Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1945 — Page 6

By Scripps-Howard Newspapers . WASHINGTON, Aug.

up a Nazi regime here, while awaitling trial, 1§ doings:business here un- | der the aegis of the Protestant War | Veterans. : Somehow "he coaxed the phone {company to give him “NAtional {1776” as his phone number. In- | quirers were told he previously had another number, but he apparently preferred the patriotic sound of the |year of our country’s birth. | His association was branded a [“letterhead, organization to deceive the people he was trying to convert” by John Rogge, prosecuting attorney, in a statement at the sedition trial. It is not recognized by the Veter‘ans administration, and the Better | Business Bureau says it refused to

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A PERSONALIZED Program for VETERANS

World War II veterans planning to begin or resume their university education may enter BUTLER University at any time—even after the regular semester is under way.

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|divulge information about its activities when the bureau attempted [to check up following the insertion of advertisements for veteran solici-

tors in a Washington newspaper. ~ Questions in Writing Smythe himself angrily refused to answer all but one of a reporter’s questions, declaring he would answer in writing only those questions | he chose to from a list to be submitted in writing. The Veterans administration washes its hands of any responsibility for checking on an organiza- | tion trading on the current interest in veterans’ affairs. Smythe occupies one of two offices listed on the first floor placard as belonging to Norman Stringfellow Bowles, Bowles is a disbarred attorney and served two penitentiary terms. He was convicted of conspiracy on a charge of bringing securities into Washington, .was fined $5000 and served a two-year term at Leavenworth. He was also convicted on an income tax violation and served a three-year sentence at Lewisburg, Pa. So far as can be learned, the chief thing Smythe is doing now of interest to veterans is promising to publish a booklet explaining the G. I. Bill of Rights. For Sale to Employers This information any veteran can get from the Veterans administra|tion. Smythe is attempting to sell, in advance of publication, this booklet, which his printer says is not yet beyond the dummy stage, in large lots at $35 a hundred to industrial concerns, to be distributed by them free with their own advertisement carried on the back cover, Whether any of Smythe's customary anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic propaganda will be included in the hook is not known. The sales letter says the book “will also contain other valuable information, including the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States, and much necessary data that will be of service to the vetreans, and will cause them to treasure the same as a reference book, and be grateful to those who enabled them to obtain it.”

‘Victory Stamps’ Another current Smythe activity

21. —Ed{ward James Smythe, under indict congress, is given in some of the {ment by a .federal grand jury for {alleged sedition and conspiracy to {overthrow the government and set

An impression that these groups were incorporated by special act of

literature which carries the tag line: “Incorporated under an Act of Congress of the United States for the District of Columbia.” In‘reality, they were incorporated under the incorporation laws of the District which of course were enacted by congress. At least one of the parties in the incorporation, Donald Shea, has withdrawn, Shea, barred from all U. 8S. coastal areas in 1943 as dangerous to national defensé, and Smythe are now completely at loggerheads and. write letters about each other. Biggest Smythe triumph under the name of the chaplains’ group was securing endorsement of several {governors and congressmen and even the late President Roosevelt for a national day of prayer in the spring of 1944, before it was exposed as a Smythe project.

Admits Pro-Naziism

Smythe’s background as an al- K

or I TION ATALTY vrs [Nazi Suspect, Waiting Trial, Active Now as 'G.1.'s Friend’

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long exposure to sunlight. In 1909,

‘ LEGEND SAYS NERO {Sir William Crookes, an English ; | physicist, made the first scientific USED SUN GLASSES attempt to control light by means SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass Aug. 21 (U. of glass. His glass absorbed the inP.).—Beach- visible ultra-violet or sunburn rays. | pau bathers may think Off “pv yviin 1917, Dr. E. O. Tillyer| sun glasses as an invention of the|, 4 assistants developed an olive modern age, but legend would have green glass that absorbed hoth in- |{ it that Nero sported a sun glass at|visible ultra-violet and infra-red | sports events. rays. The glass invented by Dr. | According to some historians, | Tillyer, a researcher for the Ameri-| Nero used to watch the athletic can Optical Co, also transmitted contests through a concave emer- adequate visible light for seeing. ald. Thé earliest recorded use of yazEERs WN O™ en colored glass as spectacles is x WHY BE F AT ? announcement: by a Julius Aucott, | » who, in 1561, advocated green glass Get slimmer

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record of the sedition trial in John | Rogge’'s opening statement, with!

self.

had arranged for a joint meeting) of the Ku Klux Klan and the Bund | in “August, 1940; that he “was an-| other early collaborator with the | Bund and with Nazis in Germany”; |

was a distributor of Nazi propa-| ganda material which he reecived from Germany; wrote “to Germany | that he would do his share”; wrote | {that “Naziism was Protestantism in | action, the highest form of civilization”; said that Hitler “was a great Christian leader,” that he looked upon Hitler “as a second Jesus| Christ.” i To all these charges, | piped up from his corner, “Three | cheers!” or “Right!”

|

|

{leged pro-Nazi was read into the|p °

vociferous assent from Smythe him- |

Mr. Rogge charged that Smythe

Smythe ||

requirements will be developed in consultation with the Butler Veterans’ Council, which is cooperating fully with the Veteran’s Administration under the G. I. Bill of Rights.

is distribution of “victory stamps,” | which he told a reporter are being! given to veterans’ groups and! others. | It is known that on at least one occasion, the stamps were sold—at |

| sez I, ‘3800 miles fer me to a festival held at the Washington

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“Us Gremlins is boilin’ mad ”

TAKE ME : ; : me job was to make tings go wrong wid American planes.

“One day, I spots a B-29 taking off fer Tokyo. ‘Boy, oh Boy!’

louse tings up!” So I climbs aboard. First ting

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Cathedral several weeks ago. Cathedral officials did not learn until the last day of the festival, when a “Protestant War Veterans” sign suddenly appeared, who was reponsible for the stamps, they said. The Protestant War Veterans has heen a front for Smythe’s antiSemitic, anti-Catholic activities since it was incorporated in 1938. The purpose of it, as specified in the incorporation papers, is to “uphold and defend the Constittuion, maintain law and order, foster and perpetuate Americanism and inculcate a sense of individual obligation for the benefit of Protestant war veterans.” In 1939 he and two others incorporated the Protestant Chaplains association as a “charitable welfare benevolent unit” of the veterans | organization.

De I figure to do, since the Saipan sun wuz blazing hot, wuz to make A continuing faculty ad-

visory program will enable each veteran to obtain maximum benefits from his university training for profitable peacetime production.

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the grease bleed out of the controls. Dat’s a quick way to

ruin a plane, see.

“But nuttin’ doing . . . dey had an aviation lubricant that stays on the job no matter how hot the tropical sun gets.

“An’ dat wuz only the first outrageous ting. I couldn’t get nowhere wid rust . . . dey had rust preventive lubricants. And even wid the load dey had aboard, I couldn’t hold ’em back on the take-off . . . dat new

aviation fuel’s got too much power.

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“But all the time, see, I'm saving up me dirtiest trick of all. HONEY THAN ANYBODY

‘Me time is coming,’ sez I, ‘when the temperature gets down to 60 or 70 below

’n the Jap Zeros come-diving in.’

“But youse know what? I couldn’t do a ting, see. Outrageous! Them aviation lubricants never felt the cold. All the complicated controls and machinery worked perfect. Dey knocked down the Zeros, blasted the daylights out of Tokyo, an’ got home safe.

“Dat’s why I'm boilin’ mad. An’ why shouldn’t I be! Standard Oil is unfair to us Gremlins,”

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