Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1936 — Page 9
a g ab FROM INDIANA
By ERNIE PYLE
MOUNT RUSHMORE, S. D., Sept. 26.— You've probably heard of what a thunderstorm Gutzon Borglum is. How he’s always \ :nting his artistic temperament, and throwing down his tools, and tearing up his models, and nobody can get along with him. So when I buttonholed -him in the lobby of a
Rapid City hotel the other night, I expected him tn
take one look, and knock me down.
But instead he said “Pyle? Any relation to Howard Pyle? He was a great artist.” So I told Borglum no, I wasn’t related to anybody, and I'd like to come out Monday and look at his great stone faces on Mount Rushmore, and talk with him for a half hour or so. And he said “Fine. If you act intelligent, I'll talk to you all day.” So out I went, and we talked nearly all day. Which makes me intelligent.
By 2 A
Mr. Pyle of man you'd picture from reading the reports about him. He doesn’t spout, or blow off, or seem: the ieast bit violent. He doesn’t use those artistic phrases that befuddle the layman. He is intenseiy in earnest about Mount Rushmore, and seems to feel sort of a reverence about it. Borglum is of Danish descent. His father was a Nebraska country doctor. There were no artists in the family before. doesn’t look it, or act it. He has amazing courage and vitality. He works hard and long,
n =
He Hates Politicians
E is medium short and heavy. His head is bald and he wears a heavy mustache, Around his neck is a scarf-like piece of batik. the ends tied down about to his waist, like the sling for a broken arm. That's the only artist's effect. He. hates politicians. He swears when he talks about them. He won't let politicians tell him how to do his work, or how to spend the money. That's what - most of his rows have been about. Incidentally, he’s liable to go back and finish Stone Mountain in Georgia almost any time now, The Georgia Legislature has put the finances in the hands of a commission, rather than individuals, and that’s what Borglum wanted. ; Although his greatest fame has been built on these massive sculptures, Borglum loves to work in small details. He plans to do many small figures again be- ° fore long. - : . He used to paint when he was younger. And now he's getting a yen to paint again. : Yili oa
Shows Tender Affection
HAD imagined that a great artist never came out 1 of the clouds long enough to notice his family. But Borglum has tender affection for his family. Mrs. Borglum is a ‘gentle, intelligent woman who seems to share, rather -than be dominated by, the artist’s genius. io They have two children. Lincoln, now 24, is foreman of the stone carvers on the mountainside, carrying out his father’s instructions. Mary Ellis, the daughter, has just been married to an Army aviator. Borglum, even at 70, climbs the high mountain several times every day, or rides up in the chickencoop cable car, high across the valley.
Just now, the whitish sculptured faces stand out
brightly against the dark: mountain. Borglum ‘says it will take 50 years for the “newness” to disappear, and 20,000 years for the elements to harmonize them completely with the gray rock all around. He says they will last as long as the mountain lasts. .
Mrs. Roosevelt's Day
BY ELEANOR ROOSEVELT ,
ASHINGTON, Friday—We are on-our way to New York. A gorgeous day with a tang of autumn in the air. I got out my last year’s autumn suit and a new felt hat with a feeling that the time for summer clothes was really over. I can not play the invalid any more for I am entirely recovered. Pleasant though it may be to shirk the daily round of one's duties, one can not justify it for too long. : Several things which have weighed ‘heavily on our minds seemed to come to a close and clear up yesterday. We got a job for the girl who was our greatest problem and started her off on it—the rest is up to her. 3 Ih the mail this morning there came a copy of the anniversary number of Parent's Magazine. The publication is ten years old and I think the editorial by Mrs. Litledale expresses their achievement very well. They are helping parents all over the country to bring up their children. The raising of children is so blithely undertaken by many of us, and the vast majority have had no training. It is one of those ~ professions that every woman thinks she can undertake, so nobody really prepares for it. The function of Parent's Magazine has been to assist these parents throughout the country. I feel that they have done avery creditable job and I wish _ them continued success. _ There is a charming little book of essays by Karel Capek, and any one who wants to spend a lazy and not too exciting hour would enjoy reading it. It is translated by Dorothy Round and very well done. Here are some sentences which I picked to remember. “Walking is really more amusing than sleeping. It is richer, more absorbing, more creative.” . Speaking of the penalty imposed on Sisyphus: “The hellish penalty consists not in the fact that Sisyphus had to do hard work, but that he had to do useless and shoddy work.” . Perhaps we respond to that because so many of us occasionally think we are in the same boat. Lastly: “Another kind of pleasure is advising the . blacksmith how to shoe a horse, or a cabinet minister what to do. From all of which it is evident that giving advice is a source of inexhaustible com-
fort.” (Copyright, 1936, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
; : < Daily New Books THE PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS— “PFT'HE matter—the real matter with the English ; is that they are polite.” + With this clever observation Odette Keun, French woman, traveller, writer, and nurse, introduces England and the English in her recent book; I DISCOVER THE ENGLISH (Longmans; $2). Possessing a keen and genuinely affectionate appreciation of his failings as well as his virtues, the author reveals the Englishman as he seemed to her in his native land. with his rigid class distinctions, his palaces and his slums, his reverence for the past, his really remarkable shops
and’ uncomfortable dwellings, his constant courtesy, his tolerance of the opinions of others and his com-
plete faith in himself; and she leaves the reader with ".& clearer understanding of why, as she says, Eng- - land has “played a tremendous part in the social and intellectual evolution.”
» # »
read THE ROOFS OF ELM STREET, by William McNally (Putnam; $2.50), is to live under ‘these roofs. And to live on Elm-st in the village of North Star, Minn.,, when the Middle West was being opened, was to'be of the “first” families, either that of Bradley Carver, a doctor from the eastern states; Otto Schultz, a German lawyer, -or Hugh O'Neill, an exiled Irish immigrant. These three stalwart men, the “real succeeders” of North Star, became friends after moving into this territory as a ‘of that great cosmopolitan, unending train of J ts which set out soon after the Civil War. * After years of I realized for them social and financial success, materially exhibited by exclusive Elm-st with . ve The closely interof these three men, those of their and the children of their
‘a panorama of a small town’s main |
Borglum doesn’t seem the type
Gutzon 1s going on 70 now. But he |
struggle their investments in a lum-
econd Section
Germans Fear Police
and Brown Shirts, Joe Finds.
(Fifth of a Series)
BY JOE WILL S Times Svecial Writer
WAS having a late dinper with a German judge in my room at the Furstenhof one night. I had known him from America, where he studied law and rowed at Harvard.
We were talking casually and informally mostly about the judiciary and how it functioned un:er the Nazi dictatorship. As a fled j‘ling lawyer he had played a minor role in the Reichstag fire trial. His reminiscences over a mess of tilsiter kase were infeiesting. : Most adult Germans smile knowingly when the Reichstag fire is mentioned. “The Communist s may have been resppnsible far many things around hers.” said the judge, “but they never fired the Reichitag. Even: Ii. Werner never had any real confidence ) their guill.” (Werner was the Reich prosecutor.) As every. body who is even vaguely familiar with the Hitler movement knows, the Reichstag incident, with its communistic® suspicions, was the spark which ignited the Nazi fires of political success. “Our case was so weak,” continued the judge, “that before the trial was half over it began to look as if the Nazis rather than the Communists would have to prove their innocence.” Across the street in Potsdamer Platz, the Haus Veterland was a five-story pillar of brilliance. This is the enormous, garish music hall of all nations owned and operated by a Jewish gentleman named Kempinski. The jerky
Mr. Williams
through the window. ” on : i! HE Russian Dimitroff almost wrecked our case single handed,” the . judge went ‘on. “He rotted e of our witnesses in confusion. The court couldn’t stop him from talking. He must have been thrown out a dozen times but he always came back. He was magnificently unafraid. He even challenged Goering — 3 There was a knock at the door. The waiter came. for the dishes. The judge kept on talking. . . . “So you say this is the finest stadium you ever saw? Well, I am happy to hear that. We have worked hard to make this a splendid show and we are hopeful you visitors will be pleased.” The judge continued talking in this strain until the waiter had left. I asked him what the big idea was. He shrugged his shoulders expressively, “How do I know who that waiter is?
Nd
strains of a swing piece floated .
He may be a Brown |
6 =
8
Shirt. He may even be a mem-
. ber of the Gestapo (the secret It |
police of the Third Reich). is unwise to take foolish chances. To mention Dimitroff and Goering in the same breath, that might, easily land me in a concentration camp. And besides it is best that no one knows your sentiments. That's why I suggested we eat in your room rather than downstairs in the grill.” ? . I recalled the judge had seemed unduly firm in this suggestion. And this was why. He was afraid of spies. This was my first personal experience with the mental terror that is an inevitable corollary of dictatorships, and it was scarcely pleasant. I knew such conditions existed, but to see ‘them with, my own eyes was— well, it was both frightening and sickening. “ ! a ” »
ERE was a reasonable young man, a graduate of two famous universities, a thoroughly normal, modern, eager citizen and yet so insecure was his position as 2 human being in the Nazi scheme he didn’t dare speak his mind even about a defunct and forgotten court action lest he might be turned in by an informer. Nazi terrorism has left a lasting imprint on the minds of the German people and even the intellectual minority, the independent thinkers, or what is left of them, seemed to have surrendered to the inevitability of superior - odds.* “Bloody Saturday” and “The night of the long knives” still cast long and menacing shadows across a cowed and helpless group.
Hitler, Goering, Goebbels can not be even caricatured ...'a dreadful blow to the artists.”
“Why do I stay here?” repeated the judge. “Hope, I guess. Hope that some day things will be different. You get to love your own country, you know. Besides, here is where my friends are. People I was. born and reared with. These are my compensations.” , . . The judge admitted he was a member of the Nazi Party. ... “I am not a wealthy. man. I either belong to the party or I have no work. It takes no great effort to give a salute or learn the chorus of the Horst Wessel Lied. It may be distasteful but. it is better than starving.” If the masses are with Hitler— and informed neutral observers in Germany insist they are — the minority either doesn’t dare or is in no position to be against him. They are without power of any kind, without means of expression and, as time rolls on, without aggressive interest. The judge's state of resignation is a case in point. : Not one line may be printed in any German newspaper reflecting on. the nobility of the Nazi cause or the Nazi leaders, and by the same token not one line may be printed suggesting meritorious qualities of any cause or any person that functions or thinks in opposition to Hitlerism,
» ” ” O an American who has seen Presidents described as thickheads, stuffed shirts and even gang leaders in the daily prints, and who is at the moment tgying
to figure out how: Mr. Roosevelt - can be such an awful heel in a. Republican newspaper and such a
aR
distinct blessing to humanity in a Democratic newspaper at one and the same time, the Nazi formula is at least a novelty. : In the German press the three party chiefs, Hitler, Goering and Goebbels, can not even be caricatured, which, considering the rich possibilities, plainly is a dreadful blow to the artists. The satire and ridicule of the artists’ pens must be reserved for the enemies of the state, meaning the Communists, the Jews and (at opportune moments) the Church.
The controlled press is the most powerful weapon the Nazis possess. Through it all forms of terrorism and brutality can be presented heroically as “acts of justice.” Even if there were an opposition party it could not be heard. The people read only what the minister of propaganda wants them to read. Nobody in Germany knew Helen Mayer, Ger-man-Jewish girl, was competing under the Nazi flag in the Olympics until she appeared for the fencing events. . . Though heaven knows why she should have cared to compete in the first place. Anyway, the Nazi newspapers were instructed to conceal the news from the 100 per cent pure Aryans and they did. The censorship is thorough. It covers the whole field. No minority can ever hope for a hearing from Goebbels’ stooges.
” ” ” ALSO had a long talk with a Nazi school teacher before I left Berlin. . A mutual friend had arranged the meeting. The teacher, a woman, taught in the lower
» This was her suggestion.
feelings.
grades, corresponding to our
Entered as Second-Class Matter - at 1’ostoffice, Indianapolis, Ind.
grammar schools. She spoke English. From 1926 to 1930 she lived with relatives in Harrisburg, Pa. She had some familiarity with the American school system. We talked in the Tiergarten. There was less chance of being overheard. She was assailed with the same fears that caused the judge to change his conversation so abruptly in the presence of the Furstenhof waiter. She explained her position was perilous, anyway. She had twice been disciplined, once for not impressing her pupils with desirable vigor that Der Fuehrer was sent to them by God; again for not urging upon the pupils the stern necessity cf reading Hitler Youth, a propaganda weekly geared to the adolescent mind. ; “I do all these things now,” she said meekly. ‘There is no alternative.”
She described some of the inter- -
esting ceremonials in ‘a German grade school. As soon as the class assembles in the room the teacher salutes and says “Heil Hitler,” and the pupils answer in chorus. Then there is a prayer. It goes:—“We thank our God for giving us a leader who has in turn given us bread and peace; we thank you deeply, great God.” The teacher omitted this prayer
once, was reported in some myster=
lous, way and disciplined, as menoned above, An earnest, s tive woman, she can ee di : for a modern, civilized Germany. . . . “All these children are taught is the greatness of the party, the might of the sword. They are not permitted to know anything about the outside world, except that Russia is a deadly enemy. How can they develop minds of their own? How can they grow up to be anything but wooden puppets? How can—” Her voice broke in a half sob, betraying the intensity of her She dabbed her eyes quickly. “I'm sorry,” she apologized. . . . “I don’t suppose you ever get over to Harrisburg, do you?”
Next—Further views of Hitlerized Germany.
BY SCIENCE SERVICE
RAGMENTS of bone from # South African cave, described in the British science journal, Ne ture, by Dr. R. Broom of the Transvaal Museum, may prove to be som of the most significant fossils thus far turned up by science in its long search for facts bearing on the origin of man. For sketches of these bits of bone, sent by their discoverer to Dr. William K. Gregory of the American Museum of Natural History, “suggest the right characters for - the adult of Australopithecus or a nearly allied form.” : : Australopithecus, or “the Ape of the South,” first was found in 1925 at Taungs in Bechuanaland bY Prof. Raymond A. Dart of the Witwatersrand University, Johannesburg. The two fossils then discovered, a brain-cast and part of the bones of the face, were definitely those of an ape, but of an ape with more man-like characters than any previously known sub-human species, living or fossil. Australopithecus was apparently a real missing link. - Prof. Dart’s findings were thos¢ of a young specimen, just cutting its first permanent molar teeth. Ii was therefore of less -value scientifically than an adult specimeri might have been, because young apes and human children are always
‘| more alike than the adult forms be
come. Scientists therefore went on
would tell the story of what Australopithecus looked like when he
grew ‘up.
= » » Y an especial stroke of good fortune, the newly discovered material described by Dr. Broom also
hopefully hunting for fossils that |
E!
Ancient Bits of Bone May Add to Knowledge of Man's Origin
the appearance of at least the lower part of its face. The age of the formation in which the fossils were found may be pliocene, that is, the time just before the beginning of the world’s latest
great Ice Age, more than a million.
years ago. Since man’s ancestry had already been well separated frond the ape stock by the late pliocene at least (and indeed man may have definitely appeared by then) it is not considered probable that Australopithecus was a direct an« cestor. He must be looked upon as a onollateral relative—a great-uncle rather than as a grandfather. But he appears to have been a more nearly related great-uncle than any other great ape yet found perching near the main trunk of the human family tree. ; 2 =» =» ; AMBRIDGE, Mass. Sept. 26.— The nova in Aquila has been photographed by Harvard Observatory and evidence that the star is expanding was discovered. On photographic plates, Nova Aquflae was
twelfth magnitude June 22, about tenth magnitude July 22 and abou
ninth magnitude Aug. 17. : x.
A Woman's Viewpoint---Mrs. Walter Ferguson
Jf" a battle over custody of a. 6-year-old girl, the
POLITICS AS CLAPPER
SEES IT
BY RAYMOND CLAPPER ASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—Undoubtedly some look upon the
conference which President Roosevelt has called with certain economic royalists in the power indus-
try for Sept. 30 as another one of
those campaign-time coincidences. This conference,
called to discuss the possibility of pooling TVA and
private power facilities in the Ten-
nessee Valley, will be described by Administration critics as window dressing. : ; > Whatever window dressing there may be in it will be good, be-
cause Mr. Roosevelt is one- of the
best in the business. But there is every ‘indication that the signifi-
cance of this conference goes. far
beyond any immediate campaign dramatics. Conditions make - the
time ripe for bringing to an end
the guerilla warfare which has been raging between the Administration and the power industry for three and a years. TVA'has reached the stage where, early in November, Norris Dam will be in operation providing more than enough electric power to meet the
needs of the major cities in Tennes-
miner
see. At that time the
between TVA and the Common-
wealth & Southern Power Co., ex- : Transmission
pires lines are al-
most complete to carry this power
dividuals than
court allowed the child to choose betWeen her parents. She turned immediately to her father, This is neither strange nor alarming. Although . psychologists would probably ascribe the selection
10 the sex tie which is supposed to make
the affec-
tion between father and daughter particularly strong, it might have been based on a simpler cause. Perhaps the mother was neither kind nor
lov: ble. i
It has become a tradition with us that all children are naturally attached to their mothers—but
sometimes this is far from true:
Also the “benign influence of mother love” can be something else again. It may as easily be a damning influence. For plenty of women have a ‘positive genius for ruining both the character and
the lives of their
af dning so. -ind
pool | ernment would be relieved of this
into Knoxville and Chattanooga. with lines into Memphis and Nashville in the offing. PWA money is ready for starting municipal distribution systems. At last government power has come to the door of the biggest concentrated markets in Tennessee. This is the decisive moment when it is to be determined whether government and private power can work hand in hand, or whether it is to be a long war, costly. for both sides, and wasteful for the nation. a am OTH sides realize this and so fax ‘as indications go, both sides are in a mood to seek a working agreement, ) . ~ Conditions which induce the government to desire an agreement include these: - : 1. Power companies are in the courts now. with the so-called 19 companies suit, challenging the constitutionality of TVA and particularly its right to destroy existing utility properties in Tennessee's leading cities by building competing distribution systems upon conclusion of 2 satisfactory agreement. The gov-
harassment in the courts. -2. Building of competing distribu-
tion systems would result in wasteful duplication of existing private
|
we dream have been n
facilities, an expenditure of government funds that would be difficult to justify so long as the possibility
of utilizing existing equipment had
not been exhausted. 3. Construction of competing facilities by the government would damage the holdings of thousands of utility investors, and prolong the public warfare with continuation of
charges that the government was de-
liberately trying to wreck the private utility industry. 4. After all, the government's aim is to get cheap power to the largest number of consumers. TVA power
can be distributed over a much larger area and more cheaply by utiliz-
ing existing private facilities than by depending upon its own lines alone. : ” : 3 ” ONDITIONS which induce the utilities in this area to desire an agreement include these: 1. The threat of intensive gov-
ernment competition in the largest |
concentrated markets is now imminent. Unless aided by the courts, private utilities could hardly hope to win. ° ‘2. Utilities urgently need. to refinance their capital structure to take advantage of current low interest rates. Probably 1% per cent could be saved, an item which would run into millions considering the heavy captial investment which the power industry must maintain. Refinancing is difficult under the pres ent uncertainty as to the future of
siz 8 hope |
PAGE 9
Our Town
"I"HE Franco brothers, Daniel and Alexan« der, from Plymouth, England, and Moses Woolf, from somewhere in the East, were the first Jews to settle in Indianapolis. One guess is as good as another, but it's pretty
safe to suspect that they came here by way
of the old Madison Railroad sometime about 1849. In 1850, the Knefler family blew in from Hungary. In 1853, Max and Julius Glaser, Adolph Dessar and Max Dernham settled here, and in y 1855 Herman Bamberger and Jacob Goldman joined the colony. All counted, 80 years ago there probably were not more than two .dozen adult Jews in Indianapolis. At that, it was enough to start a congregation, because on Nov. 2, 1856, we find 14 of them going to the home of Julius Glaser and organizing the Indianapolis Hebiew Congregation. At the same meeting, they collected enough money to buy three and a half acres on the Bluff-rd for a Jewish burial ground. A little later, Father Bessonies of St. John’s bought ground for a Catholic cemetery in the same neighborhood. Both churche yards are still there. : =
Mr. Scherrer
” n Outgrew First Quarters
HE next year (1857) the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation rented a room for divine worship on the third floor of Blake's Commercial Row, which was where the Hotel Lincoln now stands. They didn’t have a rabbi to start with, because it wasn't until the fall of that year that the Rev. M. Berman came- {0 take charge.
He stayed about a year and did such a good job that the new congregation had to look for bigger quarters. Anyway, in 1858, we find the Jews worshipe ping in a hall on Washington-st opposite the Courte house. ci . #Ahe celebrated Dr, Isaac W. Wise came up from Cincinnati to dedicate the place, and the next night everybody went to Parisettes, the spiffiest restaurant in Indianapolis at the time, to participate in a big banquet. A good time was had by all, and nothing could have looked rosier for the Jews of Indianapolis. It looked even better six years later, because on Thanksgiving Day, 1864, under the rabbinate of the Rev. Judah Wechsler, a committee was appointed with Morris Solomon at the head to raise funds for a permanent synagogue. That was the start of the church on Market-st east of New Jersey-st. The cornerstone was laid in 1865, with the help of Gov. Conrad Baker. This fine piece of early Indianapolis architecture was wrecked four years ago to make way for a parking space. Everybody was asleep, apparently. " # ”
Expansion Followed E*.lovma the Rev. Judah Wechsler came Rabbi Mayer Messing. With him, too, came great active ity. He instituted Friday evening services, also a daily Hebrew class and a Sabbath school for children, What's more, he worked hand in hand with Father Bessonies of St. John's and Oscar McCullough of Plymouth Church in the interest of civic enterprises. In 1897, the Jews started thinking about a new synagogue. By that time; too, we had another Hebrew congregation—the Ohev Zedek Hungarian. They offered the older congregation $10,000 for the Market« st property. It was fair enough. At any rate, it was the start of the temple on North Delaware-st. The temple was dedicated in 1910, which year also marked the sixth anniversary of Rabbi Morris Feuer= licht’s connection with the congregation as an asso= ciate of Rabbi Messing. And as everybody knows, Rabbi Feuerlicht succeeded Rabbi Messing, which brings everything up to date to begin the Jewish ~ Year 5697. : LB .».,. 1 wouldn’t have known all this had I not noticed the mysterious activity around the temple the other day. Theyre getting ready to redecorate the place. Little signs of prosperity like that are stirring all around us. :
; SEPTEMBER 26 HE first regularly constituted Marion County Court met Sept. 26, 1882, in the house ot John Carr in Indianapolis. William W. Wick was presid= ing judge, and associate judges were James Mcllvain and Eliakim Harding. First business of the court was taking of oaths of office by the judges, Clerk James M. Ray and Sheriff Hervey Bates. Then it adopted 14 rules ot procedure and admitted 10 attorneys to practice. Next it chose a grand jury and appointed Calvin Fletcher prosecuting attorney. Then it was ready for business, and the first business was to secure larger quarters, found in another house and occupied that afternoon. Main business of the court in the afternoon was fixing prison bounds for insolvent debtors. Persons who couldn’t pay their debts in those days were put in jail but allowed to roam 600 yards from the prison if they promised not to try to escape. The court then attended to the naturalization of Richard Good, “lately from Cork, in the Kingdom of Ireland,” who apparently didn’t think much of Eng lish George IV's dominion over Ireland. The court then concluded its first day’s business oy granting the first liquor license issued in Marion Court to John Hawkins, who kept a hotel on Wash« ington-st between Pennsylvania and Meridian-sts.— By J. H. J. :
Watch Your Health
BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, American Medical Assn. Journal H®== are rules that should be followed carefully in keeping a family medicine chest: ‘1. “Don’t save poisonous preparations of any kind except antiseptics. 2. Never keep in the family medicine chest bie chloride of mercury, pills containing strychnine, or solutions containing wood alcohol. I 3. Never keep samples of patent. medicines of unknown composition. 4. Never allow any preparation of opium or mor= phine to remain loose in the family medicine chest. 5. Never save any preparation after the specifies need for which it was ordered by the physician has ended. : 6. Go over the family medicine chest at least once every three months and discard all useless or spoiled materials. a 7. When measuring out a medicine, think of what you are doing and pay no attention to anything else. . 8. Have a measuring glass for preparing doses, and several spoons of various sizes available for administering liquid medicines. * Si 9. Always measure drops with a medicine dropper, Do not use guesswork, ; 10. Always shake a bottle containing liquid m
-
: ine before pouring out the medicine for use.
11. * After removing the cork from a bottle, put the cork with its top down on a table, washstand or tray. Put it back in the bottle immediately after the medicine has been poured out. = 12. Never take a cathartic for abdominal pain un« sless the cause of the pain is known. It may be appen=
13. Never take pyramidon, or tablets which ec lain pyramidon, without a doctor's prescription. . 14. Never drop any medicine in the eye un doctor has recommended it. ~~ « ~~ 15. Women's cosmetics should be kept in a an concerned
