Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 307, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 May 1934 — Page 22
PAGE 22
The Indianapolis Times lA • CHIP!’* HOWARD Sr.W Sl’A I'F.Ki BOT W HOWARD Fiii*ui TALCOTT POWELL . . . . Editor EARL D. KAKF.K Riin* MinngtM Phone — Riley SMSI
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.. - - Giv Light ant the Po pie IT ill rtna Their Chrn Wag
FRIDAY. MAY 4. 1934. CONSPIRACY? TNDIANAPOLIS citizens will not permit their •*- streets to be made a battle ground for industrial warfare. The merits of the Real Silk strike well may be left to the national labor board and the department of labor. . In the meantime this community can not tolerate violence either on the part of the strikers or Real Silk management. Strikers guilty of rowdy tactics have been arrested promptly and punished. That is as it should be if law and order are to be upheld. But what about the armed guards imported from other cities by Real Silk? For several days they rode the streets like Cossacks, brandishing firearms and blackjacks, intimidating good citizens and generally using the tactics of thuggery under the representation that they were “special constables" of Warren township. Police Chief Morrissey was informed of the situation, if, indeed, he was not fully aware of it all the time. He took no action even after a shot actually had been fired at a group of strikers. It was not until Prosecutor Herbert E. Wilson courageously stepped in and sharply recalled the chief's duty to him that he began to arrest these guards. At the same time the Real Silk management dismissed its “special constables." This by no means closes the matter. Impersonation of a police officer is a serious crime at any time. It is not only serious but utterly contemptible if it occurs in labor disputes. Industry makes a poor case for itself when it turns to lawlessness. These private detectives did not come to Indianapolis of their own accord. Nor is it conceivable that they could have procured their “constable" credentials in a strange city without assistance. They were acting as agents for someone. Who is that person? If, as the evidence indicates, the “guards” were impersonating officers others would appear to have conspired with them to flout the law. Conspiracy to violate a criminal statute is also a serious offense in Indiana. Prosecutor Wilson should forthwith place this whole situation before the grand jury. He not only should direct his investigation toward the conduct of the private detectives, but he also should determine whether their employers entered into a conspiracy to flout the law. SNOOPERS NOT NEEDED SEVERAL suggestions for combating the bootleg menace have been made by Mr. Choate, head of the federal alcdhol control administration. # Ironically, the only Choate proposal that yet has been embraced is the one that will accomplish the least. It is his recommendation for increased enforcement expenditures and multiplied number of federal agents. Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau plans a force of 4.000 agents and employes in the new alcohol tax unit. That will be a force as large as the prohibition bureau boasted when the “noble experiment" was in flower. De we need as many snoopers and spies to enforce repeal as we did to try to enforce prohibition? There is no reason for surprise that this proposal is being acted upon with such enthusiasm. Self-perpetuation is the first law' of bureaucracy. Mr. Choate also suggested lower prices for legal liquor, and recommended that liquor taxes and tariffs be reduced. Congressional leaders apparently do not want to reduce taxes, and seem content to achieve slightly lower, but still prohibitory, tariffs through the inadequate provisions of the pending reciprocal tariff bill. The price of liquor is the key to the bootleg problem. Before prohibition good grades of whisky sold for $1 and $1.25 a quart. In those days there was no bootleg menace. In 1916 the internal revenue bureau had only fifty-six special agents to run down bootleggers and moonshiners. The total number of employes connected with liquor tax enforcement was 1.487. That number included clerks, bookkeepers and gaugers. The whole revenue bureau in 1916 operated on a $7,000,000 budget—about half the prospective budget of the proposed alcohol tax unit. Pre-prohibition prices are impossible now even should the industry be content with reasonable profits. In the more populous states, where bootlegging thrives today, the federal tax plus the state tax totals 75 cents a quart. On foreign-distilled spirits the tariff brings the total tax to $2 a quart. These figures explain the continued flow of bootleg. A FUTILE LIFE THE more one reads about the frantic flight of Dillinger and his crew, the more one discovers that this business of being a notorious and badly wanted gunman can't be a great deal of fun. On the surface, the life seems to have a veneer of romance and excitement. Underneath it must be a lot more trouble than it is worth. Read the stories told by those citizens who have, against their own .will, come into con • tact with the hunted men for a time. Unanimously. they testify to strained nerves, to eternal vigilance, to a tension that can never be relaxed. Every car that approaches may carry the end of everything behind its windshield. Every sudden noise at night may be the signal for the last spatter of bullets. Every stranger who comes near may be Nemesis;
every tiny accident may be the break that will destroy the whole scheme. And under all this there is nothing but complete futility. For by this time all plan and all reason have left the fugitives' campaign. Originally there was some sort of pattern to this life of sudden forays and mad. reckless flights. It was a way of life that might be dangerous and desperate, but there was a more or less regular rhythm to it. But not now. It has changed into an aimless, helter-skelter chase that can have no end, a melodrama that can not /Inally resolve itself into peace and quiet, but that must be carried on until some more accurate burst of gunfire finally brings down the last curtain. All this is pretty obvious, to be sure. But mast of us have a sneaking and perverse imp of imagination tucked away somewhere that makes us see ourselves in an outlaw’s place; and from that human failing there arises a misplaced and mawkish sympathy which, in the end. can become a source of refuge for the man who has defied society. That sympathy tends to persist as long as we can see the outlaw as a gay and dashing fellow living a bold and carefree life. But it dies out when we get a look at him as he really is—as a badly worried, badly frighten°d and eternally restless fugitive, who resembles nothing so much as a hunted rat in a barn full of fox terriers. THE TAX VOTE rj' ACH member of congress is to draw $9,500 a year salary. A few congressmen are independently wealthy. Most of them have a little Income on the side. All but a handful of congressmen boast total net incomes ranging from $9,500 to $30,000. t In studying the new tax bill that soon is to become law, it seems strangely important to remember in what brackets congreslional incomes are taxed. The truth is inescapable. The same congressmen who a few weeks ago voted successfully to raise their own salaries SI,OOO a year now have voted to cut down the taxes on their own incomes. They even rejected the Couzens one-year 10 per cent special levy, which in all lower brackets would have left the tax lower than at present. The following table, applicable to a married man with no dependents, tells the story: INCOME PRESENT NEW PLUS TAX TAX COUZENS’ 10% S 5,000 $ 100 $ 80 $ 88.80 10,000 480 415 456.50 14,000 900 809 889.90 20,000 1.680 1.589 1.747.90 25,000 2.520 2.489 2,737.90 Only on incomes of more than $30,000 is there a tax increase in the new bill. It is perhaps unfair to say that congressmen were thinking only of themselves. They undoubtedly were thinking of the voters whom they must face in the fall. But who are the voters? Forty million persons voted in 1932. That same year only 1,525,546 persons paid income tax. The percentage of income taxpayers may be higher this year, but there are still ten million persons unemployed, still 15,000,000 persons on relief rolls. WILLIAM H. WOODIN TYA"R. WOODIN. who died last night, gave loyalty and cheer to the President and the government in the dark days of the bank holiday a year ago. Though not professing to bp a great expert in public finance, his sympathetic service in following the leadership of his friend, the President, strengthened the United States treasury department through the emergency period. He helped to provide the co-operation and courage so essential to unified and effective administration action during a crisis. Overwork impaired his health. His charm and kindliness will be remembered. SECRET TRAILS NO one can read of the kidnaping of a child without wondering what he himself would do if his own youngster were taken by kidnapers. The parents of a kidnaped child must be in about as soul-trying a position as human beings ever are forced to occupy. Shall he follow the instructions of the kidnapers. pay what they ask, and trust to luck that his child will be returned unharmed? Or shall he notify the authorities at once and try to have the kidnapers captured—praying, meanwhile, that his child comes to no harm? Most of us, thank heaven, are never called on to make that decision. When it comes, a peculiarly tragic conflict at once arises between one's natural impulse to protect his child at all casts and one's duty as a citizen to get the police on the trail of the kidnapers without delay. And right here, it seems, there is room for a great deal of improvement in the customary police procedure. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, as soon as a man notifies the officers that his child has been stolen, the news is broadcast from the housetops. And it seems pretty obvious that in most cases this is a great mistake. By making public this news, the police simply warn the kidnapers that the law is on their trail. They thereby diminish the chances for a surprise which would land the criminals in their net; they also create an added hazard for the life of the child in the kidnapers’ custody. What is apt to happen? The kidnapers discover that the police are after them, and that their chances of negotiating privately with the father of their victim are nil. If It looks as if the chase is getting pretty hot. there is a strong incentive for them simply to destroy the child and scatter to save their own necks. For in this case, as in so many others, the police seem to proceed on the theory that criminals never read the newspapers. In justice to the victims and their relatives, it would seem that the smart thing would be to keep the news of the crime secret as long as there is a chance that anything can be gained by such tactics. Police work can't always be done properly in the glare of the floodlights. It's time the police realized the fact and acted accordingly. On arrival, Samuel Insull plans to get a hair cut first. If his barber happens to be a utilities bondholder, he may give Insull the kind of trimming the bondholders think they’ve had.
Liberal Viewpoint By DR. HARRY ELMER BARNES”” 1
THE old-time historian paid little attention to the history of literature. But the more up-to-date historians recognize that there often is more to be learned from literature than from politics in the way of understanding the civilization of any country. Mr. Mangus has written a clear review of the history of literature from the Greeks to the nineteenth century i“A History’ of European Literature.” By Laurie Mangus. Norton, s4>. It probably will supplant Faguet’s classic. “Initiation Into Literature,” as the best introductory volume on the evolution of western literature. Its outstanding defect Is the slender treatment of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. One of the outstanding phases of the ‘‘new history" is the increased attention given to the place of the Celts in the evolution of western civilization. The tendency today is to begin the study of the history of western European civilization with the Celtic people rather than with the Teutonic. Professor Hubert, a distinguished anthropologist, has produced a brilliant and authoritative history of the Celts down through the iron age to the eve of their contact with the Romans (“The Rise of the Celts"). By Henri Hubert. Knopf. $5). The book is very literally an introduction to western European civilization. B B B ONE of the chief reasons for hoping that our children may be somewhat more civilized than this generation has proved to be is the gradual development of more realistic education. In no field has there been more progress than in the provision of intelligent and broadminded historical texts. Professors Thomas and Hamm have produced a high school textbook on Europe since 1700 which rivals the manual by Professor Carl Backer as a civilized instrument (‘'Modern Europe." Bv Harrison C. Thomas and William A. Hamm. Holt. $3). Professor Turner has succeeded remarkably well in combining scholarship and a good literary style in his biography of Buckingham ("James Silk Buckingham." By Ralph E. Turner. Whittelsey House. $5). The book is more than a skillful biography; it is a real contribution to the social and intellectual history of England in the period of the industrial revolution. Mr. Smith has written a series of brief biographies dealing with reformers from Savonarola to Margaret Sanger “Evangels of Reform." By Mortimer Brewster Smith. Round Table Press, Inc. $2.50). It is an important and interesting contribution to the history of modern humanitarianism. It is especially useful in that it embodies studies of leading women humanitarians. BUB ANOTHER volume has appeared in the very important series on the history of American civilization edited by Professors Schlesinger and Fox. This is the volume by Professor Cole on the cultural and institutional background of the Civil war (“The Irrepressible Conflict; 18501865.” By Arthur Charles Cole. Macmillan. $4). Students who have become weary of reading about the slavery compromises, the controversy over state sovereignty and other hackneyed topics connected with the coming of the battle over slavery and disunion will welcome this stimulating departure from the traditional and historical treatment of the eve of the Civil war. LEWIS MUMFORD'S latest book is by all odds his most important one. ("Technics and Civilization.” By Lewis Mumford. Harcourt Brace. $4). The machine has exerted a greater influence upon contemporary life than any other single factor. Mr. Mumford has written what is beyond any close comparison the best work In the English language on the social and cultural import of the mechanical era. It probably will prove the most important contribution of the year 1934 to the history of modem civilization. Few authors ever have been better fitted for a task than was Mr. Mumford for the writing of this volume. About a year ago Columbia university appointed a commission of eminent professors and publicists to investigate the problems of economic reconstruction in the United States and to appraise the validity and prospects of the new deal. Their report has now been published in attractive form (“Economic Reconstruction.” Report of the Columbia university commission. Columbia University Press. $3). On the whole it warmly approves the thesis that a planned economy is essential to the return of prosperity and expresses considerable optimism with regard to the prospects for achieving this result by means of Mr. Roosevelt’s legislation.
Capital Capers BY GEORGE ABELL■■■-
STATE SECRETARY CORDELL HULL was a guest at luncheon at the Pan-American Union at Washington. Presently, Mr. Hull, stroking his chin, remarked to his host, Dr. Leo Rowe, director general of the Pan-American Union: "Who is that young man over there with the yellow hair? His face seems —er —vaguely familiar to me.” "What young man. Mr. Secretary?” inquired Leo, peering among the palms and plants of the banquet room. "Over there—you see—the young man with the yellow hair? I'm sure I’ve seen him some place.” , Good Dr. Leo Rowe peered more closely and presently discovered the "young” man of whom Secretary Hull spoke. It was venerable Dr. Gil Borges, whose beautiful yellow toupee glistened like gold in the rays of sunshine. "Why. that is Dr. Borges, assistant directorgeneral of the Pan-American union,” enunciated Dr. Rowe, without drawing breath. "Really?” said the secretary. "I was sure that I had seen him some place.” "Why. yes. Mr. Secretary,” replied Rowe. ‘‘He sits directly across from you at the table at all the regular meetings of the board of the PanAmerican union.” “Ah. yes . . . yes,” nodded Hull. "I was quite sure I had seen his face somewhere.” a a a PETITE FRANCES FULLER, niece of Frank Hogan, noted criminal lawyer, and Senator James F. Byrnes, Democratic leader of South Carolina, has just ended a successful role in the play, "Her Master's Voice,” which has closed after a several months’ run in New York. With seventeen pieces of pigskin luggage and a bright-eyed Sealyham named "Sandy,” the attractive Miss Fuller departed from Manhattan on the Commodore Vanderbilt, bound for Hollywood and a moving picture contract. The youthful Frances—who used to be one of the Capital's gayest debs —has scored an extraordinary success in the films and on the stage (extraordinary, at any rate, for most debutantes who decide to tempt the bright lights of Broadway). Her first stage role was in "The Front Page” and she subsequently was featured in "Five-Star Final.” played opposite -Leslie Howard in "The Animal Kingdom” and appeared in "I Loved You Wednesday,” which made quite a hit in New York. AMIABLE, billowy-mustached Colonel Eman-uel-Lombard, military attache of the French embassy (who has an American wife—one of the most beautiful girls in the corps diplomatique—departs today for New York to greet the sword of General Lafayette. The sword is arriving on the lie de France and is being sent by the French government for display in the Lafayette exhibit, which opens in New York on May 4. It is not so heavy as the magnificent cavalry saber which "Monsieur le Colonel” Lombard wears at diplomatic White House receptions, but envoys feel certain that a high-ranking officer like Emanuel will know how to handle it. French diplomats of later years are experts at presenting swords to museums and public officials. Not long ago French Ambassador de Laboulave assisted at the presentation of a French sword at the White House. Descendants of The Marquis de Lafayette and the Comte de Rochambeau always may be relied upon to add the fine point to .modern French diplomacy.
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
, i^rn STo (NTeU-XGEUT \ 3 JJosTf<e**we> f | Tke f I OF SOCiuTV J I i . — . ■.... TANARUS; -v.0.8&x-
The Message Center
(Times renders are invited to express their views in these columns. Make your letters short, so all can have a chance. Limit them to 250 words or less.) SOCIAL REFORMS CALLED MENACES TO HOME Bv a Mother. Mr. Lackey must be blind to conditions today or he would not have stated his questions as a challenge. The sacredness of our homes is fast crumbling due to so-called reforms, The subject of birth control has and is being advocated to such an extent it has destroyed the sanctity of home life and the purity of young girls. If you are a father does it matter to you whether God gives you a son or daughter? Accept that child as God's gift. You will be held responsible for its future, regardless of sex. You ask what is the purpose of our lives and under what conditions can we live them? That is plain. The purpose of us all should be to lead pure, wholesome consecrated lives. With God’s still, small voice and an open heart to obey his call, we will be able to live our purpose under any conditions. Dr. Gouthy has drawn the dividing line between science and religion so plainly any person with ordinary brain power can grasp the truth. a a a ASKS INVESTIGATION OF PRINTERS’ WAGES Bt a Reader. Now that the Typothetae probably has finished investigating the wages the employes were getitng in the Statehouse multigraph department, I think it is high time to investigate chiseling printers. The code went into effect Feb. 26. Big sheets of paper with different styles and sizes of type printed all over them were stuck up somewhere in the shops stating amount of hours, wages for a particular kind of work and the like. Did these sheets mean anything but just another job of printing to most of us? These employers can always afford anything, but when it comes to paying more wages they say, “I just can't afford it.” Most of these employers are too narrow minded and selfish to see that by giving us more there would be more for us to spend and eventually it would come back to them doubly. A large local printing company have mailed a questionnaire to all open shops trying to find out if they are paying the code scale set for Indianapolis and also trying to get open shops to lower the wage scale. No* isn’t this a direct way of trying to defeat the code and the NRA? ana THERE MAY BE SOME SARCASM IN THIS Bt Fair Plt. I believe that John Dillinger is no worse than the bankers and I wish him luck. However, it also should be remembered that there are a lot of others in jails no worse than Dillinger, so why not let them all out? Johnnie can't rob all the banks by himself. He has had a break so far, but let's be fair aad give some of the other criminals a chance, as there are still enough banks to be robbed. This would make it easier on Dillinger, also, because the police would "be so busy, they would not concentrate so much on one person and he
BLOCKING THE ROAD
Hitch-Hikers Pointedly Defended
By Hiram Lackey. Fostering cowardice and selfishness, newspaper propaganda against hitch-hikers has smeared the minds and hearts of Christians and left an ugly stain. How many uneducated persons who read such colored articles because of their news value stop to consider that the scarcity of men who bite dogs gives the article its news value? An increasing number of persons are learning that they can get along without thase newspapers which are dedicated to the growth of selfishness and cowardice among men or ingratitude toward God. Obviously aimless hitch-hiking deserves to be condemned. No man can sink lower than have certain ungrateful hitch-hikers. These rare fiends as bad as we are when we attach ourselves to the name “Christian” and then drag that name through the dirt by placing less than infinitive value on each individual human personality. Did you say that “picking up" hitch-hikers is dangerous? Then will you name one thing which Jesus, the immortal hitch-hiker, advised us to do which does not turn out to be a dangerous adventure? Footing it like Peter and John, one hitch-hiker journeyed from Indianapolis to a distant city on
would be more at ease in the pursuit of his chosen career. He might evade capture indefinitely and that would be fine for Johnnie, because once he is caught and kept in prison for some time the public no doubt would forget him and the girls would replace his picture on their dressers with one of a movie or radio star. I am sure I have offered a mast logical suggestion inasmuch as Johnnie has proven the fallacy of the old theory that robbing banks is wicked. DILLINGER FRIEND RECEIVES REPLY Bv a Reader. I am a steady reader of your Message Center. Some of the letters are written either in ignorance, without thought or just for mere wisecracking. I refer to Mrs. Betty Crawford’s letter in Monday's paper. She contradicts and doesn’t practice what she preaches. She claims to be a mother and not in favor of crime, and doesn’t teach her children to honor Dillinger. I suppose in their presence she says if she could help him legally she certainly would ahd wishes him lots of luck. She claims crooked politicians turned Dillinger loose, and she hopes he never will be captured. What’s the difference between her and the politicians? Well, I guess money was the difference. As far as Dillinger is concerned, I have nothing against him personally. I will leave that to the police force and the bankers. a a a COMPLAINS HOTELS DISREGARD NRA Bv Times Reader. Although not in any way financially interested in the Claypool, I am pleased to note its full co-opera-tion with the President. Having once been interested in the business, I certainly can take no pride in the niggardly attitude the hotel
1 wholly disapprove of what you say and will defend to the death your right to say it — Voltaire. _
his father's business. Hundreds of church members passed by on the one side or the other. On the previous Sunday these same drivers were professed followers of that Jew who dared to hike across hostile Samaria. At last a drunken driver stopped and by goodness reminded the hitch-hiker of the fact that the harlots will enter the kingdom of God before hypocrites. With the above truth in his mind the drunkard said. “There has to be a few good people in the world.” Flamingly significant is his burning rebuke to insincere church members who prate of redeeming a drunken world! The best friends of the hitchhikers are the heroic followers of Christ and other real “he-men,” such as our veterans. The worthy hitch-hikers have a mast efficient method of sifting away hundreds of false men and finding a true and worthwhile friend. For generosity is proof of courage, and helpfulness indicates gratitude to God. Courage and gratitude form the foundation on which all of the other admirable qualities of character are built. When the light of day is seen for the last time by our open eyes, may our souls be strengthened by the presence of friends who are brave, generous and true. Let those who will be surrounded by cowards.
men in Indiana, and particularly Indianapolis, have taken toward the NRA. General Johnson, if he would investigate, might be surprised at the number of hotel employes in the city, both skilled and unskilled, who are working from seventy to ninety hours a week at salaries ranging from $lO to S4O a month. Not only have most of the hotels failed to comply with the NRA, but they have not even made the pretense of an attempt toward compliance. REMEMBERS ’’LEFTY LEE” AS FINE SPORTSMAN B? Jack Cattleman Allow me to say a few words in regard to Lefty Lee. In writing this little missive of remembrance I feel that I am voicing the heartfelt thoughts of all sportsmen, especially fishermen. We have him to thank for the very interesting sports column that appeared in your paper each day which was always the first article I read. I had the pleasure of meeting him two or three times and I am sincere in saying that I think he was one of the finest, squarest shooting sportsmen that ever w'hipped a rod. Speaking for all lovers of the outdoors who read his column, we offer our deepest sympathy to his family and The Times. maw LABOR WILL REWARD FAIR TREATMENT B* Hiram Lackey. Knowingly appreciative, labor and its sympathizers hope for favorable action as a result of the publicity given by The Times to the striice of hosiery workers. The more responsible snd intelligent of these champions of economic justice have decided upon a practical plan of gratitude. Briefly, it is this: That the words or rather the divine command, ‘•Come unto me all ye who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,” be taken
MAY 4, 1934 '
, literally and seriously to the end that only those publications espous- ! ing the cause of labor’s righteous demands be given favorable consideration. The day of the torch light procession is long since passed, and the drums that once drowned the craving for just desire are now but the beating of the tribal tomtoms. Labor now sees its way clearly. We thank Thee, God. lor brightened day* And lor the darkened ones as well, For were our days lorever bright We would not know the gloom ct night. Nor find the ever kindly light Whose firmly steady rays impel Our leet along the better ways. And these ways have been blazed out of the morass of social wretchedness by one who remembered the forgotten man. B B B URGES ATTENDANCE AT UNION MEETINGS By a Former Seamer If I don't miss my guess, an article on April 17 was written by the seamer who is an employe member of the E. M. B. A. board. Whoever she is, she doesn’t know as much as she thinks she does. I admit Real Silk is as good a place to work as any in town, but will be better with the hosiery workers union; pays the best wages on the average of any place in town, and has short hours. There is plenty wrong with working conditions. If you will attend only one union meeting you will know why hundreds of employes, not only knitters, are striking. They didn’t have to be talked into walking out. The union officials don't ask you to believe them. They throw light on the subject and uncover things J. A. Goodman tries to cover up. You already may have ample employe representation, but it isn't any good. There isn't an employe member of the E. M. B. A. board with nerve enough to give the employes' views on wage cuts, raie cuts and lay offs. That is why you need a union. You have insurance protection for 60 cents a month, but you used to get $lO sick benefits for the same amount. What happened to it? You have to be at Real Silk a certain length of time before you can join the E. M. B. A. In the October election every one voted, even those who only had been there a few weeks, but weren't allowed to vote in the last E. M. B. A. election because they weren't members. Although I haven’t worked at Real Silk for several years, I keep in contact and have hundreds of friends there I wish I could say every one I knew had attended a union meeting and decided to sign up with the hosiery workers union and to work and walk for a worthy cause.
CHANGES
BY VIRGINIA KIDWELL O Love is every changing and tha • feelings of today We can’t expect to be the same as we will have tomorrow. Then never swear your love will last forever and a day. And never think you never will forget your grief and sorrow. For time brings changes wonderful and circumstances aid To form a different character and think a different way, Obtain anew environment and a new outlook is made So never swear to be the same tomorrow as today.
