Evening Star Newspaper, March 7, 1923, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1923. THE EVENING STAR,|tons. It had passed the Senate, but | backbone to resist efforts to force them SEETIC | With Sunday Morning Edition, _ | o2 in the Houso for lack of umo | inio such & truttiems b rewimwmat| | WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS Politics at Large CAPITAL KEYNOTES WASHINGTON, D. C. had been ordered giving it privileged | condition where things must get worse - status. before it can be hoped they will get 5 BY N. 0. MESSENGER WEDNESDAY . ... - March 7, 1923 "7 that measure been considered | batter. Chancellor Cuno's address to BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE BY PAUL V. COLLINS by a joint committee, representing both | the reichstag yesterday indicated no ..o Editor J & ¥ y : houses acting in unison, instead of first | softening of the German attitude, He| Senator William E. Borah may be | himael as “a partial colonel.” A po.y LociNE it beat all how different THEODORE W. NOYES.. . S % America rofuses to recogmize the,property, Prosident Clavels : j r : % AL . Prosident Cloveland made & by a Senate commiti— and then by a |declared that Franco-Belglan occupa-|%UT Arat chain-lotter President. He| lilical crony “who recently cd [ Deople in the same o o el | Sovlet government of Russia, for that | Precedent by dispatehing orders v House committee, acting independent- | tion of the Ruhr had resolved itself (!l Do if Marcus W. Robbins, at-of the Motion Picture Producers and s i 7 18 too radical to fit into the scheme | 'USfuleral Arni o o ander & propositions? It is certainly amaz- When reat Britain undertook te of civilization. A cablegram an-|ignore the Monroe doctrine and e nounces that the semi-civilized sovi- | ¢Touc B upon Venezaclan boun. i Ahe Evening Star Newspaper Company Business Office, 11th St. and Pennaylvanta Ave. oW York Oiee 170 Nasean St 1y, it would doubtless be a law today. | into a dismal economic failure, and as- torney-at-law In San Diego, Calif., | Distributors Corporation obscrved to e Chicago Office: Tower Building. has his way. Mr. Robbins Is now | hlS surprise that the walls were not | i18- Now, take the works and acts European Office: 18 Itegent St., London, England. | The Washington school system would | serted that Germany would not nego- | o adorned S = Bt S 2 = ned with the autographed por-{of the Sixty-seventh Congress and President Cle i then have been in a position to com-| tiate to bring the occupation to an | ¢ "'“‘lf"" country with circular let-| traits of movie stars. Hays' den con- | (he administration as praised or dis- | ©t5 have just exccuted forty-two high e e e SaEdie e ol Epening Star, with the Sunday mOrmng | pete for efficient teachers agalnst| ond. The chancellor insisted that be- ;oo calling upon “all common Amer- | tains but one picture. It is an' cn-| b officials and sentenced to DFison, fOr|to nrotect the dorie aot o e tion. 1s delivercd by carriers within the city fcan citizens to get into ste 4 to | larged photograph of his_scven-vear- | Paraged by respective commenta- o e Sy D d the rights at 60 cent daily only, 45 cents pef | cther large cities, instead of being | fore there could be negotiations there | qqqg o o "y D 10 860 wnd Shelv. Whlitm Harison |tors. Tt Ys all'th the polut ot visws | corms varying from:one: toiten: yedars, {0 ;10 SOUCH American country. His Gern e e Miata | compelled to see many of the best|must be complete abandonment of the | 1 Baray 2or presiint 1 rint e | HAYS, 24, posed a3 a crack golfer. Democtats, for biatancs, Jaoking ]340 oftier offciuls found SUHW Of| fueal 1o submit the maiter Lo b ity 8000 Cotceriun 127 ety earrlers at (¢ | teachers leaving because they are of-| scheme of occupation and full restora- | Robping eneyetto 1o o el ’ d"'::“ * ok ok back upon the Congress. vision it as|corruption in ofiice. tlon won the im : | fercd better pay elsewhere. As it is, | tion of seized property, With Indemnity | o postal eard amticien . rne poyey| Senators arc scattcring to the four |if seen through the telescope invert- e SRR T i T Rato by Mail—Payable in Advance. |Washington must now wait nine [to Berlin. In other words, that & Pre-! Chain Rocimierts o ooy o 4" | winds. Underwood s nearing Europe | cd—a small and even ‘insignificant | The Investsating comvm ffee oF 1 TS M Marylznd and Virginia. months, and then begin again the |requisite to negotiations is that France | ganize a “link-by-link vote whh_ldnnd Johnson and Moses start for that {fizure, indicating - neither majority, ‘Daily and Sunday..1 yr., $5.40: 1 mo., 702 | qpjy, ngress for = destination this week. MecCormick | powe inatl rab 2 s e e a0 1 mo- Ie | drive on Congress for a living wage | shall acknowledge defeat and sue for | will carry Borah Into the White y o TcCormick | power nor domination. It is drab and Sunday ouly a $2.40: 1 mo., 20¢ and Central Americ s anson Senate which is to probe the charies [had looked upon e pet oo o of graft and mismanagement of the|the nsions of pOs! v *hi Veterans' Burcau has received its in- 114! assert for its teachers—for those Intrusted |peace. As continued German opposi-|House.” o will hie himself to Chicago to pell- |colorless and squirms upon tho glass s : |protectora S the weaker nations with the training of vout tlon only serves to stiffen French de- | quest. that end they are re-|ping for the republican candidate in |8 & mean and RO e ERes ; structions from President Hardin of the | 8 wealer I 4 = i nly ser! Quested to send the message—"Borah [ 1o \windy city's hot mayoralty c publicans seem to use the same tele- | go the lim The committee, co E 1 t her The elsim that joint committee | termination to make occupation of the | for President, 1924"—to five friends. i I8y ity 8 fot mayoralty cam- - Al Other States. g > potimevoraliy Keope i ‘its magninying . capacity . jresitzca ‘it G Noneo aotin St “_:“,“'M gse | WOk would have expedited passage | Rubr effective, prospects for any early | “Ask them to do the same,” says| bt Lerroot will proceed to Cali-fund o them tho late lamented Con- | Wulsh of Massachusetts i co-operativ e 5 S i fornia n aw cons cress 100; arge p ce: 7 i the . ba Y- YT $47.00: 1 mon, 60c | of the teache bill is also | settlement of the controversy seem all | Robbins. “Done ten times, and it | (o r “;_",,_’f:“.,, s B chmmpprns. £ S s ada; hasthe responsiniiity o it Bunday oniy. i vio, $3.0 35¢ | made with regard to a dozen or more | but hopeless. Yet it is Into such a|reaches nine million people. Do NOt | ontire recoss i T oo atotn i | Just opinion, unbiased politically, | st sum over Tanfleal by -any Kovern- | X 3 i ~ nothiy Mem, £ 11 : iated P I!ull such as the street car merger | situation as this, where England fears | break the chain.” Senator Borah may | ting acquainted with Kansas all "‘\‘; s 'lr" '-\l‘milc'll to develop ‘fl! the | ment bureau, e t the railroad bu- [0 ¢ Member of 1o A e e oa | I1CSIITe, the extension of 14th strect, | to tread, that some Americans would have something to say about the plan | #Eain in anticipation of next years 100y i hiaiment Dot |l B ST e fury due e S raton TS ws dies | the gasoline tax and auto-tag reciproc- | have their government rush. A to chain him into the presidency when | CaMPiEn. Shenpard, with the glory and the next election. heial daniet that is toigo to net otlierwise credited | 1 n of I the District resi e Bpenks at a New Yorl mass mect- | 26 41 i It hin Tomecs 1o orier i ¥ x x 22 @ucsta of the soviet government # g v—in all of which the District resi- ing nex e 2 ®edit, will iB Fances in ovder i as guests e soviet governme s g and also The Joeal mews pubs —_————— & next Sunday afternoon. He will | % ’ i 1ined w “All “Fighis of " publicati s e N hold ‘ Texas and see how fa Klan bs T There they might get pointers which | 1o . A S B R e g e . 0ld Albums. Word en, ager the auspices of the { aismanticd ihem, Pepper will 100k | o s, summer to come about | woula prove Invaluable. — e | N b “"’: of “"‘l"'"‘_ thrustf g e is to be a big show in New|of the political prison 30 |urter i law bractice i Philadeiphia e only lisue which i xmfle!fila;! * % % ok upen the late Sixty-seventh Congress ; and intermitten s Sifice at | Will have to discuss at such meetings, : York called the international photo- * 4 S Rl G LT 3tiNas Deenicanyita Deliavelthores eyt Shvin € SamOtaom V] - Wi the resolution of Representative Moore ! | Wastington. 1 ung a Chautauquas or store-box gatherings 4 rom his own state. What They Will Talk About. ‘r"_ tution of ‘.] L ’l‘ A b "® | graphic arts and crafts exposition,| Thomas R. Marshall, who is spend- | #4101 HEIT forat 1east & month be- |y gy attend, will be ll\"e wmmf ports that some parts of the Arctici,ng that it should be voiced by o atdorat i, |21 0o of the directors has adver-{ing our capricious” winter in Wash- fore ohoostug between Idaho 4nd | ions and omissions of the Sixty- | Fesion are warming up. The TeDulliChn: Al TR LS Saseal ation did not veceive: condderation | i.ed for the loan of some of those old | IIEton as a member of tha coal fact- | Who now writs “ox” b seventh Congress. . With that pros-|ment of Congress last Sunday Was €0 lown pure g although it was very favorably dis-ye o0 potographic albums of yester- | inding commission, never tires of dis- | #10rial title, expeets to i eaanes i Hiouse nnt neaate| e to the Washington e tnate cussed by some of the most careful | Y PSR T R renera. | CUsSIng the unimportance of the vice | Fieryn Fo : i"the demooratic and’ republican | 2 : of these | Presidency of the United S Ad- | nentiy unul committees have prepared | Fahrenheit. Now if the uisties, arguments, charges and F\V: uwl umd h:l"’" ! ny detense for the oratorical equip-!? i an the cold c v 1 e b Bsures week, Marshall sald he would ot thors fo e e drs | might e ran the thermometer bee v “considert 3 s b : of their followers. For ten days like to introduce himself, lest any fter the tenment the € low freczing, we would begin roduce himself, lest any in| | ; surnment the Con i a b o | the audience might not recogaize him ol | sional Record s columns Will be open | Sume that the world had tu or perhaps in some dark closet. TS Las o man who hid onee hotd anie | narcotic | under Prohibi-{!or the publication of “leave to e iglecpte ofcl likely that only an old home, oceupied |office—that of Governor of Indiana | | tion Commissioner Haynes ndremarks rea “uefore ad- ind that { by 0ld people, can furnish such a relic | ‘% w ok brating a first anniversary this)iniver foreiss thosd | o * ow % ¥ These albums were highly esteemed, | Gov. Gifford Pinchot of Pepneyl. |month It commen s his escape Ve ves of the privilege e sk faR et or dearly loved, in their time, but|vania has called o mecting at Harris. | YCAF 880 from burning to death in | ity So¥ whitt Ahev please and eive as predicted by Scnator La Fol- [sen: Wood they have fallen fi favor. Perhapsburg for next Saturday of the *com- | th® fire Wwhich destroyed the famous | polftical ements thoy desite. = jistte, It will bel the only thipg that|ambass Alexander 1+, they dwell in the shadowy land of old fmittee for perpetuation of Roosevelt's | ¢ @lonial Hotel an, Bahama * ok ok % go anywphere; everybody —will L r to Mr. Woods a5 oks beside the autograph a < | ideal St % Jalands, Nutt got @ % his paricl | 5 3 “stop short. never to go again.’ like v and in 1t 5 i {best men in Cong Wh) are can.| Podksibeside theiautographiaibum | CICCH ! held in the go - g o ! e e Now, the man In the street, Who|granafather's tall Just he- i L o are the pr i cons of e ctliciency | Dest i . ! O | \which the misses' friends—generally [ STOT Tuom ai the capitol wnd con- |17 SEE 08 & Besits gacked u; . Kas 06 follomea the ‘achatas | catise p t the ; | sidering a change of procedure in the 5 s nued at di - ase o her impedimen 1 A 4 s i ipgs aehanp ! : €] heir young man :’r,w”.. 4‘ .ulx iner at the executive man- | eotonel wis in Naboan g S ¥ ry carefully nor avail- | 1o there is no uze in blowing up versn carefully carried in the memory | 8101 In the evening. Henry ¢ vs and mean reviews of its acts| ' he pri a0y Eone unia for such important requests as “Please | \ju&, gerrotary of el at the end of the|cent s r immediately the write something in my album.” These | ingtonians invited to e proent e | 7 i b Be I perforee have to fall back tda consoles us by < i R , albums used to be h at forth for | committce haw plans for | e ihalt o ' s senator or represent- | N4 i s o upon the national of 1924 |mittees. which they suy will in time] . ") tortainment of callers. Ana|REHO s e . o a e He T e - - B s inevitable 0 e 3 l v Hiliated he end prospective or possib) esiden- | ! ot thi tter which has vecontly | theY Were entertaining? Also_there s & h mic i v @ hance also read the t acics. OF net be S A o o oot b a ittiomusicibox on a black wal-|Siher meane, | The Vopseve 1 h t pronunciimentos of| gt seems stran 4 by vavieus writers, i ion, with fu : s . Vs spokesmen, prou Inut marbletopped table. 1t was a e A : : vokesmen |10 "ta one of the very few Presi- cweot and wonderful thing that played | upon the exact forn : i e I f bl <. How |dents of the United tes whose iohine . whose comprehen ! Imental commen . 1 : : toitlpurais | 2% haaets A s “on the jub. g i three or four tunes. 1t would be | pen! nem 3 » WeT memory fs not vet honored fn ma hefore the « ‘ ve procedure Wasi oo ind up with a key and set going | e rite newspaper L t 9 or hronze. There fs mot even jree i n is now ir E h a ration that : < for him |of the great de in the vessmen interested | . which is to ] Deing studied by Irvin Cobb. at a recont mate: g 1ps ; : % it o t 8o at ; {Tie and othe . | wits in Washington, acclaime : : let i that away | 1! ‘”' e ; entertaining. They had promoted | nier Losemmntor Gener o licas Gtnes (ens o A ; in 1 their (i ¢ <ation, and perhaps they had | i e on s ; b they were of the|betore they suce jeessful work s juint committec idents. We has alled on : S and Garfield, and a4 moveme ments upen the Con-{fqot for a statu Buc tain | hono, ould come from Iil necessarily dry djourn- 1 fall ahead of »ugh the esteem of ; the ¥ n is hroader than any party that thermometers touched 80 degree Representative Rodenberg did not President | eXDect action at this se upon ssion next [his il but its intr v i the 1 spelibinders on in the nine legislators in both branches of Con- s, Outerop tion. There were so many famity photographic albums that some " i of them must still be living, perhaps Sixtyseventh and the ) & whenever there are hooks 10 { in the garret, perhaps in the basement, shth Congresses there is plenty [ ., perhay wat there wili | STESS: Sing & soclety at dinner ofie night | A0 100 i Dur ¥ = between the sese of werest to dis- | em o, There is the propos Sie vors for this resolution 1o receive thought which may result in when the legislate retur g | Aside from the proposition of Rep. recom. | Tesentative ) Ation to Dis lu T nited States world court; there Stat rict matte ¢ is interesting to note the trend of th f wmany of the s the 1 | House and the necessity of conserving i time with tr nereasing volume of { business. Invariably they look with { favor on the creation of joint com icther extension of v osys- tem; there is politics lore. bearing * Representative Robert Luce when the £ photograph and the autoeraph albums had done their task | & ists of the man who introduced “the partial | Cans promoted courtship. But that Was|post” When Wil H. Hays wae here ) long ago. Tt was in the time when it | the other duy 1o receive I ! was the custom to pin a “tidy” on Hiet 68 Ay a the back of cach chair. May seme of | of war, 1 t expect to make tead act at the next | System in the slatures of seve tee, who| Massachusetts, Pre of cpr nistration, for funtil Representat o plan to cov oo el goun : : edtative L : Istrative | publican) of 11} iy ! . S " lthe oid family photoxraph abums | : ; T B tasan ay s o ) [ i SR I passiye | b brousht to light for the photo- | r I I -~ i : for the purpose ¢ ting et fonding: | “Words: Wor Wor Sy f ¢ : < ot going to be possible : S { n ! men, thinks in honor of nd. who had g . TN " tndepen commit Co-Operation. ! i ity of President Clevelar |May Be Known in History as the ® ; 11 O 0 r t t- {the able chief magistrat i ; Bie ition w tion—a man of enuine foree ;‘J‘ur)'\' e alien he Support o * will strive with mi HMemnorial to Women. iy sides of appreciution of the fact. {it will take twenty years to make : i Shas " the heg 3 % “',:’_”"."{ "if e o hold thee position of : e et nspives | Organizations having in general aAmerica dry, as disclosed in a series t ! T s ¢ 18 | (e ailver, but & ed by the existi common purpose dre getling together | of articles on prohibition recently | u , : ! X s toliowed that s S o i ithe nation’s notab! likely to increase ss duplication of evi-f (g.operation is the order of the day. ument and reports 3Tt is the way to the accomy nent of Twenty-Year War. results, and there is evidenee on | President Harding's statement that 1te hook i ¢ corv.! With a1 view of working harmoniously | Published in The Star. has arocuscd i vl ¢ re- ont of thefr aims and ; One of the most animated editorial Th * e : ] i - ser ation of effort. One of | discussions of recent years. Natu- e <% o an . Gk e rally the prohibition advocates s : 1ston > Bl hope in the statemént as confirm ¥ a3 ve already discerned with a A ith reakers, 1hold that beer and light wines would ) ’ TR R e : L2 b staiion: was . nual : d st ¢ t Hull goes ¢ i v v . M tation was the first annually, ', oycellent solution of the prob- |that d o for ¥ ertha, of a chari tration to make % 3 © dinner of cight civic clubs, The { o &8 CF00 O o mperance” ar Tarins next decade it i e "RPHCS Of Percy BVSS]IO Sll(‘“("\' show i 1 < done so nany nebie | object of each of these clubs S Serv-j,non this opinion of the chief exceu- ing whetk Sl iinzs ¢ ax done them on such a f e in some form to mankind, and bY i tjve as proving their case. The col- | ! nati ' ; ol eNat awi L mic Now Treasul‘ed by Gl‘alldll(‘l)ll('“' ale that it enjoys theja central organization. bringing the {lateral questions, including ot ! for the achieve voiding dupi rendered 1 s world war of -this spirit iatibn of J inity chest plan of raising coted by | for welfare work. Another 1ted $150.0 1 lie when ©degoe In this conne before the war the ed in Berlin an autozra . poet Heine, in which he relates i of the poct in July, 19 he G f Speazi not due e ?| man, old Sir John § OB e o ‘ “,y,‘, os Tatiatonn ,‘”r "," b O |y jas iwen ohserved that it's a|state. One governor Willing to try prs : s <ot step from the ridiculous to the | before saying it cannot be done! tempest, but to murder and robbery cublime. The assertion of KEugene | —_——————— o s r_confi deathbed ! Deis that John D. Rockerfeller is an { of Amerlcan {confession of an uged seamun ut 41 the poople of ourclubs into close understanding withlcourse, the cost of enforcement, have | mi n reactionary lead- | py gy MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. | Thomas Moore, Lord Byron and otl & Vollette and i ex-1 g veat numbes of per.| politan. Lions, Newcomers, Optimist|the fate of the Volstead act. Moral D10 @ : t E 1 » be | lived fr the T'nited States with his joutweigh the eeonomic and adminis- 1 delegates to : ¢ the women of the entire na-{good of the community, but smndlng.”o" G hhn e to el xister itter proteat g ».il:nlls. the celebrated aviator, Wi Ay GperatinE Wfure & mber iy el shrine.” The amount to be | capacity for doing good will be muldl- { {20 ML BTIer SRR SIS B4 o . strangle hold an} 1o ton yvears ago, is a_ era inseniisimiier dog days. fnot ch the $150.000 to ‘“‘i Gov, Pinchot, determined to make |ging of the processes of justice” he- | t vinion ssiig a blooming bouquet at-they ¥ N (UL caeile Goring In BeLShav L dhnic j match it. as enforcement officers, and seeks co- | other prosecuting business into the | that pre Wy 2 lude i his namesake and ve growing worse, instead of better.|Saining syoun . surpassingly better | his home at Shobrooke Parlk, ¢ iship determines either to obey ielghteenth mendment t under demoeratic rul than § “abject pauper” makes the persistence | (o) ong quarreling over margins of { does not want them. 1The light wine and be. i £ ok ok ok riage of Timothy Shelley to a very|was one of t Sverol arteiy plan . ntry. T wined (o uise the | each other, this service can be better [proven interesting. i Tins Lonimedit : Sdit. | With regard to * for an active v , . vemstraction of this|rendered. The note of cooperation{ In this connection the Chicago ! i< fuir o mestic and foreign | comtribustions | was sounded by speakers representing | Daily News insists that “the question 3 of 2 piictes actiohare Jea e jan enfinie: country ever, with | the Rotary, Civitan, Kiwanis, Cosmo-!of cost will not, of courge, determine | beco spre f h i t “ound! Sir John Shelley-Rolls, who ha ¢ : et Car sected to € 1 rect interest in the {and Thirteen clubs. Each of these or- and social issues are invelved that amendment. wi e » 3 ' % | wife, daughter of the first Lord Llan- | i : . self fo e er of the late Charlic 15 Miss DBourdman puts | ganizations is a power in itself for the | ! ; | L r gattock. sister of the |a P! itrative. Still, in estimating prohibi- e s nior B ments forc Tnderd 3 g Ik h arts a s | together and working together their to the wets who have buil e an leardership was killed in such a shocking 1k their hearts and souls {country, all proper items should be |ture of pr ¢ f it even the prec fon before her very eyes at Hast 5 structure is not to he | plied ¥ i n . erald ration, is at all B will intervens 8 ol S0 GO0 T e ben e R R {Sonrastiiaisofeconitlio fmoncy Hoont |\ P i | satisfied with t two years of {nephew of the famous poet, T limited t : greatly added to through the s b be dy : arding. I st anaimawn as v all 1 conditi ziven by the government, but to over-| pennsylvania dry, will enlist women |cause liquor cases have “crowded all % S kel ot by CRair- | sex, and must not be confeunded W he o i —_———————— operation of the clubwomen of the|background and the congestion is|that the enforcemo 5] persons and o Faining ground o now realizes onl {The unfortunate situation will have [Gpininse siatemen: Sirls G S e e e Ito exist until the American citizen- |10 the effect that so e | those s during 1919 and | 90 18 DOt ey Rolls now = 5 iof its own making, or to take orderly | law are unrepealed the ” {thoy have heen during the two years | America has a strain With anthracite miners and mine i steps for their repeal if the country {ermment Intends or £ Hurding and ‘normaley.” | 5iood im his veins through the mar-Gombo in 1813, Lo tie effect that he with which he demands the privilege | 3 Tt « is little consolatio; davia [they are s . onl I i sy t%he name | had purpos run dow: ennett : 2¢ | profit, the public may get more facts |, It =is ltile o 2:‘:,';”{,:‘,,5,’,.‘}',”_\.. Ives. Tilici i} (Comes next the republican natlonal | wealthy. New York widow of the nam: Fun of Johanna Plum. whose people are un- SCH00BCT, b > have hailed from Newa y in 1l \d to have bec A urdercd him and his publican stalwarts who may have|of importance. The son o 10 his statement cd and appalled by the | Shelley and of Johanna T, 3 Miss Trelawny, . ! e Shelley, who wa et viend, Bdward the Balkans dic ot necessarily start | forces sors.” and heartily |, i1 ondon shows that no nation |is 4 reasonably falr survey and tells {eighteenth amendment would remov s i navonet of Castle Goring, SUSTER, © . intil wbout ten an endiess chain of 1 {subscribes to the assertion that the | .40 Jose hope which has not lost | of the beginning of what may be | liquor trom politics. It aignment o their Congress andji1ses, and who was the gra {ve: B a very wd- sriadbd L ke o eeds g d s e e T e Eeliee for cmany ! Prosident will liit up their hearts. |of the poet. wed age o ; 5 sev- e ! honor. Germany take notice! {Lafayette Journal-Courier holds. Re-|for the disruption of so fhe republican managers start out g al_relics of S which vears The president Py have | —— . L cause “the majority of people ure wlp vidable organized boldly wit flat-1oo0ted dwlur«zlon,] The present Sir John Shelley-Rolls jafter }m]m.u ;‘. had purchused S - ook it GRS | e ol » il o B dry,” the Elmira Star-Gazette de- closing of Heensed ered wiih a punch: < 2 seople seem to be- | from Leghorn fishermen, and whose had some advance information from | An English boy entered a lions’ den SHOOTING STARS. e M Ametea il Bt hae o ficTan o e S i “,”!m not, a8 so many people secm to bl L e T L the weather burean when it decided | to earn $230 with which to provide 2 drier Year by vea whatever advantase i : g0 down I Lisory as having enacted | lieve, descended from the poet by his ; e e that Khor oons to go while the coing was zoad i medical attention for his sick sister. e nggfmf\ac"lf ',f'“.‘;«';‘.??:?:’r‘-'fi"‘"n'l" s the|| sleeting pea 2 more worth-while constructive legis- | marriage with Mary 'rcr:lml- 1 of the Looty of those s . X NDE]| NSON. 4 , of an lation an ¥ rican Congress! e s e o] censted hu T T jenighhoodiisistiil in fiower. | admiristration, In the view of Presi-| “The right of citizens to advo el i iy Amiciom Conen el Geiuiitnon of sEnankanscl : i | voy 1 relates the' in- The young man's spring fancy will | ‘Winter Quarters. e burdens almost| 1., government commission is able | somathing other than the stufe that |laws will ma tance | cor > with a pronunciamento | i sublinu . H little more than a reminder of {in the gres ' 2 rters i had oore e than | cover. n om headquarters in this fifth w 1d thi tostn {ather day: sts the ' Youngs- | mately tof 1 trelE TLopIteadauaT a war in the alkans, hut that was in T e e ———— v The " prohibition {sven there the nineteer . when a wi i Germany calls the French occupying ErnO laws seem to have a way of staying | be 1 astr 1 B Bbeen discourag i i Oversubscription of the Austrian |y i "o taxes, onco tacked on. “It | prohilition Y th: diiTeariie Tatiomall SR laid down 1 riot in the Aont Harding” is most important. as|repeal is cxactly on a parity with the T et I MOl | taesfaown romi (e pusts younger {o ; S e S R the Albany News sees it, becau right of other i to stand for B iho b, 4 oY | rother, John Shelley of Avington ithe seashore at Viareggio, where they (Y]\ardl.\ s l-nt'fl-.\mmu for a few more! Chancellor Cuno’s speech concern- | Somewhah or yuthuh, President is lookimrhnt the thing in ll:‘lvm:wn]m the ( ution,” th '“ 2 ‘” ,”‘y.ll' ‘fm':ym:lho.l»c.‘.;{l)c.. \1 el [:r‘:.k Hants, r Jolm, a former \-uh}’wl K‘" ‘ ‘i** up fu a terribly ays, at least. i K ciolation” 1 5 - terms of statesmanship, whereas the | kane Spokesman-Review holds, “hut ihe | olfvct o i 5 Epeintop Rank, He 5 | mangled condition. and expatiates on ing the “armed violation® of German |/ Tlkain’pe zackly clear, vorager man in the sireet can ses |associition opposed to prohibition's | ble on cvery hand. By contrasting;oncl of the Scots Guards, has nojthe circum < o sl ———m——————— sovereignty someway or other sounds | De butterfly is waitin’ prohibition enforcement or the lack |real purpose as losedsihy (el | o) discouraptos \conoltionai RIS fenilaxen, andion i Saed el drown- New York's epidemic of sleeping ! funny. 3 " year. thereof only in terms of its imme- | Lawre s to nu constitu- { existed in every line of activity two i etc; Avington P ate: diing, as it was at first believed—when R e SEONSCE SunnyAine olyear jdiacy. But a moment’s reflection |tion by amending the Volstead law s ago with the prosperous con- | th < ‘ot the poct Will go to his | nis"two most intimate tricnds, B “Who's S DG - o gives President Harding’s position to legal the now outlawed fon 1d outlook today, one may | br who is still a bachel and lawny, shouid have been such 'Who's sleepy now British faith in world peace i at-|AD’ it made de cricket tremble remarkable weight. Here is the > in intoxicating beer and win . the legislation of Sixty- | These o un|1|uvl-»””‘-& Beart o jstrong swimnicrs Brron swam i i ing of centuries—s | The movement is tricky and decep- | coventh Congress trans 1 poet, which on the incineration @ fthe Hellespont, while Trelawny, yea tested by provisions for bombproof ! Likejbe el o droftul m‘;"'v Tt oo e e L i atesinn obadiches ;\,:1f'~'-' Congrens) tranainted g ro- | B e ains of the bard, on the funeral jafoy! oo e i How to Speed District Bill | houses and gas masks in every home, | Dat news de groun' hog tol’ 'em mentals, taken away from the indi- | the law, its object is disregard of the | R | pere at Viareggio on August 16| e how Byron endeavored s ‘When he come back home again. |vidual by the body politic. Mr. Hard- {law. 1t is sheer contradiction whe 11323, escaped tho flames, or rather o pr o greater pert The failure of the teachers’ pay bill | Ing 18 apparently counting on fime |the head of the organization says that | The republican spokesmen then go|was snatched from the fire as the|syuil R pareaier o Y { by his_ lifelon® { membering. e Shail ot & o e eut bcestble dimonaiss { Bonar Law and the Ruhr. De katydid's a-whinin® as the great solvent in this ques- (he feels t the laws of the landon to explain this translation. “The|body f mpars a P . is the best 1 le demonstration of d e tion, as it has been in many others |are sacred, but that when they touch | qrarandous, and, in many i fricnd, Eaward John Trelawny, and | aibott of stead Abbey, the a the desirability of creating a joint Well meaning but inadequately in-| 'Bout de cold, f'um morn till late,! 454’ ‘as he infers, the first twenty |personal liberty each individual SUeEpeces: ¢ given by him—Arst o Leigh | iral home of the Byrons, had been committee i Congress to consider formed Americans who keep up agita- | An’ de fishin’ worm's a-wishin’ ' |vears are tho hardest” ! should decide for himself what he unprecedented. ‘:“‘"‘3:0 in industrial | jyunt and ‘;hv‘“ {;:”l'll“‘_ (""‘l‘;e"-“m;‘[" verted into a sHver-mounted drin o i . . now revealed, ' wt b 4 activity, i va .| Jatter to Mary Shelle S-lcpp and used by Lord Byron f trict of Columbfa. to settle the issues involved in occupa- oot e e o T e Tiihas s Diclen e il s lacit rerres The House had before it for many | tion of the Ruhr will do well to read But dey gotter wait an’ shiver savings accounts, in all wholesale s 12 her to be charged with hav- | mai ('Ce S i Tover be thus pro- ) . Protests Treatment of Stock on Ranges. Siid betall Busiass (whHIGRAR LiRl L ubL tHoifostsiHeaTt asia mare nans o v o ou 1 COYSERSICICE BRI months a resolution. introduced by |the speech delivered last night in the y Representative R. Walton Moore of | British house of commons by Prh’nel Till de ' rm, T ‘ ill de passin’ of de storm, Place within the vears hus | pookmark. The reproaches addressed ek Virginia, that in the interests of ' Minister Bonar Law. In vonr'ludlng’ An’ cuddle 'roun’ de lightnin’ bug D L acieried] el biec her to place ot be cidental. ons o] to her on the subject place| § < A-tryin’ to keep warm. ; Erown BTy A consistentis het | 1C fa iver urn on the mantlepicce| Sir John Shelley-Rolls prescrves, To the Editor of The Star: Point, there is the gstounding loss to | ter from month to month since March, | of her boudoir. & among other relics of the poct, & bat- economy of time and efficiency of ac-| his statement of reasons as to why Easy. The president of the National|the ndn on's food supply. Billions of { 1921 llurm'?'] a}l t)f"\:hu‘h time the| At her ""“‘}' 1n5\hl [Ih«; Ma"x«‘}“.n tered and water-stained copy of Sopho- : 3 2 : A 6 . G i _ | pounds of beef, veal, b and mut- | Siy seventh Congress was practi- ited by her son, Sir Percy Flo Sehgpleo s 5 tlon, and for the best guardianship of | the British government cannot inject | rng man with the hammer is happy | League to Conserve Food Animals de- | v "y re “wasted through stunting or in continuous session. e helley, was carefully preserved cles, Which. cvidently a favorito com- the National Capital, all District mat-{ itself into the Ruhr situation, he de- | Selling sires to call your attention to a fla- | geatn. is_improvement would not—in- { by ‘him with the utmost’ reverence. |panion of the poet, since it was full of ters should be referred to a joint com- | clared that to him it seemed inevitable | g troubles are wondrously few, grant wrong—a wrong both moral .Tlhlslr!‘nr] be ‘n!‘I‘(\'fln(NL for the most | deed, jg::l:ir:"':‘h;;; l:hir:“v;::cv!:‘x:g on nlsddev‘umol:‘!j‘\‘\l::i:gfl-’l;“_l:::’d"‘“:‘ annotations ‘in his handwriting, was mittee of the Senate and House. The | that “to break the entente would mean | o nia sole occupation is looking to|2"3 Sconomic P that o el yiter of o re: | hastilo to on huptfal of tia AnduBtEIRL: | mi o iin bo that in the vault of St,jfound o the pocket of his cost wheny thought was that because of thelthe possibility of enforcing England’s It is in connection with the habit| nune and good business men, by pre- | agricultural or financial interests.” '| plors Church at Bournemouth, Sus- |his remains were cast up by the sea. & s = = s see in the range stock states of the|paring for storms, blizzards and| Then the pronunciamento goes onfg.x fest the remains of Sir Percyiit had apparently been regarded as pecullar relstion existing between | will on France by war. The faults in what other men do. to specify in detall the beneficial | §yy Jane, daughter!yorthiess by his murdere D" = 4 = droughts, suffer little or no loss. Shelley, of his wife 2 Congress and the National Cupital,| Is there any American who would be | 4/ e 1s the merry refrain of his | L oo Sates of annually wrming ot B Jegislation enacted by the Congress, | SReieY, <of_nis mother, [ " It s scarcely necessars to add that It is a matter of reeord that the of Sir Thomas Gibson: of Congress having direct and sole juris. | willing to g0 to the extent of enforcing countless thousands of cattle andlmaat thus saved pays many times | toking' care to stress the benefits | yjary Wollstonecraft, and last but not|here is no truth whatsoever in the Set e S e e § L = 2 song, sheep (food animals) to shift forlover for the cost of preventive |showered upon the farmers. Mary The heart.of the poet el s s R U diction over the federal city, the joint | this country’s will on France by war? | ugeen knocking along, and you'll{themselves. Little or no provision is|measures. e e e So the memorial at Rome to Shelley, | States and in the American press, to committee system could well be tried | Yet it would not be at all difficult, S rone made for food, water or shelter. Al-| The league wants you to write an 2 s e et while It contains his ashes and cer- {the effect that the poet’s grandfather, t on District legislati d then. if | th v t t TEVEr EOMTOnE: though able to “get by” under favor-|editorial urging a more thoughtful| The democrats have tried to “take |73, ynconsumed portions of his|Bysshe Shelley, the husband of Johunna, o o endithen S1C e Gl SOYSENINERE Lo SCERE (ho o hte Eeonditions, countless thousands | consideration of the subject. Agri. | the joy” out of the republican claims | hones, notably fragments of the jaw | Plum, was @ native of Am ann found satisfactory, could be extended | vice being urged upon it, to get this|The man with the brush and the man {of them perish miserably when ex-|cultural experts call the present|by poinfing out that all of these|and of the skull, does not contain his | that he owed his name of Dysshe to an such as agriculture, finance, com-, have to be made between ignominious| Are objects of pity profound. weather good or weather bad has|can produce more and bette MO ures were enacted with the ald of |woiimed. and over which so many (eats | was born of an American mother. Jo- merce and national defense. retreat and rupture of friendly rela- | They are tempted to start their lives contlnuedh for mnny’ )’;ar!—-s‘n lo;u-:i. fewer h;flds of .}vm-k b; P d:n\t:l;\:a):‘lcof\'o“‘(“:‘ &Tn‘n"r‘.?lll “"'l‘lo?;!lh*“r.mw been shed hlw mmhnnbu 1 a;rf- 1+ Plum, and of her marriage to chers' pay - i v i in fact, that much of the:public mind | care and extra fecding. § exceptic s ; o frs and enthusiasts - about his i latter was the s The weRcEes je B, sEslec diews 8L Soemes W Se Bee, OYEr Sgatn i e 16 mabapt it he & mecessary | agree that nature. unhided, canpot he | them would not have been passed with- [ PSS Eiriously enough, the epitaph en Place, @ country with it reorganization of the entire|whose stake in the game is much|{ When the man with the hammer|hazard of the range stock game. | depended upon to provide suflicien: | out democratic agreement. Neas written by Leigh Hunt, who was Sussex which he had acquired school system, is of vital interest to| greater than that of the United States, comes round. Kmowing that each year hnrdl‘:s btl‘:f an er. A L perfectly \;’ol,l n\\'n‘ll‘v‘ ‘,hls}‘l there w l- ; e (nr}l-\rn. heiress of Roger. the future of the National Capital. A | cannot see a way to help the situation | There is nothing he's done and there | helpless animals sufter unspeakaple| IL1L s fiminal 1o starse a single| o e face of all these assertions {1 NN Suiaif "had surrendered It | 1. At of ane of fhe ol county notable demonstration in favor of it| by proffering mediation, it is fortunate is nothing he's made— lace u\em«el;lea v{'mx the ftllk me; utsrvem\_vlrgr\‘]rl herds upon the plains?|and counter claims what is the man |ty the widow at h;:r urg;nl rcq[ues:— levs trarnhlhflr descent from Thomas vi b; . hammer | that it is “all in the day's work™ an INNIE MADDERN FISKE, in the street going to do? WIll he [nay, even, entreaty, and on the in-|Sneley, who was lord of the manor of was staged by the women of Wash-|for America that the President and|His mission is leading the er | Cannot be prevented. Prestdent the ‘Nutional League. to |have (o throw up his hands and wall, | sistént, demands of ‘many of his life- | Shelioy’ and memher of parliament for ington, representing many organiza-|his Secretary of State have sufficient brigade, < Aside from the humanitarian stand- Conserve Food Animals, “There 1s no hope*t “"long friends, ‘including Trelawny, | Sandwich in A.D. 1417,

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