Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1951 — Page 3

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- SUNDAY, SEPT. 9, 1951 | ; as x Gromyko Thunders Final Vain Blast—

_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ Jn - Seal _ PAGE 3

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Soviet's Threat Clouds Signing Of Jap Peace Pac

SAN FRANCISCO, Bent" 8. "Forty: signed | 000" Loa Ad AN » Sepl. orty-nine nations. signe Even His Enemies Appla vded Him— : today a treaty of peace with Japan which Soviet Deputy | PP .|As 4 Look on— Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko charged lays the founda-

LE Acheson’s. Smooth Job at Parley Wins Acclaim Warehouse Is Destroyed

Russia, Poland and Czechoslo- By PETER EDSON vakia did not sign the treaty to|!® the one in the Atlantic to which "Times Speciy) Writer ~

end the war which began with the Japan is expected to become a; / . sneak attack at Pear Harbor on Party JBI xs chert. Tiuslas SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8 —Secretary of State Dean Dec. 7, 1941, { 4 i i 1 , J NEW YORK, Sept. 8 — On a stormy note when Russia, Acheson probably did himself a lot of personal good at the [Poland and Ggechoslovakia vainly Japanese Peace Conference. |sought to prevent adoption ofl ~~ When the man who would not turn his back on Alger

fication. It was a good example

of how bipartisan foreign vores IN Spectacular Fire Here

should be made to work.

8 ron A spectacular blaze, witnessed ‘Ing a power shutff for the ime IF THE American and British by ure than $00 Epectatons: Ge mediate area. : z 'stroyed a warehouse in the : ; ; statesmen who master minded ,| of N. Miley St. last night. Two traffic lights were knocked out and many homes blacked out

Gen. Douglas MacArthur watched the Yanks play the

this “conference had known in ad-|

| Only the chimney of the build-

Senators today while the peace treaty was signed with Japan.

'Anglo-American sponsored rules |of procedure which limited each {nation to a statement of one hour.

Hiss did turn his back on Polish {Deputy Foreign Minister Stefan

had a unique tribute to pay Polish

vance how easy it would be to push through their treaty, they might have made some different

ing was left standing following the fire. The blaze burned two

by the power cutoff while fire« men battled the flames,

But he was remembered in .. IWierblowski, refusing to recognize Minister Wierblowski. “If the : 75-foot electric power poles forc- - San Francisco. John Foster aie, Cotise of 11s JJonierence | ve Pole for or nie State Department wanted to take El re presiding officers. rere berets een ttre Senn One metal drum containing ofl ® po’ Dulles, architect of the treaty, 3 to adopt the rules and gag the 8andizing from the rostrum, $2500 of its secret funds and pay tives as officials of ry confer- Church Grou SxPlogen suring the height of the : S ks. Sent hil this telegram! small Communist bloc pas imany of Secretary Acheson's for-| them to that Pole for helping us ence ‘would have been a master P , [fire The warehouse. owhed bY ort parks. “As we are about to sign the | The treaty is the most lenient mer critics were ready to forgive | secure ratification of the Jap stroke. The two statesmen who Sets Meetin Dates “corse Wolf, was filled with Japanese peace treaty, my red sidieteated nation. I¢/nim a lot. treaty, I'm sure Congress would made outstandi tributi g *¥ salvaged rubber 2 home for thoughts, like the thoughts of over Sran #T elea g: Nalin. that have 2PProve the expenditure,” he told to the an ng ton moe ons Preliminary - arrangements for| , Cs e children, other delegates, will turn to jsnps Spen of 18 acihe aN Some Dewspanely i Hal ave associates. Io dine. son erence Yate Fane te focal A a tiv: Mech] Traffic aggravated by many hope this you. You will be present in |ASIatic empire, limiting it to its been mos eF abonl lar. acl What Mr: Richards meant. of nister 0 Yorelgn./uairsiine [00a Area Assembly. ~1eeUng sichiseers was snarled for mors » spirit for the signing delega~ {four main islands. [son admitted in headlines that s oy Zafrulla Kahn and Ceylon’s Min- of fhe International Convention than a half hour after the fire \s taken to tions and the witnessing multi- | Permits Rearming [the el ne the shogs course, was that Wierblowski's jeter of Finance J. R. Jaye- of the Disciples of Christ were was extinguished : tuary. . tudes. All know that without | But it permits the nation to re. Ti Is Was ort Ae So typical Commie agitator’s tech- pb fies It made at a meeting last week. { oy Chist R . : : your great leadership in war |ATT for its own defense and con-| Mr. Fhgson, EY Jeu porary taroe Dique had angered many of the 2 Bovis Eo poat es re ney po In| The local area assembly meet- Hire Les Nozcoe McKinney nd and peace, the results achieved |!#N8 no punitive clauses, al- Han, = m 1 2 . 2p dure. delegates. Many who were wav- entes ouncs. n future conieri,g will be Oct. 31, and Nov. 1 and! timated the damage” at $15,000, ters here would not have been at. though individual nations may ne. 0f conference rues of procequre. =.= =~ L oo0 0 co Core neces, theyll undoubtedly bei, ys the Murat Temple here. The The one-story, 80x80 frame builde tainable.” gotiate for reparations later. Even Sen. Pat McCarran (D.,, 8 Sig ; Secretary Acheson His 8iven chances for important international Convention this ing was completely destroyed dscapes; he The. three Communist nations The treaty permits Japan to ne- Nev.), who has fouled up many Won over by the pelligerency of stock 08% y yy roles. : vear will stage Area -Assembly Defective wiring was the cause dio in New. boycotted the signature ceremony 80tiate for separate, bl-lateral a State Department program, Wr ierDlow oki and Russian Deputy 9 p: tao meetings instead of just having of the fire, the chief said. ea in the gilt -and crimson audito-|28Téements and it was under this gave Mr. Acheson grudging trib- ig Minister Andrei Gro- State Department in San Fran-| THE PERFECTION of detailed one internationai convention. rm rium of the War Memorial Opera Provision that the Pi-lateral de-| ute. ' . cisco than friends. planning that permitted adoption, The local area committee is M Holl dR d ; House where Russia began Its [nse pact with the United States . “Even if they do get rid of him ry . In addition to Sen. McCarran, Of the Japanese peace treaty with made up of Dr. F. E. smith, Mrs. VIOre Hollywoo eds Son Hurt post-war obstructionist tactics in awn er = ealicr at. tig as ‘Secretary of State, he won't NOT ONLY Secretary Acheson, gens. Alexander Wiley of Wiscon- SO little lost motion was in a/ Dorsey King, and. the Rev. Roy, WASHINGTON. Sept. 8— (UP) the United Nations charter meet- £ y found f 4 ; have any trouble finding another but the State Department as a'gin Smith of New Jersey, Hicken- Way a matter of simple revenge. Gray. ~—Eighty more Hollywood film ried ing six years ago. conference found imperfections in job,” said Sen. McCatran. He whole did itself a lot of good bY |goper of Iowa and Bridges of At the Danube River Confer-| Assembly meetings are under figures will be named as past or Last Vain Blast the treaty, but nearly all agreed can afways get work running a inviting to San Francisco—all ex- Naw Hampshire were on hand. ence several years ago, the Com- the direction of Dr. Gaines M. present Communists in on-thes ept. 8 (UP) An hour before the ceremony | \t was a “good treaty” which|steamroller. penses paid-—some 15 key mem- All this is expected to pay off munist countries had the major- Cook, with the assistance of the spot hearings starting Sept. 17, 45, of Ded- opened, Mr. Gromyko restated at could not have been impoved on if 2 a.» bers of the Senate and House. nbd er a {ity and they voted things through Rev. Lavon Fisher, Dr, Ephraim a House Un-American Activities | today and a Press conference ofl the charges. Le had been spent discussing. JAMES P. RICHARDS, House They way it worked out, there handsomely when the Japanese to suit themselves. At San Fran- Lowe, Roy T. Combs and Orville Committee spokesman predicted Peter, criti- against the treaty he and his here. Foreign Affairs Committeeman, were more former critics of the treaty comes up for Senate rati- cisco, the Allies had the votes. |Williams. today. ir in which Polish and Czechoslovakian satel- | Vs Je = to make a lites ‘had made during the five- : - near here. v peace parley. - 3 ; ident took tay ins ane last vain y 22, seven blast at a conference which had esvifle, The rendered his efforts futile: by. id, 48, and denying veto and filibuster » 17, were privileges. - ’

The treaty was signed six years and six days after Japan formally’ capitulated aboard the Battleship! Missouri in Tokyo Bay, where one-legged Foreign Minister Marou Shigemitsu signed the sur-| render Sept. 2, 1945. | The treaty today was signed for | Japan by Prime Minister Shigefu| Yoshida, the tiny, dignified, 73-1 vear-old statesman who guided] Japan through mast of the occu-| pation years. It marked achieve-| ment of his ambition to “see Ja-| pan through to the treaty.” i The treaty was signed at im- . pressively simple ceremonies which began shortly after noon, Indianapolis time, when .Perma-| nent Chairman Dean Acheson called the conference to order. A oT First Signer eh a 4 oe p £3 GE o Yoo . First signer was Hipolito Jesus oo i 2 : : Paz, Argentina's ambassador to the United States, who strode! across the green-carpeted, flagbedecked ‘stage of the opera house to sign the treaty document lying on a table just under the podium. Representatives of 47 other, nations followed him in alphabetical order. Signing for the United States

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These include the United States, Australia, Canada; Ceylon, France, Indonesia, The | Netherlands, New Zealand, Pakistan, The Philippines and the United Kingdom. Russia also would have been included. in: this group had she signed the treaty, as would India and Burma had they accepted an » invitation to attend the conference, In most cases, ratification Is expected without much argument. In Indonesia, however, a cabinet crisis was precipitated by that country's last-minute decision to sign. A dispatch from Djakarta said the Indonesian parliament may rebel at ratification. The treaty was signed with some misgivings by some nations. Delegates from 51 nations, including Japan, spoke on the treaty during the five-day session and many pointed to specific]

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