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

8, 1952 >. ice

d as Califorrren bunch, 1¢ Dunne, a > rnia and a adison, Ind, old Hoosier ront of her. ed Madison 1 E. Garber, knew her ingster, iterday ' proe delegation - nt and con-

he afternoon n “voted to favor of the ne of Indiegates, Mr, th the Taft ends to vote or President. nt occurred dio program hn Randall current rehe would be to Italy if ominated,

ce I'd. like to | one of the

radio panel, really think

ming Here

ENR TELM NGAI,

non

TIRES.

TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1952 __ |

Pictorial H

. United Press Telephoto. HUDDLE—G. Mason. Owlett, Pennsylvania national committeeman, engages Gov. John S. Fine, Pennsylvania (right), in discussion on convention floor. Gov. Fine heads his state's delegation,

__ NEGATIVE—Gov. Fine sig

ighlights Of

- -

OP

, United Press Telephoto. nals rejection to Mr. Owlett on

whatever it was the two delegates were discussing. Scene took place during initial session of GOP national convention, in Chi-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

United Press Telephoto BLANKETET — Mrs. Annie McReynolds, Williamston, Mo., nestles under newspapers as air conditioning proved chilly.

KEYNOTER—Gen. Douglas MacArthur is greeted with tumult of cheers a

Convention In The Windy

PAGE 3

Ci

s he takes speaker's

stand for his address to the conclave, The General scored Trumanism repeatedly, much to the delight

of the packed hall. His exit was marked b

Die."

Ae TST

which figures prominently in the coming balloting.

cago's huge international amphitheater.

y sustained cheering and music of "Old Soldiers Never

Ne

ET a PE AA Te, RTS I Eh no Er dr EFT I RR

FOES ae Se se

TT Pn

United Press Telephoto.

Page One ri : i z TT ————r— i ® : : is Tndicates Taft's Cam MacArthur Said What Truman Wins AEC Fund Fight To ssp Mi a Pa) A WASHINGTON, July 8 (UP)|than the House voted Saturday T H E R | Q IF t other top . ly —President Truman chalked up a might and $898 million more ii 3 ' { y its compromise offer. whic e! nissing from ¥ . T Y wW t it jd victory today in what was prob some were It's Not in the Bag Gets Jitters e anfie Oo ear ably his final fight with. Con: Senate ejected as. Inadequate yayments. By ANDREW TULLY country. The Democrats were gress—a billion-dollar batt! er : = as against For Anyone—Yet So ingnrioners Staff Writer Sy 8 and planners and HI i Bite oY The atomic agreement Cleared, rnment said CHICAGO, July 8—It was they) o. reckless men.” They were expans on. the way for final passage of a 12,000 busi. EE Ver in er same man, with the same magic|,.. true reactionaries. a band off Ihe economy-minded 82d Con-($11,739,776,339 ‘catchall” bill name and the same classic pro-| . : gress finally adjourned sine die which also carried $6,031,947,750] May . an By the Staff of The Seripps-Howard Newspapers file and the same rich, tongue- I Sought to taX'last night after the House re-|for foreign aid and $2,145,000,000| If you like to Speed, ull v of $561. CHICAGO, July 8—1It looks as if the Eisenhower task! Work Harder rolling tones—but this time he| EE : solved its dispute with the Sen-/for military construction at home| you're careless driving . $i : ; pproving Applause | at or in traffic... Game’ force is airborne, at last. a was playing a different role. All this, of course, brought ap- ate by giving the administrationiand abroad. Hight o are bad or your n is general- F hile th : 1dn’ line. It's off th To Offset Loss G e n. Douglas i : lap a if sme of $2,808,800,000 for new atomic J .. then there's a the biter or a while there, it couldn't get rolling. S0 e MacArthur — ind proving applause an some Of plants and equipment during : : gig hy 1 only $8000 ground now. By CHARLES EGGER = |blue double- it Was tentative you had io o-|fiscal 1953. The wrangle had de- Typhoon Kills 20 pr. 3 JR Beg Bg nc his substan And the Taft steamroller is sa a 1 CHICAGO, July rer AFL breasted sult In. gi ol liar apa; Ye pont layed adjournment for two days. MANILA, Philippines, July 8| an accident.” _ “" v ’ " 7, x ¥ oe a. gets Fatting Big Seam Sune PRESIDENTIAL candidates|s Taft's strategists, with one jacket—was a hall. But when Gen. MacArthur or gre a re hough oney (UP)—The Red Cross reported | BE CAREFUL . . . the ifs oy Suances) out, when the first big test came, get almost as much protection as pig plunder against them, knuck-\politician no w got to foreign policy, friend and 0" 00" Ty OMMS-today that 20 persons were killed, you save may be your own! ber . it wasn't the well-oiled model Presidents. At least one of them |jeq down today to what one of and he was play- | {roe gave him vigorous acclaim. pay for completing all the and 202 others are missing in the. tam. Tom Dewey piloted last time. |does. A detail of 68 Chicago|their insiders called an “uphil ing the role to It was, of course, the subject new secret projects which the . sing game. Pisenhower forces went through plainclothesmen has been assigned fight » ho Fr Gen. MacArthur knows best ama] AEC Plans to start in the next Wake of a iyphbon that ravaged| The Indlanan NE SR the fight over rules with no slips./to guard Taft at his Congress Mr, Taft himself professed op- He was stil al "» LM lonts of ttowd-plensing i2 months. the , central Philippine . Islands The A N Even guessed the result within Hotel suite, his Conrad Hiltonitimism. But his camp was jit- of cotirse. a 1a rr Py hdr a p fatal The sum is $1,448,800,000 more !July 2 and 3. ‘ | one vote. The Taft outfit fell headquarters, and at Convention|tery, And memories of 1940 and!tional hero—and 10 anter any war without the will down badly. Hall. In addition, hotel detec- 19s, when Mr. Tafts' hopes for|was welcomed as = Mr. Tull BD ny ey ‘ Like this: Sen. John W. Bricker| tives stand guard at the Senator’sla Republican presidential nom- such in a nolsy Tr. y aby I on le aa , an ey rat(R.0.) wasn't told he was to speak door, even check the weight on/ination were exploded, didn't help. ovation as he stepped onto the * STRAUSS SAYS: till 10 minutes before he mounted elevators before he descends. Not that there was any talk platform at the ton wid = ee en again S: ; : : the Fostrum. The man xm as : . # 2 tof throwing in the towel, as Gov. Amphitheater. But, mostly, he rea stands today as hallowed OUR CUSTOMARY SUMMER HOURS-—S$ ATURDAY prepare 0 speak wasnt called GOV. EARL WARREN of Caly-{Thomas E. Dewey ot New York, was a member of the lodge giVing| graveyard for countless Ameri- E ; : fornia muffed an appearance be- er, 8 ed, {the opposition hell and that’s! : : . Most. tmportant of all was the pp BU toe Tatites wre working! yf prositl pa and ican dead. We must not let it 9:30 TILL 1—OTHER DAYS AS USUAL 9:30 TILL 5

{fore a Young Republican meeting! | lodge hecome as well I ip jes Bot rOM sunday night. frantically to recover the ground prothers settled down to hear, fips Boge, oN a i y. His managers decided in ad-|they lost yesterday when the con- What They Wanted {and American honor.” bE od vance to turn down the invitation vention smashed even their at- y in r ] BUT IT'S NOT OVER YET.to speak, but failed to notify tempt to soften a rules change) As a keynoter, the General of Bi T Hard core of Taft first-ballot sponsors of the rally. After other "hich finally was approved by a/the Armies was telling them the BIJ TOM Gets lcandidates had finished speaking, [¢ou° n8 v0!Ce vote. The tally was kind of things a political conven An oth Del And convention machinery willithe chairman asked the audience | " ' [tion likes to hear. er e ay

votes will be tough to crack. be in the skillful hands of Perma- i, pe patient, to wait for Warren. A caucus of Ohio delegates was “This is the supreme moment Politics brought another delay ou!

ANE

' nent Chairman Joe Martin (R. called for tomorrow morning. for America,” roared Temporary! today in t 0 IS Mass.) hs now on. For che Sinally young you! Enlich of the oni GOP Congressmen and state Chairman Walter Hallanar ‘as he nay in te mail 3-pace ame thing, chairman decides how many breach g P (officials here also were told to brought Gen. MacArthur to the Thompson ballots to take at a session, when C, Preach. presented the gover- attend the caucus. aul platform. And ‘Gen. MacArthur, rp Poon. d | to call a recess. Candidates have "°F ® 3Pologies and regrets. ‘Work ..arder’ like a good keynoter, sustained ,.. a cuse to J al For] THE been made or broken by just that.| 3 a | “Well just have to go out and this florid theme by assuring the gay on three gamblin 2 indict-| OREGON delegates” were em- work harder than ever,” said one delegates it was up to them 10 ments pending on 15 I ht g S

The serious wheeling and eal) raced when Sen Tart t drain ing has started. | . urned Taft leader. [save the country. | But : e Another said yesterday's “bad| Right off, he Struck & Stance o postioued 1b veer pesock:

A group of 1.50 TIES

95¢

A group of mostly

y i do-or-die-for-Taft boys, are inbreakfast Sunday morning. They setback” . charge. Their own political ca-/had invited Californians to join fatal.” But he complained that heart. He was, in the first three r r reers are at stake. They're work-them, talk about Warren. After it could have been avoided and paragraphs of his speech, a soler Ss ing on single, unpledged, dele-it was over, Oregonians hastily showed a “too cocky” attitude dier, a crusader and—finally and | length ar travel

Midwest Republican leaders, the UP unexpectedly at a delegation | was not ‘necessarily that would warm any politician's Virgil Norris, one of Thompson's

attorneys, wanted to attend the national Republican convention.

gates. {told the Californians not to jump among Mr. Taft's top-level mas- triumphantly—a faithful Republi BG Prosecitons Slice 31 Jo Taft's been trying flattery: “Ito any conclusions, said they ter minds, can. be i h TE , a Ian alr need just three more votes to put hadn't invited Taft, didn't know| The new rule bars contested! Then he went on to tell the dele- : Ne a8 handled the case me over. I want you to be one of he was coming. |delegates from Texas, Georgia gates, in good, solid political persona Y, is vacationing in the three . ..” 1 # uu |and Louisiana from voting on any|terms what was wrong with the TL Fh 0 LC 0 3 79 nN a 2 { REP. CHRISTIAN HERTER sue until they've been formally | early oor after oe ro 50 IT'S NOT THE SAME GOP of Massachusetts pulled the first Seated. 3 | hres : : ; il that Philadelphia saw four years big blooper of" the convention.| Fifty-two of the 68 affected are Cooped-Up A LL ago. These delegates rap on wood Talking for the “fair play” reso- Pledged to Mr. Taft. Their votes office. Judge Ruckel was apwhen they talk about winning. lution, he called it the “fair deal.” WOuld be valuable to the Sen- Texans-for-lke |pointed last month. alter Jud And whistle. And try not to take Delegates booed. |ator’s cause when the convention | 7 rin;

je has new ps garments

and neaty r easy care vn or green handles, zip«

n brown or

in ool vn or

e...8.98 t

c Suit ’% duck fabrig

k. e698 fo tax.

ATS

acturer’s -losé-out

"med Bags ol each

o

Fully quitted » with clear per, Wine,

any chances. They remember, hi {acts on the credentials committee Just Sit and : Wait

1948, Ireport recommending who should . i i t the dis | By ALBERT M. COLEGROVE First thought in the minds of get thé disputed seats. | A Sowers SLi Yerlir

delegates who are candidates: There was considerable specu-| HICAGO, July'8—Room 1141 Who'll help me most at the head ation 2s to why the Taft camp! Cpe Hon oy about 12 feet of the ticket? Eisenhower picked orcgd=a vote on their move to square—and six. feet deep in

up votes on that basis. His, "po : save seven of the 50 or more ee cold drink centers—and seats they mingled emotions. promuse fo 50 into North Sato-ivs ticklish business to throw (ticularly y Jose, rer Room 1141 contains a double more. He's ny Hy 0 Fo a out anyone, even if they have have no chance of winning. bed, a dresser, three chairs and Southern states po assed ragged collars, three-day beards.| actually the issue on seven | [FOI 20 to 40 uncomfortable up by GOP candidates Y + {As one girl behind the counter at gejegates was pressed because | F £Xans. - ¢ a |Taft headquarters put it: “After some of Taft's strategists, 'in-| Texans like elbow room; these N NEL all, they're old enough to vote.” cluding David §. Ingalls, his “ain are no exception. They're cramped, NO DANGER of a nervous : = “hemmed in. They sit shoulder to

speaker dropping his note for-| 8. |paign manager and Reps. Carroll, ED ing BE at or con-| HE'S SITTING on“the lid of Reece of Tennessee and Clarence Ehoulder -o5- the edge-of ‘the-bhed,

: the big New York delegation, but Brown of Ohio, believ , The three who have chairs ah ut. Rew, Eadgst. tans Gov. Thomas E. Dewey still could keep the seven I ey squirm. ‘Those un the flcor: lean It's called a telepropter, A faces threat of breaks in his| There was no explanation in the "8 against [bs wall, have te pull typewritten speech .is transcribed organization. It s the first time Taft headquarters how that con- In their feel * when some y on a big spool of paper by a he's had trouble since the Wendell clusion was reached. Big states walks by. ; special machine. The spool then Willkie blitz in 1940. {with favorite sons and uncom- They crave unwinds before electronic tubes— | 8.4.8 and the words appear in big] FIGURE THIS ONE OUT: Wil- nounced .or indicated before the letters on a screen in front of/liam Hutcheson, of the AFL session opened that they would] the speaker. They move along, carpenters union, a delegate from favor the amendment sponsored Yet—maybe today. like quotations on a ticker tape. Indiana, and an avowed Ike man, by the Eisenhower forces; { These are Eisenhower Texans; The speaker's voice controls their|voted with Taft on the first test; But the Taft leaders let the 22 would-be convention delegates speed. If he stops, or extempor-|vote, on changing the rules. Only issue go to a roll-call vote any- and as many alternates. izes, the tape stops ‘till he gets known Ike man to do it. On the Way—and took a sound beating. | a.8 2 back on his prepared talk. {other hand, some of the Taft sup-| Sen. Taft sought solace in thé] THEY ARE the delegates who sz =a [porters went along on the rules 548 votes his side got. He pointed were elected in their home towns TWENTY-ONE DETECTIVES: change; thought it would get the out that this hard core was with= pt who were barred from the are keeping a constant watch on “steal” issue out of the way, help in 56 votes of the 604 needed for convention by the GOP National the public address system at them and the party in the long nomingtion. Ike's leaders, of committee, which gave their convention hall. They're looking run. (coyrse, saw nothing but victory ¢jeiets—.and their votes for sk| for taps. Afraid something will 4 8 = for their candidate. nominee—to 22 pro-Taft people be rigged so that the gallery] CONVENTION HALL tickets IL TY and their alternates. can join in, whoop # up for some wate d out on eal wey 18 Freight Cars Jump Now the convention is arguing idate whe . States (ou n e e - Sandgate hen the demonstra der). have ‘their. leaders hopping Track; No One Hurt ov Pili over who should PI mad. For example, New York got| MARPINSVILLE, July 8 (UP) g Meantime it's a long, dreary PENNSYLVANIA delegates none of the 80 boxes; got no spec- Eighteen cars in the center of spell for the Ike Texans. from Allegheny County ‘found tator seats closer than fifth row, a long Pennsylvania Railroad Their sleeping accommodations coples of Apr. 23 newspapers at [als in the balcony. freight train jumped the tracks are at the Sheridan Plaza, a their doors when they woke up|, Pennsylvania delegates (very near here today, tearing up 300 minty far piece from the Hilton the day the convention started. doubtful) got front-row delegate feet of. track. Hotel Papers from their home towns, seats at the auditorium, just be- Authorities believed a broken | Each morning since their arwith notes attached “lest you for- low the rostIum. . Fo ape] toe Setafiment. Nol tiva) here last Friday, they have get.” Apr. 23 was the day after 5 Hv 2 : ‘ridden in their special buses t the Pennsylvania SH, nel ARTORNEY Shanes L Je INE 5 oaded with coal, re-|1he Hilton right atter Wome By papers’ reported the victory of Kentucky, was first convention By 10 o'clock, Room 1141 is full

six delegates favoring Eisenhower Fs ; | Va, of Texans. . ' speaker to be “insulted” by the Angler Gets One Y two favoring Taft. |galleries. Didn't bother him at 9 sar They don't talk much. There's For Bad Check Angle

” 8 DESPITE vigilance of hotel and political workers, skidrow | infiltration of various entertainment headquarters at the Hilton Hotel has started. They make for!

the wide open

theater.

* « a all: ‘Said he didn’t wonder that Ino television, no radio. Mostly, WHETHER it's Ike or Taft, people were tired of all the argu-| SIOUX FALLS,*S. D. July § there's just heavy silence, he'll be the. oldest man ever ments on the rules. |(UP)—William Sommers of ¥®d-| That's not necessarily a sign nomipated by the GOP. Both are| * = |gerton, Minn, an avid angler |of pessimism, they assure you. past 60. - Oldest man the Repub-| BRIDGE EXPERT ELY CUL- won't do much fishing during the| licans ever picked: was Benjamin gERTSON is for Ike for just the rest of this season. , {offer out,” a young Harrison, 59. . ireason you'd suppose. “Got to| Sommers was sentenced to ohe woman from Houston. “We've They've nominated professional drive the poker players from the year in jail for passing a worth-| gone over all the arguments, We _. Moldiers twice: Fremont, who lost,|White House,” he says, “and get(less $10 check to pay for some haven't much more ‘to say to each © @nd Grant who won twice, a bridge game started.” ; fishing tackle, |other.” :

explains

“e ’

- . ate é - yd . " er : . . 8 : ” : : 3

-

mitted delegations had either an. SPaces of the Chicago Amphi- 4

And they say they'll get there gy:

| {

“We've just about talked each

[Harry O. Chamberlin, Crimina Court 1, disqualified himself

French Jail Red PARIS, July 8 (UP)—Authorities reported today that Marius Colombini;, member of the French Communist Party Central Committee, has been jailed at Toulon on charges of plotting against the state's internal security.

Cool, pine-scented...

NORTHWOODS

via the famous |

Hawaiians

Sparkling blue lakes, aromatic pines and cool nights: Do as you please — fish, swim, boat, ride, play golf. Accommodations from luxurious hotels to quiet cabins. Low round trip fares on daytime HiawATHAS and overnight trains from Chi to Northern Wisconsin, Upper Michigan and Minnesota. No heat or highway hazards | on air conditioned Milwaukee

Road trains. | For information, tickets and res- | ervations, see your local railroad agent. Indianapolis Office 420 Board of Trade Bldg. Phone Franklin 7582 S. P. Elmslie, Gengral Agent

2.50 TIES

food i!

-

1.65

A group of 3.50 TIES

2.85

(2 for 5.50)

A group of $5 TIES

3.85

(2 for 7.50)

A group of 6.50 ? TIES

4.85

(2 for $9)

MAKES

ONE

THINK OF CHRISTMAS

AND TODAY! NOW! 3,000 FINE FRESH

COME AND GET IT!

———

*There ar shopping hr

e 148 days. till istmas -

TIES—IN STRICT MASCULINE TASTE-IN 5 SALE GROUPS THAT GET A TREMENDOUS PLAY

THESE ARE among the choicest ties that the new Season has presented—Silk Shantung Ties—light colored background ties—narrower shapes— conservative ties with a spirited note—deeper toned ties that are bold yet keep within fine taste.

THEY ARE ALL—ALL—in strict masculine character.

WITH SOMETHING like 3000 ties—detailed descriptions are impossible—Anybody that can keep from buying two, three, or half dozen or so ties— can be said to have marvelous self-restraint.

THIS IS the time. The ties are spread out on top of crystal cases—Just inside the doors.

ph

STRAUSS & CO., THE MAN'S STORE ~~

wb