Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1946 — Page 15
Statue
, and soldiers like | rant. A statue of ight up his alley. created no end of one, was terribly dn’t get it through the best model in euchred out of the repeatedly pointed » leonine character t Mr. Simmons had 7 good. The judges that Mr, Simmons » ‘fact that India ited art critics on
rton’s statue took x-Governor Conrad amin Harrison and heir sleeves. Prof, way from Greenpoetry at the end © a historian should ckle verse. As for eir tiptoes to see
', Simmons had dege again. The fight ct until the followtion of The Herald f which had never
ld, “that Governor ed at a spiritual since the unveiling r. He spoke freely ul frame of mind. - good likeness, and d to throw around ke times in which ing ‘as if to go, Mr. incident connected vhich I disapproved wish it had been
e Paris’
France of Russian of the trouble and time Russia threat8. h Mr. W. J. Jordan Connally of Texas... iat the Congress of session at all. The e by the Big Four, Talleyrand. e meeting with the y spell progress. lagged professionne was had by all. rt was host and the the scene of such tnessed in all the leading wisecracker ices but it does not onquers the peace.”
1e nightside of this ens and emperors, ere. such giants of rnich, Castlereagh, ngton. the art of knifegt rarabb en enna, the congress hen, is it now, and ji
Report
em and weaknesses es,
aused to be investily violations of the an Ohio speech. . e cases hangs upon § ke trying to fight a rr musket. However, Iting some displays other citizens con-
1gress may have to zens the guarantees
shall - file a report ing the experience , pointing out the al statutes in the need for ‘legislation il rights.” ] on record and on table by the public ing it can now and ”
gress dly be ignored, nor the civil liberties al says he will pre-
er he be white or sorgia or Mississippi York or South Dase. It is about time n makes no excep-
} Factor
e threatened Anglo-
ywn of negotiations a British military British rights and of danger. Whether e completed in five 1e year as Cairo reromise on a three-
ual ‘assistance pact when - “neighboring Persia, Turkey and | _as Cairo ‘proposed, “were attacked? »d not only by Rus-
FRIDAY, AUG. “», 19%
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
F. 0. R. FEARED
Dewey Sprang _ Surprise, Miss Perkins Says.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (U, P). | —The late President Roosevelt had little respect for Thomas E. Dewey, but was forced to change his mind | about not making an active fourth-
FACTS ABOUT INDIANAPOLIS
About 300,000 workers are employed in our city ~100,000 in our growing industries.
[term election campaign when Mr, Dewey began gaining, former Sec(retary of Labor Frances Perkins said: today. _ Miss Perkins,
who served four
only woman cabinet member in the
{lier's magazine her * story of the [late President as a politician. She said that of the four ReWpublicans Mr, Roosevelt beat for the Presidency, he feared the late
"and the—
a8
£5 i 2 ro & 1 ule) l HORIZONTAL 3 Uselessly ISTEIEIPIS] vice-som [AIRLLIAS) 1,5 Pittured 4 Call (Scot.) Nar ae WILLIAM FT J Nl former presi- 5 Mouth parts FRIEIINIS] Of ER Sy dent of U.'S.. 6 Indian town ESSIBE] SMITH IE Chamber of 7 Flock (TIE EEAHIE Al a Commerce 8 Knot AOA 2E8 HER NI 5 2a 13 Fortification 9Scuth "= [CH IEA REPrCES 15 Intersticed latitude (ab.) 16 Every one ~, 10Flaps 30 Poem 45 War god 17 Ahead 11 Indolent 31 Moist 46 Nuisance 19 Encore 12 King of Pylus 34 Avers ~~ 47 Diminutive of 20 Speak 14 Neither 35 Powerful Edgar 21 Live 18 Compass point 37 Mulct 43 Sun 22 Drunkard 26 Beverage 38 Minor 49 Gagp 23 Diminutive 27 Number 42 Rim 54 Anent suffix 28 Rested 43 Strike 56 Three-toed | 24 Thus 29 Fold 44 Own sloth | 25 Chairs 29 Meaner 32 Meadow
n_ political pressure |
1¢ Churchill leaderthe Labo® goverh- | ar and too fast.' I party threatens the >t as an alleged tool ds are boring from list organization.
m PUTE involves the reignty over Sudan lo-Egyptian control. anda for home con- 7% issue. Both sides down, knowing that is for the Sudanese ‘0 or London... : r thie United Nations
® There are a lot of good
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33 Fruit drink 34 He —— four . years in office 38 Flower part 39 Preposition 40 Pronoun 41 Consumed 43 Forms 49 Footlike part 50 Spread 51 Texhs city 52 Art (Latin) §3 Etches 55 Spear 57 Sheerest 58 Brain passage
VERTICAL
1.Expunges 4 Narrate ‘wn
Wendell Willkie the most. He regarded Herbert Hoover as a “soljemn defeatist” and Alf M. Landon |as a “nice fellow who dian’ now
WILLKIE MOST [7
terms under Mr. Roosevelt. as the|
| nation's history, published in' Col-| §
“Back Home Again” d by Dale Bessire of the Brown county artists, and now on exhibit at the Nashville gallery.
much,” she said. Miss Perkins said United Mine | Workers President John L. Lewis breke with Mr. Roosevelt when he blocked Mr. Lewis’ political ambitions. © In 1040, she said, Mr. Lewis sought the Democratic nomination | as vice president. She quoted Mr, | Lewis as telling Mr. Rgosevelt that “if the vice presidential candidate on your ticket should happen to be: John L.: Lewis the objections (to a third term) would disappear.” | Mr. Lewis is reported «to have told associates after the campaign that he néver said such a thing. How Roosevelt Rated Foes Miss Perkins gave this summary of Mr. Roosevelt's opinion of his four Republican opponents: “Wendell Willkie, I think, was | more disturbing to Roosevelt as a | rival than anyone who ran against him. He recognized that the elements which forced Willkie’s nomination were not old-line Republic- | ans but people with some idea of progressiveness who, under other circumstances might have been converted to Roosevelt's cause. . “Roosevelt thought Hoover a solemn defeatist with no consciousness of people as human beings. {He had been shocked by President i Hoover's orders to drive the encamped veterans out of Anacostia flats in Washington. “Alfred Landon, Roosevelt thought wand often said, was a nice fellow who didn’t know much—just a figfurefiead in what the Republicans knew was a hopeless camapign. “For Dewey, Roosevelt had little respect. He expected him to make a bad campaign and was surprised i when Dewey made an excellent one, | revealing preparation, thought and good advice. ‘Dewey made a minimum of mistakes and some good blaye. Roosevelt had not intended
¥
| began to get reports from the field that Dewey was gaining, he changed
'$20.000 FIRE SWEEPS, PAINT WAREHOUSE
Fire caused an estimated $20,000 damage to the Advante Paint Co.
: warehouse at Sand st. and Ken-
tucky ave. late yesterday when flames from a burning truck were swept into the building. Witnesses said the truck, unloading highly inflamma cellulose products, caught fire from an over{heated muffler. When one of the {company’s officials opened the door {of the warehouse to step away from the truck, he told firemen, a sudden draft shot flames into the warehouse, | FPiremen battled the two-alarm { blaze for more than two hours be- | fore bringing it under control. No- | body was reported injured.
3 HURT IN MISHAP
DURING CAYUGA FAIR,
LAYUGA, Ind. Aug. 23 (U. P). -AThree “persons were in a hospital { today after a stunt rider lost con- | trol of his motorcycle and it crashed linto a crowd of “1500 at thé Ver- | million county fair. Two of the victims suffered serious injuries. They were Noah I'oreman, 74, Newport, right leg fracture and shock; Lawrence Heber, 54, St. Bernice, fractured right arm and head and face lacerations, and Raymond Clore, 14, Newport, back injuries The rider, Ernest George, 26, ; Washington, Ind. escaped with bruises. He said he had finished a
| leap through a flaming wall when |
the bike went out of control.
S(T SIRE
to make a campaign, But when hel’
Ca rN ha RITE
76 Paintings Are Awaiting Annual Influx of Visitors
Times Special NASHVILLE, Ind, Aug® 23— Brown county artists, with 176
paintings now on exhibit at the Nashville gallery, are awaiting the yearly influx of statewide visitors. The annual autumn exhibit, a
traditional event here, gives a
| cross-section of the work of the] | Brogn County Art Gallery 4350-1
ciation, Included in this season's exhibit | are paintings by the' following
{members of the group: Dale P. Bessire, C. Curry Bohm, V. J. Cariani, Sybil Connell, Homer G. Davisson, David Dunlap, Alexis J. Fournier, Marie Goth, Carl .C. Graf, Genevieve Goth Graf, L. O. Grif-
CONTINUING
A
7
\
For your own real deep-down
Copyright 1048, Thi Americas Tebasen Sompery
-
Brown » County Arfists Exhibit Work
. . A typical Indiana landscape, done in oils |
an wii
|ATHEIST RENEWS BROADCAST BID
‘Acts After F FCC Upholds; Right to Freedem of: Air.
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. "23 (U. P) Supported by a federal communications commission opinion, gray-haired Robert Harold Scott today renewed his six-year campaign to broadcast in behalf of atheism over major San Francisco radio sta-! tions. Mr. Scott, a 56-year-old army] i pensioner, denies the existence of any kind of God or life after the i|grave. Since 1040, he has sought _lunsuccessfully to obtain time over . |stations KPO, KQW, or KFRC to . “counteract” what he calls religious propaganda broadcast by radio. Waits Word of Attorneys
He scheddled a conference with John Elwood, manager of KPO, the San Francisco’ outlet of National Broadcasting Co. An appointment has been arranged with Manager Willlam B. Pabst, KFRC-Mutual for Sept. 4. He has already talked with C. L. Mc€arthy, manager of KQW-CBS. Mr. McCarthy asked for 60 or 90 more days time to enable KQW's | ith, Lottie L. Grow, Glen C. Hen- [lawyers to study an FCC decision. shaw, George La Chance, Ethel | The decision issued last anh : denied Scott's petition to revoke] Lomasney, Leota W. Loop, Evelynne the licenses of KPO, KQW and | Mess, George Jo Mess, Harry Os- KFRC, but upheld the right of free-| good, Frederick Polley, Albert R, dom of the air for atheists.
Roc docs
Shulz, Adolph R. Shulz, Paul T.| “KQW if taking no position in Sargent, Clarence Staley, Musette| L118 INALSF Mr Meguriy wie the ress. “We ; O. Stoddard and Edward K. Wil-|g hip
Scott is or is not entitled to time liams, to speak for atheism. We are wait-| The exhibit will be open to the ing to hear from our attorneys.” { public week days and Sunda¥s until | winter. It has been arranged by|A. F. OF L UNION CERTIFIED | the association's hanging commit- HUNTINGTON, Aug. 23 (U. P| | tee, with Mr. Bessire as chairman,| —The national labor relations | |aided by Mr. Graf and Mr. Osgood. | board today certified the Interna-| Association officers for the year| tional Brotherhood of Electrical are: Mr. Bohm, president; Mr.| Workers (A, F. of L.) bargaining, Griffith, vice president, and Mr. agent for employees of the Farug- |
La Chance, secretary-treasurer. | worth Television and Radio Corp.’
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Wood engraving by H. McCormick based upon the original oil painting
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