Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JANUARY 28 1923—PART 5. Judges Who Preside Over Police Court Opera Star Presents Battle Cry Are Keen Students of Human Nature| = (¢ g apan’s Emancipated Woman F, some day when you are sitting who, having heard of their plight, peacefully at your fireside, think- All Sorts of C])arges Faced Day by Day have made an Investigation and are ing of how only Europe is hav- going to see if something can be done senet S o on ot ot e § it Mill That Grinds Continually That Society §|is by tem pissst smprmses . Open Letter to Husband From Oriental Woman Who Is Internationally 7 i 5 Siet|( May Be Protected— Hardened Offenders it it i e 4 'S ' i ’ ; o ’ as the Votics Court, xou witt ana that| § Take Sentences as Matter of Course—Severe (| wronsdome. * The evidonss e pror Known Appears in Pages of Woman’s Magazine at Tokio—Its Message of bickerings and disagreements are not o duced, and then the district attorney 20 contned t0 e boundaries ot a- ) Penalties for Those Who Prey on Innocent {luues it he enims. t it ms| Independence .in Seeking Career Has Singular Background in Nipponese tions across the sea / with the approval of his honor, that There is a bumorous as well as & Strangers. i P! s S » e oun e onibs st tne Firln be paroled in the custody of | Tradition Relating t pathetic side to the y °© the two ladles who have interested e g 0 the mill where justice is ground out themselves in the case. 9 W " d d, If N " £ every working day in the year and, if | TR et odib RGN ke EEaDe BY ADACHI KINNOSUKE. | that reason I have firmly determined you nf?)llr!fllflud::‘:lcl;’fl:"":l'c““‘:“;::b shooting game, and from the {nno- VEN in America, the paradise ; o . s never to become separated from TouiL gis i (ol ntereat ey cent expressions shown by the a of the new woman, an open > / , . ; mustc. God has sympathized with this :;':m’:.: e on Siitine vnateA) cused you would think that they had letter trom a wite to her hus- | L . . ; heart of mine, evidently, for He has to Tearn that avery day in the year | never even heard of the galloplag band would be a novelty. . - _ always led me along the path of art. $have is tioabls womewhers 1o this dominoes, let alone playing them | When such & letter comes from an in- | |7 B . . o Nine years ago, when the two of great city, that people of all walks K 1 Again the presiding officer quickly | ternationally famous representative o : ‘4 |us left Japen, vour sclentific study e iits aie aoii SbtEetMRE OhAC TR A arrives at the truth and fines are im- | of the gentle womanhood of Japan, it z i ey was our chief aim. I thought of Violation of the laws of our land, and | posed. Some have the necessary|ls a shock. # o Ly : 4 |studying music only when random fkat stern justice has reached out her iamounts. It is really remarkable how | Mme. Muira, who s deepiy admired s S AN e opportunities might present them- fatil aad hatea them Lefors thewhan |some people can securs money to pay [ in this country and in Europe as an i ; } selves. Fhopredides Gver this: comrt. - - |fines and seldom can raise enough to| opera singer, has written to her hus- | f& b 3 : " “ g “But on the way my lust for art It ihey ave not satisfied $o take a g ipay Just debts. The others smileband through the pages of a woman's (- 7 sty § v - ralsed its head. . It brought us to ehencs with “his honor,” they are! i | slckly grins and head for the cage | magazine in Toklo. Her letter a: o i % : 3 s o the condition we find toda: Under B over Untl) suchiitine ania oy | 5 i {from which they will be given a free| tonishes even those who have been . S . e ] [the circumstances, my desire for ot their peers can pass upon the| A 3 3 At |Fide to their home, for a few months.| closest to the woman's movement §i/ i/ | o “ i i q{ |study became more and more Insist- merits of the case and report findings | ' : 5 g on the Eastern branch. throughout the world. It sums up 5 > : i ent and I began to forget ail else 0 the sitting magistrate. | [ Day after day these scenes are pre-| the evolution of the Japanese woman. - i : e o and devote myself to art exclusively In almost every large city in the| H ! |sented. Day after day the judges| It tells the story with dramatic vivid- ¢ 2 a0 and feverishly. country there are several police | 1 b ! | | =ift the wheat from the chaff and dis-| ncss. Gone forever is the humble. . . i 7 “At times I stand in a room of a ccurts, but here we have only two. In | i |pense justice, endeavoring to do that | welf-denying, wistful-eved lady who . S poor boarding house In a strange man ipalities one will also| d I ‘K b |Which will prevent crime: for, after| has been content to sit patiently be- i - 7 : : : land, without an acquaintance. Then find night courts where cases of i | all, that is the primgry duty of allf hind her lattice and await the pleas- | |8 N { X I f| |there was a time also when stand- minor importance are tried, and it i i § i HER | & | courts. ure of her lord and master. In her & 3y % petvs v & beside you—or mayhap in the speaks well for the conduct of the X i il | stead we find a modarn woman, tri- s Presence of a relgning Goverelgn—I majorlty of the citizens of Washing- i | & umphant and defiant, who looks with B 4 7 sang under a shower of applause, as ton that there does not appear to be Y e R ) 1 i | Professional Ranks Are proud eyes to her sisters across the e v e though the happiness of this world any pressing need for such institu- iH B &L W 1 1 sea. i J > were a thing all my own. AndI thi e f (N Represented Among Diplo-| *};..... Muira’s own life might stznd i / e 7 always that it is a matter of true Despite the fact that many cases | i i | mats Now in Washington | 2 the epitome of the oriental wor- { h < e & oy that I could taste with you both are tried in our local Police Courts, : an’s eager, fumbling, unhappy strug- it i § the happiness and the sorrow and the majority of the infractions of the A A i I b i (Continued from First Page.) gle for freedom. She spent, as che f i 3 talk them over. Iaw are of & minor character, and the s i \ i says, “half a lifetime of tears” before | ¢ = 2y : “Muira Masataro-sama: she galged recognition in her art. | ) ‘ v L 4 { “I have heard the people of the Her first husband brought her only § 5 6 F world say: ‘You must be lonesome misery, and, to the consternation of | k& { Indeed, living as you do far from : her family and her public, she ran| NS 3 |each other’ Indeed, I am not at ali |over duties which might be likened | yuay from him. She fled to Singa- | ! > P : |certain whether we have any right ;" t‘;::fl:‘fc::o:\oeedlla:r:::isgr‘awr‘ But | pore, to the man she loved—Dr. Muira. | [ V 4 P N |to call ourselves man and wife if a neX only to{Tnat was nine years ago. Now Dr.| b o 7 R married couple should be always facs © food nlaced on the market, but | yruira has been left {n Toklo, while : -8 et G gk to face and never be separated when jals to that being grown 1n the|ine singer, brilliantly successful at | ; A S RN g ithey go out and when they come in |flelds. Ho had never served in any | ya4¢ but fired with ambition and be- £ : | “Bue we march each our separate |°“b"° capacity save this, when, aft-| ;¢ i herself and wedded to her Jyi§ A @R G 2 % |way, you and I. On the surtace we | er the proclamation of the new Pol- | caredk, faces the world again. A > w i ¢ [lead a separate life. Wit all that | ish state, he became the undersecre- 2 W > “ |my heart is firmly united with your |tary in the foreign office of Warsaw. 2 h2 be Bl % 4 S o v truet each other. There is | Dr. Wroblewski is the son of the HIS is her letter to her husband: < 5 . ’ i {70 sense of uneastness on the part of |revered patriot, Joseph Wroblewskd, “Moira Masataro-Sama: i 4 ik % e 4 g z Ither of us—not in the least. This, ] who led the futile Polish revolution| “At the reguest of the Fujin Sekal | 2 . - 3 4 |think, you fully understand. I think | ©f 1869 and dfed In exlle. T wish to tell you what is in my heart S b Koo i ¥ also that even while to all outward i The Rumanian minister, Prince An- | completely and without rese: : o # ¢ seeming I appear cool to you, you toine Blebesco, has proven a capaple | everything 1 have been thinking all s : : yourself must recognize that I am diplomat and has interpreted his peo- | the time. The world outside has been | y e v § |fuliliing my part as your wife In |Ple with complete success to Amert- | watching our household with eves of | NEESES > 3 7 |another and more noble sense. I am |oans, who were utterly Ignorant of | curfosity. They are right; ours s in- % *ig>7¢ y Y 8% 3 |quite content as long as you do th thelr history, aspirations and ambi- | deed an unnatural, a crippled family. | ot < 3 F GSPel | I pray you anew that you remain ons. His appointment was, how-|As an artist, 1 can to some extent 2 % » 3 g 3 |the good and gentle husband to mic ever, cntirely sentimental and | maintain my confidence. As a mar- | FE g - A & {to the end of time—to me who was | prempted by his decent from a former | ried woman, I have not the slightest | i R 4 - A 5 P [born with this ever-young spirit and >Ir°:'!! d:nnw of Rumania and hta|ability whatever. Iam a spectacular | . Sl i |a love for life's beautiful things." | Intonse devotion to Rumantan .| fatlure. That much Is plain to me, | - 2 = . He had declined court appolnl‘:-.::llsl et‘r: to me, r«:oush :a 1 rpenaxnly am | MME. MUIRA, WHOSE OPEN LETTER TO HER HUSBAND IS PUB. e untll the crucial post-war days, when | Whenever T watch you feeding mar- | LISHED IN TOKIO. HIS letter, written for the wo every hand was nceded in the work | mots and rabbits in the course of your to read, is more than a letter. L. of roconetruction. He had acted | medical studylng und investigation, |Proudly. Sometimes you took me |.,{ elf throughout the e al press of |is (he oriental woman's declarati penaltics imposed are largely in the | swer to his name, a court official on | the judge. Iach combatant had his:b'“fl:" in the Rumanfan legation in |feeding them varfous foods and test- ) 'he hand and rejoiced with me, say- | engagements, I shail take this oppor- |0f independence. It is her battle cry uature of fines, which, in the main, | the outside shouts the name three|witnesses, who swore that 1he|r;:fi|1‘<\{on Wwhen he was named mintster | ing them with various medicines, | !N&. ‘It was very well done’ At other E hing ¢f the|of freedom. It means the crumbling have the desired effect and cause the |times. If the violation is a minor | friend was set upon by the other man o Washington, shutting yourself up il alone in that ?‘“’"f you sympathized with me, say- ] me when 1 was but a child, so that |of the sturdiest barrier.which the en- oftenders to be more careful the next!one and sufficient coliateral has been | withaut the slightest provocation. It} o o ox lonely study and working rmuemlyi“”“-‘ ,T'”’f aid not come o'fl auite as | see how deep has |lightened modern woman has faced; time. posted at the station house, the judge | was a tie until the ninth inning of L.\TIN American countrics have | WWAY. T often think how mueh more | % i > “‘\"‘_“"‘“““‘b" would. | fon with the stage. . |for Japan is surely the place of the It i5 true. of course, that the “reg- | orders the cash forfeited and the|the conflict, when one of the prin- founded their diplomatic traqy.| n€ and happy for me if T should.| 7 Uive Masstanicstnny, o 3 E {origin of the ldea that woman's place ulars.” those unfortunates that have | money goes, eventually, into the|cipals made a elip, only & slight one. | tions of Spatn ang Portagal, and | once for all, throw over my art and | am ever thanking God from the| A . S " |1s in the home. For centuries the . e = , g 3 . as = = 4l depth of my heart for having given €6\ JUIRA MASMIARO-SAMA: When | women of Japan have acoepted with- the unhappy faculty of getting 1nto | Treasury of the United States, for in |but it was evidently what the JUdge | a rule, the long list of envoys mom | N€IP You look after your rabbits and | 1°P'h of ¥ Shevin . A\ i, S N n of Jap: pted trouble all the time, generally draw | the District of Columbia all money |had been after, for in pursulng his | serving in the American capital have | [I&FMOts and prepare for you }Our;:;;;d‘:r!“:;‘m s “‘\01‘7‘1"{"“1 el “‘“ e -“‘M 2 ::1-'vn~ out 2 murmur a masculine domination Sall sentences, with or without fines, | received must be turned back to the |1ine of questioning he soon was able | followed the usual gradations favorite dishes ke a gontle wife and e as you. T am an utterly | gzn 10 an ancing |more complete than that which the : e : - 4 as | hopeless person away from music. | master. Becaus fond of it |y 5 % and thess chronic offenders are Wise | govarnment. If, however, the offense | to determine upon who was the|gtrictly as promotions &0 in the mil. | V€ beside you all the time. e T o (o thie ‘_:“. sl A St :uo:;n of any other race have en enough, in the great majority of in- o opinion of the|gullty part Twenty dollars Was iary gervice. Nearly “I have also felt as though some | Losh stances, to throw themselves on the ;id:';e c:;;‘:’,:: ::c ,,Orzsr‘e‘nm of the| the amount of the fine. [has’nadors .n;(:::’n::xe:t:‘::fir:fi; one were pulling back my soul from | 10! SIng. e alibel aferiqotimy | - Asaresult it seemed that| Japanese soclety, since the dim be- meorcy of the court after making a . ons. is 18-] . s Bave Lioe: ! behind whenever T left you alone in | life. At times I so completely lose |1 made unexpectedly rapid Progress. | ginning of history, has been based o : accused one, then a summone is is- | * nown - service previously fin e a .| myself dreaming over the melodies 1| And the master used to send me on |the theory that the wife must minfs- plea tosdenteney. sued and tho alleged law VIolator I8} o \wppy, known name was called; | S0Me minor capacity. But the new |7OUF 4umey e et e on™> L love that T forget utterly that I have | to the stage at all opportunities, In |ter to her husband's desires; that she “ . brought fnto court just as soon as{ A W response. The ‘three calls|OFder e becoming visible even fnj sRUECL MU P8 KN 00T T 1 | you as my husband. Such am 1. Time of my age. After entering the |must arrange his home to his taste, \vm\' and again you will find that | the authorities can lay their hands| ..., ouiside, but still the accused | ‘hese “X‘" countries. The brilliant! , B 0 >0t people robed lie |&nd again T have not been able to musical school opportunities naturally must rear his children, and, in a very 4N some “smart aleck,” who is not|upon him. : one did not appear. His collateral | YOUNE minlster who has recently been o "WWENY L LEEG B hat | look after v On the contrary, You|came to me to appear on the stage |liberal sense, must honor, obey and familiar with the routine here, tries to| The second Individual is accused of | \ oy ¢5rroited, when the judge was | SNt from Colombla to clear away the | 1% °5% "l SUCR, B B0l Ll Wil | vourselt have taken the trouble of iwith the students who were training [be respectful. bunco the presiding officer. He is gen- | having “cawn” in his possesslon. He|, c cq that the wanted one was (138t Vestige of resentment over the |l MEVEr MO8 JANR T TS T T 1ooing atter my own personal affairs. | there. 1 was always happy while 1| This ia like a fiash of blinding light crally some would-be “wise guy,” who | has been tried and found Builty once |, yyo pogpital, having some rather | Panama matter, Senor Enrique Olaya, | g =" " Moy PG S0 Pl 16 here | “Mulra Masataro-sam was ging. Cut off from my |on Japanese womanhood of today. It still 43 of the impression that there 18 | before, and he does not want to take |y (oiage liquor removed from ‘i :'cl‘ched the pinnacle along the polit-{ of YOUT BPRS N 0 art from my | “When I think of it, I am convinced | life was er complete. Since I have |means that the new woman of Japan o town in the country outside of la second chance with the Judge. 80|y oygiem, and that he was in a| Cal route. He served in many posts| .\ ‘mpig you have yourself come to |that T was fated to stand upon the|come to understand things, 1 have |has come into being so swiftly that New York, but after he has regained | his lawyer demands a jury trial. Boud, uypor 1aq way. This was punish- (' the legislative branches and was| .j;” Always you have eent me |stage from the time of my birth. As|always known that I could not live the world has been unaware of her lis eenses he finds that the mild-|is demanded, and @s S0OM &S @W AC- | n.ny anough, according to the men- | T8Cently secretary of state, being the| g iy tanderly and welcomed me home | T have not been able to unbosom my-|a single day apart from musie. For larrival mannered man on the bench has | ceptable bondsman has appeared and | i " TGS G NCTON orlo, day by | Youngest premier Colombia ever pos- handed him a jolt that will prevent | complied with the necessary formall-| o “'coo " sile greatest reey of life |Sessed, and one of the youngest re- him from mingling with his fellow | ties, the accused leaves the courtroom | ...t chown. corded in history to hold such a re- . 0En ok beverat dnoriiie o conse: with his counsel. | The next on the docket starred |Sponsible post. While the local judges are fair, yes,| The next victim comes inside of the | i iroce and maid. The latter, a| Dr. Don Pedro Manuel Arcaya, nml | ! iof Cracow for many generations. At the beginning of the war, the min- ister was placed in charge of the | student camps and gradually he took even merciful men, they have bfl: on | rajl, is ordered to stand to one §ide, | Laiver diminutive person, was charg- | Minister from Venesuela, was chief the bench long enough to know how |gng the complaining witness takes the . e appropriated some of | justice of his country, and later min- = to spot and to handle any “wise one” | grand. The accused presents a racher'::r“'e'::p;",ycrf R ies of olothing. | ister of public instruction. He was BY FINLEY PETER DUNNE. that blows into the city, and 1t 18 | romariable appearance. His head 15| jror jawycr entered a general denial | for thirty years professor of interna rather amusing to see the change of | 4y a¢ped in bandages, his right “optic” | 4,4 demanded a jury trial. The mis- | tional law in the Uiniversity of Cara-| . L' man Donahue bought used to play his chunes,’ he says—'me axpression on the faces of those who | [ 'yaq)y aiscolored and he bends over | iress was leasing for Florida in a | Cas and is the most erudite historian| € € Moy & lsany Ww - - | brother Mike, that run th’ grip ca-ar,’ thought that t could get away | ¢, one side as he walks. He IS SUB-|few days. and compller of textbocks fis his! week,” Mr. Dooley sald in, “ v he says. ‘But there's wan thing miss- , With It when they find that the gentle | goyiivq of o case that might be treat-| The next seven cases concerned the | country. the’ souras of his conyer- in’'fr'm Molly's playin'’ ‘he saye. person on the beneh has not fallen|eq ™ py' tne druggist from Nancy. |stuff that Mr. Volstead has put on| A glance at the long list of lesser| ...\ o cin Mr. MoKenna. “She'd been “‘And what may that be?” says Mrs. for thelr line of chatter and has seen e : / B . e ooy | sation A ) = S o The complaining witness. after a 100k | ine contraband list. Each of the de- | diplomats, o e making. | ..\ lessons fr'm a German down th | Donahue, ) ihfough theithinly wellad 1166 at the work she has accomplished, | fendants, being new at the game,|8hows an early training equally re-{ S0 0 IR Loh Py Bl gy . | “'An ax.’ says Slavin, backin' out. If you want to see the beglnning of | g ¢o show signs of regret that |inrew himself on the mercy of the |mote from those hitherto conferred | IS "y "y or hands crossed as| B : e | A “So Donahuc has took to dhrink.” the Police Court work drop into Mot | o0 y0g fhvoked the law, evidently | court, and they drew fines that large- | on the envoy to be sent to foretgn | ot Tl o ol ancer She's been & (Copyright, 1923.) any station house the night befors| .., .iaiing the fact that tha @b-|ly increased the amount that re-|lands. But, without exception, the(CAby v Jo " o ginoe an' Dona- ’ { you are golng to visit the court and {, ;2100 of the prisoner at the bar |poges in Uncle Sam's strong box. | participants in the world war havel\w'E & o0 Lo 0 Sniniver ho 708 wil wpe me"ka”ddw:me"dbu.r‘: is @ wonderful demonstration of her | If one were (o sit down and figure |Sent to Washington men eonnected| .. oo ye. Ants of Himalayas. brought them in have blaced against|iC toll the judge that the whole mat- | ing traffic cases, eto, he would lsarn | 5 th' la-ads wint over T to Bee wheth- L (B . ets ol T ot masystustlshow e offense 1 ter resulted from her man being | that,many thousands of dollars, yes, |of a depleted treasury, the premiers| . . "o\q ymosh his table In a : i e T e e their names. I an alleged offense 1] ,verly jealous and that they had ! nhundreds of thousands of dollars, are | of European countries are convinced | 70 ¥ Jo (M0 L nies 1 domt \ ; 3 y 5 / A e T et e e e Pecossary fliEht misunderstanding. It is the{pald cach year by those who cannot | that it requires a hero to make such|, b ¥ 0 0" orsenged Donahue. He \ 3 £ e e s ;fl:h‘lf) dip:m‘“ the station house|PFlsomer's first appearance in the|convinco the authorities of their in- | efforts obvious to the creditar na~| . .. agied his frinds into the parlor SR A B ¥ 7 S b e s or can secure the services of a bonds. | S°UTt and the judge, influenced. no|nocence. o befure. They used to set in th' din- - § ] tion that seems extraordinary. Among O e turmed loose and told to|d0ubt, by the spirit of romance that | The next case on the docket con- fag Toom; an’, whin Mrs. Donahue £ ot e wniin g A morning ot the | c108KS the affair, admonishes both o] cerned the crowing of a rooster. P g B e ek evA 3 - - : TG EE ante wnL ;fo‘:“’:: Z,:m‘ o aonad ouse he | Bettle their difterences in & manner | Here again we saw many witnesses, Regulating Headlights. dle out th' side dure with their hats 4 ¥ 7 4 ;':‘rixb“u?pp:; rt:;;y’ 10,000 teot the e that will not be an Infraction of the | and if all of the them had been heard, GOME time ago thero was placed |in’thelr hands N e staiat in0iereaiat It you want to be In at the very be. | 18W and dismisses the case. it would have clogged the wheels of upon the market a device for| “But this here night, whether ‘twas & /s B ol ot dseet teer teiis ginning of the show you should drop| The next actor on this stage ls ajustice for the rest of the week. The | eeping the light projected from the | that Donahue had taken on a dhrink N oy v v TouRd.abd et da down there & few minutes before 9 ((¥Pical hobo, one of the gentry that[judge selected two or three on each|peadlight within legal ltmits. It 18 |or two too much or not, ho asked thim — / S et e dareral nvesit o and waten the line of officers and | Make for the south in the winter. He side and proceeded to sift the Matter | 4o crineq as an all-metal, cellular at- | all in th’ front room, where Mra. Don- e s Sation would show that they exist others as they are walting thelr turn |DaPpened to be a little ghort of ready | with a swiftness that was indeed |, cymene that Is put In the upper |ghue was settin’ with Molly. e leven at 13,000 feet or more. A ‘o be heard by the district attorney |funds ané commenced to panhandie| surprising. His decision appeared 0| pa1¢ of the headlight behind the reg- | »I've brought me frinds’ he says, N lau fant, not faund o) any. biher and his assistants. It is a busy place, [ (P08). He happened to strike a plain- satiefy both sides. ular glass door. It contains more |:rr to hear Molly take a fall out lv' I ocntiin raiige b thet the | 5 " |clothes man and the tome that he! The next person to face the bar d 31 mietal re- | i ’ Let hav. = . and ft is no locality for & ehrlnking- {1 (o, 0ol 3™t the officer that ne|of justics was, Judging from his 8D- | fesrors constitating approsimaters | L iio-box. Be By e el not| “MOLLY WINT AT IT AS THOUGH SHE HAD A GREDGE AT IT. |Himalayss possess an immense va- violet sort of a person, for every one | 2 & flectors, constituting approximately | ye're hat, Mike,' he says. ‘Ye'll not FIRST 'TWAS ONE HAND, THIN THE OTHER.- rlety of local specles of ants. Out was a regular. 8o he took him to|pearance, a stranger not only to the| ;o gouare feet of highly polished foel it whin ye get out, he says. xious to get his or her mat- = t::r:llt:::'\(:or: :_::‘ don't dare even | the station house, where a search dis- | city, but to city ways. He had been | . qecting surfaces. “At anny other time Mrs. Dona- * ;:)'1.1: (:;ln;’. :;c:‘:‘l,:::l:: "t‘: Hll;::-: o e ent. you lows your place be.jclosed the fact that in addition to a|buncoed—the old story of too much ' Th object of the “glassless lens” |nue'd give him th' marble heart. But |in this house, ‘she saye. ‘Molly, give | &irl’ he says ‘Why, pap-pah, says lane an fore the ralling that separates the|Pair of brass knuckles he had two faith reposed in strangers—but “:‘ 15 to deflect those rays which normal- | ¢nov wasn't @ man in th' party that,|us & few ba-ars fr'm Wagner. ‘What | Molly, ‘What d'ye mean? she says. G legal lights from the outsiders and |FaZors. Three months was the por-|headquarters officers had been able |y rise above the forty-two-inch level | yog 5 panny to his hame, an she | Wagner's that “That's Wagner,' she says. "Tis ih' e R oimeien. tion of justice that was meted out tolto round up the men he claimed rob-| 4nq cau®s glare and to project them {1 ;.. they'd be throubls whin they |Wan ye know.’ says Donahue 5 TaliSlo 1y £ Tatures she says. ‘em: China Tea. About 10 o'clock you step into the {BI™- Bell i, Kntt | romi the 1ok i ;‘: instead upon the roadway, where they | o 0% 0" ou1d about ft. ~Tis [German musiclan’ ‘Thim Germans is | Says Donahue, ‘but 1 don't want me room where justice Is to be dispensed,| Then came two familics—fathers, | *¥® it was ml?ner a good thing t . [ore wanted. & melodjious insthrument,’ says she.|hot people f'r music, says Cassidy. 1| hell on earth. 1 can walt £ it/ he| QOME interesting statistics have and if you are wise you will sit about | mothers, cousins, uncles and aunts,|h° was impressed by his surroufid-| Tho principle of construction is sald |.; cq git here be the hour an listen [ufed o know wan that cud play th' | ays, ‘with th' kind permission iv Mrs. | boen gathered with reforence to (hree seats from the front row, for|to say nothing of numerous small|in&s for had he been in ""b:: Ve | to cause the device to transmit 93 per |, 5 i en ana Choochooskl, she|“Wacht am Rhine” on a pair iv oym- | Donahue’ he says. ‘Play us th'|the great decline in China’s tea trade. this is the best place to hear and sec | members of the families. All of them ; Beath Some ono would have Beeome |cent of the lamp's candlepower. ey bals” ho says. ‘Wieht! says Dona- | “Wicklow Mountaineer,”’ he saya |From 1678, when tea was first intro- ail tuat 1s golng on. From this point | wantéd to tell the story to the|&acduainted with the knuck '- of & PO, hue. ‘Give th’ girl a chanst.’ ‘an’ threat th' masheen kindly,’ he|duced into England, until 1837 China bt vaniage you can lear the qulet|judge and they all wanted to tell iz |and t::“'x‘:l“e °""°"°:|° “'d“‘ Earth’s E 4 | “Slavin tol’ me about it. He says|sass. held exclusively the tea trade of fne Asidos from -witnesses, those about to|at the same time. It required the |Strensth. el e e ik The s Energy. I (AT did them write? says|he niver hecerd th’ lMke in his born| “‘She'll play no “Wicklow Moun-|world. Then India began to enter bo tried and thelr friends. From this | combined efforts of all the court at- | '™ & JIffy. for ail judges have the ut- bas been estimated that the w Cassidy. ‘Chunes,’ says Don- |days. He says she fetched th' planny | taincer,”’ says Mre. Donahue. ‘If ye|tho tea market. The Chinese tea point you can hear some of them |taches to restore even a semblance of two or threo wallops that madoe Cas- | Want to hear that kind iv chune, ye| trade reached high tide in 1886, with speculate upon their cases, and some- | sidy jump out iv' his chair, an’ Cas- | can go down to Finucane's Hall,' she | total export of 300,000,000 pounds. times, although not often, you can sldy has charge iv' th’ steam whistle | Says, ‘an’ call in Crowley, th' blind |In 1884 China furnished about 72 per hear two offenders laying a wager as | part of his honor enough facts were are apt -to soak the bunco artists earth In & single second as it circles | lu-ads?' o 2 at th' quarry at that. = piper she says. ‘Molly, she says,|cent of the world's total, Indla and te which one will draw the larger |brought to light to show thae jt| 5t SPL 19 SofR €88 DI CXEER| oung the sun. And yet so perfect| *Dyo know “Down be th' Tan-| “She wint at it as though she had a|'¢lve us wan iv “thim Choochooski|Ceylon, 18 per cent, and Japan and 1me. . " |uuly was a civil case and that some | CF r ST Al T e on the | 18 the mechanism that, flying around |yard Side?’ says Slavin. N -..yl.rrod'a at it. First 'twas wan hand | things,’ she said. ‘They're so ginteel.’ | Formosa, 10 per cent. But, at last most contempt for the class of T s 4 . power developed by a million |ahue, ‘chunes. Molly)' he says, ‘fetch order.’ After about half an hour of | STOOKS thet prey en the WMROCR| . DUl 15" million years would | 'er th' wallop to make th' gintlemen Solomon-like interrogations on the | SIRNECR TOC SO (T LCVE OO | not equal the energy expended by the [foel good. he says. Whatll it be, b one had been stretching his imag- theory that all of us city folks have|!ts axis at an ‘equatorial speed of | Molly. ‘It goes like this™ says Sl an’ thin th' other, thin both hands,| “With that Donahue rose up. ‘Come |accounts, when the total consumption HE judge has entered the room,|ination In a talk with the district( 0" V't "the fitm-flam games often |Mmore than a thousand miles an hour | vin. ‘A-ah, din yadden, yoodean knuckles down; an’' it looked, says on,’ he says. ‘This is no place £ us’|had increased to 644,000,000 pounds, T the bailifts are shouting for|attorney’s office. ok th B8 £k SOF SHEHE and around its orbit at more than 1,100 | yadden, arrah yadden ay-a’ ‘I din-|Slavin, as if she was goin’ to leap into | he says. China contributed only 30 per cent, order, the district attorney has taken| Again, two fighters appeared. Both miles a minute, all the mundane influ- | naw it says th' girl th’ middle iv it with both feet, whin “Slavin, with th' politeness iv ailIndia and Ceylon, 60 per cent, and hs seat and the name of the|of them showed unmistakable sign o ences of which astronomers know could| ““Tis & low chune, annyhow,’ says | Donahue jumps up. man who's gettin' even, turns at th’|Japan and Formosa, 10 per cent. {irst person to bo tried is called out|of vigorous combat and each declar- | FJWO young girls, still in their early | not change the length of its day as|Mrs. Donahue. ‘Misther Slavin ivi- LR dure. 'I'm sorry I can’t remain’ he| The decline in China tea is ascribed in tomes Joud enough to be heard all{ed that the other was the aggressor. teens, are. the next to he called |much as a second in & hundred thou- |dintly thinks he's at a polis pienio’ | ¢¢ ¢L JOL' onl’ says Donahue. ‘That's | says. ‘I think th' wurruld an’ all iv|to careless methods of cultivation and over the room. 'If he does not an-| It looked as If here was a puzsle for upon to plead. They are accom-|sand years. - she says. TIl have no come-sll-ye's 'nat & reénted planny, ye daft|Choochooski,’ he says.: ‘Me brother!preparation of the leaf.