Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1939 — Page 3

“THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1989 oo

3RITAIN C

Wi

Into Service, Hint | Draft at Hongkong

|

CASINO, HOTELS | SILENT, EMPTY

|

Resort City Lies Between Rival Ports: Collision | Possible Anytime. |

By WILLIAM PHILLIP SIMMS | |

King to Review Fleet At Time Situation Is Most Tense.

FOREIGN SITUATION LONDON—British raise defense budget to near four billion dollars. TOKYO—Talks with Britain on Tientsin start Saturday. ROME—Italy makes protest on French-Turkish pact. MANCHUKUO—Fighting ends; victory disputed.

LONDON, July 13 @W. P)— Great Britain today boosted her annual war expenditure close to four Times Foreign Editor billion dollars, called up reserve] ZOPPOT, Danzig Free State, July naval and aerial forces for joint ex- y3 __1f there's one danger spot in. ercises in August and reportedly de- | ka cided to conscript able-bodied Brit- | Curope more crucial than any other, ish subjects av Hongkong for de- this is it. fense service. | Zoppot is a German cross between Prime Minister Chamberlain an- | Monte Carlo, Deauville and Newnounced in the House of Commons port. It has a splendid casino,

that 12,000 retired naval officers and | Juxury hotels, sandy beaches and J APANESE END reservists as well as warships now |poardwalk which juts a quarter of | AR ON BORDER

in reserve would be called up for gi- 'a mile into the Baltic Sea. It is a gantic exercises with the Royal Air seaside Garden of Eden, but there's Force in August and September—the | little joy here. Except for the na- | months which diplomatic circles] tives, it is almost deserted. - Prepare for More Serious Crisis if ‘Superiority’ Is Unrecognized.

curity Administrator, was a

have marked as likely to be a tense | The reason is plain to see. Walk-' period in European affairs. (ing out to the end of the jetty, Four Submarines Included | between rows of flagpoles alternately The Admiralty said that the re- flving the swastika flags of Ger-| serve fleet to be called up would many and the twin cross-and-crown | include one battleship, one aircraft banners of the Free city, one faces carrier, four cruiser squadrons of the sea. To the left, around the probably four ships each; four de-! curving bay shore, can be seen the] strover flotillas of probably seven or harbor of brand new Gdynia, city eight ships each; four submarines; Of 110.000 inhabitants, built from

HAILAR., Manchukuo, July 13 (U. Po. —Japanese Army ieaders

Paul V. McNutt, recently nominated Federal Seluncheon guest regional chiefs and bureau directors of the Social Security Board at Washington yesterday. of the Security Board who will come under the new

AIR

os

Times-Acme Photo. agency headed by Mr. McNutt are (left to right): | George E. Bigge, member. SSB; Arthur Altmeyer, chairman, SSB; Mr. McNutt; Mrs. Ellen Woodward, member, SSB, and Oscar Powell, executive

air TAKES OATH AS SECURITY CHIEF

Appointment Is Approved After Bridges Scores 2 Per Cent Club.

of

Members

Socialite Pair Try ‘Chute Again—-O.K.

NEW YORK, July’ 13 (U. P.).—Aviation’s code—"Go up again after a crash"—sent Joseph Cornelius Rathbone and his wife, Nancy, back to

the New York World's Fair (Continued from Page One)

CEA ea sae

charged.

& WEE + oie Sec

"FORCE, 12,000 IN NA J FARM BUREAU'S: RANKS TO FIGH

GREEN TO URGE FD. R. TO ORDER WPA PAY RAISE

Dismiss 18,000 for Strike; Indiana Workers Face Firing Tomorrow.

wag

(Continued from Page One)

would be issued today. He estimated 24,480 were still on strike. CALIFORNIA—Officials said approximately 400 had been ‘“separated” from jobs. MONTANA—40 have been dis-

i | i | $d

PENNSYLVANIA—103 fired, in-| | cluding 101 in Pittsburgh.

Total Still Disputed

(In Indiana, where the strike, spread to nine counties today, strik-| ers in Clay, Vermillion and Knox counties were threatened with dismissal tomorrow.) Figures on the number of workers still on strike varied. There were no official figures for all areas, but Monday Col. Harrington announced that more than 77,000 had stoppe& work. Union and Workers Alliance leaders placed the total at more than 150,000. Unofficial surveys today indicated that the total, including those dismissed, was about the same, although the number varied daily as a result of one-day protests. In Chicago, where Col. Harrington and other WPA officials are meeting with State and regional administrators to discuss provisions of the 1940 relief bill, President David Lasser of the Workers Alliance threatened a new wave of WPA strikes by Aug. 31 which he

of the Board of Education, de- | clared Britain is “prepared (o fight . . every aggressor, however indirect the method of aggression.”

REPORT JEWISH ARMY INCREASE

‘World - Telegram Quotes ‘Gilead’ Saying Majority In Palestine Sought.

last night for another parachute jump.

but its odor could be expressed by

said would make the present pro- NEW YORK, July 13 (U. P.).—

when Earl De La Warr, president |

VY,

4 ¥

BUDGET ‘FRILLS

‘Schools’ to Train Members To Look for Increases, Foust Says.

The Indiana Farm Bureau will open the strongest drive for gove ernmental economy in its history next month. Six thousand special committee men, six from each township in the State, have been appointed to super vise local budgets. , | Farm Bureau tax experts, neaded ‘by A. S. Thomas. Bureau tax and legislative head, are drafting letters of instruction to the committeemen,

‘Tax Schools’ Planned In six weeks, tax “schools” will be |set up in each county to train them for the task of appearing before | County Tax Adjustment Boards | when local budgets are examined in | September. ‘

The schools are to train the cone | mitteemen in how to read a budget land where to look for increases, age |cording to Edmond C. Foust, meme ber of the Bureau Tax and Legisla~ {tive Committee. Classes will be held (in school houses, Bureau headquar« | ters and other centrally located places. | “The Farm Bureau never has been | for cutting costs so as to hamper (good government,” Mr. Foust said. |“But we are going to see that the [frills are eliminated when ihe bude ‘gets finally are approved.”

| Britain's first concrete warning

against even “Indirect aggression” by Germany in Danzig was given

Seek Greater Savings He said the committees will work

one mine layer and one destroyer Nothing by Poland since 1923. On > the right rises the fine old towers of Danzig and the Marienkirche Cathedral, completed just 10 years

depot ship. Officials said that would mean that more than 50 reserve vessels would be available for commission-

used as fighting units in event of

ing and that any or all could be]

said today that they had about | completed =iweir present campaign | ; als on the Outer, Mongolian frontier, after Columbus discovered America. pt had made preparations for a The two ports are less than eight gjtyation many times more serious. | miles apart. Gdynia and Danzig A inree-day tour of the front symbolize the conflict between the ang of numerous bases between the

They made the ascent and drop uneventfully, in less than two minutes. The Rathbones’ first attempt was not so successful. Their ‘chute fouled on its pulleys halfway up the 250-

even a stronger term.” Such a system “never should be allowed nationally,” he contended. Senator Bridges then dipped into the political past to link Mr. McNutt with the “stop Roosevelt” movement in the Chicago convention in 1932

tests “look like a tea party.” | Col. Harrington announced yes|terday that under the [650,000 persons who have been on [the WPA rolls 18 months or longer, | would be dropped Aug. 31,

Million Face Pay Cut

|

new law, |

| The New York World-Telegram re- | ported today in an interview with a “Mr. Gilead” that the illegal Pales- | tine National Army is now strong {enough to reveal its aims openly and that these include the establishment of an absolute Jewish majority

hostilities. Mr. Chamberlain said | >. i : iit that. with other craft, there would 2XiS powers and the antiaggression|

; i ~. bloc. One represents the right of i ig MRIs ae ® | free nations like Poland to live and

prosper: the other typifies the Nazi [theory of expansion at the expense

Previously, developments included: |of Germany's neighbors. Zoppot is {on the frontier halfway between. A

1. The Government called for 32,000 more men for the Air Force . ion could occur here at any as part of the program designed 0 ¢jme The whole Danzig area is build British fighting forces uP gpout the size of Marion County. | toward the million-men mark this | Hitler Wants the Neck

year. 2. The Government asked for| (gynia and Danzig are at the another $836,445000 for defense, ong of the Polish RUG SEE, the | Through this |

boosting the record-breaking total ¢o_called Corridor. | bottle-neck pours 80 per cent of

for this year to $3.827.465,000. 3. It was reported reliably that pojand's foreign commerce—and | the Government had decided to put that's all that does pour through it. | conscription into effect in Hong- German foreign trade moves via kong. presumably in preparation Hamburg, Bremen and other ports. for possible defense of distant Em- Germany does not need Danzig at yt appeared that the Japanese pire interests. ; ‘all, but loss of Danzig and Gdynia aq used the present “incident.” The British Navy virtually will be would deal Polish economy a mortal which has resulted in nearly two Bl XSrimt sirongth Mh AhSus, nd peo, : months of frontier fighting, to hold September for the mancuvers in| That is precisely what Herr Hit- elaborate maneuvers of military ler is demanding. He wants to hold lang political importance. As the

front and Hailar, provided ample evidence of the big scale prepara(tions the Japanese-Manchukuan | Army has made for any future test with the Russian-Outer Mongolian forces.

Call 32,000 Airmen

MOSCOW, July 13 (U. P.). —Official dispatches fr om Soviet headquarters in Mongolia said today that Jap-anese-Manchurian troops had been driven out of Soviet territory after a series of severe battles climaxed by stiff hand-to-hand fighting east of the River Khalkhingol.

the North Sea. The ships will be reviewed at Wevmouth by King George on Aug. 9.

(return of Danzig to the Reich, but they had demonstrated their milihe also wants a 15-mile “Corridor | tary superiority with both land and across the Corridor” which NOW aerial arms at a point where, they

the stopper to the Polish hottle. action approached its end, the] Not only does he insist upon the japanese expressed confidence that

and cited the ensuing enmity of Jim Farley as continuing to the present time. ; Barkley Heckles

| | foot tower and it took five hours and 10 minutes to get

them down.

| |

HULL TEMPERED ON NEUTRALITY

Seeks to Dissuade F. D. R. | From Framing Message Stirring Anger.

bach (D. Wash. interposed heckling questions, while Senators Harrison (D. Miss.) and Lucas (D. Ill) reminded Senator Bridges that he had voiced no protest when Mr. Mc-

(Continued from Page One)

| Nutt was confirmed by the Senate las High Commissioner. Forewarned of the Bridges as|sault. Senator Minton (D. Ind.) took up the cudgels for the Two Per | Cent Club and listed a long line of Bou under Republican rule in Indiana. | He said Governor McNutt had nothing to do with organizing the [ Two Per Cent Club but that State : employees did it “voluntarily” in | Roosevelt might change his plans .qer to raise a war chest for the and use some other medium-—pos- Democratic Party. sibly a fireside chat—to make his Claims Idea Good views known to the country. | F. D. R. and Hull Confer ; ml : While Administration leaders has spread to the cities in Indiana searched for a way to revive their publican as well as Democratic adneutrality program, shelved by the nnjctrations,” Senator Minton as-

Senators Barkley and Schwellen-

“The idea is such a good one it}

and is being carried out by Re- strations spread to nine coun

of population in Palestine.

“Mr. Gilead,” the newspaper said. is a representative of the army here to explain its point of view. He described the army as about 5000 | strong in actual numbers but with a | potential strength of 160,000, mod|eled on the Irish Republican Army

| Leaders of the United Govern- | and other direct action nationalist

ment Employees, Inc., an organiza- | 8roups with small cells whose memtion of Negro Government em- | bers know only their own immediate |ployees, urged all Negro WPA | superior. | workers today not to join the cur-' “Irgun,” as the army is known. ‘rent WPA strikes throughout the has deposited more than 15.000 They said there was no| jews in Palestine since 1938. Gilead

| country. (cause for complaint on the part of was quoted, and 10.000 others are

Other changes, he said, would in- | clude wage reductions for more | than 1,000,000 workers in Northern | states to provide money to raise the pay of underpaid workers in South|ern states and the discharge of 12,1000 administrative employees so as

to cut expenses 30 per cent.

{“certainly not Negroes in the] South and North, who will now get a better break.”

Indiana WPA Strike,

getting ready to land. He said Irgun blamed Great Bri- | tain for the situation in Palestine [and considered the recent white paper “a piece of treachery in viola- : [tion of international law and of ‘Demonstrations Spread [ pledges given.” Irgun charges that By UNITED PRESS | Britain has “instigated” Arab vio-

| Hoosier WPA strikes and demon- lence, favored it and permitted it ties to continue.

| i

(the great majority of WPA workers, | now sailing the Mediterranean and

in co-operation with Indiana Taxe pavers’ Association representatives and will scrutinize the activities of the Tax Adjustment Boards “from start to finish.” “More than 811,000000 was trimmed from budget estimates by County Tax Adjustment Boards last vear,” he said. “We think we can do even better this time.” :

UNABLE TO LINK TWO TO UPSTATE SHOOTING

| Two Michigan City police officers | today failed to identify a man and | woman arrested in Missouri by State Police as suspects in a northe ‘ern Indiana shooting affray last month. One of the officers, Frank Cow= gill, was shot in the leg by a blond woman and her companion when he attempted to arrest them for having a stolen car near Michigan City. : The Missouri suspects, Paul Ott and Velma Myers. were ordered taken to Starke Gounty where he is wanted on a forgery charge an | she on a bigamy charge.

today as the deadline neared when | workers must either return to their |

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday, the President and Mr. ‘Hull conferred on the language to

|separates Fast Prussia from West. gai, the Russians had chosen to serted.

Italy Protests French-Turkish Pact | That Yous make 4 depend- | contest, Manchukuan boundary . ¢o_ ent on Germany or Russia for an claims. ; ‘ ; i) > OE whaly lo (outlet, and both are stronger than The Japanese asert that they have be used in a reiteration of their | employees were assessed as high as for five days will bring dismissal. ai oe oo S| she is, and both completely hostile expelled the “invaders” twice with- Stand. : | 5 per cent; contributions were taken| mpe strike was still in force in ES watts toe petvance of Alec |'o tev in six weeks and that they believe The President it was said, Was from great corporations in return gay Knox, Vigo, Vermillion and | andreits was i on to Turkey in | No Philanthropy in Action [they have discouraged Russia from | 1iisted by the at for gh ang he gif lophyists | Parke Counties, all in fe coal min. | Si wri iki . {initiating ‘ge- iliti ti i | carrie rivate keys to the ver- | istri 'kers in four | payment for Turkish participation| Britain and France see this clear- lips ie So hostilities. Ali review the European situation] por's A ¥ a i tote | In the new European security front. ly. They understand the stakes for “B SAE ey A Cy no. pointing out that the existing 1aW| «The Two Per Cent Club is purely | tions and in some cases left their | |which Herr Hitler is playing. The carefully avoided retaliatory INCU" gives comfort to aggressor nations, a state organization and no Federal | ; » a short time Japanese-British elimination of Poland is essential to sions into Quter Mongolia. jand accuse Republicans and some employees are asked to contribute,” ops Fr an in Clay, Versuccess of his “Drang Nach Osten” Japanese intimated that they be- conservative Democrats of making Senator Minton said. 1 gd Te oe counties must Talks Start Saturday | pojiey ria Se © the Tr dj ueved this Sumners Mme political issue of foreign policy. | Nearby, Senator VanNuys @.| Men return to work or be dis{Poland would be eliminated if cut of their strength might assist init was r dl. in 5 ; z ; J TOKYO. July 13 (U. P).—Javan, off from the sea. he eventual seitizment of Russian-| Administration sources said Mr ir! A ey ait Ly ove in negotiations with Great Britain| Anyone who thinks a sentimental Japanese differences without the Hull was urging the President to ator Bridges hs gh in RO ag Leathe the five-day limie set upg on the Tientsin blockade, will de- attachment to the Poles would lead “necessity” of a bigger demonstra- stick to a broad, general statement Two Per Cent Club was “political | nERORSL TO Val deputy state mand that Britain change its “pro- | cold, calculating England into war tion. ' : of his neutrality views and to re-| racketeering” and that the funds | , qministrator said he had received Chinese” policies, recognize the to keep Danzig, with its 96 per| If not, it was hinted. Russia might frain from attacking any group or were being used to prevent his re-| word that all projects except the | ‘mew realities” in Nerth China. and cent Teutonic population, from be- eventually feel the full shock of groups within the Senate. | nomination. | sanitati d recreation jobs were co-nperat2 politically and econom- ing annexed to Germany 1s sadly the Japanese strength at a time to “Nickels and Dimes” | sanitation an Te i with in t i istaki rita " . : IP Isolationists Plan Attack vicike's and Dimes down in Clay County. About 1300 ically with Japan in the Tientsin mistaken. Britain and France are be chosen by Japan with an eye io] “I'hev contributed thousands and’ Ro al he sid area, it was reported today. [guaranteeing the status quo of Po- the European situation. | Leaders of the Senate isolationist | got hack millions,” he charged. woke TOTkerS Were al/écten, te WM: | Tie CR negotiations land because it is a matter of life| Casualty figures were still unavail- bloc today formulated plans to com- have to depend on the nickels and | Threatens to “Dock” Pay nll start Saturday. . s well. o i , foi Soni Tihs : : os will star and death for them as well able officially. (bat an anticipated Administration’ gimes of our party employees. Their plans were not aaa.

IN INDIANAPOL

|Sfort to revive neutrality legisla-| In closing he asked Senator put it was indicated that they YY . Bridges where his funds were com- | yj , . fi few y i ; ‘might return to work for a few LS The group also decided to put the ng from to carry on a direct-by- pours to retain a technical claim okey hat J ag ama mail campaign for the Republican for a WPA job and then walk out | . fri ord | 2:37 P.M. st ch . 7s he foreign inati : sident. ; Wd ti Here Is the nn affic Rec ord | | Meridian St. at en BO AAO Lo aden for the second time. DEATHS TO DATE £ 2:51 P. M.—Grass fire, 131 ran- | Ave County 17 33

He charged that under Republi- jobs or be discharged in accordance | can rule in Indiana, State House yijth a national ruling that absence

fire. 1142 85 loss

Harold. Theima Davis. at St. Francis. J. L. Gretchen Ludlow, at St. Francis. Vergil, Helen Briemier. at St. Francis. Harold, Jeanette Schoettle, at St City | cit o~ | Lex. Mabel Wood. at St. Francis. = Boris, Roberta Rothburg, at St. 33 Robert, Naomi Huffman. at St. “| Edward, Alice Haulter, at St. Francis | Gaylord. Louise Knox. at St. Francis. 10! Donald. Mary Borski, at St. Francis. . 69 Fred. Ruth Groves, at St. Francis

Strauss Says:

a OS

oss. [Relations Committee to give ihe = genators Taft (R. O) and Ven- John K. Jennings, state admin-| Sheridan President authority to impose 2M- | qenberg (R. Mich.) obviously en- istrator indicated vesterday that | 3:07 P. M. Residence ‘bargoes against Japan. The pro- joved this sally and Senator Bridges his administration is ready to en-| Francis. | defective flue. "$75 loss. posal will be considered by the com- jemained silent. after questioning force the dismissal rule. kl TILIA TT ig Sradiey | mitice iomBHOW. ‘ ‘ | Senator Minton throughout the de-| He also asserted that the sirik- | 6.21 P. MM. Residence, 121 8. Sherman | othator Clark (D. Mo) in whose pate ing employees, “voluntarily” leavDrive. cause unknown. $18 Yoss (ofilce the six-man isolationist “strat-| ~The fireworks lasted from 5 to 6 ing their employment for less than sie Residence, 626 E. 46th St. egy board” met. said he would de- p. m. with nobody taking it very five days. would be docked pay for Dory dumtal Secretary Hull or some omer Suate|SeTouSly. |the period when they did not work EATS — Drarmint epreemativ Jo Se bh AEE SASH (OF Jsonvile Workers Qui 21, at Methodist, 211 A. M._Vacant building. Thocolate the committee its views on the Pitt- | Clay County WPA leaders called | low- a mass meeting for tonight to de-

; : : : : [Senator Bridges and one or two] ve. and Morris St., defective sprinkler. {man plan. | : (other Republicans voting a . |cide whether to return to work tomorrow.

J Ear ty | voiced dissent. In Greene County 200 workers

ITALY EXEMPTS U. S. GIRL | ‘Mr. McNutt gave another off the! voted to strike tomorrow. They

OFFICIAL WEATHER mn record talk on the Orient at the rk ig hel | Overseas Writers Club luncheon toAngelo A. M lla, 62. By U. S. Weather Burea | ROME, July 13 (U. P.).—Doro- | 1 Tis ; ment” pumonary edema 88 3525 Col INDIANAPOLIS CORREA i 1 thea Watts, American, advised the day. Last night he was among the i a wo ary arinda Young. . at 3525 Col- | ! N! AS ‘CAST — Fair to-| "i ¢ | | idi |] . $ a . American Embassy today that she | guests of the Gridiron Club at alls at Jasonville left their jobs yes[terday when a Clay County delega-

a | lege. carcinoma. % I might t TOW; § y - 5 i 1 71, Wt 136 W. juin, [DERE and temerrew; semeWhai cooler 1-54 her mother had heen granted | buffet dinner. tion of striking workers visited

—| crea, Levene, moron $309 Hallie Goodrich, #2. at 329%: W. New| i & stay from the expulsion order | ; Of Cerchoma i § Sid ooh served them at their villa in the Chandler Says Presideiit en. onary embolism. Toth Tyrol area bordering | The Workers Alliance held a proBE | Austria ; : ; y | > | test meeting at Bloomington and a MARRIAGE LICENSES | oops ; (These tists ‘re trom official yecords | protest resolution was voted but no | in the County Court Homse. The Times. | strike followed. At Anderson more therefore is not responsible for errors in | than 100 workers held a short demonstration but returned to work. It was reported that part of the group participating in the demonstration at Anderson came from South Bend. ‘AN ALL-IRISH HEARING

2283 Hillside Ave.

JULY 12 fH Accidents 5 Arrests Cases ConTried victions Fines 13 $99 | Lilllan Gertrude Outer, | urema. | Irene Schmidt, 48, at Methodist. carci- | noma |

Elsi: Young. 70, at City, myocarditis. { Edward TenEyck, 62, at 1740 Kildare,

| myocarditis. 9 William M. Jones, 55, at Veterans’ HosJe pi | at 1302 Edge- |

Charles, Alice Wilcox, at Methodist. Duel, Ruth Sutton, at Methodist.

Injured Violations papers burnSpeeding Reckless drivme. ........ Running thru street Running red light Drunken driving AN others...

» ‘

4

Sunrise ...... 4:27 | Sunset

TEMPERATURE ~—July 13, 1938—

kh

© BAROMETER 6:30 a. m.. 29.79 [Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 6:30 a. m. | Total precipitation since Jan. 1... .. | Excess since os orca 405 Beville cummin 21, of 1121 |

Totals

ALL Straws—

Sailors and Body Hats Including “Jippi Jappa” at 1/3 reduction!

n | . Clearing Way for Self CE vr . LOUISVILLE, July 13((U. P.).— FRANCO TO VISIT DUCE Governor Chandler said last night ~oh| SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain. July 13 that President Roosevelt's appoint2465 (U. P).—Generalissimo Franco has ment of Paul V. McNutt of Indiana 2.38 accepted the invitation of Count! as director of the Social Security | Galeazzo Ciano to visit Premier Administration was for the purpose Mussolini in Rome in September, it of “removing an obstacle from was said authoritatively today. | Roosevelt's path in 1940.”

| | m |

MEETINGS TODAY

Home Builders’

Indianapolis Association, dinner, Athenaeum, 6:30 p. m. ! Advertising Club of Indianapolis, luncheon, Canary Cottage, noon. sigma Chi, luncheon, Board of Trade nodn. American Business Club, luncheon, dianapolis Athletic Club, noon. Acacia, luncheon. Board of Trade, noon, Sigma Nu, luncheon, Hotel Washington, noon.

n Richardson, 36, of a, Mary Elizabeth Vincent,

Troy Ave. | . | Indiana—Partly cloudy in north portion: Robert Thompson. 22. of Indianapolis: jpca)] t} rhe : portion) ) ” > 212 es hundershowers in sopth poriion 1= he WE Bo. o 1114 W. Ohio St | tonight or tomorrow: cooldr In Morih aod : evar ilhlam Ernest Reinhold Ratzhe. 35. of | west central portions tonight: cooler to- | o re oon, ram AP | 050 York Ste Margaret Elizabeth Clark. morrow. : | onstruction ague ianapelis, 25. o . Meridian St. Minois - ally in : | luncheon, Architects and Builders’ build- Lewis Walker. 22. of Ft. Harrison: FIP eat ge ML Va ing, noon. Margaret Whorstell. 20. of Lawrenc land possibly in extreme south portion | Indianapoli Ay Satering: 30. of L031 h tomorrow morning: cooler in entral and! East Sth St {Ave.; Mary en Sherman. 24 > north portions tenight: cooler tomorrow.

: | Virginia Ave. | ak: Beta Theta Pi, luncheon, Can ry Cot- | wi ; .| Lower Michigan - Partly cloudy and , { Erwin Kleiner. 25. of 2733 Napoleon St.: |smewhat cooler tonight: tomorrow fair

tage, noon Marguerite Herrmann, 23, of 1231 N. King

Ave. = LeRoy E. Cummings, 26, 1944 | Capital Ave. Mary Frances Kixmiller,

In- Melviy Avea.;

MIDWEST WEATHER

Help yourself! But make it soon— (the sooner you come—the more hats to pick from).

DOBBS $3.50 Sailors—at $2.33 DOBBS $5.00 Sailors—at $3.33

Wearington $1.95 Hats at $1.30 Wearington $1.45 Hats at $ .97

$3.95 Jippi Jappa Hats, $2.63 $5.00 Jippi Jappa Hats, $3.33

PANAMAS—one-third off.

e. Englis 8

s Camera Club, meeting, 110 8 p. m. of 50!

| —— | BRIDGEPORT, Conn. July 13 (U. P.).—A man arraigned in police n (court for overimbibing, knew his {audience when he offered to prove he was a musician. On a 10-cent fiute he shrilled “The Irish Washerwoman,” and the music fell on the ears of Judge Hugh Mavery, Prosecutor John Flanagan, John Flynn and Joseph | Coughlin, policemen; Tom Gerrity, court officer, and Joseph McConnell and Nellie Mulvihill, probation officers. He drew applause and a suspended sentence.

ELKHART EXAMS ORDERED

WASHINGTON, July 13 (U. P).— The Civil Service Commission an-

jd cooler.

N.!| Ohio—Generally fair tonight and tomor-

MEETINGS TOMORROW Club, fub. luncheon. Columbia Club,

_ Exchange ingter, noon ptimist C

i | to fo {

noon. Reserve Officers’ Association, Board of Trade, noon. Phi Delta Theta, luncheon, Cottage. noon. Delta Tau Deita, Club. nocn. Kappa Sigma, tage, noon

Canary

luncheon, Canary

FIRES

Wednesday 12:44 P. M.- Residence. Boys | Run Blvd. gasoline Thomas. Pearl Rowiand, at 1530 EF. 13th. | loss. Paul. Anna Johnson, at St. Francis. 1:01 P. M.—Grass fire Edgar, Eva Carney, at St. Francis. vania St,

| | . | Pittsburgh i | Portland, Ore. . 1549 Pleasant San Antonio, Tex. .. stove explosion, $2300 San Francisco .....

St. Louis , 6130 N. Pennsyl- | Ta ¥

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L. STRAUSS & CO. i. THE MAN'S STORE

Senate 1 D $30 Monthly Pension Pl Shoal A i 22, row: slightly cooler tomorrow ch . Hotel Wash-| 1 Broadway. Kentucky -Generally fair tonight and] : -Ye— luncheon ote as | pS itliam aly Fisher, 28.5 { 1630 | tomorrow: slightly Cooler LOM, sal . v ; g Jawrence ve.. June Price, 22. of 1011} . | WASHINGTON, July 13 (U. P). will be sent to the House for conluncheon. | William Jacob Weil. 25, of 1802 Somer- WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES 6:30 A. m_—The Senate today rejected by a currence in several minor changes tg, Ave. Anna A. Canter, 22, of 233 8.1 Station. os Weather. -. Temp. voice vote an amendment to the and one important addition. The |g Clarence Bean, 24 of 833 N. Bosart Ave. | Blomarck, ND. Oey Pe 4 Social Security Act which would | proposal of Senator Connally (D. v .. | Viola Conroy. 28. of 853 N. Bosart Ave. | Bosto a y X ra i rati \ ncn, Commo BEN 35 Balhae, SEL I Cot-| 19 _R. R. 13, 1] 3. [Cincinnati a A : v3 ¥ 5 . ry areone Lewis 2, ol ai Banaie ave; [Sieveiand Ek providing a minimum Federal con- | for every $1 contributed by the — eo Hanson Givens, 23. Middleton: Alyce Dodge City. Kas... .. tribution of $30 per person to state States up to $15. ‘Senator Connally’s BIRTHS NE re i Sos Boulevard Dace aid al Helena, Ment, old-age pension systems amendment, under which the Gov- : i er, 39. ; kland | Jacksonville, SIR Ada X : ; Girls Ave. Edith Friers, 24, of 5124 E. Walnut | Kansas City, M The amendment was sponsored by ernment would contribute $10 of the Maurice, Marie Dowan, at St. Francis. | St. | Little Rock, Ark i i D d i George. Mary Tolbert, at St. Frapcis. | . Robert Watkins. 23. of 1623 Ludlow Ave: Los Angeles... .. Senator Bilbo (D. Miss), who warned | first $15 paid ihe aged, was adopted Fred Antonia Henke. at St. Francis | Tr Viney 13 of 13 E ILA 8 ¥.:| ami, Fla the Senate that if more adequate by the Senate, 43 to 35. It provides iam, Rita Meister, t. Prancis. | s : ylor, 29. ster. N. X..| S.-St. i : i ine! Erwin, Katherine Endsiey. at St. Francis. Helen A. Taggart, 22. of 9400 Spring Mill | Mobile, Ala. pOnNSION hes nt provided the Admin-| that ihe Federal Govemmant would Robert, Anna Souders, at St. Francis. oad. ew Orleans istration will pe repudiated in match on a 50-50 basis, as now, state Y t S$ rancis. | i i Homer fone Morrison, 2 nat 1940. A proposal by Senator Lee contributions to payments above $15 . 4 ; Denby. Catherine Gerlach. at Methodist (D. Okla) for $40 pensions was a month. nounced today that it will hold a Boaagiy- JRriheny Winston, 8 beaten vesterday, 55 to 16. It was estimated that Senator| competitive examination for postSenate Majority Leader Barkley Connally’s amendment would raise masterships at Elkhart, Ind. Appli(D. Ky.) said he expected final ac-| the five-year cost of the program by | cations must reach Washington by tion today. The amendments then approximately 80 million dollars. | Aug. LL ¥

L mpa, Fia. .. Washington, D. C. .