Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1951 — Page 20

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Times State Service MUNCIE, June 11—The west-

‘bound

_ today after 11 cars of the Knickerbocker jumped the rails yester- © day, slightly injuring six persons ‘and tearing up a mile of the _ roadbed,

. Railroad officials said passenger

trains were operating on schedule but some freight trains were being delayed. A broken wheel on the second unit of the diesel locomotive caused the accident at Sapo Junc-

tion, about four miles west of *

Muncie.

Only one of the 11 derailed cars

turned over.

Deputy Sheriff. Willlam Jeffrey said the 13-car train was traveling “at a pretty good clip.” It normally passed the junction at 70 miles an hour, he added. Only two of the injured were hurt badly enough to be held in Ball Memorial Hospital at Muncie, They were Kathryn Whicker, San Francisco, and Mrs. Stanley Bkredenske, St. Louis. State police sald 25 other persons were examined at the hospital but were not hurt. A train was backed up to the scene of the wreck from Anderson to take the passengers to Indian-

The Knickerbocker was bound from New York to 8t. Louis. One hundred fifty persons were aboard. Most of those injured were riding in the car which turned over. Passengers were pelted with a barrage of luggage and were tossed against seats, Miss Mary Knauer, Greencastle, said: “It just seemed to slide over. It was an easy turn.” Railroad officials said it was a “miracle” no one was killed,

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Cupid Hits a Snag

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TINY TELLS 'EM—A one-l Tiny by Marines who rescued hi

machine-gun fire, lectures in an orphanage at Pusan. Tiny's subject:

How South Korea gets food and

Russ Pronounce Doom’ of Treaty Planned for Japs

By United Press MOSCOW, June 11-—Russia and

“the world’s peace-loving peoples”

nese peace treaty such as West. ern powers are preparing, the newspaper Pravda said today. Such a treaty is “doomed,” Pravda sald. It commented on a note which Acting Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin delivered yesterday to United States Ambagsador Adm. Alan G. Kirk, The note charged that the United States sought to conclude with Japan a separate treaty aimed against Russian and Communist China, and demanded a pact which included all countries tht fought against Japan in the Pacific war, Russia asked for a preliminary treaty conference in July or August. The Russian note accused the

‘a new aggressive grouping in the Pacific.”

U. 8. Only to Blame

“Responsibility for the consequences of such policy lies entirely with the United States” the note said. Russia particularly denounced as a ‘vicious slander” American charges that Russia had grabbed special privileges in Manchuria. It denied that Russia still held Japanese war prisoners, Denounced as a. “defamatory distortion” was the allegation that Russia fought only six days, at the end of the war, against Japan. Russia entered the war according to agreement, the note said

destroying 22 Japanese divisions captured 600,000 men. Moreover, before she entered

Jithe war Russia kept 40 divisions 710f troops in the Far East and thus

helped the Allies, the note said.

WAXAHACHIE, Tex. (UP) —

will never accept a separate Japa- |

Thomas Smith, Retired Teacher, Dies in Home

Thomas Smith, retired school superintendent, died this morning at his home, 6020 Guilford Ave. Born in Shelby County, Mr. Smith had been an Indianapolis resident: most of his life. He taught school 48 years, instructing at Broad Ripple and Ben Davis High Schools. He attended Chicago, Indiana and Butler Universities, receiving his degree from IU. Services will be at 2 p. m. Wednesday in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary, Burial will be in Crown Hill. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Jessie Burton and Miss Lorena, both of Cleveland; Mrs, Evelyn Israel and Mrs, Inez A. Davis, Indianapolis; two sons, Virgil, Ann Arbor, Mich., Paul W., Indianapolis; a brother, David Smith, Shelby County, and three grandchildren.

Lyman C. Davidson Lyman C. Davidson, executive director of the Citizens Historical Association, will be buried in

Joseph Brooks, Barber, Dies “-. [r": Mil toting services ot

Joseph Charles Brooks, a bar- Buchanan Mortuary, ber here 28 years, the last eight) ‘Mr, Davidson, who was 72, died in the Spencer Hotel shop, died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hostoday in his home, 3548 Station pital. Bern in Hamilton, Mont., 8. He was 48. {he lived here 18 years. | Mr. Brooks was a member of He is survived by a sister, Mrs. {the Methodist Church at New- Polly G. Teselle, and a brother man, Il, Brookside Lodge F&AM, Eqward W., both of CaMfornia.

Scottish Rite and Royal Arch H arol d St evens

Masons at Broad Ripple. | Services will be at 3 p.m.| Harold Stevens, a piano player | Wednesday in Flanner & Buchan-|at the Homestead, died yesterday lan Mortuary with burial in Crown |in Methodist Hospital. He was Hill, | 55. Surviving are his wife, Mida| Services will be at 3 p. m. toBlanche; a daughter, Patty Jo, morrow in Dorsey Funeral Home.

Indianapolis; a brother, Emmett, Burial will be in Memorial Park.

egged Korean orphan, nicknamed m after he was wounded by Red

supplies from the U. S.

THE INDIAN. APOLIS TIMES

il,

Le 5 5

Hoosier Miners Work Half Time But It's Normal

riners in Indiana are having a light summer. They're working aout half time. But it's’ normal. Production figures show" up badly this year because last year {the industry was restockpiling

‘after a strike. Ortho Scales, vice president of the Enos Coal Co. and the Enoco Collieries, said current production in Indiana is following the calendar, running about 375,000 tons a week against winter production of better than a half million tons. Between 8000 and 10,000 miners are affected. Their work weeks {have been cut mostly to three days with a few mines closed completely. | " » » BUT PRICES are down for {those who want to save up to 75 cents a ton between now and the (first cold months, | Industrial users were scurrying jabout last year to rebuild stock{piles depleted by a strike. This year they're in Jood shape. Indianapolis Power & Light Co., biggest coal buyer in Indianapolis, | reported it had between 90 and| {110 days supply, about normal,

‘Bradley Back in U. S.

WASHINGTON, June 11 (UP)! ~—Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staffs, returned today from Europe] where he conferred with top Allied military commanders on Western | defense plans. :

t |

Speech Expert ‘Ranks Churchill Foremost

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (UP)— Here's ‘the way Dr. Robert T. Oliver, head of the department of speech at Pennsylvania State College, rates the speaking qualities of some world-prominent figures: Joseph Stalin: “Bland as a boy caught with his hand in the cooky jar, swearing he really is ‘in the parlor studying his Sunday School lesson.” Gen. Dwight G. Eisenhower: “Disarmingly simple — A Kansas farm boy with a college education.” Winston Churchill: “Petulant, tired, sometimes over-eager, but still the grandest voice speaking for freedom.” British Prime Minister Clement R. Atlee: “Flat and dull, even when he {s speaking the incontrovertible truth.”

Spread of Disease Scientists report that at present there are 75 known diseases of animals that are transmissible to ‘members of the human race,

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Whiting: and four sisters, Mrs. Madge Schmentale, Terre Haute; Mrs. Lucille Clark, Forest River, Ill; Mrs. Avid Reed, Oakland, Ill, and Mrs. Marjorie Byers, Lebanon.

Mrs. Howard Malham

Services for a 22-year-old Indianapolis housewife will be at 10 a. m. Wednesday in Farley Funeral Home with burial in

Floral Park. Mrs. Josephine Malham died {yesterday morning following a

United States of trying to create heart attack In the home of her

(husband's. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Malham, 721 8. Sherman Dr. She and her husband, Howiard had spent the night there. Their home is at 2120 Howard St. Other survivors mother, Mrs. Eminence; five sisters, America Landrum, Martinsville; Rosalie, Marilyn, Carolyn and Nina Parrish, all of Indianapolis; two brothers, Albert and Charles Parrish, Indianapolis.

Mrs. Ella Williams

Mrs. Ella Lee Williams,

include her

Zora Parrish,| ;

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Mr. Stevens also was employed as custodian at School 60. He was A member of the Christian Church and a men’s group of the church. Surviving is his wife, Frances

and his mother, Anna, both of,

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Indianapolis.

re- |

itired Indiana Bell Telephone op-|

lerator,

‘was 75.

| | Mrs. Williams, a lite resident of

Indianapolis, retired eight years {ago from the telephone firm after! 20 years of service. She was a member of North Park Chapter, OES, and the Telephone Pioneers of America. Services will be at 1 p. m, In

: died yesterday at her| fought bloody battles” and in home, 3506 N. Hare Av She

J. E. McWhorter promised the 10 single girls working in the county court house that if he were appointed justice of the peace, he'd perform a free marriage ceremony for the first one of them who showed up with the neces-| sary material. Mr. McWhorter made it, but so far, none of the

their

not but fonts in Ch Round) ave ne aPhincen ior from wally Dont in today.

Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will follow in Glen Haven. Surviving are two sons, Ralph W., Indianapolis, and Charles H., Chicago, a brother, John Barnes, Indianapolis.

William Harry Minter

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Ld ak hed up] UR} in General Hospital. He was 60. AIDIOEANIO IR] | IAPR] | . Wakefi I HORIZONTAL 1Cereal grain [TIAISISETIOINGHSITISE |, ots 55 years ago from Ver 1Depicted is 8 Negative reply prise ih 'salles, Ky., his birthplace. He has thestate flag? Tavern 2k Z ELLE been committeeman in the 12th of 10 SEL GIANT Pe Ys or aa 11 Copies 13 Poms wh ARTS ragair [El ber of years. : Raid 16 Try BERET ASSIA] | His wife, Mamie, survives. 18 LLININGEIMI TITRE T CIC] | : {8 tect oft 10 Boiron cars [RETILAARESHES Postal Supervisors 1 tp 22 Last TIRIYISIT] IRIESLIETIR Elect New Officers 20 Down 24 This js 35 Revise 47 Beverage 21 Paradise nicknamed the 40 Love god 49 John (ab.) SOUTH BEND, June 11 (UP) 23 Eras —— State” 41 Festive 81 Vice-consul |—W. Raymond Fudge, Ft. Wayne, 25 African port 31 Apostle 42 Morose (ab.) was elected president of the In26 Price 32 Mistakes - 43 Tardy 82Ear (comb [diana branch of the National 3 27 Displaced Egyptian river 44 Ireland form) Postal Supervisors Assn. at fits 2 Pet ab, annual convention over the weekend. Hr Other new officers include Wal8 Lord his ter A. Smith, Indianapolis, and 3 ersia ary Lester Luga, Gary, vice presi33 Unasp ra dents; Everett Jeffrey, South 37 Okla elty Bend, secretary-treasurer, and 88 Chaldean city Ward Weifell, Portland, Wilburn 30 Bargains Elliot, Columbus, and Kenneth 45 Chinese Buser, Crawfordsville, trustees. 46 Plot of ground 48 Pertaining to Sk TEEN AGERS

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Minter, a drug salesman for Mooney Mueller Ward Co. 40 years, will be at 2 p. m, tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Minter, whose was 71, died yesterday in his home, 3227 Park Ave, A native of Indianapolis, he was a member of Unity Truth Center. Surviving are his son, Shelby V., Battle Creek, Mich; two daughters, Mrs. Roy Larson, Chicago, and Mrs. William A. Sandy, Marion; a sister, Mildred, Indianapolis, and two grandchildren.

Thomas Wakefield

Services will be at 1 p. m, Wednesday in C. M. C. Willis & Son Mortuary for Thomas Wakefield, foreman of emergency trucks for the city sewer division. Burial will be in Floral Park. Mr. Wakefield died yesterday

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Three Broke! Of Sta

Reduced Cite Mis By ED A feud a the Indiana | yesterda nounced- th post officers of their ran

troopers.

In one of th shiftings in department, a sergeant and demoted. Supt. Arthu today: “The men w committee of to be guilty vicious quarr selves and o duct. They countercharge and simply that they coul the best inter were reduced.

‘Enforce:

“The slot n there had not! with the red will continue, was not an is perintendent i The reduce Albert R. Stil Sgt. Howard and Sgt. Dor ington. All the ofl echoed “no co The three o! than 10 year ment, said tl on with the r

Not

The shift c: other officers that fact th: the Jasper pi on for more t -All the re given a hear and yesterdaj the personnel per before fin Officers ass reduced men phone ‘and to new station, ately.

Replacing t Walter P. We ton Ave.; Wil non, and St: ville. The thr to fill the r: they replaced The subco nounced the : composed of Robert O’'Ne man Barnwo Supt. Thur after the co of the facts | determined b duction of th the only way resolved in the departm: “There was Bupt. Thurstc

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CHILLICO (UP)-~Mary 0., woke up terday and charges of at Ross Count through the : deputy waite house for he other.

France W Frenc Of F

By WILLIA PARIS, I elections of § be crucial. turning point Bolled dew munism vers Without a France, the f Pact of Ger hower’s miss be dark, inde The found eign policy in Russia an is not enoug world must b in, too. And native Comn out Moscow’ On June her answer--—at the pol rally all n gardless of union agains There has | tions since 1! ing body—th —is to be re In the pre munists hold —nearly one est single ps And the Cc in strict disc command, W nists—who v sounding mé acted togeth achieve unit The gover only through

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