Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1939 — Page 2

PAGE 2

HOOVER FEARS | Palm and Banana ‘SUBTLE’ SHIFT RNY 2

IMPERLLS U.S.

Tendency to ‘Compulsory’ Co-operation Rapped in College Talk.

HARROGATE, Tenn, June 3 (U. P.) —Herbert Hoover told graduating class at Lincoln Memorial University yesterday that the most menacing danger facing the United States today is the “subtle growth” of a system of compulsory no-operation “under tine dictation of government.” he former President delivered a commencement address on the need for protecting personal liberts under ‘‘changing economic pressures.” He said that the United States had developed and flourished under a free system of voluntary co-operation but that there was presently a danger that the system night be undermined and personal liberty perish. The difference between the systems of voluntary and compulsory co-operation, he said, provided a measure of “the whole distance between liberty and no liberty.” “The great danger to Americe is not from violent invasion of tems from abroad,” Mr Hoover said “The danger is not from open agitation of socialism, communism or fascism. The danger is the subtle growth of these compulsory ideas a means of remedy to war dislocation and depression.” Mr. Hoover sketched the histories of “three revolutions’—the revolution of liberty, the revolution from scientic discovery and the revolution of utcpias to end the e times.” The last he g back to the ancient uision rooted in ce and cultivated suffered by 1 depression. ce controls by Government were nec sary to curb unethical and greedy interests but insisted that the proper role of the Government was that of an “‘umpire” and that above all it should see that “liberty not transgressed.” He praised the American system for developing a high standard of living, for protecting personal and religious freedom and for stimulating “great advancement in learning and the arts.” “It 1s true that we need free speech, free press, free assembly and all the other freedoms,” he concluded. "But we need above all things minds free from ignorance. We need awakened imaginations. We need disciplined reason. Without them there will be no other freedoms.” |

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Vandenberg Formula:

Recovery in Six Months SYRACUSE, N. Y., June (U Senator Vandenberz (R Mich), expounding the political and ocial philosophy on which he is xpected to court the 1940 Republiidential nomination, det free enterprise revthetic socialism” to complete re~

e X. months

livered the

5

commencement at Svracuse University. In view of his indication last week that he is a candidate for the 1940 nomination, the speech was viewed as elaboration of the principles upon which he probably will base his campaign.

Asks ‘Fair Chance’

Condemning

an all

many policies of President Roosevelt's Administration, Senator Vandenberg called for restoration of “equilibrium” to “salvage the best of yesterday and temper it with the best of today and tonorrow.” “In free enterprise system,

my he said, “if under the American were given a legitimately fair nce—with all the frustrated and damned appetites of a gloomy decade—we should be out of this depression i SIX victorious months, and America’s collegiate graduates of 1938 would confront real opportunity instead too often WPA as a career.” Without referring by name to Mr Roosevelt, Senator Vandenberg criticized policies and programs of the New Deal. Cites Paradoxes

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“We wobble ominously old deals and new deals deals and — occasionally — square deals,” he said. “We tread a gigantic paradox. “We spend to save; we hunt more prosperity by going deeper into debt; we try to stretch an annual income of 60 billions into an annual income of 80 billions by squandering the difference; we dig gold, pay for it, then bury it back into the ground again out at Ft. Knox; we call 12 million unemployed in 1932 a depression, and we call 12 million unemployed in 1939 a recovery and announce ‘we planned it that way’; we lecture foreigners about democracy, and set up virtual govern-ment-by-executive-decree ourselves; we kill little pigs wihle children ery for food; we have ‘purges’ and ‘appeasements’ in such breath-taking and confusing succession that ‘the man on the flying trapeze’ seems static in comparison. The jitterbug becomes not only a rhythmic trance but a national affliction.”

70 WABASH SENIORS RECEIVE DIPLOMAS

Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, June 5— Nearly 70 seniors today received their diplomas from President Louis B. Hopkins at the 101st commence- |

ment of Wabash College at Memorial Chapel The Rev. William R. Graham, the Lafayette Central Presbyterian Church pastor, delivered the baccalaureate sermon. Preceding the exercises the annual Phi Beta Kappa breakfast was heid at the Wabash Avenue Presbyterian Church.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES re | U.S. Applies Pressure on Warring Labor Factions = ONINTERSTATEILLS — As 100,000 Remain Idle

| AT FRENCH LICK

Revolutionary Steps in

Radio and Television Ex- |

(four or five plants where he has

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Times cial

Sne

Wants Strikers to Go Back To Work During Quest For Settlement.

By LUDWELL DENNY Times Special Writer | WASHINGTON, June 5.—Alarmed by reports that more than 100,000 | are now out of work in the automo- | bile industry as a result of the strike | of 13,000 Briggs body employees, the | Government today put peace pres- | sure on the warring C. I. O. and A. | F. of L. leaders. The Government wants the strikers to return to work pending nego- | tiations. Though this is the same Adminis[tration policy which in the recent {C. I. O. coal strike in effect put the on the side of the union, today it throws the official weight on the auto employers’ side land against the C. I. O. For the C. 1. O.-United Auto Workers Union | refuses to return to work until it gets a contract recognizing it as the | exclusive bargaining agent.

Hot Spot Waits Martin

Today in Detroit the Federal | Conciliator, James Dewey, is ex{pected to remind the C. I. O. that he has already successfully arbitrated the grievances which started the Briggs strike, and that it ican get exclusive bargaining rights through a Labor Board election if {it has the 95 per cent representa[tion claimed. But at the same time Mr. Dewey is expected to put Homer Martin, head of the rival A. F. of L. union, on even a hotter spot. Although Mr. Martin is believed to represent only a small minority in the Briggs lant, he is the kev to an immediate Labor Board election. All parties except Mr. agree to a consent election. If he continues to hold out, that will force delay for hearings before the Labor Board can expediently order an election. Mr. Martin threatens to call out

| | | | |

Martin

|an apparent majority.

Relations More Strained Relations between Mr. Martin and

FRENCH LICK, June 5.—Revolu- the Government are becoming intionary developments in radio and creasingly strained not only because

television their application the home, nounced as more than 900 distributors of the Philco Radio & Television Corp. opened their annual convention here today The meeting which will be the largest single gathering in Philco's history will continue through Thursday. | Distributors from every state and territory of the United States converged on the French Lick Springs Hotel. { Aerials to Be Eliminated The radio developments scheduled to be announced included: 1. Furst introduction of complete line of television receivers for the public. 2. Invention of a new radio circuit to make practical reception of television sound. 3. Elimination of the radio aerial for all tves of radio receivers by use of television tubes. 3. Perfection of Philco’s “wireless | remote control to apply to radio-|

in

| phonograph record changers.

Times Photos. |

| Demonstration of the new devel-

Top, in nearby Garfield Park is this European palm tree, growing |opments was to open for the Press, under glass to give an exotic atmosphere to the large nursery there.

For 15 years or more tropical plants have been grown with a good deal

of success

|

Below, beside the palm is a banana tree from which ripe bananas |

are occasionally taken.

Mrs. Beulah Maze, 3601 N. Sherman Drive, is pointing to them. Oranges, limes and lemons also grow in the nursery. |

William Coleman Atkins Gift to Yale Arranged.

A Yale University by his grandmother he memorial is a collection of

memorial for William Coleman Atkins is

i i

|

to be presented tc

. Mrs. William Henry Coleman.

works of 155 Indiana authors, col-

lected after a year of research and representing the best known authors from the earliest to those now writing.

Many of the volumes are autographed first editions.

Mr. Atkins was a member of the 1933 class at Yale and he was killed in an auto crash in August, 1937.

Among authors represented in the collection are Edward Eggleston, Robert Dale Owen, John Hay, BenJamin Harrison, Lew Wallace, John Clark Ridpath, Albert J. Beveridge, | Henry Lane Wilson, David Starr Jordan, Jacob P. Dunn, Thomas R. Marshall, William Vaughn Moody, James Whitcomb Riley, Maurice Thompson, Charles Major, Booth Tarkington, Goerge Reisner, Claude G. Bowers, Charles S. Beard, Meredith Nicholson William Dudley Foulke, George Ade, John T. McCutcheon, Theodore Dreiser, John Finley, Robert Underwood ‘Johnson, David Graham Phillips, Gene Strat-ton-Porter, Kin Hubbard, Paul Wilstach, Albert Edward Wiggam, Louis Ludlow, Lloyd Douglass, George Jean Nathan and Edwin C. Hill The Yale University Committee is composed of William George Sullivan, chairman; Frederic M. Ayres, Henry C. Atkins, Christopher B. Coleman, John Edmison and Evans Woollen Jr. The books were collected with the assistance and advice of President

‘Emeritus William Lowe Bryan of

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University; Presicent Clyde E. Wildman of DePauw Uni- | versity; Dr. Coleman, State Libra- | rian; Hilton U. Brown, Indianapolis | News, and Miss Ethel McDowell! Moore and the committee. William Coleman Atkins was the son of William Avery Atkins and | the husband of Mrs. Brownie MisKimen Atkins, Golden Hill.

SNITE LEAVES LOURDES LOURDES, France, June 5 (U. P)). —Fred Snite Jr. of Chicago, who visited the Lourdes shrine in the “iron lung” in which he lives because of an attack of paralysis, left today for Bordeaux on his way to Paris.

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ar 2:30 p. m. today. The demon-| stration was to be followed by an} address by Larry E. Gubb, Philco| president. Executives on Program Mr. Gubb and otner r.ilico execoutline company Other executives include Sayre M. Ramsdell, vicepresident; C. E. Carpenter, auto radio head; Thomas A. Kennally,

| general sales manager and W. Paul

policies for the|

to of his were expected to be an- blocking a consent election at

| utives from Philadelphia were to|

|

|

Jones, president Philco Refrigera- |

tion Co., Indianapolis. Television was to be demonstrated through the Philco new portable television transmitter. This transmitter, which stands less than six feet high, is capable of picking up complete television programs either indoors or outdoors by connecting with an electric plug, company officials said.

threat and his action in

Briggs, but also because he has| broken his promise to go along with | a consent election at the Graham-| Paige plant, where he claims a majority. If Conciliator Dewey is unable to| budge Mr. Martin on the matter of | an immediate consent election at! Briggs, and is unable to get the | C. I. O. officials in Detroit to return | to. work pending further negotiations and an election, the Government is expected to put more pressure on President Green of the A F. of L. and Lewis of the C. I. O. High Administration officials and prolabor members of Congress ex- | press increasing impatience over strikes caused by A. F. of L.-C. I. o.! rivalry. They say this union rivalry | is rapidly undermining not only the | Wagner Law and Labor Board but! most other labor legislation and governmental labor agencies. They point to the antilabor swing | in such states as Oregon, Wisconsin, | Minnesota, Michigan and Pennsyvania,and to the efforts here to emasculate the Wagner and WageHour Laws. They add that they cannot forever protect organized labor in its rights if it is determined to commit suicide through A. F. of L.C. 1. O. conflict.

Martin Auto Union Returns to A. F. of L.

DETROIT, June 5 (U. P.).~—| Homer Martin's independent United | Automobile Workers Union stood under the A F. of L. banner to- | day, completing the breach in the |

original U. A. W. and returning Mr. | Martin to the organization he once | deserted to join John L. Lewis and | the C. 1. O.

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J HEARINGS START

Three committees of the Indiana | Commission on Interstate Co-opera-tion were conducting hearings today

on interstate problems. |b

One committee, meeting in the House of Representatives chambers, ! was hearing evidence on the controversy over the Kentucky-Indiana boundary near Evansville, Part of Kentucky is on the Indiana side of the Ohio River and Evansville officials are seeking the! right to police this area which is

described as a “hotbed of vice and | L

disorder.” Another committee was hearing,

"| witnesses on trade barriers against Indiana milk products in Eastern! 2

states. The third committee was hearing evidence on the Ohio-Indiana liquor | transport controversy. Indiana truck line operators charge that Ohio officials had refused to permit the transport of liquor into Ohio except by trucks having licenses in that state. George Henley, Bloomington, was presiding at this hearing.

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