Evening Star Newspaper, April 12, 1930, Page 6

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EVI it 1t was mot, that he not be called| 156,000 votes awsy from Smith. Nor THE EVENING STAR upon to testify, Willlams was charac- ! did Alfred E. Smith, running as & wet ——With Sunday Morning Editien. _ | '\ i by the Senstor as an “unwill- | for President two years ago, have even WASHINGTON, D, C. |ing" witness, and the lllryhml"l:h:v . l:::o;n in Iilinels, but was beaten tor praised America’s speed g for | by 450, votes, . SATURDAY ¢ s rAPEl 10,1000 e Tofiiaal- (o eutnt “asooeatrowkey | . The Dusowale ‘dsclars’.thispussives s . Editor|with his superior officers at the|delighted with the way the Oght i The wilderness trall from Virgin Washington is the world's greatest| lieutenant colonel in the army of James TERCOORE Y. HOEN, - B | acioe shaping up in Iilnols, But any one,| There are many things one shouldn't|fourth seat by the window decides to|Kentucky in Revolutionary days, the|storehouse of all kinds of knowledge.|II He got his name n i You can draw on it free of charge| hair, and adopted Campbell as his su ‘The Williams case has aroused much | Democrat or wet, who thinks that this|do i public vehicles. TVo of them, |Show him what she can do. As scontrail of Daniel Boone, Sy “’“'l']' ;:l" through our bureau here. Any question | name. After the secession of W interest and has brought sharply for-|senatorial race is going 1o be an easy | smoking and spitting, are forbidden b | por feely o tickling in her throat and | S"PS€rous way. 1t was the trall fol-| ;¢ 700t you may ask will be answered |III he obtained- 4 commission fro e % " hich is all; lowed by Diony Hall with her INg | promptly in a personal letter <o you.| James II, and in 1691 made & desce ward the qusstion of the Navyh davelop- | victory for Semstor Lewle:should have :":::"'“ il ESnpeily,.oW= | mustconmly oo L LU Husband, Bars Jarvia, the | (rall, st | Be abecnul Lo, rite. cleasty, §Ive JOuF| on Buthp e "y As0L: made 6 evicted ment of speed planes, not necessarily for | unother guess. The suggestion is made Thede ars st loast elght other These actions are minor, however, in | eVer Tetraced, for she became one of | full name and address, and inclose 2-|and outlawed on a charge of emhezzle- internationsl competition, but to keep | (hat the city hall organization, the ever, which might be banned, comparison with the sneeze. This is|'De Pploneer settlers of Kentucky—|cent stamp for reply postage. Send ment. He became a Highland fred- “fln" month | phase of military aviation. Backed bY | which helped to carry the city of Chi-|clally that portion of the populace which | only because it is disagrees d of- & ormation 3 * g er. _Unde: pro n u:’ le: 60c per month | private capital and aided by the Navy,|cago by more than 150,000 for Mrs. Disagreeable actions in these vehicles, | casts cold ger: e - ~ rides the busses. fensive- but, above all, because it broad- | BI04y Ground.” The story of Diony | director, Washington, D. C. | Duke of " Argyll - he- continued ‘ms. i i 65 oer wonth | Williams, who s the holder of the | McCormick in her race against Senator | oying to their smaller size and more| The tough part of it is that the per- anhzm in her recent novel, “The Great| Q How much do business men lose!is the subject of a novel by Sir Walter THE LIBRARY TABLE the Booklover. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN. Wt THIS AND THAT BY CHARLES E. TRACEWELL. d Berk is told by izabeth Madox | blackmail on the Scottish’ gentry. He The Burday 3 v idow.” Before their marriage Berk | by bad checks?—R. 8. Scott, published in 1818; of an .opera "Coilection mude at the sach month, | American speed record of two hundred | Depeen, will now switch over to the | scientific lllclllil.‘ of the human product,.;londwho s0 :rnl-:u:.:da?m may ):. described to Diony the new home he | > A Tie secretary of the National Re- | by Fiotow (1833 and of seoera] i Rl o0" “ent n by mall or telephons | g sixty-six miles an hour, has sought | wet Democratic nominee and kill off :::'nmo superdisturbing to many per- Dan );‘:m N g e dlio s reeaiv planned for her and ]m LS they | tafl Credit Association says that bad - — vainly for the past four years to build | nrs. McCormick, having taken the Do-| “*EVery pasgenger will have his own|the invidious dossge may not possess By ,‘,‘:',"’:’,{‘,’o,{:,"i',"_m‘;, Ly L checks cost Ametican business L sl Rate by Mail—Payable in Ad an American plane that would be fast|jtical sealp of Senator Deneeid, their | littie list of things which other riders| the powers of resistance which will en-| pot™, T * "PRE: POy B10, 808 Wb 1000, e | A By treaty, the amount of water Maryland and Virginia. enough 10 regain for this country one of | epemy. Any wide publication_of that|do which he does not like. able them to throw off the disease. country behind the mountains and start | Q. when will the Kentucky Derby be | that may be diverted from Niagara for ally and Sunday. . 1er. 310,003 me 0 of i vibtion - Ofdered 3 < 3 Few' persons take the trouble either| (% U0 Tha T o M e would bt P power purposes has been limited to pall onis 36.00: the major records of av 5 ered | possibility, however, is likely to ald Mrs. to smother thelr sneeses or to ground | hove" norses 1o cerry them and horses | "5 i ;' AL LR 136,000 cubic feet per second on the °| to sen duty before the project was com- | yeCormick The people downstate ) discretion of readers, them, as it were, h the result that |, carry their packs, and there would | Canadian side and 20,000 cubic feet per pleted, Williams, in justice to his back- | wj)) not stand for such double dealing. 0:; own private list of utmu which untold millions of germs o fl0alng | e corn enough. The price of land in| @ Why do crackers get soft while second on the United States side. Wi $1,00 | ers, resigned from the Navy to tontinue | ;or, indeed, will many of the voters in | e o e u‘:"fi:l‘l:::l'l!{":l“‘m“m‘lm‘:':‘;f& the nice | the cane country was 20 or 30 shillings | bread gets hard when staie?—R. C. i 1mo.. 50 | his work. wet Chicago itseif. . for & hundred acres, and he told her| A. The reason for the hardening of| @ Can a rabbit swim any distance? 3. Coughing in general. 1t may be admitted that it would be | what gold he had saved and what allver | bread and the softening of crackers —E. J. According to testimony brought out at| jgry McCormick announces that she Sneex) e s aa | the Dearings, the Navy is again consider- | o regular Republican, that she wishes k ng. difficult to forbid sneesing in public| he haa earned from the sale of pelts | when stale 15 & difference in composi- | A. A Tabbit is able to swim naturally 4. Eating, ‘especially peanuts, egg|vehicles outright. since often it 15| and now secreted in hix money belt” | tion. In bread there is o great deal of but cannot swim for any great distanc wiches les. wholly involuntary in character and “ - | because its fur becomes weighted down B 15 11 SORURICATion of all hews alk: | ing the atudy of speed in Ahting planes, | 15 stand with the Republican adminia- | **34'YiCHGS Aid Bpples Indulged in by the most circumspect g ouleTwOiKT e heough the Vatley Portant ingredient of brend." ‘A3 the| With water and drags it under. Sl Ped e DAEeT jand aso ihe lucal rews |and with Italy and England at least;ygijon, although she will oppose the| 6. G persons, much Lo their confusion and| of the James, and then easy, the way | bread stands the water gradually leaves | Q. What is the re i on o7 5 at Teal name of the | woman who writes under the name of : : o in a south direction into the waters of |and dry. In crackers, on the other | . and one hundred milea a1y hout faster | world (Gourti with ‘or ‘without Teserva- rcely board a vehicle at|may insist, about those persons’ who|ihe Kanawha, but you keep southwest | nand. there s o special Qrving process | Gl e S S In seaplanes, the step would secm to be f yjons, The daughter of the late MAark lany time of day or night without run-|sctually seem to take a pride in snees-|and go over a long ridge into the waters 2 gl . used in the baking which takes the & desirable one. Increased appropria- | Hanpa may turn out to be an “in-|ning into one or the other of them. So|ing upon othe We have seen Women | of the Holston.” So, with her few |water out of the starch. Hence there Q. When did ccial dispatches herein are slso reserved | fifty miles an hour faster in land planes | o irance of the United States into the chagrin. down into Augusta County. Then dowi | the starch and the bread becomes hard | But something might be done, one Peace, Profit and Parity. | e New York blizzard o s - i there is plenty of field for observation. nd sneeze squarely into | household goods on pack horses and her | takes place in the cells of crackers an | ocotr?— . M. K. 5 ‘v"l -'n -mlvflfl of (he three-power | tions from Congress will be necessary, | o gent,” but if she does it will be con If our No. 3, for instance, slackens in| the face of somie total stranger. cow driven before, l’mouy set off nvx:nl.nnrp'fl;n of the molsture from the fl"n:.mm of March, 1888, is gen- naval treaty, which will .carry strong | but America, the birthplace of aviation, trary to the political breakfast food of | Summer, our No. 4 takes on renewed life| We submit that this is not nice, and Berk toward the wilderness. Others | air. y known as the New York blizzard, eonviction to the country, Preaident | cannot afford to draw up in the rear of her youth, a8 the holiday season beckons. And | ought to be forbidden by law. Some- | joined them until their party numbered | r R nd e always gay young blades want to whistle. | thing really ought to be done about #. |15 or more. For weeks they fought| Q@ When was the first ImPOrant | exsertemsed on b Aforc aore, &5 Hoover proclaims his approval of the craft amon experienced on the Atlantic Comst. It u e e ot o d id rather wrile | EE X ¥ x | their weary way through forests, over | boat race held?—F. 8. P. e e Calvin Coolidge would 1 results achieved and his admiration for | the countries of the world, was characterized by the rapidity with <l # sy Englishman named | i i el The subtle uction known s “clearin Young people are apt to be the worst | mountains, fording swollen creeks, | A. In 1715 an which its energy was developed and by the “patience and determination® with TR sagine srticles than messt 10| the throat” is particularly irritating 16| offenders when It comes to eating on|SI€€ping in the open, feeding on the | Thomas Doggett instituted boat races | 1'%\ SNeTeY was devel ‘principally which the American delegation at Lon- Commissioners' Salaries. Congress. By means of popular print | many, because it is 80 unnecessary. In|busses and street cars. T WA the i enjghoe IKIwaye (olilwz )| KinoHp e ARG ool HISH N (BRE | siwis WhISH (41138 Tha atori extensad don has carried out “an arduous and rethery discriminating and |9 cases out of 10 this pecullar nolse of| We have seen their elders, however, | Ing Boone's Road, At thelr last night's The first English regatta of which We | from Cape Hatteras to Southern Massa- difficult negotiation.” The fact thet Gen. Orosby Wil csn- | he Teschies & More the vocal s 8 nervous in char- | Indulging in square meals as they swept | ¢amp, Diony sald to Berk: “What do|have evidence took place on the Thames | ciiserts, obtaining its greatest violence ¥ : retir p e same time more cordial class . | i ¢ | We want here? What did we come for?"{off Ranelagh Gardens in 1775. This tinue to draw the retired pay of a|at acter. If it were necessary, the thing along through the wide streets of ou in New Jersey, Southwestern New York, i Bresdent alofocneriniaesaing | o L e o [oteatena. might be -tolerated by others, on the| beautiful city. And Berk replied: “We want a fine high | was modeled on the Venetian regatta. | Block Isiand, Southern New Engiand’ delegations of other governments for S i human basis that it cannot be helped,| One of the most comical sights we | house, out in the rich cane. We want | The first race in the United States|The snow which fell was estimated at b Bl cous ac. | the two civilian Commissioners of the ey eI s b o e | e et marets T e, lsas ot | Warmitortenics On the |occurred in 1811 between two barges. | apout 40 inches. Rallroads were Rlock. tion.” Mr. H here i piainly fellel. | DISTict_and that Dr. Reichelderfer, | Tt is quite possible that Ruth Hanna | Gl Py PEron fhay at s [nug was an elderly gentleman in (Next day they rode into Harrods Fort, | the Knickerbocker of New Vork and | adeq and teiegraph and telephone com- R tingdors m:::;m:l: ’c‘; “"‘:_l;,":;\mnnn-n of the Board of Commission- { McCormick will prove one of the mOst| " The tryth seems to be, however, that | skulicup attempting to devour an egg|¥hich was o be their home and refuge | the Invincible of Long Island, the for-| munication stopped. New York was ers, will, therefore, receive less than | interesting and informing visitors en- |cleaving the throat is mostly & habit|sandwich. There was some humorous|from the Indians. The hardening of | mer being the win entirely cut off from all communieation his 11 devel Int " tertained at the White House in some which one falls into as the result of s connection between the cap and the|!he journey was only the beginning of | with the exception of the Atlantie cable. colleague, develops an interesting Great. Britain and Japan. He cannot . Has Arkansas a poet laureate?— rolonged cold or cough, and which he | ©gg, We suppose, but the total effect|the hardening which life was to bring ch poe! mean fo toss any laurels in the direc : o to Diony. As she pounded the corn in | M. C. Q. Who settled the old city of Ghent Woii 6f Prenice and Ttaly, for, Wiiteve | POIDS G SERUAy of compeniMboR we- M. renoy P (hereafler as a sort of nervous| Wap GTOLCAIUE, . 1n transit, let him|® WOStAr and made the corn cakes an| ,A. C. T. Davis, on the editorial staft | 1 Frandensters B G their motives or justification, it was| 97 the new regime. But it is improb- s J the hearth, as she drew water at the | Of the Arkansas Gazette, was made poet | 5 "Thiy eity has existed from the they who frustrated the conferences| A0l that anything will or can be done | Shanghai bandits are reported to| What man ?:fl"fi,;"{';;"';’;_},e:_‘;:{;:fl':f“ e & | springeiniine center of the stockade, | laureate by act of Leglslature n 1933. | very earlient dime and ot exror aure BepeN otAGUInRIRTE re st ,,m:"f’ |.: to remove the inequality. The same | have looted large areas and to NAve |y by or oivtings This is one of the | be worse, of course. Peanuts, while dis- ::hl;!h;bloll‘edh‘belrrrmllul&nd! leached| Q. Of the Chiness in the United | A1 be given for its settlement. nor is e e "ot | inequality exists on the Public Utilities | beheaded officals. Their methods are | easiest habits fo acquire in al the long | sgreeable to others, are mostly offensive | 38158 1 & huge lion Kettle to make | grates how many are mative born?— | {he derivation of the name goeutauly el i ot s ;]:I‘:l Commission. even more ruthiass then tNose of|list end ooe which is the herdest to| throush tbalr sound effects. ABples,| corliy‘and shirts, s sne Whittied Fpoocs B P D Census Bureau saya that the| historic tribes and Inter by the Geits onekta T isVaekaNYS Sco 0l Gen. Crosby'a Telired pay bas nothing it Sy il ige) e rond Vit i from pleces of wood and grew gourds | iay e, Consus, Bureau saye that the | jnd Belgil and Nervii. It is mentioned & = to do with his services as a Commis. The White House interpretation of the three-power pact may be said to = L 8 for dishes, as she watched the men as early as the seventh century. Ac- far and wide. the wider and farther the| oud talking is a habit which springs|out from the fort to fight the Indiams | bopulation In Jhe United States are 01| cording to one author, Ghent wa# orig- sioner. It represents, according to the | The Springtime gardener is & peace- | beiter, untll they become nuisances up in some men with conceited tend-|us she bore her child in her dark, Chit Ulation of 61630 Of this Nally Gand, which derives from & interpretation of Senutor George of | able householder who has no fellow- 1ot only to their fumilies und friends encies who rather fancy that they |barely furnished little cabin, snd then | Chinese pop il Celtic word meaning ‘“confluent.” in stress three cardinal points which can i | oy . o X idug) | DUL %150 to themselves. - |are wise, smart, cute or whatnot, and fas she watched through many months, | Jumber 18,532 were natlve born and| el %0 pe“location of the city at be described as peace, profit and parity. | O°°'® portion of the salary of an | ship with the underworld individusl “geverely reproved, they will make an ake sure that others are | with lessening hope, for the return of | 43107 Were forelgn born. | the confluence of the rivers Scheldt and s tant that it is not | YMCer reserved aguinst the day or time | who gets a fust-growing crop of. ex-|effort o breuk themselves of the hubit. | iy the know.” Berk, her thoughts wandered often back [ Q. At the time of the crucifixion was | Lys. s so importani at it is nol | when he ‘vill become separated from the | citement simply by planting s bomb, |and by exercise of will power succeed| "Here, again, prohibitive action is im-| to the home of her father, Thomas 1 v ! Christ nailed to the cross as it lay on| bt i ::::i’u':d:::m::.: T.‘.!.p;:‘:uu:l::::“n:e periice mant 1 due i iRspl M AL s i ; of their womenfolk cannot stop them | the process of civilization had been | g ¥t e G R with Roman m..‘hgfinwltf]l“g;‘:;‘:nwmfld‘;r e e President Iays on the magnitude of | (/0 SeMator Vaudenberg, it is a pen-{ By starting & fght for prohibition e | when they get started. Reform through longer at work; there the dangers were | tom. Christ probably mounted His cross | 1t5 PUrposes’—A. H. ] o magniec Ollsion. In any respect, it represents| Gandhi proves that he regards no| The disagreeable fellow who insists| their own realization of the sad truth ' fewer and the somforts o miere by climbing & ladder placed against it. | A. The present system of restricted . y developments at London in 1930, 23 | compensation already earned: somelhing | economic problem as 0o hard for him [On clearing his throat usually sits in| that no one else is interested in their | The story of the settlement of Harrod's — | liquor traffic, devised by Dr. Ivan Bratt, N compared to what was proposed. at| the back seal, where the rear of the | opinions is the only hope. Fort in Kentucky is told by Elizabeth| Q. When were nails first made by Was put into effect in 1914, s0 well that shortly the thing becomes | possible, Even the “mortified” N & memory. looks Hall, in Albemarle County, Va. There replacing | Owiig to Gen. Crosby by the United | to tackle. bus affords him an excellent sounding | As for giggling, it is a mild offense. Madox Roberts with the descripti 9 the Gothenburg system. which abolished 3 V! 2 3 ptive | machine in this country?—J. A. 8. { L] Geneva in 1927, dilieates BISIRlY the | ouycoy o econnt of past servibes T e — board. From there he can broudcast to | afier all, being the result of youth and skill and power to create atmosphere| A. The first machine-cut nails were the saloon and established certain hours wvardstick by which he believes we should measure the present success. It the United States. His sulary us SHOOTING STARS. m"el entire 42 (theoretical) passengers at| good spirits, and therefore may be borne | Which she showed in her earlier novel, | made in America in 1786, Before that When liquor could be sold. Three main Wi I j | for their sake, if not for that of the|“The Time of Man." time nails were made by hand with a | ideas run through the Brait system— was the “Geneva basia.” in all its costli- | COmMissiondr’ is the money he earns His will is to ery out “A-hem!" with | offende PR hammer. Wire nails were made for the | reduction of the general ration of dis- Q mistrust breeding naval | Y PETOTIIINg the duties of w Commis- BY PHILANDER JOMNSON. mathemalical = precision =~ every ~two| Whistling sboard busses is another | Tqiking with a Cossack farmer in a | st time in America by Willlam Hen- | tilled with spirituous liquors through a Thatrs, vir. Hoover sotemmiey a i, | Sloner. The inequality between his sal- ekt iy 12 8 dull, hollow sound. which human faillug. Our chief kick against | village near the River Don. Ias Sume | t¢ll Of New York in 1851, \fi%’}.‘é:".fi’é“;‘:’;.fi;:‘";’»&' AR rivalry, Mr. Hoover solemnly s, vl " gives him mental reliel ritates | it is thut Ve S 4 4 “toward which the world was steadily | oY #'d thut of Dr. Relchelderter would Limited Msnufastors. every one else. | hich the. merty. feliow thinks he |t Wiliam Henry Chamberlin, au-| o when did Rob Roy live?—K. F. | abuse drink and elimination of ol pric ‘ tune which the merry fellow thinks he be analogous Lo the difference i in- 7The Communist deciares he's through | This noise must not be confused with faw or Ceds S s asked him v V: 3 " whistling. If he must whistle,, let! 4 = A. Rob Roy (Robert McGregor or vate interest in the liquor trafic. Un- ";:“" ' rerence has steered | COME E0Ioved by u poor man appointed | with an existence tough, the genuine cough, which we have him select something well known, that l’y‘.’:..p':f";,lr::-’;rugl:;s.tw‘gr"gn:rl:: e | bl Sweden non b el Sl {10 the commissionership, dependent| and if he makes s bomb o two placed second on our list. Coughing | we may criticize his rendition. they're much smaller,” the farmer re- | s, Scgtland. 5 F s il Toner’ srom’ e often cannot be helped. The cough is As for the man or woman who mani- us away from those rocks. It is thele-‘ mnost out of place in the theater, snd | cures in public, the law ought to de- hidder December 28. 1734. He was the | liquor traffic. Bootlegging is unknown. fore, indubitably, in the President: wholly upon his salary, and the income | He thinks that's work enough plied. “Pirst of all we lost a great deal tion brcause it marks the abolition of | eompetition among the greatest naval powers. The Anglo-American-Japanese treaty Is to run for merely five years— from 1931 to 1936. Mr. Hoover lb:lllh of the “final’ sbolition of warship- e bulding rivaiey. Bridently e has 18| CLincution et raised them 1o the tup | Ol Sertpleacious ST 2 son to betieve that the wreat naval | Ll TR P KO L IO L pme | Vered Senator Sorghum. powers will not retrace, when they €Ol- | rocjgeqincation act, however, provided, 'YV fer again six vears hence, the sLepS | iyt after the retirement from office of s oo BB | And if he makes a bum or so that it is infectious. No sooner does| vehicle is simply not—well, ible. Bl 1. | the big man in the second seat cough | Yes, that is il—it is not piavsible. He Nthlnks il tehe Swell' apeut. fieoytly than theMide woman' i the | worihy! of AeiALY DI Highlights on the Wide World Excerpts From Newspapers of Other Lands & There is threatened, however, another interesting inequality in the pay of | Commissioners which will probably be settled during Lhe term of the incums bents. The previous Commissioners drew original salaries of $7,500, but the re. Vi Bl Donald McGregor, a!There is no enforcement problem. . of man power and many animals in the | YOUPBer_son of e /i of vich man, who, in addition to his . especially at the symphony concert or|scend upon him or her with a heavy| ejyi : . - ——— — —— words :t ;reat ;::m:w.::-mtm;t:“m ! sulary, continues to draw dividends from | ln}: lf:v(::‘:m!::le‘l‘l: I go other m""f"., e(venléu e A {:nd. This is an (ction_ which may | tied o by i,‘:.;‘.i.."i.fi:'.’:;"‘:.‘{.’.v?n'-g . . (el haios™ entitled to thal A bt iy 0 iscontent, e greatest trouble with & cough is| be necessary but which upon a public| nearly as many horses and bullocks as W d D f : 0 e o we need. According to the Tujes our 1ae lvergence O plnlon “not poorest pesants get the best Jand. and t ot aet the wont e mis wnnc ;| On Future of Muscle Shoals Placing an Argument. “What persuaded the opposing candi- date to give up?” far away. The result is that our best land is poorly cultivated, because the poor lack horses and machinery, and are sometimes bad farmers anyway, ‘W1de differences of opinion are found |of war but will also be of material while the better equipment of the rich |in the comments that have been made | service to agriculture in time of peace.’ is partly wasted because they have in- | on the action of the United States| Approval of the bill omes also from the ferlor land.” Senate, which by a vote of 45 to 23 Duluth Hei the New York World, * k% approved the Norris bill for Government ' the Daven 'mocrat, the Richmond Japanese festivals and ceremonials, | operation of the Muscle Shoals plant, | News-Leade) Milwaukee Journal, they are now taking. rioa 7 ! B BULLETIN, Sydney.—After | mystery has just been revealed to pub- | 3till colorful and often poetic, in spite | one of the relics of the World War. The | the Asbury Park Evening Press and the The President, ruling & realm 10| s e riie o hrades OOLY ON€ | backer that it would be & waste of trying. rughy 00t ell for two | e coReTvation. by the. el ot s | Of the invasion or Wettems sistome. ave | discussion, develops. no clear BaHonal| RAIIph Nowe and Obrver SRl IR oty itk i sl S ] s be eligible for receiving the WP popep to go on.” seasons, the Italian Rugby Union | Carrao Palace by the police. This is| Dearly all symbolical. In the chapter | attitude on the question of Government | mond paper says: “It is predicted that President Hoover will veto the Norris salary. It may thus develop that only 4 has decided that it is too stren- | the name given to an old, stately atruc: | "Celebrations,” of her book, ~The | control, favorable statements emphasiz- | money of taxpayers—gives & l'"P‘"c one of the two civilian Commissioners| Jud Tunkins says the danger of flat- P A hybrid zame na | ture, in nfl Greclan style, at the 300 | 5;“:{:*’ ';;k‘;,"l _\'::m'ml d"i"":fi some ::x‘ meh nldvfiéu::)i‘lluy“cr:e ulx;g'een;l;x::fin‘ ;le:;)dlut‘:mh:")::x'\ :; |mc3:-rl;‘::'n ou.}. ill profit from & 2 “volata"—founded on ru S0 goe> | D ve i | of them eans of story sketches. On | test, while af s | . - ot S iae Riisdie Wby | MM bé wEtia| (e el STy AGUIMVIOOY | tavy e thuiih wilanle o catestaioain | DSHIRE, [EUSOCICH SrAGEVE DA NENT [mnery foe this ol Cen Guarivrat| (61 SsmUETIERERIG siocy Sarcnes Ontfflase, W DR aCKELES samofcline warail g | hard o Thalieviuth o ey sullty (Caesntion foci ik FxIADMTLE and that the other civilian Commis- | to overestimate his self and start more | ;oom that & good chance to press the |sion has been & woman Xnown nual house cledning ordered by the po- | trol and the dificulties involved in at-| of this folly? 1f he is, it will place London treaty. The United Btates; aur= | S50 000, B0 OHF S a0 O L oan e cam i merits of the Australian game has been | Senhora Amella Carrao, & descendant | lice for all householders, she goes with | tempting a favorable lease. Opposition | him, finally and for all. on the ige of ing the next six years, is called UpoD 0 e g ineer Commissioner is mot in- - missed. I case the followers of | of the old proprietor of the estate, but | NeF brother to Sushiya's stail, e e L e epimtaNdl m"“”";::‘k“"fl it % % ussolini will in time that, what- | ong eplcures. eat “sushi,” balls of | approval of public competition with pri- ury Park paper maintains spend for replacement and new COM- | y51yey however, as the difference be- ol o Getiehathtana ‘ui fook oell the' roubi | e e e ey HETe was o, | Tice served with various accessorien vate business. There is much specula- any other plan the Government is pow~ struction from $550,000000 to 8680}, 0\ yis hay o an Army officer and | AR owl is sitting in a tree stuff will make itsell evident, if the | It now transpires that she is the fem- ) Ihe¢ balls of pearly rice, close like & [tion as to the ultimate attitude of | erless to regulate. 000,000. But to have brought the Amer- 1, o0 410 sajary of the civillan Com- | As solemn as a bird can be. players feel that way. inine leader of & gang of thieves who | finely Wwrought mass of Chinese gems | President Hoover. in view of the 0pposi- | “Tncle Sam has no business operat- * % & * made her home their depot. ican fleet to equality with the British | il T Y by the District and | And very soon the whippoorwill held my imagination. As I sat with my | tion to the plan when a similar bill went ing any kind of plant at Muscle Shoals.” navy and to & point of Proper Propor- | p "o aue him 1s construed to be | Will show most superior skill. elbow resting on the table-pad. I could | to President Coolidge, in the opinion of the New York Sun. Halian Borax LR " sec those sushi balls in procession. | “Whatever one may think of the basic | - 5 tion to the fleet of Japan would have | oo g The nightingale with loveliest song | Found te Be U. S. Product. il dressed with a layer of omelette, pllt | policy involved in the plan for Govern: | i o 1O € ind. Tne praise: o cost, on terms discussed at Gemeva,| Tl oo e eclassifi- | Will help to Dl the night so long, | Le Matin s.—Certain _develop- | Made Study of Alienists, prawns, or rolled in seaweed, with & ment operation” says the Baltimore| yolves a fantastic and unwarrantable ments in d to the importation of Diario del Comercio, Barranquilla.— | touch of kampio for stuffing, hanging " te's action i rovin, " $1.400,000,000 to $1,600,000,000. TaKING | opyf 0oy does result in two civianCom. | While variations will be heard borax have the customs officlals by the | The criminal insane are x ciass who are | out Uke & thread. T could see others | 3y, ¢, Senate's action in approving | jnvaston of the realms of private busi- it by a vote of 45 to 23 is another T into_consideration the additional GO | y\egioners drawing different rates of pay, | From the melodious mocking bird. |ears. A lot of 50 tons, claimed (0 be | not known o be crazy until they have | With cuttlefish on their backs, the SUCK- | 1apoikable telbre 1o 1o a2 ey, BeRLOR | Do Ol e e e of maintenance and operating, Which { o S0 o ihould be removed by sp- | ADd through 1t all the owl they see[of Italian production, and s such | committed some terrible crime that ap- | €8 luminous, ilke a night lamp. But I | Norels of Nebrask would have been entailed by the Geneva | e FEIE W IR BY ROV DY AP Ax solemn s a bird can be, dutiable in the amount of 13 francs 60 In the event that| conceal the sini: pose: vouls pals us with its atrociousness. Such | longed most to eat sushi dressed With |the bill meets some later setback, (he | ba- subsereed if ine Hoors g‘x:;‘:‘:rz centimes per 100 kilos, was analyzed. | criminals frequently give no evidence of | T8W fish; & blend of white flesh and | gun declares: “It is a perfectly safe " 2 fieet, the six-year saving upon the Lon- |\ B o0 b fixing thieir salaries | No music rises from his throat. with the result that the bOraX Was|insanity beforehaud. Then, suddenly, | Vegetable flesh for the palate, With & |bot that Senator Norris will doggedly | B‘Z:.fii.'.‘?{.’éffl&. ferotladt e don basis is estimated by Mr. HOOVEr |\ "g 665 o 610,000, The latter figure, In fact, he doesn't know a mote. found to be of American production, | they lose control of their reason and | 33Vor of tunny-fish. a little uncluous, | oi.rt out again to get the bill o the | bem oos otigress voled for the, Norris i b being shipped from Los Angeles 10 | their actions. To i -| and spread with a foam of sauce, sea: to be a round billion dollars. equal to the salary of a member of Con- | And yet the songsters fine and NIt |plf *URPG 00 Whence it was Te- | o, ACt wom}'l‘-:mp:::’ l:l:nl; g}n. soned with & small, underlying heap of | Statute books. And if he lives long There remains, along with th;tm:::;:"ren_ would not represent lavish over. | Strive on, with him to make & hit. | hioped "ta France, aficr changing Hs | Sy b becoming more and more of 8 | 904, HIth 8 smal baderying crete promises of Besce ond o be | PAMent for the work the Commission- | Opinions such as his we prise— nationality. result which America S . the sine qua non of any limitation g | resolution in 1928 who were opposed in enough he will unquestionably succeed. | principle to Government ownership, but. he Plant | The Dayton Daily News refers to the| who despaired t . do with these people after they have | Detween two tissues.” Funeral anni- | ciov fi¥i0n BRI NCRR T0fels, B0 the | ment for privats sperttion. Thet e ment for private operation.” That pa- ers have to do and the responsibilities | Bécause he looks so wondrous wise. |, Borax coming direct from the Duited counnitied ceimas s/ comparatively. alm= | 1 ey it BUL with a pocket veto, and so Muscle | per nolds that ‘it e itk and hazards of their office. amount of 27 francs 20 centimes DI | pay the penalty for their act. no mate | Several personal social functions are [ Shoals remiained in suspense.” but adds | ican intelligence that the solution of i 5 that “since the pocket veto there iave this problem has been so long delayed t, viz. parity with Great o e, <a Longevity Required. 100 Kilos. Importers, under these : " |similarly sketched impressionistically. t e prot delay . e w._y; res thy - “Why did you come to Crimson Ghileh | aitlens, suake & Sroat saving and escape | o7, 0w heinows. But they must be pre- | HECLY, Setoted , ShEvetontieatly. been significant developments,” and| It believes that President Hoover is op- Britain. The President assures the COUN" | . woy street, not long ago, the Uiha G 1o 'a4dition a surtax of § franca per | cnted from the opportunity to commit | 1C WS 07 Ihe book, & SROICRL. THGe | “the secret lobbylng and wire-pulling | posed to the measure. tey that this has been achieved. There | o (8 TE 00 N ond promotes | 0 the old days? urther outrages—that is, they must be o ok ok S by which private interests sought pos- g 3 100 kilos in port fees. This \arifl has % ing paper screen which forms the par- will be utter numerical equality in bat-| "Ly en that the thermometer | 1 Wanted to’ forget my past,” con- | peen in effect since 1922 incarceraled until cured, if they are| gf BSEC CCIrCl P Cand rtly makes | Session of the great property have been e " curable. The hard thing to do is to de- brought to light.” “Advocates of Government opera- tleships, airoraft carriers, destroyers | 1o TS ER CE L e nnite lengtn | ided Cactus Joe, The customs house administratin, | cige between those who are normal and | RHiVate. partly reveals, what is going . T tion,”_declares the Philadelphia Fve- The American and R “Did you succeed?” it is said, is considering the bringing | t),0se who are psychopathic—that fs,| O" Within the rooms. Thus Japanese | " ac-| ning Bulletin, “have naturally exploited AR Smte. | e of time. 4 of an action to recover the dutles Of | petween those Who will mot and those| fAmilY life is both reserved, intimate| -The case for the Norris plan” ac-| PR BUCUn, heve Satiwlly exploited British fleets will total, roughly, 1,136,- | SR S Rt No. I have kept on piling up a| pich “the government has been who may some time be guilty of sane| 20O €ntirely the affair of the social or- | cording to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, | oo Rl B A bl 000 tons each. There will be a slight Accepts Lewis' Challenge. reord. If 1 want to forget it Ill|mulcted to date, amounting in il |guinary crimes, This is the branch of | S*Riztion.” =" 1 el and {',‘,;,‘,‘"“,‘,2‘,‘;",.“’.",,'%",‘}'commnm;" ‘lso ihe testimony elicited i A v t & = y, several million cs, | ¢, & 2 discrepghicy in wggregate cruleer ono| Mrs. Ruth Hanoa McCormick, newly | her ,':0:"’!::.'5" o em- | il "th French horax_ lndistcy has fortunsiety. Iy begining tr aurinend:| Dr. Karl Menninger on his recentmense hydroelectric power plant in |88 to propaganda expenditures for the nage, bu w e of = J 4 J nominated by the Republicans of Illi- nois for the Senate, has accepted the| “We admire greatness so much,’ challenge of former Senator J. Hamilton | Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, “that g lease of Muscle Shoals by the Senate sustained a loss in consequence of visit to Cleveland encountered one of | Which the Government's investment is, | these iregular transactions. spproxi- tention o(tllknhu :nd scientists in the experiences said to be common to | «pproximately, $180,000.000. What l‘lobl‘:y committee. . Such revelations said | Cting 1,000,000,000. ""uym coun II?; ‘nukmly is Dut';k:ell authors. In one of the leading book | fair price for hydroelectric power is m“mel nothing to do with the principle ST e e SR e jtores he picked up & copy of his own | the United States is not known. What |Involved, the undesirabllity of Gover- portance. In terms of reduction, Mr. Hoover asserts, each navy will have Y about 364,000 tons less than it would = k, “The Human Mind,” and engaged |18 known is that a Canadian plant of Ment operation of business enterprises Hidve) had, 'if ‘Geneva, 1927, idatead o | oxor, 0 IDeimoceatic aominee) $o mAKS |ieven | where il idoastnot fexis i we tm- | iDutie g e txes the sales girl in_conversation about it. | comparable magnitude is operated suc- |in competition with private interests, e prohibition an issue in the campaign | agine it. i Are Mere “Sidel pR—— “What's' the subjsct of this “Fumar | cesstully by the government at. rates | and there is no reason why opponents Lothiy e pre 2 this Fall. She will run as a “dry.” . Cork Weekly Examiner.—Most of the | gringy ‘relephone Subscribers. Mind’?" he asked her. “Oh, it's & lot | substantially lower than those charged | Of such operation should permit them- Peace, profit and parity—it 18 &)g. 0 yoyis will.campaign as a “wet” Insidiows Influence, pestaurants i Dublin now are “sie" | North Chine Herald, Shanghai—In|of talk sbout sbnormal people and |by private enteiprise in this countey.” | Selves 1o be stampeded into supporting trinity of results, after all these weary |\, “yyocomick made this clear, if it | We know that alcohol will cause :':3,-'““:"::“4 e easily named. The | order to induee more people to sub- | things like that! They say it's awfully | The Topeka Daily Capital advises that | it- proposal, if passed by weeks of waiting, which s substantial{ L 4 "0 e T an interview | Men to talk loud and break the laws. t "of hotel and restaurant i per- | 5cribe to the new automatic telephones, | €00d. And do you know,” she whis- | “until there is far more evidence that | the House, invites a presidential veto. . z b | Its passage would therefore be a mere and satisfactory. The President's 00| .o\ 40y " following & conference with |TO swallow it we may neglect; 16e8ly utisal, Db W Ve Tiad to gab | & tremendnis reatietion ks e mads | fered Candmuil toey ey heds | thepawer dndustey haslan intention of |0 BRCRES B0 e iin, e s gratulations to our fellow countrymen | o . o 6 pooo. i" will promote the same effect. accustomed to the ll;lmc}: 5-‘:‘ d‘::l:::‘:; ton, Whereas it recently cast as much Fop company manipulation, in capitaliza- | m.flhc.ud, :.qu oppose waste of time on Nho Ieougts them Abudt Wil MIRIAY L riiaveaiwaysibeta a dryiand' am [ Evenithatiodght of 1t twll start B il Yoo Sind picture house. The | &3 $450 (Canton currency) to have one| Hilaire Belloc praises the efficiency | tion, in rates and in other fmportant | SUC5 & 822 e ttable” in th shared in the republic at large. entirely with the President on his law | A Quarrel that is from the heart. underlying idea would appeer (o be |Of these machines installed, the price(of the Turkish military organization of | matters, the public should not for one exceedingly regre e,” in the et~ ” e ‘hase ot | has now been reduced to $100. The re-| the sixteenth century, though of courss | moment tEtnk of turning Muscle Shoals ;ludzmem of the Chattanooga Times, SRIOrOLment IRUEERM, HMIS IMEOUE S ER |7 lls me” said Eben, | LIaL adles onpeped i eareir of Amuse. | duction seems % have had the desired | deploring It in his book How the Her- | over (o It g that the Muscle Shoals question, in Investigation, however revealng, | guoteq as saying when questioned [, D¢V fells me” Uncle Nben, | drapery goods, or in sesrchh of ANUSS |effect, as there has been. quite s rush| corinns oo L0 8 ook ow e Rt | " Perhape it would be well” suggests | wiiich the fate of the Upper Tennsases ver fully satisfles the statesman who % D ‘dar ain nuffin mo' precious dan hope. | ment in the dance roo eal; on |at the telephone administration offices battle of Mohacs Field, on the Danube | the Charleston Evening Post, “to make | has become deeply involved, should have ne' y about this matter. No’straddling ‘there. " desire, in their hurry, to get m r 1 hip of wer | again become entangled in a vern 1s naturally a glutton for bad news. Again Mrs. McCormick shows political De heaps o' hope I has had at de the spot. At any rate, the outlook for [by new subscribers to the service. In|pelow Budapest, “made the Hapsburgs|a test of public ownership of a power Go jon maneuver, ‘with the al- S track ain' never yit been' tive. He |fact, the administration is not able at| realize what they ought long to have | generating plant and to see just how ment operat! 3 —aoe- acumen and common sense. The can- | 18 IO T o %1 oo mere e s Tt Hheive. In e | the moment o guaranice the IMMEAINe | boanre, Tiay Sovemme i mamier mates | the principle. actually works, © If. 1t is ternate prospects of prolonged delay or An Act of Justice. didate who endeavors to carry water on iy s - restaurant business, first establish nim- | installation of the telephones. rial and a beiter military machine iu | 1ot “s::u. nc(gr'z.e -A:;--:ele. mc&"um m::l rtpartlisied S chom s R In clearing Lieut. Al Williams of the |one shoulder and whisky on the other 3 self in the drapery line, or else go in o < recruitment, morale and methods than it r);r ths power companies hisd|the pikh would muet the: exnestetidas harge that he was the instigator of (18 In a bad way these days, forfeiting| - - A Solution at Last. for a very laxge ball room or cinema. Canadi Baiadr i W -T-'.‘.yg‘h-"q','fx Ll'n{mclngl“; L pglr‘fl' iR TGt I fating thie SHect of Clov- | Of 1 Sponeus" The Sprifel Unisr he o investigation by & special sub- | the support of both drys and wets. | Prom the Port Wayne News-Sentinel. R e ! e G " | of Europe—yes, even the Europe of the | ernment operation. It might prove | draws a contrast between the fact that com! com! been Venesuela Soon . Pl highly successful, aithough the chances| “Congress has been talking abcut Mus- committee of the: Senate committee on| This coming race between the dry|, Cocts hes bogh S3RC LK o0 Tk | 0% Hreet Statue of Clay. National sentiment is & curious thing | RS :’m‘:::rx"::h and Suns and| e heavily against that, But the ex- | cle Shoals for more than 10 years’ and naval affairs, Senator Millard E. ‘Tyd- | Mrs. McCormick and the wet Mr. Lewis | gt would settle the question of where | EI Nuevo Diario, Caracas.—Venesuela | The players on both teams are, with | Missles, siegework and avtack. He bad | S0, U UENLRt it g and - | the fact that “business drives ahead , all Canadians; fnating.” while Congress and legislatures dis- land has performed anwill be followed with keenest interest| Aljoe should sit at the house table. is shortly to have a statue in bronze | one possible exception, al lery, 'He iniroduced the shell. He may | minating. e ‘.‘:’ o: ‘gu:‘t::ey ‘nol. only z the Navy's| throughout the country. It will be re- ?I‘l th;l ermnn" c?-y .l‘;grep .v.hln :finf' fi.{%" 9 i 'hm:“ it Liod h?"| mv;"“;‘ "fi ‘Every safey :-r: :hl:h could be de: :r::él that :“:‘ ";-‘l’oove‘rlyu kngn::ctg crack aviator, but to the public, which | garded as more than & Republican- Proof of Good Manners. any other American of his time, or R A O R D ool | s Soreeie the, Fhint Doy Jouec| boid general objection to' placing. the i g § | Government, in competition with private d the case with much in-|Democratic contest. It will be Tegardec | rye arkansas Gazette, 2 perhaps of any time, was Henry Clay i 2 4 for more than 300 years.” The effect of | nal, “has been included in the Norris n 1 :’e-l"u:o“o;:fore Senator Tydings' an-|as & test between the dry and wet senti- | The final proof of good manners is to | the friend of the South American re- | Feeding Neighbors' Chickens. | inis Mosiem menace upon the Reforma- | resolution to prevent the Government |enterprise. teien. Toc. ine- ing direct competition to| Quoting & statement by President d | speak sweetly when some rich guy ex-| publics, particularly o 9| prom the Loutsville Times. tion, then seething in Germany and to | from entering < nouncement of yesterday, in which he|ment in a State which has twice vote blics, particularly of Venezuela, an e K — pointed out that Willlams had nothing | wet in State referendums on modifica- m:. o ‘!:) ;m:’;be because his o dll- In thelr ugges et Migh | The back-yard farmer PR ey e to do with the investigation and, in| tion ot the dry laws. « Despite these b st o degree 20d will be ensconced upon a lofty ped- [ to coax foodstuffs from out the soil, | Belloc says, was very great. It weak-|factory arrangement for disposal of the “except as an unavoidable by-product el , ! fact, had tried to prevent it when he| referendum returns, the question as to pense 'y ned the imperial power so that it could | properties to private interests could be|Of some other major public purpose,” Don’t Enjoy Being Reformed. ::',‘,l‘"mu;fim of “:'m;'x',fih'.l: z"a“e.:" :—; ‘1‘::: fi.nmm'lm ::o lm“ Imuinp:he n’gvmeu. about | worked out, we believe it is the sane|the Buffalo Evening News comments: e - Protesta) - |and cal thing for the Federal Gov-| ‘Mr. Hoover is 4 good, practical engi» " learned that it was contemplated, the | the preponderance of senttment in Ini- | WL - W CRCE 0 will be defrayed by the United States | chickens. 7 &fid« - fl:“:dfljn::ned D’l‘::'of‘l‘;;lr.ees. mml::: o make use of them for good | neer. as 'well a3 President. Would n?," impression unfortunately prevailed that | nois on this question has not yet bien | oy "y g nation of is that ge. | Government. Though Henry Clay never T The qulet town of Spires, with its fine; | of the general public.” renly be detrimental to the interests of Williams brought about the hearings to| definitely seitled. Certainly the people | cent mepn don't enjoy reformed | became P b man of his i| : Country Home Invasion. m:'"u'u «a::-l. does not. t::'-e:;. e ':xh'n g o lgpm t:l: Afi:gm Beevill 1 & Matlr o B B r{:rgmen air personal griévances against the|of the State, generally ‘speaking,” have | by corrupt men. From the Toledo Blade. N iiied througn ,"'“u “"'m“,,' at the ‘close | Coolidge and & vindication of the or) The Tulsa, World demands that “Con- Navy, from which he has resigned, ef-| not put the wet cause above their parly T 7o § It you see half s dozen sutomobiles | of'the firat quarter of the sixteenth cen- | inal intent of the Wilson administra- | 8Tess be put on record,” while the Mem- 4 factive May 15, to continue his work| allegiance up to this time. “The late Stiek to Your Story. parked around a country home on 8un- | 4;;ry " “Opposite the place where I stood | tion in projecting this development, | Phis_Commercial Appeal believes that day it means that the people who 1ive | (near the cathedral); that little eating | which not only would have the effect of | the matter “will be submerged in polit- on the development of a plane capable | George Brennan, genial Democratic | prom the Indianapolis Star. there didn't get away in time to escape the site of |making the United States independent|ical manipulations,” and the New Or~ 3 § L e it i it Bedaid i m‘meem“mn:l ,&T}'m"-fia'fl ihe nvasion,"” 1‘8“4'?. ;ehr‘fl "fn".'.r?‘!?; same struce | of lon'u'n powers for nitrates 15 time Inn‘- mu—mc-ym:a concludes:' “The * s speed record. wettest of the wet against Frank L. |You it e new Southern republics, & oo ture as u‘l:ed ‘Iry to vél;lc&e'.’?{ m;: > — m.‘: vho'ufie .l:‘e;' 3 -:t! :mlrn.-l:a ‘EI':E s In making his announcement at the | Smith, who had the indorsement of the with the older nations from which they Sad But True. wlgc l'::vln‘ .I;I: ro;em." pre ©. C. Martindale, 8. J., at the Jesult | certain when 1t will hmmnn ey “hearing yesterday Senator Tydings as- | Anti-Saloon League, and who was under Busy a8 Outfielders. sprang. SRl Prom the San Bernardino Sun. * K Xk Church, Parm street, London.. Evi-|There is at least a possibility of its be. serted that the only time he had ever | fire because of the expenditures made | . T S oL ; It doesn't seem possible there could | It is that Shells KayeSmith | dences of Sheila, Kave.Smith's interest | ing held in committes uni) the present; - the investigation | for him in his primary eampaign, was will be | Mystery be much unemployment in this country ! and her the Rev. T. Penrose ' in the n Catholic Church have n's close, and thus carried along seen Williams before . Yol Before very long % of us tal _of other Pry, were recelved into the Roman b-en appifent in her novels for some | &s ‘unfinished businsss’ unti). after .the. " began was vhen the avisior jetme (0 ‘,!JHW"!‘:;‘"""’“ e ahn in- Jugy ahout a8 busy as -y : I 48 Many AR o Catholie Church Ias Qctober by Pather time. congressional elections in November.” ‘biss and asked that it be or, dependent Republican took anoth:r i A i

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