Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1940 — Page 4
! TRADE BATTLE
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“Approving More CCC Funds.
WASHINGTON, March 28 (U. P.). —Death or survival of the Administration’s reciprocal trade program * may be determined by a two-vete enate margin, Democratic leaders said today, So close was, the division that absent members were being urged by telegraph and long distance telephone to return to Washington immediately for a major test of trength—a vote on a proposal Senator Key Pittman (D. Nev.) : to require ratification by a twoi thirds” Senate vote of all future _ trade agreements. Mr. Pittman seeks to attach his 3 proposal as an amendment to the » House-approyed bill extending the - program three years. In the meantime, Chairman Pat ¢ Harrison of the Senate Finance . Committee : told reporters that ; President Roosevelt “certainly would . not” signi the reciprocal trade agreements bill if it contained a pro- : vision requiring Senate ratification.
SEAT IN INDIANA | [SENATE SOUGHT
BY CHAMBERLIN
Ex-Judge Raps State Costs;
4 3. Announce Candidacies
For House.
Harry O. Chamberlin, former Circuit Court judge, today entered the race for the Republican nomi-
2% \ \{
8 /hation for State Senator from Mar-
Harry O. Chamberlin . . . favors fewer laws.
EDITORS MEET HERE APRIL 13
Democratic Banquet Set on Jefferson Birthday;
A ~~ Republican-conducted Showed ratification supporters leading by three votes. But it listed doubtful, most of
0 EASA OE RN TR haa? wh
re A poll by Administration ¢ leaders, said to be as nearly complete as possible, showed a two-vote . margin against the Pittman amend5 ment. House Joins Spending Spree
Meanwhile, the House eeonomy record was on the skids today. Congressional advocates of | § Pdgei-ttimming sought desperateto rally their, forces before the ars against extra-budgetary spend- : : iy were completely down. When House leaders adjourned ; proceedings yesterday, a spending : spree had tentatively added $67,.450,000 to the $954,189,000 labor- ¢ security appropriation bill. Quick * adjournment avoided a test on : further increases for which the * House appeared headed. - Nevertheless, the managers of the
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~~ ¥ bill maintained hope that on the
« final roll calls the increases would * be knocked out and the bill restored : to the limits set by President 2.Roosevelt, in his budget.
ve Aga to CCC Fund
It was /on relief items that the -. House voted to exceed Mr. Roose- » velt’s estimates. Acting tentatively in committee of the whole it: x11 Added $50,000,000 to the $230,- = 000.000 Mr. Roosevelt asked to keep 1 the Civilian Conservation si
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. s going during 1941 at a strength of % 1227 camps. The extra money would : have the effect of maintaining] the : corps at its present. strength of ¢ 1500 camps. 1 + 2. Added $17,450,000 to the $85,000,000 the President requested for . 4 the National Youth Administra1 tion in 1941. The NYA got $100,000,000 for the current year. Both items are part of the $1,300,000,000 allocated for relief when { Mr. Roosevelt made up his overall i budget of $8,464,000,000 for the year beginning July 4.. =
poll | :
Record Predicted.
The annual spring banquet of the Indiana Democratic Editorial Association will be held in the Claypool Hotel on April 13, the 197th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence and father of the Democratic Party. State Democratic leaders said that, since this is election year, attendance probably will break all records. A nationally known speaker, to be identified later, will head the program and Governor M. Clifford Townsend, and Senators Sherman Minton and Frederick VanNuys will have prominent places on the program. | There will be dancing later. At noon the editors’ will have luncheon in the hotel. Hugh A. Barnhart is chairman of the business session that will follow. ; Mrs. Frank Finney, chairman ‘of
nounced that a tea and reception will honor Mrs. Townsend, First Lady of Indiana, and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt, former First Lady. These social affairs also will be held in'the ‘hotel and will be open to all Democratic women in the State. The dinner will be served at 6:30 p. m: in the Riley Room.
HEARINGS PLANNED ON DEFENDERS BILL
Times Special] WASHINGTON, ‘March 28.—AS chairman of a special Judiciary subcommittee, Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) was to begin hearings today on bills to” provide full-time public defenders in the Federal Courts. One of the measures applies only to the District of Columbia, where indigent cases would have the services of an attorney paid $7500 annually bythe Government. But another bill would extend the same
system to | ederal District Cousbs,
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the women’s committee, has an-|
ion County. Others who announced their c¢andidacy at the same time included: Charles W. Lahrman, Democrat, for State Representative. C. Titus Everett, Republican, for State Representative. Hoyt Moore, Republican, for State Representagive. | With the April 6 deadline for filing drawing close, several candidates who had announced previous-
didacy. They included Robert Allison, Democrat, for State Representative; Otto W. Petit, Republican, fon Sheriff, and Dr.'John A. Salb, Dem-
' |ocrat, for Coroner.
Judge 12 Years
Mr. Chamberlin served as Circuit Court judge from 1920 through 1932. He was appointed to the post in 1920 to fill the unexpired term |© of Louis B. Ewbank, who resigned to become a judge of the Indiana Supreme Court. Mr. Chamberlin was elected to a six-year term in 1926. Since 1933 he has been practicing law. He was born in Washington, D.C,, and for a time was a postal clerk before being admitted to the bar in 1902. He was. a captain in the Army during the World War. In announcing his candidacy, Mr. Chamberlin said he believes the “crying need just now is not more laws but fewer-laws.” Government in Indiana, he said, is needlessly expensive because “the party in power has manifested more interest in creating new jobs for its workers than in relieving some of the burdens of the State's taxpayers.”
Lahrman Was Court Bailiff |
Mr. Lahrman, - an active Democrat all his life, has been precinct committeeman and ward chairman, and for six years was bailiff in Superior Court 3 under the late Judge William A. Pickens. He is president of the Boilermakers Local Union 10 and is business representative in Indiana. for the Boilermakers International Union. He is a former member; of the Indianapolis Central Labor
| Union executive board, and is a
member of St. Joseph’s Church and the Loyal Order of ‘Moose. He is married and lives at' 723 E. 11th St. Mr. Moore has lived on a Decatur Township farm 22 years. He is 12th District agricultural director for the Republican State Committee and last winter was a speaker for Purdue University at farm institutes ipoughous the state. Mr. Everett, who rive at 4937 Hillside Ave. is presidenj of the Bel-Rose Civic League.
work iRtren: campaigns sand was connected with the State Tax Board
from 1927 to 1933. He has practiced law since.
3 ARE DELEGATES TO CHURCH MEETING
Mrs. L. T. Freeland and Mrs. Hat-
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delegates to a provisional Methgdist Jurisdictional Conference meeting in Chicago June 24. They were elected at a provisional
: | Methodist Conference yesterday at
Columbus, Ind . The meeting was called by Bishop Titus Lowe of the Indianapolis’ area, At the same meeting, Mrs. O. W. Fifer and Mrs. J. N. Greene of Indianapolis and Mrs. M. O. Robbins of Edgewood were nominated for membership -in the new national
: | Board of Missions and Church Ex-
tension of the Methodist Church, and Mrs. W. W. Simms of Columbus, Ind. for the jurisdictional board. At the Chicago meeting, nominations for the new board will be received from conferences all over the country. Mrs. Freeland is president of the
} | Woman's Home Missionary Society
of the Indiana Conference and Mrs. Simms is treasurer. Mrs. Asbury is secretary of the conference foreign society.
RETIRED ACTRESS DIES HOLLYWOOD, March 28 (U. P)). —Memorial services will be held Saturday for Mrs. Harriet Breese, 61, retired silent screen actress and widow of Edmund Breese, famous actor and director. She died Tuesday after a long | illness.
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The Gallup Poll. | Shows—
New Jersey Republicans Increase Edge: i Majority in State Frown on Third Term
By DR. GEORGE GALLUP Director, Amer pinion Institute of Publie
PRINCETON, N. J., March 28.— The announcement that Secretary of the Navy Charles Edison, son of the famous inventor, will seek the Democratic nomination for governor of New Jersey comes at a time when the Democrats may need the strongest and most prominent candidates they can find to hold the states in’ line. . New Jersey went Democratic by ‘a landslide in. 1936, but a special study of political sentiment here indicates that the state is leaning Republican at the present time. With 16 electoral votes New Jersey is one of the top-rank states importance for the 1940 cam1paign. The significant news at the present time is the sharp defection in Democratic sentiment which the survey shows has taken place since 1936. Roosevelt carried the state with 60 per cent of the major vote four years ago. Today, the survey shows,” Democratic sentiment has dropped 13 points, one the largest drops of any state ‘in the country. The study, conducted by the In-
Editors Say F. NEW YORK, March 28 (U. P.. —American daily newspaper editors believe that President Roosevelt will run for a third term and that his - opponent ‘will be Thomas E. Dewey, according to a poll conducted by Current History. The editors, according to the poll, would prefer that the Democratic nomination go to Secretary of State Cordell Hull and the Republican to Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg. Of the 1605 daily newspaper editors sampled, 497 answered the poll. Of , those polled, 63 per cent
AMERICAN INSTITUTE PUBLIC’OPINION
ye
Score So For This is the fourth in a series of articles on political sentiment in key states as shown by the Gallup Poll. With reports on other states coming in at regular intervals in the next few weeks, the score to date follows: Leaning Democratic Electoral Votes 47 36
State
New YOrk .....cicevdeee Pennsylvania California ..
ny
Thier win shneie 108 Leaning Republican New Jersey : 1
stitute, put the following issue Ww a cross-section of voters in New Jersey: “Which party would you like to see win the presidential elections this. year?”
New Jersey Voters
Want Democrats to Win.... 41% Want Republicans to Win.. 53
‘New Jersey’s neighbor to. the north, New York, and her neighbor
{But a large proportion of ‘these
.|to date:
to the west, Pennsylvania, were both found leaning Democratic by slight
D. R. Will Run
thought that Mr. Roosevelt would be nominated; less than 18 per cent thought he should be. "Nearly 34 per cent thought Mr. Hull should be nominated; 19 per cent thought he would be. Although 38 per cent believed the Republican nomination would go to Mr. Dewey, only 19 per cent believed that it should, compared with 24 per cent who thought it should go to Mr. Vandenberg. Sixty-nine per cent of the editors said that political sentiment in their communities was more conServative than in 1936.
: California ......
margins in recent surveys. But in those states, too, there has been a sharp drop in Democratic. sent Rent as compared to 1936. In the congressional elettions two years ago, the total Republican vote in New Jersey was slightly larger than the Democratic vote, and a Republican senator, Warren Barbour, was elected with 54 per. (cent, to 46 per cent for ‘his Democratic opponent.
RALLY SCHED JULED BY
‘publican Clubs and the Woman’s ‘Republican ‘Club, will have a woman's rally at 8 p.'m. today at 2038 N. Capitol Ave. 3
will be the guest speaker. Maude Smith and Mrs.
The anthem by Vivian Rhea, the invocation’ by ‘M#s. selections by: Mrs. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Lucile Cole, Mrs. Catherine Gaddie, Mrs. Julia Reed; Mrs. Cora Carter, Mrs. Cornelia Parchman, and the vice committeewomen.
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President Roosevelt's personal popularity in New Jersey continues strong. the survey shows, with 60 per cent approving him as president at this point in his second term.
voters say they would desert him if he ran for a third term. | Third term sentiment in i surg vey is as follows:
' vif President Roosevelt runs for: a third term, will you vote for him?” New Jersey Voters Would Vote for Him. ....... 43% Would Vote Against Him..., 57
In. earlier reports the Institute has shown party strength today in other important pivotal states. Following is a summary of the gndings
Want Want Dems. eps. To Win To Win 53% . 41%. 51 |. 49 . . 58 42 47 ! 53:
Pennsylvania ...
New Jersey.:....
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Q. Which lowest price car stands up remarkably under punishing driving? “A. Night and day, for 15,000 miles each, two cars traveled around Indianapolis Speedway, at better than 60 miles per hour, without a single structural defect showing up. The two cars were Studebaker —soundest, strongest cars in the
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Q. Which lowest price car rides most comfortably?
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