Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1951 — Page 3
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25, 1951
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SUNDAY, NOV. 25, 1951. oe .
Charges #5 Million
Defeated Foe Will Testify
On Campaign By United Press COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 24—State Auditor Joseph T, Ferguson cred- | ited an “‘unethical” $5 million
campaign fund today for his defeat by Sen. Robert A, Taft in the | 1950 Ohio senatorial election. x The Senate Subcommittee on privileges .and Flections will begina hearing Monday on charges | that the State Republican, party |
spent too much money, and that |
scurrilous literature was circu-! lated. : However, Mr. ‘Ferguson said
Mr. Taft's campaign fund was not used “illegally, but certainly unethically.” Half Unreported “Almost half of the $5 million was never reported,” the Ohio] auditor said, “I hope to furnish | the committee with information!
which will make such abuses im- |’
possible in the future.” Mr. Ferguson said he did not request the investigation after the election. He added he was not too integested after the campaign funds had been sent, but “wanted to stop the flood of money during the campaign.” “I can’t prove he went out and paid $5, $10, or $15 for votes,” he said, “but he used $5 million to influence the vote.” Hopes for Law Mr. Ferguson said he hoped a law would be enacted to stop the present trend which “makes it impossible for a poor man to be elected to high office
President Truman this week credited a huge war chest with helping Mr. Taft gain a victory over Mr. Ferguson by 431,000
Truman said the Republican Party had another fund to be used in torial battle.
the.next Ohio sena-
Denies Truman Role
In Taft Investigation WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 (UP) —Chairman Guy M. Gillette (D. Iowa) of the Senate Elections Subcommittee, denied today that President Truman or the Democratic National Committee are connected in any way with investigation of Mr, Taft's re-election. The inquiry opens Monday with Mr. Taft, now a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, as the first witness. He will be followed by Mr. Ferguson. Mr. Gillette said the Ohio hearing was not called to smear Mr. Taft or anybody else but to promote legislation to correct election law abuses before the 1952 political wars get underway.
4-H Hoosiers 0ff to Chicag
LAFAYETTE, Nov. 24 — Indiana's young farmer delegation, the top crop of the Hoosier 4-H Clubs’ harvest this year, were entraining today for Chicago, where the National 4-H Club Congress opens tomorrow, The 28 boys and girls from 21 counties, all winners of state 4-H project contests, include: GIRLS—Barbara Wesco, Warren; Carolyn louise Bowen, Claypool; Alice Carol Graves. Bloom-
ington; Marjorie Ann Schnepf, Bringhurst; Sarah Joan Smith Bloomington; Joyce Mae Sibbitt Fillmore; Ann Abbott, India olis Marjorie Brown. Gastor Linda Downey, Lafayette: Mary Lou Douglas, F Jacque
Steward, Bainbridge; Nancy Lou Horney, Sheridan; Carol ther, Ft. Wayne; Sara Mawhorter Wawaka, « BOYS—Byron Hiner, Lewisville; Jay Bates, Bourbon; Marvin Evans, Greencastle; John Zeiner,|
Guen-
Fillmore; Walter South Jr,| Bloomington; Owen Amstutz Angola; Ronald Chambers
Galveston; Philip Cline, Sheridan;| Richard Ellsbury,
Greenfield:
Richard Eltzroth, Wabash: Rodney Miller Eaton: Dale Wendelman, Milan: Marvin Wiley Bloomington; Jack Rbeschlein Cory.
Legion Auxiliary To Plan Program
Programs for the American] Legion Auxiliary's 975,000 women! in 1852 will be presented here Tuesday and Wednesday. Occasion will be the 24th an
nual conference of the Auxiliary's state presidents and secretarie Mrs. E. A. Campbell, national president, will preside There will be an open houss tomorrow night in the Auxiliarv's national headquarters “1 N
Meridian St. Donald R. Wilson, | Legion national commander, will address the conference's opening session Tuesday morning. National and state officers will be guests at a dinner in the Hotel! Antlers Tuesday night.
Escaped Convict | Nabbed in La Porte
LA PORTE, Nov. 24 (UP) Arthur C. Stremming. 34, Evansville, an prisoner, was caught here: today in the same act which sent him to prison before, Stremming was serving a two-to-14 year sentence for writing bad checks, Officials at Indiana State prison reported him missing Wednesday. He was arrested while cashing another fraudulent check In a store here,
escaped
Heads Hotel Group FT. WAYNE, Nov. 24 (UP) Harold Van Orman Jr, Ft Wayne, was elected president of the Indiana Hotel Association today during the group's 57th annual convention. Others named were Thomas C. Knapp, Central, vice president; Clark H. Jones, Gary, secretary, and Charles D. Watson, Indianapolis, treasurer,
‘tions:
{take over the country's defense! TAIPEH and relieve the
{President Syngman Rhee of the burned
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Put Taft Over In ‘50
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Continued From Page One. |
include Omicron Chapter, -Alma Omicron Alpha Sorority; Beta Pi Chapter, ta Sigma Phi Sorority, and Mo-Vets, all 1st Battalion. Placing second and third, respectively, in other battalions are Sigma Nu Fraternity Mothers Club of Butler University and Gamma Phi Beta Sorority, 2d Battalion; ‘School 14 PTA and Victory Guild, White Cross Guild, 3d Battalion; School 82 PTA and Butler University Women's Faculty Club, 4th Battalion.
University Heights Chapter, American War Mothers, and St. Vincent's Hospital Guild, 5th Battalion; School 34 PTA and School | 51 PTA, 6th Battallion and John Strange School PTA and School 39 PTA, 7th Battalion, Under the chairmanship of Mrs.
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Wayne Twp. Is Top Blood Donor
George Eyard, NCCW drive chair- Many more were made for groups man; Mrs. Edward W. Schneider not enlisted. Others pledged as a and Mrs. Roscoe Perry, who di-iresult of the drive but asked no rected block captains. igroup be credited. :
Other large co-eperating groups| Drive momentum was largely whose - membership. registered in responsible for the October record the drive at the unit, chapter and |of 5115 pints. of blood collected in guild level include the Indianapo-|this area. As a result of the record lis Council of Women, White response Red Cross asked for Cross Guild, Riley Hospital Cheer additional nurses and volunteers Guild and the International/at the Center. Extra days for Travel Study Federation. {donating were scheduled both for One outgrowth of the drive|tne Center and for mobile operawhich ended last Wednesday is|fjons, . the Nov, 29 and 30 mobile unit Clubwomen recruited by the operation of Technical High|«Byddy” system. They pledged School and ‘East Side school PTAS| themselves as donors, then rein the girls’ gymnasium on the|cruited a non-club member as a Tech campus. | “Buddy.” In cases where they Modern Minute Women Were were unable to donate for some sponsored by The Times in an|phygical reason or above the 60effort to alleviate the. emergency year age limit they recruited a
need for blood by American serv-|ip q4v” . or icemen in Korea and to help| Vo Teplacs themselves,
; Recruitment was . ! stockpile reserve blood in case of through en! va conaueteq atomic attack at home. ‘phone and house calls as well as It opened Oct. 3 with a rally
in the Murat ‘Theater for presi-| “Pecial BEetngs. : dents and publicity chairmen of| NOt one club. registered asked Indianapolis organized groups rep- to’ withdraw, Clubs were regisresenting some 25,000 clubwomen. tered in one of the seven batAt that time an appeal for talions according to the number blood was made by Sgt. Jerry of active members in the group. Long, Chicago. returned Korean| The Times will continue to reveteran, who had received some port progress of PTA efforts as 30 blood transfusions. “Blood and|well as other groups to recruit Bullets,” U, 8. Defense Depart-| donors of blood gifts which grow ment picture on blood filmed out of this orginal clubwomen'’s largely in Korea was premiered. |drive. > 275 Clubs Registered | Appointments for donations are More than 275 clubs registered Made through Red Cross Blood in the drive. Of these more than| Center, 18 W. Georgia St., LIncoln 170 have had blood gifts given or| 1441. Monthly goal of this area pledged to give in their name, through next June is 6000 pirts. Originally scheduled to close Nov. rr
2, the drive was extended to Nov. 1 ¢ 3 - 21 to give clubwomen additional Babysitter Faces Trial
time to complete recruitment! RENO, Nov. 24 (UP) — Mrs, plans. Magdaline Teresa Hamllik, 37By the ghal deadline more than year-old British war bride, goes
1550 pledges and donations had on trial Monday on a charge of been registered in the name of murdering a four-year-old boy one of the participating groups./she had been baby sitting.
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Walter L. Eidson, who has two] Township group stepped into first place in the third report of the president of the auxiliary organized by wives, mothers and sisters OVER THE SALAMI—Artists George A. Teichner and Janice | Heading participation of the InCraig are painting a murai for a new Detroit supermarket. dianapolis Parent-Teacher Coun{Jr., council safety chairman. Set Up Canvass From the Korean Front: 5 wi i d |safety chairmen were in charge JIM G. LUCAS, author of war, the Korean soldier's charac-°f Tecryitment in the school . my... Wi : ir i attalion winner, Indianapolis rean Army —Willing and in the future. Mr. Lucas's exclu- Deanery, National Council of one of America’s best-known war Sezies Slatin the Indianapoliz charge of these were Mrs. John correspondents. A Ye {P. Montbrun, president; Mrs. cic : po ; ity of Missouri, Jim Lucas served guished himself with his cour-3' H ageous frontline reporting and his With the U. 8S. Marines as a com-| Evrae a the Bronze Star and the Presi-| Korea have made tremendous : . . a em 3 dential Unit Citation. Since startcountry. er for the Scripps-Howard NewsAn eight-starred battle cor-PaPers, he has been to the South lin, land, on naval maneuvers in the dianapolis Times and other : : Scripps-Howard papers shortly Caribbean, and, sigce the Korean i - bachelor, the author of the book breather” and journalistic mis- y " 2 sion back to 23 states, he has Combat Correspondent” and codramatic stories to come out of In. 1943 for his combat reporting the War. . on Tarawa. ON HIS LATEST assignment, rienced observer and a hi ; : ighly Lucas set out to find the answers qyijled writer focused upon a sub-
sons in service, and assisted by Mrs. Merril Richison, the Wayne drive, Oct. 28. Mrs. Harold H. Shepherd is . lof the volunteer fire department lin 1942. . —— C1 WHICH rated three battalion winners was Mrs, Nicholas Kira ! | She set up a door-to-door can|vass in various sections of the ot Igroup. . Trane > ter and capabilities, and the 8T bore ; " the series, ‘The South Ko- country's ability to defend itsel| 5 the organization of the Tth Able,” which starts in The Ive ererslew with President Rhee catholic Women, the city was Indianapolis Times Monday, is S One of the highlights of thélgivideq into four sections, In Since the outbreak of the Ko-| 2.8 = ‘ rean war, Jim Lucas has distin-| A GRADUATE of the Univer- > . . brvrise bat correspondent during World| graphic ersonal stories of the | REtiog. pe dispatches from War IL winning eight battle stars, impression on readers of Scripps- . Howard Newspapers all over the \08 to work as a military reportrespondent of World War II, Mr. Pole with Admiral Byrd, to Bikini, | Lucas went to Korea for The In- \0 Alaska four times, to Green-| after the outbreak of hostilities, VAT Degan, all over the Far East. Except for one brief combination Mr. Lucas is 36 years old. a . ¢ : author of a couple of others. He been there ever since, writin Ta i : some of the most revealing ang von a National Headliners’ Award His sizeup of the South Korean army is the product of an expeto a hey group Sr gina ject of vital importance. |
Korean army? Can it fight? Will Fo it fight? To what extent can it no
heavy commit- Nov, 25 (UP)—Two brief earth ment of American and other UN tremors rattled windows and troops . brought many Formosans from To get the answers—and to get their beds early today. Both them accurately and honestly Mr. tremors came within a 15-minute lucas spent weeks in Korga talk- period. ing with American Army officers
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and Korean leaders, living with a. . South Korean troops in the front 5 Tots Die in Fire
lines, and observing their train- MARTINSBURG, W. Va., Nov.
to death today when Republic of Korea at the Presi- flames destroyed their ramshackle dent's provisional capital at Pu- trailer home. Police believe the playing with
san, and with-him discussed many children were significant phases of the Korean matches.
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