Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1940 — Page 5
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"THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1940 _
DEWEY OFFERS FARM PROGRAM
~ URGING PARITY §
“to Single ‘Scheme Will . 1=Solve Program Overnight,
He Tells Nebraskans.
LINCOLN, Neb., March 7 (U. P). ~Thomas E. Dewey, in a bid for farm support of his candidacy for | the Republican Presidential -nomination, today left with the nation an eight-point plan which he said : was “part of any proper agriculture progress, but only a part.” : The 37-year-old New York Disstrict Attorney, outlining for the first time a specific farm policy, told : Republicans at a Founders’ Day
; rally last night that his plan aims at “parity for agriculture” and in-
loans.” Mr. Dewey, who will be opposed on Nebraska's Republican primary ballot April 9 by Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (Mich.), conferred with G. O. P. leaders and then left early today for Chicago for a day-long conference with his campaign 2 managers in Illinois on whose Re- : publican primary ballot he is un-
t will be held April 9. Warning that he knew “of no gingle scheme tnat will solve the ifarm program overnight,” Mr. Dewey set forth these eight points es “part of any proper agriculture program.” 1—Establish a fair parity between agricultural prices and industrial prices. 2—Provide Government crop loans at reasonable levels. 3—Adopt a direct program of soil conservation. 4—Convert sub-marginal land to more economic uses. 5—Expand the farm. co-operative movement. 6—Continue and extend the program for marketing agreements. 7—Preserve the American market for American agriculture. 8—Broaden research in the use of agricultural products.
HUNT SUSPECT IN FT. WAYNE SHOOTING
FT. WAYNE, Ind, March 7 (U. P.)—Police today pressed the search
‘4 for a bandit who shot and critically
wounded Asbury Bunting, 60, a filling station attendant, during an attempted holdup late yesterday. Mr. Bunting was shot once gh oush the stomach, the bullet, apently from a .32 caliber revolger. puncturing his intestines in rer places. Hospital . attendants d his condition was “not good.” . Mr. Bunting told police the dit first dpproached his station “and asked for the rest room. He paid he pointed it out and then . turned his back. The bandit shoved a gun against his back and told Hh was a stickup, Mr. Bunting
5 ® Police said Mr. Bunting daughed, g it was a joke, and the
cludes “reasonable Government crop |.
{opposed. The Illinois primary also 3
Heads Hospital
Dr. Robert Staff . . . takes tuberculosis hospital post May 1. » ” =
Dr. Robert Staff Is Named Rockville Superintendent; Dr. Pace Advanced.
Dr. Robert Staff of Terre Haute, former’ City Hospital interne, will assume the superintendency of the Indiana Tuberculosis Sanitorium at Rockville May 1. His appointment to succeed Dr. , V. _ Pace was announced last night by Thurman A. Gottschalk, supervisor of State institutions. Dr. Pace, who headed the Rockviile institution for 10 years, recently was named superintendent of the new Southern Indiana Tuberculosis Hospital, now under construction at New Albany. He will take up that position May 1.
At Rockville Before
Dr. Staff served as a staff physician at ‘the Rockville institution from 1933 to 1936, when he became superintendent of the SmithEsteb Memorial Hospital at Richmond, Ind., whére he now is. He was graduated from the Indiana University Medical School here in 1930. He then spent a year at the City Hospital and was a resident physician at the St. Louis City Hospital. While practicing for a short time in Terre Haute, he became interested in tuberculosis and secured the position with the Rockville Sanitorium to further his studies.
Wife Was Technician
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Staff of Terre Haute. His wife, formerly Miss Etheline Hector of Fargo, N. D., served as Vigo County Medical Society laboratory technician for several years before their marriage in 1938. The new hospital near New Albany is nearly completed and probably will accept its first patients about the middle of the summer, Mr. Gottschalk said.
COAL MANAGER DIES Times Special EVANSVILLE, Ind, March 7.— Albert A. Gee, manager of the Sun-
light Coal Co., died here today after a brief illness. . He was a resident of Boonville and a member
pandit shot him.
of that city’s council.
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WELLES LEARNS FRENCH POLICY | ‘FROM DALADIER
U. S. Envoy Confers More “Than Hour First With President Lebrun.
PARIS, March 7 (U. P.) —Summer Welles . conferred with Premier Edouard Daladier today after talking for more than an hour with President Albert Leburn. Mr. Welles will remain here three days. M. Daladier, walking with the aid of a cane and with his foot still in a plaster cast as result of a broken ankle, stood in the doorway of his upstairs office, smiling a greeting to Mr. Welles. He rarely speaks English, but fonight he stretched out his hand and said “welcome” to President Rogsevelt’s envoy. Col. Vasserot of - M. Daladiers’ military staff met Mr. Welles’ automobile and with very simple ceremony accompanied the American to the broad stairway landing to M. Daladier’s office, which overlooks an inner garden.
Peace Held Impossible
President Lebrun had given Mr. Welles the first outline of French policy and war aims, stressing that Germany knew from French gnd British guarantees that invasion of Poland would cause war. Hence, he was reported to have said, peace was impossible until Poland was wholly liberated. The same, it was said, applied to Czechoslovakis, in M. Lebrun’s view. = Arrangements had been made for Mr. Welles also to see Auguste Champetier de Ribes, Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs, and other leaders, including those of the Polish Government in: exile, tomorrow and Saturday when he leaves for London.
With Mr. Welles arrived Joseph P. Kennedy, American Ambassador to London. Mr. Kennedy, or his way to London after a visit ta the United States, had joined Mr. Welles at Lausanne and come with him in the special car provided by the French Government. Mr. Kennedy planned to continue on to London this afternoon.
French Reject Peace Talk It was evident what Mr. Welles would be told here: That Adolf Hitler himself had made it plain that peace now was impossible; that the Allies can not talk peace with Herr Hitler or any Nazi; that the peace after this war must be a secure one which will not be supject to the threats of any dictator. Knowing that Mr. Welles, in his mission of surveying the state of the war and the prospects for peace, desired a minimum of fanfare, the Government made his reception a quiet one. M. Champetier de Ribes, holding the job in the French Foreign Office corresponding to his, headed
road station when Mr. Welles’ train arrived 10 minutes late. With M. Champetier de Ribes were Maurice
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Loze, chief of protocol of the Foreign Office,
Dinner Scheduled Tonight
American Ambassador William C. Bullitt is in the United States, so the Embassy was represented by Robert Murphy, charge d’affaires, and Maynard Barnes, first isecretary. A dinner had been arranged for tonight at the Foreign Office, with
M. Daladier as host’ and Jean
Jeanneney and Edouard Herriot, presidents of the Senate and Chamber of Leaders: among the guests.
M. Daladier is Foreign and War Minister as well as Premier and was thus in position to discuss all topics. It was indicated he would ‘be candid in talking to Mr. Welles, whose visit—at first regarded with some suspicion that he might be seeking what France would regard as a premature and Germar peace —was now welcomed.
He was ready, it was indicated, to talk not only about the great war, but about the Russo-Finnish war, the Pan-American neutrality declaration, the Allied Blockade, the entire Chinese-Japanese situation, and the relations of foreign powers with Japan, and post-wgr reconstruction and disarmament.
French War Aims Plain
There was no mystery about French war aims: France will fight until Poland and Czechoslovakia are free and until Germany has a Government which can give, to ifrance’s full satisfaction, moral and material guarantee to respect the rights of small nations as well as big ones. Mr. Welles flies to London Sunday to remain Monday, Tuesday and
| Wednesday and return to Italy to
board the liner Conte di Savoia March 18 for New York. Anthony J. Drexel-Biddle Jr., American Ambassador to Poland, arranged for Mr. Welles fo meet Gen. Wadislaw Sikorski, Premier, and August Zaleski, Foreign Minister, of the Polish Government tomorrow. It was understood that Mr. Welles would be given an advance copy of a diplomatic “white on German treatment of
the welcoming delegation at the rail-|
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European War Delays Consideration of -
‘Episcopal-Presbyterian Union in America
By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS Another thing that the war has delayed is the posisbility of some sort of a union of the Protestant Episcopal Church and the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. The Rt. Rev. Frank Earl Wilson, Episcopal bishop of Eau Claire, Wis., today sat in his room at the
_ The two suggestions for co-opera-tion .ncw. before the two commissions for discussion, but not for any vote, according to Bishop Wilson. are a “Concordat” and a “Dual
Membership Plan.
The “Concordat,” about which a great deal of debate has centered,
‘provides that in small communities
Columbia Club and explained how
the well-laid plans of two American churches could be upset by a war across the sea. Bishop Wilson is the Noonday Lenten speaker this week at Christ Church and spoke at the mid-week Lenten devotions last night at the Episcopal Church of the Advent on “Be Sure of Something.”
Two Plans Suggested
Commissions: of the Episcopal Church and the northern Presbyterians have been discussing methods of co-operation or organic union for several years. Although Bishop Wilson said that the conversations were “far from being crystallized into anything concrete,” two possible plans had been developed and were being discussed by the commissions at meetings twice a year. The next meeting is scheduled for June. Then later this summer the bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church were to ‘go to London for the decennial “Lambeth Conference” of all bishops of the Angelican communion, at which the Arch- | Bishop of Canterbury was to preside. . Presbyterian commissioners at the same time were to discuss the proposed plans with officials of the Church of Scotland, from which the Presbyterian Church grew, just as the Episcopal Church stems from the Church of England. Conference Was Called Off If these conferences had been successful, there might ' possibly have been some concrete plan on which the Episcopal General Con-
vention next fall might vote and’
which might be ‘presented to the
_ ians in his territory.
where only one of the two ienominations is represented, Presbyter-
ian ministers may receive ordina-
tion from the Episcopal Church and then minister to the EpiscopalThe same would be true of Episcopal ministers in small communities where there was nc Presbyterian Church. The second plan is a broader one and it would operate in communities wherever the two churches are active and would include lay people as well as clergy. Under this suggestion, members of the Presbyter-
ian Church could also become mem-
Bishop Wilson . . : “stop arguing about doctrine.”
Presbyterian General Assembly in May, 1941. But the Lambeth Conference was postponed indefinitely because of the war and commissioners from both the American churches are agreed that no definite action on union will be taken until the parent churches are consulted.
Bishop Wilson is, however, optimistic of the eventual co-operation of the two churches. He says the commissions have found that the two denominations have “a common recognition of the Holy Scriptures as the primary source of Christian doctrine, a common recognition of the two great sacraments (Holy Communion and baptism) as the basis of organized Christian life, a common ‘recognition that the two historic creeds (Apostles’ and Nicene) are sufficient statements of basic Christian teachings, and a
common recognition of a formally,
authorized ministry.”
bers of the Episcopal Church hy being confirmed and Episcopalians could become Presbyterians, too, by confession of faith. Members would be “enrolled” in only one church, but might be “members” of both.
01a Issues Not Alive Now Under the “dual membership plan” the Presbyterian clergy could be ordained by a bishop in the normal Episcopal manner and hold a dual ministry. Likewise an Episcopal clergyman might be ordained
‘by a presbytery and then hold both
Presbyterian and Episcopal charges. “The whole idea,” said Bishop Wilson, “is that we give you what we've got and you give us what you've got and stop arguing about doctrine.” “The 17th Century issue on which the Churches of England and Scotland divided is no longer an issue. Then why not try to get behind the original issue and co-operate? _ “The idea of either of these two tentative steps toward co-operation would be to create an atmosphere in which these old prejudices could be liquidated. “But we all realize that that day is quite a long way off.”
ELECTION APRIL 15 FOR JUNIOR C. OF C.
The ‘Indianapolis Junior: ‘Chamber of Commerce will meet April 15 atthe Canary Cottage to elect of: ficers and members to serve on the Board of Directors for 1940, Candidates are Berkley W. Duck Jr., John T. Rocap, and William E. Williams, for. president; H. Burch Nunley and William J. Stout; executive vice president; James R. Herdrich. Robert E. Jackson and Donald E. Shafer, secretary, and Maynard R. Hokanson, Frank L. Reissner,
tredsurer.
Candidates for the board of directors are George W. Bockstahler, Harold H. Bredell, Royer K. Brown, John H. Elam, Edward A. Good,
and Sidney N.: Sanner, ||
John ‘Hair, Fletcher 8 ‘Hubbard, Lyman G. Hunter, A. Asher Irwin, Harlan, B. Livengood, Virgil Mar tin, John Miller, Pernald F. Mills, Joseph P. McNamara, ‘Donald G. Morrison Jr., Jess C. Pritchett Jr., Dr. Gilbert D. Quinn, Galen L. Parks, William and Warren F. Wright, |
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