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imaginary goblins and academic ab- stractions,” Garrett said: | “The favoritism which within seven short years has been wrought 4 : into law; the tangled confusion fol- | . lowing in the wake of corruptions! b T and shame; the foreign policy, or | B R R s lack of forelgn policy, which has | - |1eft us without a triend among the m Leaders Um TS | rtioms ot tha wosid: tho domestic | aistresses which all their cunnivg W“M M“a | has not enabled them to cure be- “ cause avarice forbade alleviation; | suraly summon us to find a firm and ‘Washington, Feb. 17.—P—As the | common group on which the legions > {of democracy can stand and give | nation’s voters cast inqulsitive |, 'O .00 in the victorious days #lances at the field of candidates for | or yore,” president, these of democratic per- | auasion are receiving a good deal of | counsel and some concrete demon- ( strations of harmony and tolernnce! 16’ gulde them in the November win- | [i[] INT“ SERVI[;E nawing at the ballot boxes. { : Davis Speaks | el I The democratic party's Aainse ae W, Davis, poicis o w France Plans o [)pen Up DlDIO' past and prue;t European ex‘ec\h: tives to support his plea that religion 2 m s should mot be s major issue in the | matic Gorps hol‘fly forthcoming race for the White| Hc::o'l?-n:p::rt“n'l;httco‘umbm' outh Faris | Ben, 17 P = Alnoum: Mr, Davis reminded that gentile |French senators maintained yes England had in Disraeli a Jew prime | gy that the place of women was | minister, Protestant Canada a Gatholic premier in Laurier and Catholic France a Protestant presi- dent in Doumergue. “I'd be ashamed,” he said, “to be- | lieve that the spirit of tolerance s less in America than in those great democracies I have named.” ~He aid not mention present can- 4 Jidates in his speech but earlicr had |SeTVe only in the ofiices at Quai %ald that Governor Smith of New |1'Orsay, as diplomats abroad have: | York, democratic candidate would be [0 perform many services now “nlghly acceptible” to him. {barred to women. These include Catholie, Jew and Protestant presiding over consular courts, cele- | gathered at a good will dinner $n | brafing marriages and serving on | Richmond last night to hear out- Medical boards —which examine | standing figures of their creeds plead French military recruits. ‘The law | for religlous tolerance, Senator |Will be amended eventually so that| Ransdell, democrat, Louisiana, spoke Women can be admitted to the| for the Catholics, Governor Byrd of Scrvice on the same conditions "51 Virginia, for the Protestants and men. Rabbl Louts D. Mendoza of Norfolk, | The difficulty of recruiting the for the Jews. The Rev. Peter Aains. French foreign scrvice has been in- | lie, pastor of Christlan Temple, |creasing and the standard of the, Baltimore, father of the good will applicants falling lower and lower. | idea and a leader of the Christian |Applic have been recelved | unity movement also spoke. from very highly qualified women Judge by Best and the cabinet after studying the | Al urged that each creed judge question decided to admit women ! the other by its best rather than its (to the next examination for the worst. Rabbl Mendoza called for service. “loyalty. to. man—unlabeled man, the | The senate rallied gallantly to the dream of Jefferson and Wilson.” |defense of women in defeating th Political Harmony government proposal to put every Chieago, - with its_reputation for |French woman at the service of the | turbulenes-in polities, offered the state in time of war. | concrete example. of practical poli-| “The country will never accept| tical harmony. There Anton J. Cer- [the forced departure of French | mak, president of the Cook county |women from their homes,” said board, withdrew from the race for 'Senator Jenouvricr. “A man owes govertior to become a candidate for |his services to the state, but as to the U, 8. senate. a woman one can only for her | The idea was to make Cermak a | voluntary services, ary father of‘ running mate for Justice Floyd E. a family will energetically repulse Thompson, candidate for governor, the requisitioning of women.” instead of splitting the party. | The senators warmly applauded The republicans now are building this sentiment and amended the up, two slates, the Small-Thompson- | bill to read, “All French of the Crowe group and the faction of |masculine sex” shall be llable to Senator Charles 8. Deneen, and |mobilization in time of war. democratic leaders saw in Cermak's| The chamber of deputics, on the move an omen of victory for the laverage a younger body of men party. |approved the measure last year 500 Urged to Accept Challenge ito 31 More counsel for the democratic e party to accept the challenge of is- | TO GREET COOLIDGE suég and not “again fall a victim to Richmond, Va., Feb. 16 (UP)— its own folly and blither about non- The Virginia state legislature vote! essentials™ came from Representa- | today to go en m: to Alexandria tive Finis Garrett of Tenn., speaking | Va., Fcbruary 22, and welcome at Indianapolis before the Indiana | President Coolidge when he delivers democratic editorial association. |a Washington's Birthday address Garrett, the minority leader in the }there. house, is a candidate for senator | —_— from Tennemsee. Observing that in| The first water-proof cloth was 1924 the party divided and fought ' made by a Scotch ehemist, Charles “with passionate abandon over | Macintosh, in 1823. (Bstern fillinery 133 MAIN ST. in the home and ref their conscription in |Le Petit Parisien today says the diplomatic service is soon to be | opened to women. | The paper understands a decree to this effect will be promulgated shortly. At first the women would | Special | Tomorrow 500 New Spring Models! FELTS in Combination with Straw For BATURDAY ONLY we offer you one of the best values, in snappy fine quality Felts, with touches of pedaline straw, that you ever saw: 25 Different shapes to choose from. All new spring colors | | with a point just beneath the bal- Lut not because they were badly cony. The picture thus would be . | made, Taulty projection, says Karl| yeflected downward through the and Sciences, is to blame. | distortion. | X | Struss, who handled the camera | vor better still” he adds, “bulld in the latest productions of D. W. | tne in the first place so | known in the industry for his sk 1l | where it belongs; that is, at right often inf and ¢ 0 . . . ¢ _ |Abraham was all ly to go on Height of Projection Twists Movie|tin'tn: rmons. ™ Linker's lawyer told the court that Scenes, Camera Man Says L e {to the old Jewish formula, and . - = | signed “in the sole presence of | |God,” a document drawn up in ac- | | cordance with the law of Moses. | | Abraham offered by the terms of | | the contract his business as fur | dealer and Rebecca brought a | dowry and a linen robe in which | | she was to be buried when death ' | brought the contract to an.end. For | this reason Linker demanded dam- | ages of 10,000 trancs ($400). Mile. Oularmeski on her part sald she broke the engagement because she felt a “growing repulsion” for | Abraham Linker, The court declded | that in this day'and age the Mosaic |1aw is out of date and, moreover, the marriage contract is not final until the parties have said “yes" fo the questions of the civil or ecclesi- | astical authority. Rebecca was al- |lowed to keep the engagement ring |and other gifts. ‘When placed in & vacuum, water boils at a temperature of about 50 degrees. Hallywood, Cal, Feb. 17.—#—| As a remedy Struss proposes the of a periscopic tube M ion pictures are out of | installation risce Al lvnnueclmg the projection room (RN O TR joint when an audience sees them, | - Struss in a paper submitted to the | palcony and then forward onto the | cm Academy of Motion Picture AItS | screen at an angle eliminating all theater Gritfith and F. W. Murnau and iS4 to put the projection room | —3nd go should you, for it is in achieving pictorial effects, con- | angles to a vertical screen.” tends that projecting a picture | & R e to those around you. downward upon the screen from a | WYER YA[NLY A safe and agreeable way to roof of the theater cheats the spec- | tators out of sceing the film they [Nvofls MOSAIC LAW; PERTU! came to see. i What they really see, he says, is “a greatly distorted image which | But French Courts Do Not Recog- i‘nfin"?-hu * or harmful under no condition or position in ¢ bringe qui the theater can be seen normaliy.” | mize This Regarding Mar- iqi:n’:cuupl sticky Projecting downward at an an- riage Pledges. | that often clogs the air passages. gle, often as great as 45 degrees, i [ ~ transtorms into a square the scene | Paris, Teb. 17.—(UP)—French ey Lo s o1 Which appears on the film itselt’| oourty do not recognize the Mosaic as a rectangle, Struss explains, and |iaws voparaivie! marriage’ promises this distortion is carried into the |2V resarding ma i images of players and sets, Spec- |Abraham Linker vainly invoked the tators in the side seats often get'aid of the ancient Hebrew books in a grotesquely distorted picture, but | his breach of promise suit against cven thoss in the center of the | Rebecca Oularmeski, who refused to| & Louse are not getting the picture | keep her engagement with the | N S ST as actually photographed. mayor and the local rabbi wheni BLAIR & BRODRIB Radiola 17 Just received a limited number of these world famous sets to sell at '130 All Electric—no Batter- ies or Eliminator—Just plug in. 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