Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 14

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TWO Allies Stop Red Attack On Hill Post Sf GfcORGfi A. MCARfHtm Korea (A U. S. and Befgiafi infantrymen today beat off 800 Chinese Reds in a fierce seven-hour battle for a hill on the Kerean Western Front. The Reds broke off the fight at dawn.

Allied patrols reported "many, many Chinese dead" littered the battle area. Elements of the Third Infantry Division's Seventh Regiment defended the peak situated three miles northeast of Kelly Hill in the Chorwon sector. A Belgian unit attached to the division fought briefly with a band of Reds 800 yards to the west andi then rushed into the main battle' alongside th Americans. The Air Force announced eight Russian-built M1G jets were shot down during the week. One U.

N. plane, a prop-driven F7F Tigercat, was lost to unexplained causes. The eight Communist jet killsj made a record total of 56 down during September by Allied; pilots. The previous monthly high of 44 was set last April. Gen.

James A. Van Fleet, commander of the U. Eighth Army.j congratulated Allied units for capturing Old Baldy on the West-i ern Front and defending key hills' near the Punchbowl a week ago. He praised the South Korean Eighth Division for a "magnificent performance" in the Punchbowl sector. He messaged the 38th Regiment of the U.

S. Second Infantry Division that its performance at Old Baldy "against a determined! Communist force supported by intense artillery and mortar fire: JggMKA BVgjftKQ OACTTTg. tgPtAjf A. gATORPAY, SggpMSER 27. Ijjl Proposed New High School Building In Armagh Area SCHOOL -UNITCD JOINT SCHOOL When the proposed new high school building for the United Joint School District in Southeastern Indiana County is completed, the structure will be one of the most modern in the area, State school authorities have given their approval to building plans and drawings have been prepared for the use of bidders.

Plans and specifications will go out to bidders on Wednesday and bids will be op- ened Nov. 10. The architects- sketch gives some idea of how the completed school plant will appear. The building will be located along Route 56, about one mile north of Armagh. Route 56 cuts across the lower left corner of the sketch.

The left wing of the building will house a gymnasium to seat persons, along with locker 21 regular classrooms. A small green house has been planned in connection with the rooms, cafeteria, kitchen and heating plant. The curved portion of the building adjoining the gymnasium will include a bus loading and unloading ramp. School offices and health suites also will be located here. The central two-story portion will contain a library, homemaking and art rooms.

A large auditorium, to seat 750 persons, is located at the right center of the drawing. The auditorium wing also includes a large music room and practice and instrument rooms. The far right section of the proposed building includes industrial arts -and vocational agriculture classrooms and work rooms. The plans provide for three science laboratories and agricultural department. It is estimated the proposed struc- ture will cost approximately $1,700,000.

Provision has beert made for future expansion. United Joint School District includes East Wheatfield, West Wheatfield, Buffington and Brushvalley Townships, and Armagh Borough, all in Indiana County. Hunter, Caldwell Campbell ate the architects. Dismisses iSuit Against Franklin Boro FRANKLIN, Pa. A suit for $80,000 filed against the city of Franklin by Paul J.

Rennard over land owned by the city has beenj dismissed. Rennard filed the suit after the city failed to give 20-year Marine Sgt. Defended By His Brother TRENTON, N. Trenton man claimed today his 25-year-old brother, a Marine sergeant, has been sentenced to 10 years in pri-! lin Airport. He claimed the city his long life.

1 c-1 I rtV-i 1 a in A Noted Poet, Philosopher Dead At 88 Mr. Truman's Whistle Stop Tour Begins (Continued rom Page One) Plans that would have extended ROME Santayana. a.civil service to virtually all federal leading philosopher and poet, died last night. He was 88. The noted Spanish writer died in the solitude in which he lived dur- departments.

The President leaves Washington at 10:30 p.m., EST, on a trip to cover 24 states and including contract as manager of the Frank-ling the final quarter century of major speeches in Buffalo and son-and a dishonorable discharge (Promised him such a lease in for'leaving weapons behind after return for donation of the land, he was ordered to abandon his The case was dismissed by Judge position in fighting in Korea. Lee A McCracken advised the city Lpuis Chiarello, said the brother, run ur own airport." Ralph, now is en route from Mare 1 Island, to Norfolk, Va. Call Louis said he has been informed 1 the Marines are "detaining" Ralph'A had enfeebled and shriveled him. New York; two in Montana; three During the past few years, age i Washington State; two in California at San Francisco and but that he understands Ralph is under arrest to await review ot AITID FsllS his sentence by a naval board in alla Louis said Ralph, cited for bravery under fire, had written him he was court martialled and tenced on But his philosopher's mind stayed Shasta Dam; at Prove, Utah- and sharp and alert to the end. Hisjshenandoah, Iowa; and 77 ore final book and one of the most whistle stop talks, important, "Dominations and was completed and published only last year.

Santayana died, surrounded by the books he loved, 'n his tiny His daughter Margaret, always a favorite of campaign crowds, will go along. The President's first stop will be (Continued rom' Page One) room at the clinic of the Little.no 1 Company of British order lot nuns known as the "Blue Sis- at Pittsburgh, but he will make speech because of his long- alongside, grabbed him and of the pale blue hab- him from Straightening up and brushing! ltStheyvear addresses on Sunday. The following day Truman moves through and Indiana; About half a dozen stops are a charge of leaving be-' off hjs suit Eisenhower grinned cient Colosseum, 'had beenipianned along the way. score his home here for the past 25 years. Samuel Clayton Mitchell bet- The famed philosopher was known as Mitch bustled ex- hmd two mortars and 390 pounds.

and sajf) he wag Mt of ammunition after receiving an; order to abandon his position dur- none was reported th jin Madrid Dec. 16. 1863, Although jcitedly around the Union Station ing an attack last April It. scra tched. Lou Duell.

Eisenhower's! a Spanish subject to the end he the time neared for the Presi- In the letter, Ralph said if he bodyguard, was thought by many to be dent's dpnnrti.ro had sent his men back after the equipment, half or more would have been killed. I thought a life received a skinned Richmond address a American since many he lived in the United States from the time he was nine years old until 1911. Frac- was worth more than a piece of a day tnum hant his whole lif was spent Th 0 n. whistle stop appearances at Char- nilts Sna The covered the equipment was re- next day when the jlottee and Winston-Salem, N. outside Spain.

He attended Brimmer School Marines back'to the posi- nd Roano Lynchburg and Pe- Latin School and Harvard itersburg, Va. rrtu: in i This ended 12 days of intensive University and from 1899 to Midwest and South. wag a professor philosphy at crowds Harvard. He then returned to Eu- Irope to lecture at Oxford Univer- tion, Ralph wrote. Chiarello was found guilty July, 6 but was sent back into action and remained in the front lines, until his battalion was withdrawn Ever he went, smiling sity, England, and the Sorbonne from the sector, Louis said.

crowds turned out, shouting France. He related that during the court like Ike chant In all. reporters! At the clinic here he lived a martial Ralph was cited by his flgured that about 140,000 life. But until his health commanding officer for "excellent turned oul lo see the Republican-began to fail he enjoyed entertain- performance of duty under ur nornine in his second invasion of'ing visitors in his room, holding a kind of Socratic "open house" He said Ralph's service record Dme shows he had been wounded while' Eisenhower chose anyone who wanted to chat on patrol and was commended for ce ne of a Civil War battle, to with him. removing ammunition from the Jt aise the record of Byrd, unof- vicinity of a burning bunker "with- f' a head of the state Democratic out regard to his personal safety." organization, who has not said whom he is supporting in the pres- "Sportsman" Now Facing Deportation Dinner Is Set idential race.

The Republican nominee, noting i QiL at he was being sponsored by TOT VTu Democrats for Eisenhower, said! Uhat "any party that can produce The Indiana County Production Mitch is a key figure aboard the Presidents campaign train he's tha man who "runs" the President's big, bullet-proof private car. He helped serve both Presidents Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt before being put in charge of Truman's home on wheels. The genial porter from South Carolina, a 25-year veteran of the Pullman service now assigned to the White House as porter-messenger as well as chief of the private car, began getting things ready as early as last Wednesday. His big job today was to put aboard groceries and a good supply of clean linen.

A 15-day trip WAJC-TV Set Keenan May To Erect New FaceRecail Big Antenna Erection of the new WJAC-TV, channel 6 antenna will be undertaken over the weekend and station officials hope to have the job finished in time to start equipment tests tomorrow evening. Regular telecasts on Channel 13 will continue while tests are conducted on the new channel. According to company officials the changeover at the transmitter on top of Laurel Hill Mountain is progressing on schedule. The Channel 6 antenna, a powerful, four-bay arrangement, will be mounted atop (he tower previously used for channel 13 The olri, two bay is presently mounted or a hign pole for operations during the changeover. Federal Communications Commission rules call for a waiting of ten days after the equipment tests are completed and bei'ore regular programming can begin.

But WJAC-TV, if the tests are successful, will ask the FCC to waive this rule and try to oe on the air with the new channel by October 1. The auxiliary transmitter now in use is only one-tenth the old power. The new transmitter wu! have a picture power of 70 'ibout seven times more power than the normal power of Channe. 13. Another Man Arrested In Brink's Job Overcharge (Continued rom Page One) The situation is ironical for the reason that when Kennan went to Moscow last May, after years of helping shape U.

S. policy toward Soviet communism, he went with the avowed hope of restoring more normal diplomatic relations and reestablishing some basis of courtesy and confidence in dealings between the two governments. The tendency of authorities here now is to speculate that this did not suit Russian purposes at a time when the Kremlin has a great campaign of the United Spates running inside Russia. The on Kennan is so bitter that according to normal diplomatic conduct it would inevitably Brewers Hit WGTU Action to Ban Ads WA8H1NOTOW spokemafl lot the bief industry says "pro fessional prohibitionists" are using "the big lie technique" in trying to ban beer advertising from the air waves. Clinton M.

Hester, representing the U. 8. Brewers Foundation, yesterday told a House interstate committee investigating possible ebjectional material on Radio and TV: "When dry propaganda is at work, facts, truth take a holiday." and integrity Hester said the Women's Christian Temperance'Onion is mislead' ing a lot of people with arguments for an anti-advertising bill for beer and liquor. Hester based his major ments on a contention that laws to regulate TV and radio advertising can't be aimed at beer alone. He said the 21st Amendment gave the states complete authority to deal with the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages.

The hea.ded by Rfep. Harris recessed hearings until after the Nov. 4 election. Adlai Offers Governmental Economy Plan (Continued -om Page One) GOP Sen. Robert A.

Taft, who, Stevenson suggested, would write labor laws and "conduct our foreign in the event of a Republican victory in November. down in Kentucky, Stevenson had a political picnic on schedule at Vice President Bark- home outside Paducah. 'On tap, too, were a brief talk at the Court House Square in Paducah, and a double-feature presenting both Barkley and Stevenson in speaking roles tonight at Memorial Auditorium in Louisville. Stevenson's speech was billed as a foreign policy address. The Illinois governor lit into Taft name in an informal talk yes- ierday afternoon at Eyansville, ind.

He went after Republican presidential nominee Eisenhower and Sen. not by a formal address last vnight to a full-house crowd of 12,000 at the Fairgrounds Coliseum in Indianapolis. Into the Indianapolis address, Stevenson injected this reference to the fund he has used to supplement the pay of a number of top officials of his state administration in Illinois: "I don't have much chance to read the newspapers these days; mean he would be declared person- DUt understand there's a lot of ally unacceptable, leaving the curiosity about som help gave to some good people in Illinois. 'I hope my reputation isn't in- MRS, MAftV fcTTA of Saitsburg passed away yesterday at p. m.

ifl the hoflie 6f her and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. 3, fiobert Shifley of Salisbury 'R. 3. 1, following an illness of several fiofh June 29, 1875 in Young township, Indiana County, she was ip i daughter ef and Susaft diawson.

She for- ted States no choice but to withdraw him. Should he have to be withdrawn! volved because if it's a crime to under such a Soviet demand now, the belief of responsible officials here is that the post would remain vacant and the embassy at Moscow be run by a diplomat of lesser rank until, at least, a new president takes office here. Whether a successor would then be appointed would depend on the new administration. American relations with Russia have not been guided for several years, however, by normal standards, and State Department ex. perts therefore felt that what has happened would not necessarily be followed by Kennan's ouster.

What has happened in the Kennan case is this: Kennan arrived at Berlin Sept. 19 on his way to a meeting of U. S. ambassadors at London, Reporters WASHINGTON UPl-The FBI to- who met his plane quoted him as means lots of planning, accordinei day announce a second arrest in saying contacts between Americans nnnriAnt.inn with tho finn i to Mitch. volunteered yesterday that connection with the $65,000 I lunch out to'and Russian people in Moscow had (Continued from Page Onei and Southren Ohio, currently is Eisenhower said he a man like Harry F.

Byrd seems and Marketm 6 Administration will to me to be a top-flight sort of llold the fourtn annual Green Pas- a 'jj lures dinner in the basement of the the President "is never hard to please you couldn't find a nicer person." One thing Mitch never neglects that is having flowers on the President's table and in other spots about the car every day. When he orders groceries around the country, he will order flowers robbery of a Brink's ar- been reduced to the zero point. It i loci 1 i i i mored car last month. reminded him, he said, of the lack The man was named as Charles 1 of contact with th German people Wesley Kight, 22, of Washington, a w.ien after Pearl Harbor he and relief driver for Brink's since July, other U. S.

Embassy staff mem- The FBI said Kight admitted be from Berlin were interned at helping plan the bold theft in re-1 Bad Nauheim, Germany, for sev- turn for a 50-50 share of the loot. ral months. He also commented The robbery occurred Aug. 25, on certain aspects of Russian life, when four guards of a Brink's' Yesterday Pravda, the, organ oi truck left the vehicle locked but' the Communist party, called. 'Ken- Harmnnv On th i The Dem National Com- unattended outside a Washington nan a "slanderer disguised as a disagrees Pn TV, mittee is picking up the check for I hotel while they went to lunch.

The diplomat," an enemy of the coun- luu Bl rive f'omis, It contends he October 9, at 6:30 p. m. Thursday, Tmman strictly Winners Contest will receive their awards at car. There is no "Why should I. because he has Admission 11 be ticket only car belongs to the government.

The Treasury Department will another political label, feel any-' at tne price of 50 eaL Tlc Hetsjfoot the bills of the Secret Service lh 8 excepl the sreatest admira- may be at the PMA who go along. Their presence ar "too many wes W.860.000 in He said Byrd believes "in in back income taxes, interest and teyrity in government, in thrift penalties. believes in the vir- ith and 8 good dinner tnd the lues that have great all. CUsed the government of failure to push it-, tax case. Wheeling Downs and several Lias holdings have been lion and respect (or Eisen- £ice tnird 'low.

Farmers Bank the President goes receivership by the hower demanded. jTrust Building, or from community quired by law 8 bii i tor tl.600.000 nul 1 11 Tram.nl turned it down. In another court fighi. nearly four years ago, Lias' attorneys a a toW the' court Lias had made his a Ve day he would money through illegal whisky and New gambling operations, but thai tit tour It next day, after a night-long grilling, try and a number of other things, is estimated the cost will Eugene Farmer, 26, a former' and accused him'of conduct unbe- wuai vv ill MWI A.W* iiic4 in tne ureen Pastures around $21.000. That will jnclude'Brink's guard, admitted the theft'coming a diplomat.

ill vecnive thnir au.arHo ,10 first class fares for the use of (Farmer took police to a nearby' He had been attacked before he 'amusement park where the entire was assigned to the Moscow job "Gift Fund" if Jetterson'Ljcf ln the That wr quitted, after a month-long trial. ot criminal charges of income tax evasion. I4as returned to the track yes- ttrday afternoon after being re- on bond. 1 Mis income tax case now in V- S- Tax Court, where further bearing is scheduled in Washington GO Oct. immigration officials said a hea.

WOUid be held tor Lias on the entry charge in Pittsburgh two or three weeks. tne heirs of th Kelly- Nash machme the Hague machine and the PencuMgast machine" are "corrupting Democratic party Averting mat tne Democrats think they have the "in their pockets Thev ln iush lhey heavy on added: living ln Gazette Classified Ads) 'you. i everybody great Southland they couici ignore you that no leader of opposite party would ever be foolish enough to A lQ U)ig am down here because that nobody But of my Every bridge and every trestle over which the presidential train moves will be guarded by armed men. Other men will be around to handle crowds. Along most of the jway, a pilot engine will precede the presidential train to inspect the 'tracks and take other safety pre.

cautions. $65,000 was found buried. but not so bitterly as this. Right, who the FBI said has as- Yesterday at a news conference, sociated with Farmer for seven Secretary of State Acheson said years and lived one block ne thought the attack wholly un- had been questioned the day of the Justified and improper. He added robbery.

that what Kennan said seemed to Ex-State Cop Dies received The average person consumes pound of tea annually in htg United Carr (. Continued rom Page One) i the fund. The Chicago Daily News said jt polled 15 persons it described as "present and former state bigwigs" and said they PITTSBURGH nied receiving any extra pay from the special fund. J. Edward Day, state director of insurance, said yesterday he received a "Christmas gift" from Stevenson.

Earlier. Fred Hoehler, state welfare director, and Walter Schaefer, a justice of the Illinois Supreme Court, said they Christmas gilts- William 46. Republican party chairman in nearby Carnegie died last night after an illness of three weeks. He was a supervisor at Union Eelectric Co. and a former member of the State Polk in The first daily newspaper America.

The Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser, appeared in Philadelphia in 1784. In Ohio, 88 per cent of the lectricity is produced from coal- operated generators. Officials said today Kight appa- nim to ave bg en a very calm and rently took no part in the affair accurate description of what life outside of helping plan it. is like in Moscow. Right, married and the father of Authorities were uncertain why two, was charged with the same of- tne Pravda attack should have fense as robbery tak en such a violent form.

Several and larceny. He was being held in speculations were obvious: metropolitan police headquarters The Russians may have pending the filing of formal com-, lo for an excuse to dis plaints today. credit him as a preliminary to get- Farmer's ease is awaiting action; tin him out of the country be by a grand jury. cause they were afraid to have sc shrewd' an observer oi Soviet af fairs on the scene. 2.

They may have seized upoi 'this as a means of feeding thei PITTSBURGH fugitives! hate campaign. Hold Youths from Morganza State Training School are being held today on charges of auto larceny and burglary. Police identified the pair as Walter Moore, 18, of Turtle Creek and William Housholder, 20, of Blawnox. They fled from Sept. U.

The modern deep sea dwer's boots weigh about 32 pounds a pan, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica- 3. Perhaps they Were seriously upset by criticism which hit toe accurately. Spaniards nicknamed big, tasty crabs caught in the Say of Biscay "oxeA ot the sea." The crabs weigh five pounds or more each. The Lone Star State. Texas would be able to boast a population of 178.OQO.OQQ ii it were ai settled as Rhode Island- ber of George nieces Martin help some good people in the government of Illinois, then I'm guilty." Stevenson held over until today his promised disclosure of who contributed and who was helped by the sum left over from his 1948 gubernatorial campaign and expanded by subsequent donations.

The decision to name names was. a direct reversal of the Democratic candidate's earlier stand that it would be a "breach of faith" for him to do so. The switch followed daily Republican demands that he tell the people the fund unless he had something to hide. The Indianapolis crowd gave Stevenson a big hand when he men-, tioned the fund. And it applauded Aff him, too.

when he said his dis- tinguished opponent, the has advanced the startling idea that "people should vote this fall for all Republican candidates, whatever their character and ability. He wants us to elect them all: good, bad and outrageous." That was a clear allusion to Eisenhower's support of Jenner, who is running for re-election against Henry F. Schricker, now Indiana's governor. It was Schricker who nerly resided near Lewlsville, lived tf Saltsbufg community 26 years and vas a member of the Saitsburg 'resbyterian Church. She was widow of Harry Wallace Bergman.

She is survived )y three daughters, Mrs. Grace Xehnedy of Vandergrlft; Mrs. Florence Kelly of Saltsbufg and Mrs M. Shirley of Saitsburg; fouf 9 grandchildren, two greatgrandchil- dren; three brothers: Rev. B.

Slawson of Mt. Pleasant; Jay Claw jon of Fairmont City, and Armour Clawson of Kelthsburg, Illinois; fouV sisters: Mrs. Bertha McConnaughey of Finleyville; Mrs. Pearl 3reen of New Boston, Illinois; Miss Lucy Clawson of Indiana; Mrs. Blanche Whittaker of Cabot.

Friends will be received at Rob- inson Funeral Home, Saitsburg after 7:00 p. m. today where services will be conducted Monday at 2:00 p. m. Her pastor, Rev.

Raymond W. Nicholson will officiate. Interment in Lewisville Cemetery. BESSIE HARRIET RAT passed away Friday at 6:10 a. m.

in home of her son, F. Earl Ray of 550 South Fifth street. Surviving are two sons, and two daughters, F. Earl, Edward Mrs. Olive McHenry and Mrs.

Helen Smith all of Indiana. Friends may call at the Hill Funeral Home, 661 Church street, Indiana after 7:00 p. m. today, where services will be held Sunday, Sept. 28, at 2:30 p.

m. Rev. Orey M. Bolt will conduct the services, interment following in the Greenwood LEONARD J. STIVER, 47, Clymer R.

D. 2 died at Miners Hospital at Spangler, Thursday, September 25, at 1:15 p. m. He was born in Marchand, April 16, 1905, a son of the late William and Melinda Winning Stiver. He is survived by his wife, Ethel, and these children: Raymond, Florence, and Edith Jane, all at home; also by two brothers and one sister, of Punxsutawney; Raymond of Oakland, and Mrs.

S. J. Mattorn of Marchand. Friends are being received at the Bence Funeral Home, Clymer, until 1:00 p. m.

Sunday, September 28, at which time a short service will be held followed by further service at 2:30 p. m. in the E. U. B.

Church of Marchand. Rev. Clayton Straw of Clymer will officiate. Interment will follow in the Marchand Cemetery. LIZZIE SIBBLE CLARK, 79, of Cherry Tree, died at the Fair Rest Home in Indiana at 12:15 p.

m. on Friday. A daughter of Luther M. and Elmira Haslet Clark, she was born in Cherry Tree, August 17, 1873. The last member of her family, the deceased is survived by a num- and nephews: Dr.

of Indiana; Steele Tree; George Clark of Hastings; Elmira Martin, Johnstown. Friends will be received at the Rairigh Funeral Home, Hillsdale, after 7:30 p. m. today, where services will be conducted on Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Burial will be in Thompson Cemetery, near Hillsdale.

Stevenson's name in nomination at the Democratic National' -TV School In D.C. James W. Cramer, Box 83, Armagh, has completed a course Practical and Theoretical Radio and Television and has been awarded a diploma by the National Radio stitute of Washington, D. C. He finished the prescribed course of tech nical studies with creditable grades and is to be congratulated upon his achievement.

uuu at me uemourauc i Convention last July 24. Md 11116 Felt For the most nart. the Indiana- polls the most part, the Indiana- speech was given over toUanCI6rlN9ar a live-point program forl economy in government. Stevenson sketched in detail, then summed up: "First, get tight-fisted executives; second, give them the au- I i A IT (Continued from Page One) had been chanting, "We Like Ike." tu j. Tne General shook his head as thonty to run their organizations if dazed.

Then he dusted off efficiently; third, scrutinize appro- suit at the crowd priation requests with a cold and He turned to Knowland and said "I'm not hurt." About 35 other men and women took a tumble along with Eisen. hower, one of them a man jn a penetrating eye; fifth, spend propriation requests with a cold and penetrating eye; fourth, spend appropriations frugally; sixth, don't do in Washington what can be done in Indianapolis, and don't ask cle Sam to bridge Catbird Creek if you can help it." But Stevenson cautioned: "Let no one deceive himself. Pinch every penny at best we can, our federal budget is still going to be larger than we would like." The reason, He said, is thst 85 cent of it goes (or national ecurity. No hanest oa.n say low long heavy defense spending aust continue, Stevenson said, but it is "likely to for long tune to corns." To anything else, he de dared, woujd be deceiving, tod he "will deception to the jpublicsn orators," jaid. "have been practicing it 4ay and aight." Stevenson orators promise one to cut budget 10, 10 or ip.WUion Collars, and hen say day they are joiBg typing armed might.

wheel chair. None hurt. was seriously Virginia's Gov. John S. Battle was just about to step on the ramp when the collapse occurred.

He stepped back instead. As Eisenhower and his party left the scene bound for his motorcade to return to a train waiting to take ftp group to New York, a wag in the assemblage just seen the collapse ol the Republican pJatforin." Nobody seemd think funny. Bell Funeral Home PHONE 5-3041.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006