Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1939 — Page 10
PAGE 10 AA
OPEN SEASON ON SQUIRRELS SET
Begins Aug. 1 in Southern Zone Counties and Sept. 1 in North.
The open season on squirrels will be the same this year &s last, Conservation Commissioner Virgil M. Simmons announced today. The State will be divided into northern and southern zones again, Mr. Simmons said, with the open shason on grey fox squirrels in the 88 southern zone counties opening Aug. 1. and ending Oct. 27. In the 23 northern counties, the season will open Sept. 1. and close Oct. 30. Five daily is limit.
Taking of grey or fox squirrels at
any time other than during the prescribed open season for a designated area, is a violation of the State fish and game laws, Mr. Simmons warned. The 1338 regulations als continue the bag limit of five squirrels a day. Included in the southérn zone are Benton, White, Wells, Adams, Jay, Howard, Blackford, Carroll, Tippecanoe, Warren, Fountain, Montgomery, Clinton, Tipton, Madison, Delaware, Randolph, Wayne, Henry, Hancock, Marion, Hamilton, Boone, Hendricks, Putnam, Parke, Vermillion, Posey, Vanderburg, Warrick. Spencer, Perry, Crawford. Harrison, Flovd, Clark, Jefferson Switzerland, Ohio, Dearborn, Franklin. Union, Rush, Favette, Shelby, Johnson, Morgan, Scott, Ripley, Decatur, Monroe, Brown, Bartholomew, Greene, Daviess, Martin, Lawrence, Jackson and Jennings Counties.
MITERN RETR ING Foy ACTIVE
1847 ROGERS
AWER ons FINESY SILVERY IAT:
RRS a tea
50 PIECE SERVICE FOR EIGHT
$2925
Open Stock Price $58.50
NNT INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Pension Plan Leader and Family
DYKSTRA GIVEN ~ SUPPORT FOR ~~ SECURITY JOB
|
Believed in Line for Post In Reorganization if He Wants it.
E | WASHINGTON, June 22 (NEA). | —Chairmanship of the new Federal
E | proval.
[Security Agency probably will be
| Li
{ |
| {
|offered to Clarence Addison Dyk-| | stra, president of the University of |
| Wisconsin,
Mr. Dykstra’s name has been pre- |
| sented to President Roosevert, and is expected to get the President's apThe chairmanship is one
E [of the most important jobs created E | by Roosevelt's two government re-
Times Photos.
Dr. Francis BE. Townsend and his family pose for photographers upon their Arrival at Union Station vesterday, With him are Mrs. Townsend and their pran@daaghter, Miss Weloise Sherling, Tox Angeles,
Text of Gov. Townsend's Talk
Following 1s the full tex! of Gorernor Townsend's address before the Townsend National Recovery Plan con-
vention at Cadle Tabernacle:
Dr. Townsend, Mr. Chairman, Men and women of the Townsend Convention: Tt is a real pleasure for me to welcome you to Indiana, because three Yvears ago 1 attended and spoke at the first Townsend Recovery Plan Convention in Chicago. Aince then 1 have spoken at many of vour meetings. met many of your leaders, and followed vour Progress with great personal mterest. Indiana is indeed happy to be the host to a movement of such vast social significance and force, and I know we all wish your stay here td be a pleasant and memorable one. I recall with considerable satisfaction that 1. as Lieutenant-Gov-ernor, was a guest and participant in your first convention. If I remember correctly very few public officials had the temerity to attend. I believe that T was one, and that the state treasurer of the State of Washington was the other. But today, if T am correctly informed. you have many state officials and Congressmen who are glad and happy to be with you. When 1 first came in contact with the Townsend Plan four years aro. I was seeking some way to provide more security for the mothers and fathers of America. 1 had seen many of my neighbors, hard-working, respectable citizens, wiped out in their old age, turned from their farms to the poorhouses. Tt was shocking ta realize that thasze wha had given their lives and their strength and their wisdom toward building America were being neglected at an age when they should enjoy security and contentment. I found that vou. as members of the Townsend Clubs, were sincere, earnest people seeking that same goal, and IT took pride in gOINK Hefore vour convention and telling you 80.
AN OBJECTIVE FOR ALL
It has been the work vou have
Y gone that has shown the peope that
? cary
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the old-age pension, first criticized and denounced as socialistic and impossible, is humane and necesTt was at that convention that I first saw those little buttons which vou proudly wore—those buttons which said, “Youth for Work, Age for Leisure.” Herve is an objective toward whieh all can work. and in which all may jom. To the voung. starting out in the word with vigor and high ambitions, should g6 the chanees to work, The elderly who have passed the meridian of life should enjoy the right to spend their remaining years in comfort and ease. Wea will not challenge your objectives, nor will any American nor any Christian, way--starting through life with opportunity offered to those through whose veins flows the blood of youth, and then rest and comfort when the life's work is over, We nave furnished the aged horse who has done his duty, the privilege to return to the pasture whan his bones grow stiff and his tired body can No longer haul the plow. Duty commands we do as much for human beings. As Lisutenant-Governor of MTdiana three vears ago, [ had the opportunity to work for and sign the first bill ever to provide assistance for the elderly of Indiana.
Tt is the Christian!
A year later when I became Gov-
ernor T advocated and obtained the passage of another bill increasing the scope of old-age assistance. Fach vear the amount of assistance
to the elderly of Tndiana has been increased, My experience in government has taught me that all change must come gradually, that too sudden and abrupt change brings a reaction which sweeps away all the gains. ideal of old-age pensions so desply in the minds of the people that progress along this line should continue until we have reached our goal. As T see it, adequate pensions for our elder citizens should be a movement in which all persons of all political faiths should participate. Unfortunately, I believe, a few professional politicians have seized upon the movement as Aa short cut to their own political suecess. They have injured the movement. The people unfamiliar with the movement are less eager to support vour fight when they think of it only as a means of keeping some politician in office. The Townsend Recovery Plan today is more than a dream shared hy a few ardent souls. Tt has gone through its period of infancy. and its periad of disillusionment when it found that those who ciied aloud their friendship before elections were bling and deaf afterward. The Townsend Recovery Plan is a mature movement Which has done much to contribute to the American way of living.
IT have great respect for vour
ELAPPER FANNY
I have tried to instill the ’
leaders, and I know that the disappointments, the hard battles. have given them courage and wisdom for the gradual progress that must ‘come, Our goal can be reached if all those in search of greater security for the aged pull together, and it tha general public understands our objectives,
9 WISH YOU SUCCESS
As one who profoundly hopes the coming vears will bring an abund-' ance of security and enjoyment for, those who have spent their youth
making fortunes for other men, I recommend to you two things. First make sure who are your true friends, and who are trying to ride on vour shoulders for their own selfish gain, and cling to the true pelievers. Beware of false friends. Second, po forth to the worker, the farmer, the businessman and all others and tell them how adequate old age security will benefit all of America, And let us preserve the liberty | awd freedom of our people Lat us guarantes freedom of speech and thought and worship. You may be sure that while IT am Governor, vou will be protected in your right to meet, and to speak freeIv what is in your minds and hearts. I wish you success in this struggle, in which 1 count myself a soldier—ta bring to every American the abundance promised by the richness of our nation. God blest van!
Ry Sylvia
r
\
“Beachecombing isn't what it was,
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> _l
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organization plans,
|
which become
Tn the Pederal Security Agency
will be the Social Security Board, the National Youth Administration, the Civilian Conservation ‘Corps, the Public Health Service, the ce of Bducation and the U. 8. Employment Service. President Roosevelt first offered the post of Arthur J. Altmeyer, head of the Social Security Board, it is learned. Mr. Altmeyer turned it down, preferring to take reappointment to his present job. He comes up for reappointment this summer and the term of office is six vears; in that job Mr. Altmeyer (whose reappointment can be taken for granted) will serve out his term no matter who ix elected President next year, The head of the Federal Security Agency, however, will be like a cabinet officer, in that he will keep hix job only as long as the Administration which stays in, When Mr. Altmever declined the job, the Prasident is understood to have offered it to Josephine Roche, who was Assistant Treasury Seeretary in charge of the Public Health Service from Dee. 1, 1934 to Nov. 1, 1937. Miss Roche declined on the around that she had to devote all her time to her private business (she owns and manages extensive coal mining properties in Colorado, and quit her Treasury job on that account), Mr, Altmever and Miss Roche, then, are understood to have brought up the name of Mr, Dykstra
named him
Clarence A. Dykstra
EDUCATOR CONDEMNS SCHOOL HAND-RAISING
LANGHORNE, Pa, June 22 (U,
P) —Hand-raising in the class [room is A handicap to learning, ae cording to Dr. Gary Cleveland Myers, head of the department of Parent Education at Cleveland College, Western Reserve University. Speaking at the fifth Conference on Education and the Exceptional Child at the Woods Schools here,
Dr. Myers said: “One wonders why thix almost universal practice of hand-raising still persists in the classroom. “Can we think of anything more
selfish in its motives or more de= |
structive in tx effect on ihe men= tal health of the child actempting td speak in class? If he pauses, up go the waving hands of hisx coms rades threatening to take his place. The victory in the long run ix to the strong in terms of callousness of these needless barbarie annovers,”
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