Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 286, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 April 1934 — Page 11

APRIL 10,193*

NRA PROBLEMS AWAIT RETURN OF ROOSEVELT Johnson in Miami to Greet President Thursday on His Arrival. By t'nltrd prrtt MIAMI, Fla., April 10.—Pressing details of the gigantic recovery proRTam, and leaders of the NRA Will be waiting for President Roosevelt when he steps from the yacht Nourmahal here Thursday. As the chief executive's ocean-go-ing vacation neared its end. official business began encroaching, indicating a busy period with important matters requiring early attention of the President. Although their visit has been put down as a southern holiday. Genera) Hugh S Johnson, recovery administrator, and Donald Richberg, chief counsel of the NRA, will greet Mr. Roosevelt as soon as he is ashore. Unofficial sources reported that both were anxious to discuss with the President phases of labor's side in the recently settled automotive controversy. Meanwhile, the Nourmahal, Vinvent Astor's big white yacht, steamed slowly in Bahamas waters seeking new fishing grounds. Tire President yesterday received a delegation of White House newspaper men and discussed his fishing expedition. He indicated clearly that he would not talk abotit Washington events until he returns to the capital. Mr. Roosevelt, in the pink of condition, greeted all hands with a cheery hello and then in a joking manner began telling of the fish he caught and the big ones that got away. As no evidence was brought forward to substantiate the claims, the visitors, constituting themselves as a special piscatorial investigating committee, decided his son Elliott was not far wrong in saying “Father's luck was not so good.” 6.000 WORKERS END SIX-WEEK WALKOUT Thirty Eastern Shoe Factories Able to Resume Operations. By I nilfri rr< ** HAVERHILL, Mass., April 10. Approximately 6,000 operatives resumed work in some thirty Haverhill shoe factories today, ending a .strike of nearly six weeks' duration which cost the city an estimated $600,000 in pay rolls. Forcing out-of-town leaders into the background, conservative local labor leaders presided at mass meetings yesterday at which the strikers ratified new wage and working agreements. The workers agreed to arbitrate all future disputes. The manufacturers granted increases of 10 per cent to fancy stitchers, established pay of 37 1 j cents an hour for bench girls, and agreed that all cleaning be given to treers except in cases of overflow work. About. 400 employes of turn shoe plants still are on strike but satisfactory adjustments are expected within a few days. •TALKING BOOK’ FOR . BUND SHOWN HERE Device Will Make Literature of World Available to Afflicted. Through the inventioh of a “talking book." the world's literature will be made available to the blind, the American Foundation for the Blind demonstrated to Indianapolis yesterday. A practical demonstration of the new' device was made at the headquarters of the Industrial Aid for the Blind by Miss Anna E. Caldwell, a representative of the foundation. Through a reproducer similiar to a portable talking machine, disc records reproduce from 2,500 to 3.000 words, the length of an average short story. These records are being made by the Library of Congress, Miss Caldwell said, and will be available to blind persons who own a machine. ASTRONOMER TO SPEAK Nature Study Club to Hear Address by Russell Sullivan. “Stars of the Southern Hemisphere.'’ will be the subject of an address to the Nature Study Club of Indiana by Russell Sullivan at Cropsey auditorium in the public library Saturday night. Mr. Sullivan returned recently from study and observation at the La Plata observatory' near Buenos Aires. Philadelphia Ledger Ceases By l niteii Pn .• PHILADELPHIA. April 10.—The morning Public Ledger, published here for ninety-eight years, will cease publication Monday. The Public Ledger and the Sunday Public Ledger will be combined with the Morning Inquirer and the Sunday Inquirer.

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STATESMANSHIP and RELIGION The fourteenth of a series about the , , , , . creed of anew and greater America.

IN the Invention of mechanical machinery, the engineers do not immediately get mad and call people names in case something doesn’t pan out quite as they expected. They try again and after a while they get somewhere. If we approach the shaping of the new deal in this frame of mind, I am sure we can bring our .social machinery, after a time, up to date w'ith science and modern methods of mass production. The chief difficulty is with human hearts and human wills.

It will .require quite a little change in the temper and education of the American people before they are willing to settle down resolutely, steadfastly and continuously to the job of making such changes in social machinery as they find necessary after a process of trial and error. At the present time, they are so suspicious of each other, so certain that the other fellow is chiseling at their expense that we in Washington tend all too easily to gain the impression that the people of the United States are packs of ravening wolves determined to drag each other down. Os course, when you get away from Washington and the larger cities, you lose this feeling very rapidly. I am certain that if we are to continue with modern science and the application of methods of mass production, we must also continue with the perfecting of social machinery so as to balance in a just way our consumptive ability with our productive efforts. I am sure this can be done in a w'ay to give us twice as much of the material things of life as we had in 1929. But I am also sure that if the spirit of man continues to become narrower and more bitter, we can easily be forced into x'rrible disaster far beyond the worst that we saw in 1932. n b a TO avoid this disaster requires in my opinion a definite change in the hearts of men. I am not discussing human ethics hut the attitude toward those immaterial, intangible, unknowable forces which, by faith, we believe make for righteousness,and which w r e customarily call God. It seems to me that the time is almost here when we can say that from the hard-headed material point of view the Sermon on the Mount is practical, provided our hearts are truly permeated with the doctrine of Jesus and our minds are capable of formulating social machines corresponding in their precision with our mechaniical machines. Our control over nature is such that if the profit motive and the monetary system did not interfere unduly, it would be easily possible to remove from all humanity those great fears having to do with lack of food, lack of shelter, lack of employment, trouble in case of sickness and destitution in old age. It is a blot on American social civilization that these fears have not yet been removed. I know the situation in Washington well enough so that I feel the leaders there would be the first to agree with me that their efforts in this direction are merely crude beginnings. They feel the necessity for something well thought out that will work in the long run, that will dignify the most humble laboring men and give them an opportunity to feel that they are a definite part of the scheme of things and not mere hangers on. nan THERE are those in Washington who feel that the way out is toward decentralization. They like the idea of small factories out in the open country, with the workers in those factories living on small farms. They like the idea of fewer automobiles and more horses. They want more people on the land and fewer people in the cities. They want to see us get back to the mode of life we enjoyed in the eighties, claiming that there is a spiritual enrichment which comes from a more continuous contact with the simple affairs of daily life, on the soil or in the small factory. These people would like to frame laws to break up the large corporations so that there would be no nation-wide distribution system. While I have great sympathy with these people in many respects. and while there is a chance they may be proved to be right, nevertheless I feel definitely that it is our destiny to go ahead first with the larger concept which involves even more science and a greater control over nature than that which we now' enjoy. I feel that one of our great lacks is courage and desire, commensurate in their magnitude with our scientific understanding. In the twelfth chapter of Ecclesiastes. you remember that passage which reads: “Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and fears

MOTION' PICTURES - lli 23c TILL 6 . . . 4Qc AFTIR 6

CHAPTER XIV Changes in Social Machinery

shall be in the way, and the almond tree shall flourish, and the grasshoppers shall be a burden, and desire shall fail.” The old-fashioned people who like to interpret the scriptures literally might say, in case they lived in the Dakotas or Minnesota, that these words were truly prophetic because undoubtedly the grasshopper has been a serious burden on these regions In recent years. The thing which gives me a feeling of poetic sadness, however, is the reference to the failure of desire. When men are so whipped that they are dulled and sodden, that they have no possibility of desire or fervor, then indeed civilization is drawing to its close and the dust is preparing to return to the earth as it was, and the spirit of God who gave it. (Copyright, 1934, Round Table Press, Inc. distributed by United Feature Syndirate, Inc.) Tomorrow—A World Ripe for Religion.

Fishing the Air

"Recovers Is Here.” will be the subject of Fred Hoke, Indiana director of the National Emergency council in one of the series of five-minute talks about/ the governmental activities in the state, Tuesday night at 6:10 over WFBM. '

HIGH SPOTS OF TUESDAY NIGHT’S PROGRAMS. 7:OO—NBC *WJZ) —Mystery drama part 1. 7:3O—NBC iWEAFI —Wayne King orchestra. Columbia Voice of Experience. 8:00—NBC iWEAP)-Ben Bernies’ orchestra. 8:15 —Columbia—Ruth Etting: Ted Husing; Green's orchestra. B:3O—NBC (WEAFI Ed Wynn, Graham McNamee. Columbia—Minneapolis Symphony. 9:OO—NBC fWEAF)—Gladys Swarthout in "The Student Prince” Columbia Caravan, Stoopnagle and Budd; Connie Boswell. 9:3o—Columbia —Harlem Serenade.

More strange adventures In the underwater Urh territory of the planet Pluto will be revealed during the ‘‘Buck Roger* in the 25th Century” program over WFBM and the Columbia network, Tuesday, at 6:30 p. m. How an old umbrella furnishes Spencer Dean with a. clue that eventually leads to the solution of a mysterious killing will be learned when the initial installment of Stewart Sterling's new Manhunter mystery, "The Absentee Killer,” is presented during the Crime Clues program Tuesday, at 7 p. m., over WLW and an NBC network. Ben Bernie, the Old Maestro, will direct his Lads in "The World Owes Me a Living,” from Walt Disney’s picture, "The Grass-hopper and the Ant” as one of the features of the broadcast over WLW and an NBC network Tuesday at 8 p. m. Favorite selections from three of the most famous works of the entire operatic repertory will be played by the Minneapolis Symphony brehestra. under the direction of Eugene Ormandy. Tuesday, from 8:30 to 9 p. m., over WFBM and the Columbia network.

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RETAILERS TO VOICE PROTEST ON GROSS TAX State Merchants to Meet at Fairground Here on April 19. Plans for the state convention of retail merchants in Indiana, to be held in the Manufacturers’ building at the state fairground April 19, were announced today through the Indianapolis headquarters of the Associated Retailers of Indiana. Expression of the united opposition of persons engaged as retailers to the state gross income tax will constitute the central theme of convention sessions. George V. Sheridan. Columbus, O, managing director of the Ohio council retail merchants, and national authority on sales tax legislation, will be the principal speaker. Other speakers include Archibald MacLeish, controller of Carson-Pirie-Scott Company, Chicago; Rivers Peterson, Washington. D. C., chairman of the National Retail Code Authority; G. Fred Wiedman, South Bend, president of the Associated Retailers of Indiana; Fred Hoke, Indianapolis, national emergency council director for Indiana, and Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue university. Among subjects of discussion will be that of an equitable tax program which retailing industries of the state are expected to support at the next session of the state legislature in lieu of the present gross income tax, it was announced. CHILD CLUB TO MEET Mrs. David Ross to Deliver Lecture on Moving Pictures. Indianapolis Association for Childhood Education will hold a meeting Monday in the auditorium of L. S. Ayres & Cos. Mrs. David Ross, j president of the Indiaina Indorsers I of Photoplays, will speak on “MoI tion Pictures Yesterday and Today.’’

. Wallace secretary of AGRICULTURE

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fe^iiENTAfIONS 7t I, NEI&HfeORHOOP THEATER?

m>RTH SIDE FT \ U TXTy” I Double Feature Gloria Stuart • I LIKE IT THAT WAY” “LADY FOR A DAY" TALBOTT I *SS,*wß* x x Double Feature “ACE OF ACES” “THE CHIEF” n, j£ | 19th and College Stratford Family Ni<p ununuiu Double Feature “16 FANTHOMS DEEP” "S O S ICEBERG” MECCA Fay Wray “MADAME SPY' 1 GARRICK Ed. Lowe “LET'S FALL IN LOVE” “BLOOD MONEY” ppar SOtb & Northwestern Kt/A Do “ bl * Feature C. Colbert “FOUR FRIGHTENED PEOPLE” “GOODBYE AGAIN” n TT7 Illinois at 34th IVI 1 Double Feature Paul Muni “HI NELLIE” “QUEEN CHRISTINA” pep /"NT Ain St. Clair, Ft. Wayne ST. CLAIR Double Feature “MADAME SPY” “SPEED WINGS” r-vw. p AH* 2351 Station St. LIKE AM Double Feature *- iT * Richard Dix “DAY OF RECKONING” "LADIES MUST LOVE” UPTOWN 1 Gavnor* AJA AW Hit Lionel Barrvmore “CAROLINA” EAST SIDE TACOMA 244 V.m7iTxue str inviU/iurv Donald Cook “FURY OF THE JUNGLE" STRAND Double" Feafuri John Boles “BELOVED" “CROSBY CASE” miTAi r Dearborn at 10th KIVOLI Double Feature AVA T V7L(I w c Fle i dg “SIX OF A KIND” “GALLANT LADY” _____ IRVING Dnu'ble” Feature XAVTXi ■^ v, Fredric March “ALL OF ME" “CROSBY CASE" _ HAMILTON DoubleVelZ. IIAITIILIWiI Lillian Harvey “I AM SUZANNE” “ALL OF ME” n , New Jer. at t Wash. Paramount “PROFESSIONAL SWEETHEART* INDIA SPEAKS”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TUESDAY. P. M. 4 00—Music Box < NBC) WEAF. 4:15 —Dictators (CBS' WABC Jackie Heller (NBC. WJZ 4 30—Nurserv Rhvmes tN'BC. WEAF. 4.4s—Hillbillies (NBCt WEAF, Gordon, Dave and Bunny (CBS) WABC. s:oo—Mme. Alda (NBC WEAF Fernadino s orchestra .NBC) WJZ. —Bob Nolan and Norm Sherr fITBS’ WBBM. 5 30—Jack Armstrong (CBS< WBBM. Mischa Ragir.sky and ensemble i r TLS i VU A Hvmn Sing (NBC) WEAF. Stamp club. Captain Healy (NBC) WJZ. 5:45 —Musical Mosaics iNBC. WEAF. Tito Guizar, tenor .CBS) WABC. Lowell Thomas (NBC) WJZ. B:ls—Sketch (NBC( WEAF Just Plain Bill .CBS* WABC You and Your Government (NBC) WJZ. B:3o—Buck Rogers (CBS) WBBM. Johnny Russell; Carolyn Rich i NBC i WEAF. 6:4s—Boake Carter (CBS) WABC. Male quartet (NBC’ WJZ. 7:oo—Jack Little orchestra CBS) WABC. Crime Clues NBCi WJZ. Reisman's orchestra and Phil Duey . NBC i WEAF. 7:ls—The Guardsmen (CBS' WABC. 7:30 —The Voice of Experience iCBSi WABC. Wavne King and orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Conrad Thibault. Lois Bennett and Salter's orchestra (NBC.. Conrad Thibault. Lois Bennett and Salter's orchestra (NBCi WJZ. 7:4s—California Melodies CBS. WABC. B.oo—Musical Memories, Edgar A. Guest (NBC* WJZ. Ben Bernie and orchestra (NBC) WEAF. B:ls—Ruth Etting and Johnny Green's orchestra (CBS) WABC. 8:30 Minneapolis Svmphony (CBS) WABC. Voorhees' band; Ed Wynn (NBC) WEAF. Duchin's orchestra (NBC) WJR. 9:00 Student Prince” Gladys Swarthout (NBC* WEAF. Glen Gray's orchestra, Connie Boswell. Stoopnagle and Budd (CBS) WABC. Ray Perkins, Stokes’ orchestra (NBC* WJZ. 9:30 —Svmphonv concert (NBC) WJZ, ‘ Conflict” (CBS i WABC. 10:00—Harlem Serenade (CBSi WABC. John B. Kennedy (NBC) WEAF. 10:15—News; Barnett's orchestra (CBS) WABC. News: Russo's orchestra (NBC) WEAF. News; Poet Prince (NBC) WJZ. 10:30—Whiteman’s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Brigode’s orchestra (CBS) WABC. Phil Harris’ orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 11:00—Sosnick's orchestra (CBS) WABC. Vallee's orchestra (NBCi WEAF. Master's orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 11:30—Belasco's orchestra (CBS) WABC. Jack Denny's orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Seymour Simons’ orchestra (NBC) WJZ. WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (IndianaDolis Power and Light Company) TUESDAY P. M. s:3o—Bohem ians. s:4s—Morton Downey (CBS). 6:00 —Bohemians. 6:ls—Pirate Club. 6:3o—Buck Rogers (CBS). 6:4s —Cowboys. 7:oo—Little Jack Little orchestra (CBS).

EAST SIDE ft •• l5OO Roosevel* Hollywood Norm an “ORIENT EXPRESS” _ “DEVIL TIGER” my jy p E\/A 4020 E. New York TUXEDO Famil > vl,e * n irrr 2930 e. lots st. PAKKEK Double Feature A t uvillviv Paul Muni “WORLD CHANGES” “SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI ’ EMERSON “ Feature ly.UlyAVktV/il Janet Gaynor “CAROLINA” “EASY TO LOVE” SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Wm. Powell “FASHIONS OF 1934” “THE LAST ROUNDUP” _ _ SANDERS “CHANCE AT HEAVEN” “GOOD COMPANIONS” ORIENTAL 4 “ “-tur? 1 Warren WUiam “BEDSIDE” “FLAMING GOLD” pn 4\t4 r\ 4 1046 >lrginla Art. GRAN ADA ?-„ fsir “SIX OF A KIND” “GALLANT LADY” Roosevelt Lilian Harvey “MY LIPS BETRAY” AVALON Double* feature rv y ■TAL/YJ'i.Y Will Rogers “MR. SKITCH” “SON_OF KONG” GARFIELD “THE FOG” T I\TAI AT 8. East at Ltncola LiiSLiULiN James Dunn “JIMMIE AND SALLY" WEST SIDE nAICV w Mich. U'TAJO I Dick Powell “FOOTLIGHT PARADE” BELMONT " ' X Double Feature “GOODBYE AGAIN” MIDNIGHT” prp 4 mp Y 702 W. Tenth St, STATE %S a £S3sr ••LITTLE WOMEN” “HORSE PLAY”

Tonight’s Radio Excursion

7:ls—Sports Omeletts. 7:3o—Male chorus. 1 45—Hollywood Lowdcwa. 8 00—Penn and Smack B:ls—Ruth Etting ’CBS>. 8 30—Minneapolis Bymphonjr (CBS). 9:oo—Caravan iCBS). 9 30—Plano Twins. 9:4s—Myrt and Marge (CBS'. 10:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 10:15—New* (CBSi. 10:20—Charles Barnet orchestra (CBS'. 10:45—Bohemians. 11:00—Harry Sosnllc orchestra (CBS'. 11:30—Leon Belasco orchestra (CBS*. 12:00 Midnight—Atop the Indiana roof. A M. 12:15—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting, Inc.) TUESDAY P. M. 4:ls—Jackie Heller (NBC). 4 30 —News flashes. 4 45—The Tattered Man (NBC*. s:oo—Mme. Frances Alda iNBC). s:ls—Dick Steel. 5:30—T0 be announced. s:4s—Little Orphan Annie (NBC). 6:oo—Happy Long. 6:15—T0 be announced. 6.3o—Knothole Gang. 6:4s—The Cavaliers (NBC*. 7:oo—Leo Reisman orchestra (NBC). 7:3o—Wayne King orchestra (NBC*. B:oo—Harry Bason. B:ls—Night Traffic Court. B:ss—Sport Album. 9:00 —"The Student Prince”—Beauty Box theater (NBC. 10:00—John B. Kennedy (NBC). 10:15—Radio Press bulletin (NBC). 10:20—Tweet Hogan orchestra (NBC*. 10:30—Paul Whiteman orchestra (NBC), 11:30—Rudy Vallee orchestra (NBCi. 11:30—Jack Denny orchestra (NBC). 12:00—(Midnight)—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati TUESDAY P. M. 4:oo—The Music Box (NBC). 4:3o—Singing Lady INBCI. 4:4s—Little Orphan Annie (NBC). s:oo—Jack Armstrong. General Mills program.

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s:ls—Joe Emerson, Bachelor of Song. 5 30—Bob Newhall. * 5 45—Lowell Thomaa (NBC), 6.oo—Amos ’n’ Andy (NBC). 6:15 —Unbroken Melodies. 6 30—Sohlo Melody Masters. 6:4s—Romance of Coins. 7:oo—Crime club iNBC'. 8:00—Ben Bernle's orchestra (NBC). B:3o—Ed Wynn and band iNBC' 9:oo—Palmolive Beauty Theater of the Air <NBCt. 9:3o—Crosley Follies. 10:00—News flashes 10:05—Johnny Hamp's dance orchestra 10:15—Marc Williams. Cowboy Ballad Singer. 10:30—The Cossacks. 10.45—Paul Whiteman and orchestra (NBC. 11:00—Frankie Master'* and orchestra (NBC*. 10:30—Hal Kemp's orchestra tNBCt. 12:00 —Hotel Gioson's dance orchestra. Little Jack Little's orchestra will feature a group of old melodies and a number lof modern song hits over WFBM and the Columbia network Tuesday from 7 to 7:15 p. m.

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PAGE 11

Puppet Play to Be Given "Rumpelstiltskin.” a puppet play, will be produced by Southport grade school pupils under the direction of Herbert Montgomery. Edge wood grade schools teacher, tonight.

’’Notkiog like it on the Air!" Smy L*mdi*%£ Rmdim Crititm rWiiff An entirely new tvpe of choral singing TONIGHT 7:30 P. M., C. S. TANARUS., WLW A icith CONRAD THIEBAULT Famous Barytone it LOIS BENNETT ★ HUDSOx\ SUPER ORCHESTRA