Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 267, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1933 Edition 02 — Page 4
PAGE 4
The Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-KOWARD NEWSPAPER) ROT W. HOWARD President TALCOTT POWELL Editor EARL D. RAKER Buslneg* Manager
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1 pM. Fa *'*'**' "o'**** eer* Light and the Ftople Will Find Their Own Way
SATURDAY. MARCH 18. 1933
not a dictatorship In the senate and elsewhere there are some expressions of anxiety lest the strong action of President Roosevelt during the last two weeks shall set dangerous precedents for executive usurpation of extreme power. A survey of our historical experience fails to reveal any cause for alarm and many grounds for gratification and assurance. The great majority of our capable Presidents have had no hesitation in asserting decisive executive leadership. Almost invariably, this has been associated with beneficial results which hardly could have been obtained otherwise. In all our major national emergencies, executive supremacy has been indispensable. For Washington and Hamilton to have waited for congress, or for them to have been over-sensitive in regard to congressional feelings and opposition, certainly would have destroyed our federal experiment at the very outset. These two men formulated a strong and coherent plan for meeting the great emergency and put it through congress with promptness, in spite of some opposition from Jefferson, Madison and other Democrats. When Jefferson himself became President in 1801, he had no hesitation in asserting an executive initiative quite as vigorous as that shown by Washington. A consummate political leader, Jefferson had congress eating out of his hand during most of his eight years in office, in spite of his sponsoring of many policies very unpopular in certain parts of the country. The strength of the executive under Andrew Jackson is symbolized by his nickname of "Old Hickory,” He prevented South Carolina from nullification and increased our prestige abroad through his strong stand on the French debt problem, but his policies in regard to the United States bank, public finance, banking and public works were less fortunate for the country. The Civil war never could have been won if Abraham Lincoln had not assumed extreme powers. These alone enabled him to meet the draft issue, the emergency in public finance, and banking, and the strategic problems involved in holding the border states in the Union. Such positive gains as Grover Cleveland was able to snatch from the hands of greedy politicians and vested interests were secured because of Cleveland’s stubborn determination to follow what he believed to be the right courts? The outstanding act in the administration of Theodore Roosevelt was his threat to send in federal troops unless the money powers in New York allowed the anthracite coal strike of 1902 to be settled in accord with fairness and justice. Woodrow Wilson was recognized as the most vigorous executive leader the Democrats had put In the White House since the days of Andrew Jackson. He put the lobby out of business in Washington by excoriating it before the American people. He put through a large volume of high constructive legislation in the teeth of powerful opposition. Even in a campaign period he forced congress to rush through the Adamson bill in the summer of 1916 and save the country's railroad system from paralysis. Once war was declared. Wilson had conferred upon him by congress wider powers than those exercised by any leading European monarch at the time. Thus far, Franklin D. Roosevelt has led more by personal force and executive alertness than by arbitrary use of extreme executive power. The extraordinary power held by him was not achieved by seizure or other usurpation. It legally and freely was delegated to him by congress. In that fundamental sense, it was not dictatorship. WHILE THE IRON IS HOT President Roosevelt will continue to strike while the iron is hot. There will be no recess of the special session of congress. He has decided, after consulting congressional leaders, to proceed at once with the rest of his reconstruction program. It is a wise decision. The country is in the mood for action. Why shouldn't it be, after the long delays and false starts with which we have faced the depression? The new President’s determined and quick handling of the hanking crisis, his economy measure, beer revenue, and farm relief bills have put anew spirit into the government. Now he turns to the first move in his unemployment relief fight, a half-billion-dollar forestation and work camp plan. That is to be joined soon with a more comprehensive relief plan, which is so much needed. To these he will add railroad legislation, a law controlling bank speculation, other revision of the banking laws, and general legislation. By keeping the new congress in session now until Its work is done, he is acting in the spirit of the lame duck abolition by which congress will carry out the people's mandate as soon after election as possible. MR. ROOSEVELT’S HOBBY This country can congratulate itself that one of the President's hobbies is forestation. Mr. Roosevelt proposes to begin his work relief program by establishing federal camps for jobless men and setting them to work planting and protecting trees on public lands. That is sound statesmanship. This plan alone will not, of course, solve the unemployment problem. But it will be a beginning in the right direction. It will employ a quarter million men at wholesale jobs. Work can be started within a few weeks. And for every $1 spent on wages, several more dollars will go toward permanent enrichment of the nation. It is high time the government looked to the nation’s forests. Endowed originally with 822,000,000 acres of forest, it new has little more than 100.000,000 acres. At the present tempo of cutting and burning, this supply will be gone in twenty years. We may begin to import lumber before that. To plant trees is not only to sow a crop that will return immense profits. It is to save much vaster values in water conservation, erosion pre-
vention, wild life refuges and recreation retreats. Lacking a wise reforestation policy, this country may become a treeless waste and, like China, a prey to recurring drought, flood and famine. The President's plan opens an inspiring vista. While immediate work will be confined to the 2,000,000 treeless acres of the national forests and the other federal areas covered by volunteer giowth, it car. be expanded through co-operation with states and private holders. Chief Forester Stuart estimates that there are 496,000,000 acres capable of producing commercially valuable timber crops. Only three-eighths of this vast area actually is producing. Here are millions of idle acres. Here are millions of idle men. Early action on President Roosevelt’s program will start both of them working for the public. This is more than temporary relief. It Is a permanent investment. POLITICS IN THE LABORATORY One of the most disheartening phases of modern life has been the contrast between the progress of science and the status quo of statesmanship. From stage coach to airplane is a long step; but from the politics of two centuries ago till now, little if any change; just the same old oratory’, the same old viewing with alarm, the same old pointing with pride, the same old appeal to partisanship. Science works in the laboratory, with no humiliation if an experiment fails. Politics works on the theory of party omniscience, on the idea that the President-elect, the Governor-elect, the mayor-elect, or the dog-catcher-elect shall propound his program, whatever it may be, and stay with it to the end. The thought of backing up and trying again is not in the code; once admit an error and all the shafts of the opposition will find you and destroy you. From such a philosophy are born policies like prohibition, policies that you ride until you drop, though your own investee tors say you are wrong and all the realities cry halt. But anew note has been struck. We read these words in President Roosevelt’s message on agriculture; "I tell you frankly that it is anew and untrod path ... if a fair administrative trial is made and it does not produce the hoped-for results, T shall be the first to acknowledge it and advise you.” Here we have a President who admits he might be w rong, w r ho is willing to go into the laboratory’, make the experiment, find out whether it will work', and recant and try again if he is mistaken. That is the scientific method. Let us fervently hope that among his many other accomplishments. Franklin D. Roosevelt will continue to inject that method into politics. PROSIT! Today, thanks to congress and the President, we chronicle small beer. The homing prodigal is not so robust as when it left us thirteen years ago. It is, also, only slightly over 3 per cent strong by weight. Missing, too, are the sights and sounds and smells of its heyday. No more the cool, sanded room behind swinging doors, where free lunch and clanking mugs mingled with the feast of the reason and the flow of soul—at least in many states. No more the aroma that ushered in the season of violets and bock. But almost here it is, and welcome. The brewmasters tell us the new brew will be better and tastier than the old. From Chicago comes the word that 146 contented breweries will be able to pour fourth 5,000,000 kegs-full within twenty-four hours after legalization. From New York comes word that plans are afoot for beer gardens with meals and music and “gemutlichkeit.” Milwaukee sends words that the beer that used to make her famous now will make her immortal. Chain stores prepare to sell it instead of the stuff satirically called near-bear. In twenty-two states 72,000,000 people may slake their thirst in legal lager without delay. The hearts of many more million taxpayers beat happily. Foreclosure demanded on the Flatiron building, which used to be one of the sights of New York in your pappy's day. Wen, In a. pressing situation like today s, all these little difficulties have to be ironed out. ' v ' ij ’K West coast woman horse-whipped an editor for printing an article about her. We don't care a lick about the editor. What we want to know is, where in the world did she find a horsewhip? You hear with your jawbone instead of your ear, says Dr. W. N. St. Peter of Pittsburgh. Well, many a box fighter has heard birdies after a stiff left to the chin. Greece had three dictators in twenty-four hours the other day. Dictated, but not red.
Just Plain Sense BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
TWO significant things have happened in the feminine world. An American woman goes into the cabinet and an American woman—not just a President's wife—goes into the White House. Avery great deal depends upon how these two conduct themselves, but we have no fear that they will not fill their positions with merit and dignicy. Yet, however pleasing these facts may be for women, they should be still more arresting to American men. Because in the White House family today, it is Mr., rather than Mrs. Roosevelt, who is the strong domestic figure. For here is a leader of men, a supremely masculine type, who breaks two cherished precedents of his sex and thus proves himself an intelligent person, capable of leadership. In naming Frances Perkins to his cabinet, President Roosevelt has done something that no man of this nation ever has tried before. And in having at his side a woman like his wife, he marks himself as one who always has believed in human ri w hts. a a t FOR mark you this. V Roosevelt, after so many years of marriage, would not be the woman she is—so interested in people, so busy with living, so burning with the flame of endeavor, if she had not lived her life with a husband who had understood and encouraged her. It is true that men make or mar their wives. By their response to her beliefs and ambitions, they can develop her natural gifts, or they can. by lack of interest and cold disdain, kill everything eager and vivid and alive in a woman's souL Mrs. Roosevelt has reared a family. She has done all the jobs that good wives are supposed to do. and she has done them well. But she has not stopped there. She has kept on working and learning and living. Her husband has helped her to do this. Consequently, at his side now, he has something more than a mere patient, loving wife. He has a helper, a prop for his will, a spur for his ambition, and a friend for his every need.
I' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
All Sig?ts Point the Same Way
It Seems to Me .... by Heywood Broun
“T>OTH YOUR HOUSES,” by 13 Maxwell Anderson, seems to me the most effective propaganda play which has come along in several seasons. And I think this is true chiefly because Mr. Anderson has kept in mind the fact that he was writing for the stage rather than for the pulpit or the soapbox. I say that in no scorn of the soapbox. I’ve stood on lots of them and hope to stand on many more. But it hardly should be necessary to argue that the precise technique which may be effective in talking to a crowd on the corner of Broadway and Ninetysixth street, could be all wrong for an effective appeal to an audience in a theater. As the final curtain fell on a recent performance of “Both Your Houses,” a young woman came up to me with rancor in her eyes and said acidulously, "I see you sat all through this, and do you really think this a better play than Elmer Rice’s ‘We the People’?” I said that I did. "But why?” she persisted. The only answer I could think of offhand was. “Because it’s so much more skilful.” I’m sure that didn’t satisfy her, for she flounced away. a * * One Thing at a Time NOW, I know what was in her mind. She well might have said that Mr. Rice attempted to spread before his audience the
Every Day Religion ========= BY DR. JOSEPH FORT NEWTON
TN some newly discovered letters by Charles Dickens, we learn that at one time he planned a tour of Australia, but gave up the idea. The reason he gave it up he states frankly; "There are not six men in the world I would go with.” Can any of us name six men out of whom we would choose one as a sole traveling companion for so long a journey? Not many of us would choose Dickens himself for such an adventure; he was too exacting, too dependent upon others for joy. He lived with all the blinds up, expecting applause. One of his friends said: "He had no city of the mind, built against outward distraction for inward consolation and shelter.” A man who can not be alone, can not be a- good companion. It all would depend, of course, on what our companion expected of us on the journey. If he required wit, wisdom, sparkling brilliancy, and all sorts of social graces, few of us could qualify. But if he wanted loyalty, sympathy, courage, cheerfulness —a man who carries these qualities in his travelling bag will not long wait for friends.
DAILY HEALTH SERVICE Ulcer on Eyeball Is Dangerous —? BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN =
This is the sixth of a series of articles on diseases of the eye by Dr. Fishbein. THE most dangerous infection of the eye is the ulcer on the eyeball. This may be due to any kind of infection, but the worst forms are those due to the germ that causes pneumonia, the pneumococcus. and the one that causes gonorrhea, the gonococcus. In both of these types there is rapid destruction of the tissue of the eyeball. If there is penetration or perforation due to such destruction, the interior of the eyeball also Is infected, and then there is complete loss of vision. There is another type of infection of the cornea or covering of the eyeball which occurs most frequently in young children who are undernourished and have frequent colds, and particularly in those who have tuberculosis. In such cases there is an excessive flow of tears and a great aversion to light, This symptom / > 'L.. i..
entire canvas of what is wrong with our system of government, education and economics. That is a very large'order. I can’t say that it would be impossible to do all that in the course of a two-hour-and-a-half drama. But, at any rate, it is difficult. The man who calls his shots is more likely to succeed in holding the attention. Although the new Guild offering received highly favorable criticism, there was a disposition on the part of some of the reviewers to contend that the theme of federal expenditures and log-rolling congressmen was a bit dated. They felt that time and events had gone on past the play. I see little substance in this criticism. With the economy bill up before congress and the veterans’ lobby working night and day to defeat it or prod it full of holes, it seemed to me that “Both Your Houses” has an extremely timely aspect. I . wish it were playing in Washington right now. I rather think that it would cause many a face in the audience to turn bright red. If it is said that the matter of honest government is less than a complete solution for all our woes I readily will agree, but I fail to see why any dramatist who undertakes to write a play dealing in a polemic way with some problem of our time is under obligation to make it the receptacle of all propaganda purposes. For instance, a man who undertakes to do a comedy on the evils
/''VF bluff old Dr. Johnson it was said; "He had large graciousness, but few graces.” Such a companion might be trying at times, lacking the little graces, which are lovely and desirable and charming; but in the long run a large graciousness might be better, stronger, more dependable. Also, much would depend on whether our companion was going for the journey, or was smitten with the mania of arriving. Life is a long journey, too—for many a lonely and sometimes a terrifying journey—and there are few worthier ambitions than to be known as a good travelling companion; reliable when the going is rough, cheerful when shadows fall across the road. It is a rather fine thing to know that one is on the list of men whom lonely travellers always would be glad “to go with” on our strange journey through the years. If we have found a travelling companion in friendship, in marriage, who is trustworthy and lovable, our fortune is fine. If our companion unites the little graces with a large graciousness, we are rich. (CoDvriaht. 1933. bv United Features Syndicate. Inc.)
Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hveeia. the Health Maaaaine. is called photophobia. Because of the aversion to light, which produces blinking and pain, the person is likely to keep the eyelids shut on the inflamed eye. If the eye is studied, it will be found fuli of little flecks or material deposited by the inflammation. Another type of inflammation of the cornea is due to the second great venereal disease, syphilis. This is a most serious condition when it affects the eye, as well as when it affects any other part of the body. For this reason, the physician who treats the disease treats not only the eye, but also the infection as it concerns the rest of the body. It must be remembered that there are various ways in which germs c&n attack the eye. They \
of prohibition, or of repeal for that matter, might do very well not to introduce very much material on the subject of cruelty to animals. B B B Being Fair to Enemy IN the discussion which raged around “We the People” one admitted quality in the play brought the author alternate praise and blame. Everybody agreed that it was a play about heroes and villains and that the dramatist did not give the people he was after so much as one toe to stand upon. They possessed neither a shred of virtue nor a scrap of humor. To my way of thinking that left them dull and unconvincing. It didn’t make for drama. But the argument ran that a propagandist must be on one side of the fence or the other, and that he would be a fool to cede anything to his adversaries. Maxwell Anderson, I feel sure, has chosen the better way. The best drawn and the most brilliantly acted character in his place is one of the rascals. Solomon Fitzmaurice ought to stand among the most vivid of all the figures which our stage has ever taken from life in Washington. Walter C. Kelly plays it to the hilt. But the fact that the man is likable does not lessen the strength of the dramatist’s argument against graft. After all, the fellow is a somewhat wistful cynic. Under cover of a humorous approach, he indicts the system by which he lives and has his being in a more, effective way than the rather too Galahadish hero. After all, the best kind of testimony always has been a well-authenticated and believable confession. B B B They Are Still Here AGAIN, there is danger from any propagandist’s point of view in demolishing your adversary too utterly. The audience goes out into the night with the complacent feeling that the job already has been done. They forget that it is only a play. , "Both Your Houses” leaves a challenge from the undefeated still ringing in your ears. The hero goes out having denounced the grafters in a swinging speech which leaves the house fluttering with applause. But the play is not over. Walter Kelly as Fitzmaurice looks up and says: “It’ll blow over. Asa matter of fact, the natural resources of this country in political apathy and indifference hardly have been touched.” And a second later he adds: "I’m too old, Wingie. They won’t get me. No I don’t hardly expect it in my time.” "Maybe,” says a girl and the curtain comes down. In other words, Maxwell Anderson has turned his propaganda theme back to the audience, where it belongs. He has said: "Now, there it is. What are you going to do about it?” : Copyright. 1933. by The Times)
may come in from the outside or from the inside. The same germs that cause inflammation in the joints or in tl e nervous system, coming from infection in the tonsils and the teeth, or the throat, also may be carried by the blood to tl.e eyes and bring about serious infection there. Under the circumstances, the mere healing of the condition in the eye is not sufficient. It is necessary to find the systemic cause responsible and to take care of that as well. People with tuberculosis, infections of the teeth, the tonsils or the sinuses, with high blood pressure, kidney disease, or diabetes may have symptoms affecting their eyes directly related to the other diseases that have been mentioned, and the diseases of the eye will not be improved until the other conditions are brought under control. NEXT: Cataract" of the Eye.
M.E.TracvSavs:
STROXG HASP IS AT THE HELM
IF its first ten days can be regarded as typical, we have a right to hope much from the Roosevelt administration. During that short period, the country lot only has been extricated from a critical situation, but has been given a vivid illustration of how rapidly the government of the United States can function when properly guided. The popular reaction is healthy and normal. Instead of being discouraged by the inconvenience and discomfort to which they were
put, the American people have found new inspiration in a wide-awake, courageous leadership. Already, the effects of renewed confidence are perceptible. Prices are beginning to rise, manufacturers are beginning to consider the possibility of increased production, farmers are encouraged by the prospect of improved conditions, merchants are looking for bigger sales. Such a feeling of optimism is due to the conviction that we have an administration which realizes what is the matter and what must be done. BUM A Strong Hand Is at the Helm NO one with any sense expects a boom to develop over night, or wants a Doom to develop any time. But for the first time since 1932 the people of this country can see something ahead besides these timid, makeshift remedies which only aggrevated the depression. For the first time they feel the ship of state responding to a strong hand at the helm. That is all they have needed and all they have asked for since the crash. The masses of this country never have believed that the situation was hopeless, or that real progress toward recovery could not be made with the right kind of guidance. While recognizing the effect of world-wide conditions, they never have admitted that this country was powerless to bring about great improvements on its own account. Nothing has discouraged them so much as the continuous parade of excuses as to why this or that should not be done, and as to the necessity of salvaging the whole world to make the tlnited States livable again. b b a Put Our Own House in Order IT is quite true that the rehabilitation of foreign trade would help, and that no opportunity should be lost to promote It, but it is equally true that the government could and should have done a great deal more to encourage domestic trade than it has. Like individuals, nations can not make business by scolding each other, or broadcasting general advice. In a situation such as has prevailed during the last few years, the most practical contribution a country can make to the common good is to put its own house in order. Had that been followed, especially by this government, not only the American people, but people throughout the world, would be much better off than they are today. The effect of President Roosevelt's vigorous efforts is no less apparent abroad than at home. People everywhere feel anew confidence in the future, now that the United States has begun to move forward purposefully.
We Hop for the Moon — BY DAVID DIETZ ,
EARTH is troubled. Discord and strife mar the affairs of men. There is depression everywhere. In the United States, the people look to the new President to rehabilitate a banking system that has failed to meet the needs of the day. We must face the problems of earth. But now and then we need temporary respite. Momentarily we must escape. So I am going to invite you to escape for a few minutes each day into a rocket ship. In it we will sail away into the sky and leave our little earth and all its troubles behind for a brief while. We will explore the wonders of the universe. See! Here is our rocket ship waiting. Being a purely imaginary ship, it is endowed with all sorts of magical properties. It travels with the speed of thought, which is faster even than the speed of light. It is as comfortable and as safe as your favorite arm chair. Our rocket ship is built of duralumin, an alloy of aluminum which combines the lightness of that metal with the strength of steel. It is the same alloy that is used for the framework of the giant Zeppelins. There are plenty of windows on all sides of the rocket ship. In addition there are glass plates set in-the floor of the ship. Once we get out into space we want to be able to see in all directions. All windows and doors close with air-tight joints. Times Readers Voice Views ... Editor Times —During Cleveland’s administration there was an old folklore story going the rounds in our community, and it was called “Danny Depressed.” Times were tough in those days and many men were working for 50 cents the day, and mighty glad to get it. So Danny kept wearing his shirts out until he had only one left fit for Sunday wear. And this lone shirt was a symbol of future prosperity to the beaten man. Danny’s wife washed this precious shirt one sunny Monday and hung it up to dry. The wind flapped it beautifully in the cool morning breeze and faithful old Bowser gamboled and leaped gleefully to grab off a mouthful cf dashing shirt as it flashed back and forth past his head. The result was that Danny’s shirt shortly assumed the title of “All front and no back.” This worried Danny’s wife very much, but being a resourceful woman, she tore open a sugar sack and made a temporary back, so Danny would have his shirt for next Sunday wear. The minister was coming for lunch, and as this was his first visit, they hoped to impress him with the true Christian spirit. And things went lovely until it came to lunch time. This Sunday fell on July 3 and it was the hottest Sabbath in thirty years. Os course Danny had to wear his coat to hide his false shirt back, and the perspiration ran down his face in streams. The minister removed his coat and urged the other men to do likewise. Danny hesitated, his pride fighting a losing battle with the heat, then he jerked it off and spoke quietly: “Please excuse my back, but you all may admire my front.” And the above story seems to fit our present depression, because we all have nothing left but our fronts looking ahead to better times. That which is behind us is all dark and gloomy and gone forever. Our backs and reserves are all down in the depths of despair, and if our fronts only will hold out for another year or so, we may cross the river without trading horses in midstream. RENE LANIER BEAUIER. Acton, Ind.
-MARCH 18. 1933
TRACY
Must Preserve Air THIS is necessary, for once we are out in empty space we must guard against the air in the ship leaking out. Os course we carry tanks of oxygen as well as chemical filters to absorb the carbon dioxide which otherwise would accumulate in the ship on long journeys. Our rocket ship is equipped with powerful electrical searchlights on all sides, for in space we must keep a sharp look-out that we do not run into a meteor or permit a meteor to run into us. ' We enter the ship, close the door tightly, and make our way to the “bridge,” the glass-inclosed room at the very nose of the ship where the steering controls are situated. If you don’t mind, I will take charge of the controls. So let us start the motors of our ship. Swiftly we rise into the sky. Looking ahead, we se the moon and stars. We notice that the stars are brighter than we ever see them in the city, brighter even than we see them from the Arizona desert where the air is clear and dry. They are brighter, because there is now no air at all to interfere with our view. We also note that the stars no longer twinkle. They can not, for the appearance of twinkling ordinarily is due to the movements and tremors of the earth’s atmosphere. B B B We Speed Toward Moon THE sky is blacker than usual. This, likewise, is due to the lacx of any atmosphere. For there now are no molecules of air to catch the light of the moon and reflect it back and forth. The moon grows brighter and brighter. We are speeding toward the moon inside the cone of the earth’s shadow. But the earth’s shadow is not pointed directly at the moon. If it were, the moon would be enveloped in it and we would have an eclipse of the moon. And so after a time, we emerge from the earth’s shadow. As we emerge, the moon looks no different. But now, when we look back toward our own earth, a strange sight meets our eye. We see a crescent earth shining in the sky! We see more stars also, and in addition, the sun as well. The sun is more brilliant and more dazzling than we ever have seen it before, but the sky around it is black. Let us examine these wonders, one at a time, and see the reason for them. a b n Shine by Sunlight THE moon and the various planets which we see in the h f ”vens —Venus. Mars, and so on --all shine by refiecteed sunlight. The moon goes through its phases because of its motions. When we see all the lighted side, it is full moon. When we see only a little, it is a crescent moon. If we watch Venus through a telescope, we find that it goes through phases just as does the moon. Consequently, while it may surprise us at first to see a crescent earth in the sky, it is perfectly natural that we should see it. The most puzzling feature of the earth's appearance is a very bright spot upon the ocean. At first we can not imagine what this dazzling, scintillating spot is. But a moment’s thought clears the mystery. The ocean is serving as a gigantic mirror in which we see the reflection of the sun. The image scintillates because our liquid mirror has a moving, rippling surface. As we approach the moon, it seems to grow larger and larger. The crescent earth fading away in the distance grows smaller and smaller. Soon it is time to reverse the engine and slow down the rocket ship. We are arriving at the moon. Next—We vi 4 the moon.
