Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 246, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1927 — Page 6
PAGE 6
The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, I'restdeuL BOYD GURLEY, Editor. WH. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of (lie Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of tbe 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., Indianapolis • • • Subscription Kates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week * * * PHONE-—MA in 3.100.
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.
probe not political Only by the most inexact use of words could the probe suggested and demanded of the State Legis lature be called political. It is unfortunate that the Democratic party is compelled to sponsor the resolution calling for an investigation of State affairs and of officials, of commissions and grand juries, of scandals and of rumors that have gained the dignity of accusation. Far better would it have been had the parly which has been In power for the past few years boldly and courageously given to the people such an inquiry and accepted the responsibility cf assuring the people or of eradicating evils which may have existed or which still exist. To call an investigation of events in this State a “political probe’’ is merely a subtle method of discredit upon what is demanded by citizens without regard to party. There are no party lines in virtue, in honor, in integrity and there are no political divisions in dishonor, dshonesty or in betrayal. But the State has witnessed so many things that require explanation, so many events that have occurred since a prisoner from his cell blazoned his charges of corruption of which he declared himself to have been a part, that the people have lost faith in government itself. There was amazement when no denial came from any source when ,the former ruler of the State made his charge and there was shame that no such denial was made until a son of the great Roosevelt came and demanded one. There was doubt and suspicion when every power of government was used to prevent Stale Senators and reputable newspaper owners seeing this prisoner and obtaining from him the proof he declared tie possessed. There’ was more doubt when the board which controls the State penitentiary held a hasty meeting, an imperative one seemingly, to indorse anew rule which would permit the warden to hold this prisoner in liis cell and away from interrogation. There has been disgust and doubt and suspicion for more than two years, with* two state boards hurling charges at each other, charging each other with various forms of corruption. The highway commission charges that Its head and one of its members were indicted by framed charges—and they trace that allegation to another board of the State. When the grand jury met in this city to investigate the charges given to the public by Thomas Adams, and ether charges of corruption, more than two hundred witnesses were called. Some of those witnesses had made public statements, and if their testimony behind locked doors were similar to those statements, they gave evidence of corruption or of suspicious circumstances. The verdict of the grand jury itself. Its most apparent division, the pub’ic statements of three prosecutors that there had been evidence sufllcient to return indictments, gave more ground for suspicion. The peculiar and significant report of the jury itself called attention to unusual circumstances in that grand jury, The people have reason to lose faith it so ancient an institution as the grand jury places itself under suspicion and invites comment by the very wording of its report. I These things are not politics. They are government. They reach to the very foundation of all our institutions. They affect the public mind and public opinion. I hey a.' et the poe!•etbsoks and the public welfare. h:t it be h‘ od that t’’?re will be no political l ines dray, u in .;u::h an inquiry, either a? to ,he ue--ssity for one or ui Ls conduct if there should be one. t Instead let there be a purpose to give the people all the facts. If the charges, grave and disturbing, are false, the people have a right to know. If they be true, the people will have their 1 hance and their opportunity to right them in their own way and that way is not necessarily an overthrow of cne political party in favor of another. The object of the search should be the truth in the open so that even those who run may read.
MORE FEDERAL OFFICERS Announcement of au increase in the number of agents to be employed in enfoiciug the prohibition laws of the nation, made after an anniversary celebration by its believers, is hardly reassuring. it might be presumed that after the several years of trial, after the inevitable reduction of all stocks in private cellars that lias come, there would he a lessening of violations instead of an increase. The adding of more Federal officers to the public pay roll for the purpose of running down violators of this particular law can only mean that .more and more officers are needed to enforce that law. People believed that each year would see the violation of this law decrease. There lias been time for tho power of example to sound its warning. There has been time for the toper to become used to abstinence. There has been time for appetites to lose th°ir keen edge. One of the great arguments tor nation-wide prohibition, based wholly upon speculation, was that this law would reduce all crime. Many of us believed in all sincerity that within a decade jails and poorliouses would be turned into kindlier institutions and that society would then begin its warfare upon other enemies, such as sickness and injustice. Instead there is a constant call for more policemen, more detectives, for these Federal agents of the prohibition department are policemen and detectives given tlie special duty of guarding the people against the boot logger and themselves against their own appetites. Instead of accomplishing the expected result, drinking has become more prevalent and the illicit traffic better organized. * It takes more men now to discover the hidden still, the alcohol mixers, the rum runners, the gunmen who have engaged in this business. It Is small wonder that many are beginning to doubt the wisdom of the Constitution itself and are wondering whether a change to a different system, not the old corrupt, political and debauching saloon with Its unrestrained license, but one which would
not poison by wholesale and create an ever growing number of violators. Perhaps we may some day settle all problems with some regard for human nature and on a basis of public opinion. A law' which demands and needs more and more officers to enforce it, lias its weak points. A FITTING MEMORIAL Students at the University of Indiana propose to raise a memorial to Don Mellett, c°uvageous editor who was murdered because lie dared to expose evil In the city in which lie lived. All over the land newspapers will be asked to contribute to a building which will bear his name and that building will be used fur the school of journalism. No more tilting tribute could be given to this former Indiana student than that his name should lie a constant reminder to those who enter his own profession that newspaper making demands honesty, courage, bravery. Such a building, too, might well inspire those who in the years to come prepare themselves for this profession, to higher ideals of their own duty to the people they serve. Such a building would be a rebuke to tbe timid, the greedy or the complacent editor who accepts things as they are and dares not raise his voice in protest when evil, in any form, menaces the public good. At no time in the history of this country is there is greater demand for these qualities of character or that sense of duty which led Mellett on in his crusades, ready to die for his own principles, ! ready to defy the enemies of the people. There is need for that courage in fighting evilo ■ hat are hidden. There is need for honesty in daring to expose dishonesty in high places. There is need for so strong a sense of public duty that no community will accept evils in ignorance or suffer through the betrayal of their interests by those who assume the duty of instructing them. A Mellett building at, the university which gave him his training will do more tiian honor the memory of Don Mellett. It will be a challenge to the future and a promise.
MR. KELLOGG SURRENDERS Arbitration! The word has been long in coming from the unwilling mouth of Secretary of State Kellogg, but now it has been uttered. He lias been considering it some time, he says, and the country, pleased to have him nay it, won’t bother to remind him of the danger that lay in his long delay. He has only to show that he is in earnest, that be is ready to forget the recent unpleasant past, and to substitute the powers of reason for the show of force that has heretofore marked his notion of diplomacy. With this the country will be satisfied. With it the menace of a break w'ith the Mexican government will disappear. There will be no more talk of lifting the arms embargo and helping precipitate a bloody civil war below the border. President Calles weeks ago proposed arbitration of the differences between his country and ours. Kellogg is now prepared to accept the proposal. It is a victory for the .American people, the great mass of peace-loving citizens who set their faces against the other course —the course that was leading straight toward war. It is, in particular, a victory for those citizens who made their protest emphatic; who wrote or telegraphed tlielr view's to Washington; who marked their unmistakable “no’’ ballots carried in tliis and twenty-four other American newspapers and thus had their voice carried to the doors of the White House and the State Department. For the time being, at least, victory is with the people. They can declare an armistice and cease firing—cease firing their ballots, that is to say. It Is to be hoped that permanent peace may follow this armistice—that it will not be necessary for the people of the United States to set Secretary Kellogg back in the true American path of friendship and conciliation again. If notr—if again our Government is found seeking to cook up an unnecessary war with a weak neighbor, without first exhausting the possibilities of peaceable negotiations—then the country will be compelled again to take up the issues with the Government. Meanwhile the United States Senate can save the people of the country the necessity of controlling the vagaries of the State Department. Secretary Kellogg has expressed his willingness to arbitrate with Mexico, following a demand made some days ago by Senator Borah and put in the form of a resolution yesterday by Senator Robinson, Democratic floor leader. The Senate must see that this expression by Kellogg is not the sum of bis action. It must see that be moves immediately to bring actual arbitration about. It must see that this vital business is not delayed until Congress is adjourned—throwing the job back upon the people aguin. Guantanamo Is all worked up. With all the warships going to Nicaragua, the convention bureau fears Cuba won't get the maneuvers this year. West Point cadets can smoke openly now. Their girls friends often were inconvenienced when tbe boys had no fags between dances. After coming within 40,000,000 miles of the earth Mars is receding again. But the State Department bad better look out —you never can tell! The world’s most trusting man has been found. He lost four SSO and two S2O bills on a New York street the other day and advertised for them. John D. Rockefeller recently gave a Sunday school pupil of 1865 a dime. Virtue lias its reward eventually. Youth turns to lawlessness for money, says a newspaper headline. Thus does the day of professionalism grow apace.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Tracy Bolshevist Russia Great* est Fact of the Year,
By M. E. Tracy A blizzard in sweeping Russia, i with the temperature at 60 below : zero and 100 frozen to death. I One’s fancy clings to the brief report because so little conies to us from the land of the rod regime. Occasionally sonic name drifts across the void, or the tale of some lurid transaction about to be completed. Trotsky out. Zinoviev replaced, the golden toys of Nicholas on display, the crown jewels up for sale —by such sketchy phrases must we guess the life and progress of a mighty I revolution. To most .people Russia means little, while the word bolshevism is an anathema, yet the great experiment her condition represents is the greatest fact of the year. Here, at least, is something new, something different, no matter howterrible, and here one more novel idea is being winnowed through the sufferings of humanity. We hate it, and shut our eyes as though that were suffeient. So Europe hated us and our rep iblicanism a century and a half ago, and so Spain hated the rebellion of Soutli and Central America. Humanity’s will to tinker with the unknown is irrepressible. It makes ghastly mistakes nine times out of ten, but accomplishes enough through the tenth exception to justify the cost. Chile and Peru will have none of Secreary Kellogg's plan to cede Taena-Arica to Bolivia. Bolivia is for it, as any one might have foreseen. Tho plan was good enough from our standpoint, but our standpoint included little more than the desire to get out of a bad scrape. Chile and Peru have been quarreling over Tachna-Arica for the last forty years. If Tacna-Arica is valuable enough for that, who could expect them to give it to a third country for the sake of peace? Barren Wastes Treasure Two geologists have discovered a petrified forest in the “Big Bend’’ country of Texas. Thejf claim it is the most magnificent of its kind yet brought to light. There are standing tree trunks from 100 to 150 feet high which look like great monoliths and there are fallen tree trunks of enormous size, one of them measuring 896 feet In length. The “Big Bend’' country is formed by a great curve of the Rio Grande, which flows through a canyon 2,000 feet deep. It is a stark and barren waste, with gray, dusty mountains and gouged out valleys that are too sterile for decent animals. Here the rattlesnakes, centipede, scorpion and vinagarone rule as lords of all they survey, daunting man and beast alike. Few white men have penetrated the region, though it has long been known to contain rich mineral deposits and interesting evidence of ancient life, S’ 1 - Fame.to Shack Twenty years ago John Olson was a great violinist. Yesterday he died in a shack. His career was brought to its tragic end by inability to withstand the temptations of success. He, drank and dissipated, as he could 1 afford to. It takes a stronger character to be self-controlled in prosperity than in adversity. We have more sober-going people w'ho are well off today than ever, yet some people argue that the world Is growing worse.
Dan Moody Rules Dan Moody, the new Governor ofTexas, is only 33. He became famous over night by being the first district attorney to convict klansmen of a whipping outrage. That made him attorney general of the State two years ago. He had been in office a very short time when he found it necessary to break with the Fergusons because of the manner in which highway contracts were being let. He forced the cancellation of several contracts and the refund of hundreds of thousands of dollars. That made him the logical antiFerguson candidate. Farmers the Losers Cotton has slumped worse than grain, yet the South is apparently not as hard hit as the Middle West. At all events, you don't hear so much about hard times in the South and there haven’t been so many bank failures. This has been a puzzle, to me, and I have taken some pains to get an explanation from inen who ought to know. The harvesting and huddling of cotton, it seems, represents a far greater percentage of the cost than is true of grain. Whether the crop is large or small, pickers receive about the same price and there are hundreds of thousands of them. Whether the crop is large or small, cotton presses, brokers and warehouse men receive about the same price. In cotton it is the farmer who loses, while the others get theirs no matter how the market goes. Somewhere in the background of tlie picture, a million or so farmers have been terribly hurt. Probably more than half of them are tenants. Meanwhile the wages of pickers and the charges of middlemen go merrily on. They have made more out of the big crop than they would have out of a little one, because there was more cotton to handle, and they handle it by the pound. What In lhe lowest temperature ever recorded? Ninety-three degrees below zero at Verkhoransk, Siberia.
Is There Anything in Mexico Worth This?
New Exhibition of Paintings On View At the Herron Art Institute Today
The new exhibition that has opened in the Print Room, Gallery II at the Herron Art Institute, is composed of etchings done by and in its own fashion is as varied as the showing of American paintings in the upper galleries. The divergent point of view that lends interest to the oils is found quite as strikingly in the etchings. They are grouped under the name, “Prints by Twenty-five American Etchers” and arc lent by Kennedy and Company of New York, and they agreeably supplement the paintings of the An nual Exhibition. Many of the etchers represented arc likewise painters whose work in the more plastic medium has frequently been included In the annual displays. There are no canvases In the present showing by Cliauncey P.yder and Frank \V. Benson, but etchings by both these men appear among the Kennedy and Company prints. “The Elm” and “Farmyard in Winter” by Ryder have a paint-like quality, beautiful and weighted with subtle texture suggestions. Benson’s “Alert,” a drypoint study of ducks seated on the water, and “Deer Hunter” have especial brilliancy and. as in the -ase of the Ryder prints, are enriched with lustrous darks that vibrate like pigment. Tho range of subjects in the etchings includes studies of animal and bird life, sport scenes, architecture, studies of child life, portraits, landscapes, and decorative panels. Dexterity of handling, beauty of spotting, and fluency of line distinguish the group. It is a thoroughly delightful collection. As is usual with the annual Y>no--. lean Exhibition, the present showing by contom or .. tists iias awnlu n< and a i < , ment and discussion. It is i. :rd ft-.-the casual patron of the arts to custom himself to the extreme expressions of the modern spirit in painting. He is directly descended from the horrified beholder of the first impressionist art who cried out that the painters who had suddenly elected to paint the light that fell upon the objects rather than the
A Big Boss
i— g a ^ni
You should have no trouble Identifying the man in this picture, but the questions may be more difficult. The correct answers appear on page 14: 1— Who is shown in the accompanying picture? 2 What Stato had the greatest population at the time of the last census? 3 Who is author of “Pilgrim’s Progress?” 4 Who is called father of the University of Virginia? SAY ho designed the Eiffel tower, Paris? 6 AVliat is the capital of California? 7 AVho was president of the United States when Theodore Roosevelt was A T lce President? 8— AVhere is Bryn Mawr college? 9 AVhut important city received the name "Eternal City’’ in ancient times? 10— AVho is United States Secretary of Labor?
objects themselves were mad, quite mad, and tHat painting was going to the dogs. It cannot be that the modern idea is all wrong. It iiihy not be as right as impressionism was and is, but. undoubtedly, it holds the mirror up to one facet of the many sided truth. The Fifth Annual Exhibition of the Indiana Society of Architects will open at the institute on Jan. 24 and remain on view through Feb. 27. The fourth study course of tho season, “Interior Decoration,” has been arranged for Wednesdays in February. This will he free to members of the Art Association, a fee of five dollars being charged to nonmembers. The first subject, “Historic Style*,’' will be discussed cn Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 2, at 3:45 o’clock, by Miss Anna Hasselinan. On the succeeding Wednesdays, “Proportion and Arrangement," by Paul Hadley; “Color,” by Oakley Richey, and “Draperies and Patterns,” by Miss Frances Hoar, will complete the course. Indianapolis theaters today offtr: Greenwich Village Follies at English’s; Harry Holmes at Keith’s; Eleota at the Lyric; “Summer Bachelors” at the Ohio; “Finger Prints” at the Colonial: "The Kid Brother”
Questions and Answers
You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to The Indianapolis Tiroes AVastungton Bureau. 1322 New York Ave., Washington. D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given nor can extended research be undertaken. All other question* will receive 3 personal reply (’n-jigTied requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. Who, was the first American to ilßitl in the World War? On the day that Great Britain declared war on Germany. G. S. Jarrett. later captain in the British army, sailed from New York. He enlisted and on Aug. 15, 1914, was actually in the trenches. He spent the four years of the war on the western front. What Is Russian tea? Tea sweetened with jelly or jam. Wltere in the Bible does it state the number of the Wise Men who went to see the infant Jesus? The number of the Magi or Wise Men is not stated in any translation of the Bible. Smith's Dictionary of the Bible states that the number has since been fixed by the Roman Catholic church as three, with the names Gasper, Melchoir and Balthasar. The number three was arrived at from the gifts being three, “Gold, frankincense and myrrh.” Is a widow of a World War veteran who receives insurance payments from the Government debarred from receiving the Federal bonus? No. When was the Department of Commerce established. Originally it was the Department of Commerce and Labor established in 1903. The act of March 4, 1913, created a Department of Commerce and a Depaitment of Labor and put a member of the cabinet at the head of each. Wliat has been the increase in the population of the United States from 1690 to the present time? In 1690, approximately 200 years after Columbus landed, the white population of the American colonies was 213,500. The first census of the United States, taken In 1790 showed a population of 3.929.32 G. The census population of 1890, one hundred years later was 62,662,250. The 1920 census showed a population of 103,710,620. Is there more than one way of voting in an open meeting or is voting by “ayes’’ and “nays" the only way? A'oting can be done by standing, silent assent, etc. In small clubs votes are counted by the presiding officer. In large meetings the chair appoints tellers and announces the result. AA'here secrecy is desired the members may vote by ballot. w'hat are tlie qualifications for and pharmacist? They are not. the same in all the States, but the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy and the American Conference of Pharmaceutical
At Lyric
Eleota
One of tha outstanding events at the Lyric this week is Eleota. He is an artist at melody. at the Apollo; new show at the Uptown; “Rose of the Tenements” fit the Isis and burlesque at the Mutual.
Faculties recommends that candidates for licenses should be at least 21 years old; have had at least four years practical experience; and have completed a course of two years in a recognized college of pharmacy. Two years of high school work are recommended as the minimum requirements for admission to a course of pharmacy. Is the story of William Tell and the apple true? The story in its main features is common to ail Aryan peoples. It is found in the Icelandic Thidreksaga, in Saxo Grammaticus, in old English ballads, in Persian poetry and elsewhere. A stone in the AA’ashington monument, AA’ashington, D. C., bears tle inscription, ‘This block is from the original chapel built to AVilliam Tell in 1338, on Lake Lucerne, Switzerland, at the spot where he escaped from Gessler.” Since the stone was presented to the United States, the Hositorical Society of Switzerland has demonstrated that no such pe-sons as Tell and Gessler ever existed. What is the largest eounty in the United States? San Bernardino County, California, area 20,175 square miles. What is meant by an “Indian giver.” An Indian expects an equivalent for a gift. Therefore an Indian gift is one taken back by the giver or one that is given in expectation that it wilt be returned. Are there any navy yards owned by Hi" t idled States outside its continent r. I boundaries other than the one at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii? No. \Mmt hind of a bird is a "whoop"? This bird sometimes called “boopee” is nu old world upupoid bird having a long, pointed, slightly curved t ill and an.erectile crest and prevailing vinous-gray coloration with black white-barred win"s and tail. S;x species are recognized. On what day did Dec. 8. 1928. fall? Friday. When docs “Twelfth Night” come? Jan. 5. What is the tlrst-aid treatment for scalds and burns? The pain f’-ont burns will be lessened by keeping the air away from them. Lint or cotton, dipped in a solution of baking Sudani teaspoon to a pint of water) can be bandaged over the wound. Sweet oil may be used if soda is not available. Cotton should not be used on an open wound, as it will slick to the flesh. If the burn covers a large area of the body, a doctor should he sent for immediately.
JAN. 19, 19 tfT
Work # Further Tips on When Declarer Should Hold Out,
By Milton V. Work The pointer for today is Declarer should not hold, up when | the adversary on ids right has no more cards of Ihe suit to lead. Occasionally the hold-up is useless because the adversary on 11 to righi j has been exhausted on the first trick, but at times, when the situation occurs, it is not recognized by an in experienced Declarer, although it may bo quite obvious. When a No Trump Declarer in Ins Uvo hands has eight cards of the suit originally led, regardless of how they nro di vided, and the Third Hand follows to the first trick, lie lias played his only card of tho suit because the lead must have been made from four, i To hold up under such circumstances | would be utter Jolly; nothing could I be gained by it, and if would be esj pecially fooolfsh if it might produce ! a disadvantageous lead of some other I suit through the Closed Hand. ; Suppose, for example, Dummy : (North) held Ten x-x-x of a suit. ! Closed Hand .South) Ace-x-x-x, that | " est led a small card, and that East played the DuCen; there would be : two reasons which would make ! hold-up foolish. Reason No. I—- | adversary on the right (East) is all j ready exhausted and all Ihe benefit j I 1° be obtained from the hold-up has been gained already. Reason No 2 —The suit is still stopped, as Diiin { | my’s Ten-x x must capture tho last , trick. Under such conditions tin j held-up would permit a. lead through i tho Closed Hand which might be di? advantageous, and might also cost ,i trick in the suit itself, provided the adversary on the left did not have to continue leading It. There Is still another situation in which the question of whether to hold up or not is to be considered it is illustrated by a hand which I give today and will discuss tomor row. Suppose, at a No Trump con tract. Declarer has the follow inn j holding} North S. A-Q-J-7 r H. R. D. 10-S-7. c. q-io-7-.r West East Leads p )avs Three of Hts. Queen of Hi.--South S. 8-4. H. A-9 ft D. A-Q-J-4-2. C. A-K-J. i Should South play the Are of Heart ■ . on trick 1. or should he hold up and ! P'ay the Six? Answer tomorrow ; (Copyright, John F. Dille Company i Work, the international anlluu-JM , ity on Auction Bridge, will ansivnifl questions on the game for Times readers who write to him through The Times, inclosing a self-ad dressed stamped envelope.
MR. FIXIT Scarcity of Fire Houses and Alarms Deplored, at 1# vv b ? T S mea ' represent at 1’ -ri _fiy Write him In care ol Th mi a ViMt| he .s V 11 ** flaiJ to tike .' ' Io, S =iVV \ ,h the proper city officials mV er“y a attended P t°o Wer t 0 that 11 19 Mr. Fixit received a letter todi.s complaining of the lack of fir. houses and fire alarms north of Thirty-Eight St., and took the matter . up immediately with the board of safety. The writer asks what would happen if two fires broke out In that territory at the same time. Fin I Chief Jesse Hutsel stated that the situation was very bad and thought that it should bo remedied at once. The letter: Dear Sir: When will those two new fire stations that are needed north of Thirty-Eighth St„ be built'.’ There is also a scarcity of fire alarm boxes north of Thirty-Eighth St. Please try and get the board of safety to action at once as this is a serious situation. Think if two flro.should break out at the same time® i nthis neighborhood. E. j. The board of safety promised Mr. Fixit that they would look after this situation at once. Thq.v realize the danger that the neigli borhood is subject to, but owing t° the work that all but swamped them at the beginning of the new year they have been unable to gei to it.
Times Readers Voice Views
Editor Tlie Times: In a speech at the .Merchants Exchange banquet ai New Rochelle, N. Y„ on March 30. J9lO, when ho was Governor of New A’ork, Air. Hughes said: “There must be straight forward dealing. Some oh Jen thus U costs money to invest igate; that is I rue, hut it costs more not to investigate. The political house needs disinfecting and we shall save money by making the job a i borough one." RICHARD O'HEARN, 2239 N. New Jersey St. What was the vote in the United States House of Representatives and Senate when the Volstead art wCs passed over the veto of President Wilson? In the House of Representative-, 176 }o 53. ond in the .Senate, 65 tollo. AVhut is an aquamarine and when* arc they found in the United States'.' A bluish green variety of barv! that is round in several scattered localities! in the United States. Those with the richest color com* frpm Royalston, Mass. A celandine gr#en variety of opalite is also called aqjia marine.
