Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1946 — Page 3
Manuilski flew from Paris yesterday | Officers who arrested Landis, cool wave will have noticeably low | tered showers or thunderstorms |e prepared to air his case if Soviet] found a bloodstained handkerchief; temperatures. | are predicted are limited to |Atamter.. ............. Delegate Andrei A. Gromyko suc- in his pocket. He said he was 0) The reputation that high pres- | southeastern portioris of the [Botton ........l.ll.L aan ceeds in forcing the council to take route Wo his home in Ohio after| gure systems enjoy among those | South Atlantic states, some sec- Cinetanat : % # up the charges at its meeting late being “fired” earlier in the evening| who are weather-wise concerning | tions of the Rocky mountains {Slevalang a a today. by Cannon. | the clear skies normally associated | and the Pacific northwest, (See | Evansville . 0111. Britain, counting on support from Landis said Cannon was a pro- with high barometric readings is map). ot Wayne bei the “United States, hoped to keep fessional concessionaire. Canfon| yell supported by the cloudy areas | The low pressure centers indi- | Didisnspglis (City)
4 1%
.
da
‘Makes Second Effort to
0 Tel Jey . ! -
FRIDAY, AUG. 30, 198
Russia Seeks
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
.N. Showdown On Greece Before Electio
Sn,
a J
ASKS TOTAL OF ARMED FORCES ON ALIEN SOIL
—
Condemn Britain.
By ROBERT J. MANNING United Press Staff Correspondent LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Aug. 30.— Soviet Russia tried today to bring Britain and Greece to the United Nations dock before the Greeks vote
Sunday on the fate of their vagrancy. ; ——] ily A The dead man at first was identi- s I Fort WORTH aon y. fied as James Tully Ryan of Mil- ied
The Russiand struggled against Anglo-American opposition to force a pre-election hearing on charges that the present Greek government, supported by Britain, constitutes a threat to. the peace. ‘The move confronted the world organization with its second Rus-sion-sponsoreu effort to condemn what it considers British domination of Greece, the only Balkan nation outside the Soviet sphere. The first attempt was turned aside by the western powers after long debate in the ‘security council's opening sessions this year in London.
Ready With Case
Local Youths Look Over One of First State Fair Entries
SIX_ARRESTED
Unidentified Man Stabbed At Plaza Hotel.
(Continued From Page One)
Ray Koers and ‘Arthur Ratz in a squad car after he boarded the streetcar at Denny st. The policemen recognized Landis from a description broadcast on the police radio,
Charged With Vagrancy Both men were charged with
waukee, Wis. In response to a police radiogram, Chris Anderson, Milwaukee phoned to say he be- | lieved the dead man was Milton | Hansberry., | Mr. Anderson, a relative, was re- | ported en route to make definite identification and claim the body. An autopsy report on the dead man showed he died of two wounds, one of which pierced his heart. The other penetrated his chest wall
IN KNIFE DEATH
3
wearnin FOTOCAST via acu TeumHOTO i
U. S. Weather Bureau Forecost for Period Ending 7:30 AM EST 8-31-46
: Bi \ ven are »
KA T Louis, 4 jn
TL paso SAN rove sgl
Find Bloodstained Knife
Cannon's room was in compiete | disorder, Police said a drinking | party had been in progress in the
rook since early afternoon. The
iY whee SAT'S PEND COPA. 1946 EOW. L.A WAGNER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
National 24-Hour Forecast Summary: There will be a fall chill in the air over most of the nation
with overcast conditions limited to , flow arrows on the Fotocast to small parts of the same areas. | find the general unobstructed In the southwest desert regions | Wind direction for your locale,
The actual issue before the 11- as a cold Canadian air mass sends | and southern Florida the warm nation council was the complaint Stabbing occured about 8 P- n temperatures to . below normal | air south of the high and cold OFFICIAL WEATHER ; of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist A bloodstained pocketknife, be-| levels. Near freezing conditions | air front will maintain warm tem- |=—=United States Weather Bureag——s=s Republic that the Greek monarchist lieved to be the one used in the| are predicted for mountainous | peratures, but these will be about All Data in Central War Time = hi stabbing, was found in the bath- | : . 4 ~Atf. % Bu government—whose future hinges a valleys of West Virginia, Penn- | the only parts of the United | Sunrise ... 6:11 | Sunset...
on the Sunday elections—was fomenting friction in the Balkans. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitri
the issue off the council's agenda
Ee Sunes referendum in 1 to help him run a concession at the| country will be cloudless, accord= | concentrations of relatively warm |Mismi 3 i , a ] , Minnespolis-8t. Paul Greece. : : state fair, which opens today, Landis ing to the forecast. It will be | and lighter air are expected dur- |New Orleans. © Three Indianapolis youths look at one of the first livestock entries at the state fair, which opened ark
. ala { Russia Wins Preliminary ay. The fact that the meeting Wasi cooper Serr, 4418 Guilford ave.,
Left to right are Ryder Overstreet, 4408 Park ave.: admiring the 1300-pound Hereford junior yearling bull entered by the
room. It was taken to police head- | quarters for fingerprint and blood |
tests.
had hired Landis and the dead man
said. | The stabbing followed an anony- | mous phone tip to Capt. Jack Alkire |
Robert Winter, 4033 Carrollton ave, and
scheduled for today instead of newt Lanthus stock farm at Lowell, Ind, lot the police department to meet
for M
victory
week was a ! Russian delegate |
Gromyko. The
a Mr. Williams in the lobby of the hotel,
Name Not Registered
| country under the influence of the
sylvania and New York Saturday morning, while the rest of the
States free of sub-normal, un- | Precipitation 34 hrs. end, 1:30 & Total precipitation since Jan, 1
i | seasonably low readings. | Defcisbey since Jan.
Affected areas in which scat- The following table in other cities:
e temperae
inset map for large parts of the
cated on the map show where |Los Angeles
partly cloudy in a narrow band | extending from Texas to the Pa- | cific Northwest, along the Gulf coast and southeastern seaboard,
ing the forecast period, but no !okiahoma city major storm development is fore- Omaha Cranes cast in connection with them. | 8t. Louis Note the large and small air
$2282 230 3888228558558
aB22IIBIAI22IR3T
Washington, D. © :
flict with the trade program this
country hopes to get the United
efforts to adjourn until next Tues-
i i 10-h il| | L 1 1 |] 1 amid vit wit orn JROP SPY COUNT Teen-Agers Tour’ (0-0 MEETING
" Town With Police
No one by that name was registered.
SOCIALISTS 6 u. S. NOTE PROTESTS
SOVIET-SWEDE PACT
Nations to adopt. The program ine
Police believed the stab- |
. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (U. p,) volves breaking down world trades LEFT IN FR ANCE —The United States has protested | DaITiers on a reciprocal basis. to both Russia and Sweden against |
5 FLIER§ FUNERAL HELD ROME, Aug. 30 (U. P).—~Funeral state department announced today. services for five American airmen | Notes were sent to both Stock- who were shot down in Yugoslavia {holm and Moscow expressing the Aug. 19 were held today in the
day. : Mr. Gromyko also presented a surprise proposal that the council |
E require all United Nations to re-| port within two weeks on the number and disposition of all armed forces which they were maintain-| ing Aug. 1 in foreign territories
) . | {bing occurred 10 minutes later. . PE SYNE Ind, us yo HEARS WICKARD Further questioning by detectives | ).—Four ’'teen-age boys ay | indicated th | e drinking orgy had b- a $278,500,000 trade agreement about!
: : | _ toured the city with police guides {been attended by at least three or : to be signed by those countries, the No Explanation Given for ™e juveniles thought the tour REA Benefits Outlined at “canons een reported to 3-Party Coalition Believed {police that $500 had been stolen | Doomed.
: Cannon yesterday might refresh their memories on : Changed Plans. Lafayette Session.
other than former enemy countries. This bombshell was aimed American forces in China as well as British troops in Greece. But its immediate purpose seemed to be to lay groundwork for the Ukrainian case against Greece afd Britain,
TURNERS OPEN MEETING HERE
National Groups to Hold Joint Session Today.
{from his room. He later said the |
| burglaries they have committed in| | FRANKFURT, Aug. 30 (U. P)—
at|U S. military government legal of - | The four boys confessed to 20 P)
| ficials at Stuttgart said today that | American counter-intelligence offi-| cers had ordered that charges against 15 Germans seized as Soviet | spies in the U. S. zone be dropped.
Col. Juan Sédalio, chief of the American legal division in the! | Wuerttemburg-Baden area, said to- | day that he was instructed Tuesday by “the legal advisor to counter intelligence corps in Frankfurt” to drop the charges. This instruction, he said, was re-| ceived although intelligence officers told him only last week to prepare proceedings against the Germans. “As far as I am concerned,” he said, “the case is closed.”
Nearly 500 delegates and friends | No News of Release
gathered here today for the 41st!
national convention of the Amerfcan Turners in the Athenaeum. High points of the convention | will be. the joint session of the Turners and the women's auxiliary at 5 p. m. today and a garden party and fun fest tomorrow night. The convention will close Sunday. The Turners were founded by Germans who attempted to inau-
It wis not known whether the Germans still were in jail at Stuttgart. There was no immediate explanation of the contradictory situation. Yesterday counter intelligence spokesmen said that the 15 Germans would be tried by military government officials "and that so far as C. 1. C. was concerned “the case i¥*closed.”
gurate the democratic form of gov-| The Germans, led by Walter ernment in, their native land. | Kazmarex, were charged by the | Had to Flee Country | counter-intelligence - agents with |
They failed, had to flee the coun try and took refuge in the United States in 1848. |
At first the Turners gave their |
entire attention to teaching gym-| natics but later added music, lec-| tures and debates. The American Turners were the first to establish a college for the training of teachers for Turners’ societies. The school now is affili-| ated with Indiana university, Dr. W. W. Patty is dean of the college.
Indiana university, will take part on a discussion of the college at the 5 p. m. convention session today as will Dr. Patty and Mrs. Clara Hester, assistant professor of
physical education at the univer-|
sity. Judge Carl Weideman of Detroit, president of the Turners; George Seibel of Pittsburgh, past president; dent of the Athenaeum Turners; Mrs. Alice Moore of Davenport, Jowa, national auxiliary president; and Mr. Wells will be heard at a banquet tonight. Fred Martin, director of gymnasium classes, will conduct a dem-
' onstration at the garden party to-
morrow night, Other attractions will be singing by the Maennerchor under the leadership of Clarence Elbert; dramatics, directed: by Norman Green, and numbers by the orchestra brass section, directed by Constantine Borshoff. All those on the program are Turners. : The convention is open to the public. : FINGERS LACERATED IN MEAT GRINDER Mrs. Zena Gwin of 5302 Massachusetts ave. was in Methodist hospital today after she caught and severely lacerated the fingers of her right hand in an electric meat grinder. - City hospital .internes, unable to remove Mrs. Gwin's fingers from the machine, dismantled the grinder and took it to the hospital, where it was removed. Doctors said Mrs.
‘Gwin probably will not lose any
fingers, 3X :
trying to infiltrate the military gov-| ernment system “with Germans; sympathetic to Soviet Russia and communist plans for expansion al| over Germany.” Kazmarek has signed a confession of his activities, yesterday's announcement said. In it he stated that he received 5000 marks from Russian repatriation officers last fall for reporting on American troop
the last two months. LAFAYETTE, Ind, Aug. 30 (U, Money had been tossed back into
| the —Rural electrification has not Toom rough an open transom.
burglaries, ‘but they couldn't re- only greatly improved farming
member the rest. .Some of the cOn-! athods and boosted agricultural | MOLOTOV ACCUSES fessed lootings were not on police production but has also created| reports, but they were verified when nore business { : . the merchant victims were called. | Siness for factories, mines
Police say the total may go-into and the main street businessman, several thousand dollars. | Claude R. Wickard, REA admin- (Continued From Page One)
re BF viele, sald foday, Yugoslav delegate plowed ahead A RED CROSS { Mr. Wickard spoke at the closing| with his speech attacking Greece. session of the five-day meeting of The Chinese chairman sat helpless-
FOR NURSING AID the American Institute of Co-Opera-|ly. wondering what to do.
tion this morning. Spokesmen for the Big Four conThe former secretary of agricul- (ceded today that late October probThe Indianapolis chapter of ture said REA co-ops were “owned, ably is the earliest date for comAmerican Red Cross today was OPerated and controlled” by the Pletion of the peace conference, commended by Dr. C. L. Williams, People they serve. “REA co-ops|already nearly five weeks old. director of the Indiana council for 8'¢ opening in two-thirds of the| The Big Four have agreed that mental health, for its aid to patients counties in this country,” he said. | at the Colvin nursing home, 1828 N. Illinois st. Dr, Williams said nurses their aids did “splendid” work in products of mines and factories.” : treatment and care of the patients Other Speakers United Nations assembly will meet He also praised the canteen and| Other speakers at the final ses-| > Scheduled, or be postponed as remotor corps. sion were Frank Robotika I | quested by Mr. Molotov, remained “This again shows that the Red » Prolessor| uncertain. Cross stands ready to aid in any of agricultural economics at Towa | Deputies Start Meetings extreme emergency when it occurs,” State college; Charles W. Holman,| The consensus of spokesmen after Dr. Williams said in a letter to Vir- ‘secretary of the National Co-Op-|!ast night's Big Four session was gil Sheppard, executive director of | that the conference will run anthe Red Cross here, The council head said he had ‘ashington, D, C. and Eugene L.| writing speed will depend greatly tried several other places .to find Hensel, counsel for the National upon the success met by the Big help in the emergency but was un-' Association of Co-Operatives, Chi-| Four deputies in finding a common able to obtain it elsewhere cago, policy on the 200-odd amendments rn | In sessions yesterday, 1500 dele- Submitted by the smaller powers. BRITISH TO ENLIST POLES |gates heard I. H. Hull, Indianapolis,| The deputies wAll meet today and LONDON, Aug. 30 (U. P).—The president of the Indiana Farm|Probably continue daily sessions. war office revealed today that troops Bureau Co-Operative association,| On amendments where there is no of Gen. Wadislaw Anders’ Polish outline aims of the institute. agreement, Big Four members will army and other anti-Polish govern-|{ “We strive toward joining hands|Support the treaty drafts already ment troops will be taken into the with other business groups' at home| Submitted, and follow their own British army as a “resettlement and abroad to work out a system of | Judgment on other questions. corps.” {control and checks and balances to] The Big Four meeting made more
Wickard, “means more business on! ties without recessing for the Sept.
meéting in New York. Whether the
erative Milk Producers’ federation,
U, S. OF MEDDLING
the conference should plow ahead (Political Action Report Voted Down “Rural electrification,” said Mr. With writing of the five peace trea- |
and Main st. and more demands for the 23 United Nations general assembly |
other two months. The treaty-|
{view that the agreement would con-| American miiltary chapel here.
———
By PAUL GHALI Times Foreign Correspondent | PARIS, Aug. 30.—The death knell |of the three-party coalition which | has governed France since the gen-
STRAUSS : leral elections in October has been SAYS
| sounded. : | The creation of a leftist bloc of | Socialists and Communists to combat the more conservative Popular | republicans has been forecast. . This is the picture as seen by { observers wise in the ways of French | political trends, following the rebuff | administered to the 20-year-old party leadership of Leon Blum in yesterday's opening session of the Socialist party congress.
STORE CLOSES AT | P.M.—SATURDAY
The congress vote, overwhelming{ly against the report on political action, drawn up by the party executive, was generally considered here | today as tantamount to rejection of {Mr. Blum himself. Although not .
technically a member of ju purty executive committee, Mr. Blum has GENTLEMEN Get TALLER!
indisputably been its moving spirit. The withdrawal of the reins of Get UP in the world!
Socialist guidance from this courageous and energetic politician is interpreted as indication of the new strength of extremist elements { within the party and the reconcilia|tion of Socialist and Communist policies The Socialist tendency now appears to be to initiate active prop|aganda among the working classes {of France and to break with the | middle-class intellectuals. The Socialist party has 132 deputies out of the 470 in the French | constituent assembly.
| copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times { and The Chicago Daily News, Inc
(Have the Gals look UP to yéu— or are you just not interested in which direction gals look?)
{
In a word—qet into a pair of
STRAUSS
|
Dr. Herman B Wells, president of |
Dr. Carl Sputh, presi-|
stabilize business,” Mr. Hull said.
movements in the Frankfurt area. Must: Take Responsibility He also said that “the co-opera-
3 Nations Pass |st Test for 4 tht ihe cooper: . | tives must adopt a plan by whic U. N. Seats, 5 Blackballed|®:, mms cin, sume ineir re
| without exploiting others.” LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Aug. 30 the majority of-the council in Both| In a night session, the delegates | (UP.)—Sweden, Afghanistan and | cases. | were told that improved living conIceland emerged today as the only | Opponents of this view argued ditions in Europe were the prequi- : [that any negative vote by a great site to strengthened democratic | survivors of the United Nation se-| | government. |
| power would represent a veto. curity council's fight over new mem-| Mr. Gromyko jockeyed with Brit-| William I, Myers, dean of the bers. {ish Delegate Alexander Cadogan college of agriculture, Cornell unia w RE lo city " » i ™ » Albania, Eire, Portugal, Trans- | 8nd American Delegate Herschel V.|versity, said only economic misery Jordan and the Mongolian People's Johnson, trying to work them into will bring about creation of ComRepublic, were all rejected in the|® position of being the veto-casters | munist governments in Germany bitter 10-hour conflict. |while they sought to keep Russia and Austria.
| i siti , % The three who passed council in this position, which she has oc- |
cupied alone since the UN began. | muster now need approval from . ot two-thirds of the 51 delegates to. The consensus was that the Amer- | New Yorker Tells the general assembly. Approval was |1cP and British delegates definitely | 8 . ¥. SPF "| used the veto, although they main- |
considered certain. The nations |. 4 they did not which did not win council approval | N ti y t tl ight licannot be considered by the as-|* hp Ye voles po ie 6g app esmbly under provisions of the Cais or eniluisiln Wo! ia the | United Nations charter. the Netherlands. China, Australia’|Peared on the newsstands with its| The council's longest meeting [ang Egypt abstained from voting. | entire issue of Aug. 31 devoted to also produced a controversy over MONGOLIA—Britain, U. 8. and the story of how an atomic bomb the veto as it concerned the “nega-| rns Netherlands. Australia and] destroyed a city. rs tive votes” employed by Britain|poynt stained from voting. | The article occupjes 78 columns] and the United States to blackballl ‘1p ANS.JORDAN—Russia and of the magazine's 68 pages. It is| the applications @f Russian-spon-|pjand, Australia abstained. |signed by John Hersey, “reporter sored Albania and Mongolia. IRELAND—Russia. Australia ab- and foreign correspondent, who Russia's aftion was shrouded in| stained. wrote the best-selling book, “Xl |no such confusion. Soviet Delegate | PORTUGAL--Russia and Da for Adano.” |
Andrei A. Gromyko unhesitatingly | Australia abstained. All departments of the mazagine, threw the great power veto at| Australia also abstained on the|including its famous cartoons, fic- | Portugal, Trans-Jordan and Eire—|votes concerning Afghanistan, tion and reviews were eliminated all supported by the western powers| Sweden and ‘Iceland, which were [to make room for the Hersey ac- | —after the Anglo-Americans scut-|otherwise unanimous. Paul Has-|count of what happened at Hiro[tled his country’s two proteges. luck, the Australian delegate, ex-|shima, Japan, when an atomic bomb But United States and British of-| plained that his abstentions were was exploded over the city at 8:15 ficials contended the Anglo-Ameri-|based on “a matter of pinciple,” ala. m. Aug. 6, 1945. can votes against Albania and Mon-| feeling that the general assembly| In the main the story is told in golia were not vetoes in the ac- should have the final say no matter terms of the experiences of six cepted sense of the term because what the council action on the Hiroshima residents who survived they went along with the will of individual applications, | the blast. ! Li
~ 4 ¥
Hiroshima's Story|.
NEW vould Aug. 30 (U. P).— The New YOrker magazine has ap- 4
progress than most delegates had | ANAD hoped. It was reported to nave ARGENTINE CONGRESS
been very calm and easy-going, in| (), K.’S CHAPULTEPEC
contrast to the month of public name-calling. | BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 30 (U. P) ———————————— | —The Argentine chamber of depu21 LAKE SHIPS STILL TIED UP | ties today approved without resDETROIT, Aug. 30 (U, P.).—Thé |ervations the Act of Chapultepec C. I. O. National Maritime union | for hemisphere defense. today called off its 16-day strike| The senate already ratified it. against all except 21 of the 400] The chamber also ratified the ships it had sought to tie up on the San Francisco United Nations five Great Lakes. charter by a vote of 95 to 39.
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