Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1945 — Page 4
MES
ry ‘Cross Publication S
UNO CAPITAL B
3Sites Proposed; May Send Group to London,
"The Fie
iD SONOS am tsiviel Pubiiontion of the Keights of the Ku & x 2 PREETI) on ¥
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ok
uspended During
{Continued From Page One)
tha, Truman, :
(Continued From Page One)
"gation was contgined in a cableSram from the governor to Gladwyn | ~ —Jebb, executive secretary of the preparatory commission. He said “proposed Hoosier sites for the UNO pcapitbl stand on. their own! merits” and that Indiana had not! planned to send a delegation but would do so if the commission desired.
Colombian Delegate & Heads Commission £12 : LONDON, Nov. 26 (U. P).—The| preparatory commission of the| United Nations organization today |
elected Colombian Delegate Eduardo Zuleta Angel as permanent chairf+ man Zuleta, who is Columbian am-
PEOPLE RALLY BEHIND AMERICANIZA
IMPERIAL WIZARD SPEAKS TO THOUSANDS
building of
so hr ate,
To addridy en of Bucriice
i wo Mare YH ouse Czechoslovakia and Chile. There were no other nominations and he | was declared elected by acclama-| | *
tion, t many years, His election was a complete re-| A » y : or | § >] 7 3 = dl in versal of earlier plans to elect a A " Ws ; : (rs wewe wl vuln
representative of a small European nation and resulted from a week.end of lobbying among delegates, | particularly by the Latin-American)
uf the Kian
ROGRAM SPONSORED BY THE KU KLUX KLA
TN pn. ad
people at he Shute €upignl
Angas. IN. lmperias Wizard James A Colasents iy vas vg 119% viese the minty da Pang Sie Amwdenmnrativnn pre of the Ko Kivx Kou ing
Mr. Colescant deiivecsd hig
vents Were lined wth intr
Wr Tv? nahlie wi in Colwmisia if Dodo faly way hailed ne a gros puecess in spite of x down
Three higehs in the hear ! you went to see your mother?” of the city, a1 the State ¢'5
Hol, wore eiosed by the » lice departon id (ov the we
Wizard spoke from » fos
em Nevsunion of Coumbg
stationed at group. s . > ” irtnen of the Ukrainian © Foreign Commissar! |: re . - rctanin of Une Ku: Wicng At Cofoetile, On he’ plekiGelt wee s all Kin ats + y rf x . 3 0 hemi yk ural " e ¥ sth Grong Bo A 2 Demitri Manuilsky and Belgian | ¥ Rho apa « 08 argn coer ui « chomivk yoke i" [tm a Sh Ata. oe Fseting of. $Me oubiserey Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak | oJ wonky. Jem Die er. . are Capitan ¥ Vue £ hu fia Revard eng Sew sgmper wth Pupils! ay
voared ir woth plbogr sping, and SAAR aah ob
his special luxury plane — “The
$1.90 command terminal here, he was asked: “Does this mean that the newspapers of the nation will not be represented on .your future trips?”. ‘No,” the President replied. ‘Well, what does it mean?” “It means that I wanted to go out to Grandview and see my mother,” the President said. “Mister . President,” one reporter said, “the papers are a little exercised » that the President of the United States flies half-way across
South (Caroma
out any press coverage. you have any explanation for that?”
“The | N ecmmsiis his usual friendly smile disappear-
bas b ; ice 18 Suva Amar ing immediately. “I don't have to ssador to Peru, was nominated by ; Aa ollewing as puraid- give you any explanation and I the Netherlands and seconded by! 7 Lodown Main’ Street fu the lan
For mites tind
don’t intend to.
yaich th
“Mr. President,” a reporter said “did the press association reporters | {ever cause any fanfare before when
Fhe wnsive af
“No,” the President admitted, dis- | missing further questions with a smile and a wave of his arms. Then | he entered his long, black bullet- | proof limousine and went to the! White House, ! Mr. Truman in his trip yesterday
The Tmpvrin the senth an State Hous, Ieerran
DT weenying ad
were elected vice chairmen. The commission adopted the TOLD KLAN STORY—"The fiery Cross” was used by the Ku Klux Klan fo keep members figenda and rules of procedure | Klan activities. Publication of the paper was halted during the war and has not been resumed. proposed by the executive commit- ‘ tee. |
» » » i It also adopted without debate from .San Francisco, headed boy] proposals for organization of eight!Mayor Roger Lapham, signalled a KU KLUX KLAN RIDES technical committees with the ee-for- all campaign by United vrs (Somme. Phin, cities to win the decision. "steering committee. Presence here also of delegations Most of the commission's work from Chicago, Philadelphia, Denver will be organizational and tech-| ) Bical but uDe ma jor Jeoue van. be do proving embarassing to the Ameri- | rious parts of the country have enbin . pe indsyun Dead. [can commission. members who were. freed, oh Javon aud Jongg Congregational church Quarters for the organization, pledged to maintain a hands-off
ried on active campaigns of disArrival of a special delegation! policy in the choice. crimination against Negroes, Jews
Hn TE | and Catholics,
: Numerous individuals DOWNSTAIRS <4AYRES'
[ESTHER WILL
AGAIN IN THE SOUTH mine Wwii. "5:
(Continued From Page One)
Gage, brother of the
£ identities under Klan hoods while|"d Sonny Tufts.
[carrying out acts of personal re. rvenge. : , The average southern Negro fears ithe Klan more than any other ori ganization. Being Reorganized Although the Klan is not operating as a nationwide, incorporated organization because of a Federal tax suit against it, K K. K. groups |
army Saturday.
3 g = 3 5 oe 8 2 g E 8 £ HOHNER
the South. J. B. Stener, Chattanooga, is de-| voting . full time to organization work in middle Tennessee. Cards he passes out to prospective mem- - bers bear the words “white suprem- |S
3 =
| -—
Stoner says there are “several hundred” Klansmen in Chat-| tanooga. “We've been burning crosses in this area for about a year,” he says. | “We burned one recently in downtown Chattanooga. { “We get along pretty well with the Catholics here, but’ we're fighting | the Jews and Negroes.” i ‘Stoner last year sent Congress a “petition” which said: “I request, urge and petition you to pass a resolution recognizing the fact that the Jews are children of {the devil and that, consequently, they constitute a grave danger to the United States of America.” A small Klan group at Knoxville, Tenn. has been urging returning service men to “do some- { thing abou the ‘niggers’ who got | SARS FIRE dR Too CUTIIorm. jis - wie Klansmen in Houston ‘and Dallas say the K.K.K. in Texas is|= “ready to go into actipn if ‘the need arises,” Several crosses have been burned this year in San Antonio, °
TOMORROW — The Commoner | Party. :
I PC A AYR ¥
ir {
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swimming champion who became a/ing tavern iii Ravenswood last star, ‘was married yesterday in a | ni
, , ._|simple double-ring ceremony to {and South Dakdta's Black Hills was | these principles, Klan groups in va Ben Gage, 27-year-old radio announcer, at the Westwood Hills
The best man was Capt. Charles [door of a lunchroom at 704 E. New
ushers were actors Bill Tracy, Ed- |prietor, hid their| Word Morgan, Ed (Archie) Gardner in a cigaret machine.
Powell sang “Because” and “I Love You”. during the ceremony. Gage ;was discharged from the | door, walked away with $300 worth |
{ hit a new high in peacetime secrecy. informed of His departure was so carefully {guarded that regular White House [~ RA ion or
nop
26 (U. P.).—| Between $250 and $300 was stolen the former by burglars from the Happy Land-
ght.) The intruders took the cash from ‘a metal box under the proPrietor's bed, =. : 3 Yeggs who 'jimmied open a rear
groom, and | York st, fled with $232 the proJack Fuller, had “hidden” Acress “Jane| Lotus Jones, operator of a garage at 1005 8. West st., told police burglars had broken in the front |
of tools and equipment. :
TTT RAAT
The Temperature? We can’t Predict It Perfectly BUT We Know and YOU Know It Will Hover Around Zero for the Next
Several Weeks!
Visit on Mother's 93d Birthday
Sacred Cow"—at the air transport
‘the country and back again with- |
“No,” the President said sharply, |
“I wanted to go out there without | disturbed by all
any fanfare,” the President said. | famous son caused when he “took
*| & riotion” to see his mother yester-
| Smiling slightly, the little old
sour for
Reporters in Kansas City learned via the “little White House” at Independence, Mo., of the President's
Press Secretary Ross annpunced the trip here late yesterday afternoon.
his rip as entirely personal, he was accompanied by Leslie Biffle, secretary of the senate and Brig. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, his military aid. Secret sérvice agents also {went along,
| ———— President’s Mother ‘Happy Over Visit
GRANDVIEW, Mo.. Nov, 26 (U.! {P.).—Mrs. Martha Truman settled | down to her routine household { tasks today and figured that "her [93d birthday present had been the {best of all—a surprise visit from her son who became President. | Mrs. Truman, keen-eyed and ready-witted, was not in the least the furor her
day.
lady indicated it was “like Harry” to make an unannounced 2000-mile plane trip to spend only two hours
. MONDAY, NOV. 2,
a ang Oc kK eh These Whe Need Them
DR. H. C. FAHRBACH % Optometrist:
Although the President described |
with her on her birthday.
An advance reservation
assures your travel
Call Belmont 3330
The President’s mother had hoped
for a telephone call from him but said she wouldn't be too disap- | pointed because he probably was busy, her daughter, Miss Mary Jane | Truman, said last night. i “We didn't know he was coming | until just a few minutes before he | walked in,” Miss Truman said. The chief executive frequently | calls his mother, although capital business prevented him from phon- | ing more than once last week. He writes to her two or three times a week. A | The President personally broke | the news of his flight when he tele- | phoned the Kansas City Star and asked that the press service be notified. John Colt, on the Star desk, sai® he picked up the phone and was told it was Harry Truman speaking. | Colt thought he was being kidded, | but Mr. Truman assured him heé was! in Grandview, a few miles south of | the city, and that he just wanted | toe local press to know he was in|
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