Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1945 — Page 2

LEN WELFARE

. DIRECTOR ‘OUT

¥ Scheumann Disqualified by Education Ruling.

sAllen county's new welfare dipéctor has been disqualified beeause of failure to meet educational requirements, State Personnel Examiner Paul J, Fay said today. “Mr. Fay said Edward Scheumann of Pt. Wayne accepted the appointment “in good faith” from Allen county's reorganized welfare board in mid-June. Thereafter, it was leirned he Jacked educational qualifications specified for the job. A merit examination from which am Allen county welfare elgibility list will be drawn up is-scheduled in Ft. Wayne Aug. 14 Meanwhile, - Case Work Supervisor Julia Flemion is temporarily administering the Allen county directorship. New Boards In All county welfare boards were aholished and new ones were appointed last May under a Republicah administration act of the 1945

legislature. Some of the new county board members reportedly are not yet entirely familiar with weltare} duties and qualifications. A number of former county welfare directors, who had served under Democratic administrations, re‘signed when the 1945 act took effect, although not legally required

& TE "Voice

Japanese-speaking Capt. Ellis M. Zacharias, USN, above, is the “voice of doom”

sistance and the certain destruction awaiting Jap cities.

GRAVE MARKER

to.do-so. The state personnel division has experienced difficulties in preparing eligibility lists from which these vacancies may be filled. As a result some “provisional appointments” have been made until thé shaken up county welfare systems can be re-aligned completely on a merit basis, it was learned.

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FORMER KANSAS | TEACHER DIES HERE

Services for Mrs. Adda May Utter, former Marion, Kas., school

teacher who died at her home, 1421 N. New Jersey st., yesterday, will be conducted at 10 a. m. Saturday

in ‘the -Mayer --&--Abdon funeral: -

home. The Rev. Herbert Huffman, vastor of the First Friends church, Will officiate and burial will be in the Cox cemetery at Thorntown. Mrs. Utter, who was 63, was a native of Marion, Kas, where she taught school three years. She came to Indianapolis in 1930. She was married in 1901 to Atley Utter. Bhé formerly lived in Thorntown. Survivors, besides her husband, | include three sons, Roscoe V., Ralph | W., and James R., all of Indianapolis; two brothers, Willis Musick, | of Canton, Kas., and John Musick, | Visalia, Cal.; a sister, Mrs. Libby | Noll, Lawrence, Kas, and six] grandchildren. |

VICTOR H. CARMAN | Services for Victor H. Carman, a former partner in the Carman & &| Fryer Electric Co., who died yesterday in Methodist hospital, will be held at-2 p. m. Saturday in the Grinsteiner Puneral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill Born, in Indiana, Mr. Carman came to Indianapolis at the age of 10. He had served in the partnership 456 years, retiring from the electric business in 1938. He was 75. Survivors are his wife, Mary E, and two nieces, Mrs. Minola Caldwell, Indianapolis, and Mrs, Doris M. Overla, Dayton, O.

Pair Given Suspended Sentences by Judge.

The final chapter to the story of the mysterious appearance of &

| Confederate soldier's grave marker

in the rear of a cottage in Rocky Ripple was written off in the juvenile oourt records today. The ‘story began last week when curiosity about the gravestone in the rear of 5116 Riverview dr. led to the arrest of Louis N. Udell, 19, and the detention of a 17-year-old girl who allegedly shared his, cot-| tage. |

that he and the girl found the

tombstone on a rubbish pile at! Crown Hill cemetery where they | went looking for flowers June 13. He said he took the 300-pound| marker ‘tc use it as a stepping! stone.” Later, he said, they .discovered carvings which revealed it was the gravestone of a Civil war

{ casualty.

Erected as a “Gag” Then, Udell told the court, they | surrounded it with geraniums and put » up in ‘their iawn -“just as.a

The gag backfired when sheriff {officials called at the house to in- | vestigate and stumbled onto the unmarried couple living there. Testimony in court today confirmed the girl's story that she was {the wife of an overseas soldier whom she married last year. She! told the court she had known her | husband only three days before their marriage and that he left for camp an hour after the ceremony. | She admitted receiving allotments | from the soldier-‘although she said] she didn’t know where he is now. The girl smiled and nodded assent when Judge Rhoads sald: “You mean you love Uncle Sam's money more than your husband?” Sentences Suspended

Judge Rhoads suspended a sen-

MISS ISA E. DAWSON Miss Isa Ethel Dawson, R. R. 14, Box 327-F, died yesterday at Robert Long hospital.

A lifelong resident of Indianap- |

olis, Miss Dawson was 50. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. In-| diana Cory and Mrs, Lela Shirley. Rites wil .lbe held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Dorsey funeral home, with burial in Crown Hill.

HARRY WRENNICK

Harry Wrennick, resident of In- |

tence of $500 fine and 180 days in jail for Udell. Detention of the girl in the state girls’ school until she was 21 was suspended. He pledged Udell to keep away from the girl until her marriage to the soldier is annulled after it was | discovered her age at the time of (the ceremony made it illegal.

LAWRENCE FROYD DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS

Services for Lawrence I. Proyd,

‘By FREDERICK WOLTMAN Soripps-Howard Staft Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 2. — A highpowered propaganda mill is operat. ing a flourishing business here In

‘ Iselling its wares to hate-inciting

Nationalist groups throughout the country. This was disclosed today in a printed, documented report on the Constitutional Educational League directed by Joseph Kamp. Kamp was indicted by a federal grand jury last year for refusing to identify the

a congressional committee, The report of Kamp's organization was prepared by the Friends of Democracy, Inc., of New York, whose national committee includes Louis Bromfield, John Dewey, S. Stan~ wood Menken, Ordway Tead and Albert Edward Wiggam.

league's officers’ and contributors to}

by appeals to racial “nd religious hatred, discontent and ignorance. Title of the report is “Joe Kamp, Peddler of Propaganda.” - Through his league, says the report, Kamp “peddles confusion” by pinning “Communist” and “unAmerican” labels indiscriminately on liberal and democratic organizations. He does this, the report adds, in a series of pamphlets, super-patrio-tic in tone, which are sold on a nation-wide scale by a staff of salesmes paid on a commission basis. : Reynolds in Picture Kamp pamphlets are distributed by ex-Senator Robert T. Reynolds’ Nationalist party, which the Scripps-Howard articles described

as anti-Negro, anti-semitic and anti-Catholic and basing its appeal

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Propaganda Peddler Kamp's Mill Grinds Out Hate-Inciting Wares for Nationalist Groups

The document supports the find-| on the exploitation of labor strife ings of the Scripps-Howard news=-|and glorification of dictatorship. papers, which two weeks ago re-! Their sales are promoted by Ger-

ported how Nationalist organiza-|ald L. K. Smith, professional rabble

the Cross and the Flag, Smith wrote of Kamp: “He Js: a martyr to the cause of nationalism. God bless Joseph H. Kamp.” Rh - Carl Mote of Indianapolis, head of the National Farmers’ Guild, also high-lighted in the ScrippsHoward articles, uses Kamp’s material extensively. Kamp's pamphlets are flamboyant, scare-head affairs, lavish with red ink and usually selling for 25 cents aplece, His “Fifth Column in Washington” listed among others Robert H. Jackson, then attorney general and now a supreme court justice, and former Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins. Another is “the Fifth Column Conspiracy in America, Authentic Map and Directory—Official Intelligence, the Danger Spots in Your Community.” It lists as Communist the. American Civil Liberties Union, which bars Communists from its national board; the Right-Wing Hat, Cap

tions are seeking power and profit|rouser. In his February issue of

to Jap radio | listeners. Through the office ‘of | war information, he makes regular | broadcasts to the Japs, stressing i the hopelessness of further re- |

CASE IS ENDED

In “court today Udell confessed |

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Goes After C.Lo.

Lately Kamp has been going after the C.I'O. In “Vote C.1.0, and Get a Soviet America,” he calls

Walter Reuther, C.I.0. Auto Work-.

ers vice president, whom the Communists have been attacking bitterly, a “Communist propagandist.” Kamp even brackets David Dubinsky, president of the International Ladies Garment Workers union (A. PF. of L.) as supporting “the ‘Red’ cause,” although the Communists themselves put him No. 1 among their enemies.

The Constitutional Educational league was formed in 1919 “for the purpose of defending constitutional government,” according to the report, which was signed by Rex Stout, chairman of the Friends of Democracy, and L. M. Birkhead, national director. The report adds: “Chief Justice

William Howard Taft and Gen.

Leonard Wood were among its innocent sponsors (before Kamp took over). The league harps rather tiresomely on. this ‘réspectable’ beginning, but the fact is nothing now remains of the old league but the name.” As a sample of Kamp's come-on methods for attracting innocent prospects, the report reproduces one of his letters sent out in 1937 on league stationery.

CURTISS-WRIGHT

OFFICIAL DIES AT 57

NEW YORK, Aug. 2’ (U, P).— Charles W. Loos, 57, director and vice president of Curtiss-Wright corporation, died yesterday at Post Graduate hospital. Loos, a native of New York, was in charge of airports for the corporation and handled its expansion from four plants to 17 in the last five years, . He was survived by a brother, John A, Loos. -

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THURSDAY, AUG. 2, 1045

Go |. THURS

“It is anfortunate® sald the lete ter, “that the patriotic elements find it impossible to maintain one patriotic newspaper, when the op-

| Defense, position is able to publish 500 :

dailies, weeklies and monthlies. The ‘Wary letter concludes: “Yours for Amers (Contin ican-ideals.” ; i In one pamphlet Kamp charges : io Slope 8 that +O. John Rogge, assistant at= on greedy 1 torney general in charge of curb | men of amb! ing un-American propaganda and Relws subversive activities, was a “fifth columnist.” This got top billing in On the de an issue of the Flery Cross, official ever, Nozl | publication. of the knights of the | demands by Ku Klux Klan. 5 " use of Frenc ———————————— in 1940 ESCAPE FT. HARRISON + The arm Local and state police today ! said, contai searched for R. L. Davis Jr., 24, and : and anythi William F. Riden, 20, who escaped , side its fre early this morning from the disci to its terms. plinary barracks at Ft, Harrison, ‘1 Laval wej

Davis, according to fort records, has a wife living in Greensville, N. C, Riden’s mother resides in Detroit.

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Law , Laval lool ' | heveled aft 1 ; confinement | awaits tris | | traitor. | French ¢ | { mediately ir i his prelimir \ | yers who wi | { prison to | | baggage. : Laval ha \ lawyer, It | | state would 3) unere was | | lawyer woul E | “I "|" The man up the an L. arrest by si [| “It's abou ¥ Most Fr | Laval larg | | Vichy’s coll Most obs ‘almost ce

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§1

dianapolis for 40 years, died yes- who died Tuesday at 1427 N. Delaterday at his home, 1227 LeGrande | ware st. after an illness of four ave. He was 76. | years, will be held at 2 p. m, toA native of Morristown, Mr. | morrow in the Usher mortuary. Wrennick had been a butcher at| Burlal will be in Floral Park. He the Kemper Regal Store in Beech |was 67. Grove for the past 12 yeags. The Rev. Almon J. Coble, pastor He is survived by his wife, Elma of Washington Street Methodist Jane; thre sons, Jesse FP. Russell church, of which Mr. Froyd was a H., and Bert, all of Indianapolis, | member, will officiate. and a brother, William, also of In-| Mr. Froyd, who had been a residianapolis. |dent of Indianapolis more than 40 Rites will be held at 1:30 p. m.|years, formerly lived at 56 N. tomorrow at the Beech Grove Holmes ave. For more than 37 Methodist church, with burial in|years he had been auditor of the Hanover cemetery at Morristown, |& P. Lesh Paper Co. He was also a memb LUMBER RESERVES DOWN |a. De er of Marion. lodge 35, F, & WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 (U, P)~| Surviving are two daughters, Mrs, The WLB reported today that the |Mary Jane Schaler, and Mrs. Millumber stockpile at mills and stor-|dred Inasy; his mother, Mrs. age yards ori May 31 totaled 3,-|Charles Froyd; a grandchild, Carole 234,846,000 board feet, a decline of Ann Inasy, all of Indianapolis, and 14 per cent from the previous|a sister, Mrs. W. J. Cathcart, Montmonth. gomery, Ala,

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