Evening Star Newspaper, July 11, 1925, Page 4

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4 * FAUNA OF ARETC SOUEHT BY EXPERT Dr. W. N. Koelz With Mac-! Millan to Fill Gaps in Collection. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1925. (Copyright. 1925, by H. C. Fisher. Trade Mark Beg. U. S. Pat. Off.) MUTT AND JEFF —They’re in San Francisco and Extremely Happy About It. W!‘" TOURISTS ARRWED IN SAN ERANC(SCO EROM CURGKA « RIGHT onN SCHeduLe AnD VERY HAPPY AS SAN ERANCISCO IS THE ity IN WHICH T™ey FIRST (MET EACH oTHER. {YEARS + AGO L = ird | Tey EIND THe K, : S <Y AND STATE > W ! E e - I~ . : A ! S RN > - VERY Muct: s % o f \ EXCITED OVER THe ! ELABORATE ~DIAMOND JUBlLEEe- CELEBRATION WHicH WiLtL Be HeLd (N SEPT. .7 BY BUD FISHER 3 e I S % § MUH-REEE, TURKEY IS ANAZED BUEOUTINGASE | BZLIEVE MG, I'M COMING BACIE — HeRe (N SEPT. T ATTEND THe /",) DIAMOND JUBILEEL THE SPANISH ) ; ERA AND SPANISH DResS wiLL 1 2 FIGURE LARGELY (N THe DOINGS So & RENTED THIS CABALLGRO LAY-oUT! I'LL PLINKETY W. ( PLINK -~ 7 b)) S€c How MUTT UIKES (T : \ = A | | | One Editor Says Nation That , Has Such a Law Should Not Judge Europe. and Dr. Walter N expert, who Bowdoin of expedition, tc Koelz, fish is sailing north the | the MucMillan Aretic | ke studies and of Arctic u for the Natio graphic Society, is one of the leading sts of the world on the white | ant commercial fish of the | BY JUNIUS Cable to The B. col CONST and | W terloc ooling | in the| attended where he | docta | at rn in r elementary tory work Chelsea Michigs and af there and prepar neighboring town the University took b degre: University when, joining the States Bureau of for th of the commer When gations fish. si wvs of family of f has A.oN HAND When THEY RCACHED SAN €. 2545 cNT FOR A CABALLGRO OUTEIT -- $200 RENT F oL Saeo GRAND BALANCE Fozez | chelor’s, 1 = He B 8 v omes the | 1917, | |Seaplane Assists the | Sophistry Charged An aff of the l'nllcd“ SANTA BARBARA g | [ 2 ‘ | Coast Guard Rum constituted a | Raulston took a well earned rest to- |quently wished to know 1!y:- commercial fish o f the United | {tine of his court. In addition, he| Ds venireman | Of Ships at Sea and o baglielliild ST R }‘ Beauty of Surroundings heries, he began { esti- | | | = | : . constit b P 3 s A Fleet in Capture stubborn problem in classification. As| Pop nossee’s Courtesy Seen in Raising Chicagoan to! B R e ! 1 day The presiding justice in the|pect had heard his min: States and Canada, and in the labora- | | performed another day's labor in about his church affiliations | Dr. Koelz cribed the 10 Reports. Have Lured the Weaithy. it DARROW IS MADE A “COLONEL” the white | t By the Associated Press. on evolution?” was one of the Chicago Bryan’s Rank—Juror Admits He Has | Scobes trial did & big dav's work |evolution ot tory, science now for the fir time | shaking hands with numerous friends. | = | species and scol of race of lhl#} in how the veniremen felt about opin- | n the 1ons of his sod order, con- CANC scores who occupied | bors | erowded standing room, burst into|he spontaneous applause. They were |D0 | cheering: the response of a prospec- | {tive juror who told Darrow emphati- BY ROBERT T. SMALL. | Bryan home week heére in Judge Raulston threatened to clear { mountains Tuly 1L—Within | "6 b “the jury selection Clarence | had entered a | Darrow had an unusual experience. | Clarence Dar-| He was examining a_prospective juror | been made a|in his usual searching style when | | the man yawned long and loud in the Circult Judge ‘BY JUDGE IN FIRST REMARKS DAYTON, Tenn., July ]1,?Judkfi‘ln\\'_\‘9rs favorite questions. He work, with fishing fleets, in antt aoxie 5 °8 i \ 5 yesterday in administering the rou- remember |Observes Communication i Heard ““Rumor” of Case. |Wonderful Climate and has pr iplete data in l’PK:H‘dI — Darrow appeared to put much store family in American water nd ha DAYTON, T 15 minutes Tennessee of Chic collected and preserved 80,000 in- | dividual fish, the largest collection of | white fish in the world. This collec tion is in the museum of the Uni versity of Michigan at Ann Arbor. { Southern e first time 1 cordin offici; participated in suspec ter he i seaplane Th red anything opinion on the subject ioned invari ared nothin r neighbors. artroom, apture of had Americans who have not who plc ts in row seen ed tu rum smuggler arrister’s face. That was | Success of the effort is taken Invented “Filing System.” | In the course of his work Dr. Koelz | has discovered a described several entirely new species, one of which | was found to be confined to Lakes Nipignon and Winnipeg in Canada. | This discovery was of considerable im. | port ince it supports the theories of glaciologists in regard to the hypo. thetical ancient body of water, called Lake Ag: So complex did the classification of white fish prove to be, due to the bewildering slight dif-| ferences in individuals, that Dr. Koelz| found it iy to Invent a new | method of differentiation, a ratio based on nose 1 upper jaw length, fin length and head deptk The fish of his huge collection have their rel ships indicated. therefore, by decir somewhat like those on the filing tags of books in a great library When ne the Great his nets on trail of fish has spent many hours with £un obtaining specimens o has gotten together ally one of the fine hawks and waders in N Lakes with Dr. Koelz trap and birds. He d owns person- | collections of th America. | Fishing Tackle Unusual. Going off to the Arc fish, birds s N is not like an aftern hon with gun or rod a Hundreds of pounds special supplies and equipment had to be taken along and problems of packi and tion involved in getting the specimens safely back to the United States to be worked Dr. Koelz aboard the Peary, one of the Millan expedition ships, the following | formidable supplies: Fifteen gallons of formaldehyde, 20 gallons of alcohol 100 pounds of salt, 2,000 feet of gill made f line thread, ammel dozens of . thermometers, auto- matic water sampling bottle: silk bolting cloth 1o seine up the almost microscopic food of fhe fish, dredges for cre ng on the sea bottom, insect nets, plant presses and a num- ber of copper tanks for use pre- serving fish Because space is at a high premium | on the Bowdoin and Peary, there| will be much improvisation. When his | fish have bes pickled” in alcohol and formaldehyde, Dr. Ko plans to| commandeer empty oline drums in| which to bring the specimens back to the United States. The -fish are pre-| served whole, and will eventually re n alcohol. to collect | transport nets. to Proserve. | The preservatio ird specimens simple. The s are split and slipped off with feathers still place. The neck is then severed, so| that the head and skin remain. These | are generously salted, and after dry-| use they | space. Hundreds of them can | e stowed away in an ordinary wooden | packing ¢ Back home these skins | will be softened by the washing out| of the salt, will be stuffed with excel sior and mounted, being thus brought | back to a lifelike appearance. The skins of land animals will be removed and dressed and numerous photographs of the antmals will brought back to aid taxidermists giving them a lifelike mounting. C. J. FINGER WINS MEDAL. Is Awarded vNew\;—::y Prize for Best Literature for Children. SEATTLE, Wash., July 11 (®) Newherry medal, established by eric G. Melcher of New York, aw annually for the most distinguished contribution to Mterature for children from the pen of an American writer was given to Charles J. Finger of Fayetteville, * Ark., for his book, “Tales From Silver Lands,” at the forty-seventh conference of the Amer fcan Library 2 fon here today Mr. Finger was formerly vice presi dent and zeneral manager of a group of rallroads in Ohio, and now lives with his family at the foot of Mount Kessler, ne: vetteville, where he raises sheep and writes. 'His books inglude “In Lawle: nds” and “Highwaymen and Bushrangers.” SOLONS TO VISIT JAPAN. Navy Tmns;o;t WAll Take U. S. House Members From Manila. The naval transport which took a con lonal party on an inspection tour of the American defenses in the Pacific, has been au thorized to proceéd from Manila to Jaban for a visit before returning to the Uni i State An invitation to the party, which includes 11 members of the House, to visit Japan was ex- tended recently by the Japanese min- ister of marine The transport is due to leave Ma nila tomorrow for Hongkong and Shanghai and then proceed to Honc luly, touching at Japan on the w THEATER ANSWERS SUIT. The Cosmos Theater Julian B ki, operators $800 Chaumont Co., arle Theater, at Thirtenth eets, have an- swered the suit of Cozzens Bros., contractors, who are seeking to en- force a mechanic's lien of $20,373.77 against the property. The defendants set up a counter claim of $44,000 and ask the court to refer the matter to the audit of the court to state the ac- coynts of the parties. Attorneys Alex- ander Wolf and Nathan Cayton ap- year for. she. defendants. { Illinois barrister. f1e Bryan | tain |a low-collared | limelight ) is presiding at the hestowed the title, and, was a decree of a competent no appeal was taken by the Instead he grinned court, like a Cheshire ca “Will Col. Darrow kindly step up to the bench?’ suggested the judge after court had been opened with an enormously long praver by one of the local ministers “Col “And judge hen posing pictures rcceded said the Darrow smilingly ol. Brya the colonels and the posed judge all two op- for their | Qetermine » be he visiting sel. | f was a colonel oL | Darrow had to be created attornevs quickly took up the | s lead all during the first | f court there was playful | session of inge with “Col.” Darrow. | Looked Like Colonel. Somehow or other the title seemed | to fit “Col” Darrow at this time. just a¢ he fitted like a glove into the | picture of the east Tennessee moun- | troom. Darrow—tall. lean, stoop-shouldered, coat off, up his baggy pant soft shirt and black looked as if he himself oped out of the moun- | instead of coming | from the Boulevard Michizan His low, drawling voice added to the | effect. Most of those in the court room thought he had worn the title | f colonel for a long time, it slipped | well on to his shoulders i While Darrow strutted all day in the of § selection, his “op- | posite number” in the case, Col Bryan, shat quietly among the array of counsel at the prosecuting table | and uttered not a word. Not an| audible syllable escaped lips in the courtroom. Some one the twenty-ninth annivers: commoner’s “‘cross of at Chicago. If it wa celebrated it with a remar silence. lightly luses holding string tle. his Sits With Beside the Commoner son, William Jennings Los Angeles, who has been called into | he case as associate counsel for the | ate. Not many persons hereabouts knew that Mr. Bryan had a son modest has been his life, but they took keen interest in him when he ar- ived. Only in some of the expres- as about the eves does he resemble eminent father. He is rather tall, heavy set, about 35 vears old, dis tinetiy on the good-looking side, wears horn-rimmed glasses and tooth- brush mustache. He hasn't his ther's grim, thin lips, getting the softer mouth lines from his mother, who also has arrived for a sort of PHONE GROWTH FASTER THAN CITY POPULATION’S Phones Show 132 Per Cent Increase Against Only 30 Per Cent Boost in Census. Son Bryan. his only an. jr., of The increase in Washington's tele- phone facilities far exceeds the pro- | portionate growth of population here, according to a survey just completed by engineers of the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. The estimated population 465,000, which is an increase of 106,-1 the last 10 vyears. now 120,332 telephones | in use, or 68,593 more than were in service in July, 1915. The increase in/ population was about 30 per cent, while the telephone growth was 133 per cent. telephone development in is proceeding very rap- idly telephone com- pany president said today. ‘“During the first six months of this year we have added 4 telephones to the system “There are now more than 500,000 calls made daily in Washington. By 1930 we estimate that the telephones | in service here will make more than 700,000 calls dafly.” s now 0 persons in iere are PRUNE GROWERS WIN SUIT NEW YORK, July 11 (#).—The California Prune and Apricot Grow Inc., were awarded a verdict for $288.600 in a suit for that amount in the Federal Court against Willlam A. Higgins & Co. The sult grew out of cancellation of orders and refusal to accept goods ordered after they had been sent. The plaintiff claimed that after signing orders for goods the defendant had no right to delay shipments of goods contracted for, and that signing of orders by the defendant was equiva- lent to order for forwarding as soon as possible. The verdict represented the full damages claimed with interest for 5 vears at 6 per cent. STl Transfer by Court’s Order. For a consideration of $280,000 the recefvers of the Harper Motor Co. have been directed by Justice Staf- ford of the District Supreme Court to transfer to the Washington Durant Co. the property at 1128-30 Connecti- cut avenue. The receivers were rep- resented by Attorneys Wilten J. Lam- bert and Rudolph H. Yeatman. | negro | evolution. the new colonel from Chi epted the juror at once There were many amusing incidents | during the selection. Only one juror | admitted having been to hear Mr Bryan speak. The judge warned all | the jurors not to attend any Bryan meetings while on duty | “Have vou heard much about this| sked Col Darrow one talisman from far out in the eountry “Just a rumor.” he replied And to another “Have you heard much mbout this | o7 | know that T replied the as the imid | ave, juror laughter. Another juror “All T know little T see in the Rogers. | o s like Will he said, “is w Preacher Is Excused. | One man examined for the jur turned out to be a preacher. He said he didn't believe in evolution, had preached against it, thought it con tradicted the Bible and was thorough ly bad, but felt he could give the| soner a fair tr | e _excused, Brother Massen- | draw?ed the judge. | "he real joy and real class of jury is “Cap'n” Jack Thompson. The | ‘Cap'n” ought to be a colonel. He is | a true picture of the Kentucky colonel | and all the time he sat in the jury box one expected to see an old-fashioned rvant enter the room and place a frosted mint julep in front of the “Cap'n” place. The “Cap'n” Is| tall, heavy, white-haired. with whit mustache and short goatee. He wore white flannel trousers and a blue coat | and kept an unlighted mouth most of the time. smoking at the trial. F is informal. Mrs. Raulston times visited her husband bench. Once she placed a cluster « beautiful rhodedendron on his desk, | the symbol flower of the mount country. “Cap'n” Thompson owns a! farm, but insists he is no farmer. He was United States shal under Prestdent Wilson. He is a Methodist but hasn't paid much attention All the folk hereabouts Baptists or Methodists. One young| man belonging to no church at all was the first juror selected Col. Darrow had some difficulty ac customing himself to the court prac-| tices down here. Once he told the| Jjudge he was afraid the prosecution | Was putting something over on him “Why we wouldn’t do that for the | world, colonel,” replied Attorney Gen-| eral “Tom" Stewart. The evolutionary defense distened | uneasily as the first day's session was opened with old time fundamentalist prayer. Now that the jury has been selected the defense says it will stand for no more pray! An_opening prayer is optional i o Tennessee courts, not compuls PRETZFELDER’S DEATH IS HELD QLCIDENTAL Blame for Fatal Connecticut Ave- nue Crash Is Laid to Slippery he hLere erything Streets. A verdict of accidental death was found by a coroner’s jury today at the inquest into the death of Julian Pretz felder, 60 vears old, who died at Emergency Hospital early Thursday from fnjuries received Wednesday afternoon when an automobile in which he was riding, driven by Wil llam H. McClure, 901 Pennsylvania avenue. collided with a Capital Trac- tion street car at Connecticut avenue and Porter street According to testimony of witnesses at the hearing, many of whom were on the street car at the time of the collision, the accident was unavoidable and attributed to the slippery condition of the street following a rain McClure, according was attempting to pass another auto mobile when the tires slipped on_the | wet surface and his car careened diag- onaily into the path of the northbound street car. Both men in the itomo- bile were taken to Emergency Hospi tal, Pretzfelder having received a | fractured skull, while McClure was treated for cuts and bruises. The street car was run by Motorman J. J. Binkert, to witnesses, EVOLU¥|E\I TRIAL OFF UNTIL MONDAY: JURYMEN CHOSEN (Continued from First Page.) Rhea County grand jury with a new indictment. This granted, the old bill was quash- ed, and the jury selected for the trial. The move for a new indictment was mode to remove technical legal defects from the first bill, which was returned by a grand jury called into session without specified notice required by law. Only one of the 12 jurors was not a | member of the church. Three denbmi- nations were represented on the jury, Baptist, Methodist and Christian. The jurors—W. F. Robinson, farmer; J. ‘W. Dagler, farmer; Jim Riley, farmer; ‘W. B. Taylor, farmer; R. L. Gentry, | the two-mile | Ynez | tensive { bara has one of the largest ‘n | of the {it | learning imaginations ime close to meeting spe ions bulletin from the Wash ingt s of the National « 5 in regard the Ca v recently damaged by an eartk “On and near the site of Santa Bar: bara is 1 medley of meadows teeming with wild flowers. rolling country dot ed with groves of noble 1 would ¢ with headlands. material’ the muc on plain slop hes and wealth of hand of man has added hill at head of a sea the « »«d Sant mous strung along the Spanish days. On between the mis- an the city grew up and Mexican village Camino Real' in sion and the py Indian rst, Blessed by Mountain Barrier. “Thanks to the bar M which height of several thousand fe diately behind the city, Santa Ba bara is sheltered from rn winds and has an mate. I Winter cc there t to his and the large that has bee s come to be called Mentone,’ after the well resort France's an coa growth in man_added People of wi Barbara from e United tes to bui residences and develop ex- until now Santa B knmown “With city's i of the st Alth all estates. aire color t coast with its on the we cer this developr adiuncts of country clubs and polo fields, is in the suburb of Montgcito, the coastal hills several miles east of Santa a to Withstand Earthquakes. > most famous building in Santa mous than any )f the region- is the Santa Mission, the only twin-towered mission in Cali fornia. The earthquake history of this m 1 is interesting in the light ent destructive quake. Built the original mission was de- by an earthquake early in the nineteenth century. When it was rebuilt, betw 1815 and 1820, the Franciscan Fathers deliberately made especially massive in the hope_ it would withstand future akes. Its walls are of stone and mortar six fect thick, and are strengthened out- le by massive buttresses nine feet square at the base. This heavy con struction has withstood the minor disturbances of more than a century, but so powerful were the vibrations of the recent earthquake that the towers were shaken down and the front wall was toppled over At the present time the mission is conducted as a Franciscan college for monks, and is a center of Catholic 1 in California of its more notable res is a wonderful arcade facing . from which tourists delight to watch the sunsets over the Pacific. Has “Seagoing” Highways. ‘The city of Santa Barbara extends of the Pacific up the foothills of the Santa Ynez Mountains ny of the business buildings are on atively low ground not far from the Pacific. Residences have been built up the mountain siopes to the north, east and west. Becaus of its mountain barrier Santa Barbara's railways enter the city along the ocean and afford trav- elers for many miles east and west of the city some of the most interesting ocean views to be found on the west coast. At places the rails are only a few feet above the high-water mark and if large tidal waves had swept inland doubtless much of the track would have been demolished. “"The main highways which connect nta Barbara with the remainder of he State also parallel the coast. So close do the hills approach the ocean east of the city that at places it has been necessary to drive piles into the beach and construct the road on them around the cliffs. The motorist driv- Bar in 1786, stroyed highway often hears the breakers thundering immediately beneath him. Channel Is Yachtsman’s Paradise. “Santa Barbara is situated on the only extensive section of the coast of California_which_ lies almost directly east and west. It is about 360 miles and not more than 75 miles from the ports of Los Angeles. Its situation water sports. About 25 miles off- merged mountains, the bara Islands, which make Santa Bar- bara Channel between them and the mainland a yachtsman’s paradise. In the Santa Barbara Channel, almost as placid as a lake, Naval vessels built on the Pacific coast ‘are_given their speed tests. draws its greatest throng of tourists. The city has dozens of hotels. In the green foothills are several of the best country clubs and golf courses to be found in the State.” farmer and school teacher; J. R. Thompson, fruit grower and former United States marshal; W. D. Smith, farmer; Jesse ' Goodrich, shipping clerk; J. H. Bowman, farmer; Bill Day, farmer: R. L. West, farmer; J. S. Wright, farmer, -, —_— & Dr. Louise Aldrich-Blake, British Empire, Society of Medicine, s edi- | of | cli-{ drawn | popu- | ing over these ‘seagoing’ stretches of down the coast from San Francisco has made it famous as a place for shore lies a string of partly sub- Santa Bar- the United States “It is in Winter that Santa Barbara recently elevated to the rank of Dame of the is one of the very few women to be a fellow of the Royal Representative John Butler of Macon County in court when Ra | charged the grand jur; It was the first time the man responsible for the “anti-evolution” bill | the law read in court | John T. Scopes ham been awardea a degree of doctor of universal reli- fon by the Liberal Church of Den- ver. The degree authorizes Scopes establish “A Liberal Church of |Evolution wherever and he desires,” and clothes him with the |rights of a minister. The Liberal Church was organized five years ago The agreement between defense and | prosecution lawvers, Tenn Friday afternoon until Monday morn- ing, was without the consent of the concession holders, who had counted on continuing vesterday's rush busi- through the week end e of the several itinerant musi who strolled the courthouse ys during yesterday's court . added a discouraging note to general heat depression as the ns out the strains of “It Ain't | Gonna Rain No More.” | Dayton, however, s not from drought arlier in {the town visited by |heaviest downpours of the season. suffering the week All of the 12 jurors who will sit fn |the case of Scopes have “heard of evolution,” according to their replies {to Darrow’s examination. Most of |them heard- very little of “it “‘until | this thing came up.” ] Have u heard Mr. Bryan talk |BOSTONIAN NAMED HEAD OF LIBRARY ASSOCIATION Charles F. D. Beiden Chosen Presi- dent in Mail Election Revealed at Closing Session. | By the Associated Press. | SEATTLE, Wash., July 11.—Charles [F. D. Belden of Boston was chosen | president of the American Librs sociation in a mail election. the results of which were announced at the clos. ing session last night of the annual conference. Mrs. Elizabeth C. Earl | president of the Indiana Public Li. brary Commission, was elected first | vice president Franklin F. Hooper of New York was made a member of the executive |board. Theresa Hutchler and Clara Hunt, Brookline; Andrew Keogh, Yale University librarian; Samuel H. Ranck, Grand Rapids, and Joseph L. Wheeler, Youngstown, Ol were named members of the council. Many of the delegates were lcaving for their homes today, while a large contingent left on a tour of Alaska. NOTED GEOLOGIST DEAD. Prof. Gilbert Van Ingen Succumbs to Nervous Disorder. PRINCETON, N. J,, July 11 (®).— Gilbert Van Ingen, professor of ge- ology at Princeton University and one of America’s leading palaeontologists, dled here it was learned. Death re- sulted from nervous disorders. Prof. Van Ingen was the assistant geologist of the United States Govern- ment survey from 1889 to 1891. He was the president of the academic board of the United States School of { Military Aeronautics ~conducted in | Princeton from 1917 to 1919. He led the Princeton geological expedition to New Foundland in 1912 and was the author of many books on geological subjec Gift Made to High Schools. Mrs. Harfy Lee Rust has presented [ to the Board of Education eight sets of the new 50-volume “Chronicles of America,” on which Yale University’s motion pictures of American history | were based. A set will be placed in | the libraries of each of the Washing- ton high schools. Some time ago the schools received a series of the Yale | films. $3.50 Philadelphia $3.25 Chester $3.00 Wilmington And Return July 12 Similar Excursion Sunday, July 26 SPECIAL TRAIN Lv. Washington....... 7:20 am. Standard Time Returning Lv. Philadelphia. Lv. Chester... .7:50 p.m. Lv. Wilmington.......8:10 p.m. Consult Ticket Agents Baltimore & Ohio R. R. had heard | whenever | which brought | about an adjournment of court from | one of the| | cally that he believed in the Bible. heir | | | t imme- |afternoon adjournment was taken. He | - | waile | | | territory A quick smile saved many row's remarks from the b which attaches to them in t stenographic record the court not t law “put a but his jocular gr concerned in good Judge Raulston, in te men that they her during 1. warned fon of g the be kept to- . gress of them refrain fr the iss at ntlemen any meet v any service these issue: would be from you The question of swearing occupied a few min "] did not waz il n Monday dered would have bes the j was under the swear One of the jurors said, 2 question uneducated.’ meant that his when he had sa not read. the i uneducated.” were impaired er than he coul ating: I eves A suggestion that some preacher unidentified in court, not so clear he might have been. was made wh juror, admitting that he had heard a sermon on evolution, said he could not find out whether the sermon was for or against ev on. | FRANCE SIMPLIFIES | COOLIDGE PROGRAM | FOR RELIEF OF CHINA | as John V. A. MacMurray, has arrived there. until recently was Assistant y of State charge of Far Eastern affairs and h made the diplomatic problems relatir to Japan and China a life study; fact, he was chief adviser to American delegation at the V ton conference of 1921 and 1 Start Made on Problem. in Apart from territorial rights sed territory the question « in the matter of | After § ntung Was| ed to China by the agreement | the British agreed to evacuate | ef, and France declared her- self willlng to begin negotiations f withdrawal from Kwangchowwang. | Japan declined to rehnquish her hold | on Manchuria and inner Mongolia, | and Great Britain felt it necessary | to keep Kowloon, which is opposite Hongkong. But a start was made in the direction of giving up all leased| in China, an objective fer- vently proclaimed by the late Presi- dent Wilson as the ultimate salvation of China. The first step is to give China com plete self-control on the tariff and then to observe her efforts to build a central government that can be de- pended upon to protect the lives and property of foreigners without the necessity of extra-territorial rights, special courts and privileges. Mr. Kel- logg comes here to get the guidance and approval of the President to the policies already worked out by the Secretary and the American Minister at Peking. Apart from these subjects the Secretary has a report on the in- formal parleys going on with respect to the collection of war debts, and it is expected that Mr. Kellogg will be instructed to go ahead with his policy of gently reminding the debtors of the necessity for soon making some definite agreement to pay. (Copyright. 1925.) MR. MOTORIST If you ask a Teliable dealer for a gear lubricant, you ‘will probably get EBONITE, because m o 8 t Teputabl dealers offer nothing else, and most motorists mean EBONITE when they buy Transmission and Tear axle lubrication. But the careful motorist says EBONITE and takes the precaution to look that he gots it. uy with your mind made up. Demand EBONITE. Take no substitute. At dealers in five-pound cans, and at serviee stations from the EBONITE checkerboard pump only. 3 BONITE (1T's SHREDDED 0OIL) FOR TRANSMISSIONS AND REAR AXLES BAYERSON OILWORKS - COLUMEIA Unit and is hail the feasibili States law Lorena the be a Gives Tooth for Quake Victims. SAN 'A BARBARA, C alif., J M - him to bread for SHERWOOD FOREST “4 Summer Colony Under Club Control” HIGH ON THE BANKS OF THE SEVERN RIVER SWIMMING AT OREST large, For the beach deep wat gradu ating Furnished Bungalows—Season—$300 Up Proportionate Rates Shorter Periods For further Particulars Apply 503 14th Street N.W. Telephone Main 7. Beautiful drive by way of Marlboro. Road in excellent condition. GARRETT PARK The Suburb Ideal LOTS -- LOTS -- LOTS 5400 to *800 Moderate Ddwn Payment Monthly Paymenlt"Within Reach of A Beautiful Trees, Sewer, Water, Electricity. Less Than 30 Mi‘nutes-to Capitol 50 New Bungalow Homes INSPECT TODAY- Proceed north on Connecticut Ave- nue to Kensington, thence half mile west to Garrett Fark; or north_ on Wisconsin Avemue and Rockville Pike to Georgetown Preparatory School, thence east one-quarter mile. Maddux, Marshall, Moss & Mallory, Inc. 1108 Sixteenth Street

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