Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1945 — Page 3

TUESDAY, SEPT. 11,1045 gro Eo _______ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SHIFTS MADE IN Eyewitness: 'l Wanted fo ~ |[EXPLAINS 60D |Parents Oppose Big Gl as nr on wa

He was sent home when he got |

STATE POLICE] Die by Sword,’ Says Tojo| IN BIBLE TRIAL Schoolmate of Children i or, Moo CT LT i

. | was discharged last July, | Mayor Tyndall told & group of He plans to work after school {taxicab company and driver | |

(Continued From Page One) had dominated Japan and led it i wy hs _ (Continued From Page One) * Hornberger said he didn’t care,

into a hopeless war. he was going to stick it out.

Kili ; A? aq) Kraus told him: . |. Tojo's attitude toward Kraus . Mine i ; to. discourage her son from re- : Killian Names O'Neal asi «ooo: tc door so can come oy ual 2 De Teacher- Testifies in Suit to] = = Bie, glues. Meanwhile, the back fence op- | him finance his education.

sign the taxicab ordinance passed D i Fain. in and present my. credentials.” | po cuestioned Kraus’ authenticity. St lasses. “You' position to his return threatened He quit a full-time $10-a-day | J etective Captain, Sis roe. +r ca. | ha usstiouod Eras autheniiehy. |. op Classes Youd think they would be | Potion fo US CHIE ENHICH | yon us a gardener to return to (bY Clty counell last week.

: " lied: : ntinved From Page One proud of a boy that was willing : : class.’ Under the G.I. bill he re- | Headed by Attorneys John Continued From Page One) p a hls thie 45. ams oficial order, wiley Soepat ouebod (Co ge ) to go back to finish up his paren voiced Sisee eames pity celves $50 a month from the |Ruckelshaus, “Jack Kammins, tenant of Seymour post; Cloyd B.| I do not care to discuss it.” he fle Window we stand, she will refuse to swear “bY| genooling,” she said. “He only e former G. 1’s contention that = government while attending Smiley Chambers, the tax! group France, Petersburg, from detective] Kraus turned to an interpreter. Jame, we: ass the Almighty God” to “tell the | he wouldn't cause the other | school. : a to first sergeant at Jasper POst:| “Tell him to quit this damn | ¥38 E0ing fo the front .door 10 | in the whole truth and nothing| Missed the last three months of pupils to neglect their studies. | # & = continued its long protest against Edward Raholin, Elkhart, from cor-| fooling around and let's get go- Spen It se requested, oD Tolo: [but the truth.” the eighth grade. But ao¥ he | "But some of the neighbors said | TWO OF Hornberger's broth- °| application of the law to present poral to first sergeant at Ligonler| ing” Kraus said. “Tell him to FPparen By ii visit, ee Instead, she will take advantage | 28 10 take the whole year over.” | = te Hotnberger walked | ers ‘are still overseas. They are (drivers. post; Robert J. Stewart, Pendleton, | open the front door so I can pre= | PCE 0 in and asked ques. |0f an Illinois statute providing that| J. B. Shambaugh, supervising | int the classroom yesterday, the | g got, ‘Cornelius Hornberger, 28, |, Conver Of # bitter fight since. from Pendleton post trooper to In-| sent my credentials. Tell him to ti ew HiGow Spe inte i witnesses who object to taking such| principal, said Hornberger was | pupil's eyes were fixed on his gold \ v » 28, last winter, the ordinance provid dianapolis post detective, prepare himself for a trip to ons ugh an P an oath may “solmenly, sincerely| 8iven an aptitude test—and “We | gicoharge button. They -fidgeted | and Seaman Vincent Hornber- (for the licensing of drivers by the Other promotions included Wil-| Gen. MacArthur's headquarters Understood Second Time and truly declare and affirm.” found him not yet ready lo Pass | ang were impatient to get him: ser, 30. safety board after an investigation liam Hunter, Auburn, from Ligonier| at Yokohama.” Kraus this time made his | Mrs. McCollum classifies herself the eighth grade. alone so they could bombard him His mother is a former auxil- |by the chief of police, post trooper to Indianapolis post Slams Window Down $ meaning clear, saying, “Open the |as an “atheist or rationalist.” She RA with questions, lary president of the Lakeland Corporation Council Arch Bobdetective; Russell Huffman, Pleas- The interpreter translated. door so I can come in and pre- [is heading a fight to establish] SHAMBAUGH said he was 8 FH" post of the Veterans of Foreign | bitt and Safety Board President ant Lake, from trooper to detec- T letpe ed his window down | sent my credentials. Tell him whether schools can release pupils| SOITY that he couldn't place IN ADDITION to five cam- Wars, Hornberger joined the | Will Remy also attended the ses~ tive at Ligonier post; Jack Nye, Bo w thought he was mov- | (Tojo) to prepare himself to go for periods of religious instruction,| Hornberger in a higher grade. | paign ribbons, Hornberger has the | post after his discharge. { sion. Auburn, from trooper to detective ing to open the front door and t6 Yokohama to General Mac- (either in or out of school buildings. : at Ligonier post; Clifford MeCory, ‘went to the front of the house. Arthur's headquarters.” The court battle—which some obCrothersville, from trooper to de- At 4:21 p. m., a shot rang out. Tojo understood clearly this |servers say may assume the sigtective at Seymour post; Paul Kern, Kraus rushed to the front dou- | time and slammed the window |nificance and proportions of the Belford, from treoper to detective ble door. They were locked, but | with a resounding bang. He shot historic Scopes trial—arose from , at Jasper post; Albert Hertzing, P® Too. on onen and ran into | himself an instant later. Mrs. *McCollum's petition to ban Jeffersonville, from trooper to de- hg entrance hall with cor- The study, where the attempted |religious teaching from Champaign tective at Charlestown post; Harold respondents immediately behind |. suicide occurred, was a small, schools. Regebrh: Terre a tg Other newsmen had ar- | comfortable room with a large Promise Fight to End i a ny ty from | rived at the scene with Kraus. | military oil painting the dominat- | Both sides have promised to carry pos -ersville| The door leading from the en= ing feature. the case to the U. 8 supreme court, trooper to detective at Connersville trance hall to Tojo's study on the Kraus took two male members [if necessary. to obtain a final depost: Howard Lyvion, Bvanswie, left was locked, Kraus called on | of the household into custody cision. n SAY : re Tojo to open it. after searching them and pasted | Mrs, McCollum, 32, is the wife of STRAUSS SAYS —\—— post, and: Ralph Powell, Li Byne: There was no reply. Kraus | a sign on the front ‘door of |a University of Illinois horficulturSos HOOPEF 16 SorperSl 8} Ligonier mounted an interior step and | Japan's former war leader say- list, She charges .that her 10post kicked in the door, ing: “Sealed by the United States [year-old son was ostracized because Transfers and Demotions Tojo was slumped in an easy Army C.I.C.—Do Not Touch.” he did not participate in the weekThe five men transferred, Killain chair parallel to the door. A red ly classes in religion,

said, were Blaine Schang, Shelby-| gmear bubbled from his midriff. J At yesterday's session, the star yille, froin Seymour-Charlestown| He was unconscious, but groan= M NUTT SUPPORTED witness for the defendant Chamdistrict lieutenant to Ligonier post;| ing heavily with every breath. paign ~ school board was & tiny,

: . gray ~- haired former missionary. | Jacob Varntz, Rockville, from La- Son Naieyy : FOR MANILA POST ring argued religious doctrine with | fayette post detective to Indian-| In the next’ room to the oa Seg Hh “| Mrs. McCollum’s. attorney, Landon}. - | apolis; George Granholt, Martins- fas Young map f Vang sowed (Continued From Page One) |L. Chapman. | yille, from Indianapolis post detec-| legged on a Takamatsu. said. he. Miss May Chapin—for the last 1 tive to Putnamville? “ErtiestRich=|- hyo SHOR0Sw: ph Sotto: the: the: reommander in-cehied 48: PERSE 4 To “op ‘the RUG sss | ardson, Lebanon, from Indianapolis| Was one of Tojo’s sons. the best of your ability. ~ |ligious education program in detective to Lafayette, and| Kraus sent a jeep to Tokyo for | pespite complaints, friend and foe| Champaign—resisted all questions Roy Newgent, Greencastle, from| medical aid. Beads of sweat ap- | or Mr, McNutt concede that he|designed to prove that her classes Punamville post detective to Indi-| peared on Tojo's brown, bald |.grrieq out his war manpower job had the effect of instilling racial -anapolis. head. His groaning continued as well as could be’ done. In fact, prejudice in the pupils. In addition to Hinkle’s demotion, uninterruptedly. Photographers he is going to describe in a book | - Tells Bibical Tales Ray G. Fisher, LaGrange, lost his| took pictures and correspondents | what management and labor can Under’ Chapman's questioning Heutdnant's rating at the Ligonier roamed the house while we waited |, without legislative interference, Miss’ Chapin recited the Bibical post and was made a trooper. for a doctor. 2 if moved by patriotic motives such

:N ed con- tales of Adam and Eve, Noah and A 3 gers teduced in rank first Ami et elt en 27" produces the Ark, Solomon and his wives fj§ Frank Bruggner, Elkhart, from firs Pledged to Freedom and Elijah and the flaming charidt.

“sergeant to trooper at Ligonier; em on _ iiterviewers. We Title of the book is “In the The tales, she said, were taught as ond Foltz, Terre Haute, #7 “op “he made whay undoubt- American Manner” In it he will) Bible stories without comment as to ctive to trooper at “Putnamy oi] edly was his dying/ statement show that. the manpower commis-|their accuracy. joorn Bufkin, Jeffersonville, from. Joo oo" oo nsibility for the |Sion, Without coercive legislation,| Miss Chapin said that her teachective to trooper at Charlestown: | ©" br CC he now was (did 8 better war plant manning|ing. was non-denominational, - She | Bemenderfer, Rochester, from | “happy to die” : job than did the British with their said it sought only to show the tive to trooper at Ligonier; Bae Tojo’s son appeared from the |rigid compulsory laws. : children “the brotherhood of man rd Rose, Bluffton, from Qetestiid| ovis oom with & glass of water. | It will be “Thé American Man-|and the fatherhood of God and did trooper at Ligonier, a «t| A medical corpsman ordered that |ner” which Mr. McNutt will pur-|so with the hope that each person Winn, Seymonr, from Seymions Do the general not be moved until a |sue in returning to the high com-|will stay within his-own denominadetective to headquarters identifica~) joo go ived, ~ | missionership; — As much as any 3 tion division. Wound 3 Bad Oue Filipino, he is pledged to full free- Christian. Drunken Driver Campaign, “He capmot. be moved” the 90m for the islands next July 4. Belief in All Faiths

Killian also announced the ap- “ : His appearance before the senate! piss Chapin said she believed 1 corpsman said. “We are trying pin said she ev n pointment of two probationary .. cove nim» committee on territories and in-|ine essential parts of all religions. troopers, effective Sept. 15. They] Tojo by then was unconscious sular affairs tomorrow is as much| when asked by Chapman if_that

to plead for needed rehabilitation meant she believed in polygamy, she were Albert Huber, Indianapolis, as-| again, but still breathing and | o.0. 00 oc to carry out the form A Ya 2 oa you AY: Se

' .| gro . The wound was a bad signed to the Indianapolis post uni-| SRI appeared almost ~ six |Of senate confirmation of his new |ja) part, Mr. Chapman?”

|| form divsion, and Richard MJ, hoc jong and continuously |2PPointment. : Other witnesses at yesterday's } Myers, Bluffton, attached to Pen-| pubbled red red froth. Senator Tydings (D. Md.) is com- | hearing included Mrs. Bessie Taylor, | dleton post. I wondered why he had not [mittee chairman. He also visited fifth grade teacher. Mrs, Taylor | © Col Killian explainéd that the| shot himself through the heart Manila recently. | testified that Mrs. McCollum’s son, shakeup was designed to make the if he actually had wanted to die. | While the Malacan palace of James Terry, was the only student best use of available personnel and Japanese newsmen explained, [President Osmena remains intact| who did not attend the classes, pointed out that the changes were however, that this was the place |there, the house of the high com-| James Terry, she said, seemed fo made on a basis of competitive men-| Where a formal hara-kiri dagger |missioner has been badly damaged. want religious instruction. But he ‘ . fal examinations, service .records|-Dormally is plunged into the Mr. McNutt says the city is sojwas not allowed in the class. be- It $ Very Important to the U. Ss. A. with the department and other legal abdomen in a Japanese cere- |wrecked that he does not expect to|cause his parents had refused per- : qualifictaions. monial suicide. take ‘his wife and daughter back mission. She said he generally

3 \ Takamatsu told me in the car |with him at once. Both were in|spent the 30 minutes each week in ‘ anaes | | At the same time, he announced | gun ty Tojo's home that the [high favor there in the peaceful [the music room or alone in the and to YOU Personally! The

: that paign to reduce drunken Vopr. 's assocls : a BE acted fumed Sed Benin lh four ite yal of the McNutt appoint- See ge Accepted’ Postwar World Requires KNOWLEDGE!

|] ately. ferent times that hari-kiri was [ment also came from Gen. Mage § The war on drinking motorists| the only honorable course left | Arthur. re. Taylor said James Tei) Mas [% follows completion of a drunko-| onen to him. . ingitng' m . Vil not accep y other pupils in meter school where 25 troopers were y recent visit, 1 wasthe room. She denied that he was ..HOW WELL THE HOPES and dreams and | prayen } tranted in the scientific identifica- . Prestige at Low Ebb housed at the home of a friend on|disliked because of his lack of “ofA il b d h ell th "tion of intoxicated persons. It is evident that Tojo's per- |the outskirts of Manila,” Mr. Mc- religious faith. 4 0 merica wi © answered . . . NOW w e sonal prestige among_ the dap- Nutt sd. “The roof remained, as| Mrs, McCollum’ theory—as = , fearfully complex, the awesome problems of fomorrow Et anese people had rea e low= n a Jap headquarters. |voiced by Chapman—is that teach-| will be met . . . depends to a large extent on CRIME WAVE ROLLS est conceivable ebb prior to to- |But their vandalism had stripped |ing religion in public schools con- h Il th P # ge TODAY! . day's attempted suicide. the place clean of everything that |titutes a violation .of the state and ow well the younger generation prepares

ON qo, esate. premier a Oc- |could be torn up and taken away. |federal constitution. Chapman said 1 4 NEW CASES tober, , and immediately as- “While there I talked to all|it is contrary to the doctrine of ' : 3 sumed domination of Japan's fu= | jacces of Filipinos. Moros came to |separation of church and state. COURAGE will be needed and brawn and sweat,

for a landscape gardener to help | sentatives today that he int 15 t

PARLE NEARER

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(Continued From Page One) ture war policy. He took over the | 0 me and many, many visitors| Unless provision is made for in- \ / = and Patience and tolerance . . . but withal a

ministries of war, munitions, com« from the outlying islands. The vies . y (struction in the 256 established attempt fo rob her but fled from the| merce and industry in addition [oo". © CHEVE JE EACK Hy ons In’ the United States—as Touch of Divinity . . . AND A FLOORING OF GOOD,

scene after hitting her. to making himself chief of the |y..o our faith with them. That is |Well as the presentation of “atheist ; 1 ERS SOUND EDUCATION WITHOUT Lieutenant Beaten goxsta) shatt July 18, 1944, after a pact that has been sealed in [or rationalist” views—she contends \ A WHICH THE WORK MAY BECOME POINTLESS,

i1 Two men who offered to show 1 Saipan, and after- |P10od.” « {the schools are- engaged In “sec- y : gain CHAOTIC, TRAGIC! 1st Lt. Louis Graham, 35, Camp At- he Sali pan, where he Mr. McNutt believes that the |'arian teaching. : | & / ' a terbury, the way to a “bootleg”| used to be chief of staff of the |United States should keep all the Deny Violation vA PE place beat him and took his money Japanese Manchurian army. Marianas and Caroline islands we| Attorney for the schools and sup- YN This, then PEP is an urgent plea “oe and clothes early today. His home is in the suburban |Wwrested from the Japs. porters of the teaching of religion FHA fe ’ RETURN TO SCHOOL! -scLt, Graham said the men took a| district of Tokyo, flanked by corn- | What the next nine months in |have answered with a claim that| k iy : " billfold containing $160, his trousers| fields. the. Philippines will do for Mr, Mc-|the classes, so long as they are 7 and Jpersonal belongings. A similar] To reach the house you walk up | Nutt politically remains problemat- |voluntary, do not violate any law. attack occurred Saturday night| a country lane surrounded by |jcal. His friends think that it was| In his opening statement to the oe ig Soules Invited Valle] M. hedges which Shglose approxXi- |only the Roosevelt third term which |three circuit judges hearing the when they took emergency jobs because 3; 1l ave. ve| ma an acre o kept him out of the di , |case, John L. Franklin, school board . UN, 38, of ge Jo eave an ages of Just: ad mh Jr fendy, louse: Jalan 1, Frapiin, schou) board Uncle Sam was in danger . . . now are urged to return to

nootleg” establishment. rs voouTele tk BOR 7 apen Of Ilion” school . . . to help Uncle Sam in his vital

Tojo's house is comfortable Sit Ty Let} 3a lave the AL 54 handso . existing in 46 states and 1850 school eacetime iob! { foursome siugged and robbed My,| “fier the Japanese fashion, but the me, White p i

Hunt, he told police. not elaborate. The window at haired, tanked manpower chairman | districts. | 2 . which he first appeared to speak |an eral security administrator : © ‘Rolled for $40 to us has three parallel double |has lost none of his punch. He| SUES IN DIAMOND LOSS ACKNOWLEDGMENT RETURN TO SCHOOL. . . so that you can do Robert G. Robertson, 25, of 1160 | panels. He slid aside the top |took more and complained less than| CLEVELAND, Sept. 11 (U. P.)— your part, nobly, in the Postwar World . . . so that you { N. Livingston ave. told police he| center one and apparently had |almost any man in the Roosevelt|Fred Chariton, New York diamond We are pleased will be prepared for Future employment | was “rolled” for $40 after he went| to stand on the window seat inside |regime. merchant, today filed suit against Ea prep | to sleep in a car parked in the 400| to talk down to us. He is a close friend of Presidentithe Statler hotel for $157,543.24] (and proud) to be among in.a changed and competitive world . . . so that you | block on Indiana ave. early today.| Looking up, I wis immediately |Truman. And some day he may be|which he said was the value ofp those present who are can shoulder the responsibility, and accept the | A billfold with the name John| Impressed with his seemingly lean |back in high Democratic politics | jewels stolen fro mhim at the hotel : J ) leadershi h rid. | Vernon Whitt, was found at W.| cut vigor, and the personality that |again. May 2. ; sponsoring the immediacy eadership . . . in-the postwar wo | | Washington st. and 'N, Bellevieu pl. ; — of Going-Back-to-

by A ls aly tiny. IN INDIANAPOLIS——EVENTS—VITALS . School! INDIANAPOLIS PUBLIC SCHOOLS are eager to re-enroll

by when they noticed two men mos: Nationil Education as many returning veterans as possible . ... EVENTS TODAY Holzbe Faden, To 0s non Myre A] ASG, Vissante—taurence, Belyn Cum and also, of course, to welcome back the large number

Tin collection, Joxth of 16th st, and west| Wise Beecher. Association of Yeerici Kur, 2908 Rader; Edna Allen,| Robert, Mary He MacGregor, Phd: ni | ¢ of boys ond girls from work shops . . . to classrooms.

Association nd, Buty, Io, - Jr., Ora O'Do ; U. 8. Office of Education dianapolis y Bran, 4 4 p.m, binson, Tipton: Evelyn| At Be nati "Martha Bo a" 837 . roto er, 1430 N. Mount. . | N. Tuxedo st: Walter, Goldus Brown, Children’s Bureau.

NX 0. Tardmaters meeting, 8 p. m.|Bdwin Martel § RAS Due Tits, N. Chester; Layion, Moles Kin- THERE ARE broad courses of study available

ot a = Nt maa tr wn» The Office of War to those young people in day schools . . . but there Hotel ig ae a an il Yas Hel AEE Hut, Chambers, Mobilization: arid are also EVENING CLASSES that offer a complete Retary Chu Tos nd, U. ; oy oer, “Reconversion and the program of academic, commercial and

ames, Mand Woodall, Retraining; and vocational subjects . . . as well as apprenticeship

Tin collection, south of 16th st. and east i Sart of Bon: Gerald, Myra ‘Pinch: training in most of the major trades. I nee. athe rr batty os st] ion. ani its : Restaurant association, meet: Delaware. Prederick, Dorothes Layion; Louis inistra and its - : Hotel ood sel Hubbard, 1918 N, Agnes Milhare : TR : ; : Mateos Gon dinner, 6:30 p.m. Lon: Corliss Palmer Ontes, 1915 N. Capin MH 30 atle. Burnotie. 1911 Advisory Council . SCHOOL 1S JUST OPENING x (1 is not too much Gamma Pu meting, AP By Mee . Hotel York; Esther| Market. fi, Mate Beit 1 = embracing to say ... that how well you will do . . . how well the

Westingen, | Robert. 157 N. Vine: Hiiz- EE representatives of The " y : TaD, : ’ 2 w DEATHS ob \ ‘ “ee MARRIAGE LICENSES Dh ans SL Casual) Drive ona | RObert Skiivim; 1 month, City, infectious Department of Labor, -Moorld will do, , . depends to a considerable measure on

[Fy Sak att Bev liam Hoyt Lawrer 0 x. panne Oe, E, Mori 8031 Southeastern] War, and Navy, -. what Ameriow's youth does now. . ; - Let your gresting be

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" YOUNG PEOPLE whose schooling was interrupted

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Cornell; Wilina Cab- | 1047 ; 7, 1140 Churchman, and WPB, WMC, and : “Good MORNING, Teacher!” . .. or" :

th, 1047 Alton. ° Riley, infectious diarrhea, Veterans Administration 81, Methodist, 1 ; “G " 7, 39 W. Michigan. and Selective Service. mS 00d EVENING Teachers” ; Poy 9, 1082 N. Tibbs] it : . MI w. Morris, eardio