Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1946 — Page 2

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4 Increases

Dr. Virgil G. Hunt reported to: day an increase In gifts to benevolences, in church membership and in Sunday school attendance over the past fiscal year at the White River conference meeting of the United Brethren church. Dr. Hunt read the report as conference superintendent at the annual conference session in the University Heights church. It is expected that he will be re-elected

later today for the office of super-

intendent. The conference schedules a mass meeting at 7:30 when Dr. 8. H. Turbeville of Winona Lake, Ind, a Methodist evangelist, will give the address, The conference willl close Friday morning with the appointment of ministers,

Memberships Gain

The conference churches showed]:

in Benevolences i Pow Amounts to $16,189.

’ | sons.

{|said he reached English, Ind. cir-

2 HURT - SLIGHTLY AS PLANE CRASHES TELL CITY, Ind. Aug, 27 (U. P.).~James Weber and Philip Schnell, president and field representative of the Ann Arbor, Mich, ‘secretarial college, were recovering at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Elbert Gibson today from injuries received when their airplane crashed Sunday. : The men left Ann Arbor Sunday morning on a flight to Perry county where they were to visit the GibMr. Weber, piloting the plane, cled the town to get his bearings on the Gibson farm when the craft developed engine trouble. They crash-landed in a soybean field on the farm of Bloomer Enlow near

Acme Telephoto.

English,

The plane was badly damaged; KILLED BY TRAIN

BEDFORD, Aug. 27

U. P)—

Rites were planned today for Kenneth Johnson, 25, who was killed yesterday when struck by a Monon railroad freight car while cutting weeds along the track. /

Freed on Bond In Cycle Accident

Beecher Sizemore, 21, 1300 Madison ave, was out on $5000 bond today on a vagrancy charge in connection with the injury of two bicycle riders by a hit-run driver last Friday night. Appearing in Beech Grove magistrate court last night, his was continued to Sept. 20. Meanwhile, Rollle Richey, 10-78 year-old Times

carrier, son of 2 Mr. and Mrs, Rollie Richey

Donald Richey, 1522 Dudley st., re< mained in Methodist hospital with a broken leg. With Arlin Stephens, 17, 30 'N. Madison ave, he was knocked from his bicycle by a hit-and-run driver at Dudley st. and

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FAMILY PERISHES

“IN TENEMENT FIRE

BOSTON, ‘Aug. 27 (U. P.)~An entire family of four perished and 50 other persons were rescued over ladders or escaped unaided early today when a three-alarm fire swept a tenement house off Bowdoin sq. ' The dead were Archie Marott, 35, his wife, Adeline, 35, and their two children, Joseph 11, and Phyllis, 4. They were trapped in their beds on the second floor. The blaze started on the first floor and mushroomed through the five-story brick structure at 3 a. m, Patrolman William J. Morgan discovered the fire and, after sounding the first alarm, aroused the sleeping occupants and assisted some to safety through smokechoked hallways. Cause of the fire was not determined. Damage was estimated at $12,000.

was released from City hospital yesterday. Sizemore was arrested a short distance from the accident scene

Madison ave. The Stephens youth

by deputy sheriffs.

By NICK BOURNE United Press Staff Correspondent CELILIO INDIAN VILLAGE, Ore., Aug. 27.—~Indians continued to fish the Columbia river today, but attempted to come to terms with the white man by agreeing to use their catch only for food. Heads of the Warm Springs, Yakima and Umatilla tribes drew up a three-point ruling for their salmon following a fight late yesterday in which several Indians battled members regulating net fishing for whites upon a narrow scaffolding over the turbulent Celilio falls. Oregon officials appeared to be satisfled with the rulings, and state troopers on the scene said they had received no orders to make: arrests. However, at Wishram, on the Washington side of the river, J. W. Elliott, superintendent of the Warm

Springs Indian agency, sald four Indians had been arrested for fish-

ing after yesterday's noon deadline.

Oregon Indians Fish On Un ‘White Man's Law Stirs 'Battle of Columbia

Both states recently passed laws prohibiting net fishing from Aug. 25 until Sept. 10 to enable the salmon to complete their annual upstream journey to the spawning grounds. Ernest Cramer, 63, and his nephew, E. F. Cramer, 41, both of The Dalles, Ore., were beaten severely yesterday when set upon by Indians after the white men allegedly continued to fish after the Indians had observed the noon deadline, The elder Cramer insisted he had not been fishing but was weighing some fish caught before the deadline when “some eight or 10 Indians” jumped on him and his nephew. The Indians used the pickaxe to chop down the scaffolding project ing from a ledge over the waterfall, where fishermen lower their nets to snare the salmon, While the fighting was going on, leaders of the three tribes held a pow-wow in the “long house,” or tribal meeting hall,

es

_ TUESDAY, AUG. 27, 1948

der Truce After |

There, the Indian representatives agreed to enforce three rulings among their people: ONE. To sell no fish taken during the closed sea= son, TWO. To continue to fish for their own use only, and THREE. Not to fish at night. The tribal chieftains also agreed to ban for one year from the Cecilio falls fishing grounds any Indian caught violating the rulings.

MOSLEMS BOYCOTT NEW INDIA CABINET,

* NEW DELHI, Aug. 27 (U, P.) Mohammed Ali Jinnah opened the powerful Moslem league's resistance to the Indian interim government today by ordering all members of the league to boycott meetings called by the new government. He told members of the central assembly to ignore meetings of the standing committee of various dee partments and reject committee ape pointments,

Screen Actress Olivia De Haviland and Novelist Marcus Aurelus Goodrich’ pose in garden of

4 net gain of 209 members and increased giving to benevolences | amounting to $16,189 over the pe-| riod from Aug, 1, 1045, to the same | time this year. The net gain in average attendance at Sunday) séhool over the same months of last year was 271. All the Protestant churches have been giving special | aitention to gathering in the chil-| dren from “unchurched” families for the schools. The Brookside United Brethren church of Indianapolis stands sec-| ond among all the churches of the conference with its average Sunday | sthool attendance of 443. The First U. B. church of Anderson led all the others with an average attendance of 579 while the Terre Haute| church was third with dn average aitendance of 429. ‘The conference has five Sunday schools with an average Sunday school attendance of 300 or more; | seven, with an average attendance between 200 and 300; and 22, with an average of 100 to 200. During the year, churches of the conference gave $463,764 toward the maintenance of local expenses such as pastors’ and janitors’ salaries, utilities. A total sum of $119,968 was contributed for benevolences— for missions, overseas relief and other causes. The value of the church properties in the conference was estimated by Dr. Hunt to be

$2,000,000. “The White River conference embraces central Indiana between lines drawn through Marion on the north and Columbus on the south.

U.S. MOVES TO HOLD

fue AN PALS 2: 19 will be taken by road from | E ) Ljubljana to the American zone of i DAYTON, O, Aug. 27 (U. P)— i ot the Citizens State Bank of An-

sofa, O., last Nov. 9 were filed to-

were convicted of a $10,000 holdup.’ “The district attorney's office here revealed that warrants against the trio had been filed in Cincinnati. . | {A detainer will be filed in Mont- | gomery county here against the trio to prevent their release on bond | pending an_ appeal. A detainer ' Summers has been filed here, accusing him of taking part in the robbery of the Vergennes, nL, on Aug. 1, 1045. Two others accused in the $100 -

Foster, now serving a. sentence in Illinois for another crime, and James Mitchell, an inmate in the Ohio penitentiary at Columbus, Moran, former Chicago gangland

figure, Fouts and Summers were|ican broadcasting,” was honored to- | convicted last night of armed rob- night at a dinner party in observ-

‘The Fathers’ association of Broad Ripple high school and the Broad | Ripple Business Men's association will sponsor a Bankers’ Golf tournament and dinner Thursday at the Hillcrest Country club, Golf | will be played from noon until 3 p. m. and dinner will be served | at 7 p. m. Reservations for dinner | or golf may be made through the | (BR. 2408) or by calling BR. r BR. 5045 not later than to-

The Loyal Baptist class of the Baptist church will meet with Mrs. T. B. Berry, 30 N. Bradley ave, tomorrow noon for a covered dish luncheon,

otal ——————— NUERNBURG TRIAL NEAR END - NUERNBERG, Aug. 27 (U, P.. ~Ohiet Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence announced today that the international war crimes tribunal expects to complete the trial of @ocused German war criminals “by the end of the week—even if it theans sitting Saturday evening.”

f —— {TORNADO DAMAGES LIGHT UBALTIMORE, Aug. 21 (U, P.).— reported only insignifiéant damage today from a small 0) which hit Baltimore's har- { area during a thunderstorm y.

resLera

248

Outdo Late

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: ‘taken unity,

| States is still waiting for Yugoslavia |

day against George (Bugs) Moran, |, d Virgil Summers and Al Fouts, who|

Ansonia robbéry were Roy M. ‘FATHER OF RADIO,’ 73,

CHICAGO, Aug. 27 (U. P.)—Dr.

inds Parley Voting Rules Gertrude Stein|

cedure, will be decided by an agree

writings of the late Germust be appreciated to MAalority, as opposed to a seven. For instance, “The i

the home of Lawrence Langer, theater guild director at Wilton, | Conn., after their marriage there yesterday.

TIT0'S PROMISE 5 UNCONFIRMED

Pledge Not to Shoot at U. S. Planes Oral. |

By UNITED PRESS Acting Secretary of State Dean | Acheson said today that the United

to put in writing the promise made) by Marshal Tito that the Yugoslav | airforce would not attack any more foreign planes. | Mr. Acheson told a press confer- | ence in Washington that Tito’s oral promises to American Ambassador

Richard C. Patterson Jr. last Thursday were not contained in al written confirmation of that con-| versation. Mr. Acheson said that the United | States hoped and expected that] these oral promises would be con-| firmed in writing. Mr. Acheson indicated that the Unitéd States is no longer seriously | considering taking the matter to the United Nations security council. Bring Caskets to U. S, Lines i Four flag-draped lead caskets con- | taining the bodies of American air- | men shot down by the Yugoslavs!

| Venezia Giulia, possibly today. They { will be shipped to the United States | {for burial. The body of the fifth man in the-plane;~Capt. Harold | Farnsley Schreiber of New Albany, ! —was still being sought today.! The caskets will be accompanied by a Yugoslav honor guard to the Morgan line. They will be handed over to the U. 8. army at Aldusina. between Trieste and Gorizia. | A U. 8. embassy spokesman in! Belgrade announced today that | | Yugoslavia still holds the wounded | | Turkish army officer who was aboard | a U. 8. plane shot down Aug. 9, and indicated the Yugoslavs might place espionage charges against him,

{ | |

HONORED ON BIRTHDAY

Lee Deforest, the “father of Amer-

|

The number of guests, including leaders in the radio and television | fields, was restricted to “73,” which | in radio code signifies “best re- | gards.” Deforest, who recently came here | from California to become director | of veterans training at the Ameri- | can television laboratories, invented | the audion tube which makes possible radio broadcasting and other | electronic developments. | Speaking at his birthday party | he predicted that “radio and tele- | vision will some day make this! globe too small for war.” {

a ————— * » 1 Finds President's | Wife Was Guest, INDEPENDENCE, Mo. Aug. 27 (U. P.).—Mrs. C. C. Bundschu held open house for friends who wanted to inspect her trailer but she got a few guests she didn’t expect. The De luxe trailer was bought as a home for her daughter and son-- | in-law, | When the day was over 500 per- | sons had signed the guest book. Mrs. Bundschu was surprised to see among them the names of Mrs. | Harry 8. Truman, Miss Margaret | Truman and Mrs. Frank Wallace, | mother-in-law of the President. BLAME REDS IN STRIKE TOKYO, Aug. 27 (U. P.) —Yomiuri, one of Tokyo's “big three” news- | papers, charged today that the Communist party is back of the

| strike of railway workers scheduled | for Sept. 15, !

|

| ment to vote for or against any vote being taken on a nine-fifteenths

twelfths majority. A five-sixths majority against amendments in favor of abstention will entitle any big power to veto

m his diplo-|the entire proceedings, and to expel |

the small powers from the conference on a charge of destroying and behaving in an undemo-

| | 1 |

a? That's inside shut,

J

On Campus on “7

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& : 3 you'll want a slim new-leoking suit, a wonderful cafva coat

+ + « fashions designed for you and the busy

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Modelling our "Young Woman of the World” Fashions in the Tea Room this week are Guest Models;

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A. The All Wool Gabardine Suit, 39.95 |

8, C. The Toss-on-over-everything Coats, one double. breasted, one single-breasted, each, 39.93 .

Coot ond Suit Department, Third Floor

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Ann Todd —=from DePauw Dois Mayer={from Indiana Phyl Jay=from Northwestern Mary Lou Jocobs=from Butler

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William Ever shaw. 139 » John Ewin 1134 N Mb

Norman, Frank Gillial dolyn Max Kenneth Han rell, Pittsbo John Hammo Tuttle, 1015 ] ANsbr , 1718 Julian Horner ham, 4808 Claude Jacob

Charles Kirk, Dezelan, 11: Harold Srogk

Edgar Morgai cille Farme: Moses Nease, 216 8. Lebe John W. Pe Plersynskli, Robert Pryo

Don Russell, 2553 Brookw John Russell, son, 832 N

Lela B Louis Schuma Tarczueski, William Selle Wilson, 262(