Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1939 — Page 3
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AY, NOV. 2, 1939 Rules of Living Govern Social Workers
MSGR, O’CONNOR |
DIESHERE AT 55; RITES ARRANGED
Joan of Arc Church Pastor Developed Parish Into City’s Largest. (Continued from Page Oné) of St. Prancis de Sales here and the following
year was appointed an as-
SiStant at 58. Peter and Pal Cathe.
a ie at the Cathedral he began the work which resulted in the establishment of the -Catholic Community Center and the Catholic Charities Bureau. He was appointed . first diocesan director of charities, the local center, by the late Bishop Joseph Chartrand on Feb. 1, 1920. One of his outstanding achievements in that capacity was the establishment of St. Elizabeth’s Home for unmarried mothers.
Built Presen: Edifice
On Aug. 1, 1924, he was appointed |'
the second pastor of St. Joan of Arc. At that time the church was a small structure in the rear of the present church. After it was partially destroyed by fire, Msgr. O'Connor built the present edifice of Romanesque-Basillica architec ture on Central Ave. 10 years ago. Both membership in the parish and the physical plant had a tremendous growth during his pastorate. The parish now numbers more than 1200 families and six masses are celebrated each Sunday. The St. Joan of Arc church, rec- , School sisters’ home and hall resent an investment of possibly more than $850,000
Elevated in 1933 As a reward for his untiring efforts in charitable and parish
work he was elevated to the monsignori with the rank of domestic
prelate by the late Pope Pius XI}.
on March 24, 1933. An outstanding leader among the clergy of the diocese Msgr. O’Connor was a diocean .consultor, a member of the board which aids the bishop in his administration, and was moderator of the Diocesan Board of Charities. When Msgr. O'Connor celebrated the silver jubilee of his ordination in 1935, the Most Rev. James H. Ryan, rector of the Catholic University of America, came from Washington to preach at the jubilee
mass, Z Understood People
In his charity work, Msgr. O’Connor’'s characteristic of kindliness was brought out to its fullest. He had an unusual understanding of people and their problems as well as outstanding administrative ability. Informed of the monsignor’s death, Eugene C. Foster, president of the Church Federation of Indianapolis, issued a statement of trib-
. ute in behalf of Protestant church-
es of the city. . He said: “In the death of Msgr. Maurice ¥. O'Connor, Indianapolis has lost an outstanding leaded in the fields .' of both church and social work. Dur-
. ing h.§ years of directorship of the i Catholic Community Center, he has
forward steps in the-
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l }
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or
participated actively inthe initiaand maintenance of many work program of this communi “Both the clergy and lay workers recognized and apprecia his fine spirit and leadership in making life better and easier for especially the less fortunate and in making Indianapolis a better place in which to live. In his torate he has : carried on in same way in a more restricted field of work.” Msgr. O'Connor ‘is survived by two brothers, Charles, of Detroit, who is in Rio de Janeiro on a business trip, and John J. of Indianapolis; and three sisters, Mrs. J. W. Warren and the Misses Julia and Florence O'Connor.
STATE BOARD LEADS STRIKE CONFERENCE
LANSING, Mich. Nov. 2 (U. P)).
‘Officials of Chrysler Corp. and the
United Automokile “Workers (C. I.
0.) were to confer today under di-
.
4
rection of the State Labor Mediation which re-entered the monthold dispute as it had promised to do “if no material progress was made.” The new state mediation agency grudgingly stepped out of the pic-
jf io make another
on Social Werk here.
STATE WELFARE GROUP PLANNED
Higher Standards for Social Workers Is Aim; Normal Living Rules Listed.
(Continued from Page One)
may eventually bring about the establishment of certain standards where an individual would be required to have a certain amount of education “just as does a lawyer.” He pointed out, however, that the increase in standards’ would be gradual, and that nothing would be done to affect social workers who do not now have a college education. In an address’ today before a conference study unit, Dr. Samuel W, Hartwell, Buffalo, president of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, listed five rules for successful normal living which adults should obey and teach their children.
Called Aid to Older Children
The rules will especially help older children to meet the problems of adolescence, -he asserted in an address before a study unit of the Indiana State Conference on Social Work at the Lincoln Hotel They are: 1. Enjoy other people. 2. Accept all new experiences as something to be understood and utilized for new Sxperlences in the future! 3. Think logically. 4. Respond to life's experiences with moods both satisfying to the
individval and socially acceptable. 5. Face reality, especially the reality of one’s innerself,
1600 Workers Attend
yesterday and today in studying the problems of older children. Fifteen other study groups were in session today at the Lincoln and Claypool Hotels, with approximately 1600 social workers attending. The first general session of the
four-day convention is to begin at 8 o'clock tonight at the Claypool
las of the University of Chicago. He will talk on “Social Justice and Social Security.” Dr. George C. Stevens, director of the division of medical care of the State Welfare Department, directed one group in the study of mental hygiene and the community today. Meetings of the various divisions will be held tomorrow morning. The election of officers will be held tomorrow afternoon. At 8 p. m,, Raymond Clapper, Indianapolis Times columnist, will speak at a general assembly in the Claypool. A Gulie will follow in the Chateau
Dr. James S. Plant, Newark, N. J., will address the closing session at a luncheon Saturday. His topic will be “Social Justice and Mental Health.” An outing in Brown County is
{planned for the social workers|
Saturday afternoon.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Here Is the Traffic Record . County City ; } O90 000000% 00000000 92 59 1 cose Fensse 9% 57 «=Nov. I= ial 5 esses 10/ Arrests ial 39 O|Accidents .... 22 Cases Convic- Fines
Tried tions Paid $74 -34 11
/ 00000Fa0encececccas
best -
Violations cess tenn 10 driving.. 4 to stop at street. . traffic
% 0
28 $172
~ Totals .........55 39
MEETINGS TODAY Indians State Conference Social Work, convetion, Claypool Hotel, all day. Indiana Traffic Clap, annual dinner, Columbia’ SX 6:30 p. Beal Evtate Board, lunchWashiggion, B of ——
American Business Club, luncheon, Indit.napolis Athletic Club, noo B Speakers Forum, dinner, aty Cottage, p. m. Caravan Club, luncheon, Murat Temple, | co:
oon. , Hotel in, Bes meson luncheon, Architects and Butter Re
Indiana pon, Hote.
MEETINGS TOMORROW
League of ypool Hote india ral bls serial flan oP" ph Crodii Men, Den anne Cha, Tuhohers! Bots) severin,
$ Club, luncheon, Columbis Club, eh
MARRIAGE LICENSES
(These lists are from official tn the County Court House. The os. Sherefore, ad responsib oF errors =
Paul junden. 26, of es Hill 34 Gt ‘sds XN Bei lie. Tacoma; » 0 ’ Norma Davis, 18, of 615 N. Denn Ay Jersey; iis
BIRTHS
Girls wi berta Eckert, in Alberta J Bckert, 2 at St. Vincent's.
t ence, - oles e. Dorothy Deiter, at 4640 Bou
utlus. a Poindexter. at 358 W. 12th 1 at 914 Union. ha Clara nt.
85% Sliver. at 526 N. Miley,
Claude, Luella Royston, at 243 ral. James, fell Coffman, at 2814 Nos Capitol.
Boys Srvncts. Mario Ransls fers e Lyons, at St. ay ineeny s. Martin, at Colem yde Garrin, at Coleman.
a james, er. Luella, C a John, Anna Horner, at 326 Harvard, °
DEATHS Elizabeth Newby, 68. at City, cerebral Br DAE pe 73. at 821 Prospect, cerebral Raney TO5pes = ames B; Bray, 17, Rai Riley, staphlococcus
am A Watz, 57, at 1722 W. Morris, aortic aneurism. herds. Paddock, 84, at City, inguinal
Tals oe) NF Scciunion. 54, at Fulton and Ohio, rons Runk, “51,” at Long, chronic neUIs,
rcus e! B57. at st. Vincent's, tor Rogers, ce
ter. static pneumonia atic Dueymonta_
64, corona occlusion. + trong. 75. at 3851 Washington arterioscler Albert Sé le. i,
pelda? iD osclerosis,
o jienbach, 93. at 2050 N. WED) —1304
—1355 Roosevelt, ‘stove com-
Dr. Hartwell led social workers}
with an address by Dr. Paul Doug=~
Long, at St. Vincent's.
* [colder in east portion tonight: * jomorraw
Tr hy Lescak, 21, at Methodist, hypo- Dod at Methodist, |; a.
at 1117 Newman, | Mia o Ala- N
SDAY ] nion, residence, smok-
Miss Catherine Heard (right) of the Stute Probation Department, explains the operation of the department to Miss Armen Ashjian, Indianapolis’ social. worker attending the annual State Conference
Times Photo.
ernment officials—a mission of fairly impressive size—to ‘Bulgaria. Russia is expect® to propose a new navigation, aerial and commercial treaty with Bulgaria. She might even ask for military or aie
.| bases on Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast.
In return, Russia is likely to promise Bulgaria the return of the Black Sea region of Dobrudja in southern Rumania, which Bulgaria lost after the World War.
Rumania Keeps Brave Face
The prospect is alarming to Rumania, which seems whistling in the dark by protesting volubly that she and Bulgaria are pals and that the question of Dobrudja. has not arisen. ; Paris, naturally suspicious of Russia’s maneuvers, hints that the Soviet. is about to engage in the same tactics in the Balkans as those
until Finland resisted. The only present discernible ac-
Allies ‘is the imminence of trade negotiations between France and Jugoslavia. owever, negotiations are latent b by . Britain and France with Balkan powers.
Holland on Alert
On the Western Front, artillery bombardments, reconnaisance skirmishes and air battles continued. Holland’s border provinces were in a state of siege as a precaution if the Germans abandon the idea of
PLAN HOSPITAL AT FT. WAYNE
Methodist Foundation Board Buys 18-Acre Site for New Institution, 4
Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind, Nov. 2.—The Ft. Wayne Hospital Foundation Board of the Methodist Hospital has purchased an 18-acre farm site for another hospital here. Cost of the rolling, heavily wooded land was $18,000. For several years the Foundation Board has been seeking a suburban site for a new institution. ' The purchase was authorized by the Hospital Board, of which the Rev. F. E. Fribley, district superintendent, is chairman. : No immediate plans for the erection of the hospital has been made.
The Methodist Hospital here recently completed the establishment of air-conditioning units in surgical and patients’ rooms. .
OFFICIAL WEATHER
ene United States Weather Bureau
INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Partly cloudy and continued cold tonight and Jomorrow, with freezing temperatures tonight, ~ Sunrise sean 6:15 | Sunset .......
TEMPERATURE —Nov. 2, 1938-—
Precipitation 24 hrs. endin Total Previpitaion since Excess since Jan,
TT WEATHER
Indiana—Partly cloudy, and continued cold tonight and tomorrow; freezing t temnperature tonight
Illinois—Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; colder in extreme south - portion general: showy tiring olg , femperatre ris emperature tomorrow in northwest and vestocentral por-
gs 1" ee
. | tions
Lower Michigan — Unsettled, slightly
Baily Sloudy, somewhat warmer in Ohie—Generally fair tonight and tomorrow, Sane snow flurries in northeast Postion tonight; continued cold. ntucky—Fair tonight and tomorrow; slightly . colder - ton Sehe in extreme wes portion, continued cold tomorrow.
WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M. , Station Weather Bar. Temp. arillo, : Bismarck, ~~ D 3: a 3 3 Boston 30.24
30.46 30.41 30.32
Chica, 880 i ..is0ee Poses Sipciinal a eveland .
Souyaen rn
1s assess isis sss esses
ie pet residence,
pobouanihiapoaai ge:
Baltic and Balkans Take Spotlight From F: ighting
(Continued from Page One)
which worked so well in the Baltic|
tivity in the Balkans by one of the"
9 Agent, . however, 411 meat is bought by the State under
t|ed plants are able to under-bid the
a frontal attack on the ,Maginot Line and try a flanking movement through Holland and Belgium. Adolf Hitler, awaiting reports from his Ambassadors to Russia and Italy, conferred with his high military and air force leaders today. In England, Lord Nuffield, known as the “British Henry Ford” was named to a key Air Ministry post in- the race—which the British hint is already successful—to surpass German mass production of airplanes. It is always difficult to gauge what is in progress on the Western Front. from the uninformative communiques which are issued, and any important drive is likely to come with lightning suddenness. As to the War Front ‘communiques, the Paris L'Oeuvre published | a cartoon showing two Frenchmen discussing the war. Says the first: “What you want to do is to read potwemn the lines and you will get a hint.’ “Yes,” is the reply, “but What if there is only one line?”
PEDESTRIAN, 70, HURT BY HIT-RUN MOTORIST
William H. May, 70-year-old paper] hanger, was in City Hospital today with a possible skull fracture after he was struck yesterday by a hitrun driver. Mr, May, who makes his home with: his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick: May, 1237 S. Belmont Ave., was Staves while crossing Lambert St. in the 1800 block.. Two sisters were injured ‘last night when the coupe one was driving struck the viaduct on Kentucky Ave, at Missouri St. Miss Mary Andrie, 24, of 3619 W. Washington St., ‘was driving the car northeast on "Kentucky Ave. - Her sister, Pauline, 18, ‘was taken to City Hospital with head injuries. :
FACES FIVE COUNTS IN 60 M. P. H. CHASE
Donald Dunlap, 2444 Park Ave. faced five charges today following his arrest that ended a 60-mile-an-
last might. Dunlap ignored a red-light at Indiana Ave and West St. and ended on N. Delaware St., 2200 block, when they fired several bullets into the Dunlap was charged with ignoring a traffic signal, speeding, drunken-
ness, operating a’ car while drunk and reckless driving.
ADDED INSPECTION OF MEAT IS URGED
(Continued from Page One)
islature “but they came in too late to get action.” “Restaurant owners - offered to pay fees themselves to set up a fund for the State to. hire inspectors for all packing plants.” Packers. having Federal inspectors have made informal complaints recently that the uninspected plants have been able to under. bid Dr on _public contracts: and under-sell them on the markets. . : L. L. Needler, State: Purchasing
contracts with the inspected: plants than from uninspected plants. State rds show ‘that public institution’ bought 54,820 pounds of meat aj the last quarterly letting from ‘a fiorthern: Indiana packing Plant that has no Federal Inspecon Three other plants that have Tederal inspections received ' State orders for 70,000 pounds at the same’ letting. “I haven't noticed that uninspect-
others,” Mr. Needler gaia,
SNOW SHIP ROLLS ON
Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd's 35ton snow cruiser lumbered on today toward Boston, fits: embarkation point for the Antarctic.
for the night near Bucyrus, and this morning
hour chase through six traffic lights] Police said the: pursuit began’ after|
spection legislation in the 1939 Leg-
sald: ‘that more|
FOLLOWING DELAYS|
MANSFIELD, O., Nov. 2 @. P)—|
The 55-foot vehicle was bivouacked :
HOUSE DECIDES | "TODAY IF ARMS | ~ BANWILL STAY
Conferees to Get orders: Rayburn Denies U. §. ~ On Verge of War.
(Continued from Page One) |
imous consent to a proposal to adJourn until tomorrow and permit the Vice President to appoint Senate
“| conferees on’ the bill ' when the House action is reported to the Secretary ‘lof the Senate.
.The vote on the arms embargo should come about 3 p. m. (Indianapolis time). The bill then will be sent to conference with the Senate
; Sonight, and preparations made for | | sine die ournment of Congress | Saturday. :
Assembled Six Weeks Ago
Pi weeks ago. today—Sept. 21— the Congress assembled in extraord=inary session to hear President Roosevelt's appeal for. repeal of the existing arms. embargo and enactment of a “cash-and-carry” plan. Actually, the House will be acting today on the amended version of a joint resolution it passed at the regular session. That resolution retained a modified arms embargo ~|despite strenuous . Administration opposition. : The controversy has not changed since last summer, the major ques-. tion. being whether this nation, should continue an embargo on arms to belligerents or should sell arms to ‘all’ countries on a “come and get it” basis. :
Close Vote Indicated
The House vote on embargo re=peal will be close. Administration leaders claim a minimum 20-vote
they still have a fighting chance of keeping ‘the ban on ‘arms export, An the law. Final speaker for the Administration—and for repeal of the embargo—will be Speaker ‘William B. Bankhead. Only on rare and importank Ovations does Mr. Bankhead leave the Speaker’s rostrum to Plead from the well of the House
On this issue, party lines have been smashed. Among the other
speakers scheduled to speak: for em-
bargo repeal are Rep. James W. Wadsworth ‘of New York, and Rep. Luther A. Johnson (D. Tex.). Rep. Hamilton Fish (R. N. Y), leader of the opposition, still was confident, despite defeats in other test votes- this week, of retaining the embargo,
- Isswe Takes Two Forms
Today's. - House. action ‘will ‘not change the bill as passed by the Senate, ‘but: will instruct conferees representing the House what-changes to seek in conference with the Senate. If the House conferees are not instructed to’ oppose repeal of the embargo quick agreement on the Senate bill is likely.
sented to the House in two forms today: 1. In a motion by. ‘Rep.. James A. Shanley. (D. Conn.) to retain the embargo, banning export of “Arms, ammunition and implements of
does, tanks and bombs. 2. In an amendment by Rep: John M. Vorys (R. O.) to ban export of “arms and ammunition.” The difference between. the two. lies : in the fact that under Mr.
States might export commercial air-
planes which would be barred under Mr. ‘Shanley’s.
with BYRD
land. Akron was its goal tonight,
| Mechanical difficulties caused eral halts y but Dr.
margin. Isolationists contend that
for or against pending legislation.
‘| bassador Cheng-ting Wang was
The embargo issue will ‘be pre-’
| Marquess of Lothian, whose Govern-
war,” including poison gas, torpesy
Vory’s proposed embargo the United’
Diplomats’ Wites Buzz
At War's
By LEE G. MILLER Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 2—Ladies of the diplomatic corps are polishing. their lorgnettes in breathless anticigation of ‘two forthcoming parties ere They are wondering who will
|speak to whom, and who will be - | cold-shouldered, at the:
Soviet Embassy reception next y afternoon and at the White House diplomatic reception the night of Dec. 14. x
Society Aspect
The speculation derives from. the :
fact that three Washington em-
bassies represent’ "European nations |
that are formally at. war, to say nothing of the Chinese and Japanese and the still-recognized ‘ mis-. sions of conquered Poland and Ozechoslovakia. / It is safe to guess. that the Russians are not inviting Count Jerzy Potocki, the Polish Ambassador whose country they recently participated in partitioning, to share their caviar Tuesday when the-Bolshevist Bavolulion of 1917 is commemora Presumably they: ‘have asked Minister Hjalmar . of Finland, but . events: of ‘the next few days may determine whether Mr. Procope will find it. appropriate ‘to help them| celebrate. : Since it is to be an afternoon affair, the absence of Secretary: of | State Cordell Hull would not be un= precedented, particularly in such times as these: when the State Department has its ‘hands full. Mr. Hull has not concealed’ his im-. patience with’ Moscow’s cavalier treatment of our inquiries about the City of Plint; and the White House itself is hinting that Russian policy is more devious than sincere.’ ‘But the - expectant curiosity of social Washington is entered principally on the chance. that the
British and French Ambassadors,!
Lord Lothian and Count de SaintQuentin, might: find themselyes rubbing shoulders with members of the German mission,
Chinese First Now
The Chinese-Japanese war caused an unpleasant few minutes at a White House diplomatic reception two years ago. When Mme. Saito, wife of the since deceased Japanese Ambassador, walked into ‘the state dining room along with the rest of Japan’s large mission, members. of
the British and other missions|
which had ‘preceded her into ‘the room turned their backs. But when the Chinese mission entered, Am-
warmly greeted.’ The forthcoming White House re-. ception has some of the diplomats a bit nervous: This time, by the rules of precedence based on the tenure of the chiefs of mission, the’ Chinese will immediately precede their enemies, the Japanese. If German Ambassador Hans 'Dieckhoff were here instead of in Berlin, he and his mission would go in just ahead of’ the French, but in his absence the Germans will be farther down the list. The Ambassador of the strenuously anti-Communist Franco. regime in Spain, Don Juan Francisco de Cardenas, will precede Ambassador Constantine Oumansky of Soviet Russia. = Comrade Oumansky in turn will be followed by -Britain’s
ment was sharply criticized this week by Soviet Premier- Molotov. |
OLD FLOUR MILL SPEEDS uP EMPORIA, Kas., Nov. 2 (U.P) — The water wheels. of the old Soden flour mill on. a bank of the Cottonwood River south of Emporia. are working overtime these days because of the increased demand for flour.
Anibassador Oumansky . cee Indies are watching. him
U.S. RUSSIAN
FEELING RISES]
Diplomatic Relations Take z
Turn for Worse After Cable Publication.
2?
(Continued: from Page One)
the record” to disclose’ that Soviet President Michael Kalinin only last: April favored his peace - formula, which included maintenance of territorial integrity of Esthonia, Lithuania, Poland, Finland, and the entir€ bloc of Baltic nations. 2. The American. freighter City of Flint, cleared from a Russian port, felt its way along-the Scandinavian Coast toward a German. port, seeking to escape the British blockade and hazardous mine fields. The 41 Ameriean seamen., comprising its
a Nazi prize crew. Steinhardt Rebufted
3.'In Moscow, Ambassador Steinhardt- continued his ineffectual efforts: to procure an official statement from Soviet officials on the international legal precepts. under which the City of Flint was permitted to leave Murmansk, White House. publication of an exchange of cablegrams between Mr. Roosevelt and President Kalinin indicated the diplomatic emphasis being placed by this country on precedents established for peace by previous interventions of Mr. Roosevelt to prevent war. The exchange occurred after Mr. Roosevelt appealed directly to Adolf Hitler to guarantee the peace of Europe for 10 or 25 years: by prom-
dependent nations of Europe or Asia: Minor. President Kalinin’s cabled reply said: -“I consider it my pleasant duby to. convey to_you my cordial congratulations and an expression of profound sympathy with the noble appeal which:'you have addressed to ‘|the Governmen's of Germany and Italy. You may rest assured that your initiative finds most ardent re sponse in the hearts of the peoples
crew presumably: were in Shsiody: of |
ising. not to invade any of the in-|
Military “Aid, Says’ Chamberlain. : 2
LONDON, Nov. Pa », .
to ‘Nai Fuehrer, “Adolf ter. . He spoke to the House of
Studiously avoiding
i | that might’ irritate the Soviets, mo} Prime Minister: favorably. compared
vention of aggression in Europe.
himself over “flights of fancy” 1 which Molotov ' charged . the Allie powers with imperialistic aggressi He said instead that “I |the Soviet'’s failure to offer milife aid to Germany had: “caused s disappoinment” Ta Berlin.
= War Aims Plain, He Says :
that there“ was nothing partic
ternational position of. Moscow. fl Eading the Allied war airs,
id: “We stated those aims in plain | terms. .I am confident they are fule
of nations of the world.” The Goyerrnment’s past pro= nouncements have called for the |
ful. aggression as, typified “by Hite
restoration of d Polish and a Czech state: and guarantees of future se curity as a prelude to agreement on" vast - economic and political reade justments. designed to’ creaté a bet
more detailed statement. Halifax Also Speaks
The - Prime: - Minister said week’s war had been comparatiy uneventful. . He said the land fight=
and occasional - artillery : b
flights over England had been successful and that “nothing: i curred ‘to shake our confidence -
rine menace.” ~ Foreign Secretary Viscount Halls fax in his weekly statement in House -of - Lords today, said that
Germany.
repeated violation of European order: and threats to freedom, obliged us| to take up arms,” he said.
cific aims but said that any solution must end the armaments problem and bring “nearer fulfillment” the “hopes and aspirations of .I
FIGHT ‘AIR PIRATES" he WASHINGTON, Nov..2 (U. P Pls The Federal Communications C
ask Congress to finance a: camp to clear ‘American short wave channels of ‘unlicensed and iiss
of the Soviet Socialist Union.”
The mill has been in ‘almost con-
with a soft collar (that keeps a neat tailored lodk}— a collar of astounding durability, ~~ We're speaking of the ‘Broadcloth Shirts
This is the cloth developed for Admiral Byrd. in weight—yet has almost indestructible strength.
It's a very expensive fabric yet you get this collar—on al : Broadcloth hint , «oat i
tinuous operation since 1859.
Strauss Says: -
Howzabout a GOOD WHITE SHIRT
cloth collars!
It is light
ry
Strauss Says:
Parents of Boys! Will you look at THAT —
By “that”
and a Cap
not the cap pictur Wool... well To sizes 2 to 8 years... Three pieces—
Otter a f Tweeds at
hromdcastens..
we mean
the overcoat outfit . . « the coat—the LEGGINS—
(an Eton ig
bi
There are Just 50 : they’ sell fast,
announced desire for peace and pres ; He said he would not disturb §
The Prime Minister's attiiude wis
ly appreciated by the great majority. a ‘end of the constant threat: of force= §
lerism in international affairs; the
ter world balance. There have been § | | persistent demands however for a § |
ing had been confined to local raids that all German pricy | :
our ability to overcome the submae §
Britain's first' war aim is to defeat ;
“The first purpose we must nave oe is the defeat of those who, by their §
He refused to outline more + pees
i 48 CR BY
mission, it was learned ‘today, will :
§
