Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 January 1952 — Page 5
dime a n: our superdieti- } tastes are in ti—and beautivhy * so come nch or
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POP'S DECORATED—Col. Raymond Murra Va., was one’ of eight Marine Corps heroes to Washington yesterday. Col. Murray, shown with his two sons, Purchase
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WEDNESDAY, JAN. 16, 1952 .
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By CHARLES LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff; Writer WASHINGTON, Jan. 16-—-A check of Democratic National Committee fund records disloses sizable contributions fram many headline figures in recent congressional - inquiries into influencepeddling. 2 Some names on’ 4 the lists showed Jup in the Internal Revenue Bu-j reau scandals others in connection with the Re construction Finance Corp hearings. Stil others may come out in an Alien Property. Office™ 4 | inquiry by Con- Mr. Lucey : | gress. There's George Sax, so-called punchboard king and owner of the swank Saxony Hotel at Miami Beach. The Saxony once got a sizable RFC loan. Congressional investigators disclosed that Donald Dawson, a present White House aid, and David K. Niles, former White House staff member, had heen nonpaying guests
there. Mr. Sax tossed $3900 to the Democratic Committee in 1950.
" Figured in Caudle Case Larry Knohl figured in the |congressional disclosures on T. |Lamar Caudle, formey assistant |attorney general in charge of tax
39, Arlington, |cases. Mr. Caudle got a $5000 e decorated in cut for his part in an airplane
transaction by Mr.
Daniel (left), 3, and James, 5, was awarded the Navy Cross for his |Knohl,
part in the breakout from the Chosin Reservoir in Korea.
Breaks Leg in Fall From Freight Train
Donald Cavender, 22, of 1204 In Collision
E. Market St, a student brakeman in the Hawthorn Yards, 700 S. Emerson Ave,
‘Not the Answer’ —
1Dies, 9 Hurt Fights Truman Plan For Tax Agency Shifts
A Ft. Wayne man was injured | suffered a fatally and nine other persons|
|
| And the List May Grow— cis Many Figures in al Prob Contributed to Democratic Kitty:
A
Mr. Knohl said he did not know, at the time of the sale that Mr.| Caudle got he said it had nothing to do with] tax troubles of his associates. The| government now has a major tax| case against Mr. Knohl himself. | In 1949, Mr. Knohl was quite] helpful in Demoeratic fund-rais-|
- ing. At. one time he provided
$2000, at another time $3000. The record bore a notation which said: “Collectidn details not rdReived.”|
In 1950 another contribution of |
% $2000 apparently went through!
Mr. Knohl to the Democratic com-| mittee. * Grunewald on List | Henry “The Dutchman” Grune-| wald, called the “mystery man”, of the recent tax inquiry, shows up on, fhe contribution lists with|
varying addresses and amounts.|; : » {tors to the Democratic In 1948 he gave the Democratsii.eaqury are among officials of
$1000 with only a post office box,
listed for’ address. In February,| 1950, there was a $200 contribu-|
tion. And he added another $500 later that year, Joseph P. Marcelle, the resigned Internal Revenue collector who received more than $150,000 in income from a vending machine company while running the taxi office in Brooklyn, shared $200 of his®*wealth with the Democratic committee in 1950. But it’s usual for upper echelon federal employees to kick in— the indicted Boston Internal Revenue collector, Denis Delaney, was on the lists, too. The name of Turney Gratz, former RFC employee, friend of ex-Democratic ‘National Chairman William M. Boyle Jr., and
WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 (UP) tion any more than the 10 com-|
broken leg in a fall from a were hurt and hospitalized last —Rep. Clare E. Hoffman .(R. mandments stopped sin.”
freight car last night.
He is in fair condition at lided head-on on Ind. 3, 14 miles northwest of Madison, Ind. Miles Resor, 28, died at King's | Daughters Hospital at Madison of {a skull fracture three hours after| {the accident. | Charleston Post state police be-| Which will go into effect auto-| lieved Burton Lake, 20, of Dep-| matically on Mar. 14 luty, Ind., attempted to pass a car vetoed by either the House Or terday that it will open public |and collided with an automobile Senate. Opposition forces must |driven by Gerald Straley, 30, of muster 218 votes in the House or posals to improve the Revenue {Ft. Wayne. Mr. Straley suffered broken ribs proposal. {and Mr. Lake had cuts and bruis-|
Methodist Hospital.
L
ROBERT E. KIRBY
MORTUARY 19th AND MERIDIAN
| Deputy.
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night when two automobiles col- Mich.)
team, and Robert Schuler, 21, of corruption
LOANS FOR AUTOMO Biles
introduced a [resolution yesterday to rejéct President Truman controversial plan for. re{organizing the scandal - plagued {Internal Revenue Bureau. Rep. Hoffman's move assured {a showdown vote on the plan
unless
49 votes in the Senate to kill the
|be put under civil service except ST€SS,
his ‘Not the Answer’
The resolution automatically requires hearings on the presidential plan and a report. by the House Executive Expenditures Committee within' 10 days. The House {tself does not have to act on Rep. Hoffman's resolution.
The House tax scandal investigating committee announced yes-
hearings Jan. 21 on various pro-
Bureau. But it will not consider the President's plan which has
Mr. Truman proposed abolish- peen referred to the executive ex-| es. The two are in Madison hos- ing the offices of the 64 tax col- penditures subcommittee. Ipital along with Earl Hoffman, lectors, who now are appointed by | 35, Ft. Wayne, and Lawrence the President, and replacing them Dixson, 35, Albert Wagon, 34, and |with up to 25 district commis-| |James Baker, 23, all of Celina, sioners under civil service. All
Faces Stiff Fight Mr. Truman's plan is expected
° 'O. Mr. Baker received eye in- other bureau officials also would 10 mee’ SHIf opposition in Con- 2 BDL [Conreq Homia K 1 rh juries when his glasses broke. even from members of his| througno : |” In the Lake car three passen-|the commissioner, who still would ewn party. Many Democrats feel | . y gers were injured and taken to be appointed by the President. to redr his family on a modest the hospital at Scottsburg. They] ) are Norman. brother, Lloyd, 16, a member of|
it would deprive them of choice |
patronage opportunities.
Some Republicans were loathe! : Rep. Hoffman said “legislation to indorse an administration re. Storm-Battered Cutter
Deputy High School basketballis not the answer” to cleaning up form which might tend to water in the government. down the political dynamite latent
| “Legislation does not stop corrup- in the tax scandal issue.
When you
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LOAN... your Indiana National Branch Bank
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AOANS FOR HOME REPAIRS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ iit ; : : See Signs of More Jap $110,000 in Suits Follow Crashes ‘War Holdouts on Guam n,mace suits totaling $110,000 pein <His towcar had stalled, Mr,
TAN a Or Aoi have been filed in Federal Court Ogrentz charged and he was ale area of this island today and re- j ported seeing fresh signs of an|dents as a result of traffic acci- way when. the crash occurred |estimated 10 Japanese holdouts dents. of World War II. |
Scandal Probes
-|and if there’s a real investiga-
9
once Mr. Boyle's assistant at
Democratic headqifartérs, figured footprints and fresh banana peels| charged the Hoosiers with negli- sued for $35,000 by Mrs. Katie a commission—and|in last year's RFC investigation. in a remote section of the island. gence and sought damages for 8, Grayson, Lexington, Ky. Mrs, ‘Subtracting the tured and dead He was shown to have made known to be here in 1946, auth-|stock car race driver, said Aug- 1950, repeated calls from. the Demo-|Orities believe 10 are still left. just Arndt of Crawfordsville parked on U. 8. 31 near Stop
Denied Influencing Loan
cratic committee to the RFC, but
he denied an implication in an| 80 out later this week. RFC director's diary that he tried je—————
to influence RFC loans. Mr. Gratz tossed $1000 into the party's kitty in 1950. Tne three members of the law firm of Campbell, Cohen and Landau, which figured in several fur coat %eals, contributed $100 each to the Democrats in 1949. The listings were in the names of I. T. Cohen, Jacob Landau and Howard Campbell. Some of the heaviest contribuParty
concerns held by ‘the Office of {Alien Property. Jack Frye, former airline president, best man at one of Elliott Roosevelt's weddings and $72. 000-a-year head of General Aniline & Film Corp., is shown on {the Democratic committee's lists las - a frequent contributor of $1000 or so. Louis Johnson, former Secre{tary of Defense, who up to 1947 drew $228069 as president of |General Dyestuffs, another Alien {Property holding and whose law {firm is shown to have received {more than $300,000 in legal fees from Alien Property holdings, has at times been a big Demoleratie contributor. He gave $3000 iin September, 1948. | Sen. Alexander Wiley (R. Wis.) has unlimbered some oratory on Alien Property Office heads as a source of Democratic funds,
tion of the office, the contributors angle will get a lot of attention.
Asks Judgment Of $680,945
CINCINNATI, O., Jan. 16 (UP) —Mrs. Barbara Henkel, Hollywood, Fla., filed suit: yesterday in common pleas court for judgment of $680,945 against the estate of her late brother-in-law, August J. Henkel, 93, who died last July 23 in Cincinnati. | The bulk of the $1,262,427 estate was left by Mr. Henkel to his son and two daughters. Mrs. Henkel claimed the money was due her husband, Conrad Henkel, who was in partnership with his brother, August, in a building contracting business more than half a century. : The suit said the two brothers | entered into a verbal partnership
enough money from the business
scale.
Due in Sitka Today JUNEAU, Alaska, Jan. 16; (UP)—The Coast Guard cutter Cahoone was due it Sitka today) after being battered by 92-mile-per-hour winds off Cape Spencer. An unidentified ship was. reported escorting: the Cahoone, which reached calmer waters last night. The hurricane force winds were reported to have smashed the Cahoone’s lifeboats. The Juneau-bound passenger ship Denali was pounded by] waves and winds estimated up to 100" miles per hour in the same area Sunday. One crewman was lost when he was swept over-| board. 1
hh Good Shortwave News WASHINGTON, Jan. 16—| Sometime tomorrow weak signals, and fading will cease to disrupt shortwave radio broadcasts. Reception will be fair Friday and Saturday, and fair to good Sun-| day through Wednesday, radio forecasters at the National Bureau of. Standards predicted this morning.
Business Leaders Nall Value of.
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‘ a Sept. 5, 1950, | .- Both suits, one filed from II- Wwilliam* and Howard Beals, The 18-man patrol sighted fresh linois and one from Kentucky, 152 Union St. Southport, were
Japanese cap- personal, injury. Grayson sald’ her driver crashed from .the ‘34 Francis C. Ogrentz, Chicago into. a Beals wrecker Jan. 30, ), while .the vehicle was
A second patrol is scheduled to crashed into the racer he was Eight Rd. It was obscured by
towing on U. 8. 52 near Otter- snow and darkness, she charged. - - »
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