Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1941 — Page 3
PAGE 3
ns to Starve Isles Into Peace
He is further said still to covet the Ukraine, for its grain, and ths adjacent territory between the Black and Caspian Seas for its il, With these regions in his hands, Britain could have her scattered over seas ‘empire. Hitler is said to have acquired a recent, but profound, respect for water as a military barrier, His total inability thus far to smash little Britain across a mere 20 miles or so of salt water, and despite his overwhelming numerical superiority in the air, seems to have caused him no little astonishment and chagrin, Informed sources here, however, do not altogether agree with the substance of these reports. At least they do not believe Hitler has vet abandoned hope of invading Britain. On the contrary the best naval and military opinion is that he still intends to make a try if and when he thinks the moment is ripe, The experts believe Hitler is about to throw in everything he has against England to soften her up. They think he will try to sink every ship that approaches the United Kingdom and lay waste every ¢ity and port in the country. Then, if at all, he will try to invade and occupy the country, If he can't do that, they say, he will know he has lost the war. Perhaps, observers here agres, Hitler will offer to make peace with Britain if and when he realizes he can not win by a knockout, Should his forthcoming blow fail to weaken her sufficiently to make invasion feasible, then, it is felt, the logical move for him would be to make peace with England-—if he could. He should still be strong enough to
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Why They Turn You Down Renort Hitler Pla
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Times Foreign Editor
WASHINGTON, March 13.—Reports have reached Washington that Hitler has abandoned his plan to invade England, his new scheme being to starve and batter Britain into agreeing to peace—whereupon he would turn his attention eastward. These runfors, chiefly in financial circles, apparently had their origin in European capitals, According to the reports, Hitler no longer believes it will be possible, short of filling up Dover Strait with his dead, for him to cross the English Channel with a sufficient force to conquer Britain.
) "THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1901 Greeks Rejoice Over
Expected U.S. Aid
Man-in-Street, Busy With War, Believes Decision of How Much Is Purely America's.
By GEORGE WELLER Copyright, 1941, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicags Daily News, Tne. | ATHENS, March 13.—The flash from America that President | Roosevelt had signed a bill for aid to the Allies was read with joy in| , is said to be convinced thousands of Greek homes, cafes and shops today and spread its cheer | Lungs—3 % hat Hive Aenermoan. 316 to Britain will mate- | fuickly throughout the nation, = dh fan | oA rialize too late to spoil his sea and air blockade of To say that it was received with wild jubilation would be to exag- | the British Isles or to prevent the virtual destrucgerate, for the intense war effort leaves little energy over for relief of MMHeart—13 % tion of Britain's ports and cities. | feelings. ‘ 1 After Britain is thus isolated, starved and de- o> The Greeks now seem to take it |and should continue to decide, in| vastaed, ‘Hitler—still according to rumor—would Mr. Simms for granted that America’s long {he ae beTest omy. hold out an olive branch, offering at the same time to leave the British i a Word of the lease-lend bill's sig-| Empire intact arm has crossed the sea and nature reached the writer while ‘en | : : a ig SE He is reported to have labored all winter on new naval and air planted a firm hand on a mae to Ages vil SE ar Tot ae lars to hut spaimst Britain with all the sudden shoulders which will remain there |tOrtuous train journey requiring fury of which he is capable, ,
Ea Sy VOM. er Wey By a. The Fuehrer, it is now reported, would be satisfied to call quits dependence. Aisles Are Packed The Greek in the street, it is evident after a few conversations, is| Except for the two men in wunigrateful to the United States w . out being a suppliant. Greece will holders,
accept and use to the full every shell |W S : : and cannon, every airplane and ma- | ductor, finding them in a first-class
chine gun, that America sends her section, could only curse them at a and, if one Greek dies, the Greeks distance and receive the calm pleas-
say quietly and without bravura, an-| ant answer: “Tt's wartime, mister |
other will take his place at the conductor.” All were cheerful, pa-
ith-~ | form, all were third-class ticket-' put the aisles and door- | ays wer so packed that the con- |
[tient, co-operative, and extremely |
{ | |
| Muscular-,
with Britain and, by ricochet, with the United States, if they would agree to let him have his way on the European Continent. After con-
solidating western Europe and the
| he would then take care of Soviet Russia, whose huge army he is said
to scorn.
STUDY DIRECT "irk New Factonv
dominate the Continent, at least until the subjucated peoples recovered and threw off the Nazi voke. No responsible official here for a moment assumes that Britain's peril has abated in the slightest. They believe the supreme test is just ahead, not passed,
Balkans under his domination,
A a —————
oe TITO SCHIPA LIKES Four new industries located in he SWING IN ITS PLACE
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (U. P),
————————— S——————"
under the name of Ware Industries,
WARE, Mass. (U. P.) —This town 'OWn last year and two already there,
trigger. Let America Decide
Buf there is no apparent effort to persuade such liaison men as foreign correspondents to plead for more aid. The public and official attitudes seem to be identical: Let the United States assume as much of the burden of our defense as| America considers morally and politically her own and no more, If the Americans are ready to spend | for Greece's liberty, runs the popuYar hellenic attitude, there are] plenty of Greeks ready to die for it.
Whether Greece's war of self-de- | whose vest pockets were filled with |
fense is America’s war is a political | question which the Greeks seem to) agree that Washingion has decided,
Hospital Ship
['bulb’s
| conversational.
When passing Olympus, the track-
workers threw down their picks and |
velled at the passengers:
“We want the news, throw us your |
papers.’
A farmer on the train holding |
the only Salonika newspaper sheet almost to the ceiling to catch the ghostly illumination, read aloud: “Roosevelt signs the bill for aid to Greece.” At first, there was only thoughtful silence and then a passenger
hardboiled eggs, observed: “American help is a good thing for us.”
Bombed
By GEORGE WELLER
Copyright
makes a serious bang,”
liberty, the chief engineer of the hospital ship Socrates,
1941. hv The Tndianapolis Times ahd The Chicago Daily News, The ATHENS, March 13.—"When you drop an oil barrel on a deck it | said Peter Eleftheriou, whose last name means | | “So when the!
hovs in the beds downstairs on this ship say they hear the serious bangs, we tell them it is the dropping of oil barrels.
“But there ars <6 many oil ba careless when we are trving to rest?’ “We do not know how to answer them on this. Only when we arrive in Pireaux and carry them on deck, they ask again: “Where are the vou dropped yesterday us up. “Then we tell them: ‘Tt
barrels that and woke
was not
The shack and the wounded were tossed |
rrels,’ they say. ‘Why are you so
I'bombs. which fell on the port side,
about 75 feet shuddered
away. the
nearest Socrates
the at
in their beds below decks. As the
bomber left it swung slightly about
to observe what damage had been
‘caused.
Since the attack occured in clear
DEFENSE TAX
Undismayed, the
'Senators Suggest 1 to 5% On $30 Weekly Wages; Rate Boost Seen.
—— WASHINGTON, March 13 (U.P). | —Some members of the Senate
LUPE AND ‘BIG BOY’ | Finance Committee today were conBREAK ENGAGEMENT sidering a plan for a direct defense
i {tax of 1 to 5 per cent on all wages THRE DOGFIGHT HOLLYWOOD, March 13 (U.P). lof more than $30 8 week. | —Lupe Velez, the tempestuous Mex- | ; A ican movie actress, said today that | Senators studying such a plan [she and Guinn (Big Boy) Williams, | said it would be a quick, inexpensive polo playing actor, had broken their [tax to collect since the general proengagement, [cedure of social security taxes—col- | “He is the sweetest boy in the lection at the source—would be used. { world,” said Miss Velez, “but we | For example, if the tax were fixed thoy we could get along better|at 5 per cent, a man getting $50 a
Defective teeth is the principal cause for rejection of selective serve { ice registrants when examined by local board and army physicians. | This pictochart shows the major reasons and per cents of total re- | Jections by local doctors for the first three months of drafting.
gether in a
}
TOMMY WINS
———————
Liverpool Residents Look on’ | As Fliers Battle in | Moonlight.
without an engagement ring so we [week would have $2.50 deducted for called the whole thing off. [defense before his check was given | “I am funny in my ways, and Ite him. The National Economy | do like a certain amount of free- |Lieague in a recent study of defense | So does he.” (financing proposed a similar plan.
Ee 1 to 3 Billions Needed Congressional fax experts Sew
| té6 taxation problems in an effort to
‘raise between $1,000,000,000 and $3.- | VICTORY PLEDGE 500,000,000 addition annual revenue | [to defray part of the expense of our | . {own national defense and the $%7,-| 1000,000,000 British-aid program. Promises “Empire of Labor,’ | ‘Several opponents of the British-|
LIVERPOOL, March 13 (U. P).~ For the first time Since start of | dom. the war, Liverpool residents watched | la night dog-fight between a British | fighter and one of the 200 Nazi| bombers that pummeled this town | for hours until early morning today. | The fighter was one of a squadron ‘which, with Liverpool's ground de- | |fenses, saved this and other regions | of the heavy Merseyside industrial | area from great damage in one of | the most persistent ‘German attacks
Br————————
of 8000 persons faced ruin three
‘try, a mill company, moved South. |
barrels, but it was bombs’.” One chief engineer this morning titude, with the ship clearly] The night was brilliant with moon- | told his story, which coincided with marked. it is difficult for an ob- light and residents were thrilled to | those of the officers and nurses, as server, however cautious of atrocity [see a British fighter flash on to the | the Socrates laid at her quai In material, to find a reason for it.[tail of a Nazi bomber and pour a |
| weather from an extremely low al- [of recent months.
On 3d Anniversary of | Austria’s Absorption.
aid bill have proposed that the full | cost of the program be collected in | new taxes. Administration sup-! porters, however, favor increased | individual and corporate income tax:
Piraeus.
Before even the Socrates’ cap-
(stream of tracer bullets inte the| BERLIN March 18 (U. P) — rates designed to raise $1,000,000,000 |
|
[vears ago when its principal indus=-|
townspeople
adopted the slogan— The town that $27,000 surplus after taxes and other | can’t be licked '-—and banded to-|{local 1941 costs had been antici-| child that must be kept in its communal enterprise pated.
doubled their space, Payrolls have —Tito Schipa, tenor of the Metros tripled since organization of the politan Opera Company, says he project. The 962 stockholders re-| likes swing-=but with qualifications, cently received 5 per cent dividends! Here on a concert tour, the noted totaling $3507. Officials reported a Italian singer remarked: “I like swing==but it i= a little
| place.”
Strauss
ays:
DEAR SIR:
The ground will soon steam and gel softer—=the birds will soon whistle and warble—golfers wll soon yell “Fore! ==" and the “umps” will soon, cry “batrees for today’s game. And already, right wow, the new-for-Spring
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The Socrates is an 1800-ton island | tain, Christoph Aranitis, had time raider until the aircraft disappeared | agoif Hitler, in a speech at Linz |Oor $1,500,000,000 more revenue a |
steamer, painted pure white With to write out his radio report, he red crosses and having beds for 362 was queried by a Coast ‘Guard sta- | wounded. She had 578 wounded [tion on Lefkas which had wit-| aboard at 9:30 a. m. yesterday when nessed the attack.
a three-motored Italian bomber at-| “We are undamaged and pro-|
from view. : | Austria, yesterday promised Ger~The long vapor trails of the fight- /man victory in the war and, after | ing planes hung suspended in the | the war, “an empire of labor, of | brilliant sky long after the fighters |gscial and communal life.”
had vanished from view. Germany, he said, must consoli- |
They would finance the bal- |
f
year, ance through new borrowing. | The plan for a direct tax on all earned income has not yet been presented to President Roosevelt, it was |
| tacked her within sight of the south- {ceeding on our course,” replied the| One of the witnesses to the dig- | gate jtself in the face of the “hatred (said, but some Senators believed he |
ern tip of the island of Lefkas. ‘captain, Besides several large, vertical red| This is the third time the crosses on the vessel's side, five are |Socrates has been bombed, but the pamted on her decks and the 100fs [other two times she was at anchor | of the deckhouses, the largest |in the harbor of Prevesa, which the| measured by the writer being 25 [Greeks admit to be a fair military | feet long and about 12 feet wide, | game. the smallest 6 feet by 6. { “We ‘don't know why the old The plane dropped three bombs | Socrates has singly, ahead of the ship, from a | for the Italians,” said ‘Capt. Ar-|
height of less than 1000 feet, as it |vantis, tapping the Trail. “We French Crisis Worries U.S. food shortage became more acute in both the occupied and unoccupied saying, “The consulate desires to impress dice more upon American ernment’'s concern regarding ‘the Government nor the State Depart. | Special M efer S who refuse to return to the United | day said special motorcycle type meries of developments concerning! "° . drive against traffic death. The first American Red Cross; cars to he operated by officers in French children, was being un-| it was satisfied results had been | WoL) ht have We Sat Yaw Tt recalled that France had of-| The efficers shipped inte unoccupied France | . Morrissey said. Tt was said that France appreciated | ers on an experimental basis and
approached directly head on. Tt [think we must be the only hospital VICHY, France, March 13 (U, P.).—The United States urged its Al'PAS., citizens the desirability of returning (———— a welfare of its nationals. It is once ment can undertake the mainte- | States. . . . | speedometers have been ordered the food shortage, the British | | He said the speedometers would relief ship, Cold Harbor, bearing | Plain clothes in daytime and in loaded at Marseilles. The Govern- | obtained in the effort to loosen the | Which make them easy for speedfered last August and several times) go... oo night would reach Germany and ‘that | He said that one squad already former U. S. Ambassador William ©. | | that it has made several arrests.
would wear
then released two sticks each of four [ship in the fleet with sex appeal.” nationals today to get cut of unoccupied France as a crisis caused by American consulates circularized all Americans by registered mail, to the United States and the Gov- 'Gh ' U | osts fo Use again emphasized that neither the nance in France of those citizens] The new appeal coincided with a | for everal “ghost cars” in the blockade and American relief. | be installed in unmarked police milk, vitamins and clothing for | | uniform at night. The ‘cars ment here announced at. noon that | blockade. ers to spot. since to guarantee that no Yood . ; mistaken for imposters, Britain never had replied directly. | has been operating against speedBullitt’s intervention.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
PY " wf Thdiana Association of Optometrists, Here I's the 4 affic Record drivers’ vision clinic, Electric Busldmg, al
; a dav. County City Total “Vianna Tndependent Petroleum Associa - 5 10 15 tion, convention, Hotel Severin, all day . : . . Central Casket anufacturers, ~ on, 13 16 29 Bookbinde 5
TunchHotel Severin, 12:15 p. m, ting, —March 12— | Sagem, 9:
Tnion, mee Hotel 30 ». m. |, Crescent Paper Co., dinner Hotel Severin, Wnjored...... 1 | Accidents...,,, 9p» m .+ 0 | Arrests
5% | WEDNESDAY TRAFFIC COURT |, Sitma chi annual state
0 Cases Convic- Fines noo hhge ub. luncheon, tried tions paid | Optimist Crab, Tuncheon, Columbia Club, 5 5% $530 "Ph; ; | hi Delta Theta, luncheon, Canary Cot9 | 132 | tage, noon. efta Tau Delta, luncheon, Columbia noon RSC
940 J%41
sar ERENr rane
Srra Rrra Bee
annual state banquet Club, night. otel Severin, Violations Speeding Reckless driving... Failure to stop at through street... 12 Disobeying traffic signals 1 Pranken driving... Al others ® Bese
J
lub, Noon. appa kms Tuncheon, Canary Cottage, | Betts Tau D-lta, annual state banquet $4 | ang, dance. Columbia Club, night, 1051 GIRNAROIS. Their CI ouTh ! i is etic Club, ni | Ri 7 Section, Amevionn¥ | Soriety, Ing. Hotel Severin, 8 % m | Sets Etaoh Tt Union, meeting, otel } main pois Pressman’s Unio - | ing, Hotel Severin, 8 p, m. Ho MEETINGS TODAY | MARRIAGE LICENSES Tndianapolis al Estate Board, Tunch-| (These tists are from official records €on, Hotel Washington, noon. | Th the County Court Wouve. The Times Caravan Club, Murat, luncheon, noon, therefore, is not responsible for errors ih Advertising Club _of Tndianapolis, lunch-| Tames and addresses.) Eon, Indianapolis Athletic Club, noon. | ’ a. Oil Club, Tuncheon, Hotel Severin, noon YD MRE 22 Construction Teague of Tndianapolis, Bailey Brewer Tuncheon, 231 N. Pennsylvania, oon, ! Delta Gamma Alamnae, luncheon, Board Pf Trade, 11 a, m. Tndianapolis Camera Clab, meeting, 116 ¥._ Ninth 'St.. Beta Theta age. noon,
9
ament, t. Chemists
6
Totals (ouuuons 1 $890
.
Peter helma ‘Garnet, , of 1417 EB 15th ow James J
| Mildred L. Montgomery, 23, of 46 S. Sum-
mit. , 42, of 412 N. ‘Oak2, of 37 8S. Tuxedo 32, of R 5 3 PF. Wells, 23, ‘of
James BR. Lightowler Cot- Tans Rose Howe, 42 arty J. Hobbs Lambdi OM Alpha Alnmni Association, ville Doris Yupcheon. Russer Cafeteria, noon. | N, Delaware, Tndianapolix Motor Transportation Crab, | Warl L. Adams. 26 of 238 Cumberland ne., Tuncheon, Fox's Steak House, avon. | J_ Robbins, 23. of 870 Fletcher : " Sigma Nw, luncheon, Columbia Club, Louis 8. Fggert. 20. of 4158 Park: M oon, (1. Potter, 22, of 519 Central Court.
p.m i, luncheon, Canary
such an attraction]
POLICE CHIEF Morrissey to- |
uni= 3 to avoid being |! Chief |New Y
fight, said that the German plane envy and greed” of other peoples | apparently exploded in mid-air, and other states. | “Suddenly there was a tremendous | pay) Joseph Goebbels, Propaganda | bang,” he said. “Then all sorts of Minister, amplified Hitler's remarks | things from trouser buttons te span- {on the post-war German Empire bv | ners fell all around us. We threw caving: { ourselves on the ground but we | “This war is a decisive battle be- | heard the plane crash miles away.” tween two enemv worlds—the so-| [cialism of a young people as against | | the plutocracy of the old, rusticated i world.” Hitler and Goebbels spoke on the VU. §. Weather Bureat occasion of the third anniversary of the absorption of Austria by GerINDIANAPOLIS YORECAST-—Fair to. manv. 'n : Amorro tly oudayv: ot mu ™ : . chante in temperature; lowest tonight | Hitler reminded his audience of HH IEEE: the creation of a “greater Germany” Suhrive ......5:50 | Sunset three vears ago. TEMPERATURE | “Today we stand before a testing March 13, 1910 of what we then begun,’ he said, Le 3% 1h. Mm “for just as our unification of 1870BAROMETER 1871 then met the world's disfavor. 6:30 hth... 8008 ___|s6 in this second great act of union | Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7 2. m.. » T and the German people must con- | DoRtd Diration, singe Jan. 1... 280 |solidate itself in the face of the re -| hatred, envy and greed of other Yndiana—Fair tonight: tomorrow partly | peoples and other states.” i cloudy; no decided change in temperature. | (Germany was proclaimed an Em | | _¥minois—Fair tonight, tomorrow partly Pire Jan. 18, 1871, in the Hall of | {cloudy; no decided change in temperature. | Miriors at Versailles at the end of | Lower Michigan—Fair tonight and to- “ o ; hk’ % | morrow; little change in temperature. | the Franco Prussian wan in aj | Ohio—Fair tonight and tomorrow; cold-| union of the German states. [er except along Lake Erie, Cleveland east- — {ward tonight; slowly rising temperature | tomorrow; warmer Saturday. | Kentucky—Generally fair and colder toinight, preceded by light snow in southeast | poriton early tonight: tomorrow fair and
gee cold; rising temperature Satur- | ay
WEATHER IN OTHER CITTES, 6:30 A. M. a Temn
; 26 30.68 5
OFFICIAL WEATHER
5:50
fam
—— MALS | MIDWEST WEATHER
BOSTON U. DEGREES HONOR 8 EDITORS
BOSTON, March 13 (U, P). = Boston University today conferred | honorary doctorates upon eight persons in connection with ceremonies commemorating the fight for press | freedom in the United States. In making the awards, President | Daniel L. Marsh of Boston Uni- | versity said dissemination of truth-! | ful news was “fundamental to the functioning of a democracy.” | | Those who received the degrees! were: | Doctor of Letters: Henry R. Luce.
| Station i Amarillo, | Bismarck, Boston Chicago . Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Dodge City, Kas. .. Jacksonville, Fla. ...., | Kansas City, Mo, ....S | Los Angeles {Little Rock.
IM a
Tex D.
LIT
BIBI DIT UY I COUT 1 J WOW IG NUE AD ND UD YING
m ’ Pittsburgh 4 Portland, Ore vh San Antonio, Tex. ..
would oppose it on the grounds that | it might deter consumers’ purchasing power. He is expected, through the Treasury, to recommend higher income tax rates, f
Basic Rates May Go Up
Even the Senators considering the | direct tax plan conceded that it would be difficult to get such a) proposal through Congress. But with pay envelopes increasing, they thought the method offered an op- | portunity “to spread the burden” | and deter a runaway price move- | ment Some Senators predicted that basic income tax ratés—now 4 per cent—would be boosted to 6 per cent, and that the corporate income tax—mow averaging 24 per ceni— would be, raised to 30 per cent, Chairman Pat Harrison (D., Miss.) of the Senate Finance Committee and Senator Walter F, George (D. Ga), ranking committee member, indicated that the new tax bill would follow previous patterns— indicating a boost in corporate and individual income taxes, perhaps in excess profits levies, and possibly a new tax on state and municipal securities, which now are exempt. No Senate action on a tax bill is expected until May. Treasury officials want 10 analyze the March 15 income tax returns before making recommendations, and revenue legislation must originate in the House.
3 MILLIONS SOUGHT FOR BURNS CITY UNIT
Times Special WASHINGTON, March 13.-Cons gress was asked today to provide the Navy wih $316,832,960 in cash, of which $3,759,000 would be used o
1 | |
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MEETINGS TOMORROW |
| arteriosclerosis.
Swartz, 21, of 1217 St. Paul: | <- | acute myocarditis. 1936
ary |
board chairman of Time, Inc. and Puild ammunition storage facilities
Arthur T. Robb, editor of Editor & At Burns City, Ind. The recommen Publisher. [dation was made by the House Ap-
Doctor of Humanities: Lewis ©, Dropriations Committee. Hartman, editor of Zion's Herald | The Maxon Construction Co. of century-old Methodist weekly, and Davion. O, holds a $2.500.000 conFrank Luther Mott, professor of tract for the Mmdiana Naval project, journalism, University of Towa. | Today's request for nore money | Doctor of Laws: Herbert S. Agar. | Would be in addition to this amount. managing editor of the Louisville | It is expected that $15,000,000 will Courier-Journal, and John Cowles, (be spent on the project that is to president of the Minneapolis Star- | Serve as an inland munitions supply Journal, | base for the Navy. Doctor of Science in Bdueation:| Today's recommendations included Joy Eimer Morgan, editor of the [$1,600,000 for a star shell loading National Education A Pia $500,000 for a bomb assembly
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Iemuel, Marjory Smith Earl, Anna Mav Zigler, Wayne, Marjory Pasley, Russell, Nancy Edison, at Methodist, Harry, Helen Myers, at Methodist Willis, Rosemary Conley, at Methodist, Ray, Alvina McKiney, at Methodist Paul, Charlotte Carroll, at St. Francis Bdward, Martha Gearhart, at City, Don, Ruth Merrill, at Coleman.
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; Journal of Education. and filling plant; $420,000 for high Tenice, Martha Stinson, at Col \ gs : y | Charles, Thelma Bacret, A Coleman. Doctor of Civil Law: Zachariah explosive magazines; $765,000 for | er eer Lon, BL 22 Douglas, Chafee Jr., professor of law at Har- | projectile magazines: $210.000 for | Bellefontaine. a ~ " Me Law School and author of inert storehouses; and $264,000 for | cingee? , rio oore, at 612 E. St Ie of Speech.” | smokeless powder magazines. { vs 5 _,s Llovd, Ohristina Luckett, | | cent's. ¥ | . | Bernard, Mary Smith, at St. Vincent's. | : Emmett, Helen Whitehouse, ai Methodist. | u 0S avia @) | George, Gladys McMath, at Methodist. IN u | Andrew, Elizabeth Tellas, at. Methodist | | Edgar, Elsie Su pher. at Bt. Trancis | Tr, ster Tu Y, a 1 rancis | Howard, Mary Kendall, ‘at Goleman. © BELGRADE, Jugosiavia, March 13 (U. P) —Jugoslavia, still holding | eon, Pearl Flove, At 1195 W. Ne ou ih, Seman Sem nh A complete Oh ah the Axis, r ! \ many could claim a diplomatic vieAustin, Thelma Sharr, at 1838 Fletcher. iA A pride would remain intact, diplomatic quarters un ers ay. DEATHS | No arrangement had yet been announced for Premier Dragitha cniizabeth k. Mote, 70, at 5025 Park, |Cvetkovitch and Foreign Minister) —— Anna Williams, 56, at Long, carcinoma, | Alexander Cinean-Markevitch to/slavia to sign a non-aggression a seman, 7, at 1457 Shepard, 0 to Germany to conclude an treaty with Germany. The agreeBaona Dancy. 85 at BOL ‘Goodie: |S ~ Pr been ment was to have been announced | wo scheduled t ast Tuesday, | after a speech by Premier Refik | ne Br on 64, AL Veterans, pulmo.) Well informed sources said that Saydam or some other Turkish or Shh B. Lotz, 52, at Veterans, cirrhosis | the Government, realizing the re- leader at Ankara. It had been exFlora Shake, 62. at 155% Charlies. Chronic EE of its doi was Fnay pected that this speech would be vocarditiy. i arrive at some agreement which 'a back-down from Turkey's stron es Th WL D0 N. West, would satisfy Gelmany provided stand against Balkan aggression. noite Neeley. _ 85, at 8740 Graceland, | that it also would be palatable to and that Jugoslavia would thus v Maite P. Xone! 58, At 540 W. 28th, eere- psa public opinion. be able to explain that because of | bral hemorrhage. | Informants said it had all been Turkey's stand it had Noah T, DAVis. 78, at 3380 N. Meridian, |... ; i RAND 10 b . DO [arranged edly this week for Jugo- co-operate With Germany. v
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