Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1946 — Page 2

vs THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ericans Are’ Wiser As Trieste

proces ~ MONDAY, ‘SEPT. 9, 1048

iolence : Continues |

Sabotage Scene.

-

, local authorities fired into an angry

“DR. ALVIN T. STONE OPENS OFFICE HERE!

~ months in the army, has ahnounced

IRI wos a

fe Police Fire Into Angry Mob ==5:

of 5000 to Break Up Demonstration.

+ By KATHERINE CLARK +: United Préss Staft Correspondent TRIESTE, Sept. 9—8ix Yugoslav «soldiers were arrested by the Amer-

«.dcan 88th division today shortly |

after a six-pound dynamite bomb espiiase in Trieste where 22 per- | _ sons, including seven Aniericans; ‘were injured yesterday by a hand _ grenpde. : The Yugoslav soldiers nad five - hand grenades in their possession, «officials said, when they were arrested after the second explosion marked a renewal of auualiiey vio:Jence in Trieste. ' 4°." The Yugoslavs were nabbed about three-quarters of a mile from a house occupied by Italians which © was the target of the dynamite bomb. The allied command charged yesterday in a formal statement that the Yugoslavs were harassing the) occupation forces and violating | Aheir agreement to guarantee | “Yreedom of movement along an authorized route, Bomb Damages Home An announcement by the 88th “division said the bomb which ex‘ploded today consisted - of “six| pounds of dynamite and a fiveminute fuse.” The bomb broke three windows and damaged a wall of the Italian's house. Those injured yesterday were victims of a hand grenade believed ‘to have been thrown from a win“dow after machine-gun fire from ‘local police stirred up a pro-Slovene crowd. + American military police and - pro-Yugoslay mob of 5000 to break _ up an unauthorized demonstration " after the explosion occurred. An|

_strators were believed injured.

Dr. Alvin T. Stone, after 32

establishment of an office at 6202 College ave, for general practice

y o Rehovot ‘

. On the ‘eve of the London, Palestine conference, Jewish extremists sabotaged the Tel AvivJerusalem railroad (1).in seven places. British troops and police launched a manhunt in the Judean Hills (2) The extremists also dynamited three oil pipelines at the huge Haifa -oil refinery (3) blew up a railway bridge at BatGalim, south 8f Haifa, and destroyed. a signal ‘box on another bridge east of Haifa,

RAILROAD HIT BY TERRORIST!

Jewish Extremists Raid Two Trains, Mine Tracks.

By ELIAV SIMON United Press Staff Correspondent JERUSALEM, Sept. 9. — Bloodshed and dynamiting broke out in the Holy Land today, the eve of the London-Palestine conference,

seven places, : A strenuous manhunt by British troops and police, stretching back

“yndetermined number of demon inte=the-Judean-hills,. followed . the

series of explosions and gunfire fusillades which shook.central Palestine before dawn. Jewish extremists raided trains, mined rail lines and Killed

during the outbreak. - Curfew Expected

The doctor, who was discharged as a captain, served in the AsiaticPacific theater where he was bat-

nance battalion. He also was stationed atiDarnall General hospital;

Danville, Ky.; Mason General hospital, Long Island, N, Y., and was|was halted after

reception center Camp Atterbury, Ind., for one year. Prior to entering the service, Dr.

Stone was resident physician at the |sse.

Methodist hospital for three years.

psychiatrist at while tracks

into “Haifa after the SOOtgs curfew and search of the port were expected.

ish settlements along the Tel Jerusalem railroad. All railroad traffic

were searched mines. Official sources . ' sabotage did not cause serious dam-

The military announced tha

| Reparations Bid Waived,

| seige Italian property . on British

. |of bargaining procedure to counter |

when Jewish extremists sabotaged the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem railroad in|

two

a British police sergeant in Haifa |

British troops and police rushed

British ay talion surgeon for the 690th ord-|‘“red devils” prepared to search JewAvi tv-|

in Palestine the explosions] fo

Said. the

BRITAIN DROPS | CLAIM ON ITALY

Peace Parley Told.”

PARIS, Sept. 9 (U, P.)—Britain | today withdrew its $11 billion damlage cliim against Italy and ade | vised the peace conference it was

| waiving all reparations. claims against Italy except the right to]

territory. | The British had never intended] to insist on payment of the huge| { bill. but introduced it as a matter

| the claims filed against Italy by the. Balkan. states, 3. The British claim was’ the big-| gest filed against Italy. Yugoslavia asked $1,300,000,000 and about $2 billion. © Agree to UN Delay The British informed the Italian economic” commission that it hoped

sion “in assessing the merits “of |

the other claims before it and to

see them all in due perspective.” The British formally notified Paul Henri Spaak, president of the United Nations general assembly, that they were associating themselves, with the Russo-Chinese- | Prensh Suggestion that the assem- | ng ‘be postponed from | w po spi 23, | The Big Four were seeking in] | private negotiations to agree on | all details of the Italo-Yugoslav| Lfrontier and the boundaries for the free territory of Trieste, Will Discuss Germany i Negotiations between the big powers are seeking to turn agreement in principle upon the so-called “French line” into a solid, detailed plan for presentation in the Nalian political commission, Disclosure of further efforts to- | ward an agreed Big Four policy followed Soviet agreement to dis-| | cuss Germany in’ the council of foreign ministers in November, and withdrawal of American objections to postponement of the United Nations- assembly meeting. The meeting on Germany ~will have before it the plan by Secretary of State James F. Byrnes for a federated, central German government. No official Russian reaction | has been voiced ‘to the proposal, put forward by Mr. Byrnes last week at Beart. co -

* ADVENTISTS PUN CASE AGAINST LIQUOR

Seventh Day Adventists of Indi- | ana today announced their decision to “immediately launch a program r| of education. plainly stating the case against liquor.” The Adventists passed such a res- ¢ | olution at their state camp meeting

| |

railroad trafic would be resumed] Which closed yesterday at Battle-

The doctor, who is married and has [late today.

two children, resides at 3337 Car-

rollton ave. TROOP SCHOOL 1S SET

Training of the organized officers|out by Hagana, Irgun Zvei Leumi) reserve corps of the Indianapolis or the Stern-gang, the three chief | enemies of society;

Shots at British troops were re ported from several points, It was not immediately apparen

ground, Ind. | They issued a call to Hoosier Ad- | ventists to “re-dedicate themselves t! to the cause of temperance; to re-

whether the attacks were carried { double their efforts to check and

military subdistrict will begin with | resistance forces in Palestine,

a troop school in the Indiana War Memorail auditorium at 8 p.m,

0. E. S. TO MEET,

turn back the liquor interests as and by -pen, | voice and vote to labor unceasingly for the cause of local option and state prohibition.”

Sept. 20, the Indianapdlis office has| Cumberland chapter 515, O. E. 8.,| The denomination counts on announced. will meet at 8 p. m Wednesday. church schools to expound their i sims maa —————— principles, saying that “what the

Fine shirting stripes

Paige of Yat. dyed,

afard cf, 3.45

MWeadsubrook Oxfords For Toun and Country

in Azure Blue, Canyon

ofl

Ton, Meadow Green . . . Styled by Nelson-

sonforized Ameritex

r Men's Fumiings, Stree Floor, South Bid

schools are today the world is 10 years from now.” “More than 1000 graduates from Seventh Day Adventist-school senter the organized work of the depomination each year,” Was an announcement made at the camp meeting. Prof. W. A. Nelson of Indianapolis, secretary of education for the Indiana conference of the church, reported that the denomination had 3116- elementary parochial schools and 285 advanced and secondary schools, A total of 6908 teachers instructed the - students who numbered 136,517.

13 HOOSIERS ON WAY HOME FROM PACIFIC

Thirteen Hoosiers, including nine from Indianapolis, today were reported en route to the United States from the Philippine islands. An army dispatch said they would be ‘discharged upon’ their arrival on the continent,

They are 1st. Lt. Paul Noffke: 1st Lt. Harold White Jr.; T-3 Stanley Meachem, Pfc, Clarence Johnson, 2d Lt, Mary Mowry, 1st Lt Harry Fulmer, 1st Lt. Ralph Gaston Ist Lt. Clarence Allig' and Capt Thomas Jones, all of Indianapolis and Pfc, Norman Rogers of Connersville, - Cpl. Jack Gordon and

2d Lt. Verne, Garrett of Anderson. and Ist Lt, Earl Carter Jr. -of Brighteiown,

U. S. SIGNS AVIATION TREATY WITH BRAZIL

WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (U.P.) — A bilateral air agreement: between the. United States. and Brazil has been signed in Rio: de. Janeiro. The agreement, governing commercial aviation operations between the ‘two governments, is of the type agreed upon. at the Bermuda conference on - civil aviation, the state department said. The United States previously has made similar agreements ‘with 20 other colintries, but Brazil was the first American nation with which one was signed.

33 TEACHERS ADDED TO N. D. FACULTY

An unprecedented enrollment of approximately 4200 students at the University of Notre Dame has made

the faculty. .

New members assumed

“Greece |?

this action would aid the commis-|

163 Transfusions

Aa

Three-year-old Raymond Gar-

rison of Glennville, Ga. plays | York surgeon, Dr. Donald :D. Van|

with his toys in a hospital bed at the University of Alabama Medical school in Birmingham, Ala.

where doctors are studying his unusual illness which has re-

| quired him to have 163 blood since he was two months old. A year and a half

transfusions _

ago he received nation-wide attention when soldiers from nearby

Camp Stewart banded together to form a continuous chain of

CHARGE REDS STIR GHINA WAR

American Policy «Group Urges U. S. Act.

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—A group “lot Americans familiar with conditions in the Orient charged today that Russia for months had been

directing Communist followers in stalling peace efforts in China, The charges were made by the American China Policy Associates, { Inc, in a letter to President Tru- | man, J lLP Powell, the American journalist who was permanently crippled while a wartime prisoner of the Japanese, is president of the’ association. Its letter to Mr..Truman was signed by seventeen per{sons including:

can Red Cross Director in China; Professor Sidney Hook, New York

3 university; Rep. Walter. H. Judd (R,

Minn.) ; Clare Boothe Luce (R, Conny, Dr. Frank L. Meleney, New

|Slvke, chief chemist, | foundation, and Robert J. Watt, in{ternational representative . of the American Federation of Labor, | They urged Mr. Truman to shake{up the state department's Far East{ern division: to place in authority there persons who would enthusiastieally support these policies. ONE: An immediate demand {upon Russia to yield unqualified | political control of China's terri-

John Earl Baker, former Ameri-|

Rockefeller |

|

|

Warns Fallate

War May Mean 'Red' State

By WALTER LOGAN United Press Staff Correspondent

NANKING, Sept. 9.—A Chinese Commiinist spokesman warned today that failure of the Nationalists and - Communists to reach agreement on ending the civil war will result in creation of -a separate Communist state in China. The spokesman, Wang Ping-nan, sdid success of the negotiations depend for the most part on whether the government will be “sincere” in issuing a cease fire order, A five-man committee of Com-

munists and Nationalists has been

named to discuss the peace. Wang said that if the committee is “stillborn,” as the local press has. predicted, it will show that the Kuomintang (government party) does fot wish peace and wants to enlarge the scope of the civil war, and will also mean the “ultimate failure of U. S. mediation in China. Collapse of the édommittee will be.

{followed by a “final” Kuomintang(Communist break; the unavoidable result of the government’s

“unwill-

with the Yalta agreement, TWO: Denunciation of the pro-

gram of the Chinese Communists.

and withdrawal of all United States support for them. THREE: Pull and unqualified support of the Chinese government in suppressing the Chinese Communist organization. This proposal was accompanied by a ‘translation of a document which the association said proved Moscow's Communist internationale

| tories to the Chinese (Chiang Kai- controlled Communist activities .in

to End China’ S|

ingness” ‘to give a cease-fire guarantee, Wang said. Wang earlier served notice that the Communists will consider a_unilateral goverhment call for a naional assembly Nov. 12 ‘tantamount to dividing China in"two parts.” Such a call, he said, issued without the consent and participation of | the Communists, would result inthe {Communists calling their own national assembly with delegates attending from “liberated” areas. Meanwhile, a fight which may decide the fate of besieged Tatung appeared to be shaping up in the vicinity of Tsining, a Shansi province communications hub 60 miles to the north.’ : . The government central news agency reported that Gen. Fu Koyi's Nationalist forces were rolling foward Tsining: and Fengcheng, 27 miles north of Tatung, The Communists were said to be rushing reinforcements to the two| threatened cities from Chahar and| central Shansi where they aban- | doned the siege of Hsienhsien, 125. miles south of Tatung. :

The translated document said the Communist internationale’s eastern bureau had adopted on March 12 1946, a resolution of general policy with respect to the Communist program in China. The" Hssociation said the central polical bureau of the Chinese Communist party issued the document, which -proposed that Chinese Communists should “use revolutionary tactics to estrange relations between the United States and

BULGARIA'S KING LOSING THRONE

Plebiscite’ - Unseating Year-Old Ruler.

SOFIA, Sept. 9 (U. P).—King Simeon II, the 9-year-old ruler of Bulgaria, appeared definitely today to have lost his 3-year-old throne as official returns from Sunday's plebiscite indicated &n “overwhelms ing choice for a republican form of government. Almost complete returns ane nounced - by the home ministry showed that 3,800,000 Bulgarians voted for a republic yesterday, compared with 179,000 favoring the monarchy. ‘There were 119 ,000 blank and “slogan”'ballots cast, the minis try said.

A leftist victory had been pres

dicted in the Russian-occupied country which joined' the axis in March, 1941, King Simeon rules: under a ree gency council established under German - influence in 1943. courigil was reorganized in Septem= ber, 1944, when Bulgaria was grante ed an armistice by Russia. Informed sources said the Bule

| garian family, with the exception of

Princess Eudoxia, was preparing to leave the country;

Socialist Party Leads in Reich BERLIN, Sept. 9 (U. P).—Th Communist-backed Socialist Unity

party forged into a slight lead toe day over right-wing opposition

Chiang Kal-shek,” head of the

parties in the Russian zone municie

ft necessary to add 33 teachers to }

their duties with _opening. of “the tan)

semester today.

AYRES IS OPEN TOMORROW AT 9:00 A. M. EFFECTIVE TOMORROW L. S. AYRES & CO. 1S ADOPTING A 5-DAY WEEK WITH ALMOST AN HOUR LONGER SHOPPING TIME EVERY DAY CLOSED EACH MONDAY - SHOP TUESDAY thru SATURDAY 9:00 to 5:25 LS. Ayes & Co.

The -

108 INI

Pittsbur With' E De

P Industrie horne car impact of day. Meanwh efforts to strike wh food short today and put the er on the A. Mayor hour-long and emplo lice headq ing was a ing the str L The ma oil situatic mal despit of tugboat John E. 807, said that “the I see no than one In the Lundberg, Sailors’ U: of L.), a with Assis Philip Ha setilement Other I ONE: 1 erhood of at a rank to vote o to end the among N Jersey tru TWO: prepared President independe Light Co. would wa minute pa union “der THREE of the C. régional n Steelwork: planned t pay for w Blam In an strike. wo berg said solely to the wage He sai no disagr who have from $22. The "co wage hiki than thos C. 1 O. earlier th by WSB

. tiomary.”

The ‘W hearings considera cision. More t .tied up ir gulf ports Mayor At Pit Lawrence pressure Tight cor order fo which wr dustrial Mayor meet a 5 mittee at face” tall for a 20 and 30 o cluding 2 Mr. M the C. I to-portal paying

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HEAL A. ‘Wa re-electec post 389, Other are Earl mander; vice com man, al finance torian; I Reed Ds Blankens

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