Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1938 — Page 7

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“2 DR. POLICY WRITTEN INTO BIG NAVY BILL

Sritain Releases Defense Budget as Commons Nears Debate.

“WASHINGTON, March 4 (U. PB). ~-President Roosevelt personally 7 scommended that the pending billion-dollar naval Bill declare it "nited States policy “to protect our commerce and citizens abroad,” it ‘as learned today. Chairman Carl Vinson (D. Ga.) ~esisted strong efforts in his House

<7aval Affairs Committee to modify | 2e language, it was disclosed, by |

“2lling members that the words were “he President’s own. The statement :5 contained in the “policy amendinent” voted into the $1,113,546,000 suthorization measure which was seported favorably yesterday.. One Committee member, who did s0t wish his name used, said that i ffer Rep. Vinson had revealed Mr. Foosevelt’s interest the amendment cdopted was “practically identical with the President’s draft.”

Speak of ‘Quarantine’

It was learned that some of the rmest supporters of the New Deal tnd a bigger Navy protested that fae language would be constructed ty isolationists as an affirmation or =n extension of President Roosevelt's hicago address of Oct. 5, in which Ie cited the principle of quarantine #zainst “an epidemic of world lawiossness.” Members said Rep. Vinson admitted under - questioning that the emendment had never been apvroved by Secretary of State Corcell Hull; that he saw President Hoosevelt after conferring with tecretary Hull and did not go back ip the State Department.

British to Increase Sudggt for Navy

LONDON, March 4 (U. P.).— ‘avy estimates totaiing $618,535,000 ior the fiscal year which begins April 1 brought the total of estiinmates for Air Force, Army and avy to $1,664,635,000 today. The navy figures did not include znything for the new 1938 construction program and a supplementary ¢stimate will be published to bring the grand total substantially higher with the peak year of defense costs to come in 1939 or later. . Air Force estimates totaling £513,600,000 were published Wednescay; Army estimates for $532,500,000 vere published yesterday. The ivavy figures completed the series. The estimates were published to gve Parliament members a weekend of study before the House of Commons debates the entire deicnse problem Monday. Prime IJinister Neville Chamberlain will icad off for the Government and it was forecast that the debate would be one of the most important in years.

UNDERSTANDING OF DELINQUENTS URGED

Juvenile delinquents must be fated as “children who have become bewildered by life’s complexites and not as criminals,” according to Judge Wilfred Bradshaw of Manicipal Court. At a rally of the 19th Ward Demo ratic Club last night he declared that 90 per cent of State penal institution inmates had been juvenile d “linquents.

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Carnival Queen

Queen of Carnival is the honor which New Orleans bestowed on tall, slender, brown-haired Malcolm Tullis, as the Southern metropolis threw aside workaday cares for its annual Mardi Gras celebration. Miss Tullis is the daughter of Garner H. Tullis, New Orleans Cotton Exchange president, who was King of Carnival in 1935.

GROUP PLANS STUDY OF MARRIAGE LAWS

Dr. Harvey Names Eight to Draft Report.

Dr. Verne K. Harvey, State Health Board director, today named a technical subcommittee to study the medical, legal and social aspects of Indiana’s marriage laws, draft proposed changes, and report back to a committee appainted recently by Governor ‘Townsend to advise the 1939 Legislature. Committee members are Dr. Charles Kettleborough, Legislative Reference Bureau director; Dr. Thurman B. Rice, Health Board member and Indiana University bacteriology professor; Mrs. Paul V. Ford, Kokomo, representing the Indiana League of Women Voters; Wendell Tennis, Indiana County Clerks. Association president, Sullivan; Judge T. Joseph Sullivan, Lake Counly Circuit Court; Mrs. Lillie D. Scott, Clayton, representing the Indiana Farm Bureau; Dr. Herman N. Baker, Evansville, Indiana State Medical Association president, and Harvey G. Locke, assistant professor of sociology at Indiana University. .

TRAIL OF FEATHERS CLUE TO LOST HENS

Four men were held by police on vagrancy charges today after someone entered the henhouse at the home of Frank Roth, 1643 S. Meridian St., and stole 15 hens. When police arrived they followed a trail of feathers to a house in the same block and raided it. There they found the four men and several of the chickens.

FILM TO SHOW YUCATAN D. G. Angus is to show 2600 feet of film taken in Mayan ruins in Yucatan at 8 o'clock tonight at St Paul's Episcopal Church.

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RESIGNATION OF TVA CHAIRMAN

NATIONAL AFFAIRS TODAY SENATORS defend Accounting Office. WAR PROFITS BILL delay seen. NAVY BILL changed by Roosevelt. TVA fight flares, WADSWORTH flays Tax Bill

Roosevelt Reveals

Letter From Directors -

WASHINGTON, March 4 (U. P.). —President Roosevelt made public

Morgan and David E. Lilienthal, directors of Tennessee Valley Authority, asserting they could no longer work with Dr. Arthur/E. Morgan, TVA chairman and suggesting his resignation. The letter was made public after Dr. Morgan requested a congressional inquiry of TVA and the longtime feud between the board members. Both ' House and Senate members have favored such an inquiry. The demand for Dr. Morgan's resignation was contained in a memotandum sent by the two members to the President on Jan. 18. It charged Dr. Morgan had sought by unethical methods to “obstruct and subvert” decisions of the majority of the board. "It charged him with pursuing a policy of “rule or ruin” in TVA. The statement said in part: “From its creation in “the summer of 1933 until the spring of 1936, Tennessee. Valley Authority was guided by a board whose every corporate action was by unanimous vote of all three directors,” the statement said. “Since the spring of 1936, however, the authority’s work has been accomplished in spite of the repeated failure of Arthur E. Morgan

-to accept and co-operate in carry-

ing out provisions of law and board decisions. “Much that has been accomplished since the spring of 1936 has been in spite of Dr. Morgan’s continued effort to obstruct board decisions with which he -disagreed.”

Wadsworth Attacks U. S. Profits Tax

WASHINGTON, March 4 (U. P)). —Rep. James W. Wadsworth (R. N. Y.) charged today the principle of the Undistributed Profits Tax, “running counter to all established principles of thrift,” has caused revulsion among small businessmen through the country. Opening the second. day of debate on the bill to modify the undistributed profits and capital gains taxes, Rep. Wadsworth said the New Deal’s tax policies sought to deny everything the businessman has been taught.

Senators Fight for Controller General

Times Special WASHINGTON, March 4—A determined group of senators led by

today a statement by Harcourt A.

n Men Hear Editor Predict Decay of Dictatorship

Delegates to the Indiana Independent Petroleum Association spring

convention remained in Indianapolis today .to inspect equipment exhibits,

but had no formal sessions scheduled.

Last night they heard Barclay ® Acheson, Readers est associate editor, predict that di nations would decay. He expressed impatience with persons who say this country’s institutions are failing, They also heard E. R. Horstmeler. Chicago, American Petroleum Industries Committee treasurer, protest against the p Federal 1cent a gallon tax on fuel oil.

Refuses to See Failure

“In all recorded history,” Mr. Acheson said, “despotism has led straight to stagnation and humanity’s progress has been made in periods of freedom. “Of course the American social order brings us problems—plenty of them. Impatient people try to tell us they are the problems of failing institutions. They aren’t. They are the problems of unprecedented suc-

cess. : “1 am sick and tired of all the

whining, the running to Washing- | ton for help, that we see about us. I want to see a few red-blooded men pitch into our problems and solve them. “Our social order is amazingly better than it was 100 years ago,

Harry PF. Byrd (D. Va.) is making a hard fight to save the office of Controller General from abolition as provided in the Byrnes Government Reorganization Bill, now before the Senate. This group, ihcluding many of the Democrats who joined the Republicans in fighting off the President’s Court-enlargement plan, professes to see in this phase of the Byrnes bill another dangerous expansion of executive power and one that might, prove costly to the taxpayers. The Byrnes Bill would abolish the Controller Generalship and the General Accounting Office. Their present function of checking on expenditures in advance would be turned: over to the Budget Bureau, a Presidential agency. Théir postauditing duties would be inherited by an Auditor General and a General Auditing Office, serving as agents of Congress.

War Bill Flayed As Dictator Aid

Times Special WASHINGTON, March 4—A new blast against the Sheppard-Hill-May War Profits Bill continued today with word from the House leaders that it would be “quite a while” before the bill could come to a voté in the House. The new attack today came in a second minority report from Rep. J. Joseph Smith (D. Conn.) of the House Military Affairs Committee, who said the measure as just reported by the Committee majority would create an “absolute dictatorship” in time of war.

- OUTFITTER MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN

Tinastons

~~ THE MODERN’ CREDITS

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and Harkodly better than even 25 years ago. . . . “Our ideal of a free people, selfgoverned, is in in competition with the totalitarian states of

Europe. I believe that eventually } , Italy, Russia and other

Germany countries under stern regimentation, insofar as they give up their liberties, will come to a standstill.” Mr. Horstmeier said that while the 1 cent a gallon tax might appear innocuous on the surface, that i5 really would have adverse economic effects. “Hardest hit of any group of fuel oil users,” he said, “would be 1.500,000 home owners who, in the last 15 years, have turned to oil heat. Apartment dwellers in many cases would be forced to pay more rent.”

FAILURES’ CALLED LEADERS OF WORLD

Rector Speaks at Noonday

Lenten Services.

“Victory through defeat is one of the constantly y recurring paradoxes of history,” “the Rev. E. Ainger Powell, rector, said today at Christ Church noonday Lenten services. “Those who have done most for mankind were those who, ‘in their day and generation, were regarded as failures. The supreme example was Jesus, *

“It is true that wherever evil triumphs God is defeated, but He cannot be vanquished permanently. Out of our present miseries and wrongs will be born a better world. For the Christian defeat is both a challenge and a pedge—a challenge to renewed endeavor: A pleage of ultiKisie victory,” the Rev, Mr. Powell sa

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