San Bernardino Sun, Volume 43, 23 August 1937 — Page 2
SAN RERVAHnTVO DAILY SUN. MONDAY, AUGUST 23, li)37 Spanish Government Threatens Warfare Against Mussolini s Navy
PAGE TWO
in
AT SEA DRAW
01 PROTES
Anti-Sub Flotilla Ready to Sail Into Mediterranean, Defend Shipping From 'Pirates'
Terror in War -Ravaged Hospital Told by Woman
(Bv Unlttd Press) VALENCIA, Spain, Aug. 22. The loyalist government, formally accusing Italy of shelling and sinking lour Spanish merchant ships, hinted tonight that further acts of "piracy" may compel it to engage in actual warfare with Premier Benito Mussolini'g navy. "We repeat our proud statement lhat we are fighting for our independence and in defense of our liberty, and in achievement of this task we will adopt all necessary ex
treme measures," a government communique said. FLOTILLA READY Announcement was made simultaneously that a speedy anti-submarine flotilla is ready to steam into the Mediterranean from Barcelona to protect the loyalists' merchant hips. The government, listing the four Spanish ships allegedly sunk by the Italian r.avy during the last three weeks, said the Italian destroyer
INSURGENTS ROUTED
(Bv Associated Pres.) MADRID, Aug. 22. Government defenders of Santander, said dispatches from the northern front today, routed a heavy insurgent attack near Ontaneda and destroyed several enemy tanks. The tanks were showered with hand grenades and blown up, it was said here, with the insurgent infantry fleeing. Three captured soldiers said they belonged to the Black Arrow division of Italian fighters. The government admitted capture by the insurgents of San Pedro del Romeral and Vega on the road to Ontaneda (claimed by the insurgents), but avowed that Santander defenders stiffened at Selaya, some 20 miles from the seaport objective.
By H. R. EKINS (Copyright 1!37, By United Press) SHANGHAI, Aug. 22. Here is the story of a woman who said she had no story to tell. She is an Italian Mother Superior Carla Helena of the Sacred
Heart hospital in war-ravaged Yangtzepoo. After nine days attending 300 patients and 1.000 refugees at the hospital, whose, walls were spattered with rifle bullet--and bits of shrapnel, she is now herself a refugee, with other sisters, nurses and patients and 60 foundling infants in the French Concession of Shanghai. Mother Caiia Helena and the other Franciscan missionary sisters are safe in the Sacred Heart college
in the French settlement. The others have found haven in homes and institutions throughout the concession. FEARLESS SISTERS She talked to me with the great
est calm and received me graciously after nine days and nights of sleeplessness. She said her sisters merely did their duty and never were afraid for themselves, but worried always about the patients and refugees. The only way to interview her was to ask her to tell her own story, which she finally did. It is a bit disjointed, because she was terribly weary. "My memory of this war," she said, "breaches back to Aug. 13, when we were celebrating the feast of St. Claire. The first we knew of any trouble was when the com
munications in our hospital were disrupted. "But we were not afraid. We thought it was not so bad as in 1032, when I was stationed at Shanghai General hospital. "During the past week more and
more gunfire broke our hospital windows. Bullets punctured the
roofs of our school and dispensary
"When tie hostilities began we
had 300 patients and when we evac
uated the buildings we had 1,000
refugees. We received in the mean
time 150 civilian wounded, 20 of
whom died. "During the week matters became worse. The refugees got out of control and attempted to loot the hospital of food and supplies. "There was nobody to bury our dead. With the aid of the fathers we constructed coffins and dug graves during the night, burying dead under cover of darkness when
we thought the planes would not flv. LIME AND EARTH "There was a supply of lime in an abandoned house opposite- the hospital. We stole it, but the priest said that was all right, because
some day we could replace it. "We used the lime to cover the bodies when there was not enough earth to fill the graves. "Yesterday it was decided that we must evacuate the hospital. While we were celebrating mass four bombs fell in the hospital compound. It was miraculous that we all escaped. I think it was because we were praying. "We prepared to move, then waited hours for the relief party. You know the rest. You have reported it."
STREET AFTER
m
U.S. NAZI CAMPS ATTACKED
International Shanghai Thrown Into Panic as Death Falls On Busy Nanking Road
(Continued from Page One)
FIENO ATTACKS SECOND NURSE
(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Aug. 22 A second attack on young women hospital attendants within 24 hours occurred early today while police were making an extensive search for a killer who ravished and beat to death a young student nurse with a brick. Victim of the second attack was Miss Florence Swanson, 34, night superintendent of nurses at the Jefferson Park hospital. She reported a man, who had entered the nurses' lounge on the first floor of the hospital while she dozed on a couch, slashed her chest and arms and left side. Miss Swanson told police she was aroused from her nap by a noise in the room. The man. who she de
scribed as "huge." threw a pillow over her face and remarked, she said. "I'll give you what the others got." He then hacked her with a sharp
blade and when Miss Swanson
he jumped window eight
feet to the sidewalk below and fled. Less than 24 hours before the attack on Miss Swanson, Miss Anne Kuehta, 19, a student nurse, was slain and raped by a man who entered her second floor room at the Chicaso hospital through a fire escape window.
RADIO SIGNALS SPURfilNG HUNT
(Continued from Page One)
bringing looastuns scrcamcd for help.
through a screened
Eaetta was Identified In one of the Mediterranean, raids. Survivors of the freighter Campeador, torpedoed and sunk near Cape Eon, said the Saetta was reBponsible for a loss of 12 lives. The other three ships allegedly Bunk by Italian submarines, cruisers and torpedo boats were the Conde de Abasolo, the Armuru and the Ciudad de Cadiz. 'PIRATES' HUNTED
The Armuru,
from Russia, was sunk in the
Aegean sea last week; the others went down in the Mediterranean. The loyalist threat came on the heels of the dispatch of British and French warships into the waters off Spain for search for "submarine pirates" who have attacked 12 merchant ships in the last two weeks. The French and British admiral
ties ordered their warships to fire n L GrCWinB Fat Immediately on any vessel molest- LsUKe, KxrWing r ai,
lng their merchant ships. Tugboat Men Signed By A. F. L. Affiliate SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 22. Joe Bt Angelo, organizer for the Sailors' Union of the Pacific, announ
ced today that nine San Francisco tugboat crews had been Eigned up by the A. F. of L., affiliated with S.U.P. in its move to regain control of the Inland Eoatmen's union. St Angelo, aid to Harry Lundcberg, secretary-treasurer of the Sailors' union, also declared that San Pedro tug crews had been signed "almost 100 per cent." The sign-up campaizn began two
days ago, after the Inland Eoat
men's union voted to go C.I.O. sev
eral days ago. It brought a statement from C.I.O. headquarters that it would not "see its ranks raided."
Buvs Larger Pants
NOETSCH, Austria, Aug. 22.-Ed-ward Albeit Christian Geoipe Andrew Patrick David, Duke of Windsor, had new and bigger pants toriav. The pants are leather shorts. They are two sizes bigzer because the duke is getting fatter on lots of slpep and lots of Austrian food. His duchess is kidding him about it. However, the duke is not forgetting abut exercises. He plays tennis for four hours a day i today it was with the village baker, sometimes it's the schoolmaster) and usually he loses.
Russian government, was expected in Fairbanks with additional radio equipment requested by officials. The plane's destination is Barrow. In New York, Pilot Roger Q. Williams announced he would take off today for Fairbanks. His co-pilot will be Charles (Slim) West, of Teterboro, X. J. Williams, who made
a non-stop transatlantic night in 1929, planned to stop at Cleveland, Edmonton, Alberta, and Skagway,
Alaska. His ship is a cabin biplane rented to the Russian government. Sir Hubert Wilk-ins and Pilot Hol-lick-Kenyon, flying a giant seaplane, took off from Coppermine, N. W. T., with enough gasoline to last 4.000 miles. The fliers were expected to go west to Aklavik, where part of the search forces will be based. Pilots Jimmie Mattern, American flier, Bob Randall, Canadian, and Pilot Zedkoff, Russian, were weatherbound here. Mattern's plane was towed to another field today because of the dangerous soft field he had been taking off from.
The Soviet ice-breaker Krassin
was fiehting heavy ice 10 miles off
Point Barrow in an attempt to
reach here, where it will discharge a supply of gasoline. At Fairbanks, Pilot Joe Crosson,
famed Alaska mercy flier, and two
other pilots were likewise grounded by bad weather. Mattern's tri-motored refueling
plane was badly damaged yester
day when it was forced down by fog south of Fairbanks.
which, according to independent reports, now total 82 warships between Shanghai and the open sea. Japanese acceptance of a protest by American, British, French and Italian naval commanders late Sunday against warships operating too close to neutral vessels eased for the time being what threatened to become a dangerous international situation. Vice-Admiral Kiyoshi Hasegawa, commanding Japanese naval forces at Shanghai, acceded to the foreign commanders' request that his ships
in the Whangpoo bo kept below its confluence with Soochow creek,
away from the part of the International Settlement where American and British interests center and from the berths of foreign warships. Huge fires, many newly lit Sunday as Chinese and Japanese airforces bombed savagely at enemy positions, continued to burn ravenously through large areas of northern and eastern Shanghai as the battle for this city entered its
eleventh day, but the land fronts were relatively quiet. Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, commander-in-chief of the United States Asiatic fleet, and his British. French and Italian colleagues protested against "irresponsible firing" by Japanese warships lying close to their own vessels. The protest following the shelling Friday of the American flagship Augusta, in which one seaman was killed and 17 wounded. Admiral Hasegawa sent his chief of staff to explain to Admiral Yarnell that although "in principle" he must insist that the Japanese warships had as much right off the settlement waterfront as those of
other nations, nevertheless he would
An attack on "19 Nazi camps within a stone's throw of the capital of Wisconsin" was hurled by Everett
Dervke, chairman of the Americanism committee of the Michigan American Legion, at the state conven
tion in Detroit. Photo, taken at Camp Hindenburg in Wisconsin, shows three Chicago boys displaying the
swastika flag of the German government.
Convict Author to Leave Folsom, Broken in Health
(Bv United Press) FOLSOM PRISON, Aug. 22. Ernest Booth, convict author of the novel, "Stealing Through Life," and other works, will leave Folsom prison tomorrow, broken in health but free after serving 13 years for bank robbery. His wife, Valverde Booth, and his brother, Edward Booth, who risked
and lost their own freedom in the
keen his shins below the Soochow fight to gain his release, will be
creek bridge.
Russian Garage Man Condemned for Crash
(Bv Asnrjated Prp.-.-i NOVOSIBIRSK, U. S. S. R., Aug. 22. A garage manager was under sentence of death today for an accident to one of his trucks which killed nine children. It was charged he had urged tho driver of the truck, which was carrying the children to a picnic, to go faster. The truck overturned.
AUNT HET By ROB P. 7 QUiLLEN
By M&
"They say tiic." iut do it to make it more intcrestin', ,but I'll po back to knittin' when I can't pet interested in bridfro without losin' rnoncv at it."
DF EDUCATION
(By Associated Pre?s) NEW YORK, Aug. 22. Henry Ford blames the nation's farm problems on the educational system. "Washed out land and farmed out land are a reflection on the quality of local schools," he said in an interview published today in the Country Home Magazine. "If you are interested in solving the farm problem, go first to your common schools. Demand that they be made practical. Stop this costly practice of hiring girls just out of coil'-gcs, with no practical experience, as teachers. Insist that the teachf-ts be experienced in the ways and jobs of life.
EAMS CASE Ti BE PUSHED
(Bv Associated Trcps) DECATUR, Ala., Aug. 22. The Scottsboro case, in which the state of Alabama charged two white
women were attacked by a Negro gang, apparently was headed today for a third appeal to the United States supreme court. A "Fight to the finish" for the freedom of four of five Negroes now under sentence was forecast by a high source. This source intimated the end of an agreement by which appeals were to be dropped and a death sentence for Clarence Norris was to be commuted. Four of the original nine defendants were freed July 21 under this agreement after more than six years in jail. Ten Alabama juries returned verdicts of guilty in the Scottsboro
"When school boaids and parents trials. One failed to agree. Twice the sav thev cannot afford to educate I United States supreme court Fct
their children in piactical tasks, I aside death sentences, answer that they cannot afford not Motions have been filed for new to do it. The c.st of having a lot of , trials for thi ee of the four convicted nr.i rained adul'g aiound is far more j Negroes and action in behalf of the th 'n it would coEt to train these ' fourth, H'-ywood Patterson, was adults when they wrie childic-n." indicated j
The Japanese envoy told Admiral Yarnell that Chinese torpedo boats had been using the upper Whang
poo as a base of operations, and asked that the American and other admirals make representations to the Chinese on that score. Admiral Yarnell indicated his willingness to do so. Six hundred and more miles to the north large Japanese and Chinese armies were reported locked in combat northwest and southwest of Peiping. Dispatches pointed to Tsingtao and Foochow, important seaports in Shantung and Fukien provinces, respectively, as the next trouble spots in the undeclared war between the two great Oriental powers. Sunday brought no respite in Shanghai's tale of horrors. Chinese and Japanese bombers both blasted parts of Hongkew, China's largest
industrial district, and set many new fires. The million-dollar plant of the American-owned Henningsen Co.,
largest makers ol candy and ice cream in China, wa3 destroyed. First it was bombed by Chinese plane.1; trying to hit Japanese positions in Yangtzepoo, the easternmost section of the International Settlement. Flames soon completed the destruction. COMPANIES NEAR RUIN A spokesman of the Japanese embassy, when asked whether Japan intended to compensate foreign owners for losses arising from Japanese air bombings, replied that this is no time to talk of indemnification. Japan, he said, is too busy with the war. American insurance experts asserted some insurance companies operating here will be close to ruin if war insurance claims continue to mount. Fragmentary reports from Foochow, chief city of Fukien province, said Chinese-Japanese fighting of unspecified nature had broken out there. This came almost immediately after the Japanese had taken their women and children from the city to Formosan ports. Trouble loomed for Tsingtao on the Shantung coast, where hundreds of Americans have been summering and scores of missionaries from the interior of the
province have been concentrated. American naval and consular officers completed plans to evacuate all Americans from Tsingtao aboard naval vessels if it becomes necessary. Many ships of the United States Asiatic fleet spend the sum-
mer tnere.
waiting to take him to Placerville,
a mining community in the Sierra Nevada. There Booth will attempt to regain his health, undermined by pul-
monary tuberculosis and physical injuries received in futile attempts
to break prison. WILL RESUME WRITING
"I'll never come back," Booth
said.
The single statement was the
only comment the 39-year-old prisoner would make. But his wife revealed that Booth
hoped to resume the writing that
brought him fame, newspaper headlines and the praise of Henry L. Mencken, one-time editor of the magazine American Mercury. Mrs. Booth said her husband had received offers from several motion-picture companies for his stories. Booth will be under parole until 1940. He must remain away from metropolitan centers and his writings must be submitted to parole officers before they are offered for publication.
Many of the stories Booth wrote in prison were suppressed after his rise to fame because of a prison ban on the literary efforts of convicts. But before that ban was enforced his graphic word pictures of prison and underworld life had startled the literary world, aroused the wrath of Texas officials and filled the pages of magazinezs. Booth's works were published in the austere pages of literary magazines and the blatant columns of "paper pulps." Editor Mencken discovered Booth. For him, the prison author wrote "Ladies of the Mob," later made in
to a motion picture with Clara Bow in the feminine lead role. Another of his best-known works was "We Rob a Bank." Booth was committed to prison in 1924 after robbing an Oakland bank. His sentence was 25 years.
On the same day that the robbery
occurred he married his wife, Val
verde. The prisoner had previous convictions for forgery and auto
theft.
While held in the county jail
Booth and another prisoner pro-
duced guns, forced their jailor to
turn over the keys and escaped.
Less than three weeks later they were arrested in San Francisco by 20 armed deputies and returned to
prison. PRISON BREAK FAILED While in San Quentin prison Booth attempted to gain freedom by sliding down a blanket rope from a hospital window. Another prisoner slashed the rope with a knife and Booth fell 30 feet, breaking both legs. He was sent to Folsom and it was then that he began writing. In 1931, Edward Booth, the author's brother, and Valverde, his wife, were caught in an attempt to alter county criminal records to gain Ernest's release. Edward was given a year in jail and Mrs. Booth was given probation. Since then Mrs. Booth has worked through legal channels to secure her husband's parole, now attained because of his ill health. Bill Would Set Up New Tax Exemptions (Bv Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.- Senator Bone, Washington Democrat, proposed legislation yesterday to
allow individual income tax payers to deduct medical, dental, hospital and educational expenses from their
taxable incomes. Bone said he conferred with Pres
ident Roosevelt about the proposal
and that the chief executive "expressed his sympathy with the gen
eral purposes of the bill."
RISEDFS.O.P.
Dl
(Continued from Page One)
was killed in the Senate. His wages
and-hours bill was stranded in the
House rules committee by coalition
of southern Democrats and Republicans. His Government reorgani
zation program was sidetracked
His appeals for general farm legis
lation went unheeded. He was
forced to compromise on the pro
posed unemployment census. He lost his struggle to make the Civilian Conservation corps his pet project a permanent Federal agency. He sought to economize by vetoing bills on continuation of low
interest rates on loans from Federal farm land banks and on war risk insurance policies and both houses
overrode the vetoes.
The Chief Executive asked for
broad legislation to create seven
conservation authorities similar to
Tennessee Valley Authority. He
didn't get it.
He asked for legislation that would bring about crop insurance. The Senate passed such a bill, but
the House balked. He compromised on a permanent neutrality bill and on sugar quota legislation. On only two measures did Congress give Mr. Roosevelt what ho wanted without quibbling the Guffcy coal act and the bill to plug loopholes
in the revenue laws which pxperts
said cost the Government $100,000,000 annually.
As members Of the two houses
and their leaders streamed home
ward tonight, none could say wheth
er they would be called back into
special session to enact the admin
istration's discarded legislative pro
gram except Mr. Roosevelt, and he
has not committed himself. He has
sidestepped the question at two recent press conferences.
TONIC PROVES FATAL SAN DIEGO, Aug. 22. A quantity of hair tonic which Richard A.
McHone, 14-months-old son f Mr. and Mrs. William McHone of nearby Imperial beach, accidentally drank Aug. 7, proved fatal today.
General Butler Says America Should Keep Its Nose Out of Oriental War
By EVERETT C. GERRY I and move in, but they have nothing nation as large and populous as NEWTON SQUARE, Pa, Aug. 22. to Bet out of Shanghai," he de-; China. Tumfi.tnH Pen qmedlev r Rnt 1 clarpd- "There is no oil there. That "If China can stall for time, she -Two-fisted Gen. Smedley D. But- ig whaf thig gcrap . a aDOut a will have a big edge on her oppoler the "fighting Quaker" of the struggle for the Asiatic oil supply. I nent," he explained. "Remember, U. S. Marine corps today cautioned j "it was cute of the Chinese to china is fighting at home and Jathe United States to keen clear of : force the fighting at Shanehai. for - Pan awfly from home. The cost to
the Sino-Japanese struggle, in spite
all the major nations have inter-IJaPan to prosecute war is tremen-
FLIES TRAP
Fl
1 MILLED
RE FIGHTERS
More Than 50 CCC Youths and Highway Workers Caught in Wyoming Forest Disaster
(Continued from Page One)
fering from second and third degree burns but expected to recover, were: John Gomez, Bastrop, Texas; David Thompson, Bastrop; William Mueller, New Ulm, Texas; Sam Van Arsdall, Cody; Joe Zavala, San Antonio, Texas; Alton Murray, Pom, Okla.; John LcVine, San Antonln; Alcario Serros, San Antonio; Roy' Reed, McDade, Texas. Not seriously burned wera th six Tcnsleep CCC memberi In the Park hospital: Wyoming state CCC headquarters at Casper said about 30 others were being treated for minor burns at the Shoshonl CCC camp. Whether any would require hospitalization was not determined. A supervisor from the Tcnsleep camp was en route to Shoshoni tonight with fingerprints and other moans by which identification might be made. H. F. Marion, chief clerk in the Shoshoni forest supervisor's office in Cody, said the fire died down some tonight after burning: over 1,500 to 2,000 acres. It was not, however, under control, and 500 or more men continued battling the flames. The flames from the Inferno trapped Eii Davis, bureau of public roads foreman, nine other bureau employes and approximately 40 CCC cnrollecs while they dug frantically yesterday on a mountainside leading to a bank of ledge rock to erect a fire line. "The wind suddenly whipped the flames up to the tree tops," said
Davis. "I never saw fire travel so fast. It encircled us faster than we could run.
"When I saw we were trapped I herded all the men to the r.ock
ledge and forced them to lie drfV-
"But the flames roared over Tn
rocks from the tree tops and tho fire licked at our clothing.
"Some of the CCC boys got ex
cited. They started to run away. Some of us older men forced them to stay on tho rock refuge, .Mt
some got away."
Those who became panic-stricken,
their number undetermined, were
believed to have been among tho fighters who perished.
Davis said some of the men
claimed they saw more than eight dead. "Some of the boys said they saw one pile of seven bodies," he said.
Neither Davis nor forest officials
could confirm those reports.
A first-aid station, with the as
sistance of six Cody physicians and a score or more nurses, was estab
lished at a forest service field camp
near the fire.
ests there.
of the shelling of the cruiser Au- metropolis.
All eves are on the aus ana tie Japanese people are
I don't think the rest not so enthusiastic about it. They'll
Snake Rituals
Enacted by Hopi (Bv United Press)
WAL.F1, Hopi Keservation, Ariz.,
Aug. 22. Priests of the Hopi snake fraternity tonight reenaeted their ageless snake legend in their Kiva, nrrnnrntnrv tn stacinc the Clllmina-
I 1" J -
tion of the oldest religious ceremonial in America their famous
annual snake dance.
For three days now, tho intricate
legend, has been reenaeted in the snake kiva, or underground chamber. Details of this ritual are not
known as the Hopi refuse to permit white men to see it and never have discussed it.
At dawn tomorrow, and continu
ing until sunset, the snake priests, weirdly dressed in colorful headdresses, carrying the sacred cow
meal and specially-prepared prayer sticks and swinging hissinfc, squirming reptiles, will offer thefr
prayer to the gods of the under
ground waters.
4
Yawns for 17 Days,
Even During Sleep SAN RAFAEL, Aug. 22.-Haggard
and worn after 17 days and nights
auring wnicn sne yawnea aimosi
continuously every three minutes,
Mrs. Rita O'Connor, 38 years old, today sought the aid of specialists.
Every remedy advanced by friends
and local physicians has failed to help her, she said between yawns when she appeared at a local news-
gusta and killing of Americans in j of the world can afford to let the j 5eo! u whcn tne ,axos bpg'n mount-J paper office and broadcast an ap-
Russian Wheat Crop Near Record Figure
4 Via CtmnnVml tlrnnts.
Resting at his country home here i between extended speaking tours,
the gi ay-thatched veteian of all of America's wars of this century warned:
(Bv Associated Press) MOSCOW, Aug. 22. Soviet Russia's wheat crop this fall is approaching the goal of 130,420,000 tons for the first time in history, Izvestia, official government newspaper, reported today. Izvestia attributed this year's record production to good weather and the more willing work of collective farmers. Six days ago 144,000,000 acres or 64 per cent of the acreage sown,
had been harvested with an averag.; Shanghai within a fortnight, yield of 15 bushels an acre. j "The Japanese, will land troops
I two nations fight much longer.
"The Japanese will clean up Shanghai, and the fighting may be over in a couple of weeks. There is not much chance of it turning into a long-drawn-out conflict. "The Chinese aren't ready for it,
"I see no need to drag 130,000,000 a,thou6h e Japanese have been
l ni cjJHi itlK Lin iiiu last tii v'-aia. I
ought , think the two are priming for a
big scrap in about five years. "Every mile the Japanese advance, the greater their difficulties become China can't be conquered, but In time will absorb Japan."
Butler avidly reads the news from
people into this fight. We
to keep our nose out of it I can't understand why the President sends marines to China." General Butler, who fought In tho Boxer rebellion in 1900 and commanded the American marines at
Shanghai in 1927, '28 and '29 during the Chineso civil wars, foresaw the end of the fierce fighting In
the Orient and daily traces the war's progress on a map of China in his home. He pictures the movement of the troops and the difficulty of an enemy conquering a
"The Japanese will be worn down." Under Generalissimo Chiang KaiShek, Eutler declared, the Chinese have made strides toward national defense unknown before this decade. He said he believed the Chinese had mapped their defense on a 10-year basis. Butler said that when he resumes his speaking tour next month he will advocate a policy for the United States to stay out of war by a constitutional amendment. "If we're going to arm for defense, let's keep our soldiers at home and our battleships within 500 miles of our own shores," he urged. "Let the world merchant marine fly company flags rather than those of nations."
peal for help.
Nnt nnlv does she vawn when a-
wake, Mrs. O'Connor said, but she
yawns while asleep.
Senate Leader Will
Attend Paris Parley
Maioritv Loader Barklev. Kentuckv
Democrat, announced today that he
would leave Wednesday with five
or nis colleagues ior fans 10 aucnci
n nnnfnrnnn rf tVtA Tntnr.in vl i .1 ... 4
ary union.
T-Tn mill Krt n rnn m rnnio Ktt Cnni
" " '' tors Byrnes, South Carolina DrAo rrof Thfmn o T 't '1 V, nnmnnnat
ton. Indiana Democrat I.a FVillcftc
Wisconsin Procressive. and While
Memphis Republican.