Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1927 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times - (A SCBIFFS-HOWABD NEWSPAPER) Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 314-220 W. Maryland Street. Indianapolis. ind. Price In Marlon County, 2 cents—lo cents a , week: elsewhere, 3 cents—l3 cents a week. BOYD GURLEY. ROY W. HOWARD. W. A. MAYBORN. Editor. President. Business Manager. PHONE—MAIN 3500 TUESDAY. AUGUST 16, 1927. Member ol United Press, Scrlpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, Newspaper Enterprise Association. Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way” —Dante
StMPPJ-HOWAJtD
Are They Slanders? Governor Jackson briefly referring to the matter of McCray and the offer of immunity in return for the prosecutorship of this county, virtuously says that not for long can slanders prevail in the light of truth. The Times is happy to agree in general terms with the governor’s belief that no slander can live in the face of facts. It is just because The Times believes that truth is the one great weapon of all liberty and the great defense against wrong that it printed the facts that on Dec. 8,1923, Ed Jackson, then Secretary of .State, offered SIO,OOO and a promise of liberty to Warren T. McCray in return for the Marion County prosecutorship for a selection of George V. Coffin. The Times stated this without qualification and as a fact, because it believed that the people of this State had a right to all the facts concerning its government and the methods and men by which its government was created. Other newspapers have said that this charge was the gravest of any made concerning that unwholesome period of Indiana history which will go down as Stephensonism. Other newspapers have demanded that Governor Jackson either vindicate himself or resign. And some have declared that the Legislature must act if the Governor persists in an attitude of silence concerning this rather unusual episode. All that remains i3 to settle whether this charge was a slander or whether it was the truth which will break down the injury to Indiana which was contemplated 'on the day when McCray, then under indictment, declared that he had lost his money, would lose his office and might lose his liberty, but that he would keep his self-respect in the face of such a temptation. The Times has said that the facts it printed are true. It has named its editor as responsible for the charges. It has intimated as broadly as it could that it was very willing to submit to any proper tribunal, either legislative or judicial, the evidence upon which it based its charge. Slander is slander only when the charge is false. As yet the Governor has neither denied or admitted the truth of this charge. Does the Governor wish the people to imply that his one sentence is a denial? If so, why not put it in plain words? Mr. Coolidge Has Chosen Almost every leader of the Republican party is now convinced that President Coolidge intends to retire to private life at the end of his present term. He shows in his bearing the relief he feels at the prospect of laying down the burdens of office. Public and press continue to praise him for his decision to respect the two-term tradition. In every respect his announcement has served as a tonic, clarifying the atmosphere and removing the chance of an acrimonious campaign centering around the third-term issue. For these reasons Senator Fess’ prediction that Ohio will send a Coolidge delegation to the G. O. P. convention strikes us as a particularly discordant and unfortunate expression.. The Ohio Senator does not pay his President or his party a very high compliment iu taking this attitude. It will be interpreted as a reflection upon the President’s sincerity and an admission that the Republican party is bereft of men capable of filling Calvin Coolidge’s shoes. The reasons for clinging to President Coolidge at this juncture are obvious, and many similar attempts will be made within the next few months. But in the turmoil agitating the Republicans as they prepare to select a candidate for 1928, the President’s wishes should be respected. Those who have no favorite sons to advance during the doubtful period of Presidentnominating should not try to use Mr. Coolidge as a stalking horse.' It would be a poor way of repaying him for his services to the party.
(Tbe Pittsburgh Sun) The deplorable part about the revelations of shocking political conditions in Indiana is that Indiana has one of the highest voting records in the Union. Indiana has been referred to time after Indiana time as one state where citizens are mi citizens; and as one in which the parWhere 1 hey ties are evenly enough divided to keep Vote government on an even keel. For instance, in 1920, when Pennsylvania was voting only 42 per cent; only Delaware had a better record and that fractionally so. Again, in 1924, when less than one-half of Pennsylvania's citizens voted, nearly three-fourths of Indiana’s again went to the polls; only two states—West Virginia and Rhode Island—did better than Indiana. Now, it is revealed that in spite of this high degree of citizen interest and in spite of the fact that Indiana has a minority party in a real fighting sense, Indiana’s politics have gone to rot. What it will be asked, does it matter vhether citizens vote, when so tittle good comes of it as is indicated by the revelations of the notorious Klansman Stephenson. Well, apparently this much good comes of it, that already leading citizens of Indiana are organized to protect Indiana’s good name. What is their idea of how to protect Indiana’s good name? Is it to hush the scandal and whitewash the suspected and accused? On the contrary, the first effort in the move to vindicate Indiana, it is announced, will be to seek indictment of some of the most highly placed politicians in the State. Seemingly, in a State where citizens vote citizens can be shocked to the point of doing something when scandal touches their commonwealth. K three-fourths of Pennsylvania’s citizens were accustomed to vote, would Pennsylvania’s politicians have dared to treat so lightly the senatorial investigation of 1926? Ono wonders.
What Other Editors Think
Too Many Babies More than 900,000 surplus babies a year! Nearly 1,000,000 births over and above deaths in an island empire already packed to the limit! An Increase of 300,000 births over deaths since the war! This is the staggering conditions facing Japan, whose statesmen are so frankly alarmed that they took the figures to the recent institute of Pacific relations and asked western delegate what to do about it. Professor Eliot G. Mears, Stanford University economist and student of racial matters in the Pacific’s considers the Japanese dilemma one of the Pacific’s great problems. He and other American delegates to the institute had no solution .to suggest. ‘‘The race between population and food supply is the world’s great economic problem, and America will face it before many decades, - ’ said Professor Mears. -‘The problem facing Japan today is what might be called a national crisis. Due to sanitation and advanced medical knowledge, the death rate of Japan has fallen way below the death iate before the great war, while the birth rate has continued to increase. The result is that Japan, already overcrowded, has a total of 900,000 births over and above death each year. This means that the small and populous islands of Japan are adding what equals the entire population of California every five years. “The problem is, like every economic problem, an international one, and Japan is at a loss to meet it. The Japanese delegation laid it before the recent institute at Honolulu, frankly asking the guidance of American delegates. “Japanese statesmen arc not looking to immigration. They realize that colonization of nations has never solved a population problem. They are talking birth control, but not as a serious national policy. The best answer seems to be the industrialization of Japan, but this, too, presents serious problems." In the past similar crises have led to war. What will this one lead to? Can civilization find a way out? M. Poincare, French wartime president, said in a speech the other day that in the matter of guilt it is well to distinguish between the German people and their ruler. Well, well, the war’s over! Enjoy your vacation at home by using youq ingenuity, a writer advises. Our suggestion is that you buy a pair of chaps and some fishing tackle and pitch camp near the rain-water barrel. Prince Carol, exiled in Paris, proclaims himself king of Rumania. That boy must be a regular Jack Sharkey when it comes to asserting himself. The man who wrote “’Tis better to have loved and lost’’ must have had a good break on the alimony. August Heckscher, 79, the philanthropist, says vigorous slapping of the body adds to long life. Depending, too, on whom you slap. Disarmament is the process by which a country which has several obsolete battleships displaces them for nice, new, shiny cruisers. / Russia proclaims a defense week. Has somebody been trying to lend that country some money again? Maybe the President is trying to worm his way into the heart of the West!
Law and Justice By Dexter M. Keezer
A man purchased on the installment plan a lot which he intended to use for the site of a gasoline filling station. Before he had completed the payments for the lot, a city ordinance was passed which prohibited use of the lot for a filling station. He sought a court order, requiring the man from jvhom he had purchased the lot to take it back and refund the payments which he had made. His contention was that he had agreed to buy the lot as a filling station site and that since this use of it wa£ now impossible he was entitled to refund of the payments he had made. The man who had sold the lot argued that the payments should be completed. He said that he could not reasonably be held accountable for city restrictions placed upon the use of ti’ie lot after the contract of sale was made. HOW WOULD YOU DECIDE THIS CASE? The actual decision: The Supreme Court of Minnesota refused to authorize recovery of the payments which had been made on the lot. It said that no person, in selling property, is presumed to guarantee it against subsequent restrictions imposed by a sovereign governing body.
(Wabash Plain Dealer) Mayor John Duvall, of Indianapolis, has been the target of much criticism during his administration and the object of much suspicion ever since the Stephenson expose was first mentioned. In common with most politicians, he has an abiding faith in the U seless power of the press and voices his faith Weapon in a s P eech made before the convention of the International Typographical Union, in which he said: “I know that the newspapers can make it awfully sweet for you or they can make it awfully hot. They have made it so hot for me here in Indianapolis that I went into the newspaper business myself. I found that there is only one way to win a fight and that is to use the same weapons the other fellow uses,” A point entirely overlooked by Mayor Duvall and other politicians who hold similar, views about newspapers, is that no amount of newspaper defense can make a bad administration popular with the people, and no amount of newspaper abuse can harm an honest administration. The people are too smart to be fooled by any amount of newspaper talk, pro or con, and most newspapers are too smart to run counter to public opinion. If a political ring gets in bad through abuse of public confidence, the best newspaper organization in the world cannot pull in out of the hole. A newspaper founded for the purpose of spreading poison gas in defense of corrupt politicians is foredoomed to failure. (Shetbyville Republican) There is a well defined rumor that Immediately Mr. Shumaker is officially committed to prison that Governor Jackson will pardon him. What kind of a precedent this action on' the part of the Governor would establish can not be surmised. Mr. Shumaker and the cause he represents will not be harmed because of the fine and the sentence imposed upon him.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
M. E. TRACY SAYS: , Modern Industry, With Its Masses of Men and Mon-ty, Would Be Worse Than Useless if It Depended Upon Single Lives.
CLEVELAND, Aug. 16. The sculptor dies, but his statue lives; the artist lays down his brush, but the picture remains for unborn generations to admire: the statesman passes away, but the policies he established survive. This is the essence of human progress. Judge Gary’s Genius Judge Gary was an organizer, rather than an executive. He not only ran the United States Steel Corporation, but he made it capable of running itself. Those who thought his death would produce a break in its stock failed to understand the genius of the man. Bigger Than Man Modem industry, with its masses of men and money, would be worse than useless if it depended upon single lives. Judge Gary was one of the first to realize this, and to build with a larger end in view. He might have made a greater reputation for himself by permitting larger dividends and following a more aggressive course, but *his services would not have meant so much to those who come afterward. He was big enough to realize that such a gigantic corporation as had been entrusted to his care must be put on a stable basis. 'That he could pass out with so little commotion, proves not only his clearness of vision, but his ability to translate it into practical form.. Mechanical Progress Modern industry is based on mechanism. The mechanism is intellectual as well as physical. If boiler, engine and shaft have been bound together. so have trade, calling and profession. Time was when the carpenter ran his shop'and the blacksmith was an iron master. Time was when the average man had to provide his own wages and invest his own capital. Modern industry has changed all that. Half the workers in this country look for pay envelopes each week, and a quarter look for interest on money which they have put in somebody’s hands. Men of intelligence are needed to keep the thing going. Modern City Life The modern city is. perhaps, the greatest ’jr-product of modern industry. It is made possible by the opportunities to earn a living and live decently through organized effort. Electric lights, sewers, paved streets, huge factories, reasonably safe financial institutions and transportation facilities are all results of modern industry. Astounding Growth
Natural gas, coal, the Great Lakes and iron ore a thousand miles to the Northwest would not have produced a Cleveland without being brought together by the means and agencies of modern industry. A million people would not be living in Cleveland today without the comforts, conveniences, pay rolls and supplies which modern industry affords. Three hundred years ago there was not a city as large as Cleveland in the western world, and in all human history there had been less than half a dozen. Within the lust 100 years this country has been able to develop five such cities, not to mention as many more in the making
Cleveland Exposition The Cleveland Industrial Exposition is now in progress. From twenty to thirty thousand are attending It daily. Where our grandfathers used to be curious to find out who had raised the biggest squash or what horse could run the fastest, we are interested to find out what the latest thing is in airplanes, or just how the street car system is laid out. John D’s Credit Among the important exhibitors is the Grasselli Chemical Company, which makes an endless variety of products. Caesar Grasselli had an acid plant in Clevelnad before John D. Rockefeller started in the oil business. He used to sell John D. acid on account, but decided that involved too much risk, so he sent word one day that it would be delivered c. o. and. thereafter. John D. came over from his plant, which was just across the street, to find out what was the matter. He needed the credit, he said, because he was using all his funds in an effort to comer the crude oil market. Not only that, but he made a proposition to Mr. Grasselli that they combine the acid and oil business and go in together. Needless to say, he was turned down, it being quite obvious that a young man who could not pay cash for his acid was only having pipe dreams when he thought about cornering the crude oil market. Some folks who know the story have tried to figure out how much the Grassellis would be worth today if John D.’s offer had been accepted. That is a waste of time, of course, and besides the Grassellis have not done so badly. During whose reign was Robert Peel the Prime Minister of Great Britain? From Sept. 6, 1841, to July 6, 1846, during the reign of Queen Victoria.
Since the Field Is Open, Why Not —
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Hard Fighting Melodrama Is “The Wolf” and How! Idabelle Arnold Brings the Glad Girl Back to Life
Melodrama is “The Wolf,” and nothing else. It belongs to that school of melodrama cf the great northern Canada where the good men put up about as good a fight as the bad ones, and the bad
ones might win if it didn't happen on the stage. OI course, in melodrama on the stage good men are only good and bad men only bad Sometimes when I see these strong bad men on the stage I wonder if they eat with forks and know the meaning of menu. And that is just what such a crude and an
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George Gaul
unreasonable vehicle .-■ s “The Wolf accomplishes. George Gaul knows this role very well, as he has played it often. I am told that he likes the role. It has a good fight in it, with lot of yelling before the fight. It is sort of theater that makes you want to yell when the actors yell and fight. It is good tonic. It gains its point. It wakes the audience up to that point of wanting to “hiss" the very good bad man and applaud the very good good hero. And that is the way that melodraca should be. “The Wolf” is melodramatic atmosphere and as such it is played as such. George Gaul is the very good man and Lury Fletcher is the very bad, bad man. Vivian Tobin is the very good, good girl, who would probably shy at a railway train. Oh, this heroine Is good. Others assisting most of ’em to be good or bad are Aldrich Bowker. Jack Storey and Eric Kalkhurst (somebody near me said that he was as good looking as Lindbergh). “The Wolf” is on view all week at Keith’s.
Stage Verdict ENGLISH’S Several satisfactory performances make “Pollyanna” the glad show that it should be. LYRIC—The current bill runs to eccentric comedy acts. KEITH'S—“The Wolf” Is only melodrama. Effective.
Questions and Answers
What proportion of milk produced in the United States is used in the manufacture of ice cream? Is the industry growing? Although ice cream manufacture is a small branch of the dairy industry, utilizing only about 3.8 per cent of the milk produced in the United States, the industry employs more than 50,000 persons and pays wages of more than $75,000,000 a year. Ice cream production has increased remarkably in recent years. The estimated production for 1910 was only 95,450,000 gallons; the 1920 production reached 260,000,000 gallons and in 1926 it was 324,665,000 gallons an increase of 240 per cent in sixteen years. How does the export of finished manufactures in the United States compare with the export of foodstuffs? In 1926 finished manufactures constituted 42 per cent of the total exports, and crude foodstuffs amounted to only 7 per cent of the total. When was the Western Union Telegraph Company organized? It was originally the New York and Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph Company, formed in April, 1851. In November, 1855, an agreement between this company and the Erie and Michigan Telegraph Company provided for changing the name to the Western Union Telegraph Company. On April 4, 1856, the New York Legislature passed an act changing the name.
■BY WALTER D. HICKMAN
HOKUM COMEDY WINS ON NEW LYRIC BILL The drawing power of the present bill at the Lyric rests in what I call hokum comedy. There are several contributors to
this special brand of theater fun. One of the chief contributors is Eddy Eddy with the four Markwit h brothers. Before a musical saxophone background on the part of the Markwith brothers, Eddy Eddy has a chance to go in for grotesque burlesque comedy. There is a purpose behind everything he attempts. He works
Eddy Eddy
with easv and know's enough about stage but-.ess to make all of his numbers effective. It is not high comedy but good showmanship. More eccentric comedy is offered by Conn and Alberts in an act which they call “On Their Way to School.” The title indicates the nature of the opening of the act before the team becomes “wild." Their burlesque on old-time theater is done with smart regard to contrast. Act pleases. Tom Ward, admits that he is 73 and that his partner, Charlie Diamond, harpist and daneer, is 75. These men seem to keep young with ease. They both have white hair and they have been loyal to the stage and deserve applause even if they had to be hauled on the stage in wheel chairs. But they won’t need 'em for some years. West, Gates and Kane, three men, go in for eccentric characterization on the part of the female impersonator. They go back to the days of “Tell Me Pretty Maiden.” Freitas Hawaiitns pass up some good results which modern' showmanship would guarantee. For some reason or other I had no reaction concerning “Revue D’Art.” I was late and missed the first act. Sorry. At the Lyric all w'eek. Other theaters today offer: “Paid to Love” at the Circle, “Twelve Miles Out” at the Apollo, “The Covered Wagon” at the Ohio, “The Callahans and the Murphys” at the Indiana and movies at the Isis.
What is the total value of the foreign trade of the United States? The amount in 1926 was $9,239,000,000 (exports and imports). Why is the sun hotter at noon then in the morning or the evening? Because the rays at noon, or meridian, are direct, whereas in the morning or evening they are indirect and must pass through a greater body of the earth’s atmosphere to reach an object. When will the Toronto Exhibition be held? From August 28 to Sept. 15, 1927. Where are the “Finger Lakes” and why are they so called? They are Lakes Skaneatcles, Owasco, Cayuga, Seneca and Canandaigun, a group of elongated lakes in West Central New York called the “Finger Lakes” because they are shaped and look like fingers on the map. What is the address of the American Bar Association? 209 South La Salle St., Chicago. What do the radio signals “CK” and ”CQ” mean? “CK” is an abbrevation used by radio operators on board ships for “check.” “CQ” is an abbreviation used by radio operators on vessels as a general call for any vessel hearing this signal to communicate with the calling vessel.
INTERESTING ACTING REVEALED IN “POLLYANNA” Things may be regarded in this light at English's this week where "Pollyanna” is being presented: Idabelle Arnold lives up to her promise of giving a charming and
sympathetic performance of the glad girl; Milton Byron gave a splendid reading of the old grouch, who becomes a glad disciple; the effective first appearance of Adelaide Melnotte in a character part and the human work of Herbert Dobbins as Dr. Chilton. The real test of anybody playing Pollyanna is the result in both tears and
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Idabelle Arnold
smiles. Miss Arnold went all beyond my expectations in the sad and emotional scenes. I found that I was rather “wet” around the eyes at least three times. And I do not act that way in the theater very often. Miss Arnold has always had in complete mastery the trick of making herself younger. And she slips gracefully and beautifully into the short dresses of Pollyanna. It is with pleasure that I v vote “yes” for Miss Melnotte even on my first introduction to her work. This woman knows her character theater and she knows how to remain in character all the time she is on the stage. Others in the cast are Inez Wolf. Grace Foreman (very effective >; J. F. Marlow, who uses a terrible make-up and I understand why old men in Marlow’s conception should look like they have one foot in the grave, but I think it is the fault of the wig; Brenice Marsolais, Robert St. Clair, Larry Sullivan and Herbert Dobbins.
Times Readers Voice Views
To The Editor: Clara Dunkin wrote to you saying she did not like your position on the whisky question. As I would like to get on the right side I wish you would tell me what is wrong with you. Claja knows, but failed to inform the readers of The Times why you are wroqg and she is right. , Can it be that Clara refers lo the medicinal character of whisky? If so, then I am all right. I know my bearings. I am on the side of those that consider whisky to be a medicine because the physicians of the prohibition persuasion tell us they have a substitute for whisky. Therefore, if it were not a medicine, why offer a substitute? Shumaker says he once tried a dose of whisky in a case of sickness and it did cure him. Os course, this one experiment is not conclusive, as there is whisky and whisky. The kind that heals one may have no effect on another patient. Since this is so, he is down on whisky. That, too, is very ungrateful. The fact is it did not kill and that is good evidence that It was not bad stuff. It is possible that the dose was too small, or it was too large and he didn’t know just what happened. His presence today on this mundane sphere is evidence that it was a good thing for him. He will tell you that its effects differ on different persons, that whisky will make some men beat their wives and break the household furniture. In other cases it will make a man steal or commit murder. After using it some will see double and feel they are twice as rich as they really are. With these characteristics it is well not to fool around with whisky. Just let it alone and it won’t hurt anyone. Clara owes it to you, as well as to your readers, to furnish specifications setting out just what she dislikes about your position on whisky. F. M. F,
AUG. 16, 1927
V\ r hy the Weather?
By Charlei Fltzhugh Talman Authority on Meteorology
STUDYING WEATHER ON MT. BLANC Many students of atmospheric phenomena have conducted investigations on Mt. Blanc, the highest mountain in Europe, and these studies have had, quite appropriately, their ups and downs. Two observatoris, intended for both meteorological and astronomical research, have beeen erected at the very summit, the attainment of which is a difficult feat of mountaineering. The first was built in 1893 under direction of Jannsen, the French astronomer. This building was gradually buried under snow and ice, and after having been repeatedly dug out it was finally dismantled in 1909. A much smaller observatory was erected on the summit in 1910, but this one also was soon engulfed in snow. By the summer of 1913 it had sunk so deep that even soundings and borings failed to locate it, and it has never been seen since. It probably will emerge some day at the foot of a glacier. The greatest scientific observer on Mt. Blanc was M. Joseph Vallot, who died in 1925. He climbed the mountain thirty-four times, and was indefatigable in promoting the investigation of other climbers. In 1890, with the assistance of more than 100 guides, who volunteered their services, he built an observatory on a rock some distance below the summit. In 1898 this observa-d tory w r as moved to a more securer site on the Rocher des Bosses, 14,301 feet above sea level, where it still defies the snows and terrible storms of the mountain. Every climbing season, which lasts from the middle of June to the middle of September, the Vallot observatory is visited by a number of scientific men, w'ho carry out a wide range of investigations here.
Mr. Fixit Discusses Weed - Cutting Work of City Forces.
The weed-cutting activities of the city forces must be confined to lots adjacent to the property of persons making complaints, officials explained today. All complaints must be signed and correct addresses given if the desired work is to be obtained. Mr. Fixit: There are two lots on S. Randolph St. that have weeds terribly high. One is at Cottage and Randolph Sts. Another is in the 1500 block on Randolph St. Please have them cut. W. M. If one of these lots is next to your property, the inspector will order the w'eeds cut. Mr. Fixit; In front of my home, Forty-Second St. and Carrolton, Ave., is a bent iron post. It w'as onew a stop sign. It surely is an eye sore to look at. Can you either have this removed or straightened and anew sign place on it. It is of no use now. W. J. 11. The street inspector’s office will take this matter up with the light company. They will try to get a new sign erected. The condition of Pershir g Ave. from Michigan St. to Tentn St. is a disgrace to the general whose name it bears. You talk about Duvall Gulch and Buser Alley, we have many miniature McCormick Creek Cayons on this street. This street has not been graded for over a year and no oil has been put on this year. A READER. Men arc reported tq have started grading this street. As for oil, the city is out of it and officials do not know when they will obtain anew supply.
Mr. Fixit,: We live at 1221 Gross Ave. On the north of us there is an alley with a vacant lot next to it. Instead of people coming to this alley and turning, they cut through the vacant lot and run into our house. Several times cars have torn our fence down. One hit our bedroom window. Recently another struck the house, tearing the water pipe down and scratching the house. We were unable to catch them. MRS. M. R. | The street inspector promises to check this up and notify the police.
Brain Teasers
The first seven of today's questions deal with the elements of food. Cooks who prepare balanced meals and all other people who watch their diet should test their knowledge on these question. Answers are on page 12: 1. What arc the three principal divisions of foodstuffs? 2. Into which of these classes do sugars and starches fall? 3. Is nitrogen found 'in proteids, carbohydrates or fats? 4. Which of the two divisions of food are found in meat? 5. Which of the two divisions are found in vegetables? 6. Os the three classes of vitamins, A. B and C, which is found in butter, which in green leaves and which in fresh fruits? 7. What is the function of each of the three classes of vitamincs? 8. How many feet in a mile? 9. What are the horns of deer called? 10. What animai is intermediate between the deer and the goat?
Da You Know — That 6,693 boys and girls of Indianapolis are being trained through four scouting organizations affiliated with the Indianapolis Community Fund to live a clean life, know clean fun, share in clean sports and develop real health and loyal citizenship?
