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. APRIL 20, 1924—PART 2 WHAT IS SUCCESS? } Developing Judgment BY HERBERT COREY. . REV. JAMES E. FREEMAN, D. D.. / Bishop of Washington. if a fish pirate outside took the other NE 0 e ey | BY ROGER W, BABSON. | is founded mpon the same basic expe NG ME. 1are c od Wi e igma, g do it him- | half, : - 3 i riences of the ages . :: ""_rr_""l: 2 '“l"; w‘?fnn_‘ i = woaians ":; L: oo‘nalley. I ke, wihsts the ass?. Ty Ak ave) HE founder of Armour & Co. of | "§8° 0014 " be wronz to deny that T. JOHN. 20.10. “Then the disci- | | ® Man dic.shall he live again?” self, says Henry Lot being savad. | This bird Is makioe Chicago, I. D. Armour, was a | money is to be desired. But mones Ples went away again unto| ©Oneof the most brilliant of English | If he were & housewifs heo e very romarkable man. o had [i§ merely a ship which helps_take ,_ st Home™ controversialists, whose remarkable | would not come home with ja one from one port 1o another. Mort And you would do your best to) his mind always fised upon take them i before the pirate did.| Onie goal, namely, that of develc Hither way the AsN Tase" | the most emicient packing business | | over, statistics teach most cleart ing | that’ money is not the only which will bring ene to the most books have focused the scholurs and think minds of |2 dead fish sticking tail and ears 5. sustained ‘in | out of the market basket. Still less The home is the chief center | ©f human intej Within its clois- red walls those cvents fake plaes 1S ©Wn home circle a terrible aflic- | would he care to spend the time that tio wozld. “Wihenionte suted why Hel port or huppin The gre 2 > phke plnce(l ) e 18] i h-jong in The chances arc that the bill that | er is 1 have becom. F'affeot most sitally. our life |1O0 in the loss little daughter. | might be given over to mah-j . . | chose hogs for his specialty, le re-| tangled v Wip that the Hers e know the renl joys and s THC book that % d this tragic | performing an unofficial autopsy on Secretary Hoover. of the Department ;. ) nse hogs are so despised | have been frec themselve real sorrows. Here all the artificial { = dise s none of hislthe animal with a dull knife, from of 4‘mun|vr('n- bas asked u-r“m” be ltnat the average man' will Have doths P 4 supcricial things of 1if. fal done & mew | which he wouldemerge with scales made into a law. That will make|,, ", 4o with them. The best trad of us sure of the . supply. & bags will do the rest. d the pa spirit of i e e e e Hin his hair. : f-disclosure. ey to the| “we must make fish eating easy, 1l seems fitting that imnediately | s wont to deal with things [he says. “We Americans are like after these disciples of. Christ had |domiy Lol tcure and remote Sud- | (hat. We like our luxuries. The ! £ o st had | denly became eloguent in expressing 2 5 anines; 1 disclosed to them the mean ith that was complete and satis- | telephone, flitvers, sewing ma of His resurrection they should | Iying. zreat scholur was com- | vacunm cleaners, a thousand other ané bacl i = ®|pelled to bring all his theories as|(hings are cxpressions of our effort a to their own homes. The | well as his faith “to bear upon the 2 B 1aid lenn 4 S the |y, godge the curse that was laid on essage of the open tomb meant |Solemn and tragic situation that ine e’ al more to them within the confines of | Yelved the peace of his own fireside. | Adam. =~ We've mmfl;.vtd ~ 'MTK he S p - | n it was that the message of k: verything except the omestic the home than in any other place. 1n- | ter day became roal and vire oy pary | CYerything 4 of rendering ing opportunities are found in the | med R 3 | ports which are hardest to reach.” | fhap Teal d Will Aid in Price Stabilization. Armour was a great philosopher. | so entangled Theiotne. . too. will Ho was a thinker, as well as a|engagements | distribution, so that the most thor-| plunger, and those who worked with | Ltapied - on o oughly Tulaud town in the United|him often quote his quaint and homc- when they do fir States can have fresh fish on its|ly savings. A former private secre Wenld Yow Like $1,006.008: cakfast tables at a decent price. |tary says that Armour turned upor The bags will save the professional|him one day with the fishérmen, who have been having hard | tracts like that they ort for which the nuot disembark reach the port Lxperience shows clearly that d amount of money. land, a e words: "A man can’t have hiz head ful | dec : | method of managing Friday's fish.’ sledding Ia for they will permit|and ends like a bologna sausage & ention, power. etc, brings happiness et Tt ilont of the llomes | L0e paal he had prescheg toothera | s h ave (Be Heat fah o Whe:worn, ! o J AR ey | ever Suceced.” He must have his heart | wd contentment more surely than sreatest riddle It an ered the awe- me the urgent need of his own | Tnit PEice 110 SR n MF {and his head full of one idea and that | Ines a large amount Tp to a cer old ery that proceeded from hearth- | jsass the commissionex of thie Donited O'Malley’s annual report he tells of | iden must be to do something useful | HarEe e to 8 tones over which deep shadows hud saw their Mas- | giate5 bureau of fisheries, and more one cateht of mackerel selling at It makes no diffcrence how trifiing | <4in Point these material things are pihored. It balm €or | peceitions. se i ohes and oX- |of them than any other nation, but S Ay el e Thing hefs doing. 1t nic him [necessary and worth while. To tha Sl an eclins. s Written over {until we can deal with them pain- Paiss Dags hbiiven dlime sia) teverd cway from nt that property eliminates or ws i like oil it won't every wher re oAz night o lessly we will not eat our share. Oth- fiwaste weil duces care amd worry, it is o bless ] Houldlicoratie in. s o zation will put fishing on | Mmix water. Men resolv g G2 s Do the new ning of Joyous Te- | [ife the Navior once ae AP 1 finicky nu.ons regard fish | B R [ thing in the world into at ing snd o 8 necomlty, I union. The At 0 1670UT | Eacs the. Ba nee again stood be- | sl v | Vieitors creat f s, The princin polish for A pretene is e dny Father mucn | fore them they were thrilled by aletary udby: _VisHOES to “Just now it is the biggest gamble | cess are such that the fool « day und genera‘ion—that one should > s ios ovgatl s 'u\‘l real: on of His saviorhood | iingland get fricd sole or boiled tur- Inidhe Wit | them and the las s Voni hut i1 B ve no materi hing: Money S efreshme ©OM | and soverrignly. He came to them . tinee whe LIS WO the averagc \ would only stop now J, attention. ease, ete sust e glowing mess . \ o iner whether they want . a &1 3 p now | 3 B s SR meting e o new eilke. He was-the motver (Dot 81 Qioner WASLAR SR AWRRE The worst danger to American fish |and then and take his bearinsge, ho | 1K 1. A certaln amount of, fe corperate eonscinus & OF mewneas | oF their ;:r(;" riddle He was the | them or not. Som in ofinan i is in the pollution of the wate Oil- | couldn’t help learning what he shou ’ necessary. One s n et fteni- 1 i o NEWNESS | 4pawe ol - eatest longing the pbligatory on e ench tal 3 > 2 do. POTAry enjoyment by eating more T 1106 thut rarrenbcs sn res e i A r the greatest longing most o burning steamships pump out their o b The o relreaty Sejuvenates | ham ever knows. How logical it | ¢ne Seandinavians eat some ‘kinds T e i e What Tn Your Port? than "o really needs Howover ith 4 arged § way having s | = i and e ol de % the eggs w one eats more n o ce > .Larl:-n.r that speaks of the glo- | Sould go biek seain to raw, and the other Kuropean nations |of those fish that come inshore to| When we stop and take bearings|amou o eftiots ‘eatuntora: S Al nature aft:r a|homes fo reflect upon the | have their fish complexes. awn. This ineludes the shad, whien | the first question we should ask o R fiotn e et 3 Lodrs ¢ 1DOT- | ton of His resurrection to (I | O | “Americans ¢at only fourteen X i man volunts 1t as all this is, it must have a is,|Selves is: Kor what port are we In fact, the shad is about gone, Yet|Readed? Is it moncy or land, physical cerns that were most vital to the the sweetest fish there & whes Ae has re He thus gAves awa balance of the fond hed o nd more immediate appiica- tion to the eat and serious prob- leins belong in a pecul pounds of fish each year, against one Lundred and seventy pounds of meat sense Mexsage o this pois Enster. ming of the waters can b { e e o { strength or family? Is it popularity or | e fhs he home itself er capita. at's Wrong. rovsnted i < needed for |} €a8€, position or power, or it it some | < i eed Sof to tho h ol 1 skt oF e ) dhat d""“::m. l-la’:m‘ e e i | prev nil d _But 4 law Is n d y,r’,m)m_ ’"N’_*"j “‘hw " ! ’“ & :n‘\:. Shall come. to our senses and a Religion Texted in Home. | not apply personally te each one of | would d she does, if T had Redeianithe enfOrtemant offatie [ . icld he to|1und «nd other thinks e we do wit ¥ would do just as s Y Tiow | surveys the whele ficld he vomes to|land and other things as we do with In times of great distress we have |us is largely meaningle: The as-| (o mess around in a hot kitchen three ' | the opinion that none of these things|2U5 f00d. Morcover. this will not he all felt the satisfaction and assur- |suring word that He brings to homes | times a day.” T P % the real port which most people de- |, progress which o ciioe: that come from contact with|and firesides that have known great| But—it beins a part of his job to | 1n the inland waters the outlook pjSEs o etch. Dl s el ASt S G wys been makine. mpathetic and companionable | sorrows is, “Because 1 live, ye .\’h-‘-‘]lpupul‘]flzn fish among our best peo- { better. The waste from commercial | Uian af menes, Tami setention o | Daoes the Rich Yan Win? r ©ne of the greatest solaces !live also.” We shall catch much of in- | ple—Mr. ('Malley thinks the problem | establishments is poisoning many | “te.. but things are not their y V.. know is that which proceeds from | spiration from all that Faster ex-|has beea solved. Fish are being “fl- | waters but science is now recover. |E0UL € thewe aretheir soal, ey | A = happy as he is working Yo whose heart beats in unison with | presses through music and flowers. [ letten” at the scaside, which is to say ing the valuable elements from much | Ay B e A Syt | e Erlends fand r‘(;v,':\r;lvqr;“a.}: ou Ail this is as it should be, | We shall get added inspiration from hest waia ol 3 of this waste, the betterment of | mix « i water. : iR i B i 'y by rything that we the churches thronged with their do- | N2t the best parts of the fish are be fish health. T4 mum‘:p&:rs""o:} Peaplo arc continually striving for | We 418 tidl friends and teut © and " cager worshipers, but | ing removed. These are placed in m friendship " and the ¢ ot an more mones, more land, more atten- |rea However, when one. ¥ in_the pl are, for the most part, co-operatin rehes on Bastor day the | aftes 1 = Of our | parchment paper bags. thoroushly i tion , and more ease. ORly a few are | either B AR e e ) s hich we must have '»;::um‘ w1 \."‘Al‘mhflur\n:r:'(; ‘r‘:’mi(y"m"m' and shipped to inland points. HENRY OMALLEY | with the bureau. New York, Penn- zn-alL‘ satisfied with what they h 1ve leffort, secu - re vitally and mor Smedles a3 acute and real, i i — | s¥tvania and Onlo are the leaders in) O] these thinss Only a few sco the = marrwer Cirels in kil we Jiv | AL (he ret.urection message has its | The housework can put m; little pa. : i g '111 leaders in | T Y e Seathe i our veal life. Tt would b hg o argest nuuning und significance. | per bag in her shopping bag—— approprintion’ tan dn akwin he went | sérvation plat 0ld days @ ten- | these things are merely the ship and With all ils profound learning, the | ~itlon to say that the test of ¢ mile drivg to a fishing hole was too | not the port No Mensiness, liglous is made mnot in Eronlipicisninn: (3. Olivert ladee) | i o A A e v, Aty e (hittuhing much, a man nowads Two ideas seem certainly true o wenial re of the churen, nor | [2UNd In the hour of his supreme sor-| It jsn't messy,” said O'Malley. “No |got on the regular roll, which was a | transpia o em (1) ‘Most poople are sreking mate- | M3NY more may T enpiieation Dy daysits ult- [ {rom “Him who on the first Iaster| And when she gets home all she|he was sent to Baker Lake, Wash, | tection. W need that e R e e Blix omwine ihe' crowd. | Theg | PEOSPEricy and @ i Tar it here that whai e morning rose triumphant over death | has to do is to take it out of the bag |twenty miles from a railroad il in Cor s now which, if it be- | (OFC0 RO PRRICOH n‘d«‘“;;nflr\ Zme. | Mave in mind no goal or port toy i | O ch eve has real test. We may |G G100 KrEYe ,.~n‘2,';,,“";;,':,;‘ SUTance | and cook it Or, if she prefers, shu} “That's my home, really.” said. | comes will make sure that Jong thelhie. Halsann ot Batal (A Tok Teatls ors aeeking + | & d0iota T R e Rl dun R Wrote: i ¢ “" can cook it right in the bag. The |"I never had such a good time wny- | Americans always have a plenti- e e sisannotiie { things e it “or . ~elves to troversies and d There is no death® | Freneh cooks have perfected that|where else. Killed thirteen black | ful fish supply. Even after the house eives, but 2 tr of mones ons about creeds and church The stars go down to shine upon | method, and they are the best cooks | bear the first summer.” w clops « real taste for paper- | It s worth while talking with the | they believe (hat, these: things will aparies R oot 1 o NI ana Beignt r‘:'h»;i!;"?mw led crown | I the world. None of that rich sea-| AN the time he kept having ideas, |} commissioner. He tells of tageing | | reaily desir s an afford te near and dear to us and a1l § They shihe ‘forevermore TOWT | ide fragrance gets into the house at |which is the reason why he ic now No doubt fish trust opposes| fish in the effort to learn their habits | pLet no one he"tanled by Mhinking | 50, i § i e fonceits of learning, our theories ‘Copyright. /824, by Current News Features. | 91l then—or into the hair—- | commissioner of fisheries He saved bill" I said. “The fishermen | N© One knows whera the salmon lives ol and et o G0 Rt oy 19 1he 1 Tesus =5 carn UrEel EBOn I RCSESRONITES AT B S Zocorporated. ) | “There is no waste, either,” he|the government money by improving | have ruthlessly depleted our fish re- | 31 sea. although every one knows | .rs are as greeds for mones e o ans Sitheat rasine o et | points out. “What part of the fish |thc method of handli the brood | sources thiat he always comes back to the cmplover poMen who Ccannot pecurs] withont silsine sealniiss’ of thos . 7 # & % £ inke o s { fresh waters in which he was borm, | 3ttention bs ity o us put o & a0 o R S ‘x/ . {isn't filleted is made into fish meal [S&lmon at Baker Lake a produced |} O'Mall t o : large diamond rings, whilt: the wom- | 4 to do he ®ame spirit ‘Allles allt Ullderstandmg and other commereial products. This |2 €00d many million more eggs by it. | regard the professi | O'Malley has discovered that fish need | o of the 2, ,.Lt‘,,,. s gvide r;\“::\“h.r ane e plover B | : = , 6 Bosnes n : | vitamines, just as small boys do, and | The same s actuate both poor | Bighe es or ives larger bonuse _ o4 latest bit of deference to the house- | Then he argued the bosses into keep- | his enemy On tre e | * AT it e e eadand rich iVes determine the | than his < 1 to pa Bllt G - - “/ 'I‘ | wife's preference for modernity and |IRE the young salme | they were the fisherman is a pretty de-| 0 N "f' e labora tions of ers ung|9or glve. The grea ermany 00s TOUDIE | caim is oniy a vear or 50 o1a, but the |01 enoush to call lelp when sort of a person. AIl he asks | i e D T R I B e e et o firms that are shipping the fish fillets | they were chased by larger fish. By |is a squarc deal sl “” g hran and attention. Where these things |25 0isascrous to lin paper bags have more than they |nd by he was in charge of the Alas- e : ales, as though they wers range | cannot he obtained by one ans, | Reizhbor ca —(Continued from Firet Page.) the maximum guarantee which France |can do. [ confidently expect to see | Kan fisheries and then of the entire Shsus Rutbislded b o they seck other means, e blame |P Nome of the big fis » much on rmen wants| “Sell fish to the housewife. Make|OUr Wives for spending Ma | can hope for from Great Brita the day when almost all the fresh |Facific coast fisheries and then he N | hats and gowns, but possibly their | S Ty Recent events h Airmonateated ain mus er e o destroy his own business,” he | fish eating easy.” s Y | 80ing through 1n extre . eraioy | be a promise to go to the ald | fish sol o i became commissioner. $ = £ oas method of securing attention is | :': v .~:|’:r('sr- ot xrm-h”v ;!" “{“:"” lfl‘n-n-r:.r .’rm-' r(mh';\' i rmx ‘“,‘ e hl ;Idn m:1| l: .\T:nun ma‘:}f" “That's all,” says O'Malley. “That's haif angrily “They're smart That will make sure of fish protec- | efficient than our method; that { start in the r Brerich e atantin e Ay s nelos | Tents T Germaay, stiould vibiAte af = sudied o tHiSSWay, Thel s ol S ’ | people. Too smart for that foolish- | tion. Mish protection will insure a | they fecure attention at 'les | cumutate mone secn MacDonald making touy ave neutralized strip of territory along | flleting may even be done at sea.” theslite stary ness. Every one of them would co- | permanent supply. Paper bags will | il e men secure it throug! | influence and popuia enen effori to reach n igrec ‘ih" X”h“w- But it appears that the| Of course, O'Malley is a believer| Pretecting the Nation' Supsly. | ,..rot0 with us to protect the fish | sell her the fish. i ) jeene elling in the right dire howay with Poincare, the Germans have British in givi is g ce are|i : s 3 ; a 5 T At R 2 r e e | fou Take Your Ease? how e Bl Edincige this | dlr;nwvmyzn ”L By ;‘fnlng (-mg guarantee are |in fish. He began.as a boy with al Fishing, T said, is no doubt a de- | supply, so that he could keep in “She is right,” says O'Malley. “Dead | How Do You ot bring 7 desired such as the recent frauduient devi arguing at they should give the|bent pin fishing in Vermont brooks.|caying industry. The fish are being | business f We must know when to stop or namely the manufacture of an me guarantec to Germany against |Then he grew so interested that he |killed off- | ever. amen. But under| risht Evervthing else is being made | Surely the desire for ease Is "r""i ne | K [ the law he are not protected | easy for every one else. Why should | Yértal although the desire manifests | we shall pass the goal which e e JsEed French Caechoslovakian treaty. | &n3 French aggression. which hardly [€0t o job as 2 common laborer in a| O'Malley said no. As a matter of | uea fish pirates we pick on her? & | itself in different ways with different | cocking. Moreaver, thic appiics to o iver since the reparations experts bo: | satisfles Frener cor ; iy & said As e fish pir r? i /S with different | seekin reover. this applies to s TR o rovaiations experteite :'A French sensibilities. to say | Vermont fish hatchery. When the ap- |fact, we have about as many of our| ~Suppose that son had sour mets at| I almost forgot. He is chunky, |ETOUPS ©f people. The day laborer clagees and groups of peon A man heen extremely nervous, Thes sought | LNe 1east. | propriation ran out he returned to | off-shore fishes—salmon, cod, the mouth of a river. You would be | smooth-faced, likes his job, is good- | SoCUres his case by resting on his} e handicapbed verhaps by having a to make use of the fall of (he franc, YOU Must see that there is, after all, | his regular job as a stenographer at |dock, mackerel and the like- perfectly willin ' ks Soonae b o ke only half | natured and laughs easily. But—he | NO¥S} When no one is looking, or by |, o %,y t"5 Manon as he mets ane. that ween Brit- | the railway station, but when the|ever had. Thanks to our fish the ering fish each yvear. But| has red hair. | stealing a day to zo fishing while | i<’ more pretent and French Views of security. The |~ m—m—————— U R TOR TR R TRRE pretendin to be on His em- | his neighbors ke | plover gets his f to weaken the French will, and they |a profound divergence b have not hesitated to fabricate docu * ments to shake French reputation in | oo Groat: Beitutn BEitish are aiming Allied Agreement Vital. Ii the report of the experts He home o for which he b s the larg use in r. Pleas at some sort of Tal agreement to preserve peace | "cause war is materialiy winter, the waste of - with no considerable n contrary to their eoncep- the employer | Sreater than the | P nd upon r cuions and mo substantial lack ety are alming at the general | both conceal this desire ease by | the averag: I unanimity if the British and the | [RCICAtIon of the « u{mux:zrmc n‘:h"lp| | o itng 1t mesaed rest ; Building. & 2 Teneh a s standing to ons—that it e Shp recent in- | | “Yes, when we stop and take our hy commur : ; Y e ctar. | apne fhat Ly four withia 4 een- | bearings, we all must admit that we nile to 10 hou t r and being equally deter- —in his mind is aiming at some | Sre' Gecking money. attention, eace, Pl o) iy Tined to compel German corm ;Lzmm-.- ) "lfhfl";_'y '::”.‘md if there s a fifth, e (oh-. largely because others are seck- | lose the good w £ man » hen there are not a few frank opti- | if, e Frenchman says “they come | A V. BUNN. | er meneral of immigration to show| The immigration bill substituted by | world had met with disaster T ing them; or eolse we are secking|other people y Who befieve (Germany will sur- |2gain” France = ise o s A - 2 x| 6. C1 b a 5 R i iy o belleve Cermany Will sur- | SERIAT France wants promise of Brit-| (oo soliowing s o Brlst sumuary |2t Under the working of that agree: | the Senate for ine House PIT S| ais. put foriioato e ater, The [ these things because we believe they | ° Observation shows that this wppli T e to performance. J2id If the German invades her o|Mat (i e, in the fifteen years, 1905- | passed by the Senate on_ April 18, |destroyer Hull rescued flyers and sir | Will Sive US that “something else” |even 1o automobiles th and By contrast practically every one|again and she wants some sort of an|of the most important news of the|1923), the net increase of the Jap- |52 fo 6, differs from the House bill|plane. The westward advance of the | Which we subconsciously desire. but! jewelry. A woman makes frieuds b Jmess Britain and |arrangement by which the German | world for the seven days ended April |anese population in the cont importantly as follows: squadron is to be delayed a week, | [0F, Which we grope in the d;\r‘?vldr’psm:: (o the average «tandar 3 reed. thece s not the ] NoLaber Alile &Enin 10/ get1into United States had been only s 1. All immigrants to be included | pending installation of a new engine | EYOIY man or woman who has <e-|but when she drives a w6wnce to real, or even pre- | P',‘},""'"' before the British can send | 19-) Sk an annual average of 57 under the quotas. The House bill|in the Seattle. cured money, attention and other ma- | wears a richer coat or PNdeSGermian complianos . [sofclent numbersief troops 1o ofiest Practioally tgnesite Me: Haciliaraia! prorides: that wiives; ctildren tndec] x o x terial things knows only toe well|than her neighbor: can 3 e dama (WL Bowiena g0 1o ¥ over French num-| United States of Ameriea—The im- | Jotter in the final debate, the Hanee | «I2hteen and parenis over Afty-five that they are mere empty shells. As | makes enemics instead of fr A ot hics of this sit | feel competent t judie s i : Germamy.—The German government |a Ship is of use only for reachin Tiains #ll here, Certainly the French | The Engli migration problem is the most im-|on April 12, passed the Johnson im- | 0f American citizens be camitted ex- 7 e = of use only for reaching g Sy th .T'.?,T}Iipropisifli’és?e’?“fib”i i':‘:tog"f"d,.hn'.fl?jimnam of American domestic prob- | MigTation bill, including the provicion | lusively of the quotas. Under the|accepted the reparations commisston's | & TOFh: S0 these material things a nse only if they do give us that ~ i : offensive. e ese government | Senate bill, therefore. only about | proj ol . 3 R NacCE are from €irmans oniy | tarized Strip from Holland to Swimer: | e maere o £ ,,ts‘ o the Japancso government | Sehate il therefore, only about | proposal to coilaborate in the execution | “something else” which truly succest- | i ave been proncunced | land and assert that if either the | - = { . Ban 4 of the plans submitted by the Dawes and | ful people really enjo: ot stiox e Moty i international group | French or the Germans send troops |Telatiens of more importamce thai| Bt if the House ignored theadmittable as under the House bllL | yrerconyy"comn it O i Sign Posts That Lie. b e . o et e, if e tiermant | into it. he will be Teady to'meet the |tho relations between tho United | Hanihara letter, the Semate aid not | . % Preference 1o eiven to apolis| Mifemna Committers, y (e e B Ulelation by forcc. But he does not|states and Japan. 1. therofore make |It i3 difficult precisely to deduce from | ARS8 fof I/ STation who, DEoF el e e mald has in-| | was once traveling over the un-|deavoring diligentls o & ” soophdmet” o undertake to maintain any consider- | the open session debates of the Senat- 0 CnEgs R el e ’aris and ashington that he | coqtle f ¥l seeking aln o tial I wei g TAn The T 1 able force. and hLe has s)madnl;vd.-:. ne -apology for the amount of SPace |,y reported by the press, the senti- 3. The preliminary overs € | settled portions of Florida secek a|n m impartiall v Wil MacDonald vou? 1£ he rofu cement of the exper i damdasing, s { 1oatio pealime 24 |is willing to accept t an as | a certain’in | devoted to the following study. ments of that body, but it seems ihation of applicants for tmmigration | o, Syngilicibe Tholen awes plan as | good location for a certain ind alvsis one must tak v agrecing that D¢, will increase his| On April 12 the House passed the bishly probable that, but for the !’ 1Y amd elieibility certificates to | Port that the Italian government is will. | The requisites were a railroad is. Hence, thes: > army to insure that his guarantee | S 1 niy | Hanihara letter, the Senate would th Sndoerion L S ihs ing in the same sense. Aj ¢ the | tion, good high land and a fev shall be formidable. Moreover he dog. | Johnson immigration bill. RoughlY | yove yoted an umendment recogniz- iBgusd socargiog D shej ton e - » , o French and Re'mian Ve ve visi il . it 5 o3 and 3 July 1, 192 - Tia governments have | pe eople. Therefore 1 visited as the Frenel un- | gedly refuses to make the commit- | speaking, that bill proposes to admit | ing the “gentiemen’s agreement” und w' \;‘":_""' |1)dh:‘”;r\’lr’fl‘lf‘<| 1527, i | not declared themselves in precise st t people. tused to do anything in the way of | dev e self-evident (1) We ar & i i + entral lorida v o cmmpato apply it inent relate only to France, lest it]immigrants to this country each year | Proposing that it be continued i graHon ite | e regarding the plan, but have, like the | F2i!r0ad junction in centr: | attention, popularity. an wse who lave Uciioved ot Gee- | look like an alliance and thus hc‘romcf:‘mr‘l"(f 2_per cent of the number of|force, and that it would have re-| 150.000 per g oA L limited (emselves (6 a rathor |1t Was soon evident that nothing | fhemselvis but becaus: wi yoanyd would undertake to. pay the | the cause of a new war: for. Mae: 2 ?|jected “the clause discriminating | lationality to bear the um- | Visue formula of acceptance, though in | could be told by the railroad name of | that they will bring us tha ¢ 7518 of mconstruction of the devss- | Donald and all his colleagues insst | foTelen born of each nationality resl- | I fnge Japan, “But,” said Senater| o (Mo tofal admittable as the num- | Li0e, o o e i . | thing” which we all are consciou “were | that Sir Edward Grey's French com- | dent here in 18%0; and in addition, n was|mitments were in a considerable|outside the quotas, wives, children 3 ided that she siced g ay more th the station. “Pleasant View” was found to be in a swamp: “Greenfield Reed of Pennsylvania, the most active | gyt member of the immigration commit- | 7u S of that nationality origin in| The reparations commission evidently | or unconscicusly seeking bore to the total number of Te&ards the German reply as a sufficient That “something” requires v it of posss ira | measure ible - ' cighteen and parents over b 3 n ! o T | “That “something” requires e ohs LIty are | measure responsible for the last war. | JACeR SERIL (o Gifzens And, |tee. “the letter of th Japanese am-| \white nhabitants. These ratios to be | &¢c2plance and, accordingly. it s of- | ingeland” was in u district which | certain amount of land. money, aiten pi not impossibly gofng L see thel Bottes Atisadgnere of ourse. in accordance with imme. | basador puts the unpleasunt bu <2 | dotermined from estimate. to be | fclally, fwithin the limits of its powers, | constantly had frosts. — Several Lo & Atter th s prospects of European peace and | faorial usage and the comity of ma-|UPOD us of deciding whather we will Supervision of | PP the conclusions” of the Dawes | road junctions visited had limited amount Af s amoun et Chpe Gertaints mroater than |, TO Sum up. then, it seems true that | o0, Cortain ‘categoriss of mon-im- | permit our legislation to Le con-| (he State, Commerce | 30d McKenna reports, and it has for. | Ko comrcopanding with the n | nas been reached, any cxcess is ch should 1i handicap and a detriment. ‘Then lenage s 2 < ous, - 'o%- | trolled by apprehensions of ‘grave | aq | sny moment sines the publication | Hefe s & better atmosphers in Hu- | migtant, allens—as Eo¥enuCE e | consequances’ with other matlons it| fasiian the “Tolted States, ‘s | ments concorned the conclutons. ot the | Canr e, ure ur koal only by Eiving aw of Ver-) rope than in the recent past, that this | fictals, U would be admitted for | We do not follow a particular line of| ot the vear 1920, accor Teports falling within the jurisdiction of |~ It is the same with life. One can- | or by putting others forward. Life is | atmosphere is most striking in the ,[Z:‘;'mrea.l:;}*rrsldenlw legislation conduct. 1 for one,” added | tional origins. \”‘{5:" Kovemmens | not judge a person by the clothes he { like ‘mnl_r;;: ur.h%:.m;.- set, or opening § ' 7 * 2 ac- | 1 nate bill o -| The Ruhr s betwn *rench | <. Because one appears to have | a safe he dial must be moved to i Settlement Rests on Good Faith. |arcas which are inhabited by the | ' The total number annually admit e e Tl L feramee, TAte DIl mow gves o con- | \pg'Bylcian ?237??-2-‘.2.1‘%?’.‘».2“2.5’;;'j.,"!:.:i.'.’,; e roat me 18 wealthy: | certain point; but when we move it contrast, those who believe thag | British and the French. MacDonald | tible under the quotas would be & bo called that, to vote in favor of | The countrs was greatly perturbed |#nd the German industrial magnates on | and because he i¢ wealthw is no rea- [ beyond that point we lose even th | the in-(Mally “recommended to the govern- | the time table, without a 1iv the terms of the tre [ Germany has nev . 8,000, un- : - ; . « ol + had any inten. |PaS obviously made it possible for ;fi_f_-"'i‘:;_“v?‘fi,‘.’,';:;fl“:&.ns ohe: B | the exclusion and against the com-|the other duyv by & report that on|the other. have been renewed for | ann he is happy. “All that glitters is | results we already had. it 20 . t I mittee amendment.” | the Top frum Seward to Chignik |Period of two months. pending armange. | not Kold" is an oid but very true saying. nt, 1928, Floming H. R _tion of paying. that all her efforts| FTenchmen and Englishmen to sit| Spccifically ;-,rom;u::m;gmcfl;::'n“&r:'_‘ The amendment in favor of the|(un the Aliskan Peninsula) \laj,;menm Pursuant to the Dawes plan. *° | Fppearances age deceittul” is_an- First’ published in this Bewsp have been’ co ed for fi down and discuss the questions which | force legislation forbidding IWmIEr. | gentiomen's agroement” was, how- | Martin and his mechanic, Serst Har- | %% % other saying, tried true. “The With Rabson Tastitate upon eluding cons concern both. with a degree of good | tion from China and certaln OUASE PEUR | ever, submitted to the Senate. It was | vey, in the flagplane Seattle of the | } proof of the pudding cating uts until such tme as{will. and confidence, which has been | Of, ASIE It differs importantly (oo |defeated 76 to 3, and the “axclusion | squadron of four airplanes which| Greece—The plebiscite held in atrong enough to vefuse |1 oune tn o)y Amglo-French coverea. | o ot O s clause” was carried 71 to {. are attempting the flicht around the| Greece on April 13 resulted in . 1em openly, and resist her creditors | 2¢ . = = - 3 : 4 s . ¥ Foren ol arems; will alto have their | tons since the Paris conference. @) ror, the 3" per cent auotas [ Foray D iy, (sheut 18 B toant) ousands O C ermans «ay in court. We are, all things con-| Added to this, the expert commie. | P33¢d on the SnFEDTiiie. (THAL in; ihe | B based on the A s . I 7 \idered, getting nearer, not perhaps, | o ce0 € SIS x tutes © per cent quotas W F Marketlng people have ratified the action of TR L Bl on tee provided 4 vy gt v | 3 ot T D00 | WY ASEE 1D Farm o sentl ey ' wios Travel and Spend Lavis om which a settlement could bw | | A | X 3 licants . . | . made, 1f good fuith. German good | vided both are willing to accept the ?;’;'f;";,:::fl;’f“"' orE AR, In U S ‘ 0]]| l Be Ellm]l]ated‘a’E::;:";snhiffl”fse'?d that the faith, existed. | recommendations, and both are ready| (c) It contains a new provision as . o ( a airly. The N o Unless, however, at the end, thc tional Assembly has designated | ¢ ! Pl % to work toget impose the: follow: | ! ’ &™: " | vs have been welcomed. It d uritish agreo thai therc is o point ey mpose them upon | (011N, ien ineligible to_ cltizenship Admiral Countouriotes (hitherto re- (Contiued froo: Fiat BAse) [ slwevs hanoibeen welcomel 5 IOHd W e shall be zdmitted to the United ; fent) as provisional president. No b Ot s e be ance con- | Germany., And it is not out of the titutes ;_gw T xu’l‘l:iv‘::"::‘v.s e j't’l";-‘.,uo stion that mere Anglo-French | States.” i (Continued from First Page.) vears, and any part of such sums 1ot | goubt it will proceed at once to|Ing and fawning over prosperous and |, large quota sightseeing in Greec o e O o e atro. j¢ | 4ETcement may act as the final ar.| The provision quoted is of the high- | mautred for actual expenaiture under | amend the constitgtion a0 as to make | portly German merchants is i fre-|mne great numbers of Teutonio visi e ance in‘a it . ¢ ; nullifics i i il ERE roper provision for the f S i is terribly hard ty s how conditions |gument in convincing Germany she | S5t ‘qz;:;&:g:fi,.bm“::m‘m,. h | marketing board, appointed in the| the bill may bo used by the federal | Proper proviaion for the election of | quent sight. |tors in Palestine and Egypt callc <ill not come down presentiy to the lmuce submit. first. instance by the President, shall | marketin® board as a revolving | 15 e Z R e TR h andate £ as s 3 apan and definitely discriminates s | iis functions, ete. It is expected that Many Use American Cuxh. |forth muc same situation v lich exinted Inet 50| o tal 60 good But it le/sdes frie g{‘l!nsl that nation; and because, in | be men known to be interested in of | fund, from which to make loans pay- | the ussembly’will subscitute” ‘bicam: Baromecs Theress Worgnek, with | tourists. But it was in ltaly and i Z9re tue Vrens i : 2 = the demo- - : Sats 5 . carrving | eril legislat or the present sin, rones 2 . 2 » o . < there is a wide margin of DossibIILY: | in her most dangerous mood since the | with Japan fashioned by Secretary | ing idea. Tho membership of the |G per cent interest. (o co-operative * ¥ % % |on currency deflation, high ;axes aiad 1 h maid, spent 2 Obviously theré are econom o | close 8 the w. board in the first instance shall con- | marketing associations and clearing companion and Frenc 4 zeneral depression urc noticeable o ously o0 asures. which | close e war, that she is about to | Hughes. n’the e Tl & s Misecellaneous, 1 as: e Negresco, one | dvery hand . e s wer e s ken o compel German | disclose her spirit in her forthcoming | As carly as February $ last Mr|gnue trom one to five years for those | house associations, for the purpose of fhe Dumber of |the season at the Hotel NegTesco, one | every hund. that the Americans wer > 0 to ioom election, and that her public men |Hughes addressed to Chairman John- comuiance. |BOL e et ®he | will be 5o fearful of crossing the pas- |son of the House immigration com- . 4 thatiin 1some tAAmy ? sions of their followers and earning | mittee a very notable letter deprecat- | cies occur nominations are to be sub- | It should be emphasized that great registered unemployed In Great |of the most expensive and fashionable [not “only puzzicd, but amazed and i ¥ est |Somewhat indignant at the vast num- | Britain has fallen remarkably of late. | in Nice, and everything of the best |Jomewhat 'REEUAn’ it Lhe VESE AUT appointed members, and when vacan- | extending their membership. r | In February it was 5.6 Der cent of | was reserved for her, the hotel offi- |, (e, s Tho chiet le R Yiike Benes belleve that once |the fate of Eraberger and Rathenav, |ing inclusion of such a provision in | mitted to the President by co-opera- | waste is now zoing on in oversupply (1. LTo& 1t Was B¢ De i ittt it s LU S TR O L P © cevs Britain and France | 8fter popular fecling has been dis- |the forthcoming bill. G arkating Sas et naain IV | dhE MateTRorl). T Sy pestiaddar] p. cials nearly bre ; M e e crmany sees Britain and Kranee | closed, that thero will be a new Ger.| On April 11, on the final vote by v {2085 - tocation of | | Gon: Bruce, head of the “expedi- |be of any slight service for such a|hearing su much talk und vrotests gt Don e T th, Germany |Mman resistance. Many, very many|the House on the bill, Secretary | nual meeting as to three of iy Tatket, Tesultii In deterlatation of |.y;or (o) aédle) Motint Hverest’ an-|aimttaguished gusst.. “Madume ia|focs Of POVSRLY and ruln trom K many must el renchmen. as | lJuropeans believe that Germany wiil | Hughes submitted to the chairman of | bers and by the terminal marketing | oo quo(s price fluctuation leading to | - ces that all hands h ‘ e th nothin Sull P 60 Aierichn BuAAEEG. o i Vi1l comply. There arc Fre “ | once more deliberately choose domes- |the House and Senate immigration | associations as to tho other two mem- rounce all hands have arrived | Baronne” traveled with nothing erid t 5 -1l as other Kuropeans el import- ce. who held o this view. But there re Germans—and many of them— a_at certain number of | renchmen who believe that the Jiritish will never, under any condi- 4t | traveling abroad to see how the u lasses were avoiding the trouble home and living mel broad. With this thought strongl their minds, American * tourists tic, financlal and cconomic chaos, |committees copies of 4 notc addressed | bers—the idea being to make sure ‘erul.mng 11 of whieh must be |, rather than submit herself to foreign [to him by Mr. Hanihara, Japanese | that the board at all times is made UP | paid for either by the consumer o inspection or conseut to considerable | ambassador at Washington. In this|of men familiar with problems in- |\ "o ooy purpose of the Wil- foreign payments. note, in language much resembling | volyed within the seope of this act. |00 (FERE, FAC BRIOITE o 0 G0 o 7t 18 undeniable that there will be no | that used by Sccretary Hughes in the| There are many featurcs in the bill | TS > Phari Dzongk, altitude 14,400 feet, | American money and explained t within sight of their objective, nearly all the 1s and Austriar In recent general elections in Dén- | who were traveling always carried | mark the Labor Party won a plural- |y o0 cupply of American money, “b o | distribution and marketing of farm | i op ALl o \ Army and Navy officer: e in Furc < {1 cited above, Mr. Hanihara dep- | looking toward encouraging the de- | : P £ | e ts in ous T e e S s e A G T ¥ and Navy officers sti rion, comsent to the use of force "”:::n:w:;‘::;::lnxnally rs?;mu:':ymge;( ’n‘c‘:{«;‘i;‘bfi.xw in the immigration | velopment of thess varous organiza- | Products aud to bring the farmer into | nguse will consist of fifty-five Labor. | cause, you know, it is so much more |3 broad. Americans {n Europe ound than our on business: Americans in the consu it e hicnns e . contac B marketyprobleme: . He | o toris Tor et ye L br |, O s any sort and that, as a consequence, yment. and proceeds to fulfil th f the clause. “aimed against the | tions. Bach organization is compelled |contact it o T led, | ites, forty-four Liberals, twenty-seven | convenient to ca 0 %) tispmany will rn, o terrible risks il | PRI S B L st e & ation” - Ha prosentea | to Keap Its books aocording io & uni- | Wil theroby exin eroaier knowiedss | Conservatives afd Cwehty Tndopend: oo ks momes. . When e |1 i QIR Corvifee, ety sisting, for theke Germans at least, [ (8 S63 1LY ; 2o digent an “gen- | form system of accounting. as pre- | bearing d u 2 Aberals. T a Labor 4 g s | with Inereduli ¢ mews' that i ~ount on British intervention to re- | that is the final fact which has beer |a digest and exposition of tho “gen. | form eyatom O &0 " Cinarkting | adaptation of products to demand. | gavernment and it will have the suppor | tioned as to how she and her fellow | [fol o or Rapresentitives way consnd Ltrain France | # = ¢t Japan undertakes to pre- | board, and to make reports and submit | The handling of products will be re- | of the Independent Liberals. countrymen were able to get Ameri- | ering a gift of $10,000,000 to the stary P A o e ” woneriemire, | oot Tmmlerion -of - Iaborets from | to andit and examination somewhat |duced 0 a minimum, cross:hauls * On April 14 representatives of the | oan momes she replied with o most|ins Gormans, When the House pas Question of Security, | while' her resistance brings progres- |Japan to the United States, cxcept the | similar to the case of national banks. | where products are looking lor a | British and = Russian governments | ed"the appropriation Americans of i f ive answer: “Oh, we just have it.” | & Mean! discussions as to ance AD ren and those | Seven and a half million dollars are | market will be eliminated, and the | delegated to frame a general treaty |SVas g | classes and walks on the continent Y"nnchu:::nfillhyclre ;rocnrd(nx and it ":fi.‘?,nme."i‘& f&flr:w:'m 3,.",’.'«'; 2,‘"“'5'.:.'}3‘:.1 h?“dur:_nfi.:mm “mmdt: be appropriated under | spread between the producer and con-lhetwecn those governments, met in Amrgricaps were not surprised tolcould talk of mothing else The pie- Locoming elearer and clearer that i iy ¢ 3 Quoted the United States commission- the act for each of the two following 'sumer reduced London find Germans in Turkey, where they ture was 100 InCOngrUOUL