Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1939 — Page 20
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THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1930
———
BERLIN TO BAGHDAD
ACK in 1866, Prussia’s Field Marshal von Moltke tan ted ‘his push southeastward along the line from Berliri to
{ Baghtsa
i
This line is the strategic short cut betwe een the At-
-lantic Ocean and the Indian ‘Ocean.
Astride it are | ‘all
* Central and Eastern Europe, the Balkans and the Niear East. It is the gateway to the Orient. Hegemony over this
‘area became the Kaiser's great dream. To
hiin it ment
. that Britain and France would become second-rate powers
-and Germany the world’s greatest empire. . He almost got what he wanted. Today
hig successor,
“Adolf Hitler, has made the same dream his own, ig Thus far Hitler has met with notoriously little bp-
position.
He has occupied the Rhineland, anne3ed Ausiria
and taken over Czechoslovakia without a shot. : What is to happen hereafter depends on the attitide of Britain, France and Italy. Poland, Rum
‘Yugoslavia and the Balkan countries do
~onward march of Hitler's goosestepping’ troopers.
ia, Hunge'y, t | relish the Hut
‘they are too weak to do much about it without the vn-
‘qualified support of at least Britain and France.
With
such support the entire situation would be altered. And (if Italy came in with them Hitler could be stopped in -his
“tracks.
Today, however, Mussolini is Hitler's d dupe.
The
~Fuehrer is getting all the plums while the Duce shakes the “tree. Already the German thrust down the Danube ahd ‘across ‘the Balkans has all but destroyed Italian influence.
Sooner or later, Italy may wake up to find the Croatia and Sloyenia, long
neighbors across the Adriatic.
azis her
restive under Belgrade’s rule, want autonomy. One »f ‘these days Hitler may offer them “independencal’—just as
he did to Slovakia. instead of Italian.
Then the Adriatic will becorie Germin
Italy’s interests have never lain in the direction of Ber
lin, They lie with London and Paris. And, but for the du 11 ‘diplomacy of Britain and France, the axis woud now be
-Rome-Paris-London instead of Rome-Berlin,
Today much depends upon whether the ‘mista kes of tl If they ean—if Britain, France ar
Italy can reconstitute the entente formed
whole present European tide may be turned.
therefore, Italy again is a highly important key.
CHECKING A CURE-ALL IVE a cheer for the Federal Reserve Board.
out flatly against proposed measures which would rg-
‘quire it or some other agency to attempt
stabilize the general price level by manipulating nioney ar
Joredtt. ' There are men in Congress who believe that prosperity could be brought back to stay by Government ¢ontrol éf
price is fair and the product good.
prices. year 1926, when: business was on an even keel,
in 1915—th As in 191
1t has con
to raise ar
One school, for instance, looks back to the go
and he god
that every year would be as good if the 1926 price levil ‘were restored and maintained. This school would have the Reserve Board increase the amount of money and credit until the 1926 price level is restored, then use its powets to maintain that level, expanding and contracting money
and credit as prices get above or below the line. i But the Reserve Board says-——and says truthfully, we done and ought not to ke
think—that this can’t be attempted.
i
Many ordinary citizens may not understand all the
Reserve Board’s arguments against the scheme. becoming profoundly distrustful of cure-alls;
price conta]
But most ordinary citizens, in our opinion, ark
especially of
those which call for Government control of cornplicatell ‘economic machinery, and even more especially of thos}
.which involve monkeying with money. : As the Reserve Board says, this country
now has bot. L
more money and more credit than it is using. The re: “problem is to get the present supply of money and credit
‘used by private citizens and private business.
would be immensely complicated, not solved,
That problex! if a Govern-
ment agency started out deliberately to inflate mney an! credit. There's fear enough of inflation. Adding to it, bi ordering the Reserve Board to start an experiment whic no power might be able to stop, could be disastrous. . We congratulate the Reserve Board on its courage aril sound judgment in the matter of price control hy mone; ‘manipulation. We wish it would take an equally forthrigh: ‘stand against the dangerous theory preached by |its ow chairman, Mr. Eccles, that the Government cain, restors
. prosperity by spending borrowed money.
PARKING METER TRIAL
E note the Safety Board is considering a trial o
~ parking meters in the downtown business atea. The “nickel hitching posts,” as they are sometime; : - called, are being used in more than 80 cities.
ill
The genersz|
experience with them has been good. Not only héve they
have served a useful purpose in speeding
provided cities with a new source of revenue, ‘but the
up traffic in
congested business areas and of actually increasing thy ) ‘number of cars able to park in the downtown zones, If the Safety Board is seriously considering all
experimental installation in Indianapolis, we
sugge st the, !
follow the example of Cleveland and put all meters through ‘a thorough laboratory examination to determine thei
‘accepting a meter that is either over-priced ‘workmanship.
- stamina before making a selection. Some cities were gouge! | ‘outrageously by over-priced meters in the early days, With | ‘seven companies in the field, there is little reason ow foi! |
| weaker sex. or of inferio!
: We would like to see them tried on condition that th
&
A REAL TRAGEDY
«
By Westbrook Pegler
‘He Takes With a Grain of Salt All the Warnings About Food and Such Not Being Strictly Hygienic.
EW YORK, March 18.~-Recent discussion of un‘suspected horrors which sometimes lurk in the food that Americans buy in cartons . and cans, prompted me to examine ajgain one of those frightbooks by which it is made to appear that the only Way 30 escape poisoning is 10 live UNAer glass in a hospital from the cradle to the grave. i One warning in this alarining work had to do with a famous brand of tooth paste. This paste, it was said, contained poison, and during the war a German officer committed suicide by consuming a tube of it. This caused me to shudder, because it happens that I use this very tooth paste, but after a time I pulled myself together, reflecting that, after all, I have no intention of spreading it on my bread, and if 20 years’ use of this paste in the prescribed manter has not been fatal the danger is nothing to worry about. The same feeling of calm courage possessed me after reading of the foul treachery of the man who during prohibition times sold adulterated ginger extract, causing a plague of paralysis, known as jake-leg, in Kansas.
Moreover, it may be remembered that during prohibition not only the bootlegger but the United States Government itself poisoned the scofflaws, and that many of us consumed hootch which we had reason to believe was dangerously impure. ss 8 = HE same work, reports in a tone of startled indignation that the bright red hamburger which people buy at many roadside gas-and-lunch stations is artificially colored with a substance which wars against health and often is overripe. That, however,
is not news. People have been knowing all this for years and years, and yet the hamburger curve in this country continues to rise like a high foul, and the health services have yet to report a fatal epidemic of hamburger poisoning. People in the circle of my acquaintance use ih discreet quantities practically all the well-known brands of tooth paste, shaving soap, rouge, powder, breakfast food, canned stuff, ham and flour, and although at my age, one learns to expect occasional gaps in the ranks, no friend’s death has been certified as due to such use. 8 2 #
AM not surprised to learn that some patent preparations cost much less to produce than the cusomer pays for them, nor does this news arouse resentment. In the zone between the actual cost of insredients and mixing and the purchase over the couner many citizens take each a little toll in the way of ‘wages or dividends on their invested savings so that they in turn may buy the services or the goods of those who pay the marked-up price for patent wares. This being undoubtedly so, it is plain that if the distributors, middle-men and investors were squeezed ou$ of the play and the goods sold direct, with only a small profit to the maker, the unemployment and relief problems would be unmanageable. Many of those who are consumers at the so-called high prices today vould not be in the market as consumers at all. It boils down to the fact that under our system many of us merely go through more or less laborious but. unnecessary motions to justify our existence. As for the poison in the tooth paste, if we just bear in mind that tooth paste isn’t jam, everything should be O. K.
Business Ey John T. Flynn
Holds Recovery Won't Come Until Banks ‘Feel Free. to Lend Funds,
1 EW YORK, March 16.—Ftom time to time I receive communications from different parts of the - country inclosing bank statements showing the sed state of lending in our banks. They are always interesting because they illustrate this thing to which the country has now awakened, namely that private
‘investment is in a state of complete lethargy.
Here are a couple’ of bank statements Irom Pueblo, Colo. One is that of the Minnequa Bank of Pueblo. On Dec. 31, 1938, this bank had in deposits some $2,043,000. Of this $1,579,219 was in cash. More than 87 of every $10 deposited in the bank was in cash. Then there was $403,759 invested in Government secufities. Out of every $10 deposited in the bank, $9.70 was in cash or Government paper. But there is an' éven more illuminating instance in the same town--the First National Bank of Pueblo. It has $19,845,000 in deposits. It has $20,171,000 in cash and Government bonds. In other words the cash and Government bonds are more than the deposits. This is the explanation of the new Administration
‘policy of appeasement. For a while it was the custom
to denounce the bankers for not lending. But slowly it has been borne in on the minds of all sorts of eople that some powerful force has been at work paralyzing investment.
Some Expert Advice Needed
The banks of the United States today have Yess money out in loans than they had in 1833 at the very bottom of the depression. The seriousness of this cannot be lightly dismissed. These banks are th: pump which we have been talking of priming. The Government has poured billions into the pump. But the pump is actually giving back less water today than before we began priming it. Now the awful year 1940 looms ahead. People are going to be asking very soberly next year why that pump is not working. The polticiang have got to have an answer. The Administration now supposes that the way to correct this condition is to make up to the businessmen, But it will have to do more than that. It must not. be forgotten that it was the businessmen who broke the pump in the first place. Not only did they break it but they had three years under Mr. Hoover to fix it: They made it worse. Then Mr. Roosevelt tried fixing the pump. He, too, has made it worse. It is now plain that there is something the me tter with the pump. Making love to the fellow at the handle of the busted pump will not do the trick. The Administration had better call in some experts on pumps, something it has.not thought of doing to date.
|A Woman's Viewpoint By Mrs. Walter Ferguson
# \ RE you for or against the Equal Rights Amend- . ment?” asks a reader. In reply, I can say quite honestly that I do not know. Having always done my work at home, I am not in a position to speak with authority on the issue, for it is out of our own experiences that most of our opinions are formed. However, looking at the fight from afar, I can say with equal sincerity that my leanings are toward the Pros. “We have equality at the polls; we should have it ‘in the economic field. And both sexes should then work together to protect the children. Their shameful treatment in our country in the past is enough to . prove that the exploitation of all weaklings can be
| expected, unless legal steps are taken to prevent it.
Women may then find themselves in the same predicament. Unless we accept real equality—taking the bad along with the good-=we are inviting such exploitation, for we are in effect declaring ourselves to be the
The aims and dreams of men and women are the satie—or if not, they should be. We realize that the primary duty of our sex is the care of our homes and the bearing of children when circumstance makes
1 those tasks possible,
Circumstance often forbids, as we also know. And
{ when such emergencies arise and woman goes forth | to compete in the business world, whether she is
‘ON E of our more enthusiastic Indiana basketball f ans f
from his chair during a game.
Afterward he dis-
covered he had a broken leg—but that’s minor at thi}
forced to do so or whether she goes of her own will, she should ask for no special favors because she is a member of the feminine group. As an individual she can only hope, with mén, that
: ct
CE ea
- WELL= Yiu TRY
The Hoosier Forum
1 wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say tt~Voliaire.
WANTS COLLECTORS KEEP ALLEYS CLEAN By Householder
The chief reason that the alleys and back streets in our allegedly most beautiful city (especially those in its less affluent sections) achieve such disgraceful unsightliness be cause of accumulations of ashes and refuse is the high cost of baskets and containers. This, inasmuch as it seems beneath the dignity of our politically entrenched ashmen to touch ashes and refuse, results in the noncollection of those that are not properly packaged. As a householder I have bought
i
| two dozen baskets this past winter
only to have most of them broken up in handling and disappear for kindling. Moreover when I interviewed my ashman about thaving a pile of ashes which has accumulated on my back lot removed in the city wagons, I was told it ‘would cos cost me $2, If I am not mistaken, more progressive cities than our own keep such necessary byproducts of housekeeping cleaned- up by providing their refuse collectors with shovels and holding them responsible for the esthetic state of their alloted areas. Would such a practice tbe more than the abundantly exploited citizens of Indianapolis have a right to hope for?
CITES REWARDS DUE | FOR FIGHTING EVILS
By Nonpartisan
Theodore Roosevelt gained a national reputation by fighting the evil forces in New York. Later he was elected President of the United States. Calvin Coolidge gained a national reputation by fighting the evil forces in Boston. Later ‘he was elected President of the. United States. 3 Prosecutor Dewey of New York City has recently made a nationel reputation’ by cleaning . put the gamblers and rackets in the largest city in this country. Now he has about an even chance of being the next President of the United States. These are only a few illustrations of honest law enforcement officers gaining the respect of the general public and going to the top in poli< tics, irrespective of strict party lines. It is generally understood that present laws prohibit gamblers from shooting craps. playing bingo, opetating slot machines, or selling lottery tickets—with no discrimination. A big majority of the general public wants honest officials, and want the antigambling laws enforced, regardless of who operates thesé rackets or those who may siempl » do the “fixing. ” # 1 HOLDS iT UNWISE :
TO SKIMP ON PENSIONS
By D. E. H
The high taxes and high’ cost of living are crushing She lives out of
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious con. troversies excluded. Make your letter short, so all can have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)
many and unless there is something done soon, there will be thousands more on relief. Why. not do something before this happens; why not exempt from taxes people who haven't a decent living? Or why not give them a pension that they can live on decently and pay the taxes, and let them keep what little property, which they have worked hard for, all their lives? The larger the pensions, the more people are going to spend and that puts money in circulation. So why skimp on pensions? 8 # = BLAMES NAZI INTRIGUE FOR CZECH DISUNION By H. 8. Innocents abroad. That's what those American newspapér editors are who blame the Czechoslovakian affair on racial and national enmity between the two peoples of the former republic. These people got along very well in the democratic state. All this trouble, stirred up theré now is solely due’ to intrigues of the Germans. The famous Standartée II that caused fighting in Austria and Sudetenland, is now working up strife and hatred between the two most numerous peoples of Czechoslovakia, and as British and French “statesmen” do not wish to interfere; Hitler gets so much closer to the Ukraine and Rumania; the sources of grain and oil. It would be difficult to understand
the attitude of the two large Euro-
EASTER JOY By ROBERT 0. LEVELL
The mighty joy of God above
Is in the Easter flower: Telling the story of the love As seen by His ‘great power.
In.bloom of flower above the sod, Divine and sacred way; The Bight glow of our: precious
Revealed on Easter Day.
DAILY THOUGHT Blessed be the Lord God of our . fathers, which hath put such a thing as this in the king’s heart,
to beautify the house of the Lord which is in Jerusalem.—Ezra 9:27.
HE way to preserve the peace of the church is to preserve its
purity.—M. Henry.
>
pean democracies if we do not know that the Tory elements governing England and France would prefer Hitler and his Fascist system any time if the alternative were the establishment of real democracy and even the slightest reduction of their economic rule. But their day will come as surely as it did for their predecessors in the English and French revolutions. Eventually they will have to make concessions to the disinherited masses. Why not now?
® 7 8 COURTESY SUGGESTION MADE TO MORRISSEY By A Reader The public should welcome the much publicized program of our Police Chief to create a Police MNepartment that will be courteous and polite—an admission of the absence of those qualities. But may I suggest that the Chief should first subject himself to a course in common courtesy and civility . . . thereby setting an example to his subordinates. . . . It should be called to his attention that arresting innocent persons, putting them through a Bertillon routine and then furnishing the photographs to adjusters to be used in trials of civil cases, in which the Police Department is not involved, to create prejudice in the minds of a jury, is one way of arousing resentment. ° He may also begin by establishing the uniform rule of giving information of police javesiigaiions of aceidents, instead of favering highpowered adjusters and claim ‘agents.
» 2 od CUTTING OFF ONE'S NOSE NOT 50 GOOD By Amused This business of cutting off orb nose to spite one’s face is getting
to be a regular thing. There was the gentleman, his
name now fortunately forgotten,
who was goihg to sell his grouseshooting preserves and move straight to Canada if President Roosevelt was re-elected in 1936. There was the gentleman who sold his elaborate estate to Father Divine in the hope that it would make his Hudson River neighbor Franklin Roosevelt just as mad as could be. And now comes another gentle tan, of New Jersey this time, who is ordering his $200,000 estate torn down brick by brick, sawed down tree by tree, because he thinks it will make “Boss Hague” of Jersey City simply furious. , Cutting off your nose to spite your face is a pleasant pastime if you can afford the plastic surgery necessary to repair the damage later. But wouldn’t our Jersey friend have done more good if he had sold his estate and devoted the proceeds to getting rid of Hague? He might and he would almost surely have
had more fun.
1
\ | LIKE-FOR To BE IEA Noy
YOUR od
A 5-YEAR STUDY of matriage) istered against by Prof. Lewis M. Terman of| psychologists calculated ‘that for
LETS EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
THE STORY OF PE: yp 2 [JF You FREQUENT NCLOSZE oR whic eONALIT®
0S EIR WIVES
P YES ORNO cies
you INSERT THE SKIN OFF Yi |. PSP Yaga No-rsl
each other, the
— i
Both Prof. Terman and I have shown this result to many married women and, without exception, they have been ‘surprised that men were so foolish as not to know that wives like their husbands to be jealous of them. They seem to think it shows their love and ads miration.
» » s ”A IT'S EITHER EGOTISM or else you have some other sort of inferiority feeling because egotism is always an indication of an inferiority complex. People who are constantly apologizing are either afraid of offending other people and, therefore, feel inferior or else they wish—often unconsciously—to call attention to themselves, fearing they are not otherwise appreciated. Any way you take it, you find yourself frequently begging other people’s pardon it is a ‘bad personality habit.
. ; NOT VERY ‘suCcESsFULLY. Criminals try this frequently, but unless the skin be rubbed down
{to the flesh it does not destroy the
wrinkles, or “whorls,” as the scientists call them. No two persons ever have
Gon. Yohnion
Says—
New Deal Demoralized Now, but Firing Some of the Wand Wavers Would Help Regain Lost Prestige.
ASHINGTON, D. C., March 16.—Having been in Washington most of the time since March, 1833, both in and out of the Administration, observe ing it closely, I feel safe in saying that never in that time has it been so demoralized. It is wrong to suppose that its tendency to fly apart is due merely to coldness between some Cone
gressional leaders and the President. There are vital
disagreements within the Cabinet itself. There are dif
ferences . even more bitter between administrators, .
heads of bureaus and especially among unofficial “policy-makers” tucked away inconspicuously in departments. These have hitherto been active in hunting out new white rabbits for the trick hat of the great magician. These are the gentry of the White House janizatriat
and of various juntas who.at one time aspired to take
the nation apart and put it together again. The conviction within the Administration is becoming general that most of these soaring schemes have failed, that the nation’s essential condition is
much worse than it was when they started to perfect "| it and—and in their eyes darkest of all—that the
country knows it and wants no more of it. » » ”
HIS raises a suggestion that would have been scoffed at no later than six months ago—that perhaps the whole Administration is on the skids and that certainly many of these wandwavers are. In any undisciplined and inexperienced army, the approach of disaster always starts a babble of blame —a scramble for alibis, scapegoats, accusations and excuses. That is happening here. It was a perilous period the) country was going through. But these people persuaded the President that experience was exactly what he did not want in the great responsible positions of Government. New faces, new blood, new ideas—get rid of the old gang in the party and the Government, of old experience in both business and politics—that was their argu--ment and it prevailed. Just glance at the roster of officials. With a few notable exceptions, none of them was ever before
heard of outside of some small circle which had lite
tle or no relation to his present heavy responsibilities to the nation. 8 ” 2
HEY could and did either shove veterans of their political faith out of the executive branch or
frighten them into submission and quiet. But they couldn’t do that in Congress. They tried and the
failure of the attempt split the President away from -
his Congressional leaders. In the resulting weakening of the President's leadership and the failure of
both their own plans and the high objective of .
those plans to rescue the country, they are falling apart among themselves to the great disadvantage of both their party and the country. More than any other single cause, it is this condition of lost leadership, absence of experience and internal division ahd uncertainty which postpones recovery by paralyzing the confidence in which spende ing and investment could flow freely. Recently changes of front by words and promises are good. Action on some of this palaver would be better. But best of all—electrifying in fact—would be at least a partial house-cleaning within the Administration and a few—just a ‘pitiful few—good sound appointe ments of wise and experienced men whose very names would give the country faith from the rece ords of their lives and achievements."
It Seems to Me
By Heywood Broun
Florida Has Quaint Custom of Banning Gambling at End of Season.
IAMI, March 16.—Florida has a quaint native custom which has been vindicated by time. The formula includes moral, political and economic factors, And since it satisfies all concerned, there is no reason why it should be criticized. And, yet, to an outsider, the device remains curious. In spite of excel lent weather and good publicity, nobody has ever been able to. make the Florida tourist season last through the month of March. By now, the crowds in night clubs begin to diminish and the hotels start cooing for conventions and delegations of visiting schoolteachers. And every year just before the ides of March the Governor of Florida issues a stiff, peremptory proclamation declaring that gambling must cease forthwith. Games of chance are excoriated as the greatest of all menaces to Christian civilization. Often the fall of Babylon is mentioned. As a matter of courtesy and good politics, the Governor generally allows a committee of pastors to have a 24-hour start in the crusade against dice, roulette, bird cage and bingo. The ministers employ a fleet of lawyers to bring y injunction proceedings against the malefactors. Sometimes a clergyman will constitute himself an investigator and take on the role of roundsman of the Lord. Under such an assignment the stern reformer must force himself to visit the dives of sin in person, and bring at least $10 for the purpose of collecting evidence.
The Call of Duty
After the evidence has been gathered the clergy= men’s committee files its complaint and the Governor joins in with an order to every sheriff to do his duty,
“upon penalty of removal.
Before the curfew clamps down there is generally one final getaway night to give the house a chance to win back the salary of the baritone, the acrobats, the ballroom dancers and the rést of the performers who have constituted the floor show for the season. Heaven pity a visiting sailor on a night like:that. About 4 a. m. the wheels are packed away in came phor to protect them against the moths until 1940. Everybody takes the train for New York and when the sheriff appears on the following evening with a strong paper he closes up a deserted village. A good time has been had by all. Only one slight dissent should be noted. I was ‘the sucker who got nickéd on curfew night, and when I came arourid the following evening with fresh money fo get square, I was turned away from the darkened casino by an assistant sheriff, who said, “Don’t you know that gambling is immoral?” And all I could answer was, “I found that out last night, so may I inquire, what delayed you?”
Watching Your Health
By Dr. Morris Fishbein
MAN extraordinary letters come to all of those who write regularly for the newspapers. Often
we wonder just how many readers gather the full importance of the advice that is regularly offered. Here, for example, is a letter that just came to this column: Dear Doctor: Can a husband and wife have chile dren under these conditions: Wif§’s blood is three, husband’s blood is four. Do anf to match or does the matching of thé blood ha¥e anything to do with having children? :
Now the only figures relating to the blood that :
to do
might apply to this question are those hav those
with agglutinization of the blood corpuscles concerned with the Wassermann test.
In the case of the Wassermann test, which is the basic test for syphilis, the figures would y have been given as three plus and four plus. While people with either three plus or four plus Wassermann tests could have children, they ought not to have any until every possible attempt: ad been made to cure the syphilis. Children born of syphilitic parents are likely to show the results of such infection. In many instances the presence of such infection, not controlled by proper treatment, would probably result. in loss of the child before the natural time of birth. As I have frequently explained in these columns, each of us may be classified into various groups according to the reaction of our red blood cells to the serum or fluid matter of the blood of other persons.
BAC
ps
FLERE
she will be treated with consideration and that too
Stanford showed that this is. a ve mu Hh will not be expected of her, There is suc In
eral cha c of women, In
sbands, Jealousy by their wives nked 126 in
‘same whorl patterns| With various classifications there are various numa but | rub skin classifica ;
fT bert it groupe. WEIS NSE Soups
icular time of the year. What if he had ir ured & ut snd even
