Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1945 — Page 10

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FLANNER

BUCHANAN g/L,

FALL CREEK AT MERIDIAN ST.

{ians next year than at present.

|factors—a short corn crop and no

| red point values for certain cuts of

BUTTER CALLED

A ‘BYPRODUCT’

Scrapings From Cheese Spread, OPA Says.

(Continued From Page One)

to Proctor & Gamble, soap manufacturers at Cincinnati, and other amounts to the Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. plant at Jeffersonville, Ind. The butter reportedly was shipped from a Wisconsin creamery. ’ Similiar Reports Indications that rancid butter has been sold here followed similar reports in ‘newspapers throughout the country. Last July 19, the Cincinnati Post, a Scripps-Howard newspaper, carried a report on rancid butter deals in that city. | Dr. D. A. Fitzgerald, WFA offi-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Judge Minton Denies Hand In Revenue Post Flare-Up

(Continued From Page One)

tion of ‘a political role was sup- | posed to have been a “revitalizing” factor, Minton, it was said, would possess the ability to “harmonize” backbiting Hooster Democratic factions.

Once Sought Removal

Now. the federal judge says it isn't so. And that leaves the Smith removal maneuver ‘without any obvious motive other than the fact that somebody, somewhere, is always shooting at somebody else's political job. Minton’s name was injected into the picture because, as a ‘U. 8S. senator from Indiana back in the late 30's, he was rebuffed by Former Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morganthau Jr. in a previous attempt to unseat Smith as internal

feck _commit- | [tee there‘is now more" butter for |

civilians as the result of (1) army cutbacks and (2) increased butter production. He said he believed July production figures would show as much as

[last year's and “possibly more.”

“We are attempting to keep OPA

| advised, so it can adjust point

values+to the supply,” he said.

Recounts. Instance

| Fitzgerald recounted an’ instance | of 3000 pounds of rancid butter. in a military set-aside of. 3,000,000 pounds. - He said he hoped the rantid but- | ter would be sold soon, probably for | soap-making. Fitzgerald said it was believed | that the 3000 pounds were rancid) when they went to the army. The hearing turned into a one-| senator affair. Senator Allen J. El- | lender (D. La.), walked.out in a huff when Wherry brought up the matter of butter sold for soap. “We're supposed to be investigating restaurants,” Ellender shouted]

Sees Less Meat

Wherry earlier predicted that there would be less meat for civil-|

He based his statement on two appreciable reducti n the size

of the armed forces. Wherry told reporters” the lower

meat in August do not necessarily mean there is “really” more meat. He explained that a seasonal increase was to be expected at this time of year and that better distribution also had helped. Meanwhile more meat, butter, margarine and lard ‘were reported available in retail stores in midJuly than at any time in May or June.

FEARED VIOLENCE, STEPHENSON SAYS

NOBLESVILLE, July 31 (U. Py. —D. C. Stephenson, convicted of.

Do Yow:

murder in 1925, has charged that

{he didn’t testify in his own behalf | lat his trial because he was afraid

of mob violence. The former grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan bolstered his theory

circuit court.

olis attorney, Ira Holmes, who assisted with the defense of Stephénson in 1925. Holmes said that he advised the former Klansman not to testify for fear of mob action.

Four other affidavits pointed out

| against Stephenson's life at the] time of the trial. He was sentenced

to life imprisonment for the mur-|

revenue collector here. At that time, Minton recommended Pleas Greenlee as Smith's replacement. Instead. of abiding by Minton's recommendation, Mor-

genthau launched an investigation

of Hoosier Democratic income tax returns, including those of Mr.

Greenlee and Paul McNutt. This, |

of course, Minton.

Talk in Washington

Now Morgenthau is” out, bowing to Vinson.

did not please Mr.|

tional Chairman Robert Hanne-

gan. Minton, Truman and Han- {Democratic associates here say he lon dollar mark.”

would go shortly after Morgenthau, his previous protector, stepped down, local politicos - assumed that Minton had at last tasted sweet revenge. At any rate, those in the know here, including State Chairman Fred Bays and National Committeeman Frank McHale, have implied that talk of Smith’s removal originated outside of Indiana, probably in Washington. But Mr. Smith; storm center of the flareup, hasn't slept through all the hubub in a prone position. Local Democrats report a furious circulation of Smith indorsements and complimentary letters. Cabinet Post for Minton?

Meanwhile, speculation over Smith's probable successor continues unabated here. New Albany Furniture Manufacturer Scott Pickens now is touted as a favorite, Mr. Pickens, former state legislator and past member of the Indi-

"FINDS EUROPE'S

PROGRESS SLOW

Capehart Sees Need for New Philosophy. : (Continued From Page One)

dianapolis Rotary club at noon today. His subject was “What I Saw in 15 Countries.” containing observations gathered during a postvictory tour of European battle grounds with a special senate communications committee.

One factor contributing = to Churchill's defeat, the senator thought, was a widespread Brit1shi impression that the U. S. fared much better, internally, during the war Yhan had England. “The British watched America prosper, economically speaking, and | then blamed their comparatively poor plight on Churchill,” he explained.

ana flood board, today said it was] all news to him. “I'd have to find out how good

the job is before I'd consider it, lin

he- chuckled. Democratic gossip has it that Smith's replacement has already! | been selected and that the man will| {come from New Albany, Judge Min- | | ton’ s native bailiwick. The judge last night also denied

Minton is “in solid” possession of any knowledge relat-|rowed money. with President Truman and Na-|ing to his rumored elevation to the| { perity.

cabinet or U. 8. ‘supreme court.

“They. didn’t think the Churchill government had done ‘as good a

. . Thus, indirectly, America was some measure responsible for British unrest and Churchill's downfall.” : The senator said that while in England he assured critics of the

| governmiént there that “cur pros-

|perity is based entirely on borIt's synthetic prosOur national debt is apapproaching the three. hundred bil-

PE

{negan are old New Deal buddies. was offered a cabinet or supreme | He said he had met all the Brit-

Hence, when word trickled down from Washington that Smith |

|court post by President Truman during a recent visit to the capitol.

PLAN TO EXPAND PROBE OF SHERIFF

(Continued From Page One)

[inal case.’ Mr. Myers said his committee | (would continue - its investigation,

notwithstanding the apparent un-|

| willingness of the sheriff and his | personal” attorney to assist.

Whether prisoners at the county

{jail have freedom of choice in the

selection of their attorneys was another- question ‘the committee would like to have answered, Followed Dismissal “I'm afraid a lot of prisoners have gotten attorneys they didn't want,” the committee chairman commented. The civil rights committee inquiry was opened following the recent dismissal of Louis Rosenberg, former legal adviser to Sheriff Petit. What duties the position of legal adviser entails is the question the {committee had planned to ask of

the sheriff and Mr. Funk at®the|

proposed meeting today. “Member Resigns

Attention was directed to the adviser's activities when Criminal Court Judge Pro Tem George

{Henry recently accused Mr. Rosen- |

{berg of representing a trio of de|fendants as well as the sheriff. ‘To complicate the situation |

of the proposed meeting with Sheriff |

stood he was not ih sympathy with | the committee action. Other committee members are Cecil A. Taylor, Herbert J. Backer and John M. Miller.

| that their signers had heard sires POINT DISCHARGES T0.

13 MORE LOCAL -MEN

Thirteen additiond]l Indianapolis

[OFFICIAL TO VISIT |

DETENTION HOME England is Qheaded for national against anything, no matter how

The country’s new juvenile de- | tention facilities at 25th st. and | Keystone ave. will be inspected for| | the first time next week by a rep-

as he marched out of the commit- |Iepresent any defendants in a crim- i resentative of the National Pro- : [tee room,

{ bation association. Sherwood’ Norman, the representative, will arrive in Indianapolis next Monday to study ‘the local rogram as one of several selected hroughout the nation for high standards. ’ In some other cities, Mr. Norman said, children are held in city and | county jails with adult offenders, often under shocking conditions.

SCHOOL POST CHANGES RICHMOND, July 31 (U. P.). — | Robert L. Gilbert, pfincipal of Riley school, Terre Haute, has accepted superintendency of the Cambridge City schools, it was announced today. Floyd A. Hines, former Cambridge City Superintendent: will go to the Martinsville schools.

IT

LA dg S$

ish labor leaders, including Prime Minister Attlee, but withheld comment on these sessions. He observed that the Labor party platform “strangly indicates that

socialism.” Previously, Senator Capehart pre-

{dicted the end of the war with

' job on the home front as ours had. on within 60 days, and stated

- ining broadly. He said he voted for

For 17

eABRA © HOUSTON, Tex, JV 01 U, PJ. —~“Things probably will be pretty dull around here after his six months of action with the field artillery,” the father of 14-year-old Robert Kelso admitted today. Young Kelso, the nation’s youngest wearer of the purple heart, can be sure of a royal welcome when he returns from a year in the army. His family has even forgiven him for running off and enlisting at 13 while his mother thought he was at. a¥Y M C A camp “Robert,” his father, Fred Kelso, said firmly, ‘can do whatever he wants to. Maybe he'll want to go back to school” he added hopefully The six-foot private, who arrived in the U. 8 Sunday with 1962 other homecoming veterans, is a “born salesman,” his father, a Houston insurance man declared. “Robert has talked me into and

that Russia would “join us in the! Pacific by Sept. 1 if the Japanese haven't surrendered by that time.” He denied today that he had ever recommended a “soft peace.” He said he wanted the American people informed of any peace feelers no matter “how slim -they were.” He was one of the first to. voice the possibility of a negotiated “unconditional surrender.” Vif “Well, they finally did admit there had been peace feelers, didn't they?” said Senator Capehart, grin-

the United Nations Charter because “no man has a right to vote

feeble ‘it may be, if it is aimed to

_ Tofmay. JULY 31, 1945

Texas May Be a Little Dull

Old War Hero’

out of plenty,” he admitted, “but al= ways to get into some kind of excitement.” Last July, he said, the youth sold himself to the drait board as a young man just turned 18. He was well

Okla., before his mother, who lives at Tulsa, Okla., discovered her son wasn't away at boys’ camp. “When I learned what he had done, I told him, ‘Well, son, it's your life but take care of it',” the father said. “And I still believe in letting him do what he wants to.”

~~ Not Yet 15

walked down the gangplank with his buddies that the secret was out; that he wouldn't be 15 years old until Sept. 15. \ Kelso earned the Purple Heart when he was bayonetted by a Nazi soldier at Opperhopen, Germany, while serving with the 342d armored division. He said last night in Boston that he was worried about oniy two ‘things—his draft board and his “girl. ”» He may well worry about his reception when he reports at Pt. Sam Houston, Tex. The best guess is

orable discharge from the army.

have no worries on that scorg. Gloria Neas, 15, quickly vowed that she still loved Kelso and could hardly wait to see him. She said she had hurried out to have a new picture taken to replace the one

with the German soldier. “Gee, 1 hope he doesn’t forget that sweet smelling perfume he says he bought me in Paris,” Gloria

eliminate war.”

sighed.

HIN I RRA ATI

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