Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1934 — Page 6

PAGE 6

The Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-BOWAMD **EWSPAPKR> Kt W. HOWARD President TAIXTOTT POWELL E.Jitor EARL D. BAKER ...... Business Mir.i;r Pbore RF I*y JlfiSl

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SATURDAY. JUNE 35 1534

TWO MEN’S VIEWS \VTAYNE COY, secretary to Governor Paul V. McNutt, speaking Thursday in Chicago, said: ‘ There does not seem to me to be any escape from the fact that the state of Indiana made John Dillingcr the Public Enemy No. 1, which he is today. The Indiana Constitution provides that our penal code shall be reformative and not vindictive. Taking the case before us we are forced to the conclusion that our penal institutions obviously failed of reformation; or that Dillinger was given too long a sentence for his first offense, or both. In.vead of reforming this prisoner, the penal institutions provided him with an education in crime.” That is a frank statement, Mr. Coy. And it is one on which you are to be complimented. If the problems of crime in Indiana were treated as openly and frankly as Mr. Coy has treated his subject in the foregoing paragraph, there is no doubt but that in a few years Indian* probably would find itself standing among the leaders of crime-combating states. However, there always has been a weak link in battling crime in Indiana. Where one police chief, sheriff or judge has adopted a platform of severe but square dealing with crooks, there have been scores of these officials who have found it easier to deal with the crooks than the law. Mr. Coy's speech went into other phases of crime history and prevention. In fact his theories are those which have been termed as ideal by the crime experts of the nation and world. But, again, the fault is to be traced to the apparently minor executives of the law who fail to heed the commands of their superiors and the people. Indiana is tired of crime. Indiana residents are tired of the consistent criticism they receive. In the old days Indiana was known as the hotbed of the Ku-Klux Klan. Now Indians is known as the state which permitted such a man as Dillinger to prey upon the nation. Mr. Coy is right. The proposal for penal institution investigation is right. Let us hope that every one of his theories is carried to the limit. And let us also hope that every one of the officers responsible for carrying out the subsequent duty is as honest and straightforward. On the other hand, there arc other people in the nation who have ideas on the subject. M. E. Tracy, noted editorial writer and columnist for Scripps-Howard newspapers, poohpooh' the idea that Dillinger is tough or even the desperado that he has been branded. In fact. Mr. Tracy's frank opinion is that Dillingrr dors not "rate” the classification of desperado. Mr. Tracy expresses his feelings of Dillinger by calling the Indiana product a "wandering runt.” But Mr. Tracy agrees with Mr. Coy to some extent when the former says: "You can't quarrel with the wistful optimism which such action suggests, nor with the fact that Dilhnger's ai*rest would be worth JIO.OOO. but the point is that ten times that amount, if not more, has been spent already on prace officers who are supposed to attend to such things." Mr. Tracy goes on to say that the reward of SIO,OOO elevates a criminal or "wandering runt” as "something of a super-man in the ryes of a weak-minded people.” "You can't dismiss a crook as of no consequence when a nation the size of ours stamps hint as worth SIOOOO. especially after having failed to catch lnm despite heroic efforts. He becomes an idol to the underworld and a hero in the plastic mind of youth. The very tumult and notoriety make criminals. "We must not create the impression that thugs are smarter than our law-enforcing officers, or that the latter can not be dependeto do their best without the incentive of rewards.” There is no question but that Mr. Coy and Mr. Tracy express the feeling of every lawabiding citizen of Marion county and Indiana. Is there anv more to be said? MO\ ING TOWARD PEACE PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT and Secretary Perkins have displayed intelligence in setting up and manning the new national steel labor relations board. Th* steel board approaches in its powers the statutory rail labor board, with its recent clear-cut labor-rights amendments. It is a distinctly more equitable arrangement than that of the automobile labor board, set up by the President with the advice of General Johnson. It provides for majority rule for the workers in selecting their spokesmen, but it preserves the right of petition to minorities. It stipulates that organizations as well as individuals may represent the workers, a power under Section 7-A of NIRA that was challenged in the captive mine controversy. The board can subpena witnesses and pay rolls, a governmental right challenged in the Weirton case. The board is nonpanisan. as a judicial board should be. And its three members appear to be able fair, judicially-minded and experienced in labor mediation. Dr. James Mullenbach of Chicago is a teacher, an arbitrator of twenty years experience, a member of the petroleum labor policy board. Chief Justice Walter P. Stacey of North Carei-na has acted as arbitrator m rail labor disputes. Rear Admiral Henry A Wiley, retired, has served on two emergency railroads m the labor disputes. These things, of course, do not guarantee labor peace in America s bell-wether industry. Possible are Jurisdictional disputes, a clash of vertical and horizontal unions and of company and labor unions, issues as to how election* shall be helfl and who shall vote. But 1 1 there are steel strikes they probably will

not b* over questions that the law has settled. We have the law, and steel, like petroleum, coal textiles and railroads, has its court to administer the law. To that extent order won over strife. There is plenty of work ahrad of the labor poacemakers. The President and Secretary Perkins have set up a special board to try to untangle the dispute that has tied up shipping on the Pacific coast for fifty-three days. Copper workers are out in Montana. There has oern bloodshed in the electrical strike in Milwaukee. There is trouble among rubber workers in Akron. With power to set up boards under the new laoor act the administration should be able to minimize violence elsewhere as it has in the great steel industry. THE HAPPY FISHERMAN r>RESIDENTS and their fish have made reams of purple copy, but none of them, not Cleveland in the Canadian woods nor Cool - ldge in the Black Hills nor Hoover on the Rapidan, ever inspired such lyrics as this jaunt oi the Houston should draw from the color writers. Paul Bunyan s adventurers may be dwarfed by this cruise through two oceans. Comfy in the cabin of the giant cruiser will loaf the President turned fisherman. With him are deep-sea tackle, shelves of mystery thrillers and sea tales, reels of motion pictures, a scagoin’ swimmin’ hole and a cook that serves food fit for the gods. Behind him are the cares of the world, ahead, across 2.400 miles of placid blue beyond the canal, lie eight magic islands that call themselves the Paradise of the Pacific. A fisherman’s paradise they are. On the Kona coast, called ‘‘the home of fishermen's souls," George Kailiwia will be waiting for the Houston's dapper launch. George, a one-legged Polynesian who knows how to hook the big ones, may ask the President to go native with him and fish the turquoise water from a Japanese sampan. There, is the expanse looking out toward China, they’ll find the gamely Wahloo, the fighting barracuda, the hardboiled yellow-finned tuna and the king of all the waters, the swordfish. Malahina, or tenderfoot, s he'll be out there in the mid-Pacific, the President calls himself a tough guy. Well, he'll meet the toughest brethren of the deep on this trip. What a vacation for a king or President! As we sit under the willow tree casting our bait for catfish or bass we can dream of what we'il do when we get to be President. But none will begrudge Franklin Roosevelt this glorified fishing trip. He's earned it. MAKE IT A SAFE FOURTH A PPROXIMATELY a thousand American T*- children suffer eye injuries each year, and fully 75 per cent of these injuries result in total blindness. And, according to figures supplied by the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness, no less than 23 per cent of all such accidents are caused by Fourth of July fireworks. Indeed, the figures show that more accidents to children's eyes occur on and around Independence Day than on any other 100 days in the entire year. These figures point their own moral. Fireworks are dangerous things for children to play with. The man who puts such things into his child's hands may think that he is doing the youngster a kindness; but he is really putting the child under the hazard of a tragic injury. It's perfectly possible to give a child an extremely happy Independence Day holiday without touching off a single firecracker. More parents ought to take the trouble to find out how it is done. AUTOMOBILES AND TARIFFS 'T'HE American automobile industry, which through the years of our tariff madness has shown the patience of Job, now hopefully suggests that the government hurry up and do something about the long-promised reciprocal tariff treaties. Speaking through the export committee of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, the industry points out that employment for American workers and markets for American manufacturers and farm products can be gained by reviving world trade. The automobile industry, because of tariffs, has to pay artificially high prices for many of the materials that go into automobiles. Yet the automobile industry never has asked for protection against foreign competition. Instead it has gone into the markets of the world and outsold foreign competitors. The export committee's report that tariffs ranging from 20 to 540 per cent clog our world trade channels—as a matter of fact some tariffs are as high as 1.000 per cent of the cost of production—emphasizes the insanity of Smoot-Hawley bootstraps-economics. Such high duties can not be called protective. They are prohibitive. If the administration this summer will turn its bombardment upon world trade barriers it will do much to restore vigor to domestic business. We are blazing many new trails, hoping they will lead out of the jungle. Meanwhile we should clear out the underbrush that has been choking progress over the normal highways of trade. MODERN GIRL VINDICATED 'T'HE modern girl is just as admirable a person as her mother was at the same age. and in some respects she is a good deal nicer. This is on the word of Sister Laurentine, director of nursing in St. Francis’ hospital, Pittsburgh. Attending a convention of the Catholic Hospital Association of the United States and Canada. Sister Laurentine told how she has had direct supervision of more than 800 girls trained as nurses in the St. Francis training school. "We get these girls at the flapper age,” she said, "and they are as fine a lot of girls as any one would want to meet. There is no reason to believe all the things said about modern girls. Some of them may have vices, but they are no worse than the girls of other generations.” This is what you might call expert testimony in the modem girls favor. A western scientist tells how he put colored glasses over the eyes of fish and they changed color. Now. if he can change goldfish into silver that jray, maybe the government canuse him.

Liberal Viewpoint —BT DR. HARRY ELMER BARNES

Editor'* Not*—This is th* first of fire article# hr Harry Elmer Barnes, Ph. D., on the arhievements and outlook of the New Deal after a year of operation. a a a NOW that congress has adjourned and the New Deal has been in operation for a year, it may not be premature to estimate its character, achievements and prospects of success. In the first place, it is crystal clear that President Roosevelt's aim is to save and rehabilitate the capitalistic system. Not since the Red bogey, at the close of the World war has there been any more transparent nonsense than the charge that Mr. Roosevelt slyly and adroitly is laying the basis for a sinister revolution designed to overthrow the political and economic foundations of our American system. The financiers and business men in the United States who now are opposing Mr. Roosevelt so bitterly exhibit perhaps the prime stupidity of all historic record in not recognizing Mr. Roosevelt as ‘Their fair-haired boy” and standing behind him even more loyally than they did behind Woodrow- Wilson in 1917-1918. The depression is more of a threat to American society than the kaiser ever thought of being. If the responsible leaders of American capitalism could get any sane perspective or fo.m any contact with economic reality, they would grasp at Mr. Roosevelt as a drowning man seizes a straw-. Instead, our American Bourbons seem to have taken as their patron saint, Marie Antoinette. In 1776 the great French statesman Turcot proposed a series of reforms which would have saved France from any revolution in the eighteenth century and perhaps have averted one in the nineteenth. But Marie and her court favorites just couldn’t be bothered with reforms which threatened to cut down the appropriations for their pleasures. Then fore, she induced the king to throw- out Turgot. Asa result, the king mounted the scaffold on the gray morning of Jan. 21 1793, and offered his neck to the guillotine. This beautiful queen follow-ed him on Oct. 16. n tt n WRONG-HEADED as the conservative opposition to Mr. Roosevelt may be, w-e shall get nowhere, however, simply by accusing them of natural cussedness. r Few of the opposition actually - are feebleminded and their seemingly demented conduct only can be attributed fairly to the fact that they do not see clearly just where we stand in American industrial civilization today. The reactionaries honestly and sincerely believe that the depression of 1929 and thereafter is merely a temporary and trivial flurry on the calm expanse of permanent and impregnable American prosperity. They really expect that the golden age of the "do-nothing” Presidents follow-ing 1921 will return again and with even added bounties. Pointing to the bogus campaign boom of August, 1932, bolstered up by the Republicans, and to the marked improvement after March, 1933. which was due to the hope of the country in the new administration, these men contend with more earnestness than intelligence that we were on the right road to complete recovery under Mr. Hoover. * tt tt tt APPARENTLY they believe honestly that the New Deal simply put a crimp in the natural and spontaneous return of prosperity and now- stands as a nasty barrier to the full realization of economic w-ell-being. Any such attitude is, of course, as dangerous as it is fatuous. We have no dogmatic certainty that we can get out of the depression under capitalism, even by the most heroic efforts and the most carefully thought out attempt at social planning. Any such illusion as the assurance that we will just naturally bound back into a new Jerusalem era is the mast rarified type of w-ishful thinking which blissfully ignores the relevant facts in the picture. The conservative wing which still controlled the American economic order puts its trust in a so-called business cycle, a myth v.-hich has been elaborated by accommodating economists as an alibi for the avarice, folly and gambling speculation of the past. The business cycle assumes that the &reat depressions all have been necessary and that they are bound to be followed by the humming of factory wheels and the bombardment of bank windows w-ith bags of gold. Honest economic historians have poked this nonsense full of holes and have shown that w-e never have pulled out of past depressions except as the result of special circumstances such as striking new industrial developments, crop failures abroad, spurts of population growth and the like. Th,? facts are all assembled with great clarity in Forest Davis’ "What Price Wall Street.” None of the things which has given us the boost out of depressions in the past seems to lie a’gead of us. In the future, w-e must rely upon our intelligence rather than good-luck or the grace of God. The Coolidge era is just as dead as the age of Daniel Webster.

Capital Capers BY GEORGE ABELL

is expected to send anew ambassador shortly to the United States. Tall, handsome Count de Chambrun, ambassador to Rome and one of the outstanding figures in French diplomatic life, is reported to have been selected as the successor of the present envoy, Andre de Laboulaye. The fact that Count de Chambrun is a brother of General Aldebert de Chambrun. who married the sister of the late Nick Longworth. is not hurting his chances for the post, it is said. Nor the fact that he is a direct descendant of that Count de Chambrun who fought for the United States in the Revolutionary war. The reasons for the proposed transfer are various: When Ambassador de Laboulaye was appointed here, it was told at the Quai d’Orsay that he was a close friend of President Roosevelt. In the old days when Roosevelt was assistant secretary of the navy, young Laboulaye was attached to the embassy. Several times he was invited to the Roosevelt home and they ate scrambled eggs together. tt a tt INTRIGUED by the scrambled eggs story and desirous of unscrambling the French mess on war debts and disarmament, the French government sent M. de Laboulaye to Washington. Since that time, however, the war debts and disarmament questions have become more scrambled than ever. Count de Chambrun is said to be a frank admirer of Americans. He has a fluent knowledge of American slang, says "half,” "bath” and "calf” in the American manner without the English "aw.” A friend of newspaper men, he once held the post of press liaison officer at the Quai d'Orsay. Since then he has been delegate to the League of Nations, minister to Vienna and ambassador to Turkey. He was sent to Rome as ambassador about two years ago. The count's social qualifications are regarded as important by the French foreign office. He is convivial, well-groomed, fond of the wines of France (hence a favorite with the wine importers', a gourmet of distinction and a raconteur who has a keen sense of humor. He speaks of his countrymen objectively as "these French.” The Quai d'Orsay feels he should go over big with les Americains. These are some reasons why, so it is said, he probably will be named the next French ambassador. According to the new code, you can got only one packet of matches with each tobacco purchase. This looks like a conspiracy among cigaret manufacturers to discourage pipe smoking. What with the Canadian quintuplets and the lowa quadruplet*,. can’t the AAA d© something about this overproduction?.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns. Make your letters short, so all can have a chance, limit them to 25 0 words or less.) tt n a CAPITAL AND LABOR DUO APPROVED By Tom Berling. On the checkerboard of life’s game there is no peace or stopping place. A life without competition, a world dominated entirely by labor or business can not be. Organized labor and organized capital, in my opinion, is the ideal balance and the inevitable solution. We who are members of organized labor are conservative and will continue on our way straight down the center. We understand that no man is a good citizen ivho has not the proper respect for the spiritual and religious convictions of his neighbors. We have nothing against Russia as a nation, but we prefer Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt as national heroes. We do not consider ourselves as wage slaves. We enjoy our work and have the reputation of knowing how to do it in the proper way. We will not. work for nothing and certainly will not fight for nothing in any man’s revolution. By 1936 business will be norma’l and so will wages. Smile and the world smiles with you, is just a Very nice way of saying, "If you don’t want to be treated like a dog, quit acting like one.’* DEPLORES RESULTS OF POLITICS By a Reader. The cartoon of The Times of June 27, page 10, along with the editorial of the same page, headed "Too Much Politics,” refers only to Indianapolis. It is the same in every city in Indiana, and on every road in Indiana. It is indeed awful the number of lives lost, persons hurt and property damaged, with no one held responsible. I am not condemning the excellent police force in any city or our good state police force. But, I do say, we should have three eighthour shifts in all cities of more than 10,000 population, and enforce all auto liability laws to the letter. If motor liability laws were enforced all over Indiana instead of laughed at, in ninety days hazardous drivers would decrease at least 75 per cent. Bad lights, bad brakes and bad tires cause about all the accidents and only reckless drivers drive such cars, and none of them carries public liability or property damage insurance, so a good, careful driver can have reasonable protection against the reckless driver for damage. tt tt tt WORLD “COCKEYED” ON MONEY BASIS Bt A Consumer. Under our economic system any service or article becomes more valuable when it becomes scarce. To enhance the value of clothes, we might go nudist. Make labor scarce by calling a general strike. We have to much labor: with less it will be more valuable. Let our banks call their loans bank credit bookkeeping money"— as they are doing, so money will be scarcer and more valuable. Reduce the total value of paper money, too; the. less the better, the more it will buy, temporarily. Sow aboui t&e oaajterg tg

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q r\ Cfpk ( j-n-v* F l wholly disapprove of what you say and ivill 1 JL lie

WE’D LIKE TO KNOW, TOO

Reviews Accomplishments of Soviet Russia

By Jack Dolan. In the Message Center of June 26 Orin Freehold credits me with saying, "Aspects of Russian civilization criticised in the column are the very same types of things which exist in the United States.” I suggest he read the letter again, as he evidently misunderstands it to the extent the opposite is true. Russia struggled along for generations in the same plight we now are in—luxury and extravagance for the few, poverty and misery for the many. The war lords wanted to sell more shells for profit and lined the workers up by the millions for slaughter, but this time underestimated their intelligence. When the able-bodied were mobilized and saw their strength, as well as predicament, they decided to stay home, rid themselves of human parasites and hypocrites and show the world that a high state of civilization (teachings of Christ, if y.ou please) could be accomplished. They decided the best way to utilize the resources of the country for the benefit of all the people was to lay out a program and one. Plenty and high living standards are not valuable; we need poverty to become rich. We could get a flood of goods from every manufacturer to distribute, if we could get the equivalent in currency. What a cockeyed world. What every one wants and needs is unobtainable because "money tickets” are scarce. Who are the dictators who refuse us enough tickets of money; that is, make it scarce? We must be their oyster. It looks like a shell game. Only money stands between the consumer and producer, and let our guardians tell us how much they will let us have of it, which means how little of the goods we need. DECLARER UNEMPLOYED MENACE TO ALL By a Reader. The coming American revolution can not change things if it becomes destructive, rather than constructive. It is impossible to maintain the status quo. That is the mess we are in. Ten to twelve million unemployed constitute a menace to all. Temporary or continued relief is not a solution. Either these people will get a chance to contribute their share to the whole scheme of production or they will crush the social order that refuses to permit their normal functioning in society. It is only a question of how are we going to make changes to take care of them in the economic order. FAMILY THANKFUL*FOR REVIVING HEAT VICTIM By Mrs. Bohannon and Children. I have taken The Times for twelve years. I appreciate the opportunity given the people to express themselves through the Message Center. I know this message will get into every home because The Times goes there. My husband. Russell E. Bohannon, was found overcome by heat at his garage underneath a car by a merchant policeman. He telephoned police and the city fireman. These men, being aided by telephone, the police radio and the pulmotor. re* rived him. In just a short time, death would have been certain, police aag firemen loim two fine

put everybody to w-ork. They did this and called it a five-year plan. As the efforts are directed by a popular vote of the workers themselves, there are no excessive salaries, no drones, no underpaid workmen. They hired thousands of engineers, chiefly Americans, and accomplished their five-year task in less than four years, an achievement that never has been equaled in this or any other country. They immediately started a tenyear plan and now are ahead of schedule. They have completed machinery and cars and homes for workmen by the millions, w-hile the workmen here have lost their cars and homes by the millions. They started with nothing and built up to comfort, w-hile we in the same period, with all our boasted equipment, have gone from a comparative decent place to live to a condition that would have been a disgrace to the middle ages. Look at that old discarded couple in your neighborhood forced to accept an insult called pension, less than 25 cents a day. The intelligent Russian must look on us with profound pity. organizations who help to make Indianapolis a better place in which to live. This incident also was broadcast on the radio. I want to thank all of our neighbors, friends and relatives for the messages and telephone calls that have been pouring into the garage on South Pennsylvania street. FINANCIAL SEt\p” DECLARED FUTILE By a Reader. The new “industrial loan law," for industries that have been unable to get finance to buy goods and pay wages, is a strait jacket designed by our money barons. Our financial hierarchy has not produced a single statesman w-ith a vision beyond the present that might make capitalism effective as a system. No system of economics can survive long,- if it fails to meet the normal expectations of those w-ho depend upon it. The financial system of the world is more like a blotter or sponge than a fountain spring of service. The rule of greed carries with it the seeds of its own destruction. Capitalism can not survive by force; it must justify itself through service. Judgment is written by victims of its oppression; the incompetence of the operators of the system to dispel poverty in the midst of plenty seals the doom of capitalism. Anew deal requires anew objective for industry and finance. Business is not business il' it resembles piracy, enslaves the workers, withholds the goods from the consumers, or obstructs the contribution of men capable of adding service and goods to the social order. The new- housing law equally show-s the hand of Ignorant control

Daily Thought

And the Lord commanded me at that time to teach you statutes and judgments that ye might do them in the land whither ye go over to possess it .—Deuteronomy, 4:14. When men are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws Mg jßgaceogflftid*

JUNE 30, 1934

of finance, which insists on salvaging outstanding worthless obligations without providing adequate earning capacity to make repayment of those obligations a possibility. Where there is no vision the people perish. tt tt SEES CLOUDS OF WAR HANGING OVER WORLD By a Reader. The army and navy flight to Alaska indicates where the next great World war scene will be. The status quo of the world’s industrial nations that are geared to export production is impossible without world markets. The status quo of Europe is written in defaulted public and private debts. It is pivoted upon increasing armaments. Japan has reached the zenith of exploitation of its working class, which is now bordering on a starvation level of existence. Coupled with the latest in machinery this combination spells ruin for other nations seeking world markets. It also means war for Japan as she penetrates the markets of other nations. The silk industry of Japan, on which it has a strong hold, as a. source of supply for the world, reasonably may be expected to use that; source for making the finished products with this forced labor. World slaughter again is in the offing because we do not want to rationalize our industrial processes to human service.

So They Say

There is nothing in a democracy that is above criticism, not even NR A, and, if there could be, democracy would cease to exist.— Clarence Darrow. Let s not blame NRA for carrying out a congressional mandate.— General Hugh S. Johnson. The smaller the world becomes, the less peaceful it is.—Dr. William M. Lewis, president of Lafayette college.

Woodland Path

BY MARY B. MOYNAHAN I wonder where it leads—yon woodland path? And would it guide mt to the things I love; Where violets nod on mats of velvet moss, And oak and pine trees stretch their arms above? With last year’s autumn leaves would ghost-like greet, Around some bend, a strolling passerby? And blushing in some hidden noolc in pride, A lady's-slipper, lone, aloof, and shy? Then, o'er a rustic bridge, and silver thread Os water trickling through th* moist ground? And in this cool ravine a thirsty group Os Jacks-in-pulpits crowding all around? And should I find a white house at the end. With shutters green (like one I’ve known before*, There, nestling midst the peach and apple bloom, v While long-loved voices greet mg fit .toe 4QB&