Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1937 — Page 17
Vagabond! = The Indianapolis Times Second Section
FROM INDIANA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1987 Bast ae Sword ve PAGE 17 ERNIE PYLE
: [ WASHINGTON, Feb, 25.—On three floors : down at the south end of the Com- | / | 'H EK P] ’ Pl ) AND ’ | '] | | 3 IR C | RTS | u I 0 WwW nN merce Building is one of the greatest map- | making establishments in the world. | eB wl i a : | It is the office of the U. S. Coast and . | By ANTON SCHERRER
Geodetic Survey. The Survey has about | Presidents Who Fought Judiciary Popular, Says New Dealer | BLL BAGWELL was the first fiddler in
250 people working in Washington and more than | Indianapolis. He was our first cigar 800 in the “field,” stretched clear to the Philippines, | maker, too, but he was a better musician gathering dope to put on its maps. The Survey has . \ ] than he was a cigar maker. The winter of Uisiceys, Just WIS Mo AEM ve 1825-26 disclosed that much.
Coast Guard. And enlisted men too. And lots of ships. Everybody That winter, Nat Bolton's Gazette ran a boxed ad=something to the effect that “Mr. Smith
I talked to was a captain. a The Survey provides naviga- and Wife of the New York Theater” would stage a
tion charts for all the waters of the | 2 N . , Pa, Bt 3 ES 4: BL $e | n ¥ “dramatic exhibition” in the dining room of Tom United States and its possessions. | gh Ch Ta 2 a . 8 | 3 Ny Bes hl J : Carter's tavern, the Rosebush, Its charts cover more than 100,000 | Ek 2 J 3 iN AQ A oy \ xX \& i Rane ox 3 ; fl 2 The choice of place was unformiles of shoreline. S a SA 5 LS \- SF ® 4 ; Pan UP —— ; . J tunate, and the fact that it was It has on file 10,000 master | nd et A RD 5 : a y of — A. / , A— scheduled for New Year's Eve charts, which are constantly being HE ; . oR fm k NN \ (1 . AL didn’t help any either, for I have corrected and added to. It prints ! 3 0 Rs 9 So : A i / ay 4 | ) i observed with some misgivings « close to 400,000 copies of charts ~ : ol = 4 % N a § id g that nothing brings out the old Mr Pyl a year. And nearly every chart = iy ATRIA REI Wel RA EE, Bat ie Adam like New Year's Eve. Mir Pyle is out of date in no time at all. : ono "ers x : ASH RICHIE HA BA 0 7 DR HOTA Well, anyway, Bill was engaged Change-~that is the heart and : y A 3 NR A ; TL vue yon a vO TR 1 = : . to furnish the music for the show. soul and theme song of this whole massive work : a: 3 E , BS Ra : = Things went off all right that of supplying the charts that guide ship ang aerial =" i a a 5 BC Jin we TORR This unusual Supreme Court sketch was made night until the middle of the see navigation. Change and also, I should say, accuracy. | ba? nee RE BC v by George Clark, staff artist for NEA Service and ond act when the domestic affairs Mr. Scherrer Tt would be hard to find greater precision in any | > GER Rn TR a The TYndianapolis Times, from memory. Photog of the Smith family became hopework | : w % ; = My raphers and artists are forbidden to make pictures lessly involved. Nobody remembers what possessed Atlases that vou buy at bookstores may remain S vw Ta) XC : eh i : § or sketches of the Court while it is in session. Bill to do it, but just at this critical point he took accurate for vears. But charts which show every | : be” a8 | Ne REE FR The justices, shown as they appear on the bench, It into his head to help the actors by playing a des submerged rock, and every inch of water over thou- | WE a vo are as follows, left to right: Justices Owen J. Rob- praved jig called “Leather Breeches.’ sands and thousands of miles, can’t remain more | oR RE i : : “RL _- erts, 62: Pierce Butler, 71; Younis D. Brandeis, 81; It enraged Mr. Carter to the point of stopping the than a few days Eo 1 : Ph Tr li Willis Van Devanter, 78: Chief Justice Charles show. What's more, he said the show could continue For, somewhare on our coasts Or airways, every “iy » oar & or - S- Evans Hughes, 74; Justices James C. McReynolds, in the Rosebush only on the condition that Bill play dav, almost every hour, a buoy is being moved, a new | a 5 : ERT Nie, 1 5: George Sutherland, v5; Harlan F. Stone, 65, and a sacred hymn and continue the same until the afe turned on, a landing field plowed | _ ol : : Benjamin N. Cardozo, 6%. salts of the Smith family had got straightened out. as Bill made that old fiddle of his weep like a repentant, | sinner, and everybody agreed that he had arrived,
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amnrway peacon up. a new rock found in & bav entrance—and when=ever that happens, it may mean life or death to . someone, (Second of a Series of Statements.) Government. From the forward- ; for upward of a year to render It is against this background of | ® nn = The Survey, consequently, doesn’t print many i looking policy of the congress any obeglience whatever to the facts that President Roosevelt's | Must ] NS X KSON : } x Yosh i $ $ 2 stcians Helped Actors maps ahead. Just enough to cover current heeds. By ROBERT H. JACKSON and the executive they found | Public Utility Holding Company OBOE such be weivhed. THEY. 1 p ' Assistant United States Attorney General a Ms q > + » y proposals must IRN » “v FTER that AW XK y . : shelter in the courts which look | Law. They have stayed loans to 80 Hot yioposs. Yo destroy: the at, we never went without appropriate HE American people have a high and well-founded re- | backward to their precedents | localities to provide work for uns ] ” se a 3 yl , music at the theater, The musicians wormed their . bmi pada . ’ vy Phones and hence are, even if uninten- employed and public power sup= | courts or deprive them of juris= | way from somewhere under the stage, 1 remember, to spect for the judicial function. et, the only Pres- tionally, the allies of those who | plies for communities. diction, They propose a blood their appointed places in the pit, to begin the playing i y , S » Person. Jack incon anc pose i wat y ave embarrass and savy i y of the overture, which was alwavs & AN Men in rowboats work along the shoreline. idents they adore, such Bs Jefter Oh, Jackson, Lincoh and oppo. Nevanon. ” ho ic Es the transiusion and ». Yelorn of pro. | matter what the act or AY: Someintng Bhat outlining on paper the exact curve of the shore: | the two Roosevelts, have been in bitter conflict with the ’ Particularly rh Ye Sewer ous TVA. Several laws are now nuls ; cedure in the interest of avoiding | gone the musicians kept their DS NE piped Sak ing i ery y ‘otti y . hock . . 10 process of constitutional ad- | ro tal. 1% : Y ; irre: sible | , sicians ace: taking soundings every few feet, and jotting down | gourts. Do-nothing Administrations have mo conflicts | judication has become lawless. | lified in some or many districts. delay and stopping irresponsible | aeqors, the figures at the right spot on the paper. Men in a MY TARDY \ aR TS Fe } : © nl Long ago the lower courts were use ‘of process, Indeed, I doubt whether i bigger boats sound farther out to sea, finding all = ™ ith the courts; progressive ones alwavs do. If President ach of more bien g'! Federal torpiaden: to sot. wide Stabe. Jaws In the light of existing abuses | DEER Tran » Ju Wit adequate analysis has yet the rocks, and sand bars, and jotting them down in ww ROOSevelt were running a “sit-down” Ad- gg TI I ie es, except by a three-judge court, wl welects, mae Hay ie Pn | musicians of their re ot Ve-rinie JOS ve his ir exa OSI s. Swrvevors work inl: : : i rn . . J ment, § Siler we : ad ably question the moderat “i : ne, € a 3 eh a SN od a ministration we would hear no complaint aside an act of Congress and the So ng judge 0 and sn his psy val their shivery music in “Uncle Tom's Cabin” cone te t ) § er) » all | » : . . wa . cocutive. They confi i aside the act of Congress. 8 Teerhot ARRRR , tributed just as much as roads and hills and buildings and towns—everything. SN that he was overstepping the Constitution, | F¥raitive. THCY cOnBict i lawylr's writ is. more powerful | (COPYIRRtIRE NEA'SErvice. Tue.) I Yomumibard eh ¥ hie loro . " . . a . . a" 5 | 3 . A - ok ADs W 3 y : 3 > ° : Aah wih | Sexi ‘me , 100, tha 1e personne] of the orchess This information comes ints Washington on 3 Pressed by emergency, hurried to keep ahead of with each other, their announce- than the people's Government. Next: Senator Capper. tra was sufficiently permanent to make us feel at rough, usually water-soaked maps. It then goes to | 4 economic collapse, amid social unrest, “he first ments confuse the public, they | ~ — home as soon as the play started. At any rate, it ale men, a hundred or more of them. who work bent | #8 : Roosevelt Administration brought forward its pol- | settle nothing at finality, but ways seemed to me that Henry Sprengpfeil was a part
over Se, Yoigirie through magnifying glasses. | Go jcies. Not one of these laws conflicted with any | ‘hey tie up whole policies of Gov- 1 lapper La uds Vol unteer | of it. Mr. Sprengpfeil was the gentleman who hane The wg 3 is informati sit) ] ; definite provision of the Constitution. Increased | crhment with hastily granted in- | | dled the drums and everything that went with them, Chey ransfer all this information, with comp ete Li majorities in 1934 and overwhelming vote in 1036 junctions. | He did it alone, too, and 1 think it's worthwhile accuracy to the hundredth of an inch, onto a skele- | ; . : . : > 5 Se] 3 ori. approved them, as desirable to the country's prog- In some instances, they have | N e ow ever att e mentioning because, if you go to the symphony cone ton map. Most of It Is done purely by hand, with ress. used receiverships or reorganiza- | certs as often as I do, you can't help noticing that the pen and ink, but all the little hames you see on a | But as Chief Justice Hughes said, when Gover- | tion trusteeships to finance fights rr —————————— drummer over there has a helper, Fact is, he had a map are clipped out of type sheets and pasted in. | i nor of New York, “the Constitution is what the | of the Government. ; re a ’ helper all through the depression, which is something When its all done. it is photographed, goes | LS , it is” By RAYMOND CLAPPER Mr. Spre y , through the engravin proces . becomes A plate and = Jos A a They have in some cases Times Special Writer I. Sprengpfeil never would have permitted, n graving process, S e, residen 11d not A t what tl rendore , . , : is run off on the press. SE rs oR i iT a He YER - ge a yd ASHINGTON, Feb. 25.~The who were intelligent and bold enough | ® u = . Mr. Jackson oyecutive to ask. But our system is unique. The | not alowed. wns A chances are that you, like to apply the knowledge which he,| Embarrassing Moment Separate Plates Tor Colors holder of a $16 coupon on a railroad bond could ask the Supreme Government to gts OBSOS most of us, had never heard of with his bare arm, had given them. | Court’s opinion of the constitutionality of the Gold Clause Resolution. and produce evidence. They have Charles G. Sonntag until he died * u @» Sorengofell w we i HEN they make color maps, the cartographers A The President, representing 120,000,000 people. could not. flagrantly disregarded a Jaw this week, or had forgotten him. EAR, rather than reason, under | Sprengp eil was going especially good The overs make a separate map for each color. One map Neither Congress, the Executive nor anvone else can get a ht pon . Ire. Sait am 3 . He risked his life heroically for ey ura called for a whirlwind passage on the part of the : ith . i : which prohibits injunctions in tax |,. ow *Iv 40 VOars ag 1 lies much of the popular oppo= drums, after which there was a silence that seemed will contain only that part of the whole map which | final judicial opinion about & law ®--—e ; cases and thereby thrown fiscal nis aR youn go Hl sition to the Roosevelt court Pro= | like a mi t | Fyn mionce Wins is to be Pmted In green. Another only Whe Yed § wath long after it is passed. Al- | arguing in Supreme Court wheth- estimates mto confusion UIE With ROACHES Wl pton posal Fear of settin a bad prec- i part, and so on. © vears after the gold | © the whole thing was legal. : ’ | National Cemetery here yesterday. | Do ot ro of a va DE something | The change was so sudden and unexpected that A separate plate has to be made of each one. And most two years after the go : » ® ” ®» ®w We have had many heroes, most th i might ha eh emits “qt | everybody in the audience heard a dowager in the then the sheet of paper. which eventually will be A POlicy was put into effect, after | NTO this judicial refuge the NDER their protecting arm |©f them unsung. Unusual circum- oa nik ty ToDDX Ee ht (roat row say: “We fry ours in grease. the map in some aviator’s hand, has to be run | business had made its commit- | lawyers have run all of their the utility holding companies stances connected with i It is fear of the unknown. like The story got all over Indianapolis -$0 stale, as a through the press once for each color. Airway maps = ments under the mew law, the | clients whose practices were of- | have operated a sit-down strike | heroism give it special elevation. a child's fear of the dark. Unreas matter of fact, that I wouldn't think of repeating it have as many as 15 colors, world woke up to find the lawyers fending against the policies of the | against the Government, refusing | When we went into Cuba in 1898, soning fear, but powerfully real. Yous except for the singular coincidence ‘that Poldi { vellow fever annihilated many of \ ; iliner told me that the same thing happened in a Bhopal iii Bi oh. Much evidence could be offered Prague theater less than a year ago. erations of natives there ahd to show that such fears are irra- With this difference, however. the Czech woman / / tl ro 1ho t the w n er ] te f tional, based more upon hysteria | used butter, It's a small world after all ; BE ar vi 4 hon oa % a: than history, We have had nu-| te CT . ; i : + short national existence. om= N By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT OF R Al LS 175 AlD S AFETY WORK IL a ar jours A WwW : wtis 2a [pare th some of them, Roost- | om Nn | WwW g when a canal would be built made Pare ia HA timid and pale EW YORK, Wednesday. —Mrs, Scheider and 1 |it imperative that this scourge, | Ye alwavs have the same cvele, found the train to New Haven yesterday after- | | more deadly than human enemies, |r. er: 3 iq Nive By MRS. WALTER FERGUSO i ys ' | . us f n i 1 ie ) tl, . “> | Firs eis situation callin . uU N noon the first really quiet spot to work in we had had | By ROBERT D. POTTER (hundred thousand of them side-by- | shatter cracks are prevented. This be conquered. The Army undertook | iy BY os “Then follow C ONSITCR Mrs. Grace Coolid yr for some time. I was just getting into a satisfactory | (Copyright, 183%, by Science Service) side would equal only one inch in new method is now being used by | the job. shrieks of protest and loomy pre= Shri ato Se Tovliage B reartyr. The frame of mind when she announced: “In 10 minutes | ASHINGTON, Feb, 25 length. rall manufacturers. | The problem was to find out what | dictio a" that the end ot the Re] sto Sick De yes The Just ye we will have to get off.” and all the papers had to be | © | Some are so small that they must The rolled rails, at a temperature | . Him: hee yo alehions bhe stood in the Smithsonian Institution and gazed upon i y Jo | Sprawling through the nation |, = : om py |caused yellow fever. Suspicion | public is at hand. Gradually the | the First Ladies in their inaugural gowns served gathered up and packed away. As I got off the train | =p 8 : | be etched with acid to make them : of from 2000 to 2100 degrees Fahren= | t vad} Can . : y St Ladier / gural gowns, preserve p ) : Oy e : 2 > : St pointed to the mosquito. Maj. Wal- | horrendous precedent fades back | there for coming generations t t a smiling porter said, “Mrs. Harvey Cushing's car is in an intricate web of steel are the | visible even in a microscope. Yet heit, are allowed to cool rapidly 10 | y0. poed. of the Army Medical [into history. It becomes a closed| Fach of the 8 tt 8 VO gape ab. ; here,” and her chauffeur led us straight to where [slim ribbons that carry the coun- | they must be watched and caught Moan WW Gages, Ten ae 85 | Corps, undertook the assignment to | chapter sufficient unto itself, some- | ion Reni ER rnk, Tania Sl iashony Mrs. Cushing was standing with her dach in "Ss Tai ; i while young for they may develop a ‘cooler box and take Irom | g.iami he facts . | ater Yicbamd uth r Wo: #a her arms g 3 a | bry's railroad transportation. |g tencverse fissures which, in a | 20 to 30 hours to come down the rest | Selenite Xp. SANS de walled or | thing for late: historians to quarrel | Coolidge, who is doomed to stand there eternally in We hi : : Yd n Around a great metropolis like | oo oo 000 (ombared to cancer in | ©f the way to room temperature. | A as human guinea | about. wax--or whatever it is these figures are made of—in a Sahai, how ih Ie wid MES Joven work wre hundreds of wiles of {ins iene pee This slower method seems to give | PI8S And be bitten by infected mos- * wu | that awful gown which reaches to the knees in (rong Cushing, their daughter Barbara and a few of their > | the human body. the hvdrol in the rail bett | quitoes. Sonntag, a private in the | APOLEON offered the Louisi-| and dips hideously behind. It is one of the worst friends. Dr. Cushing introduced me to a young Eng- |track that are part of the total| Some years ago Elmer Sperry de- an Ay Afylen In the ral a Wer | Army Medical Corps, was one of the | re vii hg tl : United looking dresses ever conceived b “the 1 ye . Orsvs lish surgeon and his wife, remarking with an amused (400,000 miles of railroad track in | Veloped the odd-looking rail car 1D CECmpe. “« | volunteers. Sn Taviory Wo ne , I iss ton re a mr aan, Dre. twinkle in his eye: “These young people have been |,ma : : { which, with undersiung electro- Every time you hear the “click- | States in a distress sale. Jeffer-| And may Heaven give us women strength to resist here less than three weeks, but ne know all bout {the United States. But beyond the | magnetic feelers, detected the fis- Click” of the wheels of a railroad | son first prepared a constitutional the campaign for its return. That campaign has ale } Uni od s t d der y XNOW ‘ml x Ul | freight, storage and switching yards | qines in an early stage and shot a | train passing over the rail joints you | HEY were put into a hut. A amendment since he did not think | ready begun. Moving pictures, shop windows, breezy TT Teas thin Ti KI oo gpd |Of any large city extend the main- qu), of paint on them so that they are coming into audible contact with cage of hungry mosquitoes, by | the Constitution authorized such a Street corners, once more show us the feminine knee to th THe ST a rE Late with Falls Sst Je aly om |could be spotted and removed. Ten another problem being studied in Which men ill of the fever had been | purchase of territory. On second In all its bareness, a sight which we had hoped never : > ! | lows, weighing J :
Yhbag h : : | thousand rails a year are found in Prof. Moore's laborator) | bitten, was brought in. The velun- | thought he decided the delay would | to see again except at the bathing beach and on the had learned a great deal about us in less than three |pounds for every yard of their 39- | ypc fashion. Special efforts have been made to | teers shoved their bare arms into be too great. He approved the deal| stage.
Weeks! He told me with a smile that he had felt that | see; length. | But why not find out what causes | develop methods for hardening rail the cage of ravenous mosquitoes and | and then asked the Senate to ratify| History is full of stories of the few brave souls who They Su, ip RG ie, 0 Rio hey ana | These are the rails in the “big | the shatter cracks in the first place | ends so that the battering at the | were bitten. | it. Angry Federalists said the Re-| have Stood indomitably against their foes. There was ey a tn eope oy ~ oa time”; that stand the batter and |and prevent their formation at all? | Joints will be decreased Just as | hen they waited. Eventually the | public was gone. Some talked about | the lad who stuck his thumb into the hole in the dike they thought sounded most typically “United States.” | Pounding of the through fast freight, | That is the question the railroads DEtenis put Evel Heel pines on the | fever, with its terrifying mortality | seceding. un hel yack the Rulers Which Would Rave covered } St ] : > | mail and passenger traffic. And each | asked themselves and Prof. Moore's shoes of their active children to de= |... or almost 95 per cent appeared. | In time everyone cooled off. | Holland; there was Horatio at the bridge; there wera
How Chart Is Made
ERE is how a chart is made:
REMEMBER one night in particular when Mr,
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and cabled for seats. Within an hour of their arrival | in 36s | i crease wear do the railroads | : the noble 600 who rode into the Valley of Death d Ss its ory stamped in its | job is to find out. Se wear so too do the Qo (vray. died, nt rece - A Aly. De Loa, AN {one bears its history p try to find a means for reducing fons Red i je Rio EL | the heroes who held the Alamo. Thinking of them, rail end batter, Ibe 64 spending his later davs quiet HEODORE ROOSEVELT want- | can't women muster enough courage to repel the hated NE wav to cause the unseeable | Rail manufacturers are NOW |," 2s a farmer in South Carolina ed to build the Panama Canal. | and unlovely short skirt? 1 ven b . When Colombia tried, as Roosevelt Something must be done about it if middle age is
: : | it Ri 8 sed, the heat | : ) dinner given by the Federation of Teachers at 6 it. the Kind of steel used, shatter cracks, Prof. Moore has | equipped to harden the ends of rails | These men demonstrated definite | already discovered, is to heat a piece | by cooling them with an airblast | . Suny Huse saw it, to hold him up, a mysterious | to maintain its proper dignity. Yet, knowing the nas revolution occurred and the United | ture of the female, my soul trembles and is afraid.
o'clock. We reached Woolsey Hall in time to hear the Timber Gnd tive tHEC: umber. ; ops glee club sing five numbers before my speech. This » ww w | of rail in hydrogen and then let it | immediately after rolling. They can hy hat tie Mosaic Wig thie Carrier meeting is held annually for the benefit of a cottage FTER trom 10 to 12 vears of cool in open air. But it was also | also be hardened as they lay in | © 5 ow fever. After that it was | down on the shore which is used in winter by students service on the mainline these Shown that by controlling the tem- place in the track. Some railroads ow ie Saber il VEEANIT on ai of way across the isthmus. of women parade, their knees knocking together in of the divinity school and in summer by nurses in the | pails. like baseball players, are no |Deratures of the cooling rails the build up battered ends by welding. | APPUEE Ww a wh gy ge 2 & | Authorities differ as to how it was | full view, their too fat, too skinny or too bowed legs hospital. | longer fit for the big leagues id wy hl A a mig Sphig 1€ | sone but Roosevelt himself said | clothed in sheer silk stockings and nothing more.
in New York City they were in one of our theaters! At 5 we went to see Mr. and Mrs, William Ladd. We had another pleasant chat and got ready for the
side; the year and month of its * © » (making, the steel mill that made
States in no time at all had a right I see a vision of a city street down which hundreds
We stayed for a little while with the Ladds before | they see years of added service on | plague ‘was quickly wiped out. With- (later: “1f 1 had followed conven- Having survived last fall's hats, my courage fails
we caught the 10:40 train back to New York, so I | secondary lines, in vards and in! : SE |in two years there was not a single | ional, conservative methods, I| me when I think of going up against the short skirt
(case of yellow fever in Havana. It | should have submitted a dignified | again. For how weak is our feminine will when
was able to change my clothes. spur tracks i ! S. : Hen | then became possible to build the | . ‘i ly 200| fashion is the dictator. Lord hav cy ! But wherever they are, until fin- 3 | Panama Canal, |state paper of approximately a e mercy on us!
ally returned to the steel mills for | pages to the Congress and the de- wc
i = 3 : ; | | y have been going on yet, a rebirth as scrap steel, their iden- : £3 . Ww ow bate would New Books tity goes with them. About the only : ie HERE is something peculiarly | but 1 took the Guns] Zone Sd a our 2A t thing lacking is a set of ferrous fin- TR i | inspiring about this story, be- {Congress debate, and while the )
3 : 3 : J s also.” PUBLIC LIBRARY PRESENTS— gerprints, | pol i (cause it embraces not only the per. (bate gocs om the Cait’ Fos BLL By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN
. i - 2 | sonal heroism of the participants y : IRLS—if your desire is to be well liked and you I a Ee Ble ak. CHR a but reaches far Vora In pas |dore Roosevelt would have done if Editor, American Medical Assn. Journal
wish to live a normal, happy life, follow sugges- | vi reater safety EE | instance, so glaringly in contrast to the Supreme Court had set itself | EASLES is im most instances a self-limiting (Scribner). ; " transportation. The Association of A [gained was intelligently applied to | COUT, un eit Ai PIEIW | normit measles to run a satisfactory, quiet course, This is a personality book for girls, one might say American Railroads and the rail Wn NR = 3 |larger ends. The crime of politics About t § 1 Ss and to ward off dangerous complications. from 8 to 80 years of age, because what life and per- manufacturers have just tossed an- 3 : and government is its waste. Not | " ® = The child must be put to bed in a quiet room, sonality are at 80 is after all determined by habits other $50.000 chip in the research | so much waste of money, but waste | ET it is a question whether the | Measures must be taken to prevent glare from irrie formed at the age of 8 or thereabout. The author pot on rail testing for the coming ‘of intelligence and knowledge. fact that we have lived safely | tating his eyes, but it is not advisable to bar sunlight pives useful hints concerning manners, dress, personal vear. An additional $250,000 has “a BR BEE In science, and in practically every | through such really high-handed| completely from the room, appearance, health. : already gone the same way into the : ; ! | department of life except politics | episodes will ease the fears of those For years, it was customary to keep the sickroom ; Sie pis wepls how to associate happily with fellow | 1, otories of the University of : RE y (and government, there is an eager- | who think that this mild legislative | darkened. Now it is better to permit the measles workers and employers. No stilted etiquette is recom | py, 0ic where Prof. H. F. Moore a OE mess to find better ways to apply | proposal of Roosevelt's means the | victim to wear dark-colored glasses in order to keep HCH es. vied lo Jive nly directs and co-ordinates the experi- : ¢ the results of discovery and inven- | goom of democracy, which is what | out the light, as the glare is painful, eau ot a RE : hi Ss phas ments. FRA a SR ke | tion and of intelligent thought. Be- | the President of the American Bar Sometimes irritation of the eyes will cause the cye= An excellent chapter pg Rep is help- So far over 700 different kinds fa Nn |cause there 1s so little of this in | Association says of it. lids to stick together. For this, most doctors prescribe Lo © eon a gy I her | of rails have been studied and EY SHEN | public affairs, the work ot Gen. | guch fears are inflamed by being | washing with slightly warm water, which will remove own room and help plan § nD 1 her ho She | punished beyond all possible injury 4 RY | Gorgas in exterminating yellow fever | njaved upon by persons who know | the crusts and prevent general irritation. P plan for the rest of her home. : { stands as such an impressive monu- | petter but find this an effective way The bed cover must not be too heavy while there
} 3 y is § d sustained in actual } PE 3 " Ty Hhougn SOU! Wile StbECt WO Biprove Hor J a oud, be have been cooled to \ ° £1 § [me doubt politic t the ti to combat the Roosevelt plan. | Is fever, but should be heavy enough to prevent chill Miss Brockman's opening words, “I meet you. I | frigid temperatures of a northern a ; , ah ull po Hains Dy Gor oe Ever since Alexander the Great | ing. If the child is very restless, it is customary to get & first quick picture of your expression and general | winter in the cold room of the " ie | Md § WHS warned hh a By cut the Gordian knot, there have| give him a warm sponge bath just before he goes to appearance. Does this first impression make me want | Army's Wright Field at Dayton, O. / : ‘a Tou Wied ea J) : a been times when the choice lay be- | sleep. This serves not only to control the fever, but to know you better?” arouse a desire jn any woman to | They have been bent and twisted in we ever, yp y sald, or Some | ween futile plucking at the tangled | also to stop the restlessness.
) [of ours today would have said, that i After th b " a i ; hines in Prof. Moore's " : ; [0 thongs of circumstances or cutting er the sponge ath, his skin may be powdered DecGirie yi ite CaPmung. Jee neg ? ee. | (he founding fathers never thought | through them in order to get on| with any light, clean talcum powder, which helps also y it necessary to wipe out yellow fever | wit, the business in hand. Practical | to prevent irritation of the skin. If there is much
And for days and months a stand- 4 a | yw y t : VERYONE who has “watched his garden grow” | apd car wheel rolls back and forth pe or they Nowa have put it into the | business executives face such | itching, or peeling of the skin, the doctor can pres | Constitution. | choices frequently. scribe lotions containing soda or other substances.
will enjoy Prof. E. J. Salisbury’ w book, THE rail joints, carrying a load 3 LIVING TIE (Macmillan). In bridging the gap NA Yat wl as TE 75.000 ; i >» : Our best lawyers make their living The food of the child should be chiefly of the light between botanist and practical gardener he has been | pounds, to see what loads can cause | Ss N most walks of life we face for- | by helping businessmen around and fluid type as long as he has any fever. Then, most successful. fissures. Actually the rail goes to A XA ward. In politics and govern- | technical legal obstacles. | as the fever disappears and the child begins to get Among the subjects covered are: The soil: the gar- | and fro beneath the wheel but the Se : ®3i ment we seem to prefer to walk | Yet when such a choice confronts better, it is customary to serve him plenty of nutriden under the soil; fertility and inheritance in seed | effect is the same. op Ci § | backward, gazing blankly at the | us nationally, we lose our confidence | tious food, particularly substances containing iron and production; seeds and their germination; the cutting : : ! ‘past, mumbling quotations from | and lapse into a cold sweat of fear.| vitamins, so as to build up his blood. of lawns and hedges. : Ta SE B® worshiped ancestors, while stumb- | We are afraid of our democracy, It is not wise to give large amounts of laxatives do flowers have scent and color? Why do | JF » steel rail can have finger- . 3 J fk ling into ditches along the way |afraid some tyrant will snatch it| or cathartics for the bowels; in fact, these should some flowers open by day and others by night? Why prints, the so-called “shatter | HGS eT ES \ 4 | which we might easily jump by just | away us. We ourselves.| never be g to sick children without a doctor's do sunflowers turn to the light? What chemical |cracks” of the railroad technologist : Wh : SR. | turning around and facing them. |We feel much er d t dag HL Rd processes take place during rainfall? Prof. Salisbury | would take that designation. Some University of 1i- | Hero Sonntag's risk was made | rol of nine supren ] 01 uld be given plenty of gives simple yet scientific answers to these and many | rails have these ly knowledge that in- worthwhile because in his case there (men ; ; 508 y tend toward alkalinizae other questions. $e * | small cracks and some do not. One ;
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