Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1942 — Page 3

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4

BEFORE CIVIL JURY

Prosecution Contends ‘Invaders’ Not Entitled to Freedom Of U. S. Judiciaryg Tribunal Jammed as Historic Proceedings Begin.

WASHINGTON, July 29 (U. P.).—Seven of eight ges-tapo-trained Nazis who—armed with explosive and incendiary devices—landed upon American shores last month from German submarines, denied before an extraordinary session of the U. S. supreme eourt today that they came to this

country to commit sabotage.

Through their counsel, the accused men denied publicly for the first time since their capture that their mission here was to spread devastation and death, as charged by the government. The alleged agents of Hitler were not present at the supreme court hearing. The seven defendants challenged the validity of their secret trial before a military commission appointed by PresiSpecifically, they sought the right to file petitons for writs of habeas corpus which, if granted, would

denteRoosevelt.

automatically nullify proceed-

ings before the commission , thus far.

U. S. Challenges Rights

Answering defense counsels briefs, prosecution attorneys centended that: “Those whom the enemy sends to destroy our industries and lives and the very existence of the nation can hardly be in a position to claim constitutional rights, privileges and immunities from the nation they seek to destroy. One privilege they seek is the freedom of our courts

to help them now that they are

caught.” ‘In opening the Chief Justice Harlan F. Stone suggested that he might be disqualified because his son, Maj. Lauson H. Stone, had assisted in presenting the defense case before the commission. He decided to sit, however, when Attorney General Francis Biddle, chief of the prosecution staff, informed him that both sides wanted him to remain. Maj. Stone had not participated in the proceedings before the court. Only seven justices took their places. Absent were Frank Mur-

phy and William C. Douglas. Mr. Justice Stone indicated that no im-

mediate decision was likely when he announced that Mr. Justice Douglas was en route to Washing.ton and would participate in the court’s decision.

Army Is Excluded No members of the army, except

*. the military commission, were ad-|

mitted to the court room, and i$ was assumed that Mr. Justice Murphy, a lieutenant colonel, was absent for that reason. The court issued no explanation of his absence, however.

\_ Briefs filed by defense counsel—

who themselves were appointed in the presidential order creating the military commission—disclosed also for the first time that the defendants had sought \habeas corpus writs unsuccessfully in a lower court. The attorneys, representing all of the accused Nazis but George John Dasch—who reportedly turned government witness—had gone to U. 8. District Judge James W. Morris yesterday, but their $Pplications were denied. In their brief filed ,oefore the hastily-assembled court the defense’ lawyers asserted that: 1. The Nazis were entitled to invoke habeas corpus proceedings. 2. President Roosevelt's proclamation denying them access to civil courts. was invalid.”

3. The president's order creating the “alleged military commission”

was unconstitutional and invalid.

4. The petitioners are entitled to

trial by civil courts. Doubt Invaders’ Rights The prosecution’s answer declared

that “the great bulwarks of our

civil liberties—and the writ of habeas corpus is one of the most imrtant—were never intended to ap-

y-in favor of armed invaders sent

here by the enemy in time of war.” ‘The defense attorneys, Cols. Cas-

sius M. Dowell and Kenneth Royall, disclosed that the Nazis had denied the government’s sabotage charges in their trial, now in recess after 16

court days. “The. petitioners testified,” the defense brief said, “that they did not intend to commit any acts of sabotage. In the case of two or more petitioners this testimony was definitely corroborated by other evidence produced by the prosection. All of the petitioners deny their guilt.” The unprecedented hearing, the most sensational development of the

IN INDIANAPOLIS—VITAL STATIS

Here Is the Traffic Record

County City Total 78 75! Girls

C1941 ... . 38 1942 ....000.....

- July 28—

40 51

000s.

Accidents '. ...

Injured TUESDAY TRAFFIC COURT

Cases Convic- Fines

Tried tions Paid 10 9 Reckless driving. 9 ¥ Failure to stop at through street. Failure to stop at

$398

MEETINGS TODAY

National, state and county officials of

most important war trial since Pearl Harbor, opened in a jammed and heavily-guarded chamber. Two hours before the bronze doors opened, more ‘than 100 persons were in line. Others sought entrance through the offices of the marshal.

Claim Commission Invalid Col. Dowell and Col. Royall stated

in their briefs that from the time

the military commission put had

on July 8 they had felt the com-

mission was invalid. Civil courts were “open and

proceedings,

“unconstitutional and

$100 .90

2 4

functioning normally in the. states of New York and Florida,” where the saboteurs landed, and, the defense suggested, should have had jurisdiction. \

The brief also brought out that the defense had sought to exercise “one peremptory challenge” in connection with a certain member of the military commisison but had been overruled. Thesidentity of the member whose presence on the commission the defense objected to was not brought out. The defense also complained that the commisison had admitted indivirual “confessions” of the defendants over their objections. Prosecution attorneys, led by Attorney General Biddle and Maj, Gen. Myron C. Cramer, judge advocate general, said that all nations traditionally “in time of war have denied belligerent enemies access to their courts.”

Struggle Between Nations

“That is one of the earliest and most rudimentary forms of political and economic warfare,” the prosecution contended. “It is an in tegral part of total warfare. And today the nation that will not wage total war usually meets total defeat.” The prosecution contended that the real issue at stake was a struggle between the United States and Germany “to determine which of the two shall survive.” “This case is no more than a small skirmish, but on an important front,” the answering brief continued. Denying that military trial of the Nazis endangered civil liberties, the prosecution contended that: | “These German soldiers have already been given rights which no ' American would receive in Germany and now ask for ‘constitutional’ privileges which we do not allow our own soldiers.” ; Justice department officials said today’s action ' was a challenge to President Roosevelt’s war powers under which he suspended the civil rights of all persons—citizens or aliens—who during wartime enter the United States to commit acts of espionage and sabotage.

STIMSON CRITICIZED

WASHINGTON, July 29 (U. P.). —House Democratic Leader John W. McCormack (D. Mass.) today accused Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson of “unwarranted and .perniciously political action” in writing a letter to Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R. Mass.) commending him for his active military service. Lodge, a major in the army, recently returned from service with an armored force in Libya and is ‘Now campaigning for re-election. McCormack is a close friend of Rep. Joseph E. Casey (D. Mass.), a candidate for Lodge's senate seat. Stimson, a Republican cabinet member, has emphatically denied that his letter to Lodge was a political endorsement.

Paralysis, first Indiana regional county chapter conference, Indiana State: Board of Health building, 1:30 p. m. Reunion of the Lincoln Chiropractic eollege, Hotel Lincoln, all day. 4-H club exhibit of Perry townshi ip, Southport high school, all day. iwanis club, luncheon, Columbia club, noon Junior Cha.nber of Commerce, luncheon Canary cottage, noon. Co-Operative club of luncheon, Columbia club, noon.

Lions club, luncheon, Claypool hotel, noon

Sigma Alpha Epsilon, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon.

Indianapolis,

MEETINGS TOMORROW Air raid warning demonstration for pub-

plass, 12:1 Wayne Dm girls 4-H club exhibit,

i. Ben Davis high school, all day.

87

‘Reunion of Lincoln Chiro; actic college, Hotel Lincoln, all day. bi

Oil club, luncheon, Hotel Severin, noon.

Hotel Severin, evening.

Farm Security, meeting Hotel Severin, all day; banquet, 7 p.

eon, Indianapolis .Athletic club, noon Sigma Nu, lunch C

u, eon,

FOR LODGE LETTER

lic and Selene officials, war memorial

United Electric Radio Union, meeting,

Advertising Club of SB dianapolis, lunch-

work.

A Doolittle ‘Chip Off the Old Block’

John Doolittle, son of the famous Brig. Gen. Jimmy Doolittle, is shown as he manned a m gun during recent maneuvers at West Point. Young Doolittle, who became a “plebe” at the 1 academy, July 1, will complete an intensive training course in five weeks and then will begin his a”

U-BOAT VICTIMS REMAIN AT 421

Details of Three Sinkings|}

Revealed; Bridge Falls On One Ship.

The unofficial total of merchant ships that axis submarines have

sunk in the western Atlantic since January was at least 421 today. No new sinkings by enemy action weré reported yesterday, although a bridge abutment fell upon a merchant ship in the Chesapeake-Dela-ware canal. Fire broke out and destroyed the ship. Survivors disclosed details of three sinkings which had previously been announced. First Officer Demonte said at Corpus Christi, Tex. that the Mexican ship Oaxaca was sunk in the Gulf of Mexico early Monday by a single torpedo. Six men were killed in their quarters and three injured. Survivors had ample time to collect their belongings before the ship sank, and rowed to shore in “several hours.” Five men were lost when a small American merchantman was sunk in the Caribbean on June 12. As survivors rowed away, the submarine approached, trained its guns on them, and asked for information about the Panama canal. The survivors didn’t give it. ‘The third sinking, also of a small American merchantman, occurred on July 12. It had been announced -n Mexico City.

GOOSIE LEE SHOT IN DISPUTE OVER HORSE

Harry (Goosie) Lee, well-known Negro political leader, was suffering from shotgun wounds today following an argument over a horse which is said to have strayed into another'© man’s garden. } Police reported that a horse from | the Elite Saddle club, one of Lee’s properties at 62d st. and Rucker road, got out of the lot and wandered into a garden on the farm of 73-year-old. Joseph Blaire at 67th st. and Rucker road. In an argument ensuing after Blaire reportedly asked for $15 damages, Lee was struck in the face by two shotgun pellets and one of his upper teeth knocked out. Deputy sheriffs gave him first aid. Blaire was arrested on a technical charge, released on a $100 bond and is to appear in the Beech Grove magistrate’s court at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow.

LIMIT PARKING ON 3 MORE STREETS

Limited parking on three more streets has been ordered by the safety board. Parkin { will be limited on one and a half hours on Nordyke ave., from Bridge st. to Stock st.; Silver ave, from Bridge to Nordyke ave., and Bridge st. from Nordyke to York st. The board also ordered that parking be prohibited on both sides of Sheridan ave. from Washington st.

Today’

selves. bly 10,000 tanks,

summer,

The London Times appeared to recognize the situation today when it said editorially that Germany’s purpose. is to drive Russia out of the war before America’s reserves were fully mobilized. The Times added that if the Germans take the Caucasus oil region and cut the Volga communications line, the united nations can no longer count on Russia’s ability to pin the bulk of German’s military strength on the eastern front. The influential Times, in thus departing from the pattern of the other London papers which have been shushing demands for a second front, echoes a propaganda line recently put out unofficially from Russia. : The Times speaks of “the unique opportunity provided by the overwhelming concentration of Nazi resources on the eastern front.” Today the Soviet army newspaper Red Star declared that the Germans have hardly 10 divisions, or about 150,000 men, with any fight|ing power remaining in France. The Germans, apparently sensing

Russian dispatches report that the Nai: thrown 20 more panzer divisions, which mens possi-

s War Mov: 2s

By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press War Analyst f The question of an early second front in | seems likely to be decided by the Germars

1 furope them-

have into the battle of the Dox, is well

as 11 fresh infantry divisions. Tb clearly indicates the ultimate German effort to crush Rubia this Hitler's overwhelming bid for victory may compel | the allies to open a second front to keep Russia in the war.

the danger, are keeping thei propaganda machine busy on 2 campaign designed to convince the allies that they are too str ‘ong in western Europe to make an i:vasion possible. They have just eli a big military demonstration in Faris to impress the allies and aire the French. I

- However British intelligend: probably gives the allies a fai'ly accurate idea of what strengt’ Hitler really has on tap in the w:st, and the allies are hardly likely to be bluffed out of an invasion :ttempt if they think they can cary it to a successful conclusion. : It would be typical of Hitler's methods to throw everything he has into the Caucasus battle :: believes in a concentration of power. Proponents of & land fro’: argue that the growing serial (/Yemsive er |will not in itself be timely, enough to save Russia. They think that: the | sh attering blows on such centers as FHamburg will be made fully effecti’ 8 by a concurrent invasion.

That Never

By KEITH WHEELER Copyright, 1942, Chicago Times, Inc.) (Distributed by United Press) AT SEA WITH THE PACIFIC

FLEET, July 2 — (Delayed)—Six weeks ago I flew a patrol with an observation plane. I took the occasion to remark that, while I wasn’t permitted to give the full names of Bill the pilot and Willie the radioman, I wished I could because they had to fly patrols every day and someday might be killed doing it. - Out of ignorance, prophecy speaks Bill and Willie are dead. On the ship, we called Bill, the pilot, “Ace,” partly because of his considerable skill at throwing darts but more because of the great sickness he had.

Wanted to Fight

His sickness was not in his body, for he was tall, muscular and handsome. His sickness was in his heart and the malady was disappointment. He wanted to fight and the wanting was a fire that consumed him. He wanted, above all the desires of his life, to fly a fighter plane in combat. With hatred that was almost an obsession, he hated the slow, sturdy, dependable, lightly armed observation plane to which his orders condemned him. Day after day he climbed into his plane and flew his uneventful beat out" over the empty sea and back, endlessly from ship to horizon and beyond the horizon and back to the ship. But Ace planned attacks. He dreamed of bombing an enemy ship and he believed sincerely that he could get away with it. He even

to a/point 200 feet south of Washington st. ]

DEFENGLE MEETING TODAY Defense District 34, Police Chief Morrissey address to air raid wardens, Sloan school, 31st and Rader sts, 7:30 p. m. Fourth meeting of summer victory program for Camp Fire Girls, war memorial, 10 a. m. Defense Heels at Indiana Girls’ school, Clermont, 2 p. First aid se of Miss Beatrice Berry,

talk on incendiary bombs, Ray Street center, 8 p. m.

DEFENSE MEETING TOMORROW

Divisions 6 and 8 of surict 41, 61st st. and College ave., 8 p.

BIRTHS

: Girls Raymond, Ruby Morgan, at City. John, Katherine Dickerson, at City. Walter, Evelyn Cocherell, at Coleman. ‘ Ray, Georgia Thompson, at St. Vinii B., Mary Roberts, at Methodist. Merril, Ni Hamil ton, at Methodist. J. K., bell Wisdom, at Methodist. John, Bn Colter, at Methodist. chi Betty Thomas, at Methodist. ‘Thelma , at Methodist.

thought, given altitude, skill and

TICS

George, Doris Pron, t City John, Wilma Masswaiter, at Golerhan. Maxine Britton, ‘at St. Vin-

s. Charles, Mildred Gibson, at st. Vinnt’s

Jackson, Ma; O'Maley, at St. Vincent's. aylord, Dorothy Moss, at St. Vincent's. dielvin, Lorine | V Bettinger, ‘at St. Vin-

s, Mary Burrin, at Methodis William, Loraine Frosch, at Sethodist. Ivie, Martha Eastes, at Methodis Melvin, Helen Englebright, at Methodist. Robert, Virginia George, at Methodist.

DEATHS Edith M. Marlin, 3 54, as 4050 W. Washington, perni Sophia Stolis, 76, at 3604 W. Vermont, arjarioseletons

Pennsy! ra Victor OO tiar 5 Richard. V

2 Hogert 79, ‘at 146 8. Oriental, cerebral hemorr! John GG. Bitte, 63, at 1207 Prospect,

cardiac insufficienc t %, at Central, cerebral

Peter C. Songer, hemorrhage Katherine Ma Snoke, 49, at 940 Olive, cerebral hemorrhage. John ay 76, at 743 W. 24th, pulmonaty

France, ih, Lorraine Oaiawel, at at Method-

| Somes W Soir, 4, at Methodist, bowel |O

tl hur R. Jones, 41, ph oy ne Brag

hi A 3 ot City, liver|Sicago

‘Ace’ Had a Great Sicknets

Will Be Cu)

surprise, that he could at luk Zero fighter and win. I: And so today he flew | hik Willie the radioman was frith him in the rear seat.” They Hes 7 .out to the end of their sector and started back. On the way in they met a plane searching another s:ctor. Ace : signalled the secord plane to join up.: Something vent wrong then, nobody knows what." As the other pilot drew toward him, Ace's plane swerved into a tur, swung sharply around 180 degrees and dove into the sea. The other pilot landed ir. the open sea, taxied near the capsize d wreckage and, leaving the plar. 2 in the hands of his radioman, |:lambered into the water and tried to reach Ace and Willie under te heaving surface. ! He found nothing but i floating glove. 3 Somebody will have | 0 to the girl Ace married two me nths ago and explain to her why his sickness will never be cured and why, perhaps, it doesn’t matter now.

FEAR COURTHOUSE MAY ‘BLOW IT LID’

County commissioners | 4 have been warned by the state buresi: of building inspeetion that the tourthouse dome is in danger of falling off. William J. Curtin, dirzitor of the bureau, advised commissioners that unless the dome is remdied or repaired he would have | te .rope off the south entrance ‘to ne courthouse and ban its use by | the public. William T. Ayres, pi: :sident of the commissioners, said lie will ask the council to appropliste $10,000 to remove the dome an: make improvements over the entire roof !

Jstructure of the butiaivs,

OFFICIAL WEA] HER

0 S. Weather Turon (Central 1 whe Tap

Sunrise

Precipitation 24 hrs. gnding % Total precipitation since Jur’ Excess since Jan. 1 in The, following. table shovs/ ‘lemperatures other cf i bo High 1c low

he 75

Indianapolis vessee Kansas City, Mo.

[CALLS TX BILL| UNFAIR TO POOR

Murray:$ays Measure Fails To Set Levies Under * Ability to Pay. . WASHINGTON, July 20 (U, P). —C. I. O. President Philip Murray charged today that the $6,271,000,000 tax bill passed by the house “fails

miserably to carry out either the

president’s tax program or the reasonable and necessary proposals of the treasury.” . In a statement read to the senate finance committee by Nathan Cowan, C. I. O. legislative rzpresentative, Murray said the measure “fails to place taxes on the basis of ability to pay, following a soak-the-poor line throughout.” : The measure, he said, “utterly fails to carry out the principle of equality of sacrific® for victory, thus striking a serious bléw at national unity and national morale,” and leaves “the propagandists of the sales tax an opening for renewing this anti-labor, anti-victory agitation.” Co }

Securities Untaxed

The C. I. O. chief pointed out that the bill does not follow the treasury recommendation for taxing currently tax-exempt securities, and “resolutely ignors the president’s call for a $25,000 limit on net income, treating it as something that should not be mentioned in polite society, as though it were slightly indecent.” Murray said the bill ‘constitutes “a serious reflection upon the democratic process we are fighting to preserve” since it represents only “the views and personal interests of a handful of congressmen.” Earlier, Clinton Davidson of Jersey City, N, J. told the committee that 18,000,000 persons would be thrown out of work after the war unless a substantial amount of revenue collected under the bill is refunded to corporations when peace comes.

NAZIS EXEGUTE 104 IN JUGOSLAV CITY

LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—~Axis occupation authorities in Yugoslavia have executed 104 Jugoslavs in Zagreb and sent 300 others to concentration camps in reprisal for widespread sabotage in support of Gen. Draja- Mikhailovitch’s guerrilla forces, a Jugoslav i said today. The executions followed the declaration of a state of siege and a curfew inthe Zagreb area as result of increasing raids by patriots which “have killed many German and Italian soldiers. All persons were warned to re‘main in their homes between 11 p. m. and 5 a. m, under penalty of death. ~The Germans announced that additional reprisals including the razing of entire villages will be carried out unless “peace is restored '| immediately.” -The axis forces have destroyed numerous Jugoslav villages, including four in the Sarajevo dis-

trict leveled by air bombings.

CITY MAN IS NAMED TO POST AT CULVER

CULVER Ind. July 29 (U. P.).— Julius Ochs Adler II of New York City, son of Julius Oclis. Adler, general manager of the New York Times, and grandson of the founder of the Times, was named commander. of the naval school and regimental commander of the summer schools corps at Culver Military academy, it was announced today. Young Adler headed the promotion - list of officers for the 41st session of Culver summer schools. Lester C. Essign Jr. of Chicago, was commissioned captain to command the Black Horse squadron. D. Bartlett, Indianapolis, headed appointments in the woodcraft camp.

HUGE TOLL OF AXIS SHIPPING IS CLAIMED

man and Italian shipping captured, sunk or damaged from September, 1939, until June 30, 1942, totalled 6,178,681 tons, it was learned in official circles today. The figures were said not to include losses inflicted by the Russians, which the Brfitish estimated at ancther 750,000 tons. Also they do not include 44 German and Italian ships totalling 256,079 tons which have been tied up in Central and South American.ports. Nor do they include losses inflicted on Japanese shipping since ‘Dec. 7, 194i. °

STATE TO CONSIDER SPINK-ARMS PLAN

The Indiana securities commission

of reorganization for the Spink-

| Arms. Building Co. which operates the Spink-Arms hotel and the ad-

joining Blacherne apartments. It calls for a lease for an annual rental of $62,000 and the stipulation that the lessees spend at least $50,-

641000 in the first three years in a re-

modeling program. The hotel has

‘been in receivership since 1931.

FACES SUGAR PENALTY

NEW YORK, July 29 (U. P.).— Oscar L. Hausner, a soft drink manufacturer, faced a maximum penalty of two years imprisonment and a $20,00¢ fine today on a charge of having sold 30,000 pounds of sugar without getting ration cer-

liu

iikcelis from the two men who

James|.

LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—Ger-|

tomorrow will hear a proposed plan|

'‘Peace—or Ruin!’

Air Marshal A, T. Harris

ALLIES TO BOMB CITY AFTER CITY

British Air Marshal Warns Germans of Impending Storm by Air.

LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—Air/ Marshal Sir Arthur T. Harris warned the German people in a broadcast last night that British and American bombers would

“scourge the third reich from end to end” unless they overthrow the Nazi regime and make peace. Harris, chief of the Roya] Air Force bomber command, told the Germans that a whole American air fleet had just arrived in England, that an epic storm of destruction was about to break over their heads, and that “you have no chance.” Beside the brewing air offensive of annihilation against Germany, Harris said, the pulverizing assaults by more than 1000 R. A. F. planes on Cologne, Essen and Hamburg will pale into insignificance and city after city will be wiped off the map.

Object: ‘To End the War’

“Let the Nazis drag you down to disaster with them if you will,” he challenged the Germans. “That is for you to decide. “Soon we will be coming over every night, every day, in rain flood or snow—we and the Americans. “It is not for revenge—although we do not forget Warsaw, Belgrade Rotterdam, London, Plymouth and Coventry. We are bombing Germany city by city, and ever more terribly, in order to make it impossible for you to go on with the war. “That-is our- object. We shall pursue it remorselessly.”

CALLS FOR UTMOST RUSS AID

LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—The influential and ultra-conservative

London Times urged today that the allies at once give their utmost in

On Program of Grand Rapids Parley.

Times Special GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., July 29.

program here at the 91st Internae tional convention of the Disciples of Christ. The Rev. E. K. Higdon,

olis, an executive of the United

Christian Missionary society, was to have charge of Latin-American and India missionaries.

+ Dr, Robert M. Hopkins was to

preside over the annual meeting of the United Society this afternoon. - Dr. Pearcy to Speak Addresses scheduled for today were. to. .be given by William T. Pearcy, Indianapolis, treasurer of the board of church extension; A. PF, Wicks, advisory architect for the same board; the Rev. H. G. Haney, Indianapolis, field representative of the committee on war services, and Searle Bates, the United Soe ciety’s missionary to China, now serving as consultant on Far Easte. ern affairs for the foreign missions conference in New York city." The Rev. Kenneth B. - Seeley, Gary, and Mrs. C. O. Nease, Indian apolis, were to lead devotionais today. Dr. pastor of the ~ Central Christian church, Indianapolis, spoke on “The Christian Hope and Reality” in his presidential address last night bee

sented to the convention by the Rev. W. E. Moore, Bloomington, co-chairs: man for the session.

FDR Greets Convention

Greetings from President Roose= velt to the convention were a fea ture of the opening session. A twoe day pre-convention conference bythe board of managers of the United society was concluded yess terday with reports and speeches concerning emergency mission needs in America resulting from the war, the evacuation of the Japanese on the West coast and the outlook for Christian education. : A vote also was taken to begin a five-year anniversary program in 1944. It would continue until 1949, the centennial anniversary of the organization of the American Christian Missionary society.

11 BOOK DEALER HERE

FACES U. S. CHARGES

An Indianapolis book dealer, Jacob Dalinsky, 141 E. Washington st., will face federal court charges

complaint that he conspired to dise tribute lewd and obscene matter,

eral bureau of investigation agents here and waived a hearing before U.. S. Commissioner Howard 8S. Young. He was released under

aid to Russia.

STRAUSS SAYS:

The air is cooled

$1500 bond.

... and filtered .

tree from soot, dust and pollen .. ,

There is no humidity in it

no "clamminess"

® os a

All this sounds like publicity for a summer

resort and health resort.

speaking ot

It is... and we're

L. Strauss & Company! The air comes through a film of oil . . . all

floating particles are estopped.

It is grand

_and bracing air for those with sinus tendencies «+ » for those allergic to pollen . . . those who are subject to hay fever and rose fever. The air is kept at a pleasant degree of

difference with the the transition from without shock.

POE

Drop in some time .

outside temperatures , 4 . one to the other is done

. any time . ,. and’

get filled up with this ary, invigorating,

stimulating air.

+ + +

And should you be moved by the spirit to buy . . ¢ you'll find the wearables and the. values . . . as pleasant as the air'you breathe!

All Three Sales Floors Are Air-Conditioned.

L STRAUSS & CO. Nc. THE MAN'S STOR

—Several Indiana churchmen were scheduled to take part in today’

William A. Shullenberger;

fore 2000 delegates. He was pres

He was arrested yesterday by fed-

x

g

in ‘New York in connection with a7 ©