Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1945 — Page 2
Bice: NEW REYNOLDS | PARTY ACTIVE
Hitler Tactics Used to Exploit U. S. Discontent. (Continued From Page Une)
sentatives talk of achieving power _ by approved political means, others now are preparing for violence. - An
|court mandated him to show cause | Batchelder belongs to the Hooster
FOR STEPHENSON
“Hamjlton } Circuit Judge Cassius | M. Gentry today again defended his |
right to hear the retrial plea of D. C. the new commander of. the Indiana |
Stephenson, ex-Ku Klux Klan state department of ithe Veterans | grand dragon, now serving a life of Foreign Wars. term for. murder + Elected ‘ yesterday in the annual Judge Gentry denied the state at- state encampment in Tomlinson | forney gereral's charges that he is | hall, he succeeds Leon V. King of ‘biased and prejudiced” in favor of Indianapolis. Stephenson. Local men elected to state offices . The state is seeking a change of |are Alfred L. Chew, quartermaster, venue on Stephenson's petition for dnd Clay Batchelder, judge advoa retrfal. Judge Gentry denied the |Cate. Mr. Chew is a member of the change, then the state supreme |Sgt. Ralph Barker post and Mr.
why the venue shift shouldn't be Post of V. F. W,
granted. Meanwhile, Stephenson is asking | Hammond, senior vice commander;
\permission to remain in the Hamil- {Paul A. Benning, Terre Haute, ju-
[ton county jail at Noblesville until dior vice commander; 1. E Selstad | .
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
China Air Chief | JUDGE DENIES BIAS tn Man Is Elected
Other officers are Charles Klaubo, ||
State Commander of VFW
Ralph .E. Welton of Vincennes is! ji
Ralph E. Welton
SEEK SOLDIER IN
Police sought a soldier here today | | in the slugging death of John WASHINGTON, July 16 (U. P|
|—An American soldier of Japanese Miller, 56, of 1462 S. Harding st. | | arfeest, $ be Involved in a fight near a. tavern! Ty sa* up In his hospital bed
in the - 1600 ‘block of Howard st. |should- say to his friend - also a Wednesday night, Miller died Sat- Japanese-American, who had reurday at the Emhardt clinic from POunced his U. 8. citizenship. a neck injury received in the fracas,| H® was at Hammond General
Deputy Coroner Leonard, Cox said, | Bospiial. Pi ng 1 ons Detectives sald two witnesses de-|Prance. His friend was in a re-
scribed Miller's foe as “a man in|location center in the west. soldier's uniform.” After long thought, the veteran Rites for the victim will be held [began writing.
at 2 p.m. tomorrow at New Mays-| 1v 18 not my purpose to get in
an argument with you,” he wrote, ville Baptist church. Burial will fol- |, low in New Maysville cemetery. Your difficulty, however, is shared
A resident of Indianapolis for 10 by thousands of Nisei like me in a
{and thought out carefully what he
_ MONDAY, JULY 16, 1945
Wounded Nise: Chides Friend § SLUGGING DEATH Foy Turning Against America
jme angry to hear that but it’ also encourages me in my fight for democracy. “Some of us are wounded, some of us dled on the battlefield. They have paid the highest price for their ideals which the Nisei haters dare . not. I have lost some of my best frienids in France -and Italy. But I'm very proud and ru continue to fight the enemy of our country be it foreign or domestic. As I have said, I'm an American to the Inst drop of mygblood. Beating for Crimes “Japan is taking a good psolid beating for her crimes,” he continued. “Because she's never lost
i what can he
x
(Continue
man and Secr Byrnes motore rubble of cent When he sto tered, burnedcellery, the Pr a pensive shal “It's a tert
| brought it on
He looked
Hitler inflame ranting speecl “It's just
manner completely different. I'm|® War till now she may have a no- | overreaches h
ex-convict Nationalist from Chicago is going ‘into Midwest communities organizing local hoodlums into a terroristic force. I know these things because: I ai have been SoiTeSpondee whish Bag Lt. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer. passed between principals ‘0 | above, has been appointed comNationalist movement, records of | tart HS . S. air his retrial plea is neard. Atty. Gen. Of Anderson, chaplain, and Dr. ness also was criticized as being some of their closed meetings and| forces in’ the China theater, with | reports - ee utterances, both | headquarters at Chungking. vate and public. i ———————————— wl have examined volumes of . del . publications which regularly are reaching: thousands of readers. | Sharing Reynolds’ leadership in| the movement is Gerald L. K | Smith, rabble-rouser, founder of | the “America First party” and idol | of various “mothers’” groups. Reynolds, contact man for the movement in oficial government Halts Action on on on Disputes in circles and high society, denies that | he is collaborating with Smith. Newspaper Cases. In Reyonlds' Office (Continued From Page One) But Smith's Washingtoh headquarters are in Reynolds’ office, in| immovable object as the board is the Colorado building. lan irresistible force.” go a 5 Bh Sith WLB struck back. It ordered its of sa , | . oa Mowe of Indianapolis, part newspaper Smniscion HD sey lities | action on ‘all pending Vv gener of wo smal public ules cements between the 1. T. . Farmers’ Guild: Mrs. Lyrl Clark | {and publishers. The aim isto deVan Hyning of Chicago, head of {termine if these agreements con=“We, the Mothers Mobilize for tain the provisions hth he Yon holds are outside the rd’s - Amer > 1d | : Amasrica, pa | Gotoh, | vib op to 405 ane “Jayhawk Naw’ of Wichila, Kas, dolph. He left Washington, preand ihe Bel Batvey piled | sumably for I. T. U. headquariers DE ee 05% lin Indianapolis, before the Beard | came through with its answer e It yas Mote who, in : the July, union's attacks in the third heated 1943, ‘issue of his -paper, "America public hearing on this controversy. Pr a: HCH foolish peo Previously Mr. Randolph Sit e v tother union officers had declar pis, Jong ago we would have put 88 in a formal statement that the si 10 all Bus hypocritical Sant action which the board took would a ema yin We would Ibe “brazen and illegal” and that . u oe Jeiavel totally the ‘union “will respect no such, RY open ttempt to decisions and will resist the applia f Ameri up fo cation thereof in any manner or .- ake_of Can anther by any. means at its disposal.” = | er O i 't Force Them Clever Operation WLB Can't The Nationalist forces are being| Further, the officers said: “Any welded by a clever operator who has [attempt on the part of the board a shrewdly conceived plan of organi- [to pursue that course would in- | gation and a “party line” that is all (evitably disrupt the printing and things to all the people whom the publishing industry of the nation Nationalists want to attract. and the responsibility therefor rests It appears to be more than a co- squarely upon the war labor board. incidence that each new pronounce-; The Internatidhal’s officers dement incorporated in the party line |clared also: “The members of the is picked up simultaneously by all{International Typographical union the affliated groups. The line in~ | produce newspapers through their cludes: {labor, which may be had under Blanket opposition to all interna- conditions satisfactory to them. tional agreements “for peace and| “If they decide not to produce economic stability — an opposition newspapers there is nothing the ” ~ Which is not ‘based on fair- minded war labor board can do to force
Poy AEG get 1H ENE to incite hatred of a “super-state from the employers or from this dominated by British imperialists war labor board they will not pro-| and Communist savages.” duce newspapers. The members of " Want Negotiated Peace the ryy. are i Sept in Apply : A ing ‘slowdowns,’ ‘sitdowns,’ ‘strikes’ “Bring the boys home now,” mean- | "qcvouts as are the members of ing a negotiated peace. the ‘war labor board Enactment of laws to crush labor “The proposed th 2 will unions and free business of all regu- Proposes. acon. will: be of tation, no help to the publishers in whose Abolition of the Federal Reserve porion issn Sood Seems (0 be g. system, which, Nationalists charge . is an agency by ‘which “international Members. Applaud bankers” control our economy. Jack Gill of Cleveland, union Severance of all relations with secretary-treasurer, nutshelled the Stalin. ; I. T. U's stand in this way: “No| “Franklin. D. Roosevelt and outside agency is going to arbitrate Winston Churchill plotted the Jap|the laws of our union. attack on Pearl Harbor during the | Applause came from rank-and-conference on the Atlantic ocean.” (file I. T. U. members at the And now, the Nationalists have hearing. added to their party line the case of| Up to this year, & man who was convicted of I. T. U. was credited with the traitorous action. They demand best. record in the country in freedom for Tyler Kent, a former | wartime strikes. Also, with its more clerk in the U. S. embassy in Lon-|than 80,000 members, it had the don, who was imprisoned by the highest number of closed shops. British on charges of turning over| The change in reasonably peaceto German agents. copies of docu- | ful relations with employers began ments taken from the embassy. (to show about Jan. 1, when new Tried It Before {union laws went into effect. These,
the venerable
| by them . produce newspapers,
The Nationalist plan of organiza. *C°°rdiD8 to “Editor and Publisher.” organ “for .the industry's management side, “suspended the democratic process” and gave the union’s: executive ‘council powers to order strikes and to override arbitration agreements, change the . striet regulations governing strikes and lockouts, and enfdrce as “laws” a number of working cénditions which previously had been. subject to negotiation. | L T. U. Is Criticized “This publication,” said Editor and { Publisher, “has pointed with.pride | many times in the past to the Inter-
tion is outlined by Reynolds in his booklet, Leader in Your District,” -to party workers. He tells them to unite in cells of 10 persons each and to meet in homes so-that all the members will| know each other intimately and| “subversive” characters will be kept out. The Nationalist groups tried un- | successfully three times before to become a united political force— | * once under George E. Deatherage, who is under indictment for sedi- | tion; a second time in Rev. Fr Coughlin’s heyday, and again with retired army Gen. George Moseley | as leader. Each time the effort failed because the individual groups would | not surrender their own rackets. |
Plans No ‘Mistakes’
The Reynolds’ organization doesh’t intend to make any mistakes this time. It has a Nation-| alist confederation in which all groups can unite while retaining their autonomy. 1Ite~also has a Nationalist party for political ac- | . Hon. A third division is the Na“tionalist committee, an “educations | al” body to which industrialists are | " told they can make tax-exempt contributions. The treasury department, how-+ ever, says such contributions are! not tax-free.
TOMORROW—Nationalists Take Over Farmers’ Group
addressed
BUTTER NOW BACK TO : 16 POINTS A POUND
WASHINGTON, July 16 (U. PJ] The ration value'of creamery bute was back down to 16 points N today. . i ‘old 24-point value came to) at 12:01 a. m. Sund&y. The said move was made pos_reduckd military require- , i points,
and [odispensable part
“How to Become a Political |
| tal relationships paper
the United States in time of war
rnational Typographical Uinon as an |
example of an enlightened and sincere union, one that abided by, its contracts and was a firm believer in the principles of arbitration. “Now, under a new set of officers, changes in the I, T. U, rules . . . |suspend the democratic processes [formerly existing in the union rules and disregard the heretofore sanctity of I. T. U. contracts . . . These union rules are an attempt to undermine and destroy fundamenbetween newspublishers and newspaper | menchanical unions. They deprive local unions of any autonomy in |Tmportant decisions affecting their livelihood. They make any arhi- | tration procedure a mockery and |waste of time. They resolve all union disputes, large or small, into an ultimate strike threat. Board Was Unanimous The War Labor Board was | Unanimous, so far as the - record "shows, if its order against Mr, Randolph and his colleagues, although it was understood that the board's labor members refrained from véting. The board's order contained these statements: : “The 1. T. U. has challenged the’ authority of the government- of
to’ provide for the peaceful ad- | justment of labor disputes,
“It has placed it ‘lis’ above the |
‘laws’ of the U. 8. congress. - It
Sus Bovapaves ate. a vital i
James A. Emmert said he would de- Whitefield Bowers of mand thé former grand dragon's re- Surgeori. turn to Michigan City when the/ The streamlined encampment, at- ™ question is settled. (tended by 50 delegates, adopted & mime terns mmeasaaion [resolution to ‘broaden and clarity” JANITOR FOUND DEAD {the G. I. Bill of Rights pertaining Robert Bruce Gibson, Janitor ‘for | to vocational and educational trainEd Duncan Printing Co. was found ing. dead yesterday in his room at 412 The present system of obtaining E. ¢ Court st. He was 65. veterans’ loans for homes and busi-
Lafayette,
ears, Mr. Miller was. employed at tion that it is a de “too complicated.” According to re- the Ball Park Wrecking Co = fifterican to the last drop of lyn, “TMi” i one ras wi
cent surveys by the National Sav-! He is survived by four daughters, she must be utterly beaten ings and Loan associations, the vet- Mrs Evelyn Dove, Mrs. Irene Shinn, Angered by Violence time for a lasting peace. érans are having difficulty in find- Mrs. Pauline Phillips and Miss! “Being a person of Japanese de-| “I'm glad to hear your family is ing available units for purchase in Josephine. Miller, .all of Indian- scent, I'm aware of discrimination|well” he continued. “I still re89 per cent of the cities. |apolis; two sons, 8. Sgt. Leslie D. | that is practiced by people who|member the time I sald goodby to Delegates also favored adoption Miller. and Coxswain 3-¢ John Q |dare not see further than the color |your folks before I went overseas. of an amendment to boost the gov- Miller, stationed on the West coast, of our skin. Several cases of|I'm rather disappointed now, ernment guarantee of $2500 on busl- and a sister, Mrs. Cletus Paige, violence against WNisel families on|though, because you have lost faith ness loans under the law, ® Texas. the coast ‘are reported. It makes!in your country.”
A
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AYRES’ Semi-+4
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EE
NANT SALE
SoS Fe TH Rp
Tuesday
s
are inviting and low.
I RR
It's Store-Wide! All Items Featured Are at Least
Er le
elf Hs aw rl wigs _ ’ 1
IRIE ta S—— Hr
~acttqass
Continues Through and Wednesday, July 17 and 18
Ayres’ Remnant Sale means exactly what it says . .. odd. lots, incomplete assortments. of Ayres’ qualify
vy Ry
Come in tomorrow and Wednesday.
“ merchandise, priced to clear quickly. Practically every department in the store has, remnant ifems, The
price of each item has been cut and cut drastically. The merchandise is'good and seasonable. The prices :
: i
e! it
|
pb:
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1
© such destruct
whether they’
4 It or not.”
Got | As. he look
and ragged
through the sections of th
| paid little att = they did, it wi
stares. The Preside
the southwes
There he in armored divi special citati battalion. After drivi track past 50
bi moved into :
¢ proceeded int: He drove pi man radio ce heart of the ~ pation on the At the fif:
| German traff * was directing
Fille The pace 0
' eession slowe
burger Chau
' leading throu ! TMiergarten,
crashed plang of tanks and the park's on At the end President ci Brandenburg trance into t gone. The worse than of the sidew:
' debris.
Mr... Trums gutted Reich Den Linder grouped ami gling with e soldiers, tryi valuables for The Presid Unter Den 1 strasse, then where he pa to look at f Russian offi curb. Leaving th
,._Mman drove |
to 70 miles ¢ Earlier Pr
| called on Pr
Potsdam sul stood to hi call to pay-! first time ( Truman sh presidency. Fut With his “brass track dent wante * the length; each of the "His two 1 were a Spe war and an ture world at least the dress peace after Japan’ The Big cloaked by sorship thal from the scene and while they 1 or more—\ from period But infoy the agends these major ONE: Ru . and the re discussion v TWO: .1 of German) THREE: | exacted fr } whether in | ‘power or all is asking fc ' to rebuild 1 , FOUR: 8 | territorial vanced b; Poland, Bu Uo FIVE: " flict over sourdes,. inc
“lem of the
Palestine, 8I1X: Rus on Turkey for revisior ment. of Dardanelle: SEVEN: Boviet-spor ment, whic States hay J BEIGHT: “tion of the of - Polish iterated th exile gove . have refus F
. The Lev complete ir also may Three, alt .. French res De. Gaulle conference that point
