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Christmas,” and'1writtep inscriptions|ing for no dispesition to demand croms-] within are perrqissible additions to}ing rights. ' b Wi Sumdacy Movatng | parcel post mattery it ceanct be too often urged that if. WASHINGTON, D. C. ' These are the ‘Aesic instructions]the pedestrian 4s by rule confined to e ber 21, 1981 ! which the Post Okfice Department |the intersection points he should have . .Novem] > wants the public to bear i mind injsome guarantee of safety: He cannot 1toe | matling Christmas g\t this year.}be guaranteed that safety in present Every Christmas sews\n & farce of conditions unless the trafiic policeman : 3 > S . - girln is kept busy at the city post|is on post. At all other points the 2 fiSuppuse you are 30 years oid. Deposit $8.20, monthly, for 120 months in the— ; naylvanis Ave. | office rewrapping which are{man on foot {s his own guardian. Commercial National’s nd : 150 a not properly wrapped by ¢he senders.] Many as are the motar cars in THE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morning Edition. Business O New swua St. Chicago Offic First National Ii:-nl Building. European Otfice: 3 Re " London, Eugland. | This work should be totally unneces-|{ Washington, as elsewhere, there are . with the Sundsy morning | 84Ty on the part of the past office, and gurriers Withip the ity | Points to one of the kinds of thougiz- 30 vents por month. Ur- | lessness on the part of the public that wail, or telephone Main { . 2 onis. made” by carriers at the | SeTVe 10 delay the malls. Sixteen years ago—in 1905, to be more exact— when Charles Evans Hughes took took up the work of investigating the gas trust in New York city the world more pedestrians. Unless bridges are provided, or subways, pedestrian traf- fc should be given preference &t the street crossings, or the speed of motors end of each nwnth. By careful adberence to the basic{at those points should be reduced to Rate by Muil—Payable in Advance. | instructions, und. above all by & real{a pace at which they can be halted (e v il aach 1ot Marytand and Virginia. enurmhml_un ‘tu “mail early” within & couple of feet. The present| moquy there isn't an American old - e il prbinrys e Washinatonidne: o ‘”’“"‘,l ot ot e LGS e At the end of the 10 years you will have saved $1,000 ily only ol 00; 1 m place their city in the positjon of] intersections. country’s history who could mot an- in cash for yourself, if “ving_ Sunday only. .. Uyr. £2.40; 1 mo. Al Other States. and Sunday.lyr., $10.00 | being a leader in the field of Christ- mas mailing. swer it. In those sixteen short years Mr. Hughes has been twloe governor of the Empire state, an assoclate jus- tice of the Supreme Court of the United States during six years, = nominee of the republican party for the presidency and finally Secretary of State in the Harding administra- {If you should die, even one day after being ac- cepted under this plan, any loved one you have named will receive the full $1,000 you had expected OFFICERS to save—and the bank also pays over the full amount to your credit in your savings account. An Adequate Navy. “Persons who contend that navies are fucentives for war are wrong.” “The reduction of navies will not prevent future wars.” “Adequate armies amd navies are insurance against war.” Soviet and Trusts. Lenin’s latest lapse from the Marx-) ian doctrine of commanal government., marking a still further retrogression from the high state of proletariat] The Courts and Their Equipment. It is predicted that an unexampled era of litigation is opening. Suing| : tion. Quite a record. Cnele Sam 1s to become not exactly a | Tule in Russia, is a recognition of the| These are opinions which have been | And now Mr. Hughes is the head of i > Qquoted in newspapers since the “naval | the American delegation to the great {Monthly deposit varies, but not greatly, between ersion but i frequency. A great | Principle of industrial combinations, ny claims growing out of the wur |00t operated by the state. In wther have already been put in shape, and | Words, the sovict at Moscow has not many more are in the process of | Ol uccepted the notion of the farma- Kb piog tion of trusts, but is encouraging ro 1 it this is true it|them. The commuml system has not tcancili . worked. 1t will not work anywhere, inerease in the number of ous 1a or elsewhere. S et hin is no fool, though fanalic: in {some respects and bent upon the uitimate establishment perhaps of an impossible system of government. He ” international conference on the lim- holiday” was proposed. They are|jiapion of armament and Pacific and opinions that have been heard before. | far-eastern questions, and as such They may bo true, but it scems rea- | presides at the sessions of the con- ‘erence. As Secretary o e he con- sonable to believe that reduced arma- | gucted the negotiations which nn.uyl ages 15 and 50. 5 {'Why not start today? ommercial National Bank Corner 14th and G Streets The Bank That Introduced the Insured Savings Plan to Washington CAPITAL, SURPLUS & UNDIVIDED PROFITS ... ...$1,450,000.00 RESOURCES, OVER ... — < +s - 15,000,000.00 ment will be given a trial. renulted in bringing wbout this con- araaise avies erence. ,‘w“"",'” Srrics f""d navies ™8| Cprior to becoming Secretary of Btate have prevented many wars, but there{__Americu’s head diplomat—Secre- huve been many wars that they have [tary Hughes hud not mixed in the x deics g game of diplomacy as it is played in- not prevented. One dves not know the | { g tjonally. But it 18 a hundred-to- wars they have prevented, but onefone-shot that there are no wrinkles of does know the ware they have not|this pustime with which he is not - " - N = conversant now. e has 'ways made Kknows that Russia today needs manu- | prevented. There is 4 very respecta- | o'y practice to know all about every ble body of opinion that “adequate” |job he has ever tackled. and his pro- factures, needs them for her own con- i 5 digious capacity for work and his no : A, sumption. and he knows by this time{armies and navies have incited wars.|) " . jigious memory have enabled CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, that factories administered by thel That word “adequate” has been @|him to do so.- As a matter of fact. he (Harris & Bwing Phota.) state and run under the forced-labor | ane of contention. With some per- | Fode to fame on two investigations iu g e o8 o, o New York; firsi e gas trust, and,| Some S office. ut Mr. o 7 p i system of soviet control will not yield [sons an “adequate” army and navy|iieend the 1ife inmurance compenies. | Huahes hus in each instance. been COLLECTIONS MADE at all points throughout the world. products. He sees Russia not merely | means a greater army and navy than | When he examined witnesres it wus | sought by the office. He had given the P:DREIGN EXCHANGE of all countries bought and sold ut lowest rates. matter. Business is working slowly | Starving because of food mismanage-|any othwr nation or any combina- {:x':?:e tw‘h‘!: c‘l‘-:;'ané"& .«:: “tl!;:i; people of xue:‘ Y::‘r'k rihatye;cl,upnd SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES for rent, $2.50 per year and up. d 5 e D I~ ‘e insura TA0- and at many disadvantages toward | ment. but going to pieces industrially | tion of nalons can bring against it.{One of the insurance company presi- fices when they demanded—at_least, i GIARHH T T " g - normalcy d to the degree|and economically for lack of goods|With some persons an “adoquate” |dents bewildered by Mr. Hughes, ex- |the republicans among them—that he |3 i I it H i1 » that it can be assisted by the prompt | necessary in the daily life of the peo- of enough im- | Ple- So ke pulls down another bar of 2 largest become governor. Prior to that an ef- army andinevy is e that a | U0 v, Hughes, you know more | fort was made to nominate bim for to call for|the Dlockado that he has thrown across the highway of Russian indus- extent 15 the and for o simpliication of 5 The jadici heen un . for a long time. has We have no plaints have been frequent, and Con- has often been prodded. We re jogged along with an insufficient number, and with dockets choked with urgent and undecided cases. Now is the time for remedying this Judges enou 00 nation can pay for, and in some cases |about the company than I do.” mayor of -New York, but he had still a larger army and navy than a nation| A methodieal scheme of living has|gome work to do in the insurance in- 2 enabled him to accomplish the vast)vestigation, and he declined. It was ir | N can pay for. amount of work which he has behind | 1910 _that President Taft appointed | R - TOowN & dispateh of all matte portance and complexity court decisions the assistance should “he renidered. trial life and declages that trusts are| The presert conference on limita-{him. At eleven years of age the future | Mr. Hughes an assoclate justice of e et b it ‘o make serv. | nevessary. Having just falled in the tion of armament believes in ade-|Secretary of State bad completedthe Supreme Cours. 1aking hir, from COUNTRY 1 10 ma e choc e governor's mansion A 3 fe on the hench mere attructive in | MAnageme' of ome of the biggest{quate navies and one of its aims is|his father because he Was 00 young When the presidential nomination he way of remuncration. Our judges | trusts ever undertaken in the history{to determine what is an adequate toMeme;l w}z‘“e'( o came ;n M‘m ‘in‘lvtls"h N\ : 7 Sty ool e 2 SRR B r. Hughes impresses every one riends insisted that N have long been underpaid. Sa |‘ f the world, he may be qualified to§navy. It may agree that an'adequate | i} whom he comes in contract With | prefered to remain on the bench, ind § { have been disereditably small. Why | pass judgment upon trusts operated { navy is very much smalier than an confl?e{noe in h§n lstegrm—hnnd :bg::”; thut ke only accepted because he i\\\\ e & ; 2 5 the old basis of direct individual . Not infrequently he has been dubbed | thought it his duty. \| ot then raise them, both for those | upon old basi al adequate navy used to be. N Yocbers. "But it has been by | ' How he was defeated by Woodrow the men who went to him for some- | Wilson for the presidency ater it had i thing they wanted, an idn’t get:{been conceded that Mr. ughes Garden of Allsh Soldiers. something that Mr. Hughes believed fwould be the next President, is too ‘Those enterprising young Americans{ it w;:-“w lh: benefit 1‘7: x‘l‘leh puhtl‘:c fresh in me;lnurgl' to ln"d retelling. % generally not to grant. When his|it gave Mr. Hughes his chance to go who a few moaths ago left New York i ing js made up—and that happens!back to the practice of law. and to for Spain to fight in the Moroccan |quickly—no man can say " more |take a leading position at the Ameri- war are returning, disillusioned and |readlly than the Secretary of State. '|can bar—and incidentally, in four or goldi - ut to his intimates, and in fact to|five years to earn half u million dol- disgusted with the “soldier of fortune a Mr. | lars or more. His acceptance of pub- business. The prospect sounded very | Hughes is known as a genial, kindly | Jic office has menat a real sacrifice to alluring When they listened to the elo-| man. Some who have followed his|him. in each lustance. for he has had | now in comn 7 and for those to|interest. I added to the for There is no In fact, little is left of the ariginal higl publ ico than that per-|Soviet fdogram except -the cruelties f.rmed by our ju and the laborers |and tyrannies of ignorant, inefficlent ot that ainly worthy of i proletartat rule. But so much has their b been dsstroyed, so many thousands have been slain, so many other thou- : . sanés have been starved, so many mil- American Enthusiasm. lions have been robbed of health, 5o An Englishman—the representative | caq¢ a value in industrially wrganized of a London newspaper—in attendance | <o ich has been swept &way, that it un the armament conference, is quoted | o1 o hard to rebaild. And there is as saving under the lnfluence of the |, qonfidence on the part of tie world enthusiasm nanifested at the 0pening | oy tgide in the 2bility of thoso who now e the confere over the [ qtitute the Russian government to o s etary Hughes: | roqte Russia, however far they may Why, it was a regular political meet- f oo ang whatever they may do in inz. The delegates know now what a iy " oyort to redeem their terrible democratic or republican convention | o ire looks like.” 1t was a fine display of feeling, and g @il the more impressive for being Trade and the Drink Traffic. wholly unworked up. But it was not| Viscount Astor and Lady Astor are a likeness. even in miniature, of one |discussing at public meetings the of our political national conventions. |drink trafiic in England. They favor On such an occasion we let ourselves | prohibition, but are of opinion that 20, and sive an exhibition worth a | England is not yet ready for the ques- long journey to witness. This visitor | tion. Pending that time they are advo- should arrange to come over in 1924, | cating local option. Their audiences when we shall be in the right humor |are rather tumultuous, but they are for showing all the “pep” that is in|succeeding in making themselves us heard. Now and then the suggestion is| This is probably @ better arrange- made that a good deal of what isment than that which put “Pussyfoot” called “the noisy stuff” should be cut { Johnson, an American. on the stump wut of our great quadrennial political | in England and Scotland as a prohibi- meetings; that it interferes with the | tion champion. His appearance was forming of sober opinion about the |challenged by the wets as an intru- business the delegates have assembled { sion, and they succeeded in stirring 1o transact. up so much feeling against him that Maybe. But it would be very diffi-|one of his meetings was turned into a cult to bring about a change. A great | riot, and he lost an eye in the melee. eathering of all sorts and conditions| True, both the viscount and Lady of men for the purpose of choosing a | Astor were born in America, but both Jvader for a campaign extending over | now are British subjects, and Lady | months naturally generates | Astor enjoys tke distinction of being and liberates enthusiasm, and cutting | the first woman ever elected to par- out nature—human nature—is not{liament. They are entitled to a hear- asy even when desirable. ing therefore on all questions of public moment in the country of their adop- Lard Tiddell eniEeace m:\‘i Liverpool the other day Lady 0 ve There were a number of good lines| , o, yartieq her audience by putting in the speech which Lord Riddell of i i themn. THiS the British delegation to the armament | NET case on sround new 3 onference moade im a Washington | W39 that Ensland could not re-estab- church last night. He crisply set|lish her forelgn trade unless she cut focth: tho sentimente of a ¥ecy larga| CUt Orink; that,the competition was Gt > A fiercer now than formerly, and that proportion of .nu: l\f.nel'n'ill Vpeoplc only sobriety and the industry and when he said: “The object of this con- 5 < FeiSrica fs Mot~ io- ks sareements | CAPRGLY, borm ok It coukd hope to Wi, % e And this is worthy of consideration with big seals, but to maintain peace. on this side of the Atlantic, where for- Peace is founded on understanding| " Susd " i eign trade is in the calculation, and and good will just as business is es- " the wets, though now out, are making 1ablished on good credits.” He ex- T2 efforts’ to dome back pressed & biz truth in few words thus: | desperate © i “1t is most essential for the well-being of the world to limit arguments and ; armament Another thing he said which is ea to approve was, “The wt are cel = areer say that he has mellowed with | to forego a lucrative private practice. quent recruiting agent—j age—he is only fifty-nine today. how-| A huge dome of a head, the clearest terrain. Garden of Allah stuff, flecing | sver. He Is always courteous to' thote of blue eye, « full beard turming F 4 about him a o those serving under|gray, are among the striking physical tribesmen, mysterious cities, all the | fbout @il AT TG TR0 B0 NI preme | Gualifications of Mr. Hoige who glamour of unknown lands. Most of | bench, Mr. Hughes not Infrequently |stanis abuve the sverage helght. und " .| took his case out of the bands of an|is well proportioned. He Is always those who enlisted were out of a J0b. | ;jgrmey, “floundering under the as-|well dressed—a New Yorker. ‘nuff said. 7 : Anything looked good to them, even |, 5 In mutters of religion, Mr. Hughes 7 / X p e more soldiering. So they took acisely and usked the attorney follows the Baptist Church. In this g | - was not e argument he inten he is Jike his chief, President HardIng. chance. Tt was a bad chance. When |, )¢, to which the attorney Mr. Hughes father was a Baptist they got to Spain they were told the | assented. Hi ql;qllion! from the bench | minister and so was his father's erms of the engagement: 60 cents | Were always directed to clarifying | father. It was the hope of his parents Tl terem O e P and a14ing in developing an argument | that a, t0o, would enter the ministry, a day pay. and oul it must come |rgiher than to merely confise counsel. | but heNgose the law. the cost uniforms, guns, ammuni- EDITO DIGEST tion, food, laundry and other necessi- eali: Mr. Hardi Imade a more earnest declaration The Idealism of Mr. ing. a inst war,” says tbe Pittsburgh ties. If & man got a full kit and lived | war on the American scale he would owe The address President Harding |Press (independent), and he is “fully the Spanish government twice as much as his pay. Nothing had been made over the tomb of America’s un- jaware of the practical difficulties” in {the way of fulfillment. sald about that on this side. Probably most of the chaps who went over— known | soldier on Armistice day iu‘ e s duvilve acclaimed by the entire press of the | tou there were only about eighty-three of nation as the voice of America ex- |more American (republican) believ them—would have been perfectly will- ing to break even, but they did object pressed “in language simply beauti- |5 hot (& dtiestion of how people foel bt to running into debt, and so they quit, t,” for the ful and profoundly soul-stirring,” to | (republican) thinks “there is no d coming back steerage and very happy for that. And the next golden-tongued | i the Tacoma (Wash.) Ledger |of that” It is. rather, a question what their government ‘will do recruiting officer who comes over here D TGiat uai ot'the woriaend (e Lodsoendent). , In_ the “chorus ofiMowitariit willigo to giveiol its strenyth m par praise, however, it is of marked in- |aml influence to others having the high about the romance of African cam-|ierest to note the comments of that [Purpose of peace To this the St paigning wilt have a hard time to get | gortion of the American press which | plies that America. for its part, “has a a corporal's squad. Foreign legion|nas been most loval to the doctrines |trust that it cannot betray”; nor, in its work is just now at a discount. and the policies of Woodrow Wilson. |opinion, “can they who come from afar For they constitute, perhape, the |to join with us in this vast consumma- S————— greatest tribute to the deeper sig-|tion of the hope and direction of man- There is, of course, a danger that | nificance which lies beneath the |kind evade the responsibility for which i n o pro.|mere rhetoric of the President's|they are answerable ;o their own peo- |\ ® How Much Armament? 1€ the rule is good that friends do Al'e we l‘lght in bellevmg that you want an over- e ey oitiog coat that costs as little as quality will permit? Has dinarianism—an ailment that is recog-{ Warren G. Harding there is a great not nced to arm against one another, nations and but one measure of the nized as prevalent but not dangerous. | §ulL, fixed’ save the Ehllanelobis ! t ¢ such t. The f v P T R the snap and style — wears long — gives you that ready to be used in a crisis, should be 3 Louis Globe-Democrat (republican) re. -op | The means to be employed to the at- Mr. Edison did the world a favor | (f5 MERS 10 Y SN Chd? put the when he showed that questionnaires|goal for which one has striven and nded indefinitely with &he other Is striving is obviously the may be propou! nitely with-{the other v/ > same. When ‘Wilson put into his out contributing much to the rapidjire work the same passionate appeal transaction of actual business. to humanity and reason that Presi- dent Harding employed at Arlington, merica, sympathizing with his aim. Wars bave 80 often been made pre-{blit distrustful to the pah he pitatel easonal chose to reach it, refused to follow G y that e 5ionly, 2 ble to SN adership. 1t the mew Preei- hope that peace can, on occasion, be|dent's path tends in the same dire; made rapidly. tion, and can bring him to the cher- ished_objective, in God's pame, let us_take it!” Chinpa may develop ambitions to be| It is, indeo‘.rln its fflfi"“ o!h:h: large politi regeneration of “an idealism whic 22 ically @8 it 18 goo- | {oE i een feared was dead.” as the graphically. Indianapolis News (independent) ex- presses it. that the President's a - makes t! strongest appe. to Col. Byran continues to star him-|Tress e T ac: ‘that MY, self in a “famous politicians™ series, red the best speech of : e he permitted himself st." the Richmoad O0TIN 'ARS. News Leader (independent demo- L G ST cratic) finds “interesting.” but “not nearly so significant as that, when BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. he mought to set the pitch of the :Bividing them in their beliefs as to romee: et e dxenet N warm, snug, comfortable feeling in all kinds of than the force at the disposal of na- tions not to be trusted. What Touia soncems navas expers [N Weather. We're having great success with just such is not so much the number of the manines o e s saen, ot N Overcoats. The best values you’ll see in “this man’s Donsessed by Germany, Russia, Tur- |N tOWIl”’ key and the like. The balance of |\ power idea is dead. In its stead is to be established the doctrine of pre- { N ' ponderance of power with those not Jikely to abuse their mighty responsi- {N 75 s 75 S 50 hilM))‘.—Nev York Tribune (republi-|N o o @ can). N No Ocean Will Be Safe. \ The Tnited States is to have three | and up to ’55 submarine cruisers of a new type. ‘They will be Jarger and equipped to —— e The steel industry is justified in re- garding the manufacture of munitions as a llmited and rather precarious Pasy .ormous possibilities of travel uch ity - _— — e i s e 2:eln|:lhn:u'l e ggn!«;fl‘a:e- l;: t:gg:‘flod; l;‘;t ethr:“;ozg r'fi“g ;\:‘hn m"fn"mn"ff?nz; l-hree e |\ = = - on treaties, on statesmen, on land % Fighters. RS pected to a crulsing ius of RS —————e—— advantages, but the note of idealism Lot hare radi . 5 armaments or on submarines, but on The man who says he wants to fight s (o TASE two years in lpflr 000 las: '.l"!:;t sneans they can Ko 8 THE : EXTRA PAIR GIVES ADDED WEAR-' ‘The en- Lenin and Trotsky seem to manage, despite Russian currency problems, to lar mone; When he was campaigning, Mr. f:‘k:‘:;d &":‘r‘"““‘h i Chatles | Evans _Hughes ‘was askel comfortably. The man who most dislikes a fray “what he would do.” He has shown » ———— his willingness to tell the world. And is, ‘mongst boasters, dumb, New York and harry the transatlantic routes, then, if pursued too. closely. | & That’s the whole storv be heard of next in the far east. We start with only three of these sub- g ! . in Our Big Line Of marine demons, but, of course, we shal] have more. And other nations MR IsEER | “TWO-TROUSERS” SUITS y all the oceans, for we ha ° Sdent . of using. subarines . asaict ar | peaceful commerce, and Rognd| ’ - - fioves Tt & mers asrsemenchcs o 3-Piece Suits, $29.75| 5=, $6.75 “That wealthy and - y {nfluential citl going peacefully about their lawful occasions will find that war means .{zen says he is with you, hoart and China may be justified in suspect. although he was elected “because hé | that mo one is safe; that they have ing that while Confucius was & fine Was supposed to be an_ultra-ma-{had nothing to do with start X : 2 Extra philosopher he was not & very good terlullmo far as worldly politics |war or 'll'i‘ll the war will no‘fin-‘lh(: 3'P lece Sult’ ’ $33 075 Trousers s 7.75 tician. 89, at Arlington “he gave utter- |any difference. This is the prospect of the necessity for fullest co-opera- | POH most idealistic ad- | —not an imagisary horror, but the tion with the Washington city post definite prospect, unless the men who 7 ¢h o3 represent nations in Washi . ° D Extra ' office in preparing and mailing their The Croaing Peril. e s Toealism and its Peprestntinstions i ngton do s s Christmas parcels in order that the| In the matter ofthe pedestrians and = (independent). i goscral 3'P tece Sul,ts’ 37'50 Trousers 8'75 heavy holiday mails may be handled [the motorists at the street corners, to|ecan be said about most popular songs in tence,” snd| Let’ S sound reason every sen! lorbl' have & twentieth amendmen: expeditiously and satisfactorily. All [which Capt. Klets of the Public Utli-|is that they don’t last long. ville (8. c.; . 3 Piece Suit’ 340 oo ;m 39 75 § e et d L4 Tousers . And flourishes his fists ‘Wil often prove a sorry sight ‘When entered in the lists. the minds und hearts of men.” ——————————— “The tactfulness of Gen. Foch makes | Should he be forced to fight, they say. | b it clear that had he not deen & great| A bearcat will become. warrior he would have made & won- derful diplomat. President Harding has succeeded in developing enthusiasm in working for peace instead of playing politics. ————————— Co-Operate With the Post Office. 1t is not too early to remind folks Limit of Devotion. the well laid plans of Postmaster|ties Commisaion has called attention ) P 5 chuw: ;nfh:u:er o?c‘lzumv:fll g0 !:: in“x:‘u ;:port to tl: CGmmlldmu;.“i: It Won't Be For Some Time. by Bhis ool h-n :‘t ‘;mnn what :nvm people naugh peopi begin to|m: ‘borne mind that 3 licsnses T—Atlanta 2 Ps - think about the matter early fn De-| motorists expect pedestrians to “step e s o e el Get this—the Two-Trousers Suit Idea is a “comer” cember, and maks a real effort to|lively,” and in that expsstation they Bal Sun (independent demo-| Crookedmess never pays in the 1 mea; CONOM’ e “nail early,” #o that the heaviest day | continue their pace to and across the et - fn'}.'ilmf‘}’«":.:" the mxm,_g“u,"_ I" ns & Yy f" YOU- YW are the man we serve of autgoing mail will come several S > days before December 25. Christmas comes slowly to children t) [ because they don’t ha: In a general way, it is well for e \ts pitture ana suddguncu: N ods luae . Yo colpey (henty those malling parcels here to keep in MONEY’S WORTH OR MONEY BA ludent writes: “In Better mind the following: Address parcels Speech . week fully and plainly; place name and ad- el inichive o | el TigheoPeorta Transoripess ©° dress of sender on all matter; pack . There can The Toledo Blode articles carefully and wrap them se- ] “hearing the m ::o Truth week. Wh:tm lo they. "1':‘1% war?—Cleveland * curely, but do not seal them, ss ssaled