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6 : THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON o D. 0, THURSDAY, JUNE 15 1 922, THE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morning Editien. WASHINGTON, D. C THURSDAY .June 15, 1922 . Editor THEODORE W. NOYES. . The Evening Star Newspaper Company 11th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. New York Office: 150 Nassau St Chigaga Office: First National Bank RBullding. Eutopean Office: 3 Regent St., London, England. ite per month. Uy ‘mall, or teleplone Matn n s made by curriers ut the of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia Daily and .40; 1 mo. Daily onl. 407 1 mo. Sunday onl! 40; 1 mo. 1 mo., 1mo.. Today at The Hague. Sorely tried Europe, disappointed and distll the proceedings at Genoa, turns te 1o The Hague with less haps. but more of eager and & way out from her hard condition. If at The Hague there is written only the record of wnother flasco, difficulties will multiply and despalr will still further paralyz: the energics and destroy the courage of European peoples. No one helieves A e at The Hague ed by a colla; that id im- on chaos, but another wve but little heart for wi <in today are ¢ to the coming of the Rus- who are not due to arrive for n a week. It is hoped that \o formey; allied ble to agree upen a present a united tes from the Mos- they will be ey tried it at and the wedges ns drove into hips have widened ned new ones. The might be able to accomplish en oo qt if they failed. “experts” with the same old jeal- t same old seifishness ve wrecked ever rt undertaken since the armi- o with fudgn We wish suce tend the efforts at The Hague, have no confldence that it will. Our lack of confidence arises from the conviction that the malady which af- fiets Europe can be cured only by a ‘major operation, and the malady has wmade such headway that we doubt poultices and salves will afford even semporary alleviation. We believe the dieease is deeply rooted in the terms of the peace and that so long as these roots are left growing there 2 permanent cure is not likely to be affected. well in hand but River Rioting. “rhe tragedy on the steamer Macal- ester last night on the homeward trip from Marshall Hall is a shocking re- minder that the peace and even the ives of great numbers of people who use the Potomac steamers are endan- gered with small provision for their protection. According to the most trustworthy accounts of the affair, which was so confused as to render a perfectly clear understanding difficult, the fighting started over the sale of whisky. It would appear that boot- legging was flagrant at the excursion ground. Between intoxication and anger over disputed payments a riotous spirit developed and fighting occurred on the steamer as well as at Marshall Hall, in the course of which several were stabbed, one fatally. This endangered everybody on the boat and it is a mercy that more were not hurt, that, indeed, a panic was not started, with disastrous consequences. There seems to have been no police protection whatever on the steamer. ‘The officers of the boat were helpless. Apart from the crime itself, which, of course, will be fully investigated, the question of discipline should be in- quired into with a view to learning what provislon there is on the river steamers for the maintenance of order. . This boat carried more than 1,100 passengers on a combination ex- cursion. It must have been known from experience that illicit liquor sell- ing would probubly proceed at the re- sort. What protection is there for those who take these summer boat rides from the rowdyism that is en- gendered by llquor when intoxicants are sold apparently without stint or fear of punishment? ———— One of the penalties of the wolld war is the loss to popular literature of Conan Doyle and Rudyard Kipling. Political theorists are numerous, but novelists and poets are but faw. —————— The Chinese, in the face of inter- national complications, do not hesitate to remind the world thut they have troubles of their own. i Germany is said to be engaged in lavish expenditures. Genuine economy is difficult in the absence of real money. The Shriners Are Coming. Washington's selection for the 1923 meeting of the Order of the Mystic Shrine, voted vesterday in San Fran- Zisco by the Imperial Council of that order, insures a large and picturesque gathering in the capital a year hence. X'or some time past preparations have ween under way here for presenting an invitation to the “Shrine” to hold its next meeting In Washington. The local delegation to San Francisco wes empowered to guarantee an adequate fund for the entertainment of the as- semblage, and so great are the natural attractions of the city that this bid was accepted. i Save for one factor, it is mot dificult construct- | termined. for such purposes by the important organizations of the country. Anad, even with insufficient facilities for the holding of great indoor gatherings, Washington has been chosen again and agaln, while better equipped cities | have been passed by as not offering i | | ! i equal natural attractions. This lack is now being supplied and an auditorfum {8 in process of pro- visfon. Tt is expected that before the time of the “Shrine” meeting it will be ready for use. And meanwhile doubtless other organizations will have accepted invitations to come here on the strength of finding at the capital adequate equipment for large meet- ings. Judging from the plans already made and from “Shrine” meetings of the past, the 1923 jubllee gathering in Washington will be an event of exceptional interest and colorful at- tractiveness. The local organization and committee in charge of the affair will doubtless put in a busy year, from the return of the Washingtonians from San Franeisco, in preparation for what Is expected to be a most notable meeting. Attacking the Supreme Court. Senator La Follette's proposal before the Americun Federatfon of Labor at Cincinnati of an amendment ta the Constitution denying to the federal court the power to declare federal laws unconstitutional fs a revival of a proposition that has been made many times in the past. [ndeed, the right af the court to pass upon the validity of the luws of Congress has never Leen definitely established by statute or by constitutional provision. The Supreme Court has, however. con- rued its mandate partly from the act cating it and partly from the neces- sitles. Its right to pass judgment upon the congstitutionality of laws was directly and vigorously challenged in the beginning. Impeachment was de- manded by some of its critics. Violent discussions occurred in (ongress on the subject of this prerogative of the court. Singularly, however, there was | no established party principle on thi point. Both of the major parties in turn assailed the court and defended it, according as their favorite doctrines were sustained or overturned by court decisions. The net result of these suc- cessive approvals and disapprovals was a final acceptance of the court's right and the recognition that only through the judgment of the highest court could the question of constitu- tionality be clearly and distinctly de- The argument against the decision of constitutionality by the court is based upon the hypothesis that Con- gress is the lawmaking body and that the court is not vested by the Con- stitution with the power of unmaking law; that Congress may be trusted to pass no law that is in conflict with the Constitution, and that the judg- ment of that hody upon constitu- tionality is more dependable than the judgment of the smaller body of the Supreme Court. This argument has been repeatedly refuted by advocates of the judicial power, mainly on the ground that the court is better quall- fied to judge the constitutionality of measures than a political body, such as Congress, which may be at one time controlled by one party and at another by {ts opponent; that a non- political body, such as the court, com- posed of men tralned specifically in the law, is mora certain to do justice both to the Constitution and the stat- utes than a body composed of repre- sentatives of all lines of American life and in large part presumably not versed in law. The speech at Cincinnati was pitched in a key to please organized labor, which has heretofore indorsed the principle of judicial recall and has frequently condemned “government by injunction” and “judicial adminis- tration.” The tokens of hostility toward the court, and particularly the Chief Justice, which marked the oc- casion are not unusual. In the past members of the highest court have been savagely assailed in public meet- ings for opinions rendered by them from the bench. And vet the Supreme Court of he United States has gone on for 132 years as the bulwark of American principles. Criticism and denunciation do not affect its course, and there is nothing more unlikely than any change in the Constitution that will lessen its power. i } Bovereignty has been wrested from the people by the courts, according to Senator La Follette, The state- ment is bold enough to suggest the posaibility of “Battle Bob’s” liability to be answerable for eontempt of coyrt. i If Muscle Shoals ever secures a chance tto settle down to regular busi- ness it will enjoy the benefit of an extraordinary anjount of publicity. 4 The amendments to the United States Constitution have come into more prominence than the Constitu- tion itself. Daylight-saving is responsible for e considerable loss of time i futile con- troversy. { Sticking to the Job. Mr. Swanson aspires to another term in the Senate. Former Gov. Davis is his opponent for the democratic nomination. The republicans will have a candidate. Mr. Davis is already on the stump and belng assisted In his canvass by Mra. Davis, who is described as not only deeply interested in politics, but exceedingly clever at the game. Each will tour the state. Naturally, this stirs the spirit of hustle in Mr. Swanson. He wants to follow suit, and particularly es he is regarded as one of the most effective stumpers in the commenwealth. He won his way to the front in Virginia affairs largely through his oratory. Nevertheless, the senator is at his post on Capitol Hill, and announces that, as his dutles there demand his presence, he will remain while those dutles press; that he will leave his interests at home largely in the hands of his friends. This decision does great credit to the senator and 4 inuye te hia he should, he will give it the attention it deserve This example ought to be copled. Uncle Sam has the first eall on all who bear his commission, legislative or other, and just now that call is urgent. Congress is behind with its business and a number of senators and a much larger number of rep- resentatives aspiring to succeed them- selves are tugging at their leash and showing a disposition to slip it and g0 home for campaigning purposes. June and November. ““If election day were tomorrow,” so and so, How often one hears thls exclamation in politics! Y It is on many tongues today. The democratic leaders, to & man, have persuaded themselves that the country 1» turning to them rapidly, and is im- patient to transfer its favor from the republicans. They are in buoyant mood. But election day is not tomorrow. It is almost five months away, and that is a long time. Much may be done in five months to repair damages and put a new face on things. But the republicans have not a month, nor even a day, to lose if they are to repalr the damages they have sustained and put a new face on things as they now appear. I It is worse than idle to get heated over questions of fixing the blame for what exists. The House may not like the Senate’s course, nor the Senate the House's, and neither body like the responses it has received from the White Ilouse when it has appealed there for help In difficulties. The thing to do. if the thing can be done, 18 for the republican factions to get together, stay together and work together. When the party took the!l reins it tackled a man's job, and the difficulties of that job have heen in- creased by the manner of handling it. Unless that is changed, unless har- mony is substituted for hades, the divided house will certainly fall. may The Wilson Leadership. And now the Pennsylvania demo- crats salute Mr. Wilson and get a cheering message in reply. East side, west side, all around the country. Well, why not Pennsylvania? The republicans in the state have had a primary serap, and the democrats are hoping to realize on it in November. They are persuading themselves that the Pinchotites and the old Penrose- ftes cannot effect a successful ar- rangement and march up to the polls arm in arm for action, but will meet there somewhat for knifing purpos"s.l Then Pennsylvania is the home of | A. Mitchell Palmer, who, although out | of office now, is still on terms with ! his former chief. Mr. Palmer is not suspected of a purpcse to try in 1924 for the prize he lost in 1920—the dem- ocratic naticnal leadership—but he is suspected of a desire to return to Con- gress—elther houses will suit—and a democratic triumph in the state this year might forward his ambition two years hence. For the present, Wilsonism seems to be the democratic wear. Nothing is heard of either Jeffersonism or Jacksonism. The shade at Monticello and the shade at the Hermitage ere, temporarily at least, without occupa- tion. Votes are being solicited in the name of the man who has led the democracy at a later day, and is now surveying the fleld from his libra windows. and manifesting as keen in. terest in what is going on as et any time when he was in actual command. i A triumvirate is proposed to take the place of Lenin. It will require more than three men to produce the brains Lenin has contributed toward the maintenance of an extraordinary political regime. $ Cheers in Berlin for the former kaiser indicate a reckless disposition to cling to familiar troubles rather than face the difficulties of their so- lution. $ The Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture are in obvious need of some kind of mediator. Vienna is at present more con- cerned with the march of clvilized progress than with the dreamy waltz. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON., Memory Blooms. Between the pages of & book One idle day I chanced to look, Wherein some flowers had been pressed. . For years the blossoms lay at rest, Mementoes of a happy day, Measured by time, so far away; Yet to my heart so strangely near, The time seems now; the place seems here. . The sweetest blossoms are not those Which colors fresh and fair disclose. Sweeter than blooming new and gay Is some long cherished, faded spray, Whose perfume faint can fill the air ‘With memories fond end pictures rare. An Opinion. . “What is your opinion of these charges of graft?” i “My opinion,” replied Senator Ser- ghum, “is that graft is, in general, as difficult to prove as it is easy to sus- pect.” Jud Tunkins saye his idea of unde- veloped resources is the intellectual equipment of & man who understands the Einstein theory, but can't ex- plain it. Musings of a Motor Cop. In church Hortense Magee was told Of heavenly streets all paved with She then inquired with gentle grace, “But how about the parking space' Questions. “The farmer is & power in politica #Yep,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “The question, ‘When do we eat? is always more significant than the in- quiry, ‘How do we vote?" *Ware of the De{ndly Chigger When on Outing in the Country ‘With the hot weather now on and thousands of city residents flocking | & on outings to the country, care should be taken in vislting places where chiggers might abound, or the outing will not result in as pleasant & time as had been anticipated. Places where grow blackberry shrubbery, high grasa and should be avoided while on the outing, or the little mite will soon make ity presence felt, under the skin, where it will remain for days and cause much {rritation. Residents of this section and farther south are often subject to great an- noyance due to the attacks of .these minute creatures, which are kome- times called “red bugs” and incor- rectly “ticks. * ¥ ¥ ¥ Chiggers usually enter the skin near the shoe tops or at points below the knees, but sometimes they are jarred from bushes or small trees onto the neck and other P*posed portions. Their habit of burrowing under the skin is not normal, and brings about their death. Nevertheless, the in- flammation thus caused may become very painful, and where many of the creatures have attacked a person this may {requently lead to fever or other disagreeable consequences. The desire to scratch the affected spots Is very strong, and scratching with the finger nails may easily abrade the skin and might communi- cate Infection from nails or other outside sources, according to the De- partment of Agriculture. Children, and especially those who go bare- foot in grassy places, are great suf- ferers from this minute enemy. * k * % These pests are the larvae or six- legged forms of harvest mites of the genus trombidium, the adults of which have cight legs. The larval harvest mites are of microscopic size, blood red, and shaped somewhat like & common tick, being nearly as broad in front as behind. They belong to the order acarina, and are not true insects, but are members of a distinct class along with ticks, spiders and the like. The parent mites are pre- daclous on true insects. The adults are of different shades ot red and are quite visible. Many persons are fa- millar with the appearance of the young of certain species, as they oc- cur on the undersurface of the bodles of grasshoppers and harvest spiders of “daddy-longlegs” and under the wings of the house fly. Just what species of harvest mites are trouble- some to man in the United States is not known, but one of them. perhaps the commonest, {s referred to in liter- ature as “leptus Soon after the mite burrows under the human skin a small red srot ap- péara (evidently the mite itaelf orged with human blood), after which the surrounding surface be- comes congested, the affected area spreading until it is from Jess than a fourth to a half or turee-fourths of an inch in diametgg. This congesticn may manifest {tself within .ess thun an hour after exposure, or :nav not be apparent for twelve hours or 80, the fever being at its helght usunlly on the second day. * ok ok % The symptoms are upt to be first noticed when the sufferer has re- moved his clothing at night, or upon awakening from sleep. It sometimes happens that there is little irritation unti] some time after exposure, but with most people sugceptible to the potsonous effects of these mites irri- tation 1s first experienced on the second day. People with thin, delicate skin and florid complexion are most afflicted by the mites, and with them the con- gested red spots are proportionately larger and more inflamed and irri- tating. The inflamed spots due to the pres- ence of the mites under thd human cuticle are often diagnosed as hives, nettle rash, urticaria, or the “wheal and resemble closely those prod on many persons by the “bite fleas and some mosquitoes. but on the second or third day each of the mite- Infested areas is usually found sur- mounted at the middle by a _minute vesicle or water blister. This is i obviously the most important charac- teristic of harvest-mite attack. ¥k ko The best means of prevention is the avoldance of exposure by sus- ceptible persons. If, however, a bath is taken in hot water, or water con- taining salt or strong soap, within a few hours after exposure, mo ill- effects will he experienced, according to the Departmeit of Agriculture. After a longer exposure a bath has ractically no cftect;and direct rem- edies are necessary. Sulphur is a soverelgn remedy for mites and is the best preventive of attack. When exposure is unavoidable and whera vegetation is not more than two or three feet high, a sure preventive is found im sifting flowers of sulphur into the underclothes from a little above the knee downward and into the shoes and stockings, or it may be rubbed over legs und ankles. Napthalene has been ‘successfully used in the same manner. It _exposure has incurred or precautions have been neglected and the characteristic irri- tation has set in, warning the pa- tient of trouble to come, a counter- irritant or cooling lotion should be applied directly to the affected parts. For this purpose moderately strong ammonia, applied when the symptoms arc first manifest, has offercd the best results. 0 EDITORIAL DIGEST The World Was Better Because of Her Presence. The demise of Mrs. Alexander P. Moore, endeared by millions of Amer- icans ap stage artist and friend of humanity, brought from the editors of the nation sincere and eloquent expressions of sorrow. Her magnetic personality, charm and ability are warmly commented on. “Lillian Russel had a good time with life,” suggests the New York World, “This and her beauty are the facts that dominate the thought when one sits down to write of her in terms of farcwell. Her beauty has become & traaition of the Amer ican stage. Her public life began in her early girlhood. She dies by no means full of years. Her interest in people and affairs did not end when she retired from the stage, and the legend of her loveliness will linger gratefully through long years to come.” Her eéntire career showed great versatility, the Cincinnati Times-Star points out, and “the real tragedy of her death is that it comes ust at the height of her usefulness. But even if her star thus disappears at its zenith, her greatest achieve- ment remains. She becomes an in- spiration to & profession that has not always shown public spirit. She has shown stage women the way toward high political ideals and civic patriot- ism.” Gifted and beautiful, leader in her profession, “public and manag: erial adulation” never turned her head, the Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch points out. *There never was a man or woman in her own companles, or in companies with which she appear- ed, who did not love her. Generous, kindly, gentle and conslderate, she created and held affection back-stage as surely as she glittered before the footlights.” And from her life a les- son is drawn by the Asbury Park Press, which says “the success of Lilllan Russell, 1ike the success of countless others who have won their way over .n-lnrly insurmountable discouragements, is an Inspiration to those who survive her. Her e refutes the mouthings of the radicals and malcontents who assert that only the wealthy have & chance to win suc- cess.” Her latest public service probably was her greatest, although it result- ed In the accident that brought about her death, the Wheeling Intelligencer declares, because, in her report on the problems of immigration, *she has stated some new thoughts. When she says that people from Europe no longer need a rejuge Wwe recognize the truth of the assertion at once: also, the statement that America n longer needs labor for development. This was the last public message of Lillfan Russell to the people of the America she loved g0 well. It s impor- tant to all of us.” This report wa “sound and sensible,” the New York Evening World says, and “to the end of her life she retained the wholesome vi- tality, amiablility and magnetism that were the accompaniments and pre- servatives of her great beauty. When- ever In recent vears she appeared in benefits she only had to walk on the stage to receive the biggest, heartiest ovation of the performance. There are many fair women left In the theater. But for the older part, at least, of the present generation one of its most briillant and cher- ished lights has been extinguished.” And “from a career as public enter- tainer she became a servitor of the government in its more prosy but not fess important affairs,” the Nashville ‘Banner points out, “and thousands will regret the death of the beautiful, and in so many ways attractive, ex- ponent of vocal art and dramatic genius.” The whole country “is conscious of bereavement,”” the Boston Globe be- lleves, because her “mission in life was Independent of her calling, although that profession gave her the oppor- tunity to become widely knogn. She dispensed the indefinable thing callrd persqnality. use she was contin- ually her charming self the world was t her feet. By thousands they sought :er out and went away enriched.’ It was not until later years that the world 'was able to her heart, the Allen- town Call n{l and "It was one that could mot but evoke public admiration and vespect. In 3 sense her life was a gacrifice to public service, since her death was brought about through an accident.” Her passing also ‘removes a link between old times and new,” the Durham Sun suggests, “that was more real and convincing than it could have been If served by any other popular favorite to whom the memory reverts.” Her life on the resulted in her “served having notably in the eleva- | s you please and then assure your tion and distinction of her professio: songeiepce that it's @ part of wars the Cincinnati Enquirer points out, and | reagtio] timere Bun, . memorized achievement in the service of others, as diva, wife, mother and lover of her country and her kind.” The affection in which the public held her, the Detroit Free Press says, rested on “more than her entrancing beauty. Her taking leaves an irreparable gap in the thinning ranks of those who helped to make light opera famous a third of a century ago.” ““Though brought to a premature end,” the St. Louls Post-Dispatch points out, “Miss Russell at least survived her palmiest days of beauty and song. and may be voted one of the most fortunate women in the world, That woman is the darling of the gods who can wear an angel visage and not become a slave to it or victim of its entangling proclivities. Lilllam Russell grabbed a lion's share of the bounties of this life and remained, in spite of it, popular and beloved to her death.” To Women. Would you live long and be always young. heautiful? Do housework. ‘Would you be self-possessed, clever? Do _housework. Would you desire that nicety of poise and balance that excites the admira- tion of men and the envy of other wom- en? Do housework. For “work performed about the house not only brings into play the whole series of varied groups of muscles, but also soothes hyper- excitability and hyperemotivity. It further means relief for those given ver to forms of obsession known ‘melancholic mystic contemplation uch is the dictum laid down by minent scientists and brain special- ists meeting together in Paris at the conference on mental hygiene,” ac- cording to a dispatch in the New York Times. Away with cold cream and the vanity bag! Avaunt the lipstick and the powder puff! The broom, ladies, the broom; the mop and the dishrag! Learn how to roast a turkey! Discover the mak- Thgs of cranberry sauce! Flee the di- rect primaries of ready-cooked food and return to the convention system of the kitchen! Beat the rugs instead of the tom-toms! Argue with the cook rather than the congressman' Slay the mice and let the mayors be! Make beds instead of speeches! Back to nature, ladies! Science hath discovered the n- ful but salutary fact that grand- mother knew more about beauty se- crets and health secrets than all the modern woman's _uplift hallelujah chorus members singing together can tell you. Isn't science @& nasty thing?—Balti- more American. C The Limitations of the Court. During its house cleaning on Mon- day the United States Supreme Court announced that it would not deter- mine what is an oulja board, which shows that the greatest court in this country recognizes that It nas its limitations. The Supyeme Court was wise in not becoming a Party in the controversy. Public opinion, at least, is divided as to whether the ouija board is a device of satan or whether the supernatural agency which is connected with it is beneficent rather than the reverse. There is 2 well authenticated case in which the head of family, becoming anuoyed with the contraption, threw it on an open fire, whereupon it dis- played all the colors of the rainbow and gave forth a plaintive squeak as it ignited. A device of satan should now show these manifestations upon returning to its native element. But why invoke the United States Su- preme Court in this matter? This ought to be a subject for the pulpit, not for the bench.—Hartford Courant. Somebody ought to ask John D. what he “gets out of & gallon."— Arkansas Gazette. This is an age of triumph for the pessimists who always expected the worst. They've got it at last—Hart- ford Times. Having the former administration in mind, maybe Mr. Harding fears that Daugherty might write a bodk it fired—Colymbia Record. — This would be & stable old werld if a man's faith could be made as nearly immovahle 8s his prejudice.— Canton News. 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