Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1945 — Page 1
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* VOLUME 56—NUMBER 227
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1945
hn “a EEN EH RR TF Rr Tr er oN cloudy and warmer tomorrow. - Entered as Second-Class Matter st Postoffice 1 Indianapolis 9, Ind. Issued daily except Sunday
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IN GH DISPUTE
‘impartial’ Committee Asked To Recommend Basis 0f Settlement.
DETROIT, Nov. 30 (U.P). ~United Automobile Workers union (C, I. 0.) officials today invited an “impartial” group of persons from. public life to examine transcripts of union negotiations with General Motors Corp. and recommend a set-
" tlement in the 10-day-old strike.
Walter P. Reuther, vice president of the U, A W, listed Bernard
industrial » demand for a 30 per cent wage increase shortly after branding G. M. President C. E. Wilson as “unbe-
1945 Mile-O-Dimes d by Times
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CLOTHE-A-CHILD—
= Purchase of Clothing for ~~ Children to Start Monday
| Clothing of children through] funds contributed to The Times
bells Washington s. in front
sidewalk Santa Claus was 10 4, m, But as
open 24)
Hess’ Insanity Is
Trial
NOTES SHOULD HAVE ALERTED {PEARL HARBOR
Miles Says Nov. 27 Message Warned Gen. Short Of Possible Hostility.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 80 (U. P.).—Maj. Gen. Sherman Miles, former head of military intelligence, said today that warning messages sent to
Pearl Harbor on Nov. 27, 11041, should have alerfed the base immediately and completely against
©. Marshall, then chief of staff, 10 days before the attack. & The Marshall “message warned that diplomatic negotiations “appear to be terminated” and that ‘hostilities - might follow. It ordered reconnaissance and any other measures deemed necessary. ; Warned of Hostilities The Miles message, addressed to military intelligence at Hawaii, said hostilities might ensue and that subversive activities could be ex-
Gen. Walter O. Short, who
a4 The Times Mile-O-Dimes on hal! is mise front of the L. 8. Ayres & Co. at sonseined ned primary
It can hurt those forgotten. chil- : ’ ONE: He discounted a January, dren of needy families for whom| oy; warning from Ambassador
see and hear the Yule mer- : .__|on a tip from the Peruvian minister riment, but somehow realize they're| Japan instead of Japanese
not quite a part of it. And it hurts. | sources.
There ARE such children in In-| TWO: A surprise attack on Pearl difnapolis, more thar at wy Ume| Harbor always was considered a during the last five years. ; . : . Clothe-A-Child are important . . .|which he participated in 1932. for own, 8s important as Santa) supEE: But inthe pre-Pearl : pm -*. {Harbor period “we had no specific Eh aa TR a information “whatever that the at- : «= |teck wéuld fall on Hawaii.” : Miles said was the only way the Hawaiian base could |ward off a surprise attack. Asked whether he checked up to see if there was any reconnaissance at Hawaii at the time, he said he did
(Continued on Page 3—Column 1)
$1000 AWARD FOR ELEPHANT SHOCK
“|Woman Chased by Modoc Settles Suit.
PLYMOUTH, Ind. Nov. 30-It was worth $1000 to a local woman
court today in the damage suit of
"| sonable rates,”
~ He Asserts At War
Foxhole 'B.O.' Smothered by Tricky Odors
By JIM LUCAS Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30. —] don’t know how it will strike the girls. But personally, I've been upset ever since I found
out that we virile males who have come home from the war with a persistent case of battlefield B. O., are spending a good ‘hunk of _. a our musteringout pay trying to smell like: § (1) Citrus fruit, (2 Lgather. 43) A horse. 4) The spice shelf of a coun-
HOUSE TO ASK. HURLEY ABOUT U.S. PRO-REDS
Data on Diplomats in State Department to Be Sought.
By JAMES E. ROPER United Press Stafl-
Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.— The house un-Amgrican activities committee today invited former ambassador to China, Patrick J. Hurley, to tell it what he knows about any pro-Communists in the ‘state department.
Committee Chairman John 8, said that Hurley
a
“|Wood (D. Ga)
— ti TH will be asked to testify Monday or scant half dozen at some other early date cone
venient to him.” Wood told report ers the committee had tentatively agreed not to open the meeting to the public. _ tsi Hurley resigned his post Wednesday with the charge that state de~ partment career diplomats, by siding with Chinese Communists, were sabotaging his efforts to unify war-
brands of male Mr. Lucas ‘ toiletries on the market. Today, there are more than 200. And, what's mere, we buy ‘em. RO «_u_ 8 THERE are some” things we don’t want to smell like. We don't want to smell of roses or (Continued on Page 11—Column §)
TRANSIT FARE HEARING ASKED
Indianapolis Railways Seek To Keep Test Rates.
to determine all other facts necessary to an order fixing just and rea-
Holds’ Rates Necessary Communism, if any, in the state de-
The transit firm pointed out that|P ument. =.
its current charges are necessary to enahle It to “render modernized, convenient and-adequate transportation service.” : Operating experfles dhe ‘now higher than its total operating revenues were. for any pre-war year, the utility claimed. It added that “wartime strain” on equipment, together with post-war improvements, will require extensive expenditures, . “This goal,” said Indianapolis Railways, “cannot be accomplished unless rates sufficient to make it possible are received.” : At the time they were adopted, the public service commission said the revised rates would save money for transit-riders. - Later; the Indianapolis tax research and assessment bureau charged the fares cost the public thousands of dollars more each year. On its. request, city council decided to intervene.
“We want Gen. Hurley to tell us if he knows of any:unA
(Continued on Page 3<Column 3 re.
Keep Umbrellas, Overcoats Handy
PRODUCING a combination of London fog, Indiana's murkiness, with a little Indianapolis smog thrown in, mother nature, our m a nufacturer of #0-called weather, has done it again. | Cloud y— that’s for tonight and tomorrow, with | its never-end-ing grayness enveloping the whole city. The thermometer will point up-
BICYCLIST KILLED BY TRUCK: DRIVER HELD| soar normal tomorrow
| through Wednesday, but about that time temperatures are in | for a big down-fall. Geheral rain is predicted in the
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with plenty of warm clothing. It
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shock” th fered to extent of . ‘Wilson, . compromised at Jolut: mundge- was one of toward destruee rampage system.” Kessler sid red-haired | 3 Jirest. donations. Donors may ee: throuet 8.1. sete, , ni Art i ‘a 40g sh mos of 18 sarod a sere (OUSTED KING i PETER khoghed. Mra. A 5 to the floor. She looked up towering over her look in her eye. by )
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DIXIE CLERIC I$
“literature which we feel 18: detii~{ (pq volce, Lo
wn— t | (Continued on Pagp 12~Column §)
Japs Stress Cruelty Even In Fairy Tales
(Editorial, Page 20)
SENSATIONAL EVIDENCE TOLD ATNEURNBERS
‘Amnesia Faking’ Testimony: Follows Revelations of - High Nazi Intrigue. NUERNBERG, Nov. 30 (U. P.).—Rudolf Hess testified from the war crimes witness stand today that his pretense
of amnesia and insanity was’ a hoax and that he was quite.
By SIDNEY B. WHIPPLE Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
TOKYO, Nov. 80. — The other day I bought a little book of Japanese fairy tales, translated into English, thinking it might make an entertaining present for a boy I know. 1 skimmed through some of the stories and was glad I did so. The book will never _ be sent home, for it contained some of the most bloodthirsty tales I have ever read. Animals biting each other's heads off.
with his own trial.
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Bloody attics oo condition. between wolves, foxes and frogs oa as counsel, preceding Hess in & Mr. Whipple ring for which the
ter and cunning trickery. If that is the diet Japanese boys are fed on, not only Japanesehistory books but practically all “literature” designed for youthful
(Continued on Page 3—Column 2)
Hate Mongers—
HATE CRUSADER
Ati-Semitic Drive Led to[ssa om
(Pith of » Series)
“Pr. Coughlin of Dixie,” who conducted a of hate and anti-Semitism from his home here, packed up and left Anniston recently. He is now in Birmingham. “I told him he'd have to stop. his radical activities or leave the parish—and’ he left,” said the Right Rev. T. J. Toolen, bishop of Mobile. “This week the bishop revealed that Rev. Arthur W. Terminiello had resigned his pastorate here and subsequently had been suspended. He sald that Fr. Terminiello, “having refused to obey the orders of his bishop to cease sending .out
mental to the church and the tnity| of our country, resigned his pastors ate of Sacred Heart church, Anniston, and is no longer considered a priest in good standing in the diocese of Mobile, nor has he the right to pursue his facilities as a priest, o nor is he considered a priest of the diocese.” This wasn't the first time Bishop Toolen has clashed with Fr. Terminiello, secretary and director of the Union of Christian Crusaders. Last May, Bishop Toolen said:
JURIST PANEL LISTED. FOR TRIAL OF JUDGE
EVANSVILLE, Ind, Nov. 30 (U. P.) ~Judges of three county elrcuit courts were listed as eligible today to try Vanderburgh County Probate Judge PF. Wendell Lensing on charges of soliciting and accepting bribes. Two judges will be eliminated from the list, one each by the state and defense, and the third will have the option of accepting or refusing jurisdiction of the case. The judges were FP, Herdis Clements of Posey County, A. Daie Eby of Gibson county and J. Harold Hendrickson of Warrick county. Affidavits against Lensing were |filed by Clyde Galsser, Vanderburgh county assessor, who said Lensing ordered him to raise fees in estates
wrought. He smiled slightly.
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‘man counter-intelligence service testified that the Nazi war criminals plotted to murder Gens.’ Maxim Weygdnd and Henri Giraud: :
F.D.R’S COUSIN DIES
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Elliott's Dog, Blaze, Is Destroyed After Vicious Attack on F. D. R.'s Little Fala
.ifor the Roosevelts since entering
P.)~Blase, the 130-pound English bull mastiff owned by Elliott Roosevelt, was destroyed Sunday for attacking Pala, spunky but under.
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cases and insisted on taking part of the fepsy, + 5 —HYDE PARK, N.Y. Nov. 30 P.)~Private funeral services will
be held at St, James cemetery st
famous as his late master, visited
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competent and ready to go ahead: 1
Despite Hess’ melodramatic asser- |
fendants, pleaded that his client's claim to mental fithess was a part of the quirks of the mind that msde him irresponsible,
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Earlier, Ma). Gen. Erwin 1g. & housen, the No. 2 man of the Ger.
He said they gave orders to xi
