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The Fresno Bee from Fresno, California • 6

Publication:
The Fresno Beei
Location:
Fresno, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i i r7 -v- a f-v i f' r- iv 'v i 4 77 7 oT 1 i' 1 2 7 it 1 r1 1 1 J1 i (: lt ii-1 'll i 1 -r a iflV wJ Ow-: a-v -r av n-4 V-" 'V ysy w-- Pag 4-A THE FRESNO I1EE THURSDAY AUGUST 20 1912 4 COMEDIANS Air Raid System MacArthur Planes Installed City Bomb Fleet In Red Army Takes Initiative On 4 Luftwaffe Smashed In Fierce 7 Hour Sea Air Battle In Channel Dieppe Reports Are Studied By Second Fronters Nelson Adopts 'Get Tough' Plan For War Output Will Request Test North Solomons Northern Fronts (Continued From Fait One) (Continued From rug )nr) (Continued From fan One) of Australian forces in this war' he said Drew Middclton of the Axuocuitcd Press one of the American nnemnen nrlectcd to represent the United Slats press on the Dieppe raid observed operation from one of the vessels that lay offshore lie v'as not permittat to land WASHINGTON Aug unit was learned today War Production Board Chairman Donald Nelson in the first wide scale house cleaning of his staff shortly will discharge up to ten of his forty edd branch chiefs some of whom are 1 a year men When fie became WPS chairman he carried on with the naff inherited from the Office of Production Management By ItRKtV MIIHItKTOV (Repreacnting The Aiwncfatliin Of American CormiiMindcnts In JniiUun) AIIOAKD A MOTOR LAUNCH OF THE ROYAL NAVY RETURNING FROM OFF DIEPPE Aur UP I have just watched the RAF and the Royal Navy smash the Luftwaffe in the fiercest and most dramatic air and sea battle of the war in the west For seven hours in the blue skies The Canberra was the flrel Allied casualty in the battle of the Solomons to be Identified by name Washington previously had am nounccd the loss of one cruiser and said two cruisers two destroyers and transport had been damaged but did not identify the vessels In adirion to Ensign Vance was believed that at least one other American was aboard the Canberra One report said he was seaman and had been wounded Brisbane capital of Queensland and one of the largest cities on Australin'i east coast had a short air raid alarm early today but there were no reporta of bombs being dropped Fresn 'i air raid and blackout warning system today was reported completely installed and Police Chief Wallace was in' structed to apply to army officials for permission to conduct a test Wallace reported the city now has twenty seven fire sirens Installed tn key positions throughout the city In addition tn a powerful siren at The Chandler Field Municipal Airport and steam whittles on railrond roundhouses here and in Calwi Alust Give 10 Days Notire At least ten days notice must be given army officials to test air raid warning systems Wallace reported tn the commission the siren signals ran be distinguished from fire traffic warnings hy the code used for air raid or hlncknil a series of long nnd wnvering notes At night lie said there should be little cnnfii'-lon with fire warnings hn-ausi- street lights will he ex-linguii-hrd at (he time nr immerit airly after the air raid or binek-mit warning is sounded the others were hotly pursued by-three Spitfires The first fell flnntitig into the sea near shore The next two tried desperately to evade the fighters 'WASHINGTON Aug -Positive and prompt art ion to forestall any war production shutdowns due to lack of materials ap- which lmng like black crosses above Nelson There were futious Imrsis of nin W1h M- enunciated tough mnclilnoRun Xlre then after tlnipj? Lou Costello Marie McDonald and Bud Abbott coming to H'arwrrs Saturday in Pardon My Sarong one the total Allied loss so far an' pounced out of probably 1000 aircraft In action in tho Allied aide Thirty of the RAF pilots who were shot down are known to be safe ft Planes 'Tleturn All of twenty fnur-Vnlted States Army Air Force Flying Fortresses which pounded the big Nazi air base at Abbeville returned with only a few bearing scars and one man lightly wounded But many of the commandos whose bulk apparently was supplied by Canadians rame back with wounds the majority minor The Americans were all volunteers frrm the Ranger battalion specially hardened and trained British experts discounted the lm portance of having destroyed radio location base at Dieppe and the demolition of coastal defense and anti aircraft batteries The real results they said are: Ample proof that the British Navy and the RAF still rule the English Channel and the air above it Invaluuble lessons in army air cooperation in battle tactics and in landing for weak points in British operations since the outbreak of the war have been in land-ulr coordination and landing techniques Prospects of establishing a permanent bridgehead for landing an Canberra Survivor Describes Battle SYDNEY Aug 20 (US) dive bombers blasted Japanese Warners Will Show Abbott Costello Film over Dieppe and on the glassy waters of the channel Briton and German airman and seaman fought for the live of thousands of American Canadian and British soldiers who scrambled ashore this morning to storm the am-irnt port of Dieppe The result was a decisive Allied victory Its full measure is not nlnrty one aircraft shot down hy British pilots and gunners hut a long line of land' ing craft full of weary but triumphant men now passing our ship They are homeward hound because of the mngnifirirnt Job done by the little ships and great seamen of the Royal Navy and the hendlong assaults of pilots of the RAF' Spitfires Mustangs and Hurricanes Broke German Forre This combination broke a German force of at Jeast 5H0 airrraft seeking to blast the commandos and infantry Into submission and sink the armada of landing craft Since dawn when two Foeke-Wolf darted at iis with marhlneguns and cannon chattering this tiny craft and every other ship have Stockton Writer Wounded In Big Raid Tells Story seven enemy tanks were destroy-launched hy Field Marshal Fedc von Bo-k from the Kursk-Kharko front June 28th wns reported mad southeast of Klctsknyi 'The rommunique report if Soviet soldiers killed or round up ail who made the thrust In plied that they had regained fu mastery of the east bank of th Don in the defense of wester approaches to Stalingrad Industrie and shipping center on the Volga See Saw Battle Southwest of Stalingrad a sr aaw battle was reported in pro) ress for a railway station on th Caucasian line from Kotelnikovsk ninety five miles aw-ay "Southeast of Krasnodar it wa anounced "our troops fought fierr defensive engagements against ei rmy tanks and motorized Tho Germans launched aevera heavy attacks ficlng our unit hack Soviet artillerymen set fii to five A German column wai reportc destroyed In the Pyatigorsk are of the renirnl Caucasus and th Information bureau said 3V) Naz dead and six disabled tanks wrr left on the battlefield The German high common claimed Krasnodar August 9th th same day 11 announred the fall Maikop lhe oil field center sixl miles lo the southeast which wa ruined hy the Russians in scorched earth retreat Krasnodar is a mnnufacturin and agricultural town with a popu lation normally of 220 (XX) on th right hank of the Kuban abou sixty miles by air northeast Novnroi'sisk an emergency base the Red Navy's Black Sea fleet The communique said the cit was abandoned afler battles whirl cost the Invaders heavily It an nounred seven German tanka wer destroyed and some 250 German: were wiped out on a single sector Field dispatches said the Rue xians were maneuvering snuthwan toward foothills of the Caucasia Mountains evidently as a preli to a awing westward for the pV lection of Novorossisk and othe Russian held Black Sea porta The German push down the Rns fov-Baku Railway toward th Grozny oil fields was dismissed the midnight communique with statement that two German tank were destroyed nnd more than 101 Germans were killed In the area Pyatigorsk 170 miles southeast Maikop (Continued From Page One) policy The production chief 'was expect ed to give his regional directors throughout the rountry power to issue priority ratings to provide needed small quantities of materials or parts Thus holders of war contract threatened with stoppage or curtailment of output because of an interruption In the flow of materials ar a breakdown of machinery could obtain readily lhe materials needed to keep going Informed officials who requested that they not be quoted by name said aurh a plan if adopted un douhtedly would put strict limits on the amount of materials at the disposal of the regional officers Cnlnn Chiefs Summoned Eighteen officials of AFL and CIO metal fabricating unions were invited by the War Production Board to a conference here next Monday at which raw material ahortagei will be discussed The Economic Outlook published by the CIO said ahortagei due to Inefficient management by the steel industry had caused a considerable number of plants to shut down Official Washington watched closely for more drastic action from Nelson who yesterday made it clear that he had taken his gloves off for Abbott and Costello have portrayed detertivea cowboys Bailors soldiers mechanics and carnival spielers In their newest comedy Pardon My Sarong which opens Saturday at Warners Fresno Theater they will appear as bus drivers who later become castaways on an uncharted South Sea island The atory takes the comedians halfway around the globe in a combination chase treasurehunt and encounter with a tribe of south seas dancing beauties Virginia Bruce has the leading feminine role and the rast Includes Robert Paige Lief Erickson Lionel Atwill Nan Wynn and Samuel Hinds Many new songs are listed la eluding Island Of The Moon Lovely Luana Vingo Jingo Do I Worry Java Jive and Shout Brother Shout The associate feature Frisco LU features Irene Hcrvey and Kent Taylor Currently showing is Gene Autry In Call Of The Canyon and Blondic For Victory hcen bombed and strafed repeal ed- invasion army now can be assessed and hnve h1nzd back at lhe rne- and the problem of whether aurh 60C Re RF jrav -lire burn er area nt a fire iioint Gray men to hr nt We SS Dl hai 1M1 LY fo of te in en positions In the Solomon Islands tor two heurs before the United Stales Marines stormed ashore in their invasion barges an eye wit ness revealed today Lord there seemed to be hundreds of dive bombers and as toon as one formal ion came away another went said Seaman Bin-nle Barnes a bearded Queenslander rescued from the sunken Australian cruiser Canberra "They dive bombed one point Incessantly for two hours and then in the distance I could see scores of invasion barges making for the Barnes said sounded like they got some opposition from the Japanese cn shore but they had the Japanese on the run from the start" The Canberra was on patrol duty from Friday night of August 7th until the naval battle began Barnei said the crulker was part of a mixed Australian and American force which escorted the invasion transports Torpedo Bombers Downed Other survivors said strong forces of Japanese torpedo bombers of about fifty planes each twice at-tarked the Allied wars hi pi Saturday From one group of twenty two planes twenty one were shot down they said Mackintosh who was working at an aircraft defense post when (he Canberra was attacked said a shell that exploded near the bridge wounded Captain Frank Getting The captain refused medical aid and continued to command his ship until he was removed despile his protests to a rescue ship lie died Inter One American warship picked up two badly burned Japanese filers one of whom spoke English and said he had been educated in the United States 1 Alamein Air ighting Rares 4 Planes Downed other the two Dnrniers turned ly over burst into Ilnmo and fell into' the sea The clieera of sailors on other ships could be heard faintly across the water Kaw 11 Nasi I'lanea Downed Afler that there was a steady rain of bombs Our ships shivered and shook But RAF fighters pressed their attacks and few of the German bombers got a chance to make their run and take rare-ful aim I saw only one small boat sunk hy and I saw seventeen German plane shot down as payment Our ship was ordered to take the wounded off a tank landing craft which had been hit by German field guns while landing its tanks and troops on one beach While we were lying alongside the greatest air fight of the day developed The sky was literally covered with fighters and bombers Many more were flying so high we rould not see them I counted forty nine aircraft engaged in one pitched battle to the southwest Twisting and gyrating madly they filled the air with the sound of thetr motors and machineguns Junkers Jettisons Bombs A Junkers 88 breaks away as though it la going to dive bomb us But attacked by a Spitfire it jettisons its bomba and fncs away A Hurricane bursts into flames A wing falls off an ME 109 and the plane drops slowly into the sea The whistle of falling bombs seems continuous I look south and see huge geysers thrown up by falling bombs We were taking wounded aboard through nil this and a hig Lancashire hoy his face creased with pain forced a smile when the liny Cockney coxswrti bent over to tell him how the battle was going Steaming to a destroyer with the wounded we passed another launch whose captain was dressed informally in grey flannel slacks and pajamn jacket and announced from the bridge that he was "eating breakfast and I don't give a damn what happrns until after I just let us have some egg" our skipper hollered referring to a stick of bombs which nar rowiv missed the launch "Oh yes old the other railed hack they really weren't to my Launch Was Motionless We rame alongside the destroyer and again we were motionless on the bomb splnshcd sen It was very hot now and the bomhrra were coming out of the sun to make their at-larks New swarms or RAF fighters flung themselves at the German formations broke them up and then pursued the homhrrs one hy one We moved til through the smoke in esiiirl the first pltHse or the tinwal from the renirnl beach The hnmhing was heavier there It ws ing craft flanked hy another fleet of troop and tank landers We returned somewhat fewer In numbers many bloody Including me but triumphant having defeated the Germans in bitter hand to hand fighting and smashed a battery Ilefensea Give Way Meanwhile the Canadians frontally assaulted Dieppe all forces proving the German continental defenses not impregnable thus railing the rurtaln for a second front Tho Americans and British discovered that while not impossible it would not be easy to establish a continental bridgehead Nearing the coast in pre dawn blurkness there was suddenly a cry from the bridge lookout: "Star shell lo port The flare lit up our destroyer and then in a few seconds came: fclar shells tn starboard Bun Into Flak Ships Then hell broke loose Veterans of many naval engagements said they had never seen such flak We had run right into four fink ships on either side of us and Ihey were hurling in everything they had giving the British and Americans a ghastliest twenty five mlnutca Ceaselessly lhe four flak ships poured shrapnel at our fleet focussing on the gunboat For the first lime the desperateness of the situation dawned upon me when a youthful sailor taking shelter ncurby screamed: "They got me" He had lost his left eye Lick Helmet I moved to better shelter larking a tin hat and was now protected on three sides beside a fun- a bridgehead might be opened in the Fall and held through the Win ter also can he reviewed Tested Nazi Strength The real strength of German land and air defenses In western Europe now probably Is known to the Allied high command One informed air source also tressed the blow to the German air force In the nine hour battle Probably one third of the Nazis' fighter strength In western Europe was destroyed in one day's fighting he said and the estimate of 10U German planes probably knocked out of action can be regarded as conservative Not only was enemy fighter strength depleted ihls source said but German bomber squadrons weak In western Europe since Hitler invaded Russia were drained by heavy losses lnriieted hy RAF fighters and naval anti aircraft fire 8 Planes Praised The performance of United States built Mustangs the P51 single engined North American fighter reputed to be the world's was picked out for particular Praise by British commentators Flown by tho RAF the Mustangs got their first major test in combat against the tough Focke-Wulf lDO's and were said to have given a gratifying performanre in strafing of enemy dc-fenses flow many German planes they accounted for was not announced however Informed Britons jeered at Nazi claims to have withstood the Dieppe assault "without calling up of reinforcements of Important They said It was probable the entire machinery of the Corman defense plan in the West was set in motion was no confirmation of the Our motor launch whirh Is about 100 feet long left a southern port last night escorting tank landing craft The moon was sinking toward the horizon as England dropped stern and the ghostlike line of ships headed for France and the enemy Discovered Other Ships As it grew light we discovered scores of other destroyers motor gunhosts lighters assault craft and chausseurs of the Fighting French Navy alt converging on Dieppe One 24 year old sub lieutenant whistled softly at the light and said: 'What's that line in Shakespeare about of England now They ought to see this It makes you The first eommandos landed as we neared the French const RAF bombers had sneaked across lhe channel to hammer German gun positions Ahead anti airrraft fire spurted In fountains of red tracer bullets Across the water we heard the rumbling crump crump of big bombs rianes Attack Convoy As the light brightened we saw six Spitfires flying high overhead We were still admiring them when there was a roar of planes to port and two Forke-Wulfs attacked our convoy They swept over us with every gun firing and ours answering theirs One climbed out of the barrage a second wavered and slid into the sea go and see the fun" said the captain afler the tank transports had run in to landings We steamed through the smoke and in the early sunlight saw the burning houses of Dieppe and heard the rattle of rifle fire and the chatter of marhineguns Shelia from the four inrh guns of snoiig irom tne inur inrn guns ni CAIRO Aug W) British fighters destroyed at least four enemy planes in sudden increase of nerinl activity over the Egyptian battle front west of El Alamein British headquarters reported today The communique mentioned no bombing raids however and said there was nothing to report concerning land operations yesterday The Italian high command reported Axis forces repelled a British attack on the southern flank of the Egyptian battlefront yesterday Rome said German and Italian planes repeatedly attacked Malta and Nazi fighters shot down seven British aircraft in dogfights which developed over that central Mediterranean Island The Italians ao-enowledged loss of one plane Al White Gets Leave To Work In Steel Mill A wartime layoff requested hy A White rity planning engineer to lake a war production positioi with the Bclhlchem Steel Corpora lion in Oakland was approved to day by the city commission Public Works Commissioner Frei Ashley said the layoff was re quested hy While in view of gen oral decline in his planning an: other duties with the city and enable him to contribute to the wa effort While has been head of the Fres no Defense Recreation Commute) and is a former Olympic Games div ing rhnmpion Woodmen Wilt The Sunset Camp No 7199 Modern Woodmen of America will meet in the Pyth-'nn Castle at 8 o'clock tonight Officials of the organization announced plans will be completed at the meeting for a weiner roast to he held at the Sin Joaquin River Saturday night finish fight on the question of his administration of dho war effort Answer Critics "From now on any one who crosses my path Is going to have hia head taken off" he said In discussing statements from congressional and other sources that the War Production Board had mlshan died its job Nelson denounced 'loose talk' about wholesale plant shutdown and flatly contradicted recent reports that as many as 1000 plant might suffer slowdowns or shutdowns because of lack of steel copper aluminum and other materials "I can see the way ahead and we're going to come out on he said lie did not disclose what step he contemplated hut gave a clear hint that subordinates who failed lo meet their responsibilities would get short shrift be no more alibis" he said "I'm sick of Reports Discussed Two reports current In Washington were believed to have nettled the production chief particularly One is the oft published theme that the army is ready and willing to take over control of the wartime industrial economy when and If civilian authority faltered The other is that Nelson was too lenient with his own subordinates A new and minor Irritant was the of internal WPB reports and one such alleged instance led to the dismissal of Frederick 1 Ljlibcy an engineering consultant Libhey was accused of discussing with outsiders a report he was preparing on operations of the Iron and steel branch Stephen Fitzgerald head of WPn's information division emphasized that the dismissal was not because the leak resulted in publication of a story rrilical of lhe branch hut realise Libhey had dixrussed confidential material pub-Bely Other considerations Including Iihhey's "general personnel also were Involved Fitzgerald said Lihbey declined to comment Iihhcy Issued the following statement: "I want to mnke it rlear that any opinions I have expressed are only based on lhe rerord -testimony before the Truman Committee for example But If what I said has made Mr Nelson mad enough to dear rut the dradwood my head la a cheap price to pay for it "I would gladly give what lit lie neck I have left In see the linvs up to his neck In splinters and still WlB will ronilnue It "open policy to the press Fitzgerald explained adding however that a perfectly free flow of confidential reports within WPB was essential to the proper functioning of the agency rorvnin 1 Enh British destroyers began to whistle "very high rasiinltirs in overhrnd lintels Were Smashed Watching Ihinngh field glasses vou could see them smash into a difficult lo keep one's feel In the nel and a couple of ventilators watched the tracers fly across the hows knowing that our moving target would come directly into tho path of the next hurst Suddenly there was a blast in my face I was knocked semi conscious and thought I was a goner but 1 recovered thinking it a lucky escape until 1 happened to pul my hand my fm-e and discovered sametiling wet nnd hot Then my chest felt wet I realized I had bi'on shrap-nelled In lhe left sirt of my face and my right chest hut it did not hurt for hours Later I discovered the concussion blew off my glasses which were Inst The firing continued for many minute more Four different men were put into our forward gun turret and each successively wounded Finally all guns aboard were silenced and at the same time the Falk Khlpx were silenced thinking doubtlessly that our gun boat had been sunk Why it wa not I eannot understand Certainly she was holed plenty hut for some time continued on to the coast meanwhile dropping a landing party headed by a commando commander For some lime we drifted and later were towed away hy American made binding craft For women we suggest Naturalizer competent-looking but to row of lintels once snered to honeymooning Brilonx along one side of Dieppe's main lioulcvnrd Slowly the British gunners brought the hotels down around the ears of the German niachinegun-ners nnd riflemen they sheltered A the buildings disintegrated under the shelling you could see Allied troops moving forward running nnd pausing to fire Periodically we were strafed by-Nazi fighters When we finally east off squadrons of Bostons flying very low were sweeping inland tn bomb the second line of Germun defenses Hard and dangerous in the Slimmer air we heard the broken best that characterizes the motor of heavy German Immlier hip Two lank landing erafl were huiiiing on lhe bench and there were three large fires burning In the town Through the smoke you could see pinpricks of light ss the rear guard engaged the Germans We rame out escorting a lighler full of Canadians Destroyers laid a smoke screen in front of the town nnd it was an eerie feeling to move through It and hear the swish of falling bombs A tank landing craft with motors damaged nnd its steering gear wrecked asked us for a tow It made three of our liny craft but our skipper took it In stride He ran us alongside nnd directed lhe crew to fix lines to the craft Onre more we were mol innless and soft touch for any German bomber killed nnd against 40 German casualties to have captured 1VK) prisoners and to have destroyed twenty right armored ears Some lanks however are known to have been lost To suggest that the attack wns more than a raid a special German rnmmunique broadcast by (he Berlin radio said WO to 410 landing hoats launched the first wave of the attack and that thirty five transports stood by In reserve "lo get into action ax soon as the first landing wave had succeeded in forming a bridgehead" The German rommunique said the attacking force lost fifteen ships sunk hy shell fire and bombing and nineteen others damaged It gave Allied plane losses ns 112 and said thirty five German planes were lost The German press featured front page stories of the Dieppe engagement under large headlines which characterized it ns "a new catastrophic defeat for the British" The high eommand listed ns sunk: Four destroyers two lorpetlo hoats one motorboat one escort vessel and seven transports and as damaged four cruisers four destroyers four motorboats one tug one assault boat for disembarking and five trans pons Moscow Is Eager News of the raid on Dieppe quickening Soviet hopes of xer- Four Hornier 177's flying at about 6000 feet in echelon headed toward I the long lines of British ships Ship rr unjlr' fn! 71 by ship antiaircraft guns opened and Iwo bombs smashed off fire nnd tracer bullets cut sharp patterns Into the blue sky Fragment fills Culiln 1 fragment from one The Dornier looked big and wear Softly very made light and oh-so-casy Naturalized slip no gap pi design ice these smart new sty lcs hlack as they roared closer hf 7nln little ship Jumped under the recoil R1P" wilh the glove-like fit of Gallman Rites Are Set Funeral aervlees for William Gall-man 60 Route 9 Box 98HB a retired painter ara scheduled at 10:90 o'clock Saturday morning in the Sullivan Burns Blair Chapel with Dev Cheater Snyder offienlt-ing Cremation will follow In the Fresno Crematory A native of San Francisco Gill-man moved lo the Fresno district twenty five years ago Ho had been confined hy Illness to hia home for several weeks preceding his death Tuesday night The siih lieutenant gravely enumerated the toss of linlf pint of gin a picture of If Suffolk and a Willi the tank landing cruft xe- of her Oerllchon (antlnirrraft gum and machineguns Bombers Drop (nails The leading Imniber swerved sbghtly nnd out of Its belly turn- rureri alongside we stalled home bled four bombs Inn cmilil scei-j-i n1( okcd like a pit-nip rrnfl ond front in western Europe was displayed prominently tn Hie Moa-Jthem dropping slowly ahexd and lolw(b be errw snipped to the waist row press British and American port They landed with explosion ii i(li np ivi ia-k communique on the action wee ht nearly lifted us mil the wa- blond ninth mu way printed at the top of futi-ign pews iter lhe sr-rniul and third buniliers lutmlis mine learning page There was no offieisl rnm-'dropped their load but antiair-mont Immediately tint the popula-(erafl fire drove off the foiirili lion rend the reports emi tl I'reNs Acclalins Itniil The bomba missed their target Iiiit by now every one was watching Mill in in'n cl iMMir mm bhii iiiiii Sizes 101 and 11 795 The British press ar: (aimed tbi' jrnrs The fiist wns blazing raid not on for ii seif Inn siso nr fIjm hjl by antiaircraft shells as its implications to eniimiilcd Pus-j sia Following so swiftly on Uu- A CJ C'hurchlll-Slalin lonferenivs In Mo- HI CfiQ down one tn port mid one tn star-lion rd The tiium-he beiu ing I lie last or the landing parties crept Ihinngh lhe smoke sciern which obscured Dieppe High above machine guns sputtered a the air tiulMo moved lu a ti iiimpliant close (or the Allies A kid manning out- Ocilirhon gun 'ailed tu the niacliliiegiirinet': go in the movies tonight SUDAN row the News ('lii'ouii-le comment- Jjjj V6k CdfYip Of rd It was "psychologically most Pelley 3 Others Deny Morale Charqe Guilt WASHINGTON Aug 01 Silver Shirt leader W'illinm Dudley IVlIcv and three other defendants hinged with conspiring to impair the morale of the nnlion'a armed forces entered plena of innocent when arraigned In the federal district court here today The three nlhnra arraigned before Judge Malliew McGuire were Hudson Depriest Wichita Knns Court Asher Mtincle Ind and Ralph Tnwnsend San Francisco Townsend now Is serving a term of eight months to two year for violating the foreign agents regls- irntton act and lvilry wns sentenced to fifteen years Imprisonment In district court at Indinn-n pot la Inst week on ronvfction of sedition 'l'lie four w-n-e among twenty eight person indicted July by opportune To the Manchester Guardian Britain's best assui-in'c 1 tint lhe Germans are jittery over ilielr own Girl Scouts Tomorrow The six week period of the Fresno (itrl Seoul Bumnu-r Day t'anip In the pine grove at Hording "Ihinly lefense fin-e wia wil fif(1 tnirrow evening Old Age Relief Budgef Is Pared the "hysterical lone" ami when parents of tho canipci-s the of their rlnims in trying to ifinpur-iclllti nutnhi'is and Ihr day i-nmp ace tlie rnmmnndns successes comiitrc meinlicis are ciiu-itaincd at a supper and program The supper will begin at 6:90 I M- followed by the piogimn and an MADERA (Minim Co) Aug 20 II Scott director of the Madera County Welfare tvpiiitmenl yrslpifliiy i i-qucstcd tbe Imnid of -upi-i visor In cut I'kiiidii off hi exhibit of ImndicMifl work nieomp' lislicd din ing the si-nsou One of Hie will ba tbe Hail Ordtn Postage Paid urigln'il estimate f)r eld nge lellcf special grand Jury Invest igat Ing foreign prnpntinniln In this country ploiing of several numbers by hii dining Hie rut lent eur orcheslio nf ten shepherd's pipe lu a teller to tlie supervisin' ROOKIE players The gills under (lie diue-tioit of KiiHi Simmons have made the hnmhon flute and learned to play them during I lie camping sc Smit said After comparing the cie loud or old nge recipients a of July "Ml and July 19-12 and refiguring our The six oilier who appenird In court today were ITrientt lrnnett Washington K-liucr and James (i -irner of Wh-hlln Kira Tome True Ailinginn Va lii-nr Bnimbnik Washington and Grot go Silvester Wreck Vlerrrk recently was r'nlited nf vlolnling CONCORD DOWN TOWN Oa Gtaiy I bs atm Small fitwclaal Smtii and Tkcotraa ara wMia aaay mISnw dlmaca mm lha laaal WITH rfVATI BAIN SINOII $179 1a $4 00 DOUBII $JJ9 fa $0 VMUmM MtltM DaaWa 1100 nCIUtNT DININB MOM St M00IMTI rixn Saad la FMa (Ivai cmaMa ItHlS JaMribai aalafk al latamt Chaw A 4 Ma'iaial flaaaiV sion Campfile snug nnd a flag rc- budget on a basis of no Im-irti-e In amBu Heat ceremony also are Im-luili-d Mrs Blchter ramp director s-nri more than 120 Girl Smuts and seventy six Brownies teglslercd during the session i-nse load but a gradual liberalization we me icqiiesllng you tn reduce our old age budget to Mm 11 i'll total federal partb-lpMlnn $l'sUHX) slate nnd county $7i(XM rm-li WHISKIT lhe foieign agents regli ration ml Krnturkv atraight bourbon 100 proof Nimnirnt rftr NiionI Ditillrni ProJuct Corp NY 1155 FULTON J-i-t rnmss rr -ifv i zr-y-vj vi ImLi.

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