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The Berkshire Eagle from Pittsfield, Massachusetts • 3

Location:
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The EerksMre Evenfnz 7Tay.3, 19H r-. CcnUuctGr Rc'dziJislci Sen. Taylor Held in Scuffle; Plans Seareaaiion Law i eel eeli mint ii 1 1 BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (JT) Sena-, CLEVELAND (AP) Senator Robert A. Taft and E.

wind up their Ohio delegate battle today Fpeaking cf the errct, Taylor said he was treated "pretty roughly." A police spokesman said the arrest was "exactly what he wanted because, he was locking for notoriety." I i Eins tnat the outcome may fcway early GOP presiden- tor Glen Taylor (D-Idaho), Running mate for Henry Wallace on the third-party presidential ticket, faces a charge of disorderly conduct at a hearing set for Tuesday night In Police Court here. Delimiter To Uch His Sunday Hours city cr) a dentist's 10-year-old daughter picketed his office yesterday because she wanted him ta go to church with the family instead of working on Sunday. Dr. Ilerschel Phillips keeps: his office open- from 8 AM to noon Sundays. He discovered' his ELiie Marie, marching back iand forth before the door, carrying a sign reading: i 1 "Unfair? to make 'my ''daddy work on Sunday.

Unfair to his children because we want him to go to church. Dr. Phillips called her Iri and scolded her but Elsie said after-, wards: "I'm Roing to picket every Sunday until he stops working." i The "Idaho senator said he tailotmg at Philadelphia. Vj j. Ecth candidates planned last hour appeals' over istate-v'ida radio hc-ckup3 tonight.

in their contest over 3 of Ohio's presidential nominating votes." gone to the meetmjr, wiucn ne Taylor was arrested Saturday was scheauied.to aaaress, toj if i the mixed audience he woull not Says lie's 'Cashiered By Chicago Orchcztra CHICAGO IVh-Dr. Artur Rod-zlnski, dismissed conductor of the Chicago. Symphony, Saturday: "I was arbitrarily cashiered without a hearing or notice: defamatory and false statements were published about me." )-. Breaking his long silence since the sudden termination of his agreement with the Orchestral Association in January, the conductor told. news conference, "charges of this sort have as their source a misinformed presi-: The president of the Orchestra Edward L.

said he. had npj comment. In a statement in January, the board of trustees of the Orchesi tral Association listed disagreements leading to the dismissal of Dr. Rodzinski as exceeding the planned budget, the staging of operatic productions at high Cost, a dispute as to the number of concerts he would conduct and repetition of programs. ELI.

Optimistic deliver his? talk becatSse-ha d.isap- proved' night as he sought to enter a meeting of the Southern Negro Youth Congress In a Negro church. He was fingerprinted and released in EatH camps expressed eoRSdenc Saturday: afternoon, three whitt can stand Stassen cZ with" a half dozen cr fewer delegates from -his own vote orchard, the- Illinois plu-r. fall on the other side nOOtbond. XN persorJ and a Negro were arrested at the conference on charges of I The charges against the third- Ail violating the segregation laws. of tr.ewa.i.

party vice-presidential candidate were released on 5100 bond. stemmed from Eirmingham'sTacial There is some talk that Gen. Douglas MacArthur's friends may be around to pick them- up. Peru segregation laws. Patrolman W.

W. Casey said he stopped Taylor from entering the church through an entrance used by Negroes and Taft's hope for support in the 73-vote Pennsylvania delegations-: told? him to use another set; aside for: white persons. The pledged to Senator Edward Martin Senator, attempted to as a favorite son was said to and Pennsylvania and a delegate winning spree in Wisconsin, hinge in part on his showing here brush him, the" patrolman said. In the results when upwards of TCO.OCO Republican ga ta the polls tomorrow's primary." The Republicans 'this week will mme a total cf Si delegates In Maryland, Ohio, Georgia, Flori.ii sni Nevada. Politicians were; watching the utcome in Ohio for its--possible effect on foot-lcose delegations from such states es Illinois and Pennsylvania, "where the bloom cf favorite might fade quickly, From the Taft eafcp came r-'-rts that a majority cf the L3-vote Illinois group' is to ''come their way speedily at the rational convention.

In fact, seme of the Taft follow-: ers--are' predicting the Ghipan can have 1 on ballot, -despite previous plans to back Governor Green as a favorite sen. Green has been named as the national convention Eat these Taft supporters admit The Stassen backers privately talked of sweeping 19 of the 23 Governor Thomas E. Dewey of Taylor left here Sunday after New York, now campaipiing to Ohio delegate contests in which they have candidates entered. noon from Washington because of keep pre gon's 12 convention votes cut cf Stamen's hands, has his eye on the Pennsylvania delegation. what he termed "urgent Senate Politicians here generally say I that any number from 10 on Ub Would VFV To Meet business." Ha said he would return Tuesday In time to face charges be chalked up as a major victory too.

Stassen's backers concede that illegally, pressed against me." In a statement before leaving tor the iormer the Illinois-Pennsylvania i delegate line-up may be the battering I ram Taylor said; "my arrest and man The Taft people Were willing td concede the loss of only six dele ci a stop-itassen movement. Dairy Club Elects PERU Lois Sherman was elected president of the Hi-Wa-Pa Dairy Club Friday night at Farm, home of Ronald Courtney and Lynn Wheeler of Middlefieli road. Other officers elected were: Ronald Wheeler, vice-president. Richard secretary; William Steele, Treasurer, and Courtney Wheeler, news reporter. The meeting marked the fourth anniversary of the founding of the club.

including a birthday cake; were "served by Mrs. Charles Wheeler, 'i Plans were discussed for a performance I by the Down-Homers, who will put on a sho at the Hinsdale Town Hall on Friday. Mury 14. Tickets may be from any member of the club. The next meeting will be Friday.

My 28, at the home of William Steele, Peru Road. gates, at most. They have 30 al handling i-; a blatant violation of my constitutional right. The local segregation ordinance, is unconstitutional and we are prepared to June 1720 I of Delegates To Be 1 Wednesday Night With that In mind, they are straining every point to pile a victory in Ohio on too of previous ready sewed upt since Stassen's AivoTiiEn Aviixrnn nuriXtziGz nnP viiikie, zz, talks to Fred Hardin on the la tier's farm near Knightslown, as the son of the late Wendell Willkie campaigns for the Republican nomination for the Indiana. State Legislature.

Primary is tomor row. Unlike his father, ho had his political baptism as presidential nominee, young Wilikie is starting his political career at the grass roots. Since his graduation from Columbia Law School, Philip has managed the family's 1600-acre farm at Rushville, lad. He is also a director of the Rushville National Bank. (AP) vi I carry this test to the United States privately that unless senator popular vote successes in Nebraska Supreme Court.

xneanwnue in Kansas City Wallace said the arrest of The Veterans of Foreign Wars, at meeting 1 Wednesday night in their post home on Bradford Taylor dramatizes the hypocrisy of spending billions In the name of freedom -abroad while freedom is trampled here at homei Wallace's Street, will nominate delegates and alternates! for; the annual encampment of the department of Massa IfUstice Douglas Leads Parade, Of democratic V.P. Possibles statement was made in a telegram he said he sent to Taylor. chusetts in NSpringfield, June 17 mem entered onlypart of the con-tests-mostly' in the industrial areas where opposition to 1 the Taftj-Hartley Labor Law'and its coauthor is reported to be strong. If I they can set the- Minnesotan down with six. the Taft backers claim they will have taken the head off the Stassen tide that has run strong across the country; 9 GOP riace at Stake Including those chosen in Ohio, Republicans will pick S4 delegates this week to bring their total to 733 of the 1004 to be named-for the convention opening June 31 in Philadelphia.

i A contested slate of 16. delegates will be picked by the Ray Foster faction in Georgia today, IS in a Florida primary tomorrow and 9 in a Nevada convention Saturday. Taft, Stassen. and Dewey all have candidates running in the Florida contest. The Foster group in through 20.

More than a dozen have Indicated they will attend the ber In second where, if elected, he would rule over the NEWl YORK Vice-presidenUal booms forj second place on the Democratic ticket are fast becoming more numerous than, first-place Senate and would be in a position affair, and morexare expected to announce their attendance. later. The sessions be in the Municipal AuditoriumNwith scheduled events such as a New England to block distasteful legislation. contenders; on the Republicanside, Compromise Weighed C- Xrc.Iicrs 77 5 yCU i (' fif i Northern Democratic powers. oui oniy ouprenwq i Court Justice William O.

Douglas -r -r owever. are likely, not to view reauy nas a oaiiuwagon ruums- Senator Byrd as a vote-getting asset in the pivotal states. If it were still necessary to placate the Itvis moving so fast in the Middle and West that it has the backers of President Truman Southerners Representative I Sam 5,95 COLORS "Green," Red, Broun, White drum corps competition, outing to Riverside Park and a mammoth street parade. Commander-in-chief of the- VFW Ray H. Brannaman of Denver, will be there as.

well as National Auxiliary President Dorothy Mann. Senators Henry Cabot Lodge and Leverett! Salton-stall, and Congressman James Van Zandt will attend with i Governor Robert Bradford. slightly nervous for fear it may Georgia is reported to favor Taf Maryland Republicans and Dem Rayburn, of Texas, or Senator Al-ben W. Earkley. of might be an acceptable 'compromise candidate.

I I Despite the revolt, however, the switch to the presidential tracks, says a New York Herald Tribune article. i Washington political sages are beginning i to say. "Who. else but ocrats elect In today primary delegates; to state conventions which Black A A 4Vt to 9 3V to 9 ft LIFETIME odds appear weighted in favor of when the vice-presiden a vice-presidential nominee 1 from will national convention groups Stassen has been bidding actively for Maryland GOP support. Indiana also picks state convention delegates in its primary tial possibilities come tip, and the outside the hitherto Solid SouthJ rzs tfs CM JuDiUFZCVDCFITf experts who have recently returned from the West report an un 7 API! CIjGCIG tomorrow.

Democrats get the first real look mistakable trend, the article reports, i In Chicago and some other large cities the Douglas fever has with Justice Douglas; holding a good edge. t- i I Justice Douglas, although born at Maine, 49 years ago, was long a resident of Washington State. He was a member bf the Securities and Exchange Commis at the depth of the Southern revolt against President Truman's spired "Douglas for President (Re. $2.50) civil righta program in the Ala bama and Florida primaries tomor r-V''W'C. sion and Its chairman from 1937 A Ih Alabama, which names a 26- vote contingent, 123 of the 84.

dele gate candidateshave signed! a to 1933. i President Franklin D. 'Roosevelt nominated him to the Supreme Court in 1933 and he -took his seat April 17. -I; i' He is generally considered a non- pledge towslkout of the convention if Mr. Truman's rights program goes party plat i Full JSize 31A" extreme liberal.

In Florida, Governor Millard Caldwell is heading a middle-of- gal's cier- the-road faction hoping to soft TXefOD-FOBGilDOi I. pedal the citil rights plank. One (Reg. 250 7 Heavy Cruiser, Still Radioactive, Will Be Sunk 7 group of 23 candidates is pledged to support Governor Fieldingv L. of '-Mississippi insteadxof Mr Truman.

Use DLlMONDwCirr CAnCIDE JEWELS I CM 4' 7 i flu' i. Utc priiMt uniljr rwcj la ikwuuiib iptt than wad. of ho-it. And wena.rt Make, a.ll kaim' Ilk. mm, rmylj, quickly and thirty.

If yea da mnt km mm af tbeM jeb, gt yaar. today at yaar favaril. kardwara. VALLEJO, Cal. W) -The heavy Cruiser Salt Lake City, radioactive from her target ship role in the Bikini atomic bomb tests, willybe sunk at sea by surface units the last week in May, officials at Mare Island Navy Yard said today.

i The 1929-built veteran of Pacific Vv-arfare from the Solomons to the Aleutians is presumed to be at Kwajaleln. Other radioactive ships have been sunk in that area recently. i if taamini h'AV B95 Clubs." Such: symptoms, however, the- professional politicians are inclined to bruslt off as of no real importance in the top race since party leaders in the hustings ere taking him seriously only for the second post. Would He Run? The question of whether he would take the' vice-presidential nomination if offered is unresolved. i- 1 The justice has urged his friends not to push his name and he has even written them that to do so would be' against his expressed desire.

He has told them he has not issue a public statement on his boom because: (1) It might be considered presumptuous and j(2) denials of political ambition are taken as bids nowadays. Significantly, however, the dynamic jurist, whose office buzzes with activity has not shut the door on accepting the nomination either to first or second on the (ticket. i intimates 6unt lt'up thus: He is not seeking" the nomination- he hardly could from the Supreme Court bench. If it looks as if it may be pffered him, he will then reach a i decision as to where he believes he can best serve. Among the Democratic vice-presidential possibilities who have positively indicated their availability is Governor Mon, C.

Wallgren of Washington. a close friend of the President's, "Senator; Joseph C. O'Mahoney, of Wyoming, is another with strong Western backing, and Senator Walter F. George of Georgia, has announced he could be had for the job. I "i Representative John W.

of hasn't said no and there is considerable drum-beating in his' behalf in New England, "rj" i In the cases' of those listed above, friends are pushing state or regional movements, but none of the names has caught on nationally like that of Justice Douglas says the newspaper, i One potential vice-presidential who is hostile to President Truman, may turn up in the July 12 convention at Philadelphia with a solid block or regional power. He is Senator Harry i F. 7 from tots 10 teens 22 South' St. Hotel Sheraton Bldg. Bldg.

Dial 2-7S2J I 1 Boland Presides 1 SltfMut Jet 30dajjy TKin, ij yau. akz -not Stevens At Convention off m77 Each BLUE RIBBON needle PLAYS THOUSANDS OF t. Episcopal youth RECORDSf Buy one today. Give yoUr home a face lifting 7J (Record Department, Fourthj Floor) i Crcaiors 0 i 7 "7 Robert M. Boland of St.

Ste phep's Church, Pittsfield. presided at the all-youth convention of the Episcopal Diocese; of fc Massachusetts in Springfield, over the week end. Miss Dorothy Greene of St. Stephen's was named (president of the Berkshire convocation. 'At the convention 140 young people heard Dr.

Paul M. Limbert, president of Springfield College, urge therh to be "more than spectators of struggle and conflict" Begin to fulfill your responsibilities, center attention on the present, said Dr. Limbert. Other St- Stephen's 'delegates were Richard Coulter, Joan Patricia M. Smith.

Marcia Angelo. Frank Frederick Chester and Mrs. Kenneth- Shepardson. counselor. ALL 7 IETAL VENETIAN DLIND3 JRcducO'lViL'isil Dieting; Exercise, 3 Laxatives, nassarjo or Drugs Hzzlly! Byrd, of Virginia, one of the prin NOW YOU MAY HAVE a more slender figure without dieting, exercise, laxatives, drugsor massage, thanks fckli the scientific AYDS Reducing Plan.

By the: AYDS Plan yoJ; eat plenty never go You simply take AYDS tscf fere meals, as directed This vitamin and mineral cand cipal engineers of tne bout hern revolt against Mr. Truman because of his civil-rights program. ADVERTISE YOUR WANTS IN THE It is the opinion of some party officials of thef Truman camp that Va nnJ Vin EVENING EAGLF erners. can get one of their num curbs your appetite fyou eat less, youj lose weight ac RIlC 51 i The Air Force has announced that Maj. Gen.

Muir S. FairrhilJ, com-niander of the Air University at Maxwell Air Force Case, Leing recommended to succeed Gen. Hovt S. Vandenberg 'as yjee chief of stafT of the Air force. Vandenberg has been ejevated to chief of staff.

(AP) Springfield Names lative of Cily As Its Librarian i SPRINGFIELD A 32-year-old Springfield native, John 'A. 3 Humphry, has been named city librarian. He will take up his new job Nov. 1, after finishing his work as director 1 of processing at the Enoch Pratt Free Library In Baltimore, Md. Mr.

Humphry was graduated in 1323 from Harvard College and received a bachelor of science decree at Columbia University's School of Library Science two years later. During the war, he was consultant for the Office of Scientific Research and Development; then was assigned by Massachusetts Institute, of Technology to intelligence work in the office cf the chief cf naval operations. lie took the Baltimore position in 1343. i Mr. Humphry is marriedand has a son.

cordingly. Ik 1 A -Ki7 1 7 PilOO? POSlTIVii! In our clinical tests, supervised by eminent physicians -r- to prov what the AYDS Plan do 'oven 1,00 AYDS users lostrfrom 14 to 15 pounds in a few weeks. viiv Rfprn'MRit? I Oil THE VIJiY Fir.ST idT 5 i a i -M X.ovj-:'wI. 5rouy, nomi JiuJi nj mort, lrTn Toon taj b. fir, oj roof fcoftom tc'X, fr 9 Uwler tlitef e4 Muhhlng cetJon cerd fcsdt.

lm i Easy to eS nuklfy wi el ''p or itcplei. eHroc? tpt en lope tesH more tJsen prSU 1 (MADE TO ORDER ONLY) IF YC'J HAVE A rcncY SLE 6.1CAU. AYDS contnina Vitamins Ergoerol, Ihi-min. aUo Calcium 1 uewphorus. Iron, nutrients tat indicate a doctor' foreifht in' discovering a randy to heip you weight without weakening ejects.

Try AYDS at ence. Ycu take no chances. AYDS Reducing Fbn must reduce your wcigSt or your refunded. Come in, pKone or.write.; Marines Offer Mail Enlistments I BOSTON Former Marines may enlist in the Marine Corps Reserve by mail until June 33. The ar- jrangement is for men who do not live near a Reserve or Recruiting Station.

They may nlist nd' set the. rank held upon discharge. No drill pe rinds are required, they may be discharged upon request except during war or national 51 Delivery in Approximately Two Weeks 34 uoxtu street Crnllrmrn rif send me Box AYDS, si Price; I 5 Name I uj i and cannot be ordered a a wJ L- A a to active duty except curing war or rational emergency. Further in-farmatSon Is available from Interior Decorators (Tollerriss, Street Floor) Stale Zans H. Jeschke-, d.recfr, First Ma- Dial CHy Cfesrf I C.O.D.

rine Corps Rrsen-e Dtrict, -423.

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About The Berkshire Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
951,917
Years Available:
1892-2009