Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1937 — Page 10
PAGE 10
Slain Diplomat
} | ministrative
J. Theodore Marriner
91ST ENVOY DIES IN LINE OF DUTY
Last Similar Incident Was Killing of Consul in Persia in 1924. HERBERT LITTLE Times Special Writer
Oct. 13
Theodore
By The Mareneral at Beirut
of Amerpath
WASHINGTON of J
11 Robert Teheran
ureaq
iala disappeare othe diplomat 5 including Persia another the Cyclops The disappeared
one 1¢ during the World who went down on cyclops, a naval ¢ with several hundred men, leaving no trace of fate, in June. 1918 On it was Consul General Alfred L. M. Gottschalk, en route to his Rio de Janeiro post Joel Barlow, appointed minister to France in 1811, traveled to meet Napoleon, became invelved in the retreat from Moscow, and died of cold and privation. The only other victims of an assassin, besides Mr. Marriner and Mr ris F. Fudger, consul Marta, Colombia, who was murdered in 1826 at Bogota The consul and vice consul at Martinique, West Indies, were killed in the 1902 eruption of Mt. Pelee. The 1923 Yokohama earthquake Killed the consul and vice consul, And the consul at Messina, died in the 1908 earthquake.
‘MATURATES SCHOOL’ IS TO MEET SATURDAY
on the torped
ler
11S
at Santa
The “School of Maturates,” an or- | ganization designed to brighten the |
lives of Indianapolis persons over 60 years of age, will meet at 10 a. m. Saturday in the Y. W. C. A. A dinner is to be given
at the
Y. W. C. A. Friday night in honor of Dr, William A. McKeever, Okla- | Mr. |
homa City, movement founder. McKeever will address a meeting in Hollenbeck Hall at 8 p. m
6 SAILORS DIE IN FIRE
BAYTOWN, Tex., Oct. 13 (U. P) --Fire that flashed across the deck of the tanker Paraguana at loading docks here late vesterdav killed six men and injured 12. four of them critically. The dead were five Venezuelan deck hands and a Chinese steward,
Imbrie, was Har- |
Italy,
Friday. |
the
|
Roosevelt Text Continued
(Continued from Page Eight)
[lieve that democratic processes (need be dangerously slower, For many years we have all [known that the Executive and AdDepartments are a higgledy-piggledy patchwork of duplicate responsibilities and overlapping powers. The reorganization of this government machinery which I proposed to the Congress last winter does not conflict with (the principle of the democratic | progress, as some people say. I only makes that process work more efficiently. On my recent trip many people have talked to me about the millions of men and women and children who still work at insufficient wages and overlong hours. American industry has searched | the outside world to find new marKets—but it can create on its very doorstep the biggest and most permanent market it has ever seen. It needs the reduction of trade barriers to improve its foreign markets, but it should not overlook the chance to reduce the domestic trade barrier right here
without waiting for any treaty, A |
few more dollars a week in wages, a better distribution of jobs with a shorter working day will overnight make millions of our lowest-paid workers actual buvers {of billions of dollars of industrial and farm products That increased volume of ought to lessen other cbst of production so much that even a con- | siderable increase in labor costs can be absorbed without imposing higher prices on the consumer, I am a firm believer in fully adequate pay for all labor. But right now I am most greatly concerned in increasing the pay of the lowest-paid labor—those who are most numerous consuming
sales
MIT
right away |
almost |
{ gether,
group but who today do not make
enough to maintain a decent standliving or to buv food. and and the other necessary to keep our factories and fully running. at farsighted businessunderstand and agree 1 this policy. They agree also no one section of the country permanently benefit itself, or rest of the country, by maintaining standards of wages hours that are far inferior to other sections of the country,
ard of
clothes
the
"Mm already
the
DECENT PROFIT APPROVED
articles |
and |
Most businessmen, big and little. |
know that their government neither them out of business them from earning a decent profit In spite of the alarms of a few who seek to regain control of American life, most businessmen, big and little. know that their government is trying to make property more
| wants to put
nor to prevent
|
secure than |
| ever before by giving every family |
|a real chance to have a property stake in the nation. | Whatever danger there may be to the property and profits of the
| many, if there be any danger, comes |
not from government's attitude to- | ward business but from restraints | now imposed upon business by pri- | | vate monopolies and financial oli- | [garchies, The average businessman knows that a high cost of living is [a great deterrent to business and | that business prosperity depends | much upon a low price policy which | encourages the widest possible con- | sumption. As one of the country’s leading economists recently said— “The continuance of business recov- | ery in the United States depends far | more upon business policies, busi- | ness pricing policies, than it does on anything that may be done, or not done, in Washington.” Our competitive system is, of course, not altogether competitive, | Anybody who buys any large quan-|
tity of manufactured goods knows China and Japan.
this, whether it be the Government | or an individual buyer.
been adequate to check | the growth of many monopolies. Whether or not they might have | been adequate originally, interpretation by the courts and the difficulties and delays of legal procedure | have now definitely limited their effectiveness. We are already studying how to strengthen our antitrust laws in order to end monopoly—not to hurt but to free the legitimate business of the nation. I have touched briefly on these | important subjects, which, taken tomake a program for the immediate future, and I know you will realize that to attain it, legis- | iation is necessary. As we plan today for the creation of ever higher standards of | living for the people of the United | States, we are aware that our plans may be most seriously affected by | events in the world outside our | horders. By a series of trade agreements, we have been attempting to recre- | ate the trade of the world, the trade of the world that plays so impor- | tant a part in our domestic pros- | perity; but we know that if the! world outside our borders falls into the chaos of war, world trade will be completely disrupted. Nor can we view with indifference the destruction of civilized values throughout the world. We | seek peace, not only for our gen- | eration but also for the generation | of our children, We seek for them, our children, | the continuance of world civilization in order that their American civilization may continue to be in-| vigorated, helped by ments of civilized men and women in all the rest of the world. I want our great democracy to be wise enough to realize that aloofness from war is not promoted by un-| awareness of war,
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| situation
We have | example of one of the antitrust laws, to be sure, but they (to follow in
| day by Roger L. ( engineer from New York.
In a world of |
| |
|
mutual suspicions, peace must be affirmatively reached for. It cannot Just be wished for. And it cannot
Just be waited for. | |
SEEKS CHINA SOLUTION
We have now made known our willingness to attend a conference | of the parties to the Nine-Power | Treaty of 1922—the Treaty of Wash- | ington, of which we are one of the | original signatories. The purpose of this conference will be to seek by agreement a solution of the present in China. In efforts to find that solution, it is our purpose to co-operate with the other signatories to this treaty, including Such co-operation would be an possible paths our search for means toward peace throughout the whole world. | The development of civilization and of human welfare is based on | the acceptance by individuals of certain fundamental decencies in their relations with each other. And | equally the development of peace in the world is dependent similarly on the acceptance by nations of certain | fundamental decencies in their relations with each other. Ultimately, I hope each nation will accept the fact that violations of these rules of conduct are an inJury to the well-being of all nations. Meanwhile, remember that from 1913 to 1921, I personally was fairly close to world events, and in that | period, while I learned much of | what to do, I also learned much of what not to do. The common sense, the intelligence of the people of America agree with my statement that “America hates war. America hopes | for peace. Therefore, America actively engages in the search for! peace.”
OLD ROMANS FEARED WOMEN DRIVERS, T00
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 13 (U. | P.)).—The tendency of men to con- | sider all women poor drivers is nothing new, More than 2000 vears Romans passed a law women from owning chariots. This fact
ago, the prohibiting or driving | was revealed |
| at the National Safety Congress to- |
Morrison, traffic | |
VOLUME X
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
( has 149.4; Denmark, 136.3: Finland, |
| mark of I the
| trends of employment and unem- | ployment and not as accurate meas | | | urements,
FALL JOB LEVEL
ous countries, as compared with | treasurer, is
those for the corresponding quarter
of 1936 are as follows:
Third Quarter 1936 1937 217,001 178.081 | 57,001 43.010 | 100,838 86.7 4 997 22,305 5076 508.081
IN 13 COUNTRIES
Australia Belgium Bulgaria | Canada Chile Czechoslovakia Danzig Denmark Estonia Finland Prance Germany . Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Geneva Labor Office Finds Employment in U. S. Up 10 Per Cent.
GENEVA, Oct. 13 (U. P) —"The | wheels of industry are rapidly abe | sorbing the majority of the unem- Haye ployed in virtually all countries. | Irish Free State This was revealed in the unemploy- | Japan ment statistics compiled by the Ine | Naiheriahds ternational Labor Office for the Norway . ~ . am 0Olf third quarter of 1937. Rama In 13 Sweden people | Yoroslaend were in Using the vardstick, Africa has
29.656 3.940 1,3! 5,713 57,045 52,501
countries, there are employed now than there the hey-day era of 1929 1929 compilations as a | the Union of South 132.7 per cent; Estonia
more
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115.5: Yugoslavia, 114.5; Great Britain, 113.2; Hungary, 107.2: Italy. 106.1; Norway, 107.0; Canada. 100.7: Japan, 1278; Sweden, 119.3, and Latvia, 116.8, U. S. Gain 10 Per Cent The United States shows a 10 per cent gain over 1936 with a | 97.1. The percentages for | remaining countries include: | Belgium, 96.8; Poland, 91.1; France, | 80.7: The Netherlands, 81.4: Switzer- | land, 79.0, and Luxemburg, 78.2. In comparison with 1936, the
Do smokers enjoy ERATE Camels more because Cn of hee Der. Fn Camel spends pit o he rien ah [PANG MPNIOY | [FPA finer tobaccos?
LEI Ee]
Office cautioned that since method of compiling them varies| from country to country, they can | only be treated as showing the |
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“LONGEVITY CIGARS” SMOKED | PITTSBURGH, Oct. 13 (U, P.) Puffing cigars is the secret of longe TOPS | 92 Two Quarters Compared [vity as far as 86-year-old Richard | The figure given for the vari- | W. Thompson, assistant to the eity concerned, been smoking for 74 years.
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13, 1087
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