Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1938 — Page 3
France Armed to Hilt.
And Ready to: Fight; Ign, ore Europe- -Beard
U. S. For F2nay Sinking; Likes Held.
(Contin cd from Page One)
turn ’em 0% now before their next ‘one.’ -Or -ihat issue, unless the ‘Democrats "hange their policies, the “Republican: might carry the country. 2
Essc-tials Unchanged “The fou Jers of this republic saw clearly the! Europe had its set of interests ard its eternal wars over them, and they proposed that we take advan ‘age’ of the 3000 miles een us 2nd stay out of Europe's ws. Nothing has changed the essential elements of that picture. “The results of the World War only confirmed the futility of our intervention. and the soundness of the original view. “From 1773 to. 1797 Washington kept us out of Europe’s raging wars From 1797 to 1801 John Adams kept us.out. From 1801 to 1809 Jefferson Kept us out. Is Franklin Roosevelt likely to become a bigger figure in history thar these three men, if he fakes us in®’
U. S. Presents ts Bill
For Sinki :g of Panay
WASHIE TON, March 22 (U. P)). —The Am, ican Government formally has i ssented its bill to Japan for loss of | fe, personal injuries and damages “tained Dec. 12 when Japanese k¢;nbing planes sank the American g: Taboat Panay, the State Departmes; revealed today. ‘ The claim was presented to the Japanese Foreign Office by American “Amba: ssador Joseph E. Grew upon instructions from Secretary of State Cordell Hull. _. State Department officials declined to reveal the amount of damages askec. Unofficial sources have estimated the claim would run from $1,500,000 to $2,000,000.
Two Sons of Archduke
Arrested in Vienna
VIENNA. March 22 (U. P.).—Duke Maximilian and Duke Ernest of Hohenberg, sons of the assassinated Archduke Francis Ferdinand, whose death led fo the World War, ‘were arrested today. Both Day are prominent in the monarchist movement. Other monarchists arrested included Prince Maximilian Zgoni: Fuerstenberg, 73, close friend of former Kaiser Wilhelm and cone of the foremost noblemen in’ Germany and Austria. _ Police also seized the passports of Pr. Sigmund Freud, 82-year-old ortor of psychoanalysis, and his confiscated .all . money eir home. Dr. Freud:is 2 regardless of nationality, will be barred from the University of Vienna under the Nazl program, a high university administrative authority said foday.
British Expected
To Sidestep Czechs
. LONDON. March 22: (U. P). — Striving to keep Britain out of war danger zones, Prime Minister Premier Neville Chamberlain in his statement on foreign policy Thursday will sidestep the question of Czechoslovakian independence, a reliable quarter said today. - It was understood that the Cabiet at today's emergency session decided that Chamberlain's statement
‘ ~would reiterate Britain’s vital gen-
eral interest in Central Europe, but without making any commitment regarding Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia will be mentioned only$ briefly, in order not to emparrass the Czechs by bringing the Sudenten German minority problems into the limelight, it was said.
Spanish Rebels
Pierce Loyalist Line
ARAGON FRONT, Spain, March 22 (U. P.).—Rebel troops attacked northwest of Huesca today, break ing through the Loyalist front at several poinis and driving several miles from Penbolea toward Lierta. The attack, along a front of approximately 20 miles, was preceded by three hours: of intense artillery fire, after which the infantry oceupied a serics of heights. - The Loyalists were still resisting : from the vicinity of the heights with machine guns, but Rebel infantry was nearing the Lierta, an extreme point of the enemy line forming a sharp angle northwest of Huesca.
© GILBRALTAR, R, March 22 (U.P). =Guy Castle, 22-year-old Washington, D. C., youth, who made an unsuccessful attempt to escape from a Rebel hospital after having been wounded on the Aragon front, arrived here today from Seville with his mofher.
‘State of Siege
Declared. in Kaunas
KAUNAS, lithuania, March 22 (U.P.).—The military commander of Kaunas issu ed regulations today equivalent to a state of siege. The regulations were motivated by “the seriousness of the situation, which requires absolute quiet.” They impose a 9 p. m. curfew and pro- * vide fines or imprisonment for violations. Resistance will be punished by court martial, “Lithuania today notified Poland of her agreement to the appoint ment of Franciszek Horwath as Polish Minister to Kaunas.
Martial Law Rules in Hongkew Area
- SHANGHAI, March 22 U. P).—
report 1 the closed area said that Igal d shot himse!”.
Uresents Its A
8 Million Men Prepared To Defend Maginot Line Any Time.
By RALPH HEINZEN (Copyright, 1938, by United Press)
PARIS, March 22—Eight million Frenchmen ate ready today to seize rifles and burrow into “catacomb forts” to defend their country.
Ravaged twice by invasion in the
last 68 years, France has armed to
the hilt. She does not intend to become the battleground of the next war if steel and men and military ingenuity can prevent it. More than half of every franc collected in taxes is turned over to the Army, Navy and Air Force. Despite the swift changes in military strength, France’s Army still is judged by experts to be the best in Europe. The fear that haunts every Frenchman is another invasion from the East. Out of that fear has developed the Maginot Line, a 400-million-dollar system of underground forts that guards every inch of the northern and eastern frontiers except a narrow strip opening on the Swiss valleys.
Prepares to Evacuate Paris
. Against land attack, France considers = herself impregnable. She counts on her own and the British Navy to guard her coastline. Like all European nations, she is vulnerable to air attacks. That .is why the French general staff has taken extraordinary precautions to protect the civilian population against air attack. Thousands of men are working today building roads leading out of the gates of Paris, wide enough to accommodate eight lines of automobiles. Using those - roads, the three million inhabitants of the capital could turn Paris into a de= serted city within a few hours. - Every Paris office building must be equipped with steel or wooden shutters so that no vagrant gleam of light will offer a target for air raiders. Busses are equipped with <curtains so they can be darkened. Air raid cellars have been built in courtyards of the Foreign Ministry, the War Ministry and all other important Government buildings. France, if attacked, could maintain an underground Government indefinitely.
Gold Buried in Earth
For 11 years the Bank of France has been building gold vaults, an eighth of a mile deep in places, under a subterranean lake. War materials factories, once concentrated in a 10-mile belt around Paris, have been decentralized and located in 100 cities. As this dispatch is written, 20,000 young men—clerks, salesmen, office workers—are preparing to go underground to brush up on their knowledge of the mazes of the Maginot Line. . Many of these military reservists will not see the sky for two weeks. They will take some of their meals five stories below the surface of the ground, and when they go back to their jobs another group of reservists will move in. Those young men are the backbone of an Army of eight million which France could mobilize: immediately on ‘the declaration of war. France also can draw on a huge pool of black native fighters from her African colonies and can equip them with the largest stock of ammunition any army ever had in reserve. Ten million rounds of shells for light and heavy artillery are buried near the border.
Losing in Naval Race
Afloat, France probably still has the best Navy of any continental nation, but Italy rapidly is catching up with her. Strong in light cruisers, France also leads the world in the number of submarines. All European powers keep details of their air forces secret because there is no international agreement compelling them to exchange information, but a year ago Parliament was told that the French air fleet was second only to that of Soviet Russia. There is a four-month supply of oil and gasoline available now, but should all coal mining cease there would be enough fuel for only two days. Attempiing to solve that weakness in her military setup, France has been experimenting with “forest gas,’ made from charcoal. There are enormous forests in this nation and theoretically the French Army could roll tanks and trucks on gases derived from charcoal. Enough cotton, a vital war material, has been stored to last six months, and United States trade reports show that ‘there have been heavy increases in imports of manganese, nickel and the other materials of war. So long as France remains allied with England in a. war, she counts on the British Navy to help her convoy war materials across the Atlantic.
their air forces for new assaults on Japanese bases. The reorganization was understood to have been undertaken because of friction between American fliers and the high command. The Chinese commanders were said to have resented the fact that the Americans, led by Vincent Schmidt of Mineola, N. Y., had received the major credit for the bombing of the Japanese air field at Taihoku, Formosa.
Rome Bars Trieste As Free Port
ROME, March 22 (U. P.).—Italy intends to_ abrogate special preferential tariffs which Austria enjoyed under the Rome protocol, including the use of Trieste as a free. port, it was. learned from a trustworthy diplomatic source today. Italy has’ notified Germany of that step in view of her occupation
{of Austria, the same source said.
Whether Italy, in return for concessions from Germany, later will permit Germany to use Trieste,
| Adriatic city, as a free port, could ‘not be ascertained.
RE PARIS, Mani oo. PJ), — The
Deputies today began debate of a 15-year-old bill for tons of military industrial
J
The newly created juvenile crime ‘Prévention bureau of the Police Department went into action in offices at Police® Headquarters Joday. Officials are
ET
(left to right) Howard Hunt of the Council of Social Agencies, Sergt. Charles Weddel,- bureau head, and Miss Nell W. Dunkle.
’
Times Photo. >
(Stary, Page One.)
Wells, Accepting I. U. Post, Pledges Energy « to School
(Continued from Pago One)
mission ‘came: extensive laws covering the operations of all types of financial institutions, some of which have been copied in other states.
Active in Education Work
President Wells is a member of the Research Council of the Americali Bankers’ Association; treasurer and executive committee member of the National Association of State Universities; Indianapolis director of the Federal Home Loan Bank;
member, Indiana Advisory Committee of the National Youth Administration. Also ‘he, is chairman of the Con= ference oft Standardization on Col= ‘lege Report Forms, member, American Economics: Association and of the Ecohometric Society; former president and chairman of the committee on Public Service of the Indiana Academy of Social Science. President Wells is a member of the following honorary and social societies and fraternities: Blue Key, Beta Gamma Sigma, Alpha Kappa Psi, Kappa Kappa Psi, Sigma’ Nu, Kiwanis, Sphinx Club, Indianapolis Athletic Club, Indianapolis Press Club, and the Masonic Lodge. He is on the board of the First Methodist Church, = Bloomington, and is a member of the Indiana Society of Pioneers. He is of. English extraction and one of his ancestors was Col. John Endicott, colonial governor of Massachusetts. His mother and father both: were teachers at one time. 1 His mother, Mrs, Anna" Berniecé Wells, was.a primary grade teacher for several years, and his father, Granville Wells, taught school for several years before going into the banking business about 25 years ago.
Enjoys Summer Outings Mr. ‘and ‘Mrs. Wells live in Lebanon. President Wells has a farm next to his father’s. Annually he rents a cottage in Brown County where .he' spends as much time
riding and swimming as possible. He is interested in the theater and music and has participated as performer or patron in musical organizations since he was 9 years old. When he walks about the campus, President Wells greets each student he meets with a smile and a tip of the hat, much in the manner -of - President ' Emeritus Bryan. He lives in the N. College Ave. home of Prof. Emeritus James A. Woodburn, retired head of the'I. U. history department. The house is one of the pioneer dwellings of Bloomington. - He lives simply, drives an open car, and is always approachable and available to those who want to see him. . The new Indiana University president is the youngest state university president in America at the age-of 36, and probably the youngest among presidents of the. larger and more complex educational institutions of the country, He is the 71st Indiana University man to become president of an institution of higher learning. He is the youngest of the 11 ‘men who have held the presidency of Indiana University.. Past presidents of the university since-its organization as a college in 1828 were as follows: Andrew Wylie, 1829 to 1851% Alfred Ryors, 1852 to 1853; William Mitchell ‘Daily, 1853 to 1850; John H. Lathrop, 1859 to 1860; Cyrus. Nutt, 1860 to 1875; Lemuel Moss, 1875 to 1884; David Starr Jordan, 1884 to. 1891; John Merle Coulter, 1891 to 1893; Joseph
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Parents Congratulate: New I. U. Chief
Times Special - LEBANON, March 22. Mr. and Mrs. Granville Wells, parents . of Prof. Herman Wells, newly ap-
‘pointed. Indiana’ University. presi-
dent, said they were “proud of our son and hope he has ability equal to the gredt responsibility.” Mr.. Wells acted as family spokesman. ‘He said they: did not plan to go to Bloomington today. He said he had just returned from his farm and “have work to do in Lebanon.”
MEXICO WON'T SEIZE MINES, SAYS LEADER
Cardenas Reassures Foreign Industrialists..
MEXICO CITY, March 22 (U. P). —Mezxico has no intention of expropriating the mining or other industries as she did the $400,000,000 foreign oil industry, President Lazaro Cardenas asserted today.
An executive statement said: that
Cardenas’ oil property expropriation decree would not be extended “to other activities of the country which:
sympathy and considers necessary’ for national development.” The
mining industry is chiefly in the]:
hands of United States promoters and financiers. Eduardo Suarez Treasury Sec- |. retary, asked representatives of
foreign oil companiés to discuss a
suitable indemnity for the expropriated oil companies.
ORATORY SAVES A LIFE WASHINGTON, March: 22 (U. P.).—James D. Cunningham, an attorney for the Federal Communi= cations Commission, credited his forensic ability today with saving the life of a would-be suicide. He talked Albert F. Krichton, 58, out of jumping from a bridge into Rock: Creek Park, 200 feet below, until police arrived.
BOB BURNS
: Says: OLLYWOOD, ; . March 22-1 often. hear people talk about how wonderful it is to live in this modern age with the scientific conveniences, but sometimes I think we ain't ‘any better off than our fore-
fathers were, as|
far as real happiness ' is concerned. I knew an old fella. who lived ‘way back in the mountains and he was not only the happiest man: I ever saw but the healthiest. Not. long’ ago one of his sons sent him a radio and he’s been poutin’ ever since. He says them announcers on those medicine ‘shows ‘make the medicine sound so attractive, he feels like he's missin’ somethin’ out of life! (Copyright. 1938)
health—don't permit. it!
‘and planes.
the proposed ‘ the Government 10oks; upon with | Executive -
| tained about 9400 gallons of mash | when raided yes
‘plied between ‘Winchester, Muncie and 8 Joelanapolis.
FOR MAY ACTON MORGAN TODAY
Probe Brow: TVA Head - ‘Remains Silent. :
is
"(Continued from Page One)
ast year ‘in which a battleship theoretically was destroyed by aerial bombardment, and details of Capt. Royal ©. Ingersoll’s mission in London during January, These reports may become important in Senate consideration of the bill to .give the United States the largest peacestime Navy in history because the Senate was certain to revive the House controversy over the . relative . merits of - battleships
Senate Rejects Pittman. Amendment « (Editorial, Page 10)
WASHINGTON, March 22 (U.P). —The Senate today rejected. the Pittman amendment to the Government Reorganization Bill exempting the Agriculture Department’s forestry service from the President’s
power ‘to transfer or reorganize bureaus. The vote was 33 to 50. It was the first of a series of special exemptions Senate leaders opposed on grounds that to adopt one would be to throw open the doors to. wholesale - exemptions which would destroy the effectiveness of Streamlining” of the
ent. Senatbr. Clark: (D Mo) Tas 16 such exemptions for. various. bureaus which he plans to offer. ’ Mr. Clark's proposal to exempt the Veterans’ Bureau was lost when a roll call vote was: tied, 41 to 41.
WASHINGTON, March 22 (U.P). —President Roosevelt leaves: the capital tonight for a 1.9ay vaca= Yon, at Warm Springs, Ga..
LIQUOR SUSPECT | -IS:FREED ON BOND
Lee D. Barker, 42, of 42, of Parker, was free under $5000 bond today -on charges of possessing an unregistered 8000-gallon still ‘at his amusement park in Randolph County. Barker waived preliminary examination before U. S. Commissioner Howard S. Young. State and County Police said the still and vats con-
terday. Federal isa} 2\conal Tax. Unit officers said: Barker recently erected a special’ ‘garage to house his big still and accommodate. liquor trucks that
0 5 7 ES Sree . Fie 4 ~ 5 3% i
Ports-of Entry Declared Source of Voting Abuse ‘By Senator.
(Continued from Page One)
Senator VanNugs’ prepared states
| ment, in ‘full, follows:
“My political troubles are almost
. | completely with the State House. “May 1. ask—in what way have 1 :
provoked them?
“I campaigned for Governor
| | Townsend to the full extent of my | physical ability. After his election,
I never interfered in the least with
| his plans or his administration’ of state affairs; kept ‘my hands off the | | Legislature and the activities of the
State Committee. “No one can say truthfully that I have meddled in state affairs. I
‘Ihave confined myself solely to my
duties as ga Federal official. In that | oo ‘capacity, I have labored long and duously in: behalf of all the people in Indiana. When relief measures were ehacted, I have seen to it that Indiana -obtained her full quota of funds and PWA and WPA projects. Scores of communities will testify to this fact. - “The farmers; laboring men and business enterprises haye had my sympathetic support in all their endeavors to assert and obtain their
‘Tespec
e rights. 1 on been “criticized for support. a candidate for the Senate in 1934 and for Governor in 1936 who were not to the liking of the State House. The ones I supported were my tried and true friends and eminently fitfed for their respective positions. I would do. it again. * “Then the Governor of Indiana came to Washington and out of a clear sky decreed my political death knell from the steps of the White House—an effrontery unprecedented in the history of political Washington. Provoking as it was, I remained silent. Later, at the Democratic Editorial meeting at, French Lick he deliberately and premeditatedly attacked me and my Democracy in & public address ‘which followed mine and to which I had no opportunity to respond. “In this embarrassing and humiliating address he again attempted to read me out of the public service. I refused to engage in a verbal brawl except to say that I accepted the challenge. This same thing has been kept up viciously to the present time. “Permit me now to make the following observations. I have labored hard and consistently for the Democratic Party - for 57 years; worked my, way up from precinct committeeman to State Chairman; spoke all over Indiana many, many times, traveling at my own expense; worked through all those years with Governor Ralston, Tom Marshall, Tom Taggart, Charlie Greathouse and others of like standing without a word of dissension between any of us. I served as Prosecuting Attorney, State Senator, United States Attorney and am now completing a term 'as United States Senator.
“I will submit my record for disinterested public service and
fidelity to my State, Nation and |
party in comparison with the records of any one or all of that handful of self-constituted bosses who today’ compose the State House machine.
“I never capitalized any of my official positions for financial gain, and never permitted any of my appointees or friends to so'capitalize their relationships with me and get rich, if not illegally, at least immorally. I quit the practice of law when elected Senator because I wanted to be free to work and vote as my judgment and conscience dictated, without any obligations arising from private employment. “In determining ‘my position on pending legislation in the Senate, I have k t in mind the best interests of all our citizenship, irrespective of race, ereed, color or pol-
‘Government. election, T will’ do it again.
acks State House
Ya and ‘governed myself nh
ingly.
“In. the long months of hard and | continuous labor in preserving the | integrity of our Judicial system, I ‘was: subjected to the most ‘and undignified political ‘and threats of reprisal ever directed : a a member: of the United States | tion. Picture Operators UTHon Busl- | Sent hs ne ie
* | ness agent.
unsavory pressure
State House. I remained true to'my convictions and the fine ideals and traditions of our Constitutional In the event of re-
“Yet, for exercising those prerogatives, I am to be read out of the public service and by whom? “If one may judge from the thousands. of signed pledge cards, letters and petitions: which” “keep steadily
pouring into my office in response.
to my open letter of Feb. 15, it is
not by the good citizenship of In- | laer
diana. * i “It is very palpable from such re
‘turns- that such citizenship is fed up on self-serving gluttonous ma-:
chine politics, . the * prostitution of local governments and law enforcent through the grant of beer eges to public officials, slush funds violative of all corrupt practice acts, office furniture, potato and gadget rackets and rubber stamp statesmanship. “I do not subscribe to any of these practices; hence, the issue narrows down to this—do the people of Indiana want a strap-hanger or an unbossed representative in the
United States Senate for their |
State? “I ‘propose to give them a real
opportunity to express themselves
on- these and kindred Sibjects, next November.”
Teacher F nds Chicken Theft Good Sideline
MARION, Kas., March 22 (U. P), —Albert Ewart, 28, who was until
this week director of athletics and ‘history teacher at the junior high school and a Sunday School teacher,
today was out working on the roads among the county prisoners, serving a six months term for stealing chickens. His ‘arrest and conviction left everybody in the county amazed except Sheriff Fred Graham, who had long suspected the teacher. The Sheriff caught him in the act, carrying off 12 of Jake Suterman’s chickens, leg bands and all, and. Ewart then confessed he had been stealing chickens for three years and estimated he had stolen and sold to produce dealers about $2000 worth. As a church and school teacher, Ewart had the county’s respect. As an insurance salesman he _could walk through ‘the ‘farm "yards to transact business. Visiting a farm, he would call “Hello there,” and if nobody answered, he would start gathering chickens. ‘He carried chicken crates in his car without creating suspicion because -farmers often . paid
‘ington,
man,
anization as oh: ore Seek City, Township. Jobs
Com missioner Wheatley In Race to Retain : His Post.
- Five more candidates for City and
Township office, two’ for Congress
and 10 for State’ Representative had filed today. 3 Clarence I Wheatley, 1521 Please
ant. Ave., announced he would seek
Democratic’ renomination as County Commissioner, Second District. Seeking the ‘Democratic nominae tion for Congress, Second District, is Arvid Johnson, Hamlet. The district now is represented by Ine diana’s only - Republican Congresse man, Charles A, Halleck, Rensse«
Earl’ R. Dunning, Michigan City, Democrat, filed for Congress, Third District. Filing for State Representative
were Curtis O. Strange, Marion,
Democrat; Homer E, Beasley, Washe Republican; Leland L, Moore, Perrysville, Democrat; Charles L. Coffin, Bloomingdale, Re« publican; W. D. Hughes, Ft. Wayne, Republican; J. R. Crawley, Greens burg, Republican; John W. Mertz, Corunna, Democrat: ey ‘A. Gule ley, Lawrenceburg, Democrat; August°A. Heimann, Decatur, Democrat; Emil J. Palenik, Hammond, Democrat. E. B. Ransom, Negro. attorney, filed for Sixth District City Councile William B. Richardson, Democrat, filed for the nomination for Perry Township Trustee, oppos= ing the incumbent, Leonard By
Hohit.
Mrs. Buehl Files
Others filing included Mrs. Mry= tle Buehl, Democrat, for Center Township Trustee; Raymond G. Hunter, Republican, for Warren Township Trustee, and Forrest C. Huntington, Perry Township Ade: visory Board. Candidacies were .announced by Frank M. Reid, 2528 W. Washington: St., Republican, for Sixth Dis«’ trict City Councilman, and Nick L. Hurst, 435 Holt Ave., Democrat, for Wayne Township ‘Assessor.
Serving First Term
Mr. Wheatley .is serving his first jerm of three years. He was a City Councilman from 1930 to 1935. He said he is asking renomination and election on his record. . Mr Hurst operates a barber shop at 2537 W. Washington St. Mr. Reid was employed by the B. & O. Railroad 20 years, later served nine years in the City Street: Commissioner's Department and: three years in the Marion County Highway Department. He has been employed by the J. D. Adams. Manufacturing Co. the last five years.
Oliver A. Quayle Jr. Democratic National Committee treasurer, on a: tour of Western states, was:to arrive in Indianapolis at 10:45 o’clock tonight, Attorney General Omer. Stokes Jackson, State Democratic chairman, announced today. Mr, Quayle is expected to confer with Democratic leaders during his overe night stop here.
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