Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1939 — Page 4
RRR
THURSDAY, JUNE 8,
‘How Are You?’ Says Roosevelt to King As 500,00
89-Degree Heat Fatal to Man as 150 Women Faint in Street.
(Continued from Page One)
EE
copal Cathedral, Rock Creek Park and other points of interest. At 4 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) the King was host at a British Embassy garden party. A state dinner with about 80 guests and a musicale with 220 more follow at the White House Washington's reception to their Majesties made a profound impression on British and Canadian citizens who saw the Union Station welcome and the procession up Pennsyvivania Ave. Some of them had expected mere curosity among Americans; they discovered real enthusiasm. that the King and Queen received a royal welcome at midday in the nation’s capital. They had as much
on a smaller scale last night roll-|
It was not surprising¢
Su AE INR CTE ETN Pe
1939
| i i i
0 Cheer
and Pennsylvania Ave—the route of all Presidential inaugurations. Crowds surged against the guard] cables at the curb edges and more) ‘than 1400 police and firemen | struggled to nold them in line,
Train Arrives on Dot
| The royal couple arrived in Wash- | ington on the very minute of their| schedule. Their royal train pulled in| slowly. Secretary of State Hull, who | went to Niagara Falls, N. Y., to greet the royal visitors, was one of] the first off the train. | He waited a moment and the King | and Queen alighted and shook hands with Secretary Hull. The] Queen walked between the King and | Secretary Hull. She had to speed her | steps to catch up. She was forced to lift her long gown with her right] hand to prevent it from dragging on the stone floor of the concourse,
Queen Carries Orchid
The King grasped the hilt of his sword with his right hand. | It was just 10:03 a. m. when the
TO THREATEN GARDEN PARTY
King to Be Host at What Hoosiers Would Call | ‘lce Cream Sociable.” |
| WASHINGTON, June 8 (U.P.).—| A brisk rain started {falling in| | Washington at 3:18 p. m. (Indian- | | apolis Time), less than three hours ‘before the swanky garden party for King George VI and Queen Eliza-| | beth at the $1,000,000 British Em- | bassy. | | The Embassy gates of “the next| thing to heaven” open at 3 p. m.| sharp and will be closed with polite but distinct bang 45 minutes | latre. Some 1400 Americans are expected to jostle their way inside. The reference to heaven | strictly realistic. No less a person-
is |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES oo |_Royal Pair Welcomed by Hulls RAIN FALLING
Called ‘Brains’
al
age than His Britannic Majesty's |
Ambassador, Sir Ronald Lindsay, so | described it, pointing out that just |
like heaven, “some are taken and |}
some are not.”
And like heaven, too, the list of | {i
the “taken” is distinctly varied. |
ing through the hills of Pennsyl- Ring and the radiant Queen, carryyanis ang Sayin, fn no Rey. ing in her hand a single orchid, en-| ; y war lore. Many & IraCR= iad the reception room where] side farm house was alight long pn cident and Mrs. Roosevelt stood after midnight to see the royal spe- waiting to receive them.
cial through and until the small The King was smiling broadly. He
hours there were roadside Crowds hesitated for a fraction of a second =:
on pe 0 Hie. Vim 2 Waye Shd as he reached the President's side 3 2 ations SIEEPINR hd Mr. Roosevelt put out his hand guests. $ fuk which the British ruler grasped and | Wears Admiral’s Uniform wrung heartily. Britain's slim. | o Tie King and Queeh entered the youthful couple, descended at 10:01 ites x Te rave ak Bio0 pt] a. m. (Indianapolis Time) from (ndianapolis Time) last night and their royal train and walked received this country’s first official through saluting lines of U. S. Ma- Ta drawl of : : nl ’ : > al ai} OLE u . Hiv Thy Sailors to a Presidential | “Your Majesty, on behalf of the 0 . _. _. !Government and the people of the h WH gh fh the da RINGS | United States, I have the honor and Bite an da pe "a gr » formality | pleasure to extend to you the warm- = da ® o in Mallty foot welcome,” Secretary Hull said. c eti ‘ ; \ » Sh “We are delighted. The people of he ne Shniies ready og my country in a generous spirit of BO od iy! rag bs Da of cordiality, hospitality and friendro 5 + S “ship, have every desire to make your ne Che stay a thoroughly enjoyable one.” rd 8 : and pre-| ope words and the occasion will sented the Queen 9 we resitent have a place in American history. and Mrs. RE ¢ py th The King stood solemnly, wearing hands W Bh ine id > Yd . a business suit, to hear them. He iy ae gro Boge are hy thanked Secretary Hull and smiled. Navy. Mr. Roosevelt wore the cus- Woy Mn re br tomary dark coat and striped trou- ponor for me to meet and greet) sers of formal morning attire. | vou.” |
Ten-Minute Greetings The Queen smiled warmly and |
monarchs, a
aw
King George and Queen Elizabeth are welcomed by Secretary of
State Cordell Hull and Mrs. Hull States in Niagara Falls.
Here's Menu For Stay at White House
WASHINGTON, June 8 (U. P).—Here is what King George VI and Queen Elizabeth will eat at their first two meals in Washington—both served at the White House: Informal Luncheon
Minted cantaloup green turtle soup; broiled sweetbreads; mushrooms; asparagus.; saratoga chips;
balls;
. Ride in Splendor Past
{enough to enable spectators to ob{tain a clear view. Both the First |Lady and the Queen smiled at the| |cheers of the massed thousands who {lined their route, and waved gra-
Senators Squeeze In
There will be dowagers and debu- | | tantes, ambassadors and Congress- | | men, Senators, Supreme Court Jus-| | tices, bankers, lawyers, a scattering ‘of industrialists, a scattering of Government officials, high officers]
of the Army and Navy, a few cliffdwellers (non-Governmental Wash- | ington society), widows of former Presidents, and personal friends of | Sir Ronald and Lady Lindsay. There will be some 50-odd Sena-| tors and wives who crashed the, party at the last moment by virtue of not too well-concealed high pres sure lobbying. But exactly and spe cifically who was invited and who) was left outside the gates probaby will never be known for the guest [list has not been announced. True, Lady Lindsay specified some lof those who were invited—Henry | Ford, J. P. Morgan, Admiral Richard Byrd, Alf M. Landon, Herbert Hoover, John L. Lewis and William Green, to name a few. But some | have sent regrets, former President Hoover among them; others, such as| { Mr. Lewis, reported that no invita-| tion ever arrived through the mails. |
Party of Decade |
But at all events, the garden party was certain to go down in history in|
Times-Acme Telephoto.
upon their entry inte the United
LADIES IN BLUE SMILE HAPPILY
Mrs. Roosevelt and Queen
Massed Thousands.
(Continued from Page One)
Mrs. Ethel Pitt Donnel
U.S. RELEASES SEAN RUSSELL
Action Taken as House Irish Threaten Boycott of Royal Reception.
WASHINGTON, June 8 (U. P.) — U. S. Immigration officials today telegraphed orders to Detroit immi- | gration authorities to release Sean Russell, Irish Republican leader, on | bond, even as King George VI and| Queen Elizabeth reached Washington. Officials approved Russell's bond |
The brief. ors and the President
greeting formalities were At 11:01 a. m. the royal visit-
tion plaza where saluting troops presented arms and thousands of citigens, Government workers, tourists and school children roared with cheers, The scarlet-coated U. S. Band in the plaza struck up “The Star-Spangled Banner” and “God Save the King” The King raised his arm to a smart salute and Mr Roosevelt placed his tophat over his heart. The party stood immobile as the anthems were played and the crashing guns of a 2l-gun salute roared from a park of French 73s placed a hundred yards away beyond splashing plaza fountains. Slowly the official party moved to two sleek, open White House automobiles as roar after roar of cheers rocked from the banked crowds.
The King and the President en-|
tered the first car; the Queen and Mrs. Roosevelt the second. Only a light breeze from the south kept the temperature from
rising above a sweltering 89 degrees. |
Crowds Press Against Lines
Both the King and the President and the Queen and Mrs. Roosevelt talked animatedly as they entered their cars and proceeded down the line of march. Overhead roared 42 fleet pursuit planes and 10 huge flving fortresses of the Army. of march—one man every four feet __stood soldiers, sailors and marines in summer dress khaki, natty white and marine blue in a guard of honor. They snapped their bayonetted rifles to present arms, Ahead and behind the royal cars were rumbling tanks and clattering cavalry. wave after wave of cheers swelled
from the multitude gathered around |
the U. S. Capitol and down the line of march on Constitution Ave.
County Deaths Speeding
(To Date) 38 Reckless
33 driving
—
1938
(1 Running City Deaths | preferential
(To Date) | street
30 Running red lights
2 Drunken
Injured 12| driving ....
Accidents : ‘ ‘ ‘ Dead ...cvic0 0 Arrests ... 55| Others ....
MEETINGS TODAY
Indianapolis Real Estate Board, luncheon. Hotel Washington, noon. Advertising Club of Indianapolis, luncheon. Columbia Club, noon. Sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of
yr luncheon, Hotel Washington,
Sigma Nu, noon. Construction League of Indianapolis, luncheon, Architects and Builders butlding. noon. American Business Club, luncheon, dianapolis Athletic Club, noon. 4 luncheon, Board of Trade, noon. oil . luncher~n, Hotel Severin, noon. Indianapolis Camera Club, meeting, 110 E Ninth St, 8 p. m. \ Beta Theta Pi, luncheon, Tanary Cottage, noon.
MEETINGS TOMORROW Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel Wash-
ton, noon In atiinist Club, lunchecn, Columbia Club,
Trade,
In-
Officers’ Association, luncheon
¢ of Trade noon Boh Delta 1 heta, luncheon, Canary Cot-
t n. betta Tan Delta. luncheon, Columbia
ub. noon Tappa Sigma, luncheon, Canary Cottage,
Association of Credit Men,
meeting, Clavoool Hotel, p.m 3 Salesmeén’s Club, luncheon, Hotel Wash-
ington, noon.
BIRTHS
Borys
John, Jamvlea Conway, at Coleman jae] Blessinger, at Coleman.
Carl, Alma . Erwin, Dorothy Ulirey, at §
Francis. Glenn, Ella Brewer, at St. Fraacis.
a
and Mrs. | Roosevelt emerged to the vast sta- |
Marine!
the
Along the full line]
|
.! . 18
advanced toward Mrs. Hull. Like| Mrs. Roosevelt today, Mrs. Hull did not curtsy.
Few for Lunch; 80 for Dinner
The King and Queen ate their first truly American food today at] the White House—which British | sailors and marines burned just 125 years ago. Those invited to the luncheon included: William Lyon Prime Minister Katherine Seymour, ing to the Queen; Alan Lascelles, acting private secretary to the King; Lieut. Col. the Hon. Piers W. Legh, equerry to the King; Mr. and Mrs. James Roosevelt; Mr. and Mrs.
JURY MAY RECEIVE scm i nt DUVALL GASE TODAY
This afternoon a squad of car-| penters set up the big horseshoe table in the same room for P).—Evidence in the murder trial the formal dinner tonight. of Raymond Duvall, 30, charged § sts—invi ac- |... ; She Less than 80 gue invited ac-lgith slaving Clayton Potts, Indian-
cording to official rank—will attead.| ; : ‘ : An additional 220 guests have apolis foundry executive, during a
hearts of lettuce salad with Roquefort dressing; pineapple sponge shortcake; coffee; nuts; candies.
State Dinner
Clam cocktail; calves head soup; Maryland terrapin; corn pone; boned capon; cranberry sauce; peas; buttered beets; sweet potato cones; frozen cheese and cress salad; maple and almond ice cream; white pound cake; coffee.
Mackenzie King, of Canada; Lady lady-in-wait-
SHELBYVILLE, Ind, June 8 (U
i
been invited for the musicale that|payroll robbery, was expected to go Once she raised her handkerchief |
|follows. Then comes varied enter- tg the jury late today.
\ : lan & son, 210 | tainment: Marian Anderson Negi | The defense rested yesterday after contralto: Lawrence Tibbett, bari-
tone: Kate Smith, radio singer; the Duvall, its only witness, testified.
Soco Gap dancers of Asheville, N. C., | Two-hour arguments tor each side who give square dances; the Coon were started at 9 a. m. Creek girls from Kentucky, who play| Duvall denied he shot Potts, and banjos and sing folk songs; the said he didn't know where the C. North Carolina Negro spiritual sing- and G. Potts Foundry, where the ers of Chapel Hill, and Alan Lomax, robbery took place, was located. 24-vear-old collector and singer of| He repeated previous testimony cowboy and other folk songs. fon how he had been treated by poJust where the King and Queen lice. will sleep in the White House is a| A confession which Duvall had state secret—so ordered by Scotland allegedly signed was read into the vard. But those who know the record. Duvall said he didn't know mansion believe there are only two what the statement contained until suites they can well occupy. One, it was read in court. believed assigned to the King, over-| Fred Simon, Indianapolis chief of looks Lafayette Square. overlooking the roiling south lawns apolis detective sergeant, were the of the White House and Washing-|final state witnesses. Simon said he
ton Monument, is believed assigned did not see Duvall sign any confes- | to the Queen. In her bedroom Abra-|sion, and Dugan told of the trip
ham Lincoln signed the Emancipa-|{when Duvall was returned from tion Proclamatior. (Louisiana, where he was arrested.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Here Is the Traffic Record], 8
| John, Nellie Thompson
Dorothy Farlev, at 1821 Roose-)
John, Vivian Johnson, at 2643 Burton, Lee, Nellie Goans, at 149 S. Leota | at 1337 Udell. Phillips, at 2426 College Girls Jesse, Agnes Smith, at Coleman Joseph, Edna Parker, at Coleman, Clavon, Ruth Frazier, at City City. Methodist. St. Fraucis. | at St. Francis, | 2837 Highland
Samuel, elt
OFFICIAL WEATHER
Reed, Margaret By U. S. Weather Bureau
cloudy with possible thundershowers this | afternoon or tonight, becoming fair tomorrow: not mach change in temperature, TeIL TL 4:18 |
Andrew. Georgia Roper, at Irvin, Henrietta Zook, at Harry, Evelyn Meikle, at Herbert, Helen Kattau, Logan, Anna Pepper, at
lace Walter, Ethel Hall, at 14 N, State John, Flora Proffit, at 1259 Nordvke, Ralph, Sarah Hand, at 1305 W. 27th,
Sunrise Sunset aH TEMPERATURE —June 8, 1938 8:30 a. m..... 38 1:00 p.m
DEATHS
82,
BAROMETER
6:30 a. m.. 2008
Charles 2M. Parker, at Methodist lobar pneumonia, | Albert A. Wood, 71, at Central Indiana, | Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 6:30 a.m. .08 Ba pg seg 0 TI 38. at 50 8. Downey | Total precipitation since Jan, 18.67 PNR tuberculosis, Excess since Jan, 1........... a
Saat 53
Mary Green, 75, at Methodist, nl ry {lated hernia. | Joseph Parks, | monia, Elizabeth A. Kuester, 79, at 2735 Barth, cerebral hemorrhage.
| —————— | MARRIAGE LICENSES Minois—Generally fair in central (These lists are from o [north porticns, local thundershowers | ficial records extreme south portion tonight or tomor- | in the County Court House. The Times, row: somewhat cooler in central and | therefore. is not responsible for errors in north portions tonight; warmer in cennames and addresses.) tral pertion tomorrow, Lower Michigan— Generally and tomorrow: cooler tonight, extreme northwest portion. Ohio—Partly cloudy with local showers and thundershowers tomorrow and in east and south portions tonight; not change in temperature. Kentucky—lLocal showers and storms tonight and tomorrow; change in temperature.
strangu- | i -_/r MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana Generally fair in north portion tonight and tomorrow, thundershowers
87, at City, lobar pneu-|
{becoming fair portion tonight.
tomorrow;
fair tonight except in | Percy Lindsay, of 2419 Ethel: rie Potts, 21, of 2714 Sangster. Earl Dawson, 49 of South Bend: Verna Britton, 38, of 301 Villa Robin Bovd, 22. of 1433 Reisner; Alice | Roller, 21, of R. R. 4. John Iron, 32, of 802 N. Highland: Agnes Fisher, 29. of 227! E. {0. | Robert Byers, 33 of 1524 Lee; Henrietta | Sheets, 38, of 1548 Shepard | Rober Riggins, 24 of 1010 W. 33d: Mary | Morrison, 23. of 619 Congress, Joseph Ward, 67 of 3114 N | Angie Smith, 43, of 1339 W. 32d.
FIRES
Tuesday
| 4:05 P. M.—Residence, 821 E. Smoking furnace
22, Caril
thundernot much
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES 6:30 A. M. Station. Temp. Amarillo, 7 Bismarck, 48 Boston 66 Chicago Cincinnati 4 | Cleveland 3 £8 48
. Bar. 29 34 29.96 29 92
Western; Tex. N. D
- Denve: ‘ 27th St. | Dodge City : ‘ | Helena, Mont. P. M. —Automobile, 2027 Linden St. | Jacksonville, defective yi Kansas City, 8:17 P. M.—Apartment building, 1512 N. Little Rock 74 Pennsvivania St., smoking incinerator. Los Angeles £0 8:14 P. M.—Automobile, Central Ave. and Miami, 4 Seah 82 | 25th St., brakes. | MDs, ~ lear 29.8 80 | Wednesday | New ra. 2 | 10:39 A M —Automobile, 823 MNassa-|New York | chusetts Ave. defective wiring. | 7:55 P. M.—False alarm. East and Pros- | pect Sts. 8:40 P. M —Office building, 108 E. Mar- | : | ket St., smoke from incinerator, ISan Antonio. Woodlawn | San Francisco St. Louis ie
{ | | | 9:01 P. M —Residence, 1213 ve. defective wiring. | $ | 11:04 P. M.—Automobile, 1400 W. S0th | Lamps, Fla. $5. | Washington, D.
'8t., defective wiring, loss «Na
78 14
Portland,
C, ~
__ time in history, the Queen of Great
The other, detectives, and John Dugan, Indian- |
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Partly
— | “azure blue,”
and | in|
much |
|ciously as their car carried them to {the White House.
Mrs. Roosevelt, 54, tall and gracious, and Queen Elizabeth, 38, 5 and radiant, bridged at the {moment of their meeting the gap {between their backgrounds — old
{feet 2
Scotland and New York.
| The meeting on the deep-blue car-
pet of the reception room was brief. Mrs. Roosevelt, standing at the side of the President, turned to the Queen after greeting King George. The two women smiled, exchanged an inaudible greeting. For the first Britain and the wife of the President of the United States had met— and they seemed at once to like each other. Queen Is Deeply Moved
Both Mrs. Roosevelt and the Queen were serious and formal as they emerged from the station and
an artillery battery boomed out a 21-gun salute. While the Marine |Band played “God Save the King and the “Star-Spangled Banner, the Queen appeared deeply moved.
"
[to her eyes. | After those formalities, the Queen turned to Mrs. Roosevelt, and began an animated conversation. The moment the Queen entered the car, one of her aids handed her the parasol, and she raised it immediately. | During the ride to the White | House, Mrs. Roosevelt and the Queen took turns holding the parasol, conversing in friendly | fashion, and nodding as the crowds cheered. Their dresses, like the two women, | seemed much alike and yet sO different. | Bach garment was designed and made in the country of the wearer, but of wool grown in the other's country. They represent an inter{change of gifts by the sheep farmers of the two countries.
Dresses Described
The Queen's dress is of pale “queen's blue” wool, made from clips of sheep in 34 American states, woven in Passaic, N. J. It is “gossamer in texture.” Designed {and made by Norman Hartnell in | London, the dress has a V-shaped neck with graduating broderie anglaise from neck to hemline.
|| With it is a slim-fitting full length
coat, of the same color and trim. Mrs. Roosevelt's dress, made oO | wool grown in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Canada, is and of the lightest weight “thermos” wool. The material was woven in Bradford, Eng- | land. The dress was designed and made by Clara Potter of New York according to Mrs. Roosevelt's direc ions for simplicity and coolness. It has sharp V accents in the voke and bosom front of the bodice, with a notched open-throat collar,
after a clan of fighting Irish mem-
event of the Washington decade. As la party, however, it won't be as |ultra-super as the heated imaginations of the uninvited social elect might fancy. What it really amounts to in Posey County, Indiana, terms is a
[tue Blue Book coterie as the social
| bers of the House, led by a McGranery and a Sweeney, had threatened |to boycott tomorrow's Congressional | reception for the King and Queen unless the Irish leader was released. | Turner W. Battle, assistant to Labor Secretary Perkins, signed the order directing release of Russell,
“lawn sociable” held under a little| : : : : more formalistic circumstances. In-| WO Was arrested in Detroit on stead of blue serge coats and white | Charges of overstaying a 30-day duck trousers, some men will swelter | VISItOr's permit. in tail coats, striped trousers and top | Mr. Battle hats even 3 | passed the word that white summer | troit Saturday on |suits will be all right. The ladies | will bask in picture hats, sweeping summer gowns from Fifth Avenue |or Washington smart shops insead {of $9.95 models from the Bon Ton
| Dept. Store on Main St.
said that Russell a deportation warrant.
What Kind of Shenanigan
Russell was arrested as he stepped |off a
(few hours before Their
Fraud
n Alleged
Times Photo.
1...seeks $10,000 bail.
Robert D. Beckett
A PAGE 3
TWO HELD HERE ON $640,000 FRAUD CHARGE
‘Swindled 200 Investors of Building and Loan Stocks, Nolan Says.
(Continued from Page One)
could not be met, it did not hold over until the next year. Mr. Nolan said that some dis | satisfied bondholders were offered | substantial sums of cash and blocks | of preferred stock for the bonds. He | said that those who relinquished | their bonds got neither cash nor stock in return.
Gives List of Properties
A bankruptcy action brought in | 1937 against the American Termi- | nals & Transit Co., holding com[pany for the other three, stopped | trading in the securities, he said. | Mr, Nolan said the properties held | by the four companies were an un= | exercised option to purchase a river | terminal at Evansville for $18,000; a | conditional contract for purchase of | four coal mines on Green River near Evansville on which payments | were continually in default; a cere | tificate of convenience and neces= | sity issued by the Interstate Come | merce Commission that represented |the Chicago, Ohio & Mississippi | Transit Co. to have exclusive | freight rights on the Green and |Ohio Rivers and carried on the | books at. $750,000. Mr. Nolan said money was spent to entertain investors and that company records show that company |funds were spent for Kentucky
! Derby and Chicago prize fight
tickets.
Legless Woman a Victim
Among the victims who lost life savings, Mr. Nolan said, was .a woman who appeared before the | Grand Jury in a wheelchair be|cause both legs had been ampu- | tated. An Indianapolis woman who | turned over $23,000 is now in a charity home and could not tes[tify because she didn’t have car | fare, Mr. Nolan said. | Two charwomen invested $17,000 land went back to Ireland with the (thought they would get $100 a month for the rest of their lives, he said. When they received no money, friends took up a collection to send them back to see why, Mr. | Nolan said. | Offices were maintained in Indie |anapolis, Evansville and Henderson, according to Mr. Nolan.
Strauss Says:
Ii
§ .
though Lady Lindsay | Would be given a hearing in De- |:
N »
train in Detroit Tuesday, a hc Brittanic : Majesties were scheduled to arrive :
1 in Windsor, Ontario, across the De- :
troit River from Detroit. He is chief of staff of the Irish Republican Army, which has been charged with terroristic acts
LONDON FINDS U. S. | | NOT QUITE S0 CRAZY eine: the British Government in England and Ireland.
| What kind of a shenanigan is it, (Continued from Page One) Rep. Martin L. Sweeney (D. 0. demanded to know, when the chief constable of Scotland Yard, Albert Canning, tells Attorney General Murphy's Justice Department to arrest “a prominent Irish citizen who is minding his own business?”
stories of the King and Queen on| (their main pages, emphasized safety precatuions such as the banning of private airplane flights over the royal route and the extraordinary | military and police precautions. | It's a bold and brazen piece of |" Pride was shown in the friendly business,” asserted Rep. James P. welcome the United States gave the | McGranery (D. Pa.).
| King and Queen. Roosevelt Gives Pledge “Once upon a time—not so long |
|ago—it was regarded as undemo-| However, the group-—which Rep. leratic and un-American for a McGranery estimated at about 75—|
United States citizen to applaud or had President Roosevelt's promise |
openly admire a King and Queen of | that he'd | Britain,” said the Daily Mail. “That |
y he persons of |) . |day is gone, for in the p |given at the White House after
| ia jesties it tates! Their Majesties the United States Reps. McGranery and Sweeney let
is cheering the symbols of a great | . 2 | Anglo-Saxon democracy.” BY in the House with a few verbal
The Star published an article by ‘an anonymous writer who lived long | aS 3 Tent Of ine promise, Rep in_the Yalted 5 ies Was aS Crazy meeting in his office to protest RusHe asked fnerica wa h “J | sell's arrest, which the group undera land as it seemed from the news- | stood to be based on two technicalireels, and answered: | ties—that he gave his name as John | “In our more delirious momentt, | Russell in applying for a visa to after coming home from the pic-|anter the Jnited States, and that he tures, we are apt to think of the | overstayed his leave. | United States as one vast Couey |
‘Island, peopled with gnmen's BEER DEALER ASKS
'molls, Dead End kids, corn-fed
“see that the right and
Ih } i [I\
: tb
— RY
proper thing was done’—a promise |;
blondes, tap dancing Negroes, G- | Men, bubble dancers, tough babies, flagpole sitters, Kentucky moonshiners, Irish cops and co-eds with A beer wholesaler recently granted voices like nails on a sheet of glass.| a permit has decided that the comThis is rather like confining one’s | petition is too stiff since removal of study of English life to the side the limit by the 1939 Legislature. shows at the circus. | The Alcoholic Beverages Commis- | “On the contrary, three streams |sion reported that a new wholesaler lof civilized behavior feed American | in Southern Indiana had asked perlife. There is the nettlesome chiv- | mission to return his permit and get lalry of which the South is proud. |a refund of his $1000 fee. | The finely tempered, grave courtesy| Commissioners said the applicant lof old New England, and the in-|explained that he could not get comparable warm heartedness of | started in the business because of | the West.” {too much competition.
Refugees Pra
in south portion this afternoon or tonight, | cooler in north |
(Another Story, Page Four) By HERBERT MANASSE
Refugee Committee Chairman, | ABOARD REFUGEE LINER ST. LOUIS, AT SEA, June 8 (by radio to | United Press).—The 907 Jewish ref|ugees aboard the St. Louis, steam[ing back toward Germany after having been refused admission to |Cuba, prayed for divine interven- | tion today to find them a place of [refuge. | Sunday morning in the deadline. | Unless a decision is made by then lit will be impossible for technical reasons for the St. Louis to turn | back. | Hope now turned toward | United States, where Bernard [Sandler is trying to arrange for our entry. (The last report of the St. Louis’ |position placed the ship yesterday |morning about 400 miles east of Cape Fear, N. C. Mr. Sandler, a
.
the
wa
As Ship Takes Them Back Toward Reich
H.|
y for Divine Intervention
New York lawyer, is trying to raise|and the United States about negoa bond in the hope that the St.|tiations concerning them. They Louis could lie off New York while hoped once to be permitted to land he pleaded with President Roosevelt on the Cuban Isle of Pines. and Congress to permit the refugees Officers and crew of the St. Louis to enter as a goodwill gesture inci- are doing all they can for the comdent to the visit of King George|fort of the passengers. and Queen Elizabeth. The Ham-| The women and children were burg America line, owner of the St.| deeply moved when it was found Louis, said they would turn the ship| they could not speak to their relatoward New York if Mr. Sandler tives in Havana and had to sail posted a $50,000 bond to guarantec| without knowing when they would payment of $5000 a day costs for see them again. holding the chip off New York.) The passengers try to pass the It is now 12 days since we first | time on board by language courses, |saw Havana, and no landing any- music and games to ward off their where has been assured us. The depressing thoughts. | passengers are mostly despairing. As| A committee of passengers is trythe ship continues toward Ham- | ing by means of daily news bulletins burg uneasiness increases. A panic to strengthen the morale of their would be almost inevitable if the fellow passengers but the task is Sunday deadline passed without difficult because of the lack of news hope. | dispatches. There is general regret among the| Religious services are being held
REFUND ON PERMIT
|
| Passengers that they have not re-|with large attendance and prayers | ceived more information from Cuba are offered for safety.
bo
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