Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GURLEY, Editor. WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scrippe Howard Newspaper Alliance • • * Client of the United Press and the NEA Service * * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis **,• Subscription Rates; * Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere-Twelve Cents a Week • * * PHONE—MA in 3500.
No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.
Why Watson? Ts it really “scurrilous” to suggest that tho record of Senator James E. Watson as a public-servant leaves something to be desired? The organs and leaders of the best advertised political machine ever constructed In the State seem to believe that any reference to his career which is not limited to the most general praise as a ‘ faithful servant” and a “monument of strength” is libel and slander. It is just possible that the rnen and women v ho will vote in the Republican primaries this spring may desire something a trifle more specific than the eulogies that they may be inquisitive as to what he has really done during the long years he has been in public office. Certainly the voter who is not overwhelmed by the fear of the “best organization” may be pardoned if he listens for an answer to the questions which Claris Adams is daily asking concerning this record. Adams asks for one specific achievement of the Senator, one real service which he has rendered either to the State or to the Nation. lie answers his own question with the charge that there is no important piece of legislation which bears the name of Watson, no law which he suggested or fathered that stands as a monument to this great statesman. If that charge be false and slanderous, it should he easy for the great organization, which is so well financed and so far flung, to point to the law, the cause or the principle which W atson has conti ibntecl or fostered or saved. His managers should welcome the opportunity to answer with something more than an adjective. If he lias been a really great factor in the Senate, if he is dedicated to the welfare of the Nation and State, his friends should seize upon the opening to parade his record, to “point with pride” to his accomplishments, to be specific in their replies. There have been other Senators from this State about whose records there was no evasiveness. It has been represented in that body by men whose deeds and words were written into history and wh;.'' friends and followers would have welcomed jus; such a chance the sure knowledge that but to list them would be to make new friends and new followers. Can it be that the refusal to answer the demand L' Adams lor details is due to the fact that there is no answer? , Is it possible that Watson’s press agents and h:j political organization have searched in vain for e-.-eji one specific contribution to the national welfare in the years he lias been in the Senate? Can this be the reason that the carefully constructed machine which is working in his behalf, devoted its efforts for months to the task of preventing any opposition to his candidacy in the primaries? Is it possible that they feared not Adams, but any man who would arise and ask the very questions which Adams is now' putting to the voters of this State? Certain it is that his friends and followers spent much time and great effort to forestall any opposition. They seemed to fear a fight, where, if Watson he ono-hnlf of what is claimed for him, they should have welcomed the opportunity to tell the story of his greatness by the simple record of his deeds. Rather a strange situation for a giant, if there r e no victories to which he can point with pride. Possibly Watson is being slandered. But if he is, the libel does not come from Adams. The silence of his own friends, their refusal to answer with a list of laws, causes and principles, is the biggest slander w'hich can be hurled at any real statesman. Someone should really tell the voters the answer to that question, “Why Watson?”
Probe This Charge A member of Congress openly charges that $85,000 worth of confiscated whisky disappeared 'from the custody of Federal officers in this city. That is serious. But the explanation of one of the Federal officials is worse. He says that when this whisky was seized and brought here, no inventory was taken and that it is now impossible for any one to know whether 350 cases of the stuff is missing or not. Imagine police officers failing to count money taken from a man they arrest, and if he complains, b£ing told that they had not counted his cash and therefore couldn’t tell whether they had stolen a few bills or not. If there be any more practical method of tossing the bill of rights into the discard than this, let someone devise it. For until the courts declared that the stuff seized was illegally held, it belonged to the men from whom it was taken and presumably was legally theirs. Such.a system or lack of system is an open invitation to every policeman, every sheriff and every enforcement agent to go into the bootlegging business. If there be any phase of prohibition enforcement in which the Anti-Saloon League and other dry advocates should be interested, it is in this remarkable statement that raiding officer's and other officials place themselves beyond any necessity of accounting for the liquors they seize. Here is something that needs probing, and probing to the very bottom. If the courts expect to retain respect for their decisions and actions, they cannot afford to overlook this situation. If there was no check made of the gigantic seizure of liquor, and there is no reason to believe that there was, why was it overlooked? The prohibition inquiry of the Senate should inquire into this- case, if it does nothing else. Or do we expect the prohibition agents to become bootleggers and partners of bootleggers?
The Sport of Kings Despite the fact that every State In the Union has a law against gambimg several hundred millions of dollars are wagered every year on the outcome of horse racing. What was once tho sport of kings now interests a very large number of American citizens in every walk of life. Vast machinery for carrying the news of the outcome of horse races to hidden hand books in practically every city has been constructed. The race track has a literature of its own, and the form sheets are studied much more carefully than the message of the President. These millions of people bet their money every day and still cling to the idea that they have a chance to pick the winner through superior judgment of horse flesh. A number of very famous jockeys are being suspended and will not ride this year. Owners of race horses are being barred from the tracks. The men who run horse races—not the men who run gambling on horse racing—have discovered that during the last year a very large number of races w'ere '“fixed” in advance. Jockeys were corrupted and bribed so that tho race was not really a race at all, but a parade. That should ho very interesting to those who study form sheets and bet their money on them. Gambling, of course, is morally wrong. But people will gamble, but no one really likes to be shown lip as a boob and a sucker. That is exactly what the exposure of race track corruption is doing for millions of people. If you really feel that you must gamble bet your money on something where you have a chance, such as the state of weather two weeks from today or whether women will still bob their hair in 1950. Grotesque, If Not Worse A good sense of humor is needed in this Muscle Shoals business. Especially it is needed when considering the congressional committee frantically busy in Washington negotiating a lease for the giant Government power plant. This committee was appointed, and is functioning, on the brilliant theory that the people as a whole have neither the right nor ability to operate such a plant for and by themselves. Here’s the humor of it: There's not a man on the committee but comes from a State in which public power plants have been successfully operated for years. The two Democratic members, Senator Heflin of Alabama and Representative Quinn of sippi, come, in fact, from States in which the publicly operated outnumber the privately operated plants, in Alabama, according to McGraw’s Electrical Directory, there are thirty publicly operated plants, including one in Heflin’s own home town, Lafayette. Alabama has only twenty-six privately operated plants. In Mississippi there are fifty-one publicly operated and only forty privately operated plants. Senator Deneen, committee chairman, lives in Chicago. Chicago has had a successful publicly operated plant since 1887. It sells electricity for 1 cent or less a kilowatt hour. Iu Kentucky, Senator Sackett’s State, there aie twenty-three publicly operated plants. In Pennsylvania Representative Morin’s State, there are fortythree. In Michigan, Representative James’ State, there are ninety-three. For such a committee to lease away Muscle Shoals, built with the people's money e.xpresssly for public operation, is grotesque. And future generations will use a shorter and uglier word.
Tom Sims Says
Better marry tin girl and save money. Steak and potatoes don't cost as much as candy and Mowers. Coffee will not keep you awake night if you drink milk instead. W*'- 1 The honeymoon ends when the life insurance agents, begin. One tells us she is going to get married this summer even if she has to go swimming every day to do so. An auto lire seems to last longest when it is on a neighbor's car. Falling Stars Are Not Really Stars You can (ret an answer to any question of fact or information by writing- to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1.323 New York Ave.. Washington, D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given nor can extended research be undertaken. Aii other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot lie answered. All letters are confidential.— Editor. Are falling stars really stars that fall to the earth? They are not stars at all. They are in fact small pieces of matter known as meteorites—tiny wandering bodies in space, which, coming into the area of the earth’s gravitational attraction, fall toward tlio earth, and when they enter the earth’s atmosphere, the friction caused thereby, heats them to balls of incandescent matter and most of them are burned up and disintegrated before they ever reach the earth’s surface. A few fall to the surface and a number of them are in museums throughout the country. Why arc persons who attend to the preparation of the dead for burial called “undertakers”? Undertaker means contractor in general, but is especially used of those who “undertake” to bury the dead, an “undertaking” which friends and relatives can hardly attempt to do for themselves. lienee the name. • What is the difference between an antiseptic and a disinfectant? An antiseptic is an agent used to destroy or restrain the growth of putrefactive micro-organisms. It is used in actual contect with the person’s body. A disinfectant is used for the same purposes hut does not come into contact with the living person. What does “Dominion Day" betoken in Canada? July 1, 1867, marks the day when the British Parliament granted to the Dominion of .Canada, through the British North America act of ItS67, the fullest amount of autonomy in its affairs, ana is celebrated as Dominion Day.
.THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Lady Jane
~r' -"' ifoc&pg.Wji l ■ • -"eBM
Marcella Shields
With the Wednesday matinee of “Hose-Marie” playing to a standing room capacity audience at English’s indications are that nil is well with this show. MarceiJa Shields is seen as Lady Jane in this production. Engagement closes Saturday night.
E 5 IN INDIANA
HOOSIERS MOSTLY ORDINARY FOLKS Dr. Edie, director of the bureau of business research at Indiana University, points out in a report on Hoosier incomes that in this State there is an exceptionally even distribution of income among the mass of people, and the average per individual is neither extremely high nor extremely low. Indianu s total income last year, including all chesses of gainful o< ■ cupations, from fanners to magnates, was approximately $1,750,000,000. The State ranked eleventh in the Union in point ot income. Yet in 1923 Indiana had only 181 persons in the millionaire class. New York City has more millionaires than that in the divorce courts every day. If all incomes above SIO,OOO in Indiana could bo divided among the entire popula tion of tho State, the average U < ■ tory wage earner would only receive about 2 per cent more a jear than lie does now. All of which indicate ■- that tiie State has few outrageously wealthy citizens and little stark poverty. It is peopled by plain, ordinary folk-. Most of us Boosters can support motor cars, Fords and radio sets and livi in comfort. But few of us can afford affinities, po-e as big btJtter-and-cgg men, or indulge hi ostentatious luxuries. Strictly middle class. That's Indiana. We have farmers, not peasant -: Rotarians> not prole - tariat; bungalows, not slums. There is the sou re.- of Indiana's economic strength. It is not the total or the statistical average, but the actual distribution cf wealth and income among all til" people of the State that is important.
NO TEARS IN COURT Judge Hurley of Chicago, hear ing a breach of promise case • gainst an Indianapolis surgeon, ordered the jury from the room when the fair plaintiff started to cry on the witness stand, while telling the story of her blasted love affair. “Lock up the jury,” abruptly commanded the judge. “We are not going to have a weeping verdict in my court. Unless the plaintiff controls her emotions in the presence of the jury, I will dismiss the case.” What are we coming to? No sob stuff in a breach of promise case? That's robbing the ladies of their most potent court weapon. Like staging Hamlet without the durable Dane in the cast. If that dry-eyed precedent is followed, next they will lie censoring the love missives read into the court records, and heart balm cases will lose their popular appeal. They'll become just musty lawsuits. Damming the tear ducts may take some of the joy out of life for the spectators at the trial. Still it may not hamstring justice. But if it is desirable to exclude emotional appeals from breach of promise cases, why not from other trials? If a lachrymal shower might so influence the jury in a breach of promise case that justice jumps out the window, what’s the effect of all the playing on sympathy, sentimental appeals, emotional claptrap and sob stuff permitted before the juries in criminal trials from petit larceny to murder?
WILL IT LAST? C. H. Robertson, former Hoosier, who ’has spent twenty-live years in Y. M. C. A. work in China, told an Indianapolis audience Tuesday that the Chinese of the educated class view America kindly and tolerantly, but they are skeptical of our country and civilization. They don’t think the United States will last. The Chinese attitude, he says, seems to be: “We have been watching Western civilization for a. long, long time. Assyria and Babylon, Nineveh and Tyre, Egypt, Rome and Greece. Western civilizations do not last, and why should the United States be an exception?” From the Chinese standpoint such skepticism may be justified. China was a flourishing nation in a high stage of civilization when Abraham moved out of Ur of the Chaldees. To China, which has endured while nations rose and fell, the thousand years Imperial Rome strutted the world’s stage was but an incident. Quite likely to the people of such a durable race the United States as* nation, with its scant two centuries of history, is just a boister-
New Show Opens at Palace Today
Gattison Jones and Elsie Elliott, dancers who headline the Palace Theater the last half of this week, introduce their Hollywood Club Orchestra, the only one of its kind, in their “Different Song and Dance Revue.” Jones and Miss Elliott have a series r ‘ solos and ensembles In their progium of the latest dances. New angles to known steps and aerobatic dancing are included in the act. The Hollywood aggregation hails from California, where, at one .time they furnished music for pleasure seekers at the Hollywood clubhouse. “Tho Syncopated Kids” play the saxophone bass viol and accordion in their unutual act of song, comedy and music. Pinto and Bennett Fletcher are two of the trio. Bryan lx>o and Mary Cranston are hilling their novelty as “Mary, Queen of Shots,” in which comedy us well as surprises are kept in store for audiences. The only comedienne in vaudeville who sings an F above high C is Muriel Morgan, who with Van Sheldon deals solely with comedy antics in “A Dash of Red.” The Four Juggling Nelsons have a hoop novelty in which their hoops are said to become animated. The Nelsons have been a feature in the New' York Hippodrome with their “Hoops. My Dear.” “Forbidden Waters” is the photo-
ous, energetic upstart. It hasn’t been in existence long enough to demonstrate its lasting qualities. However, the longevity of a nation is relatively unimportant. The glory that was Greece blazed and was extinguished in a period of two hundred years. America lias contributed more to the W'orld's progress in two generations than China has since the lieginning of the Christian era. We aren't much interested in the question, will the United States last? Americans are more concerned with what’s going to happen before 6 o’clock this evening than the state of affairs a thousand years hence. ALWAYS LAMBS TO BE SHEARED The Indiana Securities Commission tiled charges yesterday in Henry County against the promoters of i peer powder enterprise, stock in which amounting to I’SO.OOO shares, ’tis said. w . ' sold in Henry County investors. And another fak-- stock enterprise is exposed. The company was represented to prospective investors as the manufacturer of a malt powder which, when placed ,n water, would make 7 per rent beer. There would be millions in it if such a powder wn possible. Col. Mulberry Sellers never thought of a more seductive shortcut to fortune. The prospects dazzled those to whom the promoters offered shares in the enterprise. The (onie-ons licked their lips and bought stock. Now the investors have headaches and not from consumption of the company's product. They find they have purchased chunks of blue sky. The stock they purchased had not been approved by the State Securities fiommission, the company was not incorporated, nor had the salesmen peddling the socalled securities dealers’ licenses, as required by State law. None of the provisions of the Indiana blue-sky law, passed hv the last Legislative for the protection of innocent investors, ' had been complied with. Yet the stock was sold readily to investors who didn't take the trouble to investigate the status of the securities. They didn't even bother to inquire whether the securities were approved by the commission. They just bit. It’s mighty hard even for a perfect blue-sky law to protect investors against their own folly. There are always lambs begging to he sheared and fake stock promoters walling to oblige.
MR._FIXIT Washington St, Surface Bad, Complaint,
Let Mr. Kixit (invent your ease to city officials. He is The Times representative at the city hall. Write him at The Times. Resurfacing of E. Washington St. will diminish the revenues of the auto repair garages considerably, according to Albert Middleton, chief engineer’s department inspector, who is best with complaints of large chuckholes, similar to the following: DEAR MR. FIXIT: We wish to report a large chuckhole in front of 2313 E. Washington St., on the south side of the car tracks. Motorists strike it with a great deal of force. It is very nerve racking and could cause an accident very easily by a driver losing control of his machine. We have even heard of windshields being broken going over it. I. R. OOLEV, 2317 E. Washington St. C. M. HAUSE. 2313 E. Washington St. The board of works has ordered immediate resurfacing. DEAR MR. FIXIT: We are reminded each, year to keep our city beautiful and clean. An old man next door persists in keeping a few chickens to satisfy a whim. The man who rents to him has a grocery and dumps rotten vegetables apd fruits In the lot. I have to see and smell, them 365 days a year. TIMES SUBSCRIBER The board of health inspectors wdl visit the location at once was the promise Mr. Fixit obtained. GETS JAIL SENTENCE The Supreme Court struck a severe blow at auto thieves when it sentenced a man to two years at the penitentiary for receiving a stolen auto.
play with an all star cast. Pathe News, a comedy, and topics of the day are the short reels. -I- -I- -I----ME LEIF TALKS A BIT ABOUT STAGE A breath of New England country life is brought to Keith's this week when Mellie Dunham of Norway, Me., the champion fiddler of his territory and the protege of Henry Ford, who is attempting to revive interest in the old-time dances, and who fiddles some old-time tunes while his neighbors, who are traveling with him, give an exhibition of liow they danced in the old days. Mellie’s debut into Keith-Albee vaudeville is not only an unique experience for Mellie but is likewise a novelty for Keith patrons. Away fronithe blase showmanship of the hardened actor, and away from theatrical embellishments, Mellie in his simple stage setting, a bam dance with his Norway neighbors earnestly stepping to Mellie's tunes, produces an odd sensation to the theatergoer. Unaffected and void of couching Mellie makes his gestures and spontaneous speeches and announcements. No one has ever told Mellio what to say or explained in lengthy speeches tho psychology of getting his work across the footlights, yet heart and soul and audience finds itself with Mellie. “No, I am not nervous about facing people,” said the seventy-two-year-old fiddler. ”1 consider them as my friends and treat them as such. Courtesy is my watchword, and I want to tell you it sometimes pays. Everyone hack stage is nice to me and my idea of theatrical life, is that the whole thing is like one big brotherhood.” After Dunham’s first stage appearance in Boston, Mass., one of his actor colleagues. Jack Wyatt, of the “Scotch Lads and Lassie,” presented him with a watch, which was one of the first timepieces ever manufactured by the Waltham Company. Mellie prizes the watch very highly, an<l the spirit in which it was given means more to him than the actual value of the watch. .1. .i. .i. I I I Other theuteis today offer: “RoseMarie,’’ at English’s: “The Cam paigners." at the Lyric: "The Bartier,” at the Ohio: “East Lynne," ; at the Colonial; “Soul Mates,” at tlie Apollo; “The In lined Lady." at the Circle; “Mellie Dunham, at Keith's: complete new show at the j Isis and burlesque at tho Broadway. Tiie Indiana Indorsers of Bhotoj plays recommended for adults the ; following features: “Fast Lynne. ' “The Barrier" and "Soul Mates;" family, "The Untamed Lady." THEATER I PI.I FT IS AIM BARIS—The church and state In France maj be separated beyond hope )of roconcilation, but the J church and stage seem to be growj Ing closer together. Recent weeks j have seen the formation of two j Catholic associations for the uplift 1 of the theater, and important mem- | bers of France's leading theater, !' he Comed; Fran lise. are ■■ ive in | each.
Friday’s Removal Bargains Quantities Limited on These Articles
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SIS Chairs. $7.50 Tapestry neat*. Arm chairs to match; regularly S2O, for $lO.
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M 50% Off Mfest Maxkdt Stree*~Opposite Bitararban Staboa Sale | We Move About April 15 to 37-39-41 S. Meridian StJ
THE VERY IDEA By Ilai Cochran ■ 111 "
THE "DRIVER” Well, where are we going? Oh, nobody knows. Just out in the open where everyone goes. A drivin’ the car full o’ kids is the thing that always occurs with the cornin’ of spring. There's something about it that gets in the blood. The air's full o’ pej—and the loud full o' mud. But, shucks, it's real fun to be flirtin’ with luck, and trust to the fates that the car won't get stuck. You se* little byways where traffic is thin, and clatter along in ver bundle of tin. You’re driving the family, an’ oughta be glad—in spite of the fact that they’re drivin’ you mad. The wife tells you this, and the kids tell you that. No wonder you never know' just where you're at. They call you the driver—that's just a wise crack, ’cause really the driver is sittin’ in back. The man at the wheel him my sympathy, yea. lie drives, hut he has very little to say. U’s fun to go touring. It's plea- it to roam. But, shucks, for the driver —it's fun to get home. * • • Now that marble season is on, even the kids are rolling their own. • • • NOW, HONESTLY— The person in mind is the one whom everybody thinks never gets tired. Her world, you might say, is the various monotonous walls that make up the inside of the place we call home. Her main sidekick is a broom or a vacuum cleaner. Her time is her own—to do with as she likes —after she has used ninety-nine per cent of it doing the things sne has to do. Ringing doorbells. Flowing sink water Cluttering little feet that track mud. They are the songs of her existence. Better than whom there is nary a soul— Allow me to introduce the one your father married.
Text: “None of us livetli to himself."—Kom. 14:7. Hocictv is a composite organism \ made up of a collection of individuals, and the whole of society is j more or less affected by each indij vidua! <>f which it is composed. There is ,*• system of reciprocal pleasures an I Ix n- fits. sorrows and evils workling in the affairs of men, and every i mortal, without a single exception. ;is making some kind of impression ! upon human society. No man cun I confine himself to the narrow limits of a personal and individual existjence. Directly or indirectly, every lone of us is exerting an influence ' upon those around us. Such is the j nature of the mind and moral character of man tiiat he cannot, if he would, keep from exerting an infilli cnee upon his fellow-beings. : That influence may lie for good lor it tiiav be for evil. Moreover, it
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The wise man will not suggest going to the movies, these Moving pictures suggest liottJHk cleaning. * • • The average man thinks that the davenport is Just something to fall back on. • • • "The two of us,” friend hubby said, “Can live as cheap as one.” And then they lound (hat living cheap Was anything but fun. • • • If your youngsters start making a lot of noise just when you're trying to hear what station is coming over the radio—they’re normal children. • • * HUSBAND—(Ariving home late) Can't j'ou guess w'here I’ve been? WlFE—Sure I cun—but go ahead and tell your story anyway. • • • > “Now I know what makes tho wheels go ’round," said father, as he paid the gasoline bill. When a man is too shy to get married—the only tiling to do is step out and earn more. • • • FABLES IN FACT MOTHER WAS TRYING TO TEACH SONNY BOTH TOTTQTTET AND HONESTY PERIOD SOUNDS fine comma but mmfti.mes THEY DO NOT GO WELL TOGETHER PERIOD FOR INTANVK COMMA ONE DAY THEY WERE INVITED OUT TO DINNER MA AND WHEN D1 SERVED COMMA SONNY Wffl | ASKED IF 11E WOULD LIKE A THIRD PIECE OF CAKE PERIOD YOU CAN IMAGINE IloW PUZZLED THE POOR YOUNGSTER WAS PERIOD TO SAY COMMA QUOTATION MARK SURF QUOTATION MARK COMMA WOULDN'T BE ETIQCKT COMMA AND To SAY COMMA QUOTATION MARK NO THANK YOU QUOTATION MARK COMMA WOULDN’T 1!E HONEST PERIOD (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)
A Sermon for Today
is immortal. An influence onto created lives forever. This is one of the most solemn thoughts that cuu ever engage the mind of man, Thh of starting In the world an influom ■ that shall live on through all tlui coming years. And yet that Is wliat we are each doing, every day and every hour, it is so even with tho most humble of us. We are exerting an Influence, an influence for good or evil, and that influence will survive the etrokc of death, outlive ilie pulverizing process of the grave, and will be found working when tho busy din of time shall have been hushe J in tlie great dawn of eternity. What a solemn and awful thing It Is to live here in this world! liow careful we ought to be about how we ihn —what we think, what we say ifH what we do. (Copyright, 1925, by John R. Qunn)
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$10.76 Table Lamp, $4.95 Metal l>a.e, georgette frame; 24 lnchea high.
MARCH 25,192 G
Torchieres, 49c Complete with cord. As pictured.
