Evening Star Newspaper, June 29, 1923, Page 6

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s iaidial ERga R e SRS i 1 THE EVENING STAR, :";:lflv in case of & suspension of WP Roay Peccine a . As Chatrman Hammond of the Coal WASHINGTON, D. C. {Commission says, “Public sentiment 923 | Will not tolerate a suspension o FRIDAYX..........June 29, 1083, ite coal suppiy.” But there is Fditor | D0 assured way by which this public sentiment can manifest itself. It is a The Evening Star Newspaper Company | commonplace to say that the public Bustaege Ofce. 11th 1. and Pennasivania Ave. | will or will not support @ certain ac- I tion, or course, or position. Public 3 Hiding. d 3 Buropesn Offce: 10 fexcnt Se. London. England. | gentiment fs, in fact, usually against i the Sunday morning | 213 Strlke which affects its supply of with the Su In delivered by carriers within the city | necessities. But these strikes, never- £t'00 cente per month; daily only, 4 cents Der | theless, continue. erm viay e 2ent by mail. or ‘telephone Mata| In this case the miners, as well as G000, Collection ts" made by carriers at the | yne operators, are apt to adopt the old Vanderbilt attitude, “The public be Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. |damned.” Back in Baer's day, over Maryland and Virginia. | twenty years ago, the coal consumers Daily and Sunday..1 yr. $8.40: 1 mo., f0C | were up against the position of the 13r. §2.40; 1 mo,, 20c | operators that coal mine ownership was & “divine right.” And then and R 5 i i e i T g i W EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1923. e ANSWERS "TO- QUESTIONS Ciréus Act Protested. Helplets Lion Tortured Brutally, Says Sideshow Visitor. from ahe, close of ortroruar | | WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS There seems to be a general speed- ing up in school work, and although ’lhere are many persons who feel that public school children should have the BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE By Frederic J. Haskin THEODORE W. NOYES. full summer for play, yet there are many who believe that it might be well to keep children at their school tasks from the beginning to the end of school days, with such recreation as they usually get after school hours and on the customary holidays, The steady growth in the enrollment in vacation schools shows that there is an increasing number of parents who are willing that their children should press onward to the end &f school days, and there appears to % a growing tendency among children to do this. In mgking an estimate of the Q. Can the oil drainea - Hiram W. Johnson on his Impending |at Yokohama in July, 1905. Like 50 | friend Interested in the cause of fair [ average valuation of the automobiles | tomobile crank case he weed .“.:f," 5 return from Europe. The Bromley |many star reporters, Egan has de- |play toward all creatures, witnessed s il Ha el i e Praskui ity fow used In Washington, why was the|—C. T. , enacted by the California legis- | Eenerated into a captain of industry |one of the most cowardly acts toward | price placed as low as $8507 —T. K.| A. Used lubricating oils mav lature for the alleged purpose of ‘;";“r“:n""‘;“'k';n"mv,g‘;;g;:"' Dorine lan animal I think I ever saw, by far| A Because more than one-half of | Cl#imed by apparatus ulr<-‘d5yb:.JT overthrowing the state civil service surpassing even the steer-wrestling | the 95,000 cars used: here are Fords, | mercially available. Thess reclaimed system established during Johnson and broncho-busting of the recent . i oils pass all commonly accepted tests governorship, has just been vetoed rodeo staged here, and about which for new oile, such as flash point, vis by Gov. Friend W. Richardson. John- |officers in France. The ~Herbert [numérous complaints were turned in cosity and sediment. The value of son's friends account the veto a per- | Hoovers and the Martin Egans are lat the local humane organizations. tests for acidity, sulphur and re sonal victory for him, especlally as |57eat, Cronies, Mrs. Egan was onel I am speaking of the sidesfow of| A. Swimmers are not allowed to|ance to oxidation has mot yet Lecn Gov. Richardson and the senator are | advisory committee of the American |the Sels-Floto circus, camped here|enter the water from the Speedway. | determined, political foes. The Bromley bill was | d¢legation at the Washington arma- |June 18 and 19, which featured |Many bathers go out in boats and Introduced at Richardsons instiga. |™ent conference. Sultan” the “untamable lion,” and|5Wim in.the river in that vicinity, but| Q Are thers amy national parks in tion, but public sentiment since its the war the Morgans released him for service at Gen. Pershing’s headquar- ters and he was one of the command- — To the Bditor of The Star: S Happy home: tidings awalt Senator paper correspondent in the far east,{ The night of June 19 I, with a| Q. er-in-chief’s confidential intelligence Q. Is there g fegulation regarding swimming off Hain's Point?—F. C. FOREE his “heroic” fight. I can hardly ex- | this is fiot 3 violation of any District | Kentucky?—G. P. passage evidently developed in a :n“ younger congressional set In|press my disgust 4t those who could t Washington next winter will' be en-|get any amusement or entertainment regulation. A. There are no national parks that state, but there is a park reservi- direction that suggested its unpop- Street Lighting. ularity.. Johnsonites claim that the riched by an uncommonly interesting {out of the torment of this fettered,| Q- What is the cost per square yard |tion near Hodgenville administered by All Other States. now it is up against the position of : bill, had it become law, would have|young woman in the person of Miss | broken-spfited 1 166 "{ of paving the streets in the District? | the War Department which contains Daily and Sunday..1 3., $10.00; 1 mo., 85¢ | the miners that they have an almost The question of better lighting for | annihilated -the entire rogressive” | & o . daughter of a newly Sp! jungle denizen. A LD, ! Washington streets is still before the | S¥stem of state administration ins ted o ; r committee of men skilled in such mat. | Lot OUFPE the “Hiram” guberna-elected democratic congressman from era. th other things, It 'New York city, Sol Bloom. Miss|tengant %, “How's h ting; ters, and there is no doubt that a plan | Purposed to clothe the governor with | oy b it St L L L will be evolved which will make con. | POWer to remove state -appointees [ Bl0Om Dbecame a free-lance mews-|mean?” but did mot hear the reply. Fah i with almost autocratic freedom.|Paper woman after the armistice, and |1y g moment a grand announcement ditlons in the public ways much more | Senator Johnson had Intended to|invaded all the regions of Europe |\os made of what was to take place. satisfactory than at present, Various :;:g;&clnmarm. against the bl im- | where post-peace trouble was brew. | " WO PN L0 2 hen 1 ely after reaching this country. | ing. She served on the editorial sta Sps Sy Iais Deiadc wih e R 7 | ot Benito” Mussolinis’ ncwspaper st {saw the one who so termented this Milan and was an unofficial member Even though Lady Geddes will not |of ~ Gabriel D'Annunzio's “foreign | Creature for profit was a youns fellow be in soclal command of the British |ofice” at Fiume. She capped her [little more than twenty years old. Ttalian experiences by interviewing |At a signal, this red-uniformed embassy for several months, another | the Pope. Representative Bloom's |., hE S e American lady holds the fort—Mrs. | earliest ciaim to fame Is concerned | CAPLain avmed WAL a DBreom. o With the World's Columblan Exposi- (Pistol with a supply of blank car Henry Getty Chilton, wife of the 5 tridges and a long iron rod, entered 4 Chi in 1893. He conceived charge d'affaires. Like Ambassador | fthe idea of the midwas plaisance and. | the cage. g Py n & Before even the show commenced 5 e n 18 a daugh- | though on! wenty-. ¥ h amon, one o T riec Geddes’ wife, Mr: Chllrm( 1!s n“ th u kln lryflt‘celtc o years lo,:lz' E bscrved the lion starting to| Q. How many bones are there {n|CINNamon, one ounce orris root, dried h ather being | WAS I oSN * CinE RS > the log cabin in which Abraham Lin- A. This varies according to the|COln Was born. type of surface. At the present time asphalt surface is $3.21 per square| & Flease advise me now to mako ard, and rose Jar?—A. A. :qulro y.,?"""’ sukface 15 32 per| 4 ‘A good formula for a rosé Jar or potpourri is as follows: Gather roses Q. Why 1s it that the crabs are not | S2Ch morning and partially dry. Placc so plentiful in Chesapeake bay as|'D & Jar & layer of rose leaves and 4 they used to be?—M. W. sprinkling of salt. Turn and shake frequently. After the mixture has be- {come somewhat ripened the follow- ing spices may be added, one-quarter ounce allspice and cloves, one-quarter ounce nutmeg, one-quarter ounce of Daily only 1yr., § mo., 60c Sunday onl; 1yl As we entered the tent, after pay- ing our quamer, I overheard an at- divine right to stop work collectively and to prevent other men from work- ing in their places in case they cannot come to an agreement with the opera- Member of the Associated Press. 4o The Amociated Press s exclunively entiil o the ‘use for republication of A - atehes credited to it or Rot otherwiss credited | tOF8 On & wage scale. [n this paper and also the local news pu ® | Public sentiment does manifest it- 152 Miroicnet ey e Ll SASHHEE 1 selr, of course, and in the tong run - . governs. But the coal consumers can. not afford to take a long run while the mines are idle. Their houses must be heated. They should not be com- pelled to stock their coal bins months in advance of need and tie up an im- mense sum of money, simply as an in- view to meeting the requirements of the city. The street lights must be of greater candlepower and this will call for more money, and it is held to be certain that the committee will recommend larger appropriations for street lighting.. The Law of Nations. Lord Curzon, in his speech in the house of lords yesterday, stated the case of the United States in the mat- ter of foreign liquor-bearing ships en- A. The crab industry has fallen off because of large manufacturing and dye plants, which throw their waste into the bay. It is said that definite estimates of tering American ports in the strongest | qurance against a stubborn disagree- ter of Columbla, b ; d B v i1 dar fl v " i 3 B2 * | breathe hard; now he had arisen and | the human body?—W. §. |lavendar flowers and any sweet- possible terms when he said: ment between the two factors of coal | ¢ :::":L;;:""’dd“‘ £ive Washing | Thomas J. O'Brien of Michigan, & emtarable mile of exotlc amUse-|yusfacing his_tormentor from the | scented blossoms or clovers may be y and volume of stree . A. The public health servi ‘ former. Unt corner of his cage. Though lasting service savs . ght g ntiancuiiliave are et tolin | e f"“':‘ Atasssador 10 Al hardly two minutes the scene which | that the human skeleton 1s composed | >0 2 a from contending that the United | time as other business arrangements| = " "0 0T T 1 | ana " waneg aly- Mr. Chilton met| pr james Brown Scott of the Car-|followed was truly a halr-raising|or 200 distinct hones. It s divided | " L Scented flavors or oils. The jur States committed a violation of inter- | are settled. e avallable 1 time for inclasion in | While Tie was on duty at the Tritiah |negle Endowment for International |ONe; The enraged jungle beast vé|(inio four regions: The skull, com.|°'0Uld be kept closed usually, but 4 d available in tim sente: v i e et e i ome i faes ,;, e\mm,,, wmme ":]: é’;;,‘;:};‘:m,:‘ Sintlon in Denmark, to which Mr. | Peace is en route to the Netherlands|paw sweeps aha wrathful roars, but|posed of 22 bones; the trunk, com. | 1" e s entodyaid i ters. The first is that forelgners trad- | Co.Qperation Among COMSUMETS. |.r will send to Congress. fan miniaver NeD, accredited as Amer | (o attend @ meeting at The Hague, {the puny man hd him at his mercy: | posed of 54 bones; the upper extrem- | <" oo atisloouolsandileare the ing with a country must comply with 3 of counselor of embaas: called under the endowment auspices. e pursu ities, composed of 64 bo COvOrZoL aws; 2 'y in the Brit- arr rison with the bars and sev- o nes, and the its laws; the second is that every} President Harding, in his speech in| The question of lamp posts is before | (sh diplomatic service means that his |Its purposes are to inaugurate the|eeai blank . but deafening pistol |lower extremities, composed of 60 Q. Why 15 the idea of #i sovereign Independent state is su- v ;. Soverelgn Independent Alute I8 emy | [daho Falls vesterday, sounded & note | the committee and it is thought that | next appolntment will be to a full- | wacaderny of International Law,”|charses and then hastily fett. the | bones. There are two recognized principles ¥ of international 1aw which prevent us | Production that cannot be gettled on added; also lemon extract or ng ass Tithin Its dominions, including ships | which should find echo in the interest | taller posts will be recommended on |fle1ged ministership. ~Some day he . _|enclosure the “victor’!! “The ‘“un- e, clated with Ascension day?—J. H That is the American case. Tt could | spoke upon a subject of concern to |streets and the posts that will be dis-| Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, | Xistence early in 1914, but the out- | With hate faming In bE €y (OWRIC 1n the United States?—P. L. went with his disciples to the Mourt ot be more plainly stated. No quali- | every householder, taking up the slack [ placed will be set up along other | o han? (oid Brasil fs to his credit |break of the worlq war prreated |13l powerless to resist. A The harleauln snake, pit viper, | 075 Setension ana was Teteived up fication, no objections to technically | between the producer of the commod!- | streets. There is also under consid- | 1921. ashington since |3 & definite career of usefuln, This young fellow has been ar-|yater rattler, pralrie rattler, cotton- | N0 Deaven that the miracle of th. ted and convicted in more than 3 ok ok % Insugural ceramonies will take place ity or his part in this brutal |mouth water moccasin, plgmy rattler and | 9r4ft Of flshes occurred. Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas|outoh i . exhibition, and seemed plainly to re- | copperhead are polsonous snakes found Dutch government and in the pres- : a Q. Is cast-iron less liable <o rust celebrates his birthdays on the birth- | ence of members of the league of na- | %At our preseuce when he learned |in this country. e e Ly day of the French republic—Bastile | tions. Dr. Scott will deliver an ad-|QUr humane Fentimnenth, —SCOWCICD e . 5 dress on “The Conduct of Foreign 2 St& | Q. Where,, In the Library of Con.| A- The extent to which c ain undertook to {mpose, and did im- | velopment in recent years of a sys-|on calls for the gradual replacement | 38: the 14th of July. The general- | \yafrs’by Democratle Governments ” | e second of which aimost mage the | L FUIelh 1 10 bobtaey of Cone| will corrode is, of course, dependent pose, cruelly rigid restrictions upon |tem of agricultural financing particu- |of street gas lamps with electric | \S3MO of the farm bloc for years has|Two annual courses of leotures on | 5o “hiust was closed up In its nar- | titie. page: of the 1625 folty edition |UPON the conditions to which it is eub- marked hi y V- ) i : American shipping. A competition de- | larly adapted to the needs of Amerl-|lights. Inadequate lghting of the | (e & ;m,‘; ;:::;;.nnrn;;.:u;y”:: ghl ::‘:?f;‘;‘efi;} ;f::‘{:?mvvbl‘lflge_:;klseg{ row prison cell to Zwalt, triendless | o cnfigsummer Night's Dream'?—L. J.|Jected. For simple atmospheric ex- veloped between England and France {can farm producers. He had no|streets has long been a matter of E e ~ 't t * I g O] - it is far superior to wrought 8 Topeka. He hires the b amuse. | tember. During this year's second|™'Fortunately, we did not see many| A, gn . the collar decorat | posure : 5 in the regulation of the commerce of | apology to offer for it, even under the | complaint and many accidents have | mon the biggest amuse- | parjod, in August, Prof.” Grafton Wil- | niidren witness this brutality. We on . DY iron or the ordinary forms of steels the states. Between the orders in |criticlsm that it was class legislation. | been charged to dark or dimly lighted |capital's youth 1loose in it with strict interpretation of these two |ties necessary to life and consumers |eration the idea of installing posts of fundamental principles of international | of them, through the elimination, to|a more ornamental type than those law can weaken ft. a degree, of middlemen. now in use. A good many years ago Great Brit-{ The President referred to the de-| A part of the plan already agreed ment park In town and turns the | Ron of Harvard will be the American | Shois to seyeral boys and they were|Blashfield the figure representing Some of the newly developed alloy © / ! 0 3 speaker. uicker than adults to see the cow- England holds on her lap a book | = council issued from London and Na-|Even so, he pointed out, it was in the | streets. SeTeryIBInglon mell (s veAr Cap * ok k% ardice of It all. This deplcts the|open st the title page referred to|Ste€ls are Just as resistant as cas- poleon’s decrees American ships were | interest of a vitally important section | The public Is profoundly interested [ electioneering season in the Sunflower| Apropos the reports and rumors of [natural tender heart of youth and|gpova, | iron is, however. harried and checked, and the foreign trade of this country was practically 4 i A the necessity of Christlan humane { of the community Which has hereto | in the cause of better street lighting | §Etecl (O0%NG, Jl1o fepititier for | Presidont Harding's future plans.|education to keep the spark of merey| Q. Who is the bass ball player that| (NO charge is made for answer fore, he sald, had too little considera- | and will give its applause to the com-{js up for re-election in 1924 His | When the burdens of the White House lalive and to fan it into the flame, Y | 1 Wi e : any questions of fact direct to the in- no recourse but war, which it was in| He thought that we might with | bringing about the improvements that | {AKInE no e e Yclonic | ¢riends are recalling one of his oft-|{i% ¥ 510y Coward the human broth-| Al Everett Scott of the New York | address The Star Information Bureau, 1o position to declare at that time. In- | profit to the whole people conslder }are demanded. - fiivvering across the countryside and | eXpPressed wishes. Ie has a lively|erhood. Now that :h'l: :c[l is -bc- American League team captured the Frederic J. Haskin, Director, 1220 ternational law, as then framed and | the possibility of effecting an anal- e e shaking hands with the sons and [desire to travel lelsurely through |knowledged to be a brutal one by} o ... o¢iendance laurels. | North Capitol street.) ¥ i daughters of the wheat belt and al- persons from various citles who are g applied, gave the two European bel- | ogous organization to promote and en- South America. Once the obligations wgentimental. it is the duty of public life are absolved, Mr. Hard- | SgPTed "aentimentall ot o8 o oliow year. O e T akowoniSHt 108 {up this cade Dy strously: basking ; z S the lands beyond the equator. Before |}l “various humane organizations, of nature that will forestall effort to * the war Mr. and Mrs. Harding visited | 'eher theaugh the Jack London Club convince him that Alaska, in addition | Mrs. Eleanor Franklin Egan has | Europe two or three times. They are | (ccpecially organized to fight trained to other allurements, has all big|arrived In Tokio for a journalistic :n?‘d :f‘ foreign gO:;?]:i;anzll;;;"%:;'fr'r animal acts) or ?‘l‘herl' mavE vlan!:ng & % Cip- | intimates are co; ore |1,y them, until this lone, tormente SeEciy of e eahyEN]. e Uy Japan. N'P-|they settle down to be “home folks™ | cleqture Is meted out Justice throush S — pon is not & new country to her. ypywhere a globe-trotting expedition [the action of the anti-cruelty law She was married to Martin Egan, will be on their program. against his foes. For information in then a prominent American news- (Copyright, 1023.) more detall regarding this, addressi o0 "CRE S TN o hat Post- | Wages fall. The United. States s the writer, care of the Animal Rescue vractically the only country in the Novel Written by Italian Premier The western people took pains to |falfa zone. Like President Harding, v Ci i v~ Mgerents, in a conflict to Which the | courage through measures of credit . ot o lige Harding some wonders | GAPPET 18 completing his nfty-eighth United States was not a party, the |and financing a proper organization right to impose these restrictions. of the consuming community in both Now, in time of peace, the United | cities and country. “I have won- States has enacted a law against the | dered,” he said, “if it were not pos- mportation of liquor, and the use of | sible, for example, that a scheme of all vehicles of transport, ashore and |co-operation among consumers financed efloat, for that purpose, with a penalty | in part through a carefully organized | The French are preparing for a of selzure and confiscation. That |and supervised adaptation of the prin- | §reat military aerial equipment. Ger- penalty has been applied to small craft { ciples of the savings bank or the|many goes on Wwith the efforts of re- as well as to land transport. It has|buiflding and loan society might be | cent vears to look like an innocent by- CAPITAL KEYNOTES BY PAUL V. COLLINS ‘The freaks of the postal service are pete for jobs—as in Europe today- League. 'VIRGINIA W. SARGENT. |master General New has undertaken | 3ion, Sl e 4ne" jon 18" ing fhe R e TR to teach the public—especially the|nien to work. Our wages cannot be . » {oncoming generation—how to ad-|compared with twages @iven. th been applied to ships of small tonnage | made to serve a splendidly useful pur. | stander. o £ P There Ave No *“Good Hamla” 1 o0Celt ol B retter wee received worker anywhers ‘else in the worl: running not merely coastwise, but|pose In this department of our eco- —tee——— To Be Sub_]ect of Screen lay Towe satororThestars oo duy or two ago addressed_stmply 5 Unsimptios, from British ports near these shores, | nomic lite.” > Lenin has been sick for a long time, Miss Lucy Warner Mayng: e st T € g o he ' Star: Is most 2, 332:.:::5.‘&':‘; 'fm;rufm::unx feature. | having come from Virginla, of- course, 3’;‘0 ‘"’""’]’x""“ f:’"".‘\sfi Alice Foote — : et ougall, regales New York with 4 ] » ’NOY. Aylmer, who was an admiral of -the |Jt is not with any spirit of criticism [the post office experts knew BY THE MARQUISE DE FONTE A b s oD Admiral of the |1 question her ciaiming “"g00d hawks” | o tor one of the Virginia senators, | Some inferences which she draws Premier Mussolini, the masterful dic- | preqecessor in the family honors, {Rmong this family of birds. Standard| ") ocing but no matter what the|from the 1920 census, on which she 5 etarad 5 y publications on ornithology classify i 2 g7 J > a time it was claimed by Udolphus |0f prey. This implies. they live on|Senator Carter Glass. It was. now women will be carrying on all though, of course, beyond the terri- torial limit. The question now is whether tonnage or port of departure can operate to differentiate between violators of the American law, whether The President sald he thought this | though probably feeling better than if would be preferable to having limited | he were actively engaged in soviet sections of the country undertaking { politics. to establish financial independence and economic solidarity, as some of them SHOOTING STARS. . ships of great- size starting from |have lately been doing. He pointed out blacksmith and as having spent his|X [ T SN Gl o e Admiral |mice, rats and other birds, either do: | “Some vears ago @ letter came from|kinds of business and men will be European ports are to be immune |that the development of such a pro- BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. sarly youth as an apprentice to his)John Aylmer, and son of ‘the second fmeetic or :jlfhefih:‘::s;:gc:f;eg: Ircland addclised 1o foRs Qi iaherty: | at home scrubbing floors and rocking from the law that imposes the penalty | gram into a sound working business father's calling, that it will doubtless |lord, who had settled in Canada a First House in Bousean | bables. of search and seizure upon those of {scheme would doubtless be found The Stereotyped Compliment. smaller size which start from insular ; chiefly an affair of the state govern-! When anybody makes a hit poirts near at hand. ments, “but one in which the jointure In some peculiar style, This matter is complex. it is sure. | of state and national authorities might | The friends, like butterflies, will flit The United States does not desire to jprove practicable and even necessar: Around him as they smile; impose a disproportionate penalty to Encouragement will be taken by the | And each, with mind all gayly fraught prevent the violation of its law, which | consuming public in President Hard-| With terms of compliment, is based upon a proviston of the Con- | ing’s assurance, “I hope to be able, as | Exclaims, *“Dear friend, you really stitution. But it cannot, in logic and | the result of studies and investigation, ought self-respect, afford to discriminate be- | to recommend for the consideration of'| tween violators. Until the statute is | Congress measures which shall repre- Insectivorous birds are the horti- |frish boarding house—up street from| She frightens timid men. by the al should have written a historical ‘“de”"d'"c"x * ¥ ¥ culturists’ and Hnlmliurlufl'(.n"_\_‘:sl Castle G meni l'rhd-v. was before the ’:Tfli"&.‘f,&'fi?; lnh:“ls";J‘censu, shows ® . ‘ fends. ELITAH E. KX . |days of Ellis Island. a v 211 per cent of novel some thirteen years ago, Which| .o 10imant made his home at del- | o/ PFUL Trien i e women engaged in gainful occupa- was published serially In the Pop-|, .. T Tl Ja0® ld as he was tions, whereas in 1910 there were only olo, dally newspaper of Trent.|quite unknown in London. although I F Words Henry Ford promises to extract ten |14.7 per cent. Also, there is & fright f o J & n a rew wordads. line f ton of coal | ful falling oft in the per t men then edited by Cesare Battistl, the|prominent in Canadian life, a real gallons of gasoline from a ton o Sngaged s Eairil wmk cent of men Itallan patriot, who was hanged by |ploneer, an ardent agriculturist, an|, The European war arose from the|without lessening the fuel value of ork—one-half o 1 per cent. (Maybe that covi h fact that the position of some of the al. That beats making two|wa . Mayb ers the Ereat powers was not clearly defined. | e, ¢ ar millionaires who no longer have : e: e vhere one gal-|to toll or spin, but are little w. the great war. Regiment of Canadian Militia, which “PREMIER SMUTS. | Sallons of corn julce w e little white The novel has some analogy With|h, had commanded throughout four Rl foi grew.bators, though even (ha l:-u::hfix‘gm{fi)bihé":u‘:r:fio:efly“ng i To run for President!” D'Annunzio’s “Nave.” It deals with|gecades at the timo of his death, 1t|. If prohibition fails it will be Amer- might “deserve more of mankin the R shons jca’'s failure. If it is a success it will {than all the scurvy politiclans put the Austrians in the early stages of | organizer and commander of the.54th the infatuatlon of Don Emanuele| aquijred several ‘Gome as & surprse to many that he|{W.YSUrs after the American-wariof {in injury the harm of the fleld mice. \* found Pat at the first . 2 years before the|p, England's success as much as - lassic quota-| She fails to analyze the situati amended to allow the bringing of | sent a beginning along thie line.” That | The fellow who invents a shoe, e miire: bl eyed witen, | committee of privileges of the house | America's, and I don't think we ought | {EStRSr." an Eocs the oo m el ehal- | and show that women no i liguor into our ports on transatlantic | statement sounds attractive, and no| A razor or a drink 2 Claudia Parcitella, who gets him|of lords, at Westminster, admitted |to interfere with it. Jenge was for somebody to “extract | o cpony o't WARIEH 1O 19 nee liners in some measure to insure |doubt means business In gilded glory comes to view. completely under her sway and be-|the justics of his claims to the Aylmer —LLOYD GEORGE. | the sunshine from the cucumber,” but | 0 © ie in housework i sink | comes the real ruler of the state. a e crow: Ford dces not pwn a_cucumber patch | OWing to modern labor-saving appli- maainntiitstnse onieale Within theters —————— . His Imueciections abic | Clandia’s many acts of wicked cruelty | b tame ng fecommended the crown| oOur five-day excursion on the Le- | 239 0ec®own @ coal mine. Besides, | ances—sweepers, for example. But ritorial waters there Is no recourse but | Referring to France's Ruhr policy, | Ito obscurity. His fate find their climax at last in her put- | ecrablishing him in the rankes of the | Fiathan ek -:‘“h“dfl%'hsch?]“’,‘ i;‘”“"’,wemer falled to !tl)}ulne :ihu;am; Curvemal e to enforce the law against all, regard- | Marshal Foch says, “Get in or get| TO flattery eoft is lent. ting to death of an innocent Eirl!peers of Ircland. They are a long- | ot "was when some of the boys | CuCumber must o e " . Y o 2 Bl , who had given i . ment was when some of the boys|yith all its sunshine gone. of their European sisters of goin out~ An old soldler fs nmataratly | “Tou ought” his bland admirers state, | Filiberta Mandruzzg, who hed lven |lived race and, born in Ja14 ke sur-fwent to the upper ‘deck and sang *E* % tnto the farm fields, or taking . SVERR: o faciin i Iowin Khe Bowat e o o ey voued. how. | Seeded. by the ‘octogenarian " general | No Bananas.” Y Americans take great patriotic pride | Ployment scraping streets, or doing ful whetlrer he is going or coming. I wonder what this happy land :ver. never to rest until Filiberts who has just been laid to his rest. —C. W. DANZIGER. |, the glories 6f this country, butfother menial work unsuited to the less of size, of importance or of na- tionality. < ——————— “To run for President!” Seizure of liquor on foreign ships - o H SCGIAibe In Courad of Hime had been avenged. After various at- ok The government right now s plan- | amongst these glories we do not|refinements of feminine nature. will g0 on with due formality. It is &| Tammany may not always be in|1¢ all thus mentloned should cxpand | (oresh o sun of potsoncd wine. cope| There is another branch of the Avl-[ning the next: draft, the kind of |point with pride to the fact that 250 | As for man's taking to housekeep- proceeding with a large diplomatic as- | close accord with national politics, but| In greatness so sublime. sumed by Claudia at & etate banquet. [ mer family, now headed by Sir Arthur { clothing the ;g}::‘:;; thall wear and| 00 bables dle nnnu;nybo: :1; :::c‘n:: (oxeane m‘?x’l.'.sT}"{"‘,’,“n‘,\':?.fi;“;‘f;”.‘ pect that calls for deliberation and no | it never falls to claim credit as an @s- {1 wonder whither we would slip, ccThe prince blshop ordered & o | Fitzgerald Aylmer, whose baronetcy —SAMUEL M. RALSTON, {ment, due to lenoratied *4f070 ec ot | ninity—it would not be six months rough work. semblage of boosters for the home| On novelty intent, for her, but the inhabitants of Trent|!s St} olier tham thic of Tord AYL{ 100000 Afmsricans must: stillheny o n'l‘l::'ou\:r St iwhert et S T e 2 . th 3 3 . havt . = ere are’ B2 -starter baby —_———e————— town. If every one who gets the tip Bt e e O O e pasatd 1o the | e o oving been created by KIng|continue to work to see that inter- | ovic ®10 " otter chances to sur-|cradle rockers, operated on the fire: Personalities are more interesting Could run for President. :‘:mpoessn'lu through completely de- :::::n:.oar::t:’lhn htlf 5 bm}‘ bm:l“r: 2::{3:;“% IL’ our CS.‘;’:?Sf“'iL ‘8; vive than in America, f;‘,:’:,‘.‘flhe"jon'ohzn ‘z‘f(\"h“fi tive pian ¢ serted streets. SDOwe cxpeticlios Wit : 5 . bor Davis calle at- duantitative plan ere always welcome, regardless of | for the moment on the principle ofj s i - Reid of New York, previously divorced > B are 600,000 defective bables ETOWINE | regular deliveries—possibls threwn whether they tell us anything we did |““come early and avold the rush. 'What has’ ‘become .of e gl The novel, which contains much |y p.. frst husband, George Stell of| I think it is supreme gall and|up almost With nomcnrec;“;nd that| 8 Pipe line with faucets for the sep. not know. cure?” action. {s being adapted by ome of | e Acth impudence for forelgn nations to | proving thelr intelligenge O HCe|arate items. 2 “QOld John Barleycorn is spending|the leading cinema concerns for a cago. Sir Arthur makes his home {oomplain of rules adopted by our gov- | there are a million voung CRUIITCR 0|~ Brains! Management! That fs whern T o Vacation Schools. b & & lay, and all the pecuniary |3t Donadea Lodge, a pretty place inlernment for the waters inside the jages between i Astries instead of be-|Mmen shiné! Come on, ye centurie Public Sentiment and Coal o so much for lawyers ‘; as evidently "‘"’;‘: D amection therewith have | Hampshire, to which he has given the | three-mile O e S 9"}"‘1‘.',"2‘3:.'5‘01 e Dlay. Who's afraid? . ‘The ularity of the summer pub-|decided to use it himself?” rights in conn 3 —W>M. JENNIN N. {in 1fi are of * *x John Hays Hammond's letter ad-|lic schzl;;. which will open on Mon- ' been assigned by P';','“ ,Mg""" ;I::m‘?"”l::' o‘r':fl’ra‘ldgg:'m‘g“:;"h:: Utoplas flourish only in the brains vlfi":na"eflx: 3&:&%5 f,u‘.':: Up to date there :r:xourzem ships 2 3 5 g n humanity. . whose delegates are now In session a: {3,000 pupils will be enrolled. This is{ The justice fined Hortense Magee, |Batt®e WIO, "8 W0 0 00 % i nonors is his brother, Gen. Sir Fen- | °™™O™ PUMANE oo o s p s | thoughttul care. the Volstead law. by bringing lquor ) Scranton considering new wage de-|the estimate compiled by the director That fascinating elf, shEoug n Fostices, a6 & martyr| o0 Aylmer, a most distinguished sol- * kXK X within the three-mile limit, but it mands, contains a warning that “pub- | of special schools. About one-haif the| And then to show his chivalry Sl dler, who Won the Victorla Cross on| We will not cure the present un-| 1 . o¢ & confirmation of the fears [does not follow that they are the lic sentiment will not tolerate a sus- | number of pupils already enrolled and He pald the fine himself. ©In ‘this way Mussolini is sharing by a plece of magnificent herolsm and | femce.”” What wo require a6 1on€ | that Commissioner - Haynes of the same an Wilson's famous fourteen pension of its anthracite coal supply |to be enrolled during the week will the literary honors of old Georges|is now general commanding the royal | heads. prohibition enforcement office has ear about. with the beginning of the fall and win- | enter the summer schools to be con- Morose Atmosphere. e n la the est two vears| Under 8619106 of the Buitlsh army: - —LORD METHUEN. | joineq the anti-tobacco fighters when | R ter season.” This warning, it is to be | ducted at Central High School. Some| '‘Why are you agriculturists so dis-| ;¢ tne war enabled her to [achleve brocognition which they have received| Americans are Inclined to regard|it ts found that ho has forblddeln . ow the splx;!t of Dr. Osler muc: assumed, will be repeated to the opera- | of the classes to be held there are al- | contented?” victory. Clemenceau's novel abou![are ail the more remarkable in view |England as a small lsland, which, | gmoking in office hours, Whether in(have gasped—if spirits can gasp—- F + Cor! the blind Chiness mandarin who|os the fact that his branch of the|by questionable means, has grabbed outside. At first the|upon seeing a sixty-year-old y - tors themselves, Who are the other |ready overcrowded, and certaln re.| ‘Well"” replied Farmer Corntossel, v vers his sight, and then . the office of young 0 3 y g i g . suddenly reco’ hat|house of Aylmer is, according to Irish {& large portion of the earth’s surface. 3 topping smoking | ster looping the loops i . party to the controversy that appears | strictions have been made with « view | “if @ drought aint burnin’ up the |is so digmayed by what he sees that| syperstition, a family which has long 2 DEAN INGE. ~ |eaict went forth stopping smoking | ster looping ! DS In an alrplane likely to arise over the question of |to guaranteeing a&ccommodation ' for | Végetables the summer boarders are E;C:.‘::a:-he = now being prepared | been subject to ill-luck, due to some in the building, because the woi i was his first air frolic | is not fireproof; then the|ajone, too. N J ;:::c:um?kea outside. It is now found ow he is as proud as a that work is lulpendeg ,:r‘hlle they 3 . ancient curse. Indeed, when he was| National introspection has becom Kkickin® because the rain is spoilin’ the | 925 . ™'y pecsoual e el via |appointed to command the force which | & policy and international selfighne P arts of the world. arrived too late to relieve the siege|has been exalted as a national creed. ‘wages and consequently of continued coal production. that part of the school population for a which the summer schools were de-|Pplcnic. Paris for shavetail with his new silver wings, " | for he qualified as a fly. 5 1 - 3 merely & fiyer. He i5 Ma As a result of the settlement of last | signed. stage I consfiela is another pre-|of Kut, in Mesopotamlia, and to avert HOMER & GUMMINGS. | go outside to smoke and It, 18 MICY | Gen. Mason M. Patefuk, and hs ha Strike Invited. mise who achloved fame as a writer [ the lamentable surrender there of . . o 1517 was fought be- | % ot Of SO the government |Deen chlef of the air service since Oc- summer the contract year in the coal | The first purposs of the vacation| .. . OFUe BRI | fmier who achloved (TS AN TOMG | Gen. SIT Charles Townsena and of his| | T war of 1812 was fought be-| waste o tober, 1921, but had mot heretofore industry ends—or begins—five months | school was to give advantages to e has not been accustomed to look |army to the Turks, there was a good jor-. achieved the right to fly. search and seize our shipg and to Im- press seamen. Now the shoe is on * kK The Department of =~ Commerce points out the serious labor condi- tions in Europe, with 2,835,000 men | unemployed, In contrast ‘with the sit- uation in America where everybody who wants employment cah get it andvwhere theie are 800,000 more [yl oo U s B e e jobs than men to fill them.. the age when Osler bade them go off than any |, ud!::er;:lc-::i“::. WO the unemployed | 'Way back and die outside the house Oitimated to number 1,750,004 Ger-|do they do their best work. many next, with 600,000 idle; Italy | At the banquet in honor of the com- with 350,000, Belgium with 40,000,| mander-inchiéf of the American Le- France with' 10,000. glon last Tuesday there sat at one of pupils who for one reason and an- ow)ty sxkl ithe pmtient Swmmen; other were behind in thelr studies dur- Sometimes I almost wish he'd get mad ing the regular school term, and to [€NOush to.go on a hunger strike.’ give them an opportunity to catch up in the work in which they were de- i ficient. All the registrants in the vaca- tion schools do not, however, belong in that classification. Many of them might be suspended without gravely |are those unusually ambitious pupils endangering the supply of fuel. Only [ who wish to advance one semester . by in 1902 and again in 1922 have strikes | taking the summer course, but in en- ‘been so protracted as to curtall ser!- | rolling pupils preference is given those ously the anthracite output, and con- { who need the extra course to keep in later than formerly, namely, at the end of August instead of at the end of March. Consequently the climax of the coal-mining relationship comes at the very point of public demand and need for fuel. Heretofore in case of disagreement and suspension of work @ period elapsed during which mining W T Is not this a new demonstration of the utter absurdity of counting a man’s age by his years? Many a man at sixty or sixty-five is physically and mentally younger than others at for- ty. Many men only begin to find wpon Mugsolint in/the ilght of & nov- | deal of shaking of heads by reason of t or a playwright. the fll-luck attached by popular su- e A perstition to the name of his family. | e, ther,fo0k And, we * ok % X press its liquor. g 2 “EMANUEL CELLER. Aylmer's new lord, who has just succeeded to the 200-year-old peerage | One of the most shocking tragedies “How did you come out of the stock [ ana the Charles II baronetcy of his |in the annala of this house was the| There 1s food for thought in thé natiet? ctogenarian father, 50 long the in- |death of John Harrison Aylmer, grand- | f3C o gle one o new republics has modeled itsel?f upon HSI “I don't believe I ever got Into the (gpector general of the Canadian!son of the sixth baronet, with his l The Bucket Shopper. 1 —MRS. HENRY W. PEABODY. _ stock market. My money didn’t 1ast | militia, is, like him, Canadian born, | wife, his eldest son, his nieces and . N long enough to get me past the|and makes his home at Queens bay. |several servants, while on their way A conate o L momething it e broker’s office.” Kt aent of the Kootenay Gold | from London to Ireland some fifty | —DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER? Mines _Company, and owns some | years ago. The express traln on| mrere {a mo “erime wave" in the inkins says what -|30,000 acres. Some forty-three years|ynich they were traveling to Holy- ted States but a lack of 1u'lhsdb:n:lt :ul‘wp-o,cflu is ttlllem f?cttp;:; of age, he s stll unmarried, fouEht ' Nead ran into & number of trucks con. | enforee the Taw.. o Of ONeTEY 1o ’ h the war in the Canadian con- France would have a much greater | the tables a soldier who had served sequently the public's supply. ling with thalr gtugien. he's generally such a bad actor. tingent In France, but is an engineer | 2iNInE, berrels of =~ parafin - left 0 Wik SRIM | ymber 1dle, but its {mmense army | on active duty In the civil war, thres If agreement is not reached between | The vacation schools have justified by Drofession, unlike his aged father. | 1o Lergele, a small station in North S ey "SR | takes up th surplus of workers, In Indian wars and the world war. o C . rst and forem ndinavia: ad been refused in the Spafis! Y ¥ the operators and the miners before | themselves by results, and the indi- Winged Weather. :v:‘o g o omimanded ‘the 11tn | Wales. No one quite knows or ever| It is all very well to arrange na- ;’;’ unemployment, but & threatened | as the almanac betrayes the} he was the expiration of the contract year, and a strike occurs, a disastrous condi- tion will be caused. A great majority of the consumers do not stock up dur. ing the summer, for they cannot af- ford to buy their supply in e large quantity in advance. They walt, as a rule, until fall, and then buy only a | weeks course and classes from 8:30 to cations are that as time passes more'| and more pupils will embrace the op- portunities given them during that period which has long gone under the name of the vacation season. . While the schedule calls for the opening of the schools on. Monday, with a six- < s will know just what happened. tional boundary lines upon the basis Riches have wings. Hussars, of which he was honorary | iy, 307 0F the explosion Killed all | of selt - determination. bt the ~real “Yes” replied Mr. Dustin Stax,|colonel up to the time of his dsath. |in the express and the conflagration | thing necessary for human happiness “and they are liable to fly faster than | one, hailing from County Kildare, and | 30160 ‘01 Wes furtinte - aoatsaction. | et snaoavins 30 as tr. tosuis ever if it becomes necessary to turn | the branch of which Lord Aylmer 18| whole families were wiped out of ex- |an increase in their material as well inte the chief has been settled in Canada |jstence, several of them belonging to piritual well belng. them i war' planes. ever since the American war of in- | the peérage. Not one of the Aylmer A C. BEDFORD. I o AT b SRRy = | ‘The Hoe Cake Deveourer. (i i P s s 'm or of their belongMgs| 1, the average happy marriage the “A'la " general of Canada. It was his sister, | was a small dressing case with young |y siand would have been equay paria targe (1 wclock on schoot daye, § "dont “ma o rospack 1o & how | e - che BAbINCE Am o IR s 5 112 WECcka g RIS nad ik | HApRY itk 4ny ons of 12 thelsand SNORiy... Dulies & ¥8cy: Wrme 11 o'ciock an Nchool Saps. 1 M- 96| “Gew ue 8 & hoe who N alter Bavage Landor's beau- | hurled by the force of the explosion jother women, and the wife with any quagtity is mined ia excess of imme- | that the time is not distant when full | ‘ceppin’ as it mebbe hab sumpin’ to do| ::g:l"wm inning “What Avails|free from the track and from the]one of ten thousand other men. Miate demend the public must sufferIschool time will be. the order, end ] wif hoe cake.” : the Sceptered *® The sixth Lord | scene of the conflagTation. decrease. of wages, because of the|then over sixty, but when the*world difficulty: of the exporters to meet|war came he ‘was only elghtysthree competition . with countries of de-|and so _he got “active duty." _Lieut. based money. Willlanis 1s the youngest and mos * * ok ok gnthusiastit soldier and_ legionnal in America—only eight-seven now— In the United States less than two | In Americarzonly clght-seven now - years ago there was a cry that there | Goorge Washington Post. He stirred weré 3,000,000 unemployed; today all |up the fogies of forty, or thirty-five, these have work and still ‘there are | When he rallied them at the Com- 600,000 jobs awalting workers. When | "pRe®, nIRY YT Prove it by the job hunts the man wages are |Maj. Gen. Patrick or Lieut. Williamsa, high; when the men hunt and com- ) Oopyaight, 100, by B V. Goiney D P BN RS L

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