Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1938 — Page 18
AT NES ORT TINIE
PAGE 18
The Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
ROY W. HOWARD LUDWELL DENNY MARK FERREE President Editor Business Manage?
Price in Marion County. 3 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 12 cents a week.
Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by The Indianapolis Times Publishing Co, 214 W, Maryland St.
7
|
7
i
Mail subscription rates in Indiana, $3 a year; outside of Indiana, 65 cents a month.
~ : Rlley 5551
Their Own Way
Member of United Press, Scripps - Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bu-
reau of Circulations. : TR
Give Light and the People Will Find
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1938
FD CHANGED HORSES NCE upon a time Jim Farley was the New Deal's Field Marshal of political wars. And as each election increased the Democratic majorities in the two houses of Congress, Genial Jim became the symbol of “Nothing succeeds like success.” But now Commander-in-Chief Roosevelt depends upon
Hopkins, Ickes, Corcoran and Cohen. general staff has demonstrated that
new Nn (1) it can neither defeat a nobody like Senator “Cotton Ed” Carolina, nor (2) elect a somebody like
vland—symbolizing “Nothing fails like
~
[ South
eo
hf Jai
THOMAS WOLFE THOMAS WOLFE was America's tallest, huskiest, most red-blooded novelist. Words rushed out of him like a
gevser, His books ran to encyclopedia size even after frantic editors hacked at them. Critics yowled “use a blue pencil!” But they fell helplessly on worn-out adjectives trying to describe the heroic energy of his work. He had a vigor more elemental, more truly poetic and more deeply rooted in American soil than any native writer before him, with the possible exception of Walt Whitman. He planned six novels to tell the story of the remarkable Gant family, which was partly the story of his own life. Two of these books—"Look Homeward Angel” and “Of Time and the River"—we already know. Another was nearly completed when he died. Those who called for the blue pencil have won more than they bargained for. Death has deleted for all time whatever else was in Thomas Wolfe to say.
ABOUT POLITICS IN RELIEF
HE issue of politics in the relief program was clearly
presented on the floor of the U. S. Senate last spring. The simple principle that the Government's immense business of feeding the hungry and providing work for the jobless should be kept clear of politics was then generally understood. In spite of the adverse hair-line decisions in the Senate, | produced by pressure from Administration leaders, we believe the country wanted Congress to say without equivocation that politicians must not be permitted to bend the great Federal relief machine to their personal uses, and that those who tried should be penalized. But, since the issue was so clearly presented several | months ago, it seems to have been confused by the sharp | over personalities, by primary results, and by | and denials. Because of this confusion, and for fear that the simple | principle at stake has become obscured, perhaps this is the time to restate it. And in restating it we'd like to borrow the words of | the man—a leading New Dealer—who tried his best to insure against politics in relief, Senator Carl (D. N. M.). “I have benefitted fi tor Hatch said then, “and and in party governmen
clamor charges
Hatch |
om political organizations,” SenaI believe in political organization
"0 i Le
“However, as a legislator, if I see danger existing to the country I do not believe I have any right to silence my voice and not say what I think the danger is. “Having had some experience in practical politics, and
| for these defenseless and
| about brutality and insult.
having some knowledge of human beings and human nature, I know—and it does not take any investigation to convince me—that when money is being paid out indiscriminately | through Government agencies, no matter what the inten- | tions are, there will be those who will misuse funds and | seek to gain advantage from them. “I do not know that this is done; but I can look out, ' and see this state of affairs: “Here are these poor unfortunate persons on workrelief projects. Their very lives and the lives of their | wives and their children are dependent upon the particular jobs they hold. They are not free men, because their very dependence makes them susceptible to the influence of the politician who comes around and says, ‘Now you vote so and so. If you do not, you will lose your job.’ “How is that man going to vote? He is going to vote he is told, because he cannot help himself. “The man to whom I refer has not any weapon; he | has not any shield to protect himself against those, if there |
as
be any, who would seek to use him for this political ! purpose.” Senator Hatch tried to forge a weapon for this man to use. He proposed an amendment to the relief bill which would have gone a little way toward taking politics out of relief. If that amendment had been enacted, when a politician told a relief worker “You must vote so and so” the relief worker could have said, “The law savs that I must not be active in politics,” and if you seek to control my vote you will lose your job.” “My amendment,” Senator Hatch said, “is a weapon | in the hands of the unfortunate man, and that is what I! want of it.” And that, we believe, is what the country wants of it. We hope that out of the work of the Sheppard Committee will come such weapon, which will permit Government and officials and relief workers to protect the simple principle that there must be no politics in relief.
COULD THEY BE FATHEADS?
ARVEY STOWERS, a South Bend sales expert, maintains that wide-headed people make the world’s decisions. The husband or wife whose head is widest just above the ears rules the homes, says Mr. Stowers, and he points | to Mussolini as “a first-class example of a wide head.” It may be true. But if so, we are compelled to con- | clude, as we observe some of the decisions being made these days, that a great many of the world’s wide heads must house Seg oly narrow minds. 3
.
Zones, cotton, hogs and cattle, with a tax
| tions,
| and
i nests agree,”
a while and Teave the birds out of it? :
Fair Enough
By Westbrook Pegler
Mussolini Says the Sudetens Must Go to Hitler, but How About Those Austrians in Italy's Tyrol Region?
EW YORK, Sept. 16.—There are points of confusion in the acts and utterances of Hitler and Mussolini. Hitler declares a passionate sympathy for the oppressed Sudeten minority in Czechoslovakia. He is particularly indignant because they have been forbidden to sing songs of disloyalty to the nation of which they are unwillingly a part. He is furious because they were forbidden to wear white socks, which
were the identification mark of a seditious society organized by his agent, Konrad Heniein. But in the territory which Italy carved out of Austria at the close of the World War, there are still 250,000 Austrians who are captives of a foreign conqueror and whose human rights have been ruthlessly denied. Mussolini forbade and suppressed the singing of German songs, even innocent folk songs, in the captive Tyrol. He, literally, even forbade the captured Austrians in his conquered territory to yodel and even to speak their native language. = 3 = NLY three years ago captive Austrians were literally, physically, dragged off from their homes, impressed into the army of “a foreign power,” and sent to Abyssinia. Czechoslovakia has fought no foreign wars and far from attempting to victimize the Sudetens in any manner, even remotely approaching the Italian brutality toward the captured Tyroleans, has preferred to excuse the Sudeten Germans from service in her armies because the treacherous movements which Hitler promoted among them made them untrustworthy. For many years after the war, the Sudetens enjoved the benefits of orderly government in Czechoslovakia, while Germany was shaken by recurrent disturbances and throughout that time the Sudetens were glad to be protected from conditions in Germany. At no time since the end of the war have the captives in Italy enjoyed similar benefits.
= 2» ”
HE Sudetens never were any more German than Mussolini's quarter of a million Tyrolean captives. They were subjects of Austria-Hungary before the war and it was the same “Versailles reconstruction of states” which placed the Tyroleans within the new boundaries of Italy.
If a few Sudetens have been killed in disorders provoked by Hitler through Henlein, many more of those whom Hitler embraces as blood brothers were shot by Mussolini blackshirts, police and border patrols, as they attempted to affect personally an anschluss by going over the hill on foot. Mussolini's word on the Sudeten crisis is that Czechoslovakia must give the. Sudeten territory to Germany. By the same principle, Mussolini then must give back to Hitler, as the executor of the deceased state of Austria, the territory which he received and the 250.000 Ausirians who are now being “victimized by a foreign power as a result of the Versailles reconstruction of states.” And if he doesn't give them back, Hitler must rescue them. In fact, he should rescue them first. forsaken brothers of the
Reich, as he calls all such, really do know something
Business By John T. Flynn
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___
FRIDAY, SEPT. 16, 1938
Gone With the Wind !—By Talburt
I wholly defend to
The Hoosier Forum
disagree with what you say, but will the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
WELL, IT WOULD SEEM HE DISLIKES WRESTLING By B. C. The great sport of wrestling, as approximated in the United States today, has finally lit on something. The shot in the arm which ugly
rumors had intimatea was unecessary ought to be administered any day now. The formula for the in-
jection must certainly have revealed itself to promoters in a blinding] flash when Joe Reno and Rough-| house Ross went at it in Minneapo-| lis the other day in a ring buried |
chocolate and vanilla ice cream, Mud-wrestling was, as you might
A Warning About the American Stake in the European . Crisis. |
EW YORK, Sept. 16.—If hostilities should begin | in Europe Americans must be prepared to hear | about an occasional bomb dropping upon some Amer-ican-owned temple of industry and the killing of an | occasional American manager or employee. For | Europe is honeycombed with these American institu- | tions of business.
Some are invisible while others greet the American | sique to Wrestling Exclusively in Arthur's Round Table, and it should traveler wherever he goes. If a bomb falls on one of | Pierre's Clam Chowder.” . .. “Wres- pe one of every gentleman an tling Just Isn't Wrestling Without every lady.
the chain drug stores of “Boots the Cash Chemist” in London we shall hear promptly that an Americanowned subsidiary of a great drug chain has been outraged. The traveler will hardly guess that the Campaigne
| Industrielle des Petrole is our old friend Mr. Harry
Sinclair; that the International des Machines Agricole | is the International Harvester or that the Twoarystavs Noftowe Oldjakolny Spokka Alecyna is none other than the Standard Oil. Everywhere there are
| Gesselschafts and Societe Anonymnhs and Aktienge-
sellschafts which mark but do not disclose the work- | ing quarters of Americans in Europe. Americans will not know this until some German or Italian or French | sentry or lieutenant slaps the manager or shoots up
the front office. i It's Not This Nation's Troubles
This, therefore, is a good time to think over our stake in these difficulties. These industries are, of course, American in that they are for the most part
| owned by Americans. But in a large number of cases,
particularly those I have named, the products are not American save in name only. They are manufactured in plants in Europe by workers who are natives of the European countries | where the plants exist and, in many cases. are man- | aged by natives of those countries. This is as it ought te be. But it is a fact that this should weigh | in our attitude toward these industries in the war
|
The owners are stockholders of American corporaall of them living cozily and safely here in America. And it is to be understood that when these
| populations in Europe go io war they wiil have no | time to differentiate in their desperate struggles be-
tween corporations whose stocks are owned in Amer-
{ lca and those whose stocks are owned in Europe. |
The disturbance of American plants in Europe
| in the last war was a source of endless irritation. The
number of American plants now is far more numer- | ous than then. But these plants are owned by Eng- | lish and French and German corporations (though
{ the stocks may be owned here), use English, French
and German products and are worked by English, French and German workers. They have to take their chance along with the other corporations there not expect to involve this country in their troubles.
A Woman's Viewpoint By Mrs. Walter Ferguson
HEN I was a child we were forced to memorize the inane verses beginning “Birds in their little which, like all our lessons, pointed a worthy moral Probably dislike of the task turned me sour; at any rate I always see red when birds are cited as fit creatures for people to emulate. If the moralists were consistent it wouldn't be so bad, yet none of them remind us that humans generally act like jays, being quarrelsome, greedy and intrusive. On the contrary, they tell us that the dear little birds are always busy going out after early worms and singing in the rain. Now if we could only learn to sihg in the rain too; if we could twitter and hum and yodel when the skies grow gray and troubles fall in showers, what splendid creatures we might become and how well business would turn out for us. Such fiddle-faddle burns me up. We can't do it for the simple reason that we are not birds and were not intended to adopt their philosophy—if they have any. While man is the only animal that laughs, he |
is also the only one who feels deeply enough to weep.
And there is a time for weeping in every life— many times in fact. exasperating to be told you should be brave as the sparrow, chirping in spite of falling weather. After all, isn’t chirping the only thing he can do? . There's a good deal to be said for holding vour chin up in a crisis, I'll admit, but if people sing when they have something to sing about it's all we should | expect of them. Not many of us do that vou know. We complain and whine when there's nothing to complain or whine about. The average person hasn't mastered the technique of spreading cheer while the sun shines. Cpuldn’t we concentrate on that idea for
i, [i SL en ey N= ———
‘am opposed to all alienisms.
When those times come, it is |
say, something of a flop, but when| it led to sundae-wrestling it led to a field of unlimited possibilities. The |
|star that wrestling can now hitch |
its wagon to is, of course, the greal! American shooting star of commercial exploitation. “Coming! Butch the Crusher and Tramp Terwilliger, in 300 Gallons of | Excelsior Facial Cream!” . . . “Gyp/|
the Blaster says: ‘I Owe My Phy-
Schultz's Motor Oil.” The nice thing about it is that it wouldn’t lower the sport an inch.
| You can't lower a thing that's rest- which has come thundering down
ing on rock bottom already. ” n ” A FOE OF ‘'ISMS’ RISES TO A DEFENSE OF HIMSELF By Edward F. Maddox
Since I have been called a “Tory” | and “reactionary” because I want | to see this nation kept free of alien! isms and political slavery, I would! like to list some of the political and economic ideas I have advocated. |! To begin with I wish to say that I have always been a Democrat, and I am opposed to New Dealism because it | leads to socialism and communism! In my opinion. All alien political movements should be outlawed. I have advocated government reg- | ulation of prices, wages and profits | cn 3 fair basis. ‘ I hope for a farm hill establishing a minimum and maximum price for farm products such as wheat, corn,
on home-consumed products suffi-| cient to take care of the exports. | I favor reasonable minimum | wages for workers. { I advocate a fair distribution of work on the basis of citizenship and need—and to heads of families first. I think it is imperative that women and young girls who have husbands
and fathers able to support them |
be. removed from jobs in favor of | resteth upon you; on their part
men with families to support. The United States’ first obligation is to provide its own citizens | jobs first. so my slogan is “Ameri- | can jobs for Americans first.”
As for foreign policy, I think we |but love only one.—Balzac.
beneath 315 gallons of strawberry,!
der uttered by malicious people, generally works as a boomerang, hitting the slanderer square in the nose. Also, for the malicious slanderer there is a Supreme Being who is watching his movements and then he has to answer to Him, sooner or later.
(Times readers are invited to express their views these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make your letter short, so all can have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)
in
” 2 2 A TOWNSEND PLAN BACKER TAKES THE FLOOR By P. M. R. It is my observation that there are many people who do not under-
should maintain the Monroe Doctrine and keep clear of all foreign wars.
I have advocated that relief work- Stand the Townsend Plan. I recent-| |ly talked to a man and his wife
's hy wages. ee a nm ge of Who said they had not paid much “Tory.” 1 believe that all of these attention to it. I told them that suggestions would be good for our We must vote for the Townsend country, I think we ought to try Plan if we want it to become a law. them. This man said his two boys were out of work, that he was on the
" » WPA and that he has a daughter
GOSSIP AND SLANDER~— HERE'S TO THEIR DEATH! By Frank L. Martine “To speak no slander; listen to it,” was one rule of King among the unemployed, too. Many think $200 a month is too d {much, but they didn’t think it was ‘too much when they were making very good American; in fact, of that much and more in 1915. No
everybody. “Thou shalt not bear one cried hard times then, did
fitness” is a & { they? If it takes $200 a month to false witness” is a solemn command bring back prosperity, let it take Li {that much. Imost from the dawn of civiliza- | on : Be Slander:is false witness. This is not a plan just for the People will talk about anything, |0ld People. It is a recovery plan but generally about things they know nothing about. They will talk | *>" from morning to night, at street work. The people getting the
: ‘money must spend it in 30 days. corners, or doorsteps, in offices, in! . : ” herefore there will be a constant shops, everywhere. Therefore t y
. SIS Eh 1. (revolving circulation of buying t The San 2 Syeatarvied SY power in this country all the time to add a little. to Yin one | that will help the merchants and has heard. and a little added here | the manufacturers. It will call for
mor & ore people on and there will turn harmless gossip | TI0Te help $8 Pus dove pehp intc a lie. People must be honest The Townsend Plan will bring in things they repeat, and care-|i;is country out of the depression ful in what they say.
: ¢ ke better times. If a thing sounds false. let us be- SEQ maketh lieve it false until we find it true: yn =
this year. thousands of young girls and boys tout of school who could not get a
It should be the rule of
let's think good of everybody; let's ATTACKS MEMBERS OF
ever remember that malicious slan-|
MEMORIES
By WANDA MITCHELL You call me, call me back to you By the trail we wandered hen the skies were blue: But the years have passed, now Since I knew, Those many glad memories That I shared with you.
DAILY THOUGHT If ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are ye; for the spirit of glory and of God
BUND AS AUTOCRATS By L. E. T. How much longer must free, liberal, liberty-loving Americans suffer the indignities of the self-be-lieved “only people fit to live,” the German-American Bund?
loved Woodrow Wilson, said, “It is not the German peopie but the German autocracy we are fighting.” Little did he know that Naziism, the successor, would be a times worse than the German autocracy. While there are thousands and thousands of fine American citizens of German extraction, the writer does not believe that members of this Bund, most of whom are not citizens of this country, should be permitted to stay here to serve all, and foment religious and racial ‘hatred among our citizens.
He is evil spoken of, but on your part He is glorified.—I Peter 4:14.
HE motto of chivalry is also the motto of wisdom;
FROM
- RB CKLY MEN O {ON — JOUR OPIN ® |
MORE MEN than women re-
bound quickly from disappoint ments, partly because moré*men are
WHICH REC
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
12 THIS QUESTION was argued | ably by President Hutchins of | the University of Chicago, recently. | He asks—would the college graduate
‘his education or would he be a bet-
| ter. citizen? Getting a job is one ob- | lect but not the sole object of a
WITH 50, FEW Jo BS AVAIL= ABLE, ARE THERE TOO MARY BOYS AND GIRLS GOING TO COLLEGE? YES ORNO ——
| jobs revive—as they always have (and always will—will it be the | trained or untrained men who will | get the jobs? While college jobs are ‘now few and far between, there are {far more noncollege men seeking | jobs. And in the long run the college man earns more than twice as | high a salary as the noncollege man. No, there are not enough young ! men in college,
2 » ® NO. That is just what is the matter with him—loss of judgment. Appeal to what the man has instead of what he has not—that is, | appeal to his desire for success anc
| importance, his desire to be like other people and be approved by | them, his desire to get away from nis fears and inferiorities and feelings of failyre. As you give these lore Tay his judgment will im-
7
» V1 TRYING TO REFORM A MAN, SHOULD YOU APPEAL FIRST TO HIS JUDGMENT $0 HE MAY | SEE MORE CLEARLY | WHEREIN HE |S WRONG;
@ QRNO
extraverts and partly because they have more outside contacts that divert their minds from their troubles.
i } 3
Goon, Johnson Says—
If War Comes Czechs Would Have To Slaughter Sudetens Who Would Be Traitors Within Their Lines.
ETHANY BEACH, Del, Sept. 16.—Let us pray that this thing in Czechoslovakia stops in its tracks. My business is writing for civilians. But as a soldier I speak as a surgeon, trained ruthlessly to cut out not only the flesh of the wound, but all the injured flesh near it. Do you know what would have to happen to Sue deten Germans in the event of war? They are named from the Sudetes Mountains which form a vast rams part which protects the Bohemian Basin. Those
mountains Hitler wants. He doesn't care about the Germans there. If he did, he would be equally belligerent about the abused Germans in Ttaly. If the Czechs have to defend their republic, those mountains are indispensable. What do you think they would do to the Sudetens? They infest that whole hilly area. You can't suffer traitors within your defenses.
: 2 pn .9
HERE could be only one result. I was going te say that they would be slaughtered as cattle are in the killing pens of the Chicago stockyards. But that is done one-by-one with a pole-ax. This will be done in mass production, through gas in closed chambers by the hundreds, with machine guns in windows by the thousands. That's the way they did it in Russia at Ekaterinburg to the Czarist family, and elsewhere. That's the way Villa did it in Mexico. Don’t be squeamish. We invented “frightfulness™ in war. Sheridan's campaign in the Shenandoah and Sherman's in Georgia, deliberately carried the world back to the idea of Attila the Hun whose boast was that grass would never again grow where he spat. The greatest conqueror, Genghis Khan, marked his victories with pyramids of skulls. That is the essence of modern military art. The mask is off. Slaughter is the word. “War is hell,” said Sherman. What he meant was that the way to wage it is on no such chivalry as the knights knew, but,with such terror that no human being can endure it. Sheridan retaught that idea to the German general staff. 2 2 »p
O; if war comes, at least the male adults among 3,000,000 Sudetens will be killed like sheep. If I were responsible for the command of the Czech Armies, I would do it. So would any officer worthy of his straps.
who will graduate from high school | I reminded him of the
NO, NO! job and that his daughter may be
to put money into circulation and | put the big army of unemployed to
Our war-time President, the be-|
thousand |
| be more likely to get a job without |
college education, Furthermore, when |
{ Do you love the dwarf's yodel song in “Snow | White”? Do you love the sweetness of Christmas— | the mystery and flowers of Easter? Do vou love | crullers and wienerschnitzel, beer and pretzels and | liverwurst? Do you like the only word for “home” and that blessed institution? They didn't all come from the Sudetes Mountains but they are all part of our Teutonic heritage— —poisoned and perverted by a little psychopath from Bavaria. That is the kind of thing we are going to see in this world if something isn't done to stop it. I know how our German stock feels. But, as a soldier, I also know what I would do to Sudetens tomorrow if I were a Czech officer under commission out of Prague. I would slaughter then unmercifully, for that is war. From such wars and the threat of them, Good Lord deliver us.
It Seems to Me
By Heywood Broun
d eet snd
Isolation Does Not Mean Giving Up the Dictates of Fellowship.
EW YORK, Sept. 16.—In time of war prepare for peace. I think that most so-called “iso | lationists” will agree that the state of our own nation would be more secure if the causes of conflict abroad could be resolved. At least, I hope I am wrong in feeling that I catch almost a note of elation in the voice of some who say we should let Europe stew in its own juice or tell all foreign nations to go jump. I agree that the subject of our foreign policy should be a matter of calm and careful debate and that no decision should be reached except through democratic processes. I have read eloquent argu= ments and books based upon the theory that since America can establish economic self-sufficiency, it is best for us to pay no heed to what occurs beyond our borders. I do not want to see American boys sent abroad to die in foreign trenches. But I cannot find it in my heart to be unmoved by the death of men and women in countries which may be no more to us than names upon the map. Isolationists have points to advance which should be heeded. But there is one group, whether it be large or small, for which I have no respect. It is composed of those who would combine isolation with come= placence.
Peace Before Big Guns Blast
When men or nations begin to thank God in pious smugness that they are not as other peoples I seem to hear mocking laughter in the skies and the sound of a pen scratching details of doom across the page of some cosmic ledger. After all, at the dawn of our republic we did not tell Lafayette to go back where he came from. It would be extremely difficult to achieve any international concord at the moment. But it will hardly be easier after the hig guns are moved up into action. A peace which is made before conflict must be better than any which can be arranged after the knockout. Such a peace is a victors peace, I'm for a peace effort here and now. I mean specifically that the United States should call . the nations of the world into conference. I want to see the birth of another league. And it can succeed if appeal can be made to the peoples of the world, over the heads of their rulers, and in conjunction with such a conference there ought to be a meeting of all the representatives of labor from every nation in the world. “Isms” should be put aside for this purpose. This may be visionary, but it is hardly as fantastic as the notion that the workers of the world can cure the ills of the world by bayonetting their brothers.
Watching Your Health
By Dr. Morris Fishbein
RACTICALLY every child sooner or later develops a certain number of blackheads and pimples. They seem to be associated with an excess of action of the glands of the skin in certain areas which put out an unusual amount of oily material. Perhaps this is related in some way to the entire
glandular constitution of the. person concerned, and it may perhaps be related also to the diet. Neither of these factors has been established with certainty, It is conceivable that at times a special germ invades the skin, producing the infectious material in association with the oily glands. The first sign of this condition is the blackhead, which is scientifically called a comedone. The skin around the glands is thickened and this makes it easy for the oily material to be retained in the skin. The various appearances possibly depend on the manner in which the blackhead and pimple form. If the pimple is near the surface, so that pus forms and it breaks, the section is easily removed, On the other hand, if it goes deep and inflammation forms, so that pus is healed in, the person develops what is called a blind boil. There are all sorts of superstitions concerning the cause of this condition, simply because it is so common. Many a young man and woman develop fears and an absolute agony in relationship to social life, simply because of the presence of pimples and black= heads and the weird ideas that exist concerning the causes of their appearance. There is no reason to believe, incidentally, that the person whose face is marked by great numbers of pimples is in any way deficient mentally, physically, orn any other manner which might make him feel socially inferior,
-
