1635-8 Anti-Semitism ti
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NEWSHOME
EDITION
'd showers. Details on page 8-B; Water temperateare, 11 a. m„ 82. Air temperature, 2 p. m., 83.
MI, FLA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1938 Three Sections FIVE CENTS
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ne War Is BeingObserved Octogenarian BRITISH PROTEST ••. . ,
Cham G.O.P•
res In Case Of Another tgyA4a .m.., GERMAN DRIVE : #
ROCHESTER, Ind., Nov. 11. AGAINST JEWS
William Ewing. who at 80 has
' • _ - spent more than half his adult •
} -T/■ T: �.■ ,• • life as Justice c: the peace of
jrI t 1 1 - 'DAY. •' • - Rochester township (Fulton Berlin Is Told Rights Of
r •:•<:�, county], lookedforward today g
,v - �:SP+' to his ninth atraight.four-year Race Must Be Given
• A/ /t��a term In that office. Returns
t , . 2 . L+i ;eh
bowed Ewing, a Republican,
A// i-i �• Protection
ze elected Tutahe In 31
;L S,"Are; �, V - years in office, he has wrath- —
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�r; • .�,�iYy ,'t ie + ~ .- - - ered a aeries of Democratic NAZIS ARE S C 0 R E D
. r,.Yf. `_f!i••
••••‘,..:..1 �'�S) / 7 ✓.. ! landalldea. —_ y ..
;� .� - II-.,--.,._ ;may 'AcK.B T;B.F.-Li-- ,�
• BRYAN ! HANKS Newspapers
` ftFLs�r-,.�.:-.. 0,,... " London News a ers At-
{, . i 1 p.SI. 7. wad s F `• �r w� ..7',,,,-,t1-„,r .., '
t b ` -•t� ',. t ! - r<,:., :':w.,w � tack Government;Pray- .
1 ., r , 0- : Ar i ;j STARTS STORY ars Are Asked
�. `•pfr „- ' zr,�. � try T!z �a
, .Y' . r ; ,��'y �r, 4 ,'' OF BRIBE CASE
��/ [ U`•,<vJyi`.` of ww •'y'�,�e; .seri \ �:+ ..,•v. • AF,RL1'i� Nov.ro1 Nall ti-
,,- , �� __ rte drafted p .
t', •,•v,.y Pt new repressive
-'••aQil. •v—,ter, .• ... r ...-..• measures against the Jews to-!S M-a :" ,• . :�'�•: urr•-•-r :% CityIs Bitterlyand 7r.Paul Joseph Gots- '
Of
.,v-sr,,. :• r.:44
•'�'�ti Dela, minister of propaganda,
.le 1. - ••'Pal.n:.v,tTiiafgl;•�-.,. } .f x'� Contest Each StepIn Indicated they would be of un-
` i ..:o,._,•:. Y� v,J • Dr.ct-denttd severity.
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, ' Aall `"'ice\W r'•r.`.•' . • Trial (Ey Van-
ua?resat
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r IANDON, Nov. 11.—Creat Brit-, ra.
�h+`' ;`f ..^T' •
R j Bryanala has made representations to
• � ,.,,s`• �• r ., & Light C. Hanks, Florida Power Germanyto safeguard rights and
<rr..ss�.`\ a. • R Co. president, is scheduled property of British Jews, it was
\ '�• y .;• � ), to return to the wltnees stand to- learned today.
r �•< <.-a` ? � details in criminal court to give The representations were made
4 "slp,i V� tem of his charge that an at- at Berlin a soon as the govern-
- e. .4'^; `•ty�i. �y,••,c•• ,,..«., pt was made to collect t250,000 ment Ie►rned of anti-Jewish out- 1
�Ysa ro O "'✓S+.. )'... for amicable settlement of the elec. breaks, Sir George Ogilvie-Forbes,
•••, •� •«.%,"�i •' .. � f f•444'•i .� •; •
t.. F•.!! .s trlc rate litigation between the city British charge d'affaires, dlacuased
'y .. ctfv,y. and the power company.
the situation of British Jews wtW -
elrnca by o, F. McIntyre, near w. clan Artist Facing the charges as result of German foreign office olticlala
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mletice day, 1938. that Louis XIV and his Immo- Imagine him movinggrand Jury Indictments are Mayor It was reported a number of
mi,ttc day, at ate auccXIV a entertainedIme- halls of him
vtdoown the Robert R. Williams,City arm's. British Jews had been arrested,
rest 'guns of the lavishly in the most ma peace alone? John W. DuBose and Rate outside the British embaary in -
tionsreat in this rule cent K conference — the very halls Expert Thomas E. Grady. Berlin. Official quarters had no
palace in the world, that which in 1871 had been defiled After two days of legal maneu- Information regarding the report
trs dropped sullen the need of the French revoiu-
to their locks, the tion was sown. It wan there, German which infantry, the great onride, centered att for the moat part Thehorror expressed by Brolt-
of smoke curling in 1871 that KingWilliam of roomliam had been Prussian ime WII- on defense attorneys' questioning people at, the aIn
outc
perp proclaimed em- of veniremen, a Jury of six men break veto expected In rim.diplomatic
muzzles, And Prussia was proclaimed Ger- parer, He remembered the was selected late yesterday, and on quarters to embarrass prima Mia-
, quiet save the man emperor,following the fall burdens thrust upon a fallen court order, a seventh man named
a rain on the dead of Paris to the InvadingGer- lister Neville Chamberlain serious-
France by this ruthless Invader. as alternate Juror. ly tino his effort to placate Adolf
id grass, the dead manic hordes of 1870, "Peace? Of course," cried - Indication that the defense coup-
e crying of the Versailles! Old rock-hearted Clemenceau, "Ruin Germany, eel batteryHitler and Insure British-German
into the corners of Clemenceau; resourceful, re- will hotly contest evl- co-operation
Leave her helpless. Take her dance produced by the state, was During the Armistice service at
vengeful, the complete realist natural resources. Keep her In seen yesterday as first winess,
ered, after that of the old school; shrewd,self- poverty and misery. Then,and Ralph C.Graham,acting city clerk, th est a nater Abbey this morning,
sin to make ever- fah.unimaginative but resource- then only will there he peace." began under prosecution the dean. the Rt. Rev. P. F. D.
. Into the great fill and dynamic Lloyd . . . The peace born of hatred Int, to identify city commission Be et us rem. said:
Mlles palace they George; Woodrow Wilson, the and the world-old axiom that minutes in which the committees Pt say remember
thee Jewisin h silence
ain
of the power, of idealist, the theorist who (tefcet in war is death,
consisting
sympathy people
hey were to come dreamed of A world in whichg of Grady and DuBois their trouble."
plan that would the Golden Rule of Jesus Christ "Peace? Yes," said Lloyd was named to meet power come The congregation rose and stood
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impossibility—for actually could be applied— George. "Our enemy, by mak- Pany officials for a discussion of silent-
miaed—promised pp ing war has forfeited her right differences between the utilities Newspapers v 1 go r o u s 1 y de-
these three met In the Palace to trade, to be a nation among firm and the city, pounced the outbreaks.
d'end wars. of Versailles, each with his nations. Her colonies must be The defense objected immediate-
It was there, as mind net. taken. Her trade routes must /CONTINUED ON Peas Peau--A) 0 staid Dally Telegraph.m ?°-
tolled and died Cl e m e n c e a u, the Tiger! tCONTINUEn oN PAGE SEVEN—A) pieceed as the foreign office,ffic1 of
of the said of
DE ON WASHINGTONABINET CHANCE `h° eGerman r riots `liver
"Germany has delivered bene!! •
VE•
ver to an orgy of savagery which
• will send n thrill of horror through-
ICHOEMARCHES OF ' ] IS. DISCUSSED out the bear Zed world. , The
S 917 7 }{ fol oma bear every mark of pre-
1 lJ tut organization and official con.
• doaatlon. , , Th• Nut revenge
-- • V la one of the moat terrible things
:ace Proceeds President. Says He Soon of (be present century,
• Armistice Day, 1918, Lives T''° comment of "' New,
Y111•Purchase Will Announce Some Chronicle, which rspteeenti the , '
Inrga body of solid liberalism,
1 Lung" New Appointments geld;. .
= Vividly In Veterans' Minds — S Pogrom hardly es based
fury since the dark ages has been
,ANS xaowvr. Of/ A„oelatea Tees)•• ' • loosed ,with•calculated thorough-
• start wetted • —
K'ASHINCTC", Nov, 11.—Presi• cessThe throughout the greeter retch.
,
!telae the poppies dent Roosevelt said today he soon bI °rulaught wu u contempt-
Skull Fracture Celebrations Of 20 Years w'°"'d announce n number of elle IDIS u Its Pretext wu paltry and
pofntmente, probably within a Its persacutlon cowardly, Not
miss row on row, AgoReCalled Byweek. on the beats of such Sava e •
r place." Fails To Deter flaked at his there be a ho g`I' `an
press conference 7 De of understand-
{hoots, specters of Miamians whether Gov. Frank Murphy e- Ing between the leaden of Gen
.Klett among the Hit-Run VtetiM Michigan,defeated Tuesday for re- m•aY and the people of this coon-
Vaahington ave. in election. woe Included, Roosevelt try'•
Britain will be revolted to a
.day. ---- Twenty years haven't dimmed said nobodywas on the list man by this sadistic outbreak."
Bum Driver, Thrown 20 Feet, memories of the first Armistice The calof election aftermath
.cis day, the day of �l
had Drought renewed speculation
1. I)rocee s Two Miles To qay In the minds of a number of Germany To 1teDlpe
Miami Legionnaire,, that the chief executive was eon-
templating his first cabinet shake-
unseen in the Report Accident ArtCilat Ghetto Law[
"lest they forget." - H. N.Fairbanks, 1140 S.W. 22nd up.
BERLIN, Nov.
shington Ave. they •terrace, remembers going to the ez 11' (Utto la .
tar Veiled Pnnl There have been recurrent rue P':ts are drafting ghetto laws
no,marching as In LOS ANGELES, Nov. ]1.—Do- front at Tout,urench-France, and firing more two or more members might along rr3edleval Innes es the flat
em-
u-year, to the tune one of last French 75's shot in the resign or be transferred to other Official act of vengeance for the
ie, battle banners spite a broken leg, broken hand, war. "I remember how we got posts—the speculation based partly fatal shooting of a German •m-
.eze, kissed by the and probably fractured skull, One news of, the'-armistice," he said, on the fact presidents sometimes Du+7 secretary !n Paris DY a 1T-
,yonets glistening, Flynn, bus driver, drove two miles
"We were driving back to camp make midterm changes in their Year-old Jew, It was
t In stride to the to telephone his boss that a hit-
with all our lights out,ae was cue- group of reference
advisers.
today. understood
'Over there, over and-run driver struck him, but tmm�ry. When we reached camp In his reference to forthcoming Under the laws, which maybe
won't come back, the sentry sang out, 'Turn on the appointments, Roosevelt said, in announced this week-end, Jewish _
there." he.couldn't finish his run. damn lights! The war's over!' reply to aa question, he did not (CONTINUED ON rang ronta._At
dened tips the Flynn was knocked 20 feet by'That night there was a bigball and know whether a supreme court /� C U •
year slowly shook a truck when he stepped x added,designation dwas know whether Nor, he- GEN[ ISM
ET
was it they his bus at 1 a- m. It ws'in°a isl dancing hwith t President r Wilson's rnordid he gotoGov- V ET INONU
something about deserted urea. so he set his teeth,daughter." Pernor Murphy would go the
d safe for democ- crawled Into the bun, and droveto succeedlcde Paul° high Nutt. loner SUCCEEDS ATATURK
ch.thing, to the nearest telephone. Charles C. Sharman, 311 N. W. to V.McNutt.
'guth in .Surgeons marvelled at his feat, 48th st., was at Camp Hancock in Murphy, an ardent New Dealer
emir rowho had' and said he would'recover. IGeorglu. "Discipline Just faded and a close friend of the president, .
(CONTINUED ON PAO5 /O5/1.—A1 (('ANT2N VIM ON PAOt POni—A)
[ARCH AT, BEACH IN ARMISTICE DAY PARADE x°FriendTurf tPnldent Is
Of Late Leader
... fey a •r,•fe/ .r
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