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'So refreshing! £ Pumsumsrmua..._‘,,.‘,m;;,, re FREGHT RATE WA wwmm@;w, Park community celebration | Takoma. who Southern Roads Fi Fighting to “’“""“mfl m:.m*- A : Boost Carrying Charges for News Print Paper.. ing heaven 'and earth" freight rates or news print paper f Tennessee terminal points which vlr turally control the whole structure of rates to the entire South, the South- ern ' Newspaper Publishers’ Asgocia- tion was informed in the report of its traftic committee at its twenty-fourth annual convention here todn Canadian, New Englan lnfl other Eastern trunk lines, on the conts “are the friends-of the Southern daily newspaper publishers,” and have re-|. fused to agree to such advances, the report stated. As the Canadian, New England and trunk line territories are competitive, the rates on this com- modity will not be raised from one section without proportionate in- creases, from the other, in the belief of the traffic committee. Labor Costs Vary. The report of the committes on business affairs shows that analysis of labor cost reports gathered from 20 per cent of the members. of the assoclation and dealing with every phase nf newspaper operation em- braces ‘‘tremendons variations in the un(t cost of type production.” “The greatest cost per page natur- ally is found in the largest plants where pages are closely set and large crews are maintained to catch early editions with numerous make-overs,” says the report. “The smaller papers, as well as some of the big fellows, sustain a high unit cost of production through their failure tb use maximum size pages with tull-length columns.” A review of the first year's opera- tions and plans for the future of the Lee School of Journalism at Wash- ington and Lee University were con- tained in the report of the school of Journalism committee. ‘The objective of the school, the re- port says, is to become a ‘“clearing house” for Southern journalism. One of the features of the report is the subscriptions which have been se- cured toward its operation, amount- ing to $80,200, of which $47,760.98 already has been pal .. total amount pledged S. subscribed $60,600 and ha.s nlrfld made available $32,3 Richardson subscribed a,nd Dlid in $10,500; and the general public, sub- scribed $8,700; paid in $5,060,98. Report on Postal Rates. The ground-work has been laid for a “real possibility” of securing a re- turn to the 1920 basis of postal rates on second-class mail, Col. Robert Ewing, publisher of the New Orleans States and chairman of. the postal committee reported today. The report expresses the hope that the short session of Congress, which will begin next December, will take | up the matter of postal rates on news-| papers ‘and other nlu-u of mail. Kent Cooper, general manager of the Associated Press, -last night ad- dressed the members on the tradi- tion of the Associated Press and the weaving ‘of these traditions into the fabric of present day needs gnd ac- complishments of the nrfi uency Immediately following Mr. address & moving picture, " fiotance of News,” portraying the ery and._methods of the -och was shown. PnhuMeleIleB—SMm. Mr. Cooper reviewed the history of the movement which resulted In the establishment of the Associated Press and paid high tribute to its first gen- eral manager, Melville E. Stone, char- acterizing him as “one of the world’s greatest idealists. Whflo the Asloelaud Press under present management honors the tnmmms of the Associated Press in the past, it is of the opinion that as a great news gathering agency it must pay proper attention to the human interest side of life. ~While we must not forget the courts and chanceries of the world, we must bear in mind that the blacksmith of America is Inurelted in the blu:k- smiths of Europe,” he said. Mr. Cooper gave & number of illus- trations of how some.of the great stories of the Associated Press have been obtained and transmitted. He told of securing permission of Premier ‘Briand to send a man to Damascus to report the destruction”of its age- old gardens. - FIRST CUBAN. EXECUTION TOMORROW IN 20 YEARS Murderer Will Be Garroted Unless " Saved by Executive Clemency. Method Almost Painless. By the Assoclaled Pross. - SANTIAGO, Cuba, July' 7 (®).—Un- less saved by executive clemency, Salvatore Aguilena will be garroted tomorrow between 6 and 7 o'clock for beating his aunt to death. There has been no other execution in Cuba for 20 years, Aguilera was convicted of ‘beating to death his aunt with a candlestick, 'August 24, 1924, for refusing {o give him a small sum of money. The garrote consists of a brass col- lar in' which a screw is inserted, ad- justed to strike the back of - the’ victim’s neck. A quarter to a /half turn of the screw is sufficient to breal the -spinal column. The condemn man is seated in a chair with his back against a post with which the garrote is connected. The instrument, a relic of the Spanish regime in Cuba, is sup- posed to cause almost nless death. A boar that dled recently i’ the London Zoological Gardens was born in 1917 in the historic forest at Crecy, France, and had been adopted as a mascot by the soldiers. i “The commilties In ‘charge of thell Johnson. and rm»ewm»num.w o o0, verdict of a Jury: Chargés. oflpflo night ;rhn fln—m eal. EENEE ‘ qmur'o ‘| placed in the county ul'dflv:\n You cannot escape these in- sidious rays that lurk in sunshine. Have your eyes examined and a pair_ of ‘glasses fitted—a pair that can shield you from this hidden danger. Consult our optometrist. CHAS. SCHWARTZ