Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1945 — Page 10
. orate. Simplicity, clarity, conviction—and brevity. It had only 219 words,
8.
The Indianapolis Times| gE
PAGE 10 Monday, July 23, 1945
ROY W. HOWARD ~~ WALTER.LECKRONE President . Biter LYE (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
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| SCRIPPS ~ NOWARD |
» Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
AMERICA SPEAKS
lin was a model. It was equal to the occasion, This was not just another flag-raising. This was the same precious cloth that flew over the capitol in Washing-
ton the day we went to war.
Algiers when he won the North African campaign.
«Sop» + RILEY 5551
"we
PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S extemporaneous speech in Ber-
Eisenhower raised it over
It
announced to Rome the liberation of the holy city. Now it flies over Berlin’s ruins, proof that democracy is stronger than aggressors. And this same old glory next will wave
over a defeated Tokyo.
We commend to politicians the President's literary
style.
whole address took two minutes. few longer than two syllables.
It has the virtues usually lacking in those who
His
But those words carried great meaning. They were
a proud declaration of American victory, a confident asser- | tion of American strength, and a pledge to use America’s |
superior power for world prosperity and peace.
“We have conclusively proved tliat a free people can |
successfully look after the affairs of the world.” “The flag we are raising ... in the name of the people of the United States who are looking forward to a better world, a world in which all the people will have an opportunity to enjoy the good things in life=—and not just a few
at the top.” ‘
oF
“There is “not one piece of territory or one thing of a monetary nature that. we want out of this war. We want
OUR TOWN=" Jap Ship pBy Anton Scherrer
NOBODY, can comprehend the full horror of the Pacific war until he learns that the Japanese navy got its start in 1867 by way of a U. S. warship delivered by a citizen of Indianapolis. It's a Civil war story. The ship was built “in Bordeaux, France, in 1863-64, for a Danish firm in Stockholm. © She was an iron-clad vessel with a stee] beak for cuttigg into an enemy ship, a fact at led some international observers to suspect that He Danish firm was merely an agent acting for some ambitious government. The trick was to learn the name. of the government. . The spies who had been stationed in Europe By Braham Lincoln suspected right from the start that the sel had been ordered by the Confederacy, a guess that proved to be correct.
Jefferson Page, left Bordeaux early in 1865.and headed for the Gulf of Mexico. She carried the name of “Stonewall Jackson” and the Confederate flag, When she left France, she was fully equipped for battle; which is to say that she was armed with one 10-inch ahd two 6-inch Armstrong muzzle-loading rifled guns. 4
But the War Was Over THE “Stonewall Jackson” arrived in Nassau when, somewhat to his dismay, Capt. Page learned that Gen. Lee had surrendered and that the war was over. It put him in an awful predicament. For one thing, his ship was without a flag recognized by any country. As for himself, he was a man without a country. To make the best of a bad situation, Capt. Page sailed for Havana. Upon his arrival there he surrendered his ship to the captain-general of Cuba, with the result that the captain-general found himself in a predicament. To wiggle out of what promised to be a nasty international situation, Cuba's captain:general immediately proffered the vessel to our government, In November, 1865, the “Rhode Island,” under the { command of Capt. Murray, and the “Hornet” in | charge of Commander Brown, were sent to Cuba. | They had on board the necessary crew and officers | to bring the “Stonewall Jackson” to the United States. Several weeks later, Washington, D. C,, buzzed with the news that the one-time Confederate warship was coming up Chesapeake Bay.
The Japs Wanted a Navy
EARLY in 1867, a Japanese commission came to the United States with the avowed purpose of studying
The ship, under the command of Capt. “fhomas |.
-
AH
——
wile
od “
Ti. AM | GLAD
OFF THAT BOR A WHILE
i
- TA
TO GET MY NOSE
[Nazi Plants
By Thomas L. Stokes ’ |
WASHINGTON, July 23.—One ‘of the biggest problems faced by the United States and its allies in the control of Germany is to prevent the revival of Germany's giant industries which . furnished the implements of war. For this purpose our government set up & group control council to operate in Germany in conjunction with those of our allies. In this country the foreign economic administration—~FEA-created a series of committees of consultants, known as technical industrial’ disarmament committees, to advice on policy. It was disclosed a few weeks ago that some of the’
key positions on the so-called TID committees were
held by men, connected with large American corporations which either had contracts formerly with German industry in those international monopolies known * as cartels, or had been convicted or pleaded guilty to monopolistic practices in this country, or both.
FEA Takes No Action
THIS SET-UP was questioned, as was pointed out at the time, by government officials familiar with cartel operations. Nevertheless FEA did nothing about it. The men, with one exception, were left in these key positions. Now it turns out that there is a counterpart to this situation in the set-up abroad which is probably more importang, since the U, 8. .group control council operates directly on the ground. This was revealed to the house by Rep. Voorhis (D. He disclosed that key spots in the group control council set-up are.occupied by men connected with industries that -have investments in Germany and therefore a stake in the revival of German industry, including automotives, electricity, communications and oil, among others. : There is General Motors, with its Adam Opel works, in which General Motors had an investment of $34,890,024 written off in 1942 according to its financial report. The Opel works were described by Mr. Voorhis as “an integral part of the industrial fabric” of Germany. Peter Hoglund, formerly head of Opel, now on leave from General Motors, is listed as chief of the conversion and liquidation branch of the group contro! council. Edward Zdunek, formerly General Motors
I manager at Antwerp, is chief of the light engineering
branch. Brig. Gen." A. R. Glancy, retired, a General Motors vice president, is on the TID committee here dealing with the German automotive inaustry,
I. T. & T. Has Investments There
INTERNATIONAL Telephone and Telegraph has a German subsidiary, International Standard Electric Corp, as well as holdings in other European coun-
© MOND | STATE EA
Traffi
Traffic cas mount here were taken tc result of two
Week-end s raised Mario talities to 857 i] seven injured #1 were reported i Charles | W Johnson coun “t lcal condition i an accident 1» ~ this morning. ~ accident was Columbus, In ¥ perintendent, ff, nose and face ; Struc
State Police rick, who In Williams fail truck at pref | 31, colliding '¥ by Mr. Newm E | A family of | Injuries when | the back .of id, In the 4700 b ton st. at abo A Treated at 4 minor injuries L'¢ 27, of Lawren and thelr tw and James, 2 ¢ infant, who w i injured, was 1 = dition, A Veter The car dr ran into a \ truck. driven | . of 364 Cole st, # before making 8 impact drove | of the truck ar 8 half a ton, of c highway. Pfc. James Ind., overseas today as an into a power li
gine.
peace and prosperity for the world as a whole.” “If we can put this tremendous machine of ours, which has made this victory possible, to work for peace we could
our educational system. What they really had in mind was to buy an iron-clad war vessel with which to start a real-for-sure-navy. - Up until then the
tries. Two of its vice presidents—Kenneth Stockton and Mark Sundstrom—were made brigadier generals to become advisers to the group control council, the
of Watseka, I 24. The driver
“lI wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”
Wm
Hoosier Forum
look forward to the greatest age in the history of mankind.
This is what, we propose to do.” The President has been-called “just an ordinary Amer-
jcan.” Of course, he is no average man.
But what he said
yesterday at the flag ceremony in Berlin does express the pride and the ‘will and the hope of plain Americans.
RUSH JOB-FOR VETERANS
LAP-DASH legislation is a poor way for congress to show its appreciation of the veterans of this war.
¢
became law than many defects and unworkabl ~~ began
LORY Jie
being in a hurry
The G. L bill of rights was adopted with much hoopla and not enough study. The Senate passed it in less than an hour. The House tried to improve it. But it no sooner
to show up.
‘clear
e provisions
£ last week, the House—
‘passed a 48-page bill making a number of material
changes in the G. I. law.
Most of the house members
hadn't read this bill. It
came to them from Rep: John Rankin’s veterans committee and was passed by “unanimous consent,” under an agreement that barred the offering of any amendments and . permitted no real debate. Some members, who admitted that they didn’t understand the bill, did ask questions about it. One congressman who wanted to know whether certain matters had been taken care of in the bill was assured by Mr. Rankin: “They can be ironed out in the senate.”
Well, we hope that the senate will do a good job
of iron-
ing. If it doesn’t—if the changes in this 48-page bill turn out to leave a lot of things still wrong with the G. I. law— the House's vacation itch, and the congressional habit of substituting kind wishes and good intentions for thorough consideration of veterans’ legislation, can be given a big share of the blame.
WILL THE MELODY LINGER ON? ET'S go back to the summer of 1831. The Poles have
surrendered Warsaw to the Russians.
The news
reaches a musical Pole, Frederic Francois Chopin, visiting in Stuttgart. Chopin feels so sad that he throws himself into musical composition to express the despair of himself | and his native land.
Chopin, the Pole, was passionately patriotic.
He was
21 at the time. Men of that age have a way of giving their utmost for their country. Chopin, an invalid, gave his best in music. In time, Poland took one of his pieces and made
it into something of a rallying song.
It became
a “war
horse” of piano students the world over, a tough number
to master, but afire with emotion.
This was the
Polonaise. , It is the summer of 1945 and three famous men are dining at Potsdam. The host is President Truman and his guests are Britain's Churchill and Russia's Stalin. Somewhere in the back of their minds lurk thoughts of how " Russia and the Poles will get along together. After dinner, a G. L sergeant, young Eugene List, plays the piano. : This is the List whom Americans have been admiring for his
concert performances.
A Flat
A decade before, he had been intro-
duced by the conductor Leopold Stokowski, who was born in England of a Polish father.
listens,
G. I. Gene plays Chopin's A Flat Polonaise.
Stalin
When the program is finished, Stalin rises with
a glass in his hand. He congratulates Sgt. List, shakes his
hand, beams:
He proposes a toast to the pianist.
The
three most powerful men in the world drink a toast because an American protege of a Pole’s son has played Chopin's patriotic cry of Poland, Warsaw is 820 miles from Potsdam. By air.
NO LIFE AL . says a correspondent, is alive in Argentina, with plenty of money, but in the cold, empty,
friendless stretches of Pata
2. “7 Alive gonia. Alive with Eva Braun,
The music ended. Will the melody linger on?
FOR A FUEHRER
0, but without the heiling ¢rowds, the adulation, even the
i;
n still spinning mad dreams, but with the sane knowl- |",
he raises his
that he is searched for, and that once of shows his face, he is doomed. aren't at all convinced by # 3
oN
ants of a faithful, fanatical circle. Alive with a.mad
this latest Hitler rumor.
Japanese navy consisted of nothing more than a collection of wooden tubs and a steam yacht, a gift of Queen Victoria. Gideon Welles, who was the secretary of the navy at that time, selected the “Stonewall Jackson” as a vessel he could spare. Commander George Brown was picked to represent the department in the negotiations of the sale. He was the same officer who had helped to bring the Confederate ship from Cuba to the United States. What's more, he was a citizen of Indianapolis. % To be sure, Georgé Brown was born in Rushville
+ (1835), but he moved’ to Indianapolis when he was
a one-year-old baby. He entered the navy at the age of 14 and served with distinction in the Federal navy during the Civil war, especially distinguishing himself on the night of Feb. 24, 1963, when, in command of the “Indianola” at Palmyra Island, defended himself for an hour and a& half against four Confederate gunboats. Finally he. was wounded and taken prisoner: ‘He became a commander in
o decke TOF THE SWE Satine | sama + Vo
For a while it looked as“ if Commander. Brown wouldn't be able to sell the “Stonewall Jackson” for $400,000, the price set by Gideon Welles, Ugly rumors had reached the Japs that the one-time Confederate boat was in such bad shape that she couldn't possibly make the long voyage to the Orient. Knowing what we now do, it's dollars to doughnuts that the Japs started the rumors themselves. Be that as it may, the Japanese commission finally decided to buy the ship on one condition—namely, that Commander George Brown should take the vessel to Japan. . g The. “Stonewall Jackson,” under command of George Brown, sailed from -Norfolk and arrived in Yokohama after a voyage of eight months. Her speedometer showed a total of 7700 miles, for the reason that: there wasn't any Panama Canal at the time. The voyage was packed with excitement from beginning to end.
You Always Find a Hoosier BIGGEST thrill wai the rounding of South America. One day the ship reached a harbor on the coast of
Patagonia and there, by way of his binoculars, Commander Brown spied a man surrounded by a group of giants. He appeared to understand the ship’s signals. Commander Brown ordered the crew to lower one of the boats and bring the man on board. He turned out to be a white man who had been made king of a Patagonian tribe. The minute Commander Brown saw the king, he recognized him as George McDougall, a kid he had played with in Indianapolis. George McDougall belonged to the breed of-men (of which there are more in Indianapolis than anybody suspects) who couldn't stay put. He was cursed with the itch to travel. For example, it wasn't anything out of the ordinary for Mr. McDougall to stop eating in the middle of a meal, run up stairs, pack his grip and sneak out the back door without telling a soul about it. Sometimes he would be gone for months; sometimes for years. Indeed, on the occasion- of his last exodus, the family gave him up for dead. That's when he was heading for Patagonia, an unexplored country ‘at that time. Commander Brown did “his best to persuade his boyhood friend to return home, but it wasn't any use. Eventually, however, King George McDougall got tired ‘of bossing the Patagonians and returned to Indianapolis. Just when that was, I don't seem able tb remember. I know he did, though, because he lies buried in Crown Hill,
So They Say—
IN MY opinion, the rank and file of Americans are overwhelmingly against political isolation and understand that the international peace cannot be maintained without an international security organization with power to act—Senator Charles W. Tobey of New Hampshire,
I FAVOR the Bretton Woods proposals. The ex.
the post-war’ period, for the economy of the world as a whole and for our own country, —~Edward E. Brown, chairman First National bank, Chicago. ' . . .
I WOULD say that Germany is not down and out. Germany is on her knees and needs watching.— Field Marshal Jan Christian Smuts, prime minister of South Africa. . - » WE HAVE enough bread (in France) for imme~ diate needs, but the situation as affecting other foods is likely to grow worse.—Leon Jouhaux, géneral secretary of the French Confederation in the United Sates. I v
. » ' 4
AMERICA : . . independence. —Mme. brigadier general #eported to Japanese. ita = Coa -
"HE (the got public y 3 but unless
—— =
ny
he |
port of American capital will be highly desirable in |
of_Labor, while |
upheld and fortified our self-re-spect and kept alive our aspirations for liberty and t Lim, wife of a Filipiho be a prisoner of the
gai)
“ANY DOG KICKER ISN'T AS GOOD AS THE DOG” By “Ruth V.-L: “Taggart, Indianapolis For myself and all other dog lovers, I say hats off to R. E. Braun for his letter in The Times last evening, Friday the 13th, to the hymn-singing dog kicker . . . And I say any dog kicker isn’t as gqod as the dog he kicks, and they like black fur with a white stripe down the back: better than they do a little dog—it is nearer their kin and kind. = = ” “JAPS MUST BE TOLD - TERMS OF PEACE” By E. RB Egan, 701 Markwood ave.
1
are in a position to demolish the Japanese mainland as completely as they did Germany, and forcing the five million men of their armies in- | side their line of defenses to surrender, the very nearly identical setup must be approached in the same strategy. i Thousands of leaflets must be pre-| pared in the Japanese language— dialects together with broadcasts in Japanese informing them of the terms of peace, and that the Japanese militarists precipitated the war and they are fighting to preserve an outworn system that will destroy their economy as long as it prevails and the war party must be destroyed or its leaders surrendered, even as the Germans, and which would prevent the destruction of their cities and industrial centers, otherwise they can expect the thousand to two-thousand daily plane raids that brought German defeat, and in half the time, proceeding to demonstrate its effectiveness on morale and military objection.
| the war.
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious. .controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words, Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter cor--respondence regarding them.) |
them with the certainity of defeat
_ Now that the allied powers have ang the utterly bootless futility of derranstzated to. the. Japanese they,
continuing a struggle in which they Were ‘geaten by members’ and ‘résources before they started. This should ' be face-saving for
the most fanatical militarist the
| world over, for this, indeed, is the
theme of the new Security Council —the World Organization, and {which was the. deciding factor” in Russia’s mighty contribution that she made did not win the
| war—would not have even won it
for Russia without our aid. Far removed from hostilities, we could produce unmolested. And if we have a mission it is not alone our political idealogies, it is our Godgiven world situation. Let us not lose sight of this fact. n ” - “ARE WE RIGHT IN NOT TRUSTING RUSSIA?" By Marvin Walton, 48 W. 21st st. We are asked not to say anything against Russia because it would hinder our relationship with that country. In other words, say nothing that would create a feeling of sus-
This, together with the rocket
| good no matter where they landed
|in Japan. {not being able
| bombing that would be all to the|
picion on our part against Russia. I, |like many other people in the | United States, have that feeling -of to trust Russia.
| London declared thousands of | Nicholas I, when Czar of Russia,
| buildings were daily destroyed by | them until the landing fields were | discovered. It would.appear to the
used force in getting “what he wanted, such as when he marched
| ordinary observer these sante bombs | into Poland in 1830. On Oct. 14,
could intercept the suicide bomber before it could reach its target. But the same ruthlessness they exhibited
turned on the Jap mainland to overwhelm their fanatical war complex and completely disrupt their war-making industries, and nothing withheld that could impress
multiplied by the thousand will be signed at Dorpat.
1020, Russia signed a treaty with Finland which acknowledged the independence of Finland. This was On Sept. 1, |1939, Germany attacked Poland; lon Sept. 17, 1939, Russia invaded | Poland; oh Aug. 19, 1939, Russia and Germany signed a trade pact and a non-aggression pact which
Side Glances=By Galbraith
| helped Franco fight the Republic
le THINK, 4m sure, a brother's love
in the presence of Stalin was signed in Moscow on Aug. 24 by Von Ribbentrop and Molotov. ©n Nov. 30, 1939, Russia broke her treaty she had signed with Finland on Oct. 14, 1920, at Dorpat and attacked Finland. Is any of the above worth trusting Russia? Are we right in not trusting her? Mr. Roosevelt made concessions to Stalin. at Yalta. = Has Stalin lived up to his agreements at that conference? Why is Mr. Churchill surprised at Stalin's actions? Stalin doesn’t seem to be happy over the delay in not securing a large loan from the United States. 1 believe he wants about six million
latter as head of the communications division over the protest of the state department, according to Mr. Voorhis. Formerly on the top board of directors of I. T. “& T. was Lt. “Gen. Kirt-von Schroeder, whom the - California congressman described as “an official of. the notorious Schroeder bank and lieutenant-general in Hitler's own 8S. S. corps, which was the heart of the Nazi army.” . Westinghouse Electric is represented by Charles H. Powel, who is chief of the electrical and radio branch of the group council. The fuel and mining branch is headed by Philip Gaethke, formerly manager for Anaconda Copper Co. in upper Silesia. ’ In the oil section: with him is Brandon Grove, former head of Socony Vacuum in Romania, also a member of the TID oil and petroleum industry come mittee, and assistant chief of the petroléum division, The deputy chief of the economic division of the
dollars for reconstruction work in (Russia; he feels .as "though lend Sense should cover: fhe tecanstryc. {tion work in Russia. But he still {gives us no hint of Russia's good in|tentions. In other words, we should {give and ask no questions. I firmly believe he will have to really show {something to President Truman | before he will get his “yes” answer. | {President Truman, I believe, willl !match anything Stalin can dish out. | As for our Pacific war and Rus|sia’'s entrance, it will bring {forth |some big issues. If Russia comes {in her demands will probably be | control over Manchuria, inner Mon|golia and Korea—remember she lost {all of that to Japan in 1904.
I have the best confidence in President Truman. and his delegation at Potsdam. I sincerely hope the San Francisco Conference will not have been in vain—the whole matter lies with Russia. To those who fail to agree with my views and others on Russia, then show us where we are wrong. ” » » “PEOPLE SEEM TO LOVE {SLAVERY AT BAYONET POINT By Si Moore, Indianapolis. The Watchman said in The Times of July 2 that Holy Joe Stalin was the originator of wholesale mass murder, starvation, slave labor and other atrocities. From what little some of us have read during the past 30 years or more, it seems that Russia has produced several butchers, known as leaders. But people seem to love the bitter bread of slavery, especially when it is crammed down their throats with a bayonet. Even runty Franco is said to have so much blood of innocents on his hands that he never has to paint his nails. . . .
Robert Quillen sald that we
in various ways, which in turn set the stage for Hitler and Mussolini, thus starting the rivers of blood. . Thousands starve in India, China and other ‘countries, rather as a matter of course. This has been going on for years. . A boy in one of our military hospitals nearby is paralyzed in both arms and a nurse's aid found him with some 20 letters unread. And they report that the kraut prisoners there get better food. But why should we worry? A woman could not get a few gallons of gas on a doctor's order so she could drive a few miles to help take care of her father who is dying of cancer. But one member of the ration board drives 20 miles to work every day both ways and his wife drives during the day while he sits in- the office. 2 So on, and on. Where will it
but what would we do, ‘with the powder?
DAILY THOUGHT . If a man say, I love God, and
hateth ‘his brother, he is a lar:
group control council, civil affairs section of the army, - who has much, to do witli appointments to®the council and ts. various units, is Robert E. McConnell. He. American subsidiary-of I. G. Farben, when it was taken over by the alien property custodian. .
IN WASHING TON—
Party Line
By Frank: Aston
WASHINGTON, July 23.—Now we Know how the government gets those quotations from Tokyu radio. The Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service here takes care of it. Through the agency's headquarters pass about 30 million words a day from broadcasting stations throughout the world. The words from Tokyo are among the 30 million. Keeping in DR an touch with the Nip homeland seemed a cinch, as we watched it. We stood in front of a teletype machine beside a pretty girl who had been born in America of Japanese parents. “Tokyo is now coming on the air,” she said. “Our operator will hear it in Portland. Or maybe in Hawail or Guam. He will send it to us on this machine as fast as he hears it. He knows Japanese and English.” . The machine started typing rows of English letters, all of them running gogether, line after line. It made. no sense to us and we asked the girl whether the thing had stuck. She shook her head and began to mark off chunks of the letters with a pencil. The Pacific operator was hearing Japanese words in dot-dash code and spelling out the Japanese on his machine in English letters without allowing spaces between words. The girl's pencil was marking the spaces.
lt Might Mean Most Anything
We put a finger on one word which was spelled in English letters but was really a Japanese word. We asked what it meant. “It can’t translate one Japanese word by itself,” she said. “Each word takes its meaning from the other words in the sentence. That word could mean ‘extravagant living’ or ‘bomb shelter".” Tearing off a sheet of neatly subdivided lines, she pointedly turned her back on us and began to translate. The translation, which we didn’t see, was sent to the department's editor. He ran a pencil over it, indicating what passages might. interest various gove ernment officials, - : Those sections promptly were teletyped to des-' ignated points, including the office of war informa--tion, which would screen the information for newspaper use. Our translating girl was one of a corps which hears and translates foreign broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Each translator occupies a soundproof booth, listening through headphones while recording the program on discs. He or she makes notes . in English on a typewriter and whisks this digest to the editor. He decides what shctions, of the program, if any, should be translated and transcribed for government use. AE ‘ The department can’t translate any standard lan--guage, including 17 Chinese dialects. ok
A House Full of Gadgets : The listening post is a tiny house in a Maryland. woods, 10 miles from Washington. There we saw an
sisted was nothing but a group of radio sets. : “Each one is like yours at home,” he said, “except we have more knobs to turn. And. sa lot more
stop? Japan even wants to quit. antenna. You want to hear something.”
He put a headphone on us and we heard words. “That's Moscow,” he said. ‘You don't understand’ Russian, do you?” 3 We assured him we didn't. He kept turning knobs and plugging his sets into switchboards to transfer the sound to those translators in " : “Don’t you ever have any fun?” we finally asked “This is fun,” he said. “We're listening to the whole: world. With a war going on. Maybe. you mean; muSioHe idl oh Gide : He clapped the photes on us again. We heard
awesome mass .of equipment which the engineer in- .
fi Sondergrath, 1 I in a critical \ hospital. Pfc. Francis E- furlough after {action in Gen , Dies | ii Morris Capl: ® st. died yest hospital of hi June 19 when automobile col Those injure # end are: ; LLOYD KE! # Illinois st., crit § DONALD RI i box 277, critics i NOAH WAR i East st, fractu ELZA RENN # houn st. leg a j GORDON H. I SEE a ae Y JESSE BUT" ave. - . PAUL HOSE Ee -st., minor cuts if Knocke The Kelly yc that he was w #1 40 with Miss . | when a speed | | from the rea: 4 into the ditch. pe ble fracture of i tured leg and hospital: wher critical. Just a few mi i lice said, the 4 a group of sms; the Reeves lad, i Robert Reeves, [1 Is in ‘a critica : | hospital. Hit-and-run | responsible for | Noah Wardrip | Mr. Wardrip ws | Michigan st. t " and East sts. ¥ by a car whi tained several y to Methodist h } Went Ove fe Mr. Renner 1 FF cuts when a struck him at r ginia aves., pol [In the 2200 b 1 pkwy. a car + Hayward went urday night, gl: . continued over El: landed on its = Grove golf co
id JI
