Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1930 — Page 9
TONE 2fi, 1930.
(.Trifles Are Important in Wedlock BY MARTHA LEE. It’* so seldom the really big obstacles In marriage, the really Important faults of husbands and wives, cause those irreparable rifts, that is really is amazing. Men and women are strange people when they are husbands and wives. They bear burdens that would have seemed impossibly weighty in the days when they were traveling single harness. And yet, the smallest thing can upset the whole machinery. Wives will toil from sun up till sundown for their husbands. They will stint and 6ave. They will do without necessities and never say a word. They will work until they drop from exhaustion, sometimes without so much as a word of appreciation, and never care. They will strain every nerve always to be pleasant and cheerful when their husbands are around. The same holds good with the men. They will labor all week and take the pay envelope home every Saturday to be used entirely for household expenses without a murmur. They will go through heartbreaking worry and anxiety to keep their families together. They will come to unbearably tragic situations and make the best of it.
Little Things Count But the smallest, most insignificant appearing part of the mechanism can gum up the whole works. The husband and wife may get along like two doves in spite of their hardships. They may have the utmost admiration for each other. It may be that the wife does not see her husbapd as pretty much of a business flop. Perhaps the husband does not know his wife is not the best "'-i-ager that ever ran a household. But they’re happy. They’ve passed a lot of hazards successfully. And then something like this comes up: Dear Mias Lee: I have been married •even years. My husband and I have two ohlldren. We are not the most successful people ip the world, financially, but we've gone through some pretty hard battles and come through happy. By battles. I mean struggles to make both ends meet. When I first married my husband, he was a promising young business man. in line for some good promotions. Just about the time we were getting started, the company changed hands and he has not made good. We were transferred here In the first few years of our marriage, and finances have prevented us from visiting our folks much.
Payinr Lons Visit In the meantime my husband's mother look it into her head to pay us a long visit. We never have asked his or my folks for any help. When we were hard up. we lived meayerly until things brightened up. Now my husband resents the fact that he has not succeeded. He has felt tbet a great deal of his failure was due to the change in management. So have I. I never have thought it was because he was not able. But here comes his mother, to see our real living conditions for the first time in about five years. She is not particularly pleased. Not only that, but whom do you think she blames? Me! She says, not in so many words, that I am the fault because I am such a miserable manager. I wish she coul i see me make a meal for four with a quarter to spend. Anyway, she has pointed it out and pointed it out until she has my husband believing if it weren’t for me. we would be millionaires. I can stand being poor and pinched, but I can not stand being blamed for something I have no reason to believe has been my fault. Perhaps Not So Good It has suddenly made me realize maybe jnv husband was not so good, that maybe the breaks, which I always considered had been against him. were lust what he earned and deserved. And I refuse to let him hoist the blame off on my shoulders. I am thinking of walking it all off. DISCOURAGED. Jilst think of all you’ve gone through together, and now you would leave him for the talk of his mother. You say you’ve been disillusioned all this time, that you suddenly have decided your husband Wasn’t marked for success. You’ve made excuses for him in your heart for years and never suspected they were excuses. Can't you let an old woman indulge in a little excuse making, too? It is pretty miserable of your husband to listen to her talk and not realize what it’s worth. Just talk it out with him. Only don’t tell him you have become disillusioned about his possibilities. That would be pretty mean. And you might suggest an early return of the mother as the cause of the dissention. Luncheon to Be Held Koran temple, 30, Daughters of the Nile, will have a luncheon bridge Friday at the home of Mrs. Henry C.. Helms, stop 4, Greenfield line.
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Hughey-Smith Wedding to Be Held Tonight Miss Yolande Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Smith, 2208 Langley street, will become the bride of Edward Hughey, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hughey, Springmill road, tonight at a ceremony performed at the nome of the bride’s parents at 3. The house will be decorated with baskets of pink and blue flowers. Miss Elizabeth Smith, sister of ant. She will wear pink crepe and the bride, will be her only attendcarry a bouquet of pink roses. Calvin Hughey will be his brother’s best man. The bride will wear a blue crepe frock with a wreath of white flowers in her hair, and will carry a bouquet of white roses and baby breath. The couple will be at home after July 1, in this city. Give Dance Recital Pupils of Genevieve Furnas gave a dance recital Monday night on the lawn of Miss Furnas’ home, 1116 East Vermont street, for the benefit of Wheeler City Rescue Mission. Those who took part were Misses Helen Link, Jane Magel Catherine Keefer and Betty Howson.
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TAE CRIME AGAIN IT TEMPERANCE ypv/OAMEf A.REED FORMER. |U /_ u. S. SENATOR FROM MISSOURI.
ARTICLE IV From Liberty to Prohibition THE people of the United States were promised a millennium, a veritable paradise o nearth, once the business of making and selling liquor was abolished. Among the predictions, I choose one of the mildest. The Rev. Charles Stelzle, a minor, but accredited prophet, wrote in 1918: When saloons are closed . . . a good many policemen will lose their jobs. So will some jailkeepers. Some judges will not l be so busy . . . Policemen, judges and jailkeepers will be more profitably employed than when they ‘punished’ booze-soaked men. Lawyers will not have so many cases of certain kinds which grow out> of the liquor business, directly and indirectly. Doctors will not be called upon so frequently by those who now suffer because the saloons are wide open. These quotations are taken from Mr. Stelzle’s book, “Why Prohibition,” used as a text-book during the submission of the eighteenth amendment to the states. I fear they will not increase his value as a prophet. There is not a community where these glowing words of hope and cheer have not been refuted dismally. The record of the first ten years of prohibition in the United States is written in three words, folly, crime, and failure. Courts Jammed with liquor cases and their corridors swarming with bondsmen and fixers of the underworld, penitentiaries crammed to overflowing with mutinous convicts, organized bands of criminals competing with one another for an exclusive monopoly over murder and extortion, bootleggers plying their trade among high school children, the energy of the police deflected from its real purpose, when not shamefully debauched; corruption so general in high place and low that it no longer shocks the citizen, staggering sums of the people’s money frittered away on “enforcement,” the complete failure of congress, court, or President to enact, interpret, or enforce any adequate measure to relieve the intorable situation—these are only a few of the grim facts of prohibition after ten years. if n tt
IF it be thought that I exaggerate, read the word picture of today painted by one of the outstanding apostles, Dr. Ernest H. Cherrington, executive secretary and publicity director of the Anti-Saloon league. For thirty-five years Ernest Cherrington has been a professional prohibition reformer. He has done little else during his entire life. He is perhaps the most tolerant of all his brothers. Read what the worthy doctor calls the picture of today: The picture of prohibition at its worst is not a pleasant picture. We read, see and hear much today regarding the bootlegger, the rum runner, hip-pocket flasks, drinking by girls and young women, the part which beveragealcohol plays at public dances and in automobile parties, corruption in government enforcement circles, poison liquor, feuds among bootleg kings, the flagrant violation of the law by the liquor interests in cities, and the serious disregard of law by the people. Surely today’s picture is dark enough. Surely the beverage-al-cohol problem in American is far from solution. Surely the road to complete victory is yet a long, long trail.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
I This is a sordid picture, a ghastly picture, a terrible picture Dr. Cohrington has not concealed the facts. What he has concealed is the responsibility for the Anti-Saloon League for these unspeakable conditions. He does not tell you that the eighteenth amendment is the handiwork of the Anti-Saloon League. From the moment of its adoption and the passage of the Volstead act, which seeks to enforce it, the whole temper of this country, in dealing with the admitted evil of drink, changed from a spirit of temperance to one of persecution. I do not believe that many sincere prohibitionists could have guessed in 1913, or even in 1917, or 1920, what evils and what menace their proposal contained. a u tt IN those days we did not know as much about the Anti-Saloon League as we do now. It held itself out of the churches, in Wayne B. Wheeler’s words, as an “educational, scientific and charitable” institution. It did not tell the good people of its secret intent “to pry open the churches” and use them for money appeals from their altars. The Anti-Saloon League, then, had not been forced to reveal how its funds were collected and expended. It did not tell the small contributor that his silver offering was split 50-50 between the exhorter and the league. Asa United States senator, I witnessed the adoption of the eighteenth amendment and saw the original Volstead law enacted. Time and time again, I have seen prohibition bills come before congress. I have heard roll call after roll call record the “dry” votes of man after man who had drunk liquor all his life and who intended to keep right on drinking. Deep in the hearts and minds of our citizenry, much of the growing disrespect for law is rooted in contempt* for such hypocritical legislators. The people have learned, what they did not know when the Volstead law was passed, that the lobbyists of the Anti-Saloon League act on the theory that “it is better to have a, drunkard who will vote right than to have a saint who will vote wrong.” SHORTLY before my voluntary retirement from the United States senate I paid my respects to dry-voting, wet-drinking congressmen. Asa sardonic joke, I said: “I sometimes have been tempted to write a list of the names of the men who vote dry and drink wet.” It so happened that I did not finish my remarks at the close of the day’s session on Saturday. When I returned to my office Monday morning, my secretary told me that he had received calls from several indignant members of congress, who understood that I had prepared a list of members whose votes did not square with their toddies and that I would insert it in the congressional record. Each caller understood that his name stood prominently upon the roster. I later discovered that two or
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three young members of congress, ably abetted by some newspaper correspondents, had spread the report and were enjoying the scramble that ensued. So when the senate reconvened Monday, I though it proper to assure all interested persons that while I might feel compelled to tell the names of people who commit real crimes, I never had fallen to the level of a prohibition Informer, and no one need fear exposure of his personal habits from me. * * IF prohibition can produce such unwholesome wriggling and dodging among some of those whose votes enacted it, what must be its result upon the private citizen? When force and fear, the federal policeman’s bludgeon and the professional reformer’s club are substituted for the dictates of the individual’s conscience, then fraud in the concealment becomes the general rule for private conduct. Yes, we know a great deal more about prohibition than we did ten years ago. We have learned that this “experiment noble in motive” was brought about by methods and tactics carefully concealed from the American people. (Copyright. 1930, Current News Features, Inc.) The title of Friday*# article by Senator Reed will be: “Intolerance; the Heart of Prohibition.” MINISTERS TO STUDY MORALS OF ACTORS Los Angeles Church Group to Investigate Film Colony. By United Press HOLLYWOOD, June 26.—The ministerial association of Los Angeles has pledged its members to Investigate the morals of motion picture actors and actresses whenever the need for such action arises. Players who lay themselves open to question because of their conduct will be placed on the blacklist, and church members will be requested not to patronize theaters exhibiting their films.
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