Evening Star Newspaper, August 30, 1923, Page 6

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L 6 THE EVENING STAR, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D.. C; THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1923. manding more room. The govern-|own, and Kid Dropper was *‘dropped” ment’s need for buildings is country-|as a consequence. Louis Cohen, who 03 With Sunday Morning Edition. . KEYNOTES W NSWERS 5 - ¥ s Edition. wide and there is a disposition to in-|did the killing, was merely a tool ol" s The North Window ER TO UESTIONb WASHINGTON, D. C. troduce’ in Congress and press upon |ihe “higher-ups” of the Little Augies, e THURSDAY. . ...August 30, 1923 | the attention of the national assembly | Of course, there fs & blood feud now BY PAUL V. COLLINS | TSR A RSN § & a general building bill. There is im- | Letween the two gangs, infinitely BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN THEODORE W. NOYES.......Editor | POrtant opposition to this because of [more bitter and deadly than that| «you've gotta quit kickin' my houn'yall. Anyhow, Miss Gile 1s worrlea | 1t 8 interesting to note an increasing 4 the cost that would be involved. Those | caused by a mere trespass upon busi- |aawg aroun’ " ‘ab&u( he motherhoad of - men, ae | nterest abroad in the works of Ameri- |, &, How tin & person make a com- jcome to Washington with the rail — 3 "s : 2 L e 3 sion?—G. | of ambassador?—1L. J. P, The Evening Star Newuuper(‘mmnlny""‘" stand for @ general bullding bill | ness preserves, and it is to be ex-| The “houn” is the market for farm | [uch as she is ‘about all her’ blg |oan artists. The managing directors of |W. It A s 7 Business Pfice, 11th St. and Pennsylvama Ave, | Seem reluctant that the needs of the | pected that it will be waged to a products, which is now, and always|mothers: she announces of the ;.le ennial exhibitions to be held In| A. The Rent Commission is in the |Mr. Takahira, & 0 5 ocoesser N York Ofice: 110 East iZnd St. government at Washington should be | finish. has been, in charge of the Depart-| . It is thelr sons who fight. Why |Rome and Venice within the next year | Distriet bullding: It iy not necessa ; = Buropean Ofice: 16 Regent St., London, England. | considered apart from itsneeds outside| Meanwhile the question arises [ment of Agriculture, so far as|SPOUld they not unite against war?” ::T,c:m:'l Bl a0 aRacl WMORERh | by ugh an sitaeney, & compiaiat |t W o Tas Masie Corelli orn? oo Evening Star. o the Sunay moraing | °7 WVAShInBton, but the Public Build: | whether the strike game in New York [studylng farm market conditions is LR E e B i ety alict e AU peYEGN OF{ Ui A. She was born in Ttal 1864 T i . s S B as born in Italy in 180 T L e S, T tits | Ings Commission hopes to win Con-|is not played to the point where public | concerned. Goout Miss Bresuaeut’gues-hoad)l B To L Gl atRE e Q. AT what Wties. aba)on whatl g, risw as sor £0100 Fents per ot Gaily uly, 43 cenl B¢ | gross to Its plan for separating the |intervention 1o necessary. When pro-| It 1s alleged that certaln influences | “brother.’—elucidates by announcing | 0 S0 B Ve o G BOM STUCE | duys are the swimming pools near e A LB s o Bt der Diay BeSent by mail, or teleplione Malu | needs of the government at Wash- | fessional gunmen, Who have no com- |&re at work to persuade President "“""'l Wisaom urings {bratiachoods [ 50 SISl et N et e e for e asman, AL o bo LD | QUEINE cyelonedt M D, 8000, Collection, ts made by curriers 8t th | ynoeon from the national building pro- | punctions about killing, can be hired | C00lld&e to transfer the bureau of |brotherhood brings —understanding; |, . 0 5005 " reien countries have |9 W- I- A The cnerey with ol - 3 agricultural economics from the De- |understanding brings love and toler- o Al o e strikes an . objeet ; ki L : gram. by the dozen to act @ guards and | JET RIS OO ance, and Toye amd tolerance bring | their own pavilions, exhibiting the works |, A o municipal swimming pool | iEVETE Al ORI el ey Ml ayable in Advance. In Washington, many of the tempo- | pickets, shooting - indiscriminately | PATIMENt OF A&ricutiuro o the De-|jeqch of their nationals as units. In every B ey P Women are diin. every lof the body. Energy is me 2 Sl l';)'“d"" and Virginia. 700 | FATY War structures, some of which | whenever a collision occurs between T e ey ey o i b0 [ [ It s Just one liuk after another— | respect this cxhibition is @ unique aftair. | the pools on Monday, Wednesduy R IL0S Drodhaciot e inis ot Bully and Sunday..1yr., $840; 1 me. 10 | have become shaky, are occupled by | workers and those who refuse to;. . (UCOTY O Rome et b 18 thejust llke that. Ho ds sausage. It s managed by the municipality and | Kriduy, from 7 am-to 6 pa. o The | LT body moving Einday’ oniy . l]1 3T, §2.40; 1 mo., 20c Eovernment workers, or piled high [ work, it would seem that the Police |rather than the furnace. Hence, when | g i s e T BT MR G Caturday from 7 it 5 | ShuiE po ek O with records. It i3 pointed out by the | power has been pasied on to an Utter- |iie house fx chilly, the meroury, not | qibe o nore: the whole thing leads |in Cohiributinng 1o s suceess: the steam- | T ry morning from 7 to G s Ll Daily and e e 1 mo.,s5c | COMmssion that the Internal revenue Iy irresponsible organization. The |the col. i blamed. Now. that farm directly to the movies. It seems like [hoat companies, the hody corresponding | {11Xpd bathing is allowed. " Tho pool | le aldy st Dally and Sunday. 1 yr., $10.00: 1 mo. 8¢ | jureau 1s not only housed in bulld-|public welfare demands that these |marketing is “chilly.” they would|® Will Hays propaganda. Maybe he|le our, chamber, of commerce of board — expends its eneri B aonis yr., $7.00; 90 |l oure s oxpls 4 °5¢ |poke up the mercury by shaking up|is the big brother. of trade, the public utility corporations, e Fopad anatensiEy I nday only. 1yr, $3.00;1mo. 25c|ings in various parts of the city, but { gangs be broken up. But whenever |the Department of Agriculture, and| They are gol e S hotel prop: I are among the pur- ttitude | pens” so quickly that the ine o e == “has a huge amount of valuable and |one of them gets in bad it always ap- |even trving a new “thermometer’- Yy are golng to show by cellulose | chasers. It pays them; it pays the city; | 4 "G, OBt the straw keeps it from cr Member of the Associated Press, | 145 4 huge amount of velvabe 200 Awas 6 Denuxtnentio e Comn it —next to TNT the highest wex-|it pays the artists, and It i upheld to |~ T Fipiotrore midcoins Tiie Associated Press Iy exclusively entitled | IrTePlaceable records pears that there are influences in cer- S plostve—that after the Brotherhood | the highest standard. Open in April, it | A; Bradley Gilman quotes him as . g ;':.'.:': e for republication of all mews dis; frame building at 14th and B streets | tain high political circles that pre- of Man Foundation will have ralseq | COntinues until early autumn, and “ou Sk "h 1 sl “"‘r“""“" outlook. | g9 Were the colors r Bathes Cremited, to 1€ ur mat otherise eredled | in imminent danger of fire and de-|vent the extermination that the se.| The Presidents secrotary, C. Bas-|\, "y deq $250,000, and everyhody |hear the delenitul concorts Eather (0| | Cfeusor in some small towns > *1Nuo in our flag chuse Hened herein: A1t "righes “of ‘publication” of | struction.” Even the old and rotting [ curity of the city demands. The gang- [1o7 St who was interviewed in | wiil have seen the first fllm, “Reality.” |the city band, one of the most famous | o wion il aen s e Ialt ow a zeserved. | avrack. bhulldings in st Potomac |ater i» bit an expression of the v last week, s reported to|all will be so enthused and lovely that {bands in Kufope, wander through the | (b When will the auction bfl"k’f‘l o~ ctonding tora g bast 2 : have sald: “The agricultural situa-|there will be no more wars in all the | galleries discussing the works of art. voyisediagaint =t H. atinental Congress. t X ¢ Park are filled with government prop- | methods in vogue of managing the |tjon s far more grave than the ay- | "orid. The attendance is exceedingly large. A. Milton C. Work, the chairman |0Ur flag were decided Pinchot’s Plan. erty of various sorts. It is against|affairs of the metropolis. Does that explain clearly why the | An unusual system prevails in regard |9f the card committee of the New | White signifies purit, erage citizen realizes, and somethl Y ¢ : red signifies hard At Hoon tomorow represchtatives]ihe Best public Wolley o Mistoms of g g | budget commissioner . cut $70,000,000 | to the purchase of prints. The original | YoTk Whist Club, is authority for the {04 signifies Lard nd valor : : on 4 oo ) —————— must be done to help the farmers.” |off of the estimate of needs for the |is not sold, but orders are taken for {tatement that mo revision of the|blue indicates v . Dperses of the anthracite operators and min- | this property and there is no other Faucation in HearOoal. Apparently, Mr. Slomp had et pot- | Navy, which Acting Secretary Roose: | duplicate etchings, lithographa and the | JaWs of auction is contemplated at | #nce and justice ers will meet Gov. Pinchot and render | place in which to keep it. The gov-| o T B BT (ten the “paychology slant” of the low o gy gt Al gt o e M s Dt g g e b g J eir L decislo = e proposals|ernment at Wa . comes . 2 vheat, the h tide 2 51 | s ack or screw, er the | effective “September 1. , have b - their decisions upon the proposals | ernment at Washington is in serious e | boll.weevil and the sl & SE the} o n ¥ of tHia brotheshcod of man: exhibit, and the names of those who |8IVEn complete satisfaction, . . : winter lot of coal is cut off, or pain umping of farm which he has advanced, furnishing the | need of new buildings. Tully reduced. we ahall mot lack for | 2108 everywhere.. All he knew * k% ¥ order are strung thereon, written onl ¢ y,y muchTmoney has the T A. The forest serviee says that Dadist for u niltiementitol SR y reduced, we came through actual observation, not| . slips of paper or in the form of visiting for po o uchmoney hiay the Rock=jtimber) that) cone ) after a for. sy “‘ : rament L e =7 Ao —— instruction in how to warm ourselves |through bankers and New. England| Senator Pepper of Pennsylvania|cards Obviously as these increase | ¢feller Foundation spent Y has been cut awd A Kol e fs.;dwmble A Cuban Reform Movement. with substitutes. It s an cducational | [AW¥ers, He-had not yet begun his|announces that he favors the uncon- | further purchascs are encouruged With A From May 22, 1913, to Decem- |growth. et .":“.“‘N“",’.‘{ ..“.:‘Al‘::::_m ”,':m‘r“. Anxiety lest Cuba was in the first | course to which hard coal users do |terances. ng” presidential ut-|ditional pardon of twenty-two of the | St i B8 With, othet, Lhibes. we are e L e e S T;,* ]'“ bk = S " T¢|stage of another uprising, caused by | not look with pleasure. Many persons * k x ¥ thirty-four remaining prisoners in{and because a thing i much desired, it A The largest item, $22.298.541, | Caruso’s memory to “cont esda B AR Seculing i 3 6 Zede anitentiaxies > are.] vke e more des e was for war wo, vering Y *{ously o I3 s e ly. sgelosic ‘" utiar i | the announcement of a curtailment of | will, perhaps, decline to enter for the | Thousands of acres of undeveloped Ee penftentiaries qwho careiSECt S Che L Al BT an | A Bt e ot an s e e | or DOt cumstinees of the siaton. IS PRAC | ihe cable service, amounting to tem- | course, and if the worst comes to|land in California and Colorado will there for attempting to defeat the { epyyin purchases (paintings) are made | £are. Y. W. C. A. and other camp and | meinore of tomeios oy tically o first working day after | oo o concorghip, proves to have | worst will shovel soft coal or pour | D€ OPen to settlement by veterans of | S*USC Of the American expeditionary fevery vear for the clty’s international { community welfare, medical researeh{once o year and b 150 the expiration of the present contract. | ooy “ynwarranted by the facts. A |into the furnace scuttics of coke with | 1 WOrld war next month. The ver- | 5ee® I the world war. collection, und these purchases, it would | afid relief und humanitarian aid, in-{four hours ; T e e e ) - Afinto the furnace scutties of coke with | 2 . He Insists that the men should be | €M, have been made with the utmost | CIUding the American and - s 7 Ahe Off for part Of Gath Sasurdiy. o proposed demonstration of veterans | maledictions on the heads of strikers {ST4NS are given the rare privilege of | given “unconditional” pardons—not | ¥154om and discretion, for the collec- | tional Red Cross 1 A & O for part of cach Saturda, they | i “gocor of certain reforms in the {and others. But the cducators in the | CTEANE farms. needing every sort of | pardons on - condition " that they fon deione of the Destiu exintinceiand || @ Wiliat was Booker T Washing L w. W never work on Sunday. and Menday | oo U B TR0 be & peace. | use of substitutes mean swoll. They |\MBrovement before becoming farme, | Pledge no more to piay truitor to the 12 Ut FePICeeRcH Rereln Asfa MR tiaNd ol D ifitiine o watll (1o se 10T tha in music is Labor day. Hence, Tuesday morn- | 1 uouie dignitied and warmly to be | plan to i vid T | miaee ot he e e Ao ot et e sty oVl e word *negro”?—J. T. H, 5 dl pentetonic or five-tone. = eIl el neheeht e > p . 1 plan to ‘“inaugurate a widespreac sts of the Department of Axricul- |4nd patriotio- upholding of the Amer- * ok > S n LLtonic dr e tons sop v will b the veal besinning of @ | welconed by those who desire the ad- | campaign of education to teach the [TUT6 frankly say that what farming |lcen armies tacing the nations eiie-| A vear ago, when the latest of these s mene it s pEastice tonwr e e e o i b e B o | vancement of the island republic to- { public how to use hard coal substi- HAce ot exsanatan | R L e e ADDEXINg | piennial exhibitions was held, the |48 N€SToes, and when using the term |#firs and picture of ur <. Lok, MM ward stability and sound administra- | tutes,” and the United States bureau | .0 5 sistent with the theory on which | United States was practically the only [ pio8i2" 85 & race deslgnation he em-| o (o, =70 : S ilits overnora booposils ArelTonni| on : of minas, it is said, will “send engi- || (NS NOHE Of the wild geese travel- | phraon s resommended. The men|civilizea western nation unrepresented, S in churches?$. M, €. o0 Provid e A spobnosdls axe: d The reforms demanded by the vet-|neers to various muaities ToTnect rd proves that the birdy(UEht gl iLand 1M and to American travelers this was a |, @ HOW many comic strips.are pub- Up until t o d in number, as follows: An eight- have heard of the coming coal strike | Spore» 2 terRative without “ifs" and tished in this country?—F. J. W. Dan AL Do of Boin T o L e . With over. | €TaNS, Who were joined by numbers | dealers. consumers and civil officials | and the early winter, and are taking| 2B s o sndsowics COires et [ 0 Vi B e it il o o 4 hour day for ] iibloves, With Vel Jof women of high standing and ad-land offer expert advice on the use of | no chances. “Safety first!” bl e e e emvegian I diant 200 such featurcs Ovor 90| on fi5or Renbens: fmers “H.( ’.m. m. x A‘“{. ]“m ...rv"'“"““‘ Intelligence, refer to many |substitutes” Soft ccal men and fuel 5 T:)' a loyal citizen, what are the |hibitions is great stumbling block | PET_cent of the newspapers of {provided with short tae 1os e o of | MALters. One is the abolition of the foil men are making ready with the| Senator Kenneth McKellr, now LM enT, Ghutes in s coromilae; to 0 CRETAIE I sme Wb liainies e ReCEY Ay e ol ISt ona e e i 7 ““‘""\’\_:” o | state lottery. Another is the budget- | best of motives to teach hard coal | traveling in Europe, is urging that ""“““," 1oy Folione o Ak el ok i araportation “mounts | o @, Did Mrs. Stowe make a fortune |pews or “pues.” fhe ion by the opirators. WIROU | ing of pensions instead of financing | nabitues how to get on without hard | the United States buy a palace from T of alleglance what are the jup tremendously. to say nothin L v aa | % e e eome | them out of lottery proceeds. Freedom | coal. Notwithstanding all this, the |the German government in which to Z'::,("“",;:“ i »“mp,h[ el - e | the SR b e A St to e & reDIUSENItive Dresent Lof prosecuting officers from legisla- | slogan of millions of people In the {Iouse not only the American em- ol 0y, old In his unex- | o esentation, ‘to, afford. the luxury. | Cabin> and for the stage rights she| A. The controller ; B i ot e e of mollew, | tive and executive Interference is{anthraciteburning states and the RASSY. Uit el dthet Amerlcan ofices|iior s i orican Tiogion aders o i bl has o il ol e ot lon NICE 5 o semarasd ool farTnk o dad 8He says thats the ccognition of o principle of collec S = ) o 0! s available fo s i e. | been va he presen v st e e ol ' ¢l asked, also removal of public officers | District of Columbia is *Hard coal and | "% i"“ red over Berlin. Palaces|under the impression that ecvery |The ?)e;:;un‘:—;;‘:?l(,'orr:;hlo?vr purpose. | basis her earnings from ’f!.tr»o'm]:::- R SRR Fashinz-" o s from membership in electoral boards. | not substitutes.” may be bought for a song, or lees. | slackening of the measure of culpae | chambers of commerce of the United |#lone would have been about $2,000.- | ton, South Dakots, Alicics i Recognition of the union is. in point {my o oterans and women would limit They might even be paid for in Ger. [Dllity of the criminal sleckers and | States concern themselves with so-call- | (00, She dicd in vers moderate cir- | Nort At : of fact, rather a form than otherwise, S . —_————————— man marks, or. still better, paid for [8ctive traitors is at the expense of |ed “marketable wares,” but art up to|Cumstances. 3 o it e anthiacitel Aatdiie { congressional immunity to arrest and{ Science continues to instruct the|by crediting the price on the unpuid‘pflbuhfl‘ or official appreciation of the | the present time has not been put in{ o <oy Q. Did Russia serve in this case, s the anthracite field 15 |1 oqocytion to offenses committed dur- | world in the traces of ancient civi- | ACC0UNt dUC the United States for the | MEFLt of patriotism as manifested by | (his catogory. Vet in many respects it | oo oiay 'u the fechnical name for | uiynds when . selling . Alacka To - Boen dnting divectis asith anton vep. | i€ the discharge of legislative duty: |jizations. History repeats itself, and What is said of buying an embassy I e e i) A The Jusitice of eating some|P7 20 StASSIW, sl ¥ I would limit imported labor to 25 per jent tomb may offer, here and | bullding in Germany would Dl " y abroad than to have our ordinary man- |Kind of earthly matter, suci lay |, A: She did not. There Is a dir resentatives in wage disputes for a| an anclent tomb may offer, herc and g many “PDIY | A letter to President Coolidge from | 4! o 3 an= | kind of iearthly matter, sich aw clay |y pre (0 ROt here ls a i B e e e vyl Cont of those employed: protest the | there, a suggestion that Will throw | acher Furapenn souroes, ‘whoce ral | the officlal spokesman of e | catepmae o ey Wi DRI R Swae s e R e on i R RS T ohieiil ai B At Gity cuns proposed increase of the congressional | jight on the more pressing problems | United stutes 1 itie beaes o leen Logton, dohn Thomas Tasler Bttt e o - ,g = vhich belong to the United Stat. 4 At y e s e e G e | Eentad) Guirtirs Thrent Eianesulsi o = interests, but on common ideals. 1f we s King George related to g ference. The check-off had been prac- | (8 10 0 S ey 5 : of the present. A mummy should be TN 00 WIRECHS: | AFeN't Buropeanvice chalrman national legislative ;. (o “command the respect of the|Queen Mary other than by marriages| Q- What is the WD tically nuilified as an issue by the ..o e presidential term to one | required, if possible, to lead a little in S committee, says world it must be through our achieve- | —F- D. A. The teleview is a . ; Sy ; 2 {year: ask abolition of all amnesty |thought as well as in fashion. “Because the average American has | menis not only in the fleld of science| A. Queen Mary is the = 1 | which to ures t abandonment of 1 m{n._\' che knfl;:m“.\l ot ity it o Secrctary Mellon of the Treasury is | been deceived regarding the {ssues | and industry, but of art, literature and | cousin once removed of King George, |Same illusion of dey . . practices proposed by the miners and | -2 U = = AT disposed to add his influence to the |involved, through the propaganda of | music. — S jpressive and no less 3 granted by the operstors. Thus the | SUfffage for women, giving them the | 1 j5 seldom that the uitimate con-| program of Congress—or certatn con. | 2P0IoBists and advocates of pacifism, | The American Federation of Arts,| Q. What Is the exact wording of {{0 still phiotographs b - S tter that | SAMe right to vote and be voted for as { ¢ ner clearly understands the precise ' ess certain con-lan intelligent public opinion has | representing the national art interests, | the President's oath as formally de- |ioned stereoscop wage inerease is the only matter that | S EEL 9 TS S € lerstands the gressional committees—to urge a|never been aroused in protest against | bas appointed a committee to tuke this { manded by the Constitution? | has been, in effcet. proposed by the | o i details of controversies in which he | building program for the offices of | the ‘amnesty’ for these traitors who | Matter under consideration and if pos-; A. “I do solemnly swear (or affir (Have wou a Fovernor . to meet. the situation. A 10| This is @ program for which there | 1iicipates only on @ mental arfguish | the government in Washington ana|“ltgMPted o stab our country in the | #ible arrange through the raising of a|that I will faithfully execute the | answered? Semd S s 2 { will be very general agreement in this | oo T¢ i but recently that the aver- | elsewh 4} hack when we were at grips with the | special fund, for the purpose, for Amer- | office of President of the United | Jormation bureas. Jreds er cent horizontal increase s by N0l o ovond g warm sympathy. The | oo e ) v tha aver-) elsewhere in this country. Rent is|enemy. ® * ¢ These traitors,.and |ican representation at the néxt biennial | States, and will to the best of iny | director, 1220 North Capitol sireet asavat e o ] ¥, and : g age citizen has clearly understood |keeping Uncle Sam poor. Some day | the initiuted of their intercessors,in Venice. ability protect and defend the Con-| Give your full name and address is more than the operators have been { demands furnish, indeed, as by & cross- { who+ the check-off system is. a fire, destroving priceless public rec- | N2Ve a8 their object the overthrow | * k¥ ¥ stitution of the United States.” that the information may be sent di. 'S section view of Cuban affairs, a clear ords, will make Uncle Sam sorry, as of our Constitution, which they pr i The Roman exhibition comes ecarlier = — rect. Inclose 2 cents stamps fo willige: {0 conced: { conception of the present state of af- e well’ as poor, because he postponed|ond to defend. The legion 'has |, . vear openin Ty Novemb. S Whoiwap Hes Japinessito} retion ogtuge) } One feature of the Pinchot-proposal | ¢/t Mo . : There is no agricultural satisfaction | the ercction of a safe archives bulld- | gontrd5d (hls continually, “and has| ® T ¥55 onchng carly du) Novemites that Interests the publie seeatly g | f4irs. demanding reform. I retine that I Eurape - dollar | M. The Tent man will et s, 1 we | Anally’ had it affirmed by ‘the re-|and continuing until the end of April s urgent susgestion the wages : 2 th o o Y : < to accep Ixecutive : T e i the eomtoo | been of a strictly political nature. The |y i) ! *x o % ommutation of sentence tendered | {iablished. but is to be held. like the echoslovakia S tta(' \lllg prin present agitation is a construetive ef- g A New York philanthropist has| 145t June because the conditions re- | Yeneion cxhibition er the patron- ’ mining should not be pussed on the way | e ; ey hecome law-abi age of the municipality and 'in the * e 10N LR s 1 (e W4 Lot to secure a better government, {given $100.000 to the Boy Scouts to| Miigens quring the ‘!‘,,‘;i“fi“”?“""h‘;‘lf_!!'amzm di Belli Artes. Those in au- | 1tles an I and P . A% D O cent wse advance, |Tegardless of politica. The United German marks are among the for-| elevate their taste in fiction, so they unexpired sentences. ‘;_3"‘;!“' \hf]n'r* appointed Prof. Frederick | OI)CI A} proposes a 10 per cent wage advance, | g S Foe e deeply interested. | €18n publications that have a large cir- | will eschew the “dime novel"—what-| “S0. by ‘their own actions, these | 1o TICOS, SCulntor, of New Xork. who | 2 ¥ which is to be absorbed by the-oper- | 0 d 1Bion bt mofnfiucncs S ihabib iaitti das enemles of our country have proved | .ong Ies 2 e can bish contns: ] ; It will closely watch proceedings. It | culation but n : jever that is, in this day and genera- : o { sioner, and on his recommendation have | gy HE 5 S ator, the distributor and the retailer ¥ 8! [ ios: e e hen the “dime | s bertenotpireedom from prison|yamed various other distinguished | BY, THE MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. | indebted to for 3 e & will keep its representative on the tion. as when the “dime|walls which they and their friends | L - L . S| 3 3 e Sl e Eover in the course of the “spread” between i R E e ey and riends | American artists to serve with him as| Brof. Masaryk, w! o | the tune of $600.000,900, on = 3 e PELWEEN | sround. In the matter of the rail- SHOOTING STARS {dreadful” was recognized as the great | desire for them. but rather Execu-|aesistant commissioners in the va- | United States Wlien heivisited the. \rifoh iu owiag o ik 2 the ine and the ultimate purchaser. | &o00 0 TH FEEED € CA el 2 demoralizer of soclety. but that was|five, PiRmissjon for, freedom to con- | rious departments—sculpture, Painting, | oo wory bores,quring the great war, | Treasury. Much m . Sihos G Pt e - yrpeseed, ; g PRt 2 e battle to overthrow A hle et el i "1 to win over its government to the| borrowed here ol how Gov. ineot proposes 1015 own way, after determining e prior to jasc and movies Just how | present form of government by the |EADNS S SLC. o (y e matter of |Idea of restoring to Bohemia her | Sources, and atl e i tals wage advance, with | whether American rights have been | — not been explained, unless the plan iv| to stab our counirs in the back shoaia | ¥4)S and means. ~Obviously represen- | medieval national sovereignty on | 211 the time to Hoat C mleted in_ this wage advance. with | (L% Cl Ol e by ungunt tegis oy iirar jlo pension really good writers of | another emergency arise. s | tation of the right sort in Rome would | SIS0 TCTEL VAT, o loans here for the development of t the additional toll that a wage in-j . bt e highly moral fiction 3 »e_extremely valuable, but it is im- | g . il rvelous resources and of t ™ Jation. It will not take a hand in the | Every vear the snowflakes flutter. PR rtant the ot ire, whi e dustrics of what was form e e e e ol 1 g portant that such représentation should | Pire, which, it was already then fore- i hat was forme Sl the product 15| present veterans' movement, but at | then the violets appeal el | Brig. Gen. Mines announces that|be fAllly complete and should be ex- | seen, would inevitably follow tne vie- | Wi it Americns will noc moved wlong Lo ihe Consumer. I fleast, so far as public sentiment in this | Roses later on. and beans and cab.| Mowever here is @ greater move- py next vear he hopes to have ] i B tory of the entente powers, made an [ longer when (hey realize that proi? oL it e i A ‘T_ L to this ef. | country goes. it will hope for the suc- bage will draw near: . e ef“‘“ ‘-F‘ “‘;““_ Y | pital capacity “open to all veterans,| _ excellent impression everywhere on|erty is ure in hoslovah 5 e s Ssmrl s Hot waves and mosauitocs till the | (e Brotherhood of Man Foundation. | rogariess of what their disabilitles | FOF *0me Years America hus main- | this side of the Atiantic. Indeed, it and at s of a cot, which he will later d et it e e whoso president is Miss Katherine A. | ;iinvets Uue that “the real prop. |tained an academy of art in Rome|was the popular sympathy which ho| hun adent o’ comc oi : There 1 £ time £ as- | R R Giles. Now Miss Giles might easil Prob-{ hich ha & adopted som here is plenty of time for it, inas- N G e R | e { Miss L ght easlly | 1o, confronting the Veterans' Bureau | ¥ 1ich has won for itself by its ad-|aroused here, in behalf of the cause | rannical, despotic a much as the immediate business in | = B > be a “sister” to the entire brother- , mirable management and worthy ac- | w| . at led Presi- | 048 of communism, . L st her- | s the finding of employment for re- | ! 3 ¥ which he had at heart, that led Presi- | °d5 of co! ist . hand is to insure the continued min- does ed upon 104 pyery vear the gentle promise of new |N00d. but she has not vet explained | habilitated soldiers.” {complishments an enviable standing|dent Wilson and his fellow delegates | comprise tots 5, ing: bt coal | express opinions on m:uem to which Babbinens e Tibar how she can be a “brother” to them' (Copyright, 1923, by Paul V. Collins.) !¥‘h""° esteem of the people of Rome. | at the congress of Versaflles to com- | t¥len. cag Bar: B " % - s . he has not had time td glve full inti- & {This, as many know, is not a school.| . 5 : & compensatios o sy t A ray of hope appears in the situa- (e bas 1ot had time 10 Bive £ Ith | Then a threat of discontent will hover {Dut rather. like the Prix de Rome of |Mit their nation to the acknowledg- | Compensation fn order to satisfy tion. 1In the dispatches from Harris- | ™ ; in the atmosphere: 2 | France, & place where those who have | ment of the independence of Presi-| popaiation thim S hurg it is stated that both the union | Cmplete accord with one of the ad- | g noiinies the world is hopeful and l S ttl d ‘; h M k passed through the preliminary stu-|dent Masaryk's native land, which, in- | great manufacturing ! representatives and the operatc { ministration’s most important policies. { sometimes it Stops to sneer n e e aSO lle al’ et ldo'l‘n ';{nbfxp cla,:,rr)uogrh L;fi!‘?‘;:féfi “:vt& »‘l?‘ad ok{‘ sll)'ling itself Greater Bohe- | (‘:hx'n al and‘indzuu al ent [ e e pmm o i R0t : = A L L s and | mia, which would have recalled the | merican capital I surprised by the govern proposals. | == h Every year. - - li;:s‘t*" n?'?!}f.—lgfit"fldh’.fifli‘: kmlmllo Elories of its old-time history. when | vested should not become the the former being disappointed over| In reminding the operators and i a ontinue a Ne Time | 5w ot ang madem art jo) & 'took wo leading a part in-the ar- | 3, stic laws for the bene the concessions and the latter agitated | miners that public interest demands | We talk about the taxes and about L=l lories of Italy and adjacent countries, | UStic and scientific movements of the | °fthe non s SRR by the recommendation for a wage | that this controversy shall be settled, light wines and beer, in was founded largely through the |4£6 and in the progress of eiviliza-| 07 W0 S0GT over - A % 4 o B 7 S s inspiration of the late Charles F. Me- |t} SR e el ownershi increase. From mutual chagrin to}Gov. Pinchot awakens the hope that {And the way that women dress We| wyon tne Governor of South Da-|hand, the Rochester Times-Union is [Kim, architect of some of ‘our mo- | $.18 O CEECOyOVARIa, WRICH WS & | o i e b tion®thial b ithe! e sat. | the ultimate consumer is at last to vow is getting still more queer: _ ks Cew Y- 3 |blest modern buildings and a me: Hexcingey sound. (o Americangcazs, LIy realization that with neither side sat y Kota, by a stroke of his pen, ordered | convinced, arguing New York “should | uildings and @ member | Jus "Gyree, the republic was pro-jto the st isfied each can afford to accept a com- | have a share of consideration. We declare that what we buy is most |2 cut of 10 cents a gallon in tho price | Hoy, "¢, IRANCIUE the Standard Oil's ;’\'h')"";;P\f!fi;‘l‘)““;;p roark ) Cemmission. | claimed at Prague with Prof. Fhomas |and those er - { e : ght in South Dakota or anywhere |% e revised Washington sk S Bevaaty ceive, at the same promise to avoid a conflict with the | - unreasonably dear, of gasoline he precipitated a situation | ciac. The consumers in Now "furs |plan. The beneficence of its infiuence | Masaryl now in his seventy-third | 200 GG, 1Y public interest is but a short step. By | It would be a desirable thing to|Every year. that bids fair to last for a long time |State should begin to get some tangi- has been fully demonstrated by the|” i O Sl b a6 S ¢ s 4 o tangi- Luceessful _achievemen uch fel- ose who have noon tomorrow the ‘compelling factor | have the government of China suf- Bl alug ) the h=iuie) a0l tan=s! with l!u come. This break in prices caused | tho pr:‘c“:g;-cr&l;c:.n:’ the reduction in [FCCSSSEY C1ders as Paul )';an;h;n crol e e R ;y:“i‘?“’\‘\ n“_m” o of that public interest may bring | ficiently stabilized to provide a reliable | vareing words 10 charm the ear, | auotations to_tumble in a haphazard | “The price of Easoline is controlled Baul Jenneweln, Sherry Fry, E2ra| b, a sort of godchild of Unele|the three morganatic children of about acceptance. |address to which demands for the), Ve PO O CIIR DIE S Imanner throughout the country, and by & sort of oben-price association, S A L I T et promoted by |murdered Archduke Francls Fer e sami e v s to a 4 ominate y a single group,” the Sl - exis Sam, was T pro ¥ |nand, whose ussassinat t Sa proper protection of foreign residents ETNle ot D e thar: brought forth lengthy explanations|N.w York World insists, and the Mil. {ahd the prominence of our American | the agreeable and clever people whom 1914, pree 1 i Statistics are produced to show that Tlinois paid fifteen millions of dollars may be addressed. ———————— One interesting phase of the prob- Yes, we like this old world better with its sorrowing or cheer, concerning the cause. Supply and de- mand were declared to cut little figure in the price. The enormous oil waukee Journal recalls that “inde pendents struggling in the overflow of crude met recently and considered cutting the price of gasoline to stim- Academy in Rome it is the more im- portant that any exhibition of Ameri- can art to be held in Rome shall be of the highest type of merit. it sent from Prague to Washington to represent it in diplomatic capacity The favor of foreign countries for it w v stipulated by wige that the children of t archduke's morganatic marriaze for medicinal whisky in 1922. This Evory 5 o = does mot settle any question as to|lem of distribution is the scattering L 4 praduction 1 C‘Z::.T:hc::;r:‘:e‘;:: IR apeuitlon —aud) then tonie * Kk x ! Czechoslovakia was vet further de-|eXcluded from the fmperial whether the people of Tilinois are es- | ©f responsibilities among operators, Personal Testimonial. S hve = duty In regulating | Use. Easoline “is placed In the sumio | Americin ‘“““';"5' sculptors, axchi-} veluped D% he TSR 50 the)indeed nothins but mere nobis BRI ey e ey miners, carrler: o £ - category with coal,” the vs | tects, writers and musicians are in- | various capitals of Europe by Dr. ave no, 1o eve e n pecially sickly or gifted with peculiar. | iners, e :‘;‘:;enz::l ":’;’Jg‘wfi‘;"h;:: You say you are proud of YOUT |the oll industry by creating & new bu- | hoids, and “before the REItation quics |vited by France to take part in the|Benes. the Czechoslovakian minister g S e G SRR, 1y robust constitutions. ! o constituents?” reau and a whole lot of new jobs. Ed- |down the public of the entire coun- |wcontests of art” announced in con- of foreign affairs, a remarkably able| country seat in Bohemia wher: (b —_———— to pay for coal. “I am,” replied Senator Sorghum. itors generally, however, believe that try will expect to be informed of the salient facts determining the price nection with the eighth Olympaid to statesman, possessed of singular pow- ers of persuasion. &pent their childhood, and upor their murdered par S spent so Both drugs and machines are an- = S i “I am proud of their perspicacity and | the price must now be kept down and | of gasoline.” be held in Paris May 15 to July 27,| The friendship which President | o i bequticying alfke o w v hounced which show when people do| NeW York’s Auxiliary Police. |courage. When they sec a good man |that the Department of Justice must el 1oz, Tnis is an fnnovation and s ;}Lfi“'J;kwi".?"b,}’{;..»x‘z“l‘,ii- Jave man- | drfully pleturesgue chatoin Gnd Pot 11l the truth. Next summer. when | Ot of the mystery of the motives |like myself, they are not afrald to |prosecute should te be shown that the | Ty oniy posible result of the|Phasise the VAIe of achievement in | their country” is not' likely to’ last|{roitur E Uihtainen 1 s L. campaign orators point with pride and | for the slaying of a gang leader by | elect him to office.” larger companies are deliberately |jgsning of prices, as the New York |intellectual and artistic = flelds, as|very long It the sinele chamber par- palace, have been conflscated view with alurm, will be a good time |the juvenile member of a rival gang o g g Sonthe all iCanl sees it, will be the “climination | works. I oL et e | pareue as accianistic, one might ars £ xx % to try them out. in New York city the other day comes | Jud Tunkins says that by the time |/ OX0er (O (0ES CF of the independents,” to which the|upon by juries of artists and sports- | most say communistic, legislation| Another victim is the former I's one fact that the police have elicited | @ man can afford to be in politics he's | The long-drawn-out senatorial in-|Wilkes-Barre Record adds ‘*there is|Men, and must in each instance have z‘éigrrr‘m:‘r!ul toornru‘r»vn;‘r((_.‘. =u‘-§lciqu:}‘l‘¢[~ John of Schwarzenberg, who v ——— A number of controversies never come to a settlement. One of them re- lates to the question of which town has the b ball team. —— e ‘which has an interesting bearing upon industrial conditions in the big town. It seems that the Droppers, which was the name of the organization headed by the dead man, had built up a prosperous business in furnishing liable to be so rich everybody will be down on him for a plutocrat. Hard Calculation. “How many hours a day ought a man to work?” answered Cactus Joe vestigation, “whioh got nowhere,” is cited by the Cleveland Plain Dealer as a real reason against congressional action, and suggests that “if a Stand- ard Oll Company can authorize a cut of 10 cents a gallon and still cover costs of production there can no longer be any doubt as to the prin- ciple which actually determines the no assurance that the present flare- up will result in permanent rellef for the users of gasoline,” and emphasizes that “no remedy has yet been found for combinations resulting from the common ownership of stock in vari- ous organizations ostensibly separat- sport as a subject. On the juries of literature, painting and _sculpture Americans are represented, Mrs. Edith Wharton being named on the first, Sargent and Walter Gay on the sec ond, MacMonnies and Andrew O'Con- nor on the third. Here again is evi- dence of & desire for International co- operation in the arts and gratifying Masaryk and Dr. Benes are the two most important and powerful mem- bers continues to enforce these stat- utes, which savor of bolshevism, with the brutality and ruthlessness which have been displayed by their officials. * kK kK It was all very well for the republi- likewise Duke of Krumau and 1 grave of Kleggau. When his of Wittigau, in Bohemia, way seiz he omitted to mention, in the tory; the mausoleum in whi members of his house for the years slecp their last sleep. fnve Ia He n Need for New Buildings. “I dunno,” B 5 protection to strikebreakers in the -5 T f its producis when competi- recognition of America's right to fel- s . ¥ : Col. Sherrill, officer in charge of | mumerous contests between the cloth. | “The fact that a man kin stay awake | fion Is lackink~ This likewise is the |ed by decree of the court. This phase |lowship in these fields. can parliament at Prague to cuact the urally assumed that, beins cor ie ildings a X from noon till five the next morning {opinion of the Springfleld Union, fof the question enters into the pres- R abolition of al tles of nobllity, to{ crated ground, it would be respect public buildirgs and grounds end act- | ing manufacturers and their workers. © | Which holds i€ the statements ent effort to supply gasoline at a rea- render their use penal and to deprive | But learning not long aso that il ing chairman of the Public Building The gunmen sometimes acted as in a poker game don't prevent him from goin®' to sleep in three-quarters Standard that it is “losing mone true, it means its cut was “designed sonable profit.” It should be remem- For some reason or other the value of art to a nation seems to be better the nobles of whatever civic and mili- tary prerogatives they had inherited mausoleum was on the verge of bein torn down, he made appeal t Commission, presents facts concerning | strikebreakers, sometimes as guards " hended abroad than here. Not- F z » . ”» titors out of the field.” |bered, however, the Pittsburgh Ga-|Ccomprehended abroa oz 4 ks an 0 5 = 4 ot Washi of an hour on a watchman’s job.’ o, axkve Sompe 4 & 5 " lthatanding the fact that the curren- | from long lines of ancestors. 1t was| . - neauss government housing at Washington | against the pickets. A rival gang, and by the New Orleans Times-|;qtte.Times says, that “It is not in :;e,h'o(' France and Ttaly are tremen-[all very well for the parliament at :r’lf\‘f'{;“' a’:;]‘r;_f‘ Sasevermmant o which ought to impress Congress with the Little Augies, had likewise gone ‘The Grand Inconsistency. Picayune, which feels “the reported readiness of oil companies to meet the the public interest ever to have com- dously reduced and that both coun- for | Prague to enact laws providing the seizure of the crown lands of the t the remains of his forbear the danger of postponing the erec-|into the strike game, but on the other tries are facing a serious financial > 'obod; ' I fixed for South kota, owned | modity prices so reduced that som ries . | sacrilegous disturban. But he tion of suitable buildings at the Capi-|side, supplying men for a price to w‘Nn e g e gl Sippiics in that atate will Rot 80 Un- | factors will grow stronger at the ex. | SLUBHOR: they ate doing all they | o s o excuse Tor confiscating | received a reply to the effect that it tal for the conduct of national busi-|protect the strikers. But the Drop- A Ntiadiatieraatina Bl Dpense of the ruin of others. It seems | the cultivation of both the fine and |the private property of the members| Wis foo late ‘to interfire, since b ness. The condition is known to,all | pers, not satisfied with one slice of "l‘l“"”l“"mw”me G ued:'“ nok S {hat is to be the result of the ‘gaso- | industrial Srts and they are doing | of the Tormer relguing family In Bo- | 1a3 CRILIeT 10, e CLIe LiS Mo etony: 1. claim sure of pral - rice war.’"” ue, but as a lemia—] V. 4 er | =, S ” i s i i government_officials and_other em. | the labor-trouble melon, took two, | 44, & measure of praise for dis| The whols brines the question of |lg PrUES AR Ly bispatch thinks | St Srekt momment. 8 | es ‘and Hrincesses of the house | Prince Schwarzenbers's treatment. in ployes, to the public of Washington, | That is, they bid in for business on | ©*Vérin8 ne S “stabilization” once again Very |usonsumers. of gasoline are perfectly | At Monza, in ltaly, this summer, the [ which so long exereised sovercign | (S respect 8 no. polaied i and the facts are plain to thousands . strongly " to the front, as the Des|willing for those who fnake and han- | Italians are holding a great interna- (sway over the dual empire, and, in | R0PETR, 8 BOT0E G A0 BRet 107 of persons not of Washington, but who have business with the “federal the strikers’ side as well, encroaching upon the preserves of the Little Augies. It thus happened that at Desperation. “Can’t you get any coal Moines Register sees the situation, and it wonders whether “the country wants to adopt the policy of stabili- dle this indispensable 'fuel to get a fair profit, but they'get restive under the belief that the big gas companies are charging an exorbitant figure for tional exhibition of industrial art, with the object of stimulating na- tional pride and production and of showing to the people of Italy and particular, the young widowed em- press and her young children, to be- come objects of charity of a neutral monarch, such as the chivalrous King nates have been subjected to simil ruthless treatment With regard to th. v tombs and vaults and mausoleums of offices. times the Droppers had men on both 5 - S T oich | their ancestors. 1t looks as If the ‘Have ou tried eve: Pos:! t only for ofl and steel but |their products. Gasoline is now al-|those who come from eisewhere the of Spain, despite engagements whic t 1B Col. Sherrill says that the commis. | sides of a fight, but being, of course, iy Y DosEbe o R ingar It It 1s good and |most 3 Indispensable s bread and | best that is being done by other coun- | had been made with regard to heri Sutiors of (heie prodairs L wnd slon has “practically exhausted all | well known to one another, they took | © o, oF. oENe Putter and the prices oharged for it | tries as well as their own. In France, | private property. There is even still { those intrusted with thelr enforce- sl 2 itadi “All but one. I'm goin right for steel and oll it is good and L o b . o 16 for % | Tess excuse for the confiscation of | ment are imbued with a holshevist Al going to sit | rig should be § s reasonable.” Be- |likewlse, plans are being mas s [ good care never to hurt their own cause the Standard took a cut of 6.6, | great industrial art exhibition to be| the ancestral. lands of the former|determination not only to despoil the possibilities in the District of Colum- down tonight and write a letter to right for agriculture, and cannot be Teh nobles of Bohemia, on the plea that| noble and the landowner of his proy B v ildi . - B fact ‘while the independent; 1 it|held in Paris in 1925. Evidently the bia for space in government l-mndmxn membell;a ina !c::; 1;:;: Little Augies Santa Claus.” nuzu.kel?owfl::he-xgnr ltm:::t“:mt:ycdl?:; , the Lounls‘yille '}“h:l - tyee’;‘:d“e(he d:temflnnfi;: is to excell in lheymv- no one shall own more than a few|erty and of hiz wealth, but even of and s at a Joss low, furthen to pro.} naturally resented ‘this nvasion: of ot O tition enforeing It ‘where |latter cannot stand the strain of deep | ter of design in art products and to | hundred acres and that all the re-|the aucestral traditious that thocs Tutting. The Seandard oan stand it | seo o it that in this particular Ger |mmainder of an estate shall be confis- | have inherited. That is the only un- ceed.” It has reached the point where it cannot provide space for. bureaus and departments that are de: their particular fleld of operations and declared war. Thus the guards became involved in a feud of their l 1 “Hope foh de best,” said Uncle Eben, “but don’t take every hope foh a hunch en’ bet on it.” necessary, or to go to stabilization. That is what this generation seems to be here to find out” Other state coxecutives, however, ought to take a Ile.n'nr the little .:ollow- e\n:‘ i many shall not again assume suprem- 35 ioss Tarsignteas o O cated, without compensation, for the benefit ofsthe state. The republic is derlying aim that can be found for this shameful destruction .of: famil, graves, L AN ]

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