Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1936 — Page 14

PAGE 14

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SPOKEN AS A PATRIOT who allow themselves to be used lo beat up reds, foreigners or labor agitators In the name of Americanism should read the words of National Commander Eay Murphy of the American Legion. Speaking in California recently, Commander Murphy said: The purpose of our battle against Communism, or any other foreign principle of government, will be defeated if we permit ourse'.ves to be swayed by blind passion. The world changes, America changes. The basic law of our land has been amended and may be amended many times. The Constitution was created for the people. The right of the people to change their basic law can not, and must not, be denied.” Commander Murphy speaks as a patriot who knows that an assault upon free speech, free assemblage, free petition and other liberties guaranteed by the Bill of Rights is as dangerous an assault upon America as though led by a foreign foe. WELFARE PROGRESS TNDIANA is watching closely the progress of the A state’s new Public Welfare Act. Machinery for administration of the law is being set up. County welfare boards and directors are being selected. Officials expect the public assistance plans to be In force within two months. With the Federal Social Security Board’s recent approval of the Indiana act, more than 500,000 persons in 30 states and the District of Columbia will receive aid in the form of monthly cash payments under the co-operative Federal-State system. Indiana will receive an allotment of Federal funds to match, dollar for dollar, its own expenditures for assistance to the needy aged and needy blind. It also will get one dollar from the government for every two dollars it spends on dependent children. It is estimated that more than 43,000 individuals in the state will be helped, including 34,400 aged, 940 blind and 7800 dependent children. The average monthly payment to aged persons Is expected to be $12.72; to needy blind persons, $21.06, and to dependent children, $13.02. The total cost is figured at $559,300 a month. The Federal government laid out the pattern for social security. The state decided for itself which of its aged and dependent citizens to help and how much to help them. It complied with Federal restrictions to get Federal assistance. The responsibility for the program now rests with the state and the counties.

NEIGHBORS HPHE contagion of the “Good Neighbor” policy is •*- its happiest characteristic. There was a time, back in the days of the “Big Stick” and “Dollar Diplomacy,” when every suggestion from Washington affecting inter-American relations was regarded with distrust from the Rio Grande to Cape Horn. So long as the colossus of the North employed the technique of a bully, the response of other American republics was usually a derisive thumbing of noses. But in the last few years this atmosphere of suspicion has given way to one of good will and confidence, all because the Washington government has acted, as well as talked, as a good neighbor should. Now, instead of asking what Uncle Sam has up his sleeve in proposing a western hemisphere peace conference at Buenos Aires, the republics of Latin America are responding with enthusiasm. Feeling that their representatives will go to Buenos Aires not to be talked at but to do some talking on their own account, the heads of these republics have come forward with a multitude of suggestions as to what the conference should seek to accomplish. All apparently agree that a program of peace and collective security for the American republics should be promoted. Some are prepared to go so far as to vote for establishment of a League of Nations for the Americas and an inter-American court of arbitration to settle all disputes. One suggested that the Monroe Doctrine be rewritten into a multilateral document, so that the other republics might share our assumed responsibility for protecting American shores from foreign encroachment. Another suggests regional armament limitation pacts, and still another a broadening of the program to include economic and social problems. This is as it should be at a conference of equals In a community of good neighbors. JUST WARMING UP IT wouldn’t be a campaign if ex-Senator Jim Reed of Missouri weren’t rarin’ about with a bagful of adjectives. For years he has unloosed his bombilating fire of invective—against Wilson, Hoover, A1 Smith, his cousin Dave Reed and many another public man in both his own and the Republican parties. Whenever there’s a political scrap, his voice rolls out of the Ozarks and it’s always a gamble what victim it will strike. This season it is leveled against the Rooseveltian New Deal. Speaking before some Illinois farmers he called the New Deal “crooked,” “vicious," “destructive,’* “idiotic,” “imbecilic,” “oppressive,” “atrocious,” “infamous,” and, in a fine and frenzied anticlimax “regrettable.” Now, to a casual observer these might appear to be immoderate, rough, turbulent, vehement, violent, passionate, furious, raging, ungentle words. But if you knew Jim Reed of Missouri you would realize that he’s Just warming up for the campaign. A GEORGIA JUDGE A 74-YEAR-OLD JUDGE got up out of his sick bed and stopped a lynching by the dramatic expedient of deputizing 100 masked men who were battering at the walls of the Danielsville (Ga.) jail. He told the mob their masks did not conceal their Identity, that he recognized them anyway. And he commanded them to “Stop violating tl e law” and to start enforcing it. Before this show ox courage and authority the mob melted into a shamefaced cordon of civilian deputies, who kept the peace until a de-

Negro prisoner to the safety of another Jail in another city. Buch courageous action does not always succeed. Other public officers have acted as boldly, but have failed to turn back mobs. But a great many more lynchings have been carried out because of the default of local officers who cringed before the mob or conveniently absented themselves from the scene of the outrage. If we had more local officials of the caliber of this old Georgia Judge we should have fewer mob murders, and less demand that the Federal government cssume this simple police r isponsibility. A RED HUNT AT SEA? OINCE he took office in March, 1033, Secretary of Commerce Roper has been the apologist for the many ills and evils which beset the American merchant marine. Ke has always been going to do something about it. The record to date indicates that he has done nothing of major importance to promote safety of life at sea, to improve the deplorable working conditions among seamen on many of our merchants ships, or to insist even upon the carrying out of contracts between government and ship owner. Now, the Department of Commerce seems to be waging a furtive fight against American seamen. There have leaked out of the department vague allegations of “mutiny” and “sabotage.” The charges have fallen upon more than 20,000 men like a blanket, bringing these hard-working, poorly paid citizens into disrepute without even the courtesy of a specific bill of complaint. Are we about to have a ‘‘red hunt” designed to place the blame for the inefficiency of our merchant marine upon the shoulders of men who are paid for the most part less than SSO a month? As for foreigners dominating American crews, as has been suggested in various interested quarters, the Labor Department’s review for January states that of 19,780 seamen studied, 81 per cent were native-born or naturalized citizens and more than 20 per cent of the remainder have taken out their first papers or have served under the American flag three years or longer and by maritime law could therefore be counted as citizens. Any bill of complaint which Mr. Roper, in his own good time, pleases to present against American seamen, should be followed by a similar document from the seamen specifying their complaints against the Department of Commerce. The weighing of the evidence should be by a congressional committee authorized to take apart and examine the Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection and the administration of it.

“A MORE PERFECT UNION” 'T'HIRTEEN states have established commissions on interstate co-operation to “perfect their participation in the Council of State Governments” at Chicago. Like the original 13, whose representatives signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, these 13 are determined “to form a more perfect union.” They will try through co-operation to unify their laws, governmental practices and regulations. They want to end the mad chaos and competition between the states that now allow criminals, tax dodgers, exploiting employers and others to thwart effective government. The states are New Jersey, Colorado, Nebraska, Florida, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, South Carolina, Kentucky, Indiana and Virginia. rJf f the Federal Congress is to be stopped from effective action in interstate matters and if states are to maintain their integrity as governing units they must join hands to co-operate more closely. Instead of only 13 all 48 states now should be attempting to work together. A WOMAN’S VIEWPOINT By Mrs. Walter Ferguson A T last we give honor where honor is due. For the first time in our history, statesmen who opposed war have been crowned with laurel wreaths. Four of them still serve us in Washington—Norris of Nebraska, Lundeen and Knutson of Minnesota, and Gore of Oklahoma. In 1917 these men knew what it was to be called slackers and Reds. They were charged with traitorous conduct. Those whose memory runs back to the hysterical days can recall the vituperations hurled at them, when thousands of pigmy patriots were for hanging them in effigy. Now, 19 years later, we pay them a belated tribute. Our weakness bows at last to their strength, and our folly acknowledge their wisdom. For, make no mistake about it, the man who keeps his country out of war is the true patriot of the Twentieth Century. Now let’s look at the picture etched upon national annals in 1&17 when a handful of men and one woman, Jeanette Rankin, voted against our entry into the World War. As time passes, its significance will grow clearer, for several in so doing voted themselves out of Congress. How many of our present Representatives, I wonder, will show the same courage when the test comes —and it seems to be coming. The United States is getting ready for war in such a sweeping fashion as to frighten the most optimistic. We now have the largest peace-time war budget that any country has, or ever has had in the whole history of the world. Read, that sentence again. Let it sink into your consciousness,-for you are helping to pay the bill. And what does such a bill mean? It means war. Peace is nqt preserved in any such belligerent fashion. The throttling fingers of militarism are about our very throats ready to choke democracy to death. Do not be fooled; there is no such thing as a free republic once war is declared. Military rule takes precedence over everything. Surely the ghosts of the boys who died to “make the world safe for democracy” must walk restlessly by night in this “peace-loving America ” HEARD IN CONGRESS TY EP. BUCKLER (F.-L., Minii.): I know a great many of these congressmen from the East. I can appreciate that they want us farmers to raise foodstuff for nothing, so that they can eat it at our expense. We are just about tired of producing for nothing. I have seen the farmer’s wife and children go half clothed, and in some cases half fed as well, while these Eastern plutocrats were rolling in fat down there when we were feeding them for nothing. (Applause.) VMM Rep. Umstead (D., N. C.): The gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Short) stated a few moments ago that he used to know how to induce a horse to put its head into a halter and to induce chickens to come into a coop. ... If that is the extent of his farming experience, he is not an authority on the question. But even if he knew that much, it has been so long since he undertook to put a halter on a horse that I dare say he would not now know whether the halter was on the horse’s head or on

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Our Town By ASTON SCHERRER

TTTORDLY NOTE: It must have ’ surprised Pleas Greenlee no end to discover that other parties also have their eyes on the Governor’s chair. It just goes to show that you can’t be sure of anything any more except, possibly, wash Monday. * n OUITE the nicest thing in the Czechoslovakian collection up at the Herron is a Bohemian-bound book titled, “Tabrakova dobrodruzstive.” We would probably have passed it up, like anybody else, had we not caught sight of the illustrations. The discovery of the pictures allayed any misgivings we may have had concerning the future of Czechoslovakia. Indeed, we are sold on the new republic since seeing the book for, if we can believe our eyes, the Czech children are reading Kenneth Grahame’s “Wind in the Willows,” the most delightful sequence of inconsequential nonsense written this side of Lewis Carroll. Unless, perchance, it is James Stephens’ “Crock of Gold.” This gratifying state of affairs inspired us to call up Carrie Scott, who runs ‘‘Children's Books” in the Central Library. We wanted to know whether Indianapolis kids could give as good an accounting. They can. “Wind in the Willows,” says Miss Scott, is the most popular of all Kenneth Grahame’s books and she has statistical proof for it. Depend on the kids to keep belleslettres going. u n XT'VERY once in a while a strange " feeling seizes us. People who ought to know assure us it is something akin to aeligion. It always turns up with the coming of spring when the crocus appears and the grass starts getting green. Yesterday, quite accidentally, we happened to be walking with a scientist who seemed, like ourself, to have time on his hands, and for want of something to say or, possibly, because of the feeling of wonder first mentioned above we remarked that the grass is green again. He told us why. It’s because the grass manufactures proto-chlorophyll, a harmless, colorless substance compounded of water and earthy materials which, to look at, doesn’t appear to have any future at all. Once manufactured, however, it gets busy and accumulates in certain cells of leaves called chloroplasts. That’s the beginning. When the sun is shining, a molecule of proto-chlorophyll, stimulated by an atom of magnesium which holds it together, absorbs four quanta of energy from a sunbeam. Which, apparently, is aplenty. The extra energy enables the protochlorophyll to attract carbon dioxide, kick off the oxygen it doesn’t need, and absorb the carbon. At that instant, said the scientist, the colorless becomes chlorophyll and the grass is green again. To hear him tell it, God has nothing to do with it. an n PATRIOTIC note: Sensible of spring’s slow tempo this year, the Society of Indiana Pioneers has extended the time for planting liriodendron tulipifera which, if you don’t happen to know, is the official state tree of Indiana.

TODAY’S SCIENCE BY DAVID DIETZ

DR. ARTHUR H. COMPTON, Nobel prize winner, famous physicist, and authority upon cosmic rays, chose Easter to discuss his reasons for belief in personal immorality. Thus Dr. Compton, who carried on a spirited debate for several yearn with Dr. R. A. Millikan over the nature of cosmic rays, seems much nearer that other famous physicist and Nobel prize winner on religious grounds for Dr. Millikan has long been an ardent champion of the cause of religion. It is interesting to note that deep religious convictions are found more often among astronomers ard physicists than among biologists, medical men and psychologists. I think the reason for this is easy to find. The biologist and the psychologist has his attention centered upon the mechanisms of the human organism. In order that they might make any progress at all in their fields, they have been forced to assume as a working hypothesis the postulate that they were confronted with nothing which could not be explained by the application of their sciences. This working hypothesis has stood them and mankind in good stead. To it we owe the immense progress of medicine, its triumphs over the plagues cf the Middle Ages, the great advances in surgical technique, the new understanding of psychological processes and their application to human welfare through psychiatry. OTHER OPINION [Senator L Follette of Wisconsin in The Progressive.] The real public works program has not been given a trial. Small starts have been made, but the government has been afraid to ask for the money necessary for a fair trial. We will come to it eventually. We will have to recognize sooner or later that the money spent by the government for constructive public works is money saved. It is money that goes into the creation of something of value.

The Hoosier Forum I disapprove of what you say—and will defend to the death your right to say it. — Voltaire.

(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make vour letters short, so all can have a chance. Limit them to 250 words or less. Your tetter must he sinned, but names will be withheld on rcoucst.) a a a HARVARD LAUDED FOR PARENTS PROJECT By L. L. At Harvard, fathers and mothers of 60 and 70 students spent four days learning what their sons’ college life was like. While the students went on vacation, their parents moved into Lowell house as guests of Prof. Julian Lowell Coolidge. Their program included sleeping in their sons’ dormitory, eating in the same dining hall and relaxing in Harvard’s new indoor athletic building near by. Two lectures a day by faculty members, visits to classrooms and museums on the campus, and a general repetition of the daily routine of their boys, filled out the unique excursion. Here is an idea that should be copied by other colleges. Too often there is a breach between parents and children simply because the elders haven’t taken the time to meet their boys and girls on the youngsters’ home ground. a a a URGES U. S. SUPERVISION OF ARMS, AUTOS By E. R. Reran, Greenwood Perhaps the gangster has inaugurated anew industrial era. If automobile manufacturers can make an automobile bullet-proof, and equipment with machine guns

Watch Your Health

BY DR. 3IORRIS FISHBEIN WHEN you eat an apple, you get 82 Vs per cent water and 12 Vi per cent carbohydrate, with less than 1 per cent of the other constituents, except fiber, a strawberry gives you 90 per cent water, 6 per cent carbohydrate, and 1 per cent protein. A raw peach provides 9.5 per cent carbohydrate, but if it is boiled the carbohydrate is greatly reduced. A banana provides 74 per cent water, 22.7 per cent carbohydrate, and IV2 per cent protein; whereas, watermelon gives 92.9 per cent water, 6.5 per cent carbohydrate, and very lit- j tie protein. Dried fruits, such as raisins, i dates and figs, have, of course, much j less water (from 15 to 20 per cent), j and from 70 to 75 per cent carbo- i hydrate. Because of their concentrated character, they provide as much as 1500 calories a pound. An ordinary apple provides 100 calories; three plums or three prunes will give 100 calories, and so will a two-inch slice of watermelon. An orange provides the same number of calories, but it takes a whole cantaloupe to give equal energy. For this reason, cantaloupe is a good substance in a reducing diet. Among the unusual fruit products are the cranberry and the avocado. Cranberries are slightly laxative, like other fruits, and they provide fair amounts of vitamin C, but lesser amounts of A, B and D. The

IF YOU CAN’T ANSWER, ASK THE TIMES!

Inclose a 3-cent stamp for reply when addressing any question of fact or information to The Indianapolis Times Washington Service Burean, 1013 13thst. N. W.. Washington. D. C. Legal and medical advice can not be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. Q—What was the political complexion of the Senate and House during the Hoover Administration? A—The Seventy-first Congress, during the first two years of the Hoover Administration, had In the Senate 56 Republicans, 39 Democrats, and one Farmer-Labor; in the House, 226 Republicans, 163 Democrats and one Farmer-Labor. The Seventy-second Congress, during the last two years of the Hoover Administration, had in the Senate 48 Republicans, 47 Democrats and one Farmer-Labor; and in the House, 211 Republicans, 221 Democrats and one Farmer-Labor.

BLAZING THE TRAIL!

for the gangsters, what couldn’t they do for the ordinary citizen.” And just what is a government pledged to protect its legitimate business going to do about private industry promoting internecine warfare? The sale of machine guns, or armaments not quite up to specifications, to irresponsible, unidentified persons, has promoted gang wars. I consider any manufacturer producing an especially equipped car to prevent the apprehension of such criminals a party to the crime. This condition emphasizes the need for government manufacture of armament and strict supervision of all sales of arms and automobiles. Government seizure of such plants is justified. a a a DEFENDS ROOSEVELT’S EDUCATED ADVISERS By Warren A. Benedict Jr. G. O. P. bigwigs should make headlines for their inconsistency in their attacks on the Administration, if for nothing else. These critics squeal that the chief executive “incites the masses against the classes.” They then industriously proceed to stir up that ancient prejudice against college men and colleges with their ridiculous tirades against the “cap and gown brain-trusters” and the President’s Harvard background. We are informed that inherited wealth, a Harvard degree and a Phi Beta Kappa key keep a man from understanding the nation’s needs. They plead for a “practical, experienced executive.” And then they try to “build up” the farmer-Gov-

cranberry also is useful for its iodine content. n n u MANY people feel that the cranberry is dangerous because it produces acid. Scientific tests show, however, that the alkali reserve of the body does not decrease until more than 54 grams of cranberries, or more than one quarter pound, have been eaten. Few people eat as much as a j quarter pound of cranberries at one time. The human body has factors of safety which take care of acid-' ity coming in this manner.. The avocado, *or alligator pear, is interesting because it contains fat and has a low carbohydrate content. TJie fat of the avocado varies from 8 to 31 per cent, the carbohydrate being about 4.6 per cent. The avocado is particularly rich in vitamin A and contains a good deal of vitamin B; in fact, one expert insists that one avocado provides as much vitamin B as six cakes of yeast. This interesting fruit is higher in minerals than oranges, lemons, peaches and strawberries. Dietary advisers have developed many methods of serving the avocado, so that when available it is highly valuable as a constituent of salads and may be used also in sandwich fillings, or molded with fruits and vegetables in gelatin.

Q—Where and when did the game of bowling originate? A—Authorities are practically united in the opinion that bowling originated in northern Italy between 1000 and 1500 years ago. Q —What actress played the role of Anne of Cleves in the motion picture, “The Private Life of Henry VIII?” A—Elsa Lanchester. Q—At what rate are sound motion pictures taken? A—Standard sound cameras take pictures at the rate of 90 feet of film per minute. Q —Why are “Grandfather Clocks" so named? A—lt is believed that the name was applied by early manufacturers to these tall pendulum clocks in reference to a popular song of the tizno*

ernor of an agricultural state as a man capable of handling the problems of an industrial nation. They bray about the sacredness and worthiness of the press. They then approve when that master of yellow journalism, that enemy of decent journalism, in a thoroughly disgusting and maudlin manner grooms the Kansan for the nomination. They howl against an “economy of scarcity,” and in the next breath loudly defend the tariff, that breeder of monopoly, privilege and high prices. They weep for the unfortunate unemployed and then plan to throw them to the wolves while they would reduce expenses and “balance the budget.” They view with alarm the “un-American principles” of Roosevelt as pointed out by sol-dier-of-fortune Hoover, who resided abroad so long. Truly, consistency does not seem to be a crowning virtue of the Republican “gang Roosevelt” boys. a a a SUGGESTS “DETECTIVE CARS” TO TRAP SPEEDERS By H. V. Allison After the killing of six people in an autc accident it is time we have an ordinance with teeth, or enforce rigidly the one we have. Why not put two plain officers in a plain car and drive 35 miles an hour on any preferential street? Take the license number of all the cars passing the said car and give them notice to call at police station and pay $2 fine for first offense. On the second offense have them turn in license plates and driver’s license with 10 or more days in jail. This will stop the worst evil of traffic. If the violators fail to heed the warning it will help greatly to balance the police budget. Try this out with one car and the results soon will be seen. Every law abiding citizen should take an interest in this situation. DAILY THOUGHT Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce; and their wrath, for it was cruel: I will divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel. —Genesis 49:7. ANGER is the most impotent of passions. It effects nothing it | goes about, and hurts the one who is possessed by it more than the one against whom it is directed.—Clarendon.

SIDE GLANCES

“Now, take me —/ wouldn’t have no desire to work, if I WS&& have a man to eu m rU"

-APRIL 15, 1936

Vagabond from Indiana ERNIE PYLE

EDITOR'S NOTE—Thi* roytnc reporter (or Tho Time* roes where he pleases, when he pleases, in search a( odd atories abont this and that. MEXICO CITY, April 15.—Some of the “little” things about Mexico City: Street car motormen don't wear uniforms. They wear regular street clothes, and keep their hats on. and look as though they were just out for the ride. Traffic cop signals are the reverse of ours. If the cop’s side is toward you, you stop. If his face (or back) is toward you, you go. And how traffic goes in Mexico City! It's wild. A space two feet wide between cars looks like an empty street to a Mexican taxi driver. Taxis swarm the downtown section like flies. They’re just ordinal small sedans, with a colored line drawn clear around on the molding. On one taxi line will be blue, on another red, another green and so on. Here’s the reason: There are 5000 cabs here, which is too many. So the drivers divided themselves into seven sections, each section with its own color. One day off a week is assigned to each color. Work on your day off and it's a 25peso fine. a a a COME people (including me) suffer from Mexico City’s 7500-foot altitude. Some don't. Some hay® headaches, nose bleeds and stomach aches. Some get tired and sleepy. Some want to leap around doing things like a wild man. It makes some people very irritable. Some can’t get their breath. Some get completely sick. It did all these things to me. Spring weather in Mexico City is good—and bad. The temperature is good. It is cool at night, but not quite topcoat weather. In the middle of the day the sun beats down fiercely, and you’d better be careful. But every afternoon a wind comes up. And with it the dust. It comes from the dry bed of nearby Lake Texcoco. By 3 p. m. the air is saturated with sand, and you can hardly breathe. This dust has been the most annoying thing about Mexico City to me. My lips are dry and parched, and my hands are chapped as from a New England frost. This dust season lasts a month or so. And at night, One night I awakened, along toward 3 o'clock and the city was as quiet as a solitary cloud. And as I lay there, just one block from the center of this modern city of a million and a quarter people, I could hear, far away, coyotes yelping! a a u T THOUGHT Mexico City was a slow city, but it isn’t. As far as I can see, the tempo of street traffic is as fast as New York’s. And the people on the sidewalks move no slower than in the states. But here’s the nice part. The city absolutely closes up at 1 in the afternoon. Everybody goes home for lunch. Nobody eats downtown. People come back, and the stores open again, at 4. Working hours are 9 to 1, and 4 to 6:30. People ride street cars and busses. There are thousands of busses here —small, noisy, roaring contraptions. They hardly ever make a complete stop, except at traffic lights. People have learned to hop them on the run. They say there is not in all Mexico a statue of Cortez, who captured Mexico for Spain. Nor of Santa Anna, the famous president and dictator, of Texas independence fame. They consider him a traitor for selling North Mexico to the United States. But every time you turn around there’s a statue of Benito Juarez, the Indian liberator. The daily papers print one page in English. But it has only one or two news stories, and all the rest =is filler, about a three-legged chicken in McCook, Neb., and so on. DIFFERENCE n BY HARRIETT SCOTT OLIN|CK I wanted love to be sincere. To be forever proud and white; To be rock deep and crystal clear; To hold forever star-flung light* But your wish is that love shall -be A thing of shallow depth and sfy; That laps at surface ecstasy; Is never brave enough to cry.

By George Clark