Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1946 — Page 13

bents |

or renomination. in the .country centage of turne nt failure of the g to its. expecta= ported Big Jim ie made nothing lis victory came ubtedly his hillther than from strength. is cone

showing in Cali= 6 candidate for ny, who lose out jovernor Warren, 1s assuring elec‘en put himself ican Presidential lests the C. I. O,

ns can be drawn uld appear that ibbon C. IL O. is ne too zealously, ant in campaign he implication of ot ready for that icted well to too r direction. r wave of strikes polities,

far, with incume ndicate that the congress toward he public still is es not want to 1 here, or eannos technicalities of

y crystallised yes,

Now

rented house in ation of the bulk )artment., gent got annoyed company, whose m. of a 'Baturday they would move

, banana republie 1e furniture was kegs of dishes. ed costs another et around to oole

’s, hate their job, viches, hot coffee, conversation. In hina and splintertheir matrimonial r dislike for work, re yesterday, and cash large enough ) the driver, who not tear the back hard money. ie stairs and they ith ropes: because’

sit for weeks, she up the desk and either and it's no hem up here and so I have put the have to pay store

She looks fairly lips are flecked

ample

indreds of shops, . And everybody ans out we'll build beautiful city.” lue is due to the y fighting armies, yr bread. Wartime otives and alumichinery was taken nearer Nazi war Russian and Naz ilitops and on the

id German cities, f air bombs. Since hat little Germany portation, nor ine ack up the pengo. \ble as the falling

seasant and highly rip to Washington ommunist, Matyas n of government; minister of justice, ryongyossy, of the

laim to return of ken to Germany; 1sly, aid in stabilie y which goes inte

rn Aid

tht easily be dise an regimes. Small 1 and the United uin and slaughter

\archy would have dum had not been stion of the Cone f Christian Demoreferred the mone rs declared against y would lose votes

that an enormous oted for the monthe Socialists had fes, the monarchy 00 for the republic,

tendency of the , of the House of sidering the bitter gainst it, the mone d by the vote they

e referendum went won by a narrow n in an impossible on, the basis of 45 avor of a republic, te obtained for the hat, in five or 10 id. He's a young not abandoned the 1e exile into which

gives up his throne,

i & : EE , J y oF . LE

vi

“WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1046 a

By HENRY REIGER United Press Staff Correspondent ° SAN FRANCISCO, June 12.—Two ample self confidence. newlywedded landlubbers told to- Married after an island courtship, | day how they spent a 40-day honey-|they were discharged from their |3dmiring navy moon ‘aboard a 29-foot yawl in % respective services in April and |

copy Of Napier's theorems, plus| of it”

to the Golden Gate. {honeymoon cruising home in their The sun-tanned .couple, Everett own “luxury liner.” 1 di voard.’ Hepp, 31, and his wife, Dorothy, For their mobifé honeymoon craft |91Ve OVErboar

“There was

Gate” 40 days. after they set sail|—-a four-ton yawl with an 18-horse repair them.” from Honolulu. [poner auxiliary engine. He Their only previous experience at| They stocked the craft with food— sea was aboard the ships that took canned ham, bacon and macaroni— | them to Honolulu. {took on 90 gallons of water and | the way. Mr. Hepp, an Atlantic City, N.| {then headed for the mainland. J, attorney and former army| When they stepped ashore at the io “keep from sergeant, and his pretty wife, form-| Oakland, Cal, yacht harbor they |

Spokane, Wash., crossed 2000 miles | Veteran mariners. of open ocean in their tiny canvas! Hit a Few Squalls rigged craft, “We hit a few squalls,” Their lone navigational. equip-! {Hepp said, ment was a second-hand sextant, [trip was uneventful.

Skipper |

All

Landlubber and Bride. Spend Honeymoon Crossing Pacific in Their 29-Foot Yawl

a slide-rule and a well-thumbed now is some ice cream-—and siewey) The tee cream was furnished by |

Mr. Hepp then described how the | { / hazardous voyage from » Honolulu | immediately decided to spend their | \yawl four times sprung leaks. /

said the voyage was made | | under sail nearly 90 per cent of |’ They were becalmed Sev- | |eral times but just idled the engine |

Mr. Hepp, who once made a 900- | er WAVE and once a resitlent of Were nonchalant as a couple of mile Alaskan trek a graduate of the University of | California. The Hepps now plan to \ motor to Atlantic City where they |* . “but on the whole the will make their home and he wil Virginia Emrich I want resume his law practice,

personnel,

nothing td do but! ' he said modestly, |

Frances Sebano

25, sailed their craft through “the they purchased the “Jolly Beggar” “and swim under the ship and

being bored.”

by dog team, is |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES - iy Washington High Seniors Honored

Lucille Heck

Ruth Greenlee

Plenty of New

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A joy fo use and to wash. New floral patterns in a riot of color, all fast to washing, and on sturdy long-wearing

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Draperies, Fifth Floor

l

Marjorie Murphy

“ Mary Gunnels

Angeline

Lynch

Marjorie Long

| Twenty-seven George Washington high school seniors have re- | celved scholarships or grants this semester to 12 schools and colleges Those pictured above and their jchoice of schools are Frances Se- | bano, Marian college; Virginia Em|rich, Hanover college, Lucille Heck, a local nurses training school; Ruth Greenlee, Central Normal college; | Marjorie Murphy, Franklin college; | Marjorie Long, Normal College of American Gymnastic Union; Mary Gunnels, Nazarene college, and Angeline Lynch, 8t. Vincent's hospital training school for nurses. Other scholarship winners were Carol Ross, Jeanne Agnew, Nada Lalioff, Jacqueline Griffin, Olga | Alexoff, Marjorie Mott, Rosalyn | Rees, | Muetzel to Butler university; Marjorie McCurdy, Dawanda Belle and Shirley Scarbrough to Indiana | university extension school; Norma Schnarr, Jacqueline Brooks, Alice |'Daroff and Angeline Geloff to In- | diana university and Mary Ann | Kish, Fred Behning and Dorothy King to Purdue university.

ATTACK ON TITO LAID TO BRITISH

Mikhailovitch avs London Ordered Clash.

BELGRADE, June 12 (U. P.), | Gen. Draja Mikhailovitch testified at his treason trial today that a| " British liaison colonel named Bailey | instructed him to “liquidate and | | annihilate” Marshal Tito's rival | partisan forces, denouncing them as| “those Communists.” | Col. Bailey came to his head-| quarters in November, 1942, to prepare for a planned invasion of| Yugoslavia in the spring, Mikhailo-| {vitch said under cross- examination

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Those Oriental patterns that practically never

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ooking

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‘on the thitd day of his trial. |

The instructions he received from Col. Bailey, he said, were to | | the partisans to the death, with | no encouragement for establishing | la common front among the Yugo-| slav guerrillas against the Germans.

British Issue Denial i

(In London the foreign office de- | | nied assertions at the Mikhailovitch trial that British agents were in- | strumental in encouraging him to fight Marshal Tito. A spokesman | said all British officers in contact | with Mikhailovitch were instructed {to work for an agreement between | the Chetniks and partisans for a | united front against German.) Gen. Mikhailovitch was reluctant | to testify regarding Bailey's instruc- | tions. Stalling, he said this testimony should be saved for a secret | session. The crowd hissed, the court banged for order, and the presiding judge told Gen. Mikhailovitch to continue, adding: “There will be no secret sessions.”

! Identifies Messages

Gen. Mikhailovitch identified messages by which he gave direct orders to Italians to attack the partisans He admitted signing two messages | which ordered a lieutenant to seek {help from the Italians in clearing partisans from the bank of the Draginja river in Bosnia. The Italians sent a battalion for action against the partisans on receipt of his order, the defendant testified. He said that the possibility of the Chetniks obtaining a beachhead for the planned invasion of Yugoslavia by the allies was threatened by partisan attacks on his forces

LOCAL BRIEFS

Flames early today partially destroyed the roof of the residence of | Bee Smith, 453 W. 17th st." Be- -| ginning in a closet, the fire srepy

up a wall to the roof before firemen arrived. The blaze was extinguished | in a few minutes. The Marion county Greenback {committee will meet in the Maple | grove, Keystone and Troy ave. | Sunday at 2 p. m. to map plans for |the fall election, — 3 William Bunch, 40, of 0928's W. | New York. st, and his wife, Opal, | were held by police today on va|grancy charges following a shoot[ing at their tavern under their | residence last night. Witnesses said the couple was quarreling when Mrs. Bunch got a revolver and fired | three shots. One police said, struck | Bunch in the foot.

| | |

The Fountain Square A. C. Girls Circle is sponsoring a field day from 4 to. 8 p. m. today at Finch park. | The youth organization will crown their summer queen, also. |» —— Henry Langsenkamp Sr. president of Langsenkamp-Wheeler }Brass works of Indianapolis, was| awarded a 50-year foundry service! pin at the recent golden jubilee congress of the American Foundrymen's association. Mr. Langsenkamp, who began his career ‘as an | apprentice molder, has a record of| 185 years of service to the industry.

"ATTORNEY INJURED | IN TRAFFIC MISHAP

Samuel Blum, attorney and former deputy prosecutor, received a broken arm last night in a traffic collision at Shadeland ave. and 21st

st.

Driver of the other car, Charles’

Robert Sayers, 24, of R. R. 15, Box 729, received severe face lacerations.

Deputy sheriffs said they were if~]

vestigating a report that there was a third person involved in the aceci- | dent who left the scene before offi-

4

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Robert Miller and Maxine |

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And both from our second fleor collection of beach booty.

Above: An invitation to be indolent in two-piece figure-flattering cotton, printed in brown, blue and orange . .. 16.98 i Below: Cole of California designs a one-piece suit that fits like a coat

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