Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1951 — Page 5

‘WEDNESDAY, AUG. 15, 1951

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Estate Valued at More Than $200 Million—

Bulk of Hearst Riches Left Truman May Fill Kills at Least 56

For Philanthropic Work:

By United Press 660,750 and 100 shares of comBEVERLY HILLS, Cal, Aug. mon stock in the concern. The 15—Publisher William Randolph Stock has an estimated market Hearst left the bulk of. his more | Value of $6 million.

Two- » than $200 million estate for Pill araing of ihe tora] ware

anthropic work, his will disclosed remaining five-sevenths divided today. equally among his sons. The 88-year-old fourder and| He instructed that all of the head of the Hearst publishing stock be held in trust for his empire died at his home yester- heirs and ordered that the trust| day of the infirmities of old age. terminate upon the death of his|

| |

Judgeships After Congress Adjourn

By EDWIN A. LAHEY WASHINGTON, Aug. 15°-The Senate Judiciary Committee-is in no great sweat to make a decision inthe dispute between President Truman and Sen. Paul Douglas (D. Ill.) over the vacancies on the! federal bench in northern Illinois.

i

every At his death bed were-his five widow arid the last s Th it its 1 urviving child e committee at regular lusive sons and two of his top aids, or grandchild, g 'meeting Monday did not even get c palr Richard E. Berlin, president of] a quorum. It does not meet again the Hearst Corp. and Martin, S.| $1.5 Million in Cash until next Monday. Huberth, chairman of the board. | Mrs. Hearst also was given $1.5 The decided lack of enthusiasm Mr. Hearst's body was flown to! illion cash which, the will {for the Truman-Douglas feud, exSan Francisco late in the after-| + the eX: pressed twice by Sen. Pat Mc-| noon in a chartered two-egine Plained, was to help her pay taxes carran (D. Nev.), judiciary com-| LI-8848 transport plane. Funeral services on her inheritance. mittee chairman, raises the pos-

will be held in the bay city, Mr.|

Th Hearst's home town, when mem-| e remainder of the estate

bers of his family reach there. His widow, Mrs. Millicent Willson Hearst, was expected to arrive here by air from New York today to help direct funeral arrangements. - The publisher's will was filed for probate only a few hours after "his death. In it he bequeathed a large share .of tis wealth to “religious,§ charitable,

|was left to religious, charitable, (literary, scientific or educational |purposes. But Mr. Hearst speci|fied only two institutions that {were to receive funds—the Los | Angeles County Museum of Hisitory, Science and Art and the regents of'the University of Cali- | fornia. :

| He specified, however, that the, jfunds were to be allocated only|

sibility that the committee might leave the way open for the Presi-| dent to make interim appointments after Congress has ad-| journed. - This gambit would be available to Mr. Truman if the committee simply pigeonholes the disputed nendinations. The President could appoint anyone he wants to the bench after Congress quits for the year;

least 56 persons were killed and] Approximately 750 clerical and|/David, Toledo, O., will officiate at

‘earthquake yesterday in central/for the annual convention of the poly Liturgical Mass at 11 g. m.

day from the area.

PAGE 5

Quake in Turkey 1750 Attending Syrian Orthodox Meeting

Archbishop Bashir, and His ¥

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Eminence, Archbishop~ Samuel

Times Church Editor

ISTANBUL, Aug. 15 (UP)—At

» the ordination of a young man to 162 others badly injured in an lay delegates are assembled Bere the holy priesthood Sunday at

Anatolia according to reports to- Syrian Antiochian Orthodoxy gt George's Syrian Orthodox

| Archdiocese of North America. |Church. The convention which opened! The convention with its relithis morning Inigjous services, business sessions the Riley Room|and festive event is a part of St. of the Claypool George's silver anniversary celeHotel will close pration. The Rev. Fr. Louis SeSunday after-cabe is host pastor. noon. His Emin-| The convention will close with a ence, Metropoli-/ banquet Sunday at 2 p. m. in The . tan Antony Ba- Riley Room. shir of Brooklyn,|

N. Y., will arrive tomorrow to at. Catfish Row Hot tend the sessions] WYNNEWOOD, Okla. (UP)—

centered around the town of Can Kiri Church members The sheriff reported one sports- . Ah from the United man was jailed and another hos- Archbishop Antony Bashir “of

— Senate Democrats States, Me xi ¢ o/pitalized with knife wounds after New York will speak at the

|and Canada are representing their/an argument over how to catch Syrian Orthodox Convention lcatfish. | here.

Additional casualties were ex-| pected from the stricken area, several hundred miles southeast of here, since many towns in the remote ‘area of the quake have not been contacted. Ten thousand farm animals were killed, 42 houses totally de- § stroyed and 500" damaged by the 32d shock, which reports said

ORTHODOX PRELATE —

Fr. Secabe

. Harrison.

Awarded Medal +

For Rescue Work’

For risking his life to help f victims of a flaming auto-trudk pri,

crash in Indianapolis last Al Pfe. Ray Lewis Jr. of Elwood has been awarded . e t h e Soldier's Medal at Ft.

While standing at 38th St. and Northwestern Ave. early on the morning of Apr. 10, Pfc. Lewis saw an automobile rip

{into the rear of * | a gasoline truck. The auto engine |burst into flames, and gasoline {was leaking from the tanker, but the soldier gave first aid to the |victims, He then directed traffic ‘around the burning wreckage iuntil police arrived.

Pfc. Lewis

rT _—_—

to institutions in the United [P™ the recess appointments would States and its possessions. stin be subject to confirmation by

ira i The will disinherited anyone" Senate when Congress reconge attempting to vened in January 1952. puns revoke, annul or ‘mpage close to Sen Douglas are The 57-page document, dated change any of its terms. certain his o osition to the presiMay 20, 1947, was more than an; All of the furniture, works of | gential HE Cros would eh diinch thick and contained nine art and antiques at Mr. Hearst's! ninich by next January if the codicils, but all but two of them fabulous retreats at San Simeon, president. did make recess oo. were nullified by later codicils. [near Monterey, Cal; Wyntoon, | nointments atl he The will was filed for probate Near McCloud, Cal, and St.| - by Mr. Hearst's personal counsel, Donats, Wales, Great Britain, i Henry S. Mackay Jr., who was Were left to the Hearst Foundanamed an executor along with Hom Inc, of New York. ored eterans Mr. Huberth and Mr. Berlin, both! Mr. Hearst.asked the trustees of New York, William M. Bas- Not to “part with ownership or . . kerville, Maryland, Harold @G. control of any newspaper, magaKern, Massachusetts and Richard Zine. feature service, news serv-| 0 y 1]! 1S0N | A. Carrington, California. “« (Ice. photographic service or| | The executors and Mr. Hearst's Periodical unless it shall, i

n | : their opinion, be necessary and five sons were named trustees. prudent to do so.” y | p 0 ven | The publisher left 53.335 shares ! of preferred stock. in the Hearst | A Bequest Revoked . Four veterans of Korean aerial

« 5 a ’ : 1 Corp. with a par value of §2-{ Mr. Hearst's sons are William| combat will pilot F-84 Allison-

Ronn ruil of the powered —“Thunderjets” inthe David W ournal - American; Ajjison Jet Trophy Event of the ay = Publisher of the Los National Air Races Sunday.

- = ee 2 {Angeles Evening Herald and Ex- ! you re Sa ‘press; Randolph A., publisher of/ The fighter-plane jockeys who {the San Francisco Call-Bulletin;| Will streak from Detroit to-In-|George and John. |dianapolis and back again are: about beans In the first codicil to his will,! Lt. Col. William E. Bertram, | about milk

literary, scientific or.educational purposes.”

Mr. Hearst left his home here 34, first man in the famed 27th and all its furnishings to Actress Fighter Escort Group to . shoot {Marion Davies, called Marion down a Russian-built MIG; Tit: iDouras in the will. Col. John W. Larko, 32, who has The codicil, dated Aug. 15, 1947,/147 missions under his safety {said Miss Davies came to his aid belt; Lt. Jacob Kratt Jr. 26, {during the depression of the '30s|credited with shooting down two {and loaned him “a million dollars| MIG's and a YAK, and Lt. Harry | jof her own money, thereby doing E. (Mouse) Monsell, 27, one of| {much to save myself and my in-{the smallest and best fighter | stitutions from financial dis-|pilots in the Air Force. |aster.” ‘The eighth codicil, how-{ Col. Bertram was commanding ever, revoked the bequest. {officer of the 27th Group in which Mr. Mackay» said the vast| the other three flew. Recent totals Hearst enterprises would be car- Show the 27th accounted for 45 ried on by the publisher's sons MIG's, had 11 probables and {and his lifetime associates. damaged 94, against loss of one Mr. Hearst was born Apr. 29, F-84 and damage of three. i 1863, at San Francisco, and he is| In the Allison feature race, the expected to be buried in Cypress| jet planes from ‘Wayne-Major| Lawn Cemetery there where his Airport, Detroit, will circle a! father, Sen. George Hearst, and|tall pylon on Schoen Field, Ft. mother, Mrs. Phoebe Apperson|Harrison, then start the return |Hearst, are buried., [ trip.

INew, Long-Lasting Auto ~ Battery Is Announced

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every dollar spent for milk is worth $1.36, At today’s navy

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Regard Truman == a li.

|S

As the Man in 52

By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 15—8énate Democrats—willing or not-— regard President Truman as their candidate for the White House next year, v Mr. Truman, in two unrelated actions, has displayed all the signs of a man whose hat, although perhaps not in the re-elee« tion ring, at least was on the edge of the ring. . Republicans also were sure that their foe again would be the man from Missouri who baffled the “experts” with his historic upset victory over Gov. Thomas E. Dewey in 1948, Mr. Truman did not say in so many words that he would be 4 candidate to succeed himself. But those who know the President swore he had “that old campaign look in his eye.” They noted that: ONE—Mr. Truman did nothing to discourage Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D. Minn.), one of his most loyal supporters, from putting his name on Minnesota's

primary election ballot next March. Sen. Humphrey reported that

the President greeted news of his intention with a very fine, thank you, TWO—-Mr., Truman, later denounced “McCarthyism' -—charges of disloyalty, communism and subversion in the State Department leveled by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R. Wis.). It was the President's strongest defense so far of what he regards as the basic loyalty of those who serve him in the diplomatic field. Mr. Truman still could cross up political observers and decide to retire, but if this happens, it would be a remarkable turnabout from the impression he gave yesterday.

New Elements The two new elements, No, 97 and No. 98, created by atomic bombardment, have been named berkelium and californium, respectively.

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