Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 100, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1931 — Page 11
SEPT. 4. 1931'.
EUROPE'S FEAR BLOCKS RETURN OF GOOD TIMES Political Unrest Only Adds to Ills of Nations, Leaders Assert. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMS StripDK-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON. Sept. 4.—Recovery from the business depression will be impossible as long as Europe continues to tremble in her boots in fear of what may happen next month or next year. This is the unanimous opinion of European leaders with whom I recently talked —from Arthur Henderson, former British foreign minister, to Benito Mussolini, Fascist Duce of Italy. D o ti b t—sometimes reasonable, sometimes unreasonable, but generally black and devastating—appears to have seized the entire continent of Europe, paralyzing industry and blocking economic recovery. Wilhelm Marx, former chancellor of Germany, expressed to the writer grave fears for the whole of Europe unless something is done to put an end to the blighting effects of the present uncertainty. Unless the capitalist powers can find a way out, he said, the Communists may soon have their innings. Many Problems Worry Europe and the world, he pointed out, is wondering and fearful of what is going to happen to Germany after the present short term credits have expired. What is going to happen after the Hoover moratorium ends next July? What is going to happen to reparations and what is going to happen to the war debts? What is going to happen at the arms limitation conference? What is going to happen in the Franco-German quarrel over treaty revision and in the German-Polish quarrel over the eastern frontier? What are the German Fascists going to do? What about tariffs? What about Russia? Marx Sees Solution There is a practical way to solve most of these problems, in the opinion of former Chancellor Marx, and the quicker it is found, he declares, the sooner America and the rest of the w'orld will return to normal. Few statesmen in Europe even pretend to believe that President Herbert Hoover's dramatic move to save Germany, or that the present desperate efforts to stave off disaster in England, are anything more than temporary expedients. “Now something further must be done, and done quickly,” the German ex-chancellor declared gravely. “But as this is not a national, but a world, crisis, it requires a world remedy. “A world economic conference should be held as soon as passible to dispose of the uncertainties which are now frustrating every effort to bring back good times. “Reparations and war and ebt payments should be postponed for five*
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years, thus giving time for a com-mon-sense solution of the problems arising therefrom. That would be one uncertainty less. “Then there should be a general agreement to scale down both reparations and war debts to a point where this thing of paying out vast sums of money for unproductive purposes would cease to be an economic drag on the nations involved. And another Goubt would disappear.” Depression Hits Alimony Payers By United Preen NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—The depression has touched the alimony business—officially. Heretofore husbands who failed to make payments were automatically held in contempt but Justice George V. Mullin of the Bronx, has handed down a decision allowing an unemployed husband to apply for reduction after loss of his job.
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THE INDIAN;
HAST PLEA OF EXECUTED MAN IS FOR BOOZE Also Asks Tomato Juice to Sober Up; Blithely Sniffs Lethal Gas. * By United Press NEVADA STATE PRISON, CARSON CITY, Sept. 4—The sentence of death on Luis Cejas. 27-year-old Mexican who killed a Chinese in a fight over, an ex-German “countess” was executed in the tiny lethal gas chamber of Nevada state penitentiary at 5:44 a. m. today. A single inhalation of the deidly hydrocyanic gas sent the nervous little convict into unconsciousness. Fourteen minutes and five seconds later, two physicians outside the chamber pronounced him dead. Eighty witnesses peering into the airtight house through newly polished windows saw the slayer wait, smiling and grimacing, for death. The last request of Cejas as he awaited death was “a bottle of whisky and then a bottle of tomato juice to sober up on.” • Cejas faced the execution in a jovial frame of mind. When word came Thursday night that his last hope had faded, he joked with his guards. Nevada claims the lethal way of killing is the most humane method yet invented. Under the new sys-
POLIS TIMES :
tem, the victim is led into the death cell and left alone. Witnesses watch him through little windows. A stethoscope over his heart is extended outside tile walls so that a physician stationed there can tell when death has struck. When the hour of death arrives, fifteen cyanide “eggs" are dropped into a bucket or water and sulphuric acid at the side of the condemned man. So long as he can hold his breath, he is safe. When he inhales one breath of the fumes he dies. Guards refused to tell whether Cejas’ last request, for whisky and tomato juice, was granted. Engineers Ponder Paving Bids, Works board today referred to the city engineering department six bids on paving of East New York street, between State avenue and Randolph street, two blocks opening New- York street through property recently acquired by the city. Estimated cost of the project is $17,447.
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KING HAS TROUT POND By United Press LONDON, Sept. 4. President Hoover can now enjoy trout fishing
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at Buckingham palace, should he visit King George. The lake has been stocked with rainbow trouj. Fish of a pound weight are now ready to be caught.
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lit is understood that King George and his guests, when fishing, use only flies. The lake is the only one within the London radius stocked with rainbow trout. •
