Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, July 22, 1936, Image 1

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WEATHER ! Cooler Tonight With Possible Showers MARKETS Stocks Lose; Wheat and Cotton Down VOLUME 2—NUMBER 175 - ■"./S'-WM REBELS CLOSING IN ON MADRID ' HOWELL RETURNS TO GENE’S CAMP IN SURPRISE MOVE “RUNAWAY BOY” BACK IN FOLD TALKS FOR REDWINE (Special To The Daily Times) MOULTRIE, Ga. July 22.—Hugh Howell, runaway boy from Governor Taltnadge’s political family, came back into the fold here today and cast his lot with Gene and Charlie Redwine. The chairman of the State Demo cratic executive committee who “took a walk" from the Talmadge ranks when the governor named Redwine as his candidate for the gubernatorial office made this surprise move be fore a cheering throng gathered here for a campaign rally. When Howell came on to the plat form, the governor put hs arm around him, and they stood before the crowd Just as in the old days. Howell then took off his coat and revealed he stll wears the Talmadge red suspenders. • In a short talk before the gover nor’s speech, Howell said: "If there is a song that correctly expresses the thought I have in mind now it is ‘Hall Hall the Gang’s AU' Here’.’’ Then Howell added: “I read in the papers that I had taken a walk. Well that is not ex actly true but I am going to take a walk. I am going to walk to the polls September 9 and vote for Eu gene Talmadge and Charlie Red wine. Howell then said ‘ ‘Talmadge's plat- 1 form is the only platform to sup port.”'. Estimates placed the crowd which head Governor Talmadge and Hugh Howell speak here today at between 20,000 and 30,000. HOLT IS LEADING MONTANA VOTE HAS 3,000 LEAD OVER HIS OPPONENT CONGRESS MAN AYRES HELENA, Mont., July 22 (TP)— Gov. Elmer Holt got away to a 3,000 vote lead today over his opponent in Montana’s Democratic Gubernatorial primaries. Gov. Holt had 9,124 votes and his opponent, Congressman Roy Ayres of Lewiston, had 6,116 in the first 179 precincts reported. The oth er candidates, Mlles Romney and A. L. Maury trailed far behind. Congressman Joseph Monaghan led Senator James Murray by a handful of votes in the race for senatorial nomination. Monaghan had 6,842 votes to Murray’s 6,421. 3. V. Stewart trailed with 2.921. BUTLER ASKED TO HELP POLICE CAMBRIDGE. Mass., July 22 (TP) —The city council resolved today to ask Major Smedley D. Butler to put the Cambridge Police Department in order unless the department cleans house within 90 days. The former marine officer hasn’t been consulted yet about taking the Job —but he did a similar Job in Philadelphia a few years ago. Councilmen believe he would try it again at Cambridge. The councilmen charged that the police department has been hampered and blocked at every turn by politics and that police morale has been in jured. The council appointed five of its members to conduct a special in quiry into the alleged political inter ference. ' If there’s no cleanup inside the three months limit—then Butler will be invited to step in with a new broom. WORKMEN OVERCOME BY FUMES OF GAS CHICAGO, July 22 (TP)—Twenty workmen were rushed to a hospital today when they were overcome by gas fumes while pumping water out of the Chicago Union Railroad sub basement. One of the workmen is believed to be dying. The basements of the Chicago post office, the terminal and several near by buildings were flooded yesterday when a 36 inch water main burst. Firemen estimate it will take two more days to finish their Job. NAVY ACCEPTS BIDS ON NEW MACHINERY WASHINGTON, July 22 (TP).— the navy department accepted blds today from two Ohio companies for ■lx complete sets of propelling ma chinery for newly constructed subma rine!. ."The contracts will be wrlt k ten up and officially awarded at a later da*. ’< The companies are the -Winton En ■-1 -Coovpany arfld Hooven, »■' *schter Compai v n u n nn®Bibilu Ghn f 5 PHONE 6183 TO TRY AGAIN! BALTIMORE, July 22 (TP) Mr. and Mrs. James Morehead of Baltimore are making plans to day to get married again. The Moreheads were divorced almost 20 yean ago. Their child ren brought them together at a famfiy gathering and convinced them they should re-marry. They boC feel they have learned a great deal in the years they have been apart. The wedding is planned for Saturday and the Moreheads say this time they are sure it will last. NEW HEAT WAVE SWEEPING OVER MIDWEST STATES WEATHER BUREAUS PRE DICT RISING TEMPERA TURES CHICAGO, July 22 (TP) Anoth er heat wave is sweeping across the parched midwest today. After giv ing way for a few days to wind storms, showers and cool weather. Weather bureaus from the Rocky Mountains to the east coast predict ed rising temperatures today. Show ers are also forecast in the centra! plains and tjie middle Atlantic states. However, they probably will not be heavy enough to break the scorching advance. The Central plains already are feel ing the effects of the new heat wave. At St, Lolus, orchids from tropical Panama and the Philippines wilted In the hot, dry air. At Geneva, Hl., firemen turned their hoses into the almost dry Fox river bed to save thousands of fish stranded in muddy pools. ’ : The Mississippi river at Davenport. lowa, is only two feet deep today, the lowest on record since 1864. Emer gency reservoirs along the big river are being opened for the first time in many years. Kansas is scheduled to swelter at 100-degrees today. Oklahoma, north ■.’’exßs and Arkansas also are due to suffer under high temperatures. Mon tana is not only struggling against the terrific heat, but against scores of disastrous forest fires, as well. BEGGAR LEAVES LARGE ESTATE RELATIVES TO GET HUGE AMOUNT OF DEAD MISER CHICAGO, July 22 (TP)—A fed eral court today settled the estate of Chicago’s “Flophouse Miser,” Thomas Kelly after an 18 month legal fight. Kelly was found dead in a shabby rooming house in February, 1935. It was discovered later that he had a fortune of $140,000. His landlady, Mrs. Belle Butman, and five men who were either named in the will or who witnessed it were sentenced to prison for fraud. They were charged with making a false will in their favor and persuading the miser to sign it. Announcement that Kelly’s estate would be paid to relatives brought hundreds of letters to Federal Attor ney Irwin Walker of probate court. Kellys from all over the nation and even from Europe claimed the beggar as a brother, a cousin or uncle. Walker anounced today that all olatms had been heard and that the estate will be divided among 18 cou sins. Each will get about $2,000. The remaining $104,000 will go for court costs, attorneys’ fees and inheritance texes. BROKER’S WIFE JOINS ACTRESS IN PRISON BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July 22 (TP)—The wife of a New York brok er, Mrs. Edwin T. Stowe was march ed into county Jail today where she will keep company with the former Broadway star. Evelyn Gosnell. Miss Gosnell is serving a ten-day jail sentence because she drove a car while her llcens was suspended—and didn’t have SIOO for her fine. Mrs. Stowe, who is a tenant on Miss Gbs nell’s farmland estate, was arrested at a Westport, N. Y., club and charg ed with intoxication. She couldn’t post $25 bond so they put her in a cell a few feet away from Miss Gos nell’s quarters. RAILROAD WORKER TO DIE FOR WRECK KILLING 51 PERSONS MOSCOW JuljT 22 (TP)—A Rus sian station master was sentenced to death today when a court held that he was responsible for a disastrous wreck on the Siberian Tailroad. The wreck took the lives of 51 persons. It occurred on the Trans- Siberian railroad at Chita when twe passenger trains crashed head-on. The station master was accused of “crim inal violation of railroad reguiat'ons.’ Eight other railroad officials ’ ant workmen were sent to prison foi terms ranging up to 10 yeate or tIM same charges. WOLLNER’S FRIENDS SEEK HIS RELEASE IN MURDER CASE HELD AS SUSPECT IN HO TEL SLAYING OF MISB HELEN CLEVENGER ASHEVILLE. N. C., July 22 (TP)— Friends of Mark Wollner may make a move to obtain the release of the radio and concert violinist today. Wollner has been held in Jail since Saturday in connection with the slay ing of 19-year-old Helen Clevenger, New York university co-ed, in her ho tel room. No charges have been placed against the violinist. ' r I I I | fl I w : Hh a. Mflk Al ■ ***** W i MARK WOLLNER Wollner’s friends plan to base a habeas corpus plea' on the grounds that Sheriff Laurence E. Brown has ' insufficient evidence to hold the mlu slclan in jail any longer. The violin ist’s alibi that he spent the night of , the murder in his rooms has been : contradicted by at least eight wit nesses. Three other men: Daniel Gaddy, Edward Fleming, and L D. Roddy, all employes of the hotel in which ( Miss Clevenger was slain are also ( being held for questioning. • * Another who is answering police questions is Miss Mildred Ward. Miss | Ward, a semi-invalid, bac’s up Woll ner’s story that he ’/as in his room at her mother’s home at the time of the slaying. TOWNSEND QUITS COURT HEARING PENSION PLAN LEADER IS RETURNED BY SHERIFF TO FACE JUDGE i ERIE Pa., July 22 (TP).—The i scholarly doctor who promises all elderly persons a S2OO-a-month Uto pia will leave this morning for Al bany N. Y. •- The pension plan sponsor Dr. ■ Francis E Townsend spent the night In Erie after keeping a speaking en gagement in the Pennsylvania indus trial city. He plans a series of talks in eastern cities during the next few weeks , Dr. Townsend arrived in Erie after a hectic day in the common pleas court in Cleveland, where he faced a hearing of the ouster suit brought against him by the Rev. Alfred J. Wright. The Cleveland minister, a former Townsend manager in Ohio, r wants the doctor dismissed as head of the pension organization and asks an accounting of al fundi taken in ' by the movement’s headquarters. The Cleveland hearing was featur- • ed by continual verbal tilts between • opposing counsels, with Dr. Town r send finally walking out. Later, he was forced to return r when a deputy sheriff brought him ‘ back into couyt. After considerable 1 wrangling, it was finally decided that • the doctor would have to make an ' other court appearance on August 17, 1 when he must produce his organiza- ■ tlon’s records, contracts and docu -1 meats. » i- Mystery of “Nunoca,” Missing Motorship With 22 Humans Aboard, Believed Solved In Final Recovery of Battered Bits of Jetsam Floating in Sea Off Tip End of Florida - - . , TAMPA. Fla., July 22 (TP)—The 0 mystery of the "Nunoca” was labelled t solved early today. The "Nunoca” was A a small British motorship which dropped out of sight soon after it left I Georgetown, Gran Cayman Island, on .. July 4. Aboard the vessel, which was ' Q commanded by Captain Moses Klrk e oonneU, was a crew of nine and 13 s . passengers, nine of whom were Amert >, cans. , d As the days pased. with no word n of the “Nunoca,” American. Cuban, e Brlb’ah and Mexican coast guard boats and planes .searched the Carrlbean 1 SAVANNAH, GA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1936 DEAN TO TELL OF ‘LEGION’ MURDER PROSECUTOR WANTS MORE DETAILS ABOUT HIS WEIRD STORY OF WANTON KILLING OF NEGRO. DETROIT, Mich., July 22 <TP)— Prosecutor Duncan McCrea will call upon the Black Legion gunman, Dky ton Dean, today for more details about his weird story of the murder of an innocent negro. Dean and four other members of the terroristic cult —including ite colo nel, Harvey Davis—are to be ar raigned for the shooting of Silas Cole man. Dean and another of the men who face examination today, Charles Rouse, already have confessed that Davis shot the negro. They’ said their commander wanted to see how it felt to kill a man. HUNGER MARCHERS AGAIN HEADING FOR HARRISBURG STATE RELIEF MACHIN ERY FAILS TO GET STARTED HARRISBURG Pa., July 23 (TP). “Hunger” marchers from sU part* of Pennsylvania are heading toward Harrisburg again this morning. The state relief machinery U at a standstill, and the marchers Intend to storm the gallerias of the state capltol today for the second time in eight days. Despite the Republican-controlled senate’s passage of Democratic Gov ernor Earle’s $45000,000 relief pro gram, the legislature is still dead locked. Republican and Democratic leaders blame each other for the fail ure to reach a satisfactory compro mise. The Democratic 'house refuses to permit $10,000,000 in profits from state liquor stores to be turned over to relief treasuries insisting that a complete new tax program be adopt ed without “stop-gap" transfers of fund#.. ■' <, While the wrangling continues, more than 360,000 Pennsylvania un employed men and women idly wait and wonder. Already one-fifth of that number have been cut from the relief rolls. Each day of legislative deadlock means that another one fifth of the state’s total of unemploy ed will be cut off from relief. And so, while the legislature is in its 12th week of what was planned as a brief special session, the “hun ger” march continues. This time says the march leaders, the unem ployed will not leave Harrisburg until the legislature provides $100,000,000 for relief. GEORGIA CONVICT FOUND IN PRISON BURRIS IS SOUGHT IN KID NAPPING CASE INMATE OF ALCATRAZ ATLANTA, July 22 (Special to The Daily Times) —A Georgia convict wanted for kidnaping Judge B. H. Dunaway, superintendent of the State Prison Farm, during an escape in 1933 has been located in Alcatraz Prison, according to word received here today by the Georgia Prison Com mission. The convict, T. B. Burris, 47 with another convict in December,’ 1933, kidnaped Judge Dunaway, the prison superintendent and stole his automo bile. The escape was made while the prison superintendent was taking the convicts back to Milledgeville from Atlanta where they had been captur ed following a previous break. Another convict wanted on a bad check charge in Georgia has also been located in Alcatraz. He is Charles Searing, 26, alias Walter Evans, who was convicted in May, 1932. SEEK STRIKE PACT ST. LOUIS, July 22 (TP)—Officials of the Shell Oil Company are meet ing in St. Louis with strike leaders today in a conference aimed at set tling a labor dispute at the company’s Roxana strike which was called in protest against th* dismissal of one man. The strike leaders said they hope to come to some agreement with the, Shell officials by nightfall. and the Gulf of Mexico in a desperate hunt for the motorship. Today, a tew battered bits of jetsam offer a grim solution to the vessel’s disappearance. First intimation of the “Nunoca’s” fate came with the discovery of an oil drum which was found floating in the water near Dry-Tortugas, an Island off the southern tip of Flor ida. It was identified as a drum which had been lashed to the “Nuno ca’s” deck when the vessel cleared They said the murder was commit ted while four legionmires, their wives and Dean were on a drinking party at a Pinckney, Mich., lake re sort, in May, 1935. D'an will be a state’s witness. He previously gavs McCrea most of the evidence that has led to more than 40 men being charged with legion terrorism during the past two months. His Bew confession resulted 4n a two weeks’ postponement of the trial of 12 legionnaires charged with the murder of Charles Poole—the shoot ing which first brought the legion into the open. . POLICEMAN SLAIN WHILE SEATED IN AUTO WITH GIRL MINEOLA, L. I. MURDER HAS FELLOW WORK ERS BAFFLED MINEOLA, L. 1., July 22 (TP)—A Brooklyn girl named Dorothy Hoett ner copfsssed today that a New York city policeman, Arnold Sissen wein, waj shot to death while she slept on his shoulder. Patrolqisn Bissenwein of Manhat tan's third precinct was killed by a bullet through his temple as he sat in his car with Miss Hoettner near East Hempstead, L. 1., last night. Po lice later found a severed bicycle tire which connected the exhaust pipe with the car’s interior—and which might have piped carbon monoxide gas into the machine. When they dis covered the car the motor was stopped, the ignition was off but the tank was still half filled with gasoline. Dorothy Hoettner said she went for a ride with Sissenweln early last night. A radio car patrolman, Arthur Pat terson of Nassau county police, spot ted Slssenwein’s car parked near East Hempstead about 9:15. He talked to Sissenweln and Miss Hoettner, noted it in his report book and went on. Dorothy Hpettner stumbled into her home about 2 o’clock this morning. She told her father that she had awakened to find Sissenweln had been shot to death. She said she felt as if she had been drugged. She was half hysterical and couldn’t remember where the car wae parked. She had hitch-hiked home. Her father called i police. ijArty today Miss Hoettner re membered the car was near East Hampstead. Police found it. Sissen wein was slumped over the wheel, a bullet hole in his temple. A revolver was in his lap. The severed bicycle tire ran from (he exhaust pipe through the floorboards inside the ear. Miss Hoettner is under question ■ ing at Nassau county police headquar ters today. BETTER FISHING FOR ROOSEVELT BREAK IN WEATHER LIFTS THE HOPES OF s PARTY CAPE SABLE, N. S., July 22 (TP). Indications that a persistent fog would give way to better sailing and fishing weather lifted the spirits of those aboard President ■ Roosevelt’s schooner, the “Sewanna” today. The president returned to Cape Sable after waiting in vain for a heavy fog he encountered at Cape Negro Island to lift. So feeble was the wind and so heavy the fog that the return trip to Cape Sable was made without raising a sail, the “Sewanna” traveling under the pow er of her auxiliary engine. i Today, President Roosevelt expects to head the schooner towards Yar i mouth, preparatory to a sailing Jaunt up the west coast of Nova Scotia, veteran fishermen predict that the i president can expect better weather i and faster fishing in the waters off ’ the west coast than he has encoun tered on the east coast of Nova Sco tia. A little later, a half-burned match cover floated up on shore at Haven Beach, near Tampa. Then a ship window frame came ashore near Mi ami. The two wooden pieces were rec ognis'd as parts of the “Nunoca’s” wcodrn superstructure. The commander of the Florida coast guard, Captain Cecil M. Gar b?tt, said he was convinced that the "Nunoca” was wrecked and sunk by an explosion, some were in the Car ribean. The vessel was powered by > weffli-Delsel engine and carried a con PHONE 6183 ■ • . LEWIS MESSAGE OF DEFY STUMPS HIS OPPONENTS NOTE DARES A. F. OF L. CHIEFS TO SUSPEND HIS COMMITTEE WASHINGTON. July 22 (TP)— The executive council of the American Federation of Labor has a knotty prob lem on its hands today. A long letter, bristling with defi ance from John L. Lewis, head of the Federaiton’s committee for industrial organization to President William Green of the A. F. of L. Letter to Defy * That letter dares the executive council to suspend Lewis’ powerful committee as it has threatened to do and then hints pretty broadly that the council darf not take such a drastic step, jhe committee has started to organize the steel industry in defiance of A. F. of L. wishes. The council has set August 3 as the date for formal trial of the unions comprising the C. I. O. on charges of “insurrection” and “dual union ism”. Lewis indicated that the com mittee simply would not pay any at tention to the ultimatum. In the first place, Lewis said, the proceedings contemplated by the A. F. of L., executive council were "whol ly unwarranted by the constitution of the A. F. of L. Legally suspension could only come by a two-thirds vore of the full convention, Lewis charged Then Lewis went further and accus ed the executive council of being afraid that the progressive commit tee for industrial organization would Jeopardize what be called their “dead hand control of the federation.’* Would Carry On But the committee would carry on no matter what happened, Lewis ddt dared. And so today the executive council has the gloomy alterjiative of retract ing its threat or going through with, action to suspend-ifo. defiant com mittee. Suspension would mean that the federation would lose almost 40 percent of its membership—possibly much more. Retraction would mean the A; F. of L. council admitted Lewis was more powerful than they in labor circles. LINDBERGHS FLY FOR NAZI VISIT TO SPEND WEEK INSPECT ING GERMAN AIR > PLANTS BERLIN, July 22 (TP)—America’s first family of the skies, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh and Anne Mor row Lindbergh,’ will fly into Berlin today for a week’s visit in Naziland. The lone eagle and Mrs. Lindbergh planned to fly straight to Berlin from Croydon airport, England. The famous couple will be met at the Staaken military airport on the outskirts of the German capital by a detail of German aviation officers who wall escort the Lindbergh s to German Air Minister Hermann Goering. It was on Goering’s invitation that Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh planned the German visit While in Germany Lindbergh will inspect Nazi civil and military airports and aeronautcal plants. ’ . ’ . ’ ' During their stay in Germany, the colonel and Anne will be houseguests of the American attache, Major Tru man Smith. Several official receptions have been planned by Georing and it is expected that the visitors will meet Chancellor Hitter before the week is up. MURDER INVESTIGATION FAILS TO SHAKE ALIBIS BOSTON July 22 (TP).—Detec tives investigating the slaying of Harry Bradley, Waltham Watch fac tory guard, are right back where they started today. All suspects taken into custody, in cluding two men arrested yesterday, have been released. Long hours of questioning failed to . shake their alibis. Police are convinced none of the 12 questioned thus far had any connection with the slaying. siderable quantity of gasoline. Cap tain Garbett said it would have been * possible for an explosion to split the ship from stem to stern, giving those aboard no chance to escape. The Tampa agent for the “Nuno ca’s” owners. Malcolm ®. MacGrea > gor, admitted that he feared Captain Garbett’s theory was right. MacGrea ! gor said the "Nunoca’s” engines mls ’ fired occasionally. Flame from a mls ■ fire, the agent said, may have ignited ’ loose oil in the hold. pt the motor- • ship, ¥ DISPATCHES FROM FRENCH BORDER REPORT DECISIVE BATTLE IS RAGIi CAPTURE CONTROL OF GOVERNMI i MONARCHISTIC MOVEMENT CONTINUES TO RITORITY IN ALL SECTIONS OF REVOLT-TOR ■ COUNTRY: PEASANTS JOIN INSURGENTS, LONDON. July 22 (TP).—The civil war amic drew battle lines today north of Madrid. w Latest dispatches from the French border reported decisive battle was impending between the rebels ment forces. A heavy rebel army was reported S from their strongholds in San Sebastian, Pamplona A number of fierce engagements were reported along the frontier. A rebels announcement said: “We are now drawing ring around Madrid. ’ ’ Spain’s New Premier fl& ; | 1 ■L * A' 41 - w ■ Sr Ihu. ■k Joss Giral Pereira, third Leftist Premier to take hold in a week-end of terror, is shown above. He ad mitted that Fascist rebels have Sained foothold in Morocco and outhern Spain, and appealed to the workers and soldiers to stand by the Republic. • , (Central Pren) PFEIFFER SLATED TESTIFY IN OWN BEHALF TODAY CASE OF KIDNAPPING SUS PECT IS DRAWING TO CLOSE i ST. PAUL, 'Minn., July 22 (TP)— The former St? Paul night club oper ator, John Pfeiffer, Is scheduled to testify in his own behalf today in the William Hamm kidnaping trial. Government prosecutors accuse Pfeif fer. of arranging ’ police protection for the Alvin Karpis prosecutors gang aft er It ■ kidnaped the St. Paul brewer and collected SIOO 000 ransom. Pfeif fer allegedly received SIO,OOO for his work. Another witness due to testify when the defense opens its case today is the former St. Paul police chief,, Tom Brown. Brown was suspended from a detective’s post recently when gov ernment witnesses said he received $25,000 of the ransom money in re turn for protecting the kidnapers. Pfeiffer is the last of seven men to be charged with the Hamm abduc tion. His former boss, Alvin Karpis, pleaded guilty and will be sentenced within a few days. Five other men either are in prison or are held for sentence. FIVE AIRMEN JUMP FROM BURNING PLANE DAYTON, 0., July 22 (TP)—Two army captains fought a fire in their airplane fpr 50 miles today and land ed safely after five of their compan ions had bailed out to safety. Captians E. G. Irwin and J. F Griffith were flying an army trar port over Dunkirk; Ind., wh*"smr whipped back from the motoK followed. The two officers yai, fire extinguishers. Their sh panion soldiers jumped over and parachuted to safeyt. Irw-. Griffin took turns flying ing the flames on the 50-tiih back to Dayton. They landed one motor running and field ants extinguished the fire. ■ —- i - ONTARIO GETS RAI TORONTO, July 22 (TP weer rejoicing from one er tarlo province to the other rain fell forth. first time lr of scorching ht. For northern Q. -vc ’ would be ’ est ffper hundr have rain WEEK DAYsj <SC PAY NO MORE | Published every day ex cepting Saturdays. Five cents per copy Sundays. Delivered to home fifteen cents per week. ! TRANSRADIO PRESS The government maintained that ? all was quiet in the ~A force of 20,000 vciuntetrs k? ifcarch ing north. The soldiefs are Socialist workers led by regular th? ‘ the government fefres cL.r.n; dustrial city of C<fr forces appeared to. be mak' way. Loyal soldiers claim 4 ousted the villa- .7; Rebel Movement. | . The rebel ma gain ground in all revolt-torn countiy Sharp fighting accompOfc vance as peasants Joined the rebel Through all the jirpsggß while thousands fell '-*i ed—the government Issued ■. ment after announcement, litis that all was well and that the t of a military dictators’’ '4»- With San Sebastian, of the northern coast, iindrt control rebel leaders dieted the fall of Madrid hours. United States Aim- Claude G. Bowers, his st-tff u dreds of Americans fuge in the embessy Ste* 9 are believed safe, altltrpgh from the city ar The city of Bayeefcw.v by both the Azaha rebel leader General First dispatches from ed that the insurgents city, but later and probs thorative reports said • troops are in complete than 500 soldiers and reasapte : t believed to have been fei«ed after three-day battle in W tion. (CONTINUED ON F.IGE 7) STRIKERSREftRN TO •" C.A. POSTSj FINALLY ends CAMDEN, n’~jT~Jv.l7 22 (TP) Three thousand strikers who ht been idle for four weeks are rewutogk to work this morning, den niant'ot of America They joined fee waft’ out called when company legedly stopped attempts to erthi 4 ' ***■ an ind'.sts The end of tiie longM bitter came when member of the America voters' an agreement of the company and nntoh. of the Car ’ant W open. W*- S t--- . .' - . . te- ■ ■ ■„ * ■