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" THE. EVE G_STAR, WASHINGTO CAPITAL KEYNOTES ticable, the plans would seem to be|there,” here, there and everywhere. worth while the attention of builders, | They will want to know the opening THE EVENING STAR, 7\\ ith Sunday Morning Edition Needs of Capital. WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS o the furnishers of funds and of labor. [and closing hours of public bufldings, S . Everybody is aware of the evils of con- | perhaps the location of shops. They Parke Greatest Now, - Writer ¥ struction booms, followed invariably | will, in fact, ask countless questions, FRIDAY by collapse and unemployment, injand it is up to the veople of the city D P LTINS, To the Hlmuffi?::‘m'. HYEREDPRSC WIBKIUM Ny 5 which all pacties in interest suffer.|to answer them promptly, plainly and | THEODORE W. NOYES. RSh L om . (REOmLY, Winly The north and south poles may be|problems nearer for Congress to at-, The Washington newspapers cowd [ j waiter Drake of Detrolt, newly(overpeopit 5 5 Secretary Hoover was told at the con- | politely. the pivot around which the earth re. | tack In 1523 Bealdes, an: election |81d the American Civie Association by = NSk e UALM itaten s e = ference last night that last year the| A few days ago The Star suggested | o1 0 1% SOnnd Whieh the ebrth Be-| omeg ext year. 4 making known to the Shriners the | eomee wpn h el s Herrerny | WAt four billion inhabitants in the Jhe Evening Star Newspaper Company | , jonal construction totaled four bil-{ that the local people should Prepare | Aimortean brains eirealats ut Wosn hoa o needs of the Pederal city, the name | merue avesrs the v 5 8 Yooy |Year 2070, reminds John Hays Ham- R O R e 4™ | lion dollars, including the carrying of | themselves for this service of guid-|ington han the “sero stone. the cen.| The United States expenditure for |@6orge Washington modestly used |ip goseiers imrricon o oo ey |Mond of a good one. It has to do Faropes e, e o B ng glana, | 41 €xcess of one Dbillion dollars or |ance, and it is to be hoped that they | ter of the untverse, around which cir. | bulldings amounted to more than [When referring to the city named in [yo -PeRiZiofmerioan Wk S5 DFAS | With coal, as befits reminiscences by &gy ; more. For the first four months of | have done so, and are ready with thelr | cumnavigate the sun, moon and— [3$%000,000,000 in the last year, of |his honor. Washington is the National | pui0™ e €3 P00 RERREr S TRIEUInT| (e Chuleman of the Federal Cod! \The Evening Star. with the Sunday moraing | 1923 the demand showed a 40 fer cent | information. They must also be ready | Shriners. When the latter reach the| Which more than $2,000,000,000 went [CSPIal for each hriner. Let thoneeds | yrot " Car Company for fifteen years, | man. Somewhas murd ot Nesrmms e egallvared by eteiers i (1 increase over the industry’s capacity |in spixit. The men with a red fez is | sero atone on thelr trip trom the far[into homes. Construction continues |9 the city be made known to the|gq reary Denby, befors coming to the | 5%55 Hammond. “once wa attending gionth: Sunday oniy. 30 conts pet month. O | for the same period In 1922, while the | to be treated as a guest, und given | weat thelr Journcy will be ended. In |t the rate of $250.000,000 & month, | riners and individual interest will | .0 " hepartment, was an oficial’ of | er Shencvon A TRl ar o Ameake 5605, ™ Catlection 1a- made by carriers at tbe [ supply of materials for this year was|every possible consideration and the | that the zero stone differs from the|Which will aggregate fully as much |°® “‘0“"‘: In this large gathering |y, 'same corporatiou. He and Drake|Showed that in fifty. million. Seare end of each moath. 16 per cent less than requived by the fullest courtesy. Blarney stone, for the latter is noted | during the current year as 1 Untied Sraneo ™ very sectlon of the |n,ye peen “buddies” for many years. | Lhere, might be no, Bt latt i (s o i Tt 18 in theas maliow.c Lecause it always “starts something.”| Savings balances are 11 per cent St pE Th dleeay g pasn that? excitedly Bate by Mait—Eayable in Allvance., | e WS PRI ol Lol ot st more than a year ako, wages are |, Washington's chief charm fs its trees. | morce was 4 Moryer at Detrort untl | ihe o og e AL man. intorrupting Maryland and Virginia. Smphasis was laid by the council | people such occasions that a city | Ligher than ever known before and |The people are fortunate in having (the Michigan metropolls became the { plied. ‘that in fije Cenii, Peaker re- Daily and Sunday..1 yr., $8.40: 1 mo members upon the fact that they “are | gains the reputation of hospitality or | Time was when “all roads led to|everybody has a job who is capable (& man like Col. Clarence O. Sherrill in | hub of the automobile universe. He is Yorla n;thv"mn‘)\~|{'r‘.2h3",ypf"s e Daily “only. LL.1yr, $6.00: 1 m not trying to stop construction, but to| of the reverse. Washington is, per-|Rome” and the Romans prided them- | ©f Working. 5 rone s, o) Dublic =~ buildings and|forty-seven years-old and recognized | heckler sank back in Rle scar visis. Sunday oniv......1yr. $2.40; 1 m c 5 3 3 Selbck b an iiiat = Maybe the new homes will keep |Brounds. Col Sherrill seems to really |ag one of the leaders of the American |relieved, & R T e T Bitess T do all we can to bring about a greater | haps, a little bit indiffeyent in respect pon their capital of the world. | pace - with Representative Davey's |have the interest and beaulification | motor industry. Drakes new post In | mom o 4nd sighed: Oh, T feel better All Other States. production and the employment of | to the treatment of strangers because | 11® ¢6ntral point of the Eternal city | population boom. Srorpo ity at heart. About & year|Washington is his first public office. | | years: | o' YOU said a million Daily and Sunday .1 yr., $10.00; 1 mo., $5¢ | more men over a longer period.” The | there are so many always in town. :Vl:.(:o‘vt]:r:: :':’"‘"‘" "':;“ ‘;:’"Ch o i o lishing & national tk:b:—:‘t‘u:‘f fn"::; * ok ox K * ok x ¥ Yal L v $7.00; 1 mo.y 60 | : i v s measured. Emu-| i " National Capital. He had an artistic ALY g : ; B i 13w $00i1 mon 00| chalrman of the executive committee } But it hias never hail #o large & crowd {1y ung Rome's example, Mas L'Enfant, |yam oo oPOTE & net 1088 of farm |y o Gastgnen by the Comsalasian. of |, 1™ Alvin E. Dodd of Washington—| - Gurrent dnd prompective shittingr S ok of the council, N. B. Hoggson, pre-|as that which is now on its way here { who designed the ity of Washington, | JADOTers amounting to 23,000 In the |Fine Arts to mark the trees in. the | {oTmely Miss Catherine Filerie of Bos- | in the British cabinet draw attention Member of the Associated Press, | dicted unemployment in the building | and will soon burst upon the city by | Broposed a milestone of granite. Ty [iast year. That is about the propor- |parks of Washington. The label ls | ton—will attend the commencement | t0 the semi-monopoly enioved by The Aseocinted Press 1n exclusively entitled | trades by next winter unless the coun- | tens of thousands. It must meet this | apoecraSie ,:,'l:':}‘;‘f. t of his plan|tion of farm loss in many of the u:gnc':r'n:.:‘:'n'&"t::fla:"iéfirmfi:uhg‘;flt’rg exercises at Harvard University this| handful .of “ruling familles." o the “ume” for republication of wil news dit | cil's program can be carried out suc-|unusual condition with a desire tof B, an historic column—also in- |%(3t68 and farmers are hard put to |tree and the habitat. month in a distinguished capacity. She | Throughout the present generation ches Creditad 10 1t or not otherwis 5 : - - { cesstully. lease and to serve. tended for a mile or itinerary column, | K¢t the necessary help. Is Mr. Frank ms and oaks are more beautiful |is one of the very few women ever|although prime ministers of - TR S T 0e A e f:e: TR Ctihatise = from whose station (a mile from | H. Vanderlip's hope that more farm- |for street trees than oriental planes | graduated from Harvard s a fuil. | ltical complexions have. corme wod apecial dispatches hierein are also reserved. ecretary Hoover was told that re- Federal House), all distance of places | ®™ Will be attracted to the cities to |4nd sycamores, which to the casual | g o 850 ' ity | 8one, the Cecil B & - | currence of the present congested con- Egypt in. Washington. {hrough the continent aro to be cal: | €aualize industries being realized? ~ |observer look like the same tree. The |fed8ed student of the university|&one the Cecils the Chamberlains ition: of buliAlNE fopesatihEtheoth. BYPt - culated.” Yol sycamore in a meadow with a chance [Proper, and is going to Cambridge to | and the Churchills, like Tennyson’s 0 An Egyptian note is distinctly| (By “Fed - % : to grow to full develo; t 1 § : e Correct Use of the Flag. out the United States could be pre-| A% UEYRIN Ao L dletneuy | or ) coora! House” is meant thel mhe rumors and fragmenis of in- |Deautiful tree: but It 15 190 Jrge for | rocoive her master's degree. Mrs.|brook, go'on forsver. Lord Robert The people of capital of the { vented if the industry and the public { PR | formation which come out of the n- |3, 5treet tree and is so severely prunedy >00% the daughter of one of Boston's| Cocll's father, the Marquis of Salisbury. - <3 s P = o tertainment of the thousands who | i b 1€ IU- Tthat it looks like a skeleton in win- | merchant princes and now the wife of | Was premier rs before Queen Vie- Tnited States should know how to use | could be kept informed of conditions | ciy® LRSI @ M MORIEE HI0) without knowledge wr Maj. | VESUAton of the Veterans' Rureau (tor and the bark il through the year | an oficlal of the United States Chare. | toria. died, A & now ot Coore (Ber- the fla the United States better | sccording to the council's plans. S e Faat ¢|/Enfant's. idea. the same thought|SUSECst the subterraneun rumblings |109ks like it has leprosy. ber of Commerce, w o { four is one) h beet o than the people of any other city of the e great reviewing stand in front of | ENER S Hea. v of some Vesuvius merting reatr tog |, The Commission of Fine Arts, estab- | Br of rce, went through the | fo one) have been enthroned fn : 3 s o ———————————— the White House is decidedly of that pressed a century and a quar-|°° . il & ready forilished by an act of Congress in |s1n,[;{"“";’,‘g‘,‘e"’§ of edn tion at Harvard. | the seats of the mighty meantime, as country. Pectiaps they know ss mu To Gt the Bum Busners. claracter in shape and color. The |S% IAter (June 7, 1919). by u citizen of (47 €TUPtION. Tho indications become |is composed of seven well qualified | A2 Ihe POl married when she dit| wers salisburvs and Cecils before < do the people of other - W, . more ominous #s the investigatio s of the fne arts, who are ap- | 1%, D¢ obably ; : ot Washington | The Shrine celebration is not to be | massive columns now under construc- shington, Dr. S, M. Johnson. In|more SO be the InvestlRatlon [pointed by the President for a period | the university's first woman graduate. | them. Joseph Chamberlaln, the great cities, yet it seems that Washington |0 SREe Coebtaton 18 o e | e avate between 1oth i |® letter to Col. J. W. Ritchio of the : only lmit to the |0¢ four years each. When the bespla |She I8 likely to be one of Harvard's | colonfal secretary, established & new needs « great deal of instruction. beded g Jisie by H ‘4| United States Motor Transport Corps, ; 11°€/08Ures appears to be due to the jof the United States realize that we |S6I6Ct {eW alumnae, for there are sug- | dynasty of rulers, of whom his son. What i called by a number of pa-|CIrcles the news went around that|17th streets are Egyptian in their |y oo o5 0O TERPE ing | Smaliness of the congremsional appro- [4r® indebted to the members of the | Sestions that having tardily admitted | Austen, is the present-day exemplar. > with hundreds of thousands of strang- | lines. The “Garden of Allah” will i starting point ipriation for pushing the investigation, [ Commission of Fine Arts for the|Romen, the institution soon may cast| Winston Churchill, who "joins con- triotic societies in Washington misuse 4 5 for a transcontinental expedition. Maj. Gen. O'Ryan. in charge of the |Lincoln Memorial, Rock Creek Park, [ them out. Mrs. Dodd's book, “Careers | servative and liberal governments of the national flag is obvious all over |€'S In Washington. with congestion | transport the throngs Who pass| Through private funds, a temporary | Investigation, thinks that £0.000 is |the Dreservation of the Mall and the [ for Women” mainly paved the way | with gay abandon, is the son of Lord dhorcit 1 me. There ave right |on the railroads, with the automobile | through it to the land of the Pharaohs. | marker was placed on the Ellipse | faT from an'adequate fund for un- |Jemorial bridge, we can at least|foF hermaster's degree. She is young, | Randolph Churchiil, a brilliant chan- the city at this time. There are right {58 0 1€ oS B0 R o ement and| There are no Egyptian structures in | 50UtB_of ‘the White House, and, on |earthing facts concerning the reckisns | JIOW OUF appreciation by giving them | 600d-looking and brilliant. cellor of the exchequer. It is as i the flag and using it for decorative y every g 7 a e marakec - departure of a historic e last indications are that several , m the Presi- . Harrison an eveland, or the flag and using it {0 decorative | i ontion of the police diverted, it would | of the Scottish Rite on 16th street, | convoy—ten automobiles, nine motor |4ensational indictmenta on. criminal |4ent and Congress can refer questions | 1o 18 no name for the wonders | Polk, Madison. Buchanan, Lincoin and purposes. and w hould know the ] 5 5 bich x| deatenied th 1 The |C¥¢les and fifty-four motor trucks— | Charges are soon to be brought. relating to the artistic development | Wrought from day to day at Washing- | Jackson, should by right of birth con- way's that are right, and it seems that |Pe €asy to run so-called liquor into | which is designed on those lines. 8/} NTome dentinatian wos b L uke— S t of the city of Washington. ton’s great scientic workshop, the bu- | LinUe to inherit the political earth in Washington i due to have an educa. | Washington and reap a harvest. The | public buildings are of classical models i e : * (According to the plan of L'Enfant, | 0”08 O FOCEROn, e BU° | Amertca from decads to decade. Liom campaign in the ethics of the flag, | Police authorities and the plain men | or colonial or a hybrid modern type.| o o T 0 d"rn- Department af Agriculture has |10 MRl Was tuCenCan iberaipatic | o0 (S ks ettt * ok % % g e - |in police uniform understood all this | But the decorators are giving them a < W, . Congress author-| discovered that trces manitest dif-|grounds of the White House. The |of a northern city was baffled to iden-| William Howard Taft, Chief Justice Leaders in cortain patriotic societies, | police uniform underatood, wil this | But fhe CHe0rre Ade E N aening. | 1260 the Secretary of War o eroct | ferent disporitions. fust as persons parkway really extends from the |iiry the perpetrators of a brazen safe| ©f the United States, who has played notably the Daughters of the Ameri- |38 - = 2 g a zero milestone on this and beasts do. S Captiol to the Lincoln Memorial. At s % = v < e = t o Revatution American Womea-s | hibition enforcement people appraised | ton has put on its gala dress for the |q Ao FHLGMONS on hiS spot, (he|RRd NeRsts do. Some trees are de- | pregent the Mall is marred by having | TObbery. All the cracksmen left behin | ANV Parts in a busy life—reporter, St i . the situation and runners of rum into | big “party” it will have much to re- STDEOTON Dy Ciel Bida | e lazy. even though sound {the ugly bulldings of the Botanic|Was a revolver, fram which both num- |lawyer, colonial governor, cabine Declon, Womsna Reler (Comun o e i et ggers who ply their | mind those who have been in that land Arts ‘Oommission. The exact astyo-|and vigorous. The lazy irees bring ol oe L he Cam o, | e I oaeeti 1t besn, SNy | wintater. President—is yat. to enadh Wo e ann Neve Ieneve are e city eg) : fokilbal Tocation, a5 indie an | Torth leaves. but no il Mount Hamilton, east of Biadensburg | flled off. in order to frustrate its origin. | . 11 ., g s th A omen my an gue, & e e B e S e : e as indicated by an| T res. but no fruit—iike ‘the |, oo P een FacamIonden oo & Livs | The weapon was séut 1o (he burekr of|another. Mr. Taf the honorard alling aitention to what they!charge h : nscription upon the milestone, and |f1§ tree which Christ condemned, as|for the i o standards, and, by a myste secs | President of the Laymen's League T have their trouble: When the Shrine itself is assembled la lesson to ehildles or the Botanic Garden. If some other . and, by a mysterious process men's Leagu Ha3 tacia in e Qecoratt many | liveries are to have their troubles. | ! 1 established by the United States const © Jyia’y, {2 childless men site is selected Mount = Hamilton | there developed, the missing details | of the Unitarian Church of America buildings, and some of the women are| Already there has been a tightening | there will be plenty of eastern atmo-{and geodetic survey, is: “Longitude | wrations o the "or made demon- {should be purchased as a part of pro- | were speedily dragged to light, and |mpae creed is completing s i ) f the trol on the roads, and it | sphere in the fezzes and the camels. | from Greenwich, degrees, 2 min- | Florida and Calif itrus trees of posed park plans. It would be an at- | valuable clues are now being pursued. 2o compieing a4 ae using such terms as “disraspect for the j up of € pasrol ol 3 3 s i blem | ULeS, 1249 seconds; latitude, 38 de- w:‘\_ .:'u‘,:l kun“nmm, and has found | tractive addition to the national ar-|Then, this marvel: Bureau chemists|Dificent = edifice in Washington, on flag.” “desecration of the flag” and |18 sald that the river is looked on as | The crescent and the scimitar, emblem | grees, 53 minutes, 42.32 seconds.” The | turning 1o Tnvestizations ot orpry | boretum. A parkway should connect |have evolved a process of deciphering | the heights ‘of 16th street, 'mow “at £ the Aag one of the ways which the wholesalers [ of the Shrine, repeated countlessly, | exact elevation above sca level, is|trees uE s of other Potomac Park, Rock Cre~k Park, Sol- | printing or writing on paper that has | crowded with noble church and em- ahuseo Tty . b d of i will strike the note of the orfent. 28.65 feet. i diers’ Home Park, Mount Hamilton, | supposedly been burnt up and charred.| Passy buildings. The Chief Justice ie Those are strong terms. but it is not | of illegal, injurious and often poison- gy a4 will be |, Next Monday, this permanent ;nm»l i Anacostia and James Creek canal. A |A moral adorns this tale. Don't toss | €XPected to occupy its pulpit fre- meant that there any intentional | OUS Stuff may try to use to get their| But the spirit of the crowd wil ite “Zero Stone,” &s it is called will| The dividing line between vegeta-|n8tional park should be made of the | incriminating letters into the flames ex- | Guently. Mr. Taft is devoting a large o N wi to the city. western. No dromedary transport for {be unveled and dedicated, upon the|ble and animal life fs vague. say ot s Soeois,of the Virginia banks|oept in shreds that can't be pieced to- | Share of his time and talents to Chris disrespect for the flag. That would be | wares to e i arri from California of 4 Bue. sayiof the Potomac from Georgetown to | gether! tian leadership. Many opservers inconceivable. The whole thing may | The letter of the President to the | the thousands who will here assemble. Sulomobile “r:";r:l‘{{h"fl lph" great| scientists. There are plants which |Great Falls. Boulevards should be * ¥ % % bracket his name with that of Wil- be ummed up as a woeful lack of | District Commissioners will strengthen | Smart motor cars and fast railroad | ®'The milestone is on the merjian of | *hoW almost human intelligence. They |Made on both sides of the river from | poyocentative Martin L. Davey of | |TjachRingS Bryan as the outstand- Bonicace e mart of decorators | the determination of the local gu.|trains will bring them. The caravans | the District of Columbia, as originally ) sleep. and they show the Instincts |Seva on the Vicsinia cils ermuis be- | Ohto, who is worrying about the| & o men of the country. knowledge on the part of deco d , sl st [Fe e o e e Al Dt S i S i 5 d 3 Copsright, 1922.) and others in the correct ways of dis-| thorities to meet the threatening{Will not depend upon far-separated|, ceq there in 1804, from which all » nimals show the habits |tend to Mount Vernon. Taving the flag and ignorance of the | situation and to do the best that oases for rest and refreshments. Care-|land surveys of America are reck- | (! 078 lines of ancestry. A flower which | These plans have all been recom- 2 . :e;u tions of the War Department | possibly can be dome to head oft|ful organization will assure food and |ened. blooms in the dark and never sees day- | Arts. It the people of the United Descendant of St- Ml(.'hael and Rurik i ” e OERRenns and capture rum.runners and boot. | comfort to those in trdnsit, and Wash. | * % % % Wwill respond to the periodic changes | States would give thelr support to = % 2 i e d (;\n\ .y” « oo -l : A’\.g | lotter. Tet it be known that he is in.|paring for the accommodation of a|With alarm” the statistics and mathe- | exists and close them when it i§{greatest country of the world ernment buildings offend nearly as ; et be knowschacine s D titide as groat. It may be, as the|matics by which he concludes that | bedtima for flowers. A scarlet runc BLANCHE C.- HOWLETT. — miuch, or quite as much, as decorations | terested A;\ lxe s \;a‘on no !on) rov:\ Permanent population of the city it.]ths countrs will have a population | I¢ :»:s»u':“)_';«;:f:"(‘;m‘:rv;’m:r:x‘g?:ky:‘gs? 3= ) y i on many private huildings. Tt is point. | the standpoint of law_enforcement, | PCT 01 4,000/080,060//fn /147, ‘more’ years |1t aodlBraiyinE temperatize. Will Seats at Arlington BY FHE MABQDISE DI SONTENVE, blame for the decline of the granteus ed out that on columns of the Treas-|“but with a view to preventing the That is just double the present age |TiSing and setting sun. Other flow- gton. When the great Tallesrand, during | 2Lothe, BOUSe Of Gorichakelt “was hix ury building flags are arranged as they | consequences that may result from I of the country. :‘hmr;fiv':.r;d”;::cl;lg'd ‘::';L‘:;mm actual e the early days of, the French revolution | Stourdza, daughter of thac Micbom would be in covering the body of a sol- | the indiscriminate use of bootleg con-| The Ruhr strikers went back to| There was once a college profeasor | Flowers have memotice. They re-| Writer Wants Greater Provision fat the closo of ‘the'cighteenth century, | S1oUrdza who was the most Eapacic dier, that is, the field is turned to the | coctions.” He set it down that he was | work, in spite of the refusal of their :‘;l:p&e:-hr;;-'r_ll‘y - x.n’n s\'t-nlni to | spond to the touch and care of those for Public. abandoned the cause of the old nobllity | governors of What 18 now Rumanis left. On the Post Office Department | prompted to express his feelings in | demand for a bonus of 150,000 marks | yere going to racae o by :h‘:'ofllct‘-enf(':x’;:';‘ri:r:‘:}yfl)‘-x?;d vither at " = to which he beldnged by’ birth. and cut g:;;g; O eLos | eHOWAC ARt building flags are arranged in rosettes, | this matter by reports of widespread | each. At their present valuation a|night he had counted several milllons | 1In the evolution of all anfmal lite, | T0 the Editor of The Star: himself adrift from his ties with the | *UgITlC 10, TATEISE sovercignty. and are otherwise out of line with|conspiracies to flood the capital with | hundred thousand or so of marks)jnd Bad ':‘;l:‘l;h;]“x;’g‘-“f“:r::raxmd the simple cell of protoplasm is the hDurms \h; fo‘unee‘n i that atgns church in which he held the rank of | the lato Princess Constantine Gort- ; ) 3 5 caleu- nt, vegetable life the con- i = . chak v ethics as established by regulations. | liquor during Shrine week. should not stand in the Way of amica- | latlons. He forgot the croup and pip | necting Tnk. ana. man ne CHmak | vl Capt 1 ave aterey s oy 1 | SlohoBEof Autum, to el himselt with | hEKeL, may, b gathered from the The President of the American Wom-| Commissioner Oyster and Prohibi- | ble adjustment. dhn:‘;rimsp other jdrawbacks to|We may noi e descended directly | SOO% CSRUE T IeR0 SHOYE A0 8 ““’l'fr:; ';‘ '“"d"’ t““’“’ ::4;'"‘ :9 courts of Cermany and ‘of Irance & 5 At " f P - - t C: rogression of chickens. | from monke: though both monkeys 4 e . Y explained then and afterward ‘that hefalike with the robbing of her moth- en’s Legion has said that the crushing | tion Commissioner Haynes will have —————————— {Next day a fox killed most of his|and we come from some kind of sea- |30th of May. Since the great world |did so because he thought it wds the | ©F'S COrpse, with frauds and theft at or hiding of any part of the flag is an [a conference, and there will be the L condemnation of error and|Rens and the rooster, so his calcula- | Weed or diatom, and that from the | war that b h h & : the expense of her brother, Prince ¢ of disrespect and mars the unity | heartiest co-operation between the | oo O 5 = tions went awry. single protoplastic cell. So there is| o 'Pat PrOUght so much SOrrow (o ibest way of serving the cause of France, [Gregory Stourdza, the Rumanian gen- St L S 5 o o more commendation of right is sug. should Representative Davey [& g00d deal of “human nature" in|almost every American home, and|and that his love for his country |eral ahd statesman and senator; with mad significance ofithe fae District police and prohibition enforce- | coyieq by President Harding in his|worry? He wont be here in AD.1all of us—from a daisy o a walnut|since almost evers one of us has some | prompted him to make any sacrifice of | CONSPIFACY. forgery. perjury’ ‘and The first point in tie way of teach: | ment authorities. Maj. Sullivan will | S70iCr ) qay address. It s just ms | 2000, 52, 567 Af America snould hold | frecor cven a Statcsmarl “All"ma¥ {griend, acquaintance or loved one Who | hrcjudice, tradition and of canscience, | Crhene 1o "S, WhAL A1 besides, T ing the proper and authorized use of f remind the force serving under him| oy 4o gpeak words of praise as words | populdtion, by that time, there are| (Coprright, 1628, by . V. (vilins ) slceps in Arlington, our other ceme-!A simiar excuse is being put forward | this. For the mansion in Paris in the Rue de Varnes, which was the scene the flag is to give instruction to deco- Seitea e ,/ rators, and it is the intention of one of the women's patriotic organizations to take the matter up with the American Federation of Labor, and through it to reach the decorators’ unions. In the that rum-runners and bootleggers are to be caught. The Washington police will not be found asleep at the switch. in the soil of France, one|py a considerable number of Muscovite ¥ 3 one | nsf 2 of many of the crimes laid_at her EDITORIAL DIGEST | foarai i e se i Dh it o S T i S e BB { Visit 4 e y empire by way of explanation for their | 9f Grannard, who received it as a gift this occasion to pay our respect to - ot |from her father. Ogden Mills of New those who laid down their lives for {acceptance of service uhder the Soviet | York. Tt served as 1h ‘metropolitan their country. Last year as 1 stood in | government at Moscow. headquarters of Gen. Pershing in the front of the beautiful Amphitheater| It is the plea which Prince Michael | Ercal war, and was placed at the dis- Attack on Allies Was a Grave Mis-|German sentiment in America—to [JUSt before our President arrived,|Gortchakoff, grandson of the celebrated | POl of Frincess Mary for her stay of blame, but they can seldom be made 80 interesting. The Turk in his native surroundings might be less terrible if he could un- derstand tMe extent to which the George Washington's New Head. Selection of William Mather Lewis i i is atter h o 1 public discussion of this matter much | s president of George Washington | Mystic Shrine has made hie customs Rold that' clement of the clectorate | 274 looked in’the faces of hundreds ciunciior of Russia daring the greater | o Farile during her noneymoon last enlightenment is no doubt COMINg 1011\ arsity comes somewhat as @ sur- | and costumes contribute to the gayety take. faithful to the republican cause, even 3 part of the eighteenth century, has put| %oar, b¥, Lady Grannard = FPrincess C y ir respect to some though falsehood, recreancy to the|OM§ to pay the forward to account for his appearance 1 Almost without exception editors. | ylifee: apostasy to truth. (reason tg]loVed one among the thousands of [a¢ the head of the soviet trade mission | Saqnr. wio hfih'“fi'&:‘éhflé old oy disregarding their political view- |all the higher, better, nobler lessons lewly Mmade graves in Arlington, Ilat Rome. in succession to M. Vorovsky, | the Napoleonic first Duke of Monte- point, have united in condemning the [Of the war had to be emploved as|{pal Jo°p (helh SYTIDALAEINE WHE | who was killed the other day at Lau-|hello, the famous Marechal Lahnes. at t iswyed th - | the means of attaining the miserably hund: =) ey o | sanne while acting as Russian delegate AR, Tecent statemout lssued from the: re the hundreds. One man said to me, {at the international conference still in K humiliating and despicable W v v c publican national committee head- |In the opinion of We gave our boy for our country |sescion there. Prince Gortchakoff, it| From the vi set of he - P the but we are denied admission to the |} ~ o o Juusiie yery qutsst ot herimay quarters criticizing the attitude of [ Tribune (republica Hni b amarial qervice = has now become known. has been serv-[vjeq 1lite the bonds of matrimony = ing for a considerable time past as the & disgrace to the party,” and it says ) i vl - v E the allled powers on the Rhineland | {-98TAIE 1o (O ‘E“d“ his "s’;“g:l?\’m He was accompanied by his wifelprincipal lieutenant of the ill-fated |Proved extremely galling to the prin- payments. The fact that almost be- | to {he nationel commirioe roSnation |and several children. and tears were |Xiorovaky, keeping in the background, | cess, and sho determined to rid her- fore the statement had been placed |If he does not resign the committes | b *osrmed Crnar gl caway and and it 1e oy tho kilitng of his chiaf a8 lselr of them at tho earllest oppors If a Rip Van Winkle could return{in the mails an announcement of an | $hould assemble and demand his res- | graves where our boys sleep. 1t has Rim into the limelight. tunity, after the death of her father- ignation If the co: i e after a long sleep his first glimpso of | ggreement concerning payments be- | (et President Harding, na the jsaner | SL4YS seemed to me that 4 certain P in-law, the chancellor of the Russian most of us. In knowledge of the flag and how to use it Washington should lead. prise, but, when the qualifications of the newly chosen head of that institu- tion are understood, as a pleasant and ; ratifying surprise. Mr. Lewis is not The Children and the President. |gminent in the cducation world in the Fortunately no harm was done yes- | sense of association with a famous es- terday at the ball park when the tablishment of learning. He has, how- §6Mool children of Washington, who | ever, been for many years engaged in were .serenading the President and{a most important undertaking, to de- Mrs. Harding, became overenthusias- |velop in the minds of the people of this tic and broke bounds. They were try-| country an appreciation of the impor- of nations. i Hints of an arrest in the Hall homi. cide case are again sent out from New Jersey. The incident is too old to have any value for purposes of summer pub- lieity. \ ” oy he State arty. is i v] Pennsylvania avenue would convince [ing reached came from the of the party, is entitied .to demand |served for the public who come first, empire, and of whom she stood if ihg to show their respect and affection | tance of education, and recently in as-| 1im that the date of inauguration had | Lercmient n'fiw'x'fi';mfrfl L N e et et B e W G| T QontihabiN ate sulont Gie mos RSl L s " vonsin & Sow ot “Abuse of this nature would be ruled e hay T W by | anclent families of Russia, tracing back at last been changed. acter of the statement. The choice |out of a police courte argues the New | al,(Provided he goes carly enough) | .\~ ancestry in an unbroken line to an, so was te, 4 et ol Seaert i emmany | the protomcpendent). and vet|fort to enter the theater myself, but|st. Michael, Prince of Chernigow, who One of the regular duties of the |Knickerbocker Press (independent re-|ment seems to have sufficed to ‘?:m; met with the same result that thou- by presenting flowers, and in a flash a. stampede was in progress which swept away the guards and caused a danger- sociation with the United States Cham- ber of Commerce he has preached that dostrine broadcast, and in so doing he after his demise, and with the avowed jobject of provoking her husband to demand a divorce, she assoclated her- \ 5 i in 1246 was put to death under circum- o ki i i ot i ands of others did. 1 then decided ous congestion in front of the grand-| has become familiar with the needs of | | 'S % T D8 Ry "o et genta) | PuBlican), partioularly acterizing it |about "its suppression. | The artiols | sanet Cronti ook arousd o sen5s |stances of indescribable crueity by the | S°1f With an Englishman and traveled stand. By the exercise of strenuous|the great schools of the land. ¥ s as ‘Tegrettable rashnes @ and cugges!- | was withdrawn at the request of the |1 could find any one of sufficlent in- | Mongols; also to St. Vladimir, and to |21l °¥er Europe in his company. un- endeavors the crowd, however, was| 1In personal qualifications the new |of Sroundless rumors of resignation. |ing “any one in the sightest degree - |State Department and ot because | fiuence to secure me a ticket. I had|potecy ®e® 10 26 VASHIE 208 1 der own name, creating a great scan- formed as to international affairs KNows | Chairman Adams or any of hix b 31 5 S 9 asso- iven up all hopes when I met an that the United Statcs will be repaid |ciates had awakened to the dangerous |61 soldier who had & bunch of tickets {and founder of the Muscovits monarchy SHOOTING STARS. T D ate (oot ened: language | AbSUrdity ‘of its publication. The|in his hand. I told him I had alin A. D. 870. It is unfortunate at su BuAge I menace of such a state of affairs is |cousin buried in Arlington who was Should have had e Pe e eemcricn |Plain to republicans who take their{a general in the war of '61, and ¢hat| Thelr name fgures on almost every BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. of a great party'’s headquarters.obligations to their country seriousiy. |1 had a nephew who fought in the|Dage of Russian history, their lineage — committee is the { trenches on the other side. He hand- | being considered as vying in luster with tion of her marriage the less in- {Maybe the prompt repudiation from |Tior" the national ithe office of the Secretary of Statelagency through which to some extent |ed me a ticket, and I immediately | tnat of the imperial. house of Romanoft. ibilities.” It was distinctly “very | ., All who are | entered the theater in time to see the drew i A . : > | clination did he show to meet her ! possi es. e ‘as the Detroit | concerned about the future of the|President arrive and hear the ad-|Andrew an exander Gortchakoff | views in the matter. In despair she bum prled dgflnllnz. as . :lrloh' world and the part America will take | dress, but 1 was greatly surprised to|played a leading part in the disasters)actually went to the length of lodg- M’l'" (indepen: f)"' “‘fi.m b, v ®|in it will naturally attend to the|find that right about me were many | inflicted upon the first Napoleon on the | Ing petitions against=wim at Petro- only purpose such an '"; """dhu T, | views of the managing groups of the | vacant seats that were never oc- R agion: atilhdalsastouaiinut at ¢|8rad and at Bucharest, on charges lude serves 1alm warn the pul ?u;flk:“ majority political party in the United | cupied, after having seen thousands|pricson 2., J ,m'gos,d the treats of | which did not furnish sufficient cause of the pestiferous D ey whe | States. ~And what they read is|turned away. Does this seem right?| (08Et "€ 00 RRASTC Joe trealy Offfor decreeing the dissolution of the Natlonal Capital of uh'too e one | billingsgate! 1t is a sorry business.” |1 ask in the name of the American Dundred’ vears age and lved o conelunion. At Stamboul she was more seek to press-agent the public along | Nothing ‘“could be more unfair, people. No sensible person would | punCrec, Years ag0 atd tved to cOM-|guccessful, and by dint of enormous the lines that pay the press agent” |the statement, the object to the Congress, Senate, mem- [EATE 78 LR {IWY COrps, M the | bribes was able to induce the ortho- The fact that the President “had to|Record (democratic) insists, and “all | bers of the cabinet and other high|{rimes 8t (ne batfles’ of Alma and|qox patriarch at Constantinople to rebuke the committee” is significant. | decent Americans are entitled to protest | officials in the government having re- | queetian., S SRR WS The hero of the | pronounce the annulment of her mar- the Milwaukee Journal (independent) |against language that is brutal, ruf- |served seats, but I do think _there | S50 Of TEORCIOPOL, and Alexander | jage. It 1s needless to add that the declares, and “the regret is that theiflanly and untrue as applied to|should be some reservations made for|o pisata throughont the reioms op |decree in question was treated 8s en- President has let this thing, go on|friendly nations. = The republican |the general public, as this war was|Nin 25T and of Alexander 17 Gt awag |&irely invalid both in Russia and in 8o long without exercising his .au-|national committee seems to need a|fought by the American peoble and|he who made the remarkable announess | Rumania, the synod of the Bosporus thorit: ¥ manager more in touch with the man- | Rot by & certain class, and those who | n® ¥ho tnadg the remarkable announce- | having no legal competence to deal The “rebuke was upavoldable, the|ners and practices of fair-minded and |have no influence should be glven|pioposed, for internal reasons, to “keep | With the case. Detroit Free Press (independent repub- | honorable people.” In the view of |more consideration on an occagion | horPor Gy fee as possible from compi| . I may add, by the way, that before lican) insists, because “whlle it was per. | the Providence Tribune (independent), | like this. I have heard hundreds of | cations abroad and (o avold foreign en. | Ner_father-in-law's death she bore fectly obvious that the President had ) ‘“the statement is a serfous blunder," | eople make the same remark, but|tanglements,” at the same time issuing | {iree children to her husband, Prince not given any advance countenance to | while the Charleston Mail (republican) {1 have never read a Iine that has|iheinistoric phrase, Lo Russie ue bons | Alexander, who, as a member of the this accusation, nevertheless, had he | characterizes it as R Seore. | been uttered on the subject. Pas. | Ello se recueille (Russia is noi| Russian Red Cross, fell in Galicia allowed such an utterance to go. un- | tary Hughes was steam-roller- JOHN P. WAGER. | sulking, she is merely reflecting). But|4Uring the great war while tending challenged and unrebuked, his silence [ ing” it according to the Worcester i 7 “ h a it quite I i the wounded on the field of battle would have been interpreted both at | Telegram (independent), and the effect, B o blichy peothioaiole ko, adhere | o had been medically rejected s home and abroad as an evidence of the Pittsburgh Post (democratic) 'rual i resented just as many difficult unfit for combatant military service. l-cqum-nc. if not of active indorse- | lives, will “be a shake-up at headquae School Truant Gives et whieh the Tocs of pholties 8810f her two daughters one 1s the | i dal everywhere. Neither this nor other provocation of a similar nature succeeded in driving her husband to sue for a divorce. The more she dis- played anxiety to secure the dissolu- finally ehecked and dispersed without | president of George Washington Uni- hy injuries being inflicted. It might | versity is richly endowed. He com- ‘ y have been otherwise. with thou- | mands attention when he speaks, and sands massing in upon one point of | he wins confidence. At George Wash bje ington University he will have a rich opportunity for constructive work. That institution has a large student body. an exceptional faculty. but, at present, an inconvenient and inade- quate equipment. It has outgrown its facilities. Educationally a credit to these children vesterday their purpose | Washington, it needs means for de- was altogether a happy one. They | velopment. To maintain the high edu- j,seeking to express. themselves 10 | cational standard of this seat of learn- the héad of the nation, and they fhoved { ing, and to bring it to its deserved forward. voa single impulse, against | financial status, with resultant in- the vilesiand despite all barriers. crease in efficiency, is the duty that The ‘incident is not, however, with-| has been assigned to President Lewis, its ‘g side. It brought to|who, a Washingtonian of sufficlent evidence ‘thie feeling of the children of { Jocal residence to know fully the con- thisicity for those who preside ih the | ditions attending this important work, White House. a sentiment of real af-| may be expected to devote himself fectfon. Mr. Harding has on many oc- | with characteristic energy to his task. casions manifested his fondness for the younger folks, and the children in- stinctively recognize a friend. That harmless stampede vesterday has a tive. These sudden rushes are beyond un- derstanding, whether of adults or chil- dren. A purpose simultaneously seizes many minds, and without reckoning or reasoning a movement sets in that inot be stemmed. In the case of The Autocrat. June smiles serenely from the sky And writes her name in flowering will help to undo some of its harmful | {ha President is thosen: Its whispering admirations yields. And should & fleeting shower annoy, A rainbow fair is straightway sent To serve her as a passing toy Thet may assuage her discontent. She claims in majesty complete The gayest sun, the brightest moon, The loveliest bloom, the song most sweet. The ruler of the year is June. Penalties. Oh, who is so wise as to know the thought Of a child in his reckless play Or the griefs and fears which his mind i fields. While every breeze that passes by New. York wants the members of the K. K. K. to demonstrate their friendly spirit by getting chummy and Ment” While, of course, the admin- | ters. 0 . drinistration 'at Washingto oot | widow of Prince Alexis Koudachefr, istration ls absolved from suspicion. | “The republican party is in a bad Ingenious Explanation o e i pose toon tho- banarececk: | while the other, Helene, is the wife pointed meaning. the Lynchburg Advance (democratic) | w: he New York Times {(democ: Nicholas Amaglio, 'aged ten, of|upon his government, and the following [ 0f Wassili Soldatenkoff, formerly of telling their right names. had caught insists_ “the republican national com- |i convinced, and “its old discipime has | Chester, Pa.. deserves & lttle miche |twenty vears was particularly fortils | the czar's diplomatio service. From the shadows that cross his|mittee’s propaganda is based upon |broken down. Its manasers semom oy e ) = in foreign entanglements for Russia,| That the mother, Princess ‘Con- Brigandage is another of those in- way? ° information acquired from republican [be deliberately seeking to bring dis. |\? 80y hall of fame that may here-|from which she could not escape, and | stantine Gortchakoff, nee Stourdza, The designation “unofficial observer" is beginning to carry as much weight | And who is so just as to measure true and dignity as far more ornate titles| The penalties that shall fall in official circlee. On the men untaught who their whole lives through Are but children after all! official sources. In the circumstances, | aster upon it.” Going a step further |after be erected to commemorate|which ultimately landed _her in the|should have escaped the indignity of therefore, it strongly appears that the the Philadelphia Public- Ledger (inde- | important, interesting and ingenious | Balkan war of 1876-1877. Circumstances | imprisonment, though not of arrest, reckless and mendacious attack upon | pendent republican) insists “it was the £ boyhood. were t0o strong even for this most mas- j in connection with the many crimes the motives, the integrity and good | most fhzen exhibition of political im. | 25235 © S terful and autocratic of Russia’s master | justly laid at her door by her rela- faith (of" the allies found its origin | padence that Washington has seen in o |- Nicholas, it appesrw’ resembles all | statesman. tives and by the authorities, may be i iNpEmoess ol CaCaTiny, Uisiony PoEitne: normal boys of his agé in that he is * ok geeribed to/ ner” groat namo and tg ~—————————————— | occasionally seized with fits of re-| But the prestige and th Hox eolouaal Sw asith. whieh (@ bellion when the school bell rings. |y P ot thap o luster of | her Jawyars to deal with the various IN A FEW WORDS RO oh "cocasions he would fain | is name and of that of his cousins, | situations by means of compromis - give dear teacher the go-by and oc- | the other Princes of Gortchakoft|The Russian great world in Paris as cupy himself with Something other | enumerated above, have sadly waned|oB the Riviera would have nothi > than books. It is usual with boys in | gince his death. Indeed, it is no ex: | Wh&tsoever to do with her and su Nothing can be effected in prevent- Any outstanding period of national |that condition to be selzed with 2 jected her to the severest boycot ing crime by law-abiding citizens |stress, during which the minds of the |strange, indefinite ailments that cause aggeration to assert that it has been | But she had quite a large circle o turning themselves into criminals in :mnla have been unduly inflamed, |their heads to ache if they go in the dragged into the mud. Thus the|friends—many of them Americans- teresting inventions that the Chinese Knew all about centuries ago. The original Mecca was never in all its history so crowded with pilgrims or 0 joyous of mood. 3 Serve the Shriners! ’ Now comes the test of the Washing- N Y iz Y tonian as the host to a great crowd. Stabilizing - Building Operations. |The Shriners will be here in a few Secretary of Commerce Hoover, after | hours in vast numbers. They will be a’conference in"New York last night|all over town in squads and as indi- with the American Construction Coun- | viduals. To most of them this will be cil, announced the concurrence of the | a strange place. For many as are the Départment of Commerce in the plans | Americans who have come to the capl- of that organization for stabilizatlon of |tal there are more who are yet tomake W::'; 'l:: ':.‘:,"‘_"_';,h:,'," the national building industry. The |their first visit. 8o they will be asking # plans contemplate the constant gath-|questions, seeking guidance, learning| Loiterin’ lazy ering of data as to country-wide con-|their way around. On high goes the sun; .struction conditions, the issuance and| They will want to know what cer-| The song and the smile - analysis of wéekly bulletins to the end | tain buildings are, big ones and littie Make him hate to ba done 9t spréading the bullding peak over |ones, landmarks to the Washingtonian,| With the world when it's June. the year through the retarding of the| but despite frequent pictorial repro- 8o he joins with the throng, moet non-essential construction. ductions, unknown to many outside.| Takin' things easy As the councll deems this to be prac- | They will want to know “how to get ‘When Days Grow Longer. Takin' things easy An’ driftin’ along, ‘When the sky is a smile An’ the wind is a song. ‘When the moon seems to waken New life with its gleam; effort to enforce the law. ave thought deeply and suffered |direction of the school, but disappear [ younger son of the old chanc among the cosmopolitan colony on the AN SUDGE MARCUS KAVANAUGH. | much, has produced strains of genm': immediately in & game of marbies |Jwho - through the infuence of k4| banks of the Seine and, aside from &pparent in children born during that | Again boys who are taken this way |father, répresented Russia for a time|Ner moral eccentficlties, was a very ‘Even when the war fever smote |Deriod. will wander off and return at Bupper |{in Switzerland and in Spain, conduct- | brillfant and origingl woman, whose Bngland we did not go to such _GENE ‘STRATON PORTER. |time to report with innocent frank-|ed himself in such u fashion as 14 [delinquencies were perhaps more & lengths as the advocates of 100 per ness that they utterly forgot to go to jincur the social oll.r‘lgsm of his dip-{tributable to heredity and, above all. cent Americanism. We kicked pac Intense patriotlsm is a product of{school. Then there -are certain |lomatic colleagues an: fote aut of our olf clubs, but not|modern times. Jeanne d'Arc did not|wicked boys who merely run away|name a byword in Kuropean capitals. [been reared, than to any actual e o wur pariiament: appear on the battlefields at the call | from school and lie about it. But the one of the family .most to | viclousnes: % Lo " "RAMSAY MACDONALD, M. T. of the draft board, but in answer to| Not to any of these classes does g * 777" l!the call of God ' She was put to|Nicholas Amaglio belong. Scorning G death as an obstinate heretic and an |all deception - and every excuse |that time? Rarely, indeed, does a new [admitted that the double negative Women on jurles trylng a woman |advanced feminist. . |Nicholas met the emergency when |invention appear in a field so well |[and the outlawed verb in his remark are always for conviction. . Woman —PROF. CARLTON HAYES. [school time came by giving away his | worked as that of the art of|to the minion of the law show all has no sympathy for woman. She 2 breeches. trusncy, but Nicholas is a rare per: |too clearly that Nicholas would have reserves her tender feelings for men,| The faculties of men and, women| “A feller, said Nicholas later to|son. He has an originating mind|done better had he retained hip are practically identical. Tt'is cus- | the truant officer, “can’t go to school [and should have all the credi tom that has segregated their work. | when he -hm m b, a1 to rénder his|to the aitmosphere in which she had it due;knickers and kept his mind on_the no pants.” and who | to a discoverer. language lessons. — Detroit e said a mouthful . children and, perhaps, for dumb ani- ';l;-‘gifol“ CHARLES GRAY SHAW, ) E. LO HOMER. | will deny But when_that is said, it must be'Pren.