Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1946 — Page 3
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_ THURSDAY, AUG. 29, Ee G.. %. 1048 U 1946 ‘THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ons | U. S jE 6 Nazi Organizations Of 8 Million Murde re URGES BLANKET HUNT 3 i
©
tt ————————
NE NAMED TY BOARD
rowne has been Tyndall as a Rer of the safety ; Ceril 8. Ober, become treasurer nty G. O. P, com-
Hoosier Happenings
C. of C. Finds Lost Pajamas
MUNCIE—The Muncie Chamber of Commerce strives to serve. That's
a
Calvary Christian Church School to Open Sept. 9: 9
2 brokerage salesoseley & Co. He first safety board
versity law school world war I vether of two world Jeorge O. Browne A. Browne, 0 is 46, has been brokerage firm for
: ’ : st. to find a surplus alr of pajamas. ‘Parity Ratio Is 122, Four P peje i i home on the night of Aug. 20. He didn't know the name of the tourist Points Up in Year. home, but described it in enough detail that Mr. Paul was able to Yacht Abandoned. ; : : WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (U, Po, find ‘the lost sleeping garments % SOUTH HAVEN, Mich Aug 2 ’ » . Verdict in Nuernberg Trial intersection where individuals have| (U. P. ~Coastguardsmen conduct D . [today that the farmer's cost of : . (been injured recently In accidents ue Sept. 23, Other | fe es 25 ir wot rns linet Fifty Tires Punctured that happened at places where street| EAD today for Chester Granath, Cases to Follow. month ending Aug: 10 40. set new! HAMMOND-—Police estimated | lights had been knocked out. Chicago, and two other crewmen hy 8 Aug. 'that more than 50 tires were pune-| The public is asked to help catch of the 92-foot yacht Verona which The Christian sch itio y ’ q J United Press Staff Correspondent | in the ® New Calvary SO ohio ¢hool addition and new front design for the Calvary tabernacle are shown of record." wave of vandalism here, ‘Fifteen |ing lights. Power company repre- north of here last night. NUERNBERG, Aug. 20.—The| t———— nari . It said the index of prices paid car owners reported their tires had sentatives said that lights in cer-| A coastguard rescue ship, which United States asked the war crimes Pl. fo - Nur been punctured with an ice. pick. In tain areas “are being knocked out|reached the Verona 17 minutes beea Tor urses 5 Ca re wrmally buys stood at 214 per cent, the tubes. Several store own gone ml EL —— (aboard. The lifeboats was tapo, the S. 8. Black Shirts =: NEW ADDITION . . . of the 1910-14 average, chiefly be-|ers reported that plate glass win- \ four other Nazi organizations of the - bp V + | M d cause of increases.in the price ol dows have been damaged with gl glass same crimes against humanity as| or oO 10 IC ims S a e
Jack L. Monk, Grand Rapids,| GESTAPO S S Mich., motorist, wrote that he left the pajamas in a Muncie tourist, Would Be . Resins Find 3 " " ~The’ agricultars department. sai and forward them to Grand Rapids. ! girl last week in an ‘accident at an ed an air-sea search of Lake MichiBy DUDLEY ANN HARMON | y high in the department's 37 years iyred by vandals in & one-night the vandals who have been destroy-| Sank in heavy seas eight miles ; the farmer for the' things he tribunal today to convict the Ges- Y : ’ . some cases the valves were ripped as fast as we can put them in.” fore it sank, reported no one was WiLL BE USED clothing, food, household. supplies cutting tools.
{crewmen said, and it was believed the men had abandoned the vessel
Bumper Melon Harvest after it became apparent it would
SEYMOUR~—Jackson county is in
| { 8 member of the i ; 22 i rs | | ; mn sink. dist church, the 1aid Rains) the Nazi leadery in | Nurses are urgently needed to, “We have only 10 trained nurses | 479 hg time. 4 : WARSAW-—Mrs. Kathryn Wag- SHE Sudob of one of 1s biggest melon Mr. Granath's wife, Vera, said _ Masonic lodge the prisoners’ dock. ‘care for poliomyelitis victims at in. the entire hospital to supervise = e Se ne, Se Sone goner suffered shock ‘and a y' her husband left Chicago with the : U. S. Trial Counsel Thomas J. Riley hospital, |student nurses in the care of more €V€l Of prices received DY NL gopgiones when an abandoned Hundreds of truckloads of water-| yo.ong vesterday en route to Hole
l, advisory board Army, the Junto imist club.
I —— ———
melons and cantaloupes are leav= |ing the county daily. Melons are on sale at almost every farmhouse on highways of the county, partic-
than 200 patients, farmer rose two per cent, bringing | oon “plew up” as she was “Overworking of our present staff | that index to 249 per cent of the ning papers in the yard of hér | 1909-14 average. home. The resulting parity ratio stood The old cistern ‘had been filled {at 122, four points above a Year ... onec.and dirt. It is be- ularly west of Seymour and in the ago. This means the farmer t0- ji. 4 that a pocket of accumu. Brownstown and Vallonia vicinities. day is able to buy 22 per cent more| ,...4 gas was ignited by the aL
with the proceeds from his crops ‘bonfir ausi the bia h . . than he could buy in the base ee ps Ho eh Prowler Tries Pistol period 1910-14 : side of her house and showered | LOGANSPORT—An unidentified The department said the increase’ , .. ih dirt and stones. man who entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hershey here just
in prices received by the farmer — resulted from record hog prices and . lcouldn’t resist trying out a revolver + boosts in the price of eggs, dairy Vandals Smash Lights he found in a bedroom drawer. products and cotton. These offset. KOKOMO-—Police have opened a Rose Marie Hershey, 7, sald the “protect the light” drive as a re- stranger walked in, uninvited,
lower grain, chicken and (fruit prices. sult of the death of a 6-year-old hooked the back door and began
Dream of Rev. Hoekstra To Be Realized.
The Calvary Christian school will | he | be completed and open to pupils {from the first through the eighth| grades Sept. 9.
Dodd in a summation of the Amerjcan case, said guilty verdicts against the organizations would lay | legal foundations for trial of rank and file Nazis. "A declaration of criminality, said, will let all the world know that no individual criminal shall escape justice. | Verdict Due Sept. 23 “Mankind will know,” he said, | “that no crime will go unpunished because it was committed in the name of a political party or of a state; that no crime will be passed | by because it is too big; that no criminals will avoid punishment be- || cause they are too many.” An official source said the ver-| ; dict on Hermann Goering and the | Mr. Ripley of the school. All!
1 azi les i on Se Be a techs wi be ned i, d Sept. e te and courses will conform to
was expected 0 recess Saturday | | . for preparation of the verdict. The the tandaras of the state depart Arrests | ment of education.
Nazi leaders have been on trial : J since last November. | The educational addition will, being made! provide for 150 students. A wood-
land, Mich.
She sald there were two other men with him. She identified them only as Fred, an engineer from Detroit, and Ben, a Japanese American cook from Chicago. “I planned to go along,” she added, “but for some reason, I ons know why I didn't.”
The hospital has only two reg|istered nurses to tend 40 polio pa-! | tients, 13 of whom are in critical is threatening to make care of all |condition. These include four iron our patients inadequate.” {lung cases. [ Miss Peacock advised that trained! Appealing to nurses discharged nurses will be accepted for as. little {from the armed forces and any un- as two days per week duty. Dwane Risley | CTPIOYE trained nurse, Miss Mary So desperately does the hospital ben oad Peacock, director of Indiana univer- need nurses that several students of-Iinoks, educa- sity nurses’ training school, said |who graduate from nurses’ training tor of 10 years | today: 'Saturday will be pressed into service experience "as - 3, “8ix full-time trained nurses are immediately without the customary
| Srade and su. [needed needed |i immediately at Riley. two- weeks’ vacation.
Tastructor in "Sand Bullet Cuts
EFLRE POLES HOLD 50 Send Bullet: Cute arp arachure reri |, S, CITIZENS WASHINGTOP, Aug. 20 (U. P).
he army air forces today un- :
i the “sand bullet,” a new STRAUSS ce . i JO Are Declining, radilon wih a buck oF fomorron
device designed to eliminate landSAYS: Embassy Says. Arrangements are
ransacking drawers in the bedroom. Finding the revolver, he fired a single shot into the ceiling and then left the home. Nothing was missed but a wrist watch, and it was found later in the yard.
accepted the of-| fice of principal |
ing hazards for parachuting troops It consists of a U- shaped tube 'with an explosive charge in the for six simultaneous trials of in-| Work shop, crafts room, rates | WASHINGTON, Aug. 9 (U. P). | ; he tach end. A weighted wire which i i lan. Ho: and 60 American citizens within t s Nuertibers, Furth and Regensburg JOouts are Inolided In hee pla tl last year and the United States has | touches the ground before the par e American zone. The school is the realization of a and the recoil of the explosion slows ireach them, it was learned today. | h y Mr, Dodd, representing Chiet U.|dream of the ‘Pastor of the Calvary | “arog of the arrests were reported | Ue downward progress of the chute. H. k 8. Prosecutor Robert Jackson, Hoekstra. Under direction of the |; Nazi organizations, some of which | Heaviest loads and the rest of the the Poles say are still operating; { fall is like ‘falling off a chair,’ ” the said all of the organizations were Was built in 1940 2 has Seadily | the problem was complicated by Po- |, < wih a man responsible for “criminal conspiracy, grown in scope and membership {land’s claim that many were Behish) aggressive war, mass murder, slave ganomination. labor, racial and religious perse- Insist on Free hung 1 I Meanwhile, it was learned that millions of innocent people.” ‘MERGER OF 9 TONES He accused the six organizations Poland hold free national elections | IGNORED BY MANY this winter. It will disregard the | o a eight million persons. IN GERMANY NEARS statement by the Polish embassy | CHICAGO, Aug. 26.—In spite of . He said each of the 22 Nazi big in Washington that U. 8. insistence | all the admonitions about the imwith one or more of the organiza-|_ plans to join the British and !ereignty. (and how to brush them which the tions—the Reich cabinet, the Ges-| American zones in Germany are far | The United States’ position is that average American gets from early (Black Shirts), the Political Lead- advanced and should be announced || for free Polish elections in the dentists and advertising, he does ership corps and the S. D, an! shortly, state department officials | potsdam and Yalta conferences. {not do as good a joo of toothbrush- o made up of picked S. S. men. | The conversations for economic | Potsdam the Big Three merely) This appears from a study of “They were all a part of, and|ynity between the two zones are noted” the pledge of the Polish toothbrushing habits reported by by Hitler and perfected by his| closely followed by officials here. | but assumed nd responsibility for college of dentistry, Ohio State uniclique into the most absolute] keynote in the plan is expected! it, versity, in the journal of the Amertold the court in his summary of| tion in the northwestern region now ican embassy in Warsaw had been|. The average American, he finds, evidence piled up against the groups under British control. lable to communicate with only a takes about 267 strokes to brush his “Deprive the Nazi conspiraiors of peen unable thus far to push coal were encouraged, however, by the sides next to the tongue. these organizations and they could proguction anywhere near pre-war | fact that the arrests have been on The crosswise method of brusheriminal aims.” lone of the chief benefits to come have already been released. tists, still is used by one out of . illion and Half Brownshirts | from unification will be application These quarters revealed that there three persons. Time spent for the M q and 2,000,000 “identifiable” members, zens in Poland who want to return [ihe tree minutes sdvised by den- : ists. e of the five war toe tages one othe me Thief Abandons
or supplibs. harge of sand in | _Poland has arrested between 50 Center and a charg dustrialists and lesser figures at| department, Kitchen and dining | ‘had only meager success trying to Achuting object sets off the charge Essential Part of Plot tabernacle, the Rev. Raymond G.| lased on cimarges of membership, “This recoil almost stopped the e now back in the United States, Rev. Mr. Hoekstra, the tabernacle | AAF said. It has not yet been is affliated with the Apostolic rather than American citizen WARNING cutions and brutal mistreatment of DENTISTS {the U. 8. will continue to insist that! of guilt for the murder of more than wigs in the dock were connected, WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (U. P).|on this point violated Polish sov-| portance of keeping the teeth clean tapo, 8. A. (Brown Shirts), 8. 8.| assumed responsibility for work- | childhood on via parents, teachers. intelligence unit for the Gestapo said today. The Poles, however, hold that at ing as dentists advise. essential to, the police state planned | taking place in Berlin, but are being | government to hold a free election, Dr. Hamilton B. G. Robinson of the tyranny of modern times, Mr. Dodd; pe a drive to boost coal produc-| Informed officials said the Amer- ican Dental association today. in the last 10 months. British officials reportedly have handful of the prisoners. They, teeth but almost never brushes the never have accomplished their levels. U. S. officials predict that | the downgrade and a few persons ing, universally condemned by denThe 8. A., with between 1,500,000 of American mining know-how. were some 20,000 American citi-| teeth averages 67 seconds instead of to this country. a ae groups. Smalest was the Reich
and others in
Of the 20,000, officials said the
greater part were persons born in ‘DENIES NA NATION FACES
voi Floor
cabinet with 48. $ Mr. Dodd estimated the Leader- | 850 Loot i in Chase ship corps and the S. 8. organization | oi 4 had about 600,000 members, the] A ~50eak ‘thie! ‘was forced to Gestapo 30,000 to 40,000 and its in- abandon his $850 loot yesterday to former arm the S. D. 3000 to 4000, throw off a determined coal comassisted by thousands of voluntary pany employee who pursued him in stool pigeons known as “V-men.” {an automobile. Shows How Conspiracy Worked | Hearing the sound of “rattling Mr. Dodd painstakingly traced the money” while he was standing on bloody history of each group, at-|truck scales at the Manley-O'Don-tempting to show how they were nell Coal Co. 2108 Columbia ave. |
used by the conspirators “from thep3)-year-old® Harold Farrar turned | and saw the thief lifting a metal]
establishment of the Nazi party in 1920 until the conclusion of the war in 1945.” “Thus the party planned, the cabinet legislated, and. the 8S. S. 8. A., Gestapo and the military leaders executed,” he said. The cabinet started planning aggressive war secretly between 1933 and 1935, and by 1939 plans to use prisoners of war and slave labor were ready, Mr. Dodd asserted.
box off the top of the office safe. As the robber ran from the office with the box under his arm, Mr. Farrar jumped into-his car and gave chase. After a three-block pursuit, the thief dropped the box to] the sidewalk and disappeared be- | tween two houses.
NAVY ONLY ‘AGENT’ Faked Incident Started War IN CARRIER’S CRUISE
The Brown Shirts, he said, helped] WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (U. P.).| drum up war spirit, the Black Shirts The navy was merely “acting as marched into the Sudetenland and gn agent of the state department’ Poland and operated a global spy when it sent the 45,000-ton carrier network, | Franklin D. Roosevelt and accomThe American prosecutor charged |panying warships on their Medithat the Gestapo faked the incident|¢arranean cruise, a navy spokesman which set off world war IL He | guid today. accused Gestapo agents of Te The navy official said the state | ing concentration camp prisoners at | department actually planned port- | the radio station at Gleiwitz “so a8|yy_port the itinerary. to afford Hitler a justification for Russian newspapers have charged the attack on Pdland.” |openly that the cruise was a show The leadership corps, Mr. Dodd of strength designed to influence said, set up the slave labor program| galkan politics. which gave human beings “less at-| These charges tention and less decent concern william F, Halsey, than primitive man often gave to|mander of the U. 8. third fleet, to his brutes.” tell reperters yesterday: “With a crassness unknown tol ordinary domestic animal care di-|g warships go. rectives providing for the abortion|4qamn please. " of female laborers were distributed, id Mr. Dodd told the tribunal. 214 Million Gassed, Burned
Accusing the Leadership corps o
prompted Adm. |
welll go where we
‘TRUCK DRIVER'S LEG . BROKEN BY ELEVATOR
earrying out the policy of Iynching| Fred Davis, 43, Terre Haute, was allied airmen and the S. 8. of | in serious condition in Methodist executing prisoners of war, Mr. Dodd | hospital today with a broken left gaid this was a natural outgrowth of | leg and back injuries after he had the attempt to annihilate the Jews heen pinned beneath an elevator and other opposition groups. | which hit him as he stepped into The 8. 8. he said, also extermi-|the bottom of the shaft. nated 2,500,000 persons by gassing| Police said he stepped in the eleand burning in its “sojourns in|vator shaft, at the Indiana Transfer sadism.” & Refrigeration, Co., 240 8. Pennsyl“It is a strange feature of this|vania st. ‘get a plank to brace trial that counsel for the respective|the wheels of his truck, which was organizations have not sought to delivering frozen food. deny these crimes but only to shift| The elevator, rarely used, accordresponsibility,” Mr. Dodd said. “The|ing to company officials, was oper- |g, fact is that all of thése o iza- (ated by two workers who were tions united in carrying out the|making electrical repairs on the criminal program of Nazi Germany. |third oor of the building.
-
\
wartime com-|
“It's nobody's business where U.|
this country but taken to Poland SHORTAGE OF LABOR
{by their parents during two large| { movements: (1) when Poland be-| WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (U. P.). —Predictions that the nation faces
{came free after world war I and (2) during the depression which a general labor shortage were chalbegan in 1929. lenged today by Director Robert C. Only about 100 of them have Goodwin of the U, S. employment service,
| been repatriated since the end of Mr. Goodwin said employment
! the war, | gained in June but that sizable
OPA PROBES 10 AUTO | pools of unemployed still exist. VIOLATIONS DAILY “Before it can be said that this | country has a general labor shortWASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (U. P). | age, unemployment must be re—OPA said today it is handling an | duced below the current level of average of 10 cases daily in its in- | 2,270,000 workers reported by the vestigation of the auto black market | bureau of the census,” he said. {and expects the number to mount | as new car production increases. William E. Remy, chief of OPA | auto enforcement, said his staff HOLY LAND VILLAGES |of 400 soon would be bolstered a JERUSALEM, Aug. 29 (U. P).— another 200 agents to step up the A force of 1000 British 6th airborne fight against the flourishing black division troops resumed their search market in new and used cars. for arms today in the southern He said OPA would continue to Palestine Jewish villages of Dorot | watch used car sales but that the and Ruhama. | primary emphasis would be on the] Troops searched. the two villages {new car market as production in-| yesterday without finding comcreased. Thus far, he said, one out! promising evidence. They called off of every five retailers checked by | the hunt overnight, but resumed it the agency has been found selling | today with support of tanks and cars at over-ceiling prices. {armored cars.
"IN INDIANAPOLIS
MARRIAGE LICENSES BIRTHS
mond H. White Jr., 2307 N. Talbott: | Ywins I™ Patricia Ruth Chamberlain, 731 Carlyle : pl. At St. Frangis—James, [John Lawrence Becknell, 3284 Guilford; : Belty Edith Lang, 2871 N., Sherman dr. | Howard 8. Mond: 950 East Drive, Woodru pt ; Rose ry Q'Boyle, 8424 E. 46th, | John . Alvord, Bay City, 'Mich.; Agnes | Jean Priebe, Bay City, Mich | Clyde L, Hursh, Pruett, 1. Meito on, 2154 N. Pennsylvania. p City Charles, Hai Norman Paul Elrod, 821 Markwoud; Edith | oy Coleman—Cecil, Jane Denison. Mae Ward, 4028 Madise | At Methodist—Thomas, Sachs; Will George Biewart, North Judson; Eliza- | Jean Cohee' Y Prankie oS 5 We gion; Esther | Clarence, Virginia Bock, and
,_ Elizabeth Drexler, M."*McCotte ar, 1814 N. Rural. At St. Vineent's—Maurice, Phyllis Miller; John William Conner, 1757 N. Gerrard dr.: |" Melvin, Dorothy Wright: John, Marjorie Mariorie Katherine McClary, E.|' Wetsler, and James, Anna Tabier Freem an, R. Meister, 1619 N. a! Boys Ruth B, Willlamson, 1619 N, Delaware. | At Coleman—John, Madline Tucker; James,
ary Richwine, and Virgil, Velma Flake. Jalnes Milton, McBride, 1124 8. ool At Methodist—dose h, Pauline Colker, and
ean Pred McGinnis, Marion; Elva Irene Jones, |, Carl, Marie Bec 26th, Marion es, Thelm
At St. Vinoent's—Jam McLeod; Prankiio Watt Winecoff, 2002 Winthrop;| Donald, Gladys Shull; William. Mary Margaret Elizabeth Green, 2902 Win-
Agnes Branson; Richard, Angeline Disrop. Borah’ Donald, Connie Cox; Lester, Herman E. Rollins, 741 N. New Jersey, Mary Elizabeth Phillips, 610 E. 12th, Chia 040
‘SEARCH RESUMED IN
Kathleen Welsse
girls At Methodistmleonard, Mary O'Connor girls. Girls At St. Framcis—Alvin, Julia Huebner; Le- ¥, Ruth Taylor; Robert, Harriei Allen, and Charles, Mary Ponsier
Inez Dell €U% | AL City—Charles, Edith McEklefrisch,
and |
8pilker, and William, Betty
: At eLioyd, Julin Monday, 1133 Belleino Hsia Tsai, Y. W. C. fontaine. Leonard M. Scott, 549 Kirck; Mary Lois Smith, 1200 W. Ray. Ven A na, an, 920 E 27th; Betty
20 E. 27th. Erskine. Miller, ; 138 Sarroliton; Edna Irene |
. Tacom Thom “ny oJoss N. Rural; Betty 8 Jlottwack, nN Rural. Clarence an ® Gus in, 430 8, Pennsylvania; Marilyn Jean field, 3117 N. Sherman d all heart t Long, leukemia
r. James Alfred Koors.. 2638 Manker; Mary |Henry Mack. 75, a Josephine Caldarone, 526 E. Merr we Wetherford, 84. at:1116 N. Goldie vs 918 N. N West; Virginia Bush, | lorena yp -” . ' I Goon 3333 a Capitol: Lul i TA81 Centra aphiol; Jv |
John ag Avery, 19 Par inn hotel: Neva May Avery, 3316 BE. Fall Creek blvd.
DEATHS
Clara Bluestein, 58, at hemorrhage John Bauer, 67, at hi Mamie Crain, 50, at 801 vascular renal, Charles Lohrman Robert McCord, 66,
City, cerebral
arteriosclerosis Lincoln, cardio-
80, at City, carcinoma. at City, arteriosclero-
Capitol,
a Sofanary thrombosis. L. Harris, 89, A eriosciero sis. J. Ln Hudson, 16, at City, sarcoms,
at 1617 N up;
a Eg y .
vy. Williams, 73, at 118 W, Weinii]
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