Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1948 — Page 12
¥ PAGE 12
Big Role in
Even Before Second B
“big off-stage role in breaking the And if released from a promise in time,
‘came official. $ : Even as it was, the StopDewey movement collapsed dur“ing the recess between the second and third ballots when word got around that Connecticut: was on the verge of switching from Favorite Son Baldwin to Mr. _Dewey. = How It Happened .- This is the way it happened: Connecticut's 19 votes were ledged to Sen. Baldwin. The nator had promised some of e Stop-Dewey coalition—among hem Gov. Earl Warren of Cali-
chigan—that he would hold fhe Connecticut delegation for his wn nomination until after the
Tiny Connecticut Plays
To Dewey Bandwagon
‘Delegation Had Intended to Switch Votes
“PHILADELPHIA, June 25 (UP)—Liftle Connecticut played a
the Republican National Convention. Sen. Raymond E. Baldwin had been able to get himself
the stampede for Dewey before the count on the second ballot be-
ornia and Gov. Kim Sigler of|
-
Stampede
allot Became Official |
ol
back of the Stop-Dewey drive at
Connecticut might have started
speaker's platform looking for the men. He found Gov. Sigler and was heard to tell him that Connecticut was ready to threw at least six, and probably all, of its votes into the Dewey column before the second ballot results became official. But before he, could find Gov. Warren or Sen. Knowland, the results were announced officially. 434 on 1st Ballot Mr. Dewey had 434 votes on the first ballot and 515 on the second. Sen. Robert A. Taft had 224 and 274. Mr. Stassen slipped from 157 to 149. After that second ballot, the
pecond ballot. Connecticut cast its 19 votes for Sen. Baldwin on both the first “Bnd second ballots, Mr. Dewey ad 515 votes on the second balt —just 33 short of the number eeded to win. A shift by Conecticut would have upped Mr. ewey's total to 534, still not “knough. But it very likely would have influenced a switch enough others to give Mr. Dewey the nomination then and there. Set Before 2d Ballot
n. Baldwin urged his state's ent of its intentions
arren or Sen. MKnowland of California.
at rolling down his face,
row -
ewey Rated
NEW YORK, June 25 (UP oesn't play the piano, but he is
uth says he milked the cows cing an aria from “La Boheme.” The New York governor has e early background Americans ike in presidential candidates, Grandfather a Delegate . His ancestors came to this untry in 1634 and his grandther, George Martin Dewey, a delegate to the Jackson,
ich., convention in 1854 at ch the Republican Party was rmed. ?
As a boy, Gov. Dewey worked as farmhand, sold newspapers and agazines, served as a printers’ vil on his father’s weekly, the 0880 Times, “and probably did e required amount of swimming the Shiawassee River which s through Owosso. At 17 he went to the University f Michigan to pursue a musical reer. He attracted no' more an the usual amount of atntion but he did make an imression as a singer and won a holarship to the Stephens’ 8ingSchool in New York City. It was the acholarship which ed him to New York, where he rolled in the Columbia chool.
gourse in two years. 3 Preferred Security
fe offered little security.
chool.
¥hite's Scandals.
During the 20 years o
Bether at home.
ent of the United States born i e 20th century.
. rr ———— DEEPEST LAKE IN WORLD
3» the world.
py| that the others one.by one with-|
Connecticut was in fact set to queued up like housewives at a tch before the official second war-time butcher shop to bow allot count was announced. But |
legation to withhold announce-
until he] | Stassen took himself out and could find Gov. Sige hd Gov. Sen. Knowland spoke for Gov. |
& Sen. Baldwin, big beads of
3 ulled frantically into the naralsle next to and below thelimous—1094 votes for Mr. Dewey,
onsidered Opera Career
Story Has It That He Practiced ‘La Boheme' While Milking Cows
nce considered an operatic career. Gov. Dewey became interested in music while a choir boy in 0sso, Mich, where he was born Mar, 24, 1902, One story of his
Law A job as'a paid soloist a church choir helped him eet expenses at Columbia and e completed a three-year law
Gov. Dewey gave up singing r law and politics after he had nvinced himself that a singer's
¥ He met Mrs. Dewey, the former rances Hutt, of Sapulpa, Okla., hile studying at the Stephens She too was a singer, a
ezzo-soprano and starréd for a s . e in a road company of George BABY Hurt in Crash;
% They were married June 16,
% If Dewey wins the November COX, as the result of an injury in Wlection, he will be the first Presi-
° Lake Baikal, in Siberia, is said| be the deepest fresh-water lake crashed into his car trying to
LIQUIDATION
opposition called for a breather, and moved to recess. Mr. Dewey| had insisted that once presiden-| tial balloting began it should continue, but his managers made a quick strategy switch, Instead of {opposing the recess they approved it. In two hours they had lined up so many additional delegates ldrew as the convention resumed)
| last night. The opposition to Mr. Dewey
their candidates out of the race. Sen. John W. Bricker of Ohio first withdrew Sen. Taft. Mr,
{ Warren. The others came along. Mr. Dewey was in by acclamation but Chairman Martin ruled the roll must be called. It was unan-
Good Singer,
)=—Gov. Thomas Edmund Dewey rated a pretty good baritone and
on a neighbor's farm while prac-
Irgunists Driven Back Underground
Israel Weathers
First Major Crisis TEL AVIV, June 28 (UP)= The government of ;Jsrael ap-
.
its first major crisis, but only at the cost of driving the Irgun Zvai Leumi back underground. Parliament © indorsed Premier David Ben Gurion's use of force against the Irgunists when they defied the government. The vote was 24 to 4, with five ab-| stentions. The members also approved a 8 proposal for a ministerial inquiry into Irugnist claims in connec-| tion with the battling touched off by the attempt to land arms from the gun-running ship Altalena. Seven ministers were named to conduct the inquiry. Plan Unified Army The group was commissioned to lay plans for a unified army of Israel, without quasi-independent units such as the Irgun Zval Leumi or the Stern up. The Irgunists evacuated their Tel Aviv headquarters and announced that “we are going back underground. We shall lie low.” The Stern group denounced the government for fighting the Irgunists, but they said they would stay in the army of Israel.
“0
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suit for $75,000 was filed in behalf of Richard Cox, 20-months-{old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
an auto accident near South n! Rushville on Ind. 3 Aug. 18, 1946.| | The defendants in the suit are | Arthur G. Platten, B. B. A. Trailjer Transport Co., and Arthie W. | { Miller, | The father charges Mr. Miller|
pass in a fog. |
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028 ¢ Times State Service t $ NEW CASTLE, June 25—A _ Sot married life they have kept E © Mp an interest in music and at feast once a week they sing to-
(UP)—John Foster Dulles, whose foreign policy views are similar : to those of Sen. Arthur H. Van- sons, Thomas KE. Jr. and John M. denberg, may be named Secre-| tary of State if Gov. Thomas E. Southern District of New York, 1931. Dewey leads the Republicans to! First National Recognition—Successful special prosecutor of,
victory in November.
viser to the GOP presidential
peared today to have weathered gs perintendent of ‘banks and a long-time Dewey adviser, been mentioned as a possible Secretary of Treasury. For a Secretary of Interior, Gov. Dewey would be expected to turn to the West. - The department supervises federal reclamation activities which are of vital importance ‘to the western farm So | WAR SURPLUS Speculation also touched on en. Edward Martin of Pennsyl-| vania, for the defense secretary)
“San. Martin paced Gov. Dew: | THERMOS JUGS
y's name in nomination before he convention and swung a fat| loc of Pennsylvania votes to him t the same time.
Gov, : Postmaster Generalship to the| man who is named-the new chair-! man of the Republican National Committee. i
glists—Herbert Brownell Jr, and| 95 Edwin F. Jauckle of New York—| Very Nice 1 have the inside track there. An- . other possibility is Walter 8. Hal.|| Army Air Force Type lahan, Republican national com- Sun $0.95 mitteeman from West Virginia. Glasses }
DESTROYERS REACH HAIFA |
American destroyers arrived to-|
day to assist United Nations/ 344 W. Wash. St. RIL 1016
ruce observers. |
snapped Republican precedent, his yickery Aor the U.S." top electoral office. Floral le
Key May Go to Dulles Of Thomas E. Dewey
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FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1943"
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
VICTORIOUS AGAIN—Gov. and Mrs. Thomas E. Dewey wave to Republican
is bedeck the couple.
Calinet Post Highlights in the Life
‘ By United Press High lights in the life of Thomas E. Dewey, 1848 Republican presidential nominee:
Born—Mar, 24, 1902, Owosso, Mich. Graduated—University of Michigan, A. B., 1923; Columbia, LLB,
Secretary of State Job Due If GOP Wins
PHILADELPHIA, June = 11925. Married—Frances Eileen Hutt of Sherman, Tex. in 1928; two
{organized New York City crime in 1935. Mr. Dulles is foreign policy ad-
Election Losses—Lost governorship of New York to Gov. Herbert H. Lehman, Democrat, in 1938; lost presidential campaign to the late Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1944. - Political Victories—Won Republican nomin in 1944 and 1048. - -
Tourist Restrictions Lifted in Japan
TOKYO, June 25 (UP)—Allied Headquarters announced approval, today of tourist travel through-| out Japan as a measure to in-| crease the country's foreign ex-| change. The Japanese Travel Bureau] will® be permitted to begin a series of conducted tours July 1.| It will be the first time since the| war that tourists will be per-| mitted to travel outside Tokyo| and Yokohama. |
Dewey’s nomination
May Head Treasury Elliott Bell, New York state
has
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being the first time any GOP candidate has been renamed to run
First Public Office—8elected as assistant U. 8. attorney for
Election Victories—Defeated Powerful Tammany Hall opposi-| tion to win office of New York County district attorney in 1937; nominee and also a member of|elected governor of New York in 1942; re-elected in 1946.
he American delegation to the United. Nations. He is an associate of Ben. Vandenberg and their stand on forign policy matters has the same; flavor ‘of internationalism. Gov. touched off a burst of speculation as top others wno might be considered for cabinet posts if the New Yorker is elected.
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North Manchester Man Dies in Truck Crash
Times State Service WABASH, June 25 — Mannie Leffel, 40, of North Manchester, was killed last night when a
pickup truck he was driving went out of control and turned over
County Hospital with a broken collar hone. The accident occurred on Road 115, about 212 miles west of Wabash, State Police said.
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