Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1939 — Page 8
PAGE 8
A
8. 0. P. IS GIBED |
FOR BACKING OF TOWNSEND PLAN
Democrats See Campaign Fodder in Vote of
| Tuesday.
| The Rev. Richard Millard, Broad‘way Methodist Church pastor, will |speak on the “Joy of Going On” at the baccalaureate exercises at Indiana State School for
Three girls and five boys will graduate at the exercises Tuesday. Graduation exercises are to be held at 10:30 a. m. in the school auditorium with Dr. George F. Leonard of Butler University as principal speaker.
the Deaf! {for the Deaf are Miss Beatrice E.
Deaf to Get Diplomas
at the Indiana State School for the Blind tomorrow when Miss Georgean R. Buckner of Hanover and Miss
Virginia May Summers of Spencer
graduate. Those graduating at the School Miss
Beard, New Albany; Mildred
|La Rue Myers, Salem; Miss Julia
Marie Volk, Gary: Samuel Arthur Maddox, Indianapolis; John Harold Butler. Indianapolis; Theodore Cieslak, Gary; Raymond M. Martin,
| Jeffersonville, and Kenneth W. Phil-
NOBLESVILLE WIFE FINDS MOTHER AGAIN
| NOBLESVILLE, June 2 (U. P).— Mrs. Grace Smith, 28, of Nobles- { ville, and her mother, Mrs. Earl
| Jackson of Pontiac, Mich. were re-|day had set June 12 for Joseph E.
united today for the first time in nearly 28 years. Mrs. Smith was placed in an orphanage at Indianapolis when she was 2 months old. She
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$3 inn ii
HIGH COURT FIXES
HARTMAN DEADLINE
The Indiana Supreme Court to-
Hartman, local attorney, to reply
(to disbarment proceedings
|
|
filed
against him by the Indianapolis |
| Bar Association.
{ The Association's petition asked | was | the court to summon Mr. Hartman |
adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph for a hearing “to show cause why |
Rees of Noblesville. Recently she located her mother and the reunion
(he should not be {practicing law.”
prohibited from
| |
attorney's negative answer to a bar examinalion question in 1932 regarding his previous connections with court cases was false. The Association cited four court | cases in which Mr. Hartman was | a defendant previous to his admission to the bar,
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55 Republicans.
the |
Similar exercises are to be held lips, Brownsburg. {was arranged. The petition charged that
By THOMAS L. STOKES Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, June 2. — The House Democratic leadership, elated over the decisive defeat of the Townsend plan, evaluated its strategy today in political terms, with a look toward the future and a backward glance toward last November's election They claimed that the vote re-, vealed a pattern of glaring inconsistency in the Republican Party—| the supposed party of conservative financial philosophy whose leaders talk of economy and a balanced budget—which they can use effectively in the 1940 campaign. | Fifty Republicans voted for the old-age pension bill | While 40 Democrats also went overboard for the depression pana-; cea, Democrats pointed out that this represented less than a sixth| of their House membership, while a third of the Republicans went on record for the scheme.
G. 0. P. Whip Included
Thev included the party's whip, Rep. Engelbright (Cal), and three members of the Ways and Means Committee which handles financial legislation, Reps. Crowther (N. Y), Gearhart (Cal) and Knutson (Minn). the latter a continuous critic of New Deal spending { Democrats found some comfort in| the fact that, of the 55 Republicans who voted for the Townsend Bill, 35 were new members who were swept into office last November, which they interpreted as showing that it was out-promising by the Republicans that accounted for numerous Re-| publican victories, rather than dissatisfaction with Administration policies Four states went whole-hog for Townsendism. with every Representative from Maine, Florida, Washington and Oregon voting for it Only four members from California voted “no,” though a few of California’s 20 Representatives did not vote Indiana's delegation split, six to SIX Don't Count it Out The vote which the House Democratic leadership forced, literally had some members quaking in their boots, and this uneasiness still continued after the vote and will until next election, especially among th who came here with Townsend support and deserted the doc-;
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ly in the gallery as the was taken, afterward pledging t he wiil continue the campaign The setback may affect the Townsend campaign to some extent. Certainly for the time being it laid the nsend ghost, so far as the Adration concerned, as a to the New Deal's own social ri program. And it embard Republicans Townsendism, however, can't be count although the contributoins have netted $3,000,000 five vears may dwindle some what
Landis Points With Pride To Townsend Vote
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WASHINGTON, June — Rep Gerald W. Landis (R. Ind.), member of the Townsend Plan steering committee in the House, pointed with pride today to the fact that five of the 35 Republican votes for the Townsend bill were cast by Indiana congressmen he measure went down to a smashing defeat in the House yesterdayv, with a total of 97 votes for it and 302 against “If all of the states made as good a showing as Indiana, things would have been better for us,” Rep Landis declared ‘There were 35 or 40 who were practically pledged to vote with us who got cold feet. But we are not through and will try again.” One of his Republican colleagues on whom he had counted for a vote for the measure, but who voted against it, was Rep. George W. Gillie, he said. Rep. Gillie and the dean of the Hoosier Republican delegation in the House, Rep. Charles A. Halleck, voted against the bill, as did all the Hoosier Democrats, except Rep. William T. Schulte, who was for it.
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MORGAN WILL SEEK FUND FOR RAT WAR
DD». Herman G. Morgan; City Rea'th Board secretary, said today he would ask for a special appropriation in the 1940 budget to carry on “a war of extermination on rats which infest the City.” Dr. Morgan said there have been numerous cases of rat bites treated at City Hospital and that injections had been given victims to guard against rat-bite fever.
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