Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 166, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1932 — Page 7
NOV* 21, 1932.
Avoid Onion Stuffing in Turkey Thl* It the serend of torlei of three ■perlal article* on preparation of the Thnk*flvln* dinner. BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer 117 H ATEVER kind of poultry ™ ’ may be selected for the Thanksgiving dinner—turkey, duck, chickpn or guinea fowl—there is a special stuffing for each bird.’ Turkey and chicken require a less highly flavored stuffing than duck or guinea fowl, but a taste for interesting combinations, a choice of .seasonings, a blending of ingredients and the proper proportion of liquid are essential for all good stuffings. Bread stuffing is the foundation for many good fillings. The addition of celery, oysters, sausage, mushrooms, chestnuts and onions to the basic recipe changes it as the cook desires. Don't Use Onions These stuffings, with the exception of onion, are suitable for any variety of fowl. Onion stuffing should not be used with turkey or chicken. The highly favored fruit stuffings are appropriate for duck and guinea fowl. In place of bread, potatoes, rice or crackers often are used to give body to the stuffing. This type of stuffing is particularly good with goose and duck. The amount of stuffing required naturally is determined by the size of the bird and the number of people to be served. However, it takes at least a whole loaf of bread for a medium sized fowl and up to two' loaves will be needed for a turkey. The bread should not be dry but should be at least twenty-four hours old. u tt tt PLAIN BREAD PUDDING One loaf stale bread, 2 teaspoons salt, Vi teaspoon pepper, 'A cup melted butter, 1 egg (optional), hot water or milk. Crumb bread coarsely, discarding crust. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Slowly add melted butter, tossing crumbs lightly with a fork to mix thoroughly. Add egg well beaten and mix lightly with fork. Add not more than one-half cup boiling water or hot milk and mix lightly. Cover and let stand five or ten minutes. If the dressing is not now as moist as wanted for serving, add a few more tablespoons hot liquid. Mix With Fork Mix well with fork to insure thorough blending. Do not pack firmly in any bird, because the stuffing expands during roasting. For celery stuffing, add one bunch celery chopped fine. For mushroom stuffing, add two cups chopped and sauted mushrooms. For oyster stuffing, add one pint to one quart oysters, using oyster liquid for liquid and adding one tablespoon minced parsley and one tablespoon lemon juice. For chestnut stuffing reduce bread crumbs to one-half the amount and add one quart shelled blanched and boiled chestnuts. CHESTNUTS AND PINEAPPLES For sausage stuffing, add onehalf pound sausage meat removed from cases and baked to a crisp brown. An unusual and delicious stuffing is made by combining chestnuts and crushed pineapple v/ith bread crumbs. Use equal amounts of finely chopped boiled chestnuts and crushed pineapple and half as much bread crumbs which have been tossed in melted butter. Season lightly with salt and pepper and use pineapple juice to moisten. Next: Turkey leftovers. Dinner Party Planned for Bridal Group Mrs. Margaret Clements, 119 East Prflmer street. will entertain Wednesday night with an informal dinner party. She will have as her guests the members of the bridal party attending her niece, Miss Margaret Warner, who will be married at 9 Thursday morning at the Sacred Heart church, to Frank E. McKinney. Miss Warner has chosen as her attendants Mrs. Peter A. Clements, as matron of honor, and Misses Josephine La wide and Esther Trimpe as bridesmaids. Mr. McKinney has chosen Michael F. Morrissey as his best man. Ushers will be Raymond Steffen and Albert Koesters. The table will be decorated with white chrysanthemums and white candles. Following the dinner a rehearsal will be held at the church. 4 BENEFIT PARTY IS SLATED BY P.-T. A. P.-T. A. of ScAol 58 will give a benefit card party tonight at the Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Mrs. Max Norris, chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames J. F. Wilhite, Emil Gill, L. R. Mottern, C. O. Martin, L. C. Smith and T. Paul Jackson. Hostesses will be the executive board, neaded by Mrs. A. F. Westman. Mrs. William Debolt is ways and means chairman.' Proceeds will be added to the student aid fund. Dinner Committee Named The committee for the formal Thanksgiving dinner bridge to be given at the Avalon Country Club Saturday, Nov. 26. is composed of Dr. and Mrs. Clark W. Day, Lieu-tenant-Colonel and Mrs. Irving Macnson, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hervey and Mrs. F. C. Hughes. 1 V ash able Gloves You can have 100 per cent success In washing gloves if you use tepid water and white soap and then dry them properly. Use the wire hand frames for them. These can be hooked to a'window and dried much faster than when put over a towel rack or wrapped in a towel. Slip your curling Iron up into each finger In tum, if they hav* shrunk. Dust some bath powder into them before putting them on.
THE GREAT NIGHT’S HERE AGAIN
Grand Opera Opening Will Have All Its Old Glamour
Underwood <V Uunderwnnd Pho’o. M.uic Mu< lire will sing in ">imon Bnrcanegra." opening the season V % ! >nigiit In ik** kgroand. sketch of an opera scene in the 'lifts h> Harry ’ r 'sjjfc Tv >i ant H.irl. I nun ' 1 iir New .Metropolis," copyright 189 Kbv I) Apple- ' m a. co.) s Jllc,’v*' " * ' f r p.^'-fiV.^r,!" a "r* richer jlf|p|fl '' t .11.-' . i in- ~p. ra mAt be in tiad.tion and proud w ith time. i 'l ' ■ a yiarar.iv land of It will be as it was. but as it * f °“ tlie Metropolitan still is to be - -- determined. L *Metropoh t
Underwood * Uunderwnod Photo. Marie Mueller will sing in “Simon Boccanegra,’’ opening the season tonight. In background, sketch of an opera scene in the ’9os by Harry Grant Dart. (From “The New Metropolis,” copyright 1898 by D. Appleton & Cos.)
The Metropolitan Opera opens anew season tonight and presumably the color and social brilliance will be the same. But back of the event the springs of change are bubbling. The opera must be broadened, they say; a guaranty fund of $150,000 has been raised; essentials of opera will be changed. Os these mighty changes in the gray building in E. Thirty-ninth street. Joseph Lilly writes in the first of six articles intervals on Metropolitan opera. BA' JOSEPH LILLY Times Staff Writer (Copyright. 1932, by the New York WorldTelegram Corporation! NEW YORK, Nov. 21.—The conductor, Tulio Serafin, raises his baton. A hush spreads over the tense, excited audience, from the standees deep in the recesses of the orchestra floor up over the glittering boxes of the grand tier to the topmost circle, close to the magnificent ceiling. The lights are dimmed, the house is dark, except for the stage. The great gold curtains part, the orchestra plays. Another season at the Metropolitan opera house has begun. tt tt tt ON next Monday evening the Metropolitan will open its doors, as it has on a gala Monday for nearly fifty autumns past, to another season of theatricals, given in the grand manner, with a high and silken hand. The opera will be ‘‘Simon Boccanegra,” with Maria Mueller and Lawrence Tibbett, a masterwork, by the eternal Verdi. But, besides the conflict on the stage, the curtain will part on another drama, one that the aduience may sense and feel, but which it will not see or hear. For the Metropolitan is in a financial situation. Asa traditional and unique institution, it is fighting for its life in this fourth year of the great depression, and already it has given ground, first to the radio—to which its surrender virtually is complete—and to the forces of democratization. o tt a THE opening will be warm, and rich, and alive with brilliance. The dowagers, imperial in their dignity as ever, the matrons and the debutantes, will assemble in the Diamond Horseshoe, gowned, jeweled and performed for the one Great Occasion left to society. The public will be there, tophatted where it can be, but at least washed and brushed and alert to every moment, hundreds with only the price of standing room, to look and to hear and to be gladdened. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt will be in her box, regally cold and sedate, the focal point of a thousand pairs of opera glasses. A hundred feet above her, gazing down from a dizzy perch close to the roof, Tony Spumoto will be on his feet in the family circle, his friends about him. all bursting with racial pride and the emotion of the music. It will be as it was in the beginning—as it was on that Oct. 22, 1883, when Christine Nilssen opened the house in “Faust.” Not quite so splendiferous and elec-
7T503K ~nw~ BY BRUCE CATTON
ABOUT all that one can really demand of a detective story is that it be a straightaway, competently told yarn with a credible plot and a group of characters who act at least a little like real human beings; and today, since fortune is occasionally kind, there are two such mysteries to be described. One is “Walking the Dusk.” by L. J. Webb (Coward-McCann; $2). This tells about a beautiful young lady who is killed at a Long Island garden party. Nobody cares to look into the matter very deeply, because all hands have a hunch that something pretty dreadful will be uncovered if they do. But a friend of the murdered woman, keeps pegging away, and bit by bit she gets to look at an eerie and shuddery crime—which, incidentally, is apt to come to the reader as a complete surprise. The story has no frills at all, and there is no irritating and humorless detective to get in your way. I think you'll like it.' The other yarn is “The Castleford Conundrum,” by J. J. Connington (Little-Brown; $2). This one is English. A rich woman who i- ,-ied an impecunious artist gets shot to death and there is some doubt whether it was done by her husband—who wanted to inherit her estate before she could make anew will or by her nephew, a foul child who had a habit of torturing cats. The solution is both unexpected and logical and the story is good reading all the way.
trifying, perhaps, as in the more gaudy, opulent years. But richer in tradition and proud with time. It will be as it was, but as it never may be again. The drama beyond that stage just is beginning, and what is to happen to the Metropolitan still is to be determined. a a * PAUL D. CRAVATH, the new generalissimo, chairman of the board of the Metropolitan Opera Association, Inc., says flatly that opera “must be broadened.” Again, he and others imply, in guarded ways, that the “broadening” will be attempted in its present home. The talk of occupying the new, magnificent structure proposed for Rockefeller Center is fading into the background. Indeed, the “broadening” already has begun. The small cluster of rich men who have held, and held tightly, the strings of financial control, are resigned to loosening their grip. They are considering the formation of anew association, a fairly large one, whose members would give comparatively small sums for future support. Already the directors have passed the hat. They have obtained contributions totaling $150,000 as a guaranty fund to insure the completion of this season—a season one-third shorter than last year’s. And then there must be more economizing—how much, without reducing the standard that has established the Metropolitan as the last word in opera, can not be said. How far the “broadening” must go, and in which direction, Mr. Cravath is not prepared to say. The farthest he can go is that the whole subject must be restudied. u tt THE seating of Mr. Cravath in the chair of control is evidence enough that something fundamental impends, and his words bear out the fact. One of the wise men of Gotham, lawyer and negotiator of the first rank, who has had an active interest in music and opera for many years, Mr. Cravath was selected by the stockholders to ride out the storm and round the era. The selection presumably was by Otto H. Kahn, his predecessor and the largest and majority stockholder, who was last reported to be quite ill in his Fifth avenue residence: Unlike Mr. Kahn, who has put considerably more than half .a million dollars into the opera, Mr. Cravath has merely enough stock to qualify him for the post. Obviously, he went in not to save his own money. He was sent in, because of his extraordinary common sense, to save opera in some form for the city. This season, according to a wellauthenticated report, the operas will be sold to commercial radio sponsors. In other words if this does become the'case, operatic broadcasts will be interlarded with brief talks, just as has been done with the Philadelphia orchestra broadcast. Mr. Cravath preferred not to discuss radio. But, bespeaking the new order, he did say this: “We expect to obtain a substantial revenue from radio broadcasting.” “AS far as I can tell,” he said, -tV “there is no decrease in public interest in the opera. On the contrary, the interest is increasing. “I think that a broadening of interest and a broadening of support in all classes is to be sought, for grand opera as an institution is here to stay. “I have no doubt but that in
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Christine Nilssen, who sang in “Faust” when the Metropolitan Opera House opened on Oct. 22, 1883. Above Paul D. Cravath.
some form it will continue in New York. It is only a question of mobilizing the forces of those who are interested. “Just how we will go about that Will depend upon conditions at the time.” And so comes the opening for the last of the Grand Dames. The torrents of life that course madly
THEY-TSLL ME 'JUf
Make Way for Youth —111 PRESENT indications are that two veteran Republican leaders who will have the most to say about reorganization of their state party are M. Bert Thurman and Henry Marshall. Neither will figure in the forefront, but both, seated in their offices, ara expected to direct strategy. Although in personalities they are as far apart as the poles, they are bound close together in a tie of profound hatred and detestation for Senator James E. Watson. And, as someone once said, “hatred is the tie that binds.” Thurman is conceded to be the best organizer and conciliator in the party—his principal weakness in the past has been a too trusting disposition, but this was eradicated by his experience in the Governor race last spring. Marshall trusts no one, they tell me, which is not a bad rule in practical (not theoretical) politics. Those familiar with existing conditions at Republican state headquarters know that no chairman is | needed as long as the astute and j competent Harry C. Fenton is secretary. If his judgment and advice had been followed, the Republican : disaster would not have been quite j so overwhelming and devastating. a t} In the picture also will be Irving j Lemaux. president of the Security Trust Company, who resigned as | state treasurer of the party a year j ago because his views about honesty | in politics did not quite jibe with i those of Watson. None of those mentioned has! made a move. Instead, they have I adopted a policy of watchful waiting. They believe that the legislature and the city campaign will bring to the fore material which might be whipped into shape for future leadership. Those supposed to be familiar with the situation raised their brows when Governor Leslie appointed Ralph Gates of Columbia City as trustee of the soldiers’ home. Gates, former state commander of the legion and old Twelfth district G. O. P. chairipan, took an active part in bringing out Raymond Springer for the Governor nomination and then participated in the mud slinging against Paul V. McNutt. Leslie also was featured in this return to the elemental and probably is bound with Gates by their common dislike for McNutt. B B O In view of the fact that Leslie will be the first Republican Governor in many years to leave office, who neither has been sent to the penitentiary or indicted, he is expected to have some standing in organization affair.-; and it is thought that he may be grooming Gates for something or other. It also is rumored that, having tasted the joys of high office, Leslie may make a bid for the United States senate. It would not embarrass him to seek the nomination against Arthur R. Robinson, because the Governor never has exhibited either great respect or liking for the junior senator. Another figure who came to the front during the campaign just closed is Solon Carter, who sought the senatorial nomination in 1923. Following that campaign. Carter dropped into the background, only to emerge a few months ago as the guiding genius of the state HooverCurt is clubs. But he dropped back just as quickly when he took an active part in the dirt pitching exhibition. Time only can tell whether he is permanently removed from the picture. BUM Because of the strong campaign waged in behalf of re-.election of i
up and down Broadway, which she customarily ignored with a pinching of her nose, are splashing over the gilt ramparts. And she, bewildered and more than a little shaken, is puffing up the grand staircase, gathering her skirts against the flood that is riding toward the Diamond Horseshoe.
Circuit Judge Harry O. Chamberlin, his name also is receiving prominent mention in speculation concerning the future leaders of the G. O. P. At present there is a movement on foot to win the mayoralty nomination for Chamberlin in the spring. His legion membership and the excellent reputation which he enjoyed w’hile on the bench are being spread widely by his friends and he also may have to be counted with in the party councils. The men mentioned in this and the two preceding columns are expected to figure prominently in future Republican dope talk—but no one seems to want the torn, besmirched, and tattered mantle of leadership dropped by Senator Watson. That is—they don’t want it until it comes back from the cleaners. THANKSGIVING DINNERS ARE WELL SCATTERED Turkeys “All Over the Place” in Vicinity of New’ Jersey Street Store. Thanksgiving turkeys “on the hoof,” were “all over the place” this morning in the vicinity of the 100 block, North New Jersey street. The turkeys escaped from the poultry market of C. A. Smulyan. 11l and 113 'North New Jersey street. He believes some are missing, but will not know how many until he completes a check. Smulyan told police he found a side door of the market open this morning, and expressed a belief that an employe failed to close it before leaving Saturday night.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Ernest Newland. 521 W’est Tenth street, Oakland coach. 75-988. from 500 Indiana avenue. Carl F. Kiser. Connersville. Ind.. Chrysler coupe. 307-768. from Connersville. Ind. Emma Carter. 1450 College avenue, apartment 19. Ford coach, from Washington street and Virginia avenue. James Malev. 1011 Lexington avenue, Ford coach. 122-143. from Washington and California streets. Charles F. Waulkner. 1212 Martin street Oakland sedan. 54-409. from Yoke and Shelbv streets. Ernest Bonnett. 332 North Jefferson avenue. Chevrolet coach, from Dearborn and Tenth streets. Paul Duncan, R. R. 3. Greenwood. Ind . Ford roadster, from 200 South fllinois street.
BACK HOME AGAIN *
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: Walter Harris. 11l East Sixteenth street. Buick coupe, found east of Lebanon wrecked.
un - "' or 'O’COA'T W
EUROPE CLINKS ‘BLOODY BONES' IN DEBTSCARE Wirld Ruin Picture Is Painted to Persuade U, S. td Yield. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Europe is preparing to pull a “raw-head-and-bloody-bones" on Uncle Sam and bring about almost unheard of pressure, both moral and economic, to make him yield on the war debts question. Private citizens in this country have investments abroad amounting to almost three times the "present value” of the war debts in their entirety. These may be wiped out, European spokesmen now warn, unless the United States listens to reason. These private investments of the people of the United States amount to approximately $18,000,000,000. The “present value” of the war debts, at 5 per cent, amounts to some $6,600,000,000. Os the total private investment abroad, 30 per cent is in Europe and, of this, about $2,500,000,000 is in Germany alone. Put All Loan on U. S. Refusal of the United States drastically to scale down the war debts, Europeans now assert, will endanger not only Germany’s ability to pay these private obligations, but cripple the whole world and imperil such investments everywhere. If the United States refuses to reduce the war debts to the allies, it is stated, the allies, in turn, will refuse to ratify the Lausanne agreement virtually canceling German reparations. If Germany Is called on to pay the average annual Young plan installment, amounting to little less than half a billion dollars, she probably would colapse, forever making it impossible for her to meet any of her present obligations, public or private. Furthermore, it is pointed out, Germany is the keystone of Europe. If she goes down, Europe will go down with her, and with Europe will crash the world. Won’t Dislodge Keystone The economic fate of mankind, according to Europe, therefore, is in the hands of the United States, to make or mar depending upon what is done with the war debts. There is reason to believe, however, that Great Britain and France, the leaders in the new war debts revision drive, will hesitate before they press Germany too hard. To do so would dislodge the keystone. Like Sampson these two countries would destroy themselves while destroying others. For bargaining purposes, they may threaten to scrap the Lausanne agreement, and return to the Young plan. But in the realm of practical politics it is an open secret that whether they do or don’t, Germany is not going to pay. She can’t. Even if she could, her population would not let her. Can’t Go Too Far Germans are almost 100 per cent against paying any more reparations, Lausanne agreement or no Lausanne agreement. Every political faction in the -country is on record against it, from Junker to Communist. Were the present government at Berlin to agree to further payments, Adolf Hitler and his 14,000,000 Nazis would overthrow it within twentyfour hours. If Hitler comes into power, he is pledged not only not to pay any more “tribute” to France and the other allies, but to scrap the whole treaty of Versailles. Thus, observers are convinced, Britain, France and the other debtor nations may seek to use the present unhappy plight of Europe to throw a scare into Uncle Sam, but they have too much at stake themselves to carry the thing too far. The situation is far too dangerous to play with. WATSON NOT TO BE TRUSTED, SAYS WRITER Senator Robinson Is Best Hated Man, Bares Drew Pearson. “When will Senator-Elect Frederick Van Nuys reach a position in Washington comparable to that of Senator James E. Watson?” This question was asked Drew Pearson, co-author of More Merry-Go-Round,” during the open forum at Kirshbaum center Sunday night. His answer was: “Never—l hope.’’ Asked for the “low down” on both Watson and Senator Arthur R. Robinson, Pearson declared: “Watson is loved by the press gallery, but not respected or trusted. He is a picturesque figure, rated as ruthless. He is a good Republican, except when it interferes with him personally. “Senator Robinson is the most unpopular man in the entire senate. He neither is liked by the press nor his colleagues cn the floor. When he arises to speak, many leave from the senate floor and the press gallery. Others read newspapers in open disrespect. “But why waste time telling you about Robinson. You all know him.”
CONTMCT BRIDGE This is the sixth of % series of articles bv William E McKennev reviewing the new code of rubber contract laws issued by The Whist Club. New York. BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridce League PLLOWING is a general synopsis of the penalties for infringement of laws, with which our readers should familiarize themselves thoroughly: Refusal of permission to inspect a quitted trick. (Right to claim revoke lapses.) Looking at cards during deal. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal.) Call other than pass when it is partner’s or left-hand opponent's turn to bid. (Left-hand opponent may demand anew deal.) Second or different call before left-hand opponent has called. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal.) Call other than pass when it is right-hand opponent's turn to bid. (Offender's partner must pass when next it is his tum to call.) Insufficient bid. Must make bid sufficient and partner must pass when it is his turn to bid.) Call other than pass after auction has closed. (Declarer may call a lead from offender's partner when next it is his turn to lead.) Bid of eight or more. “Left-hand oopponent may demand new deal or disallow call or allow' call to stand at seven.) tt BID double or redouble, when debarred. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal or disallow call or allow call to stand.) Double of partner’s bid. (Lefthand opponent may demand new deal or Double or redouble of bid which partner has doubled or redoubled. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal or disallow call.) Naming wrong suit w’hen doubling or redoubling. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal or disallow call.) Any unrecognized call. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal or disallow call.) Exposing card lower than ten during auction. (Declarer, if opponent of offender, may treat the card as exposed and subject to call, or prohibit offender's partner froiji making opening lead in same suit.) Exposing hard higher than nine during auction. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal.) Exposing two or more cards during auction. (Left-hand opponent may demand new' deal.) Exposing card with intent to lead during auction. (Left-hand opponent may demand new deal.) Exposing card during play. (Must be left on table, face up, and may be called by declarer to any subsequent trick.) Leading from wrong hand by declarer. (Must lead same suit from correct hand, and failure to do so w’hen lead is in declarer's hand constitutes a revoke.) a tt a LEADING out of turn by declarer. (May be treated as regular or must be taken back at the request of either opponent. Leading out of turn by opponent. (Declarer may call lead from opponent whose turn it is to lead or call lead when next it is an opponent's turn to lead or treat card so led as exposed or allow lead to stand.) Lead by both opponents simultaneously. (Correct lead stands and card led by partner of correct leader is exposed.) Premature lead, play, or exposure. (Dealer may require offender’s partner to win the trick by trumping if necessary or not to win the trick or to play highest or lowest card m suit led or to discard from a named suit.) (Copyright. 1932, NEA Service. (Inc.) STATE-OWNED POWER PROJECT FACES TEST Illinois Follows Example of Many City Governments. By Scripps-Hotcnrd Newspaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Nov. 21—Federal authorization for a state-owned power project in Illinois is hailed by public ownership advocates as an opportunity to test public operation by a state government. More than 7.000 municipalities now own and operate their own water systems, and 2,000 their lignt and pow’er system, and the state of Illinois has started to follow their example by obtaining a federal license from the power commission to construct a power plant on the Desplains river near Joliet and two on the Illinois river. All three are on the Great-Lakes-to-Gulf waterway. The three plants are to have a capacity of more than 90,000-horse power. $650 Loot Taken From Car Twisting off the door handle of the parked auto of Dr. Fred Robison, Danville, at Capitol avenue and Market streets, Saturday, thieves removed w’earing apparel and a fur valued at $650, police were informed.
Drunkenness Is a Diseasel This FREE Booklet Explains Facts That Every Person Should Know II ERE is an authoritative treatise 1 * written on the disease of Inebriety and its relief, written especially for the Keeley Institute. It is based on fifty years’ experieffee. embracing the treatment of more than 400.000 patients, including men and women from all walks of life. It tells yon “why” the njedieal profession reoojrnir.o* drunkenness a* a disease; what famous medieal authorities say about the disease of drunkenness.. and "how” drunkenness can be relieved permanently. The booklet is free, and mailed in a plain envelope. Write at enc* for Tour copy. NOW! Address D. P. Nelson, Secretary
PAGE 7
U. S. OFFICIALS DOD6ED INSULL CASE JS CLAIM Federal Power Chiefs Shut Eyes to Affair, Says Drew Pearson. Charge that the federal power commission, under the Hoover administration, “knew all about the Insull affair” was made in an address here Sunday night by Drew Pearson, co-author of “More Merry-Go-Around.” Until recently Pearson was a Washington correspondent for the Baltimore Sun. He talked at the open forum at Kirshbaum center. “Several minor officials of the federal power commission have told me repeatedly that they tried In vain, time after time, to get the commissioners interested in Insull operations,” Pearson said. “The commissioners knew what was going on, but they refused to stop it, holding that it was none of their business.” Bares Political Loans Pearson also asserted that previous to the time that publicity was given federal Reconstruction Finance Corporation loans, many were made “for political effect.” “The Democratic national committee got a copy of this secret list.” he said. “There were prominent Republicans who received loans which would have made excellent political capital, but there also were similar loans to prominent Democrats, so it was decided not to use the list.” Declaring that under the Hoover administration the loans to big G. O. P. partisans exceeded those to the Democrats, Pearson predicted that under Roosevelt the reverse likely will be true. He anticipated little vital change in the conduct of governmental affairs under the incoming Democratic administration, he asserted. No Fundamental Change “President-Elect Roosevelt will be more friendly toward the press than President Hoover,’’ he continued. “His administration will, of course, make the usual shifts in personnel which takes place whenever a change in parties takes place “A more kindly feeling towr.rd, and interest in, the average man's welfare, instead of an exclusive interest in big business may mark the new regime. But so far as fundamental changes go, there likely will be none. “The problem of continuing loans to defunct business without possibility of repayment or of taking over the business by the government, such as railroads, eventually must be faced.” Pearson said he thought the press at Washington did "a fair job,” but declared that the reporters there would do better if permitted to by their publishers. Dr. Louis H. Segar introduced the speaker and conducted the open forum questioning.
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