Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1940 — Page 1

DIES IN CRO

FORECAST! Partly cloudy ontint ‘with lowest temperature about 30; tomorrow mostly out and continugd cold Hallo

VOLUME 52—NUMBER 8

PETERSTOQUT | + Fi ost, FOR GOVERNOR

Caniivany to Be Family

Next Week at Rally in sam ll

_Ft.- Wayne. by NOBLE REED

R. Earl Peters will resign | his post as Indiana FHA di- | rector and announce his can-| didacy fory the Democratic, ' nomination For Governor at al rally meeting at Ft. Wayne next week, he announced today. Mentioned prominently as a gubernatorial aspirant for more than a year, Mr. Peters’ friends| have been campaigning unofficially for him since last September. He said he will go to Ft. Wayne | Saturday and make arrangements J r Allen County Democratic leaders Weer for his announcement sendpa Hatch Act Provision

“My resignation as FHA director | the same day]

will become effectiv ‘my ‘candidacy is said. His resignation bhi the Federal post is necessitated by provisions .of the Hatch Act which prohibits Federal employees from active par“ticipation in politics. A leader in Hoosier Democratic politics for more than 15 years, Mr. Peters was made state chairman in 1926 and headed the party for six years until he was ousted during the 1932 gubernatorial campaign of Paul V.: McNutt. . Mr. Peters had been reported feuding ‘with the McNutt machine until several months ago when the differences were said to have been “patched up” temporarily. However, recent rumors at Washington indicate the, McNutt forces may still be * withholding sanction.

“Second Party Candidate

The FHA director has ‘claimed close friendship and political al- ~~ liance with Postmaster General James A. Farley and: through his national connections he has built up| a political machine in Indiana., | Mr. Peters’ announcement comes close on the heels of the formal declaration of candidacy made by his Democratic rival, Lieut. Go Henry PF. Schricker, at North Judson Monday night. Although both Mr. Schricker and “Mr. Peters have heen regarded as ‘the leading |candidates’ for the gubernatorial nomination, many party leaders insist that neither will receive the nomination, indicating ‘that a “dark horse” candidate will {appear before the State Convention early in July.

{SMOKE COMMITTEE

Announced, ” he

It’s Spring

But We're Speaking in A Manner Purely

Astronomical.’

stage a banquet| “some time next{. p. ne

‘TO-CONVENE TODAY |e

Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan's | Smoke Abatement Advisory Committee was to convene today at City Hall to consider reports from subcommittees on various phases of the smoke problem. ‘Councilman Albert O. Deluse, chairman, said he would also present the report of the St. Louis Smoke Elimination Committee, thé St. Louis, Mo., counterpart of the local group. This report urges rigid control ‘of all heating plants and compulsory use of special equipment. The Advisory | Committee was named by Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan to make a thorough study of . the smoke nuisance. Findings of the group will then be presented to City. officials for action, eb he

SEVERE COLD FORCES F.D.R. TO BED AGAIN

WASHINGTON, March 20 (U. P.).

| | —President Roosevelt today was or-| | 4 - dered back to bed in an attempt to

throw off a severe cold from which. he has been Suffering for more than a week. "Dr. Ross T. Mel) physician, asked | the President to cancel his engagements for today. Dr. Mclntire (found that Mr. { Roosevelt was. Tinning a tempera- . ture of 99.4 degrees—two tenths of { & degree higher than yesterday. Secretary Stephen T. Early said. Dr. * McIntire ‘was not concerned about ~ the President's condition, The phy- | sician, however, |insisted that Mr. | Roosevelt remain in bed and take), +a complete rest. ———

[ MOST HEAVILY ARMED

- PLANE CLAIMED IN U.S.

LOS ANGELES; March 20 (U. P.). —Development of the world’s. most heavily armed fighting plane was claimed ay by Vultee Aircraft Co Officials said their new “Vanguard” pursuit plane would be able to moun 10 mala heavy-caliber

gt. was built, to carry six Tr machine guns, three on each wing section. ‘Engineers said, however, that the '30-caliber guns could be replaced by two 20-milli-‘meter cannon firing 75 high explosive shells each. The: ship develops & speed of 350 miles an hour.

SSING CRASH

MOORES HILL Ind. March 20(P (U. P).~Delmar Stevens of Moores Hill wag killed yesterday at a crossing near here when his automobile as hit by a Baltimore & Ohio Rails road train. . Charles Hughes of Moo! inj

. his companion, was

to Arlington Ave.

tire, White House i

| TUES

» i

8 §

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

6a. m .;. 35 10a m... 7am ... 34 1am .. 8am ...34 12 (Noon).. 35 1p. m.

THE ASTRONOMICAL spring arrived in Indianapolis at 12:24 p. m. today, but the meteorological agences of the North Temperate

Zone took little or ‘no notice of the fact. | Althou g. h temperatur e stoday were nearly normal, it will be. cold= er tonight and tomorrow with snow late tomorrow afternoon or night, t h e Weather Bureau predicted. Skies will be cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow, the forecast said. Technically, the sun was directly over the ‘equator at 12:24 nd. and a man standing ‘on the equator cast no shadow. If it were not for the fact that the earth’s axis is tilted 23 degrees 27 minutes away from the perpendicular to the plane of the earth’s orbit around the sun, there would be no seasons. All seasons would be alike. ~The sun now, however, is moving north and the days will get longer with the result this part of the world will be bathed for more and more hours in sunlight.

EAST SIDE BUS ROUTE: STUDIED

Rural St. Spur Suggested in Consolidation of Two Lines.

Works | Board- members today studied a compromise suggestion in the petition of the Peoples Motor Coach Co. to consolidate two East Side bus lines. The suggestion, made by Charles QO. Britton, Board "member, is. to run a spur from the proposed new line north on Rural St. to 18th St.

33 - 3

‘i According to the company’s pro- || posal,

the new line would turn east at 13th St. leaving residents between 13thf St. and Brookside

|Ave., from one to six blocks distant

from bus transportation. Board members inspected the proposed, route yesterday in an effort | to arrive at a decision on the proposal by Monday. ' The Board’ s decision is complicated . by a split ‘among East Side residents; about half of whom oppose the consolidation. Mr.: Britton said that if the suggosta spur were approved by the mpany and the affected residents. 5 would eliminate a large part of the objection to fhe consolidated line. After Teaching the. end of the spur at Rural and 18th Sts, the ‘|bus would turn around and return

south to 13th Sts, and then con

tinue on the route proposed by the company to Parker Ave, Nowland Ave., Gale St., 16th St., Bosart Ave, 21st St., as far west as. Euclid, and turn around to go east on 21st St.

In making the return trip, the bus would go west en 21st and turn south on Bosart. ;

SNOW GREETS SPRING INN. CENTRAL AREA

Skies Clear on Coasts and!

Through South.

By UNITED PRESS Snow greeted spring’s arrival to-

day in the nation’s northern tier of states. A white blanket extended from Montana to New York state, ranging from an inch of spow at the

western extremity to 10 inches in varts of Wisconsin and Michigan. South of the north central states and below the Ohio River Valley, skies were clear generally and temperatures: were normal. Both Seaboas received spring in sunshine. was cloudy ovér the northern part of New England and a slow spring was predicted. Texas, Florida, California, the old South and the Pacific Northwest greeted spring with {traditional sunshine and mildness. The famed swallows of San Juan Capistrano were secure -in their, . (nests at the California mission, having returned there yesterday exactly on schedule for the 167th consecutive year. . But at St. Paul, Minn.) Glenn Guertin, p, searched “around corners” for hours for the spring supposed to be there and returned to his parents’ home with the cryptic finding: “It ain’t so.”

DEMANDS SHOWDOWN

ON ‘STATE'S RIGHTS’

OKLAHOMA CITY, March 20 (U. P.).—Governor Leon Phillips, “enjoined but not served” by the Federal (Government, today demanded a showdown over “state's rights” involved in his demands for $850,000 an Authority and the Public Works Adtion.

IMPLICATIONS

-apolis yesterday to postpone :the

| tation a quarter century ago as a

ges from the Grand River Dam| |

ro, | AD |

INNOLAN STAND

IRK SUPERIORS|

WPA Case Meeting Called

To Expedite Matters, Offictal Insists. .

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY . Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON, March 20.—Justice Department officials today expressed resentment at what they termed “the implications” of District Attorney Val Nolan that they are trying to hinder rather than help in his rosecution of Arthur V. Brown, ndianapotis banker, and others in the WPA fraud case. Hugh Fisher, 25-year career man who was assigned to the fraud case by O. John Rogge, chief of the criminal division, explained that he knew nothing of an attempt last January 10 have a ‘“pre-Grand Jury” conference here with Mr. Nolan and the Brown defense) at-| torneys. Mr. Nolan, in asking Federal | Judge Robert C. Baltzell at Indian-

March 28 date for hearing oral arguments in the case, explained he had been summoned to Washington for a conference with Mr. Rogge in the case.

Tells of ‘Orders }

Under questioning by Judge Baltzell, Mr. Nol related that Frank C. Dailey, attorney for Mr. Brown, had requested the District Attorney to go tc Washington last Jan. 11, before the Brown indictment was] returned. but that he had declined to go. Later, Mr. Nolan said, he] received instructions under Mr. Rogge’s signature to be in Washington the latter part of the week of March 25 for a conference on several matters, including the Brown case, Mr. Fisher, speaking in the absence from the city of Mr. Rogge, said: “Whatever the facts are regarding that proposed conference (sought by Mr. Dailey) it has nothing to do

with Mr. Rogge asking Mr. Nolan| to come here next week to discuss |

the Brown case. “That invitation was sent because of legal technicalitiés which we be-| lieve should be straightened out. Our whole effort here is to expedite Se prosecution and not to thwart

Tell of Visit to Murphy |

Mr. Fisher said that in the Rogge correspondence with Mr. Nolan there was no clear discussion of the Brown case by Mr. Nolan and that the entire mattér could'have been ironed out by a “co-eperative telephone call from Indianapolis.” * Department officials explain | the proposed conference last January as resulting from an unidentified visitor calling on then Attorney General Frank Murphy and citing (Continued o on Page Three) - |

SAVES HIS SON WITH BOY SCOUT TRAINING

Resusciiates Bal Baby After Fall *in Bath Tub: =

Sixteen-month-old John Stipp| was aiive today because his father, Raymond, learned artificial resusci-

Boy Scout. About 5 p. m. yesterday, the child’s mother, preparing to give. him a bath, left him /on the bathroom floor while she; went to the basement to turn off the gas under the water heater.) Returning several minutes later, she found him on his back in the tub, with the water covering his| face. Mrs. Stipp’s screams awoke her husband, who was asleep in a nearby rooin. Mr. Stipp placed - the child, who had stopped breathing and was' turning blue, on the floor and began artificial respiration, while the mother called for police and an ambulance. ¢tBy the time police arrived, the baby was breathing naturally. At St. Vincent's Hospital where the child was taken for observation, he was reported in “fair” condition today.

~|be held fro

-

NEN. MARCH 20, 1940 : re

71 FOE MAY

T

Entered . as Second-Class at Postoifice,

Y¥ .

spurt of flame . .. the thunder of of planes .

like a streak of flame.

‘REVERENT CITY FRIDAY IS GOAL

Observance Here Expected To Be Biggest Ever ‘Held Locally.

More churches will hold Good Friday services in Indianapolis ‘this year than ever before, the :in-ter-denominational + Good ~ Friday Committee announced today. James P:-Lynch, committee chairman; said today that Good Friday || observance will be more ‘city-wide than in any previous year and that his group, consisting of 22 Protestant and Catholic laymen and clergymen was receiving heartiest co- operation from ‘business, industrial and civic leaders.

Services Planned

. He said all®*chain grocery stores and many independent stores will close from noon until 3 p. m. in order to permit their employees to attend services. - Many plants, factories and business offices will per||mit their employees some time off during the three hours to attend | services. Indianapolis Railways streetcars, trolleys and busses will pause for the “One Minute of Silence” at 2:59 ip. m, Friday. Mayor Reginald H. ‘Sullivan has asked those, who cannot attend services to pause for, one huis, otto. of the compiittee} is “A Ra City on Good Friday. ” 1 has 11 services planned in: the neardowntown area.

| District Observances Set

Protestant services from noon to 3 p. m\ in the downtown section will be at B. F. Keith’s Theater, English’s Theater, the First United Lutheran Church, Christ Episcopal Church, St Paul’s Episcopal Church, Roberts ‘Park Methodist. Church, Wheeler City Rescue Mission and ithe Salvation Army Citadel. Phe Cat olic Tre Ore will be held at the same time/ at St. John’s Church. e Way of the Cross, sponsored by ‘the Knights of Columbus, will held, in the War Memorial Plaza between 2 and 3 p. m. The committee also announced 33 district- anf individual meetings. The Irvington district meeting will 1:45 to 3 p. m. in the Aje ntie. Christian Church, evs. John B. Ferguson,

Downey with the

as speakers. / The Revs. Basil G: Stultz and RC

E. L, Hutchens and E. Robert Andry | in. Criminal Court.

TOENDER, Denmark, March 20. —Swift British bombing planes diving at terrific speed toward the German island of Sylt . .. the roar 6f more and more engines and then the dull explosion of bombs . flames shooting up in the dusk .

.. a big explosion and a bigger

anti-aircraft guns , . . more waves

. blasts that seem to shake | the ground ... 8 plane falling That, Scedding to the stories of eye-witnesses, is what the biggest

'It Was Like a Says Eye-Witness fo Attack

_ LONDON,” March 20 (U. P)— The Exchange Telegraph today carried from the Danish island of Roemoe, three miles north of Sylt, an eye-witness account of the spectacular British raid on: the Nazi North Sea base throughout last night. - Two British planes, this witness said, dived through clouds which then obscured the moon at 8:15 p. m., and, flying low, dropped eight bombs on Sylt, “1 saw columns of smoke and fire and ‘heard explosions,” the witness said. “It was after the explosions that I heard the wailing of sirens on the island and. saw searchlights, but by that time the two raiders had disappeared toward the south. There was violent fire from anti- aircraft guns. “At 8:20 p. m. another plane came

Dentist Warns Of Peridonti

| BALTIMORE, Md., March (U. P.).—Dentists have Ws more about man’s gums during the last:20 years than they discov= ered in all of the previous recorded ‘time, Dr, Olin Kirkland, Montgpmery, Ala., said today. This is important, Dr. Kirkland told the Baltimore Dental Centenary which ‘brought 5000 dentists here, because no tooth is better than the gum which surrounds if. Peridontia (gum diseases) is a dangerous . thing, Dr. Kirkland said, because many persons suffer from this ailment and it may progress to final stages without great discomfort. #0f|all the preventable diseases, there [is no other that can be pre-. vented so easily, or with any greater assurance of success,” he said. ¢“It.is one of the simplest of all diseases to treat while in the early ‘stages, and yet, it is one of / the most difficult to cure when i has reached the advanced singe.

| - VENIRE IS ORDERED

FOR ANDER ON JURY

A special ve A of 200 prospective jurors was ordered drawn today. for the trial of Dan R. Anderson, In-

dianapolis grocer charged with filing se relief claims.

The date was set last week by Special Judge

ki i on Page Fire

Charles B. Staff, Franklin.

e trial is scheduled for April 1|Fa

Silhouettes of death! Engljsh bombers of the type which raided Sylt last night. Ti bees

imes

wet by snow: in late afternoon or nights |

Indianapolis,

ABINET

Matter Ind.

air raid of the war looked like to those who watched from’ the coast

of Denmark. It went on for hours.

“It was quite a show, but I don’t want to see a thing like that

again,” Peter Bergman, a farmer, told the United Press today. a horrible show. I went through’ the World War but there was noth g that compared to what we saw last night.

in was possible that there were real h we saw.”

all of Fire,

from the west over the sortherh oart of Sylt and was immediately fired on. It succeeded in dropping two bombs .and disappeared to the west once more. “Further southward in the direction of Helgoland Bay heavy fir--was -heard and at Hornum, at south end of the island, and on} indenburg Dam many Huge

th the nearby bombs: ‘were seen to explode. columns of flames spurted up. ‘At 8:40 p. m. I heard the detonation of a single bomb and a few utes Tater a violent explosion which ‘sent a brilliant flash all over Thén camé a series of explosions. ‘The bombs obviously ad struck a munitions depot. - ‘Soon afterward all anti-aircraft gv s on the island started firing frenziedly, using tracer projectiles

| (Continued on Page Three)

FARLEY 1S IN RACE AND ‘THAT'S THAT

He Denies rs Hite Stalking : Horse for F. D. R.

SPRINGFIELD, ‘Mass, March 20 (U. P.).—Postmaster General James A. Farley, replying to charges th he was acting as a “stalking horse” for President Roosevelt in ning as a candidate for the Democratic P esidential nomination, sdid today y name will be presented to the|. c vention at Chic 0 and that's at.”

Without waiting for newsmen’s questions, the Postmaster General made his statement “in order to ar up whether or not I am a ‘candidate’ for President.” | . Burke is sponsor of a full slate of candidates for delegates-at-large and district delegates, pledged to Farley for President, which will appear on the Democratic ballot | at the Massachusetts Presidential primaries April 30. ‘Because Mr, Burke had stipulated that the candidates agree to switch their votes to. President Roosevelt, should his name be presented to the convention, a group of Boston Democrats had pratested that Mr. rley’s name was ‘being used so that the President would not have to declare himself for a third term

before the convention.

Silent and Deaf 2 Years, Hospital ‘Santa’ Suddenly Talks

By JOE COLLIER For more than two years, until

early on the morning of March 14,

Ed L. Jones had not been able to hear or talk and then he said, distinctly and with no apparent sur prise: @ | “My foot hurts. n City Hospital ward doctors, who had been carrying: en communica tion with their patient since Feb. 20 by two-way note writing, were astonish —not that Mr. Jones’ foo hurt because that was why he w in the h spital. They were astonished (1) because he talked |at all and (2) because he wasn't astonished that he talked.

They reasoned that a man who|

suddenly talks after not being able to talk. for years would he a little emotional about the event. But Jones was not. [ His second: statement, 0 far they know, was: ° fos “My throat hurts.” They gave hid some sort of a gargle and then he asked: A where his money was. not tested his hearing,/they aske him what money sng he repli promptly, “The money in the bank.” From there the doctors and thi

ly ol estab shed City Hospital pa; en By

Mr. ;

Having yet}

bureau uncovered since k

| Mr, Jones who now is 85, and says he was born in Indianapolis and has lived most of his life here. Mr. Jones told them that Sver

riodically, for a stre hes of , unable either to hear or ta

"The doctors said that scarlet fever had

might easily have affesjed th

_|identified Mr. Jones, and was sur-|

{from the w

|

picketie that its affects would ave paired both talking and hearing Ives.

| Mr. Jones told them that somees he could talk plainly, and hear stinctly, as he was then doing. At ther times he could hear and say othing, he said, “And sometimes it’s just 50-50,” he said and laughed. ' The bureau checked out the bank| where Mr. Jones said he had’ be-. tween $2000 and $3000. A bank offi cial verified this but was at first unble to believe that Mr, Jones had OLD them of the money. “I've been writing notes to him for ore than two years,” he said. “That man can’t or hear.” The banker went to City Hospital,

prised to hear his client talk without difficul foe

| Mr. Jones said he was connected th the outdoor advertising busiess for years and that he saved all of the money he has in the bank “of hard work. » a

| He said t his luggage

e audiim-}

downtown - valuables, including a ring with a] large diamond in it that his father given him. But 1 never ore: it,” he said,

| Nazi

‘hotel contained other|

“It was

i wondered that it uman beings putting on that show

Pik

BRITISH CLAIM SYLT DISABLED

Report Tremendous Dain: age’ After All-Night Raid On Nazi Sea Base.

LONDON, ‘March 20 (U. P.).— British reconnaissance pilots were

reported today to have informed the Air. Ministry that the Royal Air Force bombing attack on Sylt Island-vesulted in tremendous dam- | morni age to one of Germany's most important North Sea air bases. / Soon after this report was. given, a German airplane flew over the Shetland Islands. Air raid warnings were sounded. British /fight- | ing planes went up to meet the raft. It was driven off and no bombs were dropped. The R. A. PF. pilots were under-

almost operational part of Hornum, on Sylt standing.”

Barrac} s in Ruins

The German hangars still were blazing when the ‘reconnaissance and p OOREELY pilots swooped ornum at 9 a.m. toddy’ and

and, was left

over

I were a smoking ruins, w

as said The slipways were severely dam-, aged,’ the British /pilots reported. The Hornum base was the starting point for many Nazi aerial raids on British shipping. Tord Strabolgi ‘estimated in the House of Lords /that almost 1000 British bombs had been dropped on Sylt during the raids. 3 That was more bombs, he said than were dropped on London throughout the World War. Reports. on /the - surveys by the pilots were received while the House of Commons was discussing the raid and the threat of future “regular” raids and counter-raids which Pirst Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill said must be expected. Air 'Minister| Sir Kingsley Wood told Commons that the reconnaissance pilots had confirmed the suc-' cess of the all-night British bombing attacks, in which nearly 50 airplanes’ led by .a spear-head of Wellington bombers par ticipated.

Planes Precisely Timed

Each/ bombing plane was in the air 12 hours and they roared over their .. objectives with time-table precision, aviation cireles reported. The attacking waves were scheduled so that some of the planes were back at their bases as others reag| hed Sylt. - Although dispatches from Den-|! mark reported that bombs were believed to have been dropped by the ' British hotography ‘planes when’ they circled Sylt at 9 a. m./ today, the main y of the flight was to make a record of the damage done by probably 150 to '200 bombs dropped by the British attackers during the night, The. second cnaliorge to the Ger-

a ; In his statement in Co {Qentinued on Page T!

STOCKS ADVANCE ‘PEACE FEARS’

The "New York stock mg covered today, on elimi ; .Deace fears. n* A

than'2’ points but By rise, : veloped in the afternoon. : The pound sterling dropped more than 2 cents in foreign ; xchange.

than 1 are! 1 I at Indianapolis while: other weights

R eynaud ‘Promises - Stern War Policy. |

by President Ale n to form, a new

Govern wy in response ta

demands for a more aggress sive war policy.

M. Reynaud agreed to” consult 3 with political leaders and to advise | M. Lebrun by. tomorrow mornin ng 5 whether he would accept the invie tation: to s sue cceed M. Daladier. If he epts, he said, it would bé with a view to completing quicke ly a ‘new Cabinet so that thers might be [no interruption in prose. ©

| cution of the war.

; old Leaders May Pass

M. Reynaud’ S| ‘acceptance would be | regarded as a challenge to the party. leaders to stand by their demands - for a determined prosecution of the | war, Political observers said that because - of M. Reynaud’s inde« pendent political status he might be in a strong position. to hold vhs -- political wheel horses in line in the |future, once he had ‘overcome the difficulty of securing a majotity In| 1 parliament. M. Reynaud was called in by M. Lebrun today after M. Daladier ree fused the President's request to ate!

‘tempt to form a new Cabinet.

It was regarded as a foregone cone.

clusion that, if M. Reynaud becomes

Premier, he would make a clean, sweep of old méthods and most of / the old faces. As minister of Finan in the resigned Daladier' Cab he halt’ a record for fast an gressive action. :

to’ organjze a Cabin ; ‘him my Toply; in Principe mtg Tomine: 2 ;

ly Overlooked : Tt w sn tstood that in calling in d, President Lebrun

nM ae former Premier Edouard Herriot, president of the Chamber ‘of Deputies. M. Herriot was he ported to have refused to be dra ‘ except in event of an extreme emergency. :» M. Daladier’s refusal to form ane other Cabinet at present was bee lieved ‘due to diffitulties in securing a solid Chamber of Deputies majors ity but it did not rule out the pose sibility that he will again be asked to. take the premiership after further political consultations; 'M. Reynaud and Georges Mandel, Minister of Colonies, have been res garded as the most successful mems bers: of the Daladier ‘Cabinet, in regard to achievements. IM. “Reynaud was one of the bite terest foes' of the Munich confers: ence agreement resulting in the dee struction of Czechoslovakia and waged such a hard fight against the decisions reached there that he was denounced as a “war monger.” [of

Foe of Naziism

He ranks with Winston Churchill, : the British First Lord of the Ade miralty, as a chief target for Nazi criticism. ‘He has been a persistent foe.of German expansionist policies, | Often he has argued that France must resist the totalitariads #f the nation desires to retain a place as a world power, i M. Daladier esplained to M brun that shortly after 10 ld a. ga m, (3:30 a. m. Indianapolis Time) that a majority of the: Chamber refused to: vote on a resolution: expressing confidence that ‘the government will take immediate indispensible measures in all domains to: bring (Continued on Page Three

and accepted perforce the | treaty which Russia dictated; was expected to resign today upon receipt of news from Moscow that the exe change of treaty ratifications had been effected, It was said that only if the delee | gates, led by J. K. Paasikivi, who | arrived ‘at Moscow® yesterday with the Finnish - Parliament’s official

S| ratification, remained to work out:

details of the treaty provisions would the Cabinet remain in office even: temporarily and that in -any event:

t|a new ministry would face Parlia=

ment at its next Session ext Wedngsday, i

he [

TIMES FEATURES on INSIDE PAGES

I | - b

BOOKS ......s. 12] Johnson vehaa 12 Clapper ...... 11| Movies *...... 13 Comics. ...... 18 Mrs. Ferguson 12 | Crossword... I Music .. om +13 : Surious World 18 Obituaries ous is ; rials ves RiPyle ......... 11 lions “ese Questions Yes MN ncial ,,.. 1 dio ....... 18 ; welt

J

by