Evening Star Newspaper, October 23, 1921, Page 65

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- | "~ MAGAZINE SECTION The Sunday Star. [rearoes | art 4—6 Pages WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 23, 1921. COMPARES BRITISH HOUSE OF COMMONS | ‘ WITH U. S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES| I HE MIRRORS OF DOWNING STREET ! SOME POLITICAL REFLECTIONS. BY CHARLES THOMAS mu.l.nux.l ofowors dole from 20 ehillings 2 . = weel (roughly, $4.00) to 15 shillings e = ” LONDON, England, a week (about §3.00). Although this By “A Gentleman With a Duster. B * October 4, 1921. » was a question of vital iterest to O resident of the District of S aanar dpesty, Nonlyfiaboutitwen y ) Columbia should visit London N g present. . You hear & good deal of o o This is to say that to be saved from without making every possible [ X : complaint in England of the non-at- Winston Churchill. himself Mr. Churchill must be carried away by enthusiasm for some great ideal, an ideal 50 much greater than his own place in politics that he is ywilling to face death for its triumph. ven the many deaths of political life. tendance of the labor members. The ouse effort to see the 5"“’(“ n . explanation is that they draw a sal- of commons during one of its noisy ary of only £400 as members of par- " A o and characteristic sessions. 7 liament (approximately $1,600) and st ] o)) are obliged to hold other jobs, chiefly Horn 1674 Saueation: Harrow and Winston Churchill—The Rt. Hon. For to a Washingtonian, more than : A o= Amefm“ it il bala 3 4 gficlal “positions in ~labor. ‘organi- Sondhorst. Entered jarmy - in” 1685; {;Mi:a:mume:t;‘lg;xr time—he hitched his a T , - . served with Spanhn forces in 3 = t 2 vivid, a coldrful, amusing experience ’ T S ) What chiefly struck an American 1893: In operations In India, 1807-041 Ever since I first met him, when he was still in the twenties. Mr. Church- ill has seemed to me one of the most pathetic and misunderstood figures in public life. People have got it intn their heads that he is a noisy, shame- less, truculent and pushing person, a ®ort of intellectual Horatio Bottoin ley of the upper classes. Nothing could be_farthem from the truth. in that debate was the lack of imagi- on the Nile and at the battle of Kbar- nation shown. Only one or two labor | | tam, 1889: w n_the Khartum | members tried (not very successfully) | | medal in that sear; corresponden, of jto show the plight of the unemployed. 1899.1900: taken prisoner and escaped, while the tory and liberal members 1800; In long series of actions, includ- // treated the question solely as though ing Splon Kop, Pleters und capture of 5 / ,,|it were a business problem. When you Pretoria; M. P., Oldham, 1900-1906: - // realize that the amount involved was M. P. for Manchester, 1906-1908; pres- / i/ because of the overwhelming contrast ) in big things as well as in little things between the house of com- mons in action and our familiar House of Representatives at home. Furthermore, as it happens, it is a » /iless than a single week’s expenditure igent board B trade, 1008.1910; home bit easier for a Washingtonian to secretary, 1910-1911: first lord of the M ol f P 7////|In Mesopotamia, you perceive that all ‘ralty. 1916 e Mr. Churchill is one of the most Visit the house as “the guest of the 7| the Government. tallc about being| | Ay IMLINI: ol o sensitive of prominent politictans and it is only by the ex ise of his remarkable courage thut he has mastered this clement of nervous- nes«. Ambition has driven him on- ward and courage has carried him through, but, more often than the | public thinks, he has suffered sharp- {1y in his progress. The impediment of speech, which in his very nervous speaker” than it is for a mere New 4 ol o nomize” chairman of the Duchy ot . ot Franciscant - 4 aken with a grain of salt. 3 ecretary of state for Yorker or :fan Franciscan! At pres N g 2 . 1 But the big event of the day was colonies, 1921. 'Autbor of a series of ent there is a very stiff ban on ' / p A7 [ the arrival of the prime minister to oks (camnalgn records)) sad alfe of i isitors and although this kL / jitell thomounsichar the ":{""“ and {‘1.. ‘The Life of Lord Randolph Churchill. e ¢ i W, Pmine owners had arrived at a settle- ‘ ed primarily againat tho AT M 2 4 7 ment and that the government was Shenn el inn Feiners, rules are rules in Eng- e { v / asked by both s'des to advance £10 INSTON C! C was 1 it practically bars every- s = / 000,000 to the industry until it could one of the most interesting obliged to *“economize” was to be hody. But if you can cstablish a con- 3 | St baok onitaifect again. moments would almost make one tact with member of the house [ A 2 1®1t ‘was interesting, chiefly as an figures in the parliament - o think his mouth was roofless, would and make it clear tnat you are not| PS8 A S J exhibition of one man’s dominatior which included Joseph : / : have prevented many men from even nly un American, but a resident of ) =, /lof the house. The benches were|Chamberlain, Charles Dilke and ; RilPHpUng Fto) eoter fDulilic diGe; A Washington, D. C., as well nd, ipacked with members as soon as word { George Wyndham. With the fading Churchill, but he h ‘;:'(-\'wdr":,‘uow"l therefore, familiar with American 7 » reached the smoking room and the parliamentary procedure and inter- " 5 ; e 2 house dining room that he had ar-|exception of Lloyd George, he is eas- sted to contrast I:n- u;n.\'-ou‘ \\'!lJ AN, - > 3 ! |rived. When he rose to speak hfrom ily the most interesting figure in the i r presently that the bewigge i o = 4 the government front bench, the housc : cer has dubbed you a “distin- g T 8 A Vs siient and attentive, having [Present house of commons. hed stranger” and admitted you, h / W |} cen o terrific babel not five minutes| There still clings to his career that - day only, to the tiny gallery it G hefore. ~Thi¢ man [ am describing |clement of great promise and un-| over the “zangway" of the| [i§ / il |svoke deliberately and carefully from |11 q uncertainty which from his house of commons . ¢ rotes, and when he got through you Then will begin an interesting ex- 0, ' i Save at once how hopeless it was for |first entrance into politics has inter- perience. . I the opposition to dream of overthrow- |ested both the public and the house s i1 fig; him. \izeq, i |Of commons. Ho has disappointed | i p o 3 y = vi Lloyd G 'ge, yo! , 18 N Vi HIS sald the clergyman on 1| «SrTs WITH A SWEET SMILE ON WIS FACE, WHILE THE NTERRUP- | DAVl Llovd feorge, vt oo e ing | his admirers on several occasions, but LT RS TIONS MULTIPLY. ¥ as 2 politician. He thinks twice as|not vet has he exhausted thelr pa- ments. - fast nsinnybmh else in Bngland; he{tience or destroyed their hopes. 1 bowed politely. It wasn't a very . 3 ‘ is adroltness itself; he doesn't care - 3 exciting remark, but it was intended | 10w J. H. Clynes and Arthur Hender- !g_overnmem intended to let the EEYD- 14 rap for that preat Englisk bogey, His in¥ellectuil gifts are consid * i son. [tian assembly meet. What was hap-|]ig rec of yesterd: He bends |erable, his personal courage is of a it to stop his way, and I think it is significant both of his courage and the nervousness of his temperament that, while at the beginning of speech this thickness of utteranc: 1S most noticeable, the speaker’s pale ! face showing two patches of fiery pink in his cheeks, the utterance be comes almost cles sign of ing to notice accent of brutality in his speaking. so different from the suave and charming tones of Mr. Balfour; this accent of brutality, however, {8 not the note of a brutal character, but of a highly strung temperament fight- ing its own sensibilities for mastery % 10®be genial and friendly, and it was PPN e L e S e s e e o it own mind. e ChareRi i appropriate to the occasion in that '8 ¢ % dis- | government's housing program?|cr.st of the wave. He has no dignity more often fighting himself than his ey tormal way whieh clergymen | HATS the first provocative of dis-|Goylq nothing be done on behalt of |1id affects none. e s like a boxer enemies. ool i order, the fact that the two hos- | the widows of those oflicers slain in in repose, the smooth lithe musclesin a unique degree the fighting qual- % love. he irregular warfare in Mesopo- ¢ . ¢ = 5 tile forces are facing each other di-|U & = suggesting somehow that he is per-|jties of the born politician. 0 man Tha mother of parliaments,” 1 said, ‘ tamia, and so forth and so on. i s talre cate /of Risinelt n imcrely. 1o wory beautitully housed.* | rectly and only indirectly looking at| *T% JiG <0 e oune to tap up [SEHY M L0 (LkS €qre of MESCIE nojls more dificult to siout down, and heart and his lungs have not " T ook:a aroind with pleasurs and | the speaker. In the House of Repre- |all this Information. although it was '™ 7' {howoe ‘o Amirican politician | opposition of the fercer Kind. 1f on y given him the support e needs for curiosity. A small dark-brown, box| sentatives. of course, everybody faces | poured out at hapliazard, that pres. |in i least jike hisn. O S ioms et alsaprointenit 8555 Ssentinons nod oy sathes o e uid to myself, “PaN-| e Speaker, but here in the house of | ENUY I found myself thinking tha Mr. Asquith. his great rival, arose|his friends, also on severul occasions | B Ml i tmes, wiben veey sl hond hos | the bosom of hate, and he possesses JS health has been against him: his neled richl in wood. with Gothic !vou want to interest a Frenchman, 1 " N - i ereq : > ©| commons you face the “other crowd.” ¥ n a Fre and a dull Lored volco congrat-|he has confounded his enemies. € arvines, "No. marble. apparently. | PISLURINS Natural that you should | YOU must danglc an abstract Prin-|uiated him on the scttlement ' Mr.| From hix youth up, Mr. Church 1] seemed to be against him, he has had (o Ny ihurl remarks at them, that you | CiPle before him. and if ¥ou want tolcypeg, the leader of the labor forces, has loved with all his heart, with allj desperately with both body Suddenly the full force of my re-j Zrow ve @ s sti . |interest an American, you must offer | "o e cise the gover: s 2 el et . mark sirek me. “No marbler” T ex-{should grow dertsive and sarcastic be: | fin"2%an, but it you want to hypo- | F{ITRIG (0 Cril e e L A e fr sl e e e e o are ot Tooking at the tize & Briton, just show him a fact. |2t "ipe hatisfaction out of it.|politics and himself. He loved war e h ot et f e i BEVST | Spealier whose solemn countenance|Certainly the house was hypnotized | rq Rovert Cecil. a tory. who has |for Its dangers, he loves politics for R o A e I N i | would, presumably, suggest to yourjRy (1S Sovernment during “question | Tossed to the opposition, clawed at |the knowledge that his mind Is dan-| and, for mysclf, I have never our solons invariably demand marble, mind a certain decorum, ORE: e |the prim= minister’s skirts, but with- | gerous—dangerous to his enemles, once found him in a truculent or fooms in which to practice thelr| Furthermore, the speaker has no * cut pulling him down. ' One man dangerous to his friends, dam!ernusl WIS TON IR CHITE {self-satisfied frame of mind. 1 be- s manship C Granite and marble | gavel and is absolutely helpless 1ol ~HE remainder of the session was|dominated the hearing. When he left to himself. T can think of no man 1 NITON - lieve hie s at heart a modest man, are. of course. more abundant in thecompel order. He sits there with a given up to two lssuex. Ofie was |the room. the show was over and lhe’evcr met who would 50 quickly and S g TR e and 1 am quite certaiu he s a deli- A o an vhey ore i the old, | sweet smile ‘on his face while the 2 {house emiptied for dinrer. | 0 bitterly eat his hoart out in Para- more to him than any other pursult| s exciting as war. ana quite as dan- | ¢ate and & suffering iman - But for about it which our public men deeply | tUMUIL 304 the TUmE DAEE 10 8 I | should be permitted to reduce its ou merica quite Well, in lie answered, “you| Fate, too, has opposed him. His his pluce in th ome of his friends have in a state of real weak- rticulariy of physical weuk- relish. At any rate, we Amerleans|pever turns u hair. The late Speaker can only be killed once, but in poli- |enemies are never tired of shouting convineed ~ourselves 2 {the two names of Antwerp and Gal- jeut terms of would lav 5 o of the House of Representatives would = tics many tlmes | oes” with republican | coriainly have broken two or three AT |tipoll. Theyr are conv. ot - { gavels in his determination to secure| jabuse. 1 Suppose tl Atectu pam ssame 5 L-xn.\r'mu' for himself : | order, gentlemen!” bLut the and per- {destroved wst politicians. But i to its credit, but| PN = } i 1 t 5 L 4 peaker calmly iets the riot s e ce Lo has | truth, both of these strokes of mili- T found myseli ..""“f-"‘,;"","‘ Ih'g" d{ its course, perfecily sure that aft-; o A b | {mps 155 A e S b l‘_‘v ary strategy were sound in concep- «d around this rich and yet subdued, dignified M. P’ have shouted many of the qualities of real greatness, tion. I doubt. indeed. 1f the milits Tudor chamber. wiether our Ameri-i¢hamgelves hoarse, they will quit. | Mr. Churchill lacks the unifying spirit |historian of the future. with all th an lexislative halls are to be Includ-{ "rrg ynderstand this disorder, which - T 0 &ns . will not chiefiy llies for their in ed among our architectural suceesses.| gaems. quite extraordinary and even 'nr character which alone can master lhel“;::g’::;:'::;f' e hi T found myself woundering whether|gij)y to an American, one must realize - alscrepant or even antagonistic ele- | ron TRy BT o or R e ted our American chambers didn't reck ajtpat the' English have a deep-seated| - 2 3 £ OO — Imenw in a single mind, giving them niot | menace to the back of the German Mttle too much of the contractor. But) political custom which we have not. et | 1 r .|y force, which i something, but iarmies: while even in our own day the house of commons, although built!\When an orator at an English pub- > N = 3 R | direction, which is much more. He is a fone doubts that if Lord Kitchener o _a purcly commercial period—to |jic meeting says something which you 3 2 - man of truly brilliant gifts, but you|in one of his obstinate moods, had cit, 1837—had the air of having been|jike you don't ordinarily clap your < = . g e o i cannot depend upon him. His love for |not refused 1o send more divisions put together piously in the middlelpands in applause. Instead, you show s = & # s - & e g mam: | danger runs away with his discrction: | to Gallipoli we should have taken ages by a building guild. Tt was cer-| your approval by shouting “Hea: - - 5 e : {his passion for adventure makes hin |Constantinople. The fault of thoss tainly ‘a_remaurkable effect and the|hear!” An English meeting whic l 1 . e = . . | forget the importance of the #oal | operations lay not in attempting them English are to be congratulated upon, jsn't well sprinkled writh “Hear! A 4 : : - 5 - e : : Politics may be as exciting and as dan- | but in ot adequately supporti it. . hear!” would be regarded by Englishi - fE ’ : - ; s as war, but in politics there is!{pem. e o The next thing that airuck me was|people as a frost And, of course. i : - o : i . i Mr. Churchill has had bad luck in the smallness of the chamber. Tts ac- o & bton frams Ehonting <Hear! : iored of the logic of el CBY . : are < Btep Bhont 3 3 R - . il 4101 0 Jogic ofl thes tters, but even here it is th hing < 1 35 Teet s ani dloroettoy comDronte. Mo Bt [ P 2 Lt : : E g an who never chamked {him most ill. He never impressed ¥t B i | 1 Dolttiten’ can et loub of the 1) ¢ R i ¥ - o b A e g [ Lord Kitchener as u win of pow. et it better. . when you imag- | kindergarten class until he has learn- !‘ lifelonz_political comsistency ix |$RIOUER Ll Sullen temberament ne the entire chamber tucked com-ied to take good-humoredly all sorts = confessing tlat he has learned | SRR B IS GTC Ty e o BOTREES - inside ore of the committee|of interruptions B~ in the school of experience. | ST fuft Tyl Jie (10 Exeetions id ridiculous as rooms in the Hous. te office; 1Indeed, English people will tell you; buildings. That wiil give you some|that the feature of President Hard | notion of its size. ut any rate. ing's caumpaign which created the Scnsistenes may appeur. amounting in | highest kind both beiore and ui the truth to nothing more- than either in- | outbreak of war, but his colleagues abill e the other side of an argu- | i the cabinet never realized the jm- ment or deliberate. refusal to ac- |Portance of this work. judging it knowledge an intellectual mistake, who [ merely as “one of Winston'’s new lcan doubt that this quality of mind X {creates confidence? On the other hand, speak of him in their con- | who can doubt that one who appears at |fidences with a certain amount of af- size) is a very important one in that|and interjections that it would never A n . & e : it > 4 o 3 3 : | ncingly on the right, creates dis- |for he is a merciless critic, and has it tends to make the house of com-|2CCUr to anybody Lo be disturbed or | T - s i . s 15t in both armies? an element of something very like mons far mors informal and far more | sidered as part of the show. -5 There is only one resion in which con- | cruelty in his nature, but even thoso sy the > e v way i ency has the great sanction of an|who do not fear him,.or on the whole Soisy W tho Haiee of RMepresenta=i A0d olivles 1y il 1a the way 1610 In dubitable virtue—it is the region of |rather like him, will never tell you tives in its wildest moments dreams| € ne O . Nobody claps moral character. Goodness has an ef- |that he is a man to whom they turn i most comment in Great Britain was < ¥ ]lhe action of the Baltimore police in AP veu havent sat-very long inlarresting some man who, at one of vour seat in the distinguished |Mr. Harding’s meetings, attempted to strongers' gallery before you realize |35k him somo questlons about the ;o GhC Velng: e o d ey G HEI he sajd. “All the same, those birds at | Paris. Then, in an embarrassed fone, | lawyerwas saying. ion | fect on men’s minds which can_ hardly |{in their difficulties, or a man to whom We Americans all arrive in Eng- | ooos a,’“:::ike':-ea;i-ue:m:wh!om;elw:;; il L o the Rat Mort got in. for there’s their |he went on: It is only my wife. It | consisted of two parts. The victim. be exaggerated. Conduct is the one.the whole cabinet looks for inspira- land, 1 suppose, with certain fixed{annoys the house—like Commander PARIS, October 13, 1921. | car at the cotner waiting for them.|is the only way that she could ac- | strapped to the sliding board, was |sphere in which consistency has an ab- |ion. ideas about the Englishman—his| Kenworthy—a babel instantly ensues OUR Americans in evening |Savalook! One, two, three, four, five | company me to the execution and be | pushed up for his meck to be im-|folute merii A man whose whole life| Gen. William Booth of the Salvation cense of formality, his peculiar in-|ang lasts for five or ten minutes dur- iv ¢ the gates|Drivate cars all in a linet They | here, at my side, all the time.” prisoned in a kind of ‘little window’ |is governed by moral principle has a | Army’ once told Mr. Churchill that he libitions, kit sénse of propriety |ing which time the “honourable and e e Shess. storiea, it la sald, were told | —to hold him steady when the big {constituence in the sudgment of all hon: | stood in meed of “conversion.s That ‘e ass: s g & e Sante prison at 4 o'cloc " & . 5 % ade shou all. Secondly, ¥ may be s old man was a notable judge of char- hich we assume is greater than gallant member” goes right on with ofth e 1f there Is so much talk just now |Tecently to iwo Englieh speaking | pulled the catoh-trigger, and the munkind rather than a party. Even a ol i ours, his reserve in public. Pure his speech though not a syllable of it the other morning. in Parls about Americans going to blade fell. Between the two parts;cynical opportunist like Lord Beacons- | {oiTicited by G. P. Putname's Sons. Al myths, cvery one! One has but tolcan be heard! s > g the prison yard, dressed in men's e L ttend the house of commons to dis- | R Wo have come to see the guillo- | s the guillotine, one ought not to | % Pornt oldk suits. there was a long and painful mo- Reld had to coufess, “So much more ‘Rights Reserved ) cover that the Englishman. in the 5 tine,” they said. Gall atatement: ‘Their husbands' French lawyers, in 'fllell"_l- dnrlr{sh:hh‘:’helhexfio'l;:; n‘hfle —_ irxmm:wp 1 herd. is the most boyish and spon-| BUT this was not the only polnt| pehing the walls all was doubtless| Immediately an American tourlst|each case. had -arranged” all be- e It D e it ihie. Now, | Mr, Churchiil has not convinced the M Kinds of T 1aneous and incurably disorderly which struck the stranger as cu-|pyusy at that early hour, but only a party arrives in Parls they begin, by {forehand, met the parties at a dis- | Antolnctte su Frhe 4 3 any Kin 0 ea. 2 ; A improvements, the |world of this possession. He carries - Auglo-Saxon in the world. After you s D he forces Around about them. to | tanee from the prison, stopped the | thanks to modern t his possession. He carries ! : ave listened o Just an ordinury |Fious- Indeed, as an American, You|fow disappointed loiterers in the|soak up old romance of the French|automobiles at a corner’ where they | Movable part of the Junies mindow 3;":!lmflihg‘ha;‘;e"m(‘gfl;"“:ofn“g)_;‘" THERE is only one tea, yet there routine session for an hour, you have miss a number of things! street outside proclaimed that a con- | Fevolution —the beheading of thelgould attract no attention and led ar ; s b iaisy Minas of ek inat ia 1 @ Yo i P tane —to’ the great surprise (it |bol which stirs the blood. His effect oi the virong fecling that' the “Britieh| You miss active littlo pages dart-| 4l 7 eriminal was having his head | Soa Hith JAarit e SHIE <4 ats | them a-oot to a “little gate in the | us o the"vTiiim: “He cannot | men s one of interest and curiosity, not | ero are . mumber of shrubs whoeo empire is not governe ¥ TWES {ing about, fetching calf-bound law- big door. Aream, at the moment they are fixing |of admiration and lovalty. His power | . 0 "0 Mugioenoqn turnish a liquid S i ) tlefields of the late war are at the end and votes, but by throaty British| hooks from the library for the indi-|CUt Off and that they, in any case, had | UFRELS OPg P elary' day in Paris we A | him, that the blade is going to fall {is the power of gifts, not character. i e i oy PaEtIos Hear, hears! i | vidual member. You miss the drone come too late to be admitted With are shown the Conciergerie. “where rHE lawyers did everything. They ! so soon! 1 Men watch him, but do not follow him. |containing those “clements Whén you look around on thislg¢'the i Gt the gentieman from ythe “thirty members of the public” | Marle Antoinetts® was “imprisoned~: [T - Thump! He beguiles the reason. but never warms | principles” or drugs which incline peo- tiny chamber from your vantage,arkansas reading pages and pages the Rue St. Honore, “where she rode were admitted, in each cnsc.' “He never knows what hit him! the emotions. You may see in him the | ) " "qink tea. Many foods and bev- point in_the narrow gallery, ¥OUisnd pages fr who must be legally accepted, if they | 15 execution in the cart”: the Place | hurriedly, to “a crowd of about fifty | Mrs. R— is claimed to say that she | wonderful and lightning movements of : Ubserve first the speakers chair at!of e semmittes on inteeatate vors: [Present themselves, at all “public,de ia Concorde, “where she had her | o oyey " 0 5 50 courtyard, close | saw a struggle with the high silk |the brain, but never beating of a ferages contain things which, if taken the north end of the chamber. It iSimerce. You miss the shorthand ro-|exceutions” In France—which, as a|head cut oft’ and the Expiatory S aar J | hae ehile the ‘lawyer was telling | steadfast heart. He has almost every | by themselves or in large enough quan- e * Chapel. beside the Printemps depart- | to the guillotine.” They were “re-| yig gtory to her in a whisper. Eift of statesmanship, and vet, lacking [tities, are poison. Whether tea or a dignified carved chair with aj : 1 o A lporters drifting freely about the floor | gact, t: 1ace i - ‘ c sbacco is injurious taken in canopy over it. Behind and above:g ¢ iha ch 4 = T |fact, take place in private. ment store, “where Marie Antoinette| porters, officials, lawyers, and the the central force of the mind which |coffee or tobacco is injuriol the press gallery, with a little | o5, tN® chamber to take down the de-| “mpe four Americans in evening and Louls XVI wers burledatter their | {5 iners of the publie” No- | gives strength and power to character, | the way most persons use these things o o 1 ¢ - i of lhas Dbeen debated for centuries and At el Lo e o Do | ,Above all, you miss the American|dress stood at the prison door. They | “American tourists in Parls cannot| body could tell one from thé other. in Using Wood Scraps. fheso gifts are forever at the SpOLt o as been e that the dcbate has hers, who must have a very hard | S¢t,upeqch, the sonorous rise and fall |nad “done” the night restaurants of |£et away from the gulllotine Only | the twilight of dawn, and “if there| e e peatance of shifts’ and | been closed, Taohens iing the debate at that!Cf the American “congregational ora- | Montmartre up till 3:30 a.m. (as the |tourists have the spots thrown at| were other womien, they looked just P these days of high-priced lumber | S0 ! Outside of the true tea, the most used sistance especially when it waxes. [0by Who makes the welkin and the|Paris newspapers which made great them, and only American tourists like men. the utilization of the small pieces ! “There is one particular way in which | “tea” is that called Paraguay tea, and Msorderiy, ~But my impression Is Lafters Ting! Instead of that youcase of the incident pointed out), and | read them up in history. Of course, there had been drilling| , o o™ oo "o oncigerable im- |I think his inconsistencies have been |which is called by those who drink it ey iy tespertely to get, fWim for hours through a sea of[at the Rat Mort (Dead Rat) they had | And if, now and then, an American | ahd explanations, heforehand, be- dangerous to his career. They have | “mate”—which word is pronounced that (hey do% o et marning's British “Hear! hear's!”, bumping oc- heard that this rare sight was being | woman tourist is reproached with, cause ‘the prison .officlals must sus- |portance. brought him too often into inferior com- | “mar-tay.” Its active principle is caf- vverything down. 2 &3 casionally—as into islands in an ar-|staged for dawn. In fact, they had |craving to see the terrible machine|pect nothing”; they were just part of, gome furniture makers glue to-|pany. fein, which is the active principle of Hansard, for example. will contain cpipelago—into short, hesitati: - | the “thirty members of the publi tea and coffee, and the “element” which pr , hesitating, un-|heard parties at neighboring tables|at work which cut off the heads of Who, by diligence, had got in oppor- | Eether small, clear pleces for the in- * X ¥ X ‘zflin ] coffees n':nfhe o vractically only the “high spots” of:emphasic, unoratorical British speech- “goi ines here is'a story they tell T aiscussion: it will ' bo_ nothing ¢ g D e rashon orase at |of tho wife of “a French cabinet | tunely. terlor framework of bureaus, chif-|7 ORD NORTHCLIFFE, with all his | Slicting” or "sumulating eflect. 1t | ike ®o full an and lively ai{ Al that the comic papers have said | Paris in their swift limousine, and minister” who “recognized the wife| These tourists think so much about | ¢onjers, sideboards and similar ar- faults, is 2 man to whom states- |said that there is not £o much caffei focount us that coptained in theiabout the Englishman's after-dinner |here they were! 2 of a French senator, at dawn, in the | the anclent guillotine that they al-1 . fen may speak their minds without loss | in @ Eiven amount of mate as in either Congressional Record, od | SPecCh, its sthttering, Its stammer-| “No admittance!” sald the gate|prison yard of the Sante, and both of | Most forget that these are modern 5 & ® | tea or coftee, and also that mate coii- A few fert In fron "of the gowned |ing™ity aok of imagination, its whe |policeman. prison yard of Hhe e ttire, mot to times. ‘Marie Antolnette, King Louls| Wheelwrights save the ends cut|of influence, but there are-other NEWs- | aing Josu tannin than tea or coffee. and much bewlgged speaker I8 3 table “h,p5py~faculty of saying the wrong| They insisted. Reract attention.” Both ladles said:| XVI and the -bcheaded French no-|grom gpokes and shape them into | paper proprietors, financiers of commer-| This shrub grow: wild through T e ens amd wige. | On the (RIng, all this seems to me true to| “Where's your permit?” ‘Oht" and were mutually embarrass- | Bility are always In thelr minds. = |)liheq for chisel, gimlet, auger and|clalized Journalism, with whom a man |larke ares of southcrn South Bmericy table i u long gilded bauble known e s yaihe syeeches koK o Lator A D e O ot | Mm Rt e other emall tool handles. Wagon jof Mr. Churchill's power and position |being' "It s~ extensively drunk i s e the roace all—save and except the remarks of (OE o the party hauled out a “spe- them’ the. following story: poier? Whot" querled the surprised | pujiders, too, occasionally make use SROUd Bold me e inchmeq of | PAraguay, Argentine, Uruguay = and is placed on small brackets in front ! the prime minister, who 13 a fuent clal passport” from the State * x k% ‘Marie Antoinette, of course—oht" |of scraps of hard woods for Uning constant communion with men of cul{worth of the leaves are exported to of 'the table. When the house re- | \(SISUTR 200, SN SORMCOY [ popartment (such as is currently |HE playwright, Sardou. being an|And, then. suddenly, she remembered |Brake blocks ash dng JTng SLSC? ture and rednemeny e nough, what | Luron Yearly, Its taste o sweetis) sumes, the mace Is solemnly restored : g, pjjar, with the rapid assurance of (gi T that they were on thelr way to see |Save thelr serebs 100 08 0% Gorkea | Forld by this time well enough, Whet|and slightly bitter and persons strang- to its place on the table. " Should a (ZETIRT WL EAD TORS Besurence ofgiven to Americans of distinction). authority on the guillotine in the | not the beautiful queen guillotined, [toriés, and larger pie Dlocks and he does mot know are 'he nelgh's [to it do not like it. Because of its member grow disorderly and recalci- fringes of a com‘-.’ew roakaoms, '0¢|The guard looked at its red seals|French revolution, desired to wit- but the frightful thug - and ' brutai é:l‘?.um::. blocks, rose cks His ?na'rm(e:“;x‘ufl.eeg,ng_:“l: b»r:l'z‘: caffein content and stimulating quali- trant, the mace is selzed and borne | oiSe® 21a 2it in the manner, in the | With respect—he read no English. He [ness a “modern execution™ for pur- | 33snesln, Langop, who killed a mother |PAGo0 (0™ ccyt broken or‘detective | HG5 100 headlens of his good name. 1 1e® 1t is & habit-forming beverage. ing disgrace and he is supposed to d“‘;}i— and after one became accus- {disappeared, to consult one higher in|poses of comparison. He was there-| " “Does it hurt?” queried the French 'staves of the larger sizes and 'r_nhnkfl Is it too late for him to acquire {28 e ey Speaiing” 30 19| LOmed 1, €, a2, doubt (hat focling | guihority.” o Tater appeared, Vs fore” invied to the behending of | 1ETEE 1 ln (8¢, chsen Senih |8, 01, 'S ToSES e aowely | AR SHIGSSY bl g Light and Secing. . 3 8 Spee: s . = . arie loinette 4 e ‘it b find ot an English memper of |, When the session opened we were P%.We should Tike to oblige your |Troppmann, the wholesale assassin, ‘n’n‘fic}‘l’ worse—the anxlety.” M Basket makers save the cores from | fmiituous temperament; they may be i - N interesting demonstration was men 0« lonc ays |treated to. that remarkable British!State Department,” he said, “but can- , "as he had asked for Mme.| They Stood, with the crowd in the | which veneer has been cut and saw oxpected to diminish as age increases Barlaen on %t “pariiamentary | institution, the “question hour," when | not admit you Without & Permit ob- | sewgou to come with him” the 1ady | Eray dewn of the prison courtyard. in |them Into thin slats for baskets and |and experlence molds. But character s Gl e roties A arahy and turmoll before the long. |81l the mémbers of the cabinet ap- |tained through your ambassador or ou. Lo a semi-circle, not far from the guillo- | crate covers. does not emerge out of the asnes of i\ €Ll A RN e of the suffering speaker will attempt to [Peared in the house, sat on the “front |the foreign office.. We, unfortunately, instructed ‘to present herself |, Brush manufacturers have made | temperament. It is not to be thought | e discipline him. Ibench” on the government's side and [have no discretion.” etc. equally in male attire, “not to at-| “A™ procession, with .the criminal, [some headway in using waste from|that Mr. Churchill is growing a char-thcl that an intimate connection In front of the table is the famous answered questions which had been| One of the Americans spoke up. tract attention. came hastily, 1ed by five men ‘in high | furhiture factories, but the pleces acter which will presently emerge and | exists b?lm:enl the magaitude of the angway.” which runs the length of | “put down on paper” by inquisitive| “What about the thirty members of | The late Delbler did the honors of | gk hats. are of 8o many sizes and of such ir- | create devotion in his countrymen. | details Visible tn s micros opEimud {ho the hall. On both sides of the gang- | M, P.a the day before. the public?” 3 the machine. “Those men in high silk hats” the !regular shapes that success has been |Character for him must lie in those color o u:eb ‘z used for ilu \way are benches running parallel.| This was far and away the quietest| “The quota of the pubile has al-| “You see, I have made several im-|lawyer was saying. “the operation)only partial A small porch chair|very qualities which are now chiefly | nating the SRR EY s There Is mone of that semi-circular 'Dart of the whole session. About |ready been admitted.” answered the | provements on the apparatus s it| the’guillotine—aids of M. de Paris.|shop has been able to draw a con- | responsible for his defects—his ar- h'e:l- :n' = orier THEHEFaYEs. thoss There 18 moe O Hat ean visitors |Afty questions, some of them quite |oMcial “and their number and qual- [cxisted under the terror,’ said M.| They Invariably function in high silk |siderable part of Its raw material |dor, his affectability, his vehemencs, towar® toc Qus VIND! ] he gpectrum. to our legislative chambers. On the |searching. had been “put down on ities rigorously verified.’ Delbler to M. Sardou. The great|hats—remnant of aucient ceremony |from the waste of boat factories. his impetuous rashness. his unques-| are on.:g oyed, lr:u -+ h: fuicanie, benches to the right of the speaker |the paper” the day before and the| At that moment a prison guard ar-iplaywright approached the instru-!to pay respect to those about to die.| Some of-the makers on interior fin- | tioned courage. One thing only can's.en that WA L = light comes from <it the members of the government, in {house was apparently deeply inter- "‘.’ls: and “M'P"';in i ment to examine the improvements,|In ‘the old days they wore knee- |ish work® their odds and ends of. soft | convert those qualities Into terms of the veglon of longar wases. $oward This ego consisting of the conserva- |ested in the answers. These ques-| The good man lift s cap & mo-lypen suddenly the long wicker | breeches, silk vests, lace ruffies, pow- | woods.into small boxes and the hard- | character, it is a new :irect‘:n.m e s tives (or teries) and the coalitfon |tions covered “every conceivable as- | Sqf PFEYErtiis o 4,00 taken | Dasket that stood beside it seémed to| dered hair and cocked hats.” wood soraps are made into parquet | All Mr. Churchill needs is the direc. | trum. Microncope manufacturers Rave {Serais”" Acrosy and facin them are pect of (he Brifish Empires and even | piace't né said, “ina f w'gver,t* " |oBen of lts own sccord end a youns || The, bigh, il hats, mets, workink | foorinen PSRS Yoo Cuiics "miedl | S0t on 'the Wiy o Bamascus” Let | ducine an spapratus wigh ynich (ho the opposition, con- rts of the. world that do not be- if 1 man, slender, elegant and all in . | rapidly, side the gul . “You & berals, who w Mr. Asquith, and jworth, undersecretary of state for'the impressive silence. - apparition st evel 5 : e . 'l!a-fnbarl:c of u:: labor parl'}". who fol- foreign affaira. was asked when the “It fi'my courteous and solemn,” “Do not be disturbed,” said M..de’ “In Marie Asrtoinette time,” the quarter-round moldings. come Paul on his way to immortality.' tion of the spectrum. (] L) .

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