Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 164, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 November 1922 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times Z>r! B. Martin, Editor-tn-Chlel. F. R. Peter. Editor. Roj W. Howard. Prealdent. O. F. Johnson. Bualnaaa Manager. PnblUhed dally except Sunday by Tha Indiana Daily Times Company. 25-29 S. Mertdlan St.. Indlanapoila. Member of thè Scrlpps-Howard JJewspapers Client of thè United Press. United New, United Financial and NBA Serri ce and member of thè Scripps Newepaper Al II ance. Member of thè Avdit Bureau of Clrculation. Subecription Ratea: Indianapolis —Ten Cents a Week. Blaewhere—Twelre Centa a Week. TELEPHONY — MAIN 3500.
For by me thy days shall be multlplled, and thè years of thy llfe shall be Increased. —Proverbs 9:11. The State ’s Best Grid Teams Meet NDIAXAPOLIS is football mad today. 1 And whv not? Two of thè State’ best football teams meet on Irwin fìeld —both undefeated until this dash. Notre Dame, whose brand of football is already nationally known, has scored thls season a total of 166 polnts to opponents’ 10. Butler, gatning natlonal prominence as thè mater of a reai football team, has thls record: Butler, 150; opponents, 14. Thousands wanted to see thè game todav who were destlned to disappointment. Ticket sale was stopped dayu ago. Is there anybody who thinks Indianapolis could ntot rnake excellent use of a glant athletlc stadium? Reward for Public Service rWIERE is little reward for a falthful pablic servant X other than thè knowledge that he has performed his duties well and that he has th© appreclatlon of thè public whom he served. Judge W. TV. Thornton, who is leavlng thè Marion County Superlor Court bench aster years of hard and painstaking work, has thls reward. v Lewis A. Coleman, president of thè Marion County Bar Association, uttered a truth when he said thè people can not fullv appreciate thè sacrifico a successful lawyer makes when he assumes a judgeshlp. The flnancial remuneration of a.Judge is amali compared wlth that of a successful lawyer. There is no such thing as a wealthy judge if he must depend on his salary for his means. There are many wealthy lawyers outside of thè judiciary who have become so through their efforts in their profession. Mr. Coleman was right again when he said that in thè retlrement of Judge Thornton from th© bench thè legai profession gains as thè bench loses. In thè case of Judge Thornton thè order is reversed. It is not "hall and farewell”; lt Is "farewell and hall!” About Controlling Birtha ALECTURE was announced here today on thè subject of birth control. Comparing thè aTerage familles of today wlth those old-style families of not so long ago, it looks to us as if births were now more or less under control. Where they used to have ten or a dozen children in a family of fair means, today they have no more than two or three. The cause for this ls in our system of economica, for thè mother instinct is as strong today a in our grandma’B day. Under an almost prohibltive cost of living. rearing a big family requires more heroism than thè Charge of thè Light Brigade. How would you like to buy shoes for a family of fourteen, not to mention bacon and eggs and other trifles? Birth control is more of an economie problem than one of morale. Need for State Police Recura rB shooting of Hence Orme on a road near Indianapolis again brings emphatically before thè public thè new menace of lawlessness mode easy by automobile. Check thè number of darlng robberies and similar crimes committed recently. In nearly every case thè automobile has flgured. City police in most cases are almost helpless in combatlng thls kind of crime. The fleld of thè criminal is too wide to be bound by city limite and police jurisdiction. Undoubtedly there wlll be brought before thè Legislature again next year a movement for a State constabulary. A proposai to create such a force was placed before thè last assembly and fought from thè beginnlng of thè session nearly to thè end when lt was flnally defeated. Automobile crimes such as thè Orme shooting wlll furnish good material for thè arguments of proponents of thè measure. Many good reasons have been advanced both for and against a constabulary. One of thè best of thè reasons for a State polle© such as those of Pennsylvania and New York ls thè fact that locai police departments are unable to meet thè sltuatlon.
For Better Food ONE of thè recommendattons of Mayor Shank's market commission for reform In city market control hM eacaped much discussion, but In some reepects It ls thè most important and practlcal of thè commlssion’s valuable suggestiona. Thle ls thè proposai that "more effective provision be made for a System of inspection to prerent thè sale of unwholesc ne food and thè use of deceptlve and fraudulent sa e methods, along with a System of gradine specifying condition or quality of goods, all auch artlcles to be properly tagged. To previde that liomegrown products can be designated by tagging, but forbldding such practlce when used as a means of deceptlcn. Persona sound guilty of using deceptlve or fraudulent methods in selling goods to be excluded from thè market.” The city weights and measures department has been breaking up thè practice of short weighing, although thè deputv inspectors claim they have not had much cooperatlou from thè courts. and thè city health department assigns inspectors to watch for spoiled products. Howi ver, it ls generally admltted there ls not enough watci 'ag and thè present System is not adequate to prerent some doubtful products belng sold as flrstclass goods uow and then. If standholders were compelled to tag their Products, thereby belng put in position of guaranteeing qualità, it might be easler for thè health department to prosecute those who sell rotten frult or vegetables. Back in thè Good Old Days DO you get impatlent when you slt In thè Union Station and wait for a train that ls late? And keep watching thè arrivai board to see if thè bad news, aster all, may not prove to be a mistake? Nothlng ls worse than waiting for a delayed train —unless it is waiting one’s tura in a dentist’s office. We read thè story of an old timer reminlscing about folks waiting for traina seventy-three years ago In Chicago. There was no telegraph in those days, he said. So John B. Turaer, president of thè old Galena & Chicago Union Rallroad, had an observatory built on top of Chlcago’s first depot in 1849. Turaer had his office in thè tower. Using a marine telescope, he used to watch out thè window for incomJng tralns. The telescope enabled hlm to “spot” an approaching train as far away as Austin, nix miles. Then he would shout thè glad tidings to
thè impatient travelers, who would slgh wlth relief and marvel at thè benefits conterred on humanity by that great scientiflc achlevement, thè telescope. Today we in Indianapolis can learn thè location of approaching traine wlth precislon, even though they a>-e hundreds of mlles away and not due here for hours. Or, even better, you can cali Main 4567 and an Information clerk wlll teli you if a train is on time or late. Great strldes? The everyday, commonplace Services which we take as a matter of course would have been magic&l luxuries back in 1849. The telephone, telegraph and radio had not been invented then. They were not needed. As soon as thè need arose, inventors provided them. In their way they are marvel. But their mapor functions keem to be to enable people to rush about faster In a mad semi-stampede. And sometlmes we wonder if it wouldn’t be a good thing for thè world lf it could undo a lot of lts progress and slip back to thè simpler "good old days.” Maybe not. But old man Turner and his telescope certainly Are thè lmagination.
Letters to thè Editor.
WHIPPING NECESSARY. Corporal punishment of children by parents should aot be abollshed by law and made a crime. I was given corporal punishment when a child, lf needed, and l thlnk if thè "leader” of thè Alllanoe of Womaifs Club© of Brooklyn had been given corporal punishment she wouldn't want to abolish thè law for corporal punishment now. H. A. C. PJKTIENCE GIVE6 CUT. Conceming ymir issue of Nov. 16 In regard to punishlng children: I have ralsed what ls called a large family and I find that some children can be talked to, or In other word, begged lnto mlndlng. But thls method ls very embarrasslng to parents at tlmes when they have company and have to say. “Charlie, please quit. Now if you don’t qult I won’t buy you any candy." You keep thls up until your patlence glves out and so does CharIle. Then Ma and her company can have a little tlme to talk wlthout belng interrupted. I contend that thè majority of children have to be punlshed at tlmes. Of course, no child should be beaten and no parent wlth any love for a child ls golng to whlp them unmerclfully. If there would be a law paased to prohiblt punishment, we would not need a Juvenile court, for I guess thè Brooklyn wornan will have a law passed that parante wlll not be responsive for what thè children do, and lf not, she had better let well enough alone and let a few get what is sometlmes necessary—a whlpping. A READER.
Permit Ua to Say Bachelors are always at largo. Business la better. Aster belng closed three years thè Dover (N. H.) Jail has slxteen prisonois now. Three of our moet beautiful word are "Dlnner ls ready." Gone are thè days when a man who dldn’t need a *have was & dude. We can all be thankful thls Thanksglvlug that lt ls not against thè law to eat cranberrlea A marine officer who proposed to a girl by radio wns accepted lmmedlately. Radio is dangerous. In these days of robbers speedlng away In autos lt is a relief to learn an Ohio thlef escaped on a cow. Just when people were feeling better toward Germany she begins exportlng musical Instruments. The bone of a poevrotherlum have been sound In Wyoming. Remember thè name in case you meet one. In Memphis a sherlff wanted to take Representative Herrlok’s piau© beoaus© he had an attachment for it. Looklng up is am optlmistlc h&blt, but In Flint, Mlch., a man asks $8,500 for hlttlng hts nose on an awnlng. When thè Binali boy voluntarily studies his lessons it is a aure sign that Christmas ls coming. ’ The thirty-two world’s Champion good looking women will be chosen, but none of thè wlnners will be surprised. D’Annunzio ls said to have wrltten 2,500 miles of poetry, but feels a little better now. Most of us have an Idea that heaven ls a placo where there ls enough good luck to go around. Many a fur coat has some unpaìd bills In thè pocket. The world's greatest men have their moments of foollshness. Lloyd George's son ls named Gwyllian. Trouble with laying something aside for a damp day is you are always coming to a little dew. TOM SIMS. Fond Memoriea By BF.RTOy BRAT/ET ( HE nappy days of childhood," How fair and brlght they werei How full of careless rapture Or people so aver: To which enthusiastio tuff I feci I must demur. ‘ The happy day of childhoodl" Well, maybe they were that. But ehiefly I remember The school whereln I sat And how I liated all thè task That I was busled at. t '‘The happy days of childhood!” Were days when. I recali, I had tlic croup and measles. Which lield me in their thrall; And other “kid” diseaees, I thlnk I had 'era all 1 “The happy days of childhood 1” Those timea of Joyous play. When I had figrhts with other boys Not less than twice a day. And swollen lips and blackened eyes Were tokens of thè fray. “The happy days of childhood!" Appear, on backward view. And days when everything was wrong That I desired to do. And always I must go to bed Before I wanted to! So, thouth a frank opinion May gire romance a jar, ITI say that slnee I're grown a man I'm happler by far. Those childhood days are over— And ree, I'm glad they arei (Copyright, 1922, NEA Serrice)
THE IKDIANAPOLIS TIMES
French Peasants Stili Believe in Sorcery as Power By United Netca NICE, Franco, Nov. 18. —Along both thè French and Italian Riviera, there are stili good slmple folk who believe In thè potency of sorcerers and soroeresses. Witness thè breathless anxiety wlth which people on both sides of thè bordar i e awaltlng thè judgment of thè Sa,. Remo tribunal on thè affair of thè liti'e Viale boy. The little Viale was slck. The doctors couldn’t do a thing for hlm. Flnally, his distracted mother, on tho advlce of her slster, brought in a duly authorized, practicing sorceress. Wlth great alacrity thè sorceress prò. clalmed that thè only trouble wlth thè youngster was thè speli cast upon hlm by one oj thè nelghbors. To exeroise that, she gave thls reoeipe: "Take a whlte hen, extract lts llver, All thè llver wlth pine, and then cook lt In a new casserole, together wlth thè little boy's one-plece suit. Let thè I whole mess come to a boli and then ! chop lt up. Keep chopplng lt up until j you hear a sound of dragging chains, , groanlng, slnging, and thè sound of j bella. If these sounds don’t oecur bai fore three days, then only your spell- ! casting neighbor can heal th© little fellow.” Three days passed, and no ominous sounds resulted. Then thè mother called in thè suspeoted neighbor, a hotel proprietess.
Ancients Were Home Brewers ofDe Liixe Class By \EA Servine BERKELEY. Cai., Nov. 18.—From thè hieroglyphs and htstorlc records of ancient Egypt and Assyrla has been coaxed at last thè story of man's carllest adventures In prohlbitlon. And what they say ls, “Old atufT." For these centurie old characters and writings teli us that even then dld bootleggers fiourish and homo fcrew was abroad In thè land; that there were dry laws and dry ralds, and thè boys sat around their Babylonian beer and walled “thetn was thè days.” To Prof. IL F. Lutz. Egyptologist at thè University of California, are we lndebtnd for thè exhaustive research that hared these consollng pinture of thè past. Recipe Galore And, oh boy, among other thlngs he dlscovered more than 100 “reclpes” for “maklng your own." Also he sound that prohlbitlon was not much of a success In lts f.rst appenranoe. It carnea a a rellgious enaetment. Persia, lt seems. wa.s thè cradle of thè bootlcgger. A natlon largely orcupled In thè maklng of wlne, lt did not take kindly to thè enforcement aot. Kgyptlan monarchs flnally Interceded. but wlne etti uggì lng already Was becomlng a pet sport.
Lcsson of Justice to Eskimos Fails, Declares Mounted Police
fly S'EA Sem-ice MONTREAIv, Nov. 18.—Otiangwakthe Eskimo, hns gone back to hi Amtlc home very dubious about clvlllzatlon. Ouangwak kllled two other Eskimos, was eaptured aster a 2,000-mlle chase, was well fed and treated kindly durirg thè two years he was held prlsoner, wa trled by a whlte maji's Jury and sound gullty—and then was pardoned nnd allowed to go home. "Why don’t you shoot me?" ho said In his own language to Sergi.
JANUARY WILL WITNESS NEW CHURCH DEDICA TION
urc-h to dedicate thè new building
By TUE VISITOR The formai dedleation of thè new $306,000 Tabernacle Presbyterlan Church will be held in thè early pari of January, lt was announced today. It was Arsf planned by Dr. J. A. Dunkel, pastor, and members of thè church to dedicate thè new building on Thanksgivlng Day, but delays In building have eaused a postponement. Instead of having thè most important Thanksgiving Service In thè history of thè church, thè members of thè Tabemacle Church hope to start thè new year wlth worship In their new tempie. The church proper, now nearing j completion, is thè first unit of a big church plant. The second part of th© ' structure will be what ls known as thè chapel and thè third unlt wlll be | tho Sunday school building and com- ! munity hall. The present temporary structure, which houses all depart ments of thè church, will be used as a community house and Sunday school building until thè various other units are cornpleted.
Do You Remember Away Back When —
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Thls building stood at Merldian and Washington St.s., where thè Kahn building now atands. It stood there only a few years ago, but oould you have told before looklng at this picture how high lt was? The pieture was taken by thè W. H. Basa Photo Company.
Fuel Dictator Seizes Millionaire’s Coal and Distributes It Among Poor Vìllagers
BY EDWARD THIERRY NEA Staff Corrrepondent lIIGHLAND FALLS, N. Y., Nov. 18. —I carne to thè villa ge of Highland Falla to have a look at thè man who had thè nerve to back a wagon up against Mrs. J. P. Morgan' coal pile and cart away enough coal to keep thè home Aires golng for fuelless townspeople. The man ls William L. Perkins, fuel adminlstrator of Orange County. He is atout, elderly, wears glasses, and is a retlred graln and foed dealer. "Why, there waan’t Ave tons of coal In all Highland Fails until we got busy,” said Perkins. "What do you t-uppose they appolnted me fuel admlnistrator for? So’a everybody would have coal. wasn't lt? Not Just thè rloh —but thè poor, too. “Well, I sound there wa a a great stack of coal at thè country place of Mrs. J. P. Morgan Sr., and a lot more at Robert Goelet’s piace. And onljr Ave tons In Highland Falla, a slzable place, you know. Sdir Twenty Tons 'Tra Just had twenty tons taken t.way from Mrs. Morgan’s place and. dlstrlbuted to familles in thè villane, a ton to a family. ITI take more from her before I'm through. Now we're paroeltng out some of thè Goelets' extra coal. I don’t know how much they bave, except that ihey've got
W. O. Douglas of thè Royal Canadlan Mounted Polle©, who suffered two months of hardship In his long cha> to thè scene of thè crime, 150 mlle* north of Chesterfleld Inlet, at thonorthem tip of Hudson Bay, almost Inside tho Arctlc Olrcle. "That ls not thè law," said Sor geant Douglas. Puzzlnd by law uuangwak trembled when at last In Montreal he faced thè strange, si lent, omlnous men In tlve courtrooni "Why doesn't thè Big Chlef-Dreesed
ABOVE A MAIN ENTRANCE \HEW OF THE NEW $300,000 TABERNACLS PRESBYTE RIAN CHURCII, THIRTY-FOURTH ST. AND (COLLEGE AVE., WHICH IS NEARING COMPLETION. BELOW THE FIRST PUBLISHED VIEW OF THE INTERIOR OF THE TABERNACLE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Both thè exterior and Interior of thè church resomble a big cathedral. In style of architecture, lt ls dlfferent from any other church in thè city. The pipe organ is belng installed and other Anal steps toward thè completion of thè auditorium proper.
""***''(af ■ a / Jf WILLIAM T. PERKINS
too much accordlng to th way I reed thè law. "I know of flfty tons In one pile In
Llke-A-Woman shoot me?” he said, polntlng to thè Judge. The Eskimo, who frankly admltted kllllng two brother, Angeallok and Vlecummlck, and stealing’the wtfe of one of them. couldn't understand. Nor can thè other Eskimos In thè (’anadlan Northland. The whlte man's laws puzzle them. They dimy understand that Ouangwak’s ohase and trial cost a great deal of thè whlte man’s money—and lt was all for nothlng. The cost of oapturing hlm. bringIng hlm back, and trying hlm was probably 18,000. Was lt all for nothlng? Men of thè royal Canadlan mounted police thlnk so For suddenly there have been more murdere by Eskimos. One of them. Allknmlsk, has confessed to thè kllllng of Corporal Doak of thè mounted, and Otto Binder of thè Hudson Bay Company. No more will be brought all thè way to Montreal. Inspector Wood of thè mounted is giving them preilmlnary hearing at Herschell Islano. and a special" court wlll be establlshed in thè Far North next sprtng to tr.v them. "The Eskimo mlnd cannot understand," said Inspector Wood. “When they klll they expect to be kllled. We take them away and their frlends gl ve them up for dead Yet they come back —free. We’\-e trled to teacti them th lesson of Justioe —but lt has missed Are.”
Most Famous Picture of Saint Cecilia on Wall of Catacomb
QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can gel ali answer to any question of fact or informntiou by wrltlns to thè In dlanapolls Tlmes. Washtnrton Bureau. 1322 N. Y. Ave . Washington, D. C., cnoloeln* 2 centa In stampa Medicai, legai, and love and niarrlage advlce svili not tic given. Unslfned IpUpcb wlll not be answered, but all lettera are eorifidenttal, and recelvo personal replica.—EDlTOß. Q. What are thè famous pictures of St. Cecilia? A. —There are many famous pictures of thè Saint. The oldest is said to be a rude drawing on thè wall of a catacomb in thè eemetery of San Lorenzo. A mosaic is In thè apse of her church at Rome, and Cimaline, thè old Ital ian artist, painted a picture of her over thè aitar of thè old church at Florence. She ls usua.lly reprosented wlth an organ and a crown of roses. Kaphael’s St. Cecilia was painted for an aitar piece for her chapel near Bologna in thè Church of San Giovanni. In thls picture she ls representod in thè center of thè group. Tn her hand ls a small musical instrument, but lowerlng it she ls looklng up in ectasy to thè angela who have caught up her song and are slnging with her. At her feet are other musical Instruments. At her right, St. Paul leans on his sword, behlnd ls St. John; to her left is thè Magdalene and betiind
Give Jewelry I This Christmas f Tlme does not diminish thè in|trinale worth nor dim thè enduring t ‘' r 'Vsfi beauty of Mullally Jewelry. You need h\ J not spend a large amount in this 'M * store to find a suitable gift. We urge you to bny early. J, P. MULLALLY, Diamond Merchant L. S. AYRES & CO. ' STREET FLOOR
thè Goelet back yard. The law says you can’t hold more than one month s supply.” Pency Wilkinson, superintendent of thè 1,600-acre Morgan estate, says tha Morgans burn Ave tons a week. And accordlng to reports, there are 350 tons stored on thè place. "Understand, thè Morgans and Goolets aren't offering any resistane© to our solzing thè coal. I guess they know thè law all right.” Just a Yam "What’s thls about their offering voluntarily to divide their coal wlth thè villSLgers?" Perkins wa asked. “That's just a yam. They tìidn’t offer anybody as much as a lump cf coal. So we took lt. “You can see how < thls Works against th© poor familles or th© on of moderate means. It Isn’t right foi somebody with money to grab off all thè coal just becausa they have thè money and get their orders In early. "Am I popular? Hanged lf 1 know, or care. I’m just dolng ray duty. I don’t get any pay for thls job, but lt Isn't a question of money. “All I'm lnterested In ls seelng that all th© familles In Highland Fails get tho coal they need. The coal dealers are dolng thè deliverlng, and all they get ls a norma! proAt_"
New York Detective Identifies Unknown Dead by Anthropology
By NORRIS QUINN NEA Service Staff Wrlter NEV T YORK. Nov. 18 —The dry-as-dust anthropologist, delving into forgotten strada and pieclng together fragmentary bones of prehlstorio moneterà, today has tumed teacher to th© New York police. His knowledge ha been turned to practic&l account in thè newest and most spectacular branch of police research —ldentlfylng unknown dead. Slx sundred unknown bodles are sound yearly In thè streets, alleys and waters of Greater New York. But through leesons learned from thè anthropologist elghty-seven per cent were identlAed beyond dispute In 1920, more than elghty-six per cent In 1921 and a larger proportion of suecesses ls looked for thls yesr. How It’s I>one Captain John H. Aypres. chief of thè mlssing persons bureau of tho New York police department. today told in an exoluslve lntervlew wlth NEA Service bow h© ha aocompllshed his successe. “If th© corpse is oompleie and clothed, ldentlffcatlon ls comparatively slmpl©,” he says. "We examtne th© pockets for letters, documenta, jewelry or keys.
her is St. Augustine. St. Cecilia by Carlo Dolci is another famous work. but Naujok’s St. C.-cilia is perhaps thè most universally popular. Here thè rapt inspiration of thè beautiful face as she sits at thè organ is appealing and uplifting. Above her thè angels are showering roses, one of wliich has falien by her hand on thè keyboard. q —What is thè average speed of thè mallard duck? A. —The average speed of thè mallard duck when under full flight is seventy-fìve feet per second. Q. —What is meant by one foot pound of cnergy? A.—One foot-pound of energy means thè energy of a pound weight falling through a distance of one foot. Q. —How old are thè Kennedy mlnes and what is thè lowest depth of these mlnes? A.—The Kennedy mines are sixtyseven years old and thè lowest depth is 4,800 feet. Q. —What can be used to rentove thè rust from ‘an oxidized gas grate? A.—The United States Bureau of Standards reoommends mechanical re-
NOV. 13, 3223
Wets Will Center Fight on Beer Before Congress By HARRY B. HUTfT NEA Staff Carretpondent WASHINGTON, Nov. IS.—Four por oent beer. Light wlnes of from 12 to 20 per cent alcoholio content. These are thè demands now to he made of Congress by organized wete as a result of increased favor for modlflcatlon of th© Volstead law registered by voterà In thè recent congressional electlon. Although “Ught wines” are always mentioned in all modlAcation proposals, thè one thing thè wets have closest to their hearts and thoughts, however, is—beer. It springs from a belief that thè expeciatlon and demand of thè rank and 01© who marked wet i ballota on Nov. 7 was for beer. Whether an effort will be made to obtain modlAcation at thè banda of thè present Congr-yss wlll be determined at a meeting of officiala of thè . Association Against thè Prohibitlon | Amendment late this month. Some members believe it would be i “good politics” to givo thè present , Congress a chance to act on modlAca- | tion in thè light of popular wlll as expressed at thè congressional electlon. With thè organizatlon of thè new Congress In March, however, thè Aght to overhaul and “Überalize” thè prohibition enforcement act will get under way lmmedlately. Volstead Defeat Wet Vlctory The defeat of Andrew J. Volstead, father of thè present enforcement act, ls thè biggest single ald to tha wet program. Although Vclstead’a suocessor is dry hlmself, 'Volstead's defeat removes hlm from thè chairmaaship of thè Judldarjr Committee and puts in his place Congressman Georg S. Graham of Pennsylvania, a wet. Gov. Edward I. Edward, newly elected senator from New Jersey, ts expected to Jump lnto thè forefront of thè Aght In th© Senate. As an ©Xpertenced ald and a counselor wise In seoatorial maneuverlng, Jlm Reed of Ml© souri ls counted on to be his ohlef as- | sistant. Want Whole Amendment Kllled "It doesn't really make any great | dlfference whether thè present Con* ; gres or thè newly elected one passo : a modiflcatlon act,” says G. V. HlnckI ley. head of thè Association Against | thè Prohlbitlon Amendment, who has ' dlrected thè assoclatlon’s congrosslonaj drive. "What we are out to get, od oourse, ls thè repeal of thè whoia pr> hlbition propositioru” IF YOU ARE WELL BRED You know that !t ls not advlsable for a young woman to ask a man to cali upon her untll she ha met hlm eeveral tlmes and ls quite sure that he wlshes to avall hlmself of thè privilege. A woman r.ever calls upon a man except upon a business matter, In which case she makes her stay brief and does not diaciuss social or domestlo topica. If, for any rea-son, a woman ls obliged to make a cali upon a man at his home she ls accompanied by an older woman.
"If these are lacking we tura to thè clothes themselves. Usually there are tailor marks. In thè better grada of clothing thè name of thè ! owner often is sewn in. "But when a body, besides being ! unclothed, also is headless, thè problem becomes intricate. Anthropologist Steps In "It is there that thè anthropologist steps in with thè knowledge he ha* gained in reconstruoting dinosaurs and pterodactyls from thè most meagre fossil remains. “Just as he would work with a fossi!, he examines thè pigment of thè haJr on thè victim’s body and tells us thè color of thè halr on th* misslng head —and sometlmes he can teli us thè color of thè eyes, too. “Talting a legless. armless and head le ss oorpse, thè anthropologist tells us thè victim's helght and weight. Ile j examines thè blood corpuscles and ’ tells us thè approximate age. “Or, given only a thigh botte, he tells us thè owner’s sex, age, weight and helght—if thè owner was not of abnormal or grotesque proportions. "Stili more—from a fleshleas skull. thè anthropologist can deduce thè owner’s age, sex and race and even make a good guess as to hts nationality.” moval with a stiff wire brush. plckhng in dllute muriatlc acid, or prokmged immersion in a hot solution of aminonium citrate. Q. —Where was thè flrst ooal mined in thè United States? A. —Near Richmond, Virginia.
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