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THE SUNDAY STAR, EM;M\EER ENTERS CITY ARENA TO SOLVE TRAFFIC PROBLEMS Science Holds Key to Baffling Situation and Will Play | Vital Part When Amateur “Experts” Step Aside. No Field for Business Men and Police. MY BY WILLIAM ULLMAN. Automobile Editor of The Star When taflic ts wmade mafe. when the thous hift and inadeguate ve heen replaced by svientific code, the trafli wve been responsible ult scientific problem v suddenly and unfairly reveirsed sign is an automuton. The “hould not be | Another endeavors to speed up traf- | tic by making an excessive number of | hanges. Kaleldoscopically, the traf : moves along the avenue. then the | NSs street The effect is l'UY\KP‘l(lUU‘ diat, Gt tines, Jx nothing Short ot | muzing. The officer bus falled to!suade a good deal at # it ever could otherwise Luve heen | ko milowance for the different de 8 ehisathare grees of “pick-up” in the cars making d=acis & rent up the stream whose flow and ebb he as a physical directs. In short, he is deficient in Scientitic investigativ knowledge of the mechanical limit _‘,',‘“ oo Dt clion tions of the vehicles he controls. The tra Use All Major Branches. motive en trafllc nating engineer. « branches of science in his effort l‘;n‘!l-- ed, accordiy traffic on a sensible and safe lup our cournve e atasn basis. e will call upon his !\"\5';‘1' know there doesn't trafic under rivers e nd traf | Theoretically it e tand- | “Enow.” Yet we know air pollution. cularly | touch the grou flect of such pollution upon fwhen the corr icul and mental condition of | pens (o feel a automobile drivers. our spiritual feet may say “know' as we are likely The | officer NCE T hard to say nds of should regulations a pi ineer wi b ely ¥ | 1 religion {Perhaps a fuller | hideous kno 1 problem as well many believe and sclentiflc natural cor of religion tolerant Nazarene {away from rebuking | ceased to interest | engineer will use alljafter I became sure count. We argue c engineer ineer will be an auto phychologist, illumi mist and physicist to the This wi to e The s raajor e ¢ to put offe I view wi at teomings of the exper: I Virtuall for traflic trian with ves are wi & rectity h. ShH so-called is ngineer’s Turn Now. s every Is ing of of the the phy jesty One of the i to tit ills. nd one has Matorist poles-aps punace and perspe ns a SE with things the traffic engi s to abolish the evil of patent remedy for il rec e traffic than a single traf; ill use for one city - migit discard for ore, there had been imitation. Man; smaller have complicated their conditions Ly adopting plans that were successful when ap pli-d to larger but to the latter exclusively The traftic advise a for all ci idvise the housi ace He My sttish Presh n start, and my start T should hav igion was Presbyter know then that cach c chart. with the impe 1 fallibility of a chart. a {itself is not a wystem It ix that feeli srammed and organ feal party or any But it is to be rememt part of veligion that the essence not the same thi The essence of relig and being a fecli t sonal. T'or this reason be coerced. Yot its personal char it from the of change. A feredit of being meriting an; chunged. At { p ! tel wich s already loca! traffic on’s bodily : ems wit ot ngineer cities ginesr 1 s zed traffic wehitect no more syster would building for This will not ng to stand icle regula gineer will having all ngers. “at specitic ar- e will p drivers and [ standari than an same < diver wanuf for sort « iver 2 rafli tue or stra home™ in traffic. Where rangements are required vide adequate warning te rlans Mostly ies have ruade tre nds of individ of information exceptions those we considering traflic as I ve engaged i Kes up most of The develop- | engiuecrs and their Need for Scientific Nolution e JnbUItaNS SDOS ) city's wraffic dir + defintte end inz and fussing over already has requirec tion of peoy v of possibilit a Nide Issue. man stex the Is are sam some if is feeling ny ain o X reu . ors NS view is eit for + problems to the t need was bor who are E do the pen: \enta from day eved bef, Little consideration | hanges in the i cupabilities The mer automobile driver | strian totally pe and nc T 3 f 1s iven of Uraflic Man) have fie with Kknow to powers in processes nd of ignoved. When engineer to hLis own traff m b 1 snal loss a to progress and e engineer s that unlocks, not o traflic prebl preb) transpo SYMPATHY IFOR R! A the trathc comes d national develop- | the key utions | s ment his Ly ining kes 1 new era in BY HENRY W HE tollowinz wary of the 1 s of the eve reat Britain. ve a resume of the s tted by t in to which is investizating mining industry tion of which view, enable the indus . though able profit FFS GROWING FRIENDS FORM COMMISSION Recognition as Belligerents Would Give Them Right . to Red Cross Aid, Badly Needed After Years of Heroic Defense. it in of appr the miners countered with siners, which the word “nat 1zation not only o ude coul . as coke and g plants using cozl or its scheme of operation | covernment i pleted u great tion, having chief desideratum, | cheap power linking together tion of existing amount of new construc it will be moditied tail more or less with t ations of the Royal Cu (their report will appea electrification mouth. for example. CGovernment | templated. but jof Governm rection is. Vested S ica. | pected to make difficult £ hiiman ideat, aas oo e | but _tactful en the people’s demand in France and ! 8pain for an end to the wars in Moro just and per- BY HERBEKT ny, are the ant Che mary gz ference rdless of ned—teiepithy ommunics e music tinite” MYRICK. the p own Mo may 1 These native : : i g n equipment tiv ured the and ¢ i w rougt ovish e Mo of ‘The anwl 1o the sea the rem ish invaders, much rearly driven in 1t of their Spa s th Moors ry d the Port 400 vears ago. that Fran o the rescue of Spain. only t the French army brought to sse three months ago b i Dle natives' defense, bie @ new rrel 1 upon energy avail ally at low cost. And the Y, illikan rays, cor & perhaps from without and beyomd solar systew, indi t wation is cotermin S with spa ot still vital interes: play of vibration upon hun: ind minds. The orator sways his au lience as the wind sways the trec tops The Sermon on Mount founded hristianity and main: it. The shot fire ord in 5 will ever be “heard around the world. Chords stirred hy ayvette's e to our naseent republic | obbed afresh 1. upon the ar. al of the American expeditionary forces in France, said at the eros we ure ore whicl place e pow seps oun nvasion nation w 1w 1 effi the vibrations villzation able re making pos based selfc people aguinst inva na fense by an ancient on by those g France and Spain. impulses that the response omipt and practical. Ameri- nds of the Riff are everywhere roups whose powerful influ ks up “The Americas’ Com: mission for the 1 The r ates o can fr forming ownel of per the sl Cor o5 tle itself to overcome. win peinted out the « | British consumption d - |ergy is in the ratio of o the SPMINg (43 and our 30. perating with a simi- | ;0 Sereann . {lar committes of the British people, | D3% vejected the the Americas’ commission urges im. | NA8es delivered | mediate recognition as beiligerents of | Sational \Wages the Moors under Krim. This would | FePresentatives o: entitle them to Red Cross service, for Uhiosefiof (tho they utterly lack even first aid, not to | Public voted. mention hospitals and sanitation. [n- | Strike is possible cidentally, American taxpavers pro.| Charles Montague st against being compelled to pay Of that immortal w the fearful cost of the Krench army in Morocco, which comes out of the otherwise France would be ving upon her debt to the United La camp nments, Co. nion aws Pe the Contrast ch high idealis f horror and rey icts of the opposite chara Then ou understand why the explosion of each bomb dropped last vear upon de- fenseless Moorish women and chil- | Iren in the Riff. by Amerfcan aviators | n the French army ugainst the Ber wers under Abd-el-Krin:, reverberates with ever-increasing intensity through it America today. It incom srenens to ty-loving A\mericans that citizens of the United States should perpetrate atrocities won a brave people struggling pluck- Iy against overwhelming odds to repel | 1 emotions aroused by 1 with the vibrations | ed b A D Italy.— It he many months Matteotti murder. u Fascist deputies calli the Aventine opp from the chamber, | would not resume tiwei as the Fascisti remaine declaring that there question”™ against Mus: words, murder of Matteotti. vow until January when upon the re Chamber after the ) resumed their seats. keep them long. Musso that the “moral qu will ago Should world-wide sympathy for a brave people now help to bring about lan bonorable . adjustm between Moroceo, Spain and Franc will e | another instance of the e bort (Conyright, 14 Recent Coal Mine Blasts Preventable. U. S. Expert on Safety Devices Asserts gun. and the clouds of dust. Safety methods adopted by the | I'nited States Government authorities | ind the American Engineering Stand- | ards Committee would have prevented | The recent coal mine disasters in Okla- homa and West Virginia. in the opin- | on of Dr ¥Lomas T. Reed, safety | (vice Ziwwwr of the United States | Fireau of Mines. “The actual cause of the two blasts has not yet been determined’” D: Reed said, “but they could not have | wppened <irictly followed. if safety rules had been | as and coal dust | ‘ed not be allowed to accumulate and <parks and flame to set them off can kept out of coal mines. A new | wethod of prevening coal-dust explo »ns by means of spraying uninflam- \able rock dust wherever the inflam- able coal dust collects would have topped the explosion from traveling hrough the mine air. “A mine exploslon is somewhat like gun firing.” Dr. Reed added. “A lame or spark sets off the collected was, which age@ like the hammer in a exploding gas sets up If the dust is of com- paratively pure coal it will explode und the flame will spread through the mine air as far as the dust extends. Powdered rock sprayed about acts as a damper.” | According to the American Engi- | neeringStandards Committee, about on the morrow there would be a spe- | purpose. Thereupon, { warming up for the di tlemen and threw two-thirds of the fatal and serfous | accidents fn bituminous mines could be prevented. During 1924, officials of the committee said, only one com- pany in America practiced rock dust- ing on any large scale. At present. however, over 200 mines are rock dusted, but this is only about 4 per ent of all the soft goal mines in the United States in F Aventine opposition di announced that they w lowed to return unless cant and utterly aba “unreservedly their The nefarious and sc isted against the Fa: | or the Fascist party. Representatives of t ernment are in negotiai sentatives of the Bri concerning the Italian The Plutocrat. Nashville Ranner he Probably the fellow you notice with | a kind of purse-proud look has a spare tire. . » Author of * cruelties inflicted in the name even in the name of that on good deal to k ling something to fi days end Royal federation nalization. cin view plants int statesmanship joard, companies Jerts.” is dead at the age of 82 just sroup tion vowing that they that_he was inplicated in the | 16, assembling liday reces: discussed and settled at once and that cial session of the Chamber for that cist members seized the Aventine gen- them hall, bestowing many kicks and cuffs nmed up, but the | wcknowledging paign of falsehood had utterly failed. und that a moral question never ex- ish government RELIGION: NUAL > v L 2 PA P have found it anything about trying without to rebuke a little and to lmr-‘ the same time. | of the| wledge | rightened me And persuading | e very much my own ac P hen we really m to be any- | very hard v when our fe 1 it is possible | thing hap- solid under that stage we | as much safety | ind Ty gave a 1in the time of | e said that my ian. 1 did not hurch ance nd that re but is always pe it should neve sthing i renoves the need ! carn adfast without ¢ never havine time he will hold for true tination i north star 1 i md g = dinary crment teaching debt th acc 100,000,000, W nost world 4 i mportant for Janu Turkey F viss civil cod additi pena German Turkey. we -stions sub Commissio « the British « estion 1 the « try 10 thout i The leaders e i S0 in characte The entir the hoard tion of the ulema is go code represents a very iic evolut ve in democr rogram sum China— 11 M + certain f the coal mines ind of bound products siun and ¢ woposed powe 46 hinese seems tern take it. TI'so-lin, £ qua beir nearly tritlea 1t grand supply of olves use and cient co-ording ind_a grest rtio No doubt as wve- | he recommend sl Commission r by May) as to near the pit ide e the red sian treaty “eng Yu-hsi dear friend, th of the Kuomix tional people’s army own construction fin speaking), with which lished h very mand Railw sup as dictator ARTICLE III ALEXANDER BLACK XANDER BLACK mvented t the spoke its last legs owd that £ Darwi used wils ends Il has ise. had Dat igatc was originally rued Test it 550,000,000, adop! e, with i on 700 1 code and T mumercial dic: $01 code tive of the Turkisi Koranic law nd the fur me. The advanced s f dispatch i Toomed mighty aving arise) betweer officials on the y (th subordi tuchun has grows rrel oW has even thre: rmy to enforce vights der will recail that the other cow's w up his com ichun (the na of China), his 2 manner of he had estab. at Peking and which he fondly thought to have indoctrinated with philosophy (nationalisti perhaps a Muscovite not, for Feng ma use Moscow in like m thought to use hi 1ip ider visio ere ble not con degree d - di are ex ies, which firm must_hus Premier i sther day that ¢ electrical en I to Canada’s of Railwaymen ard concerning month by the! for which the union well the and e tons in is adopted. which 1930 unless Th som 20 fu shortage brought on b striction of ruhber expd makes the price so higl recallec tha alied that ]y B eoreign and inters the | committee of Congress | the high price of rubbe merton, chief of the of the Department brought out that methods by which combat the high prices present artificial shorta after of themselves | withdrew anti ng r seats so long d in power, and wus a_ ‘“‘moral solini; in other | of what hav longer. we e They kept their just passed.| Reclaimed rubber, alt some of the qualities of rubber, could be mixed ber in They did not manufacture of some a: olini announced ion” must be o e e ihing | exclusively in the past. In certain places, s reads of tires, the use o by way of cbate, the I'as-| (o tain point the du out of the | o reclaimed rubber is Synthetic rubber ha: next day the Germany, during the the war, W grams of synthetic rubl they should re- | T¢ costly to produce themselves. | icity, but it serves qu that | manufacture of hard-ru m- | dn’t. Mussolini ould not be candalous ist government | tive buying. he Ttalian gov- | tion with repre- | is prospective for us, that & million to a mil debt to Great his Rubber there Americans might certain proportions for ber decreases the durability. tire treads have shown that up to a politi radical, with dash, perbaps have thought to anner as Mos why ). 37.000-Ton Shortage of Crude Rubber - By 1930 Is Forecast by U. S. Expert| e world’s demiand for erude rub- | ed upon plantations of our own vill exceed the supply by 37,000 | ber trees do not hegin to bear until 5 e plan of relief ture shortage, ‘tual, ix troubling Congress | trees almost as much now as the artificial | affect v English re ortation, which h at present In hearings now being conducted by tate commerce to_investigate r, Paul L. Pal Division Commerce were four of aused by the ge. One was a campaign for a more conservative use naking it last Substitutes were another possibility. | pj; hough lacking ¢ fresh naturai with new rub the rticles wherein natural rubber had been used almost uch as in the f reclaimed rub- Tests on rability is de- creased regularly as the percentage increased. s been unsuc- cessful commercially so far, although | latter part of producing 150,000 kilo- ber per month. and lacks elas- ite well in the ubber products The stimulation of production of |Of France. e wild rubber in the Amazon Valley was | Settee and Robespierre’s chair? another suggestion made by Mr. Pal merton, and the fourth was co-opera Tn view of the actual shortage which | dirty and broken. he estimated | lion and a half more acres of rubber need to be plant articles wa thiy o a larger ncidentally a bit dazed for @ people who thought had lost a theory But the clock is not direction they a God heology is not ology was quite metri ng way ¥ First Ca Joes annot be a child feet in recorded from two causes eniy no such body (of ironsides) as he ny others had imagined, but ty honeycombed wit fection on mutiny’ That his confidence thus rudely he fear and other conner ous possibi attack by Chang developments Feng's worst Fen cases of cold Apparen That he his army no history? ) that was m d tuck ) 4 co-ordinated and Wu. Ree 1 to indieate that tifled rinchun Ch: o (hic seer, fears wer departed, supreme e time ‘coming region, recovered in Man that W n the Y ingtse have 0 understand ing” with other und propose Wu adva srth and Chang once e des outh of Shan Hai Kuan arn Willow Pali: to liquidate” the Kuomincht | the, schemes o' tuchuns ne 1o each ding mi ited States of America. - to 1 the House hus voted t priation of $50,000 asked for by Pres ident Coolidge to cover the expenses of participation of American repre- sentatives in the commission, which, under league auspices, is to prepare the way for an inte fonal disarma ment conferénce The House has jorities the ar: ratifi ingements by lar ¥ for set Rul) to 7 vears old and full bearing is not | obtained until $ to 10 years old, so planted now cannot hope to the prospective shortage of 1930, but they can provide for the more distant future. Procop’s Old Cafe In Paris Desecrated One of the oldest cafes in Paris i | Procop’s, near the Comedie Francaise. |1t began as a bar in the reign of { Louis XIII, and attained fame during {the days of Moliere, when it fur- hed its patrons with the new drink | calle coffee. The name “cafe” orig- fnated in those days when Parisians, instead of saying, “Let's go to Pro- | cop’s and drink cafe,” said “Let's go | to the cafe.” | " During the revolution Procop’s was { | vers The Great Desire,” “Stacey,” ‘“‘American Husbands and Other Alternatives,” Etc. without a parent, there cannot be life | without a parent * * My religion teaches created things must partake of the character of the parentage. Thus | am surer that there is a God than T am that God is both all good and ai powerful. Logic points out that if everything is not the way He wants it to be, then He is not all powerful and that if He is all powerful and wants it the way it is, He cannot be thought of, in the terms of our think ing, as all good. But no logic tells us anything of God's intentfons or gives us the wisdom to measure right Iy the signs Our confusion does not change the fact of God. We could readily father who was imperfect without invalidating that father. In any e, our stupldity neither removes nor limits him. And it does not release us from the part- ner obligation to help along the family undertakings. If we are, inevitably like God, and we are participators. what we call a bigger thing than most of admitted that all 1 ser find a v is us have Yet T do not believe solemn and fretful matter ever can be u duty to invent miseries r ourselv thers. 1 can't imag e a threatening exasperated ), or a God without a sense of ht mor. TIf happiness is a duty est note must be the laughte I believe that creation is 1 that the universe, with this pic world in the midst of it, is sim- ply on its way. So far as I know, we have much 1o work with as God 18, When evil we say tn natural” as good, that lie is as nat at dut s or its high nished T ricro. is as ural as a truth, we ar raw materials. We partner-creators have work in cur own hands. 1 want to we can build a little e\ slde some w's are permitted (o have liberty. We can work or in Wi other good. an on our can be g e direction of 2 obligaty own advi t 3 tes cailed her. e theory of n is privi mit that the have off niine hir only exam ample igion may But s0 1 that sor affect justific and 1 1 nterference don't the of believe If God presume hall d is toleran wi to ap an otr shall The we apply con mon taken taker nian a Gove debt m nd Latv commis the ssions of In con opped finance col n tw the t the Ho mittee ¢ ision 1 i 1end ~hould b Senate non-par The most interesting amend- are: ports ts in tk rates on net inc 090 and $100.000 (e n from the rents ported out measure. ments erage 1 the preser compared House bill) reductic e rates per cent. in the with 9 instead ot differ <ed change th on 000 and $368.000.000 (estimates as to just how would wor! Daniel Gueg ago gave § ity for of aerons more mu lished the 1t York Un done a still He has estab- 1ggenheim fund for the promotion of aeronautics, which fund is to be expended under the direction of a board of trustees pe cullarly qualitied for such a function. Five hundred thousand dollars goes to the trustees at once, and sums up to total of $2.000,000; more will ned over the fund if, as and ment has now in Daniel ( stics, tablis ! when the trustees decide they can use | | other 'a meeting place for Robespierre, Marat, | | Danton and the young Lieut. Na- ipoleon Bonaparte. Marat, Danton land other leaders used to make | speeches there against the aristoc- {racy. Until the present one. the su | cessive owners of Procop's preserved | the original furniture. They showed with pride “Na ipoleon’s corner,” or Robespierre’s chair, and especially Danton’s broken |table "Since the war, however, peo- {ple seem to have forgotten Procop’s. Recently old patrons on returning found a new owner from the south “Where are | asked. The owner shrugged his shoul- {ders. “And Danton's table?” that table! 1 threw it out: it was T sold all the old unk for next to nothing and replaced it by these nice clean tables and chairs” | tion " they | “On. | them wisel the fund a (1) To promote aeronautical ed tion both in institutions of learning und among the general public; (2) To assist in the extension fundamental aeronautical science; (3) To assist in the development of commercfal aircraft and aircraft equipment; ) To further afreraft in bu: economic of the Nation. It is a zift peculiarly happy in con- on and in its timeliness. The Mexican government s re- plied to the note of protest concern- ing the new Mexican land and petro- leum acts, presented to that govern- The general purposes of of the ness, and application of industry and social activities ment by our Ambassador at Mexico | City. Jane Cowl predicts that within a dozen vears the “legitimate” will have vanished. There are many melancholy signs to justify her prophecy. P Miscellaneous.—The finance coim mission of the French Chamber hus not yet finished with the supplemen- tary tax bill of M. Doumer, the finance | minister. The majority of t »m misston are radical Socialists or un fied Socialists, and report has it that they have altered the bill quite vut of its original semblance. It is reported that the Anjera tribesmen of the Spanish zone of Mo- rocco have made peace with the Spanish. On Friday Dr. Luther succeeded in forming his new cabinet. It includes, esides the chancellor, Dr. Luther, who is a non-party man; three mem: bers of the People’s Party, three Dem- ocrats, two Cent the Bavarian Peoples Party. Dr. Stresemann continues to be foreign minister and Otto Gessler minister of defense The German umemployment ontinues to grow worse. Bolivia has a new president. The league commission for codific: tion of international law, composed of 12 members selected from sundry- na tions and including George W. Wick ersham, one-time Attorney General of the United States, s now holding fts second sesston at Geneva. situa be | ts and a member of | ?F( JRMER U. S. ENVOY LAUDS MOVE FOR ROYAL ACADEMY IN ITALY Recent Decision of Mussolini to Unite Best Minds of Nation in Arts and Sciences Pleases Robert U. Johnson. SRWOOD JOIINSON, | Just here fs an important differ- to Italy and Secretars of | enca between it and the American § Avidemy of Arts and Letters. | academy. While the latter has the that Ttaly, the home and | prestige of a national charter, it i liead of academies, should |supported by private funds and have had one comprehensive | independence of officlal control of cluding its most distinguished | ference is thus assured. And science, lfterature and the v hangs a tale. When the significant comment on 1 Institute of Arts and Letters nd vitality of her intel-| (parent body of the academy) a) in the Renaissance and | plied for its own charter, Mr. Car two succeeding centuries that | non caused the list of its members time more than 700 local| in the ling act, to be increased were in existence within | by the addition of the sculptor Jaeg- Talian unity, conceived | ers who hud just made an admir |y Dante, had rot vet taken po-!|able bust of the Speaker. This gave {litical or intellectual form. Lorenzo | Mr inn the privilege of choos de Medici had established in Florence | 118 & member of the institute, and in |almost the earliest of these bodies, vis 1 he charter was passed peripatetic group the model of | AS Mr Jaegers (now recently de !that of Plato, and today in the parlor | Ceased) was an artist of abllity, the | of the monastery of Cimaldolf on the | embarrassing difficulty was solved D Upper Arno there is an inscription | Promptly electing him to the insti. { recording met in that room.| tute. But such a contretemps car t serene and secluded mountain oceur st was found “the still air of de- e Will Be Judge. hiful studies The famous Della Cruscans followed, and In 1603 was however, the organized the Accademia dei Lincei| b be the judgs (of the I¥nxes), of which Galileo complexion which the academs a member and which now s perhaps have—-at least at first; it is not ar |the foremost scientific acade nounced whether members are Thes hut a few of its re- | theveafter to choose their associates instil which the | as in France cities into influent 1y I and the genius e | | 1 | It is odd { fountain never hody i inte of there arts {the vigor lectual life in the at one acad her border at it L never agal n 1 { ren to of the the peninsula Will Represent Nation. It has left to Mr. Mus: jana to establish a Roval ich shall represent Italy s France presented demie Francaise, or, shall the Instit de rance, five academies. In the instead of the 40 members ort the American of Arts and Letters (science o our National Academy there are to be 60 me ar from scier the nd it is to -ordinated local Italy. It is un- doubtedly nports step the purpose of unifving stimulating | onal purpose The Royal to have the full financial support of the state and 15 to @ new department of the zovernment | oups rp the hody ti s fn a carr the names of b We e 1es on its list , Nelson Page but & omits_ the his ¢ wder wh hole we my re sed of Jof Frinc 1dem be {of s rs equall liter and { be peik academies ull aver s - found £ the emi- tragediar <cholar difficult & minent a u m, \WALL STREET SEES NEW LIGHT. ' FINDING MARKET IN MEN’S MINDS iCash Register Deal Opens Financiers’ Eyes to Pos- sibilities of Capitalizing Good Will Created by Advertising, Making Market for Securities. BY HOUSTON. rubb i the HERBERT w Str s £ Dil the sur rill of a financing 1 Mor Cational Cash last has caused W t t et t jen't on.” Rea th the powe; ash Regis reaso; L merely quite 1 of. the. utside its times Indeed | transcends 11 by the t Wall mader secuin thaj speculated i1 nd bears, ive made and appr to discount ure v have E ising. 1 - ‘of markets for product New York operat Markets in Human beginning n ard stands. ts for prod ses quiekly ) have the piants And this is Read & g to e tion. offered better the Dodge of th the u to make t ition Dillg in which tha go0d wonderf: Pt they terms than th cuns or weing it was becaus fidence in growth of ifor 1 s. And_ when | Dodze dealers met in Detroit a few o and orvdered 400,000 cars for t double the num- | Dictatorships Apparently Inevitable To Solve French and German Problem have discovered control it First | stituents is not once inevitable Europe, as a whole, then. the cc tinent, exclusive perhaps of Russia | where to be sure there is an unmise takable dictatorship passing through a stage of amentary crisis,” which, however mpreher sible American rep) nts the inevitable cons of post-wi events. All European observers must therefore ascribe to dictatorship problem an importance which seen:s on our side of the Atlantic excessii e In fact. in many cases, they regard it as_inevitable. It 1s not a {sound and heal seems to us att {tion and a d outside the re: us. For Europe two methods, nued_from Page.) only possible, but | | nd fatal | ating slowness and waste, nevertheless the thing did fy were tolerable. Today all is changed {and little countries i evils assume a netion and condifons g countries | appalling sis the ol par inco! problems. in this c different importance The inability of parliamentary mem nd groups to agree over pre | war issues did not bring paralysis, be | cause the machine was functioning: | nothing new was required. But today the existence of millions of people, the prosperity of countries and the so ness of national tinunce depend upon the ability of parliaments, not alon to adopt new and far-reaching projects, but to put them throu And far, from one end of continent to the other, from Bru: to Athens, from Madrid to i the parliamentary machine has been unable to function and the ma people are becoming more and more impatient. angry, willing to under- take what must seem to_Americans dangerous experiment. No crisls, no danger, no evil, seems sufficiently great to coerce members of different { small political groups into any form of combination The international situation has im proved and seems destined to con-| One may tinue to improve because on this ques- | tators is as inevitable as the origlms tion it is possible to enlist majorities | that coming to restore order, dire-* in all countries. The French Chamber |government, make the machine wors and the German Relchstag, no matter ; they insensibly or deliberately move what the divisions between groups,|toward an extreme of depotism which can always muster the votes to put|in turn becomes intolerable. One m+ through things like the Locarno pacts; | believe, as most Anglo-Saxons do, that because there is here an agreement | dic on the whole, too expen which runs through most ranks of life | sive and dangerous remedies to be e in all nations and exercises its influ- | ploved. But the fact remains that fo ence upon all groups. We are then the par: of a parliamentary de escaping from the appalling mess of | moc Haall o ke on the post-war period despite the limita- | Known substitute. and Europe is ma tions of parliamentary methods. |ifestly turning to them, not with e But as the international situationthusiasm or with free c but le clears up, the national, the domestic, |cause the existing sit has 1 s worse and worse in many coun | come weil nigh unbea t is relatively simple to come| Lurope may th i agreement with Germany by |cvele, accept dictate which the status quo is assured—I | the present democrat say relatively simple, for, of course, |be obliged to employ {for France it is never simple—but | -et rid of dictators. | when it is a question of domestic tax- | (Copyright. 1926.) |ation, when every group is resolved | . | to protect its constituency and the | ‘Bernhard Baron, a_tobacco king ! combination of constituencies. to re- | Engiand, has given $1.000,000 to hos- Ject taxation divested at thelr con- pitals within the past 1ences the | bers choice between democracy inab mere Vol h which is quit 15 of possibility with the choice is betweer wch of which has ver: clear and definite evils and dangers but one of which, for the momen seems Incapable of functioning. N\ . one confuse the situation scribing dictators mainly or perhaps principally to the reactionary and aris jtocratic elements. It was by the wil of France that Napoleon. while stili { Bonaparte, succeeded to the hopeless and helpless directory. Certainly Mus jsolini in his origin and history has common with aristocracy o th wh tator > hat the end of du 1tion rable 2 the usua S 1o get it out of mess and ther violent means iu vear