Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1946 — Page 19
on
eman who does the || ters of his party in § hey get to the polls i to the county conhe candidates don't mmitteemen. ly reform victory. al committeemen who ceptable to the soot too tough a job Il on voters just the d if their cause has rs to do what so few inet committeeman, vith the statementing in opposition to
ICS for their health * better government. ng election, too, But
citizens committee cessful nominees of roup organized with | mind. And that is || control of the party ,
oes i
' to the mess within , ection of a county with the defeated zens committee , , as not indebted to, with success in tie | old or creation of a ]
Before!
at he did not know . Taber had charges ore the Mead com-! recollection of any » the Garsson comd if there had been § 7 social” Mr, Dickpreviously in testi-§ as one of the conne calls were made.) in the 1937 debate l to be appropriated | brother of Murray’ the Mead committee | ver brought ouf, was committee formally §
ate that not a cent vas to go to Murray| vestigations I have! been indicted.”
ray Garsson showed n 1815 and received} erly conduct charge -} d larceny and dis sts followed and the tion “reflecting that dwney Madden and | yrohibition brewery.” ations in the Lindd by the labor de-
ite, praised the work ay Garsson. He also nt of the additional } he committee, which .
n Lakes
his second inaugural ye’s suggested Indian lians were better off , of whites who went. 1d fended for them-
e United States govand on indefinitely— 1olded with a casual’
you may get by eye | awattomies) as they 1e lease on their land time came for them ersuasively, defiantly, Awed by government led. 1eduled departure, in! little burial ground, |, to their past, and
8, the goods of 858 my wagons, and the s, in Marshall county, age river in Kansas, yay. Thus one of the nd of North America
that have gone sinoe ut of Indiana, every stern Hemisphere has
0 Grow.
d, worked untiringly | a “United States ofy met with little en-} tuck ‘blindly to th& and paid the price
g to be much easier n the time of Briand. y than then, Europe nd world war behind nass of Russia thrust And the rise of the que power and wealth, f all nations, notably},
urope that Included | rmany would consti-|| to 200,000,000. The world and has within lizations and culture Il these people could! jously together, there ot be strong enough! tside aggression and second only to that, ent,
Power [ING in this project t with the ideals and ations. Indeed, the ~ specifically provides llary of the “regional entered hii! In the
hich a United States r upon its own popu~ ght well restore the ‘has been so fatally
speeds over this country at regu-
{SWEDEN SILENT ABOUT ROCKETS
Censorship Lid Is Clamped On Mystery Missiles.
By E. K. LUNDQUIST - United Press Staff Correspondent STOCKHOLM, July 25, — The
Swedish army imposed a rigid censorship today on details of dtringe missiles streaking at fantastic
lar intervals for several weeks. The mounting scale rocket activity over scattered parts of Scandinavia produced a state of jitters]
and a crop of rumors approaching ;
those of wartime. ' Military authorities were reported to have received a flood of new reports on the rockets or flying bombs or whatever the darting objects actually may be. The original theory they were meteorites long since has gone by the boards. i ' Locations Kept Secret Most of the latest account of things shuttling comet-like through the skies come from southern Sweden, They indicated the “bombardment” was moving southward after | being concentrated over north Swe- | den for the last two weeks. i The army issued instructions noti to publish the exact location and time of the appearance of the missiles. While it gave no official explanation, the order was taken to be aimed at avoiding contributing to the information of any “foreign power” ‘suspected. of carrying | out rocket experiments in the Baltic. The process of elimination narrows the field of experimenters pretty well to the Russians or the | British or both. The Baltic was the favorite testing ground of the | German V-weapons and the AngloSoviet forces now occupy the same regions. “Finland Reports Cases One of the latest manifestations was described. as a “fire bullet
zooming over soundlessly and ter- __
ribly fast at an altitude of 600 feet, and visible for only a few as » A skyrocket-like “giant torpedo” was seen Tuesday anne over Norrland, 500 mile north of Stockhold. Similar objects were seen in the same area on three successive nights last week. Helsinki dispatches said new | rocket bombs were seen in many places over Finland last week.
A typical account by a witness!
said the “big rockets, emitting a dazzling light and buzzing sound, move fast at high altitude.”
NOTED DRAFT DODGER FACES NEW CHARGE
DOWNINGTON, Pa., July 25 (U.| P.).—Grover C. Bergdoll, 53, weal- |
thy world war I draft dodger, was held in $2500 bail today on charges | of threating his butler with a gun and punching him in a dispute over | the servant's back wages. Arraigned before Justice of the Peace George Taylor, Bergdoll asked and was granted a continuance of the hearing until. next Monday night su he could obtain counsel, His wife, Berta, posted bail for him. Bergdoll was seized at the farm home near Thorndale where his wife was reported living alone. Police said he offered no resistance.
Pol ice Are Una ble to : Revive ; Victim ]
City police apply the rescuscitator unsuccessfully to Charles Fossee, who drowned yesterday in Fall Creek.
YOUTH DROWNS IN FALL CREEK
Officers’ Efforts to Revive Charles Fgssee Fail.
Charles Fossee, 14-vear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fossee, 2042 Hillside ave., was drowned yesterday afternoon when he jumped into | Fall creek near Keystone ave. for |a swim. | His young playmate, Henry Rippy, | 12. of 4045 Keystone ave. stood by, helplessly as Charles sunk * from sight in the 10-foot hole in the _Charies Fossee stream. The Rippy youth told police he
and - Charles had rio intention of ADDITIONAL PARKING bathing when they went to the
creek. He said he refused to join
young Fossee as he plunged into BANS ARE APPROVED. ix.
Parking bans on two more city Passing Motorist Stopped : A : Barbara Kane, 11, of 1910 Bloyd {residential streets was ordered by ave, and Eugene ‘Davis, 9, of 1948 the safety board todey in another Tallmaj ave, who were fishing in step to ease traffic congestion. the vicinity, heard the screams of | The board approved the recom- the drowning youth and rushed to
: . the street -to hail a passing motormendation by City Traffic Engineer i chares Trappen, 3665 N. Colo-
Frank Y. Hardy and Police Inspec- rado ave tor Audry Jacobs to prohibit park- Mg Trappen drove to a telephone
ing on the north side of Schiller st., in the neighborhood and called po-
between Meridian and Pennsylvania sts., and che east side of Hamilton ave, between Southeastern and ,¢ water about 30 feet downstream English aves, from the spot where he was The board also awarded a $424.45 drowned. {contract to the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. to apply roof: coating to | the city market. | Board members aiso gpproved the | demotion of Chauffeur Jody Day to, ! private first grade in the fire de-! | partment
Police recovered the boy's body one-half hour later in four feet
Rites Not Arranged Police were unable to centact the i youth’s mother at the time of the drowning as She had taken another | son, Robert, 12, to City hospital for routine Wit treatment, Charles’ body was taken to Moore SHAKESPEARE IN SC SOVI IET Mortuaries Peace chapel where ar- { LONDON (U. P.).—Over 1,0,000 rangements have not been com-| copies of William Shakespeare's pleted. - works have been published in So-| Survivors besides his parents and | viet Russia since 1917, according to brother. Robert. are another broth{an Izvestia article broadcast over! er, Richard. 13. and four sisters, Moscow “radio... The bard's poem's! Rosemary, 11; Marie, 6; Frances, 5, |and plays have been translated and Lola, 1 {into the 27 languages of the Soviet m- { unjon.
EE Eye Doctor Opens | East Side Office
Johnson ave. |
Dr. R. M. Graves, 5807 Lowell | Ju . ave., has announced the opening of | ¢ an office for the practice of op-| 17 tometry at 10]
x
lock: <
A veteran of] world war 11, Dr. Graves served | four years with | the army medi-| cal corps, spending most of that time in ‘the eye clinic of Newton D. Baker geneial hospital, Martinsburg, W. Va. A native of Irvington, he practised three years at Kokomo before he entered the service. Dr. Graves 1s married and has two children
Dr. Graves
SWITCHES HORSES WICHITA FALLS, Tex. (U. P) AM. C. Sherman of Wichita Falls is ecually at home on an iron horse or a flesh-and-blood animal. He works at the Ft. Worth and Denver City railroad roundhouse and rides + horse to and from work daily
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