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E - EVENING STAR With Sunduy Moraing Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY. .....April 8, 1920 THEODORE W. NOYES. ...Editor The Evening lhlf Ne pager Company Rate by Carrler Within the The Evening St er month § The SOPY | Little America Camp. bliszard of 1809, when a minimum fifteen degrees below zero was ‘There have been which the local temperature has somewhat below zero, The cold 1899 visitation, however, was despera! trying because of the high wind preveiled and the heavy snow marked the storm. The suffering was more intense on account of those fac- tors than if the temperature had been even lower without wind and without Snow. Arctic explorers have found it pos- sible to maintain themselves in tempers atures even ‘below that reported from ‘When they dig ¢ |in, making ice huts for Winter shelter, All Other St lly and Sunday. iy only 1 unday only Thr:m 1 t’:m i lusively entitled atehes ered- ted in this paper and also the local new: published herein. All rights of publication special dispatches herein are also reserved. Double-Edged Weapons. Within a few days Congress, con- vened in special session by President Hoover, will tackle the question of tariff revision. From the other side of the world has just come a timely reminder that tariffs nowadays are double-edged ‘weapons. Japan proposes to impose customs dutles on lumber, which, it is contended by certain American producers, will practically destroy their market in Nip- pon. A formal protest has been made at Tokio on their behalf by the State Department. It is based on the claim that Japan's action is discriminatory in effect and a violation of the United States’ treaty with her, guaranteeing us most-favored-nation treatment. Assurances are forthcoming from Tokio that no hostility to American lumber is contemplated and that it will continue to compete on equal terms in Japan with the lumber of all other countries. But the incident has inter- esting implications that should not be overlooked in Washington this Spring when the drive for higher tariff walls is on. ‘Turn about is fair play in interna- tional relations as in other walks of life. If the United States feels the urge, as it has a perfect right to do, to make it increasingly difficult for foreigners’ goods to enter the American market, it must be remembered that two can play that game. Foreigners, in other words, can—and inevitably will—make it hard- er for things emblazoned “Made in U. 8. A” to squeeze through their cus- tomhouses. Nations would be less than human if they were governed by non- retaliatory impulses = .er such provo- cation. Csnada, our nearest foreign neighbor ~—if, indeed, Canadians are to be looked upon by us as “foreigners”—happens also to be the nearest case in point. The Dominion, with nearly a billion dollars a year spent in this country, ranks as Uncle Sam’s best customer. She sells us less than half as much— roundly, $450,000,000 worth—and a third of that total, or $150,000,000, represents Canadian farm produce exported to the United States. Canada fears that agricultural tariff increases now proposed in Washington may wipe out her lucrative farm prod- uet business on this side of the border. She is in precisely the same mood as the Oregon timber people who arg now setting up a howl at Tokio. From the threatened regions in our Northwest comes a demand that America should proceed to bring the Japanese to terms by imposing stiff tariffs on their tea and silk. From Canada there are inti- mations that even interests hitherto idolatrously devoted to the principle of free trade now advocate vigorous pro- tective tariffs as reprisals against the United States. % President Hoover is on record in favor of “limited changes” in the tariff. As a seasoned man of the world, in the broad interpretation of that term, he knows the perils to American overseas trade lurking in a tariff policy which 1s an ostrich policy. A Boon to Safety. ‘The long-awaited time when insur- ance companies would offer to careful automobile drivers with clean records a policy for liability and property dam- age much below the regular premiums seems to have arrived with an an- nouncement from Hartford of the estab- lishment of a plan under which some fifteen million dollars would be saved to motorists. To secure the reduced rates a driver must ghow that for two years previously he has not been convicted of driving while under the influence of Hquor, reckless driving or avolding re- sponsibility after an accident, and to demonstrate an otherwise clear record of careful and intelligent operation of his motor car. 4 If all companies adopt this form of select class insurance it will prove a _boon for traffic safety. A reckless driver, if he is able to procure insurance at all, Will have to pay dearly for it, while the other type, careful and considerate of the rights of others, will find that the cost of motoring has been much re- “guced. The new plan, therefore, puts a “premium on safety, and ‘will doubtless sbe whole-heartedly welcomed by traffic suthorities and motorists alike. they are in point of temperature really very comfortable, for these ‘“houses,” like the igloos of the Eskimo, are wind- proof and coldproof, despite the fact that they are made of frozen materials. ©Of course, exposure to the air in tem- peratures of twenty, thirty, forty and Aifty degrees below zero is highly danger- ous. Men must be covered with ‘skin garments so made as to keep all the bodily heat within, Only the slightest surfaces are exposed. The newly de- vised polar region garfnents, with gog- gles and breathing apparatus, make it possible to face the lowest temperatures without serious risk of skin frosting. Byrd's men at Little America ‘Camp are not in any danger, therefore, from the terrific' cold — which will be more severe later, as the Antarctic Winter advances —but their risk will come from any expeditions they may under- take away from base. They are now digging in for the long, long night, for months of darkness, but with their radio they will keep in touch with the rest of the world, and the tedium of their long wait will be relieved by amusements and entertainments and diversions never before enjoyed by polar travelers. ——————— The Roosevelt Memorial. * Ten years ago this week the Roose- velt Memorial Assoclation was formed to perpetuate, in some tangible form, the name of a great American. Approxi- mately one million Americans contrib- uted to a fund of more than one mil- lon seven hundred thousand dollars. An announcement from the assoclation, in connection with its tenth anniver- sary, states that the fund has been noticeably increased by the accumula- tion of interest. A park at Oyster Bay has been dedicated, and is practically completed, at a cost of about eight hun- dred and fifty thousand dollars; a nine- hundred-and-ninety-nine-year lease has been acquired on the western half of the restored birthplace in New York City and & museum and research library established there; Roosevelt distin- guished service medals have been estab- lished and are being awarded annually; a library of moving picture films has been collected, showing various phases of the former President’s career, and numerous Roosevelt writimgs have been assembled in volumes for popular use, But the greatest of the projects is yet to be completed. The first aim of the Roosevelt Memorial Association was to erect in Washington a suitable and adequate monumental memorial. A fund of about a million dollars was appropriated by the association for this purpose. Congress authorized a site, and plans were drawn for a great memo- rial near the Tidal Basin, which con- templated & complete rearrangement of the basin and the erection of an impos- ing structure. These plans have been awaiting congressional approval for about two years, and meantime there seems to have devéloped a sentiment against this form of memorial in the minds of members of Congress, the park officials, and even, it is understood, some of the officers of the association. ‘Whether the project on the Tidal Basin will ever be realized is & matter of con- Jecture, with the odds against it. As the result of suggestions from the ‘Washington Board of Trade there is now being considered a plan to change the form of the Roosevelt Memorial and to make of it a great outdoor forum for the accommodation of large public gatherings, the display of pageantry and the holding of public ceremonies. A site has been suggested for this memorial near East Capitol and Nine- teenth streets, the memorial to lie on what is now undeveloped park land be- tween Nineteenth street and the pro- posed Lake Kingman. Those in favor of this site point to its location at the eastern extremity of the axis, which cuts through the Capitol and the Mon- ument and ends with the Lincoln Memorial. It would also be designed as a monument entrance to Wash- ington for the traffic that now enters the city from the north and east at Fifteenth and H streets northeast. Within the next few years it would come to be the main gateway, for road traffic, to the Capital. In ten years the Roosevelt Memorial Association has recorded great progress. ‘The temporary delay in deciding upon a fitting form of memorial here in Wash- ington should be counted as fortunate. It would be & source of unending regret it & memorial was built that was not generally approved. And a sufficient in- terval has passed since Mr. Roosevelt's death now to permit of an examination, not be swayed by sentiment, of all sug- gested plans. Whatever form of memo- rial is finally adopted, it must stand as a fitting testimonial to & great man, enhancing the beauty of a city that knew him at his best. ————————— A regular chauffeur may be employed for the transportation of alcoholis beverages designed for the tables of foreign representatives, if accompanied by an official of & legation 6t embassy. In order to be & diplomat, it will not be necessary to quelify as a skilled motor driver. Ob- for Laughing Out Loud higher seats, but very often those gods of the gallery took part in ths dialogue, gave advice to the hero and expressed thelr utter contempt for the wicked char- | Heul acters during the action of the play. Nobody ever ousted. them “or charged them with - disorderly conduct. Wil there be a new rule nowadays? Are the auditor-spectators—this ‘new invention has put the patron of the talkie into a hyphenated category—to be barred from any vocal rejoinders to comments upon the amplified conversations of the pic- tured performers? The Chicago settlement out of court, which netted Mr. Pillion $300 for a single chortle, may be the making of a new technique of theater-going. ————— Scientists are going to great pains to explain the theary of evolution, in spite of the fact that some politically inspired teacher is lable at any moment to draw a ruler and deliver a slap on the wrist. Mathematical calculations do mot work out with precision in regulating Wall Street speculation. There is hu- man temperament, even in money. ————————— After many years of conspicuous service, Ellhu Root might be pardoned if he decided to insist on giving himself a little time to improve his golf game, Insistence on liquor privileges has thrust into the background the man who boasted that he could take it or let it alone. Advocates of change of date for inauguration will have to look further ahead than early April for a climate that seems reasonably secure, PSR AN e o No system of reparations can be ex- pected to prove perfectly satisfactory to those depended on to produce the ab- solute cash. Prohibition points out that men who assist in making laws should be among the last to forget about them. — et ‘The Mayflower should be desired by souvenir seekers. It is a craft asso- clated with many historic significances. ©Old Porfirio Diaz was & man of ruth- less ideas. But many Mexicans remem- ber him with respect as a fast worker, ———— SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. The Ever Optimist. My friend, the Ever Optimist, Says, “Never mind the weather! And do not think of what you've'missed ‘When Troubles get together, To hand you out & fate unpleasant, ‘With each day tougher than the pres- ent.” v This Ever Optimist, my friend, Assumes a pose quite saintly, And seeks his comfort to defend By proverbs fashioned quaintly. Yet frequently we say, “Good Graclous! Philosophers are so mendacious!” Utilizing the Immediate Supply, * “Have you some new laws you want passed?” “Not at present,” answered Senator Sorghum. “I am mostly concerned in looking for a means of persuading peo- pie to obey the laws we already have.” Jud Tunkins says he had great luck last night. He dreamed he was in an airplane crash and all that happened was that he fell out of hed. Back to First Principles. To grab the center of the stage Is easy for audacious men; Yet humble worth they must engage To help an encore, now and then. Dissipation in Crimson Gulch. “What has become of Cactus Joe?” “He’s still a desperate drinker. He ordered four ice cream sodas in succes- sion and said he didn't care a hang what they might.do to his digestion.” Music and Words. .My Radio! My Radio! ‘You sometimes leave me sad. Your tunes alluring rhythm show, But. your grammar’s mighty bad. Remembrance. “Rosemary is for remembrance,” quoted the reader of poetry. “Yes,” answered Uncle Bill Bottletop, “and so does a mint patch.” “If you would have the means to buy,” sald Hi Ho, the sage of China- town, “you must labor in order to have something to sell.” Ch, why should I sob? It must be admitted He did a good job. “Civilization took a big step forward,” sald Uncle Eben, “when de safety blade took de place of de straight ragor in preparation foh a party.” e —— Probably. From the New York Evening Post. A for & the of automobiles. Have trians been given up as a bad job; that London has banned . M"mn‘cmlynmm time till some one opens up & !sheik- {but came to Chicago in 1885 as & lad ity for an annual vaca ‘Hundreds of men have proved this for themselves, although its loud announce- ment by any one of them would prove highly un ‘What no man can get nlofi without, s nd“ view with which to feed his mind, heart and soul. We are put into this world, not to be bbers on & Enm surface, but to ex- nd ourselves in the vertical. ‘We may either go u?;r down, and we may do it either physically or menml';; but up or down we must .go, if wit i s o sl : i nommuunourcyu,l!wemml&!t wind e. the most or even something out of CRCE ‘The annual vacation is city men and women may d ups and downs of mountains, the rolll hills and plains, the vast horizon of sea, with the eye climi to the clouds and even to the very sun {tself high in the heaven, One may see clouds and sun in the city, it is true, but stolid solid bulldings and unimaginative walls block off the necessary side lines — ps some artist can tell exactly what we mean; we have the “feel” of she subject, but not the exact lingo. Nomenclature makes little difference this subject; every one feels the need for this extension, along the lines of the eyes. rolling expanses of natural scenery fullfill 4 need of heart and mind which no length of beautiful avenues can satisfy. Only by going on & housetop, or into ward Perhaps this may help to account, to some extent, for the popularity of the modern skyscraper. In New York, where they constitute a real problem, x::vertholal they continue to construct em. May it not be that every one loves to work in them if for no more than the occasional glance they get from those lofty windows, with the view of the harbor, and the ships, and the Statue of Liberty? * K % % Those who are fortunate enough to | 1 own city homes, with attics or garrets, know that children especially love to thus go aloft in the confines of the home cirtle. Ne, it is not alone just to have a good time, or to romp unconfined. - He who will recall, if only momentarily, his own childhood, will know that many a child really loves the attic because he can get a new view of things., From the pinnacle of this third or fourth story an imaginative boy can see miles and miles beyond his ordinary horizon. He recognizes familiar things in un- familiar aspects, and sees farther tha is his wont. His mind is unchained, WASHINGTON OBSERVATIONS BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Representative M. Alfred Michaelson, Republican, of Illinois, who lug“ pros- ecution for violation of the liquor- smuggling laws, is one of the handful of foreign-born members of Congress. He is a native of Kristiansend, Norway, of 7 and has lived in this country ever since. By profession Mr. Michaelson is & teacher. A normal school graduate, he taught in the Chicago public schools from 1898 to 1914. Then he served two terms on the Chicago board of alder- inen. Since 1921 he has been a mem- ber of Congress. Rivers and harbors matters are the committee work with which Representative Michaelson been es) ly identified in the House. He ought to have known the ropes be- tween Havana and Key West. Repre- sentative Willlam M. Morgan, Repub- lican, of Ohio, who is also in prohibi- tion hot water, is a native Buckeye. He runs a wholesale business in Newark, Ohlo, and lives on a farm within the city iimits. The seventeenth Ohio_dis- trict last November returned Mr. Mor- gan for a fifth term in the House by the biggest majority in the district’s history. EE Arrival of Gov. Henry J. Allen in the Scnate as Vice President Curtis’ suc- cessor from Kansas will disarray the Senate roll call for the first time in n will come first now, and John C. Orockett, sonorous clerk of the Senate, henceforward will have change his tune whenever he starts to call the roll. The first man to speak up in an aye-and-no vote has a con- to | Washington' siderable responsibility. Sometimes he must act quickly according to his own wits, without time for signal from the party leader or whip. Senator Allen will arrive on Capitol Hill with a va- riety of e ns, all pleasant. He comes by appdintment of the governor, who once was his own private secre- tary. He will be sworn in by the Vice President, who was his predecessor in the Senate. He returns as a full- fledged member to the body in whose press gallery he once sat as a corre- spondent. * k kK At & party in Washington the other day there happened to be gathered in a group James W. Good, Secretary of War; ator James E. Watson, Re- publican leader of the Senate, and James M. Beck, former Solicitor Gen- eral of the United States. Somebody who knew all of them stepped up and ejaculated, “Well, if here aren’t three Jims' in _a row!” Secretary of War retorted, “Yes, but I'm the only one that's Good.” ¢ . * ok k % Former mnufiu Walter H. Newton of esota, now the secre- tarigl Hoover-Congress go-between, says theé the laying-up of the Mayflower is ing to save members of Congress a folks' from - back home want to the presidential yacht than almost an: sight in Washington. . Reports. drifting in from the country indicate that none of the Hooverian innovations since rooms. The Kilkenny reau of Navigation’s inspection Hoover was very fond of the Kilkenny, and all his fishing trips away from S s v m 3 that if ’s to be amwmmc: enough to carry out their D they have Pained cometring. - ‘e gal somef . the chance comes, they wl'flm' 3 hteenth o eigl ame There are plenty o might call them, w] tiful and inspiring. their tops in the wind, may be the only object of Nature to be seen from a city home, but is enough if the beholder remem- bers his need for it. At the least it % be sald to be better than or a hing perspective of street. The endless rolling of automo- biles cannot compensate for the peace of the hillside. The serenity a lake n the mountains, with the Te- flected so that they appear to be grow- ing both up and down, so clear is their Hand" The clasp s sentle and e N clasp gentle and mag- netic. The power of the sea is even | greater, in its changes from oalm to storm and back again. High mountains and rolling plains exert similar influ- ences. If the city dweller can see these only occasjonally, can - keep their images in his; heart, and remember them as no lesy precious treasures than gold and silver. Thus he may help to | overcome, to some extent at least, the inimical lack of vista, panorams, per- spective of city living. Four scientists of the De, ent of Agriculture are en route for the Far East on a professional trip, having been invited by the Netm&m colonial government to visit the "Dutch East Indies. There will come together in conference with agricultural -scien- tists from all parts of the world. The delegation consists of Dr. Prederick V. Covill inci) N[ Pl:' principal botanist of the Bureau | ¢, nt Industry; H. T. Edwards, technologist in fiber plant investiga- Avcenenux, fpecinlts' in "sess-sane neaux, -cane diseases. En route to Batavia and Java Dr. Coville will visit Japan to make some studies of acid soil plants, both fruit and ornamental: is Br. Co- ville has'a son who is attached to the Demq American embassy at Tokio. LR A well known statesman was & guest at the swagger Easter breakfast party where 150 members of Washington so- clety got the shock of their thirsty . |lives by “finding only ice water and the tables, “Senator,” | the orangeade on o quoth a woman friend, “do you realize you're present on & historie ‘occasion— the setting of new social standards in The Senator rejoined, g_lggmfly: ““You are quite right, madame. occasion is not only historic; it is uninteresting.” (Copyright, 1929.) Child Marriage in India Medical Woman’s Topic BY E. E. FREE, PH. D. Among the evils of child marriage in | his good worst to India perhaps the has marriage or with do directly either with child wives are kept indoors. So believes a British medical woman of Indian ex- perience, Dr, Kathleen O. Vaughan, who reports that what impresses the medi- cal visitor to Indian women is the prev« alence of a crippling disease called “os- teomalacia,” in which the. bones often soften and bend so that unfortu: ¢ | tive to the sex, but is due simply to the fact that | Smith is the E ¥ g5k will by the referendum re- sult,sunless there should be a real heaval to prevent the State voted for November and former Smith of New York, who was the “wet’ hope of the country in the presidential con t Hoover, in his inau- g:u address, strongly declared that duty of the States was to join with Government in the enforce- ment of national prohibition. New York and Maryland, for example, have no State enforcement statutes, If Wis- consin should join which decline to aid the Federal Gov: ernment in the dry laws it would be a step backward, in the view of those who support the ndment. * k kX President Hoover is still looking for the right man to head the so-called National Crime Commission which he is to appoint to investigate the whole sub- Ject of law enforcement in this country, including the dry laws. As soon as the chairman has been selected the size of will be determined— whether 8, 7, 9, 11 or whatever num- ber may &} is to head the commission. There is nc dearth of well qualified material for this commission, it is said. As Presi- dent Hoover has declared that the prob- o 2 e st 2 o % gravest im) country, expected that the commission will be appointed within a short time and be- gin work. * %k * ‘The transfer of the prohibition en- forcement unit from the Treasury to the Department of Justice will require an act of ,lbuu.'l'he! President has suggested in his inaugural | address that it would be wiser to place the enforcement unit under the De- partment of Justice, even before the National Crime Commission makes its report. But whether this action will be undertaken at the ‘coming special session of Congress remains to be seen. It is a matter with which the House and Senate leaders will have t':g deal, the spe wi limits of farm and tariff revision, and one or two other subjects on the side. * % kX The result of the personal appeal made to “citizens of good-will” by Presi- dent Hoover in his ina address to turn their backs on tions of the liquor laws is clearly having its effect in Washington, and also in other parts of the country. There has eral tighten] up of agencies and greater activity on. the part of United States attorneys and their assistants, it is sald here. How- ever, the President’s appeal to law- abiding citizens to set an example in their communities by living up to the spirit and letter of the dry laws is be- lieved to be as effective as, if not more 50 than, the greater efforts of the law enforcement agencies. There is a report, for example, t in one of the exclu- sive golf clubs near the Capital, which | has been frequented by members of | to any more in the locker room. is said, is partly out of deference to the new Attorney General, who uses the golf course for his exercise. However this may be, there are constant acces- sions to the list of nouveau- in Washington’s social and official circles, and it l;l; y.:’ flmu fashionable to party affairs. The effect might well have been to throw a very large number of Democrats permanently into the Re- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN. gl customary to go out early on ing of the 1st of May “to fetch = s o t amid g 1| oo ‘What cif f.heqlunlc in ll’l’tl.’ A It covers which makes it Island. al flag, “Old Glory” A. flag was found to lent and was forwarded to States National in origin: this flag. The latter is on exhibition in the National Museum. Q. Are there any places that have not been explored?—A. L. A are as yet remote, unex- plored regions in Africa and the jungles of Brazil which have not been pene- trated by white men. Q. How long did the Reign of Terror in France last?—H. T. T. A. That period of the Prench Revo- lution known as the “ lgol ‘Terror” is generally considered to have extended from January 21, 1793, the date of the execution of Louls XVI, to July 28, 1794, when Robespierre and other san- guinary leaders were guillotined. Q. What are sinuses?—S8. G. M. bones, as the frontal, ethmoid, sphenoid and superior , are w0 frreguiar cavites extending upwara two cavities e: Upware and outward, from their ings on each side of the nasal spine, between the inner and outer layers of the skull, and separated from each other by a thin bony septum. give rise’ to the prominences above the root of the nose called the “nasal eminences.” Q What color should kitchen walls be painted?—E. H A. Various shades and tones of color room. The walls finished in ivory l‘éx‘xt'wlu give 72 per cent reflec- The o b _mfimum enfweug:t “familiar and widely known popular saying in epigrammatic form.” A. The cells or cavities contained in |of certain . | prevent the drifts Q. What nationality are Mr. and Passing Applauded as Economy Lesson President Hoover's action in putting the yacht Mayflower out of commis- sion and sending the White House by the press, which likes the example in economy and also feels that a Presi- dent has a right to choose his own “The public is in favor of increased | ‘Hooverizing’ by the men who are ex- pending public money. z’)lfllcms 1¢ o;v the ik a popular move,” says laining that ")lr.uo Hm:‘lr en- expensive recreation of toss- when he is in de action taken as “notice to all executive that departments and fo President Hoover will not tolerate expendi- well for the country that sound, Governmen busi- j nesslike economies in t are publican party—Democrats whom the | to be nate victim may be able to about her house with knees to the shoulders and fixed there hysicians ha maintained. “It is reasonable to believe,” accord. ol sacrifice to anybody and mw‘ot the May- may not have so easy jobs here- are worth while and commend- With farm rellef, flood control and 16 new oruisers and an airplane carrier loom! shead, the ad- save what ———— o Relieved of One Worry. From the Indlanapolis News. . & Mexican rebel never supreme in their , and the activi- tiueamdmo?:fi:m under the wing of the church. Now they have d in clubs very much like our cultural and civic rather than benevolent. In each South and m American country today there are or- ganized groups of women each with a special problem. The women of Cuba Q. How tall does a person have to be to be termed a “giant”?—N. E. A. The word is conventionally lim- ited to persons over 7 feet in height. Q. Why do flowers smell sweetest after & rain?—D. D. A. It is because the air is clearer. Q. Isn't there a chicken farm in California that has more than ; chickens?—C, 8. D. # e Pinan A Bmylnede‘ b here ar operates s m"fio& ‘White A It ex- pects to have a mnu‘llfy.ot 500,000. arsin HOSOAR o saRAt RS g0 an er B e e e . Fifty-two cent of the vm States are w&d to_the care and treatment of persons suffel from mental disabilities. . Does Canada have to go to war henever Great Britain does?—M. G. E. lation of Canada to ain, A her Canada need not fight, need not sup- ply & man or a ship to assist in Canada tory and citizens liable to attack.” — Q. For what purpose are lath fences about 75 feet long and 4 feet high bullt along roads in some places?—F. E. D. A. They are snow guards, placed to of snow ac- cumulating on the road. Q. How large are the flags used to attract the attention of a bull in a bull- fight?—J. 8. N. A. These flags are about one yard Q. Where are stamps for the British colonies printed?—F. {. T. A. In general, the stamps are ted {rom plates suj by the Royal Mint, London, to contractors for the stamps or to the postal authorities concerned. this connection, piates were supplied 1925-26 to Messrs. Waterlow & Sons, Ltd., for the printing of stamps governments of New Zealand and the Union of South Africa. of Yacht and Horses “Roosevelt was one of the most ener- horses back to the cavalry is applauded | riding. in service into riding. Since his time the stable has fallen into disuse.” * %k % “Mr. Hoover apparently has his own ideas sbout recreation,” ts the 't the pruidency. the ?pnnunuy o he sees no ical side, the records that the Presid: lay up the May- flower in order that more sailors might be avallable for the fleet,” and that this The Columbus Ohlo State Journal |p . bserves: “These minor economies, — i i g i g g 2 B3EE zgs o) : f Coiffure for Statue.