Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 296, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1933 — Page 13
APRIL 21, 1033.
RULE BY HITLER FOR FULL TERM DEEMED CERTAIN Dictator Firm in Saddle; All Opposition Is Shattered. Following i* the concluding article by Milton Bronner Ig)ndon correspondent of the Newspaper Enterprise Association, cabled to The Times describing big tentl *v trip through Germany. By MiI.TON BRONNER NEA Service Writer LONDON. April 21.—Analyzing conditions within Germany after six weeks of Hitler dictatorship, there are thro* inescapable conclusions to be drawn, after a ten-day trip through the country and conversations with responsible sources. The first is that Hitlpr doubtless will continue to rule for the fouryear period of the prescribed dictatorship. The second is that there is little likelihood of the Nazis being disturbed by civil war, for the simple leason that all opposition forces have been shattered. The third is that Hitler may have come into power much sooner than lie* actually expected, and was caught unprepared for anything except the destruction of his enemies. Uses Jews as Scapegoats Lacking a program, after lavish promises, he gave his followers an immediate scapegoat—the Jews—upon whom they could vent their hatred. Every major action taken by Hitler to date has been directed toward consolidating the Nazi power over every branch of German life. The various decrees taking jobs away from Jew's, Socialists and Liberals, mean that these jobs now are held by Hitler followers. From government departments on down to municipalities, universities, schools, and even private business enterprises, this movement has swept. Meantime, what has happened to the Nazi opposition is this: Communism has been driven completely to cover. The social Democrats are smashed. Many of their leaders have fled to Switzerland, Vienna or Prague, leaving the rank and file entirely dismayed and disgusted. Olive Branch Accepted The Center party (Catholic) accepted the olive branch extended by Hitler in his reichstag speech. The Catholic bishops have raised the ban on members of the church who are Nazis, The trip of Vice-Chan-cellor Von Papen and Minister Goering to Rome means the settlement, of all disputes, with the probability that they will arrange with the Vatican for anew concordat, embracing all Germany, and nullifying previous concordats with states such as Bavaria. This w'ould mean that Bavaria no longer will have a minister at the Vatican, but a German legate will represent the entire country. Vice-Chancellor Von Papen, Minister of Economy Alfred Hugenberg and Minister of Finance Franz Seiche are being kept in the government purely to emphasize the “national character ’ of the cabinet. Should Hitler choose to dispense with them, there is no organization on the outside to protest. Goering Is Powerful If President Hindenburg should die or should resign, it is thought likely in Berlin that Hitler would become president, and Minister-Without-Portfolio Goering would be named chancellor. Goering is the most powerful man
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THEY'RE IN SHORTRIDGE 'BLUE BELLE' RACE
Betty Moon, (left) and Margaret Lee Riddell
Betty Moon, 3345 North New Jersey street, and Margaret Lee Riddell, 5535 Centra! avenue, are two of the candidates entered in Belle contest being held at the school today, during the annual the Shortridge high school Blue Blue Belle hop. The winner will be selected by popular vote and
lin the government. His stormy ' speeches and radical acts are popular with the younger Nazis. By ; comparison with Goering, Hitler seems calm and moderate. The anti-Jew campaign is being [ pursued diligently. The family , trees of office holders are being examined for traces of Jewish an--1 ccstiy, if there is any doubt of their ! removal. An example of this is to be found in the ultimate removal of Dr. I Theodore Lewald as chairman of | the German sports federation. Dr. Lewald is also chairman of the Olympic committee for the games to be held in Berlin in 1936. His resignation from this post may be expected. Ear Far Back Into Ancestry Dr. Lewald was the chief organizer of the German sports movement I for youths at the end of the war. He is 73 years old and was born lin Germany. The Nazis, however, ; looked up his ancestry and dis- | covered that his father was born of Jewish parents 120 years ago. The establishment of limitations !on the number of Jewish lawyers j w f ho will be permitted to appear bej fore the courts (in Berlin only 35 | out of 2,000) is to be followed by limiting the number of Jewish doctors, surgeons, and dentists. Opera houses, theaters, and concert halls have been forced to discharge Jewish directors, actors, | singers and musicians. The Berliner Tageblatt w r as compelled to dismiss j 117 Jewish employes, w'hereupon 1 Hitler's owm paper commented that j "wonders would never cease; even i the Tageblatt is becoming antiI Semitic.” Authors on Blacklist Famous book publishing firms dare not accept books by authors who are on the Nazi ulacklist. Be- | cause from America Toscanini, ! Damrosch, Bodansky, Bayer and | Gabrilowitsch protested against the I treatment of Jewush musicians in Germany, the government issued an order prohibiting the playing of any of their compositions or their phonograph records on radio stations. Steps are being taken to eliminate Jew r s as directors in banks, manu- ! factoring plants and other inI dustries. One prominent American in Germany expressed the opinion that I if the Nazis actually carry out the ! contemplated program it would complete the paralysis of the country. A Times Lost ad is the most economical means of recovering your lost valuables or pets. Call RI. 5551. The cost is only 3 cents 1 a word.
will receive a silver cup. Other candidates include Barbara Haines, Peggy Clippinger, Dorothy Bradpn. Anne Elliott, Helen Taggart. Mary Alice Snively, Mary Elam Moon, Kitty Myers, Louis Brown, Emma G. Tucker, Doris Van Horn and Mary Wynne.
TAX BOARD SLASHES UTILITY ASSESSMENTS A. T. & T. Cut $2,000,000; Others Win Fights for Reduction. Further cuts in utility assessments were announced today by the state tax board. American Telephone and Telegraph Company, owner of the Indiana Bell Telephone Company, was reduced $2,000,000 from its last year’s assessment of $20,880,593. Public Service Pipe Line Company w'as cut from $508,630 to $206,535, and Central Indiana Gas Company from $3,574,760 to $2,973,017. Public Service Company of Indiana was reduced from $49,754,339 to $43,738,820, and Indiana Pow'er Company from $10,300,000 to SB,500.000.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NEW 3.2 BEER PROVES AID IN FIGHTING CRIME Morrissey Cites Decline in Drunkenness Arrests; Youths Big Problem. BY BASIL GALLAGHER Time* Staff Writer The new 7 3.2 beer, the radio cruising unit and the development of playgrounds and jiuvenile recreation centers are the three strongest weapons of the Indianapolis police in combating crime in this year of shifting social and economic conditions. Chief Mike Morrissey cited the
new beer as a factor in crime prevention by calling attention to the fewer arrests for drunkenness o n the police blotter since the advent of the new' brew'. He calls the radio the “most powerful factor in fighting the modern mobster ever devised.” He deplored conditions which have made youngsters 18 and under “the most
• -yi . •
Morrissey
serious problem of the police.” Morrissey is proud of the radio set-up in his department. He points to vari-colored maps hanging behind his desk charting the radio cars. He will tell you of policemen from other cities who have come here to observe the Indianapolis radio unit in action. With almost two years behind him as head of the department, Morrissey is striving to keep Indianapolis
j in the lower brackets in the national reports on crime. “We kept crime down last year ! and the year before,” he says. “We re going to do it again if it s humanly : possible.” He thumbed quickly through a sheaf of papers on his desk. “Here's a Washington report for 1931,” he says, “which shows that i we had one of the lowest crime records in the country for a city of 1 our population. It was even lower in 1932. In 1931, $468,000 less stolen property was reported than the year previous. In 1932 it was *314.000 less than the previous year and this i year, up to date, it has dropped $32,000 more.” “Gangsters?” Morrissey scratched his head. “They don’t seem to like Indianapolis as a residence. We’ve had them, of course. Every so often | some of the mobsters drop into town j to pull off a job and make a quick getaway. But they don’t settle here as they do in some cities. | “The radio is mostly responsible j for that. When we get a long dis- | tance call from some other city that , hoodlums are heading this w'ay, the 1 radio cars concentrate on the approaches to town. We lay for them. “In the past, when gangsters have ! settled in town in a flat or hotel I we have paid them a visit before | they become too comfortable. From j time to time, gangs have dropped in ! from cities like Chicago, Cincinnati, | and Detroit. We got them out.” On the problem of juvenile crime i the chief became very grave. | “It’s not the gangsters who are ’ the chief concern,” he said, “but the j youngsters. It’s his damn depresi sion. The kids don’t get any spending money, and, in some cases, they’re actually hungry. They start off with petty thievery and gradually become bolder. “Moving pictures, glorifying the gangster life, are bad. of course. Recently I’ve been happy to note this type of movie seems to be on the wane. Boys need plenty of open air and organized play. Good outdoor sport * and popular idols like Lindbergh or Babe Ruth help more to break down juvenile crime than a million cops.”
SOUTHPORT TO GIVE DIPLOMAS SATURDAY NIGHT Commencement Exercises to Be Held in Auditorium of School. Commencement exercises for the . seventy-nine seniors of Southport [ high school will be held Saturday I night at 8 in the school auditorium. The program will open with music by the school orchestra. The invocation by the Rev. Guy Lowry, pastor of the Southport M. E. church, will follow. Fred T. Gladden, county super- ! intendent of schools, will present diplomas. The program will close with tjie benediction by Mr. Lowry. Members of the graduating class are: Alma A. Amacher, Maxwell Askin. Margaret C. Baumann. Frances Mae Beals. Olive Ruth Bean. Fred E. Bertram. Marv Blankenshin. Vernon Boehle. Heldred Eloutse Bohannon. Dorothy Mae Bovard. Richard R. Branham. Kenneth Brewer. Walter A Briles. Jr. Harrv William Brouwer. lone Burns. Harold O. Burnett. Norman A. Clark. Mildred Blanche Coffman. Paul T. Daily.
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! ford Howard Norwood. Rosemary Defter. I inc William Palmen. Ernestine Rachel 1 ; Parker Av Anne Pierson. Mabel PitVr. Douglas Raine Earl O i River* Oscar C. Rosenbaum Lillian SchusI sler Lucille Anna Schuster. Dons Jear.r.* ! Shannon. Cecil Shutters. Frieda S’ar<. Marv Temnleton, Austin Temnke Ruth t Thomas Viola M Thompson. Dorothy I Aline Toian. Gladys Marv Tomamlch*:. Isaiah Tvler. Grafton F. Waddell. Bet'v \nr.e Watt. Arthur F Wegehof: Pauline Flov Wenniug. William Desmond Wlliouchbv and Thomas Sidney Wonnell.
