Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1939 — Page 10

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PAGE 10

TITHE PRINCIPLE IS LAW OF GOD,

The Gallup Poll

INSTITUTE TOLD

Roads to Peace Debated at

Butler Conference; Parsimony Scored.

{ The principle of the tithe is God's | law and the parsimony of the av-| erage Christian is a direct rebel-| sec- |

lion against it, John G. Alber, retary of the Nebraska Christian Missionary Alliance said today. He addressed the annual summer institute at the University College of Religion. speaking today were Dr. Clayton Morrison, editor of The; Christian Century and Gerhart H.| Seger, nan Reichstag. Peace Oebate Continues

A debate on pacifism, what it is and how to achieve it, was to con-

midButler

tinue today, tomorrow and Friday G, QO, P. Voters Think Party Wil Have Better Chance to Win in 1940 With Liberal Candidate.

{ By DR. GEORGE GALLUP Director, American Institute of Public Opinion EW YORK. July 5.—The dominant pull of sentiment among the rank and file of Republican voters today rather than the conservative side, and a large majority O. P. has a better chance of winning in 1940 with a liberal candidate and a progressive platform than with a

at the sessions. Participants argument yesterday E. Fey. New York City,

in a three-cornered were Harcid secretary of

the Fellowship of Reconciliation, al James secretary of Temperance | and Social Welfare of the United

leading pacifist organization: A. Crain, and

Christian Missionary Society,

Homer L. Chaillaux of the Avene

can Legion. The Rev. W. R. Walker, Stand- | ard Publishing Co. president, and pastor of the Indianola Christian Church, Columbus, O., delivered the | sermon for the night service.

Roads to Peace Cross

Mr. Fev described the futility of the Great War, insisted that the next war would be equally futile, and that the only way to stop war

was for every one to refuse to fight. declared himself in;

Mr. Crain favor of a world organization with an adequate police force to make its decrees effective. Mr. Chaillaux said the only way to preserve peace was to have an adequate defense.

Scores Praise of Debt

he Rev. Mr. Walker said that the Church today is not attacked but that it is neglected. “Contracts no longer are respected.” he said, “thrift is regarded as a vice, and none is disturbed about any sort of religious conviction because he believes no. longer that any item of faith matters. his complete abandonment of standards has led to the rule of opportunism in every department of life. “Despite all this, the future of the church is bright. After all, the gospel of Jesus Christ is the onl av out for humanity and sooner or later it must be recognized Just what it is.”

Also | Charles |

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| An American Institute of Public Opinion interviewer getting the | With the aid of a nation-wide interviewing staff, | the Institute conducted a poll among Republican voters which shows

opinions of a voter,

that the majority think the G. O. in 1940 if it nominates a liberal candidate,

” 2 ”

| {

voters believe the G.

TWO SAFES LOOTED, STORE HELD UP HERE

Looting of two safes of more than $175 cash and the holdup of a 65-year-old drugstore manager were investigated by police today. George Schwenk, 65, assistant | manager of Haags drugstore at 301 W. Washington St., reported that a | sharp-faced man held him up shortly after 10 p. m. and took an undetermined amount of money. The | man's gun was partly covered with la newspaper, he said. | A safe valued at $50 and containing $100 cash, and about $8 worth of cigarets were taken from the Consumers Gas Co. Monday.

The safe, broken open, was found later by police in a wooded lot near Arlington Ave. and Road 52. A quantity of dental gold and $75 cash was taken from a safe at the] office of A. F. Eiteljorg; 82 E.| Washington St. Dr. William B.| Saltis, 28, of 527 N. Bradley St. found the office door had been “jimmied,” he told police Abe Cohen, 46, of 1201 Ymion St., | reported the theft of $18 worth of | chickens from his poultry store, 1018 | S. Meridian St.

for |

BOARD SETS HEARING ON SCHOOL BUDGET

The State Tax Board today set next Tuesday for a hearing on the for | appropriations totalling;

City School Board's emergency $2.951.057 for expenses the remainder of 1939. The appropriation request is in-

‘cluded in the School Board's 1939-

request

1340 budget which totals $6,871,318. |

(calling for a tax levy next year of | 96 cents. | The granting of the special appropriation for the remainder of

| this year is a routine procedure re- |

| quired by law on budgets set up on a July 1 fiscal year basis.

ARMY WILL TRAIN RESERVES AT FORT

| A group of organized reserve corps second lieutenants was to report today at Ft. Benjamin Harrison for a year’s active duty preliminary to regular Army appointment. ' Those to be trained by the 19tn Field Artiliery included Donald E. Monger, 1528 N. LaSalle St, George Pohlman, Ave. both of Indianapolis; Paul A. Derra, Vincennes: R. A. Hartman, New Albany; Robert K. Hirschert, West Lafayette, and Edward P. Hurley, Lafayette,

To be trained by the 11th Infantry |

were Don A. Hopkins, South Bend; James N. Jean, Manilla; George IL. Kinnett, Tipton; Gene R. Welch, New Castle; Victor B. Lindquist, Ft. Haves, Columbas, O, Taul, Winchester, Ky.

DAY

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and | 3653 Graceland |

and James]

[ it is important to know how the

| liberal? Hew do the people rank

| BOYS BUILD LARGE TELESCOPE

| bers of the Charlestown branch of

P. has more chance of winning

2 2

is toward the liberal of party

conservative candidate. These are the indications in a national study among Republican voters completed by the Institute. Using sampling methods which have proved accurate in two national elec - tions, and more than 50 state and local elections in the last four years, the Institute put the following two issues to a crosssection of Republican voters in every state. “Do you think the Republican party should be more liberal or more conservative than it was in the 1936 Presidential campaign?” More Liberal .. More Conservative . About the Same “Do you think the Republican party has a better chance or a worse chance of winning in 1940, if it nominates a liberal candidate | and adepts a liberal platform?” Better Chance ......., Worse Chance

AMERICAN INSTITUTE

ropLIcYoPINION

NEW ROBBERY LAID T0 ‘TAPE BANDITS’

Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind, July 5.—Indiana State Police today were confronted with one more crime blamed on the “tape bandits” who were ac-

" $E INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

tive around Indianapolis earlier this

year.

The bandits abducted Dr. Charles Cooney at*gun-point from in front of St. Joseph's Hospital here Monday night, bound him with tape and ropes, robbed him of more than $100 and a watch, and tossed him into a woods near Columbia City. He freed himself by sawing the ropes with keys, and went to the farm home of John Traster to re-

port the matter. He could give only a meager fexription of his abductors.

SPINSTERS SEEK PENSIONS LONDON, July 5 (U. P.).—Two hundred spinsters, lobbying for $5 weekly pensions to be paid at the age of 55, were dispersed by policemen when they began button-hol-ing members of Parliament at Grand Central Commons, shouting: “We want justice and pensions.”

ALDERMAN EVIDENCE ENDS

HOLLYWOOD, July 5 (U, P).— The $15,000 alienation of affections suit against Ruth Etting will be given to Judge Samuel Blake late today or tomorrow. Only final arguments remained to be heard in the action filed by Mrs. Alma Alderman, divorced wife of Miss Etting’s husband, Myrl Alderman.

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The significance of this sentiment within the rank and file of | the party is two-fold. First, it in- | dicates that Republican candidates of a liberal turn of mind are like- |

| 1y to go into the G. O. P. conven- |

tion next vear with more popular |

support than conservative candi- |

dates. { Second, it shows that the rank | and file do not at the present time agree with those Republican party | leaders who think the G. O. P.

should establish itself as the party | |

of out-and-out conservatism cate- | gorically opposed to the New Deal | and all its reforms. Instead, they | appear to agree with the viewpoint | recently expressed by both Senator Borah and Alfred M. Landon that the party should avoid an ultraconservative attitude. The desire of the Republican rank-and-file to liberalize the party is not new. Institute surveys a year and a half ago found the same sentiment existing. In December, 1937, for example, nearly half of Republican voters (47 per cent) wanted the party to become more liberal than it had been in the 1936 campaign. 2 ” 2

MONG the rank and file of the Democratic Party, on the other hand, previous surveys have found a tendency to move in the opposite direction — toward the conservative side. Although the largest group think the policies of the New Deal should be continued pretty much along present lines. nevertheless the number who think the Administration should be more conservative is far greater than the number who think it should be more liberal. Thus the situation seems to be that a majority of Republican voters think their party should move toward the left, while among Democratic voters there is a growing tendency to move toward the | right. In the light of these tendencies

voters of the two parties classify some of the leading presidential | candidates. Are Thomas E. Dewey, Senator Vandenberg and Senator Taft—to name a few of the leading G. O. P. contenders—regarded by the voters as conservative or

Vice President Garner, Secretary Hull, Harry Hopkins? The Institute is now completing a survey which answers these questions.

BOSTON, July 5 (U. P.).—Mem-

the Boys’ Club of Boston have completed a 59-inch telescope.

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