Evening Star Newspaper, February 18, 1924, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18 1924, TI_IE EVENING STAR because of the urgency of the case.|a matter of public concern, yet a house - With Sunday Morning Eition, A contractor stands ready to begin |cannot be constructed without sewer . IN TOD AY?S SPO'I‘LIGHT The Librnry Table ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS the work of cutting and filling to|connection in a section served by D cC. make this land available for building. | sewer mains. It 1= «ald that even WASHING 0N, D. © The park character of the land and its | with the $100,000 provided in the sup- BY PAUL V. COLLINS MONDAY.....February 18, 1924/ qcsirability as un entrance from the | plemental estimaics sewer connections DX THN BOOKLOVER BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN 5 1t {s & commonplace of literary and |.| o] west to Rock Creek Park would be|with new housts cannot be furnished | On last Friday :he forelgn rela-| In 1904 a treaty was negotlated | coral history that a book has often| Q- What is the real name of the(and the Springficld were the weapons THEODORE W. NOYES. ... Editor | qestroyed. The Commissioners are[up to the close of the present fiscal | tions committee. of the Semate re. by Secretary of State John Hay, Te-|rurnished the intellectual basis or|cthedral where former President | one of which T alwuss carticd i my The Evening Star Newspaper Company making the matter clear to Congress|year if the present rate of applica- nart:a. with 1!; nm:r?\a.l. a treaty be- [linquishing the Isle of Pines to Cuba. the emotional stimulant for many a|Wilson is lnlerr'ed?—b_ H. V. forred them fo 4ny nile v‘”w il ofise Tl ot o In @ hearing on the supplemental esti- | tions for such connection is main-| twe¥n the United States and Cuba. |That treaty has lain for twenty years | great reform, cause or movement.| A. It Is officlally the Cathedral of [ Winehester did adimiraniy wh 1 New York Otfice: 110 Last mates. tained. which has lain in the archives of the lin the office of the committee on | Perhaps the most striking case is that | Saint Peter and Saint Paul. giraffes, cland 3 o 3 Fower 1d % 3% # as will be with h 5 Euroncan Ofice: 16 texen St , Londonogland. [ From the heginning of development| Here the District government has|committes for twenty years, awalting |foreign relations awalting Qiscus- | of «Uncle Toms Cabin” and its in-1 Q. ‘How many women in the Philip- | heavs. oo inke " Lo ippos. —_— of Rock Creek Park the advantage|its troubles in connecting new houses | due consideration and action. slon, with ratification or rejection |fuence toward freeing the slaves in |pines belong to women's clubs?’—R. E. | buffaloes 1 found thit for e flon, T3 detiverct . ot ithin i | B4 Deen seen of adding to it the val-|with sewer maing already laid. Old[ The treaty, which concedes the Iste |bY the Senate The treaty cltes. 4| Amorica.* 4 less conspicuous but no- | A. There s & membership of ap- (Sonally the heavy Mol v (it i 60 cents per meatl; dafly only, 40 | leys of certain creeks that enter Rock | outlying sections of the city where| °f Pines to the republic of Cuba, winl |geRfieration for the relnamishinent 1\ Bl b cMle that of “A i e A B L G D i etes M Lt o :"‘(:":‘F"'PK“;”':‘I"H";:A';U:thi.‘ ':;-.xw Bl o Ber 1 creck. These little valleys are bits of | sewer mains have not been laid have | €O™e uP mr'arllun upon the floor of l(]years huhore) (:flcer;;nl?én:llnx’r'l:t:; That Found Itself,” by Clifford W. g0t oot o e ratorme. T;‘gr(uugn jio agsert my full knowledsa of the Ferad e G A s " 'Y A7 | wild lgnd and are natural entrances to| greatly increased in population. The | he Sephto probably thin week. It will (088 on fhe matniand of Cubs, Thewe | Beers, and its effect on the mental thele effort 4 mother's day has hren | fact that the clioice of a ritle i s the park. Two of these valleys are|people demand water and sewers. The | 1700 VILED opRoston Wnspired BY )y’ tokens of appreciation of our |hygiene movement. So potent has|sct aside They are now Javentie | idosvne as the choles of il American citizens who claim to oWn |services {n freeing Cuba. from Spain |been the influence of this book to- i 4 = a 4 ¢ Mail—] itng] ; 5 » % o o iy Sy thy abolltion ¢ ¢ | fricnd. The determining facto. Kate by Mail Iingle, which leads {rom) the weat, | District liegds inust deny ithe demandy ;.o fiien| (hfae-qiiusters of the teatl|anl i thelr beorion L rom Epain ward securing a saner view of Insan- | Soepgie o OF the @bolltlon of the | oI n e ehing the and Piney branch, which leads from | hecause there is no money for the | autits of the fsle dnd wh been miade to the Isle of Pines. “ ) ate o . tho allege that ity that ften been called “the . RJ:}: .Am] anday i o 'r 3600 “ the cast. The proposal to add these|work. The health department closes|they w-;‘re induced to settle and invest | . * ok ok ok 'L":Icl: ;:J:scl:hrn]- of the Insan Q. Which (‘hanfi'ler i‘:( "l,)lu,n» \\'um-.‘ Q. What is the highest city in the aily only <o 15T, 26,00 St i S Lo o there by statements from our gov- = . -, ]en” was supposed to be the author?| United States?—J. K. r $2.40 ¢ yalless to the park has been pending | thewells on which the neople depend|(hore hv. staicmenta fromiour §9¥- 1 ‘wien ithe United States withdrew |7 reafl (his boake. whim It was fret] oo, B. & Yo & long time and a few years ago the | for water and says that the situation | with Spain, that the isle was & part |from Its government of Cuba Gen.|published, tn 1908, and it made @ pro-| 4. The character of Joe is the|city, being 1,014 feet above seq jr land could have been bought for a|isa menace to the public health. New o }{":i'es;f“t"rv ceded by Spain > ‘:;L‘ Leonard Wood left the Isle of Pines|found impression upon me as a vital |author, Louisa M. Alcott. licre are other settiements the (1 mo. trifling sum. There has been delay | Sections of the city have grown up| Lritid States at the ‘close of the fynger the government of the de facto | human Goenens and alse because of rxide e Sl o Liden, bUC ey are 0 1 mo., 2jc | because it was believed by many that | where there are no water mains and * ok ok ok jofficers of the province of Havana.|ity simple, direct and vivid style and | dangerous?—D. M. i - these valleys, steep and narrow for a | Sewers. People had to have, houses, Article IT of the Paris treaty saya: Q:dm‘h'm 5““"»’7"::0"1 :nfl é‘onflflue‘d for its humor—for humor it hag | A. Continued exposure to ’Q»l “'ljl’v«-h star sends us the Member of the Associated Press. Corataa 5 2 N hey e s it ¥ = i cto ever since. merican set- | = v em. In the inter- |tenths of 1 per cent of it will cause | heat?- - ety s | considerabie part of their length, could | and they bullt villages without wait Spain cedes to the United States tlers have alternately protested to|Strange as it may seem. In ded it |unconsciousness and death. Carbon| A. The star Alpha Orionis sends the to the use for repiblication of il % | not be used for building. But tracts as | ing for water pipes and sewers, the Island of Porto Rico and ciher ngress sgalnst adoption of the|vening years I have recommended i) onoxide s odorleas, colorless and|most heat on the bs patehes credited 1 i1 or gt atherwise eredited | rough as these have been graded for ——— lands now under Spanish sovercigucs (Hay treaty giving over the island {lo scores of readers. A new and|FQUZiSe (8 000tRss, coorless and | — The aggregate valie ; . e roten iy Be n this paper nnd ale the locud news i sl i % in the West Indies, and the Island of |de jure t.” Cuba, and have appealed |flnal edition has recently been pub- | fASLEISE, ¢ Shonld ardoman be addre e nbrein AT HEnGs o pablivation ot } building and the Commissioners told A Coasting Casualty. | Guam, in the Marianas, or Ladrones.” |for an American administration. lished—the sixth, I believe—and |4V of the senses. e e asonian be adds incial Uicpatctes heicin e’ aids TeveR. | the director of the. budger aen e | Mariancy ca5 admis ook e up ror Birsoty SamBRtoR 13| @ How Guen T Stteaction of tna| A DO Bl R i e P : A lad of fourteen was struck by an Eotok * seo what new matter it might con | moon'for ‘the carth compare ith | ikl HIG O & phisician does ¢ o a subcomm ;o of the @pPUTOPHa- |, ysomobile last night and seriously| On August 10, 1899, George Bridges, | The United States Supreme Court | tain. N o e e [Eravity’—1 C. “Nire, BIank." If tho Ts u phel Critical Hours for Tax Reduction, | tions committec that application hasi i eq He was sliding down @ sleet, |20 American, inquired of the War De- [Las ruled upon an appeal in error 15 the Story. A. The Naval Obeervatory s [ herself she 15 known professionally B o been wade by owners of the land for | . i o partment regarding the Isle of Pines: i from the southern New York United Tk ® that the moon's tide-raising for as “Dr. Blank,” and socially us “Mrs The next thivysix hours will ¢on-} gyaging permits, preliminary to buid. | €¥¢7ed hill and was hit by the motor “Does it come in as Porto Rico or | sta i ¥ when the moon is in the zenith, is| 3 & stitute a eritical period for tax redue- o e e GR car. No blathe was attached to the el e 2 oohag | States circult court, in the case of| In this autoblography of an ex-|ihout one nine-millionth pase ot the | 1 tion, 1o, which halt 2 dosen votes inil o& houses. It would Le deplorable if motorist, as the accident was unavoid. | 24T the same conditions as <huhfl Pearcy vs. Stranahan, on & claim that | crazy man the author, who shortly |force of gravity. A ship weighing | Q. What musical inetruments do e ' S gan i . this bit of land should not become AR b e | T expect to go there In November:'!tobacco importe 5 Ya ad | 45.000 tons would lose 10 pounds of | Chinese play? D¢ the House may decide the nature of : Creck Park able. This is the first of the winter's = = f t el = P d from the Isle of [after his graduation from Yale had 1t weight when ‘the moon 18 Sver: o S s e the Billitoibe fitat e o oy part of Rock Creck Park, coasting casualties in Washington, and The answer to this inquiry from the | pines should not be assessed tariff as an attack of mental disorder which |pe,q S A. The Chinese use drum : oy OHpICk o i Ans BESCE RO —_— e it comes so late In the season stmply | 27, Department, August 10, 1899, |from a foretgn country, it belng part |lasted for three years, tells the in- - TRere ase tiree Nahaties S ot T Tou's,) The eLe AN noftans (9 . < O 2 ke 'n (e season Simply | yqs gs foliowa: of United States territory. If the [side story, not only of his own ill-| Q- In a social gathering. when Ay t0% B0 TGS AADEIES GF Tiie the country. involving the srave de-| The Government Invites Disaster. | because of the lack of snow and ice Roferting to your communicatlon |isie was part of Cuba, then Imports {nees, but also of the experiences he | bl bolos & toast to B, should Bidrink | e Giston whether the Haute will sefd] Yosterdiy momniug fireidestroyed o | {NI81¥50r, Had there been more snow| o Augtinn 10 matant, Tam aiiscteaby rom 1y wats subiace 1 el cibiilo it b i L What i of over to the Senate a balanced meis- {two-story frame barracks at Fort | there would probably have been more | the assistant secretary of war |races under our reciprocity with Cuba. |stitutions, particularly the eruelt and the toast is drunk, B should not | vear? -A. M. 11 . ure, framed on sound cconomic 1ines | Humphreys, Va. Two enlisted men | 2ccidents, and perhaps some fatalitles | (Meiklejohn) to advise you that this suin the declsion, wrltten by Chief |no euffered and saw others suffer, | 4rink the Goast propossd in his honor. | 4 which would ultimately work out to|were burned to death. The building | fOM this cause. island was ceded by Spain to the [Justice Fu vr.‘_lt is held Even before he fully recovered and| o ywhat dig Semator Tom Watson | &T¢ importations s 1910, the best interests of business, the £ov- [ in which these men lost their lives| It iS seemingly impossible to pre-| United States. and is, therefore, | ,iiiis Induirs |‘l"':°1r;;m“:;lmé:;»;rrel: whilo he was still confined in a state |,y Vo R o *Ga | following fhat i which ut ernment finances and the taxpayers as | was one of the war-time “shack™ bar.] VNt children from using the streets| part of our territory, although It is [ments nave put upen the treaty. For | tion to Rnl o iSormen o resn. (‘A L b?smrr! son?—D. T. {lmm“_,h,,, AR AR well, or one largely shaped by party | re 3 o erected by eds |83 toboggan slides whenever condi- attached at present to the division of [in the language of Justice Gray In|of methods of tresting the insane. . The late Senator Watson prob- | tountry free of dite, is ¢ ell, ol OneAarRely ships by Tty frack: © erected by hundreds o f i o Vernmental purposes, lione United States—137 U.|His purpose became to rob insanitv [ably based his statement on the fact | $550.000,000 a1 averdgs of and political exigencics which. it isfin the hasty preparations for the re.|tlons permit, despite the risks and|Cuba for go RaTy 1s soverelgn de jure [of ItS terrors, to correct abuses and Brutus has been | G00.000 For 19 predicted by the experts, would seri-|ception and training of troops when |dangers. They will take their chances|® * © You are advised that the|or de facto of a gKovernment? 15 not 4 | ralse. the wrandard of treatment. of held by some historians to have been |ports from op wusly injure all interest States entered the Iuro. | Without thinking, regardless of all the | disposition of public lands must await | judicial b-;z a political uuesrl‘lor]l. the |the Insane and to induce the benevo- ‘,’,'“,2"'{'}’,.“',"{;}“-' o of Jz;n)us !.’sr‘rarv‘\..ln ut $33,000,600, o : S o PR s 2 R Sl ¢ St Congrens: determination of which by the legis- [Ient rich to ald in the founding and . s' Joininz the conspira- [© L I* i3 cortain now that the oviginal { pran struggle in 1917, It was neces. | Police can do, which is little. The mo- ”\fj‘.:‘"_)_“:‘lw;‘m""“l‘;"“ lative and executive departments of {mnaintenance of model {nstitutions for Vs ieotxbluined by the fact! Q. Will vou please tell who was the plan of the Mellon bill cannot be car v o DAt them ool e torists must continue to use the - v . any government conclusively binds|the care of the mentally discased. | that in aesur had appointed | author the quotations on :A“d‘ :»irl tarting ui‘mlqh m“l\ of }n"(l A m—,';‘; kl"",md "rd";l‘ streets short of the blockading of “JOXN J. PERSIING, the judges as well as all other of- 'r!lY success which has crowned g|i< Octavian as his heir, ‘;nmn ation and v opest office?- o o e Latie and speedivi & = - “Assistant adjutant general” | fic citizens and subjects.” efforts is recounted in the appendix i 18 fno 5 per cent. the administration vepub- !l handied material. It was not expected | €6r1ain areas. That can hardly be ef- Aaistan ;d’*u: BRRSER theless, the Chlef Justice goes | to this edition of “A Mind That Found '1.»(ihe“s-';'\ft\!n{’xf"n“fl"”f‘“t,""" includedj 4 '}y Charles Eliot was the oriz icans were forced by conditions pre- | that they wor silong. o : fected without a very serious discom- ) say: telf,” wherein Mr. Beers gives ajif S faORET inal author of the quotations abo licens were: foraed by/conditions pr [ mat they’ would be 1ong continuea ""m,‘”“ P blic and vossibre| On the strength of this attitude u short, the world knew it (Isle |ilstory of the mental hyglene move-| A, The following tribes were origi- | wiser s hace toguoed s vailing in the House to “raise the{yse, Y me of them are still oceu- Ging o e public and possibly f the War Department, it is alleged, |of Pines) was an integral part of |ment and his predominant part in it. [nally called the “Five p “lomited: so speak, by Treside ante” to 33 per cent by way of prof- | pied, sev ars after their | denial of access to private property. | ne feans have invested |Cubi, and in view of languare of [Largely as the result of this book | Cavuga, Mohawk. Oneid: aga, | Wilkon, ¥ changed the ed compro They were driven These dangers arise on short notice, | PUndreds of Americans have invested |5 50" (s lution April 20, 1898 (declar- |41 0f the author's efforts during th . Later the e tered compromise. They were driven & ; erection. They are fire traps, as this in the isle plantations, vet almost |y, <D cering | 145t fifteen years. Iy have state. . m : : Bt & 3 : e isle plantations, vet alme 15 war with Spain and empowering yeare, not only have state, " to this, practi “held up” by al gatadity a vt Humphreys demon-|3 snowfall comes, and before any pro- |jmmediately after the above letter | e Yo sident to wage war not for |Dational and international mental hy- tribes Yor Q. How b erative orean threatened ontbinGtpn Hetween FidE | etraten sion can be made for safeguarding {bégan the diplomatic movement to]vonquest). it was elear the Tele. of glene socteties been organized, which [and Canada, and_some in OKlahoma. | zations ¢ Gre there Bl . S b o lcede the island to Cuba Pin ‘S not supposed to he one of |'Ave published an abundant popular o United States? I i the war temporary barracks ;’.’l‘; frh}:le‘i”“ ":f” ‘"‘; shalng ‘l“:"'f When the United States esligne Cathes Iotantr eadea s onaoL Mteraturs on his subject, ut, even i), St oider (shoutd tne| %] oe. ed.in. Potomac: Pavie th. this | Dl v sometimes station “guards™ lgotiating to turn over the Island of |1 These were fslands not constitut- |More significant. the whole menta Lesthery ir s be read?—a.. A I8 1 he demucr: Yer the or 3 at da * points, 838 B Cuba to the newly formed Cuban re- | piintaa of Cubia ch as |Attitude of the uninstructed public | K. ¢ i The demucrats effected the cre ¥ for the housing of a detachment ;8¢ danger points, but this is but a|tubn to the newly formed Cuban re- | ing ar Intogral Dant of Cube nuchias | cowand intanity tad ok aL A. D. W T Tohg in i Americin | ok of their bluc by “tving up” all heir for troups. After demobilization these | 114l reliance, as the youngsters thus {5 e ceived wn_amend- S A k (formed. Tusanits is no lon con- | Literatur gEests that Cooper' | { republicans and a solid democratic ve tes hud 191147 members, with aggregate paid o capital §11.290,875. The raf societ membership, through their catcus rule, | uildings were turned over to the in- | S¢t as sentinels are lacking in judg- {ment introduced by Senator Platt, as " lsle 0f Pines lies thirty-tive |dldered as a mysterlous curs 1 no fnovels should be read in the follow- pet s & 5 1 "® |longer is one who has been in an |ing sequer Dee: roL 6 s ¢ the Garner although it ant g cigilance. - cast o shore of Cuba, di- n i E cerslayer, Last of 4 suppurt the Garner Lill, althoush it | terdepartmental supply committee for | Ment and vigilance. Tn any case. 1ste of Pines shatl be [Uley off the south shore 1ol ouba, di- Jacylum permanently stigmatized. Peo- Pathfinder, Floneer,| fve ooioti o1t wemie fs known that many democrats are of | storage purposes. They quickly de. | Signals are difficult to see, especially [omini fivn e Gromiied ehall, be 800 square miles, of which about 300 |Di HoW understand the importance G o mare (Hin 53,000, With . ton Upinion that the Garner bill is not the | teriorated and, loaded with heavy ma- |38 Dight. A dangerous condition de-tionul boundarics of Cubu the ttle | o “Covered with forest—mahogany | oh,,"ntaning ‘mental health and = capital slightly xcexs of §11,00 3 DEsiEEte s , thereto being left for future adjust- 7 5 : Is often just as possible to! Q. Ts there a ruling about an old safest nor soundest proposition. Onee {erial, one of them collapsed and fires | VCIODS With almost instantaneous | {HeTete aud g U hebCpulation | regain mentul health as it ic 1o get|embloze of the post offve that is on having their bloc coppered up against [yere started in - other tunately | Suddenness . I o sincs | only fourteen Amerlcans, the others | 0ol s bh mertal Toin ho, (ot physi- |4 pension working for ancther com-| q. How » ir disintegration they proveeded to hold fquickly estinguished to prevent the| TS matter defles solution. Official {com: intrrpretution of | Lo Spanjards, Indlans and negroes. | tied together. Read this high -1 A, The Post Office out. inducements to the vadicals 01 qestruction of valuable stock. Now | Prohibition of coasting is virtually |qp.. sh ession, for Cuba and e & bl e~ Inificant’ and intensely interesting |that there i come over. and the invitation was|they are beins ed to clear the |Sure to be ineffective because of iack |the United te greed that the = panies and some 400}book. N an settlers who own more than « % g < A f means of enfore ¢ title was not fixed by the . % * ment to be employed promptly accepted. around of their unsightly and unsafe ; 9 Means of enforcement. It is simply §ol,5 w43 M thiree-rourthe of the Jand snd: have that are not under the < ] p I suggest that the reader of “A - ¥ ary feed Menaced by this combination. which | T another case where the children must ne e developed orchards and plantations of Jf the g overnment. A pe whom 1 pplementar: s il % o ngle hiies. The b G Rl e B | &rapsfruit ‘and other tropical fruita [Mind That Found Itself” supplement | Move anner nevept amer s e | and adnition LR e TentusL ] el of ithe Platt: amendment, The island is partly mountainous and | nis knowledge of mental hygiene | the sovernment. 2 ! provided HEntiy assume the responsibili It is up to | ituti = ntio: ay | Dighly picturesque. The climate is et aton s He says that cl Srfans Cuban_ rons 1convention (May | Mghly picturesque. ‘The el noslfrom Dr. Stewart Paton's “Stens of them to see that the boys and girls do |20, 190 its_instrument {ancdicnl sbctoms. There ores wiatoos Isarity: and the Princisies of Mental ot risk their lives. ferrin government of Cub, |imedical springs. There are sixteen 3 t Menta ne enough for their replacement. it< president and congress, declared, | American manufacturing plants, six |Hyglene.” 1In this brief book, pub- | L ; vadical 1 fcans e 1 them- | xppropr should have been made e SIS understood by the United | Samills twenty-six nurseries’ and | lished tn 1922, the author attempts o | e o metealp t stied, ane et " oy i c C States resent Ko N one bank. % stion: * - o e selves as not satistied, and negotia the erection of permanent | Protest is renewed by ¢ Bman:-ny e th D rovernment | The Americans ‘compliln’ that ithe |anawer tie question: “Does man to- | di orders through the fundamental| Q. Who was the girl who fougl tions ave procesding today 2 s, But seemingly it hus heen | that the thecry of evolution demoral. | nt pending | Cubaus oppress them, maintain no [day possess sufficient soundness nf;(”;‘:;:“in‘:‘“:‘l‘&hg;ll"" and experiences |during the world war with Rumar Tt ois a grave vesponsibility. which | geemed “cconomy™ to continue them | izes students. While it is dificult to | #e Loof the title to the ddeduate courts of justice, no prover imind to exercise intelligent control - e e legislators shonlded he pr s < i o1 itrace the e Sotion RuGEest 3 | Ly treaty, pursuand to|schools, either in English or any|gver the complicated civil R = e, | A. Ecaterira Teodoroin was knov tnedesiilaton shoulier inythe by and take charces with the devouring | trace the connection susgested by Col. [tho" cuban constitution and the act (other linguage, and are planning to has created? e nolds that on the | ot anias 4re the average carnings las the Jeanne 0 Ar: unts don of this Bl Some day thes Willjement. Yesterday's tragedy is proof | Bryan. there is no donbt that a de-|of Congress of the T'nited States ap- | establish a leper colony on the isiand. | a5 Createds” question depends not | T, T vAY Workers?—T. P. D. fought Intieneront Hinestrenoiies 01 have to account for their votes if the [ ot this is an unsafe risk. {moralizing influence has been at work |Proved Mareh 2, 140 B | (copyright, 1924, b 1 Y. Collins ) imply individual happine 1A The averaze compensation of |the Rumanian amns 1z the, worls Rl Lo 1 e renar Ty of Social probe (Taliread emploves in 1922 was |war. This girl n wore wrong bill i< passed. [t is not yet t At Walter d Hospital a number | Somewhere Teme, WorTa pence and acial Hebioh: {'eieaz 95 uniform wnd foupht us brave late to abate partisanship and o i of wooden buildings remain in use, @ —_— { > = The tem of sanics s the auced . S it i Der dh e AR e s up economic soundies- g GO o =5 5 reany Al 5w S . ’ a ife to reall 5| Q. What make and caliber rifie dic A5 2 Ta 1 Sxampi P economic sou il fnvitation o disaster. Should | Bven should the senate committee | THE VICTORY OF LEADERSHIP | |adusunent jof he to rean Col, Roosevell use for big game of fid e —————— e start in one of them a terrible | produce no further reveiations. the at- mind, The obfect of the ook is while hunting in Afr L. I H. d in battle earl e : Iilibe stffered. for these Stene ] tornaved - T e e the essentials of sanity . Col. Roosevel 4 Winchest (Let The wiion Burca The District's Greatest Need. = would be suffered, for these strue- | torneys in charge of the oil prosecu- P [ o5 tiat e Col: Roosesalt neliester ; A occupied by disgbled men | tion will find enough material on hand | BY JOHN RLYLE ;%;lfllrr(:\;!;(;O:'I’l‘lfinrn:gn:l!mt © Holigud, b;;\rmgn—hl and Eox suns e T < RS el {who could not be “‘cleared” from the ! to keep them going for some time. (T il bcome bealthy, nealthy aua Of Teade-at the midwinter dinner Sat: ds in time. Yesterday's five shows ——— A million persons stand bareheaded ;. Lenin was the ruler of Russia, |y =% 0T §1GETaiis rute for kewn- i Tontivoy | HOW Tapidly the flames spread in these | g ool . {In the Viting cold while the corpse His successors will be the rulers of {1y¢ ‘navertheless, there are nseful vx. night, fully and effectiv e ke i tock quotations reacted to the oil | Nicolai Lenin is carried by, Ten |JUSSia. Democracy, which works but | pedients of recognizec pr St ATy stated the plea 1 f | Mngerboes scandals in @ way that made wan |Cf Nicolai Lenin is carri fitfully in any land. works with even erving sanity and prev et this iate happening 2 {hours are miven up to claborate |less success in Russia because of the | ws Sell as for stimuin resentation in Pk 2aat, PPening Al gireet feel like an innocent bystander | A for aumuls Furt Huamphreys® serve as a final s e S it e e s | s 2 et S T R g, R e, NS O LR S Lloyd George’s Statement Worth {"(‘II"_‘"; :I? ’j‘”‘"" ; "" | government is running in continuing e e | And in those dramatic and melan- [hatred of the czar and on what i?,‘g‘lx:,: ?)l:; ;nzv\iulvrp‘rfi;P;;gm;finfi l.';' . ~ o« 1 the agsrogut i e ases patd 1y | oS 2 wavds, boh sabed and | Enghnd's labor goverament fnas n fcholy G, T, W, mplets proot passed, for creareipies, veert oot et et Taking Only for What It Contains :‘;"e";‘p‘_‘;_ ::;‘;":I“\[‘““::;‘\"““" a0 private ownership be permitted to [ utilize @ line of information and ex.| For no muliitude in the imperial [people only thought they hated the | Washingtonians should be inter ge in many are destitute Department savs | I 1. I no rule S ven tha a pensioned employe o Ha | there ase 2000, A ehildre: and children for ereated a majority against th per continutd hoeusing of troops in s s a direct ported today to be offering to vaise the | 3 suster. There has been -ate to concession, The 1 cent vate. the vepublicins were re- !, i St N - i | the Tnited States. Unlese it is pr | vided thousands of children will di {and hundreds of thousands will suffe: { i Representative Will a of In diana, in his ad s e the Buard s by Guery to The Star iformdtion it least for me, Y. the | reau, Frede Haskin, dired ‘medicine gun' for lior At another 0 North Cup treet.” The on place in his book he makes the fol- | charge for this serviee is 2 cents lowing statement: “The Winchester stamps for returi posiage.) more humbly acknowledged personal ftine, eager for adventure—that was |per's the article by Elizabeth Robins| Although Lloyd George has denied George's close sentation which gars evorywhere lat the bier of Lenin | Lenin. And they worehiped him |cathedral. It is illustrated with! of the phr i . ehich i avs of the czar could have|czar. They were just tired of rou- ing in the February Har- Egranting then Tt nf remea | Temain in use for human habitation, |Perience in which its responsible rep- |42 o : { 3 rou-jed in reading in the February Har Branting S R I resentatives are naturally expected to |autocracy and dictatorship than this [all. " Deprived of one czar. they | bennell Building an American Cathe- | that he authorized the statement as @nd which Mr. { be most proficient. imilion of average Russian citizens kly Luilt another. His name was i dral,” since it describes our own to the “secret compact” between U1a1es only to the in the United States with the liabilits | Having vefused a retainer from Mr. ! : > act” betwee to taxation Sinclair, Mr. Colby sees no reason to! S e When Leon Trotsky dies the same jas ther had long ago worshiped an |ctchings by Joseph Pennell. Mre, | Wilson and Clemenceau. his denial is o on thi : 2 2 i re-cnacted. And when |Alexander and a Nicholas and back | Pennell tells us of our good fortuns |taken with several bags of salt in quite - ool epresenta ol knows discuss the matter further. The attj-| SHOOTING STARS. ders who succeed Lenin and |of that a Catherine and a Peter (he‘fi'nlrh[nz (lsg;x;\\‘.f & this country, where it i: regarded Ly {the Loy the helpless condition of the Dis- | tude is sensible enough, though indi ! ¢ ] dic, the same million, and |Great. “One thing it does give in its pres-| 5" 0 ;L Sth Hustration of | Jinneapolis Tribune insists, hecause utiot le in respeet to their legista- | cating an unusual readiness to evade | 1Y PHILANDER JOHNS0N {more than thev, will bow again in| What a lesson the funeral of Lenin jent stage which not one built in the {Many as just another illustration of | Nids agner 1 < here ict peopic In respect to their legisla- | 4 = e S iabject recognition of personal leader- |teaches! People change so slowly. |past can give us now, and this is|the Lloyd George personality. | home, any one of ks larger tire. He has seen them repeatedly |the spotlight which public opinion A Negative Satisfacti {snip. Human progress drags but inch by [the chance to see the beauty of @| iy spite of his honorable and ef-|in the Am. : than ask for laws and for appropriations | likes to turn on a prominent man |, S pon, {* What is the answer? The unswer |inch. {cathedral in the making. H anything that eould now possib 1 S o e soas i v | We go torward by s 0 P he e 45 | fective career during the war,™ the [ UStHing that ould vow DOSSIUIS be without effect. He has s hem | who shuns templation. ‘m proud of what I left unsaid,” !is that there is nof. and in our day & ard by one man. .nd| “Much of the history of the old ca «24d about th that v said Hezekiah Bings. jnever can be, any dictatorship of the lone manner alone.” We g6 forward jthedrals is told in their stones, injColumbus Dispatch declares, “the|around the peace tables five vears ignored in respect to their most| 7 e !proletariat or of ‘any other cluss. Men [In the train of banners with some |the marks of their growth through | pritisn ex-premier has so often ut- |axo. The Lansing Journa¥ 0! ! e . e e e i “Though oratory oft has led are not created equal. and even when |£0Ft of an imperlal leader going on [the ages, in all that survives of the | oS8 CHlTE A0 H8 19 € LoF Tho i GEhes widirope n conis excited urgent needs. his s in greal part | That Senator Walsh of Montana To very splendid things, hey approach equality in birth they |before, endor with which generations of ' » oA over the the United State because they have no voting { . i Y Bl & \ al. Leadership isx| There is no victory but the v S iched them, in all traces | ratirement that the best hope now |Gei ooos = St Fch mttion 1 e e g repre- | should be hard to please in the matter | Impressions which have tempicd me |40 Dot remain cuual Leadership f| leadership. e ety e e L ol e T e e : Berly char tion in the body that makes the | of ol prosecutors is not yurprislmz.l To speak before the throng ce E ! (Copyright, 19: generatlons of unbelievers dishonored [ 17 ¢1 (0] power to harm, because of | acterized i for them and that allols the |The information he has been sifting | Have faded, and I must agree llllem. Also, of .’xln’um!wr' there Br-; their very frequency,” and his correc- money for their muinienance. It is|may be regarded enough to cause! Th = more or less complete archive u do the harm that ) ! < y be rega se | at mavbe I was wrong. 1 important part of thejrytlons ccanuot undo. the harm thaty i Uil because they are politically impotent, { gy man’s faith in human nature t Deplores Auto Crashes. |1 % i we et 1o adeauats | 143 been done by opentng ol sores | {THAL e ) netusion because they have nothing to say in ! gaver, ‘It's great to make an audience roar, record. We Eknow nmmn;,:“ of lh‘;:[i time when every thoughtful per-|is the way the Wnoxville Sentine vespect to national affairs and have | s | But it will bring a sigh Writer W f actual mannes of their, buflding, and i son should be striving to promote | pue it, Lecause “the story was s no voice whatever in the selection of i 116 jnternal revenue bureau ge.|If ¥ou should find you've started more viter Would Aid Research in|it iz this buliding, hich {odag, con {wood will aud frionaly ndesetant’ | iapid: ana ‘preve S as dn the federal exccutive. T quires returns as usual, regardless of| Than you can verify. ": am :]I;e master of my ’"ui” Brake Linings by Standards |St- Alban at ;\ .;sh;niwn. HRE o e bl Corer- ot 1:.(.( n_conte s S There is but one cure for this CON- opoced tax revisions. The fact that | THOUEh My remarks have never led o theicapiinof;my s0u . T Jar, | M. Lioyd George Is exceedingly pro | oy aternatint e it dition, and that is national repre- Congress is compelled o procrastinate 'To fame's loud trumpetings, —HENLEY. Ghost stories are always popular. | e S 0rt 0 e ren > Britain;an A sentation, for which Repr enmn\'r‘; cuse for the taxpayer's doing I'm proud of what T haven't said,” Wood spoke strongly, and it is hopwl‘ : 3 4 Said Hezekiah Bings. ON, THE QUIET BOY. | Bureau To the Editor of The Star: It has been with marked interest that I have read the strong editorials and ! A v W, s timel, v S ————— - ndrew W. Mel . a ' timely news articles y Unleashed. W. Mellon was the son of a les you have published “I understand you are helping to whether they be of the hair-raisi bive imposed uyon the i i s. Y2 BRh 1 a even e most type practised by Mrs. Radc . g et naa even \gressional oo the elghteenth century, those with a{ Whatever be the facts, the Des 'e,pqjon alout the = e i sort of pseudo-reallsm, like Defoe's | Moines Tribune feels the action of ity valq Unton regards it nt Saturiay, night. The fact that he is liable to be reck- | thi “Apparition of Mrs. Veal." or the "‘°“'!Ll°yd Ceores I malcms AL gtk O bis Br Al sy nalie i il ys In| 08si oi = eputable 8! 0 alis {essly fired on makes the DOOUEEEEr | 101 an investisation had 2 good education, but always he (MNE possible to reduce the number of | “PYIC VL% search ehost stortes. ; because “the facts concerning the n 18 going to the demo-t con more of a mena.s to the law-| ar i) has been the quiet, bashful, modest Sutomoblle accidents. During the year |00 NVl larion, the famous | secret agreement “merited the con- | NN TN TN Y Fescara ciatic convention. There is no room | oy e e Not strictly speaking,” answered | self-effacing person. | 1523 the persons killed in motor crashes | French astronomer. who has un even | demnation it received from Loth the |ing the Rhineland have buen publish. for fear that anybody will succeed in § o0 0ns Public than he was before. Senator Sorghum. “This investigation| He attended the Pittsburgh public | "umbered enough to populate a city the | wider reputation as an in esxm:mm- London and Paris foreign offices” ;Z:rr"h" LI x'ill‘:};. e ater i AUbping en evblalion iane dnto dhs { s gotten past the place where any- |schools and Western University of | 5i2¢ of Annapolis, Md, I Dsy e ree e, T e elick | But “the world will not be deceived | {UTther Fomitiibly DECEUEE o UK platform. i Sewers. body can hold it.” f:;‘;s‘{h'.um&, wur_klnq,\&)n hie father’s | You can further help lower this terri- 2 soon be published. In it he re.|by his belated attempt to set him- L seeret agrecment that could . The Commissioners have appeared seemed 16 Fe'the thing to Ao at the | prrate o urking Congress to appro- {Sounts the atSries of FHich e Rap|Sclf D &5 iho one Wio was [ELUAE/ FEATENY rate St wonld cer » 3 .. ibefore the District subcommittee of{ Jud Tunkine says a heap of talk |time,” he sald, in his reserved manner, | PTiate @ sultable sum to permit the |sand fimunted houses which he has}eo. yjeal solutions,” the Brooklyn TNt Thoroass the Aood, feoling ey vails In the Uniled o appropriations committeo In sup | 7O B0Ing around makes a. jazz band | Graduated from collee when nine. |automotive division of the bureau of [IN¥eSEBtEd 1o poi o oo o Lor o8l SOWUORE D TECL tainly ot eyt gond Gl States Senate that facts available are | o ks . sound harmonious by comparison l;:x:, h’? dlsk)ed hl!l father |lur_a standards to contlnue Its research work | of “The Last of the Vikings.” s about was the ideal comnromiser and his it insinuated that Woodr A Wiise R e e [ port of an item of $100,000 for sewer . haven't ns Secaritrto ol youos | Which has resulted in the conservation | to come to America for the purpoue | Shioe funation was co persuade Loth | tricd to put over an” seere ) i j construction under the assessmentand | R el i poel o ClIer: YOUTS | o6 countiees 1 of making a study of Norwegians in | Clemenceau and Wilson to make com- | ment i Faris in the opinion necessary o add @ gossin department | o015 A0 OB BESET the Secessm Polar Research. a bad risk.” his father said, ‘as he InE publle ot o esaving to the | 31 Crica, to be used in a new movel. | promeneCaR ARG T (O ived 1o |Savannan Pross to the Congressional Record. ?r:ll;,:supprm;mo:l I estimates mcmdeg The old north pole is lost again, | Gbout nterest. Hirtoen monin Lo | moer 8 PUbllc of 310000000 por an- |} Fians o cvtain e i vy ojneETatT, The most JmpUTIANT PO o in th al estimates approve ; s & 3 num on their yearly brake lining bill, |in the morthwest, perhaps also in a der is the state of Frenc After ail, though “when T small town, g bill, | in to consider is After all, thoug éb,v thie biireait OF thie budseh T ihe hough in the same position. ! mall town, working fourteen hours H = d there to study his ish nerves, in_the opinion " - " 3 & 2 day as boss, bookkeeper, clerk and | Which is but one of the numerous econ. | lumber camp. an and British n 5 things,” the Detroit Free ress mauin 1t is finally admitted by Mr, Sin-!qssessment and permit plan a part of|{ 10 8¢t discovered now and then helper, he built a real estate, lumber | omies that have been effected. clair that all the interest and excite- | the cost of the sewer work is charged Would seem its only mission. S R“};Tl;fi%\;'ly)plll':;"buslnwu, then | Dispatches from . Washington state Ségfii’{;f' f\'x'fm;f?'fu:li"" e s, Premier |oyachic the. Toyal Cuorgs shuta ment the U. & A. could ofter did not | against the property beneflted, @nd| The Tnnocent and the Gull Back in his Tather's bank, he had to | that the entire appropriation_planned et i Macdonald's latest approaches 1oiment.” For, as the Indiunapolis News fade out when the big race was over. |during the past three years the Flslane h_';fl uilty. dig out his knowledge alone. Within [for the automotive division is but $15,- | Emma Goldman has not found bol- ‘}'“,’;“;e""’nfi',';fifl:s’g:m'«"“*“‘ sees it, “the only question left is & O RS Uamount peld, by property holdess for you te! e sheriff he might |a vear he became a partner when hgs 000. Unless this sum is increased, not {shevist Russia the Utopia she dream- ?l’(lchmnml Nows Leader also e [to the origin of the interview and (g P Or | shoot at & fleeing bootlegger?” father retired, and when twenty-five | only will the present research work e |ed of when she acted as a ¥booster™ sensation “ls of interest today chlef- | p, rocponsibility for its inaceuracy It is undoubtedly the wrong time of | this work has averaged 38 per cent| «yep, replicd Cactus Joo, “The city Onc-mam brivate bamk and. he “has | curtalled, but some of the activities wiy | for it before her deportation from | i for tne Slivapse 1t es Of WHAL| Which, the Newark News caplulug vear to look for enthusiasm concer- | Of the cost. council decided that he could shoot|no directors to help him decide ques. | be discontinued. the United States. She has publighed ! Macdonald's forelgn poliey 1s 10 beit| FER T8 BECE0E (O P ing a flight to the north pole. i The appropriation for sewer work|yyg to scare him, beln’ careful at the foma. Injiwenty-five years he made| There is no doubt but What the whole | & book, in this sountry, called My |8 A Baris to/prosent thel cooc. ey tmuression of hix osil i under the assessment and permit plan | game time not to hit him » the lorgect in fiational Bank, one of | country will welcome & tax reduction, D Ning twevears inHussia she | formal apclogies of lia country te [LEECL imasmmueh g el Klingle Vall {was $150,000 for the fiscal year of| wphat's @ humane idea. up, threo other financial fnstitutions. | but there is nothing of greater Impor. | probably has some reason for her|ITance for what might b e e s e R ingle Valley. {1924. The sums appropriated for this But it ain't workin' out. In & |4 %% 02nker he was a retiring, dif-|tance than the reducing of aceldents®|disillusionment. Although denying he ever gave out [ (' P e Wit The Commissioners are “giving the {work for the fiscal vears 1922 and| orowded street the tioolleaxe's "the 2&1;§,§;“;,'p';*:,§; e sualized pos- | An appropriation of $50,000 would en- PR the statement which caused such @ ol PTG Georen e s best that is in them" to save Klingle | 1923 fell short of the needs of the city only one that's perfectly safe.” paper. Carnegle, Frick, and others|able the buresu of standards to con- Charles R. Flint, the well known |furore in mplo_mm;‘c itcles E it \“__\,\.,,,‘ ey cun o valley for the park system, and Con- and deficlency eppropriations wers 5 Tent to him, e made the carborun- | tinue its splendid laboratory experi- | Anancier, whose “Memorics of an Ac- rOPe and Amcricy, the Kulaico Kb newspuper vorrspoiids il gress has before it in the District | necessary. The supplemental estimate Warning. e mmilg industries IS, | ments and should result in fewer fatal- |tive Life” have recently been pub- | Z5¢ie Botes thak (e Jatln - | flulr for u steiking story s sanly supplemental estimates an item of [ for the current vear is the difference| «} warn you that man is a fottune | Ress, founded Donora, Pa.; challenged | ities and greater savings to the motor- |1ished, can claim the distinction of [ent from that which he trayed his judgrnient. Wi o forg $200,000, approved by the budget bu- | between the appropriation for the | hunters e comtany atss Steel Company and | Ists, whose taxes amount to millions of | being _the only man e S s B e e e, e xR InADL UE Kl reau, for the purchase of Klingle val- | year and the sum already spent or| My dear,” answered Miss Cayenne, | Company: = d°g:;:; i i i delivered & WarEhlD o T ian [vorted to Bave [eharged’ wax a s¢ has blown over there bl rematn vy Jand and its addition to Rock |which must be spent before June 30. | “my father would hesltate to Insist on | o, DIFeCtor In four banks and seventy | 5" write' thelr representathen op S0 | Known As the _father of trusts Whist:, haplaned durinig absence | world's i Whitt hupy Creek Park. A bill for the purchase of | More than one-third of the amount (his working twelve hours a day for |1y wnkasun oeiie e ‘Tas bractical- | subject, as more “fay-walkers” are in- [bought the Chilean cruiser, Xame- | Which, havheed S0 oriticlam, Lue VerAnitton. g L v for |1y unknown outside of Pittsburgh orljyrad than motorists. 1t is of vital im- | raide and delivered her to Japan dur ! R e T T Y this land. for the purchase of land in | spent will be returned to the Treasury | $50 a week. Don't warn me. Warn|New York when Senator Knox -push- portance that a car driver be able to|ing the Russo-Japaneso war. g i) s DAYl nak Ve Piney Branch valley and for a part of | by special taxes on the property bene- | him. < e.d!!él:g‘_cl&rl’yrel:s’lfimlg:g‘lrgs cll:ll";; stop quickly and human lives depend * ok ok ¥ lis expressed himself upon them in Lanybody « 1 v the Patterson tract has been favorahly | fited. Fuve up a vearly income of hundreds | tagay o of & high standard bechuer ot The Pasadena Community Players, |such i Wiy s to lead Mr. Kpender o fwis the Uit Stut il sbiln veported by the Senate District com-| With an insufficient appropriation| “T know a man dat can't tell de |of thousands of dollurs to accept. | {he seven uml!fl‘ouonx tet by the gov- | guo of the muny little theater com- | FUPROse thut the former, premic L R e v mittee, but in the matter of Klingle [and with the danger of incurring a | truth,” said Uncle Kben. “He's mighty | o oy s; & seventy, ho wlwo ix"the e et M ke a981lY | panies In the United Statex. have | {ivo Bonton Trunseript Wonders Mt e ° . . - heat and ro- Wwulde OF dimeutiis Vi e yelley the ftem for its purchase was | deflcit the sewer department hasron- | good company, too. 1o has to be s0's |is intercted in many bencvolent 4nd | the bureau ot staidurds may cens |been producing John Maseficld's play Gecarion for the Tiei - An @ wwale of dillculilen Ao Approved by the budget in the Com. [ducted its business in an economical | ho kin meke new fricnds an' find |¢ducutional tnstitutions ‘but uil has | hoen 'tests of brake lninge. Bacuuso of of Tust wpring. “Melloney Holtwur.” sentment wilch N certuiniy, die|um wiivls 4l v Lty 1 0L 00 missloners’ supplemental, estimates | way. The housing shortage has been | somebody to believe him." sty Y mousetly; CAlBgy: GNET LN Mck of Ss Dy STRRAY. e valrs Which wus written by Mr. Lioyd but should help get her vut i rich man; he inherited wealth, and Stressing the importance of doing every- !the death of Wilson to speak of a[part of ————

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