Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1928 — Page 6
PAGE 6
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Enforcing Prohibition
Announcement that the civil service commission will get some easier tests for those who aspire to jobs as prohibition agents is just another indication of the whole ghastly lareo which has been made of this law. The blame for the failure to enforce was believed by very many to be due to the fact that the prohibition agents received their positions from Senators and formed a part of the political machine. It will be remembered that the Indiana statesman, Senator Watson, declared on the floor of the Senate that you could not separate politics and prohibition. Asa result the last Congress enacted a law placing the department under civil service. Theoretically a man must now show some qualification for the job, other than servility to a Senator. Taeoretically, also, any man who was unfit and placed there by a Senator is to be replaced by someone qualified for the job. Examinations were held with the result that a large number of those who were given these jobs as reward for political services failed to pass the tests. These agents who failed, for the most part, still hold their jobs. One of these agents in this State hangs to his job. He was quite im portant in the last primary campaign. Me took a two weeks’ vacation from detecting violators to pal around and line up votes for Watson and Robinson. Just where he palled .the most can be readily understood and in fact is known. It is a matter of record also that the head of the prohibition forces in this State is among those who did not pass the tests. It is also a matter of record that there is an outstanding citizen of the State with i very fine record of official duty as chief of police in a northern city, who did pass. It is a matter of common knowledge that many agents, especially those who did not pass, are spending considerable time to bring pressure against any change. Now it is announced that new tests, so easy that any one can pass, will be given by the civil service examiners. The frank purpose is to permit the agents picked by political Senators for political purposes to remain on their jobs, protecting the “right” bootleggers, punishing those Vho vote wrong and seeing that the machine is well oiled. Two years ago a newspaper reporter, drawing S4O a week, left his ivork to become a prohibition agent at the same salary. This happened in a border city. Today he rides in a Pierce-ArroAv and has built a $30,000 home. When such things happen, an honest effort to enforce prohibition might seem to demand that the tests for agents be more strict instead of so mild that any political pet of a Senator can pass. Modern Symbols of Peace The scriptural prophet of old sang of a day when men would beat their swords into plowshares. Something rather like that, in a modern way, has just been happening in the United States. When the World War ended the government had on hand large stocks of. an explosive called pyrotol. It had been made for killing Germans; the end of the war of course made it a useless commodity. So the government began selling It to western farmers who had cut-over forest lands to clear. Thus the pyrotol that was made to kill men was used for blasting stumps ami rocks out of fields so that men might raise wheat and corn. That is the modern version of beating swords into plowshares. Yugoslavian Earnestness Some people don’t deserve parliaments. They take things too seriously, too earnestly. There have been times in our Congress when Representatives or Senators have been so wrought up in their arguments with each other that it looked as if they were going to jump at each other’s throats. And then a half hour later they were to be found in one of the Congressional restaurants peacefully sitting side by side eating ham and—. That’s civilization! The other side of the picture is this. In Yugoslavia a Serb deputy got so violently angry at some crotian opponents that he pulled a revolver, killed two and wounded four others. That’s the reverse of civilization. It is being earnest with a vengeance. Imagine what would happen in Washington if, the Republicans took the Democrats thus seriously.. Or vice versa. The Soda Fountain And now the soda fountain, once the despair of dietitians and health authorities, comes in for a pat on the back. Writing in Good Housekeeping, Dr. Walter H. Eddy, of Columbia University, says that the soda fountain is now an asset to the national health, whereas a few years ago it was considered a detriment. The reason? We are learning what to drink. Fountain sales show an increasing consumption of pure fruit Juice and milk drinks in place of the artificially flavored, more or less mysterious concoctions of a generation ago. The change is good for us. It is helping to balance our diet. The stenographer who drops in at a drug store for a lunch of chocolate malted milk and a sandwich is wiser, apparently, than some people think. Federal Reserve Policy At the outset of the presidential campaign, the Federal reserve banking system, with financial power, Lenough to make and break presidents, finds itself In an Extremely .ticklish situation. In the commendable effort to reduce the enormous
Times (A SCREPPS-HOWARD 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—l 2 cents a week. BOYD GURLEY. ROY W. HOWARD. FRANK G. MORRISON. Editor. President. Business Manager. „ PHONE—RILEY 5551. FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1928. Member ot 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.”
volume of commercial credit being used for stock market speculation, the reserve banking system has tightened up credit. If this policy is continued, it is only a question of a relatively short time until there will be formidable ccmplaint from business groups demanding lower interest rates on credit to finance production and crop movements. When that time comes, as it is certain to come, the Federal reserve system will be faced with the momentous decision of loosening up credit to accommodate business and at the same time encouraging an already overdone speculative stock market, or ignoring complaints and keeping a tight hold on the credit situation. No matter what the system does, it is almost certain to come in for a lot of criticism. But by far the easier course for the moment will be to loosen its grip on the pursestrings of the country, and usher in a period of abundant credit. Effects of such a policy probably would not be felt until after the election, but then they would be somewhat akin to waking up after a jag. So far this year the reserve board has shown a fine independence of expediency by following a necessarily “tight money” course. Will this pfolicy continue during the campaign under what is certain to be a terrific pressure for easy credit? The answer to this question—one of the most difficult with which the reserve system has been faced—may have a vital bearing upon the future of the banking system as a financial agency independent of politics. Correcting a Court The Federal Court of Appeals in Chicago has granted citizenship to Madame Rosika-Schwimmer, once a well-known Hungarian pacifist leader and a cabinet minister in the liberal Karolyi government. A lower court had refused her application because of her pacifist views, the judge having asked her a number of hypothetical questions. “The duties of citizenship do not require the correct answers to conundrums,” the appeals court remarked. The high court’s ruling is a victory for justice and commonsense. We hold no brief for pacifists, but no judge has a right to penalize a person for the opinions he holds, and there is nothing in the American system that contemplates that a judge should be able to assume this authority. It is no crime to advocate the abolition of war. If | ever the age-long dream of universal peace is realized, it will be because leaders like Madame Schwimmer have preached war’s futility and cruelty, and, have sought to learn and eradicate its causes. Madame Schwimmer may be an extremist, but she is just as much entitled to her views—and her right to express them—as those who preach that war is inevitable, and that the only way to avoid it is to build increasingly large military establishments. One of the great advantages of sitting in the j grand stand is that you can tell the players what to do without knowing a thing about it yourself. Wonder if the newest Kellogg plan for outlawing war has any reference to the possible necessity of aggressive defense? We are disappointed. Neither the Democratic nor Republican platforms made a single promise about the elimination of political oratory. A small town newspaper is one in which the editor casually makes the occasional remark that “consid- i erable humidity has been mingled in the local atmosphere the last few days. Judging by the smile Mrs. A1 Smith, has been wearing in her recent pictures, A1 probably can throw ashes on the rug at home now any time he wants to.
-David Dietz on Science-
Cynosure: A Dog’s-Tail
No. 95
THE LITTLE DIPPER furnishes the foundation for the constellation of the Little Bear, just as the Great Dipper did for the Great Bear. And as in the case of the Great Bear, you must draw rather heavily upon your imagination to see the figure of a bear in the sky in this constellation. The accompanying illustration shows how the Little Dipper and some neighboring stars are supposed to fit into the figure of the bear. With the telescope it is possible to see about thirty stars in this constellation, but only.a few are
V THE LITTLE BEAR
thoe gods, loved Callisto. Juno, queen of the gods, became jealous and turned her into a bear. Her son, Areas, not recognizing her, was about to kill her. So Jupiter turned him into a bear also and placed both of them in the sky, Callisto becoming the constellation of the Great Bear and Areas the Little Bear. The constellation, however, was not always regarded as a bear. The ancient Babylonians called it “The Leopard,” and the Egyptians “The Dog of Set.” Set was one of the Egyptian gods, the god of the inhospitable desert. The Egyptians also called the constellation “The Jackal.” In Denderah, on the left bank of the Nile, stands one of the best preserved and most beautiful of the temples of ancient Egypt. Many constellations are pictured on its walls and among them is the Jackal. The constellation is also represented as a jackal in the Rameseum, the temple built by Rameses II on the west bank of the Nile. The Greeks at times must have thought of the constellation as a dog since they called the north star "Cynosura,” which means “the dog's tail.” Our modern word “cynosure” comes from this word. Mariners always turned their eyes to the north star and therefore anything which was the center of all eyes became known as a cynosure.
M. E. TRACY SAYS: “If Gang Leaders Are' Going to Their Rest in Silver-Plated Coffins and Beneath a Wilderness of Flowers, Why Bother to Teach the Advantages of a Moral and Upright Lifer
THE anomolies of life are what make it interesting—the dreams that send youth in search of queer adventures; the successes that sour; the failures that leal to fame; the “mercy murders,” benevolent crimes and stunts on the lunatic fringe. Jean Lussier goes over Niagara Falls in a rubber ball; Capt. Alfred Loewenstein walks out of an airplane flying over the English Channel; Frankie Uale, the New York “racketeer,” is given a $25,000 funeral; Captain Ferrarin and Major Delprete break all records for speed, distance and endurance in transoceanic flights and the glorious Fourth sees 200 human beings sacrificed to the god of whoopla. Those millions who wind the clock, put out the cat, eat what their wives cook and pretend to like it, believe in the Ten Commandments and mind their own business still lack a press agent, but they furnish an audience, if nothing else, and what would there be in it for the stunt artist, the stock speculator, or the gang leader, if they did not make the wheels go round. Mediocrity, as we call it, plays a large and important part in the show, furnishing the cash, as well as the applause, and offering the one valid excuse for men to seek the spotlight. tt tt tt Call to Fame It is still a debatable question of whether the mass mind dances to the tune of individual leadership or whether individual leadership merely represents reaction to the mass mind. Jean Lussier saw Bobby Leach go over Niagara Falls in a steel barrel | seventeen years ago. To the thousands of other spectators it was just one more thriller, but to him it was an inspiration. From that moment life held anew meaning. He, too, would do this wonderful thing. That was it that clicked in his brain, and why didn’t the same thing click in other brains? Why, of all that vast multitude should he alone see the vision that Bobby Leach had seen and that Annie Edson Taylor had seen ten years before? Most of us hunger for a call over the footlights at one time i or another, but seldom to the -extent of such gamble with death, and seldom for more than a few weeks or a few months. a an $7,000 for Plunge The cheers of the crowd stayed with Jean Lussier, changing his career, setting up anew goal to be attained, breeding visions of fame and fortune, he, too, would do this wonderful thing, but in a better way. For seventeen years he worked and planned, saving, experimenting, dreaming. It cost him $7,000, we are told, and many sleepless nights to make ready for the great adventure; for a fiftyminute gamble with death; for a few headlines in the papers, and a hope of cash returns. Bobby Leach died two years ago from a broken leg, which he suffered by stepping on an orange peel and Annie Edson Taylor died In a poorhouse. They, also, had visions when they went over Niagara Falls. a tt a Mystery of Success With all our speculating and philosophizing we have not agreed on what constitutes success. Fame often does not look the same to the man, who has won it as he thought it would and often does not bring the hoped-for happiness. Capt. Alfred Loewenstein, said to be the third wealthiest man In the world, drops out of an airplane over the English Channel. His friends say it was an accident due to absent-mir.dness, while French authorities are inclined to regard it as a case of suicide. Neither of these conclusions is satisfactory. One does not like to think that such a shrewd, alert financier could so far forget himself as to push a door open against a hundred mile wind without realizing what he was doing, and one certainly does not like to think that his remarkable career had brought him such little satisfaction that he found life no longer worth while. o a it Vice Uses Charity The riddle of success finds no better solution at the grave than at the cradle. If the dreams of youth rise before us in confused contradiction, the weeping of mourners offers no clearer answer. John A. Dix, former Governor of New York, died not so long ago and there were pitifully few to bid him farewell, but Frankie Uale, gang leader, “racketeer” and overlord of the underworld, draws 15,000 around his bier. If gang leaders are going to their rest in silver-plated coffins and beneath a wilderness of flowers, why bother to teach the advantages of a moral a<rl upright life? He gave to the they say, which is just a repetition of the Robin Hood legend. Graft and greed always have found their most plausible excuse in ostentatious philanthropy. That is why it Is so hard to convict liberal-handed millionaires or make the poor believe that the thug who gives them coal is not a thug. Charity, as the good book says, is the greatest of all the virtues, but vice is doubly wise in using it as a cloak. Is there anything that one car put on the finger nails to help break the habit of biting them? Paste adhesive tape over them for a whiie. ,__ u _l
visible to the unaided eye. The bowl of the dipper forms the flank of the bear and the handle of the dipper, the bear's tail. Polaris, the north star, is at the tip of the tail. According to the Greek legend, the Little Bear is Areas, the son of the beautiful nymph, Callisto. Jupiter, king ol
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN, Editor Journal of the American Medical Association atid of Hygeia, the Health Magazine. EVERY dietitian npw knows that it is not only the food that must be considered in the preparation of suitable diets both for the sick and the well, but also the manner in which the food is prepared. It is a common proverb among housewives that a good cook can do wonders even with poor material, and that some women can not even boil water correctly. A few modern flappers take pride in their lack of knowledge of cooking. But the old proverb that the road to the heart is by way of the stomach, still holds good. Innumerable cook books are available for every woman who wishes to improve herself in the culinary art. An unusual, volume just issued by
(Abbreviations: A—ace; K—kin*: Q—queen; J—jack; X —any card lower than 10.) WHEN you possess the minimum of “normal expectancy” or less, it behooves you to furnish your partner with information as follows: 1. When holding minimum normal support as X X X or A X or K X In trumps, bid other major only if It is better than an original bid. 2. When holding Q X in trumps, bid (a) other major if as good as original bid or (b) no trump with two other suits stopped and total hand worth at least two quick tricks. 3. When holding less than Q X bid (a) any suit as good afc K Q X X X or (b) a no trump if two other suits are stopped and worth more than one quick trick. Examples of third-hand bids follow. In each instance the third hand is depicted, and in each instance partner has bid one club. The best bid for third hand is shown. Spades X X; hearts A Q X X X; diamonds XXX; clubs XXX. Hand is as good as a defensive bid. Game can more readily be made in a major suit than a minor. Bid one heart. Spades X X; hearts A X X; diamonds A Q X X X; clubs XXX. Hand contains sufficient strength for a defensive diamond bid. It also contains a stop in hearts. Game can more readily be made at no trump. Bid one no trump. Spades X X X X; hearts K Q X X; diamonds K X X; clubs Q X. Hand contains two suits other than clubs stopped. It is worth more than one quick trick. Bid one no trump. Spades X X X X; hearts J X X; diamonds A K X X; clubs X X. Hand contains sufficient strength Cora defensive diamond bid. It does not contain a stop in any other suit. Your partner did not bid a no trump because his hand may contain a singleton in diamonds. With the information obtained from you; he may enthusiastically return to a no trump bid. Therefore bid one diamond. (Copyright, 1928. bv the Ready Reference Publishing Company)
July 6 1747—Birthday of John Paul Jones, naval hero. 1785—Congress establishe a standard dollar. 1837—Texas sent an ambassador to Washington. 1837—First political convention to use the name “Republican” met in Detroit. 1901—Philippine General Bellarmino surrendered to United States troops. 1912—General Federation of Womclubs in convention in San Francisco refused to endorse woman suffrage.
Some Folks Have All the Luck
It’s Not Only Food, But How Its Cooked
Bridge Play Made Easy BY W. W. WENTWORTH
This Date in U. S. History
DAILY HEALTH SERVICE
the University of Chicago Press, under the authoriship of Evelyn G. Halliday and Isabel T. Noble of the home economics department of the university, considers the matter of cooking primarily from the standpoint of successful cooking, and the general principles governing this art rather than primarily through the provision of recipes and formulas. For instance, the authors point out that cabbage, which is especially rich in vitamines, cheap and available most of the year, is usually ruined in cooking. The raw cabbage itself has a beautiful color and a slightly biting flavor. For this reason almost every one enjoys cole slaw. However, many cooks boil cabbage so that the disagreeable odor penetrates to the farthest corner of the house, and the food as served has a brown and unappetizing appearance.
Times Readers Voice Views
The name and address of the author mu(t accompany every contribution, but on request will not be published. Letters not exceeding 200 words will receive preference.
Editor Times—The thing that makes A1 Smith the champion of the cause of the common people is the fact that he is not afraid to express himself, openly and honestly, on any question of vital importance that concer is the welfare of the people as he sees it. No pussyfooting and indulging in “weasel words” for him. He stands four-square on principle and speaks his mind, even though such an exalted station as the presidency of the United States is at stake. What constitutes honesty and sincerity of purpose? To dodge and skulk and evade? There has been too much of this, since prohibition. Miserable pussyfooters, drinking one way and preaching and voting another, performing mere lip service in the presence of the so-called “anointed” and then going clear over, bag and baggage, to the opposite side on the sly and undercover, even plaguing the devil with their duplicity and deception and hypocrisy. No hypocrisy and deceit for Governor Smith. He is the one shining example today of an honest man. committed to the truth for the truth’s sake, though the heavens fall. You know just where to find him. You know exactly where he stands and what he represents. You do not have to guess and fear and doubt. He challenges the modern-day concept of what constitutes political expediency and policy by freely speaking his mind in the face of the most intolerant opposition this country has ever seen. Is it any wonder that a man possessed of those faculties and devoted to the principles of justice and truth, as he sees them, has strength and power and character? In this he more than typifies that which the whole world loves in revering the memory of the immortal Lincoln—the courage to stand for the truth as he sees it, regardless of the consequences, and to let the chips fall where they may. This is what ennobles and characterizes Alfred E. Smith and endears him to his fellow man. Would to God there were more like him! EDWIN C. BROWN. Editor Times—l have a little argument that I would like the reporter to hear who wrote the article on the J. E. Hugg road in your noon edition Tuesday. He is all wet about being fifty remonstrators on that road. There are only nineteen, if that many are left on it, because some of them withdrew a few days ago. The people fighting the road live up at Castleton and Oaklandon, and do not live on the road. All that they want is a school for some of the Negley followers, so they can get jobs. I You cannot call the farmers along
What applies to cabbage applies equally well to brussels sprouts and other foods of the cabbage family. Overcooking results in disintegration and destruction of many of the valuable qualities. Correct cooking by dropping into a large amount of rapidly boiling water and cooking only to the point of tenderness results in food of beautiful appearance and excellent taste. A special section of the book deals with the methods of preserving the color of the other vegetables. The nurse who primarily is concerned with presenting food to the patient so that the appetizing appearance and taste will be indicated especially will appreciate the wide dissemination of the knowledge that this book contains. In general, green vegetables can not be cooked in a steamer or pressure cooker without loss of color. The exception is spinach.
that road real estate promoters, not by a long shot, and not a promoter’s name is on the list for improvements, and the people who do not want improvements are dead and nothing more. The leader, Mr. McCormack, has no children, and so the school would not do his family any good, unless he needs it himself and I believe he does? So here is looking forward to getting anew road for Shadeland Ave. S. J. WILDRIDGE. • Editor Times: The old party conventions are past and now comes the hurrah time. But there are a good many dissatisfied ones in both camps and many are saying, “I won’t do this” and “I won’t do that.” Just hold a little bit. Don’t you know the best comes last? The Prohibition party will hold its national convention in Chicago at the LaSalle Hotel on July 10, at 10 a. m., and the proceedings will be broadcast by radio station WMAQ. Be sure to hear it and there is no law to prevent voting that ticket if you don’t like the others. J. E. THOMPSON. Mooresville, Ind.
Questions and Answers
You can get an answer to any answerable question of fact or information by writing to Frederick M. Kerby, Question Editor, The Indianapolis Times' Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.. enc.osine 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical and legal advice cannot be given, nor can extrided research be made. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters art confidential. You are cordinally invited to make use of this free service as often as you please. EDITOR. Who played the part of the grown-up son in the motion picture “Serrel and Son?” Nils Asther. Are chemicals used by fiire departments mixed at the scene of the fire or before? The usual practice is to mix with the soda and water at the fire house, but the acid is contained in a closed compartment and is not dumped into the soda and water until the fire is reached. Where and when was Gilda Gray born? In Krakow, Polan, in 1900. What is the value of a 20-cent piece dffted 1875 with the “S” mint mark? Collectors value them at 25 to 30 cents. What nationality is a child born on a ship in the middle of the ocean? The same nationality as its parents. What Is a play broker? A person who negotiates the sale of plays for writers to producers for a commission.
JULY 6, 1928
KEEPING UP With THE NEWS
BY LUDWELL DENNY WASHINGTON, July 6—Republican leaders arriving in Washington tor the Hoover campaign pow wow Saturday base their hope of November victory on the G. O. P. slogan of the “Pull Dinner Pail.” When all is said and done about prohibition, farm relief, political corruption, the power trust and other issues now in the public mind, the Republican bosses think the majority of voters will cast a Hoover ballot on the belief—which the Democrats call a benighted' supersition—that a Republican tration is “good for businqtWA G. O. P. scouts from of the country, mclurtinlgfcSjWj Democratic districts as Texas and the industrial 1 North Carolina, report more responsive to this prosperity appeal than any campaign talk. Hokum, reply the Democratic 1 leaders. Present Republican prosperity is a snare and delusion, with the farmers hard hit and almost 5,000,000 industrial workers out of jobs, they say. But the fact that the Democratic platform was unusually easy on the protective tariff is interpreted by observers as indicating the minority party strategists are sensitive to the Republican prosperity claims whether such claims are based on fact or merely “propaganda of old superstitions.” a a a GETTING away from the politicians with their partisan claims on this delicate subject of present business conditions, one finds the banks, the economists and the Government experts also somewhat at odds. But perhaps the opinion of the more objective group of experts is pretty well represented by a statement of the National City Bank of Nbw York. That bank says: “The half-year which has closed neither has justified the apprehen- | sion of those who feared that it was j leading the country into a serious I depression nor realized the expectations of the sanguine ones who thought it likely to make anew prosperity record. “If assurance could have been given that the production of steel would surpass that of 1927 or 1926, that building operations would outstrip those of the corresponding period of last year and that the automobile industry would stage a come-back, the general opinion would have been that a good year was in prospect. These are the outstanding features of the period, and they imply general industrial activity.” Bradstreet shows a gain in national building permits of 6.8 per cent in May, compared with a year ago. The National Association of Real Estate Boards reports greater activity in that business in more than one-third of the cities of the country’ than a year ago, a third in : which business is about the same | as last year, and less than a third with decreased market. The National Lumber Manufacturers’ Association reports that industry has rarely been in a more favorable position. a u According to the Federal Reserve Board: “Industrial production continued during May in about the same volume as in the three preceding months. Wholesale and retail trade increased in May and the general level of commodity prices showed a further advance. “Security loans of member banks, which were in record volume in May, declined during the first three weeks in June. Conditions in the money market remained firm.” The general level of wholesale commodity prices, as indicated by the bureau of labor statistics index, increased in May by more than one per cent to 98.6 per cent of the 1926 average, the highest figure recorded for any month since October 1926. The largest advance in May, as in April, occurred in farm and foods. aaa _ “AT 145 the KcnerajwgftjpijnL farm prices on fificen points above JuneTjPjfiSp'f ago, but declined three poimP**fsEM May 15 this year,” according to tWjS Department of Agriculture. 1909-1914 average is used as a bn of 100. Prices of practically all commJM| ities included in the index from the middle of May to th!™S middle of June, grains going down eight points, fruits and vegetables thirteen points, meat animals one point, dairy products two points, and cotton and cotton seed four points. Reasons why the United States i Chamber of Commerce can not share i the current pessimism of "those predict peasantry for our farmers,*2® as given by President ButterwortArfj of the chamber to the annu l meiqnp! ing of the American Society of cultural Engineers, follows: JrßpoT “The explanation is that wsPtlflSf had a reduction (in eight more than 12,000,000 acres culture's production plant; ofjEfc&fcPf cent in its population, yet gate crop production has creased nearly 5 per cent, duction of our animal units creased 15 per cent end the tivity of each farm worker lm\ -\vs2 creased about 15 per cent." Industrial imemploymcntflfffc,ffel union workers in t vronty-fiJRxJ* sentative cities fell cent in April to 13 per ceJfcft&'Aj?'-?’. the Ainev.in 1 'em -a;;<•>: announces. | Did You Chicken or Lgg; All life on the globe wjv f sumed to be derived fPft^;*. ( celled animalculae. It '|| therefore, that all life S Horn colls or eggs. The birfU■ ; C>.,other forms, go back to | simpler forms. In this seiß**?*-'" fore, the "egg came firsfß}%T-v':i
