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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 11

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DETROIT FREE PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMRKR I. 1941 11 Demands Land Defense Puts Finns Call Receives Firemen's No. I Award I i i I 1 vl-V 1 i It fTv I y. i 1 li problem Up to Schools Trailers Tuzzled by Situation as 327,000 prrpare for Oasses l0 Open Wednesday Continued from rage One school bell could be heard in IJery corner of the quiet town. materials for pageantry are Jdv at hand, but all celebration the centenary will be put off "til the school year is well under During tne year, uuwever, kidding histrionic talent will be STuie opportunity to flourish a many a school auditorium centennial exhibition.

Accommodations a Problem If 4 In nroblem of the moment, toucver, is where to place the additional enrollees expected in the Lie schools. The arrival of many Lilies in Detroit because of de- 1. nunAiifaH trt rQ nan fense worn inmnllcations as yet unmeasured. A drop in high-school enrollment Is possible because of the lure of the factory arm wcii-pjms jmo, misrht be offset by the de mands of industry and business for minimum of a nign-scnooi euuea-tion. Schools offering education In mechanics are expecting record enrollments.

Lutheran schools will open Wednesday, at the same time as public jchools, but Catholic schools will hold off until Thursday, with faculty members to meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday for a special mass at Blessed Sacrament Cathedral at (Men Archbishop Edward Mooney will officiate. New School for Girls To the Catholic high schools of Detroit ill be added a new school for girls, Immaculata, which will open Monday, Sept. 8, at Green-lawn and Marygrove. The school will be staffed by the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and will enroll approximately 600 students.

Eleventh and twelfth-grade students will register Wednesday and ninth and tenth-grade students on Thursday. Hours will be from 9 nm, to il a.m. and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Principal of the school will be Sister Anna Marie, heading the staff of 18.

The Rev. Stanley J. Schafer will be chaplain. College preparatory work will be emphasized. The first of Wayne University's six defense curricuiums for the year will get under way at 7 p.m.

Tuesday when an Air Corps Institute will meet at McMichael Intermediate School. The total defense program will cover industrial production, medicine and nursing as well as air defense, and will be jnore extensive than in any previous semester. The institute, one of three Wayne courses related to air defense, is planned for air cadets over 20 years old who cannot present two years of college credit but who wish to prepare for special examinations given by the United French Push Effort to Get Nazi Accord Vichy Is Working to Gear the Way for Definite Pact, De ttrinon Reveals BY LANSING WARREN Nsw York Tlmrs Farflta SWska VICHY. Sept. 1 Efforts ti make possible a definite accord between France and Germany are being pushed, according to a statement to the American press In Paris today by Fernand de Brinon, the French delegate with the occupying forces.

He denied, though, that as yet it had been possible to clear the ground for such negotia tions. This statement supplements the recent declaration by Marshal Henri Philippe Petain in which he gave the clear indication that there could be no hope of peace as long as the war continued between other nations. Collaboration between France and Germany may prepare the way for a final settlement, but for the moment the terms of the armistice and the acceptance of the principle of collaboration are the foundation stones of Franco- German relations. (Marshal Petnin's announcement of a new Government, the Legion of War Veterans and Volunteers of the National Revolution, was censored out of the German-controlled Paris press today an indication that the totalitarian-style movement was trouble-bound, the Associated Press stated.) Anti-Jeivish Outbreak Seen in Paris Slaying Bt tin Associa(t4 Prasa PARIS, Sept. 1 A new, outbreak of anti-Jewish terror was suspected tonight in the slaying of Adolphe Rosenthal, a once-prominent Paris stock broker, whose body was found today in a traffic underpass in the Porte Maillot district.

Rosenthal Was killed by a shot in the temle from a small, cheap pistol of the same type that was used by Paul Colette to shoot Pierre Laval, former vice premier, and Marcel Deat last week. Police said that Rosenthal left his home Sunday evening, apparently lured to his death by three men posing as policemen who told him they were taking him to a concentration camp. He was a brother of Leonard Rosenthal, widely known diamond merchant who is said now to live in the United States. Pierre Laval and Marcel Deat, leading French exponents of collaboration with Germany, were reported out of danger and convalescing tonight at Versailles from wounds suffered in an assassination attempt Aug. 27.

The assassin, Paul Collette, was freed of a charge of Communism, which might have meant his summary execution by order of the special anti-Communist court. HOUSE MEETS 5 MINUTES WASHINGTON, Sept. l-(AP) The House of Representatives held a flve-mlnute session today, one of its rare holiday meetings. Fourteen members were present. Nine inserted speeches or articles in the Congressional Record.

Free t'botu Mrs. Rose Nuttall, of 207 E. Savannah, called around to the Fire Department Headquarters early Monday morning to drive away a Cadillac, tops award of the department in connection with its annual Field Day. Mrs. Nuttall beamed broadly as William A.

Dover, chief of the Twelfth Battalion and president o( the Fir, men's Association, handed her the auto title. 43 Beauties Vie forCroivn Br llw Assoc lain! prns ATLANTIC CITY, Sept. 1 -Forty-three of the nation's pret tiest blonds, brunets and redheads arrived here today to begin com petition for the 1941 Miss America crown. The girls, each the winner of a regional beauty contest iu her own section of the country, will under go a series of beauty, talent and personality tests in the next five days. Then, late Saturday night, one will be chosen to succeed twenty year-old Frances Marie Burke, of Philadelphia, as Americas reign ing queen of bathing beauties.

Thousands of holiday seashore visitors gathered at the railroad station to greet the contestants. CONFIRMED THIEF SYRACUSE. N. Sept. 1 (AP) Ivan Stone, 18 years old, is serving three months in Onondaga county Jail for theft of food from the kitchen of the St.

Lawrence County, Jail at Canton while serving another sixty-day sentence. 80 HP SANDMAN OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept. 1 i At-; west xvicnois Hills rest dents can go back to sleep now. Instructors at near-by Wiley Post Airfield have been ordered to use planes of only 80 horsepower in nigni training flights. The big 300 HP jobs made too much noise.

Awociaiwl Press Wirtpholo GE.V. LENNART OESCH Says fight goes on States Army. It will meet from 7 to 9 p. m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the McMichael school, 6230 Grand River.

Others Start Sept. 15 The other tw'o air-defense programs will start Sept. 15, when the regular academic day and evening classes begin. One is a year's program for freshman students whereby the essentials of the two-year course required for Army air cadetships may be completed. The other air-defense program, civilian-pilot training, will have both primary and advanced sections.

Applicants must meet age, physical and edu-cational specifications for tiar- ticlpatlon in the Govei nment. financed program. a new curriculum of 50 Fed- erally sponsored engineering courses will be offered through the College of Enirlneerlnc. be ginning Sept. 22.

Tuition is free and the courses are designed from specifications of industrial lead-ers in Detroit. Two courses in public health are in medicine and nursing. industrial Medicine and Sur gery," a weekly lecture course to aid physicians of the metropolitan area who are facing new problems with the expansion of industrial work in the national- defense program, will be offered oy the Continuation School of Medicine of Wayne County be ginning about Oct. 1. The school co-ordinates the facilities of the Wayne University College of Medicine, its affiliated hospitals and the Detroit Health Department under the Wayne County Medical Society.

Nurses' 'Refresher' Courses For graduate nurses, the third series of "refresher" courses will begin Oct. 15. Registrations are now being taken. There are no fees, funds having been made available by the State Board -of Control for Vocational Education and the W. K.

Kellogg Foundation. Seven changes in the Jesuit faculty of the University of Detroit have been annouccd by the Rev. Albert H. Poetker, S. executive dean.

Those leaving the university are the Rev. Norman T. Weyand, S. and Mr. Julius J.

Toner, S. in structors in English; the Rev. Ray mond P. Griese, S. instructor in philosophy, and the Rev.

John A. McEvoy, S. instructor in religion. Fathers Weyand and Griese will go to St. Stanislaus' in Cleveland for their tertianship.

Mr. Toner will go to West Baden College to begin his study of theology, and Father McEvoy will undertake studies in Holy Scripture. Three Added to Faculty Three new priests added to the faculty are the Rev. E. J.

Bracken, S. professor of religion; the Rev. J. T. Becker, S.

Instructor in philosophy, and the Rev. R. T. Deters, S. instructor in English.

An enrollment of 4,000 is considered likely at the Lawrence Institute of Technology this year because of defense courses, E. George Lawrence, president, said. The Detroit Institute of Technology expects an enrollment approxi- mstely equal to last year's 2,215. The 7,500 teachers of the public-school system will report at their schools at 1 p. m.

Tuesday. Sidesl 10W By the Auothtrd Frew RATTLESNAKE, Sept. 1 ucorge K. End, postmaster, mayor, Chamber of Commerce secretary and leading business -man of Rattlesnake, doesn't know what's to become of his business of selling canned rattlesnake meat a costly aeucacy. "Some of my best rattlesnake hunters have been drafted." he moaned.

"We can't get enough snakes and then there's no telling when the Government will shut down on our supply of cans." KANSAS CITY, Sept. 1 Lightning struck Mike Hotujac'a home. He telephoned the Fire Department. As Fireman Claude Williams answered the phone, a bolt ran into the building, shooting sparks from the mouthnlece into his face. Neither Williams nor Hotujac were injured but it was several minutes before Hotujac could call back to complete the report.

www PHILADELPHIA Sent. 1 An intruder fleeins- from Thnmm Me. Farland's home today was chased by two policemen. It looked like he miirht pet nunv until he sprinted by a gasoline station, stepped on an oil spot and skidded right into the grease pit, ATLANTA, Sept. 1 For six consecutive years, fifteen-year-old Trent Coursey and his pals have eaten his birthday cake and ice cream above the clouds.

But it cost his mother a pretty penny. This year Pilot Pete Clay, who has flown the boys on all the parties, did something about it. inis party," said he, "is on me." Holiday Toll in -Michigan Soars to 35 Continued from Page One a skull fracture suffered 12 hours earlier when his car skidded on a curve and rolled over a mile south of Vermontville. Burt, a graduate of Charlotte High School, was home on leave from the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. mcnara Colpaerts, 20, of Mon roe, was killed Monday when his motorcycle crashed into a guard post along Telegraph Road.

Miss Ida DeCarlo, 18, also of Monroe, who was riding with him, sustained a skull fracture. Indiana Youth Drowns William Thompson, 17. of South Bend, drowned Mon day afternoon when he was seized with cramps in Barron Lake, near Niles. Peter Crehoff, 50, of Chicago, drowned when he fell from a boat in Paw Paw Lake. Two other Chicagoans who had drowned Sunday in Michigan in accidents not previously reported were Alex Carlson, 34, who lost his life while trying to swim across Huzzy's Lake in Van Buren County, and John Mundra, 45, who drowned when a metal boat sank in the Joseph River near Buchanan.

When an outboard motorboat in which a mother and three sons were fishing late Sunday overturned in Saginaw Bay near Bay City, Mrs. Lucy Gamble, 40, and her son William, were drowned, but the two other sons, Lucian, 14, and Theodore, 20, were saved. Their father, Dr. William G. Gam ble, Bay City, sent help when the boat failed to return.

Five persons were, reported dead from injuries received in automo bile accidents Saturday and Sun day. Norman Dunlap, 17, and Leo Reese, 19, died in the Allegan health center from injuries re coived when a car driven by Max Long, 19, of Gobies, collided with a machine which they were pushing on M-40. was seriously hurt. Peter J. Norkus, 41, of Grand Rapids, died in Butterworth Hos pital, Grand Rapids, after being injured in a collision Saturday.

James Yocum, 1Y, of Kalamazoo, who was injured Sunday, died Monday in Bronson lospltal in Kalamazoo. Yocum's car crashed into a tree on Portals Road. Seventeen other persons met death by autos and drownings Saturday and Sunday. Highway Jammed State Police at the Flat Rock Post reported that Monday evening traffic on Telegraph Road bound for Detroit was jammed for 11 miles. A seemingly solid mass of cars extended north from the Six Mile road on the south-bound side of Woodward, where the problems of Palmer Park Station police were doubled by traffic moving to and from the State Fair Grounds.

The Wayne County Sheriff's Road Patrol reported that U. S. Highways 24, 25, 112 and 12 were all heavily loaded with inbound traffic. Every form of transportation serving Detroit wag hard pressed to handle the flow of passengers in and out of the city. Officers of the Accident Prevention Bureau said that despite the unusually large number of Detroit-ers who were out of the city for the week-end, more than 400 accidents occurred inside the city limits, and 216 drivers were jailed or given violations tickets.

Personal injuries resulted from 57 of the accidents. CHAIN GANG TOO COSTLY ABILENE, Sept. 1 (AP) Taylor County has abolished its chain gang. It's a matter of economy though, and not an experiment with prison reform. A guard and a truck has been necessary for a gang that averaged only two men.

Policemen Use Powder for Athlete's Foot Sufferers of Athlete't Foot should follow the example of policemen who depend on their feet for a living. Try K-4. a powder rontainintt druf that kill all four kinds of funguses that cause Athlete's Foot. '3 is an ahaiiiutelyharmieat scientific treatment fur At hlete'g root, ringworm and othar ungoua ss: disease. Must aatiafr cr mony re-f-indeii.

K-4 for aa! and recommended tj dnj storea eierjwhert Advenuemcnt. Nazi Army in Full Rout, Reds Assert Foes Falling Back Along Central Front to Second Lines, Moscow Reports Continued from Page One drive which had broken through the German fortification line. Another Red Army counterattack under Gen. Constantin Rokos-sovsky along the Smolensk-Moscow highway was said to be sweeping the Germans back after inflicting many thousands of casualties on the Nazis. Berlin Again Admits Red Counterattacks Br the United Frets BERLIN, Sept.

1 The German people, entering their third year of war, tonight were promised an ulti mate "glorious victory but fierce Soviet counterattacks on the Rus sian front were admitted, especially around Leningrad wnere cloud bursts have turned roads into im passable quagmires. With Adolf Hitler at his head quarters on the Eastern Front as "the First Soldier of the Reich," Labor Front Leader Dr. Robert Ley told arms factory workers in a speech at Krems that the war against "capitalism and bol-shevism" would be waged to a victorious end. Anniversary Is Quiet The second anniversary of the war was treated with restraint although it was reported that Hitler and his High Command had prepared a special communique summarizing the German triumphs since the Sept. 1 dawn in 1939 when the Fuehrer sent his armies into Poland.

Military dispatches from the Eastern Front told of fierce fighting against Russian counter- assaults on all three main fronts, from Leningrad to the Dnieper estuary, but insisted that each Russian thrust had been shattered. On the Central Front the Rus sians were said to be "counterattacking repeatedly," supported by tanks, one sector 25 of these tanks, including eight 52-ton mon sters, were said to have been destroyed and in another a German Army corps was reported to have destroyed 86 armored vehicles. The official German military spokesman said tonight that the Luftwaffe was engaged in "terrific attacks" on the Leningrad front in preparation for the final big push on the city. Near Lake Ilmen, south of Leningrad, a German division was said to have taken 1,600 Russian prisoners. Heavy Losses Inflicted The Russians were said by DNB to nave suffered especially heavy lossei around Novgorod, where the Russians were said to have thrown "all available reserves" into the battle.

The High Command in its com munique Monday reported a swift mop-up of" Northern Estonia fol lowing the fall of Tallinn and said that the port of Hapsal on the west coast of Estonia had been captured. The communique from Hitlers field headquarters said that German units on the Dnieper River north of Kiev had destroyed 2 Soviet monitors and gunboats since Aug. 2,6. Boy, 16, Wounded by 'Empty' Gun PONTIAC, Sept. 1 Daniel Mc Neil, 16 years old, sat in a chair in his home at 30333 Southfield Road Monday, reading the comics and playing with a recently-cleaned revolver.

"This is the way to do it, mother," he was quoted by Deputy Joseph DcVriendt as having said. He clicked the revolver three times with the muzzle against his cheek. The fourth time he pulled the trigger, there was an explosion. The boy was taken to St Joseph's Mercy Hospital with three teeth missing and a bullet in his head. His condition was reported as serious.

He had overlooked a loaded chamber when cleaning the gun. A 1 1 Airplane irash in France Kills 13 MARSEILLES, Sent. l-(AP) Thirteen persons were killed today, including a French member of the French-Italian armistice com mission which sits at Turin, Italy, when an Air France transport plane crashed into Lake Bolman near the Marseilles airport. One of the plane's motors was said to have died shortly after the take off for Toulouse. Four persons were seriously injured.

The member of the armistice commission who was killed was M. Gourret, who also is general director for the Port of Marseilles. COUPLE WED 75 YEARS HOWARD SIDING. Rent. 1 (UP) Samuel C.

Parks and his bride of 1867 have observed their seventy-fifth wedding anniversary. jfarks, 9o years old, is a veteran of the Civil War and fought at Chancellorsville. Mrs. Parks, 91, has known "Sam" since she was 13. TRUSSES PROPERLY FITTED Reasonably Priced 41 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Type Illustrated 12.50 I IT 0 mm tat i sua Martirs! AnA Surliest 1 5,11.111 dyjipnaa 13:9 opp.

Capitol laeater i swsji i i for Return of Ancient Soil Take Cognizance of Peace Reports, but Hint They Will Not Be Easily Satisfied By the Awwlutrd rrrni HELSINKI, Sept. 1 A Finnish battle leader, takine coenizance of speculation over the possibility ui an eariy Moscow-Helsinki peace, emphasized old territorial demands upon Soviet Russia today and declared "our fight is not nnisned." Lieut. Gen. Lennart Oesch de averea the comment in a victory auuress io nis troops at Uie Castle Square of Viipuri, the Karelian Isthmus city 75 miles northwest of Leningrad newly regained from the Red Army. A finnish battle flag lowered before the Russians March 13, 1940, was raised again Fight Not Over Yet "By the conquest of Viipuri.

the coercive Moscow peace of 1940 is no more," said Gen. Oesch, chief of the Army general staff, but he added that "ancient Finnish soil is still the hands of the enemy, May your success give you strength to carry your task to a final and permanent conclusion," he said. (Possible willingness of Finland io negotiate a separate peace after her claims are satisfied, however, was not ruled out by the general's declaration. The Finns have denied starting any such negotiations, and circumstances of the speech implied that any peace leeiers originated in Russia.) Gen. Oesch's phrases suggested to observers the repeated claims of Finland often presented by Field Marshal Manncrheim for Russian Karelia.

Russia clings also to some territory ceded her after the 1939-40 winter war, including the naval base of Hango at the mouth of the Gulf of Finland 80 miles southwest of Hel sinki. Greater Finland Sought Baron Mannerheim, who called upon the Finns June 29 to follow him "this last time" in a holy war with Germany against the Russians, declared anew July 11 his purpose to win all of Karelia for a "greater Finland." A positive development in Fin nish-Russian relations was Foreign Office announcement that 12 men of the Finnish Legation in Moscow and one private Finnish citizen, who had been interned in railway cars in Russia for two months, at last crossed into neu tral Turkey yesterday on the way home. The party was headed by Minister paavo wynninen. Rumors that a separate peace between Finland and Russia was being exploredlinked with a report that Stalin had ordered his numerically superior Northern Army to retire to old Karelian Isthmus frontier circulated wide ly in Europe. 15 Divisions Moved The Stockholm correspondent of the Daily Mail reported that Red Army Marshal Klementi Voroshi-lov had moved back 15 divisions "outnumbering the Finns two-to-one" in some places as much as 150 miles in a voluntary abandonment of territory won 18 months ago.

London sources pointed out that a separate peace with Finland would relax pressure on Leningrad and diminish the threat against Murmansk in Far Northern op erations. All on Lost Trawler Safe By the Aorlatrl Pre MUNISING. Sept. 1 Capt. William Reynard of the Munising Coast Guard reported today that the trawler Minors Castle, missing since Sunday with 10 persons aboard, had been located in a Lake Superior inlet.

Capt. Reynard 'said that all aboard were safe. Only a few hours before a sec ond trawler, the Otter which the Miners Castle had become separated from a fishing fleet during a Lake superior storm naa been found beached 20 miles east of here. of Norway by the British supplied proof of the well established theory that jsea-borne invasions are Impossible against land-based air power. This operation took place under the most favorable circumstances possible for the British nevertheless, the invasion failed.

"If the conditions under which an invasion would have to be attempted against the United States are visualized, it will be seen that the problem would be infinitely more difficult than the Eritish problem in Norway. "Leaving aside naval interference, imagine a convoy of 40 or 50 troopships crossing the Atlantic Ocean toward the United States. Their departure could not be kept secret. Our defending bombers would start attacking it a thousand miles from the coast. The invasion might not be stopped before it reached the coast, but it would be badly damaged.

"Imagine then this convoy attempting to come into a harbor and remaining practically stationary for days with the entire bombing force available to the United States working on it. The picture is incredible. The invasion would be doomed. No military leader would ever think of making such an attempt." INDIGESTION miT affect the Heir! Oil trapped iu ttj'1 or rillrt my irt Ilk i tmif lniifi 'In1 rear? Al tint of K-iitt wn wmih-p ltxTHl on K'ii aii IK fit fe Ituant but rtis'I nf th (sifcui- arin miirL( hiMiwn ftw icM If if irnve httr. tuiue iu tJ itself lutbi.K fctor.py back.

Ad tl Uauuieii Detroit fl Traffic I ofii Cfllll This Dale Watch iro Last Year Pftlrslrians 12 1 Drivers and Passengers 60 Study Business and Secretarial Science in a Modern College in a Modern Building THE 39th year of the Detroit Commercial College begins next Monday. Reservations this week, 10 to 3, and in the evening, 6 to 7:30. Graduation from college or high school is required. Two Share Glider Honors By the Associated Frees FRANKFORT, Sept. 1- Arthur Hoffman, glider instructor from Joliet, 111., and Bob Sparling, of Klngsley, shared honors in the Frankfort national glider meet, which closed Monday.

Hoffman finished with a total of 13 hours, 54 minutes soaring time, while Sparling turned in the longest sustained flight of the meet'8 hours and 38 minutes. Sparling had a total of 11 hours and 53 minutes in the air. Other pilots who finished among the money winners were: Malcolm Hughes, of Muskfgon, 10 hours, 4 minutes; Glen Mead, ABC Club, Detroit, 9 hours, 45 minutes; Charles Kohls, XYZ Club, Detroit, 7 tiours. S3 minutes; Lyle Maxey, XVZ Club, 6 hours, 47 minutes, and Herbert Abrams, of Detroit, 5 hours, 47 minutes. Pilots com piled a total of 100 hours, 43 minutes flying time, a national record for a three-day meet.

Defense Czar Urged by Byrd By the Associated Trees WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 Sen ator Harry F. Byrd, Virginia Democrat, called tonight for "fun damental replanning and basic re organization of the defense pro' gram." renewing his charges that production of military supplies was lagging. "We have the choice of a shorter European war providing we speed up our defense production," Byrd said in a radio address. To attain this end, he urged an end to strikes in defense industries, replanning of the defense effort in relation to civilian needs abandonment of the doctrine of "business as usual" and appointment of an executive head for the program.

Referring to the Supply Priorities and Allocations Board headed by Donald M. Nelson as executive director, Byrd said that the board "serves the useful purpose of defining the duties" between William S. Knudsen, director of the Office of Production Management, and Leon Henderson, price adminis trator. "Yet, after all," he said, "the job of spending billions for defense is an executive one. Let us have a procurement director for all military supplies with the power to act." Credit Curb Called Rat ion in to Poor WASHINGTON, Sept.

1 (AP) A publication of the Congress of Industrial Organizations asserted today that restrictions on installment buying would "have the effect of rationing the products affected in favor of the people who have the most money." Federal regulations went into effect today requiring higher down payments and shorter periods for paying off the balance due on installment purchases of most durable consumer goods such as automobiles and refrigerators. The Economic Outlook, CIO magazine, said these regulations "will makd it more difficult for working people to get even their prewar percentage of automobiles, refrigerators, radios and the like." NOW SHE SHOPS "CASH Af ID CARRY" Without Painful Backache Many uffnvri reiiT nagging bv-kvh l)uickiy, once Uiry dicovr tht the rU nm of thir trouble may be tired krini. Ihe kidoevi re Nature'i ehwf way ot taking the fiw fcckis txnd vanta out of ttie blood. They help most peop le pae about pinte day. When disorder of kidney funtiM.

prmi'i poieonoui matter to our it may cause nacjtmjt ha kur he. rhiunaU' pA.ii Iff pfMUS, Kt Ol fJ'p Slid CDTfV, Tukrhu, iweiiinjr. uri'i-r tr hea Jar bet fd diZiin i'r'i'i'a or arnrsi (rtwii'ii with nd shows tiwr is fon.eti.m wrung aith your kidneys or Kadr. Doo't wait! Ask your ius Hoim Pills, used by ti.a I vt 40 rira. They ue Lapf.y rci- i au'i 1 ti i u' 3 bust vaa iiwia ui b-jjL C-t I a U.

S. Impregnable from Sea Due to Bombers, Says Colonel rm- Marb" i tS ff Corridor 4 4-. i in the i I i -a v3i 1 Detroit Commercial V'1 College Lull 111 li.sMU sk. t. THE WEATHER (Official United Stales Rtport) WTKE io No i form ASD, VIC'NJTV -1 Partly -y warmer vnij.

10 moderate souUieasl ILLI- A N. WISCONSIN miki droi jursoay and "'LI'Yt', "'P1'- -onler In Pn. Wednemlajr. 9 I Si 0. s.

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m' al a. "i 1 at 7 .1.1 "t'r at 7 a dp. 1 ai 7 1 HI 3 III at 7 per ti; iV Tr-MI'fcHATl lll'JS New York Time Servlre WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 An unequivocal statement that modern bombing airplanes make the United States impregnable to Invasion from the sea is made by Lieut. Col.

Thomas R. Phillips, of the Army General Staff, in an article to be published tomorrow in Army Ordnance, official organ of the Army Ordnance Associa tion. 'This is the most important military fact that can be deduced from the European war," Col. Phillips observes. "If new harbor defenses are to be constructed, let them be built with our eyes on today and tomorrow and not on yesterday.

"Even if the United States had no harbor defenses, it would be impregnable to invasion. And this still would be true if our Navy were inferior to that of an invading power." Land-based air power, he added, has assured the nation's safety from attack by sea. Col. Phillips backs his opinion with an analysis of the failure of the British to obtain a foothold in Norway. His article, in part, says: "Almost no other event in the history of warfare equals this in importance.

For the United States, th conclusion in transcendental. It make.s it possible for this country to insure not only its own continental territory from invasion but, by provision of a suitable airbase and airways system, to insure the impregnability of ail North ami South America. "The attempted countcrinvasion LEADING DETROIT FAMILIES Families well known in business and society send their sons and daughters to this college to be trained for a. business career. The American traditional principles of honesty, integrity and -loyalty are emphasized in its instruction.

In subject matter the college has a national reputation for efficiency. Graduates of colleges and high schools have come to Detroit from twelve states for the sole purpose of attending this college. They came because of the college's modern systems and methods of instruction. Members of the faculty will be at the college office today, 602 Book Building, to advise applicants regarding the program of studies they should follow, Bl'LLZTlX ASD SYLLABUS of the eoune, in Buunes, Administration, Secretarial Science. Shorthand Reporting, and Commercial Teacher.

Training may be obtained bv written or telephone request RAndolph 3S80. This college has no agents or solicitors. Detroit Commercial College Hook Washington louIeartl R. Maclean, Preidenit Mif Lola Maclean. EJucational Dire, lor: Mns Jntephtnc Ratiktn.

Director ol English and Shorthand: Eugene A. ailing Attorney, Director ol Constitutional and Lam: Mr.s Margaret fU. cj mine Mathematics; Miss ElU Coulter, Director of li ulion-Maclean 1 peritmg and Secretarial Practice. "i -I n. 7" li ill 7') e.

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