Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 278, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1923 — Page 4
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IS YOUR -w-F you weren’t born to be a super-man, you’ll CAREER I never be one. Every human being is born LIMITED? X into the world with the potential ability to develop just so far but no farther. This theory, about any individual’s limitations, is advanced by Dr. H. H. Goddard, psychiatrist at Ohio State University. It sounds reasonable, since we all know that we cannot build a skyscraper out of one load of bricks. Some of us are more gifted than others. Also, we lack certain powers that nothing on earth can possibly develop. Max Rubner years ago penned a similar idea: “For every pound weight of his body at maturity the average man produces and consumes 362.900 calories of energy before he dies. Death comes when he has consumed that amount. Nothing that he can possibly do will make his body produce during adult life more energy than the 362,900 calories; and nothing can possibly prevent his death when this amount of energy is produced. Rubner’s theory was that our potential physical strength is limited, that it is impossible to increase it past a certain point. Goddard has a similar idea about natural abilities. However, no one should be discouraged by these theories. Each of us has enough potential strength and ability to make us reasonably successful —if we develop them. No man, not even an athlete, ever develops his powers fully. No matter what record a man makes, he has within him the power to beat that record. Occasionally we think we have exerted ourselves “to the last ounce of strength,’’ but that’s imaginary. DEAFNESS ¥ EXPERIMENTS conducted by The Times in AND THE 1-4 connection with the development of hearing RADIO i J in persons considered totally, or almost totally deaf, by means of radio have opened up anew field which may prove of considerable scientific benefit. Why radio should have the power to make it possible for persons who have no usable hearing to enjoy music is a question scientists must answer. That it does accomplish this result we believe was conclusively proved. It is not claimed that radio will accomplish or has accomplished miracles or that it is possible for persons whose organs of hearing are absent or totally useless suddenly to be able to hear. But it is certain that through the radio lateut hearing powers have been intensified remarkably. What place radio will have in the teaching of the deaf is yet to be determined. Experts in this line have for a considerable time had the theory that the power to hear could be developed in persons unable to distinguish between sounds. Some success has been achieved in this field by means other than the radio. The latter may prove the most efficient means of carrying on this work. The results of the experiments have been presented for what they are worth. They should at least result in further investigation and experiment.
BEAUTIFY BRING is the season when a householder’s YOUR fancy turns to thought of improvement of HOME k J his premises. It is the time of year when the average citizen turns not only to gardening and golf, but to the beautification of the home and of home surroundings. Next week there will be held at the State fairgrounds the annual Home Complete Exposition. The exposition will he cxlaetly what the name implies. Everything needed for the complete home will he shown. K Indianapolis citizens take pride in their homes. A tour of of the streets reveals that fact. The city is continuously bo MS changed, not only by an unprecedented amount of new con--35 xction, but by improvement. rt* At the Home Complete Exposition there will be available Bab in abundance on every subject from new draperies to new B)fs. A visit to the exposition would prove profitable to any one EXPENSES -m ypUSSOLINI, of Italian black-shirt fame, probCAN BE j\/| ably will bold his job a long time. He’s cutREDUCED X.YX. ting down government expenses. That’s the Eurest-fire vote getter in our age of abnormal war taxation. Mussolini recently took a blue pencil and whacked 512 million lire out of the expense estimates from his ministers of finance and the interior. He follows this by abolishing 600 Italian courts. We also have too many courts, too many lawyers, too much red tape and delay in legal procedure. The chief reason is that we have too many laws. The idea that we can dodge our problems by legislating against them is a national obsession.
ASK THE TIMES A nswers
You can get an answer to any Question of fact or Information by writing to The Indianapolis Times Washington Burou. 1322 New Dork Ave., Washington. D. C.. Inclosing 2 cents in stamps. Medical, legal and love and marriage advice cannot be given, nor can ext- tided research be undertaken, or papers, speeches, etc., be prepared. Unsigned letters cannot be answered, but all letters are confidential and receive personal replies. —Editor. How far is It from the surf are to tiie center of the earth? It is estimated to be 20,926,202 feet; or about 3,963 miles. What is the Ifoly Grail? The cup which was used by Christ at the Last Supper. How has the average man of fifty divided his life—in sleeping, working, eating, etc.? A French statistician states that a man 50 years of age has spent 6.000 days in sleep, has worked 6,500 days; walked 800 days; enjoyed some amusement 4,000 days; spent 1,500 days in bed; and was sick 600 days. He further estimates that this man has eaten 17,000 pounds of bread; 16,000 pounds of meat; 4,600 pounds of vegetables, eggs and fish; and has consumed 7,000 gallons of liquid. What does a Sabbath Day's Journey mean? Under the old Mosaic law the Jews restricted as to the distance they might travel on the Sabbath. According to one authority this was IVi furlongs, or about 1,650 yards (110 yards i less than a mile). The Rabbins fix it j at 2,000 cubits, which Is about 1.350 yards. Josephus says thr * the Mount
of Olives was five sta<lia, or 625 paces, from Jerusalem, which would make the allowable Sabbath day’s Journey about 1,050 yards. Where does the word "loafer” come from? An old Dutchrr.man, It is said, settled In New York and acquired a large fortune. He had an only daughter, and a young American fell In love with her. The father forbade him the house, but the daughter encouraged him. Whenever the old merchant saw the lover about the premises, he used to say to his daughter, "There Is that ‘lofer* of yours, the Idle, good for nothing, etc.;’’ and so an idle man, hanging about, came to be called a 'loafer.' How the letter "a” got Into the word Is not known. Where was the first street railway built? The first passenger street track in the world w&s lain In New York City —the Fourth Ave. street railraod. chartered ip 1833. It was built on the Bowery' and was opened for travel in November, 1832 Has a dead rriai ever been brought back to life? In a way, y eg ; D r . u. 3- Russell of London last year succeeded 1° restoring the heart beat of a patient after it had leased for more than S n hour, lie accomplished this by the injection of a Stimulant, the massaging of *he heart ' with the hands inside the pericardium, and the final injection of andfrenalin. At the end of an hol^ r the man began to breathe, and lived again. 4
The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN. Editor-In-Chief. FRED ROMER PETERS. Editor. ROY W. HOWARD. President. O F. JOHNSON. Business Manager
Hope of Wets to Change Volstead Act Appears Weak —Amendment Regarded Unconstitutional
Tins is the third of the series of articles on the national aspects of the prohibition movement written by C, C. Lyon of The Indianapolis Times Waahing'tcn bureau. By C. C. LYON WASHINGTON. March 31.—1 t took the approval of thirtysix States tc put nation-wide prohibition into the Federal Constitution. It will require the approval of the same number to take it out. The prohibitionists worked for a good half century to reach the point they are today. How long will it take the wets to undo what has been done? Hardly a week goes by nowadays that some wet leader or paid lobbyist for wet interests doesn’t break into print with the statement that he sees unmistakable signs that the country is about to discard the Eighteenth amendment. Let's see about that. So long as the drye can keep control of only thirteen out of the fortyeight States, the Eighteenth amendment is absolutely safe where it is. Dry Show Majority Are the drys apt to hold such control for any considerable length of time? Read the last November election returns from a score or more of western and southern States. The drys won overwhelmingly, except in New York and New Jersey, lust election. The big hope that the wets talk about is enough votes in Congress to
GARDENERS CAN GET FREE SEEDS 1 APPLICATION Department of Agriculture. Will Furnish Bulletins on Vegetable Growing, Ity Times Sprrial WASHINGTON, March 31. —If you! are one of the vast army of backyard gardeners. Uncle Sam is ready to help you make things grow. Free seeds may be obtained by application to your Congressman ar.d any expert advice that you need will be cheerfully supplied if you write to the Deportment of Agriculture here. If you are new to this home garden game, and want to know how to pro pare the soil for a good crop, write to the Department of Agriculture, Wash nprton, I>. for bulletins on how to make things grow. If the buys ;md worms are had in your neighborhood, get Uncle Sam's hook on how to fight them. It tells wh o kind of sprays to use for each different r ivager, and how to apply it. t'ther bulletins will tell you what variety of vegetables will grow best In your particular neighborhood, and Just when to plant them to get the best results “City gardeners can get a lot of healthy exercise and make their time profitabi* as well.” says W. K. Beattie, garden expert of the bureau of plant industry. “The uvo ice city garden, depending upon its size, can be made to produce from S4O to SBS during a Bummer. our figures show,” lie continued. ‘During the war, we had from 3,500,000 to 4,000,000 back yard gardens, but th number now Is doubtless considerably less ” Explosion I-. Fatal limn Rprrial SOUTH BEND, Ind.. March 31. — Benjamin L. Smith, 42. died at a local hospital late last night from bums received in an explosion in his gar- ; age. He is survived by the widow j and a son.
Make the Backyard Pay Strawberries Nearly All Year
By W. R. BEATTIE Extension Horticulturist. United i States Department of Agriculture. II a IRST fruit of the spring time, |H beautiful luscious red strawberrles come upon our tables when ‘ the store of fresh and canned fruits ■ is about exhausted and just when wo : most appreciate fresh fruit. Strawberries should find a plana in practically every homo garden where | a space 12 by 12 feet in size ca.n bo I provided. Strawberries can bo grown on any ■ good, well-drained land, but require j plenty of fertility in the soil. Tho j time of setting the plants will del pend upon locality and varies from ! early spring in the extreme north to : early fall in parts of the South. Sev I oral stylos of planting and cultivati ing aro used, but the matted row system Is most common. By this system the rows are spaced about three feot apart for the small garden and the plants set eighteen I inches apart In the rows, the planting being done rather early so there will be a free growth of new plants j to form a matted row about a foot |in width. In case the plants become | too thick they are thinned to stand four to six inches apart. Water Required During the summer the strawberry plants should be given frequent but rather shallow cultivation and the runners trained so that the newly I ormetl plants will be evenly distrib- ■ uted. In case of excessive drought, or in regions where irrigation must be depended upon, water should be applied as required to keep the plants alive and growing. In the late fall or early winter a mulch of straw or pine needle's should be worked in among the strawberry plants and in regions where the winters are severe this covering should be heavy enough to protect the plants especially against alternate freezing and thawing. In the spring the plants can be worked up through the covering and the mulch •ft to keep the berries clean. There are a great many varieties .of strawberries, some of which are
As the Wets See Prohibition
By CAPT. W. H. STAYTON, Founder and Executive Head of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment. Prohibition is a good many things that the Anti-Saloon League and its other professional advocates, both in and out of Congress, claim for it. The errors lie in their deductions. Prohibition, for instance, is a moral issue. Under its present form of Volsteadism, it has been largely instrumental in creating a Nation of law despisers and lawbreakers. Theoretically, prohibition essayed to remove the evil of the legalized liquor traffic and the curse of the saloon. In practical effect it has introduced the boot-
amend the Volstead act, increasing the alcoholic content of liquor. But this appears to me to boa weak and false hope. In the first place, the Eighteenth amendment says that ;ho manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor is pro-
Church and Theater Cooperate; ‘Holy City ' to Be Sung at Circle LILLIAN MAT TTET'SLEIN
More and more tho old battle between tho church and theater is lessening in intensity. Tho move merit is toward cooperation. For Instance, Keith's Theater has been donated each noon for two weeks for special Lenten services of the Church Federation of In lian-
particularly adapted to growing in tin* home garden. By planting early medium and late varitl>-s can be greatly lengthened. During comparatively recent years there has been da veloped a class of fall bearing, or rather spring uni fall bearing, va titles. Superb and l'regressive are among the leading varieties fox foil bearing. Spring anil Fall The proper method is to set. the plants in tho spring and k'-q> aJI blossoms pinched off 'luring the spring blooming period. The plants v. ill then produce a. fall crop and another crop the following spring after which they should be discarded. Klondike is the most universally
Couzens Maintains Rails Are Drifting to Government Ownership
By JOHN CARSON. Timex Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, March 31.—-Rail-road Inefficiency Is costing millions of dollars In Investments and operating expenses, according to Senator Couzens of Michigan, who is now making a study of the transportation problem. Couzens has Insisted that the country Is moving rapidly toward Government ownership of railroads. Unless someone can show him another remedy for the railroad mess, Couzens says Government ,ownership is inevitable. To support his claim that the railroads are Inefficient, Couzens listed a number of specific charges. Ho showed that Henry Ford had discussed the error of tha railroads In building larger and heavier locomotives and added that the railroad executives like the ostrich, Ijad buried their heads rather than face the situation. Couzens’ specific charges of inefficiency are as follows: Railroads have not developed any greater efficiency from locomotives in the last eighteen years. Despite the Increased power of lo-
legging industry, a fax greater evil. Far worse, the drug vendors, relatively harmless in the days of open liquor sales, have followed in the wake of the bootleggers. General results —a steady increase in (lie crime record since the inauguration of Volsteadism, with Federal and State prisons, blind asylums and insane asylums crowded with their victims. Under Volsteadism the Government loses $500,000,000 annually in taxes on spirituous liquors alone, and the States lose a far greater sum, all of which must be met by additional taxes on an already overburdened people. Thus prohibition is shown to be false in morality as in economics. un-American, an incentive to lawbreak in g.
hibitod. Congress is given authority to say how great tho alcoholic content may be before liquor becomes intoxicating, but it is safe to say that any Increase in percentage to more than 3 or 1, or possibly 5 per e. nt. would be regarded by the courts as
apolls Keith's did not upon until 3 yesterday afternoon in observance of Good Friday. Asa mark of reverence the Circle Thea'er Sunday and all next week will have Lillian May H*u leln, local artist, sing “The Holy City.”
grown of the single crop in tho South. Premier, Early Jersey, < 'zark. 1 Hinlap, Marshall, Chesapeake and Gandy are among tho leading single crop sorts for the north central and northern States. Strawberry blossoms aro of two kinds, tho one having what are termed “perfect” blossoms, which hove both tho male and female parts of the flower, and the other called “Imperfect,' ’and having the female part of tho tlower only. Where the entire planting Is of tho imperfect sorts little or no fruit would result. The varieties named above are ail of the “perfect” type, and can be planted alone. NEXT: llow to grow raspberries.
comotives sinco 1903, the “tractive effort’’ remains tho same today. Two thousand engines could be saved In passenger service and 6.000 engines in freight service if thirtynine Inefficient roads would only equal the performance of ten of the more efficient roads. If forty inefficient roads would do as well as the ton most efficient roads, they would save $45,000,000 a year on coal bills in freight service and $20,- ! 000,000 a year In passenger service. TRIAL IS WEARING CLOSE Attorneys Argue in Martinsville Killing Case. Times Special MARTINSVILLE, lnd., March 31. The State is expected to close Its arguments in the trial of Samuel T. Walk, fanner, charged with the slaying of Ferd Haase, his son-in-law, late today. court session was devoted to character witnesses for Walk. He was said to be a law-abiding citizen of good reputtlon.
contrary to the Constitution, and Congress would be overridden. Congress Is Dry Anyway, in absolute fairness to both sides, I don’t believe there is the remotest possibility that the new Congress will play the game of the wets. There are too many drys in It. On temperance matters, the new Congress, like several past Congresses, will be dominated by the Anti-Saloon League of America.. The man beliind the gun is Wayne 15. Wheeler, general counsel of the league. As Wheeler told me tho other day: “The new Senate will have four more days than the old Senate, which was about two-thirds dry, while in the House we can count on 302 drys out of a total membership of 435. With such overwhelming majorities there will he no backward step and the wets throughout the country may as well reconcile themselves to that fact.” Some of the things the new Congress is very opt to do to the wets is to extend the present ’three mile limit" to anywhere from twelve to eighteen miles; place all Federal enforcement officers under civil service in order to rid the service of politicians, and vote a lot more money for prohibition enforcement. In the light of all this, it seems to me that the wets have built iheir hopes on a very weak foundation.
RUINS OF ANCIENT RAYA IN MEXICO OLDER THAN TUT j Explorers Plan to Excavate Ancient City of Itza, \\ WASHINGTON March 31-Old YV Nlng Tut needn't go putting on airs! Just across the Quit i of Mexico, about ne.'i miles from New Orleans < xplort rs arc expecting shorti ly to make ex. \ivati-■: which will uncover relics as ancient. if not more ro. than those found in the tomb of the old Egyptian pharaoh. Dr. Sylvanus G. Morley of the Carnerie fnsiiiute here has been working for years among the ruins nf the ancient Maya civilization In Yucatan of Central America. He first visited the r.te of the ruins of the lost city of Tulum in 1013 During this last y, he reported | that much more intensive investiga ■ linns had been possible. Th • forest whs felled completely inside the inner ■ inclosure a.nd around the principal : temples. Tracings of the mural paintings. ! maps, plans and elevations have been made ami brought back to Washington. Th hieroglyphic writing found there, with the exception of dates and figures, has not yet l-.-on deciphered. Such a great amount of interest has been aroused among the wealthy < Ul/.ens of Yucatan and among supporters of the New York Museum i of the American Indian, that It is expected that work of excavating will he undertaken very shortly. Archeologists of the Carnegie Institute would direct the work. Professor .Marshall H. Savllle of the New York Museum believes that the old city of Chicken Ttza. which is in the southern part of Yuc; tan. will be chosen for the first excavations The Facts By BERTON BRAI.EY SHE'S pretty Md cuddly and lanrhinc and young. With blarney enourh at, the tip of her tensue To lolly an anchorite out of his cave And ar to her eves—-why they never behave; They lure every masculine person tn reach. I GUESS she a a flirt—but I KNOW ghe'e a peach I SHE'S sweet and demure In her Innocent youth. Though somettairs it's whispered ghe Juggles the truth I For popular damsels will tangle their dates And fib thorraolvea out of gome desperate straits >: Her words are not always entirely sincere. X THINK she s a ilap— 1 KNOW she a dear SHF'TJ. coquette with Ninety and flirt with Nineteen. She hasn't a serious thought In her bean: Unstable as water, a butterfly girl Who keeps every masculine head In a whirl: Yet always about her I faithfully hover. X GUESS shea a vamp—but I KNOW that I love her (Copyright, I fiNEA Service. Inc 1 JfcUoUiSlfip cf pram* Daily Lenten Bible rending anti meditation prepared for Commission on Evangelism of Federal Council of Churches. SAT! If DAY The End of 11 is Ministry * n the Flesh. “And he rolled a stone against the door of the tomb.” Mark 15:46. Read Mark 15:42-47. “It Is a paradox of Christianity that: to go fast one must go slow.” MEDITATION: We cannot know alt of God’s plan, but we can know enough to live fruitful lives and we may have faith enough to be sure of Ills eternal companionship. HYMN: Jesus, lover of my soul. Let me to thy bos mu fly. While tho nearer waters roll, While the tempest still is lilgh; Hide me, O my Savior hide. Till the storm of life is past; Safe into the haven guide, O receive my soul at last. PRAYER: C) God, author of the world's joy. bearer of the world's pain, make us glad that we are men and that we have inherited the world’s burden; deliver us from the luxury of cheap melancholy and, at the heart cf all our trouble and sorrow, let unconquerable gladness dwell; through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
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TOM SIMS SAYS: V-gJ SPRING is when nature says it with flowers. * c r /m I Counting to a hundred before / BjF 3T js&gj starting a fight is nice, but Jack Demp- I sey counts to $750,000. I * * V These are the days budding poets \ get nipped in the bud. V Rice Lake (Wis.) man accidentally >//> . 1 put a bullet in his pipe. He fouud it l/rff | was smokeless powder. ** * * All this, water in flooded rivers comes from the spring. Every week is prune week for the boarders. Breitbard is an athlete who bites nails in two pieces. We do not know what makes him so mad. * v • Spring style hint: Rubber heels don't scratch desk tops so easily. • * ♦ It seems to be the Mad Hatter who sets the spring hat prices. • * • Away down yonder in New Orleans a man broke his jaw yawning, and it is another sign of spring. Doctor says men who smoke are liable to have everything. We say everything except matches. • • Some men have been wearing trousers fifty to eighty years and still throw them on the floor every night. * • • It is a wise man who doesn’t show his ignorance. • * ■> Manx a party Ls given for the pleasure of .not inviting some one. A -mall town is where the jail is full if they catch a erook. An old-timer is a man who likes his coffee so strong he need* a chaser after it. % • • The height of something is a eoat of arms on a flivver. New York is where a distracted mother hands the baby her cigarette instead of the bottle. Jesse James rode a horse. Men who cut pie in eight pieces don t. • • * A poolroom loafer may he broke, but you seldom see one without any hands in his pockets. It is so hot in Africa underwear is considered an overcoat. In Alaska they get oil from sharks’ livers, but you never get oil from a shark's oil well. • * Marshmallows make excellent emergency powder puffs.
'Revolution by Consent' Has Changed World by Public Opinion
BY HERBERT QUICK ll 7E have had two great V'V' revolutions in the civilized world in the past 150 years—'he greatest and most basic humanity ever experienced, and both of them by peaceful means in tho main. The one is the industrial revolution It has hern brought about by science end invention It has -hanged production over from hand wot k to mu chine-work, from John Waggoner's wagon shop to Henry Ford's factories, from farming with spade, matt tick and hand sickle to big scale production with steam and gasoline and twine binders and themselves. It changed our world from one of ••mall shops to one of huge factories. In the Editor’s Mail Wants Better Service To file Editor of The Time* The city street railway reports $238,241 additional earnings over last year. That Is 5 per cent interest per annum on $4,764,820. Why then the dilapidated conditions of street car tracks and ancient street cars? That sum of bonds will construct 238 miles of radwav tracks laid in concrete or 119 miles of double car tracks. However, as Indianapolis has that much trackage, it could reconstruct all the city tracks and purchase several new and up-to-date cars without the necessity for any increase in fares and better tracks and better cars would bring an additional revenue because a well halasted track would not consume so many kilowatt hours per car mileage. Therefore the operating and maintenance accounts would be lower and the marginal differences could be transferred to profits. My figures are fairly accurate as I can point out electrical railways built since 1913 tha* only cost $66,000 per mile of right of way including special consideration, an incidental account seemingly necessary to the securing of francliises, rights of way, and other items that might be embarrassing to have placed In the ledger in detail. \ncl that included Pentograph trolleys on the cars and the dual suspension type trolley wire construction that accompanies Pentograph trolleys use. Also tlr.it figure included changing the course of a river bed and a mile and a half of cement embankment where the river bed was changed, and the purchase of a competing railroad that was as obsolete and extant as the Indianapolis city road bed is in general. Therefore, when 1 allow $50,000 a mile for the cost of construction. I am fairly liberal because there are not likely to be 114 lawsuits in equity for property damages to be Included as there was in the figure of $66,000 per mile. Neither is there the grading necessary to allow a train on its trial trip to make eighty to eighty-five miles per hour. So I am not afraid to state openly that my figures are capable of production because $66,000 per mile included street cars, freight cars (rolling stock! terminal and power houses which are already con - structed In this city except the new rolling stock or improved street cars. N. R. THOMPSON, Puritan Hotel.
No such complete change ever took place before in human society, and the change still goes on faster than ever This revolution has been painful sometimes, but peaceful in the m;Un. The other great revolution has been the grow: h of political democracy. It w.is Moody at first, in Switzerland, ri our war of independence, in the : French revolution, but it has grown faster in most nations in peace. When I just read in a very' remarkable hook a chapter entitled “Revolui tion by Consent,” the title looked odd j to me at first; but after ail. as I read of these great revolutions of the past, it dawned upon me that they were really Just revolutions by consent. They came through public opinion—and necessity. Face Future Hope If you will read this book, it will force you to face the idea of future revolution; but it will do it with such buoyancy, such hope, such faith, that | you will thank me for caiUng your at- \ tention to it_ The name of it is "Robinson Cm soe, Social Engineer,” It Is by Dr. Henry E. Jackson, who conceals more learning under a purer simplicity of style than any writer I can call to mind. It Insists that the war between labor and capita! has now gone so far as to prove that neither side can win: but he argues that anew system can and must grow out of our Increasing civic war between labor and capital which will be vastly better for both. It must come through the new profession of the social engineer. And It will bo revolution by consent. Injunction Sates Student From Expulsion in Athens, Ga. Rn XEA Sendee A TIIENS, Ga,, March 31.—Many Z3k and varied are the uses of the injunction. But it took J R. Roberta, second year law student at - * University of Georgia, to use it to *' ee P himself from ' getting "canned' Jlala|la from the university | gpljPj as the result of K charges against him M -IP*! sa ' s are false. 1 Roberts recently Ejjk was summoned be IPm Jj fore the students i|i council of the uni lnßfhrai verslty 10 an3We > ‘conduct unbecom ing a student of ROBERTS Georgia.” The young stu dent believed the council was going to recommend to the dean that he bo sus pended. So Roberts employed counsel and prayed Judge Blanton Fortaon of the Superior Court for an injunction restraining the council and the dean from suspending him. Roberts secured a temporary in junction. And now Judge Fortson lias summoned Dean Charles N. Snelling and members of the students' council to appear before him and show cause why a permanent restraining order should not be issued. “I’m not a law student for nothing.” says Roberts.
