Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1946 — Page 5
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! By NEA Service WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.~When
| word gets around a coast guard station that “Uncle Joe” is going to ' pay a visit, the boys either limber
Lup their trigger fingers for hunting,
or polish up their golf games. “Uncle Joe” is. Adm, Joseph Fran
| cig Farley, new coast’ gifird comsmandant replacing Adm. Russell R.
Waesche, who has retired.
When the new commandant isn't in his quiet and efficient manner, there isn’t anything he likes better than to park himself in a duck blind, puffing on his ever-present pipe, or trot his rather portly frame around the golf course. He's no champ at either sport but can hold his own in most company, The men respect him and like him for his good sportsmanship both behind his k and on the links. He's had the “nickname “Uncle Joe” ever since he attended the Coast Guard academy. Classmates described him as a quiet, serious youth. An exceptional scholar, his teachers always marked him as one who would go far in the service. Communications Expert Problems of international communications have always interested Farley. He likes to think of himself primarily as a communications officer. He served in this capacity with the coast guard from 1937 to 1042, Farley was technical assistant to the United States delegation to the International Telecommunications conference, held at Cairo, Egypt, in 1938. Next year he served as the
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Adm. Joseph Franels Farley, new coast guard commandant, is a communications expert with a flare for diplomacy.
ence, held at Montreux, Switzerland. He also served as a delegate at the international subcommittee of ‘the third world conference of radiotelegraph experts for aeronautics in 1939. With the return of the uvwust guard to the treasury department Farley will be directing its peacetime function of protecting inland lake and coast-wise shipping. The
for being a diplomat. Farley is popular with shipping executives, who have a great respect for his judgment-and know he is fair. He has the reputation of being able to iron out difficulties during a quiet luncheon, or over a cup of coffee. Adm. Farley was born in Oxford June 22, 1889. He attended Trumansburg high school, Trumansburg, N. Y., and was graduated from Ithaca high school in 1908. Appointed a cadet in the U. 8. coast guard on May 10, 1809, he received a commission as an ensign on June 10, 1912. During world war I he served on escort and convoy duty in the Mediterranean and between Gibraltar and the ports of Great Britain. He has two daughters, one married and one a SPAR. Before taking over as new com-
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mandant, Adm. Farley was chief personnel officer of the coast guard.
SALT OUTPUT HIGHER
WASHINGTON — Owing = principally to an’ increase ‘in soda ash land chlorine production, the total output of corhmon salt in the United States in 1944 exceeded 186,000,000
assignment carries with it the need |
‘|such matters, the Russians have
RUSS ABSENCE HAMPERS UNO
Odlepaics Guess’ Soviets Are Sore About Something.
Br WILLIAM ¥. STUNEMAN
LONDON, Jan, 21 ——Proceedings at the U Nations meeting are hampered by the
are equally in the dark, and even members of the Russian delegation do not seem clear on the subject. So all one can do is guess. May Be Sore One guess among the delegates is that the Russians are sore about something. That something may be the American attitude toward the atomic commission, or it ‘may be the Iranian question, or it may be the agitation for the alteration of the United Nations’ charter. They have made it very clear that they are not even willing to discuss any revision of the veto clause which allows any of the Big Five the right to prevent police action against an aggressor. A second guess, and ‘perhaps’ a very reasonable guess, is that “something is happening in Moscow.” With their usual reticence on
surrounded the recent resignation of Marshal Lavrentli P. Beria, chief of the secret police, with an absolute fog of mystery. Vague Duties They announced that he had resigned at his own request because of the pressure of other duties, but they have not made it clear what those other duties are. The Soviet commissariat for internal affairs—the NKVD-—is one of the key organs of fhe Soviet union, its chief is bound to be a figure of first-rate importance #hd his “resignation” would normally indicate a pretty serious. shakeup in the Soviet heirarchy. So, until further notice, people are bound to wonder what is going on and Vyshinsky's absence from this meeting is bound to stimulate speculation. Copyright, I 1046, by The Indianapolis Times
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By RUSSELL ANNABEL United Press Staff Correspondent ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jan. 21 (U. P.).— Fr. Gerasim Schmalz,
Russian priest of mysterious back-
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ground, whose superstitious neighbors in the Kodiak island group, {believe he may be Rasputin, has {admitted he knew the monk who swayed the Cazarist court, it was disclosed here. Schmalz, a large man, with a tangled beard and hair and hypnotic eyes, appeared in Kodiak in 1919, {less than two years after Rasputin |was reported murdered by Russian {Prince Yussopoff. | After his arrival Schmalz took over the job of guarding the simple] |tomb of a Russian priest, Fr. Her-| {man, who prophesied just before! his death 147 years ago, he would} return to Moscow in 1350 years to| save Russia.
Photograph Taken
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Natives and whites, frighéened by Schmalz’ appearance and manner, evolved the report that the aged monk with the piercing eyes was Rasputin. U. 8. Marshal Paul Herring disclosed that he had investigated the report, and after repeated questioning Herring said the monk admitted he knew Rasputin and went to school with him, but said he was several years younger. Rasputin, if alive today, would
ey |be 73.
Priest Denies He's Rasputin,
But Says He Knew 'Mad Monk
Unsatisfied, Herring photographed Schmalz and took the picture to an Alaskan artist, Eustace Ziegler, who reproduced it oil and superimposed Russian urch vestments on it, then despite bitter protests from membres of the Russian church, placed the picture in the window of a Kodiak store along with Herring's collection of icons and other relics. (Ziegler, now in Seattle, has declined to produce the original photo taken of Schmalz, terming it “solely the ‘property of Herring.”) Angered, Schmalz packed the altar cloths on which he has spent years
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Jap Government
. Game
| horseback and plays tennis. Her
TEER
Tokyo's treasury department picks up “floating money” by selling Sal that are really Jotery Rete
|10- Yoar Bonds Pay Off With
By HARLOW M. CHURCH NEA Staff Writer TOKYO, Jan. 21.—The Japanese treasury makes bond buying so-at-tractive that even American soldiers
are shelling out their yen during the present drive to sell a billion yen worth of 10-yen treasury notes. The 10-yen notes, worth about 67 cents in American money, are really lottery tickets with prizes
varying froth 100,000 yen and other
cash amounts down to gifts*of cot-
ton cloth and cigarets. But the part that sets this lottery in a class by itself is that there aren't any Josers. All the unlucky number holders will be able to cash in their tickets at the rate of 10 cigarets for| elope and the minute he opens tip, personable Chinese gentiehe knows whether or not he’s won man of 58, now holds the, rank of |C a prize ranging from 100 yen PIUS| ojor general and the position of
market, House Percentage
The 1 in banks, shops and railway sta-
the nation’s largest financial institutions. More than 10,000,000 notes are expected to be sold before the drawing is held at a Tokyo department store. The Japanese government gets
per cent. cent will be distributed among 105,-
GRANTSBURG, Wis, Jan.
he revealed today.
pend, among other things,
congressman, Must Be Honest
{doing fine needlework by way of a hobby, and moved to a lonely cabin | {far from “the little community on | Spruce island, site of Fr. Herman's | tomb. Russians here, familiar with Czarist politics and who know Schmalz, “were left to mull over the theory that Yussopoff did not actually kill Rasputin, but instead made a deal With the Bolsheviks about to take over control of Russia, Rasputin, once all-powerful favorite of the Czarina, would have a better chance to get out of the country if believed dead. And Prince Yussopoff, according to speculation here, might gain favor with the Bolsheviks if he could claim to have killed the dis{solute monk.
Japan, Hono CAMP PENDLETON, Cal,
(U. P.)~—~An 82-year-old exwho served under Adm
Jan.
21 Up Nights == George Dewey ‘has been found by
two. marines In a remote cottage high in the hills of Kyushu island, Japan, officers of the 5th marine division said today. The man, Edward Zillig, was the first marine to set foot on Kyusu. He had been living there 18 years and was being cared for by an old Japanese servant and her 21-year-old daughter. “The Lord has been good to me,” Mr, Zillig told the marines, members of the 2d battalion, 27th regi-
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“Not many men live to be 82” the veteran said, “but now I know He'll call be soon.” “There's just one more thing I want of life, and that is to see a full dfess marine corps parade.” Mr, Zillig's wish was granted, the
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Dewey Veteran, 82, Found in
red by Marines
2d battalion passed in review before him. A native of Switzerland, Mr. Zillig joined the marines in 1888 in Philadelphia. He was a member of the marine détachment on the U, 8. 8. Olympia, Dewey's flagship, in the assault on the Philippines in 1808 and won the Dewey congressional medal for bravery. Mr, Zillig was discharged the same year and became a watchmaker in San Francisco. In 1927, hé won a" free trip to Japan, toured the three home islands, and worked as a bond salesman on Kyushu until world war II broke- out. Interned at Nagasaki during the war “for his own protection,” he saw the atomic bombing of that city, he said, and described it as a grand sight. “It was the magnificence of a nation determined to remain free no matter what the cost,” Mr. Zillig said.
¢
ful Arthur advertised. be honest,” he said in his ad,
It was a relief, he said, to dis{cover that there are 1600 honest women in the world. They answered from New York to Chicago, from
Georgi to Alaska.
every three notes—and that's cheaper than the Japanese black
card-sized “bonds” are sold
tions and are marketed by the Hypothec Bank of Japan—one of
the usual gambler’'s percentage—860 time, a drawing is held and the The remaining 40 per|lucky bond numbers win first prizes
1600 Answer Farmer's Plea
For Wife Who'll Milk Cows
21 because (U. P.).~Farmer Arthur Birlstengel scribed herself as a very good has 14 cows that need milking and|woman. 1600 women who want to marry him,
Mrs. Birlstengel of 1946 will de-|fided. upon no good. So I got rid of him.” which of the candid candidates wants to help him milk the cows. The wifeless Solomon of Burnett county, who has been divorced twice, has promised to pick one this year. This is his New Year's resolution.
The mating matter began last y year when Birnstengel, a Lusky 44- asks Ol's wile is that she wust: year-old farmer, found ne was too busy operating his 610-acre farm to go courting. So he wrote his
Rep. Alvin E. O'’Konski was short {on wives but long on advice. “Be {sure she’s honest, ” he replied. Art“You must
One who urged him to write soon, cows.
Lottery as Added Feature
200 prize winners with the 10 luckjest numbers bringing 100,000 yen ($6,666.67) to their holders, Hypothec Bank President Gen Nishino explains that the purpose of this bond selling scheme is to avoid inflation: “We ‘gather together the floating money.” The Japanese have other fancy methods + of gathering together floating money. One sure-fire one is the two-yen “speed bond.” The Nip citizen with two-yen in hand and a yen to gamble doesn't have to wait for a drawing on this number. : For Conservatives His bond comes in a sealed en-
10 cigarets down to three yen and
two For the benefit of the more conservative customers, the Japanese government has another type of bond that really pays interest. This bond can be purchased for 10 yen and is redeemable in 10 years for 15 yen. But even on this one a special appeal is made to the Japanese gambling instinct. Once a year during the 20-year-long maturity
of 1000 yen.
“I just can't wait” de-
“I weigh 120 pounds and can lick my weight in wildcats— verbally or -btherwise,” she con“I had a man, but he was
Mum on Ages But the trouble is, Birnstengel complained, that most of the fancied fiancees are close-mouthed about their age and height. He said he isn't fussy. All he
1. Be between 30 and 42 years old. 2. Not weigh more than his ‘195 pounds. i 3. Be between 5 feet and 5 feet 8 inches. tall. 4. Be truthful. said so.) 5. Not smoke or drink. 6. Be healthy. 7. Be friendly. 8. Not be a gold-digger. 9. Have a sense of humor. 10. Be willing to take good care of Arnie, his 6-year-old son by a former marriage. 11. Be willing to help milk 14
(His congressman
In Marriage
mates are few and far between.
their marriage partners.
critical. They found only 20.
irritating to wives: tentive.
longings. house.
dates.
superiority complexes. The husbands things about wives are: 1. They nag. 2. They talk too much. 3. They're late.
Poll Shows Perfect Mates
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (U. P). ~—Take it from the guys and gals who should know—perfect marriage
The Woman's Home Companion magazine conducted a nation-wide poll of husbands and wives to discover their chief gripes against
The wives listed 27 mejor complaints. “The husbands - were less
The five husbandly traits most|cOnstructed a complete miniature
1. They take wives for granted and are not affectionate or at-
2. They don't pick up their clothes or take care of their be-
3. They never help around the | 4. They're late for meals and
5. They are bossy and inconsiderate or they are bossy and have
said the worst
4. They're not tidy housekeepers. 5. They're careless .in personal appearances or their personal man-
Scarce in U. S.
nerisms, such as toying with rings, get on their husband’s nerves. Wives under 25 fretted most about inattentiveness. Wives between 25 and 34 were concerned chiefly with husbands who won't help with the children and the house.
BUILDS MINIATURE CIRCUS PORTLAND, Me. (U. P), — Maurice J. Allaire of Portland has
|circus equipped with a “little top. "i The largest model is 10 inches long and the smallest 2%; inches long. Allaire also has a collection of 7000 circus photographs; 100 postlers, 20 books and scrapbooks, nine
no cigarets, or whether he's just out army commander his
By WILLIAM
-
in the Chinese National army,
Is Colonel} in , China's Army
McGAFFIN
; Times Foreign Correspondent : CINCHOW, Manchuria, Jan, 21.—You meet some’ very interesting] people in this Manchurian outpost——and they are not all Rewspapers : ' {men either. : Take, for instance, the Chinese-Russian girl who'is a full colons]
Her name is Ariadne Lee. She is 22 and ss talented aa she is
beautiful. She is so beautiful that it ‘makes you think of princesses in fairy tales. 8he could convert handsome
to mention Hollywood scouts, into humble followers with a mere flick of her long black lashes. ‘Main Interest Is Medicine » But she is not a devotee of the frivolous side ‘of life, although she dances with the acgomplishment of an American girl, laughs a lot, rides
main Interest is medicine. She interrupted her "studies at Aurore university (French Jesuit) in Shanghai at the reques of the Shanghai area army commander, who appointed her secretary to commander of the 13th army, Lt. Gen. 8Shi-Tse. Miss Lee's, that is, Col. Lee's linguistic ability plus knowledge of shorthand make her indispensable to the 13th army, which will help ocoupy Manchuria. She speaks five languages—Russian, French, German, English and Chinese. But, when her job is finished here she plans to go to Johns Hopkins and finish her ‘medical studies. Then back to China where she will treat the wealthy for handsome fees, so that she may treat the poor for nothing in China's myriad villages.
Daughter of Diplomat
Col, Lee is the talented daughter of a talented father, Lee PaoTan, who spent 14 years in foreign posts for the Chinese diplomatic service and has had more adventures than Richard Harding Davis. Lee Pao-Tan, a tall, powerfully
political councillor to the same 13th daughter serves as secretary. He named his daughter Ariadne, incidentally, for the lovely daughter of a Russian admiral, who was his fiancee before he wed Ariadne’s mother, He was educated in Russia and, after being graduated from engineering school, entered the China diplomatic service, in 1915, as diplomatic attache at St. Petersburg. In Revolution Mr. Lee kniew the czar and stayed on in Russia during the. revolution. By the time Ariadne was born there, St. Petersburg had changed its name to Leningrad and her father had acquainted with the new heirarchy of Russia—Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin. Mr. Lee and his family moved to
in 1028. In each city, daughter po Ariadne attended local schools, thus |e acquiring new languages, not to young knights of cafe society, not mention poise and culture wun. paralleled in an average gn of any race.
Back in his homeland,
Caught in Manchuria
was caught ‘in Manchuria at the time of the 1931 incident and was imprisoned by the Japs, because he refused to go to Russia as
Mr. Lee
of the Marco Polo incident.
and took a post as a Russian professor in Kunming institute. He was in Hong Kong buying books for the school when the Japs bombed that city in 1041, Once more he was taken prisoner. However, he was released after seven months and taken to Shanghai. There he and his family spent the duration under close surveillance, until the allied victory brought final and complete freedom,
Freed agaic, he wen & Evimimpil quic
Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times |
ambassador. Eventually freed, oe nd | went to Peiping and again was im-| bran
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Archangel, London, Paris, Berlin} back to Moscow, and then to Helsingfors before returning to China
THIEF DROPS COAT BUT STEALS AUTO
CLEVELAND (U. P.).—Mrs. Arthur Tepper finds it hard to believe this one: As her husband left his office one night, he noticed a man walking away from his auto with a coat and he recognized the coat as his. He got in his car and chased the man to a nearby street. There he got out and dashed after the man on foot. As he was about to make a grab for the coat-thief, the thief dropped the coat and speeded up his getaway. Mr. Tepper picked up his coat, brushed it off and started back to the car. As he got there, the thief was driving away in the car. And it's still gone.
NEW ORLEANS GAINS AS MEDICAL CENTER
NEW ORLEANS, la. (U. P).~— New Orleans is gaining prominence as a medical center for Latin America. So said Robérto Sandoval, physician at the Santo Tomas hospital in Panama City, when he visited local medical schools and hospitals recently. “We have 15 graduate doctors of Tulane. university in the Santo Tomas hospital alone,” he pointed out.
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