Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1940 — Page 2
a A - -—
SATURDAY, AUG. 10, 1940
o to Ball State QUEZON GIVEN ~ EXTRA POWERS
Philippine Kesemlly Votes Emergency Because of European War.
MANILA, P. I, Aug. 10 (U, P.) President Manuel L. Quezon given extraordinary emergency pows= ers by vote of the National Assemes
bly today upon his assertion that they were necessary hecause of the situation arising from the European War. The law empowers Quezon to exert drastic control over public and private enterprise, distribute labor, sequester private property and rege | ulate rents and prices of goods He is empowered also to take emergency measures ‘to suppress espionage and other subversive ace Livities.” Despite bitter assembly, the one-party passed the bill by a vote of 62 to 1, Opposition had centered on the charge that the law would give Quezon dictatorial power, and led lo accusations that he was dics tator-minded Spiked by
PAGE 2 Hoosiers in Washington
TOWNSLEY'S SPUNK | DeLS UPSETS “THE BOYS
‘How About Those Stories of Fifth Columnists Who Are Holding Top Jobs With the Government?’ Hoosier Legion Leader Asks in Capitol Session.
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY WASINGTON, Aug. 10.—A rotund little man, who proved that he can stand up and take it as well as dish it, provided the most exciting session of the Federal Governments meeting this week on fifth column activities. He is Raymond B. Townsley, Indiana Department Com- | 1ander of the American Legion. Commander Townsley drove here from the state as one eight persons appeinted by Governor M. Clifford Townsend to represent Indiana at the meeting which was held under the auspices of the Justice Department.
The session where the Hoosier ex-service officer blew TALKS HALLECK '8 YEARS HENCE’
the lid off was executive and
so all reports are sort of secRoyse Tells Republican Club
ond hand. But it is said that | he challenged the Administra- | Hoosier Is Presidential Prospect.
tion men there by asking: Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind.
“How about these stories of fifth columnists who are holding top jobs w the Government right here in| HJow about Sidney | Wasn't he born in Russia | and didn’t he take part in the rev- | 1905 and hasn't he was referred to as possible presiden2. been a Socialist, if NOL a ta] timber “eight vears hence.” in| Communist . | gl an address bv Wilbur A. Royse be- | fore the Washington Township Re- | publican Club last night. ! Mr. Royse gave the club a report | on the Republican National Convention, which he attended as a delegate. He described the enthusiasm of the convention crowd for Wendell L. Willkie, “It is only natural,” he said “that a man of the extraordinary ability of Wendell Willkie should attract men and women of the same type In his organization he had many brilliant persons. “We here in Indiana have reason not only to be proud that our leade: is a native Hoosier, but we have further reason for pride In the faci that one of his chief lieutenants whose zealous, intelligent work contributed as much toward the Willkie nomination as that of any othe: person in the U. 8S. was our own | Charles Halleck. | “He did the work of three men and did it well. His fine record in Congress, plus the splendid achieve-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
arto and Titian Art
was
| i
m
’ O1
opposition the Parliament,
a provision that vioe lations may be punished by ime prisonment for as long as 10 years, or by a fine of 10,000 pesos ($5000), the law permits Quezon to forbid lockouts or strikes to prevent “unwholesome” social agitation It permits him to commandeer Phil ippines shipping and other means of transportation to facilitate free and continued movement of good It permits him to suspend the eight {hour law and to require unemployed | persons to register for work on pub(lie projects |
LABOR BOARD GIVES LINK-BELT RULING
The Link-Belt Co. today received orders from the National Labor Ree lations Board to disestablish the Link-Belt Emplovees Association ag the collective bargaining representative at its Dodge plant. | The Ewart Employees | still is in existence at plant, company officials said The Board dismissed charges filed by the C. I. O, Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers that the company had dis= criminated against 34 employees because of their union membership,
The William H. Thompson art collection in its special room at the Ball State Teachers College art museum. The walls are covered with mouk’s cloth and the rose-colored carpet has been woven in one piece, 45 by 15 feet. On the rear wall can be seen the famed Andrea del Sarto “Portrait of Lucretia del Fedi,” the artist's wife. This is the portrait which was on display at the Néw York World's Fair last year. On the left can be seen the pair of ruby velvet covered arm chairs, dating from the 16th Century, The painting in the left foreground is a 15th Century tempera painting by Pinturicchio. In the center is the marble bust produced by Andrea Sansovino in the early 16th Century.
A. Pittenger (right), president of Ball State Teachers College, inspects the Thompson collection with Dr. Ernest Brown, head of the art department. The painting is Titian's famed portrait of a Venetian nobleman, sometimes referred to as “Portrait of a Cavalier.”
Dr. L.
th Washington?
Hillman?
Thompson Collection to Be On View at Muncie Without Charge.
(Continued from Page One)
piution there in
alwavs
Mr. Hillman iz the labor member the National Defense Advisory mission and has been highly ised by William 8. Knudsen.
ETramlis: in charge of produc- tion of a
polyvehromized stucco, “The Virgin and Chila with St. John the Baptist,” bv Benedetto da Majano. The stucco is in its originai frame with the Holy Father
depicted in lunette, Arturo Grassi. son of Italian art connoisseur and dealer, Luigi Grassi. was in Indianapolis visiting his father-in-law, Ralph A Lemcke, and showed the Thompsons a paotograph of the stucco
After the kick-off by Mr. Townsthe argument went round and round, until the visiting Hoosier quieted the local boys by telling them he wasn't charging anything but just inquiring. A sample of the spunk shown by Townsley also was demonstrated he came through a nearby nd town en route here. Fe driving alone and two young cut in ahead of his car and commenced calling him names. He called names right back and lowed him to the edge of where he got out and challenged both of them, calling them voung smart aleecs.” belligerent did Mr. Townsley that the two young men reto their car ana stepped on
Tey
Association
the noted the Ewart
of Bianca Capello, by the court painter of family,
Portrait MATvIa 1 Bronzine, Iyl: the Medici was ted mmmemdiFrom then
were 111 aimost
They became 1nitere ately and noughi on, the Thompsons constant touch with the elder Mi Grassi ia Florence, always seeking additional examples of rare art,
men other, a ballet dancer 3ronze Century Bronze plaquette,. “Pace,”
atello, 15th Century. Michelino .
by Degas, portrays holding a fan figure of a
ih 160TH INFANTRY TO MEET LOGANSPORT, Ind., Aug. 10 P.) ~The 41st annual reunion of the 160th Indiana Volunteer Ine | fantry, Spanish-American War Vel« {erans, will be held here Sunday at Marble bust of a youth by Andrea (he Veterans’ Memorial Home
Sansovino, early 16th Century ——
Triton, 17th hev fol (yu, own The Sansovine marble bust. by Don-
Art Lovers tion,” by Dominico di (1417-1491), Fifteenth Century pora pianting on wood,
chio, and depicting St.
Mecca for
home for the last Sansovimo Bust
several years has been a mecca for art lovers from all parts of the country, and even from foreign
The Thompson
Sn
panel. a temby PinturicGeorge
look
turned
he gas It’s that kind of insulting conduct me 100 per cent for Isorv military training.” Com- € Townsley declared in rethe incident those young
121, makes
cmpu
squirts spent a under a tough top-sergeant ldn’t be so cocky. What hole of young America needs is some manners and
woul learn
Commander Townsley said he ly disagreed with ander Raymond J. Kelly of
who opposed
(til Comm he American Legion, the draft bill. And I told him so, ting man remarked
too,” this
» n »
Commenting in the Senate this on the appeal for funds to support the Willkie campaign as sent to five and ten cent store employees bv Carl B. Tuttle, vice presiand treasurer of the S. S.
sge Co. Senator Sherman Min-
week
dent
Kre
The Senator from Connecticut suggested that Mr, Tuttle may be a Democrat who has ‘taken a walk.’ do not know anything about Mr. Tuttle; perhaps, the Senator from Connecticut does: but if not a Demoat. he ought to be. He makes a salary of $89,000 a vezr with the Kresge Company of which he is vice president. The ge Company in 1933 owed the <= $25.000.000. Now they do not the banks a cent. Thev are among the best money makers we hzve had in this country during the seven or eight years. So if Tuttle is not a Democrat, he te be one.” »
2st Ma: ight
0
w »
Reports are current here that Edgar Bush, one-time Republican Lieutenant-Governor of Indiana, has announced against Wendell 1. Willkie for President. It was recalled that at the Ninth District meeting the night hefore the G. O. P, state convention, Mr. Bush sought te pass a resolution condemning the Willkie candidacy on the grounds that he was a “Democrat, Wali Street lawver and utility magnate.”
» » x
Indiana Republican Congressmen have been taking an active part in the under-cover movement to have the party declare against conscription both bv a House caucus and hrough their Presidential date Rep. Charles the delegation and one of Mr. Willkie’s closest advisers here, makes nightly reports to the candidate recarding politics and legislation on Capitol Hill. Halleck has not come out against eonscription, although op~ocition has been announced by the fellowing Republican colleagues: Lens. Robert A. Grant, Noble J. Johnson, Gerald W. Landis and Raymond S. Springer. On the Democratic side Rep. John WwW. Boehne Jr. has said that he will ote against the draft bill.
ARTILLERY ROLLING TO WAR GAME AREA
WITH FIRST ARMY IN FIELD, Aug. 10 (U. P.).—The caissons rolled today bringing into the First Army maneuver area in upper New York state almost all of the artillery which will participate in this year’s piggest war games. gE: Four regiments of the famous 73's, one of 155 mm. howitzers and two of three-inch coast artillery and; anti-aireraft arrived from the anges. The
Rep
total artillery personnel 1s well over 10,000 officers and men and brought the troops assembled fo this maneuver to approximately 0.000. More sriillerv snd air corps unis numbering 5000 men. are vet to come,
National |
six brooms and an
ments he accomplished at Philadalphia have stamped him as a great national figure. “Perhaps eight vears hence another Hoosier will he called to carry on where Willkie leaves off.”
FIRE TRUCK LOANED T0 FIGHT GRASS FIRE
Sheriff Al Feeney now has his own fire department, shiny red truck and all, te fight grass fires The truck was loaned to him by Chief Fred C. Kennedy of the Indianapolis Fire Department. It will be manned by deputy sherifis and County Jail trusties It is equipped with six 50-gallon water tanks, three chemical tanks six sprinkling cans, two buckets ax his new
Surveying department
and citing how it will be a help in | extinguishing the fires which have | prop- | |
endangered homes and other erty, the Sheriff remarked: “It's a knockout
BRITISH SAY FLEET WON'T GO TO NAZIS
LONDON, Aug. 10 U. P.).—A high British naval authority ureing the speedv sale of 30 to 100 | United States destrovers to Great Britain said today that Britain would never surrender her fleet to Germany.
countries. The special room in which collection has been placed at State resembles the salon of an Italian nobleman’'s palace The walls are covered with monk cloth, while a rose-colored carpet, woven In one piece 45 by 15 feet, covers the floor. The Ball State art building. constructed less than five Vvears ago. has two wings 2nd two galleries for temporary exhibits. In making the gift. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson explained that it was being presented to Ball State for the benefit of the entire educational system of Indiana. . The college has the right to loan and use the collection in any way it wishes for the benefit of educa tion in Indiana, The “Thompsons
Dull-Eyed Fren
the Ball
By DANA SCHMIDT United Press Staff Correspondent BERLIN, Aug. 10 (U. P.).—Thousands of dull-eved French prisoners are harvesting the fields around the untouched Westwall fortifications. while across the Rhine the Germans are sitting in the Maginot Line, which fell almost without battle. That was the contrast I found between the German Rhineland and Alsace-Lorraine as I traveled from Karlsruhe to the deserted city of , Strasbourg, on a German-conducted
A close-up of the del Sarte “Portrait of Lucretia del Fedi.”
have expressly provided, however, that the collection shall be open to the public forever, without any admission charge. Among the treasures lection are: Portrait of Lucretia
in the col-
Bor gia, _in
chmen Tend
Crops Along Nazi Westwall
serted. The once busy thoroughfares were empty, and the thriving shops of pre-war days still were shuttered. Peeling plaster fell from the thousands of abandoned buildings. Only 18,000 of the Rhineland capital’'s 200,000 evacuees have returned German officials told me that total of 400.000 Alsatians must return from southern France before the winter begins, but added that the French part of the population! would
tempora on wood panel, 16; by 12 inches, painted about 1494 and attributed to the Bartolomeo di Giovanni. Painting on a panel, “Madonna and Child,” by Lorenzo di Credi. _ Panels depicting the “Annuncia-
PURDUE TO REPEAT
10-BALLOON TEST
LAFAYETTE. Ind, Aug. 10 (U. P.).— The 10 hydrogen-filled balloons carrying the delicate recording instruments released Thursday by Purdue University physics department have been found on a farm near Brookston, Ind, about 15 miles from Lafavette. A check of the instruments bv Dr Karl Lark-Horovitz. head of the department of physics, revealed that the balloons and their cargo reached a height of 12 miles. The instruments to
are used
Florentine master, |
of Bianca (1503-1572) the Medici
Small Capello, by the court family A pair of oil paintings on canvas, representing Roman ruins, by Pan. nini, 18th Centun A sepia and ink drawing by Raphael of lot and his daughter This was the sketeh for the fresco in the fourth arcade of the Vatican
circular portrait Il Bronzino painter of
Loggia
A Rembrandt etching, “Beggars Receiving Alms at the Door of a House,” from the H. O. Havemever collection Portrait of a woman, ardaino Luini (1475-1533) Two drawings of the French school One is by August Renoir of his son Jean
Old Moores Hill Friends to Meet
THE OLD MOORES HILL College campus, quiet for 20 vears except its yearly gathering of graduates, students and friends, will welcome another such reunion Aug. 18 at Moores Hill. The college, a Methodist institution. was moved about 20 vears ago to Evansville to form part of Evansville College. Each vear former students of the old school at Moores Hill reunite there Mrs. Adelaide Edwards, of 3465 N. LaSalle St. is in charge of arrangements for this year’s reunion
by Bernmodern Pierre The
soles, Louis XV style Carved walnut chest ous sculptured figures, 16th Century Walnut table, partially gilt, with hexagonal top. 16th Century Carved walnut stool. covered in red cut velvet, Louis XTV-XV period Majolica Jar, Florence, 17th Century Pair
with numer-
of carved walnut antique tables, Florentine 17th Century Pair of ruby velvet covered arm chairs, 16th Century, Small carved walnut and partialgilt table, early 17th Century Pair of carved walnut and gilt mirrors, 17th Century Carved walnut “Dantesque” chair covered in brown leather, Century, Carved Umbrian
ly arm 16th
walnut middle
chest ‘“cassons,” 16th Century,
|
HOOVER 1S 66, FISHES PALO ALTO, Cal, Aug. 10 U. P) President Herbert Hoover the only living ex-President-—-was
celebrating his 66th birthday today on a fishing trip “somewhere in Montana” with his son, Allan,
Former
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A. Halleck, dean of
churned through mud today carry-
not be permitted to return Measure cosmic rays in the strato“at least temporarily.” although it sphere and study the behavior of tiny
was presumed most of them wouldn't ergy particles in the high want to. ; Dr. Lark-Horovitz said that no yerman labor service men, information on the exact results of stripped to the waist, are busily en- {he experiment would be available gaged in repairing 45 bridges which immediately, as it will take about the French blew up before their Ye- a month to evaluate the data. treat. The experiment will be repeated in This appears to be the only direct
about 10 days. war damage suffered by the city
There was considerable deteriorati EIGHT MORE INJURED somes erreter TFRANKLIN COLLEGE of last winter, which the labor servce
IN CITY'S TRAFFIC =~ one. ns
A co-educational, liberal arts college ol high standing and moderate exWILLIAM GEAR SPENCER, The number of persons injured in President Indianapolis traffic yesterda dropped to eight. One pedestrian was struck by a hti-and-run truck. Mrs. Frances Ledford. 2454 W. 29th St.. was the victim as she crossed 25th St. at Sheldon. She was taken to City Hospital. Caroline Freeman. 764 N. Miley Ave., was hurt when thrown from an automobile after a crash with a bus at 22d and Bellefontaine Sts. | She was riding with Robert Hall, 905 | N. Senate Ave. The bus was driven by Clyde Newell, 3230 Winthrop
“As the bulwark of the free wav of life which we and the United | States have followed. we are facing the greatest threat ever witnessed, and facing it without any balance of power in Europe.” he said. “If we had another 50 to 100 destroyers available to make up for | those lost, repeatedly damaged and immobilized, the Axis threat would correspondingly dwindle and could far more easily be met ' “To those Americans who fear that the British fleet, plus any additional units purchased from the United States, would fall into Ger- | man hands I say emphatically that the world must see how we are fighting. No ships ever will be surrendered.”
TRUCKS CHURN MUD. TROOPS GET FOOD
CAMP BEAUREGARD. La.. Aug. 10 (U. P.).—Four-wheel drive trucks from the quartermaster corps
tour. for a full semester's credit work. Droves of French war prisoners were hoeing fields and reaping the crops which grew up alongside the German bunkers and barbed wire entanglements. The great city showed hardly any we entered. The streets
New Student Week September
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ing food and other supplies to the 10300 men of the 36th Division camped in the Pitkin-Cravens area southwest of Alexandria. Ave.
The division, composed of National Guardsmen from Texas, was FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 3 . . .
cut off Thursday after approximately 12 inches of rain had fallen in the Third Army maneuver area, nn out bridges and turning ountry roads into a of mud. Prospective students are invited to call here for a diseassion of their schoel plans. They will be given most thorough sympathetic connsel and co-operation.
Many who entered this school a
BAPTISTS 10 CLOSE 83D ANNUAL SESSION | furl’ Biers Sess
The 83d annual session of the Sivions ToURY. Tt 1s the Indiana Missionary Baptist State Association will close tonight with a | di B : C | mass meeting at the New Bethel n land usiness ollege Raptist Church. During its ses- : of Indi li Th t sions, which commenced Tuesday, ot Mara ance. oe the Rev. Judge I. Saunders of In- Couerzen, Hpkoma Lafayette, i i a olumbus, ¥ mo - dianapolis was re-named moderator | cenmes—Ora E. Buin pnd Vin. and the Rev, Henry W. Lewis of Yor Bulletin ig courses Indianapolis was elected to the edu- Ione or Ere ‘the Lone cational board of the association. nearest you, or Fred W. Case,
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