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Gingerly. If there are injustices and discriminations un- der the present law they should be eliminated; but this is not a propitious time for experimentation. ROOT’S ACHIEVEMENT The return to the United States of Elihu Root recalls to mind the brilliant bit of statesmanship he executed while abroad in reconciling the views of the United States and the World court members on the subject of the con- ditions of American entry to that tribunal. All but Mr. Root consider that achievement marvel- ous bit of diplomatic engineering. The skill and tact used Course toasted by him in showing the way out of what seemed a hope- ; = en rar entirely te less deadlock has never been surpassed even in this elder statesman’s distinguished career. But to hear him discuss what was accomplished at Geneva one would gain the erroneous impression that the trick was turned as easily as flipping a coin. To him it was merely a matter of the conferees getting down to the heart of the matter to find there was no real dif- ference of opinion on any essential. That done the court members accepted all the senate reservations. Before Mr. Root went to Geneva American member- ship in the World court seemed as remote as an Ameri- can alliance with the East against the West. Back home, he finds American adherence virtually taken for granted. President Hoover's silence on the question in his mes- sage to congress is looked upon as a tacit admission that Mav romk oT pine ave. Bide. congress will act as soon as the council of the World We court ratifies the Root agreement in September. THE GLADSOME SEASON ‘When a warm sun shines in April young and old are of one mind. The desire to get outdoors is untversal. While EE HH E Ee 3 ; it Wi i994 Tower Bldg. Kreage Bidg. (Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspaper) Cattege bee ts the ede vest wi loner be abt [D2 cll may lifer widely, ts to the open alr. The to spend thelr summer vacations as deck hands on Great | {**mer is reminded of plowing and of getting ready to put in the crops. To the suburbanite it may mean clean- ing off the garden patch. To others it speaks of golf. To the school-boy the ball ground beckons. When it is Pleasant to be outdoors we feel that it is good to be alive. . | 4 warm sun compensates for many cold and stormy days. worth. Hence, hereafter, Great Lakes crews will not in-) 4 ressure of frost is good for us. It quickens us, and it makes us prize the more the opposite when it comes. For many years the deck hand's job has been ® Pop-/ 3, modern life there is so much artificiality that we ht for how our forebears lived did not the spring out the interior. Each June young hopefuls from scores bs glo aia ieb tae not seppacaicagerli ak of campuses have descended on the lake ports, to sign up delight with which they welcomed the return of the sun 8s ordinary sfumen and spend three months or less). that they might emerge from their crude habitation. ‘We have overcome many former unpleasant features of Lakes freight steamers. ‘The Lake Carriers association has decided that since these lads always leave just at the height of the season to until the mixture assumes a jelly-like consistency. Do not fail to keep on stirring the mixture even after it has spirit must exist on both sides to} Herold, a weak character, would not peor Bran from the fire, as the fry- life, but the joy with which we welcome the passing of “— accept such a one-sided situation! have gone to his death on the gal- |, will retain a deal of | tops, G * ) x * * lows without having disclosed the fact eet Whee? will pom Bbev cook the poe nt up in the 1 locked interior winter is a resurgence of the feeling that beat in the young men broug ich breast of some barbaric grandaddy of long ago. He could this brougit the thrill of open water, a taste of adven- be warm again without effort and was glad. “BECAUSE OF HER” that the man responsible for his} egg. serve in sauce dishes or ‘egg ture that was often a high spot in life for years to come.| “1, tits age, while we may greet the return of the sun Fresh from commencement week, a young chap would downfall was free. . ind that one for a different lad, too. ¥ publte bi Mr. cbolidge conteoee in danaiin Loni tebe ean ee Prepared -oieow cateee oh rails lor a ly re ‘gf » ¥ was under one 0! head for some such city as Ashtabula, Toledo or Gary. on en ee a 's body ALLENE SUMNER, 4 i 4 his second confession that one major | the ground floor cells ofthe old peni- this way will serve one person, and ee ee ee aa Mf | enna Washington, — house takes from a First Lady. BAKED EGG: Cut with a small On any subject, there is always more ignorance than \ intelligence. p ‘When Senator Heflin’s boy came} guch consideration. is only taken . biscuit cutter rounds of white bread ; : home from a trip some place or {for granted in this day and age and rey slices traclem it of rho _ teeth by A 4 A % other, he was in a condition unmis- ne shee sion but if oe aay i Rcoeae Sate wie : nc ‘ Editorial Comment takably illegal in this Volsteadian era, | Gatien $5 (0 anv Doers: ee u ; 5 Heap talfoar pillar d hte He y Here, after filling out a blank form with a clerk, he He ito pee tr reas ve Lasreey lic men half a century ago would . ee eee rine sweet Dy » lam) 7 Bl ‘would sit to wait for his turn. Presently, after several FAIR PLAY FOR FILIPINOS ae a oo on oentne’ ad a alas ak ua oe cee fl bors om “Bor A bat ie each i" hours of waiting, his name would be called. He would (New York Times) ; liners that it isn’t even news. niktte how much such an argument have become firm and all transparent a: sign articles at the desk, and then follow a guide down) Although the details of Colonel Stimson’s plea before/ 1 was news in this case because | would weigh in other countries even ~..T00 HIGH A PRICE albumen has coagulated, being care- = waterfront streets, shadowy and mysterious in the night, | the Republicans of the Ways ‘and Means Committee, that! pana Heflin has a little habit of! today, (By Alice Judson Peale) ful not to overcook them. Dot each i. : ieee Ueenity i hee of railroad | Rothing be done to end the present free trade relations| criticizing other people, and because eae meets z “|” when Mary was 10 years old she | 8, With butter when ready to i between this country and the Philippines, have not been| he is a-most prosdry himself. There- : The melba toast is prepared in the j tracks to cross, a tangled network of byways and canals| made public, his views are so well known that it is easy| fore, argument went, give him a dose STEPMOTHERS. se | rad, Good many of the slovenly Per | following manner: Cut all the crust i to go through—and finally the sleepy youngster would} to surmise what he said. In fect, on this question every| of his own medicine and show the| A little 18-year-old girl in the day's j sonal habits which are expected and | trom an ordinary loaf of white bread 5 to scramble aboard a dark steamer | one genuinely interested in the Philippine Islands, Amer-| public that what a man preaches|news tried to kill herself because | forgiven in mephter little | 204 slice’ the entire loaf one-quarter arog ¢ epaateagedl * d mate, who] ican as well as Pilipino, Democrat as well as Republican,| isn’t always practiced in his own She learned that her © “mother” thoroughly scandalous in nice little | inch thick. Allow this to dry at least and be delivered by his guide to a — is in accord. Men who fought each other bitterly about} family circle. Not that there’s any- |W@S only stepmother. How that | girls. t Y's little t to | overnight, and preferably longer. would show him to the crew’s quarters. Philippine independence, or about minor questions af-| thing uncommon about this fact. Few jstepmother and stepfather bogey| | One of Marys little tricks was to) when thoroughly dry they should i AY of this, commonplace enough, would seem like high | fecting the islands, are agreed that for the United States| indeed, are the sons—or daughters 18 founded on truth in all too many | suff Het soled garments pack into | adventure to a youngster fresh from the study of Eng-|to place a restricion on the import of Philippine sugar| who are exactly ‘chips off the old| cases. The annoyances of one's own “ia hamper. block.” offspring are almost. unendurabe at | ting them into the proper lish: literature, calculus and political science. In the} \) + _ z ft the} Her mother, in- putting some clean 7 | Gruber, and Mrs. William i the Filipinos. j é we T} + | times, even ‘all the aid of 4 : clear for Duluth, or Es- : : protective instinct. When | Clothes away one day, discovered this, Mandan, were here EE morning, when the vessel would 6 The movement. began with the so-called ‘Timberlake Re ogesS stepparents have no alich, armor, one | failing. ‘There were guesta in the} pemreralpeledrs Lesconbg i canaba, or Superior, he would feel as if he were begin- | resolution, intended to limit to 500,000 tons the quantity pare! h ¢ the’ time, and: "3 moth governor’s mansion. Pe thrilling and momentous than|of Philippine sugar that might be shipped from the Phil-| _No matter what one thinks of the| cannot wonder at occasional out- | house at the . ‘Mary’ er — il cuit gincend aged vs ippines to the United States duty free. Tt was followed| Senator, or doesn't think, there was | breaks. ee ee oe eo eee ‘ TEN YEARS AGO. i? Drake's. What if it would only take a fortnight to com- by a plan to tax copra and cocoanut oil. Both projects| Something rather humanly likeable in still recalls inert humiliation of Miss Catherine Bleth, Glen Ullin, Plete the trip and return? For the moment the inland | were backed by persons representing small local interests| his treatment. of the whole Mea teaching @ term of school in the Z — i “ are seas had expanded to oceans, and the Lake Superior |in this country. It apparently never occurred to them| He met his son himself, | tons she SEG, SSSSS a [thet eee eS 2 = isis rors Tact that there are | Painted Woods district, i ports were as distant and mysterious as Shanghai or |that to apepiece a> ree nerao erer ay gees ee is would toon det either Hye he ‘did ele iS Ke cured her of her sloventini venlnes thete- the Unite Slates coc Year. It is a i Many a man, living for years in dry-land security a|{%,ad encouraged to develop industries which would be pctlans Was echecnobcativae (aah Tee war | bureau drawers would have revealed greatly reduced if’ the individual } . a , fresh, i a } Sera i thousand, miles {fom salt water, still deat grea ae, Mclain that Shliceine euees pene: awe gl patel teen eras ding | as Cogs Nas as 7A la tas a a ulate,” An he alesse said, she nis own responsibility in the ney i because summer of this kind. The Great sugar mar! and forced down Pl 80} own dign! assail tainly knew to put a stop to that | W. H. Cameron, managing director nal oe: that the American growers of beet and cane lost their ty is ce, BOOTH’S CAPTURE ety thing. bles the National Safety Council. Lakes freighters have helped to give thousands of men} (ore Sut Hawallan and Porto Riss im-| __ rhe senator was especially maternal) : hi Paes sels ¢ a glimpee of roving adventure that they could not have| Ported duty free into the United States in prenter velume| Whed insisting that his son's vagaries | Sixty-four years ago today Johr| It'is almost always possible to make | ee * : the lakes—and you'll find| than ati rt 8 greater volume} were due to evil companions. There | Wilkes Booth, assassin of Beeson a child:conform -to-rules and. stand-|. “It.is.a singular-fact. that people had otherwise. The alumni of you’ ippine sugar. This fact has been carefully kept isn’t a mother living who doesn’t ex- | Lincoln, was: trapped by soldiers in| ards if we do, not care how high a| commonly go into debt in good times them in every town from Buffalo to Des Moines and/in the background. It is difficult to see how the Ameri- plain Billy's badness as the evil in-|® burning barn near Bowling Green, | price we pay, or what other. values | and pay their debts under pressure in beyond—will regret the new ruling that will -bar college SRR ere neNS Aaa Alec nniarate sentons Pallingine site Minence of the little boy next door. Va., and. shot. and killed when he| we sacrifice in th bad times.”—George E. Roberts, vice sam loing * : attempted to leap from the hayloft Mary learned..to keep president of the National City Bank ~, men henceforth from this pleasure. z Ra and escape. With Booth was the| drawers ih ordér but she of New York, Bs . 5 8 Ing of those' fir the public eye, | and: execul for in Pro} ion. er mi “Women have gained no freedom ss LADIES AND LIONS bea what 8 patient, long-suffering soul | conspiracy. . well as an hostility toward her mother | yet except below. their knees. ‘They | Were arrested by Chicago police reaction of lions on ladies does — “Mrs. Gann’s husband” must be.| The capture and fatal shooting | whtch contributed its share to lack of. in a raid on gambling. together uniform. In the palmy Victorian days the mere| propose to deny you the rights of all other American| Though a good attorney in his own | brought to an end a frenzied nation-| confidence and friendliness between Just had to be done. @ppearance of @ mouse was enough to cause a dainty | citizens.” right, he. can be nothing but just} wide search for the assassin, which | them. aA: damsel to shriek softly and faint. Lions, other than the ——_—_— “Dolly Gann’s husband” in Washing- | began 11 days before, when Booth Public humiliation is an effective vocial o_. were beyond the ken of the feminine mind. SOCIAL DEATH IN WASHINGTON ee, Sore he ie ne oe puree pan shot Lincoln in Ford’s Theater, Wash | but expensive means of achleving A ing 3 may: . immediate: good. behavior. Mary's eaten es Rane satier (ban the bales ote Sid, 20°F aeate in Fr eetln) sesary,” accord | invited toa few:not-too-otticlal Many fanciful rumors have been| mother. had heen patient of her un- vasion of Africa lady -hunters contribu i . a ing to Emily Post, in her book, “Etiquette.” And prece- : h of being : tidy habits, had used a gentler if less materially to the shortage of big game on that conti-| dence, “the bane of the Washington hostess,” is difficul : husband, ’ ire Sree nmnco cre bet, Maes ie nent. The effect seems to have been much the same asjto solve. The forfeit, moreover, is “social death” if the : Pepys ae ig yeaa b when word gape gerg peer ataerag ‘in officialdom she describea| Ver him if she were. the -crowing ically disregarded ried from her childhood one memory 1900 thet warning that it is “only approximate,” and that|5rt, and what trué magnanimity of less of cruel injustice. after seven Points the state department should be consulted. . — land Precedence under equal. cir- 4 le I Wodtd LIKE To wAND HoW- Do XL KNow “sHaT T REMIND ‘He WiTWess ‘WAS EXACTLY THIRTY-FEeET AWAY AGAIN, THAT ‘He ts Nor’ FROM “He AccIDENT WHEN rr \ since THE YZ BEFORE A BROADCASTIYG | OCCURRED) uEGAD, SIR, THE . | AcciDeNT . MICROPHONE, we AND MENTAL CALCULATION oF DISTANcE jTook PLace} He is Not oie -” iS VERY VITAL 10 A BIG: GAME 7. Ay ioe A TRAVELOGUE’ © HUNTER I HAVE BROUGHT. } momnine, LECTURE fmm THIS DowN HUNDREDS oF Liols is A TRAFFIC CASE IW AFRICA FRoM “He Fire. eed Tks an DISTANCE OF THIRTY FEET al. ee MILI THRU HUNTING - SAVAGE ~~ WAGON AND aul “BEASTS, MY MIND HAS U\, automosice ¢ ‘ASTS, MY MIND HAS | : BECOME TRAINED "To «' AccURATELY FiGuURING. _). A MEASUREMENT Ii, ‘FOoTAGE f ae Now, ‘ WHEN ‘SHooTING A ‘RHINOCEROS, + WELL, w, | in the order of their length of aif ats i (as president of the senate) when 4 z. vs