Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1946 — Page 13
a cigaret will readily)
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[8B comes to Indiana y raised tobacco, They bones of their dead, of tobacco, often lie . For good or ill, and 0 the men who taught
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» » » Criticism al opinion were repd Ju work has been
tore public confidence hauling job on itself, iting action by the
Ss are a reduction in avoid duplication and ditional expert assistidual members. This major national prob- ' important decisions crease in salary and pvide greater person:
ther provisions, too, responsibility in conlittees in both parties ws would know each islation, and could fix missions, both by the ber. the present congress ich a system been in wires between White nflicts within the Reyuld have been easien ‘tions,
arly tant reason now, too If the Republicans ember they would be1e house. This would ng since there would nocrat in the White ment of one branch ily would be entitled olicy in that eventu-
ess formalise such a
Defeat
ide coal and steel. zone came from what tory given to Poland ym the Ruhr now in ie entire économy is | of the present fron-
tigated a little by bints with the British ach month the effects rious. sdam central-contro. ach and the Russians the Ruhr and Rhine: he western frontier o ginally said she was but the {ron-curtair nd one-party system y joint control through nless Russia reversec néthods.
ork OMIC and social eflent of Germany is le. It destroys theh democracy and .earr ns as planned by the ne time it encourage: rategy of playing the 0 turning defeat intc
ace conference and a cter and better than n of Germany into Anyway, the four-
t* Spain rho write violent de hing of Spanish hisd dany of them have feel entitled to ufge gigantic and bloody dvice naturally ptbiy patriotic Spaniard, onvietions. tment is 1ll- informed s ohly itself to blanis or, Norman Armogg, hassy dounselor, Wil ungking last March. ¢ United States has Press Attache Philip | able, agreeable perstige and knowledge resenting his coun
nent thinks this an islike of the Franca ective. All that hap+ went is less well in< the Spaniards, who k the state depart
oJ] on the other hand ibassador Sir Vict nd most experienced service, and he’ ifted staff. The ar greater in Madrid
to is wise, he will re | send to Madrid a n speak plainly and
ith wel v 's Ly Rencunce Share Of German Assets In
Largest Land- Based Bomber Gets Final Taxiing Test Today
RK ASKED 10 NEGOTIATE BY PRESIDENT
Chancellor - Wants Russ’ Recent Property Grab Cleared.
By DOUGALD WERNER United Press ‘Staff Correspondent A, July 10—~Gen. Mark Clark told Chancellor Léopold Figl today that he had been directed by President Truman to start negotiations toward renouncing the United States’ share in German assets in Austria. Clark in a letter said the American government will not recognize any transfer of property from Austria under the Potsdam agreement unless the transfer conforms to the United Nations’ declaration of January, 1943, on forced transfers. The announcement™ of . Clark's letter followed a stormy . session of the national assembly at which Figl said ‘Austria demanded a clarification of the recent Russian order to take over all former German property. Communist leader Ernest Fischer told the session that the government “has done worse than nothing with its policy in regard to the Potsdam declaration,” and that the government “only wanted to start a hatred campaign against the Soviet Union.” Wants Assets Restored Socialist Deputy Paul Speiser said
that if all German assets were taken
from Austria “we will not be able to restore Jewish claims in Austria.” He said Austria's claims against
IGermany include two billion schill-
in money and one billion schillings in property. “We don’t want mercy, we want our rights,” Speiser said. “We need our own ore and our own oil.” Pigl said that “assets which belong to Austrians or members of the allied nations in Austria should be restored at once.” The assembly adopted a resolution supporting the chancellor's remarks with four Communist members as the only dissenters. ‘The Russians appeared today to have halted for the time being their deportation of Germans from the Soviet occupation zone of eastern Austria. A ministry of interior spokesman said that on the basis of scattered reports there apparently was no rail movement now. “Let Us Work” Figl told the assembly that “for every government, either of a victorious or defeated nation, there is a limit which it cannot exceed.” He said German property is that
which persons of German nationality purchased legally from the Austrians before 1938, when “Adolf Hitler's ‘blackjacks’ wiped “out legality in this country.” The chancellor said the allied
commission “is the only plenipo-|
tentiary institution to give orders to the government,
“We have done everything ol
ulfill the Russian demands,” he d. “We will do everything to stabilize peace in Europe provided we are given hammers, shovels and plows. “It is my appeal to the powers= ‘let us work’.”
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 8. Weather Bureau All Data in Central Daylight Tinte ~July 10, 1946— 5:26 | Sunset...
Sunrise 8:14
Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m. Total precipitation since Jan, 1... Deficiency since Jan. 1........
Station
Cincinnati Cleveland .. Denver Evansyille Pt. Wayne FL. Wort HEE Be (city) Kansas City ... Los Lin is Miam Mam elie, Paul Fn New Orleans . “ New York .. Oklahoma City .. Omaha ts Pittsburgh . Louis
Police fo Open
tory technicians plan to dismantle.
QUIZ WAR BRIDE ONENTRYINU. S.
Probe Status of Briton Who | Jilted Husband.
RENO, Nev, July 10 (U. P.).— Immigration authorities investi|gated the romantic affairs of Mrs. Jean Carbone Beschen, today to determine if the British war bride should be deported for illegal entry into the U. S. Special Immigration Officer Harmon Hoiser began a secret investigation yesterday at the instigation, said Mrs. Beschen’s attorney, of Lt. Harold Carbone, Rochester, N. Y. Mrs. Beschen divorced Lt. Carbone last Friday to marry Capt. Donald Beschen, Dubuque, Ia., the father of her five-months-old| daughter. | The investigation was expected to be completed today after the testimony of “all concerned.” Washington will make final disposition.
Go Into Seclusion
Capt. and Mrs. Beschen were reported in seclusion -here. Mrs. Beschen came to the U. 8S. last December as a war bride, but did not join her husband. Instead, | she went to Dubuque to meet Capt. Beschen and announced he was the | father of her unborn child. They had met and fallen in love after Lt. Carbone had left England. The 19-year-old English girl filed! a divorce suit after the birth of her ’| baby last February, charging men-| | tal cruelty. Lt. Carbone, in a cross| complaint, charged adultery. He | also charged that she entered the! country Hogally, .
2 AUTO ACCIDENTS INJURE 7 PERSONS
Seven persons were injured in two | traffic accidents here last night. Four were injured, none seriously, when automobiles driven by Charles
Ward, 28, of 1816 Kelly st. and Ger- | ald Ruddell, 26, of 4815 Young st.
| collided at West and Morris sts.
Patricia Milliner, 19, of 830 Reis- | ner st., and William Harvard, 42, of | Cape Girardeau, Mo., riding in the! Ward car, were hurt slightly, jured passengers in the other car| were Betty Durham, 20, of 2950! Morris Hill st.- and Delores Taull-| man, 28, of 1220 N. Alabama st. Three more persons were injured | when a car driven by Melvin Lane, 37, of 1634 E. Palmer st. struck a| parked car, careened into a power line post and landed against a! guard rail at Fall creek and Pennsylvania st. Lane, who was slightly hurt, was charged with reckless] driving and operating while intoxicated. Injured passengers in his car were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Teachen- | tin, of 2913 N. Talbot st.
ADVICE ON HOT DAY: ORDER WINTER COAL
City Purchasing Agent Edward |
In- |
Washington, D. C.....
G. Hereth believes in the stitch in| time, | Dressed today in a cool, white | Palm Beach suit, his thoughts tured toward those frosty days | when the snow will fly. And he | sent a notice around to all the city | employees reminding them - to get | busy and order coal for next winter. |
New Altitude
Your treasured old photographs expertly copied andirestored-.. .
2 10%...
| Photograph Studio . . . #8 floor
Fld
* WHITE SANDS PROVING GROUNDS, N. M,, July 10 (U, PJ). —American rocket experts claimed a new warld altitude record today as the seventh German V-2 rocket pierced unknown space 83's miles! above the.New Mexico desert. The 46-foot giant of wartime ter-| ror and destruction : roared away | from its launching site, yesterday | amid an inferno of orange- ~colored| flame and heat generated by the| fuel mixture of alcohol and oxy-| gen. The 1l4-ton rocket was crammed with scientific instruments instead of high explosives. 3500 Miles Per Hour
The rocket plunged into space
minutes. The missile was tracked by radar: to determine the official
height.
| July 17, at
| day | Lenora Welch, vice grand; Delia Kimbrel,
| had no skull fracture.
V-2 Rocket Soars 834 Miles: |
[the instruments landed separately,
ordnance experts, General Electric
at a 3500-mile-per-hour clip and] was aloft slightly more than six| would be revealed cancerning -tem-
nassau
“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Harmless Shell
Jchief,
WASHINGTON, July 10 (U.P.) ~~ The army's new XB-36, world’s largest land-based bomber, will undergo - final taxiing tests today at Ft. Worth, Tex, the army announced. Gen. Carl Spaatz, army air force said the giant plane has a range of 10,000 miles compared to the B-20's range of 5000 miles, W. Stuart Symington, assistant secretary of war for air, sald it could drop an atom bomb en any city in the world. The new plane has six - 3000-
horsepower Pratt & Whitney engines, the most powerful ever installed in an army bomber, The B-29 has four 2300-horsepower engines. The plane, built by the Consolidated . Vultee Corp. will carry a crew of 16 mgn in its pressurized compartments, The six engines located in the trailing edge of the wings tum huge three-bladed pusher type propellers. The wing span is 230 feet compared with 143 feet for the |B-29 and 212 feet “for the experiimental B-19.
ARRAIGNMENT OF EX-CONVICT IS SET
NORRISTOWN, Pa. July 10 (U. P.).~Former convict Allen W. Black, 28, a merchant marine veteran, will be arraigned today .on
charges of kidnaping an ex-G. I,
‘pumping seven bullets
Fred on. Staggs, in charge of the police property room, displays bazooka missile presented to Herman Botiema, 4668 Wentworth ave. by a “friend.” "Although the shell is believed harmless, Police’ labora-
ho 3 -
LOCAL |
BRIEFS
Lt, Col. Hal F. Winter, 617 N Euclid st, has been awarded the bronze star for outstanding service in the European theater from July, 1945 to January, 1946. Gen. Mark | W. Clark, commanding general, | made the presentation in Vienna, | Austria.
A covered dish luncheon is to be | given today from 10 a. m. to 12 noon by the ladies auxiliary of ‘the | General Protestant Orphans home for the children of the home, Mrs. William Wagener, president, will | preside at the business meeting | following the: luncheon. Indianapolis Traffe club golf league will hold its third golf tournament July 20 at the Sarah Shank course, Players must make reser- | vations with William FP. Baker. chairman, by July 17.
Organizations
July cirele of the St. Philip Neri Altar SoEisty will hold a card party at 1:30 tomorrow in the food ats shop. Chairiadies will be Mrs, Hazel Murphy and Mrs, Fred Butler.
Mothers and Dau hters Benefit club will Sponsor A iow & ip card party tomor-| n
P the auditorium of | wm. 5. "Bloc Co {
St. Catherine's Altar society will sponsor a dessert card party Wednesday, N in the school hall. Mrs Woerner, chairman, will be as- | sisted A the following committee: Mrs. John Opbergfell, Mrs. Julius Armbruster, { Mrs, Clyde Gates, Mrs. John Gartner, Mrs. Leo Landwerlen, Mrs. Everet Later! and Mrs. George Mennel.
Olive Branch Rebekah lodge will install the following officers at 8 p. m. SaturDoris H. Downey. noble grand:
| right supporter to noble grand; Elizabeth ! Boswell, left supporter to noble grand; | Ann Gaynor, right supporter to vice grand; Fairy Armel, left supporter to vice grand; | Nellie Safford, chaplain; Hazel Sense, ! musician; Constance Crim, inside guardian; Mary Gaskill, outside guardian; Doris
into him while he pleaded for mercy and
THIS
J. Downey, conductor, and Fauneal Greenlee, warden Myrle Miller will be in. st alling oti officer
CONDITION OF HUGHES REMAINS DANGEROUS
BEVERLY HILLS, Cal, July 10 (U. P.).—Penicillin treatments to ward off the threat of pneumonia were continued today as Sportsman | Howard Hughes kept up his stub-| born fight to survive the crash of!
| his experimental army photo recon- | | naissance plane.
Dr. Verne Mason, Mr, Hughes’ physician, said his patient's condi-| (tion remained dangerous, but he| He said Mr.| Hughes’ left lung. was injured, but | |not punctured, as early examinations indicated. Mr. Hughes was given his first solid food at midnight, He refused efforts of hospital attendants to give him gpiates.
3 CHILDREN INJURED WHILE SWIMMING
Police were kept busy yesterday | and last night answering calls to) Willard pool at State and Washington sts. where three children were | injured in accidents and the clothes | of two .others were stolen. Children injured in diving colli- | sions were Billy Turner, 12, of 1640 Hoyt ave. dislocated jaw; Barbara | Lickliter, 14, of 1221 English ave., face injuries, and Joan Leaver, 9, of | 1007 E. Georgia st., lacerated chin John and Wilbur Smith, of 319 | Forest aye., brothers, reported oe clothes were stolen while they were | lin swimming.
|
Mark Claimed
Gouging out a huge crater on its return to earth, the rocket was reported to have landed 63 miles due {north of the launching site. In order to. prevent destruction
| protected by heavy cases. A radio signal caused an explosion at the height of the flight which released the scientific instruments. Test Spectacular
The test .was pronounced the most spectacular thus far by army
scientists, and Lt. Col. Harold R. Turner, in charge of rocket experiments here. It was expected that new secrets
perature, pressure, atmospheric lconditions and cosmic rays in outer
BLACK PERSIAN PAW
“r
| then disposing of the body in a garbage pit. Black, who sald he took the victim’s wallet containing $55, yesterday led police to a Trexlertown dump and pointed to a shallow grave where police" had found Joseph Wicen, 31-year-old carpenter buried beneath a pile of ashes and
SPY SUSPECT'S WIFE MAY TESTIFY TODAY
SEATTLE, July 10 (U. P.) —Galina Redin, attractive young wife of Russian Naval Lt. Nicolai G. Redin, was expected to testify today in support of her husband's contention he is not guilty of esplonage; as charged by the U, 8° government. “I,am ready to take the stand to say that those people have been telling lies about my husband,” she sald. “He is Innocent.” “Those people” included Herbert Kennedy, shipyard engineer, who previously testified his house was wired for recordings by the Federal Bureau of Investigation after Redin
asked him for information about secret data on a new U, 8, destroyer tender,
MALDEN, Mass, July 10 (U, P). ~Ci¢orge Ross may win his silent battle for life in a hospital and if
he does it'll be on sheer grit. Mr. Ross was working alone yesterday in the Potter Drug & Chemical Co, plant when he was caught in a conveyor, “Im stuck heye, call police,” Mr Ross shouted to John Welch, who lives near the plant and investigated after hearing a faint whistle and cries of “help.” Police battered down a door and found Mr. Ross bleeding and faint, his ‘legs twisted between two conveyor systems that operate in opposite directions. ‘Got a Clgaret? “Ovér here, sergeant,” he called to Police 8gt. william Butler, Then “got a cigaret?”
Redin, on the stand yesterday, challenged the government to present any such recordings of his
other refuse.
talks with Kennedy,
“Don't get excited,” Mr. Ross sald | after a couple of puffs. “You can't get me out without dismantling this
Sheer Grit May Save Life Of Man Caught in Comoyor
Mr. Ross explained he had shut off the power by reaching a pile of cans and firing them at a power switch. The 50th can hit the “stop™ button. Mr. Ross directed the dismantling, He chain-smoked until lifted out, asked that his wife be notified, then fainted.
MEAT PACKER ROBBED CHICAGO: ity 10 (U. P.).—Phillp
held up and robbed of $186 early
thing. I'll show you how."
today.
v
YEAR, AS
ALWAYS,
Imbued with an air of casual grace
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