Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1948 — Page 3

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de-N lent oceurred a litt, J 5 DeVeY

purdens of the presi-

ot enough for one nomi a x a great’ party leader. Above all, he must be a great adtor. He must be a man understanding and broad in world affairs,” “No man in America today is prepared (than Dewey) to get up 2 top-notch State Department and give it the loyal, intelt backing that will carry the ward peace.” Wii nomination seconded Mrs. Jessie. McCullough Weis of Rochester, N. Y.; Rep. Charles A, Halleck, Ind; Rev. Arthur Baltimore, add Arthur B. e snolie. Seattle, Wash.) ler last night. 3 x = = > SEN. JOHN W. BRICKER of Ohio, nominating Sen. Robert A. raft of Ohio—"The Congress, the pation and the “world are indebted to him for his superb leadership. The magnificent record of the 80th Congress is his record it he stands.” “Jt (the Taft-Hartley Act) is in fact a charter of freedom to the man who works. It frees him from the tyrannical domination of labor bosses.” “He will, as the candidate of the Republican Party, carry us overwhelmingly to victory.” (Taft nomination seconded by peter Wynne, New York; Vernon Romney, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Caroline Hyde Kelly, Trenton, Mo, and Roscoe Conklin Sim- : mons, Cihcago.) EAT te = #* » PR. ROBERT GORDON SPROUL, president of the University of California, nominating Gov. Earl Warren of California: “He (Warren) .is just the kind of man the people of America are looking for as their next President.” “The Republican Party can weept without reservation full responsibility for any administration that Earl Warren heads.” “He is a modern American who is intelligently aware of a world in which space and time have + #8 been almost eliminated, yet he ' never forgets that his allegiance :- Mbelongs undividedly to the : U.8 AY (Warren nomination seconded by Arthur W. Carlson of Danville, Cal; Actress Irene Dunne; rt : #7 8 Frank 0. Evans, Milledgeville, Bet Ah 8 Ga, and Sen. William F. Know2 | land of California.)

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REP. WALTER H. JUDD of Minnesota, nominating Harold E. Stassen: “This 1948 election is not in LA - the bag. Ever since our conven- , ing, headlines have screamed of deals, trades, manipulations. Let us recognize soberly that this is not an’ atmosphere which breeds victory with the people. They re not bound by any deals or ommitments whereby delegate Votes are delivered.” “He (Stassen). has done more to revitalize and invigorate our Republican Party throughout the Whole country than any person in our generation.” ‘It is an extraordinary fact that the supporters of almost every other candidate want our man to be their Vice President. Why? So that his strong appeal and vigoroys campaigning can tect their man President.” (Stassen nomination seconded by Ozro Cobb of Arkansas, Mrs. a Kirkbride of Danville, Cal, liek of Pennayivania and . Saltons Hampshire) tall of New » " 2 GOV. KIM SIGLER, of Michigan, nominating Sen. Arthur H indenberg— ! :

® peace and security of the

Heeds Bishop's Warning, ‘Bolts’ Zavty Contest

7 BELING, W. Va. June 24 I shapely, 22-year-old withg ng brunet said today she City Jew from a pre-Atlantic Bisho auty contest here because P John J. Swint threatened 0 excommunicate her from the Man Catholic Church. rtrude Bedway, a graduate a5t week from the. New gral nase es vatony ot ‘Music at Bos- ) ® rough 5 ishop advised her,

ougl t,-that Be considered beauty contests moral, indecent exposure,” nd “totally pagan.” -

» ~ » piss BEDWELL' said the P Warned that he would ex- - Unicate any Catholic girl M his diocese who-entered a Watest based on “nakedness.” ishop Swint later confirmed a . story, and he said he “understand how any os it want to enter such an

Most Powerful’ N aS. avy Bl Signed by Truman

Floor 3 WAS

170, vor 110.250 fiscal year starting July 1. though the E $172,568 450 les

1 asked in h able the Nn is gt!

“Ngth to Ten ag com; tis yog,. Pared

pn 'SHINGTON, June 2¢ (UP) Sident Truman signed into fn today a bill giving the Navy

to operate the ghaok hands, too, and talked fast $ most powerful fleet in the wile they did ft. -

total in the bill started blowing when Gov. Warsthan Mr. Tru-jren was nominated were borbudget, it willirowed from Los Angeles ‘bakery avy to build up its/wagons. 527,014 officers and 5 ‘wo hundred large with 518,002 photos, 200 slogans on sticks, six

Ex-Gl Stage

‘Hans Busch Praises Hoosier Talent By HENRY BUTLER An ex-GI staff sergeant who also has been stage director of some of the world’s leading opera houses—that’'s Hans Busch. .

Mr. Busch, who has been guest collaborator this spring with Con-

all others. He has the American people behind him: He has he fighting vigor to wage a winning. campaign.’ He can carry the

JInited States depends upon the Jeace and security of the world. All other considerations pale into ‘nsignificance if the Republican arty does not provide the leadership for peace and security throughout the world.” “He (Vandenberg) did not come to this convention.for the purpose of being nominated. Until a few days ago, we have not been en-

more votes for him. We have no bands or banners. I present him to you without fanfare, without parades, without ballyhoo, but with”the quiet dignity which becomes him and to which he is entitled.” : (Vandenberg nomination seconded by Sen. Homer Ferguson of Michigan.) - » ® HARLAN KELLEY of Wisconsin, nominating Gen. Douglas MacArthur—

“Douglas MacArthur has ‘successfully met the Communist problem in Japan, he can do it here and he can do it all over the world if we but give him the opportunity.” “After all, fellow-delegates, we have 48 governors, and we have several hundred ex-governors. And as for Senators—we have over a hundred of them, active and retired. But we have only one Douglas MacArthur.” (MacArthur nomination sec-

wright.) » » .

MRS. FRANCIS BURKE REDICK of Connecticut, nominating Sen. Raymond E. Baldwin —“We are conscious that we must meet that desperate cry for leadership which is coming to us from all over the world. . . . Such a (leader) is the man whom I have described to you today—a warm human being, skilled and practiced in the complicated art of government, a statesman beloved by the people, a responsible and patriotic American.” (Baldwin nomination seconded by Gov. James C. Shannon of Connecticut).

Philadelphia Calling—

(Continued from Page Cne) stock in trade is reputation for knowing what cooks, and ‘this time few of them did. For instance, there've been lots of red faces in Pennsylvania crowd since favorite son Martin unexpectedly - declared for Dewey. Most of delegation heard the mews from reporters. And they haven't known what happened in Gov. Duff's day-and-night conferences to stop Dewey. : Pennsylvania politicians were playing on their home grounds so it was particularly bitter. Most of them figure Martin got some important promise. # ” » Everything «= happens - to-Taft department: On the way to talk stop Dewey strategy with Stassen and Duff the Ohio Senator got stuck in a freight elevator at his hotel, : . » His name on the Taft-Hartley Act has handicapped Taft. With this the only issue on which all labor's united, platform committeé declined to point with pride to act by name. 2 GOP still considers labor vote, important enough to have some union men as members of state! | delegations. One Indiana alter-| nate, a union official, refused to| go with his delegation when it| paid official call on Taft.

The Colonel Speaks

PRESSURE. direct ‘from Col.| Robert R. ‘McCormick, Chicago] Tribune publisher, ended the! deal- ‘which might have given! Gov. Dwight Green of Illinois the vice presidential nomination. McCormick, who's anti-Dewey, delivered his ultimatum at an Illinois ~~ delegation breakfast. Asked to speak, he said Illinois was not interested in vice presidential nominations, that when it presented. a candidate he would be presidential timber. Abraham Lincoln, he said, was

Aaron Burr typified Pennsylvania (meaning the Martin wing of that state's delegation). His listeners got the point. Gov. Green had wanted that second spot. But he wanted still more not to break with the Chicago “Tribune's boss. Indiana’s Halleck was quick to step in. He got his delegation to promise all 290 votes to Dewey on first ballet, withdrew as a favorite som, arranged to second Dewey's nomination. ~ oy “ Gov. Warren's daughters, all three, wanted to talk to their father, found they'd have to get in line. North Dakota and Missouri | delegates were shaking hands with him, his daughters

Two hundred whistles that

Other demonstration ritems; typical: Two’

cases of serpentine streamers.

aged ina campaign to obtain

onded by Gen. Jonathan Wain-|

atic production at Indiana Uni|versity, has covered a lot of activity in his 34 years. He's currently helping Mr. Hoffman prepare the world premiere of Kurt Weill’s “Down: In the Valley,” which Dean Wilfred Bain’s School of Music will put on in Bloomington July 15. In town yesterday, en route to New York, where he will conduct summer classes in opera-staging at the Juilliard School, Mr. Busch spoke glowingly of IU, ‘Wonderful Place’ “It's the most wonderful place on earth to work,” he said. “Not only do they have the facilities down there, but the students have talent and spirit that are really astonishing to somebody with a European background.” Mr. Busch, whose regular job is

Opera in Stockholm, Sweden, first came to Bloomington last

May 15. “Never in my life have I had a jcase so well trained as was the |‘Tales of Hoffman’ cast,” he said, alluding to the preliminary work done by Mr. Hoffman with the |{musie school students.

Starts With Father | That statement comes from a {wealth of experience few men of his age possess. Starting with some years of apprenticeship in Germany to his father, Fritz Busch, the distinguished operatic {conductor now with the Metropolitan, young Mr. Busch has been associated with opera houses in Florence, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, Verona, Salzburg (with Toscanini), Turin, Montevideo, Basle, Berne and Brussels, besides having done Broadway productions. : He started his Stockholm work in 1940, ‘shortly before the German invasion of Denmark and Norway made flight to the United States seem advisable. A naturalized citizen of Argentina, he was able to enlist in the U. 8S. Army where he served three years in Military Intelligence, because of his command of five lan-

Television Serves to Boil ‘Cold-Blooded Convention’

for his pro-public housing statement as Congress adjourned. »

“ Ed Thumbs Down Anti-Truman Southerners, here looking over the candidates with a. view to whipping up Republican support in their states, don’t like Dewey; say he won't carry anything in South. Chief reason is New York's FEPC law.

¥ » » Gov. Dewey’ turned up unexpectedly at Wanamaker’'s, was mobbed by salesgirls asking for his autograph. By mistake he autographed part of his own necktie while looking up to answer a question. > ' Ohio headquarters ran out of tickets for convention hall, hit on this scheme: Applicants got a note saying “Bearer has lost two tickets for this section. Please admit.” It seemed to work when signed with a big enough name.

» " »” Philadelphia streets glisten with new Fords. They're being turned over to delegates to drive, for free. Ford dealers were called together, each asked to put up one car. Quite a risk, a visitor remarked. Oh no, he was tnld. After the convention they'll be second-hand cars; they'll bring more dough. As convention reached the bal-

{lating stage, page boys and girls

said biggest demand from delegates was for aspirin. And number of faces with adhesive-tape patches zoomed upward. = - =

Willkie's Boy Philip Willkie, son of the late Wendell L. Willkie, an alternate delegate from Indiana, is staying at the Union League Club. When a newspaper photographer managed to get into the club, stronghold of Republican conservatism, asked to take his picture, Willkie said “Not in here. It would h me back home.” So Willkie went outside, was photographed leaning against a fireplug. He's run-

representative of Illinois as ig for sats legislature in In-

» = » Prosperity. note: Hotel bellhops say Republicans ars more generous with tips this time. But cab drivers complain. It's mot the tips but the traffic. Worst of all, they've been told to wear a tie, shave every

gates. Those lucky enough to get Delegate Austin McCoy from Washington state as a fare don’t mind. He hands them a silver ‘dollar, waves off the change, . 0»

» High in the galleries a tall, gangling man with the badge of an assistant sergeant-at-arms wandered from seat to seat. Each time he got settled someone turned up with a ticket for his seat, and he had to hunt another. The man was Ham Fish, former isolationist congressman from FDR's Dutchess County district. » ~ - With more than 10,000 people jamming Convention Hall, a woman hurried. up to an assistant’ sergeant-at-arms. “Pardon

Incidentally, Gov. Warren got

bi

Struc op? clot id start secret going-over from Repub“Supey a new a 8 aircraft carrier.

lican Congressmen at convention!

—— —

,” she

inquired politely, “have| ‘you seen a lady in a red hat?”

Director Aids Opera Presentation at IU

as stage director for the Royal|SUa8es. His Army service won

month to help Mr. Hoffman with|overseas, he saw action in North ithe now historic IU production of|Africa and Italy. He was largely |Offenbach’s “Tales of Hoffman’|instrumental in

OPERA EXPERT. Hans Busch, former staff sergeant in Army Intelligence, who currently is staging opera for Indiana University and previously has been stage director in some of the world's leading opera houses.

him U. 8. citizenship. During his year and a half

restoring the Florence opera house to its peace[time activity—a task he agcom{plished by persuadihg a high brass hat to cut some red tape. | And in Rome he met and married

lissing Note Enters Weiss Tax Case jhlights in Oratory

that Put 7 Candidates

gefore Convention pewey's Name Heads Nominations And Baldwin's Brings Them to Close

ELPHIA, June 24 (UP)—Highlights of nominating geeches pefore the Republican National Convention; ward Martin nsylvania, nominating Gov. Th 8 s : Sen. = New York—“By every test, there is one man who towers ductor Ernest Hoffman in oper-

' Describes Writing

Witness Says Paper Ordered Book ‘Loss’

As Defendant's A note that disappeared mysteriously from company files was described today in the half-mil-! lion dollar income tax case of an; Indianapolis attorney and two business associates. Arthur Hammetter, testifying for the government, said the note] was in the handwriting of Jacob! Weiss, one of the defendants. Weiss, 47; Louis H. Rosenblum, 50, of Hammond, and Max’ Stryk, 52, of Gary, are charged, with evading and conspiring to evade payment of taxes on 1943 black-market liquor profits to-! taling almost $500,000; Former State Senator ! Weiss is a former Democratic! state Senator from Marion Coun-! ty and president pro tem of the Indiana Senate. i Mr. Hammeter, tary-treasurer of the Milwaukee Liquor Corp., one of the defend-

ants’ firms, testified the note or-

dered him to show a bookkeeping loss of $32,217 on 2431 barrels of whisky sold to the P. and M. Liquor Corp., 2a “dummy” firm. Later, when federal agents searched for the note, it could not be found. . Details Slow Trial The involved trial before Judge Walter Lindley of Danville, Ill. has been slowed considerably by

his wife, the former Miss Giuliana Conti.

Works on Plans y

| Both he and his father left their native Germany in 1933, the year Hitler turned on the heat with the Reichstag fire. Hitler, he thinks, made a big contribution to American music by driving so many artists out of Europe to this country. “People are unprejudiced here in America. That's what strikes you first when you come back from Europe,” he said, adding that his cousin-by-marMage, Pianist "Rudolf Serkin, feels the same way.

A firm believer in opera sung here in English, Mr. Busch fis working on plans for an IU production of “Rigoletto” next fall before he resumes his Stockholm duties, : . Learning to Fly

Though opera takes most of his time, he has other interests, one of which is learning to fly. “So many of my IU students were pilots in the war that I

{introduction of details, records of several corporations organized by [the defendants. Yesterday, Sidney Prosterman testified that he was a “figurehead” president of the P, and M. firm for four months and was paid $25,000 in commissions for sales he never made. He had no personal financial interest in the corporation. . The whisky “sold” was made {available by Rosenblum, Mr.

Prosterman added.

Booing Delays Dewey

Nomination Briefly PHILADELPHIA, June 24 (UP) —Chairman Joseph W. Martin Jr. of the Republican National Convention had to bang away with his gavel several times last night to quell booing which broke out while Thomas E. Dewey was being placed in nomination. The boos, punctuated by one lusty Bronx cheer, briefly interrupted the Dewey nominating speech by Sen. Edward Martin of Pennsylvania. The scowling chair-

IRRESISTIBLE FORCE—When this |5-ton slab of limestone slipped from its rest-

former secre- Ng. place in the C. Ittenbach Stone Co., 916 Harrison St., last night, it ripped out a

30-square-foot section of the plant wall as if it were tissue paper. Residents several blocks away heard the crash and telephoned police.

STRAUSS

SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROWI

day, and’ say “sir” to dele- |

thought I'd like to be one my-man hammered for silence and self,” he says. And so, under the|finally got it. GI Bill of Rights, he’s taking a| The booing came from the galcourse in flying at Kister's Field|leries. It was scattered. Who in Bloomington. He's also joined! inspired and directed it could not the Reserve. {be established. a One of his comments certainly! EE should please Hoosiers: “I ana New York Delegate

life much more fascinating here goed for Taft S ch

in the Middle West than in New York. It's more peaceful here and] PHILADELPHIA, June 24

there’s more time to work, with-| (UP)—New York delegates to the

city.”

Gl Killed in Japan

d one of their own colleagues in Convention Hall early today. Recipient of the boos was Peter Wynne of the Bronx, an alternate FUKUOKA, Japan, June 24 member of the New York delega(UP)—The Far Eastern Air| tion which is pledged to support Force announced today that Corp.| Gov. Thomas E. Dewey for the Charles F. Gallaway, 19, Sun-| presidential nomination, bright, Tenn., was killed Saturday| Reason for the boos: Mr. night when he jumped down a) Wynne was making a speech sec-14-foot embankment to avoid an onding the nomination of Sen. |oncoming car, | Robert A. Taft.

STRAUSS SAYS:

BASQUE SHIRTS aa Aa0

BASQUE SHIRTS FOR (SON) BASKING

We have a group of Basque Shirts from Apolda for his or their activity for now and the days to come, such as, the Fourth of July. Two-ply cottons with button shoulder — and they held that shape. Plain colors — BLUE, WHITE or MAIZE,

Sipe ~~an sivériment of stripes on white. 1.50

~ L STRAUSS & C0,

; i : - Fourth Floor : : : Lg ein NG

out the restless haste of the big) Republican National Convention].

~

Shop in’ AIR-

ALL RIGHT S0ITS HOT—

—but it’s not so hot if you are within the - cool comfort of a good summer suit— And you, of course, know where GOOD summer suits are to be had— °

Shop 1 Al%. nothing but GOOD! selling for ‘And they are surrounded Sore are 4. with services (including the services of our tailoring staff) to see that their basic goodness— comes to you to enjoy to the fulll. From Seersucker Suits from Haspel to Customized Tropicals from Hickey Freeman—your summer ola suit 1s here for you to enjoy

2 who has in mind a bit of relief for overheated feet—will find

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VENTILATED OXFORDS in . for whatever you choose great profusion 2 dl : —-—arejoo comfort! to Sp cna: (almost) — . (First Floor The Clothing Floor (Second) has s Mezzanine) first floor convenience— just 45 seconds from the ashington Street Doors

via Electric Stairway.

CL STRAUSS & 00, =

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THE MANS STORE

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