Evening Star Newspaper, July 19, 1926, Page 8

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that Senator Borah speaks, #s he has 5 now done twice, in challénge of the at- | , S d 4 | fi%Alt!uc'tor.n‘c. :‘:um“:n:&:thnnm::h Fu: i o Aight for ke ¢ i . \ 4R y 1€ stitutional governiment, to by. ! S S 4 i G 1 s 7 4 3 . , o, '8 ¥ S RN - st | thielr voicen ADd thelr Votes, & flmm; W. NOYEB.....Bditor | ly proceduré: to change that faw, change s desired by the people. ¥ begun Janvary 27, 1925, and rmy'“ 3 e about §1 'he eost to guess it 't make Senator Borah in his Au, “agd- in, & A dress clearly indicates the change of ure with reference to the u:: nomi- Jovial radio ann 3 ice and -fi were w,,:: ey ook ] 430d St | (he attaek upon the eighteenth amend. | nation, It is “Smith against the fleld."§, VB> Dad been g ! ; ) 4 o Tatten! 5 <l g Toer PUIHE. on?’ | ment. In ik view, which 1a no léaver, | HIA frisnds are working vigoroualy | 74 10¢ 0oussksep) e e et Bl X ok e . 0 g . 2l " |indeed, than that ot.sny steadfast ob- {16 éffect a ¢harige of the rulés govern: v g . > | Bristan : server of the events of the past few | g the mominating convention, They '| monthe, the opposition to prohibition | Want the two-thirds requirement abal- has shifted Its ground. What started | ished, and believe that with It swept | poges as & movemént to secure an amend- | Way after many years of n-‘n"thou ment ‘of the law for the enforcement | Will be “nothing to it but AL" But 5t the elghteenth amendment has be. | thus far there is no sign of material progress toward repeal of the historic standard of Democratic nomination.| “So We can bave homemade ice A. 1t was introduced in base ball For an idle-day diversioh it is all “We tan get it at the store.” : lidated. :-:I:I:r et:‘y. bt‘h-ml:n'l;urme; -Mynx‘; right to engage in speculations on the| «yes, 1 know that; but think of 4 ’ % in and n | catior clube, the T ,,;";,wk":' P:‘;r subject of whether Gov. Smith is or|the fun making your own.” d of. | Tontes are an Sy Ol g e \astur of Brackivas Prioe will be a candidate for the 1928 nomi| 'Cant see any ::'r_- :m."nmu +Q. Why, when one is driving, can | bound was out. fation. But really, 1t is s needless ex.|® Srank for an h pools of water be. seen on the road \ It “You don’t have to grind for an time- the pressed betwee ahead, only to: disappear upon ap-| Q. When and where was the first nditure’ of thought, Whatever. he|hou i wes Srosear, skyacraper erected?—A. 8. G. - He i . > proach, and appear farther on?—H, may fesl dbout the matiak the imy. | (CHOW Mo7ven ARWIL i L storm will not devel F. 8. A. The Tower Bullding at 50 Broad- table eircumstances compel candidaocy. f .00 P St st The Bureau of Standards says |way, New York City, is believed to be : the phenomenon. is the same as Q. How can a worn flle be re- newed?—I. D. < i A. To restore a worn file, carefully clean it in hot water and soda, and dip for 40 minutes. in nitric acld 41° B, wash it off, dry and ofl. Q.. When was the fly cateh intro. some | duced in base ball?—N. B, O, it _ES%E i ! odid ] 4] . Rijte hy Mail—~Payable In Advance. % Maryland and Virginia. ¢ome a movement for the repeal of 5c| the amendment. But at this time there s o definite proposition for the repeal by orderly procedure, proposal by Congress and submission to the States, . Repeal by nullificatiop s the fa. vored mode, and it is against that mode that Senator Borah protests, in - | his call to the people of the country, 3 _ “What for?” asked Simp Jones. g airhes rredited to Tt atherwiss cred. Something may occur during the next| “Mere like six Nours, you mean.” ; " u . r I news | regardjess of how they view prohibi- ohi But| “Well, we had better get 3 ) to becoms in time & réference library mirage seen.over hot, sandy plains. | from s of Bradford . ished heretn. tio year and a half to effect a change, bu vell, r gt one, any- of_inestimable 3 next to the road Th tiron Building was bullt i i pects: Algmatane lfi::ffi‘nbnfl" esarved | tion, to stand by the Constitution. A|il"o, "eun now. foresee it < s mfim et above and the lomes | 1903: the Binger ana Metropolitan third party is not to be regarded as & practical outcomé. Onme or the other of the major parties may be compelled, out of deference to a steadily growing sentiment combined of direct prohibi- tion bellef and regard for the Consti- tution and fear of nullification, to ac- Distriet Budget and Taxes. District estimates of $42,001,225 are Submitted to the Bureau of the Budget < by the Commissioners. It is accom- l. panjed by an explanation of thé re- [ sources which, it is expected, will meet %o large &n expenditure. These re. Sources are thus compiled: Tax on in- ‘tangibles, $2,300,000; tax on public seiyice corporations, banks, ete., 12,200,000; miscellaneous receipts, fines, ' fees, permits, etc., $3,000,000; gasoli ——— et Out-of:town papers are filled with |y social items concerning people who visit Washington, D. C., for reecrea- tion during the Summer. Shdps are 3 ot etropolitan of it was that Jones by - member layer consequéntly reflects just as a |buildings were completed by 1910; the and body of w«'u * | Woolwortn and lqulubl.g 1915. Q. How leng did Queen Victoria| Q. 1Is It true that there is a tree 7—W, growing on the roof of a build- §3 years, dving in |ing somewhere in the United States? A. Bhe rel * %k * % 1901 at the age of 81 years. —I1. I. H. busy and hotels are crowded. The A. A young maple tree has taken role of ‘deserted village” during the | THan the fun beman. L o ved|up his ” h bh S Vhat e the ; frst . gvlosieal | oot i aJorovice i the brAE? of the cept this as an {ssue. Guerrilla war-|moriths of July and August has been | 8i v facts. period - S e, brick tower of the courthouse at imp. A. The first ia the Azole—without A fare, alming at individual candidates | apandoned by the Nation's Capital | T g0t an extra plece this morning.” R : B life. The duration of this Period 18 | paes - and mo e beors ot for Congress and other individual| ¢orever, ' s “What are we going to make?"” bably great h: 1l the th “Let wa be-| The moment had come. Th probably greater than all the time by i candidates for presidential momina- Ll by 8 LYy, rasge ‘watey. los, t6 eritical which has e since. Sot, there, tions, will not serve to meet the great | In addition to being reprehended as in_ with.” clock showed eight minutes of grind-| more vital matters. This. is a fatr o sy % . Why was a fort about 25 miles | Q. What does Selma Lageriof's issue which is clearly now in evidence | violators of speed regulations and nu- ined. t “Where you going te the |ing. Jones had doubta about the whole | and a wise division of functions. Give| Q. b e Y 5% . He would take off that lid and | i( o trial, trom Now Orieans mamed Chet Men | family name meanz—J. L. H. “I have six of them right here and |find the mixture stil liquid. Hel| . (Copyright, 1926.) . |teur'*—D. D, . i ;::‘ , pame in tax, $1,200,000; water fund, $1,414,88 '—“‘;(":" of ";"|"""““y of the basic | merous laws of more national author- | the two lemons and the sugar and |knew A il 5 ~A. The following legend is told: | SWedish means trubts and special funds, $1,075,000;) W of the republic. ity, bootleggers -are now being held half cup of cream and the orange | Doubting Jonea The Choctaws 'were conspicuous for- ; e - . . | extract— % v|~ He let out & whoop of joy when he Q. Please. print_the size of Lake unappropriated balance to the éredit up to public disapproval as “malefac. Mo dbent. tha'lce clelin Gt £ Globe-Circlers Unkind ‘Winnepesaukee?’—H. R. Two Crimes and Corruption. tors of great wealth.” hiiot & $opound bag:t ;: _the frozen orange ice Within the A striking contrast offers in two PSSRy, “Good! Do you suppose it will taste “Nobody could do any better than tragedies in this country, just enacted. The high cost of gasoline sheuld {like anything when we got it done? |that’' he said with great satisfaction. |, ung maitor of The Star: It covers an area of 178 square mfiles M 2 “Sure, it will be fine.” “Why, it is 80 hard you can't budge and is 300 feet deep. One is the murder of an editor at |make the public gratetul to Mr. Rocke- i Messrs. Evans and Wells, having ¥ Jones carried the freeser, which |the dasher. 1 ‘thel Tide d the | French for “Lying Chi Th Canton, Ohio, obviously because. of | feller for limiting himself to the dis- | was of the ail-metal type, to the base- | . Several tugson that important part | completed r joy aroun Q. What is the difference between N £ 4 ¥ » 10 show J globe, pause in the midst of congrat- ) Wes named for this place. a bridge and a viaduct?—S. G. B. his incessant aétjvity against munic- | tribution of ten-cent pieces when he | ment and loudly called for the ice and | of mmuhln‘:-y l"vflflL e mwm ulations and jollification to take & N ¥ A. A viaduet is & bridgelike struc- ipal corruption. 'The other ls the |feels like squandering money in an oft- |8 hammer. = = o Bl }otomcomt iy Ry bn"'"!" | s AT the Arey AN 3 Q. How long doss it take light 16 | ture, especially a. largs ofie of arched killing of a wealthy business man of | hand personal way. - brought thé ice ‘and the hammer,| A big , however, removed| It appears that these happy trav- |reach the ;fl from the moon amd | masonry, to carry e y or the Worth, Tex.. by a clergyman PSR B 0 O Bl i R Jones demanded a burlap bag to crack |enough of Fe frozen ice to allow the|elers on arriving st the Pacific end | Mars?—N. E. M. . like over a valley or raviné.or across PR W GRE, A, % it-in, and, whacking away, smashed | dasher t6 be taken out, and the whole | of their native land. calied upon mall Light traveling at the rate of [another.roadway. A bridge i¥'a struc- who had attacked, from the pulpit| It is not likely that anyhody will be [y, T [Ty 5 Packed down Into the can, but not be. | planes to carry them across the con- | 136,000 miles per second requires 1.3 (ture erected cross o w and in a weekly. publication, certain | severely punished for the champagne s assistant then took over the |fore Jones had sampled a few spoons- . Mail planes not aswering mm ml.o‘ reach s from thé moon, | ravine, road or the like, municipal officials, charging them | splash on Broadway. It is not even |job of cracking 'the ice, while Jomes |ful, or spoonfuis, if you are particulsr. | the call, they turned to the Army— nul 0 comé from the sun, and | the passage of persons, animals or . ed th: he authorities in the | aselduously read the directions for | Jones could not get over the feeling |as 80 many do in eleventh-hour vehicles, or as & means of supportand with gralt oL ey S o the tenth time, ‘ that the freezing was somewhat of a |emergencies. The Air Corps, short of transit as for a water main. : In the Ohio case the crusader | “réaring 40's” will go so far as topad-| "1t gays heré that you ought te Right in his own basement, too! | equipment and personnel, loaded as | Star syst can be used in a more general sense against corruption was slain. In the | lock the bathtubs. put the iee and salt in before you |He put a cork into the hole in the lid |1t always is at this season with the|}ight which left it 36,000 years ago |than “viaduct” can. 2 led to let the water pour Na- | has only just reached us, while there A 3 N Texas case it was the crusader who e g ml;{-l:? e mixture, How about the ::.tfl&m_h ‘:" Wl gl et ag:l‘t:osu hwfifn;’:‘ Rnorv;‘ :ndd' “": la SnothaebBebaMe chuster thet 1o _g. ‘A)o Bmmw. ,u””‘v"(m,_ did the killing. In Ohio the slayers| 1t may be stated without fear of | "“T have it all ready upstairs.” Sogesie . planes “d' pliots. As .' result of Illu.llt.mm than 200,000 light-years - MO b H are unknown and are being Sought, | contradiction that ene topic chretully | “Sure you didn’t put too much of | Then be packed more lce and sit|inis response the travelers were|ftom the sarth A light-year is near.| 15 TOUAOW Q8 "5 Sl o g rwards otered.fr $00 | vaged ducng the il ot Gov. A1 005, Grases exirac oy E & g | around e, hr, NG S0t | anted Sy and mpesy o Mihel 17 600000 mien | JOULS O B e identification and capture. In Texas, | Smith to President Coolidge Was that | 1oy want that in when you have six | “The book says an old blanket,” but| " ong might expeet thanks and I‘% ;3“ k‘jvna vgf (?" ofganization ::t 3: k:?ny affected when canned the slayer acknowledges the shooting, | of the probable winmer in the csm-|oranges and two lemons——" he compromised on @ newspaper and |, aise for the Alr Corps from the of the District, $301,000; Federal con- fribution, $9,000,000; the remainder, $20,700,345, to be raised by taxes on real and tangible personal property. This concluding item is the one that » ®goncerns the District property owners " especially. The tax rate required to produce the amount named is placed At $1.80. But this rate is calculatéd upon the hypothesis that the budget _#s ‘now framed will not be supple- mented by additional estimates and ap- propriations. If other sums are re: fiuired, to meet deficiencies or tardily @lidcovered meeds, a higher tax rate * will be necessary. ¢ To those who have with a measure of indifference viewed the proceedings of the past few years in'Congress, Alming at the definite-propertion prin- ‘ eiple of Federal aid in District main- - 1’ ¢| A.. This New Hampshire iake is 25 To Army Aviation Corps|auentiy. ilGG Ty Mg Trou T 1o 10 S e The o ‘ganization known oy g tenance and culminating in the adop- |15 reieased on ball, and yesterday hé | paign of 1928, ¢ | "1 ayn the freesing takes out some [an old topcoat. " |iravelers. One hears instead critle | p g o s fain Somiar T s Q. What s used to taake loose tion of the lump-sum principle in sub-| gooke from his pulpit to & packed Rt BRASEE Sh SR Sf KA SaSE Sk wal) Ak the estestoses e R el et th Waibing: glém and compiaint—nay, more. eveh |oi Mount Pleasant, Tows, by iyory ‘tacei stick on. plano keys?— AN S R Lt o There is & fimit to human endur-{ - 5w o pe and (hal Hie o N ieaies. fying services of other aads, Thers | soc ‘A. Piano' dealers use a ‘cement in ral sessions as the amount of the | jystery attaches to the Canton ¢érime | op06 The King of Italy may yet feel| . ey n Jones is the ut one thing to say to these happy .| repairing piano keys the ivory cov- National Government's shate of 08 | csuse of th Ichsot any €10 10 the | L 2"k ‘e Feapuntibl [comomod Brmmieis osons? 1 107 | 2 S R0, PO Ve Do onereitica giode troiers. e s A cost, this budget offers food for seri- ous thought. It verifies the prediction oftén made that once the definite-pro- portion principle was abandoned the Hid would be lifted from the District tax pot. it is to be noted that since the pro- ceedings began which culminated in the framing of this present budget, which has yet to pass in réeview at the Bugeau of the Budget—for no partic Jar reason in equity save that the statute so declares—there has been a decided arousal of feeling that the Di o United States has less: money | one absect Seates. Uy jee- (S ernment siatistics bring out the WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS n"‘"m‘c: e o gne chance in 0 fa sttain ditinc, - m “l( higher such identity of the killers. In the Texas |, .. o¢ government for a while and tragedy there is some mystery 25 t0 | sive Mugsolint & holiday. the circumstances. The slain man had gone to the study of the clergy-| i aseline of the French franc ve. man to protest the attacks that were | ... 40 paper money. The shopkeeper being made against his friends. The |y, pitey his coin mwunm P in _these days of free schools and free information. This paper supports in! ‘ashington, D. C., the largest ififor- ' P reau in_existence. It will Q. Is it trué that there are still | procure for yow the answer to any colonies where slavery is law- | question you may ask. A yourself ful?—N. 8. A, of ita facilities for your self-improve- A. Until_1925 slavery existed in|ment. Inclose a 2-cent stamp for re- - e 5 &ur.lfin. ]:utlh‘o Lo n‘:' n:. liberation | furn I,o;acun oA tdress The Evening ter, the man put his h |, be- : “ Senator iph H. Cameron, Repul slaves in I through pur- 'nforma lureau, Frederic “m"‘:“:“‘ and it "p“ then ‘.:"""‘ :::k :upimmm T e {l::- :f' mn’ fsons, denies nhmn't.l,: e A | chase by the British government was Director, Washington, D, took from a desk drawer a pistol Nisuie ol O 100 4 ls far and away the Do this own account or at organimtion be- BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Afnerican abroad this|of less than a million. They comprise Summer in :’r:.no«ntl. on lan -M‘;:I ,unit in§ elérgyman says that his caller, on the | .o\ ster is atill o the '“.-‘I. his Bebics b largest numbers que, economic for buying the | the 4 h individual family pro- | rd, are responsible for ync Xits! e o A téléphone, declared that he was 'eom- |, ... q0stions. ing to ‘“settle” with him. On his A e arrival he became violently abusive | The ease with.which President Chol: and threatening. Finally, says the 1dge catohes fish as ‘to’ it the i i B B e £ trict has been made the vietim of a ¢ 2| During the first six . (G LI ) =19 g k fon of the & ! “ ot st seing o ror 207908 o 00 veesien o€ 03| gmoomrg wrAms. ' |y"fne il of Unto Rum B, 35, e oy B Bwi sioon Kipling’s “Immortals” Remar B izene of WaShinELON | pima that he shot in seifdetense. | TR T30 ‘more than were: lisued during Chayon, “dam sites,| Camaron ayows a . 2 - o regarded the sl congres- BY PHILANDER JOENSON. the same period im 1925. Passports [ P simp S W f S ul sional opinion ori the score of District | But detectives who examined the body e are mely meat little source of | draw the Senate's attention to them, |"DORGTHY g tirs ave O. eculation maintenance without concern are now | °f the slain man atate that they (ound The Limit. Tevenus for the Government. TheX S0l IS M LIes hent of Cocontao > no weapon on his person. Thers were : h A . i s Y % Sidpeing thels the eaoption ot che| 1% WO UL ST Lo e ug | SS ISk o girmadcin s . o0, yéar recently ended the | Sounty and the blaser of the Brisht | Tells of Telephone. : 1o ok " . Jusip-sum principle means decidedly | "® X In the pursult of art. - . tate Department turned ove: n‘.:‘lk Angel mm.' ‘na- ‘When Rudyard ‘Kipling told the | the test English writers of his claim him as an 8 shooting. Until, when all was sald and dpne, 180 to the T ury. That's en . heavier taxes, and with no guarantee Mu An?l;’uxon author, one 3 ling is rising to a g to pay the # Jesrs #gainst heavier increases in the tuture, | In Ohlo public fee She looked-1il clad, but smart. Geor Sheds Ligh has pictured with courage and - Clamor fof improvements, which are | Mi§h Ditch over the crime. The chléf{ 4y e tne course of less attire ';:,EE?.‘,’,‘."« ihe higher subordinate | dri b B'B"‘Cfi lmenl"“ = peculation | skill the spirit of the age in which he Heeded, i likely to be tempered by this | Of POlice, Whom the dedd editor had |~ conyigtantly pursued, ¢ I ‘and and on s tion. which lived. England honors herself when new understanding of the penalty tne | 0ften bitterly denounced, declares In | gpe put an artist under hire ot our 40-0dd m"‘";‘m over for the 9 200 B A0 V0 B :m R have been D e m‘.’:‘ “have been ro’m District taxpayer must pay for the |® Statement that he had been unjusti-| 41 yad nerself tattooed. |3 considerable Bub Lo 3 tor- % R R il ropgadt 5 Dhona Y be applau svasion by Congress of the funda.|fably persscuted and that in his beliet| : J eign service pay roll. » comserning "The First Telépnones.: |mind. His ‘statement was at| “Are we to blame.” asks the Louls- mental law of Capital muintenance, |the editor was tbt sincere, but was P‘;‘:‘: Sonigns ot "'.': ; * k%K) You:ask “What I know about it enacted in 1378 and amended a few |%¢king pilitical prestige and aavan | 606 & .::Wm“u' m'::y sompiste, |, Vice President Dawes is going to s fulniling for the | And I tke pleasure in enlightening |1V 100 o™ Karneet tribu ¥ears ago by a change of ratio, Mean-| 8¢ in conducting his attacks. It have & fishing vacation, too. It honored task of pinch-hitting for the ”-}'i. tele; B 50 |Senius have followed from his ad- | il here is a budget which wil tax | MAtters not xt al, of courss, whether | How shall she further go? occupy him and Mrs. Dawes 100 (06 | president of the United States.' He'w| years. ager when T, was. spent the editorial writers the District sorely to meet, the dead man was sincers or was tor ettacts T atrivar I oent ‘at the luzurious “camp e el Svuey: 21 Referring to “Mr. Kipling's casual —— ————— MByiag; selora N6 A RHIMALI VS % . ©|A. B Humph : Chist Masistrate of the repubiic. Al ; remark” on the dozen immortals, the {57AN8 GRrk: hoar. uf He was consistent in his attacks, fear- | HOW can I take off any more : tlan 5 executive busihess that drifts into Mels New York Herald Tribune: suggests A thi - natiteat Turkish ladies adopt modern cos- Unless ¥'m skinned alive?” ed mil father, Melville, personally, _Neither fr tume, and so do Turkish gentl less and thorough in his methods. y 3 -|and through the White House now- | ¢ them ever went to.the Southern| . “doubtiess he 4 80 far as comfort i concernag \ps |TPet he had reached thé truth and Ennebling Influence, | ‘olorado. e T O e e ands. | Hemisphers and there was #o expos el l';‘::’::n" ¢ | was on the point of turning up sca- | e shouid orgive our snemiss.” out.referenice to White bine Camp; | " 1on 1100 49 Janelrol o egtindo. ; . the matter of innevation, dalous conditions with specific proof | «qpe¢ fact,” commented Senator rande National for practice has made him perfect, 4nd | 5¢ Brasil toured this country in 1876 opportunjties’ ‘the like of this have 4uote haCun phirass,: Briain's, wn. ot guilt on the part of somebody is indicated by the crime itself. He was “silenced.” , Men of the underworid, professional Sorgiium, s’ WAL IANAS IN6 FegARd |and TR GF¢ HURCIC i et O o chjers and while at eur Phlladelbhia Cen- |t (2 NrIURE TSR W KOOW US| ometa) ' poet lauceata i . soberly itics i ennobling infl ; ennial was so impressed with|¢ne Herald Tribune, “but on none of tful. The real Kipling speaks: ™ feudig :mb g :m it. Two large artlfl ked 2 .’iloi.:h. oo made lr-x’l:t Mx_: il's’ telephone exhibit that the|ghe.rolln Wupptied by these gentlemen | the Kipling whose oecasional g.impses “There's nothing ke it for com| ie Vice President’s host and stocl Ztuy every Y ;! Pukith of reporters whq Dublihed nig g t by oune. s, a man to forgive his enemies as new PR fieh. from hatcheries, .bu; con- of record. ' Nor be written the o letters | Of ope: eavens may vet se Naullifiation the New Tssue. While Benator Borah's deciaration Is it anywhere set|post appreciative remarks positively | v LR, among his dozen seers, ling, one . that the people who are loyal to the | Criminals, crooks and grafters, do not | aeals arise.” structed and maintained sver spilied & state |yaveq that invention from oblivien! il .| senses an occasion—a high moment Constitution may organize & ssparate | COMMIt murder merely for revenge, st _}_{hmnpnr’alz‘-, .:x: wlfl:‘l:l 6& ump, vmw ”.:he mw'.*n;.‘l;;l o-f Yours ‘n'm.o l;ém ofn m | The in a life being 1:1* by nnl u:holmm. + party on the prohibition question, de. | V¢ upon members of their own . Sout of the Filvver., w.fifo"n"’c.“i, of C w&- : | the personification " Then there are Virgil and | will 45 ignore. o livered In an address yesterdsy at|Senss who have turned traltor. They [ The filvver is a gentle brute been deeply inte in ey and Dante It rayhs LFrante L _Augusta, Ga., is not to be taken as a| Wil kill without ruth to stop attacks| ~Whom I respectfully salute. outdoor activities. orwhrd with = % Gérmany will 1 “And Kipling, in his s h of ac- His various faults that we deride w We oneQ Neoded. few =4 nd 8 . pdeoh"' res tha";:llwlukaee | setfous predicti of icatching fish th , ¢ AR o, pint, i mevorthamis mtie & Ate due to some poor boob inside. fi“’ Shiot '&':‘; Hfle 1;:nn and | —Senators an s S - 5 & word to ‘say for Cervantes. -Any |Journal, “is the Kipling of old, point- or to prevent exposure. The fact . alignment, it nevertheless indicates a | that Mellett was shot down by a gang . o wonders | one ot th ; I - > 3 from ese countries could ‘name | ing the way in a phrase. ‘Fiction, trend of .influential thought toward |I® the surest proof that could bs de- Jud Tunkins says money ‘“‘makes h ate’s hlmndM' m 9“.‘ ) ife. Tourists con- e-| full twoscore men whose, work has|he says, ‘s Truth’s elder sister.’ So the-only assured line of isnue between | Mred that he was put out of the Way | the mare go” 18 oné of those sayings | - 0 - Tk 4 X & : A ; e e il ‘ large groups of voters in this country, | to stop him from reaching the crooks, that se P 5 o o Hill 4 h years, ¢ can ju an least spiritu Nuilification; says the Iaaho Senator, | In OF out of office. He may have been | tnis und good, but don't mean &ny-| pere's an oidtimer on Cabi 1 ; y" 88. standing, by. the excellence of its | b " Quay, United J | Matthew, erature. When poetry bégan to @ bt -”truu:"P-nmlnnu uninter- q that immortality ‘is | cline, that. ought to have been a thing. A big bet never yet made a who has already taken advanced|insincere—there is nothing to jultity tion out of politics, ,|only resort of those whose crooked A third party favoring prohibition | Work he was threatening. estate booms in Summer. 18 not only unnecessary, but it is hope- RSN AP s Majesty ¢ 1888, For many years such a party "z:;":""::"‘:‘“ Wm-"‘blthl e You m::?&::fl £ rey, osition, who existed in this cpuntry, quadrennially r temperature, An es ? - 5 misstoner, 't 0" bave [renon, h y B Neuttnating canaldates Hor the, presi. | Ceptionally cool period has been fol- m?;mu::‘uy. 18 Drimios, Gulch?? it against | onoe 5&'&"‘ m%’:v“. dentia) offices, and aiways trailing | 1°Wed by record-breaking hot waves. | | ¥ Det we are,” answered Cactus |41 wid "peasts _of the ont, and I'm going to stay out.” hopelessly in the ruck of the “aiso. | The JAW of averages is still reapected, 00, e ievlt Mnvbody that can % rans.” This party’ maintained organi.| Put like other laws of Tots authorita: | Pe¢dle & drop of Hliit licker around | been TAflon stsadfastly until nationat pro. | e OFiEin, it evades practical appiica. ey nds in. with the nibitlon was adopted through the rati. | tOn on terms of human comprehen- ; . © fication of the amendment, and has | Slon- e ~ gontinued in shadowy form even since. i then In behalf of ehforcement. But it © Has never been A factor in the politi-| Gossip about Gov. Smith of Neéw | eal "equation, wavé 'perhaps in such | York and the presidential race of 1928 - flode elections as those of 1876, 1884 [has been revived by his call on Presi. 1016, when a few thousand votes, | dent Coolidge at White Pine Camp, i the Adirondacks. Interviewers have, in the way of a @eclaratfon, that hoss win face was crooked, nator ¥ Fraunt on this aviestion, 1s tiK obecst | 1he assertion of Bis Shecrs b | unless the Y 3 : ptedly from 1887 to 1905, m‘l:l"! bot o K -, X warning to us of the many things greatest danger to the republic, En.|hAve been a wrong-headed fanatic, but R ments. 3 \.{ have m ‘nnm:!‘. n‘:m‘““"“u "‘M o ¢ N . ‘“‘l'- that ?"h'u mmn: hloln:.' l:: e Do fo:emem of the eighteénth: amend. :::’ ;mh R that he was on'the | = “Where d:;n- !fl:.. 0 in Winter?” |StO08 B st this vfiwfim on, ! E‘;a 2 the Chicaga|as b Il ONE o The Al fa e s . meht is th 1y -way prohibl- track and that crime was “Hard question! I haven’t found that never than, 3 5 . ows, te tl sett] lown one' voice ” Prrmdir n e pond g ot - v e uam ; ’all 4 k sang clearly—the voice of Kipling. out what becomes of the Florida real [a million” on hl'l su .fo, 'twould Kipli not able to cmpaigns He B St Bteed oF Thg ‘Hocorsional: but l&u. lites ideals t and y will a | him. ‘earth's last picture is painted nd wé ¢ome to the time he i L sty izg | L H il L gs sit ifE " Gmith and 1928, has not deterred them from announe-| o that ol ‘to the irreguler and revolution imethod of rewriting the organic | .. There 18, to b sure, &n inévia- ¢ relationship betwéen nullification t of the matter there are but few ’?"‘_’h:’?‘?" nullification who de niot

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