Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1940 — Page 3

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PAGE 2

Aviation News—

‘MAJOR’ AIR FIGHT AHEAD--DOOLITTLE

10,000 Nazi Planes May Cloud Sky When It Comes, Says Liaison Officer at Allison's; City Still in Running | For $10,000,000 Engine Lab.

By SAM TYNDALL Maj. “Jimmy” Doolittle, the Army Air Corps’ liaison officer at the Allison plant, says there has not yet been a “major” aerial engagement in World War II—but he thinks HS TR : \by School Board. members because one is coming. | § : Le X SB 8 3 ki ta TE SS - ‘he sponsored indecent reading fo Even the Nazi bombing of Rotterdam was not of the : ; Ft Dap. it yesterday afternoo: proportion that he considers “major.” Ile believes that

the defense read excerpts from th: if the Nazis loose an aerial blitzkrieg on the British Isles, enn, LY. oa Carmien. the air, for the first time, act-] = - Si

while Mr. Phinney read section ually will be

from “A New American History, filled with {another book cited by the Schoo! “clouds of planes.” MAI In a “major” air engage-

Board as “questionable.” ment, Maj. Doolittle said

2 ' | Mr. Phinney held that the histor |book was valuable as an auxiliarm there would be perhaps one-| CAN BE RAIDED ! v y. 1 Ti third of the attacking nation’s rg p—

| text both in history and in the trend air force in combat at one Immediate Steps Against

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

Eager to Aid Defense of US. . . . .

SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1940

LITTLE SCOPES’ VOLUMES READ

Questionable Passages in 2 Books on Record in Redkey Trial.

PORTLAND, Ind., July 20 (U. P.). —Virtually every questionable passage in “Stars Fell on Alabama.” a best-selter of several years ago, Ne Ci i : ! : : : ; stood in the records of Jay Circuit i Cn $ 4 = 3 on : 0 v TE EE . |Court today as the defense conX a : : tinued. its attempt to prove that

Walter Phinney, a ‘Redkey school | teacher, was legally asked to resign

h of Wings .

Ldn Searc

$

Court Room Jammed

The small court room was jammed | as the trial of the two-year-old suit began. Mr. Phinney, 27, and a | Redkey native, charged that the | School Board illegally broke its contract with him. He asked for rein- | statement and $1000 for the period | he was not allowed to teach. Clarence A. Benadum of Muncie, a defeated candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor this year, classed the discharge as a “little Bcopes” case and said he planned to quote from the Bible tu prove that certain Biblical verses were as immoral as those disputes by the school board.

Quotes Board's Books | He told the court that if the books

These three Butler University students will begin the “high school” phase of their new flying careers on Monday. The fledglings (left to right) Ted Shadinger, Claude Stropes and Russell Rauch, are the scholarship winners of Butler's inaugural primary civilian pilot training course held this spring. Monday they will begin an advanced

Fears for Morale | course of ground school and flight instruction at Municipal Airport.

The U. 8. Army Air Corps thinks | of a major engagement in terms of dividing up all planes in three Bi classes: First line craft, first reserves and second reserves. The first line planes would be used actively in| the engagement. This might mean nearly all of them would be in the air at one time — it might mean half in the Maj. Doolittle air and half preparing to take off, refueling or returning. The others would be held as replacement And reserves, If the Nazis send aloft waves of even one-third of their fighters and bombers, Maj. Doolittle thinks that! England's morale might crack—he is sure the air attack will be worse than any of us imagine.

Hoosier Goings On

WHITE LIES

Give Tipton Sensation—E. Chicago Demands Recount—And a Fish Story By JOE COLLIER |

FROM TIPTON, via Florida, and Paoil, via Toronto, Canada, comes new, sharp and incontrovertible proof that neither white nor | were bad. then one approved by the playful lies get you anything but trouble. | Sel L Board. “Adv ! 793 Item: Robert Henderson and his wife moved a couple of years ~¢00% Board, dvetiiures in Apago from Tipton to Florida. During their residence there, some one |preciation,” was “Terrible.” Ne said though up the idea of superimposing phony headlines on newspapers. (the phrase “by God” appeared in Mr. Henderson had some print | ~ (the text nine times, “damn” 35

ed,, calling attention to the utter- | times, and “whoop in hell” and ly untrue circumstance that he UPHOLDS WAGE-HOUR similar expressions 28 times.

; . p 3 Mr. Phinney added the two hod wir his Se om mailed volumes with 25 others to the school Well, Tipton was in a dither library because he believed that it when the spurious headlines ar- I Aas Sonny Board, rived and tried A with The right of the Wage and Hour cause they believed certain passages a ror Division to make inspections under Would corrupt the morals of the | the Fair Labor Standards Act was| | upheld today by the Seventh | | United = States Circuit Court, the] | local division office announced here today.

tails, until the fake was discov- pupils. ered. There was a short period of emotional readjustment thereafter in Tipton. item: Miss Bertine Hawkins, The court declared the division Eee ere Asai ! itv ye o J. i y Widely known | has the authority to inspect payroll | py ert of Chicago, Will oarSoraly and tell her how they were. The |and time records even though no|pe jn Indianapolis. Ind. at the box was a part of a car-lot ship- | complaints have been filed. Claypool Hotel, Thursday and Friment. | "From the standpoint of obtain-|day, July 25th and 26th, from 1

Hromada on Coast hein a Advertisement

RUPTURE

Paoli, wrote her name and ad- : Shield Expert Here Again

dress on a box of strawberries, and the date, and a note asking the consumer to drop her a note

| of literature. These men hope now for jobs, eager to impress upon an employer the knowledge they received in the . bil : ks six-week course in industrial training in Indianapolis high schools. The courses are part of the national time—this might mean over Danger Are Advised by defense program to provide skilled workmen. At Manual Training High School, these men were among 10,000 of Goering's armada. those to be given certificates. . . . Left to right—Ollie Limp, 5132 Hovey St.; Joseph Prater, 3532 N. IlMaj. Phillips. | linois St.; Melvin Eyster, 642 Division St.; H. A. Tolin, 2038 N. LaSalle St. and the instructor, A. C. Hirsh- | | man. : WASHINGTON, July 20 (U. P) 1 Maj. Thomas R. Phillips, army > i k Bl f d a anti-aireraft expert, warned todayv [talian ruc S as e In 1 that modern bombers can raid the] United States and that immediate M D h f D d F f " steps must be taken to counteract | ercy as o oome or HALF "= HOLIDAY the danger, oy : : . | writing in the current issue of British Keep Up Deadly Fire to Prevent Aid Reaching Men rene the publication, Army Ordnance] . . i : Maj. Phillips said that the speed of | In Ruins, Writer Says. Morning Given Over to modern warplanes, carrying out : . their deadly bombing missions at By JAN YINDRICH Artillery Display and night, greatly increases defense! United Press Staff Correspondent { . . problems. FACING FT. CAPUZZO (On the Libyan Frontier), July 20-—-I| Tent Pitching. “The whole problem of anti-air-| watched while Italian trucks attempted to relieve the garrison in the craft defense is becoming more wreckage of white-battlemented Ft. Capuzzo, in the Libyan Desert. | Following an “old Army custom,”| acute,” he wrote. “The day already | It had been seven days since the ltalians had received food, water, | C. M. T. C. trainees at Ft. Ha®rison, | has arrived when the United States ammunition or other supplies, and but one truck, out of 100 that sought | 2200 strong, were to enjoy a half | can be raided across the Atlantic to run the volleys of British fire, got through. {holiday today “just because it's SatOcean. Every means of anti-aircraft There are about 100 men in the Italian garrison. Not a soul is urday.” defense must be combined in order! — ou ime — visible. I was told that the fort| This morning was taken up with to assure protection.” [had been so thoroughly wrecked a display of field artillery equipA coast artillery officer attached {that most of the garrison were de- ment and a demonstration of pitchto the Command and General Sta HUGE IDAHO FIRE | fending themselves from the ruins|ing “pup” tents. School at Ft. Leavenworth, Kas., |of trenches outside it. | Tomorrow's devotional services Maj. Phillips said that present aerial] | I lay on my stomach for two will be conducted by Chaplain Jowarfare between Great Britain and OUT OF CONTROL 2 in an observation post, un-'seph O. Ensrud who will be transGermany proves that defense Jee "© ip Se Vaca 20 ferred Friday to duty in the office] Wa “ine «a a Against planes is ‘not half solved”| {trucks try to break through. They of the chief of chaplains at Wash-| cao, at the Moa Ape. LIES meas ca be found 10 mul. Ee in, Broom athens and Be DC we on . . 4 BREE ord be ify night raids. : : : y. ! J His successor wil e Chaplain Crile res gg) "Rods ig % Yipuad nabiuanty Fanned by High Wind, a tanks. | Ralph Ww. Rogers who Ni Sopa. Aira eo. 10 be made at night when protec- | . 100 Trucks Turned Back ‘uesday from Scott Field, Ill. Music I a ign 1" tion is most difficult,” he said. | Rages Over Range; GCG One hurled In wl, ¥ was told, jior We Services Wii be provided by The ultra-high frequency range | H€ emphasized that defenses] Enroll Dies TI ayn ull, 1 Was rod, ithe C.M. TC band. ; od 1 against night raids are complicated | oitee vies. (had tried vainly at dawn to break | , polo game at 3 p. m. will attract developed at the testing depot here by difficulty ir illuminating fast-| | through the British artillerv, tank EE a a eh Is believed to be the answer to the go..0 "hich altitude bombers so| BOISE, Ida, July 20 (U. P.).—Fire/ and machine gun fire to take fresy | uncree U2 yisivors Yo Wie Tor oe pots ples a that guns on the ground can be today raced out of control over 18.-| troops, water, ammunition and sup- “\jondavss schedule includes field static proof but can be installed with considerably less equipment than the present range stations which furnish the “beam” on the airways today, After tests on the experimental fnstallation in California, it is believed the ultra-high frequency range will be placed in service for testing between Chicago and New York. The pilots on that airway will be able to test the range for its static proof qualities, but the present range will remain in service, Models in Spotlight One week from tomorrow, pilots of incoming arliners at the Municipal Airport probably will hear the earphones: “Large crowd of spectators at the southwest corner of the field.” This will be a warning from the radio control tower that there are upwards of 16,000 people watching little gas model airplanes do their stuff. It will be the MidStates Gas Model Contest, sponsored by the Indiana Gas Model Association The Sundav visitors on that day, will switch their gazes from the ever-fascinating arriving and departing airliners, to see model planes do loops, dives—and crashes —all bv themselves. One, it is understood, will be flown by radio.

Reports on ‘Lab’ Myron Green, Chamber of Commerce industrial commissioner reported on his return from Wash- | ington this week that a subcom- | mittee of the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics probably | will make a fast trip to Indianapolis and other cities before final decision on location for the $10.000.000 aircraft engine research laboratory Indianapolis is still high in the running. The race has boiled down to about three or four cities although 57 want to get the defense project Cleveland is reported “pushing hard” for the lab. If the subcommittee inspects Municipal Airport facilities here and those of other cities, it is expected the decigion won't he reached for another two or three weeks.

War Role Discussed

The part commercial aviation will play in time of war was discussed bv Mai. Reed Landis, vice president of American Airlines, at an “off-the-record” conference of the Indiana Civilian Aviation Committee at the Hotel Washington last night Mai. Landis said: “Preparedness fs the greatest insurance policy in the world against wail «A war probably could be won with an air force alone, plus a reagonable amount of ground equipment to hold territory captured by fir power.” C. K. Gregg of Indianapolis, committee secretary was chairman. Others who attended were Herman Teetor, representing the Indiana Chamber of Commerce; W. B. Stephenson, vice president of the, Indiana Manufacturers’ Association; ¥rank Millis, ninth district chairman: Elvan Tarkington, Col. H. Weir Cook, I. J. Dienhart and Wallace O. Lee.

SETTLEMENT ENDS | GROTTO CRASH SUIT

SHELBYVILLE, Ind. July 20 (U, P).—A settlement out of court has prevented trial on a damage suit for $10,000 against the receiver of the Union Traction Co. as the result of the Sahara Grotto wreck near Indianapolis in 1929. It was reported that the settlement was $2000 to go to the estate - of Margaret W. Dallas, one of 16 killed when an interurban car crashed into a truckload of Sahara

Grotto members en route to a picnic.’

in|

trained on them. Aircraft warning networks, operatthg on a 24-hour basis, should be established at least 200 miles away from potential bombing tarfgets in order to make possible an alarm of approaching aircraft, he said, Otherwise, defense might be unable to reach sufficient altitude to fight off attackers before the latter drop their bombs.

LUNCHEON HONORS

4 UNDERWRITERS

A luncheon and silver anniversary meeting was to be held at the Co- | lumbia Club today in honor of four

planes

000 acres of range land and 2000 plies to the fort.

acres of timber north of here. Already it had caused the death of a CCC enrollee, destroved 100 cattle and burned crops on more than 350 farms. Riding a high wind, the flames entrapped Joseph Galluzzo, CCC member from Ohio. Earle Templeton, superintendent of the 500 fire- | fighters, went back through the hot | ashes to recover his body. At least four homes were de- | stroyed and the fire raged through | Boise's new recreational center at Bogus Basin. U. 8S. Forest Service authorities closed off all roads into the area to aid movement of men and supplies.

MINTON. CROWE ON

British guns opened up on the artillery practice on the range and

trucks at 4 p. m. Other guns dropped an occassional shell on the battered fort, I saw one motorized | covered wagon make a dash for the |VFar men fort. The driver stepped on the gas and sped along the well-made Italian road. Shells dropped be(fore and behind but the truck, swerving madly, went on. It dis-| (appeared and presumably got through. | Another truck made a dash to the north, away from the fort, apparently trying to get back to Bardia, | the supply base. The fire got too hot and the truck turned back toward the fort. (It ran into a shell. A cloud of dust rose. When it cleared the truck was a tangle of wreckage. During the entire two hours the

| tine gunnery,

methods of training.

tion and first aid. After a series of demonstrations

held on the machine gun

Monday. A program of a#hletics will be held in the afternoon.

M'GINN FAGES COURT

a study of range finding and rou-|

Classroom work for the fourth] (Blues) will include lec- | tures on the duties of officers and Instruction al-| so will be given in military sanita-

actual machine gun practice will be | range |

WIFE BY SIDE WHEN

Three weeks from the day she [Ing uniform compliance with the p. m. to 4 p. m. and 6 p. m. te 8

wrote the note, Miss Hawkins received a letter from Mrs. Margaret A. Goddard, Toronto, strawberries were very good, indeed, but that personally she no longer considered a certain Toronto grocery clerk reliable, “He didn't notice your note on the box,” she wrote, “and he told me the berries had been picked the day I bought them.”

” ” ” EDWARD J. WOLFE, Chamber of Commerce spokesman for East Chicago, has notified the Government that it can’t get away with what it is trying to. Mr. Wolfe said that the population count of Bast Chicago, as of

| general agent; Ray O. Woods, sales | manager, and John R

| general agencies; William M. Houze

FLOODWALL PROGRAM

JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. July 20 [(U. P.).—Start of the construction of a $3,000,000 floodwall for Jeffersonville and adjoining communities will be celebrated here tomorrow. Senator Sherman Minton of New Albany and Rep. Eugene B. Crowe

members of the Indiana agency of

the John Hancock Mutual Life In-| surance Co, The four, each of whom will complete a quarter century of service this vear, are Dan W. Flickinger,

Jones, all of Indianapolis, and Thomas J. Stan- & ton, Gary. Several company offi- of Bedford will Speak. Crow cials from other cities were to speak Mr. Minton ale Tr, CTOWe Shonat the luncheon. Thev include J Sored the legislation authorizing the y ; : dwall. Actual construction work Harty Wood, Boston, manager of 100 Y 2 on the wall started two weeks ago.

Italians tried to dodge one way or another to get out of range. None did. Soldier Directs Fire { I lay alongside a soldier who was | telephoning fire directions to a bat[tery of field guns. He wore brown | mechanic's overalls, a khaki cap and sandals. He was relaying or[ders from a sergeant commanding an observation post. This freckled, red-faced voung soldier sat on sandbag. The sand flies crawled lover his ears, nose and mouth and tabout his eyes, but he continued

An attractive young housewife | stood by the side of her youthful] husband in Municipal Court yester-| contrasts violently with the anday afternoon and with a hand] nounced population as of 1930, : | which was 54,784. clasped on his shoulder, heard Saul | This embarrassed and astonRabb, judge pro tem. bind him over| jshed East Chicago all the more,

to the Grand Jury on a burglary| Mr. Wolfe said, because the new charge city directory indicates a populaTs ; | tion of 59,000. The youth,.Floyd McGinn, 21, of/ Mr. Wolfe demanded a recount 1229 Oliver Ave. was captured last! , "iq mast Chicago will be satSunday in a West Side grocery after| ; / ; poilce. lind Killed, 1is. isl, RRebers] Ted WHE ‘vowing less Usa

‘ 4 . 60,000. Carter, 22, when Carter failed to, = A,.4 the Government's recount= heed a command fo surrender.

April 1, 1940, has been announced at 51,493. This, Mr. Wolfe said,

NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P.).

four-pound candy box marked with [the warning “Danger — Explosives” {which caused a brief bomb scare at

|Act the decision is an important p. m. daily. one,” William Schneider, Indianapo- | [lis office head. declaged.

MR. MEINHARDI says: The

lis ©o “If the|Meinhardi Shield is a tremendous |division were able to make inspec-|improvement—well known for pro144 y . . v . | § 3 (tions only where complaints were qucing immediate results.

| filed there might be many instances | vents the Rupture from protruding | where violations might not be uncovered.”

BOX OF ‘DYNAMITE’ CONTAINS ONLY JUNK

iL A coming here for 15 years.

it pre-

in 10 days on the average—regard- | less of size or location of Rupture {and no matter how hard you work lor strain. It has no leg straps or | cumbersome arrangements. (No Surgery or Injection Treatments used.) Mr. Meinhardi has been

| Caution: If neglected—Rupture may cause weakness, backache,

| constipation, nervousness, stomach

the British pavilion at the World's| Pains, etc, or sudden death from Fair, was disclosed today to have Strangulation

contained only “junk.”

Men having larg® Ruptures which

Detectives of the bomb squad were | have returned after Surgical Opera-

|called to the pavilion, where a bomb | tions or Injection Treatments are was found July 4 which exploded also invited. and killed two detectives. The pack-| —see MEINHARDI

When all others fail He will be

age had been found in the pavilion's pleased to demonstrate to you pri-

theater, where British news reels/vately without charge.

were shown.

(Only men

linvited.) White only.

|and Henry 8S. Stout, general agents

imperturbably reporting where the

| ing, by golly.

peared to have recovered.

URGES PHILIPPINES TO THINK FOR SEL

at Chicago and Dayton, respectively.

‘SNAKEBITE PASTOR’ IS JUDGED

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. July 20 (U. P.).—The Rev. Jesse Pack, Holiness preacher who twice let a copperhead snake bite him in view of his congregation to demonstrate “how faith can cure,” vesterday was committed to Eastern State Hospital for the Insane. The hearing was requested by his] wife. The Rev. Pack had been jailed | three times in the last few days on! HOLLYWOOD, Cal, July 20 (U, complaint of persons who said he P.).—Stanley Brown, young actor, attacked them. Allowing the snake was injured seriously yesterday to bite him on successive Sundays when the ‘horse he was riding colin his pulpit, he had refused lided with one ridden by Charles medical assistance, preferring to!Starret, Western actor. Mr. Brown remain at home and recover “with the help of the Lord,” and ap-

INSANE President Manuel Quezon said today that the Philippine Islands must “do our own thinking and learn lessons from contemporary history or bust.” He expressed surprise that Franeis Sayre, high commissioner of the Philippines, had disagreed with his declaration regarding the need for a one-party system.

YOUNG ACTOR INJURED

rushed unconscious to the studio

I hospital.

11 /

a ‘

]

Photo by Joseph H. Pike, Rushville. Ernie Pyle, the “Hoosier Vagahond” has come back to Indiana. He paused today to look over the Willkie farms at Rushville, as you see him here. “They're neither a hobby nor a plaything,” writes Ernie. “You won't find any polo fields or racing stables. They're real farms, run to make money—and they do.” Turn now td Page 7,

MANILA, P. I, July 20 (U. P.).—|

was thrown to the ground. He was

shells landed and correcting eleva- | | tion. As the gung thundered in the {rear and the shells crashed in front {of me, I watched the fort through | binoculars. Most of the main build|ing and most of the surrounding | wall had been destroyed. The cen|.ral tower had been battered but | eained standing. | There had been a great concrete! plinth nearby from which Benito Mussolini once had made a speech. |I was told that a British soldier | (onsineen had blown it up two {nights before because it was being fused as an observation post. The same man the night before had] blown a huge hole in the Ft.| | Capuzzo-Bardia supply Yoad by ex-| | ploding 150 captured Italian shells,| So as to impede trucks. When I left British tanks were awaiting orders to dash in and try | to clean up the Italian trucks.

|

1 [charges in connection with the slay- |

URGES TEXAS ‘DRAFT’

GARNER AS GOVERNOR

| PT. WORTH, Tex. July 20 (U.] |P.).—E. B. Gibbons, a Democrat, | suggested today that Texans “draft” | Vice President John N. Garner as | Governor. The Democratic state prmiary, at! {which Texans will express their! | choices for state officers, will be [held July 27. | “We have a mighty fine gentleman! {left open for a job at the first of {the year,” said Mr. Gibbons, in [urging that E. B. Germany of| Dallas, chairman of the ill-fated] | Garner-for-President drive, direct [an intensive eight-day cam- | paign for write-in support of Mr. | Garner for Governor. |

'BURGLARS ROUTED BY |

A home-made burglar alarm last! night routed prowlers who have] |been bothering Robert Hess, of 2522 |E. 38th St., for more than a year. Mr. Hess ran a string from his (back door to the garage with a tin |can attached to the door of his | home. When the can rattled loudly |last night, he investigated to find je string broken. The prowlers had | ed. He told police the intruders last winter drained the alcohol from his automobile, threw gravel in his face when he answered a knock at the door, let the air out of the tires on

[amination

{his car and pried the gasoline tank cap off.

McGinn waived preliminary exand was placed under $2000 bond after his attorney vainly attempted to obtain a lower bond. Carter had received his freedom a| few days before he was killed when| a Municipal Court judge reduced to $500 a high bond after he was ap-| prehended by police on suspicion of burglary. McGinn's attorney told the Court | that the purpose of a bond is “not to exact punishment but to assure] a defendant's appearance in court.” |

EX-UNION OFFICIAL FIGHTS EXTRADITION

WARSAW, Ind., July 20 (U. P.).—| William C. McCuiston, 38, former national maritime labor union offi-|

> » 9 One of the most incomprehen-

ord is reported from Logansport. It seems that a car bearing a license plate which was not issued | for it, ran onto the Pennsylvania crossing at Road 29 at the precise moment a passenger train, with prior claim, ran onto the crossing. The car was demolished and investigators were unable to find any other identification in the wreckage. What makes it odd is that there appears to have been no driver in the car. This may turn into something pretty good before it's over. ” us » AUSTIN RAFINER, Vincennes, | tells his pals that he had a cial, said today he would fight ex-| o ia tradition to New Orleans to face| Perfectly harrowing experience the other day with a 20-pound catfish. He was fishing peacefully at Seven Mile Bend in White River, he says with a shudder, when the 20-pound catfish tock his handline and caught him. Just as the fish was about to “land” him, another fisherman took hold on the line and together they turned tables on the fish and landed him. Mr. Rafiner has been having nighmares about guppies since.

ing there of Phillip Carrie, rival union leader, Sept. 17, 1939. McCuiston was arrested last night | at Claypool, 10 miles south of here, | where he was operating a photogra- | pher’'s gallery in a carnival. He is | being held in the Kosciusko County | Jail pending arrival of New Orleans | authorities. Last November, McCuiston testified before the Dies Committee con- | cerning “the power exerted by Com- | munist organizations over the Mari- | time unions.

Threat to Jump Ties Up Congested New York Traffic

NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P.).—]that he was able to escape. Then reets in the congested mid-town the man locked himself in while

St : . . [two police emergency squads, three shopping district were jammed by radii cars and a detachment from

additional thousands teday when the midtown squad roped off the police emergency squads spread nets street. in front of a building after a re-| Pins: live a own a . im. (door and captur n, w DOr ig . an vias Joekenl itn | Was described as Jewel, Nomipen, : a "135 a worker for a New York newsJ a Jump from 2 fourth oa per. He said he had been The alarm was raised by Fred brooding about the death of a sis- ”" ; . . He was taken to Bellevue Havinghorst, an athletic trainer, Hospital for observation.

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