Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1939 — Page 24

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CARD PARTY SEREOTIER.

GREW GIVEN THANKS | "sro BUT JAPAN GOES ON ES

League will be held at 8:30 p. m tomorrow: at : the center, A. R.| | Haught, sheirmath, La toTOKYO, ons 20 0 BY —dap- day. 2) anese newspapers today expressed appreciation of the candor of American Ambassador Joseph C. Grew in declaring in a speech here yesterday that American public opinion is deeply ve resentful of Japanese acts in China. The newspaper Asahi said Mr Grew was to be thanked for con{veying American public opinion frankly to the Japanese people, but | declared that prejudice and misunderstanding in the United States called for “frank and straight recti= fication.” Miyako said Japan was: prepared | to go ahead with her ‘supreme mission”—construction of a ‘new order in East Asia,” regardless of public opinion in America. This newspaper said Mr. Grew’s remarks were “appreciated but not dreaded.” The newspaper Hochi said Mr.} Grew’s speech represented intimidation and urged “pro-American| Japanese to disillusion themselves.” The newspaper Kokumin, which is close to the Army, said that it is the height of folly to be frightened

Dotncast at Light Verdict

‘CLEVELAND, Oet. 20 (U. P.). —Carl Lechler, 50-year-old former police ambulance driver who killed his wife Aug. 10, yesterday was sentenced to life imprisonment— ‘and then insisted that his penalty should have been death. Lechler shot his wife, Mrs. Mary Bietz Lechler, five times in front of City Hall. Three judges returned a verdict of “guilty” with a - recommendation of mercy. Jurists and newspapermen said they could not recall a similar: instance here or anywhere else, 2

After Presiding Judge Frank S. Day pronounced sentence Lechler said, “Your Honor, I am disappointed in the verdict.” Judge Day asked, “You mean you think this court should have given you the extreme penalty?” “Yes, I do,” Lechler said.

STATE ENTERS CHRYSLER-UNION LABOR. DISPUTE

“Corporation. Objection; Tests New Law.

PAGE24 DIES CALLS ON "WITNESSES T0 | REFUTE’ KUHN

Chicagoan May Dispute ‘Bund Leader’s Disavowal . Of Hitler Link.

: Waliinvoron, Oct. 20 (U. P). —The Dies Committee called new witnesses today. Chairman Martin Dies (D. Tex.) said that testimony] § will refute that.given by Fritz Kuhn, husky leader of the German-Amer-ican Bund. Ong of the witnesses was to be Fritz) Heberling, whom Mr, Dies identified as head of the German Bund in Chicago. Mr. Dies emphasized that the German Bund|§ was composed of German citizens| | and was not be confused with Fritz

DETROIT, Oct. 20 . \P.).—A State labor mediator enters a conference between officials of the Chrysler Corp. and the United Automobile Workers.'(C. I. O.) today, despite refusal of the corporation to accept mediation.

£ | It was a test of Michigan's new E | strike mediation law which gives the State Labor Board power to subpena both sides in mediation efforts,

Returned to Detroit

Lester L. Colbert, Chrysler counsel, said Chrysler representatives would

at to-

Kuhn's German-American Bund,

composed of American citizens. Mr. Dies said the witnesses will dispute Mr. Kuhn's contention that the Bund is solely an American pofitical organization not connected in any manner with the Nazi GerGovernment. or any other for1 powers,

[ Bund Leaders Listed

Mr. Kuhn brought to the Comthi e yesterday a list of local Bund and the names of some local leaders. This information had been subpenaed - by . the Committee. + Indiana leaders were listed jary, Fred Schattat; Ft. Wayne, enry Schaphorst, and South Bend, H. Purwein. Mr.°"Kuhn said an Indignapolis unit was under the direction of George Froboese of Chicago and that Dr. Otto Willumeit, i A of Chicago, led the Hammond unit. Fred Beal, onetime Communist Party organizer, told the Dies Committee today that because he broke from the party Communists in this country ganged up and threatened to have him “liquidated.”

Disillusioned by Friends

“Beal, who is serving a 17-t0-20-year sentence in the North Carolina State penitentiary in connection with violence during the 1929 textile strike at Gastonia, S. C., testified that he was “left without friends” when he found the Communist Party did not come up to his expectations as’ a factor for social Justice. 1 His disillusionment over the Communists, he said, came during a visit to Russia, financed by the Communist Party, while he was free on bail in connection with the Gastonia charges. i “Leon Josephson was of the opinfen that they should have shot me aver there before I came back,” Beal testified. | Josephson is an American agent for the O. G. P. U., the Soviet seeret police, he said.

HERRINGTON EXPECTS LONG EUROPEAN WAR

"Repeal of the arms embargo with I's strict cash-and-carry provision in the Neutrality Act was advocated by Col. A. W. Herrington, MarmonHerrington Co. president, at the Indiana Society of Automotive Engineers’ first fall meeting at Hotel Antlers last night. "Col, Herrington, who was touring -Furope at the outbreak of war, predicted that the conflict would be a long one. German motorized army equipment is superior to that of the { Allies, but the Allies are better pre- | pared to withstand the strain of a } long war, he said.

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Times Photo.

‘Indianapolis Indian Summer No. 2, which sent thousands of youngsters outdoors to play yesterday, led to disaster: in one case. Nine-year-old Doris Miller, who lives at 1202 S. State Ave, took a tumble while roller skating to market for her mother. Today Doris was at City Hospital waiting for her broken right arm to be X-rayed. It's Gli that Doris is being pretty brave about the whole matter,

LOCAL DEATHS

Ralph G. Eilers

‘Ralph G. Eilers, 3207 Arsenal Ave, a draftsman in the City engineer's office, died Wednesday in St. Vincent’'s Hospital after a long illness. He was 27 and had lived in’ Indianapolis for all but one year of his life. Mr. Eilers was. ‘born in San Antonio, Tex. For the last two years

-|'he/was secretary of the Indianapolis

National Poultry Exposition and was a member of the Loyal Order of Moose. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Margaret Doughty Eilers; a son, Jack; three daughters, - Bernice, Charlotte and Sally, all at home; seven sisters, Mrs, Ollie Gray, Mrs. Nellie M. Young, Mrs. Cora Stephenson, Mrs. Enola Z. Bash, and Mrs. Ruby M. Brewer, all of Indianapolis; Mrs, Nina M. Hudson, Paducah, Ky., and Mrs. Bessie Conlon, New York, and three brothers, Victor E., Charles N. and Claude E., all of Indianapolis. Private funeral services will be at 10:30 a. m. tomorow in the Wald Funeral Home and burial will be in Washington Park Cemetery.

Charles F. Rhein

Funeral services for Charles F. Rhein, 516 E. 15th St., former doorman at the Columbia Club, will be at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Harry W. Moore Funeral Home ahd burial will. be in Washington Pgrk Cemetery. Mr. Rhein was 58 and died Tuesday night after an illness of seven months. He was born in Cincinnati and lived in Indianapolis for 30 years. He was a former member of Logan Lodge, F. & A. M., Scottish Rite and Murat Shrine. He was a member -of the First Church. of Christ, Scientist. Mr. Rhein was employed by the Columbia Club for 16 years and was a former employee of the Indianapolis Athletic Club and of the old Marion Club. He is survived by his wife, Dora; two brothers, Vincent, New York, and Leslie, Sacramento, Cal.; a sis-

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Mrs. Laura P. Schmidt

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terday in the Chapel of the - Intercession. Mrs. Schmidt was the widow of Augustus Schmidt and the couple

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vivor,

Mrs. Garnet Fay Fraker

Mrs. Garnet Fay Fraker, 1436 Bradbury Ave. died yesterday at City Hospital. She was 36 and a life-long resident of Indianapolis. She is survived by three sons, Russell, Leonard and John Earl; a daughter, Wanda, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B., Raymond, all of Indianapolis. Services will be at 10 a. m. temorrow at the Royster & Askin Funeral Home and burial will be: ab New Crown Cemetery.

Miss Laura Michelson

Funeral serviges for Miss Laura Michelson, a life-long resident here, were at 10:30 a. m. today at the Aaron & Reuben Funeral Home and burial was in the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation Cemetery. She was 67 and died Tuesday in a sanitarium at 1902 N. Illinois St. Miss Michelson founded the Paramount Employment Agency in 1929. She was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation. She is survived by four sisters, Miss Stella Michelson and Mrs. Louis Franklin, Indianapolis; Mrs. William - Sebel, Mount Vernon, Il. and Mrs. Morris ° Lichtenstetter, Chattanooga, Tenn., and a brother, Maurice

“withhold our appearance” a day’s conference, if their presence was construed as consent to mediation. The peace conferences were moved back to Detroit, where 55,000 workers are idle because of the dispute between the corporation and the union, after a one-day meeting in Lansing, in the presence of the Board, which apparently produced no results.

Picket Line Remains

But = possibility of settlement seemed more promising. Herman L. Weckler, Chrysler vice president in charge of operations, indicated that the major difference now was the union’s demand for the “union shop” and the company’s determination not te grant a “ciosed shop.” Chrysler maintained its curtailment of production, which had made idle not only many of its own employees but many of those of the Briggs Manufacturing Co. which makes Chrysler bodies. The union maintained its threat of calling a Chrysler-wide strike, which would add approximately 30,000 men to those now idle. The union still operated: a picket line around the

ASKS PUBLIGITY

‘FOR RELIEFERS

Taxpayers Urge La Porte Township Names Be Revealed; Trustee Silent.

Times Special : LA PORTE, Ind, Oct. 20.—The

publication of the names of all those on relief in an effort to drive undeserving individuals from the rolls

and reduce mounting relief costs, was urged here today. The suggestion was made by R. O. Jarvis, representing the Indiana Taxpayers Association, and John A. Shanks field representative for the State Welfare Board. No comment on the proposal was made by Trustee Lauren Arndt of Center Township, The new poor relief rate for the

main Dodge plant here.

township is $1.05.

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