Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1947 — Page 18
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local Deaths— ai Ey George McClellan Glass, Retired Engineer, Dies
George McClellan Glass, a former railroad engineer 40 years, died {yesterday in his home, 1127 E. Southern ave. - He was 86.
tired Railway Employees and Baltimore &._ Ohio Railway Engineers, i Services will be at 9:30 a. m. tomorrow in thé*Blackwell Funeral {home and at 10 a. m, in St. Cath-/ rp ve letne's church. Burial Will be in| Rudolph, Gerald and William Cash, St. Joseph's. | Indianapolis; his father, Henry Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Eliza- Cash, St. Louls, Mo.; a sistter, Mrs, 'beth Glass; three sons, George E. | Gertrude Lombard, Indianapolis; (Glass, South Bend; Harry A. Glass, WO brothers, Charles Cash and the (Indianapolis, and Robert L. Glass,! Rev. Benjamin Cash, Indianapolis, {Washington, and six grandchildren, 80d one grandchild.
‘Mrs. Deborah Cruea Carl Grosskopf
Mr. Glass was born in Mt. Savage, Md., lived here 30 years and/ was a member of St. Catherine's Catholic church, Association of Re-
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Mrs. Deborah Cruea, 244 E. 10th | Services for Carl Grosskopf, 222 st., died yesterday in City hospital. |N. Richland st, who died Wednes- | She was 60. {day in City hospital, will be at 1:30 : . tomorrow in Shirley Bros. Mrs, Cruea was a native of Cov-/P: Mm 8 { ington, Ky, and had lived here| Vest i Burial" will be nine years. She was a member of |} Crown ol the Methodist church in Eaton. aphyicnel who Was 5, was Services will be held tomorrow inf ost of his life Say. ved here Muncie with burial in Eaton. machinist and was a retired | aR Yvors MIS ge ughters, A brother, Henry Grosskopf, In- | Annabell Cruea, New Castle: Mrs, | 18napolis, survives,
Atlantic City, N. J., June 9. Jo ———— meet rhea. : 3 Griffith told the 56th congress of Atom Spies Unhindered he Daughters of the American In U. S., Griffith Says | Revolution last night that the spies WASHINGTON, May 23 (U. P.).[still are at large in this country, —National ' Commander Paul H.| desptie the fact that their names Griffith of the American Legion| were disclosed to the U. 8. governcharges that a band of Communist ment in September, 1045. The disatomic spies has been allowed to closure, he said, was made by Prime
rograms Pushed
Col. C. F Cornish, director of the Indiana * aeronautics commission, last night urged airports to carry lout extensive safety programs. to stop needless air disasters, At an aviation safety conference in Hotel Washington he attributed
| the cause of the rising number of
plane- accidents to pilot error and carelessness in ground operations, Local ‘aviation representatives unanimously approved a safety program outlined by Col. Cornish and appointed safety committees: for the following airports: Weir Cook municipal airport— Russell Irwin, representing Air Sales & Service, Inc.; Dale Mason, representing Roscoe Turner Aeranautical Corp, and Phillip Roettger, manager of the field. Shank Airport—Ned Bottoms, representing Bottoms & Lamb Flying service; Arno Siefker, representing private aircraft owners; Bill Long, Central States Aeronautical Serv-
CAITY on espionage work unham-| Minister MacKenzie King of pered in the United States. Canada.
ice, Inc.; Rex McCormick, Aero Re-
_ FRIDAY, MAY 23,
management, ; Sky Harbor Alrport—Harry Mee Quinn, representing Sky Harbor, Inc.; EsFrank Echolds, Sky Harbor Flying service; Al Lichtenauer, Ell Lilly flying club; Gene Westervelt, Sky Harbor cross country club, Bargersville Airport, Inc.~—Irwin Deer, safety director for the airport, who said he will organize his worke ing committee at a later date.
Six Ships Due Today | NEW YORK, May 23 (Uc P.).~
Scheduled ship movements in New York harbor today:
* Arriving: America; Southhampe ton; Queen Elizabeth, Southhampe: ton; Stavangerjord, Norway; Mae rine Falson, Le Havre; Marine Carp, Beirut; Santa Rosa, Caribe bean,
Departing: Alcoa Cavalier, Cae ribben; Saturnia, Genoa; Drott= +| ningholm, ‘Gothenburg, —
ATTEND INSTITUTE A. 8. Rowe and L. R. Douglas will attend the 26th annual meeting of tite Horological Institute of America to be held in Washington,
pair Staiton, Inc. and Charles E,
D. C. Sunday, Monday and Tues, day. :
Raymond Gibson, Indianapolis, and 3 Mrs. Kerney Joseph, Medaryville, Cecil A. Payne and a brother, William H. Sawyer, Cecil A. Payne, 37 N. Traub ave. | Cle Elum, Wash. ' |& welder at the International Har-
| vester Co. five years, died yesterday | ‘Mrs. Helen B. List in his home. He was 57. |
| Services for Mrs. Helen Beebe Mr. Payne was born in Conners'List, who died yesterday at her|'llle and had lived here 35 years. ‘home, 2445 Guilford ave, will be PTeViously he was a welder for the {at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at the G.| American Foundry Co. & H. Herrmann funeral home. Burial] Survivors are pis wife, Mrs. Fern | will be in Crown Hil, (Payne; a daughter, Miss Vera June | Mrs. List, who was born in! 2yRe, Indianapolis; three brothers, | 'Swayzee, liad resided here 30 years -A¥rence and Russell Payne, In-! ‘and was a member of Woodrufr J3Napolis, and George: Payne, ChiPlace Baptist church. cago, and a sister, Mrs.. Hazel | She is survived by her husband, "ld. Billings, Mont.
| George Merlin List. Carl E. Singleton '
[George M. Cash | Carl E. Singleton, millwright at |
Services for George M. Cash, who! ational Starch Products Co. 27! in hi .|years, died yesterday in his home, | died Tuesday in his home, 2421 Ter 13200 W. Michigan st. He Ns nome, race ave. will be at 1 p. m. : st. 5M. | morrow in Mt. Olive Baptist church. | Mr. ‘Singleton was a native of Burial will be in New Crown. {Napler, Tenn, and had lived here | Mr. Cash, who was 46, was "born |? years. He was a member of the | lin Clarksville, Tenn. He had lived [M087 Woudmen’ uf Audrils. | here “33 yeafs and was employed as| p. m. tomor-
row in Fairfax Christian church 2 foundry foreman atthe Interop rural in Flom corn
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Sylvia Singleton; two daughters, Mrs. Marthe Fleig and Miss Mary Ellen Singleton; two sons, Leo F. land Carl E. Singleton Jr. a stepfather, William Bartlett: three half brothers, Mack, Clyde and Flaviel Bartlett, and two grandchildren, all
Har i * Kl Indianapolis. : |
Fire Equipment Fi has switched to | quipment Firms
Are Fined $50,000 Calvert because, .| coLumBuS, 0. May 23 (U P)_ a] : Two fire equipment manufacturers Calvert 18 milder. and their top officials were flned‘a %ot 6 Buckingham Gardens, Maplewood, N. J. t0tal of $50,000 by U. S.- District CALVERT RESERVE Blended ‘Whiskey Judge Mell Underwood yesterday in
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. ‘Geor-
Co. for
—386.8 Proof-85% Grain Neutral Spirits. |an anti-trust case growing out of Calvert Distillers Corp., New York City alleged price fixing. =~ | The American La France * & i {Foamite Corp., Elmira, N. Y., and the Seagrave Corp, Columbus, O.,! withdrew pleas of not guilty and
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/ 4 ments returned last February. They jaccepted the penalties rather than go through a long jury trial. i | Judge ~ Underwood fined the com 1 panies $15,000 each and the oMcials i 185000 each. r
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entered substitute pleas of nolo contendere. By this they neither denied nor admitted the charges contained in three-count indict-'
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