Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Dayton Herald from Dayton, Ohio • 3

Publication:
The Dayton Heraldi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DAYTON HERALD 3 Wednesday, March 20, 19i8 Burglary Suspects Held By Dayton Police employed in Dayton but have not worked for several months, they Two Covington, Ky, youths were held by police today for question said in police lineup today. ing in several recent burglaries. One of the pair, Charles Leonard, 20, has admitted participating in two thefts, Det. Sgt. R.

K. Pfauhl said. Leonard admitted burglarizing DON'T PAY DOUBLE FOR WHAT YOU EAT yon, too. rale monry far food ynaToar eninyed. and pay again an auRenn( tiotmch and aacer paina cauvfi by rirrm acid, try IMita frar quack rciici.

UDGA Tabieta an cnoipoundot from not onr. bat three fcwt-wrtina; mre-dwnti. Ova 200 miiiioa uaed. RaaameDdeif tat banuog atomaih raina, mdiKnUon. pa.

hurt ham. aoor aiaact iionuchand -hn rtrper-aad conditKKM. Zx. boa of Udn Tabkeai Irom yoar drwtiat. 5-mmut trst cmmcia.

OMULS, y0C8 MOEY BAC1U it. the Crystal restaurant, 238 South 1 pj Ludlow street, and the Dexter Sales company, 35 North Jeffer son street, Pfauhl said. The other youth being held for fit Jja) MM 1' e' A 0 questioning identified himseii as Robert Renfro, 17. Both had been 'Mi? (3Z) nam csm qub to ann Russians Taken By Chinese In Mukden Battle MUDKEN, March 17. (UP) Chinese Nationalist troops fighting off a Chinese Communist siege of Mukden today questioned six Russian officers and soldiers allegedly captured near a Communist artillery position outside the city.

The two Soviet officers and four enlisted men told the Nationalist headquarters that it was all a mistake. They said they accidently were near the gun position when Nationalist troops attacked it, and said they didn't know Communist troops were there. Two other Russian soldiers in uniform were captured by the Nationalists in territory wrested from the Chinese Reds. These Russians said they were stragglers. Both carried sidearms and rifles.

The beleaguered and gutted city of Mukden was virtually surrounded by Communist troops. The Communists were doing their utmost to capture the city from the Nationalist troops, to whom the Russians handed control when they evacuated last week. 'All railroad and highway traffic into Mukden has been interrupted by the Communists, who are infiltrating into the city and fighting battles in the downtown area. Field reports from the fighting at the southern edge of Mukden said the Communists were using Japanese guns. The skirmish in which the six Russians were said to have been captured centered around a Japanese 75-mm.

cannon. It was the first report that the Communists were using artillery. The Communist gun position at Suchiatung, 18 miles south of Mukden, inflicted 20 casualties on Nationalists, field reports said. Nationalists counterattacked, forcing the gunpost to withdraw, and captured the Russians. NEW YORK Mrs.

Gloria (Mama) Vandcrbilt filed papers in Albany today for incorporation of the firm, Gloria Vandcrbilt Corp. The papers said the firm would manufacture and sell cosmetics. Co-directors are Maurice Chalom (above), sportsman, and I. P. Flatto, her attorney.

(Acme Tetephoto) Troy Light Plant Workers Off Jobs Camera Club To CHear Tweedie Herbert Tweedie, In charge of the finishing department for the TROY, March 20. Distribution I I jt 4 tr 1 before the YMCA Camera club In room 201 at the association at 8 p. Tuesday, March 26. Tweedie will analyze and criticize a 21-crint exhibit from Camera Custom re-upholsterinq by our factory eraftsm will meet the approval of everyone desiring quality. FRAMES REPAIRED, REINFORCED WORN OUT SPRINGS REPLACED WEBBING RESET AND REPLACED NEW CUSHION UNITS USED FURNITURE HEAYILY PADDED LARGE SELECTION OF FABRICS monthly contest, illustrating his remarks with 50 of his own prints.

The meeting is open to public attendance. Acid Indigestion Relieved in 5 minute or double your money back Whanexrasa atnmach arid causfts painful, Buffirif ln hi, lour itomarh and heartburn, dnctnra usually prFHrltm the fatit-artinf mrdlrlnea known for ymDtomattc relief mHirtnp like, those In Bell-ana Tihlfll. tmm tie. Bell -ana brings comfort In Jiffj or double your money back turn of boule to ua. 25o at all druggtiti.

TRUCKEE, CALIF. A blizzard slowed parties removing bodies of 26 victims today from the C-47 wreckage near here. The Army plane was reported to have exploded in the air. Itfis one of the worst peacetime crashes in history. Examining wreckage are Lt.

Stephen Cummings, rescue officer from Hamilton field, and Bill LaMarr, game warden. (Acme Tetephoto) Phone ICE 6113 At your request our representative will estimate yojr needs In your home, day or night at your convenience. No obligation. Call us new. 12 MONTHS TO PAY and maintenance employes of the Troy municipal electric plant walked out yesterday after city council failed to take action, Monday night, on their demands for higher pay.

The men also are ask. ing vacations with pay and pay on legal holidays. The strikers are members of local B-258, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The present scale of pay ranges from 76c to $1.33 an hour and the men are demanding a scale of from 00c to $1.40 an hour. John F.

Porter, city service and safety director, said today union members had agreed to handle emergency service calls to Stouder Memorial hospital and to private homes where there might be illness. Other calls, however, would be ignored. Service, he said, would continue normal except in case of a major breakdown. City council, at its meeting Monday night, adopted an ordinance providing pay for vacations and on legal holidays, but took no action on an increased pay range, Union men say the 44-hour week is satisfactory. Serving Dayton for Over a Quarter of a Century Victims Of Transport Crash And Nearest Of Kin Listed QM3c, Robert A.

McGee, Philadelphia, Joseph W. McGee, Mantau, N. J. Lt. (jg) John C.

Shaw, Newark, N. C. C. Shaw, East Orange, N. J.

v. Crew members included: Capt. Richard K. Young, Stockton, pilot. First Lt.

Louis N. Duesing, Stockton, co-pilot. Sgt. Antone J. Esgro, Denver, Colo.

ton, Calif. Wife, Marion B. Milton, Stockton. Second Lt. Richard F.

Simpson, 550th AAF base unit. Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, Thomason, Ga. Sl'c Gerald P.

Udell, USS H. A. Wiley, Mattie Udell, Philadelphia, Pa. RADIOS Repaired. Free delivery.

All makes. Also refrigerators and washers. Work and parts guaranteed. 19 years' experience. Phone FU 1151.

er' 11 GcHtiai ZCccttk. 27 East Second St. Coast-To-Coast Sleepers Coming CHICAGO, March 20. (UP) Six major railroads announced today that on March 31 a new system will permit passengers for the first time in history to travel from coast to coast without stopovers and without changing sleeping cars. The six east-west roads participating in the new coast-to-coast system are the New York Central, the Pennsylvania, the Santa Fe, the Northwestern, the Union Pacific and the Southern Pacific.

Spokesmen for the Rock Island railroad said it would inaugurate the new service June 2. Under the system stopovers and transfers will be eliminated for sleeping car passengers at the terminal point of Chicago, St. Louis, Memphis and New Orleans. Sleeping cars will be switched from one road to another and passengers will not have to change trains. Railroad officials said the plan had been considered for 10 years before the war, but wartime travel congestion delayed its adoption.

-Recently the Chesapeake and Ohio criticized the old transfer system in national advertisements depicting human passengers being forced to transfer while market-bound pigs were given through service. The Chesapeake road, which has merged with the Pere Marquette, has not announced participation in the coast-to-coast network. STOCKTON, march 20. (UP) Col. Malcolm Green, commanding officer of the Stockton Army Air base, today released the names and next of kin of identified victims of the crash of an Army C-47 transport plane near Truckee, California.

Yoeman 2C Charles R. Brannss of Mare Island, whose nearest relative was listed as Mrs. George F. Brannss, Chicago. Motor Machinists Mate 2C Mel-vin S.

Van Riper, Mare Island, Mrs. Laura Van Riper, Vestal, I yix nr iT. reuTTt fix iT. Lusk, is regarded as a typical Western town, with levis, boots and big hats seen frequently. i 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 i i i i 1 1 i a in iiiiifii i i i i i i i i i i ii ii ii i i ii i i i UURr UJVUlUiiliWUWiuifl New York.

Lt. (Med. Corps, USN) Frank W. Davis, Mare Island, Mrs. Herbie Davis, Canton, O.

S2C Raymond L. Schneider, Camp Shoemaker, Mrs. J. L. Harryman, Cuerto, Tex.

MM3C Lyle C. Dykes, Mare Island, Mrs. H. M. Dykes, Morill, Nebraska.

Ens. Gino C. Caletti, Philadelphia, Frank Caletti Colusa, Calif. Electrician's Mate 3C Stephen R. Kirsch, USS R.

H. Smith, Mrs. R. Hirsch, Cedar Hurst, L. I.

S2C Pasqual Iuluicci, Camp Shoemaker, father, Vincent Iuluicci Brooklyn, N. Y. Lt. Col. Clyde Taylor, headquarters, ATS, Wright Field, 0 wife, Mrs.

Bess G. Taylor, Washington, Minimum Wage Compromise Considered WASHINGTON, March 20. (UP) Senate administration leaders, facing almost certain defeat of the pending 65-cent minimum wage bill, today considered a compro- NOW You Can Have a i 1 A D. C. First Lt.

Ervin Cue, Camp Atter-bury, Ind mother, Mrs. Mary Cue Kennedy, McMinnville, Ore. Hosp. App. 1C Richard O.

Eh- YOU YOURSELV CAN MAKE )fSfe special LUXablc Talons on ffllp Parade THURSDAY 1aWS -n-minnM it I'M THIRD FLOOR titlM lers, Naval hospital, Oakland, i mise flat 60-cent increase for two mm years. The present bill, now in its fourth day of floor debate, provides for an immediate increase in the legal minimum from 40 to 65 cents an hour, with boosts to 70 cents at the end of two years find 75 at the end of four. Under the compromise plan there wife, Mrs. Laurel Ehlers, Medwary, Utah. Pvt.

Willie B. Wilson, Camp Beale, Calif. Mrs. Beatrice Easter, St. Louis, Mo.

Capt. Donald A. Bride, Cincinnati, Mrs. Adeline Bride, Platt-ville, Wis. Lt.

Comdr. L. S. Stark, Hunter's Point, wife, Mrs. Dorcas Stark, 841 Middle Menlo Park, Calif.

QM3C Floyd R. Sundgren, USS Bondia, Mrs. A. W. Sundgren, Sa-lina, Kan.

Storekeeper Maurice Vose Oak Knoll hospital, mother, Mrs. D. L. Vose, Terre Haute, Ind. rm lf Sim would be no provision for any automatic boost beyond 60 cents.

At the end of two years, however, i jhf mm congress could review the matter and decide whether further in Tailored to the exact measurements ot YOUR CAR Custom-made Auto Seat Covers, fitted and installed in two hours. Guaranteed workmanship. Finest fibre materials and fabrics. Reasonable prices. EVERY JOB TAILORED FOR YOUR CAR.

Pick out your fabrics. Drive in note the address What woman ever has enough clothes? Even if your budget creases should be granted. is small, it cost so little to Urges Separate Force Tj mm make things yourself that yoir if wr ft til I Corp. William T. Woodhouse, Camp Beale, M.

Woodhouse, Silver Lake terrace, Yardley, Pa. Pvt. Glenn Dickerson, Camp Beale. Mrs. Agnes Dickerson, Chattanooga, Tenn.

First Lt. James E. Milton, Stock NEW YORK, March 20. (UP) Gen. Carl S.

Spaatz reiterated his plea for an autonomous air force last night on the grounds that the air arm "will never reach its stature as long as it remains the divided responsibility of agencies whose major interest lies in other fields. Spaatz, commanding general of the U. S. Air Forces, spoke at the annual dinner of the Wings club. Auto-Craft Co.

can easily afford to spice up your wardrobe. All these smart new styles we're showing are made from patterns with a printed cutting line. See them previewed on living models! Every costume in our show was Lux-tested so you can be sure it will suds like a dream. When you choose Lux-able fabrics, upkeep is low, too it costs less than a penny to Lux a dress. Fabrics for Easier Clothes SIXTH ST.

Between Main Jefferson The large building with the AUTO-CRAFT Sign, Next to overhead. Enter from Sixth St. Dies Of Injury GALLIPOLIS, March 20. (SpD Earl Gray, Oakhill brick plant worker, died in a hospital here to- day after receiving injuries when (a truck colli'-ti with his parked automobile and knocked the car against a train near his home. yit if lWtafi StvpP i "Shangri La" Secrets Gleaned Dy Torture SHANGHAI, March 20.

(UP) By employing the "crudest tortures," Japanese officials learned within a week after the Tokyo raid that the Doolittle's flyers were carrier-based, lt was revealed today. How the Japs knew about "Shangri La" while it still was a top military secret in the United States was explained vividly in a deposition from Lt. George Barr, of Queens Village, Lond Island. American prosecutors offered the deposition in evidence at the trial cf four Japanese officers being tried for the executions of three of the eight captured Doolittle flyers. Lieutenant Barr said the information was obtained in Nanking April 24, 1912 after two days of torture and continuous questioning.

Barr and some of the other pilots were forced to sign "confessions" that they machine-gunned civilians during the raid, accord-Ing to the deposition. May Advise Chinese SHANGHAI, March Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, commander of the U.S. Army's Chinese theater of operations, said today he may send American officers into Manchuria to advise the Chinese army if it Is his responsibility.

Wedemeyer told a press conference that if American officers go to Manchuria they will assist the Chinese in repatriating any Japanese troops in the area and advise on similar problems. 11 (' jm fill I heat iSt 1 lev nn a. .9 jf e. 4v. i raatanara far horn tawinf ttapartmant r- a jou.

-Tr-T-if-n 4 UD Qt Ml win A CO riavriNNAtl, Ohio FUlton 6291 RED TOP BREWING CO. BRANCH.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Dayton Herald
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Dayton Herald Archive

Pages Available:
364,405
Years Available:
1882-1949