Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1941 — Page 3

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1941

Greeks Jubilant At Jugoslav Revolt

Recognize Courage Required to Cast Lot Against

Axis; Bulgaria Move Seen as Blunder.

By GEORGE WELLER Copyright, 1941. by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

ATHENS. March 27.—Gleefully shouting newsboys today brought the Greeks news from Belgrade that the Balkan tide had finally turned and another country had decided to cast 1s lot with the anti-Axis forces. With beaming faces, Athenians received word that the Serb, Croat and Slovene peoples had decided to stand shoulder to shoulder together in resisting diplomatic invasion as the Greeks resisted Italian invasion

| ——

in the Albanian mountains. The accession of young Peter to | [Greece or Britain upon its interior the throne gave an added uplift of | policy, Jugoslovia has taken the optimism and cast a hopeful augury course which protects its umity for from beyond the wide plains of those believing in it and has given South Serbia. |a truly Greek answer to those misGreek Spirits Filled |takenly believing that all nations could be penetrated like Hungary, The Greeks have been ready to Rumania and Bulgaria, or dismemdefend their liberty if necessary pu ..q like Poland and Czechosloagainst two-thirds of the AXis and vakia have been awaiting whatever attack| gne Greeks fully recognize the came, from whatever quarter, With '.,,.ase required by Axis-dominated calm hearts and cool heads. The| tries to take this step. The efpositive, heroic and independent fect upon Turkey, it is predicted, stand of Gen. Simovitch, following gy; pe pronounced. In light of the close upon Mussolini's personal de-| rp ooqavian overturn, Bulgaria's adfeat in Albania. now has filled the peepee eto the gradually disinteGreeks’ spirits almost to the burst- o,.¢ine tripartite pact now becomes ing point with confidence toward ,euealeq as a diplomatic blunder. future events. | For Bulgaria is now placed in the The present fulfillment is doubly exposed position formerly held by thrilling for the Greeks because it|Jugoslavia means that their calls to the Ser-| While Russia's hands are still off | bians, to remember the brother hood | |awaiting the psychological moment, | of arms during the World War, |it is clear that Jugoslavia's bold anhave been heard |swer to the Axis will have the same Such a call was directed by the thrilling effect from the Ural MounGermans to the Bulgarans prior to|tains to the Albanian fastnesses

HEARN HELD ON DAYLIGHT ISSUE

The Butcher, the Baker and The Fishermen Give Views to Council. (Continued from Page One)

18-pound carp and a 15-pound catfish—one right after the other. “Now I want to say .. . At this point, Councilman Walter E. Hemphill asked Mr. Baker to vield. Mr. Baker did and Dr. Hemphill asked how many hooks he used on a line, “Fifty hooks,” replied Mr. Baker, “which I am entitled to. Now, I was going to say He had forgotten what he was going to say. He went back into the crowd and the partisans gave him a rousing cheer. From the three-hour hearing, there emerged these reasons for and against daylight time: td » 5

FOR Daylight Saving Time because it would: 1, Give more recreation for. workers by the extra hour of daylight 2. Speed defense production by enabling defense workers to relax. | 3. Help prevent accidents by enabling heavy traffic to clear wn | town area before dusk when accidents occur. 4. Encourage greater use of City parks, playgrounds, pools and golf courses thereby increasing the revenue from these facilities. 5. Help keep children off the] | streets by making it possible for |

| | ost | { |

Ascends Throne

Em

King Peter II

BRITAIN, FRANGE TUTORED PETER

Boy King Is Cousin of | Puppet Ruler of Rumania.

them to play an hour later on the

| playgrounds.

6. Line up Indianapolis time |

By UNITED PRESS The boy King Peter II, who be-

- S are hainvasion and now receives an ap-,where Greek snipers now | schedules with Chicago and other came King of Jugoslavia in his own

propriate answer in the Serbian rassing the Italians, and from the] Army’s remembrance of the com- Dodecanese where the British are radeship of blood formed during bombing the Aegean outposts to the) the retreat upon the Ionian Sea. If German airdromes in Tr ipoli. the Athenian atmosphere anv| Public opinion would phrase the criterion, there will be no retreat/present prospect: now. “The reconquest of Europe has Without any interference by either begun.”

1S

Japan and Nazis ‘Agree’

BERLIN, March 27 (U. P.) —Japanese and German Foreign Ministers Yosuke Matsuoka and Joachim von Ribbentrop find themselves In

ing near here, Injured were engineer lor, fireman Cletus Knitz, both of Terre Haute, and Harold Pauley, of Pana, Ill, driver of the truck. The truck was carried 100 yards along the track by the force of the impact, spreading blazing gasoline | within a radius of several hundred

| ‘ANVIL’ EXPLODES, 2

arising from the co-operation of tendered a reception to SpE nl py v T's + Ta I the Fuehrer's studv at the Chancel | aged by blazing gasoline today when Japanese - German friendsiip as sizes that the Japanese people “When statesmen of Germany ported “their condition as “fair.” of Germany, will furnish the same ences which started today. But un-| St, died today at St. Vincent's Hos-| t r East.” The same sources 11 the Fa A native of St v | Arsenal her (now TT States e ech High Unknown Soldier's tomb The | DIE the two of them appeared on the when a projectile, manufactured for

‘hearty agreement” today. » At a conference this morning which lasted several hours, Ribbentrop and Matsuoka reached ‘complete unity of views on all questions Germany, Italy and Japan.” The conference occurred “in an AVR phere of hearty agreement.” After the conference, Ribbentrop HITS GASOLINE TRUCK his party and a small circle of I Nazi officials. TERRE HAUTE, Ind, This afternoon Matsuoka had a|(U., P.) —Three persons were In-2'2-hour discussion with Hitler injured and three houses were dam-| on Pennsylvania passenger train la Ins . 4 Meanwhile Nazi quarters, with increasing emphasis, mvited the United States to take note of Matsuoka began his round of conferences here. “Matsuoka’s message to the German people strongly emphastand toe to toe with the Third Reich,” an authorized Informant said. “This should interest the yards. United States. Hospital attaches said the men | were suffering from burns, but reand Italy come together the keynote is action, not words. The visit of Matsuoka, representative of a people who are brothers in arms MISS ALICE SHOBE, result.” 80, DIES AFTER FAL Informants would. not suggest whether the “action” would take| Miss Alice Shobe, housekeeper of place during or after the confer- | St. Joseph's Rectory, 623 E. North official German sources expressed pital, belief that at least there might be i . v | Miss Shobe died as'the result of an official German declaration ‘““‘de- a fall @t the rectory last Feb. 12. end Japan's position and rights on Tag } She was 80. said that Japan was likely to dis-| Louis, Mo., she aC CW 3 | was brought here as a child by her play in future “a stronger and ¢ i . i ather, Edward Shobe, who at that more active stand on foreign affairs, | oe was bookkeeper 1 0 US especially as regards the United S per for the 8 : School). Before his conference with Rib-| Miss Shobe was educated at the bentrop, Matsuoka motored In a|glq St. John's Academy. Survivors closed car to place a wreath on the jnelude two nieces. streets were almost empty despite advance preparations for large | TACNA, PERU, March 27 (U. P.). crowds to greet him. —Antero Virot, a mechanic, and his After the Hitler-Matsuoka talk, assistant, Justo Perez, were Killed Chancellory balcony for a few min-|the 1879 war with Chile and used utes to be cheered by throngs of | for many years as an anvil exploded. Hitler Youth waving paper Japanese They were hammering a piece of and Nazi flags. Ired hot metal on their “anvil.”

struck a gasoline truck at a cross-|

Bert Tay-

22,

| Inge cities on Daylight time. . Serve as an inducement to the entire State to adopt daylight time. n n n

| AGAINST Daylight Time because: 1. It would force workers on early | morning shifts to lose an extra hour | of sleep. They would rise one hour earlier, but would not necessarily | retire an hour earlier, chiefly because of the heat, 2. Theater owners, who pay heavy vaves, would lose “half their business.’ 3. It would increase the troubles lot the housewife who works, be-|

| { | |

housework before she leaves for her | employment, 4. Tt would make it harder to put Otten to bed early because the ts would not fall asleep in dayie ht. te . Yu handicap the farmer m. in order to Wig a in Indianapolis. vs Residents of rural areas on dard time would lose an hour |

business would suffer a loss. | the citizens that no hasty action would be taken. . | “In fact,” he said, [legal problems to solve. | cerns validity

“we have two!

of a 1928 daylight ordinance which, I am informed, is still on the books. The other [the issue of whether we can pass [this ordinance legally until the! State law takes effect June 1. This issue, the biggest we've ever had, puts us on the Council in a| | tight spot. No matter what we do. we cbviously will displease some- | body. So we'll deliberate very carefuliy and take our time with this! ordinance.”

15 |

Among those who spoke in favor was beheaded in 1817 for agitating °N¢ 8reat-

of the proposal were Berkley Duck Jr., Indianapolis Junior Chamber i Francis Hughes of the Chamber, H. Burch

One con-|

| vight today in an Army coup possibly directed against Germany, is | two years younger cousin, King Michael of Rumania, the puppet of a German army of | occupation. r| Peter will be 18 on Sept. 6. He| | had been king in name since 1934, | when his father, King Alexander I, was assassinated at Marseille, | France, but a regency headed by | his uncle, Prince Paul, ran the Government, waiting for him to become of age at 18 At the time of his father’s death,

on all current questions, a communique announced | cause she could not do part of her | Peter was under the unofficial tute-

lage of Great Britain and France, |the Allied Powers of the World War that gave his nation its present [boundaries in the treaties of St. [Germain and Neuilly. As a g! he had to stay in his native land|. (but the British-French Sues around him were kept alive by suc | devices as an English tutor and B) miniature electric railway, a present of the French Government, that

March 27 Io ion to shop in the City—hence [was the delight of his boyhood.

Called From English School

| He was in school in England when {his father died at the hands of a | Bulgarian assassin. France had trained his nation’s army into the (finest in the Balkans. He was re- | called into seclusion in a land of (racial hodge-podge, blood feuds and | [burning patriotisms. His kingdom primarily was that (of the Serbs, expanded to include

Council President Wood assured |

roats, Slovenes, Montenegrans and |

others with post-World War awards. Of his nine predecessors on the | Serbian throne, four were mur- | dered and two were forced to abdi- | cate. One, Xarageorge (Black| | George) Petrovich, a pig merchant who founded the present dynasty,

rebellion against the Turks. His head was displayed at Istanbul and his headless body lies in the mausoleum at aaa

| Nunley of the Traffic Advisory ga

| mittee, Russell Townsend and Jac | Reich, also of the Chamber: John! { Miller, Deputy County Prosecutor; | John S. Kirby, a salesman; John | Bruhn, Mrs. Lucille Rainny, a nurse, | land Mrs. Evans Cochran, a housewife

Among those opposed the proposal | were Adolph Fritz, State Federation!

of Labor Secretary; torney,

Ezra Weiss, atrepresenting neighborhood

theater owners; D. R. Barnecle, Cen-|

(tral Labor Union; E. R. Heizer, lpr esident of the United Aircraft Engine Workers, unaffiliated; Frank { Darby, machinist; S. B. Prater, notary public; Arthur Huhn, Central

Labor Union; Frank Stewart, glass-|

worker; Hugo Pfenning, Brotherhood of Locomotive Enginees; Miss, Catherine Schnabel, vice-president of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union; Norman Lansford,| president of Branch 39, National Association of Letter Carriers, and | Lester Cheetum.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here Is the Tr affic Record] ,'" Vn Varnish Co., buffet, Hotel Severin,

County City Total | | 6

21 —March 26 Accidents 23 Injured Ariests 53 | Dead WEDNESDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines tried tions paid

33 33 $327 8 6 50

13 15] MARRIAGE LICENSES . of (These lists are from official records 18 | in the County Court House. The Times therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses.)

Scearce, 38, Combs,

Hamilton County, 44, of 518 Massa-

Marvin |Ind.; Grace V. chusetts Roy Taylor, of Eunice Bell, 30. of 261% Boulevarg Pl. Carter C. Boyd, 23. of 3536 N. Meridian; Dorothy Virginia Gimbel, 23, of 3541 N. Meridian Charles Arnold Freshman, 27, of 2359 N Meridian: Marv Sue Mothershead, 26, of 1512 N. Meridian Wallace Hugh Dearinger, 21. of 226 N. Hamilton; Ella Mae Beals, 20, of 1025 N 9591 Ww

New Jersey Walter M. Jackson, 2%, of Washington; Doris F. Todd, 29, of 220 S Plum Ralph A. Hart, 22, of City; Hazel L. Miller, 22, of 3135 N. New Jersey. Curtis Payne, 36, of 747 S. Noble: Mar-| Ind. Neoma Lich-

guerite S. Hensley, 31, Franklin, | tenberg, 28, of 1710 Roosevelt.

47, 2619 Boulevard Pl.. Violations Speeding Reckless driving Failure to stop at through street Disobeying traffic signals Drunken driving All others

13 20

1 23 20 43

) age lester Earl Budd, 36, City: Totals ... 112 $483 er Earl Bu ity

BIRTHS Girls

Norris, Dorothy Williams, at St. Francis. George, Evelyn Harness, at St. Francis. George, Jo Van Ree, at Methodist, Paul, Katherine Baker, at Methodist. Raymond, Doris White, at Methodist. Merrill, Ruth Sheets, at Methodist. Noel, Helen Ward, at Methodist. Boys Adona. Virginia Horner, at St Walter, Christine Whitlow, | Fra ancis. John, Mary Welch, at City. Joseph, Ella Moorman, at St. Vincent's Harry, Lois Dortch, at St. Vincent's. Edward, Mildred Dawson, at jicthoaist. Albert, Evelyn Cotton, at Methodist. Carlton, Bonnette Carrington, at Meth-

dist. David, Esther Knight, at Methodist,

MEETINGS TODAY

Advertising Club, I. A. C., noon Caravan Club, Murat Temple, noon. Oil Club. Hotel Severin, noon | Construction League. 2351 NWN. Penn- |

pyivama St., noon Board

Delta Gamma of | 110 E. Ninth |

Alumnae,

Trade, 11 a. m 5 Ing! papel Camera Club, t

Beta The ta Pi, Canary Cottage, noo Lambda Chi Alpha, Russet, Cafeteria,

Indi anapolis Motor Transportation Club, Fox's Steak House, noo Sigma Nu, Col umbia Club, noon,

Francis. at SS

no

MEETINGS TOMORROW |,

Sigma Chi, luncheon, Canary Cottage, |

oon Exchange Club, luncheon, Hotel Severin, DEATHS Columbia Club,

| Charles L. Bare, 83, at 549 N. Hamilton,

heon, Canary Cot- myocarditis. Tutietie y | ‘Clara Burrell, 51, at 1140 W. an,

oon Optimist Club, luncheon, noon Phi Delta Theta, tage. noon Construction League of annual dinner, Hotel Lincoln, Delta Tau Delta, luncheon, Club, noon Federation of Community Civic meeting, Hotel Washington, 8 p. Kappa Sigma, Juncheon, Canary Cottage, noon Construction Leagve dinner, Hotel Lincoln, Indianapolis League of lectu re, Jhdiana World

| bral thrombosis. Ida Plummer, peritonitis Arthur Redmond, 64, at hemorrhage. Thurston | hemorrhage | Nancy Lou Parker, | broncho-pneumonia, nig Reeves A. Smith, 77, at Long, peritonitis. | "Women Voters, | Charles James, 82, at 410 N. Jefferson, War Memorial, | cerebral hemorrhage Vira E. Foster, 63, at City, breakfast, Hotel

monia Viola Pedigo, U., breakfast and 8:15 a. m, and

Ynfianapolis, 30 at

City, City,

1 general | Columbia

Club,

intestinal |

Anderson, 47, at Long, gastric

1 month, at Riley,

of Indianapolis,

lobar pneuRutgers U,, 81 a. m. , Ohio Stat Hotel Severi®

50, at 1816 Milburn, chronic myocarditis.

Etta Cohee, 58, at 100 E. St. Clair,

luncheon, 12:3 chronic myocarditis.

t. | ni ht,

28th, cere- | Dodge Ci

Anna Leeman, 65 at 1062 Pugene, angina pectoris. Louise PArrmann, 79, at 5871 Broadway, influenza.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. 8S. Weather Burean

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Mostly clondy tonight and tomorrow. Lowest temperature tonight about 35. 5.37 Sunset TEMPERATURE March 23%, 1940— Mm owen SRT LL

BAROMETER | 6:30 a.m... 50.08

m.

Sunrise

6 a.

| Precipitation 2 hrs ending 7 a. Total precipitation since Eh 2. | Deficiency since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER _Indiana—Cloudy, warmer in north por. tion tonight; tomorrow mostly cloudy, light drizzle or snow flurries in extreme north portion. Minois—Cloudy, light extreme north portion tonight; partly cloudy to cloudy, light drizzle or snow flurries in extreme north, ¢older in northwest portion. Lower Michigan—Cloudy tonight and tomorrow, light snow in north and extreme west portions tomorrow; little change in temperature. Ohio—Mostly cloudy and warmer tonight; tomorrow cloudy with light rain in south and light snow or rain in north portion; colder tomorrow afternoon and | much colder Saturda entucky—Fair, north portion tonight, WMOROW cloudy with light rain in no portion: colder tomorrow afternoon A night; Saturday generally fair and colder.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M. Stations Bar. Temp. Amarillo, Tex. . 30.11 30 Bismarck, N.

rain or snow in

treme mostly

g vy, Kas. Jacksonville, Fla. | Kansas City, | Little Rock, | Los Angeles | Miami, | Mp Is = Mob le, New Gieans | New : | Okla, York. Omaha. Pittsburgh Portland, Ore, San Antonio, Tex. San Francisco St. Louis Tampa, Fla. . Cloudy Washington, D. CQ. “vv PLCIdY

!

. Clear PtCldy

ay. slightly warmer in ex-|

MRS. BURKETT DEAD; OFFICERS’ MOTHER

Mrs. Gertha Hubble Jamestown, mother | officers, died today in Hospital after an illness of a week Mrs. Burkett was 65, was bom [in Jamestown and lived in and near there all her life. She is survived by her husband, Charles | Burkett; sons, Sergt. Charles | Burkett of the Indianapolis police, | Sergt. Oscar Burkett of the Indi|ana State Police, and Woodrow | Burkett; daughters, Mrs. Grant | McDowell, Crawfordsville; Mrs | Clyde Bennington, Ferndale, Mich. ; { Mrs. Lee Neidlinger, Brazil; Mrs Noble Walker, and Mrs. Everard | Cantlin, Jamestown; two sisters, Mrs. Elsie Bryand, and Mrs. Reddinger, Indianapolis. and four brothers, Herman Hubble, Advance, Ind.; Glenn Hubble, Indianapolis; Pobe Hubble, Jamestown, and Fred Hubble, Clayton. Services will be at 2 p. m. Sunday at Jamestown.

SENTENCED TO DEATH

SYRACUSE, N. Y., March 27 (U. |P). —Justice Jesse E. Kingsley today |

| imposed the mandatory death sen- |

| tence upon Anthony Nadile of Van | Dyke, Mich., for the eight-year-old slaying of Joseph Carlucci, a Syra- | cuse contractor.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TOTAL VICTORY’ | Low's Arm Welcome Here MARTIAL LAW IN

than his first]

Burkett, | of two police Methodist |

G.|

Bessie |

PAGE 3

SEEN BY Y WINANT

Lauds Churchill i in Talk to Employers and Trades Union Council. LONDON, March 27 (U. P.).— United States Ambassador John G.

| Winant said today that Prime Minister Winston Churchill's leadership

= | would bring total victory to Britain. E | Addressing

| a luncheon of the | British Employers’ Confederation {and the Trades Union Council, Mr. | Winant said that “the strength and

understanding of your leadership is|

|making itself felt more and more |day by day.’ | “It already has enabled you to re|sist what no slave or regimented | people could ever resist,” Mr, Winant said. “It will bring you total vic[tory.

Powers Freely Given

Ambassador Winant, comparing democracies and dictatorships, said that in Britain, when in emergencies greater powers were needed by the Government for the common good, the powers were voluntarily conferred by a free people “They do not have powers taken from them by a dictator's fiat,” the Ambassador added. The democracies were organizing | | the energies of free people to oppose fan enemy “who has established a combination of the punitive system f the Middle Ages harnessed to {modern machine technology,” he | said. Churchill

“To

Lauds Winant

resist this they needed [only skill and hard work and materials in combination with the iron will of a soldier but an understanding that was sensitive to the devoted loyalty of the people,” he said. | “The outcome of the present war, in my judgment, will decide the future of labor, industry and | democracy, not only in our time but for generations to come.” Addressing Mr. Winant at the luncheon, Mr. Churchill expressed | pleasure over the Ambassador's presence in Britain. “It gives the feeling that all | of President Roosevelt's 1representatives give me—that they would be shot stone dead rather than see this cause let down,” Mr. Churchill said.

FUNERAL HELD FOR | “MRS. ARTIE MORGAN

Funeral services and burial were held at 10 a. m. today in Acton for Mrs. Artie Meccie Morgan, who died in her home there Tuesday. Her father, Samuel Floyd, who {served as a drummer 27th Virginia Militia in the War 1812, died in 1890 in Acton he was 94, Mrs Morgan's

Ly

us

of

husband, John Morgan, was a member of the Union Army during the Civil War and par- | ticipated in Sherman's march from | Atlanta, Ga., to the sea. For 13 months, he was held prisoner in the Andersonville prison, | Born in Kentucky, Mrs. Morgan, wh» was 84, lived in Illinois during her childhood. | Survivors are two daughters Mrs. Elizabeth Portteus and Mrs. Minnie | Billingsley of Acton, seven grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren and greal~grandehild.

ACCUSE 2 ENSIGNS IN HIT-RUN PLANE DEATH

PENSACOLA, Fla., March (U. {P.). A Naval Board of Inquiry completed a hearing Inst night into the case of two young ensigns who admitted they were Bre a Navy plane so low that it struck and decapitated a farm woman in a turnip field near Robertsdale, Ala | The fliers, Ensigns J. C. Thomp son, 23, of Heladsbhurg, Cal., and Paul Brown, 22, Chicago, were held under arrest action in their case by the Department at | Washington, Commander W. D. Sample, executive officer of the Naval Air Station here, said a court-martial would be ordered for them if they were found culpable,

A

awaiting Navy

9 DEBATE TEAMS SEEK STATE CROWN

MANCHESTER Ind (U. P.) .—Nine teams will for the Indiana High debate crown in the final round of an elimination tournament which opens here tomorrow The schedule: Friday, 1:30 P. M.—La Porte, de- | fending champions, vs. Hagerstown Saturday. 8 A. M.—Washington vs winner of Friday debate; Clark or Hammond vs Goshen: Gerstmever of Terre Haute vs. Greentown; New | Albany vs. Ft. Wayne North Side Semi-finals will be held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday and finals at 8 p. m. | Saturday night.

NORTH March 27 compete School

They Didn't N Kinnick—He

Charles Kinnick, at work yesterday at his Moore plant on Madison Ave. knew there was something wrong. His fel-

windows, Some were running outside. Accident! Mr. Kinnick hurried with group of workmen to the corner of | Prospect and Alabama St. They were already coming back to look for | him. | “It’s ish. Mr. had seen it—his wife Mary and 3-

. They didn't need to fin-

both struck down by an automobile as they were returning from a visit at ‘‘granny’s.’ At City Hospital today, Billy lay with a possible broken leg. His mother suffered less serious injury Police said the car that struck them was driven by Jess Johnson, 54, of 1015 S. Alabama St. Police said the Johnson car struck two cars at Alabama and East Sts. and continued without stopping to

Billy and his mother had just gotten off the streetcar. Johnson was charged with failing to stop after an accident and with drunkenness.

eed to Tell Already Knew

bench at the Pitman- | low employees had rushed to the

\ tomorrow |

the

Kinnick knew as though he :

year-old son, Billy, on the sidewalk,

Prospect and Alabama where young g==

Billy Kinnick

| | |

not |

boy with the |

when |

This is National best accident strong sponsored by

which issued the

‘House Warming

Damage $2500

FRANK mes O, 4463 Guil=-“house-warme-

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ford ing’ a A druggist, building a new land Road dition, it within a month. Last night,

taneously was estimated at ered by insurance.

Princetown Gabardine Suits are 39.75 Hickey Freeman Gabardine Suits Are $68

Accident and Health insurance 10-year-old John arm of an Indianapolis policeman, the Indianapolis Accident and Health armbands worn

Lobraico, 4230 Ro~in the Wynnedale adand planned to move into

home at

paint-soaked rags on the second floor caught fire sponDamage to the home $2500, all cov=

SYRIA IS DENIED

Country Quiet After Series Of Demonstrations, Vichy Claims. | | VICHY, March 27 (U. P)—=The | French Foreign Office today denied that martial law had been | proclaimed in Syria as a result of a series of Pan-Arab demonstrations land said dispatches from Damascus | indicated complete calm prevailed throughout the country. | During the last four days, there have been 10 demonstrations, the Foreign Office said, five at Aleppo and five at Damascus and Beyruth, { Troops have been despatched to |strategic points in Syria and Lebanon, the Foreign Office ad- | mitted, but quoted a message from | Gen, Henri Dentz that neither martial law nor a state of siege had been proclaimed. Gen. Dentz, the Foreign Office said, is continuing negotiations to “widen” the Cabinet to give the Pan-Arab bloc greater representajon but not control

MRS. BELLE HANSON IS DEAD HERE AT 90

Mrs. Belle Carey Hanson, an Indi[anapolis resident 60 years, died last (night in her home 2256 N. Penn[sylvania St., after an illness of sev eral weeks Born in Easton [was married here Hanson, who died She had celebrated he: dav last January Mrs, Hanson was the Second Church entist Survivors are three sisters, Mrs, Lizzie Jane Ramey of Indianapolis, Mrs, John C. Walker of Los Angeles,

MISSIONARIES HELD Mr Mrs. Georgia Cherry of Peoria,

{ TOKYO, March 27 (U. P.)—The|1]. arrest of 15 British and American|{ puneral services will be held at 3 Presbyterian Tas ionaries in Korea, (Pp. m. tomorrow at the Flanner & wag (On charges of spreading anti-w ar} Buchanan Mortuary, Burial will be propaganda, was called to the at-li; Crown Hill tention of the Foreign office today pss by Merrill Benninghoff, second sec- DEPL ORES retary of the United States Em-| VATICAN CITY. bassy. | P).—Pope Pius XII, asserting he It was reported would continue his peace efforts, and letters at the told hospital workers assembled in headquarters in Keijo the Vatican throne room today that | Korea, had heen seized he deplored the sufferings of war,

| reports

Pa., Mrs. Hanson to Frederick W, several years ago. 90th birth«

Week and the ask for is the local campaign is Insurance Club, the police this week,

4 U. S. PRESBYTERIAN

Insurance Graul could The member of Christ, Scie

a of

by

St FFERING March 27 (U.

all records Presbyterian capital of

that

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