Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1946 — Page 3

president, une let onthe porch during the serve in honor of the nizers, on's banquet last iates praised the the organization. tomorrow will lon. Included on » election and ine al officers and a meeting at heade

MING HOME ine 28 (U, P.) red men of the , mostly veterans pan and Okinawa ive Japan aboard duled to arrive in uly and August, osed today,

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WATCHING CITY

FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1948

VU. S., British

CRUISER FARGO, 7 OTHER SHIPS

Look Out for Trouble as Tito Gives Warning to United Nations.

By EDGAR E. CLARK United Press Staff Correspondent

BELGRADE, June 28. — Seven British and American warships— including the newly arrived U. 8S. cruiser Fargo — were lined up in! Trieste harbor today as Marshal | Tito warned the. United Nations! against opposing Yugoslavia's claims to the city. { Tito issued his statement through | the Yugoslav Tanjug news agency. | He said the Yugoslav attitude toward the United Nations would) undergo “serious changes” if the, Trieste dispute was submitted to| the United Nations assembly and) Yugoslavia was outvoted. { “Yugoslavia cannot accept any halfway decisions to her disadvan-

tage and cannot . abandon her sovereign rights in Trieste,” Tito said, Sécretary of State James PF.

Byrnes has stated that he might submit Trieste and other disputed treaty issues to the United Nations assembly if the Big Four remain | at odds on them or fail to summon a 2l-nation peace conference, Entire ‘Fleet’ There The 10,000-ton cruiser Fargo arrived in Trieste yesterday. The entire American Mediterranean “fleet” of three warships is now in the Adriatic port, on the lookout, for trouble. With the Fargo are the destroyers Power and Small. A British cruiser, destroyer, frig- ; ate and L.S.T. also are there. An- | other cruiser is at nearby Venice. | Lt. Frank Duerst, public relations! officer of the U. 8. cruiser Fargo, said today the ship entered the Trieste harbor yesterday with 900 | men on the alert because of a false | rumor that the YugoslaVs had fired | on a British cruiser ahead of the |

* Fargo. { week-end is in prospect for Shirley,

Two Months Age

Duerst said the Fargo's crew picked up the rumor in Malta, but a check proved that the only firing incident on the eastern Adriatic coast recently was when 30 salvos | were fired on a British destroyer off Albania two months ago. The Fargo entered the behind the British cruiser Mau-' ritius, whose officers Duerst said! had confirmed that they were not fired on. by anyone. The Fargo Joined six other American and British ships in Trieste harbor. They were anchored in the center of the harbor in front of the Grand hotel, Lt. Col. James Holland, 88th division intelligence officer at Gorizia, said that the army had not requested the Fargo in Trieste. Making Customary Calls He said it came only because it was the flagship of Vice Adm. Bernard H. Beiri, commander of U. 8 naval forces in the Mediterranean, who is making courtesy calls at Mediterranean . ports. The Fargo will stay here four or five days. yY lavia strengthened her Balkan ties to the south yesterday with the conclusion of a friendship pact with Albania. Premier Enver Hoxha called Yugoslav-Albanian amity “a great peace factor in the Balkans.” He called the recent firing by Albanian coastal batteries on Brit1sh ships “a regrettable incident’ He said the British ships failed to show their flags until the batteries had fired and were mistaken for Greek vessels. Attacks Statement { Tito's statment on Trieste contained an attack on Premier Alcide de Gasperi of Italy for his state-| ment that Italy would not sign an unfavorable peace treaty. Tito said the “entire democratic world” expected to see past injustices against Yugoslavia righted. PARIS, June 28 (U. P.).—West- | ern power delegates, baffled by V. M. Molotov's surprise agreement on the Dodecanese and the FrenchItalian frontier, today expected him to seek a concession on Trieste in

harbor

exchange. In an atmosphere of renewed hope, the Big Four ministers ap-|

EVENTS TODAY Mothers of World War II, Lincoln and Claypool Advertisin 3 Sw of Jndianapotia, m., Lincoln,

EVENTS TOMORROW Mothers of World War II, Lineoln and Claypool

American Veteran Committee, convention, Lincoln.

convention, |

lunch-

convention,

ree MARRIAGE LICENSES

Morris McGray, 1045 W. 26th st; Mahomes, 2515 Northwestern ave Fred Eugene Bennett, 819 8. Holt rd Edna Mae Voiles, 1456 Cental ave | Prederick: Samuel Wiles, 11134 "Markwood Bettie Frances Bohn, 1423 Gilbert | Joseph Ferdinand Kersting, 6189 Mashing. | ton blvd; Mary Catherine Husted E. Harrison st., Martinsville { Glenn Raymond Booker, 124 N. Gladstone Janet DuGranrut, 1023 Newrnfan st Keith E. Brown, Jackson, Mich; L. Saunders, 2025 Broadway Harold D. Allison, 50 8S. Bradley Watonag Charlene Allen, 23568 N. Alabama st Prank Edward Wills, 1106 8. Senate ave, Beatrice R. Banks, 1545 Lexington ave, William F. Cherry Jr, 5208 W Dorothy J. Phipps, 4941 Ford st | Robert A. Black, 62 N. 13th st, Beech Grove; Dorothy L. Oliver, 1324 Main st., Beech Grove . Howard Dale Spangier. 1320 N. Delaware st; Vera LaBelle Stanley, 1421 N. Olney James E. Cartwright, New Castle, Pauline E. Turner, New Castle Robert Lerov Redenbaugh, ave: Mary Ruth Magnus, Jersey s Denver Cecil Jodan, 1017 N.. Jefferson st.; Buily Christine Borhage, 1417 E. Vel

Mich.; Tois Janet

Pauline

Helen

172 Central | 1019 N, New

nt st doek D. *olark, Detroit, Fletemeyer, 65 N. Tremont. Everett Ross, 5623 Winthrop ave., Janice Herhdon, 3730 BE. Market st. Daniel Z. Marsh, 1042 N, Talbot: Florence Huy Ritter, 616 E. 15th oodrow Clarence Howell hy AtterViolet Bailey Hardin, 22242 BE on hington, Oarl Bugene hey 335 Lansing st., Vivian

| keep

10th st.; | ®

‘At Coleman-—Dennis,

Shirley (Jackie) Esmon

G. l.'s Select Shirley Esmon To Be 'Miss Liberty Belle’

A whirlwind Independence Day

(Jackie) Esmon, Indianapolis girl! recently named “Miss Liberty Belle” of Scott field, Il. Because her photograph was selected as tops from among 1500

entries submitted by Scott field G i L's, Jackie will be whisked around Louis in a three-day!

nearby St. social swirl July 4. 5 and 6. She'll

receive the kéys to that city from!

Mayor Aloys Kaufmann. Jackie, 19-year-old brown-haired,

blue-eyed Indiana university co-ed, !

lives at 154 E. Troy ave. She's 5 feet 5 inches tall, weighs 120 {pounds and is classified as _the

POLICE ARREST PAIR AFTER ALLEY HOLDUP

Two young suspects were being | questioned by police today in cons nection with the holdup of William W. Warren, Crawfordsville, in an alley in the 100 block, E. Market st. last night. Mr. Warren -said two men forced him into an alléy and took $67 in cash and $71 worth of jewelry. Later police picked up two men,

19 and 21 years old, and held them |

under $5000 bonds each on vagrancy charges. One of them had Mr. Warren’s watch in his pocket. Aurel Meko, 30, of 634 S. Roena st.,, manager of the Retail Domes-

tic Appliance firm at 1555 N. Meridian st. said he left his desk for a few minutes and when he re-

turned $200 had been taken from

‘a drawer

Frank Popass, 1731 Kessler bivd., said while he and his wife were working in the basement a burglar, entered upstairs rooms and took | $108 from their purses.

peared to set aside today's deadline for reviewing the treaties. They plunged ahead, hoping to up Vvesterday’s momentum Originally they had agreed to finish reviewing the Italian and Balkan treaties today and see if they could issue invitations for a 21-nation conference All parties kept a wary eye on the overshadowing Trieste issue. Agreement on it seemed as far away as ever.

IN Ta

Marie McCoy, 733 N. Belle Vieu nl John Cunningham, R Lafayette

Sadie Sandefur, 1603 Virginia st., Lafayette George Henderson, 2621 Ralston ave

Clara Jones, Springfield | Lawrence A. Wingle Charlotte Rosamond ave

154 Avondale pl isher, 5812 Julian

| Charles Russell King, 1402 Nordyke Mae Louden, 58 N. Ewir { Warren G. Thompson 2415% Sheldon,

Willie Lee Trumbo, 636 Pierson st Oscar Frank Roesener, New Palestine Verna E. Schwier, 439 N. Tacoma ¢ Charles Bolus

| Theodore Board, 1716 Alvord st. ; Alford, 11290 E. 23d st | Jess D Koker, 331 W, Maryland; Esther Ruth Sheets, 534 8. California st Donald Burkertt, 2020 W. Wilcox st; Virginia Opal Noe, 1024 N. Belle Vieu pl Paul Edward Pope, 127 W. 11th st.;: Kath-

erine Beryl Edmonds, 542 N. Senate ave. !

William Edward Mahan, ave, le

20 N. Arlington Betty Marie Corrigan, 1021 N, But-

r Kenneth Clayton Moran, 3701 N. Temple; Dollaretta N. Robeson, 548 N. LaSalle General Robert Brown. 2034 Martindale; Margaret Strong. 606 N. West st Cletus L. Meyer, 2260 N. Pennsylvania st.; Marianna Smith, 1438 Samoa s! stel M. Slaton, 1818 N. Alabama st Willie B. M 1818 N. Alabama st Paul John MicMhelis, 821 N. Tacoma, Ruth Emma Jones 3019 Park ave,

BIRTHS

Girls Jeannette Burris Kathryn Welty. At Methodist—Otto, Thelma Riegger; Carlton, Dolores Beever; Harold, Bessie Craig; Robert, Lenora Dallas; Ralph, Mary Luzader; Lawrence, Marie” Brietfield, and Charles, Miriam Marbaugh. |

At St. Vincent's Charles,

At City-—Ralph

Maxine Garing; Issac, Maxine Harbaugh: Jack, Lynetie | Brown, and Charles, Dorothy Owen

At Home Clifton, Beatrice Danlel, 947 8. Capitol: William, Phyllis Mansfield, 152% Douglas; Jack, Rose Via, 654 E. 11th, and Lord.

Warship:

Local Girl Chosen Quéen

Lesta

Clara |

omas, Mabel Cooper, 831% o : ‘Rex Chapman, 43,

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“vivacious type" by the Scott fleld public relations office. Jackie and her mother will be flown to St. Louis and Scott field. where the beauty queen will be enthroned in official ceremonies presided over by Col. Neal Creighton, commanding officer. Entertainment on the agenda includes a riverboat cruise up the Mississippi, dancing on the roof of St. Louis’ Chase hotel and an orchestra seat at the St. Louis Municipal Opera's presentation. of “Rosalie.” Jackie also will be eonducted on a tour of a St. Louis department store, during which she will be offered a complete clothing ensemble, jnciuding nylons,

Fear Impaired Marines’ Eyes

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 (U P.).—The fear and anxiety of com= bat left many veterans with impaired eyesight, a navy doctor said today. Cmdr. Meyer A. Zeligs. naval reserve medical corps, said in a report to the convention of | the American Ophthalmological | society that the emotional stress of battle affected the eye tissues. He based his report on examinations he made of marines—veterans of Pacific fighting—at the Oakland, Cal, naval hospital. Comander Zeligs said fear and anxiety start disturbances of brain centers, produce changes in the sympathetic nervous system and tremor and pallor, and con- | tribute to peptic ulcer, angena pectoris and arterial hypertension. He believed that fear, anxiety or other emotional upset caused | spasm of eye blood vessels. This | in turn reduced the blood supply | to the retina, causing it to undergo a series of changes and frequently ending in degeneration of a portion of the retinal area.

HOME AGENT NAMED

HUNTINGTON, Ind., June 28 (U. P.).—Patricia Joan Mauller, Hartford City, today was appointed

ps Lined Up On

HEALTH SECRETARY

Dr, Louie Ricliard Crabtree, Colum- | pus. Ind, health board secretary, ments includes Bob Palmer, chair-| oo a hide of Pfc. Rene Buser, is

died here heart attack, while visiting relatives. | Roy Thompson, Dan Metzger, Don |

Nashville in 1920 from Tompkins- SON. ville, Ky., and was a Nashville phy-| sician until .1942 when he moved will be held at Port Optimist Sun-|Germans invaded her homeland,

| to Columbus.

. {and five of his sons served in world | vice commodore, and John Kender, is a native of Dubrovink, in Dal|war II the Masonic lodge.

Beulah Crabtree, and six sons and 8. 8. 8S. Riley and 8. 8. 8. Golden | son of Kenneth K. Buser, assistant | four daughters.

Huntington county home demonstration agent. She is a graduate| | of Ball State Teachers’ college and formerly taught home economics in | Miami county.

Francis—Edward, Jonas Rieman Fenton, Mary Jane Marshal, and

At St At City | Paul. Velma Timberlin | At Coleman--Carroll, Dorothy Matthews and William, Mary Jane Bayles: At Methodist Miller, Josephine Wampler Willis, Grace Staten; Turner, Evelyn Meadows. Eugene, Mary Lewis. HarriMaxine Savage Robert Irene Jinks. and Lloyd. Nellie Combs At St. Vineent's—-Aloysius, Helen Firsich and Max. Betty Zwezk | AL Home Wilbur, Mary Oarson. 1620 Nor man, and Richard, Ellen Stubbs, 331 W. 13th,

son

DEATHS

| | Emma H. Mathena, 81, at 34 E. Minnesota srteriosclerosis | Frances Lucille Muench, § mo i; 2153 8. New Jersey, whooping coug Osear Overbey, 851, at 1920 Highiand pl | |

chronic myocarditis

| Vada Clara Scudder, 68, at 220 Prospect CArcinoma Ira A. Howard, 73, at 520 E. Vermont

carcinoma | Clara Belle Keever, 75, coronary occlusion | Nannie Edmonds, 86 cerebral hemorrhage Georgian Ann Bush, 83, at 2049 Paris, acute dilation of heart Mary Baker, 57. at 941 Roache, interstitial nephritis Delia Lloyd, 65, at City, cerebral hemor. rhage

at 5219 College

at 1907 N. Iliinois |

chronic

William Howard Williams, 61, at City, myocarditis George E. Parker, 50, at 1261 Shelby, coronary thrombosis » | Doretha Green, 23, at City, pulmonary | tuberculosis | William Bheldon Hickman, 1564

5, at Brookside, myocarditis, ‘ Donnie Kelly, 65, at 1420 Minocqua, myocarditis, Hattie M.- Wilson, 68, at 1017 N. Jefferson, cerebral hemorrhage Elizabeth I. Brading, 76, at 2402 N. Stuart, cerebral hemorrhage.

James Clarence Hawkins, 54, at 2413

Yandes, coronary thrombosis at City, endooardiris.

3: ih « 3 : i ¥ »

“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 3 a

lert In Trieste

DIES IN COLUMBUS

Times Special NASHVVILLE, Ind,

Senjor Scouts of the Central In- AT CRAWFORDSVILLE Woo council will pienic and dance!

lat Camp Chank-Tun-Un-Gi all duy| Times Special June 28.— tomorrow. CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. June

Committee in charge of aa 28 Mrs. Slavici Buser, Yugoslav

A 2-Day Sit on

HOLLYWOOD, June 28 (U, P.). —Jim Moran, who's been sitting {on an ostrich egg for 13 days, today proposed a two-day ‘“egg-sit” to relieve strained international relations. “Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill, Ernest Bevin, President Truman, John L. Lewis, and Jus-

tices Robert H. Jackson and Hugo He was also a member of assistant port director. | matia, Black should take two days from | Entries to date are the S. S. 8.| Pfc. Buser, twice wounded dur- their affairs to sit on an ostrich He is survived by his wife, Mrs.' Indianapolis, 8. 8. 8. Flying Cloud, ing the campaign in Italy, is the egg, simultaneously, each in his own back yard” Moran said. “It's a great thing for a philoso-

1 yesterday, victim of a Man; Delmar Woerner, secretary; ,. o,yiordsville awaiting arrival

Dr. Crabtree, who was 59, came {o| Detar, Dick Powell and Hugh Hud- | °F her husband, Mrs. Buser, who fled from YugoThe third Sea Scout sailboat race slavia with her family when the

day under the direction of John was married to the Crawfordsville He was a veteran of world war I | Buehler, commodore, J. G. Messmer, |G? I. at Jesi, Italy, on Jan, 27. 8he

| Star. | postmaster.

.

. STRAUSS SAYS:

‘a lot of activity (an EXTRA lot) this Saturday—what with the 4th of July ahead—and vacations!

’ (People will stream through the doors —

2 the temporary entrance on Washington

La freet (West}—and linois Street.)

THERE WILL BE MEN AND BOYS—sireams of them taking possession of their various Shops—getting. themselves outfitted.

Frankly—selections are not all they should be—but the sum total is pretty good—from Air Cooled DOBBS HATS to COOL-TO-THE-STRIDE OXFORDS.

WOMEN will come into their. Specialty Shop—for those none-such “Zip-Eze” Play Dresses (“California . Perfections” )—for cool Dresses— for Swim Wear—Beach Wear, Blouses and Accessories—Third Floor.

And the “ME TOO'S” will co their own little Shops (on the Fourth Floor )—for charming little Play Clothes and Dresses— just like the “simply beautifuls” of their mothers.

AND FATHERS AND SONS AND MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS—will come to the SPORTSMAN'S LOUNGE—that wonderful, already-famous Sportswear Shop {featuring SPALDING)—to see what it has to offer—for

Fishing Badminton And for Golfing Baseball LUGGAGE Tennis Croquet Ineidentally quite Camping Archery a collection has »

just come in.

WHICH LEADS US TO THE POINT we wish to emphasize—PLEASE SHOP IN THE MORNING if you possibly can. Thank you.

“- » : »

EE BRIDE ARRIVES Moran: What World Neex

Ha

an Ostrich

pher and has great curative pow. ers for one with upset nerves. “It has helped me a lot.” Moran began sitting June 16 on the egg deserted by an ostrich mother who became angry when her mate made eyes at a younger, prettier, unwed ostrich in the next pen. He hopes to hatch the egg by July 7. : He already has commercialized on his venture by selling International Pictures space on .the side of the egg for $200.01 to advertise their forthcoming movie, “The Egg and 1.” y

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