Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1939 — Page 25

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VENEZUELANS | The Gallup Poll

EMERGE FROM RULE BY ONE

Nolan Returns, Says People Enthusiastic Over | Democracy.

The people of Venezuela, emerging | from a 27-year-old dictatorship, are]

1 working enthusiastically in estab-| lishing a democracy, according to U.! S. District Attorney Val Nolan. Mr, Nolan returned to Indianapolis yesterday from a trip to the South American country with a group of U. S. citizens who were guests of Venezuela during their stay. | The purpose of the visit was to aid the Venezuelans in re-establishing the practices of democracy. The delegation also visited Colombia and Panama. “Manv of the persons now comprising Venezuela's officialdom were political refugees and prisoners during the reign of Juan Gomez, called the dictator.” Mr. Nolan said. “They lived in other countries during his! rule. many returning with Ph. D. degrees after long study in foreign! universities.

present time, according to surveys Opinion. »

» 2

» Third Term Oppo ‘Some in Jail’ | “Some were in jail, however. One a young senator, showed me the scars on his ankle caused by irons placed on him during his 12 years in jail. “When Gomez died, his successor | and the President now, E. Lopez Contreras, neleazed the political prisoners and spread word that the exiles were invited to return home. They came, filled with respect for the democratic wavs of their temporary lands of refuge and resolved toe put them into effect in Venezuela. “The rank and file of Venezuelans sre very happy with the present government because the benefits of the. program are being executed with facility.

Re-Election Restricted

“The object improvement

EW YORK

N

of Public Opinion.

1936, a majority of Pennsylvania see the Republican Party,

OFFER TRAINING FOR DOMESTICS

WPA-Indiana Job Service Course to Be Given In Five Cities.

of this program iz of the condition the masses. Now ther want to reelect their president, even though he has had the constitution amended restricting the "presidency to one term.” Mr. Nolan spoke io Venezuelans on the social aspects of crime. He said there is no, jury svstem there, chiefiy because ‘the jury system is Anglo-Saxon in origin while Venezuela is of Spanish origin. Women do not vote nor do they have to testify ¥n court. The Government’s chief {sources of revenue, he said, are from the export tax on cil and from the: tax an imports. The present educational facilities. giving the average nerson nn better than & sixth-grade education. sre being expanded. Public health improvements and industrial ana agricultural expancion are also planned.

of

Hoosier women will be trained by the WPA for several hundred jobs as domestics as soon as facilities are found, Stanton T. Bryan, deputy state administrator, said today. Yesterday President Rooseveit approved the expenditure of $56.820 in | WPA funds for training household workers, Senator VanNuys (D. Ind.) announced. In its monthly surveys the State Employment Service has found 100 jobs in Indianapolis alone for domestic workers and several hundred more throughout the state. They have been unable te fill the majority of these.

Job Service Planned Purpose of the homemaking course will be to “qualify women for these jobs,” Mr. Brvan said.

REPORT 3 CULTURES

WPA for training and attempt to place them after their study has been completed. Training in general housework, sewing, washing and ironing. cleaning and cooking will be given at South Rend. Ft. Wavne. Evansville, Terre Haute or Lafayette and here, Mr. Bryan said.

Furnished House Sought

Approximately 20 persons will be trained in each class. Civic clubs ‘will be solicited to provide a furnished house for the use of the students. In a similar course given 2 vear ago. hie said. the Rotary Club at Evansville turned over its clubhouse. Trainees will receive no pay and the course will be open to any persen interested, Mr. Bryan stated. In the previous course entrance was limited to thiose on the WPA rolls and trainees are paid a salary lower than the WPA rate. One supervisor and one assistant. both trained home economists, wiil teach the stud®nts for a five to sixhour pericd each day, Mr. Bryan said.

The Employment Service will ‘sponsor the two months course in IN SO 1 five major cities, he said. The 1 S, Service will refer persons to the

WASHINGTON. July 14 (U. PY — Dr. Frank H. H. Roberts Jr.. Smithsonian archeologist, reported todav that a study of mwehistoric remains nf primitive peoples of the Southwest indicate that three distinct cultures existed side by side for many generations. Existence of these three cultures explains, he said, the diversity of ways of life among these most advanced of the aboriginal civilizations of the New Worid. The three cultures are Anasazi. comprising the basket makasrs and the pueblo builders: the Hohokam. the lowland dwellers who build single familv houses and the first big-scale irrigators. and the Mogoiion. the race that engaged in huntIng and farming at the same time. Dr. Roberts found that droughts. as shown by moifiure rings in trees used in building prehistoric dwellings, had a determinative effect on the Anasazi culture. Expansion and growth of the mountain cliff dwell-: ers coincided with favorable weather conditions.

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Political sentiment in Pennsylvania is leaning Republican at the

Pennsylvania Is Leaning Republican,

By DR. GEORGE GALLUP

Director, American Irstitute of Public Opinion . July 14 —Pennsylvania, which went Democratic 1636 but elected a Republican Governor last autumn, continues to lean toward the Republican side, judging by surveys of political | sentiment conducted throughout the state by the American Institute

Whereas President Roosevelt carried the state by 58 per cent in |

rather than the Democrats, win the Presi- |

I the Pennsylvania survey are:

| Arthur H. Vandenberg ........ 14 | | Gov. Arthur James .. ... ceive 3 Herbert Hoover ...... sessisa 8] Alfred Landon ...... Cheeees 3 William E. Borah ........... 2 Others mentioned included Bruce Barton, Henry Ford. Fiorello La Guardia, and Glenn

| Frank.

by the American Institute of Public

sed, Survey Shows

in |

voters now say they would like to |!

, dential election of 1940. The di- | vision of strength between the | Republicans and Democrats is |! sufficiently close at this time, | however, to in- | dicate that | P e nnsylvania, with its 36 | elect; zal votes, is likely to be | one of the chief battlegroun d s | Ise in the cam- : | |PUBLIC’OPINION} paign next | year. | Using methods which have | nroved accurate in two national elections and more than 50 state | and local elections, the survey explored the sentiment of a crosssection of Pennsylvania voters on their party preference today, the | third term, and candidates for 1940. i The trend toward Republicanism is indicated in the answers to the question: “Which party would ! | you like to see win the Presiden- | tial election in 1940?” | Would Like Democrats. . .... 486% | Would Like Republicans .... 54

This division of sentiment is | exactly the same as the vote cast | in the gubernatorial election last autumn, in whic the Republican, Arthur James, polled 54 per cent against 46 per cent for the Democratic candidate. Party defection is approximately five times as great among Demo- | cratic voters as among Republicans.

z x 2

i THIRD term for President Roosevelt is not popular with | a majority of Pennsylvania voters. ! In answer to the general guestion whether they would vote for Roosevelt for a third term if he ran, 36 per cent replied “yes,” 54 | per cent “no.” If Roosevelt did run for a third ! | term, and the Republicans put up | Thomas E. Dewey of New York to | ! run against him, a majority of Pennsylvania voters say at the present time that they would vote | for Mr. Dewey. The actual vote is: |

DEWEY cciiceisiiaiiiies 550, | Roosevelt ......:..cccc0uuss 45 Mr. Dewey's lead is accounted |

for chiefly by the fact that nearly | a third of the Demcecrats say they | would rather switch parties and |

vote for the voung Republican racket-buster than vote for a | Roosevelt third term. | = 2 » {

YN case Mr. Roosevelt decides not | to run in 1940, Vice President | Garner would be the leading ! choice of Pennsylvania Democrats, | with James A. Farley second, and | Cordell Hull third. However, more : than half the Democratic voters in the state say thev are undecided about their choice at the pres- | ent time. !

The leading choices of those | with opinions are: IfFF. D. R. Doesn't Run Per Cent Democrats Favoring | . John N. Garner ............. 68% James A. Farley ............. 12 | . Cordell Hull ........... Seties 8 * Frank Murphy ........ seiee. ¥. | . Harry L. Hopkins ......... 4 f Ex-Gov. George Earle ...... 2 Senator Joseph Guffey ...... 2 Joseph P. Kennedy ......... 2 Herbert H. Lehman ......... 1 Others .....cccocciciiscaies 4

Among the others mentioned are ! Supreme Court Justice William O. | Douglas, Solicitor General Robert | H. Jackson, Paul V. McNutt, Am- | bassador William Bullitt, a native of Philadelphia, and Harold L. | Ickes. Among Republican voters | throughout Pennsylvania. Thomas | E. Dewey is at present the favor- | ite choice for the presidency in | | 1940, with Senator Taft second, | and Senator Vandenberg third. | Mr. Dewey, who received 54 per | cent of the Republican preference vote in a recent Institute survey of | the nation as a whole, polls 53 per cent in Pennsylvania. i Leadinf Republican choices in |

Per Cent | Republicans Favoring | Thomas E. Dewey ......... ...58% | Robert Taft ..... fest iee «vss:68 {

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Four Plants in South Bend And Mishawaka to Help Cut Relief Costs.

Timer Special

SOUTH BEND, July 14 —Four

major industrial plants in South!

Bend and Mishawaka today decided to employ only St. Joseph County residents in the future to reduce unemployment here. Although seniority rights of out-of-county employees will be observed, the plants have agreed to

hire others only in case of a shortage of skilled workers.

Portage Township Trustee Alex

| Langel told the industrialists that {52 per cent of all persons on relief

came to St. Joseph County since

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

GALL WORKERS Shaky London ‘Counts’ Thousands Dead, IN COUNTY FIRST 300,000 Wounded in Week of Air Raids

perhaps as many as 300,000 wounded in a week.

These figures—guesses, estimates, what you will—are based upon a recent statement that, despite won-

antiaircraft guns, balloon barrage and fighter planes, perhaps 75 per cent of the enemy planes would succeed in reaching London. | Such a possible catastrophe in ithe number of wounded people pre- | supposes that the Government has {taken all necessary steps to have

ion hand, to have adequately

{ enough doctors, surgeons and nurses Jac

1930. Ke said it was this move- | 2€ds, and to arrange for rapid evac- | ment of out-of-county persons to uation of the injured to safer places {South Bend for employment after

{the 1929 crash that built this city’s

relief load to about 1700 families.

Companies represented at the | September, adequate arrangements! ter appreciated in Virginia, where |negie Museum director, is not so conr:ference were the Mishawaka | for medical services are still lacking. he won his fame and where his hide sure he wants to part with the skele-

Rubber & Woolen Manufacturing Co.; the Studebaker Corp. the

Oliver Farm Equipment Co.

joutside London as soon as possible.

LONDON, July 14 (NEA) —If de ics are maintained by public volcombined German and Italian air untary gifts. ‘fleets should come over London in| bomb-dropping wave after wave, has been evolved. This Greater Lonhour after hour and day after day, 900. With its some eight million peoit is estimated that in addition to Pl€, has been divided into 10 sectors

thousands of killed, there would be radiating from Charing Cross.

On paper a good war-time scheme

In each sector there are voluntary hos{pitals and London County Council hospitals. The plan: After patients are treated in any of these hospitals, they will be taken to institutions

iderful preparations for defense by lying outside the main parts of the icity. Each of the 10 sectors has a

medical group officer, a lay officer and a chief matron.

So far, so good. But the widespread complaint is that the Minis-| try of Health has been lax in not! naming some . one person to take, charge of and co-ordinate all the! medical, surgical and nursing efforts necessary in case of war. Nor has! there been any very clear statement as to what ambulance services are available, nor who is to have general! charge of them. | Also, if there has been any pro-

_ FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1939

TOLEDO SIXTH PORT TOLEDO, O., July 14 (UU. P).— This port city ranks sixth in the United States, according to ton=nage figures covering 1937, published by Army engineers. ‘In 1937 Toledo

handled 25,465,642 tons of freight valued at $113,335,558.

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vision for underground, bombproof surgical wards, with adequate lighting and other facilities vital for emergency operations, little has been made known to the general public.

months after the war scare of last suggested the skeleton might be bet-

{ London has two kinds of hospi- is mounted.

{tals — those supported by taxation

L : Two Southern museums—one in tion” created by newspaper stories Dodge Manufacturing Co. and the raised by the London County Coun- Richmond, Va. the other in Jack-|that the skeleton “was not appre-

Old Bones Get a Break

PITTSBURGH, July 14 (U. P.).—The skeleton of Gen. Stonewall kson’'s famous war horse, “Old Sorrell,” who “would not run except

protect- | towards the enemy.” today was rapidly becoming one of the prize attrac‘ed hospital wards with sufficient tions at yay. po E P

People of Pittsburgh first became “Old Sorrell”-conscious a few days | | But the supposition is wrong. Nine 280 when several museum officials] soil.

be delighted to welcome the bones of the war horse back to his native

But now, Dr. Andrey Avinoff, Car-

ton. He developed the ‘false no-

icil and the great teaching hospitals son's Mill, W. Va.--said they would ‘ciated in Pittsburgh.”

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