Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1931 — Page 9

MAY 14, 1931

POPE TO BARE | VIEW ON LABOR | IN RADIO TALK Encyclical to Be Based on Address Pontiff Will Deliver Friday. BY FRANCIS RF.A tolled Prr-15 Staff Correspondent VATICAN CITY, May 14.—The j address to be broadcast by Pope | Plus XI from over the Vatican radio J station will be the basis for his J forthcoming cnc> iical on the re- ; lations of capital and labor. The encyclical, which Is to be I made public later this month, will j lie a summary of the pope's address.; In his speech the pontifl will al- j lude to the anti-religious riots in! Spam earlier this week, condemning j them in scathing terms, It is under- ■ stood. Spain under former King Alfonso XIII, had long been a Roman Catholic country, with the state exporting the church. He also was expected to refer to | t,he labor situation in Soviet Russia, I where charges of forced labor have : been voiced abroad. Talk on Labor Problems The pope, it was indicated, will give Catholics throughout the world directions regarding labor questions, insofar as they are connected with the moral- and religious aspects of j society. The radio address will coincide with ! the fortieth anniversary of the “Rerum Novarum” encyclical issued by Pope Leo VIII on the same subject, expressing the Catholic church's views on new problems. Pope Leo XIII issued his famed encyclical “Rerum Novarum,” dated May 15, 1891, as a frontal attack on Socialism. At the same time he accepted what he termed “the spirit of revolutionary change” which he said had passed beyond politics and entered the field of practical economics, and in many quarters his ideas were found startling at the time they were expressed. Leo Opposed to Socialism The Socialists were, in the pope’s opinion, “working on the poor man’s envy of the rich, endeavoring to destroy private property." But such proposals were termed futile and unjust and the principle of private' ownership was strongly upheld while it was declared that "the main tenet of Socialism, the community of goods, utterly must be rejected, for it would injure those whom it intended to benefit.” Humanity must remain as it is and it can not be reduced to a level, Leo found, He asserted that class is not naturally hostile to class, but labor and capital mutually are dependent. 11. S. Aiding Peanut Growers WASHINGTON, May 14. —The federal farm board announced today that it is assisting farmers to establish a national marketing organization for the principal peanut growilg regions of the southeastern states. A CLEAR COMPLFi’ION Ruddy cheeks—sparkling eyes—most women can have. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 20 years treated scores of women tor liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. Know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, causing a normal action, carrying ofT the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a palp face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, take one of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets -now and then to keep flt. 15c, 20c and 60c.—Advertisement.

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BARRYMORE IN ROLE OF AN EVIL GENIUS Famous Actor to Be Seen as Svengali in •‘Trilby,” Which Opens Saturday for the Week at the Apollo. "QVENGALI.” Warner Brothers late release starring John Barrymore in the title role, depicting the strange character of music-master fiend, will occupy the Apollo theater screen, starting Saturday. Few characters of Action have ever taken a real place in the consciousness of the world. However, Svengali is thought to be one of the few. Stepping out of George Du Maurier’s famous novel, "Trilby,” which won such sensational acclaim as a stage play in all English speaking countries, a generation ago, the character stands as the embodiment of evil love. Even the millions who have not read “Trilby” or seen it on the stage

know the satanic portent of the name Svengali, just as those who have not seen "Uncle Tom's Cabin” know the signiAcance of Simon Legree. The pointed beard, the lanky black hair, the blazing eyes, which Du Maurier—who also illustrated his novel—gave to his sinister character, and which has become associated with the part, are faithfully done by Barrymore in his amazing makeup. Miss Marian Marsh, who plays the part of Trilby in “Svengali,”

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

30 ESCAPE IN REBELLION AT i GIRLS'PRISON ! Seven Penniless Fugitives Voluntarily Return to School. fly United Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala., May 14. Seven of the thirty girls who scaled a wire fence and escaped from the j Alabama training school during a riot, returned to the institution today. Police said they would make no organized search for the others, in | the belief the fugitives, penniless, would voluntarily give themselves up when they tired of their freedom. Affairs at the institution settled into the usual routine with a new' superintendent, Mrs. T. F. Adams, Red Cross executive, in charge. Wednesday's riot, the third in a | week, occurred after the resignation j of Mrs. Ida Champion as superin-

tendent. She had been under Are on maltreatment charges. One hour arter Mrs. Champion’s resignation, the senate passed a bill disqualifying her as superintendent, under a measure which makes college graduation a requirement for the position. Police here had announced they would answer no more riot calls at the school, but a detail went out to establish order upon urgent appeals from officials. The girls took ignition keys from the police automobiles so they could not be followed, while others in the institution kept the attention of officers so that the twentyfour girls could make their escape over the high wire fence. Residents in the vicinity were accused by police today with assisting the girls in their escape and driving them away in automobiles. Mrs. Champion decided to resign after the riot of Monday night, when the girls tore doors from their hinges, hurled bedding from the windows and broke windows in pretest of alleged ill-treatment. Senator Not to Run Again By United Press WASHINGTON, May 14.—Senator Harry B. Hawes <Dem„ Mo.) announced today that he W'ill not be a candidate for re-election in 1932.

GIVEN ‘MERIT MEDAL Martha Berry, Director of Mountain School, Honored by Club. By United Press NEW YORK, May 14.—Miss Martha McChesney Berry, director of the Berry school for mountain children at Mt. Berry, Ga„ has been awarded the third annual medal of honor of the Town Hall Club for achieving “an accomplishment of lasting merit.” Miss Berry was elected for the honor over Booth Tarkington, au-

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George Foster Peabody, banker and philanthropist.