Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1937 — Page 9
FROM INDIANA
: ERNIE PYLE
UMA, Ariz., Jan. 11.—By the time this is printed, the famous marrying judge of Yuma won’t be the famous marrying judge of Yuma any more. The movie stars will have to hunt up somebody else to mavry them at 8 o'clock in the morning. Judge Freeman has quit. : For 10 years Earl Albert Freeman, justice of the Yuma peace, has been marrying people, rain or shine,
day or night, Sunday or holiday— you just come and he weds you. But it was getting him down. He never had a full night's sleep. It was worse than being a fireman. He’s 57 and his doctor told him he'd better cut it out and take things . easy. So this fall he didn't run. His. last day in office was Dec. 31. Judge Freeman has married 25,000 couples in the last 10 years. Most of them were people who came over from California to avoid the threeday marriage notice law. The Judge has married some 50 world-famous movie couples, and probably 100 not so well-known. His most “recent big ones were John Barrymore and Elaine Barrie. He likes Claudette Colbert best of all the movie stars he has married. When Claudette and Dr. Pressman showed up to get married, the Judge had flowers for them and told her she was honestly his favorite star. Whereupon Claudette grabbed him and gave him a big kiss.
Mr. Pyle
# 2 8
Stars Send Photos
UDGE FREEMAN asks the stars for autographed photos and they send them when they get home. The living room of his house is full of big framed pictures of them—Mary Astor and Gloria Swanson -and Richard Dix and Sally Eilers and dozens of others. He has one of Jack Oakie looking on flabbergastedlike while the judge takes a big smack at the new Mrs. Oakie.
Judge Freeman is just as modern as anybody. He has silky white hair, and a young face, and wears a bow tie and blue shirt and a belt, and smokes cigarets and likes to go to parties. I went out to see him about 10 o'clock on a Sunday morning, and he had already married three couples since breakfast. It has been published that Judge Freeman gets as high as $1000 for marrying the big movie stars. He says that’s a lot of stuff. He says the biggest amount he ever got was $40, from Harold Graeve and
Jetta - Goudal. : | 2 8 s
Has No Set Fee
E doesn’t have any set fee. He just says give whatever you think it’s worth. He has married Hundreds who gave him nothing. I asked him what he thought of people who get him up at 4 a. m. and give him nothing. He said “I could go to the penitentiary for what I think about them.” He has refused to marry only one couple. A nice farm boy showed up one day with a painted floozie from San Francisco. The Judge says he didn’t like the looks of it from the beginning, but after all -it wasn't his business. ; So he started the ceremony, and the boy said “I do,” and then the Judge asked the girl if she took this man to be her wedded husband and so on, and she gave her chewing gum a crack and slouched over on his shoulder and gazed at the ceiling and said “Hell, yes.” Whereupon Judge Freeman just handed the license back and walked out of the room. Later they got a preacher to marry them. (More about Judge Freeman tomorrow.)
Mrs. Roosevelt's Day
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
ASHINGTON, Sunday.—It is a curious thing that when you feel you have some free time to write a great many longhand letters, the day passes by and you haven't done any. Yesterday I thought I had a morning in which I could catch up on my correspondence, but because of one thing or another the morning slipped away and I wrote only one letter. I went over to the lunchedn given by the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and the Emergency Peace Campaign. I had met and heard Miss Roydon speak in 1928 and welcomed the opportunity of hearing her again, particularly as all I was asked to do was to say a few words of greeting. I think she is as discouraged as many of us are as we look around the world today and see how little we seem to have learned from our experience in the World War. She has come over as the guest of the Emergency Peace Campaign and is to speak, I believe, in 40 cities. She made two statements which stand out in my mind. One was that no one could help but love his own country best, but that did not mean you had to hate other countries.. It should mean a better understanding of other countries, and a realization that other people feel about their country as we feel about ours. : : Secondly, she made the plea if war came to Europe, America should not join. We had joined in the last war and what good had it done? Better to keep at least part of the world sane. There was general agreement with her. Some people came in for tea in the afternoon and I went out to dine with a friend, leaving my husband and the two boys to a cozy dinner in his study. I returned very early and found the President still busy with his mail and both boys getting ready for bed. Franklin Jr. is getting his strength back rather slowly. He expected to go South tomorrow, -but- his departure has been postponed ior a few days. This morning he ate his breakfast in my sitting room with Chandler on his lap. When it was over, the children induced him to play hide and seek with them. He laid down the rules and told them they could only hide on the second floor, and that the counting would be done in my room so they couldn’t see where anyone was going. All his careful arranging was useless, they paid no attention to rules.
New Books
PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS—
O a desolate spot on the bulge of Africa’s west coast, there came, about 1820, freed slaves sent by an American colonization society.” There a settlement was established and a republic founded. Many years later comes a young Englishman, Graham Greene, to this black republic of Liberia, seeking to find in its primitive culture at “what point our civiljzation has gone astray.’ JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS (Doubleday, Doran) records the reaction of this virginal land, with its fringes of a decaying civilization, upon the mind of a sophisticated modern. The story of his trek through the hinterland of Liberia pictures the brooding mystery of the bush, night fires pricking out the pointed village huts, native bearers straining under heavy burdens over paths packed hard by countless generations of bare feet, bush dancers, mysterious ceremonials, superstitious terror, unspeakable disease. From the physical misery, the green menace of encroaching vegetation, the sucking crawling jungle life, the civilized mind recoils. : But the gentleness and simplicity of these primitive people, the rhythm of their tribal life when undistiirbed, drives more forcibly home, says the author, the shame of what we have done to ourselves. ” ” » > Wis a pattern of love and mystery placed “against a Maine background, Emile Loring has woven her romance, GIVE ME ONE SUMMER (Penn). Lex Carson came to Maine for two reasons, first, to claim his inheritance, second and most important, on a secret mission for the 1. 8. Treasury Department. He met the gay and light-hearted Melissa Barclay, and, for him it was love at first sight. But his investigations for the government gave him little time for lovemaking and it was not until after a series of
breath-taking and at times discouraging adventures
in his man-hunt that he was able to plead his cause. A small, but not unimportant character in the story is G-Man, an Irish terrier, who adds much to
« the plot by his constant pilfering of the bathing suits ‘belonging tc summer residents, is aia
Second Section
MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 1937
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind,
’
“TYPICAL HOOSIER’ TAKES REINS
By TRISTRAM COFFIN
TODAY is the climax of a long, determined struggle for M. Clifford Townsend. Born 53 years ago in Blackford County, the new Governor has been tenant farmer, teamster, factory worker, state legislator, school teacher, Indiana Farm Bureau officer and Lieutenant-Governor, He believes that his success is due largely to the opportunities a democratic system of government offer a poor farm boy and is determined that his Administration will be the most democratic possible. “I believe the people themselves should participate more in government. The best bills are those written by the various groups interested,” he said once. Governor Townsend is particularly pleased with the Milk Control law, because it embodies the suggestions offered by producers, distributors, consumers and Federal
~milk experts.
He called the public conference on gross income tax revision, because he believed that the people concerned should have the opportunity to state their views.
The Governor does not ¢ believe in tight dictatorship ‘by a state Administration and has announced he will not try to shove a number of bills through the Legis-
lature. “The various legislators know more about what their - people want than I do,” he has said. » #. ” OVERNOR TOWNSEND is an example of that legendary personality, a typical Hoosier. He is a self-made man with a warm
smile, a firm handshake and a drawling voice. He is a hunter and a fisherman. “Lum and Abner” is his favorite radio program. “Cliff” Townsend is happiest with his family and on his farm in Grant County, only a few miles from his duplex apartment in Marion. During the heat of his campaign : for election, Governor Townsend stopped in Marion one afternoon to = teach his little granddaughter to walk.
” a ®
RS. NORA A TOWNSEND— whom the Governor calls Mama—keen judge of character and situations. She often gave helpful suggestions to her husband during the campaign. Although his friends have suggested that Governor. Townsend continue in politics when his term is completed he wants to fulfill a boyhood dream of owning and operating his own frrm. : He entered politics in 1922 when he was working with his father-in-law, Benajah Harris, on the latter's farm. He had been superintendent of schools in Blackford County in 1912. Mrs. Townsend wanted to go back tJ the farm with her chil-
dren.
T the last minute for filing, the Democratic candidate for state representative from Blackford and Grant Counties dropped off the ticket. : Someone recommended “Cliff” Townsend. Mrs. Townsend was not enthusiastic, but told her husband to talk it over with Mr. Harris. “Is there any chance of your being elected?” Mr. Harris asked. “Not the slightest,” the Governor replied. “Well,” said Mr. Harris, “you and I are in the farming business and it might do you good to go in the campaign and make a lot of friends.” : The “miracle” occurred, according to the Governor. He was elected in what ordinarily was a strong Republican district.
# ® ”
N incident when he was -16 and a teamster in the oil fields may be responsible in part for his position today. His employer ordered him tio drag a heavy pipe through a bog. The horses sank in the muddy water and only ‘with great effort did young Townsend rescue them. “You knew my horses might drown when you gave me that order,” he said to his employer. “I'm
~ through.
He determined then to get an education so that he could do something besides team. Working his way through college, attending whenever he had the money, Governor Townsend completed the course at Marion College in his home town. .
2 ” ”
OVERNOR TOWNSEND proclaims himself an ardent believer in highway safety. He never permits his chauffeurs to drive at high speed. In Florida a few weeks ago, Dick Heller, the Governor’s executive secretary, was trying out his new car on the hard-packed sands.
Governor Has Been Teamster, Farmer, Teacher and Legislator
Governor ‘Townsend, fills out his gross income tax blank.
Governor Townsend asked Rex Rischer, his chauffeur: “Will Dick's car go much faster than ours?” When Rex replied, “Much faster,” the Governor said, “Well, you . just let Dick go ahead. We're in no hurry.” Governor Townsend is not airminded. During his flight last summer from Illinois to the State Federation of Labor convention in Evansville, Governor Townsend, friends relate, closed
his eyes during the entire flight.
AX TOWNSENEL! his oldest child, is a sei ous-minded youth of 24. "A gradiiate of Purdue University and _iresident of his fraternity chapter. Max arises at 5 a. m. to go to rork at the Indianapolis stockyar(s. Miss Lucille Mae 7 ownsend fis 22 and a teacher in a Grant County consolidated s:hool. Mrs. Helen Duncan is 18 ar i lives with her husband and bali daughter in Marion. ; Election night prob: ly was the
biggest night in Governor Townsend’s life. The Governor sat close by the radio scribbling down the returns as they were -announced. A
" The Name Is Lewis—
John L.
A series on the famed labor leader starts Somersaw on this page. :
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UNIQUE AMERICAN RADIO STATION BROADCASTS ON ALL FREQUENCIES
By ROBERT D. POTTER (Copyright, 1937, by Science Service)
ASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—The Nation's most: unusual radio station, which has the only permit ever granted by the Federal Communications Commission to broadcast continuously on all frequencies, 1s in operation at Kensington, Md.,
near here. : Known as Special Experimental Station W3XFE, the all-wave transmitter broadcasts only to itself and enables the scientists of the department of terrestrial magnetism of the Carnegie Institution of Washington to bounce radio waves! off the electrically-ionized layers scores and hundreds of miles above the earth’s atmosphere. A study of these radia reflecting layers, or “mirrors” as they have aptly been called, is disclosing new facts about radio transmission, magnetic storms around the earth, particle emission from the sun and magnetic storms on the sun itself. Even if you own the most modern all-wave radio receiver don’t sit up tonight trying to get W3XFE and its “click-click-click” signals. Radio engineers of the Carnegie Institution worked for six months with engineers of the FCC proving that although the Carnegie Institution station broadcasts on all frequencies of police, airplane, commercial and ordinary broadcast radio bands there is no interference with them. And what is just as important in turn, for research, is the absence of interference of ordinary radio communication with those -high-flung radio signals of science. #2 8 8 HY Carnegie’s station causes no interference when it is transmitting on a frequency of 660 kilocycles or 980 KC (assigned to stations WEAF in New York and KDKA Pittsburgh, respectively) is puzzling at first and the answer might be the reply to a seemingly meaningless question “When is a radio signal not a radio signal?” Into this land of kilocycles, side bands and attenuated® receivers wandered the writer reef itly at the exhibits of the Carnegie ‘Institution and put the question up to Dr. L. V. Berkner, the radio engineer who supervised the installation of the paradoxical radio station W3XFE. In the first place, explained Dr. Berkner, the radio pulses shot upward to the radio layers of the ionosphere come at the rate of only 10 a second. Since this is 50 per cent below the lower limit of hearing, or frequencies which the ear detects as a low pitched” note, the signals—even when heard
al
special receiver of the station— are only a series of clicks. Moreover the Carnegie station is continually changing frequency from short wave signals of 16,000 kilocycles to long waves with a frequency of 516 Kkilocycles and passes over its entire range every 15 minutes. If this seems too involved, Dr. Berkner pointed out that on any radio channel to which you may tune your receiving set only five tiny clicks lasting a total time of one-half second will occur every 15 minutes, ” » ” N addition, the special antenna used by the radio station is so designed that a great majority of the radio energy being liberated is going directly upward and even to a nearby receiver just outside the “shock” area of the station there is only an inappreciable signal. Even though such a receiver may be only a mile away from the station, any signals it receives have gone upward to the reflecting layer and bounced back. As if these items were not enough —as they may be to the layman but not ‘to the scientist—station W3XFE is so designed that its receiving set is electrically interlocked with the transmitter and
- continuously tunes itself to receive the ever changing signals. Those signals, moreover, are of a special kind having what the radio engineers called decided sidebands. An ordinary radio receiver is designed to cut off such sideband characteristics while the Carnegie station receiver is built so that it 1s especially sensitive to them. Thus W3XFE, while broadcasting continuously, lives in a radio world all its own.
” » 5
VISIT to the station shows familiar contro! panels, but no loud speakers or the “da-da-dit-da” purr of a spark transmitter. All reception of the signals from far above the stratosphere is on a photograpic - recorder which makes a continuous and. permanent record of the height at which any given frequency of signal is reflected. A continuous probing of ihe radio reflecting layérs, known technically as the E, F, F-1 and F-2 layers, has made possible a study of the changing daily pattern of these ionized re gions above the earth. Seascnal patterns are also disclosed and the effect of increasing solar activity in the form of sunspots can be correlated with an increase or decrease in the effectiveness of radio trans-
mission on earth.
Dr. L. V. Berkner, Carnegie Institution scientist in charge of the
“radio reflection studies of th : - the transmitter on the uni de are Jojers above the earth, adjusts
titer on th
station: which is licensed to. broad-
Court and Roosevelt Not
Sullivan Says
Far Apart,
; i By MARK ASHINGTON, Jai. 11.—From the flood of bills in Congress proposing amendment io the Constitution or curtailmenf of the powers of the courts, it niight be inferred that much commotion is getting up steam—comu otion about the Constitution, about he Supreme Court, and about Presiient. Roosevelt’s attitude toward te Court. It might be imagined that a historic controversy is ger crating. We might suppose there is going to be storm over the Constiti ticn, thunder over the Supreme ( ourt, lightning over the White Huse, and a big wind everywhere. That may turn out to be so. Bu; there are grounds for thinking thre may be no crisis, that this sifiiation may work out as similar situ itions have often worked out befor, ’ True, President Roos¢velt in his message to Congress, t)ssed- some complaining words in tle direction of the Supreme Couft. But they were the mildest of the s:veral complaints he has made about the Court since it unanimo sly turned down his NRA. And Mr. Roosevelt's complaint this week wa put more into the sound of his voi 'e for radio listeners than in his wo. ds as read in cold print. > : The fact is Mr. Roosev:lt and the Supreme Court are quiet|y converging toward the same pcint. I say this is a “fact”—but of ‘ourse it is only a judgment. 2 ” 2
Sri first, the direction Mr. Roosevelt is inoving in, and the point he has now reached. Mr. Roosevelt says we inust have regulation of industry, sc: as to end child labor, ‘starvation ivages and long hours. He says we must have this: And, up to the Jiresent, he has seemed to say we ¢ n have it only through action by tiie Federal Government—action by ithe State Governments would not o. But in this week’s iddress to Congress Mr. Roosevelt moved a little backward from thai position. Consider Mr. Rooseveil’s words last Wednesday: “Tha (regulation) can be secured, through parallel and simultaneous action by 48 states is a proven impissibility.” That was Mr. Roosevel! standing firmly on his old positio. But in the next paragraph he begins to edge backward. He sas: “Experience with actualities makes it cleat that Federal laws st )plementing State laws are need¢ i.” So, in Mr. Rooseveli; present position, what is needed i: “Federal laws supplementing Stat¢ laws.” Now this present posit n of Mr. Roosevelt is the same p sition toward which the Suprem: Court is moving. Last Monday | h od deeisi
fect.
SULLIVAN formula, “Federal laws supplementing State laws.” If Mr. Roosevelt is moving - slightly backward, the Court is moving slightly forward. The two may arrive at the same point—a middle ground between Mr. Roosevelt’s streamline and the Court’s horse-and-buggy. f ® in. 2 - HE case decided by the court last Monday had to do with goods made by convict labor. Some states forbid the sale of such goods. To enable such ‘states to enforce
their ban Congress passed Federal.
lew forbidding the. shpiment of con-vict-made articles into states that don’t want them. This law the Supreme Court unanimously upheld. True, the Court said the law is valid only when the articles banned are, so to speak, deleterious articles, harmful in themselves or their efBut evidently the Court is willing to enlarge the definition of “deleterious” in this connection. The Court has been enlarging its definition for more than a century. If a state says an article is deleterious, apparently the Court will be disposed to accept that description. Mr. Chief Justice Hughes read a list of articles as to which Congress has already forbidden interstate transportation. They include: Diseased livestock, lottery tickets, adulterated and misbranded articles, kidnaped persons, women transported for immoral purposes, intoxicating liquors, diseased plants, stolen automobiles— and now convict-made goods. Now it seems as if the only thing necessary is to add to this category articles made by child labor, or with wages below a certain standard, or with hours longer than a
certain standard. And it seems as|
if this decision of the Supreme Court opens the way for what Mr. Roosevelt wants. . Let a state pass reasonable and carefully drawn laws forbidding the sale of articles made under the conditions mentioned. Then let Congress pass a Federal law forbidding transportation of such articles into states that don't want them. : With that combination Mr. Roosevelt’s new formula is satisfied— Federal laws supplementing state laws.
KNOW YOUR INDIANAPOLIS
The $87.64 per capita bonded « debt of Indianapolis is second lowest among the 26 cities of °
ferences—for example, from 70 to 756 per cent, or from: » : : t np Le i J fn oa 7 &
PAGE 9 |
Our Town
AS I am fond of remarking, nothing in- ~ trigues me quite so much as the periods ical perusing of the “Condensed Statements’ issued by members of the Indianapolis Clear: ing House Association. The latest, as of Dec. 31, 1936, is quite up to standard. Indeed,
in many respects, it is even more interesting than usual—anyhow, more entertaining. 2 . What entertains me this time is the little item
labeled “Bank building, equipment and furniture” with the figures at the end of it connoting the value of the bank’s rolling stock. The value appears as one of the bank’s “resources.” Be that as it may, let’s accept the bankers’ notion of resources—just this once, anyway ; —and try to guess what, if anything, is meant by the term “value.” Value is one of those loose terms, of which there are many in modern business, . which demands attention more for the clearing away of its | application to vague and fallacious uses, than for an attempt to give it strict scientific definitions. It has a distinct meaning only when it is used as “value in exchange,” and that between things coexisting in time and place. The measure of such value is, of course, the current money of the place. Thus, two articles, each of which will bring $5 in Indianapolis, are equivalent in value there. Cost, it appears, has precious little to do with it. I guess it’s perfectly safe to say that the value of a thing is what it will bring in the end. Or, to put more point to it in the present case, the value of a thing is what our bankers hope to get for it in the end.
2 = ” Bankers’ Whimsical Figures
LL right, let’s suppose that’s what our bankers : mean by the whimsical figures attached to the line labeled “Bank building, equipment and furniture.” I say “whimsical,” because if you've combed the “Condensed Statements” the way I have, you'll discover that one banker hopes to get $25,376.55 for his rolling ‘stock; that another holds out for $353,597.40; another for $492,568.64; another for $1,096,696.74, and still ane other for $1,295,346.50.
I have no quarrel with the figures except that I think our bankers are much too optimistic in the matter of odd cents. Knowing what I do about local conditions, I'm almost positive the bankers are never going to get the odd cents listed in the “Condensed Statements.” There isn’t a Chinaman’s chance. And if the bankers can’t count on getting the odd cents, there isnt the repgotest possibility that the Condensed Statements™ will ever balance. I hope I've made myself clear. :
Mr. Scherrer
2 2 ”
Borrowed Store Scales
LL of which leaves me just enough room to record something else that is now taking place in the modern business world. I was in a grocery the other day when a woman rushed in and asked for a 10+ minute loan of the store’s counter scales.’ Said she'd return them as soon as the baby was weighed.
EE a A Woman's View By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON -
% A S I grow older and emerge from the romantic age,” said the man next door, “the less I can stomach the ways of women. 'I yearn for simplicity,
just as I know most other men yearn for it. And why
can’t we have it? Why aren’t we able to arrange our lives to suit ourselves, at least some of the time? Why are we helpless, all of us together? Married men, widowers, bachelors?” “I'll tell you!” By this time he was all worked up to platform gestures, ana his vetce rumpled’ with wrath. “I’ll ‘tell you. It’s the women. They hate simplicity like they hate poison. The hardest way— that’s: the way they want to do everything. They've made such a stupid rite of formal dinners, such
stuffed-shirt pomposity of all their social affairs, that :
we only go when we're dragged. “And how about their own work?" They’ve complicated housekeeping and homemaking with a thousand unnecessary tasks, because they can’t abide the easy, simple ways. Do they. appreciate food, for instance? No! All they think of is the fish-knives, the finger= bowls, the salt spoons; and the service plates. Service plates! Gad! \ “Yet we call them the elemental sex. They're primi=tive—we claim—close to God and nature because they bear children. Ridiculous. Why, their every act marks them as the opposite of such an ideal. the superfluous, the gaudy—those are the preferences of women. ; : “And the same traits are reflected in all their atti--tudes toward life. They never act directly; impor= tant issues are the ones to be avoided. They skirt all around facts, and make wide detours to avoid reality. Anything but the straight truth in human relationships, and anything but simplicity in their household and social arrangements. The more they can fuss and fume, the more, unnecessary tasks they can think up to do, and the more imaginary emotional troubles they can manufacture, the happier they are. “Lordy!” he stopped, mopping his brow.
get it off my chest.”
1 couldn’t think up a quick answer to these charges.
Can you?
Your Health
By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, American Medical Assn. Journal
iE blood of man normally contains from 4,500,000,
to 6,505,000 red blood cells in each cubié mili The blood of woman contains 4,440,000 to The body of a
meter. 5,350,000 in each cubic millimeter.
woman is smaller and obviously demands fewer, red |
cells in the circulation than does the body of a man. Each red blood cell is only 0.0003 inch in diameter. These cells grow in the bone marrow, especially in the ribs, the backbones, and the flat bones. In babies, however, the marrow of all the bones takes part in building blood. : After the blood cells have been developed, they go from the bone marrow into the blood stream, being picked up by the veins, and then are carried to the lungs, where they take up oxygen. The oxygen is carried .by the red coloring matter of the cells, called hemoglobin. ~ Hemoglobin is a complex substance which contains some iron. If the number of red blood corpuscles falls below normal, or if the amount of hemoglchin in the blood corpuscles is deficit, the person has anemia. At present, examination of the blood is considered a vital part of any complete physical examination. The doctor punctures the ear or a finger tip and withdraws a very small amount of blood. Usually he will take a little. more than a drop for each of several pipettes, or tiny calibrated tubes, which are used for measuring and counting the number of red blood cells, white blood cells, and blood platelets. He also will spread some of the blood on a slide; the blood is then stained so that he may determine the different varieties of white blood cells and the relative number of each variety. He also mgy mix a very small amount of blood with other fluids to determine the total amount of hemoglobin, or red coloring matter. hemoglobin is estimated by comparing the color of’ the patient’s blood, when mixed with acid, with that of various standard solutions or with the color of a piece of paper or glass which also is standard. There also are electrical devices with which it is possible to estimate much -more accurately the exact amount of hemoglobin by weight in a certain quantity of blood. Whenever any of these methods is used, the doctor is able to say that the blood is 80 per cent normal, or 60, or whatever the case may be. Very small dife 80 to
x
The artificial, |
“How did | I get started on this subject? Anyway, it's a relief to |
The amount of
SENHA en WE SE A
