Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1945 — Page 2

PAGER . eas

Ei Seems Sure for. nr MORE LOCAL MEN * Quisling, Traitor and Thief

* (Continued From Page One)

land -a

Norwegian club in Oslo and the ‘ from the royal palace | are taken away.

{The only time when Quisling arrested. hen | without pernussion, ‘dé not eveh dare to venture. outside |

seems uncertain of himself 4s wi Ye is asked about Germany's

penchant for

hich he never wore. lw Mrs. Quisling, incidentally, liv es |

in a flat in Oslo and has not been st;

She ‘cannot leave Oslo|2Ye:

feat. Hitler told him when he last | the house. - ° 128

Visited Berlin, in January, that he

Prussia immédiately. Quisling believed his master then |

and he was still willing to believe | the wall for

fim when he sent an emissary to acts | duct.

Oblo on April 20 with another as-| ‘surance of impending’ victory. Quisling has cooked up what he obviously thinks is a perfect, story, ta He swears up and. down that h didn't know the Germans were | going to land in Norway.

Denies Responsibility .- pr

we

|m

To the charge that he committed | fused fo reprieve Gunnar Eilifsen,|alcoholic beverage commission for| an act of treason by canceling the the Oslo police inspector, who had | selling liquior to minor. government's mobilization order on |been sentenced to death for his re-| — April 9, 1940, he replies that the | fusal to arrest a Norwegian girl who legal government had ceased to ex- | had: evaded ‘the .grder to work for ist when the king and his cabinet (the German labor corps. .

left . Oslo. He denies all responsibility for

maltreatment of Norwegians and, i aitor to stand trial, but before lays the blame all on the Germans. | that justice may be applied to some Although his brain is definitely [3050 men who volunteered for servin working order and he still has |;.e in Russia with the “Frontkjema brilliant memory, Quisling is not | o. »

in very good health. He is fat and |

flabby and his digestion is not func- | path of such proportions would be tioning too well on the prison diet; 0i0n to the Norwegians and they may simply be given lang terms at

of herring and cod. He misses those sacks of walnuts |), he used to munch and the brandy

he used to take in moderation, but, ' members of his cabinet and after |

as a regular thing.

Stomach Misbehaving {of his party.

According to’ his second wife, a It Russian who looks definitely non-,w ‘Aryan but is described by Quisling as|a.

#“Dinarian”"—a sort of super-Aryan years.

~his stomach has not been behaving properly for some time.

type of family life. His greatest t.

weaknesses seem to have been wal-

New Social Sec

To Face Tough Opposition

(Continued From Page One) j Serve has been growing steadily since the first Wagner- -Murray- | poses federalization of the unem-|pnyinge)) bill was introduced.

ployment insurance system and the employment service set-up. There is tough sledding ahead for the measure. : The original Wagner- ~MurrayDingell bill, introduced in 1843, never was given a hearing in either “the house or senate.

Wagner in Defense

Backers of the revised measure say, however, they expect congressional dction this year, They count on President Truman's request for greater unemployment benefits during reconversion and the need far| protective servicemen's rights to) keep the measure from beicg | pigeonholed. “The bill is not put forward as the final solution to all social se-! curity problems,” Senator Wagner | said. “It is proposed merely as a desirable next step that can be put] into operation now,

“As the national income in< creases, congress can and should | consider . further improvement in| the benefits. As experience is gained | in the administration of the pro-| gram, further simplifications can be adopted. But we need not wait | for a perfect social security plan | to improve the present program.’ Supported by Labor Opponents of the original Wagner-Murray-Dingell bill frequently|, charged it was ‘a “cradle-to-the-grave” proposal the nation could not-afford. It proposed a 1 per cent tax, divided equally between employer and employee. It was ine

troduced at a period when wartime | taxes were high and likely to

increase. Many observers here say ‘the measure never came up for hears

ing because it covered too much|

territory—because it lumped together controversial provisions and

proposals which had strong Polioy to do it, and they have not done it ls

support. Backers of the program-—par-ticuarly the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O.—sald they wanted the entire measure placed before congress and the public at one time. Could Be Reduced So the revised Wagner-Murray-Dingell bill was introduced late in May. It provides more bénefits than the original measure but proposes a tax rate only two-thirds as high. Senator Wagner said it was possible to reduce the proposed tax rate from 12 to 8 per cent because the unemployment trust fund re-

{the Norwegians, There is no indication that Quis- | through five years of this business, ling ate or drank excessively, or may be trusted to see to it that it led anything but a proper, monastic is sure.

| Copyright, 1045 hy The Indianapolis Times

Actually, it seems almost certain] Ng Contral AV still Mad great reserves, that he | that Quisling will be shot and the was going to stop the Americans | Norwegians may be trusted to ‘do few and British cold in the west and this bit of local laundry by them-=-| then recover Poland and East selves without Leb | side, Quisling can be stood up against HRN N. Tilinos st at least two specific Ny tone st

aside from his general con-|"'G

Quisling was. a major in the Nor-

-jert gian army and subject to mili ars

ry law which provided the qeatitisi Winter 1832 Brookside ave e! | penalty in wartime, when; on April

he - rescinded the government's | obilization' order. ) |

Secondly, he committed a murder 1310 W. Washington st. y. death when he re-|were fined $100 by the Indiana;l7 and Justice Robert H. Jackson 15.| member. .

inishable b

| Twenty-seven more Tndianagalis| more than half of them determined tion proceedings. nits, theft, megalomania, treachery mej were accepted for service inipy split votes. A enormous ithe navy in the June 1-7 period, at) Dissension again nfirked yester- and the anti-trust action against|often casting the deciding votes] ‘high court directed the acq uiftal| fer, 30, a patient at Madison State: the stuf he stole from. the exclusive ‘wardrobes’ of nice’ clothes, ‘most Of the naval’ recruiting office. were. ling six more BH-to-4 decisions, deRo bert W. Aldridge,

hroo! but ‘she does|Annette sti; George Carrico, . 1020 | Gladstone ave; Vliet |dorfl, 4618 Ralston st

Marion Max Allen, 2159 Ww. 58th 8t.: |charles Dale Bullock, 337 a gloiges ave.; 43

| Robert F. Gootee 908 ‘N. No ma 0 | artis Graves, 1417 Udell st. Tieodore B. [1936-37 by Justice James C. Mcadvice from the out | Eektaster. 3054

| Eiford Ri aS Sen ar term. Other records of dissents are: and Murphy—has continued to as- | The court's liberal-conservative pat-| Elgin, Jollet and Eastern Railway Rob-

Ronald SerVies, 4210 N. Capito! ave.!

Gracuinoui and Vasile Hocioga, Frank Murhy and William O. DOug-' |aqge ‘successor to Justice James F.|

¥ or

ah THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ te ee i TUESDAY, -JUNE 12, 1045 “'Young' Céurt Disagrees More Thos ‘Nine Old Men' DEATH BLAMED ON Fr P 0 y ond its normal adjournment date. an appointee of President Coolidge, term the” court outlawed a Florida] Ie TAKEN INTO: NAVY comm mom mi 0% | 0 Si ir SSE, or tn, it ie INSUF FIGIENT HELP | —The death of Margaret Kleindore

| licensed with ‘the state. “In another impor tant decision the

against “Harry | furter, a Roosevelt choice. Bridges, West coast labor leader, in the position of “swing” men, They day's: decision day, the: court &dd-|the Associated Press. have been Justices Reed and Jack-|of 24 former German-American hospital,’ was blanjed today on the _ Seven of the nine present justices |son. The, latter has leaned most|bundists convicted in New York of lack of sufficient help at the instie Y. Al toe, TN New Jerse | termining six other cases by split|ge Roosevelt appointees, but dis-|frequefitly to the conservative side.|advising bund members to evade the| ion AWatter Amza Smith Jr, 1003 "West. votes and agreeing unanimously on corq still marks their deliberations, myin)y disguised in their written draft law. : «Willi Irvin Beal, ' 3018! only two. ; : ; Jefferson County - "Sheriff Lodlie k avs; liam jon y tw the black- robed jurists ‘dividing ions have been the liberals’ dis- tituN. | opinions e The court affirmed as constitu: Franklin Geisen-| Justice Owen J. Roberts, te ® primarily into liberal and conserva-|iqcte for the doctrines of Justice tional an Oklahoma gross premiums §. Bear said after an inyestigation nt. Moar: “Brace. Marsh, | (oungs iBacing ise: oh tive orbits. Frankfurter. The former Harvard |law assessing a 4 per cent tax on|that the woman was choked to and John. Amog . Rusie: ee This brought his| The average age of ‘the ‘preset law professor's alliance with jthe all premiums collected by out-of-|death by another inmate June 8 by bea for the term to 48, or 28 justices 1s 58. The average age of conservative wing has been ont of state insurance companies within g string from a straitjacket. Only more than ‘the number recorded in the nine who Knocked down im-|thé court's major surprises since the state. The law had been chal-|a night watchman was on duty, doportant props of the New Deal pro-|Mr, Roosevelt put him on ‘the bench |lenged by Lincoln National Life In- ing the work formerly performed by gram in the early New Deal days, six years ago. surance. Co. of Indiana, five = attendants, Bear sald he giving birth to the “packing” plan,| 'gharpest cleavage has been be-| It also held the 10 yardmen em-| learned. was 72. tween Justices: Roberts and Frank-|ployed at Whiting, Ind, were en-

Kenyon st., Holmes ave,

is Cummins Jr, a Suis st.,

W. | Reynolds, the leading .dissenter of

Park. ave.; Qeorge Dex {that term.

rick. R.R. 6, Box 521; James K.

401 Park ‘rve; John D, Reath

Frank Safranek. ana Justice Roberts’ closest competi24 I Su i is tor has been Justice Hugo L. Black, The familiar ‘combination of furter on one side and Justices titled to a jury trial in their sult PREMIER OF NORWAY eorge Collier Jr, 318 § Oxford st:|who has recorded 37 dissents this|liberals—Justices Black, «Douglas plack and Douglas or the. other, for $65.274 In back- pay from the AND C ABINET QUIT S

OSLO, June 12 (U. P).—Pre-

sert itself in a significant number tern has been most closely defined | Co. | mier John Nygaardsvold and his

Chief Justice Harlan F, Stone 25, ot split decisions in the present jon’ issues involving utilities and - term. bus POLISH ‘COMPROMISE? 4 | Justice Wiley Rutledge 23, Justice] on many occasions these three {other big ess gh Jghot Tights. LONDON. June 12 (U. BP). — cabinet resigned today to permit (Felix Frankfurter 21, Justices were joined by Justice Wiley Rut- 81. 14bo7. Victory ™ Tilits of 8 Co romise or| he formation of a more represenLeaders of organized labor hailed The possibility of a comp Of | tative government now the Norway newest | yesterday's ruling as a Victory over | the delicate Polish issues was indi-|nas been liberated. state efforts to regulate union ac-|cated today by reports that a three-| King Haakon asked the cabinet tivities. power commission soon would meet/to continue until a provisional In its busiest. day of the present |in Moscow. : government has been formed.

L Irwin 1300 31st st.: Vernon Emil] F. D. R, Appointees th, R R 16 Box 613. and Walter Eu-|

FINED $100 BY ABC

vesterday | las 20 each, Justice Stanley F. Reed gyrnes and the court's

Disagreements within the court| Identified with -the conservative, |already have carried the term be-|wing have been Chief Justice Stone, |

srs. ps——————— nese

on

First to Stand Trial Quisling will probably be the first

They ma$ be executed but a blood

ard labor. After Quisling will .come the

that will come the 40,000 members Only 10,000. are now y prison, but all are Known and ill be ‘duly punished. These trials re expected to take at least two

Justice will be slow but sure and who have been

and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

urity ill

He said, however, that several years after the end of the war the] {rate may have to be increased or a| | government subsidy provided for the insurance system. The revised bill would set up a social security advisory council representing employers, employees and the public to help administer the program. Basically, the new bill seeks to, accomplish the goals set in the original one—provide wage earners and their families with federal protection against the financial hazards of unemployment, illness, physical disability, old age and death.

VINCENNES MAN OPPOSES WICKARD

WASHINGTON, June 12 (U. P). —Sonfirmation of Claude R. Wickard as rural electrification administrator would be “a very serious threat not only to the weMare of REA but to rural electrification projects all over the nation,” a witness told the senate agriculture | committee today. Earl C. Murley, manager of the Vincennes, Ind, REA co-operative, opposed Wickard because of the “internal strife” and “unwholesome conditions” which he said existed in REA. REA has been under Wickard's jurisdiction as secretary of agriculture. |- He said Wickard had

aroused concern. among co-operatives At that time Wickard said, “if the private utilities will do the job of electrifying rural America, let them do it.” Murley said this was “a dangerous statements,” because “the private utilities have had 30-or 40 vears

PETAIN'S VERSION OF TREAYY DENIED

LONDOY, June 12 (U. P.).—Marshal Henfi Philippe Petain's claim that he made a secret resistance

treaty with Great Britain after the fall of France in

1940 was refuted by Prime Minister Churchill today Churchill disclosed in a special statement that negotiations for such a pact actually were initiated by the British government, but they fell through: +because Petain's Vichy regime was too thoroughly domi-

nated by the Germans.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

EVENTS TODAY

Tin collection, plekup in area northeast of Ora JH der 82, at 3530 Balsam, arteétio

. Meridian and 16th sts Grand Lodge Knights of Pythias, meeting, | K. of P, all

( American Transit associstion, engineering | +

section, meeting] Hotel Lincoln Indianapolis ¥ Men's club, International

luncheon, 12:15 p.m. Central Y M. C A, |

EVENTS TOMORROW

Tin collection, pickup in area southeas of Meridian and 16th sty

American Transit association, engineering

i. meeting, Hotel Lincoln

ana’ Con! Merchants association, meet Tail ¢ Hotel Severin,

Junio: Chamber of Commerce, luncheon, | ary

>. 12:18 . ms. Hotel Washifigton. , 8 ’ $ Hotel Washington A p——

BIRTHS , : AL Bmw mes. ‘eRtty Mennesy,

Jewelry Workers’ wilon, meet- |

ras - Helen Barter, Pate) a Nethodins Prancin Martha Barlet, |

‘han Brinsoti; Ruel, Florence A adiargare: Kiewitt, ca Ine Rob wr Noe ussef] fh Hi: ere Geren 0!

DEATHS

Ella ( igen, 42, at 1277 W. Ray, heart dilata n ara PF. Fitch, 77, at 1420 Carrollton cerebral hemorrhage Char! Traylor, 35, at Long. coronar 0 1sion ‘

e M. Gorman, 68, at City, carcinoma

M

Prank D. Graham, 73, at City, pneumonia Maris Miller, 68, at Crty, Cerebral hemrhage v Lodisa Thomas, 86, at 1840 Boulevard pl

chronie nephritis, Mary Polk Ritter, 73, at 2138 N. “Alabama

coronary occlusion

Charlies A. Harrison, 83, at 424 WwW. 31st, i

«| cerebral hemorrhage 1AarBn J, Smith, 78, at 822 Paca, pulmon- | congpstion Nettie Jane Bledsoe, 63, at 3305 Haw. thorne Lane carcinoma | Margaret Stafford, 34, at City, acule | peritonitis

| ears H. Sampson, 16, at 5609 Broadway,

coronary ooclusion | Mary Weyl, 90, at 3008 Broadway arieriosclerosis.

lege. acute myocarditis » | Elizabeth ‘Hedges, 12. a 128 BE Vermont, , Soronary thrombasi 1 Martin Emperly. Seu a 2608 N, Tlie | nols, eoronary throm

©

| Sourthey Smith Fowler, 85, at 2630 Cols!

us 80, i fia Brodaway,|

ee ———————————————————————— EE ——————————— rr ———————————————————————————

of colonful, Bates sanforised combed. cotton

/ Men's Sports Shop, Second Floor

Boy's Shop, Fourth Floor

+

Men's Shorts, 3.00 Men's Shirts, 3.95

‘ . oy : Boy's Shorts, sizes 6 to 18, 2.50

Boy's Shirts, sizes 6 to 18, 3.00

, a ne on ctetomis, ie Aire

OPPO VETO

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