Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 110, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1923 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN. Editor-In-Chief ROT W. HOWARD, President ALBERT W. BUHRMAN, Editor WM. A. MATBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers • • • Client of the United Press. United News, United Financial and NEA Service and member of the Scripps Newspaper Alliance. * * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 25-29 S. Meridian Street. Indianapolis. * * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis— Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. • • PHONE—MAIN 3500.
WHOSE VOTES ABE THEY, ANYHOW? TTOST every day or so, 'Washington dispatches indicate, some iVI practiced politician walks into the White House and delivers his home State to President Coolidge. As he walks out, feeling very rectitudinous, he tells the eager newspaper hoys what he has done. The newspaper boys, keeping tally ever since Senator Moses dumped the whole New England delegation on Coolidge’s desk, are abont ready to call the polls closed and Coolidge elected. But there arises an Ohio Republican editor to protest. He asserts that those Ohio politicians who have cheerfully added Ohio’s twenty-four electoral votes to the Coolidge collection overlooked the little matter of asking the Ohio voters for permission. If Ohio gives its vote to Coolidge, he says, it will be after the people of the State have decided they want him, and that nobody can deliver their votes save these people themselves. In the meantime, says the editor, President Coolidge will have to demonstrate. Which, perhaps, is as it should be. DOING A GOOD JOB | a |S REPORTS continue to come from the United States coal iA\| commission on the results of its investigations, the justification for the Borah bill creating it becomes clearer and clearer. The latest report is that dealing with labor relations in the soft coal fields. It contains thirty-seven recommendations, many ;of them sound on their face, others whose wisdom can only be determined by careful consideration. But the important thing is that these reports give Congress a real basis for a study of a big and complicated problem and that •was the purpose behind the creation of the commission. The country cannot go on indefinitely drifting from crisis to crisis in the matter of its essential fuel. Basic principles must be agreed upon whereby speedy adjustment of differences between operators and miners can be reached in the future. The commission sees the only alternative, for it expresses the hope that “resort to public ownership may be unnecessary. ’ ’ PROTECT THE CHILDREN HIS is children’s safety week. front of your automobile. It means “be careful”—not only this week, but every week. Children now are going to school. It is necessary for them to cross'streets. They do not always “stop, look and listen.” That cannot be expected of them on every occasion, regardless of warnings from parents. It is up to you, Mr. Motorist, to look out for them. It is up to you to be alert for the youngster who may run directly in front of your car. There is no excuse for a motorist not being on the alert. Don’t think it is always the other fellow’s car that strikes a child running across the street. It may be your turn next if you are not careful. You cannot be too watchful.
STEALING THUNDER FROM PARIS u q PECLAL Tours Now Being Organized for Indianapolis, O Ind., U. S. A.” Paris tourists may be coming to this city one of these days. It has been proverbial that the American society woman has dragged poor hubby over to Paris to look over “styles” since the when Ben Franklin was our first semi-ambassador. Paris has thrived on American tourists. English is heard everywhere on streets of the French capital. “Notorious” theaters and rendezvous of the Appache exist only because tourists support them. But with the $10,000,000 War Memorial in the heart of Indianapolis, nearly a half mile in length, 460 feet in width and within two blocks of the Monument Circle, the State will boast of an architectural beauty that rivals anything in Paris. Grouping of public buildings is one of the newest developments in city planning. The impressive Federal building and the Indianapolis Public Library linked by a mall, in the center of which will be the stately memorial shrine, is an arrangement that Washington authorities have dreamed of for years for the United States capital itself. On the north side of the mall, or parked vista, will stand two buildings at the northeast and northwest corners. The American Legion national headquarters and the State and local legion and other patriotic societies will he placed in these two office buildings. Indiana’s memorial in the Circle to its soldiers and sailors of the Civil War has been the pride of the State and has attracted commendations from thousands of people who have visited here. The new war memorial, crowned with a beautiful shrine that will stand out like a white gem in a setting of green, is going to add more fame to Indiana and to its capitaL WOULDN’T it be nice if we could burn coal investigations? PITA" the poor German school boy, with his teacher’s marks so low. MOVIE star 62 years old wants a divorce, so perhaps she was too young when she married. WOMAN of 96 won a beauty contest at Turin, Italy. Now she won’t be worth a darn around home. PROVIDENCE (R. I.) woman shot the wrong man, which, however, was not an act of Providence. WOMAN shot at while driving a car in Chicago, so perhaps 6he was just learning to drive. GIRL eloped with a one-armed chauffeur in New York. We fail to see how she enjoyed such a ride. ' \ “SPEED TRAPS” may be of great assistance during children’s safety week. THE DUKE OF YORK may wear a “derby,” but that is no reason for Americans to don iron lids. si BUTLER COLLEGE enrollment will break the record. Now for a report on the football team. “I’LL SHOW ’em when I- get down to Washington,” says Magnus Johnson. Is it possible that man has Concealed something from the reporters? a \
ALFONSO IS MEMBER OF DUMMY CLUB Spanish King Joins Others in Europe as Has Been in Power, • BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Times Staff Correspondent (TWVJ ASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—King yy Alfonso XIII has Joined the club of dummy kings. By letting the revolutionaries have their way he saves his crown for a time; it no longer means anything. The movement in Spain was like the Mussolini coup in Italy. And just as King Victor Emmanuel 111 effaced himself before the Fasclstl leader, and asked him to run the country, Alfonso has put Captain General Riveira, leader of the Spanish revolt, in the saddle. Thus Alfonso takes a back seat along with Victor Emmanuel 111 of Italy; Boris 111 of Bulgaria, George II ; of Greece, and the other dummy kings jof Europe, who, one by one, are all j coming to have no more real power ! than the decorative thingumbob on top of your automobile’s radiator cap. Began Two Years Ago The direct line of events which led to Alfonso's joining the club of has- ' been kings who stlU sit on uncomfortable thrones, began two years ago. The Moors of Spanish Morocco were In revolt and Spain’s prestige in Africa was In the balance when, In July, 1921, General Sylvester, at the head of 11,000 troops, was surrounded by rebels in the Arrult Mountains. For days he held out against vastly superior numbers, waiting for fresh supplies and the reinforcements which never came. The War Department in Madrid seems to have lost Its head completely. Os the 11,000 troops, 7,000 were butchered on the ground and 4,000 surrendered, while General Sylvestre and several of his staff, unable to stand the disgrace, blew out their brains. Spain liOt Prestige Thus, at one sweep, Spain lost the benefit of twelve years of “pacification” in Morocco, which had entailed heavy losses in blood and gold. If a wave of indignation swept the country now. It redoubled Its fury later on. Spain’s prestige needed patching up and General Berenguer, In command In Morocco, it was thought, would do It. He did not. Instead, while he dallied, the rebels surrounded another Spanish column and cut that to pieces. General Weyler in command —name well known to Americans—began yelling for reinforcements, despite the fact he already had 50,000 men! Spain was boiling by this time. Over 200,000 men had been flung Into Morocco only to be defeated. Troops began to mutiny when ordered to Africa. About the only thing Spain could do was to try to get out of Morocco alive. King Is Powerless Throughout all this hullabaloo King Alfonso seems to have been powerless in the hands of politicians. Civil and military clashed at every turn. The king could do nothing. There was a public clamor for the trial of those responsible for the- Moroccan disaster, but-even this the men around the king were able to stave off. Then came the revolt of the array, led by General Riveira—not against the king, but against crowd about the the king—a Mussolini coup all over again.
Science
For the first time in history a head has been taken from a living Insect and grafted on to the body of another. This interesting experiment waa done with water biotles and has been performed several times. Three specimen were exhibited recently by H. Graham Cannon to the Royal Society at Burlington House, London. The bodies of the beetles were of the species called hydrophilua, while the heads were of the species dytiscus. Skin, bone and gland grafting have become common, but It was supposed that grafting a complete head. Including the nervous system, waa tmpooslble. The water beetles were chosen for the experiments because they are hardier than many other insects and because of their size the results are more easily seen and studies*. Beetles are Insects of the order of coleoptera, having four wings. One of their pronounced peculiarities Is the fact that the outer pair of rings la a stiff case used for covering the other wings when they are folded. There are over 80,000 different kinds of beetles. • • • Platinum, now a most expensive metal, was once so common in the Ural mountain regions of Russia that pots and pans and even stove-pipes were made from It and it was found Iff the hovels of peasants. In 1802 William H. Wollaston, an English chemist, discovered how to work It. The value of platinum increased and It soon disappeared as a kitchen utensil. Wollaston separated two other rare elements frtom platinum. These are called rhodium and palladium. Platinum soon became of great value in electrical appliances. In fact, it became so valuable that the price became prohibitive and It Is now used chiefly for Jewelry. Wollaston was perhaps) the greatest natural scientist the world has known. The Wollaston medal In geology is the highest distinction that can be conferred on a geologist.
Heard in the Smoking Room
mHE preacher was a regular fellow and he sat In the emoklng room with a friend and told stories with the best of them. "Elder Smith, of Jimto-wn. had been at the Capital to serve on the Federal grand Jury,” he said. “After two weeks, he returned home and was greeted warmly by Jerushy, his wife, who wanted to know at once whether or not he had attended church. He had. "Did ye. know any of their sooga?” %he asked, anxiously.
THE IJN DLAJN APOLII3 TJLMEb
UNUSUAL PEOPLE Prison Relief His Life Task
By XEA Srrrice |TWT| ASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Is the IVv criminal as black as he’s palnt- | V ed? Generally not, says Earl E. Dudding, head of the Prisoners’ Relief Society, with Ilf years in the :> Moundsville (W. ■mßmli '-I •''' was self-defense. a to relieving, both out the bars, the DUDDING lot of men who have fallen athwart the law. He finds jobs annually for thousands of convicts released from the counrty's penitentiaries, and so well has he established his contention that the average convict is a victim of circumstances rather than a deliberate wrong-doer, that today 20,000 representative employers of labor take hia word as a bond for any ex-convlct trying to win back to respectability. “And more than 90 per cent of such men,” says Dudding, “have made good. Os the few who slip, the greater number are mental defectives." (QOM SIMS | -/-. -!- Says Having a beautiful complexion doesn’t leave muoh time for cleaning up the house. •• • t If winter were to "drop in unexpectedly she certainly would get a royal reception. • • • Safety First. Edison invented the phonograph by accident. • • * Next thing to perpetual motion is a small boy wearing out clothes. • • • Many men flare up as if "Please Remit” and "Final Notice” were our worst cuss words. • • • Your ship will never come in if you stay away from the bank. • • • Bloodhounds are getting useless because they can’t smell auto tiros. • • • A half-soaked man always thinks he is hard-boiled instead. • • • Some people find It hard to go to sleep even though they have been practicing for years and years. * • • A business man tells us he is entitled to life, liberty and freedom in the pursuit of golf halls. • • • If you must cuss the boss bo sure he ißn't around. • • • Nice thing ahout a vacation is get ting back.
Family Fun
Reason As the train approached the dark tunnel the man turned to the strange lady at his side. "When we are in this tunnel," he said calmly, "I shall kiss you.” "Sir,” she said icily, “how dare you! I am a lady.” "That’s Just the reason I wn going to kiss you,” replied the young man. "If I preferred a man I’d call the conductor.”—Froth. On Sister's New Feller "I guess you’ve been out with worse looking fellows than I am, haven’t your’ (No answerl "I say, I guess you’ve been out with worse looking fellows than I am, haven’t you?” "I heard you the first time. I was Just trying to think.”—Lemon Punch. Read to Your Barber "What makes your chief so talkative today?” Cannibal: "Oh, he ate a couple of barbers! ’ ’—Judge. What Interests Dad "Tt says here a mosquito can fly ten miles.” "The distance doesn't Interest me; it’s what the darn little cuss does when he arrives.” —Boston Transscript. Lizzie's Great Record "What, 3,000 miles in her this summer, old man? Some tour!" "No tour at all. Just back and forth to the grocery at ore for things my wife forgot.”—Judge. Bobbie Sure A Diplomat "Robert, come In here to me.” “But mother, can’t I stay out here until I finish my candy?" "What kind of candy are you eating?” "An all-day sucker.”—Youngstown Telegram. Tills Will Hold Dad "It always takes you an hour to dress. I’m done In five minutes." “It wouldn’t pay to spend more time on you.”—Judge.
" ‘Naw,’ the elder replied, ‘they didn’t sing nothin’ but anthems.’ " ‘Anthems!’ exclaimed Jerushy, ’Whut on the yearth Is anthems?' “ ’Well,’ answered the elder, ‘I kalnt Just ezzackly tell ye, but es I’d say, ‘Rushy, the cows is in the corn,’ that wouldn’t be no anthem. But es I’d say ’Rushy, Rushy, the cows—the cows —the Holstein cow, the muley cow, the Jersey cow, the spotted cow —all the cows—the cows—is In—ls In —the com—com — com, Ah-menl” why, th&t'd be anthem.' "
ILLITERACY BLAMED FOR MURDER ACT Educator Declares Responsibility for Brutal Tragedy Rests Upon State, . By ALEXANDER HERMAN, NEA Service Writer EW YORK, Sept. 18.—Can a State which tolerated illiteracy escape responsibility for the crime of Its victims of ignorance? On the answer hinges the life of an old man, sentenced to be hanged; the happiness of his son, imprisoned for life; and the fate of three mher members of their family, awaiting t#al for murder. Educators say that the State cannot shirk Its responsibility; but State officials hold another view. Guided by Primitive Guided by the law of primitive man, for he had never been taught to grasp any other, J. W. Minter, a poor Georgia white, tried to right a wrong In his own crude way. His daughter complained about being abused by her husband. Warnings and threats didn’t help. A family feud developed. So Minter, who could neither read nor write, who had been raised In poverty and ignorance, took the law Into his own hands. He killed his son-in-law. In his confession the younger Minter said his father had brooded over the stories of the mistreatment of his daughter until he became a monomaniac on the subject. Then one day last August Minter, who is 50 years old. called the men of his family together, hunted down their quarry and killed him. State Is Blamed “Neither Georgia nor any other State can escape entire responsibility for crimes due to illiteracy," says Dr. Margaret Noonan, professor of elementary education at New York University. But there are two persons who aren’t concerned much with the placing of the responsibility for the tragedy. Their hearts are too fu'l of sorrow. They are Mrs. .T. W. Minter. the old mother, who is alone now on the little farm near Newnan; and her daughter. Mrs. Millard Troutman, whose husband waa murdered. T rom the J Referee’s Tower By ALBERT APPLE Mother-in-Law The fifteenth of June hereafter will be Mothern-in-Law day, with a pink rose aa Its token gift. So decrees the new national association of mothers-in-law, through its president, Mrs. CI/<ra A. Griswold. On second thought, most of us will support the movement. The old Joke about the average mother-in-law being n dragon and a trouble-maker is os false as the Jokes about plumbers leafing on the Job. The average plumber works more in a week Than the average Joke writer In a lifetime. When we hear a slam at mother-in-law. we’re Inclined to investigate the source of complaint. Music
Just POO years ago. In 1023, the monk. Guido, invented the method of “writing" music on paper. Before j Guido, music could be corcutated | from one person to another only by I egr. Guido Invented the system of ' recording musical notes on lines, in | about the same form as modern sheet music. We owe much to Guido, the Benedictine. Incidentally, when he brought out his discovery he had a hard time overcoming suspicion and ridicule. Such is the history ot all new things, especially new Ideas. Swarms Another record Is broken, 16,000 visitors flocking to the New York Aquarium in one day. Similar reports keep coming from museums, art galleries and the lecture halls. The mind of humanity is swinging strongly to science. W are on the j threshold of a great/ scientific age. j Radio craze Is another proof, indicating the trend of the rising generation. Keen The radio broadcasting station in Los Angeles gets this telegram from a listener in Cuba: "For Heaven’s sake, turn off that faucet. I hear the dripping of water every time you put on a program and tune In." Investigation revealed a leaking spigot near the transmitting apparatus. That’s extending one of man’s senses, hearing, thousands of miles with almost unbelievable keenness. Later will come a similar extension of the sense of sight. Autos Four auto companies now have produced more than a million cars apiece since they started business. WillyeOverlar.d Is the latest. Bulck and Chevro 1 t passed the million mark early this year. Dodge soon will be the fifth to reach the mark. Ford hit the million goal several years ago. He’s getting along to 8,000,000 cars produced. These figures don’t mean much unless you recall the old days when the “horseless carriage” struck most people as a fad or, at best, an Innovation limited In Its power of growth. It’s dangerous to condemn anything new —or predict its future. Statistics Something" new under the sun—a business doctor who condemns his j own brand of medicine. Slason Thompson, railroad statistician, says superfluous statistics are adding 100 million dollars a year to our nation’s transportation bill. Possibly an ecxaggeratlon, but In principle he Is right. And It’s true of al) Industries, seml-demented concerning statistics which few read and fewer understand. Since 1895, railroad clerks have increased 441 per cent, while passengers increased only 147 per cent and freight tonnage only 231 per cent. System Is futile except when It eliminates work and cuts cost of production.
\ / ILL ’A / YeH-rw Abi \ N / COULD W0l?K )T W OLD HAHDATTHiS n. I ouT in Half // gan\£, i couu? / / - \ „ -- l ISs Time / l Solve ir in \( ,S^L? IT \ Z' xA J \ A Hueey. J\ leTnewaaKT \ ( You SHOULD Do \ \ K—V OU ’ s'
QUESTIONS Ask— The Times ANSWERS
You can get an answer to any question ot fact or information by writing tc the Indianapolis Times’ Washington Bureau, 1322 N. Y. Avenue. Washington, I). C., inclosing 2 cents in stamps. Medical, legal, love and marriage advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken, or papers, speeches, etc., be prepared. Unsigned letters cannot be answered, but all letters are confidential, and receive persona] replies.—Editor. Is there any connection between the white and colored Masons, Odd Fellows and Elks organizations? What is the history of the colored societies? There is no affiliation or recognition between white and colored Freeman sonry In the United States. The negro Masonic order has Its beginning from the Grand Lodge of England, when i Prince Hall, a negro, and fourteen ; others were made Masons by an Army Lodge at Boston in 1775. The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, a branch of the English order, was organized In the United States in 1843, for and by negroes. It has no connection with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows other than a similar but remote ancestry. The negro fraternal order of Elks is known as the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, and is a separate and distinct order from the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, limited to white male citizens of the United States. What are the maximum and minimum temperatures In Alaska? The highest temperature In southern Alaska is around 87 degrees; In the north; In winter the thermometer often goes to 76 below zero. Are the sketches in a comic strip drawn separately or all on one-piece of cardboard? How large are the originals? In a single strip, and the usual practice of cartoonists Is to make the drawing from two to two and one-half times the actual size the strip Is to appear In the newspaper. Is a mall earrior classed as a Federal employe? Ye. The term "Federal employe" refers to any one who Is employed in any capacity by the Federal Government. If an alien marries an American woman does that automatically make him a citizen of the United States? No, he must go through the regular routine to obtain his citizenship. I notice you published that there is no cure for blackhead In turkeys. According to an article in the Country Gentleman of July 21, by Hubert E. Cosby, Ipecac Is stated to cure blackhead. How about It? The poultry division of the United States Department of Agriculture states that Ipecac Is effective as a remedy for this disease of turkeys, but it Is not a cure, and no cure Is known. The article to which you refer does not state that ipecac is a cure, but outlines Its remedial use. Is it incorrect to say "I expect I did?” Yes, this is incorrect, for one cannot expect about the past "Expect” is to look forward. Is it necessary for a young man to give his seat to a lady In a crowded car? This Is a mark of courtesy that seems to be passing out; nevertheless, it Is always a sign of good breeding and politeness. How do Government reporters measure rainfall? If one places an open vessel of any dimension with straight aides, out In the open, can the amount of rainfall be determined by measuring the amount of water In this vessel with a standard rule? This method la used by Government reporters to a large extent, while in other cases, a special device Is used. When rainfall Is to be determined In this manner, care should be taken to have a pan large enough to prevent the wind from blowing the water away. If a pan with perpendicular sides Is used in this manner, end a standard rule Is used, the amount of rainfall way readily be ascertained.
Uncle Sam’s Jig-Saw Puzzle
The Doubt By BERTON BRALEY Time was when I was ready For any old adventure; When I was brash and heady, Oblivious of censure. But now, I figure chances Down to the smallest fraction, I weigh the circumstances Before I get In action. Time was I chased illusion And thought advice was needless, And plunged into confusion With eager youth and heedless; But now, before I Journey In fantasy’s dominion, I talk with my attorney And ask for his opinlonl I once was most imprudent, As young men, I suppose, are; But now I am a student Os what the "cons” and "pro's” are. And from a lot of thumping I’ve gained some erudition, I'm not so quick at jumping At each new proposition. I’ve learned to curb my hurry And thus avoid a blunder, And yet—and yet I worry And cogitate, and wonder; 1 wish some kind adviser My load of doubt would shoulder— Say, am I getting Wiser, Or merely getting Older? (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.)
Observations
Gloucerster’s fish story beats ’em all. It is 300 years long and the odors are there to prove Its truth. \ A magazine writer insists that It 13 impossible to love 100 women, but he is wrong. They begin to shoot with deadly effect long before that figure is attained. "The people have a voice in the coal settlement," says an eastern paper. True, but pride of unsullied columns prevents printing what that voice Is saying. Plnchot was the pinch hitter. If it Is true that banana song "saved us from complete moral collapse,” as a New York musician claims, then there are none but slippery places for us, coming and going. The constant slamming of the brokerage office doors Is another noise that disturbs New Yorkers. "Pinchot is presidential timber!” shouts an Eastern admirer. Let’s wait until the new price of coal is fixed for the consumer before venturing assertions like that. Spanish Army Is buying Missouri mules and those Moroccans will now get a real kick out of war. When Magnus states he will reform the Senate, we begin to pity him for his unsophisticaticn. Secretary Mellon called on President Coolidge today and they had a long talk for half a minute. Those 60,000,000 lire Mussolini grabs from Greece ought to make the latter’s political party talk that way.
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Tuesday, bLFT. i,
Sport (Columbus Ledger) Where a hundred years ago sport end entertainment were created by those who enjoyed them, now it la paid for. The price is beyond all computation. Even children, once content with simple games, now buy their pleasures with money, watching others contest In sports instead of playing themselves. It may well be doubted that this is a wholesome con* ditlon, economically or otherwise. * * * Naturally (Bluffton Evening Banner) A thief took an even forty thousand dollars from the top of the desk of an Indianapolis banker, got away, and the only clew left was that he “was handsome, clean shaven and wore a grey suit.” Os course the girl In the office, and the only person to see him, noticed all about his "being handsome and clean shaven." •• • s Watching (Newcastle Courier) The Governor of Oklahoma says he is determined to put a stop to mob violence, and will order out the militia and call for volunteers, If necessary. That is the proper spirit, and the country is watching with Interest to see if the Governor’s actions correspond with the vigor of his talk. • * • Absurd (South Bend News Times) For the southern States to pick the Republican candidate is as absurd as for the Democrats to turn over their conventions to Pennsylvania or Kansas. The real insurance which the people will finally demand is a nationwide presidential primary in which the candidate will be he who obtains the larger vote from the people themselves. • • • Dictatorship (Muncle Evening Press.) Those who admire Governor "Walton's firmness In enforcing law and order in Tulsa may change their opinion if he carries his Ideas to the point of military distatorship that lntereferes with the legitimate activities of the citizenship and the constitutional rights of free speech and free press. Enforcing* State laws by breaking Federal laws may not make a popular appeal.
A fool uttereth all his mind; but a wise man keepath It till afterward.— Prov. 29:11. S'” PEAK fitly, or be silent wisely. —George Herbert. Teacher’s Ervor "Jimmie," said the teacher, "why don’t you wash your face? I can see what you had for breakfast this morning.” "What was It?" “Eggs.” “Wrong, teacher; that was yesterday.”—Capper’s News.
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What Editors Are Saying
A Thought
