Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1938 — Page 10

ET he Tadianapolis Times

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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1938

. BAD SMELLS IN WPA ADMIN ISTRATOR HARRY HOPKINS has protested loud and often against charges of irregularities in the WPA. His attitude has been that of one unable to conceive the possibility that an organization with such humanitarian purposes as WPA might be perverted by the political ma“chines which control it. That has been his attitude with regard to the Alben "W. Barkley machine in Kentucky which helped to renominate the Senate Majority Leader; to the Josh Lee machine “in Oklahoma which helped to renominate Senator Elmer Thomas: to the Guffey machine active in Pennsylvania. "And his method of combating criticism has been ‘‘whitewash” investigations of WPA by WPA. But at last the story of what is going on inside the ~ WPA is being told by someone other than newspaper report- | ers and opposition politicians. At last, we think, Mr. Hopkins “will stop charging personal bias. Indeed, most of the unsavory details are being brought to light by WPA’s own investigators, working under the direction of district at"torneys. : : Yesterday in New Jersey, where WPA is controlled by the Frank Hague machine, a Federal Grand Jury indicted ..16 corporations and 32 persons on charges of conspiring :to defraud the WPA of approximately $250,000 in the pur“chase of sand and gravel for WPA projects. ° That action followed on the heels of even more sensa‘tional indictments in New Mexico, where a Federal Grand ‘Jury charged 73 persons with law violations in connection with WPA.

2 ” ” ” ” 8 N New Mexico the WPA has long been operated as the ~~ personal political machine of Senator Dennis Chavez. “Among those indicted were the Senator’s secretary and -geveral of the Senator's relatives. The charges included ‘intimidation of WPA employees, shake-downs for political contributions, and diversion of WPA funds, materials and labor services to personal uses. : The New Mexico grand jurors, whom the presiding ‘judge properly commended as ‘‘good American citizens,’ ‘reported that— “The extent to which the avowed ends and aims of the -Works Progress Administration program have been impaired and defeated through selfish aims and ambitions of individuals entrusted with its administration, or who sought political advantages, has amazed your Grand Jury.” WPA investigators were prowling around in New Mexico in September of last year and in April of this year, and nothing came of their prowling. It was quite natural, therefore, for Senator Chavez’ political associates to think that Mr. Hopkins didn’t mean what he had said about no politics in WPA. And for his failure to convince them of his sincerity, Mr. Hopkins cannot escape blame. Incidentally, Mr. Hopkins might have spared the WPA this scandal had he joined last spring in the efforts of the other New Mexico Senator—Senator Hatch—to pass a law which would have left no doubts as to the impropriety of mixing politics with WPA. But Mr. Hopkins was not among the sponsors of that legislation, and his pal, Senator Chavez, ‘was one of its most vociferous opponents.

‘NOT THE ANSWER T would seem elementary that any enterprise that has poured $50,000,000 into the city during the last decade would be rather tenderly cared for by all downtown interests. But what has Indianapolis done to make it more pleasant and more convenient for convention visitors to come here in 1939 and future years? Improved existing meeting places downtown? Built a new auditorium in the downtown area? Not at all. True, the State has approved construction of a million-dollar new coliseum at the State Fair Grounds, roughly four miles from the business and hotel district. That is a laudable project for State Fair purposes and for some other events, but thoughtful people are coming to realize that the proposed arena is not the answer to Indianapolis’ growing convention needs. Sooner or later this city will realize that the only real solution is a downtown auditorium sufficiently large to attract major conventions, if not the very largest, and easily accessible to visitors. If it does not take this precaution to insure its position as a natural convention center, it will find itself running an unhappy second to smaller but more alert communities.

SOME REFORMS DESTROY DONALD RICHBERG, speaking the other night in opposition to the Patman bill to tax chain stores out of “existence, said Sonny well worth pondering. It was this: “Somehow or other poor people are the principal victims of reform and racketeering.” Abolition of chain stores would improve the profitmaking opportunities of smaller retailers and jobbers, said ‘Mr. Richberg, but would result in boosting retail prices about 10 per cent. To the 12 million American families

with less than $30 a week to spend, he added, that would.

have the same effect as a 10 per cent wage cut. Congressman Patman doesn’t talk about these things. He talks about breaking up monopolies and equalizing opportunities. There probably is much in what he says, just as there is much in what Mr. Richberg says. But it occurs to us that this issue is one that ought not to be disposed of hurriedly. We have now in existence -an official body known ‘as the Temporary National Economic Committee. It is conducting exhaustive investigations into ‘our financial, industrial and commercial systems, with the view of recommending legislation. The committee was created by Congress to study precisely such problems as this. Before we choose up sides on this issue, let jit for the committee's findings

Fair Erouah

By Westbrook Pegler

Open Season on Sunday Drivers To Bag a Creeper and Nonsignaler.

EW YORK, Oct. 22.—I forgot to -tell you about the hunting last Sunday, the first day of legal shooting of Sunday .drivers. After all these years of protection the game was plentiful along practically all the roads, and the highway police interfered only to settle disputes such as the time when I got a fine

of cars on a narrow, winding road, and another hunt-

er claimed him, : I couldn't blame the other sportsman for wanting credit for the kill, considering that we fired almost simultaneously, but the trooper decided that the honor belonged to me, and the other claimant very courteously offered his congratulations, saying, “I had had my eye on that creeper for years, and I suppose I was overanxious. “He wrecked a friend of mine on a curve near hear one Sunday several years ago. My friend was trying to go somewhere on .an important errand, and this creeper was poking along, blocking traffic with at least 20 cars behind him. “Finally my friend reached a position just behind him and made several efforts to honk him over and pass him. But when my friend would try to pass, the creeper would step on it until they would come to another hill or curve, where he would be forced to fall back. 8 ” ® FTER nine miles of this my friend took a desperate chance on a curve, met another car and was wrecked. His back was broken, his wife's face was terribly mutilated and two persons in the oncoming car were hurt. “So, naturally, you see, I figured him to be my creeper. However, the pleasure is almost as great as though I had got him myself.” There was a lull in luck for some time after that. But along toward noon there came a fine specimen, steering with his right hand and with his left hand out the window holding onto the roof of his car. This one was not a creeper but a nonsignaler, and I blew him through when he came to a turn-off and swung far over to the left side of the road to make a right-hand turn. I naturally thought that he was turning left and started to pass on his right, so when he turned right I let him have it. EJ 2 os A Norn hunter got an interesting specimen, a buck riding along, wabbling all over a busy highway at about 20 miles an hour, with his right hand around a doe, who was almost in his lap. There were half a dozen hunters strung out behind him, all anxious to make the kill. The one who got him was in an oncoming car in the other lane. He sized up the situation in a quick glimpse and knocked off the game right under the very eyes of those who were edging along in pursuit, but there was no rancor whatever. They all got out and congratulated the lucky sportsman. There were a few speeders in the bag, but not many, for the game around here consists more of creepers, one-handers and nonsignalers. Those that happened to be out last Sunday were almost exterminated, but, of course, all of them were out, and there is no reason to fear there will be any lack of sport on the annual open Sunday for legal shooting next fall. There has been some protest over the “slaughter,” as some people call it, but it was pointed out that such drivers themselves cause terrible slaughter all

’ |:year long and that it was in the interests of human-

ity to reduce their numbers by one day’s legal shooting every year.

Business

By John T. Flynn

Somebody Has to Pay for Kansas' 50-Cent Wheat—It May Be McGill.

ODGE CITY, Kas., Oct. 22.—As matters stand in Kansas now it looks very much as if another New Deal Senator is slated for retirement. That is Senator George McGill. It is difficult to appraise accurately the ingredients of the sentiment which flourishes now in this state. Of course, in the first place must be put 50-cent wheat. You can hear arguments about what farmers are actually being paid in cash for their wheat but I saw farmers paid 50 cents and others have told me they have been paid as low as 40 cents for wheat which cost them 37 cents a bushel to get to the elevator--37 cents actual cash. When wheat is 50 cents in Kansas, it's somebody’s fault. In 1932 it was Hoover's. Now the only one to blame is the Administration, But it happens that Senator McGill was coauthor of the Pope-McGill bill—the present farm act. However, one does not find a feeling of angry bitterness about the Administration. They merely say that after six years they are hardly any better off than they were in 1932. That, perhaps, is not entirely true. It is also probably not the fault of the Administration. But the farmer judges his rulers by results. Fifty-cent wheat is a result somebody is going to have to pay for. .

‘Returning to the Reservation

Also they are not by any means enthusiastic about the present farm act, particularly in eastern Kansas. Out here they are complying with it more, but there is no enthusiasm for it. But another thing has happened. These farmers are Republicans who have been off the reservation. They are drifting back. There is a sort of ground-sweil noticeable here and no one can mistake it, Whether it will be enough to sweep McGill out of the Senate is, of course, still a matter of speculation. But at this point the weight of political opinion is that Clyde Reed, McGill's opponent, has a decided edge over him. Democratic Governor Huxman, who has done a good job here, seems to have been caught in this ground-swell. Of course the election is nearly three weeks off and the Democrats are moving heaven and earth to allay the very obvious farm discontent—some say Secretary Wallace's recent statement about “dumping” surplus commodities on the American poor is part of this. Unless they succeed, Kansas will be lost to the Democrats this year.

A Woman's Viewpoint

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

NOTED magazine writer sobs for several pages about the tragedy of middle-aged wives who find it impossible to hold their husbands. She reminds us, tearfully, that, although ugly men are loved

for their ruggedness, a woman lacking good looks in her forties or fifties is simply out of luck. Pish, tush and pshaw! A stroll down Main St. or a visit to any woman’s club would cheer her up, for beautiful middle-aged women are as scarce as hen’s teeth. Our incurably romantic natures, coupled with the propaganda of the cosmeticians, have overemphasized the advantages of physical charms in winning and keeping a man’s love. Nine times out of ten the suggestion is mere exaggeration, for beauty lies always in the eye of the beholder. Hence, the grocer’s clerk sees in plain Mary Jones, his current cutie, enough loveliness to endow a bevy of movie stars, just as the overplump husband visions his Gracie as she used to be when they were holding hands on a park bench in the moonlight. If his Gracie has been reasonably tolerant and good-natured you may be sure his love for her has deepened since the days of the park bench. When we charge that middle-aged wives have a hard time holding their husbands, we imply that middle-aged husbands are constantly on the hunt for new heart throbs—and surely most men are too smart for that. In the first place, the average one is very busy nowadays trying to earn a living, and in the second, he likes his creature comforts. In short, he’s not half so romantic or gallant as he’s cracked up to be. And for real heartwarming romance, nothing can

beat the affection, which exists between a middle-aged usband ?

Westbrook Takes Advantage of iis

buck in the act of creeping at the head of a long line |

Raked Up More Than the Leaves!

—By Talburt

I wholly

The Hoosier Forum

disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.

A SLOW DRIVER DEFENDS HIS STYLE OF MOTORING By A Taxpayer As a taxpayer on property as well as a payer of all the taxes it costs to own an automobile, I strongly kick at what those wiseheads said to that traffic meeting as to the slow driver. I work all week and on Sunday like to take my wife and children out and enjoy a ride in the country. Can you show me where the law says 1 must drive 60 miles an hour because some fool thinks he has got to go that fast since his car is built for that speed? He has no more Tight on the road than I have. Anyone knows that to drive more than 30 miles an hour you should attend strictly to safe driving and I do not call that enjoying your Sunday drive with your family. They will never stop the reckless killing until they take the selfish idea

ways has the right of way and is always careful and it is always the other fellow’s fault. ” ” 2

SAYS SPAIN’'S WAR WOULD END IF FOREIGNERS LEFT By Agapito Rey, Bloomington

The same sinister diplomats who tore up a friendly nation at Munich have been trying for some time to work their wiles on the Spanish people. For more than two years England has maintained a Nonintervention Committee with the sole purpose of denying the legitimate Spanish Government the right to buy war materials abroad so Italy and Germany could ravage the country unmolested. The invading army of Italy alone rose to more than 100,000. In addition, 80,000 savage Moors were brought over from Africa to “save Christian civilization in Spain.” Not, only did ‘England nod to all these flagrant breaches of the nonintervention pledge, but even France winked at the recruiting of Moors for Spain in her Afriean possessions. German and Italian aviators were so efficient and thorough in wiping out defenseless cities that early this year England thought the Spanish people were about ready to drop to their knees to avoid annihilation. So England hastened to conclude a treaty with Italy. This treaty was to pe put into effect as soon as Italy withdrew from Spain, which she promised to do when she had won the war. This treaty was signed in April, but after all these months while the foreign invaders conquered considerable territory they are no nearer winning the war than they were two years ago. This resistance of the Spanish people exasperates the foreign vultures. Now Italy and England are trying to work out some scheme at the expense of the Spanish people. It

out of the driver’s head that he al-

(Times readers are -invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make your letter short, so all can have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)

seems that Italy is going to show her “good faith” through a token withdrawal of her legions in Spain. This will consist of a few hundred sick and disabled soldiers. When that is done, the Anglo-Italian treaty will go into effect. Gen. Franco, Mussolini's puppet in Spain, will be granted belligerent rights and the foreign. navies will try to starve the Spanish people into submission. The Spanish rebellion was planned with the aid of Italy and Germany in 1934. They wanted naval and military bases in Spain to be used against France and England in case of war, When the army actually revolted in July of 1936, they expected to take power without meeting with much opposition. But as the people resisted, what was to be a bloodless revolution soon became a violent civil war. As the traitor generals were defeated, the foreigners invaded the country. Hordes of Germans, Italians, Portuguese and Moors have been ravaging Spain now for more than two years. The Spanish people are fighting for the independence of their land and the preservation of their democratic institutions. If the foreign invaders were to leave Spain the war would end immediately, as the Spanish people are sick of the war and they would be glad to patch up their differences and start the reconstruction of their ruined country.

SUNSET By VELMA M. FRAME As the shimmering streaks of sunset Fade onward to the West; : There comes a hush , , , a quiet

pause; The sun is being put to rest.

Then, silently lest it awaken, A star-sprinkled cover is spread, The breeze sottly sings a lullaby While securely above the angels tread.

DAILY THOUGHT My son, let not them depart from thine eyes; keep sound wisdom and discretion.—Proverbs 3:21.

OU read of but one wise man, and all that he knew was—that he knew nothing.—Congreve.

OBJECTS TO ENTERTAINING KING AND QUEEN By W. F. Weiland It would be foolhardy to encourage the visit of the British King and Queen to the United States. Although Britain is said to be one of the democracies it must be admitted that there is a modification to the extent of the reality of their titles. A democracy is a government by the people collectively by elected representatives. Since when have Kings and Queens been elected? : The democracies are having enough trouble holding their status without this contemplated splurge which would not add to the prestige of true democracy. I object to the risk of what might happen while they are within our borders, The Fascists would be secretly pleased if the visit ended grievously. ”» "2 2 THIS READER DISAGREES WITH PETTENGILL By J. H. N.,, Templeton The voice of Rep. Pettengill is of one crying in the wilderness—very deep in the wilderness. ‘Another four years of the Roosevelt Admin-

istration would wipe out the middle class and destroy democracy,” he is quoted as saying in his latest prophetic utterance. If only he could attain a little perspective and insight into the situation, Mr. Pettengill would = see that the middle class was destroyed before Roosevelt took over the helm of the ship of state—destroyed by the very policies to which Mr. Pettengill would have us return. With 90 per cent of the people it is no longer a question of maintaining class distinctions but of acquiring the means of the barest subsistence. A large majority of the American people know that, sound or unsound, the Roosevelt oy intes have enabled them to do this. Let Mr. Pettengill be so kind as to formulate a plan designed to end prevailing economic chaos and the people can judge between the Roosevelt policies and his. 2 8 HE HOPES TO SEE F. D. R. REMAIN SANTA CLAUS

By a New Dealer

In reply to J. B. in the Hoosier Forum dated Oct. 12, 1938 in reference to the Santa Claus in the White House. Here is hoping to see KF. D. R. remaining our Santa Claus and more power to the New Deal. Mr. J. B. speaks of our money ‘being handed to other people (oneeyed, as he calls them). I wonder if he remembers when Hoover was 6 Santa Claus but distributed our money to a Mr. Dawes, and many others. Would he refer them as

-1being one-eyed?

IT HARDER NOW_ * ME FORMERLY TO

WIN A W/FE AND

HOLD HER? YES ORNO — ©

CERTAINLY, and properly so. Formerly a woman had just two

possibilities—bein, married or being

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

12

y oot i ras OUR

Mh MORE CLEA TA ~~ YOUR HH

Now that she has a hundred other careers open to her in the industrial, business and educational

fields, her life is not narrowed | of

THIS WOULD SEEM a pretty common sense proposal and one that at least is not likely to do any damage, since such men probably jBeve a sounder heredity of mind ‘and body to transmit to their children. If such men should have more children than the unhealthy, shiftless, lazy and incompetent, it would seem likely to improve the average health, intelligence and character of the race. France is now trying this on a pretty wide scale. It is too soon to make sure of the results but it is certainly a promising experiment which has the merit of running little risk of injuring the race and seems economically just.

% : » ” ” ONE PSYCHOLOGIST tested a group of college students to see which they remembered more keenly—their correct or incorrect answers on examination. They remembered their mistakes much longer and more keenly. Consulting psychologists and psychiatrists find that some trivial mistake made in childhood—especially if it be one that has preyed on the mind and which - has been concealed—has frequently changed the whole trend of a person’s life, whereas thousands happy have been for-

HACC! +

Gen. | Says—

Johnson

He Refuses to Predict the Resulf ‘Of the Ohio Senatorial Race, but Bulkley Will Know He Had a Fight.

OLUMBUS, O., Oct. 22.—The batting average for this column on political prophecy, except for the 1936 national election, is about 000. In that case it wasn’t as good as Jim Farley’s. He said two states and it said four. But that was cinch. In other and closer cases it usually guesses wrong. So notwithstanding three trips to Ohio, I am not offering any tips. But one thing is a certainty.: Senator Bulkley is going to know that he. has been

to a contest with Mr. Robert Taft. He has the Presi’ .

dent’s rather ambiguous accolade of being like a. cavalry officer guarding the Ohio pioneers. That’ meant no more than that he has brought home the bacon. The Administration is using every influence: of patronage and pap to re-elect Mr. Bulkley. It will be no easy job. Robert Taft is a good’ citizen and a good speaker. He carries the kudos: of his great name modestly but he carries it. Wil=":

| liam Howard Taft may not have been the most:

popular of Presidents but there are few names more revered. Robert Taft does not trade on this at all but he" has a splendid reputation as a fearless and upright" public character in his own right. : ™

< #8 8 : : HE Senator has a less appealing figure. He is anhonest, stubborn, stodgy legislator with a bank-:

ing background. With all his good qualities, divineProvidence did not endow him with the gift of gab. He simply cannot make a good speech. Ignoring this handicap, he made the supreme mistake of engaging’ with Mr. Taft in a running debate. Now the joint debate is an echo of our pioneer past. This attempt to revive it was worthy in prine ciple but, so far as the Senator is concerned, unfore tunate in practice. The element of conflict is what makes million dollar gates for prize fights. But it makes no gates at all where one boxer simply bounces. the other all over the ring with monotonous regularity. The great Taft-Bulkley debate is a good deal like that. Neither contestant is any Ruby Robert, but: Robert Taft is simply making an oratorical monkey. out of Robert Bulkley. This may make little difference. Third New Deal handouts may speak louder. than Mr. Taft's eloquence and offset Senator Bulkley’s lack of it. r t 2 » ” HE Senator is not nearly so much of a rubber stamp as the news would indicate. He opposed: more White House measures than did Senator Georgeof Georgia. Anybody who knows him well is aware. that he has a kind of obstinacy that could not be” forced if his future depended upon it. One interesting development of the debate is that. when it started, Mr. Taft was well over to the right and Mr. Bulkley was near the infra-red end of the" political rainbow. As it proceeded and public sens: timent clarified, both moved at equal speed toward the center. Now they seem to stand so nearly oh. identical ground that the choice seems one of pers" sonalities rather than policies. If that were all, if there were no New Deal hands outs, ‘Senator Bulkley would stand little chance. Bub: that -ain’t all. If Mr. Taft doesn’t win, and many professional ‘ observers believe he will, it will be largely because nobody shoots Santa Claus on Chrithe mas Eve.

It Seems to Me

By Heywood Broun

Foreign Censorships of Any Sort’ Have Wider Effect Than We Think:

EW YORK, Oct. 22.—An Italian newspaper, which naturally speaks for Mussolini, has begun: a campaign to convince Italian cinema fans that the~ Marx Brother, the Ritz Brothers and Charlie Chaplin + are not funny. And when a Fascist mouthpiece. .edi=x torializes for the benefit of its readers it isn’t just! arguing with them but telling them where to get off. Obviously a rejection slip from the head man inRome implies no lack of artistic merit but merely an: Aryan deficiency, And this may concern America’ rather more intimately than we imagine at the moment, x) I am not suggesting that the Marines be landed. in Venice to preserve disorder when Harpo is at his” riotous best. Still it might be possible for Cordell

Hull to remind Mr. Mussolini that Zeppo is no longer - -

acting. And yet perhaps there isn’t even so much’ as a small facet of anything funny in the whole® business. : When Churchill said, “The lights are going out,” he spoke of a dopnain even wider than the British’ Empire upon which the sun has begun to set. The? repercussions of foreign censorships do touch us here,.: This is particularly true of motion pictures. In the creation of an expensive film—or any one at all, for" that matter—the producer likes to figure that he will - get part of his costs back from the foreign market. There are certain ideas and- themes which will be: banned in the Fascist countries. Motion picture mage nates are likely to shy away from them.

Radio Hardly Untouched

The radio is freer than the screen at the moment, but hardly untouched. Dorothy Thompson and seve: eral other well-known figures have made slashing ate tacks upon Hitler over the air in the last 10 or 13: days. But usually both the network and the sponsor. prefer commentators who take no sides at all in: controversial questions. A well-organized writing campaign will scare the life out of an advertiser. = Our best hope lies in our press, but even if every. newspaper in America were 100 per cent unbridled—=and I would hold out for a somewhat lower estimate—. there would still be the difficulty of getting accurate information from lands where a correspondent is sent home as soon as he tries to cable or mail an uns" pleasant truth. In spite of the Atlantic Ocean we will have to fight to keep the crippling hand of the Munich mone * archs off our own screen and radio and stage and press. For my part it involves a new responsibility... I am not among the most ardent admirers of the humors of the Ritz Brothers. But now whenever: they appear in a motion picture theater I mean to go and laugh my head off just to show Musso'ini what I think of him.

Watching Your Health

By Dr. Morris Fishbein

HE experiments with tar by which cancers have 1 been produced in animals indicate that it would - not be desirable for human beings to rub tar repeated=' ly into the skin, or rub in any of the substances which resemble tar in chemical structure. - . For some time it has been known that repeated rubbing of the skin by a roughened collar might pros" duce an abrasion through which infection could enter,

It has also been known that repeated rubbing of the-

skin may in itself produce overgrowth of the tissue., There is also another kind of chronic irritation which™ takes place within the cells, and which may be a minute chemical irritation. . We recognize that cancer of the lungs in miners may occur because of exposure to arsenic and radium dust; cancer of the cheek in people who chew the. betel nut, cancer of the lip and tongue in smokers . who constantly irritate the lips and the tongue, and. cancer of the bladder in workers in certain dye in-: dustries. There is also evidence: that certain forms of tumors, , may develop on an hereditary factor. However, cancer itself is not inherited. True, the susceptibility may be transmitted. Hu" man beings intermarry so irregularly, however, that it is believed in general unimportant to consider the - question of heredity in relationship to cancer. PF When the statistics for all ‘people with cancer are” studied, it appears that an average of 14 per cent”

of persons with cancer have had cancer recorded: 2 :

their families.

The. mere" fact that the ‘majority of people with a

cancer are not able to ‘remember anyone in: their : families having had a cancer does not prove in itself : that cancer is not hereditary, however: ut is quite: S= sible for a recessive characte of

¥