Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 15, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1935 — Page 13
It Seems to Me HEYWOOD BROUN IT has br*n m:H o( ■ - ill the tarsons dev lees Jl 'Hun ‘ * nf pra rt> that they < j, an , Tory "; A • time. This I'n t quite enough to ha' them* from • . -ic** and vet it floes give men s |tt tude *o he told .jy,, are mereiv pursuing the old way of failure. p rr , .>, r rea on 'hat nothing worked bark 1914 and thereafter nay he found in the r.rrt.m '.irrr • •• a grea' many of us didn't rev' - t*:de neare established. Before the last
war there was the sneaking susp.'uon ’hat another round might mnke ?, all both healthy and wi.se. Many were seduced and sacrificed to the ideal of the war to end war It is highly unlikely that ihr old slogans will be trotted out all over again. Certainly they will hardly come into their own until there has been a vast process of softening up and romanticizing public opinion. But it may be that one deep fundamental illusion ruined us in the vears which are passed. A society for peace, quite often is a rather pa ;;ve orcamzition which
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do€ r.o fighting for its rause until it is much too la f e The growth should be in militancy and cfIrr'y. er.e - ir is one thing for the old and middle aged *o sa*. ’ I will not fight again in any .struggle.” B.t the r are the men and women who turned the tide for our joining the in 1917. There *•;. be a red or revolutionary rolor in the new shoe, troop of public opinion With organizations a v.th football team’, a cood a'tary is the best defen e. If f were tfjr rerruiting serceant for the peare nor r• r po> .’vie. I vould begin like the armv fjoetnr < :’h t pht iral examination and arrept mto full r * ;‘:'. ’:ot. onlv the very fit. To he sure the e brigade would have to be ro-eduraf lonal b*i T do not regard the fact of femininity as a fundamental weakness. mm m Amer irons Would Fight Again volunteers for the next, crusade should be m b> to fr it like any conqueror. They would have , ej word for very few and one of their chief or, .;>.>• ie- > ;!d con i't of elbowing marines off t ing to salute brass-hats. T e only wav to top a war is to catch it firmly h' the throat and throttle it before it's started. I h e rm ple re<-po~t for those who say <and really rte.-sn*. Thi time thev'll have to come for me and s-rd me o a cell m Leavenworth.” But that isn't • 1 Ittitude mu * be much more aggressive a conflict when it gets under way can take within i? stride large and noble armies of martyrs. Now i= the t.me for all good men to come to the aid of the movement. And it will be well for them to estabh-h their tipulations p iblicly and chain* them elves do*v n against the call of the crowd. You and I mav say that we could not be fooled again. But of course, we could. Bo bv hi* assured defenses go down under the r- : g tide i ike dykes along a swollen river there t the po . ibUtty of udden rollapse in the key spots. p .ppfM> another Lusitania was to he sunk on every front page. jv you mean to say that quite calmly the average American would remark. “Nevertheless I will not fight.” If you think that you are illinformed. m mm Every War Scrum Good at First rpHE sf-mull which move men out of previously 1 prepared pos'Mnn* and into the battle line are as strong todav as hack in 1917. Os course, every rpms good as if first swings *nto the notice of t>v beholder. Here is a release from things which are humdrum. Here is the way in which the young may c nr 'o heroi m while still within their teens. But t t< titd like to see the young men and women of all the world aroused to the intense heroism of saying, 'Thi is an adventure in which I will take no part.” Such stamina us rare. America does not grow a Lneene V. IV bs in every generation. Accordingly. 1 think that all who fight and stand for peace should be articulate before the nation goes utterly into the silences of “public safety.” Bo first of all let the invasion of the colleges continue. I am informed that April 12 Is the day set for an international strike of tutlents against war. Anv such demonstration will be of vast effect particularly if it is followed up by some quick and significant action upon the part of labor, including new paper workers, teachers, authors, radio broadcasters and clergymen. Now is the time for men of the cloth to step forward and declare themselves. In 1917 they did not lead their flocks bn* followed pell mell and served as chaplains for the slaughter. Bv now they could do much better. Well, what are they going to do about it? ♦Ceprrlrhf. I*9 Todays Science BV DAVID DIF.TZ -* r I 'HE sucee"ful treatment of a case of high blood A prr Mir* bv the cutting of eight motor nerves at the pom- where they emerge from the spinal cord is t.-ported bv Hr. Irvine H. race of the Hospital of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Researrh and Dr. Ocnrge J. Holier of the New York Hospital and Cornell Medical College. Unusual significance attaches to the operation because so little is known of the cause of high blood pressure. It may point the way to discovering its cause as well as proving a treatment for certain ivpc<. Manv authorities believe that high blood pressure is the forerunner of many degenerative diseases which are now on the increase. Details of the operation are given in the Journal prtkm. The patient was a 23->ear-old girl who had complained of fatigue and restles>ne s for a period of a year and a half. Temperamental! v she was excessively excitable and tins'able Toward the end of the period, she developed severe headaches, palpitations, and dull pains over the heart. At mcht her ankles swelled. Physical examination revealed that she had developed a blood pressure of 200. The girl was admitted to a hospital and given medical treatment without any relief of her eondtinces. the two doctors decided that surgical procedure was justified. MM* r |'*HE op. -it ton decided tiron had bce n first sugX gr ted and performed by Dr. A. W. Adson and p r p- Brown in 1934. The patient- in that in--0 vea-s of ace. had been suffering from h • 1-m of the arteries n well as high blood press ’ and -he operation did not lower the blood pressure jt much as had been expected. • ..... however, there was no * ,rder _ of the arteries and so the two ■ felt that thev might hope for success. The cause of high blood pressure # this g r. suffered from is not known. One thetu., is that 1' :s cue ?o contraction of the verv small blood vesscls in the region of the heart, stomach and intestines This means that the heart must do more work to fore- the blood through these tiny vessels or arterioles as they are called. The theory further holds that this contraction is due to nervous tension or some bodily upset which in turn affects the nerves. * M M / 'I”HE particular nerve trunks which were cut in X the operation not only carry impulses from the central nervous system to the abdominal muscles but also connect to the center in the sympathetic nervous system known as the celiac plexus. Through this center, they establish connection with the mach, liver, adrenals, pancreas, intestine and kidneys. The operation took three hours The nerves were severed at the spinal cord and the wound closed throughout with silk. Recoverv from the opera'ion was uneventful." the report of the operation states “The blood presi .re fell rapidly and progressively to a level that was nearly normal. There was steadv improvement m the patient's s'renet h but her emotional volatility continued unaba’ed. Her headaches, palpitations and precordial pain, however, disappeared.
Full Wire Service of the United PreM Ansociatlon
' ' Up tfP'fWm I \" t " Jjy 'l''--: ; -Ik: •}V 4t
Dust, rolling vp from the wheat fields in a choking . blinding cloud, stripping the flood earth from, once-fertile farms. The above remarkable photograph of a f>ipiral plains dust storm, reproduced here by permission of the United States Department of Agriculture, shows graphically the grim destructive power of a “duster **
Thi* I* Ihi flrt of thru srtlrln on th* national problem proaonlod h dnt • lorma—th throat of thoir rorurronro, thoir toll, ohat ran he and is Heine done about them. B'l V / f Srr< irr Kansas cit\'. March 28. Blacker and more terrifying than the cloud of dust which is gradually subsiding, there hangs today over the whole plains region of America the specter of still more dust storms to come. Unless nierriful rain comes soon, literally millions of acres of wheatlands will be forever destroyed The farmers know that despite any long-range remedies, nothing will help this spring and summer but rain. The drought which brought a billion dollar calamity on the plaias states last summer has not ended. It has been, up to now. a dry winter, and a hot. dry spring would open the to still worse dust storms than those of last year or this. The long-time future may be in the hands of shelter belts, sorghum and cover crops, or different methods of tillage. But unless rain comes thus spring it will be impossible to get root crops started at all, and the barren surface of the plains wheatlands will then be at the mercy of the winds at- any time that they happen to arise during the summer.
The DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND By Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen —
lIT ASH ING TON, March 28—Unquestionably the President's necesVV sity-inspired rapprochement with the A. F. of L. moguls has brightened the prospects for NRA renewal. The bat tip. however, is far from won. The Administration has yet to placate Ihe bitterly hostile Senate Progressives, who. privately, arp fully prepared to scuttle the Blue Eagle
unit if their demands for reforms are not met. The President is fully aware of this dancer. Behind the scenes he is making a strenuous effort to reach an understanding with the left-wingers. He has Eiven them assurances that personally he favors the bannine of price-fixing, elimination of all restraints on production and the reinstatement of anti-mono-polv safeguards. Senate independents say they are taking the President at his word, but they make no bones of the fact that they have their fingers crossed. In other words, they are waiting for him to make good his pri-vately-conveyed promises. If the Administration bill that Donald Richberg is secretly preparing fulfills the President's statements, then the independents are ready to play ball. If it fails to do so they are determined to fight. a a a THE PRESIDENT'S peacemaking with the A. F. of L. rhieftams was almost entirely at Mr. Richberc's expense. The burly Chiracoan took it on the jawthree times. Privatelv hastile to the Wagner labor disputes bill, he had to back water and make a public avowal that he was for the measure "in principle.” Likewise, he was strongly opposed to adding another labor member to the NR A board. Some weeks aco when Secretary Frances Perkins—who favored such an ad-dition-thought she had it all arranged with the President. Mr. Richberg intervened and put a stop to it. But in last week's shakeup of the board, not only was a labonte added, but he was the choice of John L. Lewis, president of the United Miners. Mr. Lewis is the most denunciatory of Mr. Richberg's foes. * m n Lastly, and most costly to Mr. Richberg. was his appointment as Chairman of the NR A Board. Second only to the presidency. this is the most exposed office in the government today. For Mr. Richberg—who is distrusted both by labor and the Senate liberals—it is doubly hazardous. He didn't want the job The only reason he took it was that Mr. Roosevelt could get no one else to accept. Mr. Roosevelt offered it first to W. Averell Harriman. multi-millionaire executive officer of the NRA. He declined. Then he turned to Arthur E.
The Indianapolis Times
'TPHAT is why thousands of •*- plains farmers pray today for rain. They know that immediate relief from the scourge of dust is beyond the hands of man. If any one had said a few years ago that winds could literally blow' a state out of the Union, it would have been good for a laugh. But it has actually happened. The Soil Erosion Service estimates that 5.000.000 acres have been completely destroyed for any possible cropping purposes by these recurring dust storms. That is an area roughly as big as Massachusetts. And a larger area of between fi0.000.000 and 90.000.000 acres has already suffered severe damage and may go the same way. That is as big as a state nearly as large as Montana. Look at the map, and see what this means. An area almost as large as Connecticut is being abandoned today in pastern Colorado and western Kansas. The farmers who knew-it and loved it as a region of fruitful farms are fleeing from it as the Belgians fled before the Germans in 1914. Dozens of ranch houses stand ncsolste and forsaken. The drifting dust piles up about the doorsteps. The fence-corners, heaped with dust, will soon fall to decay. The region looks exactly like what it may soon be—a desert. The pro-
Whiteside, dapper little head of Dun & Bradstreet and a member of the NRA board. He also refused. Stumped, the President was hesitating over his next move when he was warned by Frank Walker, former chairman of the National Emergency Council, that he must act and act quickly if the NRA was to be saved. Mr. Walker had been making a quiet survey of Senate sentiment and he found the NRA situation decidedly ominous. He told the President that it was absolutely necessary to come to terms with Labor and the liberals. So at the last moment, with no one else available. Mr. Roosevelt, in effect, drafted Mr. Richberg as NRA ch? ; nan. n an •O Senator Bill Borah modern ballroom dancing is a strange phenomenon. The sil-ver-tongued Idahoan rarely attends social functions but at the White House diplomatic reception this season he did put in an appearance. As he stood watching the crow'ded floor a friend asked him if he danced. “No." said Senator Borah, “I don’t dance. My views on the subject are similar to those of a famous Chinese statesman who attended his first occidental hall in Washington many years ago. “He watched the twisting and contorting couples on the dance floor for a while and then turned to his hostess. “Madame.” he asked, ‘‘would it not be possible to get your servants to do this for you?”
THREE DOCTORS ARE SELECTED BY ARMY Commissioned First Lieutenants In Medical Reserve Corps. Bp Times Special WASHINGTON. D. C.. March 28. —Three first lieutenants in the Medical Reserve Corps commissioned here yesterday were Drs. Carlisle Allen Payne, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis: Robert Bliss Miller, St. Joseph’s Hospital, South Bend, and William Warren Washburn, West Lafayette. Daniel Meade Johnson. Evansville, was commissioned second lieutenant of infantry in the reserve corps. Fry Issues Liquor Warning All holders of alcoholic beverace licenses were warned yesterdav by Paul P. Pry. state excise director, that licenses of those convicted of violatmar the Sunday liquor sale law would be revoked without renewal.
INDIANAPOLIS, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1935
ductive soil is gone, right dow'n to hard-pan or gravel. tt u n TT takes nature from 400 to 1000 years to create an inch of virgin topsoil. And government experts in a test in Texas have measured the blow-ing away of nearly 16 inches of good earth within a few' days. Once blown aw-ay it is gone. It benefits no other section of the country. The granular matter which settles as the storm blows onward is a detriment to land on w'hich it falls. The valuable fine material of the soil is almost always blown out to sea. These plains farmers are hardy, independent people. They have seen drought and hardship come and go. But at last they are beginning to fear for the future. One horny-handed w'est Kansas old-timer shook his head as he said, “I’ve farmed this territory for more tjian 50 years, and I swear there was never anything struck this country as terrible as this last dust storm.” He had been over his fields after the worst of the dust cloud had passed. There he saw' his winter wheat with roots exposed, certain to die with the return of the sun, and the best of his topsoil gone forever. There are thousands like him today. Many were even worse off.
AAA ANSWERS HOOVER ATTACK ON IMPORTS Deny Food Pouring Into United States Because of Program. Bjt United Vrm* WASHINGTON. March 28.—The AAA replied today to former President Hoover's charge that food was “pouring” into the United States because of government crop curtailment.. Imports of virtually all foods except grains and sugar were less between July, 1934, and Feb., 1935, than the 1924-33 10-year average the AAA reported. Total imports of all competitive agricultural products were 25 per cent less. The United States bought from abroad in recent months less butter. eggs, meat and cheese than usual. Grain imports were 286 per cent above average. City Osteopath to Speak Dr. Paul V. Allen, 526 Merchants Bank Building, has accepted an invitation to address a session of the American Osteopathic Association to be held July 22 to 26 at Cleveland, it was announced today.
SIDE GLANCES
Xtu .jubyj j ■<r. 1935 BY HE* SERVICE. 'VC. T. M KEO. t>. >. OW
“I want you to meet Mr. Bailey. He croons or flies or something like that”
and sawr tender green shoots of the winter wheat blown right out of the ground, roots and all. a a a TN great parts of Oklahoma. Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado, men and women are "digging out” today almost as the people of Naples dug out after the eruption of Vesuvius which buried Pompeii. They are burying the dead whose lungs, already weakened by pulmonary trouble, gave w'ay under the added strain of fine dust particles. They .are burying the victims of auto accidents caused by the fog-like haze of dust. They are washing off or shoveling out the dust mantle. And as they dug their way out, new storms sw'ept across Oklahoma and parts of Kansas. Wyoming. spared the brunt before, saw huge dust clouds roll across the state. But all this, terrible as it is, seems nothing to the plight of the areas where the real damage was done. It is not the territory where the dust goes that suffers most, it is the territory from W'hich it comes. There, in eastern Colorado, in parts of the Texas panhandle, north Texas, and southern Nebraska, the farmers saw a little swirl of dust rise in a field, saw then several other little swirls, and then fled to shelter as their
Split Pea Zoo-p
Javanese Pea Hen, Widow' of Few' Weeks, Picks on Tiny Bantam Rooster as New Love.
Bv United Pres* NEW YORK. March 23.—Spring comes to the zoo as to all other places and it gave a few twists to the heart of Madame Alberta Pea, a member of that well-known family, the Javanese pea hens. Madame Pea, being a widow of a few weeks, had felt herself immune to the call of love. Her husband broke his leg and died and she was heartbroken. In this weakened state, she contracted diphtheria. For convalescence, she was sent from the bird sanctuary to the Central Park Zoo. There spring got Madame Pea. She looked about and saw nothing but love and lovers.
MR. and Madame Duck billed continuously. Likewise. Mr. and Madame Swan. She fought off her own impulses for a long while, but finally cast about for a successor to Mr. Pea. Unfortunately, there were no peacocks around. But there was a Mr. Bantam who had a cocky, positive air about his tiny person that took Madame Pea by storm.
By George Clark
fields seemed to leap upward in a vast rolling cloud. It is in these places of origin where the grave and permanent damage is clone. a a tt ONLY two things give Lope. They are the possibility of widespread heavy rains, and the unconquerable spirit of the plains farmers. In the midst of the dust cloud, w'ith tragedy all about, they were able to laugh, grimly perhaps, and to invent a flood of dust stories like the ones w'hich they used to make up about their old rattling model-T Fords. On the plateglass w'indow of a busted bank in a western Kansas plains tow'n were found these words, etched by a finger in the dust: ‘‘Ashes to ashes and dust to dust; The men folks raved and the w'immen folks cussed; Take it and like it; In God we trust!” In God for rain, and in the federal government for relief until rain comes, the million farmers of the plains W'heat belt put their trust today. NEXT: There have always he<-ii dust storms in the west; why are they so had today and why do they seem to be getting worse? Government scientists will tell you some of the whys and wherefores in tomorrow's article.
She began following him around quite unmindful that being a fullgrown pqa hen she was three and one half times larger than a fullgrown bantam. Madame Pea was overpowered by love. Wherever Mr. Bantam went she was at his heels. When he crowed, when he strutted, when he climbed up on his roost for the night, her adoring eyes were upon him. tt tt tt '"F'HESE goings-on continued for X days and the entire neighborhood began talking. Surely, Mrs. Bantam would do something. But Mrs. Bantam being a little smaller than her very small husband, knew she had no chance. She watched and prayed. At first, Mr. Bantam paid Mrs. Pea no mind. Finally he became aware that he had an admirer. He contemplated Mrs. Pea’s great bulk and it was too much for his vanity. At that instant. Mrs. Bantam came up and got a few resounding pecks on the head. Then she was chased away in such fashion as to make clear Mr. Bantam didn't want to be bothered. Now Mr. Bantam struts proudly about the zoo. followed by a lovesick hen much larger than he. The zoo gossips say that poor Mrs. Bantam may end it all. CITY MILK PRODUCERS TO DISCUSS MERGER Three Groups to Hold Parley Here Next Wednesday. A merger of three milk producers’ groups operating in the Indianapolis market will be sought at a conference of the organizations next Wednesday, it vas announced today by Ralph Poulton, Independent Milk Producers’ Association secretary. The two other organize.cions which will be asked to join in the unified movement are Indianapolis Dairy Producers’ Council and the Indianapolis Dairymen's Co-operative. A committee appointed by the independent group to push the merger includes C. E. Powell. Lebanon, chairman: Guy Daily, Mooresville; Elmer Burns. Otto Sharp. Charles T. Riddle, M. E. Busald and Maurice Routon. all of Indianapolis; T. E. Yoke. Acton, and Walter Cooper, ZionsviUe.
Second Section
a Second-Cla Matter at Fixtoffire, Indianapolis. Ind.
1 Cover the World WM PU SIMMS VI7ASHINOTON. Marrh 28.—When the haze lifts * from Europe's diplomatic battlefield. Nippon and Britannia may stand revealed as the new European balance of power. This would be the first time in history that an Oriental nation ever played such a role in the Occident. Today Capt. Anthony Eden. British Lord Privy Seal, arrived in Moscow to talk with Joseph Stalin, Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinov and other Soviet leaders. But this visit, like Sir John Simon’s
to Berlin, is not expected to alter the British government’s apparent determination to hold aloof from any further alliances of commitments on the continent. Tory Britain is notoriously antiSoviet. The British conservatives, now in office by an overwhelming majority, once rode into power by making use of a Red scare. Harping on this motif, Chancellor Hitler is said' to have scored his one most impressive roint on Sir John by dwTlling on the danger of Communism and declaring Nazi Germany to be the only dependable dam against the Red tide. The British, accordingly, are expected to refuse to join hands with
the .Russians, whom they suspect of playing some sinister game to further the world revolution, or with any other power or group of powers aiming at the encirclement of Germany. Instead Britain is said to aim at playing with the French and Italians, at Stresa and subsequently, her old role of balance of power. a tt * Japanese-German Entente Likely r I 'O do this successfully, however, requires a fairly evenly balanced Europe, and today no such Europe exists. Leaving Britain out. it looks like Germany against the rest—France. Italy, Russia and the Little Entente. Even Poland—which until recently seemed inclined to side with Germany—now appears about to return to the camp of the former Allies. Mighty as Great Britain is, therefore, she alone can hardly hope to sway Europe the way she wants ir: time of crisis. And there is where Japan comes in. Just as Germany contemplates expansion eastward. partly at the expense of the Soviet Union, Nippon is credited with aiming at expanding westward, from Vladivostok into Eastern Siberia—also at Soviet expense. A Japanese-German entente is far from unlikely. On Foieign Minister Koki Hi rota's orders, Japanese ambassadors in Europe are to meet in Paris shortly to discuss thp European situation. Afterward Tsuneo Matsudaira. ambassador to London, will return to Tokio to report. With Nippon’s military might in the scales on the side of Germany, the powers will be far more evenly balanced than they seem at present. And Britain’s chance of swaying the balance, her role for centuries, will be considerably augmented. St St tt Simon Ready lo Give In SIR JOHN SIMON is believed to be prepared to report to London that the former Allies must yieid to Germany both on arms and territory or get ready for war. The Stresa conference, therefore, stands to bring the former Allies closer together on a plan to lace Germanys defiance, or drive them farther apart than ever. That Sir John may spring some modified version of the old MacDonald scheme for arms equality, or an entirely new one to bring Germany back into the European fold, is confidently expected. At any rate no doubt exists that Britain has little enthusiasm for new' commitments of the character of a coalition to ring Germany in.
Your Health —BY DR. MORRIS FISIIBEIN
YOU needn’t worry much about a slight loss of blood, when you cut yourself, because the bloodforming organs of the body can take care of that easily. But don’t let the blood continue to flow too long, or the loss may become a serious matter. Besides the loss of blood, other factors associated with wounds are quite important and may threaten life itself. A wound is any injury in which the skin is broken and there is damage to the tissues beneath it. When a large wound occurs, call a doctor at once. Thp clothing should be removed so as to permit an inspection of the condition, and it should be turned back so that it will not touch the wound. Moreover, those who are trying to help should avoid touching the wound with their fingers. Air will not infect the wound in the vast majority of cases, but fingers may. a tt a A WOUND of an artery is always serious. The blood comes in spurts and is light red in color. A wound from a vein is less serious. The blood will ooze and flow steadily and appear to be dark red in color. When the ,/leeriing from the nose, in the vast majority of cases the condition is not serious. Many simple methods of stopping nose bleeding are useful, such as the application of cold w’ater, or the pressure of cotton or gauze packed gently into the nostrils. When blood comes from the lungs, as in tuberculosis, it flows from the nose and mouth; such blood is frothy and very red. The patient should be put fiat on his back, an ice bag or towel wrung in cold water should be put on his chest and a physician should be called immediately. When blooc. Ls vomited from the stomach, the condition is always serious. a a a IN the care of ordinary wounds the two most important factors for control are the prevention of infection and stopping of the bleeding. In giving first aid. do not handle or wash a wound. Put on a clean surgical dressing. Amonr the antiseptic substances' that are useful are tincture of iodine, pure alcohol or green soap. There are also many well advertised antiseptics which vary in their potency. If blood is flowing steadily from a cut. it may bo necessary to put on a tourniquet between the wound and the heart. This will stop the flow of bl °lt is obviously not possible to put tourniquets around the neck or abdomen. In such cases, pressure by a tight bandage may serve the purpose. Questions and Answers q Name the Presidents of the United States whose pictures are on United States postage stamps? A—Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Taylor, Garfield. Grant, Madison, Benjamin Harrison, Monroe, McKinley, Harding, Theodore Roosevelt, Hayes, Cleveland, Wilson and Taft. Q—What is a chinook? A—A w’arm moist southwest wind on the coastal regions of Oregon and Washington: briginally so called by the white settlers at Astoria because it comes from the direction of the Chinook ramp. The name applies to a warm, dry wind that descends the Rockv Mountains. Q—What is the shortest verse in the Bible? A—“ Jesus wept,” John xi, 35. Q —ls Emma Goldman still in th? United States? A—She had a permit to remain three months in this country last year, and sht left at the end of that time.
I jm
IVm. Philip Simms
