Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1944 — Page 11
ty by both oututside the state, he women's diviformer National ational Treasurer
JT there will be
jonal stature and
to say. In fact, nber sessions over man, which is ta
n is here, but no incils as he was senate. idate, and Homer ore politically unile Robert Lyons etting in and out ent has put him
Klux Klan backliana Republicans
ed among MidRepublican fold hip has developed » were such men late Postmaster ly, but no longer Hayes, who had man. - feminine vote is ver, the Indians made no woman
ica] retrogression jescribe what has ate on hand here.
n
IN, June 26.—You ut Undersecretary , P. Pattersons
at O. Henry story -dressed man in disappeared one | years later In a ¢ gimmick was robe he had dis~ ect garment—ona bag at the knees, Patterson's pants er merit of being
recently had a brated American statuette of him. d upon a standhat in hand and places. It was a haracteristic pose g undersecretary, alk about his big
hing up the legs tle puzzied about \ggy at the knees been pressed in
se in them, Mr.
hen in his usual , “No. I haven't ' he explained. t he did manage d it?” red frankly, and 1 afterthought he
e, but it was the ve suit has seen n't a less clothesand it isn't an l. Surrounded by retary of war is d unassuming of state of mental count and don't
old hat personof ordinary GI p over the ankles. Kalish statuette, l. But the pants ronze with bags
er?
an old hand at tatue of Lincoln, l, is a classic in ies of sculptures
the majesty of-
all the nobility thes. nts, however, has ersecretary’s lacks Iress up for any-' ng, someone sent he Jackson Day g Republican, but id the 100 bucks
rty hot-shots sat suit and a blue
n HIM.
Voices From the Past’ Fill Lobbies as Delegates Mill Around.
By PETER EDSON NEA Staff Writer CHICAGO, June 26.—The" dullest Republican political convention within the memory of living man gets under way here today. The preliminaries have been even duller than that. No decorations, no bands, no elephants, no parades, no fight, no pep, no good. For a week before the opening of the actual convention in the stadium, what activities there have been have centered in the recently reopened Stevens hotel, and it is as predicted, a mess. People mill around in the airless lobby for whatever reason it is that people at conventions mill around in airless lobbies, when they might be outside breathing fresh air and enjoying the breezes and sunlight on Michigan blvd. They stand in line by the halfhour, waiting for reservations at the two out of six room clerks’ windows open for business. Rooms aren't vacated, and aren't made up at 8 p. m. when they are vacated. The Republicans at this convention are literally not only going to have to lie in their own beds. They've going to have to make their own beds. Linen closets on some floors are bare of clean towels. If you wash, you dry on your handkerchief. There aren't even any Gideon Bibles in the rooms for solace.
On the 25th Floor
Up on the 25th floor is the headquarters of the New York Dewey-for-President delegation. Most significant thing about it aside from its air of desertion and barrenness is a telephone switchboard with a number all its own. Harrison 3620, in case you want to call them up. Governor omas E. Dewey, sitting in Albany, is apparently figuring on capturing the convention the same way Hitler used to conquer Balkan countries—with a telephone call Governor John W. Bricker of Ohio—the only avowed candidate who wants the presidency and| thinks he's going to get it—has a! suite on the 10th floor, a press room on the fourth, and the grand ball room. His enthusiastic backers are doing what they can to make this look like a convention fight, on the eve of the convention opener it was considered mostly shadowboxing. They have a “John Bricker from A to Z" kit, complete with a $2 biography, an actual buckeye imprinted with “Bricker” and a big button, “Be a Bricker Backer” which you have to spell out and pronounce carefully to avoid confusion with bric-a-brac.
Bricker Looks Good
Governor Bricker looks good and he goes about beaming and sparkling through his big blue eyes, radiating what goes for the Republican version of confidence. Dr. R. C. Radabaugh of Hastings, Minn, is for ex-Governor, now Cmdr. Harold E. Stassen, in a big way. But even. the doctor's 300 pounds can't give Stassen enough delegates to do him much good, and about the only way the convention could reach him way out in the
LOOKING BACK to the May 20 of 50 years ago, Lee Windle, who lives with his wife, Mrs. Florence Windle, at 31 W. St. Joseph st, remarked today that “they made more fuss over the one this year than the day we were married.” The couple came fo Indianapolis in 1918 from their native Flora, Ill, where they were married when he was 18 and she 15. Mr. Windle was a mechanic for the old Stutz Motor Co. for 14
but |
{him a V-mail letter, Congressman Everett M. Dirksen of Pekin, Ill, is for Congressman Everett M. Dirksen for President, | but few others are, Gracious Marian Martin, with the
| most beautiful head of gray hair,
| you ever saw, is trying to do things for the women delegates and the | wives of delegates who managed to get here. Even so, the program runs not too heavily to the political education of the wonfen voters who may decide this election, but more to lec-
a trip to the planetarium. Maybe they're going in for astrology.
Pacific if it wanted to tell him or| ask him anything would be to send
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Windle look Fwver the pictures of vesteivear " the famuy album.
and later was a maintenance employee of Frederick Wallick, architect and builder. Retiring two years ago, he sometimes aids in home decora “just to help our friends.” As member of the 32d Volunteers in the Spanish-American war, exSgt. Windle took part in que the Philippine insurrection. The Windles’ “family sized™ family includes six children, 21 grandchildren, and two greatgrandchildren.
years
Through the lobby and in and out| | Broad Ripple,
of the parlors where the committee J
all on ideas for the party platform,|
glory.
tures on art at the museums and
thing is here save fresh, new, young blood.
The Hon. Henry P. FletchHerbert Hoover is coming. All voices from the past. Every-
Four Named at Southern Methodist Conference
In Bloomingotn.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 26.—
yesterday during the last day of the Southern Indiana Methodist conference were from Indianapolis. The nine were Guy Duncan Carpenter, Richard Gillum, Robert W. Gingery and Charles P. Shulhafer, all of Indianapolis; Glenn Harold Kaetzel, Connersville; Grester L. Kemp, Evansville; Frank L. Little; Vincennes; Charles A. Tyler, Castleton and Clarence Hutchinson. Yesterday's program included a sermon by Dr. George A. Butrick, pastor of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian church in New York City, on “The Value of Personality.”
Bishop Lowe Presides
Bishop Titus Lowe, head of the Indianapolis area, presided in the afternoon. Special assignments and ministerial appointments for the fol-| lowing year in the Indianapolis district follow:
Special rintments — Otto Liebner,! board of p ons and relief; C. E. Wildman, president of DePauw university:
Harold Zink, professor in DePauw university; W. C. Hartinger, secretary, Methodist hospital; W. T. Jones, | executive secretary of the preachers’ Aid society, Indianapolis; E. M. McKown, dean of Evansville college, and H. G. Lytle, superintendent of the Goodwill Industries, | Indianapolis. Indianapolis Distriet — Acton - London, James C. Cheney, Beech Grove, K. D. Vandeventer; Bethel, W. H. Thompson; Castle- |
Four of the nine elders ordained!
| the elevators disgorge new mobs;
Woughest Beachhead Is in Chicago Hotel Where GOP Delegates Fight for Elevator
+ By CHARLES T. LUCEY Another tenant who wouldn't Scripps-Howard Staff Writer budge invoked the authority of CHICAGO, June 26 (U.P.).—The OPA. toughest beachhead in America to- | When a hotel told him he’d have day is a piece of tiled terrain about | {to get out to make room for a dele40 by 75 feet, a sort of court where gute, he replied that under OPA the elevators come and go, just off regulations he couldn't be put out
one of a battery of lobbies in the as long as he paid his bill. And,|
Stevens hotel. {he added, he'd pay a bill every 30 It is defended at all times by {minutes if need be, but he would swarms of politicians, and reinforce- not move. ments arrive every few seconds as) Notices Ignored from this world’s largest inn. . | At the Sherman, notices went up Much of it purposeless, but that that people had to be out of their is the way of STnVERHIOnS. Reacauns |To0mS by 3 p. m. last Thursday. ters, to Joe's room for a drink, back | Plenty of theff are still there toto the lobby, across the street to the “2 Blackstone, into a cab to the Palmer house, Sherman, Drake or wherever. Multiply it by thousands. Chicago—June, 1944.
Queues Line Hotels All day, queues of sweaty, impatient people wait before hotel registration desks. People who say they made reservations three months ago, and had them confirmed, are told there’s nothing in the house and to come back at 7 p. m.—maybe floor. He came around in a few there’ll be something then. {minutes. There was the fellow who insisted] Despite large batteries of ele-
One man who waited an hour and a half in a line leading to a hotel {window was so sore about it that he did everything as deliberately
it, held up everyone behind him {longer than necessary. When he | finally left, the whole line broke into a cheer. A sober newspaper correspondent | who had waited more than an hour in line collapsed and fell to the
ton,
“SHenniger, Edinburg, W. mith; Glenns son; Greenwood,
Kroft: | Mare. Stanley Mahan: Blaine Avenue, B. A {
| j tree; on resolutions is hearing one and |iral’ Avenue, {L. Klausmeier; {East Tenth, A. M. Brown: there pass ghosts of past Republican |p.
Alf Landon of Kansas, who | Emery Parks: Fletcher Place, H A. Meyer, | was candidate eight vears ago. Sen-!| ators Arthur Vandenburg of Michigan and Robert Taft of Ohio, who were candidates four years ago. EX-| Senator Jim Watson of Indiana, who was Taft's father’s floor manager in 1912. Alice Roosevelt Longworth. Texas Republican stalwart Marvin Creager. er.
Grace, R. Query: dian Street. Logan Hall; G. gitt; North Church, D. L. Browning; Rob- ant lodge 134, F. & A. M,, of which erts Park. 8. L. Martin; Roosevelt-Temple R. A, Shumaker: Shelby Street, B. T. MorWhite; Victory MeWashington
gan; | morial, | Street, Patterson;
Charles Tyler: Cumberiand. G. 8. Edgewood, W. E Watkins R. Gingery; Franklin, G. A Valley-Center, C. D. WilM. R. Kerr. Indianapolis — Asbury Memorial, C. M Barth Place, R. M. Taylor; BellMorgan; Brightwood, . R. Flanigan; W. E. Gillette; Broadway, Associate, R. D. OchelCapitol Avenue, J. F. Seelig; CenF. M. Smith; Associate, R East Park, O. T. Martin,
. F. Edwards;
M. Church, Edwin Ray; Fifty-first,
Porest Manor-Arlington, C. T. Jones E. A. Clegg. Heath Memorial, C. Irvington, C. A. Shake; MeridMorris Street, G V. B. Har-
Peel. New Jersey Street,
Trinity, E. P M. O. Robbins; A. J. Coble; West Michigan, C. D Woodside, T. E. Adams Lawrence, B. J. Renner; Madison
nue, Somerset, A. L. Beatty; Maywood, W. H. Thompson: Old Bethel Ellis; Southpert, FP. T. Taylor; Trafalgar, H. W. Baldridge: Union Chapel, T L Rogers: West Newton, A. H. Backus; , Whiteland-Mt. Auburn, M. T. Reynolds; { Henniger, Guy D. Carpenter
Edwin Ray, |
' ployed by the railroad 50 years, re-
Ave-
William (cham, Miss Esther Meacham and |
{rapped mightily on the desk, de- \lessly on the floors as cars swept
| manded that the clerk do something. up and down without stopping.| without authority, and made a lot He threw up his Some learned to get into elevators of people mad. and ride up to the 25th floor in orBut der to get down to the third. Others dignitaries got pushed around like Off the senate floor, |
{The clerk did. | hands.
| “Sure,” he agreed. “I know.
hospital and field ‘there are two guys from Oklahoma learned about service elevators in everyone else. lin there, and I can’t do anything the rear, found they could make senators looked pretty much like
better time in them.
as possible when he finally reached |
Many a delegate told stories about strange people sleeping in or walking through his room. Only a few months ago the Stevens was | in army hands; many people credited the management with a miracle for doing as well as it did. To Republicans who four years {ago had herds of telephants march{ing through Philadelphia streets, bands blaring in hotel lobbies and bunting plastered everywhere, this show is tame. But there are plenty of laughs.
Plenty of Laughs
The Tennessee delegation met to plump for Governor Dewey. Just as the indorsement was given someone announced that Governor | Bricker was waiting to meet the {delegates. Quickly they adjourned and went to shake his hand. | Col. A. B. Gay, from the Ken- | tucky horse country, seemed piqued
because the Dewey people hadn't been paying the bluegrass boys { much attention. Darkly he threat{ened to give no tips on the next | Derby.
“General” Jacob S. Coxey and
Gerald L. K. Smith provided side{show effects.
STILL
Smith blitzed the he had a certain room reserved, \vators, people waited almost end- | stevens yesterday afternoon, held
ja mass meeting in a big ballroom,
lother people.
-
Senators and other Washington |
{war problems,
| vith them. They won't get out.” in England, and the Rev. Paul L.
OSCAR MEACHAM, 73, semis ry Th
i Fern Edson of Auburndale, |
DIES IN ACTON HOME
Oscar Meacham, retired employee |
Meacham. Services will be held at 2:30 p. m.
jcago & St. Louis railroad, died to- tery. !day in his home in Acton. He was |
ALBERT C. MILLER | Services for Albert C. died Saturday at his
A resident of Acton since he was
12, Mr. Meacham, who was em- home,
a. m. tomorrow
Catholic church, Calvary.
at Holy Cros with burial
tired in 1939. He was a member of the Acton Methodist church, Pleas-
he was secretary 23 years, Acton| K. of P. lodge and Order of Railroad Telegraphers. | He is survived by his wife, Edna; three daughters, Miss Lucille Mea-
lis, Mr. Miller was a salesman fo the Automatic Canteen Co. A mem
‘was 58. Besides his wife, Mrs.
| Wednesday in the Acton Methodist | of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chi- church with burial in Acton ceme-
Miller, who 326 Highland ave., will be held at £:30 in
A lifelong resident of Indianapo-
ber of the Holy Cross church, he
'4 ARRESTED-ON
Macs. and & grandson, William " BEVERAGE CHARG
Four men were under arrest to
beverage act,
California Governor Re-
mains Dubious About 2d Place on Ticket.
By HENRY J. TAYLOR Seripps-Howard Staff Writer CHICAGO, June 26. — The only
surprise remaining on tap here is what happens if Governor Warren of California is not nominated for vice president.
Four features surround the “War-
ren dilemma”:
FIRST, Governor Warren recently
said that his disinclination to ac~ cept the place, if offered, was rooted in the local situation in California. He emphasized then, as he is reemphasizing now in Chicago, that his value, to the ticket would not necessarily be as great as many seem to think.
Other people, but not Governor
Warren, may brush off the fact that his lieutenant governor is scheduled to run for the senate, and that if the governor should run for the vice presidency the Republican ticket might be vulnerable in California on the grounds that to vote for the ticket would be the equivalent of scuttling the home folk.
Home State Problems Governor Warren is gravely concerned by California's war and post= which are compli-
cated and intense Were he elected
vice ® Dresides he would have to ap-
day on charges of violating the 1935
successor, and Governor Lsupliy is at a loss to decide who jis ol to the governorship No California name - pra Fon itself for this place. THE SECOND FEATURE of the Warren dilemma is that there ex-
Arrested following police raids ists no strong Republican organiza- | yesterday were Sherman Nelson, tion in his state. Republicans and
46, of 844 S. Capitol ave; Wellington, 43, of 401 Douglas st. John Byrd, 65, of 809': Indian
731 Drake st. charged with drunkenness.
S
a raid on a house in the 700 bloc
rl on Utica st.
| BROWDER HEADS NEW YORK, June 26
‘WORKER’ (U. P).—| Florence (Earl Browder, national Communist |
Lemar pemocrats merge their votes for
'| candidates in the California pri8 maries, with a resulting breakdown
ave, and Edward C. White, 40 of of party lines and party vitality. Mr. Byrd also was
Accordingly, Governor Warren | believes that his personal strength
Officers also confiscated liquor Ini, california may be a misleading
kK test of Republican strength there, | which, in his opinion, is far less than many easterners realize.
Personal Obstacle THIRDLY, Governor Warren is
Miss Eleanor Meacham, all of Ac- | Lipps Miller, he is survived by a |leader, was appointed editor of the well and happily situated in Sac-
ton; two sons,
1st Lt. David Mea- | son, Albert C. Jr, and a sister, Mrs. | Daily Worker, chief Communist or- ramento.
cham, , serving with the signal corps| Lavinia Maple, all of Indianapolis.'gan in America, today.
He has a large family, all in local schools. Mrs. Warren
By MARGARET FOLLIN EICKS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer NEW YORK, June 26. —Whenever J. H. DuBois of General Electric's plastics division is asked for an opinion on the possibility of an all-plastics house he quickly dusts off a stock reply. “The plastics house at this time,” he says tartly, “is partly wood, partly paper, partly resin and mostly conversation.” Many leaders in the rapidly developing industry agree with him. The Monsanto Chemical Co, alarmed by an epidemic of wishful thinking stories in which dream houses of plastics tumble from a giant press complete with gingham curtains and a welcome mat, keyed a series of advertise-
CROSSWOZD PUZZLE
ACTRESS
Answer to Previous Pussle TRE] ERG RIA ISTE PA EE | [E] ele 916 LAM AT Ee PALE
HORIZONTAL 59 Reign
31 Musical note 32 Rough lava 34 Orchestra 35 Current events 36 British (abbr.) 37 Indian army (abbr.) [39 Paid notice 40 Exclamation ‘ Light brown
42 Psalm (abbr.) 44 Tellurium (symbol) ls Accomplish 47 Old Testa- + ment (abbr.) 48 Per $0 Destruction 52 Sketched 55 Journey 57 On the sheltered side ° 58 Coliege official
Monday Hours: 12:15 to 8:45 Tues. Thru Sat. 9:45 to 5:45
"DR. R. J.
THOROUGH EYE GARE
EDIE FS FALER LEST IA] SA YE
WELDON .
In * Charge
OPTICAL sepaTHENT
{ is more sanguine.
i and walls.
i
: wiped without injury—another in- | stance of how plastics will aid ! housewives to keep their homes
| mum of elbow grease.
i
but another result of U. S. Ply-
|
| steel sink of conventional size made
|
| from denting and much lighter. | This sink can: be made for 40
{1.6 Pictured 60 She is a char- . Screen actress acter —— 12 Ireland 61 Thwarted I 5 sre SET 13 Crucifix ~ VERTICAL IC IANEEWE AK ENEIRIOB] 15 Eccentric 1 Solution SIT EE SILIEDED! 1 IME] wheels 2 Arabian Sadi] 1 TE OArTEN, 18 Tale 3 Wearies WIA SPE INIT] 17 Notion 4 Tavern 25 Far Eastern 44 Soft mineral 18 Great Lake 5 Operatic solo country 46 Chances 19 Exist 6 American 27 Transmits 47 Possesses 20 On account author 28 Recede 49 Christmas i (abbr.) ? First man 29 Spoil 50 Sheep's bleat 21 Missouri 8 Frozen water 32 Reverential 51 Ever (contr.) J (abbr.) 9 Nostrils fear 53 Things 23 And (Latin) . 10 Leave out 33 Kind of tree (Latin) 24 Iniquity 11 Employ 38 Also 54 Each (abbr.) 26 Donkey 14 Alleged force 39 Likely 55 Three (comb. | 28 Print measure 20 Individual 4] Belief form) 30 Compass point 22 Rowing stick 43 Concerning 56 Bright color
| able to take their sunbaths com- | fortably in their own rooms with
| spired Morris Sanders, the archi-
!
|
| outside the glass. Where building | laws prevent such construction he
ments to debunking prevalent fantasies. Lawrence Ottinger, president of the United States Plywood Corp, He holds out hope for post-war homes in which plastics, in plywood, play a maJor part. Consumer demand for plywood walls, wainscotings and cabinets has been growing rapidly. Prime problem so far has been in cost. Mr. Ottinger points out that mass production methods have reduced the expense of producing plywood so that cost of a wood-paneled room will not be appreciably more than one which is plastered, papered or painted. And there are other advantages.
Aid to Housewives
Plywood surfaced with resinimpregnated paper is a new and improved product which will find its place in tables, drainboards Highly resistant to abrasion, they may be washed or
bright and shining with a mini- | Still in the experimental stage, |
woods powder box, is a stainless by superimposing stainless steel on birch plywood. “The resultant product is something that will withstand impact, which is free
per cent or less of the cost of a conventional steel sink,” Mr. Ottinger reports. Little post-war Juniors will be
nary a draft and all because of the fact that ultra-violet rays pass right through sheets of plastic. That scientific truism in-
tect, to plan a plastic storm window, preferably to be attached
has whipped up an inside pane and also expects to make units of plastic windows with window boxes for country-hungry citydwellers. Probably the quality nearest to a woman's heart when she thinks of this versatile synthetic is its cleanliness. It isn't hard to keep plastics furniture, lamps, etc., immaculate. Nor do plastics require polishing or rubbing. That quality will pay double dividends in functional home uses when continuous
Haven for the Man
Perhaps it is too early for the industry, which cannot be accused of making extravagant claims for plastics, or the eager consumer, to anticipate plastics
where the man of the house can read undisturbed while the radio blasts, the children
pressure laminating process which, he insists, would not have been fully developed for 20 years had it not been for the war. now is turning out war materials s0 important as to be military secrets by this process. Molding is the method usually associated with plastics but many materials now classed as plastics are laminated sheets of paper, cloth or asbestos impregnated with plastics resin and compressed under pressure, These laminated sheets, by the low-pressure molding technique, are shaped into any desired form with strength their outstanding characteristic. That strength, ac-
cording to Mr. DuBois, may have |
post-war applications in hot air furnace pipes, heating and ventilating equipment, mantels, refrigerators, ranges, sinks, medicine cabinets, furniture, musical instruments and, of all things, ladies’ and men’s hats.
Withstands Boiling Water Plastics’ functional and decora-
tive placg in the electrical appli--
ance industry is already well | known. The synthetic also is scheduled to fashion vacuum
cleaner housings, making the instrument lighter and less destructive when bumped into furniture. Because one of the important features of plastics is the power to dampen sound vibrations and cut
GE |
1 noises, clocks and fans will be de- | | signed to take advantage of this plus-plastics value. You probably have owned at | one time a plastics bathroom tumbler or a set of picnic dishes | which warped and were definitely | unsatisfactory. You vowed you'd never have another such in your | house. The industry regrets that and explains that careless manu-
| facturers used the wrong kifid of | plastic for the job. Hot ‘water : | had a deleterious effect, but M
santo reports that six months after the war there will be a transparent plastic that can ac- |
wife like an Aladdin's
water resistant. variety,
coke and salt,
One branch of the plastics family will be to the postwar houselamp. Called elasto-plastics, this newly developed and perfected for war uses material will serve such di- | verse purposes in one or another of its widely divergent forms as flooring, package wrapping for the refrigerator and as a film to make
B. F. Goodrich's ‘al, is made from limestone, easily obtained natural resources. But you'd never know the tupe*¥Hen the chemist
Your Post-War Home: Plywood Leads Field of Plastics in Tests for Houses and Furnishings
you will beg, borrow or stea
roll,
or grease.
above,
; gets through with them. Your baby will wear protective panties of Koroseal. If you live by the sea
screens made from plastic extrusions for your house because they are translucent, flexible enough to resist’ salt water and rust and are unaffected by sun, water
Awning also offer a big field, and work now is going on to per- | fect a glass fabric which, with a Koroseal film, will resist mildew along with the advantages listed
{has a long and tedious session recently behind her in redoing Sacramento's dingy executive man- | sion, and the governor is not a {man of independent means. His removal to Washington (where no {official home is proivded for the | |vice president) and all that such |uprooting would entail is a real |obstacle on the personal side. STLY, Governor Warren can hardly be expected to see any political plum in the vice presidential | nomination. It is not a place to fascinate such an active man, es- | pecially one who has been arguing constantly that he can serve the Republican ticket better by cam- | paigning for the ticket on the Pa- | cific coast, rather than being on
tually withstand boiling water. Plastics dishes and cutlery will follow this development. Speaking of dishes, Monsanto prophesied plastic dishes (they alreadv have been experimentally introduced) which retain the appearance and consumer appeal of china but cost little more than paper plates. Once dinner is over vou head for the nearest trash receptacle with what would be a good hour's dish washing. The synthetic's non-heat conducting quality is handy in the kitchen. Because they don’t transmit shocks, concealed doorbells and decorative doorknobs will be made of plastics which are tarnish free, too. Monsanto thinks it possible that continuous strip | electrical outlets will replace in- | dividual floor sockets.
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&
