German Propaganda Office flays Press Of 'AMERICANS WIN ALL STAR GAME Sluggers in Junior Major Bat Out Victory After Hubbell Retires. POLO GROUNDS, New York, W Coming from behind with a batting attack that blasted Lon Warneke off the rrtjund and also drove Van' Mungo td" cover, the American League , all-stars whipped the Nations today, 9 to 7, for their second straight tri umph. A crowd of 52,000 fans j saw Joe Cronin s crew clinch the game with a six-run rally in the fifth, after which young Mel Harder, Cleveland righthander, held the Nationals incomplete subjection. Harder, relieving Lefty Gomez and Red Ruffing, Yankee pitching aces who yielded six runs in the first five innings, held the Nationals to one solitary hit for the remainder of the game, as he completely befuddled the big hitters rushed intlj the fray by Manager Bill Terry. Carl Hubbell, ace southpaw of the Giants, blanked the Americans for the first three innings, with a thrilling exhibition while his mates were climbing on Medwick but Warneke and Mungo were unable to check the big bats of their rivals. FIRST INNING smashed a drive pa?t Frisch and ran to second when Wally Berger fumbled the tall. Manush walked. Ruth farmed on a low-treaking curve without lifting his bat from his shoulder. Lou Gehrig swung and Missed the third strike. The runners were in motion and Gehringer beat Hartnett's throw to Traynor at third base on a close p ay. Manush advanced to sec-oi d. The Nationals kicked at the decision. Foxx also fanned. No runs, one hit, one error, two left. Nationals Frisch smashed the second pitched ball high into the upper right field stands 'for a home run. Traynor was thrown out on a hard-hit grounder, Gehringer to Gehrig. Medwick fanned and Cuyler bounced out, Cronin . to Gehrig. One run, one hit, no errors, none left. SECOND INNING A mericans Al Simmons, and Cronin each took three hearty swings, missing each time by ridiculous mar-frns, as Hubbell mixed his screw ball with a fast curve. Bill Dickey finally broke the spell, with the count two and two, by banging a curve over Jackson's head for a single. Gomez also fanned, making Hubbell's fcixth strike-tout victim in two innings. No runs, one hit, no errois, oni left. Nationals . - Berger was a strike-out victim as he missed two swings at Gomez's fast balls. Terry received an ovation as he stepped to the plate out Bill's best was a h;gh fly to Simmons behind second bam.. Jacksot. .swung -nd missed the ! third strike, a low fast ball. I No runs, no hits, m errors, j none left. THIRD INNING Americans i Cuyler made a beautiful catch of Gehringer's drive. Manush rolled out, Frisch to .Terry- The crowd gave Ruth another noisy reception. The Babe finally vslked as Hubbell took no chances and pitched everything inside to the Yankee veteran. Gehrig lined out to Cuyler. No no hits, no errors, ALL STAR BOX SCORE NATIONALS AB It H O A E Frisch, 2b 3 3 2 0 zVV. Herman, 2b 2 0 1 0 Traynor, 3b 5 2 2 1 Medwick, If 2 110 Klein, If 3 0 11 Cuyler, rf 2 0 0 2 Ott, rf 2 0 0 0 Berger, cf 2 0 0 0 P. Waner, cf 2 0 0 1 Terry, lb 3 0 14 Jackson, sg 2 0 0 0 Vaughan, gg 2 0 0 4 Hartnett, c 2 0 0 9 Lopez, c 2 0 0 5 Hubbell, p 0 0 0 0 Warneke, p 0 0 0 0 Mungo, p 0 0 0 0 zzMartin 0 10 0 J. Dean, p 10 0 0 Frankhouse, p 10 0 0 1 0 ? n o 0 o n (i 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 36 7 8 27 5 1 z Batted for Hubbell in 3rd ana played second for Frisch later. zz Batted for Mungo in fifth. AMERICANS AB R H O A E Gehringer,"2b 3 0 2 2 1 0 Manush, If 2 0 0 0 0 0 Ruffing, p 10 10 0 0 Harder, p 2 0 0 1 0 0 Ruth, rf 2 1 0 0 0 0 i Chapman, rf 2 0 10 10 Gehrig, lb 4 1 0 U 1 1 Foxx, 3b 5 12 12 0 Simmons, cf-If 5 3 3 3 0 0 Cronin, ss 5 1 2 2 8 0 Dickef c 2 114 0 0 Cochrane, c 10 0 110 Gomez, p 1 0 0 0 0 0 I Averill, cf 4 12 10 0 West, cf 0 0 0 1 0 0 TOTALS By innings; America ng Nationals - 39 9 14 27 14 1 000 261 0009 103 030S000 7 Runs batted ip Frisch, Med- I wick 3, Cronin 2, Averill 3. Foxx, himmons. Ruffing 2, Traynor, Klein. Two base hits Simmons, Averill, Cronin, Foxx, W. Herman. Three base hits Averill, Chapman. Home runs Medwick, Frisch. Stolen bases Gehringer, Manush, Traynor, Ott Double play LVz and Vaughan. Left on bases American 12; National 5. Bases on balls Off Hubbell 2; Gomez 1; Warneke 3; Mungo 2; Kutiini:. 1; Harder 1; J. Dean 1 i rankhouse 1. Struck out Byh't, to right, scoring Frisch Hubbell 6; Gomez 3; Warneke 1; Mungo 1; Harder 2; J. Dean 4. Hits Off Hubbell 2 in 3 innings: li'arneke 3 in 1 (nona out in fifth); Mungo 4 in 1 ; J. Dean 5 in 3; Frankhouse none in one; Gomez 3 in3j Ruffing 4 in 1 (none out in fifth); HSrder 1 in 5. Winning pitcher Harder. Losing pitcher Mungo. Umpires Pfirman, Stark (National); Ow- er.a and Moriarty, (American)-Time of game 2.44. the first pitch to Croniti. Frisch walked. On the hit and run play;- Pie Traynor bounced a single over second base. Frisch raced to third. Joe Medwick took a toehold and walloped a curve into the upper left field stands, scoring Frisch and Traynor ahead of him and giving the Nationals a four-run lead off the American league's premier pitcher. Cuyler lined to Ruth. Three runs, two hits, no errors, none left. FOURTH INNING Americans Lon Warneke of the Cubs : wpnt. tn Vio ihnv fr. a Mo. ionals. Foxx was his firs, victim th. home run king being retired on a grounder, Jackson to Terry. Simmons got only two bases on a drive that hit the left field wall on the fly,- 414 feet from the plate. Cronin slashed a single down the left field line, scoring Simmons. Dickey fanned. Earl Averill, Cleveland outfielder, batted for Gomez and tripled to the bullpen in deep right field, scoring Cronin. It was the longest hit of the game thus far. Gehringer walked but Manush lifted a high foul to Traynor. fcenterfield while Simmons mov- d ovr to cf thereby elimina tii.g Manush from the American lineup. , Hartnett grounded out, Foxx to Gehrig. No runs, one hit, no errors, cne left. FIFTH INNING Americans-Ruth took two called strikes, protesting loudly and asking Um- 0 ' p're Pf irman to dust off the 0 ' plate. The count reached two 0 : and three and the Babe then 0 i walked on a fourth ball, low d'nrH nntaiHo fioVirio- .U ult r ' ............. .6 o l ed Van Mungo big Bro E ! and e baseball Vlt l?!l.J5f..,7l?ttnb wlU bS discussed at. ; lyn righthander, was called to ! the rescue and Dizzy Dean sent j to the bullpen. foxx lashed the first pitch to him for a long single, scoring Ruth and sending Gehrig to third. Simmons scartched a hit to Jackson, in deep short, scoring Gehrig with the tying run. Cronin popped to Hartnett. 0 ' With only one out- Averill slash ed a double down the rightfield l.re, scoring Foxx and Simmons, v hile Dickey pulled up at third. Gehringer was purposely pas-yji, filling the bases again. Ruffing cracked a single between Traynor and Jackson, scoring Dickey and Averill with the fifth end sixth runs of the inning. Gehringer stopped at second. Ruth bounsced out, Terry unassisted, advancing Gehringer to third and Ruffing to second. Gehrig fanned to end the big ral- Six runs, four hits, no errors, two left. National 1 Ben Chapman went to right field for the Americans, replacing Ruth. The game -being at the midway point, the scenes were shifted, with the umpires changing assignments. Pepper Martin of the Cardinals batted for Mungo and walked. Frisch drove a single over Cronin's head and Martin galloped to third. Traynor scratched a hit off Gehringer's glove, scoring Mar tin. Frisch halted at second. Chuck Klein of the Cubs batted for Medwick and slashed a Traynor stopped at second. Mel Ott, Giant outfielder, batted for Cuyler. Ruffing was replaced by Melj,ew changes Made In Faculty Harder, young right hander of Clf eland Indians, Ott lashed a line drive to Chapman, who dropped the ball but recovered in time to force out Klein at second base, Cronin taking the ball for the put-out. Traynor dashed to third and Ott was on first. Paul and Ott was on 11;."u' Wer of Pirates batted for , , . ! " "Tj 7 . in Tir situck oui out raju"! Dr. M. L. Batson, superintend- 7 7 T j Police headquarters. ar.d Ott reached second safely Uf the institute, did not Tec-! S"nday Semce an Car'y date" ! Public discussion of the Pro-for a stolen base, on a close de- j oalmend a compeUt faCulty for T . Li tr j. tii i tcstant church strife had been cls;o11, , , . i - The play was scored as a double steal, with Traynor also Kitting credit lor sieanng nume, mtuh - it was largely unintentional on his part. Terry walked and Arky Vaughan, Pirate shortstop, batted for Jackson. VaugKah forced Terry, Cronin to Gehringer. . Three runs, three hits, no errors, two left Sixth Inning, Americans Dean went in the box for the Nationals, Klein in left field. Paul Waner in center and Ott in right Vaughan took over the shortstop position and At' Lopez went behind the bat. Foxx fanned, but Simmons got all the way to second when Frisch lost Al's Texas Leaguer in short right. Cronin clouted a double down the left field line, scoring Simmons. Dickey walked, and Cochrane, Detroit manager and backstop, went in to run for him. Dean was fast but .wild and heaved three straight balls at Averill, who then took two strikes and swung at a Chamber Commerce - Will Meet Tonight The regular monthly meeting of the Greenwood Chamber of Commerce will be held tonight at 8 o'clock in the rooms of the organizatiDn at the new City Hall. The prospect of securing a new industry for Greenwood will be up for discussion, and report from a special committee on the meat curing plant will be received. n h nrnnnca1 cunmmmn. yvtI the meeting. COTTON DINNER AGREEMENT OFF All Efforts of Administration To Make Marketing Agreement Abandoned WASHINGTON (JP) The administration formally abandoned today all efforts to institute a cotton ginning marketing agreement, saying the ginners who esk for the agreement had insis- i.,a , -; J.UC .mi.cv...s was proposed by the ginners in an earnest effort to correct some of the ills of the industry," ssid Cully A. Cobb, cotton section chief. "The administration finds itself unable to sanction and enforce fixed rates for ginning services, and as the industry felt this was a primary requirement f jr the successful operation of the agreement, we have but one alternative that is, to discontinue our present efforts to effect an agreement." Farm administration officials said ginners had evidenced "widespread unwillingness" to accept the proposed agreement, m a series of hearings through the cotton belt, the' last of which was htld at Oklohamo City July 2. STATEBOARD MAKES CHANGES At State Blind Institute JACKSON, Miss. ?) Mrs. J. C. McGee was elected principal of the school at the state blind institute in Jackson suc ceeding Prof. E. E. Allen, and i a few changes were made in the ' faculty of the institution at the JJ is'.-ation held in Governor Con- t3 OWUll iiiva 111 uwn-iuwi. Iner's office here yesterday. 1 the school, but said he would . remami recommendations at meeting next month , Cnly ather changes made by , board were &t thg deaf jnsti tute, where Mrs. Ora Barr was made matron for girls succeeding Mre. McLemore, on recommendation of Dr. J. H. Stone,' superintendent. All superintendents of the 11 institutions controlled by, the board were called in for personal recommendations, but no changes were recommended at any of the other places. Both Dr. Stone and Dr. Batson were re-e'ected at the June meeting of the board. Business reports were made by all institutions, and A. G. Jones, business manager for the board, announced that all are operating within their budgets and making fine financial showing. - Chairman Alf H. Danzler of the board was unable to attend the meeting, cue to illness in his family and Vice Chairman Sim F. King of Pelahatchie presided over the session. GANGSTER GUNS AT KANSAS CITY CUT DOWN LAZIA Democratic Political Leader Shot In Front of Hotel KANSAS CITY UP) Gane ster guns blazed out again today I ts f: 1 I. in aansas Vity in au umuuau that brought down John Lazia, North Side democratic political uuuutai loniav witli wnnnrfi which TT1V r, fofoi The lieutenant of T. J. (Big Tom) Pendergast, Democratic boss, fell with eight bullet wounds in his body when two gur.men opened fired on him in front of his hotel, the Park Centra!, (300 East Armour), early hi3 morning. Police arrested Joe Lusco, a north side political rival of Lazia's and 15 of Lusco's followers for questioning. Detectives said they also were working on the theory that Lazia may have been the victim of gangsters from other cities whose enmity he had gained. t The shooting caused a furor in . . . , breaks in the spring municipal election when four were slain and many injured. O BISHOP DOBBS lll I RF PFflKFRl0101118 was expected to dell ILL UL Ul Lnill-ll, velop the theme that the world, District Meeting Here Friday In Interest Of Orphan's Home Bishop Hoyt M. Dobbs, of Shreveport, Louisiana, will be u.K. " u- .rict meeting to be held at the ; Greenwood . (First Methodist the interest of the Orphan's 1 Home in Jackson, Rev. W. N. Duncan will be in ! charge of the meeting, which will open at 10 a. m., and will be attended by pastors and orphanage committees from the Greenwood District. The committee from the First Church is composed of C. A. Pitchford, E. F. Glaser and Warner Wells. Announcement is also made of the pastors conference wide meeting at Grenada, Wednesday and Thursday of this week, which will be in charge of Bishop Dobbs, who will preach on Wednesday night. The public is in- , 44.j it ; ' b I the new v 7s li-FA f M .....mn Un u" Zf " Light Vote Polled On M;iV-Rnhprt Rill!Irick minister of the interior, Jll lUdj uuuci is urn . ... . . The statewide ballot .on the , Rob bm for the repeal of the Mississippi prohibition law was' in progress today with only a light vote recorded. The Greenwood vote was one of the lightest in years and it is probable that the results will come in early. At noon the three Greenwood sixth of the registered vhtes had' cast their ballot. o CCC Recruits Will Leave On July 18 The local Welfare office of the ERA for the City of Greenwood has been notified to have the boys who have been selected for ' ' 000 i" Indianola on July mh at 8 A. M. The City's quota of thirteen has been selected together with thre alternates. The Jackson office advises GERMANY FACES FOOD SHORTAGE Chancellor Returns To Berlin To Face New Unrest In Reich BERLIN (P) Chancellor Hitler turned back to the capital of Nazi Germany today to face "ew unrest, heightened by a food -1 b:iui tagc. Apprehension spread because I - ,J1 i e : i . - (, . i I ' f the chief staple food cf all Germans limited sharply by the drought and early frost. An increase was ordered in the potato import quotas from Belgium, Holland and Italy, to meet the emergency. While the return of Hitler from a weekend in the Bavarian Alps was awaited, interest cen tered about his reported plans for a vacation cruise this sum-li.er on the Baltic sea. Should the occasion arise, it was reported widely, he would thus be ready for a quick flight from Germany. To batter down opposition to their wholesale executions, the Nazis rolled forward today one of the most powerful of their oratorical big guns. Paul Joseph Goebbels, dynamic speaker of propaganda and spokesman for Hitler, was scheduled to deliver a half hour ad- I dress tonight on "How Other t Countries regard the June 30 understands and approves the bloody second Nazi revolution, and the aims of Hitlerites. His effort follows closely the startling speech of Rudolf Hess, minister without portfolio, who m..j. npare overtures to France Ce peacf AT , J . . ainst ani.inva!ion' Ammunition for Goebbel's talk doubtlessly will come from a mass of newspaper clippings his propaganda ministry clerks have assiduously gathered favorable ones indicating sympathy v.'th Germany, and adverse ones j demonstrating some quarters sfiil do not grasp the often proclaimed Nazi platform of "security, peace and equality." The Jewish telegraphic agency said at . least nine Jews were slain when Hitler crushed a revolt week-end before last. Eight Jews were killed in Silesia, the agency reported, four of them "while attempting to es !e" and one BerIi al W through a window at forbidden today by Wilhelm of the reichbishop are permitted I to appear." A general vacation until August 18 will be taken by the Stahlhelm, or Steel Helmets veterans' organization, under orders of their directors. The semi-military force is at loggerheads with the Nazi storm troops, now on July vacation and whose forces are expected to be sharply at the end of the minth, Berlin newspapers today gen- erally accorded equal prominence ! tn reports ot a aecrease 01 j 000 in unemployment last month and the Hess speech, with world reaction to the latter. Hitler's Volkistnhe Beobchter said editorially Germany had given the world a new peace challenge, asserting "the world knows well enough the German people now has a leadership in complete accord with the will of the people and pledged to seek peace." Foreign GERMANY TODAY Chancellor Hitler, returning from a -brief vacation, convoked the reichstag, or national parliament, for Friday to listen to a speech by him concerning the recent "second revolution." At Munich a secret order was issued to a section of storm troops to turn in their arms, emphasizing the uncertainty of the political situation in southern Germany; Apprenension spread in iier- lin and elsewhere because of a serious shortage in potatoes, the chief staple food of all Germans, Import quotas from Belgium and other countries were increased to meet an emergency. Interest centered on Hitler's reported plans for a vacation cruise this summer on the Baltic sea. It was pointed out that should the occasion arise he would be ready for a quick flight from Germany. Paul Joseph Goebbels, minister ! of propaganda, schedukd for a half-hour- address tonight on "how other countries regard the June 30 Cleansing." The Jewish telegraphic agency reported at least nine Jews were s ain when Hitler crushed last week's revolt. -O- WITH SPY RING j Farther Arrest Foreshadowed In Drive On International Spy Ring PARIS (JP) Further arrests in France's latest drive on an international spy ring was foreshadowed today by police investigations in the suburbs of Paris. Warrants were issued yesterday for seven persons and authorities ordered the questioning of an American woman, Pauline Ja-cobson Levine, 32-year-old native of ' New York. She was believed to have left France. Officials said they wanted to ask her whether she served as a go-between for Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Switz, Americans held cn espionage charges since December, and Benjamin Bercowitz, called by police a leader of the fpy ring. Important ramifications, police Eiid, were uncovered through the arrest Saturday of Maurice Mil-ice, a clerk at Lille. Documents seized at his house are being studied. Authorities charged he sold French military j defense plans to a foreign power. ' A total of 29 persons are un- I der charges in the spy ring case, j Seventeen of them are in jail, j four have been granted bail, while eight eluded the police net. The ring allegedly was working for Soviet Russia. O HOT UNDER THE COLLAR CHICAGO It was like this: Fred E. Johnson was in a fairly good humor when he sat down to dial a telephone number, but as time wore on his outlook changed. Dialing one number, he f jnnd it had been changed to another, which he attempted to ring, receiving only a busy signal. So he put on his hat, jumped into a cab and went to the Telephone Exchange building where he was accused of tearing off the shirt of the. manager, E. J. Meyer, and r"-""'s """ " " Telephone Company called the pauce. Result: Johnson was fined $1 and costs. Inncidentally he bought five tickets to the Fireman's ball and agreed to buy Mr. Meyers a new shirt o THE WEATHER Nations GERMAN CHIEF READS RIOT ACT TO WORLD PRESS Goebbels Charges Other Natina Wage Campaign Of Lies. BERLIN, W Paul Joseph Goebbels, Nazi Minister of Propaganda, read the riot act to the press of the world tonight, especially the French and English press, in an address internationally broadcast. "I call you all to witness," he said to an invisible audience of many millions in describing the suppression of the' second revolution, "that there have been cases bf lies, slander and, misrepresentation of the true facts such as are almost without parallel in journalism." A large part of the foreign press, he charged, "has embarked upon a campaign of lies which in its maliciousness can be compared only with the campaign of atrocity tales that were get in the scene against Germany during the war." Goebbels' version of events eleven days ago is as follows: "June 30 passed off without friction, without the slightest domestic tremor. "With his authority and with remarkable brevity, ,Der Fuehrer (Hitler) quick as lightning suppressed the revolt of a small Coterie of Saboteurs, ambitious men afflicted with a malady. : "Peace and order were disturbed nowhere in tht entire country. Daily life procMded in its normal course, j The people , of Germany went on a holiday as nothing had happened, or else dntinued their work without interruption. "The people in their entirety, however, welcomed with a sigh of relief the liberating Reed of Fuehrer which saved Germany and thereby the entire world from direct catastrophe. "A huge wave of confidence welled up in the entire nation for Adolf Hitler because of his heroic acts. If anything in Germany changed, it was possibly this: that the German people are devoted with even greater love to the Fuehrer and t the plitical regime represented by him." Goebbels devoted twt-thirds of his speech to mixing what be called erroneous statements from various reports published abroad, quoting liberally from various reports published abroad, qutoting liberally from French, English Austrian and Russian newspap- ers, together with radio broad casts to show the German people that they must not believe what they read in the foreign press. He showed, for instance, that Vice Chancellor Von Papen was reported dead by some as Hitler's successor by others at the same time. His argument was that the "campaign of lies was miserably organized." "We can only give good advice," he said, "to thbse who have inspired it, to keep in better contact among themselves." Goebbels claimed that "one is nauseated as one gains a complete survey of the entire foreign press comment. "Even if sheets like the London Times declare that a mutineers' revolt is suppressed with gangster methbds, and if one compares with that how dignt- fiedly, nobly and decently events abroad are treated in the German Press, one can only say with perfect serenity 'ah, how much better human being are we savage.' "What has been done in reporting this situation has nothing to do with freedom of ex-pressijn."