Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1934 — Page 22
PAGE 22
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• ftoWAAS tiiva Light and the °eopl Will Find Their Own Way
FRIDAY. JUNE 15, 1934.
A NECESSARY RETREAT 'T'HE President has prepared and asked congress to pass a joint resolution empowering him to appoint boards to hold collective bargaining elections where there are disputes over labor representation under the recovery act. f As William Green of the A. F. of L. points out, this is a long retreat from an adequate •labor disputes law' which the President has bben advocating for several months. But it is necessary retreat because months of congressional delay have brought the country into e state of strife in steel and other industries and there is no time left in which to debate -and pass adequate legislation. In these closing ;days of the session a small minority in conegress can prevent passage of such a law by filibustering. So the choice now is not a whole loaf or even a half. It is a small slice or nothing. The {President has chosen the small slice. • ' Whether he can get even that small slice depends on the intelligence of the Republicans. They, apparently, are divided. Some of them ;would like to defeat the mild joint resolution ;by amending it to death. ? That, in our judgment, would be a political blunder for the Republicans. If anything is •clear in this situation it is that the vast majority of voters who wall go to the polls next autumn w'ant industrial peace preserved. They .■ look to the President to help preserve that peace. If congress refuses to give the President the minimum authority for this purpose, -the voters are not going to blame the Presij dent; they are going to hold congress responsi- . ble. And they should. • If the Republicans are intelligent they will ; get it through their heads that the voters consider this issue above politics. V THE SLENDER THREAD 'TN Nanking a hapless Japanese vice-consul, • t° r reasons unknown or for no reason at all, disappears. t Japan decides the chip has been knocked -off her shoulder. The cables hum with peremptory Japanese demands that China rectum the vice-consul unharmed. : Japanese tanks rumble menacingly in the ‘Streets of Shanghai. Japanese warships steam tup the Yangtze. Japanese diplomats discuss and apologies, t Then, on a hillside near Nanking, a Chinese coolie discovers the unfortunate Japanese ice-consul wandering between the tombs of ; the Ming emperors and the mausoleum of Sun .Yat-Sen, contemplating suicide. Thus a great international crisis ends abruptly, and the sun of peace shines again the Orient. What would have happened if the viceconsul had not been found? What would have - happened had he cut his own throat? Would Japan then have moved in? \ Peace in the Orient hangs by a slender ;thread. • - JOB INSURANCE ''HE social insurance committee of the • Indiana state conference on social w'ork : has approved a tentative draft of a compul- , sory Indiana insurance law r . - That appears to be a step in the right - direction and one which the Indiana legislature will be asked to approve finally in 1935. j The bill, as now written, would give the •benefits of employment insurance to any one ‘-more than 16 whose annual pay is less than : $2,000. ' The bill provides for those who most need • aid. A youth under 16 who makes $2,000 a J year has no reason for not saving some of his I funds, but the married man with a family who ; has worked year after year for less than $2,000 • and then finds himself in dire straits also will • find that he has had but little opportunity to ; set aside something for days of ill luck. ; The bill, according to the committee, “. . . • can provide a buffer to the onset of depres- > sion unemployment and it would continue *throughout the depression to give insurance relief to a large percentage of the unemployed. The provision of a buffer to cyclical unemploy- ; ment is one of the important functions of unemployment insurance. It gives time to get emergency measures organized and it actually reduces the amount of emergency relief required by a large sum.” . Those facts certainly uphold President Roosevelt’s hope of bringing home and job security to the people. • Those facts also make it mandatory for state legislators to consider the proposal fully t when it is presented. THE GOLD RUSH ; ''HE rush is on in Indiana. This time it's ' not for beer or a bargain day but for the most precious of all metals—gold. • According to dispatches coming from the hills of Brown county, someone has found - enough gold in new deposits to make the trip worthwhile. Like most other Hoosiers, we have hunted gold down in ‘‘them thar hills.” In fact, if memory serves us right we’ve covered many acres of ups and downs in Brown and Morgan counties chasing the elu- • sive metal on a screened pan. About all we ever got out of it was torn clothes and a rabbit 1 or two if the season was right. ; Indianapolis actually would welcome a gold ‘ rush in Brown county. There is no doubt but • what this city would benefit from the oncoming hordes. But, frankly, don’t become too elated over the prospects. There are plenty of hills to climb and brambles to battle to reach those little streams where, mo doubt, the gold rurh* (ifs will converge. -
DIAMONDS IN TRADE DIAMONDS certainly trade hands in this day and and age. The other day we read how the parents of Miss Uene Gillespie, prominent in New York social affairs, had returned a SIOO,OOO diamond ring to none other than John Jacob Astor. Yesterday we read that Mrs. Adolph Zukor, wife of the film magnate, had more than $87,000 in jewelry stolen from her in a Chicago hotel. Those of us in Indianapolis who probably don’t realize what a SIOO,OOO diamond, or even $87,000 worth of jewelry looks like, get a kick out of these quick turnovers. It looks as though the diamond trading business is on the upturn. THE PALE PROCESSION r T~'HE other day New York state did to death in its electric chair four men for the punishment of one murder. Massachusetts is about to electrocute three youthful and probably weak-minded murderers of a policeman. In every state, except eight that have abolished the death penalty, the pale procession continues its march toward gallows, chair or gas house under justice’s strange illusion that it can stamp out private by public killings. Science knows it can not. Recently Dr. John A. Larson of Chicago’s institute for juvenile research, told members of the American Psychiatric Association that he has found capital punishment unworkable as a crime deterrent. He studied the minds of eighty murderers in Illinois prisons. Almost onehalf of these were unstable emotionally, as compared with a 14 per cent instability in the general prison population. Dr. Larson also found a marked increase in acute mental disease and breakdown. More than one-half of this, he said, occurs in the group of first and accidental murder offenders. He added that the causes behind many cases of men turned murderers can be found in deteriorated neighborhoods, disorganization of the home, similar social factors. He urged psychiatric ' treatment and re-education as well as better environment. “You can sing Hosanna when some poor devil is sent to Kingdom Come,” said Clarence Darrow, “but you can’t understand without thought and study.” If society applied thought and study to its criminals there would be less crime. ‘ YOUTH AND PARENTS A REVIEW of reports from all over the country, covering the views of boys and girls being graduated from high schools, should be more embarrassing than surprising to the generation that is passing. For although these reports reveal a seriousness toward life which we older persons used to feel in our teens, they also point to the fact that youth today is much more frank and liberal and sophisticated than their parents cared to be. And it is in the matter of the relationship between the sexes that this freedom of thought and expression is most prevalent. Only recently a prominent lecturer before high school pupils and parent-tekeher associations finished a speaking tour of the country, in which she collected a number of highly illuminating questions that the girls and boys put to her—in writing, of course—after each of her talks. The questions revealed a frankness, a seriousness, an endeavor to know what life is all about, that opened the eyes of even this experienced lecturer. For instance, she found that the great majority of girls asked her about the mysteries of marriage and childbirth. And the boys asked why they must not pet, why girls can’t be as good sports as their boy friends, and why parents must always know what their children do when they’re out late. In other words, the general run of questions seemed to direct both a challenge and an indictment toward the older generation. The challenge—that youth today stands as ready to face the problems of life as their parents did in their day. The indictment—that fathers and mothers have failed, as did their own parents, in the proper mental and physical development of their children. It is most embarrassing 'to find youngsters of high school age revealing the fact .that they have been thinking of things that their parents had planned to tell them some years hence. It is embarrassing, too, that these youngsters should go to a stranger for information that their parents should have given them. But it is encouraging and stimulating to know that youth does think seriously along a line that promises a much better generation to come. NOT THE LAST OF IT ' I 'HE air mail bill awaiting presidential signature effects some reforms, gives legal sanction to the temporary air mail program of Postmaster-General Farley and at the same time introduces new contradictions into the confusion of the air transport industry. But it does provide a way to clear up the confusion through creation of a special commission to explore all phases of aviation and present to the next congress recommendations for a broad national policy. It is to be hoped that the President will act speedily and wisely in the appointment of this commission, and that the commission will do a thorough job. In no sense can this bill be considered adequate permanent legislation. Containing as it does a series of disconnected compromises, the immediate effect of the new law will be to keep the air transport industry in confusion and add to the public apprehension of the government’s relation to the industry. The new law will not even be workable for the interim period, unless this congress adopts clarifying legislation, in the form of joint resolutions, reconciling the contradictions in the bill itself and the conflicts between the bill and the temporary regulations promulgated by the postoffice department. This temporary period is not likely to be one of harmonious operation. The sooner a long range program is substituted, the better it will be both for the administration and for aviation. Douglas Fairbanks has acquired a monocle in England, which Mary Pickford now can put first among her reasons for wanting a divorce. Wonder why congress backed the President on the tariff measure? There are no votes to get in Europe. *.
Liberal Viewpoint BY DR. HARRY ELMER BARNES —
A YEAR ago much alarm was expressed in ■IY circles friendly to the new deal lest the supreme court might display a short-sighted and reactionary tendency and nullify basic legislation in the Roosevelt program. During the last twelve months the supreme court has amazed even its friends and admirers by the surprisingly progressive decisions handed down by the majority with respect to new deal principles. In the Minnesota mortgage moratorium case, in the New York milk case, and in the Washington butter case the court has swung definitely to the left and gone out of its way to approve legislation in the interests of the public. It has exhibited an almost unparalleled willingness to allow the legislatures to determine the wisdom of public policy. It might have been supposed that the at-torney-general’s office and the legal staff of the NRA would have been quick to exploit this favorable, trend of the court while enthusiasm for the new deal is fresh and intense. Yet, exactly the opposite policy seems to prevail. The legal representatives of the government appear to be surrendering without a fight. They seem willing to confess that they are licked before going to the supreme court. And this confession of weakness is made without any apparent ground for fearing defeat. With victory seemingly almost inevitable and easily within their grasp, they run up the white flag. nun 'X'HIS astonishing situation is well described In J- an article on “Planless Legal Planning,” in the New Republic. Last autumn the government played an ignominious role in it& vacillation and evasions in testing the legality of federal milk control. But the most, decisive and critical illustration of the timidity and ineptitude of the legal representatives of the government is manifested in the case of the United States vs. Smith, designed to test the legality of the federal authority to control petroleum production under the provisions of the NRA. Chief Justice Hughes has announced that the government has requested the postponement of this crucial case until autumn, despite the fact that the attorneys for the petroleum board had the case perfectly prepared and were confident of winning a victory. It would be difficult to imagine a more favorable case through which the government might test the validity of the NRA. The supply of petroleum is limited. The need for conservation is indispensable. Unrestricted private ownership and production not only promote reckless exploitation of oil, but also upset the possibility of national price control. a a a 'T'KE great majority of the powerful oil proA ducers of the country are in thorough accord with the petroleum board in wishing to control production. Not more than 10 per cent of the oil producers are defying public control. Economic power as well as public interest would encourage the court to render a decision favorable to the government and the petroleum board. Yet, after the government brief had been finished and only two weeks before the case was to be heard, the government weakly requested a postponement and offered in justification only a medley of absurd rationalizations. In the opinion of the majority of the press, the chief responsibility for these weak legal tactics rests upon the legal staff of the NRA. Perhaps the most absurd item in the whole procedure has been the sop thrown to the disappointed petroleum board. The latter has been told that the administration will support a stronger oil bill, meaning, if it means anything, a bill more likely to be set aside by the supreme court in a test case. If the legal staff of the government does not care to go to bat in behalf of the present oil bill, how does it propose to test an act more likely to arouse the opposition of reactionary members of the court? The government of the United States has in the past been defeated before the supreme court on issues of public policy. But, so far as I am aware, it has never, even under the most reactionary administrations, surrendered without 2ven the semblance of a fight.
Capital Capers BY GEORGE ABELL
' I a ALL, elegant Sumner Welles, assistant secre--i- tary of state, and lovely Mrs. Welles, were hosts at a garden party at their estate near Oxon Hill, Md. State department boys were present en masse, some diplomats, too—dapper Bello Edwards, minister of Chile, in blue suit and green and red striped tie; Ambassador Marquez Sterling of Cuba, in mouse-colored cutaway; the diminutive Siamese Princeling, Damras Damrong Devakul; Belgian Ambassador Paul May, very Chesterfieldian in dapple-gray with a mourning band on his sleeve; correct Ambassador Freyre of Peru, sitting on a chintz sofa talking politics. u n n NE of the most interesting guests was energetic, plain-spoken Fred Britten, “big navy” congressman and ex-pugilist, who told a good joke he recently played on Josephus Daniels at the New York naval review. ‘I came out of the Plaza,” chuckled Fred, “and there was Daniels in his Quaker hat, ready to go down town to review the fleet. There were some motorcycle policemen waiting to escort him, but they didn’t know Mr. Daniels from beans. Piesently, Mr. Daniels got in his car and drove off. He thought the police would naturally follow, but they didn’t. He went down to the sea alone. four automobiles were waiting. My little niece said to me: “Uncle, what a pity we can t have motorcycle cops to escort us?” I patted her hand and said:: ‘Just you wait, now’ “I went over to the policemen, saluted and asked: ‘What’s your detail? They repliedAmbassador Daniels, sir!’ ‘That’s me,’ I said’. They saluted and replied: ‘Very good, sir Whenever you’re ready.’ I went back to my niece and told her: ‘Don’t worry, darling. We’re going to have that escort.’ we It was a glorious ride down j* l with the sirens and claxons going and Irish cops a block away holding up their hands and stopping all traffic! I warned the policemen not to go too fast—you see, I was afraid we might catch up with Daniels, and that would have been just too bad!” JOHN PHILIP HILL of Maryland, excongressman and future Governor (or so he says), was an early arrival at the Welles party. John Philip seemed in radiant humor. For once, he wore no uniform. “How is your potato field?” asked a friend knowing that the former Representative is growing potatoes with the announced intention of making vodka. “Rotten!” boomed Farmer Hill. “Or perhaps I should say, wonderful. The government’s paymg me a bonus for raising less potatoes. Isn’t that marvelous?” He sighed reminiscently and added: “I turned all my potatoes over to be eaten by the potato bugs. What a meal!” an a COURTLY Mr. Welles bowed to a lady in a large picture hat, who was admiring his flower garden. “Oh, Mr. Secretary,” sighed she. “How much I envy your beautiful blue Canterbury bells! How do you make them grow so high?” “Hmm-mm!” commented Sumner. “The cold winter did them good. The hardest part has been to keep the slugs away.” “You must have learned how to keep the slugs away during your stay in Cuba,” grinned a visitor. Sumner—who successfully avoided Havana bullets—grinned good naturedly. Green will be the most fashionable color for fall, say style leaders who have become sick and tired of Representative Hamilton Fish’s red scares.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns. Make your letters short, so all car, have a chance. Limit them to SSO words or lessJ tt tt tt PROFESSOR BUTCHART S LETTER COMMENDED By Hiram Lackey. Will you please extend our thanks to Professor J. H. Butchart of the astronomy department of Butler university for his recent letter to Indianapolis newspapers. His civic interest deserves our attention and admiration. The citizens of Indianapolis will appreciate more of this quality of writing by educated men. An occasional letter like his will make the public views departments of our Indianapolis 'newspapers worthy of space on an editorial page, instead of in a comic section. Os course, knowledge of the opinions of the most lowly and unlearned people is of social consequence and eminently worthwhile; but for us to read and learn the truth which has the power to illuminate the darkness of our minds, is infinitely more fruitful and important. We can learn truth best from men of intelligence, discipline, unselfishness and years of training. These essentials enable men to write something worth reading. If honest, courageous editors will offer college-trained, religious men the proper encouragement, our boasted freedom of the press might become useful. I wish to thank the Indianapolis editors for their co-operation with such men as Professor 6utchart. tt tt a DECISION IN SEWER CASE CRITICISED By H. C. The recent decision of the appellate court in connection with the sewer assessments for the Bean creek and Pleasant Run sewer does not settle the question in the minds of several property owners south and east of Indianapolis and in Irvington. In the test case filed by C. M. Bottema, the court has held that those assessments are good. That sewer was purely a sanitary sewer, inclosed in a small concrete pipe and is connected with the sanitary disposal plant. Yet it was built under a farm drainage law. The reasoning of the court is not understood by those who must pay the large assessments, neither can those who understand the English language believe that any law to build a sewer for the drainage of land permits the building of a sanitary sewer. Those farmers who are assessed do not need a sanitary sewer for connections. It is obvious that the piping would be too long and expensive. If the city wanted to build a sanitary sewer, why did it not use the sewer law and not search high and low for a farm drainage law to do it? Perhaps it was because the city wanted to assess the farmers also. No question is settled until it is settled right. The court’s decision does not settle the matter, in the minds of those who must pay. tt tt a NUGAE CANORAE; THAT SLAYS HIM By C. S. G. I was reading O. O. Mclntyre’s column to the “little woman’’ the other night when I came upon a bit that threw me for a loss in her estimation. “He was spotted in a Follies and several other nugae canorae, but the inexorable box office statistics refused to justify him.” Recovering from a momentary nausea, I heard a distinct rustling at a nearby table on which was a copy of the Ll&rary Digest, open at
SENDING A BOY ON A MAN’S ERRAND!
f'T'Vl TV If , ’ 1 wholly disapprove of what you say and will JL ±XO IVJL V>6nt6r _ defend to the death your right to say it — Voltaire. _
Coffee Cream and Children's Milk
By a Female of the Species. It is good to see Mr. Maddox back in The Message Center. The thing that I like about his letters is that he takes himself so seriously. And he is so well informed on his subjects, socialism and communism. Why, he even knows more about communism than the Communists themselves. Os course, most of what he knows isn’t true, but that is a minor matter. He speaks of Communist Russia “where the people are uninformed and uneducated.” The Soviet Union, as it happens, now occupies first place in the world in book publishing and in number of students in high institutions of learning. Those of us who had been laboring under the illusion that this was an indication of culture appreciate having the matter cleared up for us by Mr. Maddox. And as to force and terror, it is true that Communists opposed the World war. So it is good to know that the World war with the bilDr. Vizitelli’s page, shriveling like a sweet ’tater plant in an early frost! Sts, sts, sts! These tank town boys! When embellished with a shave and a shine, there’s simply no holding them. They just cut laose with theip deviltry, letting the proletariat fall where they may, gosh ding ’em! And there’s nothing we can do about it to* prove to the little woman that we know a word or two. But nugae canorae! O temporal O mores! tt tt a SLEEP DISTURBED BY YELLS OF PEDDLERS By a Night Worker. To Police Chief Morrissey: Some time ago you were the only one in Indianapolis with enough intestinal fortitude to stop that great public nuisance, namely, paper boys waking every one up on Sunday mornings. Congratulations on that, chief! Here is another for you. I am a working man. My work requires that I spend nights on the job, which means I have to get my sleep in the daytime. Can something be done about strawberry peddlers yelling their heads off all day long? They start in the morning about 7:30 and onehalf hour later there is another gang selling its wares at a reduced price. This keeps up until I have to leave for work at night. My wife tells me they- are still yelling around 7:30 in the evening. One wouldn’t object if they reduced their yelling somewhat; however, they can be heard two blocks away. Another thing is that hardly any one in the neighborhood ever buys from them. As soon as the strawberry season is over, thence will come the cherry peddlers and then the raspberry peddlers. Just one mad bedlam all summer long. I know that if it keeps up around this neighborhood very long somebody’s berry cart is going to be upset. I do not know what revenue, if any, the city derives from issuing permits to hucksters. However, inasmuch as we do have stores in town, I believe that the public welfare comes first and that consists of making a man’s home his castle and not having every man out of work and his brother yelling and screaming around the front door. Let us have some action, chief. In conclusion, I will bet that the majority of people in the city agree with me. .
lions of wealth destroyed and the millions of lives lost w-as not a matter of force and terror but just a long drawn-out Sunday school picnic lasting some four years. According to all three Indianapolis newspapers Communist Russia informed the disarmament, conference that the way to disarm was to disarm and proposed complete disarmament which, presumably, represents more force and terror on the part of the Communists. And there is the matter of the 6,000,000 American children going hungry. It is a pleasure to know that this isn’t being forced on them and that it holds no terror for them. How interesting to learn that American children are different from all the other kids in the world, they just don’t like to eat. Communists are quite fond of that fellow Lenin w'ho said that no rich man should have cream in hie coffee until every child has all the milk required. The old meanies! BUILDING ASSOCIATION POLICY PRAISED By G. L. This is not about John Dilftnger or Real Si’k, but a word of constructive praise for the build ng associations in this vicinity is due. When so many banks failed, the associations paid reasonable dividends to their depositors or built up their reserve contingency funds. They paid reasonable amounts regulated by the state department of financial institutions to depositors to meet their needs, made reasonable adjustments in interests on mortgage loans, and co-operated with the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. Their personnel is patient, friendly, kind and helpful to their customers. They still are the bulwark of Americ n home owners and especially in this locality. u u tt HE’D LIKE SOME “SOUND MONEY” By a Sucker From Missour, •We soon will hear the ballyhoo of the “sound money” group. Not a word came from that group to provide the farmer and wage earner with enough of this “sound money” for goods and services, to prevent both farmers and laborers from losing their farms, homes and “sound money savings,” deposited in banks or mortgage lending outfits. The only crop that is regulated to order is the “money crop.” Bank credit money is not even evidenced by greenbacks; it is just a bookkeeping process of creating and destroying the medium of exchange, and the tragedy is that 90 per cent of all our business is done without “real money”; the I. O. U’s in bank checks move the wheels and the bank system tells us when we can use these “bank greenbacks” or do without. With 50.000,000 persons on some sort of dole, we b#ve a right to question the soundness of this degenerated economic system of money controlled production. If the old “lizzie” doesn’t percolate better, and that very soon, no balyhoo artists are going to per-
Daily Thought
To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some.— I Corinthians, 9:22. Some must follow, and some command, though all are made of —Longfellow.
.TONE 15, 1934
suade laborers and farmers to act like contented cows, while they, the real producers, live on Poverty alley. Sound money is the kind that really gets us maximum production for maximum consumption. Let’s hear the sound of it before we hear the sound of marching feet, for then it will be too late. No more blah! There is a twobillion dollar federal reserve bank credit on hand to expand money credit of banks to more than fifteen billion. Let us see the “sound money.” PLACES EMPHASIS ON RACE TOLERANCE By Alvin D. Davis. I am a daily reader of your newspaper, particularly the editorial page. I am taking time to write this letter to convey to you my thoughts and appreciation for the timely article entitled “Racial Tolerance.” I’ve followed the writing of numerous editors and writers in different papers and pamphlets of the country, and this is the first article that I've read which in such a limited number of words actually and definitely condemns the idea of prejudice between races, bringing about the comparison of northern and southern states in any way. If these United States afforded just a few more editors of your caliber, we as a people could and would be more patriotic, law’-abiaing citizens, and without a doubt more interested in the welfare of the country. I'm hoping that the future will bring forth more editorials and a public as liberal with such viewpoints as have been published.
So They Say
Romances are not made to order. I still believe in them, however. One may overtake me at any time.— Mme. Ganna Walska. This country is in a state where it is ripe to be picked, and if you don’t pick it in favor of mankind and constitutional liberty, the Hitlers will pick it.—Judge Edward J. Jegries of Detroit. The most important shot in golf is the one you have to play next.— Walter Hagen. The heroism of the American teachers in their efforts to save education from the horrors of this economic war can never be fully recorded.—Dr. Harold G. Campbell, superintendent of schools, New York.
NIGHT SONG
BY ALYS WACHSTETTER Let us take this hidden path . . . Here . . . hold me tightly, dear, The night has become suddenly dark, The moon no longer lights our way, But I am with you and have no fear. The wind loves the moon, as you love me. See ... he has bedded her in a feathery cloud, Listen ... he is crooning her to sleep With singing whispers of love, To be adored by one so strong, like me. she must be proud. O my beloved, we have but minute souls, Time is timeless for the wind and moon . .. And our entire span is but one night to eternity, Give me this hour filled with love, Bend my spirit in abandon , , we die so soon.
