Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1946 — Page 2
| Mein Kampt) Other Radical Texts, Magazines to Be ~ Surrendered to Military Chiefs for Destruction. re)
& By EDWARD P. MORGAN Times Poreign Correspondent BERLIN, ‘May 14.—The ghost of Paul Joseph Goebbels returned" to , Germany today to laugh. The cause of his wi ‘authorities last night “of Nazi and militarist nature.”
wicked amusement was an order issued by allied for the confiscation of all “literature and material
"NEW FUND CAMPAIGN NAY SPUR RESEARCH
By Selence Service \ NEW YORK, May 14.—QGrief over the loss of friends and relatives will provide the means for scientific attacks on diseases from: which they died, if a new memorial plan proposed here captures the imagination of the American public, A group of ‘medical men, scientists and laymen have organized a medical memorial fund. to receive
memorial gifts that would be applied to some of the neglected fields of medical research. A memorial certificate would be
» If literally applied the order wa make the allies—who supposedly
e war to preserve demo“en she bis <1 RITES TOMORROW = pr better book bonfires than RITES the little proparts = FOR RAYMOND SALE and his minions . ~ ever touched &| myo poy Herbert Huffman, pastorch to. tor of the First Friends church, T h e decree i onauct services for Raymond b a ns Hitler's g sale, 2212 Broadway, in the «Mein Kamp {’|chuich at Rockford, Ind, at 2:30 “text- | P- Mm. tomorrow. Mr. Sale died Sunday following a heart attack after attending the _| baseball game at Victory field. He
Shapley,
sent by the national organization to a relative of the person in whose memory the gift is made, Heart and artery diseases, the nation's greatest causes of death, had only 17 cents per death in charitable funds given for research upon these diseases, Dr. Harlow Harvard astronomer and chairman of the trustees of the new memorial, said in announcing he new fund. Dr. Henry 8. Simms of the Columbia’s college of physicians and surgeons, is president, Dr. J. Murray Steele is medical director and head of the -group -that will allot
—. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Crash Kills G.
auto-truck crash. Pvt. Billy Miller, 21-year-old Alabama st.,
early last night. His brother, Lt. Wilburn Miller, 26, ‘was seriously injured in the! crash. He was taken to City hospital and later transferred to the station hospital at Ft. Harrison where his condition is “satisfactory” today. - The two soldiers were returning home to a farewell dinner after having their car serviced on the West side, - Police said their car struck the left rear side of a truck driven by Milford Poisel, 48, Attica, at the intersection. When the two brothers failed to return home, their father and the lieutenant's wife, Mrs. Mildred Miller, drove to the West side to look for them, believing them to be visiting friends. They heard of the accident and then learned their family was involved. Pvt. Miller, who recently returned to this country after 33 months in. Europe, had taken part in five
funds for research,
and LS Cra. Was 41. Burial will be in Rockford: : taining ries and A resident of Indianapolis for six ¥ “Mr. Morgan cial’ theo Mr. Sale had been an em-
years, ployee of the Allison division of General Motors Corp. | Survivors include his wife, Mrs. | Eva Sale; his mother, Mrs. Millie | > The communique announcing the |p ..4ine Bluffton, and two daugh- | action of the allled co-ordinating i... paverly Sue and Linda Kay on, which applies through- | ggg, "out Germany, said that the ma- |
“other propaganda,” even for repurposes, according to an
search “American military government -~
terial must be “surrendered to MRS. HELEN BRUNSON =~ miiltary zone commanders for de-| idles 3 i nn" Services for Mrs, Helen Brunson, |
who died yesterday at St. Vincent's | Controversy Develops hospital, will be held at 2 p. m. to- | at | morrow in McCord’s funeral home, | or aw ee | [Daklandon. Burial will be in Crown 5 1 By ley mitry dirstorals 3 Mrs. Brunson, a resident of Caswhereby they, too, can be “purged.” | tleton for three years, had been ill A whirlwind of controversy ap- | Several weeks, She was 37. A nato ‘be brewing over the tive of Chattanooga, she was a measure, which originally was spon- member of the Roberts Park Methsored by the French, and which |Odist church, | in its final form appeared to sur-| Survivors are her husband, Harprise and trouble American pe- | (old B. Brunson, a daughter, Virlitical, propaganda and = education [ginia, and a son, Bruce, all of Casauthorities in Berlin. tleton, and an aunt, Mrs. Ruby They were attempting today to Adair, of Indianapolis, | get the order “clarified” and, depending on what the reaction may PFC. NORMAN R. COOK be in the United States, there is| Pfc. Norman R. Cook of 8301 E. ‘a possibility some revision of it|Washington st. was killed in line may be requested. of duty by a German civilian in the Won't Burn Books American occupation zone, his wife,
Mrs, Ethelyn Cook, has been in-! It seemed plain, however, the formed by the war department. Americans were just as openly a| According to the war department party to the order, and a com- telegram, Pfc. Cook was shot with! panion directive to liquidate | his. own gun by the German civilian “German military and Nazi me-|in Arxburg. At the time he was morials and museums,” as were billeted in a hotel there, en route any of the other three occupying | home for discharge. A graduate of Technical high school, he had been Asked for comment, Brig. Gen.|in the army 42 months. His mother | Robert McClure, head of the United |is Mrs. Marie Achey of Miami, Fla,, States military government's infor-| his father, Kenneth W. Cook of In-| mation control division, recalled dianapolis, that in a press conference on psychological warfare in Paris nearly MISS BEULAH WII WILLIAMS two years ago, he had stated the Miss Beulah D. Williams, Optical | Americans were not going to burn | Industries, Inec., employee, died yes- ! any books In Germany. “So far as| [terday at City hospital. She was 38. I am concerned, that is still our policy,” Gen. McClure said. ville, had lived in Indianapolis eight | “We canont be parties to the in- years. She resided at 1896 Sugar! vasion of private libraries, either. Grove ave. However, we are exploring means, She is ‘survived by her parents, | of getting people to relinquish un- Mr, and Mrs. Henry Williams, | desirable material voluntarily so Indianapolis; four sisters, Mrs. | it can be converted into pulp to| Esther Jackson, Indianapolis, Mrs. | print the kind of things we want|Josephine Michael, Detroit, and | Germans to have.” Mrs. Eunice Waggner and Mrs. | Memorials Forbidden [P61 Boker, bork of Chicago. snd ee brothers we Although potentially less sinister Leslie, Danville, and ig od than fhe literature order, legislation |liams of New York. directing the destruction of military | - | and Nazi memorials appeared to | respective military zone command-| have its ridiculous aspects, also. ers, | For instance, as explained by the | It was admitted that it would not American spokesman, it forbids! | be impossible for some commander any village to have a memorial in |t0 ban the works of Tom Paine or the town square commemorating its | Karl Marx. | sons, fallen in the. first or second| Nobody seems to know yet how . World wars (unless they died on the | far the order goes, but as one respot of the memorial) but statues porter remarked, it will boom of Bismarck need not be disturbed.| “Mein Kampf" prices in the black No explicit definition of what {market, constitutes anti-democratic litera- | “Didn't anybody remember,” he ture has been devised. | asked, “that.to make a book a best As the order now stands, the re-| seller you get it banned in Boston?”
sponsibility appea: (Copyright, 1046, by The Indianapolis Times Y Appears to be up to the The Chicago Daily News, 1 Inc
Gold Prospector Has $100,000 In Cash, Heads to New York
TORONTO, May 14 (U. P).—| Mr. Arsenault leafed through the Spud Arseriault, 47, a bachelor-! {bills in the office of Samuel Ciglen, prospector, had $100,000 in cash to- | president of the Beaupleiwu Yelday and a desire to see some New lowknife Co. and planned a trip to York night life. New York before returning to the Spud searched the mountains of country where he struck it rich. the far north for 25 years before! ‘He admitted shyly that he might he struck it rich. He sold his in- | be looking for a wife, but he said terest in his gold claim 50 miles! he definitely would return to the north of Yellowknife Bay in Cana- | Yellowknife country as soon as he da's northwest territory for $100,- | visited New York. 000 and 250,000 shares of stock. Engineers said Mr. Arsenault's He insisted on being paid the claim was one of the richest in the $100,000 in $50 bills because “I al- territory. The gold vein he unways wanted to see that much earthed was reported to be from 20 money.” [to 50 feet wide and 800 feet long.
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Broader Tenant Protection
WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P.).'came ~The supreme court today consid- céted. ered an OPA demand for broader _ 1 the other protection of tenants faced with une Goumys, O
out when their rented house was ' lawful eviction. sold. The new owners failed to Lower federal courts have ruled get an OPA eviction certificate, but
' that they have no power to halt the local sheriff ordered the eviethe ousting of tenants while the don anyway. The federal courts merits of their eviction is being ruled against an OPA appeal on by state courts. They grounds that they lacked power to also have held that if a tenant halt a state proceeding, moves out while his case is being! A government lawyer, arguing the f he no longer has a case. cases before the supreme court yesps OPA maintains that unless terday, said that effective OPA conoourts take a stronger hand trol over the “ever-sharpenin ; Sasen, landlord abuses housing crisis” could hot prin greatly. The agency tained without the aid of the fedhigh tribunal to back it eral courts, the appeals of two eviction! The.court during its usual Mon-
joy decision session handed down | Y one new ruling, It held that
moot, after the family va-
case, a family at , was ordered to move
Ky, apartment with" is Subject to state and local taxaa local Justice of tion, The ruling was made in the |
ijoase of a reconstruction finance.
~Wright
Miss Williams, a native of Dan-!
Supreme Court Considers |
} was evicted from | equipment in federally owned plants!
nt fat Beaver, Pa., leased | Corp.
| |
| |
|
| .
major campaigns, He was a native
er TT SN ei
|.; Brother Is
Hurt on’Way to Family Fest|
Tragedy interrupted the reunion of two overseas veterans with their father as one brother was killed and another seriously injured in an
son of William E. Miller, 1205 N,
was killed instantly when the car which he was driving was in collision with a tractor-trailer unit at Ohio and Koehne sts.
of Vincennes. The Hewlenant, who (had been in service eight years, spent six years in the Pacific area. Both in Artillery Both men were attached to the coast artillery and were en route from Ft. Monroe, Va., to their new station at Pt. Winfield Scott, San | Francisco, Cal, They had stopped {off for a week-end visit, bringing the lieutenant's wife and seven-month-old daughter with them, The body of Pvt. Miller was taken to Moore Mortuary Peace chapel, pending completion of funeral arrangements,
DON'T SCATTER PRINTS
If you have several similarly framed flower prints, don’t scatter them about the four walls. You'll gain a dramatic effect—for both pictures and wall—by grouping them above a low piece of furni-
ture,
Zz
See the House of Ideas ot the 1944 Home Show
i : [REPORT ‘LEFT WING’ WASHINGTON, May 14 (U.-P.). —S8enator Kenneth 8. Wherry (R. Neb.) said today he has been 'informed by a high-ranking state department official that at least 12 department employees have been discharged for left wing sympathies, Senator Wherry's statement came as a senate appropriations subcommittee was asked to postpone action on suggestions by several of its members for a sweeping examination of state department employees. The members believe that further
department “to set its owh house in order.” ici C Mr. Wherry said he has been informed that many persons “suspected” of adhering to leftist philosophies were among a group of 4000 employees recently dropped from the state department pay roll. This, he-added, has been the basis of department requests that the suggested congressional investiga= tion be postponed. Many of those discharged, he said, came to the department when functions of some wartime agencies were taken over. They were employed, he said, without the usual ‘screening” examinations for loyalty.
opportunity should be afforded thei.
Qt. — 60¢
Long rr
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., May 14 (U.
the telephone is a remarkable invention, and that he will swap his deputy sheriff's badge for a career as an opera singer, Mr, Danilo, youthful deputy sheriff of Bexar county, won a contract from the New York Grand Opera company after a long-dis-tance telephone audition believed lo have been the first of its kind,
Alfredo Salmaggj, the opera company's dynamic impresario, listened to Deputy Danilo's clear, full-throated tenor over 2500 miles of telephone line and said: “It's the finest voice I've heard in tenors.”
Voice ‘Most Unusual’
Then he drew up a contract and mailed it to 8an Antonio, Mr. Salmaggl said the quality of the young Texan's voice was “most unusual.” It ranges up to a fullvoiced F above high C, Mr. Danilo, a native of Dallas, Tex., and a graduate of Baylor university, will make his New York debut, on the stage of the Brooklyn Academy of Music, on which the
P.) ~Rolf Danilo said today that
TUESDAY. MAY, 14, 1048"
Phone Audition
Wins Grand Opera Contract
great Enrico Caruso made his fare well appearance, Mr. Salmaggi arranged ‘the telephone audition after reading in a New York newspaper that radio station KTSA in San. Antonio had discovered a new tenor, He con= tacted Mr. Danilo and ‘asked him to come to New York for an audi. fiom.” Deputy “Danilo said he couldn't do it, because he is under contract to sing “Punchinello” in San Antonio’s Sunken Garden theater June 6. So the impresario are ranged the long-distance audition, and the deputy sheriff got the contract.
WET PAVEMENT IS DUCK ‘FOOLER’
ROSCOMMON, Mich (U, P.).— Add another civilization-created hazard for the migrating ducks. Northward flying ducks mistook a macadam highway, slick with a light rain, for a watercourse. One was killed coming in for a landing
and many others were injured.
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