Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1945 — Page 6
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Sunday afterncon and evening at the parish hall. committee in charge are (left to right, back row) Mrs. James McGinley and Mrs. Joe Suding, (front row) Mrs. Robert Heiskell, Mrs. Frank ' Scherrer, chairman, and Mrs. Virgil Padgett. -
" Plan June Fiesta of St. Roch’ s
FONTAINE WINS DIVORCE
HOLLYWOOD, June 15 (U. P.).— own home. Actress Joan Fontaine: divorce decree yesterday from she won Brian Aherne, who she says changed last year that Ahern ‘the finest hus- | time in the desert—w band in the world" to a man who, hay fever.
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‘The annual June fiesta of St. Roch's Catholic church will be held demanded today that the United Members of the | Nations charter guarantee them an-
| fas
|
Small
LATER CHARTER
REVISION | ASKED
Nations. tions. Want New, {
Parley Within 10 Years.
By R. H. SHACKFORD |
United Press Staff Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO, June 15.— { The ‘small nations which lost .the | tight to modify the Big Five veto
other change within five to 10 years. |
They sought a specific provision | faking it mandatory to hold a con. |
| stitutional convention for revision |
| plans.
{made her feel like a guest in her| of the charter not sooner than five | The academy award-|yvears nor later than 10. “her | winning actress told the judge when her interlocutory e spent ll his|the specific time reference. here she got!little nations show no sign of vield- |
The big powers favor provision |
decr~e|for such a convention but oppose |
The | |ing claiming 1t is “the certainty” of | [such a convention that they want.} Another Delay That controversy, dnd the re-| lated dispute over-the right of 2 member to quit the organization, threatened another delay in United Nations conference adjournment |
A_vote on these issues may come today in committee, but the eing] side is certain to want to argue it) again later in the public commis- |
|
sion sessions.
A lot of work must be done fast if the conference is to adjourn on June 23 as planne The committee which is the | fartherest behind in its work is the | one which must reach decisions not t| only on the constitutional conven- | tion and withdrawal issues, but also on expulsion and the secretary gen- | aral. Domestic Interference | Another fight was promised for today. The committee on organiza- | tion principles adopted the section ! which guarantees against world organization interference in matters |of domestic jurisdiction. Chile im-| ! mediately served notice that it would | have another amendment to offer | {at the commission session. The major conference bottleneck {is the committee on amendment,| membership and secretariat. Yes- | terday it received its subcommittee’s {report which called for:
ONE: Omission in
| mitting or prohibiting withdrawal lof a member from the organization, put with explanation in the min-! utes of the conference that the right of withdrawal was implicit. The little nations oppose this. TWO: Provision in the charter for a See] convention to! | make revisions. i called not sooner than five nor later {than 10 years on a two-thirds oie] ‘of the assembly and a vote of a seven security council ny 'and to recommend amendments by | | a two-thirds vote.
FOUR: Such
| other members of the organization. _The leader of the five to 10- -year | Fos is the safe” man~who" led the unsuccessful fight against the veto—Australian Foreign
| Herbert V. Evatt.
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the charter | | of any express provision either per-
{ THREE: Such a convention to be|
| amendments to {come into force on ratification by | the Big Five plus a majority of the|
Minister |
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Divides Bust o
f Pyle for.l. U.
With collar loose and dog tags dangling, Ernie Pyle was snapped sitting for a clay likeness by Sculptor? Jo Davidson. A bronze cast of the bust, which was made before Ernie went to the Pacific, will be presented to his alma mater, Indiana university.
A LIFE-SIZE bronze bust of Ernie Pyle will he presented to Indiana. university at the world premiere of “Story of G. I. Joe,” July 6 at Loew's theater. The bust was made by Jo Dav- | idson, nationally known New York sculptor, when the late war | correspondent was in the United States last fall before going to | the Pacific, where he was killed | on Ie Jima. | __ Following the premiere the bust |
will be placed in the Ernie Pyle memorial room at the university library, along with other mementoes of the Hoosier Vagahond's travels and life. The world premiere of the film based on Pyle's books is ‘being sponsored by th& Indiana Uni-
| versity clubs of Indianapolis. The
entire proceeds will go to the Ernie Pyle Memorial fund at I. U. to establish scholarships in journalism
YOUTH WITH RIFLE. WOUNDS 3 CHUMS
A 14-year-old boy, playing with his sailor. brother's riflé, injured his three younger playmates yesterday {when he fired a bullet at their feet. | Injured were Joseph Kelly, year-old son of Patrolman and Mrs. | Robert Kelly, 1116 N. Riley ave, and Peter and Paul Georgescu, 9
” (=
| year-old twin sons of Mr. and Mrs.)
| Pete Georgescu, 1230 N. Riley ave.| Forcing the youths to “dance” at | i the point of the 22-caliber rifle, the older boy fired one bullet which | splattered on the concrete in the| 1'1100 block on N. Riley ave.
|
| The Kelly lad was wounded in the left leg. Peter Georgescu had | a minor wound in his forehead and Paul was struck in the left leg. All were treated by a private physician. The boy with the rifle told juve- | nile authorities he “accidentally” fired the weapon sand-—the- bullet oounced off the sidewalk. He was placed in the custody of the juve-| nile aid division. | | According to Patrolmen Michael Yates and Frank Delatore the boy! has a delinquency record.
‘THOMAS B. SMITH | SERVICES ARE SET,
| Rites will be conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow in the Conkle Funeral home for Thomas B. Smith, who | died in his home, 521 N. Traub ave., yesterday. Burial will be in Floral! Park, He.was 81. _~
and burglary
|
Mr. Smith, who Tad lived in In-
dianapolis 50 years, was born in {Lincoln county, Tenn. He was a former employee of the Indianap- | olis Railways and the Link-Belt Co., ' and a member of Puritan lodge, 678, $LOOPF | Survivors include three sons, Richard. Bridgeport, and Hubert and Arthur, both of Indianapolis; three daughters, Mrs. Alice Rhoades and Mrs. Annie Morris, hoth of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Ollie Rowe] Danville, and two sisters, Mrs. Belle! Bennett, Kelso, Tenn. and Ns Doll Thompson, Paint Rock, Ala
SUMMER WEATHER AND MORE RAIN DUE
| There's still more rain on deck for Indianapolis this week. | Already 3.75 inches of rain has| fallen in the last six days and] |the weather chief promises occa- | |sional showers and thunderstorms | | through tomorrow. Summer temperatures are to re-| main with the mercury going a {little higher about Tuesday and
day forecast,
IAN
No Coupon
| went overseas in October,
| Wednesday, according to the five-|
| Memorial Service For Pvt. Lovelace
MEMORIAL SERVICES for Pvt. Russell E. Lovelace, who was fatally injured in an accident Aug. 21, 1944, in France, will be
| conducted at 4 p. m. Sunday at
Third Christian church. The Rev. A. C. Brooks, pastor, will officiate, assisted by Merle Sidener, leader of the Christian Men Builders class of which Pvt. Lovelace was a member. Pvt. Lovelace, who was 22, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell H. Lovelacé, 829 N. Drexel ave. He enlisted Sept. 11, 1942, and 1943, entering France two days after D-day. A graduate of Technical high school, he was a member of the Indiana State guard and Third Christian church, and was eme ployed at Schwitzer-Cummins. Co.
EIRE DENIES HITLER LANDED IN
Eire government officially
The London Daily
children.
ties,” the Daily Mail said. The Irish denial followed.
IRELAND
DUBLIN, June 15 (U. P.).—The denied today that Adolf Hitler had landed { here. Mail had {carried a dispatch from Cairo yeslterday quoting a that Hitler had landed at Dublin airdrome dressed as a woman and accompanied by a woman and three “It is not suggested there | was any connivance by Erie authori-
“reliable - source”
GIANT ROCKET ‘BOMBS FOUND
‘Nazis Might Have Hit U. S. In Six Months.
By MALCOLM MUIR Jr, United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, June 15.—If the European’ war had lasted another six months, Germany might have bombarded New York, Washington, Philadelphia land Boston with giant rocket bombs | Ordnance intelligence experts at~ {tached to supreme headquarters said German scientists were within a half year of perfecting the mass | production of rocket bombs capable of pin-point bombing at a range of 3000 miles. The allied experts based their statemerit en the results of a monthlong survey of a huge rocket assembly plant 800- feet under the Kohnstein mountains near Nordhausen in Germany. Blueprints for the
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long - range | rockets were found and German scientists said they were prepared |
to turn out. the missiles in sufficient numbers to neutralize American air I superiority. | Maj. William J. Bromley of Grants Pass, Ore., said the proposed rockets y obviously were intended to subject American cast coast cities to the {same robot-bomh ordeal London suffered beginning last summer. The Germans might have begun their bombardment of the United States even before the end of the European war had it not been for an R. A. F. gaid that smashed the enemy...experimental plant at Peenemuende. Faster Than Sound “That raid was a lifc-saver for us,” Bromley said. “It set the German scientists back just about six months in their experiments. They told me it caused great damage to their installations and killed 800 of their foremost authorities.” Bromley did not describe the long-range rockets, but the V-2 type used against Britain traveled through the stratosphere at a speed faster than sound and carried a ton of explosives in the nose. _ He said the German scientists be{lieved that, given another two years, they could have developed rockets that could be shot 15,000 miles—as
far as from Britain to Japan.
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Pumpk Some
Pumpkins a such as the, Cr Bush and the V The ondy w ‘few different on But, be the th* seed when f ard give the pl: in which to ran bl partlal sha of Lhe sweet co plot is ideal. Seed ~nould n ibe sown until ti soil has becon thoroughly warr Beeds of summiq squash may | «sown until Ju 1, but: winte squash and pum; kin seed shou be in the grou week or 10 days. Manure F " Prepare the so or ‘three shovel: ito Zach hill; if r able work in a balanced comms
Is best to sow In each hill abo When the see put, leaving tw strongest plants summer or bu about four feet the hills, and e for pumpkins a A pack of se alls, so do no your garden is e san use or disp A few hills will ‘amily. The vin arolific, and o winter pumpkin \ meal for four 1 The gardener vatch for squa lat-backed “sti: nore than half luster on vines yy sucking the ‘ausing a wil leath. No very neasure-has bee Urge Ha Entomologists Yicking the bug ‘ed eggs formed eaves. Since th seetle will gene ‘he same plants, ‘Wo parts; calc art, and gypsus air control of |
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