Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1948 — Page 3

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23; 1948

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘Swings Blitz From East For

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Wha =

: Taft. Stassen Confer Twice

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GOP Delegates Unanimously -

Halleck Labels Truman *"Obstructionist; Predicts Complete Victory for GOP.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Notwithstanding veto after| issued by petly tyrants in WashTimes Stal Writer veto, notwithstanding the pres-

One-Way To Open July 14

PHILADELPHIA, June 23 —|gures and propaganda from New

“Our people have had enough—

Indian’s favorite son candidate,

House

Deal bureaucrats opposing every much too much—of the efforts

ty Leader Charlesigtep to free our people, and to.of New Dealers to foster hatred

About. ‘Deals’

Governor's Rivals

OK Platform

Lodge Praises

A. Halleck, told the Republican

President Truman is “an obstructionist” and defends his failuresiy;

release the forces that have made among our people, to set class National Convention today that/our country great, this Congress against class and race against has kept its pledges—it has de- race—and then, to capitalize upon vered.

First one-way streets in the downtown area will be opened July 14. : Southbound traffic will be routed over New Jersey St. from Ft. Wayne Ave to Washington 8t., while northbound traffic will

pir home and then | By CHARLES T. LUCEY > Seri Howard Staff Writer pa himself with thy PH ELPHIA, June 23 — liber pistol, police re. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey turned y. on westward in a- quest for nominawin, 37, died in a hos. J tion-clinching Republican presiurs after police burst dential delegates today as his opome last night ang Jl ponents poured all their political lying wounded besidy ll resources into a mighty lastf his wife Gladys, 3 ll minute effort to stop him. | : , 73. : The New Yorker has breached, " ® one Eastern state after another, 3 to Meet : where his adversaries have sought : to cut him down. | g of the Past Pres. Sen. Edward S. Martin of Penn- | of the Major Harold sylvania sent the New Yorker's Auxiliary No. 3 wig Jl boom to a new crescendo yester-| turday at 7:30 p. m, day when he announced his own, : withdrawal as a favorite son tral YWCA building, candidate to nominate Mr. Dewey. ! Resor, president, will ll 7,4ay Mr. Dewey picked ap new of the business ses. Wl ,irength in New Jersey. Ars. Zora Love: and But his men “Were turning new oYe be hostesses. ll 4c now on the west. | program. The hope was to increase his|

total in Indiana, to penetrate the| lines of Sen. Robert A. Taft in| Jllinois, perhaps even to find a way to break into Sen. Arthur H:| Vandenberg’s Michigan strength. | Warren Holds Fast Gov. Earl Warren of California has held his 53-man delegation in tight rein. At a caucus ‘oday it —

of the Indiana delegation examin

JUST CHECKING—John Owens and Rep. Charles Halleck

Republican National convention ‘in Philadelphia.

e newspaper clippings during the

voted to stand fast with W. REV 5 ‘Only a month ago Texas me. With Clare Boothe Luce— publicans voted heavily against|

—yet today there is increasing talk among their 33 delegates of a possible early political courtship with the New York governor.

Refutes GOP

Mr. Dewey in favor of Sen. mn: Keynote Speech by Green

Isolationism

dential nomination.

placed before

Talk of “deals” to hobble the men of Dewey flowed through most of the corridors and across most of the bars in Philadelphia. The latest burst of such speculation grew out of two meetings between Sen. Taft and Minnesoty’s Harold Stassen. Only a few weeks ago, in the Ohio, Nebraska and Oregon campaigns, these t'.0 men were saying some very unkind things about each other, yet today they have the great common longing to see. Tom Dewey stopped. They know this must happen before either of them can have a shot at the presidential nomination Hopes to Crush Dewey But delegates don’t always follow their candidates when the

Interpreted as Announcing Party Return To World-Minded Foreign Policy

By CLARE BOOTHE LUCE (Copyright, 1948, by The Indianapolis Times and United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) PHILADELPHIA —Bernard M. Baruch, America’s elder states-| man, has two theories for successful speechmaking that are broken| by almost every campaign orator, includihg myself. They are: “You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar, so always deal gently with your opponent,” and “never talk more than 15 minutes, unless you have a point of vital importance—then cut your speech

to 12.” Eye eign affairs, and that more is Mr. Baruch. believes —- and 1 onesty—honesty with foreign have no doubt that efperience ) would vindicate his judgment—| countries and with the American that only short speeches are ever PEOP'E

’ | “The Democrats became disgiven any audience's full atten |. The in ‘an attempt to

tion and only very, very short) . ’ realistic.’ Where has this landed ssecties rr Bt primed of Il us? Let me briefly review the night, Vv. (are “record. Mistrusting the Ameriswinging be, i linois talked something over 15 .o, people, the Democratic adng ng gins in 2a national minutes, a procedure wholly nec-| i io¢ ation Kept its policies sethat Ee that's the fact essary to the keynoter of a great . ot oven when those policies ee a tien Li national convention that is Cer- wor. rioht Harry Hopkins’

+ « « with one-piece,

on, acid resistant top 1 cooker and rivet,

Planks for ’48

, June 23

PHILADELPHIA » (6P)—The Republi conven: decisive” victory for the Repubtion today unanimously approved

a party platform described by its chief draftsman as one that puts the GOP “far out ahead of where it has ever been” in foreign and domestic affairs.

The platform already carriedon the winning ticket in either

the indorsement of the top contenders for the Republican presi:

The 2700-word document was the convention by Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.!| of Massachusetts, chairman of the 104-member resolutions committee which authored it. “This platform,” Mr. Lodge said, “marks a bursting out of bounds by the Republican Party and puts it far out ahead of where it has ever been on for-| eign policy, housing, social wel-| fare and similar issues.” Some Dissenters It pledges the - Republican Party to the Vandenberg brand of - international foreign policy. On the ‘domestic front it calls for lower taxes and living costs, civil liberties guarantees, government economy and an all-out fight against communism, The top presidential prospects gave it their full blessing. Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan called it a “superlative job.” Sen. Robert A, Taft of Ohio approved it “thoroughly,” and Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York called it a “fine declaration of the principles of the Republican Party.” There were a few dissenters. Some southerners opposed the Civil Rights plank which calls for anti-lynching legislation, elimination of poll taxes and “equal opportunity to work." They thought it went too far, but they were outvoted in the resolutions committee. Rep. Forest A. Harness of Indiana—one of the critics of the foreign policy plank and of some of the domestic proposals—said

“Not Too Bad” “I don’t think the foreign policy plank is too bad,” he said. “I think it leaves us in a posi tion to re-examine the whole

That plank advocates continued

1 F ~ “broiler unit and “deal” tain to be picking the next Pres- ;.. io a5 edited by Robert Sheror, br : would be for Mr. Stassen to|ident of the United States. What ooo owen ne ry ot

swing his strength to the greater made Gov. Green's speech a doc-|

ywers. 179.95 forces of Mr. Taft—in return, it ument of enormous contemporary| yo.) Pe . people i might be, for the vice presidential | significance, and even historical ‘common-law alliance’ with Great J nomination. . Yet some of the importance, is that it was far) oitain British OS officers states in which Mr. Stassen has! from being the “isolationist” ar- came to Washington for militar iy a strength have no interest in/gument that rumor had adver-| 3

going for Mr. Taft—they have! tised. their but they wore mufti and

i i ised. made it plain that in part, at McCormick “Hahd Seen their purposes were disguised

; 5 “hs | ces, Seventh Floof |Our Navy corfvoyed British ships,

Dewey if Mr. Stassen cannot ert McCormick may have Per-\ merely patrolling. win. {sonally supervised its composi-| “The Democrat who records That is a problem faced also|tijon. While Gov. Green Has in {pie deception, Robert Sherwood,

zy by Pennsylvania's Gov. Jamesitimes past given every evidence justifies it in the following words: ° o' eo ® H. Duff, whose greatest hope isiof being able to write his own ‘1; ay) probability no great damto crush Gov. Dewey politically.|speeches, it would be nice 10|,00 would have been done had XS * Jj Gov. Duff's own sentimnets long|think that the Colonel had Writ-\{1o details of these plans fallen . a §| have been for Sen. Vandenberg, ten this one. Then one could look 3 8 but the Michigan man has de-| forward with a certain pleas . ) J clined and still declines to make to reading in the papers that

an active move for the nomina-/the Colonel and his lovely wife Lier Tallen into A tion. : had invited Mr. Winston Churchill co =n ono ration for war might If the Vandenberg drive does to spend the summer holidays ; . wo been well-nigh wrecked.’ not take hold Mr. Duff might with them. | Mr Sherwood ‘calls this situation swing his strength—and a ma-| Gov. Green's speech as 2 “ironic. jority of Pennsylvania's 73 dele- deed a notable one, precisely be- =, gates are claimed by him—to Mr.|cause it showed that the Repub-| It 5s more than Tonle When Taft. Yet Mr. Taft has not here-|lican Party has returned to the ; . ..iic sees nothing wrong . lofore been given a very highprogrefsive, forward. marching in telling lies to the people for 4 Popularity rating in Pennsyl-|World-minded foreign policy of) hat it conceives to be their own vania. : Theodore Roosevelt, John Hay, coo d. It is dishonesty com Still Another “Deal” ~~ |and Elihu Root. pounded by cynicism. Mr. Duff’s opponents say the I am glad that Gov. Green cut = Saw War Coming Dewey forces are cracking into|none of his talk. But as the eve- “History shows now that back the strength he has been claim-| Ping, 1216 In starting, grew ister, in ’39, administration circles priing and now say they have as I found it necessary to cut greati_ ely thought lend-lease” Would many as 50 Pennsylvania dele-/chunks from mine—no doubt to) nd ware. Congress-was told gates. The battle in this second |the benefit of the speech and the S50 peate rmasare largest state is not personalities/audience, seen and unseen. «History shows now that in 41 alone—it involves control of the| Reproached for Deletions | commitrents were toad tor Mr. GOP organization and probably) TIOWEVEr Sever’ newspapermen' , =... at the Atlantic Conferimmense patronage in the next/| (New Dealers naturally) later re-| wong nL four years. {proached me for having cut a th ’ , 8 There is still another “deal”|thrust or two and a light-hearted ® El sliows now that te No. . hope held by some who wish to|line here and there through fear| o y ns a a N) > stop Dewey—the possibility that|of public criticism. {vem or Ns wh Tipe avy, yi e Senator Taft might throw as| These are those portions, de- pi ng british s ps, was na much of his strength as he can lected for the want of time: 8 oo yA a aga ns 3 Tan to Senator Vandenberg. Mr. Van-| “American foreign policy must su 5 ; 2 hye ouse denied it. denberg has’a 41-vote core in his/first of all recover its honesty.| Lear at r Was Pay-Off own Michigan = delegation and Yes, simple honesty, which has] And history-shows that the considerable support elsewhere. |been drained away by 16 years of State Department felt our de-

r people with young:

ensitive radio receiver

Yet for months some of Mr. internal discord, foreign war and mands on Japan would provoke]

Taft's friends have been hinting the lies of war. We Republicans her into an attack. It told us that if Senator Taft saw that he have prided ourselves on our that these demands were a sound and Mr. Dewey were deadlocked practicality, and justly so. But basis of peace in the Orient. and that a darkhorse might win,/I say we have contributed and; “The pay-off to such an extrahe would throw in with Mr. must contribute more than prac- constitutional foreign policy was Dewey. |ticality to the conduct of our for-/Pearl Harbor.” 2 he Flock of Rumors m— sn - - e theory was that the two | Y 4 | together would control the con- In Indianapo § See i a i Anna Richmond, 25, of 522 W. 12th St. 'Lester Collins, 24, of 53

onic speaker and pre

deast « * a 219.50

vention, that they should be able

to agree among themselves rather

an, functional style in "EN 4 Hi than 18t it slip to a third man as EVENTS TODAY

. Lynn St: 3 | i A iation of University WomSR w "dd in 1940 to Wendell Willkie. *t3"Werkshop—Ail day. YWCA. Minnie May Tomphins, 2, of i017 re radie with [8-wa — 6:30 to 8 D. My james 1. Buford, 20, of

Taft - to - Vandenberg play | Vaccination of Dogs , > . 630 W.. Michigan St. How would go against this Shoo Sahara Gris Dand—3 p. m.| Olis Ave; A Hig eory—. Brookside Park. . y—but it is ‘a possibility Broo Se A Concert-tp. m.. world Repert Gale Moody. 25, of Palestine, T.;

being studied by some. : War Memorial i » Ruby Mas tm anv N.. Dearborn th Mr. Dewey's bid for new “Let's Go.” a song and dance revue BY po, ionjin A. Priend, 23, OT 1905. N. Tibbs V ¥ | nts of Mernice Van Sickle (through ~ . g western support went a flock of | studei o T Ave, La Vera Jean Maile, 19, of 1705

Friday)—8 p m. Civic Theater. | N. Tibbs Ave. rumors—he hi 11 of | Recital, Jordan Faculty—8:15 p. m., Re- o.0; ©. Wells, 23, of 2164 N. Pennsylvania mself denied all of | 8t.; Dolores M. Nicodemus, 22, of 1313

them—on deals involving the vice hearsal Hall, 1116 N. Delaware 8t.

! , of 2328 Judianapolis Ave.; Mary Smith, 16, of 1919 -

Juosonic speakers, and 50.record library « + ¢

| N. New Jersey St. Presidency. Gov. Dwight Green pyENTS TOMORROW | William _E. Landrum, 27, of 420 N. Chester Illinois was mentioned .in Vaceination of Dogs — 6:30 to 8 p. m.,| 5i Dorothy MaXime lambewy, 35, of A etur | ~ School 47, 1 . Ray Carl H Mosser. 30, of 2600 Cold port y for substantial Dewey SUP” Band Concert — 8 p. m., Keystone Play- “°g rings Road; Flossie Mae Stohler, 29, 2 of rom Illinois, and Rep. ground | of Fairgrounds Hotel. J \erican styled cabine Charles A. Halleck of Indiana! James A. Stephens, if. of 1836 Miller|

In return for greater Indiana MARRIAGE LICENSES | 8 wien Yan Terry, 18, of 114

: Support and ibly help from George Trask Wheiden Jr. 26, of 3524 ,p4 04 G Mangold, 24, of R. R. 1, Box power utput 12- possibly help Birchw ve.. Mary Joan Beckett, “ out pr ie Hagedon, 19, of RB. R. i ® ! Tralleek friends in other states. i. of eid th BL of 5050 N. Dela.’ Li BOX or 5 N. Capitol {James Louis McCoy, 23, o a : John K. Johnson, 26, of 1905 N. Capitol of it added up, only a few ve St: Mary Ellen Leckie, 23, of 404 el Oente Ann Banks, 23. of 2240

wa ve Bours before balloting begins, to Ruskin Place. mer. AS of ‘130 Nis. Ca itol Ave. of Bo Taf 0 . 3 . y thport, 3 Dew tempted gang-up on Mr. Wir VAST tM iclen ‘Lucile. Million, Roper HL HOY pranke. 10. of RR. 20 Wey by his combined OpPO-| 39, of 1434 N. Delaware St. | Box 71. . hents—and a tremendous effort Gene Edwin Herrick 31, of 38% N, TOG prank Hiram Collins, 18. of New Augusta. bot t.: e by Mr. Dewey to beat these men | R. R. 4, Box wn,

n automatic record

. . F Al ao 19.50 FM M Marilyn Loy, 22, of Ind; Patty Ramona Mitchell, 19, . I W. 35th St. .. 25, of 5470 Uni- ;,pes G. Newland, 29. Nicholson, 22, of “"gop, 8t.. Helen L. Rayman,

- g v FISH FRY TO BUY TRUCK Shell G 320 8. Noble , N; Colorado Ave. y Bert Russell Carter, 30, of 320 8. Noble p,.; gjljott Harris, 38, of 1706 N. Alabama » Baths Mary Teresa Carter, 2, of 1528." gi." Bertha Ellen Phelps, 25, of 4817

} A fish fry sponsored by the A St. | Winthrop Ave. i Fleming Garden volunteer fire! wim R. Powell, 19, of 1048 Winfleld goratth Pk Robe dios, Eighth FIOOF § department will be held tomor-| Ave. Margaret Rizabein Hausman, 20. “haiian 8: Mildred Louise : Tow, Friday and Saturday at! yok E Mealey. 2. of 32 N. Buelid Ave: 5 or JOU No C8 of Greenwood, Ind.: : 4325 W. Washington St. Serving| Mary Ann Pravel, 18, of R. R. 3. Bok) Norma Frances Bohannon, td ¥ill begin at noon Saturday and pemard J. Maurer, 20. of 803 West Drive] “WOKS ____ its : at A mn. tomorrow and Friday. Woodruff Pia chia: ae EE SUITS FILED used to buy awison Higgins, 27. © | 3 new fire truck, Charles Hughes Ave: Luckie Jackson, 26, of 1712 Caf: {Marjorie Maxine v8,

roliton Ave. Watson; Glenda vs general chairman.

& 4

Benjamin Frankl Ross Wickliff; ua.

Vernon T. Groves, 30, of 153 Douglass Bt.; dred Louise vs. Jasper F. Goftman;

-

least, they are headed for Mr. Rumor had it that Col. Rob-/put the people were told we were|

{into the hands of the Germans clearance and low-rental housing €and the Japanese; whereas, had “only where there is a need that

Statistics

y W. A. Gray: Marjory H, vs. James R. A

of 1305 N. Dels-| wiiliam Price, 58, at General, cersbral 7, of 3023,

rts, 18, of 724 8. Man. fldred Louise Cadwell, 18; 7000

ror or Si mitral steposi i

Jean vk. Harold Dean Rs May

foreign aid—“within ‘the prudent limits of our own economic wel(fare” —to “peace-loving” coun{tries which try to help themselves. It also calls for “firm friendliness” without appeasement, creation of a United Nations armed force and curbs on the big-power veto in the United Nations. Mr. Harness disclosed that, at |his suggestion, the ~ resolutions |committee toned down the hous(ing plank by eliminating an outright indorsement. of federal aid for public housing and slum clearance. As finally drafted; the plank calls for federal aid in local slum

cannot be met eithér by private enterprise or by the states and localities.”

Student Pilot Unhurt In Crash Landing

Ed Smith, 21-year-old student pilot, escaped injury yesterday when he was forced to crash land his plane in a field near Municipal Alrport. The young fler, who lives at 2910 N. Illinois St., said he was practicing landings and takeoffs ii. a Cub trainer when the engine quit. He narrowly missed some high tension wires in his attempt to make the field, according to tower operators. Only damage to the plane was a broken propeller. He had been flying for two months,

Montana Residents Dig Out of Flooded Area

GREAT FALLS, Mont., June 23 (UP)—Residents of north central Montana dug their way out today as the flood waters of the Mirias (and Teton Rivers subsided from {their silt-covered homes. claimed a disaster zone by President Truman, had swept over about 2000 acres. The property {damage caused by the tributaries lof the Missouri River was high.

venia vs.

George Martin; Arthur J.

PFischesser. Doroth 5 ew; Katherine Louise vs Waiter Shoemaker; |Annie vs. Brady Johnson; Mary vs. Louis | Goebel; Elvertia vs. James T, Bell; Mary Nell vs. Harry Grandson Hazelwood: Mary Lucille vs. Earl i Mary vs. Joseph Dillon: Jewel vs. ilburn Grider; Helen izabeth vs. Herman Ralph Cunningham.

BIRTHS { Boys At St. Francis Lambert, Phyllis Oliver. | At General—-Robert, Jacqueline Hardister; | Carl, Kalie Weeden. i man-—Richard, Dorothy Hansen; Donald, Christine Clements. . {At St. Vincent's Robert, Mildred Bell. {At Home—Charles, Juanita Tibbs, 1823 Massachusetts Ave, bh ~ ris {At St. Franeis—Gilbert, Marjorie Fowler. | At Gemeral—William, Teresa Ider. At Coleman—Terry, Anita Walters; Robert, Oresta , Williams; Robert, Margaret

{ Grothaus. {At Methodist Thomas, Virginia Jones; . Albert, Edna Dale; Morris, ‘Phyllis Stone; Rex, tha Brock: William, Victoria | Behn; Orval, Mabel Love; Cecil, Estelle

{At St, Vincent’s—Coy, Sue Coffee.

DEATHS

hemorrhage. Lorenzo Allen Jay, 73, at 3163 Graceland, ! carcinoma. {Hans Christian Andersen, 71, at #33 N. Dearborn, arteriosclerosis. . . 88, at 115 8. Audubon,

46, at 4402 College,

8. lice Bartean Runnels, 93, at 1325 N, New Jersey, myocarditis

|otover McCormick, 64, at General, cere-

{ coronary occlusion. | Florence Brandon,

cirrhosis

‘the resulting confusion and bit“We have solved old problems terness by posing as the cham- travel East 8t. from Ohio to 10th that for long years the New Deal-ipion of each group against the Sts, the safety board decided toers left unsolved. We have met other.” licans in November. current problems, most of which| Among the accomplishments of “It will be a victory of the the New Dealers created. Much!Con pointed to with pride Sts. will be made one-way. American people for the cause of has been accomplished. There isiby Mr. Halleck was the tax cut, City council recently approved liberty,” he said. : much more to do.” Taft-Hartley law (which he re- a sweeping ordinance for the reWhen that victory comes, Mr.| Decrying Truman obstruction-iferred to as the labor-manage- routing of downtown trafic Halleck has high hopes of being ism, waste, extravagance, Com-iment relations bill), removal of through thoroughmunists “in places high and 10Wicontrols on prices, cutting the fares. first or second place. He may|in our government” and the/war.time payroll and” post-war One-side-of-the-street-only parktry ‘to throw the 29 Indiana votes! “coddling of radicals,” Mr. Hal- budgets, helping with housing by|ing was ordered for 30th St. from to Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New leck continued: ‘ |“cutting red tape” and “licking 4 to 6 p. m. from Boulevard PL York on the very first ballot. Affairs Cry for Leader the problem of prices through |to Fall Creek Blvd. And should Dewey fail and dark| «Affairs at home and abroad increased production.” | = horses be considered he might (cry aloud for a competent leader “President Truman may consid- UJ, S. Surplus Tops later be back in the race himself, in the White House—a man who er it good politics to be an ob- Nhe with the prospect of New York |is nig enough for the job, a man structionist” he concluded, “but, $8 Billion for Record support. [who will be guided by American I am pleased to say, many mem-| WASHINGTON, June 23 (UP) Defends 80th Congress iprinciples, a real leader who will'bers of his own party are not, The Treasury surplus has soared past the $8 billion mark,

His speech at the opening ses- be guided by the welfare of all willing to play politics with the {the highest in history. November,! The surplus reached $8,251,054,-

sion today was a fair sample of our people. | welfare of the nation. the kind of campaigning he willl “The Republican Party willl “The people, next do if he lands on the ticket. It|furnish such a man at this con- will remove this obstacle to sound 534.55 on June 21, today's daily was an ardent defense of the|vention.” national progress, with the elec-| Treasury statement showed. - 80th Congress, giving the GOP| Condemning the President for tion of a Republican President.”! The final surplus, however; credit for its success and Blam his Western trip Sampaighing at Seve ————— {probably will be somewhat under ing the President for its failures./the taxpayers expense” -—he pre- $5 billion by the end of the fiscal Since the Republican congres- dicted that the country is not “go- Mrs. Armanda Deer, 86, {year next ey because of sional record already has been|ing back to New Deal regimen- Dies in Hospital ‘Here {heavy year-end interest payments made an issue by President Tru- tation that destroys initiative and| gervices for Mrs. Amanda Deer, still to be made. man on his western trip, Mr. stifles production.” who died yesterday at St. Trancis! Nevertheless, the surplus will Halleck’'s candidacy is being| "They are not going back to|yogpital, will be at 3 p. m. Fri- be an all-time high for the end urged on the grounds that he is|rationing and price control that/qay at the University Heights of any fiscal year. an outstanding defender of it. |create shortages and black mAr-|christian Church, with burial in| “How desperately our country kets,” Mr. Halleck shouted. ound Hill Cemetery. On Aviation Board needs a Republican President) Scores ‘Tyrant’ Rule Mrs. Deer, who was 86, lived at| has been demonstrated by the] “The American people are not{1058 Windermere St. Survivors| James A. Hogshire Jr. today difficulties your, Congress has had going back to an ever-growing include a daughter, Mrs. Paul H.|had been appointed Democratic in carrying out the will of the bureaucracy, ever increasing Miller, and a daughter-in-law,\member of the Marion County people against the stubborn op-/taxes and ever-burdensome debts. Mrs, Louise Deer, both of Indian- Aviation Commission to replace position of the New Deal Demo-| They are not going back to the apolis; a brother, Henry Minton, Ignacious J, Dienhart. Renamed crat administration,” Mr, on us by Providence, Ind, and six grand-|to the board was Irving M.

by resorting to. “demagoguery.” He predicted a “complete an

y. Later, Michigan and Vermont

directional

he was reasonably well satisfied]. be with the final product,”

thing in Congress.” Fer,

The waters, in an area pro-|

Vaubel, 50, af MW Ruekie,[

Hal-|strait-jackets put leck told the convention. | rules, regulations and directives children.

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