Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 253, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1927 — Page 6
PAGE 6
The Indianapolis Times HOY W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GURLEY, Editor, ' V M. A. MAYBORN. Bus. Mgr. Member of the Bcripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of the United Press and the NEA Serrice • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday bv 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 3500.
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.
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT . Severity of penalties does not check crime. It may even increase crime. So New York has discovered and so United States District Attorney Joab A. Blanton has reported to the Bar Association. In the face of too severe penalties juries will not convict. Fifteen years for a second offense; life term for a third. Nothing doing. More often than not the criminal goes free. So the district attorney recommends the repeal of the so-called Baumes laws, which sought to put an end to short term6s, quick releases and the spectacle of habitual criminals habitually committing new crimes. It sounds well. It always did sound well. "Increase the penalties,’’ say the friends of law and order. “Make the penalties amount to something. Stop slapping the criminal ou the wrist. Stop coddling him. Hang him or send him up for life and let society be rid of him." And the laws arc amended accordingly. But what are the results? A professional bondsman who has made himself responsible for a lot of petty criminals is told that his clients are planning to forfeit their bonds rather than face the possibility of life sentences. He concludes that he must surrender the subjects of the bonds. Who, being threatened with surrender, have a couple of gunners bump off (assassinate) the bondsman. Again a jury finds that a first offender, who has really not been a very bad offender, had a little difficulty when he was a mere boy and is technically a second offender. It must send him up for fifteen years or let him go. They find him "not guilty." Clarence Darrow could have told the authors of the Baumes laws that they were on the wrong track. It has long been one of his conclusions that too great severity of penalty puts a premium on certain crimes of violence. If the penalty for stealing is made the same as the penalty for assault with a murderous weapon, the thief will, if interrupted, add assault with a murderous weapon to his stealing in the hope that he may destroy a witness and open his path of escape. In the seventeenth century our ancestors got irritated at invasions of property rights and made sheep stealing punishable by hanging. The result was the system of trial by jury and all the technicalities of criminal practice which were built up to protect the accused against the cruel and unusual punishments of the law. What then is the remedy for crime? Make the punishments lighter? Make them more prompt and certain. A writer in the Atlantic Monthly points out that one in ten criminals is convicted. The courts are clogged, the jails crowded, and the law s delays are unspeakably tedious. If justice were a little more swift and sure the business of crime would he less thriving. To make the punishment fit the crime was the object all sublime of a much-loved character of high opera. To make the punishment fit the criminal and that the fitting should not be too long postponed would be our advice in handling ?.ie difficult problem of our Increasing crime. THE BROWNING CASE There is a good deal of talk about the propriety of publishing the details of the proceedings at, White Plains, N. Y. Ordinarily, wo would say much of the unpleasant testimony in a divorce case should remain unprinted. But a question arises in our mind in this particular instance. Suppressing details of such ugly stories usually is done with the purpose of keeping them from young people, especially young girls. Here, however, is a case v,here it seems necessary to present some details In order to drive home a lesson. It is a lesson newspapers should not be required to teach’—a lesgon that should be taught by mothers. Mercenary marriages end in misery. It always has been so and always will be. But mothers are to be found every day handing over their daughters to men who have money, and little else, to give them. A mother gave Evelyn Nesblt to Stanford White. A mother gave Llta Grey to Charlie Chaplin. A mother gave Frances Heeuan to Edward West Browning. It seems hard for some mothers to learn When the present sickening story first opened with little Mary Spas (misnamed Cinderella), repudiating her adoption by the same Browning (misnamed Prince Charming), thero wore New York mothers by the bedraggled dozen toting innocent daughters to this ogling millionaire to be adopted in Mary’s place. It may be that such mothers are not to be blamed too much. Victims of poverty all their lives, they seek something better for their children. But they seek it where nothing better is to be found—nothing even so good as poverty. Adults too old to be harmed may read the story being broadcast from White Plains and get a sneaking thrill from it. That can not be avoided if the story is published. In any case It can only damage something past damaging. Young girls, with over-ambitious mothers, may read the story with profit. Better that they should read and be warned than that they should walk into similar disaster through ignorance. MEXICO The United States Senate adopts, 79 to 0, a resolution declaring in favor of arbitration of our difficulties with Mexico. This having been done, the would-be war-makers resume their chant, “There are some things that can not be arbitrated." The confiscation of property, the White House Indicates, is a thing that can not be arbitrated. Possibly not. But the question of whether or not property has been confiscated can be arbitrated. Machinery for such arbitration can bo provided teadily, if it does not already exist in the mixed claims commission. There are powerful interests, still holding the ear of the Coolidge Administration, that want no arbitration. If they have their way, the alternative is a break with Mexico, a lifting of the arms embargo and the encouragement of bloody civil war below the Rio Grande. If they have their way, these things will happen and, almost inevitably something that concerns the average Americana great deal more —armed Intervention by the American Government. We may find ourselves attempting to “pacify" Mexico. Not an army officer who knows the differ-
ence between a pup tent and a G I can, but knows that “pacifying" Mexico is a ten-year job, involving the expenditure of an enormous number of lives. Arbitration of anything that can be arbitrated—which means every question of importance that has thus far arisen—would seem, to be the way out. But you may not be Interested in China and Mexico. So let’s consider— CHINA Around the great, wide-spreading city of Shanghai, British, French. Americans, Japanese and other foreigners are feverishly working to complete barbed wire entanglements. Pressing toward this city are well trained armies of Chinese. They are sweeping up from the south in a movement which has for its slogan “China for the Chinese." They propose no harm to the foreigners behind the barbed wire, they say, but foreign troops, including American marines, are awaiting tlieir arrival, and out in the harbor is an armada of battleships, cruisers, destroyers and gunboats flying the flags of these foreign nations, with their guns elevated at a range to drop shells where the damage will be the greatest, in case the coming army should get out of control. Anything may happen. The purpose behind the Chinese government is to unify that long chaotic country. Os the foreiguers the Chinese demand new treaties, dealing with their country as an equal among the countries of the world. In principle the United States has always agreed to this. In practice it has treated China more nearly as an equal than has Great Britain, France or Japan. The latter countries, however, aflfe moving swiftly to concede China's entire equality. In Washington, a meticulous lawyer, who happens to be our Secretary of State, delays a similar expression by the United States. He is ready, says Kellogg, to commit the United States to revision of the unequal treaties, but not until China has a government whoso stability satisfies him. He agrees, he says, to the abrogation of extra territoriality, but says it should be gradual. Good enough, his attitude, if the movement of the Cantonese armies were gradual. But they are moving swiftly. Edward Browning and "Peaches" it is said may settle their differences out of court. What with the Chaplins, Mexico, Ban Johnson and Mr. Landis usurping the front page, they might as well call it off. George Young, 17-year-old conqueror of the Catalina channel, now is writing "the story of his life." There’s a tip for Baby Peggy. Every public building in Boston has its cat, says a Boston newspaper. Nothing remarkable about that. i Ai’my barracks are becoming terribly decrepit, General O Reilly tells us. Maybe the Government could sell them to Henry Ford. Chicago tried a hawk for the murder of a pigeon. They surely do go after lawbreakers in that city. If we have a war with Mexico, perhaps we’d have to call hot tamales "liberty dumplings." George Young says he was able to swim the Catalina channel because he lively cleanly. But he did admit taking flappers to the movies a couple of times. Forty-four State legislatures are busily grinding out laws this month. Young man, become a judge! The critics agreed “Abie’s Irish Rose" was trash. It played its 2000th performance recently. Maybe the show still has a chance. Let us be thankful for Latin America, Japan and Wild Youth. Where would the orators be it it were not for perils? Moan not your lot today. There’s an eightfamily flat in Jersey City with eight radios, eight Pianos and eight phonographs.
SCIENTISTS MAY GO TOO FAR By N. D. Cochran
Doggone these scientists. In their eternal and everlasting search for the truth they’re getting a lot of us all mixed up in fractions. What with one thing or another about the reduction of all matter, including mackintoshes, golf balls, potatoes, straw hats, silk socks, chewing gum, rubber nipples and tooth paste to positive and electric charges, they had the human imagination forking overtime. But now they threaten us with anew religion—a religion based scientifically on the ultimate truth. We seem to be In grave danger of getting our new and ultimate religion from a scientific laboratory. We will have to admit, of course, that we have no real kick coming against the scientific laboratory. It lias practically knocked Out yellow fever, smallpox, diphtheria, typhoid fever, malaria, siphylis, lockjaw, ulcerated teeth and appendicitis. It has not only given us the sewing machine, the telephone, electric light, victrola and radio, but has added twelve years to the average of human life. It has gone out beyond human vision of both sides of the spectrum and given us ultra violet and infrared rays. It has discovered all of the elements of matter from hydrogen to uranium, with the exception of five, and will probably find them by mathematics end chemical analysis. It has found evidence of human existence several millions of years ago and found human handiwork of earlier date thafl Noah's special flood. Having discovered and used X-rays it has ventured out into space and found the Alllliken or cosmic rays, which indicate that all life on this planet comes in invisible rays from the stars. And there is no telling where they will stop. Scientists may yet prove not only that the whale, or big nah. swallowed Jonah, but that he found a furnished flat inside the whale s belly, with electrlg lights, frigidalre, automatic electric elevator and all the comforts of home. But science is going to raise the dickens if it springs anew and universal religion on us, based on cosmic truth. If all of us should belong to one church and establish the kingdom of God right here on earth if we should actually bring about the brotherhood of man under the fatherhood of God, and take the Golden Rule as the supreme regulator of human conduct, there wouldn't be much to fight about. And what’s the use of being human if we can't fight and kill one another? Something will have to be done to these scientists so they’ll quit monkeying with our prejudices and leave us to our greatest of human joys—lighting. "Who wants the truth if it deprives us of our Ignorant prejudices of intolerance?
'JLME INDIANTIMES
IrjfSl ’ * T' 1 racy Consider Norris CaseJustice Blind, Maybe Deaf and Dumb.
By M. E. Tracy The Rev. J. Frank Norris is free —free to be modest, free to repeat liis tragic performance, free to cash in on the vast amount of free ad vertising his trial included. It is a paradox of this enlightened age that, with the blood of a fellowbeing on his hands, he can become a more powerful exporter than ever, can draw bigger . crowds, perhaps, and provide more converts to "hit the trail." A jury verdict is a jury verdict, and there is no use quarreling with it. When a man is acquitted, he stands clean in the eyes of the law and justice, as she officially functions, and can go no farther. The Greeks were more truthful than sarcastic when they represented justice as blind. Had they known how she would operate in America, they might have represented her as deaf and dumb, also. —' Beyond the Law Charlie Chaplin's pictures are just as funny and just as foolish as they i ever were. His divorce has merely opened the i eyes of some prudish folks to their foolishness. That good old blackjack, the cen-! sorship. is being 'brought into play, i Even Pasadena, which 13 almost j within shouting distance of Chap-! lin’s studio, will have no more of i him. This suggests that there is a type of punishment outside the law, and that it can be inflicted, whether justly or not, without the services of judge and jury. Why the Difference? Charlie Chaplin has not been in- | dieted or tried for any crime. The - Rev. J. Frank Norris has been indicted, tried and acquitted of murder. So far as the law is concerned, both stand the same free, innocent and unstained. Why should the public treat them differently? Distrust System The point is that we lost faith in our system of justice. Rightly or wrongly, public opinion has contracted the habit of acting without much regard to it. Serious minded people are worrying about this as representing a dangerous situation. There is coming to be more mob law in this country than lynchings would indicate. Sentiment is constantly acquitting men whom the law has convicted and just as constantly convicting men whom the laws have acquitted or never touched. Here Is a conflict that cannot go on without wrecking the purpose which Government is designed to serve. Unpopular Kellogg Secretary Kellogg's bumptious policy toward La tin-America is not popular with the Senate. This was made clear when the Robinson resolution, advising arbitration with Mexico, was\passed by a unanimous vote. There is little doubt that the Senate's attitude reflects public opinion. The people of this country want no trouble with Latin-America that can possibly be avoided. They are especially opposed to trouble originating in the desire of vested interests to entrench themselves in countries which they have exploited out of all reason. The suspicion prevails that the basio human rights have not been trampled on as much as some would like to make it appear, and the hue and cry has far more to do with the secondary rights of commercial enterprises, which, legitimate though they may be, smell strongly of special privilege. # Bloody Challenge No one can stand on the bridge connecting Juarez and El Paso and watch the loads of freight, electric cars and autos go by, without wondering what all the fuss between AVashingto’n and Mexico City is all about. f No one can see the great trainloads of ore ccme into the great El Paso smelter, where thousands of men find steady work, without realizing what war would mean. In spite of all the bitter experiences, of all the futile strife and profitless bloodshed, it is surprising how lightly men still talk of war. t It is surprising for what little issues they are ready to wave the crimson challenge and invoke the arbitrament of wholevale murder. What has Mexico or any other Latin-American country done to us "that needs to be washed out in an ocean of blood? What have we to gain that would be worth the price? Or, are we pulling guns we don't intend to shoot, running a bluff merely to see how far it will work? Takes Worst View Latin-America does not know what to make of our attitude. It cannot tell whether our State Department is going to classify a, revolution as a war of liberation, or mere banditry, whether anew president will be recognized, or ran out of office. Failing to understand our motives or intentions, it puts the worst possible construction on both and shouts “imperialism.” Russian propaganda has bred no coalition of Latin-American countries against us, but our own stupid, blow-hot-blow-cold policy is driving steadily toward that end. What were the large fish in the motion picture, “Aloma of the South Seas"? Sharks. What green, leafy plants wfll thrive best in an indoor window box where very little sun reach them? Palms, ferns, English ivy and wandering Jew.
Isn’t It About Time We Were Adopting i A Real Child?
Art Mahon and Virginia Scott Bring “Apache Land’ to the Palace Today
Billed as an Apache sensation, Art Mahon and Virginia Scott stage their “Apache Land" at the Palace Theater the last half of this week. The music for their dancing steps is furnished by the Filipino harmonists. a five-man combination which works comedy numbers and harmony spngs into the act. Violet Dell is a toe and acrobatic dancer. Gerber's Gaieties in a “happysnappy revue” presented by seven singers and dancers. Aleen Bronson and J. Gordon have invented anew kind of bullet which mnkcß its victim laugh instead of die. “Comedy Songs and Sayings” are contributed to the fun bill bV- Tom and Dolly AA'ard. Three Belgian girls are the Morok Sisters, who have “An Aerial Revue.” These "aerial butterflies” do aerial acrobatics, iron jaw work, and acrobatic dancing steps. Bessie Love is the star of the flint, "Going Crooked.” which is advertised as a thrilling crook mystery. The picture is based on the stage hit by John Golden and concerns a gang of jewel thieves. Pathe News, a comedy, and topics of the day are the reels. “CRAIG’S WIFE" BOOKED AT ENGLISH’S NEXT WEEK There is a message to every married woman in this city and vicinity in George Kelly's latest stage success. "Craig's AYife," coming to the English Opera House for three nights and Saturday matinee, starting Thursday, Feb. 3. Mr. Kelly has already scored a dramatist with his satiric fling at the Little Theatre movement in “The Torch Bearers” and in his bitter satire of the blathering windbag in “The Show Off.” In his new play he touches irony and has written a serious drama in which he deftly handles another phase of modern life in the person of a wilfully and designedly selfish wife, not unknown and all too frequently present in our every day existence. Harriet Craig is a worshipper of material things, whose whole scheme of life is acquisition and
What’s Wrong?
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This is a child's test, but it may stick many adults. The correct answers appear on page 14: 1 — AYhat is unnatural in the running position of the man in the illustration? 2 AVhat states border directly south of Michigan? 3ls Rhode Island larger than the District of Columbia? 4 What early colonial governor was called ‘Old Silverleg?” 5 What is the feminine of comedian? 6 What heavenly body is the closest to the earth? 7ls the bed of an ocean level? S —What is the caxjijal of Maine? 9 What is the abbreviation for professor? 10— In what state is the Royal l Gorge? ~Vjß*
Paul and Colleen Are Snapped
\ * Wtmlm '*
Paul AA’hiteman and Colleen Moore
Some time ago. when Whiteman viited the studio while Colleen Moore of "Twinkletoes” was there, the two famous people had their picture taken. And here it is. Whiteman and his band are at the Circle this week.
possession of a house, not a home, which becomes a prison to its inmates because of the absolute rule of its order and preciseness. The play was awarded the Pulitzer prize as the best dramatic presentation of the past season, and will come under the able producting ability of Rosalie Stewart, who has been responsible for the public showings of all of Mr. Kelly’s plays. Chrystal Herne heads the original New York cast, which includes Charles Trowbridge, Anne Sutherland, Isabel Irving, Donna Pasede-
Questions and Answers
You can set an answer to any question of tact or information by writing to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. i323 Nev York Ave.. Washington. IJ. C.. inclosing 2 oents m stamps tor reply. -Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be riven nor can extended research be undertaken. All other auestions will receive a personal reply Una trued requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential. —Editor. How can a woolen sweater be washed so that it will not become hard and shrink? Use soft, tepid water. Maks a suds with a mild soap Never rub soap on the wool, as that makes it harsh. Squeeze and knead the wool in the suds. Do not rub. Rinse in two tubs of clean water of the same temperature as the suds. Change of temperature of the water will cause the fibers to contract and shrink the fabric. In drying lay on a clean sheet and pin to original shape and size. When and how was the Princeton University founded? Who was its first president? It was founded in 1746 as the College of New Jersey. Its inception was due to the need felt by members of the Presbyterian Church for a more comprehensive school to take the place of the Log -College established in 1726 by ’William Tennant In Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The first move toward Its establishment was begun In 1739 by the Synod of Philadelphia, but the plan fell through and In 1746 a charter was Anally obtained independently by members of the Synod of New' Rork. The college was opened at Elizabethtown with Jonathan Dickinson as president. On his death in 1747 Aaaron Burr became president. What two cities in Canada have the largest population? Montreal, w'ith a population of 618,506, is the largest, and Toronto, with a population of 621,893, la second. Can you give me a recipe for veng son steak with chestnut sauce? Wipe the steak, sprinkle with salt and pepper, on a greased broiler and broil five minutes; re-
loup, Josephine Williams and other favorites. Indianapolis theaters today offer: "The Cocoanuts," at English's; Nazimova, at Keith's: Boyd Rowden and Company, at the Lyric; new show at the Palace; Paul AA'hiteman, at the Circle: “Tin Hats,” at the Sanders; "AA’hy Girls Go Back Home,” at the South Side; "The Lily," at the Uptown; “The Potters,” at the Ohio: “The Auctioneer,” at the Colonial: “The Kid Brother,” at the Apollo: new show at the Isis and burlesque at the Mutual.
move to hot platter and pour over chestnut sauce made by frying onehalf onion and 6 slices of carrot, cut in small pieces in 2 tablespoons of butter for 5 minutes, adding 3 tablespoons flour and stir until browmed. Then add I>4 cups brown stock, sprig parsley, bay leaf, 8 pepper corns, 1 teaspoon salt and let simmer for 20 minutes. Strain and add 1 cup boiled French chestnuts diced and I tablespoon butter. Would an airplane going at thirty mile* an hour stop immediately when it hits an endless belt going thirty miles an hour in tho opposite dlreetion? If not. how far would it go before stopping? It would not stop, but the distance It would travel depends upon so many fnoto.-s that a definite answer cannot be given. If a landing was made upon a belt traveling In the opposite direction It would lessen the distance of travel before stopping, but, in no case would it reduce it to zero.* On what date did President Wilson sign the Volstead act? He did not sign It. He vetoed It on Oct. 27, 1919, and Congress immediately passed It over his veto. I* this the first time that Ben-Hur has ever been produced as a movie? In 1905 the Kalem Company made a one-reel film under that title, but this is the first elaborate film production from the book. Is Augustus Thomas, the playwright, still living? He is still living. He is called tha dean of American playwrights being oldest living member of the profession in this country. Is Will Rogers, the comedian, one of the Rogers brothers who plsyed years ago on Broadway? No. The Rogers brothers who played on Broadway years ago were German comedians. One of them is dead and the other has retired.
JAN. 27, 1927
Work When Bid Violation May Escape Penalty by Rule,
By MILTON C. AVORK The pointer for today is; Insufficient bids or bids out of turn may not be penalised if Alio player on the left of the offender bid, pass or double before a penalty is claimed. The penalty for a bid out of turn i3 that the bid itself is declared void, the adversary whose turn it Is to bid declares and the partner of Ihe of fender is prohibited from partieipat ing in the auction during the remainder of that hand. Ts the partner of the offender bo the player whosturn it is to declare, the penalty is the same except that the turn to (V Clare passes to the adversary on the left of partner of the offender and on the right of the offender. Wh*ui an insufficient bid is made, the pen alty as far as the partner is con cerned is practically the same. The Insufficient bid is void and the in sufficient bidder is required to mak<a sufficient hid, which he may do in any declaration, and his partner is barred from the auction. Laws 20 and 22 cover these case?, but misunderstandings frequently arise because some players suppose j that it is the offender who is not al lowed to bid subsequently. These rules, like all others, fit the crime-' The improper information given Vo Irregular bids cannot be of benefit to the player who makes the bid, but it may be of great value to his part ner and therefore It is the partnet whose mouth is closed. One feature of both of the insuf ficient bid and the bid out of turn which Is sometimes in the pointer given at the beginning of this article. When, before attention is called to the irregularity, the adversary on the left of the player in error either bids, passes or doubles, such action accepts the irregular bid as regular, and the auction continues with the, player on the left of the one who condoned the offense exactly as if no offense had been committed, no pentlay being enforced. Another question often asked w whether a Declarer who pulls a card from the Dummy and then returns it is compelled to play the card he has touched, or may play some other. On this point Law 31 (c), is most explicit. A card touched in Dummy must be played, unless in touching it the Declarer say "I arrange” or words to that effect, or unless he be manifestly pushing otic or more cards aside to reach the one he desires to play. The failure to enforce this rule leads to delays ao.) sloppy play; and sometimes induce ls an adversary to expose a card ami give undue advantage to the Declarer. The game produces the most satisfactory results when all penalties are enforced. i (Copjright by John F. Dille Cos.) * W ork, (he international author ity on Auction Bridge, will answer questions on the game for Times ! readers who write him through The Times, inclosing a seif-ad i dressed envelope.
MR; FIXIT Better Street Car Service Is Promised.
The Times' representative at the eib hall. Mr. Fixit. will be glad to present your troubles to the proper city official? Write him in care of Tne Times The numerous complaints of street car service received by Mr. Fixtt were turned over to the Indianapolis Street Railway Company. The com pany handled them collectively and sent Mr. Fixit the following letter. Dear Sir: In regard to the com plaints of our East Tenth St. and Central Ave. patrons, w r e beg to advise that owdng to the unusual amount of snow and sleet of the past five weks, a number of our cars have been knocked out. This has hampered our schedule on sev eral lines Also the fact that near ly all the traffic uses the car tracks has slowed up our schedule considerably. With a break In the severe weather conditions w r e shall 4 have our full schedule out in a few 1 days Tours very truly. JAMES F. LYNCH One person wrote Mr. Fixit today and asked that when the city lays out Its unimproved street repair pro gram that Boulevard PI. from Twen ty-First St. to Fall Creek be put down for fast action. The letter states that this would relieve the congested conditions on Capitol Ave. The letter: Mr. Fixit: When the city lays out its unimproved street repair pro gram this spring please try to get’ Boulevard PI., from Twenty-First Si to Fall Creek down for fast action.’ This short terrible block keeps a, loi L of traffic off of Boulevard Place and adds to the congestion of Capitol-. Ave. NORTH SIDE MOTORIST. The board of works referred this • complaint to the street commission . * er, George Woodward, for im 7 mediate repairs. Woodward said that the place would be viewed and 1 repaired as soon as tho weather permits. Another complaint about ashes was received today by Mr. Fixit : It is: Dear Mr. Fixit: I am wondesingif you could help me get our ashes* Collected? AV© only have them collected once a. week and then th collector spills about half of eaeJY container in the alley. It does nv good to talk to the men on thw wagon. They just give us a mean: look and then go on. Have the sanitary board look at the condition ofl the alley back of 1126 N. Tuxedo St* Tours for a cleaner city, especial!' alleys. airs. J. V. s. " Truly Nolen, superintendent of the collection department of the sanitary board, said that he wouM see that the situation the above lett?r rare of at once. nn > •
