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WASHINGTON HERALD / _________ XO. 5043. WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY. AHil'ST 19. 1920. TWO CENTS WARSAW POLES' 1 RECAL Capital, Secure Un velops, Shielded a tember, 1914?Cr Striving for Comple (Washington Herald-Public I Paris, Aug. 18.?The Spa wires tonight that the Poles b> in taking Lukow, on the Brestening the whole right wing of Gen. Wrangel accompanie< visit #to the front today and situation. (Copyright. 1S20, By WYNDHi (Staff Correspondent of the Universa (Special Ca Warsaw, Aug. 18.?Warsaw is Poland, contrary to all expectat observers, has duplicated the fir Pari was saved in September, 19: The dramatic turn in the ti ^ountcr-offcnsivc against *hc U north and the southeast of War f from the problem of defense to a complete rout of the Red armi< lines to the points on which the 10.000 Rrda Trapped. To the north the PoMsh cavalry in a rapid advance, cut , off 10,00< Ked troops operating on the wes of the Warsaw Pantzig Railroac near Mlawa. This stroke insure: communication between Poland an< Dantzig. Polish airmen report tha the Reds are in hopeless confusioi trying to get out of the trap. The: will have to escape through a bottlt neck to .the south of Mlawa. if a' all. The Poles feel sure they an as good as captured. To the southeast the Polish coun ter offensive has reached Novo minsk, Kaluchin and Lukow. Thi: move threatens the flank of the Ret divisions that have been operatini against Radzymin and also tha part of the Red*army that is direct ly east of Warsaw. If the Polisl spearhead goes out much farther i will force a precipitate flight of th< Russians. Peasant* Uninterested. An eye-witness reports that th? Bolshevist retreat in the north hai not been characterized by looting the damaging &f property, or th? molesting of the civilian inhabit ants. lp one instance where a wind mill had blown down the Red sol diers covered the machinery the ac cident exposed with a tarpaulin. The peasants continue to work thi area unmindful of the fighting Some of the ground has been crosse< by armies three times?first, th< Poles marching out; second. th< Poles in retreat with the Bolshev ists pursuing; and now the Bolshev Ists in retreat with the Poles pur DENIED A CHEW; KILLS HIMSELF Walter Reed Patient, Miss ing Since Aug. 9, Pound | Hanging. Despondent because he was un able to obtain sufficient quantitie of chewing tobacco, a convalescen soldier at Walter Reed Hospital, be lieved to be John J. Flutters, for merly of the uaQrtermaster Corps killed himself by hanging sometim last week. His body, suspended by a slin halter rope from an iron rod in thi roof, was discovered last night in i barn on the Louis I". Shoemake estate, just back of 7201 Georgii arcnue northwest, by the caretaker Marcellus Beckwith. colored. The authorities believe the mai committed suicide several days ago probably Saturday, as that was thi last time the barn was open am the condition of the body indicate) that he died about that time. At Ward 43. where Flutters, whi hid been missing since August 3 was undergoing observation, it wa ?aid that he was continually depressed by the lack of chewing to ' l.ac^o. This was caused, it was said . bv a shortage at the post. Flutter originally a shell-shock patien at Walter Reed, having been injurei overseas. He was discharged fron the hospital, but was brought bacl July t. AN UNFIP WE no longer groan and heap ashes upon our heads when ,the flames of Tophet are men tioncd. For. even the preacher have begun to tell us that Go< is radium, or ether, or some sci entific compound, and that thi worst we wicked ones may ex pect iu a chemical reaction. Thii is a pleasing hypothesis; but then lingers yet some of the old goodly terror of orthodoxy. There ?re but two subject; upon which one may discourse with a free imagination and with out the possibility of being con troverted. You may talk of youi dreams. and you may tell wha heard a parrot say. Botl SAVED; VICTORY ls MARNE less Unforeseen Des Was Paris in Septy's Defenders Now te Rout of Red Forces, .edger Special Cable Dispatch.) correspondent of the Excelsior ' a counter attack have succeeded Litovsk Railway line, thus threatthe Russian army. 1 the Polish staff officers on a returned very satisfied with the Public Ledger Co.) VM HARDING. London Daily Express and of J Service.) ble Dispatch.) saved unless the unforeseen happens, ions, even of the most pro-Polisti st battle of the Marnc, by which '4de is now being developed into a armies on an extended front to thj saw. The military talk has turned aggression. The optimists can sec ts and the restoration of the Polish y rested prior to the retreat. * Seeks troops i .tohelp poles 1 _ r | Maj. Butkiewicz Wants tc ! Organize Crack Outfit of Vets in U. S, ? j A crack outfit of veteran Poles * j with as many Americans as care t< T| join, will be whipped into a regi t ment for service in Poland, shoulf j the State Department grant Maj t Thomas Butkiewicz's request fo: e permission to organize and equip j fighting unit tn the United States. But recently back from Poland 5 Maj. Butkiewicz. of Wilkesbarre 5 * a-* who has held commission) during the past five years in th< . French, American, and Polisl forces, and was for seven month: - following the war assistant commis sioner for the American Red Cros; B organization in Poland, has mad. . an appeal to Secretary Colby to bi i allowed to ask for volunteers for j s J veteran regiment. 5' .. I want only experienced sol . diers." said the major yesterdav a . his headquarters at the Washingtoi . Hotel. It would take a very shor time to whip a regiment of veterans into shape. I am doing all in m: power to obtain the consent of thi State Department, but I am running into some international questions a the same time." The major pointed out that it wai \ contrary to a Federal statute t< raise troops in the United States foi the purpose of waging war on 2 friendly people, and there is th< question whether the people of Russia, taken as a whole, are *or are nol friendly to the United States. Dimpled Knees and Peeve Girlies and Where Man c t ' < Special <o Washington Herald.) ^ Titusville, Pa.. Aug. 18.?"I do no e need a bath, but I am ready foi them." a So spake the Rev. Frederic* e Kopfman. when told that the "bath ^ ing bungaleers.- of "Washington*! r Crossing, N. J., on whose charactei a. and swimming suits he had splashec , aspersions, are preparing a fecep tion for him which he will do wel i attend clad in his own chasi< i, bathing garment. J "I am dauntless, and ducking j will not deter me from my purpose,' proclaimed the pastor. > Led by Miss Georgia Roebling. ai executive at the Roebling win . plant at Trenton, it is reported tha - the "bungaleers" propose to purgi . the pastor in the cool depths of tht s canal, from the sin of havipg gaze< t on hosiery conservation and dimple< knees. For this, and a will to laugl n and "cut up" on Sunday or any oh i\th * Bay' the ful1 extent o tne snameful and immoral condi WISHED STOl > Morpheus and the bird are Incompetent witnesses- and your listener dare not attack your re cital. The baseless fabric of a vision, then, shall furnish mj theme ? chosen with apologiei and regrets instead of the mor< limited field of pretty Polly'i small talk. f I had a dream that was so fai removed from the higher crtti cism th^t It had to do with th? ancient, respectably and lament cd bar-of-judgment theory. Gabriel had played hrs trump and those of us who could not foi low suit were arraigned for examination. I noticed at one sid< ' a gathering of professional bonds FRANCE JOINS U.S. IN STAND : AGAINST REDS I State Department Gives Out Paris Reply to Colby Note. i ; AT ODDS ON WRANGEL U. S. Officials Gratified at French Position, However. uy kiikdf:IIIC WILI.IAM W1LB. (Public I>odrcr Service.) France's reply to the American note on Poland, Russia and bolshevism was issued, after four days' delay, by the State Department last night. As already foreshadowed by semi-official summaries cabled from Paris, the French government, in l suave and knightly language, assol ciates . itself unqualifiedly with the United States' demand for Polish independence and with our uncompromising hostility to the bolshevi 1st regime. [ France avers that it Is because .it so cordially approves'the "spirit" of the "principles formulated by the l United States" that the Wrangel government has received French . recognition. Wrangel's regime in South Russia is described as "a Russian government which declares that it accepts the same principles." The implied French invitation to America to join in recognizing J Wrangel is not acceptable to our I government. In that connection the ^Secretary of State announces that "there is a divergence, not of purpose 6r objective, but of policy." Feat area of French .Note. ) the basic feature of America's note of August 10?the affirmation that "this government would regard with satisfaction a declaration by the allied and associated powers CONTINUED ON PAGE NINE. I * | The full text of the French >| note to the Inited State* on Po-j land. Kuaala and Rolahevism will 1 be found on page P. r I I Cognacless, Cognace, l;\ Devil Dog Monkey, Is Returned to Zoo 8 - - - - - ... Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 18.?"Cog. s ?.ace'" thc sreen monkey of the Marines, has been forced to take 5 refuge in the zoo by the enforce? ment of the great nation-wide i """ought. His master found it impossible to give him his customary - n,Shtcap of hot toddy, and the t mournful squeals of the bone-dry , monkey made him an unwelcome t member of the community. Today ,;H. R. Mercer, a Philadelphia war ''j7e.teran' Presented the green im? biber of stimulating fluid to C. Wer sen Brown, superintendent of the t ?oo. J Cognace," so called on account j I of his frequent spells of inebriation. answered reveille one morning r whlle the First Marine guard was II stationed at SI. Aigre. France. His 3, love for hard-boiled eggs and ] 1* rench licker" immediately won t the aomiration, love and eventually j the respect of the gallant Marines. Critical Pastor Swains to Point >f God Faces Ducking Itlons denounced by Pastor Kopfj The town committee of the Crossing yesterday took action on Dr Kopfman s demand to secure the i towns salvation. "Jim" Hallinger I hnVt sworn in as special inspector of i fn rt.'.lf a~Parel ,Ie was instructed to dust off an old ordinance speci,r ^nfownesh"ea ?f bathiDe SUks '? ! 1 "Jim:" who puts touching conflV'1'"' stringy suspend1 | ers to keep up his own appearance S i an.,.,?"n"d''is Platform immediately'. The bathing suits will have to begin somewhere around the neck" fh' '* J' ^an<1 wlnd u" no sooner | than the knees, and I figure everyI thing will be all rixht. The parson must have been using his eyes right smart to see so much. 'Honey l swat kee molly pants,' as they say t in French, say I." ' ! iS'n,ue Gen' Washington shovI ed off in the rowboat has there been -1 SO much excitement at the Crossl|i"g According to Stationmaster Johnson, had he been passing that J way again the Father of his Country i might have sent the army on ahead and lingered to watch the sport and - dimply knees. rv ~ T men in solemn black and collars that buttoned behind; but it seemed there was some trouble about i their real estate titles; and they r did not appear to be getting any ' of us out. A fly cop?an angel policeman * ?flew over to me and took me by the Jeft wing. Near at hand was a group of very prosperous-looking spirits arraigned for judg? mcnt. "Do you belong with that bunch?' the policeman asked. ; "Who are they?" was my answer. Why," said he, "they arc?" But this irrelevant stuff is taking up spay that tho story FRENCH TROOPS!, SHOOT DOWN 20 INLEAGDEZONE Soldiers Kill Germans and Poles in Kattowitz Riot. NINE POILUS ALSO DIE Ruthless Acts Charged to j Army?Hatred Wave < Spreads. p By KARI, H. VON W1EGAND. I j (Universal Service Staff Corr??pond?nt.) \ (Sprrial Radio Oltpatek.) Berlin, Aug. 18.? In a street bat- j tie in Kattowitz, between the sol- I ! diers of the French army of occuI pation and the German and Polish | civilians, twenty Germans and Poles i and nine French were killed. Dr. | Milewski, one of the chief Polish leaders, was beaten to death and I his body thrown into the rive^. The German dead include Maj. Ton j Kleist, commander of the StcherI heitswehr. These reports were received at ; the German foreign office at noon j today from the plebiscite area of Silesia, which is practcally a "no 1 man's land." It was cut off from | Germany by the treaty of VerI salles and is occupied by French 1 troops for the league of nations. H | The country which is finally to rule B the region will not bo determined I until a vote is taken by the in- I habitants. I Hand Grenades Used. L The French used machine guns gj .and hand grenades in firing into the mob, the reports stated. This incident, following closely upon the alleged ruthlessness chargod against the French mill-! tary in the Sarre Valley and al-l leged new cases of outrages on j German women and girls by the | French black troops, have resulted i in a wave of hatred against the French which Is sweeping Germany. The government today expressed itself as pr**atly disquieted. Never ^ at any timr during the war was the hatred of the French so unanimous, so bitter and at so high a r; pitch as it is today. jj Soviet Spread Feared. The French officers at Kattowitx are charged in dispatches and in * ofTicfbl reports with adopting "a c most provocative attitude." . _ At the foreign office fear was expressed that Upper Silesia in its| 1 desperation and in its hatred of the French would join the Bolshe-' 1 vists. creating a most serious sit- j uation for Germany. It is believed! that if this occurred the French: would immediately seize the Ruhr Valley. U.S. INCREASES OLYMPICS LEAD ': ! v?? ! ti Have 100y2 Points. Against j 1 46 of Finland, Second. U Sweden Is Third. By JAMES E. (-TED") MEREDITH, 1 I Olympic Champion, and I'nlmul ! || Stnff Correspondent. [ D I Special Cable Dlapatrk.) Antwerp, Aug. 18.?Running with e] perfect stride and taking the hur- * | dies with such ease that it almost c' j seemed they weren't there. Earl j Thomson, an American boy running:! p under the colors of Canada, won j the 110-meter hurdle race here to- ? day, clipping one-fifth of a second j? trom the world's record, as well as J t< the Olympic record. Tljc new mark is 14 i-j. Thorn-j son established It with ease. He fin- j t< ished ?. good eight feet In front or j 8 jH. E. Barron, of Philadelphia, who! | ran his mightiest and got his place 1 j' honors by an eyelash. I n L?. S. t.ainn 32 Point*. But, though Canada gained the ^ thrill that goes with the most spec-jtacular event ot the day, the Amer- i | lean athletes were heard from in L substantial fashion. They picked up thirty-two points, finishing the day with IOOV2. Sweden's fifteen-point I gain, the second greatest of the day. gave that country a standing ot c 28^. Finland gained 12 points and S stands second in the standing for o the four days, with 46. Sweden is tl third. England, with 25,/is fourth. The other nations are France, 12; s CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT. b She 1 should occupy. Dulcie worked in a department store. She sold Hamburg edging, or stuffed pejpers, or automobiles, or other little trinkets such as they keep in department stores. Of what she earned, Dwlcie received $6 per week. The remainder was credited to her and debited to somebody else's account in the ledger kept by G? Oh, primal energy, you cay, Beverend Doctor?. Well, then, in the Ledger of Primal Energy. During her first year in tho store Dulcie was paid )?> per week. It would be instructive .to know how she lived on that amount. Don't care? Very well; probably SUFFRAGISTS AFT. AS ANTIS PREP A. VICTORY BANNERS FLOWN HERE Q t'.,'.- ^^Hv|: * ' ' pMB 18j W ffif *g W^K . i I ^shH Hli afei 1 nigl: ( Bnuaai yw| e^Emimmme&K^^^^^B ' W ^ ?' iBB hlvi jj?f B ^ .\f* h ^ ? Upon the addition of the last gold Mar representing Tennessee's the atification of the suffrage amendment, Miss Alice Paul, chainnan of ??i be National Women's party, threw out the suffrage ratification flag ,u!I csterday at 14 Jackson place northwest, headquarters of the National ln 1 Vomen's party. Siiiiling-faceU womtr., with tears of joy in their eyes, rowded near as they witnessed the triumph. ^,en ' ~ rati Victorious Women Planning ^ ^ suff Convention Here That May 2*1 Turn the Tide of Campaign ,?"* man said Washington, probably late in Sep-| stated she would immediately move frag 4mber, will see a convention of' to Maryland. Miss Emory has the begi aders oi the National Woman's j distinction of having been arrested a s arty which may turn the entire j C4 times as a suffrage picket. and| a' end of the political situation at the ; was 'n the local jail four times. : *V ,, , i To secure the vote for the women! ill elections, according lo Miss , of the Capital another Kederal rme lice Paul, the party chairman. She , amendment to the Constitution must I iid last night that the national of- j pass both the House and Senate by j ,-j eers were already at work on a'a two-thirds vote and 36 legislatures j to < ig convention, which will deter- 'must ratify the amendment by a ma-] line the policy of the National jority vote. ."Oman's party. 1 Miss Paul, at lier headquarters at _ t Jackson place northwest, was the j L, n?f I J nrl pr(jrnt 1 Tin ()rO nonsor last night for the statement V UOt / iCit / g I UUI ILL \J I g lat "there were &0.000 women in the y-x r T . ., 1 T i utriot who win establish a legal (j/ International Ink ?sidence in* other States in order ! J at they may ballot in coming 1 J III"} A \ Jt i lections. j. H 6(1(16(1 t)U A. MllC Officials said that plans for the I ^ [invention m Washington, while as 61 'm^Irei> W?rVlrea.dLia1^ <B> v?l.er..l Service?Special Ca-'Gol, >rm. Migfe Paul aJso stated that ! to lans have been made by the party Wr DUpatck.) ^ > discuss the District suffrage sit- Paris, Aug. 18.?That A. Mitchell, e ation when the convention meets. jpalmer Attorney General of the: era entative plans are now being . , ? , , 'orked out to help secure the vote Cnited States, is the- head of a vast . Dr women of Washington. 'underground organization of inter- the The National Woman's party to-J national inteligence agents was dis- mu ay will open ar. .nformation bu- I covered bj. Universal Service men i cot. t>au to aid the women of Washing- i " , vi* 3n in establishing residence in the ! today through diplomatic sources. . ?'? tates. j Despite Washington's proclaimsJ' Miss Sheldon Jackson. District i policy of "hands-off Europe." an j hairman of the National Woman's arm of American detectives has 1 arty, announced she would im- i, . , ... , ma lediately take steps to secure a Ibern busy since the armistice ga.n- J (on psidence in New York so she can j ?ring data by which, it is stated. It J COy oto this fall Miss Julia Emory, hopes to begin world-wide propa- rat ho lives at ttie Savoy Apartments, &anda to combat the Moscow gov- m?J j ord ernment. -iv, J. S. SHIP PITTSBURGH ! Several of the Severest of the wh ON WAY TO BUCK SEA ! Russia by means of "cooked"' docuParis, Aug. 18?The United Statesjments Parting to co e from *** { ha. ruiser Pittsburgh left Brest forilcaders in the Lnited States, mis i outhampton thin' evening to take group apparently had unlimited but n coal She will then procecd to j funds at ,t8 disposal. ! he Black Sea. . . ^ sni The Franch cruisers Guydon audi Foar Agem? MDe|H?r ^ lbr iarsellaise ' left Cherbourg under] Four other agents it is stated, wh oal?%d orders. They arc reported to?were "deported" from the United wil e en route to Sebastopol. | States on the boat which took Eraoia i tw< ? ooked at herself in the mirror. you are interested in larger swell music, and you see a lot tl amounts. Six dollars is a larger of swells. You'll have a sweet si amount. I will tell you how she time, Dulce." ^ lived on $6 a week. Dulcie hurried homeward. Her b One afternoon at 6, when Dul- eyes werc shinins- and her ch"ks P cie was sticking her hatpin with- showed the delicate pink of life o in an cighfh of an inch of her -real "'e's-approachinc dawn. , medulla oblongata, she said to 11 was friday' Hn s ? 1 1 her chum, Sadie - the girl that cents left of her last week s wa^es. p waits on you with her left side: Dulcie lived in a furnished "Say. Sadc, I made a date for room. There is this difference be- c' Hinner this evening with Piggy." tween a furnished room and a "You never did!" exclaimed boarding-house. In a furnished o .Sadie, admiringly. "Well, ain't room, other people do not know w you the lucky one? Piggy's an ** when you.go hungry. awful swell; and he always takes Dulcie went up to-her room? s a girl to swell places. He took the third floor back in a West 1* Blanche up to the Hoffman House Side brown-stone front. She lit w one evening,' where thcyj| have the gas. Scientists tell us that v ERNEH RE LAS' OPPOSITION 7IGHT IN T FOR ANO /o Days ^eft for Po if Ratification by L 3aul Declares Victc )y Securing of Thir New battle lines in the fight U it. Immediately following passage tr House of the_ Tennessee legii gorous campaign to obtain reco c two days in which to force Suffrage leaders are exerting i he Tennessee ratification. They listory as the State which broi he United States. Seek Ano Women leaders also announce iring ratification by a thirty-sei ' be taken to delay promulgate retary of State Colby. "We must safeguard ratificatioi i Alice Paul, the Quakeress lea > has personally directed the m; Tennessee feminine fight for I "The winning in Tennessee ir let-down," said Miss Paul. "V rlook no narrow strategy or le| "om tis. To make our long wo energies to gain another State epare to Block Reconsideration by Tennessee Solons iPublic Ledjer Service.) ational woman suffrage leaders ? preparing last night to use ry means to block reconsideraby the Tennessee legislature of ratification of the Nineteenth ndment and attempts of antiragists to throw legal obstacles he way of complete enfranchiseit of the women of the United Ice. While the action of the nessee legislature in passing the fication resolution by a vote of to forty-six was generally reled as a consummation of the rage fight, fear was expressed victory might be turned into at unless proponents of the te stayed on the job. *'e are informed by our workers 'ashville." Miss Alice Paul, chairof the National Woman's party . "that the forces opposing sufre. as soon as the vote was taken, in attacks on our men to induce ufflcient number of them to ren at home for the next two days order that the reconsideration .sure might be passed and the ndment defeated Thinks KfTort* Doomed. Phey are reported to be saying >ur men "you have done everyCO>TINTED ON PAGE SlVKN anization dligence Agents, hell Palmer, Claim dman and other anarchists bade Russia. These four were listed "undesirable anarchists." uring more than a year of option. the agents successfully t to the United Slates a mass of uments purporting to describe inner workings of the Comnist party, particularly in Mosr, Petrograd. Novgorod. Vilna, it and other iar?:e centers, at n through American eyes'. Object of tonKpirar?. "lie object of this secret diplo< tic conspiracy is stated to be a lenting of opposition to the Mosir government in widely sepaed centers. At the proper mont this opposition is to be colinated into a single, comprehene anti-Soviet action. through ich, it is hoped, the present Husn government will -be overthrown t even is asserted that the da> I hour of the counter revolution i been set. 'hus not only the United States France today is revealed a? king all. including the friewrlp of Great Britain, on a last ow of the dice which will decid< ether or not the next five veari 1 see the outbreak of a war be* uen the East and West. tic diamond is the hardest subtancc known. Their mistake andladics know of a compound eqide which the diamond Is as utty. They pack it in the tipi f gas-burners; and one may tand on a chair and dig at il i vain until one's fingers ar? ink and bruised. A hairpin will ot remove ij; therefore let u* al it immovable. So Dulcie lit the gas. In it.' ne-fourth-candle-power glow w< rill observe the room. Couch bed, dresser, table, wash tand. chair?of this much th< mdladr was guilty. The rest 'as Dulcic*8. On the dressci ere her treasures?a gilt chtm ? /STATE T STAND O * PLANS " ENNESSEE THER VOTE ssible Reconsideration egislature?Miss Alice iry Will Be Clinched ty-seventh State. ar woman suffrage were drawn last of the Anthony amendment by the slature yesterday the "antis" started nsideration of the 50-46 vote. They another ballot. "very effort to prevent any change ' hope to make Tennessee go down lght suffrage to millions of women ther State. d they will clinch their victory by >'enth State before any court action on of the suffrage proclamation by 11 by the winning of another State,'1 der of the militant Woman's party, ineuvers of the difficult atid draw n the ballot. leans no slackening of our efforts, I'ith nominal victory ours we must gal device that may operate to take rk certainly fruitful, we must direct * ;Victory of Women Ends Battle Begun 'Way Back in 1875 I Nashville, Tenn.. Aug. J 8.?The Nineteenth amendment to the Fed' eral Constitution pro viding equal suffrage for women became effective today when its ratification was comI Meted by ,the legislature of Testlessee. Tennessee furnished the thirty-sixth and final State needed te j make up the three-fourths majority I of all the States required te amend the Constitution. I The house approved a resolution of ratification after a spirited deJ bate. The senate had adopted ar identical resolution last w eek. The J final vote was 50 to 46. Declare Fight Jo.i Begiaelag. I Suffrage opponents declared after ' the house had adjourned that "the fight is Just beginning." They said Speaker Walker will | bring up his motion for reconsideration. which he can do under the rules at any time during the next two days. A majority of the membership of the house can vote to reconsider. said Representative Overton, who j had the Speaker's chair during the j voting today. "If this were done the house ( would vote again on the question of ratification." Overton, who voted against rattI flcation. declined to predict whether | or not the house w ill reopen the I question. Declares l ight Over. Representative Hanover, leader of thi suffrag. forces, said the fight is over and predicted an ev?n larger vote in favor of suffrage when an j attempt is made to reverse the dej c:sion of the house. When Speaker Walker changed * his vote from "no" to "yet" to get a chance to reconsider, he brought the tetal of affirmative votes to i0. 11 w hich i? a majority of the total membership of the house, which : IS ??. By changing his vote Walker gained the right to have two dar? 1 in which to gain reconsideration For a minute after the vote was called it looked as if It was a tic. . { <'*VTINTEI> on PJCE M.fw A REAL HOME i | Do you li\e in a "house" or 1a a homer* There ? a different*. j All houses are not homes. There if something about one's domicile. no matter how unprctcntlous it may be, that stamps It as i a real home cr otherwise Advertised today on the classified . I page of The HKRALD is a real home, built by the present own1 *r f?r hii ov/n occupancv. Jt ig located at Chevy Chase, vhrre 5 many of the most beautiful i homes in Washington arc located. It has all modern improvements. and can be bought right. What more does the homri seeker desire? See full details on classified page. By 0. HENR Y vase presented to her by Sadie, a calendar issued by a pickle works. I a book on the divination .?f i dreams, some rice powder In a i glass dish, and a duster of artl' filial cherries tied with a fink ; ribbon. 4 Against the wrinkly mirror I stood fcturcs of General KltchJ cner. William Muldoon. the t>u<-hess of Marlborough, and Bonrrnu, to Cellini. Against one wait was , a plaster of Paris plaque of an O'Callahan in a Roman helmet. Near It was a violent elrograph of a lemon-colored child assaultt ing an inflammatory bultcrly. This was Dulcie's final meat i CU.VTinU) do,