Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1925 — Page 4
4
The Indianapolis Times ROT W. HOWARD, President. FELIX F. BRUNER, Editor. WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scrlpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance * • • Client of the United Press and the Service * * • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis • * • Subscription Rates: Indianapolis Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week • • • PHONE—MA In 3600.
No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever. —Constitution of Indiana.
A Picture That Tells a Story
I II ' ' - __ . ' : ‘ l'*■'*• * '
mHIS picture is a better editorial than we ever hope to write. It shows the MAIN BUILDING of School No. 42, Twenty-fifth and Rader Sts., that was damaged by fire. Do you want your children to go to school in a building of this type? You will help elect anew school board next Tuesday. The most serious need of Indianapolis right now is decent school buildings. Vote for the candidates who w ill give your children proper facilities. There are more important things even than holding down the tax rate.
Religion and Science TIHE following resolution was adopted by _____ the Nationl Council of Congregational Churches of America, meeting last week in Washington: t Resolved: That we pledge ourselves to the conservation of the spiritual values embodied in the time-honored statements of Christian truth, but believe that God makes Himself increasingly known through the patient investigations of modern scholars; We declare our conviction that there is and can be no conflict between science and religion. We deplore any attempt of the State or Federal government to interfere w r ith the teaching of widely accepted scientific theories; and encourage all reverent students in their search for the truth in whatever field, assuring them that we welcome all light that God can give us; and commend to our ministers and people the preaching and acceptance of a gospel consistent with modern scholarship. This is the church of which Calvin Coolidge is an active member. Whether you can or cannot agree that there is no conflict between science and religion, you should voice a hearty “Amen!” to one clause in that resolution: “We deplore any attempt of the State or Federal government to interfere with the teaching of widely accepted scientific theories.” Such interference would, in time, mean the wreck of our educational system. WITH THE weather as it is, the Eskimo costume should be a popular one among Halloween revelers tonight.
WEEKLY SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON The Church Continues Fight Against Strong Drink
The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for Nov. 1. The Fisrht Aafrinst Strong Drink ( World's Temperance Sunday)—Ephesians 0:10-20. By Wm. E. Gilroy, D. D. Editor of the Congregatlonalist E HOUGH warfare has changed, and the warrior armed according to the equipment of Paul’s day would stand a sorry chance against modern weapons, the power of the spiritual forces that Paul symbolized in his description of the ancient soldier standing well armed and prepared has not undergone any change. Even worldly warfare has altered more in its form and conditions than Its essentials. Courage, endurance, equipment, preparedness, watchfulness, care against the arts and wiles of the enemy—all these are as essential for safety and victory as in the days when the first captain led forth his crudely armed soldiers In defense or attack. And if this is true in worldly warfare, how much more true in the spiritual conflicts of life—the battle against sin and temptation. Here the great forces that battle in behalf of the soul are the powers of the Eternal. God helps men as He always helped men—as they avail themselves of His power, and take to themselves the strength that He offers to the weak. Paul’s Experience Paul In this appeal to others to put on the whole armor of God was speaking from experience. He tells elsewhere how he had been oppressed with his weakness, until he had heard the Lord’s voice saying to him, “My strength is made perfect In weakness.” So, he said, he had come to “glow in his infirmities,” that the power of Christ might rest upon him. It is probably this experience that is in Paul’s mind, as he writes from his imprisonment in Rome, courageous and undaunted, to those in the tvhurcJa at Kyh—E'm im 1 to
Both Blundered rjjTrjE would hate to say whose was the biggest W blunder: Joseph Caillaux’s turn-down of Mellon’s final offer, or Mellon’s failure, to grab the best terms he could get from Caillaux and call it a day. Almost any settlement of the French debt would have been better than no settlement at all. Better for France and better for us. Because there was no settlement of any kind, France today is in a pickle and nothing short of a miracle is going to get her out of it whole. There was a lot of discontent in France to begin with. The franc is now slipping fast, eating up Freuch fortunes as the expiring mark ate up German fortunes. Opposed to taxes as the French are, they are now facing a capital levy. Already paying taxes to the tune of 25 per cent of the national income, they are going to have to pay still more. Finance Minister Caillaux refused to apply the levy on capital. Rather than do it he caused the collapse of the cabinet. Anew government now stands upon a capital levy platform. Will the levy succeed, or will it only make matters worse ? Caillaux takes the latter view. He says capital will he hurriedly withdrawn from French business and industry and sent abroad or into hiding. One of the results will be a smaller national income to tax; others will he great unemployment and popular unrest. What with a disastrous war on in Morocco and another in Syria; with a budget that fails to balance by billions, and more billions of short-time debts falling due; with the home market saturated with loan after loan, and foreign credit nil, France’s future indeed looks dark. Which is to say that the $4,000,000,000 debt which France owes us is still far from paid. A bird in the hand is worth a whole covey in the bush. That was the moral for Mellon.
Play Fair! mAMES M. OGDEN, city corporation counsel, told a group of voters at Thirtieth St. and Kenwood Ave. the other night that the city tax rate during the Bell administration ranged from $1.14 to $1,225, while the tax rate set by the Shank administration for 1926 was only $1.05. Mr. Ogden is exactly right so far as he goes. The only trouble with Mr. Ogden is that he did not tell the voters the whole truth. He did not tell them that tax rates mean nothing unless valuations are taken into consideration. He did not tell them that as a result of the Goodrich tax law valuation of property in Indianapolis has more than doubled. Mr. Ogden did not tell the voters that a $1.05 rate in 1926 WILL COMPEL THE TAXPAYERS TO PAY INTO THE CITY TREASURY MORE THAN TWICE AS MUCH MONEY AS DID A $1.14 TAX RATE IN 1915. M e hold no brief for the Bell administration, but w e believe in play, even in politics.
“be strong in the Lord and In the power of His might.” What an expression and what a privilege! Be strong in the Lord! What a refuge for weak and buffeted men! One thinks of Luther’s great hymn: “A mighty fortress Is our Gpd!” Spiritual Struggle We are engaged In a spiritual struggle. We war not only against outward allurements of evil but against the very enemies of the soul, against spiritual wickedness. Nothing but spiritual equipment can prevail. It is God against the devil. A true temperance lesson reaches far beyond the evils of drink alone, but how necessary it is to perceive the place of spiritual strength in the fight against strong drink. We have been fighting drink by law, and at present the whole country is divided over the results of prohibition. Some say that it has been a profound boon, while others see in it an incentive to lawlessness and a deep failure. One thing may be said while men ore "reasearching” concerning the results and effects of prohibition, viz: that there never was any need
Sousa Here - John Philip Sousa and his band will give two concerts at the Murat Sunday, afternoon and night. This famous bandmaster has played here many times. His program will include many of the old favorite marches which have made him famous. Special soloists will appear at both concerts. Request numbers will be made up of the marches which have made him one of the outstanding figures in American music.
to “research” for the effects and results of the drink traffic: in the preprohibition days. They were always apparent and one didn't need to go beneath the surface to find them. But one good thing that the Federal Council’s Department of Research has done In its investigations concerning prohibition is to Insist that there must be the old sort of sound temperance education and propaganda. We have been too ready to assume that the lav/ was going to do everything, hut the law must be backed up with intelligent action, appealing to the minds and consciences of men, teaching them the evils of strong drink, and the strength and beauty of temperance. The fight with evil is never won until man wins a spiritual victory. Trust in God, prayer, watchfulness and perseverance will create not only a sober nation, but a race of men gloriously strong. Tom Sims Says Nothing gets you all up In the air quicker than an inflated ego. You may have hard luck driving, but In Texas a man ran over a chief of police and broke two ribs. Be careful about getting robbed on pay day. If it gets in the paper people will learn how much you make. Man from Chicago shot a man in San Francisco, and lots of people in Chicago going without being shot. You may want to be in another man’s shoes, when if you were you would put your foot in it. Doesn't cost a cent more to laugh at your own expense Doesn’t matter, but a couple of oysters is so little for a case to make Buch a big stew about. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)
Tllii I.\JJIAiNA±'ULI& TlAlhlS
Poker Iss a Gread Game Editor Times: {
#*INCE der courts haff giffen der decisions dot Poker iss a scientiffics und not a g a m 1 i ngs games, und der arrestings cood not bin made on such,
der boys gotten a better feelings. Der vimmins poker blayers vat must vear falses faces to hide der excideinents ven dev gotten a big hand, bin der limits. Vy such foolishness? Mit der red und vite vat iss painted on der faces all der time, any udder kind of falses faces iss not necessity. Ve admission der bin Poker fiends so veil as Vist cranks. Ven base ball iss der National game, Poker iss Universals. Effery kinds peebles blavs Poker. Der superstitious; der bluffer; der sure ding men under feller vat noffer antys aber iss always shy in der pots. Exberts said goot poker blayers did not much talkings und der carts ranted in der draw iss indicationcd by der fingers. In vun game vat I knows aboud, a feller holds up der hand und der dealer gift’s him two carts und tore der udder cart in two pieces und gills him dor haff und ven he kicks id vas seen he had only two und a haff fingers. Der bresent game iss full mit confusings made und der Olt Timer iss alias-bin ven dey introdueings such like Stud; Duces Vild, Spit in der Ocean und Hogan, id tookon quick scientiffics to bin able to seen der possibilities mit such new fangled idees to know vat you got. Ach. Yen you cood bring back der olt vay us blaying, mit a stine us beer und dem sandviches by your elbow, you sure vood gotten back der nerf to made callings ven you know already yon don't cood vin und so bring oud dot goot natured lass vat iss neffer heard in der game us today. I guess der answer iss: Blay Mar-Jong und Shop early. HANS lIOFFMEIER, 1622 Sout Vest Streed.
A Sermon for Today By Rev. John R. Gunn— —
Texts “Faith without works is dead.”—.lames 2:26. R. GLADSTONE said: “There is one proposil__l tion which the expe rience os life burns into my soul; It Is this: That a man should beware of letting his religion spoil his morality. In a thousand ways, some great, some small, but all subtle, we are daily tempted to that great sin.” Some poet has said: “Grace abused brings forth the foulest deeds. As richest soil the most luxuriant weed.” The gospel is spoken of as a saviour of life unto life or death unto death. Electricity lights up the pathway of man, but if he blunders with it, It puts out the light of his life.
Many Musical Events Are Planned by Colleges Here
rjrTj ISS FAY HELLER, teacher M of dramatic art in the Metro- * '7 politan School of Music, will present her students in a play, “The Rainbow World,” by Irene Jean Crandall, next Friday evening, Nov. 6, at 8 o’clock in the Odeon, the school's theater, corner of North St. and Ft. Wayne Ave. The play will be precided by a short musical program, which will be given by Miss Frieda Heider, soprano, and Edwin Jones, violinist, teachers in the school. Mr. Jones and Miss Frances Wishard, pianist, will lurnish the music between acts. The program is open to the public free of charge. The following students will take part: Ruth Crail, Charles Craigle, Blanche WlJson, Robert Geis, Denee Wolfard, Louise Dodd, Eevlyn Wolfard, Betty Martindale, Fairetta DeVault, Stuart Williams, Virgniia Elliott, Mary Castvell, William Robert Craigje, Barbara Jean Williams, Elizabeth Ann Matthews, Marjorie Jane Duncan, Harriet Bartol Renick, Peggy Ann Williams. • • • cr-JIISS GRACE HUTCHINGS of j the faculty of the Metropolttan School of Music and Mrs. Harry Lelve of the Associated Artists studios and her student. Miss Margaret Gallagher, have gone to Chicago to attend a concert ’to he given there this afternoon by E. Robert Schmitz, pianist, of Paris and New York. While there Miss Hytchings will he one of a few musicians to receive a private lesson from Mr. Schmitz. • * • mHE Indiana College of Musio and Fine Arts will present the following students In a recital on next Wednesday evening, Nov. 4, 8:15 p. m., in the College Auditorium. Mrs. C. F. Cox, Virginia Lucas. Neva Bowman, Pauline Becker, Helen McCarty, Maxine Ferguson, Esther Hollister, Beatrice Stultz, Helen Thoms, Christine Owens, Mary Virginia Wallace and Gertrude Whelan. The above are pupils of Glenn Friermood, Bomar Cramer, Ferdinand Schaefer, Clarence M. Weesner, Eleanora Beauchamp, Flora E. Lyons, and Ruth Todd. This program is under the direction of Bomar Cramer. • • • The Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will present the following pupils in a recital on Saturday afternoon, Oct. 7. 2:30 p. m. in the College Auditorium: Edward Donnell, Katherine Maurer. Betty Lou Wright, Rosaline Pugh, Jeanette Arnold, Marion Gilbreath, Joan Ereles. Emma Elizabeth Hallet, Virginia Marcus, Jean Coverdlll, Marjie Miller, Mary Pauline Smith, Jean Lucile Foley, Carl Stoycheff. Kax Kendall.
Hans Hojjmeier Says: Women Already Have Poker Faces Because of the Paint
Tampering with electricity is a dangerous thing. It is more dangerous to tamper with religion. Religion is a thing no man can afford to tamper with. No man can afford to be insincere in religion. To be deceitful in religion is the most perilous thing in the world. There is nothing wortJi so much to a man as real religion. It energizes his will, puts iron in his blood and moral fiber in his character. A cold, formal, callous religion is worse than none at all. It vitiates a man’s moral senses, devitalizes his moral forces and weakens his moral character. This explains why we have so many professedly pious people in the world who are long on religion, but short on morality. Tour religion is no good if it is all profession and no practice. (Copyright, 1D25, by John R. Gunn)
Margaret Titus, Louise Hodges, Maxine Elizabeth McCracken and Virginia Caughlin. The above are pupils of Elizabeth Meek, Clarence M. Weesner. Gladys Loucks, Cleon Cclvin, Evan Georgieff, Ruth Todd, Pauline Roes, Eleanora Beauchamp, and Mrs. h riermood. This program is under the direction of Mrs. Glenn Priermood, and is open to the public. * • • R. GLENN FRIERMOOD, artist teachers of the voice department of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, will talk informally on "Voice Technic,” to all voice students of the school on Sunday afternoon. Nov. 1,3 p. m. • • * SHE MET RO P OLITAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC has consented to cooperate with the Merchant's Heat and Light Company's broadcasting station WFBM in a series of musical programs, which will be given the first Wednesday evening of each month beginning next Wednesday evening. The programs will be given by members of the faculty nnd advanced students of the school nnd have been arranged to begin at 8 o’clock. The first program will be as follows: "Meditation" Gruenwald Robert Sehult. oomotlst ‘ La Paloma" J,a Forge "Faiu-honnettc" Clarke Min Frieda Heider, soprano. "The Jiurgieresa” Moszkowskt "Tho Lark" Giinka-Balakireff Mies tirm-e Hutchings, pianist As We Part" Ilgenfrttz "Charge O' Mind" Curran Miss Heider. “Ava Mnria" Schubert-Wilhelmj Hugh MoGils-pr. violinist. Mrs. John Kolmer, Mrs. Lucille Wagner and Earl Howe Jones will be the accompanists.
Ask The Times You can get n answer to any question of fact or information bj writing to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau, 1328 New York Ave.. Washington. D. C.. inclosing 2 cents In stamps for reply. Medical. Jegal and marital advice cannot be given nor can extended research be undertaken. All other uucst.ons will receive a personal reply. Unsigned reuuests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor What is the merchant marine of a country? Tho term is used to mean the entire shipping Interests of a country apart from its navy. What is a “love bird?” A “love bird’’ is a popular name for a diminutive parrot, native in the warm parts of America, Africa and Australia. The African species, about the size of sparrows, are common cage birds. They mate in captivity from the middle of February to the first of June, but must be given a nest for their young. They feed on dry bread, crackers, nuts, chlckwecd, dandelion, grass, peppers and broken oyster shells.
Illllllllililliiii" 'LA (W*v 1 TOllll.iuliflH P\.f\ce v.oovvb 1 90UK? | I W GOT ' &\WfkC\OOS> f) k \ poc \jjoT A^vv\t -77 PT MUlf, fSl'ilUHi VJOVA-O ONW fcHV. ) £i\YT\W OtSC. /r^^
f *AV (~ v/IVb SfWV- r —T \ rt.lnilUl hv\KVS STRAUGt- V iM ff 1 fcOOfc Of* \ ira®! , ,IPM A YVAfVY \ NOO IWMf Mil \ ' iiy&\ji if
RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA
By GAYLORD NELSO:
LICK ’EM HARD AND OFTEN OINSON MAN I FOLD, Judge Y>ro tern, in city court, recently advocated a flogging post for punishment of incorrigible youths. The case of an 18-year-old youth in court for beating up his mother stirred the jurist. “I really believe that an oldfashioned flogging would do more to straighten out the modern kinks in some of these youngsters than any modern method of punishment I know about,” he observed. The whipping post—a once-popu-lar form of panlshment—has been abolished except in Delaware. Even the woodshed has practically vanished as a family institution. These be soft days for unruly youths—the old theory of lick-'em-hard-and-often has been discarded. There are no naturally bad children, says Dr. Edgar A. Doll, an authority on child psychology. They are just misunderstood. Perhaps then the 17-year-old boy sen-
I j-v UPILS of Helen Warrum Ijp Chappell will give a recital <— J at the Herron Art Institute on next Wednesday night. The public is invited to this recital. The program follows: “BcsUuvv” Rommel Shepherd. Thy Demeanor" ... Old English Miss Lois Anderson, II “Dear Lit le Garden" ..... A. A. Brooks "Sicialiam ” Mascagni . _ Mrs. A. A. Brooks. “Down Here" Brahe Life and Death" ..... Coleridge Taylor “Gavotte" ("Mignon'M Thomas Mists Raffaela Montana Miss Isabella Mont ant. Accompanist. IV "Jewel Song" t “Faust") Gounod Mins Mar.v Ann Porter. V "Gn , wln F ?f Sour" Mendelssohn “Rock o Weary world" Trcham Mrs. Louis Traugolt. VI "Die Lotus Blume" Schumann ‘Ah. Love But a Day" Beach Miss Grace Rush. "Vot lo Sanete" (“Cavalleria Rusticaua ) Mascagni ■ Mrs. S. E. Fensterr.iaker. Mrs. Vergil 11. Moon, Accompanist. “Winter" Foster ‘Sing to Me. Sing" Homer Miss Gladys Whiteman. IX “The Little Dove" Saar "The Wren" Lehmann’ Blossom rime Salter Miss Mary Alice McCarty. Miss Marguerite McCarty. Accompanist Scene I "Haensol and Gretel". Humperdinck Haensel. Miss Bernice Abbott. Gretel. Mrs. L. V. Harrison. Mrs. Lucile Row Phillips at the piano. * * * I r-p| HE Indianapolis Matinee i I Musicals will present Uyrena L... J Van Gordon, prtnia donna mezzo-contraJto of the Chicago Civic Opera, in a recital at the Murat on Monday night, Nov. 9, at 8:30 o'clock. 1 This will ho the first concert of tho artists series. Tho sale of seats is open to the public.
Homesick By IfaJ Cochran NY man livin' appreciates glvin’ his system a loaf, i nJ ’cause It’s best. Often we’re wishin’ that we could go fishln’ for fun and for fish and for rest. Sweet is the dream of a swift running stream, with a moss bank that’s sheltered by shade. Line and a book and a paper or book, and your paradise parlor is made. Shy of all worr. I ne’er In a hurry to do thing* tat ougty to be done. Shucks, you’re not working—you merely are shirking. The goal of the trip is just fun. Maybe a week, or a couple you seek when your vacation time is at hand. Everything’s fine, as you toss In your line —but there’s one thing I can’t understand. A man gets away for a session of play and his home’s where he’s hanging his hat. The way’s sweetly paved for the trip he has craved —but he always gets homesick, at that. Coouriaht. t9tt. NBA Btrviet
THE SPUDZ FAMILY—By TAJ,BURT
tenced the other day in Ft. Wayne for poisoning his 11-year-old cousin was merely misunderstood. Ho cave a pretty good impersonation of badness. No doubt the old axiom “spare the rod and spoil the child.” was grossly abused in the sterner past. It was the excuse for a lot of sheer brutality to youngsters. They were knocked lopsided on the slightest pretexts, merely as Incidents to fathers' daily dozen. The progress of a boy from babyhood to manhood was frequently a succession of painful welts. Nevertheless modern youths are not such an improvement over their predecessors as to warrant the belief that corporal is inherently wrong. Many youths can still—when occasion demands—be best trained from the rear. AN AGED ~ PETTY THIEF Ira I RED FORTMAN of Milton, Ij4 I ind.. 70 years old, imI -J poverished, feeble and almost blind, was arrested and haled into the Circuit Court at Richmond Thursday for stealing 30 cents' worth of coal. For once justice unbandaged her eyes and manipulated her scales in accordance wtih facts, not abstract theories. The Judge fined the old man sl, sentenced him to one day In jail, disfranchised him for one day—and then suspended all the sentences. He discharged the aged malefactor after lecturing him on the evils of petty thievery. There was a humane judge. Three hundred years ego, when men were hung for stealing a penny loaf of bread, an old man guilty of the theft of a scuttle of coal would have been drawn and quartered. Truly the race is making some progress upward, despite the fundamentalists who declare it has been going down hill since Adam. But how will the old derelict feed and warm himself when the next cold snap comes? He can't eat or burn the Judge's lecture. Will he have to steal another 30 cents' worth of coal to keep from freezing? We are still a long way from a perfect society when in bounteous Indiana a feeble old man must resort to petty thievery to keep tottering body and soul together. The millennium won’t arrive this fall. INDIANS IN INDIANA
mNDIANS In Indiana only number 125. according to recent census statistics of the Indian population in the United States. In this State, the noble red man who once ralspd the warwhoop and scalps has been completely supplanted by the white man with his farm mortgages and search warrants. The so-called extermination of the native Americans has caused sentimentalists much anguish and gallons of tears. • Poor Lo has not been exterminated, though hts treatment In the settlement and development of the country can’t give present citizens a feeling of pride. TMie Indian population of the United States now numbers 340.595. the census shows, a gain of 18,978 In the past twelve years. Probably it was never much larger. The country could never have supported a large population of Indians, who were hunters and trappers, not cultivators of the soil or industrial workers. The Iroquois. the most powerful and feared Indian nation In the eastern part of the United States, never had more than 2.500 warriors at the height of its power, according to the French explorer. La Salie. The man power of the dreaded Iroquois confederacy was less than that of almost any present-day Hoosler county. The Indian has jjpt vanquished like the the silver dollar.
feAibilDili, Lv
New Organist
mmmu iff |ip&' rpi jgfc,/ *#*■• -™By |gBW|M , T ~_t-; ;sJ|
A. F. Taylor
On Monday night the new ZarIng Egyptian Theater will formal ly open its doors on the north elde. A. F. Taylor, noted organist, will preside at the large organ. or the hitching post. He has merely adopted the white man’s ways and is sticking around, Some, like Senator Curtiss of Kansas and Ex-Senator Owens of Oklahoma, with Indian blood in their veins, are helping to run tho country. After 400 troubled years the melting pot has assimilated the original Americans. They have merged with the general population. Will it take that long to digest some of our more recent racial lumps? FADING OF A RFD ryiOHN C. SCHADEL. of Ft. I I I Wayne, has been ordered Ls£—l deported. He Is charged with being an officer of the Communist party, and was deported once before, but about a year ago slipped hack into the United States over the Mexican border after he had failed in several previous attempts to re enter this capitalistic country. In 1920 John was "red.” He thought with his mouth. "I would rather live in Russia than In tho United States,” he asserted bold ly. The plutocratic American Government took him at his word and kicked him out.—separating him from his wife and four Ameri ’ can-born children. A year’s residence in the Rus slnn paradise cured him—the "red” in him completely faded. Like Emma Goldman, Bill linywood and others forcibly exposed to communism at short range, he only longed to return and live again under tho iniquitous Ameri* can Government he so fluently cursed. Redness of the parlor or the matted hair species Is mostly vocal —a variety of nuto-lntoxlcatlon. Talk of world revolution, overthrow of capitalistic government*, the uprising of the downtrodden proletariat and such Inflammatory "red” shibboleths is entertaining—but means nothing to tho in*” dividual. Martyrdom for some •such communistic ideal looks well" In print. However most men find, when the choice Is given them, that what, they really crave Is nos martyrdom for an abstract “cause," hut a concrete pay en-" velope and domestic happiness. When brought face to face with that choice the Ft. Wayne "red" lost hts redness. Asa he Is now about ns dangerous as a rubber boot. legally, perhaps, his,... deportation again is a strict matter of justice. But what has the United tSates to fear if it permits this burnt-out clinker of a coni munlst to remain? His deportation will do no good. And the principal sufferers will htj four American-horn children, who are pink and rosy, not red.
