Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1945 — Page 4
Truman 2 Churchill 5 Ready to Meet.
By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, May '16.—Russian
ni Times G. 5 s Meet After Two Years
Premier Josef Stalin today hefd the |
" answer to one of the most urgent } ‘problems on the world Poijical front: “When will we (Big Three) meet] again?” and where? President Truman and Prime | Minister Winston Churchill both have proclaimed. within the last 24 | hours their desire for an early meeting of the leaders of the three major fighting allies, Nothing, however, has heen heard publicly from Stalin. Traman ‘Seeks Data President Truman sought infor-| mation about past international conferences from two: first-hand sources, Brig. Gen. Elliott Roosevelt and Mrs, Anna Boettiger. Gen. Roosevelt attended the Teheran and Casablanca-conferences| with his father, the late President Roosevelt, and Mrs. Boettiger was at | Yalta. The brother and scheduled to’ call. at House at 3 p.m It was an accepted fact here and in London that 'a meeting of the Big Three would take place by midsummer, But as in the case of the previous: Big' Three sessions atTehran and Yalta it appeared that Stalin held the final answer on the actual time and place. Different Status Now The next meeting of the Big Three will be held under different circumstances from others when the three nations were united in war against] Germany. Soviet Russia maintains| neutrality in the Anglo- niin, * conflict with Japan. and is therefore
sister were! the White!
“Big Two.” The first meeting of the Big Three | took place in January, 1943, at Tehran, Iran, near the Russian | border.
| armed forces.
“Three former employees of The Times press room meet there un-
expectedly. . . Bates.
Back where. they started from two years ago, three
1
former |
Times employees recently held an ticipating in six major engage-
impromptu reunion in the press
room which they left to enter the |
The unexpected reunion took place when two sailors, Quarter master chinist's Mate 3-c Harold Bates, came home on leave, and Pvt. Jewel ‘Tyson got a convalescent furlough. All three servicemen - made the press room where they formerly worked one first stopoffs, sauntering into the room a few minutes apart.
3-c John Hill and Ma-"|
1
1 |
of their |
The two sailors left the same |
day in 1943 and attended Great
Lakes training station together. | i Ashburn general hospital at Mc-
Pvt. Tyson entered later in the year, He was sent to the European
theater, while the sallors went to |
the South Pacific: Quartermaster Hil, a veteran of 22 months of naval warfare, has seen action everywhere in the
RITES SET FOR |
LIFE RESIDENT
not a fighting ally of the remaining George 3 Miler, 75, Dead
At Home Here.
Rites will be held at 2 p. m. Fri-| The second meeting came {day at Moore Mortuaries Irvington |
| |
| Dr. Harlow Shapley of the Har- |
{ the ‘son of" Mrs.
. Left to right, John Hill, Pvt. Jewel Tyson and Harold
& Pacific. He wears the Asiatic,
American’ and Philippine theater ribbons, as well as stars for par-
ments. An Indianapolis native, he is the son of Mr, and Mrs. L. F. Hill, 2034 Bellefontaine st. A pressman 22 years, Machin-
ists Mate Bates spent his time |
sailing around pretty much the same territory as Hill. The two never met at sea, although both were stationed in the same harbor
P3t¢he “same time without knowing™
it. Bates is the husband of Mrs. Nola Bates, 6116 Winthrop ave. Pvt. Tyson, a native Georgian, snent seven months in France, Belgium and Germany. A combat infantryman. he is stationed at
Kinney, cence from illness, Pvt. Tyson is Birdie Farley, 3629 . JN. 10th st. His wife: Mrs. Mae Tyson, - lives
Michigan st.
Comet Is Here
On Refurn Date
CAMBRIDGE, Mass, May 18. (U. P.).—The comet Kopff has
been rediscovered and now is
visible through a telescope in the eastern constellation of Libra,
+vard observatory has reported.
last February at Yalta, Russia, | | chapel for George J. Miller, retired | which led to the now historic| furniture finisher who died yester- |
Crimea declaration. day at his home, 770 N. Emerson | Relations between the leaders of | 3aY Burial will be. in ‘Memorial
-the three nations had developed’ into a personal plane but when! Park, i Mr. Miller, who was 75, was a; . President Roosevelt died in April a | 0.1000 resident of Marion county. |
A ea ar, suddenly | He was employed by the Smith &| Neither Churenll nor Stalin has. ‘Day Chair Manutacturing Co. cd met. Mr an. | years before his retirement in 1929, | ‘and. was a member of Polmete |
CHILD LABOR ABUSES RISE | Tribe No. 1F Improved Order. of |
WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P.).| oo Men.
Ni » He is survived by two daughters, —The children’s bureau of the labor | \,.; oar Henderson, Indianapolis,
department sald Joday ge, the and Mrs. Helen Wurgler, Milwauwartime employment o kee, Wis. four sons, George A.
youngsters 14 and 15 years old Ra ymond V., John W. and Arthur] . and 2,000,000 more aged 16 and 17) 4. all of Indianapolis; a sister
years has brought a “return of Mrs. Rose Martin, L ynchburg; Va; | many of the old abuses of child [17 grandchildren and five great-
labor.” { grandchildren.
Advertisement | 4 ! MARIE V. MYERS
Dr. Shapley said the position of the comet had been reported to him by its re-discoverer, Henry 'L. Giclas of Lowell .observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. Th® comet's last closest apprqach to earth was in | 1942 and on this trio it is ex-
pected to come closest to this | ’
planet in 1948.
Spokesmen said that the comet | was discovered March 3, 1906, by | Professor A. Kopff at Heidelberg. |.
It has been observed every six - vears except for 1912, when it failed to appear. Kopfl is a very
| faint ‘comet of the 13th magni-
tude.
FAMILIES TO JOIN NAVY IN CARIBBEAN
WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P).
—Families of commissioned and non-commissioned navy officers sta-
| tioned at Caribbean bases are get-
ting ready to join their husbands {and fathers as the navy makes its
Tex, during a convales--t
at 4042 W, |
NAZI FIGHTING ON LAND ENDS.
By MEL K. JENNINGS . United Press Staff Correspondent
ett's ‘ruling, which he termed the final recourse under law, brought to Joseph White Musser, SALT LAKE CITY, May #.~|an end thé defendants’ 14 months- | the * fundamentalist’s 3 , | Fifteen male polygamists, boasting | long “appeal a combined total of 55 wives ‘nd charges of illegal cohabitatiofi.
15 of Polygamy Cult Denied Last Appedls, Go fo Prison.
“We accept this decision as'final,””; “But this does not mean that we publication | “Truth” .and acknowl€dged leader of the sect, said. |
from convic he added duickly. Thi
on on I e commitment Brought to 46
Submerged U- d U-Boafs Ordered 5g, children, today ‘began prison Sunk on; Sight.
ye +By W. R. HIGGINBOTHAM |
» United Press Staff Correspondent }
,
terms ranging from one to five,
They filed through the gates of
German after - Third” District Court Judge action
resistance on land had | ; |
| Reich's capitulation—and the num- | | posed May 20, 1944. Judge: Crock- day. | ber of U-boats surrendering to the
SHa5 Gold. Star Services Sunday for Sailor
Gold Star services for Seaman | LONDON, May 18 (U. P.).—Al| Utah state . prison late yesterday | 2-¢ James C. Bracken Sr. killed in|band of Mrs. Eunice Bracken of 917 entered the Utah forison also are
: h ‘Allen Crockett denied a writ of Nov. 25, will be held in the Gosport|James €. Bracken Jr. (ceased today—one - week. after the habeas corpus from sentences im- Methodist church at 2:30 p. m. Sun- is Mrs. John C. Bracken of Gos- charges of kidnaping and Mann be
- ‘the number of persons claiming to
(follow the original Mormon pre-
polygamy within the past yeay." Seaman Bracken was the husin the South Pacific last| Bancroft st. and the father of] awaiting the outcome of appea His mother for conviction in other states on
| port. - | violations.
l allies was increasing almost hourly. | Nearly 50 German submarines al-|E | ready had put into allied ports on both sides of the Atlantic or had surrendered at sea to allied war{ships. ™ A London Evening News dispateh said U-boats which still remain be-
»
e| S000 6G
fs
.
AYRES * DOWNSTAIRS
STORE
{low the surface have been outlawed. |
| Orders - have been issued to allied | | warships to sink any submerged | submarines, the dispatch said. The last German ground resistlance in Europe was crushed by the | Yugoslav army. Marshal Tito announced that his 3d army had surrounded and compelled German and ‘pro-Nazi Ustachi forces in the upper Drava valley to capitulate after a violent three-day battle. Russ. Finish Roundup Tito said the battle had increased the 3& army's bag of prisoners in | the past fortnight to 100,000. Elsewhere in Yugoslavia, he said, [his forces disarmed another 15,000 enemy ‘troops, including two gen- | erals, The Soviet high command re- | ported succinctly in what may be i its: last. communique of the Euro- | pean. war: “The rounding up -of captured | German officers and men on all fronts has been concluded.” A Copenhagen dispatch said Russian reinforcements of troops and material, including artillery, continued to arrive at the Danish island of Bornholm in the Baltic though almost all German soldiers and most civilians had left. Russia has given assurances to { Denmark that she does not intend | permanently to’ occupy - Bornholm.
TRUMAN PLANS ADDRESS WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P.) | —President Truman plans to ad- | dress a “get-together” meeting of { North’ Carolina's’ state senate and state officials at Statesville, N. C,, in | October,
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editor of surrender our religious principles,” .
cepts who have been convicted of :
Several of the cult’s members who :
|. Services are scheduled at 2 p. m. first move to unite families with | tomorrow at Flanner & Buchanan men overseas.
| mortuary for Mrs. Marie V. Myers,| It was emphasized that this ap-
.{who died yesterday at her home, plies only to the Caribbean so far.
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7 WA. 331
«| Crown Hill, A resident of Indianapolis most of | soon as permission is cleared in each.
R. R. 14, Box 388. Burial will be in| A navy department spokesman
said today that families may gy as
her life, Mrs. Myers was 85 and was! case. a member of Christ Catholic church. She is survived by at government expense. a brother, Harry PF. Vogt, Indian-| apolis, and two grandchildren,
Navy dependents are allowed
| IKE VISITS CHURCHILL i T JOHN A. MINTIRE { LONDON, May 16 (U. P.).—Gen. Rites will be conducted at 2 p. m Downing Street today for a talk tomorrow at Moore Mortuarics with Prime Minister -Churchill. He Northeast chapel for John A. Mc- was expected to return to Frafice Intire, retired carpenter who died later today.
Monday at his home, 2614 Olney ave. | 8 . Burial will be in Memorial Park. S tate Deaths
A resident of Marion county | i years, Mr. McIntiré was 80. He was| | employed at E. C. Atkins & Co. 20, years before his retirement in 1934,
CROTHERSVILLE- Mrs Sarah E. Cair 4 75. Survivors: Daughter Mrs jand was a member of Methodist Rit s, Mrs. Flossie Bryant; sons
church in Milton, Ky. | 38t. ren Cain, TH--Mrs. Clara Summers, 1 Surviving are three daughters, Ba Son, Capt. Bice py 2 | Mrs. Jean Brown and Frarfces Mit-| GREENTOWN- Ms Rosella Dawson, 73 chell, both of Indianapolis, and Mr. (Survivors: Sons, Lee Herschel, Glen { daughter, G u brot | Izora McCormick, Louisville, Ky.; | Brnest Sab. Geein) Ea aman: hen jive sons, Walter A., and Norville O.,| KOKOMO—Mrs. Eva |both of Indianapolis; two brothers, 1... Survivors: | Henry N. and W. H. McIntire, both | PETERSBURG —~ George Loveless, 80 {of Indianapolis; 10 grandchildren Survivors Daughters, Mrs. Effie Hill, rs
Ethel Willis, - re and two great-grandchildren. | RUSHVILUE—Mts. Irene Crowell, 91
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' JOHN MICKEL NELSON |
Services for John Mickel Nelson, | retired farmer, who died ‘yesterday {at the home of ‘a daughter, Mrs. | Alga Wilson, 1311 Leland st., will be {held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the West funeral home in Spencer, with burial in Spencer. Mr. Nelson, who was 78, had resided with another daughter, Mrs | Olive Harris, 841 §. Belmont ave, for the last four years. Additional survivors are the widow, Mrs. Ada | Robertson Nelson; two brothers, | Linton and Will, Terre Haute; two sisters, Mrs, Clara Wilson, Spencer and Mrs. Laural Trestle, Kokomo; (two half-sisters, Mrs. Ecil Stout, | Anderson, and Mrs, Mary Kiser, Poland; three grandchildren and a| great-grandchild, Friends may call at Hisey & Titus mortuary here until 7 a.m, to- | morrow.
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