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; THE JATTLE STALK THURSDAY, JUNI i024 a WHAT POWER FIGHT IS ALL ABOUT! Kirst of a Series on What the Power | He Writes | —— Adviee j © Graduate — Fight That’s On in the State al Reward ed Personal Today Really Meané Letters b : saa | About oday Really Mear Aad Pleasure in Manufacturing | UTHO but a bret time on the job, attorney Genera) || FL CFCgp py |lemitm hme ten tot te ecg states tr |_ Millions \ today.) ‘ — BY JOH Cc. WAHI Stone tackled one task both of his predecessors, Pal $.6i"'6 — President the Wahl Pen i mer and Daugherty, failed to accomplish, and has fir BY HARI B. HUNT BY FIELDING LEMMON Y hep firnt f the ished it in short order ae peewee Be MU) WASHINGTON iis in the midst of a great power | ae , Stone freed the country from that awful “red menace W A vhs hes fight. Should the proponents of the Bone Free | . For years, the country has been trembling wit at ‘ F t Power bill obtain sufficient number of signatures, the - *” 2. 44 ” . Z Take t mes BE. W right of cities owning municipal power plants to sell J this “menace” to peace and security First Palmer, and tht er MH, ‘ : ‘ pAtae rated =o 7 surplus power outside their ; later Daugherty, kept an army of sleuths tracking en N . oo she corporate limit will be | py ot : { saries of Lenin and Trotsky to their underground lairs = Mad ar pt cay tested at the polls this fall A "| a5 wee vie & And then came Stone, more lawyer than politician ‘ William | ‘There are two power bill | er toe : hain tin aes With one wave of his wand he ended the fearful “red a Se a | n the ua One # aie | Ad wonntuct of ttn Unewe ” tt t trict us the Reed Power bill. It eo a menace. one “J ; we 4 ad t the wt se CONRAN Oe Rete smuatiogarn , > tea of the ids a fig a 1e ses - Stone got rid of it d y simply getting r d f Sleut tisens ‘were most important t sion of the legislavare and | a noel ye ues Burns. He separated from the department of justice the ‘ ampaigne will be referred te the peo |) omnan es wel p main lair of the fiery “reds the vivid imagination of a sii - ple at-tae ceminy clectien | inion, tent judgment of William J. Burns. nd clom about tn | Tor rejection er appreval. | | hard work; He should firet a pair of wooden shoes. rhe bill provides that cities | aliy himself with some prospe Ih a ‘ These woodes eee Merely | may sell power outside | | ous, succeastu aed ) Shading Language pe a el al ale it | their corporate limits, but if they do so, they wil be | | He may have ¢ ie, Sus i s ts M. ~- he starts out meelf he AG F ee | taxed 5 per cent on all power sold, t Bp Beecrctgy ¥ | T WAS a grievous blunder that Ambassador Hanihara N THE rough and sitar ¥ rca ay J The; pews ceuatia a iz | a © and cap. | i made when he wrote to Secretary Hughes that Japa- | & campaign few | house sponsored this meanure {1 stop at noth to defeat thin | Robert J. Cuddihy , ’ and John C, Wahl i are such perfect ters of th | the legisiature, « it was t measur Alrea they 6 - » 4 when he celal 1) nese exclusion would result in “grave consequences.” Jap- bate it wastes seed Be: ist eH apd salqet by eter mg) pan’ | PEW YORK, June o—Hold- | when 4 of his | will be advanced ax rapidly as aese newspapers now arriving in this country admit it. ation of the cou Whether or not it was so ir ganda, Much of it in falnehoods re A rags pe = soa mt capital, he ls: seady to go forward i : | toll » Watson. One of thes tende he taxing featu half ha an Hisstatements: ~ r 5 agg stoning he goe 6 \adde: As to Improper translation, they say, was the cause of great pi 2p tle ea Bg TBs ios NO ERR SORES AB | eae GRTant oe Dee ae Cuddihy that he has gone to Porch galt dit LO wig Mer aa (EE 5 misunderstanding. 4 from Uncle Joe Cannon municipally owned power plants tien In to refer to the Bone bill ~ pe f ae fee ty ne | (iitle bit harder than what he executive nanuts ; i ees ” a Uncle Joe had a habit, b: and & measure that brings bene. an the Bore-Erickson measure uring 16 days recently he | thinks he can qualify for. If | concern was better paid than ‘apanese. the words ve are } * pe : r) na for p In Japanese, the words “grave consequences” are as way of ingratiating himaelf with fit to the private power trust | ‘There ts absolutely no connec went out 16,000,000 letters to get | jt ts a hard fob he ix compelled the professional man of the harmless and pacific as the coo of a love-making dove, | a country audiences, of remov- only. It ts hard to say whether | ton the country's slant on one sub to work harder and in that samo age, and will conti i z y . j ing « an Onn t or no ark Heed himsel rt dhy Erickson nas super. Ject—tax reduction! lea: ore. To obtal ud, be better paid as long as i . ee ; ed States > yminous | !9 his r and tossing { r not Mark Reed himself ts in Oliver a sup learns mor: in © judg p . | Seueeu-unvarnished United States they are ominous |.’ -2t.c' comtemptuotaly ‘tp the, |: favor o¢ the bill as bin ctacd on | POWat MAASinG Whih hee ka In 1920, he sent 11,000,000 let- ment of values he must be in | continues to rise, As to pe | and chock full of kick, as recent history now records. nearest chair or table, as if a the power question has been un tended to initiate, The power tars to git, a. preconvéntion close contact’ with his subject sonal satisfaction, it seems to ( ee rsa aia j ey « collar was some gc to be de certain Your vote should be trust spent much money get presidential primary poll. and well informed of everything me that to bring comfort, con A Tt won't do, think the Japs, to have a similar situation ised ; pa tah tn li ting out Mterature to beat this Spe OF ent 4 10,000,000. | concerning {t venience or ease into people's | develop again. Hence, they will have at Washington here- | Watson—when he gets well | The other bill is Initiative be Phen Erickson withdrew it sadder alive eakatiote Sometimes in business a man lives should be as worthy and % 8 i say vig. C 2 slineati ine warmed up—goes Uncle Joe one Meas No. 82, coi ly kno rom the field and power trust ae itlon f has to act very quickly and, If bring as much pleasure as to after “a literary advisor capable of delineating the finest etatee ear aletibes ust on | rae da Krcgs! Oat feund it, had epank te teanae on prohibition and the bonus. fa anal nae ttataibattt ot Yok bial’ ( thale 4 swothie | Oe deitle shades of the meaning of English words. | his collar, but his coat, then hix in bill gives cities owning | o See, “3 the private in: Pn sante lect ald ues, he may take a failure. | their legnl difficulties, i > plan is a wi . . q Vewt—and then caat ort 0} power plants nt to sell erecta. tried to use this aame a «| The man who eucceeds in the | —— The precautionary plan is a wise one, as anybody can faced tape on le Bs Mis Latta send a HS Pad ba Iterature against the Bone bill strives fo present the views of saan who MaGaet aE littie®-isore TOMORROW—Retalling. f see. It is entirely consistent with best diplomatic usages ners. otlginaily’ called the tasctresstill by calling Homer Bone’s meas. the press and the thought of about his mubject or hin line af 4 7 Hi ‘ ure the Bone-Irickson bill. the world. th the other fellow and who y, 4 : 3 vords 8 ely draw hat no one knows Thin always gets a tremen and later the free power bill han th D G if at wherein words are so finely drawn that e dous ovation It is thie bill that ts causing This Mterature has much to Sedats and retiring, he shrinks haw the best fudement of on’t lve in © positively whether they say what they mean or are Mere | the sweat and worry among the my about the Hone-Erickson | from breaking into print him- values BY HAL COCHRAN . ayers r t r te powe: ompanies 0! progr So do the pa‘d propa wolf. Never before had he If h ters the manufactur By 1 ohn” oft : meaner than they pretend to be. VER #0 often reference ts priy r r companies ¢ am: 14 e enters the m T ‘OL kinda sleep oe e ithe E at made, either seriously or in this state, and It is this meas ints of the power trust. The granted an Interview. tng business, learns one trade, an’ are) lary as Gea’ be As for us, we area plain, blunt people, as a rule, but, feat to Tom Marshall's observa ure which they are spending | thing that ean be sald Here are some of his thoughts and is content to remain a || your bones feel sorta creepy . at the same time, we recognize that, in Washington, the tion, that “What the country | thousands of dollars to defeat, | sel proeram is that } 0D American thinking bench nt, bin ways Cee by Make you wigsty at ithe ‘knee : eae ee ie PARMAR needs is a good five-cent cigar.” Ciiles:: sith: Srtvate’ — tower ero ain't no such ant Rr country thinks more the pay of that trade, Bu }} an’ you got a task befere you harmonies are less likely to be disturbed if language there “May Rilew » Heat) ¢ha ctisoes te hak GOH Advertisementa and literature | clea nd more deeply than | he gets a working knowledge of | tho more tired youve neses han is denied no fine shade that other and numerous things stances under which Marshall js no cause for | that are be! broadcasted in any other nation. nll the tmportant preceases !n just grit teeth an4 bristle ak voiced this now famous rema rates that private | large quantities about the state “There is little difference tn the business, {f he knows some. up—go to it; don’t give in. and men enjoy. Joe Bristow, the long, ; | are ch g. They hawe shown sre merely an attempt of the the mental activity of people in thing about the market for the If nothin’ seems to sult former senator from Kanms, in | that cheap power in possible, | Dower trust to confuse the ts the several parts of the coun product, if he has fairly (ay an‘ just everything is wrong. the course of a speech one day | and that there ts no reason fi } Mue in this fight. | try. knowledge of how it ts adver. the feelin" that's about you make . What's Wonderful y as a Kansas cyclone, the people of this state paying | There in no logical excums for | “Our people are keen in dis tised and old, ‘his superiors the day vful long; be an | was discoursing on the coun | erent on “watered” stock and | cal the Bone bill the Bone. cerning tho difference between will soon find St out and he optimist—consic how mu 4 ‘ “. : . ‘i try’s needs. ated asaot. ¥ son mMeasure—except that truth and error, | Worse it might have been, and : Vv B W . y/ : HERE'S ae ay frying to keep up with it. The only “What the country needs," he The cities ask tht night to the power company had tho “Thers hasn't been m time in || A THOUGHT brace “up, forget your troubles thing to do is to gasp and swallow and make yourself would say is thus and po. extend to fdmem outside the propaganda printed and didn't the -past 60 years when the | | 1 go to it; don't give fn. i u 7" 4 After Bristow had recited th city limi@ the privileges en Want to waste the money, country, on the whol was as | f your weary hope ts sinking, believe that you are a part of the progress of 1924. : nre Ree a5} ne fovea by the etifmae Stet Gis This ts but one example of happy an it Js now." : cakes us i elaine || when the last straw scems to Photographs are being sent by wireless. The chemists hour, Vice President Marshall, limits. In ti¥s tf powar com the halftruths being hurled {ato Peinghoscde cess ret et fall, m3 you've tried again ot are producing a fat and a sugar the like of which are not front: ti, Seraldtig. “officer's | DAS, OSes sete Gee. CE ee ee eee ae his mother.—Prov. x.:1, Hegel coed arent wer ; Seeing s i y chair, crooked a finger at “goose that inGy tie golden sipiaad S D b ll saghetiar srsel be PR Pires eee to be found in nature. Scientists are making light turn | jronry Rose, aasletant iecetary egg” and which tty people are © ; | ez amoe Dad: E must be’s thetourh- foo! wne| | 7UF-PTOxPect light is thin, then's : , A | eedin a pe dee ' orrow. 2 5 = |] the t < | corner. Laboratory sharps over in Washington are able | of the senate and mid in an ss rep pei patentee de for ae Sere | No small |i2ican iearn nothing from —)is Biicoee and " to change the sex of a frog or a chicken in the egg. Comes _ | arnniariaad highs Ke ae ve ino aes pe DESTROY TATE SEALS | TF boy wo nl dA | forte. x | ie setae ee des eck feat now Dr. Harvey Fletcher, of the Western Electric Con: | o-whdt the country nests to « one of Washinggonw veteran lwent coast fishermen are urging the| want to be}\ AN MNGLISHMAN says tie can) yon seaae pio ed leat er: With a machine that reproduces the human voice with good five-cent cigar." correspondente—Louts %. Lud | annihilation of immense herds of hale} LTO president if | destroy whole armien with « newly. | pitty sits “ail cchin’ tillebnls: acres Such perfection that, when it says “papa” or “mamma, ee cee | low. Ludlow's beok. entitled \s for the protection of salmon in|] “fAamA he knew how || discovered ray. Hoo ray! your ‘face’ thore |beeakea "a stille you get up and hunt for the bottle of colic medicine. S onary aby <e the ios Slippepehta eh he aber bere mind and along the Alaskan | oy much work tt |) CHAKLIE DAWES says they and over you begin, for you have Tha Sake a sei jf t he ways anc ery ey: ni ae h ‘The seals destroy whole xg AE DA ery || found the rule ts good—Go to it What the chemists and electricians will produce next wiles of public men as revealed public men over @ parind of |schools of fish headed toward the takes to hold || mention of the vice presidency irri. dont ctvelinr pied the job. tatea him. Careful, everybody! Slow is limited only by the size of your imagination. But, right by a volume from the pen of more than 30 years now, you can sit down in quiet, take breakfast in the Se eT Te ee ene — shape of a pill of synthetic food, talk to wife back in —.- New York, get a picture of her in her Broadway shopping and press the button of a talking machine that will sass mother-in-law to a standstill. Nature may be wonderful but, a little later on, we may CHICKEN CROQUETTES | ome and be able to get along without her. . 6 tablespoort onion juice few grains pepper | C 34 tablespoon chopped parsley 234 cups a 1 teaspoon lemon juice 4 teaspoon salt Iocy, with chicken; Some Omissions rolztire will Boll topeeliee > ih ny eee Thousands Assembled BOSTON HERALD man gets the $500 Pulitzer prize 3 sand, ort aside to cool: Eiab ose: ong with 2 tables: of ew a S for milk. Roll croquettes\in dry bread crumbs, then in spawning ground (Copyright, 1924, for The Star) bdown! Danger ahead. for the best editorial, the text of excellence being mixture and then in the dey bread crumbs, covering well. “clearness of style, moral purpose, sound reasoning and ata pees Oa Ngee to brown a ples of bread power to influence public opinion in the right direction.” 4 s ‘i pod In well on unglared paper ; e@ The youtg man wrote on “Who Made Calvin Coolidge?” Makes 14 poncho < ibieiiaca | a | Tt is a real fine article, but it is difficult to grasp the Thick White Sauce | “moral purpose,” and some glaring omissitns are apparent 2 tablespoons Amaizo few grains peppen in “the makings.” For instance, full credit is given some ° gop Sour or 74 cup cornstarch) 1:eup scalded rail Massachusetts politicians for making Calvin, but there’s Put Amaizo into top of double bofler, Add flour and sea- . , net a word for God, or pensnere oe that 1920 convention. sonings and stir until thoroughly blended. Cookoverflame | Very recent arrivals'comprise this gigantic However, maybe it is just as well. Anyway, the judges adding m displa 7 5 hs vilieved the Creator of all responsibility and, in these psa Ale 5 P y of Untrimmed Hats, Sports Hats, days, nobody is doing any public cheering over what until smooth f Trimmed Hats and Children's Hats, which Daugherty had a hand in. psi ier pe promise more comfort, style and good looks cooking, until ° ; ae, Se than The Criterion has had the privilege of Never Too Old = ‘ offering before during this season, for..... _ JN BUFFALO 104,000 adults have attended night schools in the last six years. No one is ever too old to learn. . In youth, schooling is dreaded—tho not as much as for- 100 Dozen New Untrimmed Hats merly, due to improved methods of interesting the pupil. } When you remember that a hat of any description rarely remains in stock at The In old age, men and women regret that they neglected rf Criterion as long as two weeks, you will understand the significance of this ar- educational opportunities in youth when knowledge is as 7 in ray of 100 dozen crisp and new creations in Swiss hemps, Milans, proxaline more easily acquired. Existence is an endless process of ; 7 and azure—the widest range of shapes, colors and shades especially adapted to Me eitcation, and life is just one class ina perpetual chain, ; Hy 41 midsummer wear to be found in the city. Every charming, quaint and dis- The brain need never grow old. oh g tinctive quirk of brim or contour of line devised by America’s leading $1 style authorities will be found here MMMM OG che bias cca se seh era eNe VRID | | roug! uickly, GL I LAN! i | It fries beautifully, tho: hly, quickly, Sports Hats Trimmed Hats a | 4 } Amaizo is ideal for deep frying. Smal}, enug, very sportsy hats of ae unusual best describes a this 8 y Oo! " i Ith ck straw, felt, straw and felt combina Jai cca peel Haren el t heats quickly, ) 2 im June 5, 1924, | 7 tions, brightly trimmed, will be , Dear Folks: | It does not smoke at cooking temperature. nathg. Gummer -snsteninls:) ahs stra) found delightfully ‘comfortabl nings, 1, ar v I wrote about a bunch of names possessed py many folks—the It does not carry the flavor of one food to perpen om a a aa ed “' ge rg varie ahi) names that always seem to call for certain sets of Jokes, I searched another, so it can be used over and over. let, tee a cen oP flip en a €a63 i baoon the whole directory for names they couldn't pun; I found a “Sku. It may even be used for shortening, after \ feat ality es gatas @ Guinan Qe come Nae Geto a biszewski,” and I thought “The very one!” having been used for frying. UES ms a 2 S ‘ ha Spe aN (GUNG Sed) GD oF rf The lonely Skubiszeksw{ wan the oddest name I found. I thought, 4 adi: «Ra ast iii $1 strayed 2 $1 “There can't be many men with such a name around.” And so, in Send for free dmaleo Cook Book containing SSE ES SEES FANG! bor Vet Oe A,» on eos « HOP css0y «cee seye s daa anon canive Tuesday's verse, I printed Skublszewski's name; but, bingo! ‘and dalleiguinads of tacit i Wednesday morni: Y atties FRENCH FRIED POTATOES J y ng here's the little note that came Add ‘ b * ig Xb gre small potatoes, Pare and cut lengthwise dress: 111 W. Monroe St., Chicago, Ill. Wreaths Children’ 8 Hats in long narrow atrips. Allow to stand a few A H Maize-P: ‘od 9) Dear Avridge Mann: minutes in cold water, Drain and dry well, Fi merican Maize-Products Co, : Old Mann, I read your linés tonight—the first in quite awhile: a few at a time in deep Amalzo tor enough t NewYork + « «© Chicago While you're here Wriday you may have your Of course the little Miss is included in all owt and when I'd finished reading them, I couldn't help but smile. Tho brown a piece of bread in 20 - choice from our big assortment of $1.45 to $1.95 plans for Dollar Friday, A hat for your girlie, names you rhymed, the Jokes you sprung, were good without o seconds (395° F.), Fry until | wreaths, one sufficient to t ght, and eve . doubt—T'll bet you lunch in the market, tho; that last name brings light golden brown and cooked ae @ aT Aa ot teie ah GRE i ce Just right, and everything $1 it out! through (about 7 minutes), gas hat complete, Nase cca de segnennn for TielistepacdameeennT sabe At noontime at “Two Sisters,” market folks aro gathered ‘round: Drain on unglazed paper and there's people, too, from everywhere who know whore good food's salt just before serving. found, The soup and fish, the juley roast, the chicken pie vo fine, Sweet potatoes can be fried in are cooked by Skublszewski—that namo in your A. WARREN, line! the same way, Bellingham, . —— eattle’s st Wlillinery Store Cirridge Yann, Ses at Seneca 5)