Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1945 — Page 18

general office work.

CLERK-TYPIST WANTED We have an immediate opening in our advertising department for a Jouns, lady 18 to 25 years old to do 2 Must be a rapid typist and rea-

sonably good at figures. Shorthand not necessary but ‘helpful.

The position is a permanent one and

offers a good opportunity for advancement. Attractive salary. Good working conditions. 5-Day, 40-hour week, Saturdays off. See L. D. Young, Advertising Manager, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W, Maryland Street.

TRIES TO REVIVE

COUGHLIN TALKS

6. L.K. Smith Also Forming ‘Christian Veterans.’

By FREDERICK WOLTMAN Seripps-Howard Staff Writer . NEW YORK, Sept. 17—~Gerald L. K. Smith, America’s busiest

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rabble rouser, has launched two new enterprises—to put Father Charles E. Coughlin back into politics and to organize the “Christian Veterans of America.” Smith, the America First party chief, is sending petitions throughout the country, it was learned today, to supply the priest with. a

pure

On Air Again?

radio network “which would carry

|his voice into every state in the

union,”

Fr. Charles E. Coughlin . . . will he get a new radio network?

The petitions are to be presented | to congress, the federal communica~ tions commission and Archbishop Edward Mooney of Detroit, Father Coughlin retired from] Social Justice, was barred from the| mails on the grounds it sided the enemy by stirring up race hatreds

{and disparaging the nation’s war aims.

Bid For Veterans

At the same time, in a play for the war veterans, Smith is flooding

white and blue circulars which declare: “Christian veterans awake! No softies need apply.” The circular, issued in the name of Frederick Kister, one of Smith's lieutenants, bristles with antigemitism: In it Kister boasts he was once associate editor of Scribner'’s Commentator, The magazine's editor, Ralph Townsend, was sent to prison as a Japanese propaganda agent. Smith's latest activities were disclosed here by the Friends of Democracy. Copies of both circulars have been received from Smith at various addresses throughout the country, according to L. W. Birkhead, national director of Friends of Democracy. - “$8000 a Year”

The America Firster himself, meanwhile, announced formation of a fantastic post-war recovery commission. He claims it will “guarantee” an average family income of $8000 a year, besides solving all the world’s ills. His plan, sald Smith, combines “the best features of Townsendism, Coughlinism, Huey Long and the Payroll Guarantee association of California.” The Father Coughlin petitions are being mailed by a “radio petition committee” from a post office box in Detroit. They are strictly an America First enterprise, Mr. Birkhead said, and not currently backed by the active Coughlinite groups, such as the Christian Front®or the 8t. Sebastian Brigade, “Call to Action” Archbishop Mooney, to whom they are to be sent eventually, is credited generally with having induced Father Coughlin to drop his weekly radio talks in 1940. Kister runs another one of Smith's veteran outfits, the committee of veterans of world war II. However, his Christian veterans represents thelr first open bid to antisemitism among returning soldiers. “This 1s a call to action!” declared the appeal. “This is not a call to the weak, not to the vacillating, not to the bootlickers. , .. It is a call to the understanding Christian American veterans, regardless of his creed, who is tired of being kicked around by bureaucrats, smear artists, refugees, alien-minded propagandists, communists, plug-uglies, whip crackers and other varieties of un-American vermin who infest our beautiful America.”

WANT DISCHARGES SPEEDED? DON'T CALL

Camp Atterbury authqpities estimate that 100 additional men could be discharged daily if the public would co-operate by not writing and phoning the separation center, Anxious relatives and friends who dally write and phone to inquire | about returnees take up much valu{able time of the separation-proc- | essing staff, - The staff is as eager as are the returnees to speed up the separation, authorities say. They consequently request the public to be patient and refrain from inquiries.

politics in 1042 afver his magazine,

TRAIN KILLS HOOSIER SOUTH BEND, Ind. Sept. 17 (U. (P.). ~Andrew Brown, 59, was killed yesterday when the car he was driving was struck by a New York Cen{tral passenger train. The victim’s wife, Mrs, Grace Brown, a passenger, escaped with minor injuries.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PLAN COURSES FOR

A series of seven courses for Boy Scout leaders and parents will start at 7:45 p. m. Wednesday at the Indiana university extension center. Sponsored by the East District Leadership Training committee, the courses will include training for scout leadership, committeemen and dads of scouts. Mr. Max Darmstandler, assistant district commissioner, will be assisted by Lester Whitaker, Charles Carr and Wade VanSlyke. The Cub leaders and all adult leaders in the Cub Scout program will be in charge of Arthur L. Bailey, field commissioner for cubbing, assisted by George Fisher, William T. James, C. D. Van Buskirk, George Schamber, Mrs. G. R. Brock, Warren Wardell, Ben Groschelle,. John D. Bishop and Charles M. Smith.

ANDERSON MAN DIES ANDERSON, Sept. 17 (U. P.)~ Services were arranged today for Charles Cahoon, 75, Anderson, who died Saturday of a skull #racture received when he fell down a base-

SCOUTS, PARENTS

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (U. P). ~—Resignation of Sécretary of War Henry L. Stimson is expected to be announced this week. ; Als6 there were reports tollay that General of the Army George C. Marshall soon may retire. Marshdll is in his sixth year as chief of staff. Stimson, a Republican, was nominated for the secretaryship on July 10, 1940 by the late President Roosevelt. Another top military figure expected to retire soon is General of the Army Henry H. Arnold, chief of the army air forces. There has been speculation that Stimson would be succeeded by Undersecretary of War Robert P. Patterson, also a Republican, who took that position id 1940 as Stimson’s chief aid. Marshall’s Post

Generals of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower and Douglas MacArthur both have figured in informal dis-

| be-an announcement this week af-

fecting top war department personnell—probably Stimson. The President has scheduled a press conference for 4 p. m. tomorrow. Eisenhower generally is regarded here a$ more ‘ikely than MacArthur to succeed Marshall. * The ? chief of staff is 84 years old, the usual retirement age for army offi~ cers, MacArthur was 65 years old last January. Eisenhower will be 55 next month. Stimson will celebrate his 78th birthday next Friday. He may be out of government service by then. Pearl Harbor Probe Some persons believe Marshall may desire to remain in office at least long enough to hear the end of the congressional investigation of Pear! Harbor. Marshall generally is regarded ns the No. 1 American military figure of world war II but he was moderately criticized by the army board which recently reported on its in-

MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1045

Stimson Expected fo Resign This Week

ing committee is expected fo meet J

“ |cussions of a successor to Marshall.

quiry into the events preceding Gen. Carl A. Spaatz and Lt. Gen.| Japan's Dec. 1, 1941, attack. Ira C. Eaker have been most fre-| The board held that the chief of quently discussed as likely succes- | staff had failed adequately to warn sors to Arnold. | the Hawaiian command of the in-, President Truman indicated over) creasingly dangerous situation de-

ment stairway at a downtown business establishment.

tne week-end at a Kansas City| veloping in the Pacific. press conference that there would! The joint congressional investigate!

for organization purposes this week. If Mr. Truman names Patterson to succeed Stimson it Te win be viewed as a less than permanent selection. The President is all that implies. He would not be likely to go into the 1948 Presiden= tial campaign with a Republican in his cabinet.

SURVIVOR OF CRASH FIGHTING FOR LIFE

. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 17 (U, P.).—8gt. Ora Delong, lone sur. vivor of a 0-47 crash in which 23 persons were killed, clung to life in a Kansas City hospital today. - DeLong, en route to his home at San Bernadino, Cal, was one of 21 European war veterans aboard the big army transport plane when it crashed near here Saturday morns ing. Three cfew members who died in the crash were identified as 1st Lt. Warren Derrickson;. Broken Bow, ‘Neb., pilot; 1st Lt. James E. Wuest, Hamilton, O., co-pilot, and Pfc, El

clerk.

Names of the 20 servicemen vic- | tims were withheld pending notification of next of kin, .

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WEATHE ‘UNCERT

The weath guessing for temperatures the weather Summer ¢ right on We supposed to thundershowe Thursday an end outings a bit. In the so will average north they w five degrees

LOCAL 6a. m...... Tam... Sam..... Sa. mi...