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., _WEDNESDAY, .8 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ( THE EVENING ST.‘\R’E"‘ high standard of living and high|tributions is not famillar with the ! : ] THIS AND THAT Politics at Large " OVEMBER 18, 1925. ¢ * ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN. AP s e —————] To ve Your cake and eat it, too, |in short order. . WASHINGTON, D. C. {is a problem that has puzzied mil-, Actual harm is done by giving to lions of people for thousands of | unworthy causes. Many of these w .November 18. 1925 8 EDNESDAY . Novembe) ?3 | vears. Naturally, the American peo- | Solicitations are purely private enter- re._ Dle would like to have the war debts|DPrises for personal profit. The names {which are justly due this country|of ‘vorthy organizations are some- Wikh B e Mecaing Xcattioe, || | D2ser: list the information can be obtained By G. Gould Lincoln BY CHARLES E. TRACEWELL. THEODOKE W. NOYES...Editor Q. Is George Arliss as popular in|Messages From Great Hymns” says Little more than a vear agd there u other cities as ke is in Washington?— | that the Poet Laareate so regarded Initead of being an Old Woman in a| ‘We love the little ones—such Young- | was a widespread discussion of the The Evening Star Newspaper Company | Paid in full with interest. But i |times used without warrant. “Drives” | Jhoe. she wis & Young Woman in « | sters as these were turning out to be!| proposal to organize a new liberal|A. H. R. tishop Heber's hymn, “Holy, Hol: | they are asked X i ¢ |are started for objects that are outside | g ; o * K K K party, which would gather into its|{ A. What fs belleved to bhe the]holy Business Office | sked to pay the price of She did not have so many children o give v he full of this remark- | fold the liberal-minded of both the old | largest gross receipts ever reached B Nedl4h St and Pennavivania Ave. o !less business activity and lower [0f the scope of the committee’s in-|she did not know what to do. She had |, vo BIve vou the fult OERVE TRIIIA s olitical parties and leave the | by a dramatic star in a four-week | @ It iz claimed that black suh- e aeats o Runidy e | do s giv chipar- — Vi = g d : 2 o e stances absorb heat and that white FurGicara ey | Tower Bulldi e, | wiges for the payment of these debts | d0rsement. Dollars given to such pur- | five of them-—four bovs and & girl—| 4o, permit me to sy that thess fve | conservatives to unite ‘either us Re.|enzagement in Philadelphis was re- S aborh Mo ngthat whi ‘Enland | the matter takes on a different com- | PUses are wasted, and the cause of the | {1 8 GRGHET 1 v what | children ‘sat squarely in thelr seats | bublicans or Democrats. Presumably | celved by George Arliss in Winthron | 0 reey 50 M atin" serps of whio i veally deserving charities and welfare | Jus o he | c1ear downtown. i the former, since the Democratic party | Amex’ production of John Gals- §o 000, 00 (o on ee a plexion. ) ust how old & voung woman she | IAr d¢ versed with one another |In a number of the States seemed flat | worthy's “Old_English” at the Wal- |and black cloth on ice and placin ng Star. with the Sunday morn. {y T = 1o works s injured. was we did not know. She was one of e its b N kel p € vl | them in the sun? If this is a far T tiered v wartiers. within | Mr. Hull estimates that in the A the sort that 1s hard to guess. She|in well bred tones, looked out the win-|on its back. But on November 4, 1924, |nut Street Theuler. where AU |ipen would not a colored man's sk ’ ket a0 month s JallT i | Talian debt settlement alone the Inquiry 1s urged upon all persons o 0 Ut C 58 vearw old, and]d0W. smiled, enjoyed themselves. TThey | the country “went_hell bent” for|plaved to 379,823 The record at | i orb more heat than a white pe B e T mail o | United States is giving up between | "efore they respond to- solicitstions | then again she might have been 15, | 41d not wriggle around. giggle. shout, :l’-yldem Coolldge, and a conservative | t Walnut, the oldest u,»;«'u-r i son'sr—H. 0. 1 tclerhone "Sain 2000 " Collection 1s'made By | &K e e 53.000.000.000 1n the | foF funds. 1t only takes u few mo-|but we put her age down at 30 and let | %6ream. hob up and down. tread on|movement set in which completely ob-| America, was broken both [ ] A1 ix an accepted fact tha ‘ hanis o Aadl oht whather. solicitors,| HbiEo Rt thet: any toes, wipe their feet on any coats, | Scured, for the time, at least, the pro- | tendance gt oo e epa L VLB SR acveRted fuct throw any caps out the window, talk | Bressive movement. notwithstanding | inz n ws well as for the rin of in loud fones, or in any way try to|Dearly five million votes had been cast | the drama emission of interest. The Americ Anywa while white reflect it. If two pieces who appear in person are authorized It seamied Simpossible st | il—Pay: vance. | Debt Commi s bect con- she could’ by - e > of clo one black and the othe ., Rate by Mail Payable in Advance. e ommission has become ¢ ;.,.- renesent deserving organizatons | NG CoUld be the mother of all those | b o', VIS Bhi0h 10 themselves. | for the La Follette-Wheeler progres- | 2 ' cloth. one black and the oth Maryland and Virginia vinced that Ttaly’s lack of resources i children. Probably she was taking o ' e | si c 3 “ > which [ 1. ibe) pliced sfpons dce. it will paryis s ALY g {or works. It solicitations come by mail | them down town to the matinee. o |, 1.tell you again, we couldn't helleve | sive ticket. For months this con-| Q. Explain the “check-off” which | R0, 0 Joi® 0, TPOR 0 10 Dails and Sunday....1 vr. 3840: 1 me makes it impossible for her to meet - 9T lit. We watched them as if fascinated. | servative drift has been in the ascend- fizian often mentioned in the present | 7 Jenf o iece will absort fanday oy . osa 10 1 mo this interest obligation without un- dren. 5 . To the right, looking out the lefi side {ency. Here and there the progressives | coal sirike. T, C S Hent 4 i e i L&y on Lyro$2:40z 1 hleleat ol g A slogan has been sounded in warn. | 47"; and all that sort of thing. of the bus, sat the tall boy in th: red [have organized and are looking far-| A. The -check-off” is an arrange- | the heat and meit its way_ into th ice more readily than white. The same law applies in all cases. The ition of the Individ- | 4,4 color of the skin of the negre It was a rainy afternoon. How chil- dren hate them, especially our modern children, who are not experts at amus- | due hardship, or perhaps. at all. If - sweater, which had a big roll around | ward to more promising times for a | ment under which the operator. afte; Mr. Hull's plan we: e followed o its | the neck. He had on neat tan shoes | new party. but the plan for a national | written authori and brown knickerbockers, and he was | party has been held in abeyance ual miner, checks off or ded ing against fraudulent husiness schemes, “investigate before you in | i | | | i investigation is even easler. | omething like that. Neighbors' chil- i All Other States. ‘ ‘| | | and Sunday. ...1 sr.S10.00 logical conclu his two or three z themselv g : Daite ana | 10.00: ozical conclus o [ vest This should be heeded Ly afl |IN& themselves. They do not know | Rlakegbague:s, o o as ecoineii A | ual min off or deducts race is due to the excessive develop. § sundav oniy....." 35000 billions of doll:r would be paid in ! 2 what to do with themselves, and must | (0PPed With a big gray car W the executive committee of the | hie earnings rezular dues, uss Ment OTiIEnIEnt o d na) : ! ! I people who are approwched for funds | Do thiten vo the eom e e S| " "This chap had a lean, foxlike face. | broposed progressive party hus fssued | ments. fiues. or the charzes levied or | [l 0 BEREE S Al T A ol American m deriven mramiftie |0 o S e e ol the . cither well tanned or natural. it was |4 call for a national conference of | ausessed azainst the miner by the [CCUGR MERIst the witre-viole ¥ AR i e e |sale of Ttalizn xoods in the Unitedicaiieq cmarity purposes. A donation | The das shen vou could put a chila | Nard to tell which. His were of i progressive leaders, particularly those | unfon, and pave the zated and which are destructive Lo proto 0 B e T i o Sil mews Uiy | States, goods which would BV 6| sy such & oawse Mo sut inwestment. | S5F0 8 & tommer with & beok or o) SUUL, SHenEl orcer. T Joched who bellevc & fbw hicy sbiould helemounts thus deducted from all i3pem P o T B 0y ertion e | S tjes Eoois whieh Bl mertean | 10 St K st L s G wat Bt B s c were a preity Wise Young | established. It fx to be held In Cleve- { miners over to the treasurer of the £ 4 mBliEhed Rereine ALK rithes ‘ot tunllention | o 0 o coPe : There are “blue-sky” schemes in the | himself for a whole afternoon are van. | CUStomer. He was neat as « pin. and i land, Ohlo, December 5. Out of that |local union. The check-off has never | Q. IPlease tell me in whil parts of wpecial disbatihes Herein are a0 reserved, ! made goods. name of charity just as there are such |{shed in'the past. where most thingn| *Syiae s st 10oxing out the Window, |onference It is"hoped plans will be been 1n operdtion in the” afithr e o B ket sl i e ———| Mr. Hull will have to make it clear | gchemes 1n the name of busine | disappear, after all. | Next to him was the boy about 10 Ldeveloped for a real national conven- | fields, but been for many v are found. How large have they to the American working people and | Lo o Dhe mibengers in the bue| Vs old, clad in a vellow “slicker.” | tion of progressives to be held mext[and is now, in operation at bitumi-|been known to grow’—a. L District's Budget and Contribution, | © the American & people and | L of the Dissengors in the bus|oap gray’ trousers, clubby dark shoes. | vear. Last February « convention of | nous coal mines working under agree. | A. The rampow trout i the business people how they will bene- A District budget of $36,200,000 is g indicated as likely to be submitted to Congress, with the approval of the Bureau of the Budget, for the fiscal vear beginning July 1 next. This is a large sum of money for District main- | saw the woman with ;l:dw':: f;::'kl:fl- with small blue eyes. | the progressives who had followed the | ment with the United Mine Workers |trout of the Pac The President’s Wild Turkey. dered when they Coast ranges from the five children coming aboard comical twisi 1o his|La Follette-Wheeler ticket was held | of Amerl It was one of the prin- | central Califor northward 1o * The , President has reteived for| One at a time thev fled Ina boy i m““‘h- He sat staring straight before|in Chicago, and at that time an ex-|cipal demands made by anthracite | Puget Sound. It takes its name fron Thankbgiving dinner a wild turkey | about 12 years old first, one m. ecutive committee was created, with|miners when the negotiations for a | the large, brilliant spots s I et d,.iz,d o hinohisar s ,,,:“; 10 3 T oainx mt,‘,":,,,',:; (i pan the center, s If hefitting her | William H. Johnston. president of the | new agreement in 1923 hegan. and |over it biuish silvers budy 3 “ | boy about & and & MU chap perhaps | UCAULY. sat the 9-vear-old girl. Some | International Machinists' Union, s one of the questions at issue in the | six and w half pounds and 1in The neishhorhond of 5 seirs ona | children there are who. by reason of | chafrman. The hope then was that | controversy. wnd in the Seplember, mately 42 inches lor ciates in Pondera County, Mont. How ! They rushed dewn the narrow aisle ! (N Very tit of thei heads. their fea- | State conventions could be held dur-| 1528, sirike. »& well ax in (his =trike. =pecies of the rainb tures and general make-un. StAmp | ing the Spring and Summer, and t - from the payment of this debt | | to the United States by Italy through | isuch a plan with such results io {American industry. He argues | 2 pean nations may be unable to pur-|2Rd was raised among tame asso. ‘s surplus goods unl teres Twents approai is the lirge chase Amer tenance, but not large in consideration wild this turkey be is a ques | for (he long back seat that <ireiches 3 & 4 nenes i i they are able to sell more goods of | '\ s ¥ may be Is a aues | role width of the bus. whers e | Nemselves ax coming from “the best| this Fall a natlonal convention would How much zeeater is the in Q. How lonz would it take of the needs of the Capital, needs | 1A% the Unaited Bates. Thes |tion- That he left his wild compantons | (1 WHOIC BUAh of the bus. where ane | people. materialize. But the times have not nlizht 1 il average person to couni one : r own in d States. The can get Jolted 7 e hit hetter than bt S04 fm 8 of sunlight than that o Hion which have accumulated during a| o e ey to make his home with tame ones!on'any other seat. This little girl was one of this =ort. | heen propitions. In some of the hi?—1. M. G $1 bills, and lonz wo take period of neglect enforced by the war- | Will continue 1o purchase goods| .. . gi.ate that he had a better ear | Her bobbed. light hair was crowned | gg;tex—Illinofs. New York, znd others | In answering this question an AN exp G {ime emargensics, at doesnotiinclude, | Wherel theyscan joblalni the greatest |l G o e fhe s g yhe auig ! *xox % wru: a white woal tamoshanier x0rt| - ihe organizatlon work his gone for- [ vapage pusi he tiken. However A, The st ent says e z ke | value for their money, however, Just | 1, . e s e of hat; she wore a tan leather rain-tward, indeed, but there hus been | conerally staied. the intensity of « thut the length « e however, according to present fore- | Perhaps he saw tame turkeys eating wve it back there coat and had on white shocs and |, : e . for & person to count one miliio ) 5 wpathy, generally speaking. 11 re-| davlizht clear day i i nt one miliion casts, a number of items of impor. |8 every careful purchaser does. If|, =~y 1 . 0eior breakfast and decided |, 'V& ©ld bus rviders writhed inside us| socke IiAlTE ‘tornE S eat Aubatnat ihe (Cleve lsHoni 1 s “m"“ bt il bills would depend enti Satih B ‘ S L ; ast and declded | ¢ the prospect of all those kids climb. Her f vas of the round-s e 2 y A 001 91,000 BeRFEEEUEr Al 2 2 ‘ e v must be pro- | American goods meet these require 55 ja P | Her face wa e roun 1€ | lind meeting can breathe life into the | the i inished by the full moon FAPIILY of the counter. Some of the lance SWhich leventusl yimustiECAnlo B O e e vy | that barnyard life was easier thun life | ing up with their muddy feet on 10| order, If you understand what 1 mean. | mnvement for o nathones pasts natm | o e b e ™" Counters in the department have vided for in the District appropria-|ments, Europeans in the forest. | that seat. kneeling as they looked out | her features delicate, her very ai | qpe Demacraty woald lihe very |¢" @ cloudless nizht at zenith counted as many as 30,000 notes tions. It does not bring the District | buy them. They are continuinz 04 \ng his induces the reflection that | '€ Window. shouting te each other.| mosphere sweet and ¢ Tinvimuch to capltulize any change from!| @ I« there anv difference in the [dav. Many the ‘Dreasury exparvs /) i ! Jumping off the cushions, hopping back | blue veins showed through the white P Fnsn L i ! | the turkey is a 100 per cent American |'on, swinging around the two upright | of her skin above her knees, which maintenance provisions. But 1f ap-y The Republican administration hits | i, Many of the early settlers in the | posts like monkevs on a stick. gener- | she modestly covered after a while wroved by Congress it will materially | insisted that American Indusi¥ | North American colonies believed that | #11¥ disporting themselves like voung | with & pink dress which had got pulled advance the Capital municipality to- | should be protected by the taviff and | (he turkey was of Asiatic extraction, |’ UHans up above the leather raincoat. the conservative atmosphere which | food value of a white and a brown | count 20,000 u day i i np to date in point of equipment and | buy them { | may come in the future, however. e . D, M T | { 'hat party refuses 1o dle, even| ~A. Analyses show that there is| @ Whe first declared ih though the proponents of the new |peactically no difference in composi “-"'H "V:‘intmv'”’"“u’» |’! « 5 % . | You have seen children act that| She wag, indeed. n picture « paky wonld, like Sigs nushe i astde fiudiibetween sienal eren, mith (aile)r o o iineta < been errone ward the point of efficient government | immigration laws. Tt has, likewise. | byt ornithologists say that this is non- | way, Evervhody has. One does not| a sy pas, Indeed. o picture But so far there has been little in-|shells and those with white shelis. [0 uf the earth hus been erroneot L i | 3 ' 7 ¥ 8 red c| ought 10 be, I v zenerally : v assigned to Thales, | he acrepte and ample provision for public require- | insisted that America obtain the best ! sense, The turkey lived in America | have to be ‘an oid grouch. or be pos-| ar there talking 10 the freckied-faced | Ccation that :h-‘ country ' sen ra‘ll\» However, theve is a popular belier that | [§ #55802d 1o Thates, Ty he aoeeb: ments. [ terms it can from the war debors of | jang hefore the coming of the whites, | #2804 of dvanepsia or In anv way be boy. and many a man and_won B iy 1hass | e forineriare UEches was a disk. The discovery that the s ! “ ; . e o rage run of = I A idl i nd s political les — Sl s s 1f this budget should range to the [the Nation. Its insistence is bear-!\hen Spaniards took a fancy to nt from the average run of hu-|turned around to look at her. such| o 07 SGAC (RO RY Q. Ix the ‘Benday Process a print. | €4rth I8 round was undoubted' 1ade e T I= 3 o e 3 manity to dislike the xctions of many |is the charm of true womanhood, | "1 Bt R e Dy ks Ak by Pyl His theory was fc sure :n«l.h ited, $36,200,000. the ques- | ing fru It will require strong and | Mexico they saw wild turk vnnl\"m'tllr»n in public vehicles. whether 9 years old or 90, e ersigtekmi .- x‘\ 'I, es is the proc. | cepted and taught by Aristotle, whoso fion of the amount of maney to be |defirite arsuments to shake the faith | they saw also that Indians had domes. || ManY of them act exactly as if they | e When the Senate meets. Decembor Ay The Benday Trocess I the DIOC | qvzuments are substantially’ those 7 provided from District taxation be-|of the people fn these policies ticated some and had private focks, | Pad been - -‘l\mx_'_\f":)l'nmlr;‘n“s(hu’"w"”s::‘ T R e 5 7.0t will be faced with the problem 0% U0 TG TG for mechan. | Which we emy today comes of vital importance. Should the | i ——— {Wildkana dtmastic tinkeys Teoh ATex iRt bac A thrabeat et rallo e an e of sexting or not senting Ger d P jeatty producing u sreat va 6 i s o we substantive law gzoverning Federal-| Public Building Sites. {ico were taken to Spain, and the iveed- | chology of the mob gets in its deadly | ian Jackie Coogan cap pulled well nt oM latiisan, Teaener SEPARCE shaded tints and mottled effe “stimme™ and “sprache” pronounce District contributions to Capital ub-{ pregigent Coolidse Is reported as|ing of them became common in Eu-|Wqrk and each child has to “show off” | down over his eves =~ . = Ltill the vacancy caused by the death | NS or half-tone pictorial plates with the “s” sound in “stone” or th eepite IOlluwed fasiit ShoalaThe Mol | disapproving the proposal of Repre. rupe before pilgrims set out from E &' Noliaione of usisteany bis ders | that In 35 or 30 years will enable him | Of Senator Ladd until a special: elec T — ol -pted pr lowed, the Federal contribution will | e uiice Underhill of Massachusetis |land for Virginia. Massachusetis and | biames the voungsters. Like Presi.| to be u regular Babbitt was writ. | on 18 Beld next June. e ihe| Q How is air tested for carbon mo- | nuncistions of the letter “s" in the he approximately $14,480,000 and the { e G m Jurchase { Maryland. When they zot here they | dent Coolidge, we blame the parents. | ten there that he shall “succeed as e o {noxide’—J. R. K German language used in various SSTathict $51720/000. It nowever fine | har tusiCovermant D e ey S11ia A n an the s inion. | "When;itherctote, wa sawifhe wormin | DIy s AN iFealilatters Eovernor has a right to appolnt t0! “A. This ix done by means of the | parts of Germany. The mafority « s e e |oedintely Bine Batall enuc i ncls 2 3 ; e Shdll what appeared to be her five chil-| e carried on an animated conver- | ot SR N R Siven the | hovlamite. The hoolamite i« prepared | Germans use the “sh” sound. hui jump-sum plan y s, and a further |, agimated cost of $15,000,000. {4t home. There is a record that turkey fdren getting into our bus, we sighed | sation. but in such low tones that 1| O T Ml . |ty miing foming aulphuri 18 4nd (e Lionoverans. msefthe piats s 1nnual departure from the substantive | o i i foel that the time is not | Was served at a Christmas dinner in | laboriously to ourselves. for we had|could not hear it. with the smallest i SUNEI0N PAEr 10 B0 VACEREES [ iodine pentoxide, usinz granular pum- <ound similar to that used in English law by Cc and the figure of the _”"r‘(]“m\ for such a large drain|England in 1541, The Spaniard tnllml!["" v’m.\ very ')}mx before. Yei, we | lad. looking out the right window. The ;ip"’wml";m:_" e e ofiee of | i@ Stone as a supporting material. |und contend that it is correc e e et s rined, | 2PPropriz or a large drain | sl s {love the spiriis of youth. but we think | latter had on & blue suilor sult FSe e Conatiuaa te S A sample of the air 10 be tested for e S 2 RUIAYONE s A “" ," on the Treasury and that the Arling. |the bird “parvo.” the French called |, greet car or a bus Is no place for its | hat. His eyes were black, snappy. so | Sonator | con ]m.(«'l to be .1”»' “'I"._.,h.q monoxide Is drawn into 2 sma (The person who loses out is the one the Federal —contribution will be |l TN i Biiage project ds cost. |it “poule d' Inde” the equivalent for | lay Tah e i e ey office or mot. In this connection it [rubber hulb. then forccd throuzh a | who aucsses. The persom who oels on £0.000,000 and the District’s $27200.-1 ., ‘4 Jarze sum that further | Indian chicken.” and later they called | What was onr amazement. then. to | sure he, at least. was her child HO S Bde, " Sk M \_”’“I | small glass tube filled with chen < | is alweye the one who acts wpon ve- @00, the District’'s being therefore s b i S S Sanabn The English called ju | watch those five children. each and He was the most exuberant of the || overnment pa R SeNa- | pon which the carbon monoxide has Fable information. This paper em- N lonz devel t lines n ry e rig v & tors, and not the State zovernments. e 2 5 seventy-five per cent and the Govern.| Sronces dlofg developmentilinesd ., Lo e they dtd this has | CYCTY ome a brightesed, good-looking, 1o, but at that was a model com- |} O e ey | the effect of changing the original col- | ploys Frederic J. Haskin to conduc 2 s "M chould be held down. | “turkev,” and why they did this has | healthy American child. file down the | pared 1o most children. He lepy ! 1De 02th of office whic Senator| € T ray or white to shades of | @n information bureaw for the public takes has to do with the Constitution of the [United States and not with the constitution of his own particular ment’s only twenty-five Tt is the hope of the District tax ss of the green de. | There is mo eharge cxeept cents in entage of earbon | stamps for return postage. Wrile 1o | been discussed. affirmed and denied [aisle. seat themselves across the seat, | pointing out the window, with short many times during three or four cen- | Which they filled. and sedately look be: | arm Jjabs of his right hand. 1alkinz | reen. the deepn With Congress soon to pass Sen [termining the pe ator Smoot’s $50,000,000 public build ra tha = 3 fore them in the best behaved fashion | and laughing in a bubbling fashion . 2 monoxide in the air him today for any facts wow desire ers that the budget will 5o to Con- |, vy "o refieve congestion in the | turles. | possible. Whenever the bus hit a rnt. the | t2te: 1t is a point, however “"""’] Q. What hymn did Tennyson re- Your inquiry should be addressed to gress on the basis of the substantive | 78 " oo L U ment busi N T e 171 tell vou. it nearly took our breath | five on: the back seat woud: bounas | thrsitens to lead tol no Hittle discus-| S« Wt BYME €6 SOnE0s O | ol Star Injormation Bureas, Fred ’ 14w, on the assumption that that law | ! Washington, it fs apparent| When Calllaux returns to America |AWAY. We couldn’t belleve it. “They | into the air. hit thalr seats azain. and | 500 SRS 15", eric 4. Haskin. dircctor. Washington will prevail in the division of funds | e I Mashinston, 2 | he will find a warm welcome awaiting | "\ll Pesin in a minute.” we whispered | smile. That was all i A, Robert E. Smith. in “Modern | 10 ) e e medm ain S itvin|etithe¥Governmentiwill ibelingur:| A 2 . {each to himself. “This is too good to| The little girl would talk. now and| The Senate has also fe pass upon 2 a & { zent need of building sites at .n | him. regardless of his political status!be true. then. to the freckled-faced hov. but[the right of three others 1o seats in| treasuries. The difference between 2t home. The . §. A. is nothing if| In the past. vou see. we had suffered | most of the time looked steadily ahead ! the Senate, becanse of contests which the District. contribution under the | 2Tl date; In ~lew of this fact, Wi " % 0 0 oo muddy little feet to be placed. without | of her. She never said a word to the |have been brousht against them by iBlaZer Case as l l‘e(‘,edent ! | 1 | | cisty-forty plan and the lump.sum | Would seem to be real economy to pEniie Y jany particular murmurs on our part. | big boy in the big red sweatar. He,|their opponents in the clection lusi plan of $0.000,000 would, in such a |Purchase the land south of Pennsyl squarely on our nice new overcoat.and | in his turn, said never a word to her,| November. The right of two Repuh . i : . 2 licans znd one Demq at to hold erg uZZ lll‘r laseu\ S K <) bttt d T 1L ie the small offender who faces|had pur up with sundry trampliings | and, as he got off the hue hefore the budget if fully appropriated, be| V2Nia avenue as recommended by upon our new shines without crying | others. we conoluded he did nrvr he- | these seats has been challenged. "The ! out. long 1o that party after all Republicans are Brookhart - whom the regular T g 18 no Republican, although he insists | peeply sensible 1o the wave of hu-|world will sympathize with the Colo- BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WII. | the strongest prospect of punishment The hijacker steps on the gas and es capes, while the man who parks over time trails to the police station —————— Representative Underhill, not oniv | for the beautification of the city but | for the purpose of providing neces: | sary sites for the carrying out of the | public building program. [ oot it e e i o It will take at least two vears for|yapce. Thix means good husiness, 5,450,000, 1in to add heavily and hurdensomely to the tax levy upon the District property owners. Liberality of budget makinz hy the Government is not true liberality if it ts based upon a departure from the law zoverning the Federal and Dis. | condemnation proceedings on all the | iy the ultimate consumer wonder trict fiscal partnership in the main. | Parcels of land in the projeci. BY |ing ax usual, where he comes in. the blind Senator. who defeated Mas- | 1, (i pitiful case of the Colorado ald declares. “but the very safety of nus Johnson. Farmer-Laborite. at the | qocior who teok the life of his im- | society demands that such sentiments polls. The Democrat is Sam G. Brat- |00’ (14" (he American press seems | shall not establish public policy." {1on. whose tight to a Senate seat has |, feel the need of urging a reversal We can sympathize with the Colo {been challenged by former Senatori,r ihe famous plea of Portia and rado father without letting our svm- pathy create s precedent which wonld Bursum. Republican. In the Brook e Gen. Lincoln ¢. Andrews, Uncle |the great Norse centennial in the Twin jptempenSrietey St i tenance of the Capital. A further re-|that time the Arlington Bridge will S Sam's mew prohibition boss, at the | Cities Iast_ June. Gt Sorho Tein | hart case. Brought by Steck. theli, ne undertone of warning to a pub- be certain to encouraze n 0 Sunciation of the fixed ratio principle | be Well on its way to completion. so | Railway accidents threaten to be-| United States Treasury. vigorously | elected as & North Dukota Non-Parti. | e o en comuleten. | lic (00 prone to let sentiment create | abuse” thinks the Kalamszoo for the fiscal year 192627 would be, | that, although the expenses of the|come so serious as to persuade cau-|denies that Maj. Roy A. Haynes, Fed- | san Leaguer, but the stalwarts of that | %enator firnet of Kentucky. chairman | 1ANEerous precedents which may un- seife, Which stands for the ancien! “as just stated. on the basis of the|two proposals will slightly overlan |tious people to prefer travel by air.|ersl prohibition -commissioner. bas|radical faith have suspected him of the subcommittee of the Senate |deTMine the law of ihe land. = = . Ie ABIt the\men Al e e ra hudzet mow proposed, a mulcting of | they will not be a particularls heavy | plane. e enn st o the ot T e oE Sinte he ‘took E"”""_"f"-“ and elections commitiee | qys the Buffulo Evening News.|I¥ adheres, “to prolong lite Whenever the District in nearly five and a halt | drain on the Treasury. B — = create the impression that Haynes |a tremendously impr | e s oc ts || Once ia deepiy. sifvied it las moj|Bcssible § Tucting thejousasion i million. There is no liberality in that.| Purchase of this property Iying be-| Mussolini is a man of few words.|was virtually snuffed out by the {man. Thore's little of the tvpical Sean- | icoramittee the first week in De.|Tegard for the law and precedent. And Wt G oDt e e Wiz 1 There is no justice in that. tween Pennsylvania avenue and the | If Trotsky insists on being a dictator, | recent deslxn;n:'\un of éua assistant \(E)l::vian a}u’)lul him, Native of North | cember. before Congress opens. at | Who IS there to awirrel WA ML ASE0 e e The substantive law. estabiishing a | Mail, the Botanic len and Four- | he should go to Italy dd take lexsons. | SOMIMISSIONSr, James (h Joned: 0 | oith & shook of amee umired Jnd | which arsuments of counsel on both | (€ 5" b emotions of even the most s no.” and further quotes simil e {ails under the new enforcement re.|in La Follette pompadour style, Sor. | 08 will be heard. His subcommit | 4yoused person,” in the optnion of jopinion from a recent symposium of 4 atio, changed from fifty-fifty to | teenth street would give the Govern v, is founded upon the prin-| ment an ideal location for the concen ciple of equity. The departures from | iration of public buildings. It would that law year by vear arc based upon ced ‘”y‘“fl\ln r:;."e'" p‘“|”|‘|e dr'»‘n‘! :‘x‘.’:"}:::i:lflhe Racine Journal-News, which orities early session and 4 5 § a T 'gests that normal persons iy will «then report to the Senate for|y,, gine themselves *in this man's marck last | "y place.” and asks. “Are we at all sure | Pittsburgh Gazette-Times contrilntes ug: | medical 1o R AP . Agreeinz with viewpoint. the SHOOTING STARS. zime. Gen. Andrews asserts that |lie looks every inch a real American. i Jones' appointment was made in | When this writer talked politics with ¢ = 2 order to relieve Commissioner Havnes | him on the porch of the humbls e enable Government departments to re BY PHILANDER JOHNSON fof routine and liberate him “for the |ecutive mansion at ! hall-Tohnson contest i< he- | { 8 o $ {the thousht that -if i e a misconception of the District’s true | call their scattered forces and pro- | e development of the vitally important | Summer the zovernor was under the | ¢ subcommittee headed by Sena. | that -we. wouldn't have done thelt = hat “if human beinzs position and a misunderstanding nf:vlde enouEh ground for the housing| Coryphee. feld program’ cf prohibition enforce- | SDell of the Coolidze economy program | jor Deneen of Nlinois. and litte has|Same?” The Uniontown Herald ex-jmuy he ‘removed Decause they e the tex Huvaer i, the Dis et ani ity ” Frolicsome girl In the foremost row, |ment. Maj. Haynes has no intention |and of the Coolidze plan to let azri- | ver heen done with it. The same le |claime: “Here, indeed. is a situation | useless there will he little «afets he tax burden resting upon the Dis |of units under a single roof T e R e of desertipz the ship of which Presi- | Culture largaly work out its awn des: | jyye of {he contest from New AMexi.|that tears at the heartstrings.” and any one in the way of another trict people. It is the present hope of | This project has been proposed time > e § s Harding gave him command in | tiny. chi d B it recognizes the trend of public sen-| who is sufficiently unscrupulous and ! The fat comedian makes his play Snt [ {co. which is before a subcommittee ds—+doubtless the | cruel ta kil incurahle patients.” T the District people, who are hearing | and again. In principle it has univer- {1 1e % @ome u play. | june, 1921. The drys of the country * k% * [\hose chairman is Senator Goff of | timent ‘“.”;f b el B e SUT g b M i I { The it s s y x |2 ar ajority of s W 2 2 s uld be this increasingly heavy burden, that | sal approval. It is not Mkely that Mr. | Lhe Prima donna assumes her sway. | would consider Haynes’ retirement &1 | popoeratic friends in Washington | West Virginia. These subcommittees, | STeat maj Fead the case forecast the verdict.” | exceedingly dangerous for the law or % %% for public opinioh to sanction ihe This warning Ie re-echoed in many | déstruction of the unst.” for one rea e o son, “hecause many ghastly mistakes P r new: s. Says the St. Paul [ %07 3 3 other newspape! 2y might be made in drawing the line /¢ The funny frump and the tenor sweet | irreparable loss. He received a tre- | Jemetiatic, friends in ¥ however, are expected 0 get 10 work Arrive with « confidence complete. | MEN4OUS ovation at the recent Anti-| New'ork in recovering the wee of hie | UM 2 Short time and report .on Saloon Vi . Vi 5 these contests. But the humble folks are the folks at v . | lower extremities so rapidly that he | at| Haynes continues to be & Strong DOE- | may he well ahle. as It were. (o 1um for Congress will realize the equity of a | Underhill will give up his fight and he rveturn to the substantive law and, | will probably find a large measur: of however larze the budget, will adhere | support from his colleagues. Favor . - : s c for the next Republican Zov- | prec & G it e ‘Hoclely 2 to the principle of a definite propor- | able action by Congress in cmljur\l'unnl“,l:" St il et ) P'r";""’l;_-‘m; e publican BOV* | President in 1925. James M. Cox's 1920 | The resnlt of the Towa contest is | Pioneer-Press ):(::'Nf)* 'j,f:,“c,:"‘,‘,;:"fi,‘or Winoss UF Taibiaenie connection tion of contribution rather than tol witn the Smoot bill might possibly |V nose efforts will animate the cast. " i | is gevoting all of his time | expected to have its hearinz on the |gate even to the saie, much 1ess 101}y pocatello Tribune aske: —Are o throw a lump-sum sop to the District | je. tegree the i) | SliboaxdsiibInzon S thel mAn; s SRwell Ty s |and enerzy to overcoming the attack | election for Senator in that State next | individuals, the right wdh 'd,f, P |laws far-reaching enough to qualify r E strict {lessen to some degree the opposition | - Ot e Florida has all the luck. For vears |of infantile paralysis that crippled | vear. Senator Cummins comes up for insane who have don the.average human to pass on any taxpavers without relation to the|of the President, and Washinston our idle rich have been estab.|him a couple of vears ago. *“Al"|re-election. If Brookhart should not | Though agreeing that “the g and) wenTisome : now total amount required for the PrOPer | nuay see this plan fulfilled in the near |1 * 10n& and wearisome monotone: | jichi,e"uxurious vines and fig trees | Smith thinks the world of Roosevelt | be seated, he would be a candidate, it On the othér hand the Ann Arbor s D o mm e B But you are the one who makes the | " 'ine sunny spaces where men are |24 would undoubtedly throw Smith |is sald, against Senator Cummins in Times-News feels that ‘“there are | real estate men, because the Alligator | STeN&th to him if desired and if the | the ' primaries next year. and in | np there are man voters. The women | times, indeed, when it appears more Smith bark itself should be shipwreck. | progressive quarters it is insisted he |, yquchusetts have not come round | of a crime to permit afflicted human such proposition?™ which is the seat of the Federal Gov- | SEfl b Lae show, olicsome girl in the foremost row! State has no inheritance tax. Now senment. | Thg word “dictator” used to imply the plutocratic classea ars heating | 51 I Shother Madlson Square Garden | would be a formidable conpetion S11so far to_votine merely as women. |beings {o/live than it would) be {o { = an arbit v ssibly S5 as Peac: . for Florida because of the coal strike. s v the Walker-Smith slate- | though in “reguar They are Democrats and Republicans, | sever the mortal coil. Perhaps some e il e e va s e Arari anc! po‘r;lbl.\ |rfl_'kle e eaceability. This observer has knowledge of a |MaKers are weighing Roosevelt's eligi- | cles it is said that the Brookhart flair | juct” as the men are. But there is|day provisions will be made to take sumption of power. Mussolini has suc- lave vou any plans for peace” |miilionaire Washington family which | PIlity for the polfce commissionership | has subsided considerably in lowa. ), growing disposition to win for|care of such cases in the practical, vestigations make those question-| ceeded in giving it a more conserva-| o naires propounded by Thomas Bdison | jve significance. i 3 4 f New York City under the new Tam. | Howard J. Clark, an attorney of Des | v hav : el S answered Senator Sorghum,|has more money than foresight. for | Of Ne u new Tam k By ot Women public office, and they have |sensible manner.” sugzests the News “I'm going 1o be personally peaceable: | it failed to put in anthracite betimes. | DY :::'ha;”;:‘ .. Mol O of Sena | the votes to do It. Massachusetis, by | Referring to_the condition of Jlazel seem comparatively easy. ! —_ B | ot 5 Httle hit of an |AS its palatial establishment requires | FOICH @ Dosevelt onde vaulted | foriCumMmIns, lias any his can- | ihe vy, will have one of the few | Blazer, the Canton Daily News sav~ b . e _|and so. perhaps, set u Htrle bit of an | 305 H8 BRI T M W inter, and e presidency didacy for the Republican nomination | \(Ciyun ‘members of the House when | “The man who would permit one of g . . The Thanksgiving proclamation | example.” the owner shies at paving $25 a ton, against Senator Cummins. He con|congress meets in the person of Mrs. | the dumb brutes to exist in suffering Anthracite coal is still appreciated | modestly omitted mention of the na- he is about to decamp for Florida tends that Senator Cummins has not | j ny jacob Rogers, elected to fill the [ under like circumstances would be R Eacth : ; e S e rogressive he was ! A= a luxury, but is no longer regarded | tional gratitude due for a Presid King Tut. ith hi tire ily and staff of | “Tay Pay” O'Connor. veteran Irish |continued the progre Vacancy caused by the death of her|held amenable to prosecution under 0 jona 0l lent with s entire mily n Of . r ris| 2 = i vy i 'y It prosecutiol ind SRR, e : Old King Tut in days of vore servants. He's come to the conclu-|M. P. and raconteur, pays handsome | When Towa first sent him to the Sen- | chang, Representative Rogers. the humane laws.” and considers that : who knows how to keep cool. : tribute to the achiev son | ate. State Senator Bowman of Black indications that the Re- [ “yiarc : = e R iy store, | slon It will be cheaper than buving e achievement of Alanson 3 K| There are indications that 1 mercy should have been applied. if P i R ad the makings of a jewelry store. | B. Houghton | e Hawk, a progressive of the Brookhart o bte = e 4 | ! ek ; " { Pennsylvania black diamonds at pre- ghton in mounting within a | HaWk, a progressive of the BrookhSil|publican national administrs at all, at the origin of life rather Tariff Attack. {ing of Italy shows rare states.| He turned—andthere a blunder made — | S0 cah: few months to t st lev " | type. is waiting the | ecognize women to a somewhat n after permitting 32 years of = Brookhurt-Steck contest before an- reater extent in Federal appoint-| ¢ Sk nouncing his candidacy for the sena- | T e coming monthe: Pres: | TS i i torial nomination. okhart is Coolidge has already appointed v ¢ Jud Tunkins says friendship ceases vight hand of H : C. Wallace i i ted to get into | 1dent Coolidge has a Discussing the “legal and maral i 5 - | be sed in ma! e the right hand of Henry €. Wallas ueen seated, Bowman is expected 1o g o Ueroge Rz i " cal ora :"dl!‘ i ll . uns‘elh ’fll"erljc e —t in a poker game; thereby demonstrat. | and 15 now in the sams atrategic posl l‘D:::lre- :‘,“;u::\“:an‘“‘# kl\\fl\»q’fl = fBeitics Ag At e O e f “:’:;:’:"w:".‘c:"h;:flel’ hitherto heen held |):‘:; r‘"‘i‘n':‘:l“:?: y-‘i‘”'l;:;:|;;l‘|:‘f':|:ylnl’:1‘r‘lh' uction in interest on the Italian ing that it didn't amount to much in | tlon with William M. Jardine, has just S § Most satisfac- |Clark, but If Brookhart is not|p,"yomen and a month ago he ap-| Luon® qo Sesirey IREAL TS B B C war debt to the United States pro- Investigate Before Giving! he rabinlase. glorified the Department of Agricul-| LOTY BUESt at anv banquet in Lon- |seated and becomes a candidate [ o5 WONQE #95, © "ETE "Bliaet cal- P tained by any cotemporary American e 5 Ambassador to the ( s Louis Varnum Woulfe. who sat at | 5'Connor has just weittens To politics instead of trade. The Republican protective tariff | manship in never venturing to inter- has been subjected to Democratic | rupt any remarks that Mussolini may James. & don; few men have ri S O ins o formations as promise only a life of o ; . ; i ture in a piece of gripping Iinglish. In e risen to such |against Senator Cummins, Bowman : Kies rm s promis 3 vided for in the recent settlement| 'y (pjs season of the vear many Li i |a litrle monograph modestly entitled | Influence and popularity. even - a expected Mot to run. In any event, | 16clor of the port of Memphis, Tenn.| physical helplessnes the Fort of that debt, it is claimed. has been | goi0jiors are abroad for funds for va- forany;Bmck. “Introduction” Mr. Woulfe. in part,| {1IOUEh he belongs to such a long |it now appears that there will be at | WIS QR (QAITEHE SReafifis, I% Wavne JournalGazette offers as irs made necessary because the Republic-| o« causes, in the name of charity | 17 21l the gilded books I hought thus epitomizes the farm branch of | i of illuatrious predecessors in least two candidates against Senator | €L A% ARACRAET: T | opinion that such permission “‘wonid 1 e i ) & Much interest I fail S the Government: s great office. His speeches are |Cummins for the nomination. whether | ' 3 5 be a zreat responsibility,”” opening np ane would not lower the tariff duties.|,. yuplic welfare. They are beseech- h‘,"k ""e'" . '1: e R et i lerse—sometimes the after-dinner | Rrookhart be seated or not. This * o ox % | “a rather wide vista of possibility to Representative Cordell. Hull of iz nierchants, business men and citi. |1 think that smart hook agent ought | ° i b i i | L".if;(::fr."r Americans strikes us | should divide the opposition and give | The campalgn for the re-election of | murders not <o benevolent as might Tennessee, former chairman of the |sens generally for direct subserip.| TO €O™me again and jolly me. gt b g Sy ] as a little too long, |Senator Cummins a good chance of | Senator George Wharton Pepper of {be urged.” 1In this connection the r ational i P i . 3 S i . | sometimes also as a little too sol- |winning the nomination and the elec- | Pennsylvania is well under way, with | Burlington Gazette believes “the hu Democratic national committee and | tjons or the purchase of tickets for en- bt A scitasy I make the t':l](ltyaflon of land | emn—Enzlishmen take even their |{ion. Senator Pepper stumping the State.| mane and Christian theory and prac expert on tariff and revenue laws, Is | ter(yi i = 4 - pay, conserve the forests, protect Smportentym . exens 3 1 e.| ma [ans fitcos e, A cioriing to/F (HGIL thasntatecs | Syt Tt ey e s | CHimOL G forecast the weather—in all func: | lv than Americans on thoir big oc. | lowa has an upstanding citizen|in rock.ribbed Republican Pennsylva:| mercifully removes them from this ~ 4 5 = g uhj.cl.l:.. nfortunately any of ese “None, whatever,” asserted Cactus }l‘“flf‘;’;“he riend of the farmer casions. Mr. Houghton never com- now in official life in Washington| nja his election would be assured.| earth.” tive tariff prevents Italy from paying | solicitations are unwarranted. Sad to |y .- dr{d ;;m‘:m:: ‘:,r‘-vu“ e Sty mits the mistake of prolixity. He |Who some day is likely to become| Byt he is being attacked, it appears, | uffering may and doubtless does ¢ her debt to the United States Gov- |state, advantage is being sought from |* . e L S i has also a very agreeable style; a |Senatorial timber if he sticks to pol |from two angles. Gov. Pinchot, on|develop the highest qualitics of those How do you know ways—in wheat and corn fields. in | Jittle I Z o g u of ernment in goods. He argues, too.|the inclination of most people to be ; ighty forest: National and It onlc. itics—the new Assistant Secretary of |one hand, is belleved to be a candi-| who minister to those too weak to ¥ “I looked at the almanac. There's mighty forests, on National ant May T add that there is ‘War, Hanford MacNider, former pres-| jagte fer the Republican senatorial | minister to themselves acknowl. ariff 2 A : 5 B & a one other 3 that the tariff keeps up the high cost | helptul to any cause that is suggestive | |\ *7 S ©0 B0 T ORI | State roadways. But my true dig- | creat distinction of the Ambasea. |ident of the American Legion. —Col.| nomination, and on the other hand|edges the Decatur Herald, but it sees of living in the United States. of charity. ; i § T s oy oot e do e as dno of the prettiest |MacNider ix only 36 years old. but|is the Phiadelphia machine, whose|the othier side of the question, &na i e vi v ounded against 2 2 e 2 % and e sweetest and mos g he has made s mark. le 1s pop-|toes Senator Pepper has trodden on,|says: “But the rights of the sufferers G e i B e S s R S Tessons in Less and Less. daiey ‘products have all passed the | tive girls that even Amerien mas | ular in the State. So far he has been and Joseph R. Grundy, president of to be released from their sufferings : licita America has p! y,” p) t £ decide, if the tariff becomes an issue | this form of promiscuous solicitation. " The Fiji belle muster of my guardianship. LR A G e e e S L O e R T e in the next campaign, as Democratic | A committee h‘a!‘been cr:al-.d by the From clothing free m‘r:“‘ the Department of Agricul- (Conyrieht, 1925.) :l:'mmervm:vel ellemenlt:f 1?1“). %rsnu';»- soclation, who is personally antago-|freely accorded to non-human ani- w seem to indicate it will, istrict Commissioners of representa- i = i i O ican party in Iowa, ‘whicl - | nistic to Senator Pe) r. mals.” As to the question of the Bl ie Sl Dx S Jatith e ptetona Hersthoueht doth:tell R ¥ ther has been a devoted adherent for | " It Gov. Pinchot gets Into the race. | souls of such victims of euthanas sl st o i e S S gentie: ioe. Gov. Arthur G. Sorlie of North Da-| In the Good Coal Days, | veare. ay is now expected, and another can.| the Kansas ity Journal de debt paid to the United States Gov- [and the public at large ca“ed“‘he ! “The luck is mine golywuv':-&:':’l:s I::c:nl:dar fl‘u| l"(}ehre From the Altoona Mirror. L dMate is put forward by the Phila-| “Souls cannot be killed, though bodies arnment at the expense of American | dorsement committee of welfare ol -] New styles to fix ‘fd’“v. Nve, attempls lsm:!’h’; late | The proper time to buy coal seems IM“' ”"# m": "}"e fi’:,;ld‘::::!: dap:“ °rg'l“‘,§°" Lod M,';;,c;'r“:l"'I '"?"' ,hf d;",'”;edh,"f "h‘:e “',‘:"_““'r“"“ industry, Wwhich means Americu | ganization: That commitite h”i For girls of ;Nigs® Senator Ladd's seat, is one of the|t® NaVve been 10 vears ago. .;,,nz:g o ';A:o Tihe it o hen e et e il | e hhits f 16 Hiowever, rother workers as well as American manu- |made public ¢ list of organisstions feen i Basia quartdbioL, Scandinevisn governora A ator Willlam M. Butler of Massachu-| velop. Gov. Pinchot, with the sup- | than have interested individuals de- facturers. They will have to decide |that are worthy of public support. = now enthroned in the Northwest. The Another Setback setts, chairman of the Republican na- | port of the “drys” and the progres-|ciding who should thus be relieved, whether they prefer to have lower | Copies of this indorsement list are in | “We all has our faults.” said Uncle [Others are Christianson of Minnesota, | s . tional committee, in a speech in Mas. | sive element, may make a strong|the Grand Rapids Press believes “it a e the hands of business Washingtorians, | wben. De frus fripnd s ds man dat | SUN0ereonDt South Bukota and Erick- | From the Rockford Morning Star. sachusetts recently called attention|bid for the nomination. His elec | would be better for society to apply waes and less industrial activity or | (06 B G 08 IR AR O, e e ot o ot i 44 |gon or Montana. ‘Al of them were on | _"Chapman must hanz. The alien:|to the fact there” are nbout 70,000 lon of sovernor was broushi about | he means of palpicss deatn atter care- 1 to sonlinue along present lines, wi Y n per 2. Ihand_to greet President Coolidge ste have been foiled agaln, . Imore woman voters tn the Bay State ! by a split in the opposition. tul deliberation.