Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1938 — Page 2
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Legion Officials Confer
Officials of the Ameri front at the big show tt Vierling Kersey, with Homer Chaillaux, Committee, and Frank Samuel,
an Legion from Indianapolis are right up in nis week in Los Angeles. superintendent of Los Angeles schools, talks it over national director of the Legion's Americanism
E| Four
Times-Acme Photos.
Above, left to right,
national adjutant from Indianapolis Below, Ralph B. Gregg, national judge advocate of the Legion, indi-
Commissioner; Thomas McNulty, | Howard Phillip and Henry B. Krug entered their appearances in Cr iminal Court in behalf of the 10 Le een workers. B r Myers and James E. Deer y| eh their appearance to defend the 13 Democratic precinct workers. One of those indicted is lout of the city and has not surrendered to the Sheriff's office. Criminal Court Judge Frank P. | Baker has ordered all the defendlants to appear in court Friday to select a special judge and to fix lan arraignment date. Frank C.| | Dailey, Arthur Gilliom and Harry | Chamberlain have been named by Judge Baker as alternates for the special judge job. The prosecutor will strike one, the defendants another and the remaining attorney will be the special judge. Either the defendants or the Prosecutor can file a motion for another change of judge under the] law,
DEFENSE HIRES 6 ATTORNEYS IN BALLOT GASES
Lawyers Assemble Evidence As Grand Jury Calls More Witnesses.
| As the Grand Jury called more witnesses in its primary election probe today. six attorneys began” preparing defense evidence for 23 of 24 precinct election workers who (were indicted on ballot fraud charges last Friday. of the attorneys, Rae
Powell, former County Election
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$150,000 IN SUGAR
structure
damage to the building. {men were injured slightly by faliing | mittee
Judge Baker disqualified him- | biaze. The cause was unknown.
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FEM RE SR NE RR PAR A I aR BD ON IE LU DR NR i
TUESDAY, SEPT. 20, 1938
treasurer; Harry R. Champ, execu- | opolous are city editors; Harold i Sperry. { Howenstine, makeup editor; Miss Meanwhile, " Prosecutor Herbert | ve candidates are Mrs. Carl Marjory Kraft, society editor; . Spencer announced the ap- En Te ne 1015 Churchman Ave.; Misses Louise Ryman and Ruth {pointment of Chester Carter, 621 | Rosen, Sonkie, 1934 WwW. Michigan | | Collier, assistant city editors, and Marion Ave. as a deputy prosecutor | rvey Hartsock, 54 N.| Miss Fanchom Parsons, assistant soHainorme Lane; Evans Woollen ciety editor. Sports news will be , 3924 N. Delaware St.; Theodore handled by Edward Cotton, 5 Board Candidates to Meet ; nn "Locke, 5210 Washington Blvd. | Reporters include the Misses With Officers.
self from the cases on his own mo-
ei SCHOOL COMMITTEE
to replace Joseph Howard who re- | |signed after he was indicted last eek. Mr. Dailey announced the ap- {Betty Boaz, Barbara Phelps, Nor= | pointment of Ralph W. Husted. 727 ma Conder, Alice Elkin, Ann Logan, | N. Audubon Road, as automobile Neoral Flack and Caroline Sherfey Plans to select a nonpartisan | chairman, and George Eggleston, and James Framer, Robert Fleet p 8 E. 53d St. as watchers’ chair- Wood, William Eggert, Robert Mille [Senet board were to be mapped at man for the campaign. er, Robert Renz, Art Gilliom, John |4 p. m. today at a meeting in the] | Bowen, Leonard Kercheval, James | Citizens School Committee head- Butler Collegian Boyd, John Sullivan and Robert
| Craft. hips 703 Fletcher Trust Build- ‘Announces Personnel | First issue of the publication was
|to appear today. A special edition The five candidates selected by | Personnel of the Butler Col-|is planned for the Butler-Purdue the committee will meet with offi-|legian, campus daily newspaper. football game Oct. 1 Firemen said that most of the cers of the executive committee. A has been announced by James| _— 3700 tons of sugar stores in the speaking program and organization Hanna, editor-in-chief, and Wil- | REPORT BURNING MOUNTAIN were consumed, and| work fér the campaign will be dis- liam Mitchell, managing editor.| SYDNEY, Australia, Sept. 20 (U. an additional $50,000 cussed. | Profs. Charles Kinter and Donald P.).—Returning tourists from offTwo fire- | Chairman of the executive com» D. Burchard, journalism faculty beaten routes of the interior report is Frank C. Dailey. Other members, assisted in the appoint- the finding of a mountain of coal debris as 10 companies fought the officers are John L. Niblack, vice ments, [that for centuries past has been | chairman; Fred Bates Johnson,| Robert Fattig and Angelo Angel- burning.
DESTROYED BY FIRE
CLEVELAND, Sept. 20 (U. P.).— Fire early today destroyed an| estimated $150,000 worth of sugar in | a storage building of the National { Terminal Corp.
estimated
cates by his pose that has his ears open, if not to the ground. Mr. Gregg is a member of Memorial Post No. 3 of Indianapolis. » n » x »
Veterans Hold Big Parade as | > | War Planes Roar Overhead!
(Continued from Page One)
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The |
air along the parade route. canon backfired and broke one of and speedy chaser planes. {his legs. Latest in design of deadly war| pollowing today’s parade activiplanes, they droned over the Le- tjes the Legion will begin tomorrow gionnaires who 20 years ago looked the consideration of policy reso-
armada of four-cngined Boeing “flying fortresses,” Douglas bombers,
up from the trenches at the sound of old-fashioned Spads and Nieuports A crowd expecting million began jamming the parade route in early morning. The crush of 130,000 visiting Legionnaires and hundreds of thousands of Los Angeles residents out to watch the parade became so great that police gave up trying to clear the downtown streets Last night the 40 and 8 Legion fun organization, held its parade amid boisterous pranks that sent several tn hospitals. Anthony Babano of Quincy, Ill, was {firing a toy cannon at hats snatched from spectators’ heads and tossed into the
CHADWICK SERVED ARMY IN SIBERIA
Developed His Opposition to Communism There.
to reach a half
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (U. P)) —Stephen F. Chadwick, Seattle attorney, unopposed for the National Comandership of the American Legion, has been the chairman of the Legion's Americanism Committee for the last three years. He was a first lieutenant with 1 American Expeditionary Forces* to Siberia and was assigned to the guard on the Trans-Siberian Railway. There, he said, he developed the opposition to Communism that he exercised later as head of the Legion committee charged with fighting subversive elements in the United Sates Mr. Chadwick was born in Colfax. Wash, in 1894. His father was a former Chief Justice of the Washington Supreme Court. He was educated at Washington and Lee University and the University of Washington. Enlisting in 1217, he received a lieutenant’'s commission at the Presidio in San Francisco. Sent to Siberia with the 27th Infantry, he worked up from officer of the line, through battalion adjutant, to regiment personnel officer Rising through the Legion ranks, Mr. Chadwick was in turn chaplain, | vice commander and commander of the Seattle Post 18. He was appointed to the national American-| ism committee in 1930 and was made | chairman five vears later.
the
He ig married and has two chil-| ©
dren. =
that | forces {by Assistant Secretary of War Louis
(nominated. The election (day.
CLEVELAND
lutions that may have a vital influence upon Congressional legislation | regarding national defense, neutrality and war-time mobilization of industry. National Commander Doherty's report is expected to influence the work of the resolution committees. He urged adequate national defense and recommended that the Legion vigorously support the May bill in Congress. This bill would authorize the President to limit war-time prices, and would provide special war-time taxes. He deplored the fact that the universal service bill has not been made law. A warning that the country's coasts are open to air attack and greatly increased anti-aircraft are the remedy, was given
Johnson in addressing the National Defense League
Auxiliary State Named
For the presidency of the Legion Auxiliary, Mrs. A. H. Hoffman of Des Moines, Ia., and Mrs. James Morris of Mismarck, N. D., were is Thurs-
Nominations for the five vicepresidencies, tantamount to election, were as follows: Eastern Division, Mrs. George F. Bamford of Sparrow's Point, Md.; Southern Division, Mrs. P. I. Dickson of Thomasville, Ga.; Central Division, Mrs. Pauline Rinaker of Carlinville, Ill.; Northwest Division, Mrs. A. G. Porter of Lamoure, N. D.; and Western Division, Mrs. W illiam H. Detweiler of Hazleton, Idaho.
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01S E— the rat-tat-tat of a riveter, the staccato puff of a steam shovel, the sharp blows of a hammer on solid lumber is a symbol, a good symbol. It means that plans have come off of paper and are in steel and wood and bricks. It means “the boss has got a big job,” and a thousand battered lunch pails are packed each morning, and a thousand hands wave a confident goodbye because Saturday...and the next...and the next... is pay day. In our 66 years in business there have been times of fearful silence—no hammers, no saws, no riveters. But each time, they've come back; first here and then there, finally swelling into a mighty chorus of America building and growing—and we have built and grown because we've had confidence in you
and you in us.
