Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1951 — Page 2
nomic controls. Mr. Truman spoke last night at Independence Day ceremonies
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers FAIRMONTH, W. Va., July 5—Henry Brown, a local coal operator, heard the broadcast of President Truman's Independence Day speech last night and liked it so much he called the White House to offer his congratulations. Mr. Brown said his brief conversation with a man at the White House who took. his call went like this: Mr. Brown: “I called you to pay the President a compliment.” ° Voice from the White House: “So what?” persons at the Washington Monument. Other millions heard him over radio and television. Cautiously, he said it is “still too early” to be sure the Reds sincerely want to end the yearlong Korean fighting. “It may be that they have decided to give up their aggression,” he said. “If that is true, the road to a peaceful settlement is open” and Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway’s forces have won ‘‘victory.” Even so, he added: “The greatest threat to world peace — the tremendous armed power of the Soviet Union—will still remain . ..the threat of Soviet aggression still hangs heavy over many a country—including our own.” Turning Point in History Whatever the outcome of the cease-fire talks, Mr. Truman declared, the United Nations achievement in Korea “may well prove to be, a turning point in world history” in bringing mankind closer to the cherished goal of universal peace. But he cautioned Americans to remain “vigilant and ready for whatever may come.” Mr. Truman said some people, not all Communists, doubt whether the United States has what it takes to “stick to a hard, tough policy of self-denial and self-control long enough to win” a global struggle against communism that may last for years. “They say we will either lose sur heads and rush into a world war, or that we will relax and give up our efforts to maintain peace.” Asserting his own faith In America’s ability to make a “long pull” he said: “I believe we will succeed.” Mr. Truman made it clear that he will regard an end to the fighting on the 38th Parallel in Korea as a definite victory for United Nations forces. Drawing a his toric parallel, he sald the revolu-
the right to be free.” Same In Korea “It is much the same with Ko-
fighting there to conquer China, or to destroy the Soviet empire.
—as important to us 1776—the aim of securing live in peace.”
this Fourth-of-July message:
in the defense of human freedom You have fought well, and without reproach. “Victory may be in your hands but you are winning a greater vou are vindicating the idea o tha
This is an achievement
goal of peace.
well prove to be a turning point in world history.”
Man Drowned Trying To Recover Hat
here today while trying to retrieve his hat.
also of Detroit, were rowing a boat when Mr, Gunton’s hat was
said Mr. Gunton removed his
swam after it. Mr. Wilson said Mr.
swim back to the boat with it when he went under in 30 feet
mediately recovered.
EASILY DIGESTED
\!
A GAM A -
ifor 1951 was upped to 35 today
‘cidents-—one near Columbus, the
ary war was not fought to “wipe out the British empire,’ but only for the “limited aim of securing
right of nations to be frees and To the men in Korea he sent “You will go down in history
as the first army to fight under the flag of a world organization
are winning a gréater thing than military victory, for
serves’ all mankind, for it has brought all men closer to their
“It is an achievement that may
ANGOLA, July 5 (UP)-—Robert H. Gunton, 24, Detroit, drowned fn Fox Lake about a mile from!
Mr. Gunton and Frank Wilson were rowing a
blown into the water. Mr. Wilson shoes and part of his clothing and
Gunton reached the hat and started to of water. The body was not im D LASTING ENERGY
DEATH CAR—The auto at the right was the St., was killed early today just north of Columbus, Ind. Her son,
man, was hurt. The family riding in the car at the left escaped serious injury. attended by an estimated 200000 Ag City Traffic Claims 35th Victim— ;
Out-of-Town Crashes Kill Two From Here
Indianapolis’ trafic death toll —
INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC
with the death of a train-truck CASYALIIES accident victim. 1851 1850
[In addition, two Indianapolis —Aceidents or 3966—4188—
Injured .... « 1728 149%
residents were killed in traffic acKilled .coovevnnns 35 36
other near Lincoln, Neb, i The dead: | Dale Simpson, 37, Bargersville, who is well known as a tavern organist, died last night of injuries suffered Tuesday in a raflroad crossing accident, Nelson A. Betterley, 65, of 740 N, Chester 8t., killed in the Nebraska accident.
Chapter, OES.
St. and the Belt Railroad. The organist stopped for a train
Mrs. Evelyn Flecker, 256 W. 4 Morris: St: killed near Columbus, 2nd collided with the locomotive nd. of a second train. A third train
§ 4 t the crossing. Mrs. Flecker was riding with her stopped short of < 8 son, Robert L.. a soldier stationed
at Chanute Field, when their car In the city, only one man was in
collided with another - auto beneath the underpass on Alternate in” the. hospital. He ig" Willlam Ind. 31 just, Harlow, 25, of 2413 College Ave. north of Colum-% Mr. Harlow was riding in a car bus, Ind. The driven by Kemp Tapberg, 36, also soldier received of 2413 College Ave, A block from
face injuries and
was taken to the 1.éroy Russell
a taxi driven by 20021; W. Ohio St
4
. i i
Stop Enemy
| Continued From Page One
Eight Injured
| .y eA | TRIANGLE, Va. July 5 (UP) $1 885 810 Bid —A Greyhound bus ran into the ’ y | |
os
Company— MILWAUKEE, July 5 (UP)—A 14-year-old boy tried to get a friend out of _ the juvenile detention home and landed inside himself. Police said the boy was released from the home Monday and came back Tues- | : day night with a rope and Continued From Page One | hacksaw blades to help a for margin, “Before the snd of 13yearold buddy, escape,
ut Rams Trailer; School Boar d OKs
| i
rear of a tractor-trailer near here early today, injuring the ws or New Manual driver and seven or ‘eight of the oi bus’ 33 passengers. : Ambulances from nearby Quan-
»
THURSDAY, JULY 5,195
still be there—if we were lucky. None were reported injured seri-
Junk. If we had waited to get (co Marine Base and Fredericks-| the the stuff from home we might | purg took the injured to i en I bonding margin will climb. again to about $737,000. This will
year,
They caught him on the roof and locked him inside .
again.
however, the school
Here's what we have salvaged: Forty-nine thousand jeeps and | ‘trucks (that's 72 per cent of those % we used in Korea); 49 per cent of > the tanks, 82 per cent of the arm-
ored cars and other combat ve-'
| instruments, and 80 per cent of | the Infantry weapons—rifles, mai chine guns, earbines, mortars and
¢#'% knives—the things that GI Joe " = p 1 ith needs to stay alive. one in which Mrs. Evelyn Flecker, 256 W. Mortis It hasn't been easy. It ihvolved
Robert, a Chanute Field service- training Japanese to work on assembly lines. Japanese hate to work at benches, They prefer to lsquat on the floor. When we first 'bufit them workbenches, they
1 Corporal $ Ring Stolen _ climbed up and squatted on them. | A 48-year-old corporal from Japanese don’t pull a wrench. {Camp Atterbury told police today They push it. For a long time they
| someone hi _ refused to hold hammers by ‘he (someone took his diamond-plat-|, 4 \.. They grapped the head
| jinum ring valued at 3750, Cpl. and pounded with it like a rock. {Addison Darrocott said he dis- Japanese Learn |covered the ring missing afer {drinking in his downtown hotel | room, :
Today they are smoothly with our methods. Hun-
working cleaned,
dreds of women git beside slow- watch them come off the assem- cafeteria, storage space, offices,
ously. occur because two bond issues :
Bus driver W. Fisher was will mature this year. { . » : trapped in the wreckage for a Despite this drain on the ron- Bf) Persons Die as time but was brought out by res-'ing reserve, Dr. Herman L. Shibcue workers. \ler, schools .uperintendent, said! Marines from the Quantico base the time table of building
ele-! . ; hieles, 75 per cent of the artil- helped state and local police in mentary schools will not be = (yerman Excursion | fected. i
|lery, 64 per cent of the precision rescue operations.
| This program will go forward ‘built $6300 trucks for $1600; we under the special building fund) got a $4000 truck for $1200. Aeveloped under a 20 cent butd- LEAINIEI EX ores One of the most surprising dis- ing tax levy, which became effec-| ; coveries was that tires on heavy tive in January. About $1.25 mil-| By United Press /trucks which had sat idle in jon will be derived from this' BERLIN, July 5— A German swamps for five years were still source during the calendar year... con steamer, carrying about usable We salvaged jeep tires for on yne building agenda for 1951 yuo (poo nae toceil and about $5 apiece. e operation re- are new elementary schools 45 C00 © en, exp acad an burned today on the Spree River
claimed an average of 16,000 tires , xg and 16,400 tubes each month. | myo new Manual will be the in East Berlin killing an esti.
Worth Billions 'Arst high school built here since mated 50 persons and injuring 30, You can stand here and watch Howe in 193%, ° Eyewitnesses said the explosion old wrecks brought in by barge First proposals to build Manual threw many of the children into trom Toko Bay. Bumper tn/00 08 DASE Sh, Se LO eed wo the river and ' W aflame, jumped into the river an par Tey big or entire old po 51d school had an enrollment drowned. r . You can see apanese alriie can see of 1382. It now has 1370. Some of the children reached
them dismantled, then each part| Manual's scholastic ' building ype pank of the river, their clothes packed, painted and ynit actually will comprise three sii) purning, the eyewitnesses labeled. And finally you can|stryctures and will include shops, .;iq : -
Police said the fire apparently
docks, classrooms and
When it had passed, the warning’ light continued to flash, but Mr. | Simpson drave across'the tracks
In yesterday's traffic accidents
jured seriously enough to remain
thelr home the car collided with
2 Russel Even an Eskimo would like
{moving rubber belts. Each women !bly lines. I counted 84 today.
Fights Bell Rate Hike strained to_spot one. particular -Brig.- Gen.—Gerson Heiss of laboratories. home economics di- " ; : health The steamer -was- immediately
{to remove the recent $5.4 million | No one can say how much when you count the jeeps, trucks,
The train-track accident which rate increase granted the Indiana money we've saved. We rebuilt! artillery, radios and other things, fatally injured Mr, Simpson hap- Bell Telephone Co. by Circuit jeeps worth $2039 for $783. That's/it would amount well into the pened early Tuesday at Harding! Court Judge Lloyd Claycombe, his everything, including the salary billions. The operations costs $10
office said today.
shite
of the general in charge. We re- million a month.
loading
was caused by an exploding boiler,
Indiana ‘Attorney General J. king of bolt, pick up all she sees washington, who runs the opera- visions, teachers’ centers, = | pmimett McManamon will ask. th an eposit them in bins. The!tjon says the tanks we've sal- department and administration enveloped in flames,” an eyewit. > a b : NaomH 1 ai s e belts are clean when they reach yaged would cost half a billion headquarters. ness said. salem, and a member oO {indiana Supreme Court tomorrow the end of the line, dollars at today's prices.” And One of the units will also in- “Many children were thrown
clude a radio studio and an alumni thrown into the water by the
room.
force of the explosion. Others
The gymnasium will seat 2500 jumped. into the Spree when their
persons.
{about 600.
The cafeteria will seat clothes caught fire. Many who ; could not swim were drowned.”
’
Hospital 4 damaged the lawn and shrubbery The other car @ of Willlam R. Richardson, 2304 . : » was driven by College Ave. bi . William C. ? , gy Mr. Harlow suffered arm in- AM( R ato S Hanger, 2, N De juries. He was taken-to Veterans : Ig e Il er r edues. hie he Hospital, where his condition to- ; ges, ni Mrs. arly. dav. was, fair 2 : - , 2 y : and tworchildren Irs.’ Betterley day. was fair, | Le . 5 “ ER : _ ‘Michael, eight months, and ; y = SA - Rodney, 8 were hurt.but not Hoosier Drowned as : seriously « nr ARE pe + 4 ALLEGAN, Mich; July 5 (UP) In the Nebraska ace Jone Mrs Eric Olson, 32, of Hammond, Betterley, an Indianapolis lodge Ind.. was drowned today when he C leader, was seriously hurt. SO ried to exchange piaces with a orrect temperature control for all foods, full was Mr, etterley's sister, Mrs, companion in a boat. The acei- el : Edmond Bhenke of Flyria, O. gent occurred at Swan Lake near storage space . . . no wonder EVERYONE wel Mr. Bhenke escaped serious Allegan. comes the convenience of AMC's handsome injury. { V . r $ a | . ' The Bhenkes and the Betterleys Frogrant Memories Linger Sgn ane fe coenience of Ayres had left Indianapolis Monday to asy Payment Plan! visit Mr. Betterlev's relatives In FLOWERS y y aly Colorado. On the outskirts of Lin- ‘ coln, the Bhenkes' car collided » with another auto * Weddings ® Anniversaries Mr. Betterley was horn in Sey Beautiful Arrangements of mour and had moved ton Indian ® Hospital Bouquets
® Funeral Flowers
CLAYPOOL
Flower Shop Claypool Hotel RI. 5028 Li. 0617
apolis 40 vears ago. For 35 years he operated a shoe on East St, near Prospect St. His wile ia roval matron of Indianapolis Court, Order of Amaranth: past worthy high priestess of Indianapolis White Shrine, Or der of White Shrine of Jeru-
repair shop
A EA Rms 5 35 i
@§ SIR
§ sony
rea,” he continued. “We are not / We are fighting for a simple atm today naa & the goal of independence was in the
©
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freedom under International law. £8» \ Ww | —
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