Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1939 — Page 1
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The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; lowest temperature tonight about 32; slightly warmer tomorrow.
FINAL HOME
z VOLUME 51—NUMBER 229
Entered as Sepond-Class at Postoffice,
MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1939
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ndianapolis,
PRICE THREE CENTS
Matter Ind.
Russia's Lightning War Fails; All-Winter Offensive Looms REDS STALLED,
By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press Cable Editor Soviet Russia has taken on a bigger job in trying to subjugate Finland than Moscow had bargained for, the war news indicated today. There has been no lightning conquest such as that of Poland. The Finns are putting up such stout and effective resistance, both in the south and north that it appears the Russians must double or triple the offensive forces so far if they are to make headway. Russia's delay in launching a really major attack may be due to two things: The Russians hoped the terror of the first attack and | the aerial bombardment of cities would induce the Finns | to come to quick terms. The Russians also banked on the | spread of the Communist movement within Finland | under the “Peoples Government” set up at Terijoki on the | frontier, |
defenses of their country, with its frozen lakes and
Sweden and Norway realize that with Russia dominnating Finland, the Gulf of Bothnia and the Arctic coast, their own position would be seriously threatened. In view of Finland's impressive defense, it could be that Sweden and Norway might decide to jump in and with the combined weight of the three Scandinavias, push the Russian menace definitely back from their part of Europe. It is purely speculation, but strange things have happened in this war. With Sweden and Norway involved, Britain would be | in a position, if she found it expedient, to decide that the war against Germany also includes Russia. | Britain might do a great deal with air bases in Sweden and naval bases in Norway. Germany's supply of steel and other commodities would be definitely cut off. All of which is looking into the future. Reactions in
Neither came to pass. The Finnish resistance is so
strong that the war might conceivably drag on through the winter. The Finns are greatly aided by the natural |
swamps and snow-drifted tundras. It is a country harder to attack than to defend. The spectacular use of parachute troops is a good stunt, but its actual military value is debatable. The Red Army has vet to prove the efficiency of its mechanized units, artillery and planes under extremely difficult conditions. If the war drags on, Josef Stalin, Russia's dictator may be balked in his presumed plan to make a quick and easy cleanup in the Balkans. Since the start of the Finnish adventure, a disturbing question has hovered in the background to make certain neutrals uneasy. The question is: Will the war be confined to Finland or spread elsewhere?
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XTENDS AUTO Sun Lost for TAG DEADLINE 2 I UNTILMARCH 1
{| THERE WON'T BE much sunTownsend Changes Date but shine in Indianapolis today or to-
morrow. The Weather Bureau Jan. 1 Driver's License said skies will be mostly cloudy, Provision Stands.
but predicted slightly warmer
"AL TEMPERATURES
LO am . 32 10a. m.... 3 a m.... 31 11 a.m. am . 32 12 (noon) .. a.m
us 38 pM.
weather for tomorrow. The lowest temperature tonight will be about freezing A moratorium on the purchase of There wasn't enough snow in 1940 auto license plates, extending the deadline from Jan. 1 to March 1, was declared by Governor M. Clif-
those fdurries yesterday to measure. ford Townsend in a special executive order today.
The extension order, however, will POSS d U | not affect the purchase of drivers’ BY WINNIE JUDD licenses or truck weight tax pay-| | ments. These still are due by Jan. 1.|
The Governor expressed regret | that “administration of the law will not permit me to advance the date for drivers’ permits.”
Notes Left With Pastor; C ani Measures 4: The A —d from | Citizens Irate Over failure of the Legislature to pass) Second Escape. |
laws fixing the deadline for March 1.| A bill providing for March 1] —_—— deadline for drivers’ licenses Was, PHOENIX. Ariz. Dec. 4 (U. P).—! passed, but a companion measure: gijond Winnie Ruth Judd, insane providing for the same extension murderess, craftily eluded blood-| providing for auto plates was lost hounds and scores of armed posse- | in the last-minute legislative jam men early today, broke into a min- | and the Governor refused to Sigh jster's home to steal a coat and food one without enactment of both. |and leave behind two notes explainSimilar moratoriums on license ine her second escape in six weeks plates were declared by the GOV-ifrom the State Insane Asylum. ernor in 1938 and 1937 While the hounds bayed on her Hits Partisanship trail through the desert fringe of | “I had hoped that the Legisla- phoenix, the "Tiger Woman,” who ture would relieve motorists of the yjjled her two “best friends” and obligation of purchasing license out their bodies to pieces seven plates at a time when they have years ago, entered the home of the other heavy financial responsibilities Rev. R. H. Warren..a close friend of and I so recommended in My Mes- per father and left a note for him sage. This the Legislature did nol ang another for Governor Robert I. do.” Governor Townsend said. Jones. “Ordinarily I would accept the judgment of the Legislature, but the failure of the General Assembly to pass this measure was obviously due to partisan politics and was not a clear decision of public policy. «I sincerely hope that an adjournment of politics during the consideration of important bills at the next session will enable the Legislature to establish March 1 by law as the date for expiration of old license plates.” The sale of 1940 license plates and
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Notes Kept Secret
She took a coat, four oranges and some crackers, and fled as she heard the Warren household awakening. | The Rev. Mr. Warren would not disclose the contents of her note to him; he delivered the one addressed to Governor Jones to her mother, Mrs. R. J. McKinnell, formerly of Darlington, Ind. | Sheriff Lon Jordan immediately ordered bloodhounds dispatched to : Jar ile fro drivers permits is scheduled to start ie EE BER? Monday. [up the trail about midnight in the {hospital cemetery, then apparently lost it again. |
MACHINERY TESTED AT ALLISON PLANT
Citizens Aroused at Escape
The chase had been made urgent after Mrs. McKinnel revealed she had talked to Winnie Ruth vesterday afternoon a few hours before her escape, and expressed fear her daughter was motivated by an impulse to end her life i When she escaped last October, she left a note with her mother for (Continued on Page Three) |
More than 80 per cent of the machinerv to be used in building awrplanes has been installed in the new 6.000.000 Allison Engineering Co factory in Speedway City. The machinery is now undergoing adjustments, Otto T. Kreusser, Allison president, said. He predicied that all necessary machinery will be in operation shortly after Jan. 1. Production lines will be turning out new 12-cvliinder liquid-cooled war plane motors for the U. S. Army Air Corps by the end of January, Mr. Kreusser said. Contracts totaling more than $18,000.000 have been awarded Allison by the War Department, Mr. Kreusser also said the Allison motor was still on the War Department's restricted list, which prohibits its sale to any foreign power under the new neutrality act.
BEVERAGE LICENSE FEES DISTRIBUTE
City Gets $196,419, Increase of $13,000 Over "38.
The December distribution of State receipts from liquor and beer permits totaled $1.589.155. the Alcoholic Beverages Commission reported today. Apportionments are made to cities, towns and counties, scools and the State general fund. Indianapolis’ share was $196419, an increase of $13.000 over 1938. The total distributions to all cities, towns and counties in the state was £995 .463 Schools rereceived $500611; the State general fund, $93.081. The total December distribution a vear ago was $1.514179. Or $£75.000 less than this year. } This distribution includes only receipts from retail permit fees paid to the state and not money paid to] the State in beer and liquor taxes.
STOCKS FLUCTUATE IN QUIET TRADING
By UNITED PRESS New York stocks fluctuated narrowly today. Trading was quiet. Steel operations declined from last week but the lower schedule, made necessary for furnace repairs, was expected. London stock traders speculated in buying Indian shares. Wheat prices at Chicago reacted on profit- | taking in early trading. Hog prices at Indianapolis gained 10 cents in; weights from 140 to 300 pounds, re-! covering from Saturday's drop.
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SOVIET RAIDS SCORED
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (U. P) Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt today condemned Soviet Russia's bombing of civilians In Finland as “a terrible thing” and said she wished people could become “more civiiized.” She refused to sav whether she felt the Dies Committee to investigate un-American activities should be continued She repeated her praise of the attitude of the subcommittee which held the hearings she attended last week, and her criticism of the attitude of J. B. Matthews, Committee investigator.
SHOPPING DAYS LEFT
eWOULo \OVE To, ) » noe BALL GLOVE
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ANAS SPS NALANANPS SSN
CAAAANAAAANAAD >
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/ BUY CHRISTMAS SEALS
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'St.,, WPA state supervisor of project |
| former, the District Attorney said, |
| Jones Co. banded together. They
| quarters and took 35 children.
| | | (Continued on Page Three) |
KORTEPETER'S | How Parachute Troops Ride in Plane
TRIAL ONFRAUD CHARGE OPENS
No Homes Located on Two Roads Under WPA Fire, Nolan Claims.
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(Photo, Page Three) x 3 # : | > 1 | Trial of Carl F. Kortepeter, for-| TT Fo nil 4 | mer WPA county director, and his | oa father-in-law, Gurney G. Derby-| shire, on charges of defrauding the Government, was started today be-| fore a Federal Court jury. | They are alleged to have diverted WPA labor to private use in building two roads on Mr. Derbyshire’s farm, platted as a subdivision. ee District Atto.ney Val Nolan, in| = his opening statement, told the jury | there were no homes on the two| ° roads and the adjoining land was! owned exclusively by Mr. Derby- | shire,
Newhouse Identifies Project
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Times-Acme Photo. | Russian troops parachuting to earth from planes of this type have been targets for the Finns, especially in the Arctic area. An ordinary two-seater biplane designed by Col. P. I. Grokhovasky with eight compartments or berths under the wings is used to carry the soldiers to their destination,
Floyd Mattice, defense attorney.
said Mr. Derbyshire asked WPA of- > oe v ficials to build the roads, after | : 5 dedicating the necessary land to the QUINN 10 FACE | K ing Geon S€ ed to his|
THY was Yet COURT FRID AY In France for
son-in-law. | Troop Visit 4 Others Charged in Relief,
County Commissioner John Newhouse, the first prosecution witness. Inquiry to Be Arraigned At Same Time.
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COURT RENEWS U.S, MILK CASE
Rein-
{
merely identified the project proposal for the roads from which the workers allegedly were diverted. On cross-examination of the next two witneses, Mr. Mattice indicated the defense would seek to prove Mr. | Kortepeter had no knowledge the) project was illegal. | Walpole E. Albrecht, 333 W. 29th!
Supreme Tribunal | LONDON, Dec. 4 (U. P) —King George is in France for a visit to { the British troops, it was an- . nounced officially today. State Chicago Area. His departure was not an- | nounced until he had arrived safely in France. It was his first | WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (U. P).— visit to the Allied troops, but his | The Supreme Court today rein-| brothers, Duke of Windsor, and |gtateqd anti-trust indictments against | tie Duke of Rent, Jive Been ae. 1, ne Chicago silk industry, |
iv i ont lines for ot : : tive. behing we. 119 The decision, an important vie-
" . Dewey Myer: today weeks. | without delay. . JE Vk | . i tory for the Government, reversed The Grand Jury, which had con-| The King landed in France from |, 7 ot. © "0 Northern Illinois
Kassing on Stand | fined its attention exclusively for | a British destroyer. Federal District Court which disEdmund H. Kassing, 686 East Dr. SiX weeks to the relief investigation, ~ missed the sweeping charges Woodruff Place, WPA assistant di- began hearing evidence in routine brought against milk producers, Yector Of Inance, tesuified bat eases which have piled wp. distributors and handlers in the project timekeepers had records of Besides Mr. Quinn, those indicied | 'four-state Chicago area. | proper projects but failed to report 1ast Friday as a result of the probe | Se ~ that the Derbyshire Addition work! Were John Barton Griffin, miik| Waited by Labor Circle WAY furan jroute operator and son-in-law of | Labor circles had awaited the deA stipulation was submitted by the Quinn; Dan R. Anderson, operator | cision because of its possible effect | prosecution and defense stating that Of two groceries and campaign man- of the iongstanding contention of blueprints showing the dedicated ager for Quinn last year: Frank labor that Congress never intended land in the subdivision were miss- Bluestein, operator of two groceries | the anti-trust laws to apply to ing from the Court House. receiving relief orders, and John| unions. The significance of the case Indications were that the trial Neenan, formerly chief relief order | was broadened, however, by neces- | wouid not last more than three days. Writer at the Trustee's office. sity for a ruling on whether the Sherman Act could be invoked in|
Mr. Nolan plans to subpena about] Claims Are Filed —Senator George W. Norris (Ind. : agricultural situations which the|
20 witnesses and defense attornevs! i hope to complete their evidence in| Bluestein’s attorney, Max M. Farb, | Neb.) appealed to President Roose-| p iioe Department considers hina day. (notified Walter Boetcher, acting Velt today to withhold for several gersome to trade. | Trustee, that after tomorrow no re- months his decision on a third| The Court, in a unanimous opin- “~ | 32 2 One Road 91° Feet Long | lief orders will be filled at Blue- yo... <0 that “if the patriotic spirit ion written by Chief Justice Charles | Mr. Kortepeter, at the time of stein’s two stores—the Frank Blue- he still Evans Hughes, said that the queshis arrest, said that as WPA direc- loin Market and Park Food Mar- es {tion whether the labor union is tor he never had assigned WPA Ket. exempt from anti-trust statutes “is workers on any OR were! The two Bluestein stores have filed | not en on this appeal.” not public property. relief claims totaling $74.428.70 in The indictment naming Mr. Kor- | the first 10 months this year, while tepeter and Mr. Derbyshire was re- Anderson's two stores—Anderson's turned in connection with the probe Market and Martindale Market— of alleged WPA irregularities con- filed claims for $81,798.10 in the ducted by agents of the WPA divi- Same period. sion of investigation. | Quinn is charged in two indictJoseph C. Ryszeleski, WPA in- ments with accepting bribes from vestigator from Chicago who headed grocers and in a third with official the probe, is expected to testify for neglect. The others all are charged the Government. . {with filing false claims and obThe roads allegedly constructed taining money under false pretense. on the Derbyshire farm are known as Fable Ave. and Loretta Ave. The | Cluitis Reported Ute Henry Mueller, chief deputy
is 912 feet long and ends in an Sheriff, will assume the trusteeship apple orchard. at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow. Mr. Nolan said that WPA lab-| It was reported that claims for overs, assigned to work on author- relief commodities furnished in the! ized highway projects, were diverted first half of November, due in the to the private work in Derbyshire County Auditor's office today, will addition, be several davs late.
Arraignment of Thomas M. Quinn, former Center Township Trustee, and four other persons indicted in! the relief probe was set for Friday | {morning by Criminal Court Judge
control, said on cross-examination that Mr. Kortepeter had placed his signature on a number of blank project proposals so the proposals could be filled out when needed.
ORRIS ASKS DELAY IN 30 TERM DECISION
Wait Developments, Plea of Western Independent.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (U. P).
of the country demands it” can be a candidate. In asking the President not to reveal his plans for 1940 now, Sen-| ator Norris said that most of the demands for such an announcement | came from enemies of the Chief Executive and his progressive policies. “He owes it to his countrymen
Indictments Reviewed
The indictments charged that the Pure Milk Association, an organiza- | tion of dairy farmers, conspired with! imilk delivery compaiies to set the pri i rmers. The not to decide at this time whether DE I we a price he will be a candidates,” Mr. NoITis'| go. +16 consumer, it was alleged. An statement said. “No man can tell American Federation of Labor what may happen in the next SeV- teamsters’ union co-operated by eral months, but until the cloutN eating labor trouble for firms cut‘of doubt and obscurity are cleared |, prices, it was charged. (away, he should remain in a posi-| yp, other decisions the Court held tion where, if the patriotic spirit {hat the NLRB properly exercised of the country demands it, he can ts power in ordering the Newport still be the leader of the liberal! News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co..| progressive thought of the nation. to disestablish an alleged company- | “The welfare of our common dominated union. country is more important than the, That the rates of the Chicago wishes or ambitions of any man Stockyards are subject to interstate jor any group of men.” | commerce jurisdiction. |
285 Children Clothed as Herff-Jones Takes 125 |
THREE YEARS AGO the officers and employees of the Herff-
3—Or you can join with others in your office, club, church, | sports team, fraternity, sorority or lodge. Select a treasurer | and shopping committee. Then | let us know how many chil- |
shopping party. But it will be one that 125 Herfi-Jones people will | remember for a full year.
they will not have to spend the winter iil. Through The Indianapolis Times Clothe-A-Child campaign these | children can be clothed and the | anxiety of parents relieved. The campaign téday moves into its third day.
came to Clothe-A-Child head- 2 2h THESE 125 children, added to the 160 already clothed by the Times-Legion Golden Gloves boxing fund brings the list to 285.
dren your group desires to clothe. The Social Service Department | of the Public Schools checks the | lists to determine the neediest children and to eliminate dupli- | cation of clothing gifts. The cost of outfitting a boy or girl depends upon individual needs. The average is from $8 to $12. Your gift will mean warmth for chilled bodies, an increase In | morale and a step toward a happier life for the underprivileged children of Indianapolis. Telephone RI ley 5551 NOW | and Ask for “CLOTHE-A-CHILD” A
They bought them badly needed clothes. The looks of gratitude and cheerfulness in the eyes of those | 35 children left an impression. The next vear found the organization of the Herff-Jones Guild. They asked for 100 children. Last vear, the Herfi-Jones Guild was back again. They wanted to clothe 125 children. We had another visit from the Guild today. They want 125 children again. Theyre going to pull three big = Celebrating the fact that for anbusses up to The Times and then | other vear they are comparatively take the children out shopping. | safe from excessive colds. that For every child there will be a | they are clothed properly for Guild member. It will be a big | school and Sunday school; that
igus » A
| » » » | THE TIMES HAS SET up headquarters at 206 W. Maryland St., with a staff on duty from 9 a.m to 6 pp m. Here are the ways vou can participate: 1—If vou wish to shop with a child personally, call Riley 5551 and make an appointment to | meet a child at Clothe-A-Child | headquarters. | Or if vou want The Times to act for you. mail a check to | “Clothe-A-Child, The Indianapolis Times.” Experienced shoppers will do the rest.
| Tune in on WFBM tonight | at 10:30 o'clock for a special |
Clothe-A-Child program by Lam and Abner,
Perhaps you, too, want to help | the needy chiidren of Indianapolis celebrate this Christmas.
'and French warships,
‘many. |
lexact hour for the start of the foreigners, | blockade.
ments for the new blockade and, it was understood, had received word
| goods 1
FINNS DECLARE; FEAR GAS RAIDS
ALLIED 2-WAY "Crier expects NAZIBLOCKADE “Armed
HELSINKI, Dec, 4.(U. P.).—An
| announcement today said that J Finland was ready to defend the | strategic Aaland Islands in the
Baltic Sea. The announcement was believed here to mean that the Finns had been secretly fortifying the islands.
HELSINKI, Dec. 4 (U. P.). |—Finnish fighting forces ree __|ported they were holding LONDON, Dee. 4 (U. rn back the Red Army in the slowly along new patrol routes in southwest and on the Arctie
the North Sea, the Atlantic and | Coast today but Government
Britain Claims Direct Hit on German Cruiser in Helgoland Raid.
‘the Mediterranean, awaited an Ad- circles expected a major So-
miralty flash today to impose a new viet aerial attack as soon as and drastic blockade against Ger- weather permits.
Allied morale was high after offi- | Felons that the Soles Uaion cial announcements indicating that Planned to send an aerial armada Britain had gained its biggest naval against Helsinki and other cities victory of the war in a bombing at- circulated as the German steamtack on German warships near their ship ponau sailed from the capital
Helgoland naval base. {a Sor : There was uncertainty as to the) VIR Sopa dengan oer
The Economic Warfare [essed fear that the Russian fliers
Ministry, in charge of the new form Bianned to use polson x : of “contraband control,” said how-| heavy snowstorm aided Fine
. . land's defenses and apparently pre q lockade would : . Be RE d (vented any aerial attacks for the
. 2 i resent, Finnish troops in the A special French-British organi- Present. A . " zation had completed its arrange- | Southeastern Karelian area reported confidently that they had scored
heavily against the Red Army forces. In the Far North, however, it appeared that the Russians were ine creasing pressure against the Fine nish’ soldiers and volunteers after successful Finnish counter-attacks over the week-end.
that all control ships were in po-| sition. |
Reply to Mine Campaign
Twenty French officials and experts were detailed to remain here to insure the closest allied co-opera-tion. The extension of the blockade to goods from Germany, as well en route to Germany,
Finns Claim Petsamo
| Latest official messages were that AS the Finns still held the Arctic port WAS of Petsamo but communications
| |ordered in retaliation for the Ger-| were disrupted and it appeared un-
(man unrestricted mine campaign. certain that they could hold out
{In the World War, it was resorted | against Red Army reinforcements.
to only in 1917, | In. Moscow, official announce~
| Tt way designed to stop Germany's ments insisted that Petsamo had
overseas export trade of 500 million peep captured. Messages from Nor<
dollars a year, thus depriving Ger-| yeojan frontier towns said that 3000
many of that amount of urgently ged Army reinforcements had been needed foreign exchange with which janded by ships and airplanes at
to buy foreign goods. Liinahamari, north of Petsamou, for
| A decrease in the number of re-'a major drive along the Arctic coast
| states Indictments in 4- [ports of Allied and neutral
1€0 a mer- toward Norway. chantmen victims indicated that an | Heavy fighting was under way in answer might have been found to the Petsamo sector, the dispatches the German magnetic mine. | said, and the frontier town of SalBritain announced a series of imijaervi was in flames. Many homes naval successes. were set afire by the Finns as the Claim Attack on Helgoland Russian attacks spread, the dis=~ . . patches said, but in the Petsamo First, it was asserted that Royal|area the Finns continued strong re= Air Rude Dishes had made a bomb- | sistance. ing attack on a German warshi squadron near the big German Helo Lack Contact With Moscow goland naval base, off the German| The Finnish Government, eme North Sea coast. It was reported phasizing that the fight for indethat one German cruiser was struck pendence would be carried on to the direct and that other warships, in- bitter end, repeated its offers to cluding a second cruiser and several negtiate a settlement with the Sodestroyers, probably had been dam- viets, but still was unable to make aged. One German pursuit plane contact with the Moscow Governe was shot down, it was asserted offi- ment, which has ignored the Hel= (Continued on Page Three) |sinki Cabinet: since it recognized a rebel government at Terijoki. Official sources had no definite iin=
50 BELIEVED KILLED nn as yet regarding the ef{forts to Sweden to act for Finland in Moscow in order to open tre way IN NAZI SHIP BLAST for negotiations, but it was not believed that any results would be |achieved | The public generally was cone cerned about the danger of aerial
bombardment when the present storm abates.
Mine Layer 3d to Explode In 2 Weeks in Area.
Cabinet Remains
Most of the civil population had fled but the Cabinet remained and Premier Risto Ryti declared that he would “not leave the caiptal until it became most necessary.” | The departure of the Donau was considered an ill omen. Forty mem« bers of the Russian legation were aboard, in addition to several hundred Germans, Italians and Esthone ians, and its presence here had been the best guarantee that the Russians would not unleash the terrible aerial bombardment they were said to have threatened in (Continued on Page Three)
COPENHAGEN, Dec. 4 (U. P.).— About 50 members of the crew were believed drowned today when a German mine layer was blown up in German mine fields off Landeland Island. | The vessel was the third German mine layer to have been blown up in the same field in two weeks. The mine layer, which exploded at 4 p. m, sank within four minutes during a storm. Heavy weather and darkness made rescue efforts impossible.
PRINCESS LOUISE OF | ed on |
ENGLAND DIES AT 91 WESTERN UNION VOTE IS POSTPONED HERE
LONDON, Dec. 4 (U.P). —Prin-! cess Louise, 91, Duchess of Argyll] and great aunt of King George VI, | died vesterday in her home, Kensington Palace. She was the first British Princess in 350 years to marry a commoner
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4 (U.P). The National Labor Relations Board 'today postponed indefinitely a collective bargaining election among {employees of the Western Union and was regarded as the most un-! ‘ conventional member of the royal Telegraph Co., Indianapolis, Ind.
family, She had been ill for sev-| Local NLRB officials said that the eral months. |election had been postponed until TTT the Supreme Court should decide a |similar case. Local Western Union
SUES FOR ALLEGED ‘officials had not been notified of DICE GAME LOSSES the postponement.
in, jun S85, | TIMES FEATURES ON INSIDE PAGES
against Thomas Dillon to recover $224 which Jacobs charged he lost in dice games allegedly operated by Dillon. = of The suit also names as a defendant the J. S. Holliday Realty Co. rental agent for property at Illinois Comics and Maryland Sts. in which Jacobs ~.occword said the dice games were conducted. Curious World
. Editorials MRS. CHRYSLER SUES Financial
RENO, Nev, Dec. 4 (U. P.).—Mrs.| Flynn Marguerite Prince Sykes Chrysler! Forum today filed suit to divorce Walter P. In Indpls Chrysler Jr., son of the motor mag- Inside Indpls nate. She charged extreme SUE. Johnson ....,
Movies Mrs. Ferguson 12 Obituaries , .. Pegler Pyle Questions ... Radio Mrs. Roosevelt 11 Scherrer mh] Serial Story. . 13 Society 8 9 Sports ... 14, 13 (State Deaths. 7
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