Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
Un journal d’éditeur Extra®

Argus-Leader du lieu suivant : Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 1

Publication:
Argus-Leaderi
Lieu:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

TP' BAM EABEK EDITORIALS page THEATERS pages 22, 23 SPORTS, WANT ADS and RADIO 4th section "South Dakota's Leading Newspaper FIRST SECTION PRICE TEN CENTS SIOUX FALLS, SOUTH DAKOTA, House iO-Month Controls Extension Pir crzi ILOWS cam re jV 70 Crowds Thrill to Horse Races Here Ike ives rower To Campaign Crew I I I I I I I i i i jT 4 1 t-it- 1 1 1 if, 'V i- 1 v-- rf 1 -v 1 -V -i Sis --3 -r r-- 1 I The annual Elks' running races, trying a seven-day split season, continue today at the Sioux Empire fairgrounds track here. Today's program is the finale of the first session as the horses take a three-day respite until their final four days July 3-6. Shown above World-Wide Beauties Vie for Miss Universe SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1952. of the stretch in the third race length over Nocat (next to him). was a close third.

Photo by Tom Jellema. Allied Troops Hold 'Bald Seoul, Sunday, June 29 (JF) Allied and" Chinese Communist artillery duelled on the western Korean front last night after United Nations inf antry smashed three attempts to take a bald-topped hill. The 8th army reported 225 of some 800 Reds were killed or wounded in trying to storm the position, west of Chorwon. A light rain followed the fighting. AP Correspondent Jim Becker, at the front, reported some of the Chinese reached allied bunkers but were stopped by hand grenades.

He said the attacks on "Baldy" apparently were a continuation of assaults on the hill mass around strategic "T-Bone Hill" several miles to the east. The hill mass overlooks a small valley on the historic invasion route to Seoul. Allied fighter-bombers pounded Communist troop concentrations and artillery positions Saturday. U.S. F-84 Thunderjets went after camouflaged supply vehicles on the east coast, near Wonsan.

The 5th air force reported at least 150 big trucks were destroyed. Acheson Greeted With Cheers in Western Berlin Berlin, June 28 Secre-tarv of State Dean Acheson ar rived in Berlin today for a well- timed 24-hour morale-boosting visu to this isolated city in the Russian zone. He came here difectly from a meeting with the British and French foreign ministers in London. They decided, among other things, on what terms they would discuss with the Russians the questions of unifying Germany. Berlin greeted Acheson with enthusiasm.

Hundreds of Germans crowded around the gateways to Tempelhof Airdrome. There was a chorus of cheers as the American official drove past in the automobile of the U.S. high commissioner, John J. McCloy. But the East Berlin Communist press was not enthusiastic.

The Reds' newspapers called for "big actions to get rid of the American warmongers." They said the policies of Acheson and his supporters in Allied councils "must be fought off with fire and sword." West Berlin police were tipped the Communists planned some street fighting at West Berlin City Hall to protest Acheson's visit, but called it off at the last minute. West Berlin police and their fire hoses have frequently dampened Communist enthusiasm the past year. BE PREPARED For a safe and sane Fourth of July, make sure that your automobile is capable of taking you and your family on an enjoyable and care-free trip. Your Sioux Falls' Franchised Automobile Dealers are once again taking this opportunity to offer their annual, Pre-Fourth Celebration Sale. In the Want-Ad Section you will find listed hundreds of USED CAR BARGAINS.

Turn to page 28 of today's paper and take your pick. YOU'LL BE GLAD ON THE 5th YOU WERE PREPARED FOR THE 4th Ice -Wage i ro; use IS SPEEDED TO PRESIDENT Me asure Approved Earlier By Senate; Expiration Is Monday By DONALD SANDERS Associated Prens Staff Writer Washington; June 23 JP) The House tonight passed, 194 to .142, and sped to President Truman a compromise 10-month extension of price and wage controls due to expire at midnight Monday. The Senate had approved the measure earlier in the day on a voice vote. The compromise had been hammered out by a Senate-House Conference Committee in a gruelling night session that ended early today. Although the administration did not get all it asked, by any means, the bill was regarded as something of a victory for Pres.

Truman. The Senate-House Committee knocked out a House amendment by Rep. Talle (R-Ia) to remove controls from all commodities not under rationing or allocation. Blow Averted Since nothing is rationed now, and few things are allocated, this would have been a body blow to the administration control plans. The conferees also drastically modified a provision by Rep.

Cole (R-Kan to guarantee sellers their price markups based on individual rather than industry-wide profit margins before the outbreak of the Korean War. The version adopted by the compromise on this point amounts to a restatement of present law. The administration suffered a. blow when the conferees decided to retain a provision exempting processed fruits and vegetables from price controls. In the brief House debate preceding tonight's vote, nobody seemed happy with the new bill.

Some Democrats thought it didn't go far enough and didn't give the administration enough control authority to do the job properly. However, administration leaders In the House called the bill workable and predicted the president would sign it. Control Feared Some Republicans thought it gave the president more control over the people than is needed. One of them. Rep.

Cole of Kansas, urged that the compromise be defeated. He said that if Congress doesn't assert Itself, there will be controls for 20 or more years. The measure sailed through the Senate with only a scattering of "no" votes. In the House the decision was closer, as had been expected all along. On final passage, 127 Democrats, Republicans and one Independent voted for the bill, and 104 Republicans and 33 Democrats opposed it The chamber, in passing its original measure Thursday, had riddled the Truman program with amendments.

Chief of these was tl i Talle amendment, which would have ended virtually all price controls effective Tuesday. Washington, June 2a (JF) Here Is how northwest Congressmen voted today as the House passed and sent to President Truman a compromise wage-price-rent control bill: Minnesota for: McCarthy and Wier. Against: Marshall, Andersen, Andresen, Hagen and OTfara. No Vote: Blatnik and Judd. North Dakota no vote: Burdick and Aandahl.

South Dakota against: Berry and Lovre. Mo ntana for: Mansfield. Against: D'Ewart. 2-Car Crash Near Buffalo Trading Post injures Four Four persons were hurt, none seriously, in a two-car crash on a township road three miles northeast of the Buffalo Trading Post last night. Two of the injured, Merle Ordal, 14, and Jim Clausen, both of Madi son, were brought to Sioux Valley Hospital in Sioux Falls while the other two, Billy Jacobs, 15, Montrose, and Lester Ordal, 32, Colton, were taken to a doctor in Colton.

Highway Patrolman Jim Breen, who investigated the accident, said Jacobs was the driver of a 1939 Chevrolet and Lester Ordal was the driver of a 1941 Ford. Merle Ordal, a nephew of Lester, was riding with Jacobs and Clausen was riding with Lester Ordal. The two at Sioux Valley were expected to remain in the hospital until today. All four suffered lacerations. Breen said Jacob's car was going east and Ordal's car was going north.

Both cars came to a halt in the ditch with the Ordal car up-lde down. Breen said the Ford was; demolished and that $400 to $500 waa sustained by Jacob's car. COMP PARTY IS ATTACKED BYKEFAUVER Last-Minute Tricks to Thwart Republicans Charged of Taft By The Associated Tresa Charges of trickery and Inconsistency were exchanged by the camps of tha two leading candidates for the Republican presidential nomination Saturday and Sen. Estes Kefauver said his chief opposition come from men more Interested la controlling the Democratic party than in winning. "We can win against any candidate the Republicans put In the field against us unless some of the leaders In our party deliberately decide to throw an election away," Kefauver told a Democratic state convention at Golden, Colo.

Among the Republicans, whos nominating: convention opens In inicago a wees Irom tomorrow, verbaLblows were traded by David S. IneallS' and Sen. irpnrv Lodge of Massachusetts, respective campaign managers lor Sen. Robert A. Taft and den.

Dwight D. Eisenhower. Trlck Charred "Taft and his advisors are resorting to desperate last minute tricks to thwart the will of the rank and file of the Republican party," Lodge said in a statement. He said defeated national committeemen from Vermont and Rhode Island were seeking to seat proxies on ihe committee "In a barefaced bid keep control" for Taft forces. Ingalls contrasted the announcement that Elsenhower will move his headquarters to Chicago during the convention with the January statement by the general that he would not actively rppIt th nnr rm.

tion. He said it "emphasizes the in-consistenev nf th u. iiwirj demeanor In the 1952 presidential campaign. Ingalls said delegates ask "whether responsible leadership would flow from a candidate who can be led to gpxh radical shifts in position In a period of only six Eisenhower spent a auiet dav In Denver Saturday, mapping strategy, while Taft was declaring in Washington that "the only thing anybody has got against me is the claim that I can't carry the election and there is no basis for that." "It's the only effective argument left," Taft told a news conference. "There is no jother argument.

Whether you win depends on the kind of campaign you make and I think I have convinced most people I can make a winning campaign." Taft came in for another attack from Averell Harriman, the Mutual Security Administrator, also delivered before the Colorado Demo cratic Convention. In a speech seek ing support for his candidacy for the nomination, Harriman said: "Stalin's Candidate" "We can not and will not com promise with a man like Taft who for political reasons would jeopardize the security of the nation. We ran nhow Taffs nolicies are what Stalin would have us to do; that Taft is Stalin's candidate. After listening to Harriman ana Colorado Democrats got down to completing their slate of 16 delegates to the national party pnnvpnfiftn which opens in Chicago only July 21. Two had been named earlier.

State party rules require that tne deleeates go to the national conven tion uninstructed. Colorado's selection leaves only 28 of the 1,230 Democratic dele-, gates still to be picked. They are Virginia's. The Associated Press -tabulation, based on known and conceded alignments, gives Kefauver to 1354 for Sen. Richard B.

Russell of Georgia and 99' for Harriman. Nomination requires 616. The AP tabulation gives Taft 431 to 406 for Eisenhower, with 129 scattered among other, aspirants and 190 uncommitted or in dispute. Nomination requires 604 of the 1,206 delegate votes, all of whom have been named. Colorado's 16 Democratic votes were wooed by two other candidates besides Kefauver and Harriman.

Russell spolte at Denver Friday night, making thinly-veiled attacks on Taft and Eisenhower who, he said, had been trying to sell the idea that there is a cheap path to national security. Sen. Robert S. Kerr of Oklahoma told the state convention that Eisenhower, if he were nominated, would be unable to put over his foreign policies because a "hard core of isolationists would be in control of Congress." And in Springfield, Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illinois, who has said repeatedly he is a candidate only for reelection, was asked once again if he could be drafted forth Democratic presidential nomination.

"I have no comment on that subjectwhich is geting mighty tiresome," Stevenson said. RULE Denver, June 28 (JP) An aide reported today that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has given his campaign managers full authority to chart the strategy that will be; followed at the GOP Convention in Chicago. This means, he said, that the general's managers, headed by Sen.

Lodge (R-Mass), will determine convention strategy, name the convention floor manager for the Eisenhower forces and choose the speaker who will place Eisenhower's name in nomination. "The general is leaving the decisions in these matters to his people in Chicago," this source said. "He is taking.no active part himself in determining the strategy or tactics to be used." Sen. Taft Attacks 'Can't Win' Bugaboo Washington, June 28 (JP) Sen. Robert A.

Taft of Ohio blasted to day at the "can't win" bugaboo he said is his chief remaining hurdle in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. Taft told a news conference there isn't any other effective argument being used against him except what he called the mistaken belief the part of some delegates that he would have difficulty beating the Democratic nominee in November. "The only thing anybody has got against me is the claim that I can't carry the election and there is no basis for that," he said. "It's the only effective argument left. There is no other argument.

"Whether you win depends on the kind of campaign you make ai.d I think I have convinced most people I can make a winning campaign." Solon Says Truman Might Run Again Oshkosh. June 28 (JP) Sen. Benton (D-Conn) said tonight he thought President Truman might run again "if he had to to save the Democratic party from an unacceptable candidate. Benton, in a speech prepared for delivery before the Wisconsin Democratic organizing committee convention, said that the president does not Want, to run but that circumstances might cause him to change his mind. Fine May Be Key Convention Speaker Philadelphia, June 28 JP) Walter S.

Hallanarv- designated temporary chairman of the Republican National Convention at Chicago, said today that Pennsylvania's Gov. John S. Fine will be "one of the key speakers at the GOP conclave. The West Virginian said that Fine had been invited and accepted the bid to speak at the convention, probably at the second day's session on July 8. Hallanan said Fine was Issued the invitation "as one of the leading Republicans." Carrier Keel Laying Set Washington, June 28 (JP) A keel-laying ceremony on July 14 will mark the official start of work on the supersize carrier Forrestal, a craft with which the navy claims it can "carry any struggle to the enemy, anywhere on the globe." The huge flattop, of a size and appearance unlike any now afloat, is designed to launch and recover atom-bomb carrying planes, jet fighters of designs still on the drawing boards, and torpedo-toting aircraft faster and longer ranged than any now in operation.

Its estimated cost is $218,000,000, not including cost of planes. Defense Secretary Robert Lovett will lay the keel of the ship named his old friend and the first defense secretary, the late James Forrestal. The Navy estimates the carrier will be launched in March, 1954, and be ready to join the fleet the following December. The 29-month construction period can be shortened if urgency demands, said the Navy. The ship is being built by the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company.

Alcester Listed For Loan by REA Washington, June 28 (JP) The Rural Electrification Administra tion announced Saturday these loans: Lincoln-Union Rural Electric Co operative, Alcester, S. $330,000. Taylor County Electric Cooper ative, Medford, $88,000. Eau Claire Electric Cooperative, I Eau Claire, $180,000. Texas Republicans Feud Cross-Country Fort Worth, June 28 (JP) Texas as Republicans swapped bad names today in a cross-country word duel.

Henry Zweifel of Fort Worth, who is backing Sen. Robert A. Taft, hurled a blast from New York at Joe Ingraham of Houston as "one of Porter's paid henchmen." Ingraham, chairman of the Harris County GOP Committee, shifted his backing from Taft to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Jack Porter, a Houston oil man, heads Texas Republicans backing Eisenhower. Ingraham replied at Houston: "I wasn't a bolter, but Henry Zweifel was. Furthermore, I'm not a paid henchman. All the money I make comes from my law practice and not from politics." Porter called Zweifel's statement "ridiculous" and "a bold face lie" In an interview at Fort Worth. He Is en route to Chicago and said he'd have more to say when he reaches there.

Taft 'Determined To Rule or Ruin' Charlottesville, June 28 (JP) Two speakers, addressing the Institute of Public Affairs tonight, attacked Sen. Robert A. Taft, and one of them said Taft is determined to "rule or ruin." They were Sen. Ralph Flanders of Vermont, a supporter of Gen. Dwight D.

Eisenhower for the Republican presidential nomination, and James B. Carey, secretary-treasurer of the CIO. The institute is in session at the University of Virginia and a large audience heard Taft himself Friday night. "For Taft it is rule or ruin," Flanders said in a prepared speech. "and it is the Republican Party and the nation which are threatened with ruin.

We might as well face it." Carey said in his prepared ad dress that organized labor will try to stop Taft. Russell Sees Big Vote in November Witchita, June 28 (JP) Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga.) told Kansas National Democratic Convention delegates and leaders- today: "I konw that if I'm nominated, I'll get more votes in November than any other Democrat could get." He predicted that party factions will work out a platform at Chicago "on which we can all get together and elect a Democratic president in November." Russell described as "political poppycock" Republican promises of quick cuts In federal taxes. Gen.

Dwight' Eisenhower Is a "great American" but also is "inconsistent," he charged. In advo cating as European military chief the "supreme Importance of the anti-Communist effort," and 'talking of a 40 billion dollar tax cut" as Republican presidential aspirant. Sen. Robert.Taft (R-Ohlo) finds himself "far outbid" by Ike's proposal, Russell said. "He's been talking about at 15 per cent cut.

OFFICIAL FORECASTS Sioux Falls and vicinity: Fair and warmer today and tonight. Monday partly cloudy, continued warm. High today, near 89. South Dakota: Fair and warmer today. High temperatures, 85 to 92.

Monday, continued warm, fair In the forenoon. Partly cloudy with widely scattered thunder-showers in forenoon. FAIR IOWA: Partly cloudy and warm today. High today mid 80s northwest and mid 80s southeast. Fair and continued very warm with scattered thunderstorms beginning western pari or the stata during the late afternoon Monday.

MINNESOTA: Somewhat warmer eat and south today. High today 70 to 80 north, 80 to 85 aouth. Local Temperatures Tdif Yesterday Sunrise 4:48 6 p.m. 85 Sunset 8:12 9 p. 72 12 midnight 66 Precipitation for Tear.

12.68 inches. Maximum temperature lor the past 24 hours, 87; 68, minimum. State and National Temperatures H. L. H.

Rapid City ...82 Sioux City ...91 Williston 68 Atlanta 101 Boston 74 Jacksonville ..97 New York 82 Washington .94 New Orleans .85 San Antonio .88 Denver 87 Phoenix ....102 Los Angeles ..62 San Francisco 62 Seattle 64 54 Chicago 101 71 74 Cincinnati ...98 75 56 Cleveland ....91 64 73 Detroit 85 63 66 Indianapolis .95 74 71 Memphis ....104 76 70 Milwaukee ....86 61 74 Bismarck ....77 57 72 Des Moines .94 74 72 Dubuque 92 67 58 50 68 Fargo 83 64 57 Kansas City 102 80 54 Paul 89 65 53 Omaha 99 74 is a two-horse battle at the start yesterday. Milldust (left) won by a Crystall Torch (third from right) competition in evening gowns and in one-piece bathing suits. When the judges narrowed the field to 10 semi-finalists, appearance in native costumes became a factor. Each of the five finalists was prepared to give a short talk in her native tongue. Miss United States, who represented New York last night, is a TV actress and the daughter of Navy commander Joseph C.

Loughery. Miss Louisiana, Jeanne Thompson, 20, of Baton Rouge, was second; Miss Missouri, Carolyn Carlew, 18, Sikeston was third. Both are brunettes. Many Contestants Supporters were not hard to find for the other Miss Universe contestants: Shirley Burnette, Alaska; Leah McCartney, Australia; Ruth Carrier, Canada; Esther Saavedra, Chile; Gladys Lopez. Cuba; Armi Kuusela, Finland; Aileen Chase, Great Britain; Judy Dan, Hong Kong; Ora Vered, Israel; Hinako Kojima, Japan; Olga Llorenz-Castillo, Mexico; Eva Roine, Norway; Elzevir Malek, Panama; Ada Bueno, Peru; Marilia Levy, Puerto Rico; Catherine Higgins, South Africa; Gelengul Tayfuroglu, Turkey; Gladys Rubio, Uruguay, and Sofia Inserri, Venezuela.

Iowa Boy Stabs Woman, Flees in Her Automobile Fairmont, June 28 (JP) A 13-year-old Spencer, boy today stabbed a woman in the forearm, fled in her car and then sped through the countryside at speeds up to 80 miles an hour before being captured. He was caught by Adolph Sie-burg, Fairmont, who ordered the lad to "Stop ox I'll shoot" even though armed with nothing more dangerous than a pair of wire cutters." The boy forced his way into the parked car of Mrs. S. L. Hansen in downtown Fairmont about noon.

He ordered her to start the car and when told she couldn't he stabbed her in the forearm with a jackknife. She screamed and fled from the car. The boy fled in the machine. Sieburg, whose car had been halted for a traffic signal, witnessed fthe stabbing and flight and started in pursuit. The flight ended when the fleeing machine hit loose gravel and leaped a six-foot ditch.

The boy fled into a cornfield where Sieburg captured him. North Dakota Man Elected by JCC Dallas, June 28 (Horace E. (Hunk) Henderson, 34, Williamsburg, businessman yesterday was elected president of the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. Henderson defeated Douglas L. Hoge, 31, Cincinnati, sales executive.

The vote was 1,201 to 597. Not all of the 6,000 Jaycees here for the 32nd national conventions were voting delegates. The Jaycees also elected 10 new national vice presidents including Earl William Hopp, Fargo, N. D. House Passes $10 Billion Moneys Bill Appropriations Total $3 Billion Under Truman Request Washington, June 28 (JF) The House passed and sent to the Senate today a $10,122,840,780 omnibus appropriations bill.

It was below President Truman's requested figure. Administration foes, aided by Democratic absenteeism, knocked out a total of $308,993,000 in two days of spirited debate. Foreign Aid Cut Major cut was $243,993,000 from foreign aid. Another 65 million wag sliced from TVA funds for new atomic power equipment. The House approved funds for a $6,031,947,750 foreign aid program for next year.

It was a total cut of $1,917,853,250 from President Truman's requested total of 949.801,000. The House Appropriations Com mittee had recommended approval of $6,275,940,750. But Republicans, aided by some Democrats, sliced another $243,993,000 from the bill on the floor. The foreign aid program was part of an over-all bill which now totals $10,122,840,780 a net reduction of $160,293,000 from the 510,283,780 recommended by the appropriations committee. The measure is to finance for eign aid, armed lorces, atomic energy, and a ariety of other programs.

The money is supplemental in addition to funds already voted for many of these agencies. The principal foreign aid reductions rammed through today were in the funds for military aid to Europe, the Near East and Africa, and technical assistance to the Far East. Efforts to cut aid to Asia, the Pacific and Latin America were defeated. Air Bases Cut The House voted $1,200,000,00 a cut of 563 millions for American air bases at home and over the world, upholding committee recommendations on this. The Democrats, with a total of 230 members, were outnumbered because of week-end absenteeism.

A minimum of 150 answered the day's first quorum call, but only about 100 were present when the voting took place on the amendments cutting the funds. Twister Damages Farms Near Dawson Dawson, June 28 (JP) A twister struck two farms near here early today, wrecking two barns and several smaller buildings and killing 20 sheep. No persons were reported injured. The sheep were killed when a barn on the De Los Bergeland farm was hit. Seven-hundred bales of hay, stored in a loft, fell on the sheep when an eight-foot cement block in the barn gave way.

During a severe electrical storm, 2.27 inches of rain fell In Dawson. Dawson is in Lac qui Parle county, which is at the South Dakota border. Long Beach, June 28 (JPy Thirty excited beauties from all over the world put their charms on display tonight for the Miss Universe Title. On one side was the blonde contingent from North Europe; on the other, the exotic brunettes from the Latin countries and the Orient. In the middle were two redheads.

Miss France and Miss United States. Miss U.S., 21-year-old Jackie Loughery of Brooklyn, won the right to compete in the finals over 38 other American girls last night. Top Contenders Rated with the redheads as top contenders for the Universe crown which carries with it a seven-year movie contract were Germany's Renate Hoy, Italy's Gio-vanna Mazzotti, India's Indranl Rahman, Daisy Mavraki of Greece, and Anne Marie Tistler of Sweden. Denmark's long-haired blonde, Hanne Sorensen, had many admirers, as did two Island girls, Else Edsman of Hawaii and Ter-esita Sanchez of the Philippines. Miss Belgium, Myrian Lynn, whose knowledge of four languages made her a popular interpreter, was highly regarded.

The contest had two phases, On, Othsut, KEYHOLE DAM nears completion page 14. NEW MENTAL HEALTH center to open In Sioux Falls Monday page 9. AUTO CHECK planned 8. EXPERTS WRITE BOOK about Black Hills 15. NEW CHURCH dedication planned at Clark.

24. SOUTH DAKOTANS believe women should take more active part in state government 11. VETERAN GOLF COURSE caretaker thought he met murderers 12. FORMER Kentucky Derby winner in Sioux Falls plans to make plastic out of stone sports section results of Elks horse races 25. OFFICIAL DELEGATION and others from South Dakota leaving this week for national GOP convention 9.

GOOD YEAR In auto-truck industry ,.13. $155 DAMAGE TO TWO CARS IN S. F. CRASH Jane Reit, 412 Apt. Airbase, and G.

S. Fitzgibbon, 1504 S. Willow were drivers of a car involved a crash on Rice Street near Cliff Avenue yesterday. Police estimated damage at $125 to the Reit vehicle and $35 to Fitzgibbon's car..

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

Journaux d’éditeur Extra®

  • Du contenu sous licence exclusif d’éditeurs premium comme le Argus-Leader
  • Des collections publiées aussi récemment que le mois dernier
  • Continuellement mis à jour

À propos de la collection Argus-Leader

Pages disponibles:
1 255 758
Années disponibles:
1886-2024