Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1941 — Page 8
PAGE 8
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
MOVE. TO LIMIT ~ USE OF TROOPS
Two More Bills Vetoed
Governor Henry F. Schricker vetoed two more bills today, one rejecting the rider to the G. O. P. “big ripper” bill, permitting present State employees to keep their jobs until May 31 and the other disapproving the measure creating a new State’ Printing Board. At the same time the Governor permitted the first G. O. P. “ripper” bill to become law without his signature. The measure will take the
Aid Bill's Backers Draft Tentative Change to Ease Fears of New A. E. F.
(Continued from Page One)
dent Roosevelt is exerting any direct or indirect pressure on the coming vote on important amendments to the bill. ; “Mr. Early said that the White House is maintaining a hands-+off policy.” The conscription law and the National Guard Induction Act, both ‘passed last year,. prohibit sending draftees or guardsmen outside the Western Hemisphere or U. S. possessions. Opponents of the bill used the . restrictive sections of the conscription and National: Guard acts as the basis for charges that the Admin-
“strict
istration now “wants to send American boys across the water.” Senate Democratic Leader Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky argued that the restrictions on the use of conscripts and National Guardsmen were not objected to because those laws dealt with men. This law, he said, “does not deal even remotely e with men” and, therefore, such a restriction would be extraneous.
Clark Calls It “Fraud” There were various reactions to Mr. Ellender’s amendment, among opponents of the bill. Senator Bennett C. Clark (D. Mo.) charged that it was a “fraud” and ‘probably
A few days ago Representative James Knapp as the “goalie” of ti
and presented it to the Speaker Herbie Lewis for the gift. an autographed puck.
stopping unsavory legislation before it has a chance to ‘‘score.” the Indianapolis Capitals hockey feam autographed a goalie’s stick
Representative Henley was presented. with
power to appoint the State Budget Director away from the Governor and give it to a board composed of the Secretary of State, Auditor and the Governor. Under terms of the main Republican “decentralization” bill, which would take control of most of the Government away from the Governor and place it under G. O. P.dominated boards, the tenure of present State officials would end April 30, when the new setup is scheduled to become effective.
Feared Chaos
In vetoing that bill several weeks ago, the Governor declared it would create “chaotic conditions” because for several days the State would be left without authorized official§ to run it. - Subsequently the rider bill was
passed toe correct the situation by permitting present employees to stay on another month. In vetoing the rider, the Governor said “this bill is an attempt to ameliorate the wretched condition of affairs which would follow when House Bill 18 (‘big ripper’) should become effective.” “However, I cannot, without receding from a position which my duty as Governor compels me to maintain, approve this bill with any greater justification than I could accord approval of House Bill 18,” the Governor said. The House passed the bill over the veto, 59 to 30.
Doubts Workability
In vetoing the Printing Board bill, which takes control of the bureau away from the Governor
Ea Kad George Henley described Speaker ie House—the man responsible for So
who is shown thanking Manager
‘would mislead the public into think‘ing no boys could be sent abroad.” Reports of a compromise coincided with release of a letter from President Roosevelt to the National League of Women Voters in which he reiterated “the assurance that the policy under which the measure would be operated would not be a war policy but the contrary.” The letter was a reply to one from an official of the organization informing the President that the league supports the lend-lease bill.
; Advertisement
tack Sunday and another shortly
ening of the arteries. His wife and two children were af his bedside when he died. They are
Gutzon Borglum, Famed as Sculptor, Dies of Overwork
(Continued from Page One)
before his death, both due to hard- fington’s arm, Jefferson’s hand and
and places it under a Republicandominated board, the Governor said he “had no objections to the reconstruction of the Printing Board but I have serious misgivings as to the workability of this act.” Under a 193% law the Printing Board was composed of the Governor, Secretary of State, Auditor of State and three more appointed
the rest of the monument—Wash-|py the Governor.
the new board dérive from the act of 1939 and, in turn, from the Act of 1921,” the Governor said. “This is a very unfortunate ‘stream-
lining’ of legislation and it is obvious that such methods are bound to cause great difficulty in ascertaining the law on any given subject.”
5 Vetoes Overridden
Yesterday, both Houses passed five bills over the Governor's vetoes. Action on the vetoes had been held up several days pending compromise of a dispute on the Congressional Reapportionment bill’ during which several G. O. P. legislators threatened to block party legislation. | The five bills will: make” the Attorney General elective in 1942; provide for appointment of an interim attorney for the State by a, Republican board to serve until a; new one is elected; transfer control of the State Accounts Board to the. State (merit system) Personnel Board; provide for appointment of| two-member voters’ registration | boards by circuit judges with county | political chairmen in control of, them; take control of the Public Service Commission away from the! Governor and place it under a Re-public-dominated Board. | The Governor signed four more bills today, bringing to 98 the num- | ber he has approved.
Tractor Law Clarified
The new bills signed will: 1. Authorize the purchase of real
estate for school purposes by boards of school trustees. 2. Clarify laws specifically to exclude farm tractors from license and weight tax requirements. 3. Permit mutual savings banks to deposit money in banks other than national banks with the consent of the Department of Financial Institutions. 4, Change the terms of the Ver-
“All of the rights and duties of arm, Lincoln’s hand and arm— would be completed with available funds. Once asked to estimate the
million Circuit Court.
ORATORY CONTEST
Albert C. Losche Jr. Shortridge High School senior, took first place in the county-wide oratorical contest sponsored by the HaywoodBarcus Post of the American Legion. Mr. Losche, who is the son of Albert C. Losche, City Purchasing Agent, was chosen as the winner in the contest finals last night at the Indiana World War Memorial. The subject of his winning oration was “The Preamble of the Constitution.” Chester Perkins, Warren Central High School senior, placed second with a talk entitled “What Is Americanism.”
LOSCHE JR, WINS
_ THURSDAY,
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Lincoln, 28, who has been SUPETViS- | cost of the finished memorial, he
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more, and Mrs. David Vhay, 24, Santa Barbara, Cal, who flew to
Chicago from her home yesterday. | Other immediate relatives include | August Borglum, Omaha, Neb., mu- | sician, and Mrs. Harriet Fady, Chix cago, brother and sister. Close frienas of the family said | s|plans were being considered for burial atop the Mt. Rushmore | Memorial in South Dakota. Lincoln | Borglum said the body probably would be placed in a private vault in, | Chicago pending definite plans for funeral services. He said the Rushmore rites were “most plausible.” While Mr. Borglum’s life span] was little longer than that of the average man’s, he left a memorial which will live as long as the moun tains of which it is a part. It is the Mt. Rushmore National Memorial in the Black Hills of South Dakota, 6200 feet above tea level, and displaying 60-foot heads of four presidents. Washington, Je - ferson, Lincoln and Theodore R0o0s¢« velt. He began the work in 1927, and i probably will take another five years to complete. The faces of the great figures fre recognizable at three miles. His son, Lincoln, is expected to superintend the work’s completion. Last summer Mr. Borglum said
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“Call up Cheops and ask him how much his pyramid cost and what he paid the creator—an inferior work. to Mt. Rushmore.” Mr, Borglum regarded the work as the only memorial since the ancients or the renaissance cathedral that sacrifices everything for the spirit of the idea involved.” Mr. Borglum was a hard worker, and often would be planning one statue or group while working or another. A work which would have resembled the Mt. Rushmore Memorial in size was started by Mr. Borglum on the side of Stone Mountain, in Georgia, but quarrels with members f the committee sponsoring the work led to his breaking off connections with it in 1925. He de-
cious intent against him were withdrawn later. , The son of Dr. James de la Mothe - Borglum and Christine Michelson Borglum was born in Idaho, March 25, 1871. He was educated at Julian Academy and Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris, and St. Mary’s College in Kansas. His full name was John Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum.
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