Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1937 — Page 9
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Vagabond
FROM INDIANA
‘ERNIE PYLE
NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., April 24.—This
town is about 20 miles north of Pittsburgh, and so far as I can see it exists almost solely because of the Aluminum Co. of America.
One of the- Aluminum Co.’s biggest plants is: here. It employs around 8000 people, which must be about everybody in town plus a few relatives over the ridge. On the way up I asked the aluminum
> man to tell me something about the background of aluminum, and for goodness’ sake to make it simple. This is what he toid me: There is more aluminum tian any other metal in the earth’s surface. Iron is second. - But aluminum, despite its commonness, wasn’t even discovered until 1825. And it is always so intricately mixed up with other elements that after they discovered it they couldn’t find a way to separate more than a few lumps Mr. Pyle of it. And in 1879 a young man from Baltimore, in Paris on his honeymoon, bought his bride a pair of opera glasses. The jeweler offered to mount them either in platinum or aluminum, for the same price. The young man made a very bad mistake. He chose aluminum, which sells today for 20 cents a pound! Aluminum was discovered by a Dane. Researches on a cheap way to separate aluminum from other elements in the earth were carried on by French and German scientists for half a century. But they couldn't crack the nut. And then in 1836 it happened. In fact, it happened twice. A young student at Oberlin College, in Ohio, discovered a process for reducing aluminum by shooting electricity through the ore. It is the process used today, and it is the key to the whole aluminum industry. 2 an =»
Discoveries Made Simultaneously
JIS name was Charles Martin Hall. He made A ks discovery on Feb. 23, 1886. And in that same month, exactly the same process was discovered in France by a young man named Heroult. Neither knew of the other. Their processes were identical. Each was 22 years old at the time. Each became immensely rich. They never met until 1912, when Heroult came to America to see Hall given a medal for his great work. Both men died in 1914. Hall peddled his revolutionary discovery in vain for awhile. He almost became the traditional inventor with the seat of his pants out. But in 1888 he found help, and the Pittsburgh Reduction Co. was started. In 1907 it became the Aluminum Co. of America. Aluminum today ranks fifth in tonnage among all metals. It is used in everything from wrist watches to entire railroad trains; from whiskybottle caps to the mooring mast atop the Empire State Building. They've made 350 million pots and pans out of it. ) Aluminum, they say, is the most workable of all
metals. | 2 2 : ’
Aluminum Made From Bauxite
HE ore from which aluminum is made is called bauxite. The Aluminum |Co. gets all its ore from |Arkansas and from British Guiana. The Aluminum Co. ships this ore to four reduction |plants—at Alcoa, Tenn, Badin, N. C. and Massena and Niagara Falls, N. Y. It takes a lot of electricity to reduce the ore to aluminum, so the plants are built near waterpower.
After the ore is smelted and cast into “pigs,” it
is reshipped to the various fabricating plants, to be formed into a thousand things. There are nearly a dozen of these plants. The one here at New Kensington is one of the biggest.
Fy Mrs.Roosevelt's Day By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
ASHINGTON, PFriday—I drove my aunt, Mrs. David Gray, around Haines Point yesterday afternoon to enjoy what remains of the cherry blossoms. These double blooms, whieh come later, last much longer than the earlier ones around the basin. To my mind, however, the ones around the basin are more delicate and because of the reflection in the water are doubly beautiful. I think this season of blossoming trees with the ‘very light green of new leaves makes the whole countryside an enchanting spot. The dogwood and the apple blossoms are thrown into even greater relief by their green background and stand out better than the colored blossoms. I never can decide which I like best. I suppose the best way to do in this world is to enjoy everything which gives you pleasure and make no comparisons. After Mr. Forbes Morgan's funeral this morning, I hope to take a plane for New York in the early afternoon to get to the party to be given by the seniors of Todhunter School before it is completely over, then-I shall go to Hyde Park. I saw a headline iri this morning’s paper which interests me very much. Mr. J. Edgar Hoover has asked the press to help fight crime. For a long time I have felt that something might be done by the press along these lines. p I.remember a warden of a prison telling me that
the average young criminal whose intelligence might"
not be very high was particularly pleased when he mage the front pages of a newspaper. His concern was often not so much with his punishment as with the fact that he would be considered a “big shot.” I was also told the story of a boy who asked that he might go to the chair walking on his hands, so that the press would record a new and novel way of approaching an execution. I think sometimes the recording of each act which has gone into the perpetration of some crime simply given new suggestions to less fertile minds. I realize that crimes are “news,” but I wonder whether they could not be very briefly recorded. detail as possible were left out, it might be easier for the arm of the law to proceed in unsolved crimes. .
New Books
PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS—
T= distinction of having three plays running in _ New York at the same time belongs just now to Makwell Anderson. HIGH TOR (Anderson House) is his latest to open on Broadway. It is a fantasticrealistic farce-romance, told with charm and freedom
' that are refreshing and original.
The play concerns Van Van Dorn and his inherited bit of mountain, High Tor. In the background are the ghosts of the Dutch crew who lost their ship 300 years ago, and who wait on the mountain for it to return and carry them to their homeland. The shark realtors who are scheming to buy High Tor, the gunmen who bring their loot to the mountain top to hide, and the half-drunk phantom philosopher, all seem quite as appropriate as the steam shovel excavating ground next to Van's beloved crag.
1 1 = =» =»
“rT HE steady lengthening of the life-span through modern medical research and public health service, furnishes a fresh challenge to make the added years a blessing and not a curse.” The Rev. Charles Courtenay has had his 87th birthday and is qualified to speak ON GROWING OLD GRACEFULLY (Macmillan). . Mr. Courtenay feels that since he has been put on the shelf he may as well make himself comfortable there and contribute to the happiness of others. He offers a practical course in everyday living, physical, mental, ang spiritual. Old age has its limitations, its privileges, and its duties; live one day at a time, never let another do for you what you can do for yourself,
~ find something museful to do, don’t attempt to mix with
the younger generation, keep interested in life and those around you, these are a few of the suggestions offered for an erect and dignified old age. 2 The book is a heartening, wise, and friendly guide, written for his own kind by an old man who has lived gamely and hopes to- die cheerfully,
So
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If as much -
: A i EA ni Ave ms GS NO
SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1937
FTE HORE SER DE LT
Entered as. Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.
SAVING LAND TO SAVE PEOPLE
Peace and Justice for Owner and Tenant Held Duty of States
This is the fifth and last section of the report of the President's Committee on Farm Tenancy.
S provisions concomitant with those set forth under the heading of recommendations Federal action, the committee recomffiends to the states measures to improve. lease contracts and land-lord-tenant relationships; to modify the taxation of farm lands, and to safeguard the civil liberties of
" tenants.
Although the Federal Government can-do much to improve conditions of tenant farmers, some of the most fruitful fields of endeavor are under the jurisdiction of state agencies. Much can be done to better the terms and conditions of leasing. Through regulation and education ténant-oper-ators can give greater security of tenure and opportunity to develop and improve their farms and participate in community activities. It is recommended, therefore, that the several states give consideration to legislation which might well include provisions such as the following: . _A. Agricultural leases shall be written. B. All improvements made by the tenant and capable of removal shall be removable by him at the termination of the lease. C. The landlord shall compensate the tenant for specified unexhausted improvements which ne does not remove at the time of quitting the holding, provided that
for certain types of improvements |
the prior consent of the landlord be obtained. D. The tenants shall compensate the landlord for any deterioration or damage due to factors over which the tenant has control, and the landlord shall be empowered to prevent continuance of serious wastage. / E. Adequate records shall “be kept of outlays for which either party will claim compensation. F. Agricultural ‘leases shall be terminable by either party only after due notice given at least six months in advance. G. After the first year payment shall be made for inconvenience or loss sustained by the other party by reason of termination of the lease without due cause. H. The landlord's lien shall be limited during emergencies such as a serious crop failure or sudden fall of prices where rental payments are not based upon a sliding scale. I. Renting a farm on which the dwelling does. not meet certain minimum housing and sanitary standards shall be a misdemeanor, though such requirements should be extremely moderate and limited to things primarily connected with health and sanitation such as sanitary outside toilets, screens, tight roofs and other reasonable stipulations. J. Landlord and tenant differences shall be settled by local boards of arbitration, composed of reasonable representatives of both landlords and tenants, whose decisions shall be subject to court review when considerable sums of money or problems of legal interpretation are invglved. Leasing provisions are strongly governed by: custom and frequently fail to become adjusted to changing systems of farming and farm practices. It is, therefore, recommended that state agencies, particularly the Agricultural Extension Service, co-operating with state and local representatives of the Farm
Security - Administration, inaugu- .
rate vigorous programs to inform landlords and tenants concerning methods of improving farm leases; and that state agricultural experiment stations ade-
{quately support research work to
adapt leases to various type-of-farming areas. Research=~is also needed on the technical application of compensation clauses. For all of these purposes more funds are required; both state and Federal Governments should make early and liberal appropri ations restricted specifically to work on improving tenant contracts. Little has yet been done in this field, and in many states little will be done without Federal contributions. It is recommenc=d that Federal grants be made to aid states in this work.
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GTATE agricultural research and extension services could be helpful in providing groups of tenants—as well. as other farm operators—with the benefit of intensive technical aid on the pay-ment-for-service basis successfully pioneered by the University of Illinois. In many areas such a program could be set up and paid for by co-operating groups of tenants,
* but in other areas it might not be
within reach of the poorer tenants unless the service is subsidized. One of the methods suggested for stimulating an increase in the number of family-size owner-op-erated farms is differential taxation favorable to such types of farms and farm ownership. | Local studies have shown that, in addition to the objective mentioned, such a policy may be justified by the fact that in some tax jurisdictions there is a tendency to assess family-size farms at a higher rate than larger properties. Preferential tax treatment could be effected only after classification of property. In a good many states classification could be accomplished only by constitutional amendment. During the past few years there has been agitation in various parts of the United States for a policy of complete or partial tax
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/
for
exemption of small homesteads. At least seven states have already adopted the principle, and bills or resolutions on the subject were introduced in at least 30 states during the 1935 sessions of state legislatures. The policy of differential taxation of farm lands has been employed for many. years in Australian commonwealths. ” # ® HE merits and demerits of such policies depend so largely on the particular provisions of the legislation and the special circumstances of:the individual state. that the committee does not care to make a recommendation. Differential in favor of small farm “properties owned by their operators is an indirect method of attacking problems of tenancy and insufficient as a substitute for more direct measures. Since uniform adoption by all the states at. an early date is improbable, it cannot properly be
This Is Home for This Brown County Child.
urged as a nation-wide means of solving the problem of farm tenancy, but in particular states, if associated with more positive measures of land reform, the steady pressure of differential taxation might exert an influence in favor of family-size farms operated by owners. : Within the past few years tenants, croppers and farm laborers have organized to increase their bargaining power. these organizations assert that they have been frequently denied the rights of peaceful assembly guaranteed them under the Constitution. They assert further that they have been subjected to physical violence and that some have been forced to flee“for their lives. We have not had opportunity to investigate these charges at first hand. But frequent press reports of violence in some areas where croppers or migratory laborers make up a considerable portion
Flynn Hits Obscurity of Treasury's Statements
By JOHN T. FLYNN Times Special Writer
EW YORK, April 24.—To the reader of newspapers the President’s message about his
budgets and his relief funds means nothing. To the more constant follower of Federal finance, who goes
|-behind newspaper reports and looks
at Treasury statements, the whole subject is made extremely difficult to follow by the method used by the President in reporting his financial management. For instance, if you look at the daily Treasury statement of relief expenditures issued April 16, you see the folowing item: “Total expenditures, $5,951,958,878.66.” © You have a right to trust that. But if you have an adding machine and a healthy distrust of Treasury statements, you will see that it means something very different. The figure should read: ‘Total expenditures, $6,035,234,121.27.” This is over 44 million dollars larger than the sum put down. / Why the difference? It is arrived at by means of a strangely indefensible device. The Government has outstanding various large sums due from farmers, banks, railroads —loans made during the depression. In the course of the year certain of
these loans have been paid. But to subtract from the actual expenditures the loans repaid and then put down the result as “expenditures” is hardly good financial reporting.
= ” ” = N view of this and certain other practices in Treasury reports, it is very difficult to check the President's statements about his budget plans. But this fact has a very important bearing on one of the statements of the President about his 1938 budget. As to that he declares that he will be able to balance it by holding down expenditures and by increasing Treasury receipts by liquidating certain assets of the Treasury. : This means that the President will make an effort to collect sums due the Federal Government on various kinds of loans made by it. This is entirely proper procedure. When this is done, however, these moneys will be cash assets. The President can use these to pay Government bills, to meet expenditures. But he certainly cannot be permitted to deduct from his expenditures the sums which are paid off with these assets.
RARE VITAMIN FILM
Science Service Photo.
Rare indeed is this enlarged photograph of Vitamin BI, found in
whole cereals, green vegetables, fruit, milk and yeast..
Associate
Professors W. A. Hynes and Leo Yanowski of Fordham University’s chemistry department took the picture with a two-minute phn
by reflected light at a magnification of 20 diameters.
Lack of Vitamin
Bl in the diet causes nervous and intestinal’malfunctions, loss of appe-
tite and weight,
. ¥ oy
Members of |
of including
“of the rural population, indicate
that such allegations cannot be ignored. A Federal commission, appointed to investigate conditions among migratory laborers in the Imperial Valley, found substantiating evidence of such practices. : The committee strongly recommends that states guarantee to
-these groups and enforce the
rights of peaceful assembly and of organization to achieve their legitimate objectives.
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T also recommends repeal of state laws which make it a misdemeanor to quit a contract while in debt, since such laws abridge civil libertier of tenants and tend to nullify Federal anti-peonage-acts.
In making these recommenda-
tions, however, the committee is not unaware that in many cases landlords and employers, as well as farm tenants, croppers and laborers, have grievances. Among disadvantaged groups there are not a few individuals who have neither a responsible attitude in the fulfillment of their obligations ner any property that can be attached for nonfulfillment.
For the protection of all interests, it is recommended that the committees of arbitration suggested above be called upon to settle disputes and promote better relationships. In a nation composed of 48 states, the Federal Government necessarily must play an important role in aiding and encour-
.aging state action. Such assist-
ance is vital if reasonable unanimity and uniformity are to be achieved in the development of adequate programs for land reform. The committee recommends, therefore, that the Farm Security Administration be given authority and necessary funds to enable it to aid state governments in drafting proper regulatory measures regarding tenant. contracts and to stimulate and co-operate in state research and extension work aimed at improving lease contracts.
2 #” ®
T is obvious that in the extension of the new ownership and rehabilitation policies recommended above, the Federal Government has a direct interest not only in encouraging better lease provisions and improved landlordtenant relationships, but also in assuring itself that the basic legis= lation of the states makes possible the accomplishment of the objectives of its own broad program. As recommended above, therefore, adequate funds should be appropriated by the Federal Government to the land grant colleges, and universities to enable them to co-operate. It is recommended also that in selected local areas consideration be given to trying the experiment improvements in leases among the conditions of benefit payments under the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act. Improvement of existing leases is one important manner of encouraging soil conservation. If the experiment succeeds, its extension on a broad scale may be worthwhile. Ignorance, no less than poverty and instability, forces many tenant and other disadvantaged families into an inferior relationship to the community. Ignorance, as well as insecurity, is often responsible for failure to adopt enlightened methods of farm operation, particularly of self-help to improve the family’s mode of life. Education can go far toward enabling these poorer farm groups to apply family labor intelligently in improving home, school and community—by repairing, clean-
ing, and decorating rooms and buildings; repairing and making furniture and equipment; plant-
§ § Po.
—R. A. Photo.
ing public grounds and home dooryards; properly selecting, preparing and serving home-pro-duced food. ; : = 2 ® T is strongly recommended that the rural educational systems of the various states be more definitely aimed at providing the kind of training needed by adult members of disadvantaged farm families as well as children.
At the same time, the needs of the children should not be neglected. The elementary rural schools in many areas are such as to offer little opportunity to children of low-income families.
Tax bases are inadequate; school terms are short; attendance legislation is not well enforced; teachers are poorly trained and even more poorly paid; too often methods of instruction are routine and ill calculated to equip the children to improve their environment. This committee prefers to leave to education specialists the question as to the proper contribution of the Federal Government to a better equalization of educational advantages. : A number of considerations appear to justify substantial Federal aid. The classes of farm families now below. the margin of security are a principal source of the nation’s population, by reason of the high birth rates prevailing among them, The congregation is given areas of large numbers of such families frequently results in a collective poverty that is a primary obstacle to the provision, from local resources alone, of adequate educational advantages. No fundamental attack on the problem of the disadvantaged classes of farmers would be complete without inclusion of measures to improve their general level of health. - » ”» ” O a large extent this is a matter of education in improved dietary practices and personal hygiene, supplemented by more adequate medical service, and more ample provision ‘of clinics and public - health nursing. The grouping of counties into public health districts appears to be a promising way of improving‘ such services. It is urged that adequate funds be made available under the Social Security Act to take care of the health needs of rural communities, especially in areas of excessive nancy. In the Wh ink pages the comhittee has made recommendation for action both by the Federal Government and by the govern=ments of the several states. Sturdy rural institutions beget self-reliance and independence of judgment, dependency and incapacity to bear the responsibilities of citizenship. Over wide areas, the vitality of American rural life is daily being. sapped by systems of land tenure that waste human and natural resources alike. Security of tenure is essential to the development of better farm homes and better rural communities. Vigorous and sustained action is required for: restoring the impaired resources on whose conservation continuance of the democratic process in this country to no small extent depends. The final emphasis of this report is consequently on the necessity for action, action to enable increasing numbers of farm families to enter into sound relationships with the land they till and the communities in which they live.
A Lowen MALT 1a
Second Section
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PAGE 9
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Our Town
HE same letter that brought me news about Chris Bernloehr, the lamplighter, had a lot more to say about Irish Hill. You'd be surprised to know how news about the Hill has ‘been piling up since St. Pat rick’s Day, when I ran a piece about the place. Nearly all the letters agree, by implication at least, that I didn’t do more than scratch the sure face. To tell the truth, I didn't try to because if I've learned any=thing about running a column like this, it is that nobody—not even I—can be helpful about of such scope as Irish Of course, that is why I should have forgotten about Edward Eckel and the Griffin sisters. To talk about Irish Hill and not mention them is like going to Rome and not seeing the Pope. Old-timers agree that the sun Mr. Scherrer shone brightest on Irish Hill the : day two pretty colleens arrived to live with their brother, Mr. Griffin. They buried one of the col= leens not so long ago, and there wasn't a soul that day but what saw the same extraordinary beauty that was hers when she came to live in Indianapolis, She was the mother of Chief of Police Morrissey. As for the colleen’s brother, he turned out to be the father of Patsy Griffin, the priest who now Shevherds the souls of the Church of the Associae ion. ” ” » Three Boys Drowned HE saddest day to come to Irish Hill was Aug. 19, 1891, when Pogues Run went on one of its cruel rampages. Irish Hill broke down that- night when it learned that three of its jolliest little boys had been drowned. George Eckel, a mere youngster and a hero if there ever was one, recoverd one of the bodies under the East St. bridge. Next day his own little brother, 9-year-old Oliver Eckel, was found swept under the viaduct at Washington and Noble Sts. It took Irish Hill years to get over it. The Eckel boys were sons of Edward Eckel who came to Irish Hill by way of Tennessee. For 40 years he was the gunsmith of “Uncle” Sammie Beck, who with his son Joseph, ran a shop at 86 (old style) E. Washington St. Some day I'll have to tell you about the old gunsmiths of Indianapolis and the amazing marksmanship of Mr. Beck’s customers, because of alt the apocryphal tales handed down, they are the tallest,
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Worked at Arsenal
DWARD ECKEL spent the last years of his life taking care of the guns out at the Arsenal, where Tech High School now stands. And here I am caught with only time enough to tell you that Jimmy Sexton and Ownie Bush were delivered to Irish Hill by way of Mrs. Jackman, the nurse who knew more about the mirth and pathos of the old place than anybody else.
: / . ; A Woman's View By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON ’
KNOW now how Jack felt when he had climbed up the beanstalk and arrived in the Giant's country. Precisely the same awe that filled us—the pretty girl reporter and myself who were conducted about by two gracious gentlemen when we entered the Republic Co. steel mill at Cleveland. Inside the gates everything was solemn and brown and gigantic. ‘Near us, several engines went bumping and snorting about, seeming in a huff over something. Ahead loomed the enormous blast furnaces and the gargantuan sheds where fires glowed, and the acres of machinery. The spaces between the tow= ° ering structures appeared like miles of tunneled avenues. As a matter of fact they were miles, because the whole thing covers more than 100 -acres, even though we were assured it was not one of their bigger plants. Thirty-five hundred men were working there that ‘day, but they were undiscovered in the vast dis tances surrounding us. The place seemed almost deserted. Occasionally away off we could see a little figure moving, like some lost naughty child in a fairy-tale witch’s world. There was machinery everywhere. It crawled under the ground at our feet and
hung over us high in the sky. We went inside. In a place that looked as big as a dirigible hangar only three or four men worked. The gigantic boiler was before us. Suddenly its great door was opened and out poured a volcano of sparks followed by a slow-moving river of molten gold. Beautie ful, never-to-be-forgotten sight! Down it rushed, bubbling, liitle flames dancing on its surface; down through the crooked trough to cascade finally into the enormous vat below which looked like nothing so much as a giant’s porridge bowl. In other sheds the reheated metal appeared in huge, golden, bottle-shaped blocks, which, cooling quickly, turned to tender rose and then to a slate gray. We watched while the great cranes lifted them about, while the wheels and pulleys and belts carried them to and fro and the machines pounded and flattened and elongated them. Driving force; terrifying power; steel! This was a man’s world. Here was something with which woman has had nothing to do and where the very atmosphere is hostile to her. I felt again the timidity I experienced once when as a very little girl I sneaked into the bg : :r shop and was pierced by the glances of strang_ _nales—and father was not among them. Men and steel. They belong to each other. And
Beginning Monday—""The Reservoir of Beauty," a serial on models, their -lives and ambitions.
seeing them together gives one a new respect for their combined strength. :
* Your Health
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
. Editor, American Medical Assn. Journal UBERCULOSIS is caused by a germ first dee scribed by the famous bacteriologist, Roger Koch. We know that there are at least four different kinds of tubercle germs. One kind affects human beings primarily; another, cattle; the third affects birds, and the remaining kind cold-blooded animals such as frogs
and turtles. The germs that affect cattle are most like those
that attack man, but the latter are more dangerous to & human being than to domestic animals, just as the type that infects cattle is more dangerous to domestic animals than it is to man. The cattle type, however, may infect human be= ings, especially children. Indeed, the bovine or cattle form of tuberculosis is known to be largely responsible for tuberculosis of the bones, joints, and lymph glands of children who, in the past, have been infected by drinking milk from infected cows. Now that this has been recognized as a menace to health, it is customary to control milk supplies by subjecting cattle to the tuberculin test and by elim=inating from herds cows found to have the disease. In Denmark, which has been most successful in suppressing tuberculosis among cattle, all animals are tested with tuberculin. Those found to be negative are kept in one place and those found to be positive in another. Calves from cows which react positively ‘are removed immediately after birth and reared on milk of healthy cows. All cows with tuberculosis of the udder are killed and the farmer is reimbursed in an amount equivalent to one-fourth of the meat value of the animal. The cattle found on examination to be tuberculous also ars killed. In this way it is possible to stamp out tue berculosis entirely as it exists among cattle.
am atrendd
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