Evening Star Newspaper, June 2, 1922, Page 6

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Gone Is the Day of the Bass; Woman Voters Have Speeded It HE National Capital may.be correctly described today as the center of political direc- tive activity at this period, to a degree notably greater than ever before. In comparison with ten years Large, Fancy Watermelons; e, 75¢ ago the condition shows a remarkable al e contrast. By the same token Wash- | &5 e ol ferentiated from the old-time P St i | R R T res rown Peas, 7 13¢ 9 Ib., n which registers conditions existing | California, for instance. He is an Sunday only ject of study at once, to be ready in season, if possible, for the bridge open- ing next January. —————— , “World Peace and Prosperity.” Say the Indiana democrats in their state platform adopted yesterday: The democratic party Is more than The Irish Crisis. ever convinced that if the league of nations and Versailles treaty had not| In endeavoring to understand the g;uiileo! lr};‘\ennrn:::g;u;{m:“rlepull::!;;?’g troubles that are again prevalent in e e e T T ago and | Ireland It is necessary to assume that world peace and prosperity would|the government of England has in oW b Asured, T O T aan | €00 faith tried to carry out the treaty ) Ceived by Woodrow Wilson realized. |of Lendon, which provided for domin- This does not state the case clearly | ion government for southern Ireland or fairly. The republican Senate stood {and for a provisionally separate Ulster. ready to ratify the Versailles treaty | Yet there is no lack of challenge on this score. Advocates of an Irish re- with certain reservations, and in its attitude had the support of some |Public assert that the London govern- democratic senators. Those reserva-|ment has not done its part in the va- tions applied only to American insti- |cation of southern Ireland, and has tutions, and would not have impaired |aided or encouraged the attacks upon the treaty in its influence on affairs | non-Protestants in Ulster. The charge \ elsewhere. is denied. 1 But Mr. Wilson would not have it| In the north of Ireland, in Ulster and so0. His work at Paris must be rati- | Belfast particularly, sniping has been fied by the Senate just as he had sub- | in progress ever since the treaty was mitted it, or not at all. signed at London and accepted by the The treaty thus fell between the |dail at Dublin. It went sorely against two stools. Mr. Wilson shared with | the grain of the southern Irishmen to see a possible separation, particularly Checking the Young Reople. Reaction has set in against. the free- dom of the flappers. Parents are begin- THE EVENNG idge and'thq government reserva-|Board 'will rule fof other _reductions. i tures-for the most part, presenting a{are likelyr to be resisted generally, at FRIDAY..... ...June 2, 1922 through from the bridge end to the |sult in authorizing the union chiefs to Business Office. 11th St. and Penneyly Ave. | appropriation. These funds should be | evidently 1s to canvass the question Chicago 3 N - T Buropean Office: § Regent St., London, EngIn. | ooy qelay, 5o that as soon as pos- | ductions: ordered by the Wage Board. &t 80 cents per month daily only, 43 co r | suitable road may be laid out to com- movement has been marked. It is 5000. tion is made by carriers at the ton. in all parts of th try. Direction | Acknowledged leader tn his state, award, Wheeher this reaction Wil goes out, information comes fn; it fs | FitT, STeAt personal follewing: Bat : Per 1 Maryland snd Virginia. in season to permit the arrangement |have a deterrent effect upon the Cin-i both a sending and recelving station | machine, or being a boss in the sense ancy ’ e tt“ce head, 7 /2 c 4 - + ment and danger to the public safety. | strike carries such a menace to the [Prominence are sensible of a change | iang, GGS ; Per 1) public welfsre that 1t is likely to-be | Sotits " which ooy theSEht in he xoxn E 0me-urown sparagfls bunch, rideting road, should be made a sub- labor must have the most obwlous and | Voters. It is a disturbing thought to| allegiance yielded to a boss, in the Spring Onions; 2 bunch pring Onions, 2 bunches . 5¢ of the equitable methods of adjust- * k Xk ¥ sylvania was bossless, after ffty now being made to repeal or modity [ proaching change in political condi- (0 0 way between the southern end of the |dently: It Is expected’that fhe ‘Wage ‘ With Sunday Morning Editlon. “i8°a ‘dangerously crooked course, |If the course in the maintenamce of : T WASHINGTON, D. C. flanked by wakempt, skiabby - atruc-| way group is'followed such reductions most unsightly appéarance. A-strafght, | least to the point of strike votes — broad: highway should: be -driven|which will almost automaticalty re- THEODORE W. NOYES. . . . Editor ; reservation. To do this wopld entafl | call strikes at their discretion. The Evening Star Newspaper Company | perhaps gome condemnation requiring| The plan of the Cincinnati meeting Nt York Office: 150 Nassau St. o Gmce: ivat Natioaa Bauk Bunaing. | sought, With the necefsary authority, | of a general wtrike tn case of other re- <alle, Eyeming Star. with the Sunday Motk sible after the bridge 19 completed a | Already the Teaction of the public to &t 80 cents b - e . the mafintenance of way strike vote ders d.g“u‘{,.‘,"" T 20 R P meone Matn | Plete the communication with AFling- e n‘:-’ll:«mnnlm plain that there is no sympathy for'a e It such a plan is adopted it s de-{refusal to accept the Wage Board's Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. |sirable that it should be worked out of the electric tracks and terminal|cinnati meeting is problematical. for political affairs on a large scale. | that Matthew C. Quay was In Fenn mmm facilitie ith mi a sylvania, or mas it In New es with a minimum of disfigure-| The possibliity of a general rallroad| Observant politicians of nationas | $IVEnIS: or Thomas C Inte I Teo Indshort, the wl':olel wdr:-ne o:hmuth- e lllflzlll‘ hwhleh may vitally affect end arrangements, inciuding the con- ounted; thHat is to say, so great a |established party lines in the United| pennsylvania furnishes another ex- (ln m) . disaster 1s unkikely because of its Very | pesrary thom thor aae and set np a | AMPle of the difference between the v 4 ® = magnitude. The responsible ¢hiefs of |new standard-for the alignment of [ devotion given a leader and the blind a ’ es - e o o impelling reasons for taking such an :2:,. °m;,lt';:m|‘:fl,l"::}°r,":‘;“"‘";; 2| victory- ot Giftora Pinchot in the c extreme step, and there is no prospect | uncharted sea minus old familar [ Primary contest for the gubernatorial that such reasons will develop in.view | chansel marks the guiding lights. nomination. On primary day, Penn- ment that are naw 4n progrees. The votes of women and the opera- | Years of an iron-clad regime In tBe i > . - iton of the primary laws are said E?'?b"c&‘ Frigs "‘.‘,.'Sf‘n"“x 't'htt res m.n s 8c to be responsiblo for tho Changing|iimus or Belss Penrosa. It is true ] oy aspects of political thought and party | that & “machine’ existed in & mum- = conditions. Recognition of these facts| ber of units. But there was no comn- B trolling head to the mechanism. Some is responsible for the frantic eforts | SFothe Sunits. sensing perhaps the ap- r es e ) T DUN >e ning to realize that samething is nec- : the primary laws in many of the|tions, se, ted themselves, threw essary to curb the license with which | states. L in their lot with what : b an Cucmnh ch Gc their young daugh art Il the effort be successful? An g Y 3 g young daughters are oonducting |, o in’ yno ayirmative would seem 1deals over |l - cy rs’ ea . themselves in point of dress and be-|¢, be furnished by the experience in 2 havior. Over in Brooklyn a movement | New York, but the more cautious vror-e:,..nt 1fie?uw¥:m‘0‘r"lhfi tie ‘ re (4 has been started ‘through the Parents’ | Among the leaders are not over-|poscd to thin ; y . optimistic, realizin they say, that battlefleld after the Ph has > N III League which, as stated in a dispatch up the electorate snifts in’ the l;11' fhe | cleared away. h s ea es’ ea L4 c from New York, may spread to other | underlying motive for the repeal be- PR i Lw) F h P resh Peaches, per Ib. . . 12¢ New Cabbage, per Ib. . . 4c e = e G B e e New Potatoes, per Ib. . . 4c as the population of Ulster is mixed | frashments after dances. what might be termed intolerance ot} F5 %, q state. - Is the time and ing made by the party leaders the communities. The members of this | 178 Made By the BEUY €0 Fotner| New York, Pennsylvania, Oblo, In- diana and Illinois, the.grest crucial out against the Senate as stoutly as e ™ ) ta the first fTusn s the Senate did against him. in point of religion. These rules are needed. The young | ®aders- By (aTepCh are the conditions ripe for na- g i) 5 ; of their accession to power through | tional character, of the & 8 ty l’dl wbm.l Unwisdom and intemperance have |girls of today have almost completely | oF ‘Re0 10570t Tation-wide suffrage, | Roosevelt, to appear, bo be democrat 4 ; P of F Stra es, The assertion that ratification of the treaty by the Senate would have re- marked the developments in Ireland |emancipated themselves . from re-|and they are proving, ndt- lr)reuuenuy "d'“"",‘;"‘”‘,“v :n:tl {:d l.“nnvcmlent . ° during th 1o hs. | teTbe taking an idealistic view | independently of strict paity regular- B es q‘emes uring the past few months. Those |straint. Parents have been rather in-|%3id <0 e:(ranchlg!flmenl- Morals and | ity? is another question, which poli- b A stored “world peace and prosperity” ; favoring an absolute republic Wholly |different on the subject and have al-|pen. rather than parties or platforms, | ticians are asking each Other: ! t e’ A . S o omatoes ‘:amt' opens up so wide and interesting a lowed the drift to continue without EDITORIAL DIGEST And Various Other fold for discussion, it is to be hoped | free from British dominion have the republicans may enter and culti- | maneuvered to prevent an acceptance | check. Now they are realizing that Fresh Fruits and Vegetables . 2 s _ | vice warcants more than conaidera: Conscience in Business Is Char- | 550 Yo%, Jon Susiness to clear . vate it to the full. And it is probable | of the treaty by vote of the people. It |harm has resulted, and it would be that they will. The challenge is in-|is believed that a referendum would | well for the country if the Brooklyn viting. Certainly, nearly four result in a vote favorable to the treaty. | Parents’ League movement were fol- after the armistice, peace and pros-| Winston Churchill has given warn-|lowed generally. perity are not the world's portion, and |ing that the disorders must cease or | On the other side are the boys, who acterized as Good mg. out the dealer.with no conacience.”, be;eaiden‘t ‘H-rdlng‘: ::”:luu(:n n‘\; © A Witeless Iaw. usiness interests o L X " Naval officlals are rted from Insist on “consclence in business” has | paqv® OTCRE lhm",‘,’:, 2 the been Indorsed by editors in the ab-|French fréight steamshlps near the it is not easy to be seen how they [the British government will intervene [are just as much in need of admoni- are to be restored. to check them. De Valera replies with [ tion and discipline. They have ac- oll de- | steamer Egypt when she sank off stract, but there has been a W e e e o ek s league Have laid down certain rules.|way. * ok x * points in elections, Will go to the Parties are to be held only on Friday and Saturday nights; 18 are to| The tendency of the times seems to | polls this fall without bosses and dress in simple, refinad clothes;|be to break away not only from |'with the woman, voters free from at- chaperons must be present at all’ par- | striet party ties but from leaders and | tempted oontrol. - The question is, ties and accompany girls home; | “bosses” The women especially are| Will thelr indeperidence lead them to parents are to censor all plays and |5ald to be indicating disposition to- | discard party tes and look to men ward independence of party and ahd measures? The Indiana republicans have at|a virtual “dare.” Plainly if the gov-|quired a point of view in recent their head the leading orator in the | ernment at London should send troops | times that is most unwholesome. state. and so choice a toplc should ap- | back to Ireland to restore order civil | Their attitude toward sodlety in gen. peal to him. war wonld result, with dreadful blood- | eral and toward their parents is un- - shed. The prayer of all friends of Ire- | sound. They have become too sophisti- ( Bolting in 1920. land in this country is that such a|cated. Many of them have motor cars e TR S A B will not be pursued, that the |of their own which they use for ques- Tl T Vi [ W BE ey (e, pecple| Hanable fpleeuign. ) hoyih have oo £ 3 2 and that order will be restored in|much spending money, as & rule, and pledged to °":’°Set“”’”f;""df“‘l‘;“ '}“" Ulster. Whoever is to blame in the |far too mmch Hberty for thelr own f:i‘;':;““r’"w‘;’o t“:':v:"thmsunqml;e; north province it is needless now to|good. Parents’ leagues might well support to the democratic candidates seekftry Scesimin s hsEpoint (G VIHL | I ke Te 10y e Into s 0cooiTE 3% well &8 Slgstaos s e is that faction is rife there | the girls and try to restore right re- Soonmn to the point of threatening a general |lations. = war throughout the whole island, and e B e i, Suppose this movement spreads, @S | ... ¢ otion must be suppressed or it may. Suppose in other states, In| g g disaster will result. every state, democrats aspiring to of- fined mote of eriticism for other sug- gra¥e, Llb TOn Feore of the crew be- gestions with which he coupled his!ing lost, was equipped with wireless. broader plan. This was particularly| These vessels would have carried 15 subsidy declaration, | Wireless had the international agree- true of his ship su y " | ment requiring all ships to be equip- There also was & belief, at least ped with it been signcd premptly among demoeratic and certain inde-|after it was put forward in January, 1914. The United States and four pendent mewspapers, that the Presi-jqiper countries, including Germany, dent was handicapped in his utter-|signed it befere the war began, me of his|French officials were not authorize ancéarby the “""“:° St Ao h“:‘:m,_ to sign until July, 1920. They were party associates Who are cl then informed that it was too late ized as “umnd-patterl»"' because the | onvention's time Umit The Baltimore Sun. Yndependent|had expired in December, 3 . : There the matter has rested since. Americans are charged extra for |democratic) desires to know ‘bow|No further action has been taken to théater tickets in Germany. The U.|ar® We going to trade with all of|oompel all vessels which travel the S. A. s still ded -{the world when we put up & high|ges lanes to carry wireless. There is | . A. 18 still regarded as under obliga-( tariff wall against the world’s Im-|just about as much sense In permit- fice this year or two years hence are required to show a clean bill of health Congress and the Tariff. tions to provide the funds in one.way | ports, and how are other nations C-iing small vessels to ignore wireless as respects 1920. How many men will| An assertion often made, and some; | OF another. g toioan s Commerce i e Wyt IR Sy A ) ¥ 7 be affected? How many ambitious|times with good emphasis, is that Con- —_———— et is not a one-sided affair.” It should|night while requiring motor trucks plans will go to pot? fgress ls incapable of dealing intel.| While other democrats are looking | Becala® (i geatnaanty Rociianc fio SNpIEY: them SNGW X oYk HucRH, There were a great many demoerats | ligently with the tariff question; that —some of them influential in party |the average senator and representa- affairs—who, for one reason or an-|tive, lacking knowledge of details, other, refused to support Gov. Cox for | talk around the question, and discuss President. Some refused because of |it too much from a polltieal point of his adoption of Wilsonism. Others be- | view and for personal political ends— cause they considered him a wet. And | convert it whenever possible into a still others because of a fear that if | vote-getter. elected he would come under the spell| One has only to follow the debate of the man who for eight years had | now in progress in the Senate to ap- about for a plan of organization, .{that Mr. Harding, while 3 2 ey Col. f bt A o make cftective the Hobo King Warns Boys. Bryan avolds politics and devotes him- filibuster against the passage of the oct to the discussion of evalutions | LIl v satsblian, as & war nessssivy. /o Pty (fousand boys lenve home the very government-owned merchant | foo o7 them ever return. MO'S( of marine he now commends With Pas-{ihem Jose their names, and a large The formation of & parents’ league 'muflgr‘:“-re*:"!::;;';“ ol apostie: | majority retrograde into mere flotsam ship 8! 1. o in Brooklyn may check the tendency | ShiP f0T % E¥e8t, TALINE U5y oF ques- | 200 JoiaHI o B e wicagid A thirsty man doesn’t go to s to transpose the old mottoth “Parents, | tion, the Sioux City Journal (repub-|ging of hoboes. Davis has beat his soda fountain snd ..y‘s(;,m obey your children.” lican) thinks, whether “an Ameriean|way around the world five times in 7. merchant marine can be estabiished|ihe past quarter of a century, and me asoftdrink.” He gets the and supported without a subsidy, yet|has covered upward of 250,000 miles drink he likes best one' it might be,” because “a ship subsidy |in box cars 1n'the United States. < ke : - - that tickles his te, that i been running the government, as they | preciate how untrue and absurd the| The absence of grade crossings does | never has been popular in this coun-j The past week Davis showed up in thought, to the government's disad-|assertion is. Members on both sides of | not prevent serious accidents in the | try.” Hozvevn-;-éhll::‘rePw{g\:l;}:“;‘clc:lrdm Cincinnat. But not as'a hovo. He S oo : : agreement” W! e Pre “taken road” to head oft the / vantage. the chambers, by amendments offered | aeroplane routes. SEtiaration that an honest commerce|hoboes, and is speaking before the — et is the natlon’s need, the Hartford|lads of the schoolroom, warning them Times (democratic) belleves, Sug-{to stay home. SHOOTING STARS. gesting that “if we are to have al Many ‘thrilis have come to him world commerce and renewed pros-|along the road, but he seems reticent Perity, we also meed a better and|about the larger part of them. At BEERILATDER JOONBON, Debader “outiook than now overne| the age'of thirty-nine years, He turns — Togislatlon.” So tar as the New York|backward, and says his desire Is to The Plodder. World (democratic) is concerned, “the[see that bums of the future do not a T in mind is hardly capable of pro-|crowd the road of progress with Winter was freezin’ and snowing, P Mamything mors absurd than|blockades of derelict humanity. We North wind was blustering strong— | the opinions expressed by President|are strong for his program ‘along w Bolting s, of course, everybody’'s privilege. A candidate is nomjnated. “No like him, no take him. But there is peril* to aspiring men in re- fusing to take him. There is peril even in giving him only a half- hearted support. A. P. Gorman and David B. Hill paid a heavy penalty for the grudging support they gave to Mr. Bryan in 1896. Neither prospered politically after that. And Henry Wat- terson, who bolted the Bryan nomina- tion that year outright, never re- covered his influence even with his home constituency for his exhibition 'of independence in that matter. Bolting in the Cox campaign was widespread, and if account of it s mow to be taken in the way of re- prisals the public is assured of “a ihalcyon and vociferous time.” ° and by examination of amendments offered by others, are showing fa- miliarity with tariff schedules and rates, and with business at home and abroad as affected by them. There is some rambling by the minority for political purposes, but, in the main, there is a reasonably close sticking to the question by both sides, and much light thrown on every phase of it. It may be that because of the uni- versal business dislocations produced by the war Congress should enlarge the force for gathering statistics bear- ing on the tariff, so as to cover as thoroughly as possible the whole field. Our present business ambition looks to a large world trade, and Con- gress should have the latest about world conditions and requirements. But Congress will never release its hold on the tariff—never attempt to hand the question over to e tribunal of experts. It could not if it would, the Constitution preventing, and it mad poor Harding" because “a President whothe uplift line. Of the 50,000 missing e sloliten ghowlen Do that there would have been|boys hundreds are in train accidents But the old world kept pluggin” o ocla war if the United States had | While beating rides, and their identity no world along. had a larger merchant marine is not discovered. Other thousand: capable of belleving almost anvthing. gz l:"elr: figne;:gag;chotlu. 'hhalvm t H oses lowrin! Tt is due to the administration's O 5 auto eve: B Onice, mipre Gry Al XY %, forelgn policles that the foreign [and burglars, The bird lifts 8 summer-time song, | trade of the United States is negli-| This appaliing condition has become And the world, while the soft breese | gible, the Dayton News (democratic) [80 general in the United States during is blowls points out, inasmuch as “our official the past few years that many erstwhile L) Boclination to assoclate ourselves | penitentiaries have been transferred Says, “I'm glad ¥ kept plugging|with any other country in a program finto reform schools. The biggest job in along.” of rejuvenation and reconstruction A e A e, brands us as selfish, indifferent, un- | Where everybocy can Bng, 608, for: 14 ! Somewhere the roses are blowing, | Tgred bY economic Eftalrs of mustsial | tike pleasure in' applauding the sent- Though the present seems woefully | leaders seek world trade. Why didn't | FCF boyp and tne inen will be Eafe - ent and seconding the motion. Save | g ° Mr. Harding explain that with a mon- b e ter merchant marine, under present | Columbia (8. C.) Record. And there's where we'll find we are | conditions, the ships would have to T going ¢ be idle?" ' The Newark Daily News Woman’s Half Vote. 1t we oniy koo plugging slons. | (ndspendent) is convinces et “the | gweden s to wote wet or ary at e Have business possess is @ domestic hational referendum to be held in Au- The District of Columbja tax col- Jector has more mail than he can handle. The sum realized must be re- ‘garded as very handsome as coming|would not if it could, human nature - bi gust. Hjulmar nting, the prime : : from a non-voting community. preventing. Men love power, and| .n ;::’:; ;};‘ n:huo.e il e i u;.“‘.‘u‘.?,:h“‘“.’."‘?.‘l jminivar avd ::mr:u’;.‘uw‘;mbc: is a joyfill, business-like hum to - & when possessing #t hold on' to it ana | D% YO! PT T BLENG peduy definen Bl T o ‘srodues advan. | {hat his idesl is a dry Sweden. And now s Bootleggers are sald to be holding | exerciso it. And the power inhering | "hane: qracit than it used fo be | fagoously and_buying " oniy " those | bolh chiambers of the pariizment, or the motor burning correctly balanced conventions, but not in @ manner |in the tariff is great. - . " | things we do mot produce, irrespec: | T 0 Neyifion, replied Senator Sorghum. “Politics is | tive of the offect upon the fortunes of (OB Prohbition = = i conc |- gasoline that is a revelation to drivers who o which will make the work of 5 = much more diffcult than slcsman-| (A% % SO0 ¥, ks an ‘opil. | mction, with, g pign for Bolding e havebeenusing one-sided fuels. “STANDARD” ° agents easier in effecting a round-up. ‘;n«:l;m“demo;:::u;?:ed Hr:pum:; ship and 1s not nearly as relhbu’,m et to meq commbroe, consclence and :.o?rew ; kml 1::: 1%; wome:;: e e pression. ocral " Y es. ept separate from compensation. > civilization in the relatlonship in Yotes amd will count only one- MOTOR GASOLINE is built up fo meet the which the President paints them, be-{y 10 * mhe women of Sweden are pro- A8 G ——— a4 Tunkins says Be thinks he|cause of fhe sotusl lesieiative pro- different conditions under which every auto- Raflway wages cannot go either {must have had a communication from| In view of the President’s dinn The advoontes : way without protest from one side or | the boy he used to fight with at school, | sessions’ with the steel mep 23l Lo ) ed mobile must be operated. ~ |tne other. i because the ouija board flew up 8nd|mun (republican) insists that “he is ity mals ' aps fairly large major g. him the chin. bet ethod th: . £ g g S el i ALl S iote ; .t It is balanced to give your car easy starting, Presidents. fllhoil lhflDll:: lhel %:nd: L 1ape e min . Summer Supply. O e tions. Less government _in | WOmAn is ciasscd o quiet idling, flexibility, speed and maximum The fruit trees leave us sure, they say, | business is Jfl;. mitted sim. bta 94 1 mileage. It should be used with Polarine King Boris of Bulgaria has taken | politicians do. to gardening, declaring that every one must work. Most amateur gardeners only work a week or two. , The New Bridge. Announcement that the new bridge in Georgetown, generally kmown as Daylight-saving is apparently in need of & good press agent to popu- larize it. the Key bridge, in honor of Francis . would Hk Scott Key, will be opéned to traffic by An © Tabor 'n:t ::Im mvi:l:: Uberal use. . |ae '."‘hy‘ m‘l ,l..‘,“c 'm.?.‘fi expen- :t‘vy ~Eon um“—uméwx?u w:h‘ i - the first of January next, is cause for mw-l Iaefin', ly point ‘ear today sive and involving compuision. T, s . 3 gratification. This structure has been] A meeting has been called for next| & BOW the ice plant will produce. Harding, perhaps LR Party platforme ace usually mad give you 'he best results. #n progress for several years, and it|Tuesday at Cincinnati which may ot Tave, i O k. & B ] 38 greatly needed as a safe, commodi-{ have a most important bearing upon AEpEET th i\m- ess 18 reviving and Ameri- simply | Siia ik botween the Distit and Vir. | ths' thitstial sitaations The' chlte] .| CeNIEW Débdiies Siore [gvil el 4o fndifig ftselt” And because this ver. STANDARD OIL COD]PANY ., ginia et a point of heavy traffic. of sixtesn raflroad brotherhoods and | o8, % erY YUE 3 is'80, and_because ‘the larger busi- | Register-Gasette. “I think,” commeiited Mr. Chug- a tac ries — (NEWJEBSEY) exécutives of ‘other raflroad unions will ble 1o’ take. up the matter | 5% thoughtfully, “they must be con- “vital to the Gommon. weltare of all | JAHNE %0me exeriments to mve mo-| AT, JCU5, ‘eatistaction: an % theretin, - It 'is né longer ‘Bis! £ -{mate.—St. J News-Press, raliroad workers,” in the language ;Y e Samhodpiehme. . T nlrucu!: “Gas is 1ot more inflaminable de-| business—thereby implying no heart | an Attantic ~ cause it’s malodorous.” - ° nscience. It is ‘Bulll;_ e matter for discussion will be dockét| .o rhe. idem ‘10 %0 ot hich stands for!} N & “ g » 3 ’, No. 1300 of the Rallroad Labar Board, |, 1o 7 g i sl o e e ; magriage s that now-’ ’ 1 " ccom It is b; support the gov- £ [5) : : which ‘involves reductions in the will hop out on its own account and o vu-dvmleh-sotnnm“_mm S p 17 g ‘workers. Other labor leaders than those directly associated with the transportation lines have been invited 2 ot E L e'ly got troubl £ 1 1 0 to. 1 s i &

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