported as an im- tre dot tip pis bond. She gave him a package that pending “invasion” of C. I. O. work-| '' Iecommende Se. changes, lers from California. | which, along with the report, were
Sheriff Ray Root and District At- (accepted without a dissenting vote.
(Continued from Page One)
The man counted the money on {the way to Hammond and when
i |
VERDI, Nev., Oct. 10 (U. P.) — (Continued from Page One)
Washoe County authorities today |
| | | | i
‘burned. Already heavily increased attend-|
ance had been noted at all Catholic | looked like the money but was noth[church services, even though news-| ing but paper and when he went
“In a second declaration, Lind-| bergh said that during his soJourn in the Soviet Union he was offered the post of chief of sov\. civil aviation. . . . Soviet fliers can only laugh at such lying. “Soviet aviation according to Lindbergh has been left without leadership and is now in a condition of chaos. Tt is hardly necessary to deny such an obvicus lie.
Object of Ridicule “Lindbergh proved himself to be a stupid liar and servant and lackey of German Fascists and their English aristocrat advocates. He made himself the object of public ridicule “Lindbergh had been given the
Col. Charles A. Lindbergh
ARMY CHIEF OF
| Today was the deadline for occu{pation of ceded Sudeten territory
| Germany under the Munich
. by Assailant Commits Suicide: agreement, and it was indicated : : : that by tonight all new German Praha Editor Dying in |
| territory might be taken over. Anti-Hitler Pact. |
‘papers had published no reports of | back upstairs she fled. : : ; pap p p torney Ernest Brown called in| 1 A change in the unit rule to | Tt was forecast that the first real | | | avern of deputies along U. S. Highway 40 make it obligatory on the board to | increased attendance at SChOOIS| qu. week-end the first man and ing to San Francisco, where it had were arrested. A man, previously shoremen were massing for a march. [by majority vote. | ligious education at schools was no |, 4 Mrs. Cross. They are seeking materialize. Sheriff Root said he tracts. Detective Viles today said Mrs. the highway for awhile. | dore Innitzer, Archbishop of vien- | four persons and recovery of Small detail of regular uniformed| 4. Intervention by interested A correspondent in the field with N " : ; | . : . parents to make their children at- | |northern California C. I. O. director,| 5. Defiite qualifications to be set (army trucks were being placed at
the riots and the news was circu- ; lated only by word of mouth. Men Flee squads of deputies posted along sec- Conform to that embraced by the t 1 When police went to arrest the ondary roads, leaving only groups Railway Labor Act. This would | indication of a surge of religious man and another man in the t I Co uISIit on Wi | yey hid fet. [west of Verdi, ihe main road 1089- |g, 5 craft or class the right to Fug Honig a wen ga | Woman, and the second two men been reported that C. I. O. long- elect its bargaining representative rogram. y reek | priests were compelled to read an |, rewed, is believed by police to be| Reports from Truckee, Cal, said| 2. “Definite” curtailment of the official decree announcing that re- one of two who actually held up Mr. that the “invasion” had failed to| board's power to invalidate conlonger compulsory. But yesterday. another. {would leave the special guards along | 3. Every known interested party o ul Ue of 0 gin gin At that to be served with due process and i a Cy ar Nin Then Cross was “smart as a whip and time, if no C. I. O. men show up, be afforded an opportunity to ape TE El Loarwyins| Then. largely responsible for the or 0 of ‘he planned to replace them with a pear in any case. he a voy Som Co SF oe Re (the bonds.” |deputies. : [parties to be made a matter of right ligious controversy, appealing to Mrs. Cross said she was “thrilled | AY San Franciseo Louis Goldblatt, and not of discretion. oD. Sai » . = as tend religious-education schools. | in owen, TR ne], She Was said longshoremen positively had forth in respect to examiners.
the Army telegraphed that German
task by English reactionary circle to ‘testify to the weakness of Sovist aviation’ and to give Chamberlain an argument in favor of capitulating at Munich on the Czechoslovak question. “The paid liar, Lindbergh, has fulfilled the orders of his masters.” The denunciation of Col. Lindbergh was based on allegations, spread partly bv rumor, that during the Czechoslovak crisis or earlier he asserted that Russia's Air Force had been weakened dangerously by the political purge snd that Germany's Air Force was equal to the combined air strength of Great ritain, France, Russia and Czechoovakia.
Hospitality Abuse Charged Estimates of Russia's air strength vary widely. There is little official information on which to base estimates. A fleet of Russian fighting planes caused a definite turn for a time In the aerial phase of the Civii war; Russian planes to and landed at the
and have flown from the American Pacific
Spanish have flown North Pole Moscow to Coast, The men who signed the letter were among those who aided in enning Col. Lindbergh when he and his wife visited Russia in August, and were honored more lavishly, perhaps, than any foreign visitors in recent vears. “He came to Russia uninvited instructions English reactionaries in order to testify to the ‘weakness’ of Soviet aviation and provide Prime Minister Chamberlain with arguments for capitulating at Munich,” said the letter. “The paid liar Lindbergh has duly performed his duties to his bosses.” The Russian fliers’ letter was headed: “Lindbergh's New ‘Record’. Vassily Molokov, Civil Air Force chief; Mikhail Kokkinaki, one of the ace fliers of all Russia; Mikhail Gromov, one of those who flew from Moscow to Riverside, Cal. in July, 1937; Valery Chkalov, of the crew which flew to Vancouver, Wash, in June, 1937, and Mabriki Slepnev, who escorted Col. Lindbergh in Russia, were among the 11 signers ‘Came Uninvited’ The letter declared: Lindbergh was not invited here. D to the Soviet union was ted only because Americans
Juested it.”
+ 1
erts
under of
the Soviet fliers acCol. Lindbergh of abusing Russian hospitality and of ingrati8 his alleged retailing at a er party given by Lady Astor anti-Russian “tales.” The Russian airmen ridiculed indbergh's achievements “after his tr flight and his marriage to a millionaire’s daughter.” It was alleged that he had said hat Russian aviation was in a cha-
Ltiial condition
No tlansin NS-AlUAN TIC
ips owing to the ‘chaotic ons’ Russian aviators hold a
IN
Herve Is the Traffic Record | o
County Deaths To Date) 1938 193%
Speeding
85 111
Reckless Driving .... © Running Preferential Street. 2
-
City Deaths (To Date) 1238 193% Running Red Light Oct. $ & 9 Accidents .... 28 Drunken Injured Driving Dead Arrests Others MEETINGS TODAY United Tvpothetae of America, convention, Hotel Lanceln, all day 0. 0. F.
n a Rebekah Assembly, I. Lincoln luncheon,
ana, convention, Hotel Scientech Club ‘rade, noon i University Club lumbia Club, noon Indianapolis Press Club, dinner, 48 Mon-
of Indiall day Board of
luncheon, Co-
ent Circle, Pp. Mm | Service Club, luncheon, Hotel Lincoln, nGOR
Irvington Republican Club, 5446; E. Washington St.. 8 p m Delta Upsilon, luncheon, Board of Trade,
| meeting
i North Side Realtors, luncheon, Canary Co noon ame Club, luncheon, Board of|
tlage,
Notre D Trad NC
MEETINGS TOMORROW
United Typothetae of America, conven- | tion. Hotel Lincoln. all day. 1 0. F. of Indi-|
tion all Rebekah Assembly. I. O. ana, convention, Hotel Lincoln, all day. Rotary Club, luncheon, Claypool Hotel, noon | Gyro Club, luncheon, Spink-Arms Hotel, | noon | Alpha Tau Omega, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon Mercator Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, oon Uhiversal Club, luncheon, Columbia Club, | noon Umi Board Lutheran nary Cottage,
versity of Michigan Club, luncheon, of Trade, noon
Service ‘Club, luncheon, Ca-
noon.
JAMES ROOSEVELT RESTS
HOLLISTER, Cal, Oct. 10 (U. P). James Roosevelt, the President's oldest son. rested today at the 20,000acre ranch of Walter P. Murphy, | Chicago millionaire. Mr. Roosevelt will remain two months recuperat- | ing from a recent stomach operation,
INDIAN.
SOFIA, Bulgaria, Oct. 10 (U. P). —Maj. Gen. Ivan Peeff, chief of staff of the Bulgarian Army, chief of staff, was assassinated in the street this afternoon. Gen. Peeff's aide-de-camp, Maj. Stoyanoff, also was assassinated by the same assailant. The assassin then committed suicide with a second revolver. He was identified as one Vlassefl. who is from Stanimaka, the same town as Gen. Peeff. Viassefl was released from prison three weeks ago after having served a sentence for murder.
Editor and Wife Near
Death in Anti-Nazi Pact
PRAHA, Oct. 10 (U. P) —Dr. Rudolf Thomas, Jewish editor-in-chief of the German language newspaper Prager Tagblatt, and his wife took an overdose of a sleeping potion
today in an anti-Hitler suicide pact. Doctors said there was no hope for their survival. They left letters saving thev were committing suicide because ‘‘there is no future for German-speaking people in Czechoslovakia.” Many Czechs, however, saw distinct gains in the transformation of their republic into a more homogenecus State within the German orbit.
Czechs Surrender
Area to Hungary
KOMAROM, Czecho-Hungarian Frontier, Oct. 10 (U. P.).—Czechoslovakia surrendered two zones on its border to Hungary today as a symbol of its friendliness as delegations from the two nations met here to settle their territorial dispute. It was understood that the Hungarians demanded a wide fringe of the Czechoslovak border province of Slovakia inhabited by Hungarians and also a plebiscite at least in the Carpatho-Russian province of Ruthenia. The delegations met for two hours last night and it was announced that Czechs would withdraw from the railroad station at Satoral-Jaul-hely, a border town lying mostly within Hungary. and from the town of Ipolysag by tomorrow morning, and that Hungarian troops would take over both zones immediately. The Czechoslovak delegation was headed by Josef Tiso. Premier of the new autonomous Slovak Government, ana all the members were Slovaks. Foreign Minister Kalaman Kanva headed the Hungarian delegation.
majority of world records,” said the letter. “The Soviet Union possesses hundreds and thousands of splendid pilots who cannot only fiv but can
be excellent organizers and admin- |
istrators,
POLIS
MARRIAGE LICENSES
(These lists are from official records in the County Court House. The Times. therefore, is not responsible for errors in Rames or addresses.)
Carl Fancher, 32. of 2816 Shriver Cota Foster, 36, of 2721 Shriver Av Lee Rov Hubbs, 25. Indianapolis; Alice Echstein. 24, of 73% Sanders St. Orville W. Cavanaugh. 26, Indianapolis: Margaret Grav, 20. of 207 E. North St. Wilbur Desmond Greer. 24. of 1612 Hovt Opal V. Bennett, 20, of 1612 Pleasant
Ave. 5
Ave;
. 13 st
_ Albert Coolige Mounsev. 36. Albuquerque, N. M.: Neicia Bur .. 24, Indianapolis. \_R. Fletcher, 31, of 26 Meridia Lenore F. Chambers, 28, of 3107 Meridian St Ray E. Lambert. Indianapolis; Henrietta Plew. 24, of 3360 Guilford St Philip_B. Teegarden. 23. Marion: Mary
n N.
| Rosalie Doerr. 18, Indianapolis.
ete Krethoetis, 21, of 3612 W. Michigan Francis Little. 18, of 1862 Milburn St. Herman Edward Gasev. 21. of 1613 Villa ve.. Thelma Irene Coherd, 24, of 233 N. Illinois St Walter E. Mikesell, 28, of 517 8 t.. Irenell Hamilton, 20. of
St
Warman
S
Anita Hill, 24, Indianapolis.
BIRTHS Boys Paul. Jean Goldstein. at Methodist. Wilbur, Julia Doran, at Methodist a Rilus, Mary Frances Doolittle, at Metholist Forest, Mildred Grav, ir, Emily Runt, Mildred Hagaman. .. Eliz beth Sauer, 1513 Kellv. Claude. Goldie Drake, 514 N. Nobie. Clarence, Dorothy Hammond, 1230 W St. Samuel,
1124 York Claude, Estyer Loser, 802 N. Goodlet. Girls Charles. Zelda Leedyv. at Methodist. Cyril, Amelia Wainscott, at Methodist. Louis, Clara Shipman, at Methodist. DEATHS Josephine Reinberg. 82, at 122% Lexington. chronic myocarditis. Jeannetie Martindale, 53, at 2431 Kenwood, acute dilatation of heart. Jovee Gray, 3. at City, diphthe Josephine Koehne, 28 ‘at 1535 boit, coronary thrombosis. Joe Spalding. 83, at 123 S. aronic myocarditis darnah Perry. 73, at Community pital, acute cardiac decompensation. Ravmond D. Rockhill, 41,
uremia, Joseph Frederic. 85 at 552 N. Parker. chronic myocarditis, Rebecca Jackson, 90, at 35 N. Jefferson, arteriosclerosis. Methodist,
Alice Pedigo, 79, of left femur. Lang, 72. Methodist, diabetes melliius. 61, at 1929 Keystone,
at Methodist, at Methodist
31
Evelvn Steele, W. New
ria. S.
Catherwood, Hos-
Tal-
Cc
at fracture
Charles WwW. at Monroe Sims, lobar-pneumon
Benjam nemorghage.
S.
700.000
1635 Hoefgen |
‘dan Ernest Flaa. 26, Indianapoiis: Ruby
t Methodist. | Tet
at Veterans,
Onia. in Hamilton, 82, at City. cerebral |
the disposal of Czechoslovak troops |
to hasten their withdrawal. The speech which Herr Hitler made at Saarbruecken yesterday |
was interpreted here as an indica- |
tion that while he thought that the| acute phase of the recent Czechoslovak crisis had passed he felt that compelte harmony was far from achieved. Attacks Churchill
He announced that he would demobilize the reserves which swelled the Army to a total of 1.500.000 men but coincidently announced the extension of the system of fortification opposite France. He made no men[tion of any possible disarmament agreement, he showed irritation at criticism of Germany in democratic
i
| elections for Dec. 11.
countries and he warned that three | outstanding British political leaders | —Winston Churchill, Anthony Eden land Alfred Duff Cooper—were potential enemies. He drew a clear line between Germany's relations| with Premier Mussolini of Italy and her relations with Great Britain | and France. Sig. Mussolini was| called “our only real friend.” “We are faced by statesmen who. we must admit, sincerely seek peace,” said Herr Hitler of the | Munich agreement. “But they rule | countries where others may come to power, In Britain it is possible that instead of Prime Minister Chamberlain, Messrs. Eden, Duff Cooper and Churchill might come |
to power. Their aims would be to speedup in the pace
start a conflagration. They admit | this, and this forces us to be on our | guard.” He went on to say that
added: “The outside world had no! understanding of the problem.” | Then he announced that the fortification svstem: would be extended | to the Aachen and Saarbruecken districts because Germany must “at all hours be ready to resist,” though | she desired peace.
‘We Want Peace’
|
“The experiences of the last eight months show me that we must be
| Herr Hitler had {Germany had obtained her post- (epndance confirmed the statement a $100 fur coat from his home Sat- |
prudent and not miss anything re-|
quired for the nation’s safety.” he {said. “Therefore I have resolved to continue building the western fortifications. “On the other hand. measures taken during recent critical months will be repealed. I am glad to announce that hundreds of thousands of reservists will be sent home. . . . “We want peace with all other nations. . . . We realize especially the importance of good relations
good thing if people (would relinquish certain smacking of the Versailles Treaty epoch. There is a certain patronizing attitude which we simply can not bear.”
in England
20.000 JAPS KILLED AT
TEHAN, CHINESE SAY .
| SHANGHAI, Oct. 10 Japanese today reported the occu[pation of Sinyang on the Hankow|Chengchow Railroad, while Chinese dispatches claimed a signal military trivmph on the Tehan front. The Chinese advices claimed 20,000 Japanese were killed in the Tehan sector. Reports from Chinese military 1eadquarters said that their troops had turned ths Tehan fighting into ‘another Taierhchwang —the northern city where Japan suffered probably her greatest military reverse in China.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
w———=United States Weather Burcave._
| greatest British orator of his time, |gregation wept and their sobs were said at first today that he would audible.
| Broadcasting Co. said that at Mr. approach the Cardinal and kiss his
|
|
| | INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Fair to- |
night and tomorrow; somewhat warmer. 5:50 | Sunset ..... 5:14
TEMPERATURE —Oct.
+ Myon . 16 BAROMETER [ .. 30.39
Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 a, m...__.00 Total precipitation since Jan. 1.... 33 al
Sunrise
19. ™M...0v. 60 |
| | Excess since Jan.
| © MIDWEST WEATHER | Tndiana—Fair tonight and tomorrow; | somewhat warmer in east and west-ceniral | portions.
Illinois Fa [tinued warm. | Lower Michigan—Fair tonight and Tuesday; somewhal warmer except in extreme nocthwest portion. | | Ohio-—Fair tonight and tomorrow; slowly | rising temperature. Kentucky Fair tonight, tomorrow partly | cloudy; rising temperature in east por-| | tion iollowed by rain in extreme west portion In aiternoon or at night. | WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT § | Station. Weather. | Amarillo, Tex. y | Bismarck, N. ston “a Caicago cincinnati | Cleveland Denver NA | Dodge City, Kas | Helena, Mont, | Jacksonville, a | Kansas City, Mo. ... | Little Rock, Ark. S Angeies I NFA, Pla, .. ais | Mpls.-St, Paul Cl | Mobile, BIR, aaa | New Orleans | New York . Okla. City, X Omaha, Neb, | Pittsburgh Portland. {San Antonio, Tex | San Francisco ..
St. uis Tampa, Ma
ir tonight and tomorrow; con- |
AM
10, 193%— |
| of
”
Washington, D. ©, 4...
Prince Paul
BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, Oct. 10 (U. P.).—Prince Paul, regent for the boy King, Peter, dissolved parliament today and ordered new The decree also partly reconstructed the Cabinet, making M. Hodjera, leader of the Yugoslav fascist party, a minister without portfolio and appointing the Groat deputy Mastrovich, minister of physical edu-
cation, |
The dissolution and the reconstruction was taken as formal notification of an alliance between the Government Party and the Fascist Party calculated to increase the popular support of the Government by 200,000 votes.
BRITISH SILENT ON HITLER TALK
Churchill Delays His Reply; Rearming Expected to Be Speeded Up.
LONDON, Oct. 10 (U. P.).—A new | of armament was forecast today as the
There seemed some reluctance in
|official quarters to comment on the Thursday at the last of a ser
speech, which had been widely preannounced as one in which Ger-man-French friendship would be
emphasized.
Instead of friendship, however, emphasized that
war victories by virtue of her might and must continue to arm herself. Winston Churchill, one of three Rritish conservatives whom Herr Hitler attacked by name and regarded by many people as the
reply to Herr Hitler tonight in a speech to be broadeast to the United States. Later, however, the British
Churchill’s request the broadcast had been postponed for a few days. Newspapers of every party aflili-
with England. But it would be a ation urged today, in comment on prevented them from touching him, | the industry here tomorrow through
Herr Hitler's speech, that the Gov-
- | a habits ernment speed up its armament Johann Kravanik, 60, who suffer
program as the result of the German leader's “warning.” The Government, on
the con-
[structive side, started the ground- ported today to be seriou work in co-operation with France [sibly critical. ! | for eventual mediation in the Span- | The home for the priests adjoins | Dighways.
ish civil war. It was emphasized that plans ere only in the starting stage. But it was understood that the Govern-
(U.P) — ment hoped that after all foreign him into a courtyard. {
troops had been withdrawn from Spain—and provided that they were withdrawn in full—there might be a joint effort by Great Britain, France, Cermany and Italy to arrange an armistice, The Colonial Office announced | today that strong reinforcements | were en route to Palestine for a campaign against Arab rebels.
JAMES LARDNER'S DEATH 1S REPORTED
Slain by Spanish Rebel Moors. Is Report.
PERPIGNAN, FRANCO-SPAN-ISH FRONTIER, Oct. 10 (U. P) — The death of James Lardner, son of the late Ring Larner, at the hands Spanish Rebel Moors on the Ebro Front, was reported today. Spanish Loyalists, who said they saw the 24-year-old American youth captured and slain, disputed earlier reports that he had been taken prisoner to some concentration camp. American representatives who have been trying for a week to learn Mr. Lardner's fate. refused to accept the report as official until they had learned whether
‘he was listed among the prisoners
at Saragossa. Investigations at other Rebel prisoners revealed no trace of him. Loyalist officers sent word here that there was no doubt as to the youth's fate, that his comrades were near enough at the time of! his capture to see the Moors kill | him. They said he might have! been saved had a Rebel officer arrived before the shooting, but that no one had been present to restrain the Moors. § Mr. Lardner went to Spain as a | newspaperman and joined the In-| ternational brigade against the advice of his friends. He suffered a minor shrapnel wound in the back] several weeks ago and after treatment at a hospital, insisted on returning to action. N
|
British | palace were there solely to protect
v . . | detention or in any sort of custody {Germany had joined the Saar, Aus- [announcing that Germany, despite [tria ana Sudetenland to the Nazi the recent Munich agreement, must | horts, by a placard posted at the leas - { tet | S, 10 STE Ne yepor e t {Reich “by our own strength,” and “at all hours be ready to resist. ported the theft of a $20
| night when the mo) invaded the; BRAZIL, Oct. 19 (U. P.).—Reor-
[it starts. . .
6. Clarification of subpena power.
Nazi Police on Guard |nothing to be frightened of,” and |M2de no plans of attempting to : > 7. Lifting of secrecy over board's
Nazi authorities seemed to be Said she seriously would like to go Picket in large numbers a road- # : es into the police business. (building project of the Isbell Con- files. taking every precaution against a The five held probably will be I [struction Co. 8. Elections to be conducted withe new outbreak against the Roman |g... ¢ A a a ras | “This is another attempt of thein 30 days from filing of petition Catholic Church among their fol- Federal Court. The Federal Bureau Nevada Vigilante element to raise the therefor. : w lower: lof Investigation entered the case C1, Of longshoremen marching,” Mr.| 9. All cases to be decided within owers, when City lice proved that on | Goldblatt said. “This happens every 45 days after the close of the taking Fuehrer Hitler was understood to- Word hag Bay TR Ss s [time they get ready to deprive the of testimony. day to have sent a special emissary | state line to Lansing. (workers of their proper collective] Two other proposals were turned to Vienna to investigate the attack.| Bandits and thieves obtained | bargaining rights. |jover to the Executive Council for He was said to have been “greatly money and property totaling $887| | They want to raise a smokescreen action: |annoyed” and to have ordered im-|;. a series of holdups and burglaries | 2hind Which to do their dirty| 1. Appellate Courts to be granted {mediately a strict investigation and : . > > work.” {jurisdiction to review the facts as Verdi is 11 miles west of Reno, 230 ‘well as the law to determine wheth= miles from San Francisco. The Is- er the decision conforms to the bell company was awarded a con- weight of credibility of the evidence. (tract to surface and widen the high-| 32 Separation of the administra= , way and to ‘build a bridge over a tive functions from the judicial IV power diversion canal. functions of the board.
OT 3 . OF Joby in the City over the week-end. |severe punishment for organizers of | 11 IY over vr. ‘the rioting. | Efford Harvey, 41, of 2214 Ken- |
i. |Wood Ave. operator of an inbound! Thousands of defiant young Nazis | yy... 0 . : a milled about the cathedral neigh- | LINOIs St. streetcar, told police two |
% : . |larmed bandits stopped his car at | borhood yesterday. After last night's | ca : : | services, 100 boys in Hitler Youth | Claredon Road and 42d St. ear
I = Sunday and robbed him of $16. | uniform, headed by flag bearers atd| "nene iancy, 34, of 112 Brglish|
la dr orps. marched past the... Ves S wh Cathedral Singing marching songs, Ave SPETRLOr of ihe Lincoin Tay-| 60 Back to Work |URGE PLAN TO RAISE INCOME OF LAWYERS
Later, youths in civilian clothes as- robbed of between $40 and $50 on At Plymouth Plant En the Cardinal's Peje of her home early Sunday, she] DETROIT, Oct. 10 (U. “To Dachau! To Dachau!” [o Without Loot United Automobile Workers Union| cpicaGco, Oct. 10 (U. P).—A ! members went back to work at the pecial committee of the American wi 2S Bar Association reported today that Officials de- ,o.rly half the lawyers in the
Dachau is the great German con- is : Police said a drunken spectator Plymouth motor car plant today Police were watchful. They kept to the holdup asked the bandit for a | cided to meet tomorrow to discuss United States earn less than $2000
him and to preserve order.
result of a speech by Fuhrer Hitler | Cardinal was not under any form of |
main entrance to the cathedral, an-
“Innitzer is a swine!” James Weaver, guard in his palace. An official robbed of $13 at the Belt Railroad ‘ 7 - Refusal of W00 Plymouth em-l,, uy of establishing low-cost legal not under “protective” or any other | Sunday. [improving incomes and also as an “SS” bodyguards in and about the! plant, which supplies bodies [youth held her up on E. 18th St. 9000 idle. Work was resumed at| The report, prepared under the demanded | | Weckler, vice president of Chrysler dean, said less than two per cent nouncing that he would . ‘but was postponed until tomorrow earning $100.000 a year or more repe
centration camp. | the crowds moving and arrested one match while he was taking Miss | OPany BAY Wien man who shouted: | Clancy's money. Cardinal Innit d 3 25, of 1667 Union the U. A.W, demands for a 32-hour 5 vear each ardinal Innitzer remained under St. reporte as ed and | w : 3 | ported he was slugged and week. | The committee suggested the posspokesman explained that he was|tracks S. svlvani early : 2 n 5. peansyivania 8. ently ployees to work more than 32 hours | ice bureaus as a step toward sort of custody by the Nazis—that| Jean Wood, 24, of 1901 N. Del- forced closing of the factory Friday | TE b the guards of crack black uniformed aware St, a Methodist Hospital anil 3 Shuiiown of the Bris wg to persons normally denied the | Grugstore employee, reported that a ‘Plymouth, followed. leaving another benefit of legal advice. t o eld wivanis | xe : \ : : That the ig ven Ls BM Pennsylvania |, ty, factories today. direction of Lloyd K. Garrison, Unis Et Y cd Ek W | A conference between Herman L. versity of Wisconsin Law School was substantiated, despite earlier re- | Marjorie Piersol, of 39 E. 9th St. | corp. and U. A. W. negotiators of lawyers have incomes of more |$5 in cash from her J Fe win and | originally was scheduled for today, than $15000 a year and that those Speak| Helen Callon, Tell City, reported |; ning. resent only 0.2! per cent of the bar, : 1€s of a suitcase and medical instruments| ________" —— - hours inaugurated valued at $190 were taken from her | auto which was parked on Market | {St. between Delaware and Ala-| [bama Sts. Sunday night.
Cardinal Innitzer celebrated mass | Clarence Lister, 35 of 1740 8. (at the cathedral yesterday. His at- Randolph St. reported the theft of |
five Bible study | yesterday.
Two Priests Injured
| i ._ |urday night. | of spokesmen that he was not per | Frank Jonts. 66. of 956 Ketcham |
| : : : ve § [sonally injured in Saturday night S|St., reported the theft of $90 from |
(riot. The mass was one of the most his home.
ny eats kr STEEL CONVENTION OPENS TOMORROW
One priest was so overcome | by the service that he became faint, and had to be escorted out of the| cathedral. Many people tried to
| FRENCH LICK, Oct. 10 (U. P) — A wide range of steel construction | hands and robes as he made his ‘esearch will be covered in special
way from the sacristy to the altar | reports before a convention of apand back again. The SS guards proximately 400 national leaders of
Friday. The convention members will dis- |
the | this |
| The condition of the Rev. rl ed | tut ’ two broken legs when Nazis threw |CUSS means of profiting from ‘him from a window of his home Predicted business upswing | during Saturday night's riot, was re- | Winter and get a glimpse of the | s and pos- | America of Tomorrow” with its]
| prefabricated homes and elevated
reve. (the cathedral. A section of the| Reports will cover bond legisla-
Saturday night mob forced the door | toh, uniform contracts, technical (of the home with hatchets, invaded research, esthetic design of steel Father Kravanik's rooms and hurled bridges and elevated highways, |
CLAY COUNTY AAA HEADS SLATED TO GO
Usually reliable informants said | the Cardinal's veteran secretary, the| | Rt. Rev. Msgr. Jakob Weinbacher, [narrowly escaped death Saturday
Archepiscopal Palace. He was the Ranization of the Clay County AAA first priest whom the mob reached. | Board today is expected to result in! informants said, and was nearly | the replacement of the two Repub-| hurled from a window. He grasped |lican members, Chairman Arthur the jagged edges of window frames Belk and A. L. Froderman, hoth as the Nazis tried to throw him to|of whom have been notified that the street below. He suffered severe they are slated for dismissal. cuts. | They have supported the Federal | iit [farm program ardently but accord | | VATICAN CITY, Oct. 10 (U. P.). ing to local reports are due to be —The Vatican plans to make a removed as part of Secretary of | strong protest against the anti-|Agriculture Wallace's reorganiza- | | Catholic demonstration in Vienna, tion program. Their successors have | reliable church sources said today. not been indicated. (Continued from Page One)
series against the be and would be if it weren't for | Giants. There could be only the cash carrying customers. . ‘one question. . . . How many games| They have a fine, lively, romantic | ‘would it take the American Leaguers| interest in their teams and in their | to win? ; [leagues . . . You can bring all the | Now you can’t possibly take the figures and facts, you can bring . . .| element of competition out of any| Well you practically prove your | sport and still Wike d eoRng - + case beyond argument, and yet old | and that's just what is happening | : Tt) in the World Series. , . . It is no | SUS 3B, Fly bless his ‘heart, will} longer a contest. . . . It is now a S&Y “nuts”... . His team lost, of series of exhibition games. . . . The | course, because it didn't get the National League is whipped before hreaks . .. wait till next year . . .
and so forth, and so forth. , . But don’t you think this has gone far enough? . . , I'll tell you what {1 think . , , in four words ..,. Naquestion: “Is the National a new|!’0onal League wake up! .... stop minor league?” . . . This wasn't a Kidding the people with minor very popular story. ... It certainly league teams. ... make these playwasn’t popular with the National offs worth while or take them down Leaguers. . . . to Florida and play them off in the It should be kept in mind that! grapefruit circuit. . . , the World baseball at all times is strictly 3 Series today is a joke ,.. it certainprofessional amusement business. | ly isn’t worth $6.60. . . . + « The only amateurs and artists! When you check back and see in it are the cash carrying custo-|how consistently and how easily the mers . . . the owners get theirs and | American League beats the Nathe players get theirs . . , and so tional League, you must come to what? . . . one conclusion. . . the two are not So what, is just what it should in the same class. ,, §
National League Is Advised to "Wake Up’ by Joe Williams
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Pe ae.
{and the 37
.
The piece I wrote last year at this | same time provoked a mild controversy. . . . Out of t came a story by Tom Meany which posed the
