Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1939 — Page 12

‘he Indianapolis Times (a SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) i

OY W. HOWARD LUDWELL DENNY Editor

Washington

Manager

Price in Marion Counfy, 8 cents a copy; delivered by carrier, 12 cents a week.

laws ‘Are Found a 's Plan ‘to Bequeath

ors to Posterity.

ao gC A

Close Co-operation Between: SEL |. And Exchange Officials Restored |‘ |. Ea A Ja j,i a badd Public, Cenfiderice in Stock Market. | | : | VY. na i Le Op or i ey A. dl Fuisa; Okla, Jan. 3—Westbrook Pegler says he :[§| “& intends to avoid the ‘or of William Shake= speare, whose manuscripts have vanished, leaving a question: gs to. whether Bacon We n't the real author 4! of his ‘works. Peg has decided to bequeath all his | papers to posterity. They tried to find and open

the poet Spenser's coffin the pther day because his

friend Shakespeare may have lett a poetic tribute there, The handwriting would have attended to the

ks his forethought in

. Publishing Co. 21 | Maryland St. : Mail subscription rates in Indiana, $3 a year; outside of Indiana, 65 cents a month.

Ep RILEY 8551

Their Own Way

(Batting for Westbrook Pegler) rh a ASHINGTON, Jan. 3—-1f there are any whoex-| § pected that Federal regulation of the stock | } market and the issue of securities would end all fraud and irregularities, they will ‘be. disappointed. SEC | hasn't made everyone honest. The year just ended brought ‘forth its share“of slickers who were, caught | | working out of bounds. That there are menipulators | who are still trying to beat the game is evident. Again | |°

it has been demonstrated that man nature's batting average perfect. cl: , In spite of Federal regulation the Whitney affalr | occurred and the gates of Sing Sing closed behind its perpetrator. The master-mind of the McKesson & Robbins fraud was discovered and he promptly put himself out of the way with a bullet. As a result of that case SEC is undertaking investigation of the whole system of corporation Sccounting. he thes found conditions in several large instances w ich have might oe. I EH i ; caused it to seek fraud indictments and it is prepar- i Jue Srouple i Bis ide a is that, Te pick / : T= | ing other cases. Within the last few days tne Stock | | ; 5 he or tas 4 inl | ents OE x Ey of Ugasirec - ment, housed in a marble and limestone structure covering | Exchange, acting upon its own initiative, has expelled " He : ey SEW, Ln ; se: veal) 8 3 ® history A fe ; | = . sl divisions—Antitru t. Tax, Claims, | one of its members, Joseph A. Sisto, on charges of | | Ra i : TE ; : J|.: He has 8 z ] , Conn, la * many acres, has six large divisions—ARULIUSS, ~= » | juggling stock. ] ey N ~~ || devise that also—after he gels through ‘with it. Buby’ # | Criminal, Lands, Customs. It includes three-bureaus—In- : ® x ol 3 2 : py Be A gd that Wonkinos provite Jor | He perpetual preserva~ : vestigation (G-Men), Prisons, War Risk Litigation. Around | C'TILL, none of these affairs, and same of them were : Pry V ay ¢' g Lon round for ‘that. ene {pass hd Mr. Murphy hover a multitude of assistants to superintend spectacular and of large proportions, has pro- | j - ZA 5) : , | : ois ip . ~~ a multitude of duties, which go far beyond the original con- | duced any panic, SF any gh re alarm or any cries for : fs 2 Eo : <: ception that the job of the Attorney General should be to | * Congressional witch-burning. a . . . s depart- In another day, such a parade of fi ncial rascal=give advice to the President and heads of executive depart-| ity probably would have caused a good deal of excite- | | ments, represent the Government in the courts .and aid in ment and drastic talk, 3 not Someiune Zcre., These ‘ : : : : : are two reasons, probably, why se : = | the drafting of executive orders and Presidential proclama- | ToC 4" without setting off a general pogrom. 7 tions. One reason is the existence ER \ Traut : » wh and the SEC. Under Chairman W. O. Douglas the And inevitably the job of Attorney General will become and the SEC. ery indicrtion of being alert, coms more and more important, as Congress enacts more and | petent and fearless in its 1olice work. SEC cannot in 3 i civilizati insure a sucker against losing his money in the stoc ~ more laws in our increasingly complex civilization. : market. But it does try to see that fair rules are He takes over the job with a background Se eX- | established and observed, ard that there is no dealing peri i ic li in in ar, | from the bottom of the deck. perience in public life. Army captain in the Wor Ww 2 m the bottom of re ai. public confidence 1s no a Federal prosecutor of war fraud cases, judge in a state | jonger upset when a rascal is caught is that the New court, Mayor of Detroit through the cruel years of the de- | York Stock Exchange is now working hand in glove pression when the city had to feed hundreds of thousands of unemployed, the last Governor-General and first High Commissioner of the Philippines, and Governor of Michigan | through the explosive period of the sit-down strikes. ” ”» 2 ”

with the SEC in policing it self. : #2 a 8 s 'YN the early days of the SEC, the Stock Exchange spokesman, who was the same Richard Whitney who is now out of circulation, was running around the country crying that Washington was ruining : ase of Mr. Murphy's career which has he I Nowevly, saw a complete change. - aroused the greatest controversy as to his fitness. Legally, | The Stock Exchange put in as its head young Wilpx _ there can be no doubt that the sit-downers should have Jam MC. Marin. Whose Qotcy J8 te Dall with been ejected, and it can be argued that by failure to eject | dominating officials, accepts the principle that it is a he encouraged more sit-downs. Yet, practically, there are pubis institation, mol & private clob, S100, CF, com. - many appealing arguments to support the view that Mr. : Murphy decided wisely in refusing to use troops and “bayonets. In his favor it must be said that, after many sleepless days and nights, peace was restored in the automobile industry, without bloodshed. . : After what he has been through, we think Mr. Murphy ~ must have been indulging in subtle Irish wit when, speaking | of the soft-cushioned Attorney Generalship, he said: “It is a difficult job—that is what I like about it.”

bined efforts of SEC and the new Stock Exchange management, crooks will be able to get by temporarily. ol Anyway, we wish him well. He is a public servant of great ability and integrity.

But when both parties are working, as they now _ BEHIND FIGURES

are, to enforce the rules, the public is ready to accept Lo J OCKING stable doors after horses are stolen is an old |

Member of United Press, . Scripps - Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Buveau of Circulation.

Give Light and the People will Find

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1939

“tomb from a similar violation in search of his true identity. . Peg’s gentle, railing boosting did so much to make this column. that one of my friends told him that I thought he had made me. Hig answer was: “Not yet, but I am arching my neck ab him.” He didn’t need {| to. do that, It is therefore true that the identity clue {1 might be found in either collin !

{| this matter may preserve my

laws will not make hu- x © : 3 ; if “ fei 2 ; ia : ! A ¢ or, myth. Mr. Pegler think

MURPHY'’S NEW JOB : : FRANK MURPHY takes over the running of the Department of Justice, on a budget of about $50,000,000 a year. He has at his beck and call lawyers, clerks, investigators

and other employees to a total of 8700. He has supervision ‘over the 18,000 inmates of Federal Prisons. His depart-

¢ s |» | | N with all that, I see ahother great flaw in this . Peg’s to “do something rather handsome

“|

| ~-“plan of a1 | for posterity.” Tl bet he wouldn't leave all his papers {| in the ‘vault. If he just picked out those that hint | that he’ was one of the great satirical writers of his time and left out those, if any there be, that seem 1'to show that even he sometimes wrote with his elbow, | wouldn’t that be slipping a fast one over on posterity =. when it was busy tying its [shoe or something? ; Also, it: is barely. possible that, at some careless moment in his interesting and important career, Mr. | Pegler may have pulled some terrible boner—something that might even tend to throw the tommy of posterity and cause it to close the book in shocked amaze. Would he leave it in the archives: or would he sneak it out and stick it in the incinerator? Mr. Pegler is one of the most candid men I have ever known about his own peccadillos but I can imagine in any man—even in him ses in which he wouldn’t | like to have either posterity or the present know ‘exactly where the corpse was buried. ; 8 8 = : : AD another thing, before I begin to head a move= ment to preserve Pegleriana I want to know whether they are going to pe edited or be preserved in their original form with jall their faults and blemishes. It is so easy.to doctor up a prophecy after the event to make it seem-miraculous. It is‘not dif‘ficult to pare and perfect one side of a controversy after the arguments are all in to make the other guy go down in history as a bu and the preserved writer appear as a Daniel come to| judgment. - All this is not to mention editing. for literary style and unity— especially if the benefactor] of posterity had: ghost + writers which, of course, P!

g never had. After all, aren't Peg’s

» =

is this last p

~The Hoosier Forum ais : 1 wholly disagree with ‘what you say, but will. defend to the death your Fight to say it—Voltaire. -

its troubles, and points out that this progress is’ nowhere so ‘visible as in America. Among the encouraging facts on the horizon it lists these: : y Since they signed the treaty of Ghent on Christmas Eve, 1814, the United States and England have maintained an unbroken peace—in spite of various incidents which gravely strained their relations. The United States has made progress toward breaking down the barriers between nations, by signing trade agreements with 20 foreign countries during the last few years. From these agreements are coming closer economic relations and better understanding.

Transportation and communica-| tion facilities have so improved that

’ | : . : ut of | journeys which used to take weeks Europe's Planes Superior to Ours. the old fellow’s way while he stole now take days, and no part of the ; : :

the show. Late that afternoon, I| United States can be said to be ; (Batting, for E Hopes J ome, De Seales 3 isolated. wile \ROM time to time, American aeronautical experts ’ ’ ’ oom, |” a generation or two ago, the .or- returning to this country after inspecting the air Joun ah places of plominence, ut aching all over, shaken, Sp) in %|dinary workingman in America | powers of Europe are asked for their. opinions as to ° a ; +! | very much wea fon. I|ioied 16 hours a day for very low | how our fighting aviation [compares with that abroad. Ting Pree. in Yitile worlds, | iiave riot been out on ihe icesines, pay. Today he works half of that| Their answers often are guarded and evasive. . ofiess toreing ule World flo eo # 2 * h When they are bold lenough to tell how many

hs ul : ; | time, gets a much higher wage, and} : pity. ah the real Aiferente SOME THINGS ON BRIGHT has a standard of living which gives | more airplanes the European countries have than between the two classes? How can SIDE OF LEDGER. him comforts and luxuries that| ourselves, they. duck the lcomparison on how foreigri oc ours in performance.

: hide: : he exclusive privilege of | fighters compare. with we recognize the difference at the once. were & sive privilege Of} 11ST J by : right time? Many executives in Maybe we spent a litle £00 mich the very wealthy. It’s certainly not a.pleasant job for an American time listing the things that are

Death rates have been reduped to admit that our airplanes cannot hold a candle to peace and war ruin themselves by oh : , ARTF AT ’ appointing a “brainless” man; oth-| rw oro with the world. There are and the average life span has een| many of Europe's top performances. But it’s a job enough of them, heaven knows, to |

“ ” + + doubled within the last century. that must be done. - 3 ers “make” their regime by a Pb . : 3 os 2s : Education, once the privilege of a We can ‘dismiss the fact that the all have more proper appointment. But our gen-|n,ape an impressive list; but we can ; Dry: : y overdo pessimism very easily, and it

eration cannot “high hat” other very few, is now available to all. ed States, but deficiency in does not hurt us to be reminded

THINKS CONQUERORS DID NOTHING FOR HUMANITY By W. L. Ballard, Syracuse, Ind

Looking into history, men’s leaders have been, at best, but a crosssection human average, mentally.| Many have been superior, but many leaders were overwhelming lapses from mentality as represented even by “average” men of that day. Who would choose to live under Napoleon, Charles XII (Sweden), Pyrrhus; Hannibal, Alexander? Not one thing did they do, consciously, as a contribution .to the general good or to general knowledge; not a shred of their work lived, or deserved to

(Times readers are invited fo express their views in 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.)

: ritings preserved in the official files of a thousand newspapers where nobody can jimmy them? Whoever saw a writing of Socrates? And of whom is it not recorded that he ever , wrote one single word—except with his fingers in the dust. Truly great sayings heed no archives, :

Aviation | By Maj. Al Williams Let's Be Frank A

and being put in the shade by him, I ascribed his dexterity to life-long practice. Shortly thereafter, I started in on my life-long practice. The first afternoon I devoted to “strengthening the ankles.” The next afternoon to speed bursts. The next to skating around curves. The next afternoon, I had to get out of

Business By John T. Flynn

Reform of Relief Should Receive Early Attention of the Congress.

EW YORK, Jan. 3.—arly in the session of Congress the question of relief—reform of the present system—will be in order. And already the Administration is making some hasty plans. The problems split into two questions. First, who has been responsible for the political scandals which have befouled the WPA? Second, how is this to be managed in the future? : ] Neither question should be avoided. On the question of responsibility, there is, however, little room for argument. Harry Hopkins was head of the WPA. But Harry Hopkins is not the political leader of the Administration. He is and always has been a Wwelfare worker with whom politics has been a secondary interest. He has been sxtremely close to the President. He would not dare undertake any political activities on his own initistive. If there is any blame there is only one person to blame and that is Franklin D. Roosevelt and everybody knows that. .Now, on the question of future administration. It is now perfectly obvious that what is being planned— in spite of four years of experience with relief—is being planned hastily. The President is playing with the idea of county bosrds. But on examination all he has ig mind is more or less voluntary boards of

live. At the other extreme are the men whose lives, in the aggregate, assembled the social world we live in and. call good. They were not all “good” men, but they successfully dealt with permanent, real values. Both . these classes of men are

2

About it and Admit

that in good faith and its confidence will not be un-

duly undermined with a rascal is caught. ‘And to say that Federel regulation does not. work because fraud cases are turned up is -to say that it is no use having a good prosecuting attorney because . every once in a while sore crook is caught and has to be prosecuted. ; : human habit likely to be much in evidence following | the Coster-Musica crash. : | i Already there is grave discussion of the possible duty | + of auditors and accountants: to make always an actual phys- | ical check of assets behind corporation figures they certify | for the faith and confidence of an investing public.

The desirability, not to say need, of such a check would - seem elemental. eo! AR A lot of money and trouble might have been saved HE if a majority of McKesson & Robbins directors had “taken nothing for granted” back in 1934, when, according to testimony before the New York State Fraud Bureau, they were ‘warned against Coster and his activities by another former director, Waddill Catchings, who reported ‘his sinister discoveries and resigned when the board took no action. Or, if still earlier, the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency had “taken nothing for granted,” when it got specific, competently backed requests for an investigation Se ao SIL TRL Om and look into

ot 18se sight of. Looking at the| ,, records is that we aven't got the right kind of

. The world’s top speed record of 440.6 miles per hour belongs ta Italy. The landplane speed record , of 379 miles per hour was made by a' German fighter, The bomber record: of 315 miles per hour was made by a German job, They should be ours. Hee ma

Watching Your Health ‘By Dr. Morris Fishbein re HEN a human bein

: Differences in religious beliefs, once our { ors is a tough pill to swallow. i generations, go a ® Dave on responsible for bitter - divisions not neatly so totigh for anyone else as it is 2 that rank with the “all-time worsts.” that there is. another side to the|among the people, are no longer a for an American pilot.. | : CE Competitive ways: of life give - picture. : {problem in America; instead, lead~ When I returned I blurted out just what I thought, « reconcilable definitions of what is So there is a good deal of interestiers of Jews, Catholics and Protes- | and reported. just what I had seen of European air reason Or Wisdom and what is in a little bulletin just sent out tants are working actively for har-| power. And I must confess that I have been greatly foolish. from the New York office of the mony and better relations. cheered by the firmness with which that unpleasant ‘As for the past, the only accepted Good Neighbor League, citing the| All of these things add up to a| news was received by. th average citizen. : rule is to honor creators of Works reasons that exist for optimism. |pretty impressive list. They have But our engineers havi sputtered and fumed. They that help us enjoy, or move toward The league feels that the race is|nothing to do with ‘the dire prob- | don’t come right out and contradict my observations, “the hore. abun dant life” AmonE making real progress in spite of all|lems’ which loom so large today; | but they slide ' dangerously near it when they offer the living, there simply is no rule. PARADE - | but for that very reason they are| excuses for what speed We lack In our fighters. | of McKesson & Robbins financing and the actual values be- | 14, We doubtless make the mistakes all the more encouraging, hecslise| GL] I nest hind the corporation’s securities It’s Not a New Story : former generations did, when whole . By KEN HUGHES they are enduring, continuing gains e need engines be To an leu & few tices ate Hnown. Trey were (Eo IO, Mle CO WER he EE a1) men | 808 2106 ere Sempotary changes in air: leaders: not having a aking too much for granted in the face of doubt and | known, before the Administration went into power. selves on foals: Lu fires of Bitversiess anu} Lata, CONOIGIORS: ri Oh val see. thby duplicate of every foreign areal engine, built ac- * * . . | as Pe Te : : 2 9 : < 5 7 : ’ . suspicion—attitude that seems to have prevailed among di- On a A cons provides | Aw, THE JOYS (7), ETC, {Bach torch sfisme Puma sacred | TO OE ov. pul sieady)| CoTAng to Ameriéan eis a rectors, auditors and even investmerit houses concerned— | fatal than to have the Bon SF from the Federal | OF ICE SKATING Bui gull the pute in heats, will £2 iy Er or Records Should Be: Ours it | » ; overnment and be spent by the state governments. | By Albert Free and, Bloomfield C at bloody road, > : "t : n't build eac ngin wt was what enabled Coster to “finance and flourish for years Another is that the communities in which the | I “see by the papers” that In- To stay the brutal flames that strive ing more comfortable, his chance to Evel i We St Id each fype of engine in before the final crash and exposure. His figures looked fine, | money is spent must also provide a part of it. ‘The dianapolis is ay some’ of the] =. lopumn _ a use his God-given talents: to the Es Son 1 Sgeh pe. ihe I whet Why poke behind ’em? : people must feel the burden. The ‘spending of money | winter sports since the last cold ‘The effigy of God. : best advantage has been enlarged, Te ee 5 out tead of dependis on: glide ) ; : Trust not be a source <f local ‘prosperity, flowing in |wave hit the state. I read with that Before the eyes of children. his prospects for getting a little |" "ono p pe oe fl LL The big lesson of the case is a plain lesso f precau- from outside from some unknown source. * °° '|réserved interest a fellow has who “And render ashes of a perfect|more happiness into. his life are abs oie vi i ti 4 : p n OI precau A third is that relief money can be spent by only | can’t do it himself of people out rust. et . | somewhat better: The. different Per fOTIRnCS of Oe raft is based on “squped ion an prevention. : Ee one kind of an organization—a professional organiza- |on the ice doing ‘figure eights 'n’ Yet shall the stricken women arise items in the list may not look » sg That mes t She, engine is Gelivene Not to profit by it, all along the li 1d __ | tion, recruited By the most drastic civil service opera- stuff, = ; : Courageously to carry on! so important, -taken singly; added nore power for a Shoes Guralien. than It can deliver ; g the line, would be stupid. | tions. Itis an insult to the intelligence of the people | When 1 lived at Feru, Ind, we| zm together, they’ show an amazing Jderinuely, all Hight, ¥ ne foreign engines make to recruit a Spending ‘personnel by the grossest politi- | used to skate some.” We used to be DAILY THOUGHT ; amount of progress. vA Toco Re Oo: debs soup-up 3 few of ours REVISE OR REPE AL? cal methods and then cover them all into civil service. joined by a fellow who had been in How are the mighty fallen in And that is a fact which we must The real OE ‘why we don’t make some ‘souped. : EN the midst of the battle! O Jona- ‘we h ight ? UNITED STATES SENATOR LOGAN Of Kentucky than, thou wast slain in thine |douds on tocays havin, Bed . : ’ high places—II Samuel 1:25. easily begin to feel that the whole world is going to pot. But under-

What does this all mean? It means complete re- the Civil War and had seen. Linconstruotion of the whole reliet approach nd ML |oo SSF IL TG ikl though a staunch New Deal Democrat, frankly de- ai "national FE by a Ely new and oh ar Sheets) Same hed clares there is “overwhelming sentiment” in the Senate for amendments of the Wagner Labor Relations Act and warns that failure to amend will invite out-and-out repeal.

professionally organized personnel and the entire cost | shines he could cut! The Indianapolis Times has long stressed the same

paid out of taxation. After watching him several days, warning and irged the wisdom of saving the sound purpose : of the Wagner act by simply correcting the defects of one- : sideness and injustice clearly revealed in its workings. The principle of collective bargaining will be all the

I NOW know that wars do not end neath the * surface, the general wars.—Henry Ford. course of man’s progress is upward.

A Woman's Viewpoint LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND By Mrs. Walter Ferguson ——By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WiGGAM *

« #~ OSH, it must have been wonderful to know as much as he did!” The remark was uttered in 2

DEMOCRACY is the one and finds that inflammatory :

only hope of. both science and

better served, we think, by an amended law that does not ; constantly challenge criticism and complaint by ignoring the rights of employers and permitting an administrative board to be prosecutor, jury and judge in labor disputes. E With the successful Railway Labor Act as a guide, particularly in providing more scope for mediation, it should be possible to put bilateral fairness into the Wag-

. ner act without sacrificing its purpose and with great gain |

in public faith that it can allay industrial strife, as it was ‘intended to do. : So ; :

«1 would be foolish to let stiff-necked insistence on the Wagner act in its present form play into the hands of repealists ready to wipe it off the statute books.

OUCH! Fo QECRETARY ICKES is renewing his word battle with * Congressman Martin Dies, chairman of the Committee

to Investigate Un-American Activities. Mr. Ickes has an- |

nounced a radio speech for Jan. 6. Title: “Playing With

; All right. - It's a free country. But we warn Mr. Ickes ta pun like that one is carrying things mighty far. We Sosdngss Mr Dies won't reply with a radio speech

profoundest admiration by Tom, aged 15, when the news of Dr. Frank Vivetelly’s death appeared in the papers. rn T : : i : In a way we felt he was a friend of ours. We have consulted the big Funk & Wagnalls dictionary so often that we natursliy have an intense admiration for its editor. Frequent consultations of the book have ,also taught Tom that a dictionary isn’t much good to the person who can’t spell. Unless you know how the letters are arranged you can hunt and hunt and hunt before you find the meaning of the elusive word, and the search is a tiring process. 2 es g Like most mothers I am inclined to fault-finding and one of my pet peeves is the sloppy spelling of high school pupils 2nd in many cases ‘of college graduates. : “A : “How do you spell ‘fortuitous’, Mother?” Or, “Mother, which comes first in ‘receive’, the i or the e?” Through many years, P've heard shrill voices shouting, such questions, and wondered why on earth’ they couldn't remember from one day to the next or at least find out in school. Lid pi Idid! By earnest poring over a Blue-Back Speller. if you please, which was the only book of its kind then circulating in the Indian Territory. = = { The idea that Heaven endows its favorites with the ability to spell is a ving doctrine of this generation, besides being a perfect alibi for those who don’t care to learn. Probably tint one of them will ever have Vizetelly,

much fun as did Fr

comi

Wick wit PRODUCE DEMOCRATIC OR DICT. YOUR OPIN I

TER 6CIENC A ERE UNION

est Steps ‘forward that

IT WOULD: be one of the gt has ever taken. True,

00ns

2

art; dictatorship is: their'doom. In Greece, Rome, the Rennaisance, Elizabethan ‘ England, -and every great period of science and art men were free to think, imagine and cre-

ate. True, at times; such as in Flor-|.

ence under dictators, great artists and scientists arose but, as Everett Dean Martin has shown, these feudal dictators, after they got all the taxes they could, left the individual free to think and create as he pleased. The free speech; free thought, free public expression and inspiration of democracy are the only hopes for great art and great science because they alone permit a great design for

which result in failure of the blood to circulate, percondition. ' Frequently these columns have discussed

name for the condition called Buerger’s disease.

because the tissues have died. The disease mostly affects men of 20 and 50. At one time it. was found that it affected

course, the loss of limbs which have to be removed

invariably associated merous cases have been Out of almost 1000 patients seen in one of our largest clinics, 28 per cent of the patients were Jews and 72 per cent were hot Jewish. Ten years ago the fgures showed that 55 pe were

changes have taken place in the blood ‘vessels

thromboangitis obliterans, which is the. technical

One of the most serious possible results fs, of

between the ages |

particuarly the Jewish people and that if was almost with men. More recently nufound among women as well.

Dx: cent of the patients were Jovis 411 and 45 per cent were not Jewish. Sipe ata be| - One of the most interesting aspects of this cordi- » those who

ticularly in the feet, he is confronted with a serious