Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1950 — Page 19
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| Stadium erback Bob Pee
and Strehlow’s
Wisconsin kept quetts territory e first three pe-
ouchdown -pass y Left End Hal
| when Strehlow for three yards ~of the second
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--never lugged a sousaphone or a bass dram’ is the
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TT “rE INDIANAPOLIS Ives _
Inside | Indianapolis : oes Touch Not the Cat Without Glove; min |i
.- I BEAT the bass: drum for’ “fhe ‘Butler Bull- - dogs. yesterday. The drum beat back. Bul: ~ Marching 95 can. go the rest of the season with~out oD ng ow 1 in the stands; bubbling. over with footal Spirit; a man. is likely to think the pre-game and half-time program. presented by university “bands. is great stuif, Easy. And the guy. who
Smiths Dangerous When
Common Family Name More Predominant | | Smith In Scotland Than That of MacDonald "| play.
————— orem ment RL "EDITOR'S NOTE: H. Allen Smith, America's. No. | humorist, Sunihs Ee CIggtd a sousaphone & : rs tis he here tells the riotous Story of America’s No. 1 family—the Smiths. ou to get out of step, * Marching bands are great ‘stuff, ‘But Is re quires work, sweat and a strong hack. It took a lot of slick talking to get Director Charles (Frenzy) Henzie to issué me’ a bass drum: And
work on the Huntington, ind., Press at the age of 15. This is the section first of six articles from his book, “People Named Smith,” about ir : his “own ole” It is to be Published this, week by Doubleday A FE
& Co. = - -|City newspaper. made a custom of] sizes, Typical size ‘give me a spot in his fine aggregation. — . ~~ telephoning Smiths at ain, | PRES 11, | $M 3% i ‘ . : : hire > ‘ , “CHAPTER « ONE Sit . {whenever a symposium of pub-[}| Onl 78 Don’t Louse 'U Show’ : : The bass drum won . . . Smiles were big as We, The Smith —- . [lic opinion was wanted. The an-|]. Y eine rene as : left ht) Bob P. “Mr. Inside" and J By H. ALLEN SMITH £ the Smiths " ett to right ear r. Inside’’ and Jim | - [swers of the Smiths were, gen-||| \ Henn or a the opening home game.” argund Mr: id ui to in Butler-Wabash pre- | ONE MORNING near the mid-mark of the Twentieth Century erally speaking, just as wise as | STORM SAS \ on’'t want you to louse up the show.” . band P. Later, the drum beat back. /a girl named Polly O'Connor arrived at the side of ‘a large plane if the newspaper. had called | Gi H \. 1 wept, threatening to flood Butler Bowl, He Jame ban ‘music, er, rum bea which was being loaded at LaGuardia Field. [Browns or Johnsons or Cohens. || 2-Lite white pine construction. irelented and turned me over to Bass Drummers the band had played “Glory of the Gridiron, wl Miss O'Connor was present for the purpose of making a routine! We sre Black Regublicans and {| "cal size. 24” os ’ TypiBob Pearcy and Jim Askren. “Ol' Wabash,” “National Guard March,” “Gallery | check of the ship's personnel before the takeoff for Puerto Rico. Communists and we ‘are “an: : x |g cal size, 24” widex36” high, % 5 “Stay in hetween them and 'do exactly what of Memories,” -“National Emblem Mareh,” “Star-|The uniformed members of.the crew “stood at attention and Miss archists; we .are ’ Baptists and|]’ Call Us for Your 11% thick. GLAZED, they do,” he said. “If you don't, you 'll be wear- Spangled Banner” and “Butler War Song. » The O'Connor pencil potsed above her = : i [Catholics and Jews and Christian: | lumber gd Hardware ONY... i iiiiiieeene ing that drum fora “hat.” 2 national anthem I remember because my on -sheet, sang out: aor Rb na ana’ Fireltes | t vh Pearcy's and Askren's. Aptain .™ n eshyterians an ehovah's re a ste, J Hal. 10a" Vopt Swink 13 whet “Chora Smith," said the Cap. Witnesses and Aner
tain. uniform. It fit like a baseball mitt. A huge Through beads of perspiration, 1 conid barely ! . i. drum: was ‘hung on ‘my chest and Pearcy — make out the playing field. Every few minutes rat Officer? said Miss : a/atick in my hand. This bass drum stick had a the percussion section would start pounding and O'Connor. Smith,” ¢ the re 5 head on if, much like: mine. Room, boom, « the Test-of the band-members shouted: A ml came the re- / boom. --Worked fine. The noise you can ‘make about “Let's gel 10 more.” .
with a drum is terrific “Second- Officer” ’ : Drum Gets Heavier . .. . Heavier
pink a even y
and st Wa “Ben Smith,” said the Second
Jim Sewery, director of percussions, hegan to {ofmcer. : ! frown. Hal Wilkins, drum. major, went into a BARELY OUT of a coma, T heard Pearcy say, | “Purser?” ops at huddle with Mr. Henzie. The drum bégan to get “Let's go.”. Someone had loaded thé drum with| ~ *Gulie Smith.” heavy. No action. I was peady to £0, man, lead when 1 wasn’t looking and now it weighed “Stewardess?” | A’ whistle sounded and we moved forward. A 1156 pounds. “Priscilla Smith,” answered the, ~ couple of turns around the many tunnels of the Pre-game marching was kid stuff compared to Stewardess. {gail Sm
Butler Fieldhouse on the double warmed me up. the half-time routine. No sooner would I get| “Sakes!” exclaimed Miss O'ConI think I had the right temperature for admission moving in one direction, Pearcy or Askren would nor, departing slightly from rou-| to General Hospital, swing afound and reverse. A tuba almost tangled|tine, for such a ea | 1 with my bass drum. Askren’s drum gouged my| Smiths had never happene e-| Aa ely Woe. Puce i, i back. My right arm became numb, T was swing-| fore, at Josey in her experience; cymbal players gave their all. Pearcy's stick was ing from memory. With each heat the vibration
nl ALONG ABOUT this same time coming dangerously close. He and Askren were rm lickied yy | slomach, It wast ! a news dispatch concerned’ with
the Uni
“second Ahigail,
wom} f Offer Ends In A Few Days Bandling two. Hal Wilking brought us to the north &nd of Another Smith came out of Chi-| 4 ajo, Smith “thera's |hecama. tne. fori president of ’ Pearcy kept shouting directions: “Left face... the field a ain, The rcussion section remained “2&°: A professional ukulele play-| thi v td othin the new nation, don’t play here . . . faster . . . slower , , . cut _ ainst hn aa other membergrof the or !IVIng in the heart of the meat nothing wa cant do, haining on ow Get Yours NOW i... youre dragging wr guide right . . , right band went into the stand. On his order to’ turn! ‘metropolis was revealed as the we don’t de. IF TT would appear that we e face , , . hold it.” left, I turned right. | ontned of oT him, Te, nnd lv related in time and illustrate are a heterogeneous hrotherhood The drum weighed 784 pounds by the time We 1 v;, were in the Butler Bowl yesterday, you. the vast range of Smiths UPON of mixed heliefs and clashing pas--Peached the retaining wall when the opening rou- mi ht hve seen oe Bu fig re, low on his’ hass house, ; the earth. sions th ‘ture ok tine was over. I just leaned until the drum rested g Su When the International Live- slong, the picture-fs true enoukh
drum, cross the field, fall over the wall and, oop ‘Show
on the grass and melted over it. Gentle hands raw] up the stone steps, bass drum dragging bedragged me across the wall. Drum Major Wilkins ning him. That was this kid.
growled to sharpen up. If his order had been to pass out, it would have been obeyed. Snare drummers Ray Laffin, Harry Henderson,
. » ” » - opened, ‘the ukulele wg, THF SMITHS, are far and Yet. we
exposition and a few days later the United States. We hold an Small boys hit the drum. An occasional-shove ‘walked off with a ribbon. easy lead, too. in the British Isles. from a Wabash Yooter helped a lot. I went over “The pig's name was Light 1t js a fact that in Scotland the top and into the gloom of the Fieldhouse. Green Smith. s Gordpn Beck, Joe Marsh, Fred Bennett, Jerry The watchman found me under the bleachers. * #
Donahue, Bill Ward and Marion Leswell and yj, said I was cuddled up so nicely to the bass eymbal players Howard Mackey and Ronnie Bird 4,um p xv, 2 A tou PLE of months after the
with ot
there are MacDenalds. In some clans is: sections of Scotland, one.out of out a gl
he hesitated to awaken me. He also in- triumph of the pig named Smith, Smitl We are inorit Yes, it's YOURS AS A GIFT f ly ses50 persons is named Smith. a minority and like all es, 1 $ or early sea said I did fine, Intravenously they poured me a formed me Butler and Wabash played a tie ball Superior: Court Judge William A. hii se pers in mind that we other minorities we have certain wo DANSHROUS FAN son purchase of any SUPERFLAME Heater T-Up. ame, 7 to 7. {Smith mounted to the bench in',., Sealing oe with straight- inalienable rights —including the FINGERS OR TEAR - reg ram foe oer A ‘Pearcy gave me some incredible news, He said Well, I got beat. i . oe 3 {Newark and examined the papers away Smiths people having the right to impose our will on the CLOTHING! ander SUPERFLAME Heater and saves up to } in the case before him. Mrs. Anna ame Ess - Em - Eye - Tee - Aitch. non-8mfths of this country, - : : : 23%,0a fuel billy, svenly distributes warm Smith was suing on behalf of her not Smythe, or Schmidt, or Smit. Woe betide the Hollywood pro As Low As air throughouttentire house, Farewell Football By Robert C. Ruark son. Robert smith. who had been ox smd. or med. or Kovacs. or ducer who calls a scoundrel ne | ~~ A% £O% Blames operates voy Porno es done struck: by an automobile, Kowalski, or Gowan, or Talia- our hlessed name! _ Let na_comic, §_ of uses. Keeps you COOL sn hot weather! NEW YORK, Sept. 30—This is a confession of slow flame fed on smart money. But football is - Judge Reh A vam fern, or Rd, or A ay rRhce of stale and Awarisy sus ieanein Se Sess} 4 ’ > oT Slow Hlame rt: money. “sel to the bench and after a
1 / 0 r versions and vari: steoreot happy ignorance, and the confessor iy as pleased fo5)ishness. It is one-fourth algebra and the rest, conference announced: “There / tude ! SE rs Smiths? asa dame with an undemanded diamond. Fifteen jo public relations. It is impossible to report. are too many Smiths In thi¥ = Ng field of human endeavor Warn years age this month I covered, professiomaily; logically, because the coaches are chronic liars aaee. By consent of counsel I my first football game. I was in thrall to the ball. and the playersiare either too dumb or too scared
hats , excuse the four. Smiths on the ¢ ‘th rts and government callin Today I do "not know the name of a single 4, talk. A Tom the a g
3 jury panel.” | down te highway robbery and . again ‘t practicing football player, uniess Sammy Baugh One of the few garrulous players T ever met These incidents —— a mighty
indecent exposure. who would ridicule us by putting is still working for the Redskins, and I do not wag this fellow Mellendick, who share-cropped for plane roaring down ft Rico with There is nothing we ean’t do, | the Smith manner of speech into Supe 7 r aim to check that possibility. I don’t know the , Georgetown a decade ago. a crew made up exclusively of and nothing we don't do. It thé mouths of his characters! WHAT FAMOUS UPE names of the Redskin coach, even, or whether “I am a natural candidate for All-America.” Smiths; a pig named Smith win-| ‘could easily have been a Smith® - Touch not the cat without a | ope GIVE AfelL George Marshall still has a piece of the team. Joe said, first time I ever met him. (I think this ning an award at fhe nation's| who kidnapped Charley Ross. glove! Best touch ‘er not at all! | “FUEL-SAVER" H As for the college lads—nay. Was a time was the year that Henry McLemore nominated his greatest livestock /show; seven| A Smith, perhaps, was respon=- . (Copyright, 1950, H. Allen Smith and when the pedigree of each player, plus coach, plus own dear cousin for the same mythical team.) Smiths brought together in a New| sible for the presence of over- I Smith
Was graven deeply on my sub-conscious, “However,” Mr. Mellendick said, “I will not Jersey courtroo because an alls in Mrs. Murphy's chowder, TOM
assistants, Today—for all I know Carl Snavely is throwing make All-America; because I talk too much and | automobile hit 8 boy——were close-| A Smith ery likely ate the the Smiths.
cross-blocks into Malik, and Frank Leahy am so good in the broken field that other people irs
Sop an nf Ton Oia He i mw Navy Medic Saves Marines’ Truman Starts “| Superfiome
Oh, the Memories luble halfback + Li Tri k a pel aH esat, Ci mute me. eosin ne wa + me wd Lives: With Tricky Bridge
thing-or-other Booth. Edwin? No. George Bar-- out to the University of North Carolina .some] Ids C Ik to C Ww d d, : Week's Cruise . FOR YOUR MONEY clay and CIff Montgomery. Andy Farkas. Dixie time back, when his war service had finished.| Bui s Shiite o Carry YWounde Ne : | BAHAI A beauiiful Howell, sure, tha old swamp rat. Big Jim Castig- Somebody-asked him what he might have. aspired bey » Hr FUEL.SA VER" lia, and Joe Meilendick. That was my boy. And to had he not Possessed lithe legs and a strong Avord Possib e Fatal Jarring of Men \ | First Real Rest « ‘| Heater matches «// furnishings, .. the best guard I ever saw was a fellow with a back. By ROBERT C. MILLER, United Press Staff Corresporident © 8i Eos , blends attractively with ony Vf . . nce arly Spring color scheme. You'll mever grow perpetually bloody nose named Fddie Kahn. They oy. py B B WITH THE MARINES ON THE SEOUT, FRONT, Korea, Sep. ; ol Yoved of itt called him King Kong, later in his career, tght Have Been a um o )Eight wounded Marines. owed their lives today to a tricky By MERRIMAN SMITH Only autos I spent a lot of years with football, but 1 “I MIGHT have heen a bum,” =aid Mr. Justice, bridge that Navy Medic Francis Granatowski, Milwaukee, Wis., rited Pies: White House Reporter Mortis) has the never understood the game or the people in it; rather more succinctly than necessary. ‘built while shells churned the waters of the river below him. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP) Triple-Combustion Burner. college or pro, high school or-sandlot. T-formation, I stray away from the premise, which was The Leathernecks were injured last Saturday night when their President Truman began a 23 S25 itive pure ated Sunes single-wing back, delayed block, double-wing back, that, thank God I do not have io shiver in bleak battalion fought into Yongdungpo, across the Han ‘River from week's’ cruise on the Potomac pi WY ai. re of rey , phooey. ‘Watch the delicate line play, they said. press boxes.this year, and interview coaches, 4nd Seoul. A deep stream separated ip. by ropes,” Cmdr. Streit. safd.
Five, six, seven-man line, Who knows what's proghosticate scores, -and worry about secon -day| the battalion from the American ' going on?, Twenty-two Joes in the mud was the angles. on: hired former coal heavers, an fret| rear area.’ best I wax ever able to glean. from the spectacle. , about Army and Navy and Notre Dame. Scat: . Bandaged and blanketed, they
“Only .the fast job of evacuating for his them across Granatowski's bridge saved their Ives.”
and the band played on. They are all in the public domain, w that right air. Large doses of opiate
fessionally. Boxing is the complete fiction, since ‘if only in the fact that it has no coaches and jjves. And’ the only bridgé ACTOSS you never know what angle is being: bésted over a you do not have to watch line play.
ST. PAUL, Sept. 30 (UP) -- A '© retur {the stream Had been blown up. |peeping tom makes so many. ay.
f The. batfalion put in a call for sorority house that a couple of press se Warden Days ee By Frederick C Othman help, and an hour later a hlacked- the girls agree, “We've accepted “natural , — out ambulance, feeling its way him as one of the family.” strenuous |along dusty narrow roads lighted, The University of Minnesota the Pres
"WASHINGTON, Sept. 30—As an ex- air “raid or whisky, ° You never ad “hear 0 “much warden .with a white tin hat, a felt'arm band, a yackety-yak. : pocket full of rules and regulations and a vow to One night about 10 p. m. we were going strong do or die; I have been reading” President Truman's on whether the gent on Alta Loma Terrace was a blue-bound blueprint for civilian defense with a Nazi; every time he saw /one of us wardens he! critical “eye. laughed. In the midst of our argument; there was = It is good so far as it goes in instructing the a timid tapping on the window.
bridge on the other side of the 15 or 20 times in six months te things
page 41 it recommends establishment of an air flashlight confronted us. “Air raid wardens.” said!
raid warden service, almost exactly as before. she, “there’s just been an. air raid: Don’t ¥OU men. He had a different plan, |only find apother- one.’ Koreah; War. After that his work- 12532 Ww. Michigan \ Co IM. 3419 All I know is that I did my wardening in Los think you should turn off your light. .. ‘Lays Planks ) day often stretched d to > 15 ‘hours, : : So : A Angeles, where false alarms of air raids for ‘a We snapped off the'lamp. We also ‘stopped our| The a sdical” corpsmen began ‘Jurors Swap | Places EE mC S——————" while were frequent." We wardens made all the talk. .Sure enough thare where the sirens. el rps &
neighbors pull down their blackout curtains. If stumbled through the underbrush: and looked into! Tipping a Sg nd laying Without Judge’ S. Consent we caught a miscreant smoking ‘a cigaret at night, the southern sky. Gad! There were explosions up em a pe Pp KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Sept. 30
we treated him like a traitor and made him there. Smoke. Tracer bullets. This was it. - [eet the sig BA (UP) — Circuit’ Judge John M. House Ht, Cloud Draws AA Fire [catwalk was built ‘under Mr. (Kelly was hearing an appeal case.
|when he noticed something *rong.| Granatowski's direction. "All the while bullets whined 2P0Ut. the jury. He didn't recog-
{nize-one of the jurors.” through the darkness. Twicel "py, 00") on ons of the extras. mortars landed in the river. An] overcast tobbed the medies-of the) thad switched with the regular {juror. The appeal hearing was
moon's light but also made them
Too Much Yackety- Yak © WE HAD a good deal of trouble that night. The.
UPON-THINKING back over those inc redible pooRls we were trying to protect were looking into’ days I'm inclined to doubt now whether an enemy: the heavens, too. We'd order 'em into their cellars, 20.000 feet up could detect the glow of a cigaret on as per:rule number three in our little books, and the ground, or even 100 cigarets, “they'd ignore us. No air raid: warden in a tin hat
-__ For a while we wardens held our weekly meet- was going to make them miss this pyrotechnical jo. conspicuous’ targets, : jreset. oad Ings successively .in our own homes, where we. display. It was downright frustrating. | Once William Boatman. of Ed-| Zs rao Tere discussed learnedly haw much sand it took fo put There was a good deal of embarrassment about qin Neb., slipped and fell into ; : Le : out a magnesium bomb and where we practiced Lops Angeles’ only air raid.. The. faider, it turned! (i water but climbed out unin- Ruptured Men Le
bandaging each; other. Well, sir, we spilled a good out, was a small white cloud, which looked like a ured. I. God $3 50 Gift deal of ‘fodine'on the rugs and we banged up the bomber to a trigger-happy guardian at the other n came the job of getting | furniture with our iron hats. Our wives, who end of town. He started shooting. The others ‘obviously did not go all the way with us in our .joined in—and the military was hard put to explain . — patriotic endeavor, ousted us. The hightown sector in a dignified way what happened. Jattice Work Sinking ine tet Be City, Mo. —Here, is an . of the Hollywood warden corps repaired to a small . Soon thereafter "the war ended. I planted 2 Everin E. Shelby, hospitalman of improved means of holding rupelectrically lighted -shack in the woods behind the. geranium in my hat. When I was transferred to|g¢ Mary's. Cal, couldn't see each ture that has benefitted thousands "Hollywood Bowl. : Washington, I forgot to bring it along. What I} other in the darkness as they Of ruptured men and women in There we'd argue far into the’ night about mean, in case the. President wasn't some eXPertiinched their way .across. Gerald the last vear. whether we/ should Wear our bands on our left advice, is that he'd better. pick his’ wardens mord wT edbetter, hospitalman of Ft.| jy i rr: . arms, or our Tight, what we should do-‘when a carefully than they were the last time. Some of! | Worth, Tex, went ahead to guide, conspicuous, RI h ou4 eg] stubborn streetcar motorman refused to darken the veterans in the wardening business weren 't 80| their footsteps. 4 bovil ey, on his car, and whether brandy was best. for shock, hot at it : ’ i | Everything had to be done hy pqe- ‘caused many to say, “IT don't |&ignals. One by one, they 00K | goa how it hold so easy. T would
The Quiz Master ??? Test Your Skill 227 Hua hurt ee ot, ii bv bleu iE
prevent further hemorrhages, and ? finally, after nearly two hours,| . So comfortable -— “sa easy to
When was the Korean Republic Tahoma? : For how many Presidents has the United States) > {all were across and loaded in the Wear—it could ghow you the way The Republic of Korea (South Korea) ‘was pio- Marine Band played? | ambulance. 2 {to joyous freedom from 3 your Tupelaimed Aug. 15," 1948. Korea was formally The historic United States Marine Band has!’ : ture trouble, cleared o United States troops June 29, 1949. played for every President except George Wash-| Alive Today Sh ; ington, CAR hour, later,~in a’ brightly | You can't lose. by | trying. Tt is ea he : {lighted surgery, Navy doctors sent to you on 30 days trial. You ‘How many dogs were Killed in World War 117 2 Dogs mans ibd in action during. World ~~ What is the’ easternmost possession of the joined the fight to save the Ma- receive a $3.50 special truss‘as a War II mimbered 7800 United States? : : {rines’ lives. All eight were alive present for your report. ; > * + ig : The Virgin Islands. ; > sity a Caan ar wo Write for descriptive - circular. Who was the authdr of the New England gt yh i , the {It's free. Just address Physi 8 Mr. Granatowski and the other) |Appliznce Company, 6231 heh Primer? : ; Does cane sugar differ. chemically from Desfcqrpemen full credit’ for keeping dg 2006 — Kansas City g, Benjamin Harris, an English versie and sugar? - m alive. & ' as
printer, compiled the New England Primer for Refined granulated sugar is chemically the “At least four of the wounded MIsfOUrL - en of Puritan parents: The sarljent ‘oop§ same whether it comes from sugar cane or sugar would have been killed by any at-| - But do it today betore Iu jose extant, is ated 1737, va : oR Tr. oe : : i Amp to’ Hanstey them hoist ' the the aqdress, : =f : : : ee cia Lh ee ’ il pe Sa . my Hpi = or = : : : or i
2
first oyster. Tt may have been a’
Our concern. in mainly with the ‘we cannot ignore all the
The author, who also wrote “Low Man on a Totem Pole” and “We others scattered acrosg the world, - Went Thataway,” is a native of Illinois and began his. newspaper We . répresent a perfect cross-
We are hlack and white and
well-off and ___just-getting-by
thn own omens we are mn. | WILLIAMS Ee CO. HAS we até diggers of graves, 1 A GIFT FOR YOU FOR BUYING EARLY!
We have not as yet produced {a President but one of ours, Abi-
there ever was such a thing as
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erable assistance of her famous hushand, . produced from her
player hauled his pig over to the away the largest family group in dangerous when aroused: The oldest maxim associated
‘here are many more Smiths than from one of our ancient. Scottish
Is without its share of Smiths, insulting fhe race of Smiths by
river and Chesapeake Bay today
Easter vacation at Key West, - All named something Polish from Pennsylvania, hacks? Climax runners? Two-piatoon en on the bank in the chill mid- ) Mr. Truman and members of 0
‘ his party boarded the Presidential Baseball comes as close to being an’ exact television's here, but if you do not mind I will dulled their pain, but only imme- Peeping Tom Adopts" dacht ilismsturg at the
science as any sport I ever met socially or pro- take rassling. Rassling is ‘such be sport..diate surgery icould save their St. Paul Sorority House gun factory here. He is scheduled
Ambulance Arives visits to the Gamma Omicron’ Charles (i. Hoss, presidential
by bursting shells, reached, the coeds “figure they've called police away from Washington because’
have eased W - stream. .. catch the prowler, but he always With the good oe fron: Korea - OPEN TODAY — SUNDAY — 2.70 6 P. M.
The idea was to hoist the gets away. He even keeps a pack- and the adjournment of Congress.
wounded in wire baskets from the Ing box under a tree near -the Mr, Truman tried 40 eake a ef bank: to the jutting end of the hous when he isn't using it to vacation in June. He flew to his — : blown bridge. But Mr. Granatow- Stand on. * home at Ind “people how to avoid being hit by a bomb, but on An - elderly woman, with a half- blacked-out| (ski was po vb that any sharp~ “There’s- no. sénse moving it,” Had to Fri Moa ut
‘movement might be fatal to the one of the girls remarked. “He'd’ cause of the outbreak of the
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