Evening Star Newspaper, May 25, 1923, Page 6

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T6 THE EVENING BT AR"done its faithful Vest to. extirpate |connection with a systend, of private be them, peonage. Men who owed money were “n.. With Sunday Merning Edition. That such places will pitch their | forced into the service of the creditor oy tents and build their shacks outside]and were treated with great cruelty. En WESBILOAAE. B S the District shows that they cannot|Some were murdered. There was no , PRIDAY..........May 25, 1933/ iy on their trade inside the Dis- | shadow of law for such a practice of teict. It is not to the honor of Mary-| forced labor in-that case. In Florida THEODORE W. NOYES...... BAit0r { .1 that they should be allowed to do the law not only tolerated but actually business or do evil in the magnificent { provided for the use of offenders :h"‘fl'lmfmm state from which the District came, |against the statutes and regulations u-u;.';’ York Office: 130 Nassau St. and a state whose representative peo- } for the profit of private individuals Chicago Office: Tower Building. k "% ngland. | Ple hold the loftiest ideals and cherish | Crimes were committed in the enforce. SR KO LIRS | Che Sest sickiitinns. ment of “discipline,” no less crimes The Evening Star, with the Sunday '-.:r-% These evils will creep in and pellute | for that reason, and now some of those ton, e el lvered By e v, 43 cente per | any section unless the law officers are | responsible for deaths in the prison unday oaly, 90 cents per Mot ywia | CODtinually actfve against them. Let|camps are to be tried. 5 ion is made by carrlers at the | the law officers take a day off and It is not assured that the perpetra- #ad of each mouth. scallawags will show their heads. |tors of these abominations in Florida Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. | Maryland will close such places Bxlconvict camps will be punished. Wit. Maryland and Virginia. those described in' The Star. nesses summoned to give testimony, it Daily and Sunday.. Daily only. .1yr., L1 yr, $2.40 Pleads for Jews. Reader Answers Article Telling of Anti-Semitic Wave. To the Bditor of The Star: McMaster University, one of Can-|President Harding and_Secretary| On April 15 there appeared in the | mycry time that wages In the trades ysmell the eau de cologne on the in ada’s smaller colleges, has conferred | Christian, are James J. Davis, Sec- | papers articles written by Mr. Francis | in town make. a jump, they: attract | toxicated roses, while he sings its honorary LL. D. on President|jiary of Labor and Eqward o, 5 [ McCullough which was headlined: | mory farm workars away from pro-| Be it cror o modern. i e 3 . “Anti- 2 oroformed home. * Harding. ~Though only thirty-six | four of them are dusting their feszes | “Ant!-Semitic Move in Russia Fore- | qucing food, and so increase the de- | Splendor dazles in vain, years old and boasting a student|in anticipation of impending big (seen.” Further on he says: “OWINg |iana for farm help. This increased | Deliver me from my etlierized cottage again: body of fewer than 400, McMaster s | (OU8 It the Raad to Mecca and the | to the probable death of Lenine there | gorana’raises the wages of the farm | The curfew must mot ring. nor i a sturdy and solld institution, sit- L t T . . - T Geetined the. deprans o xar® | one of the things most rememberea could mot personally recetve it in abeut Stanley Baldwin, néw BEritish Canada. Then the college decided to "'I":';';"l“.’:’:"‘l":'l""“ :"v‘l‘“‘l" have been meant for Litvinoff. Fur- confer It “in absentia” which has|AVC 180 Wler 16 oo, Some. of | ther he states: “It is determined that just been done. In acknowledgment Asipige:. Oemm Lenin will be replaced by a Jew, his hardest thinking during sittings . of the honmor. President Harding probably Kemeneft,” wifch I suppose wrate that the universities of Can-|Of the $sbt:funding commisslon was |, " .0 wamenot. Further fn the }ma.i0e| Many years ago Washington Wwas|appears, are afraid to present,them-|ada and the United States are des-|90me between puffs. Ambassador | = B0 " CErer pitighonesgudhenty o o | Plagued with evil “resorts” on the | selves at court. A state of terror still |LiNed to play an important part “in | Harvey is & veteran member of the . e CAPITAL KEYNOTES BY PAUL V. COLLINS WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE *s no place Like is much fear and unrest in Kremlin circle. The Jewish faction, through Trotsky, Kameneff, Lioneff and Sta- 11in"—T suppose that Lioneff must roses bloom, before the week of “b hands. That is one reason WhY It|ier homes"—beginning June 4: her costs more to produce food today | this etherization of the rambler ros than it did ten years ago. They shall not ramble tonight In 1910 the average wages of farm ¥k ok % | hands, working by the month, was| The Supreme Court decides that $19.21 a month, plus board. Today it ;shxn can be permitted to come with is $30.98. The supply of labor forithree miles of our shore having o farm work today is 88.4 per cent of |bhoard any intoxicating liquor. Italy normal, as cogpared with 111.4 April | France, Spain and England have law 1, 1922, and 108.3 April 1, 1921, requiring all ships sailing under thei Sunday only. ;1 mo., 200 | Pk interpreting one country to the other . ~|tion of Kameneft, Stalin, Trotsky or 2 Y et s carry Il times. The Virginia side of the river und ulong | provails despite the housecleaning [and in furthering the chievement of P12 ATo¥er, (Lrateralty. The work: | 7o SCUNIIN Baih, TrOSKY 07| ‘Perhups the farmers have not vet|fags to carry liguor at all tmes. The !, E All Other States. some of the roads leading through | that has been effected in the legisia- | brodder freedom, brotherhood and | diggings 'is ' always littered wWith |entirely in the grip of & small Jew. | It the Pressure of the labor short-|\ouid"be (o anchor the ships outeld: Daily and Sunday..1 yr., $10.00; 1 mo., 86c | Maryland. The establishments at | ture. But whether these men are con. »l A8 thefr dstmia: Nobody 18] iah auitooracy, e I St W SUNE Woui S Bave |t fheat-mlin Humit » Ae S0t b5 i Daily only 1yr., $7.00; 1mo.. 69¢ | jackson City at the south end of the|victed or not the fact stands that b e Lt I e st e artia e 5 felt It If the weather had been more | Practicable, the United States Treas Sunday oniy......1yr, $3.00;1mo. 25c Former Supreme Court Justice John | FardIng in the suggestion of Britis| S its headlines, | fayorableifor crops. They have had a | Ury has called upon the Stute Depart Long bridge were notorious. There | Florida has purged itself of a most Member of the Associated Press, | Were such places at the south end of labominable practice and deserves com- The Associnted Press is exclusively entitled | the Aqueduct bridge and along the | mendation for adopting that course. | to the use for republication of all news dis- Vi e q - Patches Creatiea To It o ot otherwise exscited | [O00éd river shore between the Aque patent experts that the world's wait- | whether it is true or whether it was |longer time for planting and sowing, | ment to negotiate some form of com that his league of nations speech thls President promiges to spin a yarn as |and create a feeling of hatred to- The cold spring has greatly les- [ with the laws of other nations. Is week was to many an introduction to | (e o lgel’st © Wonderful collec- |ward a certain class of American |sened the fruit = crop—especlally | that time limit to be computed by o o) Ve " itizens who are neither to blam. peaches—according to the' Depart- | Einstein theory or the old Copernicarn ! T "Ghis ‘Gaper and 'aiso the local me iduct and Chain bridges. There were g one of the most gifted orators in| Sonoma county. Calif. one of Amer-|° > e nor L 5 o o Usned "nereln: A1 rightsof "pubilcation of | a15 “arks” or houseboats where gam. The Horticultural Show. America. Clarke 18 a noble Roman |ica's Iukcious Irult “bélts, has been |have had anything to do with condi- | Bt of Agriculture. Freezing | measure of time? clul dispatches hereln are also reserved. 1 weather in the week ending May 15 xxx Wit cadd ciw tten. |In @ppearance, with the eloquence of | celebrating the golden jubilee of Lu- | tions that exist abroad. T am not at f he b " 3 blers trled to beat each other and . hl ‘;““h m"c K’ “1"‘""' ten-|," Cleero. ‘He perpetrated & merry | ther Burbank's sctivitios e & Dlant | presont in somieinseod,, 1,am not at et rginia and North Cas- ence tells us that the wester where ‘“suckers” were robbed. But|tion to the ‘:)rt ultural exhibition %‘;‘r’.h‘l “g:,em.ex :;17_0 hoer “l:!""‘l"\:h:" brga({lar.h fi_n May 18 Burbank com- n{o\'arnmebnt. but there is a vast dif- | olina. hemisphere once was a part of I % # 3 néw on'it-thé Now Natiohel § % sald, n [ pleted half a century at the Santa |ference between bein, % t % ‘ Virginia made a clean-up campaign, Museum > & sympsthetic bl i rope and Africa, but that it brok event was commemorated in connec- | matter. As early as 1918, in my vari- | Mr. J. H. McLaurin, president of the | ayway and drifted westward. It is : Senator Borah has fifteen minutes to ; asa s canait been heard | under direction of the American Horti. | soncc’'1 hofar a8 fittean minutes to|Rosa experimental " grounds. ~The | and writing the absolute facts in the against her in this respect for a good | cultural Society, were it not so busy and per and write out his idea of | tion with the “Sonoma prune festi- {ous articles, I said that the commu- — _a! No Price Boosting. There are disquieting reports about | ; - hiof Wholesale Grocers’ Association, fore- ‘ P the city that there have been increases a statute that would outlaw war: Nt v of 3 leged that Newfoundland is st i making preparations.for receiving and | for, as. Ba id, ‘writi keth | YRlL" The principal feature was a o &overnment in Rusels |iq1q, tn hi; h bef n ia- 1 e pri s - | while. 3 con said, ‘writing make 7 ve | must fail for the re b, 01d, in his speech before the associa- | grirting farther and farther aws n the price of food at some restau-|WiNe o ny clean-upe in | €ntertaining the Shrine and the Other | the exact man. historical pagea; Under Five eason that there 5 a rants and in the price of some kinds of provisions. The reports are that the increases are not large, and that the T Flugs,” a reference to the fact that | 14 & difference between a man sitting | tion in session here, that there Will | rrom Buropo at the dizzying pace o - i : Sonoma county, since firat it harbored innle :}mr}[:flz;hnnd Qlreaming A lbe a business depression in 1924, and |fifty feet a vear. Supposedly ali aron Shidehara, formerly Japanese | California pioneers, has passed under pe: _ong om he urged all grocers to buy “short” | America is Kkeeping up with i S the control of five different countries | ®&lizes the dream in action. Even ! L » ‘ S é A g ambamsadon to the Uuited Setes | oS oo R ok caction e ounixten [ toany. afiar jan’ expecinent of ‘Oye [andicurtatl cradits. Joneacsl of Newtoundiand. o AC L Maryland, but it seems hard for the |thousands of persons who will come law officers to keep the lid nailed { With the Shrine. Even under the ex- down. “Temples of chance,” and no | traordinary conditions which now pre- reason for them is that the purvey 2 i e - - " | writes Washington friends that he is fe_ rale. years, they have come to the conclu- i dervatt _ |rate. if not stopped by some intc have had to hire more “help.” and|doudbt bootleg emporiums, spring up vail in the city there is a satisfactory | paying satisfactory progress “,‘\urd“"l;*sl?‘.P l’::t.i:: "m‘:.lg.".;h:lfl;:;o;:n;& Sl SR oMo e e isonolu. b ,M.a basis for his conservative Pre- | national trafiie ‘vu:h‘;enmm;! Hl | that the wages paid this “help” are|OVernight and attain considerable | attendance at the show. Thero is &|rystoration of health. He is now de-|for whom the city of Santa Rosa was | (€3, are today allowing the retail | Sautions B s e bt e LS A LS o | high. 1f there hus been any raise i | POPUIATity, but it is probably safe to|remarkably large number of personsitached from official service and able | named. Her rich black halr. dark oTauality n repaind to exerclse in- | material and wages, and predicted |ufter Conmgress moets to leave he food prices at this earts stoge it may |56t it down that they will not last|in Washington who are as interested|to devote himself exclusively to the St Mhiemnal hrows eves iad-[ricus. " | that this will bring a slump in con- |anchored ships even twelve milcs rices a sta may x s : . e = struction, which will throw many ast bo feared that there will be & boost in | 1NE- ke d";" :"";'f" ":‘m e e eta el R R Nipan banic native ot Jewish Are Accused. Wage earners out of Jobs. Men with, | O ¢ ML x - ; 5 . and in the things of nature in general ; ter. urned seventy-four. out ‘wages, are poor customers, he 2 sald: “In Korea there's a tradition | i; = - Since the rise of the bolshevist ] e acding prices Wheri the crowd ¥ here e 6 |t mapdalits. Sudl Gpicibles ol ot b aeim s SCaAtticn iived n i the (coaut hiKies 1HTE: e bo said. On June 9 President Harding and A warning should be sounded to vrofiteers or to those who contemplate boosting prices. The trade and ci organizations should and will stand movement in all countries, including America, the press has brought charges that the persons to blame for | . that system w -<e a certain class of Jews. Even L o in America one of * ok k¥ certain other high officials of the ad- The American Legion resents the | Ministration are to be magically me ffering, by some dealers, of popples | amorphosed into Tall Cedars of Leb- “made in Germany.” The former|anon by certain wizards at Milford, 3 izens' as. | ticular ailment, an internal com- **xx marching men. Forty-two citizens’ as-1 L o'richly blessed. S0 that, it 1t Argentine, = formidable wival of sociations of the District have entered | became a matter of general knowl- B . . plants and flowers, and the display of | #d&e just what's troubling me, 1 sup- | the United States in wheat and cat- ose I'd now be receiving delegations | tle, has j . garden products {ncludes roses, onions, | b licitating me & haw. Just anpolated & womam Senator Borah may presently find himself in the position of being com- pelled definitely to anhounce whether. . “ehovid cahi of my friends, falicitating me UDOR | gunoms : Taleresauats b e ot Del. behind the District's promise not to| he entertains ambitions for & nomina- e &% PACIEIAC RECs Tl 08 Vo | of, iy, Kriends, (ol e iae asue, Nico minlater of | (hrINant maen b ChowenyBly)len (RO IR QeC e et nanepeBianeh | BRLL L Ll L e raise prices because of increased de-)tion for the presidency, and if s0.|'oe otner things that grow about our * % g s German born, but | tire strength, his power, his capital & cedar stuff js not made clear, but mand for food and shelter during the Shrine gathering. They must insist that this pledge be kept. The case is not serious at this moment, and it must not be permitted to reach a seri- ous state when the rush of strangel 2 i e 5 On the eve of.the Mystic Shrine |came to South America at y P e e oo or [ homes. It is said that this is the|conciave’ In. “\Washinglon AImas |age and married an Asgentinion. mr President Harding for the nomini-}, .gegt exhibition of its kind ever held | Temple, the local organization, has | {5 | =S tion. An incident which occurred in|; "t initiated a number of distinguished | '8 the owner of a farm. which has 1t keeps out the moths which cor- 4 e in ‘Washington, which means that it|neophites. Among them are Mirza |developed under her personal super.|and that the entire Russian govern- | With the wearing of the poppy in s ref ing Ohi t £ th barrass. 13 In| rupt. Its balmy odor is refreshing 10 15 Indicauve of the embarre|is a very large exhibition, for it is|Hussein Khan Alal. the Persian min- | vision, and has actually werked i, |MeDt i3 controlled Ly"Jews® whose |memory of the Soldiers who died in | TUPL Its bal ment he may otherwisc encounter. €o-| yyany years since Washington was a | (355" Fho 1% 10 straiger to tho fez: | Her book on agriculture, “Manual of |iSntions are to overthrow the gov- |the service would be destroved ~If|'Or{l®Gemotratic varsion that it is/ X % & ¥ S st s Col. heodore - Roosevelt miral | ¢ ~ - une, A nments of the world, ples were made by the late 20 3 S ¥ L lumbus members of the committee of | gyl ity and did anything in a small | Robert B Conatz s Say Godire! ,:‘;or‘;‘;‘,:mm‘"';‘j:’“‘{- rapused much | M. Ford in his book entitled. “The |enemy, whote acts caused the deaths | 41Waye green and bears nio fruit th S aponius. forty-eight, which Is sponsoring a | wee. A Tepeune T Al 0f Ahem have | ot meraapemrie"t, When published International Jew" makes the state- | Which the flowers now cumemurmc.l;;‘r:[_lme Jls understood 1o be merc The good faith and the good name | movement to boom Senator Borah for hieved the requisite thirty-sedond men at “all proclamations issue * ok koK % 2 ' degree of Masonry that entities them | of (ordoba. Senars e chsiee oriup? Y, the bolshevist government in Mos- faee: day, or any other day. The German- | SS9ar stuff ls not made clent, ive made popples are sald to be cheap|in general of the uses of cedar. 1t in price. but the sentiment connected | {3 Valuable for making ‘hope chests. to accuse the Jewish people of the l"nrld of being bolshevists, asserting that they have created that system, of Washington are at stake in this|the presidency, declared they would R e L crikTies Senora de Castro speaks |cow sre In the Tiadien teesiane ind| Strange d ' : x ok ox 5 3 o o ancient | 13 . rde € D t ge doings in connection with matter. This may not seem important | circulate petitions under the state law, w";'“ 1::::;’:’:[‘:;"!:’3;"‘“‘2“:"’5 frabie order Other distinguished | ongllsh. German, French and Span- that | the Christian churches were|ine replica of *Home, Sweet Home,”| Thero is a dispute as to who is the o those who would take advantage of { although Secretary of State Brown chur"d'ch,s belirine That s eathe il ashington Shriners, in addition to (Copyright. 1023.) and their priests and preachers are, by the Federation of Women's Clubs | oldest postmaster in the service. The e e e : T T e e aRaG (o B0 forced TabGs whils the —the cottage temporarily erected|Postmaster of Caledonia, Ala, is They can be hardly up to the present standard of modern youth. Some of our “Young Intelligentsia” would have assassinated the teacher. Jewish synagogues and their rabbis Greeks and Turks Unable to A ree e e B e Pl north of the Treasury. alongside | ninety-three years old, but he re- jorder, to bring the absolute truth lImv,Sherm'An'! statue. minds one of what Queen Wilhelm!a in regard to the rela-| (, Ba T = Eatoian is alleged to have said to Kaiser Wil- “Rabbits” “ o9 fore the pubile “age the lark, vet bid it sing as 2 tionship between the Jews and the b h 5 helm once, some years before dr n ether “Rabbits” Are “Asses™ |, betren, e fens and 0 iy a2 if wariv "the 1006 51| belm gnce, jome, Yeazs etorg, 007 b, |must say there was only one OrEani- {{ain goat, and in its astonished agony | the Ereat war lord and reyiewing the BY MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. o i e b2 inever did anything criminal or ter- 1S Pris jeanchor the swift yacht.| jioieq men passed before the roj n Any case. with the seat of the |rorizing. That organization was|®nd expect its sails to swell in j. D e ccith menERRA NG It seems but the other day that I|33600A0et Eovernment transferred (known as the Bund. -The philosophy | 2us port, as if it were bounding the | /o0, gt 5 : " i g , ora. negotiations there will be thics of the Bund were not|foaming waves of the open sea! o ! 7 . Tas relstiok in these letters How (N far more difficult than At StambOUL | Lo oioil e s ey ol Ron: give natcatic to tia cemifley) IR ORI LS gn Sl dele majority of the huge mob of labor- :hfflre the Turks have always had |educational. Their entire effort was|Tose, Ssaying 'tis nature's winter sleep ’,’,,',.r,,‘,if'“vz.‘?h fier “ns(:'llal‘llt enough ites, who allowed themselves to be| pSfore their eves something to re-|to educate the mass of people to un- |that soothes it into drowsiness. Pres- | Mgant With he AR persuaded by bolshevik agents in| sieoatie that they had other con-|derstand their condition, and no less|to! you bid it awake and burst into| yiag; T a1} foet stbiinehes tl Siderations to_ bear in mind than |an authority thaneStepanik wrote in|beauteous splendor of the morning's | 50 S oot be Sl i aa England to make an insulting demon- | their own selfish views and preju- [his famous book, “The Career of anicrimson sky, and leap to play over| XOUld mever be able to march throug stration before the mikado's embassy | 91°€%. At Angora they will be apt|Nihilist” (which depicts the work of |the portals o6f ~Home Sweet Homeo | ber dyked domain, where in a fev make large and quick profits, but it is important to the great mass of Wash- ington people. They have not gone into this thing to make money. They ~ are not working and worrying and proposing to subject themselves to various inconveniences because of the cash that the crowd will bring to ‘Washington. That is not the point. It is the lowest and most paltry view of the situation that can be taken. The people of Washington 'see in this eriterprise an opportunity further issue blanks until Senator Borah had glven his consent in writing for the use of his name. The secretary of the ©Ohio branch of the committee declared that ““Senator Borah must have given his consent or we would not be going ahead to obtain signatures.” The secretary of state maintains a “show-me” attitude, insisting that A patron of a Philadelphia restau. rant, while entertaining a young wom- an at dinner, was held up on the prem- ises and robbed of his diamonds end there 1a mothing on fle te that effect. | 3150 in cash. It was hard luck for So if Senator Borah means business, | M that he had not yet paid his as his backers count upon, he will not | <he¢k: be in the way of getting any delegates —_———— to popularize the Capital city of the|from Ohio in 1924 until he declares| There is & degree of respect due the to lose sight of this fact. Jewish revolutionary movement),| Listen el minutes she could flood the wh United States and to interest in that | that Barkis is willin®. revolutionist who strives to change “L“l;'z,“d.:" griae eronng jof ":",‘_‘"’ i G Rt ek muck was a0 BRARGL e ::;e.pl:«::h.m:?;::L vatn, | SOUUTIY Ten or twelve feet de clty a large number of other Amerl-| A similar situation will exist in|conditions for his fellow countrymen. :_"e'm:d” ‘:a",‘;‘;‘r‘:““’lm ":‘“‘q':“: Arthur ‘Ponsodhy. 6l Gabotite l'_lrl.eer,al‘g: ffizr:s‘; rious forelgn COUR- |Gy, give me my glass-covered greenhouse again | So. what 1s the use of & postmas cans who probably know very little | other states. Meanwhile, and pending | There is none due the communist Who | pajien Baiitih caiic oGP s s P;or:e member of parliament from Sheffeld reached Doctri; " - * ok ok % Jitern Dokaviticke e RESRRAE ¥ HIE about it. That is the main idea of the|qa formal declaration of either his in-|antagonizes his own and every other ) . b2 octrine of Love. yenrs old and has served the posta that had been doped on a British race | *1'© has just introduced a bill in the course for some sinister political pur- | POUSe of commons designed to ter- poses through the machinations of |INate hereditary titles, which he de- : the Tokio government instead of be-|10UNCeS as “grotesque” and which | grime of terrorism. The nh|lo:‘ophvlca‘"“'" do jazz? Will its house dog, Philomoni, Va. who is ninety-nine ing the northernmost and most re- | °Uld enable present peers to re-|or tne Jewish revolutionary party as|TiSe and bow to welcome guests? Will| years old. ‘and, as he has served since | mote of the group of islands in the| CU7C® their titles and would bar|expressed today by Trotsky was this:|its grandfather's clock tinkle chimes ,‘;ei an :ngar':ol.tlcaxlpé:;'gs‘:\jsre“;rgn?;'~ kecper is presumably making a Drofit| s republican, @ rival of President|screen’s most beautiful women. Now |ar Pacific known as Japan—Sagha-|i2f8 &nd helresses to titles born |ThS forces of production WELh Cap|from an ornate “whatnot?” Will the| £ fva'ip to Postmaster Tavenner on his present sales. His sales will be | Harding. if they had only added an office boy's | lien being the habitat of the hairy|_ ‘O % Passage of the bill from|jimit of nation and state. The na-|Spirit of John Howard Payne stop to|to elucidate. bR i - g S = 2 2 inuauite the Halties jr-|Succeeding thereto, has long been a|tional state and the present political | Wipe the dust from his shoes ana (Copyright, 1923, Ly P. V. Collins | probably very largely increased during{ In a speéch at Manchester, N. H.,| brains the thing would have been com- a i t and the dir the Shrine meeting, and his profits will | jast night Senator Borah said that| plete. pronounced foe form is too narrow for the exploita- | ‘l‘ie;t sn-cl_x:mn of zh; human race. | 2 OMO8 ”‘”“m"’: ;2:(:‘&‘;:2 ‘:;,::':“'tlon of these productive forces The| ot i , 5 nd now it a ’ eto, ¢ our_economic be larger than he gets from his normal | measures looking to solution of the na- has arsen at the congrems of Lau |21tHOUER he belongs by birth to the | sestom, theretore, s o aeek To break | EDITORI A I DI‘;E ST volume of business. The people feeltion's domestic problems are in prepa-! Every conference is embarrassed by . e o e through the state boundaries, the | that such an increase in profits should | ration for introduction in Congress,|tne recognized privilege of any dele. —_— sanne which threatens to wreck this | o7 €14%% Which he seeks to abolish, | through, the state boundaries The | be satisfactory and sufficient. The| particularly @s to fuel, freight rates|gate to pack his suit case and go home - on the rival' claims of the ks @ nder e con-|become o > The former treaty was ac people will not submit without resent-|and profiteering, which he realized | in case @ decision looms up which he i of Turks After Twelve Years Canada Seems ment to being gouged because of the | would be denounced as radical. He do”‘“n:t approve of: and the Greeks to the possession of | SL2lt eve of the late Queen Victoria | SITCrent Patts it o theran |our sovernment, but onl coming of a large crowd, and they will | challenged the critics to produce substi- —————eee Think of home, sweet home, wilh’ ice 0 many P our letfers concrete walks, electric sweepers and | might have started even before h. runke: bl st Vi ppointed. Jrunken rambler rosest Wills its] VS CRRSIIE. o B Sl Gater ait There Was never a man of Jewish faith who ever attempted on the lives of the Czars or committed any several hundred thousand Washington | tention to run for the nomination, or, nation’s government on general prin- people who are not Shriners. They | not to do so, if his friends persist in | ciples. want the best possible treatment for | booming him, he is likely to be regard- — —— the crowd. They insist upon it. ed asa potentia] aspirant for the nom-| A composite face has been made of Every merchant and restaurant{ination, and, as he is now: classed as|the features of seven of the silver ' i i b 4 ably connected with each other, and - N Ao ontest W ey certain diminutive islands which bear ;;fldr_\'\-ull;l.er son of the late Gen. Sir|th was the basie and theo 3, of Kari| to Favor Befupmxtyt | ey atramnionsicoutest JAmIngton : the name of animals. The islands| cn™ 1ofeousy, who throughout|Mars; TRS PReccltECh of°an in. | After twelve years' reciprocity with| gione - not hear without resentment that the | tute measures, for conditions are in-| 1 is stated authoritatively that the |concerned and which form the sub- q“'”“f' "‘l ""{"" vears was the late | ernational people without regards to Canada looms up once more as & tOPic| mhe New Haven Journal-Courier crowd is being gouged. < { tolerable “‘and cannot be permitted to = i1 be * v Ts this |ject of violent disputes between the S chlef private secretary and|borders. language, religion. birth or|for at least “conversations” between | feels certain the entire problem il exist’ Mo veitersited bisiopposition to :e:n‘::;:: ‘:a:hfionbo:: :’l::.oldssall: Hellenic and Ottoman delegates «t k"‘;er o; her privy purse, while m,-Ilr:c:fl'wg:g-,'r';'fmmf;;‘;';;e‘;:;d‘e‘;@‘jg’; the two countries. It {s susgested by |be placed squarely up ‘to President 5 43 - “tI mother, Lad v, o tal . but suggests do Sir Auckland Geddes. anything looking lke participation in | water expression “a bone In her|{LAuSanne bear the name of Merkeb, | o wmpr of ,;‘:mi‘:"::":’;; “‘::“"““3 the UnitedStaten, . ery lit- ‘s"‘l_.lc:l::‘:;‘"w‘;‘;“‘:;"m“: ::;“C‘:‘m know what the administration w . i G < v i eRoOnY: 2 queen, was e s C 3 3 3 3 g vi s sal. W il een sympathy and hope that his i European affairs. He is giving the| eoipom which ’s the synonym for the English appointed on her marriage to be a|tle to do with the bolshevist move- | =", Tl L g e oriitael el gg :&:&&éw&r&r;g:alfi\;: t::;rxelq“m affifetion of partial blindness is only | country a very clear idea of what he “)"ord ;:Ms ow the Greeks insist | lady in waiting. Gen. Sir Henry and |ment. but as Individuals they Tiiec | gotiations with President Taft, In|Of Eood Wil The republican part 5 ¥ i = that the “Ass” islands are the islets y Ponsonby w. ~fore - jbeen in all maveme! & % recove: 3 d temporary are felt in Washington for | thinks bout domestic and iWnterSa | cninese politicians are mid to bel i, 0 N8% 19TARAS are whe jaletsi ol TRIeTQY were therefore al- [dot? “he it rellgions, economio oF |ubmitting his annual budget he g O Y el o i tEina Sir Auckland Geddes, the British am- | Hoh) FIOICHS, 11 000 b o me 15| 214ing bandits. In a division of the ) the ‘siand of Tendos and. the main: l"“-fl“ g A under Lenin |Bests & plan whereby should Presi- | sake, but, If American public opinio baseador, announcement of whose af- | talked of for the presidency, and he is| 1 i handits may be expected to{land, Tenedos being retained under and at Balmoral. |two mem fmes as Trotsky,|dent Harding reduce duties on agri-|would fasten itself on this subject | dantic fal po! ¥ pel Turkish el Ponsonbr's eldest brother, |there are such n i - felt, 3 v bi fliction yesterday caused a shock to|being discussed by enthusiastic friends | o rather the worst of it. Pasha and his fellow plenipe ente s Preoniie gldest brother |thers e Suomswl. Petroususki: | cultural products and fish the Cana.|and make itself felt, a new business tal y. e b- = era would open for bhoth countries on the people of the capital. In the course | in several states in that capacity. e of the Angora government argue that | SR8 #SOUTE In the same rélation |Kamineve, Biscone. EISURTY SjUr |dian government should be authorized | {5 U0l Shotitaie. basis This of his official sojourn in this city Sir — {1t will be a relief when the German | hg YeTkeb islands are a group sit-i 1o late queen. o e iznukidse, Lasewitz, Kalikene, | to meet the cut in such a way as shall|view meets = opposition from th Auckland has made many warm|} People who used to think the circus| = 0" . .ane does reach zero. Figur- | from Tenedos and that are oecupied h‘A!blnr Arthur Ponsonby, he was ;,.isedgn’lnne. QTAT:V:KP;:’I :PD;!Q'.“: be reasonable. Discussing the sug- S"‘{i:i,?;fi:ld(h“P}{"I‘L'])t]iil‘;;‘g"‘ V“éhgis?u;’:xu. . Y = { oy a ze )T to the . 8 nvue, y J- B i ~ ~ | acterizes the as friends. In his officia} relations he has |a wicked influence are now compelled|; o ot things will then be so much |PY Greece. which has long known|oiq '“;;hr?f’d a page of honor to the|Warslione, Sap: gestion at length, the Newark News| o) 2 i . The two Jews are properly de: ibed the over 50 acted as to win the high esteem of | to admit that the worid has not im-| & ™ them by the name of the Rubbitis- |2t Shiliol Colleme. opora. s Tuitas | Trotoky and Petrusky, The Jow will [says: : { worked word ‘gesture.” 1t is perfect government officlals. He has proved | proved perceptibly in spite of the fact : o6 bed o 5&3“5&“%?.’;&"2,.’5 :’{‘;Hen\‘ing the university entered the jneither have the power or the nu- More important than anything else 1y understood in Canada that the diplomatic_service, being stationed iy |merical strength or create any s¥&-| .. ‘p." oo qeni Letween the two|American Congress is hostile to rec g stat in P himself a most efficient and capable | that the greatest shows on earth have Greeks can agree as to whether the or 1 ¢ government in Russia, . procity, and Mr. Fielding’s invitatio: diplomatic repre;(-n:aflve and s:ame been consolidating until there are only SHOOTING STARS. :l::‘.lfi?;" &‘:"‘-}-‘.}rfl;‘,"dk"“ - ;‘é;';..:in.c :;‘l.t::n‘:"l?l‘::%mhe‘;‘:t e Lor ax an individual he acts like any ;-o;m'trlles mnl “‘ou‘;" sr;":l out offis ghviously a maneuver to pla ¢ t Asss islsndr, rson. helpful mutual trade relations. A lthe western progressives, who des trying and difficult questions arising | one or two expected in town each sea- and, as such, subject to the Turkien |} Cor" at the foreign office. Then he |other person. P o progre has borne himself with the utmost|son. 5 e b vi 5 Je{an arrangement that would cre BY PHILANDER JOHNSO T e e ..'f’""‘u?.’.‘r“?“ :‘:;‘e::m_i*;h: late Jew Long a Scapegoat. torkable agreement should fml Le | et “L‘ L 1 Utopia and the difficulty of the masses in dis-|hen the latter was. premier nag|*The Jew will be, has been and is|beyond the power of these two peo » his is mbgut dignity and discretion end with a ——ee— Lis. 28 oo by SOOI tinguishing between islands and four-{after the latter's death developed ajunder the present system of society |ples, and when Canada shows a fa-|opinion enteriained by the. Ne spirit of appreciation for the American | Hiram Johnson's candidate for Con-| Utopia, Utopia! You are the land of 53:‘:'.’.‘,'?,','&11':’&0": ‘.'-’r,f,i'fl-i';.'e‘n;? logk | species of revolutionary streals. A |the scapegoat for all ‘the ills that!vorable disposition we ought to wel-| Virginian-Pilot, which asserts “along g _ e R y n on befall the governments of 2 i X ivi i e Yorwpoint. She! sadien silpms Ju it jguoes, Who QU M- WHIIR oRuh i ; the general public of the present sit- | of which the Farl of Beorbhonuon 1| The Jew 7alls and in raised by the |come It and meet her more than half-| either the executive or legislativ tributed to the results of war exposure | idea, was defeated in the Los Angeles| Where flowers always blossom and |uation. But, after all, when it is re- |chief, and & grandsen ef g Citey, {same environment as a Christian. He | way. Partisan politics have hurt our | [OUL€ A0 CRances o7 reeiprodiey an and dlso to the strain of assiduous|district. A great orator must appear where sunshine always gleams; ::‘:{f; n:;le n;fl:r:: congress Ou'f "Oe‘:; the nrtlm.hmmlmn he developed into ifl,l(heg e "‘g ;h"e":’;‘;l“:'f‘;‘; ,:;"g relations with other peoples so badiy | opportunity to level tariff barriers devotion to duty in the preparation of | in person to dazzle the crowd. HeIWhere every man-to other men i8|great power, got badly mixed up be- | orcien of fhb"\hfl:rledd"l’;;;m"#:go;zd&‘g" o eared amongst dirt and fiith be- |that Washington cannot be too alert r;zngro;z:s})?‘;d;;e:::& 'lp(l'gf'feavv the war-debt adjustment which falls in | cannot hope to shine by reflected ef- generous and just, Lween Cilicld, in northern Syria, and|of the house of lords and achieved |comes a gangster—the Jew Who Isito see they do not make us ignere he Tanst et Jour- yart to him. The happy bellef is en- | fulgency. And honest human sympathy effaces | Silesia. in the castern provinies ofinote as a speaker and writer on the | reared in the west side among beauti- | Canada's outstretched hand.” nai saverully pointa out AShec tuis ( : 5 happy . Germany and that still more star-|alleged moral and physical degener-|ful surroundings with class and edu- | Mr. Flelding was defeated in his(Mal carefully points out ‘under this tertained that the impairment of his ———————— all distrust. Y tling mlAllkes’wfre made by vetlation and even degradation of the|cation beeome‘snhxlg:—cl-; hm%:-e";_h{ initial attempt, the New \o]rk 'lljltme: ladt. wolld. chiefy tawdds the pro- i i Ve've toiled with chart and compass; | more august plenipotentiaries, mis- | aristocracy, ' | this persecution? Is e rich? ct | recalls, because “af internal political - 5 : vision 1s of a passing nature, and that| When a wizard sues an emperor for | We've tol e £k c_:’ takes of a geographical character. it|worka on gh:n:u:]'ec};mhell):'; oW | tus matter Is that, as & whole, e [ cortlle RECAUSS "o L ornel &%t em- et B Sir Auckland will soon be restored to ! libel it becomes evident that the love | Every map we've scan ’ . |isn’'t so very surprising that the un-|entitied “The Decline of the Aris-|is the most poverty stricken individ-o phagizes that “there is no geographi- = 5 ‘ full health and powers, >, - Ve E = 5 1ty 1 s can_ be produced on humanity expected of a Klansman | But we find no indication of its pres-|educated, mobs of Great Britainitocracy,” published in 1912 ual in the world. Does he live in idle- | ;) barrier between the United |“8ficultural crops can he produsccs The great world war left many prob- | member. And the worldly-wise assure us, &s for | gates at the conference of Lausanne| Arthur Ponsonby looks his part as|he is spoken of in all countries to be | glSrCOMURICRIION T8 BUCH TTRE 108 A Rt te lems of reconstruction to be solved. counsel we apply, ana Fravely ciscussing the localityla sour iconoclast. ‘He is the “Knight [Persecuted as it he were & erimingb lor products between these two na- |Cangdian crops in cheaper we wou Many influential stas It is but a fleeting fancy, like the|2nd future destiny of islands in the| ' "o 00 Cn Born in |y AL, 81l ages and at all tmes whe|tions in to the advantage of both.|have little along the farming lina (s 3 n statesmen refuse to European statesmen, when looking e Levant which bear the name of Rab-|of the Doleful Countenance. orn In | jews have been persecuted not only UOHE, 0 (0 608 LOVELTARN, O anada erort: Conseqasntiy 11 Tedhare cloudland in the sky. bits and Asses. 1871, he is old and sad beyond his|in MH' :u; Igusp‘l‘:;!!e::!wil: 'J;t:? needs the United States. Thus far |agree to reciprocity it would be with * ok ok ok years. The pale anemic face and g;;v; S st elastic human in the | the reception of the Canadian offer in |the idea of bemefiting the consumers ‘For centurles the name of the|scanly hair, the drooping figure, Sug- | world—he is able to acclimate him- | this country has been rather cold.|in the United States, and not the pr Our farmers see in the plan another |ducers, Opposition from the farmer</ e A gl o Rl ) st o aidbe s i (2t D s "Mmyem;ah::s‘('o'&? blow at their interests. Agricultural |would be certain and with that clus % in_cold climates. H ot . b i 1 power and the prestige of the Otto- | the frivolity of a butterfly social sys- | &S ives in freely of all he pos- | prices would be reduced, they allege, |organized now in bloes, it could man empire as the seat of its gov-|tem. He rarely cheers up. A smile in |iand he B¥es 10, f0EY, 23 Tite. He 1s | while manufactured goods ould re- |wicld ‘sumelent political ” inucnc: ernment. Indeed, forelgn ambassu- | his gves is as rare as a joke on his {known for his sobriety and purity of | maim high. Cut the duties on the lat-|probably to suc viclous | ter and then the farmers will talk [If any American party is to suppor el e e o] et St e bt s g:mts“fi‘;‘afl: ‘o‘lh‘:r (::;e'from with you!" Even though there should | Canadian reciprocity it must be pre credited to this sublime porte just|Passed him by. This Is all the more | "¢ Jew, with few exceptions, has|be no present action the suggestion |pared for a political fight with ¢ as foreign diplomatic represents- | surprising mince the Ponsonbys have [ maintaired the purity of race for imust be received as indicating ‘Cana- |favmers, Constquentiy there is o tives in England are accredited to|always been renowned for their good | thousands of years and today he is|dian changing views the Bansor|Prctiit, voP, o7 WARE 32 HiOlh, the Court of St. james. But the|looks Indeed, at the close of the | the oniy rage Cort S TLice 8,Co00 | 1ot it appears to be the local im-|is splendid, the Waterlog Tribune be- sublime porte has fallen from the m, = lieves, and “there is no cheap foreig He seeks some little betterment to eighteenth century, one of them, John, | that of any other race of people. If|pression that local sentiment has| SUe5 TG Coere Gn B people of the passed another bill which puts an end f an; Canada is now % Viscount Ponsonby, great grandson of | long ages make nobility, the Jew|changed and that w0 cotntxich aative (0 ths tante ends BAID TS @arenly oclisme. e neadquartors of tat once Greads | the firal earl, wan colebrated as the |15 certainty & nobleman. If “old fready to do what it refused to 4@ |Living conditions are much the sam. to the county convict lease system after the 1st of next January, Under ccnsider any suggestion that the re- construction of the United States Con- stitution is one of them. ———— The Shriners will drive dull- care away, but will not undertake to attack the particular brand of care that at- taches to the parking problem. for a few bits of timely advice from Uncle Sam, almost invariably drop the | Yet every human traveler, as he jour. hint that money talks. neys on his way, Down in his heart expects to reach Florida’s Housecleaning. Utopia some day; t years, so brief, be Florida. is making its prison reforms | O If IS span of yeu effective. The legislature, after a se- spent ere he arrives, ldren or his children's children vere struggle, responded to an aroused s chikioen public sentiment in and out of the there shall pass their lives. Y a railway train or state end passed bills abolishing the | v Pene er he takes 4 use of the lash on prisoners for cor- fares by sea or stream rection and discipline. Now it has Evil Resorts in Maryland. Gambling houses are opening in Maryland just beyond the District line, according to a news story in The Star. Their situation was given. Auto- mobiles made trips between the street car line and one of the places. Cars were parked about them.. Hundreds e blematical ch place mij it ceas! Jew is the first prince in the world— |is, however, quite pro in_many® flelds, are affiliated. 1t we o 9 the mighty Byzantine empire on the owed nn‘u‘g;:‘onn::ofio o 0 B8 | et in spite of all, e has been blamed | what the response of the United ||0 et feidm, afe afliaved it o Yet it seems the universal destination | SO TeR O LN O, e e | e e e Tho. terra, | Jor everything that came 1o the world | States would be. to such & proposal. ||W\*/&L0 BEAVS; CUtads Je fun f- sublime porte i® merely the head- Utopia, Utopia! They say there's no{ eq oriental power that supplanted |handsomest youth of his day and |ancestry makes a man a prince, the|under the Laurier administration e ML and Anarian ooy this measure ng essing wWill be per- of the race. quarters of the provinofal adminis- when there was all over France a|that was bad. ————————————‘Demagogues will again. cr: mitted after that date, and all existing tration of Constantinople, and an in- | ver: he time of the terrible massacre against the plan, here as in C; y > 3 n. v strong feeling against England.| At the time 3 of men and boys were in the places. | contracts will become void. It is pro- The Townsman. significant provincial governor now |Lord Ponsonby happened to fall in|and r:volugon“!l‘n .?::;:‘:m’:‘a '-'r.n: girls. Many people became insane. ::‘)"sn‘!rl:nt::r;dm}},n::ied:r ",‘I."l“h;xr There seems to have been nothing|vided that one county may turn its|qne pictures in the plcture bodk— | Dhime who y renson of st hign | the e MO o EaEed I | W as DA iace of bsing a bolsheviki|I can enumerate such scenes by the | {00 Nstiong, A%e top, hear tn their [n strikingly secret in their operation. prisoners over to another county for No gambler could run his business | work on the public roads, or they may with such publicity in the city and|{be turned over to the state road de- “‘get away with it.” In the quiet rural [ partment for similar service. Convict districts it seems possible, sopetimes. | wardens are. placed .under bonds of Orderly and law-abiding neighbors| $2,600 each, and guards are bonded may be all around, but such “carry-| fof $1,000. e ings on” at night by hundreds of men | - This is a long step forward for the and boys from the city do not excite | state of Florida, and it is hoped it will their curiosity. Revelry at late hours | serve as a stimulus to similar reforms does not disturb them. Law officers | elsewhere in the south. Theé practice 3 t what is the use—the - The swirling seas, the babbling brook, | office was entitled to the style of lat once seized by an angry, drunken |and an agitator of communism, has | thousands, but what is the BseTthe |the two nations steadily surmounty our highnesa” just as if he hld‘lnt of men and women Who took up |paid in Russia the greatest penalty Jow has paid for all the atroclties|iyrimr obstacles and has long sur- ‘ el as devas o world under the > hne vSayeeman 0 acchiy Steder anspore the aeat of thair mational pame of bolshiviem, this too. has|fhlCo'canter. American factoricr cr He sought them earnestly end far, x’b‘&?}.mnc ‘to Angora, beyond the|lows. He was pushed and dragged | Corpses of the killed remain lying g::-:}:g:gl“::; ;e:':l’l"’;“!‘::vgg he {tablish Canadian branche American But some defect the scene would mar, | reach and range of the foreign war- |along to the street corner. The rope \in the streets for days afterward.|y® gy g o ot oo, tourists and C.{,.dh,, mumm‘ floc ships lying at anchor in the Golden | that usualiy held tke larftern was |Thousands of severely wounded peo-| " JOUUD 100, B RA% GG B2, 00 Iback and forth. Tt is a strong strean. And nathing managed quite to look Horn, and they insist that all com- |placed around his neck and he was|ple in their dying throes remain IP:“ Mr. Ford has. in place of crnun(l“,’:d mgn;fl‘n‘.:m, w‘hlch flowu‘ 5;v\|;1‘|: Like pictures in the picture book. mercial negotiations, all the dncus-lhuned up, actually hanging in mid- | without assistance of any source. Dogs > these neighbors. It announces a la lanterne,” the lampposts at that|roms have taken place in every town time being the most convenient ob-|of Russia, where Jews have been ject.to convert Into a makeshift gal- | killed and raped by the thousands. freedom, new life and a friendly tural unity against which no customs sions on the subject of concessions—|air, when the women—it will be re- have gnawed at the bodies ;‘::'“n‘ ATGAE, 1o VATIOWS ErouDe of | & f ugh A fact, the entire business of |membered what a fiendish part they |of the dead and wounded. A grea! Snd Maer B SnRnt O e 5 oo amaits Dlayed In the great revolution—as If | sany women and chiliren have been by a common impulse, rushed for-|ravished. line can prove a useful barrier, or peoples in ‘this great country, to try lanything but a toll.” Because the the empire shall be transacted at to create an enmity starting up race iplan would affect only the farmers, ‘The pleasures waiting close at hand; | {70 " /stead of at Constantinople. i " bl u « |hatred and race prejudice for no other |as outlined, h ver, the Wilkesbarre | Homgtdnawotit. g Somviolh I gt par 8 S L :':’x':i v‘:..‘i‘;‘l“.‘.u':’.’:.‘l’. oF &:P. ons 1o the :‘r‘:u‘:&: 2tr:ldlln:lln.htlhht":ad;= Jows Still Survive. reason than some whim or something |Record is certaln It cannot be made [ WOSRRTRS ) haN Tyable With 2 Scous e Cuiteln thJeii o0 lls. | AN SUREN Y ARG I, Gecrat City Which the &Teat Nanploon | oo handsome & boy 1o be hanged | Seme particularly atrocious scenes |that may have happened to him per- [affective now because “the manufac- SRS S Siiakily e | St} Iende it ) qunetisaide poticint | She sney by SN 06 oy rinc ¢ S e oe ot UL MEVS R Ig TORR o e in mopnabian Flask Hass 18, D ooy S e e S, trint fur e o0 TS P e et B Tprec of outside the mnrip}" ever since such | practices. It isa form of state slavery. | By day with interest replete. not r;;rely of Europe, b‘\g-nl,f.h& t'n‘. ln{‘u: u.:-dl °=.m|:-yd ur:::u')z. :t‘;r: 8 355‘.‘-’:""', ' The courtyard was | vears to destroy. the Je has suc- |but the farmers are stromg enough laces were rooted out of the city, or | Some manths ago.an atroclous series | He learned to love them and forsook. g“u'h"""““_ .mm“‘n‘i 1) w.mu. and then capped the mat- | covered the bodies of women }ceeded in doin "Wl RGN {10 {0 put the veto on the propos of crimes was unearthed in Georgia in boul of the Ottoman. - ter by helping himsto reach London, < {and children. old -men -and young] - ! 3 :

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