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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • 2

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Indiana, Pennsylvania
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2
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Wwt Al ffntattteit, VMM Ml INDIANA' fOACHtt, WWAlfA, PA. REGISTRATION FIVE DIE OF CHAIN OF BASES CONGRESS REVIEW JOBLESS TAX gressional controversy was 4ha 00m pulsory military service bill To finance a cart of the prepared- Anothir dltclotur mad in laat night's tnnountmifmt was that military aircraft of Both th United States and Orsat Britain would have joint ut et llrfuldt tstab. llahed by both government mi th land ot Jamaica, south, of Cub. This government also was grant-d th right to develop resources tnd facilities for the Port Royal dockyard tt Jamaica "undtr British corftrol for th joint us nf UMIUd States and British fore." Navy spokesmen declined to tit-borate on th arrang ament for point usage. The navy't announcement Indicated that th moat powerful American bRsee were planned at Newfoundland and at Bermuda.

Sites agreed upon al Bermuda, it was said, included an area for a land plan base, seaplane base, naval baae and garriaon area. ALCOHOLISM PITTSBURGH. Nov. M. AP The deaths of five men, the first unday and th last todsy, were offlolally attributed lodsy by th coroner's office to acuta alcoholism.

Deputy Cororwr Anthony lappa said: 'All these fellows wr chum. Some ot them had been on spra for from three week! to I month and they evidently got held of some 'canned heat' someplloe." SaDDo identified the five and th times and fnaces of their deaths aa: Walter Burr, 90, Plltsourgn, Al legheny General Hospital Sunday, a. Hi. one hour after admission. Arthur J.

Davis, 31. Crngle. Al- legheny Oeneral Hospital, Monday, 8 3S p. 28 minutes alter admission. Harry B.

McMillan. 40, Csrnsgla, at horn today, m. John David. 70. Carnegie, at home, yesterday, :19 p.

m. Idward Mulany, 45, Carnegl. Carnegie jail, today, 7:10 m. The Stock Market max oro WASHINGTON. Nov.

11-A! Th navy plans to rush construction, Informed persons said today, on 180,000,000 chsln of bases for th sit acquired from Britain In the western hemisphere. There also war lndlcatlnne that United flute naval tenders might move into tome of th nswly.se-quired anchorages Immiettately and provide temporary base faclilil for American submarines and aa planes guarding th Atlantic tnd Caribbean approaches to Ihe vital Panama Canal are. Th way to ganerel start of conatructkm and partial occupancy of torn baste appeared cleared by the navy'a formal announcement the teat night "all th British au thorities concerned" had agreed upon aitea to be leased by this government In Bermuda the Bahamas, Jamaica, Antigua, St. Lucia, British fjhilnna and Newfoundland. 5nly at Trinidad, th southern "anchor" of th chain, ware arrangement atlll Inenmplet.

American surveying parties already are at work In Newfoundland Northern "Anchor" of th nw chain, where a major defense post Is planned, Including an air base and army training ground, naval base with 1,280 feet of wharfage, and sit of approximately 160 acrea for an army defensive fore These facilities at Newfoundland, off the coaat of Canada, would put shore-based warships and piaffes on the flank of any enemy fleet which attempted to attack this coun try from the north Atlantic with out first reducing that stronghold. Preparing Application of State's Unemployment Levy HARRISBURG. Nov. II (-A legislative ayb-commlttee waa call- ad to mt in th Capitol today to round out It roommndttlant on a proposal to (aUbllsh "merit rat ing" for application of Pennsylva nia's unemployment compensation tax. Th group, hssded by State Sena tor Weldon Hayburn (R-Delawar), was assigned to conduct hearings on the proposal and report to the state government commission, which Is correlating surveys on a number of governmental problems for possible presenta'lon to the 1141 legislature.

Under th proposed "merit rating," employers who maintain steady payrolls would pay a smaller tax on their workers' wages than those with fluctuating or seasons! employment. At present the tax is uniform, at 2.7 per cent of the payroll. Repreaentstivea of "heavy" indus tries generally opposed the plan at hearings, on the grounds that they always would have to pay the maximum amount, while spokesmen for "light" InrHiitrles and retailers favored the plen. Read the Gazette Classified Ads. Llvaeleek PITTSBURGH, Nov.

Salabl hoga 400, steady, 10-19 higher, rati hoga held higher. 160-160 lb 0.29-40, 180-290 lb 6.40 220-260 lb 6.29-60, 290-290 lb 6.00-2J, 100-190 lb 9.29-79, roughs 8.00-90, Salabl cattle 126, ateady, prices unchanged. Salabl calvee, 90, steady, 60 lower. Good to choice 11.00-12.00, few at 12.90; medium 9. 00-1 1.00, culls tnd common 4.90-5.90.

Salable sheen 600, ateady, 29 lower. Choice lambs 9.29-79, medium to good 8.00-0.00, common lambs 4.60-6.90, ewes wethers 3.60-9.00. J'" r. H. l(iV-An OonlM which (iom I Win, wnut" session un anu.

fin wihtrnf up auriy 11 nmuu or ujysxpaotea activity witn a peace- tra ggmdint nurd of gT tM Witn vast oeiense pro- MB tesrevtd ind in operetion. About two-third! of th money I In actual tpareptlattona which can spent gajtort next tfuiy according 10 ui flfurM of Chairmen Taylor (D-Colo) of tht House appropriitlom committee. Till rameinaer repre-Mnti authorisations for fulurt con-tracta. Defense cxpondltunrt wer pri-Oiarily responsible for the hue total, which hl been xeded only In the World Wr year of Ap-propriatlona ind contract authorisations for the armed urvices oggre-gated $12,136,832,316. In addition, about 14,700,000,000 wis authorized for eventual development Of a two-ocean navy.

Adjournment talk ('ready was in th air laat May when President Rooaevalt, following the German military successes in western Eur-one. called for an emergency ex penditure of more than 000 to speed up preparedness on land, aaa and In the skies. Within weeks, however, that estimate was doubled and redoubled and men increased, again. The money, voted with little basic opposition, provides for this historic military program: An Increase in the standing army to 1,400,000 men by next July, including conscripts and national guardsmen on active duty; an increase in navy personnel from to 176,000 men and in the marine from 25,000 to 34.000. Acquisition of reserve stocks of equipment and munitions for aoldiars.

Start of construction of 292 combat naval vessels and 97 auxiliary ships. Provision for 25.000 planes for the army and 10,000 for thft navy, along with establishment on new air bases. The only phase of the defense program which stirred deep con OBITUARY HlftAM P. CALHOUN, 62. retired tone mason, died at 11:15 p.

Monday in his home in Nowrytown. A ton of James and Priscilla (Paden) he was born December 7, 1858, in McKaesport. The greater part of iy life had been spent in the community where death occurred. He was a member of the SalUburg Lutheran Church, the pastor of which, the Rev. Frederick Huer, will conduct services in the family residence at 2 p.

m. Thurnday. Interment will be in Apollo Cemetery. Survivors are his widow. Mrs.

Elsie (Almes) Calhoun; two sons: H. Dale Calhoun of Avonmore and Frank A. Calhoun of Nowrytown; three daughters: Mrs. Verna Parson of Springdale, Mrs. Grace Negley of Tarentum and Mrs.

Florence Hab-arstich 0' Pittsburgh; nine grandchildren end a brother, Charles E. Calhoun of Saltsburg. R. D. SflARON BUBT, two-months-old daughter cf Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Nicodemua of Diamondvilte, died of bronchial pneumonia in Indiana Hospital at 11 a. m. Monday. She was born September 4 last.

Surviving with the parents are these brothers and sister: Carl, Wesley, Garry and Lorraine, all at home. Funeral services will be conducted in the Diamond viUe Breth-'ren Church at 2 p. m. Wednesday. Th Rev.

C. E. Little, pastor of the Clymer Methodist Church, will official and interment will be In Dfamondville Cemetery. MM. JENNIE (M'DONNELL) FRANK died in the home of her daughter, Mrs.

Helen Trees of Penn Run. R. at 11:45 p. m. yesterday.

Bom in Green Township, November 21. 1876, she was a daughter of the late Daniel P. and Mary (Long) McDonnell. A lifelong resident of the vicinity, she was a member of the Evarigeli-1 cal Church. i Surviving are the following child-Ten: Floyd, Clyde, Paul, and Mrs.

Helen Treese, Penn Run, R. Mrs. Grace Grew ley. He il wood: Mrs. Margaret March, Nicktown.

and Carl, Nanty-Glo; these brothers and sisters: Harry and Roy McDonnell, Cherrytree R. D-; Mrs. Verda Strum and Mrs- Margaret Anderson, of Akron, Ohio, and 14 grandchildren. Funeral services will be conduct-d it 1 p. m.

Friday in the McDowell Church by the Rev. Mr. at (Continued from peg OM had refugrf to sign MoMtglf ptfitrt or give further Information. Man. goy probably win be taken before U.

s. Commissioner In In. Ma. shank added. Mr.

Lambert, prior to th draft registration, told his eonpagatlon. cannot go along In the great est crime against th Republic sine its founding. This whole thing ha been mar or ten forced th Am erioan people. Th only way pe can come Is through the Gospel of jesu Christ. I am willing to die tor my country but not to He dectsred Democracy was en dangered from within rather than from without and said that In r.

fusing to register he wai fighting for Democracy "on the Spiritual plan." Conviction tinder the law pro. vides a maximum penalty of Av vcars' Imprisonment tnd on of 110,000. INTERNATIONAL (Continual from pag on) town fell et last to Greek attack at I a. m. today (9 p.

m. Morv day), but th Greek High Command made no immediate claim ot capturing the crossroads base, The Greeka said their advance troops war threatening to cut off the last road of Italian escape, and reported "fierce fighting" there and on the Epirus battlefront, where Greek troops were said to have made othor raids Into Albania, cap turing prisoners and seizing aup plies. The Bulgarians, who long have demanded ah outlet to the Aegean Sea throush Eastern Greece, learn ed today their King Boris had joined the list of European leaders who have talked with Adolf Hitler. An official announcement In Son said Hitter and the King met Sim' day preceding yeaterday's confer-ence of Hitler. Italy's Foreign Min ister Count Oaleazzo Clano and Spain's Foreign Minister Ramon Serrano Suner.

A storm over Britain and the English Channel cut down the cus tomary trading of air blow last night between Britain and Germany. The British reported "few casualties and little damage" from bomb ings at Liverpool. In one midlands community, and along the south coast. London, which had four alarms during the night, reported no bombs were dropped there. One small aquadron of RAF bombers was said to have struck through the etorm In raid on oil target" In central Germany.

Hitler's High Command asserted that 10 British merchant ships to talling S1.2J0 tons were torpedoed or dive-bombed to the bottom off England yesterday and last night. oerman warpianes were reported to have set new fires reeine at Coventry, the, English Midlands town which was attacked by 900 raiders in a 13-hour assault the night of Nov. 14, and at Birming ham and Liverpool. The London Admiralty acknowl edged the loss of IS merchant ships totalling 71,748 tons in the week end ing Nov. 10-11, but aaid that In that same period the Oarmana claimed to ttaVe stink 140,414 tons almost twice aa much.

The Italians said they repulsed an attempt to capture the Island of Gaidoro in the Italian Dodecanese, off the Turkish coast. This was apparently the same ac tion described in a Greek communique, which aaid Greek "motor launch' raiding party landed on small Dodecanese Island, killed three Italian naval guards and escaped with lour prisoners and equipment. GREECE (Continued from page one) enemy lines" In a squeeze to cut off me Italians road of retreat The Greek communioue lodav said "fierce fighting" continued in these operations. In which some 'stubbornly defended" Italian nosi- tlons were taken. The advancing Greeks were said to have laken an unestlmated num ber of additional prisoners and seized stores and war material includ ing 10,000 blankets, quantities of grain, ten field guns, 33 anti-tank guns and 15 mortars.

Large Kalian stores were believ ed to be in KrirMza, where Fascist forces were said to have stocked up lor montns lor the trustrated push Intended to cut Greece in two with drive through Philorina to Salon ika. The communique trld of fierce fighting also in the central and Seaward zones of the front, where the Greeks were reported to have taken prisoners and seized Italian supplies in raids Into Albania at Erseke and Borova. The ministry of horn security i WE ARE TEAMED WITH OVER 600 LEADING STORES TO BRING YOU THIS EXTRAORDINARY VAL.UE Air Reduction 41 Ms Al Chem 168 Am Can Am Rad and St Am Smalt and 45 Am Tel and Tel Am Tob 'H Anaconda 2' Atch and 16Ta All Ref Bald Loco Ct 17 Bait ond Ohio Yt Beedtx Avlat 32 Beth Steel 87 Boeing Alrplan IB' Borden Co 20 Brlggs Mfg 244, Budd Mtg Stt Casa (J I) Co Ches and Ohio 424i Chrysler Corp Colum and El 5 Comwlth and Sou 1 Cons Edison 24 Coniol OU 0 Cont Can 3 Curtlss Wright 10 Douglas Air 81 S4 Du Pont De 103 Eastman Kodak l44'A Elec Bust 16 Gen Elec 35 Gen Food 36Vi Gen Motor 50 Gen Refract 29 v. Greyhound Corp UH Hercule Powder 73 Illinois Cent Interlake Iron 1H Int Harvester Int Nick Cn 27H lnt Tel and Tel 2 Johns Manville MY, Kennecott Cop 35? Lehigh Val Coal 1 Loew's Inc 28H Montgom Ward 98H Nash Kelvinator 5 Nat Biscuit 18 Nat Dairy Pr Nat Distillers 22 rt Central RR 14', North Ame Co lTVi Nor Pac 7V4 Packard Motor 3 Param Plet Penney (J C) 87 Penn RR 25 Pub Svc 3114 Pullman 26 Pure Oil 8'4 Radio Corp of Am 5tt Reading Co 14 Repub Steel 22tt Seara Roebuck 77 Vt Socony Vacuum Sperry Corp Stand Brands Stand Oil Cal 19' Stand Oil Ind 27'i Stand Oil 38 Vi studebaker Corp 8H Texas Corp 39H United Aircraft 45 United Corp 1H United Gas Imp 10'i Rubber 24 hi Smelt and Steel 70i Warner Bros Plct West Union Tel 23 West El and Mfg 105 Woolworth (F.W) 34'A Yellow Tr and 15a Youngst Sh and 41Vi Curb-Aero Corp 6'fc Ark Nat Gas 2 Cities Service New 01, El Bond and Share 44i CLIPPER CRAFT OVE OATS IN BOMBING CASE Scranton Hopes to Solve Mystery of Death of Boy, Sister 0 SCRANTON, Nov. U.

W)-Th lur of a 110,000 toward was one ol th major hopes today of lnvstlga-tora working on the trails. Dabhoin bombing ease. Almost two weeks hive pasMd since William Rcbhorn and his prelty sister Lois started to get Into their family's automobile In Irontol their home only to be blown to bits by bomb. Since inen more than do expert Investigators, utilizing virtuali every scientific device in th eastern United States, have gone over even the bark uf a tree in their seemingly fruitless search tor clues. An American Legion Post has added $100 to the amount previously posted as a reward, and authorities are hopeful that the 110,000 tola! might induce someone to come forward with information to put them on the right track.

Police Captain Oeorce Donaldson, District Attorney Michael J. Eagen and Major William A. Clark are in charge of the Inquiry. Under them officers working in pairs have been assigned to checking all recorda ot workmen's com pensation heatings In which Dr. E.

H. Rebhorn participated. Hebnom. father of the victims, is oity director of public health and also cioraultant tor Hospitals ana a coat company. One of the first theories advanced was that some person ''planted" the bomb to kill Dr.

Rehborn. THANKSGIVING Continued from page one) Ourselves, in the role of Impar tial reporter of the news, we were rather surprised at the heat some partisans displayed in avowing stand on the issue. A good bit seem ed to depend on whether one was Republican or a Democrat. One thing, though, everyone will agree to, whether its on the 2lst or on the 28th, everyone in America bu real, heartfelt reasons for giving thanks, whenever, wherever and however he chooses. In fact, every day should be a Thanksgiving Day for Americans in the world as It goes today.

Both the public schools and the college will have vacations begin-ning Wednesday, November 27th, and extending until Tuesday, December 3rd. That just about cleans up thn problem of Thanksgiving Day. Oh we forgot: The Indiana Evening Gazette Will not be published on Thanksgiving Day, November -28, Happy. Thanksgiving-or should we say Thanksgivings? Army and WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 The Army and Navy are cooking un the bieffest Thanksgiving dinner since the mammoth meals the served in the years just after, the Wnrid war.

The reason? TheVre feeding more men than at any nme in iwo decades. Something like 84,500 Turkeys (of 15 pounds -each), 11 tons of iranberry sauce and 73 tons ot dressing will go into Thursday feast to feed 500,000 soldiers and 175,000 sailers. After totting up the bogglers for gobs and dressing for doughboys today, officials said those figures on the main course told less wan half of the story. They outlined typical aervice menus as follows Army Oyster soup, celery and olives, roast turkey with chestnut dressing and cranberry sauce, baked ham and candied sweet potatoes, mashed potatoes and gib let gravy. string beans, cauliflower, siunea tomatoes, combination saiaa, mince plum pudding, pumpkin pie, cream and cake, candy and coffee, cigars and cigarels.

Navy Cream of tomato soup, olives, celery, pickles and almonds, roast young turkey with chestnut stutfing. giblet gravy, cranberry sauce, baked spiced ham, candied sweet potatoes, asparagus t.ps wttn brawn butter, nuts and raisins, mix-ed candies, fruits, ice cream and fruit cake, crackers, cheese, coffee, garets. The vangard fi selective service trainees wilt eat the holiday meai army reception centers, getting the same fare as the regulars. A. F.

L. (Continued from page one) awaited a further personal message from President Roosevelt urging labor unity. Altmeyer declared in a prepared address that methods of protecting social security rights of defense employes and draftees must perfected in order that they not lose their social security credits. The message from the President, reliable reports said, was in the hands of AFL President William Green who has cleared his decks for negotiations with the Congress of International Organizations by outlining hta conditions for settlement. Al the convention opening yester.

day Green said the President wished committees from the rival groups tp sit down in the White House with him and start peace talks. aaa 46-100 ot second from the moment Ihe light flashed red until his foot hit th brake. Alter six drinks he did it in 42-100 ot second. Normal ia 49-100. Sober, he stayed on the highway 80 per cent of the time, after six drfhkt per cent.

Normal is 75 per cent. In the combined test his emergency reaction was 50-100 uf second sober, sl-100 with six drinks Normal is 55-100. Ability to stay in the highway when sober was 64 per cent, with six drinks was 76. Normal (5 per cant. a nail measure beg federal deficits are in Prosoect for the next few years--Congress voted various tax Increases, including higher levies on theater tickets, cigarettes, wnisity, etc, and on excess corporation pro- ftts.

It also lowered the personal income tax exomotlon. thus increas ing by perhaps 5.000,000 th number Of men and women who will pay such levies next spring. The federal debt limit, which had stood at 140.000.000.000, was ordered raised to t4t.000.000 becaus of the greater defense expenditures. Only two weeks ago Secretary Morgen- thau of the Treasury expressed Ihe opinion that Congress soon should raise Ihe limitation, possibly to $65, 000.000.000. But while Congress was voting billions for defense.

It was holding appropriations for regular govern ment functions to last year's levels or slightly lower. Slightly more than a billion doi- Isrs was allocated to WPA and other relief agencies, but with the proviso that it could be spent in eight months if neccsssry. Such system would permit about 2.032.000 per sons to be kept on WPA rolls. Continuation of the administra tion farm program was voted, with Its benefits for soil conservation and special payments designed to bring parity to agricultural prices. Little new legislation, however.

has been plr.ced on the record books this year. Congress extended for three yesrs the President's author ity to make reciprocal trade treaties with foreign nstlons. but the Euro pean war haa caused a lull In such activities. The Hstch Act. which prevents federal workers from engaging In political activity, was broadened to cover state and municipal employes who get part of their pay from fed oral funds.

In addition, individual campaign contributions for a federal office were limited to $5,000 a year, and a $3,000,000 maximum was placed on a year's expenditure by a political committee. Sprankle. Burial will be in the Mc Dowell Cemetery. MRS. VESTA ELBERT A (HENRY) DAYTON.

24, died Saturday in Mercy Hospital, Pittsburgh. Surviv ing are her husband- and her par ents, M. and Mrs. R. B.

Henry of HCitevernon. Funeral services will be conducted In Clearfield at 3 p. m. Wednesday. ORE GO It FBRACIOLY, 67, died last night in his home in Sagamore after a several months' JllneM.

He was born December 23, 1872, in Austria and had been resident in the United States for many years. He was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Steam ore and of Sagamore Local No. 473. United Mine Workers of America.

Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Mary Feracioly, and these children: Mrs. Ada Zonchy of Big Run; James Feracioly, president of the miners' local at-Sagamore; Agnes Feracioly at home; Mrs. Rose Viclni of Margaret, Leona and Charles Fer-acioJy, both at home; Mrs.

Alvie Stiveres of Buffalo: Mrs. Anna Pierce of Omaha, Mrs. Mary Pomko and Eva Feracioly. both of Pittsburgh and William Feracioly, home. There will be a requiem high mass in Sacred Heart Church at 8 m.

Thursday. The Rev. Father Joseph Malinak will officiate and interment will be made in DuBois. RICHARD LEE MA UK. Infant son of Albert D.

and Gladys (Mc Laughlin) Maiak, of Grant Street extension, died at 6:45 p. m. yesterday in the Indiana Hospital. Burial will be from the Robinson Funeral Home today at 4 p. m.

in the Greenwood Cemetery. DRAFT (Continued from page one) and five years imprisonment. Brooke. Texas Christian Univer sity graduate, said: I can sanction violence or force. We are in about the same po sition that Germany was Ave years ago when they instituted conscription, I am perfectly willing lest the charge on broad giounds, as opposed to a system of democratic thought and of conscience versus the slate." HARRISBURG.

Nov. 19. (ff) Men in ihe regular armed forces of ihe United States must register for the draft as soon as their enlistments expire, provided they are over 21 and under 36 vears of age, selective service headquarters announced today. Previous service in the armed forces may obtain deferment if he ing of a man, and authorities listed these possibilities: 1 A man who has served satisfactorily for at least three consecutive years in the regular armed forces may obtain determent if the establishes for hi IochI board the I proof of uch previous training. UL-ierment may be obtained ir a man shows he has served one year in the regular army and subsequent to 1)141, two years in the national guard.

3 Six consecutive years of service in fhe active national guard or in the officers' reserve corps serves as a deferment reason- Those who would chum such deferments must have been a part 01 the uniu Involved as of October 16, draft registration day. (Continued from pag one) lights and moving panorama with a highway in the center. Test No. 1 is reaction to emergency the time required to reach the brake silt, th light dashes red. Test No involves coordination between hand and eye th ability to stay centered cn the panoramic highway.

Test No. is a simultaneous combination of th two. Here's how Caldwell slacked up: Sober, hi reaction to amergency ia 25 TT-T; 'r tPMiT- 5jPiu i amy "i is i fytJ iistM 4 jiJVF I 'uT II i Tl 2-M: l-75-: Long island Chipp. 1 Muck or Little II There It no need to II 1 I feel that you must I Our winning team numbers over 600 leading stores from coast to coast, pulling together under the CLIPPER CRAFT PLAN, to create greater values for you. We pool our purchasing power, bring about great economies through "scientifically planned production," and turn the savings back to you.

That's how we can offer you values like these luxurious Clipper Craft Overcoats. tailored of rich, warm fabrics, In all the approved models. Try one on and you'll join the Clipper Craft cheering squad of over a million men I Produce PITTSBURGH, Nov. Produce demand slow. Apples, on car, about steady.

N' bu. baskets and bu. cratea ylvania Staymans $1.0015. Jona. thans 85c-00c, Mcintosh Pl.25-50 Baldwins 1.00.

Grimes Golden 90c Si 00; New York Hubbardstrms (Sc. 73c, Kings 90c; Virginia Dallciow gl.40-30. was Pennsylvania Rural' Katehdina 11.10-20; 15 lb. sacks Maine Chippewas and Green i Mountains 32c-23c. Oraln CHICAGO.

Nov. 1. Whea' future, opened slightly lower today in an apparent continuation of thr-selling wive which struck the pi. yesterday. Corn waa ateady.

Wheat started unchanged to 3-3 lower than yesterday'e close: December 88 6-8 to 1-2: May 87 7-6 tn 88: and then held about steady. Corn started unchanged to 1-6 off; Decern ii'lMiy MM turned higher. munism," Nazi or Fascist philosopsy. Lewis, acclaimed yesterday ia a boiaterous 40-mtnut demonstration before announcing hs would tulfill his pre-election promise to step down as CIO president if President Roosevelt war reelected, aikad delegate to support hi successor "without stint" He reiterated hi warning that external fare war teaklng to "divide and conquer" th CIO, tnd aaid labor'sleadere would need united trangth to win thir objectives. accept inferior ser- I 1 vice when your I i means are limited.

I Wnethr you pay I much ot little, you I Jt assured a er- 1 vic keeping with 1 our traditional qual- cist naval basea in th eastern Me diterranean. The ministry's communique save this account of the raid 'Citizens of the dodecsnese is- lsnds living and working In Greece sailed on the night of Nov. 17-18 with a group of Dodecaneslans and others on a motor launch from a Greek anchorage and landed on a small Island of the Dodecsnese islands. "The group attacked the police post and captured th police head and three Carablnieri (policemen) with meir equipment. The frmjo further attacked a naval guard and tit the' wwch fouow' three' naval guards, including the petty officer in charge, wer killed.

"The raiders returned with tour prisoners and equipment to th anchorage from which they sailed." C. O. (Continued from pag en) Lwia in his opening convention apeech yesterday labelled aa "lis" any assertion that CIO policies are conceived and endorsed and supported arad engineered and admin-tuered by th adherent ef Corn- EXCLUSIVE WITH MOORHEAD'S Indiana's Ltadlng Man's Stort.

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