Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1949 — Page 14

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Witness Testifies Exile Stayed There 3 .

WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (UP ~-A former Polish shipping off"cial has reported * suspicions” that the Polish con sulate in New York harbored Communist Stowaway Gerhart Eisler for three days before he fled this country, This was disclosed today with publication of testimony before a Senate subcommittee studying wo lonpholes. in the immigration. law. | "' The witness was ' Anthony Trzecieski, former purchasing agent of the Gdynia-American Steamship Line. This line owns the Motorship Batory on which Mr, Eisler, at liberty on ball, escaped from the United States May's, 1949. Quit Company In 1047 a Mr. Trzecieski, who sald he quit = the company Dec. 31, 1947, because it was under “Communist control,” was questioned at a pecret subcommittee hearing ear-i® lier this fall. In response to a " question about Mr, Eisler's whereabouts before he stowed away, the witness said: RTRICS wile Siang fsplsiong: “Newspaper readers—down. South-—said "It ain't so” when e , 4 » hat a pn in the (Polish)! they saw the photograph (left) of Geene Courtney, 22, Chicago consulate building.” | night club chorus girl. Dummy from some store window, they said. ™he But to prove she's alive, Geene offered a picture of her (right) to prove that the eye is not always deceived by what if sees.

tradictory to Mr. Trzecleski's—by Czeslaw Grezelak, Gdynia-Ameri-

ne prtadon CHICAGO, Nov. 12 (UP)— “Somehow. they think they're M. Kutylowski, rt Roman Geene Courtney, 22-year-old made of special material. frm. A . chorus girl who wears a “In fact, I could raffle off

my sweater during the show to the men, of course. “At the end of the show, I prove that I ‘don’t wear falsles,” Miss Courtney said. I come on in an evening gown that's cut all the way down to my liver."

[EDUCATOR TO SPEAK

sweater like most girls wish they could, assured the nation today that everything under it belonged to her, Miss Courtney's photograph in a sweater recently drew protests of disbelief from newspaper readers in Jackson, Miss, She was pictured fishing off a Chicago plier. The readers scoffed that “her upper torso appeared rather. falsified.” “It's perfectly rediculous to say that my sweaters are padded,” she cried. ’ “Everybody knows 1 don't have to wear falsies.” She appears in a Chicago | night club as an “elaborate straight girl,” she explained. “Women come up to me after the show and try to buy my sweaters. :

Mr. Trzecieski testified that: ONE. The American firm is owned almost entirely by the present Communist government in Poland. TWO. It sponsors “propaganda” broadcasts every Sunday night in Polish over Station WHBI, Newark, N. J. : THREE. It largely supports a Po k age newspaper, Nowa Epoka,in York.

1500 Alive in Cemetery CLINTON, Mass., Nov, 12 Town workers discovered some 1,500 very lively Individuals in Woodlawn cemetery. They were removing an old tree from the graveyard when bees that had hived up in the tree sent them scampering. ;

social studies at Indiana

| Danville.

CLUB PLANS DINNER

ter of the Bemis

|University, will be the speaker.

STII on PCR SIT ety Ee . me YBa A 5 ?

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Dr. Cloyd Anthony, professor of State Teachers College, will address the Danville Alumni Club Wednesday night at the O, K. Restaurant in

Annual dinner meeting of the munist: Party. Indianapolis Bleaching Co. chap-| 20-Year Club {has been scheduled for Nov, 19.|ity of the California State Senate {Dean L. Gray Burton of Butler and was threatened with con-

Loopholes in Law

To Stay in Country .. By TONY

Beripps-Howard Staff Writer ; WASHINGTON, Nov. 12—~More {than 300 nationals from Iron-

ab it the country despite orders t they be deported, Justice to-

About 1300 of them are regarded as subversives, They are at large because, un.Aloophole in our if their home countries won't take them back. Nor can they be jailed

All of them are known to he subversives are regarded as dangerous. Among the others are hundreds who. were ordered deported for sex crimes, drug peddling, larceny, theft and assault. The Justice Department has been trying for 10 years to ge a law plugging this loophole. It wants the Attorney General to

~

who cannot find a place to go after being ordered deported. : House Passes Bill The House passed such a bill the 76th Congress and it was

re - introduced last har by Rep. Sam Hobbs (D. J. The

Judiciary Committee apppaved it, but it was left pending before the House Rules Committee when Congress quit. «The Justice Department supplied

cases to point up the problem. Here's one of them: “Frank E. Spector, born in Odessa, Russia, and now lving in Los Angeles, He served a jail \sentence in 1930 and was ordered deported by the Attorney General the same year as a person who advocates and teaches the over-

or violence. Spector showed up in Los Angeles in 1921, Since then, he has had a record of continuous activ|ity and leadership in the Com-

Defies California Last year he defied the author-

countries are wandering!

tion laws, we can’t kick them out!

have the power to jail any alien)

\ ® You're going to like OUR

you like your own , . . next Synday . , . when you meet GRANDMA in the Times |H

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NEXT SUNDAY In THE SUNDAY TIMES BIGGER COLOR COMIC SECTION

Charity Stirs Tabby's Heart After Old Foe Dies

Times Foreign Service

cat, is willing to ‘let bygones be bygones. A few days ago her enemy was Sally, an Airedale dog, whose idea of fun was to chase the distracted cat up a tree.

Now Sally's

are béing raised by a very protective kitty. .

the committee with several typical |

throw of the government by forceithe No, 1 Comintern represénta-

ht, 1049, by Indianapolis Times and Chicago Pali pat

that the

order for deportation was issued years ago, and I'm still here.” An incident jolting Congress was the escape of Gerhart Eisler,

tive in the U. 8S. Mr. Eisler was

might do more harm.

tempt proceedings. He was told

your home . . .

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[victory this past week in what he{tajace recently redecora Grandma almost as much as [fran terms a “tide” of Demo- mother and father,

; Med help receive the he says Mr. Hague started slip-|Charlie’s staff of ping many years ago and he just gave the final push. Gov. Driscoll is 47. He teaches Sunday school and delights in his family of three children. He's/Fleet. a lawyer. f “One thing that riles me,” he said, “is this talk that the Republican Party mustn't be a ‘me, too’ party. It all depends on what you're ‘me-tooing.’ . “If it's the Ten Commandments, then ‘me, too. amble to the Constitution, then “me, too. If it's a strong national SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 12-|defense without wasting money, Kitty, a Sydney poultry farmer’s/then ‘me, too.

: “But when Mr. Truman comes worsti out for socialized medicine, then|ggret the Republican Party has an fissue on which to put up a real |battle. And we've got to let the dead. And her people know that we want dethree newborn motherless pups centralization of government and make them see why home rule is vital for this country.” The Republican party won in —| New Jersey last Tuesday because contempt might be|jt had a record strong enough in grounds for deportation from theithe minds of the public to withU. 8. In his reply, Spector resistand the tide running in the torted: ‘You are too late. Mylother direction, said.

He said New Jersey has accomplished progressive reforms that the national Democrat administration has never matched and pointed to the state's civil one of the few subversive aliens liberties program, its - sickness U. 8. authorities preferred to benefit insurance program, keep here rather than send him housing record and its guarantee to his native Germany where he of veterans’ loans, “We found in New Jersey that But the provision in the immi-|if we were to have a winning gration laws which prevented him team we had to stand for somebeing kept in jail made it anithing” Gov. Driscoll said. “We

4

son of the Duke of

It it's the pre-| William. |

pocket gangster

to the manager.

Gov, Driscoll

on Monday.

detective and a footman. Prince Philip will not bé presen

First of all, there's Dick. Five \year’s old, he’s Prince Richard,

Charlie's second cousin. Bill is Dick's brother, Prince

Mike is Prince Michael of Kent, seven, another cousin. The little girls include Sandra Elizabeth Zia Butter, 16 months, and Rosemary Elizabeth Elphinstone, two, of The third is Marylin Emma MarLycett Wills, Charlie's aunt, Princess Margaret.

Cafe Patron Beaten Up | Washington from Germany to After His ‘Gangster’ Act

NEW YORK, Nov. 12 (UP)— Police said James Dougherty of Brooklyn ate early today at a restaurant then patted his coat

snarled “hand over that. dough”

When police rescued him two bartenders still were pounding him = with their fists. He booked for attempted robbery and taken away in an ambulance.

along with

Gloucester and

Elizabeth, god-child of

fashion and

was

its the public fancy.” was wise

lvigorous state governmerit, an|too.

to drop around and eat some of his birthcake, flavored with a dash of rum, will have one big orange

Ousted Professor Explains Nazi Tie

. Returned to Reich to Fight Reds, He

HOUGHTON, Mich, Nov. 13 (UP)—A professor of discharged from

The employment of Dr. E. V, Sittler, was “not continued” at Michigan College of Mining and Technology after Rep. John B, Bennett (R. Mich.) demanded his deportation,

many in 1939 and renounced his American citizenship “because I was convinced that it was necessary to preserve Germany as the cornerstone of European security against communism Imperiale ism.” “I wrote and broadcast come

tween Soviet Russia and Gere many to explain to the Englishe world that which now needs no explanations” - The board acted yestere day after it learned that Dr. Sittler had been returned to

| testify in the trial of a former United States embassy clerk in | Berlin, During this trial, his member. ship In the Nazi party was re vealed. Thé War Department said he never had been given clear ance to stay in the U.S, “I was forged by circumstances to enter the party,” Dr. Sittler explained. “I have been amnestied by’ Gen, Lucius Clay because I attended no meetings, held no office and fulfilled no function.” - Dr, Sittler, father of six chile

end to bossism. The Republicans dren, came here in September afthave got to quit being the party er teaching at 4 of expediency, quit switching to University, try to match what they think is!

Northwestern

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Gov. Drigcol} believes the GOP| BELMONT, Mass, Nov 12 (UP) in making foreign -—One wall of the living room of policy a bi-partisan affair but Prof. Carl.Koch’'s home is a huge that there is still room for con- rock, part of a natural ledge

easy matter for him to flee when'do. We stand for home rule, a structive criticism in that field, against which the house was he felt the time was right.

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Dr. Sittler sald he went to Ger-

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Tale: To | Dani

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The Ge! with Mrs. P Emmett Hu a paper, “De Hodges pou Mrs. Lucia | the next ds Colonial Da were Miss J cinnati, Mi Activities C man of the explained th Ald to Indi: ing given t sorshipof a one room unit of 30 children in

Henry Buttolph pre. sided at the meeting. The flowers on the tea table, yellow chrysanthemums were in the | blue and go On -Wedne apolis Bran

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THE IND! den Club m Mrs. Thec Among the 1 ing lunch be were Meéada: der, George Kuhn and H were at Wo Chicago se a popular s lately, Mrs. and Mrs, | went up for Dudley Tay! visit. Mrs. F Mrs. Otto F this week, Mrs. E. has been in tc see her ne daughter of Thurston Gr

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came up fro .Rome, Ga., time betwee! Jane's fami) was nice to informal ga afternoon af Mr, and ) fels had a Woodstock which, than) ful tunes of tured by the was more have seen

.- Knees. Tale:

to the entert by the strol ing dinner. The Danie colors of gre the color sc stylized au lem: