Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1946 — Page 3

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1946

THE .INDTANAPOLIS TIMES

| Raughvilie’s Slovenian Residents Protest Slav S

| HOLD INCIDENT 1 15 UNJUSTIFIED INSULT TOU. §.

Some Voice Opinion Russ At Root of Trouble.

By JACK THOMPSON Citizens of Haughville who are of Blovenian descent voiced objections today to the shooting down of two American airplanes over Yugoslav territory. They held the act to be an unjustified insult to the United States. Frank Dreflak, 424 N. Holmes ave., a U. 8S. Rubber Co. employee, expressed the attitude of his Slovenian neighbors when he declared: “Yugoslavia is not strong enough of her own accord to start trouble with the United States, The Russians are forcing her into these treacherous acts. Marshal Tito, Yugoslav militarist, is a Serbian Communist.”

Should Protest, Not Shoot

Pete Cerar, a bartender at the!

Blovenian National Home, 2717 W 10th st, asserted that the Yugoslavian government should send protests of unauthorized planes flying over their territory and not shoot them down. “It was the wrong thing to do,” Mr. Cerar said, “I believe the reason Yugoslavian people did not protest the government's action was because they like their new-found freedom. Under Marshal Tito's regime the land has been diviend among the poor and the Yugoslav are no longer slaves.” Ex-G. 1. Adolph Madley, 2710 W. 10th st., a prisoner of war in Germany for 26 months, contends that the Trieste dispuie is the root of trouble in Yugoslavia. “The Yugoslavians are mad at the United States because they apparently favor Italy, an enemy of the U. 8. during the war,” he asserted. “They were merely trying to show their anger by shooting down the planes. I do not believe it was the right thing to do.” Says U. 8S. Bungled Navy veteran Joe Moze, 1036 N. Holmes ave. claimed that the incident was created by a “bungling administration in the United States.” He said, “That territory might be 8 powder keg for another war.” Henry Dezelan, assistant manager of Dezelan’s bowling alleys, 959 N. Holmes ave, said: “I think the, Yugoslay government did the Wrong | thing if they ordered their pilots to| shoot down our airplanes. It ndie{ aI United States helped them, during ‘the war Mrs. Christine Saligoe, 952 N. Holmes ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Medvescek, 759 N. Warman ave, felt that shooting down the American planes was a “dirty trick.” Mrs. Saligoe declared that Tito “is not a Slovenian but is a Serbian.”

Shipmates Now Buddies in Army |

Times Special NEW CASTLE. Ind. Aug. 22.— Here's one for Ripley. Howard E. Kidd, R. R. 2, New Castle, and Howard C. Hodges of Tiffin, O., were shipmates in several naval | battles during the war. On July | 15 they both re-enlisted, this | time in the army, and are together again at Camp Polk, La. but neither one knew the other was planning to re-enlist.

| over why Mr.

Plans to Enter Bendix Trophy Race

Red-haired Nadine Ramsey beautifies herself before a test flight from the Los Angeles airport in her stripped- -down P-38 which she will pilot in the $25,000 Bendix trophy .race starting Aug. 30. The former Wasp ferry pilot will compete in the 2045-mile race and feels she’s “a cinch to be in the money.”

18 Cross Atlantic:in Sloop, May Not Get to Enter U. S.

MIAMI, Fla, Aug. 22 (U. P).— America, the long dreamed Promised Land was near, yet far,” for 18 sturdy,

“No one regrets it more than I,” of | Miami Immigration Director Francis “so|J. H. Dever said today. “But we sun-tanned | cannot allow them entrance te this Estonians here today. | country without credentials, or withMembers. of the hardy band— out special permission.” which included a stocky, blond, five-| None of the weary sailors pos-year-old girl were being temporarily sessed an immigration permit. denied entrance to the United Will Not Go Back oR, 2 Soa, in fo sea A guard stood lax watch over the ‘i tight, weather-beaten little “InarThe fate of the 11 men, siX do” ag Capt. Felix Tandre, the only women, and tiny Eha Kogu, was be- | English-speaking member. of the ing weighed by immigration author- | party, made it shipshape against ities. the possibility of further traveling.

“But we won't go back,” Capt. Tandre, a ruddy, former Baltic Small Wonder hei Meiy | d “We don't know where we will go. They’ re Puzz e {But I know it will not be back to - ! Estonia,” he said in the halting WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P.). | gnojich which he learned as a sailor ~The library of congress Was |.....4 British ships. scratching its head toddy over a | «gefore the war we lived under gift from George Bernard Shaw, | Russian rule. Then we lived under famed 90-year-old English play- | (ne Germans. wright. » : “I will tell you here in America The gift, described ay = | {what I have been afraid to say cal Shawian , paradox John | wefare: Js ed RR TRE irristol CA Te E a ATONE. i 400 SPCR British embassy who presented | “If we must go we will go. on -it, consisted of an autographed | myen if we must travel all the way copy of the script of the British- |t5 Australia. Our ship is small. produced cinema, “Caesar and pyt jt's taken us this far. They Cleopatra.” Mr. Shaw was the [can't take the sea away from us. ‘author, | Thank God.” Here's how . Mr. Balfour de- | etre or ———— ing sponsor in America for an | Irishman who has chosen to live Teeni f thi t library —Sister Maxine, 39-year-old Beneeping o is august librar i the script of a comedy—made by | edictine nun, wrapped her flowing Egyptians and Romans.” her first solo flight. The Lead-scratching comes in | Her instructor, Harold Youngthe library. The title page tells job. Producer Gabriel Pascal: Sister Maxine, a member of the of congress to which I owe many |learned to fly so that she could obligations.” | teach clases in aviation this fall,

THE WEATHER

3 U. S. Weather a "ie *

Cloudy Crea S

I. 8 REC. PAT'S PEND COPA 1946 EOW L A

NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: There will be | clear skies in the far west and

most northern sections of the nation, New England will be cloudy and partial cloudiness will prevail elsewhere over the country. Scattered showers indicated for New England areas are expected to develop into general rains Thursday night with improved conditions probable after midnight. Increasing winds along the coastal sectors of southern New England and New York will probably result in wind warnings for small craft being hoisted late Thursday. Weather conditions in the area mentioged are being dominated by a low pressure concentration of relatively warm air and the cold air front moving into the region -at about 25 miles per hour (see map). Arrow heads protruding from the fronts show the direction in which they are

scribed the gift: “Here am I, a Scotsman, standpermanently in England and ST. PAUL, Minn, Aug. 22 (U. P.). about to hand over to the safea Hungarian with English money |habit around her today, climbed —that is concerned mainly with into an airplane and took off on Shaw felt himself | hans, chief pilot for American Avi“obligated”- to give the script to |ation Co, said she did an excellent “Dear Gabe, you had better |teaching staff at Cathedral high ppresent this to the U. 8. library [school in 8t. Cloud, said she FOTOLAST via acute reusnoro Bureou Forecast for Period Ending 7:30 AM EST 8-23-46

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WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

EROWNSVILLE

coast of Florida, the Rocky mountains. and southern Plateau states,

« OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau All Data in Central Daylight Time —Aug. 22, 1 1945 Sunrise. ... 6:03 | nae

———— tau A Sunset aaa

Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m. Trace Total precipitation sinks Jan, 1.....2446 Deficiency since Jan, 1.............. 2.12

The following table shows the temperature and precipitation in other cities:

The high pressure concentration of cool air in the central part of Canada will move into the southeastern quadrant of Canada during the night as the cold air front ahead of it moves out into the North Atlantic and trails through the middle Atlantic states westward and northwestward becom- | ing standing or stationary after reaching the mid-Mississippi valleys.

Warm moist air south of this | \SN" ie ioe advancing cold air front will re- Boston 80 65 lease its instability in the form | Ghicago - 8 60 of showers, and thunderstorms Sieveland “ae ‘ 8 sl along a belt extending from the | mvansvite "1. | 82 61 mid-Atlantic states through seuth- Jt. Sayhe eran . 5 - 56

ern parts of the Ohio valley, thence northwestward through the middle Mississippi and Mis« souri valleys where heavy rain-

Indianapolis (ity) Kansas City .. Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis- Bt. New Orléans

fall is expected in eastern Ne- |New Yor o 67 braska and northeast Kansas, Ghlunams Sy . 8 Scattered thundershowers are Siuavurgh . pictured for coastal sections of Sau Antonio 1... #1 the east “Gulf states, the Gulf | Washington. D, x

th 4

SAS .S. WILL WIN ~ BATTLE “FOR PEACE

WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P). «Chairman Sol Bloom (D., N. Y.), of the house foreign affairs committee, predicted today that the threat of “isolation from the rest of the world” will compel Russia | to negotiate for ‘realistic and per-! | manent peace.” | “The United States will win the diplomatic battle and win it soon.” Mr. Bloom said in an interview. | “We will probably come to a show- | down even before the meeting of | [the general assembly of the United Nations next month.” Mr. Bloom, whose views often re[flect state department policy, sald | he believed che “strong” ~ttitude {taken by the Soviet Union toward | the United States is ‘largely for do- | mestic consumption.” The Russian (government, .he said, “wants its | people to feel that it is strong and

WIFE, SON, 5, WATCH FLIER DIE IN CRASH

GARDEN CITY, Kas, Aug. 22 [(U., P).—~Two war veterans were killed late yesterday in an airplane] NEW YORK, Aug. 22 (U. P).— “crash ‘as the wife and 5-year-old |A strike by 1100 trainmen’ against ichild of the pilot watched. {the Long Island railroad, disrupting | 4 Paul Robert Seavey, 25, who service for 300,000 commuters, was | came hte recently from Richmond, scheduled to begin at midnight toInd, and his passenger, William C.| h it President | Bolinger, 21, both died in the crash, | ais toe tne. | Truman 37 miles south of Garden City. William Dalrymple, strike spokesMr. Seavey had been taking up| man for district 50 of John L. Lewis’ | passengers throughout the day from | United Mine Workérs (Ac F. of L.) 'the Sublette, Kas., airport. He had said, “the strike order still stands, planned to establish the town's first | whether the government seizes the airplane service and a flying school. railroad or appoints a fact-finding Several persons saw the plane board.” overshoot a small pasture used as, The union demanded that the a landing field. Parts of the plane | railroad accept certain working rule were scattered over a wide area. changes, which the company has The bodies were badly burned. rejected on the grounds that the Mr, Seavey's wife and child were national rail strike settlement last

STRIKE MAY TIE UP

300,000 COMMUTERS

Yo

NATION'S

civic CLUBS ASKED TO PROTEST FARES

The E. New York Street Civic | league urges that the Federation of Community {Civic clubs of Indian-

| apolis call a meeting to protest the

33% per cent increase in streetcar fares. The E. New York Street league met last night in the Dorsey Funeral parlor for a discussion of the increased bus and car fares. They also gave their attention to the matter of crosstown bus service on the East side. C. C. Livingstone, league president, presided and F. J. Murray was elected delegate to the Federation of Community Civic clubs.

OPIUM SMOKER EXECUTED

SHANGHAI Aug, 22 (U, P).—A Chinese army private, Kuo Jung-

WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (U. BP). ~Whisky “merely trickled out of the nation's stills” during the first six months of 1046, the distilled spirits institute sald today. It said the nation’s 154 distilleries turned out only about one-fifth of their capacity due to strict govern. ment controls.

NAMED U. P. NEWS HEAD NEW YORK, Aug. 22 (U. P.).—~ Hugh Balllle, president of the United Press, today appointed Ross Downing to be in charge of news and business iN seven eastern states, Mr, new headquarters will be in Pittsburgh, Previous to today’s appointment he has been

: . : ~ There is quite a bit to : interest a Man here—who is looking to fall and winter— (including those with college destinations) There are TOPCOATS here—and Colored SHIRTS—and SWEATERS — THE BOTS" SHO hefty SOCKS—a wonderful ro selection of DOBBS HATS—LEATHER : JACKETS—quite a stock of _ OXFORDS—TIES for your life. FURNISHINGS FST FLOR You can be absolutely and nr ER positively certain to get quality— EL ~ you are sure of “the BEST at YOUR rt price no matter what the price.” 1. STRAUSS & CO. w THE MAN'S STORE