Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1947 — Page 1

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FORECAST: Increasing cloudiness and warm today and tonight ; scatt ered thundershowers tomorrow becoming slightly. cooler.

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Lee Leaves for U.S.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1947

Meat Wheat

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Prices Break More Records

Next Week to Retire

Coming Home Red Carpet Rolled Out From aly at For Lee on Arrival ‘Own Request’ In Seaside Resort

Stop in Washington 12 GI's'on Duty at Rail Station and Hotel;

Cen. lke Won't Dodges Queries On '48

Entered as Second-Olass Matter at Postoffios

Indianapolis, Ind, Issued dally except Sunday y , Pn

PRICE FIVE CENTS

CIO Unions Set Up | |

price of livestock and wheat soared |

to new all-time highs on Chicago exchanges today. In two other large cities ©. I. O. unions began a drive to combat rising food prices. Prime steers sold for $35.50 a hundred pounds, a new high for 1947 | at Chicago, the world’s largest meat |

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: | Captain Made to Serve as Doorman Planned on Arrival By ROBERT C. RUARK, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer ROME, Sept. 11 (U. P.).—! VIAREGGIO, Sept. 11.—Viareggio is so simply laid out Lt. Gen. John C. H. Lee told that, if you turn right, you run into the mountains, and a a press conference today he left turn will run you into the ocean. would leave for the United | But 12 men are stationed at the railroad station and States next week to await re- the Piedmonte hotel. Three MP's are put along the road to

tirement under army orders. salute the honored guests at

. Gen. Lee said his departure would different junctions. be taken under orders previously|

|first lieutenant, aided by five first {three grade WACs, ran the hatTwo men are on the door checking concession. issued by the army, : Gen. Lee, whose administration of |at the hotel. One opens it} An P ay sutioned Fo} the gock the Mediterranean theater has been| There are also two men in the giaff cars 100 yards away in order under eriticism, said he will leave parking lot. And an officer is nec- 4 announce the honored guests. his post under orders issued by the essary to see that things don't... phat wasithe night the Arstlooey: WIN geeretary of War June 10, {sIip up. : got put under arrest by Col. RemNo Direct Comment At a fancy party in Caserta on ington Orsinger fof kissing one of The general did not: comment di- New Year's eve, 1946, a captain was the WACs in a spirit of New Year's rectly on Columnist Robert Ruark's made. {0 serve as doorman and a!fun, :

charges him but indicated y,,. Lig 4 gh ral eg ‘Windsors Accorded Big Welcome “1% is not my intention to let| But, back to Viareggio.

slanders against my staff and mY|somebody like the Duke and Duch-|& jeep, found the sprinkler, and led army family go unanswered,” he ess of Windsor, recent unofficial | '* magnificently to the station said, He first called this statement ; tai ye {sprinkling like crazy. = *oft- the record” but later per- Buests of Gen. Lee, came to Viareg-| mere is actually a little red car- | mitted correspondents to quote him. gio, there was quite a production. pet which is unrolled when the The orders were to become effec-| Sedans are backed up right up train pulls in for Gen. Lee. tive. with the deposit of the Italian lento the station platform, scatter-| And wheh the Windsggs' came to! peace treaty. This deposit ceremony ing the Italians and moving back call, Col. Colson employed 20 Ital- | is to take place Monday in Paris tables in the cafe. ians to hand push a freight car off | and Moscow. | Before the train arrives Col. on another Track because it marred! Sixty days later, all American Charles Colson, an ex-brigadier the view. Lee himself ‘drove the] troops will be withgrawn from general, will have run out his Windsors to the hotel. A private Italian territory. Five thousand will sprinkler. The sprinkler 'stands by was trying to take a picture of the remain at the international city of and just as the train arrives it be- procession and, in fiddling with his Trieste, along with similar con- gins sprinkling the road between camera, failed to salute. An MP tingents of British and Yugoslav [train and station so the very im- (arrested him, his company comforces. . portant persons won't get dusty. |mander ate him out and the repriGen, Lee is turning over his com- Once, when they fouled up on/mand was entered on his record. mand to Maj. Gen. Lawrence C.

Jaynes, deputy commander and Gl Arises at 4 to Get Papers for Brass to Read chief-of -staff. Yes, sir, they really live the sim- with silver star and purple heart. Plans Washington Stop ple soldiers’ life in Viareggio. For He works for one of the officers’ He will await retirement at San . oye’ in Viareggio.

When |the operation, Col. Colson Hanes,

when a lieutenant colonel's wife

center. The previous high for the| {year for beefsteak on the hoof was| $35.25, set yesterday. | Good and choice hogs sold for {$30.50 per hundred pounds at Chi|cago. | Pork chops on the hoof also set a new all-time high at Omaha, |Neb., where hogs sold for $32 a hundredweight, breaking the pre-| vious record of $30.75 set yester-| | day. Wheat Hits $2.87 On the Chicago board of trade,! | September wheat jumped to $2.84 a bushel, and December wheat sold $08. $3 B8Tw.. covonnvimmmimesmeEs 7 These were. the highest prices| {ever paid for wheat for delivery in| | September and December. Corn and oats, however, failed to top yesterday's record prices. Sepator Ralph E. Flandegs (R. Vt.) urged the board of trade to boost its margin requirements in

{corn and wheat dealings to the full

100 per cent to halt speculation and

{higher prices in those grains.

“The grain situation is now out). of control,” Senator Flanders said. “It is a general feeling that this i a speculative rise.” Union Stores Set Up |

At Detroit, locals of the C. I. O. United Automobile Workers set. up grocery stores in union halls to sell food to members at cost. “A local representing Ford Motor Co. em ployees earlier this week bough

sold out the supply in a few hours. | Today, a local representing 16,000 workers at Briggs Manufacturing Cb., authorized the expenditure of $10,000 to open a grocery store in the union hall. Union officials said the local "would carry everything but perishable foods. The groceries will be ‘sold at cost by union officers

un Food sores | Alas for The Good Old Days

$1500 worth of canned goods ‘Got Everything, Mrs. Bilsky Says |

Sidesteps 2 Chances to

The new ankle-length fash-

fons have made life pretty miserable raphers, as readers, In the good old days of short skirts, photographers sat a fair passenger on: the rail, told her higher, please.” changed now. Washington, D. C, arriving on the | Queen Mary, shows Dan Milistein | the 1947 ship-rall pose, right,

for ship news

well

photog= AS newspaper

to cross her legs—"a little But that's all Shirley Talbot of

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mn

Margaret Sings for Neptune—

Truman Gets Off Easy

At Equatorial Ceremony

Spikes Rumor Bandits. Presidential Aides Get Mustard Massages, Overlooked Cash | Dunking, Paddling in Funmaking

A widely circulated rumor that By MERRIMAN SMITH, United Press Staff Correspondent ABOARD BA

TASK at as Colbie

‘Say ‘No,

Refuse ‘Draft’

Wants No ‘Partisan’ Post, He Says

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.

—Politicians are speculating today on the fact that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower twice within the space of 24 hours hag withheld direct answers to direct questions regarding his availability for a presidential nom‘ination next year. press conference today whether he would accept a nomination if drafted, Gen. Eisenhower ‘that there never has been such a draft without artificial stimulus. . “I will be no party to anything {artificial,” he snapped, somewhat red of face by reason of embarrass-

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ducked that one, too, explaining it was a hypothetical question, - Reluctant to Say Firm “Neo” | There is widespread belief here {that the general expects to {his career as president of the

1

Iversity, where he will take

‘|early next year. But it seems

vious, also, that he is reluctant to

instance a GI gets up at four every : He failed to snap to attention Francisco hut plans morning to go to Leghorn to pick P Washington Tou! up the papers for the brass to read came into the office. Two days

He said he is retiring from the army under a request granted by Gen, Dwight C. Eisenhower last February. Gen. Lee discussed his plans at a farewell press conference called to) outline a program for the with- | drawal of allied military personnel under the peace treaty,

singer. Men are required to sleep erect on the train from Viareggio to Leghorn, it being unmilitary. to slump while sleeping. : Then there is the case of a man we shall call Sergeant Ex-Brass. A staff sergeant, he was a former

|didn't want him around because he couldn't be trusted. He was transferred to another hotel. Later, a letter signed by all the {residents of the sergeant's first ho{tel was sent to the exec asking for {the sergeant’s re-establishment at his old job. He is back at the old

Gen. Lee would not comment on officer seven years in the army stand now.

Reduce Sergeant to Private Despite Good Rating

the investigation of his command being made by Maj. Gen. Ira T.| Wyche, the army inspector general. He said Gen Wyche planned leave for Washington by the en of this week to give the war de-

Also, there was a staff sergeant

an old building in Caserta.

was reprimanded, and the next day

to named Clarence Cann, who started Orsinger ordered him boatded—a | d a kitchen which he converted from refined type of court martial—for | d

|inefficiency,

"Threaten fo Picket Stores

eting of food stores “to display the

No date was set, however, for the a start of picketing.

$30 per hundred set last Feb. 25. No increase was shown at the Indianapolis stockyards, where the top price remained $29.25. Choice steers brought $34 at Inianapolis.

serving as grocery clerks without pandits who raided & $100 limit at breakfast by order of Col. Or-/later he was told that the coloneM”™”

| MISSOURI, Sept. 11.—King Neptune let {poker game at the home of Mr. and President Truman off easy today but he gave Presidential Assistant

At Toledo, O, the joint C. I 0. overlooked a large sum of money, | council voted to begin mass pick- was denied today.

feelings of the American worker.” station that the bandits who took | Bearded old Neptunus Rex passed loot variously estimated from out briney justice as President Tru- part of the traditional hazing cere- |

report. was,” she said.

Mrs. William F. Bilsky Tuesday, John R. Steelman and others the works, The works included mustard massages, doses of quinine, dunking {in a pool, electric shocks, and a sound paddling by sailors swinging

Word filtered through the police canvas clubs.

$6000 to $20,000 overlooked a large man and some 1500 other “polly- monies marking the equADE-CrUs- | The record hog price: at Chi- cash reserve in the Bilsky home, Wogs” were converted into “shell- ing, cago topped the previous high of 5542 N, Delaware st.

backs” by crossing the Equator cn| But they were spared the roughMrs. Bilsky, however, denied the route home from the Rio confer- handling meted out to Mr, Steel “They got everything there ence. man, Presidential Secretary Matt- | The President had to make a hew J. Connelly, and dignified

Appeared ‘Well Cased’ “ eigh™ Detectives today sald investiga- had to sing “Anchors Aweigh” as department protocol chief,

| speech, and his daughter Margaret) Stanley Woodward, urbane state!

much like statements made by many {another candidate in the past. The general said the purpose of {his visit to Columbia was to get | better acquainted with officials of the university and to find a place to live when he moves here, He sald he hoped to find a “coun= {try place.” L 4 “A Farmer Boy”

partment his Jopere. adusite {he received a rating of superior lieutenant colonel, a captain and a West Point Gradua for three straight months from Or- lieutenant, found him innocent of Now 59, Gen. Lee graduated from gingers food supervisor. lineMciency, or not guilty. Orsinger West Point and has served 42 Years, one day at ‘inspection, Cann was ordered the board reconvened. in the army. He said he did nob y.ino queried by Gen.'Lee, and he| It met again, and once more know when his retirement would ,..4e the mistake of talking to the found Cann not guilty. Orsinger become effective. igeneral with his hands on his hips, dismissed the board, and ordered

" Last February, he said, Gen. , preach of military etiquet. He!Cann tried again with a new board. |

12 (Noon). 88 "1pm... 8

Dwight D. Eisenhower as chief of staff told him he had “never denied an officer with my length of gervice a request to retire.” lcient and was busted down to pri-|mission from a superior to take Gen, Lee pointed out the datesyqie firgt class at 10 a. m. At 2/them home. of his retirement request and his|, ;, ne received 4 letter of com-| But back to Col. Orsinger. He is - orders to return when correspond- n.ondation of his efficiency ' from|the character who, while inspecting ents questioned him about charges/yro; Gen, Lawrence G. Jaynes |enlisted men's family quarters, made against him by Columnist Gen, pees subordinate and reputed-|chewed out two sergeants in the Ruark. ly a square guy, a nice guy and an|presence of their wives because one 5 wa |efcient guy. But Cann is only al corporal today, and this happened|the back of a chair. This was in the ‘Near 90 Again, last spring. sergeants’ home and no more a | I can add another incident of a military establishment than. OrCooler Tomorrow |sergeant in Rome being fined $90 singer's four rooms and two .baths LOCAL TEMPERATURES . |necause a civilian guard stopped|at the Piedmionte hotel or his two 6am..." 10am... (him with two loaves of bread, al-irooms at the palace in Leghorn, T7am...7 > a's . uu» 1 tor General Should Another warm cloudy day with ® ope - temperatures reaching near; 90, was) Be Civilian, Amvets Urge forecast today as summer began its| . : final “fling.” High Command ‘Whitewashes’ Fellow Brass, 's 's were | . . Bivig ae with Commander Says; Eisenhower Disagrees the possibility of slightly cooler By Scripps-Howard Newspapers weather in the afternoon. WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—-The American Veterans of World War The weather bureau estimated the II today urged that control over the inspector and judge advopate gentemperature would reach a high of | erals be denied the drmy and navy. They asked the changes because 80 today and a low tonight of 71. | “the high command still is prone to protect and whitewash fellow brass.” ——————————————— I Gen. Eisenhower replied the change would be a “very grave error.” i Amvets National Commander Ray Sawyer said his “justice reform” 150 Priests and Nuns | program grew out of charges against| 8 . Reported Kidnaped | Lt. Gen. John C. H. Lee by Seripps-| That those positions could be SHANGHAI, Sept. 11 (U. P.)~|Howard Columnist Robert C.| Sled oY Stvilisns Sppointed by. the The government-controlled Centres Ruark. Gen. Lee's administration “resident. news agency claimed today that in the Mediterranean theater now Mr. Sawyer said 13 of Amvets’ Chinese Communists kidnaped .150 is being investigated by Maj. Gen. 14. board members approved his foreign priests and nuns in a raid Ira Wyche, army inspector general. recommendations. He said he was on a Hopei-Chahar border’ town, | “Glaring deficiencies in justice in re-emphasizing changes The agency, in a dispatch. from the armed forces again have been mended by the Doolittle’board and Kalgan, sald the Communists set revealed in the case of Gen. Lee in the American Bar association. fire to the parish's 80-year-old Italy,” Mr, Sawyer said. At 8a press conference, Gen. church and seminary, Amvets recommerided:

intimate the inspector general and

Times Index . y listed personnel be permitted Wl Amusements... 22,Dr. O'Brien... 25 serve. i Classified. 31-34|F. C, Othman 19| That the Irispector general in 24| (Continued on Page 5—Column 3) ... 29 Radio «+.. 35/both army and navy be removed .. 20 Mrs. Roosevelt 23|from control by high officers and 2518ide Glances . 20 that they serve stated terms such 20 (Society ...... 23 as that .of the U. 8. comptroller ..'24|Sports .... 30-31 general (14 years). Also that they Hollywood ... 19 Stranahan ... 30 be-made directly responsible to the Homemaking . 24 Teen Topics .. 25 'secretary or_highest:ranking civil “Don Hoover.,..20| Weather Map 9|ians in the army or navy departInside Indpis. 19 Washington. .- 20 ments. ‘Ruth Millett. 25 Wom. News 24-25

hi Movies. 2 Word-a-Day . 19iconnection with the judge advoon «++ 12/ World Affairs 20 cates general of thé army and navy. (Continued

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for one general” after conducting

no complaint has been made.

'a lot of generals ‘in my time.”

land the secretary of war.

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“A

be

{ So talented was Sgt. Cann that| The first board, composed of a

| Wins Praise of Major General After Being ‘Broken’ |

This time Cann was found ineffi- though he claimed to have had per-|

of them had his coat hanging over

recom-

chain of command and qualified en-iness. He added it wag unfair to angle irons, automobile parts and

is placed directly under the secretary, Gen. Eisenhower said, it would be necessary to “appoint an-|(U. P.) Stockholm was added tol That similar action be taken in other for my staff” since the in-

on Page 5~Column 3)

Market analysts said meat prices would really skyrocket when the full effect of the poor corn crop is. felt by the nation’s stock raisers. | Several experts predicted that wouldn't occur until next year, howjever. They reasoned that the lack |of corn would force many farmers {to sell their cattle, hogs and sheep 1} short weight early this fall. That would increase the supply of meat during the fall and winter, {tending to depress prices or at least hold them steady. But the big pay-off of the corn {shortage would come in the spring. {The short-selling of stock this fall {will make them scarce later on and prices will zoom, the experts said.

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Plane Missing,

(U, P.).—A C-47 cargo plane carry-

ing three men was reported missing P.).—Link three hoof {bodies were reported recovered from Arthur Rosenthal, a farmer, {an unidentified plane which crashed enthal’s birth to siamese pigs which Are! was, in the sopinion of Nepturie, a

(today. A few hours later

jon Spruce mountain near here.

| It was believed the plane was the Joined at the stomach, The linked «poy {missing C-47, which was en route POEkers were part of a litter of serious charges for flouting deepfrom Jobbs, N. M., to Hill Pield, ¢®ht.

(Utah. Sheriff J. L. Harmond went

{to..the -seene of the crash, but he Steelworkers Victors In Taft-Hartley Suit

{could not identify the type of plane At Hobbs, army ‘public relations {officers said the C-47 left there

{about 6:30 last night and had not Federal Judge William J. Campbell| TRIESTE, Sept. 11 (U. P.). ~The {been heard from since. Names of today dismissed a $75,000 damage | myjoste

Pull Aguing; the Dutied ee a, Ported that military authorities of

charging violation of the Taft. Yugoslavia closed her frontiers with | Hartley act,

the crew members were withheld.

‘N.Y. Wants Blacksmiths, But Not to Shoe Horses | The * big town is lookin

village blacksmiths. The | $2280 annually.

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| However, the municipal civil serv. %¢ Eisenhower said he had had nol ice commission specified they were 315missal of the suit, That appointtent and control of report from Gen. Wyche but had not wanted to shoe horses. The 1 Was the first Chicago suit new frontiers are established for-|courts-martial be removed from the| “complete confidence” in his fair-' work consists of making - tools, fled under the new labor law.

tion showed the hold-up to be “well Woodward Gets the Works, and How

ased.” Theysaid ‘it'might be linked | \ ori a Br at ay home! Mr. Woodward got a thorough; In the pool a well-greased gang last February when burglars chop- going-over, and he looked like any- i saifate, kyiows a8 “hens, Bueked, ped open a closet, stealing Jewelry thing but a -diplomat when the i poate ACE 8 pe and valuable guns kept there. This p.bers of Neptune's court got hen ny vis unceremoniously burglary also showed evidence of {a : | “I hope to spend many happy inside knowledge of the home, th (through with him, [tossed down an oiled ramp into t Columbia ” sald ’ 5 After being shocked almost out, the hands of free-swinging sailors years 3 um ked he added. EE ~ . {of his wits by electric rods, Mr.| with canvas clubs who made him| newsman. as him: - Only one article from that Now that you are abdut to be . . Woodward was plied with quinine run a long gantlet, | y burglary, a shotgun valued at $600, . .|come president of Columbia, should was recovered It was found in| 2nd alum until he nearly gagged, | The decks of the massive bat y be addressed , s = a { practically blinded by a mustard, tlewagon resembled a college fra- Hou President’ ?” 43 General’ or

parts scattered along an area near | Smilingly, Gen. PBisenhower re-

| massage, | The exact amount stolen when! ; plied: y | Jaunty Baker's Cap {a. m. Tuesday to blindfold and bind | ishirt and sport (still remained uncertain today» Neptune's realin by being. a Demo

| The general, who is from Abilene, Kas, described himself as “funda~ mentally a farmer boy.” : “I want a place” he said, “to raise tomatoes and beans and get close to the soil.” .

and hurled backwards ternity house getting ready fer a {the Biisky home. linto the pool. | freshman hazing. {bandits intruded on the game at 1| Truman Wears “I shall always answer most read ily to the name of ‘Tke.’” | | The President was clad in a blue neiro, He also stood accused of 4 | | [eign players and Joos thelr pias trousers with a violating the “no politics” han of | Detectives said they still have not white baker's cap perched jauntily questioned three of the eight players

Reports Robbery,

and that several persons were unaire as fo how much money they had with them,

Wreckage Found cores on pork From

CASTLE ROCK, Golo. Sept. 11 Link Sausages on Hoof

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| NEW YORK, Sept. 11 (U P.) — Co., charged the union hdd vio- | ‘tor 27 ated ‘a no-strike clause in the col-| salary is lective bargaining agreement. {company sald the strike had been movements and prevent

ordered by King Neptune's ‘lieu~ deny he was a Democrat but said tenant, Davy Jones, who boarded it should be spelled with a small the ship last night to make cer- “d.” tain everything was in readiness! Mrs. Truman wore a baker's cap for the ceremony, like the President's, while daughter The role of Davy was played by Margaret had on a colorful greén Chief Machinist Robert Zeller, raincoat and a sou'wester. Flushing, Long . Island, -N. Y., pork sausages on the Chief Machinist J. H. Harrington, reported today bY pong Beach, Cal, drew the part of Ros-| King Neptune chester white sow gave! Davy disclosed that Mr. Truman

ELKHART, Wis, Sept. 11 (U.

conducting the ritual to give his party the full treatment. There was a wildfire rumor about the ‘decks that Margaret tried to sing her way out of the roughhousing. In the officers’ mess yesterday, she joined singing waiters {sea protocol by flying across the in an ‘impromptu version of “A |Equator on his trip to Rio- de Ja- Bicycle Built for Two.”

[Tito Closes Frontiers Suspect Grilled In 1344 Death

To Italy and Trieste Times State Service

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 11 ~ onroe County Prosecutor Robert 8. McCrea today reopened the case The designed to screen Yugoslav troop of Sherman Albert Fisher of Bloome a last- ington, who died at Long hospital, ttled and that it would accept minute flight of ‘civilians from Indianapolis, Dec. 11,1944, following {former Italian territory before the head injuries suffered Sept. 1, 1944.

Mr. McCrea indicated he would {mally with the treaty ratification. ask Judge Q. Austin East to call an

were

Landlubber,” and faced

CHICAGO, Sept. 11 (U. P).~

Information agency re-

{Italy and the Pree Territory of, The -suit, brought by the Globe prieste at 1 a. m.. today.

The reported closing was believed

| reapiring iron parts on city ' ve-|

the chief of staff would “cover up: hicles.

many investigations against which HOOSIER DIES IN REICH

| FRANKFURT, Sept. 11 (U. P).

“After all” ‘he said, “I've busted —The army announced today that| . | Sgt. Henry J. Wendholt, Ferdinand, | At present, the inspector genera] Ind, dieg Monday in an army hos-| is responsible to the chief of stafr pital If he

mrm———— [STOCKHOLM ON U. P. WIRE | FRANKFURT, Germany, Sept. 11],

the 24<hour-a-da wire network of

y European leased the United Press today. ;

early session of the Monroe county grand jury and that he would ask indictments for murder. The prosecutor said he had statements from Willle Hamm, 40; his son, Rogér Hamm, 21, and Ralph ‘Homer Griffin, 33, all of Bloomington, who, according te police, were

It's Here «++ TODAY ...(Turn to Page 20)

‘““IN TUNE WITH THE TIMES"

® A brand new column . . ." a brand new kind of a column . . . written by Hoosiers, for Hoosiers, in the best Hoosier literary tradition. (More than" 60 distinguished writers #ccepted our ‘invitation to start it off, set its tone, fix its standards . . . for others to shoot af). ® The result? The best of Indiana writing . . + today, and every day in

[1, 1944, in which Fisher was al{legedly slugged with an automobile |erank. ae |. Sheriff Noble Sciscoe and” Ray |Hinkle, a state police detective, to(day administering lie-detector

bo [tests to B Hamm te police in Sndiapapolis,

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1 b “ ¥ ro

The Indianapolis Times

A

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jon his head. The costume Was yo. muna; said he could not|

The President asked “shellbacks" |

* . Lands in Jail |. CHICAGO, Sept. 11 (U. Ps (Michael Courtney, 50, said today he would never again mention it if he | were robbed. | He reported to police that thieves took $270 from him—and was jsentenced to six months in jail. His divorced wife, Elsie Courtney, 48, read about the robbery in the newspapers, She traced her former {husband, who had not paid support money for their daughter since 1038, | He was found guilty of contempt of court yesterday and Superior Judge George. M. Fisher sent him to jail. The thieves got away,

Urges End of All

[Barriers to News 'CHIGAGO, Sept. 11 (U. P.) —Dr. | Milton 8, Eisenhower, chairman of {the United States national commis !sfon of the United Nations educational, scientific and cultural or ganization, said today that UNESCO should move directly “to eliminate all barriers to the international flow of information.” | Dr. Bisenhower said that “if an international convention fails to reach an agreement on this question, those mations which do stb |scribe to the principle of a free flow of information should be per. suaded to enter into agreements with one another for the imple- | mentation of this principle.”

Negotiated for U. Now Heads Turk Ce ANKARA, Sept. 11

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involved in an argument here Sept! Turkey had a new

| headed by Hasan Sak eign minister was & negotiations for United Stat the resignation of Peker and go: the weight criticism