Evening Star Newspaper, June 16, 1922, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morning Edition. ‘'WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY..........June 16, 1832 THEODORE W. NOYES. .. .Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company ‘Busine: Ofl;o. 11th Nt l‘lfl Pennsylvania A e 50 Ni o Otfice: ! Naneau 8t. irat National Bank Building. European Uffice: 3 Regent 8t., London, England. The Evening Star, with the Sunday morniag edition, is dellvered by carriers within the elty &t 60 cents per month; daily only, 45 cents ner S lay only, 30 cents)per month. Or- be sent by mail, or telephone Main 8§000. " Collection Is made by carriers ut the end of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginis. Daily and Sunday. .1 yr., $8.40; 1 mo., 10c Daily ‘only - §po0: 1o 60c Sunday only. Tyr., $2.40; 1 mo.. 20c All Other States. Daily and Sunday.1 y., $10.00; 1 mo., 85¢c Daily only. 17 '37.00: 1 mo., 80c Sunday oniy $3.00: 1 mo., 25c o Ireland's Charter of Liberty. A study of the cabled outline of the constitution drafted for the Irish Free State leads to the conclusion that it guarantee hmen all of the sub- stance of 1 nd self-government. Nominal allegiance to the British crown is provided, but there is lodged in the crown no greater authority than it wield n Canada, and no one denies that Canada is wholly free. It is to be doubted if in all the his- a people ever opportunity to of human progr fore afforded b were adventure upon self-gov ment un- der circumstan so auspicious for individual The Irish people are offered their liberties ready-made. All the safeguards and gudrantees won by a thousand Years of Anglo- Saxon struggle against oppression are theirs for the taking. More is offered them than they could have as a re- public. for as often as not republics, ¢ young republics, have been their government, Irishmen are offered the recourse of appeal to the king and his council. one of the most cherished rights of Englishmen. who through generations have learned to appraise liberty in own to distinguish between its substance and its shadow. One of the fundamental and most vital of the constitutional guarantees State never shall be engage in war. except in val invasion of its soil, is that the required te of without assent of its parliament. This is the v essence of self-government, and is a prerogative not enjoyed even by Scotland, which always has claimed a partner’s equal voice and at the be- ginning zave the British common- Ith its king. There is no approved modern device iment. even to the initiative nd all the while back of not have, them. to g stubility and protection and to spare them the heavy burden of self-defen there will be the tradi- tions, the prestige and the power of the tish empire. So now it would seem that at last there is within the &8 of Irishmen all thai they have longed and prayed for and struggled and fought for thrcugh generations. 1t is inconceivable that, through reach- ing out for an unattainable something more, they will let this opportunity pass by. The Republican Dilemma. The republican conference on the subject of relieving the party’s em- barrassments on Capitol Hill has been called none too s out of the tangie must be found, or the con- sequend may be disastrous. Fac- nism is in full swing, and faction- sm spells defeat. meeting the President and Mr. Lodge had the whole case before them. As the leader of the Senate— the present trouble lies in that body— Mr. Lodge was able to explain mat- thoroughly, and as one with u lative experience could have had no difficulty in fol- lowing him. The President's views about what should be done are well known. He has not volunteered them, nor insist- ed upon them unduly. But at the re- quest of many senators and repre- sentatives he has expressed himself ; more than once as to the tariff, the bonus and the merchant marine, and what he thinks should be done as to those three important measures. The Preésident speaks as the leader of his party, and in its interests no fess than in the interests of the coun- Against the possibility af | ium. which the Irish may . the President | prohibition, and this order of the su- perintendent is the latest, and it is to be hoped the most effective move In the campaign. It is not the purpose of the school board to prohibit soclal assoclations among the students. The sole object of this order is to stop secret organi- zations whese membership is not open ‘to all who apply and qualify. The real “|evil of the fraternity and sorority in the high schools is that they tend to establish selective exclusive groupe, to breed jealousies and to foster fll- feeling. Their ‘meetings are not un- der supervision of parents or teachers. | There is no likeness between the college or university fraternity and the high school organization. In fact, the former deplore the existence of the latter. Conditions in the higher educational institutions are different. Students are away from home, and the organization affords them means of association that are as a rule help- ful to them. The high school student needs no such aid, and the secret so- ciety is an artifiiclal, superfluous method of promoting sociability. "It has, it is hoped, run its course, in Washington. Railroad Strike Talk. It ‘does not follow assuredly from the overwhelming vote for strike which, it is understood, has been cast by the memhers of the eleven railroad |shoperafts and maintenance of* way men that a strike will result on the American lines. The membership of these unions is about .000. If {they should strike they would serious- |1y cripple the roads, although the members of the “big four” brother- hoods, the engineers, firemen, train- men and conductors, do not walk out. The brotherhoods last October called off a strike, when it had been ordered, upon the Intervention of the Railroad Labor Board under the provisions of | the Esch-Cummins law. The board may exercise its authority in & simi- lar way in the case of the shopcrafts |unlon if a strike order should issue. It is fully expected that the orders will be issued in about ten days, and the wage board may take cognizance.| jot this expectation and summon the executives of the eleven organizations, | « in the bretherhood case, to show cause why an order should not issue forbidding the strike. | A formal statement issued by the | heads of the unions affected by the re- tcent wage decisions says that the; | strike would not be the “only solution | if the attitude of the management did | not block all possibility of the other | iand better alternative.” If this feeling is persisted in the heads or execu-| tives of the eleven unions may resist | the wage board's intervention and a | court order if one is issued. In this connection B. M. Jewell made a statement yesterday before ! 1the American Federation of Labor, in ! ihis capacity as president of the rail- | way employes’ department of the fed- | ! eration, that sounds like a war cry. He said that the employes were con- {vinced that ‘certain sinister influ-| ences” had been at work for the last | ltwo and a half vears attempting to| maneuver the railway workers into a i position where there might be hope of crushing the railway shop unions. He added: i 1 think this is the time for us to | determine whether or not organized Jabor can be crushed without killing every individual member of the unions. The railway workers are Iready to attest. l’ This extravagant statement is not ! necessarily to be taken at full value. | {Much must be allowed for the occa- | |sion. Such declarations are in the ! | order of things 4t conventions, and do | not signify that labor is ready for a | iwar to the death. Nobody believes | { that there is a disposition on the part | Ior the railrcads to wage such a war. | In the present case the shopwnrkers} could hardly expect differential treat- | | ment from that accorded to the mem- bers of the big four brotherhoods who | have suffered wage reduction, or lhei telegraphers, who, it is believed, are | {soon to experience reductions also,! tand who, according to dependable in- {formation, will not strike in lhatl levent. If the brotherhoods could not | strike in the face of wage board in-{ | tervention and court action, it s hard-; ’ly to be expected that the shopcrafts | unions will strike unless the brother- | {hoods join them. More mreatening{ isituations than this have passed, and ! j there s ground for Believing that this will pass as well. ———— The author” of “The Star Spangled Banner” would never have succeeded | in securing such wonderful results if the heat these boats have been a boon to the residents of jthe ‘capital. If they cannot bé made safe, if -the passengers cannot he protected from drunken rowdyism, their use will be discontinued in great{ measure, what- ever the deprivation ‘to the people. Disorder on & steafnboat is much more sarious than on land. Those on board cannot escape. They must sub- mit to vile language and to rough conduct. They puyt their trust in the conductors of the steamer when they g0 aboard as they do In those in charge of a raliroad train. Under the laws of navigation the commander of a vessel has full power while afloat over the behavior of thuse upon his craft. Evidently this power has not been exercised on the Po- tomac, and a rough element has come to regard these boats as free ground for ‘their lawlessness. It is time that an example be made to demonstrate that the laws prevail even on the water. ———t e Congress and the Courts. . In his address at Western Reserve Univerity—a deliverance certain to receive wide attention and provoke much comment—Secretary Weeks de- clared that “in the public mind the legislative branch of our national gov ernment probably never has been at lower ebb than it is today. It has al- most become a habit to say disparag- ing things about Congress.” , Disparaging Congress is not new. 1t has long been a habit—a partisan habit. As severe as are some of the things now being said about the body in seesion on Capitol Hill. they are not severer than things that have been hurled at other Congresses. Throwing stones at Congress is, and long has been, a sort of pastime. What more distinguishes this day is the disparagement of the courts. That-§8 extreme. True, it is not new. With -us the courts have never been sacrosanct, but have had to take their place in the pillory along with our other institutions. But, at present. they are under a heavier fire than usual, and some of it comes from quarters high up in the national scale. But let us not become unduly de- pressed. We are a nation of Wickers. We are a spoilt people. In our na. tignal life and institutions we have; enjoved so much guod fortune—have become so used to progress and pros- perity—we lash out at times thought- lessly and unwarrantably. Fortunately, a good deal of the kic ing is not much more than exercise. It inspires nothing. corrects nothing. If only a portion of the charges made about the functionings of our insti- tutions had been true we should long since have been on the scrap heap. —_——————— Grand jurors who advise the sub- stitution of electrocution for hanging, while offering no consolation to those who disapprove of capital punishment, at least show they are in favor «f modern improvements. —_————— Daylight-saving continues to be de- bated. It has not yet been brought to @ point where it conserves intellectual energy, however much it may pro- mote industrial efficiency. —_———— Marconi believes that signals are being sent from Mars. Astounding as the assertion is. it comes from & man whose expert experience and scientific knowledge commmand: respect. —_———————— 01d John Barleycorn is now joining lustily in the chorus when some one sings, Sailor's Life for Me.” —_———— Bootleg conviviality has, introduced a new element of peril in the summer steamboat excursion. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. The Spring. Reflecting myriad colors from the sky That shines above a depth so crys- talline, It rests, with ferns and mosses clus- tering nigh, In a rich background of brocaded green. Ah, lady fair, no jewel you possess, Though holding in each gleam a for- tune great, Can ever rival in its loveliness i | | This gem, whose value none nm)’l - calculate! A Follower. “Think the voters will go your way try. He is asking for the redemption ! he had been obliged toset his rhythms | ;o 4 gayon of promises made by his party to the countr Congress were elected. Monday evening next then may be highly important in the annals of this If a program for the re- of the session can be ar- mainder ranged, there will be time enough to carry it out and-leave a comfortable margin for discussions from the stump before election day. ————————— Rock creek is a picturesque stream whose beauty is in danger of covering a multitude of microbes. B —— According to reports of steamship activities, old Neptune is’one of our champion bootleggers. The Ban on Fraternities. Supt. Ballou’s notice to the prin- cipals of the District high schools putting a limit.of June 30 next on resignations from unapproved student organizations should bring to an end the ‘sorority and fraternity troubles that have been found {n the local school system for some years past. Under this netice the pupils have un- til the end of thig fiscal year to leave the organizations that have not been given official school approval. If they fail by that date they become subject to the penalty that has been estab- lished by the board of education..This penalty is deprival of the right of the student to participate in any achool activity. A student who persists in membership, or who accepts member- ship in a disapproved organization, cannot take part in school athletics or drill or become a membér of any ap- proved organization. The fraternity evil has been per- sistent. A few years ago the board of education undertook. its suppression, but with poor success.. It hecame .of pegessary to recast the measures and upon which he and the to a modern jazz ngneA i i ! Assertions that there Ys nothing to! arbitrate in connection with strike | conditions are beginning to impress | the public as fallacies, to say the least. | ———— 1t would be only complimentary for ithe Russian politicians at least to mention Trotsky as being in line as! Lenin’s successor. ! Lawlessness Afloat. | statements regarding the fatal af- fray on the steamer Macalester Wed- |- nesday night are so conflicting that the truth regarding the tragedy may never be fully determined. Yet it is plain that there was great disorder both at the resort and on the boat, |thn liquor was openly sold and con- sumed, and that little if any effective effort was made by the officers of the steamer to preserve order. What- ever may be done in the homicide case, it is plain that measures should be adopted to insure the security of Ithe public using the river steamers for summer outings. - | It now develops that it has bée - notorious for some time that liquor | is being sold more or’ less openly on the river boats.and at the resorts by persons using these places because of the large assemblage of people and the lack of effective police super- vision. It is to be assumed that in the| light of Wednesday's happening steps will be taken to check this traffic. In this connection &rises the question of the responsibility of those in charge of the steamers and the resorts to which they ply. 3 The river excursions have been for many years a most delightful means of summer outing for the people of ‘Washington. ~T‘hey\ have given pleas- ure to enormous numbers, éspecially families. As s méans of escaping from “I don't expect quite that.” replied Senator Sorghum. “I'm studying hard and doing my best to go their way.” Jud Tunkins says greed is likely to be misleading. He knows a man who turned down a Cremona and picked a bass fiddle simply because it was the biggest. Musings of a Motor Cop. Hortense felt admiration so complete That she was soon the center of a storm. 4 She stopped right in the middle of the street To watch the traffic officer perform. Practical Sentiment. ' “Would you marry a man-in order to reform him?” . . “No,” replled Miss Cayenne. “If I were to marry I'd want to be the head of a household and not of a reform school.” . “Fohgit 'bofit de discomforts of sum- mer,” said Uncle Eben, “an’ remem- ber dat when de suh shines.de hottest de watermelons is ripeniiig’ de fast- est.” g eie B ——————— Ev"i-"{{.:“i"‘.fih‘:?ufi“fl:w ?i'a';'rl'v:g g\:w :nouguno _of a treat.—Chlcago Those who predict a boom in’ the shingle business probably saw the list of graduates of law sSchools.—Esca- naba Press. Z Anyway, one privilege' that will never. be taken away from the Amer- lcan citisen is that of paying tRxes— St Joseph.News-Press. . A philogopher is_ one who has 3 ki fairly | requisite to action.” e P s lhemy Philadelphia Bulletin -believes that good lawn. {f one Kkeeps trimmeds—Atianta Constitution. et 2 | “Texas leads in May lynchings” says'a headline In the Washington Star. And Texes probably.would.re= aly mo’t,lutly ‘that May isn't & par- good month for lynchings in thas state, either.—Kan: cn’vmx ! LTHOUGH more than a mililon persons visited ‘he nation’s playgrounds—the national parks —Ilast year, this number is ex- pected to be far excéeded during the present, reason, which s now beginning or will begin in a few weeks, according to ofticials of the. national park service. Five of thc largest national parks, including the famous Yellowstone Na- tional Park, In Wyoming, will open within the next two'weeks. Other parks opened June 1, or a few days earller, while a few, including the Yosemite National Park, in California, remain open all the year round. Attracted by the call of the greal outdoors, thousands of motorists from the eastern and central tions of the country, park officlald say, are ts to the national parks Utah, South Dakota and Arizon: while many, attracted by the low-rat excursion fares just announced by the trangcontinental railroads, will travel via rail to the parks. The automoblie mode of travel is the favorite meth- od with most of the park visitors. Ofticials of the national park service estimate that out of approximately a milllon visitors to the parks last year 600,000 came In automobiles and brought camping outfits with them. * K X K The national park service has made motoring to and through the national parks particularly attractive by build- ing good roads and by furnishing to motorists and campers ample camp- ing accommodations, good water and facilities for recreation. Opening dates of the-national parks for the 1922 season are announced follows: Cratex Lake National Parl Oregon, July 1 to September 20; Ge: Grant National Park, California, M: 24 to October 10; Glacief National Park, lontuna, June 15 to September 15: Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, opem al] year: Hawail National Park, Hawaifan Islands, open all year; Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas, open all year; Lafayette National Park, Maine, June 1 to November 1; Lassen National Park, California, June 15 to September 1; sa Verde National Park, Colorado, May 15 to November 1; sount McKinley tional Park, Al ka (summer only): Mount Rainier k, Washington, June 15 to Rocky Mountain National May 24 to October 10: Wind Cave } tional Park, South Dakota, June 1 to September 30; Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, June 20 to Beptem- ber 15; Yosemite National Park, Call- fornia, open all year; Zion National Park, Utah, May 15 to October 15. ok k% Vistas of marvelous grandeur, the finest fishing obtainable in the United States, wonderful scenery, unsurpa: ed anywhere on the continent and oth- er features, coupled with the con- veniences furnished by the national park service, attract the transconti- nental motorist and the visitor who makes the trip to the parks by rail. Of the parks, Yosemite, Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon parks have proven to he the most popular, Yo- semite and Grand Canyon parks being EDITORIAL DIGEST | Changed Methods Expected to Fol- low Court Decision. The statement by President Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor that the decision .of the Su- preme Court in the Coronado cas¢. made only after nearly a week’'s re> flection and study of the working of the decree, that it was the “worst blow” ever administered to labor in America seems to have puzsled the editors. They discuss the decision and the Gompers attitude at great length. Many of the editors take a sharply opposing attitude to that of Mr. Gompers. The fact that a re- hearing will be given by the Supreme Court next fall is admitted to be “interesting. “Why would it not be wiser for la- bor to take itself under the protec- tion of the law instead of persisting in remaining without,” the New York Evening World asks, “and by incor- poration, by the establishment of courts of labor, the codifying of labor | laws, enjoy the benefit for which it already pays and from which, by its own policy, it receives the least re- turn?” In the opinion of the Chicago Daily News the decision works no hardship on labor, because ‘no union that acts within the law,and exer- cises its legal and moral rights with proper regard for the rights.of oth- er.d:ms any occasion to deplore the rdict.” That the “only rights” taken away from labor are those which make for broken agreements and violence is the view of the Durham Sun., which attacks the ‘“conservatism™ of Mr. Gompers, insisting that this would b& “high comedy if it were not for the grave fact that where other labor leaders are concerned Gompers is cor- rect in so describing himself. recult of the decision, the Richmond News Leader points out, will be that “a fight in Congress, rathef than & great movement to incorporate, may be expected. By the time the Coro- nado decision has been Interpreted according -to the prejudices and sym- pathies of different tribunals " i sharpness will have been dulled. The fact that the decision was by a unanimous couht emphasizes its im- portance, the Baltimore Sun believes, and it points out that the ‘moral is “that it will be wise for both em- ployers and employes to hew as close- ly to theline of equity and fairness @s it is humanly. possible, considering the strained relations between them. “There is no denying that the deci- sion will bring organized labor “Tace to face with the necessity of review- ing its policies and determifiing anew its course of action,” the Springfield Republican asserts. “It would cer- tainly be going much too far to say that the decision is a death blow to eftective labor unionism.” In addi- sion, admitting that “capital has not always treated labor according to the Galden Rule” the Wall Strest Jour- | pot wich its cares jneagr s Pull intol nal asserts that “he who deStroys|'.The couniry Is already overbur-, property of another wmust pay the damages. The decision has taken a long step forward in holdiig that associations glso are ligble for their acts.” Summed up, the Newark Even- ing News points out that “the ruling thus restates organized labor’s rela- tionship to society in ‘general,- is pronounced just as responsible as it is privileged.” How can it be other- wise?’ Labor can gain little from attack- ing.the decision, in the view of the New York Post, which holds that “the constructive course for ‘lahor léaders is not merely to attack the decision. It is rather to sccept the actual sit ation as it is.and uir‘ new legisl tion more carefully 8rawn, which will’ detérmine an equity of ststus, rights and ‘ responsibilities Yor -groups on both sides.” To this contention the New York Globe asséents, Insisting that “Congress ouglit to arouseé itself to the situation. In this case at-least it has surrendired the ‘initiative to | the Supreme Court largely. because it lacked the courage and the Insight - However, th the decision is. “by na means' one- sided, and a careful and unprejudiced study will discover in it quite as much for the ultimate advan perma- nont trades unionism as of disadvan- tage in the denial of its immunity from the fundamental law of equity.™ 5 More Than a Million Americans: /to Visit the Parks This Year 3" |most and southernmost of the par One | e open all year, their winter beauty ful- 1y as atiractive to the hardy tourist as_thelr summer magnificence. The eastern section of the country has only ohe park. Lafayette National Park, on Mount Desert Island, off the | coast of Maine. Its scenic beauty, well managed hostelries and many | attraltions have made it a focus for | many thousands of visitors since. its' dedication in 1919, i ©On the opening dates. the park hotels and camps will be opened and repared to accommodate visitors. |} ajiroads have offered greatly re- duced round-trip summer excursion rates, with liberal stop-over privileges flective June 1, with no war tax. * % % X The wild life in the national parks proves of great interest to the gue: of the nation in their national play- grounds. The far western parks in particular offer glimpses of the na- tive wild life in its own envirgnment. Hunting is prohibited in the parks. | however, with the exception of | 1 hunting of predatory animals, and the || | tourlst is not allowed to bring fire-| arms into most of the parks without ; the written permission of the park i superintendent. ! ' On the other hand, fishing is open to all, the only restriction being a fish limit per day, which no true sportsman ever violates, whether or no the park ranger is near to check up on his catch. In the western parks trout of all varieties abound. Pike, grayling and other game fish attract the disciple of Izaak Walton, and at every point the angler is met with vistas of the most magnificent scenery |onEthe Amerlfln continent. very, possible convenlenc fered by 'y s of-{ the national park service, | or under {ts supervision, for the| visitor to the parks. Automobile trips, horseback rides, boating trips, 1r gulle service, hotel rates at reasonable fees, recreatjonal enter- | tainment at community houses in the | large parks are all features of the national park service work for bringiny |hame to the heart of America the ide. that the national parks are the play- grounds of the people. i * x % % = | An easier means of access to the national parks has recently been pro- i vjded from either the east ‘or the west by construction of a great loop highway which takes in the north and binds them in a ribbon of road- way which is perhaps unparalleled in this country. Aside from the natural scenic beau- ties in the parks, they all offer an admirable opportunity for nature lovers to pursue their studies at first hand. In the parks the results of na- ture's uctivities remain undisturbed. Nearly all the parks are wild flower ({f gardens, and while promiscuous gath- ering of bouquets is not permitted. | visitors may gather a few of the most abundant varieties of *flowers. iIn some of the parks study of nature is assisted by intelligent direction of experts who take their parties out into the field. - In every possible way the national park service, under the digection of Stephen T. Mather, a man of means, whose hobby I8 greater utilization of the national parks, is seeking to bring |home to the people of this country the thought that the national parks constitute @ God-glyen playground | for all. “under the ban” by the decree. the Wilkes-Barre Record is convinced, and if labor unions restrain them- selves “they will not come in conflict with the law and théy will not be forced out of existence,” while’ the Adrian Telegram believes that “most of their objects and actions are per- fectly lawful. When the parties to a dispute pass the bounds of legality, | then both alike Should be subjected to- the same law in the same ‘manner. A conspiracy in restramt of irad: is| identically‘the same in nature, wh er committed by organizations: of employers or employes, and violence is no more tolerable from une side than from the other.” Becausc of this very fact the Waterloo Trihune | holds that “this decision 1s not al blow at unionism. It is a plain mat- ter of the protection of the rights «f mankind.” Wants a National Flower. We know that summer is here, for the age-old controversy as to what shall be the American national flower has_been reopene: 4 It” always requires hot weather to| start this. It is just as indicative of | the approach of the summer solstice ! um:.hnnder-howeru or garlic in *he milk. Representative Kissell of Brooklyn has introduced a bill in Congress, nn- der the terms of which the daisy— that white-and-gold dweller in the fields and pastures, the commons and | back lots from Maine to Mendocino | and from Itasca to the ‘delta—shall Ibe enthroned as the American flow. | For forty years and more the di cussion has gone on. It flares up June and dies down in Octob as the daisies do. There arc porters of the sunflower, the golden- | rod, the magnolia, and even the hum- ble dandelion—all anxtous o have their favorite blossom selected. ise- | sides, limited groups would choose I the rose, the violet, the pansy or field lily. But the truth of the mat-{ ter is that interest in the selection of a nationalk flower has never been ¥ vivid. Not one person in a_huadred | cares a_whobp what-flower is chosen. —New York Telegram. = The Corncob Pipe.. i John T. Wayland, when he gave the | President of the United States 'Qn:‘ll‘l? cob pipe, performed a notable service | for the nation. The cob pipe, whea filled with a low grade of tobacco, is a symbol of sterling masculinity. The man who smokes it may be de- pended upon to hold his own in a crisis. He is not of the sort to squirm before his antagonists or to follow a spineless policy of do-nothingism. He is a man's man, else he couldn't || suevive prolonged addiction to a cob pipe. long as the President re- tains & cob pipe, and so long as he is not partieular concerning the quality of tobacco he uses, it is certain that the ship of state will glide through ML S0l A adod I ol dened with . societies of diff kinds; but it is time to nrnnl:eer::!. other. Tts purpose should be to raise funds to equip every member of Cori- gress and the administration with cob | pipes. Ahlmx 'wllhlench pipe should g0 a supply of nutive twist, produc- tive of fumes which make lhenh?l‘;ll:‘i:n palate callous and which penetrate the vital spots of men’s souls. 2 There would _be no sidestepping of issues then. Every man would face his task with the valor of a David spurred to action by the stimulus of acob pipe well caked. Should he ex- perience the slightest sensation ' of’} timidity, let him take to, it, inhale deeply, and cause the corpuscles of hisblood to squirm as he bathed them in nicotine in its most.virulent, hair- |, raising form. He would be ready to fight then.—Kansas City Journal, To retain its popularity radio 1 have to broadcast scandal—Detrolt Journal. % W woman Jets her h X m:\a her do what she wajits u‘).g;‘fl Augusta Herald. A chronic grouch never goes where he is told to go until he dies~—Nash- ville Tennessean. “Ford! 1s_ Wilitng_to Run,”" - headline. “Yos. thate the best thing fem.—fyreouse - NOMFORT first! In the wide accept- ance of this fine modern_idea, none lhaz been more forward than the social eader. 2 To her, particularly, ordinary foot- wear has meant style tyranny. & So she has welcomed this new trend in better shoe design. The relaxa- tion, the buoyant restfulness of Martha Washington Comfort Shoes have earned from herinstant, whole- hearted appreciation. And the easy gracefulness of* design- has- found added approval. . Women everywhere wear them. This is the shoe for instant, grateful relief, to over-taxed feet. It is distinctly presentable in appearance—its good looks need no apology. to the un- expected visitor. artha ashington This is the Martha Washington Comfort Pump. A shapely slipper for household or ordinary street wear. Dozen More New Styles Priced from $3 to $6.50 - Rerberichs Established 1868 1116-1120 Seventh St. 813 Pennsylvania Ave. !Valllin;(ofi'a Lariut fid Moct Progressive Shoe House Selfierzogs === Qth.\O EGARDLESS of the fine quality of the materials used by an _artist the resultant picture is good or bad according to the ability of the artist. Likewise with clothing—you may get a suit of the same material some place else, butra Herzog Summer Suit is HAND-TAILORED by tailoring artists. It looks better than a “thrown_together” Suit to start with and refins its appearance until it is practically worn out. It wears better—it IS better. In the Palm Beaches, Mohairs, Gabardines and Tropical Worsteds we offer here is every wanted style from the most con- servative to the sportiest—every size from small to large, stout, slim and regular. And BEST of all— Mohairs This_dis the ma- ways bern popular Jor sweltering days because they are well as cool. Yes, they're hand tai- lored . Tropical Wor- steds that have all and shape retaining s qualities of their heavier brothers, but totally lackin in warmth .... good looking as the fine appearance and $10 Palm Beaches The light-weight fabric that wmade America comfort- able—hand tailored from coat collar to trouser cuffs...%... troskericige i B = Gabardines This is the ma- terial that made the words “long s wear? famous—and it makes you think the thermometer is 'w_uy down_. ) o Ton n_«mmer'u;mumc y e White Flannel 5.7 7o o White: Flan- - 3 3. ula.t M‘v’lo‘l‘a“;:l"o; do”bc'; | TROUSERS A v And Here Are Spm;z:'l"l;ierdashery Specials Pure Silk = White Jefsey r{?;a?re;g:r Special | Fine Madras. Satin ,Stripes and Nainsook ° UNION SUITS $5.50 . = Also Rockinchair and . Manhattan UNION"SUITS ~Suits Men’s and Women's California Styles $2.00 to $7.85 The ev&r—pnpular‘ WHITE WOOL SHIRTS | wand - BLUE FLANNEL The correct shirt for' vestless summer ‘days. Swmart and long-wearing. « Which certainty is’ SOME bargain! TRUNKS. ' Com- plete with bell,; 5 O cceonnn Ay

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