Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1939 — Page 3

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Seeks to Thwart 2

Groups Proposing To Amend Measure

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NATIONAL AFFAIRS

WPA to drop aliens,

- L ADMINISTRATION tries to block threat to Wagner act.

REPUBLICANS face factional strife. - DEFENSE bill moves ahead in House. HULL attacks war vote proposal. LABOR talks to begin within week

By LUDWELL DENNY . Times Special Writer

| WASHINGTON, March 1.—The Administration moved today to block:

threatened nullification of [the Wagner Law as its critics drew new

courage from the Supreme Court’s

straitjacketing of the Labor Board.

"OES C OF WAGNER AC

Sparring for time, the Administration is maneuvering fo win over, | ® or if necessary kuy off, two of the three groups fighting. for amendments ; | | to the law. One is the large “moderate” group asking only “clarifying” |

amendments, and the other is the curb the C. I. O. If the Adminis- , tration can come to terms with these pe half-friendly armies, it can de-

. feat in pitched battle the right-wing

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“nullification” army.. GHQ staff officers’ for the Adminjstration are Commerce Secretary Harry Hopkins, Labor Secretary Frances Perkins and Senator Wagner (D. N. Y.). They won the first, skirmish by persuading the| moderate, Chairman Thomas (D. Utah) of | the Senate Labor Committee, to " postpone the Committee fight on amendments. The moderates want to stay out of the present A. F. of L.- | C. 1. O. battle, before they enter | the amendment war. But this Administration victory in the first maneuver, which tempo- ! | rarily removes the ‘moderates from ‘| the! field, has been costly. It has infuriated General William Green of the A. F. of L., whose forces also must be won over by the Administration.

. Green The Gr

Wants Hearings Now

een strategy is to force coggmittee| hearings at once; so he can engage the C. I. O.-Labor Board “enemy” While they are busy binding up their Supreme Court, wounds. Having outmaneuvered the Green . forces, the Adniinistration is trying to pacify them with the argument

. & that this delay is vital to ultimate

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labor victory. The Administration plan ‘is to prevent any Wagner Law amendment, or if necessary, permit only the mildest possible change. Though the Administration is not far from the moderates in purpose, they are _ far apart in method. The Administration fears the moderates’ unobjectionable clarifying amendments will open a wedge for the nullifying

uth of r ‘labor by the New Deal since 1933, the Administration is expected to attempt ‘the following moves: 1. Restrain the more vocal, New Dealers, allow recuperation of morale, and hope that the Burke nullificationists will get drunk on the Court victory and overextend them- - selves. 2. Increase the pressure from ‘White House, Congress, public and

To prevent that loss of m

\ labor rank-and-file for an A, F..L.-

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: ‘Accidents | “ee

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| Hotel Severin, noo { Yi

. C. I. O. peace—or at least a- truce, * permitting a labor united front against destruction of the Wagner Law and Labor Board. John L. Lewis last night accepted the Presi.dent’s appeal for negotiations, earlier agreed to by Mr. Green.

Appeal to Moderate Groups

3. Bore-from-within tactics on the moderate amendment groups. On the moderate la side this will re‘quire turning into a majority the

~ A. F. of L. minority already oppos-

ing the Walsh-Green amendments. To the moderate employer group the following argument probably will be presented as the most potent: “We Administration representa- - » tivés agree, and always have agreed

Here Is ‘the. Traffic Record County Deaths Speeding |. . ||4]

(To Date) | Reckless |

| driving J... | 0 | Running preferential streets .

City, Deaths (To Date):

10 Running red lights ee 4 Drunken : . 3 driving .

L ee { 0 2 3 Others

‘Dead . 17

Arrests

seme

MEETINGS TODAY ol ana Baker a. Assaciation, aypool Hote Kiwanis Club, Junction: Columbia Club,

Bs Club, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

meeting.

oon. Purdue Alumni gq Yooviation, luncheon,

oun, i Discussion Club, dinner.

LY. M.

12th District ‘American Legion, luncheon, |:

Board of Trade, Indianapolis Cennsil of Parent-Teacher Associations,

0a Beta Phi Phi Sigma, dinner, Hotel Washingn, p. ma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board of

Ram aonils Real Estate Board, Property uagement Division, luncheon, Canary

ea: 7 Theta Tab: luncheon, Seville Ta-

Sadiahaplin,

oon. Traffic tun heon, Hotel Antlers, noon. _ Junior Chamber | of Commerce, luncheon, canary Cottage. noon.

~ MEETINGS TOMORROW

ames Business Club, Juncheonj Coub polis Real Esiate opoard, lunches Sri Washington, vertising Club of indiana polis. lunch-

Association,

A eon, Columbia Club, Sigm

a eh Junctieon. hoard rt Trade,

Fine per Credit Group. ‘uncheon. Men's crite the William H. Block Co. oon.

BE Patia, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. ma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington,

Caravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple,

Radio Znrincers Guild, Antlers. 8 p. ©il Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin; noon. Construction dianapolis.

meeting, Hotel

Leagu

{ of In + luncheon, Architects. “and Builders | Build-

Tadianapolis Camera Club, meeting, 110

4 E. Ninth

D. ta Theta Pi, Re, noon

+ . MARRIAGE LICENSES “(These lists are from officia) records - the County Court House. The Times, erefore, is not responsible for errors in

luncheon, Canary Cot-

“5 ies and addresses.)

% ma Jefferson Purns Jr.. 34. of 2446 pith Ave.. Be

18. _ Ramsey 26, ig $307 N. MM, of

HD rant Lenora Sharp, 20, N.

3 Saily Carter, 18, of

meeting, Hotel Washington, fi

vem Swails, 21, of |agen

A. F. of L. faction desiring only to

with you 100 per cent. Both of us want the law. Both of us deplore the inevitable mistakes in administering a new basic law. You could not be blamed for losing patience and demanding simply clarifying admendments. But, of the two chief correctives we both wanted, the Supreme Court now has guaranteed the most important. It has confined the Board .te use:of “substantial’ instead of ‘scintilla’ evidence from labor, and to ‘remedial’ instead of ‘punitive’ action against employers. Union sit-downers, con-tract-breakers, and sabotage employees can no longer be protected by the law. No employer will suffer except the one definitely guilty of violating labor's basic right to organize and bargain. “So you: already have all-fhe just protection you asked for—except one guararitee. An employer as well as a union should be able to call for a Labor Board election to decide which union, if any, is the majority representative. That was the intent of the law, and is the desire of the Administration and Wagner group. So, since you have won nine Joints of the game, we ask you to waif a little while longer for the Board to change its regulation. If it doesn’t, or if the Court doesn’t remove that objection before, then you certainly should and can do it by amendment next session.

An Answer to That Argument -

“Meanwhile, if there is A. PF. L.C. I. O. peace Or even a truce, the employer will get the only real relief from union jurisdictional! war which wrecks business.” To this argument, some at least of the powerful moderate business group will answer: “Rightly or wrongly, the employer election ‘issue has become one test of the Administration’s professed desire to co-operate with’ business to end the recession. Immediate action is required. L&t the Labor Board reseind its unjust election regulation against us first. That would encourage business and also

gotiations. Then we shall decide whether a further amendment is essential”: »

FORMER ILLINOIS OFFICIAL PAROLED

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P —The U. S. Board of Parcle has paroled W. H. Malone, former Illinois State Tax Commissioner. The parole will be effective March 24. Malone, now at the U. S. Madical Center at Springfield, Mo., under conviction on tax evasion charges, plans to enter Mayo Clinic, Justice Department officials said. They he was a “good risk” and that his serious physical condition was a consideration in granting the parole.

| Raymond A. Hetter, 27. of 1916 N. Tacoma St.: Hazel E. Dickey, | 25, of 818

| Marion Ave. i OCUEY Ey Scott. 17. of 124 W. Regent M, Cummings, 18, of 212v; S. Meridian 9 St Jose, h Charles Dodd. 24, of R. R. 13 : Mary A. Rosenbrock, 28, of R.

. Woolen, 42. of 1646 Central .: Inez PF. Dashill, 317, of 728 N. Persh-

g Ave Es Hatcher, 29, of 760 N. Miley Ave.; Venus Howard, 28, of 760 Miley Ave. William E, Ferguson, Rockville; Bertha A. Dixon, 57. of 411 N. Delaware St. James E. Kirk, 24. Ft. Harrison: Mabel 2220 Kenwood Ave. Joseph G. Tierney. 21, of 3025 N. St.: Frances R. Laughner, 19, of 302 5 wulinois St.

BIRTHS

Girls Bernard, Louise Kruchek, aL x Coleman. Leo, Helen Lederer. at Coleman. Leonard, Esther Sawyer, at S512 Hillside. Joseph, Anora Kish, al 533 ent UCKy, Woodrow, Cora Cook. at 618 E nth. Harold, Eva Butler, at 1134 N. De tain. John, Juanita Lawrence, at 730 Eoache. Otto, Opaline Watson, at 518 N. Miley. Boys Edward, Nina Stahl, af 1411 Tabor. Floyd, Eloise Everhart, 'at 3208 Ww. Mc-

Cart “star, Elena Roddy, at -1014'2 W. Ver-

nt. mM Ebert, Pearl Fleener, at 420 Melvina.

Robert, Elnora Stephens, at 1236 Charles. won. Retha Caldwell, at 1330 &. Pers Braest, Queenie Harps, a ae W. 18th. Alva, Ruth Col 421'8 andolph. William, sore Bx at oh Willie, Ann Senteney, at City. James. Lillian Brown. at City. Edna Dodd, at Coleman, Ho Iris Cook. at Coleman.

DEATHS

Clara Beckman, 27, at Central Indiana Hospital, = deraentia praec joss Mackinaw, 40, at 829 Olive, car-

" Ethel Hayes, 42, at 1712% Pearson, carClaude Wood, 50. at City, ‘lung abscess. Byrd E. Newton, 65, at 4714 E. New York, carcinoma. Horace Kernodle, 42, ab City, lobar pneumonia. Hannah Christensen, 66, at 16395 Broadway chroni¢ nephrit is. Quincy E. Bundy. 76, at Central Indiana Hospital, acute myocarditis. Malisa Nixon, t 410 W. ‘14th. cerebral hemorrhage. Elizabeth ¥ox, 77, at 1750 'S. Talbott, Serebral hemorrhage. R. Arnouil, 59, at 1504 W. 28th,

nry arteerosis, Jos 81, at 3540 N. Meridian, at Riley,

seuss at dilatation tty Lou Vaught, § £5 n inths, 60, at Methodist, diabetes

mellitus

INCORPORATIONS

aes & Brickley Grain Co., Uniondale; ssoluti Cinna od Furniture Co., New Alban New Albany;

i mon n d '100 shares preferred of $100. value; to dea! in furniture. dry goods, pt H. Cinnamond, Hillsman LR

J. Wentzeli. - Fiance SL. Inec., Banke apolis; resident Royse. Raliwey Exchange olis; capital stock, 30. ; loan bi usiness: W.

ter S. fangpolls

John £ ing, Indi: es

A. LA

prod the A. F. L.-C. I. O. peace ne-y{

said.

N. |Donnha Bryant, Ethyl J

t Shirley. Beulah Payton, at 1302 S. Shef-

Inc.. : resident. agent, Chester S. Went-|Mia 320 Elm St. £aplial ;

New methods of firing furnaces without causing excessive smoke were described in pamphlets distributed at the Indianapolis Smoke Abatement

League meeting last night. the literature are Mrs. W. D. Roberts, Mrs. Learny F. Jones and Miss Grace L. Brown.

|New Ways of F urnace Fi ing Outlined

Times Photo. Shown studying some of

Claims Proposal Is Not in Spirit of Democratic * Governments.

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P.). —Secretary of State Hull said today that a proposed Constitutional amendment requiring a national referendum before this country could declare war, is incompatible with the representative form of government. Mr. Hull expressed opposition to the proposal at a press conference. A resolution calling for such a Constitutional amendment was introduced by a bipartisan bloc of 12 Senators yesperday. The national referendum would be necessary before war could be declared by this country in all cases except in the event of invasion, under terms of the proposal.

Ludlow Started Plan

Rep. Louis Ludlow (D. Ind.) is the originator of the war referendum

lan. Mr. Hull said the present form of government, in which Congress has final control over declaration of war, has proven its wisdom and practicability. “There was no question more acutely in the minds and purposes of the founders of this republic than that of keeping the Amsgican people out of war,” he said. ™ “After the fullest deliberation they reached the conclusion that the representative form of government by the people which they es-

). |tablished was best calculated to ac-

complish this end.

CANONIZATION URGED

VATICAN CITY, March 1 (U, P.). —The canonization of Mother Elizabeth Seton of Emmitsburg, Md., a distant relative of President Roosevelt and founder of the parochial school system in the United States, has been recommended to the Sacred Congregation of Rites by two American cardinals, it was learned today.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Associa- ; no capital ‘1aal life; Mack

som ee! cil of Girl Sin St ‘West Lafaystock. Ruth C. Heckar Ford and others. Lake County Labor Legion, inc., 26 W. 7th Ave., Gary; no capital stock: to promote cause of labor in all lawful means; Carl F. Lomax Charles B._ Jones, Charles Wolter, Kilmer R. Lomax, John Foyt.

Little Kentucky Amusement Co., Inc., Jasper; dissolution. Simplex Automatic Music -Corp., . South/ Bend; dissolu tog Indianapolis un Club, pTndianapolis; dissolved by decree of cou Superior Body Co.. Inc., SS ion: amendment changing name to Superior Metal * [Products Inc. Dunelands Corp., Hammond: ghange © agent to Wasson J. Wilson, 603 First Wi Building. Hammond. Waynedale Raboit Breeder's tion, Inc., 4, Pt. Wav stock: to’ foster wild. n~ Rayl, D. Ta thot The “West Lafav Scouts, Inc.. 712 *. ette; no capi‘ai

OFFICIAL WEATHER

By UU. NS Weathers Bureao

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST: Fair toinight with lowest temperatures about 25; fair tomorrow ‘with rising temperatures. Sunrise ¢. 6:18 | Sunset........ 5: 37 TEMPERATURE =—March 1, 1938—

_ BAROMETER

Perea 24 hrs ending 7 a. m.. Total precipitation since Jan an.

Excess since Jan

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana—-Fair tonight and tomorrow, except cloudy in extreme south portion tomorrow; somewhat colder in. northeast portion tonight, BE rising temperature tomorrow.

Illinois—Fair tonight and tomorrow, except cloudy and unsettled in extreme south portion; not so cold in northwest and ira portions late tonight; rising temperature tomorrow.

Lower Michigan—Fair tortight and tomorrow; colder tonight, owly rising temperature in north portion tomorrow. . Ohio—Fair and somewhat colder tonight; tomorrow cloudy with slowly rising temperature followed by rain or snow tomorrow night.

Kentucky—Fair, slightly colder in east and extreme north portions tonight; tomorrow. cloudy with slowly rising temperature followed by rain beginning tomorrow afternoon or night.

.T.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES AT 7 A. M. Amarillo Tex. Cloudy 30.24 22

n Chicago Cincinnati .

Pod ges City, Xa, Heldna, Mon

Srtanaran? eri foriland, ore ve San Antonio, Tex n_ Francisco

Hull Hits War Vote Plans; Defense Bill Progresses|

Guam Naval Hearings to Open in Senate on Monday.

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. PJ). —The House Appropriations Committee today reported to the House a $499,857,936 money. bill for the War Department for the year beginning July 1. It was the largest

regular Army appropriation since the World War. : Simultaneously, the Senate Naval Affairs Committee announced it will open hearings Monday on authorization of a five million dollar harbor and airport development at Guam which was stricken from the $48,800,000 Naval Base Bill by the House, ‘Today’s House action initiated another phase of President Roosevelt’s broad national defense program of which an air force expanded to at least 5500 planes is a key part. The Committee recommended immediate expenditure of 50 million dollars, mostly for Air Corp expansion, and all of this sum was cash except $19,505,988. This later amount was an authorization to contract for combat planes. The sum allotted for immediate expenditure, without waiting for the new fiscal year to start, will buy 551 combat planes and 14 photographic planes. With other sums already approved and orders given, that will raise to 1690 the number of planes to be delivered within 18 months. The Army then would have around 3200 first-line planes toward its new goal of 5500 or 6000 planes. Throughout its report the Committee reiterated that the President will send supplemental estimates to Congress later for more appropriations, thus broadening the program.

Curb Sought on Military

Propaganda in U. S.

WASHINGTON; March 1 (U. P.). —The House studied today a request from Acting Secretary of the Navy Charles Edison for ‘legislation to curb activities of subversive agents who, he said, are interfering with

‘the national defense program by

; | propagandiz.ng Army and Navy personncl. Mr. Edison wrote Speaker Bankhead (D. Ala.), submitting a bill drafted by the Navy Department to provide penalties for persons at-

4. | tempting to incite disobedience of

military orders or regulations. He said propaganda agents, particularly Communists, were attempting to break down Army and Navy morale through the distribution of “literature of a nature subversive to the Government.” The Navy's proposed legislation, providing a $1000 fine and two years imprisonment for agents inciting disobedience, would crush subversive activities without ‘‘abridging the right of free speech,” Mr. Edison said.

LABOR TALKS START WITHIN SEVEN DAYS

Perkins Will Confer With F. D. R., Call Meeting

- WASHINGTON, March 1 (TU. P.). —Secretary of Labor Perkins announced today that the new peace negotiations between the A. F. of L.

and C. I. O. will be within a week. She said she w: the negotiating committees into session after she confers with President Roose|velt when he returns from his cruise with the Navy. The President is due back Saturday. Expediting efforts to establish peace between the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O., Miss Perkins said she would review recent developments|m with Mr. Roosevelt. Her conference with the President apparently will be held almost immediately after his return. Mr. Roosevelt requested last week that the new peace efforts be made. It was believed the first meeting would be held mi the

House. ouse

EDINBURG FARM .GOUPLE SLAIN

Daughter, 12, Attacked; Hired Hand Sought by Investigators.

(Continued from Page One)

trict. Mr. Brand has two surviving

brothers, Ray and Ernest, who are farmers in this vicinity, and a sjster, Mrs. Lottie Johnson, 4924 Young St., Indianapolis. Mrs. Johnson arrived at the home of her parents in midmorning, saying she had learned of the murder through a radio broadcast. The murdered couple had made the hired hand so much a part of the family that he and the son slept in the same room. The children all declared they heard no shots fired, but that the struggle in the bedroom awakened them. The older girl was placed under the care of a physician and was said to be suffering from shock. The children were cared for at the home of the Robertsons. Girl, 4, Is Comforter With each reference to the parents, all three burst into tears, and very often the 4-year-old would go to her brother and sister and put her arms around them, obviously not fully understanding what had happened. Clarence Jones, operator of a tavern on Maincross St. here, told Marshal Williamson that the hired hand and two friends were in the tavern from 9 o’clock until midnight last night and left together. He said the hired man had drunk about seven glasses of beer, seemed in gocd spirits and had not mentioned the name of his employer during the evening. Raymond McFarland said he was with the hired hand and that he and a friend, Curtis Pierce, drove him to what is known as Simmon’s Crossing, one-fourth mile south of the Brand home. Declined Ride Clear Home “He got out there,” Mr. McFarland said, “and said goodby. We asked if he didn’t want to be driven the reso <7 the way and he said no, that he'd wal, We drove back to town.” The Brand home is- situated on the Johnson-Shelby County Line Road. There was only one light in the Brand home during the night— an oil lamp that the girls said was kept burning in their room. About it the children huddled in their fright until dawn gave them courage to go for aid. Nothing was moved in the house until State Police had taken all pictures and made all measurements necessary for the investigation and court evidence.

30,000 ALIENS FACE SLICE IN WPA ROLLS

Move Is Made to Soften Critics in Congress.

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P)). —The WPA has begun elimination of aliens from relief rolls as part of a revamping program to meet Con-

gressional criticism of alleged waste and political activity. WPA officials said today that aliens on relief, estimated by Sen-

ator Byrnes (D. S. C.) to number |

around 30,000 ars being dropped from rolls as rapidly as discovered under an order by Congress directing their removal not later than March 5. The alien clause was written into the 725-million-dollar bill that, continues WPA until June 30. The WPA pyrsued an intensive checkup of all on its rolls to determine whether they have outside income, and should be removed.

This study was also ordered by Con-|:

gress, and will be finished about April 1. Some WPA employees already have been dropped, it was said. While pursuing the congressional-ly-ordered “clean up,” WPA Administrator Harrington has instituted a broad reorganization program within the agency designed to tighten its aciministrative machinery, and eliminate waste. He ex-

pects to present results of the} changes to congressional commit-|. tees about April 1, when they conPresident

1apolis Smoke Abatement League.

spector for the area.

| the day will come when “it will be

SMOKE CONTROL

GROUPS TO ASK FOR CHECKUPS

Seek Staff of Eight to Provide Annual City-Wide Inspections.

City Council will be asked to increase from one to eight the number

trol to provide for city-wide annual inspections. A resolution to that effect was adopted last night by 100 representaives of industrial and civic groups meeting in the Indiana War Memorial under auspices of the Indian-

It also was proposed by Roy O. Johnson, League counsel, that Council create penalties for violations of the smoke conirol ordinance and empower Municipal Court to impose them. That was not acted upon at the meeting. Dr. Herman B. Morgan, City Health Board secretary, was 'instructed, to present the resolution io Council. The resolution also urged City officials to continue the antismoke campaign already begun. Officers Are ‘Enlisted’ Yesterday the Safety Board made the reporting of smoke ordinance violations the duty of all police officers and set up one fireman in every engine house as smoke in-

Prof. W. T. Miller, Purdue University, told the audience that intelligent stoking of domestic heating units would go far toward solving the smoke problem. He said the goal nrust be to prevent smoke, not to filter it out, of the air, ‘and illustrated with a matchbox furnace how smoke can be preventegl through proper firing. Dr. Morgan told the meeting that

as much of a disgrace for a city to tolerate polluted atmosphere as it now is to tolerate an impure water or milk supply. He demonstrated with preserved

a

STRAUSS SAYS:—

of persons employed in smoke con-| [8

Fatal Spots

Beside a grim “No. 4,” indicating Oklahoma City’s fourth traffic death of 1939, Patrolman Allan West points to the “X” which marks the spot of the fatality. With numbered crosses, the city preaches an illustrated safety sermon to drivers and pedestrians.

human lungs what Indianapolis’

polluted air does to its citizens and!

said that when pneumonia strikes a lung already scarred and discolored by smoke the “battle is half lost, no matter how strenuous the efforts of science.”

PROBES MILL DEATH FT. WAYNE, Ind, March 1 (U, P.).—An investigation into the death of Guy Robinson, 21, Coesse, was being planned today by Allen County Corongr Dr. Walter E. Kruse. Mr. Robinson died at Lutheran Hospital here late yesterday, three hours after he: was struck in the chest by a plank at a sawmill

| sizing

CARDINALS OPEN CONCLAVE FOR POPE ELECTION

Voting Begins Tomorrow; Rt. Rev. 0’Connell Tired, Not in Procession.

(Continued from Page One)

in the coming election,” he dee clared. Reviews World Situation Msgr. Bacci exhaustively ree viewed the world situation, empha “today’s prevailing - desire of earthly welfare, contempt for the eternal truths, and the bringing up of youth in certain ‘nations in contempt of Christian life and in old errors, in social disorders and hatred or distrust between nations.” After stating that the above and similar evils must be dispersed, the preacher stressed the necessity of returning “to the angelic rules and to Christ, who alone can call men once again to the straight and nare row path and make new nations by extinguishing, hatred and bringing peace to our souls.” “This will be the very difficult task of the Pontiff who will result from the decision of your voting,” Msgr. Bacci continued. “You theree fore know how much wisdom and sanctity he must have to be able to confront with success the necessi= ties of modern times and accomplish with divine aid such a difficult task.” The Cardinals started taking the oath of secrecy in the Sistine Chapel at 4:45 p. m. after the Mas= ter of Ceremonies invited all but the | Cardinals to leave the chapel. The conclave attendants took a separate oath simultaneously in a small chapel nearby. Relatives, diplomats and members of - the aristocracy headed by Crown Prine. cess Marie Jose were permitted to remain |inside the royal hall outside the Sistine Chapel until the Master of Ceremonies calls “Extra Omnes” at dusk, ordering all to leqve except

near his home.

those immured.

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