Evening Star Newspaper, January 12, 1922, Page 6

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*'HE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morniug Editien. WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY....Ja1uaty 18, 1029 —_— e e THEODORE W. NOYES,. . . Bditor The Evening Star Newspaper Company M-g od? 114h St. and Penasylvania Ave. ontengs Ol Tt ¥ :‘.‘i‘:.:" :;“”“'fi"lll‘l : Tiret 3 ul ing. etopne Dh 6 oron 0. Losden. Bapint. Star, with the Scndey rorning thia the el il per moath. Or- hta The Evento, +4ition. 1s deliversd hy eutrior vei 2t 60 certs per month; dally anly. zaomth; Sunduy oaly. 20 evnts pe , Be sent by mall, or talephone MALA G000. Collection 1s made by eurriers at tho 424 of each moath. Rate by Maii—~Payadle in Advance. Maryiand and Virginta. Daily and Sunday. 1y 302 0 ¢ e 50 - Automatic Train Control at Last. The long, slow protess of making the steary rallrcads cafe from disasters duo error {8 advanced mat order juet issued by tin Commerce Commission of the larger rallroads, all sections of thz gulres them to show caw 15 why they shouid not td install complete sy=ten: train-control dev this ordes fs & tentativo da ng it manditosy upon t lntes to install the devices by Juir 1 fext. It at the hearing in March the nine ng neacly i railrcads cannot give counvincing rea- | © son why the auteranie train controi shouid net be insts will staad and the 1t of July | wiil be in foree and rai net obeyed will ba subj Thus at last are the A roads brought 1o the po pective safety against the “acciden By ecror’™ which hae fn the past the cauge of theusands of dea the destruction of immense valy property. It since the first automati tr device was preeenited to the railreals la-contr for adoptlon. It was refected : pirimental and unveliail Tt idiculed as subject to derangement waather. It was scorned as depriving the ecngineer of contrdl of his own train, as weakening the senss of re- | bility of the operating force. The devicés were Bot permitted ex- mental insizllation and vet the 2ilroads refused to consider the adop- tion of any of théem on the ground they had not bedn §emonstrated. It was obtiously impossible for in- ventors to bulid railwoy lines in order 15 teat out their apparatus. Put final- 1y certain prosressive railread execi- tives openéd the way for experimenial | ingtailation, ticabiiity of automatic rain control. Of recent years the Interstate Com merce nmission has been sys tamatically studying train wrecks | With a view to ascertaining the do gree to which the element of buman error éntered, and has found a shock- ingly large percentage ©of c¢asés in which mistaken judgment, error of vislon of failure of memory has been . 1ilie basio cause of diesster. In prac- tically all ¢f ticse cases automatic train ¢ontrol-would have lassened if not wholly prevented the chances of aceident. Eveén granting e certain di- &ree of uUndependability dué to the weather, it has been evident that the | automatio device—of whichever of the tried and proved typee-would have| bésn more reifable than the best sy tem of signals with the engineer in; 41l eontrol of his locomotive. The installation of these devices will | @ost a large sum. But that ocost| shouid B8 rated as an insurance| te | 1 the decision { .jbut as i {2enal revoited by the brutal murder at Bel- grade of the profilgate Alexander and Draga, his queen, and Peter, whom the regicides placed upon the throne of Berbia, was hield by his fellow mon- erche to be 80 etained with blood a8 to Do an unfit associate. But the years brought full récognition of Peter's right to rule and to the king himself brougit respect and a large maasure ¢f affection. It may not be a pleasant thing to €it at table with Lenin at Genos, but to bar'him because of the Violence upon which iis government is founded would be merely to mako the nations of Europe ridiculous in the eyes of I!hm who have read their histories. i That conditions should be attached to soviet participation in the cohference is emainently right and proper. No one wiil quarrel with requirement of a pledge that propasanda aguinst other i guvornments shall ceasc, nor will |there ba complaint at insistence that | Gebts contracted by preceding nusshni governmen!s shell be recognized. The; | Urited $tates is even willlng that the | feupreme council shall stipulste that aese G2bts be vecognized as actualt and not werely “polltical” labliltles. |} H The Art Referendum. i hgtonfana Leve o chanee to} | {vote this | Presiden !eentattves ck. They cannof vote for | = Viee President or repte:| Congress, oo for any other r. but they can vote for! ture In the Corcornn Gal | nnial exivbitlon. They! re tnvited to @o 30, They are asked | o file tclr roeerenc, bailot after | d trai wil! be announced. arter. | otes may be fied at the Judging from the past ret. | uls sort and the spectal | ©wown in thé present exhibi bably Le more ithan the box whea the i | i sat { tinterest tion. there will »: ' i are eloscd. % o to the poople of the superfortty 1 nat in scnee an appeal ffom the judg- the Jury of uwards. The ave already been bestowed. = vots I8 In & way o test iv taste. Qomelimen these pup- | ula® voies incids with the awards, rule the nonsprofeesional | yoilow thelr own tast¢ and, hout any guldance Whatever | preferchaes and individual; # art. baliot accordingly. of aroueing interest in the nniaj éxhioition and consequen generally, these popular votes are ed value. Those who go to llery and cast their véles ace: quire & soase of partisipation. They | fare 1ad to study the paintings, to | classity them Into groups, to compare ietyles and schodole and treatments. {They thus gain & Knowledge of art matters that otherwice would be de-| nied them. Thie practice of suf nz exhini- tion paintings té popuiar vote was iraugurated here, and It {e interesting o know that this course is being foitowed {n othet ait centers. Washe ington already has high rank as an and surely when over 10.000 peopls.take pains to attend an exhibition during “voting Wweek” to study tive exhibits and record their prefercnces it is plein te sec that there is here a largd public to support | art displays of all Kinde: The trustees | of the Corcorah galiery have rendered | a valuable service in titus opening the exhibition to an expression of publ:o! taete, i ——at e Duty and Personal Ambition. Palitics is not all a game of self nesa. There are men who piay It upon a much higher level than that of per. advantage and advancement. i i i { | | Two instandts are no% prominentiy in against loss. Every collision costs the aliroad mahy theusands of dollars in | damages. Tie saving on this score! “ should be reckotied as a sinking fundi i against intetest and principal of the installation expenso. ———————e e The new senator from Pennsylvania | wae prominent in ‘the defense of or-| ganized base ball, in litigation with the | Iate “Feferal” League. There is nol ‘beanch of the United States govern | ment in which the great national game has not enjoyed a greater or less wmeasure of distinguished eonsidera-} ————— Parisian prestige in fashion received | ®» sad sotback when the audaeity which permite a display of stocking became ‘worldwide and unhesitating. ———— i Modern methods of Inatruction tend | #0 make life casier for the school chil * @ren, but harder for eiembers of the board of education. 1 Soviet Russia at Genoa. | Amerieans may bo excused If they | - gafldly wonder at the téo-do being made " #n Europe over the decision of the su- erament of Russia to participate in the financlal and economic conference | 0 bs held at Genoa In March. Ob-| Jeation to Russian participation seems 0 be based chiefly on the ground ehat the soviet is & government of viBlence, that it murdered the czar und hes been gullty of many other deeds which have shocked the mor: #ehse of humanity. Europe should bear In mind that Rusela has not the first government of violence to Be set up on that con. tinent, and the brutal putting to death ©f rulers, revolting as it is, does not time outrage and indignation aroused by such &ots have given way before the logic of economlic eircumstances. WMistory seems merely to be repeating 5teelt in the case of Russia. When Rmglishmen chopped off the head of les T the monarchial governments of éontinental Burope yere so alarmed und@ resentful thet they resolved to have no intercourse With the rebel government sét_up by Cromwell. Yet well lived toO see those who ed the boycott suing for his wor. The sending of Louis XVI and fe Antoinette to the guillotine re- ited in France being declared an y among the nations of the , yet the daughter of one of tae @est of royal lines was given in to Napoleon, who built .empire on the. ruins of the Pennsylvania mineé dwners have been 2 mine fire Which has been birning it is well under. sontrol. sinee Fedruaty, 1859, in an abandened dynasty. All the-worid. was | gangway. The area involved {s absut | him.” famendnient which would ba* {1ated the llquor 17ws since t | deavoring to savd Vi ’women who attain responsible m-x‘! The New Chairman ‘of Finance. one mile long and 1,500 feet wide.| While no estimate is made of the mii- lions of tons of coal consumed, it is _You Cash, and PAINTING right way. We wast to be o Atthe Arms Dacorating stated that the mine commany has 10 kmep our spent more than $8,090,000 in the fight. Conference at Special 2{:’;22%”’.,.5!.";‘;&, 'The ordinary fire counts its life by 2 Prices. | bytroneus tor catimates. hours, but this one, having its being | in the very seat of fuel, has fed on itselt for more than a half century.|; Firefighting, under such circum- stances, takes on the character of an endurance contest rather than the fe- verish activity which marks the battie with fire above ground. A few yoars after this Sumniit Hill fire etarted an open cut was made in the involved area, which stemed to isolate the flamey for a time, but finally they loaped the cut and have never betn ended since. Within the lagt dozen years or so @& concreteand. clay barrier, about twelve feot thick, 170 teot deép and 700 feet long, was HARRY W. TAYLOR CO. Phome Col. 1077. XLIX—Basil Miles. gation to the limitation of armament conference, Basil Miles, was & wi cholce on the part of the State D partment, as has been proved by the excellently smooth manner in which the conference has been carried out. No hitceh has occurred In the physical plans that were devised before the delogates assembled to make posdible the successtul manipulation of the meetings, and the methods worked out for the machinery of the conter- 13¢ ~For expers Pe: nced commercial belp, lonal Forsa: ice Byreau. Before buying a car phone Franklin 3860 and get the and Return tullt, which Feuras to have checked G'M:h 'fl:“ reen lDl;lllOfl highly by ail SUNDAY. " the progress of the fire. ol e foreign visitors who have had = There {a somoething about this cease. | eXPorlence with other such affairs. JANUARY 15 new reduced pl'lceS on a]l ’ ledsly burning firo which grips the f;::g:;:;‘;hn-flafuu must : il ekl imagination. 1n anclent times various DL imilur Excursion 3 . ‘ 5 " 5 Last July, onl; 13, April tempies had firos which Were supposed | nag reivod in Aoy “f'l‘_":'“:‘f‘r’;; Lv: Washington. .. . ..12:30 A.M. BUICk mOdels fronl never fo go out. The ever-buraing arcund the world, Re drafted into Arrivz in New York in Early tamp hes been a sort of symbol fm,isx;e :::ltl‘cah.og the &tate Departmeit l-.r-lux - constency throughout the agos. Taere ! giveqn ‘;;.';'m:::lsulfi.rz"fiel&h .p’on‘lr':g 1 > ,.‘:.":.;Kmm R R et somathing inspiring, too, in the | the stage for the confesomcc ™ 1ns R N ok Tareut ad Bireot 8[ O ceaseless @etivity with which plain | DAL vau not to help in outlining the Giptusrny B merson rme j prologue or libretto or chooaing the dramatis personas, but to prepare the eoiting and act in the capadity 0f stage manawer. As ussislant to Mr. Iletcher last summer, hie duties {were inany and varied, and entalled {an animaginable amount of detall. H. outh and vigor and capacity for gete ing things done, gettlng them done a4 they should be done wnd when the, shewld Le done wade hi : 1 Liberty Street (down staudard time, same Tickets on Sale Friday and Sat- urday Preczding Esxeursion Ses Flyer, C 1t Ticket busiiess men have fought the Summit Hil mine fire. In & contest with an| elemental force man has at least held | 18 own. N P ——— Gov. Davis on Prohibition. Tiae Virgloia legislature met yester day and reccived & message from Davis. Tils ia 1 from & press | report firem Rlchmon & boerites™ ev he said, are open! faunting their daflarce of the br hibitisn taws of the st i Gov, Davia croatad a p: on’ by proposing A 1620 M St. N.W. ““The Home of the Buick’ “YWhere Service Ts Paramount™” | 1 § a:i- “q 3 onference, e of having them iitie jout and arranged to acoommodate (he #exalons and committen nd all that went v th B couvenies for gRtcs and ac tion for theland other extra-curricvlum affairs, public at the plenety eessions, all of | Mr. Miles went to Oxford, where he which involved many minor detalls| studied the economic resuits of the that would pase unnoticed by the on-{ American revolution at Balliol Col- lookers. bul whioh were hecessary!iege. From there he went directiy for the proper functioning of to St. Petersburg, @ 1905, to Lo an | meeting. ~ M2 obtajned the use of ! attache at the American embaesy un- that part of the Navy bullding in!der Ambassador George Meycr. Later which the delegations _ have their | he was made third secretary of the offices suparvised the greut work of embassy und scon after was rent (o transforming the rooms fnto sultable! take csition in Berlin un- otfices Bnd arranged for tha cars 0f! der Am © Charlemagne Tower. the newspaper coriespondents, wiih{ On his retirement Dasil Miles w wotk room, telephonss and telegraphgiven the second kecre connections, ete. Kesides this, he had | Mexico, but hefore proceed o mee to a vast amount of printingcalled to Washington by Vot | 'and srrange for And Bupervise the|Omfice Department and given the posl- | Inla from an | borzonael, the great number of people | tion of supervi of forelgn matls. 8ed by by- nceded to run the machifery of the|wWhile in this oftice he was very in- | conference in all tta ramifications.!atrumental in reorganizing ihe parcel The muny lttle things that haveipost servic and played an important | cotiie under his hand are too numerous | part on the committee that wrote the | to try to enumerate, but they have'first postal sivings regulations under | been dons and in such a thorough {Postmaster General Frank Hitch 3 {manner us to male them seem alniost! Agter that he automatie, When the conference started No- vember 12, Mr. Miles becam tary lo the American delega! i 2 | " BASIL MILEN. M—<Press the dele- | natitutional MEN’'S WEAR Adding More “Pep” With FURTHER REDUCTIONS —To Our— Semi-Yearly Clean Up 130 Men’s and Young Men’s Golf and Sport Suits Broken lots of our entire stock—just the opportanity you have waited for. Priced for quick clearance. $33 2 and 3 Piece REMNANTS! Suits 0dd lots left from this season’s Our selling—note the price redactions: - 8 Golf Saits, formerly ‘ ntire 1 { fice thowe who, he said, ' 1y dry” and “fersonrlly wet.' As'a cotrective mensure, the exccu- yiva ured the legisiature {5 provide | for an améndment to the conatitution requiring each aspirant for public offics to swear that he has not via- ment of the and that he in the future. whteenth not brea ture.” Gov. Davis tol general Resembly. impanding degeneracy o pocrisy and law evasion. The legisiature may not respond to Coy. Devis' recommendation, but somethlng of value has been added to the dlecustion of the prohidition Gues. rved for two mber of C during he ¢uarge that there are men “politieally dry” but “personally wet” | besidex all the duties involved in drafted into the | atside of Virginia. Indeed, 'hg:";;""- £ es undrioek {diplomatic service and sent to Russia | - > sl ant to John Gurrett, the se G } many states and 100, (are general of the conference. ard | S The ontand-out wets—|in tiat capac handled thoee who are both politically and pen | Achinery of the sonally wet—stress the charge in thelr | spondence, the records, the mi campaging, and assert that prohibition the mealings And the bul as a pubiie policy derives sc e il e strength from the support of men w i e for th enge o o P accounts of the c secretly evade the law, cndlesn nuiber of other de: hi'mén should be exposcd and | stantly thifted to his shoulder: w lon, but {aoting editor of tt in that iy, 1916, he wae ag to be Nation's Business. ! \ was an eyewit: {of the arsencl # Irevolution in 1917, and found himself in the thick of ‘he fighting that fol- lowed. T however, was no new experfence for him, as he h:d been an onlaoker st the rev. ong of 1¥u5 {and Qurinz years of | service in Ruesia. Wien America | storming | t§ 1 i ! and been responsi 0 b - pi chere they | Although Mr. Miles ik only just foreed to take thelr piaces where they | o S tour. venrs ‘old, hib_cxporionee | entered the war, his work Leink over. | Belon, Wets in pritvat act i ng. e practice | potn as an organizer and In thecative [he made a trip to Siberia to report | shou!d be %éts in public profession. |p.si'tons. “nd nis many ¥ on ¢on ons there, Lut véturned to! dipiomatie service, made hi: ifled to take Over a position i anding such varied dut They are provably met numerous | for .'}"'thl:f;n RIllpehciny b0 2 5 orcefy soneilty made it p anywhere. £o0 much attention now h' to accomplish things in a hurry. fixed upon the prohibition law and its| Afier gr]aduaur«g from szi S { £chool and the University of Pennsyt- evasion, men of consequence encugh | TERCO! QUL SN { METRILE Of T to aspire to public office find It Necés: | noth a'hlétics and literary pu #mary to walk straight and suppress| DIGEST OF FOREIGN PRESS \ Values Up to $65 Petrograd again to hecome gecretary of Mr. Roots commissicn, composed | {of Gen. Scotr, Admiral Glennon and | other representative Americans, which | was pushing friendly pelations with Russia. On returning to America in| 1917, Mr. Miles was commirsioned by the State Department to form, for the | first time, a division 6f Russiun af.{- tairs, and became ite chief. ] Their hypocrisy militates against nmli;'.,‘h; ary cause. I3 any impalse to double-cross the public. | The fact Is warthy ot note, though | perhaps not very signficant, that the! |ingly finds 1t “gtfcuit not to helieve that the breaking down o? the Cam -Penrose dsHasty must pro ning for Amertcan pol " And it o happeas fortunataly, the Urand Raplds Heruld (iudependent) r hat Renntor McCamier has a unusually splendid equip: pacity for thle eupremely DOBt. ¢ ¢ ® and a wester tlons in politics are notthoss wh affec: extremes in mannish fashions. | TR e een PO RIS —— i et i = = o % mic Aspest hardly lese Important th Accidents which have reduded Mr.iin. presidency itself,” i3 the chalr- George Harvey {o temporary uncon- manship of the Senate finance com- stiousness did not happen 860n enough |mittes. The death of Benator Penrose to be of any serviee to the Qemocratio Jeft {t vacant, and the &uccession, “Prodably the most powerful posi- 332, 838 and $38 ....... 1 Dark Green Spe-t Suit, size 38, formerly $40 . ... furthermore, evidence. 0 iwtr. {under tha time-honored sonidrity rule,' way of vefres: 1 Brown Mixed Suit, 17 Gov. Sproul of Pennsylvania has| [EDSEEIGS SN SN {goes to Menator Porter J. MeCumber| dlr. M size 39, 1 genatotial aspirations and a large fol- Philadelphians, after considering|of North Dakota. Thus for the first °e"“, 3 ,f';‘ rulelu;;"lde‘ formerly $38 s a lowing at home. Doth when Benator |,on oniployment problems, mention §18 |time [h sixty years that impoftant|edes: “but there ie no rcason to ba 1 Gray Stripe Suit. size 16 . Knox died and when Scnator Penroso |, weck ag a living wage. Philadelphta |committee will be directed by & west n‘?ur_hla‘d' i | 38 long, dled the governor had opportunity 0l e oo ors fimons as a vonservative !mmr That in ftself a number of sy '!; & pré. | Iomarl;& uaw P of gratify his desires. Ile had only to!cm. Iwriters regard as “not & Dleasant| farmers their tnnings, and the farne 1 Dark Gray Worsted Suit, 2 reach out and take the prize. Many | BT | prospeet b{o‘rklh: ::at:?n aia(e;.‘ 'nxc:\ noy be as geflsh ag t ivdux_;v - vize 35, e % h of the taxes an 'y it is no longe thought ho would do this, ahd kome | ;0 " TIIIGT T o) to{besatbe of thelr vast Industrial and that one sige ia | T Light Stripe Flammel Suit ] advised him to do it. But on bothi ., - 1 1 : financt stitutions are vitally af- L » % t the temptation be-| {beraiize his pay roll in crder to en-)l"m’ by fiscal legitiation.” But when { tize 38, . ! e " i t “Lhe a better gere: H :t:w:a :‘!‘\0 priee Without condition oh :m'"'t T eimetion pleto e ‘“"“’!:-"n"a“-ué'éim'.‘ cxlo kp.«‘:.‘:er";:, l‘;:nl :’:i flg""’?fb;n ‘Conxress‘i( and; en % nere] : :’;‘. Herringbone Suit, $1 6 { % ofitable teamw. di i G i 1 S . 0 loc usly In the T oy B e e e sopi of| Tho German mark has risn n | (0781 RSP (8L 13 oL Recialed (o) RARCHRARY cotaifac il P, 0 e - and ! Y e s H nd, &8 the Omaha World-Heraid (ine » Pennsylvania at Harrisbure. “‘“"e' but not ehough to enablo the juet as much as it possibly can for| GA% ke (s Crmahs World-Tieraid (in: ciov. Miller of New York is working out some state reforme which are sub. Jecting him to criticism in several sec- tions of the state, He is being told that his course may prevent his fe- notmination. Asked gbout the matter, the governer replied that he was thinking about the stale's affair just now and not about renomination. These are the sort of men needed in office at this time—men whe are thinking less of their o%n than of the people’s affairs, and giving tha best that is in them to the dlacharge of the duties they assumed When thes took the helm. ‘THe people's affairs we'e never more lmportant than no¥, 1 { | prome councll to invits the soviet gov- | and have seldem, If ever, bsen so Qif-{Friend North Wind, I confide to you ficult to handle. 1 ———e : Porhaps Mr. Hays could draw more than a hundred thousuhd @ year from | | Were 1 compelled to spend the day l(he intereats o citizens” many editors felt that an {especially auspiclous moment had ar- irived to break what the New York: | tral states have torn a leaf from (h book of wisdom of the cast. Not 5o long ago-it was the east ti electing its senators and the President of Germany to contémplate kis salary with much pespect. " "”"v’“ Otg.'g Cray Win- eight O'Coats, ‘ormerl, 2 ‘coats kept re. iTimes (indepéndent democraf) called! B Iy 838 ............ SHOOTING STARS. A roollen Tule ot ‘seniorith: TIE aomdition fo coasis, hem. But | 7 Gray Herringbone Fall f That practice “has alwaye been, {18} Sondition e changinz. and with | Weight O°C. | traught ewith potentlal” dangers o | it the eontrol and complexion of the | ‘ottts, BY PIILAXDER JORN: ‘ Teat mnzn‘itude." ‘lhe “dhruord Senate. 5 i Form e s oufant contihues and poltical for- e : Roating Boreas. tune now <changes the potential to| An All-Women's Bank. £ taln, {1 New av - . e The North Wind rears. Tt %ho shall | Soarnal.ce e ety T4¥ST | Whether the all-women's bank, just blame MoCumber possesses no | opened at Cleveland, Ohio, will be a ends, “Mr. uch knoWledge of the revenue needs of the country at large. and of its séparated revehuc-producing powers, fot of the national field of human mctivity and investment as to war- t his selection If the coatest was | Ingtitutioh. i an open one betWeen men of known| Hanke are not nearly so awesinspir. | fitness,” And, with the New York, ing as théy once were, and are daily i Herald tindependent) and others, the | heaoming more human, but there are Journal-Courier maintains that ‘the| many women Who have not vet found mantlé should have fallen upon Sen-! it out. 'The Stocking and tfe old tea. ator 8moot ak the better qualified. pot are much more familiar, and there McCumber's geo- suceess or not remains to be seon, but the tdea will, no doubt, appeal 1o the women who 'stfil fecl 2 bit shy and self-conscious In dealing with what has hitherto beena etricty man-made ; s mannets when he does that same! 1 Mediom Weight 8rown O'fi;:. size 38, former- l Out where the akies are cold 2nd gray, Amid the enow and stinging aleet, With not a hope that I shall meet A friend to pause with smile €0 gay And cheer e on my groping way— 17 S14 $22 $14 1 Mediam Weight Brown Mixed O’Cost, sise 40, formerly 832 ...... % & Winter ‘Weight Brovia O’Ceats, assoried sixes, formerly 348 .. 13 Winter Weight Gray Mized Couts, assorted sizes, The world would find me rearing, too! Not Registering Well. A “'1 thought those photographers were | cession to the finance coMimlttee , the Chattanooga News | eompilmentary when they sent around | dhairmaneh) th pietures it te could get a good | SRR THEE Lo Rent ,,‘:mi fdemocratic] thinks, fof they “would | com sl s Aitat oT e | formerly $38 ............ e scenario depicting {ho bale L S0 T e of e S aere s otila b Iy el i ! . ; pator Sorghua. advised. . rect ai al Ineti- rize 38 a breadth adventures of x ‘eampalgh | BTSSRI e minar | stesa. of ‘Mecumber tutlon from the @round ub, for al: i et managet. Wes., 1T = tractors of the North Daketa senator | thougn women have gi besond the caates 1 A R o Yes. Whea 1 saw m on theithe catastrophic cvent” as the Co- | gxperimental stage in their partici- 5 Davk Gray Ulsters, ec- seréen T became convinced they had |lumbla (S. C.) State (democratic) in- | pation in business, it has been in a sortdd sizes, 12 Girman chemists have eaceeeded played a trick on me to spoll my popu- | LIPrets it. 18 “for the tariff,makifg | gubordinaté capacity. In the direction { fi “en - in manufacturing gold, taey mey vely | p i ¥ PoPU-| committed to have HASAng| Saaimentaenant of Intpe a1talia tiiey.| 6 Brown 3 : ’ { aon! ci PO - ar jus! 0 eir way. b flm:hvur g ?flfn ::” . ; ey oeu how. vo frame tasima | o roskiTribabe;(republican). vy formerly $35 SI 8 D CIOHI Ex d and prestigo without @ny further 65 Jua fTunkins eays o lasy man i8{ 120 TN penent of those for whom| 1¢ the Washington conference sucs | ety PP ress es Cept periments (n military gasses. soviet government a8 any Xind of a! goverament that happens to fit o par.| ticular emergency. ————————————— A nation is tempted to regard a sub. marine as wicked only, it the hands of an enemy. —————t Pt Persistence. Evéry individual can take a lesson in persistence from the fight which i { i i making for sixtytwo vears to control for that length of timé én one of their properties. News dispaiches state that, although the fire is etll] burning, This venerable fire has been raging TR T least apology he can offer for n Lenin's disposition is to definé algoin classical -tusic?’ “X don't object to hearing it, but I8 Gon't like to run the risk of getting into conversation about it and being ealled upon to pronounce some Rus-|3 #lan composer's name.” man seems to Ahument, simply because he talks so. loud an’' fast nobody kin interrupt 1 Ceeds in limiting the submarine peril it ml‘% ta conda Etand “What e 60 impressive as the even- | ing hour?”’ asks a mag! ne wriier. { How about the kilowatt houri—1 Peoria Transcript. California _has beén having beavy | flood: obliged to bo good-natured. It's the|tariffs are tramed.” There is still a ot | ctumb of comfort, however, which the Springfield R'e?uhuem (inde ent) holds out to “Wall street” end eastern financlal interests, for, it points out, Me. | Cumber comes up for resglection in No» vember, and_"if hé should be defeated back home ‘Wall strest’ could find com. pensation in the fact that Senator Bmoot would suéceed him.” But the fiy i1 that ointment I8 that “if anything uudm{ should then happen to Afr. Smoot, ‘Wall | strest: would have a fit. The republican| ext in line After Mr, Smoot is Robert 21, La Follette of Wiatonatn.” However, to the Baitimore Sun (inde. 4 pendent democratic) -“the chief fact “As 8 rule.” confessed Mr. Cumrox. { about the promotion of lcCumber to vacant chair in the finance commits 16 that it means & break in the | | | i i © the automobile.—Ana. NO CHARGE $1 FOR ALTERATIONS Sidney West= = 14th and G - _I’__‘:J. — | g his share of the work. A Mean Plaything. . The submarine’s a curious toy That cones up for arraignment. It serves the naighbors to annoy And brings ho entertainment. Classical Dificulty. “You admit that you try to avold as o 14 Eureka Aate Paper Vesis, Fformerly $4 Jdaho rodbders who got oniy 11 oents found the safe wasn't what it raing and s. One' feels certaln was cratked up to be.~Muskegon Chronicle. that the wateér was beautiful.—Toledo Blade. 1t the farmar survives all of the cone ferences to bé held over him theére 18 hope for. his futuré.—Indianapolis Some séém to think it helps get n\o| ew year started it they put in lots of ! alcohol.—Detroit News, i One of the principal reaséns w (hes glad Christmas epirit doesn’t last l oligarchy Whote by John Shérman, Justin 8. Mormil, o T AaHeh kind Holes Pen McCumber is not of theit mold.” This is, indeed, & significant change, agrees tae Memphis News Sdimitar (Independ- ent), which means ‘transferring the Franship from the eAst to the west, m the representativés of big bysiness to the representative of farming and agricultul 0. & ) Di "sometimés," sald Uncle Dbdan, “a ve all de best of an News. t longer than & Wesk is the print. T Rnowiodge of the saving you could have made it you had waited until after Cll& 10 buy your giftse— Kansas Oity E mualufln 'rhlca ‘;’:‘; & lum! £patoh (independent) ascord-

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