Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1934 — Page 14

PAGE 14

STRICTER NRA ENFORCEMENT IS ADVOCATED Representatives of 84 Codes Discuss Blue Eagle in Parley Here. NRA and the bue eagle was “taken to the cleaners’’ yesterday when representatives of eighty-four codes in Indiana discussed the bird and its habits and reached the decision, in a meeting in the Chamber of Commerce, that a strengthening of enforcement was necessary if the NRA structure was to be maintained. It was decided, tentatively, to hold a series of individual code meetings instead *of general sessions on all codes. Censure and praise for NRA in Hoosierdom was rampant. “Poor enforcement” was charged. Elimination of fair price provisions in codes were declared by speakers to have weakened NRA. Fred Hoke, Indiana NRA compliance director, warned the code authorities that if they didn't cooperate with NRA and make it a success that “it is going to be done for us, maybe in a way we don’t like, no matter what administration is in power in Washington.” “We must promote this for our own salvation. It is beyond my comprehension why people can’t cooperate for their own good,” added Mr. Hoke. Speakers at the me' ing were, Charles A. Becker, Charles A. Howe, H. L. Rauch, Adolph J. Fritz, J. F. O’Mahoney and Francis Wells, assistant to Mr. Hoke, all of Indianapolis; H. L. Gauss, Columbus; Carl Gartner, Shelbyville, and George Firmin, South Bend. Dr. R. Clyde White of Indiana university presided. Mr. Rauch, chairman of the petroleum industry code, asserted the codes have been a salvation for the oil and gas business. Mr. Fritz, secretary of the Indiana Federation of Labor, told the group that labor was back of President Roosevelt and the NRA. He praised the petroleum industry for co-operating with NRA. LEISURE STRESSED AT COLLEGE GRADUATION 33 Receive Diplomas at N. C. A. C. U. Exercises Last Night. Stressing the importance of leisure hours, Dr. R. Clyde White, head of the social science department of the Indiana university extension division, delivered the principal address at commencement exercises of the Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union last night. Thirty-three members of the graduating class were presented with diplomas by George Vonnegut, president of the board of trustees. Joseph Janelunas gave the farewell address for the class and the response was made by Walter Kroczynski. Dean Emil Rath, recently appointed public school recreation ■jjrector, had charge of the proif.am.

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BY WALTER D. HICKMAN

THIS state has contributed anew poet to the ever growing field of poets. Although she has only two books of poetry to her credit, her work has appeared in more than 100 American and English publications. Her latest book of poems is called “Mysteries of Earth” and is published by the Kaleidograph Press of Dallas, Tex. Her name is Margaret E. Bruner and she lives at Newcastle, Ind. This last publication lives up to the prediction that I made while reviewing her first book “The Hill Road,” that she looks very closely and intimately at the things which are nearest her in life. lUfc-s. Bruner proves that by the titles of her poems in “Mysteries of Earth” such as “Second Marriage,” “A Certain Undertaker,” "The Clown,” “An Old Man Walks in His Garden,” “A Maker of Quilts,” “My Friend’s House,” “Deserted Farm,” and many others. My favorite poem in her last collection is “A Maker of Quilts.” There is a reason that this verse appeals to me because of the subject matter . I had a wonderful cousin who lived on a farm in DeWitt county. She was of that farm and she was a queen of her domain as long as she lived. When a youngster, I saw her rise in the early morning to do her work which started with milking her favorite cow. She always had a favorite cow while she lived on the farm. From early morning until after sundown she worked as if she were a man. Then under the light of an old-fashioned oil lamp, I saw her make quilts at night. an u MRS. BRUNER must have known someone like my Cousin Kate because she has shaped her poem, “A Maker of Quilts,” after just such a woman. At the very beginning, the poet tells you that this maker of quilts “is not one to sit with idle hands” and that after necessary work “turns to quilts, as if to snare the strands of early hopes.” And the object of the maker of quilts was “to fashion beauty from the commonplace.” Mrs. Bruner has the quality of getting into the very soul of her characters. She understands that silent language—the purpose of any one doing his work well. It is this power of observation which gives life, brilliancy and a human feeling to nearly all of her poems. These qualities are found in another poem, “Second Marriage,” and still another under the strange title of “A Certain Undertaker.” Daily, the public of Mrs. Bruner is increasing because she records life as she really sees it. Aero Club to Make Cruise An air cruise to Lafayette will be made by the Indianapolis Aero Club Sunday. The planes will leave municipal airport at 9:30 a. m. The cruise is in charge of Robert Murnan, with T. E. Frankenfield as program director.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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JUNE 1, 1934