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THE EVENING ST WASHENGTON, D. C., MONDAY, DECEMBER 24, 11923, THE EVENING STAR/|near a sretty park or a cabin in the | body of our citizens have always been With Sunday Morning Edition, | Pines. 1s all the samie to Santa Ciaus. | engaged in it, and many of these real WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS EAST IS EAST ANSWERS TO QUEST]ONS How he keeps in mind so many chil- | estate dealers have been leaders who BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. BY FRANK H. HEDGES BY FREDERIC J. RASKIN WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY .December 24, dren, how he can remember so many | have subdivided farms and tracts that names and faces and how he can |could not be tilled, and have bulit up know the inmost Christmas wishes of | theseé lands to become large and splen- " Editoy | 5C_Many little people is one of the | did sections of the cit .. * | Charles Evans Hughes is 00 %00d,pected guiss of a valiant defender| Romance and pathos cling about things we do not understand. Of course, the city would have |, lawyer to make grave charges|of the republican majority. Benator|the glender figure of Hsuan Tung, We ave surrounded with things we | rown, but its growth has been stimu- | agay ithout know- | PAt Harrlson, ‘eloquént omclal scold against soviet Russia without know-| (0%, Wa 0 /oot iie minority, had been | YOUNE boy emperor of China. He is know to be true, but are unable to|lated and directed by men who have |ing whereof he speaks. The sur-'lcmm"‘ the republicans n’,’; their do- | the llving symbol of a day that has| " n " is to tax|Ri 5 Merstand. There is mystery in|taken raw land, and often idle land, |tary of State will be found “loaded for ( nothing record during the first three | vanished. The little court that cen- |, o " i "“"“. SO W ule Sunday. Enropens 6 Limdon,Ensland. | every rock and pebble, in every plece | covered it with houses and gardens, |bdar. when the Senate committeo on | Weeks of the session, = Brookhart|iers about him Ineide the purple| i g, " Lk PReumatic tires accord- e Bvosing Sunday morning | 9 MOSS. in every flower and every old [and by advertising and other ways of | forelgn relations puts him in the wit- [ 37292, ¥, FiENteous protest; He Ob-lwally of the Forbidden City in the P Ay 5 el Eveaing 7 i Wit 8 pine tree. Wise men have invented |salesmanship have persuaded people |ness box.. Undoubledly Hughes has|moll and dissent” he hadm't noticed [heart of Peking is all.that remaing ;‘n:;""l;r;"‘m‘u:‘n“ + | names for all the parts of these things | Lo buy houses and set up homes. |Plenty of heavy artillery in reserve. | any rticularly constructive e of the majesty, grandeur and im- 2 5 thusiasm from the democratic side. v Shote Main 2000, Collection is made by ear- rtain changes which we | Washington's real estate men have |That he has the unflagging support of |/ Ciihat: ‘declured that despite “thig | POT!al power that captivated and riers at the end of each month. THEODORE W. NOYES. . Q. What provision, if any, has been week, Correct §; made by Maryland for electrie cars?|America wee! T I5e Prevention day Make-Your-w{ y, ke b i 3 day, Eafe! day . Mother's day, Fathers s, jv(;ul:;eu ech week, Sweden- Q. How many Amert, re t in Constantinopler—ar. 5~ ©¢ there horsepower; and_those with solld| A" myig bureay of forel tires akcording to’tonnage—$20 & ton. | micstic commercs snys imes ] 90 oW about 8,000 Americans fewiding Q. What fs meant by the ethical| D Constantiople; know they undergo, but how and why | been Important factors in the Capital, | President Coolidge goes without say- | crowd's” clamor about farm relief,| Won the respectful admiration of |dative?—D. A. @ SHow s BT e & of the business nr (m_ = < ] vinging | !n€: At the White House, at the end | tax reduction and other issues, no|Marco Polo in other days. Those| A. This is a colloquial use of &|the Unit, S L He Rate by Mail—~Payable in Advance. sl be cannot 5 understeod {not merely as beokers :,“~h‘1:“ "8 |of last week, inquirers were informed, | “concrete propositions” emanated | who wrested the scepter from his|Drofioun to denote personal interest:|checkr oo o8 18 Carried on 1, e uniess one just believes. yuellere and buyers together. but as i (6Ll S e taunion, that the | (Fom them. Ugder the circumstances, | you ‘novas gloven years ago. deft | FOF €Xambie, Quid mini Celsus Agi— | gy o o, Puith k0é Sony ! ven if Santa Claus should nod or | bullders and developers of large dis- the Towa Sepator thought democratic How does my Celsus do? usell to the amouns or Lioiecks are H ty times 3 President “stands b; vhat he 1d,” 9 kim t . indecr would stop at Alex | tricts of the Capital they have, when | i~ e biunt reply to Tehitenerin. | " "85 ™ i llm: o orpitce ot} Tomuse BRpeEIal acoicen: et sis Q. Does th “Smitnfelt ham® | one. “erae) money in citeulation. They used to travel that way | they have done that work well, been | That means that Coolidge and Hu;he!' Aoy Genstal Tises At DRk ‘l\n ;:: dr:l{m‘n"}h:\ma \hv.hhlllgflc‘;:rr:l.::; md;"moe‘u bre“(‘gm. pmc": 2 "Tc S A 2,‘::‘:?' $400,000,000,000 wa all woods grew where Alex-|captains of industry and benefactors. [are convinced, offictal soviet denlals LA S Y St - ke the marbia pavement ,before |Place where the hog was raised?— = ) {andria is and when the only houses | SRS G to the contrary notwithstanding, that | ®'tY has found a Boswell. Some-|yim with their heads. A H.C. Q. Is it possible to imitats ? |in ch little Christian children lived | Christmas in the Arctic. | there is Daily only AL, nap the r Sunday o ST +20¢ andria. All Other States. Daily and Sunday.1 vr.. $10.00: 1 mo. Daily only....... MY ! when Moscow directed” and “con- | P04¥ named Kevin Moore, whom even | Despite the bellef of his princely| A. Smithfield when applied to a|f2Mous old violins so cleverly thai S y 3. mo, nel 1 1 experts are deceived?—F s! unday:iont =A3r. S0 A mo. Bel oo farther down the tiver., Whes ) & |tinued propaganda to overthrow the ";e‘ D,',"::’:fm ot 'T"l"l‘? u:’"r;‘" o L S R T L D lcr:;i:ue:[{'hdav"fnz:;";-:'n'wh:r:':s::é A. It has been nubrr '! that or Member of the Associated Press. | homes with big. wide chimneys were | | 1S8INE the stove in their tny |ingtitutions of this country.” OF Snvestiamion. eanust daeniity be shielded from an unworthy world. | by the Smithficld process. This proc- | Derts could tell the fine 0ld instr rhe Aswociated Preas s exelusively éntitled | Luilt at Belle Havi d s {hut “on the top of the world,” only P written & brochure on Daugherty. It|the events of the past two years|ess was first used by the people in|ments from their modern imitatinge 10 "the ‘e Forsepubiication. of A newa die, | UAIIE 2 1 en and aL Alexan-| o en’ degrees from the north pole, &| . ) \ir. | 15 @ ‘Danegyric pitched in a major [Bave partially broken down the bar- [the vicinity of Smithfield, Va. Prof. F. J. Koch, physicist and m: 19 Datches credited to it or not otherwiss or dria something like 230 years ago he |y, ik & il wo of the men upon whom Mr. |, o' 'spoarently, the booklet 1s one | Fior of secrecy and something of his| ., sician of Dresden, Germany, ls re % n this paper and alwo the losal news pub Ey g = | little group of American explorers will | j1uches relieh for guidance in Russian b the life and personality has become 5 ported to have duplicated’ wor lished herein. All rtights of publication of | ade & note of it on his travel sched { tomorrow recelve a message by radio o4 2 of a series entitled “History Makers|known to thousands of Americans| Q. Is the term “bar sinister” cor-|famous Stradivari violine so suecn 3 dispatches hereln arc also reserved. | ule. He made Christmas calls at| o ke o affairs are Evan E. Young. chief of| ,¢ Toqdy.”. A foreword by the author |and Europeans. It would be con- rectly applied to the bend sinister|fully that in recent tests a group of T === Alexandifa many. many years before | IO Fresident Coolidge, offering them | the eastern European division of the | state f this volume an atiémpt | dervative to may that he has gained|in heraldry?—G. 1 Italian musicians was unable to dis | Chiristmas greetings. There is some-|State Department, and Alfred W.|Is made to picture truth and hon- (thousends “of eympathetio friends Genealogists say that there fs | tinguish I 4 : esty as they exist and are related to |abroad, for to,the glamour thatsur- |no suc ng in heraldry as a bar | tones of h thing thrilling in the mental picture | Klleforth, assistant chief. Both of | {¥ {fiormdy “General of the United | rounds thia h-'r of the ages has been | sinister. There could not be, for the tween their tones and the instruments, Communist Party and Government. | hc came to Washington, though he ace of Moscow's denials of | Made @ yearly visit to the old farm. LB Che e oM N 8 O e 0, i d farm-§ e conjures up of these men. away | them are American consular officials of | tates. It Is not my privilege (o|added (he - peal of a young boy |reason that & bar erosses ihe field| Q@ I a woman served through the subversive propaganda in the United [ 1ous at were here before the ity | " oo in the long night of the | intimate experience in Russia. Young,| know personally the subject of this |striving to ‘ak through precedent | horizontally, covering one-thirg of | revolutionary war, was she but on Si o) - | came, i = S i v vi v discourse. Neither have I and fulfil’ iongings of youth. the space. If It crosses diagonally it |the pension roll?—J. H. tates, and of the statements by i Aretic winter, “listening in” for the |® native of Ohlo. was in the Army In L b o i e ey long | Arctic winter, “listening e ! sically this man who is a * & Is a bend, not a bar. bend sinister The heirs of Deborah G n Arieticat defendeis ot the soviet that . own Alexandria so long el el o hich will come | the Philippines for three years and | Sl (Tis men Who i & tower of crosses from the left or lower sinister | who served through . (he rec i the Moscow government has not for | that & man as kind and loving as he ghtered the consular service in 1900.| strength. But the facts given are| There is no concerted and ener-|crner to the upper right hand cor- |were awarded & pension fn 15550 i never could fory out ot the dackneas. B el e Dias heen Jninister 19l certain—gathered from friend and | gstio plot in China to restore the[ner. In English heraldry the bend | Perscn s g A three vears engaged in any radeal | Bever could forget it He has seen | Ty, Donald B. MacMillan and his | Feuador, foreign trade adviser of the fo7ta!USiERINGIRE [Trom (TSRS ARG | £8tia Blot 17, China to Restors the | uimister couped o tut off 4t cuch end | homaD, nimed | Hodgers = served 2 i 0 e i hundre thousands, of little chil- 2 State Department and consul genera e d 3 | s L e civi r under the name agitation n this country, comes the | BN there whom he served with detly | CT&W ©f hardy explorers are to get a [at" Halifax and Constaniinopie In | Mmakes facts always' trustworthy. Chiniess and Manchus who wiwts for | Ve udersd & mark of llezitimacy, | of Cashier. and was put on the pen disclosure that it was on the Tth pf he T message from President Coolidge him- {1920 Young became American com- ok % ¥ a restoration, but they are mawing|ister, @ much narrower charge than |00 TOIL in 1900. November, 1922, Jess than faurteen | aN¢ ‘:::";XT"'; o e Ol and| it, ahd the wonders of the radio are | Jissioner fto the Baltle provinces.| Angrew W. Mellon—with the ex-|no efforts to bring it about, nor is the bend. 'In French heraldry the| Q. Can a baromeier ha made wit months ago. that the Ivestia. official | FISs: G e hliden he serves Lo |, gaiy ¢ pe exemplified and in a con- ) No man in the United States 1a more | ception of Calvin Coolidge, now the | there any Indication that they plan |peng, BIiater in sometimes called “la|a clock face and used to tell people organ of the sovlet recime, set forth |44 will he waich grow gray and | B0 C O Tl horoughly acquainied With present- | most talked about man in America— (o do so. For the time being, at i © added. | yeather conditions as & clock tells U .y b + opia e > . { bent. He used to stop at Al = hour Russian conditions. Lieut. Klie- = 5 L i - he “spiritual and material” unity be il hm: Alexandria | oo outfit on their little schooner. ] forth, who 15 a Visconsin man, has | Was once described by Philander C. |loast, mal republican fndrm( of L Q. How does the amount of water| A. There is a giant barometer with tween the third internationale and the | When every house a big chimney | o opowaoin, and the American Radio | served in our foreign service at Péking, | Knox as the unconventional man of | erhment la not menaced from (hI8|sioreq in lakes compare with that|a dial face on the tower of the Ger bolshevik government. and a wide hearth and when (hcrclnt‘ay an;e Ba s n AL b s;ock:-»lml u.nd P’l"f‘r"d'{“r't u:::x:, | high finance. Knox said Mellon was lnh"“—"m ovile 'u they have been{neld in the ocean?—J. L. and M;lmeum at Munich. A single This date completely discounts the | ¥ere only candles and the stars to d the message written by Presi. | carily stationed In Siberia. ie speaks | different from the run of moneyed |demonstrated in concrete practice.| A. Sir John Murray estimates the | f30d chronicles the siightest varts- o ain that | €Ve lght on Christmas eve. He| 2" = the Russi - fuently. | men because he always specialized |The ofy for a restoration would | yoiume of the lakes in the world at o6t rweAther: claims of those who maintain that g eve, | dent Coolidge and sent to New York (the Russian language fluently | men P! alouse no answer from the masses|Z2.000 cubic miles and the water of the | C2ting probable changes in weather there has been a change at Moscow | KneW ali the littie children there long vesterday, whence It was-transmitted | * ¢ * ¥ in taking hold of things that had {of Chinese. ocean at 324,000,000 cubic miles. Q. Why was the Grace Dodge respect to international propaganda. | before electric lights, traction cars, | Y% FH0S ROTT N0 headquartery] This observer is enjoying adventur. ' not yet “arrived,” developing them,| It was in late Beptember two years| o oy, oiq ure you are|lotel S0 named?—M. R. L. o « |ago that the first dramatic incident{ > e of A il af Toe important In. | to0k place in Peking which marked | FIENt, then g0 ahead”?—L. 3 oA oy ey Ains Grace Tiole dustrial enterprises from which Mr. | the beginning of the world's knowl-| A. This was the motto of Davy|'S Ievered by humanitarians as one spect to | Tallroad trains and autos eame to| andria. There is no doubt that ous experiences as a broad political events at Washington. Once | It is also of importance in the denial of unity betweer of the Relay League. the com " i} e ) - 2 o 4 » omen of th munist government of Russia and the | e Will be in Alexandria soon after l-,r:‘m:,‘:r’;:?o::’ ',":“fl“"d"i‘:::“'m’i‘:’ @ week he is “in the air” from Radio | Mullon derived hix vast fortune arc | cGEe of Heuan Tung, deposed Emn-|Crockett in the war of 1512, of the rare American women ‘of communist organization. Of course, it | leaving Washington on the night of | > e an o North Greeniand, | Corporation station WRC on wave | said to answer that description. They | Jicl 1iveq restoration of midsum-| Q. TWhat is the name of tha peem |of Cleveland Dodie of New ork city. the | December 24, or very early in the | °C'oPS Canada to North Greenland. |jength 469. He has been “in the air” | include the plate glass, aluminum, | 0 "5 017 scarcely a word con-|about .Flora McFlimsy?—A. S, W | Miss Dodge devoted her time. strength is possible that those who de; connection will declare the the Izvestia of November 7, banking, coke and ot interest: | where the explorers in their quarters at Refuge Harbor will “pick it up.” cov corn! o |®nd fortune to the betterment of just tong enough to discover that !t | which Mellon found as “infants” and c:osu‘n(i‘ (?""no"'fil'fc'ét'm'fi"’ffiiil -’:fld FA. The poem about ~Flora voung women. She weas m\"::n?nusv- ! < as full of “pockets” and pitfalls as | nourished 'into Coloasal concerns. | STOTed the, lotucovered moat eur | Flimey of Madison Square is cal'ed | 3oiofeupnorer of the vow oA viators find it. Listners-in are as | Knox pradicted, when Mellon was ap- | qoi" 0%, ™5 PRIGee Jome TRa thE} "Nothing ar.” It was writien morning of December 2 — All of the work is to be done over Sl ¢ movement, and founded Teachers be a “forgery.” But it o happens| Colonies in Southern Maryland. |amateur outfita. The marvelons de.|punctiions fn their demands for ac pointed, that his fellow-Pittsburgher | mera ‘youngster, driven from power (7 ‘- A Butler. College, in New York. that an original print of the physical| Colonization plai M & AR {curacy and {mpartiality as the cen- | Would become a famous Secretary |by the republican troops. In the de-| o are airents "o e o e ) e s i o Dicd plans are going well | velopment of the radio among ama- MY/ and Mrs opull, who | Of the Tregsury. crecs of abdication, issued in his|, @ ATe »s us n life-sav-{ Q. Is tattoojng of the skin an old ssue of the mpul Nlmx“ he 1’:» in southern Maryland. which is that {teurs is shown by the fact that long: alling attention to allegee R {xlmn.! 1‘1 wh-[s -tt‘u:uln‘zsd that halwnp % T;“\ Bavs Hen sed toLeest custom?>—R. T. . Department. an enlarged edition pub : e G . punication is H 4 its in the newspapers. ¥ 0 .| to retain his title, his personal es-| A. Y hav ed Lo effac % Shibokstile P Hed 1 honer of the celebration og] Pat Of the District's mother state | distance communication is effective In i [pistatoments I, 1IC ROWSPAPSER| From the goverament printing of- | (2 0L T8, Dichy T2 ,PEREOLEL 07| some remarkable rescuce. The United | demnithy +herd Too¥ible to = © velebra south and east of Washington and | most remote regions through the in-|giantancous beyond belfef. While a| fice these days annual reports of|tion of the troops of the republic:|States Army airship D-? picked up a tom originated. Records of it are found in the tombe near Thebes, the fifth anniversary of the soviet| petween the P adio s | rec 2 1 e binet officers and subordinates ,in | that he was to b ded th man recently off Cape Hatteras. Th 3 b otomac and the bay. In |stallation of radio sets. recent program was In progress at | cabinet officers subordinates ,in 6 was to be accorded the same g £ ibey. tnipisilation otiradiosy WRC, a am arrived from Des | ine executive departments are com- |NORors by republican China that|airship was lowerci to within fifteen | whare there are painted representa: gime. The leading a le on the | the colonial and well int 3 imit into the repub-| There seems to be no limit o t Moines, would be given to any Visiting sov.|feet of the water, its speed killed by | tion X tn 4 Moines, > S 3 s dts s ¥ | tions of a race of whit vhose first page, signed by Steklof. editor of | jican eras the land-halding class in | possibilities of this latest of modern | with which'is was Man. | ing forth in a deluge. It is & rarity | erelgn from another country, and |heading into the wind and idling | hodles are (attooed Tn < Cassnrn the 1z devoted to the specific | that part of the state was prosperous. | miracles, and the time will yet come | #8€rs of broadcasting stations are kept | for anybody to pile through them ex- | that the new government ‘would{the motors. A rope ladder was al-| “Commentaries” we are told that the topic of the relationship between the pretiy busy with complatnts an 3 grant him a yearly invome of 4,000, [lowed to trail in the water as the | prit the. Vet The soil was generally fertile. With |when the whole world can convers:|eisms from listeners-in They o e Whoke Dubineas et 000 stiver doilars’ Except for’ thi| ship approached ‘the ‘wrecked plane. fions wereRiationea. communist interrationale and the so-| g sla v - dopted the wise policy of doing the i . last provision, these guarantees have e aviator graspe the adder, i = {large farms and siave labor thers |freely. {best they can, conscious that the pos- | tNinks these offclal documents are || on axecuted by the republic. which | limbed to safety, ballast to counter- | & HOW many Americans gav viet government. Some confusion perhaps has been caused in this matter. It has been { were many rich families tn that sec- | i e Sibllity of pleasing everybody is as {:}{;‘j":fl;":‘"‘fin'.“'m'x;‘:{’m!’r*“:: Da. laccepted them as binding. Fact his welght avas thrown out, and | ! tion, though there. as everywhere! [t will be nothing unusual ‘if the|Temote as tae millennium itself. inwamly digest. They are the ac- | EEER ps DL WABIRRT Y GHE 52 g else, the majority of the people were | palitical gossips begin immediately to EE counts of stewardship which Uncle| A quarrel within the Forbidden City st o nd that the sovie 4 S ¢ s TonL L CRE i ce | Si faithful and underpaid serv- | ~- S T o 5 HR\SEdnnn ;r_m“:\:‘y;:x ‘“- x‘..-hvl,,\;":l‘: poor, but bitter poverty was known |speculate on whether Henry Ford| UPtimists on Capitol, Hill believe |Sam's falthful and underpald Vear, | between the boy emperor's mother{than post offices in the United |l wounds recelved in action. The WOpCTnmeny S the creator and sub-{to but few. Consecutive crops of{would prefer to be a cabinet official | that Col. Brookhart. republican rad-|The ecountry would know its busi. |and Chin Fei, head of the women of | States?—J. P. ORREHIGEGY 018) troopa porter of ;ha l(‘omlmulmsl party mlux tobaceo, the chief export, tended to | or an ambassador. {ical from lowa, will before long be | ness better if it took the time and |the tmperial clans, led to'the death| A. At the end of the last fireal| o 14 o onila born consequently the third internationale. i i sta trouble to study the despised narr: vear there were 39485 letter car- 2 e s exhaust the organic elements and ¢ found as stalwart a senator as the|troudle fo study the def Dx;m. and | of the mother. The guarrel may have | yiors and 51,013 Japanese parents an Am 0 us been set|tain mine llrlumr‘hn. been concerning his marriage or it their lives to gain independence for America?—M. A. S. _ A. During the revolutlonary war. Q. Are there more letter carrlers| 7184 Americans were killed or died ’ Hawati of rican citi- post offices. | ————— 31 contents o tha soll ana | G. O. P. possesses. On December 20 — zen?—K, D. L. aid.it get dark in|_A. Hawali is a part of the United i . ernment The recent announcement by Henry : i i e P SC gove nent > g e » Brookhart appeared in the unex- (Coprright, 1823.) Q. What tim. forth that fhe soviet government I8}t grew poor ovér a wide extent of | pora does not meet with Hiram Jr)lnh! 2 o may have been abolit a court physl-| 5 %" voincs Towa, on'the §th of last | States, and a child born there is as the creature of the communist PArtY | country. There was lack of under- b SneATALL Bt Al e St b cian. The emperor's mother retired | July?—G. T. much a citizen as_though he were or the third internationale. This 181 atanding and faith in the value of | o ~PP! 2 I8 V3 . to her home, took an overdose of | A. The Naval Observatory says on|orn in Boston or Topeka. not merel al difference. Tt|wgeyficial” fertiliz @€ (0% | less more or less expected. 'Youneg Peeress Is to hhecelve opium and died a few days later |July 4, 1923, the sun set at 7:38 p.m., . eity ptechnoliglitmnce artificial” fertilizing agents | i = All of the ancient ritualistio pomp |iocal mean time, at Des Moines, lowa. | (Frederic J. Haskin is employed by ; s a very vital matter. It'would 8D { The lure of rich cheap lands in the | i e of China accompanied her burial in|Civil twilight, such as suffices for or- | this papsr o Aandle the inquirics of our pear from the Tzvestia publication of | onio and Mississippl valleys made a| 1 time of war people were glad to| - A Call t th B t h B o | October, and his majesty is believed | dinary tasks, ended at about 8:15 | readers and you are invited to call upon Novamber 955 ‘that ihe Sovlat ol pay taxes “till it hurt.” In time of | (1) e T1{1S @1°|to have left the Forbidden City, to|p.m.; total darkness fell at about 9:45 | Aim a8 frecly and as often 63 wou 5 drain on the adventurous and agsres- d Rave gone into the country to the|p.m. please. Ask anything that is a matter regime in Russia is the agent of the { give population in the latter part of | Peace they will welcome such allevia- summer palace, and there to have " . . | 07 fact and the authority will be quoted International party, not the parent|ne cighteenth and first haif of the | tion as Secretary Mellon proposes. . = . e e e Y 1] o ders" that are celabraned I thia| fo0 There WinoiOhorye for tMs serv: o that it is the Russian manifeetation of | nineieenth centuries. The of the | —————— | BY THE MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. ) contempt for her chist opponent at Pl TR B BT R T foe. Ask what you want, sign your ful a principle of government which the | woqi beyond the Mississippi bezan | According to Hiram Johnson's cyni-| Great Britain has already a con-|ihat is {o say, her kinsman, whose| It was the following March before| A. Some of these special weeks |in stamps for return postags. Addrcas third internationale secks to establish 2 Gk e i- = isiderable number of peers of the |cause was publicly championed |the world again heard of the em-|and days are: National Education|TAe Star Information Bureau, Frederio 3 drawing people away in 1848. The |cal mate Mr. Ford would rather galnst her by her own eldest son,|Deror, for at that time he chose, from | week, National Thrift week, Chil-|J. Haskin director, 1220 North Capitol asgthe world form of administration. | jvil war upset the industrial dnd{be “in right” than be a presidential | T8 Who are active members of the JGE R Fry o T o8 iy her hus- |a set of photogTaphe, the most beau- (dren's Book week, Appie week, Boys' | street.) 3 his, probably. is the true relationship | cocia1 system and destroyed much | candidate. |bar. The former objection to thely,ngq hrother, the Hon. Louls Gre- |tiful of the Manchu princesses to be between these two elements. The Soviet | 14t had heen classed as prope ai : fracts Vot Fiierspretaamin| o e T b S L B e s CEtin ey cession along the upward slope, the S crntien: ) ey itselt bivescateal st ,;g Sin property;and § = S e icourts on the ground that, as mem r own relatives and former friends | went steadily forward. and preoedent Dlspules Evolution. P D some time ago, as a government. to i = e 5 n The fact of the matter is that the | was thrown to the winds when fift eve of man and the awakened pow- ol hmld became POOF{ rotaky contemplates retiring. No|bers of the house of lords. they 4r¢ | Countesw of Warwick has falled to|or a SR e ot (e an Rl ers of man cannot detect it. Al ix > ent. 10 those who lived on it became poor. In {ipso facto, judges of the Righest! realize that she is no longer & youns |ted to the inner courtyards of the promote radical propaganda in this| ype ‘705, '§0s and '90s the lot of most well disciplined soviettst will inquire . < U Griamgiare | 28 fixed as the Sphinx that slumbers G . 9 tribunal of the realm has been over- | Woman of exceptional beauty, ele- | Forbidden City in the early dawn of | Writer Says Many Scientists|on the Egyptian sands. This couniry, confining itself to the busi-| 4¢ the people seemed to grow harder. ness of administering Russia accord-| Tne lure of the cities drew thousands whether he leaves politics richer than | LTI ©i0 " the’ English bar is | gance, charm and sprightiiness, who, | December 1 to witness the procession of transformation end activi ing to bolshevik or communist prin- when he entered it. about to receive @ mew recruit in|in her day, was one of the acknowl- |of the bride to the home of her hus- Deny Darwinism. dream.” FRANCES A. WALKER fhe comely person of & yaung pecress | eiged icaders of the London Ereatband and. emperor. Even & more |To the Editor of The Star | : from the farms. Washington and | | 5¢%the Tealm in her own right, namely, | World, also 4 woman of much w startling break with the past took i s . . e Bt i s | s i v T ois | SHOOTING STABS. | Fads, lfmnp Tt Bt 1| Foat 5t SRt A R TR VLRG| et Ve O o wone o/ A Three R's Education e Rl s : i the Barony o ton, created in lomatio corps and a few chosen |- . AT mlcrndt&rnal mq.amrun:y. seated f“ ter to work for a small wage in the | 1608, e is the only daughter of the | whose. features n!llnd umefl of -the | ity ‘_e"v"ce‘wd i aa iR utbundevolutibn and Darwinism; Not Adequa!e Today Moscow, has undoubtedly gone ON | ciiy and get it, than to work on the | BY PHILANDER JOHNSON {late and eighth Earl ot Darnley andformer delicacy and = refinement. |,y imperial majesty. as, of course, the evolutionary theory, v To assert now that {at his death succeeded to his Clifton | Moreover, she has quarreled not only with this work. with nearly all the members of her farm from sun to sun and be deeper The young emperor and his Httle] ;o transmutation of species, had ‘The schoolboy of a hundred years ' i b: v. his earldom of Darnley and t the soviet government has not pro-|i; gept at the year's end. - The Joy Ride. his entalled estates, comprising { own family, but also with her own |bride Bowed of efock hands withl,, . y;jught of long before Darwin's | 380 When the tree public school sys- moted radical agitation in the United| "gince the opening of the twentieth | O Christmas eve, when dreanis drew | Cobham Hall and Park. in Kent, so(caste to euch an extent as to vir- - T e 21T | day, and had, probably, been dis-|tem was in its infancy, received his States is to seek to ignore the major rich in Charles Dickens 3 close many doors against her. nad ot Darets | education aimost entirely out of fact that its creator, the international way of her remaining any longer a |champagne held in one slender hand, frotitl Yo E BOERE L TR O ae [School. Ha needed the school to teach | improvement, but while crop prices |4 sleigh-bell chime I seemed to hear, 4 ] present earl. and land values have advanced the |And just outside, with smile so quaint | nim to read, write and “figger.” His century there has been an allaround | near, igo,nx to his younger brother, the ) That very fact now stands in thethrone dais, and with a goblet of | cussed by the ancients. ing card and of her exercising |toasted his guests in a few words of communist party, has unquestionably T o e oenrey Mok | English. A, siriking - contrast was|applied to man, forging the links in * % 2 % - |broader training came%ith his father done so. c ving i v = I saw the jovial Yuletid i The committee of privileges of the t ¢ the lab arty. She has |presented a few moments later when [the chain until he reached the 2 e | cont of tiving tn the country has risen | T Sa¥ h h-" A "‘rl:*;'rm > Boome 3¢ lorax has GHIT unbr cone | EE e O e o ek e o L0 st Chingse WLl o kar whers hesummined snspendo|on the fhrin anf s the wosdaior aa sud pxes layemounted. Pegeatave |l o 3 ST diinend sideration A claim put forward by|and the conviction which she has |loyal to the throne presented their | ' € BEFS T8 FEMETC BLOl 0T | apprentice tn the small shop of the The Day Before. { greatly advanced in the cities and are | All childish play must have an end. gained of this, through her signal de- | compliments, for this time a thin v 5 i My the late earl for the old Stuart duke- | s, (L PR A s Jowored before 'the|ing for the mext link. As G. K JLEaLy The day before Christmas: Waat is | Still drawing people from the land.{ MY fireslde has no Christmas tree. |4 % "Cecroniox, which In supposed to | LR hAE wn inamen. aesiated by | throns and the Manchus knelt In the | Chesterton very wittily remarked, mother for the enly vocation then the reckoning? Has anybody been | There are vast areas of idle land in | What pleasures can you bring to me?" |, 0 pocome extinct during the reign | her son and by her other relatives |marble courtvard outside the throne|«yoy know it's called ‘the missin e, DA forgotten? Are there any last-minute | Southern Maryland, and it is believed | Ile answered in a gentle tone, of King Charles, when the last duke | cannot fail to add to the bitterness{hall, touching the pavement T | e because it mever was there!” [fH® three R's was enough for those : e Disedinsss o o | that the hardy and industrious people | “My" Bifts are not for youth alone, {of the line died, leaving his estatesjand many dissppoiniments, of the|thelr foreheads nine timee as shrill| 1 if monkeys ever evolved into men |SImPle times. i errands or purchases to complete the My aloish " 110 nin sister. It has always been a|sorry eventide of her life, which was |musia from weird instruments rose |an v The times have changed, but this roster of those to be gladdened tomor- | from Europe will find conditions easier | MY sleigh on, yonder cloud so white ‘question as to whether this Stuart)inaugurated with such brilliancy |on the air, they have fortunately stopped this auclént 10en o & sumolent shool it than in their former homes and will | AWaits. Come forth with me tonight. | dukedom of Lennox was heritable, | when, after refusing a royal offer of PR i s Fits time. The girl was tralned by her reprehensible practice, as Mr. Monk - e 5 proaperity r v fike most other old Scotch honors, in | marriage, she was wedded in Wes ; Those questions beset everybody n { At length come to prosperity hes Trust me and take me by the hand | Hike mosh OUICr U0, PUCIG] Nhie male | minster Abbey to her present hus.| And then those who know and|is still with us, hanging by his tail| o'eo 0 0n g emall ghops has become the 24th of December. For weeks the i —_——— | And we will ride to Memory Land.- | jine. Charles 1I took it for granted | band, then Lord Brooke, as the great- flove the beauty of the courts andto a limb, and shying coecoanuts at| © o (5 S0 BAORE HES OF0Te SE s < S - 2 % E .« 1o | Then, in & flash, past stars so bright, | that it could not descend in the|est heiress and the acknowledged| .. o4 that make up the Forbidden |his fellow to the end of time. i : preparations for the cbservance of the | Lenin said some time ago that he | TP BUE | female. line and, consequently, hold- ¥ of the day, in the presence of ARk i it an Bateton. M. &, F. T, |complicated industrial _establish- great day of gifts have been going | Proposed to terrorize the world. There ;“ 'pr‘; And Bosn s nowy light fing that the dukedom had become of the members of the relgning | City ':ervm:::;*‘h:b;:m: I | O et of ne British Ac. |ments. Hard work has become ma- Fole . o vietists w! il feel evealed a spot of beauty rare. , bestowed it upon the Duke ol . Pr Vs EoWeg, .| chine work. he home dustries forward, Work bas ben in prosvess | may be & few Sovietiets who stilh feal f Lo To0 e D M B0 R S arel| o M\enmosa;, Rle natural won by his | Feaw of the palaces. Two weeks later|soclation. for the Advancement of |[alle Work —The ome industries e e e there Bretonne favorite. Countess Louise| ., juap ge la Cierva, who has|came the message from acrogs the |Sclence, threw a bombshell Into the | ;.50 oi onty at the beginning 5 o d % ot , i e ad A o - s, 0! ow 2 g ~ ertc ssocia- 2 Shopbingihas iheen Joonducted sl iChComtiEn i WaeninEton D zont ey th the Deerage af France: | ures in the public life of Spain and |foroed to flee his home to escape the | tion for the Advancement of Science |small opportunity to transmit to them tematically, with careful search of | ————— 1 ! ¢ . th of palace servants, of servants 2 v “that it was|their own practical and technical {Many of the ablest genealogists in | <o has repeatedly held office as min- [ Wrath of paiace servelis of SOTRRIAin 1921 by declaring “tha il h ol D lachules) And sang the songs that we liked best. | wist that Charles was wrong in this [T " 0 e an mintster of justice, as | ¥1O had atolen Imberial tFeasutes |impossible for sclentists any 10MEeT | qncired the field of businese, industry stocks, And yet the remain perhaps| Many of the men relcased from 5 ‘We spoke in honest innocence, { assumption and that the strawberry- ith Darwin's theory of 2 th toss! The h some neglected items. Or maybe | Leavenworth prison, where they wers J D oronet of the last of the |premier, and especially as minister of | their theft. Discovering their knay-|to agree W a and the professions. ~The home no <omebody has been remembured tardily | sent for war-time oftenses, may as| T from all envy and pretense. | {RVEY SHCLCCe Teennox should have | wor (8 LS RGN ot renuous fight | ery, his majesty had pronounced sen- | the origin of species.” e further |longer offers them an education, for = d they had ri i t! “while forty years ago the | life. 2 well face the fact that while they are | 1 PAs8ing tears of youthful hours | gone to his sister. Should the S9r ) " cuppress political movements in (tenCS on them and they Bad risen [0 |said that (ot was arcepced without| T K "y jvileges of the house of officially pardoned they never can be | SParkled like dewdrope on the flow'rs. | mittee of PHVIEEER OF 300,7°0¢ e | the army and navy and, above all, to | republio entered the Forbidden City, | question, todsy scientists have come | lic and there must be a final dash for the counters. result is to force upon the pub- chools a burden of “education’ . h as the “little red schoolhouse® fully - It was a happy thing to see e Earl Darnley and or as- |arrested the evil doers and the em- |to a point where they are unable to|FBuch as the ¢ 3 s obs . thes e — > dy C g ¢ 4 of s S e s T e _ {“Now, here let me abide,” I said. e e Duchess of Lennox in{ which, throughout the past century. | "¢ {8 2°pH%: 4200008 1t confines hie | Ho procecded to say that "thero was |manual training formerly asquired #t arrives, “not to be ed gt e 1oma Wants | mhe good saint smiled and shook his|her own right and a still greater) have endeavared to dominate the §0 irit and mind rather than his body. | no evidence of any one spectes ac-|in the home and on the farm, It must gift arrives, “not to be opened until | to tell his voluminous troubles to the Head e ot fofthe British bar than she | ernment, but who are now, thanks |fa has heard of America and Furope | quiring new faculties, but there were 1V ithem, Dekifss, & Dinial trlining Christmas,” that brings to mind some j U'nited States Supreme Court just at » . will prove as a mere, baroness. to Gen. Primo di Rivera's coup d'etat, | and he longs to visit them, but court | plenty of‘examples of species losh;s ler 11fe of & century ago. A threa friend at a distance who has not for-| & time when that distingui Said he, “Your pathway may be set Lady Clifton has tried her hand at|in power. has just inherited the entire | intrigue prevents. His only contact | faculties Species lose things, but do | BSr (11° OF ¢ CTULCY MER, A Hhres : @ time when that distinguiched Lody | \\1iq memorles that are sweeter yet. | quite a mumber of callings since | fortune of the rich old Marchioness | with® the west is through his English | not add.” . ; existence in the mass Of MoAErR Iite sotten. |is regarded as being overworked. e = & . = =r°w|n¢ up. Thus she dabbled for a lof Romagnera, estimated at over|iytor, R. F. Johnston, and an American| Mr. Smith sas Eyolution a8 &|ZLincoln State Journal. 3 This is the true spirit of Christmas, | | If your affections still prove true, | EEOWIE finalism, and worked for!$4,000.000. She had almost passed out | girl, Mias Isabel Ingram. who s now | workable, scientific theory has now in the matter of making gifts, th: he | o 7 0ld pleasures will bring pleasures new. W entire year on the Staff of a Lon-|of his recollection, for she was one | gamitted to the Forbiddén City as in-|been held an establishe t king gifts, that the | Kew (hing are more depreseing | Again I saw the firelight glow: don daily newspaper, first of his firat clients when he started | atructor of tho llttle princess the empe- | nearly a hundred yeara” [ challenge|ny 1o Boliove Langd cndeavor is to pay tribute to friend-{ (yan an out-of-date “Shop Earl i = ' Y porter and then as head of ¢ his practice as & lawyer, more than |ror took as hie bride last December. that statement. At the risk « P i ship to everybody. It may be only a | ki The dawn revealed its splendor slow, |(pe editorial departments. But forty vears ago. He won her case| It {s unlikely that Hsuan Tung de-[reputation I again call atteation to B H N e < it ——mt——————— And brought a day of Christmas cheer, | finally determined to abandon news-|for her, in the fa f considerable | sires to regain his lost power, but he|the eminent cotemporaries ho{ D:;: oon to umanity card, or the slightest gift. But it Realtors’ Convention s it e *|paper work for the bar and that is{gdifculties, and she has niever forgot- does wish very much to gain a greater | win, who pronounced the w ols evos " S a brings about unison of thought. . 3 he kindliest in many a year. why this comely and gitted descend- | ton that she owed to him the prese raonal freedom. He would go out :\Ix':lonllrzml:\azl;yu:fl!&n’l.';phul;::‘"ry Whatever l\l-l;en: our imagina- i1l i av Cf = P . The National A ci 1 x it Earl of nnox who fig-|vation of her proper wi o] nto the world and see the wonders o C. o vot. | tion, our sense of the mysti nd 8Hil, it the day comes and somebody The Natioal Associstion of Real Substitute. AraaCin ‘Sl Walter Scotts ople Doem | Youtd otherwise have 104t Shemade | which he has heard, but his wishes ars | John Willlam Dawson, Arnld Guyot, | 1or fW° S+0%e OF the mystieal and has been neglected, if there is a lapse ¢ Boards has recognized the} Sas “Nfarmion” is about to be called to|pner home almost entirely in the coun- | thwaretd by those who profit from his { Dr. Traas, Pasteur, Lord ol in e, enefac: somewhere, a word of greeting and a | laims of Washington as the Conven.| “The Santa Claus myth is about ex-{ ;o bar in Middle Temple. S8till un-|{ry and therefore was scarcely known | remaining in the seclusion of myatery | Faraday, Herschel Dr. George Pau-|tor and a blessing, For out of theso heattfelt wish for Bapph tion city and will meet here in June. | Ploded.” married and twenty-three years ofl,: remembered at Madrid. and gran that are now his lot. He|lin, Francis Balfour, James OTT:|geop wells happiness is gorever bub- S8 rEait iwvlah, for, Lbnin ey ion B i < .| “I'm afraid so,” od Senator |age, she lives with her mother, the | 'non Juan is a native of the eity of | is only seventeen and his empress is | Leibnita, ye Bosle, Carpenter|iiing. p great day of joy will meet the needs | This association is composed of more i 80,7, SARWAY) enator | 250 er Jemima, Countess of Darnley, | mula. in the province of Murcia, and |nearly a year younger. He is a boy|Dana, Davy and a host of other n . B the occasion. Ior the measure of | than 300 real estate boards in all | SOPERUM. “A ot of my constituents, | who has dropped that title since REF |15 yar o & Brench mother and of o | aven befors he 1s an emperor, but his | raised thelr volces in prot The drama is one of the greatest 8e g 0 Vice Adr h o h of whi incely uneles and other court officials Al jay! The l)\eory' is a v e i @ | parts of e Uni S whenever they want anything, e | second marriage t et tral Sir Sbanish fat! ', to the latter of om | pri ly gassiz & s, inventions of the human race. It Is remembrance lies not in values, but | Parts of the United Statés, has an ac. | Whenev Arthur Leveson, who commanded the |be owes his somewhat Arablo fea- [insist that the boy give way to the em- | scientific mistaice, UBLTUe i are mis- | one of the most popular forms of di- in sincerity. tive membership of 20,000, and its as. | t0 think T ought to take his place.” | 5icona battle squadron in the North |} e o L evon > I- i c—-—..--—e : sociated and afliliated i i sea during the great war. latea borAgb o e Aare P he | "It is_because of this that pathos|chievous in its tendency. Thers is|version and {nstruction. It is man's | 1Y membership 181 jua Tunkins says his bhildren al- wox % % e Yaomination 'of the Inerian | clings about him. None can question |not & fact known to acience (end:{iand of make-belleve. On tho stage It “another war” is to be accepted "‘;,““‘}‘l"’"“""n'"‘“ hrestdent of the| ve begin to be good just before| If poor Lady Warwick was, in spite |peninsula, centuries Ho started | the romantic appeal that he has for the | ing to show that, any DONF, ! (i |before him he witnesses his own . as an economic impossibility some | (ASTINELON Tiedl Wtite Board suys | cpiigimas, but he's thankful for small | of her energetic appeals to the elcc- QUL In 1ife as Journalist, a poet and | %oud, Tet WS PANCOr Il gihone | Mmultiplication has ever diverged |moods, aims and life enacted by an- kind of agreement between France | I3 thio convention of vealtors may | oo tors. defeated in her efforte to win & | 6 P TIE" e "y future, | H boy emperor of China, in his paluce{ trom the course MAtTR l6 (% oy |other who might easily be imper- and Germany may be regarded as in.| > th¢ largest assembly of businees b seat In the house of commons, as & [clever enough to realise, ere long, |home that is to him a prison. gr that & alngle X other:: sonating himself. There he beholds evitable. praen WRUP e Copual Has et * Playthings, particularly radical member of the |that writing was not his forte and Theso are very sirong words, and his own ambitions, passions, hopes, tained. At any rate it will be @ lar€e | Arqund the world the Germans fiing | 1abor party, it was because that no- | IARE, he, WOUS S8 BEHGE Sk Ag R NAT | o uitate to personally raid the lead- fon s by taiea, ©n w1 this .‘i.;’f".‘h'"fl,::’ e ":;',‘:, Dereouined. crowd of realtors, their families and |~ mye tovg that we get gay ‘with body appeared to be willing to treat |gself to politics. The old Marchioness | ing clubs of the metropolis, where ‘museum there s mot a par-|Thete’ he 2OF ours, the friends, and they will be made to feel 1 hope old Santa does not b"n“ her seriously. Her arguments did|de Romagnera was one of his first|gamblfng lays were being violated,|&IC™ ¢"avidence of the transmuta-|good and bad he fain would live in Santa Cleus and Alexandris ' lity if he could or dared. From A news paragraph in The Star told | at home in Washington. rot seem to carry conviction and, in|O88es as & lawyer, and 1te sucocess, |and arrested several mor atic scions | HO® 0 Srecjes”; by Virchow, late|rea i ; " 3 3 a b o Iy w fore is death lost |the play he emerges a rejuvenated that a five-year-old boy in Alexandria| The delegates will find that the Capl-| 1 PAPeF Marks to play with. her rather gorgeous apparel of fars | LOT L e R e S P Sl A of Berlin, Who b lation; by recent|person. He has forgotten for the i sent & letter to The Star expressing | tal is something of a real estate cen- Question f bl vith big dt: ds in her | itance of her property, emabled him |of the interior, in the con! it inent German scient{sts such as|moment the real world, so often ~ . . or Question. o Th1 rvants on to make his way in politios, with the [Maurs administration, he undertook | Sy Rt Wolf, de Vries, Hoocke, | monotonous, merciless, materfalistic fear that Santa Claus might not pass | ter. Real estate as a business or in-| “Why are farmers always complain: | §olcor's geat of her conveyance, she | Tesult that, in course of time after |the reform of the san the [ Btner, G ein. Fleishmann and | and dull. itary a through Alexandriz and evidently | dustry was established in these parts e est sincerity in her Alling various minor positions in the|postal services, established postal|piinke; by modern French scientists| This is also true of the motion pic- seeking to have wiped away the dread | before the creation of the District in | o1 dumno Aokl e ses naiations ol wealih and Dropersy service of the state. he was appolated |ssvings banks, Dostal money orders|suoh as “Meunier, Gaston Bonnier | turee. Some are, stupld Some are that Santa, in his haste and because|1791. There had been unusual ac-|tossel. “Why are politicians always :’éi‘,"a“:m;’:“.fl;’..'-"':{‘: o R s g or fowest in Burope. Then, 100 | Kuduillae and others, and by o few |punged aund prohibited. Here is too of exactions of increasing business, | tivity in farm land here In anticipa- { sayin’’they've got to do sometnin: | i She suceeed In explaining how the it S B T e e Shat tiog, | American seholars who a7e curaee O ot Bt tho iotirs that is. Cean might cut that city from his tour. tion of the establishment of the fed- = capital levy which she advocated | As such he made a name for him- | of Sunday rest. For up till that time, { ous enough to speak their quick to save the countryr” 1d diminfsh the unemplo: for centuries, every place of business|es Dr, William Hanna Thompson, Dr.|and appealing is a Godsend. Without g Tl 19 One of the principal’ pron: |¢1€ by his strictness in enforeing the | DL 00" on' Sunday. His new Bab- | feaviit, ex-prasident of Leh thin Hew form of .amusement the Santa Claus could not forget Alex-| eral territory. Ever since the begin- s fems with whigh the nation was con- {1AWS and by his resistance to all bath laws, however, were not blue|versity, and Pref. C. C. Ev modern man would find his humdrum andria, He never forgets little chil-| ning of things in the Federal city, “Nonse: is foolish,” said Uncle 2 t i life_too often intolerable. By it the | dren, wherever they live. Whether a | which came to be named the city of | Eben; “but dar ain’ mufMin’ foolisker | " oot Ciwhat, above 09 P ot s e e |, D ‘heaimens satablisnm an tha i lemt _1s besinning tolIang of e et I aay sibae little child lives by the side of & busy | Washington, there has been general|dan not bein' able to enjoy a little | preventad hor audiences Axing SO MInpaamaL Fes] Benke avan I8 pur o S of be- | form wof iMuslon —Rochestar Tiewe. strect or'an idla yoad, or in & houss | interest in real estats, A considerable | nonsense.” her abuse and the bl v et ey (LY 'T""mm_ ivageness of her ings ever, yoss and moved in pro- Union. ) 3