Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 332, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1927 — Page 4
PAGE 4
The - Indianapolis Times EOS W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GRLEY, Editor. VVM. A. MAYBOKN. Bus. Mgr. Member of the Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of the United Press and the NEA Sendee • * • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dallv except Sunday bv Indianapolis Times Pobllshinjr Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis * * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week • I’HUNE-MA in 3300.
No taw shall be passed restraining the freeinterchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.
Poor Policy Once more the State pays for its niggardly policy toward its institutions of education. Prof. Lionel Edie will go to the University of Chicago. That may mean nothing, stated as bold fact. But those who have a knowledge of the university Know that Professor Edio has already attracted wide attention bv his research and by his ability. ; Professor Edie is a young man. His case merely proves the contention of the college authorities that it is impossible to hold the younger men who show ability when other universities want them. The reason they go is that universities in other States pay better salaries. The Indiana University once held first rank among all the State universities because of the leadership of its teaching staff. There was a time when It attracted students by the fame of its professors. It drew because the Nation knew it as a progressive center of education. In the past few years the university has seen many of the men who gained distinction leave for other places. The lack of funds did not permit it to compete. It could only take pride in the accomplishment of these men and see them go to higher and more profitable honors. Certainly a professor whom the University of Chicago desires because of his marked ability is none too good for the youth of Indiana. There will undoubtedly be others in the years t.o come who will be attracted in the same manner. They will remain in Indiana only long enough to achieve a reputation and will then respond to the call of more appreciative institut’.ons. The last Legislature failed to provide funds which would permit the holding of such men. It failed to appropriate mo; y to meet the demauds of a first class university. It did levy a special tax for new buildings, ft failed utterly when it came to the more imr rr tant factor of man power. Certainly Indiana can afford to have the best when is a matter of education for Its future citizenship and leadership. Child Health Day May first, besides being May Day. has this year another reason for being given especial aattentlon, It has been designated Child Health Day in every State in the Union. Now, we have had in this country, of recent years, so many special “days” and "weeks ’ that a lot of us have grown rather tired of the idea. \\ hat with dried prune week, eat-more-aspirn week, tulip week and what not, the idea has sort of fallen into disrepute. But here is an exception. Child Health Day Is something to which we can be glad to turn our attention. It touches on a matter of the highest importance. , Strong physical manhood has always Weer. an American ideal. The American of tradition is, and has been, a wiry, athletic chap, healthy and active. He Is a noble figure, worth keeping as our national type. But we won’t keep him without effort. Strong, healthy men don't develop from children that are undernourished, for example. They don’t develop from youngsters with defective teeth, with faulty vision, adenoids, crooked spines or the like. The foundation for good health in manhood must be laid in childhood. Looking after the physical well-being of Its children Is a task this nation cannot shirk. Examination by competent physicians will often disclose unsuspected ailments in a youngster’s body—ailments that can easily be corrected If treated promptly, but that will hamper him for life if allowed to go unheeded. There are now upwards of 17,000 clinics for young children throughout ' the country. This is good, but it is not enough. We must have more, and we must see to it that the widest possible use is made of the ones we have. If you have a child, see that it gets a medical examination every so often. See to it that child dispensaries and clinics get the support they need. The health of tomorrow’s manhood and womanhood is in our hands. A good way to show our realization of that fact is by whole-hearted support of Child Health Day, The World Fears More Wars On the Way The time to disarm is now, former Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes told the American Society of International Law in an annual session at Washington. But, he added sagely, "the difficulties mount so high as to appear well nigh insuperable.” Mr. Hughes is eminently correct in both instances. There is no time like the present for doing a good deed in the case of international disarmament the chances are it would be harder and harder to bring about as time goes on. Which is why this newspaper insisted right after the World War that the time had come to ‘make our bid for world peace and disarmament. Then all humanity was crying out for a warless world and that was the time to strike. But we did not strike and we, the people of the United States were the ones that held back. The world will never forgive us that, and today, as we urge disarmament upon the other nations they are prone to reply: "If you are so eager for world peace why did you not join us seven years ago when we were begging you to come in?” And it is difficult for us to answer. Today, quite as Mr. Hughes says, “well nigh insuperable” difficulties are already in the way. In fact, to our way of thinking, they are not well nigh, but quite insuperable, for the present at least. We must wait for a more favorable opportunity and hope, meanwhile, that it will not take another world war again to put us in the notion. People have a habit of talking of disarmament as if all a nation had to do was just to disarm. That is nonsense. f No nation is going to disarm as long as it feels itself in danger. It must first feel secure, otherwise
no amount of talk will induce it to throw down its arms. We Americans are prone to pat ourselves on the back. We like to picture ourselves as already having given the world a model of a disarmed state to go by. But have we? Our Army is small but it is small simply because we have nothing to fear from Canada or Mexico. But how'about our Navy? It is "second to none.” Why? Because we believe we may need a Navy of that size. Restore confidence to the world, give people everywhere a real sense of security, and see how long they will keep on paying high taxes to support what they know in their hearts is a uselss lot of junk. But until we reach that era of confidence and security, the world can make up its mind to go on supporting the burden of armies and navies. Why are the difficulties today so great as to seem insuperable to Mr. Hughes? Precisely because the world's confidence in peace just now Is at low ebb. EDUCATION AND MYTHS The spread of education in Ireland is rapidly killing the picturesque old Irish folklore, according to Ella Young, Irish poet and author. Miss Young declares that the Irish children are growing more and more to find fairies and elves and the like unbelievable; In a short time, she says, Ireland’s mass of folklore will exist only in memory. To a sentimentalist this doubtless will seem too bad. Yet the Irish fairies are only going the way that countless other generations of fairies have gone before them. One after another, the races of invisible, unearthly creatures with which men’s imaginations have peopled forests and fields and mountains have disappeared before the rising tide of knowledge. In the not too far distant future there will not be left one of them on earth. Tracing their decline and fall is interesting and instructive. There was a time when every man on earth believed devoutly that every tree, every bush and every stream sheltered strange, Immaterial creatures who could profoundly affect his life for good or evil, and whom It behooved him to propitiate. To these beliefs can be laid many strange, dark customs; human sacrifices, blood atonements, elaborate rituals, systems of taboos and so on. They hedged a man's life in sharply; the “carefree” savage was actually far more -wary about his comings and goings than we imagine. But the old credulous days are gone. In their passing man has freed himself of many worries, has released his spirit from a whole host of incomprehensible fears and superstitions. Yet, at the same time, the old myths were beautiful —many of them were, at all events. And they held, here and there, grains of truth. An ancient Greek might believe that fauns and nymphs inhabited the woods behind his home; he might believe thrt the mountain on ihe horizon was the home of all-powerful gods; and these beliefs might cramp his course of action and narrow his horizon. Yet they helped him to build buildings and to carve out statutes that the world still admires, and they kept him eternally aware that life is a profound mystery, a wondrous and Insecure wayfaring in the midst of forces that no mind can comprehend. So they kept him from growing too complacent and cocksure. He was not arrogant; and the beauty and majesty of nature and life were ever before his eyes. We have killed all of his gods and discarded all of hiß myths. And sometimes it seems that we have grown too sure of ourselves, too matter-of-fact, too blind to the power and the glory that the unenlightened ancients beheld so clearly. That is our loss. It is good for us to become enlightened. But we must watcli that we do not let the light that has come to us blind our eyes. New Orleans A mile wide and more flows the Mississippi at New Orleans. Stand high on one levee of a sunless day and across the dark sweep the far shore is a dim line lost in haze. No river this, but a running sea, a continent of waters, whose roar is so low and monotonous that'it seems a silence everlasting. “Look upon this river,” says the city of quick laughter, “look, and roam where you may, you will return.” The queen of its flow, married to its memories, New Orleans has loved this muddy, beautiful river long and well. The fear is something new. Other floods there have been and New Orleans has laughed, laughed with water seeping down into the streets from the steady streams. And the laughter was fit, for from this friendly river the Crescent City takes its name and its very life. Its buildings, its bank accounts, the ground even it stands upon, all were built by this dark and lovely flow. Nothing so bespeaks what this worst flood is as the fact that New Orleans, the light hearted, has really discovered fear. It is a fear in which all the Nation can join. Flood waters swirling through the quaint, historic streets of the City that Care Forgot would be a catastrophe even beyond the inevitable loss of life and property. It would be the knell possibly of a dionysian epoch that not even yellow fever, Yankees or a world war could quite usher to the limbo, an epoch that has been one of the seven spiritual wopders of an industrial standardized world. Inundation of 200 square ibiles below New Orleans is not even too large a price to pay to save the happy city. \ Aimee Semple McPherson's congregation split when the evangelist bobbed her hair. Perhaps they only came to the parting of the waves. A Chicago woman was arrested as she was shooting at an old dishpan. Sne explained to the authorities that she didn’t have any husband. A confession is a statement that a jury is not expected to believe. A quarter of an apple pie for a nickel is the forecast of a Federal economics bureau. Maybe we’d better stick to the G. O. P. alter all.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Flood Waters Stand Where Children Played a Week Ago.
By M. E. Tracy Uncle Sam has played the surgeon’s part with pitiless intelligence cutting out a thousand feet of levee, turning the Mississippi loose and wrecking one community to save another. Muddy water stands five, ten and twenty feet deep over door yards where children played happily a week ago and where they wanted to go on playing forever. Rooms made dear by years of occupancy and adorned through painful economy have succumbed to the ooze and slime of an overflow. It Is easy enough to justify the thing by arithmetic, the property of 500 sacrificed to save the property of 500,000. You can't quarrel with the logic of it. Besides, the great city will pay and pay more perhaps than the buildings and crops were actually worth. Modern Epic It is an epic of modern civilization, of organized society dancing a tune of scientific knowledge, of a few individuals brushed complacently aside in order that more individuals may be saved discomfort. The theory is sound, but somehow you can’t reconcile yourself to the practice. When an emergency arises there is nothing else to be done, but you cannot help thinking that scientific knowledge should be employed to prevent such emergencies instead of meeting them in this ruthless way. What Price Life? The inundation of St. Bernard's parish is not so appaliing when measured by the number of people affected or the amount of property destroyed. New Orleans can well afford to pay for it if she is spared. So, too, New York could afford to pay for the deniolitoion of Terre Haute, Ind., or El Paso, Texas, or Newark, N. J„ if by so doing she could protect her own people from disaster. “But can we afford to put life on such a basis? We say that the law Is unjust unless it offers the same degree of protection to the humblest citizen that it offers to tile most powerful. Doesn’t the same apply to the Government in the way it safeguards life and property, and doesn’t the vital point in this case consist in the fact that if the Government had done what it ought to control the Mississippi it would not have been confronted with the necessity of flooding St. Bernard to save New Orleans? Averages in Saddle The city compels us to follow the law of averages, to think in terms of cold blooded arithmetic, to take care of the crowd, no matter what happens to the individual, to Insist on standardization, to regulate traffic by bells and lights and to make everybody do the goose step to relieve congestion. Cities are and always have bee* the strength and weakness of civilization. Their tendency Is to kill the very Initiative that brings them into being by systematizing life to such an extent that people have no time to learn much except the rules and regulations. Five-Deck Streets Comes Dr. John A. Harriss, New York’s most eminent traffic expert, recommending five-deck streets. The proposition is just as logical and just as scientific as was that of flooding St. Bernard parish, and centers on the same Idea of Inconveniencing a few to make life safer and more comfortable for the many.' If we Insist on building of fiftystory sky scrapers the five deck street becomes inevitable, but the five deck street means that the five lower stories of a great many buildings will be practically useless. Again, you cannot help wondering if It would not be wiser to go to the root of the problem and try to prevent congestion instead of meeting it with half way measures that seem as likely to make it worse as they do to make it better in the end. Bigness Misleads If intelligence suggests anything, it suggests that there are limits beyond which we cannot go with safety—limits to the heights of buildings, limits to the number of people we can crowd into a given place, limits to the size of cities. One of the most distressing lllusionments of this age is Its worship of business. Worship of bigness is causing us to go to unreasonable extremes in many directions. Worship of bigness was probably responsible for the fatal accidents that have pursued the proposed New York Paris flight. Most of the aviators seem to have assumed that this flight called for the heaviest ship, the heaviest load and the heaviest engine that could be built. If results are to be trusted, success lies In the opposite direction. Chamberlin and Acosta, who hold the world’s duration record, put their faith in a minimum of weight and load. When to Quit Acosta has just withdrawn from the New York-Paris flight in favor of Chamberlin, because, as he says, the fact that he weighs sixty pounds more than the latter might determine Its success or failure. Acosta’s action breathes a fine spirit of courage and self sacrifice, but what is really important, it shows the superiority of that kind of intelligence which recognizes limits and is big enough not to overstep th£m. We need more of that Rind of intelligence in this country. Our greatest weakness is that we don’t know when to quit. ,
BUT /i-v „ LET me; ~ - ; choose j i explain- i I BETWEEN HE’S 3061 AH j I- Y\ BUT UNTIL 1 OLL ? r ? iENU J
Many Big Events Planned in City for National Music Week Observance
HE Indiana College of Music | I and Fine Arts has arranged 1 I for a recital and concert to be given at the Masonic Temple, Illinois and North Streets. Frlday cvcning, May 13. The departments of the school to be represented will be voiced, piano, violin, harp, dramatic art and dancing. The public is invited to attend. Eleanora Beauchamp, pianist of the faculty of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts is playing at Tipton, Ind., Sunday afternoon. May 1, 1927, on an especially arranged program for the opening of Music week. Miss Beauchamp will also participate in programs to be given at First Baptist Church on May 3-4, at 8:15. Miss Virginia Lott, scholarship pupil of Mr*. Frances Johnson of the voice department of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will sing at the Fresh Air School of Technical High School, next Wednesday, May 4. Miss Helen Pearsol has accepted the position of choir leader at the First Methodist Church in Rushvllle. Miss Pearsol is a student of Frances Johnson of the faculty of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts. Mrs. Frances Johnson, voice teacher of the Indiapa College of Music and- Fine Arts, will go to Elwood for two engagements on Wednsday. May 4. In the morning she will sing at a musicale to be given at the homo of Mrs. E. T. Myers. In the evening she will sing at a reception to be given by Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Plougho at the Elwood Country Club. Inez Shirley, pupil of Boniar Cramer, will accompany her. Mrs. Lenora Coffin of the family of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will go to lowa University, lowa City, on May 6 and 7 and will act as one of the judges for the lowa State music contest. Miss Ocie Higgins, pupil of Glenn Fricrmood of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts and who won first place In national students’ contest sponsored by National Federation of Music Clubs, will sing for Lebanon Music Clubs in Lebanon Monday, May 2, 1927. James H. Hatton, ten, pupil of Mr. Friermood of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, is singing at the Ohio Theater. Mrs. Ruth Todd of the Dramatic Art Department of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will be in New York City next week where she will take part in the play that the Theater Guild Is -entering in the tournament. Mary Jane Foran, Ruth Peterson, Helen Gertrude Shaner, pupils of Gertrude Hacker of the dancing department of the Indiana College of Music and Fire Arts will appear next week in the Charlie Davis presentation. Bomar Cramer, artist teacher of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will appear with the orchestra at the Circle Theater the week of May 2. Mr. Cramer will play. Rhapsodie In Blue—by George Gershwin. Mr. Mikhail Stolarvesky will conduct the orchestra. I The bi-monthly students recital of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will be held on Saturday afternoon, May 7, 1927, at 2:30. The program will be In charge of Helen Sommers. The Junior Music Club of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts will give a program at the Indianapolis Orphans Home Wednesday evening, May 4, at 7:00 o’clock. The Indiana College cf Music and Fine Arts announces the affiliation of Miss Bertha Jasper with the faculty of the college. Miss Jasper has had a large class in Indianapolis for * \
The Eternal Triangle
many years. She is a graduate and post-graduate pupil of Jeannette Crouse. A graduate of the Sherwood course with a diploma. Teacher in Cooperative School of Music; special study of harmony and coordinate subjects. A teacher of splehdid ability and will fill a well-defined place in the school's staaff of teachers. Mrs. Frances Johnson, soprano, with Arthur W. Mason accompaylng, and Miss Louise Dauner, violinist, pupil of Ferdinand Schaefer, with Mrs. F. E. Dauner accompany, all front the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, will assist on a Music week program to be given by the North Side Lions Club at the roof garden of the Severin Hotel, on Wednesday night, May 2. Mrs. Henry Schurmann. president of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, has returned from the biennial convention of the Natlcnal Federation of Music Clubs held in Chicago. Mrs. Schurmann has been for four years a member of the national board of directors, and has just been made a member of the executive committee, and also national chairman of finance, with subcommittees of endowment and special memberships, ways and ipeans and budget. |_| HE Technical High School I [| Band, under the direction of * * | Frederick Barker, will present the second band concert of Music week on the south steps of Monument Circle Tuesday at noon. Many special numbers have been arranged, including solos by Ellis Carroll, Rudolph Miller, Irl L. Smith, James Goulding, Paul Robb, Raymond Johnson, Burton White and the Brass and Woodwind Choir. The program will also Vic broadcast over WFBM, the local station of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company, direct from the steps of the monument. This will be the first time that a radio program has ever been put on the air direct from the street by an Indianapolis station. The Thursday concert of the Manual High School Band will also be broadcast. Director Ba'rker announces the following program: Trumpet Call—“ Assembly." tOn south steps.) ••America." (On English Hotel.) The Senior Band Brass and Woodwind Choir. Medley of Marches—"Semper Fldelis ' Sousa "Hostrauser" Chambers Fife, and Drum with Concert Band. Descriptive Overture—“A'Midsummer Morning" Barnhouse A Selection from "The Prophet”—“Coronation March" Meyerbeer A Duet from "Mantana" Wallace The Tech Clarinet Quintet.
Sings Sunday
Dm ojjgSuß; MM ..
Tito Schipa
\ On,Sunday afternoAi at 3 o'clock Tito i Schipa will a])pear in recital at tlie Murat under the direction of Ojia B. Talbott. 1 l.
Suite from "Siguro Jorsalfar ’ Grieg No. 111. "Hukligungsmarsch." Selections from "The Atlantis Suite". . Safranek No. FI. “A Court Function.” No. 111. "The Love Scene.” Rudolph Miller, trombone soloist, i Echo i Ellis Carroll, cornet soloist. James Goulding. baritone soloist. (On White's roof.) Irt 1.. Smith, cornet soloist. Paul Robb, baritone soloist. (On north steps.) A Selection from "II Trovatorc ’. . .Verdi "Tim Prison Scene.” Raymond Johnson, cornet soloist. Burton White, comet soloist. (On Circle roof.l Selections from "The Spanish Dances. No. 1. "The Bolero." No. lit (Original No. V'.) "Barmim and Bailey's Favorite. i march) King The Indianapolis Newsboys' band, under the direction of fl B. Vandaworker, will present the opening band concert of Music Week Monday at noon on the south steps of Monument Circle. The soloists will include Ellis Carroll,- trumpet; Miss Martha Lukens. soprano, and Melburn Lantz, trombone. Mr. Vandaworker has arranged the following program. “March Jacques de Molai" Jewell "That 1 Alone Can Know Riegg Trumpet solo. Ellis Carroll "Grand Patriotic Potpourri” Barnard "In a Little Spanish To\vn".ar. by Sciacca "I'll Wear a White Flower for You". . Trombone solo. Melburrt Lantz "Barcelona" arr. by Sciacca Vocal— v "When (lie Sun Goes Down" Penn “Roses Remind Me of You" Davis Miss Martha Lukens. soprano "Lone Star Overture" Jewell Vocal— • “The Last Rose of Summer" arr. by Vandaworker "Only a Rose" . .. .arr by Vandaworker "That's Why I Love You" . . . .Donaldson II I The appearance of Lawrence L\ Tlbbett, the young American —baritone of the Metropolitan j Opera Company, who is to sing with j the Mendelssohn Choir Monday eve. I ning, May 9, at the Murat, will j tiring to Indianapolis an artist who, i though internationally famous, has | received his training, entirely in I America. Those who will attend the concert here on May 9 will hear the rare combination of a great artist plus one of the znest singing organizations in the country. The choir's work under the training of Elmer Andrew Steffen has drawn great praise fsom the press and public of this city. In this com'ing concert, which is to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the choir, over 140 voices will appear in a program of nine choral numbers, six for the entire choir, two for the women's choir of 75 voices and ,ortc number for the male voices. Bomar Cramer of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts, pianist, and Thomas Poggiani, of the Metropolitan .School of Music, violinist, will assist in the rendition of the choir's openng number, Anto Aubnstein’s “Seraphic Song.” Mr. Tibbett's program will include some of his most popular concert songs and several operatic arias. The reservation of seats will begin Monday', May 2 at the office of the Choir, 27 E. Ohio Stx SHIS will be the fifth concert season of the famous Tito Schipa, who will be heard at Murat Sunday afternoon. In the past four seasons thousands have flocked to his concerts in every section of the country. Again history ivill repeat itself. Wherever he has sung once, he Is redeinanded. Many cities will this year'witness Srhipa’s fifth annual concert. Audiences love him not only as the greatest living lyric tenor, but as.a man whose heart sings in his songs. ■ Schipa is young; his career has been meteoric. Already before he came to us the beauty of his voice had captivated audiences in the great opera houses of Italy, Spain, Portugal, South America and Central America. It was in this country, however, that Messrs. Evans and Salter, his managers, brought Schipa before the public in concert, a field in which he was to celebrate his greatest triumphs. i Asa tiny child he sang; at the age of 10 he made his first appearance in the Boys’ Chorus in “Carmen;” as a youth he composed a Mass, sung at the cathedral In Lecce, Italy, his birthplace. Originally intended by a pious mother for the church, it was the venerable Bishop of Lecce who. on hearing Schipa sing, as a young man at the seminary, de(Turn to Page 7)
APRIL 30, 1927
o "]f~\ c4uctio . arid® buJ/Hilfon f Doubling Adverse Suit With One Stopper in that Suit,
The pointer for today is: It often is advisable to double an adverse suit hid with one stopper in that suit; wit htwo stoppers and requisite side strength No Trump should be .bid. Yesterday's hand was held by West, who had to decide what to do after a declaration by South. A \-M-l K-l--t o Jk K-J-9 * My answer slip reads: No. 17. South pass; West should bid one No Trump. No. 18. South one Spade; West should double. No. 19. South one Heart; West should bid one No Trump. No. 20. South one Diamond; West- should bid one No Trump. My reasons in support of these declarations are: No. 17. With four suits stopped and a hand containing two Aces and two Kings, plus addditional strength, the No Trump is so unquestionably the declaration that it does hot need explanatory comment. No. 18. The adverse suit being stopped but once, and there being admirable support for a Heart takeout if East have four Hearts, the double is distinctly a better declaration that No- Trump. No. 19. Avery close choice between one No Trump and a double. The argument in favor of the double is that if East have four Spades, it will produce a Spade bid and that might work more advantageously than a No Trump. On the other hand, after a Spade by East (the one situation in which the double might work better than No Trump). South would lead. The West hand is of the type which desires as many leads as possible up to it, and it has the Hearts stopped twice. A No Trump is reasonably safe and more apt to make nine tricks than the possible Spade answer from the partner would be to make ten. No. 20. Another close choice between No Trump and a double; probably closer than No. 19, because in this case doubling would give East a choice between two four-card Majors. In addition to this, South's Diamond bid, without Mie Ace and Queen of his suit, shows a KingJack suit with at least two side tricks; and against such strength it is important for East and West to reach the best declaration. The advantage of having the original lead come up to the West hand rather than through it, however, seems to make the No Trump slightly more "advantageous. . John F. Dille Cp.
Your Brains iS&Pozerlffi
Ten of these questions deal with Biblical subjects. Two concern Indiana. Y'ou'll find the answers on page 14: 1. What scene in old testament histouy does this sketch represent? 2. Group these words so that each man's name is associated with the word which the Bible applies to him: David high priest Paul fisherman Caiphas harp player Matthew tent maker Peter publican 3. How did Jezebel meet her death? 4. What Jewish king ascended the throne in Jerusalem at the age of eight? 5. Under what circumstances was Esther chosen as queen by Aliasuerus? G. What fate overtook Human? 7. Which disciple protested when Mary anointed Jesus’ feet at Bethany? 8. Who was Theudas? 9. Whom did Peter raise from death at Joppa? 10. What Roman centurion sent from Caesarea to Peter for guidance? 11. How many Federal judges arc there in Indiana? Name them. i 12. What former branch of the United States Treasury Department, with an office in Indianapolis, was made a separate bureau by the lastl session of Congress and its employees placed under Civil Service? Can paraffine be hardened? Only by mixing with harder materials. If paraffine is melted with carnauba wax and the mixture is thoroughly stirred, the cold product will be harder than the original paraffine. Paraffine of different degrees of hardness can be purchased.
