Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1952 — Page 1
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FORECAST: Fair tonight and tomorrow. Warmer tomorrow. Low tonight 65. High tomorrow 93.
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Death on Wheels— 5 Ze : >. 16 Slings Highway Toll Zooms In Finals for Olympic Spots
As 10 Die in Indiana RAR ASA SAAR CAAT A LRRARAL = Fons (AERA AA ALhS
THE LINE OF DEAD GROWS—Three more persons died here yesterday. One died on a county road to bring the county death toll so far this year to 43. The others were victims of city accidents, making a total of 34 urban deaths. The line of marching dead now totals 77 in the city and county. Are you next?
Scripps ~owarnY 63d YEAR—NUMBER 115
NO
Sixteen of the nation’s top
noon at Broad Ripple pool to deltermine who will wear the .red-|white-and-blue for Uncle Sam at |Helsinki, Finland, two weeks
- |hence. » Death roared over Indiana highways at a record breaking pace for| The field of 32 backstrokers
the first day of the three-day Fourth of July week end. [wis Jyickly reduced in the Srst
backstroke and breaststroke y | ! { swimmers are poised for a 4) showdown fight this after-
Three Marion County persons were dead. & : Suse , Sis mor ced trem 3 : nother e were Over the nation 138 persons had met death on wheels. Drownings, » chaliengers in Ra aro _ plane crashes and other acei-| : . 3 [breast stroke. All Positions in the dents boosted the toll to at R . D 1% K | el janals were awarded on the a - } of times. least 215. x | ace river l € / | Gail Peters, one of America’s State violent accidents claimed ® ; ° foremost backstroke stars from Washington, D. C., had the fasttotal of 13 lives Drowning Claims Two [imam 2c iwi te ast
PRICE FIVE CENTS |
1952 Entersd as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice ’ * Indianapolis. Indiana. Issued Daily,
Doug Being Boomed | To Run With Taft
Fight Over Delegates : Will Be Taken to Floor Of GOP Convention
By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO, July 5-—The MacArthur-for-Vice-President boom was thundering in this convention city today as Taft managers maneuved for a first ballot nomination. Sen. Robert A. Taft's associates in public and private were speaking well of Gen, Mac-
; [Arthur as a running mate. Former President Herbert Hoover was believed to be a key man in
plans for ticket. The latest United Press tabula-
tion showed Sen. Taft has at least
a MacArthur-Taft
For Indiana it was Sarnags at a record-smashing pace, ex-| Indiana highways crowded with Fourth of July funceeding the gloomiest prediction geserg hecame death lanes for many Hoosiers as the holiof the Indiana State Police. 3, weekend death toll mounted.
! r- a ; ood Ee i ocr pe There were at least 13 violent deaths, and one Hoosier ! drowned near the state line. The
week end. This would equal the; - state death tell included 10 traffic
1951 record slaughter when 21| : New U. S. Sea fatalities, 2 drownings, one race-
persons died in one three-day
at 3:10.4. Betty -Jane Lynch, Laflayette Swim Club, and Dela Se{horn, outstanding star from Port{land, Ore., were clocked at 3:14.4 {and 3:11.4, respectively. : Finished Third
| ’ Indianapolis’ hopes were kept
alive for the 200-meter breast-
Bosses Thwart Will of People’
{ By JOHN L. STEELE United Press Sta” Correspondent
CHICAGO, July 5-— Gen.
stroke when 15-year-old Ann
Dwight D. Eisenhower, ararrived in Chicago today to
530 convention votes to 425 for Gen. Dwight. I), Eisenhower. But nothing was in the bag. Eisenhower strategy was to play the corruption and vote-stealing issue against Sen. Taft to the limit before taking the delegate contest dispute Monday to a showdown on «the convention floor. Both sides were full of fight. *
Tkemen planned a spectacular:
take command of his bid for
the Republican presidential nomination against “arrogant” politiclans, who, he says, are trying to dictate the nomination of Sen.
“Dixie indignation meeting” today in the Blackstone Theater across the street from the Conrad Hilton Hotel convention headquarters. They were whooping it
*
1 gee
Hots 91738, and Maxine, 3.
period. : | : track death and a train mishap, Morrison finished third behind, But with only one day account-| Hit The death toll marred an other-|* -cr® 2nd Lynch in 317.4. | ed for, nine persons were already Wi UE CM Ins | wise near-perfect day. Skies were] Other good times among the victims of the highways. i n pe y {qualifiers were: Judy Cornell, New The three Marion County resi- Record Pace {blue and temperatures through- york City, 3:16; Ann Bardwell,| dents killed were: i lout the state had the warmth of, Birmingham, Ala., 3:15; Alan PotConnie Sue Haus, 1, of 559 2 . {summer heat, but none of thejter, 3:18.2.,
Moreland Ave. | Barbara Jean Cunningham, 15,
of 1511 Bellefontaine St. Joseph Pratt, 24, of 4037 Col-|
lege Ave, A Noah L. Gromes, 62, of 544 W: Pearl St. died in General Hospital yesterday of traffic injuries received early Thursday. He had| been struck by a car as he crossed West St. near his home, The Haus girl was killed in a head-on crash at 38th St. and Arlington Ave. last night—the day after her first birthday, @
injured critically. They were taken to Methodist Hospital.
+ 8 Others Hurt Also hurt in the crash were
BY Tilted Pres discomfort which),
3 {heat-wave ABOARD THE 8. 8. UNITED "® week, 01d sensation from Berkeley, Cal.,!
STATES, At Sea, July 5 The Plagued Hoosiers until mid 'had the best qualifying time in| superliner | 8. 8. United States, Today and Sunday were to beitpe packstroke of 1:18.4, and her new queen of the American Mer- fair and a little warmer, with teammate Phebe Cramer chant fleet, raced through rough-| temperatures in the high 80s or|next in line with 1:19. | ening seas today, nearing. the OW 90s. |, Mary Freeman, Washington, | halfway mark of what ed Driver. Killed {D Ca Jad 2 time . a 2h 4} v ' Shila, nahne, Lafayette rim to be a trans-Atlantic record. About 6500 persons witnessed
The giant liner passed through One Of the holiday deaths. At|with 1:19.4. Barbara Jensen fog pax the hy This ert ‘Wayne, Race Driver Robert Reeves, 1048 Olympic star and Y * ; 3 - , 3 f the ing the weather was overcast and L. Jones, 26, Chesterfield, was In- America’s woman swimmer o
the seas, though still moderate, JUr®d fatally when his roadster were rougher than yesterday, ~~ [OVerturned in the southeast turn|y ying Miss Maureen O’Brien, But the United States’ speed|®! the Ft. Wayne speedway, pin-| Red Bank, N. J., who qualified in undiminished. - (bing Jones in the wreckage, Of-(1:19.7. TS pm a id ey ;'ficlals blamed excessive speed. Mrs. Reeves, of the Chicago The $73 million li shattered : : 21 9 two a0 on mer the ered David Axton. 33, Evansville, Town Club, was clocked at 1:21.2.
a
Little Barbara Stark, 14-year- |
was Club, earned a place in the finals!
year in 1949, just managed to| ¢ make the field finishing fourth! Hilton Hotel.
The field was completed by Cora
leg of its maiden voyage from|died of injuries received when his
New York to Le Havre, France, motorcycle struck a parked truck
Lee O'Connor, a comparative unWorcester,
Mass.,
yesterday when it steamed the|in Evansville. known from
Robert A. Taft. ; up for a standing-room only meetGen. Eisenhower's special train |ing which would jam 1500 persons arrived in Chicago at noon. From!into the place. Sen. Henry Cabot then on out Gen. Eisenhower is|Lodge, Gen. -Eisenhower's campledged to fight what shapes up|paign manager, will be master of as an.epic political scrap down |cereménies.
1to the finish wire. Au he move Toward the con| 1 pEeEAR, MEE .\vention city, Gen. Eisenhower in- pact, Sen. Eisenhower's charges creased the intensity of his at-|qe corruption made against Sen. tacks on “a Httle group of men.” mast in connection With selection Who, he said, prized control of se 1ouisiana, Mississippi, Texas the Republican Party above dem- and Georgia delegates has exDeratic principals of majority ceaded all expectations. It not e. : : ; 4 Despite & back-breaking sched- (pas. has Socksd ho Yous Dut it ule, the General looked fit fOT| vention sampalen aon mon or _|the pending battle. He was an lieve, seriously and, rg
s as hi ded decisions | in SNovember, ou 3 the smoke Mths Santas ls what !
HOT SPOT—Gen. Alber Wedemeyer, an ardent Taft backer at the GOP convention in. Chicago, trys to dodge the heat with a old, soft drink before going/into a press conference in the Conrad
TR a RA TT. as ra 3 ur x
Syn SY
Et
he “behin Ex h 2. at) . 0 Tke called the pT eg room. : = Was 78 of 96 contested delegates were warmi — fr Be ap awarded by the Republican NaParent)y oying : Meta ough ¥: tional Committee to Taft and
A
William Caudill, 27, Keystone, was killed near Hartford City when “his motorcycle skidded in gravel and Caudill fell to the ground. Samuel Hostetler, 54, Terre Haute, was hurt fatally in! a two-car collision on U. 8. 40 near Terre Haute, and Charles Phillips, 23, Richmond, died of injuries suffered when a car
first 696 nautical miles in 20 hours and 24 minutes. At an average speed of 34.11 knots, the ship bettered by three knots the record previously held by the Cunard liner Queen Mary. The 8S United States addcd to its laurels by being the first merchant ship to establish such a speed record on a maiden voyage. Merchant vessels generally make Struck a tree on Ind. 227,
one or more crossings before Bonnie Purdue, 9, Walton, was! “pouring on the steam.” {killed when a car rammed the!
Commodore Harry Manning told newsmen aboard this 990-0 Ind. 14 near Rochester.
t | ® foot vessel the United States was| Drowning Victims | I oO 90's A aim “Just cruising” and denied with| { Another auto passenger, Ed-| a broad smile that he was at- { th 1 to light tempting to establish a new rec- ward Reece, 18, Lafayette, died! The weatherman plans to lig
Eddie Lunsford, 34, of 2432% Guilford Ave.; in fair condition in General Hospital, and Robert Fitzgerald, 16, and his brother, Henry, 19, both of 2327 Guilford, treated at the hospital and released. i They were riding in a car driven by Robert Pope, 24, of 737 E. 22d 8t. Mr. Haus drove the other auto. : Pope was arrested on a prelimfnary charge of reckless homicide and on a charge of drunken driving, second offense—a felony: Capt. Audry Jacobs, police traffic chief, said Pope tested 2.47 ! on the Drunk-O-Meter. Legal i maximum is 1.50. Police said witnesses told them i Pope was driving 60 to 70 mph | at the time of the crash.
Julia Murakami, of Hawaii who got to the finals with 1:21 flat.
The finals are scheduled - to start at 4 p. m, today. The Olympic trails end tomorrow with the one and three-meter diving and the 400-meter free style events. The 21 winners will leave immediately by plane for New York City tomorrow,
“If the ship makes a record, I'struck the rear Wheel of a truck morrow and send it skittering up!
| » ”» . \ nningham girl was in-{ 0, t help that,” he sald. land overturned on Ind. 28 near|to 93 degrees. But it won't be as The Cunning gl | “I-never dreamed she would jured fatally last night when she . | Attica |hot as it has been. Old man ure y {make 34 knots and not tremble. | .
was thrown from an auto that. ..= : w humidity is low. p has’ far exceeded my| Drowning victims were alter, | hit two cars, then overturned. | | A mass of cool, northern air |expectations. My hand trembles R, Early, 9, Mitchell, and James that spun into Indiana in clocks
Leaving Picnic jmore than this ship . . .” (Whitehead, 18, Princeton. The|wjse fashion gave him the old
: | ut! Travelers on the new vessel ] 8 a Sehool | reported the four giant propellers arly boy drowned while swim- one-two.
| reatherman has his eye } {created some noise and vibrations Ming in deep water at Hindustan| The wea ) | Be EL vara Pl In the aft cabin-class section but Falls near Loogootee, and White- 08 8 hugh SL 30 today, nk. } Sheriff's Deputies Hardister 8d it yas Minor Sompered with head drowned in Lake Lawrence 8 © 2008 i : opine yeher i s Irwin said. other high’speed ships. in Illinois, across the state line; Bo om ane two depu-| Among the 1660 passengers from Vincennes. Ing up, ties, who were directing traffic/aboard the nation’s new Yleen) Calvin Davis, 39, New Castle,
- i New se icnic und. Bickley/of the seas was Margaret Tru-/was killed when he was struck Views on the at ihe Bin Ir man. by a train at New Castle; Floyd | Hansel, 43, Paoli, died Friday. of! injuries suffered a day before in|
: » Dan Kidney lan auto crash near Paoli which ]
|killed William Timberlake, 29, THAT TV BAN. on GOP pre(Paoli, and Curtis" Blanton, 17, convention fireworks helped ConCulver, was found dead at a Lake gress hang up a better attendance {Maxinkuckee beach, apparently airecord on the Fourth.of July. {drowning victim. . . " = = The country is in such shape that some men would do anything to. be President.
”, ” n IF GEN. EISENHOWER doesn’t get the nomination, he may feel pushed out of SHAPE.
failed to stop, the officers said. AS they chased his car, It| met am metus smashed into another and flipped, LOCAL TEMPERATURES over. The deputies captured Bick-| g 4 m... 67 * 10 a. m... 81 ! ley after a chase on foot, they| 74 m.. 71 11a m.. 83 i said. | 8a m..7 12 (Noon) 84 : Driver Arrested i- 9a m.. 8
He was charged with reckless) AP = homicide, wi driving and latest humidity ...... 4% failing to obey an officer's signal. | Barbara died in General Hos-| ° pital. r . i Mr. Pratt was killed and three, other ‘Indianapolis residents in-| jured in southeastern Indiana! early today when their car over-| : turned. td State police said Donald Lewis, | * 20, of 226 N. Tremont Ave., lost| control of the car on Ind. 46 near) St. Leon,
Mr. Lewis, Alice Brown, 19, and| Louise Wood, both of 3461 N. Illi-|! nois St., were taken to a hospi-| {al in Batesville. . ~. 1 Mr. Pratt, a Broad Ripple High! i School graduate, formerly served * . in the Air Force. He was the son’ of Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Pratt. A! gister, Barbara, also survives. : dank Services will be at 11 a. m. &%%. Monday in Flanner & Buchanan
Mortuary. * °° 4 Hurt in Crash - E
Four elderly persons were in-° jured in a 2-car crash at Rockville and High School ‘Rds. late yesterday. 1 They are William Leech, Day- '** ton, O.: his wife, Gay, 70; Mrs, Fannie Fork, 80, of 221 E. Michi- , gan St, and Mrs. Edna Breeding, 's \ 73, of 559 W. 31st St. All were taken to General Hospital, whee the three women
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an
a ‘a ) i i La X pg p : * I © | Were in serious condition. | - BEAUTY ON THE FIRING LINE — These two ladies lit a
Police and sheriff's deputies re- .,.k on Camp Atterbury's firing line the other day. They are
I ported 46 traffic accidents in Mar- Lo pecorve nurses, members of a Kansas City, Mo., medi. fon County yesterday, 36 of them Ty Ie tw ‘of summer training. ‘Lt. Ann
in Indianapolis. gos o Lt. Rose: Wiedemeyer, while Maj.
£3
who had a 1:20.1 reading and|
Purdue family auto from the rar PQ to Jump |
; {amble to the constitution. ord for a trans-Atlantic crossing.|when the car in which he rode|the fusé under the mercury to-| A woman wearing a gold star
|
oo 5° . OMAHA, July 5 uP) —twenty- AAT in Fight lone persons who refused to sign. ? la petition comprised of the second paragraph of the Declara-
tion of Independence offered a| CHICAGO, July 5 (UP)—Taft variety of reasons for not doing
so yesterday. forces welcomed the vice-presi-
“It sounds sorta communistic,” dential boom for Gen. Douglas one man told Reporter Tom Allan/MacArthur today as giving a lift of the Omaha World-Herald when to their campaign from two direcjhe was shown the petition. tions.
“What are you trying to do,| mpere has been - A h en growing spec overth re w the government? (ulation, encouraged by supporters asked another. a 4 lof Sen. Robert A. Taft, about the Four persons signed the OCU~| ho ssibility of nominating Gen.
iment, but one of the signers MacArthur for second { 3C place on a thought it was part of the Ameri-\¢jcxet with the Ohio Senator as [can Legion constitution and an-
the presidential nominee, lother thought it was the pre-| f oe ue PD | Sen. Taft himself started this
speculation by remarking on a! [radio program two weeks ago [that a Taft-MacArthur ticket
By RAYMOND LAHR United Press Staff Correspondent
Iowa.
who would
Ideals and will of the people,” |said,
“It is a straight issue between
against a ‘little group of men whose purpose of controlling the
spect for majority decisions.” The General and his backers are counting on one thing, They hope, and confidently expect, to arouse American public opinion against men Gen. Eisenhower [youd be a strong one. Generally jerms ara-ealiber politicians who ; . / Ihe has refrained from discussing wou wart the will of the delePoa BNO YY nant SIg™ possible vice-presidential nominees|gates” and dictate the nomina- ’ “lor cabinet choices. {tion if they can.
“They would really get on us” : ay sounds : all y but. we| Backers of the Ohioan believed) Gen. Eisenhower said at Denidon’t know anything about it,” the MacArthur boom would give/son, Iowa, that the. Republican two women said after giving it a their campaign a twofold lift Ly: Party cannot win in the fall elec-
quick once-over. ONE—Providing a strong in- tion if it resorts to “chicanery . . .
refused because she ‘didn’t undérstand it.” ”
” ”
A man playing with his two centive for Gov. John Fine, g[irockedness’ io naming Is wn} e identity o el {bloc of perhaps 25 uncommitted|/nominee is unimportant, he said, [Pennsylvania delegates into the/28 long as the party standard{bearer is chosen honestly and in
‘sons in a park on the Independ- {MacArthur partisan, to lead his candidate. ‘ence Day holiday paused for a {look . ” “Sounds sorta communistic,” he Taft camp. |said. “Some of these com-| TWO—Combatting the “Tart- the open. /munistic writers have a way of!Can’t-Win"” argument which has
writing things, you know.” been the Ohio Senator's biggest The second paragraph of the y Bpes
Declaration of Independence reads:
“We hold these truths to be { self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
‘The Essentials’ At Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Gen,
for the GOP presidential nomina-/formed by John Foster Dulles, tion.
lon {would believe
the premise that
that Gen. Mac-|/pared which includes “the essen{popular appeal to give Sen. Taft|Dulles on June 20. {substantial help in the fall cam-| “If this report is true,” Gen.
ipaign against the Democrats.
Gals Air Race Heads For Texas on 2d Lap
By United Press i y | y |is prohibited—but' the ‘women ‘re: |}, { PHOENIX, Ariz, July 5—8ix-| ceived only a severe shaking.
|ty-seven women pilots in 39 light!
planes headed for Texas today onjed here, and 14 came down at!not accept it. the second lap of the 2700-mile/ Tucson to spend the night, | But the big play, the one Gen |“powder puff” air race. y
| All but one of the 40 planes
{that took off from Santa Ana, needs . to Cal, landed here safely and be leading the pack, but they em-
at| Tucson, Ariz., to end the first log PhAsIzed that winners of
of the trips which will take the
hii housewives” to Teterboro, e1apsed time and handicaps.
| The race -¢nds at Teterboro on A cream-and rust-colored Piper wednesday, with the" winner re-
Cruiser flown by Mrs. Thelma | ceiving $500 and the runner-up | Bishop of La Jolla, Cal, made anig40q
lemergency landing at Ft. Hua-/| |chuca, near Tucson, but the women aboard were unhurt. The plane was 75 miles off its course when Mrs. Bishop crash; landed at the Army Base. . 8he bod was accompanied by her daugh- ERE 81 one of 1 cies siong the ter, Jean Kay, 14, and her moth- |, ed Handicaps a computed er, Mrs. Edna Laubenstein, the ‘ P ;
‘on the basis of each plane's adRoungset: and oldest women IN yoi.tis0q cruising speed.
| i | The race is sponsored annually | The plane was too badly dam- by the Ninety Nines, a women aged to continue when the race pilot's organization founded by,
| |programs and security.” Previously, Gen.
cut
after the race on the basis of lection campaign “with
{hands,” he said: promise offer for splitting tion.
never: compromise. no deals,” he said.
three! Miss Eacret was the first to Tee take off from Santa Ana yesterlday. With her in a Cessna 140 was Helen McIntosh.
Contestants must stay over-
Times Index Bridge sessssenes 3 Churches ....csv00s 4 Comics shevesansnsed12-13 Editorials «..i Forum Movies sevians 8 Radio, Television ,..10044.13 Bociety .iiciaiviivnvisinn Sports .isiasivicscnrisenild Women's
Cara ses aen
cessnsassrensnees 8
chs N aaa
:
“Whether politicians are to be {loyal servants or arrogant masters is the issue at this very moment in Chicago, he said in Ames,
«It is a struggle against those use parliamentary procedures and legal technicalities as a smoke screen to thwart the
he,
|inist tactics.” right and wrong. It i | 5 8 8 8 a struggle (.."1uck before the convention
Republican Party overrides re-|
single handicap in his three bids/ Eisenhower said he had been in-
GOP foreign policy expert, that a | This second factor was based tentative foreign affairs plank for day, delegates/the GOP platform has been pre- Gen.
{Arthur has the eloquence and 'tials” of the letter he wrote Mr.
{Eisenhower said, “and the tenta[tive plank is later adopted by the] {resolutions committee of the convention, it will clearly evidence leaving Washington that he had the determination of the Repub|lican Party to be forward looking |! ‘would not reject” second place on {and eminently practical in treat-|a Taft ticket. {ing the grave problems of foreign! Wedemeyer,
{not contain essentials covered in i Twenty-five of the planes land- his letter to Mr. Dulles he would! vania is a MacArthur fan and in
Race officials in Santa Ana said| Eisenhower time and time again Gen. MacArthur being on. Doris Eacret of the Bing Crosby|drove home, was that to win at ticket might -swing Gov. Fine's Ranch in Elko, Nev., appeared tothe polls the Republican Party support to Sen. Taft. into Democratic, the Voting strength. The party can|Blght with warning that the Tans { < 'do this only if it comes into the Eisenhower delegate dispute ha $1750. purse. would be Fomputed y clean become so bitter as to damage
| He flatly rejected Taft's com-|in November the Many agreed with him, and there contested 38-vote Texas delega-|Was anxiety all around that the “On such things I would Republican nomination was losing I will make value by reason of the bitterness-
only 20 to him. Sen, Lodge abruptly rejected all compromise Taft proposals and brushed aside Mr. Hoover's offer to referee the disputes, Sen. Lodge said the National Committee had become “a puppet for the ruthless steamroller tactics of the Taft machine.” The committee's actions on const dispute reminded Sen. James {H. Duff, Pennsylvania, of “StalThey hope for bet-
credentials committee, Under this barrage Sen. Taft's attitude stiffened to one of give ‘em nothing and ask no quarter, The battle is on and someone is
going to get hurt here next week.
First Ballot Blitz Sen. Taft's strategy. was toward a first ballot blitz when the roll is called next Wednesday or Thursday. He had about 100 more pledged votes than Gen. Eisenhower on the United Press tabulation but was about 75 short of the 604 necessary to nominate. The national committee's contest. hearing ended yesterday
this time on a compromise basis dictated by the Senator's supporters. The contested Texas delegation was divided, Sen. Taft 22, Gen. Eisenhower 16. Sen. Lodge had rejected the 22-16 compromise proposal but the committee forced it on him. The leaders were arriving toSen. Taft from Washington, Eisenhower aboard his |whistle-stop special from Denver,
{the 70-vote California delegation. |Gen, MacArthur and Mr. Hoover are due Monday.
Kind Words Sen. Taft acknowledged before |received word Gen, MacArthur
Gen. Albert C. y chairman of the Citizens Committee for Taft, ar-
Eisenhower rived with kind words for the ad sald, that if the plank did/MacArthur boom.
Gov. John 8. Fine of Pennsyi-
|control of 25 or 30 of that state's .1T0-vote delegation, The chance of
ine
Harold E. Stassen arrived last
|the Republican election prospects “hour by hour.”
"of the delegate contest disputes, Ikemen were determined to take {to the convention floor. a “no {deal-fair play” resolution which would bar contested delegations {from voting on the temporary roll call Monday on the question {of any delegate’s eligibility to be |seated. The Republican rule here{tofore has ‘beefi that a contested delegation might vote on all questions of eligibility of ‘other delegations to be seated but not on
Radar car patrolmen arrested Neve acts as coach 75 speeders in the city, B. Hay looks on. %
»%
; a b
resumed today-—nighttime flyingithe late Amelia Earhart. ip -
s 8
- “4%
its own eligibility.
with another Taft triumph, but :
|Gov, Earl Warren by train with, =
EA -® y 3
RT .
STE ARE ft
