Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1946 — Page 19
$ x ko a 3
. ; sreatest isting were George 3, Gen. MacArthur, n and Gen. Eisenchool pupils didn't
ago by a national same question of ing persons throws g. Gen, MacArthur dent Truman, Gen. rs. Roosevelt and
rman youths questhe and Churchill 1001 youngsters inbomb discoverer.”
p
hat Mr. Roosevelt Mr. Truman) that lve read about as time, his selection
survey in Germany ng of the coming the Russian zone, in top position. In ubtedly have been nch area where no r with the probable
sking the question
© do with the top .
pices of Bismarck, are probably more pinions of German
fo U.S.
ple information recontinental fortress. when Italy decided
ist for keeping Mr,
he Catholic church (he laymen who are to the Vatican, for
the Catholics have s strongest party in ria and the second
Europe’s chief bul- . of these Catholic ch reforms as are 3 respective nation 5. Truman or of Mr. political anti-com-a Christian church. that the Vatican is ew,_of the heads of 5 are as potent poTaylor is. concerned
4
Direct ECTION has also f the Vatican. Italy ing, and there are pope as almost the
merican soldiers as ‘aylor was similarly Because he is the President, he can while Ambassador of state. This fact y Li lO
o Scale
, is amply attested f Paris in 1783 that
t is that without Northwest Territory . That means that part of Canada. scales in America's revolutionary war. attack on Vincennes ured, for a British ppi river in a wide river to Pittsburgh. British force there, vania army and the leston and Augusta the American army, nd the revolutionary
iis plan, in reverse, rictory. It was the original states, plus Northwest Territory.
med portions of the { those who had no
s by George Rogers arican pioneers that of the basic things
1
1 War?
ankees if I ever felt iream before. id my old roommate | to dust at Salerno, ith low draft numm, and I will be a up the paper and von the war against
e 18 months of cohat is supposed to ut about. the only slligerent with after aghett! or maybe a
yd for another rye r a spell before .he
ect, I used to think the boss for awhile, , to a handy little ch nobody else has than anybody else's you win a war you cked and you let a itself fat on your your gat which you threaten you and
+ Into my pants to hed kicking the tar 'ybody who puts the t the same rate as
15. he full implications understand I can't and if this is the ell with it and let's gather is on tap.”
1, S, POLICY QUIZ
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1 :
1
a
‘THURSDAY, AUG. 22, 1046 oy
‘Make Plans for Howe Picnic re
BUFFEY TO ASK
‘Sabotage’ Charges Prompt Plans for Probe.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U, P). —8e ator Joseph F Guffey (D. Pa.), said today he will ask for a full dress investigation of the state de-! partment if charges that career] diplomats are sabotaging President | Truman's Palestine policy can be substantiated. Senator Guffey, a veteran member of the foreign relations commit. tee, told a reporter he has “long known” of powerful influence wielded by a “diplomatic social lobby.” He described himself as “disappointed, but not" surprised” at charges brought yesterday by Bartley C. Crum, a member of the Anglo-American Palestine committee. Mr, Crum, a San Francisco lawyer, declared in a speech that some state department officials deliberately were sabotaging this.nation's program for a Jewish homeland in Palestine, Names “Saboteur” He said the committee had been shown a secret department file indicating every policy statement on Palestine from the time of Presi-|
dent Wil ral lison was countered by 8! weetheart of Lt
Planning a Howe high school alumni picnic Sunday at Riley park in Greenfield are (left to right): Joan Newby, Ruthanne Gossom, Albert Maher, Jane Gossom and Marvel Ikerd. The picnic will start at 10 a. m, and last through the afternoon.
'Cuddle-Bum' Is Acquitted Of Boyington's Charges
SAN DIEGO, Cal, Aug. 22 (U. guilty of these charges, or of any P.).—Mrs. Lucy Malcolmson, jilted of them,” he said. : Col, Gregory, “Congratulations,” Col. Boyington secret message - level” MeSHake Lom e109 mie} (Pappy) Boyington, emerged the muttered as he passed the counsel ing nothing would come of “the Victor today from a court hearing table “where Mrs. Malcolmson was policy that aired the marine air ace’s love seated, her.eyes bright with relief Or 4 | letters. after hearing the decision. dar. Crum singled oul Loy Bene The proceedings had been billed, “All I got out of this was the Middle East, Near East pa African | 28 a preliminary hearing on Col. | privilege of paying income taxes : | Boyington’s charges that the red-|on the money,” he commented bit-
affairs division, as one of the of-| Mr. Henderson would comment on | trusted to her while he was overseas.| Mrs, Malcolmson attorney, Richard troduce a resolution when congress details of a romance between Col./he had left at her Reno residence. Palestine committes {he publicly jilted her to marry Ac-|as “My Darling” and “Dear Cuddlees (against Mrs. Malcolmson, 35; were off their engagement via the newsOIL MEN LINKED TO : “There does not appear to be any| Twenty-four hours later he eloped taken Sept. 9 against two ‘ell proBRIEFS ‘UNTAUGHT' FLIER of the National City bank of EvansThe promoters are reported toe the subject of a discussion of cided today that a boy who wants bezzled during a four-year period. .gicine before the Indianapolis|benefit of a single lesson ought to Mr. Caughran said investigation| 4 party and golf tournament will | Hopkins, a theater usher, had had presented to the grand jury. Friday he decided he'd had enough. at least a one-eighth interest in| wife are the parents of a baby and—although he never had a fly-
ficials sabotaging American policy. | paired New York socialite embezzled | terly. the charges. But the court heard less about the Cantillon, handed Col. Boyington meets in January to investigate the Boyington and Mrs. Malcolmson| Col. Boyington, who described Mr. Crum’s charges. substantiate’, os Frances Baker, a blond. |bum” ahd begged, her to “do somedismissed yesterday by Municipal papers, last Jan. 9 a féw days bePERRY MAY NE TRIED cause to believe the defendant | with Miss Baker, °' : moters who are linked with Sterville, U. 8. Attorney Howard] WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P).| have borrowed $110,000 of the $142-\ py Thurman B. Rice, professor at|to fly badly enough to steal a plane He is now serving a 15-year sen. Optimist club Wednesday at the have a chance. has continued since the bankers! ico be on the day's program. his dreams of the “wide blue yonInvestigation also has shown, de- | clerk in the 2d army medical lab-|So, police charged, he stole a plane oil’ wells. in Illinois. To make 200d | daughter, Katheryn Louise,’ born | ing lésson—managed to take off: In| RR TAR aS
{after he crash-landed, and he has
{
. The Brotherhood of Painters 2 BICYCLISTS HURT [Decorators and Paperhangers of ii hud 4 "ine en" America, local 47, will have a picnic | Yesterday, however, Capt. George IN AUTO CRASHES for members and their families 10] 5 Maines. Americanism _ director Two young bicyclists received miles south of Indianapolis on Me- |g. +10 Army and Navy union, said slight injuries yesterday as the re- ridian st. Saturday. Those not hav- nis organization will try to have sult of collisions with automobiles.|ing transportation have been asked no; paroled in its care so he can Patsy Lou Patrick, 7-year-old to meet in front of Painters’ hall, be sent to a flying school at the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aster 29 S. Delaware st, at 10 a. m. |union’s expense. Patrick, 354 E. Morris st. was treated g Capt. Maines explained that any
at City hospital for Injuries fo ber ARMY WILL TRY WAC |would-be flier who can take over a right shoulder after having ridden lane the way Marsh did is a nather bicycle into the sitie of a car IN JEWEL THEFT CASE DE ao pilot and ought to have driven by Walter T. Eavers, 42, of FRANKFURT, Aug. 22 (U. P.).— |g chance to try his wings instead 1328 Hartford st, at the intersec-| An American military court ruled of peing convicted as a criminal. tion of Sanders and New Jersey today that Capt. Kathleen Durant | ———————— — sts. : was still in the women's army corps| MORTALITY RATE HIGHER At Ghio st. and Senate ave. 16-| and subject to army jurisdiction for | WASHINGTON—An average in-year-old Earl Webb, 419 N. Hamil- [trial In the $1,500,000 Kronberg crease of 120 per cent in mortality ton ave. received bruises and cuts| jewel theft case. {for the first six months of 1945 was when his bicycle was struck by an| Immediately after the ruling, Mrs. reported in the 12 largest cities of auto operated by Benjamin Shroyer, Durant stood mute when asked to |western Holland; the greatest num42, of 743 N. Wallace st. He also enter a plea on a long list of charges | ber of deaths was in the food-short-wag treated at City Hospital. | which were read by the court. lage days of February.
TIMES SERIAL—
Daughter of Mine . + + . ByR.Louise Emery
THE STORY: Cecily has organized would one day do to break that|in this house of ours, my heart Bet own wt Cainging back bailing 'stiff-necked pride of Cecily’s. |cried, why was the peace never girls she doesn’t like. | Knowing this, I could afford even | enough for me? CHAPTER 16 | to feel sorry for them. Cecily fol- | I could not sleep that night. At : - |lowed me into her room when I|last I made a pretense of not wishI ASKED unbelievably, “Ceclly, wont pack to hang the skirts in her| ing to disturb Robert and slipped you don’t mean that you'd actually closet. {away from him to the bed that had ding another girl—hurt her perhaps, 4 8 been Cecily’s. - for life=" | er Mayle. she said, “I 2 nm ; : ....| wanted to put Corinna’s name up—| THE NEXT three years were moShe ‘had ho Business wasting sus I knew she'd never come in mentous ones for the entire world to join,” Cecily returned, pouring without Mercedes—" |and our lives did not escape the demy tea. “It wouldn't be a kind- | I paused with the skirts still over | mands of war, First there was conness to Jet her come in—she hasn't my arm. “Cecily,” I said, “Merce- scription in the United States and enough money to keep up.with the|des is worth all the Ella Mays and | then came Pearl Harbor. Stevie rest of us and her father is\nothing| Janines in the world put together,| Ralston came home from the Tast but a garbage collector.” and some day you're going to have|to stay until he should be drafted: “He contracts for the salvaging to see it. You can spare yourself a| This time Myrtle Ralston offered of waste products. He'll make nore | great deal in the future if you'll| no opposition, facing it squarely money as times goes on-—it's ai start now to look for something | that there was no use in being too new project for him. And what | else other than money or social|coneerned about Steve's mature difference does it make, anyhow?| position in people.” |years. His young ones might be all His daughter is pretty and sweet.” | “I. think they're both terribly he would ever have: if he wanted important, Aunt Mavis.” The im-|Cecily now he was free to marry placable opinion of the very young. | her, “So does a mole think the uni- * on x verse is entirely dark,” I said. “But| DELLA WAS all for it—Cecily a «| perhaps you consider his ignorance | Ralston but with Steve away ap-
Neither the state department nor | $9000 of nearly $20,000 he had en-| As he walked out with his wife, Mr. Guffey said he would in- financial transactions than it did of {the Congressional Medal of Honor department if other members of the| that came to an abrupt end when | Mrs. Malcomson in his love letters al { The nine counts of grand theft!thing about marrying me,” broke Judge Eugene Daney Jr. |fore they were to be married. = Federal grand july action may be LOCAL CHANCE IS OFFERED ling J. Perry, former vice president Caughran announced, “Adding Life to Your Years” will|—The army and navy union de000 which the bank executive em-| eo Indiana university school of (and take off in the dark without tence in the federal penitentiary. 'Ulen Country club, Lebanon. A| Seventeen-year-old John Marsh conviction and the results will be ——— der” frustrated for seven years. Last Master Sgt. El Gibson, chief | spite Perry's denials, that he held |oratory at Pt. Harrison, and his|at 3 a’ m. at-a small local airport his- oil investment which he’ ‘made | Aug.’ 13 at the station’ hospital. | the dark; during a light rain; and and hoi ain betting.
sn o CECILY GIGGLED. “Aunt Mavis -you're quaint.” “What do the other girls’ fathers do?” I persisted.
“They're in businesses their fam-| commendable?” | pealed to her as an ideal arrangeilies can be proud of,” Della chimed a 8 8 | ment, Cecily, of course, would rein. “IT DOES all right for the mole,” main at home with Della.
“I suppose playground work ranks with garbage collecting?” I queried. “Salvaging kids who aren't as lucky as Cecily and Ella May and Janine, Is that why Corinna hasn't been acceptable to your sorority, Cecily?” Cecily went scarlet, but Della stirred her tea, unembarrassed. “I don’t see where you hav¥ any kick coming. You've had your chances to amount to something. It isn’t Cecily’'s fault if Fou like having Corinna hobnobbing with the scum of the earth.”
Cecily answered flippantly. | I waited tensely for announceMy answer was hard. “It isn't|ment of their engagement, but it going to do for you,” and then'I|did not come. despised myself for allowing her to| Val had wanted to volunteer but see how unsteady my lips were. Robert persuaded him to wait. He “It doesn't matter to me that|was majoring ir chemistry in YOU haven't any money,” she tried | junior college and his professors to make amends. said that he was a wizard. I felt that inevitable moment . ¢ nu rushing upon us now, and the wea-| “BUT STEVE is aiming for the pon I held was poised to strike and | Air Force,” I told Robert. “Val shatter all the strength of Della’s|could make it easily, He wants golden one, i Cecily and he can't possibly comI Stepped away from Cecily diz- pete with Steve as things are.” " zily, trying to push the time far| “I doubt that Cecily would be WE WENT on drinking our tea.|from me, wanting to spare her— [good for Val." ' Cecily was still uncomfortable, I|and myself—as long as I could. | “He'd be good for HER,” I said. saw, but Della seemed pleased. She “. na |“And besides—" 1 broke off. And though she had settled my hash| TI NEARLY spoke . then - but the besides if she married Val she for not letting Corinna take the|years held me silent. I went down would be away from Della's inlargesse she had offered.” °* [the hill blindly, seething with the |fluence. I could be with her often, And sitting there, looking from | pent up words. Corinna had din-|teach her all the things Della had one to the other of them, seeing | ner waiting for me and Robert took | neglected. : their smugness, thely utter inca-|off my oxfords and rubbed my| Married to Steve she would be pacity for compassion except within | aching feet a little before he slipped | almost as inaccessible to me as she the limits of their own charmed my scuffs over them. Was now. :
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/ a AP GABARDINE P. J.'s g “Bitsie 0
circle, I knew inescapably what I' There ‘was such love and pedce (Te Be Continued)
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Little Flirts “
in :
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