Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 260, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1932 — Page 14
PAGE 14
JEWS IN GRAVE i PERIL IF HITLER WINS ELECTION Fears of Pogroms Already Aroused by Threats in Germany. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS SrrfDos-Howard Knr.irn Editor WASHINGTON, March 9.-With unconcealed anxiety, Jews in the United States are awaiting the outcome of the German national elections next Sunday. Already Jews in certain parts of Germany report they are living in constant fear of a pogrom, and if Adolph Hitler and the anti-Semitic groups *about him win, Jews throughout the country, it is be- j lieved, would be in deadly peril. The American Jewish committee, headed by Cyrus Adler of Phila- j delphia, and on whose executive committee is Benjamin N. Cardozo, recently appointed United States | court justice, warns that the danger is not confined to Germany, but is world wide. Bitterness on Increase The existing economic struggle, it declares, inevitably carries usual bitterness in its train. And if German Jews are made the scapegoats in Germany now, the movement likely will spread to other lands tomorrow. Jews nowhere will be im- ! mune. The Hitlerites are regarded as the outstanding threat to the Jews of Germany. This party frankly includes as one of its principal planks virtual outlawry of all Jews. “Only a member of our people j can be a citizen,’’ the program of the National Socialist party (the Nazis) declares. Then it defines who “our people” are. “A member of our people can be only one who is of German blood, without regard to his religion. Therefore, no Jew can be a member of our people.” Continuing, the pogrom asesrts: “Any one who is not a citizen may live in Germany only as a guest, and j must be subject to legislation adopted for the governing of for- ; eigners.” Barred From Office Jews could not hold office. If there are not enough jobs to go round, Jews and other “foreigners” I “are to be expelled.” No other “for- | eigners” could enter the country and these who have come in since Aug. 2, 1914, must leave. Decades ago the American Jewish committee declared in a state- 1 ment to the writer that German in-; t.ollectuals favored the Jews in the fight against -anti-Semitism. Today, however, owing to increasing competition in professional fields, “the intellectuals are among their most bitter foes.” “The universities are the cen- 1 ters of anti-Semitic agitation. Writ-, ers, professors, teachers, physicians, \ lawyers, are the advance guard of j anti-Semitic activity . . . it is in j the courts, schools and all other departments of public life.” Sentiment Is Spreading Jews in Germany, it was stated, | are being boycotted. Merchants and | employes already are hit. Jewish rituals are taboo in certain sections. Weimar, the town of Goethe and the birthplace of the present con- , stitution, has been in daily fear of pogroms; throughout Thuringia anti-Semitic prayers were recited daily in the schools at the behest of the minister of the interior. The elections of next Sunday will be to name a German president. The leading candidate is the aged Marshal Von Hindenburg. His chief opponent is Adolf Hitler, the fiery Fascist. Hitler’s party is the second largest in the country and is said to be growing fast. The conservatives want Hindenburg. But so desperate is the j plight of the masses, that anything j can happen. Hitler’s pledge to re- j pudiate reparations, tear up the treaty of Versailles, restore Ger- j many’s prewar frontiers and run j out the Jews unquestionably has j widespread appeal. POSTAL SAVINGS SHOW HALF-BiLLION INCREASE Huge Gain Made in Last Three l'cars, Department Reports. P j/ United Press WASHINGTON. March 9.—Postal savings deposits have increased more than half a billion dollars in the last three years, commerce department figures revealed today. The growth of postal savings, backed dollar for dollar, is considered by governmental financial experts to be one of the recent major features of national banking. In January. 1929. deposits totaled $153,517,000. Bv January, 1932, they had increased to $658,081,000. REALTY BOARDASKS SEN. WATSON TO TALK Indiana Lawmaker’s Support of Home Loan Bill Assured. Invitation to Senator James E. Watson to address the Indianapolis Real Estate Board next month has been extended by the board's directors. Assurance that Watson will support the home loan bank bill in congress was given a group of realtors, headed by Dan W. LeGore, president, in a conference with M. Bert Thurman, candidate for the Republican nomination for Governor, LeGore reported to directors Tuesday. The board will be addressed by Earl D. Baker, business manager of The Times, at its luncheon Thursday in the Washington.
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DARING ANNE’S COURAGE GETS GREATEST TEST
Valiant Spirit Proved in Air Exploits Helps in Present Crisis
REMEMBRANCE Your hands have curved about this bowl. Your lips Have left a kiss upon this tea cup’s rim: Frail and inanimate things that can outlast your beauty. Have they no memory of you singing still About them, echoes of your melody, If I might catch my breath and bow my head to hear. Do their bright surfaces remember not Some faint and tremulous flutter of the wings Os light and shade and color that were you; No print of touch, no perfume lingering, That Beauty’s ghosts joined hand to hand might serve As Beauty’s self, refashioning your loveliness for me? Mute bowl! Mute cup! Might as vainly ask the scent of some late jonquil to recall Lost April. —Reprint by Special Permission of the Smith College Monthly. BY JULIA’ BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer HOPEWELL, N. j., March 9.—The sensitive, imaginative college girl of five years ago who wrote the accompanying poignant verse is now the tense, white-faced Anne Morrow Lindbergh, who mourns her kidnaped child. What horrible scenes of suffering can such a vivid mind as hers be picturing for her little lost baby? What fears are striking terror to the mother-heart of one as sensitive as this poem shows her to be?
No one will ever know. For Anne Morrow Lindbergh has the high courage to suffer in utter silence. Quiet, moving as if in death, she keeps going as seconds stretch their interminable length into minutes and hours drag into days. •Resolutely she sits down at table with her mother. With steady determination she puts a cup of broth to her lips and drinks it. She must have nourishment. She expects her second child in early summer! It is this valiant moral stamina that makes Anne Morrow a fit mate for Charles Lindbergh. Again and again crises have tested this courage of hers and never found it wanting. tt an TT'VEN before she was married, she and Lindy had one narrow escape. As they took off from Valbuena field, Mexico, in February, 1929, a wheel of their ship was torn off by a stone they struck, Lindy wrenched the plane into the air with a terrific jolt. Anne’s heart must have stood still. For she knew, as Lindy did, that only a few lucky folks can land on one wheel. But as she circled the field waving a distress signal, little Anne quietly packed herself in pillows to lessen the shocks. When they picked her out of the wreck, she was pale but mustered a faint smile as she uttered her
EDWARD KELLER, 65, CLAIMED BY DEATH
Succumbs to Illness of Several Years at Sister’s Home. Edward Keller, 65, died Tuesday night in the home of his sister, Dr. Amelia R. Keller, 3815 Guilford avenue, following an illness of several years. He had lived in Indianapolis all his life. Funeral services, to be held at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek boulevard, Thursday, will be private. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. All Live in City Survivors art three sisters, Dr. Keller, Mrs. Lillian Sielken and Mrs. Otis Denny, and two brothers, Otto E. Keller and Conrad Keller, all of Indianapolis. Mrs. Susan R. Turney died Tuesday at her home, 516 West Morris street. She was 74 and had lived in Indianapolis fifty years. Mrs. Turney was a member of the Christian church. Funeral services will be held at 2 Thursday at the home. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Born in Kentucky After a two weeks’ illness S. B. VanArsdale Sr., 70, died Tuesday at his home, 3267 North New Jersey street. He was an employe of the Acme-Evans Company. Born in Harrodsburg, Ky., Mr. VanArsdale lived also in Owensboro, Ky., before coming to Indianapolis twenty years ago. He was a member of First Presbyterian church. Funeral services conducted by Dr. George Arthur Franz, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, will be held at 2:30 Thursday in the Hisey <& Titus funeral home. 951 North Delaware street. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery.
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famous “Augustus will speak for me.” The very next day they boarded a fast two-passenger ship, Lindy with his arm in a sling from a dislocated shoulder. Anne seemed undisturbed as they observed the law of crack-ups—to go right up again to recover flying confidence! In July, 1929, they had two other narrow escapes. Flying from New York to St. Louis a wheel on their Curtiss Falcon collapsed on landing at Columbus, 0., and the tail skid and one wing were injured. She climbed out unperturbed, and later they took the same ship to New York. At Newark airport just a fortnight later, a wheel collapsed outright and another wing was broken. She merely got into another plane to resume flying lessons she had started in Mexico City! nun IN January, 1930, before her baby was born, she made her first glider flight at San Diego. All alone, this mother-to-be took off from the flat summit of Soledad Mountain, headed directly toward the sea, made a number of right angle banking turns, stayed aloft more than six minutes and won her first-class glider pilot’s license. Just two months before her baby was born, Anne and Lindy made their famous speed flight from Los Angeles to New York,, in 14% hours. They stopped only for fuel, and averaged 180 miles an hour through sleet and clouds. They flew at a height of 14.000 feet in their open, tandem-seated ship.
Costly Curves By Times Special GALVESTON, Tex., March 9. Another great American institution, the international pageant of pulchritude, has yielded to the depression. New plans for the twelfth annual event reveal it has been shorn of internationalism, and this year will glorify the bathing beauties of only four states. They are Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas. Last year, thirty American beauties and six foreign contestants were entered, but directors said they sustained a $20,000 loss.
SEEK N. E. A. PARLEY Indianapolis Editorial Groups Want 1933 Meeting Held in Indianapolis. Indiana publishers will seek to bring the 1933 convention of the National Editorial Association to Indianapolis, it has been announced by Henry T. Davis, chief of the Indianapolis convention bureau. The association will meet in July at Los Angeles and the bid will be tendered by representatives of the Indiana Republican Editorial Association, Indiana Democratic Editorial Association and Indiana Weekly Press Association.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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With a calm courage few mothers-to-be have ever shown, Anne Morrow Lindbergh (upper left) donned an electrically heated flying suit, two months before Charles was born, and took off from Los Angeles with her famous husband on their recordbreaking trans-continental flight. Two months earlier, she stepped into her glider (upper right) at San Diego, headed out over tb° ocean, stayed aloft six minutes and won her glider’s pilot's license.
Little Anne, sitting in the back in her electrically-heated flying suit, was the navigator! She had been taught navigation by Wiley Post, who flew around the world with Harold Gatty. On the night that Anne and Lindy landed in New York, Anne stayed in the ship several minutes after landing. Though there were tears in her eyes," perhaps of exhaustion, perhaps of relief at success, she didn’t complain. Never once has Anne ever cried
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In August, 1930, when Lindy’s belt caught and tore a valve on an emergency gasoline tank, as they landed in Indianapolis at the air races, apd only the direction of the wind prevented the sparks from igniting the pool of gas beneath the plane, both of Anne’s hands flew to her face (as shown lower left) but no sound escaped her lips. Anne’s sturdy independence is revealed (lower right) as she alighted from their seaplane and came ashore unaided at Kasumigura beach, Japan, during the Lindberghs’ air trip to the Orient last summer.
out or become hysterical over danger. In August, 1930, the famous flying couple came near a horrible death. In landing at the air races in Indianapolis, Lindy's belt caught and tore off a valve on an emergency gasoline tank and dumped 100 gallons of gas. Only the direction of the wind prevented the sparks from the exhaust of his motor igniting the pool of gas beneath the plane. Both of Anne’s hands flew to her face but no sound escaped her!
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T AST May Anne won her private pilot’s license, going up alone in a secret test, executing spirals, figure eights, banking this way and that, in perfect form. In July, Anne became a licensed radio operator in preparation for their oriental trip. On this trip they battled fog and winds en route to Alaska, her radio keeping them posted as to position. Radio engineers claimed at the time that Anne did 75 per cent of the work on the entire oriental
flight, for the Arctic challenges the best of all radio operators and “all Lindy had to do was to fly the ship.” She told him weather conditions, the latest reports on landing conditions ahead and on the way from Nome to Siberia, received word and warned him of a severe storm ar?a which they succeeded in avoiding. In China, Anne faced death by drowning, along with Lindy. when their seaplane plunged into a wave and was damaged in taking off from the Yangtze river. Whep the crew of a British aircraft carrier fished Anne out of the water, drenched and shaking from shock, she pluckily greeted them with a smile. u u * THESE crises show of what brave stuff Anne Morrow Lindbergh is made. But now she faces a danger incomparably harder to bear than the chance of death to herself. By day and by night she lives with the horror of unknown danger to her first-born—and she is powerless! As she moves about the house, silent, withdrawn, as she finds herself drawn against her will into the little white nursery with its empty crib, she shows herself to have even greater depths of moral strength on which to draw. For, who knows but over and over in her mind may be running her own words: “Mute bowl! Mute cup!” Might as vainly ask the scent of some late jonquil to recall Lost April!”
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.MARCH 9, 1932
NAB TAXI MAN ! AS DRIVER FOR j ‘TOY GUN GIRL’ Delinquency Charges Filed Against Joe Hottenrock of Ravenswood. Joe Hottenrock, 32, of Ravenswood. taxi driver who figured in the alleged toy gun robbery tour of Miss Vera Wood, 17, Shortridge high school girl, was arrested today by juvenile court authorities on delinquency charges. Although absolved by the girl of participating in the alleged crimes. Hottenrock was said to have been involved by relatives of the girl'who identified him as the man who called on Vera at the Wood home the nignt of the alleged crime tour. According to police. Hottenrock was the d:jser of a cab which is said to have carried Miss Wood to scenes of three alleged holdups. Following arrest on the charge. Hottenrock was released on SSOO bond. Meanwhile, Juvenile Judge John F. Geckler prepared for the trial Thursday of Miss Wood on drunkenness and delinquency charges. i Following the trial, Geckler said, * the girl will be taken to city hos- ! pital psychopathic ward for mental j examination by Dr. Murray De ArI mond, psychiatrist. Miss Wood claims she was drunk | at the time of the purported robj beries. j Date for trial of Hottenrock was not set, although Geckler said the , taxi driver will be present at the i girl's trial.
