Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1927 — Page 4

PAGE 4

The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GURLEY, Editor. WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • * * Client of the United Tress- and the N’EA Service * * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis * * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week * * * PHONE—MA in 3500.

No laio shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write or print freely, on any subject tvhatevcr.—Constitution of Indiana

A Neutral Chamber? Whatever may be the official attitude of the officers of the Chamber of Commerce in regard to the city manager election, the membership of that body should be anything but neutral. The Chamber is the semi-official guardian of the business and industrial interests of Indianapolis. It is interested in obtaining new factories and in helping, where possible, to create conditions undßr which established industries and business may prosper. It is dedicated to the material growth of this city and has a very deep interest in any change of conditions which affects business. The business men of this city understand, as do no other class, how much bad government costs. They know what it costs when they are compelled to employ political lawyers to obtain for them improvements or permits which they need in their business. They know what it costs in taxes to have a government whose sole purpose is perpetuation of a political machine. It may be said that no activity in which the Chamber engages can succeed or as easily succeed unless the government of the city is efficient, economical and business-like. Probably three-fourths of the work which the chamber knows must be done to permit Indianapolis to grow and be the great city which its location and natural advantages make possible, would be accomplished if this city got away from the misrule which has existed not only under the present administration tut under most of its predecessors. It would seem that the election on June 21 is the most important event which the chamber should have upon its calendar. If the city manager, system Is what its advocates claim, and there is ample evidence that it is, then the chamber should be the most interested civic body in its passage. If it is the menace to efficient government which a few politicians claim, then the chamber should be eager to protect the city from its evils. Here, certainly, is a question on which there can be no neutrality in bodies dedicated to the welfare and the growth of this city. A vigorous, alert and intensive campaign by the chamber would do much to give that body a high place in public confidence. This is a movement which affects every interest of the city and will bring its first benefits to business of all sorts. It may mean new factories. It may mean a lighter burden upon the retail stores. It may mean the lifting of taxes on homes which will leave more money in the pockets of the wage worker. A neutral Chamber of Commercdion this issue is inconceivable. The Silent Governors Silence on the part of the present Governor and a former one at this time is rather to be deplored. The attorney general of this State has declared that the present Indiana law prohibiting the use of whisky as a medicine is murderous fanaticism and demands that the law' be changed so that physicians may use it, legally and openly, to save human life. He states frankly that he broke the law in order to save the lives of his little sons and declares that no man should be driven to crime for such a purpose. True, Rev. John Roach Straton, nationally known minister, says that Gilliom should have either let hi3 boys die or resigned his place as attorney gen era]. But not even the head of the Anti-Saloon League in this State has gone that far. Instead he announces that whisky is never needed by doctors and brings forward as his proof the case of James P. Goodrich, a former Governor, who recovered, -sa he says, without its use. That might suggest that the best witness on that subject is former Governor Goodrich and his physicians. It would be interesting to have a statement from leading citizens as to whether the facts are as stated by the professional dry leader. In his letter to Governor Jackson, the attorney general stated in plain terms that the Governor did obtain whisky for his wife under advice of his doctors and that her life was saved by its use. The people are beginning to wonder at the silence of Governor Jackson on a question which Is being universally discussed. If the Governor W'as driven to the illegal use of whisky to save the life of hi3 wife, the people expect him to state the facts with the same frankness and courage shown by Mr. Gilliom and to likewise tell them whether he believes a law w'hich forces a Governor to become a criminal to save a life deserves a place in an enlightened community. It is just because men have been afraid to discuss questions openly and freely, that public officials have felt that hypocrisy is one of the qualities of success, that Indiana has permitted some deplorable results at the polls. Statements from the silent governors at this time might help the people to reach a very definite conclusion on the question raised by Attorney General Gilliom. Lindbergh’s Homecoming Disavowal is made by the White House and the State Department that the Government intimated to Charles Lindbergh it was time he started home from Europe. That is good. It is to be hoped that Ambassador Houghton in London disavows the suggestion likewise, although one London correspondent tells a circumstantial story of pressure placed on the boy by the ambassador. Charles Lindbergh flew to Paris on his own initiative. It was his own idea and he carried it out, all alone. The Government wished him well cince he was on his way, and cheered his sass arrival. It has done everything possible ter show its appreciation of the fame and good will his daring has brought to America. It proposes to bestow upon him all honors within its gift. But Lindbergh’s visit to Europe is unofficial. He didn’t ask permission to go and he shouldn’t be told when to come home. He has wanted to see more of Europe. If the correspondent is correct had in mind a plan to

hop about the continent, taking in the sights in a way that, may not be possible for him ever again. In view of the good feeling lie has created in France, Belgium and England, it would seem that Lindbergh couldn't possibly visit too many countries. We want all the friendship we can get—even that of Fascist Italy and Soviet Russia. We can’t ask the boy to start out and gather it for us, but if he wants to do it, the undertaking should have our blessing. The ambassador is said to feel that Lindbergh shouldn't attempt such a tour because he would have to omit some countries and thosg left out feel hurt. , That is hardly convincing. There might be disappointment, but surely not any hard feelings. We don’t observe any bitterness toward Italy in those States that Plnedo failed to visit. No. if the ambassador did take the course ascribed ’to him it looks from this distance like a bit of officiouJness for which he should be rebuked. Meantime, it is announced that the destroyer conveying our young hero will reach New York June 14, This, of course, is good news for the millions who hope to get a sight of him and the millions more who are likely to burst if they have to hold back their shout of welcome much longer. Bootleg Wars Treaties outlawing wars or laws making war a crime will not prevent war. Only public opinion can do that. We have had a prohibition amendment to our Constitution for the past eight years with laws to enforce that amendment. But drinking goes on just the same because public opinion is not such as to make the laws effective. We have been at peace with Great Britain for more than 100 The answer Is not that the two countries have not had differences in all that time; nor is it because of any treaties binding us to peace. Americans and British alike have simply come to regard war as unthinkable as between themselves. Public opinion in each country is r-nin.st an Anglo-American war. Years ago we welcomed the Bryan arbitration treaties between the United States and numerous foreign countries, not because we believed the treaties, of themselves, would safeguard the peace of the world, but because they would tend to create or increase an anti-war psychology in the minds of the-peoples concerned. Today, largely for the same reason, we welcome the draft treaty suggested Professors James T. Shotwell of the Carnegie endowment and J. P. Chamberlain of Columbia University, and hope it may take the place of the Bryan treaties as those expire. The fundamental principle of it that war “as an instrument of policy,’’ is consciously and avowedly eliminated from the internatiorfal relations of civilized powers, ai Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia explains, and nebulous, and therefore troublesome points in existing similar treaties lnvo been cleared away. No mere treaty is going l_> prevent war between two nations when one of them considers it has sufficient grievance against the other. But just as the Bryan treaties constituted one step in the right direction, the proposed treaty constitutes yet another advance. Only in this way, a step at a time, can we dim-visioned mortals toddle along toward our goal of a warless world. We can outlaw wars ?11 we please and we’ll still go on having them, as a sort of bootleg product, as long as anti-war psychology is not sufficiently strong among us. Thus it is that the real contribution Professors Shotwell and Chamberlain make to the cause of peace—and the same goes for the . statesmen of Locarno and Geneva before them—consists in the fact that they are helping to build up public opinion, to tear the blindfold from our eyes so we will one day see that war is civilization’s greatest anachronism. Wars are born of a state of mind. And, states of mind are changed by education, rather than by laws. Lindbergh’s feat advanced aviation tremendousI.', all tlie dispatches tell us, but how many people are like the Brooklyn man who wrote to a newspaper urging that Charlie be prevailed upon the quit flying now and come on home. Men use only 10 per cent of their, intelligence, a professor informs us. Now how are we going to so about discounting that statement, figuring that the professor was using only 10 per cent of his own when he made the discovery. e had begun to wonder what became of the oldfashioned high school graduate who had liis picture taken with diploma in hand until the other day. We saw him with a banjo . A tornado tore the front off tlie barber shop in a Missouri city. The only question we have to ask concerns the continuance of the barber’s shavmg activities.

Law and Justice

"By Dexter M. Keeezer

Government agents saw a man sell narcotics In ' iolation of the law. They obtained a warrant t<J search his quarters for narcotics. While making the search they discovered liquor “in pla'in sight." This liquor was seized and later used as evidence against the man for violation of the prohibition law. The man claimed that this evidence was illegally obtained Because the warrant only authorized a search for narthat.the officers had gone beyond their -ority in seizing t * le liquor. The prosecution contended that, on the contrary, the officers would have neglected their duty if, seeing the liquor in plain sight, they had taken no notice of it. HOW WOULD YOU DECIDE THIS CASE? The actual decision: A United States District t ourt in the Northwest decided that the liquor evidence taken in the search for narcotics could properly be used in a prosecution for violation of the prohibition law. The court said, “Whenever, during the progress of a bona fide search for other commodities illegally possessed, intoxicating liquor is found, whether a search warrant was issued or not, it would seem that seizure is not gnly legal but mandatory.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Most of the Lynchings That Disgrace This Country Are Due to Weak-Kneed Officers.

By M. E. Tracy % Like hundreds of others, Sheriff Iliers could have saved himself a lot of trouble by deciding it was hopeless to resist the mob and letting a prisoner be lynched. Most oC the lynchings that disgrace this country are due to weakkneed officers. Sometimes a mob really catches the sheriff off guard and overpowers him, but in nine cases out of ten it succeeds simply and t>olely because lie lacks the courage to do his duty. Once in a while a sheriff is hurt in the defense of his prisoner, and once in a very great while a sheriff is killed, but generally speaking, officers of the law escape uninjured. Superior Courage ' Sheriff Hiers had no larger force of deputies, no stronger jail and no better equipment at his disposal than had scores of others who yielded to mobs on the ground that there was nothing else for them to do. . The one thing he did have, however, was superior courage. He has demonstrated' to the country how to prevent lynchings. The problem requires no special bills by Congress and no additional laws by the States. All that is needed is officers with courage and intelligence. Fokker to Search A Fokker monoplane is about to leave New York to search for Nungesser and Coll, with F. Sydney Cotton as pilot and Daniel Guggenheim financing the expedition. This is the right spirit. While paying homage to Lindbergh the world should not forget that it owes a duty to these two men. It was not through lack of ability or courage that they failed, and their heroic though unsuccessful attempt merits sufficient interest to discover what happened to them, to find their remains and give them an honorable burial, if that is possible. Two Killed; Fifty Injured V,.oVpeople were killed and fifty were Injured in connection with New York’s Memorial day celebration. Italian Fascists accepted the occasion as a proper one to display their colors and the Ku-Klux Klan defied a police order not to march in regalia. The first resulted in a double killing and the second in k two-mile scrimmage. Such things are disgraceful. The dead, whom Memorial day is designed to honors*did not put on the unfiorm as members of any particular creed, race or faction, but as citizens of a common country. The ceremonies of Memorial Day should center around this thought and should he free from those prejudices and factipral alignments which interfere with it. The United States never called Iter men to the colors as "Protestants or Catholics,” or Jews or gentiles, as Fascists or anti-Fascists, and it does not accord with the respect, due them or the ratines for which they fought to make religious, racial or political differences a part of Memorial Day ceremonies. Philanthropy Patrick Magrane celebrates his seventy-fifth birthday by pinking a 12> 2 per cent cut in the rents of his 1.200 tenants in Lynn, Mass. “I want to help my tenants," he says, "and at the same time help Lynn. The saving in rents will give the tenants increased purchasing power, which will react to the benefit of all the merchants and industries to some degree at least ” This is common sense philanthropy. Killed in Siege Fourteen State troopers and two agents of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals are on trial in New Jersey. They are charged with manslaughter In connection with the death of Beatrice Meaney. Miss Meaney was killed during a siege of her home at Jutland, N. J,, last December by State troopers after the Meaney family had refused to allow the agents of the S. P. c. A. to investigate reports that the Meaney cattle were being improperly fed. The question arises as to howcruel the law- should be toward people in order to prevent people from being cruel toward animals. Proclamation Excuse England’s break with Russia has given the third internationale an excuse to issue another of those ringing proclamations in which the Russian people are told that the world is against them and that their problem is to defend the fatherland. Such proclamations have become Bolshevism’s chief stock in trade and such action as the Tory government of England, has taken, gives them color. For a decade the statesmen of western Europe had done nothing so distinctly as to supply communist leaders with material for war scares. The diplomacy of London and Paris has done more than all the books Karl Marx ever wrote to keep Russian communism alive. The Russian people will sustain the Soviet just so long as they can be made to believe that it stands between them and invasion and no longer. They could not be made to believe this very long governments of western Europe were to cease gesturing. Who were the first five racers to finish in the Memorial Day auto race at Indianapolis in 1926? I P'rank Lockhart finished first; j Harr^Hertz, second; Cliff Woodbury, third: Fred Comer, fourth; Peter De Paolo, fifth.

i is -i^nnw% -jsZfißh— hew/etoosT

A Little Journey in Search of Beauty at the John Herron Art Institute

There is a lot of new beauty to lie seen at the John Herron Art Institute. One of the contributors to this exhibition is Howard Leigh. The work of Howard Leigh has been exhibited at the institute during the last month. The romance of

Real Hit “My Maryland” continues to capacity houses in its 18th week at the Lyric Theater. Philadelphia. Patriotic organizations of the city have given the operetta the distinctive title of “The National Operetta.”

t.-mkn’s achievement in architecture lias touched the blaze to Leigh's ierlpative impulse. He makes portraits and figure studies—rafely ! landscapes—but his distinguished ; productions are Ills drawings and of architectural subjects. Fine buildings, classic ruins, 1 bridges with the balanced symmetry ; of their arches, towers with the deli- ! cate adjustment of their height and weight. He chooses his point of view with discrimination and arranges his composition skillfully. His forms are convincing. His use of lights and darks is carefully calculated. Among the lithographs shown are the “Arch of Septimus Severus,* “Gate of the Charj treuse, Avignon,” “Temple of Con- | cord, Girgenti,” “Le Ponte du Garde” and two views of the bridge over the j Tiber, one showing two arches, one ! two towers. I Among the paintings by Helen i Turner is a charming canvas called “The Pool.” The pool is a dark-oval set in a stone rim, and at its edge is a slight figure in pink peering down into the • depths. With its massed trees, and sunny lawn and drifting shadows this landscape has all the warm scented charm of a golden afternoon. The bronze by Harriet Frishmuth, shown in the gallery with the Turner paintings have won a gratifying meed of appreciation. "Crest of the Wave,” has been particularly admired. This slim, straight youthful figure dances on the wave's curving edge in joyous abandon. An age-old memory lingers in the back of every mind recalling an hour in the childhood of the world when to live in such light-hearted joy was

When He Plays

s£g&b . HHHHBwvHHRHMi

Milton Byron

When Milton Byron “plays” between learning new roles and acting those he knows he takes the greatest delight in two things—motoi'ing and playing repair man about his home in the north part of the city. Byron is appearing this week in “Is Zat So?” at English a. y*

Let’s Not Forget

By Walter D. Hickman

the heritage of all human creatures. It is perhaps this memory that explains the wide appeal of “Crest of the Wave.” A Doll's House In the exhibition for children, the doll's house made by Mr. D. M. Karns for his little granddrftighter, Mary Catherine Stair, attracts much attention. From its fire-resisting shingled roof to its near-brick foundation it is as near perfect as a doll’s house can be. It is wired for electricity, and looks sufficiently stable to be piped for water and gas as well. There is a chimney and a fireplace with andirons and logs laid in place all ready for the match. Windows that give every appearance of glass, doors that open and close, a staircase with a landing, a wis'eria hung pergola porch and a milk bottle waiting on the back step are a few of the fascinating features. It Is completely, even elaborately furnished from immaculate towels on the towel rack in the white tiled

Times Readers Voice Views

Editor s Note: This letter was written by Senator C. O. Holmes of Gary to a friend who asked his opinion on medicinal whisky. The only confession I have to make about the Wright law, I made the other day to a reporter for the Indianapolis Times, in which when he asked me as to what I thought the future was in that respect, particularly after he told me about bis success with Mr. Gilliom, I said that as far as I was concerned, I was just as willing the doctor should 1 ave the right to prescribe bfgndy or whisky or any other alleged medicine, particularly in view of his right to prescribe morphine, laudanum, heroin, etc., and that I though the provision in our law which pftihlbits this was probably a mistake. This is no death bed confession or list minute conversion; it is a conviction to which I have given expression many times and for several years. However, If anyone thinks for a moment that the State of Indiana, or any other considerable section of the United States, is going to make any changes in the Wright law or any other dray law, looking towards weakening, they certainly do not know the sentiment of our people. There isn’t anything pious about this conviction at all: it just grows out of wide contact with all walks of life, wide enough to give me a good deal of confidence'in the soundness of my own judgment. There has been some foolishness on the part of some drys and that condition will gradually right itself without any yielding on the main issue; however, that foolishness' is very mild compared to the ridiculousness of our “dyed-in-the-wool wets,’* who mistake their own determination for any general support. Would be glad to see you sometime at your convenience. Yours very truly, C. O. HOLMES. To the Editor: I am glajl to notice that you are publishing in your valuable paper, sentiments which I heartily approve, hence, I hope to be heard through your columns, but first, I wish to say that I am and always

What Other Papers Say

Man-Made Statutes (Roanoke (Va.l Times) In connection with the remarkable communication sent by the Attorney General of the State to the Governor of Indiana, revealing that both men in the past have violated the prohibition laws of Indiana, which are stringent, an exchange suggests that the people of Indiana would do well to read over the lecture of the late Senator Beveridge on the ''Bible as Good Reading,” in the course of which he said: “If these well-meaning people who have tried to regulate all human life and activities by merely writing words on statute books had read the Bible, and understood it and believed it, they would not have expected man-made statutes to exterminate sin and create perfection." The advice is good, unquestionably. And needed. But why limit it to the people of Indiana? Is that the only State in which mistaken majorities have supposed that a sure way of remedying a problem—any problem—is by enacting a statute on the subject?

bathroom to the floor lamp that stands beside the piano. Indianapolis theaters today offer: ' Tlie Last of Mrs. Cheyney,” at Keith's; “Is Xat So” nt English’s; "Peaches” Browning at the Lyric; “Fast and Furious" at the Colonial: Bernadine De Grave at the Palace; “The World at Her Feet” at the Apollo; “The Scarlet Letter” at the Circfe; “Senorita” at the Ohio and "Lightning Lariats” at the Isis. Some Tall Boy During his seven months in America. producing “Sunrise" for Fox, F. W. Nlurnau, who is six feeti three inches tall, escaped without being called “big boy” even once. Did You Know? Did you know that Neil Hamilton was called “Hollywood’s Houdini?” He is never without his bag of tricks whether between shots at the Paramount studio or at one of movie land's social gatherings.

have been, a temperance man. I haye never been drunk in my life, and have no taste for any kind of liquor, but I do have a. taste for liberty to eat and drink anything I wish. The prohibition law is the most intemperate law that was ever thrust upon a free people. Perhaps, it may benefit one out of a hundred, but why punish ninety-nine to benefit one. We are beginning to see the hypocrisy of the law through the Governor and attorney general dilemma. They did what, I think, everybody would do under like circumstances. But, what I regret is that people, a great many of them, have not the courage of their con-, victions, and the Governor seems to be one of them. n I have no ax to grind, no favors to ask. I am 82 years of age, and only hope to help put liberty back into the Declaration of Independence. . H. A. CUMMINGS. 637 N. East St. To the Editor: I Suppose this letter is useless, but nevertheless I am going to start the ball rolling. About -this $1,000,000 that the city will have to spend fori a suitable piece of ground for the coliseum they are talking so much about. It is very funny that the city officials can never think of the south side when it comes to any large building or park or memorial, or in fact anything that would help to build up the south side, and they could buy ground much cheaper there than north or east. And the city owns a large piece of ground In the heart of the busiest section of our city, outside of downtown, Fountain Square. I refer to the old city car barns that Shank and Duvall squabbled over just before Shank went out of office. Everybody knows that it is the old mule barns that are holding back the development of Fountain Square. If they can’t consider anything for us they ought at least to sell the barns so somebody can put up a business block. Then watch Fountain Square grow. earl McDaniel*. 1139 Shelby St.

JUNE 1, 1927

Cv]T\ C Auction , oridp'e byJMilton r~\ CWorfi V. J Observe Conventional Requirements for Following Bid,

The pointer for today is: OBSERVE THE CONVENTIONAL REQUIREMENTS FOR A FOLLOWING BID. Below are the four West bands given yesterday. South lias hid on Heart, score love-all; what should West declare?

NO. 5 NO. 6 4 A-6-3 < £ A-J-3 9 64-3-2 9 9-74-2 4 A-7-2 4 A-Q-5 4 A-104 4 A-10-4 NO. 7 NO. 8 4 A-K-10-7 4 44-2 9 5-3-2 • 9 74 4 7-6-3 4 A-Q-10-64 4 9-5-2 4 7-64

My answer slip reads: No. 13. West should pass. No. 14. West should bid one Spade. No. 15. West should bid one Spade. No. 16. West should bid one Trump. My reasons in support of these declarations are: No. 13.—Exactly one quick trick but no more; a following bid guarantees more strength than one trick. To approve following bids with any less trength than original bids opens the door as widely as wisdom permits, and the conventional minimum should be rigidly observed. No. 14 The King of Hearts affords the strength needed In addition to the Ace at the head of five Spades. No. 15. While all suits are stopped, the Heart is stopped only once so the five Spades, even although headed by “Ace nothing,” should be bid in preference to Np Trump. With this hand a Dealer could properly bid a No Trump, but after an adverse Heart it is not advisable. No. 16. With the adverse suit stopped twice, every other suit stopped once, and the flve-eard Major headed by only one honor, bid No Trump. Today's hands again are held by West, South having bid one Heart; score lovcall, and the question is what West should declare in each case.

NO. 9 NO. 10 4 K-10-54-2 _ 4 K-1044-2 9 6-4 9 64 4 8-74 4 A-74 4 7-5-2 4 74-2 NO. 11 NO. 12 4 K-10-54-2 4 K-104-3-J 9 64 9 64 4 R-7-5 4 K-74 4 7-5-2 4 K-5-2

Bridge Answer Slip of dune 3rd No. j*. West should No. 18. West should No. 19. West should No. 20. West should >

Questions and Answers

■ y ° u , c * n * ct ar ‘ answer to any quea'nn _' ,f 'art or information by writing IP The Indianapolta Times Washington ““/“u. New York Aye Washinxton, D. C. inclosihc 2 eenta in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot bo given nor can extended research bo undertaken. All other questions will receive a persona! reply. Unsigned requests cannot bo —Editor' AU , *- tte ’ rß * r ® confidential. Did Abraham Lincoln say, “You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time?” This epigram has been attributed to Abraham Lincoln but Spofford, in his life of Lincoln, denies that he was the author. P. T. Barnum is the generally accepted author. It is said that Lincoln quoted Barnum's words in a speech at Clifton, 111 , Sept. 8, 1858. Is there a minimum weight for railway mail clerks and post office clerk*? Railway mail clerks must weigh nt least 130 pounds and post effire clerks at least 125 pounds. Applicants are required to remoVe shoes and coats when being weighed. Will 14-carat gold wear better than 18-carat gold? Yes. Because 14-earat gold Is usually harder. It depends, however, on the alloy that is used. What is the address of Bud Fisher, the cartoonist? 131 Riverside Dr., New York City. * Who Is Lew Cody’s wife? What is their address? Lew Cody and his wife, Mabel Normand, reside at Beverly Hills, Calif. How ran a boy enlisted In the United states Marine corps secure his release? If he is stiU under 18 years of age his parents can apply for his discharge. They must produce his birth certificate and affidavits. If he is now over 18 years he can apply for his discharge on the ground of havor others dependent upon him. He should file his application for release from the service with his commanding officer and It must be accompanied by the sworn affidavit at, two disinterested parties. If his application is approved he will receive his release. By how many Individuals has “Man-O’-War,” Ihe race horse, been owned? \ He was bred by the late August Belmont, and sold as a yearling at Saratoga Springs. New Yo*k, August 1918, to Samuel D. Riddle." He belongs to Riddle at m •resent uae . ■a,-