Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1946 — Page 2

Asks for Delay in Discussions Following Surprise Move,

July 12 (U, P.).—Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov to-

“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

n Austria, ‘Molotov Demands

50-Day Fast Takes b Inches Off His Waistline - NOTED WRITER |

day tossed another monkeywrench| nto ‘Big Four foreign minister dis-! cussions, ' He declined to discuss Austria) tinless the ministers agree to re-

move an alleged 437,000 pro-Nazis western Austria occupation) | made his surprise after the Big Four completed discussion of Germany with-

| and Russia over treating Germany| #5 &n economic whole. ' Byrnes Suggests Delay As the ministers began to discuss | Austria Mr. Molotov suddenly | charged that the western allies were] harboring 437,000 assorted kinds of pro-Nazis in the western Austrian

He said he wouldn't talk about an Austrian treaty unless these per‘sons are removed. Secretary of State James F.| Byrnes suggested that the discus- | sion be delayed until this afternoon | to enable him to get some back-!

the late afternoon session,

Earlier Mr. Byrnes charged that | Russia, which bas demanded $10,-| in reparations from Ger-| actually has already re-| ) direct and indirect repara-| tions of $14,000,000,000. Denies Yalta Pledge Mr. Byrnes said that the transfer of ‘Silesia, most of which has gone to Poland, and the acquisition of Russia

estimated to be worth $14,000,000. an ek Sally denied Wat the at Yalta agreed that Rosia was to get $10,000,000,000 in" reparations from Germany as ‘Mr. Molotov had indicated. He said no “such agreement was reached at Yalta.

Family Does Part To Keep Jail Busy

" PAPA GOT out but mama went

"Arrested on ‘charges of Keeping house, Thelma Ratcliffe, N. Arsenal ave, told Judge Niblack she had thrown a party” to get money to out her husband, held in jail

questioning. "Well, Papa's out, but Mama's fn." Judge Niblack quipped as he Mrs. Ratcliffe $25 and costs and sentenced her to 10 days in

LA pair of dice and a “Kitty bag” $25 in change were | gonfiscated, and the money turned ._gver to the police pension fund. +. SWEITZER RITES SET . TERRE HAUTE, Ind, July 12 ow. P.) ~Rites will be held in Chi-| | cago for George Sweitzer, Law- : , Ind, a government int who fell 30 feet from a window of the commercial solvents

| death was due to a heart attack. Js

5a PH hi 1 % Bei ¥ £ 1-Pi i =riece Bu

§

; 4 SET

|

ground on Mr. Molotov's charge. |

plant yesterday. Physicians believed |

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Acme Telephoto.

Halfway finished with his projected 100-day fast to emphasize the Slight of Europe is Clande L. Bax-

ter, retired chef.

Here he shows by gathers in his trousers and an extra long belt that he is 41 pounds

lighter and six inches smaller at the waist than he was at the start of the fast 50 days ago. He subsists on |

coffee and ‘wine.

To Get Pay, Keep Union Card (pj BILL DELAY

WASHINGTON, July 12 (U. P). —~Senator Glen H. Taylor (D. Ida.) [in the senate a member of an or threatened today to go to court if ganization asserting the right t necessary to get his senatorial sal- strike against the government. ary without surrendering his cher-| Mr. Thompson said he didn't se ished union card. {how he could pay anyone wh

The one-time factory hand and hill-billy crooner complained to his | senate colleague that he apparently | can’t collect his pay of $10,000 a 9ay, the year under the terms they have ‘Ne new fiscal year. imposed. The trouble, Senator Taylor sai is an appropriation bill rider re-, quiring everyone on the government | payroll to sign an aMdavit that he does not belong to an organization which asserts the right to strike | against the government. » The rider was aimed at the newly, CHEYENNE, organized United Public Workers of | P.).—Forrest “Nubbins” America (C. I. O.). But Mr. Taylor who a year and a half ago wash said he can't sign such an affidavit | because he holds membership in] the Sheet Metal Workers Interna- | tional association. It is associated; with building trades unions which | often have struck against private contractors on government projects. | Senator Joseph H. Ball (R.! Minn.), author of the rider, said he | intended it should apply to members of congress as well as the low- | est government clerk, “If he feels that way about! strikes against the government then I think the taxpayers should be re-

The test of whether Taylor ca

d file suit,” Mr. Taylor said.

'‘Nubbins' Enjoys

had a delayed birthday party today.

_a hurry to get home to his tri-

cycle—a birthday present—tha

skinning his face.

nap, and the celebration was pu off until today.

‘hasn't signed the proper affidavit.

‘collect on that basis is due Monfirst senatorial pay day of

“If I don't get paid I'll have to|

A Late Birthday

Wyo., July 12 (U. Hoffman,

expected to live until Christmas, |

” Actually, nubbins’ fifth birthday |ers, which failed of adoption last was yesterday but he was in such |Dnight through a tie vote. They have

he stubbed his toe and fell down, He went to bed early for his customary afternoon

Nubbins became ill of bladder

will not become during his services |

o Suggests Nov. 15 15 Action on el Out-of-Line Prices.

0 ~~ By DANIEL M. KIDNEY n Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, D. C,, July 12.—|

Senator Capehart (R. Ind) today! {will attempt to amend the senate! OPA bill ‘to’ prevent its becoming

effective before Nov. 15, except on. FT, WAYNE MINISTER! ous manor house that accommo- || date

He has considerable

rent control, support for this proposal, he said.

The Capehart amendment would| Rey. J. McNeal Wheatley, rector of level of industry, from management

have price controls re-established after Nov. 15 by presidential proclamatipn on commodities that are

| explained. The rollback would be to June 30, when OPA was terminated. Both | Senators Capehart and Willis of | Indiana supported the Taft cost{plus amendment for manufactur-

| |

supported the other amendments t | designed to weaken the original | OPA bill.

| Hapgood Protests

Married Jan. 2, 1896, to Jessie I. Beal, he and his wife had four | children,

DIES IN EAST

‘Meart Attack i Fatal to Ray Stannard Baker.

AMHERST, Mass, July 12 (U. P). | —Ray Stannard Baker, 76, crusad|ing writer of the 90'sp who later | gained fame for his pastoral essays | under the pen name David Grayson, died at his home near Amherst | college here today.

| At the bedside as Mr. Baker died

| at about 3a. m. were- Mrs. Baker {and Dr, L. N. Durgin of Amherst. | Mr, Baker suffered a heart attack, | the last of several in recent months, | A prolific writer throughout his life, he recently had started work on another book. Private funeral services will held Sunday at his home. A native of Lansing, Mich, th author lived as a child in northern Wisconsin where he became familiar with rough pioneer life, After a backwoods schooling, he attended the Michigan Agricultural college and later the University of | Michigan. Wrote Wilson's Biography From 1892 until 1897, he worked for the Chicago Record. Nights he spent writing articles which he contributed to various papers and magazines that included The Century, The Youth's Companion and | McClure's. In 1918 Mr. Baker was appointed a special commissioner of the {U. 8. state department in Great | Britain, Prance and Italy. The fol-

o

It was through his contacts with | President Wilson at this time that

Senator Plans Court Battle CAPEHART ASKS No Place Sacred

To Some Thief |

T HELD, 25, of 431 E. oD BERT st., sat down on the steps of the Trinity Evangelical | Lutheran church, at the corner o Ohio and East sts, and dozed

Nie he awoke, he discovered some thick-skinned thief had taken his wallet, $5 and a watch valued at $25.

‘SCHOLARSHIP HONORS

Times Special DANVILLE, Ind, July 12. —The| the Trinity Episcopal church irr Ft. Wayne, has been honored with the! first scholarship fund to be estab-|

out of-line on that date, its author|jished at Canterbury college. 5

An initial endowment of $1000 has been made by confributions of

and the announcement was made on Mr. Wheatley's birthday. Present plans for the scholarship, which is to be known as the J. McNeal Wheatley fund, call for the fundg to be incorporated into a trust fund and renewed each year by a free-will offering of the congregation, ’

A protest agsinst taking price t—+eontrols—off meat was received by | Senator Capehart from Powers | Hapgood, Indianapolis, head of the |

{leved of paying his salary,” Mr.! ailment in November, 1944, and Ball said. |" celebrated Christmas early when (indiana C. I. O. He signed the Mr. Taylor returned his signed | physicians sald he wouldn't live telegram as a farmer, and it reads: | {afidavit to Oco Thompson, financial | until Dec. 25. Later, an: opera- | “In my capacity as a farmer,

clerk of the senate, after crossing lout clauses declaring he is not and! he recovered rapidly.

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tion removed an obstruction, and operating 680 acres, I am opposed

— exempt meat and poultry from price

(to Senator Wherry's amendment to

ceilings. Was so ashamed of re|ceiving $20 per hundred when I {hauled 22 hogs to market last week |because of feed shortage that I (am roughing 140 hogs through on {short feed, rather than sell at | present outrageous price when 1 know will make cost of living far higher for entire population. “Realize that it will make things temporarily better for farmers, but in long run plunge entire country {into chaos if Wherry amendment is (passed. Urge you vote against this] {amendment and support decent] price control methods.” Senator Willis voted for the Wherry amendment, which was .] adopted by the senate, but Senator Capehart was absent in Indiana.

CARLSON'S RAIDERS LEADER IS RETIRED

| WASHINGTON, July 12 (U. P.. | The marine corps yesterday an- | nounced the retirement July 1 of

| July,

! ATOM-SMASHER BUILT BERKELEY, Cal, July 12 (U, P.). —The University of California announced today a super-cyclotron 10 {times more powerful than any previous existing atom-smashing defvice will be completed by Oct. 1.

Organizations

Pilgrim Shrine will have a pitch-in plenie 5 Brookside park at 3 p. m. Sunday.

| Cumberland chapter O. E. 8, will hold Rien at noon Wednesday at Riley par in Greenfield. Mrs. Helen Bangle | is chairman of the event.

b= roves ———

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Col. Evans PF. Carlson, leader of] “Carlson's Raiders.” Col. Carlson was retired on dis-|

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church parish each year.

DEATHS IN COUNTY LEAD BIRTHS BY 2 -

Times Special

FRANKLIN, Ind, July 12.—Ac-

cording to the reports of births and | & deaths submitted this week by Dr. §

Walter L. Portteus, Franklin city

health officer, and Dr. R. C. Wil- |} son, Johnson county health officer, &

the population” of Johnson county has been decreased by two.

In the first six months of 1946!"

135 babies were born, while 137 people died. The county had 118 births only 77 deaths, while in the city of

Franklin 17 were born and 60 died.

GRACE MOORE LEAVES U. S. NEW YORK, July 12 (U. P.).— Grace Moore, opera singer, left La Guardia field today aboard an Air

France transport plane for Paris | to join her husband, Valentin Pa- |} |rera, who was reported ill at their

home in Cannes.

the Trinity church congregation

i and |

Writer Dead i

CATTLE PRICES HIT NEW PEAK

‘Steers Sell for I for $23. 25 )

Chicago Yards.

CHICAGO, July 12 (U. P).-—A| new all-time high price for cattle | was set at the Chicago stockyards today when a load of choice steers sold for $23.25, +The record surpassed the $23 high

. noted who died today at his home In Amherst, Mass.

Roy Stannard Baker . writer,

" LABORERS’ REST CAMP SUCCEEDS

Fatigued British Workers Are Rehabilitated,

By DAVID M. NICHOL Times Foreign Correspondent HORSHAM, England, July 12— Rest centers for {fatigued service men who show the strain of daily living where shot and shell are falling are no novelty either in this | country or elsewhere. But here in Horsham is a rest center for other war “casualties” — the casualties of industrial speed-up. During. the past two years, 1700

|lowing year he became director of persons have come to this unique the press bureau of the American | institution, called the Roffey Park

commission to negotiate peace at rehabilitation center, Paris.

For an average of six weeks, the “patient” who has been taken from industry's mass - production lines

|he received permission to write the |lives in a restful and peaceful at- | wartime leader's official biography | mosphere in this secluded country

home, 37 miles southwest of London. Given Careful Attention

Some patients are suffering physically, but most of them have mental ailments, resulting from overwork or overcrowding or. just improper job placement. Careful medical attention—both | physical and psychiatric—is given to the guests. Under the direction

{of Dr. T. M. Ling, chief of ‘the med-

ical staff, special treatment is pre|scribed in some cases, For all, however, the routine of exercise, crea{tive work and community enter- | tainment is similar. Surveys have shown that, after six months, more than 80 per cent return to full-time employment. Cost $20 Weekly

All the patients live in a graci-

s 120 persons. They are recruited from every

to the most modest day laborer. { Those who can afford it pay their {own way. care for the others. Fees are about {$20 a week for each person. | Dr. Ling believes that

in other countries.

Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and T

he Ohicago Daily News, Inc.

INJURED BY SAW Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind. Claud 8. Walton,

July local contractor,

The scholarship will provide tui-|Was in the Major hospital today g tion to Canterbury college for one |Suffering from severe injuries sus-

high school graduate of the Trinity |t&ined when a power-driven hand into his right thigh.

The accident occured when a bench X {holding the saw tipped and fell

saw ripped

‘against Mr. Walton.

| 8

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12.—

set last Wednesday, and was the | fourth new peak cattle price at the | yard since the death of OPA, Most cattle on the Chicago mar{ket sold at prices ranging from "1820.50 to $23, averaging 25 cents {higher than yesterday. | At East St. Louis, Ill, hogs sold at the yard's highest prices in 27 years. The top price was $18.75 per | hundredweight, 50 cents over the Rien reached there yesterday, and | 2.75 over OPA ceiling price. The | eh time record at the yard was set in 1919, when hogs brought $23.55. |

WHISKY STILL. BLAST, DAMAGE 1S $750,000

RIPON, Cal, July 12 (U. P.).— | Firemen placed the toll of injured at three and listed damages of | $750,000 today after an explosion | of & whisky still at the SchenleyCoronet distillery near here. The blaze destroyed 10,000 gallons | of barrelled brandy, 10,000 tons of grapes and 2500 gallons of highproof alcohol. The administration building of {the two-acre plant was leveled, and several other buildings damaged.

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