Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1937 — Page 9

MONDAY, NOV. 29, 1937

HISTORIANS OF STATE TO HOLD

MEETING HERE

3 Societies Will Two-Day Annual Conference.

|

Sponsor ||

The 19th annual Indiana History Conference, sponsored by the In- | diana Historical Society. Society of | Indiana Pioneers and Indiana His- |

torical Bureau, is to be held here ||

Dec. 10 and 11.

A luncheon and annual husiness | meeting of the Indiana Historical Society is to open the program at 12:15 p. m, in the Claypool Hotel. Eli Lilly, Indianapolis, is to preside, and Emmett A Rice, Indianapolis, will speak on “Commemorating Indianapolis’ Forgotten Man.” A general session in the Claypool will follow, with James W. Noel, Indianapolis, presiding. Speakers and their topics will be Clarence E. Carter, Oxford, O., “William Clarke, First Chief Justice of Indiana Territory”: R. B. Whitsett Jr., Logansport, “The 18th Century Metropolis of Little Turtle’s Eel River Miami";

and O. O. Winther, loomington, ‘Thomas Leiper Kane: An Unoffi- | cial Emissary to the State of | Deseret.” At another general sessicn in the | Claypool at 8 p. m. Robert Phillips, West Lafayette, is to preside. Speakers will be James G. Randall, Urbana, Ill, “The Historian as Revisionist”; Clarence W. Etroymson, Indianapolis. “The First Half-Cen-tury of Austro-American Relations,” and Robert W. Karpinski, Terre Haute, “Indiana in Early Maps.”

Breakfast Scheduled

A breakfast for college teachers in the Indianapolis Athletic Club at 8:30 a. m. is to start the Saturday program. Albert L. Kohlmeier, Bloomington, is to preside. florence Hawley Senter, Chicago, is to speak at an archaeology session at 10 a. m. in the State Library Building, with William R. Teel, In- | dianapolis, presiding. At the same time, Mrs. William | H. Schlosser, Franklin, is to preside at a genealogy session. Speakers will be Gilbert H. Doane, Madison, Wis, and Mrs. Ora W. Lesh, Indianapolis. The Indiana History Association also will meet at 10 a. m. in the Hotel Lincoln, with | Melba E. Smith presiding. Speakers are to be Willard H. Smith, Goshen, | and Luther H, Evans, Washington, D. C,

Teachers

Gould to Speak

At the organization’s luncheon in the Lncoln at 12:15, John J. Gould, | Indianapolis, will discuss “Current Interpretations of the Constitution of the United States.” The Society of Indiana Pioneers | is to hold a luncheon and business | meeting at the same time in the] Hotel Washington with Charles N. | Fultz, Indianapolis, presiding. | Two meetings are scheduled for 2 p. m. A general session will be | held in the World War Memorial auditorium. Speakers are to be | Naomin A. Whitesell, Indianapolis, | “Help for Indiana Museums,” and | Frank H. Henley, Indianapolis, | “The Indiana War Memorial.” At a high school teachers conference. in the Lincoln, Willis Richarason, Ft. Wayne, will lead a dis-| cussion of history textbooks. Closing the two-day meeting will | be the annual dinner of the So- | ciety of Indiana Pioneers at 6:30 p. m. in the Claypool. Daniel Som- | mer Robinson, Bloomington, is to | speak on “Indiana's Cultural Heri- | tage.”

SAYS 500 CHILDREN EXAMINED AT CLINICS

More than 500 children were examined at the psychological clinics of the I. U. Medical Center during the last year, Dr. C. M. Louttit, clinics director, announced today. The clinical work included speech training, remedial orthoptic training and research works. The patients were referred from 67 counties in the State. Three hundred students were enrolled in lecture courses given under auspices of the clinics. The clinical woriz also was carried on in Blocomington and Martinsville.

AIR PACT SIGNED BY U. S.. IRELAND

WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (U. P.. —The United States and Irish Free State have concluded an air navigation arrangement by an exchange of notes, the State Department announced today.

| The arrangement will obviate the

necessity for making formal application through diplomatic channels for the right of pleasure or tourist aircraft of each country to be flown in the territory of the other.

ROTARY TO HEAR VICAR

The Rev. A. Elliston Cole, Trinity Episcopal Church vicar, Bloomington, will speak on “Rotary in Action” at tomorrow's Rotary Club luncheon in the Claypool Hotel. The Rev, Mr. Cole is governor of Rotary District 155.

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Alexander Kahn (above), 920 N. Alabama St. has been elected president of Avukah, new club for Jewish students at Butler University. Other officers Levin, vice president; Levin, Edith Chasman, Katz, Robert Kammens Joseph Weinberg.

include Estelle Edith Esther and

SEEK SAVING IN PROPOSALS FOR REORGANIZATION

Senators to Fight Plan for Dropping Check hy Congress.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 29. — The homely virtue of saving a dollar or a dime, when the public has become | | accustomed to Federal expenditures | in the billions, is scheduled for con- | sideration in Congress as soon as | | legislation to reorganize the Government gets the floor. More than dimes or dollars is involved. The Roosevelt-backed pro- | posal to divest the General Ac- | counting Office of preaudit powers | is a body blow at the theory that Congress should keep a check of its | own on the expenditure of money iv | has voted. This doctrine is a part

| dent’s Committee cn Administrative

»f the Budget and Accounting Ast} of 1921. That law gave almost dictatorial powers over spending to the 15-year and almost unremovable Controller General of the United States. The first and up to now the only occupant ot that office, John R. McCarl, used his authority in a way to bring protests from most of bureaucratic Washington, and the following criticism from the Presi-

Management: “The General Accounting Office, | particularly, is charged with being a stumbling block which slows down governmental procedure, with resultant confusion in the handling of departmental affairs. It is proposed to remove the accounting and ‘control’ functions from the General Accounting Office and place them in a reorganized Treasury Department under the President. Under this plan the General Accounting Office ‘would continue as an independent agency of Congress, but its functions would be limited to that of making an independent audit

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

| fact that Congress

and reporting to Congress.” Byrd Is Leader Senator Byrd (D. Va.), the most persistenc advocate of Federal econ- | omy, is the leader of the opposition to the plan to make a mere auditor out of the controller.

He has]

PAGE 9

been busy lining up Senators for a fight against this phase of reorganization. How much strength he would develop was a question. But his chances were believed to be helped by the growing sentiment in favor of balancing the budget, and by the last summer tasted blood by defeating the “Court Packing” Bill. Opposition senators say the same sort of concentration of executive power which was alleged in the Court fight is involved in the proposal to drop the Congressional check on expenditures. In some measure, they assert, the same thing is true of the companion proposal to change the bipartisan and three

| member Civil Service Commission into a one-man administration.

The first cannonading on these subjects will occur in the Senate, An opposition senator predicted today that the Senate lineup would be essentially the same as in the Court bill.

HUNT BOY WHO SAVED PETS IN SHANGHAI WAR

S. P. C. A. Knows Little of | Russian Awarded Its Heroism Medal.

| NEW YORK, Nov. 29 (U. P).— American Humane Society officials |

| were anxious today to find 15-year- | old Valentine Holdosi, Russian-born

| schoolboy who, because he held the |

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life of his pets above his own, has been awarded the William O. Stillman Medal for Heroism. All the society knows about Valentine’s whereabouts is that he is somewhere in China, perhaps in the war zone from which he rescued his two starving dogs, two canaries and a chicken, under the fire of Japanese guns bombarding 'Shanghai. Valentine's heroism occurred after his parents had joined the rush of natives evacuating Shanghai several

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