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b 5 1 = z it e S n 7 i UM !'pear in the Washington uniform. in | justified the claim that, take it all in IHL EVENING b’lA\R! which- he has been an.honor to melau, it is one of the fairest climates in ___With Sunday Morning Editlon. | i nar game for nearly a score of |t country. It is a climate of variety years, feel that he has earned this|rather than of monotony, The weather WA SHIHGITON DIC i reward by his faithful services and his | change, though long delayed and sud- TUESDAY....November 18, 1924 i\ ionance of ihie high standard of | den, should not be thought of as dis- agréeable. Late Autumn and Wintef have thefr charps. and a cold “speli” that would lock the earth into a good rest would help to give us brighter iage and flowers in the Spring, et Grade Crossing Tragedies. Four men were killed Sunday at a railroad grade crossing - in Tilinais. Bearcely a dey passes, perhaps not & day, that clty dailles do not contain news of grade-crossing fatalities, Next to deaths In automobile accidents the grade-crossing tragedy figures most prominently in the news of casualties. Not all the fatal accidents are re- cortled 1 any newspaper, but those that do get into print show that the total loss of lite at raflroad and high- way crossings ‘is extremely ‘serious, and that these accldents are becom- ing.more. frequent with the increage of traffic on the automobile roads. et Tt is said that Robert La Follette and Willlam J. Bryan wil both re- main inactive long endugh to write their autoblographies. The work should be completed as rapidly as pos- sible; The world is advancing very fast, and only a few years may suffice to develop so much current interest that onlythe historic high spots of | Ythe past will command wide atten- tion, NEW BOOKS AT RANDOM CONVERS STREET. Liveright. Ebury stgeet—Victoria Sfation not ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN f TRAFF’IC REGULATIONS Miscellaneous Regulations. —~ | the spor --Editor | mye regret at the passing of Walter e ~—— | Johnson from the home ranks Is the * The Ecening Star Newspaper Company | ener hecause of the wonderful show- e en Cosy Ofvce: 110 Eant 420 &t "' |ing he made during the season. just foago Oce: Tower Bul'ding. e i Europeaa Ofice : 16 Regent Bt Londun. England. | Ci0%ed. which witnested the final ai 5 | rival of the Washington team at the ing Star. with the Sunday morning tup of its league and then the top of ;o Gclivered Ly crrieny, witlin (¢ | the game In the world merles. It was ger month; Hunday oaips 30 ce | one of his best vears, certainly the Dhane Main 5000, Coliection I made by car. | most valuable one to the home team. | His winuing of 23 games during the _scason was, all will admit, the par- Tiers at the end of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance, ¥ He ticular factor that gave Washington | 70¢ | the champlonship, ‘and no oné. who Maryland and Virginia. 50c | witnessed that contest will ever for- Daily and Bunday. .1 yr., $8.40; 1 mo., 20¢| get the wondefftul! thrill of Walter Daily only. . 8unday only | Johnson's arrival in the seventhand | Daily ana sfi;g"r;f:‘:;o 1 wmo.. 83 | declding game of the world séries in Daily only $7.00; 1 mo., 80c | @ relief role with all the speed and $2.00; 1 mo., 26¢ | cunning of delivery of his_best days; { to check the enemy and lead the way to the supreme victory. g It will seem strange to see . the Washington team line -up - without “Barney,” but the day miust come jn any case when his familiar form will be absent, and-it ts better that he should pass Into other ranks where he can make his own winning than that he should fade, @s pitchers must fade, into incompetence and be out- classed. Such wizardry as remains in his arm will be Iavoked for his own 1088 IN EBURYY Q@ How did the custom of standing orde Moore, Boni & |4t (e seveuth inning originate’— A We have consulttd mamy old| Q. What nationality is John Phflfp i Sl IR :ue:-uma? andibass ball authorities |5 R’ G. 2 3 + | but mome of them can answer defl- = oy ot ATie Music™ Buckingham Palace to the ~NOIth:|,jtely, The custom was followed s ek !(',fi's..ri AL e D Just off to the 1-est Belgrave Sauare. | early as 1890. Some claim it was due | pian and his father w a political A J21 Wpury street Georse Moore. |, the old term Of craps—come seven (rifucee from Spain. The - ot edventucilig- upon._{he -“Conversi- | _peing lucky. So people got up In kpnii wae horn iy Washington, D ¢ tlons”.that now.move out in greeting | the seventh to pull for the home FHe is, thevef: e e g to the eagerly expectant devotees of |aam. | s, therefore, an American George Moore, That Is exactiy what S | 2 S they are—devotees, taking thelr man [ Q. Where is the longest suspension =~ @ Why is Friday regardcd as a and artist in a whole-hearted en- | bridge in the world?—C. O. jlucky day for marriage?—W.'W. thuslasm that promptly excludes from [ A, What is believed to be the long- | A Tn Northern ntr tils su- their company even the mildest of | est suspension bridge is now being |Perstition prevail his is traced to doubters and cavflers, erocted across the Delaware River, |the fact that Friday is named for the PR linking Philadelphia and Camden, | Norse goddess of marriage—Freyja N. J. The total length Including the | Her chariot was drawn by black cat Just now. in an easy chair drawn | plazas is 9,670 feet as compared with | This is why black cats are regarded up before the open fire, -beside him | 5989 feet, the length of Brooklyn |as omens of kood luck a cat for comfort and counsel, George - Bridge. = S e e L il s e | Q Is dewberry growing profitablc? nla mind varioug .ppro..fhfs “and |, Q@ Wnat is the frequency of the |31, N. 0. handlings for the “Conversations |human heart beat?—B. H. D. | A’ The dewberry, also ¢ At the moment fie is remembering & | A. The number of heartbeaty of the |ing blackberry, is extensively grow ietter from the ~far-famed city of | average individual under nora®i con- |in" 4 small of localities fn Winnetka, Tl written by an author | ditions is 100,000 in 24 hours. | North Carolina, Yorl asking permiseion to transcribe on| g and New Jerse vellum “The Brook Kerith.” A beau- t tiful thing It Would be. sc’the young man sald, In any one's library and | . later in a nation’s possession. A |piei "{:“.f.fi:{inb; s e pleasing thing to read about a book 3 : of one’s own. In Moore's hand Is a | Q. story by this friendly writer, a story about a mine. And it sets him to thinking that the literary sting must be deep, indeed, to-send this Mr. Husband 500 feet under the ground to find his theme. “Mr. Husband. sir.” said the maid And in walks the man‘himself, right out of Winnetka, Ill.—come to hear — George Moote talk about hooks and | Q. What is the difference in weight structed as to prevent any unneces-|pietures and things. No, he has notjof wet and dry sand?—N.S.P. sary, intense or prolonged nolse in|[seen the houses of Parliament, nor| A. Dry sand weighs from 90 to the operation or management of the!the Tower, nor Westminster Abbey,|110 pounds per cubic foot, While wet machinery, and the muffler shall not be | nor the royal palace. nor the natfonal |sand weighs from 118 to 129 pounds ferred from one vehicle to another.|“cut out™ or “put out” of operatior |gallery. He has just arrived, only |per cubic foot. nor can they be loaned by one to|in any street. Any extraordinary |this morning. and has come at the another. Dealers are allowed dem- [noise in starting, stopping, moving|earliest moment to sece George onstration numbers.. In case of lose, | or &djusting the machinery of such |Moore. mutllation or gestruction of any|motor vehicle is also a violation.| And that's the beginning of the metal identification number, It should | Perhaps a strict construction of thix [“Conversations.” . be reported to the superintendent of | ection would be the means of taking 5 licenses within 24 hours. A npew |many of the so-calied “wrecks” off ! namber will be issued. the streets. A regulation which (s not generally | The anti-noise regulafion, together | And Moore ;‘ulr“ogn e, M understood. nor observed, fs the one | With the other sections @ the police |07t WHh N owh portrall by which requifes the securing of new |Fegulations, would seem to meet the | F/VEEIL AURES O VITLOT (I enEer tags every time the car is trans-|Cdse of the lugy swain who calls hir contending youthfully that the ike- ferred or sold. The law requires that | mate &t late and unusual hours by |CORLENEINE YOuthrully that the ke lmmediately upon transfer of owner- | Me&ns of the hank-honk. Basily: etroking- the' éat” meanwhile Ship of any motor vehicle the person | Fresh air enthusiasts are favorec| % ' onee Mol ing” ghout por In whose name the motor vehicle is|DY the prevention of any prolon&ed,| ., ..o ang, finally, about painting registered shall remove the jdenti-|dense. or offensive quantity of smoke, | )" " iyolh’ “Unwinds it little by {fcation tags therefrom and shall re- | B4scs or disaguceable odurs. little, reaching out here and there turn them to the superintendent of Light Prohibitions. for eome loose-fiying thread which license and shall report to him the | We have already touched {he deft'y and securely entwjsts with pame. residence and business address| ,,2¢ upon the subject of lights as|!1'¢ main strand of his thohts and of the new, owner, Tags arc Issued | nonees for aveidents . The regula. |COnclusions about act.; And here one for the ownérs of the ‘car and not| gL onibit the ~spot light” within |&ets glimpees—glimpees _onty—of to the car itself. This Is the way | (s fire limits of the District and|Moore's art 1ife in Paris. of the full | the owner is identified. they can only be used outside the|experience there that went, yiti- Thus if a car be sold several times | [{mits when o other vehicle fs ap.|MAtely. into the substance of “Mod- and retain ita old tag it will readily | proaching and then it muat be direct. |¢rn Painting”—one of the best books history. | be seen how difficult it would be 0] on the gwound at a distance not[On Ppainting ever published tn the trace the new owner, with the old ceting 30 feet In front of the|English tongue, so Lewis Hind says. tag stiil out. Kecond-hand dealers|yehicletand to the right of the center n cars. and dealers generally who ot the hway. Drivers of experi-| take old cars in exchange, could be|ence have stated that thers is no! this matter, and the utmost punish-|is not a charity., It is' an ageney | §ot a personaily happy one. of great assistance to the police in | necessi.y for the spot light. about art something diverts him Into [in play: the odds to he obtained in! ment is demandcd for any inotorist | whose opportunities for the conserva- ————— f‘_:L}:-;"hl:? ‘;:’:"';'tkrl‘m‘:. rw:zu‘\luum.. Al nml;-r \th‘l\:l‘!s v:msrz"m:‘v:-nr!‘ :h" npm“or dx:cnllionan xr‘,;dnbv’nan‘ ERL,, mti'\;"g p‘:'her‘lh IY:;d‘rzl:l!‘f;xrm t;ni 5 : N ¢ 2 3 q e be known, however, | laust two lamps In front, one ol ch | George Moore, to be daun v sc 8 : ca iv who strikes a person and runs awsy | tion of the public health are PArtly| Pparticipation in polltics is not fa-|where they have been so anxioun (o | siae sMacd 1n such & manner ae 10| simpie & (hing s education. whose | en by other player | if he should later be caught, | dependent on and proportionate 10| vored by the A. F. of L. This decision | make a sale. or they do not want|ghow a white Ifght visible for a mini- | basic principle clearly divides the Only by giving the limit of the law | outside support. It maintains a SIaff | wiii enable the federation to avoid the | {0 1056 @ eale Ly mentioning any fuc- | mum distance of 200 feet 'n'fro‘nd(.‘ yorld into two classes—one, a very on every possible charge—and in prac-| of 37 graduate trained nurses, Who|incidents of the La Follette cam “jtor which requires additional iabor|and a lamp attached to the left slde | 4mall class, the other an enormously tieally every case of this kind there fa| visit and who inatruct. Through snow | saoen La ite campalgn. | ana expense. Ofttimes the purchaser|of the rear in mich & manner. as 10 | large one. 'To the former alone does |dunois? _What portie the Nile has resulted in enorme y ¥ 8 Kine ere is | involving a waste of time and sta-|is under the impression that the tag|throw a white light directly ugion the]edugation apply and from it come the | i% on - et | crease in productivity and va more than one offense—can this prac- | and rain, heat and frost, they fulfill Is part of the sale. Wrong tugs are | license number and be plainly visihlé] crentive artists in letters, painting, | A There are 192 karats in one|p/iG% o FRECUCIE Bt TO0C T tice be broken up. So long as dri their appointed task by giving expert n in police parlance as “dead|for a minimum distance of 10 feet lo)rlrchll.erlurr, music; ffom it comes |Found sveirgupols. I‘:‘n—"“::,’;fm’l’j A Holtrean e e i et | iR e (b e e and when they see one they |the rear. [the soholars and thinkere: and the | there Iy ot 5 ; s peosti | came suspicious. Patked cars are allowed to hate|éxvidiive intellectuals appreciative of g with simple fines, with no cymulation | not afford to pay, and at cost to ok (iyineotd iraey W5 thmenl on 30 atification. a parking llght o as to throw a red | theke others, their patrons and sup- 2 N Ry e for repeated cffenses, they will con- |those who can pay that small sdm. e Vi i a 4 8t el light in the direction of ‘on-coming | porters as well. The great lower | Q. ¥What war Reoseveit's rnvvm-r“,,mn period during and after the Ies tinue to flout the law, depending upon | These nurses, through sanitary edy: | °07Y that people sirongly influenced | Identification tags must be issued | irafic and a white light in the oppo-| class is not subject to education.|YOte in 1012 for Preaident: what |pion ™ wae at Augusta that th 1 by idle curiosity should at least be re- | !n the true name of owners of|gite dliection &0 us to wan driyers! Fhese must be left in contented ig- |Kfates did he catry, and what was his|era Conetitution was ratificd b thelr &peed to escape detection and | cation. help to safeguard the city from | o (O SUTORLY STOUE B eask vehicles for which the o 2 ; 33 § capture. epidemics. They stay the progress of | 1Y /G0 thelr onIl g Suggestion is made that the auto|incipient tuberculosis and cancer. | fore it is churned in order to give it a rich color. BY GUS. A. SCHULDT, Judge Police and Traffic Courts. keepers are requestef to . report weekly all autos stored with them hav- ing tags other than of the District. A new regulation, which wil no doubt result in the better obscivance of the preceding regulations, ls the one requiring every car to have a registration certificate ~ containing thereon the make of car, engine num- ber, vear made, type of body and name and address of owner. This must be kept in the car at all times when in use. And the section states boldly that this is issued “free of charge.” Svery motor vehicle must be pro- vided with & lock suitable to lock the starting lever, throttle or switch by which the vehicle is set in motion, but the locking of wheels 80 as to pre- vent the car from being moved read- ily In case of emergency Is prohib- ited. There are no. “minor” trafic regu- lations. While it is true that some are more important than others, all e propiulgated with the view in mind- of obviating some condition, which, - if not corrected, would be- come troublesome, annoytng, if not dangerous. So closely are most of the regulations linked that it has been observed that the non-observ- ance of one -generally leads to a breach of others. A chain is no stronger than its weakest link. We have been considering regula- tions ‘conc¢érning the operation of the car. But there are many which deal with the car ftself before it can be operated. As has been stated, no car can be legally operated unless the driver has secured a permit so to do. and "an ckamination is necessary be- fore one is granted. g Scction 4 of the regulations deals with identification tags, of which two are required, one to be placed In front of the car and the other on .the back in. such & way that the lght shines. thereon to make it visi- ble for a distance of 40 feet behind the vehicle. This .is necessary for the purpose of glving the officer, or a person injured; a chance to get a Deep at the uumber, if possible. That “if possible” is very pertinent. Regulation of Tags. It also makes provision for tags for vehicles for hire, and for tour- ists who have other tags. No more than three identification tags can be on any vehlcle. Tags must be kept clean. unbent and in an undamaged condition. _This is also to.ald the police, Numbers cannot be trans- son, $2.40; 1 mo,, ed trai Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the e for republication of all ‘mews dis- patches credited to It or not otherwlse eredited tils paper and also the local news pub. JiT herein. ALl rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Can carbollc acid be rdded to whitewash used in a poultry house?— | G. A. Leaving Car Unattended. No vehicle is allowed to stand or remain unattended in any public place unless the lever, switch or throttle is locked, and the driver cannot leave his motor running while the car is unattended. The theory of this ec- tion is that unless restrained the car may get loose and perhaps cause damage. Cases of this character have besn known, especlally on nilis. As heretofore stated. cars must also have safe and adequate brakes. The anti-noise contingent will be pleased to know that the regulations brovide that muffiers shall be so con- clal methods of training and cult |1t is very profitable. Although suited |to many types of so = | 1s most extensively g Is it true that lumber can be |sandy loams. made from sugar cane’—A. K. E. > A. Lumber is being made from | Q. 1Is there a “bagasse,” the residue of sugar cane |designs genera after the sugar-containing juice is |rugs’—sS. C. C. extracted. This lumber is very light, | A. Authorities on Orienta weighing only 3-5-pound per square |say that the rug Itself tvp foot. One ton of bagasse yields 3,000 |universe and the varlous desig feet of lumber. ever changing course of life | principal color, if red. typifies of victory; if blue, rovalty; if w! {purtty; if green, devotion, and black, evil. In patterns th means good luck; the flower fortune and life everlasting: the « cle, ‘immortality The star of points represents Allah. Catch the Death Speeders! Inspector Grant, in his instructions to the detective force regarding the capture of the drivers of motor cars thet have killed pedestrians in this clty during the past few days. €ays| e, according to hls own judgment, ‘h“h“h’““h effort must be made 0| g gouptiess reports will come next ;“;he‘n’:fi::r:‘;:a'":‘:“:“’l':;“‘i‘":seasuu of typical “Johnson games” liberately murdered inmacent men | 00t 00 the coast, which will gladden i | the hearts of all of IValter's friends and women.” This is not a strained | o0 - ot exaggerated comparison. These - They may create an impression that motor drivers have literally run : 7 amuck through the streets of Wash.| FOT All Washington's Welfare. |, .. iional activities. are to be ex- ington, like the Asiatic maniac who,| The Instructive Visiting Nurse So-| pacted from him. As a general rule perhaps under the influence of drugs, | ciety is a public health agency Which | the Wisconsin Senator fights hardest starts out on a promiscuous slaughter. | each year becomes better known|apg with the keenest enjoyment just But these peopie are presumably sane | throughout the District of -Columbla, { arter a convalescence, and have no excuse for their conduet. and which. in ratio with that en- S S S They are simply cruelly indifferent |hanced reputation, seeks constantly to human suffering. They are prob-|to enlarge and expand its fleld of ably wanton in their will to frighten | Work. It has. started a_short cam- if not actually to injure those they | Paign to raise $97.000 for a (wo-year hit. 3 : s - [ budset. I spite of this conslisrable | mNt8 10 that effect. Much of the S trouble of the Wall Street financiers veri ic of this <h | task which the = and ' friend; A veritable epidemic of this fiendish | task which managers-and friends | € WF S T etivities of sharks recklessness has developed within a | of the organization have set them- th th inn - week, In addition to the killing of | selves, they are confident that. at the | than to the eagerness of innocent peo- four persons by motorists who huve|end cf ten days, they will have P t0 Play games they do.not under- fled without checking their cars, or | thoroughly “sold” the vieiting nurme | °%2"% sought 1o escape, several people have | 1dea to the local public. This means | heen hurt more or less severely. Sure- | that the needed funds will bé in hand | Blasco Tbenez. belng a man of ener- Iy some of these drivers can be found, | o pledged and, furthermore, that the | getic mind, is willing to add to his ef- if not all of them. Two were, by the | public will be so famiiiar with and [forts in the line of Spanish fiction by public’s good fortune. captured short- | 8ppreciative of this nursing seryice | helping to make Bpanish Iv after the death of their vietim |that future campaigns will be shorter | Authorship and poiitics do not always Others are still at largs. Public senti- [and easier on all concerned. combine for comfort. The career o ment is aroused to the last degree in The I. V. N. 8, as it is often cailed, | D'Annunzio has been a brilllant but significance to found on Or —————— Reports that Senator La Follette is slightly under the weather do not immediately excite the sympathy proper under such elrcumstances. Q. What causes dark spots on ko- duk picturgs?—S. . T. A. Undissolved chemicals in a de- veloper will cause dark spots, known as comets, to appear in negatives. These spots are called comets b cause they have tails. The disk of a e comeét may be as large as a pin- . = head or almost as small as a pin-| @ Wbat 1§ photomicography point. Removing comets without in- [ K juring the negatives is difficult; pre- venting them from occurring is easy The surest way to prevent them is by stirring the developer while the chemicals are dissolving. Ty What is the origin of the term “psrurhoul' steak?'—P. 8. W. the tongue of a fly, 1300 tim A. A porter house was a housc |larged. where porter and other malt liquors| = were gold, and this cut of beef was| Q. Ts it possible to det " made popular by the proprictor of a | solutely whether or not a pain porter house. {the work of a great master?—. Q. What is meant by | poker player>—S. P. P. A. According to Hoyle. skill con sists entirely of good judgment betting. This is based on three|found on paintings known to be o | things—a mathematical knowledge | uine. of the probable value of one's own| And right in the midst of talking |hand as against all the other hands| Q. Are any of the seven the world still in existence A. Only one of them rem |the great Pyramid of 2 % % s Gizeh. Security swindlers are to be dis- ciplined, if possibie, if the New York Stock Exchange can secure arrange- A. This term is applied to | science of photography under croscope. It is used in patholozy. ology and botany., A motion pictu camera is placed behind optical struments with the result that possible to photograph the 1. ———— | A According to recent inv. illful” | tions this can be done by exami {the painting for fingerprints lc n:|the canvas by the artist it | piring them with the finge % » Q. Why isn't it possible to Nile #o that water may be availzl: irrigation the vear found? Y A. This has been done. A re 3 {and dam was completed at Assus Q. Will you adviss me how many | December, 1802, and within the | karats there are in one pound avoir- | Y°ars the storage capacity has dupois? What portion of an ounce lll\\‘tn-svd This storing of the w tionery. e R Q. Has Augusta ever been the ca; Opposition to publication of income was the capital for tags are in-|of approaching vehicles. - Dazallng Lporance to tig the fields, to guard |€leCtofal Vote?p. T. §. - State {h/Iathias tended, and any attempt to’ obtaln |jjgnté sre prohibited and no beam of Lthe forests, to turn the mills, to man A. The populaf vote none_.x by T‘m-.!} —_— one n_other Shan the true. name|iignt shall rise al a srolter'"elkfi{« fpe factories. to give glad housrhold | 040re ‘1::”:!“;'1‘»;3:"156‘3”“5;’ 412801 Q. Wétennere many i { Z vice g i or Attempt to obtain one by misrepre- | than: 42 inches from the growfid ‘#Y{fervice. Nonsense, of course. Obso- {22 o o V1T | vocabulary of an un; ;:u :e increased in size so xhal!Th!: render !rwu}l‘ ‘;-;m:e at ‘f" sentation or fraud is punishable by | 75" feet In front of the: vebicle: “Allete nonsense at that. Eut M-\cr--i{,‘"""“’",. ;i:rfllld ‘l‘vr.x;“ len\:»lnl\(r he?—P. M. O: lentification of license numbers can | perilous time of birth. They give pre- a fine up to $100. i1t of approved lights I¥ on fils An]talks alons . his 1ime of thougnt|States: Californta. Micwlgan, Min-| 3" e " mithsonian be more readily made. Anything that | natal and post-natal care to mothers. Provislon is also made relative to|the office of the superintendent of pos Hfngenuousiy and engagingly as if it ““,:““"\; (hfl“":»""“”‘- South Dakota| statés that the old ldea will lessen the chances of these death | They relleve and comfort. the aged :‘;"'f",;‘j —_g ::)'";)f:‘:lld;"'lfi eh ane T attonat B “‘,\ur» a fact, as if the whole wh;k] e PR neon: \_;v:-r:]\]:‘!'an;: of meivilized tribes ; # e & ] en o cense and | -These regulations. alth placed fyere not alive in protest against: his Y B {he | Peclully t an tribes, was speoders escaping should be tried. and Incurable. They swing the bui- | registration fees, “upon complying [in the “mihor” ciass, are as impor- | hatic philosophy. But. this is Moore | 'eiied Sraies hesider oie on, h® | limited. hae bheen disproven. —————————— | ance trom death to life for the acutely | 1t must be admitted on ehaif of na: The Farm Commission. ill. They save from future handicaps | tjonal statesmanship that the United iz he curse C: a il cross- et its first meeting here yesterday. de- | Of 80081 disease. They Pl0y’ | examination more &xciting than a The tenant who threatens t4 move unless the landlord papers the flat has not been heard from in many years, ¢ Q. Is there anything to put in but- | SXPress the b with certain regulations relative to|(ant.for the proper adminlstration of {of Moore Hail. Ballygiass, County | gomeeriie ouio noty, e O0¢ 81| have avery reason to beliove that reglstering with the superintendent of e P ; i os | o : cided to proceed along three general | oS Of labor by making employes|courthouse does. lines: First, the study of pending farm the traflic situation as uny other.!Mayo. And no other aristocrat in| A There ie such a bridge at Rich.| YO¢abulary of such tribes was « police within three days after coming | They make for the efficlont operatiof| the world @ quite =0 tneorfigibly | mend. aee - SUGL @ Pridge at Rich-| | “urge as that of modern langy into the District of Columbla. Gara, legislation; second, the administration of present laws relating to agricul- | | auce poverty, heaithier and more efficient. By com- | bating disease and,ignorance they re- Creed, color or finan- cial standing mean absolutely noth- ——————— - SHOOTING STARS. Skyscraper for University ment wl“ an air of ingrained cer- titude th¥ s altogether irresistible. * % 3 % 1 | | Maid—Mr. Freeman. sir. | ter to make it white?®—J. H. F. A. The Bureau of Dairving says that £o far as it knows there is noth- _|ing that can be put in butter before | beleved to be of greatest public jit is churned to give it a white ap- | c e selected for publication. A» | (Space can be given in this coliy only a few of the questions that into owr office daily. which Those d are conducive of Bafély. | qych as the Irish aristocrat. And jand that such tribes were ab. George Moore carries off his argu- modt complicated id: ture, and third, and finally, t rma- NDE! NSON. tion of plans for inrulcx::lnvhrl\nt(': fhe | In to them. They are thoroughly or- e farmer an appreciation of the value | $27ized and readv for any emergency. Unexplained, . And yet. notwithstanding their [ > of co-operation, 5 T wonder why 1 like to sce It is essential that a survey be| ¢80y §FOWth in numbecs duping the | . g0 e mimic stage made first of the proposals now imu; | past quarter-century, they, have fallen | iy i fnsidious glec ing in Congress fcr farm relief. There | 2iNd the growth of the city. On the | "y, "0\t 1o giuengage Set - T retiel. Rered pagis of the number of nurses maln.|. >° are several of them, differing in prin. | 10| Two trusting hearts that ought to ciple and detall. They are mainly de. | 123 Per 100,000 of population their | 7~ g signed to stimulate prices. One of|SAN0ING I8 below that.ef mearly a| -~y 2y oines complete— them 18 & proposition for the Govern. | 10200 DIE citles. ~ I wonder why folks go and spend ment to control in a way the exports| _ LD¢ Hoclely needs mdre nurses: it]" ;oo g nars or o seat. of wheat so as to insuro"hv best w»lwnms {0/ Dt isipaySEEK e8/UD Lo | KPR IPetoh Tor the ‘Afdriogn arower. | the standard of that enjoyed by ather For each of these projects there. 1a|10Cal public health nurses; it needs to & ‘specific argument. Each has its own | ¢1@P1sh & new nursing centef, to ex- strong “advocates, Wwho believe that | Pand 10 office ruom and equiptfient. their perticular plans are the best. 1¢ | 1t ¢&n do all thess things it the public. | in the task of the President's commis. | "1iCh benefits both directly.and indi- 4 rectly by its endeavors, will co- sion, compaved, as it is, ot growers| C [ ML El o oparate 1o by and marketers as well as scientific means of contributions ranging from students of agriculture, to find witich, 's tull . if any, of these plans s practical and the payment of a nurse's full salary . calculated to advarice the welfare of | (O ® Year or miore, down through ! Precious Persifiage. * ariculture without Imposine o wy | SMaller amounts. The visiting nurses| Why“don't you intersperse your Juat burden npon the coneumer " | cover every house on every street., To | apgeches with eplgrams and anecdotes Perhaps fone of the present pro. | 10-that expeditiouely and successfully | gs you used to?” . posals s the right one l;flss(bly D:;w they themseives should be put on| “Business is business,” replied Sena: plan most surely effective is still o | La8Y Street. 2 = ;le—l szx:lg;;ur:s ":m;:fll:ll.:s I:?g:obr‘:)‘v)v' ; —— e g be evolved. A study of the pending | tcinan:. Bt b ansHeey i 15 propositions, however, is essential to| One-way traffic systems have not | ®! i Seme ascertain whether any promises most | yet reached .a perfection such as to | hear me tell my bunch of comcalities surely the relief which the farmers|prevent. thrée automobiles from com- ‘hereafter they've got to get me a b 3 Ing together while each i8 trying to|eral salary contract same as in vaude- require. = President Coolidge “recently in a|keep going in its own direction. e ‘®peech before teachers of agriculture e e in this city stressed the point of co-| = Among prudent motorists the acei- operation by thq farmers. Evidently |dent fnsurance policy will soon be- that is his main remedy for the evils | come “almost as important as the from which American agriculture is|driver's permit. suffering. ‘But he is leaving the com- = ‘mission free t6 survey the whole feld. elthough 1t is plain from the an- nounced program of procedure that Freeman—I'm afraid I am inter- | rupting® But nothing is an inter- pearance. In Winter when the cows | is srivileged to ask questio are on dry feed the butter is much | chooses, Luwever trivial or prof. ruption that permite George Moore | lighter in color than in Summer when | and it will be answered divect. In. to talk when the fit is on him.. And|green feed is used. On the other hand | a 2-cent stanp with wour query, o versity of Pittspurgh that it will| string or ghall we have profeskors|this morning he is pondering the it Is customary in Wintertoadd some | dress The Star Information [t bulld next vear a & $10,000,- | with- a fuller appreciation of hig|reason for the sudden oblivion of |coloring substance. tothe ‘crewm be- | Twenty-frst and ¢ strects nortiu 000 “eathedral of 1 to housa i buildings and big salaries? Will the | George Dliot. What are the gauses WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS a gremt part of the activities-of the|rest of. the *country. like driving:|of her swift decline? Cleafly a 8Y FREDERIC WILLIAM WIL Arouses Divergent Views The anrouncement by the Uni-|alumni offering endowments witi' & institution is accepted by the prées as | chriving ‘Pitteburgh, abandon ‘charm, | furpassing mind. Clearly the gift another Innovation abreast the mod- | Intima: restfulness, dignity and]of;.dramatic inventlon. Why = do ern spirit. For economic and utili- | cosiness:! will it desert taste . WES pass her by for othems of tarian reasons in some quarters the | discrimination. spiritual and infW. [ mér¥ nteager powers? And here is plan i« commended, however, editors | lactual capacity? 1Is the day of Bab:|John Freeman, the very one to help are inclined to hope this will not start bll\ ‘only‘nl :)unr!‘;:"" : him in \{:is dl‘:fl'“m:l.l_\\'her:‘\r:zls ;(‘ha a movement for skyscraper colleges | Noting in the skyscraper univer-|born? To what station? What her BT e rmen read a|extend knowiedge of Siav ide “A memorial to the Pittspurgh of | one spirit, the modern spirit of mam- | her social influences? Why did she | = f ell a& to the memofy of “Gus” Kar- | Americans intereste he ¢ L e e D e L e L e e R RN LD h"':::r” 7 u\e‘preunce of the President | slovakia aspires -T.dr'.]: 'v‘h lea of the Pittsburgh of today. a vision | the Springfield Union refers to our : ires t e lea there? And Mr. Freeman answers pa- e Bideat lalovakie. as be dhe i the way the Pittsburgh Sun describes | of (Ne past, and asks. “Will they,|George Eliot, both equally familiar [ SiteS 8% 10 WIGER SOISEEGC QEMIET 1T, (CUEAnS BIOTE the faes tradicio the new and greater University of |00, be Invaded, by the skyscraper|with all of them. Repellantly un- | SOTFORRONGRAt S FREER, SECICEL | Flr | (U™ B rien e, Pittsburgh after the structural plans | pirit? Shall wé hear now of dear|happy books, these, “un outcome of | K& WaZ tNC IRGREIRORT By 08 SO0 G Zb, (0, HERTESTIvG, pol had been made public by Chancellor|o0ld forty-ninth siory of W. and J.. paperman (o whom American public | ambitlons ! John Gabbert Bowman. The Sun de- | tales of fair Harvard when her high- men tell thelr innermost secrets and | i clarek: “No more daring concept has | ést building was no more than 6 inthe wmmured confdance ther willnot | T T w e s flashed across the yision of any city. | floors: and shall we be told of the|ness would have crept into her writ- | P& betravec. —Fresfenl Talt CUOERG | The eroseword puszle s Lifting 52 storles toward the stars, | mad antice (hat were cut in Prof.|ings, for what is {n the mind finds its | KatS00 DD BRSO G0 SOUTHUCT | pade | e dictionary o best - the’ new cathedral of learning will | Dryasdust's art 12, on floor 37, or of | way on to the page, an almost need- | FAVE R 0 "1ie frgt love. By cOm-|ary has another Nown wonetn Anp e GO IO G A D 6 ol oo S T Bl Wit “““""““lmon consent Karger was the &pokes-|he is & Washington s pr: ks Plitsburgh means, believes, fs. ¢ * ¢|oned to drop a neophyte 10,000 fect|that the moralist is seidom happy.” | MO0 GOReEnt EATERE IS, 00 CPOLLT e I8 8 IWashinatonian—Justive W What Dr. Bowman's project means is|£0 the pavement below? Most of usi, .. “And let us agree that ancient | ftll OF W37 (R Wi i | 100 FROIDE | Stafford - of - the = | that Pittsburgh—long frst in in-|are old-fashioned cnough to hope |{iterature was happier than modern. | SIS i VT Bresident Cooildge | bia < Juetir Stnmrarge <500 10 dustry, lately first in art—is at one | that we chall not. Eut if we do what: Homer's fighting, . though heavy- | ([0 Cieq his first: confab with the | Dictionary," especialie wh > daring stride to become first in archi- | of it? Sentiment calls for colleges|handed, is always light-hearted... The | S8ICHTH R FVF gir e Ficibute at Kar- | o c.mmmwxr fall When v “itiaburgn has ‘material to yemain as they aro. calmn. unassum- | wanderings of Odysseus are un-|UiF pier was one of the most elo- |English: Hers afe Its opening itisburgn has material reasous|Ing. unostentatious. ' But supposing |touched by melancholy and the very | ESUS bier was one of L mOck €O | English. Here are its opening v for the skyscraper, but its artistic|that practicalities dictate that senti-|name of Theoeritus brings up before [ AUENt and (ouchioe o T i bagi YUtTles wheuee brave thought success will be worth watching,” in|ment take a back seat? Is there not|our eygs sumty hillsides, with shep. ¥ ik Truth's towering templer e talon of the New York Herald- |88 much glamour, of beauty and of | herds gathered under tamarisk trees, - T otuche om Tribune, which says: “People discov- | Compelling charm in tite average of-|and for single ornament a torrent| The La Follette-Wheeler campaichl|The sngs of ages wait. like slee ered the skyscraper as a new form of | fice district as in the average English | dashing over. the face of the high |has had one result t is lmul\udad‘ 1;: The “:i"“n’rnlkflli‘l:h“’a’l‘r:‘::'m‘}:::\:",,(" Somstruction long before they discov- | countrysidez” = | Fock. "Store real. mors true are these | be’ lasting—a “national liberal” club | ¥laf Bl make Yiennines bo the e, “red It as & new form of art and the| The Albany News asks: “Butithan George Eilots Nrrfolk hinde. |in Washington. It {s the outgrowsh | Riou™fft™ (R e timser 71 o e emen “who make woodcuts for | Why mot? The work of the world |The shepherds and shepherdesses | of a.little luncheon: glub hitherto the paler press seem to have been arsenal isn’'t done in scholarly atmos- | have come down to us from ‘more | known a¥ the Penguins and frequent- | Where rust old biades mew batiles will inaceountably late. Bat the discoy- | Phere. This is the age of efficiency | than 2,000 vears, gaining In every ery has been made, and those who | ed, for the mest part, by scribes of | J"lf"" e B and there can be efficiency in the|generation, it would seem. a mew and | both gexes, who don’t. mind being called | K5, fL Srunaes, aipe hosrd Taintain that great art can only | ¢ollege ‘plant’ as there can be in all | more intense life. More real ‘than |radicale. The Penguins met dally on (" the bins of Egrpt ¢ a natural necessity have|Plants.” From a utilitarian point of | Tom Tulliver is to me, or his sister | the upper ‘floor of & downtown re G UL b side, | View the Pittsburgh plan seems ex-|Maggie.” And so the falk moves on, Thevs are moments when there seem | C?r‘“e"'- agrees the Reading Tribune, | which thinks “one who has struggled N taurant. Now théy have taken'a 1arge| Our principal two overseas all by way of eccounting for the un- |and dignified house on. I street. Gilson | torice—Alaska znd Hawa « tr < = nguin d b ewspapermen—<Scott ¢ N eIE Rl e : “|fo teonly, two @enuine American ne=| TR oLy 00 (005 AP, 155, STREId | mistakable decline of Georse Hllor " |.Gkidner, chairman of (e BERELESH tmed e new SeaTeTRe Peeping through the window blind | tistic traditions—the "““".'“,: houses | \on minutes between periods over R i that the club will be headquarters | rington. at Honolulu. Both govern.: ler o, P B n L34 3 ‘ansportation of- ues wi erés C 3 W et el vl ;:‘e::D::“:x:‘ talking of the golden days of Autumn, | s now & sport that's left behind | whatever may be sald of the AUty | furad by the 16 high speed elevators. e b oaia sre ot ol L h n e Stene Arrash (n {he v o5 ® | the mellow rays of the sun and the In culture's brighter dawn. of the modern American skyscraper.a | ghoula the elevator operators strike, . Sibers farmer in lts‘l‘!porl the need of that| L oco " hat wray the hills Win. | - . * - |product wholl}‘ Amelrlc!br:":r:. Lo-'«'n‘m 8 once happened in New York, the regardiess of whatever ° legislative Jped The count of rugs and furniture |ville ~Courier-Journal v outlook would be appalling. ; i1s with little warn- 2 et fversity bullding, measure may be devised and adoptéd. | SF PISW In upon.us v Next_ddor you may ‘relax: construction of a un y ing. Many automobiles refused to Y ————— Just read for information sure With America’s defensive nmecessitir : iH inly centered in the Pacifl At length there’s an autnoritative |t sea mainiy cent . cord | Alaska and Hawaii have mounted in definition of “propaganda.”’ a word < 1 # hat has mot smelled sweetly since the |an importance they never had beforr ve, men turned up thélr coat col building, e o that e e aroaght It fnto bad odur, [ How to utillze thelr natural ad ve; men turne at col- o GUERE It ! oty Shras The Farm-Labor Movement is now | 1nes and e The published income tax: not fail to cause a shock. Some wa 4y k& G of Haw Yore Lug of Belbe | B e o e S feferred to by poiltical diagnosticians | ;" .f'::fl orm"n:m..kn?a Lhdrlmm- has:suggested it symbolizes higher e, e MMacketellers, the Harrl. | Bone and Farrington will - dis 3 i i {J 3 cl ~ S . only as a slight spasmodic tremor. | phor, e, 7 ihousands of bomes o kit e imd other billion-dollar clients, | thoroughly during their sojourns R there ate Jounds of shaklng furnaces| «They tell me tHat. Crimeoy Guidli|at tha pun B dtsnit THATn: has Issued & brochure on the “funda- | Washington. Walter Johnson a “Magnate.” pis ’;hm;: HE et ?.;a w"mhe;:;" is going to protest against the hig ::'ul‘: S al: Sonnscteaiwiihidn: mental aspects” of propagands. = He o reau In its message today says: 'Rain | oo yeq ¢ R 7 here of colleges others he wins applause. That Is,|bolls them down into tw : 3 p quity. The atmosphere a n Announcement that Walter John-|or snow' today, slightly- warmer; to- N X 3 I ind one of the George Moore wins his usual *meed | statements”: - * b answered Cactus Joe. *‘The|is pected to rem L dhe Ak son has completed a deal which makes | morrow clearing: moderate eastorly | yy.oe gorss o h. What |past! * ¢ ¢ Perhaps this cathedral of ‘admiration for a elncerity ‘that| 1. The propriety of propaganda de. himh & -“magnate” at Oakland, Calif, | winds” Weather statiaticiaf tupneq | X 907t bother Us 5o much ot [of learning can turn out eficiency counts nothing of worth excent the | pends upon the honesty . ol we're peeved about is the way Mesa and techniclans. Neverthe- sn the Pagific, Comst League, -causes | to the records and told us that thls | B ‘wiio runs the Palace Hotel, keaps | jek 1t seems like jazz applied to col- mingled feelings here in Washington, | is the foiirth time in the &nnals of'the | coigin the amount of rake.off on the | lege architacture. 1t seems tb have which has beén the’ scene of practi-|local Weather Bureau that the mer- i cally his entire base ball career for |cury has dropped to 24 degrees before 18 seasons. There is sorrow that he is | November 20, and that yesterday was leaving this city, and gladness that he | the coldest November morn - since matter in hand, that re¢ks nothing of |and method by which it is carried on. male evolved or developed into some. |this” of that change in ‘modes of| 2. The effectivenses of propagande thing higher? Why has not the elephant, | thought or in manners of conveyance. | depends upon the 5‘ e et 7 Lot behind it the beauty of the fields | the most intelligent of ali animals, [Here {s the {ngenuousness that|honesty of purpost, ToREIET IR & Bk 1t and dloisteral silence.” evolved or developed into _something | chAFma one, and an Innocence of the | wisdom béhind it. Is pparent. by T2 x " * % ¥ ¥ 0il and Opportanity. “And in these temples, or ‘cathe- When midnight oil suggests a trick | drals"of erudition what shall the stu- las achieved the object of *his ambi- | 1920, For famé and fine apparel, tion, which is the embition of every| We are loata to part with -the|you must not bufn jt'with.a wick,, professional ball player, that of own- | weather that has been with us since i ing and managing his own team. For|the end of Summer. Thé warm days if ever a base hail playei deserved | have been delightful, and the Autumn higher imself? Ian't it just pos. | mind that refuses tribute to prosti-| Now, we know. : Sniat tist enn monkeys Tt 5 | tutlon of speech In the interests. of Tk kR will be nt d during the short denta learn, and who shail teach jthem?" aske the St Louls Post-Dis- But sell it by the barel. such & success it is Waiter Johnson, | leaves, astérs and the goldentods have and. his friends at the Capital, despite | been worthy of high praise, _The look %o much more like men than any | sickly, or guilty, oversensitiveness.| When Lewis Einstein. American |8ession. Nobody expects anything but patch. “The answer to the second thelr regret that he will no longer ap- | Washington climate this Fall “has I wonder why I so enjoy A crooked “comic” face And drums and horns which would annoy In any.other place. T wonder ‘why I often view ‘With pleasure more or less 8o many things which if quite true Would cause me much distress. the moral conflict in which the writer found herself involved. “Jf she had been a happy woman her happi- On this palette In_this grov Jud Tunkins says there are two kinds of politeness; one indicating good breeding and the other the dis- covery by soine one that he can use yoy in his busines: The Cool Snap. Winter made a sudden attack on Washington, While most persons were Mr. Freeman goes his way and others come to the sittings with George Moore in Ebury street. Among them Walter de 1a Mare and Desmond MacCarthy, Gran- ville-Barker and Edmund Gosse, and another and another. And the talk 1s alwi of art and literature, of painters and writers—a onessided talk wherein Moore makes use of the others not &0 much to spur his_own thought or to enrich it. as to give the effect of dialogue rather than that of soliloguy. A man talking to him- selt excites suspiblon. Engaged with Questions Scientific Collection of Tribute. Claims of Evolution To the Editor of The Star: If man originated from monkeys. as Dr. Ales Hrdlicka says they did, why is it that the monkey is the only animal that has evolved or developed into something so much more - intelligent than himself? Why have no other ani- * % The congressional ducks, lame otherwise, are flying back to €apiiv Hill in flocks, and, although the = n- sion will not open until December 1. a quorum in both houses could almok: be counted now. Senator Curtis o Kansas. Republican whip, fs on the scene lining up the G. O. P. faithful in the Seuste and. greasing the waps ['tor such administration measures &~ other animal some men have believed | When you come upon this book be | minister to Czechoslovakia. was re- |Supply bills (o0 be attempted On the man originated from momkeys, have |sure to read what Moore has to gay | cently a gucet at the White House. Fouse side. speakership politicr i tried hard to and did prove to their |about this very matter of degrading |lie disclosed to President Cooildge a | Mainly the order of the day, Arrivia Gueation will answer the first. Shall (own satisfaction that man did originate {the ¥nglish with Which we try to|scheme for an American institute to|members, 1f they are to be in the we have the recognized scholars of | from monkeys, when, if they had tried | communicate one with another. . Yes. | be astablished at Prague. Dr. Stephen \; x 5 th Co gl o W: .‘r Iged the world {n scte economiys, poli= -28- hard to, prove that mati-orig- |12 Rnow,: : Michael ‘;Atlén #ays - of | 'P.. Duggan, professor political science | in advance. ."uu 5 a d\n‘. Jeaddad, tios, history and iitérature, who will | inafed from elephants they might have [ George Moore @hat to the latter “In-[in-the Coilege of the City of New Longworth, Burtun and Woc e as Impart their methods and conclusions untrammeled by corporation officers on the boards of trustees and rich “Most” people dat ‘Volunteers sym: pathy,” sald Uncle Eben, “don’t do 1o mo' dan prevent you f'um fohgittin' you troubles” o to the conclusion that man orig- | discretion is the better part of lit- | York,: n charge of the organiza- |aclive as cranherry lu(.!l:(‘hfill(! D‘lr\,lhv lvm:d from elephants? o erature”—but that 1s one ageinst Ar-|tion det&ils. The ihstitute 15 Intanded feve of Thanksgiving. JOHN ANSCHUTZ. |len, not against Moore. 1 G. M lto be a center of Slav culture and to | (Copyright, 1624.) A A