Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 12, Decatur, Adams County, 14 January 1938 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
ENTIRE FRENCH CABINET QUITS President Leßrun Seeks Formation Os New Cabinet Paris, Jan. 14.—|(UJO—President Albert Leßrun sought an all star, cabinet today to restore confidence In the nation's finance and Ita so cial structure. The left wing popular front which had ruled a troublous 19 months has been shattered appalently beyond immediate repair. Leßrun had been called from his bed at 4:30 a. m. to receive the resignation of the cabinet of Cam file Chautemps. It was regarded as an urgent national necessity to form, by night if possible but certainly by tomorrow, a new government. Sensing the seriousness of the crisis, the government through the Bank of France asked banks not; to deal In foreign exchange pending formation of a new ministry The stock exchange opened normally but the money market was closed. Leßrun was up by seven. He consulted first with treasury ex-1 perts, then with Jules Jeanneney
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I president of the senate; then with Edouard Herrlot. preaident of the ! chamber of deputies. 1 Thon ('hantemps. the outgoing | premier, was culled to the prealdeut'a palace, to answer whether the radical socialist party, conserI vntfve wing of the broken popular front, could form alone a cabinet that would advance a program susceptible of support by left wing and centrist parties- Chamber President Herrlot. a radical sociallist leader, was called back to talk to the president and (’hautemps. Leßrun Invited (’hautemps to form a new, reorganized ministry, (’hautemps refused, and the president prepared to pick another candidate. By noon, the first effort to form a cabinet seemed slowly taking form. Leßrun was after a makeshift cabinet, to rule during a critical period. He wanted in it as many senators as possible—senators with names known throughout the world—in order to inspire confidence at home and abroad in the ’ country's basic solidity. With such an all star lineup the president hoped that the budget could be balanced; the treasury filled; the franc protected; the bitter fight between capital and labor, persistent since the popular front ! took office, ended. Albert Sarraut was mentioned, among others, as a possible prem(ier and probably also minister
Interior--the public order authority. la-Brun's effort to form a radical socialist ministry, dependent for a parliamentary majority on support of other parties, was taken us a dear indication that the left wing popular f rrtwno as 58m shrdluth popular front was ruptured. Admittedly, it was a political crisis of the first order, precipitated at a time of extreme delicacy in internal and foreign problems. The split in the popular front was definite; it threatened to be final. First communists, then socialists, had refused to support Premier (’hautemps in the chamber, where he sought a vote of confidence in currency and budgetary problems. The socialists, as the result, had resigned from the cabinet, and in turn the entire cabinet had resigned. The radical socialists had been left alone in what was a threeparty popular front. Communists, who precipitated the crisis, seemed regretful today, and their parliamentary leader, Arthur Ramette, id: “We did not desire to overthrow the government. We hope the popular front, born of the 1936 elections, may be preserved. We hope that unity of communists, socialists and radical socialists may continue.” But there was no unity and the president, in this, the 12th cabinet fall since his election to the
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. JANI
'presidency May 10. 1932, bud a, difficult problem. Alternative* to a popular front I or radical socialist cabinet wen-: , 1. A soclallHt cabinet; 2. a radical! socialist and centrist cabinet; 3. a left whig coalition with commun-1 4. a national salvation cabinet unists supporting radical socialists; der a man like Finance Minister i Georges Bonnet, whose threat to resign because he did not like tlie finance and labor situations laid! the basis for the crisis. 0 YOUTHS GATHER (CON'i lytTEty FHOM PAGE ONE) ! ganlations. M. K. Derrick of the Indiana, farm bureau spoke on the relationship between the farm bureau and the extension service. ‘ Tlie relationship of the farm: bureau and the agricultural exten-; sion department in the development of the rural youth movement in Indiana has been a sincere partnership of two institutions, conscious of a definite need and eager to extend the service which would be most effective in accomplishing the desired results,” Derrick, former county agricultural. agent, said. He discussed various phases of ! cooperative effort in furthering the i present youth program. Other speakers were Dr. M. Z. | Smith, state club leader, and Geo.
1 Byers, Ufayette. They were to I discuss parliamentary procedure. I Dr. Frank Slutx, Dayton. 0., will be principal speaker at tlie annual I youth banquet tonight. °“ MURDERER PAYS (CONTINUED P*wr>M *AGW DWICj. I state supreme court. Tlie appeal was later denied. Os the five remaining in the .death house, Herber L. Hicks.] mustermhid of the "head and| hands" slaying of Harry Miller, rc- ! tired Cincinnati, ()., fire captain, is] I the next to die in the chair. His, ! execution has been set for Febru-1 i ary 4. ! On March 25. Hames Swain, ' youthful negro, will “burn" for the murder of an Evansville grocer, 1 during a holdup. Tlie most notorious of the con-. ; demned criminals who will sit on the "hot seat" is not yet in the prison death house. He is .James Dalhover, the under sized gunman of the infamous Al Brady gang who is scheduled to die April 8 for the , I machine gun killing of State Po-] liceinan Paul V. Minneman last > May. | Dalhover, sentenced to death by l a federal jury at Hammond, is being held in the South Bend jail. Five days after Dalhover dies, | on April 13. Henry Noelke of Boon- ; Ville, will be electrocuted for the cold-blooded murder of his wife
- 1 | lll Aml'on May 13. Vurtis 'llugh Mar 1 Andrlahs. ews H s : Hugh Marshall, slayers of W illiam Bright, Indianapolis druggist wll be executed the penalty tor al crime which netted them only $1.25. CHINESE PLAN 1 tails of the battle. ri „.,. r ..i i With the removal of Gt nert ' Han, reliable advices from Hankow I said that Gen. Yu Hsueh-Chung. 1 another North China commander i had been .appointed to direct all 1 military affairs in Shantung provI Ince. Shen Hung-Lleh. mayor of ‘ the Japanese-controlled city of Tstngtao, was named to head the prince's political affairs. The new appointments were considered significant since Generallissimo Chiang, after flying over the battlefield around Tsining. had instructed General Li to defend the Lung-Hat railroad, running from east to west almost through the center of Shantung province, ! at all costs--1 At the same time the central i news agency reported that 10.000 ! outer Mongolian troops were sta tioned at Pallingmiao, in Suiyan I province, and that an additional J 10,000 were stationed 130 miles north of there, presumably in preparation for a drive to the south. It was believed that fighting in
that area would break out aoob Inasmuch ns outer Mongolia hi« been declared a formal war zone by the Chliiese government. —o— ——- MANY CHANGES (continced fiwm operating loss. Closely held corporations which are not personal holding companies, carefully defined in r '' po^ t ' wouid be subject IO the 16 to .0 ner cent undistributed profits tax and to an additional flat 20 per I cent tax after subtracting $40,000 or 30 per cent, whichever is greater from the remainder. Corporaflons accumulating surplus to avoid high surtaxes would nay higher rates The present tax „f 15 per cent on *ie first SIOO,OOO of retained net ificome would be lifted to 25 per cent; and the present 25 per cent tax on all above SIOO,OOO would be lifted to 35 per cent. "Your committee,” said the report, "has devoted special consld-j eration to the surtax on undistributed profits, since it is a new tax and has been the subject of | much criticism." PRES. ROOSEVELT (CONTINr j ET) J’Roy I*AQE. ONTO Hon and related anti-trust questions. ' In connection with the steel ru-
I mors. It was Hun Murray have h,.,„ u JM privately In X. w Yurk wlthij as Moses. V. s St.-,.| vh .A dent The nature „f * sioits Ims been guard,.,! ' Today's Whit.- i| l)Hw . once, however, bring, l(lt « Lewis and Murray and principal Morgan Morgan fit in selves as |, a ,, k „ f. S. Steel and .Morgan p,are closely concMiti.d huge industrial mi.-i p, ? is also intimately Lamont. o PAULV.McNPTT . ( '< INTINUKD EB, ,yt g< 3t 0 _ Fan American Airways ( iipp(t Jan 29 and is due In the (•- States on Feb. 5. His survey of American j ests in the far east and his iy M tug report to President were considered of special sm cance In view of recent dcH i ments in the general far cig area. __ Justice Cardozo's Condition Is S« Washington. Jan. 14 — (VP), Justice Benjamin N Cardozo | maintained during the las'. 2(y the improvement which wish in his condition early yesterday] J. P. Earnest. Jr., reported tody
