Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1938 — Page 4
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Platform Silent on Gross Tax Changes,
Refers Indirectly to Beer Port-of-Entry System;
Urges Beverage Commission Be Allowed to Make Reciprocal Pacts
(Continued from Page One)
perso! 18 tO be found to y fill point with pride to the fact i a for improvements ol and public employ \ merit system than
ng accomplishments and indorsing the entire New Deal agricultural program; praise the administrations both Paul V. MeNutt and M Clifford Townsend, as well as State officials and legislators ‘for their to the welfare of all the
them and that we
devotion peonle vso refer with pride to aealong the lines of welfare and social security the two administrations cutting down the cost while adding new gervices to govern
"hey lHshments
complis : public maemn ing to red nwa in
government
tO oper po na we Rk on small and hn emo hameful hypo necessary
plank
£4 of
Labor Plank, built on gen alitics, commits the party to no legislative program programs submitted the A. F. of LL. and rotherhoods wage collection
specific Ia
ignoring hvthe C. 1. O the Ra A State favored
bot
the
ilroad '
aw Is
Budget Change Suggested
Commenting on tax limitation the draft suggests an amendment (0 provide a longer period between publication and adoption of budgets to give the puhlic more time to study the proposals Fhe draft pledges the party to give every consideration to war vet. and their widows and orcondemns the persecution ial, religious and political reaffirms the party's bein home rule and local selfvernment: commends the Gove his program of studying needed marriage law reform; praises the "efficient and economical practices and policies of the State Highway Commission.” AXES Other planks indorse the calling Praised the special session for emergency legislation only: reaffirm opposition line tax diversion; pledge ous progressive leadership in education, without mentioning ‘he proposed State aid increase, and fonational | vor progressive improvements of attitude | child labor laws already enacted by
ture. list< | the party
Pick Candidates Who Will Aid FDR, Townsend Says
AW § ernor io
Party 1s
ta past contin
iministration
4 1t8
Continued from Page One) the MceNutt-in-1940 campaign, read a one-page message from the former Hoosier Governor, now High Commissioner to the Philippines his is still a testing time for lemocratic self-government.” it said Indiana is and must remain the best place on earth in which to live they | and to work, a place where problems who are solved with fairness and justice welfare of the | to all”
Democratic | of
any office
Democt
ven even
Als Of
candidates
represent the
have the
N.Y. NAZI CAMP HEADS CONVICTED
Failed to File Member List, High Court Jury Rules.
will rstand and are basic problems its people e you will select rate in the broad |
aaa) 10 ’ ¥ * Presiden {fo
you select
ana
those |
Proud of Hoosiers
t that rag
gram has been was jetail and then QGovend said x Hoosier butions that
© Se at
alt broud RIVERHEAD, N. Y m- | FP.) —A Supreme Court SIX leaders of American
July 12 (U today | Gerwhich
ury mvicted the
League Inc
ors and our “ongressmen have | manrogram N. Y., on charges of state civil rights law The charged the leaders failed to file membership lists with the Secretary of State as required | by oath-bound organizations. A convic tion also was returned by | the jury against the League. The defendants faced a maximum penalty of $1000 fine and A year in prison. The league faced A fine of $1000
QUESTION SUSPECT IN 2 NEW YORK DEATHS
NEW YORK, July 12 Walter H. Wiley, 19, returned here from Reno, Nev. to face charges of | looting homes, was questioned F. PD. R. the murders of Frances Ha1 took over as! jek, 20, and her sweetheart, Lewis and Weiss, who were ambushed in a lovers lane last October. Police information was that Wiley formerly lived in Miss Hajek's neighborhood, that he had admired
violating the
state
$10 ~OCH 500.000
pointe
U. P=
today 1 { about
gave
nds todav of ME rica, th 1 thi roubled world the New Deal, the S of democracy
lead-
the idol
16 best | preying on “petting parties.”
MINEOLA, The fight vear-old
N. Y., July 12 (U over custody of oneRichard Roland Reynolds, son of Julian Reynolds, an heir to tht Reynolds tobacco fortune, erred today until Thursday preme Court Justice Stoddard ad habeas co
Helen For
rthy of his Roosevelt 10cratic 1 and man
Naagrel
WAR VETERAN KILLED BY TRAIN AT ELWOOD
journ rpus writ obtained bv Ars rtescue, the child's mother.
| smagh the
200 CIVILIANS
SHANGHAL-Nearly 200 civilians reported killed in Japanese air raids,
EVIAN, FRANCE-U, 8K, France and Great Britain reach agree. ment on refugee organization,
MENDAYE—Insurgents reach Loy- |
alists' firet-line defense,
LONDON-—Reporte here say six killed in air attack on Valencia.
SHANGHATL July 12 (U P). - Nearly 200 civilians were Killed today in widespread Japanese air raids which extended from the ceéntral provisional capital at Hankow to Canton in the south. thirty-four Japanese planes broke | through the Chinese air defenses near Hankow and raided the city of | wuchang, across the Yangtse River {from the capital. More than 100 perons were killed and several hundred wounded there Oficial reports from Canton said more than 70 persons were | and 200 wounded in a raid by
that
Killed
25 Japanese planes which bombed |
70 minutes Isolate City
around Hankow isolate the city
the city for
Seek to
The raids
designed to and
{ Japanese land and naval forces ad-
| |
operated a Nazi camp at Yaphank, |
{ last night.
Settlement | | meet
the girl and that he had boasted of |
REYNOLDS HEARING DEL AYED | P). | (
was | Su- | Percey D.| 10d arguments on a | !
vanced up the Yangtse Valley to a point within five miles of the city of Kiukiang About 10 Americans were at Kiukiang, an important Yangtze River port 135 miles below Hankow Chinese authorities at Kiukiang ordered the Standard Oil Co. to
sink three of their pontoons on the |
Yangtee in an effort to prevent Tapanese troop landings. Socony employees sank one and Chinese troops shelled and sank the others I'ne United States Consulate General will protest the incident and the Standard Oil Co. will de-
mand indemnity
Reach Agreement on
Refugee Proposals
EVIAN, France, July 12 (U. P) A compromise among the United States, Great Britain cleared the way today for an international refugee probably will start functioning in London at the end of the month. The compromise was reached after the United States delegation, headed by Myron C. Taylor, dropped its demands that the organization be empowered to aid political refugees of ill nationalities
Loyalists’ First Defenses Reached HENDAYE French Frontier, July 12 (U, P.) —Nationalist reports asserted today that insurgent advance forces had reached the Loyalist first line defenses around Sagunto, important seaport Three vanced lencia Progress In region
Nationalist columns adtoward Sagunto and VaHeavy fighting was in the Sierra Espadan
Six Reported Killed "In Air Attack
LONDON, July 12 (U. P) —Six persons were killed and 10 injured today when Nationalist airplanes bombed Valencia, the Exchange Pelegraph Agency reported.
RAILWAY LODGE 261 OPPOSES ‘WAGE CUT
Brotherhood of Railway Lodge 261 was on record today as refusing to accept any wage cut. Three other Indianapolis lodges of the Btorherhood are to meet tomorrow night to vote on the same question The 463 decided to meeting at
Trainmen
members of Lodge 261 refuse a pay cut at a 1021 E. Washington St John Zinger, Grand Lodge vice president, presided. I'he national organization is to at Chicago July 20 for a vote on the ques stion
PETTERS GET BREAK
FROM OHIO FARMER
BELLAIRE, OQ. July 12 (U, P).—
Farmer Harry Smith of down Wer- |
nock way invited couples to his Jovers’ lane in the woods today, and nailed up a sign to tell the world | he meant it. The sign read: Welcome Farmer Smith said he had put up the sign because other residents had complained that petters were blocking side roads. “If they want to pet, they're welcome to PRK in my Xoous:® he said.
ATION CAPS FOR 0YS AND GIRLS.
MAKES 10 BIG GLASSES |
“Lovers Latie—All |
12 u P) New York war
here
ELWOOD
Pt sons | h-bound | t trai n Str uck an Associated Box who was ridwas thrown be- | A) freight i itch en-
MC \LL SL \YER ASKS STAY MIAMI, July 12 (U. P.) —Attorneys for Franklin Pierce McCall today bega n appeal from th viction and death sentence of kKidnaper-killer of 5-year-old Jimmy Cash to stay for at least three | trocution.
months his scheduled elec OUTFITTERS TO WOMEN and CHILDREN
[livingston THE MODERN CREDIT STORE : 3 == =
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4 yo LET IE.
AA N
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were |
Chinese air defenses as |
and France |
organigation. It!
Spanish |
| edge of Mr.
| kind word.
aa
'Garner-Roosevelt Break DIE IN JAPANESE By 1940 Is Deemed Likely;
Meni 1t Plan Extension BOMBING RAIDS Oklahoma a Voting Today
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
TEXAS
POLITICIANS vie for FDR's
favor.
ROOSEVELT-GARNER break is likely.
PRESIDENT in Pueblo lauds U, in primary today.
OKLAHOMA VOTES WESTERNER favored for
Texas Politicians Bask
In President's Smile
By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer
ABOARD ROOSEVELT TRAIN,
S. ideals,
Supreme Court,
® ————
Primary Pictured as
‘Test of F. D. R. Plea
| OKLAHOMA CITY, July 12 (U | P.) —Oklahomans
trooped to the | polls by the hundreds of thousands
| July 12~“And how did you like today to decide a bitter primary
| that, Mr. Garner!" The unvoiced taunt sums up the exuberance of New Dealers over the | outpouring of rank-and-file Texans ' for President Roosevelt in the home
| | | i
election that was regardea as A pars tial test of the inflaence of President Roosevelt's trip in behalf of liberal candidates. J. William Cordell, secretary of the State Election Board, said re-
state of the Vice President, who is ports indicated the heaviest Demo-
laying plans to recapture the Dem- cratic vote in state history. ocratic Party for the conservatives dicted
at the 19040 convention, There is a suspicion aboard this [ train that the President's paramount desire in visiting Texas was to arouse the Roosevelt following— which is tremendous—in a demonstration that might help to thwart the projected Garner coup in 1840. The Vice President made no move to pay his respects to Mr. Roosevelt, but just went on with nis fish« | ing. Belated telegrams exchanged | between the two—in which the Vice President facetiously begged that it was too far to walk, and he was working for a living-—fooled no one who has watched Mr, Garner grow cooler and cooler toward the New Deal in the last year. Open Break Possible The situation seems to be moving toward an open break between now and 1940, but it is too early to predict that, John Garner does not operate by the open<break method. | He works behind the scenes. That has been his method in seeking to | sabotage certain New Deal undertakings in the past. But Mr. Roosevelt himself may resort to the open-break method if the Garner
| |
| movement gathers momentum. The President traveled across the | Lone Star empire surrounded by— | | and at times almost buried under— congressmen thirsting like desert wanderers for a drop from the brimming cup of the President's popularity. They crowded about him on the back platform at every stop, vying to get in the pictures | | close to the Presidential shoulder. | Even Senator Connally, whe bolted on the court bill, sought and ob- | tained a portion of the Presidential limelight.
President Gives Blessing
After one stop the President referred to the Senator affectionately {as “Tom Connally,” and told how {he and "Tom" were
something in his
| Mr
He prenearly 600,000 Democratic ballots would be cast. Thomas was leading his two Democratic opponents for the Senatorial nomination on income plete returns from 11 scattered preeincts Senator Thomas, Roosevelt referred in his speech here Saturday as “my old friend” was opposed by Governor Marland and Gomer Smith. Both Governor Marland and Mr. Smith were conceded a chance of defeating Mr. Thomas before the President visited Oklahoma, The winners of today's nomina- | tions will be pitted against Repub- | lican nominess in the general election. Approximately 600,000 votes, including some 65,000 Republican,
Senator
to whom Mr.
will be cast in the primary, officials |
believed.
Of almost as much interest as the Senatorial race was the Democratic
campaign for Governor. William H. | (Alfalfa Bill) Murray sought to be- |
come the first Oklahoma Governor to be re-elected. W. S. Key, former State WPA Administrator, and Leon C. Phillips, State Legislator and attorney, Murray's The Republican candidates for Governor and Senator had no opposition in the primary. gubernatorial candidate in the general election will be Ross Rizley, the senatorial candidate Harry O. Glasser,
U. S. Government Form
‘Good Enough, Says F. D. R.
July 12 (U. P).— |
PUEBLO, Colo,
This nation is not going to copy
other forms of government because | Presi- | an audience |
“ours is good enough for us,” dent Roosevelt told that crowded around the rear plat-
| form of his special train today.
joking about | private car It po
[looks as if it is all patched up be- |
tween them | The irrepressible Maverick, who is favored by the White House, came all the way from San Antonio to ride with the President. He got his reward at | Amarillo, clear across Texas’ mil- | ions of acres, and after an all-dav | ride, when the President referred to ‘my friend Maury Maverick.” But Hatton Sumners, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, got no benediction. He spoke out
Rep.
Maury |
against the Court bill and has been |
toward other New Deal Von | ge The President was at the |r Sumners' district, which but ventured no
cool | tures.
is about Dallas, The really morose figure, was Rep. | Fritz Lanham of Ft. Worth, who has been voting agrinst the New Deal. He vearned for just a word, which never came
NEC to Co- ordinate U. S. Film Activities
The Farm Security Administration closed its movie activities June 30 and Pare Lorenz, producer of | “The River” and “The Plow That | | Broke the Plains,” has been transferred to the NEC. Mr. Mellett is seeking to deter- | mine whether a bureau should be | | set up within the NEC to produce | high-grade films of this sort for | various Federal offices, thereby avoiding amateurish productions. In radio, Mr. Mellett explained, it has been suggested that governmental requests for | funneled through his organization.
| willing to give even more time than | at present to Government broadcasts.
radio time be |
The radio networks are said to be |
His Administration's big objective is to make democracy work,” Mr. Roosevelt said The President pledged maintenance of the present form of government. The President of politics nor did he refer to Senator Adams, Democrat, up for election. It was
where Colorado politics cerned. In the September Colorado primary Mr. Adams’ strongest opponent will be Judge Benjamin Hilliard of the Colorado Supreme Court. Senator Adams, an oppon-
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Mrs. Frances Slifka, resident of 708 N. Illinois St. for many years | prominently identified with church | work in Indianapolis, adds her name to the constantly increasing
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in three weeks it |
ent of the court bill, was the Administration's floor manager when the lending-spending bill came before the Senate. From Colorado the Roosevelt train will proceed to California, via Salt Lake City and Ogden, Utah.
An——
Westerner Favored for Court Appointment
By HERBERT LITTLE Times Special Writer
WASHINGTON, July 12~The |
expectation is growing that Presi- | dent Roosevelt will name a West- Du Pont, Raskob Stock Losses Disallowed
Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana has been unrepresented on the Court since Chief Justice Melville Fuller of Illinois died in 1910, and can be counted on to urge its claims. The name of Governor Horner of Illinois already has been advanced. Other possibilities in this area are Senator Minton (D, Ind,), President Robert M. Hutchins of Chicago University, and Dean Lloyd K. Garrison of Wisconsin law school,
eérner to the Supreme Court. WASHINGTON, July 12 (U, P).
Only three of the 22 Supreme Court appointees since 1000 have | —The Board of Tax Appeals ruled
come from west of the Mississippi. Pierce Butler of Minnesota, named 16 years ago by President Harding, Is now the only “Western” justice. Westerners fost often mentioned here to succeed Associate Justice Cordozo include Circuit Judge Sam Bratton, former Senator from New Mexico; Justice Harold M. Stephens of Utah, now on the U. 8. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia; Thurman Arnold of Wyoming, the Justice Department's new trustbuster, and Senator Schwellenbach (D. Wash.), Other possibilities include Circuit [ Judge Seth Thomas of Iowa, Jus-
Court of Appeals here, and Circuit Judge Joseph C. Hutcheson Jr. of Texas.
The judicial circuit _made up of
its thrilling taste and painless price,
TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1938
today that stock transactions im 1929 and 1930 between Pierre S. du Pont and John J. Raskob wera “designed” by the two individuals and that losses which resulted are not deductible for poses. The Government asserted dee ficiencies totaling more than $750,« 000 against Mr. du Pont and over $1,000,000 against Mr. Raskob.
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