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| Art and Artists Reviews of Books EDITORIAL SECTION The Sunday Star. - Editorial Page Special Features Part 2—12 Pages MORNING, MARCI 18, 1928, CWASHINGTON, D. (., SUNDAY U. . TO INVITE 55 NATIONS | | TO JUBILEE OF AIRPLANE An Intimate Pictum;e0 of William M..Jardine filled with dapper young persons and he | Is sorry for their occupants. He has | found that out of difficulties self-confi- dence Is born. * ok kW It seems a far jump from rustling ! cattle, raising crops, chopping trees, to being a college president and a member of a President’s cabinet. It would be if it came in one leap, but Jardine be- 'LONG PEACE FOR EUROPE " SEEN IN TRIPLE ACCORD | | 1 | British, French and German Co-operation Declared Surest Guarantee Against Any Serious War. By NE HARD. | BSERVING Dr. Willlam M. Jar- dine, the Secretary of Agricul- ou begin to examine g “hie: | your sense of humor. i at Chi *ago. ! “Of course. vou think you = ! have one. Every onc thinks he has one F What kind is yours? Are you the sort { person who thinks humor bagins and | with “funny story?” Are First Flight by Wrights to Be Marked Iso by Exposition in December | | ture, BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. |even to disturb the German mind. 1f the French still imagine that Germany BY FRANK H. SIMONDS. they wish to reach. They will particu 5 larly be invited to fly to the Chicago | ends a lleves that after the first job the next SRLIN.—What are the prospects | silver jubllee of | 18T B iohey 3 oW s bored by t | cherishes the hove of recovering_ the © (e “Bret flight by mAD in an | EXpositon and o make ntervening | 301 Ue tort B0 e by A jthould follow es the matural conse- of peace and of war in the BU- | iq Reichsiand, 1 confess that I have airplane—the _achievement of ;i {1y Canada, Cleveland and Day- | Witty answer? OF ate ou the sort s Ottt Tl A piies Suy of Hiom must. occupy more of the | 10t been able fo find a single German Wilbur and Orville Wright at " a¢ Dayton " the home of Orviile |of person who loves that humor which achievement. attention of any observer s”k_’who even dreams of such a thing. For _ . Kitty Hawk. N C. on Decem- | \wrient. it is planned to hold a festiv- |lies deeper than words, which often can- | Son of & Scotchman who went out|ing to establish the cxisting condi- | S, Alsace has been ’&ffin;’"g:"‘?f ber 17, 1903—the United States is about jiy or ‘cercmony which will be of pe- [not be expressed in words—the humor | with the Union Pacific till it married N e skt T TE e %o invite 35 foreign governments to be Uncle Sam's official guests at the end of 1928. The Department of Commerce and the State Department will join in bid- ding the world to come here. They are acting in nee of the suggestion culiarly personal character and by way of a tribute of honor to the surviving brother of the famous pair of air pio- neer: Those foreign guests who care to re- main over will be urged to take part in the annive proper on its formal of character and the irony of life? 1f, you are this last sort of person, you will | thoroughly enjoy the conversation of | Secretary Jardine--known to his old His_deeply the Southern Pacific in_the wilds o Utah, he read the old classics his father had loved and worked with his hands and fought his way. He was— in his own spicy speech—inclined to be “lippy." Every one knows that a “lippy” boy survives after difficulties—if he sur- tions in Europe. No subject can be I more interesting and more puzziing (arl the American, for whom European dis- sents an example of the failure of the older Germany to reconcile a population patches, even in the most months, have been filled with the re- ports of storms alike on the Baltic and ments of disputes between Poland and recent | the Mediterranean, with the announce- | | which all believe might have been won | by wiser tactics. Eastern Frontier Problem. On the other hand, with respect of mads by President Coolidge last De- | gate” Decem 17—-at Kitty Hawk. | Small eyes of the humorist, not the | vives at all. Lithuania, Jugoslavia and Italy. i orri cember, when he proposed to the CVIl | There ~ along “Barrier Beach,” near | 1arge eyes of the idealist. His wide cars 1 ""This dynamlc man must have been a | *Sceking an answer 1o this question. I | aerein Cariqor,nd Upper Bilesia, Am\gn" ical Conference. then meeting | giizabeth City, N. C. where Wilbur |stand out back of his countenance as | super-charged boy. He did regular farm |have in the past six months traveled | France and Britain desire that Ger= in Washington. that the Wright anni- | ;4 orville made history on the South |if to hear everything going on behind work by day and was the first one to!from the Pyrences to the Baltic and |many should co-operate with them. in Yyersary be {"“"fl“ commemorated N paniic sand dunes on a bleak Winter [ him as well as before him. His thin, rise in the morning so that he could |irom London to Danzig, and in the | the whole field of European affairs the g An._;_.m - R dopt. MOMINg in 1903. their epochal triumph | wide mouth stretches back ‘nto a smile |get the fires lighted and wrangle the | present article I shall try to set down price the fixed and !mmutable price, wo distinet plans have been adopt- | wijj e marked by a program in which |as he talks. The voice that issues has | horses for the hands, He had to gothe impressions resulting from discus- | ie the revision of the eastern fromtiers, ed. One calls for the holding. under o,mmemorative addresses probably will |2 plangent vibration, a carrying quality. into the primitive forest to chop the!sions with the statesmen, the diplomats | To Poland the Germans all conced ! - of the American aviation |be the outstanding feature. President | e firewood. At 17 he ran a scraper in an |and the journalists of many countries. | posen. That revision of the frontiers e o T dod, || | Coolidge may be the orator of the oc- | Muscular arms end in two large irnigation ditch. At 20 he fode the|Bevond all else, however, these Impres- | JUld b accompanied alike by moers rt icage s ed. 15 | casion. Orville Wright, of course, Will | hands, with thumbs flattened on one range, strung barbed wire fences, |slons have been derived in three capi- | antees of free access to the sea through o Morgan of Columbia—Explains Limit to Changes the most ideally situated spot for the exhibition. because of its central lo- cation and physical facilities for a show ‘The other plan is the one the Federal Government will directly sponsor—the international conference in Washing- ton. Seven-day Exposition. As tentatively arranged. the Chicago be on hand. He is not given to speech- making. but is certain to be invited to | deliver a memorial address, if he can be | provailed upon to do so. | Noted Delegates May Come. | The United States is leaving Rt to foreign governments to designate the type of dignitaries they prefer to send here for the Wright silver jubilee. It edge. They are the living history of the time when he was the champion milker | of his section. A muscular body carries two broad shoulders energeticall reminiscent of the days when he was a 165 fullback. His college mates say that if he had | happened to enter one of the Big Five | or an Eastern college he would hn\‘c] | ! branded cattle. ! He was never a “cowboy” in the| sense that men were cowboys in Texas. | He was always a farmer—a Montana | farmer, a Utah or Idaho farmer—with all the slants that the great mountains | |and wide valleys and free conditions of | life in the Western '90s imply. | Moreover, he was going some day tc ‘tals —London. Paris and Berlin. ‘The sum total of all these impres- sions makes for optimism. At no time since the war have I found quite as great a unanimity in the popular feel- ing and the public policies of the three countries, still recently divided by the struggle of the World War. I do not think it is possible to exaggerate the ex- tent to which the passions and the fears | German territory and the German guar- antee of the new frontiers precisely on the terms of the Locarno agreement, all assent. There. 50 far as I can see, German conciliatory spirit ends. There iz no German idea of reconquering the lost territories in the east by arms. But the German statement is that no or- exposition will open December 1, and is hoped at Washington that they will been a nationally famous foot ball hero. college. 5 ganization in the east, no perma continue for seven or eight days. It | delegate government aviation officials, | You can well believe it when you | To get into the college 40 miles gom g: dlh; war and pre-war periods | consolidation of the Euroneax?esuul{‘isa‘r‘\z wil be immediately followed by the | industrial leaders and famed flying | know Jardine, for this very humor of | away, at Logan, Utah, he had to|Rave died down. |is possible without full German partic. ‘Washington conference, which will open on Wednesday, December 12, and con- tinue until the end of the day on Fri- | mber 14. The purpose is to | permit_foreign delegates who may wish | %o be home in time for the Chnstmu; | ing, will assemble as a “‘committee of men. Uncle Sam, it goes without say- entertainment” the fast-growing group of air celebrities which this country boasts. Lindbergh, Byrd, Chamberlin, Levine, Maitland, Hegenberger, Schlee, his is a fighter's humor. He likes to hear a good story, but doesn’t remember | an anecdote to repeat it himself. The | sort of story he remembers is one like | his own tale of what he saw haj 'n to a Swede. o PPER 10| o mcial lite in Washington, like official | life in any capital, has a way of stereo- the horses. He could only stop them by heading straight into a tree—one wrangle a certain amount of Frenci and math as well as cattle. But he got in—older end a whole lot wiser than | the other students. Of course, he paid for his own education, farming Sum- mers. By the time he was a senior he Masses Thinking Alike. I can discover today no serious di- vergence in the opinions or in the state of mind between the masses of the peo- ples of France, Germany and Great Britain. In fact, while appeasement ipation and frontier revision. |, The single hope for a peaceful re- adjustment lies in the possibility that Icreu Britain and France, supported | by American finance, will exercise upon the Poles pressure sufficient to compel holidays to take steamer from New |Brock, the American Army fiyers who | When he was a boy he was over in | elp in the teaching. | ane iciliati = acquies 3 York o other points on Saturday, De- | grcied the globe, e Navy aviators who | the Big Hole country in Montana. Be- | o T D D B A TR R T s O ) s oo riiin reicallone | Betwsannithe nevmien. B ] T s nehe oo b cember 15 have added to the country's air luster, |Side the cabin ran a swift mountain |is very probable tha il BCt| vith the idea of becoming an engineer, |tual confidence and co-operation be- | native is not disguised. For them the The “agenda.” or program, for the | aviation conference has not yet been | worked out. Nothing at present is| contemplated by the United States Gov- | ernment in the form of another inter- | national aviztion convention. We have | slready signed two such conventions— | ted in Europe, vhich was never | t Washington, and the other v adopted at Havana and ap- plving to pan-American states, which also awaits ratification. It is within the range of possibilities thet some of the foreign governments Feature Airplane Travel. and other luminaries of Yankee flying genius, will extend the hand of welcome to foreign guests. It is confidently hoped that the Wright jubilee will| bring together on our soil the most dazzling galaxy of aviation “stars” of all branches of the art yet assembled. Willlam P. MacCracken, jr., As- sistant Secretary of Commerce for Aeronautics, is in active charge of the preliminary arrangements for the Wright celebration. He will have pres- | ently the lively co-operation of F. Tru- Davison, Assistant Secretary of Office Department will have a big hand | in arranging for the jubilee, too. Uncle Sam will not have much to exhibit to itrough,” he said to the boy, stream, which froze at the bottom and became coated with ice at the top.| There was also a sow with a litter of plgs—a very ugly sow. In April, when | the thaw was beginning, he and the | Swede built a fine new sty and the | Swede told him to get her into it. He | tried to explain to the Swede about that sow, but the Swede wouldn't listen. | “You yoost put some milk in the the Jardine of cow punching and root1 ball playing and dry farming—persists to a very much higher degree than red | carpet and gold plate suspect. You will | never get that Jardine out of his solemn, ' expert-revised articles, not even—en- tirely—out of his less solemn but al- | most equally official soclal presentations. * xox* .Inthe | you might, of course, suspect the real 3 e an’ I'll | jardine from that humorous face of his, show you how to do it! Vet, to get that side of him, you have to So Bill got the milk and the sow put | ialk with his old her snout into it. The Swede came up js significant) are still his true friends. | slide for the brook. He never stopped dn in middle life—the inner meaning | till he was on the thin ice. As he went ' of vouthful episodes, He remembers, a: under the chill water, the sow was off | we'do in middle iife, the object lessons ‘Turanian way. irfends—wio (and this | yneg 4 % | chances like those. them up alone, mend the harness alone, pile the poles back and bring them though home alone. he was. He did it, boy A Another time he was taking some |ularly called “dry farming.” and was ‘The procedure | was to wait untll the grass was right {in the Spring and then drive the cattle along the grass routes in the ancient He had to try out & |nags and one-eved cayuses, hoping he'd He rog«- i buy them. B cattle up the valley, fjord through rushing water. His horse began to drown. | he had soon (being older than the other |students and a whole lot wiser) made !up his mind that agriculture was just as | much of a profession as law. i He became interested in what is pop- | |g|ven charge of a big enterprise. Be- cause he was only little over 20, the lmen on the job tried to put things over lon him, and brought in broken-down | But he fooled them. | He unloaded the first tractor ever, tween Stresemann, Briand and Cham- berlain has no parallel in European his- tory, at least since the Franco-Prussian war. In reality, Europe is today regulated by a concert of Europe, which includes France, Germany and Great Britain. No more striking example of this fact could be supplied than the experience at Geneva several months ago, when Stresemann joined hands with Briand and Ch#mberlain to end the state of war existing between Lithuania and jumped off his horse and swam back.!seen in the country. only to d,;cavfl-:l’nllnd. provoked by the Polish seizure Young people today don't often get But Jardine thinks | you can find a way, even for the chil- country, got & spare part, and was back | at noon next day to make it work. | ! against Poland temptation to the German foreign min- ister to play the game of Lithuania Nor_ was there less opportunity will come when Russia re- gains her strength. In that day they see Poland caught between two greac and hostile powers and crushed as it was a century and a half ago between Austria, Prussia and Russia. And in- evitably this possibility envisages clote | and closer relations between Germany ! and Russia, which all believe will one ldny emerge great and united. Possible Breaking Point. _ And here one touches upon the ques-' tion which may one day be the break- . ~ | War, in charge of aviation, and of Ed- [behind and seized her legs. : " sel opean send representatives in Decem: . . & Looking backward himself, he does not | Tha horse drowned, but he ved the | S ‘t work. ipj &nd continued possession of the city ing point of present Eur co- ay want (0 put something forward | ®ard P. Warner, Asslstant Secretary of | With a roar she was on her feet, the | qwell on his riding of the range, as he |caitle. " 0 e % L l',lu:,‘;::,d" O s leaceralin | Jd diatrict of. Vilna: operation. For France, the ally of way of New World air treaties LB DRI, | Swede went out from under and hit the | giq at 20. He does remember—as we | In bed, he drove 20 miles through rougi| 1n this dispute it was an obvious Poland. the reorganization of must be under the existing treaties and without disturbance of the existing frontiers. And today, France demands CERa Europe that will open her eves in the | for the woods wi s f Idren of today. He set his own son to| . - - gokravel by airplane is to be ane of the | realm of passenger air travel, but Post- | her, (he o x ine of D AU | f early experiences. and keeps the | CTliing up at 4:30 In the morning to * ok ox ok | $hining opportunity offered for a sim- | of Germany, as one of the conditions e I be oo siENt SNDIVETSATy, | master General New has Lindbergh's | sow, the squeals of the pigs, the unsym- | pa 0"~ 2 S Of [Sell papers (had he not himself been| He heard of an examination for a | iar policy of playing one nation | of early evacuation of the Rhineland, e e oY ic American | authority for the contention that the | pathetic guffaws of the boy, and the | "'se remembers the time when he went | UP at 4 to make the fires before he |Government job—in the department |A8ainst another when affairs between an acceptance of the eastern frontiers Gipnitarics, if they Geiie. will be figwn | United States is miles ahead of the | dialected imprecations of the Swede as |yp in the mountains cutting poles. He | Went out to work with the men in the which he now heads—whicl would_fl‘""“ Italy reached something as the western have already been ac- o thehs hoits o e Old World in the development of the |ho observed such a lack of sympathy. | was a good pole cutter: so when he was | flelds?), had him sell peanuts and bring in a salary of $2.750. He was | ke a real crisis last year. Cel"“d through the Locarno pacts. R poue riation, on ar- | air mail service. ! * wox % pe { | stockings. getting $1.200. He got 94 in the exam. ! Conciliation Gains Ground. n recent times the growing tension rival in the United States, to any point | (Copyright. 1928.) PROFESSOR DENIES SCIENTISTS ARE DISCARDING DARWINISM| General Evolution Theory in Stature of Race Is Gaining, Writes T. H. | Due to Selection. | realist can enjoy. /16 he went alone, with an old wagon That is the kind of humor that the | top for ¢ tent, and stayed up there on It is the humor of | the mountain, still alone, cutting poles men who deal with life at first hand— |and cutting roads to them. for two rough stuff humor that neither takes | weeks in the icy weather. Finally he nor gives odds, the humor of experience. | piled a load of the poles on his wagon When ycu see Jardine about Wash- |and started for home, 3 miles away, | ington, when you see the well valeted | straight down the mountainside. Sud- Secretary with his tall, slender, gracldus | denly the poles loosened, slipped down. wife, laying his topper in the hall and | prodded the horses behind and they lit proceeding up the red carpet to the gnld |out down that slippery slant. Would piate dinner, it i3 very hard indeed to | you have known what to do? | picture him in that early setting. | Young Bill knew. No use to try to| It is doubtful if red carpet and gold | rein them in. Every leap a slip and plate ever get the real Jardine at all. | every slip a new prod of the pole into and pi When he found the son ready for " college at 15, he sent him off to Dakota | landed! ut him onto a farm where he had | ;a fight his way, with no odds in his avor, e where he had to get out and learn to (“dry farming. harvest and milk as his father had—not under such stern conditions as his |everywhere, one of the fleld men of father had faced, but sufficlently far [that department—traveling, observing. from the tender ministrations of the |Studying, storing up information against | rme of a cabinet member in Wash- | h ngton. Jardine looks at limousines purring |Club_of Washington. whose plain food down the boulevards of among immigrant Russian: Wa. hington | “Gee," he thought. “I sure have that | No so. ‘The man who had set the paper himself got the job. Soon after, however, Jardine was in| the department—in his own speclalty of Soon he was traveling about the West, here and there and his then unknown future. Soon was a member of the famous Cosmos a (Continued on Third Page) SENATE SEEN USING NEW POWER | DAILY CHANGES IN ROTATION Such a policy was urged by the Na- tionalists, advocated publicly in the still recent debate upon foreign policy in the Reichstag. but greeted with con- temptuous criticism by the bulk of the German press. Steadily and de- cisively, the men and the parties ad- vocating conciliation and co-operation have gained ground. It one examines the domestic polit- ical conditions of Great Britain, the same fundamental circumstances are discoverable. The Tory cabinet in Britain has not only squarely adopted the policy of conciliation, begun with shining success by its Labor predeces- sor, but there is today between the three great parties in England no between Britain and Russia has led | British statesmanship to perceive the value of Poland and of the Polish army jas a vu%en against the Baolshevists. | Along with this political development ! has gone a growing economic and | financial interest in Poland. | In the same fashion, the recent | American loan to Poland is' viewed in | Germany as nothing less than a dis. | aster for German hopes. Indeed. the | whole policy of Germany toward Poland | been modified because of the Brit- ish political and the American financial | support of the Slav state. Recogniz- !ing that for the moment nothi can be done, Germany has accepted the hard necessity of finding a working | basis with Poland commercially and ac- L ot et b e o g e g s e stz | IN REJECTING ESCH FOR 1L C. €. OF EARTH NOTED BY SCIENTIST [l i a'in s ot muS5fh | Sping rioral” crcomsancs fo winism is dead and that scientists are | generation, the smaller individuals are A SR | S BN 'dj:gl‘:;m:(“ émmx':fmngr ut fllc'[,m;’ But Germany has not accepted Po- rejecting evolution wholesale, is sharply | destroyed and only the larger ones left e v ! land. as created at Versailles, as a [ challenged by Prof. T. H. Morgan of Columbia University, one of the fore- most of living biologists. Writing in the April issue of the Yale Review, Prof. Morgan states that this misconception apparently has arisen from a confusion over the several dis- to breed. The same result follows, and the average may again be somewhat ! larger. | “Experience has shown, in fact, that | the average population may in most | cases be changed by eliminating con- sistently certain kinds of individuals But then Precedent in Exercising Confirmation Right | of Upper House. | Punishment of Official for Action Taken Said to Be‘ Dr. Benjamin Boss Believes Phenomenon of Earth-| quakes Is Related to Oddities of Cosmic Movement. ald and Lloyd George is not based on the direction of Tory policy, but only at the rate of its. progress in the direction all desire to travel. In France a coalition government. with the redoubtable Poincare at its head, still follows the concillatory poli- cies of Briand. who himself remains permanent fact. What Alsace-Lorraine was for France in the very first days after the German annexation of 1871, Danzig and the Corridor remain for Germans. | In my judgment, the Polish question, the Corridor question. as it has now come to be known to the world. consti- tinct meanings that Darwinism has through a few generations - Ao y comte t have. In lts broad sense. s the process slows down rather quickly e — | = T o emive tec, | tutes the gravest single problem in meaning evolution in general, the doc- | and soon comes to an end. Further e e | Every day (the earth changes a lttle | the earth tur . i : ? ¢ imes contemporary Europe il BY DAVID LAWREN and'as to politics must be considered as . & e earth turns, any change in the rate | ference. Again no one even magines ; trine is becoming more firmly fn- | selection falls to produce further change IR AR SHeTich'or & cate Dy mkise & | n/fti pate. o votablan: of the earth’s rotation would affect the | that Briand will at the forthcoming rahe 1078 trenched every year. In its more strict sense, as meaning | olution caused by natural selection at work on small, fluctuating variations | a given plant or animal stock. Dar-| inism has come in for more or les: icism from scientists, though even| i does nol mean that it has been | It merely means that in » | The tallest may be no taller than be- The upshot has been not to produce a new race in which all the individuals re taller than the tallest of the original ace, but only a race in which the average individual has become taller. fore. This fact was not known to Darwin, or at least, if vaguely known, it was not given due weight.” Rejection by the United States Sen- ate of the name of John J. Esch, who was renominated by President Coolidge for membership on the Interstate Com- merce Commission, raises the biggest issue with respect to the judiciary since the famous proposal to recall judiclal declsions. The Interstate Commerce Commis- |decision, In other words, the Senate can by following the practice in the | Esch case make itself a reviewing bod: on the judicial decisions of Independen commissions. Esch case than sectional pressure and | resentment as the change of vote by | This is the opinion of Dr. Benjamin Boss, director of the Dudley Observa- tory at Albany, N. Y., and director of | the department of meridian astrometry There 1s much less politics in the | of the Carnegle Institution of this city. ppears to earth- Furthermore, this varfation a be related to the frequency of right ascension of the stars. | Variations in Time. | For some time, says Dr. Boss, it has | been known that the sun, the moon, | and the planets Venus and Mercury, | undergo changes indicating the vari- | able rotation of the carth over long| periods of years election be replaced. while the general bellef is that such change as takes {place in the composition of Parliament will bs a change in the direction of greater co-operation with Germany. Stresemann's Prestige High. As for Germany, since Bismarck no forelgn minister has possessed even a Language Study Aided By Jewish Catacombs Bad spelling on tombstones in the Jewish catacombs of Rome indicates iy fi g Mr. Esch affected adversely the interest scientists have recognized certain diffi-| Prof. Morgan s inclined to believe slon is partly an administrative body | Mr. Esch affected adversely the Interests | quakes..and so further investigation of | The annual change in the star posi- | fraction of the popular support or the how the Jews who lived in Rome in jes that were not clearly seen in ‘md partly judictal. Mr, Esch was pun- of coal operators in West Virginta, Vir-{jt might aid in the study of quakes. |tjons. says Dr. Boss, can be ..xpx,':'n..d political prestige of Dr. Stresemann, the early Christian centuries pro- Darwin's own day. Prof. Morgan calls ette: these, which makes it difficult e one species from another that the force which gets new species | ' past the limits of the old is to be sought in the phenomenon of mutation, n which sudden and relatively large anges occur. When such changes are hereditary, as they frequently are, they ginta and Kentucky and aided those in | ished admittedly by the Senate because | b, ovlvania and Oho he changed his vote on a judicial ques- tion before the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Senate has asserted the right to |the Senate were advised that the vote | was taken conscientiously, but the dis- on the interpretation of law, a bellef Dr. Boss has found evidence for this Members of | apparent varlation in a long study of | | At the Dudley Ob- | | servatory an exhaustive eatalogue of star agreement was not personal, but largely | places is in preparation, and in the work on this It has been found that star positions by a daily variation in the rate of rota- tion of the earth. Possible evidence in favor of such a variation is suggested when checking clock time with the stars. for it has been found that there | and Stresemann is the consistent cham- plon of the policy of reconciliation with France and co-operation with the Western powers. When, in the Rajehs- tag the other day, his Nationalist op- ponents attempted to criticise Strese- nounced Greek and Latin, according to | Dr. Harry J. Leon of the University of Texas. Scholars have wondered whether the Jews who formed a settlement in Rome | clung to their Hebrew ways or whether “If any particular charac provide material on which the process |reject for confirmation anybody whose L 15 a dafly variation in the clock rate, | size or color, is measured in of ratural selection can work in the |views do not concur with the Senate's (B WLE EAR fofied 6 Tollow The Wishes | considerable corfection, which varles | which indicates that the earth may | mann, ~thelr foeble atiompts were ihey did as the Romans did, Dr. Leon rumber of individusls of a race manner postulated by Darwin interpretation of the law. President o, CEREICD. BRC G ml:" TR l.nnllmll).'lthnr:'drd (::[r_hlhel lr‘nzht AS-| change daily in the rate of its rotation, | greeted with derisory laughter. And. | explains. Six Roman catacombs where species, it is found to vary. Bom Students of evolution, Prof. Morgan |Coolidge has insisted on his right to |FROrnl FER A0 o on, expires, the | s & tho oatesiey: e Tight ascen- |~ That the changes in the moon and | despite the fact that Germany. 100, |the Jewish residents buried their dead | visible body structure, such as claws question prospective appointees to in- sion 1s the celestial equivalent of longi- is on the verge of a general election, |are now known, and study of the ine the individusls will be smaller or fainter | thinks, have concentrates v stars are both due to the same cause in color; others, larger or darker: but| attention. on l‘fi;“fi;‘u:wf, ‘f,’.",ue'!?“fi,’; dependent establishments as to their flm"';tm’ r:’f“rmg";l‘:;flg;‘ (‘;"1 '}urrllam:t tude. ~ As n telescope ft'rm-mn"v is indicated by the fact that. when the ; NOthing is more certain than that|scriptions on the slabs and the gallery views, and to make his appointments e xel resident, | placed on the earth would point to|minor fluctuations in the moon's path, | Stresemann will continue in his present | walls shows that the writing is three- the great majority will be average or | le but the opinion of the Se Now the Benate in effect in the struggle for survival an ex- different right ascensions in the sky as post and his policies will suffer no unmistakable drift toward the liberal !fourths Greek and one-fourth Latin, class, If the smaller individuals | and teeth, at the expense of less | 4ccordingly. and the variation n star positions, are are destroyed and the larger omes be. | tangible but perhaps more lmponla:v says that it the President has that plotted over a long period of years, the | change i Often words n the inseriptions are con- come the parents of the next genera- | things such as inherited ability to with- |F8ht in advance of an appointment, So curves are closely similar. Asout 1860| Belween the three great Western fused with other words of similar tion, the res population w | stand cold or drought, or to run or fly has the Senate, and that when r.’ both curves reached & minimum, while | powers the success of Locarno IS no | sound, so that they are misspelled in show & wids f variabi] fast. which are of obvious mportance |Esch is nominated for a new term, it ()t ne about 1900 they ware both a @ high flonker © be questioned, In all three, characteristic wavs. Jewish ritualistic it Just the same as if he were a new | mark. Since that they have been go- | there is in domestic politics the same fsympbols on the tombstones are signifi- ! member of the commirsion and !Ing down, until 1920, when the moon | cant evidence that the epitaphs on the amination were made as to his pre- K ; | fuctuation reached a minimum. For | And even radical parties. The “stand- |yngerground tombs were indeed written ™ aa > @ S -] vious views on elther a 2 commis- , K TON the last 10 years the 2y | patter those who cling to the old yy Jewis) opl > iy Gestures Are Called Origin of Speech S tat BY BRUCE BARTON. tar "Vaciabionn. have. ner seencoms | onceptions' of forelgn telations. are | Pvasty Br. Loon pot par " AW . 4 " | New Phise of Silustion. LITTLE MAN, swelled up newspapers carried caustic edi- | |pleted, but they also seem to have|in full "“'Mr And between the lib- Jewish population in Rome, Af“.r Slllll\' ll\' Bl'lllhll lll"l',fil gill"l’ IR gkt vona with & pleasant sense of the telephone rang | |teuched a minimum gbout the same |CTR1 parties of the thres countries. and | wpien grew to about 40000, was ne : b oo Thix tight to_pase . L self-importance, stopped | angrily; men walked through the | | Ume. Dr. Boss believes that this fndi- [ Particularly between the leaders here {yore familiar with the Hebrew lan. andidate for u Federal position | es very stongly that the two varia- |13 & surprising degree of divect com- |guage than the average Jew of toda ance af confirmation s never heen me at the corner and in- office with large packages of tlons are due to the same cause. munieation. | The more cultured among them spoke | | A theory ¥ wcoount for the way in with the natural gestures (of hands A Prominently questioned, but the right| | sistad on telling his story. But Josephus seemed as | | “\what this cause may be i t cor-| SO far. then, the European sk¥ I8 |praun ac well which Janguage was invenwd by primi- | #¢) which are still made by deaf| ! reject a nomination us a punishment | He said that the general man- | merry as a lark [ tath, bt D Hons thks that 1rs sery | briaht, brighter than I have seen it fine'™ 55, X€ll a3 he popular Cireek, tive man has been sdvarced by Bir "ULH 8nd that these gestures were | 1o un action taken Iy something new. ager of the corporation which “You don't appear very worried | |likely to be the vesult of tides fn the | 20 years. For it s self-evident that | ppejr nseriptions afford valuable mas Richard Paget, s British seiontiss, why, | P4% sudible by breathing or grunting.” | It Is not confined o the Inters employs him had sent a letter of | by what they are saying about | |earth. “This view Iy supported by the i relations between Paris, London aid | jerjal in tracing the history o the ¥ ftish sclentist, who | Commerce Commission. The Benate P AT b st S A B B R fact (hat Dr. A. A. Michelson of the | Betlin are close and confdent. the|Greek and Latin languages in their de« is experimenting in speech production herd has manufactured a num- WOords in the way Lnal he believes must have ornginacd and these Any Digging in Italy Yields Things of Past holding up the confirmation of the members of the Radio Commission on the rame general principle and ihere s been similar CONtoversy over mem- and that the wrong about it wrong | cauld not was something Just what was quite make “Oh, no," he laughed. “One of my men ups! % 18 opening the mail and sorting the letters into University of Chicago has actually ob- | tained experimental evidence of earth | tides x.w.mmw of & general European con- agration fs insignificant and the prob- ability that France, Britain and Ger- many in close co-operation will be able { velopment from the classical tongues of [autiguity to’ the modern Greek and {the romance languages of our day, Dr. Leon states. been compared by Dr . bers of the Bhipping Bourd out, but it provided the little | two piles—those that praise me Tidal Feietion. [0 prevent & smaller disturbance is . ymant with worcs of Almort any Maban public improve- | The view prevalent in Congress man with an opportunity. and those that abuse me. 8o far, "“;’"(“ ““:-“ i "“:i n\;mflrm o ae- | very great g . ing belonging W ment or bullding construction v . that all these independent extablish- " x o f count for the observed phenomena, but N » N H " g belovging 15 eurly nent. or pulldlng conatruction which fn- | Al Wil these independent esmin. | Atllave may Lo Loamien au: | the (e nllesiare: itnningsndsici]E e ther gutes aratiatishatensttin ke | Some Diiculties Remain, | Pneumonia Death Rate $letes In & repurt v ok eavation is bkely to turn YD | and that In delegating the ratemaking | panding his chest, shot him and neck conditfon such as recent investigation In the case of Germany, however, See " '| 2 “ h ST iiiod ot Torm le be. WrCheological curiosities, §f not treas- | With ‘esmect o transpartation | | back a hot on Every man who holds a pos supposes 1t be, tidal friction might | there are (wo very distinet lnnitations Seen Highest in Mare feves, “wak Vo imitate with the wngue | ures. This s e of | 1 me Giving himaelf a pat on the tion of responsibility expects apprectably affect the rate at which the | Which one must today pul upon the Lie e 0 ngue I particularly true of ongress 1s really delegating some It Ly earth turns. German readiness to co-operate, The | Mareh has the highast pneumonta & pantomimic geswire, such as mnight 5 have been made by hand, and v nonste or grunt while making the E//,x-u gesture wncient centers, like Rome or Naples, where one community lives on top of whit wes the site of an earller com- munity. Beautiful vases were turned up back, he proceeded up the street, looking for another sympathetic listener, its powers under the commerce clause of the Constitution, something It can revoke at will. By exerclse of the power of refusing confirmation, | amusing to watch him eriticiam. is a part of the discipline. Said Gladstone John Morley: “Take it from me, that to en- According to Dr. Bass, the tide might rr»duue the long perfod changes by the et that the crust of the earth lifted at high tide, falls to settle back to its conditio of permanent assoctation with France and Britain are (wofold death rate of any month i the vear. Frequently more than one-seventh of In the fust place CGermany's share |the annual pneumonia mortality oee in e benefits of Locarno demand the | CUrs in this single month. according to “Thus le—which 1 Que v the sudden | by w, 0 members of the Benate say, they apply Vac! N Sowering of the vingue from contact ,}{“m:‘:x';r‘\“gxfa !l’.".':fu'y stately Via | RS Sgaint wrongful use Frjindd iy h!rlumuh;l'wly and to m.;. n'-:mpm‘.glu: with ;ul:lcnln ::Hm:lr n\u!llm‘;. “'rn‘m (hodurm ;":‘;"g:v 6:‘?:::;"::';t ht;' l}:‘: .il‘lwn\m :;::1:‘191;\“:‘! the Metropolitan Life Ine b o B il 4 4 recently nder how much human energy | and self-control is no bad el ameter Is gradually increase 3 \ J o ::m‘ e palate—has the menning ‘v, (b camster engaged In carting wway ratemaking power. le consumed each 24 hours In | ment In the preparation of & | |ing ita rotation, WO point | Hauidation of the Dawes plan, and, tn | Sclentists have not been able to K s due 1o 8 complete closure (nd | sons. found & emicoin ot ana tid Argument Over Tenure. [ | the ‘private game of shooting | man for walking firmly and suc- | {13 tehched, It gradually starta to seitle, | Feferal, the ferniiation, bl every - T S Lo o K 18 doe 10 4 ey ona 101 4 13 ¢ gt e % & bt speeding up 1 o o ¥ n ~ S Onany single cause, s sy of te bwck of Ui gl | coin ey sains. in recent months | 10 e argument ‘o::t m‘é""z'!fl:.."f back a hot one. How many | ceasfully in the path of great P LAl "‘“‘“"_“ many by the treaties of peace. Iatitude, altitude. extreme cotd 0F e solt pulate L b g megnicent. R | At to make e interatale Cons) | acathing letters are compossd | public duty By the termm of the contract of Lo- [high or low humidity. age distribut sy Iui wenns 1o bend or ¢ at Girgenth near Naples The (metoe Commision w - fudichal body | " men's " mindsi how many 1t you are doing work that | | Nohel Statue l)inpull'. carno (he Germans now demand the |of the population, or occupation, A we L ’,,.' dble & elowire Smpartng | mosdi w nally discovered in 1899, | members of the Benate answer that imaginary conversations are seems to you important, waste o complete liberatton of thelr country. | comdination of factors s felt to be yoe R T avold apofling | LIeL, A0 bofh Hhe e e auratil)y Warkl ceiit to o de> e Aime.In. wiAning: vark. vio l“ll:::.-‘nmh:\mll\;: mel:"ll\rl\' n mlm-lr ‘Al:n‘«:mlll‘x' ‘:l;m:‘l\hl |l|l \x\::‘l:‘i“" n‘u.:m .;l',:\n\m!e for the high wotalitv o s o 12 vorge ! d. 11 s d bave provia . L LSS b A : . o ‘equont e proposal o X e lquidation of tne bty disew e found ti be ol Ainterps forgotten until the rain re :::“'I’r', '..".',,,",.', ~‘l n:l‘ ul':«:fm |I‘::..-4'|‘ i ::.‘n.:‘u :;“...:L“",‘li i how '"‘"': : ‘:"" "A“:":Wl'h ng :1.«"' 1“:':' TeeL AtALUe of the great promoter of | Dawes plan lvolves commerelalizing | A cold climate where the average ol words i 1 it U ¢ asu vare wnd beautitul work | 10 of . defiolte (o I w-boxing yoes on Lo : Pt the motta of the | ipeace. Alfved Nobel, founder of - (he [ the veparations and thus tisures con- | humidity 1s hot Nigh appears to operate lenders. He i bus found Uat 320 of st D s mow been lfted und [Soitof G of review. G the endless tune of “I says to | great Englishmani “Never ex Nobel priees. One wroup wanis | (ho [diderable eatly payments G France jin (o of low moriality, & condition youle of Arysn » o m{u .,:,vh’ 4 ransparted o the wreheologle mu Iae IIr’:” )»l uuim :Afl- lln ”: ':'l,‘“':“‘:\! him, ‘Look he | says - tract, ne apolo statue placed In front of the town hall, [ they aceept this as reasonable. But | ilusivated by the very w poewmonia Yeading Jungusge of 1,.:»,,,» ftr.fl ng UM at Napies, “The mossic consista of | ’mr‘ ‘[»' iave uu"¢ :i::‘,”” A 0, day during the war | Get it done and let them aome Persons prefer (o see 1t before the { that they should pay more for & prompt | rate (or the western provinees of originated show signa of pantomimic | & centrul wiare :’4,::::'-4‘v);“;;“;:ul;{rlfl'“flhlfl ‘;'nll';u.r::rArl,I"::-n;:‘m-A"." e . | | dropped inta” the office of tor Ir:‘:l":l"n? v:‘lhua' ulll:flll liat on & flmumun they hold & violation of | Oanada, Ovogon and Washingion, also, N ichard Paget conchides 10 ricel designe. touettes, stars snd vividly | Judicial bodies s part of the judielal phus Danisls, who had just the fittle fatke amuse [ 1EERERTRRES S 0 hom o v ‘fore Becendly, every Clorman, with whom 'Kl:..:"'y‘(n.‘"fli‘.'.'.\fi'x‘!i..fl"&'& {'urt wiald ppesr, Lherefore, thsl Dnted yellove, yedn ana blues. 'Ituuml amu:, .l.r :‘m nmu,my i h; |’v”l’-’b :J,IL I -:‘ '“-N b od n‘r‘d-f mak- :"'I"‘ elves by shooting back the KOtten that Nobel was averse to statues, |1 have talked tn Cleneva, tn Herlin uu:\’n\d New Jersey, I approximately the siwern began by the performe shout wie oVher leige squaves Ihe mo- &, In the opinton ol “: ”y‘ y g the avy bone dry. The hot ones, \ and on several 00eastons s sald to have felsawhere has aMivmed that the situ- [same lattiude, oonsist v \nter YR le peutomimic gestures s cai weighs 4 ons &nd meanires 260 10 © noties that the wishes e (Onnyriaht 1098 ) expressed his wish that no statue of [ation on the eastern frontlers is mitol- [ same of the highest tates of '.'1! he i s susre fe wem wollh wa Lo geographical sections | e i Nimsell ever he erected, erable, Alsace-Lorvaine has ceased | States, e of e A 5 .;