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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 2
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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 2

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The Tampa Tribunei
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Tampa, Florida
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2
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TAMPA MORNING TRIBUNE 2 Tuesday, October 30, 1945 Friends Testify Terrorists Sought To Kill Cuban Major TRUMAN SEEKS ACTION ON BILL PERRY OPA TO CLOSE NOV. 22 TALLAHASSEE, Oct. 29. (Special) The Perry Office of Price Administration will close in Taylor County Nov. 22, and its activities will be transferred to Tallahassee, Perry Chairman M.

J. Foley said. Perry Board members are R. L. Adams, J.

V. Martin, E. L. Cox, J. O.

Huxford. Henry Lv Sneed, O. D. Hendricks. Ruth Elkins, R.

W. Vereen, Ben Cash, Tom Abdoo. C. A. Couver, T.

A. Jackson, J. F. Gllmore, Paul D. Bird, C.

P. Wilson, Royce Thompson; clerks, Mrs. Sam Register, Mr. J. B.

Faircloth, and volunteers, Hazel Kelly, Mary Cone, Elizabeth Sisson and Barbara Brown. TO PROVIDE JOBS WASHINGTON, Oct. 29. (JP) President Truman turned on more team today for congressional action MIAMI. Oct.

29. (JP) Ernesto De La Fe, editorial worker on the Havana newspaper Manana, testified in Federal Court today that an alleged Cuban terrorist organization had published a proclamation calling for the death of MaJ. Mariano Faget, formerly of the Cuban National. Police, who is now a resident of Miami. The witness testified that members of the Society, the Accione Guiteras, had threatened to assassinate Faget in Miami if the former police official did not return to Cuba.

The testimony was given at an extradition hearing before V. S. Commissioner Roger E. Davis, in which the Cuban Government is seeking the return of Faget to its jurisdiction to face a murder charge. Accused of killing one Harris Brown Card! in 1942, Faget has already testified that he had never seen the victim and asserted that the charge is a frameup engineered by his political enemies.

La Fe, describing the Accione Guiteras as a terrorist society which sprang up in opposition to the regime of Former President Fulgencio Ba- ADVERTISEMENT 2 drops in each noetril shrink membrane, cold "Have members of this organization ever attempted to assassinate MaJ. Faget?" asked Defense Attorney James M. Carson. "Yes, before he left the witness said. La Fe also testified that several former associates of MaJ.

Faget had been murdered in Cuba, and added: "Only last Saturday, MaJ. Pedro Tandron, once head of the Cuban Police Investigation Bureau, was shot six times in the back by unknown persons. Tandron held the post just before Faget took It over, and they worked together in 1942." La Fe said he had been told three months ago by a member of Accione Guiteras that the society Intended to kill Faget. He named the member as Orlando Leon Lumus, who, he said, had no occupation. "Outside of assassination?" asked Attorney Carson.

The witness declared he had been told that the society was out to "get" Faget, even if he won his fight against extradition, and that a man nicknamed "Colorado" had recently taken out a passport presumably to come to Miami. Another wii-ness, Jose Lopez Vilabot, president and editor of the Havana newspaper Manana and Deportiva, testified that he considered Faget a political refugee whose life would be; endangered by returning to Cuba. si stuffed nose opn. Cau-1 rv iiSiiilyll, 'ir-, nm I fPFNFTRO NQCC flRftPC TMW- GEN. MARSHALL RAPS SPEED OF DEMOBILIZATION NEW YORK.

Oct. 29. (JP) Gen. Marshall said tonight that demobilization in the United States has become "disintegration not only of the armed forces but apparently of all conception of world responsibility." In a speech prepared for delivery before the New York Herald Tribune Forum, Marshall said "it is certain that the military establishment cannot hope to Insure the safety of the United States very much longer at the present rate of demobolization unless some permanent peacetime program is established and at an early date." He added: "For the moment, in a widespread emotional crisis of the American people, demobilization has become, in effect, disintegration not only of the armed forces but apparently of all conception of world responsibility and what it demands of us." "If we are to nourish the infant United Nations Organization and thus establish some possibility of a future decent world order," Marshall said, "definite measures must be taken immediately to determine" at least the basic principles for our post-war military policy. I have never felt so certain of anything in my life." Falling Back Gen.

Marshall said that "just a few months ago the world was completely convinced of the strength and courage of the United States." Now they see us falling back into our familiar peacetime habits. We must somehow to get it clear in our thinking that the fulfillment of our responsibilities is not some vague mumbo Jumbo. It requires positive active effort and sacrifice, and above all it is a continuing process." Citing slashes In military appropriations at the close of the first World War, the chief of staff said: on Jobless pay and employment legislation but the wheels didn't turn perceptibly faster. The President told the "big four" of House and Senate at a White House conference that he wants; 1 Revival of the $25 a week for S6 weeks unemployment compensation bill. 2 Action on th full employment measure.

Both are stymied In House committees. Legislators who took part in the conference told reporters that Truman expressed concern about a proposal to return the federal employment offices to the states 30 days after pending legislation becomes law The measure making that change, passed by the House, Is hanging fire In the Senate. Truman gave the Impression that this would turn out, In his opinion, to be a bar to rapid reemployment of displaced war workers. At the conference were President Pro Tem McKellar and Majority Leader Barkley of the Senate; Speaker Bayburn and Majority Leader Mc- RECTAL DISEASES No Ether, Knife or Hospital DR. J.

R. ALDEN 506 Slovoll Otflc 41 Tempa St. Hours 11 to 4 an4 by Appointment PHONE 4425 Ltista of Cuba, told Commissioner Davis: "One of its present members is the present second chief of the secret police in His name is Rogalio Hernandez." ifLjfe Sales Wafils Service VETERAN QUARANTINED FROM OWN HOME North Hollywood, Oct. 29. A quarantine sign (scarlet fever) on his own home today kept Capt.

Kenneth Ramsey from Joining his wife and their daughter, Patricia, 7, whom he had not seen since putting them on the last boat from Corregidor in July, 1942. Since then he has been a prisoner of war. (AP Wirephoto.) W. B. HAGGERTY, INC.

805 MORGAN TAMPA Cormack. of the House. Praises Tax Cut JAP SOCIALISTS DEMONSTRATE FOR WAR TRIALS TOKYO, Oct. 29. (U.R) More than 1000 Japanese Socialists gathered out Truman expressed satisfaction wlth one recent action of Congress, the tax reduction of nearly six billion dollars Brazil Changes Presidents In which Is about to be adopted In conference report form.

The unemployment compensation Shakeup NEW CITY BOARD WILL GO INTO OFFICE NOV. 8 City Election Board officials said yesterday the new Tampa Board of Representatives will be declared in office Nov. 8 after completion of the canvass of the general city election, which will be held Nov. 6. This means that the first official meeting of the new board will be the TRUCE HALTS BLOODY FIGHT AT SOERABAJA By RALPH MORTON WAINWRIOHT FOR MERGER OF ARMED FORCES a PHILADELPHIA, Oct.

29. (fif The hero of Bataan and Corregidor, measure bogged down In the ways and means committee. Under Its terms PAVBNG StrMt Roadway Drivewav SPB1L WOHE4 Garoq Floors. Booav ana Low Places. Lory or Small Jobs.

FREE ESTIMATES. OYSTER SHELL Delivered Anvwher In Tampa RQQT.f.l. BROWN DREDGING CONTRACTORS PHONE M-lltl side the office of Yomirui Hochi today to join the newspaper's employes in demanding a war criminal trial for its "It was argued then and it will soon te argued again that the nation's economy cannot stand such military expenditures. Is not that absurd if you consider that the country's economy can better stand expenditures Qen. Jonathan Wainwright, said BAT A VIA, Java, Oct.

29. (ff) Bloody fighting at the Soerabaja naval base, lasting more than 24 hours, was halted by an Indonesian truce tonight president, Matsutaro Shoriki, and resignation of the paper's directors. Socialist Party Chairman Kanjukato said the demonstration was not directed at the newspaper alone but at all "war criminals" in journalistic circles. He said Matsutaro was a criminal because he collaborated with today he favors both a merged Army night of Tuesday, Nov. 13.

-w-Sf" after 25 British Indian troops were for national security than it can stand and Navy and the peace-time military development program advocated to Congress last week by President Truman. At that time, the board, going into killed. The entire British garrison of office under the charter revision of 1600 men was seriously threatened. defeat or even a victory with a consequent debt of more than three hundred billions?" The Dutch news agency Aneta re Gen. Wainwright opened the ported new fighting had broken out between Allied troops and Indonesians in the Kramat district of Batavia, Quaker City's Victory Loan drive and was greeted by a crowd which Mayor Bernard Samuel estimated at "close 25 Baptist Ministers Hit the $25 maximum would go to those who qualify regardless of the top figure fixed in the state In which they would be eligible.

The difference, if any, would be made up by the Federal Government. The so-called "full employment" bill has been stuck In the committee on executive expenditures. The President told his news conference last Thursday that he is for It with everything he has. Truman's call for a break In the deadlock was a follow-up to testimony by Reconversion Director John W. Snyder who said there have been some "mistaken ideas" bout the legislation.

Snyder told the expenditures committee today that the bill doesn't mean government ownership, competition with private enterprise or more regulation of private business." He said It Is instead a systematic mechanism for government, industry and labor to tackle Impending unemployment together, each with a share xt responsibility. LEON PROPERTY IS ASSESSED the militarists, the Zaibatsu trusts and war-mongering bureaucrats. While the demonstrators shouted Socialist slogans and listened to speakers, Foreign Minister Yoshida called on Gen. MacArthur to request modification of his order of Oct. 25 directing, the recall of all Japanese diplomatic representatives in neutral countries.

where the natives were said to have amassed large stores of arms and mu tfUfitikSj' 1 Sweat boxes July 31 to replace the Board of Aldermen, will organize and name a chairman and vice chairman before transacting city business. Will Name Officers The new charter requires that the new board must name officers-and committee heads within 10 days after being duly certified as elected by a canvass of the general election returns. Before going out of office, the present Board of Aldermen may hold two more official meetings, the meeting to- nitions. The Indonesians at Soerabaja, well equipped with armored cars, light tanks, machlneguns and mortars and said to number more than 10,000, de clared the truce after hearing a per sonal appeal by President Soekarno of DEATHS MRS. AMELIA McLEAN HARRIS Mrs.

Amelia McLean Harris, 44. of the "Indonesian republic." He was flown to Soerabaja by the British. night and another next Tuesday night, Soekarno, although carrying a white 3415 9th died last night in a Getulio Vargas (Continued from Page 1) of the Army garrison at Vila Militar, flag of truce, had to brave the fire of which is general election night. Aldermen have Indicated they will hold both meetings. Tampa hospital.

Survivors are three to 2,000,000." Of the Army-Navy consolidation, the general said It 'certainly would mean greater economy and facilitation of the supply problems of the services." Referring to President Truman's proposed military program. Gen. Wainwright said "I don't see how anyone can fail to give the most serious thought to the President's warning that this training may mean the difference between the survival and the destruction of this great nation." He declared "it is obviously essential that we mount guard over Germany and Japan until we are convinced that they have learned their lesson well. How long this will require is not for me to say. I hope we do not tire of the task until we are convinced that the poisons of Nazism and Japism have been eliminated completely and forever." dauehters.

Mrs. Amelia Renfro, Miss his own followers repeatedly before he reached headquarters of the Indo Frances Harris, and Miss Vera Harris, had been appointed to succeed Goes Monteiro. HURT IN ACCIDENT of Tampa; two sons, C. M. and J.

T. nesian forces. In the late afternoon, however, he persuaded the young radi Harris, Tampa; two sisters, Mrs. Hat- Alessandro Marenco, 60, of 609 East Benjamin Vargas succeeded Joao Alberto Lins De Barros, formerly tie Bishop, Rlverview, and Mrs. T.

A Peck, of Cash, two brothers, J. Brazil's first minister to Canada. E. and J. W.

McLean, Bloomingdale, and two grandchildren. Mrs. Harris Columbus was seriously injured when the car he was driving collided with a car driven by C. J. Hamme, 59, of 708 West Euclid yesterday afternoon at the corner of Armenia Ave.

and Main St. Marenco was treated at the Tampa Hospital (Continued from Tage 1) to sweat-boxes and unanimously adopted a motion offered by the Sarasota Woman's club that Governor Caldwell be asked to make a survey of penal institutions to see to it that punishment be made more "humane." The district embraces the Women's Clubs of Arcadia, Wauchula, Englewood, Punta Gorda. Moore Haven, LaBelle and Sarasota, and the Junior Women's Clubs of Arcadia, Wauchula and Sarasota. The motion by Mrs. Bob Newhall, president of the Sarasota Club, did not name sweat-boxes specifically, but Mrs.

Newhall made it plain that it referred to them. As submitted to the meeting in writing the text of the motion follows: "That Governor Caldwell be asked to make a survey of the penal institutions of the state to see that the type of punishment to be made more humane. We also request that copies of the resolution be sent to Nathan Mayo, commissioner of agriculture, and to the corresponding secretary of the State Federation of Women's Clubs." Commissioner Mayo has jurisdiction over the state's penal Informed sources said the removal of De Barros followed his refusal to take some "restrictive measures." They said several persons were considered for his post but all refused to accept and President Vargas finally placed for cuts on the head and a possible i ORANGE HILL 9 BtouHtll, Cemetery Clean and Orderly Prices within reach of all Ph. M-60102. 207 Cass St.

Arcade cal leaders to call off the attack. Refused to Disarm The fighting started after the British ordered the Indonesians to surrender their arms. They refused, fearing apparently that Dutch troops were about to enter the city. Meanwhile, the sudden uprising caused negotiations between the Dutch and the Indonesian nationalists to be postponed indefinitely. Nationalist leaders were scheduled to meet with acting Governor General Hubertus J.

Van Mook today, but were unable to be present because of Soekarno's trip to Soerabaja. The British readily admitted that they had been In a desperate plight. back injury. Officer Williams his brother in the office. The new police head's first action was to dismiss Joanuim Antunes, head USES PLACES 1 1 1 WORKERS AT LAKELAND LAKELAND, Oct.

29. (Special) FUNERAL NOTICES HANCOCK, JAMES DIRWOOD Funeral of the political section, and appoint MaJ. Bruno Fraga Ribeiro. was a lifetime resident of Hillsborough county. INFANT DIES Siamel Echevarria, Infant daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Joe Echevarria of 3202 Armenia died last night at a Tampa hospital. Other survivors are two sisters, Lqrelel and Leilani Echevarria and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tomas Bazarte and Mrs.

Angelica Echevarria, all of Tampa. MRS. P. A. LOCKART BRADENTON.

Oct. 29. (Special.) Mrs. P. A.

Lockart, 47, died today She was a native of Marianna and had resided in Manatee county for 19 years. Besides her husband she is The stationing of the troops. In mi TINMAN'S FLOWERS 316 MAOISON PH. 2059 formed sources said, apparently was a precautionary move on the part of the government of President Vargas following accusations made last week i AT $22,295,889 TALLAHASSEE, Oct. 29.

(Special) Leon County's taxable property Is Valued at $28,295,889 and 1945 taxes to be collected total $347,787, Tax Assessor W. A. Bass said today. Current collections wil begin by the office of Tax Collector W. Kenneth Collins Nov.

1. Payers get- a 4 percent discount for payments in November. Here are the valuations, listed by Assessor Bass: Homestead current lands valuations, non-exempt current lands, personal property, railway and- telegraph property, land reverted to state under Murphy Act, delinquent homesteads, $3860, and non-exempt delinquent lands, $9950. CHANDLER QUITS SEAT IN SENATE WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.

JP) Senator Chandler of Kentucky, quitting the Senate to become baseball commissioner, kept -the way open today for a possible return to politics. Chandler told his colleagues "at least for the present, this is my last day as a member of the Senate." He said at 47, however, he did not think anyone should foreclose his future. The natives were using at least 20 A total of 111 workers were placed in jobs here last week by the U. S. Employment Service, according to C.

C. Miller, manager. There are still 401 drawing compensation pay, with 15 new claims filed last week. services lor James Uurwood Hancock, 70. resident ol 3303 Morgan who died Saturday night at a Tampa hospital, will be held Tuesday morning at 11 from Townsendhouse Baptist Church, the Rev.

Roy Mason of the Buffalo Ave. Baptist Church to officiate. Interment in Townsendhouse Cemetery. Active pallbearers: Howard Hancocfc, Hubert Hancock, L. J.

Hancock, Richard Dale Hancock. Newell Osborne, Max Edwards. Honorary pallbearers: A. J. Burn-side.

John Burks, C. E. Hines, Lucus Ansley. T. F.

Delf fenwlerth. J. W. Smith. Arrangements are in charge of Wilson Sammon Company Funeral Home.

by the pro-government newspaper armored vehicles, which they had taken from the Japanese, and other first-class equipment. Anoite" that opposition forces were SS SOW MW. preparing a revolution. Miller has 543 Jobs open for work The opposition candidate for Presi survived by a daughter, Mrs. Pastell dent is Gen.

Eduardo Gomes. The HESOL'N. MR. JOHN F. Mr.

John F. He- other candidate, who reportedly has AVELLANAL ASKS RETURN OF FEE IN CITY RACE Temporarily Mezzanine Tempa Terrace Hotel Phone S022 ers and, as rapidly as possible, he is finding the right men to fill them. Types of work and number of workers needed are: Agriculture, 33; construction, 76; manufacturing, 24; railroading, 61; utilities, trade, 48; finance, service, 40; domestic, 29; govern Douglas, Bradenton; two sons in the Navy, Durell Lockart, California, and Leon Lockart, Virginia, and the following brother and sisters, Mrs. Lola Dennis, Samoset; Mrs. Lucille Grover Slain Girl Had $3200 In Brassiere the support of President Vargas, is Gen.

Eurico Gaspar Dutra. soun. age 66, of 1810 35th passed away Sunday morning at his residence. Funeral services will be held this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from F. T.

Blount Funeral Home with Rev. W. H. Edwards of Tenth Avenue Baptist Church offici Benjamin Vargas succeeded Joao J. L.

Avellanal, defeated candidate Alberto Lins De Barros, formerly Brazil's first minister to Canada. and Liddon Peacock, Bradenton; Mrs. Laverne Meredith, Plant City, and Mrs. Thelma Isbell, Birmingham, Ala. ment, 13; mining, 195; canning and preserving plants, 12.

in the primary elections for the Tampa Board of Representatives, charged yesterday an error had been made in listing him as a candidate from Dis Power Seized 1930 Getulio Dornelles Vargas seized trict 4, and petitioned the board of WRECKAGE OF LEWIS E. JACKSON BRADENTON, Oct. 29. (Special.) ating, assisted by Rev. J.

W. Wyrlck of Eighth Avenue Methodist Church. Interment will be in Myrtle Hill Memorial Park. Pallbearers are: Active. Joe Carter.

J. B. Knight. Henry Havlick, R. J.

Nichols, Paul Crawford, J. W. Baker. Honorary, Carl Stephens. John Ulicny, John Sloboda.

A. P. Weise, Dp. H. O.

Snow, John Whidden, J. E. Lovell. Alto, Klay, J. W.

Stephens, Wagner Rawls, S. D. Hurst. W. R.

Bennett. Qeorge Lord. Gordon Gornto, Wallace Prltchard, John Fisher. A. C.

Durden. C. W. Mier, H. P.

Vest. Judge Leo Stalnaker, Arthur Lewin, Lee O'Neal. power in Brazil in 1930 and became President four years later under a news constitution. aldermen to return his qualifying fee. Lewis E.

Jackson, 70, who arrived City Election Board records show PLANE FOUND ANCHORAGE, 'Alaska, Oct. 29. (JP) His term as President was the long Avellanal took a notarized oath be est in the nation's history. here with his wife from Sparta, N. several days ago to spend the winter, died last night.

He was a native of Jersey City and a retired public health In the years he headed Brazil, he A ground rescue party radioed that it had found a big C-54 fore the White Municipal Party that he was qualified as a candidate from District 4, Ybor City, but his voter registration shows his address as weathered three uprisings, declared a official there. second republic, promulgated two con 1318 Vi 9th which Is In District stitutions and established a tight, centrally controlled government. HENRY B. McGEE CLEARWATER, Oct. 29.

(Special) 5, downtown. transport plane, reported to have crashed on a mountain 15 miles east of here en route from Edmonton, Alberta. The rescuers reported two men alive. Fate of the other five reported aboard the plane was not determined. A board candidate must have re Henry Benjamin McGee, 57, resident BRITISH HOUSE sided in the district he wishes to rep of Clearwater for the last 28 years, resent for.

two years prior to the elec-l Every service we pro- 11 vide lives up to the I high standards asso- I ciated with our name 1 rT" PHONE H-I7TT i CRESCENT PL tion. died at his home yesterday. He came here from Augusta, Ga. Survivors include his widow. Luella Louise Mc The rescuers' walkie-talkie operator ROCKPORT, Oct.

29. OJ.R) Authorities of this rural town called the Federal Bureau of Investigation Into a weird murder mystery today and were rewarded immediately with the identities of the victims a man of 33 and a girl of 22 with $3200 stuffed in her brassiere. From fingerprints, the FBI agents Identified the man as George E. Tyson, who last July was wanted by Illinois police for questioning concerning a murder, and Ethel Sparks, 22, both of East St. Louis, 111.

They were found burled side by side in a clover field overlooking the Ohio River late yesterday. Both had been shot, Tyson through the heart; Miss Sparks through the head and stomach. In addition, a rope had been drawn tight and knotted around her neck. In her brassiere were $2700 in one dollar bills and one $500 bill. State police lndicrted the FBI had been called in because the murders could have had their origin in 'he robbery of a bank In Richland, less.

than 10 miles from here, two weeks ago. Bur- WEST. CLARENCE EARL Funeral services for Clarence Earl West, 29, resident of 3004 Central who died early Sunday morning at a Tampa hospital, will be held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock, from Wilson Sammon Company Funeral Home, the Rev. W. W.

White of the Alliance Church and Rev. E. C. Aber-nathy of the Riverside Baptist Church officiating. Interment in Woodlawn Cemetery.

Active pallbearers: Carl Roberts, Richard Roberts, J. C. Johnston, Albert Sydner Johnston, J. R. (Bob) White, Robert Milian.

Honorary pallbearers: Sam King, E. C. (Duke) Clayton. John Breithoff, Edward Simon, Buell Collins. Dock Miley and Roy Hais-lip.

Mr. West was a member cf the Henry West and Sons Hardware Store. He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Patti S.

West; a daughter, Floy West; his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Henry West. two brothers.

Henry West. Willium Douglas West: a sister. Mrs. Alton T. Strong, and a grandmother, Mrs.

Lila Parodi, all of Tampa. PASSES BILL TO TAKE OVER BANK LONDON, Oct. 29. (P) The House asked for two stretchers, a gas stove, a toboggan, clothing and bandages Gee; three daughters, Mrs. Mary WOMAN HURT IN FALL Mrs.

Doxie Schenck, 45, of 1822 to aid in bringing out the survivors. of Commons by a vote of 348 to 153 13th was admitted to the Tampa The big Army transport arrived over Lim, Mrs. R. O. Chafen and Miss Luella McGee, all of Clearwater; five sons, Tommy McGee, J.

B. McGee, Henry Leslie, of Clearwater, Hospital last night suffering from passed on second reading tonight a bill to nationalize the Bank of Eng scalp wounds and loss of blood which she said was caused when she stumbled Anchorage at 2:25 o'clock this morning and circled the field, awaiting landing instructions. It was not heard from again. land. and Sgt.

Frank J. McGee, Camp The measure, providing for one of Gordon Johnston. over a curb near her home last night. the chief objectives sought by the new Labor Government, must be passed a third time before it goes to the House of Lords. BANK THB FURNACE FLORIDA 4 tti i a lit- s- I.

mi w. Earlier Hugh Dalton, chancellor of the exchequer, had urged passage of the measure in order to advance the Labor Government's five-year plan of glars broke into the fafety depsoit full employment and production. Declaring that the British treasury llfe mKm r5 113 and the country's banking industry must "pull together," Dalton added: VThe Bank of England with its financial powers must be brought under public ownership and operations of other banks harmonized with industrial needs." Jl boxes at night and carried away loot whose extent has not yet been determined. But authorities were at a loss to explain why the killers, if they had been confederates in a robbery, had left the money stuffed into Miss Sparks' brassiere untouched after they shot and killed her. If they had been confederates, it was pointed out, they would have known she had the money and would not have hesitated to search her body.

She and Tyson had been dead six to 10 days. "Mister, take a picture of yourself doing something you'll never have to do again! Life is different here forget all those common nuisances and enjoy life at its best. Mister, you're in Florida! "And let me tell you another way to get the most out of life in Florida. When your pleasure calls for a bottle of beer or switch to LA TROPICAL. You'll find that 'Florida difference' there, too.

Master brewers have spent 50 years perfecting a taste for your Florida pleasure a top quality beverage that's 'tropic brewed for tropic thirst'! Try it!" RUSSIA SILENT ON EVE OF JAP CONFERENCE WASHINGTON, Oct. 29. (P) Plans were completed today for the first meeting of the Allied Far Eastern Advisory Commission tomorrow with LISTEN TO: out the hoped-for, last-minute notice LA TROPICAL SPORTS BROADCAST, WDAE that Russia would participate. MON. THRU 6:55 P.

WITH SOL FLEISHMAN LA TROPICAL NEWS BROADCAST, WFLA mi MON. THRU 6:00 P. M. mi MAN HELD IN MERCY KILLING OF HIS WIFE READING, Oct 29. (JP)- John Pattas, 41 -year-old steel worker, was charged with murder today in the mercy killing of his wife.

Pattas was quoted by Detective Hoffman as saying he fired a bullet into the head of his 40-year-old wife, Helene, because he "couldn't stand to see her suffer" from cancer. Mrs. Pattas was shot 10 days ago and died yesterday without regaining Dr. George Stark, Berks County coroner, said death was caused by a 'gunshot wound which brought on necrosis and hemorrhage of the brain. The major function of the commission is to advise on future policies for control of Japan.

There was still time for the Soviet Union to declare itself In and designate its Washington charge d'affaires, Nikolai V. Novikov, as Russian representative. American officials, however, assumed that Moscow was standing on its contention that a four-power (U. Russia, Britain, China) control council, with actual administrative powers, should be established in Tokyo prior to creation of the advisory commission in Washington. IMA .1 Brewed by MASTER BREWERS at TAMPA FLORIDA BREWERY, inc.

Established. 1896.

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