Evening Star Newspaper, March 21, 1921, Page 6

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x ~ .,-— that official reports of the voting show an overwhelming preponderance for German rule. Out of a total of 1,265,- 000 votes cast, according to this re- course, the suspension or repeal of the matural laws of desire and endeavor. Capital must still have its remunera- tive dividends. Labor must still have port, 876,000 favor Germany and 389, its adequate wages and comfortable| ooy favor Poland. This report is, of standards of living. The consumer|.,yree, gubject to some doubt, con- 18 entitled to, and justified in-demand- ing. prices in keeping with the con- tents of his wallet. What Mr. Coolidge does propose. and what should be brought to pass, s ' full recognition by capital, by labor, and by the consumer of the fact that the very grave conditions produced o¢ preference to assure that the de- by the war bear upon all. must be| cjgjon will be broadly acceptable to borne by all, and can only be amelio-{ the people of the region. A pro-Pol. rated by the co-operation of all. Injigp or g pro.German vote by a small other words, there must be teamwork | ya50rity would be a serious misfor- in this the greatest of our tasks; and|,, . teamwork means mutual confidence| pyiraordinary efforts have been made #nd toleration and assistance. This,|py poth sides to get out the fullest Mr. Coolidge thinks, will produce “a|poegible vote. Partisans of the two state of mind” leading to “a new era | interests have been brought thousands of prosperity.” of miles under the terms of the plebis- The advice sounds good, and comes | oite gagreement, which permitted par- from a man who has given thought| cination by expatriated Silesians. A %0 the subject and been in position to| o 5yp of forty pro-Germans reached study it from all the angles involved. |4yq goene from South Africa only last It is worth a trial, as all are anxious| o .1 for relief and a return of good times.| ' Equally strenuous efforts have been made by the allied representatives to - An Excellent Public Servant. prevent frauds at the polls. Every #his is from a news note which ap- known method of electioneering was peared in yesterday's Star: engaged in by the two sides. Had it “The appointment of former Senator |0t been for the presence of allied Sienan of the United States Shie | oy Sreeny war would have rman of the Unit ates Ship- ping Board would strike a popular broken out between the factions. As ehord, according to some of the sen-|it is, there are some reports of riot- are giving attention to &T.,;I‘&. oF e members of this ::‘m ::::;";:;’an’;m‘ Mr. Chamberlain's record as a pub-| for¢es: It was the purpose of the e servant entitles him to. the high ::l"’;:m"’ Sapee '\M“"Y fair refer- e e emtatin tor| The great stake in this case ia the efficiency and independence. This se.| cOntrol of the rich coal mines in the cured him promotion to the Senate,|®CUthern portion of Upper Sflesia. If and in the Senate he maintained his|Cermany loses Ppossession of them reputation. He was diligent, watch.|PY their inclusion’in Poland she will ful, and at all times capable. have under her control only the Ruhr The high spot in Mr. Chamberlain’s | Fe810n mines, which just at present senatorial service was his course when | 27 Within the area of allied occupa- @8 chairman of the committee on mil.| tion and are in danger of ‘adoption” affairs he speeded up work at|DY the allied powers in the event of a War Department in the midst of failure of German reparation ' pay- our war operations. Finding that the|™ents- The stake in Upper Silesia, @epartment was not functioning as the | therefore, is strictly commercial, and emergency required, he sharply criti.| tPer® is no cause for wonder that cised in speeches in the Senate and Germany has put such a high value alsewhere the delinquency,.and forced | O" the result. the necessary activity. =y 80 courageous an act brought down| Panama has a future of splendid on the author's head no small meas- | possibilities at hand which jts states- ure of denunciation. He was accused | men will scarcely jeopardize in seek- of unworthy motives, and even of giv-|ing to prolong controversies which ing aid and comfort to the enemy.|time will reveal as only minor inci- But he did not back track. Instead,|dents of a distinguished national e pursued and developed the subject, , career. . and had the satisfaction in the end of sgeing things mended according to his specifications, and the country brought to the proper appreciation of his judg- ment and performance. Mr. Chamberlain was a victim last year of the unprecedented republican landslide. —_——— There was no “brotherly love” in the methods employed by Trotsky in recapturing Kronstadt. Bolshevism [has no sort of softness in its composi- tiom. sidering the source. It may be that there is a preponder- ance of pro-German sentiment in Up- per Silesia. On the other hand, the Polish feeling may dominate. The ! hope is, however, that the plebiscite will reveal a sufficiently large margin —_——— King Constantine is calling for troops for an offensive against the Turks. Certain European statesmen would probably be glad to have him lead the Greek hosts in person. —_———— A few Russians have ventured to mention Lenin in association with George Washington. Others compare him to Jesse James. —————— As a matter of thoroughness, Secre- tary Weeks takes even the possibil- ities of a “tariff war” into his official calculations. —_———— ‘The people who are now complain- of the heat are probably the same s who wailed at the two or three Japanese cherry blossoms abloom in Potomac Park are not to be rated as unwelcome propaganda for Nippon. —— New York is disconsolate over the prospect of & perfectly good divorce suit tried behind closed doors. —_—————— Office seekers who are subsisting on hope have no reason to fear the work- ings of a more drastic vagrancy law. A number of personages whose offi- duties carried the privilege of on a railway pass are awaken- to a personal interest in a pos- reduction of fares. —————— Lower gas rates and lower car fares make the average Washifigtonian that the war is over, whatever Senate may not be saying. The State of Lincoln. This is from Spokane, Wash.: “Northern Idaho residents. fostering formation of the new state of Lin- coln, which would comprise ten coun- Motor Lights. Two people were killed and eleven ‘were badly hurt Saturday night the suburbe of Baltimore, when two cars came into collision. The ices of this wreck should be and widely understood, for the is a tragic confirmation of a that prevails on practically road in the neighborhood of gton. The driver of a large car, seelng & single light thought it was & motor cycle hing. He gave it, as he sup- plenty of room, but at the last t discovered that instead of be- & motor cycle it was a motor car only one light burning, and that & the far side. There was not time @pace to avold a side-swiping col- and the larger car was thrown ties of north Idaho, a part of western Montana and eastern Washington, are to raise a fund to be used for propa- ganda purposes, it was stated here today by Herman Point, 1daho. The Id: recently passed favorably scheme to form the new state, of which Spokane would be the capital.” Idaho and Montana and Washington have all been successful as their boundaries are now traced. All are camparatively new states. All have made their mark on our national life. In Mr. Borah Idaho has one of the most conspicuous members of the United States Senate. In Mr. Poin dexter Washington has a senator whose name was prominently can- vassed last year in connection with the republican nomination for Presi- dent, and in Mr. Jones a senator whose committee assignments testify to his But then perhaps a mere handker chief would not appeal to the pas- sengers as strongly as did that sock. 1t is worth something to be saved in an unusual manner. 1 —_—————————— i The fascinations of a seafaring life | do not appeal strongly enough to Mr. Josephus Daniels to prevent him from {going back to newspaper work. It will be surprising, however, if the columns of the Raleigh News and Ob- server do not develop a department {of shipping news surpassing anything of the kind hitherto attempted by a publication so far inland. —_——— Numerous New York theaters are making a change of policy that will devote them permanently to motion pictures. The “American drama,” for which 8o many literary patriots have been walting, may prove to be a high- ly developed form of the film drama. f Italian war cripples solved the unem- ployment problem in Rome by march- ing to the public offices, turninz out the girl war workers and assun .._ their duties. The government was probably relieved to shift its responsibility in the embarrassing situation. l The ex-kaiser has missed an oppor- tunity to show his statesmanship by {HIil to the cffect that “an uncondi- tional peace with Germany would he 2 & blot on our flag.” If Senator Knox {should introduce his resolution, the Cleveland Plain Dealer (indlependent democratic) declares, it would not have | “the support of public sentiment in I Ameri The Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch (in- dependent democratic) says as much our business to s measures shall be taken agai many as it is Great Britain's. Yet {if we were to make a separate peace | with Germany we would no longer be one of the associated powers." With such and similar arguments at hand it is natural to find those papers which fought the idea of a Scparate peace from the start tak- ing occasion to urge the opposite measure, a peace in conjunction with the allies. ~ Events in Europe, the Des Moines Register (independent republican) declares, have merely “emphasized an embarrassment that Qught to have been perfectly plain' Yrom the <tart. is “The more the situ- studied the clearer.,” the lis News (independent) be- Wwill become that we must make peace in association with those with whom we ar. The Fort Journal-Gazette (democratic) y “We are not parties to the peace. In truth, we have no treaty or understanding with Ger- many. Thus there {8 no reason why we should interfere and a separate peace would be the most offensive sort of interference.” The Philadeiphia Bulletin (independ- ent republican) remarks: “There would appear to be no- unavoidable barrier in the present situation to a simple declaration of the end of a state of war. The nogotiation of a new treaty of peace and of commerce | with Germany under the present cir- ation indicating a solution of Germany's in- demnity problems, instead of confining his reflections to matters of personal disappointment. ! The evolution of the sovietist into the capitalist i3 now contemplated by Lenin as the solution of@Rufsian af- fairs. Trotsky will be expected to get to work immediately on a new line of prospectus material. ! A repeal of the excess' profits tax| might check the progress this country has been making as a nation of arith- metical experts. i The philosophic observation that a man may find himself lonely in a large city is appreciated for the mo- ment by Hiram Johnson. f The Island of Yap is, obviously, not desired by Japan because of any area that will assist in accommodating sur- | plus population. Europe is demonstrating that com- merce, like war, has its strategems. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Caution. ! Be careful how you undertake Your various views to state, Lest one fine morning you awake To find a fearful fate— Our language often seems to show An unexpected twist And you may be, next thing you know Proclaimed a “lobbyist!” Be careful how you ask a man To have a good cigar, He'll ask you your ulterior plan And what your motives are. If information you possess, In silence still persist, Lest people say of you, “I guess He is a lobbyist.” Long-Distance Discovery. “Hiram,” saild Mrs. Corntossel, “‘mebbe there's oil on our farm, same as on 80 many others. “No,” replled her husband, chances are against us. We're not located right. Most of the ofl I've heard about lately was discovered on roll top desks and not on farms.” “the No Difference Worth Noticing. Oh, fashions have become so queer That presently we'll find { The bathing suits will all appear Like any other kind. Modern Facilities. “Do you think we are happler for the convenlences of telegraph and telephone?” “Not always,” replied Senator Sor- ghum. “It would be & great comfort to be able to make a speech that ex- actly agrees with your audience with- out its being placed immediately be- fore people all over the country who ‘my not feel the same way about ft.” Uncle Bill Bottletop says a plain old-fashioned jug is the last place any- body looks for licker nowadays. An Impression, *"Are women really economizing?" “I don't know,” replied Mr. Grow- cher, “but I'll say a good many look cumstances might be a far different matter,” The ‘Akron Beacon-Journal (repub- lican) states that “the miserable aitua- | tion” in Europe is not of our making. and since “we are going to be hlamed for whatever we do and also if we do nothing, it looks as if it were just as well if ‘we went ahcad regardless of criticism” to “open the way" for a new treaty with Germany. Because it believes “the world is perishing for want of harmony” the Lexington Leader (republican) feels that “the one reasonable and feasible policy for America now s to declare the state of war at an end.” A third alternative is suggested by the Janesville (Wis.) Gasette (repub. lican), which asserts that “there is nothing to prevent an American Con- gress from accepting the Versailles treaty without the league appendix. And should we do so there would be no reason why jt could be called al ‘separate peace.'” The Horror of the Rhine. The mass meeting held on February 28, in Madison Square Garden, under the leadership of Edmund von Mach and George Sylvester, Viereck, to pro- test against the employment of Afri- can troops in the occupled western territory of Germany, has given rise to a lively controversy in the Ger- man language press and organiza- tions of this country. The national committee of the American Gymnastic Union, better known under the name of Turners, has sent out a resolution in which it expresses its displeasure at the whole enterprise, which might be interpreted as forefgn propagand: or as a_meeting aiming at segrega- @ tion. The national office of the Turners has stated, further, that it was against any aglitation which tends to provoke race prejudice among the American people, instead of promoting a good mutual under- standing, national harmony and unity, It was further pointed out that the Turners, by a resolutipn passed on May 6, 1916, had expressed themselves | as against any political combination based on race, and insisted on a citi- | zenship without the hyphen. Die Deutsche Zeitung, Utlca, N. Y., condemns the Turners, and writes as follows: “The action of the national com- mittee of the American Gymnastic Unfon reflects the well meaning, but badly advised, attitude of the hand- ful of people belonging to the na- tional headquarters, but not the spirit of the American Gymnastie Union. | We expect. and are firmly convinced, that the mistake made by fhe nationai headquarters by Its arbitrary proceed.- ings in confounding servile cringine | with patriotisn. will he rectified by resolutions of protest adopted by the different districts of the gymnastic unfon.”* “Die Abendpost Chicago,” a dally, comments on the matters as follows: “The Turners, or the members of their national headquarters in In- dianapolis, aré of the opinion that thaej mass meeting and the agitation under the leadership of Messrs. Edmund van Mach and George Sylvester Vier- eck are doing harm to the good cause, afid whoever has kept a clear head and does not allow hls desires | ana feelings to becloud his judgment will agree with them. A protest against “the horrors of the Rhine” was apt to be misrep- resented, and the continual agitation was in effect represented and consid- ered as propaganda, especially since that agitation proceeded from people who had indulged in political propa- ganda, and who were to all appear- ances pursuing political purposes. It therefore did harm to the cause which It was to promote. It did much more harm than can be seen by a su- perficlal observer, for it places ob- stacles in the way of the new admin- istration. and increases the difficul- ties of diplomatic action which prom- ised @ quick success, and which ap- pears to be the only feasible proce- dure under the circumstances.” It may not be an enduring peace, but it has endured a great deal.—Bal timore Sun. After filling out one of those blanks a man knows all about his income oxcept where it went.—Wheeling In- telligencer. Abraham Lincoln split rails, Theo- dore Roosevelt solit his party and President Harding splits his {nfini- i tives.—Charleston News and Courier, BLUE ‘ROSE RICE 150 Stores Fresh SANITARY ¥+ _BUTT SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK Del Monte Cherries 29¢ Spotless Cleanser (Royal Anne), Large Can. ........... 6 Cane fone ot Del Monte Apricots 19c¢ Quaker Yellow Cornmeal (NOT Peeled), Large Can............ Note: Speefal at on in ealled to 1:: faet that these NOT peeled. Thisx explanation is Reretofore bought the pecled variety will not be confused as to w! we are offering in this ale. Sale Extraordinary on Nationél Biscuit Co.’s FIG NEWTONS Prices on some lines of cakes are being reduced, and to call your attention to this fact with emphasis we have ordered in a large supply and are goi_ng to offer same to youon the basis of practically cost price. There are many so-called fig cakes, but none, in our opinion, which excel in purity and wholesomeness the product of the National Biscuit Company. . “ BUY LIBERALLY OF THESE FINE CAKES; THE WHOLE FAMILY : WILL BE DELIGHTED WITH THEM For This Week Only . National Biscuit Co. Read Here What the National Biscuit Co. Says About Them Fig Newtons are a unique combination of cake and figs—puffy little bolsters of flavorsome golden brown cake with a generous filling of fiz jam, one of the many varleties that have made the name National Biscuit Com- pany a buy-word for biscult. Wholesome sweetness is typified in Fig Newtons. They are fig cake In its finest form, easy of digestion and tempting to the palate, Finely chopped Fig Newtons added to lemon flavored custard A’l’ld b:lred in custard cups, then chilled, make a dessert that Is new and delicious. Use Fig ljlewtons plain for the sweet course at the after-theater supper. They make a very satisfactory terminal dish. Pure Lard, Ib. ..14c Pure Lard, 1-lb. carton....16c Crisco, 1-lb. can...........20c Snowdrift, 1-1b. can.......18c Mazola Oil, pint..........2%c Wesson Oil, pint..... .29¢ Nutro, tall can .10c Borden'’s Milk, tall can.....14c Pet Milk, tall can.........14c Nut Marigold, Ib.. ..25¢ Troco, 1b., ..30c Jelke Good Luck, Heinz Baked Beans, small. .10c Heinz Baked Beans, med., 15¢ Heinz Kidney Beans, small, 12¢ Heinz Kidney Beans, medium .............17%c Fresh Milk, pint.... e dC Fresh Milk, quart... ..14c Large Can Tomatoes......11c A-1 Country G. Corn......15c Blue Bell Shoe Peg Corn..15¢c Blue Ridge Comn..........10c Silver Label Peas.........10c Ritter’s Pork and Beans... 9¢c Canned Beets, No. 2 size, 12%5¢ Melfa Sweet Potatoes.....19c End-of-Season Prices on Pancake Flours Each package Is a big breakfast at little cost, 10c Gold Medal Buckweat. Aunt Jemima Buckwheat. .10c Virginia Sweet Pancake . . .10c Waxed Lunch Paper, 3 Rolls for 10c Reductions on All Kinds of Shopping Baskets Smaller sizes make excellent baskets for Easter Eggs. Small, each.........35c Medium, each.......45c Large, éach.........55¢c WE BELIEVE ‘That you will pronounce SANITARY BRAND Macaroni and Spaghetti —the very finest quality that you could desire. Price is reasonable, too— Per Pkg., 10c These Fine Western-Packed Peas We Are Offering You Should Be Judged from the Quality Standpoint The fact that the price quoted is extremely low should have no bearing whatever when it comes to_ considering this offer. Only by reason of a fortu- nate purchase of a large quantity at the right time are we in a position to sell these peas at such a very low price. 1b. ..30c We can consistently urge every patron of our stores to try one can, knowing that the contents are of such quality that they are suitable to be served on any table, and we feel sure that nine purchasers out of ten will come back for more. INDERRIEDEN PEAS All Western Packed Under Various Labels, such as “Blue Jay,” “Peewaukee,” “Meadow Lark,” etc. P . ’ mE EVENING ST AR only one light. It is impossible in|ized into three states is doing 8o well? Editorial Dl est ) Wt Mosning Edition. | 92Tk spaces to tell what they are.| When Texas was admitted, to the 2 SCHLOSB] BROS- % e Pun Sandey Sometimes it is the right hand and | Unfon her size was the subject of com- ERG was il WASHINGTON, D. C. |sometimes it is the left hand light{ment. But it was explained that if, German. Antesican Peace: mss oooss i 4 that burns. If it were always the|and when, she filled up and developed = o o eevwe..March 21, 1921 . W “friendl, ations of Eu- MONDAY. = ” Jeft-hand light—the left hand of the as expected she could be partitioned | WIR the “friendly” matlont of FH- 732 SEVENTH ST.Nw. HST i LR THEODORE W. NOYES. . . . Editor | !Illighted machine—it would be safe|to suit; that she would easily cut up America, though till legally iy TSR R O RN R E S as affects collisions. But sometimes, | into four states. She has filled up! age o % herself in | NI =] e e land Ao o B at war with Germany, finds b BLOUSES, i) in this Baltimore case, the light [and developed amazingly. But there e tie| Husonean 5 = - The Evening Star Newspaper Company | 28 : danger, according to T SUITS, W e g 25 Peanazicania Ave. bull;:u r: the o(her‘ side. e - :; no talk of c;n;n; :'wrmu'h: ‘:u A iiaat /ot e ivine “o\aiand eom- | Hx;hr Etlveunl Bnlbriggzn HE ~ value "of “commercial _ New Office: e Ruildin; gulations require two lights, an ‘exans are proud of eir state’s his- to the enemy. Although it is ‘erc: y =l H H 3 | B o F'Eegout Br Losdos. Engiand | regulations should be enforced. Every | tory, and want to hold together. pretty generally taken for granted and Nainsook, oF mr; fl::y measured in terms =es . + v 1 need of a new |that the Knox peace resolution has ' 2 of relial economy con- = i the Bunday morning | PETSON Who Is scen driving at night| Is there any actual tha lox peace lutioni Has Sizes 6-1 3 e A and icton. I Sotirensy by warriers within the clts | with a single light, whatever the cause, | state anywhere? Are not all the states, | satully ahcveniinyithenaloy C 4, wenience. g s By e\ por monih. . Or- [ should be punished. Only by per-|and particularly the states of the wi wion has been cner- | 4 Chevrolet Model “T” One- & may be seat by mail. or telephone Maln | sistent enforcement of this rule will | fulfilling expectations and obligations feting elements of the situ- | COVERALLS C o e A, .One- & 2 . & £ i —_— fulfills €0d of each mon drivers of cars be brought to realize ation are well illustrated by the i BLUE on ese require-, === the necessity of scrupulous attention A Red-Socked Hero 3 g ienublicanii(ndepentent ] Sizes 3-8, = ments; they constitute the basis [ o kL L at “inaction is the | » Mail—Payable in Advance. i { marks that i i = 5 = 5 5 @ Rate by e to their lamps. It is & matter of | poo oo oo Tl for the time being” and | N Blue, Khaki SERGE of its and construction. & Maryland and Virginia. | "y y T T e . | e e v o s 0 T Y 1 S | TWO PAIR PANTS | saior ||| U : o o g d the first consideration of self- o 1 Daily only . 137, $6.00: 1 mo., 50c | an in Canada. They are not particularly | | SUITS, m : -40; 1 mo., 20¢ | protection should cause everybody who e o | Fairs | » i Sl = Ay G Bestestion = ’ common, but fortunately Sam Lowe, | [2178 can She ] C All-Wool Chevrolet Motor Co. All Other States. runs a machine to look to his lamps who lives at Holland Landing, had ' jng. " ten “"m_rm(_) i y . A J i and Hunday Tyc. 10 0 I ’“"d‘ & be ""’"“: l:" h: ;‘i”‘;“"g Bl [pair and he was wearing them the |compl Harding administra- | BOYS’ Sizes 3-8, 1218 Connecticut Ave.’.7 N.W. a1 yrs 37000 o itea ; bing | tion e Franklin 562 Sunday o Ayr. $3.00; 1mo., 2cfand his gas tank an other day when he saw a washout on | % ¢ She S e L PANTS, Phone Franklin 5 = person who is careless about his lamps | i1, Grand Trunk line and heard an | Will not make nonee with his Crami¥ | 2 54.79 B should not be permitted to run & ma-t oo o ckin i SO that rare | Allies or Without them. i ,;.,[ Corduroy and [ ) 10 = Mr. Coolidge Advises Business. | chine. Presence of mind that comes to Some | shauld T aviiges 20 Peace. which | Cloth, SERGE-~ I@ In a “message to American busi- e e people in emergencies he yanked off a ! The X Post (independent) All Wool SUITS, = Bess.” which appears In a business| The Upper Silesian Plebiscite. | hoot and stripped off one of his socks | 15, fonfident " that when the ‘Tnited | 98c : ‘m publication today, Vice President| yoqiorqay a plebiscite was held in|and waving it over his head he raced | ~would n approval of the Ger- : All-Wool, = Coolidge say Upper Silesia to determine whether ! down the track to flag the train. He & against the allies.” thi Sizes 8-17, 2 ) L 5 = 11 not abandon her former | WASH g 1t is very necessary. under Present| nat region should belong to Poland |managed it. The engincer saw the i ican business € a it continues. we are now | .= SOl ahould deal with their|or to Germany. In the determination | sock, recognized its color, realized that | runnini _avicious' circie. for | SUITS, Sizes 8-16 $8 90 i employes in & way to commend them_ | of international boundaries. the Ver-|it betokened some unfavorable condi- | " A e inteo | Regular $3 * m el to el e en in mind the | sailles conference encountered an «ob-| tion and stopped the train. The - And untl Ameriss speskaros| =4 E Recessities of the consumer. Failure|stacle in the case of Upper Silesta, |sengers made up a purse and present. ! #Tairs in Furope winl remain wnseet N Value, BEST VALUES MADRAS 1 in either respect will embarrass In-|\ith no assured basis for determina-|ed it to Sam. Some curious people| 'yl iyl Si 3-8 2 emptin, as 1 It has been “the hope of Americs 1zes y 1) By A e o nod erestly dcios | tion) of nationality. so/ mixed was! the | would!iike to know whether Sam put {support™ on the part of Germany al | lN THE Cm BLOUSES, R their ‘program. This 13 no time (7} population of that region. The de-{his boot on in order to make the run | *ong that has Eiv | $ 69 89c Modal “T™ 1-Ton Track. Expeess Bady and 8-Post Top, $1.545, f.0.5. Flint. Mich. Press for an Undue N S elation | Civion was therefore reached to leave|down the line. Perhaps hereafter Mr. ! (Iniaricoue, 5 s Iv relation s @ . -! (independent) point M= = B e el iouts of | the iqneation: to ‘s ictersndiite;, For | Tawe Soillicars & maalte tona with | Grrmany’ v or : \ Nz === === s ‘hether represented by e asi s sjep + inde e can be no real p P o e o Sacting the | Which preparations have heen under | him for such occasions. It i e g L eho eeal mation in that state of mind will be|Way for many months. Yesterday it|to flip such an impromptu flag out wants no other kind.” This se the beginning of a new era of pros-{was held. of the pocket than to do a partial dis-i_"’_'i"“""’: if‘mvl'lr-r,m;"l llu ‘uw Chattano ’e;‘llv-"cw“dse does mot. propose, of |, To0aY @ dispatch from Berlin states | rabing act and hobble down the rails. | qubioy i yoca TGl ShCh r. L

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