Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1940 — Page 3

TUESDAY, APRIL 80, 1940

~ HOUSE CONTINUES WAGE-HOUR TALK

resins:

Leaders Drop Plan for Early Showdown on Extra Farm for June |

Relief Funds; Werk

Adjournment.

WASHINGTON, April 80 (U. P.).==House leaders dropped their plan for a showdown today on extra farm relief funds and decided to continue consideration of wagehour legislation. The postponement wag decided on after a conference among Acting Speaker Sam Rayburn, and Reps. Clifton A. Woodrum (D. Va.) and Clarence Cannon (D. Mo.) of the House Appropriations Committee. They said that the post

ponement of a vote on fm BATTLE RAGING parity payments and other) y | Senate increases in the 1041 farm | SWEDEN HEARS

appropriation was advisable be-| Fighting in Gudbrands Val-

nee

cause the House Appropriations Deficiency Subcommittee wanted to end its hearings on the relief bill and WPA investigation today. Ae-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 8

GERMAN PEOPLE | House Here, 100,

heavy e

. BLAMED IN WAR Needs No Repairs i sus enumerator on the West Side, reported today that she had found a 100-year-old house whieh . With ; ey ethan census returns as “not in need of In or mitted. Mrs, Weber said the nok was ontinued from Page One at 8568 8. Belmont St. She said © Hed two rooms of the house had been forces in Norway's Gudbrands Val<| rooms added since. She said the | defending the vital railroad june<' excellent condition. tion of Dombaas. ——— a : | German troops suffered heavy! Wi L AVOID | munique said. 'a military spokesman had said that | TERM FIGHT | the Germans had taken the town | of Stoeren, south of Trondheim. | defend the important railroad from | | “Afr attacks on Andalsnes and i : Moloe (the British landing bases Delegation to Chicago. {on the coast south of Trondheim) | munique said. |==Garner and Roosevelt politics! | British airplanes bombed the spokesmen in Texas have agreed Fornebu airport outside Oslo 1astiyat the state shall send a Garner. | raid, which wag “successtul’” aes«|

Mrs, Dorothy I. Weber, a cenChamberlain Includes Them could be listed accurately on the ' any major repairs.” munique today said that Allied] built In 1840 and the other four |ley again had retreated to positions huge oaken timbers were still in | pasualties in the fighting, th ; | The communique was issued after |The Allied troops are fighting to! bans Ie Doer, State Arranges for Garner | continued during the day, the coms, WASHINGTON, April 30 (U.®), | hight, the Air Ministry sald. for-President delegation to the cording to the Ministry's commus Demoeratic National Convention, it

BERLIN REPORTS

|

DOMBAAS TAKEN

Admits Fierce Resistance by Allies in Battle Over Key Rail City.

(Continued from Page One)

toughly and retreated only step by step. In many villages they clever ly built machine gun nests in stone walls and the foundations of wooden houses to hold up our advance.” German troops defeated the Allies at “all points” in the Dombaas area yesterday, the High Command as|serted, and forced them to retreat, | 16 was further asserted that the 4th | Norwegian Infantry Regiment, numbering 2500 men, had surrendered northwest of Lillehammer, A “hunt” by German submarines in the Skagerrak, the High Compinand sald, had resulted in the ‘sinking of “two or three” Allied

submarines, | In the neighborhood of Namsos and Andalsnes, Allied coastal bases, |German airplanes severely bombed

‘Baby of Year'

Sandra Henville , , , career began 12 months ago.

FIVE UTILITIES SEEK TO MERGE

Papers Filed With SEC;

$111,000,000 Company Would Be Formed.

(Continued from Page One)

ferred stock and $1.55 a share on the new common stock. Both Public Service Co. and Central Indiana Power Co., together with Central's subsidiary, Northern Indiana Power, recently completed refunding their long-term debt as & preliminary to the merger plan. The application to SEC included a plan of converting the present stock of the companies into shares of the proposed new utility. The trustee of Midland United Co, beneficially owns all the present outstanding common capital stock of the three companies, except 161, 451 shares of common stock of Pube lic Service Co. which is owned by Central Indiana Power, In addition to exchanging the shares he holds in the existing firms for the new stock, it has been pro= posed that the trustee subscribe for an additional 80,000 shares of com= mon stock of the new corporation for $2,000,000. |

tion on the agriculture bill would nique, was the third on the German was announced today In a telegram ,))j0q landing forces and concen- HOLLYWOOD, April 30 (U. P.).

have required the committee mem-

ley May Determine Fate

bers to attend the House session. | It was reported that eity repre-| sentatives seeking defeat of the Barden wage-hour bill, granting

broad exemptions for agricultural wounded German troops. (In processing workers, were attempting |

to trade votes with farm state lege Berlin, the High Command sald fslators on the agriculture bill. | Germans had strongly resisted ah-| Some were reported offering to vote other Allied attempt to land at for parity in return for farm state

| Narvik.) | votes against the Barden bill. House leaders said they still ox | Late messages from the frontier

peeted an early June adjournment sald that the German forces still and that the relief bill is the key Were superior in the air ih central to the situation. Indications were Norway, but that more British that the bill will be reported to | planes had arrived and that the the House within 10 days. Allied forces also had received adThe House was deeply involved in ditional artillery, anti-tank and proposed amendments to the wage. anti-aireraft guns. hour law when it adjourned yester | The Allied positions at Dome day. The bill under consideration baas, facing down the Gudbrands was a measure by Chairman Mary| Valley toward Otta, were deT. Norton of the House Labor Com- | scribed as strong but their defenses mittee, which would provide for Were less powerful along the rail special labor standards for Puerto toad line from Stoeren where the Rico, except better-paid white eol- German flanking operations were lar workers from the maximum reported in progress. work week, and give limited wage | Allied reinforcements were re. and hour exemptions to workers ported arriving in the Otta line employed in the processing of farm from their new base in the Nordproducts, (fjord, 60 miles southwest of Andals-

|nes. Apparently the Allies had pene Charges Labor Board Prober

trated far into the Nordfjord and had effected landings at four or Favored Pressure on Court more points on it. WASHINGTON, April 30 U, BP) —| Access to 30 Harbors.

Two members of the House Com. Possession of this fjord gave the mittee investigating the National Allies access to more than 20 deep Labor Relations Board charged to- Water harbors for troop disembarka- | dav that a Labor Board special in. ton. The new Allied base in el vestigator once suggested to the fiords north of Andelsnes was cal-|

Board that the Supreme might be influenced to uphold the Wagner Act “if enough labor strife gardless of the immediate developcould be stirred up.” iments in the area south of TrondCommittee Chairman Howard WwW. heim the Allies would remain in| Smith (D. Va) and Rep. Harry N.| Bastession of a broad coastal base Routzohn (R. O.) said the sugges POS . tion was contained in a letter write! The Allies were reported now to) ten by investigator Heber Blanken- be in strong positions in the Steinhoth to Labor Board Chairman J. Kier area north of Trondheim and Warren Madden in January, 1037. frontier reports said that numerous three months before the court ruled German transport planes were on the act. The letter was identi tushing reinforcements to Trond. fied by Mr. Blankenhorn yesterday. heim. as if expecting that they After the court had upheld ne I eR ere. anor act, Mr. Blankenhorn implied in a/ © ed RB Lan Shor memorandum to himself that a in Norway. told the newspaper believed members of the court, par-| gens Nyheter that Norwegian ticularly Justice Owen J. Roberts, |, ops were becoming increasingly was influenced by financial inter=| active in guerrilla activities ests. Mr. Blankenhorn wrote that a | against the Germans few weeks after the automobile and| “go guerrilla party, he said, capsteel industries signed C. I. O.l4req4 a German raiding party, and contracts in 1937, Mr. Justice Rob-| ihare mopped up German paraerts cast the decisive vote in a 5-4|. ute troops. He said the Nore dec json, upholding UIE HOY Com. | Yeglans asserted that they had shot Mr. Blankenhorn to “/down 20 German planes in the mittee yesterday he still believes pombaas area and Hr one of these in the memorandum Which helhad been brought down by a locowrote “for my own use” He Will motive engineer, defending his| be questioned again today. [train with a rifle.

Caution Promised in ‘British Wait New Reply | Freezing Foreign Credits

By Reds on Trade Pact | WASHINGTON, April 30 (U. P).| LONDON, April 30 (U, P).—A re~Secretary of the Treasury Henry liable British source said today the Morgenthau Jr, said today that the Soviet reply to Britain's offer of a Administration would use its power new trade agreement was “not satis to freeze foreign credits in this factory” because of Russia's refusal] country only when the native na-|to discuss the export of Russian tions of the credit holders become goods to Germany. | victims of aggression, | The spokesman said the Russian | Mr. Morgenthau's remarks were position, that Russia may export prompted by Senate passage of her own oil, wheat and essential legislation clarifying the President's metals where she will, regardless of power to freeze foreign holdings. any trade agreement with Britain, The measure is expected to pass the was still under consideration by| House shortly, | British officials.

Of Central Norway. | (Continued from Page One)

Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt , | feeling ‘quite well

F. D. R's Mother Stricken

With Food Poisoning on Return From Fair. NEW YORK, April 30 (U. P).—

A spokesman at the home of Mrs. |

Sara Delano Roosevelt said today that the President's mother was feeling “quite well” and had recovered completely from an attack of food poisoning. The spokesman said Mrs. Roose velt had spent a quiet night and appeared to have suffered no ill effects from the illness with which she was stricken yesterday while re« turning by automobile to her home from the New York World's Fair, Mrs. Roosevelt rested for two hours in the back room of a Long Island drug store while she was recovering from the nausea which forced her to order her chauffeur to stop and ask for assistance, Later, she returned to her home in New York, where she said: “I don't know what happened to me. I guess I must have been poisoned.” Last night Miss Marion Dickerman, assoclate principal of the Dalton schools, called at the house and reported that Mrs, Roosevelt was “all right” and “resting comfortably.” John ‘Tangredi, pharmacist at the drug store, said Mrs, Roosevelt's

lunch.

RN ————

ONE KILLED, 25 HURT IN MIDWEST STORMS

(Continued trom Page One)

on her as she attempted to find refuge by crawling to a basement stairs, The storm cut a swath 400 feet

wide across the 60 miles of farm land between the Illinois cities, The farm home of Milner Boggs was moved off its foundation and many were damaged. Arthur Connell, a farmer, was working in his fields when the storm struck late yesterday. “I ran to the house and when I got there I was nearly naked,” he said. “The wind had blown off most of my clothes.” One hundred and twenty-five students at the Delavan High School were kept in school when the storm struck and broke several of the school avindows, None of the students was injured. One farmer said he had had 350 chickens, After the storm he could find only seven. He also lost a dozen pigs and three rooms at the rear of his home were blown off. Two barns were wrecked. Rain was general throughout the Middle West, As much as three inches fell in some parts of the “Dust Bowl” states of Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Colorado. Crop prospects were brightened in the wheat and corn belt of Nebraska, Towa, Illinois and Minnesota where the rains fell on newly seeded fields.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

| _40-Plus Club, Indianapolis Chamber of] | Commerce, 7:30 p. m. t iwanis Club, Columbia Club, noon,

BIRTHS Girls 4

Percy, Thelma Lain, at Coleman, James, Mary Wilkerson, at City. John W. Naida Little, at Methodist, | Maurice, Nancy Louise Daniels, at Meth.

“en 18 { od Gladys Claffey, at Methodist,

Here Is the Traffic Record DEATHS TO DATE

County City Total | 3 11 ay) 2 36 ~April 29, 1940—

Injured ..... 11 | Accidents | oda Dead 0 | Arrests 65 Fred \ r RT | Theoucre Helen Nolan: at St Franch: MONDAY TRAFFIC COU \eodare, Helen Volkert, at St Francis Cases Convic- Fines Ctven. Bays

tried tions paid | James, Mary Lynch, at Coleman,

Violations \ 51 $308 | Omer. Fannie Adkins, at City i

Speeding ........ 53 Reckless driving. . Failure to stop at through street. . 9 9 Disobeying traffic signal % R 1 Drunken driving. . Wi 0

All others , 3 10 | | Mastin J. Finn, 50, at Veterans, ear.

$3! el ma. —————— Cornelian Farnsworth Goe, 01, at 128 8. ¥ Ritter, chronic Shdascardiug, > Missi race Stafford, WE ower ssion, MEETINGS TODA pulmona tubstculoais. Rotary Club, Claypool Hotel, noon. Josep archer, 79, at 208 8. Addison, Y's Men's Club, Y. M. C. A, noon. coronary thrombosis. . O. Spurlock, 79, at City, arterioAlpha Tau Omega, Board of Trade, sclerosis. noon. Iva A. Dawson, 50, at 502 E. 83d, coronary occlusion. Ida Adams, 62, at Central Indiana, ear-

cinoma, ciauliet Fisher, 84, at Methodist, carImogene Borton, 15, at City, lobar pneu-

monia, Arabelle Williams, 80, at 1605 Spann, arteriosclerosis. William H. Browne, 41, at Veterans, hypertension. William W. Hendricks, 57, at City, pulmonary embolus. ul . Scanlan, 74, at 1927 N. cardio vascular_renal. Douglas, 1, at Riley, influenza. Lucinda Priest, 90, at 6563 Ferguson, chronic mvocarditis. George W. Koepper, 59, at 2047 Beecher,

1 83 Alice Lusch, at Methodist, ; John, Eva Russell, at Methodist. William, Frances Drake, at Methodist. Eharles, Beatrice Hess, at Methodist. Farl, Elizabeth ger, at St. Francis, | John, Irma

' ve, Lillian Sherman, at 1232 Wright.

DEATHS 113

Gyro Club, Spink-Arms Hotel, noon. Mercator Club, Hotel Lincoln, noon. Universal Club, Columbia Club, noon, University of Michigan Club, Board of

Trade, noon. TR pg] of Columbus, K. of O. Clubuse, noon. Lutheran Service Club, Canary Cottage, noon, Fine Paper Credit Group, Wm. H. Block

., noon, Central Indiana Chess Association, anBilal Banquet, Capitol Avenue Methodist urch.

MEETINGS TOMORROW

. cardio vascular renal. wis waoters obay Roundup, Indiana|” giward Mitchell. 44, at City, abdominal YM. C. A p

8 p.m, A abscess, Camera Club, ¥. M. C. A, Charles Gatewood, 72, at 876 Darnell, cardiac decompensation. Bessie M, Trager, 50, at 19 N, Tremont, angina pectoris. ) Bernice E. Kellams, 38, at City, bronchopneumonia. Mabel Maners, 43, at Methodist, agranulocytic angina. I Ira Thompson, 58, at St. Vincent's, cola

e of lung, ohn Howard Nay, 31, at St. Vincent's, septicaemia. earl Williams, 67, at Central Indiana, arcinoma, Philippine Claffev, 85, at Methodist, lobar nsumonia. Ora Oyler, 56, at Long, malignant lym.

homa. P Belle C. Bakemeier, 58, at 1822 Orange, chronic ri : Davie 8,

8 pm Lions Club, Claypool Hotel, noon. A TIE Men's Discussion Club, ¥, M. C.

Hotel Severin, noon, 12th Distriet American Legion, Board of Trade, noon. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Board of Trade,

noon, Indianapolis Real Estate Board, Property Managers Division, Canary Cottage, noon. Indiana Society, Sons of the American |e Revolution, Spink-Arms Hotel, noon. Delta Theta Tau, Seville Tavern, noon. 1 Club of Indianapolis, 00!

b, n, Indiana Motor Traffie Association, Hotel Antlers, noon,

a b. m. Purdue Alumnl Association,

Willlam A. Ewing, 69, at 405 W. 12th, acute cardiac dilatation, ohn Hubert Hinds, 64, at City, cercinoma. Luke Tansell, 75, at 1427 N. Delaware, hypostatic pneumonia,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

nes U. 8. Weather Bureaun J

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Unsettied with showers and considerably cooler ftonight and tomorrow, __ Sunrise 4:46 | Sunset TEMPERATURE April 30, 1930 an BAROMETER TODAY 6:30 a.m .. 20.87 Precipitation 24 hrs. ending T 84 M.. tal precipitation since Jan. 1 Deficiency since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana—Unsettied tonight and tomorrow with showers; cooler; much cooler

neral. inois--Unsettled tonight and tomorrow, Showers probable; cooler, much cooler in Lower Michizan ~ Unsettled and much cooler tonight and tomorrow, probably with some rain, except rain or snow in north portion. Ohio—Cloudy, with showers in east and south, and precede y showers in northwest portion, slightly cooler in north portion tonight: tomorrow cloudy and cooler

portions. Kentucky—Showers, warmer in extreme east and cooler in extreme west portion tonight; tomorrow cloudy, preceded b showers in east portion, slightly cooler in west portion.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M. Sta Weather Bar. P 29.77

1d y 30.05 33.08 29.75 20.88 20.88 29.81 y

Temp. 30°

8883838558858 353325333

* _ Junior Chamb Ad hn I an er of Commerce, Hotel

tis. rs, 6 p 3, at 2448 Bthel, cerebral

hemorrhage.

8253333

with showers in south and extreme east

airplane base. Air Vietories Claimed Afr sources said that seven | German planes had been encoun= tered by British aireraft over Norway in the last 24 hours and that at least three of them had been damaged in fighting, One flight of Blenheims over the | | British landing base at Andalsnes | chased a German Junkers into the| clouds and later attacked two German Heinkels which fled, The Blenheims then attacked a | Messersehmidt 110 which was “last | seen spiraling downward ‘in disse | tress.” Two other coastal command airs eraft attacked another Heinkel, ! whieh escaped, Another Junkers was reported at« tacked “effectively” and both ene gines set afire, In addition, an Admiralty state ment said that two British sub{marines are overdue and must be] | considered lost. They are the Tar [pon and Sterlet, Two Trawlers Sunk The Admiralty also announced (that the trawlers Bradman and Cape Siretoko had been bombed and sunk, No loss of life was reported. The date and place of the bomb(ings were not announced. | The Tarpon, completed May 10, | 1037, carries a normal complement f 53 men and is of the class between 1090 and 1575 tons, accords ing to Jane's Fighting Ships. She was in the $1,000,000 class and was built for patrol duty, { The Sterlet was in the 670-960

Court culated here to be of considerable illness appeared to have been caused on alass and was designed to crash afd and experts suggested that pe. | DY some peaches she had eaten al give in less than 30 seconds. She

|earries 40 men normally and was | completed Jan, 4, 1036, according [to Jane's Fighting Ships, | In the Bergen area, German [troops advancing against the Norwegians were reported to have reached the town of Godvalen, on an arm of the Sognefjord. Closing in on Narvik | In the Namsos area, north of Trondheim, Allied troops were reported to be holding their positions las of yesterday, north of Steinkjer, |and dispatches which reached here |indicated that at present there was only patrol activity, with the German and Allied lines more or less stabilized. Allied troops at Narvik, in the far north, have been reinforced and are closing in on the Germanheld town, it was said. Ore company peoperty at Namsos was reported afire, and it was suggested that either the Germans had set fire to wharves and buildings or that Allied shelling had started the fires, A military informant, summing up the situation in Norway, said: “Things are going well at Nar(Vik, the situation is stationary and in hand at Namsos and the situation is difficult at Dombaas.” Ailied troops and equipment were reported arriving in Norway mow in an almost continuous stream. Stanley Faces Questions Members of the House of Commons prepared to question Oliver Stanley, War Secretary, on the steps he was taking to get reinforcements to Norway and to equip properly the Allied forces already there, It admittedly was necessary for the Allies to get a large number of airplanes to Norway and provide them with suitable bases. Experts held that Allied troops would be almost hopelessly handicapped unless they were given effective protection against German bombing planes. It was understood that Royal Air Force staff experts now had arrived in Norway to direct airplane strategy and tactics,

NAZI AIR ATTACK ON NAMSOS PREDICTED

By ARTHUR MENKEN

United Press Special Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NAMSOS, Norway, April 30.—Allied anti-

?_|aireraft guns, newly arrived at the

Namsos base, are proving effective

|in keeping German raiding planes

at high altitudes, but persistent German reconnaissance flights were believed to foretell a big scale German aerial attack intended to cripple operations here. German planes bombed Namsos four times yesterday. After the raids the streets were found littered with unexploded demolition and incendiary bombs, and with strange looking balls containing an orange-red powder believed to be a new German device to spread flames started by incendiary bombs. Yesterday's raids apparently were directed at the dock area. In raids Sunday the French lost a lieutenant and six soldiers killed. In all, the French had lost 27 officers and men killed by German bombs. After yesterday's raids, German planes thrice flew over Namsos on reconnaissance flights, and it was believed they were getting a full picture of the situation to direct raiding squadrons in a big attack. A French soldier, coming out of a shelter after yesterday's raids, said to me: “We wish our people would send us some planes to beat off the Germans.” A British Tommy said: “Blimey! They fly over us here as if they were over their own air field. They gave us hell during the recent fighting with their unimpeded low

(received by House Majority Leader (rations, and troops in movement Sam Rayburn, |along roads, it was asserted. The announcement apparently] A barracks, warehouses and tank effected a political armistice in| depots were set afire, the A High Texas, where a bitter third term | Command said. battle was in prospect. The tele-| It was asserted that six “enemy” gram, sent to Mr. Rayburn by My- ships had been sunk and others ron G, Blalock, manager for Vice damaged. The communique did not President John N. Garner in Texas, [say where the sinkings had ocsaid agreement had been reached curred, but it was apparently supon a basis of a delegation instructed posed to be in the neighborhood of for Mr. Garner, but not designed Namsos and Andalsnes. to serve as a stop-Roosevelt fac-| In fighting in southwest Norway, lon, [the High Command said, German Mr. Blalock said he and Under-|iroops were pursuing Norwegian secretary of Interior A, J, Wirts, | troops from Voss, east of Bergen, who ig in Texas in behalf of a third | and had taken 260 prisoners and term, were “in accord on this pro- ave cannon. gram,” which was as follows: —— “1, A strong indorsement of the Roosevelt-Garner Administration. DEWEY CONFINED TO ROOM

delegates to. work and vote as a| , COLORADO SPRINGS, Golo, unit at Chicago for the nomination APril 30 (U. P).—Thomas E. of our great fellow Texan, John Dewey remained in his hotel room Nance Garner, for President. | today following a physician's advice “3. The selection of a Texas dele-| to “take it easy” while recuperatgation composed of a strong and | ing from an acute digestive dis~ representative group of Texas Dem- order. The New York district atocrats, both men and women, to|torney expected to leave here parry out this program and not to| Thursday to resume his campaign serve as a stop Roosevelt move- for the Republican Presidential ment, I nomination,

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BALL MUST ANSWER 38 OF 868 QUERIES

Federal Judge Robert C. Ballzell today ruled that George A, Ball, Muncie, Ind., millionaire, must answer 35 of the 868 questions propounded to him in a $5,000,000 damage suit, in which he is the defendant, Judge Baltzell overruled 164 of the questions asked by attorneys for the plaintiffs, Robert R. Young, Allen P. Kirby and the Seaboard Co., Ltd., who charge that Mr, Ball “illegally and artificially” raised the market value of the Allegheny Corp.

FREDERICK CAMPBELL DIES IN CHICAGO HOME

CHICAGO, April 30 (U, P), — Frederick G. Campbell, clerk in the 7th U. 8. Circuit Court of Appeals since 1931 and deputy clerk for 36 years before that, died apparently of a heart attack at his home last night. He was 69. Tentative funeral arrangements include a private Chicago funeral with burial at Battle Ground, Ind, tomorrow, He came to the Federal Appeals Court, which embraces Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois, in 1895 from a clerkship in the Marion County Circuit Court at Indianapolis, Ind, His wife, Juliette, and one daughter, Mrs. Edna Moran, survive.

STRIKE AT TRAILER PLANT ELKHART, Ind. April 30 (U, B.), ~The Schulte Trailer Manufacture ing Co. today operated with a cure tailed staff as the U, 8S. W, C. I. O, struck for a closed shop, wage ine

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