Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1952 — Page 8

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: THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1952

~~ THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1952

__'THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___.

Be

vears in office. Mr. Truman sajq| With convention officials in Chi-

n ” —- » s Bp °C # % . Ri oi» . 3 r Sl Ed HST Extols Political Roundup— | Local Musicians Will Study at IU | . By ASAE an Times State Servi Fi: : clinic §| G tt ; Ahead ! « IT WA 1 GOP Charges Mayor | zoos is src sop me oe one | Gettin a DN . ; : ry Indianapolis high school - musi-| A Es ay a ; I know | ‘ND | ; A : B00" wi OF Of the JU_Philharmonic, 884 - Lisi cold Brisofewhere be- || CHEESE $800 p30 = — 71 rr Ar. sy A ¢ & LF 3 [cians ae oi ie 200 studentiorcnestra director; George F.| : the fell h obs I ing gum ® Plans Own ‘Machine’ [i Sri. bm fre sinc Soil aif wer, be flow who ati. Eo . Fe . ; opens Same y e 16 sic, as choral director, and Daniel || .head keeps going. BUSI- | the flavor = ~ y | ~ : lw pH ing Satu ay. i t L. Martino, director of university {| NESS 1S ALWAYS oh the stead of : : By IRVING LEIBOWITZ The delegation, in. state conven- anapolls representa- ands, conducting the clinic band. ||. - A Ever : s . tives in the annual event, "which = { foot | | - Courthouse Republicans today ton, was instructed to vote solid-|(iy” run through July 13, are| The clinic will close with a joint | alert. for such young men | x Darefoot. 3 ‘ charged Mayor Clark has planned ly for Sen. Taft for President, but Alice Graham. Joyce Broeking concert by band, orchestra and} a.nd women. This is the an, w er By United Press “a wholesale shakeup” of ward Mr. Pulliam and Mr. Huftheson Nancy Jane Foster and Carolyn CNOTUS at 2 p. m. Sunday, July § : ; stuck toge WASHINGTON, July 3—Presi-chairmen to build up a personal said they were not bound since ey +8 arolyR 13, in IU auditorium. Indiana ‘Business College gum, I've | {dent Truman said today Amert-jpulifical machine. hoe they “were chosen in district. 1 coteq by M. F. Shadley, co- qe—— SL he ain ol the years leans who want to pull out of the e Mayor, who also is County caucus. ! : : $i hy, yeh - 1 of Indianapolis. e others are at | ntil an of {United Nations and Tan it alone” GOP Chairman, said the report] The Times revealed last week ordinator of pubic Susie Sy Te wSCIAL NOTICE | fare ogansport: Marion: Min ~ferred to {are advocating a course “that can Was “untrue” but added he did that Mr. Pulliam threatened to «and Jobbers { cle. Richmond and Vincennes--Ora gum, * “ » : Clothing, Dry Goods, Shoes, Hardware, J]! E_ Butz. President. For Bulletin | : only lead to the holocaust of plan to make “a few changes.” |file suit against Mr. Holder in Boy, 3, Burned Variety. Gift shops. Toys. Tools, Candy. § }' and. complete information Jen The gt | In what he termed his “fina SW n a free on the hand and leg after he » under the counter, a { NEW, AFTERNOON SERVICE! report” as President on U. S. par-|In Political posts until after the hand. stuck a bare wire in a light SOCKeL |] Ere on ane sh perth Seamer Central Business College | : Rouse of : ticipation in the United Nations, Republican National Convention L . d p li . in his home yesterday. Roy Tex, call us Prompt service and cash on §| Yadians Business Collsse Bile: | ng Mr. Truman told Congress that{i} Chicago. Je SEpiained wis wi egion an olitics 1750 Fletcher Ave. was treated! INLAND CITY JOBBERS {20% N. Meridian 81. 11-8393 gle, body % : tain “ "le se un. tliminate an ‘and released by an am | calls Made Any Place In of red clo 2 : cer 2 BR ad Sve a y T jobs were handed out on the basis Democrat John A. Watkins said doctor y Bulanee] 505 W. WAS. Ton. Lire - the right i / dermine » lof £ today he will wage a “hard hit- -- . . (Nations through ‘partisan at- of a preference for Sen. Taft-or n " First fe — MINS LV. 4:15 P.M Pkg Gen. Eisenhower. ting, but constructive” campaign | Bet in. Yq , ONLY 66 . wo fas GFP “Oyr main job is to win in No-;!0 become Governor of Indiana, drinks h | He did not call any names, but, » 5 but will t h | NKs ha F in the past he has directed similar, vember the Mayor sald. “And BOL sedis iho 31d of the] n body simp NEW criticism at such Republicans as|™® need the best men to help us.” American Legion, which he served | f : 2 Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, Gen, Most of the complaints have Prominently the last 25 years. THE 1 (1/7// Ben. : + TM originated with Eisenhower fol- Mr. Watkins’ statement was a’ i / : Douglas MacArthur and former] : direct sl i wipe away { |{lowers, who claim the Mayor in. direct slap at a Broad Ripple: , President Herbert Hoover, t « » 1 ’ / i eyes. Let Exvressiaz confidences (hat tends to “stack” the county Re- Legion Post's indorsement of his strong. on SRPressing “thao. Publican machine with Taft peo- Republican rival, George Craig, Som Americans would reject these Some Kk > i“ former national Legion com-! 8d {“voices of degpair,” Mr. Truman mander. The post, under pressure! lewalk a 4 (also said the United States and Taft Vs. tke from headquarters ay % ; ! til the Ger Phone FR 195 or your travel agent [its United Nations partners were| Newspaper publisher Eugene C. indorsement. . WE CAN HANDLE YOUR ORDERS QUICKLY AND EFFICIENTLY! . ierrectio ¥* , |“right” to take up arms in Korea|pylliam has declined to carry out Mr, Watkins, a for ; iy & p 16th YEAR OF PERFECT SAFEYY » . ns, a former Legion * 1 thou : to repel Communist aggression. |hjs threat to sue Republican state commander, said he would LEVOILOR Potnes e But he admitted concern about gtate Chairman Cale J. Holder consider it “poor politics to make ; PATTERSON'S Ld the fact that the United States is{as a result of the Taft-Eisen- . ; see the Pa wii f t > 4p : €n- the Legion a political machine for Qdndad Wood Hn SERVICE 80 sad of still shouldering most of" the hower feud in Indiana. one party br another,” oral Hoe. B Korean burden. | . Mr, Pulliam, publisher of the ~ «1 deplore any action >that ® Tail Is Fara oi This country, he said, is pro- Star and News and an Eisen- might put the Legion into a posi- allored to Your Windows COMPLETE tl i iding 50 per cent of the ground hower delegate to the national tion of becoming a political bat- . . \ . rl 3 forces in Korea, 86 per cent of GOP convention, said last night'tjeground,” he declared. Choice of Slats With - .® iii ’ art TER oe The vig the naval forces and 93 per cent/he has been assured he can vote EL metal i . i ; gs ? : lof the total Air Forces fighting |for Gen. Eisenhower without in- al inclosed Heagers Maacirey WINDOW SHADES body move 4 ree y . {terfer from Indiana Republi- and Bottom Rails. cy the leg. 1 the war. ence n a Repu Laundry UN Best Route can Party officials. / SHADE CLEANING 4 ’ The “limited” participation of| “I have been assured by mem-| ‘ _ Closed All Day Friday and Safarday z It H .t other United Nations nations in|bers of the National Committee, ; v o wh. + |goves: the President said, is ajas Well as by Speaker Joseph Patterson Has Been the Source of QUALITY VENETIAN By Ea NETH SURE subject of “concern” to the United Martin, the permanent convention : IN « |States. He said this country {g/chairman, that William Hutche-| BLINDS and Window Shades for Over 40 Years NEW 3 0s? ws? \continuing to press its Allies for(S0n and I will be permitted to] ; pas . ; flay that 1 . * {larger troop ‘contributions, _ |vOte our convictions in the selec- Free Estimates, Easy Terms if Desired "As I'm dn dmericon | Summing up his interest inition of a presidential nominee,” | . from Nebr » stave ; lthe United Nations over seven MT. Pulliam said after conferring foreign po

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“ » |cago. i his “paramount aim” has been| i to work for peace and Yhat the Mr. Pulliam and Mr. Hutcheson,

| sader, are thé o senUnited Nations was the best|ETIOD leader e the only Eisen-

| hower backers among I SE {route to it. He recalled the high 9 5 among Indiana's wd

32 convention delegates. {hopes - for the United Nations —— 2

‘when it was organized in 1945. | “But those hopes have been] ‘dimmed by the conflicts of the] {succeeding vears and by the hos-| [tile attitude of the Soviet Union.” | . Mr. Truman said. “As a result] {voices have been raised, ques-| tioning the value of the United, Nations and the need for main-| taining it. . : _ “Some of these attacks are made in a spirit of impatience that ican only lead to the holocaust of world-wide war,” he said. ‘Voices of Despair’ “Most of those “who urge us to| ‘go it alone’ are blind to the fact 'that such a course would destroy ithe solid progress toward world {peace which’'the United Nation® has made in the past seven years. 1 am confident that the American people will reject these voices] of despair. , | { “We can win peace. but we cannot win it alone. And, above! all, we cannot win it by force alone. We can win the peace lonly by containing to work for in-| ternational justice and morality] “through the United Nations.” | While ‘the Kremlin's interna{tional conduct. “threatens the peace of the world,” Mr. Truman {said its policies of “stirring up

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timidation and conquest” might have been successful but for the {United Nations, which has “re{lentlessly exposed” Soviet tactics. Defending the Korean War, the {President said failure to act imight have wrecked the United Nations. That would have been| {the same “dreary road of ap-| peasement that had led from, Manchuria to Munich and then to] World War I1," he said.

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