Evening Star Newspaper, May 17, 1925, Page 45

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Sources of Inspiration. Everyday Religion t a Talk ol?Theology. But Upon Life and Right Living. BY RIGHT REV. JAMES E Bishop of Washington. FREEMAN, D. D., | self and to others—is like oil poured THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MAY 17, 1925—PART 2. Old Ideas of Things Fall Before Science, Now Aiding Civilization’s Advance BY HAROLD K. PHILIPS. INCE that epochal day when Christopher Columbus returned to Spain and in- formed an incredulous people that this world most assuredly was not a risky, ‘WE ONCE THOUGHT— That our universe was alone in the entire creation. That stars were nothing more important the church can ill afford to much longer dis- pute it. Most scientists only contend that men and apes, and even fishes, sprung from a common stem. When they reached the parting of the Story Week Has Told Comprehensive Survey of Latest Events in United States and Abroad. BY HENRY W. BUNN (The following is a brief of the most important news of the world for the seven days ended May 16.) “helots” and his pressure on Kruger for their enfranchisement brought on the Boer war in 1899. He drafted 2 | e . : ay: i ifferent direc- * ok * the terms of the Boer surrender in Pealm CX., 7: “He shall drink of the | upon overheated bearings. It prevents . = e than lanterns to decorate our skies. ways each simply went in a d & ) hrook m the wa. therefore thall he 1{t up | friction, and hence the wear and tear Inverted saucer, from which the venturesome That the atom was the smallest thing tion. Tt is not generally suggested that we United States of America. — Lieut. ‘9',’;' Iis head incldent upon :consecutive ‘secvice.| Soul who stepped too close to its rim might extant. were necessarily once apes and fishes; merely Gen. Nelson Appleton Miles, U. S. A, Tiis greatest service to the empire : e - g . ) 3 vas the ensuing work of reconstruc- HAT a blessing it is on a|Any form of play or recreation in skid off into utter space, man's conception of That life, like Topsy, “just grew. that we had a common origin. rgmego. (Held !{Jlddsnly o ‘\[ny|151313{9e asjiie eating mork of ;":a-z’:guzin hot, humid day, as one pur- | which we Indulge that injures another | things has been turned so completely upside : O tather s the thought that | ®as born in Massaachusetts in 1839. | tion he | % s hit trmeels mlong a |15 a menace. We saw a tragle state. down that if it were possible for a learned sage iThat ithe theacy' ol evolution was/wicked e Rl ey s Do el S His great-grandfather and grandfather [ 1905, he had “laid deep and strong sues his travels along a | I8 ace. £ le state- 2 heistic elephants and tigers, camels and dinosaurs the 'foundations of a united South b 2 ment written about a youth: “He died : % 3 e and atheistic. ; , : fought in the Revolution. He was a So Iy o e | mae At twentshverr Hisoven| of, e previous century to step suddenly back | " ginosaurs were the hallucinations | once reamed this fair continent would have | clerk in Boston at the outbreak of the | AfTS ; cool, sparkling water that issues from | indulgence in play had dulled his ap-| o he st of overstudious minds. provoked side-splitting merriment. Yet only [ Civil War, which he entered as first | Milner became the imperialistic A Spring, deep und hidden from the | petite and tastes. Too many of our mself a stark ignoramus. a few weeks ago workmen digging in modern |lieutenant’ in the 224 Massachusetts [Dar _excellence, carrying on the of the burning sun! If such an experience means much to the trav- eler, what must it mean to the soldier, youths are satlated with play from sses, and it loses its charm and fascination. excy So rapid and deflnite have been the ad- vances of science in the last two-score of years that even our struggling encyclopedias have BUT SCIENCE DECLARES-- That ours is one of many universes. New York came upon the fessil remains of a mammoth. And laborers who removed the of James Infantry. Within a year he had risen to be colonel of the 6lst New York Volunteers, and at the war's close he Chamberlain tradition, only more so He was for binding the common- wealths of the empire into a “per- A e flagstones from the front porch ‘ b manent organic union.” “Of such hurdened with the weight of hisequip: | Mixed with work and play there{ been utterly incapable of keeping up with the st stars arewhit!iicloda ok vapor, Monroe's home, only a few nfiles down in | vas major general of Volunteers in IMAuen) oresic unen.” . Of 2Uch 4 ment, hastening on to action in the [Must be love—the satisfaction of the terrific pace, and men who are still young many in the process of evolving into Virging & d th VA Sommeyd of 4 oorps. sie pavticing s of th vereign: as they t field, the issues of which are all un- | deeper yearnings of the heart. What enough to admit reminiscences of their boy- planets. rginia, some years ago turne em ov in all the major operations of the t"é.s of the soverelgn as they exis known? Tired and tense, straining |& brook in the way love is! It speaks hood. dave findlithaic bratns: whisling (issly That the atom is separable into yet and found stamped upon the under surfaces Army of the Potomac, except the Get- | today are only the raw materia o every muscle, vet ready for the fray, he comes upon a brook, protected from the sun by overarching trees, and, stooping to drink, he receives refresh- and renewal, and, rising from knees, he lifts up his head and Zoes on his way with a new sense of fitness and a freshened inspiration to service. The brook is -suggestive of those sources of power from which, from time to time in the course of life's pilgrimage, we receive new strength and new courage. In a delightful little book entitled “What Men Live of kindship and friendship, terms that mean more to us than all others. When Silas Marner put love out of his life, his soul dried up and with ered. Nothing so contributes to fric. tionless living as love that is recip. rocal and unfailing through all the changing vicissitudes of life. Many a man is saved from destroying vices through the love of a mother, a wife, a child or a friend. This brook in the way is one of life’s renewers. * ® Work, play and love must be supple- mented by worship. There is an in- as they endeavor to draw a comparison be- tween the conceptions they were taught and the new facts that have been brought to light by our modern scientists. Ideas Revolutionized. During the past Winter there have twice come to Washington many of the men who are responsible for this new outlook upon life, first as delegates to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the second time as members of the Natlonal Academy of Sciences. And each time there were made pub- smaller bits. That life follows, under normal environ- mental conditions, definitely predeter- mined lines. That the theory of evolution invites no condemnation as being anti-religious. That giant dinosaurs really did once romp around Washington. atoms, for the atom is no longer the extreme of brevity. The physicist has smashed the atom to pieces and found it to be constituted of a number of parts, and now he has a strong of several the unmistakable prints of a dino- saur’s foot. The prints of those mighty feet were stamped into the flagstones when they were still moist sand, untold ages back in the his- tory of creation. Through the ages they were preserved intact, but when the stones were quarried and laid down as a floor for the front porch of one of our most illustrious President’s homes, they either passed unnoticed alto- gether or failed to impress the unenlightened workmen of the past century. Similar tracks, and even the bones of creatures long extinct, tysbsurg campaign, during which he was Incapacitated by a dangerous wound received at Chancellorsville. He was three times wounded. He was conspicuously one of the Civil War heroes by reason of his youth, his notable gallantry and the splendor of his appearance. In 1866 he was commissioned colonel in the Regular Army. He became major general in 1890; in 1895 he succeeded Gen. Scho- field as commanding general; in 1900 he was promoted lieutenant general; in 1903 he retired. A commanding general during the was for a permanent deliberative council. He was the grand champion of imperial preference and of tariff “reform” (i. e. protection) answerable to_his imperial idea. His contribution in the World War was a great one, especially in the matter of food production and con- trol. He was perhaps Lloyd George's most valuable colleague in the war cabinet, because of the resolution of his character and his willingness to shoulder responsibilities and face facts. He was all for co-ordination of allied effort, and is sald to have been By Dr. 50 2 o lic yet newer achievements that were discov- may still be found in virtually every part of | Shanieh: American W, ® | chiefly responsible for Foch's ap- l’limuil)}:;d Sreeon, el e That thens | SRt within each one of us that finds ved in the quiet, efficient research laboratories suspicion that each of these bits of parts like- the United States, and with them fossil fishes wg’,f,ma,,aede(L:".:‘,,:S}J’:npf.‘:m;;‘:rl:'; POl ente o s auaraidshne are four essentials, mamely, “work, | g, d°CPSt satistaction in commu-| which seem to be revolutionizing man's outlook Wise consist of more than one unit, although to prove that this continent once emerged | Rico. . The crowning recognition of his play, love and worship.” These four | e ahi constiions chi e 6ne 0| upon life, and even his ideas about himself. he is frankly doubtful that he will ever suc- from the sen. Fine as was the Civil War record ||MPortance was his appontnent 1o things, he maintalns. constitute the|ihe brooks in the way that sustains Had you asked a man a comparatively few ceed in dividing them. It has long heen a populur belief that man [of Gen. Miles, his distinctive fame is|;t)315" “When the trouble broke in and fiar, gar them e TS StAlc | We recall how the Master said to the| the center of the universe, he probably would littie acorns grow” any longer hold good. Mind that nature provided man, however he | ISSITes g iowas, fhe, €O commission to investigate the s ek AL ¥ e woman of Samarla: “Whosoever| have turned away in disgust at such benighted Rather we should say, ~Ereat caks from little De4LORLY can improve upon the crattsmanship | manches. ihe Soux, the Nez Perces | iion and recommend a remedial pol- T EE Piketh of the water that I shall glve | jgnorance. But should you put the same ques- chromosomes gro For the geneticist noW 15 the point of duplicating in his laborato, Chief Joseph, Sitting Bull and Gero- |ICY: The present status of Beypt 12 As he surveys life from his vantage | be in him a well of water speinglag| UOR to @ student of today, he might quite feels justified, in the light of recent discover- in a single day better rocks than she manu- nimo. He ended the Indian wars. |00 S0 RITRITICREE POl miasion. point he sees that a life well-balanced. | up unto eternal life.” We m’,,‘:. ,,eg,; blithely ask in retur: The center of which ies, in concluding that the destiny of every- factured in spans of time so great that they He was, perhaps the greatest of our well-poised, a life of efficlency and hausted with work, oversatisfied with universe For we are now virtually assured thing living is predetermined by infiinitesimal are most easily conceived in terms of geo- Indian fighters, a sufficient distinction. Lord Milner has left a deep impr ; A = . X sion_on_the British_empire. satisfaction, calls for and demands a | play, overindulged in love. but where | that our universe is but one of a number of . bits of matter, appearing under the most pow- I0Bic ages. And man's synthetic rocks, while | A magnificent soldier; fine subject for e Wi Uasord b dead proper proportion of each one of these | worship has its large part in the universes, and that the edge of oblivion has ot erful microscopes like diminutive bolognas, 1Ot mearly so large, are purer. & Al;z_ralfo:r”u Ee!mus. vt 1| He was born in 1856. Few nove ot (‘:m,f{:’“Theff can he little doubt | scheme of life it tempers all our vet even been touched. that are called chromosomes. Life's Span Increased. iy Lows Lt o omtic, and| have had such popularity as ‘'She ork_play: arge part in the | tastes, regulates s ’ - it i i " > nor < . Presi-| «King Solomon’s Mines” and making of character. Work, rightly |lends & rest ta ol Sur rderioits, and ‘Through the oyes\(Galllag fumiished naicen Each chromosome is filled with minute pills Decatlee man Imirovss UDon Detine Mo 2o° || gent of Havvara et ot iperalvite |l oo ie DO CRO0 D SRR s e n conceived, is not drudgery, nor again B8, turies back we have peered far out into space called “genes." It is these genes which are ™l span of his life has been increased by 12 Stroks ion Moy T3, THS Toss to Arner. is it designed merely for selfish gain. Its real and highest purpose is world betterment. The man who works * % ok % Every now and again we meet some and found it crowded with millions and mil lions of stars we never dreamed existed. And we have discovered those glowing dots to be, held to be the determining factors. One may determine sex, another the shape of the nose; vears in the last decade. Some scientists who recently journeyed to the jungles of Central America and lived with the monkeys in their ican letters is a great one. ell's experiments in Miss Low adence verse and “polyphonic prose” may or ma. justified, for the author’s rather ex- cessive exuberance of imagination was associated with genuine literary gifts r one who has been eminently success. ) ake you handsome or homely, a : Iphonic pros nay | “'She” at least, will probably keep solely tor [imself, or for the replen-| ful In work, whose leisure affords him not lanterns hung out to ornament our heavens, ;);L‘:s‘: e iunmetre blueeyed or brown.eyed, ~ Datural, openair habitats, learned that despite not have quite Justified themselves;| he sheives for many a decade stilh ‘;ngnxl; %6 Hai®m Dburse, comes at|ample time for play, and whose home but masses of vapor in the process of evolving, Still others may control your disposition, while thelr muscular activities and abundance of s aere 19 mo don lrdhnut} € curl | and should. Haggard's chief interest 0 find his occupation. be it|environment witnesses to love, but rhaps, into planets like our own. These ex- . S clikis sl ozone and sunshine our simian cousins are not s beauty of much of her verse, nor| jowever, was not novel writing, but what it may, irksome and distasteful. | there is something lacking in his life Doruans, P 5 2 the remainder are planning whether you shall 2 Fiie {6 bound clift-awel. about her importance as critic, trans- | aericulture and sociology. He is a We were talking recently with one . plorations of the heavens, however, have o€ eI er ATE B or @il of the other mearly so healthy as we city- - oy y of the world's greatest surgeons, well advanced in yea and upon asking Lim whether the exactions of his pro- fession were not too great for him he replled: “I am having the time of my life.” To him work was joy, and he It is the sense of union with the In- finite; the consciousness of walking day by day in fellowship with Christ. When the Master would leave His disciples, He gave them the assurance: “Lo, I am with you always.” It was the consciousness of His abiding pre: vie'iad vet more. The milky way that comprises our own uni- verse is from 150,000 to 300,000 light years in diameter. Light travels at a speed of 186,000 miles a second. If vou would like to know what the speedometer of an automobile that multitudinous conditions of the living body, providing, of course, environmental factors are normal. Any Washingtonian who longer doubts that life can be reproduced by virgins need only ers, who must depend upon specks of golf courses for our meager exercise. One might quite easily write a iibrary on the accomplishments of the scientist during the last century, and yet the half would not be told. One by one some of our strongest concep- and interpreter. Not least charming and valuable of her volumes is the “Fir Flower Tablets,” English versions of Chinese lyrics, in collabor- ation with Miss Ayscough, the trans- lator. The great Hawaiian Islands war notable authority on intensive farm ing, whereof he wrote several books. One shudders pleasantly, recalling his tales of Impi and Assegal. Several hundred cases of sleeping sickness are reported from England It is, however, a curiously mild form exercised his great genius, not for|ence that susta; . : take a bus down to the Mall, get off at the tions are having the props knocked from under | games made clear certain deficiencies | only one death—-that of Lord Miller what he could get out of it, but for | them in the Storm duys wnen ronamcd | had traveled around that diameter would read \uiional Academy of Sciences, and observe an them. As the bystander waiches this amazing | in the island defenses and in the fleet; | having reculted: the course of the what he could put into it. Work for | tion and martyrdom awalted them. at the end of its journey just multiply the _\'yipit'in one of the rear rooms of that amaz- demolition he cannot help but ask himseif, fhiclning the: need Of & considerabi dollars is one thing; work for human Wors number of seconds in 300,000 light years by “What next?” It would be difficult to find a malady being about 10 days. = ip, or the exercise of r ing building. There he will see two frogs, = 1 e increase of the strength of the garri- A snake has been discovered in Ire- service another. ligious feelings, is the brook from 186,000. But as to the other universes. iher of which ever had a father. They Single instance, however, where {zhxs‘_ereA§XIV~‘;'r‘1é son, and the need of great improve- | an, e s*i ® ;‘ *d hence we draw that refreshment and | «Island Universes” Found. were not only created by science, but grew to has not m’:ar:‘h‘egf i:“f"‘lg‘gli;;‘*‘" e ments of t;w l'lmrborb and entrance | Willlam Ferguson Massey, Premier ay 1s closely e e = : 3 R gTow 20 channel if Pearl Harbor is to be IS n Ma p Shouln B b{;‘j“eflr ‘l_ec;‘fioa!‘l;‘mi\ Iny :)!lx"mun that sustains us to the Pndg be strong, healthy, normal frogs in every sense, Without any blare of advertising or loss of 4| of New Zealand, died on May 10 a recreation that is wholesome' to one's pilgrimage. fre One of the great discoveries of the last vear was that of the “island universes.” Science had and were finally killed by the same hands that assisted them into this world, so that they time with useless words, the scientist has been plugging ahead with his tedious researches first-class base. But presumably the requirements for the defense of the the age of 69. He was born in Ulster. went out to New Zealand in his 14t hat of ¢ n : ] Panama Canal take precedence over|vear and commenced farming. He . { ::;’;el;;edo:t:vfing‘ i?;i;:z:r l(?:s:xrxf:e\{fx?c:s might be preserved as actual examples of In unattractive e U0 |those of the islands, and the Panama | has heen premier since 1913 (the Den lllg' All H 1 hat could be traced through the most power. ~ Parthenogenesis. e e ok Dviiization has come to take of |Project is far short of realization as to | last of the war premiers to hold on). i y uman 19 ts‘ that cou o Sivo the MakiesoF i couniiy sew secil B EEN e s personnel, material, emplacements, | remarkable fact, since he was a sturdy =) 4 e S n T i TeTel's " e tiss whenimen waro-put (h{deattihecaiiie. JintAher Tios b o e oo doubt Congress will be urged | Conservative, and New Zealand leans Soviet Is Challenge to U. S. from inued st rst_Page.) jbranch of government is the very tic system. This theory has now become a fact, and we are assured that the nebula in Andromedo, for instance, is something like a billion light vears away. Even an outstanding student like Copernicus would have turned pale at such a suggestion in his time they harbored doubts as to the story of man's own descent from Adam and Eve. There are still many who doubt the theory of human evolution, but scientists declare that it is com- ing to be accepted more and more as its real light that has been shed not only upon his sur roundings, but himself. As one outstanding stu- dent expressed it: ) “We owe our present state of enlightenment ta scientific research. But if mankind had not been willing to accept it with an open mind it would have availed nothing. More and more at the coming session to provide what is needful for both canal and islands. It is good news that Sir Thomas Lip- ton, now turned seventy-five, is strongly minded to challenge once more for the American cup. strongly toward radical experiment History will give him much of the credit for the splendid participation of New Zealand in the war. He was an ardent Imperialist, while standing out for equality of the dominions with | definition of tyranny | Th Sicas Eiab Asin b0 aning becomes more apparent, and even in orld is coming to accept the truth with a PR the mother country In the imperial E oy : Lyranny. e meticulous modernist who shudders at meaning the world is ] the r he | a atugis Drogram and the successive| The function of the judiciary. the| the thought of being old-fashioned may no the churches, it is asserted, there is a wide proader vision, and so long as that state pre- The British Empire—Alfred, Vie. | PATCIEIShiD. It was largely due to ot e mollowed In its executlon | last bulwark of human rights. is like-| 1000 eypress diminutiveness in terms of circle of clergymen who frankly assert that vails civilization's progress is inevitable. | count Milner, is dead of the siceping | Bis, SIONS that the dominions wase formed @he life dream and_ the life | wise clearly defined in Soviet jurispru. | sickness at the age of Seventy-one. | fobran ennforome e Heo ro ot v Vikolai Lenin. For this|dence. Article 7 of the constitution, Educated in Germany and at OXford, | New Zealand . ne o s transformation he planned and wrote | section 43, provides: “In order to frovy ZEshanls s thelipexint e and pf‘(‘mil'?d. Controlled, obsessed by this single idea, he drove straight for his goal with uishakable pertinacity. It was the “cloud by day and the pil- lar of fire night” that led him through the darkness and drab mo- | notony of prison days in that house of the dead—Siberia. It sustained him during his exile in Switzerland, where he ate with it. slept with it, walked with it and talked with it, until, like ' f mly maintain revolutionary law throughout the territory of the Union | there shall be created a supreme court | of the union, which shall be attached nion central executive com Section 47 provides: “The right to submit questions specified in section 43 to the plenary sessions of the su- preme court of the union may be exer- cised only by the central HINDENBURG WILL FIND 'BROADCAST OF DEBATES DIFFICULTIES ABROAD% OF CONGRESS UNLIKELY German President Should Have Time loiL ongworth Believes It Would Uncork after some years at the bar and in journalism he entered public life. His first important post was that of under secretary of finance in Egypt, under Cromer.” Returning to England in 1892, he published his “England in Egypt,” a most important exposition of the British work of reform and re- construction in the land of the Pha- reohs, The conspicuous ability he display- cabinet and war conference meetings of 1917 and 1918 at the peace cons ference of 1919 and at the imperial conference of 1921. He preached in perial preparedness and was bitter resentful of the British Labor gov ernment’s abandonment of the Singa- pore project, a project since revived He was a warm advocate of close re lations between the Pacific dominiores ot - = and the United States. 1 1 v i executive st o [ 2 < ed under ensuing appointments led to the magnetic North, It drew him buck | commities of the “umim aocus N 0 Howev ' Enough “Eloquence” to Block Trans- to Petrograd at_precisely the oppor. | court, the attornevs genmeral of the | Carry ut Policies, owever, | noug loque b Ty i R No Roman conqueror leading captives at his chariot wheel ever made a more triumphant entry constituent republics and the political department of the union. * * * No such cases, however, shall be tried by Says Harden. action of Nation’ Business. I high commissioner for South Africa and governor of Cape Colony; post of high importance because of the deli- France.-—Gen. the age of 59. Mangin is dead He was one of the : most gallant and competent of the than did this third Nicholas into the | the supreme court of the union, ex- O o e B “th |reat leaders of the war. Entering demoralized Muscovite capital _in|cept upon a motion in each case made s s Satheson rata. The selection of Mir. |the Army in 1886, he had his fill of April, 1917. He was the Russian | by the central exdcutive committee of BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN, of him we will uphold him all the| BY DREW PEARSON. selves to think were hanging upon ner by Mr. Chamberlain, the colonial | 00Nl petty warfare in Algeria, Mag Marius, and the whole world should | the union or the president thereof.” | coneral Furope's Foremost Publicist. | more.” i Sieryword v, 3 S s, fhiesndan dndo Ehina < e be his Jugurtha' These provisions of the fundamental ILL Congress, following the s a matter of fact, it would be was agreeable to the Lib- secre The monarchists’ success was so 2 : : . three times wounded. His most me, On the fall of the shortlived and |law concentrating all power in the STACMOM: | of. | Nationalnto | imocr oetar thas thes srpactul that B British | pnysically impossible for many people x:é‘:’,;eoi,?:e}r‘:l“f:o:;‘m‘e}?e‘%:)filg morable feats of war were his recap’ inefficient provisional government of | hands of the central executive com- demonstrations on the day |they must be more stupid than they Parliament, st miere;| to listen, for most sesslons of Congress | moderate Liberal, thought He Would |ture of Fort Douaumont at Verdun in Alexander Kerensky, militant Com- | mittee are further elaborated in the of Hindenburg’s entry into|have appeared to be so far if they phones oo ‘d-‘”;” Sfiam take place in the daytime, and the|not put the screws on Bresident Kru- | 1916, and his share in the counter munism became the order of the day, | civil and criminal codes. Thus, for ex- Berlin is useless. Bootless, | stake it on adventure. They can broadcast its deliberations | average citizen is too busy to use his |Eer. But they mistook = thelr man. | ,cic on the German Marne (Soi both as an internal and an externai | ample, article 1 of the civil code reads | O oriticiam L0f e D | e s e niieit. o | tosthasKmeritan fublis? ¢ ¢ ge. |Tadio except in the evening. After exhaustive study of the situa: | (Giat 51, 'Thicresy satient on Ju policy. Through a graded system of | as follows A Highia are proteto |augural opsech Cor ine. Prestaenta | Limn At sapubn facde with peope |, This® proposal of government de-| ™At present these long speeches are|tion. he concluded that the condition |13 “Uhat turning point in committees, chosen by occupation, not | by law, save in cases where they are |proclamation in the tone of a|of their own party. The last remains bates by radio umjhe flrlxgnlflm) ;:siv not delivered on the floor of the House (‘e“s‘)em e e et €U0 | The attack (nitiated, I believe, by by districts, an all-Russian Congress | excrcised contrary to their social and |monarch: “To my people.” of the front against the old regime | Stanley Baldwin, S ok o | uenate ] Insiead, each Consrees {1 2 Mangan) was executed in conjunction s assured, ‘which maintains the pre- | economic aim.” Now the social and | Fair play demands that Hinden-|have fallen to pleces, and in Germany | Pility of cementing his loose kit e |man has the privilege of putting his —————————————— [} Degoutte: Mangin's army ex- ponderance of .the urban proletariat | economic aim of all bolshevik law is |burg be given time to fulfill the|more than anywhere else today suc-|Dire bY allowing the vadio fan % |undelivered speech into the Record,) ¢ the man responsible for | tNAINE from the Aisne to the Ourcq over the peasants of the districts. |to destroy a certain class of human |hopes which he expressed in Han- | cess is an irresistible magnet. Wil.|Australia or South /Africa to which then is printed and mailed out | the name o m: <! | The constitution every 125,000 inhabitants of the pro inces, but one for every 25,000 vote provides one repre- | sentative to the Soviet Congress for beings called, contemptuously, *the bourgeoisie”; to effect the confiscation and nationalization of private proper- ty, and to bring about the dictatorship = rs over in the words “from distress, misery and chaos, I will restore Ger- man unity.” Such Messiah-like action is only expected from mon- helm knows this. After Hindenburg's election three beautiful motor cars were seen at Doorn Park. Then “his majesty” went for a long trip, on on the proceedings of the “Mother of Parliaments.” Stanley Baldwin also had in mind the awakening of public interest in to his political supporters. That may cost something for postage and print- ing. but not nearly as much as what it would cost Congress in time if it this work.’ “Well, Champ stopped and scratched his head, and for the life of him, could not remember who the Attorney Gen- and Degouttes (with the majority of the American participants) from the Oureq to the Marne. The majority of the attacking troops on that glorious day were Americans; but the bulk of among the city workers. The ratio is. | of the Communist party throughout |archies, where the rights of the throne | which he took tea at Noordwik, Hol. |Parliamentary affairs right at home|had to sit and listen to all those|eral was. Afterward he came up to|y,ngin's army were African colonialy therefore, about five to one. justified | the world. il A meciiet wih | Dady Getgtunt buthitg pleok in England. He saw in the radlo & |speeches. me and asked if I thought the inter-|ys, o in hag been the most ardent ad: by geoisie is to be exterminated. he Communist because “the fac-| limited power, the marshal soon will for him to ameliorate than for a The writer, who was the only Ger- “When 1 make my triumphal entry means of defeating a biased press, of ruption, as recorded in the minutes, our men on that July 18 tory worker is centuries ahead of the | People Denied Rights. Itef s oves are sharp enough,|man besides his suite who saw the |educating a part of the public which Ashamed of Triviality was ‘any special contribution to sci ;‘3?,"? :r’ 3]‘:‘ ;E:_‘e‘;:g;YA‘;:;ff\ ;‘(‘)foxgz' peasants in civic consciousness and | The conclusion is clear—there are |gpet he is using Natlonalist spec- |former Kaiser, could not help wonder. |18 too 1azy even to read the newspa-| Not from what Mr. Longworth sald, |ence. ~And of course 1 consented t0|ang his advocacy was borne out by political ripene: Hence, industrial | no rights for either citizens or for-|(aoles, He has regarded conditions |ing whether he is again hoping for a |Pers. and of reaching "“d "‘j‘,‘ér but rather from what he left unsald, | Withdraw it from the Record. the magnificent behavior of the colo workers are the privileged class In | eigners in Soviet Russia outside the |ihgide of Germany much to pessi- | long-deferred triumphal entry into | WO though unable to read or Write, |1 got the impression that Congress: Interviewing Father. nials on this oceasion. e ithe stataine 5 il Com et S el e Mapx mistically. He will see that the in- | Berlin as he recalled a question Wil. [ €an always hear. ;‘;,’,;‘n,";;i“"s‘;"ffii‘i o roadcasting | At this point I interrupted Mr. smericans will always cherish a S 5 e peasants are sec-| icle = civil code says iona i i i S| v ¥ ion. . 'y ve: v - vite] Mas X i y . ond i impostance, while the bonr.|tbat Jesal sfatus Is granted by fhef o cauonal situstion e more qCF Ul jihelm ok ed 0K e Sees War Prevention. e oy hleh wanld there. | Longworth in order to switch him to | Mangin's testimony to the conduct ot state with the aim of developing the representative of the nation who is into Berlin at the head of a victorious Tt is said that the British premier by reach the ears of the public. So I a subject which was infinitely more . - _| Besides being a thunderbolt of war 7 3 e | productive forces of the cor v. : e b rious | 1so foresees =« great step toward|asked the mew Speaker why it was|important than government or busi.| Besi - a th Dictatorship by Minority. e Iikewiseelf;;::(r)sh(;sjil‘girepum,ca“ rn Genbarg T 1 submit to-erles of “Hin- | 5%q Teute when the people of one | that the public lacked confidence. in | N5 ot ool i 4 'fil‘;fifii? “;l:;aa‘n“"xilé’é;?pfili'éa“n‘,‘d‘s‘fi Theoretically, therefore, the Soviet | the geconomic development of a given Country Not So Bad Off. Vexation at the people’'s adoration |COUNtry can “listen in” on the Parlia- | the House and Senate. g:’mne“}:n:l‘e‘fl;::“cmerc\;-ed ma;efn e tdeal is expressed in the sloganv—"The | timBer concession or gold mine or oil | 1If distress, misery and chaos are|of the old fleld marshal caused this|Ment of another, and so get the pros| “The last Congress,” Mr. Longworth | OREWOTR ' e Subiest ot N Hew 1t| His comment “Finit La Guerre" is Dictatorship of the Proletariat:” | Well result in the establishment of |really so great, Germany's creditors |question to be asked by the -Kaiser, |and cons of war or peace threshed |admitted, “did not have the confidence FEXVIEWEE O Fi0 T onaiofithalimost motablslof the Wt Actually. however, this dictatorship [.1““"‘" prices than are profitable to|and beneficiaries under the Dawes |who, even in the midst of the most ap. | 0t upon its floor. Had Europe been |of the public—and no one will admit TG et rhe abronigsiie books, a masterly review of the chief is exercised by the “conscious minor. | COMDeting heavy industries of the|plan would have reason for sreat|palling human slaughter, still thought |able to listen to the parliamentary |that quicker than I—chiefly because| The amswer wasa broad gnin = | U0C%, 0 ety FRTET, OF D08 o0 ity of the workérs—that is, by the | Communist state, the concession legal- | anxiety. This is not the case. The |only of theatrics, debates which preceded the great|it was frequently at odds with the Sl Interviewad, e miatuss sbrutality made by his enemies seeins 600,000 members of the Communist |l1¥ 8cquired may be legally canceled. |German minister of finance, in order| .~ s cees 2 war, that catastrophe might have been | Executive. During guch confifets | MERCOUBY, ANEINERER, Mol PITTC ] Tho Ve been totally undeserved party, which is the only legal party | Article 18 of the civil code provides |not to appear too well off and not Former Kaiser Envious. avoided. popular opinion always sides with the | 1< occiblec (rsUREES Tpace T Cvery . = in Russia. Through its “political bu- | that a_juridical person may be abol-|to be forced to lower taxes, is obliged | Ten years, when the fame of the vic. | ~With this British proposal in mind, | president. He can “seize opportuni-|Paber 1 the jcophiny. —Faulines * k% % reau.” composed of seven tried Com. | ished if any actions of their Tepresent- | to hide the treasury's surplus. Un- | tor of Tannenburg eclipsed the sun of | I Went to the man best able to speak | ties and move quickly. He catches the | MOther €4 2741 French Morocco.—Increasing peril munists, the “party” rules the Soviet |atives are directed against the inter- | employment in Germany is less than | the Hohenzollerns, the crown prince, | for the American Congress, Nicholas|popular imagination. The legislative |SWoEiZedq = ¢t all the |to a number of isolated French block- government. osts of the state. It is to be observed |i¢ fs in England, and dangerous dis- | never noted for his filial piety, mock: | Longworth, newly elected Speaker of | branch must of necessity move slowly. | , Why 6t the women gef all whe |y | o0 O o0 g e rent 50 To retain this dictatorship of the | that the code does not say agalnst the | turbances have not taken place for | ingly remarked: the House of Representatives, and|Frequently it can only act by com-[EIOr¥¥ My PAPES | ol ME LOUE | con ohec“inder a couple of French “conscious minority” a constitution | Fights of the Soviet state, but against |5 Jong time. “Papa is envious of the field mar-|asKed if Congress contemplated any |promising. Compromises please no- ¢ S lomcers, has been written, detailed codes have the interests of the state. The inter- Lack of capital is Germany's great shal's fodder.” such move as the British Parliament body, and displease everybody. champions of the old order of men’" led Marshal Lyautey to 2 1 ho s of 3 x 4 - rights. My editor wanted an inter.|order an advance in force on the 14th been edited and legislation enacted. | €Sts of the Soviet state have been clear- v. Customers in most Eastern % y, y i hat | had. > ‘'The last Congress was also unpopu- | T ack ights 2 There is & civil code, a crlminal code |1y interpreted by Nikolai Lenin, Leon ?:;T;f.gl‘:;q a‘:et unable to pay their en‘tl"‘;“oasnl‘;:;;fl?:g?;gn:?;}rszggflyl “I have talked with a good many |lar because it introduced for the first ;19;:' [T e :x“rtn“gll‘;cf};r?infiésoh)\'-e‘:flun?f(eful?d::% and a labor code, with a wilderness of | Trotsky and Grepory Zinovieff to be | depts, credit mortgages are not ob- [in the darkness of the night, with | COngressmen about installing radio|time the bloc system of government, (father. o o 1GONE with the expert assistance of decrees, regulations and penalties, | SYNORYmous witl. the interests of a |tainable except at tremendous in-|machine guns on the roof of his sleep- | aPParatus in Congress,” Mr. Long-|which, in my opinion, is dangerous to| - TheY 8Iresdy PEUTe OF WA Ret | onenn soldiers of fortune, Ger- But as guarantees of justice and lib- | Small group known as the Russian |terest and there are failures every- |ing car, Wilhelm left Berlin, and he | WOrth replied, “and I find there Is|this country, and which was killed by | Cresidente, Fauiing fAiner Gemited | o,y T 0 g o) § erty the various codes of Soviet Rus- | Communist party. Where. Even old and well establish- | has not vet returned. But through the | divergent sentiment both for and |the vote of the people in the last |Sadly. o e hore T, Ths “attack, directed by Gen. tHe sia are scrapped by one or two simple |~ IS it not a valid conclusion. there- | eq firms and big shops are continual- | same streets where he had hoped to | a8ainst it. Personafly, while I do not | electio S ara e e e ns oty Taas | Count De {Chanibrus, was s gaHant paragraphs in the constitution of the | fore, that the cor stitution and codes |ly having sales to get cash with|ride triumphantly Hindenburg now |think it would be wise to broadcast| “Why," I asked, “has it become the | VOters a rather intense vouns lady| o w0, 00T, Va5 O B0 S0 Soviet union—that is. in the funda-|©0f Soviet Russi. acknowledge no|which to buy new stock. As only |has passed with a large government |the entire proceedings of Congress, Ilhabit of business men to blame Con.|Who reported for & Sl s 3 mental law of the Communist state. Thus, the dictatorship of the centr: executive committee—the small group which rules Russia between the meet- Congress—is ings of the all-Russian rights at all—natural or civil—but only tolerate certain practical possi- bilities so long as they operate for the advantage of one privileged class? In a word, it is a conception of gov- al foreign credit can shorten the period of want, Germans should avoid ex- aggerated reports of distress. It seems to the writer that it also the duty of the victor states to is retinue, the imperial field marshal elected by the people as the President of the German Republic. And there were no cries of “Wil- am in favor of broadcasting certain speclal debates when big and vital questions are being discussed. The Pork Barrel by Radio. gress for everything that goes wrong with the Nation?” “Partly because of the reasons I just mentioned, partly because the average business man knows less about the wanted to know if Paulina expected to be the first woman President? To Be “Ward Boss.” ‘I replied that I believed in keeping this success plaved havoc with Abd- el Krim's defensive arrangements, and resulted in relief of all the i lated French positions except two. One now conjectures whether Marshal C helm 2 iy ¢ | Lyautey is proceedin . sateguarded by section 20, article 4, of | €rnment which is ;heufl";ed and milt | forget Hindenburg's military past and (Copyright, 1925.) H “The public would not understand sg:ern:nen; of‘bthe country than the Plenest ;’r‘nsl‘l‘;og‘?g: e xfg;{"ffi el e e ‘,;’,[ggg;";e"‘; the constitution, which sa e i RUEAR ARSI G at (System of |regard him without prejudice, al- apiesined R e much of what we were doing it Pt (i bl el Al Just isn’t in-| ¢ ®have her become councilman for |their associates from the French pro- central executive committee of the | enumerated =powers and - reserved |though he was the advocate of the broadeasted everything. Can you im.|terested The farmer knows far more |\, "0 it Cincinnati. tectorate, or is waiting for reinforces unicn of Soviet Socialist republics [Tights for the establishment and de-| cryelest submarine warfare and the Sees Great Clmnges. agine, for instance, some merchant out | thar, ; man. On the whole | "S.re reporter took me seriously and | ments. shall have the right to veto or sus- |fense of which the Founding Fathers, | geportation of Belgian women and in Keokuk, Iowa, listening to the farmer {s pretty well posted. printed quite a story about it. Since| A pleasant aspect of modern war- pend all decrees, regulations and ordi- | on July 4, 1776, pledged their lives, ———— men and was responsible for the reading of a bill providing for a post abominable treaties of Brest Litovsk office in Galitzin, Pa., or dredging some Stumped Champ Clark. Damees of the presiaiim of the sentral | their fortunes and their sacred honor, then I have been somewhat wary |fare is seen in the relief of the dis- ° . Ve - | comfort of isolat Sts y o executive committee of the union of Thus we must recognize that Soviet | ,nq Bucharest. If you wanted to live through the|canal in Alabama? After two minutes “To back up that statement, let me il:::tbgll‘:’l‘{‘fs ’I“!roerf:’:v;':ol;z z‘:’w?;:g:r pings of Dfoodso:n;dicl:eefi?cfl:)!’g:g:"h e mEItee O e 0o | liats Ty s otese Al wolle Welar sa ol most Interesting single generation in|he would probably switch over to a|tell you about a Clncinnati business | e to the Souns lady herselt. airplanes. Congresses and of the central execu- | lenges the American form of govern- A Do Bhey, Sl the history of the world you would|Jazz band concert. s Bschson ¥ nis St G “Are you allowed to carry her?": The Spaniards, of course, persist ment. How far this avowed antago- “No, I haven't progressed that far |in their jealous refusal to allow thé nism is reduced to practice in Russia's tive committee of all the constituent republics, and of all other government | This is asking a good deal. but it is “Even taxation, a subject in which not more than the interest of the wise ing Wilson's administration. I asked the entire country is interested, would wish to have been born a Japanese the guests to tell me the name of the = - yet.” French to cross into the Spanish organs within the territory of the | foreign relations will form the subject | heads of London, Paris, Brussels and and to have duplicated the career of | be almost too complicated for the aver-| Attorney General at that time. There | > °r ; i - v Sy of a succeeding article, to be printed | Prague require. If the big entente|Viscount Shibosawa, the ~grand old|age citizen to comprehend over the |were about 50 men there, and not one | perw o >0 28 Afrald of dropping | oo o A e et e next Sunday. postpones evacuation of the Ruhr|man,” still active in the affairs of|radio.” of them knew that the Attorney. Canc] well, T ‘cairy “the ‘beaket With | ever mush os oy wiee ek howe Control Is Concentrated. — and Cologne, if the little entente, |Japan. “Would not the fact that every |eral was Gregory. i Paulina in it. That’s not bad for a start. After I get-used to that I ex-; the French arms, one must feel a which now practically includes Greece sneaking sympathy for that bold pae and Poland, strives to complete the In other words, absolute and com- plete control of the destinies of Rus. Born in the middle ages, a young Congressman knew that his political man when Perry opened his country “But the sequel to that story took supporters were listening to him, keep place in the House one day, when Public Welfare. sia is here concentrated in a group of | encircling of Germany, if both swear to the outside world, already a ma- the entire body on its toes, and pro- Champ Clark, who was Speaker, did pect I'll be promoted.” #Does she have the colic?”” triot, Abd-el-Krim. n * ¥ ok x Sirroxiinately $0hhen el Anditrae . | the irrevocability of treaties, which, ture man when the feudal system was|duce greater legislative efficiency?” |the very unusual thing of coming| ey, 1l She’s not troubled with Taembers of the Communist party. In| A good illustration of the growing |even in the minds of the originators, |abolished and Japan became a modern |I asked. down from the chair to make a speech | o thing Ttaly.—The Italian chamber re- order that no doubt mighi exist as to |Mspect public officials have for nation, and now an old but active ‘were to be suited to the poiitico- economic ebb and flow, what do they gain? They will only strengthen belief in Germany that “they want to subju- “Well, it would produce a powerful Jot. of talking, if that's what you want,” Mr. Longworth replied, with a smile, “We never would be able to do any business on the floor of the House. on the floor in defense of the Wilson administration. After he had extolled the great work of the Attorney Gen- eral in breaking up the trusts and pro- tecting the consumer, I interrupted to opened on May 14. It is still boy- cotted by the “Aventine opposition.” Mussolini has recently made impor: tant changes in the personnel of his government. “On the whole, how does it feel to be a father? “Fine! Better than being Speaker. But I'll tell you one thing I've found I knew they had taken a lot™of municipal questions that affect the public welfare on the side of its com fort, convenience, safety, health and | pleasure is the creation by the Chi- the all-embracing jurisdiction of the central executive committee, the fram- ® of the constitution carefully added “:all other government organs.” There man seeing Tokio erect o radio broad- casting station which w..i be audible to “fans” in America, he has lived through more change than the whole was to be no escape, even for the ju-|cago City Council of a committee to | gate and make slaves of us.” The |history of America, and more than|Business would be transacted almost|say: :flhmty away from the Speaker since| The chamber has passed a bill diciary. be known as the committee on city | Germans will reason: ‘“Hindenburg|any one in Europe could have seen |entirely in committees and the floor If the distinguished Speaker will |the days of Uncle Joe Cannon. But|&ranting to women the vote in mu- Alexander Hamilton in No. 47 of the | planning, public recreation and | now is peaceful and obedient to the |unless he lived 700 years. of the House would be given over to|pardon an interruption, I should like | ['ve learned that they've taken even | nicipal elections. The debate on the Federalist reminds us that the accu- |athletics. It is so highly regarded | constitution and the treaties, but he| Only once in history has such a[the Yorensic efforts of those who want-|to say that we have been much in-|more authority from the medern |bill was one of extreme violence, bus mulation of legislative, executive and | that there Is competition for its|is strong and will not eat out of any-{career been possible—Grand Rapids|ed to make campaign speeches to the terested in. hearing what the gentle- | father.” . by heroic efforts the sergeant-at-aemg ‘prevented fisticuffs. , B Judicial power in any one unit or chairmanship.—Illinois State Journal. | body’s hand: because they are afraid Press. . multitudes whom’they flattered them- man has said, and would like to ask (Copyrgiat, 1025.)

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