Evening Star Newspaper, June 26, 1923, Page 6

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THE kveasasu S1AR PUKSDAY, JUNE 1923. e e e e n'HE EVENING sTAR,’mmblnnre of a guard. Perhaps every- | having to make the clothes and pre- . body thought the chances of a car go- { pare all the fopd of the family, have v + q With Sunday Morning Editlon. _ |,.." o the track and then leaning |time to enter more and more into the | | CAPITAL KEYNOTES NEW BOOKS " WASHINGTON, D. C. streetward were too slight to' be con- | world outside the home. The house- - . 26, 1093 | dered. Be that as it may, that old | keeping hag not been relegated to the BY PAUL V. COLLINS AT RANDOM TUESDAY.........June 26, guard rail stood until yesterday, when | men, ms Mrs. MacDougall suggests, St st = 39 at the first shbck it crumbled and let ! but requires less und less time of the THEODORE W. NOYES. the icays down At the emet: N han The Department of Justice is) To m-;muumlw nu;‘ |}nrlcri "f"“:cr]al THESE UNITED STATES: A m-] Q. What is the cost of malnt Under s i Ao 6 “sepdrt.iof con- ars that the wholesale dealers, postum.” Ernest Gruening, editor o sht ¢ o Was c 4 Mayor Hylan, who worked on the | Women Jike Mrs. MacDougall ap-| 3700 ;‘ 4<'1‘::can‘x AR : contranted by the organized | - Boni & Liveright. o i e e b i & clevated road himself as an employe | pirently feel there is no place in the | 1o : i ii¥ers for the . Ariy. of 180,000 o n 2 e i il N lall native s Pennsylvante Ave. | © place Thtle Forkdrs. otEAmer o] siimern wEre ab 5| Here the stutes go marching by, a| - B. O Owe Aot =1 Bustnegs Ofce. 11th 8. and Dennylvant Sears sizo whin'1F. was bullt, imade an |+ 6Fkadey “socld for Mo min “ang | UniediMine’ Workers off Awerica and | aus ere abl p o A. Mr. B C. Owen, manager of the Pt S A S 2 rde . bi art o S . Twenty-seven | p, R Soma i according to u: orning | hd expressed himself as convinced Women ‘must dominate. But the | goming to America. Some officials be| have Increaged. The farmers have re- g 2 10" Monument and the Lincol r \(n |<‘,\ '\'.l‘-(x-‘:;nl‘”(’fn“nm.‘ ereed e Mmfl};e::nlf':‘:}r..wgh{:{:fi:fflfl{, Tty | that the accident was due first to 1!\1-‘sch’nl|s|~4 tell us the men of t0day are | Jjaye that ft §s the function of Con-|duced their prices 16.8 per cent but|Yet in sight. A spectacle, this. Not|. ..o 0 F T f Independence?—A. x}‘ . claral S0t b mon STy 45 ceml g | rcakaie oF parC of the running gear | physically larger and stronger than | grily o o wll the prococting neces | 1o o i,y CoRRUmIr list ot folsjaulte the historia pageant, not alto- | sk B e be sent by maii. or telephone Matn [ and then to the weakness of the guard | the men of centuries ago. They do not | gary for the infant Industries, without | the 1920 peak, It not increased. | 5oaner the monotony of event andj @ Was George Wash wranglini over th The Evening Star Newspaper Company maining ones announced, though not y Tt has been said that after seva leaving him stark hich he really is. This not sign their names The Army ! tical” work & 4 this core of individual existence !} i at draft diselose e fact that, for all | cogineeri e tag, for convenience, with ik leased b raft dibcluseditho) tac ithut it ocational training faddi Faae g nid 3 practical -purposes, per cent will gloat over that situati P ; Gt rhRat g e okt e : bl i ot suie The New Conduit. e ; oot | SUIIL there stands before every chief | has phn nor write a short letter. it v : . s 5 o | tracks are carried far above the street ¢ facts ave hecoming so familiar | A% . f ] which is con work on the new | of bureau or department a guardian | that their import is easily forgotte: i g ; is con | gress is in session defleiencies that ar inevitable, and that may be antici pated; are provided against by ocea sional bills of refund and allowanc 1 record of accidents that safety geems rs. h i o e o ecord hat diamp con- | Musician? 3 4 ‘.::oh e T T *¢ e rail. Of course, investigation s prom- {appear o have retrograded mentally. [ the unlons undertaking to add to coal Tho auresd Dechen; producaciend l:. ‘:‘{:z; 1'11\.1‘ 2 ithxtvuvl.'fl:‘xr, \mx’l‘. A. It is not reported that G g e £ ised and prosecution is predicted. um"rm- feminists may find they still have | prices by an embargo on importa- | “OWRMET Mereass 0 the | more 1 with somethinE over and|Washington' was a musicia Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. it will be hard to find the rigit person | quite @ job on thelr hands subdulng | tions 168 per cent retained from the fubove, making the spectacle unique, | ooy, Sithough. I by s . The flies at- Maryland and Virginia. {to prosecute. The motorman of the | the men. Howdtar tons tlie senators re- | 110.000,0007 “What are you going to!l alive, striking, -illuminative. Chron- | enjoyed play > 2 oty e eaivel el Iy andiSund ‘,i,‘;'ifipfi‘}fifi"zgf“" in has been arrested charged with cently urged preachers to substitute | %° 2POUt 2 ielo distilled to pure essence. Histors | Q. What is the S oGt s the R Y E & 25 40" " 90¢ | homicide, but it is diffic o see how P o {scunsions eir s i become, 8o to spea a subject: of [feet in the aver fted 50 as so es from the ®unday only... : ; 1 mo., 20¢ n de, but it is difficult t how Red Tape Stops the Mails. tarifl discussion their pulpits in o Ahit Thomas aidon; $i.. donlosams 18 t peak, a sul J ‘\, Lilis Distaer sigs T & he can be held on such a charge unles I 2 s place of so much 4 if that{ S0 ; 91 {modern chemistry, whose reactions K : : 24 Eow All Other States. he was excecding the speed limits o s S BTN PSR, i o IRk oo R g € Inventor his Mt fouteseats asyavg tal asGiik (siEniNeatoetiarom | L oo T TOL, Bossio) with Daily and Sunday..1 yr., $10.00; 1 mo.. 8¢ | jnocd o signal.. He cannot be held | TUNS its business ina small way. Itis | Who would not only carry o Sfoom saunpehy the avian D, sing appearance. As if somelall uniform. it Tt the Daily only........1yr. $7. 80 | otntalle for the breaking of a |MOL Vet fully organized on lines of high- | sional debat into mines and nds that he has a lot of things, : process were 10 dissolve mesium, Bunday only.. accountable for the Dbisslking Of ‘& | st wMoleney; |Congress miles appro- | Churches, to learn before he can hold a job in L being, an 3. How e oo TN truck, and surely not for the weakness | L0 SR LR rigidities of pro R |,';’ tathor's Iaboratory. He H,v‘(.w\l. . 3 arable tht O et Member of the Associx . of the guard rail. vision, mepsuring everything by the tistics show that 6 per cent of |t his training i largely cultura ciated Press fs exclusively entitied Mhe fact is that these clevated line » & everything by the % ‘,nnl theoretical and he is going b b B e R Ve s L Bt abr i o e (Bl ivehed, yandSHEL. Svwlitle 0N, || e/ DeoBle of the inifed; 8 can | 10 sehool for In this paper and al news pub. MHshed herein. ANl i publication of apecial diwnat " ced be tuken for granted. It is, indecd g | remarkable that so few tragedices have 5 and that the traflic on them is enor duit from . atifying # ked' sword of prohibition | Vet they are humiliat R o i rested | MPUS: But the low pereentage of ace thia crigked-sword) af SBIBIOn §iesgn 2 to everybudy in t et intercsted ust exceeding appropriations o * - . ¢ v e you Ham Allen White, 1t b a mae in the iner e (vl V. | casentials ax sound runuing gear ana | AUeinatine them. The other day fhe hosen f s ftor and it is at e District government had an experic | ciation to deciar should be anybody in the District who ence along this line, ar nd it nec is exper dent does not excuse neglect of syeh the Natie s commonwealth 15 not interested in this important mat - S i it R R R ter. Every blast and every shovel of Women to Assist. et e e R e i rock and dirt taken out of the gre smpt action has followed the de-{ ning short. “But a much more. inr PR ditch and tunnels brings us closer 1o o ot repubican leaders recently | pressive example of the absurdity of | the colorcd peo the time when we shail have an abun- | reached to accow) to woman repub- | st e e i i el dant water supply, and reduces the < cqual share in the party man ey oo e bl danger that come to us from with men. President Hard & off until the 1st of July all parcel | - any interruy i supply fur with™ Chairman John . Adas it mervico: with Iunope foriack of nished by a single conduit. A vecent {of the rep an national committee; | fung report of Maj. Max . Tyler, Corps of | Mrs, Harrier Tayier Upton, vice chair, 1t seems that the volume of Engineers, in charge of t v man of republican natiomal exeen- | Burope has been inereasing tjon of the new conduit fr tive nmi il Hamilton Kean { during the past two or thrce me Falls to the rveservoir at the chairpan of @ subeommitiee @ nted fSinee Congress adjourned this inerease line, shows that the work is canvass the he con- ' has exceeded all expectations and cent complet the scetion west of 1t was found »osenti | broken ail records, and the approps the Angiers’ Club, 18 per cent conu | ment was almost unanimous ame s for the service for the closing plete in the next section extending to § the national comn v for admit- | fis v “heen exhausted, de Cabin John bridge and 9 por cont com- | ting the women in party eoun- | spite 1 e naiten s eaiie) plete in the next section to the Dis- | ion Y Pald to steaimsk trict line rescrvoir, including the tun There was some uncertainty for .. C R nel under Dalecarlia 5 {a while as to t ays and means of could be made One chapter in the hig work has just | expedit pending the next | care for AT dituation iseled . f —flooding |~ = beer: written in calling for hids to be | meeti full commit which | Tiers sUSHraily ‘of {he e arsi n o ' t int r g Sl Slory i!lfli IC‘_En,!",(, s Zill E ¥ opened on July 20 for the construc will be held in December in this eity, service is prepaid. The iome £ that section of the eonduit from its | to appoint the time and | S OE HEA v e mes. v ¢ fre el i A ¥e el plott A Sl declar T a point near the A < Club, where | lem has been solved for the prese matter bhetweer work on the conduit is well advanced. | Chairman Adun il upon » mail user and the ¢ G This call for bid the cons evs appoi the servic of the westernm 8 4 ssible, a wor - ney-makir dutt is said td b t]s 15 an associate s Eiakey i of Maj. Tyle servie tional committec arry fetters ar S bullding of Washingt sreater wi ¥ ccognition of women is not ate ter plant. . War Department has | by d poli- i ordered his transfor ta F 1a., } P Wd main- | particular time of ve in connection with the M s 1% the t woman te-|not. In other words project. and he will leave f ¢ | publicans in t welfare, and | always at hand at the post in a few days 1 be none t less apy 1! post Office Department money enot THE MARQUIN Di2 FONTENOY. | s rendered conspicuous | though belated. The democrats took | to carry out the acts that it king survevs and plans | the first opportunity after the enfran- ! constantly 3 th mail use developing hydroelectric power | chisement of women to give them f ere sh St from the Potoma 1+ workingz out | recoznition, and the convention Jay for lack of f irasoiuch plans for various projects for ir {1920 provided for'a woman on the na- | funds have paid by the pa ing the capital's water supply and in | tional committee from each state, ter-i trons of the po working out the plan now heing put | rit d the District of Columbia, Mirough which calls for a new conduit ¢ of the i 1 i 4 T from Great Falls and for enlarged men in the party managem | from 5 e new reservoirs for the storage of the | Lotk w is ex : ! wrist. The accident might not have greater volume of water that sting of efforts to create Eappened if the rider had trusted him. | brought down from the falls. {separate women's party. P B cait to his trict regrets that this ol v is 'are general b cumstances 10 be transferred to another ficld can serve their p t Rl tearsot s i 3 it 18 part of the life of an Army officer | cperating through tie than the plain plodding horse 10 be shifted from one post to another. | parties than by s s up an inde — It ts quite likely that vears | pendent organi A Michisan man was m associated with the new conduit very | None of (h pessimistl @nd hilied. RS Tsaicncr D e much as that of Gen. Montgomery | philosophers w sted in basej " ricR 2 3 HERCC Tlepasiines: & Maigs is assoclated with the old water | pall. This fact ents them | 9nimal with horns and four feet tof the in *lne. It is predicted that the new cor sinirealing the hopoand good chicer | [0k ko & huminibeins isioneiaithe Jthe | HainE ou e the rascals out. 1 whea e e duit may be completed by Janary 1, h lingers in the heart of-the true (PYSteries of psychology. the last decade ene 3 ¢ | sho Gt bral 5 lits way. 1925. optimistic fan, regardless of the posi- T T s wve been much —_———————— tion of the home team Shortly after the visit of Mussolini | Soht OfF of the 5 prsight v Too much of Thomas F. Dawson. Sdren LW News of the death of Thowas F. s a result of the automobil accident near Denver on Sunday adds ! to the shock caused by the first an pass Maj. Tyler's name wili b i | i H to hearten the sufferers from the vol | Having had a raise of wages, the v disaster, Etna began to. slow EDITORIAI DI QT others dn. dewn. When a man is truly jucky 4 Rach Ruhr miners may feel more cheerful \though if compelied to count their | cverything happens in a way to gain Eofer him the confidence of the populace. ate th ' q 1 Just as a sent, when the « s R R Amherst Disturbance Symptomatic ['3% meeting 2 splendid perfor e e tn : is of the American press are nouncement of the mishap, in cons So N , - ¥ & B b Ul of reports of honest membe urs. et Ahat b tic of Unrest in Many Colleges. s that ima- |0 2 AR 3 memb quence of which Sumner Curtis lost | POU'S Sl e L e ey 1g . pmes x “the attempt to rep. | VAECANL re an uncon ] irgs 3 e the sk Bialiie b Davson s icaitics inthe ———————————— {the Supreme Caprt John M. Clacke cething unrest apparently has the difliculty o cia and a vivid me t er > el sl mewspaper field in Washington than| There is a remarkable amount of had been hitten by a mad dog was «“ ] vlu»l;-mv r u: the ml_\'m colleg tween liberalism ay zol ':;jx;l l‘._\' than once. work 5 . . s AR Mr. Curtis. His experience extended | gambling reported from ali parts of | perfectly correct. excer hig |21l outs jthe cons o | T trasioce R e e b, 8 8 tikae Ly e 3 ely to poi over a long span. His acqua Europe, some of whose prominent | clothing was torn, but he was not bit. break at g 1 % bty eplsode stands t Apocals i I ity ¢ i e or was remarkably exten citizens are never.happy unless they | ten, and that the dos was not mad. | SVmptomatic e SRRl i 1 emminatiol fof MEXere MUy e x peror, he did, for many years at the Capitol | are taking one kind of chance or an-|It is an example, which an eminent i edils v's administration of Bniantire sact ¢ & post of special importance with the | other. : furist may easily appreciate. of how a e aatiors At s e . o ht i o, Jusstioniotjotin ar tmos, before t i avor hduke Franci ORsos o or T from ¥ B “hoc s 3 simple fact may be complicated and | = = e e e w beaven and a1 ne h 1 ment o who have Associated Pr Tom™ I o R e bR s Gtthe e [into battleficld of the wa : He occupied is Lingering. i 3 i) bR e yresarded with affectionate res Certain disagreements make gt | O°5CUrCed In the manner of fts telling\ ooy “yesterday and tomorrow, ol L wwix Lewisolin ovokes tho | : pevial rank o semEic el & multitude of men in public life, Who | gountful whether the actors or the tween spiritual vouth and sp feels that “to judge the whole dis- racy of O H thousands of pounds sterling in order always found him intelligently sym- x producing managers believe half the | Mfforts are being made to enable the e, between conservatism and 1ib- | Pute as nothing but a contlict betwe < arot A E L 110 purs p h iR pathetic and trustworthy to the 1ast | pjoe things the press agents say about | Japanese and Russians to r as the an: GIoba fex ol 3 A he Wi L Loe X L Eho T hi iy copixa sy & | ocale o aning and prosec people who degree. In later years he had left the | 41 of them. trade velations. Tt is another case s it To » : \ president of being woe- | by 1asil Thompson, i or cay 1i5-Lothring : edtiheaking it ne i Sl newspaper work, and though it was where the innocent bystanders and]ijbiicated lssue. the real troup 2 In tacl. Tho fact that | 4 ver¥ discrimMat r sons and by their unmar- i ho U made iton rule throughout ¢ i I e T S & hey « it, being not would have by rnatio il i th ula i sl Gr it Sty with vegret that he removed from i ultimate consumers will hope for the | john' rked liberal T ',](1. have b i ! L icariationst ot i : 2 ¥ titul hundred years or more of its ex ‘Washington i appropriate that he| AS July approaches the warm-wave |, : o 1S | s Reginald Wright Kauil- e ; Sy Sty Exlat ashington it was appropriate that he | . SSRGS A bone Which tae man's highly «intelligent and deeply ; * to the police in_such matters. Of should go into the role of state h '"“l; o byt e Sy —_————— l; MR hiving o claim that It was an is- | interesting study of ‘tne ereat [ e s lke athior. Daviicein . i < s likely to assert hims as a Ao Bt 3 € iberalism and dog- at—Keystone state. layf o 4 e/ Re victlng on torian of Colorado, for which he was | Wa¥8 likely : . ey 5 liberal tendencles of tt Bt | 2o ectis : 7 pno. t s % ¥ the victims o e e i Y% | tandpatter, and an_ irreconcila Too many of the ‘talented plavers | herar tendencles ov 1 aront | matism. w and tien cover serious and sub- i ! - e e R shington mourns | who come to America immediately | ment still unconvine aintaining | _Commenting on the charges made |3fantlal worle =—The Fordiziug of a ¢ v e el i er hears abe Thomas F. Dawson as one of its best | thange their intellestual trand and e | that 1t 16 & Hittho Jate to dicover the |ASainst the ousted prosident, the New | Plensant Peplnsula” is on hiee { hn S < oy is observed.” T triends and most resec < s| Asan agricultural manager on a he princinle A i administrative ineflic of col- |‘'York Tribunc finds that the wravest hio. . G We've Do - 7 " b for many year: { scale Mr. Bernard Baruch’ takes yunk ( £ 10 neglect-the stage managers and | jogo prerident after 3 ol o T v e annther SONe miian tax y : ne ol Y g ans S scenario writers in order to give most | service in which the ¢ : ard for nersonmal foel Mr. Mencken for once i J<hip @t Ll ST e | as the foremost of amateur gdrdeners. i 2 no matter how = 7 stoa o orially, witl cons n 1 ST 2 of their aftention to the divorce |Ccollege has stoadily ad 5 without consuiting n the middle ¢ srunn imperative 3 povular confider Voters are likely to change their lawyers. 5 and’- dignificd’ her. hIsfory: T, answers the Spring- ‘Arh t. fine though her t " * faculty—illiberally, if you s pe nt showing jthei e - 1 (' { the firm by all minds between one eiection and the The Sex Conflict. small.” the Nowark News thinks racy yns broweht n ree of autd|of siate record and accounting : > next, on prohibition as well as other | Ars. Alice Foote MacDougall, New ™ j be of national concern save whera a | SOCT, IS 21 13 referred o an|Mr. Mencken into the t =5 a8 o 5.4 e Ma all, SHOOTING STARS. sredt principle in t a0 fige | Che ofaplers : ; i of studying h subjects. At that, Perpetual Candidate | york feminist, is quoted as sayin cducation 15 at stake,” and the “mcre 1 tho American U'“M":l autoc * A finely infor , J. Barleycorn can never hope for'any- |, cithi SRR " ising of a college president who ed in a college presidency survey upon the |qence strian Derby ko of e A 5o st Y1 that within a century all the business BY PHNANDER JOHNSON. Zot in & row with his faculty and his | $emething new in our educ : Mr., Mencken at (e Tast, how | e ot the Prater Ciltnna voios ans ot ;hlng resembling a landslide in hlslur the world will be transacted by i * 57 would never have becomo | S¥stomS Vet the paper observes.|iver.ocs afsposition by |- nd at whict . y e G favor. : She subgests # ation-wide front page news” but - autoo is- a fixed - char- |y g s state is fr % { brilliax found’ te women. She suSgests that the men ) cies nation-wid ont pag ; stic of {ithanking e prs und_ to n ) e < Discrepane s for the belief| “that up in the Pelham | ? istic of college administration in { from—and then there is a consider- | o the of the Austriax s hitn may do the housekeeping. Some “nature’s noblemen” there be |hills was 'being fought out a battle this country; and if it utocracy { able list of persons and measures and | opj despite the lc it} ¢ rowns of the dead man's estate. The . @ne of the advantages an American| “Some one has to do the housekeep-{ Who toil and are not understood; ifor intellcctual freedom.” Dr. we must get rid of a long, list of | practices against whom, and which, | aobiliary titles decreed by the laws lic would not have known about A : e Each Amerlcan university and college pre: felen -art 4 = i = 23 Al e Angd e : . v john, the News goes on to s A ! x ege pres- | ¢ uthor kicks around and thrashes | ind constitution of the Austr L o statesman enjoys in making a tour in | ing, I suppose, and if women are othae- | Arid others boast a family iree e Dl i e idents, begluning with the " distin- | ghout in quite haracteristic fashion. | oo iiie ! O D e e Europe is that so many of the’people | Wise engaged the men will have to dd | Who should, forsooth, be chopping { cleven years ago “to establish a new | 8uished Nicholas Murray Butler, must | Reassurinz, too. for print would losc IS | . BANB bt EHHE AT Bl * paper marks one at a time they will down nt to never, u . relinquish 1 brong s ago, : s s <l ro |1t sai 2 : i ' rder Amhers of the rut 80" a lot Mr, Mencken were to turn L : e . do not understand English and are,it.” said Mrs. MacDougall. But she wood! S O L e Thl Cwiitn LATexanabs AfaikIbiotin. werll | e tisan 400 cum "3 Grascs, af - which: womparitinety |of K6 BEHICRAS 0 Gvald hotgu ot likely to insist oni a speech. raises the hopes of men in her next s o R s 1o s of | (0 Ameret that collegs “waaiainking i e, O e | ac-al cost would lendthem to_ tur- {line. “Probably,” she said, “inventors. The Rivulet. {ihe Balgimore Sun. is suggested by |deeper and deeper ints the rut of 1 el A little i4 heard nowadays, is o | iher. pocuniary sacrif secure by that time will have relieved human | The poct says there is a bodk {its asseftion that under his direction {5tod£y conservatism and intellectually | Every discussion in this book de-{tnroes of a levy Dy the state gn all | his siier t + ~ v i W aken. His case against the firm was 3 1 “Amherst College has won an enviable | it Wi dving on its feet” declares | sorves special. consideration, sincejcapital, which many governments on| [ v e brey A Rotten Guard Rail. drudgery to such an extent that it|In every little running brook fatbrnationsl reputation as s liberal| the Pruvidenco Tribune:: “he was to| ol o’ SP2E8 . [OOCRSIAHOR, nesteantat, THCT HEIR S Thle | navel fomn, olit of court when his die - Somebody’s, business, nobody's busi- | will be pretty easy for the mep.” It is @ volume rare, T ween, - { educational institution with ideas and | clear out the musty academic air with | S 4 b 2k di Wb - Aeblitad to, igkosas s! { { 5 Ithe fresh and invigc ing breath of | distinction to a guite original way of fthreatened to inaugurate, but which, ness! That old saying was illust 3 i & i 2 methods of its own,” among other |t and invigorating breath of y of | or to make uny move ying rated [ A happy age, indeed, the coming |All bound in rich and radiant green, things because of “his insistence that ( liberalism.” Although it has de- | dcaling with our history. Here is the |driveri by necessity, she has been Ot PNy, OV tmxi(_*nu)t- yasterdayfir;l B;"“kl‘m"lmm { twenty-first century, with the women { And broidered o'er with flowers fine; { the spirit of inquiry rather than re- I\"_lu‘!(n"v]lqn i vl e m-f-«._zla n_vl }x!u»r:\.!h‘:n. I plain scholarship of history, lines of jcompelled to enforce. v(‘l,n"x-"nf\x tic a train of two cars fell off the elevated | going all the wovk of the world and | Also with many a graceful vine. ceptiveness should "characterize the'the sells is very obviously not the. . .o, "4t gequence and results, |iCVY, imposed on everything in sight % 3 ? £ the students toward their|band that the board of trustecs con- 1t 38 4 tax on all movable aud im- |~ . tracks into the street and caused the | the housekeeping being done by ma- :S;‘,‘k“;"glg’,o,:f et the uamels | tracted £or,” it is Just as obvious that | Here fs that inner sense of historic [1sovable property. If you have cash, COrrects Statements \ death of eight persons and the injury | chinery. When Columbus. discovered [ANd In this brook each human brain | F0) T mbership of the college at | the undergraduate body upoh Whom | moyement, 2 seizure of cause aud ef- |in the banik, it is taxed. T i A of seventy others. Tt was somebody’s | o mew world in.the fifteenth century | MAY Pause to look arid not in vain, | the expense of the quality’of accepted |lboralism deponds for fts success of Lric » hold om certain underlying [& Bouse, a’bit of buildins lad o1 On Solomon’s Temple business to see that the guard rails on | jt was inhabited—that-part of it in | £ 0" 0 each drop of water clings ;‘,‘,{‘::.’,‘."Z;, e of acions | floacy: and/ the paper feels: that -in i e i B e s fabpovas: and fowin 3 | 10 the Editor of The Star: the bridge structure -on -which the {hich we live today—by the American A::l:inh'orse of wondrous things, fite”+ "+ '¢" ana the cxperimenta- |a colleze dispute tnat has the board e e e o ikt 1 [are. ta: sed. Al property used in e s Sfidiive 28 und st i . g And if for tragedy tion which he has forwarded in es- [Of trustees on one side, the under- | 35h P70 e o {rying on business is reached by t 43 o 3 a dxacka aro l&id, weee stusg, Snotigh |1ndian - wholhail, provided that ‘tnaf LHe 7 50 TEESTY Va0 WAty Cablishing workers: study classes with | £raduate hody on the other and the | [oiks WHO can put squarely over the |0F 1%, “"shares and honds and other | tion “Cost of King Solomon’s Temple. to hold @ canting car in case of de- | women do all the work, leaving the | PTOP I ¥our line and slay the flah. |\T00 N RE, SECF iRt SOCTCASOTE Jith | president in the middle, the under- | i B Rt ey o A O sing | seourities are taxed. So. too, mone- |are three statements so wide of the railment. That is'to say, it was some- | men free to #pend all their time hunt-| Bt most beloved is the song the college™” e Sun | fiduate Lody, with its youth. itf}upon each of theso studies Is the cu:|tary claims, claimable in Grecce of | mark us to what I said that I desire . i % : . result of all o s, the y 4 - | guarante. b3 g5 locate } T e S aor body’s business thirty years ago when | ing and fighting. It is true that under | 1 teaches to the tiny throng. explaine. . “perhaps particylarly the |cducation, is usaally right” The New | oomsiayi e O o e e |Greece, aro taxed. The storekeeper |to have you make the following cor the road was built. And the rail was | the system of the Indians the Women | Amid the struggle and the woe ° last foint” is that “Dr. Meiklejohn [ Haven Journal Courier quotes tho or- | Work. Now just try it Top off your | who sells you tobacco, groceries,)rections: ; then probably strong enough. But|also did the housekeeping, there being | w, * has stirred up opposition in influential | gan of the'student body as declaring | cut-and-dried knowledge about any)wine clothing, etc——every neccssity | pipst, as to the cost of the temple Bl yeas i it sitiipt R g hich life encounters high and low, | quarters.” - Evidently, the New York { that under Dr. Meiklejohn's “inspira- | one of these States—its settlement. |or luxury—is taxed, provided he |, . . 0 o o0t 1o rebuild every gov- year to year it was simply some- | no machinery to keep that going|Some sweet refrain shall he discern | World: concludes, “his ideas are not{tlon men who before saw education | jts this and that and the other—with { owns more than $600 worth of this|being » ont, D LRI 5 body's business to see that it was |automatically. , those of the average modern college [as a compulsory affair-of dull facts|ihis treatment of that particular |Wworld’s goods. The lonz arm of the jernment building in Washington. : : ‘Who doth but pause and eare to learn. | t, who is -emi and duller figures have seen it take decrce even extends into the habits [stated that the estimate was based on ted, b that a ‘h: s president, pre- nently a & state. The dry events moisten up to painted, 3 job that was done perhaps | The women in this countiy—in the v e business man, bent on increasing en- | on color and meaning unti: it has be- |Jife, tomen and women working out |4nd hobbies of one's private life. and | the cost of all of said bulldings | well enough” for looks, but not well | world—are doing a good job today. The Privilege of Inaction. rollment and éhdowment at any cost f como for thom @ LIVINg thing fraught | togotndr not only 'the character .of | If ono 15 & stamp collector, or X col- existence just after completion of t v, 3 o et ; ¥ > 3 t] r of o ns, eir o r is Ongres ” 8 enough for security. And so the rail | One reason this is true is that house- | The man who doth his little best mg{‘ z(u:e;t:h(fv: dl‘l;l\ghl‘:ylin?owmge %"r‘ ’-’s’nflw o an;' fixh’s’flnuc:;“m:-‘m}r‘n:. ;}x‘-gunadnenveg:r%'\:x‘:l\.;auc:’::n it {:xeod for “having them. Property | Secomd, 1. said that King Solomon rotted, and nobody knew it or thought | keeping has been reduced morve and| Hae seldom time to criticize; Meiklejohn found himself was the re~| The Waterbury Regublican inquires, | well, conteibjifing vitally and abun-|in Greece owned hy forelgners, or|paid the workmen. not King David. of it or cared-about it, and the v 1"9‘ JORBRRE e S ¥ walt. nateef: kig’ policies. ot hig | “hoast siudont” hod ’ hat take ang'gant’y to the eniv't of the wholes ‘o | foreign ,mnnflm.fiwmu‘ within{ Third, 1 smd_ 20,000 } thé( of Wwine. 0 P SRl £ oy wg.:a,:i;i'.‘-;vz,nwd iy _So. taaiix} il, pog 20, "& iy £t

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