Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1946 — Page 1

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FORECAST: Fair and Moderately cold tonight,

he Indianapolis Ti

Tomorrow increasing cloudiness and warmer.

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SCRIPPS = HOWARD

DEMOCRATS T0 SEEK SLATE OF CIVIC LEADERS

Merged Factions Hope to Pick Strong Ticket In Primary.

By NOBLE REED The Marion county Democratic organization is undergoing the most complete “faceelifting” operation that has been attempted since it began losing -out in elections here in 1942. Prominent men never before identified with the high command of the party are’ being sought for leadership on the docal ticket this fall, This is being undertaken through what appears to be a merger of three factions of the old party lineups, accomplished in a series of conferences during the last two weeks when heads of all factions agreed to avoid any serious factional battles in the primary. Under the leadership of James L. Beattey, county chairman, the three factions outlined a policy under which they plan to slate, for primary nominations, several prominent men known for their civic leadership rather than their political record with the party.

Seek Best Ticket

“Our main aim in this primary is to present to the voters the best ticket of candidates the party has had in several] years,” Wir, Beattey said, Party leaders have been contacting several men ‘not previously identified with the party's leadership in an effort to present a new front in the fall election. The names of most of the prospective candidates have not been divulged, Party leaders said they wouldn't list the candidates until they have agreed to enter their names in the primary, The organization slate is not expected to be known until a few days before the deadline for filing candidacies April 8.

Chairmanship .Contest

The only factional fight appearing in the at present is revolving around the election of a new central committee chairman on May 11, Chairman Beattey is expected to step down from the chairmanship after the primary due to the pressure of his private law practice. In this contest, the three party factions are identified. One is led -by Frank McKinney, David M. Lewis, Henry O. Goett and Municipal Court Judge Joseph Howard. Another faction has been identified as being led by James Cunningham, Center township assessor and John McNelis, former Municipal “court judge. The third faction has been known as the Dewey Myers-Russell Dean group, The only name mentioned thus far in the party chairmanship race fs Mr. McNelis who has said he does, pot intend to be a candidate for any office this year,

Quiz Woolridge In Stranglings

State police were to grill Joseph L. Woolridge, confessed Bloomington, Ind., murderer, at the Indiana Reformatory, at 3 p. m, concerning unsolved stranglings of four Ft. Wayne women in 1944 and "45. State Police Detective Price Cox of the Connersville post will conduct the questioning for both state police and Ft. Wayne authorities. Woolridge’s attorney, Lawrence Shaw of Indianapolis, planned to be present for the questioning. Woolridge is reported to have been in Ft. Wayne at the time of the unsolved murders there. The grand jury in Bloomington will resume hearing prosecutor's evidence Tuesday morning, The jury was adjourned over the week-end yesterday by Circuit Judge Q. Austin East after more than a dozen witnesses were heard in the second day of its consideration of charges against Woolridge, 29-year-old janitor who confessed the quarry slayings of Mrs. Phyllis Coleman and Russell E. Koontz and later re-

pudiated his confession.

emer enorme TRUMAN ON CRUISE

WASHINGTON, March 9 (U, P.). —President Truman was on another of "his week-end Potomac cruises today. * The President went ‘aboard his yacht, the Williamsburg, yesterday and will return to the White House Sunday evening.

TIMES INDEX

Amusements. 5|Ruth Millett , 8 oo oon nals were at Nat Barrows. 9|Mrs, Milner., 4 “Stake this af 1 Building .....6-7| Movies ...... 5 Stake this afternoon in fos Carnival sane 10| Obituaries 3 semi-final centers over Churches .... 4|Radio ....... 14 Indians, . Classified ..12-13 | Reflections .. 10 ® Close to 15,000 fans were Comics vine ire 14 Mrs. Roosevelt 9 " expected to jam Butler ®rossword ... 6{Science ...... 9 fieldhouse for the local Editorials ..., 10/Sports ........ 8 meet. Other tourneys were Poin es D Siate Desils. 2 in, progress at Bloomington, . oe fayette and Muncie. Don Hoover . 10|Bob Stranahan 8 | ; . In Indpls. ... 3 Washin . 10 ~ For Details and Tourney y Indpls., 9 (Women's .... 11 Dope, Turn to Page 8.

Lila

VOLUME 56—NUMBER 312

New Cardinal Dies

John Joseph Cardinal Glennon

DEATH FOLLOWS TRIP TO ROME

John Joseph Glennon of St. Louis Was 83.

DUBLIN, March 9 (U. P.).—John Joseph Cardinal Glennon of St. Louis, 83, died at the home of President Sean O'Kelly today, just 15 days after Pope Pius XII gave him the ceremonial red hat as a prince of the Roman Catholic church. Cardinal Glennon succumbed peacefully at 8:51 a, m. (1:51 a. m. Indianapolis time) after a farewell visit with his Irish relatives last

VATICAN CITY, March 9 (U. P.).—Pope Pius dispaiched a message “of personal condolence to the St. Louis arch-diocese today when he received word of . the death of Joseph Cardinal Glennon. A solemn funeral mass will be celebrated in the Basilica of St. Clement, Cardinal Glennon’s titular church. The Pope was deeply grieved by the death of Cardinal Glennon. They were

friends of long standing. The pontiff was his guest in St. Louis in 1936.

night. He was anointed and given a ‘papal benediction, received by cable from Rome, a few hours before his death. He was the oldest ‘of the 32 new Cardinals elevated at the recent consistory in Rome, and the first to die. Msgr. John Cody of St. Louis, his personal secretary, announced that the cardinal had spent a quiet night despite the complications of lung congestion and uremia in his aged body. At 8 a. m. his breathing became difficult, and he died quietly less than an hour later, Wearied by Trip Wearied by the strenuous religious pageantry at the Vatican and the effects of his long flight from the Uniwed States, the cardinal was stricken with a cold when he stopped off in Dublin on Monday for a two-day visit en route home, The cardinal’s body will be returned to the United States. It was understood that it will be interred in a special crypt which had been constructed in St. Louis Cathedral for his final resting place, At the cardinal’s bedside when he died were President and, Mrs. O'Kelly; the cardinal’s nephew, the Rev. Philip O'Connell; his physician, Commodore Alphonse Mc-

(Continued on Page 2—Column 6)

KILGORE WILL GIVE JACKSON DAY TALK

West Virginia “Senator to Speak Here March 23.

West Virginia will be the Jackson day dinner speaker March 23 in the Claypool hotel, State Democgatic Chairman Fred F. Bays announced today. Meanwhile, Executive Chairman Pleas Greenlee, who is in charge of the annual Democratic affair, gave a boost to the current fund-raising campaign to support the party's candidates in the fall election by announcing 11 district chairmen who will work with him, Senator Kilgore, who was a leader in the fight against compulsory manpower legislation, is recognized as an authority on monopolies and cartels, A lawyer by profession, he is a former judge.

A strong . administration sup-

(Continued on Page 2—Column 2)

Net Teams in Semi-Finals

® Four berths in-next Sat« urday’s state high school

Senator Harley M. Kilgore of

BRICKS HURLED. IN LOUISVILLE TRANSIT TIEUP|

Service Will Halt at Dark To Avoid Further Violence.

By UNITED PRESS - Public transportation service will cease opergtion in Louisville, Ky., again today between 6 and 6:30 p. m. to prevent violence, General Manager Frank Miller of the Louisville Railway Co. said. He reported that at least two persons had been injured seriously during outbreaks of strike violence today. The strike began yesterday. Mr. Miller and city police said Mrs. Robert Logan, 25, was injured when a brick was thrown through a trolley window. Bus Driver John Green received three broken ribs when hit by a brick, police added. They said a third person was reported hurt but no name was available. Mr. Miller said property damage had occurred throughout the city. He charged that bricks had been thrown through trolley and bus windows several times and that several railway company employees had been hit. Two Disputes Settled Meanwhile the nation’s labor troubles Were eased today with settlement of the 65-day-old Western Electric strike and announcement of a tentative wage agreement between the C. I. O. United Aufomobile Workers and the Nash-Kelvinator Corp. In addition, the threat of an immediate strike against major railroads had been removed. The Western Electric strike was settled last night when the Western Electric Employees association accepted an 182 per cent general wage increase, amounting to 17.6 cents per hour. The settlement ended the longest strike in telephone history. The major labor developments: ONE: Fred Smith, president of the strike-harrassed Dixie Greyhound bus lines said he would ask Governor Jim McCord of Tennessee for “protection for the traveling

two busses last night near Jackson, Tenn. One man Was seriously wounded. TWO: Nash-Kelvinator Corp. and the U. A. W.-C. I. O. announced jointly a tentative wage settlement giving 8000 production workers an 18%-cent hourly increase. The agreement will be submitted to workers at Milwaukee and Kenosha, Wis., plants for ratification. THREE: The two national presidents of the Brotherhood of Loco-

(Continued on Page 2—Column 3)

Fickle Changes In Weather Seen

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

a.m: ,...28 10a. m... 30 7a. m, ...28 lla m.,. 33 8am... 28 12 (Noon) 35 9a vie 8 1p. m... 36

TODAY'S WEATHER forecast must have been issued by the “weatherlady.” It is as changeable as the traditional woman's mind. Today first was scheduled to be cloudy and colder. The colder was all right but the sun came ‘out. ‘Tonight will “be fair and moderately cold. Tomorrow first was forecast as being fair and warmer. You guessed it .'. . now it has been changed to increasing cloudiness and warmer, o Meanwhile the nation is going through pretty much the same thing. Eight persons were dead today in southern Wisconsin's heaviest snowstorm of the season, . The storm struck late yesterday after moving on high winds through the Mississippi valley | and Great Lakes regions, inches of snow fell in Milwaukee

public” after shots were fired into

and nine in Madison. Yesterday's high winds, which reached a top speed of 54 m. p. h. at Chicago, sent plunging down as snow accompanied it. Twelve inches of snow blanketed Dubuque, Iowa.

SATURDAY, MARCH 9, 1946

Bri

In

Of Breaki

Entered as Becond-Class Matter at Postoffice

dianapolis 9, Ind, Issued daily except Sunday

WASHINGTON:

WASHINGTON, March council meeting in New York as London meeting—or more Look for United States Russia this time, instead of

Eisenhower said recently our army Gen. Eaker says we haven't ev for major military mission, And inability of this country to have lon bomb.

side with us—have one “big stick”

made legal only by recognition in pe Russia, of course, might refuse

United Nations.

isters’ deputies, meeting in London,

has not been completed. » = .

UNITED NATIONS military sta whén security council and assembl

= MORE CLOTHES EXPECTED SOON

But Prices Will Be Higher Under OPA Ruling.

WASHINGTON, March 9 U. PJ). _Clothes-needy Americans were told today that more men's shirts and shorts and women’s and children’s cotton dress should be on the

A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

9.—United Nations security

Realists here worry about how seriously we'll be taken.

and balances set up by constitution. And we—and British, French and any other nations who might

Russia has Kuriles, other Pacific real estate, and she wants even more in Europe, the Mediterranean,

—can say “no” at peace conference, so she would alienate herself even more from rest of world,and from

Peace conference was scheduled to start in Paris in May, but it will be postponed, maybe until August or September.

details of Italian ‘treaty, among other things, that preparatory work

(Continued on Page 2—Column 4)

March 21 will be as stormy S80. to carry the ball against Britain. Gen. is less effective now than in 1940. en one air force squadron left fit recent articles have pointed owut

g-term foreign polféy under checks But, of course, we still have the

we might use against Russia,

Middle East. Her claims can be ace treaty. We-—and other nations if sufficiently irritated. to sign peace treaty, but by doing

Foreign minhave been so slow in working out

EJ ® »

ff committee, which met in London y were in session there, will meet

Timken Offering

Loan to Strikers

CANTON, O,, March 8 (U, P), —Timken Roller Bearing Co. today offered to loan $25 to each of its 14,000 striking employees. Timken officials said the offer; to be interest-free, was “inspired

PRICE FIVE CENTS

ish Deny Russ Charge g Bulgar Pact

REDS BARRED AS OFFICERS INU. S. ARMY

War Department Acts to Protect Atom and Radar Secrets.

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, March 9. —American Communists were barred today by the war department from holding commissions or undertaking any of the army's “sensitive” responsibilities, Radar and atomic energy, especially, will be off bounds. The new policy was announced last night under pressure of inquiry. The department's re-exam-ination of its policy relating to disaffected or subversive soldiers apparently coincided with discovery in Canada of Soviet Union espionage operations, Duties in connection with secret or confidential codes also. . were specifically barred to soldiers either disaffected or subversive. The department defined subversive personnel as any engaged in activities of any sort directed against the nation’s military security. Disaffected soldiers are those who lack loyalty to the government and Constitution of the United States. Limitations Defined The department's announcement did not mention Communists. A department ‘spokesman said, however, that membership in the Com-

by the knowledge that many of our employees, who have been prevented from working for 12 weeks by two major strikes in the past six months, are in need of | funds.” The company said the loans,

market soon but that prices would |

The increase was expected to fol-| low OPA’s action “in raising ceiling prices on nearly all cotton textiles and yarns by 5 to 10 per sont} and granting a 5 per cent “incentive” price increase to manufac- | turers of scarce cotton clothing.

Mean More Shirts A large part of the increase will be passed on to the consumer but | OPA said it should mean more shirts, shorts, pajamas, dresses, work clothing and other hard-to-| get apparel within three to four | months. The action was designed to carry | out the program disclosed to con- | gress two weeks ago by former OPA

involved

clothing items should be boosted | 40 to 50 per cent.

Additional Cost

OPA said much of the increases had to be passed on, to the consumer because previous textile price hikes had used up the ability of manufacturers and’ distributors to absorb further increases. " The actual additional cost to the purchaser probably will be about 10 cents for an inexpensive shirt and 10 or 15 cents on a dress..The order also was expected to increase the supply of medium priced shirts | and low- "price house dresses.

| PLATE TRAPS TONGUE

| BERKELEY, Cal, March 9 (U. {P.).—~When Mrs, Gertrude Gumbs’ |

{under the lower plate of her false | |teeth she grabbed for the telephone | |and managed to voice a feeble | “help” to the police department.

| tongue with what he said was a| | “simple twist of the wrist.” =

| bat,

| Russians the mercury | Patrolman A. G. Lyman responded | Semnan district of northeast Iran | |and quickly Juntrapped Mrs. Gumbs’|in accordance with their as vee informa- |

extended to the five Ohio Timken plants, would be available Mon-

be somewhat higher, | day

‘BAT-BOMB" HELPED |

U.S. BEAT JAP NAVY.

Radar Guided We: Weapon Used, By Naval Planes.

NEW YORK, March 9 —The bat, bomb, was disclosed by the navy today as one of the secret weapons used in defeating the Japanese navy. The 200-pound bomb, when re-

(U. PJ.¢

Chief Chester Bowles who said it|leased from an airplane, unerrihgly | “sweetening up” textile sped to its target, no matter how | mills. He said production of scarce devious was the enemy's maneuv-| (had been forced to adopt a new

ering.

The bat was perfected late in|

a radar guided robot-|

munist party would be considered as a disqualification for the sensi-

Pacific Training Is Tightened Up

TOKYO, March 9 (U, P.) ~The U. 8. army Pacific air force is “tightening up” {ts on-the-spot training program “in earnest.” Aerial target practice and aire plane identification classes are being resumed and previously inactivated planes are being rearmed, it was learned today. Lt. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, deputy commander of the Pacific alr force, said the training program, which includes classwork in identification of Russian, Brit. ish and othér types of planes, is part of a “normal overall traine ing program.”

RUSSIA WANTS FRANCO USTED:

‘Quite Inadequate.’

MOSCOW, March 9 (U, P)— The newspuper Pravda said today

that the Anglo-American-French statement on Spain was “quite inadequate, since it leaves open

the question of liquidation of the Fascist regime.” Russia proposed ‘at the Potsdam conference last summer that the Big Three recommend that the United Nations break off relations with the Franco regime and help the Spanish people establish a democratic government, Pravda disclosed. The Communist party organ found the recent three-power statement on Spain a “certain step forward from the standpoint of condemnation of the Franco regime,” but still not going ..far enough. Pravda said the Soviet delegation's proposal at Potsdam was

| tive duties covered by the new

| policy. {| It is possible, also,

based on three arguments—that the | Franco regime seized power as 3

DEFENDU. S.AS TAKING PROPER STAND IN NOTE

Spokesman Says Policies

0f Two Countries Are Parallel.

LONDON,

infringed the Moscow

The British spokesman said that

Britain was fully informed on all U 3-Power Statement Termed| there 1 nothing to indicate that the American representative had gone beyond a proper position.”

. 8. moves in Bulgaria and that

He said that American and Brit

ish policy in Bulgaria was parallel, The Russians contended that the American representations to Bule garia on reorganization of the gove ernment exceeded the scope of the tri-power Moscow decision.

The foreign office spokesman cons’ tended that negotiations for the broadening of the Bulgarian gove

‘ernment to include two opposition

leaders—in line with the Moscow agreement—had completely broken down. Britain in Accord

He attributed the breakdown to Bulgarian government refusal to meet opposition demands for free elections, free speech and a guarantee that two key cabinet posts would not be given to Communists.’ The spokesman said that the British representative in Sofia, Richard B. Tollinton, had informed Bulgaria that Britain in ais. itself with the Unit

that former result of axis intervention; that the |randum of pai

{party membership would be con-| spanish people ha¥ demonstrated |the Soviet protest was Boge ot

|strued as disqualifying army per‘sonnel, | ~ The new policy has been trans{mitted to all interior and overseas | commanders. They will be respon-

WASHINGTON, March 9 (U. P.).—Chairman John 8, Wood (D. Ga.) said teday that his house un-American activities committee needed a bigger staff to push its investigation into the alleged “atom bomb” activities of Soviet agents,

{sible for making it work, Disquali- | fied soldiers will not be permitted | {to attend officer candidate schools [nor to take aviation training. They

{tion with information, education or | orientation of troops.

Editor Relieved Belief that the war department

| policy developed rapidly here after | two members of the staff of the

their opposition to Franco and their | desire for restoration of democracy; land’ that the Franco | threatened | and Latin America. “There is hardly a doubt,” Pravda | said editorially, “that acceptance of | | the Soviet proposal could have! aided greafly the liquidation of the tottering Franco regime, but these | proposals were not accepted. “Condemnatory declarations have not brought & a change in change In Spain.” |

3 HURT IN TRAFFIC HERE, 1 CRITICALLY

Attica Man | Killed as Car Sideswipes Truck. Three local residents were injured |

in accidents here last night and an Attica mln ‘was killed in an auto-

the war, and “did not see service Tokyo edition of Stars and Stripes | mobile-truck crash near his home,

in the Pacific until the spring of p although thousands were ss-produced by the Western Electric Co. the announcement said,

The glide-bomb carried its own radar equipment and when aimed at the target piloted itself with no further help from the mother ship. One incident proving the effectiveness of the missile was released by the navy. A navy bomber, equipped with a sighted some. Japanese deapproached them; and the missile well out of the ship's anti-aircraft

stroyers, launched range of

The bat sped to the target and

Five (tongue mysteriously became trapped blew the bow off of ore destroyer.

"REDS QUIT IRAN AREA TEHRAN, March 9 (U. P.).—The have evacuated the |

intention, according to

{were relieved after “negative’; | loyalty check. They were T. 3a Gr. Kenneth L.| Pettus; Chicago, managing editor of the paper, and T. 5th Gr, Ber-

nard - Rubin, Waterbury, Conn,

a

subsequently were relieved.

|transfer of Pettus and Rubin, There has been more than a year of wrangling between the war department and various members of the house of representatives. on the subject of Communists in the service. Members of the house commit-

(Continued on Page 2-~Column 1)

MURDER VICTIM'S

tion brought by-a traveler today. '

Brr! Educators Ready for Summer Sessions

Rushing the season. . + » High school principals doff their straw “skimmers” as they get in the swing of warm weathér preparing for summer school sessions, They are (left to right) Fred Gorman, Technical high school; Edgar Stahl, Broad Ripple high 1school; Julian Coleman, Crispus Attucks high

school; Wilbur 8. Barnhart, Man

Voorhees, Shortridge high school, a4 Slate Clarence Clayton, Howe high school. Hargrave, Washington high scheok

itidia

ual high school; Emmett A. Rice, Sessions will open or iL .

.

summer school head; Ted VanNof present was. Ellis B,

damaging his

Attacked Photographer at Bloomington Funeral.

| BLOOMINGTON, Ind. March (U. P.).~Rufus Koontz, brother of one of the victims of the stone] [quarry love tryst slayings, paid a $1 [fine and costs today for attacking |a Chicago photographer at the slain! | man’s funeral Koontz pleaded guilty to a charge of assault and battery in the peace | |court of George Branam. Charges | [were filed by Ed Feeney, Bhotog- | | rapher for the Chicago Tribune, | who was knocked down by Koontz | last Monday in a public road in front of the Clear Creek Christian church, | Koontz attacked Feeney as reins | |tives of the slain Russell E. Koontz | left the church after his funeral | Monday. In court, Koontz apologized to | Feeney and paid—him $5 to repair | damage to his camera. He told Feeney hé was “under a great strain” and had no intention of injuring the photographer or

| Herschel Keller, | killed instantly swiped a truck. Della Hamilton, 80, of 1456% Hudson st., is in critical condition ! at City hospital after being struck |

30, Attica, was as his car side-

7th st.

The Communist press in. the Buford J. Chamberlain, 32, of 832 United States has been notably Fayette st.” is in serious condition |angry in its denunciations of the 3! the Veterans hospital with a

possible skull fracture. He was! struck by a car as he crossed at the | intersection of Hanson ave. and! New York st. A Red Cab driver, Luther Smith, | 43, of 1255 Union st. is in Method- | ist hospital suffering face arid hand | Injuries. He was hurt when he] crashed into an underpass support at E. Washington st, and the Belt! railroad. He had swerved to avoid! [ hitting a pedestrian.

Without replying to the American note requesting withdrawal of So~

regime | viet troops from Iran, Russia took the peace of Europe the counter-offensive with charges

{that the United States is violating | the agreement reached by the Big | Three foreign ministers in Moscow {about Bulgaria. The Russian note, delivered in Washington on Thursday and [broadcast ' by Radio Moscow last ‘night, was a sharply worded rebuke for what the Russians said was American support of Bulgarian op= position leaders in defiance of the Moscow decisions about reconstruc|tion of the Bulgarian government. Say He ‘Incited” Opposition Russia centered her anger on Maynard B. Barnes, the U. 8. po~ litical representative in Sofia, who was accused of “systematically ine citing” the Bulgarian opposition leaders to demand conditions for |their participation in the govern ment which weren't included in the Moscow agreement, The new Soviet-American dis~ pute centered around the role to be played by two opposition leaders who, according to the Moscow ane | nouncement, would be added to the | Bulgarian government controlled by the left-wing Fatherland front. The United States on Feb. 23

reporter, Four other staff members |} a car at Northwestern ave. and | handed an aide memoire to Bulrepresentative in

garian political Washington, urging inclusion of two opposition leaders on a basis , mutually acceptable to them and to .the Bulgarian government, The Russian note said violated the Moscow agreement,

REPORT 38 KILLED

BOLTON, England, March 9 (U, P.).—A wall collapsed beneath the

this

| main grandstand at Burnden park

during a soccer game today and preliminary reports said at least 38 persons were killed,

Will Mirac

Once upon a time there was a

|

[known enchantment and could not! be roused, Her worried parents | brought her to Camelot, jy ORavAASIR today was another little girl, 4-year-old Joyce Utt. She became drowsy and then unconscious Thursday afternoon at | her home in Newcastle. Her worried parents, Mr. and { Mrs. Marion Utt, brought her to the Riley children’s hoSpital here, where - sometimes modern miracles as.good as any of those in the legends can be performed. Until this morning, though, the wise men there had not solved her mysterious drowsiness. They woke

| her for, a time yesterday afternoon, |

Ibut ghe’ went to sleep again. | They are tending now to discount

(the possibility that she swallowed

| sleeping tablets. They are making further tests. They are noncommittal so far,

BROTHER PAYS FINE Another Princess Sleeps—

le Awake Her?

pital—stronger that the at Camelot many, many years ago.

q

| Convenience to Schools Is an Asset to Any Home

grade schools in the city, School 60, and both Tudor Hall and Shortridge, that is the ultimate in desirability for any family with growing children “ee

sleepi work; out; social - jooweri A

plete nL: to

Times Claifid Ads ©

ray

a ER sy

» March 9 (U. P.) .—A foreign office spokes man denied today that either the United States or Britain had conference decision on Bul-

garia as charged by the Russian protest to the United States,

magie

g little princess who fell under an un-| which woke the sleeping princess

When it is near one of the finest

x HEE ‘