Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1944 — Page 11

A s an amusing oe , He was asso- goo ’ | fy cago for two years. Leininger, the physicians who atSenator Jos § \+ ciated with the Consolidated Milli-|tendeq him in his final fllness, that harge of the * nery Co. in Chicago for ‘six yearsine dig not suffer, There lags Ee nd en ons employed by L. 8a glimmer of consclousness d . ‘QOVOrROIS’ . Ayresa [ite those final few days of life, th a - Fredrinbia, N six sisters, Agnesis iq Ante pink by ‘Helen Lawlor, Franses. Cather A seemingly unimportant bit of I sem by Lawlor, Mrs. R. T.. an —that of being the lone jed them bee Mrs. James E. Har(, all of Indian-| penyhiican to vote with the Demo.

ow

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JAMES H. POWELL

nt's importance ¥ WV

tures and direct But there is.f the whole job, .° i and home job * his party, who

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gr

-Mrs. Albert Kempe, Mrs. Charles

resident of Indianapolis, died Satur- ~ Services will be held Wednesday in

i. Macy, and two sisters, Mrs. Ella

will be in Calvary cemetery. .

{ — SUMMER

LY. HARRY F. LAKE

"© A former resident of Indianapolis, | machines and bosses.

Lt. Harry F. Lake, 55, died yesterday of a heart attack at the U. 8.

naval air station in Del Mar, Cal, the leader of the move against

who died Thursday at his home, 3102 'W. 10th st, were held at 9:30

o'clock this morning at the George W. Usher mortuary, 2313 W. Wash-

Survivors are eight sons, George, John F, Prank, August, William 1, Joseph, Henry E. and Herbert J.

daughters, Sister Joseph Clair of the Franciscan convent in St. Leon,

Knarger, Mrs. Clara Michaelis, Mrs. Orvel Petersim and Mrs. Carl Sauer, all of Indianapolis, 48 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.

James H. Powell, 52, a former day in his home in Dayton, O.

Dayton and Indianapolis. Mr. is survived by his widow, Mrs. Catherine Powell; a daughter, Mrs. James Swihart of 2ayton; two brothers, John Powell of Indianapolis and Reed Powell of

Bacon of Los Angeles and Mrs: Ina. Richards of Kalamazoo, Mich,

LYNCH SERVICES ~~ SET. TOMORROW

Services will be held tomorrow morning for Bernard A. Lynch, chief of fire prevention -of the

Indianapolis fire department, who died Friday at his home, 1118 Belle

- Rites will be conducted at 9:30 at the Kirby Funeral home and at 10:00 inh Holy Trinity church. Burial

~~ Former L. S. Ayres

€ {the powers by which he the

SEM-JET PLANE | INVENTED BY YANK |

crats in 1903 to adjourn the house on Washington's birthday was the beginning of George William Norris’ series of battles against party

“"His indépendent action gained him followers until in 1920 he was

“Cannonism” in combating the dictates of the party organization. The success of the fight in stripping the’ venerable “Uncle Joe” Cannon of

house as speaker made of Norris a national figure for the first time. Since that date, his activities placed him in the forefront of the insurgent group in congress and upon the death of Senator Robert La Pollette he inherited the toga as

Preferred to Be Right

“I would prefer to be right and be a poor Republican, than be and

| :

teacher he studied law, and in 1806 settled in Nebraska in McCook,’ Thrice he served as prosecuting at-| torney; served later as judge for eight years until he was elected to’

In 19010 he launched his first bombshell against Cannonism. Ob- |

By Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept."4.—An air- | plane combining the advantages of conventional - propellers and the newer jet propulsion has just been | patented here by Capt. Homer A. Boushey of the .army air forces. | Rights in his patent are" assigned! royalty-free to the government. | Jet-propelled aircraft, Capt. Bou- | shey points out, suffer from the dis- | advantage of wasteful use of fuel ih getting off “the ground and in! low-altitude flight; propellers have | the advantage there. But at high | levels, where the air is so thin that propellers have no “bite” the! rocket-like push of jet propulsion has considerable advantage. i Accordingly, .he has constructed | his jet-propulsion device so that it| will function as a gas turbine at take-off and as long thereafter as the pilot wishes, and ean then be switched over to direct use of ‘he jet. The propeller blades are of the feathering type, to present the least possible hindrance to ffght when ‘they are not working.

FRENCH BAN SHAVING OF WOMEN'S HEADS

"PARIS, Sept. 4 (U.P.).—Col. Rol! Tanguy, commanding the French | interior forces for the Paris region, | announced yesterday that any; member of the resistance movement! who shaved the heads of collaborationist women or branded them} with the swastika mark on the forehead or elsewhere would be,

‘THOROUGH

punished most severely.

EYE CARE

{ { | | |

STORE HOURS: Monday— 12:15 P. i wee P.M. Tuesday thru Friday— 9:45 A.M. to 5:13 P. ML.

*- Saturday-— : 9:30 Ac M. to 1:00 P. M.

DR. R. J. WELDON _ + - in Charge alee

: locke TEAL SEBARTNEN? i

licity Will Mark Fun

uring | tution.”

1903. when a8 [ine same independent attitude. He

{ment proposals of the peace treaty,

the house of representatives in 1903. |

he said: : i J “Mr, Speaker, I present a resolu. tion made privileged by the consti-

| - Then he sent to the clerk’s chair a frayed, torn piece of paper which he had carried for months. It the resolution proposing to strip the speaker of his powers, and it ‘wasa signal for the beginning of the historic battle—a battle pver rules of procedure which had allowed the speaker to become the second most powerful figure in the government, second only to the President. Three ddys later, when Norris’ resolution came up for a final vote, Speaker Cannon ruled it out of order. An appeal was taken and the tesolution carried with the combined votes of insurgent Republicans and Democrats and Cannon was shorn of the powers that had become a national issue. :

wished to back Norris for the governorship, but Norris became convinced the attempt was to keep him out of the senate, and so he became a candidate for the senate for the first time. Despite his support of Theodore Roosevelt, the Bull Moose candidate, in preference to President Taft, the regular Republican choice, Norris was elected. 3

“Always Was Independent Norris’ course of action during the years he remained in the upper legislative branch was marked by

again flared across the national picture when he opposed President Woodrow Wilson and ‘voted against the United States’ entrance into the world war. At the close of the war, Norris was emphatic in his denunciation of that provision of the Treaty of Versailles which awarded territory to Japan. He favored the disarma-

eral Services Tod

hy 1928 to support ratic Alfred

.In 1012, a prominent Nebraskan]

He bolted the patty ticket in

cameral assembly brought true another of the veteran senator's dreams for betfer government. - A lasting monument to his career is the Tennessee Valley Authority with its vast network of dams, locks and hydro-electric plants which to Norris-represented a lifelong ambi-

for all. It was a controversial subject but he never swayed from a viction that it “would do the test good to the greatest number.” . “Father of TVA”

He was called “Father of TVA” and was never disturbed by the fact that it was built on the ashes of a first world war project—Muscle Shoals—the war which he said in a

the United States. Senator Norris won over his audiences with his conversational way of talking rather than by oratory. He consumed an abundant supply of smoking tobacco and cigars. : He was finally unseated in 1942. Mr. Norris generally was serene, placid and calm, but his temperature and ire always mounted rapidly whenever a federal court issued an injunction restraining his pet TVA from carrying out a project. The next day he would rise in the senate and deliver a scathing denunciation of “government by infunction,” and berate courts in genwal for seeking to override congress:

His first wife, Miss Pluma Lashley, died in 1901. Two years later

od

® Sizes 4-6-8-10.

“= KEEP 'EM SNUG 'N WARM

BOYS’ SNO-SUITS

EAN on Si Ad * Navy-and blue combination

he married Miss Ella Leonard.

14.95

Two-piece, reversible melton wool and gabardine jacket with wool melton skin pants. Ski’pants have zipper anklets for easy removal.

£5

Bestar

‘wool lined. Sizes 2-34, >

: % ONE-PIECE POPLIN SNO-SUIT, 10 95

er

3 XN 5

_ Bogs Shops—Third Floor

~ :

Tw.

‘making duties in 1937. “The uni-|'

tion to create power cheap enough |

senate vote was not -the concern of.

For the KINDERGARTEN CROWD

Practically every style you can imagine, in warm fabrics-of excellent quality . , . suave little affairs for daddy's pin-up girls and rugged ones for tweedy young men. Coat and . . . thank goodness, zippered leggings. All made to keep out cold and dampness with the minimum of weight and the maximum of wear, Sizes 3 to bx. BLOCK'S-Kindergarien Shop, Third Plode

J *

A. Little girl's alpaca coat set, all wool, long napped for extra warmth, in autumn leaf brown, bound with bright red shetland to match the red shetland leggings, 16.98. > dh Hat, 3.00,

B. Little gifl's diagonal weave all-wool set, smartly fitted or cleverly boxy, in lovely soft shades of blue or shrimp, 19.98. “ Hat, 3.00,

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D. Little girl's knitted back fleece coat set, fitted or boxy, in rick Torest green, natural, brown, with ‘velveteen collar, . 19.98 Hat, 3.00,

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