Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 191, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1928 — Page 4

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1928-1929 When the future historian evaluates our age, he is apt to mark the year 1928 as epochal in science and material progress, but puzzle over the negligible social and cultural development. There is plenty of evidence tha f invention and discovery now enable us to do many things which a year ago would have seemed impossible or miraculous. But the advance in physical sciences ha£ not been accompanied by similar progress in the arts, in education, in social engineering, in administration of justice, in mechanics of government, nor in international organization. Here are some of the advances of the year listed by Science Service: “Anew and larger looking glass for the heavens, sight by radio and sound by film, elemental creation discovered in outer space and signaled to earth by smic rays, 5,000,000 volts of electricity developed, ancient civilizations discovered, and the center of our universe located,, flying made safer by new airplane designs, artificial fevers attacking other diseases.” In the business field there has been increased production, increased distribution, increased speculation. The “value” of Wall street stocks has increased almost eight and a half billion dollars. Mergers, "chains,” and “associations” are increasing the size of industrial,, commercial and financial units. Competition is diminishing within individual industries and increasing between industries, as the business problem shifts from bigger production to bigger consumption. Prosperity is relative. There are high prices, high wages, high dividends. But several million workers are unemployed or working part time, exact statistics not existing. Child labor still is the rule in many states. No cure has been found for our sick basic industries such as coal and textiles, and little relief has been afforded agriculture. Improvements are lacking in our cumbersome 1 judicial machinery. *' The injunction evil still flourishes against labor. J Civil liberties are violated by lawless police and judges. ' The welcome reduction of lynching should be observed ■ 'as an exception. Sectarian bigotry has gained through misuse of a political campaign. 1 In national prohibition the major social experiment of our time, there is further breakdown of enforcement and loss of morale, without a willingness ;,of a majority of the people to face the facts. The year saw continued failure to cope with gov- > crnmental problems, such as needed reorganization of ■ executive departments, abolition of lame-duck sessions of congress, and restraint of presidential usurpation !iof congressional power over independent federal com- | missions and the right of congress to pass upon "American war activities, as in Nicaragua. < There has been a distinct retrogression internationally. While eastern nations, such as China, turkey and Russia have consolidated nationalist gains, -the middle east and Europe are less stable politically. (Revolt grows in Afghanistan, Jugo-Slavia, Bulgaria and Hungary. Mussolini in Italy becomes more militaristic. French ■ relations with Italy and with Germany are disquieting. The Locarno spirit has been tarnished by the Anglo-French “alliance.” The League of Nations has lost moral prestige by continued postponement of disarmament meetings. Official friendship between the United States and Great Britain is at the lowest point in many decades. Shipping and trade rivalries are added to raw material conflicts over rubber and oil. Naval competition is being revived, following failure of the Coolidge Geneva conference and the Anglo-Ejfrnch naval agreement penalizing the United States. During the entire year, London has held up the new arbitration treaty with America, which other nations have signed gladly. While twelve months ago our foreign problems were in Mexico, Nicaragua and China, they have shifted now to Great Britain, and have become correspondingly more serious. Despite national and international failures of the new year offers the promise at least of Better things. Another expert commission is to formulate anew reparations plan, which may speed financial stabilization of Europe, French evacuation of the Rhineland, and readjustment of war debts. The League of Nations has called another disarmament meeting. A Pan-American conference in Washington, after heading off a Paraguayan-Bolivian war, is projecting arbitration and conciliation treaties for the American republics. The Kellogg treaty, with fifty-nine nations renouncing war as an instrument of .national policy, threatened by senate delay and nullification, probably yet will be ratified unconditionally. The foreign problems of Anglo-American rivalry and American imperialistic tendencies, and the national problems of prohibition, industrial maladjustment, and unemployment, farm relief, governmental reorganization and civil liberties, remain. In the main, the American people during the coming year must trust to Herbert Hoover for solutions. Hoover has been chosen chief of state by a record majority. By training and experience he is fitted uniquely for the task. If Hoover fulfills the hope of the American people, 1929 should add the social and political progress which failed to accompany the scientific and material achievements of 1928. The Primary In Danger Finally the dream of the politicians to stifle any voice of the people in their own government is in a fair way to be realized. The platform plank, so called, of abolishing the primary for state officials is the one on which politicians ox both parties center their attention and which they profess to be most eager to redeem. Os course, the people never expressed any opinion , about the matter. It was not an issue in caml paign. It was not discussed nor debated. No candidate had the nerve to suggest that the people who him did not have the sense to know what ■they were doing and needed political guardians. I The plank was written by politicians, who know ■what they want, and the election was largely decided iiy the personalities of Hoover and Smith, without ■•egard to any state issue of any kind. ■ That the primary law, as it stands, has its defects Hnd is not ideal, may be readily conceded. ■ But those defects do not come from any grant of Hiwer to the people. It comes from too little power. Hr office is a costly matter. That could be easily

The Indianapolis Times (A BCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 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 Wff FRANK G. MORRISON, Editor. President. Business Manager. PHONE— RILEY 5531. . MONDAY. DEC. 31. 1928. Member of United Press, Scripns Howard Newspaper Alliance. Newspaper Enterprise Association, Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way.”

corrected. It is most costly to the most undesirable. A real return to democratic government by the people could be obtained by a shorter ballot and a revision of powers and authority of state officials. That could come only from a constitutional convention. But until that happens, the destruction of the primary can only result In turning over the control of government to those who make a business and a livelihood from politics. The primary, bad as it may be, is still better than a convention. It requires only a very brief memory to recall what happened in the last state Republican convention. That ought to prove .something. The last election strongly indicated that the state of Indiana is a one-party state. It is as much a one-party state as is Mississippi. The only chance for any party of opposition to operate is in an off year and then the chances are so slim as to be almost negligible. That situation should be recognized. The troubles of Indiana come from within the Republican party. They come from the grip and control of political leaders who thrive on patronage. To return to the convention system merely means that the people will have no chance to select any of their officials. If a majority of the Republican voters really controlled the party, there would be no need of bigger and better jails for politicians. The remedy lies in nominations by a majority of the party, not through minorities and manipulation. Instead of abolishing the primary law, it should be enlarged. Other states, where it is % recognized that there is but one effective state party, have adopted a system of two primaries. The first determines the strength of all candidates. The final primary is between the two having the highest vote in the trial run. If this is to be a government by majorities, the election machinery should be devised so as to ascertain the will of the majority. At present that is not done. It is significant that the attack on the primary comes so shortly after the death of the late Senator Beveridge who always rushed to its defense. Instead of abolishing the primary, an effort should be made to make it effective and really determine the will of the majority. Convention government always means bad government. Sleeper Busses ■While aviation enthusiasts continue to lay plans for transcontinental train service, the motorbus people are quietly going ahead and making the task of crossing the continent by bus much more pleasant and comfortable. Sleeping car busses are now coming into service on the long transcontinental run. Furthermore, the bus line operators report that business is picking up. For ali the fact that the bus is noisier, bumpier and slower than the railroad train, it seems to be finding an increasing measure of public favor. It is cheaper—and the American, despite a lot of loose talk about his love for luxuries, is a bargain hunter. Just how much the growing airplane business is going to worry the railroad executives is doubtful; but it looks as if the interstate bus lines are going to provide plenty of it. The influenza epidemic is not without its benefits to the homesick college freshman. Sometimes you ask the Boss for a raise and all you get is a rise out of him. A Russian couple were married and divorced in forty minutes the other day. Great movie talent.

11 David Lietz on Science ______ Chemicals in Body No. 247

THE physiologist is interested not only in the structure of the cells which comprise the tissues which in their turn make up the human body, but also is interested in the chemical composition of these cells. Study of the chemical composition of cells has revealed the fact that all cells, whether of plants or animals, were so much alike fundamentally, that they might all be considered as composed of the r— same substance.

ili f r i - c-c-c—c-c-c----*II I { I HHh H M H lli If I H- c - C- C -C- C-C*- O II! I I on OH OH OH Op B.

bage does not have the same exact composition as the sort found in any other plant or animal. And in any animal, the composition of tissues varies. The exact composition of a nerve cell differs from that of a muscle cell. But they are all so much alike that they justify the biologist’s procedure of classifying them all as variations of the same basic substance. The chemicals w’hich comprise protoplasm—and therefore the human body—are few in number. They are the most common chemical elements known, namely, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, sulphur, phosphorus, chlorine, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and slight traces of iron, manganese, iodine, silicon and copper. These chemical elements are united into a number of compounds which in their turn make up the various kinds of protoplasm. Since carbon is the foundation of these compounds, they are known as carbon compounds. They can be divided into three cries varieties, which are known as proteins, fats, and carbohydrates. Those three names are familiar to all who have been watching their diet in an effort to gain or lose weight. They are the three constituents of protoplasm Since food consists of plant or animal tissue, all food, of course, is protoplasm. The chemist has made a careful st;udy of these three types of compounds. The simplest of all are the carbohydrates. The basis of each carbohydrate molecule is a little chain of six carbon atoms. This is represented in the accompanying diagram at A. Sugar is a simple carbohydrate consisting of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. The diagram at B shows a molecule of the sugar known as glucose. In it, C represents carbon atoms, H, hydrogen atoms, and O, oxygen atoms.

M. E. TRACY SAYS "It Is Fitting 1928 Should Come to Its Climax With the Greatest Scientific Gathering Ever Held in the World and That New York Should Be the Scene.”

IT requires little strain on the memory or imagination tc prove that 1928 has been a rather good year. Radio sets are cheaper than they were twelve months ago, the boyish silhouette is going out of style and Hollywood has become a clover patch for elocution teachers If that is not enough, let it be recorded that 1928 saw the “Bunyon derbies” completed, the Democratic party broken down and Chicago committed to a program of civic virtue. Such incident as the signing of the Kellogg pact by fifty nations, the advent of a purely civil administration in Mexico, the end of the Chinese revolution, the trip of the Graf Zeppelin and Hoover’s visit to Latin-America also should be noted for good measure. m a Another Little Job WHAT many Americans liked best about 1928, perhaps, was the great gamble in Wall Street which eclipsed anything of the kind that ever happened on this old ball, and by which they were able to add some ten or fifteen billion to the book value of their holdings, without much physical or mental effort. Someone will have to pay the interest on that added book value if it stays put, not to say income tax, but such a matter seems fit for New Year’s resolutions, rather than worry. All we need is to absorb a million more autos than we did in 1927, or, better still, sell them in the foreign field; use a couple of trillions more kilowatts of electricity; boost the building record by 15 or 20 per cent; find means to fill a few hundred more movie theaters; increase the consumption of tobacco without hurting the candy trade or bootlegging; replace all our radio sets with new ones and buy three or four million more; organize a thousand new golf clubs and maintain the five or six thousand already organized; make a market for twice the number of airplanes now in use, and suffer no slack in any ordinary line of business. What are a few little things like that among us Americans? Thanks to Science WE owe much to science for the peace and prosperity we enjoy. We owe more for the promise the future holds. We owe still more for the calm, hopeful way in which we are able to face the expanding problems of life. Science has not destroyed faith either in man or God, as some are pleased to think, but has given it broader meaning. Science has taught us to think not only independently, but fearlessly. It is fitting that the year 1928 should come to its climax with the greatest scientific gathering ever held in the world, and that New York, which is the greatest monument to scientific achievement ever erected by man, should be the scene. In this metropolis of modern civilization, this center of wealth, culture, jazz and hokum, with its 700-foot skyscrappers, its thirty miles of brilliantly lighted tunnels through which trains ceaselessly roar, its mighty bridges and torrential traffic streams, the greatest scholar wijl find an appropriate setting, not only for his profoundest thoughts, but weirdest fancies. Here is evidence of organized ideas, as well as organized industries; of the poetic as well as the practical; of exalted ambition, as well as perverted taste. Here is a magnified illustration of both the good and evil which science has .woven into the picture of human progress, of vice made strong, of maliciousness intrenched and of decent instincts refusing to bow to either.

Savage Savants SCIENCE is supposed to be practical and hard-boiled, but some of the papers being read before the great gathering in New York breathe an atmosphere of romance and unreality. Speculation and theory seem to claim the spotlight. What is God? What is the universe, what is morality, what is the meaning of life? These and similarly abstruse questions attract most of the attention. One would be staggered at some of the notions advanced, if they honestly could be characterized as anything more than notions. Except in the special and exact fields of science, such as physics, chemistry, mathematics and mechanics, the greatest scholar is as much at sea as a 10-year-old boy. He may be able to hazard a shrew’der guess, but it is a guess just the same. When he gets to talking about the Deity, creation, space and ether, he only Is using words to cover his ignorance. nun In the Beginning? SCIENCE has worked wonders in producing creature comforts, has discovered much with respect to the processes of natural law and has taught men to make better, if not wiser use of their resources. But science has made nothing. The minerals it has found and enabled us to refine were here long before we arrived. So was the electricity, the air, the water and the sunshine. Even if science proves that men descended from monkeys, that monkeys descended from lower mammals, that these lower mammals descended from reptiles and that life began with a single cell, it will have proved nothing but the method of creation.' Back of that single cell lies the riddle. As Darwin said. “The mystery of all things is in the beginning,” and the beginning is a long way beyond anything science has seen, felt, heard or imagined.

This substance has been given the name of protoplasm. The cells which make up a cabbage or a robin or a tiger or a man are all composed of protoplasm. The great Huxley called this substance “the physical basis of life.” There are many varieties of protoplasm. The sort making up a cab-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

This Is the second of a series of three articles on the Physiology of Golf. BY DR. MORRIS FISIIBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of iiyj?eia, the Hivilth Magazine. THROUGH the Burke Foundation whicn endowed a scientific study of the physiologic effects of golf, special investigations have been made of the player’s reactions. Certain players were permitted to make three practice shots and then to use a fourth explosion shot for driving a ball out of the trap. The time required for the test was one minute. In every case there was a marked rise of the blood pressure after the shot, and this rise was greater in the case of experienced

WHATEVER caused Mr. Hoover to visit Washington so far ahead of his term, he must watch his step to avoid offending Mr. Coolidge. The prestige of a President dries up like a prune during the last congressional session of his administration, and for his successor to appear upon the scene to be palavered over increases the agony of the presidential eclipse. The reason for this is printed in large type on the first page of the book of human nature. PPM There’s one good thing about Commander Byrd’s expedition to the south pole, and it is that if Byrd gets there nobody will make a speech and declare that it will improve the relations between the south pole and the United States. u u If President Emilio Portes Gil of Mexico, who has abolished summary executions of rebels, wishes to lay In a supply of legal delays he should come up to the United States and give our elaborate exhibit the once over. an* We do not believe there is anything in this report that Mr. Hoover has offered to make Julius Rosenwald, secretary of commerce in his cabinet, for he could not recognize the Sears-Roebuck half of the American people without offending the Montgomery Ward half. n n u Even if Mrs. Hoover wears that Spanish shawl the crew of the Utal; gave her for Christmas, the women of the country will not follow her example and wear anything that would take so much scenery out of circulation. One undisputed result of the Boulder dam legislation is the life tenure it. gives Hiram W. Johnson to a seat in the United States senate. nun The arrest of a fortune teller in California for defrauding a lot of gullible victims causes one to marvel that anybody in his right mind should think another could foretell the future, when if that other had such power he could play the stockmarket and clean up a fortune in ten short days. Yet you would be surprised if all who believe in such slush were to parade before you.

This Date in U. S. History

Dec. 31 1793—Thomas Jefferson resigned from cabinet because he opposed neutrality as between France and England. 1806—England continued to search American ships and impress the crews. 1862—President Lincoln signed the act admitting West Virginia to the Union. 18C6—Income tax of 5 per cent on incomes over SBOO yielded ' $61,071,932.

The Engineer Builds a Bridge!

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Golf Effects Vary Heart and Weight

Reason

THE PHYSIOLOGY OF GOLF—NO. 2 .

players than in the case of amateurs. Evidently the concentration necessary and the tension associated with such shots is sufficient to react immediately on the blood pressure. The general evidence seemed to be that 3,000 yards of playing distance makes little difference to a healthy man when he plays with the same tempo all the time. A friendly game has much less effect on the pulse rate and the pulse pressure than a championship game. A strenuous game, such as takes place in championship tournaments, may have such a serve effect on the body that the pulse rate will

jr"* ■

By Frederick LANDIS

THE government has sent some doctors down to El Paso to examine ex-Secretary Fall and see if he is well enough to prosecute. Personally we are afraid we are about to lose Fa’l; we do not see how a sinful worlc can hope to keep one who has displayed so many heavenly qualities.

Common Bridge Errors AND HOW TO CORRECT THEM BY W. W. WENTWORTH

4. VINESSING HONOR TOWARD HONOR AT WRONG TIME North (Dummy)— 4J 6 4 t? A 5 2 oK7 3 2 4 m Leads 3 iiast^ South (Declarer)—* 4AQ 8 S 2 7 4 O A 9 4A 3 2 The Bidding—South bids one spade; all pass. Deciding the Play—West leads 3 of hearts. How should Declarer play to make game?

Times Readers Voice Views

Tlie name and address ot the author must accompany every contribution but on request will not be published. Letters not exceeding 200 words wUI receive preference. Editor Times—Several recent articles in your paper disgusted me. One was about the woman who helped her husband get another mate. Slangily speaking, she “surely wasn’t all there,” for she helped break both God’s and the civil law, and she showed the world what a tiny brain she had. Second was the judges’ decision in the “Orchid contest.” I thought a fair and intelligent discussion was desired instead of the wise cracks that were too silly for words. And then comes Peter E. Grimes w’ith his ideas against birth control. What a pity he was not a mother instead of a father. I wonder if he still would argue for large families. What a pity he couldn’t have borne a dozen or ipore to wash, iron, and cook for and sew and clothe on about $25 a week. And he says “It is fiendish to tell parents they should not have more children than their income will support.” I wonder if he ever read in the Bible where it says “He that provideth not for his own, ond espe-

still be rapid on the following morning. When the game is prescribed for invalids as good exercise during convalesence. it is sufficient to begin with one-half hour of play and to increase gradually. The player loses weight during the game, varying from one pound to four for eighteen holes, and being greater in men than in women. If the player drinks a great deal of water during the game the weight will remain the same. Losses of ten pounds or more, which are reported to occur to championship players on a hot day, are therefore quite conceivable. Next: Fatigue and the heart.

WATCHING HIS STEP o a ONE GOOD THING n * m IT’S HALF AND HALF

THIS international conference which is to consider German reparations ten years after the war reminds one that these European nations can get more conversation and less cash out of a debt than any bunch in the history of finance. If Germany had won that war there would have been prompt paying and no conversation whatever. u * * It may have been a disappointment when the House of David refused to let the late Mr. Purnell of Kentucky lie in the beside his brother, King Ben, but we can think of a lot of things we would rather do.

Ty r Error—Declarer wins the first trick in dummy with ace of hearts, and then finesses jack of hearts, which is covered by East with king of spades. Declarer wins trick with ace of spades. Game is lost as a result of this play as opponents make king of clubs, queen of clubs, queen of hearts and 10 of spades. The Correct Method—To frame, declarer must make five tricks in spades. After winning first trick with ace of hearts, declarer plays 4 of spades, finessing with queen of spades. Thereafter ace of spades is played and in all probability the king of spades will then fall. The last spade is now drawn and game is insured. The Principle—Do not finesse an honor toward an honor, when holding only eight or less cards missing the king and 10 of that suit. (Copyright. 1928. Ready Reference Publishing Company)

cially those of his own household, has denied the faith and is worse than an infidel.” Grimes says, “When we are not willing to bear the burdens of bearing children we should at least be glad to help an encourage those who are willing and alive to the responsibility.” Most of such couples need no encouragement, only to work and multiply less. And one doesn’t have to be a murderer on his way to purgatory to restrict the size of his family so they will not have to be objects of charity from birth. I’ve never read in the Bible where God has taken any one's life because his family was too large. But He did take Eli's life for the way he reared his sons. He also struck with death King David’s unlawful child to punish David. It seems to me in those two cases that even God considered quality more than quantity. MRS. O. F. POWELL. 172 North Scruggs street, Moores-

DEC. 31, 19‘2i

Idea* ■ opinions pressed In colnmn >■ those of oa|H of most interest- I ins; writer* I mid are pre- ■ sented without retard to I their agree* ■ mrnt with the ■ editorial atti* ■ tude of this I paper. 1 The Editor. I

IT SEEMS TOME By HEYWOOD BROUN

IN muddling through a closet came across a discarded pho-fl tograph. Clinging to it were memorH ies which make these old eyeH glisten. Do not, I beg you, rush tH

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the conclusion that it was a picture of Jennie, Dot or even Frou Frou. This was a person nearer, dearer. In fact this was the group photograph of the Harvard freshman basketball team of 1930. Over to the left between the assistant manager and the substitute guard, stood a well remembered figure.

Here was the lad I used to be. And though well remembered, it was yet unfamiliar, for time has dealt harshly with one of us. We posed for Pach almost twenty-three years ago. So straight he stood, this stripling weighing scarcely 210 pounds. In his clear eyes there was a fllne, fearless look, or rather there would have been if he had not waggled his head just as the photographer said, “steady.” but as a matter of fact, both the heads in the group picture are fine and well thatched with coal black hair. And all four eyes are good. He was the center on that team and it was a good team, too. We beat Dartmouth, Brown and Yale ant would have had an excellent clain to the freshman championship or the North Atlantic states if we had not played that unfortunate post- , season game with Columbia. U H ' Almost Made It THE rugged youngster of whore I speak is the very same one who held his opponent on the Roxbury Latin five to four baskets who shot a goal on his own account against Brown, and almost got one against Yale. It saddene< me to think how poorly I would fart if pitted against the Heywoo< Broun of 1906. I have not his spee< his grace nor his endurance. The accumulated wisdom of the years would help me not at all in such a contest. He could run ring! ! around me. In fact I don’t knov I whether he would like me much. 1 And, to tell the truth, upor i closer scrutiny he seemed just a little sappy to me. It wouldn’t b( ! much fun to go out on a party with | such a callow youth. Very probably he thought thaf filet mignon was a fish and Tenny* son a poet. Aside from talk ol football and other athletics wt would have small stock in com* mon. The more I looked the more bitte did I become, for this was the ver individual who flunked his fresh man French and made it necessar; for me to go out into a cold worl( without a sheepskin. And for a the primness of the waggling hea I could tell things to his disadvai tage. In some respects I am more ui right. He played poker every nigtiH while once a week now seems to nH a shade excessive. And how bariMjl he played. £& This clean American thought that there was merit drawing to a three-flush, and Hi stood for raises on an straight. I have left you far my boy. And in the next ten I will win back the money that cost Still the thews are sinuous. EmS only was he the first-string but upon him devolved the resp< (tfSm bility of giving the signals. A tie of It, comes back to me the mist of two decades. Whr:fj|f|9 put his right hand on his hip meant that the ball was flipped to the left forward and versa. HSfl a a a HBB Broun of Harvard IF I HAVE referred to Harvard as a somewhat s;L*vL*< person, it is only fair to admit he didn't have my advantages. was not acquainted with the waijSSjE Shaw, Tolstoi or Ibsen. He wh even familiar with the writirikHo®H Heywood Broun. Piaß Maybe he wouldn’t have like column. The things for cared. I now abominate. wouldn't take any lip from him KWH! wash behind your ears.” I have said at the first crack him. MCH Or maybe I wouldn't. I that he might lick me. He WiJHS? I observe from the photoj'Q'MPj larger around the chest than MmEMI the stomach. I’ve put the pESk® back into the darkest corner closet. I don’t want to be remiKjlßaij Indeed. I think it is a curiouHraß lusion that the sight of younHß comforting to those more anci<Bj||fcw was struck with this by atteK I the latest opening of the h]bsEHh cabaret of Texas Guinan. Most of Miss Guinan’s as gOgES are aggressively youthful. rons a little older. To me not inspiring. Each scum chorus changes. Gone, all all the old familiar faces. V Dottie? Bunny? Naoe? the snow’s of yester-year? Instead they have a lady snake. When first the snak|*l|S peared one patron ran screiffijlK? from the room. And snake took an encore, she r fewts again. Myself. I have nothing against snakes. I can leave alone. But I don't warm them. It, would never occur to say along about 4 a. m„ ‘ V-;* go down to Texas Guinan’s that snake.” After a crake has crawled the restaurant a bit I get feeling that the chow’ mein taste quite the same.