Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1944 — Page 7
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The governor is prepared to meet attacks that he had pledged himself to devote his full term as governor to the people of New York state. “You have decided otherwise,” was his answer to, the convention, Governor Dewey, now 42, will place an accent on youth; rapped the New Deal as having “grown old” in office. His ca
ROLL NAZIS BACK T MILES IN ITALY
(Continued From Page One)
low Siena and in the hills around Perugia. Allied headquarters revealed that the number of prisoners captured since the beginning of the offensive on May 11 has swelled to more than 32,000 men, of whom 25,000 were taken by the 5th army, Begin to Crack Everywhere the Nazis were battling desperately to ~ delay the march on their Pisa-Florence-Rim-ini line, now only 35 to 55 miles beyond the advancing allied columns, but front dispatches indicated they were beginning to crack under the sustained fury of the 5th and 8th army drive. American tanks and Infantrymen pounding northward on the wartorn coastal highway met increasing evidence® of confusion in the enemy ranks. The Germans were losing heavily in men and equipment as a result of the devastating shell-fire poured into them by fastmoving American fleld guns Stretches of the coast road were littered with enemy dead and. the wreckage of tanks, trucks and guns.
Governor Thomas E. Dewey (
tion at the G. O. P. convention.
_|indiana Leaders See Ticket As a Strong Vote-Getter
(Continued From Page One)
|Leroy Yoder of South Bend and H.
Clark Springer, De Kalb county G. O. P, chairman. Most of the Republican leaders were hesitant to make any predictions at this stage of the size of the Republican majority they expect this fall with the exception of Sen-
atorial Nominee Homer E. Capehart who predicted victory by a 150,-000-vote margin.
speech for Governor Bricker. Mr. Hutcheson cguld not be reached for comment last night. The Hutcheson supporters said | that the fact that his name Was | not placed In nomination would | make it appear that “labor's candidate” was not given a chance. Friends of Governor Dewey said
that had Mr. Hutcheson been placed in nomination and then de- | feated the Democrats could say,! “Look what the Republicans did |
John W. Bricker as presidential and vice presidential candidates of the Républican party meet on the speakers stand following their nomina-
left) shakes hands with Governor
(Continued From Page One)
that the axis again. TWO: Win the peace so it will stay won this time—not by words, not by deals “of a little group of rulers who meet together in private conferences,” but by co-operative effort with ither sovereign nations in the patient building of a peace that will last. THREE: Preserve America as “a free nation of free men,” in which “full employment shall be a first objective of national policy .., . a real chance for every man and woman to earn a decent living at a decent wage.” FOUR: Get “a new, progressive administration in Washington,” that will substitute a young and efficient cabinet, a restored congress, a unifled administration that leads instead of regimenting a free people—
DOUBLE RITES SET FOR CRASH VICTIMS
(Continued From Page One)
will be the following policemen: George 8. Martin, Daniel A. Newman, Edward H. Arzman, Maurice Kinney, Thomas Allison, Thomas O, Carter, Ernest B. Haught, James O'Brien, Thomas Smith, Henry Dugan, Melvin Wilkerson and Karl F. Kimberlin, Born in South Carolina, Sgt. Owens had lived here 35 years. He was 8 member of the Fraternal Order of Police.
WHISTLES TO SOUND 'V" BLASTS IN DRIVE
Factory whistles throughout Marion county will sound the three-short-and-one-long victory blast every day next week as a reminder of the July 8 closing date of the fifth war lean drive. The highest single day's purchase on record— $26,200,000 worth—was made in the state yesterday, zooming the total to $143,900,000 or 51 per cent of the Hoosier goal. Indianapolis municipal employees have accepted a $200,000 V-loan quota, Harry Calkins, chairman of the city hall war bond committee, announced. :
never can attack
Dewey Out to Take Liberal Vote From 'Groggy Champ’
in place of the New Deal's petty {tyrannies and bloated, wrangling, bungling bureaucracy of one-man government grown old and exhausted. What Dewey did not say was as significant as, if not more so than, what he did. Unlike some of the convention orators, he did not call the Democratic administration Communist or Fascist, he did not deny that the New Deal had its godd points in its early days, and he did not question President Roosevelt's good faith. He did not say. Throw the rascals out. Instead, he said in effect: throw out the feeble old bunglers and, the cynical palace sycophants.
Appeals to Independents
obviously Dewey’s appeal is not to the conservative Republicans, who will vote for him anyway, but to the independent and progressive voters who have elected Roosevelt three times. He cannot challenge Roosevelt's good faith without challenging their past judgment and purpose and without making a martyred votegetter out of the fourth term candidate. So Dewey chooses to campaign for the disillusioned Roosevelt vote on the theme that the New Deal's original progressive pledges were fine, but that its recent performe ance has been so bad that efficient and fair government are out.
‘More Pity Than Blame’
Mr. Gates said that the polls that
He said that ‘one county which had always polled Democratic now showed the Republicans ahead by 1000 votes.
Plan Organization Drive
Mr. Gates said he intended to put on an organization campaign, “the best that has ever been put on in Indiana.” - “After all,” he added, “you don't win by speeches, you win by organization.” J The question on the minds of most G. O. P. leaders was whether, now that Ernest 'M. Morris had been re-elected national committeeman, the various Republican editors throughout the state who had been calling for the ouster of State Chairman John Lauer would “turn off the heat.” It was Mr. Lauer that called the “quickie” meeting of the ‘convention delegates in Indianapolis on June 2 at which Robert W. Lyons, chain store attorney and former Ku Klux Klan treasurer, was elected national committeeman. Most of the leaders said they believed that the editors would see that there was nothing to gain by kicking up further turmoil in the party and would “go along” for the good of the state and national | tickets. I Party leaders said, too, that they | really intended to push the plan to have Governor Dewey, if he is elected President, appoint William L. (Big Bill) Hutcheson of Indianapolis, international president of the Carpenters union, as secretary of labor.
Hutcheson Group Irked
A resolution proposing Mr. Hutcheson’s appointment was submitted to the national convention yesterday by Congressman Charles Halleck of Rensselaer. It was signed by Mr. Lauer. Mr. Hutcheson's supporters were plainly irked that their candidate's name was not placed in nomination and Mr. Hutcheson, who was an Indiana delegate to the national convertion, did not appear at the stadium while the nominations were in progress. He reportedly was urged by a number of friends to appear at the convention and make a seconding
to the Republican labor candidate.” |
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By pointing to the Roosevelt fail- { ure more in pity than in blame, the rising young challenger would lick the groggy old champ, who aint’ what he used to be. - { It is good strategy, because a lot of folks who like Roosevelt think he 10 longer has what it takes, We never were very good at looking into the President's mind, but our guess is that the great politicician in the White House—after get- | ting a sample of the challenger’s | capacity last night—may not have that igaret-holder cocked at such & Jaunty angle today,
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FIVE GIRLS DROWN | AS LOG OVERTURNS
i : drowned late yesterday when a log | on which they were riding over-| re : turned in the Susquehanna river at | e i Exeter, Pa., five miles north of here. : State police identified the victims . 10; Theresa Modleshifski, 13; Ther- | resa Janiczewski, 10, and Delores, Gadela, 10, all of Exeter.
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FITCHBURG, Mass. (U. p).— John Andrews of Watertown, a rail- | road employee, asked for a sock in the jaw, got it, and was happy. It cured him of lockjaw, |
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