Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

The Indianapolis' Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GURLEY, Editor. * WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. . !. , Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • * • Gient of tb# United Press and the NEA Service * • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St.lndianapolls • * Subscription Rates: Inalanapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week • • * PHONE—MA in 3500. 4 ,

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

KNOW YOUR STATE INDIANA maintains a sanitarium for sufi>)fferers from tuberculosis at Rockville. Through an aroused public interest in the campaign to eradicate the disease, the death rate ftjgm tuberculosis has been reduced to less than onethird of the figure of a generation ago.

THAT GOOD'JOB The job of treasurer of Marion County still remains about the best political job in the Nation. • In salary it somewhat exceeds that of President. In its duties, it remains largely a matter of bookkeeping. The people never really intended to let any official draw a hundred thousand dollars a year for this particular work. No sane or reasonable person believes that the work is worth anything like this sum. Yet the man who can get this job from the political bosses does get about that much money through the operation of the Barrett law. That law governs the handling of funds paid by property owners on special assessments for improvements. Because of a lack of definiteness in terms, the county treasurers have been taking the interest on these funds and putting it into their own pockets. That interest is what makes the job very at- 1 tractive. It is the basis of a fortune for the treasurer. The city attorney of Indianapolis does not believe that it is the law, but his efforts to get this interest for the-people-have resulted thus far only in a decision that the interest does not belong to the whole city and does not belong, probably, to the treasurer. Apparently that interest belongs to no one. But the treasurer gets it. Past treasurers have It. It might belong to the contractors who did the work, but that is hardly fair, for these men got all they earned in the payments of the full sum of their contracts. It might belong to the individual taxpayers whose money earns the interest, but every taxpayer would have to bring a lawsuit to get his share and probably have to spend considerable money to find out—much more than the trial is worth. So under the present rulings and present situation, the Job of county treasurer continues to be a very fine goal for an aspiring politician. It is one which pays well, very well Indeed. It is one to which only the closest intimates of the bosses can aspire, only those who are near enough to the throne to whisper to the monarchs. One thing is certain. The next Legislature should make the law very definite. It should put the Interest on these special funds into the city treasury. It should make it impossible for any man to get something he does not earn and can not in good conscience claim as his because of work or contribution to tltp public good. A hundred thousand dollars a year for keeping a bank account and doing a little bookkeeping is a trifle high. . t “ECONOMY’* Governors in a number of States, restless under White House strictures on economy, will find satisfaction in the Federal appropriation figures just made public. These figures' reveal that the Congress which has Just gone home—the best Congress ever, according to Coolidge’s statement—appropriated 14,409,000,000 for the use of the Government during the fiscal year which began July It. That is $470,000,000 more than was appropriated by the Congress of two years ago. Senator Warren, chairman of the appropriations committee, says the increase is due to the fact that this is a growing country. \ Representative Byrnes of Tennessee, ranking Democrat on the House committee, takes pleasure in pointing out that the total expenditures of the Government in the three years preceding. the war was $3,278,Q(ft) —very much less than is to be spent in thi* single year. Then the $173,000,000 appropriated for the veterans’ bureau is subtracted from this year’s total, he ' says, the single year still remains much more expensive than those three years combined. It may be difficult for Congressmen to campaign on ap slogan with these figures confronting them.

THINK SO? Thinking, declares a Chicago physician, 'will lengthen the life span. Just think, say fifteen minutes a day, about anything from the obliquity of the ecliptic to the propriety of going fishing on Sunday. And, according to the doctor, the thinker will lengthen his life. \ ' Dr. Coue was a thinker, and he devoted far more than fifteen minutes a day to the thought that he was getter better and better. Yet Dr. Coue died—died at an age when most men are putting in fifteen minutes a day thinking about whether or not they should retire from active life. And anyway, the Chicago doctor certainly is in error in saying that thinking about anything will in-> crease longevity. How about the boy who thinks the gun isn’t loaded, or the motorist who thinks he can beat the train to the crossing? RADIO RULINGS What’s this we’re tuning in? Squeals, scraping, rasping! It’s a decision of the Department of Justice that Secretary of Commerce Hoover has no control over broadcasting or any other form of radio unless it’s specified by la/w. Sounds terrible. Look at all those stations now on the air, trying to find a good wave-length on which to broadcast .their circuses to the world. Se 6/ all those applicants, 600 of them, waiting for a chance to horn in. Watch all those ogres raise their power to devour the little stations. All of them unleashed. All of them wild for the humble fan’s 'attention. But it’s not as bad as it looks. There’s a law still in effect, the old law of 1012. By that Mr. Hoover still has the power to issue license* for broadcasting,, although lie can’t very well

refuse them. But only those of the 600 applicants with equipment ready can get them. As for the 640 now broadcasting, from pigmies to ogres, most have a gentlemen’s- agreement to "be good,” to stick to their own wave-lengths and give the fan what he wants to hear. It all boils itself down to the fan and his desires. It’s he who makes a station and if he doesn’t, the station soons finds it out and dies. No law is peeded. It’s a matter of natural selection, as Darwin would have put it Are those squeals still on the air? Let’s turn the dial a little and tune in something good. JUST WHY? Certainly the- people" of this State can not be accused of undue inquisitiveness if they should ask Governor Jackson for the names of the sponsors of Dr. Bachfleld, now acting as a personal agent of the Governor in the matter of pardons. The unusual nature of the appointment without any explanation of its necessity, is another reason for some show of confidence in the people. Are there matters of such grave import pending that it is necessary to have immediate action? The absence from the United States of two of the members was the occasion of the naming of a special representative of the Governor. The law plainly says that two members are necessary to constitute a quorum. There is no claim that Dr. Bachfleld is a member. If it be necessary to have a complete board, a removal and regular .appointment would solve it The disclosure that Dr. Bachfleld had a connection with the case of the most celebrated guest of the Indiana penitentiary might, so it would seem, impel the Governor to tell why he made this selection. Floul those who' prosecuted this famous case comes the information that Bachfleld made statements to them that showed a very close connection with this prisoner and was suspected of showing undue activities in preventing evidence being gathered against him. The story of carrying whisky away from a bank is not a pretty one. It might not have been true. But that this new appointee of the Governor told it, is certain, if the word of three men of high standing in this State is worth anything. Under these circumstances it is not unreasonable to, expect Governor Jackson to be a little more frank with the people and tell them just why he picked this particular man at this particular time and what particular job he expects him to perform. GASOLINE AND GUMPTION The University of Illinois is the latest of the growing list of schools to forbid the ownership of automobiles by students. % ' The university authorities claim,use of automobiles results in less study, moral delinquency, traffic congestion on the campus, accidents and a general of. time. - This is probably all true, but it doesn’t make a case against the use of automobiles by college students. The big Job of the American colleges and universities is to teach hoys and girls to live in the kind of a world we have—not the kind of a world we ought to have or may have some day, but the world "as is.” To try and protect them from the realities of modern life by restricting their use of modern machinery smacks of the middle ages. It may ease the problems of college deins, distracted by jazz and gasoline, but it dodges the principal job that the colleges and universities have before them—the teaching of people to live in a real world, not a cloistered and restricted one. Women are so silly. Kick up almost as much racket over a bridge prize as a man does over a golf cup. Imagine the plight of a nervous man who got caught in a traffic Jam without any horn to honk. Bootlegging Is a dangerous business. It leads a man to stealing autos. And that’s against the law. Bet the foreign papers carry standing heads, "Today’s Cabinet.” The most expensive thing about a home is carelessness.

CONCERNING SOME CONGRESSMEN My MRS. WALTER FERGUSON The other day a candidate for Cqpgress was orating about the bankers and what detriment they work to the farmers. He commiserated at length upon the wrongs that the agriculturists suffer from the usurers. Probably a number of his audience wondered whether it was possible for any banker to work more havoc to the farmer than the average Congressman does. The time has certainly arrived in the affairs of this Nation when the blatant politician should be turned down at the polls. The fellow who yells the loudest about the wrongs which his constituents suffer at the hands of the capitalistic class, is often the guy who can be bought out easiest by the money interests. Certainly Congress has done very little for the farmer so far, nothing at least for candidates to brag about. And farmers have more speeches made to and about them, and the least done for them, than any other class of citizens. However, the farmer In most communities is his own worst political enemy. He is about the first man to fall for the demagogue and the last voter to see through the tricks of the political shyster. He still believes everything a candidate tells him and" has utter faith In the loudest talk of the most pompous liar. When farmers get sense enough to discount all this vocal sympathy at campaign time, about 90 per cent, and vote accordingly, they will have done more to help themselves than all the Congressmen who have ever sat and slept in the Capitol halls. Os course, the agricultural condition is a serious one, and no man Is wise enough of himself to Improve It. But talk gets nowhere and solves no problems. And when one has listened for twenty years to the mouthings of men who want office in agricultural community, and who have neither the Influence nor the mentality to contribute one iota to the betterment of the farming population, one comes to the conclusion that the worst enemy the farmer ever had Is the lawmaker. The congressional candidate who yells about the farmer being the backbone of the Nation certainly acts utfor the theory when he gets to Washton. For the backbone is obliged to stand up of itself and hold up aU -the rest- of the bodjr politic. —'

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Tracy France Observes Bastille Pay by Staying on the Front Pages.

By M. E. Tracy This day belongs to France. * , It marks the 137th anniversary of her blood covenant with Republicanism. So long as history Js written, the eyes of youth will shine as they fall on the crimson page that tells how a Paris mob stormed the bastile, and they will not look away until they have drunk in the last detail of the five succeeding years. It was one of those glorious moments in humanity’s career when an excess of idealism seems to excuse the grossest passions, and when even the’ eruptive Latin temperament could not attain such extremes of fury as to gb unforglven. One would like to pause and speculate on the grand upheaval, with its strange admixture of high preachment and low practice, its reign of terror that could order massacres one moment and devise anew system of weights and measures the next, but the present calls for notive more Insistently, If not more deservedly than the past. And France Is right on deck to claim a front page position throughout the world, running true to form in her lovely, erratic way. The Spanish dictator is hissed by the same old type of Parisian radical, the puppet Sultan of Morocco Is cheered by the same old imperialistic spirit and Ahd-el-Krim is sent into exile by the same old pitiless Intelligence that once filled the dungeons of the bastile.

A Real Sheba "El Sltt,” the Arabs called her. while Englishmen who traveled the romantic wastes between Suez and the Persian Mountains knew her as "Gertrude.” Without power, ah© ruled as an uncrowned queen and without authority she changed the coilrse of empires. What caprice of inscrutible fate sent this frail little woman, with blue eyes. Into the desert. Inspiring her to roam with the Bedouins and learn their dialects, when she might have adorned a drawing room? What peculiar quirk of the mind enabled her to be the good adviser of so many men and the sweetheart of none? Gertrude Margaret Lowethlan Bell, daughter of a British Iron master, educated at Oxford, equipped by fortune, training and temperament to fill the highest social position—why did she forsake the white woman’s role and go to dwell on the desert? Let it pass as one of those mysteries which make life interesting but not without the acknowledgment that she played a most useful part and that her death at Bagdad last Sunday night marked the end of a most unique career. She knew the East as few men and no other women ever did. , Her counsel was sought by housewives, disgruntled sheiks,, archeologists, historians, diplomats, statesmen and military commanders. "El Sit,” the womin, she was called through Arabia, thus sharing equal honor with Sheba’s Queen. -I- -!• ICivilized Veneer Having noted how this refined English lady cot id pass most of her life In safet * among the wild tribesmen of Mesopotamia, let us Jump half across the world to that grewsome find of a girl’s dismembered body which occurred in Boston yesterday. Have we learned so much, or advanced so far, after all, or Is It true that our boasted civilization is but a veneer over the same old brutal Instincts, ready to crackle and give way at the pressure of pent-up emotion? Neither the Bastile- nor Bagdad are so far away as we would like to think. The savage can still show us how to be chivalrous on occasion, while the civilized man can show us how to be savage. At best, these anniversaries are hut reminders that we still have work to do. •+ + + Pressing Problems Fifteen men hanged at Smyrna for plotting to kill Mustapha Kemal, Mussolini and Rivera shouting that democracy has failed, Latin America and half of Europe sore at the United States, Joseph Caillaux chosen to save France, though he came hear being executed as a traitor—these are but a few of the details to Show th’at we Still ’ have problems and there are me re closer home. Everlasting Tasks The world grows better, of course, but not steadily and not unless people stay with the job of treking It better. Let a generation or a race get lazy and it grows worse, no matter how glorious the past from which they sprung. The idea that we can develop, or even hold our own by leaning against tombstones Is not to be trusted. Each rising sun means another day’s work, no matter how much was done the day before, and each evening sees many a task uncompleted. PHONE * CALL PROBED Unknown Person Tells of Killing Man After Accident. Police today were Investigating a mysterious telephone call an unknown Negro made In the garage of Eugene McAtee, Negro, at 21 W. Eighteenth St., late Tuesday. According to McAtee the man talked to a party who he called “Lillian” and told her that the auto he was driving had run over a man. After striking the man, the Negro said, according to McAtee’s story, that he leaped from the auto and stabbed the man to death. Negro who napde the call had a shirt bearing stains, McAtee told police.

‘Mary Lou’ Is a Cute Little Musical Person From Our Own Good City

By Walter D. Hickman • Musical daughters are supposed to he born on Broadway, Yut thero is a musical germ in this city. There is a musical father In Indianapolis. His name is Russell Robinson. You may start his melody in your own home by getting this Bruns, wick record, "Mary Lou.” The announcement says that "Lyman-Rob-lnson” is responsible for It. And then you notice that Abe Lyman’s California Orchestra is responsible for bringing to life the visible melody of the composers. "Mary Lou’’ Is a swinging melody of delightful purpose, one of those quiet and soothing moonlight things whiem causes one to understand. The vocal warbling is done by Charles Kaley. But the lyric and the melody both are present. The combination is the same old result —one of those restful, melodious things. And that spells soothing success to you and Hick. And 1 have seen composers when they are not composing. When they are not "composing” they are always at a piano. And nothing else but Just that. And that Is Russel Robinson. He is mentally always at the piano. That’s the language he knows. That’s the language he talks. I have had him In New York. I have had him by letter. I have had him at the piano in Indianapolis. He is always Russel Robinson. Get this Brunswick combination of quiet and sincere, melody, "Mary Lou." On the other side you will find "Do You Believe in Dreams?” -I- -I* IGETTING A LINE ON A PALACE EVENT Something interesting is going to happen at the Palace. The Palace announces: When Billy House, comedian, appears In his musical tabloid show "Hello Bill” at the Palace the first half of next week, he will be the show. He and his company of twenty chorus girls and six men are taking over the vaudeville end of the theater all next week offering

REED DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL HOPE

Fiery Missouri Senator Has Friends Among Wets and Drys.

By Charles P. Stewart XEA Service Writer . WASHINGTON, July 14.—Watch Senator James A. Reed of Mlosouri. All the signs are that he Is gaining strength every day as a Democratic presidential possibility. Among politicians still In Wash-.lac-tun—cesplte the congressional reMai. they’re constantly drifting out And in, with tidings from all over the country—the increasing frequency of references to him, as such, is surprising. • • • Here are some of the things one hears in his favor: He has a tremendous personality. He has ability. He's an indomitable fighter. In his home state he has proved himself a wonderful campaigner and vote getter. A1 Smith has all these qualities, but he’s known somewhat too exclusively as a wet. So is Gov. Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland. While Reed's a wet, he stands for numerous other policies which ought to take some of the curse off his wetness even in dry territory. • • • William G. McAdoo would be all right for the drys but has nothing to recommend him to any of the wets. No wet oould find any fault with Reed, and, as previously remarked, he does have certain things to recommend him to some, at least of the drys. Another thing, the mld-West is clearly indicated as a good place to pick presidential candidates from In 1928. Reed is a mid-western man. Smith and Ritchie are just as far east as they possibly could be without falling into the Atlantic ocean. McAdoo is western but the Pacific coast Is rather too far west. • • • There’ll be talk of Atlee Pomerene if Ohio elects him to the Senate in November. However, he may not be re-elected. Even if he is, there'll be talk also of Governor Vic Donahey, and, both being Ohioans, they’ll tend to nullify one another. Furthermore, geographically they’re not as well situated as Reed with reference ,to the corn belt. Neither, although both have national reputations, has either one a national reputation of Reed's proportions. • • • Reed’s a progressive and progressiveism see.ns to be in the atmosphere throughout a considerable part of the United States. His wetness should endear him to the big wet eastern States and to some few western ones which show damp tendencies. It will hurt him in the dry South, but, to offset that, the South is strongly antl-foreign, and no part of Reed’s career has more distinguished him than his fight against foreign entanglements. He voted against the corn belt’s pet farm relief measure, but not because he doesn’t believe in farm relief. He simply doesn’t believe in a subsidy. The com belt, discouraged, | appears practically to doned the idea of a subsidy, anyway, and to be concentrating on tariff re. diction. Reed’s for tariff reduction. | • • • Democratic hopes are greatly stimulated by the undoubted split in the ranks. However, they have tft split of their own to be closed yjf’lf they’re to get any good out of the Republicans. If Reed can -fimnage It he’s a wizard. ,

Finding New Face at the Palace

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Here is one of the important women present with Billy House and his musical comedy company to be at the Palace all next week, starting Sunday. Her name Is Ann Greene.

their two musical comedy farces, one for each half. i In resembles the play, "The Man From Mexico,” House has the role of the husband who is sent to Jail after having been caught In a poker raid.

OUR OWN BROMINE NEW YORK.—No more European bromine need be used In this country, according to Carl R. de Long, head of the chemical division of the United States tariff commission. Bromine, necessary in medicine and many arts, is obtained , from the ocean. Treatment of about 1800 gallons of sea water Is necessary for one pound of bromine. SCOTS WILLING GLASGOW. The people from Scotland are so anxious to come to America because of the high wages that there Is a waiting list of 22,000 which will take some two years to exhaust under the quota law.

EXCURSION Sunday, July 18 Via Louisville and 50 Mile Boat Ride on vhe Beautiful Ohio River Passing through immense Government Lock •< •-f .3 *3.50 &r nd Half fare for children Sand under 12 year*. Special train will e Indianapolis 8 a. m. ; returning leave Louisville 7 p. m., same date. Super-Steamer WASHINGTON Famous Washington Band and Orchestra 6 Spacious Decks—2 Cafeterias For tickets and full particular!, apply to City Ticket Office, 112 Monument Circle; phone Main 0330, or Union Station, phone Main 4507. <7. N. Lemon. Division Pas*. Agent. 112 Monument Circle, Indianapolis. BIG FOUR .ROUTE

When he returns to his home instead of offering as an excuse the busines trip gag he poses as the general of the Mexican army. The true general happens to be in his house at that time and complications ensue. Ann Greene Is the wife whose cross fire questions make matters worse for the happy-go-lucky fellow. * * * Other theaters offer today: "The Old Soak,” at Keith’s; "The FourFlusher,” at English’s; "Mildred Andre at the Palace; Frank Wilson at the Lyric; "The Savage,” at the Circle; “Oh! What A Nurse,” at the Ohio; “The Far Cry,” at the Uptown; “Lovey Mary,” at the Apollo; “The Gilded Butterfly," at the Colonial, and “The Man In The Saddle,” at the Isis. $lO GUITAR IS STOLEN Youth Charged With BurgUry and Petit Larceny. William Murphy, 17, 6f 1715 Glmher St., Is held today on charges of burglary and [petit larceny after detectives allege he entered the barber shop of Frank Granderjean, 2041 Shelby St., July 7, and stole a $lO guitar. 1 Buster Kennedy. 29, Negro, of 2102 Boulevard PI., Is charged with grand larceny after Maurice Shaunter, 220 W. Twenty-First St., reported the theft of S3O.

EXCURSION Wf SUNDAY, JULY 18 m DECATUR, ILL., $2.75 ‘ SEE BEAUTIFUL LAKE DECATUR Visit Turkey Run—lndiana Btate Park—Marshall—sl.3s Train leave* 7 a. m. Retarning. leave* Decatur 0 p.m. One Fare Round Trip to All Station* on C., I. Si W. Saturday and Sunday. Return Saturday, Sunday or Monday. City Ticket Office, 114 Monument Place or Union Station , For Information, Call MA in 0404 or MA In 4507.

The NORTHLAND Carrying through sleeping cars to MICHIGAN Petoskey Harbor Springs Leave Indianapolis 7:15 P. M. Reduced Summer Vacation Fares The Northland leaves on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Affords direct service to Petoskey,Bay view, HarborSp rings, Mackinac Islandand other Michigan resorts. For further information and for illustrated booklet, "Michigan in Summer,” call or write J. C. Millapaugh, Div. Pass. Agt., 610 Kahn Bldg., TeL Main 336(k or City Ticket Office, 116 Monument Place, Phone Main 1174 j PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ws

igg^EXCURSION m Half Fare for Children, 5 and under 12 years \ ■ Leave Indianapolis 700 am 3.00 pm 815 pm 1100 pm ■ , Arrive Niagara Fall* 10:30 pm 6:33 am 8.00 un 1:25 pm fr Leave Niagara Fall* 7:30 am 1200 nn * 4:lopan MS pm m ' Arrive Indtanepoll* 7:30 pm 12:15 am 700 am 11:15 am 1 ■ Ticket* wilt be honored in sleeping and parlor earn on payment of Pullman ■ ehaiga*. Baggage wilt ba checked. Return Limit 16 Day* /? and reservation* at Cltr Ticket Office, 111 Muniment Ctsale.

JUHT 14, 192(1

Questions and Answers

You can ret an answer to any qua*Hon of faql or Information by writing to Die Indianapolis Time* Washington Bureau. £323 New York Aw., Waaiungum, 1). C.. inclosing 2 cent* <n aUmpa for reply. Medical. legal and marital advice cannot be given nor oan extended research lie undertaken. AH other question! will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot he answered. All letter* are oonftaenUeJ. —Editor. How Is orange marmalade made? Select sour, smooth-skinned oranges. Weigh them end allow three-quarters of their weight In cut sugar. Remove peel from oranges in quarters. Cook peel untit soft in enough boiling water to cover; drain and remove white part from peel by scraping It with a spoon. Cut thin yellow rind in strips, using a pair of scissors. Then divide oranges in sections, removing seeds and tough part of skin. Put into a kettle and heat to a boiling point, adding sugar gradually, and cook slowly one hour; add rind and cook one hour. Pour Into gUaaSR. A real bitter taste is given to orange marmalade if one grapefrUlt. is added to each dozen oranges. What la the best way to wash black lace? Make suds of castile or other hard white snap and boiling water, and add a tablespoon of oxgall to a#t. the color. Allow this to cool until It will bear the hand and then Immerse the lace and cleanse by squeezing gently with the fingers. Rinse in two or more cold water*, adding salt to the first water and bluing to the last.- Lay over black cambric and iron with a warm lrorA| Describe the shield of the United States of America? It in the shape of a shield and has thirteen vertical stripes, seven white and six red, with a blue chief without stars. What Is the proper way to eat corn .on the cob? It should be held in the fingers at each end. A more satisfactory way la to use corn holders that mav be purchased at house furnishing, stores. What is the etiquette with respect to using a napkin? Lay it across the lap, folded in half. When the meal la concluded the napkin is laid on the table as It was Used. It Is never folded. If, however, one Is a house guest, a clean napkin should not be expected at every meal, and the napkin Is neatly folded and put beside the plate. Wliat is the bst way to kill a tree? Cut with an ax a deep girdle around the trunk, about 4 to S Inches deep. The tree will soon die. Where was Sherwood Forest In England? Does It still exist? The ancient forest was a stretch of hilly country in the west of Nottinghamshire, Englad. between Nottingham and Worksop, extending about 25 miles from north to sou’h and 6 to 8 miles from east to west. It Is now divided into estates and includes In part the ancient bounds of the towns of Mansfield and kS number of villages. It does not long to one owner. It is almost wholly denuded and divided Into gentlemen’s scats, parks and farms# Who was Secretary of War In Lincoln’s cabinet during the Civil War? E. M. Stanton.