Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 324, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1928 — Page 4

PAGE 4

| M, ■

SCRIPPS - H OW AJU>

What It Means The Ku-Klux Klan and the Anti-Saloon League are still in undisputed ownership of the Republican party in Indiana. That is the real meaning of the primary results as shown by a study of the vote in the different sections of the State. There is nothing in the vote in the agricultural counties to indicate that the farmer was in rebellion against Herbert Hoover or that his nomination would spell defeat in November. There is nothing in the vote in cities to indicate that he is the choice of the industrial workers. The vote cast for Watson was the same vote that the machine has always had for years, or since that unholy combination of bootlegger and dry leaders, the machine Catholic and the Klan, of the preacher and the ballot box stoffer took charge of the Republican party. The contest was not, apparently, between Hoover and Watson or between Hoover and all other Republicans. It was a coming to grips of an unorganized revolt against corruption and the forces which had corrupted Indiana —and corruption won. The Hoover candidacy, unhappily, did not identify itself strongly enough with the cleanup crusade to make the issue clear and distinct. That candidacy also was badly handicapped by the fact that it had fastened to it the support of former Governor Goodrich, whose presence in the campaign did not tend to lend any confidence in the claims of the Hoover managers that they really stood for r„ new deal in Indiana. There are too many Republicans, who, very justly, have no interest in transferring power from the Watson machine to a Goodrich machine-and who could hardly be expected to become enthusiastic over such a prospect. As far as the presidential delegates are concerned, the Republicans of the State have given a blank check to Senator Watson, good for the thirty-three votes, and told him to cash it at Kansas City as he pleases. Not even Watson could expect to be a serious contender for the nomination. There are things that are beyond imagination and the spectacle of a Watson in the White House is too grotesque for even his most loyal supportters to conjecture. The chief interest of the forces that supported Watson from herein will be to see that he keeps his bargains. He has no easy task, with so many promises out. The real meaning of the primary is to be found in the majority of Senator Robinson and the nomination of Ralph Updike in this city for Congress. That shows the source of power in the party. It means that the Anti-Saloon League and the Ku-I ’.ux Klan, working together as always since the days of Stephensonism, have conquered again and that they continue to rule the party of Lincoln. The nomination for governorship, under these conditions, in a convention is not an honor which self-respecting men can seek unless they announce in advance that they will not indoi’se the Robinson and Updike candidacies. ' The convention of Republicans, if it is truly representative of the voters who cast their ballots in the primary, will make the pardon of Stephenson the party pledge and platform. Hoover’s Farm Relief Attention of all those who think Hoover isn't a friend of the farmer is directed to an article in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post, out today. George Barr Baker is the author. The title is “The Great Fat Fight.” It tells hoAv Hoover saved American farmers from a loss of hundreds of millions of dollars. It is a striking picture of Hoover in action. And it deals not with theories of farm relief, but with accomplished and stupendous facts. A reading of it, therefore, especially is recommended to all swivel chair agriculturists whose only contribution to the cause has been to play politics with farm relief theories. Those Mexican-American Claims Notwithstanding the impioved relations between the United States and Mexico, there still is one potent source of friction which should be removed. It is the enormous claims for damages growing out of the Mexican revolutions of 1910 to 1920, and American intervention. Americans have filed some 4,900 claims against Mexico for a grand total of $700,000,000, an amount approximately equal to the Mexican national debt, while Mexicans nave filed claims against the United States totaling $245,000,000. For years special commissions have been hard at work trying to get to the bottom of these claims, yet the end is nowhere in sight. Meantime, Mexican credit necessarily is involved, as it must continue to be as long as this stupendous, though entirely theoretical, obligation remains unsettled, and many urgently needed reconstruction projects are being held up for want of cash. If the staggering total claimed by Americans is

The "Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) Owned and published dally (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland Street. Indianapolis, Ind. Price In Marion County, 2 cents—.o cents a week; elsewhere, 3 cents—l 2 cents a week. BOYD GURLEY. ROY W. HOWARD, FRANK G. MORRISON, Editor. President. Business Manager. PHONE—MAIN 3500. THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1928 Member or United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. Newspaper Enterprise Association. Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way.”

to be believed, more than half the property of our nationals in Mexico must have been destroyed, lock, stock and barrel. Which, needless to say, was not the case, since their holdings were almost entirely in oil lands, mines, railways, agricultural and timber concessions and public utilities which remain to speak for themselves. The trouble Is the sky is the limit when it comes to filing claims against foreign governments. Not that Americans are any worse in this respect than the citizens of any other country. They are not. To blow a SI,OOO claim up until it becomes a SIOO,OOO one, or bigger, seems a universal practice, as ths history of such cases clearly proves. Take the Mexican claim commission, for example. Americans filed 1,017 claims for $470,126,613, yet only $4,125,622 was allowed. At that, be it said to the credit of the 'United States, $1,170,851 of even that small sum subsequently was returned to Mexico, when it was discovered that two of the largest claims were fraudulent. Similarly the Mexican claims against the United States simmered down from $86,661,891.15, demanded, to a mere $157,498 awarded, or less than two-tenths of 1 per cent. Why can’t the United States and Mexico agree upon a lump sum for each, then have their courts pass upon the claims of their respective citizens? The Alabama claims were settled in that way and a prolific source of bitterness 1 between Great Britain and America was abolished. A basis of settlement might be arrived at by a study of the average percentage of claims paid in previous awards. Or a lump sum might be decided upon by a special commission appointed by the two governments, or by arbitration, as in the Geneva award covering the Alabama case. But something should be done to cut short the long-drawn-out negotiations now in process. Mexico is in urgent need of capital to carry out her full program. A moderate number of millions spent now on interior improvements, would yield immense returns in prosperity. A prosperous Mexico with 15,000,000 people living on a higher standard is ot great importance to the United States. But time is of the essence in her reconstruction and as Americans would benefit in the long run about as much as the Mexicans, every obstacle should be removed from the road without delay. Jailing the Spirit In the case of Harry Sinclair that District of Columbia jury doesn't have the last say so. Os course it was fortunate, or lucky, or something else, for Sinclair that he wasn't found guilty by that jury—for he doesn’t have to go to a penitentiary. But that isn’t the end of it. The Supreme Court has convicted him and he is guilty in the opinion of the people of the United States. f In some respects it is just as much punishment to be convicted by popular opinion as it is to be convicted by a jury and go to jail. Sinclair’s mind is in jail, even if his body isn’t. His spirit is imprisoned, for he knows he has lost the respect and confidence of his fellow: citizens, even il he still is a big man among his oily associates and in horse race circles. It may be practically impossible to jail a million dollars, but it isn’t impossible to convict a guilty millionaire in the minds of the American public. Sinclair's prison term for his fat body might have been a few years, but the term of the imprisonment of his spirit will last as long as he lives. Bowers for the Democrats. Their jobs will be slightly different this year, rhe senator saying nothing while Mr. Bowers must say everything. Speaking of the newest long dress edict from Paris, isn’t it about time charity covered a multitude of shins?

Planet Jupiter Lifeless No. 46

NO one has yet suggested visiting Jupiter by means of a rocket. Attention, reasonably enough, is concentrated on the moon and the nearer planets. It would be a long journey to Jupiter, some 400,000,000 miles, when the planet was in the most favorable position. Astronomers are not certain just what a visitor to Jupiter would find. They are certain of only one thing,

1 100 t/jCd TELESCOPE at Mr Ic/ilSotJ

hot, and gaze up at a mountain peak which is covered with perpetual snow. Viewed in a telescope, Jupiter is seen to have a grayish-white surface marked with brownish red streaks. Charges in the appearance of the planet are continuous. The olwer views of astronomers were that the planet was surrounded with heavy clouds and that the dark streaks were the surface of the planet, showing through openings in the clouds. The color was taken to mean that the surface of the planet was still hot, perhaps still in a molten state. In 1878 a great red spot, 30,000 miles long and 8,000 miles wide, appeared upon the planet. This was believed to confirm the view that the surface of the planet was still in a molten condition. But recent measurements made with the thermocouple, the electrical thermometer used in taking the temperature of the planets, indicate a temperature of 200 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit. These measurements were made at the Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, Ariz., by’ Doctors Coblentz and Lampland. The only conclusion to be drawn from these measurements is that the planet is very cold. But a third view is possible. The calculated density of the planet is very small and this would lead us to believe that the planet was in a molten condition. It may be that the planet is much smaller than we think and has a molten surface. If this were surrounded by many layers of heavy, dense clouds, the outer layers of these clouds could be as low as 200 below zero and the surface of the planet still redhot. Remember that the temperature of the earth’s atmosphere drops to 60 below zero at a height of seven miles.

KEEPING UP With THE NEWS

BY LUDWELL DENNY TT' FFORTS of Johrl D. Rockefeller, Jr., to oust Chairman Stewart from Standard Oil of Indiana, and demands of Judge Edwin B. ‘Parker that industry “purge itself of pirates,’’ were hailed by national, political and business leaders in Washington today as proof of a. public awakening to the oil scandals. Herbert Hoover’s large presidential primary vote against the successful machine in Indiana, where twenty-two State and party officials have been imprisoned or indicted, was cited by his friends as evidence that this “clean up” movement is spreading among the rank and file. Most of the 2,000 delegates to the United States Chamber of Commerce convention in Washington appeared to resent the discredit cast upon business ethics by the deals of Sinclair, Stewart and other oil men, and enthusiatically welcomed the action of Rockefelller and Parker branding business and political coiTuption. There was similar rejoicing in Congress, where investiagting committees reluctantly weer coming to believe that their crusade had the hostility rather than support of the business world. Senator Walsh (Dem.i, Montana, the Teapot Dome inquisitor, and Senator Nye (Rep.), North Dakota, chairman of the Senate oil probe committee, were the first to commend Rockefeller and Parker. Rockefeller has accepted Stewart’s challenge that their differences over business ethics be fought out before the company board. Explaining his, letters. Rockefeller said: "I have taken the above action because I have lost confidence in Colonel Stewart’s leadership, and believe that the interests of Standard Oil Company of Indiana now can best be served by his resigning. This action should not be construed as a prejudgment on my part as to the issues involved in the legal ■ proceedings now pending.” tt it tt THE LEGAL proceeding referred to is the Washington trial of Stewart, May 21, for contempt of the Senate in refusing to answer questions of the committee regarding his part in the Continental oil deal. When sought by the committee in the winter, Stewart finally was found at an Havana race track and was persuaded by Rockfeller to return. Stewart would not give the committee the details of the deal, but testified that he did not profit personally from it. Later the committee, through tracing Continental bonds to his bank account, discovered that like Sinclair, and the two fugitives in Europe, Blackmer and O’Neil, he got a quarter share of the $3,000,000. Called back to the committee stand, following jury acquittal of Sinclair on the criminal conspiracy Teapot Dome charge, Stewart admitted receiving the money, but claimed to have given it secretly to an employ to keep in trust for his company. it it a DISCOUNTING Senator Watson’s hold upon the Indiana Republican delegation to the national convention, as a result of the Tuesday primary, Herbert Hoover's Washington headquarters praised the secretary’s “remarkable showing of popular strength.” “It was predicted freely at the time of Mr. Hoover’s entry that he would lose every county in the State and be defeated by a majority of 150.000. Instead, he developed a strength which made the contest an exceedingly close one, adding prestige to his candidacy through the revelation that even against a favorite son candidate—backed by a powerful organization which has been years in building., and supported by the combined opposition—he was able to divide almost evenly the vote of the State.” Senator Norbeck (Rep.), South Dakota, voiced the opinion of Hoover enemies that the Indiana vote showed he “is not the candidate approved by agriculture and no candidate can hope to win this year without the farmers’ approval.” n tt tt The long-delayed Mississippi flood control bill has been amended to satisfy the President and is expected to be signed this week.

namely, that he would find conditions under which life would be impossible. . The planet may be boiling hot, it may be icy cold or it may be both. If this sounds paradoxical, please remember that in the tropics it is possible to sit at the foot of a mountain, where the temperature is intolerably

BRIDGE ME ANOTHER (Copyright. 1928. by The Ready Reference Publishing Company) BY W. W. WENTWORTH

(Abbreviations: A—ace: K—king; O—aueen; J—jack; X —any card lower than 10 ) 1. When is it advisable for declarer not to lead trumps? 2. What do you lead against a notrump, partner having bid a suit and you hold three with an honor? 3. Partner not having bid, what do you lead against a suit bid when you hold K J 10 of another suit? The Answers 1. When both declarer and dummy hold singletons or short suits, and trumps can be used in crisscrossing. 2. Lead lowest if honor higher than 10. 3 —J if you have no better suit to play.

This Date in U. S. History

May 10 1503—Columbus discovered the Tortugas Islands. 1770—First town meeting called to resist British aggression met at Abingdon, Mass. 1775—Ethan Allen captured Ft. Ticonderoga. 1775—Second Continental Congress opened in Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia. 1865—Jefferson Davis captured near Irwinsville, Ga.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

\ ND now follows a pagan riot of TV shameless flesh; Jupiter, in the form of a cloud seducing 10, Jupiter, in the form of a Satyr, seducing Antiope; Danae disrobed by curious and frolicsome angels, Love asleep on Venus’ breast. What voluptuous ecstasy here, and yet innocence!—forms too beautiful for safety, and faces as conscience clear as children’s; simple, contented faces, that have never felt the sense of sin, nor the burden of thought; they would have agreed with the young Italian who asked Goethe: “Perche pensa? Pensandos’ invecchia.” "Why do you think? Thinking makes us so old.” Correggio knew neither the cause nor the consequence; nature spared him the curse of consciousness and the indignity of age. He felt too much to think, and produced as the spirit moved him; not without labor, but, as one may see, never without inspiration, which is an inward devil that makes labor sweeter than any rest. And then suddenly, one of those fevers which a jealous nature sends out of the marshes to punish Venice for its beauty, caught him up and snatched him away, aged 40, still in the prime of life and art. But we do not mourn him disconsolate; we feel that no generosity of time oculd have made him more perfect than he was; we are content with what death has left us of him, for we know that not all years will suffice us to understand and absorb him.

'T'O pass from Giorgione and Correggio, who were never older than youth, to Titian, who was born a year earlier than Giorgione and yet outlived him b ytwo generations, Titian, who was born seventeen years before Correggio, and outlived him forty-two years,—this is to pass from adolescence to manhood, from lyric poetry to tragic drama and serene philosophy. Michelangelo was magnificent with his 89 years; but Titian with 99 (14771576—0ne must say of him what Napoleon said on seeing Goethe: “Voila un homme” Tiziano Vecelli, as his country calls him, was born at Cadore, on the road that unites Italy with Tyrol. The landscape and the floating colors of the sky that surrounded him in his youth helped to make him the greatest landscape painter, and the greatest colorist, among all the artists of his inexhaustible race. • In his early pictures (as in the Gypsy Madonna) the mountains play a considerable role; in his old age they will return to his painting, and he wilL cleanse himself of the passions and bitterness that broke down Angelo by contemplating the imperturbable stability of the hills. Titian went to Venice when still a child, and at an early age knew the happiness of following unimpeded his natural vocation. He studied first under Gentile, afterward under Giovanni, Bellini; then he passed to the studio of Giorgione, but his precious skill displeased the master, if we may believe the gossips of the time, and for a while Titian cooled his heels in Padua. In 1513 he received from the authoritives of Venice an invitation to come and superintend all the pictorial work required by them for the adornment of the city; and from then on he never ceased to prosper. He signalized his return to Venice by painting for the Church of the Frari one of his masterpieces, the “Assumption of the Virgin.” It is a perfect example of composition; almost all the lines of vision or motion in the picture meet in the fine full figure of the Madonna, borne upward naturally, as by some inward power, while a thousand rosy children hail her. He fell in with the spirit of Venice, and for a while lived riotously, playing Shakespeare to Pietro Aretino’s Kit Marlowe. Aretino anticipated the morals of the Stuart Restoration in literature and life, loving as loosely as if he had reached a marriageless heaven, and writing prose and poetry as if

Isn’t It Time He Thought of His Own Children

THE STORY OF CIVILIZATION Pagan Riot of Flesh Sweeps Venice

Written for The Times by Will Durant

with a mind to excel all comers in the bravado of immorality. He was a little cleverer than his friend; for in 1525 Titian, „o legitimize an imminent heir, was forced into a hasty marriage. His wife survived the nuptials by only five years but within that time the artist (to reverse an inaccurate phrase) presented her with three children. Titian now settled down to a soberer routine, organized his affairs with some financial skill, made lucrative contracts for painting notables and supplying grain to his native town, and rose to heights of affluence such as only Reubens, in the history of painting, was to know again. tt tt tt MEANWHILE he had found time. amid his lusty living, to paint religious pictures never surpassed before or since, except by the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The figures he made reflected the abundance of his spirit: here, for example, in the "Madonna with Cherries,” the mother is no modern sylph or wasp, but a woman of rich proportions, robust and ruddy; and that boy with the blonde curls at the right will grow up to be just as powerful a man as the old shepherd at the left; how can one stop looking at this picture? So it is again with the “Pesaro" Madonna; and here the wealth of

Questions and Answers

You can get an answer to any answerable question ot tact or Information by writing to Frederick M. Kerby. Question Editor, The Indianapolis Times. Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Ave., Washington. D. C„ enclosing two cents In stamps for reply. Medical and legal advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be made. All other Questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letcrs are confidential. You ore cordially invited to make use of this free service as often as vou please. EDITOR. What will remove painted pictures from a slicker? If the slicker is rubber coated it is likely that the paint cannot be removed without seriously injuring the fabric. It may be possible to spot the paint-stain with carbon tetra-chloride and remove it by very careful manipulation. There are some soaps containing carbon tetra-chloride which are very useful for this purpose. They may be obtained from any dry cleaning supply concern. Who invented or conceived the notes and scales used in music? The first attempts to write music date back to the days of ancient Babylonia and Egypt. The Greeks

WIA I V OIF | F

1. The idea of letter golf is to change one word to another and do it in par, or a given number of strokes. Thus, to change COW to HEN in three strokes, COW, HOW, HEW, HEN. 2. You can change only one letter at a time. 3. You must have a complete word of common usage for each jump. Slang words and abbreviations don’t count. 4. The order of letters can not be changed.

Ml U I S I El~ MUST M O S T~ _p__o _s_x P ~0 E T

coloring carries out the amplitude of design, so that Gronau considers it “the most important composition that Titian ever produced.” Once more Titian tells the story of Christ. In a simple picture of great power the master answers with a clear vision that only seems to be subtlety the cititzens who sought to trap him with the coin of the realm and the problems of loyalities; no man on the street could be more real than the wrinkled tempter. In “The Crowning With Thorns” the coloring is Venetian Rembrandtesque: brilliant yellow and green flung against a dark background that makes these terrible figures more terrible.

Then “Christ Is Carrying the Cross,” and Simon of Cyrene as magnificent in age as Christ is in youth, helps to bear the burden, which seems so real in the rough texture of the wood that its weight oppresses us as we look. Never in painting has death been made more vivid than in “The Entombment”; the flesh of the crucified leader is bled white, and every muscle is limp; while Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea hold him up with arms and legs as strong as oaks, and Magdalen, already old with sorrow, supports the failing mother. (Copyright. 1928. by Will Durant) (To Be Continued)

used an alphabetical notation. Roman letters were first used in the sixth century A. D. In the tenth century Huebald conceived the idea of using lines. Franco of Cologne used notes instead of dots, in the twelfth century. Thus notation in music has been a gradual development. How did prohibition become a law of the land and did President Wilson veto the Volstead bill? Nation-wide prohibition as a fundamental law of the land was established by the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States which was ratified by three-fourths of the States. President Wilson vetoed the Volstead bill which was the prohibition enforcement act, Sept. 27 1919, and Congress passed it over his veto. What is the oath taken by the President of the United States? “I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.’ Are children bom of alien parents in the United States American citizens? They are natural born citizens of the United States in spite of the fact that their parents were not citizens at the time they were born. What is the number of millionaires in the United States now compared to 1850? In 1855 there were twenty-seven millionaires with William B. Astor at the head of the list. In 1914 there were probably about 4,500 millionaires in the United States. This number increased to about 6,000 in 1915, to about 10,900 in 1916, to about 11,800 in 1917, the maximum number of American millionaires at any one time, probably due to war inflation. At present there are probably about 11,000 millionaires in thsi country. When and where did Empress Elizabeth, wife of Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary, die? While on a visit to Geneva, Switzerland, she was stabbed, Sept. 10, 1898, by Luccheni, an Italian anarchist, and died a few minutes afterwards.

Daily Thought

Set thine he use in order—lsaiah 38:1. tt tt tt GOOD order is the foundation of all things.—Burke.

MAY 10, 1928

M. h\ TRA C Y, SAYS: “Secretary Hoover Loses, but With Such a Splendid Showing It Makes His Defeat Look Very Much Like a Triumph."

EVERYBODY said that Indiana would throw a clear light on the Republican situation and that after the returns had come in from that State it would be easy to tell what was likely to happen at Kansas City, especially with regard to Secretary Hoover. Well, Indiana has strutted her stuff, and who is the wiser? Senator Watson wins, but by such a narrow margin as dauses mm and his crowd to still shiver. Hoover loses, but with such a spiendid showing as makes his defeat look very much like a triumph. Since both sides are cheering, it . is difficult to regard the verdict otherwise than Scotch. b b a Need Democratic Rule From a local standpoint, Indiana leaves less room for doubt. What the State needs is a Democratic administration, not because Indiana Democrats are spiritually superior to their Republican brethren, but because housecleaning is called for, and anew broom sweeps clean. The Republican party of Indiana has shown itself unable, or unwilling to throw off the yoke of a Klanridden machine. To argue whether it is proud, or scared of tar bucket rule, were a waste of time. The thing to do is turn it out and give it a chance to contemplate its misconduct in the atmosphere of calm and complete retirement. a tt -Klan and Corruption Indiana and Alabama apear to be the last two States content with pillow-slip politics. One turns down Hoover; the other turns down Smith. Both gentlemen are to be congratulated on the kind of antagonism they have aroused. An American leader could be paid no higher compliment today than to have the Ku-Klux Klan and the crookedness which appears to form an inescapable part of Its political adventuring against him. Not that the Ku-Klux Klan is responsible for all the crookedness and corruption from which we suffer, but that they seem “to seek It as naturally as ducks seek water. tt tt a Plagued by Fraud As has been said a thousand times during the last few months, crookedness and corruption have become the paramount issue not only of this campaign, but throughout our social and political structure. America is plagued by lying, deceit, fraud and graft as never before. Public office is prostituted, the oath has lost its meaning and contempt for law has not only grown widespread, but is to be found among our “best’ ’people. The ignorance of juries, the windjamming of lawyers and the red tape of our judicial system combine to help along the demoralizing work. a tt tt Thanks tc John D, We have come to a point where we must fall back on what society has always found it necessary to fall back on in such emergencies, and that is the sense of common honesty which survives in the hearts of upright men and women, regardless of fad or foible. Jol.v D. Rockefeller, Jr., proves how thiSTan be made to work by requesting Col. Robert W. Stewart to resign as chairman of the board of directors of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. Though facing the possibility of being charged with contempt because of his conduct before the Senate investigating committee, Colonel Stewart appears to have eluded the law in spite of the fact that he told two stories under oath which did not and could not square with each other. If our system of justice is powerless to deal with such cases, we have no choice but to seek other means, and Rockefeller is to be commended for showing the way. tt a u Drunkeness of Power If the Chinese Nationalists fcould hold up their end of it, this would . be war. The one hope of avoiding a real conflict consists in the fact that they have beaten themselves at the very outset by starting more than they could flinish. They have not only brought Japan into the fray, but have turned millions of their own people against them by such a course of folly as is plain on ts face. Though successful during the last few months, they still had enough on their hands to overcome the Pekin government. One wonders what made them so drunk with power that they should have provoked Japan to enter the lists against them at such a critical moment. Now they have no alternative but to knuckle under, or take the beating of their lives, with consequences that may effect the destiny of their country for the next 100 years. If it was liberty they sought, they certainly chose a peculiar method. tt tt tt Carol Ordered Out As though the explosion in China were not enough, Rumania breaks out again with a peasant revolt which is evidently too formidable for the censor to let the rest, of the world know the truth about it. Prince Carol biding his time and watching his chance, as is the habit of Princes who throw away their thrones in a mementos calf ldve. pleads for permission to stay-in England just a little longer. England, wise in the ways of such Princes, and just as wise in the ways politicians make use of them, decides that Carol’s room is better than his company. England wants no additional trouble in the Near East right now.