Evening Star Newspaper, December 17, 1921, Page 6

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< X iy .- 's THE EVENING STAR. { With Sunday Morning Edition. - et e S WASHINGTON, D. C. BATURDAY...December 17, 1921 . R s FHEODORE W. NOYES. .. .Editor in the French, British, Itallan, Japa- nese, Chinese, and American law- making hssemblies will be men the better qualified for work bearing on world affairs because of this Wash- ington opportunity for conference on forcing the little folks out upon the|matters of world consequence, Taeir pavements for their sports and exer-|vision will be the larger and their . [cises. A public playground is a life|wits the keener. he Evening Star Newspaper Company | saver, and there is & definite obligation| Woerld questions, at present much in Bai now upon the municipality to provide | evidence, will continue in'the spot- ‘|areas where the youngsters can play | light for some years to come—certain- APT: Ernesto Julio de Carval- in safety, not merely to keep them odft {1y until the instability now every- ho e Vasconcellos, sedond of Th Star, with the Sunday mormiog | o¢ danger, but to give them a chance | where existin the two delegates represent- ‘ red > g disappears, or ylelds P! e Y STy 43 centa por some measure of its menace and dls- ing Portugal at the confer- month ; daily only, 45 cents per | for helpful developing games. only,'30 centa per month. O | g report of the children’s bureau | turbing influence. Legislation bearing | °7c° on arms limitation and far enst- on world conditions alll be on the | " 8nd Pacifia problems, was trained | gers ma nt by or telephione Main 8000." Gotlection. 18 rrlers at e | i3 now belng considered by the joint eard everywhere. for the navy; has made a lifelong study of colonial affalrs and is perma- ead of e committee on schools, and will prob- nent secretary of tne famous Geo- ably be given full thought In connee- tion with the school building projeets. Do Nob H ] graphical Soclety of x-‘.i'l)nn His se- Cr in the ‘&eeu!. atotaarana lection as eellea £ Viscount d’Alte, But the municipal playgreund system should not necessarily be made a part Portuguess minister to the United cars, the stress of choosing glfts and | giates and chief delegate; Eives evi- of the public school system. Indeed, the playground needs are to be meas- | the work of buying them and bearing | gence of the fact that Portugal's prin- ured on a totally different scale from |all kinds of packages, tend to excite|cipal Interest in the cenferense is in the school needs. It may be possible | many porsons, There¢: are 50 many | relation to the latter's eensideration things te thlak of, and e many things | of far eastern affairs. to combine the two, but this should be ) France Worries Her Friends. attempted only after very careful|to do outalde of the usual schedule of| Capt. Vasconcellos has vieited all office hours and meal hours! The holl- | the Portuguese colonies, and because s 3 study. If the playgrounds are to be t Solonies, causs = dr ;“d” of France are perplexed at | pjaced under separate management |day shopping crowd ia the largest of 5 ;,‘:::'o":c;',:",z:“d ASACEAGS b:‘m“”'l::l’uf”"“’““d e hex 4m-land direction, assoclation with the |crowds, and it carrles mors money | colontal matters. At one time " he val program. They recall | gohools may make difficulties of ad-|than other crowda It Is made up|Served as minister for the colonies /8 how shocked and agerieved the | inictration. In fact, this has been P|ig the author of many notable articles & mostly of women who take a&long|and books on colonial matt French people were at the charge that | the experience in the past, and it 13| more money than usual, and having|1897 became the editor of France was militaristic. They do Not | necessary now to determine . just i flsL s oo the 1ob hefors P Colonial e Maritima. = ortuguesa, Colonial i damaged. Prompt servi: want to see that charge revived, but | whether the playgrounds shall become necessity of providing and maintain- ing recreation spaces for the young- sters in a crowded city. It has but to note the accidents in the streets, the children crushed under the wheels of traffic, the tragedies resulting from Who’s Who Grienee XXIV—Capt. Vasconcellos * Always- Fresh and Delicious 60c Lb. Yout can pay more—but none better at any price, Fancy Xmas - Boxes and Favors At Very Low Prices 1220 G St. N.W. Carroll Electric Co. 714 12th St. N.W. 20 Years Dependability Regent 8t., Lond . . gent 8t., Loudon, In selecting your Electrical GIFT it will be well to remem- ber that you are best served electrically where electrical merchandise is featured. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. In such departments elec- trical experts are to be found to serve you. | All Other Statex. Dafly and Sunday.1 yr., $10.00; 1 mo., 850 ily on!: 1y $7.00: 1 mo., 60c BUY FROM | Electrical Merchants your property . no correct pockets carry it In little| 1o hiy’ incumbency he made an satchels called handbags, mesh purses, | intensive study of maritime affairs, CAPT. VASCONCELLOS, »x. FERGUSON ¢ they wonder how France expects to|part of the school system and admin-|or something of that kind. A woman |&nd. under the tc:p"onlh?' Tolas escape it In view of the attitude of | istered as such, or kej avaesiZoontributed monthiy erticiom: 1114 9th St. N.W. _ Ph. N. 231232, t 3 pt separate, both | has her fur neckplece and a muff to . & 231 that his countrymen might be advised| . o0 _iiention to the fact PAINTING BY EXPERTS her spokesmen in the armament con- | ggministratively and physically. look out for. Bhe has many bundles |of the progress made along those lines that the conditions in the highlands - - 'his work, now in its third edition, and frozen meat; and he urges that time when many purses are lald on | ;RS WO TOW (L \P Macao, Timor, the rallways. from the coast should counters and forgot, and many purses |[Mozambique, Angola. Portuguese | be eontinued with the greatest vigor French army, the American people| Ever since the 16th of September, were sympathetic, even if they were|1920, when'a bomb was exploded in ference. in foreign countries. { When Helaia picaded) the “Gasman| ——— e end her hands are full. Often she is In 1900 Capt. Vasconcellos wrote|of South Angola (Portuguese Africa) i and Senma A Russian-Plotted Crime in a great hurry and s flustered. This | “colonias Portuguesas” for the Portu- | are most favorable and give promise i peril” as justification for a huge uss1an-x'10 * is harvest time for thleves, and it Is a | Buese section of the Paris exposition. of a second Argentina in maize, wheat PERPETU ! l not convinced. They could not see in | Wall street causing many deaths and | are lost by being dropped in the street, [ Guinea and many other far-away ;-nd tx;;t' elolonlns should be sent out BUlLDlN a N 1t mmediately. a d&s:nrme:mand prostrate Germany | much destruction of property, search|The moral is, keep cool and watch | ®P%% g0z (he present delegate of Por-| “He considers that the condition of l;‘yr‘rmlm e te mf";(‘e !ohthe safety | has been prosecuted for those guilty|your purse as well as your step. Do |tugal became professor s“l':lms}";’ ll’or(uzue‘ue cnl%rlueu :hulwl;a:; 18 Tt of France, but they knew how cruelly | ot this atrocious crime. Many clues|not yi and naval sclence of the Socledade de |least as favorable as that of the col- 3 yield to the feeling that haste is | . ¥ e ha G hica de Lisboa or Geographl-|onies of other nations in stmilar cli- France had suffered and made allow-| have been followed and several ar-|necessary. Do not let yourself become | Cat Soclety of Lisbon. Following the and situation ances for her fears. They did not|rests have been made, but untll now | excited. Shop early, shop calmly and |outbreak of the world war, ho was ap- pt. Vasconcellos is also the au- want it said of them that “He laughs | no definite results have been obtained. | keep a thought on your personal prop- “?I(H‘Ed perpetual secretary of the so- {:hq‘;'mg;;:e‘"g\fi:;zh.s::T‘l:'x.::l::e V;zr':l:_. P‘y' [ Per Cent @t scars who never felt a wound,” 50| Untli the annpuncement that has just | erty. e erican tourists in Lisbon mever|cipe and other places; of charto- ([l on shey tiition they were willing the question of 1and | come from Warsaw of the arrest there fail to visit the bullding of this so- | graphic works and a manual of com- zres maturing in 45 disarmament should wait until French | of a man for complicity in the outrage . _|clety, contalning a splendid muscum | merclal geography, He s president or 83 months. It 3 -nerves had more fully recovered from |it has seemed hopeless to expect & It may be that President Harding|and a remarkable library of o of e Lisbon Chartograp! ‘ommis- 000 volumes. It is related that the|slon, member of the Lisbon Academy the shock of war. And they Wwere |solution. Long ago the theory of an | St &1 example of more important in- | x-kaiser of Germany, Wilhelm I, |of Science, a fellow of the Royal Geo- Pays 4 Per Cent ready to concede that there was some | aecidental explosion was discarded on fluence in world affalrs than he real-|fier an Inspection of these remaris | graphical Society of London and of [} o hares withdrawn be § N i able collections and the by! ng hous- | other learned institutions. e has wn - merit in the Briand contention that|the ground that there was mo con.| Z°G When he de;h;l"’dthm‘;"‘“ Wil | e e, with tho usual Hohenzol- | contributed to both the Encyclopedia fore maturity with millions of trained men and an | ceivable reason for the existence of a | t© lsten respectfully to advice. Jern tact remarked: “Too fine for|Brittanica and the International Ge- industrial establishment intact Ger-|jarge quantity of high efplosive at many might prepare secretly and|that particular point. The affair bore * Call a WEST 84 Taxi HEN you're late for the train a phone call W will bring a WEST 84 taxi to your door in five minutes! 50c for Ten Blocks | 75¢c in City Proper Our taxi rates are the cents in city proper. Phone WEST 84 and employ this cheapest in the city—S0 poaper better taxi serv might manufacture small arms and | gtrueti ¢ the third internationale | Bryan's he was highly complimented by the stedstionsfof (helchied frien Bryanis)Comuioner. London Times, which said, In part markable. Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W, cents for ten blocks, 75 ice for all your needs. Taxis by the hour as low as $2.00 munitions in secret, but she could not |4y Moscow, which had promised $30,000 JAMES BERRY, Presideng : Special Rates for Out-of-Town Trips build a battleship fleet in secret, even | 1o be divided among four or five per- JOSHUA W, CARR, Seceretary The “Flexible Tariff” Plan. | American history no such scheme has | | NEW TAXI SERVICE CO. i Portugal.” ography. He has been the reciplent In 1919 Capt. Vasconcellos wrote |of various Portuguese and forelgn or- fck A magazine designed to exploit the | “Portugal Colonlnl.”Ppuhlll)'ud in Tl'r‘.; ;l‘ers. beh;fi an om«-'r orl n;; ue{ngn o: Assets More Than quickly for another war. i o is. | bon by the Livraria Professional. onor. His recreation is the study of e e ot e sty sichl unmistakable evidence of a deliberate- | ideas of the Woodrow Wilson adminis- |}, ¥ probably an expansion of the|Portuguese discoveries, explorations | $7,000,000 Siteshs any such ex ly planned crime. tration is announced. The hopes of @ | earlier work gotten up for the Paris [and chartography, a fa: cuses nor make any such allowances | * The man arrested at Warsaw, it is | united democracy do not go 5o far as | exposition, contains a complete sum- | almost Jimitiens aubject. H s Surplus Nearing for France's d d for the construc- | gaj mary of the Portuguese colonies—their | born in 1852; his figure is slender and |} et See construc-| gaid, has confessed to having been a | to expect that it will combine its re- |8 P (003 tion "and products. For | wiry; his bearing is military and alert.| | $800,000 of ten great battleships. Germany | member of a group acting under in-|sources and influence with Col.|this contribution to colonial science |His English, while not so fluent as ” that of the Portugese minister, is re- fi i if she could find the money and With-{ gons. This money, the dispatch states,| Numerous propagandists once busily ever been proposed for giving the hold it from reparations, neither of | was recelved by New York commu.|engaged are now beginning to struggle which she could do. France can ad-!nicts from Russia. In one respect the ] Visibly with the problem of unmem- In the face of appeals from “cham- | beneficiaries of high tariffs a strangle treet, N.W. bers of commerce and other business |hold on the making of tarift. ““_’ 21st Street, N.W. vance no argument which will con-|confession, as reported from Warsaw, | ployment. interests throughout the land to let wvince the American people that she|is not clear. This is the statement one,” deaf, indeed, to their West Indies for Debts. the tariff alone,” dea £ N d Popul Teeds a great fleet og bal‘lleships 10{ that one of the persons implicated was| Santa Claus again manifests his protect her from possible German ag- 1, woman who had for several days|benevolence not only as a promoter of pleas, the Loulsville Courier Journal| The talk of trading of British posses- I ent Hard- | 810ns in the West Indies for the British (democratic) charges President FAI- facht'to the United States will not down. ing In his message to Cong: TEES | [t is being discussed lately more seri- gression. And if she does not need |peen watching from a window op-| good will but as a business booster. them to protect her against Germany, | Logite the office of J. P. Morgan to for what purpose does she need them { opcerve his movements and to give a and to what use could she put them?| g1t the planters of the bomb,| The only thing Lenin seems able to Unless France can furnish & convine- | wpich was intended to destroy him. |Suggest concerning Russia’s unde- ing and satisfactory answer to that (. Morgan was in London, at the | veloped resources is to put some more question she must withdraw her naval | i of the explosion, and must conse. | MOFtgages on them. Project or sacrifice much of the sym-| quoniiv have been absent from New yathy and good will which the Amer-| york for at least & week prior to the| The vicissitudes of finance may at dcan people now have far her. explosion. least enable President Ebert of Ger- 1t is, of course, to be hoped that all | many to mention with pride that he is of those connected with the outrage|one of those who leave office less rich The Senate and the Conference. will be caught. If this man is telling | tkan when they entered. The Senate should await the Presi-|the truth it should be possible to 4 dent's pleasure before entering upon | round up his assoclates, unless per- @ discussion of the armament confer-| haps they are now in Russia, where ence and its labors. It will not lack | they cannot be reached at present. An- for opportunity. It is not to be ignored. | nouncement of the arrest of Linden- In good season, when the conference’s | felg and his confession suggests that Jabors are concluded, the President, it | steps have been taken to capture these 13 understood, will lay the business|others, unless the statement is pre- formally before the Senate for its con-| mature. The natural result of a proc- sideration and action. lamation of Linderfeld’s exposure of Much of the feeling exhibited in|he grime and of his associates in it the Senate over the Paris peace treaty | would be to drive them into hiding. Erew out of Mr. Wilson's attitude t0-| ~ Association of the Russtan comm i ward that body while the pact was inlpjgt center with the crime is not sur- course of preparation. Although hefpriging. It has been known for a long had promised upon setting out for|(ime that from that center has come Paris that he would keep the Senate | nuch of the radical propaganda that informed about the progress of the|p,q been active in the United States. business, he seemed to forget his|post of the troublesome radicals in promise upon arriving on the scene. | ¢njs country are known to be identified The Senate heard nothing from him | gith groups that are in turn affliated until called upon to ratify his work, | «ith the third internationale. While without the dotting of an i or the|ne soviet government has no direct crossing of a t. Then the fun began. | fcial connection with that-center, the Mr. Harding began, and is proceed- | gggociation is known to be close. The ing, In a different way and spirit. Helnirq internationale, in short, is the drew upon the Senate for two of the | picsionary agency of the soviet. Or ‘American delegates. By that act heht perhaps may be stated thus, that @ssured the Senate of his appreciation | yno soviet is the Russian political of its importance in the negotiations. | anjfestation of the third interna- Of course, when the time comes,ionale. Whichever may be cause and Mr. Lodge and Mr. Underwood from | gpich effect, these two are linked in thelr places in the Senate will con-|yye identification, as this crime of tribute to the discussion of the labors | gortember, 1920, the truth of which 1§ in which they have had a share—will, | | =" omine to light, has shown. €0 to say, give an account of their etewardships, and interpret from their B Points of view what they may have set | A New York city statesman usually thelr hands and seals to as delegates | finds that his success depends on his to the conference. strict attention to local issues. Mr. Mr. Harding has treated the Senate | Hylan, in all the present discussion with high consideration, and the Sen. | of battleships and merchant craft, does ate should reciprocate. - not permit his mind to be diverted ————— from street cars and omnibuses. Many congressmen contemplate ad- T journment with the hope that naval{ When the Japanese consider accept- holidays will hecome as securely estab- | ing German murks from China in pay- lished in custom as Christmas holi-| ment for railways, they are caretul to days. stipulate gold marks. —————————————— ————————— Pressure is being brought to bear| Japan will keep the Mutsu, and na. o prevent De Valera from becoming | tions hope that the gallant ship will an irreconcilable. ride in absolute security until eld age ends its career. —_———————— 2 German financiers are disposed to try the ancient experiment of letting the other fellow walk the floor. ; * immediate tariff revision. Further he |ously than ever. There is evidently advocates a pollcy which, its oppo- |g0od deal of British sentiment in favor Save Money, and RENT _|of it. Lioy the great British insur- nents declare, would result in a con- |27 0 i R0 ETCRY SELSE el The Book You Want— tinued uncertainty that would make [fyer on it, placing a 15 per cent premium business conditions Intolerable. This [on the possibility of such action oc- When You Want It e OO as o “Mloxible tapify” | CUTTing In 1922, That would mean about The onty library in the world BAthe PEOD: " |one chance in seven that the islands | giving prompt serviee of new the rates of which would be made ad- | would be ours a year from now. titlen. 'The books are fresh— Justable and regulated by the tarift | An American economist has gone so . clean—taviting. You are your i far as to list the islands, with their PO IR L commission. While admittedly aj o o i ge and possible valuation. There A wgreat departure,” as the Buffalo Ex- |are Antigna, Bermuda, Barbuda, the e pres (independent republican) puts it, | Barbados, Dominica, Grenada and the fmail ‘reatal fec while book 1s + . | Grenadines, Jamaica, St. Kitts, St Jour posseasion. from ‘the traditional American doc- | (repadiges, Jamslca, St Hitts. St The iscellancons _librars trine, the proposal finds much edito- | Tobago; Trinidad and others which, e b ot aeaactinn rial support because it would, it is|along with British Honduras—the on¢ British hold on the South American |fi R believed, afford greater facilities £or | \j e Ocive'a “total area ‘of 21468 meeting changing conditions, as wWell | square miles. Figuring these at the rate w “l’ Lil) as proving a more scientific eystem |paid by the United States for the Dan- omrain’'s rary 1: est Indies, the economist finds that a ped sl Gabriel DAl ::::yt:;p%’::;{ll‘ 3‘?& sgle“bt)!l;m;olnfl!l‘-’ l?% W°u;:.g§9w'o;_lh!; the nle:l little sum WASHINGTON BRANCH been depressed since Gabriel D'An-| 31"5;4 economic danger in such a|pi i ,059. t would come with- nunzio forsook literature for politics. | soheme: in @ biliion o paying the British debt || 1416 F St. N.W. Room 114 s the uncertainty of the tariff | to this country. I e i, S, the ettt | “There ‘are oniy two obstacles in the Protects Your All that Herr Ehert needs to make | phia Record (independent democratic) way of this settlement plan. One is his idential income adequate is a 2an, and “the fact that a change I8 'hl:t d!h'l IV}elraxg value of the British e fmminent is worse for business than |islands to the United States would be China has long represented mass with inertia. If China gets into politi- cal motion the momentum is likely to be something to reckon with. travel, history, bi- It must be admitted that the stand- ard in motion picture scenarios has stipulation that his salary shall be | mminent i3 Woue C0f low one. If [ nowhere near that of the Danish West | ES 5 3 w, Indi in- i paid in gold instead of paper. changes could be made “automatical- | [11c8: x;’:'i\hb:ffirb&'fl:’e'n':’éum Jo- H TNUT FARMS service 1y, by some kind of magic,’ to meet Loy ooy that this country is rather changing conditions, the New York | £he SIFSR I8 thal (hiS country is rather | in your interest ngiflS at Our old friend Santa Claus is a| Post (independent) concedes such. &l o, Pon ot k s h system “might be desirable” but it L",,e!!::u;::.rs es, mosquitos, in. ter of Christmas cheer, i def - 2 2 2 great promoter of 8 cheer, | roels that “a tariff which must be so | “CTbD o lnrem;un;:lmg.:pfc’:&’;? the dalry, before the mllk is pl'O' but it is upon the Postmaster Gen-{changed by human beings would be w/oS L/ \ateraationallicompiles 1ife eral that he has to rely in the main | the worst kind possible, for it 1‘"’-‘1‘” and the life of a World-lfnimau i fiw 2 for @ solution of his problems of dis. | b52mst Uncertal 1anite, Wik d G- |trom stmple—Tacoma ~Ledger (inde- duced, and does not end until tribution. ties as conditions change,” the New -~ £ = s 2 York Times (independent democratic) = . Eonsvariheless conident” that “busi. The Congueror Sails. the bottles in which the m_llk is A respectful public finds the ut-|ness would prefer to take e e e i et e o ed have been unquestlona_ oo in A Chlet BxecullVe” mportant that busi-| He Bas cnded & campaian wider In fta ) N/ ) bly Sterlllz.ed before bemg put 3 ess should conform to rates than|geographical stretches than the great / AN 1 That rates should conform to busi-|terrain of his European victories. Night [ ) tO use agaln. Kin ch a tariff than under a terances of King George no less im-| under such & G0, abie at the |captured all of the United States s " the New York Tribune (repub- e BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. mesn the N ok Feris oysbt. o| 20 daY. In forced marches, “living oft portant than those of Lloyd George.| pleasure of a commission and the | evacuating today with his spoils. respond to the ““cml“,,m: of world | the coutmry." he'lhnls snrem: hluNcon- = From Fiction Springs Reality, trade and to readjustments in our own 'quest of a non-resisting people. Never, . . pelngs Ry, | atiies. The prevailing idea, the|even befare the mightiest onslaughts of Our dellverles are ¢© al'l In days gone by old Santa Claus Bostop. Transcript (independent re- 2 Unto my home came ‘round. puB¥ican) thinks, has been “that the recention committees, spellbinders and I rompt and re: ular U ur mnspiing “mia the great appiaues | Ui o, P, TEEcty, 1L BERE | Conl M vt e ek promp e tion an n eyelid. “The hes lefense is af o . - . Parental thought profound. One fha business of the country “has|has been an aphorism as useful on the e T o i drivers, courteous and obliging. 0ld Santa made the children i1l reverses of tariff plogcyi“; “81\|eh flilmtl)(ly He salls "L"ro'ntix‘ 'hettex;l b:oly thlg Wh t th t t- osite of flexibility, and the |ever a conqueror before had presses K Andigo widHimElst intonse. e ot all sclentific determina- |upon him by the captured and capti- I y not secure the protection They had to 2dd & doctor’s bill fom" Further, any tariff policy that|vated. Swords batons, university de- f . 3 F@ise atates- | grees—and memories. 'These last, we . Jio Nelinexpenne might have represented “wise s1aler | Fncy. will be the most treasured of all of our service manship” up to & few years 280 WOIlcl e trophies carried back to the qulet ise, We paused, the whiskers to admire | now D eraemt, (rapublican) believes |home gardens for contemplation in the Which grew on Santa's face; that President Harding is making an[Sunsetyears. = . . _1d come : 4 But in some manner they caught fire intelligent recognition of the fact| o\ //"Sye'yone you found Ameriea up Perfectly Pasteurized Milk And ’most destroyed the place. that “circumstances and condmon; to the standard of the men it sent % T Guernsey Pasteurized Milk have been radically changed,” and|!S the SARSRTd CF The menoab Sond Certified Milk—Cream—Buttermilk And father murmured, as forthwith, |that: as the Chicago Tribune (ne:|you leave us thinking half as well of us Butter—Eggs—Cottage Cheese ondent republican) says, A bunch of cash he loosed, Pt of fixed achedules is inappli- |22 ¥ LTk of yob Hamer o o oy in pe “Dear Santa, you're the buslest myth | cable to our present problems.” Al (ingependent). o tariff commission with power to ralse That history has produced! o lewer rates as conditions warrant| Shillalaghs must now be beaten At All Dealers’ would, in the opinion of the Ithaca|inte pruning hooks.— Peoria Tran- ‘Not One of Them. Journal-News (independent), “be an|seript. Lo e airaekion ot & J. ED. MATTERN “There seems to be no ‘practical e thin ¢ tarif which the country| Anatole France thinks that “men in penalty for the bootlegger.” et A ™ ihe oli-fashioned | goneral are worse than they meem. Distributer w " 3 1 method of tariff making is| But—to use the old “comeback’—how 'Well,”” replied Senator Sorghum; E:gv‘l’r;c?‘“' ik “Mu“l to the coun- | could they be?—Chicago New 622 F N.W. “he’s at least deprived of the privi-|{ o, eds, injurious, in fact, to the = : logo of Writing ploces for the paper |gevelopment of that forelgn trade| Some pecple are all risht es long LIMBERS UP Qut of 1t they akid—8yra- C H Public Playgrounds. A comprehensive playground sys- Aem for the District is proposed in the report of the children's bureau “which has just been submitted at the * request of Senator Capper, chairman of the Joint committee on public &chools. It suggests the acquisition of 100 ecres of land by the District gov- ernment for this purpose, the immedi- ate enlargement of the directing force wnd the creation of a special hoard to coordinate the activities of the play- ground department. ‘Washington’s, playground system thas “just growed,” Topsy-like, from a few school yards, Land has been ac- quired pieece by piece here and there without any particular plan. Some of it has been bought, some horrowed, | terms of Intimaecy and cordiality Sec- and some of the borrowed land has|retary Hughes, Senators Lodge and “been lost to the system later. No|Underwood, and Elthu Root, all ex- playground map has ever been worked | perienced in political business in out to {nsure that the children of | America, Three of them are now in every part of the city shall have equal | political commission, and likely to re- opportunity at these recreation sta-|main for some time to come. Mr. tions. Soms sections are entirely with-| Hughes may have elght years before out facilities. him where he now ds, while Messrs. The need of muniejpal playgrounds | Lodge and Underwood are very “solid i 4s fully established. Backward, indeed, | at home—seem to have life jobe. 45 the mind that refuses to grant the| In the immediate future, therefore, ~ ~ of the health department for the District of Columbia Pasteurized Milk receives the highest official rating L oo P Ta emsential If American in- and signing them ‘Taxpayer. e 15 “to srow.* ‘The Detroit 5 s (independent) points out|cuse Herald. | Jud Tunkine seys it's a sure slgm of | Fice inger, sseh & pian “the general| Chiveiry' has not Fied out. Over fn SORE S'“FF Jo ! progress when natlons take more poliey of the a'fi.':fl:'o Whether for pro:|Arkansas we learn that & number of pride in thelr conversational powers |tection or teRCInE o e Cont 4| men helped thelr wives gather in the than n thelr fighting abllities, remain in i R o e Gt |corn crop.—Nashville Banner. THER exposure and hard olicy would he left “te expert de-{ mprovement of the Chinese situ: Twentieth Century Shakespears, egrmlnlllcn upon economia. princi- o Mnltlon co clnlla yt mufihu o jom: our collars When from the north @s bolsterous|® g, ¢he * Johnstown Democrat|came back badly frayed.~Richmond chill 18 sent (democratic) remarks, the wer | Times-Dispateh. ‘Wae hear sad mortals say, which President Harding has asked —— . o) win fer upon him and his| A physiclan says that sleep is a *Now s the ter of our discon- g:f-i';f-'fi;"g;'omu Am§ hlblt.» ut ons 80 tmpullr with the tent!'— Sommission, that of deslaring “duties| houses of Congross tnat we noed not o o d imposts, oar a —St. Paul We can't play golf today! I onarean by the Conatitution.” and | Pioneor Press. Real Enjoyment. the g“ Eaul ,fl::‘;m::.{.'. “Tempestuous _emotions, beauty, 'C w Mrs. Cut bestiality, fine writmg, unrefined situ- Did Mrx. Cuinrox enjoy. the' elasyl: cgn’ml":’,;{,‘:fifdm. ations,” & critic writes of a certain cal conoert?” for in new novel. The line of buyers forms the old one of|Cn the right. Don't shove.—Nashville ‘Tennessean, will thank her stars that " . A Conference Feature. One of the many éxcellent features of the armament conference which should have a good bearing on the fu- ture has been the bringing together of men of light and leading in the logislative spheres of their respective countries. The French, the English, the Italian, the Japanese, the Chinese delegates have had long training as legislators, and will return to that life at the conclusion of thelr Amer- ican visit. They have met in Washing‘on on “No doubt of {t," sald Miss Cayenne. | 4 #All the soclety pages mentioned her as among those present.” s FeEY, dent! “Dar ain’ . much inceuragement,” | would put Ar!n ‘::: lln;po fitrs t £id Uncle Eben, “for an effert to tell | the mercy of & 0Red (R N U f whose membera are in their — a bunch of men dat it's wrons to shoot ;i'-«'t' ona by reason of the politioal| Marsha) Feah, “Amarisan obsarve crap, De losers know it already an’ dl:‘l::nm of manufasturing interests| have discoys is never tamy, -:" v of dominatis the ho heal can put added do winnors s mighty bard to con-|CARESHS. Yna’the Omana World-Her: e it theit desiriptions of his : vince. ald_(independent) feels that alli uuevm-uu—wwug%umm M ‘

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