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10 SOCIETY. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ., JANUARY 1. 1928 _PART 2. SOCTETY.’ - l The Story ; N. Y. is the guest of her son and davghterdnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. E. A, Swecley Mr. John H. Abraham of Duke Uni. ersity in Durham, N. C., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs, John B. Early Winter Bride BRIDE OF THURSDAY oolidge to Lay Ghost of Imperialism of Civilization (Continued_from_Fivst Page) | of jurists also deals with the specific | s & 5 Abraham. ; T —— setilement of international conflicts, | { = e ’ - {Continued from Third Page) :-ngnor :\:r' own time. . \ The probabilities are, however, that | and makes the following propesal: “In v,'Mr, - 'I].H“ De Bul'!’{! "\h M4 winv apective that his cotemporaries called | —Some sculptors of that turbulent age \ \ he will be homeward bound on . the vvent of a serious question which | g M. and Mrs. Jamos E. Ambier in * him the “shadow painter,” and Plato | have left us busts of Alexunder, which N uary 17. His quarters on the Texas | endangers the peace of naticns, any | Nre Metiton Aaviie aal Sk Simounced hi uilty of an out-| make him out as handsome and dash- T will bo adequate. Adm. Wiley will[one of the parties can have recourse | Y Sprouse Miss Ge noun m as guilty 3 3 the chict executive of the | to the governing hoard of the Pan- tride Sprouse were week end guests turn over t s deception. ing a conqueror as any girl could pic {of Mrs. John McIntire in Warrenton. g T t| ture in_her dreams. The youns war- £ 3 admiral's quarters, ineluding spacious | American Union. which shall there- y ; ; wm!d“hm‘:!‘:xl‘il\‘u!;nl?:oawn.lf.l‘ \ke his| rior did not care for those portraits X rooms and hroad decks cut off from | upon excrcise the functions of a coun- | WiVac s e pusmot ms et Pame the center of many pleasant|which tried to catch the beauty of = the rest of the ship. oS concilition: and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, H. A. e 3 : The adoption of a_treaty emnoaying [ -3 4 3 * ok ok ok ) ) tales. His forte was realism; story | face and the melting look of hi such a proposal would, indeed, give the inted grapes so much | he prefe Lysippus, who represent- i Press reports from some of the e B B e s Ccame and hecked | ed im In his jeonine aspect. charging S Latin Ameriean countrios have indi LamecEanaUNIn A polltiCaltng : at them. His rival Parrhasius was|recklessly into the midst of the enem = . cated that efforts would he wade at | Which 1t has not hitherto had. = The | et to be outdone. 1ie painted a scene | and dominating the world with the coming Pan-American Congress to| Boliey of the United States. while en-) partly covered with a curtain, and|glance. See him in battle 5 5 imterject itleal questions ol v"""l l“ “;‘) "l' ot ofipiiter fnvited Zeunis to come and see the| Ale Sarc s at | (Esdigr cxtent than ever Botute. okt ke, from shiernational. polltics pleture. Zeuxis came. nd trying to| Con ntinople, sai R LA the past the Pan-Ames ne :unu ,I i rom international political | Phaw aside the curtain, found it | Battle of Alexands avius™ in | 3 \ ] [have dealt largely with ecor R o el urtain, as unceal s p at Naples, he is % | social questions. 1t has been sug- grapes. Lot ) ] | zested in some quarters that attempt Zeuxis had no timidity before t In the ver e of the . \ 4 | will he made to In bout the to ditions. Believing that the artist wa s on the ver; pturing S mation of an American League of N | mighi heeome with the American Ro. | Sorthy of his hire, and would not|Darius himself: he has all the fine | N [tions with the Pan-American Union | pullics what the Council of the | T o o apotied by remune nal verve of a vouth splendidly | as the hasis of departure for such a | Leaguo of Nations Is o its assoeited | “o_nm. e exhibited to the public his|endowed with spirit and impulse, and step. Another report has be that | members. The idea of an American | famous portrait of Helen, and stood | not given much to th bit of think- | | \ efforts will be made to take the head- Leake, on Duke street. Miss Virginia Wilking is the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Samuel F. Rixey In Culpeper., Mr. Kenneth Statler of Ne ty mpent the past week w ents, Mr. and Mrs. on h Washington street. Mrs. Robert J. Yates and Miss nees Yates, who are spending thi Richmond. are at their e holiday season. lorence 1. Morgan of Mar- is the guest of her son-in- ughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. York th his ward Stab- wished that the Pan-An i Union | Cortain - Latin - Americans have | | Mrs, wood 1 of Nations has had suppor ot the door to collect an admission | ing which Hen s considered to auarters of the Pun-American Union | the United States nien meer o oot fee. “Ihe public growled. being ac-(be a degradation of vital energy. One from Washington and place 1t in a | dent Wilson and Col House in 1914 ) customed to receiving much for noth-| sees in his flashing eves the destiny Latin _ Ameri capital, because of |ang 19 Their plan called for a ing, and spoke of the Helen as|to great achievements and an early the dissatisfaction in some of the her loose association of states to “The Courtesan” who revealed her|ong, Latin American countries with the ntee mutually territorial integ- beauty only for pay. Neverthele: * ook % D v(k's of the United States Govern- nd political independence. The | the great teacher of painting BN AEAE R e e Crior vana ment. . lan also provided for the amicable | philus, dared to charge high prices for| 0% s Yot IRS. DARROW KIRKPATRICK, The United States would 100K | sottloment of international disputes | his instruction, and refused to take|kept him near to the brute. At the e oy Miss Eleanor E. Smith, |2skance at the or tion of a Pan-| by means of permanent international | any pupil for less than 10 years. The |agze of cight he led the c under | * gaughter of Mr. and Mrs. James | American League of ,"",‘}""”; Volith | commissions for investigation or hy | public at last accepted the artists'|,, . epepg eve at Chacrones Hawley Smith of Woodley Park, the |21 In character. 1t would rekard, of | phitration. At that time there was | valuation of their work and paid & l}“"mm il kel marriage taking place at her home |course, any attempt to take the hend-|gocided ~opposition on_the part of | aintings—of course, to deal- o quarters of the Pan-American Union [ oy’ pon s st ol sums for pa December | Washington as unfriendly. The | Chile and President Wilson later be o Rn);m’)t Saffelle of Richmond “ollege is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Saffelle. g 7 Mr. James Hartr of 12, Is the guest of Mr, and M itine Smith on Duke street { Mr. and Mrs. Hayward D. Luckett D. Luckett, jr. of i are the guests of th former's mother, Mrs. Lucie P Luckett, on South Patrick stree Virginia Cochran of Char- Mrs. Harry Hubbard of ex.. and Mrs. Charles Jack- £on of San Antonio were gu, iast wee s Cora Cochran on North na, Can- Val- ainters themselves, | “Courage i & in e D entury hefore | Anatole France: “it has even the rizht Svendn ‘o tha_coming conEross has | Same interested in a World League of | Alrea . tormeces | to do evil.” Alexander led his soldiers | member, a lad of 30 when, like a sd. Tt ihcludes Christ | some ancient masterpiece lexander led/bis soldiers [member, & 1 o 30 b rid, 1o |aiready been adopled. Itcincludes a | 5o ¥ ypin ponsibilities (hat hot| Columbus street brought American prices. Caesar paid | in battle atter battle. sc that thes plan_“to pl the Pan-American | poaqy from some of the Latin Amer- ‘ranklin Neal of R | had been Jed on to victory by imagina- | nent basis hy con B ar two mictures by Timomar- | plored him to protect himself, sever D Rtbe 0 et \ e s ican countries will undert: and by imagination he was to be e to it 0.000 for imes he was severely wounded, and | ti : O ety Gr e ot | chus. and Attacus gave S100.000 for & | Lhed 8 L0, NV was white with | destroyed. cluding a treaty or consention, dofin- | liver addresses in Havana antagonistic | reot L L b e rs. He mourned at his tuther's | B ety o it g to the policies of the United States . John Fowler of Johns Hop AR victories, saying there would be noth- | Kisnandiean Gol: sl e B - (| The United States. however, throush | T is spending Meanwhile, science and philosophy. | ing left to do. = S e s e | 18 delezation and through the pres | w s parents, M ' ¢ e stimulus of the | To find new difficulties he ¢ _His plan_for the fon oty s artiiG {ters ng|“nee of President Coolidge and Seere. | m Bruce Fowler, o0 still vigorous with the sUi East and West wa ntic as | agenda inc | tary Kellogg. will do its best to dem. | ngton street A nquer Persia. Th> old quar e e fpoaies | tween the two rival foci of the me great mames. NP cine from | cantile world in the last millennium BC) emancipated on. and under | before Christ had not been - quite priestcraft a o J thon: time and azain Davius’ | inter-American juridicial n vouth—he wouid daughter and encourage es among his s e proh | 2% Kelloge, ons t s s P Mr. and Mrs, H. A . | lems of communication: intelicctual | {5540 ]’mn:“;,‘l",'fi:h,"fl:’r','i',"‘;“, et wered ers and his | co. DII"I-ll ‘nn, l’l'fl;l“lll'(‘ || l!l;l"lx:l-“.l S0 that it has only friendship for lh.'l:; S K6 ik problems and reports on treaties, 3 s em. | 8 B oator d Democri. | settied at Marathon nd azain e this was a con: | conventions and resolutions. The MRS, FRANK ARMSTRONG, ¥ of s of induc-| (h2 Greek cities of Asia Minor had | (q fob 0 ™ ncarthy of an emperor; | time of the conference will be given | X Before her marriage last week she was Miss Margaret 152 S 2t R |1, S s A, I I o S 1 bt e o st Wil 2| [ ALEXANDRIA SOCIETY | |45 b B = ksl i, Frm . 1o - s it Ao iita e Igar e TG IR SIRpeT R awrious Pan-American | will live His knowledge of anatomy resolved to give @ wenerous impetu of o e | Madden of < at the rt M. Greenshoro, | Persian gold had nourished many of | “|the civil wars that tore and ruined | n Winchester, V ik n forbade disss A : to that ethnic fusion by intermarriaze, ted b ) g m :;:(‘}ndr:;i?\‘x:h:\s of therapeutics | (ireece. One Nw!"fln"‘;' tem WAas | \hich he hoped would make at last which met at Santiago, Chile,| There have been five large sub.| Philadelp e ) > i3 P o : a”f: S S laosimiciern. Whiet and regimen | (OVEINE 1ato unity the Nes ind | o ion of a thousand trilx 1923 The report drafted by the [scription dances during Christmas | | s arents Mt Ceoree " 1 from Or F = A ec than drugs, he thought. [the eastern Mediterranean: either |, amission of jurists tending to the week, in addition to several smaller | HCALY S parents, ) i Washbig 4 ke e e et gl Y nd the Persia or Greece would dominate that | ation of international Iaw and | private dances and a number of other | 11 Schwarzmann, on North Washing: 4 b i : the Persian robe of state and the dia- | N was the best doctor. ar At ersian symhol of supreme au L seex only to| unity. Darius proposed to Alexander | ician would In his | that they should divide and rule, but Instead of conquering the father of | Alexander answered, recklessly: “As i iV HESCH Fid begun to con- | ton street. mity in_civil, commercial pro- | parties for the young wle home lutal and other branches of private | from eollege for the holidnys. The| Miss beth Smith of McDonald w 1S to be considered. Belle Haven Country Club gave a | INstitute in Guelph, Ontario, and Mr and in | it would be impossible for order to | i ot a evering, the Gia” Do | Watler Snih ‘o Wil S Sars reign in the world with two suns" v, in his endeavor to Hellenize < last commission Minion Boat Club had three dances, | (0llese & of their par fines mev: It has amIion), i Hibila | O i e | The repart o€ (nth Iast commitssion | ) [Uol Rty CULn et pinee i nges | e By §00 uiT impossible for the earth to be at peace | (Hon v ideal ot the omnipotence and | may bring before the Pan-American ninge “and the American Legion en.|on Duke Smith has as With two masters.” In the year 235 | givine 1ight of Kings. He withdrew | congress a number of. political sub- | tertained at a e dance Thursday |her suest her clissy Miss Inga B.C. he crossed the Hellespont and set [ the i *h he Ned zranted to | tes to the commission evening at Elks' Hal, Hislop of Edmonton. Alberta. forth for Persia’s capital. the i) g : al propositions, Rev. and Mrs. William J. Morton | The marr Iren He stopped on the way at Troy to | glute § o nut embodied have had a family party with them at | linger, daughte nd Mrs. € Barrett’s rrett of skillful p! aid her against her enemie: “Prognostikon” the great medicine founded diagnosti his volume on “Airs. Waters and Places” he sketched the new science of public health. Laennec. the mod- ern founder of auscultation (the de- termination of internal conditions by ussion or the stethoscope) modest- 1y attributed to Hippocrates the credit Frank Me- Aert Colquitt Shack- Dr. and Mrs. W Alhemarie (o < nd Mrs. F r usual Christmas Rarrett’s brother- ster, Mr. and Mrs. Rath- . entertained at dinner for jects. Dele jresented these poli nd although they D 1 A | offer sacrifice at the tomb of Pro il hge the rectory of Christ Church, on Nor W ttor, to Mr. Charles PTG iy ary of | tesilaus, the first Greek who had put Pty in the projects submitted by the com hington street mnll:nl:l:'n:n::-.: a 1 GEAls. city: willi EakEin hce which the engagement Tbe teacher and cotemporary of | ¢ "o \efaric soll. At the aftar of | ~oiom In ok w8 later Napo- [ mission to the ( hhEyIAY, (e w and daughter. Mr. and Mrs ¢ in Terra Haute, Ind. Mr. and e and Lieut. Paul Barret s B ey the. doctrincs | Athena the youn warrior exchanged | fian wan to comp the people | 140 before that bady, Bl ERMI | fahn Armistead Deming of Baitimore, Mrs. Clacke will make an extended E0 Oher uent A O I snng Aoy e - .C.). 0 { his armor for a s b N e Aol S rom the whao . S et teyn est and re o Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. s g of his master. Leucippus Aelbicitag i o o S Dhave tniatiie O e | rom Mexico, the following proposition | yRse T e et | i 1 (86, 1ata e and Mrs, Alvert V.| Miss Mary Pra the most famous theories rpelig ¢ | mis| e bieden e A S -e | was submitted: M 1 o i . i 5 ikt nd Mre Clarence J. Rob. (2nd Mr. Harold L. ilosophy. aid a wreath on the tomb of | even in Alexander's day they were | Wis Subp : ‘. directly | #nd Mrs. Charles Bruce Morton, 2d. | and Mrs. Dettor had eir_ guests it o were married Su tory of science and philosop ! e | wiile vaky Do the fiturs, @irectly) | ANTATCS ClNkion S Brisoep Atueton ioit| AubMESERHL o DAL A8 UIGTE (et o7l At MYG arieie T : + “as | Achilles and reeretted that he could ell informe orld—the world of thoukht as e too well informed “"I:ll:z:he world of things—was com | DOt expect to have so great a biog- | Sophists and Platos ‘Democritus believed, of minute | Fabher as thut imperfect hero had |nothing. When it heard that Alexan- 3 ing combinations | found in Homer. These were delight- | der had become a god Greece merely e e 1 purticles “",““r'ieg“z;’;‘:_"‘. of the uni-|ful dramas stazed to appeal to the |Jaughed. The consent kiven 1o the LCCBBVINR | United States Military Academy. class | Ohio, where they will spend : made the N mis atomic theory. do. | imagination of Greece; they stamped | If Alexander had been a mature state by the state occupied WEE UL of 25, | with ceiatives. “I]x?::"uuv implifying an_ incalculable | Alexander as a lover of Hellenic cul- | genjus of thought, as well as a boy | lezitimatize the occubatiel Q% TI| Mr. and Mrs. Henry O'Bannon| M e Bemocritus drew a material. | ture and literature and as their ro-|of limitless courage in action, he, too. occupant Will be responsbl Cooper were Christmas zuests of the Mary Colles at the parsonaze ¢ Chur Rev. fie or by reason of any i and Aristotles for |or indirectly, nor by fily any heir other sons. Lieut. William J.{ington of Wash ce, occupy even temporarily any 5 0 o i p bty £ the territory of another state, | Morton U 3 X 00 West Boing: | Miv. and 6 = portion o 3 and Cadet Powhatan Moncure Mortor. | their children have sta Bode of T Cobb Ath: . is with her and Mr llen Ticer of William and who is at her hom= afterward : 1 | ma . i 5 ade ? ccurrences resulting from the occu- g, s o | o 1 pie -sogd e ‘hich has fascinated | mantic defender against the eternal | would have laughed and made it plain |occurrences T v t ormer’s mother, Mrs. F. L. Cooper.|for the holidays entertained at tea ed At the hok e "‘:ew;"m ‘:::‘:en::xio;s. | Oriant. to his friends and to the Greeks that | pation, not only with respect to the i, cyjpaper | Wednesd FRoGn Mrs. D 1t was in the same age that Plato| Nevertheless, it was against the this.sudden divinity was solely for e occupied but the third partl Miss Mary Berry of Marlboro, Md.,| = Miss A Price of St h Mr. | well.” 1t this proposition Were i ’tha guest of her cousin, Mrs. John | erine’s School. Richmond. and her dopted it v\n::\d by end "1‘: “,‘;?fii; F. Tackett, on South St. Asaph|classmate, Miss Mary Chinn of War- : - = sent out a call for mercenaries and |all who came to him on affairs of [jcan intervention in Nicaragua. FHatt/ sireet, | renton, are the guests of her mother Lnglpal:;) g-;;::mu;fl:g: thousands of Greeks had come. Alex- | State to kneel and kiss his feet. To and Santo Domingo; it would prohibit | "sir"and Mrs S Russell $mith of | Mrs. Overton W. Price. B¢ “molecules: it was the scene of a|ander met them at the River Granicus | make himself a little more seductive, |also any more Vera Cruz !m-hler\::i Culpeper have heen the guests of | Mr. and Mrs Carroll W. Ashby of Toyriad inchoate purposes strusgling | (334 B.C) and destroyed them, nearly | he shaved his face, o introducing an- | Several propositions along e, | thelr son-n and daughter. City | Columbia, 8. €. have been gues's t0. come to maturity and fulfiliment | losing his own life in the midst of vic- | other nuisance into Kurope. He | lines were submitted by other 7,' e- | Manager and Mrs, Paul Morton. Mr {M, a week of ihe latter’s: parents $n all things some subtle possibil | tory. Only the brave intervention of | dreamed of having Mount Athos|gates to the commission of Jurlsts.|,nq Mrs. Morton also have had as| Mr. and Mrs. D. 8. Watkins, on Greeks that the first battle of the |oriental consumption. Instead of that, campaign was fought, for Darius had | the new god issued an edict requirin gave his literary genius to the first Classic expression of an idealistic phi- i ol Kieinberg and berg of New Y Mr. and Mrs. Bened Asaph street. T. L. Berkeley and t to Miss Margaret Warwick on red nd M f their he h n-in-law and daux > e est | his friend Clitus saved him—Clitus | od into a vast statue of himself,|One submitted by Haiti Was: “AnY | their guests the Iatter's hrother-in-law | Duke street. b Robert: Bagle i ol — iol:::bnnn ll-l;h:fnxdl 2;’::::‘&:‘:‘:1 :un | whom later he would kill. with a town of 10,000 people living in [action earried out by a state. whether ', nq gisters. Mr and Mrs. John Mar-| Miss Mary Aitcheson entertained at 3 3 . unrealized. And (to resume so brieflv % % x his hand. When the Greeks about|by means of diplomatic pressure or I Taliatorro of New York Clty|tea vesterday afternoon at her home d Diviea Clifton & story often told) Plato’s astound- | him smiled at his new dimensions he | by armed force, in order to force Its | ind Mrs. Earl Whitehorn of Cald-|in Rosemont RS ET e sy upil. Aristotle, facing every prob. | ¢ marched on now with an army | sent them away and surrounded him- | will upon that of another state, con- well. N. J. | Mr. and Mrs Rohert S. Barrett " F. et < = of 35,000 men—hardly enough to keep | self with Asiatics accustomed to sub-|«titutes intervention.” From the | Mr and Mrs. Howard Teary of ' have had as th holiday xuests Sw ce an) -'t"-wé‘;';“f““ffi,:‘:fi"h:“":;ad, ot | an American city dry. He came upon | servience He scorned the cld udvis: | Argentine Republic came the follow- £ oze! Darius at Issus (333 B. C) and de- | ers who had led him to victory, and |ing: “A state may not intervene in | philosophy with unparalleled range of = : . | Pt ima mind. concluded that mat | fealed him o completely " that the | ordercd several of them killed ‘on a | internal nor in the externul affairs of | | | ter and atoms were but the husk of | 2564 King sued humbly for peace, of- | charge of conspiring to depose him. |another state.” The d it hiding "aeme persisrent cn | 1cFin% all Asia viest of the Euphrates | When Callisthenes, nephew of Aris- | paraguay to the commission of Jurists telechy. some inward urgency 1o x- pansion and growth which came far Alexander's counselors | otle, refused to acknowledge Alexan- | proposed the following: “Intervention '—'be't’d hiv:lhto n«'em-mbul he would { ders divinity Alexander l-undlvmnfl; or any act of a state within the terri- Jose: “hines | ML were there not still some worlds | him to death, and seemed careless of | tory of another state without a previ. :mr.‘n';-l:nflflt:rnmfi«of&":fi: to conquer? It was a momentous de- | the fact that this brutality brought|ous declaration of war, with the intent long battle began between matter and | C'ion: and a foolish one. Courage is| his old friendship with Aristotle 10 |(o decide by force, material pressure. ming, between mechanism and vital. | %, K74t virtue. but without intelli- | an ignoble end. ~ When Clitus (the o moral coerclon, Internal or external fom. for the guidance and dsmination | S55ce it 18 nothing. same who had saved him at Granicus) | auestions of the other atate, will be of philosophy. While Athenn died men | i 50 Alexander marched on, devour-| ghjected to his surrender to the Orlent | considered as a violation of interna- Sabght with Sesperate passion some | LS Cities every day. Atter a re and dared to quote Euripedex: tional law." wnreasonable viewmor mL that would | @Ple siege he captured Tyre (332 B.| “Are these your customs? © ® ¢ P Eive to human existence a permanent | el Ling the Persian fieet havenless. | Shall one man claim the trophies WOn whe commission of jurists under. xister !|Then he passed down and overran | by thousands y ~alue in the scheme of things and | g i 4 . " stood with regard to these proposi- ensble them o look withot terror | 1-57hy, allured, as Caesar was 10 be.| Alexander ran him through with & | ;0 tnat wome of them did not have ; " by the glamor of that anclent land, | spear, and spent the next three days|.. iy even upon triumphant death. AR A i - " that degree of maturity necessary for ut clear-headed enough to select an | in bitter tears. Incorporation in the codification, and WILTON RUGS for the Lzving Room ining Room and “Bed Room * % % ¥ admirable site for the great city that * ¥ ¥ % - - AMiiior as Wsaquirer. | was to bear his name and give its own | Greek lite,” said Hegel, “is essen- i (‘)’:‘o:l:“wg::":::g::: e Meanwhile in Macedon. the barba- | (e morneins 456 Turning back 0 | yally youthful; it was bexun by one ;"o nifestations of a_means of ob- a northeast, he marched straight | youth (Achilles) and ended by an- rians were preparing. Here was a|into Persia, defeated Darius again (it | shere - To underatand Alexander it mew and vigorous people, unspoiled | Arbela, 331 BC) and showed his gen- | jg necessary to see him as a boy s:ru with abortion or philosophy, poor | CTUMIY by honoring the memory of | gling with the problems of statesman- enough 1o be virtusus, and hardened | (B¢ a*sassinated monarch and treat-| ship: a boy brave withou' limit. Lut by a lie of tillage, peril and simplic. | 5 _his family handsomely. It de- | jimitably vain. Energy s cne half taining the commission’s views re. zarding pending American political questions. For this reason the com- mission decided to transmit and to submit some of them for the con sideration of the Sixth International o~ - | serves not that the three supreme con- art [ Pt nd Sty. In 336 B.C. their king, Philip. | “ of genius, harness is the oth . Conference In Havana.” annexed Thrace and founded the city | (0110000, Burobian histors—Alexan: | Alexander wan il eneriy, He lached | = Tho“comminsion id, however, in. of Philippi (where Brutus and Anthony ¢ Napoleon—though | the balance and moderation idealized | ), 0 SOEEREWI B TOAREICn killed ' magnificently, were al- 720 by ¥ocrates were 1o cross swords) in a region of | Lo s Yo by Aristotle and .culiz hy ¥ocrates, i e ys ready 1o forgive. And as spaminondas. Letter £nld mines rich enough 10 yield ten | Cupuar ‘gave Brutus pardon, and Na | o en AN e Jupite Bmes the return that now came to | oIT0T FOIS FLUtHs pardon, and Na'| far if, instead of going to Jupiter thens from the failing ilver of Lau- | {1 e i 0 had | Ammon to learn that he wax a.zod, he - tried to take hin life, 0 Alexander | ad gone to the Delphic Apollo and viwn. Before the death of Alexan- | 'l . B \hese Thracinn mines gave Marce | Ueated with indulgent humor @ pl- | jearned meden agan. age of 33 he was used |rate who had been comdemned “for y don $30.006.000 & ¥ and constituted | . o By th of it Sacommpicnons eoonoimic | LIk 1he ates unilys In the | having lived many years in answered the pirate, “In| yeur, “The arid climute of Axia same way,” helped to weaken him Neither he basis of international law governing the American Republics the following: “States directly injured by violation of international law may address themselves to the Pan-American Un. fon in order that it may bring about |an_exchange of views on the matt The code of International law which will_be submitted by the commis 'nor is that underlay Alexander's me- | which yo e SN Fomance. | ich you make the land unsafe. But History, #aid Renan, gives place only 10 the passionste and the ambitious, | because 1 do it in my little whip 1 am | por hix soldiers could drink without called a robber, and vou. who do it in | gunger the water of the hostils reg a great fleet, are called an emperor.” | which they traversed; more und his grouping of Wilton rugs embraces patterns of the most desirable designs and colorings. The long. wearing qualities of the sturdy Wilton weave are well known. Every rug in the group Philip made sure of hix place by being | Alexander gave orders that the man sure | . n s an | they relied on wine and solaced their both. He hud learned the art of War |whould be wet free. And when he wan | homestekoens. with —drinking bouts under Epaminondis, the Theban leader | taken to see Diogenes the Cynic— | Alexander could not be second in ny Whose military genius had put an end | member of that littde band born of thing, even in drinking. At a chal fat the hattle of leuctra, 371 BC) 10 | Bocratew’ simplicity. which abhorred | lenga from another youth e emptied Whe Spartan domination of Greece. | the urts and Juxuries of civilizatlon | oy times the great gobdet of Marcules Ranging his soldicrs in solid phalunx | and bade men live naturally. even HKe | e next duy - though feverisy. he 80 rows deep and buttressing them |the dozs (kynem)—and Diogenex. un. | rioted and aln. Then he with cavilry mounted on sy impressed by royalty, rudely ordered | took to his ix hree days Macedonian steeds. he drove them like |him to stand out of the sunlight, | of sickness. during which he continued wedges into the enemy’s lines and 50 | Alexander wpoke magnanmously” “I |t give orders for his army and his army could vesist him., Demomthenes |1 were not Alexander, 1 would be E i 4 . g pire, he died, azed 33. ' pled with the Athenians. in powerful | Diogenes.” But probably he much |}y ; , : A in innt words were in reply to the " o . > Vitueprative ors 1 resist abworn- | preferred to be Alexander. Men of | , 0 wh ’ cave | Aas tion by Philip: while Inocrates. in mild | action meldom return the intellect il i g P L‘,:L:',‘,.."“,'“J‘f; Lo Bl | en marred, [0 1M Mec lale ( &”‘1”((‘. at and pertert prove. whots eavayn ud [ mecret fuscination for a e of deeds. | 56 “hin time and 8 wrophecs of e | | Vorating the unity of Greece under{ Thirst stil unsated, Alexander | opaom ot would follow nim.. o the “1Pf this new und masterfu) man from the | marched on theough Persin (0o 1nain, | orragene s e aaq oW B “To th | these o j" VAR Borth, Athens 1ok the advice of the {and stood on the bankx of the Ganges eut were the Iomans, | orator, fought Philip a1 ¢ surely then he must have renlized 1027 by Wil Durant) | (88 B, woffered defent sand accept- | that there were many worlds 10 con g . | of without grace the Macedonian yoke, quer, and thut the earth, small as it ol B | Taocrnten Wked 1D an Gosthe | Was, win tos Snrme. for Alexander. | Woman “Vet” Wins Honors, -ORSFTE 4t e, | Mied Nopoleon, beeaume every philos. | i soldiers grambled, being men, 0oy Magion gtewnrt of Seotstaun. | W CPeastiol® ye gateetelaseics ouher pines for urity nnd goddn: and at lust their wintfol leader " S dudent nt the | Glamgow | nitee © 1 de G EGE e Ty of | atimires wtjon, " 11 wich telded 1o them, ond torned hin foce | \ogorinars oo i been i dod |y wne, \\"‘.“g Srselss | materislly better for Greee » unwillingly toward home, Fverywhere SaiEN T adl S ETGAITL o e o Cor /1 S8 by Phillp S Philin had not bean, | be Jeft garrinna and {ounded tawns L bl B T S I an Pie Napoleon something of u bar (thereby. and through his lenlence nt ut her wecond profes the (th barian, ersde. crael and dronk with | With doeal cults and institations, he aminution, AMinn Rlew 1$ i~ power, In addition. Philip Arank fike | hoped 16 keep the congoe il Bhekepnenre snd murried il ton in quiet subjection white he would mon. One of bis wives, Olvmpion. o | cvilize them with Greek philosop halfsavege Molossian princess. wha 00 irvegular verhs hed given bim Alexander. grew Jeslous He Jisd now brought under his s | passed with second cliss honors, in the first woman (o earn such o distinetion In Seotlind mthe 9 x 12 NewTork | ©ipah JameaR KendrichCo, Ine..Philadelphs Macedon snd Groeoe He wax o wild | forged 8 vast chain of empires s youth. energetic and passionste. o | pations f1o 3 Sunday, January Ist, 1928 Monday, January 2nd, 1928 of the er wives and 1o ke sure ;«1 ul{l The st ;. ot P TWO MORE FAMOUS COMMUNITY that Philip would hace no other heirs | J0lous of s nelghbors, and incapable nQ ombivad »1 ihe sasassination of the |9f Uity to win & corporate independ. | DINNERS King (236 BC) ence, e hnd conguered most of Awia Will Be Served in the s | Minor, chaotie with diverse and way ~ DA L e | e s W b HIGHLANDS CAFE " herefore. w € of | O Testament read ke Creasy’ . " i 20, Alerander found bimselt vuler of | “¥ifteen Decinive Battien; b el Connecticut Ave. and Californis St. ° PY Eaypt through Valestine, t.:‘:vmy' x:; l'.»’» tro . :u-‘_ Al‘h'-l IA,mo—nl:x“ Mju‘lm, Versis, Parthia 10 M ith ondness for sleobcl. For two | India Aid ot ven e " . e _r o AER G RS O LI ST T LS e aitery 709-711-713 TWELFTH ST, N. W, WASHINGTON, D. C. that glaclsl philosopher could yt cool | tribes, the wild heterogeneity of (helr Alexander's royul fire When. on the | cultures bellefs; he did not con Yed's woession. the Greek states re | eider the great distances that isolsted | Oxtail Soup or Oyster Cocktail Roasted Vermont Turkey or Choice of Koasted Meats “The Honse with the Groaew Shutters™ wolted, presuming on bin youth, he | them, and the scarcity of means for Braised Sweet Potatoes Two Greew Vegetables erushed them with o bhow . and [that persistent intercommunication | Sniibe .\nla:l Nesil when Thebea robelled aguin be burned L and exchange which ix il to | I « pith € te Suuce or 4 I & " R rd, It e wnaral Tna luniy. oW St acter Tt WOV A At L LB STORE OPEN FROM 9 A M. TO 330 P. M. DAILY, INCLUDING SATURDAY Bause of he poet Pindar and kave 10| have boen It he hsd ler Awin wh i 4 . \ 815 bt Theiwa # very liheral peace (und, tarning west, had solidifed the | Chpiceia] tewmansts Fastrivs Charge Aovvants Comvemenily Arnanged ;’"*:)’lw‘ Gresrs conmenerne, o | ltiia “u)m coimies of the Uren 1“ I)Rl(‘h' $|.25 Froight Paid To All Shppeng Points i tde Ui pwerful Maredonian party arose, | from Thrsea tn Naple calm 3 . { Which sreved how well 31 would be for | st nough In body and soul o Sunday Dinner, 1 to 7:30 ) " i Vil v, She Oraaks 1o he forged into unity | witheiand the coming Orienin) um‘: Monday Dinner, § to 7:30 Sloane Endorsed Menbemdie Carvies An Auwnamy ond led 16 new toiumphe by so splen Jof anigration and elief But he 44 / B34 6nd ferocious a king. The tneom: [ olssed the banes 1o be w better Phone N, 1240 f orgnn || We are able to seat 200 people in our spacions well-ventilated Dining iz Hoo Come early and avoid the rush, we wmust e Tetence wnd covuption of e Athe | lome, to be oo genins Tium apsmbly hid rousht 1o Ataens zation givinx evdor o @ Babb veane sheyticim of populer sgye ul geniuses. Me wax,