Show 't Saturday Morning- Kuss - Shake-U- p In Diplomats Uljc Salt £akc Uriimnc Aclors Imperiled As Blast Rips Hole in Vessel Foreign Office Action Hints Many Changes 3 tion a bulletin listing recent government orders and decrees was recalled New Trade Envoys It mentioned decrees signed by commissar apthe premier-foreig- n pointing new soviet trade representatives to Britain Italy Belgium Denmark and Greece and new vice representatives to Turkey Italy Japan and Iran (Persia) in the Moscow foreign office three new vice commissars have been appointed since Litvlnoff's displacement and new chiefs are heading all departments including those responsible for Balkan Scandinavian and Japanese affairs Meanwhile the soviet ambassador to Berlin Alexei Merekaloff is still in Moscow and none of the following are at their posts: the ambassador to Washington Constantin Oumansky the ambassador to Rome Boris Stein the ambassador to Tokyo Mikhail Slavutsky and the Tokyo charge d'affairs Constantin Smetanin Army Shakeup Looms (Oumansky who succeeded Alex- ander Toyanovsky in Washington May 10 sailed from New York July 5 indicating he was going to the soviet union on a vacation On July 18 he was among the spectators at the annual physical culture parade in Moscow) Reports that changes were imminent in the soviet representation in Paris and London have circulated abroad although they were without confirmation here At the same time there was lively conjecture among diplomats in Moscow on the possibility that General Grigori Shtern displaced commander of the first special red banner army in the far east had been assigned to Outer Mongolia where soviet forces are aiding Mongolians to fight Japanese I & " f f - ' Ci rvy C1 MOSCOW July 28 changes in foreign office personnel since Premier Vyacheslaff Molotoff took over direct charge of soviet foreign affairs and the fact that numerous soviet ambassadors are absent from their posts Friday caused foreign observers to conjecture on the possibility of important shifts in the soviet diplomatic service Molotoff added the foreign commissariat to his duties May 3 when he displaced the soviet union's veteran diplomat Maxim Litvinoff In connection with this specula- j ’ ! V i§ J I I "123 LONDON — An army sergeant shows the use of a tool to a young student at a British army technical school which will have 1000 students learning trades by the end of 1939 blockade to mine the mouth of the in August 1914 The bomb exploded next to the which Reiher represents the Koenigin Luise in the film The blast tore a hole in the ship's side under the water line and she heeled over at a sharp angle Jannings and Werner Krauss two of Germany's actors and the rest of the company were removed by lifeboats from other ships and the Reiher was towed to a dock for repairs Thames river Friday Speakers representing 62 delegates from Denmark Norway Sweden and Finland said that the spirit of moral rearmament was spreading from their nations southward providing reconciliation and hope that may yet prevent an outbreak of war and build a new basis for the establishment of "responsible democracy” Paul Broderson dean of the Copenhagen cathedral and meeting chairman defined moral rearmament as a "revolt against the tyranny of human instincts a rediscovery of the holy spirit-ana return to God” "To be reconcilers of the nations” he said “we must reconcile ourselves” Sten Bugge of Norway said n NorBrigadier wegian civil engineer discussing the effect of moral rearmament on industrial life predicted that “God's will and not human profit will become the driving power of the nation" He said that "responsibility seeking” would become a hew law of industry Ernst Roos Swedish steel worker said that morally rearmed workers and employers would give new strength to democratic government "When every workman begins his day by listening to God and practicing what he hears” Roos said "on that day we have created for democracy and freedom Holm-Ilanse- a suffragette campaign "Don't give your vote to a politician who is not for moral rearmament” she urged t Annelene Buhn memher of the German minority in Denmark said “moral rearmament showed a border conflict in my own " d ing $65 in bad checks After Neilan’s arrest the throe firms holding the alleged worthless checks wrote letters to the court saying they did not wish to prosecute Deputy District Attorney Fred Wichello joined in asking dismissal of the charges but municipal judges refused and the preliminary hearing date was cnt Friday in superior court Named to Bland I'ost WASHINGTON July 28 (A’t- -E Burlew acting secretary of the interior Friday appointed Richard R Ely supervisor of Philippine affairs in the division of territories and island possessions Burlew acted in the absence of Secretary Ickes who is vacationing Jv heart" ' To Fight for Land Which Gave Them Haven g Lars Carpelan editor of Svenska Pressen of Helsingfors and Yrjo Reinila member of the Finnish majority declared “bridge building and cooperation should be the A B tjps&l C's for all minorities" They said that moral rearmament had solved Finnish racial national conflicts Sw4edish-speak-ln- PARIS July 25 (AP)— (Via the Yankee Clipper) — France European haven for “men without a country” at last has opened tier official eyes to see the potential army of between 200000 and 300000 fighting men living within Jier borders More than 180000 Spaniards of' fighting age most of whom are nationality or were admitted to as political refugees hardened veterans of France civil war languish in Czechs Collected Spain's French concentration camps During the same week 600 Thousands of an! innzi Germans officers and slip across the frontier into France Czechs all former each year either directly or by way soldiers of the Czecho-Slova- k army were concentrated at of Switzerland or Belgium to form the nucleus of a Czechs too have made in France Huns Three Sections and foreign legion regiment composed their European headquarters One train was forced to run in almost entirely of Czechs ofmany of them are Sources close to the war ministhroe sections and a number of ficers and soldiers of an army said the high command had persons who sought spare too late which was forced to surrender try mnde its own survey of the "men without a fight made reservations for Saturday without a country" and found alScotland Yard officials declared Press Suggestion most 90 per cent of those of fightdid not to want stop any they For years the French press has ing age could be considered vetfrom leaving including known suseran soldiers already pects of the outlawed I R A or- suggested that men of this type They either had fought In Spain’s ganization unless there was defi- might he only too glad to do their civil war or done their military bit in the French armed forces nite evidence of complicity in in the Italian Austrian terrorist bombings in EnDuring the crisis last Septem- service a German or other ber over the for- Czecho-Slova- k gland armies Thirty cases were submitted eigners themselves opened a reFriday by Scotland Yard investi- cruiting burenu in Paris Thougators who began pulling a drag- sands flocked there to register net when the anti-- I R A measure their willingness to fight for became law Government sources France Then however the govsaid about 5000 suspects in all had ernment frowned on the bureau and refused to consider its rolls been watched The first indication that the Sir Philip Game commissioner of police conferred with chief government might do something constables from the areas consid- about these foreign fighting men Lower California MEXICALI ered "storm centers" of the under- who have frequently signified their July 28 ('FI— Hard liquor crossed to came for France cover army Sixteen thousand po- desire fight the barsof local drink places Frilice over the nation were mobilized last April for the first time since Presiday for a quick round-uTo Foreign Legion dent Lazero Cardenas ordered them Police Raid All Sections Then 300 Spaniards signed up closed on the occasion of his visit As soon ns King George assented for the foreign legion and were here last month Governor Rodolfo Sanchez to the bill rushed through parlia- shipped to its headquarters in of the northern territory of Tens of ment under the spur of new bombAlgeria the district of Lower California ings police cars went to work thousands of Spaniards had apThey raided in all sections of the plied for admission— but nothing temporarily revoked the president's prohibition order city and 10 men were taken to one more was done about them He ordered that saloons where The next step was to make It police station in an hour The hill gives power to arrest possible for foreigners to promise nothing but liquor is sold must without a warrant and permits that they would fight for France close at 9 p m places where food summary deportation of suspects in the event of war A decree was also is sold must close at midnight Public buildings were guarded passed providing for such "peace and dancing establishments at 2 more strictly than usual as police enlistments for war" but organiz- a m The resorts have been selling formed lines against violence ex- ing work has progressed slowly Finally last week end the gov- beer and wine since President Carpected in react km to the bill Visitors were barred from the ernment ordered a "provisional denas qualified his original order houses of parliament over the census” of foreigners between the of absolute prohibition issued durweek end ages of 20 and 48 who are without ing his visit anti-fasci- well-traine- d ecent Czecho-Slovaki- Mexicali Gets LOS ANGELES July 28 UP)— Marshall (Mickey) Neilan onetime motion picture director will plead August 2 to charges of writ- a fortress which nothing can wipe out" Helge Nystrom from the same steel plant ns Roos said "the 1 take more responsibility lor employers the more they take for me” Mrs Bettsie Kjelsberg for 26 years a Norwegian factory inspector urged women supporters of moral rearmament to adopt of Democracy which he described as "the right to demand from society” was not enough “A new basis for democracy” he declared "can only be in We canchanged democrats not make a good democracy out of bad democrats” Must Ex-Direct- or Face Check Charge MoralJRearmament Speakers See Scandinavia as Peace Force that the present conception 5 Many Express Willingness Home Secretary Expels Eight Army Suspocls LONDON July 2S SWINEMUENDE Germany heavy July 28 (PI— A bomb exploded for exodus of Irish residents front En- theatrical effect during the film- gland was reported Friday after ing of a historical film tore a hole Home Secretary Sir Samuel Hoare German warship armed with broad new powers unin the 2000-to- n Reiher Thursday in the Baltic sea der the "prevention of violence imperiling Emil Jannings and a act” ordered eight Irish republican group of other nazi actors army suspects expelled Units of the German navy were An official at Fusion station decomwith a Jannings cooperating scribed the crowds1 departing for recountin aifilm producing pany ing the story of the Kocnigin Luise Ireland as "bigger than those durfamed German ship which rnn a ing the recent war crisis” top-flig- MONTEREY Cal July 28 (A) —Scandinavia will become “the reconciler of Europe” delegates to the second world moral rearmament assembly were told here July 29 1939 Filming Bomb English Order jF ranee Eyes Refugees Increases Damages lAs Possible Soldiers Nazi Warship Irish Exodus British Students Gets New Style Teacher Believed Near A -- Liquor Again p WASHABLE t SUMMER ENTIRE STOCK TpU A : 1 25 SHARKSKIN SLACK SUITS CRASH SLACK SUITS rM)HEti: In natural color cotton with wooden buttons and embroidered pockets Sizes 20 a 12 to 16 Originally 349 NOVELTY Sale SLACK 5ART In sharkskins and rayon crepe In pink white blue and navy Sizes 12 to 18 Originally 498 Sale ft NOVELTY SLACK Orig 650 SALE r K&(' Enjoy several of these lovely frocks to finish out the summer Styles for all day every day flattering fabrics that £o blithely tubbing over and over now at a price that makes them more carefree than ever SUITS SUITS SLACK “ Kopy Kats ” I7' 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