Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1937 — Page 7

FRIDAY, AUG. 20, 1987 | Stage Lures Local Beauty

BRADSHAW RACE

FOR LEGION JOB

GIVEN SUPPORT

Er ——————

wr

| |

County Groups Indorse His

Bid for District Command.

As Indiana American Legionnaires | prepared for their state convention | which opens at Terre Haute tomor | row, Municipal Judge Wilfred Brad shaw today had the 12th District | indorsement for Indiana oom- |

mander,

Delegates from each Marion | County post cauncused gave him a | vote of confidence and elected him |

12th District delegation chairman,

Albert Meurer, 12th District vice | commander, was elected commander |

subject to confirmation at state convention district meetings

|

A “Bradshaw = for - Commander” | parade is to be staged tomorrow, |

sponsored by the Madden-Notting-ham Post. It will form at 30th St

and Capitol Ave and procesd east | to Meridian St7, south to the Cir | cle, east to East St, south to Wash |

ington St, and west to the city limits and Terre Haute

District representatives on state | convention committees named by |

Mr, Bradshaw were

Americanism, RB W Breadlove: | athletics, IL. PP. McGhehey, child | welfare, Russell A, Purr; condition | and by-laws, Edward P. Brennang | credentials, Gar Davis: finance, | John Ruddick: legislative, Joe Rand | Beckett: next meeting place, Fred |

Hasselbring; post activities, . J. |

Monahan; publicity, W. O. Harper;

rehabilitation, Dr. George Bowman, |

resolutions, Herman Kennelly: rules and permanent organization, Pat-

rick Shead; sons of legion, William | ¥. O'Neill, and trophies and awards,

Bdward W. Gilliard

By United Press

LA PORTE, Ind. Aug. 20.—The| candidacy of Isadore E. Levine for |

re-election as National Executive Committeeman has been announced by the La Porte Post of the Amer

tests,

Miss Hoadley haz been singing for four years and is ambitious to go on the stage. She has been vocalist for four Indiana orchestras Born in Gosport, she has lived here for voice at the Jordan Conservatory of Muse,

teacher for many vears

“Miss Indiana™ is to leave for t Biloxi Aug. 31,

Pretty and talented—that f& Miss Virginia Hoadley, 19th St. Ax “Miss Indianapolis,” she will compete in a National Ama teur Contest at Biloxi, Miss, Sept. 2 diana” in a state amateur contest July 16 at Greensburg to that she had won several state and local beauty and singing cons

She won the title of “1

two years and ix studying F mother was a music

BE ._... . s L

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

James Roosevelt's Speec

ech—Continued

(Continued from Page Six)

SRC RS Ss

We must try to cheek and tame by human foresight that economic oyele which not long ago Was viewed asx the automatic producer of Inevitable waves of heart-break= ing depression for all and wad prosperity for a few-=—=destroying democracy both on the upswing and the down, The fact that the Democratic Party believes that a democracy ix not compelled to be fatalistic about the economic eyele any more than about vellow fever or the bubonic plague, is proof of the party's youths ful outlook and another reason why youth should rally to it. One secret of vitality and of the effectiveness of the Democratic Party of today has been the fact remarked upon by friend and foe alike, that ours is a young man's and a young woman's party. It has done much to advance the cause of the younger men and women; it has welcomed them to positions of greater importance than any psy has ever done in the past, And, return, they have given the Son their own courage and the optimism to accomplish the seemingly impossi= ble. Just as it Is young men and women who have overcome seems ingly insuperable obstacles in the field of selence and invention, it is young men and women who can overcome seemingly insuperable obstacles in the social adventure of government It was a party with deep roots in a fine tradition, with young courage, young energy and young brains that moved mountaing in the last four yaars, It will move forward and prove in the future as it has in the past, that figurative mountains can be moved by a resourceful democsracy. nn these davs of struggle and slaughter in many parts of the world, the domestic program of our Government sweeps like a gale of cool, frexh wind through the heated and fetid corridors of world statess manship. The picture of other nas tions gives us additional reason to support the policy of the Democratic Party of today to keep out of other nations’ troubles while their respect for us grows as we attain our prin. cipal goals at home.

forthright and honest EteaMge co-operation. But we have kept out | of foreign trouble and will continue | to keep out of sueh troubles =a that | | our energies may not be devoted to | the futile task of killing and destruction, but to he constructive

INJURED IN AUTO ACCIDENTS HERE

Clarence Wyant Receives Possible Fracture of Skull When Hit,

(Editorial, Page 16)

A T-year-old boy war reported in eritical condition in City Hospital today and two other children were recovering from minor injuries res ceived in Indianapolis (raffic acois dents’ overnight, Twenty=xix defendants in Munioets pal Court today were assessed £158 in fines and costs and escaped pay ing $81 in fines and costs suspend ed Twelve of these were convicted of violating preferential stredta and paid 887 and escaped paying 851 One speeder was fined $11 ve | traffic xignal! violators were fined $44, Clarence Wyant, 7, son of Mrs Anna Wyant, 844 Church St, re ceived a possible skull fracture last | night when an automobile struck | him as he ran across Morris St. in | the 200 block, Three-year-old Kenneth Marlin, | 1040 N. Pershing Ave, was cut and bruised when struck by a car near | his home last night. He was treated | at City Hospital, Harry Beecher, 10. 1525 Cornell | Ave, was injured slightly yesterday when he ran from behind a parkes | car into the path of a truck in | front of his home and was struck He was ¥rested at City Hospital.

le. mp

activity of building a better and more peaceful nation

Tt is our job to make good in this

country the promise of tomorrow's | | worid. But building a better nation

ix not Hlawing a dream castle from |

zoap bubbler, It ix the hardest work

man does, To make progress in our

generation will take the devotion and energy of the thousands you

delegates represent, co-ordinated

and given direction through this organization, fitted to our hand if we have the will and the wit to use it, The rest of the zessions of thix convention==the actual building of a program on whieh the future of the

| Young Democratic Clubs of America

can be securely built-=will be the test of our practical abilify to cooperate to attain ends on which we all agree And it will be a test for the eon tinuance of the olubs themeslves hecause no chain ix stronger than fits weakest link and the party ean not afford to rely seriously upon us unless we oan prove ourselves strong and competent in combined effort, This organization of the Young Democratic Clubs Ix the machinery through which the party hopes to make {tx young blood most effective, Right ahead of us, in the struggle of ideas that is going on in the po= litical world today ax never before, the value of our party to the individual citizens of this country and of ourselves to our party is being

[ put te proof, For the country, for

the party, for ourgelves, we cannot fail that test,

--. i aa

REDSPREADS ARE STOLEN Dawgon Monevhon, Cineinnati, agent for the Railway Express Co, today reported to Indianapolis pos lee that eight antique bedspreads,

{ valued at $6825, wera stolen May 6

from the firm's Indianapolis ware house

RT —— TERR

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50c A WEEK

OLD MEN'S WARS

joan Legion. The election will be TWO FACE LIQUOR CHARGES held at the State convention AF A Delia Davey, 40, and Albert Hart, 51, of 1154 8. West St, were in jail

WORKS BOARD ASKS TO SPEAK HERE | me ivi Svea] me weer me va Ye er ars, but FOR AIRPORT BIDS | rested vesterday by State Excise oh re past. were old men's wars, ot

a m— gents our strength and encouragement to The Works Roard today asked for T_T ET i ———————

AY § Nr w,

bids on electrical equipment to Provide the Municipal Airport with an auxiliary power line connection, Cost of this equipment is expected to be $14.000, the Board said. The Airport now has only one power connection which runs west out the

National Road and south down the |

High School Road. The Indianapolis Power & Light Co. has agreed to bring a second line over from Mars Hill to the High School Road entrance to the Aire port. The City, however, must pay for the line extension into the field and for the switches Superintendent Nish Dienhart said the Airport has had several power failures during storms, be=

cause of its single connection. Re | cently an airliner, forced back to |

the port, landed only a few minutes before the landing lights and radio directional ‘beam failed.

INQUIRY IS PUSHED

Princess Fatima Served as League Interpreter for | Haile Selassie, | |

| Princes Fatima Massaquat, | daughter of an African chief and | former interpreter for Haile Selassie, | | will speak tonight at 8:30 before the C. M, E. Women's Missionary Couns cil at Phillips M. E. Temple on “Africa and Its Needs.” Princess Fatima, whose home is in Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa, | served with the Liberian legation at Geneva last vear., While former Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia | was conducting his negotiations | with the League of Nations in an effort to save Ethiopia, Princess Fa- | tima acted as his interpreter. Educated in Germany and Switz | erland, Princess Fatima speaks six | languages and has served as an instructor in the University of Hamburg. Her father, who served for several years as an African official

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leather st and { $ ple and Monday night at Trinity | 932-934 So, Meridian St. Elgin FT A anos

Sister of Fall Victim Says|M. E. Church, 2240 Martindale. | | WA ment. 20 She Was Not Despondent.] Sas ”

Dr. frank Ramsey, deputy coroner, sald today he would continue | ESN X \ ) nm , his investigation into the death of | RANE NN \ : EERE TR ARETE ; i Diamond FAIRFAX Mrs. Marie Miller Bowen, 24, Chi- | Rl NN MIRREN 7% \ wp ET : : dd watch cago, after Mrs. Julia Eden, 1741 N. ; ith black cord bracelet on with two

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ACCOSTED BY ARMED DRIVER, TWO REPORT

Police today sought the occupant of an expensive automobile who was reported to have threatened to “plow out the brains” of Henry Lane, 27, of 315 N. Senate Ave, and James Mahoney, 24, of 1141 Villa Ave, Lane and Mahoney told officers

they were standing at New York and Illinois Sts. at 3 a. m, when a fe SONA stranger drove up, got out of his : ill

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