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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Weather Tonight: FAIR AND COLDER Tomorrow: FAIR AND WAR3IER Weather Reports, -Tides and Almanal on Page 19 "in srnnpz id tpa nn tomT In Tonight's Globe 24 30 19 19 24 17 .3 ,20 Story 19 Short Story 21 Society 20 Sports ..22.23, 29 Smooth Susan-. 18; War Diary MAKCH 26, 1911 vonox8X5X' 2 PAGES TWO CENTS 1 Amusements Boake Carter Comics Cross-Word Death Notices Editorial Financial ..28, BERLIN, March 26 (UP) Japan's Foreign Minister, Yosuke Matsuoka, arrived at Anhalter station at 6 p. m. (11 a. E.

S. tonight on a momentous visit to the Axis countries, which he said should be closely watched by the United States. En route to Berlin, Matsuoka talked with German, Italian and Japanese newspapermen. He told them that Japan has no claim on the United States, but he advised America to watch carefully what occurs during his visits to Berlin and Rome. Matsuoka 29Wigfam Handwriting 19, Women ....26, 29 Obituaries Continued on Page 14 The Lines Grow Longer i Divisions tvttqt i0 I r-j fe WfinKfLMMIlM 17 27 t.

it Steel Strikers Given Mayor Lyons Mayor Lyons and Wife Go to Florida Mayor John W. Lyons of Cam rermssion to Picket nh. BULLETIN SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia, March 26 (AP) More than 1000 persons clashed with police tonight in the streets of Sarajevo, birthplace of the World War and a center of dissent against this country's new pact with theAxis. bridge, found guilty last week of conspiracy and requesting and accepting bribes, left today with his wife for a vacation of several weeks in Florida. -Mayor Lyons yesterday furnished WASHINGTON, March 26 (UP) Defense mediation board chairman Clarence A.

Dykstra telegraphed Gov. Arthur II. James of Pennsylvania today that the board is "watching closely every development" in the Bethlehem steel strike. He pointed out, however, that the board cannot enter the case unless it is requested to do so by Secretary of Labor Frances SPREAD OVER EUROPE- Without a real friend in the world, Germany is forced to guard all borders and police all conquered and satellite countries. Mussolini's defeats in Albania and Africa have forced Hitler to further scatter his strength.

He has had to send divisions into Italy itself to make sure that country doesn't try to unhinge from the Axis. This map shows how the Nazi forces are distributed. Twenty divisions are still stationed opposite England. mander of the state police barracks here, today gave the C. I.O.'s Steel Workers Organizing Committee permission to restore picket lines around parent plant of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation after the strike leaders had decided to reestablish them "by force, if necessary." Martin's decision, whichravert-ed threatened violence, was announced to a mass meeting of strikers by John Riffe, C.

I. O. field director. Strike Continued on Page 13 $7500 bonds ordered Dy Judge Harold P. Williams when the latter stayed sentences of two years in the House of Correction and three to four years in State Prison imposed on the Cambridge chief executive.

dt is believed Mayor and Mrs. Lyons will be the guests of City Treas. Andrew P. Carroll at the letter's Winter home in Florida. En-route, the couple will visit their eld BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, March 26 (AP) -Sharp street fighting broke out anew in Belgrade tonight as public protests rose agaihst the alignment of this country with tljp Axis.

There was fighting in at least eight points of the city, with police and soldiers Jn riot cars speeding through the street from one scene to another in efforts to quell jBKe violent disturbances. Many arrests were made. est s6n, John W. Lyons who is a student of a university near BETHLEHEM, March 26 (UP) Maj. Joseph Martin, com North End Man's Cinderella Horse Waltzes Into Derby Newton Street Called ''Twins Row Army Air Corps Aim 800,000 Men, 80,000 Pilots The United States Army has set a goal of an Air Corps of men of whom about 80,000 will be pilots, Maj.

Willis S. Fitch, and recently named chairman of the New England Flying Cadet committee, said today. Maj. Fitch was addressing a conference of state chairmen of the Flying Cadet Committee and Members of the Comitaji, the old Serb revolutionary society which has sprung into new life, and student leaders were among the majority of those arrested. Heavily-armed troops rushed, to guard the Danube and Sava River bridges when authorities received reports they were to be bombed.

disorders which had been agitating the country for 24 hours. The first step taken by the authorities after Cvetkovic's arrival was to close several Belgrade public schools where thousands of older boys destroyed pictures of Adolf Hitler and staged sit-down strikes. Police cordons were stationed around some of the largest schools. F' If lass Twins W'- '1 Mfh" BWWVWSV f. ivmfdf- 134 f.Vxl..

ill Rioting broke out in the center of Belgrade at noon today in protest again Yugoslavia's alliance army officials of the 1st Corps Area. Maj. Gen. James A. Woodruff, Corps Area commander, was represented by Col.

Vernon L. Burge, air officer, and Lieut. Col. and it was reported all might be closed until after the Orthodox Easter April 20 in an effort to avert future trouble. The scene at the station, when Cvetkovic and his foreign minister stepped from their train at 9:04 a.

m. (3:04 a. m. E. S.

was somber. Hundreds of persons already were reported under arrest in the provinces as a result of yesterday's dem John L. Rice, recruiting officer. The army, at present, declared Fitch, has only between 4000 and 5000 pilots, and wants to train with the Axis powers. Police and soldiers, armed to the teeth, rushed to the scene and quelled the outbreak, which occurred a short time after Premier Dragisa Cvetkovic returned from Vienna, where he signed the Axis pact yesterday.

Many persons were arrested before police halted the fighting, which started when Axis sympathizers attacked a parade of students bearing British andj 000 a pear. Air Corps Continued on Page 29 vv I i "-'H ill 1 i i 'i I I I I y' -4 I 41 'JZ? "I I A. Jft 'JjSMlVIJ. JjS f. llil AjiMJA onstrations which threatened to reach grave proportions.

Serb peasants, students. Com Jl munists and the rejuvenated Comitaji (Committee of Dissenters) American flags. The paraders already had "TWINS' ROW" Name applied to Falmouth st, West Newton, with three pairs of twins in families living there. March 26 "Blessed marched through the business district, singing patriotic songs. The students were mostly from secondary schools and formed the procession on their way home Freak Spring Blizzard Hits Maine BANGOR, March 26 (AP) A freak Spring blizzard deliv events" generally come double on which dates back to Turkish Empire days, took a leading part in the disorders.

Kosca Pecanae, one-time Comitaji leader and hero of the 1918 Salonika compaign, was reported in southern Serbia recruiting sons of his World War comrades for. a new fight against German domination. Yugoslavia Continued on Page 14 Falmouth road, West Newton. "Twins Row," as the street is com from lunch. Cvetkovic no sooner had reached ing to be known, acquired another the capital than he went into brace of new arrivals yesterday conference seeking to end the ered r.

knockout blow to com when twin daughters were born at Waltham Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. CINDERELLA HORSE Here is Little Beans, a bay colt purchased in the 1939 yearling sales at Saratoga for $550 by "Rocky" Palladino of Boston. Little Beans is now being munications and power service in central Maine today while the southern section of the state basked in warm, bright sunshine. Thomas F.

Corliss of 30 Faimouui road. Only three doors away, at 42 Fal Nazis Move War Zone Closer to United States regarded with high favor in the Kentucky Derby reckonings to a result of his smashing victory over Whirlaway, Derby Winter Book favorite. Snow ranging from one to 18 inches turned to heavy slush which stalled highway travel and felled telephone and telegraph mouth road, live Mr. and Mrs. Theodore A.

Brown and their 1-year-old twin sons. Theodore uennis ana poles in a wide area around Bangor and in some sections of Arthur David. And two doors beyond the By JAMES H. POWERS (Foreign Editor of the Globe.) By extending the zone of oper Aroostook County. The Weather Bureau at Port Browns, at 50 Falmouth road, Mr.

and Mrs. Charles S. Flagg have a land was unable to get its daily ture. In her latest action, Germany has refrained from advancing any official claims for control over the great mid-Atlantic territory in the north. But her action, and the threat which has followed upon its heels Greenland Continued on Page 14 ations for her war of blockade set of twin boys, Gerald and Donald, 6 years old, among Iheir 14 children reports from upstate stations be cause of disrupted communica tion service.

against Britain up to the three-mile limit off the shores of Green ft Before the Browns came to live in their piesent home at 42 Fal Power failure and subsequent land, Germany has posted a cav lack of heat caused school officials mouth road, the same apartment BABY TWINS DennU Brown (left) SET OF TWINS David Flagg (left) to suspend classes in Bangor. By EDDIE WELCH Cinderella horse, a $550 bargain at the 1939 Saratoga will carry the eolers of a Bostonian in the 67th run-of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs May 3, 2nd at the present time is accorded an even chance to win t-e Eluegrass Classic, the outstanding event of the American turf. The colt, Little Beans, and his owner, "Rocky" Palla-dino, are the upstarts challenging the bluebloods of the world in this outstanding traditional stake, and it 15 quite possible that the youthful Bostonian will capture this historic event with a thoroughbred that cost him a ttere $50 more than the starting fee. eat against navigation in waters which lie perilously close to the was occupied by a couple who were and David Brown, one year old. and Gerald Flagg, six years old.

the croud rmrents of twm gins. Hemisphere Neutrality Zone pro Maine Storm Continued on Page 14 Born at Waltnam Hospital aner an emergency trip through the big blizzard on Feb. 15. 1940. the Brown twins have been dubbed "the storm babies." The Browns have another Struck in Abdomen With claimed by President Roosevelt and has definitely moved the operations zone for her sea raiders to a territory lying within the Western Hemisphere.

Greenland, it happens, is bisected by the 42d meridian, and child. Martha, three years old. SaysPetain Favors France The Flagg twins figured in me news recently when Gerald (or was it Donald?) lost two front teeth and with them his resemblance to his Snowball, Boy Near Death America's createst lottery, the her easterly coasts lie within 250 Riddles, Vanderbilts, du Ponts snnual yearling sales at Saratoga, in "New Order" brother, only to restore the likeness by knocking out two of Donald's Bobby's father died last November JTi.f YORK. March 26 (UP) A and others bid hysterically for the offspring of sires which have sent champions to the races year after teeth (or was it Gerald's? snowball struck 5-year-old Bobby VICHV. France.

March 26 (AP) Small wonder that the unsuspect ghlights the racing season at York's famous upstate track, utftandir.g names in the turf lci, the Whitneys, Wideners, to mm wsmm Fernand de Brinon, Ambassador year. ing stranger passing through Fal Bocca in the abdomen last Friday. mouth road thinks he is seeing Today he lay in a Fordham Hospi This was the scene in August, 1939, when Mr. Rocco Palladino, of France to Paris, announced today that Chief of State Marshal Petain favors participation of double. tal bed, almost literally packed in a product of Boston own North ice.

while pnvsicians weignea me France in creation of the "new order" in Europe. De Brinon told the press Petain chances of saving his life by an almost hopeless operation. from a kidney ailment which physicians said resulted from the fact he had given 106 blood transfusions to Bobby's two brothers, Alfred, 13. and William, 11, both of whom are haemophiliacs. His mother.

Mrs. Catherine Bocca. is on relief, about to be evicted from her Bronx home because she cannot pay the rent, and still provide the special diet and medical treatment her sons need, from the $110 a month of home relief 6he has been receiving. She sold her Bewing machine for miles of Iceland also included in the newly defined German raiding zone. Only a little more than a week ago, Premier Winston Churchill of England officially declared that the Nazis were conducting their sea vfarfare as far west as this meridian, thus raising questions not entirely dissociated from the policy of this nation under the Monroe Doctrine.

Almost exactly a year ago President Roosevelt asked at a press conference whether the United States would invoke the Monroe Doctrine if Germany, having taken control of Denmark, should assert control over Greenland also, stated that such questions were very very prema Racing Results TBOPICAL PAHK DAILY Chirlamar nd Dusky Ctrl paid S203.60. FIRST RACE II 000. maiden -year- considerea that France should re Hopeless Because BODoy is a nae- mophiliac, a "bleeder." And the in End, visited the Spa with the idea of purchasing yearlings of. real bloodlines. "Rocky" came up the hard way, from selling papers to managing fighters and thence to racing when the sport of Kings made its first appearance in New England at Rockingham Park.

ternal hemorrhage resuitea irom ine sume collaboration with Germany and a clear position against the "free French" movement of Gen. Charles de Gaulle. snowball carelessly thrown by a oldi. 4 furlnnct. (hlimir.

lid. Caff'la 10.50 8. HO 4.10 frafnrha. Hi. K'Im'n 5, So ii torj.

1014, M'And'w IX) neighbor boy i complicated by Time: 49 1-6. ituin i uiri, mav Mr, Villas lad. Try Fin, Roll Roma, TREASURY BALANCE burgeons Deiievetj nis cnance iu Wrulow, Darby Demon, Falcon. XourUl S3 last week. There wasn a cent lve, ehonid the operauon De neces Lady also ran.

sary, would be little more than one left in the house" when Bobby was WASHINGTON, March 26 (AP) Net Treasury balance $2,361,113,275., Customs receipts 31,534,576. Little Beans. Continued on Page 23 In 50. taken to the hospital, she said. Continued on Page 29 i.

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Pages Available:
4,496,022
Years Available:
1872-2024