Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 179, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1924 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN. Editor-In-Chief ROY W. HOWARD, ?r sident FELIX F. BRUNER Editor. 'VM A. MAYBORN. But Mgr Member ot the Scrlpps-Hewnrd Newspaper Alliance * * * Client of the United Frees, the NBA Service and the Scripps-Palne Service. * • • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dailv except Sunday by Indtanepolis Times Pnhllsblnc Cos 214 220 W Marvland St., Indianapolis • • • Subscription Hates: In&anapolis— Ten Cents a Week Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week • • * PHONE —MA in 3500.
HOW ABOUT YOUR GLANDS! r=n CIEXTISTS nowadays can tell yon a whole lot ahont your | Q | glands that the old family doctor never knew much about;; and if they keep on getting inside information the time iso 't j far off when the scientific “Doc” can take one look at vnur face and then give you a map of your entire interior works. Having you stick out your tongue while Doc feeK your pulse is old stuff now. They X-ray your teeth and any other part of you they are curious about, and then prick a few drop of blood out of the lobe of your ear. This last, trick is important. Tests of the blood will tell them how your glands are working, for they say all the glands of interior secretion do their stuff by contributing their secretions to the blood stream. And if one of vonr glands is loafing on the job or is working over time, then that gland is out of whack and so are you. \ One illustration of how your glands work is that of the cat terrorized by a dog. Terror stimulates the adrenal glands which get busy pumpincr more secretion into the blood; and that stimulates the eat, so she can either fight like the dickens or run like all-get-out whichever seems to be the thing to do under the circumstances. This probably explains why a boy can ran faster when he’s seared than when he isn’t. Then there’s another gland that has a lot to do With growth of your bones. If it works too hard you 11 be more or less of a giant, while if it is lazy and soldiers on yon. you’re liable to be a dwarf. It’s going to be a good thing for all of us when we get acquainted with, our glands. We will then know what happens on our insides when we give way to the various emotions. We will know that hating anybody is worse for the fellow who does the hating than for the fellow he hates. We will know that we suffer the real punishment when we get mad at anybody. And here’s something really worth while: When we know that cross words and angry discussion around the family dinner table makes everybody feel unhappy, disturbs the appetite and serionsly affects the digestion, then we’ll see that we have happier homes. There are families who know this well enongh to have a fixed rule that under no circumstances shall there b© any family scrapping during meals, and who bar absolutely cross words aul harsh criticism of any kind at meals. If we hadn't fonnd out any more about our glands than that, it is enongh to contribute a whole lot of human happiness—pr>. vided families enough are wise enongh to profit by knowledirand keep their tempers while eating. WHAT’S IX A NAME? jITTE A BIT of uproar it’s causing—this determination on the part of certain feminists to retain their own maiden names even though married. Comptroller General McCarl in Washington did his share to keep the fire hot when he ruled that the woman doctor in the employ* of the Government mast sitm her married name to the pay mil or she wouldn’t get ther check. Elsie Ilill, member of the national woman s party and a “Lucy Stoner,” married to Prof. Albert Leavitt, has clung to her maiden name successfully, but admitted the other day when her baby was born that its name was to be ELsie Hill Leavitt. If this custom is to be established as a precedent for the other “Lucy Stoners,” it may answer criticism of some of the agitators who have held that using the husband’s name merely indicated the improved status of women in these civilized times. Tracing descent through the father is rather a social achievement, it is said. If a woman has established a professional reputation under her maiden name, it may be said with the newly wed husband of Rita Weiman, author and playwright, “why change the trade mark?” Her husband is an advertising man, so knows what he is talking about. In private and financial life, however, why not he Mrs. Bo and So? What earthly difference does it make? Seems as though it should save a lot of embarrassing situations!
Facts A yellow apple from the hills of Athens Is anew “plant Immigrant" received by the United States Department of Agriculture. Dressmakers In Rome are now designing their models with anklelength skirts and high-necked l-odices, as approved by the Pope. A worm that Uvea only in ice and < annot even withstand the heat of a human hand has been found and photographed by a scientific expedition in the Olympic mountains. A purple suit, worn by a fashionable Parisian hairdresser. 1s matched by the fur of his white Russian wolf hound, which is sprinkled with mauve powder. An English pathologist has discovered that bad temper increases the amount of sugar in the blood by 10 to 30 per cent. Bobbed hair in this generation may mean bald, bearded women In the future, according to the American Wholesale PeßUty Trade Association. A hammer head ran be kept on the handle snugly and permanently by dipping the end of the handle In glycerin to thoroughly moisten the surfaces where the head touches. A tiny fish called the "palolo,” found off the coast of Xew Zealand, can only he caught at dawn on one particular day in the year, when it rises to the surface of the sea for two hours. Family Fan The Cook Posted "This recipe calls for a pound of suet. What’s that?” “Suet is black stuff that comes out of chimneys.” Youngstown Telegram. The Doctor’s Say ’’Your husband needs a complete rest. I will prescribe a sleeping draught.” “When shall I give it to him, doctor?” “Don’t give it —take itt”—Answi-s.
Science Why do people commit suicide? ! This Question has been asked since I the dawn of history and has never i been satisfactorily answered, for, | while a motive sometimes Is trace- ! able in Individual cases, there are many more cases that ore mysteries 1 and also there are such events a>. i “suicide epidemics.” | One of these historic epidemics ocj curred In ancient Greece among ! young women. Others have occurred I in recent times In oriental countries. ■ Until recently Japanese killed therni selves In large numbers upon th© | occurrence of public disaster. In ; the L’nited States, with no teachi ings that suicide is meritorious, ns i was the case with the Japanese, j there are about 13,000 suicides a | year. There are. of course, large ! numbers of unknown suicides not i Included In the figures and many I more who made unsuccessful atj tempts to end their lives Dr. Wiii Ham Steinach, noted psychiatrist of j New York, says the underlying far j tor In most cases is a disordered | mentality or a mental disease which j might easily escape detection. Nature If you are a renter you must not ! cut down a tree on lot or farm to get at a wild bees’ nest. Honey 1 and tree belong to the land owner, i decides the court. , Bee keeping Is the business of | 8,000 women and men in the United j States. | A whole book could be written on the rainbow as a symbol In religion. Small birds are not shocked when they alight on a highly charged electric wire because the circuit is not complete. But if th© tip of a wing or tai! touches a neighboring wire, good night to that bird! Many eagles have met instant death in that way in the West.
PRINTS OF FINGERS ARE FAKED Men Hanged on Faked Finger Marks, Expert Says, P.v ROY r. GTRBONTS Y r,l Service XTri' r rWIHICAi JO, Dec. 3.—! -fallibility ICI of fingerprints Is • ballenged '■—Til ly. APert TVohdo. rationally known designer and.ent i\ . here Experts say that then- is only otic chance in several trillion of two fingerprints being ex ictly aiik, . Now W*hd© claims such i.’.-ntiti-cations can be for r - and and 'no convincingly demonstrates how the forgeries can bo effected by means fa comparatively simple process. What lie has done threatens to mash the whole fabric of fingerorint theory and practice. Wehde became Interested in ftn-■--erprlnts while confined in the Fedrai penitentiary at Leavenworth during 1021. He was sent there for attempting the transport of arms to East India revolutionists before the United States entered the war. President Harding fi> i him after ho had served six months. At the prison he was assigned to laboratory work in the fingerprint section because of his expert knowledge in photography and engraving. Tried in Change Them There, he says, he saw a visiting Oklahoma detective endeavor to ‘‘doctor” a set of fingerprints later offered as evidence a sensational train robbery trial in which a ?”S,OOO reward figured. This started Wehde thlnk'rg. FYom current e< around the prison he learned that at least two men hart been led to execution in America within recent years solely on the strength of circumstantial evidence built about the fable of the, fingerr’-irt ir.fallibility. TVehde made a few experiment*. HA w: - -ssful in transferring or forcing his ©wn finger print to a watch cover. Th--n he tr:c i duplicating the mime fingerprint* o -r. it they could, for exompli . hotoeraphert from a phi.-® ' ’• t in New York and later placed on a bl-wviv murder hatchet In Sap Francisco persistent trn.i brought about the desired effect. “I first obtained possession of a genuine c-rpnrt, which wits easy, an no smooth surfaced article can be handle,i with-,ut leaving digital
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marks,” he says. “These marks I then developed and brought into bold relief by dusting powder on them, “I photographed this Imprint, making a n-gative tho exact size of th© original. An etching is made from this negative, preferably on copper. TTiis etching serves ns a j die. “All anyone has to do to transfer i a fingerprint thus made is to take a piec" of uhv heavy correspondence i paper. Mois’en the paper slightly ! and force it into the ridges of the I etching bv rubbing the back of the j paper firmly with any hard, smooth \ instrument. “When the piper is lifted off it will I>© found that the portion which bears the 1 rant finger impression is now an < nu t replica of skindesign on tin 1 finger Involved. Moistening this paper trajisfcr by touching it to any perspiring part of the : human body, or slightly greasing it ! with any fatty or oily substance. ; then pressing it against any surface | capable of holding a direct, finger- • prim you transplant an exact ropy l of the original finger impression, ; including every detail and sweat- ! pore.” A Thought Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? Then may ye also do good, that are accustomed to evil.—Jer. 42:15. • * • There is nothing in the world that remain.; unchanged. All things are in perpetual flux and every shadow is seen to move.—Ovid.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
A T o Tipping
'Vl &**■*■,' ■ '*■<
Managing Director Mary A. Lindsley of the Grace Dodge Hotel, ■Washington, permits no tipping, The funny thing, according to Miss T Jndsicy, is that while it s easy enough to get hotel help Hi refuse tips, sometimes it’s very difficult to persuade guests not to insist on having them accept- and. In New York By JAMEjjf XV. DEAN NEW YORK, Dec, 5-.- —A battle of batons is on in Gotham S > Koussevitsky, new eondwcio of the Boston Symphony, is threatening •he crown of Leopold Stokow* > The idol of the fair ladles who n. in orchestra music profitable. Stokowski and his Philadelphia < >rchetra for several years :■ re held front place with New York's music lovers, especial!” the ladles. The Boston orchestra has been pretty much out of the social picture here since Dr. Karl Muck became a war prisoner. But Koussevftaky is a tall, slim, handsome man and an Impeccable dresser. In that respect lie is much like Stokowski. And those who have followed the career of Stokowski since his Cincinnati days w’: e!l you that his subjugation f -lu-ii cnees hes been brought about as much by Ids appearance as by hid musicianship. New York has its own great, con-ductors—M-ngviburg, Van Hoogstrat.cn. Hartley, Furtwangier and Ig'>r Btmvinslcy. the composer, with the Philharmonic, end Dumnwh, Bruno Walter and Vladimir OoNch- | man with the Symphony. I£• •waver. I The battle for the pinnacle of public 1 favor seams to rest between the
visitors, Stokowski and Koijssevttsky And may the better pair of spats tv In! * • Asa cub reporter I used to daydream of tho time when I should be eve-witness to a murder or a bank robbery and run to a telephone to give my paper fin eight-column scoop on tlie opposition. Well. last ni;;ht. as I was walking down Eighth Ave., two West Indians started a tight a f©w f©et In front of me. One was pushed through a plate glass window and the falling glass out. his jugular vein and he bled to death. In New York that story was hardly worth telephoning to a paper. And yet I believe I could write a fairly interesting column about the fight. * The head waiter in a midnight club asked his guests to keep their bottles off the tables the other night, as ho had been tipped that a prohibition raid would be made that night. One guost pulled out a white opaque nursing bottle and toasts were drunk from tho nipple. One on the fill! >l:ui “I’ve come with tho gas bill.” “My husband Is out.” “But there are his shoes.” “How thoughtless of him! He’s gone off without them again!” llow Wife Won “I see by tho papers that detectives in Canada have a system of communication by eyelid talking, to balk criminals.” ' “Pooh! Nothing new in eyelid talking. That's the way I got my wife.”—Youngstown Telegram.
'Here |j^| By GAYLORD NELSON
s —“t DELEGATION of residents J A I from tho vicinity of the lr>:> I ■**•] ana Woman’s Prison —Ran dolph and Michigan Sts.—requested the Governor yesterday to recommend to tho t ext legislature the institution’s removal to a site outside the city. Its present location is detrimental to neighboring real estate and Us proximity to Technical High School has an unwholesome in:, '.er.ee on children, declared the spokesman. Which Is doubtless true. Prisons j arc not fairy palaces, and their Inmates arc ret recruited from the Roll os and Pollyanr.as. So nc\ peaceful householder wants penal institutions sprawling on Ids doorst* ps. But even prisons must b*- located some place. Their Ideal sites would he spots so remote fVui* la.\v*aliMink: f> :ks ■\vouM never f* >• r p ■ ' Ve \ ■ ould bo hurried th --r ’.<• foro it- ir • rl!'i > i-oi. . Sir -pn < ft'C SCUCOO near Indiar :pln Probably ?'* present site of tho Woman's Pr.sen if more valuable for raising children than reforming women. And it should I*o moved •utside the city limits t>ut adjacent thereto* I But by the time it settles down u,nd becomes accustomed to its nw surroundings where will the city limits be? Reward nrnoHN It. KISSINGER of EngI ] '.lsb, Ind., was a hero in the ; J I Sjvaibih-American War. tie iv. is one of seven volunteers innocu- . v 'e ! with y..•!!■•■ w fever through ! mosquito bit s in Dr. Walter Reed’s I experiments to trace ?' •• source of , hat scourge i Four volunteers <it*• i from the 1 disenge. K:esinger siirvivd —e phvs--1 ical wr-rk. But tho conquest of yellow fever followed from t. e ex- ! porimenta And their patriotism was ! uccailtned by tho na-.ion. 4 Though Hubstar.'la! recognition r--i rival more slowly. For It never ke-ps pine With tho cheers. Years later a governtti nt hospital was named for Dr. XValter Reed. Which wtLs recognition of ~ sort. But tho invalided received only a tiny pension, inadequate to - sustain him. Twoe'y six years he i p; ( ssl in dependency on friends — while <’ongr--ss toss.-d billions Into i ork barrels However, republics are not ungrateful-- mer'-ly forgetful. An-1 at las' he will gut recognition. For :he President has recom- ; mendc I to <'(ingress an annuity of i 51.2i>0 for liim. llis inuu-rial reward for hnrotsm i arrives tordialy. But long ago ha rej ceivcd a greater reward. Tliat was the inward glow of persona! satisI faction for performing unseih -h service for the comm m good King rzr"IALPIL K HEILMAN of Hope. Ind, has been proc! aimed | Icom king. His ten acres of Johnson County corn won at the Imi-rn.'ii lorial Livestock Exposition , in ( ’liiongo, 1 110..5i. r growers also captured the I single ”ar honors and junior cham- ! piotisldp So thin State is tho golj dm buckle on the corn be!* j Royalty l common In this demo- ! ccitic country Wo have regal spenders, underworld princes, and 1 llstlc kings. These s.iv-ivirns nre !of " P value to but of little concern to or pos- } \ fistic monarch gesticulates for ! a few minutes with padded lists, j For each gesticulation he draws a | royal -alary. A grower devotes skill and labor |to producing championship com. And is awarded a mythical crown ! and a blue ribbon. While society I gets the kingly recompense. For the and I adorn the corn king | wears Is placed on his brow by per spiring efforts to grow two kernels of corn where one grew before. And | the competition adds millions to tlie ! State’s wealth. j The rule of corn kinvs will benefit ; the Nation long after reigning fistic | potentates are embalmed in the | Police Gazette. ! Debt HONARD V. HARRISON, seeI rotary of the civic affairs i *— J committee of the Chamber of | Commerce lias completed an analy ! sis of Marion County’s budget for J 19” County pay roll —his report reveals ] —will take only $59.81 than ! this year. But bonds and Interest j will require $49,1.85.55 more In 1925 ’ than in 1924. Or 37.1 per cent of j nil expenditures. XVhlch saves at the spigot, but ; knocks tho hoops from the public ! barrel. And county bonds Issued In the \ period 1921-1024 exceed the previous j twenty-three years’ total by $250,000. jTf that speed continues soon 13 7 per I cent of county expenditures will be ! for bonds and interest.. And taxj payers will feel pronounced lassl- [ tude in their check hooks. Debt is easily contracted. But I it’s a stubborn ailment to cure. In individuals or counties. Still it’s a pleasant disease in early stages. It’s only when payment is demanded that public or private debtors get furred tongues and feel feverish. Paring nickels from county budget, appropriations Is Interesting. But It doesn’t reduce taxes. Not when county bonded indebtedness conducts itself like an impassioned sky rocket.
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THE WEST CONTROLS CONGRESS Leadership of National Legislature No Longer In Fast rjm. 1 tra*M'Jt'*n Hurraa. ? . 'we Vorfc tiv. ('( ■gi- -a used by death hivl By p..l He .1 defei'.t, have transfemt cont • -'.l cf Cf-ngress from the East to tli” West By the operation of th" seniority rule Senators and Repre.se: ’strives from XVevtem S:.take over chairmanship of inr-t-y committees which have been held in the ; ast by Congressmen from the Atlas.tic seaboard. i’nder the seniority rules new mcrnlwH in Congress must start at the bottom of committees ftr.d as men i Vr in service pass away or fall n f .-lection, the new men step up until at lost, after years of service, ih v take over chairmanships of com:!:.' tees Sir.ce !' him been the practice of Now England to keep Congressmen in office 1. nger than does the West ordinarily the East, particularly N< w England, has bad more than Its fnil sliiua. of committee rhalrmansb:;s h. the past Similarly, under I*• i i.'.t" tie administrations the :; ships are held almost enHt- v b> men from the South, where political upheavals seldom take place. West TTas Majority Now, for the first time, the XYest h.as a majority of chairmanships ■ within i's grasp. Tills hr Important, t.ecjuis the influence a man has as a member of an Important committee. and especially -k chairman. Is infinitely greater than his Influence ns a Senator nr Representative on the floor. S -me of the important committees I which Will gat to Westerners are ; the?*: I The Senate Foreign Affairs Committee chairmanship goes to Senator Borah of Idaho as tho result of the do ith of Senator Lodge of Massachusetts, who held that important post for reaps. Senator Cummins of lowa will take the post held by the late Senator Brandepee of Connecticut as chaitman of the important. Judiciary Committee unless Cummins should prefer to have back again the chairmanship of the Interstate Commerce Committee. In that onse, Senator Ernst of Kentucky would become head of the Judiciary Committee. Johnson to Get Job Senator Hiram Johnson of California will undoubtedly succeed the, late Senator Colt of Rhode Island as chairman of the Immigration Commit t es. Some other important Senate commit tees which will bo headed by "Westerners include agriculture, headed by Senator Norris of Nebraska: appropriations, hold by Senator XVarren of Wyoming: claims held by Senator Capper of Kansas; commerce, headed by Senator Jones of Washington; finance, held by Senator Smoot of Utah: Indian affairs, headed by Senator Harrehl of Oklahoma, and irrigation and reclamation, held by Senator MoNary of Oregon. Control of these committees and others equally, Important in the House, will transfer tho balance of power In the next Cmigre,ss to the great Mississippi Valley and the Pacific Coast. Cat! "You should have heard my husband crocking up my biscuits this morning.” “Oh. was that what he was doing? I thought at the time he was breaking up some furnace coal for the stove.”—Boston Transcript. 4
Everybody Wants Something
Ask The Times You can gel an answer so question ot tact or Uitormatiou bj vrnuug to The Indianapolis Tunes Waahiustoii Bure a 132 . S * V rli at e W>- . lr.,jior D 0 , lndor.nn 2 cents !n stamps tor reply. Medical. !'*a, arid | marital advice cannot be given nor rai. ,it,rsded research be undertaken. Ad other questions will rertivt a >-r son a! rf.Cy. Unsigned requests m :ioi b- answered. All letters ar conUd-iO-tiai—Editor. Where was the Chinese philosopher Cor.furious born? In the State of Lit. TTn-tv ran paint bo remove.! from E H r of the following formulas have Ren reeomrrv nd- and: American po'.-sh. ’hree parts unslaked lime, ore part. Lay this on with a stick, ’.■Bing it rmain for some time, and it o ' remove either tar or paint. Com:, i-tt washing soda llssolved in water Let soak a while —if put on thick, say thirty minutes —and then wash M? rs it dors not remove rhe paint give another appll- ' cation. What is the description >f the i laitrest, most complete radio rej ceiving set ever built? fire yf tile largest, if not the largiest. has fourteen tubes: it is a superheterodyne unit, employing eight, ' nine eleven or fourteen tubes. At , 1.-ast ,-ight tubes, super heterodyned, | are used, in combination with either one, iwo, three or six stages of an- ' pllficatlon. Were Russian troops ever on ! German soil during the World I War’ Two Russian armies entered East Prussia in the middle ~f August. ! 1914. At first they met with sue- ! cess, but in the battle of Tannen- • berg, Aug. 2H-31, 1514. th© German troops* under the command of General von Himlenburg Inflicted a ! crushing defeat upon th© Russians, i Hlnth’nburg followed up the success, and the Russians were completely expelled from East Prussia. Ar© there many national forests located in southern and eastern States? Which are they? The Arkansas forest. Arkansas; Florida forest, Florida; Mononrahela forest. West Virginia and Vir- | glnia; Nantah&la forest. Georgia. ! North Carolina and South Carolina; | Natural bridge forest, Virginia; j Dzark forest. Arkansas: Shenandoah | forest, Virginia and West Virginia; i Unaka forest, Tennessee, North j Carolina and Virginia; White Moun- : tain Forest. New Hampshire and ! Maine. How arc the names Nietzsche and Haeckel pronounced? Nietzsche is pronounced “neechee” and Haeckel is pronounced •’heckel.” Will crocus and tulip bulbs grow and blossom in water? Crocus and tulip bulbs will not ; grow and blossom successfully In | water ns the narcissus bulbs do. | They can, with special care, be j forced to bloom in that, manner, but it is not recommended. Who is the author of “Th© Two Van Revels?" Booth Tarkington.
JOIN OUR 1925 Christmas Money Club You May Want $25, SSO or SIOO for Christmas, 1925 Easy to Accomplish This Way Pay 25c for 50 Weeks and Receive $12.50 With Interest Pay 50c for 60 Weeks and Receive $25.00 With Interest Pay SI.OO for 50 Weeks and Receive $50.00 With Interest Pay $2.00 for 50 Weeks and Receive SIOO.OO With interest The Union Trust Company 120 East Market Street CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS, $2,000,000
FRIDAY, DEO. 5. 1924
A Debt By HAL COCHRAN Toll me. where is t_ha man: pick hit. ut. If you can, who has never had worries o'er debt. Every grown person knows, It’s the things that he owes that are causing him often to fret. You may lean on a friend who Is ; willing to lend when you tell him | your own funds ar slack. It is i easy to borrow, but only brings sor ; row. You know that you’ve got to ' pay back. Ts you only could save, then you • never would rave that you constant.ly run shy of dough. But there’s : never an end to real places to spend. : It’s so easy to let money go. I could argue till death and h© wastin' my breath, for the borrowing cat's h©re to stay. Since the world ; first began. It’s been practiced by man and he’s still up and at It to- ; day. Tom Sims Says We would hot© to he a bank cashier’s wife. When he was late for dinner we would just know he had ' been Indicted. It’s all a matter of habit. An Eskimo would sit on a cake of ice on our coldest day and have the I spring fever. People work harder in winter. And [it takes their minds off the few troubles which work won't end. Every cloud has a silver lining. i but every silver lining has its cloud. Painter is charged with slapping : a girl in Chicago, but maybe he wanted to see If the paint was dry. ! Another beautiful thing about winter is the mail man doesn’t bring us ; any vacation post cards. What tickles us more than any ! other one single thing la seeing a : gossip bite her tongue. Boston judge rules a man who soils booze is not idle. We rule the same, especially just before Christ- | mas. Milwaukee auto salesman's wife ■ got a divorce. Now she will have a j chance to talk some herself. (Copyright, 1924. NEA Service, Inc.) Tongue Tips Miss Lucy Gage. Peabody College. Nashville, Term.: “If this Is a Jazz | nge, it isn’t the young people that are making it lazzy. They are the result, not the tause, of tho times.” George M. Cohan, Actor-Play-wright; “No matter how big a man may get in this world, or what he mnv accomplish In this great contest for power and position, if he's a regular, real person he never outgrows his love for his parents and the fond memories of his boyhood days.” Congressman Edgar Howard. Nebraska: “The agricultural bloc (B Congress is economic first and p® litieal afterward.”
