Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1938 — Page 10

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The

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| MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1938 'REVULSION Selb ay A NTISEMITISM was old in this world even when : ©7 Pharaoh’s taskmasters beat the children of Israel and ‘ commanded them to produce bricks without straw. Like mankind’s other lingering barbaric prejudices,

2 racial and religious bigotry recognizes no boundaries and "varies from country to country only in form and degree.

* We must admit, with shame, that flare-ups of anti-Semitism "and other intolerances have at times blackened our own - history. ,, The savage hatreds that flamed in Ku-Kluxism - have never been extinguished completely. Pi : Knowing the préjudices that smoulder in the breasts . of a small minority of our own citizens, many who cherish America’s proud tradition of tolerance have feared that the pogrom hates of Europe might span the Atlantic. We have seen how quickly they were spread into Italy, into . Czechoslovakia and along the brutalitarian axis. “But the sheer horror now raging in Germany has stirred a revulsion in the mass conscience of America, as it ' has in England and France and other lands where people | still live under the democratic ideal that makes all men * equal before the law. This ghastly demonstration of what

}| can happen, once passions are unloosed, has caused many

hb

; | ! Les ALFRED M. GLOSSBRENNER

Americans to count as never before the consequences of - giving rein to bigotry. | hE A 17-year-old Polish Jew, temporarily crazed, shoots a - Nazi official in Paris. In revenge for that boy’s crime, mobs “of Nazi hoodlums are loosed in the streets of Germany to destroy and pillage the property of Jews. Thousands of Jews are jailed and sent to concentration camps. The psychopathic tyrants of the Reich issue decrees— - Levying a $400,000,000 fine against the 500,000 German Jews; ¢onfiscating all insurance due them for destruction of their property and compelling them to repair the damagé Et their own expense; forbidding them to operate stores or factories, to hold any important jobs in German

~ | corporations, or to attend movies, concerts, museums, lec-

tures or dance halls. : : en Acts and decrees, these, which terrorize, pauperize and ostracize a whole people for the sole offense of worshiping “their God in their own way, or having ancestors who did. : Seeing this, Americans are shocked into resolution that the seeds which sowed this tyranny shall not take root in ‘oursoil. | Tl :

i

THE death of Alfred M. Glossbrenner deprives. Indianap-

olis of one of its most widely known business and civic leaders. | : . > For 40 years he was actively interested in movements designed to make Indianapolis a greater city. The printing industry regarded him as one of its ablest men. City and ‘State business groups sought his advice, and honored him with important posts. Republicans elected him fo: the 61st General Assembly, named him to the Republican Ex¢ ecutive Committee and sought to elect him Mayor in 1929. City leaders put him on the Sinking Fund, Commission and kept him there 30 years. . . : And, ‘by a curious coincidence, tribute was paid his many fine qualities just a few days before his death. Fellow workers gave him a testimonial dinner honoring his 50 years association with the Levey Printing Co., of which he was president and treasurer for many years. It was a tribute in which a great many others in Indianapolis would « have been pleased to join. : :

| WHEN $400,000 LOOKS LIKE 30 CENTS

: ];;'OUR hundred thousand dollars sounds to us like a lot of 1 money. It would make quite a bulge in a fellow’s wallet, “even in $10,000 bills (yes, they say there are such things). But 11 million wage-earners also sound to us like a lot “of wage-earners. Congress gave the Wage-Hour Administrator $400,000 to administer the Wage-Hour Act, which is supposed to cover 11 million employees. He handed over a chunk of that to the Children’s Bureau, which handles the child labor provisions of the act, and another chunk to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Out of what's left he has to pay rent, salaries, big printing bills, $15 a day and ex-

: penses for members of industry committees, expert stenog-

raphers for hearings, etc., etc. “All those things are vitally necessary. Industries also are clamoring for the appointment of industry committees to clean out chiseling competition

by establishing, wages, within those industries, above the |

925-cents-an-hour floor fixed in the act. But only one such committee has been appointed and only one other is in immediate prospect. The answer is that Administrator Andrews’ $400,000 is supposed to run him until July 1. This is one time industry would be pleased to see more money made available to the Government. . Nothing can be done about it until Congress meets. But - surely Congress will ‘appreciate the wisdom of rushing _ through an emergency appropriation in January which will permit Mr. Andrews to take on an adequate staff and to

go forward more rapidly with industry committees and

hearings. .

HAGUE CAN'T WIN AMAYOR FRANK HAGUE has appealed from Federal >= Judge William Clark’s injunction directing Jersey City authorities to grant free speech privileges to the C. I O. and the American Civil Liberties Union. Here is a remarkable spectacle—the chief official of an American city using the money of his taxpayers to fight a judicial order that he obey the Constitution of the United States. For the Clark injunction is simply that. The rights it upholds in Jersey City are the same rights that other communities respect as a matter of course. - It seems unlikely that higher Federal Courts will set s injunction aside. Before long, we believe, Mayor Hague have to choose whether to comply with it or to defy d challenge the authority of the Federal Government it. We think orn and unwise enough

A4-Will he conclude

{

ct "HF INDIANAPOLIS T

Fair Enough By Westbrook Pegler

La Guardia Is Undoubtedly Sincere, But He Shouldn't Blame Electorate

For Being a Wee Bit Suspicious.

TEW YORK, Nov. 14—1 have always given Mayor La Guardia credit for sincerity and therefore

have no doubt that he spoke in honest apprehension

when he perceived in the election returns a danger of either communism or dictatorship. The distinction between communism and dictatorship seems artful, but I will let that pass. ;

The point is that he is still strong for the Roosevelt New Deal and believes that those who call them-

selves Progressives and Liberals must get together to sharpen up their program and resume the fight. It is a fact, however, that some of those who have assumed a patent right to the politically sanitary labels “Progressive” and “Liberals” are conspiratorial Communists who have smelled up those words and made

people suspicious of hidden purposes and intellectual

stealth, Court-packing, for one example, rubber-stamping for another and persistent effort in many ways to impose Government regulation on business, little as well as big. All that stuff may come of the most pious political intent, but it seems: to be a NaziFascist, and a square-believer who really hates and fears this disease, owes it to his own cause to explain away the suspicion and caution that the people expressed last Tuesday. : : ” ” ” z HERE has been too much lofty contempt for the honest apprehensions of the voting people, as

- though they were either too stupid or too evil and

selfish to rate a civil answer to their doubts. I should think Mr. La Guardia and the other men on his team would have sufficient respect for democracy, to concede that the mere fact of their devotion to certain beliefs is insufficient.

Now, the bolos and their “fellow-travelers,” on

the face of things, would seem to be automatically op= posed to Nazi-fascism, even in the primary stages, but a subtle paradox covers that. The explanation is that Mussolini himself was a bolo in his early days and produced a system which differed from the original only in external fancy work. In morals it is the same loathsome pestilence, detesting honor, truth and trust between men, and with the passing of the years he and Stalin have converged until now one “ism” fits on top of the other as neatly as one new dime covers another. » ”n E-

OT to doubt that Mayor La Guardia and his cobelievers in the Roosevelt New Deal in its extremist measures really do cherish democracy and hate ‘dictatorship, I insist that they have a patriotic duty to expound their knowledge to people who veered away from the New Deal in honest aversion.

Certainly Mr. La Guardia and those who cand

honestly call themselves Progressives and Liberals can-

not believe that these voters wanted to vote against |’

the American democracy. They thought they were voting for it and against encroachment on it. Mr. La Guardia, Maury Maverick and many others seem unable to back off and take a good look at themselves. If they could they might notice that they have antagonized a great body of citizens who love their country and their liberties and reject the propo-~ sition that a man with a job or a home or a business necessarily rejoices in the tragedy of those who are without. Mr. La Guardia should explain more fully, and while he is about it explain also the errcr of the belief that the Government was falling into authorfrian habits for convenience in meeting its probems.

Business By John T. Flynn

Apparently Nothing but Trouble Faces F. D. R. in Next Two Years.

EW YORK, Nov. 14 —Politicians and businessmen and stock market people are speculating on what the President will do now in the light of the apparent turn in the tide of favor against him. : : Will he ease up on his friendliness for labor? He once said “a plague on both your houses.” Will he feel more ow ein ever on this point?

Will he. now begin to seek peace with business? -that the country has grown a little fatigued with the energy of reform and wishes to go no further? The President has always taken the position that he must not go faster than the country. He always looks cautiously around to see if it is directly behind him or better still, a little out in front. There are signs that, even before the election, he had begun to make industrious peace overtures to business. First was his naming of a member of the Stock Exchange to the SEC and later promoting him to be undersecretary of the Treasury. : It seems more than likely that he will seek to rid himself and his Administration of the embarrassments caused by the war between the A. F. of L. and the C. I. O. We may look for speedy moves in this direction.

Grip on Congress Lost :

This course, of course, may prove a dangerous one for the. President. Apparently he has lost upon a great scale the support of the middle class, small businessmen and the conservative and moderate conservetive groups. If by his acts he should now give the liberal groups cause to feel that he is deserting them, he will alienate their affections and find himself without support anywhere. His position is eminently dangerous. While his party has a large majority in both Houses it is accurate to say that a majority of the Senate is opposed to him. His power to get legislation through that is offensive to the moderate conservatives is at an end. 3 Probably there will soon develop a fight to limit his power over the allocation of recovery funds. This has been the course of his power. The manner in which he used that power in his own party primaries has resulted ir. a deeply bitter: feeling toward him. Besides now the Republican opposition will be aided by the inevitable battle which will go on in Washington for control of the next Democratic convention. Ahead looms nothing but trouble. He rides the tide no more. He must swim upstream.

. ’ ° ° A Woman's Viewpoint By Mrs. Walter Ferguson oa T was a lovely tea. Lighted candles cast a warm glow over white flowers, lacy cloth, and silver

service, lending a softer sheen to women’s gowns and a softer contour to women’s faces.

Sandwiches and cakes, in a wide variety of shapes |!

and colors, all as fragile as if they were to be consumed by a bevy of Titanias, instead of flesh and blood women, were passed. ‘The ladies sipped their “beverages daintily. What meticulous beings we are, I thought; not one little cake was awry on its salver, not one tiny sandwich but conformed to a pattern. Certainly hours of thought and care had gone into the preparation and several housewives and servants must have planned and worked a long time to achieve such perfection of detail with so little apparent efIort.

- But such, of course, is the way of women.

. I was more than ever convinced of that truth on the following day when, strange as it may seem, I watched the tables being laid for supper in the women’s ward of the State Penitentiary. There, in less elegant surroundings, the same artistic passion was evident. White clothes made the dining roum cheer-

ful and the dishes, though heavy, were arranged with |

a careful attention to the niceties of dining etiquette. Later, above stairs, the inmates had decorated their cells in some fashion. Potted plants grew bravely on certain windowsills; in other places, narrow strips of colored paper had been cut and hung to make the small rooms gay. : In a dozen ways, one sensed the devotion to neatness, symmetry and color. : ; : Nowhere was to be seen that drab hopeless ugliness which make men’s prisons such depressing places. So once ‘again, I was struck by Ruskin’s observation

when he said, “Wherever woman is, there is: Home.”

As I looked into the

eyes of th

MONDAY, N

Few Crumbs?—sy

Herblock

The Hoosier Forum

I wholly disagree with what you say, but will

COTTON, SILK AND WAR By O. L. We women pat ourselves on the back and call ourselves peace-loving creatures. Lots of us are good Christians, too. :

That isn’t all we love either. We love our own beauty (if any) and we make the most of it. We have our prayer meetings and missionary meetings and we pray for the poor little starving children of China. We ask God to help them—there dpesn’t seem to be anything we can do ourselves.

But we can Wear silk hose, making it possible for this suffering to continue. We expect someone else to stop it, why don’t we? It is the women + who buy silk and furnish Japan the means for war. All because we must have beautiful legs. Is beauty anything compared to people’s lives? Some of us would wear cotton—only our friends might laugh. So we go on being smug and safe while our hosiery money is used to kill these people we pray for.

2 2 2

'|REASONABLE ATTITUDE

ON LIQUOR URGED By L. W. C.

I quote H. S. Bonsib’s Hoosier Forum article: “Any party which does not take a firm stand on the eradication of the greatest evil on earth—liquor—has no right to expect the support of the good peopie.”

Now just what does Mr. Bonsib mean by “good” people? I do not use intoxicants in any form, but I am emphatically for legalized beer ‘and liquor (with taxes paid) rather than prohibition and the bootleg eva we had in the past. When will people learn that it is useless to tell people what they can eat—or drink? They will follow their own desires and appetites. Prohibition helped fill the prisons, the asylums and the hospitals. : It would have been all right if we had really had prohibition, but we never had it. legging flourished. Drink was never stamped out. I maintain that if we had a law that made it as hard to sell a bootleg bottle of beer or whisky as it is to pass counterfeit money, we. would still: be “dry” today. But the zealous devotees of prohibition who cry for laws ito eradicate thé evils of drink, and then oftentimes glect men that “talk dry” and ‘rink wet” and public officers who accept graft for protection for the lawless are anticipating an Utopia that can never be. The youth of our nation never

Crime and boot-|

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 your letter short, so all can have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)

frequented saloons as they do the taverns. They learned to drink liquor when we made it hard for them to get it. If they are going to indulge in liquor, it is a relief to know they are not sneaking a drink; breaking a law to buy it, and filling their stomachs and bodies with the poison and - bootleg dynamite that has caused many persons to go blind. We have had intoxicants since Bible times, and I think we will always have them. If the majority of the people insist upon having liquor, let us take a sane and reasonable attitude on the dispensing of it. 8 ” ” VOTERS ARE TIRED OF . EXPERIMENTS, IS BELIEF By E. F. Maddox

A correct analysis of the recent election seems to be that Americans are tired of experiments copied after the methods of foreign dictatorships. They are fed up on radicalism disguised as liberalism. As Raymond Clapper and Gen. Johnson interpret national trends, we have simply returned to Americanism. We have slapped down Communist-inclined public officials.

MAYBE By ANNA E. YOUNG Maybe unaware we spoke a word That helped some worn, weary soul . | Maybe some. act of ours reached out And aided someone to his goal.

Maybe before it ever escaped We stifled an unkind word Maybe we accepted some slight, ; some hurt By pretending it never occurred.

Maybe unconsciously we handed a

cup | To a disheartened footsore friend Maybe these things are aiding us To that road that has no end.

DAILY THOUGHT

I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot hear them now.—St. John 16:12,

HERE is nothing in the world so much admired as a man who knows how to bear unhappiness with courage.—Seneca.

We have retired the leaders of radi-

‘|cal parties and blocs such as La

Follette of Wisconsin, Benson of Minnesota and Maury Maverick of Texas—leader of the so-called “liberals” in Congress. The logical conclusion is that the people of the United States are opposed to alienisms and are deter= mined to check: our drift toward the left (Socialism) regardless of party loyalty. © If such a wise course followed the destiny of our coun is once more safe and all fair-minded citizens and their representatives in Congress can. join hands and stand solidly united to protect, preserve

and defend to the vest of our abil-| | ity our great American heritage of | liberty under law and constitutional

protection. from governmental -coercion. All genuine patriotic Americans ought to rejoice in the defeat of radicalism. The only element to suffer a severe setback in the election was the leftist liberals *vho were too familiar and chummy with communism. So we repeat that

this election is a. mandate for Amer-

icanism!

Mayor La Guardia, alarmed at the

repudiation of leftwingers, is calling them into conference to consolidate a new radical alignment. It will)/pay to watch the leftists closely. [They are a sly, tricky, dangerous “clique of revolutionists. Their policy is rule or ruin. : : Congress is now a more conserva= tive, middle of the road legislative body. For that we all ought to be truly thankful. A reaction from extreme radicalism to plain, old-fash-ioned Americanism is a welcome relief and is a guarantee to business, farming and labor that the time has come when we can begin to rehabilitate our economic system, regain our independence of action and get rid of the jitters caused by the threat of socialistic regimentation. The air has cleared, we can breathe the free air of a nation that is returning to sanity.

2 8 ” CITES REASONS WHY PIGS’ TAILS CURVE TO LEFT By Q. E. D. :

Pigs’ tails always: curl to the left. Reasons: Trial and error; by observation; scientifically. The earth rotates from: east to west and this causes things as big as a cyclone always to curl in one direction—to the left only. Theoretically when you pull the stopper from your bathtub, the water alyays surly in one direction—to the eft. ‘ Therefore, any object as small as a pig's tail would be controlled by the same influence, the rotation of the earth, and therefore all pigs’ tails curl to the left. Lona

LomeeSt @

1 ANYTHING is a bad tendency that causes secret social conduct. This is especially true of marriage which should be known of all men. It is a pity that economic pressure

ix

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

| (secretly marry. Either course lowers

1. 12 18 THE PO EF . F MENGE INSANITY?

| YOUR OPINION

/

/ #2 Ta. WILL THE PRESENT WO MAKE TH

YOUR OPINION — |

marriage, and of setting up a home. A married man is a far better business asset than an unmarried one, and as

at least as

a married woman is just

their morale in business. The situation is bad all around. § . *s = 8 gr THERE is no critical proof that insanity has increfi8ed within the past hundred years. There are, it is true, far more persons in hospitals for the insane than ever.

Likewise there are far more operations for diseased tonsils and appendicitis but this only means that we have better methods of diagnosis and treatment and this is apparently the case with insanity. Sn i” 1 THINK it will have this effect on a great many and will also crush some others to such an extent that they will become dunib, unreasoning radicals. ‘My main quarrel with the radical is that he thinks he has the solution for so-

ciety. I do not believe there is any one solution. I think, though, we

‘shall be able in democratic counr- | tries to frain. our younger genera-|’

tion to think their ‘way through this turmoil to better. solutions than men have ever found. And as long as young:

Gen.

people will investi-|

Johnson Says— i Veteran: War Industries. ‘Board

Knows All Answers to Preparédness, But It Seems They Won't Be Asked,

TEW YORK, Nov. 14.—This i§ going to be a bum column. It has to be written in a hurry. Some

“1| of my columnar colleagues can write good columns

in a hurry, but I can’t, I veritably believe that Heywood Broun could half-close his eyes, haul off like an old Irish harper at the court of Brian Boru and, if he were in the mood, turn out a reasonable dis-

| course on any subject in 25 minutes.

‘But Peg—Westbrook Pegler—who unconsciously

taught me all I know about columning, and this ad miring pupil, have to sweat over ours. I rewrite mine from three to six times and Peg’s birth-pains as he chisels, retouches, reorganizes and recasts are, to his friends, agonizing to observe. Most people who talk to me about. it think from his stinging writing that Mr. Pegler is a sort of

1 | menacing masterful man who goes butting about '| among his acquaintances making them uncomfort-

able with hide-removing wisecracks. The fact is that he is shy to a fault, kindly beyond your ordinary observance, and truly a sort of sentimental Tommy. ; \ ” ” » i

N Armistice Day what remains of the War Industries Board held its 20th reunion. It is a continuous performance for one day. I simply had to go and tear away only long enough to impose this jerry-built job on you. For once, at least, I wish I were Heywood Broun. : : : =, The purpose of this reunion, in part, was to present a bust of its chief, B. M. Baruch, which -the Secretary of War has promised shall repose in the Army War College, where only two others have ever been permitted, that of Elihu Root, its founder, and that of Gen. Pershing. : ; . There were originally 500 members of that board, 1t was the World War organization which mobilized American industry. They made of that industry the greatest and most powerful economic organ of war that ever functioned on this earth. It was for all of them a supreme adventure, Many of them have fallen in the 20 years since the Armistice. But 146 came from all parts of the country. That is a very remarkable demonstration of solidare ity and of loyalty and affection for their chief—Mr, Baruch. They comprise everything from the greatest captains to the lowest corporals of industfy. ho

. — » ” 8 : N that group alone in this country is the knowledge, proved by experience, of how to make this country effective for war on the economic side. The economic

'| side, as Gen. Pershing said in his letter of congratula-

tion, is now indispensable to the military and naval side in modern war. or It was a significant meeting because the same problem on which they worked so well in 1918 is again thrust upon us. . The casual observer would suppose that they would again be called upon at least fot ine formation and advice. ea It hasn’t been done. It looks as though it were not going to be done because too few of them are third New Dealers. That gives a hot partisan political

bit experimentation where experimentation is not necessary because experience is ‘available. In the World War, Woodrow Wilson said—and made it so—

“politics is adjourned.” With a world again aflame, that would be a swell idea now. E Dod

lt Seems to Me By Heywood Broun New York's Mayor Urged to Call ~~ Parley of Liberals to Map Stand.

EW YORK, Nov. 14.—One of the most important N_ posts in the field of American politics is not. official, although in a real seinise it is an elective office: For many years George Norris of Nebraska has been not only a Senator but the spiritual and temporal leader of the progressive forces of the United States. In the darkest days of reaction Mr. Norris has kept alive the burning embers of liberalism. : , In a measure the actin of his position has been t

heightened by the factjthat he was not personally ambitious for further political preferment. His appeal was equally cogent to men and women of good intent in both the ‘Republican and Democratic parties. Of late Mr. Norris has been ‘in ill health, and he has need of 4 younger man to suppert his arm in the battle, Fortunately there is an American leader magnificently competent:to perform that function, And nobody need say, “Name him! Name him!” because it should be easy for you to name him your. self. Naturally I refer to Mayor La Guardia. 1 am not suggesting even now that Fiorello should get himself a sample case and take over every State as part of his territory. But the state of the nation'is a matter of practical concern to any Mayor of New York. What starts in the Dust Bowl may very well end up as another relief problem in the greater city. New York is peculiarly sensitive to the tides of progress and poverty throughout the country. :

Part of His Civic Duty

And so it is a proper part of Mayor La Guardia’s civic duty to give aid. and advice on problems of national and even in ational importance. Only the other day the Mayor told City Hall reporters that, as a reaction to the last election, he thought it might be a good idea for him to make contacts with some of his old progressive buddies with the intent of solving the problem “Where do we go from here?” Later he said that at the moment he had in mind nothing more than individual and even somewhat casual con= tacts. That is undoubtedly the wisest approach, but before the snow flies very hard I hope the Mayor will take it upon himself to isSue a call for an informal gettogether of progressives from party and independent ranks. : . : Some of the so-called Republican “liberals” seem to me to be a little less than weatherproof, since they are dolled up in nothing more than a single coat of varnish. But analysis of Republican gains in the last election is quite likely to show that not all the victors are men minded to swing national policy over to the right of the road or even to the ruts which lie along the middle of the highway.

Watching Your Health

By Dr. Morris Fishbein.

ox of the conditions which of late is becoming extremely frequent and giving greater and greater concern to the medical profession is known as endarteritis, or Buerger’s disease. :

' ‘Experts in the clinic of the University of Illinois ‘devoted specifically to such conditions have prepared ‘some general directions for home care of #he feet which are given to all patients suffering with either of these diseases. These instructions follow:

1. Wash feet each night with neutral (face) soap and warm water. - ; i 2. Dry feet with a clean soft rag without rubbing the skin. "3. Apply rubbing alcohol (70 per cent) and allow the feet to dry thoroughly.’ Then apply a liberal" amount of vaseline or toilet lanolin and gently massage the skin of the feet. ° ° : Fat "4, Always keep feet. WARM. : ; 5. Use loose-fitting bedsocks instead of hotwater bottles, electric heaters. or any other form of mechani cal heating devices. Lg : : 6. Wear properly fitted shoes. : ks 7. Cut your toenails only in very good light and ‘only after your feet have been cleansed thoroughly. Cut the toenails straight across. 8. Do not cut corns or callouses. | - 9. Do not wear circular garters. 10.. Do not sit with legs crossed. : , 11. Do not use strong antiseptic drugs on feet.. +12. Go to your doctor at the first sign of a blister, infection of the toes, ingrowing toenail or trouble with bunions, corns or callouses. ! yg - 13. Drink at least four quarts of water each day. 14. Eat plenty of green vegetables and fruit in anced, liberal diet, unless you.

3

aspect to preparedness. It suggests more white rab- --