Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 232, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1933 — Page 4
PAGE 4
Ti ie Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) rot W. HOWARD Prentdpnt BOYD GURLEY Filter EARL D. BAKER Business Manager
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If *' * I tt OHJI Ci> * Li’jht an'l the People Will Find Their Own IVay
MONDAY FEB 6 1333. __ THE NEXT MAYOR Discussion of candidates for mayor at the election in November is linked inevitably with proposals to discard the primary as a means of nomination. That, the primary has its defects is admitted. It tends, among other things, to discourage candidacies on the part of any except those who make a business of politics. It has not always resulted in wise choices. But it has resulted in giving the people a weapon which is always available, if they choose to use it, against bossism and machine rule. If the primary is abolished, it is admitted that the nominations will be directed by a few men meeting in back rooms who will tell the delegates just how to perform. This city will need an unusual mayor during the next four years, more than it has ever needed one in the past. It will need a man of unusual courage and unusual honesty, free from obligations to political bosses or political machines. The problem of unemployment must be met locally as it must be met nationally and only a wise man, with a sympathy for the man out of work, will find the proper answer and prevent not only misery, but unfortunate incidents. The gas question must be solved and the people put into possession of the gas company. Only a man vho is a firm believer in public ownership should be on guard. More than that, he should be a man with sufficient business acumen to see that there is no milking of the city in the process. Tt is probable, too, that the question of taking over other public utilities will arise after the legislature makes the path to public ownership easy. The time to act Is now, when people need relief from high rates in order to lower the cost of living and of doing business. The next mayor should be the type of man the city hoped to get as city manager, when the people voted six to one to change to that form of government. If the primary is to be repealed, there should be ample opportunity given for independent candidates. The present law bars any such candidates after the primary. Somewhere along the line the Independent citizens should have protection against the mistakes of bosses. LICENSING BARBERS The public should be more interested than the labor unions in the pending law to inspect barber shops and issue licenses only to those who are qualifield. Although it is demanded by organized labor, it is really a health measure and has been delayed too many years. Every other state bordering on Indiana has a similar law. The result is that the Indiana barber must compete with those who are rejected in other states. The proposed law would furnish protection in the matter of sanitation, in the health of the operator, and would also guarantee a certain amount of skill. The cost of inspection would be met with fees paid by the shops and the barbers who apply for licenses. It would probably furnish revenue for state funds as the wage of inspectors is fixed at a modest sum. Opposition in the past has come only from those who made it their business to fight any demand coming from organized labor. But this proposal has so much merit from the standpoint of the public that the legislature should not hesitate to pass it. A DEBT COMMISSION President-Elect Roosevelt's announcement, that he will consult members of congress during the foreign debt negotiations is encouraging. Since he indicated in the beginning that he would conduct the negotiations himself, those most interested in a settlement have feared that he was raising additional barriers to congressional ratification of any agreement. His new statement reflects one of Mr. Roosevelts chief assets as an executive and party leader—namely, his capacity to adjust himself in part to the judgment of his associates. It remains to be seen whether his compromise plan of consulting selected senators and representatives during the negotiations, rather than appointing them as formal members of a debt commission, will achieve the desired purpose. It is the function of the executive to conduct general foreign relations. But the fact that this is a fiscal matter makes it a joint function of President and congress. Apart from theoretical considerations of this kind, there is fact that congress.in this instance has asserted its prerogative and is exceedingly sensitive on the subject. Both in the earlier funding agreements and in the senate resolution of December. 1931. congress has maintained control over the debts. Asa matter of practical statesmanship, many have believed that Mr. Roosevelt would be wiser in following precedent and requesting congress to authorize revival of the debt funding commission. That, of course, would involve a legislative battle at the beginning with a large congressional group. But. in view of the December. 1931. resolution opposing any change in the debt status, it might be more effective to meet this opposition openly and directly, rather than wait until after anew agreement is negotiated, when the opposition will charge the President with usurpation of power and with acting in bad faith. No agreement negotiated by the President will be worth the paper it is written on until it is ratified by congress. And. since persuading congress to accept a reasonable settlement will be as difficult. if not more difficult, than reaching an agreement with foreign governments, the real test of Mr. Roosevelt’s debt leadership will be his ability to obtain co-operation of congress. Rightly or wrongly—and we believe wrongly—congress is suspicious of debt negotiations. Therefore. if the President-elect finds that his compromise plan of consulting certain members of congress Informally does not clear the air, he may be forced by circumstances to revert to the precedent of bi-
partisan congressional representation on a formal debt commission. If the President, with easy party control of both houses of congress, can not get its co-operation on the debt problem at the beginning of his term, he probably will have even less chance later. SAVING CHILDREN The attention of complacent congressmen, Governors and legislators respectfully is called to a warning from Health Commissioner Wynne of New York City, that the death rate from undernourishment is increasing among children. Dr. Wynne told the welfare council’s health section that 25 per cent of his city’s school children today show signs of undernourishment, compared with 15 per cent a year ago, a fact that probably will be reflected in an increase in the death rate this year. New' York's school teachers have spent $2,000,000 helping feed their pupils. New York state has bonded itself for $30,000,000 for relief, and New York City leads all communities in the extent of its giving. Yet in these children’s homes it is found that the gas has been turned off and many children are eating raw food. Clothing is scanty. Many go to bed with no covering. •'This can not go on much longer,” Dr. Wynne declared. Here is an official report from the richest city of the richest state of the richest nation of the world. It shows that helpless children slowly are being permitted to sicken and die from lack of food and warmth. What is happening in poorer states and communities w’ell may be imagined. Starvation is a bitter word. Yet there is no other word for the weakening brought on by insufficient and improper food. Starvation of children during a famine may be inevitable. Starvation of children in this well-stocked land is criminal. Testifying before a senate committee, Professor Haven Emerson said distributed relief Is too low to permit "growth of children, to maintain a reasonable degree of resistance to infections of various kinds, or to prevent deterioration of the human stock, if long continued.” Miss Grace Abbott, chief of the United States children's bureau, testified that “no one familiar with relief believes the needs have been met anywhere.” Congress should pass the Costigan-La Follette and Wagner relief bills for the winter’s fight on hunger. GEORGIA JUSTICE Georgia thinks it has saved its institutions from revolution by sending to prison black Angelo Herndon. a 19-year-old Communist organizer. He w'as tried and convicted under a statute passed sixty years ago to prevent carpet-baggers from upsetting the reconstruction government. The Negro youth might have been sentenced to death under the statute. Clement Judge Lee Wyatt of Atlanta gave him a sentence of from eighteen to twenty years. The Communist party is legal in the United States. Georgia’s state motto is: Wisdom, Justice, Moderation. The fellow with a capacity for grasping things quickly stands a good chance of success. But even purse snatchers get tripped up now and then. They’re talking of equipping skating rinks with tinted ice. What could be more appropriate than black and blue? Now' congress talks about soaking the little fellow —as if he weren’t in hot-water already. Reprisals against France will be easy enough If they're confined to poetry. But suppose Paris sends over the "Follies Bergere?” Uncle Sam should know by this time that w'hen he casts his dough upon the waters it’s apt to come back just a lot of crust. Kissing stimulates heart action, says a medical investigator. What a debt w r e owe to science for disclosures of this sort. Army engineers on a flood control project have changed the course of the Mississippi, it’s probably a forlorn hope, but maybe, before the next war, they’ll devise a means of keeping the slumgullion from inundating the jam in a mess kit. The technocrats' four-hour day might give millions employment, but how' about six-day bicycle racers? Hard luck for the farm boys. Just when they get adept at adjusting carburetors,, the horse stages a comeback and they’ve got to learn to knot a halter.
Just Plain Sense i-=" BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON -- T TOWEVER hastily we may wish to escape from 1 1 marriage bonds, we need more restrictions to prevent a too-precipitate dash into them. A realization of this has struck the public consciousness. This year in many states women are working together to pass legislative bills that will make it more difficult to get marriage licenses. Nothing will save the younger generations so much unhappiness. While prohibitions are not preventives, in a case of this kind more stringent regulations are necessary. Boys and girls who are in love often are immune to advice and incapable of reasoning. The stories of hasty marriage, of drunken unions, of escapades that end in wedding vows pronounced on a dare are tragic proof of this. Parents suffer endless humiliations and heartbreaks because obscure and irresponsible justices of the peace are so easy of access and marriage licenses so easy to obtain. Girls find themselves faced with the necessity of going through a court procedure to get annulments, with their reputations tarnished and shame in their souls, all becausee it is possible to slip the legal noose on so quickly. „ s a tt TT was a sad day for America when we took from the marriage ceremony its sacred connotation. Whether you believe in a legal or church performance. you must admit that there is something sobering in a leisurely advance to the altar, something thought-provoking when the event assumes the proportions of a solemn undertaking. This at least precludes any idea that is may be of a desultory nature, a sort of hit-or-miss affair that is of such small consequence that it may and perhaps inevitable will be of short duration. One may sympathize with the desire for a quiet or even a secret wedding, but if we wish to preserve the happiness of our daughters and sons, and the dignity and integrity of marriage itself, we no longer can tolerate the possibility of degrading the wedding to the status of a mere amorous assignation.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Looks Like He's Stirred Up a Hornets’ Nest!
It Seems to Me • . . . by Heywood Broun
1 NEVER have known precisely what the word “style” means in regard to writing. For instance. I am puzzled when people talk of some author and say. “Well, at any rate, he has style.” I think they might as well say, “Os course, he has blood pressure.” I mean that everybody who sets down words on paper must have some highly personal addiction to certain phrases. Some men write in such way that you can identify them almost by any single stray sentence. But surely it is a mistake to assume that the man who signs himself so palpably in every paragraph is not of necessity a greater prosemaster than someone else less easily recognized. For instance, you could give me a page of Galsworthy and I might be in grave doubt as to the authorship, and yet I believe that I could spot an essay by Walter Winchell within the span of the first twenty words. I think that Mr. Winchell has invented a novel and an interesting manner of writing which is wholly his own. His imitators do very badly at it. But obviously one does not mean the same thing in saying “Walter Winchell has style” as in remarking “John Galsworthy had style.” u tt tt Almost Silent Motor POSSIBLY most of us who employ the word are off on the wrong foot altogether. We hail as “stylist” the man who carries the greatest amount of luggage. In my youth my teachers and preceptors frequently called my attention to Joseph Addison (1672-1719), who himself was a columnist of sorts. Indeed, the instructor said that Addison stood unrivaled in his field, but this was before the days of Winchell and Adams, Brisbane and Broun. Now, Addison undoubtedly possessed style. It stood out all over him, like the quills upon the fretful porcupine. And in my youth I was urged to emulate'him. and I made an honest effort so to do. But after a six-month trial, chiefly confined to error, I gave up the attempt to capture the balanced sentence and the rhythmic flow of words. In the hand-me-down shop which was called a school or college they show’ed me next the raiment of Thomas Babington Macaulay and after that the mantle of Stevenson, and I was assured that, with diligence and radical alterations, I might venture timidly into the world, wearing these garments. In truth, I would have tripped with every step, for there was far too great an amount of material to garb my slender frame, a tt a Never Came Up ACCORDINGLY, when I got my first job on the Morning Telegraph, I put all thought of style behind me, and. as far as I can remember. Shep Friedman, the night editor, never brought the matter up. Years later, when millions of
DAILY HEALTH SERVICE Pain Severe in Thrombosis Attack lh_ ; = BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN -
This is the second of three enlightening articles bv Dr. Fishbein on coronary thrombosis, the disease which caused the death of former President Coolidge. IN an acute attack of coronary thrombosis, there is pain—sudden, severe, and persisting. There is also a feeling of impending death, so that the person becomes pale and is in a cold sweat. Most often the pain, wliich is described as deep-seated, cutting or tearing, is referred to the heart. It may persist for minutes or even hours. As the pain lessens into a dull ache, there is still a feeling of apprehension. A physician is able to make examinations which will verify the diagnosis. This he does by studying the pulse, the blood pressure, the breathing, and sometimes by using an electrocardiographic device, which gives him an indication of the action of the heart.
words had flowed from my pen and hastened, like the tiny brooklets, to the sea, somebody wrote me a letter and informed me that I had acquired a style. He neglected to add whether it was good or bad. I received the news calmly, for it seemed to me that such a result w r as inevitable. Nobody can go in the mills of minor literature for very long without discovering that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points, or that the longest way ’round is the sw'eetest way home. Unfortunately, I never have reached any peak where I was in a position to be exposed to much parody. That must be a helpful experience for any man. Every member of the distinguished group w'hich Max Beerbohm took over the w r ater jump in “A Christmas Garland” should have knowm from that time forth which of his mannerisms were excessive. t o o For Vices or Virtues BUT right. here we reach the complicated problems of whether the better-known authors
Every Day Religion ===== BY DR. JOSEPH FORT NEWTON .
TN London the other day a lovely girl took her own life because she blushed too easily and too often. Poor child, embarrassed by her flaming cheeks, ashamed of her shame, she flung away the swift and awful gift of life. In these brazen days, to be able to blush ought to be a distinction, as it certainly is a rarity. Howbeit, my subject is not blushes, on which a delicate discussion might profitably be pursued, but the cheapness of life and the slight hold which people have on it in our day. The incident does not stand alone; the increase of self violence among us is appalling. It is common news to read of those who take their own life impetuously in a fit of depression or dismay. as if it were the cheapest thing on earth. It is indeed strange life, which men clutch so tenaciously, which makes strong men cowards and cowards strong men. for which many would barter all the gold in all the hills and deem it a good bargain; life, for w'hich women gladly endure the pangs of labor and to prolong which in the aged sends men ’round the world, is thrown away in a mood of agony or ennui. a a tt A STRANGE weariness with life seems to afflict us today. especially those who give themselves up to living at a hectic rate and any price. Old and young alike, who have lived fdr little but this w'orld, quit it on the slightest pretext by the everopen door. One is struck with the boredom of the worldly minded with this
Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hvgeia, the Health Magazine. There are, however, some cases in which even such methods fail to show definitely the nature of the change. An experienced physician. particularly someone who has studied heart disease, is able to make the diagnosis by the use of observation, by listening to the heart, and by the type of study called physical as contrasted with laboratory diagnosis. a a a NO doubt, the majority of patients die almost with the onset of the attack. However, cases are known in which patients recover and remain free from attacks for several years, or even longer. In a recent revie-w of the subject, Dr. .Paul D. White records several instances in which patients
are loved chiefly for their virtues or their faults. If Kipling had not been frightened in his youth by a hurdy-gurdy and fascinated by a British sergeant in full regimentals, he might have written with more able grasp of the earth's realities. And that would have been a pity. Some people believe that the manner in which an author tells his story is largely conditioned by his political and economic beliefs. For instance, Dreiser’s sledgehammer method has been hailed as the result of his proletarian convictions. I doubt it. It seems to me that Mr Dreiser, in dealing with Cinderella or with Jurgen, still would have gone into his infighting and two-volume manner. Battling Nelsons are born rather than made. Upon a few rare occasions I have had the privilege cf reading burlesques of my own manner, but it has not been helpful. The only conclusion I could reach after reading these parodies was that one of us must be terrible. And I couldn’t quite make up my mind as to which. (Copyright, 1933. bv The Times)
world, the frustration of those who do as they like, the slavery of those who have no fences, no restrictions; and they go away as though too sick to stay. It always is so. When the lights of faith burn low, the music of life falls to a lower octave, from a dance to a dirge, or else to a “Dancing in the Dark.” Asa satirist said recently, we may have to introduce religion to some people as a novelty to destroy their boredom, if not their sin, since that w'hich is forgotten because it is so old may have to return to startle us because' it is so new. . . v Yes, w'e may need the oldest faith in the w'orld to take the faded look out of the face of life. If life is ’worthless, so is Immortality, and it is idle to talk about it. Thus the sum. works out, proving once more that if we are to find zest in life, treating it like a battle yet enjoying it like a game, w'e must have faith in its value and rules to live it by. To put it otherwise, if w'e hold all things loosely that we may hold God tightly, life will be too precious to. pervert and too holy to throw away. (Copyright. 193?, United Features Syndicate)
Daily Thought
O Lord, why hast thou made us to err from thy ways, and hardened our heart from thy fear? Return for thy servants’ sake, the tribes of thine inheritance.—lsaiah 63.17. No man ever prayed without learning something.—Emerson.
have survived seven or eight years or more. One man had his first attack at the age of 63. passed a life insurance examination two years later, and was in such perfect health at the age of 72 that he climbed mountains at high rate of speed without symptoms. He finally died at the age of 80 of brain hemorrhage, without any sign of heart disease. The post-mortem examination showed definitely the scar associated with the attack of coronary thrombosis seventeen years previously. This case serves to illustrate the wonderful recuperative power of the seriously injured heart muscle, and indicates that the occurrence of one attack may not necessarily mean permanent crippling. NEXT: Treatment of coronary thrombosis.
M. E. Tracy Says:
CORPORATIOXS DOMIXATE V. S.
NEITHER overproduction nor cheap production is responsible for this country’s present plight. Considering all the comforts, advantages and opportunities which modern progress has made available, comparatively few Americans are wellhouse, well-clothed, well-fed or wcll-circum-stanced. Our charity bill, not during this depression, but in normal times, mocks our boasted prosperity. Instead of being glorified as an evidence of
virtue, it should be recognized as an evidence of greed. The average American would prefer to pay his way. Ther is no reason why he should be denied the chance. He would not be denied the chance except for the smug philanthropy which has been developed as a smoke screen for the ruthless and in ordinate control of conomic affairs. Asa matter of fact, forty or fifty great corporation? dominate the so-called industrial life of this nation, while an even smaller number of finar cial institutions dominate its credit structure. n a a Nation Now Stands Immobilized TNSTEAD of increasing the average person's capacity to live and , achieve, the system which all this represents has narrowed his activities on the one hand, and misdirected them on the other. Asa nation, we stand immobilized, not for lack of strength, resources. or ambition, but because of arbitrary controls on evrey hand. Even the government has proved powerless to assist us, except through breadlines or artificially created jobs. The billions of credit which it authorized has been absorbed by the loan juggling game. Instead of getting work or relief through improved business conditions, the taxpayers have been leaded with debt to ease the paper setup of great financial and industrial concerns. You can't standardize production without standardizing consumption, and you can’t standardize consumption without destroying the basis of progress. We are killing human efficiency for the sake of mechanical efficiency, and are excusing ourselves on the ground that machines make it necessary. an u Future Bigger Than It Ever 11 ’as IF that were true, we would be justified in scrapping the machines, but it is not true. Science and inventiveness have not brought us to a point where we must sit down and hold our hands. The future is bigger than it ever was, if we only could see it. Science and inventiveness simply have given us more time and power to accomplish new things. We can’t visualize new things, however, much less accomplish them, without imagination, and that means, above all else, the liberty to think, not in phrases and opinions only, but in every phase of life. Insofar as it makes for development, consumption is largely the matter of imagination, or ever-widening viewpoint, compounded on curiosity, desire, hope and restlessness. We are losing that all-important factor of economic and social advance, are becoming victims of system, discipline and routine.
Chemicals Hold Own
THE chemical industry made a good showing during the first two years of the depression, according to a report just made to the American Chemical Society > Otto Wilson, statistician of Washington. D. C. Wilson bases his study of the situation on tlje government census figures covering 1931, just made public. The study shows that the value of chemicals produced in the United States fell off about 24 per cent during the first two years of the depression. “Considering the times." Wilson says, "this is a good showing, and, moreover, is convincing that the expansion in 19-9 and earlier years represented substantial growth and not merely inflation, although at its height demand and production were to some extent stimulated abnormally." Effects of the slump on the manufacture of acids varied widely Wilson shows. A few of the leading items showed encouragingly small losses in 1931 as compared with 1929, but in many minor products the decline was heavy. For the acids as a whole, production for sale in 1931 fell off 33 per cent in value from the 1929 figures. Total for 1931 was $66,063.000, while that for 1929 was $98,620,000. tt an Decline in Acids THE 1931 level of the value of the production of acids for sale was lower than for any census year since the w'ar except 1921, Wilson says. He points out, however, that it still was about twice as high as that of 1914. “Sulphuric acid, which makes up about one-half the total value of all commercial acids, makes a somewhat better showing,” Wilson "Total production was 6.015,000 tens as compared with 8.491.000 tons in 1929, a reduction of about 30 per cent. But the production made for sale dropped only 27 per cent, amounting to 4.250.000 tons valued at $33,202,000 as against 5,816.000 tons valued at $45,573,000 in 1929. “Sulphuric acid made and consumed in the same establishment totaled 1.765.000 tons in 1931 as against 2.675,000 in 1929, a drop of 34 per cent. “Among the most important acids, the best record was made by nitric, which showed returns of 31.386 tons made for sale in 1931 as compared with 32,961 in 1929, a loss of only 5 per cent. The value was $3,349,000 as compared with $3,495,000 in 1929 The manufacture of carbonic acid showed an increase. This is believed to be due to the manufacture of “dry ice,” which consists of frozen carbon dioxide. “The 1931 production of 151,674.000 pounds of carbonic acid was 11 per cent above that of two years before, which stood at 136.930,000 pounds.” tt tt tt Due to Lower Prices LARGE decreases were the usual rule among the other acids, according to Wilson. Prosphoric acid fell from a value of $2,073,000 in 1929 to $761,000 in 1931, a loss of 60 per cent. Oleic acid fell from $5,375,000 to $1,871,000, a loss of nearly 70 per cent. Stearic acid fell from $5,488.000 to $2,057,000, a loss of more than 60 per cent. "To a considerable extent, these declines were due to lower prices, as the quantities sold in 1931 were much nearer the 1929 totals than the values,” he says. "Hydrochloric acid stood out conspicuously in the 1931 returns in that the total value of amounts sold showed a much smaller decrease as compared with 1929 than the quantity. Precisely the opposite w-as the rule with other important acids.”
SCIENCE^
BY DAVID DIETZ
Discussing other chemical compounds, Mr. Wilson says, “Preliminary figures showing production of nitrogen compounds in 1931 ax-e very encouraging. “The value of the year’s output for sale was $32,504,000, only 15 per cent less than that of two years before, which was $38,337,000. “The value of sodium compounds made for sale in 1931 dropped to a lower level than for any census year since 1921. although it was still only 23.8 per cent below the highest point yet reached by the industry, that of 1929. The total for 1931 was $104,886 - 000 as compared with $137,655,000. years before. “While compounds of potassium shared in the general decline, the decrease was much lighter than in most other chemicals.” Questions and Answers Q —What did Aristotle say were the four elementary principles whose combinations made up all substances in the universe? A-Air, earth, fire, and water. Tire early chemists used the word air in the sense that we use gas. Q —Give the address of Sir Wilfred Grenfell. A—St, Anthony, Newfoundland. Q— Name the nations that first had ships. A—Among the earliest builders of ships were the Egyptians, Chaldaeans, Hindus and Chinese. The oldest existing records were left by the Egyptians. These indicate that Egyptian vessels large enough to carry' fifty or more persons were in use more than six thousand years ago. Q—ls there an amendment to the Constitution to abolish the electoral college pending before congress? A—Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska proposed an amendment to provide for direct election of the President, but it has not yet been considered by congress. Q—Who coined the phrase “the almighty dollar?” A—Washington Irving, who used in satirically to describe the “mad race for wealth” in the United States. Q—Who played the role of Harris Randall in the motion picture “Call Her Savage?” A—Hale Hamilton.
So They Say
I have known convicts to commit crimes so as to return to the chain gang, where life for them has been more comfortable than so-called freedom.—Chase S. Osborn, former Governor of Michigan. . a a a Can anything be harsher to the privileged than the words ‘•there is no work” are to the unemployed?—William Green, president American Federation of Labor. a% a a There never has been and in all probability never again will be such an opportunity for advantageous investment as at present.— Alliston Cragg, wTiter on investments. a a a Don't let any one make you think that Christian religion would be more powerful, or more helpful, or more reasonable, if it were divested of its supernatural elements—Bishop William T. Manning. New York. a a a A criminal is a person with predatory instinct who has not sufficient capital to form a corporation.—Howard Scott, spokesman for Technocracy.
FEB. 6, 1033
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