Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1946 — Page 7

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T. 12, 1946 ale » IVES as iph ¢ Writer e two series rivals msical fates held ), with the sixth

1 to. win but not ‘ere hailing them

Figures 12 (U. P)~—

"on the world se-

tendance—35,082; lance—178,160,

ul receipts—$144 - total receipts—

gues’ and clubs’ 15: five-game ibs’ share—$326,-

imissioners’ share e-game commis 110,187.80.

share—$304,141. only in receipts nes.)

single and a steal hey were rarneed ) ot that it had a result, but the day ad sent the leftoses to right field as get himself four hese items are sig- , in that they inSox are “deep”: ond stringers of

ngers

Through

8 HORNSBY ; League Star

0 ST. LOUIS, Oct. get. Joe Cronin of lled the string on 1 that fifth game. string. He started 0 didn't figure to n pre-series dope, itteridge at second

yy Doerr and staulberson in right

appened? Dobson d should have had eridge drove in the run and Culberson the sixth that took f the game. It just hat- you never c 1appen in baseball mebody can com clutch when le

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of getting by wit » now has Da or tomorrow's gan son and Harris fa flair if necessa uld be~the toughe far, because Ferri are the two shuto is series. They" “key games” a arkably steady pen

Brecheen would ha ecatise he's at ho e's a tricky pitche ; is easy to see eve stuff is hard to h cheen in yesterday yyer assured himse! ider's best effort a him a game to do i can't figure Pollé ch part in the tit finitely sore and it can't put much o might go for an 1 relief . . . but nad

vy The Indianapolis Tim ago Daily News, Inc.

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Inside Indianapolis

. SOME 20 ODD YEARS AGO a young woman iresh from a farm in Morgan county joined a local Business and Professional Woman's club to “fill in” her spare time. Next week portraits of that same farm girl will pop up in store windows all over town as the state honors its No, 1 businesswoman during the observance of “National Business Women's Week." «+ « We say “the same farm girl” advisedly because national and international acclaim haven't changed Sally Butler, newly elected president of the National Federation’ of Business and Professional Women. : A warm personal approach and a total lack of aloofness that were traits of the Morgan county girl dre two of the outstanding attributes of the woman who's achieved what no other Indiana woman had ever attained, the national B. P, W. presidency, . . . Indicative of her total lack of affectation is the fact that people begin thinking of her as “Sally” rather than Miss Butler on first meeting. None of the older members can remember any other national president, ever being spoken of as anything but “Miss.” Now members who've only seen their new officer in formal meetings refer to the homey-looking gray-haired executive as “Sally,” as if she were a personal friend instead of a natiohal figurehead.

Rise Not Meteoric MISS BUTLER'S RISE to national presidency was in no way meteoric. Her progress in B. P. W. was marked with steady plodding, the same type that carried her from a temporary civil service clerk in world war I to a deputy manager of community service in Indiana's U. 8. saving bonds division, . . . She

Indiana’s “Gal Sal.” . , . Sally Butler, president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women.

Kentucky Dew WASHINGTON, Oct. 12—Our Uncle ‘Samuel, I think, needs a drink of his own schnapps. He's in the whisky trade (yes he is, ladies of the W. C. T. U.) and he is what you might call nervous. His hand is a little shaky. The war did it, ladies. The army and the navy used spirits of frumenti for medicinal purposes. A

dozen different distilleries made this Medicine “for .

the government and nasty-tasting stuff it was, too, being mostly bonded pre-war bourbon. So the war ended and the army and navy started turning over this surplus tonic to thé war assets administration. It wasn't long before the surplus property boys had 62,000 quarts of the horrid fluid in storage at Richmond, Va. The Virginia state liquor commission offered to take this off the government's hands, but when that deal was announced there was anguished screaming.

Surplus Liquor Piling Up

NUMEROUS VETERANS’ organizations said didn't the WAA realize congress had promised ex-soldiers first crack at all surplus supplies? The war assets people canceled that one and the 62,000 quarts of federally owned tiger milk remain in Richmond. That was only the beginning. Each day brought new consignments of surplus drinking liquor to the federal sales department. As of now (tomorrow therell probably be more) the surplus experts have 230,000 quart jugs of this nauseous liquid in depots all over America. Some of

Aviati FOR YEARS airmen have been planning the transoceanic air transportation business. But we also understood that transoceanic flying meant something more than suitable long-range air transports and competently trained pilots, just as domestic air transportation means more than ships and men. With suitable time to calculate the needs for maritime transportation, the U, 8, coast guard was organized. This life-saving government agency has done a marvelously effective job fer coastwise and ocean-going vessels—and with a minimum of publicity blather, It has guarded our coasts in peace time and rescued shipwrecked human beings. In conjunc tion with foreign nations it has maintained ice patrols in the North Atlantic, warning seafarers of icebergs. : With little or ne fanfare, it inaugurated its own air-sea rescue operations long before the war, daring landings in the open sea despite the fact that aircraft at that time were designed for less strenudus waters. These air-sea rescue pilots of the coast guard made landings at sea to pick up shipboard personnel who had been injured or were in need of immediate surgical service. They received no inspiration from a grandstand of cheering spectators for that kind of grim work, but they did it and the country heard little about it.“

Appropriations Cut to Bone

NOW WE'VE GOT the airplanes and the pilots for transoceanic air transportation and the usual “too little and too late.” What we need is for someone In Washington to assign to the U. 8. coast guard the exclusive responsibility .for providing an adequate airsea rescue operation. The coast guard is conducting such” an operation now, but due to the customary

My Day

NEW YORK, Friday —Yesterday I attended a press conference and met some of the delegates who .are going to the meeting of the international assembly of women at South Kortright, N.'Y. Mrs. Alice T. McLean will be hostess to the group, which will meet on her farm. There are some 140 delegates from other countries, as well as a great number of American delegates. . They are interested in what can be done. by women in the various nations to forward the one cause on which they are all united. No woman in the world wants war, : Every woman knows that, if her country is once engaged in war, there is nothing she can do but work to help the men who fight, but every woman would like to prevent war if possible. This must be one when we are at peace. t=

Bogged on Political Level

THAT LEADS me to some reflections -which Walter. Lippman’'s column ‘pointed up yesterday morning. He seemed to infer that, unless both we and the Soviet Union were ready, to make some concessions, no solution could be found to the question of handling atomic energy. : I think that, for the moment, we are chiefly

~ ve

Aas it lies in our power, the United States will

= SL ’

*

-

state president, regional chairman, national recording secretary and national first vice president. She was carried into national presidency by an overwhelming vote in Cleveland last July. . . . Six days after her election she was whipped off to Brussels for an international board meeting. No sooner was she “back from Europe than she was whipped up in a whirl of activities that has kept her flying back and forth across the nation. Her schedule for last week included a lecture at the National Safety council in Chicago; a brief stop-off back in her officer here; a flight to New York to attend the United Nations section on the status of women. . . . Whether she’s attending a local club meeting or speaking at a national meeting she wears simply tailored suits, inconspicuous costume jewelry and sensible shoes. . In a private conversation or speaking publicly she still retains a slight southern Indiana twang; often uses down to earth phrases light “right proud” or “right

Doesn't Like to ‘Just Belong’ UNLIKE MANY CLUBWOMEN, Miss Butler doesn’t believe in “belonging.” She once found herself a member of too many organizations to take part actively in all. She immediately dropped most of them, r r than retaining membership just to say she “belonged.” It's characteristic that she dropped those organized solely for teas and get-togethers. “I can't stand a hit-and-miss attitude and I can’t bother with groups that have ‘no purpose’ was the way she explained it. . . . Her friends describe Miss Butler as a “self-made woman.” She attended the State Normal college at Terre Haute and Madam Blaker’s here. Later she was appointed primary teacher in Morgan county after her brother married the primary teacher. “Her father was superintendent,” she laughs, “and kept the job in the family.” She resigned shortly after to teach at Midam -Blaker's, dropped that to take a civil service job at the start of world war I, , . . That ended her education until she was_firmly established in civil service and on her way up in B, P. W. At that time she decided she needed more educational background. With her typical “get it done” attitude she enrolled and grad-| uated from I. U. law school, got herself admitted to| the state and federal bar. She never practiced, but felt she got what she needed from the course. . . . Miss Butler was well-liked as a state officer. She once introduced a project to sponsor ambulances through the purchase of bonds; got the women so enthused that 40 ambulances were bought. . . | Her first national project, the sponsoring of Belgium children by B. P. W. members, drew such enthusiastic response that now, almost a month after she introduced the project, the officials still haven't finished tabulating. The prestige which the state has gained from her election, plus her personal popularity may result in B. P. W. emerging as an even stronger factor in Indiana club life. Indiana officers are going to try to double membership with a “Rally to Sally” slogan. . If they succeed, and there seems to be a good| chance that they will, it will probably make “Sally,” in her own words, “right proud.”

By Frederick C. Othman

this corn juice is only 90 proof. Some is 94 and some is 100. Each bottle is labeled, “proof spirits.”

Suggest Rat Poison Label

THAT LABEL, unfortunately, is illegal. The law says that a bottle of Kentucky dew has got to say what's inside. So the war assets fellows have about decided to empty their 230,000 bottles into one big tank. They will mix contents well and rebottle ‘it into 287,500 fifth gallons. These, at $5 each retail, will be worth $1,437,500. So far so good. Only what is uncle going to call his medicine? At this writing a man, whose address I must keep secret, is thumbing through hundreds of old whisky labels; looking for ideas. He also is receiving helpful suggestions. We drys have urged that he label each bottle, old rat poison. Several wets (people with whom I personally would not associate) have sniffed the stock. They agree that the government should call its whisky, old salubrious, with a picture of uncle in red, white and blue, of course, upon the label. That's still just a start. If 13,000,000 veterans insist upon their fair share, there's only enough to give each one a short snort. And uncle would have tol set up as federal bartender. This is an eventuality | he hopes to avoid because, as I said before, his hand | is shaky. Frankly, he doesn't know what to do. The distillers, who made the unpleasant stuff in the first | place, want to buy it back. Veterans in the liquor business insist. they should get it to resell to other

Hoosier Profile] =

climbed steadily from midor committee positions to

~ SECOND SECTION _

Ca

e Indianapolis

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1046

BEHIND THE IRON CURTAIN—

Stalingrad Back At Work

(Last of

a Series, )

By JOHN

n'‘whole or in

machinery instead of tanks. The ruins of Stalingrad earth across 40 miles. The ruins are ugly but the people who live here have an almost reverent feeling about their city. It was here the tide of Nazi conquest was, turned.

both an atrocity and a monument, The same peo- : ple who saved 8 because they obeyed : the order: “Die j but don't give an | inch” now labor to bring order in § the chaos of broken stone. ‘ They have a a certain pride. 1t Mr. Strohm shines on the bristly face of an old farmer as he slaps the flank of a camel, beast of burden in the countryside. “This handsome fellow is the real hero of Stalingrad,” he smiles. “He carried the shells to Katushka when mud stalled the trucks.” We went to the Stalingrad tractor factory, built with the help of American engineers in 1932. It switched from tank to tractor production at the end of 1943 and is steadily getting back into production, with about two-thirds of the workers it had before the war. ” - ”

THE FACTORY is not clean. It is not well-lighted. The work seems poorly organized. But I saw tractors coming off the assembly line. This factory, while still digging out and repairing war damage, hopes to make 6000 tractors this year. “How did you ever get back into production so quickly?” I asked the manager, a vigorous young man who has been in charge since the factory was built.

It is

~ ~ » “WE FIXED up some of the equipment, not too badly damaged by fire.

and we got some new ones from our Ural factories—well, anyway we got going again.”

World Copyright ‘by NEA Service, Ine, 1

STALINGRAD, U. S. 8S. men trudge through the rubble of Stalingrad to their battered tractor factory, once more ‘turning out farm

“We cannibalized other machines, |

STROHM : , And John Strohm. Reproduction part prohibited. a

R.—Ragged,barefoot work-

stretch like a blotch on th

per cent boost—earnings for. the average worker in 1050 of 6000 rubles, or about $480 a year. : The government has kept the price of basic food rations for workers very low, But because of food scarcity, these items are not always

: available.

That's one reason why the government encourages a factory

8 [worker to have his own cow, chicklens and garden. The more food

the industrial worker grows him-

i | self, the better.

» ® » THE FACTORY manager hands

lout small plots of land to the work-

ers, and also helps them establish co-operative livestock breeding so|cieties, | Farmers are well off—compara- | tively speaking. In the towns a {chauffeur gets about $85 a month, |a stenographer, $44; a construction worker, $27; a policeman $38: a month. < But a farmer, by selling on the free market half a gallon of milk daily from his privately owned cow, can make $360 a year from that alone. That's more than the entire salary of the construction worker,

» ~ ~ COLLECTIVE farming is a mixture. of collectivism and private enterprise. (Editor's Note: Recent reports tell of a purge among collective farm officials in the Soviet Union who are accused of “introducing the principles of private property.” “While I was in Russia,” says Mr. Strohm, “I was surprised to find that the government sanctioned this private property. Farmers were encouraged to own a certain number of livestock, to sell livestock produce and produce from their privately-farmed plot of land on the free market.”) » » ” WE MET three ox carts from a collective farm, making their first delivery of grain to the government. The driver and the farm chairman helped straighten out a few basic questions many of my farm friends had told me to ask:

responsibility of tending

the acre,

over-fllfilled the plan b

brigade gets to divide one-f

their workers, according

during the year. i “And what is a labor-

ask

ure our various farm jobs.

HUMAN MUSCLE MOVES

certain

fields, growing certain crops. For instance, the quota for a 20acre field of wheat is 20 bushels to

But if this brigade, by its good work can make that field yield 28 bushels to the acre, then they've

y eight

bushels, or 160 bushels in all. . - ” UNDER the incentive system, this

ourth of

this surplus, or 40 bushels, among

to the

number of labor-days each put in

day?” 1

- “A labor-day is the way we meas-

Cutting half an acre of hay with a scythe is 1'4 labor-days credit.”

ila on et a

STALINGRAD RUINS: Crews of women labor to clear the rubble from Stalingrad streets; some work barefoot in the broken bricks and stones they are moving by hand,

He was happy. “We're getting some new machinery from America ~it’s the best.” The factory looms large in the life of the worker. He lives in a factory home, his

was the first,

using the land.”

“Who owns the land anyway?”

“The government owns the land, but collective farms about 245,000) have the privilege of

“YES, BUT what about those jobs that just can't be measured that way?” I asked.

(there are| “Oh, but we have a measurement

a

Byelorussia, on several farms visited they had about seven acres per worker. - “The American farmer couldn't afford to use that much labor on his farm,” I told them. “And what about the people, are | they looking for war?” my corre- | spondent friend asked. I LE Ea I'M NOT a strategist or a psychologist, but the words of one Russian sounded to me like good sense. He said: “Anyone. who says the Soviet Union wants war is crazy—unless it 1s our leaders who are crazy. “The people have been living on promises of better things in the sweet bye and bye ever since the revolution, They accepted world war II as an excuse why they could not achieve a higher standard.

|

® * » “NOW THEY want to work for peacetime goals. Our government

8

a

of war

We, the Wome

Times Change; Now Father VL Minds Baby : By RUTH MILLETT IN THE“OLD days Papa had his night out with the boys and manima wouldn't dream of spending an evening with the girls, leaving Papa at home as a baby-sitter. 3 But times have changed. Now © the girls are going in for evening parties and get-togethers. -5 It started during the war, when lonely wives had to occupy their evenings somehow, so switched their bridge-playing from afternoon to after-dinner, And they've

must consider’ the people—not war.”

for all of them. For example: Hauling 15 carloads of manure

The man who said that was not

stayed with the altered schedule,

+ 8 8

children go to a factory school, he plays on a factory athletic team. His tiny ones are taken care of at the factory nursery, while he and his wife work, and the factory doctor is the family doctor. » ” »

1940 earned about $360 a year— less than a dollar a day. The Five Year Plan calls for a 50

veterans. Anyway you look at it, uncle's headed for a hangover.

By Maj. Al Williams

racket of cutting appropriations for the army and navy combat air forces when a politician seeks to promote his own economy prestige, the coast guard appropriations for air-sea rescue have been cut to the bone. Air-sea rescue operations require a complete, up-to-the-minute network of communication. Any slipup in the communication setup can mean, as it did mean recently, the death of coast guardsmen. Obviously, the other requirements are first-class aircraft—not cast-offs from other services—facilities for training pilots and adequate appropriations.

Natural Function of Coast Guard

IT WAS coast guard aircraft and pilots from Argentina (Newfoundland) which reached the landcrashed Belgian transport. If we fly the oceans we are bound to have a few landings at sea. Such an emergency means rapid, accurate communications certifying the plane's position, cleared through a rescue co-ordination center, and the immediate dispatch of the most modern, fully equipped plane and crew—plus a standby for unforseeable contingencies. These facilities must be spaced strategically along our coastlines and at whatever island positions are available along the ocean airways. " Such ar air-sea rescue agency is a natural function of the U. 8. coast guard because it represents an extension of its surface life-saving operations. It is difficult for airmen to understand how the men charged with national policy-making can dare to Ignore the moral responsibility for providing such life-saving facility. Some day, unfortunately—as always happens— there will be a Aistress cry for more air-sea rescue facilities than we possess. And then the decision will be forced from those in the high places who should set up such an agency now.

gram from WLW a listener

This mother said their li

himself at the front window to watch for the coming of his master,. but no boy came home. The birds at his garden pool seemed to chirp rather lonésomely, The game mother and child had played earch spring at. finding first flowers in ; the nearby woods §i would be no fung with him away.

hardly noticed. The house seemed empty... There were no towels bathroom that Mr. Pogue indicated a boy had wet his hands and wiped the dirt off on the clean linen, There were no crumbs on the kitchen cabinet where a hungry boy

By Eleanor Roosevelt

* | bogged down on the political level, If we want one world, we have got to find some level on which we can work together.

Break Down Trade Barriers

WINSTON CHURCHILL'S recent speech in Zurich, suggesting a federation of European countries, dealt with political questions. But I wonder if he could not find, on the economic and humanitarian side, something which. would start us actually co-operating. For the recovery of Europe, the one essential thing is to break down trade barriers and allow free travel from one country to another. Wouldn't it be possible to have an economic federation, leaving to every country its political sovereignty but doing away with restrictions so that travel and trade could be accelerated? Could® We ‘not also give assurance that,. as far

continué“to work with the United Kingdom and the | U. 8. 8. R. to help all the European hations needing relief? vl Such a plan would not ereate more divisions and might start us working together. It seems to me | essential that, somewhere, we begin building our! confidence in each other through -working' contacts. 4 . \r

N \ . dio

i ~ u : * em 3 v

| had made himself an after-school

snack. . oo» WHAT I WROTE for that radio friend could be done now with much more feeling, perhaps, seeing my “only” has made the long trip to Indiana university. (Purdue fans, or patrons of other schools, must not feel bowed-down, seeing that we chose the Bloomington school. . I had taught at I. U,, and secretly hoped she would decide to matriculate there.) Last Thursday we took down there—her and all that .clutter of luggage, so'I know now how it feels, as thousands of other Indiana parents must feel, to have the kid away at college.

There’s a little white dog at the window at four, Expecting him home from school, There are little song birds at his feeding trays Down by the lily pool; But the littl white dog, and the gay little birds

Each evening at about 4 o'clock the animal would

. ~ ” “IT SEEMS to me,” I said, “that a farmer, who is a pretty individualistic fellow all over the world, would need more incentives than he {has on a collective farm.” | “But we have incentives,” pro-

THE average factory worker In|tested the chairman, and he gave |t

|an example: The work of the farm

is divided into four brigades. The

WHILE BROADCASTING my “Wayside Windows” pro-

asked that 1 write something

about this experience of having a child get away to an institution of higher learning.

ttle white dog was lonesome. station

A lonesomeness, and a sol-

And sunsets lack in tone, The game we played at finding first flowers Isn't fun when you play it alone; We're not always certain what concert is on, As we sit by the radio, We're wishing for him to anchor our minds, And oh, we're wishing it

emness, For the kid has gone to college. We only half hear the song of the birds,

weighing 770 pounds each to where [an official. My eyes and ears can

they plant the cucumbers is one|vouch for what he says of the turned many young husbands into

labor-day,” he explained.

On this farm, 119 workers {are women) tilled 960 acres of plow (land.

farm,

That's eight acres per worker on [thing which no reporter, free or rehis graip and.vegetable and fruit stricted, can answer.

” n n IN THE Ukraine on a grain farm [a {brigadier and his workers have the |it is a little more than that.

In

{was before my lens.

BARTON REES POGUE . . . Times Roving-Rhyming Reporter

The Kid Has Gone to College

hunger of the Russian masses for

(96 [the good things in life.

Whether the men in the Kremlin give heed to that hunger is some-

I have told only what I have seen nd heard and pictured only what

By Palumbo

so! If his room were cluttered sand thrown out of joint| We'd welcome the sight to! behold; He could track in mud on the| kitchen floor And no one would care or! scold;

What a joy it would be, on the cab'net top,

Where a hungry schoolboy| |*BEHOLD CHRISTOPHER, — AN AMERICAN INDIAN In comes, To find big spots of butter : : RIOT OF STUDENTS and jam, All 'Fowled Up’ i dg trace of P TIES UP TRAFFIC!

The house is too clean! The thumb-marks are gone From the paint on. the kitchen door; He doesn’t wipe dirt from his dampened hands On the, bathroom “towel

That's part of the price of knowledge . . . Half of our hearts went out of the place,

Do quietly acknowledge

When the kid went away to . college. 1

’ i

at LS

10-12

SILLY NOTIONS

ONE REASON may be that war

home-lovers who would rather sit at home with the evening paper and the radio than go to a movie, with the result that their wives get an over-dose of sitting at home. The other reason is the scarcity of baby-sitters, It's a problem for Mamma to find somebody to stay with the kids in the afternoon. But going out in the evening is a cinch. Papa can baby-sit. a Grandma, who thought # was a wife's duty to be at home whenever her husband was around, would be horrified at the idea of wives’ evening parties. But it seems to be working olit all right with the young couples. ~ » »

THE HUSBANDS apparently aren't objecting to the baby-sitting arrangement, probably for two very good reasons, : It lets them out of gossipy bridge sessions, And the wife who has her eves ning out can't very well object to a husband's weekly poker. night. Bo, unless you don’t mind being thought ‘ old-fashioned, don't turn down “an evening invifation with the explanation: “I'd love to come —but George will be home.” The modern wife will answer: “That's perfect. Then you won't have to scare uo a baby-sitter.,”

Windsors Hope

To Be Received

LONDON, Oct. 12. (U. P.).—The question today was—will the royal family . “receive the - Duchess of Windsor, now that she is back on English soil? Both the duke and duchess hope 50. But they aren't sure.

sea,

a

In Meat Game

BALTIMORE, Oct. 12 (U. P).— Retail meat dealers and Baltimore housewives have turned thé meat

shortage into a seen.” . .

game’ of “sight un-

In those stores in which the game

a package with the price

anymore! is played it works this way: The. house is too ordered,| A housewife walks up to the meat empty and dull .... counter and the butcher hands her

written

on the outside. If the housewife

wants to play the game, 8

he pays

her money and takes her chance. “And what is slié most likely to

get? Fowl,

A

.

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 12 (U, P.. «A traditional “rowbottom” riot staged by several thousand - University of Pennsylvania students in West Philadelphia last night resulted in an eye injury to a policeman and tied up traffic for a half hour, The students, who swarmed into the streets near the university campus following a football rally for ‘the game with Dartmouth, pulled poles from trolleys and pushed automobiles onto the street car tracks. A

Several hundred police were called to end the riot.

# » eG

“three weeks in September, 1939, just

“We hope to see the royal family during our visit, but cannot say we shall,” the former King Edward VII told newsmen last night during a brief chat at the gates of the Earl of Dudley's estate as the couple ar« rived from France, It was the first formal visit to England for the duchess, the former Mrs, Wallis Warfield Simpson, since her marriage to the duke. It had been regarded a very. first return to British , but the duke disclosed last night that she had made an unpublicized visit here for

after the war began,

TROOP SHIPS ARRIVE, DEPART + NEW YORK, Oct. 12 (U. P).— Ship movements scheduled in New York harbor today: Arriving—Ze~ bulon B. Vance, Bremerhaven (troops). Departing—Marine Robin, Bremerhaven (troops); Ballou, Bremerhaven (troops).

BUS WRECK HURTS 12. WILMINGTON, Dela., Oct. 12 (U, P.) —Twelve persons were injured,

usly,