Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1924 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTfN, tttitOT-fh-Ctrtef’"* ROY W. HOWARD, President ALBERT W. BUHRMAN, Editor WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of tbo Soripps-Howard Newspapers • • * Client of the Cnited Press, United News, 'L’nit,d Financial, Scripts -Paine Service and member-<rf ilre‘ Serlpi>s • Newspaper Alliance. Member of the Audit Bureaa-qf Circulations. Published dailv except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing win * • • PHONE—MAIN 3500.
BOK PEACE PLAN -~-|OME on, now. Lfetk go I The politicians tell us that the peoC pie of this country voted for “isolation” by 7,000,000 in 1920. They claim you and the rest of us don t want to join in with the rest of the world in order to prevent another big war, but that we want to get. off in a corner by ourselves and let come what may. _ We have insisted all along that the politicians were wrong. We have said that the only way to prevent war is for all th§ nations of the world to act together to prevent itEdward W. Bok, one of America’s greatest editors, thought the same thing. To prove whether he was right or wrong, he offered a prize of SIOO,OOO for a plan by which the United States may cooperate with other nations looking toward the prevention of war. V 1 ■ . .T A jury of atfard, headed, by Elihu Root, former Republican Secretary of State, has made a selection, and now begins the most interesting part of the proposition: A nation-wide referendum. You, and every other person in the United States, are entitled to vote on whether you favor such a plan or not. Every time anybody has proposed that we enter the orld Court, or that we cooperate with other nations to make world i peace secure, the politicians have risen up and bellowed that we j voted to keep out of such “entanglements” by 7,000,000 majority. Now let’s put politics ehtirely aside. The politicians have had j; their say. Now you can have yours. Read the Indianapolis Times’ synopsis of the plan, published * elsewhere in today's paper, and then fill out the ballot. Tell ’em what you think. > - ft : • CAN WE AFFORD THE BONUS? YY/ ILLIAM G. McADOO, wartime Secretary of the Treasury, ** evolved the plan for insuring all the boys who enlisted or were drafted into the army, and insuring them at rates no higher than they would have paid the old line companies for peacetime insurance. No country ever before had insured its soldiers. But this country recognized the justice in McAdoo’s daring plan ana :indorsed it. ; ... f „ McAdod’iiow says shat-America can afford to go further in behalf of the fighting men. He says America can afford to recom- ' pense them for their financial loss incurred by absence from civilian pursuits—at least, that America can go as far as the fighting men have asked the country to go. The former Secretary of the Treasury declares a bonus can be paid and Congress still be permitted to reduce taxes. There is good reason to belieffe that McAdoo knows what he is talking about.
THEY’LL KNOW THEMSELVES mT IS perfectly legitimate, policies in the department heads of Candidate Coolidge’s official family to issue statistics showing that the “goose hangs high,” under Candidate Coolidge’s j administration. • The yotgr.is going tg get statistics, from Mr. Cool- ■ idge’s department heads, shdXYrng that the cost of living is 20 per cent lower .than on such-and-such a date; that the railroads never did more hauling; that wages were never higher; that the country never before enjoyed such prosperity. Later on, a Democratic National Convention will present statistics showing that the wage-earner is being gouged; that war profiteers are making 60 per cent profit; that the tariff and fall- ; ing foreign trade are sanding the country to the dogs; that the 1 prosperity consists in the rich getting more and the poor less. Both sets of statistics will be issued for political effect upon [the folks. We believe that it was England’s great premier, who said: “There are three kinds of liars—liars, damn Iliars and statistics.” However, fortunately, American folks need Trot be fooled by !anybody’s statistics. Every voter will know what his or her cost ;of living is, how the pay envelope meets it, and what is his or her j prosperity. The status quo of the individual always has decided (influence on the vote. \ WANTED: TAX REDUCTION •(nr j here is just one thing certain about the coming contest iLLI * or the election of anew Governor of Indiana. This thing ;|is the fact that you will not be able to vote for a candidate who 'hasn’t declared for tax reduction. The most vital spot in the, anatomy of a voter is his poeketbook. The candidate who promises the voter’s pocketbook will be fattened if -he ia elected usually figures on getting a lot of votes. But now that everybody is making promises of this kind, the argument has lost its effect. | The State of Indiana still is waiting for a man who will put a little efficiency in the State government, who will lop off a lot of useless jobs and eliminate useless expenditures ‘and duplications. Whoever can do that will be assured of anything in the gift the voters, Whether he is a Republican or a Democrat. * 4 GUESTS THE COUNTY p ROHIBITfON, we were told a few years ago, would result in empty jails. Sheriffs and policemen would have nothing to do but draw their salaries. / Then the law was passed and policemen and sheriffs got busier than they ever were in their lives. Result: The Marion Comity jail now has 348 “guests,” sent there by Federal and State courts, the largest number in the history of the oountv. The answer, of, course, is prohibition. A large majority of the inmates are there because they actively failed to agree with Mr. Volstead. Whatever else may be said of prohibition, it didn.’t empty the jails. - - <: . :.. . r. .. . . v v NOW comes) one. William J. chief sleuth of the Department of Justice, with an interview to say that he knows there’s a Russian Soviet plot to put a red flag on the White House, bemaa he personally discovered the plot.jj Now we know how seri ottaly fiot to take it.
MARK TWAIN NAMED EARTH, “THE WART” Ancient Authors Believed World Flat Plain With Firmament as Roof and Stars as Windows of Light,
IMr U TTountdjn O cean C , " ~~~ Wafers 1
THE ARTIST'S SKETCH SHOWS A RECONSTRUCTION OF THE UNIVERSE AS PICTURED BY THE ANCIENT WRITERS OF BIBLICAL. DAYS. TO THEM THE FIRMAMENT WAS A fIEAL ROOF. THE STARS WERE LAMPS ATTACHED TO THE INNER SIDE OF THE ROOF. WHEN IT RAINED, THEY BELIEVED THAT THE WINDOWS IN THE FIRMAMENT HAD BEEN OPENED, LETTING THE WATER ABOVE THE FIRMAMENT FALL THROUGH.
This Is the first article of a aeries by Dietz on “Secrets of Science.” He discusses scientific facts and phenonema In every day terms. By DAVID DIETZ, Science Editor of The Times. (Copyright, by David Diets.) <| ;HK heavens declare the glory . lof God and the firmament LiJ showeth His handiwork.” So wrote the ancient author of the Psalms in Biblical days. One imagines him standing in the open fields at night, filled with awe at the wonder and grandeur of the heavens as he gazed aioft at the myriads of stars. And yet his conception of the heavens was a simple one, compared to
UNUSUAL PEOPLE Heads Nature Lovers
By SEA Eervice R l-- ~| AVINIA, 111., Jan. 7. —Jons Jensen of this city has been chosen L__J head of the unique organization known as The Friends of Our Native Landscape. The object of the association is I to encourage revgUy erence for the Wa primitive boauty ’ America and Ks *■ preserve it as a 5 sacred heritage. , It is desired to protect wild as FA well ns plant life. The association HP plans to purchase . v ,- _ and preservo one fw- s os the few typical I / tamarack swamps :T5 V / ’ of northern 1111nois. It believes JENSEN that there is an Inherent force in the primitive beauty of Mother Earth that is invaluable to mankind In restoring and Inspiring his mentality and soul and in giving vigor and strength to his body. Wherever it is possible, the association advocates the restoration of burned or cut-over tracts of woodland. ———— Family Fun Mother’s Armament One day Hazel’s mother sent her to find a switch with which to chastise her little brother, who had been teasing her. After a time she returned with a dozen or more pebbles in her apron. “I couldn’t find any switch, mama,” she explained, “but you can throw these rooks at him.” —Detroit News. What Dad Got “Did you not find that turkey an exceptional one?” "Exceptional! It must have been a freak! I don’t remember ever having seen a turkey before that consisted of two backs, three necks, a gizzard and a wing.” American Legion Weekly. Her Dad’s W'orry "Tell me, my child, has this flanoa of yours any money?” "Money, father! Why as an engagement ring he gave me a cluster diamond ring studded with pearls!” "Yes, yes, I know. But has he any left?”—Oklahoma Whirlwind.
Heard in the Smoking Room
FTER a roomful! of native flons had boosted “the fdorious - ...J climate,” etc., eto., for an hour, the little man over in the corner seat, asked, “Did you ever hear this old one from Cressay’s History?” and, taking a slip from his pocket, he read: “ ‘The great dream of my life is to sometime settle down there in my own little bungalow, on my own little ranch, and there in the golden sunlight and the silvery moonlight of California, dream the hours away, seeing visions of other plaoes and other times. And where dah you find more to recall such visions than on a California ranoh? You wake in the morning to the music of a Connecticut alarm clock. You button Your Boston garters onto your Paris socks, your Baltimore suspenders onto your Detroit overalls, put on your Lymi shoes and your Danbury hat )n4 you are up. “ ‘You sit down to your Grand Rapids table, have your Hawaiian pineapple, your Cape Cod fish and your Aunt Jemima flapjaaks swimming In New Orleans molasses.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
what modem astronomy has revealed concerning them. His idea can be reconstructed easily from a study of the Bible. The earth, to him, was the all-im-portant factor, a flat plain, stretching away in all directions. It was surrounded by the seas and supported* upon them. The sky was a real canopy or roof over the earth. When it rained, it was because the -windows in this roof were opened and the waters above allowed to leak through. The stars were so many lamps or lights. The sun and moon were simply larger lights, “lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from, the as the Book of Genesis; phrases it. Today we know that in point of size, at least, the earth is not the allimportant part of the universe, but one of the least Important. We know today that our earth revolves about the sun and is very much smallef than the sun. We also know that the stars are great blazing suns, many of them thousands of times larger than our sun. If by some sort of magic we could suddenly transplant ourselves to some comer of the universe where these gigantic suns are, our own sun would appear as one of the very faint stare In the sky. Our earth would, of course, be totally invisible. Mark Twain, who possessed the rare faculty of presenting great truths in garb, gives a sharp picture of the situation in his imaginative book, "Captain Stormfleld’s Visit to Heaven.” Captain Stormfleld, upon hla arrival in heaven, finds that the corner of the universe in which our earth is located is so small that it is referred to as the "wart.” NEXT: A model of the universe.
What Editors Are Saying
Milk (Lake County Times) According to the Department of Agriculture the United States has a fourth of the milch cows of the W'orld. Americans have to have something to drink. Pride (Marlon lioader-Trlbune) A Marlon man was willing to serve thirty days In Jail Just to see the city. How Is that for home pride? • • • Knives (Bluffton Evening Banner) The Republican State convention will be held at Indianapolis May 21 and 22. It is hoped by this time that all knives will be sufficiently sharpened for any contingency that might arise. s • • Congress ' (Lebanon Reporter) The man who deliberated sixteen years on the advisability of asking a young woman for a Sunday night date had nothing whatever on the present Congress. Bossing Wlfey "So you told your wife that you were going to be boss of the home?” "You bet I did! And after that she never does anything unless she tells me about It afterward.”—American Legion Weekly.
" ‘Then you go out, put your Concord, N7 H., harness onto your Missouri mule, hitch It onto a Moline (111.) plow, and turn up a oouple of acres of land covered with Ohio mortgages. " 'At noon you dine on Cincinnati ham, cooked In Chicago lard, on a Detroit stove burning Wyoming ooal. " And then when the twilight falls you fill up your pride of Detroit with Mexican gasoline, dash out to the beach and while sitting in a Greek restaurant, smoking a Boston made cigar, you watch a New York girl dance the Memphis shlmmlo to the mu*lo of a New Orleans Jazz band. " 'And then you go back to your little home under the orange trees and the mortgage, read a chapter out of a Bible written In London, England, say a prayer written in Jerusalem, wind up your Waterbury watch, put on your China silk pajamas, crawl in between your Fall River sheets and fight all night With the fleas, the only native product on your whole ranoh.’ ”
MOODY AND I SUNDAY ARE LITERALISTS Porterfield Admits Fundamentalists Have Accomplished Much Good. W. H. Porterfield of The Times' Washington stall, has made it a lifelong hobby to study religion and people. He is a student of the Bible and has read widely on hte growth of Christianity. He discussed the present controversy between the modernists and the fundamentiists from his own maud-, point. .This is the fourth of five articles on the subject. BY W. H. PORTERFIELD mHAT tremendous good has been accomplished by the fundamentalists, only a very narrow pai u.ian would deny. Dwight L. Moody, who from a Chicago shoe clerk came to be the greatest evangelist of modem times, was a fundamentalist pure and simple Without scientific education or cultural background, he still wrought mightily for righteousnes throughout the English speaking world and brought millions to think of spiritual things who had hitherto given no thought to much above the material. It was Moody who, upon being asked if he could read the Bible in the “original Hebrew and Greek," replied all he wanted was people who could read it “in the original United States.” Os course, this made everybody laugh, Just as William J. Bryan, great fundamentalist of his time, makes his audiences roar with his attacks on evolution when he declares he never descended from a monkey or even a water puppy of the Palezoic age. Sunday Is Fundamentalists Today among the great fundamentals, one of the most prominent is Billy Sunday, whose great “sawdust trail” meetings were the sensation of a decade ago. Billy is now a special pleader for big business, but still breaks out occasionally in defiance of all modernism in theology. A peculiar feature of the present war between the opposing forces in the church is the revival of the premiilenarian theory or belief in the imminent second coming of Christ. This belief is as old as Christianity itself. It was undoubtedly held by many of the apostolic writers who ex pected to see Jesus return as the temporal Lord of the Universe even while they were still alive. Through all the years this belief h3S persisted more or less, for causes which space will not permit to be given here, and now it has broken out again with great virulence. Draws Big Audiences Dr. Frank Goodchild of New York is drawing great audiences with his declaration that “Christ is coming very soon in the clouds of Heaven.” Dr. Torrey of Los Angeles Bible Institute is perhaps the most noted of all the pre-mlllenarians of the country and, having plenty of money, the Los Ange.es Institute is scattering its propaganda throughout the country. Dr. I. M. Halderm.an, another prominent New York preacher, declares Jesus is (jpmLrjg soon. “JUa garments dripping Wth blood.” and that he wilt wreak vengeance upon his enemies, etc. Dr. J. Frank Norris of Ft. Worth. Texas, believes in "the literal, personal, bodily, visible, imminent return of the Lord to earth,” All Are Literalists All these men are literalists, fundamentalists,- conservatives, if you will, men who declare the modernises must be punished even to the extent of driving them from their pulpits and from the community, if possible. Bishop Manning of the New York Episcopal diocese, is at his wits’ end to keep his church together, and yet avoid action which he may live to regret. He Is still undertaking to create the impression he is a strict fundamentalist. yet those who know him Intimately realize, of course, that with Ids rich scholarship and intellectual background, such a thing is impossible. Asa whole the clergy of the Episcopal and probably all other church denominations Is modernist Mn attitude, secretly If not openly, while the pew is much more conservative. Author Has Many Readers For example, Alfred W. McCann, author of the absurd diatribe: “God or Gorrillft?” probably has more readers in this country’ today than any one modernist preacher or author, while hundreds of thousands of earnest Christian men and women still believe Moody's Bible Institutes In Chicago and Massachusetts are the lost word in religious instruction, notwithstanding the fact they teach the literal inspiration of the Scriptures, the doctrine of a personal God, a personal devil, and to a great extent, the second coming of Christ to earth. On the other hand, the colleges and theological seminaries in the North and on the Pacific coast, at least, are growing more and more modern and liberal in tone, and such books as Bade’s “The Old Testament in the light of today” are becoming text books in many Biblical schols, although they are anathema to the fundamentalists of all shades.
Tongue Tips
• Lou E. Holland, president Associated Advertising Clubs of the World: “The truth In advertising movement has become so general that certain individual newspapers reject questionable copy that would net them from $50,000 to $150,000 a year each, and say nothing about it. They assume, of course, that a newspaper should not praise its own virtues. We feel that the publishers have been much too modest.” Frank Van Hoven, vaudeville comic magician: “The essence of humor is some other person’s misfortune. When I am the boob on the stage, I am the butt of my own jokes and thus I am not making fun of anyone else. But, at the same time, I am making a world merry. That Is a worthwhile reward.” Senator Oddle, Nevada: "They jokingly tell me that Reno Is the only city in the country whose people go down to the depot to see the tide come in. I say it is also the only city in the country whose people go down to the depot to see the untied go out.”
Was Ever Anyone in a More Difficult Position?
QUESTIONS The Times ANSWERS
You can ret an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Indianapolis Times' Washington Bureau. 1322 New York ,Ave.. Washington. D. C. Inclosing 2 cents iu sutinps for reply. Medical, leral anil marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended renean-h be undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned request* cannot be answered. All letter* are confidential.—Editor How may an inexperienced person tell a grinder from a goose? Sex is difficult to distinguish in geese, especially when they are young The gander is usually somewhat larger and coarser than the goose and has a shrill cry, while the female has a harsh, coarse, cty. The gander has a longer neck and a larger head. The male Is usually lighter in color titan the female. What are the areas of the six largest States in the Union? Texas, 265,896 square miles: Call fornia, 158,297 square miles; Montana *46 ,997 square miles; New Mexico, 122.534 square miles; Arizona, 112.956 square miles; Nevada, 110,690 square miles. What is the population of Japan? In 1920 it was 65,951,140. Which are the three highest waterfalls in the world? Grand Falls, Labrador, 2,000 feet; Sutherland, Now Zealand, 1,904 feet; Upntr Yc Semite, California, 1,436 feet. Are the Unit -d States Mints in the market for old gold and silver? They are not buying old silver, but gold in lots worth SIOO or more will be purchased. Who was John Calvin? A Frenchman, one of the most eminent reformers of the sixteenth century, very prominent in the work of the reformation. The views of Calvin are supposed to be embodied In the doctrines of the Presbyterian Church. How Is perfume made from flowers? There arc several processes. One is that of distillation, in which the steam removes the oil, and the oil condenses and is collected. Another process, which is used largely in France by the large manufacturers, is very complicated—wooden trays are coated with lard, over which the flowers are sprinkled. After being set away a short time, the lard takes up the odor of the flowers, and the flowers are picked off and thrown away. The lard is then scraped off, and the odors are removed by means of ether. What has been the peroapita circulation of money in recent years? In 1917 it was $45.74; in 1918, $50.81, and in 1920, $56.81. . What covers the most space of the globe, daylight or darkness? The part of the earth’s surface fiom which the sun is entirely invisible at any one time comprises .4927 of the total area. In obtaining this result it is assumed that the sun's semi-diameter is 16’ and the horizontal refraction 34.’ The answer, therefore, is that daylight covers the greater portion of the earth’s surface On -what date did prohibition become effective? National prohibition became effective Jan. 16, 1920. War prohibition was in effect from July 1, 1919, until the time of national prohibition. Is it permissable to write to prisoners at yenitientiaries; is • their mail censol%*3? Yes, prisoners are allowed to receive mail: all mall is strictly censored. Most prisons furnish the Inmates with stationery. Regulations differ at the different institutions. Information on the rules of a particular institution can always be Obtained from the warden in chai*ge. How can a rhinestone ring be cleaned and polished? Wash with soap and water, but take care that no water gets behind the setting. Then polish with a chamois and a little rouge.
The Air Mail By BERTON BRALEY No stuntlng’s allowed in the Service, Although we could stunt if we chose; But or pilots’ copper-lined nerve is For other requirements than those. We fly when the tempests are blowing, * We buck through the fog or the hail; Our stunts is to go—and keep going, We’re carrying Uncle Sam’s mail! At midday you'll hear our planes humming And see them, perhaps, in the sky, At midnight our motors are drumming, As steadily onward we fly. We whoop over forests and mountain, We swoop over river and vale. We’ve got to be guys you can count on, We're carrying Uncle Sam’s mail. Height records? We fret not about ’em. Speed records? They’re not in our line. And yet we move swiftly without ’em, On schedule, rain, snow or shine. The eagle and hawk lag behind us Along our aerial trail, Look up when we’re due—you will find us, We’re carrying Uncle Sam s mail! (Copyright. 1924, NEA Service, nc.)
(QOM SIMS I-/- -!- Says
Here’s leap year news from London. Prince of Wales is preparing for a trip to South Africa. A Chicago boy of 5 who can play a saxophone needs spanking. Washington has a crime wave; a real crime wave, not Congress. More London leap year news. Girl of 17 married a man of 74. This 1924 looks like a bad year for celebrities, but then every year Is bad ior celebrities. Cop says Babe Ruth, hall player, was speeding. Babes in the wood had nothing on Babe in a car. Irvin Cobb, writer, is wanted by a Texas game warden, perhaps for shooting dice out of season. Cop says Jack /Dempsey’s dad had some booze, a brave cop. Judge Landis must decide if a player’s wife Is a necessity. Judge is married. So that’s decided. General Wood’s son says Investing In Well Street is his own business. Yes, but it’s a bad business. Scotti got decorated for being in metropolitan opera twenty-five years. It does take a brave man. There’s one nice thing about movie celebrity scandals. We are always getting brand new ones. Microbes, say experts in Cincinnati, are being eradicated. AVeIJ, it’s the microbes’ fault. Indications are that 1924 will be a hum dinger, except for those who make it a ho-hum, dinger. Boston phone company will occupy anew building soon if moving men don’t get the wrong number. Scientists decide man is the ape’s cousin. We heard a girl say he was the gnat’s eyebrowe. Here’s leap year news from Siam. King wants to abolish his harem. Fire interrupted a Boston wedding. But It went out. That’s more than the bridegroom can do now. Auto guards are being placed around Seattle fire plugs, when pedestrians need them most. New York judge resigned. Says $17,500 is small pay. He talks like a bootlegger or landlord Here’s good !e ■> news. More single men that won in this country. But be careful Marcus Loew says million-dollar moles are through. Wa say not until all press agents are shot.
MONDAY, .TAN. 7.1924
Editor’s Mail The editor is willing- to print views of Times readers on interesting subjects. Make your comment brief. Sign your name as an evidence of good faith It will not be printed if you object.
Russian Recognition To the Editor of The Times I do not see how people who have been keeping In touch with history of the Russian people for the past twenty years or longer would wish to withhold from them recognition by this Government. The condition of the peasants has been so pitiful for so many years they could hardly be held to a strict accountability for overstepping the bounds of good government (If they did so) because I firmly believe had they not been oppressed and hounded as they were the word Bolshevik! would not have been applied to them in the terms as now used. I honestly believe we should extend a helping hand to them and assist them to stand on their feet. I know of no better way than for our Government to grant recognition at once. Theirs is a pitiful story of suffering and oppression. J. R. MARTIN, 1905 Orange Bt, Modernists To the Editor of The Times Having read Mr. W. H. Porterfield’s first article, may I ask if it be the plan of your excellent paper to broadcast the doctrine of the ‘’Modernist?’’ Aim will Mr. Porterfield, in subsequent writings for your publication, decry the doctrine of the divine birth of Christ, as do the modernists generally? Mr. Editor, if in the evening, after >our little girl has knelt at her mother’s knee and said her prayer in the Savior’s name, she should ask “who is Jesus Christ?” I’m led to wonder if you would have a "Modernist” answer that He was an illegitimate child, that He pretended to he the Son’ of God, until good people grown weary of His blasphemy crucified Him —or would you rather say He was a Saint, "conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary’’ —and the Savior of all mankind? C. B. WHITE. I let’s Wait! To the Editor of The Times Asa lifelong Republican and a supporter of clean politics, I am deeply interested in our present day governmental situation in our good State of Indiana. I confess Just now that I am a bit confused and somewhat perturbed after reading the political dilemma in our newspapers. Did I go to the polls at the Tast State election and assert my rights by ballot as an American citizen or did I Just kid myself Into thinking so? Or did I go through a sort of formality that has become a custom In our modern politics? Any patriotic, God-fearing American citizen will not uphold our chief exexecutive or any other high official in anything but wbat Is Just and right. But, however guilty he may be, we are compelled by our Constitution, as free-born American citizens, to respect him as our commander-in-chlef until he is proved guilty by the courts of our land, and relieved of his high office by the preambles of our Constitution and not by a few partisan machine politicians such as are trying to usurp the law of our fair State. If there is any law on our statute books whereby It grants Clyde Walb or any other State committeeman the right to use the authority of our courts and pass Judgment on the innocence or guilt of any man, then I will say "Well done, thou good and faithful czar.” Until r then why not let the grand Jury and courts and our legislative body have just a wee bit of a voice in the affair. JAMES A. SUTTON. Apartment 19, 406 N. Delaware St A Thought Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night; nor for the arrow that rtieth by day: nor for the pesti lence that walketh in nor for the destruction that wasteth stt noonday.—Ps.‘ 91:5, 6. HE only inheritance I have re ceived from my ancestors is ■ soul incapable of fear—Julian.
