Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1939 — Page 18

PAGE 18

The Indianapolis Times

(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

ROY W, HOWARD RALPH BURKHOLDER MARK FERREE President Editor Business Manager

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a week,

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B23 RILEY 5551

a

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Price in Marion Coun- | ty, 3 cents a copy, deliv- | ered by carrier, 12 cents

FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1939

RUSSIA BALKS T is too soon to tell whether Moscow, in balking at the newest Anglo-French formula for a three-power military alliance, is merely seeking to drive a better bargain before signing up, or is plaving a craftier game. Until the proposed alliance is signed and sealed, the prospects of continued peace in Europe will remain precarious. And the fear will persist that Russia may be secretly discussing an alliance with Hitler and Mussolini. The potentialities of such a combination are too obvious for comfort. If Russia's inexhaustible resources of men and materials were combined with the technical and administrative skill of the Germans, the European balance of power would be gone. The future of Poland and Rumania would be promising—despite the pledges of Britain and France.

not Russia has no love for Nazi Germany, whose leaders have vilified the Stalin Government for years. But neither does she feel affection for Great Britain, It is a question of joining one or the other of two distrusted and distrustful camps. will choose the “peace front”

THE TOWNSEND DEFEAT

Soviet

rather than the Axis.

Townsend plan bill in the House of Representatives, We wish thev might be spared the future disappointments that will result from their pathetic faith in Dr. Townsend's mirage. That

OS

3302-10-97 vote against the bill ought to end their illusion. They have been misled by those who assured them that victory was near. In manv cases they have heen deceived by demagogs who sought Townsendite support as candidates for Congress, but had no intention of voting for the plan if ever they were placed “on the spot” they occupied vesterday. Tt is tragic that the old folk should go on putting their hopes, money and votes into such an effort. _ Only 97 Congressmen voted for the bill. (The 55 Republicans among them, incidentally, seem to us to have forfeited all right te criticize “reckless” Democratic fiscal practices.) The great majority in both parties stood against it, It hard to imagine any future Congress supporting it. The Townsend Plan contains many fallacies, and the most dangerous of them is this—that, in the name of re-

18

covery, it proposes a system of taxation that would break !

the backs of the working, earning population in an attempt to provide luxurious ease for nonworkers and nonearners. It 1s reassuring to know that fewer than a hundred members of the House are blind enough to vote for that, Yet Dr. Townsend makes it clear that his fight will go on. And, indeed, it was charged openly during the debate in the Ilouse that some leaders of his movement would welcome the defeat—that their real desire is to conduct a campaign for a Constitutional amendment. Such a campaign might go on for vears. It could have, we think, no chance of Dr, Townsend, himself, has acknowledged that amending the Constitution would be more diflicult than getting a bill through Coneress. But dues could he collected from Townsend Club members as long as their false hopes could he kept alive,

ultimate success.

WORLD PROBLEM ON SMALL SCALE... (From the Portales (N, M.) Daily News) HE more we hear about the European situation, as it is loosely called, the more similarity we can see hetween the dispute of jealous nations and Western farmers over fence hnes, Last week there was a Justice of the Peace here.

difficult case up before the Farmer “A's” land adjoined Farmer's “B's.” A lane, used by both farmers, ran alongside both of property. But Farmer “A” purchased another quarter section on the other side of “B,” and “B” leased a quarter across the lane. The difficulty then became acute. “A” wanted the lane to remain open so that his cattle could roam freely from one pasture to the other through the lane. But “B” wanted the lane blocked so that his cattle could go across the lane

to the piece of leased property. » »

pieces

=» »

“B” built fences across the lane that prevented “A’s” cattle from getting to the new quarters, and “A” proceeded to tear them down. When the trouble broke into a fight, the two decided they had reached an impasse. Neither was willing to give in, but both agreed to take their trouble to the Justice of the Peace. The Justice in turn appointed a board of arbitration, composed of farmers who could readily see the troublesome situation. Their decision, we believe unique in the annals of fence-line troubles, was for “A” and “B” to build jointly a combined under and over pass. So now “A's” cattle go from one pasture to another through a ditch dug under a bridge over which “B's” cattle go across the lane to the leased quarter. Of course, it would be impossible for Germany and Poland to settle the Polish Corridor problem that simply. But they could be made to realize that neither will gain if they decide to make a battlefield out of the small area involved. Perhaps we had better send Justice Tuska Walker over there.

BLUR

n 5

Nort infrequently the lines of the class war become |

blurred, and so we suffer a bit from eyve-strain in reading this Washington News item: “After a luncheon at the Mayflower, a panel discussion on American labor problems, and a garden party at the home of John L. Lewis, members of the League of Women Shoppers closed their second annual convention here vesterdav by picketing the George Mason Hotel.” For some reason or other we are reminded of Abe Martin who recounted that: “Lafe Bud, cranking up his Packard, drove rapidly to the poor house, arriving just in time te see his dear old mother breathe her last.”

We can only hope that in the end she

( of debris; | over the countryside.

Fair Enough

By Westbrook Pegler

It's Quite Apparent Now Hitler Is Making Good on Boast to Interfere In Internal Peace of This Country.

the Nazi

interest

threat of unpleasant

June 2.—The take an

EW YORK,

Government te

| in the domestic affairs of the United States is now | being fulfilled by German organizations and a fol-

lowing of native adherents and “fellow-travelers.” Same of these Americans profess t6 be intently patriotie, but they are Nazis, nevertheless, who hope to make a dictatorship similar to Hitler's, which 1s only superficially different from Josef Stalin's,

{ | | {

|

The method bv which world-Nazidom operates |

is similar to that of the Communist

penetration. |

World-Nazidom sends agents into the United States |

to take citizenship in the country and organize antiAmerican cells, and emotional Americans either join these societies or enlist in disguised subsidiaries, scme of them as dupes. The Nazis learned this from the Communists. They adopted bolshevism themselves, calling it Naziism, to fight Russian bolshevism, and

the program which is being promoted now in this | country in the apparel of star-spangled patriotism is |

the German, or brown, type of bolshevism, » » » MERICANS who have joined or flirted with organizations of the Nazi pattern forget that the Nazi Government has been convicted of spying on the military strength of the United States through individuals who pretend to he friends. They forget also

| that the Nazi Government unwisely gave warning a

few vears ago that it would interfere with the internal peace of this country.

That warning was published |

in a German newspaper as an official announcement |

of the Nazi Government, Americans generally overlook the fact that group of Americans in Germany who undertook to hold public meetings in favor of democracy and to revile Hitler, as anti-American agents of the worldNazi movement have reviled American public officials, would be beaten within an inch of their lives, thrown into prisons and, if they carried weapons, shot as armed invaders of the Reich,

any |

The Nazis do not permit anvone, native or foreign, |

to offer to save the German people from Hitler and restore their rights as human beings, but it tile to attempt to limit Hitler's anti-American workers

| to the same extent mn this country, GREAT many elderly people must be bitterly disap- | pointed by yesterday's overwhelming defeat of the

” » »

NTI-SEMITISM is the opening argument of LX American Naziism, but it needs to be pointed out that the so-called world-Jewry, from which it would save the United States, is still, after vears of propaganda, a vague and unproved phantom, whereas there is no doubt of the substantial existence of worldNazidom nor any doubt that it uses the very methods which it attributes to world-Jewry, It holds a great pep meeting every vear in Germany, at which agents from far corners of the world, Including, of course, the United States receive honors for their treachery and boast of progress in the work of betraval in lands where thev pretend to be honest friends of the native population. : Whenever an anti-American speaker or organizer with an admiration for Hitler's bolshevism undertakes to enlist Americans against the furtive, unseen enemv one question may be asked him which will stop his clock. It, is this: “In view of Hitler's oft-declared hatred of the mongrel American people why do his agents try to save them from a fate which is worse than death?”

Business By John T. Flynn

Danger Seen as Borrowings End Up As Savings Begging for Investment.

EW YORK, June 2.—There is a verv important § feature about public borrowing which the President's National Retailers Federation brings to public notice. In that speech the President practically announced a new policy, for him at least—namely, that all talk of private investment in the capital goods industry was highly exaggerated and that the Government must consider what amounts practically to a permanent policy of borrowing and spending. But here is one feature of Government borrowing and spending which is usually overlooked, When the Government borrows a billion dollars and spends it—what becomes of the billion dollars? The Government pays the money out to people on relief, to workmen, to contractors, material men. This stimulates business. Those who get the ‘monev from the Government, in their turn. spend Rut as this money cirenlates around it comes the hands of people who do not spend it all, who save part of it. The man on relief, of course, spends it all, But the next fellow who gets it a merchant The merchant pays his help, wha are people working at regular wages. Some of the monev goes to the wholesaler and to factories where it ‘makes wages, profits, salaries of officials, Many of these people do not spend it all. They ‘pass on ‘most of it, but save some. And as it circulates, first one dnllar and then annther drops inteé the funds. Tn time the entire billion ‘dollars finds wav inté the savings funds of some person big or litile It 1s In the commercial banks, in the savings banks, in insurance companies, in various reservoirs

it. inte but

18

BvIngs its

System in Jeopardy

Every time the Government borrows a hiliion this is what happens to it. Now if private investment stops—as it has; and if it is to be no longer considered important, as the President intimates: and if the investment is to be done by the Gavernment: and if the Government is to make its investments with money which it borrows, then where is the Government going to borrow the money? Up to now it has been borrowing it, not from the people who have all these savings, but from the banks. issuing half, one, one and a half per cent ‘Ireasury paper. It has not been tapping in anv important way the savings of the people. g : What is going to happen to the economic system if private investment ceases, altogether, and if the Government goes on adding billions te its debt and

seems fu- |

|

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1939

‘He Owns the Place —By Talburt

| an

1 our

The Hoosier Forum

I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.Voltaire.

CLAIMS M'NUTT FOES

| ALSO ARE ACTIVE

{ estine tarticle

speech |

{cerned in the upbuilding of

By Daniel Francis Clancy, Logansport I read the other day that Frank McHale is busily carrving on the McNutt preconvention campaign. Inclined to take the wide view of things, I add that, on the other hand, there are some people who are equally busy ecarrving on a McNutt prevention campaign too. » TISAGREES WITH TEGLER ON ZTONIST MOVEMENT

By Tonis Levy

» »

Pegler's caustic liberalism went completely astrav, and Lis lack of knowledge regarding American Zionism and the upbuilding of Palis revealed in his iecent protesting the ‘efforts of American Zionists to secure the aid and influence of the United States Government, subsequent to the bitter betraval of Great Britain in disavowing the Balfour Declaration. « . The American Zionists are deepIv stirred by the action of England cutting off immigration to the only land where a new life can be created for their homeless brethren, and condemning the Jewish community in Palestine to be a minority in their own homeland American Zionists are deeply Palestine, because there is the last stand of the Jewish people; hecause there is the only country which can ceive the multitude of refugees who have nowhere else to go: because there the Jewish religions and national spirit can revive again It is stupid and ridiculous te eall such efforts to aid their persecuted brethren as dislovalty or lack of love for the United States: and, bv contrast, to elevate and rationalize the horrible indifference and ig norance of the large group of American Jewrv toward the heroic efforts to rebuild Palestine as love” for the United States To compare the hyphenism of the Nazi-American, whose philosophy demands the crushing and destruction of all other lovalties. to the

" 181

I'e-

| ideals and efforts of American Zion-

these billions keep on flowing into the hands of the

savers and banks who do mvest, them?

not and literaily cannot

A Woman's Viewpoint By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

HE tornado is the Most people build then sometimes they terror strikes

terror of the plains eauntry themselves storm caves, and can't get to them before

the

We drove about recently in the destructive path of

such a storm. On one side of the highway a house would be untouched and on the other net a stick or stone would be left of a sturdy farm home. Those

high winds, erroneously called cyclones by the natives, |

are erratic in their movements. They dip, bend, curve and veer crazily. That one came at midnight, accompanied by thunder, ficree lightning and spurts of rain and hail. Over an entire county it leaped with sudden mad SWOOPS;

razing homes, leaving trees stripped of leaves and |

Many escaped, miraculously unhurt: others were

| battered to death, or had the life sucked out of them

| bark, windmills a twisted mass ef metal. barns a heap | scattering livestock, chickens and people

by the monster's breath. In several homes, not an |

article of furniture remained, nor a piece of wearing apparel; not a book, picture or gewgaw could be

found. What became of them? Onlv the whirlwind | knows. They were quite literally blown out of exist- |

ence, As T looked on the ruthlessness of Nature, the mad

prankish tragic results of only one swift spring storm, |

I was reminded of the pictures T had seen of ware forn areas in France and Belgium and lately in Spain

and China The stripped trees had the same anguished | look, as if their verv roots had sufferad some twisting !

primordial pain. The landscape was bare. with that queer, desolate, bareness which is indescribable, Man is the victim of Nature's wrath—and the results terrify us. Yet continually ‘man, himself. pares to wreak the same sort of destruction upon his

-

| {

pre- | animal and was getting ready

but 1

ists is insulting and American official sional indorsement, supported by the Christian and freedom loving sympathies of the American people, has been recorded ‘many times, favoring the upbuilding of the Jewish Homeland. Just as Americans of Trish descent supported the creation of the Trish Free State; just as Americans of Czech origin recently organized to fight to free Czechoslovakia; so are the American Zionists determined to persist in their efforts for Palestine. Just as there has never been any suggestion that these groups are disloval to the United States: so there

malicious and Congres-

| |

tions

(Times readers are invited

to ‘express their views in these columns, religious con-

excluded. Make

your letter short, so all can

troversies

have a chance. Letters must

be signed, but names will be

withheld on raguest.)

SEES MINERS’ JOBS JEOTARDIZED BY TVA

By Conservative

No clearer example of the dislacabeing caused bv technical progress can be shown than in this case:

TVA is planning te extend its power lines to Bessemer and adjacent towns in Alabama. If 1t does 86, cry agonized coal operators, “a million mere tons a year, or one-sixth of Alabama's commercial coal tonnage, will be slicad off Alabama's shrinking coal output.” There you are. The dilemma of the Thirties is in that cry. Is electrical expansion to be deliberately restricted so that the coal industry, already in a precarious situation, may not be unduly embarrassed, and additional minsrs thrown out of work? The whole industrial future of the country depends on how we solve problems like this one,

» » » BACKS BTLL, BANNING LIQUOR ADVERTISING By Rev. ¥. L. Fekerley, Noblesville Congress Bills S517 and S575 should be passed. One national radio hroadeasting ‘company has long since banned liquor ads over OUT OF REACH By HARLAN J. LEACH A donkey stood beneath some leaves, Attractive, conl, inviting! He nosed them over and AAV Ton common fare for a donkey's biting.

furned

But then they swished from out of reach He looked at them in contemplation. And suddenly for these self-same-leaves He stretched and strained to beat the nation!

DAILY THOUGHT

And when he was at the place, he said unto them, Pray that ve enter not into temptation. —Luke 22:40,

O nray against temptations, and vet to rush into occasions, is to thrust your fingers into the fire,

fe stations, and many good publica=-|

tions are prospering without it. No way has heen devised to stop radio waves at lines, The 21st | Amendment gives the states full an-

| thority to regulate or prohibit the

[importation of liquor for use within | the states, but how can we prevent {radio liquor ads coming from out- | side the state? Do we ever learn? Yes, we are ever learning. Conditions may have jen worse during prohibition than before the national prohibition law fwas effective, but anvone who has observed all three periods will admit that they are also worse now than over before, and are getting no bet ter, Laws are being violated as usual on every hand, and bovs and girls ‘of high school age have no trouble in most cities in getting all the liquor they want as long as they can pav for it Whisky sold by the drink will make it easier for these voung folks | to get started with the habit. Liquor laws will not stop liquor consumption, but it does remove the temptation and we do need to keep on with noble experiments until we have the best temperance laws we can get and elect the best officers we can get to enforce these laws,

state

” ” »

URGES BETTER HOUSING [CAMPAIGN FOR CITY Bv Viola Nah, Reenrding Neeorelary Women's Auxiliary No, 20, United Auto { mohile Workers nf America Some time ago a committee of [five was appointed from our memes bership information available an better housing We had an appointment for some time with a gentleman wha was in charge of better housing in Indiana Due te some very important busi ness this gentleman was unable see us, His secretary sent us to the Board of Health and thev tald thev had ne statistics or literature In fact they were =o busy thev had Ine time to talk te us. They sent 1s to another affice. This went on for some time until we began to realize they were just passing the buck, and that we were not going "to get any information on this sub= ject. We gave up the program for the time, but the urge is stronger than ever to see this through. It is commonly known that we could have had this program in effect long ago but the City Council [tabled it saving “There are no slum: in Tndianapolis.” No? We have | plenty ‘of proof there is. We are hoping the A. F. of 1, and the C. 1. O. will join hands and get for ‘our people better homes to live in. Tt is up to the laboring class of

ta obtain all

to

1S

can be no aspersions upon American and then pray they might not be people to get these homes because

Zionists,

burnt. —Secker,

{we are the ones whe need them, |

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

WITH A HIGH HAIRDO

Re

BATH. YOR OPIN

1

SHE looks to me like she had men and just been scared by a burglar, soientific ahd historical standpoint,

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

women's stvles from =a

mouse or some equally dangerous because styles in dress, as fh all art,

run. This is not a fashi have :

sions where not only the dress bul the surroundings=even the archi | tecture and furniture=partosk of the same grand style. Tt seems a hil inappropriate—even ridiculous--for work or business or ordinary street | wear.

| » » » NO. More than 500 special researches on this problem=-all in |agreaement=have been made, begin[hing with F. A. Wood's study of the heredity of the Royal European families in 1906. This was the first proof ever developed that all good qualities tend to go together, Persons who are good or brilliant in one direction are better than average in all directions. This applies to school studies as well, Business-

[men have found, especially in re-

cent years, that students who stand high in their studies are far and away the best ones in learning business problems.

>. ¥ % NO. Th all the cases I have heard of==and there have been A food Mmany=-the man has been hanged again, All I can sav is I Just couldn't put the poor fellow through the ordeal of death a second time. Common humanity would surely indicate that his sentehee should be commuted to life imprisonment. Parhaps it would not

; to tell a good deal of the story of man- be unwise for the Jaw to make such column kind. Th the past the high hairdo | Drovision, provided we are g Punishment at

[nas been worn ouly OR state ovow Wve Capital

| industry

adie

Gen. Johnson Says—

Murphy Campaign Looks Suspicious; States and Cities Should Clean Up Their Own Civic Corruption, EW YORK, Murphy

passes up a chance to =a}

a

rank

rarely

Attorney General He

y np . He doesn ne

June

hates molitical con iption

26 ed to ao the res) a

{the second

that, In the firs! of

It

place,

place, s0, 160, do most of

the folk even though they take it foi ante.

is like saving: “I'm not a thief i

his whole public record says it a lot louder

than he can, sanctified Mich of his possession assume of anv decent a “holier-than-thou” that any group has a

Much as we must all admire (thi igander, his constant broadcasting of virtues which most of us man, raises two question: Is it complex and does he think monopoly on virtue? If hasn't, enough faith in the whole electorate to occupy his office That absurd because, as Michigan? in the sit-down strikes, he put his faith in the return to virtue of flagrant sworn to enforce—~and didn't doned because it avoided that law and he did dally

80, he is Governor, eventful he was cCoON=to 1k even if

violators 1 ['hat should

bloodshed a

be dl an justice prevailed in the end with his !

oath

» KAY for the first question=M Christ the

” »” is no such

“whited

1

I'M

pharisee co a wall.” Bul Is there ganda in his about how if their

as 1iaemned ars tom political propas country, preaching do not parily ey io 1%

Mr,

it raises second hy traveling the states

ques chance low about

anda

any

any tho the cities

elections and their jud

and, on that basis, advo rm [61

Roosevelt?

He t& the

Pendergast,

merely

boasts that pen

mecent

for evadn income ne 1% of a projecte Purge «

states and ci indicates “0 corrupt democracy [ democras

Governs

ermmental

that that

our stare gos

our eitiz no lange It 1

dictatorship:

FON ¢ and that therefore pal cles ment It ou business and

on to purify is the revers ana

not

them ¢ of {hal rotten spots mn But il {heir constitutional that of 1 ‘Government to Mr, Dewey, a Rey ican, as » more mH local

Murphy ne,

states Cli10s

clean them up a stat officer ha:

ruption that Mi NIVIC virtire is neither a N oa

C a Murph: Federal

ment Crovornments vice, =and we have ermment—-a Federal Boss Pender local law Fecleral If Mi and most Will j WPA adulteration of and local-==through political handm uge ‘of taxpavers' mone: House the Senate hill PICS im WPA campaign

done political cols

nor Groverns for

trvithine ¢ hing

monopoly monopoly If thi ipline cipline them centralized Gove-

has a right to disc loca it has a right y eli a completely nip

should have

for e¢ become dictatol jail under He wont

one to

for local political corruption for

tax evasion Murphy is

aangerou

on a tie hunt for the higgest areas of political corruption, ha Y il eorruption present Federal both Frderal compulsive that the [out of polis

the 1940

nvesticate not local, but Fede -

political activities

e Purity of tol

mo na

enact

pecially oi

sisson

It Seems to Me By Heywood Broun

Case of Fette and Turner Proves Thera Is Always Room at the Top.

une 2

" ho

A couple of season

then

EW YORK, J aro Bill McKechnie, Bravos, brought up two pitchers who had passed the age of 30. They were and are 1 Fette Tarner, When the first of them walked the mound the fans laughed, because they went hey prevalent, American notion that big leagues early he There is alway: has it: sort of stufl while the waking

philosophy is

Was with the

and Jim to

along

Ol oul wit] unless vou hit the much good the

weather-eyve

vou can't

1d and

room al top. American art al

peeled for talent that And much ‘of and art, the Knows: to wi to the high-priced slicks urally, he ought to he Lamont and Dorothy Lamon Well, Fette and Turner, the ball proceed the National their heels projects the hove tinued storie: And s6 1 am custom when T read forth that those or professions got or mfregquent Greenwich thers arti in its hevedan somewhat shighter

which Pegasus

all nol gpend too Jit I'n a fellow

stuf

nals

fan n thinking

average may

his time about ratn SAM papulal I{

1r'eally how ite, why isn't he selling paints, whe

adroit portraits of

and if he Gong qui K of hast= hitters on on WPA around [or cons

two old hove

ed to set L.eage ana writers I'INgs

prices

['here are painter: ink oi

0 gel

who can sling mn

girls wi

paint and the big than 1s my which 11 js xeh in the eralts lack of ability

r'alhet Old +

ns

irritated that whe are that wa bathing V Of eonurse, stic and literary fakers in the Villages but the Phones was and offices to

more

fT in PE

11 311

ti ne because of lage ix # ar in point, were Propo; 1 than m the

has trotted

The Second Guess As far as paintin any Academician short thrown in the old scout The of thos glint of

sell ball when

«ale bet to like a glass

the davs

Of S 11 1 Aa He goes out

Juflalo Bill

the air for Bi in

was 200d of writers. Bul most the ball did get soma In many CANES Greorge Bernard Shaw had to wait almo oO 18 Turner and Fettea many 16 ; he had a hop on his

one

thing is less true omething on

1 Delors

same who had wore

recognition gone

the blooming wa belated befor fast I uaderstand tl a book called asking herself and abar to he with

Be fore

who has written 6 Rome” is now vith the poor 1 AOE storvted deosirs have read paid particus IL and taken preached His

ho might another which i i the Bh and la } note

attention { { life of J i nr Of l

gospel,

Watching Your Health

By Dr. Morris Fishbein

\

fr eream usually make a using the res

YHEN milk is placed in a hott] the Thdees me practice of pouting off the mainder of milk for drinking Recently methods have heen develaped for mixing the milk thoroughly by a special process ga that the cream does Not sep= arate. Tn other words, thare will be as Much oream at the bottom of the container as at the top. Milk treared in this manner is called homogenized milk, The usual technic is to force the milk through a narrow opening at high pressure by means of a pump. The pressure may be from 500 to 4000 pounds to a square inch, The fat globules strike the side walls of the valve, causing them to break up into tiny partis cles, The number of fat droplets is thus increased mote than 200 times and the droplets remain distrib uted evenly throughout the milk, Dr. Philip ©. Jeans has pointed out some unusual advantages of homogenized milk, One is the fact that the debris and sediment settla to the bottom, which they will not do when there is a cream laver, Second, bacteria in the milk are broken up and evenly distributed ®o that unless the milk has been properly pasteurized, it will sour promptly. Theres fore, careful pasteurization and extrasrdinary 2leanlis ness are necessary for the production of a good quality ‘of homogenized milk, To many people milk thoraughly mixed in this manner will have a richer flavor and a smoother texs ture, the flavor being due to the slightly thickened quality, Thus homogenized milk mav be used 1n place of light cream for coffee, cereals and similar table uges, making possible the use of a smaller amount of whole cream. Some people, however, do not like the

taste as |

Is Al ran Peatie

cream ana

the