Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 215, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 November 1935 — Page 6

PAGE 6

The Indianapolis Times (A SCRIFPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) ROV XV. HOWARD President M-DWELL DENNY Editor EARL D. BAKER Business Manager

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Give LUjht nrid the Proptt Will Hn>l Their Own Way

SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 15 19.1

BOTH profit, neither loses ' J ■'HP. United States and Canada have at last signed a reciprocity trade treaty. It is reported that the treaty reduces the tariff on 700 items of commerce between the two countries, and that special interests in both lands are sure to Protest vehemently and abusively. Suffice it to say that the treaty would not be worth its salt if it failed to arouse abusive protest. If the ticaty did nothing more than arrange a reciprocal exchange of pine needles and pumperni. ks , biead, we should expect the oppositionists in this country to proclaim loudly that those shrewd Canadians had made suckers out of us, and the oppositionists in Canada to declare that those clever Yankee traders outsmarted their innocent neighbors. Thus it has always been, ever since the idea of a tariff was invented and the fallacy that trade can move on a one-way street was first embraced as a political creed. Over the years Canada has bought from the Cnited States about twice as much as the United States has bought from Canada. When keeping such a good customer as Canada is at stake, we hardly behove it. possible for the United States to sign a bad treaty. IK THE STATES ARE IMPOTENT— muddy thinking about the Constitution 1 A and states’ rights will be clarified by reading the decision of Federal Judge Elwood Hamilton of Kentucky upholding the Guffey Coal Control Act. The people of the states, he said, gave to the Congress the right to promote the general welfare in rases where the states could not do this acting alone. The facts show that hc states alone could not rehabilitate the bituminous coal industry. Inasmuch as coal is an interstate industry, Congress can legislate concerning it from the beginning of its movement, until its ultimate delivery to a consumer or producer. This means from the time the miner begins to dig. “The Congress,” hr said, ".should first determine if the act proposed is in the interest of the general welfare; second, can the states acting independently accomplish the result; third, if not, should the central government take action, and, fourth, search the Constitution for authority to carry into a statutory form the demands of the people for governmental action. If state action is impotent, Federal action is imperative if public necessities demand. . . ” It is, lie said, "constitutionally and economically absurd” to expect the states to control products nationally distributed. ‘To deny power in such a field to the national government is tantamount to saying there shall be no legislation. . . . When the states fail or are unable to perform a public duty, the doctrine of states’ rights should not. be a barrier to the Federal government rendering an essential service to the human race.” Here is an opinion that goes considerably beyond narrow legalistic interpretations of the Constitution. It goes beyond the Schechtcr decision. But it is realistic in facing the facts of our great interstate industries that sprawl across state lines defying states to regulate them in the interests of the people. Legalists will quarrel with it, so will industries that want neither state nor Federal ‘’interference” in their business. A great majority of Americans will applaud it as a sound, sensible and human restatement of conditions as they are. LITTLE PIGS OF IRON TENDER folk whose hearts have bled for the little pigs sacrificed to the farmers’ new prosperity should avoid reading Secretary Wallace’s latest defense of AAA. lest the impact on their sensitive natures be too severe. For Mr. Wallace reveals that while the farmers in drought-plagued 1934 produced 80 per cent of their 1929 pig crop, the iron and steel industry turned out of that year only 45 per cent of its 1929 pig iron production. "That sort of industrial reduction,” he said, "plowed * v ''llir sos workers out into the streets." Mr. Wallace presun., j.j .niidn't argue that the steel corporations should continue producing their little pigs at a peak rate when a depression was reducing the demand. But he contends with justice that the industry's artificial controls kept the price of pig iron so high as to discourage even such demand as survived. Let those who weep for the sacrificial pigs of pork save a tear for the unborn pigs of iron, and direct their plaints of "scarcity economy” toward the factories as well as the farms. DON’T DOGGLE THIS BOON TJAID propagandists in Washington have taken over a job begun by volunteer propagandists in New York several months ago. It is the job of discrediting every type of made-work attempted by the Administration by giving it the name of boondoggling. Whoever invented it, it s a good word and amusing. But it is being put to pretty bad use. It is being applied to every sort of job that seems or can be made to seem unimportant. Counting chickens! Ha, ha. ha! Boondoggling! Don’t explain that counting chickens was part of a serious effort to break up a vicious New York business racket that affected honest dealers as well as consumers; that had to do with holding down extortionate prices and keeping diseased poultry off the dinner tables of the city. Tap dancing! Ho, ho. ho! Boondoggling! Ignore the fact that tap dancing is something which people pay money to see, when they have money, and is considered an honorable profession; that when prosperity returns there will be a demand for those tap dancers if they haven't become ditch diggers—or starved to death. And so through a long list. There's a laugh in every line, if you feel like laughing. Somehow we do not. For the latest added to the list of boondoggles are the writers. The employed writers of the anti-New Deal campaign now have the choicest chance of their careers and they are not overlooking it. Unemployed writers. Government's going to pu s ’em to work. Yeh, honest! Twenty-nine hundred of them! Naw, you're kidding? Kiddin', nothin'. And that isn't all. be--9 fore they get through they’re goin’ to hije 4500!

Well, I'll be—wait till I can get to my typewriter! Unemployed writers —chicken counters—tap dancers! Haw, haw, haw! Boy, is this a honey! No, we don't think it's funny. You see. we know a lot of unemployed writers. We know so many that we fear employing 4500 wfil not take care of nearly all. And we make our living by writing, just as the boys who are so busy about boondoggling do. We have long regarded it as a useful and honorable profession and we don’t enjoy sniggers on the subject. Not only that, but we haven’t any illusion that we hold present job by divine right or that there is no possibility of our ever being out of a job. In that we may be different from the boys who are being paid for having such a happy time over boondoggling. But we don’t think we are. Campaign jobs are not the most permanent form of employment and we have a notion the boys are aware of that fact. We feel that they just aren’t using their heads. Carried away by their art, they are forgetting that, but for the grace of God or the G. O. P.. they might any day find themselves among the unemployed. So, on behalf of all writers, employed as well as unemployed, we earnestly implore these hard-work-ing humorists: Don't doggie this particular boon! BACK TO PRIVATE BUSINESS every hand is evidence that the Roosevelt Administration is passing the nation's economic responsibilities back to private business. And fortunately there are some indications that private business is preparing to reassume these responsibilities. Orders to tighten their belts have gone out from the White House to the various government agencies as the Administration prepares a budget narrowing the gap between revenue and expenses in the next fiscal year: with intent to close that gap as soon as passible. Secretary Roper, re-interpreting the President’s recent promise of a "breathing spell,” says that practically all of the Administration’s reform program is now on the staute books and that steady green signals on a clear right of way stretch ahead of business. Outbidding the bankers, who in convention petition the government to retire from competition in lending, New Deal spokesmen at New Orleans invite them to take off the government’s hands such assets as RFC and PWA bonds and HOLC mortgages, representing transactions that have contributed much to the government's great bookkeeping deficit. The bankers admit, through their resolutions committee, that government deficits of the last six years "in part have been justified by efforts to relieve human suffering,” but say conditions which necessitated heavy government outlays have passed to a large extent, and that the obligation now rests upon private banking institutions to demonstrate that they are able to meet the demands for business credit. The key to providing jobs for the 20 per cent of American workers still idle, says the bankers’ policy committee, is in floating long-term loans for manufacturing and utility industries, thereby stimulating the heavy industries where unemployment has remained most acute. The bankers have completed their diagnosis. The Roosevelt Administration seems more than eager to withdraw and let private enterprise fill the prescription. But the convalescent patient can not attain recovery on promises alone. A SCHOOL FOR HUSBANDS THE school for brides which has been opened in New York should be a co-educational institu- j tion. By the time branches are started in other cities there should be a bridegroom's department. It is right and necessary to train girls in the art | of being successful brides. But how about the i bridegrooms? Are they to be permitted to go un- i schooled? For example, what boots it for a bride to have a perfectly appointed apartment, with dinner waiting in the electric range, if the bridegroom won’t come home to it? If he prefers to sit in a pub telling some stranger of his college days, of how he landed the big order, or of how he told the boss where to get off. there is hardly any use having a trained bride. It just doesn’t make sense. To leave out the tavern-sitters, what about the unschooled bridegrooms who can't get their work done in the daytime and are forever calling up to say they’ll be late; that there is a big sales conference on? Anybody must be blind not to know that the training for marriage should start with the men. As things stand, a bride must be prepared to sing "Husband, dear husband, come home with me now,” whether it be from the cocktail lounge or the conference room. If all the late husbands were laid end to end the marriage problem would be in a fair way of solution. A WOMAN’S VIEWPOINT By Mrs. Walter Ferguson TRONY is added to tragedy in the Memphis murder -*• of a young man by his estranged wife. He taught her how to shoot, taking great pride in her skill. Guns arc dangerous playthings in the hands of emotional men and women; the latter, especially, with their delicate and easily unbalanced nervous systems, have no business whatever with such weapons. Awakened from her trance of semi-insanity, this wife who vented her rage upon the man she professes to love, probably will be sunk in horror over her deed, and even if she escapes punishment—which hardly seems likely—will feel lifelong regrets. The lamentable incident was the result of a casual flirtation. A pretty girl meets a handsome man; the two are attracted to one another. The man withholds the information of his marriage and separation from his wife and the girl makes no effort to find out too much about his past. Thus can be laid the foundations of a major tragedy. Such cases are too numerous in our country. Sometimes it is the other man or woman in the triangle who is killed, sometimes it is the mate, but whatever the result, the cause is always the same—consuming jealousy. And jealousy when it becomes such a "vehement flame” can be traced to what we may call an illiterate emotional nature. When we are truly wise we will educate the emotions of our children as we now educate their intel-kri-s. Men and women are very much ashamed if they do not know how to read these days, but they seem not to be ashamed to go through life without being able to analyze their moods and sensations. To direct one's hand in the movement of writing is a form of self-control; the person who can learn to do that can also be trained to exercise restraint upon his suspicions, fears and angers. To teach such restraint will, I hope, be one of the important functions of our schools of the future. If we can afford to pay the farmers for plowing up their wheat and cotton and for killing their pigs, why can’t we afford to pay munitions makers to stop making guns and shells that may some day kill our children?—Maj. Gen. Smerlley D. Butler.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Squaring The Circle With McCREADY HUSTON

YOU ride and talk with taxi drivers and you learn that it | shouldn't be hard to regulate them cr their business. They tell you of jobs of the safe delivery of what might be called merrymakers that 1 make your hair stand on end. The taxi driver in Indianapolis seems to be a kind of craftsman. Those you talk to suggest a pride in their work. Part of their work consists of accepting the care of a person or persons unable to care for themselves and seeing them safely home. Not only to the doorstep. Sometimes the taxi man must act as valet. a a a THE foregoing paragraph was written in the second person as an exercise. The author of a column may be the shyest and most modest person around the shop and still give the pontifical impression' by overdoing the first person singular. Frankie Graham, of the New York Sun, has developed the "you” style over the "I” style until it is a work of journalistic art. e tt a The sad news about Chuck Wiggins distresses you whether you care for prize fighters or not. Less than 15 years ago this Indianapolis boy was an Apollo of the prize ring. His physique, his lion heart and his boxing skill promised to take him to the top. His fights with Harry Greb, whose indifference to trainj mg was like Wiggins’, will long be remembered. tt tt tt \\T HAT daily amazes me is how * * far a man can go in life and yet know so little. Without any research, I always supposed a fellow could buy his boy a dog, give it a name, and then go on in the pleasant father-son-dog manner. To my astonishment, I discovered that this thing of owning a pedigreed dog has been made into a rather large and complicated business. We got this animal from the kennels. I expected to lead him home on the leash with a mere exchange of money for dog. Instead I was confronted immediately with a formidable looking paper with the heading of the American Kennel Club and asked to select three names made up of a selection from the pup's ancestors on both sides for several generations. tt tt a 'II7’ELL, that was all very confus- ’ * ing. None of the names of the ancestors sounded to me like the name of a dog. I always thought a dog should be named Rover, Skipper or something like that. Lynnfield Cooperstown Boy seemed to me to take all the joy out of a wire-hair. It was explained, however, that this rigamarole was necessary if I should ever exhibit the dog. Also, the Kennel Club would not object if we gave the dog a call name. The boy chose Gary Cooper, so now the pup is merely Gary and everything : is all right, with a registration fee | of two dollars. I hope I do not discover that he has to be reregistered ’ every year. ati a I was reminded of all this by reading the literature of the Indiana Saddle Horse Association. It made me think of how many papers I should have to sign if I should go in for a blooded horse instead of a terrier. At least as many as when one applies for a life insurance ! loan. a a a j /~\NE of the recommendations of Indianapolis which the Chamber of Commerce might use to fetch new people here is th' age of some of the active professional and business men. In one day I met an active lawyer of 91; another of 85; a hotel keeper of 77. They seemed I much more alert than I am; but, ! of course, I spent two recent years in Philadelphia. a a a T LIKE fun wherever I hear it. A A baseball park is a likely place. Last summer I was watching the Cubs and the Pirates, and in the game was a player who had acquired a reputation for slow thinkI ing. The plodder came to bat. A fan behind me yelled to the pitcher. ! "Hit him in the head if you hit him.” tt tt a /”ANE of Simeon Fess’ sons was here from Ohio the other day with the news that tbe Republicans are going to elect a President next year. If one of Simeon Fess’ sons said anything else, that would be news. OTHER OPINION IFranklin Star] DIG fortunes are working fortunes. They are the fortunes j that provide the capital that is essential to every productive undertaking. They are the fortunes that carry industry through bad times | as well as good—and absorb a loss, | even while keeping men at work and wheels turning. The whole history of American industrialism proves this. "Soak the rich” and you soak every one. You strike directly at every pocketbook. You invite unemployment, industrial distress, bankruptcies. And you prolong depres- | sion.

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The Hoosier Forum 1 wholly disapprove of what you soy—arid will defend to the death your right to say it. — Voltaire.

(Tones readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make Hour letters short, so all can have a chance. Limit them to 25 0 words or less. Your letter must he, sinned, but names will be withheld on reaucst.) a a tt PRESIDENT'S BIG MISTAKE WAS NAMING JOHNSON By E. Scott Miles It is surprising that a man, even one craving publicity as Gen. Hugh Johnson does, would write such a lot of nonsense as he has written about the Cabinet. One would suppose that he (Johnson) was a super man and the only competent man in the entire country to hold office. Asa matter of fact, very few business men in the country ever heard of the gentleman until President Roosevelt picked him to head the NR A, and as it was such anew proposition and there was so much controversy over it Johnson was placed in a position to become well known. Johnson is the self-appointed critic of everything. He tries to make President Roosevelt out an absolute incompetent as to appointing men to office except when he appointed Gen. Johnson to the NRA. The President is human and has made mistakes and will continue to make them, but the greatest mistake he has made to date was in appointing Johnson. tt tt a PLEADS FOR CARE FROM AUTO DRIVERS By M. E. E. While the safety campaign is on would it not be as well to ask motorists to please look behind before suddenly opening their car doors on the street side? Messenger boys riding swiftly along sometimes get struck and often injured badly, putting them in a hospital or under a doctor’s care. One of my boys was struck that way last week and for a while it was very serious. I am sure the majority of people would rather look first than hit one of these boys whose work necessitates their riding bicycles. They can not always swing out in time, especially when another car is passing, which was the case with my boy. A door swinging open suddenly is a very real hazard and these boys, most of whom are helping or keeping up homes, surely are worth consideration. B tt tt CHANGES OPINION OF CITY POLICE By H. B. I have heard much comment on I the conduct of police officers of Indianapolis, but until recently could see nothing wrong. However, lam forced to change my opinion now. I As I was driving east on Wash- | ington-st at Alabama-st Tuesday ! about 4:10. Radio Car No. 43 drove

Questions and Answers

Inclose a 3-cent stamp for reply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Washington Information Bureau. Legal and medical advice can not be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. Be sure all mail is addressed to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. Frederick M. Kerby, Director. 1013 Thirteenth-st, X. W.. Washington, D. C. Q —What does "J. H. S.” on a cross stand for? A—" Jesus Hominum Salvator," meaning “Jesus Saviour of Men.” Q —Name the author of the following poem: To him in the love of nature holds Communion with her visible forms, she speaks A various language. A—lt is in "Thanatopsis,” by Bryant. Q—What is meant by the First. Second and Third Reich? A—The First Reich was unified Germany, more properly the German Empire, which was born amidst the throes of the FrancoPrussian War of 1871, and which lasted until 1919. Tne second Reich wasVthe German Republic

LIGHTING THE WAY

through the stop light at that intersection and nearly collided with the car that I was driving. If the squad car had been on a run, I would have overlooked the incident and been glad to see our officers hurrying; but as it happened they just rolled along at about 15 miles an hour, holding up a line of cars that were headed east. I had halted at the intersection to await the change of the automatic signal at the corner. The signal was against this squad car long before it approached, but the driver didn’t seem to care; he just drove on through. Why should these cars be allowed any such privileges, unless they are displaying their red lights or sounding their sirens? If it had been me or some other automobiie driver, we would have been violating the law. But, of course, these big. “strong arms of the law” were not. If we are to have safe driving, why not have the police set an example by observing the traffic signals? a a a SPEECHES OF BUTLER AND NYE APPLAUDED By D. W. Blakeslee Two of the high spots of the national encampment of the V. F, W. at New Orleans were the addresses of Senator Gerald P. Nye and Gen, Smedley D. Butler. In part, Senator Nye said: “If we would really take the profit out of war, we will not hesitate for fear we are too drastic in the fixing of the tax rates co become automatically effective in the event of another declaration of war. Why not take the bill now pending before Congress, which would cause a rate of 98 per cent to prevail upon all incomes in excess of SIO,OOO a year while we are at war? “National defense has become an international racket for profit.” Gert. Butler said the United States never has fought a defensive war. He said: “All of them have been fought after we had declared war first, from the time the Pilgrims landed and chased the Indians off their land. Every war was fought because somebody wanted to make something out of it and somebody always did.” a a u THINKS YOUTH CAN BRING PROSPERITY By W. H. Brennen The Young Republicans meeting in Des Moines is going on the rocks if the sponsors follow the lead of old-line party men. They must cut loose from the old leaders or accept New Dealism. Vandenburg, Borah, Capper and others do not stick to their platform any closer than the Democrats did to theirs. The plan to accept part of the New Deal, in order to catch a few farmer votes, is just the kind

under the Weimar Constitution, adopted by the National Assembly, July 31, 1919. after the abdication of the German Emperor. The Third Reich is the present Germany governed under the enabling act of March 24, 1933. which virtually set aside the Weimar Constitution by giving absolute power • to Adolph Hitler and his cabinet. Q—Who is the best known of the Chinese writers? A—Confucius and Lao-tse. whose writings are known as the Chinese classics. Q —State the number of beauty shops in the United States, and the average number of employes and booths to the shop. A—Approximately 65 000 shops, averaging three booths and four employes to the shop. Q—What does Shawangum mean? A—lt is an American Indian name meaning "white stone,” or “white salt rocks.” Q —Where in the Bible is the verse, "Cast thy bread upon the waters, for thou shait find it after many days"? A—Eccliastes xi, t:~

of politics the young set can not afford. It looks like poor politics to listen to the old bosses. They can not win. But if the young men and women lead, all youth will unite and give us a government that can pay its debts and not repudiate them. The time is ripe for youth to face the music. That means they must rule, and to do this they must elect youth to office, in Congress and all down the line. Politics of today is not the kind for people to follow, but should be made to fit our needs. Our educated youth is best equipped to make it over. The young men and women must pay the debts which are piling up; it is up to them to find a way to quit running up more debts. So make way for youth. Stand back out of the w r ay and let our educated young men and women put the country back to prosperity. THE FLEMINGERS BY BERTRAM DAY The w'orld becomes an open, priceless book Whose author lies beyond the pale of Time, Its pages cling to thoughts in every nook, The inner sounds become the outer chime. One page of life is told on Flandcr's lea Where live the sturdy blue-eyed Flemingers, Their daring deeds for life on land and sea Brought Christian freedom through their messengers. The "Heroes’ Mound” on war-scarred Waterloo Remains a monument to all the world, For here the principles for homes came true; Men died —the flag of justice was unfurled. . Religion, home, the right to think aloud, Will conquer fear and shine through any cloud. DAILY THOUGHTS I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.—St. Luke 5:32. OUR greatest glory consists not in never falling, but in rising every time we may fall.—Goldsmith.

SIDE GLANCES

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“She says he went to Africa to get her out of his mind, but it was partly to shoot a rhinoceros.”

NOV. 16, 1935

Washington Merry-Go-Round

BY DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN. ll TASHINGTON, Nov. 16 —Ons W report which never got by the Italian and and British war censors told how three Italian destroyers stopped and searched a British merchant vessel in the Strait of Messina. They found nothing on her and let her proceed. Rome claimed the Strait of Messina to be Italian territorial waters. and neither the British nor the Italians wanted to arouse public opinion bv letting the incident leak out. The United States government, however, received an official report. . . . Emil Hurja. pudgy Man-Friday to Jim Farley on the Democratic National Committee, had his expenses for the trip to Manila paid by the Philippine government Die national committee continued his salary during the journey, though what patronage he handled in the Philippines remains a mystery. a tt a WHITE HOUSE circles whisper significantly of a smash surprise the President has up his sleeve for political foes who have been hammering him for failing to balance the budget. Inside word is that the budget, now being prepared. will not only be balanced but will show a perk surplus. The spectacular feat is being acomplishod by slashing appropriation requests to the bone and making use of huge unexpended balances of emergency appropriations. An instance of this is the little known cache of approximately $850.000.000 held out from the $4.800.000.000 Work-Relief grant. • . . A busy winter season in the capital is in praspect for J. P. Morgan Sc Cos. It is slated for appearances before both the Senate munitions and railroad finance investigating committees. . . . February 1 will see a reshuffling of Federal Reserve system titles. Heads of the twelve Reserve Banks will be known as "Mr. President” instead of "Governor.” The title “Governor” will be used by members of the new Reserve Board, whose official designation is "The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Banks.” . . . To supply investors seeking information regarding stocks, the Securities and Exchange Commission maintains a 24-hour photostat serv- | ice which—for a fee—turns out | facsimiles of all reports filed with it. a u a A BILL providing for regulation of commodity exchanges is on I the Administration’s “must” calendar for the coming session of Congress. ; The proposal has been pending for ! several years, but this time, with presidential elections in the offing, I the White House plans to get active|ly behind it. The measure would i place control of commodity markets I under the Agriculture Department, j not the Securities and Exchange | Commission. . . . The daily mail bag for the President and Mrs. j Roosevelt is now averaging around 2000 letters. One letter recently re- ! ceivcd from a man in West Virginia I asked the President for a loan of j $l5O. with the assurance that if the | request were granted the borrower | "would say nothing about it to any- | one.” . . . Vice Chairman John ! Hamilton of the Republican National Comfnittee is complaining to friends j that most of his working day is I consumed opening and answering I letters containing recovery programs, j Hamilton says programs come in not I only from all parts of the United States, but from many foreign countries. . . . Much interest is being displayed by political leaders of both parties in the active behind-the-scenes role played by Earl J. Christen berry, secretary to the late Huey Long, at the recent Townsend plan convention in Chicago. Christi enberry was seen in frequent secret conferences with Dr. Townsend and | other heads of the movement. a a a RECENTLY compiled officiaj statistics show that there were 132 more extra dividends declared in the first 10 months of this year than last. The 1934 figure for the period was 402, this year 534. October's dividend declarations topped thase for any previous October in four years. . . . Harry Hopkins’ assistant relief administrators are coming into their own. Each has been supplied with an official automobile and chauffeur. . . . The latest issue of Consumers’ Guide, official publication of the consumers’ division of the AAA. takes a sharp rap at Secretary Henry Wallace for inadequate representation of the buying public at the recent potato and corn-hog hearings. , 'Copyright. 1935 bv T’r.:!e<i Feature Syndicate. Inc.l

By George Clark