Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 276, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1934 — Page 24
PAGE 24
SIGNIFICANCE ATTACHED TO HOOVER TOUR Observers Believe Former President Is Feeling Public Pulse.
By T n,fc4 rrr.. DENVER. Coin., March 29.—A growing belief that former President Herbert Hnovpr, now touring the on a self-styled “pleasure trip.” actually is quietly feeling the public pulse, was expressed by political observers here today. At several points in the last few riavs. Mr. Hoover has conferred unostentatiously with 'old guard Republican leaders—among them such national figures a.s Charles G Dawes, the former Vice-President; General John J. Pershing. General .1 G. Harbord. president, of thp National Republican Club, and Albert G. Simms, national Republican committeeman from Npw Mexico. After each such meeting, the forfer President, persistently denying himself to newspaper men. has sent out word through his secretary that •'it was just a coincidence.'’ or that • i was just, visiting personal friends." Observer* Skeptical Rut observers are finding it incrcasinglv difficult to believe that such a distinguished assemblage of leading Republicans as the former President met in Phoenix. Ariz., for example, were there solely by a I eoinririenee. as Paul Sexson, Mr. Hoover s secretary, said. In ihat assemblage were Generals Dawes. Pershing and Harbord, Henry M. Robinson, well-known Los Angeles banker and adviser to the former President, and Arch W. Shaw, business man of Winnetka, 111. According to Mr. Sexson, it 'just happened” that these men were in Phoenix when Mr. Hoover arrived there. Visited Albert Simms Then, leaving Phoenix, the former President drove to Alhuquerque, N. M.—and there he spent Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. Simms. Mr. Simms is the. Leader of the Republican 'old guard” in New Mexico as opposed to the ' progressives,” headed by United States Senator Bronson Cutting. Mrs. Simms is the former Ruth Hanna McCormick, once. Republican congresswoman from Illinois. Newspapermen and others prognosticated as to whether Mr. Hoovpr did not, seize upon the oc-rar-ion to learn first-hand from Mr. Simms about, the state of Republican politics in New’ Mexico. From Albuquerque, the Hoover party wended its way to Santa Fe, the New Mexico capital. There, again. Mr. Hoover found' time on his “pleasure trip” to be gree'ed by. and to talk for some hours with a number of ‘‘old guard” Republicans. Will Visit Publisher From Santa Fe, the former President made a flying trip to Colorado to have dinner in Kit Carson. Mr. Hoover left Kit. Carson in his large automobile for a 410-mile trip to Syracuse, Kans., from where he expected to travel to Kansas City. Mo. He is expected to return to the west, roast, by way of Colorado and to confer with Clarence Hamlin, publisher of the Colorado Springs Gazettp and Telegraph, for many years a Republican national committeeman from this state.
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STATESMANSHIP . Henry A. and RELIGION Wallace ♦- ■+ 8 The fourth of a veriest about the need of SECRETARY of anew and prenter Americn. AGRICULTURE
CHAPTER TV Egypt, Babylon and Washington ISAIAH seems to have been the first man in recorded history to meditate long and deeply about International relationships. He knew thp sordid politics of these countries so well that, he could predict the outcome. He was appalled by the futility of it all and proclaimed that it. nepd not be so. And so we have the first man saying wtih profound f onvicition that the day would come when there would be justice between thp nations, when the swords would be beaten into plowshares, when the people of the different nations would find it possible to Jive and worship in comfort because they recognized the Just law of Jehovah.
It is interesting to note in the fourth chapter of Micah. which probably did not come from Micah but was borrowed from Isaiah, it is said that these things will come to pass in the last days. But these prophets with a broader vision, in spite of their feeling of the imminent doom which they strove manfully to avert, also had a strong feeling of ultimate saltation. They could see the continuous play and counter play of light and darkness. They felt that they themselves were part of the forre making for righteousness, H"nce, we have Isaiah saying, “Behold my servant whom I uphold; mine elert, in whnm my soul delighted; I have put my spirit upon him: he shall bring forth judgment to thp Gentiles. He shall not cry nor lift up. nor cause his voice to be heard in the streets. A bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench: he shall bring forth judgment into truth. He shall not fail nor be discouraged, till he hath set .judgment, in the earth: and the isles shall wait for his law.” The ultimate justice and peace as visioned by Isaiah has not yet been realized. But in literally millions of hearts, this vision still endures. The spirit may perhaps be burning fpebly. But there are many today who are willing to say almost with the vigor of Isaiah that this thing will eventually and surely come to pass. a a a lEPEMTAH. like Isaiah, seems to have been a. city man of good family. Apparently he was sprung from a priestly line, but no man ever denounced the priests and the old line prophets as vigorously as Jeremiah. Tt was in Jeremiah’s time that religion was being formalized and ritualized at Jerusalem. Deuteronomy and the ether early books of thp Bible were being compiled. Doubtless Jeremiah approved of all this up to a certain point,, but apparently he was fearful that, the spirit would be lost. He was the last prophet, before the exile, and he spoke with full vigor, knowing all the while that the nation was doomed. In spite of his denunciation of those in high places, he had friends among the princes and ciders who stood bv him when the priests and prophets wanted to destroy him. In Jeremiah's day. both Egypt and Babylon made Judah a battleground, and he had opportunity to see a continuous succession of the deepest human emotions. Probably no prophet yeas hammered so continuously by wide
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| changes of circumstances as Jeremiah. At times he was tempted to despair, but even when he felt mast, weak he returned to his duty and told the truth as he saw it. Finally he came close to the very' heart of things, expressing his disgust with written law' and saving, “I will put my law in their inward parts, and in their hearts will I write it and I w'il] be their God and they shall be my people.’' Reading the prophets causes the problems of our owm times to stand out with greater clarity'. The essential problem of social justice has changed scarcely at all since the time of Amos, although modern inventions have complicated the details of the problem and confused the issues. The typical farmer on mortgaged land, however, sees things in almost exactly the same way as Amos. He knows the balances have been falsified by powerful selffth interests and that a terrible day of reckoning is coming to those who have profited at his expense. These men do not come to Washington; very few of them to Chicago. But I have listened to many of them in the middlewest and in the south, and at times the depth of their feeling is almost, pathetic. They know' little of economics or history or of balances of trade or relationships with other naThey are as limited and as intense in their outlook a.s Amps. Undoubtedly, w'e also have to“I Suffered ID Years With Itching Eczema” “ and after spending hundreds of dollars to clear it up, I tried Zemo and got relief.” writes G. C. G. of Texas. Soothing and cooling, Zemo relieves itching in five seconds because of its rare ingredients not, used in other remedies. Also wonderful for clearing Rash. Pimplos. Ringworm and other irritations. Zemo is worth the prire heranse yon get relief \]| druggists', 35e. Stir, Sl.—Ad-
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day men in many cities of the land who. up to a certain point, are counterparts of Isaiah and Jeremiah. They have the intellectual appreciation of certain forces working remorselessly on a world-wide scale. They perceive certain failures of this nation to adjust herself properly to other nations, but their suffering and the suffering of the people has not yet been sufficiently great to enable them to reach the intensify of insight which characterized Isaiah and Jeremiah. Os course, the outstanding characteristic of the prophets which is lacking today is that intensity of conviction which enabled them to say, “Thus saith the Lord.” Frankly, I see no reason why there should not emerge today men who
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are the modem equivalents of the prophets of old. (Copyrirht. 1934, Round Table rr. Ine.i distributed hr (nlted Feature Sendicate. Inc.i Tomorrow The Spiritual Adventure of the Reformers. SPORTSMEN WILL~MEET Marion County Fish and Game Assoeiation to See Film. Members of the Marion County Fish and Game Association will meet at 7:30 Monday in the Washington Two reels of pictures taken by Kenneth Lewis in the Superior National Forest in northern Minnesota will be shown, and Audley Dunham, local magician, will present a program of tricks.
PRESIDENT UNWORRIED BY SENATES ACTION Roosevelt. Cruising in Bahamas, Offers No Comment. By T'nitrri /Vr** MIAMI, Fla., March 29.—President Roosevelt cruised through Bahamas waters today, apparently unworried by the senate's overriding of his veto of the independent offices bill restoring pay cuts
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to federal employes and giving additional benefits to war veterans. Word of the senate's action was communicated to the chief executive by Colonel Marvin H. Mclntyre, White House secretary, who is maintaining temporary quarters at the Miami-Biltmore hotel. No word. , giving Presidential reaction to con- , gress action was forthcoming.
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