Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 124, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1934 — Page 12

PAGE 12

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_____ WEDVEBDAV. OQT. *. 1*34 GARRISON AND THE NLRB LESS FRANK, president of the University of Wisconsin, will not release Lloyd K. Garrison from academic duties on the Madison Campus to continue as chairman of the National Labor Relations Board. So the government is losing a valuable public servant at a critical time. The great-grandson of the great abolitionist organized and guided the NLRB. Since it came into being July 9 It has cleared the fog-bound question of majority rule in collective bargaining in the Houde and Guide Lamp decisions. * settled the* NR A Donovan controversy, aided in bringing peace or a truce in the cotton textile, copper and aluminum strikes. • As the American Federation of Labor says. •It has moved with dispatch and decision to establish certain fundamental principles in } Industrial relations." i Mr. Garrison, in announcing yesterday his resignation, also announced the latest success of the board. Twenty-eight ship owners voluntarily have agreed to recognize the International Seamen's Union and to negotiate on workers' demands. Unless the left-wing marine industrial union proceeds with the strike, the tie-up of commerce from Maine to Texas threatened for Oct. 8, will be prevented. This summer's Co6tly and tragic lesson out on the Pacific coast apparently has been learned by the Atlantic employers. Credit goese to Chairman Garrison, who interceded, as well as to the ship owners. In recognizing the seamen s union they broke a precedent of ten years, and despite the fact that their industry is not under an NRA code. The seamen's story is an oft-told tale of hardship and injustices. Even the New Deal dealt them a joker, for when they were about to receive the protection of a code foreign complications intervened. To win industrial justice the longshoremen and seamen on the Pacific went through a perdition of deprivation and violence. The Morro Castle tragedy revealed the incompetence of some non-union ship workers under the American flag on the Atlantic. It is to be hoped that the NLRB, under Chairman Garrison's successor, can continue its effective leadership toward industrial peace in the shipping and other industries.

JAPAN IS NOT OUR ENEMY T> RIG ADI ER-GENERAL WILLIAM MlTCH- ■*'* ELL retired, told the federal aviation commission yesterday that “Japan is our most dangerous enemy." That is not true. There is friction between the two countries. That friction can not be removed by ignoring it. But it can be intensified by provocative statements. Mitchell implies that Japan wants war with us. This is contrary to the evidence. Even the extreme Japanese militarists know that war with the United States would weaken and expcwe them to defeat in their Asiatic offensive. They have more than enough to keep them busy closer home. If the United States and Japan ever go to war it will not be because either nation seeks it, but because they drift into a situation both desire to escape. As long as there is friction between the two. it is possible that a world war might draw them in. That fact is terrible enough in itself, without our Mitchells trying to make it appear that Japan wants war with us. i Mitchell's recommendation for an American air force “capable of attacking Japan” is as mad as similar advice would be coming from a Japanese officer. Neither nation can be in * position to attack and occupy the other successfully. The distances from bases are too great. Os course, if impoverished and politically isolated Japan denounces the Washington naval treaty that will provoke a needless armament race. But this in itself would not lead to war. Japan could not possibly win such a race. So. sooner or later, she probably would give up such a suicidal plunge into national bankruptcy and disintegration. Unfortunately, however. Mitchell - type statements play Into the hqnds of Japanese militarists who try to use the alleged American peril to buttress and justify their Asiatic adventures. Whatever the Japanese militarists or the Mitchells may say, the American government and people do not plan to attack Japan. SPEED! SPEED! SPEED! 'T'HERE is nothing on which people disagree much more widely than on the question. What causes automobile accidents? Every one has his own pet theory; and usually—human nature being what it is—we are inclined to blame those particular faults of which we know we ourselves are never guilty. But there isn’t such a great deal of room for argument, after aIL A lot of painstaking work has been done in tabulation and analysis of fatal traffic accidents, and the things which cause such tragedies are pretty dear. Statisticians of the Travelers Insurance Company recently drew up a table covering fatal traffic accidents for 1933, as officially reported by the various states. They found that in more than 32 per cent of the fatal accidents in which drivers were found to be at fault, a driver had been exceeding the speed limit. In 13 per cent of the cases, a driver had been on the wrong side of the road. In an equal number of cases, a driver hd taken the right of way when he was not entitled to it. In upward of 5 per cent, a driver had been guilty of "cutting in." passing a standing street car. pasting on a curve or a hill, or passing on

the wrong side. In nearly 19 per cent, a driver had driven completely off the roadway. In nearly 9* per cent the cause could be listed only as reckless driving. Now the thing to notice, as the insurance company statisticians point out, is that all these causes, lumped together, are practically synonymous for "heedless, needless haste.” They are the sort of offenses that are committed when a driver is in such a big hurry that he fails to tend to his knitting. And if you lotal those percentages, you'll find that they account for approximately 90 per cent of all fatal accidents in which any blame attaches to the driver. It is often, and truly, sayl that the intoxicated driver Is as dangerous as a maniac with a gun. Yet these figures show that fewer than 5 per cent of the fatal accidents can be laid to drunken driving. The overwhelming majority—9o per cent—is caused by simple, everyday haste. The drunken driver, dangerous as he is, isn’t in it as a public menace with the driver who is in too big a hurry. AMERICA AT PLAY ' EACH year, about this time, the American nation sits down to prove to the rest of the world that its greatest salvation from the worries of the day is its love for the two predominant sports, baseball and football. No matter what the immediate political permit us to relax, breathe easily, and look and economic problems may be, the world series and the opening of the football season with a more jovial and optimistic eye upon whatever difficulties face us. 1 / In few other countries does this psychology exist. True, .everal nations have their national sports, but nowhere does the spirit of pl|iy appear as ebullient and overwhelming as in the United States. Perhaps, on the other hand, South Americans get more fun out of revolutions, and Europeans out of war preparations, than we do out of our national games. TAXATION AND HEALTH AN idea that has been gaining headway is that of group hospitalization, involving the payment of a definite sum every year by persons who may receive all necessary hospital care during the year at no additional cost. * There are strong objections to this plan by some of the interested organizations, however, and so an alternate idea is suggested in the form of federal aid for voluntary hospitals. But the snag proponents strike here is the question, "How will the government get the necessary funds for such federal aid?” A 5 per cent manufacturers’ sales tax is proposed by Franklin S. Edmonds, past president of the National Tax Association. It will produce $1,000,000,000, he says, and could be distributed among those states that would co-operate in the federal aid plan and would also promise not to tax sales in any other way. The hospital program is an endeavor to maintain the health of the people, but would not the additional burden of taxation offset that effort?

A START IN Atlanta, Harold L. Ickes, secretary of interior, assisted in blowing up two squalid shacks. The ceremony was important. It was the first actual attack by the government upon a great internal enemy, the city slum. Secretary Ickes was starting two low-cost housing projects in Georgia’s capital under PWA’s Emergency Housing Corporation. The two projects will cost $4,800,000, of which the government will furnish a third as an outright grant. One project for whites will provide 603 apartments, to rent for $7.90 per room per month; the other, for Negroes, 617 modern apartments to rent for $5.50 per room. These slum-clearance ventures are part of a government program involving the spending of 5147.000.000 on thirty-nine projects in thirtythree communities. This program has been delayed for a year. It should be remembered, however, that the administration was pioneering with new problems and personnel, that it had to fight civic inertia, legal red tape, real estate speculators. It also is true that the program, at best, scratches only the surface. We should be spending billions, not millions; rehousing millions of families, instead of thousands. But just as the government has tackled the evils of child labor, sweatshops, of low wages and long hours, so now it has begun the slow task of providing decent homes for those who need them most. “It is strange,” Secretary Ickes said, “that the tearing aown of a miserable shanty, long unfit for human habitation, but which, nevertheless, until recently has been the home for human souls, should be such a milestone at this supposedly advanced stage in the civilization of our country. I hope it will p’-ove to be only the first of many on a long and broad highway leading to that fairer and Juster social order for which we have been, striving since the dawn of history.” AFRICAN RECOVERY NOTE T TEARTENING news is reported from Africa by Science Service. Elephants in Uganda are twice as numerous as they were twenty-five years ago, when Kipling's tale of the Elephant's child made us personal friends of all elephants. The child's “satiable curiosity” got him many spankings, and provided him 'with a trunk, through an incident involving the bicolored python rock snake and the crocodile in the great green greasy Limpopo river, all set about with fever trees. With the trunk he was able to pluck bananas all the way home across Africa, and when he got back l\e used it for revenge on all the dear relatives who had spanked him for his “satiable curiosity”--his hairy uncle the baboon, his fat aunt the hippopotamus and the rest. But there is a disturbing note in the current dispatch that the goriilas in the Kayohsa forest are not living up to their reputations for savagery. A huge old male gorilla stared calmly at a white Invader, without charging or even scowling. Gorillas we met in the pages of Paul du Chaillu's thrillers of boyhood never behaved like that! The lions, however, are still raiding the Uganda villages, and the pygmies still range the forests. w

Liberal Viewpoint BY DR. HARRY ELMER BARNES IT has been my practice to avoid quarreling with many critics in the correspondence columns. Before they can quarrel with me I have had my say. and it is only fair to let the reader have his come-back if he wishes. But the bitter attack made upon Hey wood Broun and myself by Professor Snedden of Columbia Teachers college raises issues so far beyond the personal angle as to deserve some philosophic comment. "What Mr. Broun said a few days ago about e*-President Hoover,” he said, “and what Dr. Barnes said yesterday about ‘th® strike of capital’ are noi only cheap and vulgar expressions but seem to me tainted with subtle malignity. Can well-informed men be sincere in such utterances?” Heywood Broun Is quite able to take care of himseif. Personally, I regard his columns on Mr. Hoover as high points in the stylistic achievement of a master Journalistic prose, and certainly in as good taste as Mr. Hoover’s articles which invited the comment. nun I MUST say that I was greatly surprised to read such an acid attack on my rather obvious column by a man of Professor Snedden’s background. From all one can learn of the man he is just the sort of person who should welcome this type of economic criticism. He has written many books on the socializing of education. He has argued, in the abstract at least, for honest wrestling with the social realities of our day. While by no means as advanced in his thought as such of his collegues as Professors Counts, Watson and some others, I never have known him to be open to suspicion of speaking in sheer animosity to elementary social facts. It might be interesting to have Professor Snedden indicate just and when it became cheap or vulgar to present some of the most obvious facts about American economic life, and especially when these facts are of the kind designed to save the very social system to which Dr. Snedden is so attached. a a a THE current strike of capital is the most serious and sinister blow at the success of the New Deal which has arisen since Mr. Roosevelt was inaugurated. If it continues and succeeds with its purpose of wrecking Mr. Roosevelt, it will throw us into the hands of reactionaries or radicals. Surely, Dr. Snedden can not be too cordial toward either Fascism or Communism. a a a THIS strike of capital is no imaginary bogey. It stares at us right out of the figures I ha\ - e quoted in the columns devoted to this subject. It is hard to see how there is any "subtle malignity” in calling attention to it. What makes me think that Professor Snedden must have written this letter rather late at night is his insinuation of a lack of sincerity. If there was any insincerity in this column, it was the insincerity growing out of restraint rather than out of exaggeration. It is rather dubious procedure to assume that when another person differs from us he must be so wrong that only the hypothesis of insincerity can explain such a colossal error. It is all right to contend that one of our opponents is wrong, foolish or even crazy. But to charge him with insincerity suggests a rather extreme exaggeration of intellectual arrogance. If those who are Working for a better day in the United States can get no support from education, from professors of education, and above all, from professors of education who long have traded upon an ostensible social point of view, then things certainly have come to a bad pass in this country. Professor Snedden once wrote a book on “What Is Wrong With Education?” His letter throws a great deal of light on this query.

Capital Capers BY GEORGE ABELL

WHITE-WHISKERED, benevolent Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes of the United States supreme court presided—but not at the supreme court. He sat enthroned like an Olympian god at the head of a little luncheon table in the “Ugly Duckling” team room. All the justices were present except Cardozo and Roberts. The luncheon was an informal gathering where—amid the haze of cigar and pipe smoke—the group of elderly gentlemen told rollicking stories about lawyers, judges, women barristers and legal procedure. Four justices ordered rhubarb pie, two ordered apple pie and one ordered vanilla ice cream. One wanted a vegetable dinner, but the cry of “don’t be a vegetarian” deterred him. He finally gave up his principles and succumbed to roast beef with gravy. The octogenarians, leaning back in their chairs, told tales of their early days at law. Chief Justice Hughes, reflectively stroking hirwhite whiskers, recalled “an extremely charming woman” he met at a tea Lady Astor gave in London ten years ago. . One of the best stories was about a California judge who continually read Blackstone. On a certain occasion, a lawyer appeared before him to plead a case. “Have you ever read Blackstone?” demanded his honor. “No,” replied the other, negligently, “Well, what qualifications have you to plead this case?” “I know the code of California,” said the lawyer. “Humph!” snorted - the Blackstone addict: “That's no good in this court. The legislature is apt to take all your learning out from under you at the next session.” The justices rocked with laughter. Chief Justice Hughes combed his whiskers and swallowed a large drink of ice water. a a a THE entry and departure of the supreme court group was a model of deportment. First, Chief Justice Hughes marched in, followed by all the others, and sat down at the head of the table. At the conclusion of the meal, all the justice.' rose simultaneously and followed their leader. “What about the check?” asked someone. “Oh.” remarked Justice Sutherland, “let Mr Chief Justice pay it. He'll get around to us later.” Others observed lunching about town: Will Rogers, the humorist, in better humor than ever. He lunched with Jesse Jones, chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Jim Moffett, the housing commissioner, ambled over to the table with happy cries of “Hello, there. Will.” Finally Rogers came over to Mr. Moffett's table. “Oh, Mr. Rogers,” gushed one of Jim’s feminine companions, “you make such wonderful radio speeches. Couldn't you say just a word about houses in your next speech?” Will’s parting shot as he left the dining room: “Well, bye-bye! See you all at Sinclair’s .inauguration!” MINISTER FAIK *KONITZA of Albania, lunching with young Dr. Mikas Bagdonas. charge d'affaires of Lithuania. The clever Albanian envoy always takes a table at 12:30 o’clock, facing the doorway, where he can see all' the pretty ladies who enter. Tall, lean Marvin Mclntyre. presidential secretary. hovering about tables like Banquo’s ghost, solemnly shaking the slender fingers of feminine admirers. Minister Enrique Bordenave of Ecuador, lunching with a group of friends, and slightly surprised at the fact that Washington hotels are not yet serving mate (Paraguayan tea), although it's being introduced into the United States army. The motor bus operators are attending the national convention in Cleveland- They should hare given the motorists a break and taken their busses with them*

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

The Message Center

(Timet reader* are invited to etepretr. their views in theee columns. Hake your lettert short, to all can have a ohance. Limit them to 250 words or lets.) a tt a WORKING WIFE GETS POINTED REPLY By W. H. P. I wish you would print this in answer to the letter in by “A Reader.” I would like to know how long the writer stood on the circle and listened to the reporter. Surely not as long as you would have us think or you w'ould have found out that you do not get a glass of beer for answering the question. What is the matter? Did you go up there to try and get those theater passes and they didn’t ask you to give your views? That must have been terribly disappointing to you. The persons listening to that program do not know what they missed by not hearing a person of your high intelligence come up and tell them what you wrote in The Message Center. If rotten eggs and tomatoes could be thrown that far you probably would be smelling bad for weeks, or months. Any one of those “bums, dirty laborers or tittering old maids” you wrote about probably are a lot more capable of answering any questions than you. I still say a women’s place is at home taking care of her family. You probably haven’t any family, and your home is just a place for you to lie down and rest a few hours after your hard dajr’s work. If you save all those pennies you are making, you will be a rich old woman some day, but that is all. a a a DECLARES MINTON LACKS CONVICTIONS By J. A. Perkins. Sherman Minton, handpicked nominee of Paul V. McNutt for United States senator, is going true to form. He stands for nothing. His first public announcement was that he wished to go to Washington, to stand behind the President; a yes man, no doubt. God knows we have too many of that sort now. His next statement was, “you can’t say to a hungry man, have a Constitution.” Almost in the next breath, “In no campaign have I ridiculed the Constitution of the United States.” Now he says, “I favor payment of the bonus if the treasury permits," and no doubt balance the budget by spending billions experimenting in useless projects. He is putting out the bonus hooey for campaign bait, but he is not fooling the veterans. We control several votes. We know our friends and our enemies. We made that a study in the service. a a a LIKES DECISION IN MILK CASE By A. E. M. “It seems to me," as Heywood Broun says, that the much gouged farmer and consumer should, by now, have their eyes open to the fact that they are getting-* royal trimming from the Indianapolis dairymen’s trust. If it isn’t a trust, what do you call it? I have been anxiously watching the papers for the decision of Judge Baltzell, and it was decided Just as I wished. •The Greenwood dairy is showing the people that it can pay the farmer twice as much for milk and sell it to the consumer for less and still make a fair profit. More power to it, and I wish that it had a route past my door. The Greenwood dairy is spoiling the “trust’s” heaven, and I Just can’t blame it for being sore. But Just why is Secretary Wallace supporting the “trust?” I thought that he was supposed to be working in the interests of the farmer. It I have misinterpreted, the

PARTING IS SUCH SWEET SORROW!

Discovers Defects in Corn-Hog Program

By C. L. Hunt. This week the farmers are voting on the corn-hog program for next year. It has helped many of them, but of all the money paid in as •processing taxes, which came . from the farmers in lowered prices, scarcely one-third ever gets back to them. They should receive it all. The expenses should corrte out of the general funds; otherwise nonfarmers get about two-thirds. On wheat, in my county, the contract farmer can’t get more than 11 cents on his total yield, yet every bushel suffers a reduction in price of 30 cents. Perhaps half the wheat grown is noncontract. The little fellow cuts down a small per cent; the big fellow

meaning of this subject, I am broad minded enough to listen to reason, logically expressed. I am for any one or firm that tries to hold prices of the necessities of life within reason. a tt tt DIGGING UP DIRT ABOUT DEMOCRATS By Marjarete Garrlty. You seem to ridicule only the Republicans and to all appearances, get a big wallop out of it. There is no dc'.bt about the Jackson administration smelling bad and none either doubts the same thing about Duvall, but since yoft said Duvall didn’t last long as a Republican mayor, that reminds me that a Democratic mayor named Ert Slack finished two and a half years of what started out to be four years of Republican rule. Don’t you remember this same Democratic mayor appointed a chief of police named Claude Worley, who made money so fast that he rented safe deposit boxes as big as dresser drawers to hold it all, but who is now serving six years in prison because he cheated the federal government out of income tax on this same money. tt tt FAVORS IMPROVING AGE PENSION LAW By J. Wilson White. Let us vote for candidates for the legislature who are in favor of improving the old-age pension law, whether they be Democrats or Republicans. I am 77 years old and have voted a straight Democratic ticket all my voting life, but from now on I intend to know that those I vote for will stand for laws to help the aged. Aged people are the angels in this world and helpless old age calls for respect regardless of the budget expense. Persons who pay taxes have something ahead to live on, while we helpless old persons have nothing and without help, must suffer to live. We waited patiently for several years, hoping a pension law would be passed. Nothing was said in Republican platforms favoring a pension law. However, the party did manage to pass a law under Governor Leslie, who, with a wicked hand, blotted it out with a veto. Governor Leslie and other politicians like him had no hearts to care how old persons suffered. But they were blotted out by a Democratic landslide after the Democratic party platform favored an old-age pension law. The Democratic ticket was elected and the party passed an old-age pension law true to the platform, but the real estate men who own much to pay taxes on could not rest until the pension budget was cut too low to pay the small limit allo.d b„ I**. mnua* pw-

[1 wholly disapprove of what you say and will defend to the death your right to say it. — Voltaire.

may increase his crop, so possibly the farmer gets only 11 cents out of the 60 cents or $1 paid in. Something like that is true of hogs and corn. The total effect is to penalize the farmer. One wonders if the Republican party, which always has been a tariff and favor-granting party, having got into the cabinet, is not playing “horse” with the Democrats? Or maybe the Democrats are just trying to give them enough rope to do the proper thing and then will turn out and be good. Another idea is that Wall Street didn’t want its shell game with the dollar distributed and so devised a scheme to divert the farmers with ragging among themselves.

ments so low as to require other help and forcing the aged to go ragged. Now comes some members of the Chamber of Commerce, sticking their fingers in the pie, trying to have the pension budget cut to pieces so that taxpayers can have more money to spend for their joys. And they even denounce the county commissioner’s way of investigating applicants and they want it put in the hands of social workers, unforgetfui of the fact that looking at the weak eyes, slow footsteps and wrinkles on t.he faces of men and women past 70 years of age, is enough of an investigation for an old-age pension. tt a a HE WANTS DATA ' ON OTTO RAY By a Foreign Service Man. Who is this Otto Ray who poses as a World war veteran and uses the American Lc.ion and other veteran organizations for his own political advancement? I would like to know just what kind of service record this candidate has, insofar as he Is trying to capitalize on the fact—if it is a he is a service man. I would also like to know just where he stands with organized labor. As for the service men voting for him, he is badly mistaken. The veterans are going to vote a straight Republican ticket. Just what was Mr. Ray’s connection with the legion’s rodeo? a a a SOUNDS RALLYING CRY FOR CONSTITUTION By Harley l Newton. George Washington in his farewell address said: “This government, the offspring of your own choice, adopted upon full investigation and mature deliberation, completely free in its principles, and containing within itself a provision for its own amendment, has a just claim to your confidence and respect.” This government as founded by our revolutionary forefathers, did claim the confidence and respect of mankind to such an extent that foreign people copied the Constitution of the United States as a model of perfection when laying the foundations of new governments. But now we have a class ow persons who say: “The Constitution is *n cd, musty, worn-out document, that has long out-lived its usefulness, and should be discarded.” The Constitution of the United States is the supreme law of this land, and is one of the greatest works written by man, and woe betide this nation when it abandons the precepts of this immortal document. This nation is facing the greatest crisis of its existence, the foundation of government is being sapped and imdonnsed, sod unites ax*

.OCT. 3, 1934

ercise the wisdom of Solomon in governmental affairs, we are doomed. For the sake of the met who went barefooted in snow and ice at Valley Forge until their bleeding feet stained the snow crimson, and of sailors who died of the scurvy and .typhus fever while prisoners of war i nthe British sloops of war off the Jersey coasts, and of our soldiers and sailors in the great rebellion and World war, who died In places we know not of and lay in prisons exposed to the drenching rains of winter and under the blistering sun of summer, amid vermin, filth and disease, and starvation, let us uphold the Constitution of the United States. a a a INSISTS M’NUTT NOT IGNORED By W. C. Higdon. In answer to the man or woman who did not hear Governor McNutt’s name mentioned during the Democratic rally at Tomlinson hall. His name was mentioned two or three times by each speaker. You said that you sat through the entire meeting and never heatd a word about our great governor. Where were you sitting—on Monument Circle?

So They Say

In the French villages I saw, the town crier called the people to the square each morning. When all had come he read the rules of their government for that day. He told them what they could and could not do. You people have gone back to the town crier days. C. Wayland Brooks, Illinois Republican candidate for congress. Women are just suckers for your money, and I don’t think I’ll ever have anything to do with them.— Jackie Cooper, film star. The government would view the export of military planes from this country to Germany with grave disapproval.—Secretary of State Cordell Hull. The functions of a citizen and soldier are inseparable. Benito Mussolini. What goes on In the capital is of no great importance, one way or the other. Laws do not save a country. We are too strong and resourceful a people to be hampered much by legislation.—Henry Ford. We have contended from the beginning that our workers wanted to work and quit only because they were intimidated. —George A. Sloan, president Cotton Textile Institute. The surplus is really a blessing in disguise. It places pressure on the ingenuity of man to discover new uses for the commodity.—Henry Ford. We ask the citizens of South America to understand that peace can only come with complete frankness.—Senator Homer T. Bone of Washington. Bilbo, Long and Roosevelt—that isn’t a bad lineup, now is it?— Senator-elect Theodore G. Bilbo of Mississippi. Time Is Long BY MAUD COURTNEY WADDELL She waited expectant —then walked With nervous tread more anxious when Time passed on suid the one looked for Failed to come, lookin'/ at me then She askea the time and voiced heart-ache, •Tlii time is long to one who waits.”