Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 70, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1930 — Page 4
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The State and Wages The smug explanation of the highway commission that it signed contracts for the construction of roads and has no control or authority over the wages paid to workers should not be accepted by the people of this state, paying out millions of dollars, as either satisfactory or even explanatory. The hideous fact is that the men who are actually building these roads, the men who perform the hard work, are being paid the wage of peons. That some of these contractors are paying 20 cents an hour or less is not denied. That no man, and most of these men are the heads of families, can \ive on such a wage is easily demonstrated. If the cement trust should deliver poor material the commission would have the power to reject it. If the crushed stone or the sand and gravel vendors should turn over materials not up to specifications, the highway commission would, or could, refuse to take it. But when it comes to human beings, flesh and blood, the commission loses interest and permits the contractors to use underpaid and underfed men to perform the work. It is very definitely written into the national laws that labor is not a commodity to he bought and sold on a basis of competition. In Indiana, as far as the state is concerned, labor seems to be the only commodity in which the rules of supply and demand form the basis of hard bargaining. Cement is sold by a trust. The crushed stone men and the gravel men have their association to eliminate cut-throating each other. The worker, with a hungry family on the one side and a slave wage on the other, is that ghastly “free agent” who can be bought and sold without intervention by the highway commission. When President Hoover called the Governors of the state together Indiana sent its chief executive to discuss the unemployment situation. It was an emergency, or at least the expense of that trip was paid from the emergency fund. The decision of the Governors, in response to a presidential appeal, was to rush public work in order to give jobs to the jobless. , At that meeting, and the later one of the industrialists called by the President, it was resolved to keep up wages as a means of bringing back prosperity. It would be bad enough for private industry to renegge on that policy. For the state of Indiana to foster such practices amounts to crime. Not only is the situation an outrage against the workers who are underpaid, but it is an assault on every other business of the state and a menace to prosperity itself. A simple notice by the highway commission that any contractor who is practicing this form of peonage would be forever barred from state contracts as an undesi.-able would end the outrage over night. But, of course, the commission has nothing in its record to suggest that it has either the wisdom or the courage to so act.
Killing Russian Trade For a few days it looked like the administration was trying to increase unemployment and close factories by killing American trade with Russia. American business men and investors whose capital was threatened directly, and American workers who were losing their jobs ->bjected. Now. it appears, that the whole thing was a mistake. President Hoover, it is announced, has no intention of backing those government officials who would boycott Russian trade as such because they do not approve of the Soviet form of government. The President's decision is wise. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Lowman was setting out on a policy which was as fanatical as it was costly. It is Lowman's duty to enforce the law, and that includes of course the clause of the tariff law against importation of convict labor goods. But Lowman has no authority to discriminate against Russian trade in this way or any other manner. Not even the American Federation of Labor, with all its hatred of Russia, approves of a blanket boycott. And it is highly significant that Resident Green of the federation and individual unions have disavowed the demands of Matthew Woll, a vice-presi-dent of the federation for a general embargo. Tfie matter does not end, however, merely with the welcome discovery that Lowman is not representative of the administration and that Woll is not representative of American labor. For this latest incident reveals with added force the basic incongruity of a nation trying to do business with a country from which it withholds diplomatic recognition. Theoretically, trade relations without diplomatic relations are possible, but in actual fact are highly impracticable. The dispute over the Lowman embargo on Russian pulpwood shipments is typical. Lowman says convict labor was employed, but he will not submit his proof. Russia denies the convict labor charge. What are the facts? The United States government can not establish the facts for itself because, lacking diplomatic relations, its officials are not on the spot to investigate. Therefore, m American manufacturers, shipping companies and labor must suffer through hasty treasury department action on the basis of unsupported rumors by professional Russian-baiters of the Woll variety. Russia is not bluffing in saying she will not buy from us if she can not sell to us. She has no choice. Already the trade balance is heavily in our favor. The little the sells to us is not directly or dangerously competitive with American products. But she must MU us a lit tie, or she will have no money to pay for the larger amount which she buys. Trade is reciprocal. A boycott is a boomerang. Russia's business honesty Is attested by the largest
The Indianapolis Times <A SCBIFPS-HOWABD NEWSPAPER) Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 West Maryland Street. Indianapolis, Ind. Price in Marion County. 2 cents'a copy: elsewhere. 3 cents— delivered by carrier, 12 cents a week. BOYD OUBLEXI BOX W. HOWARD, FRANK G. MORRISON. Editor President Business Manager ~THONE-Riley &>H THURSDAY. JULY 31.~m0. Member Ini ted Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. Newspaper Enterprise Assoelation. Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way.”
and most capitalistic corporations in the United States, such as General Electric, International Harvester and Ford. They have not lo6t money, but have made money, doing business with Russia. Dozens of other corporations have had the same experience. They want to cc.itinue this business. And it means jobs for American workers who need jobs. But this business and these jobs are jeopardized seriously by the unnecessary obstacles to the free and tuller flow of trade and credit occasioned by our irregular political relations, the lack of commercial treaties, and the absence of governmental machinery o facilitate trade as with other foreign countries. Therefore, the logical conclusion of the Hoover policy should be diplomatic recognition. The free flow of American-Russian trade, which the White House claims to favor, has been proved impossible without such diplomatic recognition. To argue that the United States government does not and should not approve the Soviet form of government has precisely nothing whatever to do with the case. Os course Americans do not favor Communism. Neither did we approve the czarist form of government. Nor do we approve the Mussolini Fascist government, nor several other present dictatorships. But we recognize them diplomatically. Such diplomatic recognition implies neither approval nor disapproval; it merely means that we recognize the inescapable fact of the existence of that particular foreign government, and that we regularize our relations by treaties and diplomatic machinery for convenience and protection of American citizens.
This is a business proposition. We have failed to destroy the Soviet government by withholding diplomatic recognition and obstructing trade for twelve years. Now Great Britain and others are taking Russian business away from us lately because they have regular diplomatic and trade relations. If we don’t want Russian business in this time of American depression, all we have to do is to continue our absurd nop-recognition policy. Like It or Not From any angle, the President’s recess appointment of Nicholas Roosevelt of New York as Vice-Governor of the Philippines is a costly blunder. Hoover is alienating the senate and ttu Filipinos, and making friendly American -Philippine relations more difficult. The President has allowed himself to be jockeyed into the position of ignoring the senate, which must confirm this appointment, and of defying the expressed wishes of the people who are to be governed by Roosevelt. The question is not whether the President has a legal right to do this He has. The question is whether the President’s act’oi. will serve any good interest, either his own or his country’s interest or that of the Philippines. It will not. Roosevelt is a sincere and able man. But he also happens to be an enemy of Philippine aspirations and a very extreme critic of the Filipinos as a people. That is clear from his book on the subject. Naturally, the Filipinos object to having such a person over them as Vice-Governor. They have resorted to very defuvte means of showing their disapproval. In public ceremonies, they have dumped his books into the sea. Their official representatives in Washington have objected to the nomination. Tire Philippine legislature has passed resolutions of protest. In view of this situation, the United States senate, on receipt of the nomination just as it was adjourning, had no choice other than to postpone action until next session The senate did not want to humiliate the President by rejecting the nomination, as demanded by the Filipinos. Nor could the senate ignore the protests and confirm the nomination overnight without investigation. Thus, by postponement, the senate gave the President opportunity to withdraw the nomination and save himself from the delicate situation which has developed. That the President now nas gone ahead and by a recess appointment forced Roosevelt upon the senate and upon the Filipinos is exceedingly unfortunate. It only can add to the Filipinos' distrust of America’s intentions at a time vfhen mutual faith and co-oper-ation is essential to any satisfactory settlement of the acute Philippine question. Under such circumstances, Roosevelt, even though he were the world’s greatest administrator, will be a heavy liability as Vice-Governor of the Philippines.
Some day a newspaper paragrapher is going to read a story on escaped gas or hot air and not even think of making a wisecrack about congress. A waiter in Paris, a news dispatch reads, has become a popular opera star. Proving again that all good things come to him who waits. It will be just a stroke of fate, of course, that will bring those mixed-up babies together in a Pullman car some day and have them argue about their berths.
REASON
THINGS not in the record often control in affairs of state. Ratification of the naval treaty was aided by the hot weather in Washington just as the adoption of the Declaration of Independence was hastened by the flies from a livery stable which bit Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and their comrades through their silk stockings. B B B The country will be glad to hear that while Senator Borah has been worn out by the long session, his doctor says he will regain his strength, for he is a great national asset. By common consent of his colleagues, he is the great figure of the senate. BBS FREQUENTLY few stand with him and sometimes none, but as Ingcrsoll said of Conkling: “He keeps the company of his self-respect. Webster. Clay, Calhoun, Douglas. Edmunds. Thurman, Ingalls and others are remembered for their intellectual independence. There arc no echoes among the immortals. M B B Mr. Zaro Agha, the 156-year-old Turk, now visiting us, is reported to be growing some new hair and in due time we shall probably encounter his tonic testimonial. He also spurned a drink of liquor, tendered him by a New Yorker, tragic proof of the pitfalls spread before the feet of youth iD a great city. BUB Mayor Walker has ordered an investigation of crookedness in New York's municipal government. Alongside the public officer, guilty of graft, the bandit is an honor to society. u B THIS cluster of 450 Americans, now visiting Russia, will see all the things which the Soviet government wishes seen: they will observe all the posies, but none of the weeds. B B • Louis Miller, aged 51, was killed by a runaway horse in New York City. You’re not necessarily sale just because you live la an old-fashioned town.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SCIENCE BY DAVID DIETZ
Sun Spots Have Important Effect on the Northern Lights and Also on Radio Reception. SUN spots are of particular interest to mankind because of J the effect which they have upon | terrestial conditions. It has been known for many years that sun j spots were at times responsible for | magnetic storms which upset cables and long telephone or telegraph lines. The spots also have an effect upon the northern lights or aurora i borealis. More recently, Professor Harlan T. Stetson, director of the Perkins observatory of Ohio Wesleyan university, has demonstrated that sun spots have a very important effect upon radio reception. Many authorities think that sun spots have some influence upon our weather. Undoubtedly this is so, but the exact connection is not yet known and officials of the United States weather bureau feel that weather predictions can not be based upon sun spot studies as yet. Sun spots vary in size from those less than 500 miles in diameter to some more than 50,000 miles in diameter. Occasionally, when the sky is hazy, the haze acts as a dark glass, making it possible _o look at the sun. At such times, if there is a very large spot on the sun, it can be seen with the unaided eye. Ancient Chinese records tell of spots seen in this way thousands of years ago. The study of sun spots did not start, however, until Galileo built his first telescope in 1610.
Galileo THE Chinese, while recording spots on the sun, regarded them as unique and exceptional occurrences. Galileo, with his little telescope, made the discovery that spots were a normal feature of the sun. The same discovery, however, was made independently by both David Fabricius and Christoph Scheiner at about the same time, and credit for the discovery must be shared among the three. About half the sun spots last less than four days, appearing and disappearing with considerable rapidity. The other half, which include the larger ones, last longer, but only a small number outlast one rotation of the sun. The rotation period of the sun is approximately twenty-five days. Russell states that out of 6,000 sun spot groups studied during a period of thirty-three years at the Greenwich observatory, only 468 were observed to have a continuous existence into a second rotation of the sun. Only 115 existed into a third rotation, twenty-five into a fourth, twelve into a fifth and but one in a sixth. In a single recorded instance, Russell states, a spot persisted for eighteen months. That was in 1840-41. It is common to note the bright streaks called faculae upon the surface of the sun, in the neighborhood of a sun spot. The breaking out of anew spot frequently is heralded by the appearance of these faculae and frequently they continue to exist after the spot has disappeared.
Formation Development of a sun spot usually begins with the appearance of the bright faculae interspersed with small spots resembling tiny pores. These pores begin to grow in size, rfinally coalesciig. In this way the umbra or dark center of the spot is formed. Meanwhile, the granules of the jsurrounding surface of the sun be[come drawn into filaments, forming the penumbra around the central portion. Sometimes a sun spot will form in this fashion within a few hours. Usually however, it takes two or three days for a sun spot to develop. It is common for a fairly large group of spots to develop simultaneously. According to Professor A. L. Cortie, an irregular group of spots usually passes into a. second stage in which the spots are stretched out in a gr-oup from east to west with two spots larger than all the rest, one at either end of the group. The one at the head of the group, that is, the one at the end of the group pointing toward the direction in which the sun is rotating, is usually more compact and regular in shape, though the one at the other end of the group may be the larger. After a short time, the small spots disappear, leaving only the two large ones which had defined the two ends of the group. Occasionally a large spot will break into several segments, bright filaments from the sun’s surface forming barriers between the segments. The speed with which segments separate may represent a velocity of 1,000 miles an hour.
Questions and Answers
What baseball pitcher in the major leagues has the record for the greatest number of assists and putouts in a single game? The record of assists and put-outs for a pitcher in professional baseball is thirteen, made by Nick Altrock, Chicago American League, in 1904, when he had three put-outs and ten assists; and by Ed Walsh of Chicago in 1907, with two put-outs and eleven assists. Why does the moon have no atmosphere? The force of gravity on the moon is not sufficient to hold an atmosphere. Whether it once had one and lost it depends on how the solar sj’stem came into existence, and that is not known. Are persons, not citizens of Canada, accepted In the Canadian Royal Vir Forces? Only citizens of Canada are eligible to membership. Why is the whale called a mammal? Because it is warm blooded, has a well-developed brain, double circulation, lungs, mammary glands and reproductive organs. The young
No Shortage of Help on the Farm This Year!
C’) . Ar\ I Jfj ' / rr* 4 M
Don’t Use Appetizers for Dyspepsia
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor. Journal of the American Medical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine. IF the person tending toward dyspepsia realizes his condition soon enough and adopts proper habits of regulation, recovery promptly ensues. Unfortunately, he attempts far too often to cure his condition by taking out a bottle that he has selected for himself. When his appetite begins to fail he tries to stimulate it with appetizers or cocktails taken before meals. This is simply an added burden to a weakened system. All the kick that he gets is mental and the interior furnishing responsible is not helped. If he reads faddist magazines he will try copious draughts of orange juice, which is not in any sense of the word a cure for his condition. He may try starvation, which will relieve him temporarily of the digestive trouble, but will weaken him, perhaps produce acidosis, and certainly not cure him since he is likley to go back to the same bad
IT SEEMS TO ME v H !SSP
Hevwood Broun's radio column, a fifteen-minute talk on subjects of the day that interest The Times famed columnist, may be heard each night except Saturday and Sunday at 9:15 over the Columbia broadcasting system. WFBM carries the pro-ram Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Gertrude ederle is a swimming teacher now in a boardwalk pool at Rye. Her hearing is very bad and she says not much of the money which was earned in her vaudeville tour came to her. Four years ago she swam the English channel, and now she thinks “it wasn’t worth it.” If it is true that the long battle with the channel tides cost this young girl her hearing, the price she paid was a heavy one, and there can be little doubt that the noisy tumult which greeted her when she returned has died down to a whisper. The public has all but forgotten her. And yet I still think it was a fine achievement and by no means a useless one. Miss Ederld may have done less for herself than she had hoped, but something in human relations was definitely changed when she fought and conquered channel water. bub Let Them Roost GENERALLY speaking, all kinds of endurance contests seem to me both cruel and silly. As far as I’m concerned, every tree-sitter can remain aloft indefinitely without arousing either interest or enthusiasm in me. But the channel has a certain dignity as a perpetual and abiding challenge to mankind’s prowess. It has dared the hopes of emperors and washed whole chapters out of history. Blerlot’s airplane flight from France to England was, in its way, as thrilling an episode in aviation as Colonel Lindbergh’s hop to Paris. It marked anew step in the growing mastery of man over a turbulent and ancient foe. Possibly I sentimentalize too much
are born alive, well developed after a long pregnancy, and are suckled and cared for by the mother as in the case of land mammals. What is the title of the latest book by Edgar Rice Burroughs? “Tarzan of the Lost Empire,” published in 1929. What is the value of a United States 2-cent piece dated 1864? It is catalogued at 2 to 10 cents. Is President Hoover a member of the Masons or any other fraternal order? No. What three famous men in the United States have not had the advantage of a college education? Henry lord, Thomas A. Edison and John D. Rockefeller Sr. answer that descirption. Is Vincent Lopez an American? Yes; he was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 30, 1895. What is Marion Talley doing now? She has retired from the operatic stage and is living on her farm, four miles north and one mile west of Levant, Kan., in Thomas county.
DAILY HEALTH SERVICE
habits as soon as he feels a little better. The proper treatment for the simpler form of so-called dyspepsia is the creation of good hygiene regarding eating. The two factors of first importance are the establishment of regular hours of eating and insistence on leisure during the performance. The human system is so regulated that tine establishment of a regular hour for eating is marked promptly by an effort of the digestive mechanism to get ready for the food before it is due to arrive. The juices begin to be deposited that aid in the digestion. Tne muscles of the stomach and intestine walls are toned up ready to do their share in mixing and moving the food along. Little ripples of activity called “peristalsis” begin to run up and down. Then if disappointment ensues they get out of the habit of getting ready and digestion is harder when it is necessary. There are a lot of foods that everybody knows are indigestible.
in feeling that Gertrude Ederle did more than conquer a robust and unfriendly body of water. It seemed to me, then, even as it dfces now, the final and complete answer to the Victorian concept of women’s place in the world. Though her time was lowered later by several competitors, Gertrude Ederle not only effected a crossing, but beat the best previous time ever made in this classic swim. *. B a Softening Channel MISS EDERLE was and is a woman of extraordinary physical power. The fact that she swam the channel did not in any sense prove such v a jaunt was in the power of every female. Or, for that matter, that the channel could be pushed in the face by every man. Still, in some subtle sense, she did soften up that harsh strip of water. The knockout blow which she delivered abated to some extent the strait’s grim reputation. Others, following after, could cheer themselves when weary by saying, “But, of course, it can be done. She did it.” You may object that I am losing all sense of proportion in mentioning Trudy’s swim and Bleriot’s airplane flight. The Frenchman blazed a trail which has led to the establishment of regular and increasingly stable communication. It is not too much to say that if a united Europe ever is established, the breaking down of the isolation caused by the channel barrier will be one of the incidents which show the way. No such direct results may be attributed to Miss Ederle’s long dip in the surf. I see no immediate possibility of the emergence of super-
-TCOAVfwTHC-
JAMES KENT’S BIRTH July 31
ON July 31, 1763, James Kent, eminent American jurist, whose decision in hundreds of law cases still are cited., was born in Philippi, N. Y., the son of a noted lawyer. Graduated from Yale at the age of 18, Kent was admitted to the bar four years later. After he had been several times elected to the New York assembly the young lawyer removed to New York to fill the new professorship of law at Columbia college. With the recognition accorded him by Hamilton, Jay and other leaders in the Federalist party, Kent rapidly advanced as a judicial officer. From chief justice in the state supreme court Kent was appointed chancellor, then the highest judicial office in the state. Kent is best known for his “Commentaries on American Law,” which are said to have had a*“deeper and more lasting influence in the formation of the national character than any other secular book of the last century excepting Blackstone’s “Commentaries on the Laws of England.” Kent’s Commentaries now are used by every American lawyer as well as by many in other countries.
Fried and greasy foods are enveloped in a layer of fat through which the digestive juices penetrate with great difficulty. The inside of hot breads or partially baked cakes or pastries are digested with trouble. Very hot foods cause congestion; very cold slow digestion; alcohol and hot spices are as imitating to the lining of the stomach as they are to the mucous membranes of the nose and throat, and a person who is physically very tired, has internal muscles that are just as tired as the external ones. The idea that eating when one is tired is a good method for overcoming fatigue is very bad logic and quite unscientific. Plenty of exercise, fresh air. diversion and sufficient sleep are marvelous aids to digestion and certainly help out appetites. Appetite is quite necessary to good digestion. Appetite is the symptom which lets the Interested person know that his digestive mechanism is all set to go and wants something to go on.
Ideals and opinions expressed in this column are those of one of America's most interesting writers and are presented without regard to their agreement or disagreement with the editorial attitude of this paper.—The Editor.
men and women who will say, “I’ll take a swim across to whet an appetite for breakfast.” u it * Becoming a Symbol IT is fairly possible that the young woman herself never gave much thought to the fact that she took on a symbolic significance when she plunged into the water. There may have been no notion in her head that when she reached the other side the status of all women in the world would be raised by several notches. Possibly it may seem a little presumptuous to say that the motives and even the personality of Gertrude Ederle are not particularly important. After all, it was she who did the kicking and reaching. But I mean that the thing which matters is the fact that a woman swam the English channel. Just which woman is somewhat less momentous. In saying that the feat was forgotten, I refer only to the fact that it no longer is uppermost in the public mind. The fact itself can not be forgotten. It is stored away for future reference. It plays its part in situations which arise concerning problems of “Could a woman do this job?” “Is this a responsibility to be intrusted to the weaker vessel?” Possibly Trudy is not a feminist at all, but her achievement was feministic, for all that. Mr. Ibsen’s Nora once slammed a door and the echo sounded around the world. Gertrude Ederle opened one and I feel sure that even yet there must come to her faintly down the wind some murmur of the shout which will not die—the shout of “Atta girl! Atta girl!” (Coovrirtit. 1930, bv The Times)
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.JULY 31,1930
M. E. Tracy SAYS:
Should Edison Be Classed as a Genius or, as a Reason > ably Talented Man? THO&AS A. EDISON, looking down from the height of his years in pre-eminence, says that the machine age is doing more good than harm, that modern youth Is all right, and that success consists of 90 per cent hard work and 10 per cent talent. Dr. Hubert S. Howe, famous psychiatrist, who has examined the forty-nine boys competing for the Edison scholarship, says that while “they are far above the average, I doubt, if any of them is a genius.’’ “Genius comes too close to insanity in many cases.” says Dr. Howe, “and what Mr. Edison wants i not a genius, but a well-rounded, well-balanced young American.” u tt How About Mussolini? WHAT is the difference between a well-rounded, well-bal-anced young man, willing to work, and genius? Most people associate genius with eccentricity, but is that quite true in the real sense? Take Edison himself. Should he be classified as a genius, or as a reasonably talented man who made his way largely through steady, conscientious effort? Take Mussolini, who just lias celebrated his 47th birthday. How should he be classified? If he had died one or two years after becoming dictator of Italy, people probably would have called him a genius. If he rules the roost for twenty-five or thirty years, they probably will forget to use the word. Most geniuses, so-called, have died young.
Theories Are Foolish FAKES, freaks and near-lunatics often can give birth to bright ideas, but they can’t do very much with them. The W'orld has built up a lot of foolish theories around that fact. It has imagined that they were victims of unjust treatment, has wept over their pathetic plight , and has developed the illusionment that genuis goes unrewarded. Meanwhile, normal persons, if they have grit to keep at it, not only can think up just as bright ideas, but do something with them. Edison should have died poor, according to the formula and he would have, had he died at 30. The sob sister complex has had a lot to do with our estimate of what constitutes genius. We have wept over bright boys who died young, until we really believed they were different. We have accepted old age as proving that equally bright boys were not so much after all. The game has gone on until we have worked ourselves into a frame of mind where we actually do not want to believe that an old, prosperous gentleman has much In his favor except “luck.” We still are more or less sold on the miracle superstition, still prefer to imagine that true greatness is more likely to wind up in a garret than in a. comfortable home, and that genius is almost certain to go unrecognized, if not hungry.
Harbor Delusion THE worst aspect of this philosophy is the number of people who imagine themselves geniuses because they have thought of something which appeals to them as different or peculiar and who take the fact that nobody pays any attention to them as proving it. The woods are full of them—swolleh heads gone to seed with self-pity, malcontents ready to smash religion, the government, or the human race in general for no other reason than to satisfy their own egotism. More often than not they wind up in an asylum, and if they happen to avoid that unhappy fate they usually spend their last years promoting some fake faith or political theory. Scratch the noisy booster of wild-eyed doctrines on the back and nine times out of ten you find a soul in torment over the delusion that it is a mistreated genius.
Daily Thought
Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith.—Proverbs 16:17. If you wish to be loved, love.— Seneca. Who produced the motion picture “Darwin Was Right” and In what year? The Fox Film Corporation- produced the play in 1924, What is the surname of King George of England? Windsor. (— When were large copper cents coined by the United States, Between 1793 and 1857.
