M M UVI mm mm (pWiT F OA EIGHTEEN KNOWN DEJID IN STOiS I Tornado PnmngP Knngcs Above Million Pollaris In Eight States (By The Associated Press) Denth-deiling spring tornadoes ripped through the central south mid roared a path of destruction up the Mississippi valley last night, .'vl least ik lives were snutled "ui in lit- w niii tiisuiroances, r.ing-, mg from Georgia to Ii.wa. va. The- kniwn dead by states were! 'and Commssioners with the mom-Georgia 1; Alabama 2; Missouri I hers of the school board and 7; Illinois 8. W. C. Williams, superintendent Also swept by the destructive i of the city schools, storm wore portions of Mississip-j Tne indicated revenues for the pi. Tennessee and Ark..nsn:Jt j schools was estimated at $100,-Tornadn damsge ranged weU j 951-40 according to the report above $1,000,000 in the eight states i''"' with the council, and the liffoeted. j council agreed to approve a bud- Injuries wer? estimated at morn. I Ket totalling that amount, al-tirin 200. Hundreds of homes were thoilSh sonlc dbt was expressed d-stroyed. Hnndi-eds of farm ani-;hat the yiel'l from taxes levi;J ni'tls were killed i ' t'1L" scnoo'-s would reach that w,,.i kit- - D..ii...ii.. in i figure. ,i in Mil. Jli'l If V II II , 111., which counted nt least ei.'?ht dead ore than 40 hurt, 1,000,000 , Z Z JhVZr n ,, In southe.st Missouri Dunklin!. a..o aojoinmg counties Us e. sev-; en lives lost, scores injured, homes j?5()0 fo. , teachers; $11,- leveled over a 20-m,le area 25.00 fol. ne u.achcrs. $2(800 Two persons were killed in the Lalai.i(.s fof mii ?175o.OO yimoty oi Demopol.s, Ala., at f()1. ?750 00 fol. least ;,0 injured. ,janitor snpplit.s. ?1 500 for equip. Blytheville bore the brunt oflnent lnaintenancei $3,500 for ripping winds throu-h northeast ,,:,,..,,,. nf i,:ifiin(,s . . ,1 Kansas counties, waicning tnree score nomes and buildings crum-. bio, injuring move than 30 persons , Initial property- damage estimate.-, raiiKcu s nijin as i.n'.uuu in iut.h ..area. ..,..,.-.-, . KEXNETT. Mn.. March lfi W0 Six persons were known dead and hundreds of homes, splintered like natchwood. littered a 20-mile path through Missouri's "Boolheel-' to- day, the toll of a roaring tornado, Leipinir from northeastern Ark - ansas late yesterday, the twister demolished everything before it in a straight sweep through a thickly populated rural arcn in cotton- growing Dunklin county. c . , . Scores v.-ere injured, many sen- , , . .j .... m'.-ly. Survivors said it was a . . ,. , , , , , . ipir,cle' he loss of life had not 1 1 1 u (. 1 1 KM-au-r a,, ma. .r.o.e, No other a(iditions , tho wi re not previously hurt. Uy were contomplated unfiel. thp Appirentljl the twister struck budget presented last night, with full force in the "Rootheel" j area. Livesnck and chickens by I 0 :ABlRf CONSTRUCTION by hmo'. A cemetery in the mid die of the quarter-mile wide swath was left a tangle of uprooted trees and broken tombstones. Paul Jones, Rennet newspaper publisher, said "at least 300 or 400 homes in Dunklin county alone" had been swept away. At some places 'there wasn't anything left," he said. DEMOFOLIS, Ala., March 16 (Pi Storm-blisted central Alabama turned today to provision fcr negro refugees crowded here in temporary shelter as authorities counted two dead and at least 50 injured in tornadoes which rip- (Continucd On Page Eight) o fli Major John M. Nicholson Will Speak At Meeting Of Reserve Officers Major John M. Nicholson, Infantry, United States Army, will be the principal speaker at the meeting of the Reserve Officers to be held Thursday night at 7:30 p. m. in the city hall. Major Nicholson is the Inspector-Instructor lor me Organized Reserves in Mississippi and has bad a long and distinguished career in his country's service, including front line action in the World war. Major Nicholson brings an inter esting discussion of the role, of the Reserve in National Defense and everyicne interested is cordially invited to attend. Veterans of .the World War will find his meeting of particular interest because of the close parallel of unsettled world conditions today with those of 1914. Council Approves Budget To The Amount Of Indicated Rev-enues For Coming Year. Tentative approval of an amount lor a SCllOOl budget Wltn the school board to work out the individual items was given by i tne city council at its meeting " nigin, ioiiowing a lenginy conference coniercnce Detween me Mayor I Thf ? inn v1 ha A ni'npn t.fH l. .... ... . a-n rrn '0 fo. gB,' for white teachers, jnclud - i 000 for full time nhv.sical , . . . . . . . and KTomds; 2.000 for fuel; 51,000 for jnsu,.ance; $1,000 for new equipment; and $1,000 for mis - ceiianeous items. Among the items for building and grounds maintenance were re-roofing the new gym, painting 'the buildings, painting the li- i brary, replacing window sasj and ' an acoustical treatment for the school auditorium, I The budget was an increase over the estimated expenses of I the present fiscal year, the total ' estimated for the current year j being $97,587.50. I Included in the increases in j salaries were the placing of the jmale teachers on a twelve months salary basis and the addition of : , ,. . . . . .. a full time phvsical education . , . , . i teacher for twelve months at a !,, of 12()0 TORE Local Governing Bodies Will Do Everything Needed To Insure Immediate Construction Official ratification of their unofficial action of last Wednesday in approving the city's share in the erection of an armory under WPA auspices in Greenwood was eiven bv the citv council at its I mf eting last night. a motion to table a ' motion to Passage "of a resolution for the "consider the vote whereby the appropriation of $7,300 and a lot eenate Passed a S-W.000,000 high-for the building followed its intro-jwa-v monev allocation bill yes-duction bv Commissioner S. H. !tel'fay- ,. Montgomery, with all members L Without discussion thPj motion voting "aye " I to recns,aer was tabled, 26 to The .ik-'aacHnn ,ntw C7 . 15- and the bill was sent to the 500 appropriation by the countjt for the armory construction. The project h is already been approved, and the plans have been drawn for the building which will be 135x187 feet, with a drill hall of 80x100 feet, shge, rifle range officers and men's lounge, and locker rooms and rifle range, with parages for the motor equipment I for the buttery. The building will be of monolithic, concrete construction. The building will be placed on a portion of the land owned by the cjty south of tlle East Green- Wood school buildin 0 Mrs. Schlater Named MemberLibrary Board The city council at its nx5 ing last night formally ratified the ap pointment of Mrs. R. B. Schlater ; as member of the Board of Control of the Greenwood Public Library, succcedinjr Miss Addic McCain, Mrs. Schlater represents the J. Z George Chapter U. D. C. on th board. HOUSE REFUSES TAKE UP Motion for Immediate Consideration of Resolution Fails To Secure Necessary Votes JACKSON, Miss., March 16 (JP) A resolution calling for im- I lleachment. nrveerlirn..j otrninut j .state Land Commissioner R. D. Moore was referred to the house i ues committee todav after the house declined, by a vote of 54 to) 43. to suspend its rules for immediate consideration of the proposal. 1 There was no debate on the mo-tirn to suspend the rules. Shortly after the house convened, Rep. Sam Lumpkin, author of the resolution, called it up for consideration. Speaker Fielding Wright then called for a standing vote on whether the rules would be suspended. It required a two-thirds- majority to suspend. The motion fell far short of that. The impeachment resolution was intTOfh.CPf. lV RpTl. Till 111 I. kill Iftt.P vesterday after the senate declined j tn accePt a house bill legislating Commossioner Moore from office. The senate voted to retain Moure, charged with high crimes and mis-delneanors in office, but placing al! administrative powers of his office in the hands of three appointive deputy commissioners. Temporarily sidestepping the impeachment resolution in short or der, the house proceeded to consid- I ei ation of the special order of the 1 oi.v an appropriation to secure a I federal farm regional laboratory for Mississippi. An effort was to be made , to increase a previously approved apropriation from $250,-000 to $500,000. The house clerk read telegrams from Senator Pat Harrison and Rep. John Rankin today urging legislative cooperation in securing the laboratory, which was origin ally proposed by senator Theodore C-. Bilbo. J ?vpn:iTni Harrison sain np wnuiB not suggest what appropriation should be made but assured the legislature of his cooperation. The senate today came near reconsidering passage of its substitute land office bill. With the vote deadlocked at !21 to 2.1, U. Gov. J. B. Snider, presiding officer of the senate, voted against reconsideration. The motion to reconsider, entered yesterday by. Senator W. B. Roberts, when called up today carried the approval of several senators who voted for the sen ate substitute bill yesterday. ! Their object was to pass the j house-approved measure legislat- j ing 77-year-old Commissioner I Moore from office in order to I avert an imneachment trial. A motion to table the motion to reconsider lost earlier, 21 to 18. Immediately after refusing, to reconsider the land office bill, the senate heard roads commit- tee Chairman Robert Bums enter ;tute (S. B. 150) the bill must be referred to the house commit tee on highways and highway financing for action before it reaches the floor. The committee (Continued on Page Six) o- MOTDR CYCLE flFFICFR!' Ssk III U I U 1 1 UIULL UI I I U I. II tin annual includes Mildred Par-Tfl DT rilini flV niTV'ker' assistant editor; James Gray, U UL LlW fLU ILU 01 h ibuaincM mMS". with -lane Oli-U I I I yer Rebecfa Roseborough, and Charles Mallett, assistants; Bev- Speeding, and Other Traffic Vio- erly Hobbs, sports editor, and lations Will lie Curbed In Greenwood Employment of. a motor cycle traffic officer was authorized by the City Council at its meeting last night and W. D. McDaniel was; named by Chief Miller to the place. The motor cycle officer will be charged w ith the duty of patioll ing the city; to enforce the traffic laws, and special attention will be paid to violations of the speed lim- its, one lighted cars, and failure to observe the stop signs in vari ous sections of the cityv DELTA PARTICIPATES Greenwood Takes Lead In Promote ing Use of Cotton for Wearing Apparel The eyes of the cotton-minded Delta are focused en the "Cotton Ball," which the Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Welfara League are sponsoring Tuesday night, March 22nd, in the ballroom of the Elk's Club here, when not only Greenwood, but society from all rwev flip flnlta n'ill hivn nut to dance in cotton' to the smooth ises to have one of the largest t-rhythm of the "Mississippians," "dances ever had before, as evi- ono of the finest dance-bands in the South The committee in eharo-e nrom - ises entirely' novel decorations that will form a fitting background for the event that will climax the ev-1 ening the awarding of a bale of the Delta's best long-staple cotton contributed by IocjI cotton men, to the woman present who wears the most attractive cotton evening gown with, of course, the new lisle hose that are made exclusively of lmg-staple Delta cotton. Everyone in the Delta who likes to dance to an excellent orchestra is invited to attend, and, if a woman chooses to do, she may dance in a dress of another fabric. However, if she wishes to show that she is fashion-wise, as well as patriotic, and compete for the cotton-bale, she must wear an evening dress made of cotton, with cotton lisle hose. Accessories, trimmings and ornaments of materials other than cotton, will not bar her from the competition. " In presenting the "Cotton Ball," Greenwood is taking an inaugural step in promoting the use of cot ton, which is in line with the campaign recently begun byj the Delta Chamber of Commerce to convince Deltans that by the use of cotton commodities they will aid the long- st'iple industry, upon which the economic structure of this section I The social significance of next had a Po,ish passport) was de. Tuesday s Cotton Ball is attract-1 tajned and his office padloc!tcd. ing photographers and reporters j Alfred Tyrnatu.ri a repreSen-from other cities, who will feature tative of the International Nen.s pictures in meir publications oi the occasion, and of the winner of the bale of cotton. Advance sale of tickets for the j "Cotton Ball," will begin in the j immediate luture, JJavid Brewer, co-chairman of the committee in charge, has announced. E PARTICIPANTS FOR SENIOR CLASS PLAY Class Da' For Greenwood Grad- uates Will Be Held On May 23. Participants in the annual Class Day exercises of the graduating class of Greenwood High School were chosen in a class election held this morning. Thomas Yates Gardner was named class poet; Mary Ann Holly, historian; Jean Glasev, prophet. James Gray will read the class will and Beverly Hobbs, the class calendar. During this week members of the class are busy with plans for graduation. Pictures are being made for the annual,and measures are being taken for caps and gowns. Orders for invitations are being given this week. Plans for the annual have been perfected with Buck Hinman as editor-inchief, assistee! by Miss Walter Granholm, art editor The annual will be called "The Deltonian" and is the first annual to be issued for several years. THE WEATHER TEMPERATURE Maximum 84 degrees; minimum 60 degrees; rainfall 0.00;, river gauge 25.84, rise 0.03. FOR MISSISSIPPI Fair tonight and Thursday; slightly cooler tonight. T Large Number of Reservations Made Indicate Splendidly Successful Event The Annual Birthday Banquet s:heduled for Thursday night at the Country Club, given by the American Legion Auxiliary, honoring the Kecsler-Hamrick-Gillespie Post of the American Legion prom- i oenceQ ttle mber of reseiva : j nons already placed with Mrs. J. 1 w- Smylie and Angelo Liollio and ! rnany more are expected to call in for reservation before Thursday. Splendid addresses will be made by the distinguished state, district and local Legionnaires aiid Auxiliaries who will attend, interspersed with beautilul musical numbers and other entertainment. The program has been most capably) arranged by Mrs. H. G. Flanagan and Mrs. Jimmy Cox. o EiAN NEWS ARRESTED IN AUSTRIA Storm Troopers Enter Associated Press Office And Take Half-Jewish Photographer In Custody. VIENNA, March 16 (P) Authorities today increased pressure on newspaper correspondents-Uniformed S... A., (storm troop) men entered the office of the Associated Press and took into .custody Willy Jacobson, German- born veteran photographer who is half-Jewish. There was no charge and no explanation. A nhotograDher of Acme. 1 A moi'iian niifnra ananmr nrVin Service, was arrested twice and! his Austrian passport confiscated.! His situation at present was not ! known. j Thre'e attaches of the United i states legation were busy throughout the morning investi gating searches of at least two homes of Americans and the Associated Press office. In the latter, four pictures were confiscated. Two of them, showing a Viennese night club scene, were more than two years old. Three correspondents of British and American newspapers left the country. They were Friedrich Scheu ojDaw80n Cain, editor of the "Sum-j the Daily Herald of London, M. W. Fodor of the Chicago Daily News, and Douglas Reed of the Times of London. A woman representative of a Belgrade newspaper was under j close arrest. National Biscuit Co. nnouncesPromotions E. E. Farrar, manager of the National Biscuit Company an- ' lwo I"m"0s maae oy Gartin, Mrs. Emma Alexander, ! Officials, however, would not offered to buy Nazi party, uni-his company. Cashier J. S. Ferrell ; Mrs Mary D. Cain, Mrs. C. R. say just how they expected these forms for their employes, has been promoted to cashier of. Prosserj Miss Erin Gwin. and 1 results to be achieved. Stores that had been closed tne Jackson, Miss., agency anc!a pgj.tiai ijst 0f reservations in- j Dispatches from Kaunas (Kov- since Saturday reopened. Robert J. Ford, former assistant i cludes: Miss Liza Bibb, David ; no), capital of Lithuania, by way The national bank announced cashier at Memphis, will take over Brewer, Norman Brewer, Mrs. N.!0f Danzig indicated Lithuania immediate payment of funds own- the duties of cashier for the Green- j wood agency. I mr. rorn witn nis wite ana twenty months old baby will take up residence ill Greenwood April 1 Rear End Collision po j n:; thing on Greenwood streets, but " ",4 luu" ,UJ"J "v rear end col hsions between cars of . , , the same owner 00 not happen of; out 11 nappenea last nignr. i wo 1 cars, both belinging to J. H Fet-j ,.iu a,. uieTOincruiiiu-! ard and Church streets. The cars were oemg anven to Jir. rettey s , hcuse by negro chauffeurs, one im mediately behind the other. When the front car driver put on brakes suddenly at the corner the trailing car smashed into the rear, damaging the hood. FRANCE MAKES APPEAL ARMISTICE Premier Blum Dispatches Urgent Appeal To England For Assistance. PARIS, March 16 (JP) Premier Leon Blum today dispatched an urgent appeal to British Prime. Minister Neville Chamberlin to join him in immediate attempts to! bring about a Spanish armistice. edThaTB nTon eTa, zjssrx SaS a aanger wluch he declared the At the same time Blum request- it number of Italian and Ger - ; - o r, t l i ua.i.o.. ..ou6c... I ranks constituted for French and " ... w ..- iterranean France and Soviet Russia mean while agreed that both would fight to defend Czechoslovakia if she were attacked. Blum's communication to Chamberlain was dispatched late last night and a reply was expected as the people's front cabinet assembled late in the afternoon. HENDAYE, France, At the Spanish Frontier, March 16 W) StubboiVesistance by governmenUnion planned to rush fighting forces uiuugm u e n e raiussiuiu o Franco's swift drive to! Francisco the sea to an abrupt halt today. The insurgent general staff or- dered a heavy concentration of troops east of Alcaniz to speed j back 30 miles to Caspe fearing , their offensive may have overreached itself and exposed their right flank. Although insurgent dispatches last night announced their motorized forces had completed occupation of Caspe with little or no re sistance, today) they said a heavy uaitie w uemK iuugnu m German army source said today;"""" OI . city s outskirts. that Eeicnsfuehrer Hitler was! They said they were so busy Dispatches indicated government returning hurriedly to Berlin be-.j'canng for thelr Kardens and four troops still controlled part of thecause e jjad recejved word that cmren they no 'me or strategic city of 20,000 population j p0and ad presented an ulti-1 PoIitica- The Archduke renounc-at the junction of the most import- ;matura to Lithuania expirin elate 'ed his "J1 Prerogatives after ant highways between Catalonia in j today. J t'le Wrhi War and was per- northeastern Spain and Aragon in j Details of the ultimatum were I mitted to remain in Austria, the east central part. not known, but it was believed ! Another "ho helped the Em- The government said heavy re - - (Continued On Page Eight) 0 FQR B & P W BANQUET Mary Dawson Cain Will Be Guest Speaker At Annual Banquet of Local Club. A large number of reservations are being made for the Business and Professional Women's Banquet to be held Thursday night nf "Thp Tnnns" with Mrs. Ilnrv mit Sun," as guest speaker. Mrs. Nell Hunt of McComb who is a prominent member of the Mississippi bar, and is active in B. & P. W. Club work, is also expected to attend. Mr. John i Cain will accompany his wife to I Greenwood, and be present for I the banquet. j had greatly disturbed the peace ' promised under the regime of An interesting program has j of Europe's Baltic region. Poland, ! Fuehrer Hitler, been arranged for the evening, j it was said, aims at pacification j Many firms, in expectancy of and dinner will be served at 7:45 0f this area, and not only wants better times' under the accom-o'clock. j satisfaction for the border clash plished union with Nazi Germany, Guests of the club will be Dr. ! but a drastic revision of Lithu-! granted double or half pay in- V. .T PC-lWiall 1Ur RavrinTld onio'c Bf.l-a innrnrA PftlaT? !lTOIOG -frt. nna vbwt,1i DfVlAVKZ c. Brewer, Miss Joy Smith, Miss Mary Sue Mohead, Mrs. J. M. Dyer, Mrs. Margaret Sigmund Mrs. W. M. Fountain, liss Stella Colvin, P. L. DeLoach, Mrs. Ann Lemons, H. Feaster, Miss Mary Belle Bunner, Mrs. J. H. PeBoe, Miss Rosella Bunner, Mrs. W. W. Holloway, Will Holmes, Jr., John TVTt.c Vail XJ,tf nf i-c T . r .A, v,J xr vn;0 ct;ot- nt. a 11. Mrs. allie btmnett, Mrs. Allen , p.,,. v. Vvc,,. r,v. JT (Kate Wilson, Sam Stein, Mr. and j jjrs jjorris Miller, Mr. and Mrs. ! R - A B,Ui Mrs. Elma Mitchell, j jIrSi w L Craig, Miss Susie JicClain, R. V. Pollard, Miss Mai McCracken, Miss Bonnie Jean Montague, Miss Mildred Burn- ham, Miss Ruth. Pate Womack, G. W. Munden, Miss Mary Trigg, Miss Alice Galloway, Miss Clyde Vandevender, Miss Myrtis Wil liamson, Mrs. J. R, Forrester. Assurances Given That Each Will Fight If Czech Nation Is Attacked. PARIS, March 16 (JP) France and Russia agreed today that both would rignt to defend (Jzechoslo- vakia if she were attacked. Jacob Suritz, Soviet ambassa - dor to France, called on Foreign Minister Joseph Paul-Boncour at Quai D'Orsay and delivered rSieraSadt . ' ... v.m . . 1 . "r.'.hot hu Wsf. 7 "Zl o " i'-' i me ucirnoc ui 11c t Czech ally j paul-Boncour replied to the as - surances that France too would fight in the same cause. 'power with cannon in February, Adolf Hitler, Fuehrer - of a11934. aD1 for five years was the realm expanded bloodlessly la3t arch-enemy of the Austrian week by his Austrian coup, had i masses, proclaimed himself the "protec-j Germany's borders in his Feb. on Tn.Au. i. aju Incorporation of Czechoslovak - ia's 3,500,000 Sudeten Germans is believed to be the next object - tt-.i , r-, Both France and the Soviet',."1 Y mem- "" y.u w viauvsiu- vakia if Hitler resorted to force to achieve this objective, inform ed sources said. Tl To Hitler : Returning Hurriedly Berlin Because Of Polish Ultimatum.' PTTpr.TV AfaK i (s based on a frontier clash of March 11 for which Poland was demand- j f aynasty its nignest ing satisfaction. !glory and who remained m Vienna .., . . - . . i was 86-year-old Katharina Von Hitler, returning from his ta umphal annexation of Austria, F she , tha left Munich for Berlin at 2:45 4 I j p.m. (7:45 a.m., CST) today. S"0' beSt fnend and ad" The army source said origi- , archdukes reported naUy he had intended to remain havleft Austria was several davs longer m V lenna, , . 5 u i. , j , , . ... .'.honorary commander of a Prus- where he concluded his historic i ' . . , , . four day Austrian visit yester - rfav hJ .!, P.n.v, T.ith i. anian crisis called him back to Berlin. The Polish press has been at- j tackmg Lithuania angrily over the border fight Detween frontier guards in which a Pole was shot oJ l,;n TU J dared the man was deliberately ambushed. , , , There have been reports Poland wanted to annex Lithuania, but official circles in Warsaw emnha- sjzed that Poland rejected any such idea. Nevertheless the view was ex- j pressed that the Lithuanian clash , was ready to pay compensate for the killing of the Polish ; frontier guard if an investigation showed the Lithuanians were to blame. The Lithuanian government proposed that both sides name envoys for negotiations to clear up the March 11 incident and k. l i. i. " T .,..1... n i I- V r 1 j j Re ations between Poland and .,,,., ,. , .; since the Polish general Zeligow ski IS rears asro siezed Wilno (Vilna), which the Lithuanians still claim should be their capital. , Lithuania has scheduled a pleb- incite for March 20 in which the Wilno affair was to be an issue. Some circles in Warsaw suggested that the border clash had been exaggerated in Poland for the purpose of intimidating Lithuanian voters. ANTI NAZI AUSTRIAN LEADERJUND DEAD Major Emil Fly Shot, HapsburgJ Flee And Austrian Seek Prosperity. VIENNA, March 16 UP) Major Emil Fey, ruthless anti- 1,aa' "on man oi ,tne isouuss I regime, was found dead In iiis 1 home early today. He would nave been 53 year old next Wednesday. ( Beside were the bodies of lTAzd their , vevsD h u ; committed suicide. 1 Fey, one-time vice chancellor ' Austria, crushed Socialist March 16 UP) Tot the second time since the World w members of the Hapsburg , ,,,. u;u ,, . Idynasty which ruled Austria for 1 TzLrTL " "11 . more than a thousand years were j..cJiiK tuc vvuiiLijr buuav, T rwU mm on 3 fa, v . . Somalia . UWS f " &0Clall8t par' In March, 1938, national Socialism another enemy of the "holy crown" made it advisable jfor most Hapsburjjs to flee before the borders were closed to foes of the Nazis, j A few, however, remained. I Archduke Antoine, nephew of I the late Emperor Charles, and j his wife, the former Princess jlleana a sister of King .Carol jot Kumama remained at their lrural castle Sonnbersr, 20 miles ?reror, 1 ra"z j0sPn ?nnS we ! " ." ',u m ! Vi orld War, said to have gone to Hungary. The Archduchess Adelhid and Archduge Felix sister and bro- IfU. t ...... J K 1. J..i. Q otto-s castle gteenockerzeel in Belgium. ' PIiIo"arC w-' Bar" iiicuin.li iv. tuu nicBuei, was reported in Budapest, Hungary. VIENNA, Mar. 16 (JP) Nazis of the German province of Aus- I tria called a halt today to four days of patriotic ecstacy and began to look for the profits ed to Austrians by Germans, These funds had been tied up in Germany by exchange clearing agreements. Exportation of timber one of Austria's biggest industries was prohibited because Germany expects to absorb the immediate, output. Textile factories were putting on double shifts to manufacture Nazi uniforms, now in great demand. Hjalmar Schacht, president of the Reichsbank, arrived yesterday 1 and was arranging withdrawal of the Austrian schilling from circulation. The schilling will be replaced by the Reichsmark, Ger man unit of exvnange. Meanwhile, it was announced the question on which Austrians will vote April 10 would be: Continued On Page Eight)