Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1940 — Page 15

HEAR JOHNSON

800 Personal Finance Company Officials Gather Here 3 For Annual Cpnvention.

Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, Indianpolis Times columnist, will address the annual convention of the Indiana Association of Personal Finance “Companies at the Claypool Hotel here Wednesday night. 3 The General will speak on “Problems of National Interest Today” at

the annual banquet. “Presiding at the banquet will be Richard E.

x 3 .

Meier, Evansville, Association presi-'

dent, and J. Walter McCarty, managing editor of the Indianapolis News, will act as toastmaster. Gen. Johnson was the administrator of the 1917-18 selective draft law during the World War and was head of the National Recovery Administration during the early days of the New Deal. .o More than 300 members of the finance association are expected to gttend the two-day convention which will open Wednesday morning and continue until Thursday night. i The Association is composed of Foe operating under provisions of e Indiana Small Loan Act. Other fficers of the Association are R. F. Martz, vice president; Paul A. Hank, treasurer, and Irvin Wesley, retary, all of Indianapolis.

STATION GETS LICENSE

mes Special = WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—A conction permit for a new broadting station was announced by Federal Communications Commission today for the Kokomo Broadcasting Corp. The station will bberate on 1420 kilocycles with 250 Fults of power and on unlimited e.

Following a chase which lasted for hours, this Italian submarine came to the surface in a hurry as shells and bombs from a British destroyer and a plane found their mark. The surfacing spelled the end for the submarine, which was dogged by the ship and plane throughout the central Mediterranean. Bombs, depth charges and shells followed the course of the harried prey as she dodged and turned and twisted to

escape.

This photo was passed by British censors.

Halt-Shaved Italians Leave War Shoeless

STURGA, Jugoslavia, Nov. 22 (U. P.) —Seven barefooted Italian soldiers, the right sides of their heads shaved clean, limped into this border town and reported that rebel Albanian tribesmen had forced them out of the Italo-Greece war. They told of a new kind of warfare being conducted in the rugged Albanian mountains — a ° warfare more humiliating than bloody. As reconstructed from the stories

of the Italians, this is what happened:

The men were ordered to the Korca front from the Libras fortress. They put on their plumed, Bersaglieri hats, climbed on their motorcycles and started out. While riding in the mountains near Progradec, Albania, they rounded a curve in the road and encountered a barricade. Immediately, they said, they were surrounded and captured by 200 rebel Albanians. The Albanians took their prisoners into the forest where they ordered them to take off their hats.

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The hats were burned. Then a rebel barber clipped and shaved the right sides of all the Italians’ heads, refusing their pleas to do an over-all job. The Albanians then ordered their captors to take off their shoes. The shoes were thrown away. Under threat of death, the Italians were marched to the road and ordered to get out of the country. When the ragged, footsore group arrived in Sturga, officials ordered them interned.

MAPS BROADER FIGHT ON ISMS

Legion Also Urges Increase In FBI and Ban on Immigration.

A broader fight against fifth columnists and “foreign isms” was launched by the American Legion today as the national executive committee prepared to close its annual meeting. Urging an increased Federal Bureau of Investigation personnel to combat undesirable aliens and advocating continuation of the Dies Committee, the Legion finance committee has approved a budget increase of $9196 for the work of Homer L. Chaillaux, director of the National Americanism Commission. The Legion also reiterated its stand against immigration to America for permanent residence until “the employment problem here is solved.” Other major objectives chosen by the executive committee from the 213 resolutions adopted by the Boston convention concern national defense, widows and orphans, civil service, veterans’ preference and employment. At today’s final session, the committee was to hear reports on national defense, child welfare, Legion history, veterans’ employment, contest supervision and convention liasion. Standing committees also were to be named. The report on national delayed when that committee recalled the report for revision.

YOUNG AMERICANS’ COMMITTEE FORMED

NEW YORK, Nov. 22 (U. P.).— Organization of “The Committee of 30 Million,” pledged to “help young Americans work for democracy so that democracy will continue to work for America,” was announced today by 100 charter members. Kathleen Fahy, executive secretary, said the committee planned to unite 30,000,000 young people between 18 and 35 in a nation-wide education and service program “for democracy, for national defense, and for national unity.” Among the charter members are Philip Willkie, son of Wendell L. Willkie; Barry Bingham, editor of the Louisville Courier Journal; Bruce Bliven Jr.; Herbert Bayard Swope Jr.; John Woodruff, Olympic 800meter champion; Leonard. Lyons, columnist; Robert Sarnoff, son of David Sarnoff, head’ of the Radio Corp. of . America; Betsy Barton, daughter of Rep. Bruce Barton (R., N. Y); Thelma McKelvey of the National Defense Commission, and Mayor John Gabriel of Garfield, N.

JONES NEW HEAD OF RICHMOND HOSPITAL

Dr. E. F. Jones, clinical director of the Richmond State Hospital for the mentally ill, today was named acting superintendent of the institution by Thurman Gottschalk, state public welfare director. Dr. Jones succeeds Dr. Richard Schillinger, superintendent since 1933, who died yesterday in Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati. Dr. Jones is from Marion and is a graduate of Indiana University School of Medicine. ' It was under his direction that the shock treatment for dementia praecox was introduced Wy the Richmond hospital.

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DATE CONFUSED, |

|. T. U. AID SAYS

Delegates to Attend A. F. L. Session on Monday, Randolph Says.

Woodruff Randolph, secretarytreasurer of the International Typographical Union, said today that the failure of the I. T. U. representatives to show up at the A. F. of L. convention in New Orleans Wednesday was due to “a confusion on dates.” “Our president, Claude Baker, had informed us we were to go to New Orleans Nov. 25. Apparently

the A. F. of L. officials expected us Wednesday.” He said the typographical representatives would appear at the convention Monday to discuss possibilities of their 80,000 members rejoining the Federation. , Federation officials at New Orleans yesterday reported disappointment at the failure of the I. T. U. representatives to appear. The printers’ union was suspended last year by the A. F. of L. and the executive council of the Federation hopes to iron out difficulties and return the I. T. U. to the Federation

fold.

PANDA’'S A COOL FELLOW

LONDON, Nov. 22 (U. P‘/.—Ming, the only giant panda in Europe, was sent to Whipsnade today because of its disregard for German bombing anes. Caretakers at London’s Regent Park Zoo said Ming refuses to take shelter during air raids,

"A Sea Complex

GIG HARBOR, Wash., Nov. 22 (U. P.).—Chris Fosness, pile driver operator at a Government munitions dock construction job here, said a deer swam out to the barge on which he was working 1000 yards off shore, and: Permitted the crew to pull him aboard. Accepted and ate with apparent relish bread, candy, chewing tobacco and cigarets. Declined to leave the barge when the crew tired of feeding the animal. : Had to be driven off the barge and towed ashore and driven into the woods.

EXPLOSION WRECKS RESTAURANT, STORE

PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 22 (U. P.). —An explosion, believed by police to have been caused by a planted bomb, shattered the interior of a midcity Philadelphia restaurant early today. Police reported that no one was in the building at the time and as far as they know, no one was injured. The blast ripped out a revolving door of a restaurant of the Stouffer chain and shattered a bulk window of an adjoining shoe store. Officials were unable to explain the blast. Stouffer's had no labor trouble, detectives said, and apparently the building was deserted when the explosion occurred. Experts of the radical and bomb squads began an immediate investigation. .

Tr ARE A 3 — REA FUNDS ALLOCATED WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—Two wiring allotments for Indiana Rural Electric Membership Corporations were announced today by the Rural Electrification Administration, The Dubois County REMC, Jasper, received $20,000 and the South-

en Indiana REMC, Tell City, ik

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