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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 1
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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 1

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Rochester, New York
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-SECTION ONE- tilt GENERAL NEWS EDITORIALS V. S. WKATHEH BUREAU FORECAST TODAY: Cloudy, Colder a TEMPERATURES! HIh: 30 de. at 2 p. m.

YES TtB DAT I Low 21 at 8 a. m. 106TH YEAR 22 Paget ROCHESTER. N. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2S.

Sun rinen 7:30. orts 4:39 Details on 1'age 11 THREE CENTS -GOOD MORNING BE SURE TO READ 'LEARNING IN FLIGHT FIRST OF SERIES On Page 2 Today ll if Holy Father Grants Audiences Roosevelt Hears POLES CLASH POPE GREETS 400 PILGRIMS, MOUNTS DAIS Of Nazi Cruelty FRENCH FACE NEW THREAT OF DEFIANCE BY STRIKERS JAPAN'S BAN PUT ON JEWS, NAZIS CLAIM Teacher Contracts Canceled After Pact Signing Berlin A reliable source Ul til -fn st'K i -ff I I Pope Pius XI is shown as he appeared before 400 pilgrims at the Vatican yesterday to make a 10-minute address, after rising from a sick bed to which he had been confined by heart attack. Photo was transmitted by telephoto from Rome to London, then radioed to New York. AP Wirephoto. WITH CZECHS OVER BORDER Officer Killed, 2d Wounded in Zone Fight Warsaw JF) A Polish army major was reported killed and a non-commissioned officer wounded yesterday as Polish troops moved into the last area about 20 square miles in the valleys of the Carpa thian mountains of the territory ceded Poland by Czechoslovakia Nov.

1. Nq, indication was given here of how the officer died. Completion of occupation of the annexed territory had been sched uled for Dec. J. Poland, however, demanded and received approval of earlier action, after an alleged attack In Czechoslovakia on a Polish demarcation commission.

The total area which Poland now has taken through a separate settlement with Czechoslovakia after the Munich agreement includes a little more than 400 square miles in Teschen, Silesia and Czaszca. An official communique said that a Major Rago was killed and the non-commissioned officer wounded seriously during a conference be tween Czech and Polish officers. The communique said the conference was arranged when the advancing Polish troops encountered a detail of Czech troops and that the shots were fired from an unstated source as the officers talked. Casimir Pappee, Polish minister to Prague, registered an immediate protest and demanded satisfaction, the communique added. Czech authorities were said to have expressed regret and ordered an investigation.

Another communique said that during occupation of the Czarzca district last Friday two Polish soldiers were killed and a number wounded in a clash with Czech troops. Inquiry Ordered Prague UP) The Polish foreign minister entered a protest here yes terday as the result of serious in cidents causing the death of at least one Pole as Warsaw's troops occupied ceded Czechoslovak terri tory near Czaszca. An investigation was ordered by the Prague government. As reported here the incidents involved both Polish and Czech Troops and Slovak populations in the district. The Czech soldiers, it was said, were unprepared for entry of the Poles yesterday and were unable to with draw quickly enough across tho mountainous terrain.

Slovaks insisted that the Poles not only crossed the demarcation line set in negotiations for occupation of autonomous Slovakia's territory, but also crossed the border into Czech territory proper. Several incidents were settled on the spot by members of the demarcation commission, but at two villages, there was shooting and Polish casualties occurred. JAPAN SHELLS PERIL BRITISH Hong Kong -UP) Japanses shells fell inside British territory and Chinese troops fired on a British border garrison yesterday as Japanese continued a mopping up pro cess at the very edge of this British colony. Japanese captured the village of Shumchun, just over lie British frontier on the Kowloon-Cantoti Railway. Shells which fell into British territory during the oper ation caused no damage.

Japanese soldiers who crossed the border promptly withdrew when they discovered their mistake. British soldiers returned the flre and waved a large Union Jack when Chinese troops fired by mistake on the Britsih border garrison near Takuling. Chinese stopped firing at sight of the flag and no casualties resulted. Other story on Page 2 New Storm Sweeps East Snow Blanket Wilson, Envoy to Italy Tell of Persecutions Warm Springs, Ga. iJV) President Roosevelt surveyed at length with United States envoys to Ber lin and Rome last nig" the nation's future course toward Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy as a result of widespread racial and religious persecutions abroad.

Before a log fire in his Mountain cottage, the Chief Executive conferred with Hugh R. Wilson, ambassador to Germany, and William Phillips, United Ctates diplomatic representative in Rome, shortly after their arrival from State Department conferences in Washington. Physical violence and severe eco nomic measures against Catholics and Protestants as well as JSws were said officially to have been covered in the parley which was aimed primarily at shaping this country's future diplomatic relations with the Hitler regime. Neither ambassador, would tor publication on arrival at 7 p. m.

(CST) on a day coach little used on a local train over a right of way from Atlanta. Other Guests Leave Marvin Mclntyre, presidentistl secretary, met them at the village depot and took them immediately to the "Little White House arriv ing just before dinner. "I have nothing to say now, said Wilson. Reporters talked to him while the two ambassadors and Mclntyre posed for camera men beside the train in 24-degre3 weather, Echoing his words was the tallsr former assistant secretary of state, Ambassador Phillips. Thev said they did not know how long they were to be here Most of Mr.

Rooseevlt's weekend guests departed late yesterday 'or Washington. They included Mar- riner S. Eccles, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, and Aubrey Williams, national youth ad ministrator. Today he will confer in the aft emoon with Gov. Carl E.

Bailey of Arkansas. Visit Comes as Surprise fniuips visit came as a sur prise to observers, here as there had been no previous indication he would join Wilson for the confer ence, which may decide whether the ambassador" to Berlin will be ordered home permanently. How the President could send Wilson back to Berlin in view of his indictment of anti-Jewish pro grams, without definite assurances from Germany that American citi zens and property would be respected and other humane steps taken, was a question observers found hard to answer. The two diplomats traveled here in the wake of hurried conferences by Wilson in New York and Wash-1 ington with State Department heads. Sumner Welles, acting secretarj of state while Secretary Hull travels to the Pan American conference at Lima.

Peru, announced that Wilson had been assigned to an indefinite tour of duty in Washington as counselor on German-American affairs. Autograph 'Bugs' Precipitate Fight New York iJP Two unidentified white girls who sought the autographs of Thomas (Fats) Waller, Negro orchestra leader, precipitated a free-for-all fight early yesterday in which Waller's brother, Edward, was shot twice and seriously wounded and Thomas Kehoe, 22, one of the girle' escorts, was beaten severely. The orchestra leader and his brother- had just left a Harlem night club when the two girls approached them. Police said Kehoe and a man in his party resented the girls' action and besran to abuse them. Edward Waller pro tested Words were passed and the fight started.

Patrons of the night club joined the Wallers. During the confusion the two girls and their other escort fled. Edward Waller was shot in the left leg and in the pelvis. Kehoe, beaten into unconsciousness, was charged with felonious assault and violation of the Sullivan (firearms possession) law. He suffered internal injuries and a possible skull fracture.

tlltler KeVealed 72 1 1 WITHOUT AID Appears Strong, But Pale to Visitors Vatican City (JP) Pope Pius XI astonished 400 Hungarian pilgrims yesterday by talking to them for 10 minutes after he had seated himself unaided on the papal throne. One of the happy pilgrims de scribed the 81-year-old pontiff, who collapsed inday morning with a heart attack, as "very pale, but he appeared the master of his strength and unhesitating in his Doctors indicated the Holy Father passed a calm night, and he arose from his sick bed yesterday morn- teg to undertake a strength-taxing schedule of audiences which i ached a climax in his appearance before the Hungarians. In the afternoon he went to bed for about two but asthma bothered him again, members of his household said, and he arose to ait in an armchair until 6 p. m. A Vatican news service aid he then went to a place in the official trartment where, from behind a screen, he could bear special ser- crons preached by cardinals at the annual spiritual exercises of the pa pax court.

The service ended at 7:45 p. and the Pontiff immediately went to bed for the night-Talks with Archbishop Br. Aminta Milani indicated re lief last night at the knowledge that audiences would be suspended foi the rest of the week because of the spiritual exercises. The Pope made no reference to his health in his atMress, and spoke in clear voice, thanking the pilgrims in his customary way for having come from afar to see him. In addition to the group speech, the Pontiff talked a few minutes riser with Justinian George Card teal Seredi, archbishop of Strigonia, who led the pilgrims.

The audience took place at 1:15 p. m. (7:15 a- m. EST) in the consistory hall. Pope Pius was carried into the hall in his portable chair wbica was placed near Ihe throne.

He was aided from the chair, but then motioned the assistants away Then he took a few steps to the tlirone which he mounted alone mhile the pilgrims looked on at tentrvely. At the close of -the audience he descended from the throne alone walked to his chair and was i-rlped into it. The master of the chamber Mser. Arborio Mella di Sant'Elia took care that the large audience did not upset the Holy Father emotionally. He asked the pilgrims to refrain from the anplause with which such goups normally pay their respects the Pontiff.

Photograph Taken During the audience a photograph of the Pope standing was tiken by the Vatican photog- It was the first photograph taken of him since the heart attack. In the morning the Pope was carried from his small bedroom to his audience chamber where, i.y a. ox, he had received in quick succession Eugenia Cardinal Pa-crlli, papal secretary of state; useppe Cardinal Pizzardo; Ca-millo Serafini, governor of Vatican Cty. and Archbishop Jean Chol-let of Cambrai, France. The Pontiff even had hoped ro for an automobile ride in the Vatican gardens his only in recent years but his chi if physician, Dr.

Milani, persuaded him not to venture outdoors in the d-izzle -which fell all Dr. Milani, who Saturday nignt finally gava permission for yesterday's audiences after strongly op posing them, left the Pope at a a m. Persons leaving the first audiences of the morning said they were amazed at the liveliness of the mind of the Pontiff. After Archbishop Chollet, the Pope successively received Bishop Giovanni Silva of Registro do Ara- guayo, Brazil, and the bishops of Port Louis, British East Africa, and of Lcmans, France. Workers Warned On General Walkout Paris CP) The threat of a aew metal-workers' walkout in the Valenciennes region arose last night as the government planned measures to combat the oneday general strike called for Wednesday.

Suddenly reversing its decision of Saturday, the executive committee of the metal workers union in the Valenciennes district ordered its 25,000 members to continue the strike last week in protest against the government's decree laws. The workers previously had been ordered back to their jobs today pending the proposed general strike. But representatives of the committee told them yesterday to "keep striking indefinitely until the government's plan to extend the 40-hour week is Another development yesterday was the offer by the national railroad workers' union to require its members to report at their regular Posts "to guarantee security, prevent sabotage and maintain order" but not to perform their customary-duties between 4 a. m. and 7 p- m.

The government may mobilize the members of the union to prevent a complete tie-up of nationalized lines during the strike. Cites Nationalization Minister of Public Works Ana-tole de Monzie in a broadcast address warned the railroad workers that the government would consider their labor contracts broken if they participated in the Wednesday strike. He declared this would result in discharge of those who refused to work. He recalled that since the railways have been nationalized the working contract Is directly between the employe and the gov- ernment. The minister, who spoke an hour before a broadcast arranged by Premier Edouard Daladier, also give warning that anyone who tried to halt the railroad service would be subject to prosecution under criminal law.

Daladier, in his broadcast, charged that leaders behind the general strike movement were seeking to force the country to accept the will of a "proletarian minority" directed by men with "international connections." Charges Dictator Try The outbreak of strikes last week, he said, coincided with the closing negotiations for a French-German non-aggression pact which the leftists opposed. Leftist political groups, he asserted, were trying to establish a dictatorship in France through industrial agitation aimed at the downfall of his government He promised to "go to the end" in attempting to break the strike movement, and declared "the whole future of the French republic" depended upon vigorous suppression of occupation strikes arrd projected general strikes. Denying assertions of his opponents that he seeks to make himself dictator, Daladier declared that occupation of factories and the calling of a general strike was in effect a test of force between "a dictatorship of the minority and republican democracy." "Tt was a question and It la a question still, as certain leaders of international organizations have warned us in their aggressive speeches, of unleasing an attack against the French government," he asserted. Mobilization Decreed Meanwhile there were indications that the nationwide strike instruction to the 5,000,000 workers affiliated with the General Confederation of Labor was not meeting with complete accord in the ranks. A decree signed by President Albert Lebrun, Daladier and De Monzie authorizing the government to requisition an estimated 521,000 railway workers into military service-, was published yesterday In the Official Journal.

The decree, announced Saturday night, gave the government power to mobilize the workers at any time after its publication, although the power has not yet been used. BCSt Man Role Unity Valkyrie Freeman-Mitford, 24, Hitler's beautiful young English friend who has been arrested, stoned and booed in England and on the continent for proclaiming what a great man Der Fuehrer is. They ai-. the daughters of 60-year-old Lord Redesdale of the British peerage, who himself has pro-Nazi sentiments. Mosley, 14 years older than his bride, was a widower at the time of the secret Munich! wedding.

Lady Cynthia Mosley, one of th-i famous beautiful daughters of Marquess Curzon and a granddaughter of the Chicago millionaire Levi Z. Leiter, died in 1933. Unity was seized in Czechoslovakia on suspicion of espionags recently when police found Hitler'. autographed picture in her lug gage. in Vienna said yesterday an undis closed number of Austrian Jewish musicians engaged to teach at the music conservatory in Kobe, Japan, suddenly found their contracts an nulled by the Japanese government.

The disclosure followed by two days the signing at Tokyo of a German-Japanese accord on cul tural cooperation on the anniversary of the Japanese-German-Ital-ian anti-Communist pact. Here, the problem of havens for Jews still was pressing. One group of Polish Jews, who had been released from custody on the un derstanding that, they would leave the country, were arrested again because Poland refused to admit them. Some young Jews left for Liberia. Krasing Continues The process of erasing all traces of Jewish influence continued with the removal of signs from 80 Vienna streets named for Jews as wsli as of statuary and other com memorations of once-honored Jews Among those of whom memory is to be eradicated were Joseph von Sonnenfels, who was responsible for the abolition of torture as a method of police investigation, and Sieg fried Marcus, Austrian automobile inventor.

A bust of a member of the Rothschild banking family was taken down from a Vienna railroad station. A tabulation of Jews' wealth, published in the Vienna edition of Reichsfuehrer Hitler's own news paper, Voelkischer Beobachter, set it at about 8,000,000,000 marks 200,000,000) for all Germany. Of this. 2.295,000,000 marks 000) was said to be owned in Aus tria, indicating that, per capita, Austrian Jews were about three times as wealthy as those in the rest of greater Germany. The Voelkischer Beobachter said 102 Austrian Jews were million aires.

The largest individual Jew ish fortune, it said, was 26,000,000 marks (about $10,000,000) so that after paying the 20 per cent assess ment of Ernst von Rath, its owner would have more than 20,000,000 marks ($8,000,000) left. Four Towns 'Free' The newspaper's tabulations sup posedly were based on returns Jews were forced to make to comply with Field Marshal Hermann Wilhelm Goei ine's decree demanding that thev list their wealth. Ejection of Jewish tenants from apartment houses, reported by ex tremist Nazi organs to be imminent apparently will raise knotty prob lems until existing laws for protecting tenants have been revised. Authorities, swamped with eager non-Jewish home-seekers, pleaded with applicants to be patient until the number of eventually available apartments is known. Jews gradually are being forced out of smaller towns and villages of Bavaria, some of them of families that had lived there for centuries.

The newspaper Fraenkische Tagesztitung said that Julius Streicher, outspoken anti-Semite and governor of Franconia, had reported that the townships of Schwabach, Altenmuhr, Scheinfeld and Lauf had announced they now were "Jew free." The same newspaper, however, said that a man in Weiden who wrote a Jewess a threatening letter demanding money, had been sentenced to six months imprisonment. 'America for Jews' The Vienna edition of the Voelkischer Beobachter continued the Nazi press attacks on the United States. "Evidently it has become dangerous for Americans in America to pay what they think lest they displease Jews," it commented In an editorial. "Perhaps th3 slogan 'America for Americans' will be changed to 'America for Sports Page Notre Dame, Texas Christian, Tennessee and Duke rule football world 16 Dutchtown Vays gain revenge on Buffalo Pros by scoring 7-to-6. victory 17 Red Wings, Dodgers and Bisons promise aid to cities forming new Class baseball league Featttres Skeffington Society 8 Editorial Theaters Damon Run von Radio 18 Comics 22! Continued story 22 Crossword puzzle Want ads 19.

20, 11 yinancial 18 Death notices '0 flsDaily features 9. 11, 19; 10 jj! 22 AMBASSADOR WILSON International News AP Photo AMBASSADOR PHILLIPS uhisked up a mountain STATIONS BAR COUGHLIN TALK New York (INS) The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin was barred from the air yesterday by Station WMCA his New York outlet, but over the remainder of his network he repeated his controversial address of the previous week, asking his listeners to judge for themselves if it was anti-Semetic. The radio priest's broadcast was heard here over station WHBI.

Newark, N. another link in the network of individual stations over which his sermons have been relayed each Sunday afternoon from his studio in Royal Oak, Mich. Father Coughlin was banned, it was officially explained yesterday by a WMCA official, because he declined to submit in advance a copy of yesterday's broadcast "al though we repeatedly urged it upon him." This refusal, it was disclosed, amounted to automatic cancella tion of the station's contract with the priest, and his regular time in New York will be assigned to somebody else. Station WJJD, Chicago, another of the string which usually carries the Coughlin broadcast on Sunday, did not have the priest's speech yesterday. A program director declined to say why, adding: "We just didn't have fcim on our program sheets today." Station WIND at Gary, also failed to carry the radio priest's; address yesterday, although the station usually does.

No explanation was given for its action. Coughlin's address yesterday consisted principally of an electrical transcription of his speech the previous Sunday which had been criticized immediately after the close of the broadcast by a WMCA announcer who said that "unfortunately Father Coughlin has uttered certain mistakes of fact." In his remarks accompanying his rebroadcast yesterday. Father I Sundays address was pro-Nazi, charged in the storm of controversy aroused by the speech. But at the same time he declared: "By their failure to use the press. the radio and the banking house, where they stand so prominently.

10 ngnt communism as vigorously they fight naziism, the Jews in- vite the charge of being supports Of communism." The rebroadcast contained the radio priest's statements in which Deepening Boston (AP) Riding on heavy snowfall struck New temperatures, even while this CIO THREATENS PACKER STRIKE Chicago (HE) The Congress of Industrial Organizations threatened last night to extend a strike paralyzing the union stockyards to the 22 major packing plants of Armour and Company. Van A. Bittner, vicepresident of the CIO, said that 42 delegates representing each of the Armour plants throughout the country, had agreed upon strike action unless a speedy eettlment of the stockyards controversy is reached. The delegates were meeting In Chicago to discuss opening of contract negotiations with the Armour Company. Bittner reiterated that if handlers affiliated with the American Federation of Labor carry out their plan to report for work at 6 a.

m. today, they will do so at their own peril. Police, meanwhile, were prepared for AFL handlers voted unanimously Friday to return to work today and informed O. T. Hemple, vice-president and general manager of the world's largest livestock mar ket, that between 150 and 400 men would report.

Henkle said he would not recog nize the men as AFL CIO but merely as "individuals returning to work. Ben Brown, president of the CIO union local, promised police last night his union would do all in its power to prevent a clash. "Our men will stand by peace fully," he said, "and if the AFL. does attempt to break the strike, we have other ways and means of fettling the situation." He referred to his earlier threat to tie up the entire packing industry should the stockyards company resort to strikebreakers or "scabs He estimated that approximately 18,000 CIO members In the packing industry could be called on strike if necessary. Him During Illness Sanctification of Saint Therese occurred only 28 years after her death.

Many soldiers in the World War called her "The Little Flower of Jesus" and carried her picture in their army identification books. To them, it was the French Carmelite nun who thrust back the Germans from the gates of Paris, saved Verdun and even brought the United States into the war. She died in 1897, when 24 years old, having spent eight years behind cloister walls at a convent in Lisieux, France, her birthplace Renown of her goodness and re ligious work quickly spread and brought pilgrims from all parts of the world to her shrine. She was beatified by Pope Pius on Apr. 30, 1923.

a sweeping north wind, England yesterday in freezing region attempted to dig itself out from a previous storm. Airlines, which had resumed operations only Saturday after being shut since the Thanksgiving Day blizzard, canceled their morn' ing flights out of Boston, but opened up in the afternoon as the storm blew out to sea. Highways in some sections were choked again almost within hours after plows had cleared them. A wind touching gale force raged off the coast. Small craft were warned to hold shore.

One train from Fitchburg reached Boston almost 20 minutes late. Boston Snowed Under The Weather Bureau estimated about 5H inches of new snow fell In Greater Boston before it stop ped early in the afternoon. When the storm letup in more northern regions, it left piles almost 20 inches deep in sections. Ear-muffs and mittens were In order even down in Dixie yester day-and through most of the East and Middle West after the double- header storm which raged Thanks giving night and continued with only slight respite and interruption through yesterday. The Eastern Seaboard was in for more of it, too, on the basis of a Weather Bureau warning of a dis turbance centered about 200 miles off Atlantic City and moving rapidly northeastward with increasing intensity.

Traffic Hampered At least 95 deaths were attributed directly or indirectly to the Thanksgiving record-breaker an 1 to the snow and wind which followed Saturday night and yesterday before most of the country-had dug completely out of the first one. Highway travel was generally slowed, but road workers were on the job, including 42,000 of them in New York City, to keep thoroughfares cleared. Heavy snows had blanketed Manhattan for three days. Unseasonably warm weather was reported from the West Coast in contrast to the mass of cold air which the Weather Bu reau reported was centered over the Great Lakes region and mov ing slowly eastward- Below freezing marks were re corded all through the South except Florida. Colder weather was in store for Virginia where 74 inches of snow lay on the ground in the eastern part of the state.

The total snowfall last year was 1.7 inches. X. Y. Warms Up Albany UD A light snowfall and slightly warmer weather gieeted most upstate New residents yesterday offering te ti-porary relief from sub-zero temperatures that followed the sea son's first big snowstorm. The snow was heaviest in the extreme southeastern section -f the state, where the Albany Weather Bureau reported two 'iiches fell.

Similar conditions ex ibted in Dunkirk and in the south western region. Several inches of snow fell at where a minimuxi temperature of 19 above was corded at 4:30 a. The mi cury climbed from 8 above to 30 in Oneonta and in the Glens Falls yjcinitly touched the 20', NEWS AR0UND THE CLOCK Pope's Faith in Saint Therese Hailed At Wedding of British Fascist Chief Foreign page Poles and Czechs clash as final ceded areas are taken over. 1 Japanese government claimed opening drive against 1 Pope, definitely stronger, receives Hungarian 1 New threats of strikers faced by French government 1 City, County Exposition Association Directors to meet soon to discuss future of annual show 13 Upstate GOP forces bid today to wrest control of State Committee from New York area 14 Thousands jam Ellison Park toboggan slide 13 National Ambassador Wilson tells FDR of persecutions in Germany 1 New storm sweeps east, with snow continuing 1 Famous German savants teach in United States Secretary Woodring cites urgent need of Panama Canal expanded defenses 4 New Grange platform asks rise in farm prices As Sustaining Vatican City UP) The refusal of Pope Pius XI to accept the role of a sick man despite his 81 years and faltering heart was attributed in some circles yesterday to his faith tn Saint Therese of the Infant Jesus. The Pope, who both beatified and cannonized Saint Therese, once described her as his "favorite child." He entrusted his health to her in the holy year of 1925 the year of her sanctification and built a chapel in her honor in his gardens.

He used to kneel there for a few moments after his walks. Against the anxiety of his physician. Dr. Aminta Milani, at his exertion, some sources said was matched the Pope's faith in Saint Therese. They called it "a struggle between science and faith." She declared that because a pre-ajng ponderance of Jews had been at) The wedding of two of the most the head of the Russian prominent figures in British Fas- nazis JOked upon the Jews asjcism, kept secret all these months Berlin UR Chancellor Adolf Hitler's role as bachelor best man at the marriage of Sir Oswald Mos- av loaor nr tho hkhirtrri British Fascists, and attractive rjiana Freeman-Mitford, who to Der Fuehrer's tye is "the ideal Nordic woman," was revealed last nio-ht nnri a veor of tor tha wo- because Hitler had the records impounded, occurred at mid-day on Dec.

4, 1937, in Hitler's private offices at the brown-stone Fuehrer-haus in Munich the same building where the four-power conference dismembered Czechoslovakia last Sept. 29. Mosley's bride, who is 28 and a divorcee. Is an elder sister of LmtlK 'bUilltllUtlJSlB, CRASH KILLS COUPLE St. James CP) Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Sherwood, employes of a ileal wjf Idiauu rnt nil killed yesterday -hen their car was struck by an eastbound Long Island train at a St. James crossing. A son, Alson, survives..

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