Evening Star Newspaper, December 9, 1922, Page 6

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. v v 8 , ; ' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D THE EVENING ST AR, ;h: overlappings through new organi-|first and they were nowhére. Thé re- tons, W Sundey Morning Eatlon.__ | 20,03 (0L L G et (a0 2. Einesn vt sovervio s | | HERE and THERE in WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, D. C. "INO proponent of reclassification in{making of the record. - e government service has expectedj Mr. Blaine in 1892 contested the BY “THE &2 3 SATURDAY....December 9. 1022 ! @ perfect system to be at once or per-|case with Gen. Harrison at the na- Maion e e | raps even eventually evolved. But the | donal convention, but lost. Gen. Har- 1 consider that my decisfon to give THEODORE W. NOYES......EdItoF s impossibility of a perfect system, of a | ruson lost the electian, but not as the| | ¥ YOU Lave ver had the idea that] The folks from, New dJersey Meblinooks as Christmas prosents this yeur HE modern world loves & siogan.1 70U have protested ail. the year. OB W ~EdItor imp fosents Businens Ofie. 1111 St. and Tennsyivanta Ave. | STECTHeT g iichjcabliplen jotacl by Mr.. Blaine's chalienge. Ing to Gebates, vots, work in|SVery one in the mosquito state had o I OPRE VIR OGO s Whras o Mo mniilie WARE D,,,{’:::;";-' L e e L T |a rational system based upon equality | e was the victim of the Homestead |\ o\ “committee rooms or perform |Dusiness in Washington. Of course, |, ., ' % book: leave nothing out. We have “Do it now!” | With care. Wrap ell, add 11, Earopesa Gce: 10 1ézunt B, Loadon: Engiand, | Of duty and compensation, which; in [riot, which occurred during the cam-| Jo8 & SOHTNIRS FOOUS OF PETONM Inig colleague, Senator Edge, had his | CIOUENATUl selections of books e8NS Ddinass man. | 18P Tght ande—do it mowrs SO short, keeps the government service |paign, but for which he Was not Te-[ s the northern wing of the Capitol |Share, but he was not a member of gitts ¥ really give more of myself —= n‘.".w"“"““‘“"m,‘ e, Far ™ 3 Tie Ecenine Star. with the Sunay moraing |as a business organization, subject to | sponsible either a3 man or candidate. | gome day and you will see that many | tb® finance committee, and that made ::: ':o:;y :,m:,r.,.' el o::e.:h?“p:; M e e e T e g.'l’k':’:.“"“r‘:.‘&':.,fl':‘*} gy A e : 2 or automobile g #dition, is delivered by carrlers within the city onth: ¥ 5 ] Ve 81 00 Conts' e munth dally ou'v. 43 conts oot | the same rules which govern every of these solons have to spend much|® differenc them the highest of possible compli- |the trafficker. Now comes another excavating huge . gaaces for ments. In sending a really fine book | Which is of great significance: “Elimi- storage under all the parks or “cir- 2 Wenth: Sunday only, 20 cedta per wonth. Or- e ‘ Acre gy e ont by mafl, or telephone Maln ; progressive, well managed busincss in- Gen. Wood’s Decision. time In the receptfon room, for all'of| What of the others? As you sitand storage under a 5000 Collection 1s” made” by curriers stitution. Gen. L a4 Wood yields to public | them are called upon, the majority |watch you see numerous oftisens of | I also give something that will afford { nate Illiteracy!” That s practicaily what | 4% ome cases @ cmin ,:-hfi,,?.:.“:: e lasting pleasure. Therefore, say I,|the Americanization School of Wash-}stories. Dangedus to mtore 5o much end of h wont] ®0 each month. 2 The House of Representatives has 4uty, and will remain in the Philip. |81+ to talk “with the folks from|Ohio drop in, some to see Pomerene, ccomplish. W &asol e Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. | passed a bill which provides a system P-| pack home or to confer with someone | some to’ see Willis—the latter more | choose books for Christmas Bifts. ington aims to accomplish. ith more line near the nether regions. for Christmas Bilis. . | om in the District who cannot | BeLer adopt the blan of sievated Marviard and Virginia. that fs belleved will meet most ef- r':""‘ :_“"‘: his notification t0 8ec-| yn; nas brought to Washington a|particularly, for he is of the Mmln-' lopt ¢ Pails and Sunday..1yr.. £3.40: { mo- 10c | ficlently the needs of the service. The | TSty Weeks: letter from some personal, political |istration, He comes out, a great ""vl No Christmas: season approaches, |Féad. it has before it a great task, but| yeorjeyor e s e moptit] i Tensionry 6.00: 1 mo.. $0¢ | Senate comumittee on civil service has | quive my remeintns ot he nasi | oF business friend. arnest, homelike feliow.~ He booms | o [IFIElmes: seasoh SPPEORCESS | o e importance of which cannot be | ing over to the automobiles and other ‘ exaggerated. vehicles all of the surfaces of the © o f it 1s near the lunch upproved it. The measure now s pend- | year. Reports of my returning lst of | Drop in at-the east end of the Sen- | & welcome, and 1 {ng before the appropriations commit.{J&NUArY sbould not be credited. Do [ate, right by the place whers the|hour he takes the visitor to lunch, Booklover to search aut the best of | “ UL L0 | hes aduits—not chil- | Streets, Includinz the present side- 1 mo.. t5e P mit-1 0ot see how 1 can leave before the |genators’ elovator Is located, and you |OF If the hour is late, introduces him | the season’s publications to share ht that it is ever t00| ks That will cost less and give Dally ‘onty f; oc | tee with a view to certain adjust-|legislature adjourns, and perhaps not | *°™ slovat ocated, and you | 0% O President. Along comes | With his friends, without his also re.|dren. The thous! more room and better air. and will Sunday onl 1yr.. $3.00:1mo..26¢ | ments. It has been there long enough | Until afterward. As I have stated will see Col. “JIm” Sellers and his calling & story which, though old, is late to learn is all wrong. An adult imeet the need for more spaece not for deta ' before, the situation here must take [group of assistants. You present| : will learn more rapidly than a child, |only for parking but for travel. Member of the Associated Prees. | f0f detalls to have been worked out. | precedence over all personal and uni- | your card to the colonel with the always opposite to such an impulse. |y "\, one year of instruction. & % % Ia excinatwely sgtitied [@0d 1t should be put upon passageversity interests Am e",‘,"“‘;“g reslE- | name of the senator you desire to see O petoro-Christmas ssaton & §TOUP|man who starts without the e end| "Take care of the pence and the ersity. ? of chorus girls w ing_or writing, = 'bru-h state. His welcome 18 & hearty girls were planning their | knowledge of reading o Jearning ten | Pound will take care of itzelf.” Pos:.- written on the back of it, Sellers 3 - who persists in stud. passea It to one of his aldes and the | OnS: The talk soon drifts to things | co-operative gifts = They prompuly | 5o0,°2 sy may become quite adept|master Gemeral Work -defends hin on dainty lingerie, they would get|in reading the daily papers and In|order that after March 1 no mail will & silk camisole. " ¥or Madge, who was writing simple, stratghtforward letters: |, To 0,00 0T T e e an. of sweets, g Yory, fond of sweets, they quickly de- where unless there be a mail re- olat wlub;mg flln?e she was _setting 1 Slong with | ceptacle provided by the householder. e stout from too frequent in- He says thmt th Fi out in euting the present. Then they | U1 18 comprehension LAciey Boh es carriers and each carrier averages came to Mayme, the spirituelle mem- |ontirely unfamiliar to the child. mervice thres times a day to 300 All Other States. Daiiy and Sunday..1 yr . 310.00 a chap from the deserts of Nevada. He wants to see Key Pittman—he is “Key"” to all the folks out in the sage- ey e il ‘:k-'n :v‘! Al ;o:- 1': speedily, so that the system may be e o B tovs: naws pane | DUL Into effect with no further delay| 'hen Gen. Wood accepted the office Tebed ‘werein. ANl richts of mulicatien of | than the government calendar entails, | f Provost of the University of Penn- e vt : ‘out there.” latter departs toward the Senate.| You wait a minute or two. The one; You hear the name of Underwood sylvania he bad but recently been de- b i . thus far advanced along the legisla. | fedted for the republican nomination {i;¢rysted with your card returns with (and you see this brilliant man from The President’s Message. tive course should not result in the | fOF President of the United States, and | the information that the senator will | the southland exterding & courteous President Harding's address to the | complete failure of action. doubtless private life appealed to him |be right out or that he is not on the | welcome. Oscar Underwood is always vesterday was notable for strongly. But he was so exceptionally | ficor at present. In the former case, | graclous, even when he has to say Opposition to the specific measure Congress Aeaheelof subledtaitoutnedianony Tibrass Cisealabion well qualified for the mission to the !you pass into the reception room and |“no” to an interviewer. Then atong th constructive suggestions for| ALY : 5 Philippines, that when President Hard. | it down on one of the seats, sofas!comes one \with wide-brimmed hat. 2 = 2 = After a lapse of eleven years an-|ing tend or whatever they call them. You get | He has sent in for both of his sena-|ber of the gr legislation. It wa erely a set- g tendered it he deferred to the B group. Clarissa suid thut isation School does for | householders. <] egislation. 1t was not merely @ S¢t-| gy “hranon of the Public Library | president’s fudgment and went to the |® Mild surprise when you deposit your | tors—double-shooting, a8 it weu—aimfly uhe had noticed that In. addi- |t iiitemers what the college exten |letter baren thes will Mcs rhe ar: ting forth of problems confronting the 3 ! tion to the murder m P s erson, f he . e C: o s ysteries in the the chautauqua courses do|rier & Guar: country, but in the more important |88 been established and opened in|archipelago. person, for the sofas are provided|western trick. You see Cameron and|kvening Scream, Mayme had Leen | fop the colieke £raduats o the under. |lstter dei Py A L - { Washington. Last night's dedlcation| s his service there has been thor.| ¥'tP Cushions that are pecullar. to;Ashurst come out, but you don't see |reading some magazines, und % R s 3 ounts 1o instances proposals for solution of the | | service there been thor- e s0, shé ult—it give Y, $5.355.000 maveld. He might have {1n the southeastern section marked | oughly satistactory to the administra. | ©*7; the least. - Your first impression 'any fingertip shaking there. They - problems were advanced. ViRt s Al ol fomari D thlaltlo: o h:]p;‘";"':n ;’h H’:i 'ln“ ~‘;?' that you are atop an undulating have real good grips and everybody jonger can it be said that the} S ot = s e pinog, his|air cushion aboard ship. Slowly and seems happy—the election is overand the republican | Y2luable institution verltably a *‘uni-}decision to remain is in the nature of | with easy motion the buoyancy of the they function harmonlously. Out of proposed that they give Muyme u|gardless of age. Yet, Iast yer ouf mdded that tima will I, e boOK. st Kloise, Mayme's Foommats, | of 10,000 jiiterates, less than 100 took | the houneholder. Tor. tustond of mosh. okel We won't give Mayme |advantage of the open doors. Hereling to the door t no book; why Mayme, she's got uis a chance for ‘md" T to greet the carrier educational mis- | every time he stops, the housekeeper administrativn and B B % book already.” known - = s constructive pro-| YOSItY for the people,” and. as thela public benefit, and entitles him to!cushion disappears. You wait for the land of cotton, clad with present- Srene i, slonary workers to-bring tnthe e e ione herirexular duties and grath. In the second year of his ,(.,m.h‘bml:: t;rzamu ;\;z states, a “sup-| great credit. your zenator. He comes. You arige day modifications, is a gentleman of| yy, yyorre povemane o -~ 7| That must mean at least two minutes £ By i plement of the public educational sys-| That he would have served to greet him. He motions you to be ! the old school from Mississippl. He variously n day saved. and at—well. how much of oftic tarding has given his well in y 3 called American regionallsm, local d. Now he has learned !, “ong tima of a housekeaper worth® [tem of the District.” the private field of education is cer-|Seated and picks out the spot you | is waiting for “Pat’ Harrison. Here | The Public Library of the District|tain. But equally certain is it that his | BaVe Just vacated, for he knows those | comes unconquered youth, the barb was created for the purpose of gIving | larger usefulness lies in public life, |SUshions. You state your businessin the side of the republicans. { the people of this community free use | and cl »|and the conference is under way. Ir! Rat? Merely b and that he is placed nog 8o as to se. your' request can be complied with," What is that? Merely a number of the senator will tell you so. 8enators! .y go)ecoming to pay thelr respects color, OF the spirlt of home, as em. DS ten words a day, can read the daily | 4y vhow, “there'n millions in ft. 4 = rstand current news, and bodied In fiction, Is well illustrated In | weite leHors, ~There 18 mothing that | Mol UD e hox i (e “Short Stories of America,” edited by [ahy man or YOMIH'":I‘:‘ hz be :w M‘: and the angel will va:l over ‘331'&0'5.1' Robert L. Ramsey, published last year. | 35,1 1l Jouth faled 0 ® e now | diaturbink you. It bleaseth him who That the short story Is an interpreter |uses the opportunities befors him. An of the sectional differences of the DT 2 Bave ",.,"w'.':’.{:‘: = s United as that of a statesman. + : States Is explained by Hamlin | o7 c'"rotented that his cwn brain Was! waiq e Aais Garland, who said in “Crumbling |not a perrenial spring: it was a cistern| _ woose honks high Adols’: “The sun of truth strikes each |and he could get nothing out of the|U’ncle S8am useg to rule horizontallr. part of the earth at a lttle different |ciastern until he put something into it. | now hg is beginning to rule vertical- angle; it is this angle which gives|Fill up more cisterns and we may find 1: life and infinite variety to literature.” | more Websters—at least many fine citi- | ¥ 88 Well. The rule of the road used The volume tncludes guch old favor- zens of great usefulness. to be. “Keep to the right” Now it es as ret art = “Among the Corn Row showing the It is amasing what surprises come party a program, and realization of a substantial part of it now is in the LTands of tie republican majority in Congress. xives and her who receives, like the men from (and the nage of any town gentie dew from heaven. 1 3 of books. It was designed primarily’ cure for the country the exercise of a for circulating purposes. Given an ad- | liberal measure of his talents and the 4 t mizable central location it provided in | benefit of a wide experience. :::::;1]1’; want to be kind to people. |t Vice President Coolldge ang ask i xmh'.'x,lt i 1mxl.!xl‘;f;rto“:,£‘::‘flse ;il:?lt;mm Martxfl'.l. uullfl;:hly m;l:orgmz 3\111::, The average Washingtonian will ashingto 2 ed. e country will have while Gen. Wood | naturally imagine that the senators: o But long distances sspuruted the ma-! remains un official wholly competent | having the greatest number of callers ecys on” yyr Sons, Buton Rense to = ity of the people from the sourcefor his work, and e dependable man |areé those from Virginia and Mary-: " 3 ‘the | OF SUDPIY. Despite this fuct Washing-{in all things. As soldier and civilian | 12nd because of the ease with which ! |ton has used tie library to a great|he ranks with the best the country the citizens of those commonwecalths' Bo far you have seen the sunny part % 3 =3 can reach the Capitol. Such, how- of the picture, but there is a drab mic vital to national 1.1’:.;a “3'1" over, I8 not the case. While it is side as well. There are those who dent Harding recognizes that this i true that Senator France received ifor years navc been trying to get this 15 a problem which cannot be dealt!9UICkening the intellectual life and) here may be danger of America's|hundreds of men und women during ;or that bill through Congress. Some sommendations contained age, those pertain- him to deliver an address in their icity. TheSe requests average about from the war, the United States in-{ trom Baton Rouge to Lerited a devastated rail and of the two reconstruction of Awmerican railways probably is the Bolse, Idaho. ducks.” There is a strip of land near Edgewood. Md.. owned by John ‘Warfield, where he lures wild ducks. In spite of his martial name, he has and increasing degree, and it has|today can boast of. proved a most valuable factor in ATrival ot s Fiue gokineon | in that line. 1 have in mind a young Lady.* {llustrating_the traditions of (Man from a Virginia farm, who seven svctal heritage; “The Making of a|years ago was belleved to be 80 igno- oo : . _iadding to the knowledge and informa- e 5 with in @ nakeshift way. It is a big| L having too much money. Wealth fa|the seasions just ended, it is true that | desire aid in the matter of pensfons: by O. Henry, depicting Sy ed with the Army decause the OTien) Danl/E & Gacki o) 1ikw iR o [0z ot thopeaplc, : always regarded as meaning perll to|Senators Calder of New York and Fre. | othors want ussistance which will got {SItY life, and = Local Colorist.” by | [t that he was counted 4s Simos |aviators have been bumping his 2 = . nowing| Establishment of bLranches in the Taghuy, £ New J e | them back home: others want posi- | Annie Trumbull Slosson, (llustrating |* hopeless moron. During duckn—or. at least. the wild ducks walization of its hugeness. Knowing | = 00 G ; a republie. But it is undoubtedlylinghuyeen of New Jersoy had just ag | them back home; S want. p rural New England life. seven years he has been reading a |cireling near the zenith which h that superficial treatment would serve ichools widen he circulation and | ggter for America to have money than | many. This was especially true dur-, tions, and, failing to get these, want G certain weekly magasine of current thinks are going to be his. only to aggravate corditions, he pro- value of the book collection and|gor gome of the war-inviting countries | 1?8 the period when the tarift w. Jjobs. Then you see those who are The/booki ust o Secis Sohlig lipen all REEEce :‘;’;h&’:}:«: l’hu::l%l;.dm w:;’-“n“l‘: 5 St 2 brought the library direct diac b t to climb up a rung or two on ust commented on con- - ered e e rary ectly into the|abroad, under discussion. t was no unusual | wont to ¢ P 8 ol ts in such large part of delighite|and political problems. Last fall he | ¥oing up while Aucks are oing down poses a major operation. 3 = sisiati schools system, as it was by enact- sight to mee Senator Calder have | the soclal ladder. and it's fifty-ffty ! l Last tall he | 8ol D e e et ot way For the railwavs themselves he| .. geqigned. This, however, left the dozensiof men and women waiting for |as far as Gex I8 concerned. The |Stories that one Is somewhat troubled | Shd, cSTiain, friends of foe BEATIGR recommends the merger of, lines into! A Chicago court has been asked to | h h his or visitors come In & never-ending pro- | 4lso to find that it contains the ma- w hat would have con- e T of, \adult population of the District in m, each eager to present his or her | visitors col € D of knowledge that wou! e con 5 ystems. @ 5 nterchange of e o 5 : % chinery of analysi ; o1 many & college graduate. [*bove the clouds is strictly” forbid- systems. a facilitated interchange of (=5 PR O wing to the | 188U @R injunction against vamping. |cane, each anxious to get the rates |cession. You ask, How about the} y of analysis and of study ques: ":xemlede any ollege e | o AnX avistor sesing & bird K : y freight cars, the economic use of | | Tt is enough to expect the courts to|they wanted; and the wonderful part|vamps that one sometimes readstions that form the staple of a school hould—d: i act t = - 3 : Eare hange, and his mod- | Proaching should—duck. terminals and the consolidation of ::" hat it it A St In{ coulate industrial troubles mithout |of It was that the senator never ap- |about in neurotic movels? No, the|text book. One cannot help wonder- | toe Turer was tho he got all hefarove the snakes. but facilities. Regariless of offendings of | "0 cases several miles to reach the \,ine " them to go any further in|Peared to be bored. He gave each|vamps have long since found that|ins whether the result of the con-|knew out of the particular magasine. {{Aken to ducke like an Irfshmon takes collection. Eleven years ago a branch ; one an audience and made a notation | senators are pretty nearly vamp |scientious use of all this scholarly | That needs interpretation: The 7 . Saa ’ opened for the convenience and uge of | threatening, there might be a chance th etit ¥ | electric motors of a great office build- Syl ted a population estimated at 40,000. An-|of splitting it by dividing the paitici- io appetite for reading and sharpen- | - hille against the bootleggers arres ing the appreciation such anaivsis|iPE. Where he has sweltered for|jn the Diatrict he objects to casting the pest, he properly insists that the . efforts to conf . > D= e peoperlviind i | Sisiontabianediin TakomayPatk asa to control affairs of the heart. | 286 A% S00 £ |eae equipment by teachers and pupils wil) | Zine Whetted his thirst for informa- %% % railroads have a right to earn a fair hel tion, so that in addition to it, he de- ctually invested capital it has served that section of the Dis- —_—mm e ;.n 1o & better appreciation and love | (20 P 1185 57 papers and such A grain of sand in an oyster shell ::l:r:‘h: D:L:’\::n:’naeni lh.mvh\s' imposea | trict eflectively since. Now, atter| Russla likes vodka, but Turkey ia of ‘dissostion And maner he LIocess!hooks as he could get, bearing on th@j mekes a pearl. but when Commis- e e s A e e S e e e e IT R DI‘ :EST | aetent the e " Ul subjects that the magazine opened |sioner Oyster sees that the grand regulations which largely deprivel 3 £ BrOve) IA I i Study: “T7, Prsvead 0t stregiherary | to his mind. He is still running the | yyries have no sand in finding true them of freedom of action, he argues government: remonsiulity. Lo accord 4 ! cause a seven or eight yeare, but his infor- t v them = square deal. Unless Uhe o VLLEE AN IS SO ot SO T | ets o ot 497 Senone Shar "o et e nd 2T | el Tniids” general scienceana | T T (IS done he foresees failure, of new con- | y.sion for the site has been estimated Relation of Public Elevators tojcomplication. It men should re-imention the subject of technique to | Politics. : 7 2 for, In the Mount Pleasant district,! 7¢ th blis] rman mar move their hats when women enter | young readers. PO King David was in flight—Saul had St el . oy Cerman ke Mere Man's Hat Pussles. I“’ jeloyaton, SHomlditheysremovoitien - HE A A5 It is the greatest blunder of any |him on the run—and he cried out: : embracing a population aboyt three|phad reserved a little when the elevator has a woman op- tion lack of adequate transportation space for adver-| ;.04 ireq world, already far oo |eratortt 15 earnestly. inquires. A |, The rccent literature of religious|man to imagine that there is an age | “Oh. that one would give me drink - times as large. will soon becomie the most menacing | ot s nhcussn Andess :’;:’;:‘ o;:";fi':,:‘;’ "“’: ;""“ the | il of vital issues and unsolvable: woman being a woman, why is not!thought—not of theology, at prevent |beyond which he can not learn. That|of the water of the well of Bethle- of national ills, Carniegls and of those who aré carry- on profitable. problems, the mayor of Cleveland 1n-|:¥=n1°‘.a,7 Crtzhey n;";n'gg*\!:mwlft_'s apparently a barren and untilled field | was shown by the soldiers of the A.jhem. which i at the .gate.” But But proper earnings and the attract-i, "o\ oo mpathetically his wishes in |fects another. He has 1asued an offi- | HosiShy 1o AN 00k pation. ts it not, as | —Indicates & constant effort to ap-|E. F. after the armistice, while they | when the water was broughs by three ing of new capital will not alone con- | In Turkey drinking has been con.|clal request to the male citizens of [ running a proach the religion of Jegus. Re-!were walting trdnsportation to Fe- | volunteers, B rary who won the D. 8 C. by respect to tl . 9 ¢ - - stitute solution of the transportation | ¢=2HC T fined to the wealthy: which shows the | Ohlos metropolis to discontinue the | I€tary. or selling wearing apparel. or {1igious thinkers are examining the|turn to America. Thousands of ma- | FeLng it. David poured it out on the 7 facilities to the people of this country ' problem. Assurance of continuous te sewl 7" ® has provided for the extension of the | tendency of primitive nations to gt |Practice of removing their hats I A NG e e, is one of | indings of the soclologlats and the | ture men took advantage of special |sand and said it was too good And aperation of the railways through re-| 8 PIOET S0 e { civilized the wrong way. olevators in municipal buildings I the few places that have’ stood out | soclologlats are studying construc- | arrangements admitting them to |precious for him to drink. Just like val of the possibility of recurring|™Main library as rapidly as means are the Interest of comfort, conservation | against the killing onsiaught of ad- | ively the problems of religi French and English colleges, where | that, Prerident Harding was hungry moval e po: iafforded for sites and maintenance.| 1 1y, As|¥20cing femininity. “Women stri igion. One | they took special courses in language, | for a turkey dinner, Ilke mothg strikes and lockouts is vitally nece!~'“,h"e it is unfortunate that ad 5 A th ty @ of space and efficiency generally. 8 dently have demanded equal rights. of the most significant contributions | science and literature, thus spending | er us to roast in Marion. and when sary to the welfare of the nation. To |, /0 = * P9 OF s ‘:‘h" van 2 -::m‘"( hasty departure made it{an iseue on which to turn editorial and they are gotting them,” declares | to these allied studies is "The Recon. | four to five monthe in study. Tt was 3 e e accomplish this he would strengthen | 28 ha8 ey oppor- | Impossible for the sultan to bid a fond | guns, this furnishes no less wide athe Cincinnatl Times-Star. = “They |struction of Relfgion, a Soctologlcal | sramiesr commcunivy for thom than 1 | roasted Jike a man of the other party o e - |can vote, and they aiso can stand in ¢ the Railrcad Labor Board or mergelm““y more rapidly, it would seem | fareweil to all his wives. fleld for argument, support and op- | ChT 1O BNG (hey Biso ean mand i by Dr. Charles A. Ellwood, |the Americanization School today for { axking for office, the President. upon now that the value of library branches position than does ship subsidy OT|concerned. But the elevator re-|professor of sociology In the Uni- |the 10,000 flliteratex and for the for- |learning that the turkey was a blue- it with the luterstate Commerce Com- S = d, ap- | majned a place of chivalr - y i e. | eign-i in Washi: - ribbon winner, declared that he could the eighteenth amendment. And, ap. p! chivalrous saluta- | versity of Missouri. The author be-|€ign-born here in Washington. e e g e By has been so effectively demonstrated mission, and then would give this fed- : i What the District of Columbia gets tion. To remove the hat was un|{lieves that th t crisis I that the process will be hastened and| ¢ Christmas is a fivemilliondotiar | PAFERTY: it 12 Just one more WNIDE) o} method of showing medieval | religious. worla has been brought el o2 Be wont 52 buch §o Califarntec Mars) eral adjustment agency the power, o ¢ : !the library carried generally to the on which the world will never agree, {respect for & woman. At involved 10 | nhert ny the: tallnee of enistial 8t | It your Christmas package, care- |1 don't know the moral. unless it is which it now lacks, to enforce its find-| o 1™ Giin branches in selected | Ut 1" the Pudset. for the opposing sides seem to be |sacrifice of seat ' But even there |iigion to adapt itself to the two out- | lossly wrapped and hastily addressed, | that the stomach 'must not Tu ings. y v % 4 s places, with reference to public needs quite hopelessly at variance. Hartfora Times explains it. am ac While this proposal will meet withl 5o F Con oo Ireland now has a government of| “It's a tradition of Clevelard, 0n10." | dawn to a contest between cmfur; ffiL“'if:.E".?«"é.’:“&i.‘fi’a |sl{: 2;'3:.‘?:5 other packages, something may hap- | vation gnaw my vittles out.” & new element was introduced, as the | standing facts in our civilization— bumps in collision with a hundred'm. poem, “Sooner would I let sta opposition from the leaders of organ-| Cireulation is the fundamental prin- | her own, with the privilege of treating | Femarks the Brooklyn Eagle, evi-land effictency, and efficlency won tional, vital and socialised Christian. { Pen just like it does when your auto- ! * % ® % jzed labor, it undoubtedly has thej . g2 S dently with some faint, far-off re- 2king every square inch count I5|jty, and that only & Christianit 1 | mobi 1id. vtih 1 truck. coppart of well resoived publlc opis| CPIe Of the Public Library. Branches | it EGUEIIE ho k0 desites. e Thcen tont fares run. (DO doubt a question of life or death | (s Soct i equal to the taak of se |meoiie collides wilh & coal truck | Eagland hes 1300000 idle whom she e e v i | are the arteries of the system. to carr ming (hrough its mind, this thing of{in the big cities” the Jersey Gty |ing civilization and harmonizing 'its Then the package has o 0 to the, yants to establish in other countrles. American sentiment favors the |y, ciia) fluid to the extremities and th| The cabinet crisis in Spain is proy. |BAVIIE its_mayors rush in where | [IC SORRA€n: ut it the littleiarring inierests, classes, nations and | Post office hospital, which corresponds | yop he sent to the United States last ‘rite- | Amenities that give life color and v = angels fear to tread.” Another writer € X iraces. His purpose is to show how |to our Emergency Hospital. There it {all parts of the community system.|ing even o rougher sport than bull.|in another large city observes that:fuvor are to be sacrificed on the|(nc wocial sciences may help religion | will be doctored and certain nmml!’"’ OBIVSEboE half/ ot (Ehe ot | Washington, the capital. blessed with | fighting. “a queer thing to get excited about) AUAT of fhe Cublc centimeter. WBY|to build a better world. Prof. Ell-[stitches may be taken, but when it permitted her' bty our immigration ian exceptionally high degree of public |1s the quesiion whether men who|EDt B0 Lie Fnole o ooy |Wovd's bovk is probably the ablest |comes out of the ether it will be sort!laws. Now it transpires that there { intellij hould have odel ichance to ride with totally strange |, 8 8 2 o B, e inches by | and most stimulating discussion of | o’ dazed. and the expert surgeon who{is a .well defined vropaganda | intelligence. shou have a model pub- SHOOTING STARS women in elevators ammm.rmmve.pmmm“nx shoes larger than -u;'n 3 | religion In its relation to modern life | sewed up its wounds may order It prejudice the emigrant against col lic library, a series of local circulating | 2 | their hat udr keep tn_fl‘n ?ln. ')Jattudgl_ ‘rom the far-western viewpoint of|that has vet appeared. It hus at-|to the convalescent ward until after|ing to the United Stutes and to divert points through which this great store 10' persons do get excited abou! ;| the Seattle Times, the amasing thing | lracted such wide attention that he | Christmas—perhap: 16ng after. Or—, the hegira to Canada and Australia. { of books may flow constantly and with largest measure of individual erty consistent with the public welfare, and does not. as a rule, hold for the compulsory arbitration of industrial Glsputes, but transportation is so es- sential to the life of the nation, and the certainties of suffering involved in a nation-wide raiiway strike so ap- and thereupon editors all over the | (1€ % h 1y been invited iv ft—might—diel »on't h i 8 at the ‘gentieness and courte: as recently been invited Lo give ajit—might—diel - “Don’t get hurt”!Speeches are made parliament gountry proceed to |:roe\n6“r(:ll;l :Ih;fl Which prompts & man to show defer. |course of lectures before the Yale|then. If your friend to whom you | warning the fmmigrant “of refin ence BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. a maximum of use and, therefore, of ! o 4 f Soman { University Divinity School. Trans- |started it. may not thank you before | ment” that he will have to bring his palling, that the people have made up| . o c News of the Day. {about it by getting duly exclted. Orevalent .“?:‘".:‘..a"‘éi.‘flx‘m."‘ angilations of his work will shortly be/July. 106 hure ansbody.tahom Son| ows Tt he comes 1o Ellis their minds that here is a case where E I really do not have to read {_vRunning a big oy, ,]l_"; man4- | “the inclination of the rest of the |published in German, Italian ard Jap-|love. by eemiug to neglect to re-|Island, for the accommodatior : 08 v P ————e—— The *paper sent diurnally sizedijob.globservesithejXoleclo s |country will be to congratulatejanese. The practcial character of his{member at Christmas time the love | bloody bad, doncherknow? 8o sor: the abstract rights of the few must| ¥ and, It adds, “in some particulars,|SOURLEY WHI be to congratulate (BRSSPl religos thought is give way to the necessities of the| 'When it islearned that many banks}To know how the events proceed, I =7 S1aeamen s its mayor.” N ttested by the fact that he has been 3 many. But they would not deprive|have failed because of “wildcat” pro-| Benignly or infernally. s, T o it Preetttos | o BUE I8 It. atter all” aske the Cedar asked to participate in the revision V 1 d h E f I i railway workers of the right to strike | moters sympathy is felt for the citi- Ithat they can take time from dis- | Raride Cazeite, “a serious h'::_"gl;’e‘ss;‘,"i fnannzicaalis sudavibchonli Sy MY stea ) the Eknemy o or, v < = s = A conference {s under way {butis Moe! usii It d! without substitute assurance of* full |én Wwho loses his savings. What y ’lr ut ng offlee refusing offic olevators or not? It may be that * % % % H : Concerning debts or boundaries; tating _legislation, - | w findt, y: 2 L and cven liberal justice. Such assur-|chance has the ordinary intelligence d t4n, scolding Janitors and policemen | w6 8re flnding other ways of ex-: mye Booklover gets & ch plea L 3 eatened - 2 i : lover gets 0 much pleasure ance is contained in the plan which |againat the purr of the untamed finan. | A strike is thratened and It may | and electrioluns and pipefitters. an- | FiCethEn’s larger place in the woria |and profit from his own reading and o _amte asal out 3 . Tie up some rails and foundries. swering_complaints about impudent : the President recommends to Con-|cial feline, when even shrewd‘and ex- = of affairs w a tribute to their|firmly believes that all may find i |park attendants and dodging re- | worth that exceeds all the fine ameni- St 7 And sy gress, and raflway management no|perienced busincss men permit them-| 5 merger new they'll soon propose, |duests for charitable subscriptions—Iilgs 'of ~ the glorious days when |PCOkS the same enjoyment and -bene- i less than raiiway workers would be|selves to be vamped? And living's cost oppreases us; B e i ta eslae upen mats | knighthood” was in flower. fit, that he is somewhat disturbed at EPRESENTATIVE Andrew J.ithere was the war-time prohibition made fully amenable to the federal ——— e The price of flivvers lowdr goes, ters involving the ancient laws of the thought of the possible encroach- Volstead of Minnesota will go ! law. Congress was not willing to re- tribunal of adjustiment. All that the user of ofl and gas| And parking space distresses us. chivalry.’” Thus enters a new era, d Add Tragedies of Broadway. ment on the exercise of the reading down in history as the man peal it and the law had to be en- s hopes for is that .investigation will - | laime e i Do Sftchne| Here is a real Broaaway tragedy |nsbit by the movie and the radlo. Will who made a more or leas suc- | forced. I thought enforcement legis- Consideration was & by G not create expenses to the companies A millionaire detests his wife; awa; Copybook precepts fa- |told from three cities: the now silent movie, which will soon, | cessful attempt to make the United | lation should come from the judiciary ‘onsidera given by Gen. Art turns to impropriety. &ive way to new doc-| In Los Angeles, George Bronson|N© doubt, everywhere have a phono-|States dry. Some of his colleagues | committee, of which I happened to be Pershing in a recent speech to the | that prompe the directors to increase| & s meanite hats what in social usage. {Howasd, playwrighit, last week killed | graphic accompaniment ~ of spoken | who kffow the details of his early life | chalrm possibilities of war zbroad and of com- | the price. AndTatace ‘° With llds drawn tightly above the|himsel! by Inhaling gas through & idrama or explanation, and will the |point out that because of experiences| That's Volstead's own story of how munism in the United States. The ————— ndistart(a new;soclety. s 0 T Vel O I e, WarayY et the state | raqio, perhaps soon to be as common |during that tmpressionable period he ho came to be “the goat.” peace movement has been strong, but{ Kemal sees only one side of an argu- | Perfunctory phrases win applause; ‘While h)l-yor lfiohler “may have|RAymond. a the: advertising | as the telephone, together makq read- | —ww———m——— 1éveloped a preju- | He is modest, shuns publicity, bui not strong_enoush to leave a good {ment. No matter what propositions| They sound like old Polonius. DS D cticn. (s Nashviile Ban: |- London England. ot Srfagoys | ing unnecessary and kill ‘off the read- | f; i [aice ‘and enmity| will dght stubboraly. almest bone- general under any fear of unemploy- | the allies bring up he insists on talk- | The tariff is a frequent cause nefhthlnk- the ‘:hlne Racans Ilnn 071'1"" um-ea 3 e she mfi-a are raised and considered qnn"; : t;: :x‘:;:::;-u\"ol i av.'om:z'a' :a: bor: :n"luful':ud::x}d ment. . such an assumption. vertheless, | will be rred in “Biffy” at the Gar- .} = 7 ing Turkey. Of comment acrimonious. ! ehe" Albany News sounds & call fof | rick Theater, Y Gar- | thought-provoking article on “Changes | stead did practi- | knows from bitter experience what S ———— c in Reading,” written by the well known ! = ———————— ats off”” to the intrepld mayor, for,| Miss Gerard was formerly the wife | Newark librarian, John Cotton Dai i{cally everything |farm work is. He stayed there till na, | The old world plays the same old|after all, he is right; “it's nonsense|of Raymond, whom she - N+ 9 - - l game. ek hatatln ofies avatore | ard T MR e AL A Seow e i%f&,""-‘::‘f:“.fi: e Ay et e '“:n“"dn = ’T .t:: ::mt' p i TnEs W Siilis seVleatneil tolvblistitt. “What is there about an elevator |arrested for stealing her diamonds.|this age has produced an increasing work to earn an|were three boys in thé family. he de- e al e o rel 3 that should require the removal of|Neither Raymond nor Howard ever|flood of print. He contends that it has honest living and | cided the farm coulin't give them all The news goes on about the same, the hat?’ asks the Chicako News.,recovered from their domestic mix-|now swelled into & tidal wave too g advancement. One | a decent living, #0 he “bt out.” However we embellish it. “As a matter of fact, an elevator isfup, both sinking under the dimgrace | mighty to be dammed up by any pos- of his early esgay-y He had to put up = real fight to zet virtually as much a public convey-|of it. As for the woman in the case,| sibie development of movie or radio. o 2 S = ance as a street car, and much|riothing appears to have stood in the] Examining with somewhat pessimistic als was as an|an education. Besites palnting the Mr. Harding and the Cabinet. Impossibility. cheaper to ride in. Yet men do not{path of her theatrical progress.|eye some of the perils to our civiliza- itinerant painter. | countryside red, one of his experi- The Reclassification Need. | ‘Opponents of Mr. Harding are siyly| I understand many of the oppoal. | Femove Ihelr hath, JUss, Tiomen Co oot 8 O e, o orata s | tion, the writer ‘atil concludes “that el e ke e Bl Civil Service Commissioner Wales |suggesting that three members of the | 100 Voted & straight ticket.” L TG T CIR s SR ES e oo Fires s sl i :':zn:fl-;.:r:: :c::-‘:t lsm::' - - i = T s street cari orison e vl b euy r job, yesterday, speaking before the Na-|cabinet measure up to the prest.| ' They couldn't.” answered Senator |stroft ELrh 89, MeNCNelosince in| The oity really dldnt thinic Mayor peiuciacalicstu e and ithe | S sourios) painting thejbut the high cost of living didn’t i Serv i X lization survives it will be because of : Uonsh CHeil Service: m‘:’&'&"fix ‘:;:l:mr::::;mh:nm;": Hughes, | Sor8 h;'é“m‘fh" ticket was crooked|tne required etlquette, ke Cousens would transter right during | {he presence of that factor. In his| 2ot VOLSTEAD. couniryside red.bothier him much, because he had ~ sess| » M. Ve r. ‘eeks. - e Tope ually mystified over the |his rush hour.—Detroit News. paper Mr. Dana shows that this factor | Dwellings, schoolhouses, barns, fences | pay only $1.50 a week for room anJ the adoption of reclassification prin-|{ True enough. They are strong men, unfque-position oocupied by the ele- Russians afe making a: “grows in strength daily, and grows bul oard. ¢iples as a vital need of the govern-|and any one of them would soon make JRATunkios saysithe ldsatixcperny l'n. ‘::ll:nf:fh -:M"l.:l';: ':fnd'-hzt 'm‘h 5”’4." :ot "& then ”":;nl.::':l he m:?l{. I’:d:{utfigwwl{mn‘“lflnd“:fi: :::ul:mt.;o:“; ::I:m::;mnm: hzl: b Back in Roosevelt's administration ment service. Pointing out that, the | himself at home in the White House. |70t adminiatration would be one that | What reaser can Bs anplied to (58 o e e cian eat—Little |, Conacfous effort be made to use It # | withstand the elements and shone | he was “roasted as an anarchist.” Vol federal service is in & state of constant | But no one of them is thinking of| KNO¥® HOW to economize, byt dom't|BFOOIRT M e eronded. an they drel oo =0t a saviour of our civilization ~ Theforth as brighter spots along the drab | stead recalls, because he fntroduced a change as new dutles develop, he said | the presidential billet. All three are have to. apt to be, it Is an ‘annoyance to|, °f Jl 1: o 't?o&n. Al;{.bsl' is | ing_by legislators and educators, as | country roads. legisiative proposal, recently put in change 2 new & lon, he id e preidentl bilet A1 hree e ; Representative Volstead allows that | the railroad act, to regulate the issu- everybody 'If hats have to be re-|but all it not Iost The h o N e tlos roatior. - Resiliency. moved. The act of taking them off in u un. : o i X be wiltten on the statute books, but|identifying themseives thoroughly Wh ’ a crowded place is awkward. EIbows| Rogjum is now down to $30,000,000 st s mn:« :Mb:”e.:“ m::i n:x:“ ;‘fih e . en prices drop jabbed into backs, ribs and and, incidentally, the biggest part ny of those who are denouncinz that e plan should be outlined, broad | with his administration. They do not stop, :{:ma:hl 2nd persons are sometimes | po;.lnd.‘ Eow- as if it were an - the pay, was chronically drunk.” He | Volstead and demanding amendment classes defined, grades established and| Why refuse Mr. Harding reffomina- Bt e it et with hand in aiv, holding a hatariicle of food—Cincinnati Times- | years is the story of the woman, beau-| . 10 1ne that “usually the job was|of the Volsiead Jaw to tax wines and . salaries fixed by legislation. tion on the record made, and put the +Of bouncing back. aloft and I:l:d.i?l°l ':?“ tfl( da‘lv.n':'l:::;‘ el tiful, of course, who establishes her finished about the middle of the week ; beer to pay a.soldlers’ bonus have m AT ,:m of View is the | atandard mo"m:a Bande oflena ot Hia 3 out doin Fplniury o Ninety thousand letters reach the | fortunes and develops her character by | ;3 | paq to hang around for the | overlooked the fact that, when 4t was n reclassification so clearly seen | official family? Mr. Harding and the as that of the Civil Bervice Commis- | members of his cabinet are in the Congress never opens a session| Clemenceau is broadminded so far ‘without the gratifying knowledsg that |as American politics is concerned. He there are a number of good ideas at|rejoices in the fact that he has per- hand to be worked-out if it has the}sonal friends in both parties. time. A popular type of fictlon in Fecent 4o their hat: The Cleveland Moe News 2387 ess on the snvelop ith 1o |losing, or rather throwing away, her |, op of the week Wajting for the boss | inevitable that the United States must jweet Consideration. News agrees fully. Crowded comdl- [ tions 49’ mot ‘permit the carryin, chastity. Such stories, by three prom- |, g per up before we could go on to | get intq the world war, it was Repre- “ 5 L ‘"l 5 ‘Has Bliggins’ wife made him|pate port, present or or, ltlx. 4. inent authors, are W. L. George's|,nother job.” isentative Volstead who proposed and * sion, which supplies the ‘mador part of | same boat. If the boat sinks, all will | nappy?” says, and “inteliigence sugges " 5 = i & ) YUrsya Trent,” Frank Swinnerton’s| g ingis:s, ho that he has H tod B 5 1 h her. i " keop th hats' on and try to P ” ngis.s, however, e +had | had enact the soldiers ‘and saiiors the personnel to the departments and | sink with She has,” replied Miss Cayenne.|®¢R, ""‘ZP" for Women wishing 1o “Cogquiette” and Arnold Bennett no prejudices against aicoholic bever- | relief act. This was designed to pro- J ty Lausanne, At oently published novel, “Lillan.” They | ;goy , He says: “I never made a|tcct the business affairs of the soldi T . 4 3 * soldier ing that ‘ehe s not to share in the(&nd others of thelr kind afe the @se%y | prohibition speech, never belonged to | while in military service, to protect gz Dineteenth century-novel, in which |a prohibition party, never belonged to [his property agammst forfeiture for “Think of your stenographer.” :‘v&.nflhflfll'fl 1s idealized, mreun:gd by | the _anti-saloon league. But,” he|taxes and to take care of insurance bureaus and maintains, as far as pos-| = There were two members of Mr. | «She got a divorce last week.” crowd Anyway, so far as cou: sible, & standard of efficiency. The|Lincoln’s cabinet of presidential size, —.—t‘_ tesy to, women s concerned, ‘what, it commission can see the service as a|and, moreover, suspected of a desire| “One o' de things I admires about u‘l‘(':.d;b:u:e'l“b;.r:or‘e' hl:iart.l:‘ ;I'::‘n thl';: whole, and it therefore discerns plain- | to mp;‘lnnt him in the party’s leader- | Job,” sald Uncle Eben, “js dat he didn’ ot in “\;:mr doft i:hn. b{:dlu in a o E o non o e ly the inequalities that have resulted | ship—Mr. Seward and Mr. Chase. But|try to blame none of his troubles on mw an n_blows tobaccola typewriter advertisement. Al argues “we ~had the elghteenth |and other obligations while the man irom the patchwork of many decades, | when the time came Mr. Lincoln was | de tariff or de high cost of livin'."” % a.a‘;‘ré:::rd' adds snother Aest—| :;‘lmidngfi(mfl bR W zw).mm dux Ca-l mendment to “the Constitution and ! marched forward under the flag. e Rl ST ey s - 4 Rt S tas ¥Ry IR Ik

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