Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1948 — Page 3
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red inside the ha} wet—from perspira.
i
FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1948
"UNCLE SAM" — At Thomas Edmund Dewey dressed | . un in Four of July costume to | Traylor Heads Insurance Firm
play. "Uncle. Sam" to a little | Fitzhugh
Liberty" in Owosso, Mich. SPONSOR CARD PARTY
10, | he registered the first-year smile.
|elected president of the Indiana {General Agents and Managers {Association last night.
¥ !cause he outsmarted the rest of ~* [the field.
to know how to behave before the camera at an early age. Atl,
———— It Was on the defensive. There]
Traylor, EquitableReview Service, secretary, and | irl's d Life Assurance Society, wa s{James L. Rainey, Great West Life! next door girl's "Goddess of Assurance Co., Easley R. Black-| deciding on letting one man carry {wood, Metropolitan Life Insur-| lance Co. and. Ebner M. Spence, | Provident Mutual Life Insurance So closely had the men of]
With Precision Of Generals
| Opposition Always | On Defensive |
By CHARLES T. LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer PHILADELPHIA, June 25—
{Tom Dewey is the Republican {presidential nominee today be-
He had with him the finest lit-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Dewey And Lieutenants Outsmart Field
Plan Campaign
tle band of political craftsmen {America has produced in many, |years. They made almost no mis-| takes. They planned their cam-! |paign with the precision of gen-!
d |erals moving pins on a map as
[battle advanced. i The opposition never had any-|
| thing better than a negative case.!
was no Wendell Willkie as in 1940. Messrs. Vandenberg, Taft, | Stassen, Warren, Baldwin and
the others never got around to!
the ball. |
Sharp Figuring i
Ladies Auxiliary of the Vet-| Other officers are Norman R./Co.. retiring president, directors. Dewey figured their strength yes-|
erans’ Employees’ Association of Miller, New England Mutual Life!
Dan Cahill, director of the Life terday that they were within five
A Insurance Co. vice president; Insurance Marketing Institute of| votes of having it estimated cor-| the B. & O. Railroad will spon- Herpert A. Sloan, Occidental Life Purdue, addressed the association rectly on the first ballot. They sor a card party at 8 p. m. to-
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{Insurance Co., treasurer: Paul on “Training—the General Agents’ anticipated 429; they got 434.
{ On the next ballot they had es{timated perhaps 25 more than they got. It wasn't a case of! any one delegation failing to come through, merely little chunks of one, two or three votes that hesitated to shift until another ballot came along. There were never any frantic, moments behind the scenes on! the eighth floor of the Bellevue-| Stratford Hotel, where the Dewey | men carried on. But there was, never any carnival nonsense or! horn-tooting or parading either. | Most delegates are brought over by argument, not hoop-la. | On that eighth floor Tom Dewey himself worked like a horse. He shook what must have seemed like a million hands, went out of his way to be gracious and
who wanted to meet him who] wasn't ushered in. : i Master Craftsmen { Down a long corridor from Mr. Dewey’s suite were the rooms in! which his master craftsmen in| politics worked—Herbert Brown-| ell Jr., J. Russel Sprague, Edwin| F. Jaeckle, Rep. Leonard Hall! chairman of the Republican! Congressional Committee. On the team also were Elliot Bell, close-in adviser of the governor; Harold Kellar, director of the New York State Department of Commerce; Paul Lockwood, the! governor's secretary, and James A. Hagerty, in charge of press relations. | For six months past Messrs. Brownell, Jaeckle, Sprague and, Hall had been out over the coun-| try lining up support for Mr. Dewey. When the delegates began to stream in here they had them card-indexed, knew most of them by first names. Whip Gov. Duff Perhaps their most skilled single convention performance was in taking the measure of Gov. James H. Duff of Pennsylvania. Sixty days ago even' Dewey people acknowledged—at a time when they still hoped they {could bring him to their side--{that he probably could control |60 of the 73 Pennsylvania dele-| {gate votes. Yet when the roll was called at a Pennsylvania delegation caucus two nights ago, Gov. Duff, still fighting Mr. Dewey bitterly, found himself with just 27 of those 73 votes. In the meantime the Dewey team had won Sen. Edward S. Martin to their side. The men | of Dewey had their wedge. They got high tariff Joe Grundy of| the Pennsylvania Manufacturers’! Association with them. One dele-| gate® after another was plucked | away and moved to the Dewey| side. | All of this built up the band wagon psychology as Mr. Dewey's strength developed, and when Connecticut climbed aboard last night it was all over.
Didn't Take Don Long to Plan That Wedding
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, June 25-— When Donald E. Baxter, son of County Clerk and Mrs. Earl P. Baxter, makes up his mind to do something, he does it quickly—| even to getting married. i He made an appointment at! the parsonage with the Rev. Chester McClure. He appeared! with his bride to discuss a wed-! ding ceremony, set July 3. | s . un = { BUT HE HAPPENED to have! the marriage license along and| decided to have the knot tied then and there. He is with the F. W. Woolworth Co. and is being transferred to Chicago. And he didn’t want: to leave without his bride, he explained.
Mrs. Milton H. Lidikay Dies at Darlington |
Times State Service DARLINGTON, June 25--Rites|
{
‘| for Mrs. Bertie Lee Lidikay, moth-|
ier of the vice president of the Indiana Veterinary Medical Association, Dr. Henry A. Lidikay, will be held at 2:30 p. m. tomor-| row in Darlington Christian’ Church. She was 73. | Mrs. Lidikay, a native of Park-| ersburg, died yesterday in her home here. ° | Survivors besides Dr. Lidikay| are her husband; Milton H.; an-| other son, Harry D., St. Gene-| vieve; Mo, and two grandchil-| dren, : |
charming. There was no delegate .
TILLER OF SOIL—Mr. Dewey | wore overalls for a summer { farm job at the ripe "old age" of 16.
fice job, Mr. Dewey signs up as chief assistant U. S. Attorney | or the Southern District of New York. AUXILIARY TO MEET Irish f | + th The Ladies Auxiliary to the In- Hotel Lincoln. Mrs, Clifford J.| SPan Irishman for a play at the dianapolis Police Department will Richter is president.
»
FIRST PUBLIC JOB—At 29, already
in an important law of- |
DRAMATIC ROLE—In col lege, one of Mr, Dewey's costumes was that of a spic and
meet for luncheon Tuesday in the
University of Michigan.
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