Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 February 1940 — Page 6
PAGE 8
“THE INDIAN
J
CLAIMS EXPORT ~ GAINS INCLUDE
WAR SUPPLIES
Reed Asks New Deal to Drop Argument Pacts Are Peace Aids.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 (U. P.)—
Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R. N. Y)|
called on the New Deal today to discard its “pious” argument that the trade treaty program aids peace,
‘and to admit that the export increase has included death-dealing war materials. “I hope,” he told the Democrats, . You will be fair in presenting your
case by placing such exports as are used exclusively for peaceful pursuits in one category and those used . for war and mass murder in another.” - Rep. Reed spoke in House debate on the pending bill to extend the Administration’s trade treaty program three years from June 12,
Plan Unemployment Parley -
Meanwhile, -2¢ members of the House circulated a letter inviting colleagues to a conference on unemployment Monday. They disclaimed any idea of attempting to form a new bloc, but asserted the conference was designed “to work out and then act upon the answer to the greatest problem of our age.” Both Republican and Democratic members were included in the sponsoring group. Consideration of amendments pre‘vented a House Banking Committee vote on the $100,000,000 Export-Im-port bank bill that would permit. another loan to Finland. Members ~ predicted the bill would be reported after another meeting Friday.
NLRB Union Probed
House investigators of the Na- , tional Labor Relations Board turned their attention today to the outside . connections of the NLRB employees’ . own union, which is not affiliated with the C. I. O. or A. F. of L. The investigators produced union . records showing small financial contributions to the Women’s Trade Union League of Washington, the Laundry Workers’ Organizing Committee, the Southern Tenant Farmers Union, and the Washington : Friends of Spanish Democracy. The committee yesterday produced . extensive correspondence to show ‘that the Board actively had solicited witnesses to testify before the Senate Labor Committee against Wagner Act amendments and had com‘mended a C. I. O. official for arousing opposition to the: A. F. of L.- : sponsored amendments.
Senate Hears State Aids
In the Senate, a special subcomimttee of the foreign relations committee heard State Department officials on “certain aspects” of American-Japanese relations, and ‘deferred action on a resolution to invoke the Neutrality Act in the Sino-Japanese War.
JAMES ROOSEVELT DENIES DESERTION
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 21 (U. P.)— James Roosevelt, motion picture producer son of the President, denied today that he had been mentally cruel to the wife he married eight Pears ago or that he had deserted er
His answer to her cross-complaint asked that the bill she had entered be dismissed. It was a routine preliminary to their impending divorce suit. It was believed he would withdraw his suit before the case came to court and allow his wife to obtain ‘ the divorce.
E. C. Atkins & Co. employees of 20 years or more service will be honored by the Atkins Pioneers at
their 34th annual banquet in the Hotel Severin Saturday night. Twenty-seven new members of the service club will receive their first, or 20-year, pins. One employee, Albert Hert, a saw smith, will receive a 55-year service pin. Those to receive 50-year pins are Albert T. Potter, who has been purchasing agent at the firm since the position was created; Henry F. Brink, a machinist tool and die maker, and Frank Suher who has been a saw smith all his life. Mr. Suher comes from a family of Atkins “old-timers.” His father—Louis—was the first employee of E. C. Atkins. George Hollins, who like his father is a saw smith, will receive a 45-year pin, Carl Aumann, also a saw smith whose father was a saw smith and served the firm 60 years before his death, will receive a 40-year emblem. These men will be special. guests of the club which was organized in 1906 with 62 charter members and now has 285 members. Other employees already have re-
received a 60-year pin before illness forced him to retire several years ago. Henry OC. Atkins Sr., company president, and Fred C. Gardner, secretary-treasurer, are active members of the club with 55-year service pins. Francis M. Hager Sr. a saw smith whose father was an early Atkins engineer, also holds a 50-year pin. William A. Atkins, company vice president, and C. A. Newport, club secretary for 30 years, have 50-year pins, as has Henry Zschech. The new members are: Chris Achgill, Juilus Albers, Elmer D. Balay, Grover C. Baker, Jacob Bartick, Clarence Bills, Glenn Boyer, Edgar C. Browning, Merle Browning, William Bruhn, Fred Bunch, Charles Clark, Maurice Collins, Martin Donahue, John ¥. Dregman, Marshal M. Edmonds, William G. Gamstetter, Henry Kerlin, William E. Leapley, Eric Lindquist, Charles Marion, William E. May, Harris Mondary, Walter Moore, William H. Reimer, Claude Short and Raleigh Wininger, New officers will be installed during the business meeting at the dinner, They are: Mr. Atkins Sr., honorary president; Raymond P. McKinney, president; William A. Weaver, vice president and visitor; Lloyd Z. Beckwith, treasurer, and Clarence A. Newport, secretary. An assistant secretary has not been nominated.
Approximately 40 members of the
ceived service pins. Charles Fenton|
127 Join Atkins Pioneers After 20 Years
1 Raymond P. McKinney eo » Club president for ’40. 2. Frank Suher . . . son of first Atkins eniployee. 3. Albert H. Hert . « « 55 years a saw smith. ; 4, Albert T. Potter , purchasing agent, first and always.
5. Henry F. Brink . . . die maker for half a century.
50-Year Service Records Common at City Saw Plant
Ladies’ 10-Year Service Club will dine in the hotel at the same time. Their 1940 officers, already elected, are: Miss Elizabeth Sutton, president; Mrs. Edna Bunce, vice president, and Mrs. Christina Miller, sec-retary-treasurer. New members to receive 10-year pins are: Mrs. Joyce Bogard, Mrs. Mertie Dunbar, Mrs. Mildred Potter, Miss Grace Cochran, Miss Ida Kaiser, Miss Mayme Miller, Mrs. Blanche Stierwalt and Mrs, Ethel Ward. : Miss Mary D. Henderson, secretary to Mr. Atkins Sr., will receive a 30-year service pin. Fifteen-year pins’ will be given to Mrs. Kathryn Carpenter, Mrs. Rosetta School and Mrs. Mae Martindale. Fourteen members of the Atkins Colored Service Club will hold their dinner the same night at the Senate Ave. Y. M. C. A, and will elect new officers. Following the dinner they will join with the Pioneers at the Severin for a social hour
TAKE APPLICATIONS FOR FARMER LOANS
Applications for 1940 emergency crop and feed loans now are being received by Glen E. Gabhart at 439 Federal Building.
Mr. Gabhart is receiving applications from Marion County farmers for Alan L. Galyean, field supervisor of the emergency crop and feed loan section of the Farm Credit Administration. As in past years, money will: be loaned only to farmers whose case requirements are small and who cannot. obtain a loan from any other source. The money loaned will be limited to applicant’s necessary cash needs in preparing and cultivating 1940 crops or in purchasing or producing food for his own livestock. Borrowers are required to give és security a first lien on the crop financed or the livestock to be fed. 23
PRESS SEARCH FOR NEW ALBANY BANDIT
NEW ALBANY, Ind, Feb. 21 (U. P.) —Police today pressed a search for a bandit who late yesterday robbed the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of $100. It was the third robbery attributed to him in the past three weeks, His description was similar to that} of a single unnfasked bandit who robbed a grocery three weeks ago and last week held up a drug store
across the street.
ee —— :
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J Philadelphia.
| |Roanoke — $26,378 for a public
|ESTATE OF $10, 500
‘| mately $10,500 was left to relatives
1 | Speedway, according to terms of his {will filed for probate yesterday. Mr. || Porter died last Saturday.
| King, draftsman, and Mrs. Hattie
{ Porter, who was known throughout /|the world as an electrical speed || timing expert, was president of the.
|| was left to three cousins, Mrs. Min- ‘| nie White, Mrs. Dora Ross and Mrs.
: in 1937 on hotel stationary. |KENNEDY TO LEAVE POLITICS
J political picture. { last night on his return from a - | Florida vacation that he would end | his political career when he com- | pletes his tour as Ambassador.
“Build- oy Good News For Suffering Women
BISHOP SCORES ‘TAME’ RELIGION
Church Needs to Proclaim A Specific, Personal God, Methodists Told.
(Continued from Page One)
our message that the world might believe that Jesus is Christ.” “Let there be no blackout of brotherhood in the world. “Methodism stands for the unalterable sanctity of the American home, for the loyalties and patriotism of the public school, for the rights of worship according to the: dictates of conscious, for justice to all regardless of color or race, for economic equity, and just, civil procedure.” Bishop Holt, a former president of the Federal Council of Churches, declared that two deep needs of united Methodism were a new appreciation of the church and a new sense of the realties of God. “The divisions of historic Christianity are slowly being healed,” Bishop Holt said. “We must put our hands into the hand of God and walk on even into a dark hour of history. We cannot enter into this union of Methodism without being lifted ‘above petty denominational enthusiasms, without getting a new grip on the meaning of life, without releasing those huge streams of Jenergy that come from God.” Bishop Lowe, in his opening statement this morning, recalled some of the large meetings of the Advance that have been held in other cities, calling particular attention to the 7000 who attended in
Expect 3000 Tonight Bishop Lowe, who himself has been addressing similar meetings in the South, was to make the principal address of the afternoon sesison at 4:30 o'clock in the Central Methodist Church. Earlier in the afternoon men and women were to separate to discuss their own parts in the porgram of the united Church. ‘Tonight, Bishops Lowe, Shaw and Holt wil laddress a youth rally at Roberts Park Church and Bishops Holt, Decell and Lowe, an adult rally at the Central Avenue Church. A total attendance of 3000 is expected.
INFIRMARY PROJECT ON WPA'S PROGRAM
An $82,060 improvement program at‘ the Marion County Infirmary is among six WPA projects in the state costing a total of $796,276 sent to WPA headquarters in Ww for final approval. Other projects awaiting final sanction, according to Stanton T. Bryan, deputy state WPA administrator, are: Bloomington—$476,720 for construction of storm sewers; Valparaiso—$137,155 for street and alley improvements; Mitcliell—$66,211 for construction of sanitary sewers;
school vocational building, and
Aurora—$5743 to improve the athe letic field.
LEFT BY ODIS PORTER An estate estimated at approxi-
and associates by Odis A. Porter, timer for the Indianapolis ‘Motor
The will provided for distribution | on an equal basis of 30 shares of stock in Porter, Glore & Glass, Inc. electrical contractors, to Harvey A
Hoeferlin, assistant secretary. Mr.
company. - Other personal property
Clara Haske. The will was written
BOSTON, Feb. 21 (U. P.).—Joseph P. Kennedy, ambassador to Great Britain, counts himself out of the He announced
POLIS TIMES
F. D. R-GARNER | SLATE AGAINIS |
A ‘POSSIBILITY
Conservatives May Cling to r
Texan if Roosevelt Seeks ~~ Third Term.
(Continued from Page One)
Mr. Garner (again after the all but open warfare that the Vice Presjdent has waged on him? And, vice versa, would -the Texan consent to take second place again? It doesn’t sound reasonable, but politics is not conducted on a reasonable basis—though politicians can become very “reasonable” on’ the showdown when victory at the polls becomes more important than personal feelings. Incompatibility does not carry the same weight in politics as in the divorce court.
Garner Wants Top Office
Mr. Garner and his friends will tell you publicly that he is running only for the Presidency. They conld not say anything else. So was he running only. for the Presidency in 1932. At least one astute gentleman close to the inside just now believes that the Vice President would accept the “call” of the conservatives and take second place again, and that Mr. Roosevelt would be under sufficient pressure from the conservatives—in the interest of party harmony—to accept him. | The conservatives have been whipped around lately by the New Deal politicoes, who with the aid of some old-line bosses have maneuvered the Garnerites into an almost impossible situation by filing the President’s name in primaries.
Others Hold Off
The Vice President has to go it alone. Other candidates are holding off as long as ‘the mystery of the third term persists, or else, like Jim Farley and Paul V. McNutt, preface their activities with the proviso, “If the President doesn’t want a third term.” Senator Burton K. * Wheeler, whom the Garner people tried to line up on their side, has disavowed them and has announced he will enter no primary where Mr. Roosevelt’s name has been filed, as that would be party to a move to split up “the liberal and progressive forces of the country.” . The best indication of the prevailing timidity of the politicians and officeholders in the face of the third-term threat is the evaporation of “anti-third-term” drives that were so boldly proclaimed a few months ago. Politicians are becoming reconciled for self-protec-tion, until the President speaks and makes it certain—if ever. Only last August, for instance, Senator Frederick VanNuys (D.
presumably including himself, who would refuse to support Mr. Roosevelt for a third nomination.
VanNuys Is Silent
The anti-third-termers were given a chance to declare themselves a few days ago when Senator “Cotton Ed” Smith of South Carolina, beat his broad breast. and said he would “walk out” of the convention if Mr. Roosevelt were renominated. But not a peep was heard from
“15 Senators.”
August that he would work within the party to try to prevent renomination of the President, recently he has indicated that he
ination—if the President wants it. Vandenberg and Taft Unite to Stop Dewey _
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 (U. P). a. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) and Robert A. Taft (R. O.) both candidates for the Republican
Congressional sources said today.
maries will be held.
“Talks on Film Choice—Robert A. Twente of the Indianapolis Photo Co. will speak before the Y. M. C, Camera Club at 8 p. m. today. His address on film characteristics and
how to choose films will be accompanied by demonstrations.
Marion League Elects—Charles A. Crumbo has been elected adjutant of the Indianapolis Detachment, Marine Corps League. Mr. Crumbo served with the Marines during the
World War. He also is a member of
the Veterans of Foreign ‘Wars and American Legion.
College Editor- Named—Miss Betty Spencer, Cincinnati, a junior, : has ‘been appointed edi tor-in-chief of “The Phoenix,” Marian College student publication. Miss Spencer, Miss Angelus Lynch, Indiana polis, circulation manager," and Miss Mary Duffy, Rushville, Ind, assistant Miss Spencer editor, will attend the regional conference of the Catholic School Press Association in Cincinnati Saturday.
School Club Elects—John Thornberry and Shirley Ann Cohen have been elected president and vice president of the Shortridge High School Math Club for the spring semester. Margaret Curle and Doris Alexander were named secretary and treasurer, respectively.
Franklin Head to Speak—Dr. W. G. Spencer, president of Franklin College, will speak on “The Church, the College and the Country,” at the
Lyndhurst Baptist Church, Feb. 29.|
Music will be furnished by the college quartet and G. M. Seitz, instructor of vocal music at the college. The program will conclude a
five-weeks series on “The Church’s|
Work in the World Today.”
Decker Heads Louis E. Decker, Indianapolis, has been elected president of the Indi-
‘ana Allied Postal Council. Other of-
ficers named are Noble Benner, Ft. Wayne, secretary; Walter Malick, Indianapolis, treasurer, and Lawrence Ernst, Indianapolis, trustee. Trustees remaining in office are H. B. Fonner, Evansville; John E. Gruber, Ft. Wayne; William Bryan, Marion, and Raymond E. Phillips, South Bend.
Ind.) was proclaiming that he knew |= at least 15 Democratic Senators,
Senator VanNuys nor others of his |== The Indiana Senator said last|ZH
but E is virtually reconciled to renom- =
Presidential nomination, have united = in a “Stop Dewey” movement in the |= Wisconsin primary, April 2, reliable |=
"Mr. Vandenberg and Mr. Taft, it was said, seek to prevent Thomas|:= E. Dewey, 37-year-old New York|s District Attorney, from getting off |= to a victorious start in Wisconsin|= where one of the first major pri- =
Mr. Vandenberg and Mr. Dewey =
have entered the Wisconsin Repubnounced that he will not enter.
The congressional sources that revealed the Taft-Vandenberg come
cause he believed Mr. Vandenberg
had a better chaice of winning the = Mr. ‘Vandenberg undoubtedly will |=
have the support of Senator Robert
M. La Follette (Prog. Wis) .and |= other Wisconsin leaders, and should |= he win, Mr. Dewey's campaign would =|
suffer a severe and early setback.
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You correct faulty living habits—une |= every day into | =
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Two Enroll in Laundry School— Harry T. Shanberger Jr., Indian-
ington, Ind., have enrolled in an eight-weeks course in textiles and scientific laundering at the American Institute of Laundering at Joliet, Ill. Mr. Shanberger’s enrollment was sponsored by the Sterling Laundry here.
Rabbi Charry Speaks—Rabbi Elias Charry of Beth El Zedek spoke before the brotherhood of St. John's Evangelical and Reformed Church last night. Fred W. Koehrn, tenor, and Richard Thorpe; baritone, students of Giacinto Gorno of the College of Music of Cincinnati, sang. They were accompanied by Mrs. Amy Cleary Morrison.
Addresses Ad Club — Robert PF. Borkenstein, chief technician of the Indiana State Police, will discuss “Looking for Liars” at the meeting of the Indianapolis Advertising Club tomorrow noon in the Columbia Club. His talk will deal with vari-
Sponsor Hard Times Party—A Hard Times party sponsored by the Townsend Youth Association Club Five will be held Friday at the B. of IL. P. & E. Hall at the corner of State and Hoyt Aves.
Lottery Trial Continued—The case of Edwin K. Heuslein has been continued until Feb. 29 in Municipal Court. He is charged with operating a lottery and gift enterprise. Police said that darts were thrown at a board bearing numbers and that players holding cards with the hit number won a prize. He was arrested following a raid in the basement of 2621 W. Washington St.
‘WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21, 1040
BOTTLERS MAP * SPECIAL WEEK -
Anderson Man Elected to , Head State Group as Parley Closes.
Vv The Indiana State Bottlers Proe tective Association, its 1940 convene tion ended with election of officers, today mapped its observance of Nae tional Carbonated Beverage Week, May 12 to 18. Decision to participate in the week was one of two resolutions passed as the convention closed at the Hotel Severin yesterday. The other thanked the affiliated Hoosier Service Club for entertainment features of the two-day convention. Elmo Funk, Anderson, was elected president of the bottlers organizae tion; Lee Yuncker, Indianapolis, reelected secretary-treasurer; E. J. ¢ Higgins, East Chicago, vice presi dent. - Directors named were C. Q. Schow, Vincennes; Jess Stuckey, Muncie; Don Jones, Richmond; Earl Coghill, Indianapolis, and Mel’ Currie, Bloomington. Mr. Currie was retiring president. J. C. Schneider of the Indiana State Board of Health and DY. J. H, Toulouse, scientist for ‘the. Owens Illinois Glass Co, spoke at the close ing sessions yesterday. : High spots of the Hoosier Service Club’s entertainment program were a banquet, floor show and dance in the hotel's roof garden Tuesday night. Three hundred and seventy« five attended. The club, composed of bottler supply men, re-elected officers. They aia Charles E. Trees, president; L. Dugan, secretary-treasurer, = James Martin, vice president. All are of Indianapolis.
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