Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1952 — Page 1
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and continued warm tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 70; high tomorrow 93.
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SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1952
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice
Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily,
LE BEN
or
I'd Meet Stalin Anywhere for
Peace,’ Says lke.
i . i!
By United Press
NEW YORK, June 7—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower told his second political press conference today that as President’ of the U. S. he would “go to any place in the world” to meet Russian Premier Joseph Stalin if he thought that would
[promote the peace and security
lof the world. { But Gen. Eisenhower added 3 d S d quickly: | “I'm not so certain that is the bu way to do things.” . : | Gen. Eisenhower made the On Rir Power {statement in reply to a question I {he were elected President, Says U.S. Can | Gen. Eisenhower opened his secBomb at Will
By United Preis * /dential nomination with a re-af
back “at” Sen, Robert Taft and|the greatest issue of the campaign | other critica of the U.:S.. Air'and an important contributing Force and said that Amercian factor to other present problems planes: “can bomb the enemy at'of government. Sp !
will” in Korea. ‘Won't Be Destroyed’ The Chief Executive denounced h d do! the “terrible amount of misin-| He said he was ready to do
formation about our situation {n|anything to find a satisfactory
" iprogram which will bring peace ihe Bi} over Koren and sale the and security to the United States:
‘maintain air supremacy over North Korea.”
. “That means we can bomb the so long as Soviet Russia main-
must trade.
enemy at will, almost everywhere tains- that communism cannot
in his territory,” Truman (live side by side with the free! said. 2 , jworld, he said. .. His remarks were seen as a| “We are not going to be stern rebuke tp ihe recent criti- stroyed.” he added. wi cism of the Air Force in the war The major difference tv eatt tone by Sen. Taft and other Republican and Democratic forrifics. ; : {eign policy was “really a dis} ‘But the President -injected a 38Téeément as to method,” he | lobering note by warning thejeoBiinued, : | vorld that Russian-made ‘new: f We ae Zone to have yi F Koreas” were an ever present Sram, hen a Tt danger to this nation, : {freedom for .all,” he said. “The | He said the Kremlin might Pe| United States can’t live all alone.” | planning new and greater war- i ‘are against the democracies of Deluged With Advice | he West. He deplored an Ameri-| Gon Eisenhower said he had
ian trend toward relaxation of been deluged with advice against
the defense effort. | making campaign speeches on the Mr. Truman spoke before the (name of “peace, it's wonderful.”
innual reunion of the 35th Di-|p, jn4icated he intended to : ‘ go on vision, his World War 1 outfit. ionoring those advisers.
can't conceive
: I *1 thi UN Walks Out {more important to the American| people than security and peace On Truce Talks |
{in this troubled world,” Gen. By United Press .
Eisenhower said. PANMUNJOM, Korea, June 7—|
Mr.
de- §
i
He said the lack of security
(UP)—United Nations delegates and peace in the world contributes | broke off the deadlocked Korean| 0 the cost of government, high
‘ruce negotiations today and taxes and inflation. | valked out on the startled Com-| ‘There is a very great threat nunists. Ea ihanging over the world. The
But Maj. Gen. William K. Har-| basic issue is whether we can rison, senior Allied delegate, told| make the free system as we know the Reds he would return to the it work,” Gen. Eisenhower told] Panmunjom conference tent at|/some 200 reporters gathered in| 11 a. m. next Wednesday (9 p. m./a Hotel Commodore ballroom. Tuesday, Indianapolis Time) —“or| “I'm fed up with people making it a later date if the Communists! fun of peace,” he said.
{as to whether he would favor al} {personal meeting with Stalin if}
{ond press conference as a candi- i date for the Republican presi- :
and to the nations with which we'S
The world would be unsettled ®
SHIRTTALE—Edwin Brube
adding a plug for her.
-
ck's shirt tolls he's a. Republiéa a | Virginia Caylor, candidate for courts reporter, pins him down t:
WE VOTE FOR YOU—Sally Delucenay, 1952 Florida beauty queen, poses to show off her McCarty-for-Governor button. Sally, 17, is too young to run for office.
LOADED—Six racy college boys from Buffalo, N.Y., proved they were impartial in the Indiana Republican race. Pinning a button on Richard Van Slyke's lapel is Doris McFarlane, 1806 Ruckle St., who likes lke. . The collegians came here to tour Eli Lilly & Co.
io desire.” ———————— i He said the Allies were fed up |
with Communist stalling and Firemen Rescue sropaganda ‘‘drivel.” A United o ! Painter From Tank
Nations delegation spokesman said the walkout left the ,Reds
Truck Drivers on Job,
‘surprised and baffled.” It marked the first time in the L1-month-old armistice talks that either side has walked out of the conference tent in the middle of a negotiating session.
Paris Police Push Raids on Reds |
PARIS, June 7
(UP) — Police! raided Communist strongholds in, Paris and the big naval base of| Brest today in a hunt for further) proof of a Red plot to overthrow the government. Reliable sources said simultaneous raids also were staged on Communist offices in other! French naval base cities. At the same time, a French naval tribunal at Toulon on the
$100 Million Tieup
an ambulance doctor who worked] Construction truck drivers, on|up by the strike of drivers haul90 minutes in 140-degree tempera- strike here since May 1, started Ing Puiiding materials include ture inside the big vat. several new city an county Michael MacTavish, 29, steeple-| PACK to their jobs this morning, | c pols, the $23 million Army jack with the Universal Construc-/ ending a tieup of an estimated mynance Center at Ft. Harrison; tion Co., suffered a broken back!$100 million worth of projects in /the new Veterans Administration when he fell 19 feet from a ladder Marion County. {Hospital and the new Chrysler
inside the water tank at the Eli
~ {and Allison Division plants, Lilly & Co., Morris St. and Ken- The Building Contractors As-| sina tucky Ave. plant.
: sociation of Indianapolis and Firemen worked from 8:30 this AFL Teamsters Local 716 a- Pageantry Marks morning until 10 getting Mr. Mac-| hounced
they had reached a * Tavish out of the tank and down! ‘compromise agreement” on Proclamation
to the ground. They had to string Wages and health and ‘welfare . up a network of ropes over the|benefits. Of Coronation face of the tower and hauled the] Neither would disclose details) : man out in a parachute harness,|of the settlement. The union had| LONDON, June 7 (UP)-—The| after Dr. Earl O’Brien said he demanded a 16%-cent hourly|coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, could be moved. wage boost and a health and|to be solemnized June 2 next year, Firemen said Mr. MacTavish welfare clause in their contract. was proclaimed throughout her
A seriously injured painter was E Pe rescued from an empty water n tank here today by firemen and!
g
Lia
HOTHOUSE—McCarty-for-Governor campaigners gave roses and peonies to nice people. Laurance D. Baker, Kendallville, gives
them a bath to keep them fresh.
Views on the News
Dan Kidney
DURING the rain in Abilene, Ike borrowed a slicker. Now he
Mediterranean reported that it/was cleaning the inside of the The contractors originally had realm of Great Britain today in a |will have to be on guard against
had found proof that the Com-
tower preparatory to painting, | offered a 15-cent hike and balked! blaze of medieval pageantry.
munist Party was acting against when he slipped on the ladder. He on the welfare issue.
the external security of the coun-|/was taken to Methodist Hospital| “on beMalf of a foreign where he was reported in serious President, said some of the 250
try power.”
The charge is the most serious
condition.
Edward T. Carlson, Local 716
{truck drivers would go back to {their jobs today but that' most
yet leveled against the 'Communists by the Pinay govern- Kefauver Raps System
would return Monday. Projects which have been tied|
ment. Persons charged with Of Taxing Gamblers such a crime are liable to the
death penalty. |
LEBANON, N. H,, June 7 (up) Television Guides
See 'Em Tonight, See 'Em Sunday
See what?? The wide variety .of homes For Sale in the . real estate pages of The Indianapolis Times.
HOME & INCOME POSSIBILITIES 4-Bedrm. home, modern. Large liv. ing rm. fireplace. full-size dining room, kitchen, breakfast room, ul basement, oil heat, auto. hot water. 3-Car garage, large corner lot. For appt, to see 3408 Roosevelt Ave. call
H. N. EDINGTON, Realtor
HU-5579 MA-2530
Above is just one of the many hundreds of homes advertised this week end in The Times many of them EX-
—8en. Estes Kefauver, crime in- Remote Control Crane
vestigator and presidential as-/ ; pirant, says the federal govern-| LONDON, June 7 (UP)—A remote-control crane
ment “is giving quasi-sanction to|three-ton gamblers by allowing them to| which can be operated from®miles pay a tax” for registering as away with the aid of television bookies. He said on his arrival here to, tus’ was demonstrated today. meet New Hampshire Democratic| = The makers, the Vaughn Crane convention delegates pledged to! Co. designed it for: sz du work his nomination that he never. had!|in which it is not practicable to favored a gambling tax. | maintain control from nearby, Sen. Kefauver said the present | They believe it will be invaluable {system of registering bookies for|in areas where atomic bomb ex{tax purposes means that enforce-| plosions prevent approach. _ ment is left up to local author-| When the operator cannot see ities. “That will not work,” he|the crane, he switches to a telesaid. | vision screen. The remote-control
| unit is slung around his neck. [Prof. Adler Quits : CHICAGO, June.7 (UP)—prot. AF Bags 15 MIGs
Mortimer J, Adler, a leader in the Without Single Loss SEOUL, Korea, June 7 (UP)—
| and an electrical director appara-|
{told police she left the office for
CLUSIVELY. University of Chicago's great books movement in education, And, be sure and read the |has resigned his position at Chi-
|cago to become president and di{rector of the newly-founded Insti-! tute of Philosophical Research.
BIG REAL ESTATE SECTION of tomorrow’s Times. You may call PLAZA 5551
American Sabrejet pilots shot down 15 Communist MIG-15s- in two weeks without a single loss
of their own, the 5th Air Force!
any time: 'til midnight tonight ‘and order your SUNDAY Times conveniently deNvered to your doorstep first thing Sunday morning.
reported today. : The swept-wing F-86s knocked down seven MIGs yesterday and damaged two to make their weekly total nine downed and
Ingrid Still Waiting | ROME, June 7 (UP)—The In[ternational Hospital said today
ny »
“there is nothing new" on “the three damaged. A propellerPHONE PLAZA 5351— condition of Bergman who| driven F-51 Mustang damaged. a| j 1 a 3 Po IT Now) fs awaiting the birth of twins at| fourth. The Sabres downed six — \any moment. the previous week, = Vg + 2 Ve wnt
In London, in‘ Edinburgh, in Belfast and ‘in cities and counties | throughout the kingdom heralds proclaimed “Her Majesty’s pleasure touching her royal corona{tion and the solemnity thereof.” The proclamation, signed by| {the young Queen, did “strictly charge and command all our lov-| ing subjects who it may concern | that all persons, of what rank or| quality soever they be . . . do duly give their attendance at the! said solemnity on Tuesday the second day of June next.” | Londoners and tourists massed | at the four points in the busiest | |part of London where medievally clad kings of arms and Heralds | read the proclamation, executed {on a parchment broadsheet measuring 30 inches by 42.
Report $751 Theft .' [From Kahn Co. Safe
Theft of $751 out of a Kahn Clothing Co. safe, 7 N. Meridian St., was reported to police today. Miss Alice McCarty, 51, of 3472 N. Illinois 8t.,, office manager,
an hour yesterday and believes the monéy was taken during that time.
Times Index Amusements .....o0000 6 Bridge ...cvsc00s00000. 13 Comics ssasenssenensssdd 13 Crossword sisecsassess - 12 BAHOrials «oovarvsssns 8 FOrum s.osvisennnsnsen 8 Hoosier Profile ssassnas 2 i . Radio, Television ,..... 1% Sports Saas sas Enna. 3 14 ! Women's essnesinannne’ 5
ui
the slickers borrowing him. ¥ . . DONORS of $5 upwards to the Democratic National Committee get an embossed certificate signed by Chairman Frank E. McKinney. It looks like a license, but could turn out more like a lottery. . " ”
EUROPEANS should really
prosper if they ever get down to!
having only one army to support.
Weather? More, Or Maybe Worse
LOUAL®TEMPERATURES
6a m..7 10a mi... 82 Tam... 11 11 a m.. 87 8a. m.. 74 12 (Noon) 89 a m.. 80 1p m.,. 98
Latest humidity ...... 48%
There'll be a lot of hot air around today . . . not all of it from the Republican State Convention . . . and it'll go on for the next" five days the weatherman says. He doesn’t see any relief in sight. The five-day outlook predicts temperatures ranging from 8 to
12 degrees above normal highs.
Yesterday, Hoosters in central Indiana sweltered in 93-degree heat, equalling the record high for 1952. Today and tomorrow the weatherman promises more of. the same, it not hotter.
Growing Investment
MT. PLEASANT, Mich., June 7 (UP)—James Parkinson brought
[ By IRVING LEIBOWITZ
ower Suppo
* PU a
U. S. Must Put Itself First, Parley Told
Bontrager Blasts ‘Dealers’ in Office......
%. ' By TED ENAP : Keynote speaker Sen. D. Russell: Bontrager sounded the pro-Taft mood of ‘Indie ana’s Republican convention today by whacking Gen. Eisen« hower for supporting the internae tional “paper doll army” in Eue rope. : : The convention got under way at 11:58—almost an hour late, ‘Rep. John Beamer, Wabash, temporary chairman, made a’ short speech, exhorting - ‘cans to lead the country on “the ‘road back from a regimented, socialistic society.” 1 The Wabash Congressman then introduced the keynote speaker. The state senator from Bilk« hart, long known as a Taft backer; fired the usual salvo at “New Dealers, Fair Dealers and Queer Dealers,” then aimed at Gen. Ike, “The paper doll army to which Gen. Eisenhower has just said farewell, is about #s nebulous as a Gallup poll,” he said. “In due tima we will come to realize that
Times photos by Raymond Bright.
the talents and energies of Gen. Eisenhower have been assigned to the shadow high command of a skeleton army.” : Those were Sen Bontrager's only mentions of Gen. Ike by
WHEW — It was hot in the smoke-filled rooms last night. Candidate Harold Handley wipes off some humidity.
Taft Bags 30 Delegates; ‘Robbed,’ Say lke’s Men
the national convention before
Sen. Robert A. Taft today the 1 p. m. deadline yesterday.
captured Indiana like Grant] “We bave seen the Texas steal took Richmond duplicated here in Indiana by a
: up of power-hungry desperate And Eisenhower. forces ®° ‘ ~ ! n , : yp claimed ‘the Ohio Senator won it|™ Mr. Grant declared sg
name. Biit he blasted repeatedly at U. 8. participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to which the General has commited himself, Safe Policy
“Don’t you think,”™ Sen. Bonte rager asked GOP delegates in the Fair Grounds Coliseum, “it would be wiser, safer and more genuinely self-defensive to be an America-firster- than ‘a Europefirster or .Asia-firster?” He charged NATO is 10 per cent by Europe and 90 per cent by America. oy “Charity begins at home, and it is about time that we take care of America and her immediate neighbors instead of wasting our substance on a lot of false friends and wanton wastrels across the seas who will turn on us when the first opportunity affords,” he said. Hits Schricker
Sen. Bontrager, legislative leader in the fight against wel«
{in the same manner — “with force.” Sen. Taft marched through Hoo-! | sierland yesterday and picked up|
|gates to the Republican National Convention. This confirmed a statewide political survey conducted by The Times.
Eisenhower forces could claim
Pulliam, publisher of the Star and News, But Taft forces said that even he could be in Sen. Taft's corner when it: comes time4o vote in Chicago July 7. The uncommitted delegate is William (Big Bill) Hutcheson, retired chief of the AFL Carpenters Union. Neither side would claim Mr. Hutcheson was on their team officially. One Test Only
a contest. But it was a scrap between three Taft men for two seats at the national convention. There was widespread talk in political circles that the Eisenhower forces were “sold out” by some of their own leaders. Robert Grant, chairman of the Indiana Eisenhower - for - President Committee, charged ina formal statement. the “Taft-domi-nated” State Committee “hand. picked” the entire slate of delegates to the national convention.
[me roeed ie of 10 Hoar rend the Baebes mkt walk” out wh n
intend to carry our fight for jus-
tice all the way to the national _|at Gov. Schricker: Stedentials committee if neces | “It 1s going to take more ; mis the Bisen-|® coonskin cap-—yes, even more Mr. Holder dismissed the Eisen THAD © Wilts Tati being 2800
fare secrecy, also took pot shots
only one official delegate, Eugene |
Only in Lake County was there!
at least 30 of 32 Indiana dele- hower blast as a “last minute
jam.” He added: | “We have endeavored to be fair in a hot contest.” . | But the Eisenhower
| ——— | Continued on Page 83-—Col. 6
forces
Louisiana Prison
‘Rebels Punished
ANGOLA, La, June 7 (UP)— {Twenty - six ringleaders of a |Koje Island inspired prison
|“strike” involving 200 convicts at the state penitentiary here were punished with solitary confine ment today. “I'd have whipped them good" it flogging were still allowed in state prisons, outgoing prison Warden D. D. Bazer said. : The convicts, inmates of camp “I” barricaded themselves in a dell block after failing in an-at-
ing clothing-and toilet facilities and complained about “harsh treatment” from a guard. - The “strike
ler's friendship with President
{a real housecleaning in Wash. { ington.” gy And he charged Gov. Schricke
Roosevelt “is now being resur< rected” in’ a Democratic move to draft the Governor to run for U. 8. Senator. v Sen. Bontrager saved his strongest words for Presidents Roosevelt #nd Truman and their “henchmen and cronies.” Chalce tags were: : “Fakers , , , Delirium Trumans « +» « Missouri Moonshiners we morally bankrupt , . . professors,
GE
