Evening Star Newspaper, February 18, 1922, Page 6

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gfi;fin&mmm& National Capital. With the granting by trafic during the years of the war, s RS THE EVENING STAR,|easlly clrculate 3,000,000 volumes a|mingled.on flelds of France. At Ary year. 2 lington rest the bodies of many of With Sunday Morning Edition. The library needs to be relieved | those who féll over there. One body of WASHINGTON, D. C. from the present restrictions that con- an unidentified soldler has been BATURDAY. . .February 18, lml — fine its service to the work that can brought back and interred with the be done from an overcrowded central | most impressive ceremonies ever library @nd one branch, and be per-|known in this country in front of the THEODORE W. NOYES.....-BULOT |mitted to establish and conduct the amphitheater, which represents itself SR P = mnecessary branch libraries and do in, the reunion of the sections, a physical e Evenlng Star N o Pary | and through them the whole work that | symbol of which Wil be afforded, by New mc{eflnoé-é?inlli? h.\":mn st its constitution fits it to do. the Memorlal bridge. m"" ‘Office : 16 Regent St., Landon, England. The conception of the library as “a| Season after season this work is de- sunnlement of the public ‘educational [layed. Some ‘day, of course, it will —_——— m!r':"-b;"gnmflgml‘{l m’g system” is a-high one. The library|come. It is needed now. Its necessity n_ 0& n:m month; daily ‘:)nly.' 48 cents per has been built up on this basis, and its | was plainly proved on Armistice day. Gere miay be gent by matl, .,,".',m, 3 future will be along the same lines.[No one questions the ultimate con- :90- -~ S::},“,‘.f;’,’,’ ml' made by carrlers at the | “The whole work that its constitution | struction. And yet session atter ses- p—— fits it to do"” comprises alding the aver- | sion sees this essential enterprise laid Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. |age man and woman'and child in the {aside on the plea of economy, as Maryland and Virginia. daily life. Books are things to be used, | though there will ever come a time Dally and Sunday..1 yr., $8.4 70c | as well as read and loved. The book | when in a strictly utilitarian spirit oy only 1yr., $6. appetite sustains as well as entertains. | Congress can appropriate for an art The whole city—including Congress— | symbol, however practical and useful. must and will help. Now is the time to start this work. Mr. Mann's vision will not fade. The _{vision of all others who see this Na- ————————— Mr. Hoover Should Worry! Secretary Hoover can well afford to ignore the “challenge” of Mr. Liggett Members of the Senate subcommit- | Of Chicago that the entire matter of tee in charge of the District appro-| Russian relief be submitted to a con- priation bill will acquaint themselves | gressional investigation. Mr. Hoover ‘with the needs of the District by mak- | @oes not need vindication by a commit- ing a personal or “close-up” inquiry. |tee of Congress or any one else in This is well. The people of the Dis |order to retain unshaken the confi- trict welcome this inquiry, and they |dence of the American people that the return thanks to the senators for the | funds intrusted to him for relief of the nterest they show in making it. There | starving Russians have been well and has been no exaggeration of any needs | Wisely administered. The name Hoover of the District for the purpose of at-|is a synonym the world over for tempting to obtain appropriations. | prompt and effective aid to the hungry There has been rather an understate- | and distressed, and has been for more ment of those needs because of the|than seven years—seven years during overburden of the people by local and | which never a breath of scandal at- federal taxes, because of the uncertain | tached to the disbursing of hundreds and unsatisfactory fiscal relations be- | of millions of dollars. Mr. Liggett, it tween the national government and |is to be feared, is merely dazzled by a the District of Columbia and because | fleeting hour of spotlight. of urgent demands for the strictest{ The one-sided controversy would economy. Because of these factors the | hardly be worthy of notice were it not needs of the District have been under | for the danger that some uninformed and not over stated, but there is a|persons may be misled into diverting American citizenship will not fade. But visions will not span the Potomac. A “Close-Up” Inquiry. and afford communication between the capltal and the great cemetery where assuredly in the future the people will gather in”multitudes to do honor to their dead. Let the vision be now made a reality without further pro- crastination. - 1922 Customs. One of the features of the times is the membership drive. Clubs do it and everybody is doing it. The man or woman who is not a member of some- find a person who is not @ member of e stressed without grave danger and | they would be used to best advantage. | lodges he was pointed out in the com- without inviting disaster. Ti_:e American Relief Administration, { munity as a “joiner,” was looked on | for y::;s haeur:yu;s&fl;g:‘:hl:rg:"z;ra Garden. To this proposition, Director | Senator Phipps of Colorado, chair- | within which has b en co-ordinated, | with some suspicion as to the sobriety Ee.l';"tfl. V-m Which seasonal flower Hess has given his earnest support. Mondav at > under the leadership of Mr. Hoover, all major efforts to relieve the Russian famine, is the only organization which has functioned with any degree of ef- ficiency. It has succeeded in getting foodstuffs and medicines through to the famine areas and in getting them through in time and in quantities to be ‘effective. Other efforts either have man of the subcommittee on the Dis- trict appropriation bill, and his col- leagues will look into the water situa- tion. We believe that they will find that this situation is bad and reflects discredit on the national government, ‘which is charged with the overgovern- ment of the District of Columbia. The facts that have been presented to Con- gress bhave been agreed on by Army ‘engineers and capable civilian en- gineers, who are united in the opinion that the situation demands a second conduit. In the matter of the schools the in- wvestigating senato'~ will find the con- ditions as bad as they have been repre- sented to Congress. They will find an- tiquated school buildings that are in- sanitary or are perilously close to the lne dividing the sanitary and the in- sanitary. They will ind overcrowding of a most disagreeable character. They can profit in this branch of inquiry by the mass of pertinent facts collected by the joint congressional committee investigating =chool conditions. They will find streets broken down commiseration by her neighbors. tain lecture” he probably finds that success. And success is the only |club. standard by which efforts can be measured ‘when it comes to getting food to people who actually ere starv-| ing. While getting food to the starving was the primary interest of the Amer- ican people, who furnished the money with which Mr. Hoover worked, they are not likely to be seriously dis- pleased because the soviet government at Moscow was not given an oppor- tunity to profit from their philan- thropy. If anything, they are just a 4jttle proud because Mr. Hoover had the backbone to tell Lenin and his crew that they had to keep hands off. Active supporters of the soviet goy- ernment and some of their wishy- washy friends in this country may not like it, but they are not the ones who put up the cash which is keeping alive millions of Russians who, with- out it, surely would be dead before spring. And, that being the case, to borrow an expressive phrase from the street, Mr. Hoover should worry! John Hay. John Hay was much in evidence at the armament conference. In all dis- cussion of China and Chinese affairs “the open door’” was used very illum- inatingly. The phrase is his. He coined it, employed it successfully, and bequeathed it to the world. It is likely to endure. Mr. Hay was much more than a portions of a boundary dispute. returned home at such an unseemly hour as 12 o'clock, after the last Belt line car and the last Georgetown plain that there had been an initia- around. and which have not been repaired dur- burned at sea by German naval offi- ing the post-war period. During the war people had no thought for any- thing except winning it, and the de- terforation of the streets has gone on since the war because of the great number of pressing needs growing out of the war The investigators will find that these streets are lined with houses whose owners are paying as ‘high real estate taxes, considering to- gether the assessed value and the tax per hundred dollars of that assessed value, a» are being paid in most of the *es of the United States and higher than in many cities where the taxable resources are more fruitful than in the District of Columbia. The result of this investigation which Sena- tor Phipps and a number of his col- phrasemaker. He had studied widely leagues promise to give to District and deeply before his supreme oppor-|} ' matters will without doubt be en- tunity came. He had dipped into litera-| Motion picture celebrities have not tribution to the fuel supply. Engineers will be prepar:i to con- to its water supply., which the most exacting censor could object. ‘ THE EVENING 'STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O,. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1922. o 5 tional Capital as. an inspiration to|houses have for years been among | Shipment ‘to state agencics schocls Potomac E l ectrlc _nmflm;;;:-g,j_?' f,m,‘“"nlz,d? I ? back, stiff . ts, sprains and strains, bruiss, They will not link ‘up the two banks | houses of the Department of Agricu g:::’ngtgtr‘fiv:?"""y where they cnn' Appllance Co. ;umaftud J s a great many things. Dues are count- | this city. 2 A Capitol, has recently proposed to ed in household expenses just as coal,| These visiting scientists, business|congress an artistic scenic develop- tional ceme- | an exhibition conservatory should be rosditojtie Arlinetoninate | maintained at tho resent site of the tery. garden, easy of access for tourists, Open National and international associa- { has been pretty well shown. thing is a strange being. It is hard to[tions of botanists, flower growers, k& 9:15 A.M. bread and gas. A few years ago @ man | fegeral departments and members of | ment of the grounds about the Capi- who was a member of a church and | Congress have for years discu ed | tol which includes a. suggestion that also @ member of & lodge felt that he | the idea that the appeal to Wash a large tract of ground on the shore ® t a meeting place for those in- - had done his fall duty in joining, and | 1ot S & s B R ould b stressed | of the Potomac river, south of the point beyond which economy cannot | funds from the channel through which {if a man became a member of two Practically all that is needed is to | Capitol, and between the Washington and reliability of his’ citizenship and | ghows can be held. It has been re- [\ osontative John W. Langley of Ken- his wife was probably the object of | peatedly pointed vut that the loca- | reoRttative Sonn I LARETY i oo on Now, a man who is not a member of | culture would give wonderful Indiana, one of the most active mem- enough things to take him downtown | petus to flower-growing, besldes pro- | yers of the appropriations committee, every night in the week is a piker, | o/5,veq by people from all over the | ;ort of Architect Woods® plan. | and when he goes home, instead of | continent. ‘Then, too, the propagating gardens, H getting what used to be called a “eur-{ _ JCCCE §oth House and Senate | idd flowers and decorations for the || T W failed or have achieved only minor |his wife has not yet returned from the | whom realize the refining influence, I pelence and the development of ! very interesting exhibition which |/ ~ Formerly when a man had a poker | the plant life of the cou;ltry r"::‘ gew“?r Ihh‘e many thausfindfi of touristni da) vould result, have repeatedly prom-|‘'n ‘ashington annually have an op- engagement requiring his attendance | Would “evE VS b o legislation. | portunity to see. These greenhoudts he went to “the lodge,” and when he Metropolitan street car and the last car and the last Anacostia car had turned in to the stable, he would ex- tion. Now he goes to “the club,” and some modern wives seem almost to feel disappointment in husbands who K get home before the milkman comes | the chrysamhemulrin. ‘;‘sd |gng;: g{:;m U | significant outlay for an exhibition The kaiser's magazine chat with|An annual exhibit of these chrySanthe | jyeq excellence each year. William Bayard Hale was carefully | tirely inadequate to display the varieties It would be entirely unfair not to| , and cers. As a consistent wood-chopper, | Year,after Y087 SO 8 N eingle weel | Smple the Rosarlans, in making Wilhelm will at least be glad that his|~ Similarly, each spring the departmerit | the capital of flowerdom. In the A0W. llection o: | Ameri Rose Society’s garden here - 9 Somvereation resuied In & sight con. | e amarile g A covecien o | Aertoln Rort socitbs gaen st See Our Announcements in Tomorrow’s Papers cede that Washington’s snow supply | has anythi: was for @ few days out of proportion | FICTPS PUE Toueure, and exhibited here | This work is co-ordinated with that ] may be relled on to contain nothing to| 0ive amaryllis bloom. lwi _'v[-:mp\!m' ATTERY REPAIR'Rather Than Lay Off Planned to Make Washington Flower Center of the World W ASHINGTON is already rec- | modern conservatory will afford them | the dull season, we'e Guot- mapanfcoh Prices on | {15 Slcial Prices to briuk in painting, paperhang- AMMEEARNVICEJOT OR[ &Pl::':e‘:i'ng.‘ E-;{.whn::n:m_omm. ling and upholstering. Can| | “we:serve you? 160222 U Strest NW. | HARRY W. TAYI;PR Co. i 1396 10-400 PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING. Geo. Plitt Co., Inc., oot |— "= sy o st wow pheme Cob dom X ' RHEUMATIC. ACHES QUICKLY RELIEVED Better than THE racking, agonizing rheue Conscientious Work | Special '—our skilled _decorators _in capital of the western |flower culture to the American public. hemisphere, apd only very * % & x| small appropriations by Congress are | Nestled at the foot of Capitol Hill ° needed to make this city-the mecca is the National Botanic Garden, the of flower lovers from all over the|outgrowth of the Wilkes exploring world and to assure a fuller enjoy-|expedition in 1838-42. In the naval ment by the American people of the | appropriation act of 1836 the Presi- really wonderful achievements by |dent. was authorized to, send out a' mate sce ' qucly e by | § the Average— H e ‘ oty e Sl o the [ 50N a wol:'l‘: Lva fous gl&n':“w be the un?!! be'a credit to you terious forces of life and nature as ;rmhem. vessels. A horticulturist and ’ nd to prodice marvelous floral speci- | botanist named W. D. Brackenridge ! and to your camera let L i best pain and ache liniment. Ask your us do your developing and neighbor. 7 botanical scientists who are devoting | surveying and %xploring expedition thelr lives to so gulding the mys- | to the Pacific and South scas in gov- brought back lar, ollection of o ens that will be a delight and a ge_collect 5 o natural history spechacns. From this | ——cool mornings and even- ; e e will “give benefit to future generations. has grown the present Botanic Gar- | Heater Y eell by its th Pou work that you can In this city are three distinct|den, “which is today a museum of! - ou can Just by .hul | Jon proud to exnibit to groups of greenhouses under three|Plant life of every variety that can stimulating odor flflt‘n.“mm o Your Zriends. Work that distinct government agencies, each l’p forced to grow in this climate. you . Sloan's Linimeat is clean comes from this Shop is of which serves a distinct purpose.|This garden is sending out, through, i o ining e E EnNEILLT All three of these groups of green-|Mmembers of Congress and by direct will not fade nor discolor ints that we have made. PSame day” service if you wish. “The Nationa! Remembrance Shop (Mr. Foster's Shop) 14th St ©F 2T the chief attractions for tourists ‘seeing Washington.” They are the | F00ts, cuttings and young plants to encourage their production in the bago, sciatica, lame National Botanic Garden, the green- S‘,‘;fch“;“‘m;{;,‘ lg:““"‘,gng“gof;e'd;:; The Botanic Garden’s main consery- ' the hundreds of parks and circles and | 81ory 18 fifty-five vears old and in 607 14& St. claim in delight and whic P | the director of the hat ton the most e garden, has se Branch Store, Washington L"‘e';‘:&’é.ffc'{i’;“fn‘Yx?:“&';‘im“ 05t | eral times made statements at col Rallway and Electrie Bldg., * kX *x 14th and C Sts. N.W. ! The American Rose Society, in co- , Telephone Main 955 with a great arboretum in connection. operation with the Department of|It has been repeatedly tried to move Agriculture, is maintaining a rose glnerkB%!ran!ic Gar({in to fi'“g‘l‘ Cl;-ek ome other suital ace garden museum at the Arlington | oyt °f 0NN THom Tor de- farm, across the Potomac on the|velopment. The will of Congress that | 1 At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. Sloan’ Liniment 5. Bavvn HovsCo & “THE BUSY CORNER® PENNA.AVE.AT 8 TH.ST orists and horticulturists and land- gcapal gardentrs gather each year in| Elliott Woods, architect of the men, flower lovers, officials of the provide what the visiting organiza- | navy yard and the Army War College, tions of botanists and florists have| ;.13 e given over to the Botanic fembers of Congress, including Rep- tion of such a conservatory in the |, piis buildings_and grounds, and grounds of the Department of Agri-| Representative Will R. Wood viding great free shows which would | 3re working on legislation in sup- > | Members of the agricultural com-|whose principal function is to pro- et Et TSR and othcr leaders in Congress, all of o versal delight, the advantage | for the Washington parks, has also a St “ontain one of the best collections of >rehids to be found anywhere in this That people would flock here to|-ountry. This, in itseif, would be a seo & bulb plant show in the early | wonderful treat for the people of the ~ountry if opened to the public in the spring—hyacinths, mnpu,l . l;:';‘:::‘( proposed big exhibition conservatory. crocuses, etc. — roses 14 * % % % : the entire year and chrysanthemums : in the fall, with exhibitions of other w::L ‘t’::“:slmn: ;‘:‘::le‘:"l'ntgh:f‘totx plants in season, is already proved | ., p.ps iy fower and plant develop- - The bureau of plant industrs has 01} none yn which the people are all in- more than twenty years malatained a{ . oqieq. These facts have been cited collection of representative wi.rietles of | 1y gnoy that, with the relatively in- Values - Extraordinary : From Every Department M. Byrn recon o avietiss, scores of which | onservatory,’ Uncle Sam is prepared have since been grown commercially.| o gtage many flower shows of un- ‘mums is held in a small greenhouse, en- —yet the attendance record is broker | nention the efforts of various o s has now climbed o | sanizations of flower-growers, for ex- 8 is, with la :glzll"ledd “’1‘1‘1‘3’;:’—-& trumpet - shaped | havior ,of the roses originated in the |/ anes—haa been pro- | American trade, in order that those - 3!.":'2'5' '¥n3§”gufnh. are native to Sou}g who m-lel imrenedhh‘n, u‘::t::':a.qfic’-:lr:r e o l e QU s bat nowhere else in the world | rose culture may have t = 2 P es s P P _l P 'l' 3 ca. | garding the abllity of the various ag! tar— ages ost age limes— ag ng like the number of “i.|Sorts to withstand climatic conditiens. . rieties been cultivated as by tae Depart- free Ve t gardens throughout the to the public. Flower lovers have %l other tes nited States and is of great value to come here from Europe and the orient to B R deis and fose proviea: see this show. Last season the depart- e . Motion pictures of Muscle Shoals| ment greenhouse for tae first time known | LoTS of n";. c-cvu‘r;e g S Enough to_ botanical students produted a pure| ;¢4 pington Is already the gar- 2, den spot of the country, that it is ey spreading the KOEl Ciower °growing and the cult of flo 0 No whjt the less notable have been the houghout the 1and, and that the De- P acaievements of Dr. Van Fleet in the|partment of Agriculture and the Bo- P The Irish question has at least beer?| development of new roses, of such char- ::II‘A; ?:;23 = ;:eorb%x“hlb:h:%ygnfi l%‘x: reduced for the time being to the pro- | acter gs to draw here rose growers from | (. " gye the whole country bloom. all over the world. This resulted in the | This work without general public Vi nition has been growing for award to Dr. Van Fleet, In 1919, of the | (S0080, "9, o (ime 'has come when a Geog e uinment in puant brecding, | SaE (3%, EROUS Fehull of thess C. H. Wills & Company, of Marysville, gitantue (o the Sonate. ture with & successful novel and a |been as considerate of one another as| he award being made by the Massa- | inany vears of worl. The Waships: TR e very successtul volume of ballads upon | the public has been of them. A declaration by Lady Astor that|homely themes. He had helped pre- \chusetts Horticultural Socety. O he piner’ nations to see his M ichigan' manufacturers of the Wills Dr. W. A. Taylor, long-time chief of | sotanical and horticultural achiev o ht to be_quite a spec- o . service 1s a skilled iob con- | pare tho most elaborate and fnforming | The new chlef of pollcs Ands & great | % I Bec U Pieror Agricaiture have | tacte-for people of tne United Biaics Sainte Claire Motor Car, have honored us firms a general impression of long standing. An honorable and necessary |achieved distinction as a daily jour- calling is entitled to all respect and | nalist. consideration. Embarrassment, how-{ It wasan accomplished and rounded ever, must arise for all concerned | man, therefore, who, a little late in when accomplishments pertaining to|life, entered the fleld of diplomacy, household administration become®80{and, well appreciated and supported highly refined that their possessors|by two sympathetic chiefs—McKinley permit themselves the eccentricities of |and Roosetelt—gave -to the country the artistic temperament. high and valuable services. —_— e Although he had reached a good age The ravages of bootleg alcohol may |2nd done so much, there was a sense - feave a surviving population so tem.|Of Prematureness about Mr. Hay's Sad Comparison. perate that it will co-operate with the |death. His intellectual powers were|A g2y, old-fashioned bunko man prohibftion authorities as a matter of |8till strong, and functloning brilliant. | _Once left me in a plight. natural habit. § Iy. There was much going on in the | So kind and simple seemed his plan, P world in which he was interested, and | It filled me with delight. toward which was prepared to con-|And even though a loss severe Divorce activities have provided the | yrjjyte much in the settlements. 1 suffered; through his guile, eity of Alexandria with & small #imi- | * pis memory is fragrant, as this|I often think, with grateful cheer, estion problemiof itslown: conference has shown; and all the| About his pleasant smile. benefits that may come to China from the opendoor policy will in some %o regard the lack of work as any |measure be associated with his name. ¥ind of a holiday. East and west, he will be long remem. | 1 robbed me, and to my regret o R T, bered. Discourteously fled. Deterioration marks our time! The Appetite for Books. —————e—es=———— | 1t is no more than right Dr. George F. Bowerman, in the | iinner g oyociots Washington's | That even folks engaged in crime ecizan | Of an addEess at the! Butlic eminence as a ter re‘wrt can easily | * gy 11 try to be polite. Library Zuring the ceremonies of pre- ;ass:ln:: himaeiibyglaking noteetithc g senting & portrait of the president of | "¢ *X3tin8 now avallable. Uses of Adversity. b ooard of trustees, declared that the present circulation figures of a niil- lion books a year *‘could easily be in- creased to 3,000,000 and probably 5,- 000,000 volumes, if the library could ‘be permitted so to expand as fully to meet the legitimate demands of what I belleve to be the city with the big- gest book appetite in America.” ‘This is a compliment to the people of Washington which the. average reader will take to himself in @ per- sonal way. The appetite for books is en honorable appetite, and one which can hardly be overdone by most peo-|eral years agg, when the Lincoln taxes ple. To have the appetite for books is| Memorial was under discussion, he S :Il::nt'::lct ,m.": :yn;::‘nld gut 0 be eager for knowledge, anxious to | said he “could see a bridge across the { 1,3 1jiq to be a deadhead. But Xknow what the good and wise men of | Potomac river which would connect The free list is suspended. past ages have thought, and desirous | us with the resting place of the Army JR—— of improving one's self to the limit. and Navy, Arlington cemetery.” Much Disapproval. 3 of Americin biographies. He haa 1y enjoys the progpect. i and the pocketbook. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. A hold-up man I later met. Navy yard men cannot be o Dersuaded He hit me on the head. Millions of Chinese are facing fam- | ment?” ine. The open door will invite the spirit of charity the world over. The Memorial Bridge Vision. Representative Ménn's speech in the House the other day on the bill to make Lincoln’s birthday a legal holi- day in the District expressed the thought regarding Memorial bridge that probably obtains in the mihds of most if not all members of Congress. Describing a visiort which he had sev- else.” The World’s a Show. To describe Washington as “the city | water has flowed down the Potomac| “Do you disapprove of women smok-| can) declares, “this departmental in- :{:ml undertakings in other direc- ns. ) with the biggest book appetite in|between the memorial site and Arling- | ing cigarettes?” . America” is saying a good deal, but is | ton since Mr. Mann saw this mental probably In no sense an exaggeration | picture of the connecting link. The of facts, although no doubt a few other | memorial itself has been constructed. eities might dispute the honor with the | Arlington has become even’more defl- nitely than ever the national place of burial and honor. The great war has been fought and America’s manhood of new branch libraries in various strategic places around the city, and the building up of libraries in the #chools, the'free Public Library over erican principles. The blood of erners and southerners has been | purty reckless aviators.” be for her to learn to smoke a pipe, deal of work to be done and apparent- | looked forward to the day when a large, | and- the world besides. 5 The soldier bonus calls up the old, familiar struggle between sentiment able to get & regular job at anything| not quite measure up to requirements, | “what did not happen Jud Tunkins says we're all inclined A stel to think that the party that's most Because of devotion tp its own 8ys- |and announce, “See all thi is money we | - £ = tem “the Navy felt humiliated when |saved in the last few months” the 0, “ likely to get us appointed to something | 1900, ¢ sweep with Army brooms,” |Indianapolis Star (in epena-r:"' sub- | > is the one that has the best chance of | the Detroit News (independent) Ob-'|mits. ~Furthermore, the New® York saving the country. serves, 80, “pointing to its honorable {World (democratic) points out, w ‘| ot spec T Yes,” replied Mr. Meekton; “the ex-| fruitful sources of official .extrava- ring is_about four t . ns - periment hasn't worked out. Cigar- ce.” .hig-vll Gazette. ok ettes don’t seem to cultivate a liking « ’ . waukee Sentinel, illustrates “the need 3 3 for real tobacco. The only Way Hen. | fos complete Co-ordination of EOVern- |y or man e e by itk In rietta and I can be companionable will | ment purchasing and of standardiza- . ‘has been sacrificed in maintenance of| “Riches,” said Uncle XEben, "‘l::ot (lu.:'.h.)‘ h::“(r&‘: rn(l:d-mn:hm -u‘; only has wings, but dey carries samie | £ sertand “that all serve one péem settied save g the government and Columbl with the appointment as representatives for EDITORIAL DIGEST Washington. . The Man With the Broom.- |mon eood, and not mecessarlly, e We consider ourselves fortunate to have the “It sounds like a madhouse,” com- | fort, as the Atlanta 'Cans tution mented “Hell and Maria” Dawes, di- | (democratic) construes it, is “to dis- privilege Of pmenting thiS car to thiS diS— pense with an army of purchasing rector of the budget, on reading the | Fo0R8, 25N ON, MO, % D he ait: . e . - transcript of his talk to government | ferent departments of the government officials and bureau chiefs at “the sec- | in, the matter of purchasing supplies mm"‘afing dlentele' ¢ b and equipment; to stop as many ond of his famous mourners’ bench {700 Pa PRLCE, 0 o P and one hole conferences,” to use the New York|inrough which the public funds are 1 1 vivune's motaphor, “Undoubtedly 1t | LOUILES el year ahd stch mont 1o Fundamental advancement in design, excel- did,” agrees the New York Globe (in- | waste,” and if he succeeds, the paper ¥ dependent), but as the newspapers thinks, “he will prove himself the lence Of materials an d workmanship an d most valuable man in the Harding ad- view it, his spectacular platform man- | yipjgtration.” That he is making her has been of immense service In | some progress in that direction is the . the introduction of many . novel features bringing before the country one of :al‘:fi!“o;)n;g’k:uln;nmohmfi‘:l:ecg: 3 % . 3 i the sore spots in governmental or- | BBLERE), (05, 29 & Tepuit of 1 com, - and refinements make this, in our opinion, 4anization which make retrenching a “;’“;'1'1"'1"1'.’" flsd P”fila 's u‘.‘n,m‘ d = = Slow DROCEss. auy of the adminie | oo Y ot Shcese, SR | - the finest motor car in the world. as are the citizens tration,” as the H“x:‘:“‘t :‘:mfl Ibn ?very ot‘llz : department of national (democratic) calls the budgef rec- m:l n::s act R“ o 3 y . -, tatis 24 tor, staged & scene euch fa Wou lsouih Giroline & democratio member We cordially invite you to attend the first make even the most dignified taX-|,¢ the House appropriations commit- T omata World Herald | a7 effccted ato wholly on papere” (he . showing of these cars at our salesrooms on > ha World-Herald ?l‘:l‘;;.:;‘:;lde':‘tg rOllme'n, when, “having | Mobile Register (democratic) remarks saihered more than Logt goternmont | Bt (TES oube or ins acicvement Champlain street at Kalorama road. ficials for the second business meet- !can be no doubt of the achievement, e o dministsation, he breathed | by means of the budget system, “of & “What do yop think of unemploy-| words of fire in praise of faithful gov- |very considerable econamv in the long P ernment servants and in condemna- frun.” ‘And even granting that they i o - lare, in_fact, “paper savings” they . el “It was the making of me,” replled | tion%of prodigal spenders of tho Deos | 200, ) O ol a0 far as the tax. | I'T Senator Sorghum. “The reason I first flz.w‘:‘: n:l?l;nml £ pa. = S ERRE = & FLELIING; Inc., went into politics was that I was un. | swered Navy specifications, while the £ rth Champlain Street at Kalorama Road D other, which swept just as well, did B the director, the Milwaukee Sentinel {money that was not appropriated. No Norta 5050 A (republican) says, “gave a concrete [one would expect the budget director llustration of the evlls of the old |“to -appear before the committee| [ with a cartload of gold or greenbacks roeonl.‘ it dem\':‘dmmm rllghthw ,2::' g:ldthe: met budget ‘fl'lreotur nor the chase its own brooms.” e ‘budget system is able “to prevent aneuthe Marine Corps felt its pres- |Congresa, if it sees fit, for political > The Mo-lyb-den-um Car tige was imperiled when threatened for other reasons, from voting away| ° 3 : with Army shirts out of stock.’ ,'l'he hundreds of millions of dollars not . director’s it exposure” Oof |inclufled in Gen. Dawes’ estimates”™ P ’ “these little domesti | News |and the Oklahoms City Oklahoman thinks, will have “the happy result of | (democratic) agrees that whatever giving a vivid view of government iemmj“ the budget commission may % business to_every citizen,” because, |he able to effect can atill be rendered ' the Akron Beacon-Journal (republi-| ‘rather flat” by ambitious coi - 5 2 - ce upon the inflexible character s me’mou is one of the most BB &% he incident, continues the Mil- tion of specifications for the various| Why hasn't Congress thought of a| = = .:+- N ST % b i~ supplies which are used alike in all|tax on bachelors to pay the bonus?— : ; X departments.” It is time, the Flint|Chicago Evening Post. e g e 2 4 : All the J&mq‘n;');ob!ui’hlve 4 — - : ¥ RO 5 N, {

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