Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1946 — Page 2
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THE : INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ha aE FRIDAY. AUG. 2, 108
es and That Fed Him, Needs U. S. Help No binges
TE
Happy Parents Beam on“Quadruplets
‘America Becomes Capitalist Scapegoat fo Comintern ~ + Planners.
Times Foreign Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 23—The deliberate and unprovoked shooting down of unarmed American passenger airplanes is = logical step in the Comintern’s plan for converting Yugoslavia into a Soviet state. As this correspondent pointed out in a dispatch from Belgrade on Jan. 30, the Yugoslav i army has been indoctrinated by its political commissars to regard Americans as enemies whom they ill inevitably Signs tn a thir world
Wore reason for ‘such malicious anti-Americanism is not that Marshal Stalin, Marshal Tito and other leaders of the Comintern are trying to provoke anqther general war
Happy smiles on their faces, Mr. and Mrs, L. D, Tigner are shown in the Multnomah County hospital, Portland, Ore, where Mrs, Tigner gave birth to two boys and two girls.
Jerry, Joe, Jesse May and Josephine Are Doing Nicely
PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 23 (U.|last May when he lost his job P.) Jerry, Joe, Jesse May and cookingon a Southern Pacific train, Josephine Tigner, Negro quadruplets said he guessed he'd have to start born in the charity ward of Mult- {looking for work “in earnest.” nomah County hospital, were doing| The quads, which brought the fine today. t Tigner family to nine for a 2%Hospital attendants said the room apartment, were all normal, quads, who aggregated 20 pounds, [except for size. They weighed in ‘at 13 ounces at birth, were kicking| four pounds, 12 ounces, five pounds, up a staccato din in their incu-|five ounces; five pounds, nine ounces bators and appeared to be “fine, |and five pounds, three ounces. healthy babies.”* Nurses hovering over the tiny But the father, L. D. Tigner, said | incubators, exclaimed: “Four in a he couldn't seem to recover from |row, Cutest things you ever saw.” the shock. “When they told me| Hospital authoritfes said Mrs about it,” he said, “I just started |Tigner's sister had borne quadto shake all over.” ruplets, all of whom had died withMr, Tigner, out of work since in eight months after birth.
—today. Like Hitler, Mussolini and the Japanese, they will do their best to achieve world domination by “peace ful penetration” accompanied, of course, by periodic acts of violence designed to scare the western democracies into ever more appeasement, Sits U, 8. Is Ideological Windmill Meanwhile, however, the Machjavellian logic of communism demands the uninterrupted exorcism of capitalistic devils in order to Justify the unprincipled behavior of the varfous Marxist gods. The Soviet heaven has to be counterbalanced by a capitalistic hell—ppreferably located in the United States. Hitler found it expedient to blame everything on the “decadent” democracies, the Communists and the Jews. Tito, emulating Stalin
| Clever Propagandists Seek To Glorify Regime of Tito
(Continued' From Page One)
. “reactionary” democracies, the “Fascists” and the bourgeoisie. Living Standards to Fall doing so, of course, he is biting which has fed him.
long as Yugoslavia must J 8. it will
collect signatures for a scroll which,
according to the official announceostensibly for raising relief funds,| ont was to “be lan 2 Marshal
turn into eulogies for Tito and the py, a5 a testimonial of admiration Tito regime. and fellowship-in- democracy from
DAWSON FILES
. | der-not only suffered pain and men-
to trackless trolley today at 13th and | | Pennsylvania sts.
‘order from riding: transit vehicles i lon metal tokens, said he intended
RB | quarter ticket.
ANOTHER SUIT
Plans Week-End Rest Before Continuing Fight.
(Continued From Page One)
tal anguish but was also “greatly humiliated and embarrassed by being twice ejected in a public place within sight and hearing of divers persons.” Relates Conversation Mr. Dawson asserijgd he also underwent another experience when he attempfed to board a
The lawyer, restrained by court
to pay a new yellow three-for-a-
Nevertheless, he related, an Indianapolis Railways employee approached him at the intersection and engaged him in conversation. The employee, Mr. Dawson declared, “talked about everything but Dawson's running battle with the utility firm, . “He talked about the weather, squirrel hunting and prospects of another war,” said Attorney Dawson, Trolley ‘Breezes’ By
However, Mr. Dawson charged the first trolley to appear breezed by him without stopping, although it was only half full, He said he then caught a ride in a neighbor's automobile. “I looked back,” recounted -the railway company's arch’ enemy,”
man I'd been talking with hopped in a taxi and followed us all the way downtown.” Mr. Dawson said he also observed a “suspicious looking,” greén sedan parked at the 13th st. and Pennsylvania st. intersection. A hefty, “tough looking guy” was at the wheel, he recalled. First Suit Filed
Mr. Dawson locked horns with Indianapolis Railways, Inc., because he insisted on using up his old tokens, purchased at four-for-a-quarter, after the firm had substituted yellow tickets at three-for--a-quarter, He claims the tokens constitute “legal contracts.” Yesterday he filed a damage suit against the railway company for Charles Lee, 52, who alleges he was,
a streetcar at Washington and Meridian st. Mr. Lee was following Mr. Daw-
: Only yesiergey a $2 -contribution Y . the Ame ican le, Fe = ap = “Fhe 8 ps Tease HE office in New York brought forth a o” committee's flood 6f leaflets which included out- | plays an imposing list of sponsors, and-out “Tito prapaganda. heavily larded with Communists: or One was a magazine-style booklet | ojjow travelers. Among the non by Howard Fast, writer fqr the & t "Communist Daily Worker. It was Communist sponsors _are Senator entitled: “The Incredible Tito: Man | Wagner (D. N.Y), Eddie Cantor, | of the Hour . . . the Most Exciting | George Jessel, Spyros P. Skouras, Story in 27 Years.” Bt of 3 full Allen Wardwell, the Rev. nother was a reprint of a fu it page article defending Yugosiavia’s| Sloane Coffin, president emeritus claim to Italian Trieste. of Union Theological Seminary; Co-chairman of the relief com-|James P. Warburg, W Walter 8S. Mack. mittee are two of the foremost— (Jr, Thomas Mann, Fannie Hurst, and active—apologists for Tito in|Marshal Field and William Green. America. They are Zlato Baloko-| Speakers at the relief meetings vic, the violinist, and Louis Adamic,| have frequently denounced the who called Tito “the only authentic|Chetniks and their guerrilla leader, people's leader. in Europe to have|Gen. Draija Mikhailovitch, recently emerged during the war.” executed by the Tito government, still AfMliated The Adamic committee was started three years ago in opposition to Messrs. Adamic ard Balokovic i, already-established United
also are honorary president and | Yugoslav Relief Fund of America, president, respectively, of the Unit-| This group
ed Committee of South- Slavic | is sponsored by the American Amerigats, #h SULRIgRY Tho propa. Friends of Yugoslavia, Inc, of § gency. which William M. Chadbourne, A Spokesman at ts national head- |, rominent attorney, is national quarters here said today the relief pb : committee moved tb a separate | “7 HE AbOTrne. comiitiee a a office at the outset of the war but! 2 achourpe © of the national
member agency is Will ln fated with ‘the Unite | war fund. The Adamic committee
“They do the relief work,” the | | is not. Although there already was Spokenar explained, “while we do | One relief agency in the fleld, the the propaganda.” President's war relief control board Nevertheless, in return for the | broke a precedent and licensed the $2 contribution, the committee for | | Adamic. committee as a competitor. Yugoslav relief yesterday passed The. control board of Feb. 3 reout propaganda pamphlets of the united committee. They included |
an elaborate, 36-page, red-white- | the report, collected $435,324, spent
and-blue magazine, setting forth the achievements of the Tito gov- | $194,062 lov Yerie!l, spent 197401
ernment in photographs with |
laudatory captions. { flayed by the So- |
Vie process. Once our aid is cut off, however, Yugoslav living standards will rapidly decline to the Soviet level: - Marshal Tito, like Marshal Stalin, is willing to subject his unhappy subjects to as many years of priva‘tion as necessary to complete the Sovietization of Yugoslavia. But in order to shift the blame for the human suffering produced by treating men like guinea pigs, he has got to create a scapegoat. U. 8. Aid No Longer Needed The scapegoat he has selected is capitalism in general and the United States in particular. Like Marshal Stalin, Marshal Tito accepted our military assistance during the war and our relief supplies immediately afterward, because he neded such help to maintain himself in power. But now that he’is becoming the absolute master of Yugoslavia, thanks to a Communist gestapo and an Americanequippéd army of 500,000 men, he is ready to isolate his country from -. the western world in order to proceed with an intensive program of forceable Sovietization, This is the basic reason why Yugoslav Communist pilots proved 50 willing to attack American transports. That unoffending American pilots and their passengers were ~~ killed or wounded means nothing to ~~ men who have been taught to glorify an all-powerful state at the expense of the individual. Why Just Now? ‘The reason for Marshal Tito's having chosen this particular moment in history for committing such bloody deeds are to be sought in the dangerous-game of power polinow being viet Union and its satellites. The Comintern, apparently, hopes
which is non-political.
licensed fund-raising agencies. The Adamic committee, according to
and had an unexpended balance of $317,886 at the end of 1945, Communist Front The third Tito propaganda agency | tee's promotion expenses at 43 per | to terrorize the American public is the American Slav Congress, a | cent. The average for the board's] into withdrawal of the remnants of | Communist- -front group of which | licensees varies between 3 and 8| China and | MT: Balokovic is vice president a5 | per cent, well as president of its New York | Ss ——————————————— Failing that, the Comintern hopes | branch. PLAN CARD PARTY to exact concessions in return for| Last year the American Commit-| The ladies of Holy Angels church| not to repeat such be- | t6€ for “Yugoslav Relief started a {will hold a public card party Sunhavior. | million-dollar medical relief cam- day at 8 p. m. in the parish school One ‘such concession would pe | PRIS. Coupled - with it, the com- hall. The August committee control of the Dardanelles. Another | mittee put on a national drive to be in charge.
a pu IEA of Trieste | ira wom seen YUQOSlavia Fear U. S. Fliers Photograph Massing Armies
A’third would be access to By LUDWELL DENNY
‘Perwian gulf, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer | Anglo- American army guarding the|
ELECTED BY D. OF A, LONDON, Aug. 23.—Yugoslavia Morgan line or north into the! has been shodting down unarmed Klangenfurst region in Austria.
Mrs. Fern Lineback of Indianapohs was We ad ed poe Unitee States pussnger planes and of the Daughters of |, ing Americans in’ fear her exmerica at the Hotel Lincoln. She ‘tensive military concentrations - in ' elected yesterday: at the group's that area are being mapped. session, + Marshall Tito and Jpseph Stalin, .\his Russian master, are preparing, for war, if necessary. At any cost | cides the seizure of Trieste is necesthey will try to prevent foreign air |sary to prevent genuine interor ground observation of their | national control. activities, assuming without evi-| Current interpretations by some dence that the Anglo-Americans are observers that the shooting down of engaged in the same espionage ‘and U. 8. planes is merely pressure on | war plans as the Soviets. [the Paris peace conference—or ex-
on call either west against the
an immediate attack. lieved,” rather,
It is be-
mum secrecy concerning their gen | eral military preparations for the
| have brought down peaceful trans-| underlings com; — pletely misjudge Bors 8 on Pouge from Vienna to Italy| the situation, J . ategic top-hinge of Titos| Yugoslav “irresponsibility” is from - major military line, There is good ithe top, not from the bottom. The reason to believe there are large | control of Tito over acts of his aio hat ioe of Yugoslav troops all subordinates and over public dem- ; live, prepared to move| onsrations 4 well njgh absolute.
Henry|
ported on the 1945 finances of the;
for administration and publicity |
The report listed this commit-|
will |
It is not probable that Tito plans, that the Yugoslavs| are determined to preserve maxi-,
time, if ‘and when; the Kremlin de-|
The area where Yugoslav fighters cessive zeal on part of Yugoslav|
ined. savgeant. =o. 8 iW Dawson “has clashed with, the Pe ways, physically and. legally, on vehicles and in the courts.
POLICE HUNT SECOND * DOPE ROBBER HERE
City police today were pressing their search for a narcotic addict who held up a drug store at 902 Virginia ave. yesterday, taking $200 and several Inmdred morphine tablets. The holdup maiked the second raid within a week in which a dope addict resorted to banditry to secure narcotics. : Police asserted the scar-faced bandit was oné of a number preying on drug stores, doctors’ offices and similar establishments since the normal supply of narcotics wag cut off recently by the expose of an Indianapolis dope ring. Middle-aged and of natty attire, the bandit yesterday - sipped soft drinks and leafed through a detective magazine awaiting the arrival of Wilbur C. Stokes, store manager, who had gone to the bank. Threatened with an automatic pistol, the druggist surrendered the contents of three morphine bottles and $200 which he had in his he tnd ns 6 pockets.
NAZARENES PLAN SOUTHPORT CAMP
The Indiana District Assembly of the Church of the Nazarene will | establish a camp site for future | gatherings at Southport. The assembly which is in annual session at the Roberts Park Meth|odist church voted yesterday to invest $11,300 in the site. They | re-elected the Rev. Gene Phillips as district superintendent, named {the members of the administrative board and ordained six ministers. | The new board members are the Rev. Jesse Towns of Clermont; the | Rev, C. B. Cox and Dewey Locke of Indianapolis, and Harry Williams of New Castle, Newly ordained ministers include: the Rev. Thomas Ahlemen, who goes to Flackville; the Rev. Edward McFarland, Kurtz; the Rev. Lowell Listenberger, Mackey; the Rev. Lee Bates, and the Rev. Charles Kale, Ladoga. James Ford was ordained {an evangelist,
2 OF GREAT LAKES STRIKES ARE ENDED
DETROIT, Aug. 23 (U. P.).—The C, I. O. National Maritime union today ended its strike against Standdrd -Oil Co. of Indiana and announced a second settlement with Bethlehem Transportation Co. in the N. M. U. strike against Great ‘Lakes ship operators. Joseph Curran, N.‘M. U. chief, said that the Standard strike was | called off after a majority of union | members in. Great Lakes ports had satified an. agreement, providing a 48-hour work week: He ordered the strikers to return immediately to Standard oil tankers. Bethlehem followed Standard's lead which provided the pol break in the nine-day-old tie-up 0 Great Lakes vessels, -
anc whattaya know? The company|’
Here for Parley
L Edward A. Ghorra, acting consul general of Lebanon, arrived here this morning to attend the four-day convention of midwest Federation of American-Syrian-Lebanon clubs, lubs. (Details, page 2.)
CONTRACTS FOR PIPE IN VETERANS’ HOUSES
The works board today awarded two contracts totaling $22,000 for water and sewer pipe connections for 196 veterans’ houses. here. The William D. Vogel construction firm received an $11,276 contract to install the utility. fixtures for 96 Houses in the Belmont park dwelling project for Negro veterans. For 100 additional houses at the Stout field housing project, the board awarded the Tri-State Construction: Co. a $10,797 contract for the installation of pipe. The contracts stipulate that work must be completed within 90 days.
Pigs Keep Coming
. 1 Into Painter's Ken John Hardrick, 3309 Prospect st. looked out the window this morning for an inspiration on the landscape he was painting. The Hoosier artist rubbed his eyes—pork—on the hoof in the middle of his lawn. A mama pig and four little porkers. He glanced at his painting and then out the window again—pigs. The artist shooed the huge pig and her charges off his lawn and returned to his work. Another
injured when he was ousted from glance outside revealed ‘the pigs
again. In disgust Mr. Hardrick called the | | police.
AOEREALA, Mien rar SX WE LL they vould send a truck. : When the police left the pigs re-
appeared. ' Mr. Hardrick is having | trouble with two landscapes—his |}.
lawn and his painting.
Driver Fined $25
L. Niblack.
date. tore off her clothes.
nish her with clothes..
as dieshard
By the time they arrived | son's example in regard to on the pigs scooted away into a nearby
For Stripping Girl
For stripping his girl friend of | her clothes in a fit of anger because | she had another date, a cab driver | Earl Ross, 46, of 825 Lexington ave., was fined $25 and costs today in| municipal court 4 by Judge John |
Policeman Myron Rance reported | that Ross and his flance were rid- | ing in the cab, when the girl told him she was going to have another The cab driver became so | incensed that he halted his car in| the 400 block Washington st. and
The girl dashed into a dark doorway until police officers could fur-
FIGHT SPREADS T0 MANCHURIA
Die-Hard Negotiations for Peace Continue. By WALTER LOGAN
United Press Staff Correspondent NANKING, Aug. 23. — Chinas
¢
| mushrooming civil war spread into | | Manchuria today with heavy fight-
ing reported northeast of Mukden ace negotiators continued their efforts in Nanking. The newspaper Hsin Min’ Pao
said Communist troops swarmed down to the banks of the Sungari | river, occupying government. bridgeheads and engaging Nationalist forces in the Hailung area, 130
Thorn-Pricked Lad Fighting to Live
Speechless and partially paralyzed by lockjaw resulting from a thorn prick, a 14-year-old boy was still
' fighting for survival at Riley hos-
pital today. The victim, Ernest Rippetoe of Vincennes, is given only a slim chance to live by aWtending physicians, A three-quarter-in ¢ h thorn pierced his heel as he was running near his home last ‘week. When his parents noticed the puncture appeared infected they brought him to Riley hospital. Now under an oxygen tent, the lad already has received multiple doses of penicillin and 100,000 units of tetanus antitoxin,
miles northeast of Mukden, Gen. Chou En-lai, chief Com munist negotiator, and Premier T. V. Soong, Chiang Kai-shek's roth er-in-law and president of t X= ecutive Yuan cabinet, om Ss talks in the capital as tension Increased throughout China.
May Ask U. S. to Rule
Meanwhile, & reliable non-Amer-ican diplomatic source said today that the Chinese government was considering asking the United States or the United Nations to take over administration of disputed areas of China in which the civil war 1s going ‘on. The reports of fighting in Manchuria came after a two-month lull in hostiljties there. The clash developed in an area about 160 miles south of Harbin, near the Korean border. Press dispatches from the southern province of Honan said Nationalist Chief-of-staff Gen. Chen Cheng. had launched “successful” counter-attacks along the Lunghai railway, recapturing Chushenchen, 15 miles south of Kaifeng. Other Nationalist attacks were reported in Shédntung province, 22s of Kaifeng.
ANDERSON GETS DISC PLANT ANDERSON, Aug. 23 (U. P.).—| Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood,
phonograph record factory here.
200 INDONESIANS DIE
IN ATTACK ON DUTCH
BATAVIA, Aug. 23 (U, P.).—Tue Dutch government information service confirmed today that 200 Indonesians had been killed two
days ago in another battle with Dutch marines. ~ The latest fight occurred on the outskirts of Soerabaya, the statement said, More than 700 Indonesians were made prisoners when the natives attacked a post defended by the marines. The latest casualties brought to 600 the number killed in action in the last two weeks, The government said the Dutch lost 15 killed in the same two-week period. Dutch sources attributed their low casualty figures to the fact that the Indonesians were trying to
attack well-trained and wellequipped troops in fortified positions,
ARCTIC MANEUVERS ‘ROUTINE’ Times Foreign Service HONOLULU, T. H, Aug. 23.—U. {S. naval authorities togay emphatically denied that the' recent presence of four American submarines {in Arctic waters had constituted
| PARAGRAPH OF | TREATY GETS OK
Then Delegates Debate on A Single Word.
PARIS, Aug. 23. — The Italian political commission of the peace conference today approved — after four weeks of talking — the first paragraph of the preamble to the Big Four draft of the Italian peace treaty. It was the first paragraph of any of ‘the five Hitlerite satellite treaties to be considered and approved by any commission of the confer ence, The commission—which eventually will have to decide such con troversial issues as Trieste and the Italo-Yugoslav frontier—finally got down to work late this afternoon. But the commission immediately bogged down in another long debate ~<this time on the meaning of the words in the preamble. The Netherlands delegate proe posed an amendment to make the preamble read: that Italy. “undertook” rather than declared war against the United Nations. Soviet Delegate Andrei Vishinsky opposed the Netherlands amend-
| ment.
Want’ No New Revisionism > New Zealander W. R. Jordan sup= ported the Netherlands delegate because he thought it, more precise wording and it obviated the chance ob “some new Hitler” using the wording to justify his case for a revision of the treaty. Secretary of State James P. Byrnes was not present at the com-
represented by James C. Dunn, ame bassador-designate to Italy. More than 250 “fundamental” treaty amendments are to be cone sidered. Strong support was gathering among the delegations to give the Italian people greater credit for knocking out fascism and fighting the late part of the war on the allied side. Italy has urged a re-
vision of the treaty preamble come
today announced plans to erect a|anything but routine training ma- posed by the Big Four to stress this | neuvers.
| point.
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1:00 P. M. SATURDAY
Daily Hours: 9:45 to 5:15 . \
Ayres Tea Room and Downstairs Lunch Room will be open Saturday from
11:00 A. M. to 12:45 P. M.
45 Apa br.
-,
~~
our orgonization. If you like to sell .
obvious. If you like to sew...
trimmers, elevator operators . .
INDOORS, OUTDOORS ... ALL AROUND THE TOWN
You find Ayres’ employees ot work! Working with selesbook or order book, with typewriters and tools, with facts and figures, with creative ideas. This means that whatever type of work yow|
ore fitted for, chonces are you'll find o job te your liking im)
in our Drapery workrooms. Mechanical? , . . we hove o foot, of 63 trucks to be kept in good condition. A craftsman? .-.-, furniture, finishing and repairing offers interesting work in pleasant workrooms,
We have indoor jobs (secretaries, stock clerks, window
porison shopping). And when you come in for an interview
you'll find we ore as much concerned with making sure the job
is Wight for you, as we ore in just filling the job!
OPENINGS NOW FOR:
SALESPEOPLE PAYROLL CLERKS 3 SECTION MANAGERS CLERICALS OFFICE WORKERS DISPLAY WORKERS STENOGRAPHERS ELEVATOR STARTERS BILLING AND Conriohine HOUSEKEEPERS OPERATORS RECEIVING DEPARTMENT AND INSPECTORS WAREHOUSE WORKERS
ALTERATION WORKERS
.~ but of course thot’s|
let us tell you about openings)
. outdoor jobs (delivering, com.
mission meeting. The U. S. was’
J | 4
%
9]
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i
8 4
|
' FRIDAY,
Co
SALAR RESTO HOUR!
$13,670, 00 Final Ap Monda
‘A 1947 civil 54 cents high erty valudtior $1.57 levy, was the city counc The council review last ni session marke trionics. Most in the budget last week was flat 15-cent-an hourly wage e Council men Monday night The $13,670, in history, the: the gauntlet o tax adjustme; state tax board ity to make takes effect ni Park Pa
At the last m men reaped p the park depar from the salari executives, inal Baul V, Brown Councilmeh | C. Dauss, A. | A. Brown and | hatchet. This at Mr, Brown, blamed for all the council park budget. The overall parks budget council orderec park board to
' divisions of th
. came " Kealing the bu
CTH...
recreation, whi dered left .inta Mr. Brown s idea how this only immediats of was a $500( certs.
Make | The whack a after cf
With = elabc straight faces ducted a moc from the buc chief financial hospital. This positior man Kealing" gRealing At f art fg I$ "Ti was “voted” “Why, if yc i | A “But, Ed,” & suasively, “wh: vestigator at t we find exper down. Isn't less?” “All right, Kealing. “Go Cut everybody life miserable. I'll make my night. I'll exp is really padgys
-— "You cut
people becaus the park boar for you, the p afraid of the Go Aheac After the members tack} ment and then Indianapolis | appropriation one vote. Before the hatcheting sl Commissioner $300 in salary and fire perso averted by a ! Phe last ac! elimination of ance premium away with ins erty. This wa that the city i its own losses ! run, effect a s
FAR WI PERCH
A special r state fair, Au will be the na sponsored by association of Over $5000 fered during Sept. 3 and 4 the state fair ment, includir draft horses, The nation: ing a post-we Judges for t ment will be Haxten, Wat Charles Wen the gold mec Robert Watsc
LAST OF GANG U
CHICAGO, last two men “green. car” g ized northern in stolen gre under arrest t slaying and n Richard Scl Kapsis, 17, wi by three Kan nearby Elgin } into the han stepped out © The young sought for ne were wanted mobile thefts, ries and the f ing on Aug. war ‘veteran,
