Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1942, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WIGNT EINAL SPORTS - b e—x Canners Must Keep Part of 1942 Pack For War Needs Production Board Official Discloses Priority Program BY the Associated Press. & CHICAGO, Jan. 26.—A War Pro- duction Board official announced to- day that the Government would re- quire canners of fruits and vegeta- bles to keep part of their 1942 pro- duction off the market to meet Army, Navy and lend-lease needs. John L. Baxter, chief of the Can- ned Foods Section of the W. P. B. food supply branch, said the W. P. B. ‘was preparing “a general preference order directing producers to with- hold from sale a stated percentage of each listed product which they ex- pect to pack in 1942.” Mr. Baxter, who spoke at the | opening session of the National Can- ners' Association Convention, said that within 15 days after the com- pletion of his pack the canner would be required to report his production | on forms which would be furnished by the W. P. B. “The primary purpose of this gen- | eral preference order,” he said, “1s | to promote the defense of the United | States by assuring that sufficient supplies of certain canned fruits and vegetables for the needs of the | various Government agencies are set aside by the producers of these articles.” Percentages Listed. Mr. Baxter listed the following | tentative percentages as the| amounts of various canned goods to be witheld from sale: Apples, heavy pack, 32 per cent: cherries, red sour pitted, 27 per cent; cherries, sweet, light, dark, un- pitted, 25 per cent; peaches, cling, freestone halves, sliced, 23 per cent; pears, Bartlett halves, 26 per cent; pineapples, sliced. crushed, 25 per | cent; fruit cocktail, 16 per cent. | Asparagus, all green culturally | bleached, 44 per cent; lima beans, | TRUMPETING FOR DEFENSE STAMPS—Sabu, the elephant boy, arrived here today to promote sale of Defense stamps, and waiting for him at Union Station was Lady, a 3-year-old elephant from New York City, who arrived earlier by motor truck. Hugh Lynch, head of the District Defense Savings Committee, is shown pinning a Defense bond button on S8abu, who will leave early to- night after talking to newspaper carrier boys who are selling stamps. —Star Staff Photo. cut, green or waxed, round or flat, 21 per cent; peas, Alaska 3-4 sieve, | sweets 3 and larger or ungraded, 38 per cent: corn, cream style whole kernel, yellow or white, 18 per cent; tomatoes, 30 per cent; tomato juice, 14 per cent. Mr. Baxter said that in most eases the Government's direct need: would not be so great as to reduce the amount available for civilian | trade greatly below the usual New. amount—"provided you increase | To explain to American readers your production to the extent de- | that Germany is strong—immensely sired. strong—1is one of the most difficult Price Rise Opposed. assignments a correspondent can In an address prepared for a later | have. session of the convention. Harold B.| Unfortunately for the world, it is Rowe, assistant director of the price | true. And Germany cannot be de- division of O. P. A, said, “We see | feated until the world is prepared no occasion for the industry to raise | not only to match this strength but its prices at this time” on the re- | to overpower it. mainder of the 1941 pack. Germany has been bombed, but fresh, 22 per cent; beans, stringless, Trut This is the jourth of a series by a foreign correspondent just returned from Europe. By DAVID M. NICHOL. Correspondent of The Star and Chicaso | Bany | h Found in Hitler Boast of Supplies So Yast He Cannot Find Storage Space little sugar, no coffee except ersatz, scarcely any fruit. No matter. The Fuehrer has promised victory. We will all be herrenmenschen—master people—and rule the world. There is no gasoline, there are | no cars for any one but the army. There is enough fuel to heat a sin- gle room of an ordinary apartment. There is no opportunity for travel because trains are limited to mili- tary service. There is endless, back- breaking work. There are no shoes, no schnapps in the corner kneipe, | nothing but secondhand books to read. There is more money than | ever before except during inflation, and it is worthless because there is He stated price ceilings would be | the bombings have not crippled its | imposed if prices went above levels | industry nor destroyed its cities. | deemed reasonable by O. P. A. | Germany has been blockaded, but | nothing to buy. How can people trade all this for Rowe expressed dissatisfaction | with_pending price control measures | in Congress, stating that if they ‘were passed in their present form the Government could not impose | ceilings until after prices had | soared at least 14 per cent higher | than last month’s levels and 29 per | cent above the pre-European war | levels. Germans “still eat as well as any other people in Europe, with the ex- ception of the tiny neutral islands that remain. German morale—that_indefinable | and vague quality—is not good and is getting worse, but there is no sign of imminent collapse. The Ger- | mans are sick of war, but they will | go on until its finish, for there are | the vague promises of a moustached | recluse who collects armaments as | most persons collect stamps, who | designs hideous buildings for relaxa- tion, who plays god with the lives | of millions, who revels in the “com- mon touch” and gets most of his from his barber in the hotel across the Wilhelmplatz? I don't know the | answer. How is less important than the fact that they do. The following officers were elected by the association: President, Carrol E. Lindsey of Highland City, Fla.; first vice presi- dent, G. Sherwin Haxton of Oak- field, N. Y.: second vice president, | but two cholces—complete victory | or complete defeat. Anything else | | would be hut a slight breathing| In terms of German industry it | spell in the world’s history, the pre- means that the entire machine has | lude to an even greater struggle. | been devoted to the army's nee [Tt still s oducing vigorously. Alfred W. Eames of San Francisco,| _Nazis Amoral, Not Immoral. |y, 00 o0 il e e who was re-elected, and secretary-| What is most difficult to under- | in terms of material and labor has treasurer, Frank G. Gorrell of | stand is that modern Germany and | peen transferred to the military. Washington, also re-elected. its reactions cannot be judged by | Supstitutes have been discovered for any of the standards that human | most of the important commodities beings normally apply. Hitler and | the Germans do not have. That his Nazi leaders are neither moral | they are expensive in ingredients nor immoral. They are without| and processing has little bearing. - Page) | morals. The government of the|Their quantity and serviceability | Third Reich is not a means by are the sole criteria. lican, of Connecticut and Taft, Re- | which people can live, but an end in h R publican, of Ohlo joined in urging | tself to which every human and | Before the workers of an arma- a modification of the power of the | material value must be subordi- |Ment plant Hitler boasied, about 4 Government to lease industrial | nated, an organism with one single | JSAr A80. that his supplies of muni- plants or other property it tekes | purpose—war and conquest. :mns were so extensive there was no = jonger sufficient storage space. I over. Hitler, the uneducated A\lsll‘lln.“h ht it solely for d stie Authority contained in the new |often finds difficulty in translating | L00UG "\ [ WAS ¥ omed war powers bill to let Federal Re- | his thoughts and ideas into precise | ‘“"““l’“pb“'!"-‘ & P"’g l‘:’ : serve banks make direct purchases | language. German officials ponder;l.";";’]_l'i ‘” CAROT. Aler U s of Government bonds without going | for days after each of the Fuehrer’s e into the open market was ques- | speeches, attempting to decipher his | At the time he spoke Hitler had tioned by Senator Taft. ‘munlng. phrase by phrase. Some | stores enough of certain munitions Taft Takes lIssue. | of his ministers are more explicit, | to last two and a half years, of Senator Taft took issue with the | however. | others enough for four at the peak statement of Senator O'Mahoney | Bernhard Rust, who, as Minister | rate of expenditure during the that it is only a revival of power |of Education, has brought all mnr‘xench campaign. Six months of ted in the last war. | schools and colleges of the Reich | war in Russia have altered this t is obvious to me the purpose securely into the Nazi fold, spoke | picture, but there has been »nnother 1% to make it possible for the Treas- last year at the opening of a new | year of production in the interval. ury to force the Federal Reserve | instifution dedicated to training| Nor did production cease in 1941. banks to buy bonds at any interest | Germany's future leaders in the | Hitler was throwing his Luftwaffe rate it fixes” sald Senator Taft, who | tenets of national Soclalism. recklessly into the eastern cam- had contended the World War power | “It is the will of the Creator.” was not compulsory. | Rust said, “that the earth should Senator O'Mahoney, in charge of | be a battlefield. It is Hitler's deep- the war powers bill, did not agree |est conviction that war is the ful- with Senator Taft's construction of | fillment of the laws of God, and the broadness of the authority.!that only that people which fulfills| He said the Judiciary Committee | these laws can expect the blessings Expense Is No Barrier. War Powers (Continued Pr the olive oil and fruits, the mercury and copper of Spain. And Hitler paid for his imports with 100,000 airplanes, among other things. It is a curious footnote to the era of international double ecross lagging | paign. At the same time he needed | that these—like all of Germany's armament deliveries, standard ma- chines that could be serviced by Nazi mechanics, repaired with Nazi parts and pressed into immediate service should they ever be cap- tured by an invading army—have all been sent to the Canary Islands and North Africa. The Spanish would rather have them out of Hit- ler’s reach. What portion of this industrial potential has been destroyed by | bombs it is impossible to say. There has unquestionably been damage. Night after night in Berlin kve heard the alarms, watched the pinpricks of shrapnel burst far out to the west and roll in over the city in a deafening crescendo and heard the dull thud of bomb explosions. Day after day we looked for damage. Windows are shattered, s branch | of the subway was put out of order, & house was smashed, a wing of a factory burned, but in a city of 4.000,000 it altered the appearance not a bit. Once, when the British announced that they had “Coventryized” Dues- seldorf, one of the Rhineland's great producing centers, I flew there on | a hastily organized trip and for 45 minutes cruised less than 500 feet | over the city, the river and its sur- | roundings. We could see occasional | bomb pits but no general damage. | The most remarkable feature was the size of my place toward the rear | of the Junkers transport. It was | Goering’s seat in the reichmarshal’s | private plane—almost a Pullman berth. | A steelmaker from Bochum, whose plant was raided several times, ad- | mitted privately that a direct hit | had reduced its capacity 5 per -cent | | but said it could be repaired. Cer- | | tainly there has been far more | havoc in the northern coastal cities. One German officer assigned in a technical capacity to Wilhelmshaven spent & busy month. “I helped put out 120 incendi- | aries in that period,” he said. Bombings can and do disrupt railroad yards, tie up entire fac- tories, weary the workmen and deal damaging blows to civilian morale. ‘The heavy cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau can be kept at bay in| Brest. But Germany is far from fatally crippled yet. The German Army's strength should need little comment. The world has seen some graphic dem- onstrations. Russia’s stand has been magnificent, but it is too early yet to attach exaggerated impor- tance to the retreat from Moscow. Hitler unquestionably wanted des- perately to take Leningrad and Mos- cow before winter. He didn't, be- cause the Russians stopped the Nazi legions for the first time in their | Convicts to Get Awards | visitors. | ways well represented. C. 1. 0. Board Urges Unions fo Demand Increases in Wages Suggests Workers Need Better Pay to Offset Taxes and Living Costs BY the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—The C. 1. 0. Executive Board today adopt- ed a resolution recommending to affiliated C. I. O. unions that a demand be made in current wage negotiations for a ‘substantial wage increase.” The Executive Board, at a closed *meeting, decided that higher wages should be sought to offset increases in the cost of liv- ing and higher taxes. The text of the resolution, released by President Philip Murray, said in part that “the most effective prose- cution of the war demands that the living standards of the workers be maintained and constantly im- proved, and that the continued ex- istence and growth of lawful unions be g nf . . It added that “the living stand- ards of the workers of the Nation are being seriously threatened, as a result of the spiraling of the cost of living and the inequitably in- creased taxes upon the low income groups.” . The resolution concluded that: “1. The Executive Board recom- mends to its affiliated unions that | there be incorporated among the de- | mands in current or anticipated col- lective bargaining wage conferences one for a substantial increase and union security; and “2. The fulfiliment of this policy Racing News Today’ Selections for Tomorrow X s Results— Entries and Rossvan’s Com Selections for a Fast T. FIRST R ACE—EGGLESTON, VEE, MORAY. EGGLESTON took “place hon- ors in her debut and a bit of improvement could have the daughter of Flying Heels in the winner's circle. VEE ran fairly well in her initial test and she may be the one to dispute the issue. MORAY has worked very swiftly and he could have a Jot to say about the result. SECOND RACE-ROMAN HERO, ARMOR BEARER, TYRONE. ROMAN HERO hasn't shown a winning performance for quite some time, but he lost his last in a photo finish and he has worked well since that time. AR- MOR BEARER improved in his last and the veteran may be near peak condition. TYRONE is con- sistent and his Gables form gives him & real chance. THIRD RACE—PHARIEN, DIS- TANT ISLE, PEMMICAN. PHARIEN has turned in two right fair local efforts and she has as good a chance as any- thing else in this wide-open num- ment rack at Hialeah Park BEST BET—ONE JEST. ber. DISTANT ISLE has been second in both of her Florida tests and she may prove hard to turn back. PEMMICAN has worked very well and he could furnish the surprise package. FOURTH RACE—ONE JEST, INSCOLAD, 'GREEDAN. ONE JEST was right there in both of her Florida tries and a good ride appears all that is needed to have her crashing the charmed circle. INSCOLAD has been threatening of late and he rates top consideratisn. GREE- DAN won his last in fair running !l'm‘e and he may be in the thick of it. FIFTH RACE—AMERICAN WOLF, WAR MELODY, LAY~ AWAY. AMERICAN WOLF has a win and two seconds to show for his Florida efforts and the son of Neddie may be able to master the good field he hooks up with here. WAR MELODY wins her share and she could be in the thick of the scrap all the way. LAYAWAY just missed winning his last two tries. Mrs. Boyle Pleads Guilty In $81,000 Gem Case By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—Mrs. Mar- | garet Boyle, 45, of Washington, | pleaded guilty in General Sessions Court todsy to first-degree grand larceny in the pawning of $81,000 worth of jewelry she obtained on consignment from a New York Jeweler. will assure workers that their unions ranteed the right to live free from attack and that they will re- | ceive & fair share of the national income, which conviction will un- | leash the unmeasured energy of the workers for maximum war produc- | tion.” Mr. Murray declined comment on | the resolution. | BY the Associated Press. Inmates of the Federal Peniten- tiary at Atlanta, who voluntarily in- creased their production of defense | articles more than 100 per cent in 1941, will be given a special “award of merit” by Attorney General | Biddle Wednesday. | history. Once that point had been | achieved, however, the retreat be- came almost a foregone conclusion. Only Quartering in Smelensk. The Russians have continued their pressure, and a number of German divisions have been badly mauled in the process. But mili- tary intelligence circles were con- vinced as soon as it appeared the | attack on Moscow had failed that | a withdrawal as far as Smolensk was entirely possible. It represents the only marshaling and quartering center available. Not until spring and summer have come and gone can it be safely said that Hitler has been perma- nently stopped. Not all Germans by any means are Hitler's disciples, but there is only the smallest of organized op- position. For those who show the slightest tendency to transfer their allegiance there is that other strength of National Socialism, it complete and utter ruthlessness, and s0 far it has kept them in line. Shortly after I arrived in Berlin I had lunch with a German official of more than minor importance in Horcher's Restaurant in the Luther- strasse. Horcher's still served ex- cellent meals, for it was the meet- ing place of Nazi-ism’s leading junior cards were no object, because the officials had enough of both. Udet, before his death, and Willi Messerschmidt could often be seen there. The late Hans Kerrl, Min- ister of Church Affairs, and his attractive daughters were occasional The Foreign Office and the Propaganda Ministry were al- It was in this plush-lined at- mosphere that I first learned some- thing of what Nazi-ism really means. The talk had turned to revolution, as it often did. As casually as you might discuss next year's garden, this official said: “Hitler is perfectly prepared to kill 3,000,000 of his own people, if necessary, to keep himself in power.” Ten months in modern Germany leaves one with the conviction that Hitler is not only prepared to do this but is capable of doing it. And it is one of life’s ironies that this official himself has now “dis- appeared” into the Gestapo net, to Jail or concentration camp or worse. (Copyright, 1942, by Chicago Daily N deemed it desirable and had con- |of providence.” sulted the chalrman of the Banking The Germans Believe It. Committee. In advocating the pro- | Rubbish, you say! Propaganda! vision the committee argued: How can people believe 1t? More “The necessity of borrowing large | important, but less generally real- sums to finance the war may create | jzeq is the fact that people do be- disturbances in the money market | jieve jt—believe it in sufficient num- which would seriously hamper the | pers to make of Hitler s diety with financing of the war unless the Fed- | the additional attributes of Genghis eral Reserve banks are given the Khap, Frederick the Great, and Na- greater latitude proposed by this poleon, believe it by millions and amendment.” are prepared to sacrifice everything, - | including their lives, for their be- Lief. I saw Hitler on a number of oc- casions, before the robot Reichstag: in a sickening ceremony at the grave of Germany’s unknown sol- Cavalcade’s Trainer Improves at Hospital By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—Bob Smith, 72-year-old veteran of the turf who trained Cavalcade, was reported im- proved today, although still in a| serious condition, in the hospital in | which he has been since January 14 suffering from pneumonia and a cardiac condition. The hospital reported he was re- moved this morning from an oxygen tent, to which he had been confined for several days. New Y;rk éfink Stocks NEW YORK. Jan_26 (#.—National As- | sociation Securities Dealers, Ing ey Bk of Am NT8 (S P) (2.40) 3b% | Bonk of Mep a0 R nk of Tr (4) (137 48| v LT and Bav, | anufacturers Tr pi atl City (1) = 261 | Y Trust ()" - 94 | s ) i | tle G &T - | @ Also extra of extr ) dier; on the balcony of the Reich Chancellory with grinning and cagey Matsuoka. But Hitler’s hold on the German people was never so force- fully demonstrated as in one of his annual appearances in the Sports- palast, & huge stadium with 15,000 of the faithful for a sounding board. For an hour and a half he spoke. He threatened, he cajoled, he almost cried. His voice went hysterical. An American audience would have reached for the tomatoes, but when it was finished and 15,000 arms went out in stiff salute, when 15,000 voices joined in the stately national an- them, it gave a new and grim mean- ing to ‘“Deutschland, Deutschland Uber Alles.” It was more than just a line in a song. Privations—to One End. ‘Translated into daily life, it means that the German housewife will spend almost her entire day trying to find something for her family to eat. There is sufficient bread of poor and steadily worsening quality, most of the time sufficient potatoes. Other vegetables are difficult to find. Meat is careful than a pound a week. on Page A-1) DALLAS, TEX.—14 PLANES DESTROYED BY FIRE—A short circuit in the wiring of this plane was believed by Maj. Bill Long to have started a fire which destroyed 14 aircraft today at the Dallas Aviation School, which Maj. Long operates. He estimated the loss at $175,000 to $200,000. (Story ) & Witnesses at her trial testified she told them she planned to sell the articles to James Roosevelt and other persons prominent in Wash- ington. | Judge John J. Sullivan remanded her to jail without bail pending an investigation and sentence Febru- ary 9. | Mrs. Boyle consulted with her at- torney for more than an hour be- | fore pleading and without putting in a defense. 8he pleaded guilty to the second count of a two-count indictment. Mrs. Boyle is the daughter of the late Judge C. C. McChord, former member of the Interstate Commerce Commission, who was socially prom- | inent here. Her father died in 1936, and Mrs. Boyle gave up her Wash- ington residence. Last summer she rented a home at 2426 Tracy place |NW. | \ = U. S. to Probe Guilt |0f Hawaiian Civilians B* the Associated Press. CHICAGO, Jan. 26.—Wendell Berge, Assistant Attorney General | {in charge of the Justice Depart- | ment’s Criminal Division, said '.o«; day all civilians found to have been | in any way responsible for the Jap- |anese raid on Pearl Harbor would be diligently prosecuted. Here for a routine conference with United States Attorney J. Albert ‘Woll, Mr. Berge said that as soon as he returned to Washington he ex- pected to confer with Justice Owen J. Roberts, who was chairman of the special board of inquiry which | investigated the Hawaiian bombing. He said he wanted to ascertain | whether the board’s investigation indicated any violation of Federal criminal laws which would come within the jurisdiction of the Jus- | tice Department. Mr. Berge said he was especially interested in any violations of the espionage and sabotage laws, and the statutes controlling the sac- tivities of foreign agents. ;Unidefilified Planes Half {West Coast Broadcasting | BY the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 26— Southern California radio stations were silenced for nearly four hours today while unidentified planes | cruised over the area. | An alert was given, calling radio stations off the air, at 645 am.| (9:45 am, E. S. T.), when planes were first heard approaching the | Los Angeles-Long Beach area.| Broadcasters did not return to the air until 10:30 am. after the un-| identified craft had left the area, | and the interceptor command gave | the all-clear signal. In announcing the flight of the planes, the Western defense com- mand did not indicate their prob- able number or direction. ~ No air-raid warning to the public was announced for any of the terri- tory over which the planes were known to have cruised. Their course was followed by ground lis- | tening posts until they had left| the area. Racing Results Hialeah Park [ SIXTH RACE — WALLER, RED CHIP, SUN EAGER. ‘WALLER improved to be third in his last at this point and his best effort would come close to mastering this caliber of opposi- tion. RED CHIP has béen threat- ening in his recent tries and he has to be accorded winning con- sideration. SUN EAGER wins his share and he may be ecloser than rated. SEVENTH RACE — SIGANAR, PERISPHERE, MAGIC STREAM. SIGANAR disappointed in his recent effort but his previous 1orm was sc consistent he has to be given the call. He meets horses that he should be able to handle. PERISPHERE lost his last by a neck and he could be in the thick of the scramble. MAGIC STREAM is near peak condition, EIGHTH RACE — BISCAYNE BLUE, SIR GIBSON, OBISBO. BISCAYNE BLUE just gal- loped to win his last with speed in reserve and right off that corking win the gelding has to be taken for a repeat victory SIR GIBSON is another that won his last without being ex- tended and the top one can af- ford no mistakes. OBISBO has good New England form to his credit. . BY the Associated Press. FIRST RACEPurse weights: maidens Cananse (Peters) Spirit (Rebertson) ity Tann (Deiara) $1.200. 2-year-olds, 3 furlo 860" 610 850 540 Peisistent._Porters Tea, Rocke e R . ont de Pailie. (Thie Watch fhiiss allie. fThe Watch. f Akron snd fAll West. {Fieid 3 ., SECOND RACE—Purse $1,200: claiming 3-vear-olds: & furlongs. Chatlet "(Mehrtens) 840 450 350 All Whims (Haskell) 830 380 Castine (Schmidl) 10.40 Time. 1:131s Also ran—Appie Blossom. Ration. Tower Guest. Zite. Witness Stand. Miah. Lady Golden. High Clique and Valdine Pair. THIRD RACE—Purse. $1.200: claiming 3-year-olds. fi', furlongs ot (James) 14.60 820 6680 n Bweet (Plerson) 5.40 450 ceat (Arcaro) 650 50 ran—Grey Symbol_ Even Record Plight. To Boot, Dan's Choice. Tour, Snow Line. Roman Nancy, Ribault. Michi Barn T FOURTH RACE—Purse, $ ing: 4-year-olds and upward Liberty Sand (Hanford) 11.00 Singing Heels (Dupps) ro) claim- 7 furlongs. 550 340 540 3.30 —Meritorious, Young County Count Maurice, Breeze. Oddes- Roval Blue. Paper Plate and Other Selections Consensus at Hialeah (Fast). BY the Associated Press 1—Eggleston, Vee, Four Stars 2—Barnet, Armor Bearer, Weisen- heimer. 3—Pemmican, Pharien, Distant Isle. 4—Orne Jest, Topee, Greedan. 5—Albatross, American Wolf, Lay- 450 | Tan, | Hialeah Park By the Associated Press. FIRST RACE—Purse. $1,200 maidens; 2-year-olds; 3 furlongs. Four Stars (no bo; Liauid Lunch ( Moray (8curlock) 2 8pollt Girl ino boy) Diggie (o boy) : | Eggleston (no boy)__ At War (no boy) | Linden 8tar (Schmidl) a Vee (no boy) Chance Cross ' (no boy) fElectrical (Day) . Over Ice (no boy) Rubber City (Caffarella) | What Not (no boy) Tower Miss (no bhoy) Betty Luzon ino boy)__ Th Uh (no boy) Budgeleer (no boy) = 2 Bryson and Shouse entry. SECOND RACE—Purse, $1.200: elaim- ing: 4-year-oids and upward: 6'a furlongs xKey Man (Day) 107 Commencement (no boy) Down Six (no boy) Tyrone ino boy Barnet _(May) Armor Bearer (Arcaro) xBuckle Up (Breen) Unauote (no boy) O Play (MacAndrew) Tony Weaver (Wall) Weisenheimer (Haskell) Roman Hero (no boy) Seven Hills (Smith)__ XMer Le (Breen) Mazegay (McCreary) xRemote Control (Strickier) _ claiming: rison) IR AR R AR MR ARA R =] e e EPE- P ey THIRD RACE—Purse. $1.200: special weights: maidens, 3-year-olds And upward: furlof y (McCreary) | d (Stout) xPharien_(no boy) == xStraw Plower (no boy) Distant Isle_(Eads) S | More Than Pew (McCreary) | Michigan_Gold (no boy) Military Brush (Atkinson) Yarn Spinner (no boy) Germanicus (Smith) Pemmican (Arcaro) Duke Tower (De Lara) Gay Fad (De Lara) XYard Arm (Mehriens) Army Gres (Wall) away. 6—Cherry Jam, Waller, Sun Eager. xInscoson (Strickler) POURTH RACE—Purse. $1.400: claim- 7—Perisphere, Grand Central, Sig- anar. 8—Wise Hobby, Sir Gibson, Santo Domingo. Best bet—Pemmican. Hialeah Park (Fast). By the Louisville Times. 1—At War, Vee, Liquid Lunch. 2—Armor Bearer, Barnet, Down Six. Topee (Robertson) _ == One Jest (McCreary) Dos House (Atkinson) | xInscolad (Btrickler) | xGreedan (Mehrtens) | FIFTH RACE—Purse. $1.400; ances. 3-year-olds; 6 furlong: War Melody (Day) Be (McCreary) | Happy Note (Mevnell) _ Hisleah (Caffareila) | Peters) = American Wolf (Arcaro) Boot High (Wall) ing: 4-vear-olds and upward: 1's miles <0k allow« | construed as European waters. These | | lend-leases upplies. 3—Distant Isle, Faise Play, Pharien. 4—One Jest, Topee, Inscolad. { 5—American Wolf, Albatross, Hia- | leah. 6—Cherry Jam, Waller, Sun Eager. T—Al Au Feu, Calexico, Magic Stream. 8—Avesta, Sir Gibson, Wise Hobby. Best bet—American Wolf. Layaway (Poliard) SIXTH RACE—Purse. $1.500: ances: 4-vear-olds and upward, Bager (McCombs) Romes (no boy) (Schmidl) allow- 1 miles Red D (James) _ Royal Man (no boy) Fair Grounds. By the Louisville Times. 1—Superior, Sunny West. 2—Be Prepared, Little Mom, Kilo- cycle. 3—No selections. 4—Latepass, Little Bolo, Wise Dean. 5—Bronte II, Dulie, Misrule. | 8—M’ Jock, Sickleking. Inscomir 8—Arcadian, Arrowtraction, Ame ica First. Best bet—Be Prepared. | . SEVENTH RACE—Puree. $1.200: claim. | Ing: 4-year-olds and upward: l's miles Perfect Rhyme (no boy) 1ns | Galexico (8chmidl) Heels, Trade B (Roberts) eaver (Durando) Un_(Johnston) | xSiganar (no boy) .- Flagscol (James) __ _ EIGHTH RACE—Purse. $1 200 ing: 4-year-oids and upward Obisbo (Eads) & Sir Gibson (McCreary) Wise Hobby (Arcaro) Dunade (Atkinson) | Dissension Sir (no boy) | Dear Yankee (James) Sanio Domingo no boy) Kilimalock (no boy) xMachree (Bates) | Biscayne Biue (Peters) relan | XTrimmed no boy) | Ayesta “ino "bov) ¢ ' Firs ) xJuneo _mo boy) (Continuad Prom First Page) | FhRE° nope rng. bor = | " xAporentice aliowance’ claimed. as SR F ety other forces were special missions, | | detailed as observers, technicians for | Fair Grounds ndling and co-ordination of | s Sunng | By the Associated Press. FIRST RACE Purse. Gen. Hartle was declared by o ds: 6 rur‘lunu officials to be a very experienced | xmis: J57 Piiias. Vi 3 and reliable commander who has | XQisco Mise d_Tip served in many responsible positions x:uhrme ET Io’::“ during & long Army career. His | XSunny Heels XBright Pinish e Double Lad s World War services were in this | xSuperior Fandansie” country. . £30 3 |, SECOND RACEPurse, He served in the Philippines with | §-y¢ar-olds and upward: the 31st Infantry in 1932 and later | gittle Mom 110 0se 108 as commander of Camp John Hay in | 53¢ B .o -~ 108 Luzon. | xArizona Lady_ 108 | xBalaxy i07 SR [ 388, 1 xi An old law unearthed in London | Sunny 112 ¢ permits the shooting of rabbits on | TumrD Purse $600: special Sunday, but not hi weight, Rene: 2. i unday, not ares. 8; maidens: 2-year-olds; 2 furlongs v Shiny Penny 18 x8andy Sku 113 claiming: 3 $600: 101 101 103 11 10 10 11 600 elaimin mile and 70 xKilocycle xI Might xFalsweep xMiss Merit xSelma May XTread On Kitche_Manitou Clock Time =552 =53 35323333 By CLAUDE A. MAHONEY. 1 Members of the staff of Admiral Ernest J. King, commander in chief | of the United States Fleet, will be uniformed naval men and no civilians will be used, it was learned today. This means that under the grad- ual shift of departments from the Buresu of Naval Operations to the new fleet command, civil service clerks and stenographers have been shifted to other places in the Navy Department and replaced by en- listed men skilled in stenographic work. Shifts Began in December. ‘The shifts began late in December, when Admiral King was appointed to succeed Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, who was relieved of com- mand following the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. It also means that Admiral King is keeping the handling of confl- dential messages regarding battle plans in the hosom of the Navy. —A. P. Wirephoto. officers, in the past, have commented that young civil service 2 Admiral King's Stenographers All Will Be Navy Enlisted Men Handling of Battle Plans Will Be Kept Strictly Within Confines of Service 1 | Prince Puck 118 Meadowbrook | My Tet Ramblier 1 ‘eentee Gabe - } —1 ko o TN 1 XZacabrand Vine Tinto 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Bornrnnm FOURTH RACE—Purse $700; 4-vear-olds and up: 6 furlong: la _____ 101 Prince Argo 08 xBig Bubble employes, even though they had passed character tests and personal investigations, often were given ac- cess to military information dis- semination of which might change the course of world events. Advantage of Mobility. One advantage of the all-Navy office force is that it~ is highly mobile. While President Roosevelt ordered Admiral King to maintain headquarters here, unless otherwise directed, it is possible that he might like to take some of his personal staff with him aboard ship or send some of them to other parts of the country. It would be much easier to transport naval than civilian per- sonnel. While the departments that are being shifted to the new command have not been revealed, it is be- lieved the transfer includes & major | Amer portion of the office of Naval Op- erations, for the order that named Admiral King as commander in chief included the command to “prepare and execute plans for eur- rent war.” ’ FIFTH RACE—Purse. $700: claiming: | 45ear-olds and upward: 1 i m; | xBronte 118 xBallotant Dulie | xPair Plaver xxAlcinous _ | Misrule 3 Z 104 - Cee Joe SIXTH RACE—Purse. $600: 4-year-olds and upward: 1,s mil The Marker ___ 111 Dovie Lou xPomplit Yarn Sox Bickleking - claiming: es. xLactose quu'JulurK s Pet xGay Trace _ 8| RACE—Purse. $600: ¢laim- ing: 4-year-olds and upward: 1y, miles. Bonnic Vizen - 107 xDotwiu 00 T xBird Haven_ _ EIGH’ 4-year-ol 102 Ophelta 1 """ 110 RACE—Purse, 3600 claiming; and upward: 1% miles. st Ellac: daide Bt 335

Other pages from this issue: