Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1952 — Page 1

ye Yourself 1-DO-IT e eWares s & Co.

against terurself with (Chlorfiane nd will not Ibs or trees. One gallon 100 gallons ite control, verage size sy-to-follow Pint, $5.95; ral, $17.95; yours right res & Co. Floor. .

reels

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-———at- the Post Office. The Mis. for

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he Indianapolis Time

FORECAST--Partly cloudy tonight, tomorrow. Scattered thunderstorms tomorrow. Little temperature change. Low tonight 58, high tomorrow 78. WiililFf

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4

—a HOME

EMPTY POCKETS—Mailman James Maley.

Postal Workers. Here Face ‘Payless’ Payday

.*_. ‘This. was to have been M-day

money.

But 2300. postal workers here were told there was nothing left in the old sock to meet the pay-

roll.

Checks amounting to more than $550,000 for this area .have been ordered withheld by the Post-

master General in Washington,

Appropriations gave out, and a bill which would have replenished the fund is deadlocked in Con-

gress. In Washington it

June 15 if the bill isn't moved.

Postal workers here today for the current fiscal year.

Sures—sowannl 63d YEAR—NUMBER 82

was predicted |

all agencies but the Armed was attributed in part to pay inForces would be without pay by|creases. granted after

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MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1952

Strike

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice

Indianapolis, Indiana. lssued Daily,

HST Loses Steel Appeal

PRICE FIVE CENTS ¥

' Dynamite Cap | Blast Injures Manual Pupil

Classroom Rocked

A dynamite cap which ex-

pupil here,

of 14-year-old Dale Martenbeck and sent the freshman to 8t. Vincent’s Hospital with three:fingers {blown off one hand and the other {hand mangled. Force of the explosion blew another 14-year-old, Jerry Beckham, {out of a nearby seat in room 104.

advantage of am. St. Vincent's but was found to Indianapolts Moris Fier offer to oo BN THEE mike Interest-freé lodns tintil the} ~~~ 38 im Classroom: appropriation goes through. 2 } The An official of the firm said It through is prepared to go the full amount.ischool and sent teachers and cosnad he Sie canes oy pa AE SEDI To, the Dist rem {where occupants were 8 fine next montlys pay i due, the stunned by -the ni blast. irm will make other loans an School authorities said . Marextend the due date of the first. tenbeck youth was sitting in his The - Postal Credit Union hasgesk in his “roll call” room soon “The Internal Revenue Bureau “sos soioc, Sfarted thie morning { e had a amite ca with 811 employees here has a hand and a Ou idly “tapping” it payday Friday. But that agency|with a lead pencil, school officials Tout be in ivouble until the fol- said. Suddenly the cap exploded . lin a deafening blast. ) The rapid drain on postal funds| None of I other pupils in ithe room were injured, the school

regular reported. {appropriation bills were passed Said He F ' dh a e roun em

the . South, Side high

ploded under the probing of} a ‘curious schoolboy’s pencil injured a Manual{High Sci;

The cap exploded in the hand!’

{The second youth also was rushed} Eee

Es 45 explosion - was heard|.

nat lh

Ty

mand of NATO.

Taft Rips Into UMT In S. Dakota Tussle

Taft Takes As ‘Obsole

By United Press

WASHINGTON, June 2—Sen. Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) accused his Republican and Democratic _ political opponents yesterday of - allowing the United States to lose

“control of the air” which he said is indispensable to a successful

foreign policy.

In a nationwide radio address,

which he billed as a major statement of his foreign policy views, Mr. Taft fired identical eriticisms at Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, his chief rival for the Republican presidential nomination, and. at the Truman administration, He said a new Communist offensive in Korea would find U. 8. forces at a serious disadvantage because of a steady decline in airpower “which began while Gen. Elsephower was chief of staff.” In a speech, delivered barely 90| minutes before Gen. Eisenhower returned from Europe to take a more active part in the political campaign, Mr. Taft staked out a claim to the role of airpower advocate and asserted that the “oldfashioned” military ideas of “land generals” atomic age. . Only One Policy “Foreign policy is deeply involved with military policy,” Mr. Taft said. ; “There is only one foreign and military policy which will maintain our security and our peace and our solvency, and that’ is the building of an air power sufficiently large to control the air over this country, over the oceans which surround this continent,

are obsolete in the!

Patrolmen Eugene Sowers and Delbert Pound said they found six| more dynamite caps in- Dale's pocket, They said the injured boy told them he found them at a local airport. The Martenbeck youth lives at 851 Prospect St. The Beckham {boy, also a freshman, resides at 1930 8. Noble St. There was no damage to the classroom, the school reported.

Dig at lke te’ General

and able to deliver atom bombs on Russian cities and manufacturing plants.”

Mr. Taft said the “purely negative and defensive” foreign policy drafted by Mr. Truman and Secretary of State Dean Acheson has been an “utter failure.” Their policy has forced drafting of young men for a war in Korea which “could have been avoided,” | Berliners today beat a CommuMr. Taft said the Truman ad-|nist policeman manning a barministration has “neglected our [rier between the city and the surair force” and the resulting rounding Soviet zone of Germany. “weakness” is now painfully evi- It was the first outbreak of gent 1 3 grea Been a steady de violence since the Soviets barred 4 {West ‘Berlin's 2.5 million inhabierioration in our comparative air |, ants from all access to Soviet.|! power, which began while Gen. |, cupied Eastern Germany yesEisenhower was chief of staff, |terday he said. . |" Allied officials said some 125 In the foreign policy address, delivered on the National Broad... c:t, Berliners, irked by the

Soviet blockade tactics, went to Sasting oe radio network, MT. in. Communist checkpoint at

Lichterfelde, on the border ie | ONE—Denied vehemently that Ger of the

he is an “isolationist,” and said|the Soviet zone of Germany, and the label is more aptly applied to/pummeled the Red Policeman on the nation’s present leaders be- guar uty there. cause they would abandon most| The” policeman was a member of Europe and most of Asia to/of the Kast German “people’s Russia. # ! police.” TWO—S8aid he would “certain-!

ly not” withdraw from Europe] : . . and would “continue to arm those| OOS Exp losion Ruins

nations who, in good faith, are! Home Inj prepared to use our arms to pro-| y [ures Two

tect themselves against Commu-| Times Stata Service .., | Dist aggnceaine™ | SUMMITVILLE, June 2—a terTHREE—Called for efforts “to|Fific blast ripped a-house apart complete an armistice in Korea, and injured two persons when a because our weakness in the air)Pulldozer hit a gas main here is such that ‘we could not hope to|Yesterday. resume a successful war until] Lola Hayden, 50, and Michael many months of, improvement in| Johnson, 5, were injured when a our air power." { bulldozer, digging near the HayHe said he would then arm the|den home, hit a gas main. Police

West Berliners Beat Red Cop

BERLIN, June 2—Angry West

For Security Buy Your Own Home

‘Whether you are in the bride-and-groom category or not you'll find HOME OWNERSHIP is the easiest road toward financial security,

Start shopping now for a really suitable home of your very own and have the advantages of more economical living plus a growing equity in your valuable property and the peace of mind from knowing your retirement ‘years will be easy in & mort-gage-free home of your own.

Pdf lim i 2a, bunt” | om Body Recovered ora a” Aarons Aili water htr. Kitchen with built-ins. ” MT. VERNON, June 2 (UP)—|midlands. fond ‘tlaed Lovely "lot ear. “Say Dan Kidney The body of Henry Whoberry, 48, South Dakota has a heavily $300 go Probably #0 SIL ith. about : ; Me. Vernon, who fell into the Ohio|German background—of 0.000 ; , INC., REALTORS ver and drowned while setting|population nearly 150, are E WILL NE The home shown here is Bisnis that L NEED nen a fishing line four days ago, vx Germans whose fathers left the one of the many HUNDREDS |hoxer shorts and a bathrobe. recovered near Shawneetown, IIL, /0ld country because they did not

offered For Sale in the real éstate pages of today’s Indianapolis Times. You will find it is very easy to choose several interesting homes for personal because

South Koreans so as to withdraw [report the explosion destroyed the in time from Korea. “I do not/home and knocked windows out think that as a permament policy|0f 12 other homes in the neighwe should ever station troops on|borhood. the continent of Eirope or the | continent of Asia,” he said.

FOUR—Stated that he is “in LOVEr Trys Holdup

favor of remaining in the United Ag Step fo. ‘Success’ Nations, even though our experi-| ence in Korea with Cae NEW YORK, June 2 (UP)—

we

attempting to rob for love. vids be used to prevent ag-| Authorities said a cab driver FIVE—Repeated his statement foiled 23-year-old Kenneth Dathat, as President he would make vidson's holdup attempt * last “maximum uss” of the “unique i8ht by attracting the attention abilities and knowledge” of Gen. °f & Patrolman. Davidson told Douglas MacArthur whom he de-|POlce he wanted to make a finan-

“ grea »|clal success because of his love scribed as “our greatest soldier. for a pretty nurse.

Views on the News

The voting comes tomorrow, with most of the state's political seers saying it's so close they fear to/members of the uninstructed slate, call the outcome.

yond the little bundle of votes General. South Dakota. can, give the win-|" ner, hower collision at the polls be-| fore the national convention five weeks from today.

three months ago, so in this last who wrote “Annie Get Y one the “Taft-can't-win” claim has been the theme of the opposition’s case against the Ohioan.

River to the Black Hills for five days. made votes and improved his po-

unable to present its man as a living, walking, talking, on-the-ground presidential candidate. It had to rely on stand-ins.

heavy foreign spending have been the South Dakotans. hower has favored UMT. * Sen, Taft talked against it unceasingly as state — though the Eisenhower < people claimed he once had kind words for it, a contention that let to a fierce battle between the two sides.

China shows that it is a hopless ic jailed & man today for |"& ; but disappeared—gone to the city! t for a ex)

farmer and a won or two can run 200 acres and do it well—but take the son away and the farmer is

fighting mad. in South Dakota.

will like it even less if one of

» LJ - SEN. TAFT said in a broadcast that he doesn't like the policy of our “land generals.” He

them lands some of his delegates. p - - -

late Sunday. Mr, Whoberry was the father of 11 children.

like conscription, and their feeling still is -deep about it. That's true also of a sizable

. By CHARLES LUCEY tors greatly in the General's fa-Scripps-Howard Staff Writer vor: First, his wide general a SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., June 2— peal nationally is manifest To The roughest toughest presi especially in the “cities ‘and lardential primary campaign of them ger towns, notwithstanding cerall ended today . with forces of tain group opposition. Second, his Gen. Dwight Eisenhower and Sen. delegate slate is headed by former

ALLEY-OOP—While one Red rioter is helped to his feet another rolls over on his back. They were demonsirating in Paris against the arrival of Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway fo take over the com.

Road Gunman Strikes Again

By United Press

LINCOLN, Ill, June 2 — State] police prowled highways today for and Justices Stanley F. Reed and candidate,

a blue auto belonging to Illinois

“phantom gunman” after the un

Robert A. Taft in a final furious/Goy. George -Mickeleon, the most bid for nationally significant vic- widely popular political figure in tory on the plains of South Da-|this contest. : kota. Ike's name is not on the ballot The contest is for the state’s 14 because he would not give the delegates to the Republican na- necessary consent at the time the tional convention. delegate slates were filed many But the carnage is ended now. weeks ago. His slate nominally is uninstructed. But publicly and personally all

contesting the Taft slate, have This test has meaning far be-/proclaimed their support of the

This .is the last Taft-Eisen- |G, B.S. Would Love This: ‘He Died at 105’

Just as the year's first Repub-| LONDON, June 2 (UP) —George| ican primary in New Hampshire Bernard Shaw was a musician

{and died at the age of 105. | That description of the famed |,

“You Don’t Know’— { playwright was among the an-|

ion survey, Again, the Taft side could build] The late American President

its campaign around personal ap- Franklin D. Roosevelt was the pearance of

its candidate. He

only non-British personality on tumped the state from the Sioux

the list. Those questioned knew more about Mr. Roosevelt than

Most observers say hel anyone else on the. list.

ition. 4 Again, the Eisenhower side was

Universal military training and

issues which most stirred Gen. Eisen-

he stumped the!

Deep Feeling Nobody questions the deep feelgainst UMT. The one-fime gr on the farm has all

ire

livelier gtence. 'oday, with mechanization, a

and Dbetter-paid!

This is not a local phenomenon It is so in

nt of

INDIANAPOLIS early Russian settlers still here, TRAFFIC CASUALTIES |°f Mennonite groups and others. (153 Days) = In Tke’s Favor ; ETA, 1951 1952 | Similarly, Joreign spending and ee Acciden “ean 3184 resultant b. higher S Are unpop-| . ee ul Man ular here. Gen. Eisenhower's leadig? tues 2% > “30 role in the whole overseas _

at andther motorist.

Police said a man identified as |edangered.

N. Kuczyk of Chicago was at

tacked yesterday while driving

north on U. 8S. 66 near here.

Mr. Kuczyk told officers that es strike call without comment.

someone opened fire on him as he| passed a speeding southbound from the White House what Mr. auto.

The motorist, who was not hit, said the car was a blue Buick but/H® had said previously he would

told police that he did not get a|CToSs that bridge when he glimpse of the driver. Lincoln - 1s -in - central: Illinois, about mid-way between

Last Thursday an unidentified

{motorist shot at two men near|°OMPanies to resume bargaining our Gun” | Plainfield, wounding one in the hand.

St, Louis police said they befeved the same gunman may

J {have committed an unsolved] Too, as in New Hampshire,-the “ers 8iven by about 200 persons|street murder in that city and|Statements of praise for the : / |questioned on supposedly well-a@sked to study the bullet re-| { America {toughest argument against Gen. du n sector of Berlin and Eisenhower has been the relent- known personalities by Britain's | ¢OVered at Plainfield. ness dinning of “you don’t know Mass Observation, a public opinwhere he stands on thé issues.”

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

6 a m.. 60 10 a. m.... 71 7a m.. 63 11a, m... 74 8 a. mi... 61 12 (noon) 75 9a m.. 70° 1p m..17

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Latest humidity........ 42% x »

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known assailant fired a wild shot [ports

lain-|that “in the absence of a wage | field, TIL, and St. Louis,cwhéte the 8reement our members have no “phantom” is believed sto have [alternative other than to cease been active. jwork.

{to our constitutional system- hold /that the Commander-in-Chief of

| |mate power as such to take pos~

{ |said:

Judges Vote 6 to 3 That Truman Acted Beyond Constitution

By United Press WASHINGTON, June 2—The Supreme Court today

overturned President Truman's Apr. -8 seizure of the steel industry.

{ate ‘strike of his 60,000 steel: - | workers. : ’ (1s an essential attribute of sove | By a 8 to 3 vote," the high ereignty and has iohg been rece tribunal ruled that Mr. Truman's 98nized as a power of the federal seizure. order was _ urconstitu- government, “tional, : “Plaintiffs (the steel compan

In the first ruling of its kind,|les)’ cannot complain that any

|man had no power—under law | hibits the exercise of the power jor by the Constitution—to- order Of eminent domain in this case. the seizure. It knocked down| The Fifth Amendment pro« every argument advanced by the Vides: ‘Nor shall private property government. {be taken for public use, without { ‘The .majority opinion by Justice!just compensation.’ It is no bar {Hugo Black said Mr. Truman had|to this seizure for, if the taking no ‘inherent Constitutional power|is not otherwise unlawful, .plaine to seize ‘the mills, not even in|tiffs are assured of receiving the

time or. as, Commander. {Teqgiied dust ompsn-~tigg ef of the Riba roTCes; in gh n°

The only authority for ‘such. seizure, it said, would be by act of Congtess—and no such statute exists, :

Black's Opinion . Ngwer before has the Supreme Court ruled on the inherent Constitutional powers of a President. Today, the tribunal met the issue squarely. And, as it turned out, two of _|{Mr. Truman's pwn Supreme Court appointees—Justices Harold H. Burton and Tom C. Clark—cast votes which helped decide the issue against the President. Justice Hugo L. Black delivered the majority opinion. Lined up with him besides Mr. Clark and Mr. Burton were Justices Robert H. Jackson, William O, Douglas!U. S. Senate, and Felix Frankfurter. He denied, as he has umpteen Chief Justice Fred M. Vinsonitimes in the past, that he is a

Might Run

Anyway, the Door Is Slightly Ajar

Gov. Schricker today left his door open just wide enough for political salesmen to wedge a foot into it. The Governor ackno there is still “considerable” pres. sure to get him to run for the

»|Sherman Minton dissented. They{ But when asked if there 1s a {said in a 44-page dissent written/Chance he “might become a cane *|by Mr. Vinson that history sup-|didate,” Gov. Schricker did not Mr. Truman's = position/say no. Instead, he replied; -. “when survival itself” may be , ‘Let's Talk Golf’ “I can’t answer that definitely, Let's change the subject and talk Truman Silent . Mr. Truman the word of, about Something else. Let's talk the court’s ruling and Mr. Mur That killed the conversation, because Gov. Schricker then said he never played golf in his life, A few minutes later State Lae bor Commissioner Tom Hutson talked to the Governor — n about golf. > Mr. Hutson said Democrats will try at their June 24 State Cone vention to draft Gov, Schricker for the Senate race. And Mr, Hutson added: “I think they'll succeed.™

Today's News In The Times

Local and State

There was no immediate hint

Truman would do to counter the new strike in the steel industry.

came to it. ’

Mr. Murray's strike - declared

I" His strike cgi] asked the steel

conferences. There have been no negotiations since White House talks broke down last May 4. { There was no immediate reaction from the companies, other than

court's decision. Steel plants were being picketed at once, Congress’ Job { The gist of the majority opinion was to the effect that President Truman by seizing the steel mills invaded the legislative “fields par-|-celled out by the Cqnstitution to Congress and Congress alone. “There is no statute that expressly authorizes the President to take possession of property as he did here, Nor is there any act : Page of Congress to which our atten- Oil industry to battle higher tion has been directed from! taxes Cra ssasssassnssnnsane which such a power can fairly be| Dr. John Dewey, called foundimplied,” Mr. Black said. | er of progressive education, Mr. Black said that, therefore, 41e8 «.ccciivsiaciisninanes

“the President’s authority, if ol Editorial Page

high-speed chase ...ccvene Holiday week-end traffie deaths shoot up to 1di0eaes %

Foreign #&* |

Yanks tear flags down at POW CAMP svrnssrissssss

must be found in the Constitution itself.” Page - But he rejected the govern-/It's Eisenhower's hour , , , an ment's argument that the Presi-| editorial ......cveeevvenses dent has seizure power because/Arms lag seen as grave risk he is Commander-in-Chief of the! ... defense «+» + by Ludwell Armed Forces. Deny sessvssereinsvanenas: ll “We cann w | annot with faithfulness Sports

Tribe eyes first division en home stand ......e0sninnee session of private ‘property in or- The Press Box cessetosnunnnn der to keep labor disputes from Baseball CAleNdAr susesranane stopping production.” * "Bill Bright hutls no-hitter in “This,” Mr. ‘Black said, “I8 8| TABA «uuuieeeesensssnsons job for the nation's lawmakers, Charles loafs in final drill for not for its military authorities.”| ‘waleott AHL rv vidnnnne Chief Justice Vinson's dissent ? Women's ©

or "

the Armed Foré¢es has the ulti-

“Judicial, legislative and executive precedents throughout our history demonstrate that in this case the President acted in full conformities with his duties under the Constitution,” Mr. Vinson wrote.

Judith Ann Gates, Lady of TOMOITOW .....ss Bubblé-free baby bottle ..... Plan’ your leisure: like your ' work—Ruth Millett Senay Bible still most read—Eleanor . Roosevelt srssssshsnnnannny 8

Amusements

Caasrensninens ® A sessssinntanan i ane Saantann Sn seenane

4

“Office of Power” The 44-page dissent said Mr. Truman was making sure that a “mass” of laws were properly executed. It said the presidency was created as “an office of power and independence” and the President

ny it

National -+® {|

-

s Break Out

CIO Presideft Philip Murray promptly called an immedie

the high bench held that Mr. Tru- Provision in the Constitutioit pros.

Bb.

.

Four teen-agers arrested after

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