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THE125HERALD PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING BY THE WASHINGTON HERALD COMPANY 4-42F-420 Eleventh Street. Telephae MAIN 3S. CLINTON T. BRAINARD. Preeldent mad Editor. FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES, THE S. C BECKWITH SPECIAL AGENCY. New York Office.....................Trebun4 Bldg. Chicago Office....................Tribune Bldg. St. Louts Office..........Third National Bank Bldg. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER: Daily and Sunday...............30 cents per month Daily and Sunday.....................$3.60 per year Daily, without Sunday...........25 cents per month SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL: Oaily and Sunday........... ...35 cents per month Daily and Sunday....................$4.00 per year Daily, without Sunday..........25 cents per month Daily, without Sunday................$3.00 per year Sunday. without Daily................$1.00 per year Entered at the postoffice at Washington, D. C., as second-class mail matter. MONDAY. JU1NE 12, 1913. A Line o' Cheer Each Day o' the Year. By JOHN KENDRICK BANGS. First printing of an original poem. written daily for The Washington Herald. A GOODLY CHOICE. If I shall win my goal or lose I may not be the chooser; But if the crown the fates refuse One choice will be, and that I'll choose; To be a SMILING LOSER! oyight. 1 .) The District of Columbia has no member of the Republican National Committee, and it can scarcely be argued that it deserves one. The Colonel has said a lot of unkind things about the administration, but the one word that hurt most was his "no" to the Progressives. Mr. Hughes didn't want it and Mr. Fairbanks didn't want it. but they probably won't care now how far the voters go in showing them who's boss. At any rate Mr. McAdoo declined the chair manship of the Democratic National Committee in time to escape the suspicion of dodging a thankless task. A Michigan man who smoked ioo cigarettes a day has been sent to an insane asylum. It is possible, though, that some treatment other than smoking might have cured him. Vic Murdock has been re-elected chairman and O. K. Davis secretary of the Progressive National Co ::mittee, but it would seem that one of them would be enough to keep the grave green The Hughes-Fairbanks ticket is described in some quarter- as a cold combination; probably' for no other reason than that neither of the candidates has the habit of talking when he has r.othir.g to sa:.. President Taft's voice "sure to be heard in the campaign, and it is doubtful whether even an offer of the place or. the Supreme Bench vacated by Mr. Hughes at this time would keep him out of it. Women jurors in Kansas mingled their tears ot joy with those of two men they had acquit ted of the murder of a boy. Is this a sign that at some time in the f'.t::: capital punishment will be abolished by the simple process of select ing juries of the opposite sex of those accused. The school board of Washington, Pa.. has formally adopted rules for spanking unruly scholars, prescribing the implement to be used and the one permissible place of attack. It is sufficient to say that the familiar reinforcements ci old-fashioned school days will be in demand i. that town A St. Louis girl, who recently won a So,ooo beauty prize, has married one of the 1,742 chaps who proposed to her by mail as a result of the notoriety she achieved. The fact that he is a railway mail clerk suggests that he will hardly find time to admire his bride and spend her money, too. The vitally unimportant question of whether the Progr.essive party nominated Roosevelt thirty seconds before or thirty seconds after the Republicans nominated Hughes may never be satisfactorily settled, but there is no doubt that the deed was done only a very little while before the death of the Progressive party. Primaries were held in West Virginia last Tuesday but it has not yet been determined who were the winners on either Republican or Democratic ticket. Practically all candidates fgr all State offices are claiming the victory,, and all are crying fraud. Those politicians up there are deliberately stealing WVashington's stuff. A lot of lunatics on a county farm in Penn sylvania went wild with delight at the sight of a farmer being dragged by a runaway horse, with his life in imminent danger. However, plenty of persons not supposed to be crazy pay~ admission fees in the hope of witnessing some thing of the sort and are keenly disappointed if it doesn't materialize. "I am still cormmander of the greatest battle ship in the world, and my men are as fine as Nelson's bluejackets," said Capt. F.M. Phill potts, of the Warspite, in person, to a corres pondent in London. 'The Warspite was certainly lost," said "a high sea officer of the German admiralty staff" to a correspondent in Berlin. Which throws some light on the process of win ning a German victory. A speaker in the Reichstag declared: "We uould not reject the peace mediation of a really neutral power, possibly the President of Switzer land, but President Wilson's hand we reject, and we believe a great mass of the German people approve our rejection of it." And having been jnst as emphatically rejected by spokesmen for the allies, no further indorsemnent of the Presi dent's qualifications is necessary, even though Roosevelt in 1916 and Later. Col. Roosevelt has said that he is out of poli :ics and so he may be just at present; but he :an't stay out of politics without staying out of the Presidential campaign that will soon be on, nd to stay out of that fight the Colonel will have o stay out of the country. Can any one imagine tim sitting calmly at Oyster Bay, almost within hearing of the big guns in action, and not leap ng on a rear platform? There are not many new places to which he may go, but he can't remain in the United States this year and keep 'ut of politics. It is common knowledge that Col. Roosevelt aas no very high personal regard for Mr. Hughes, and it may easily be inferred that he has not permitted himself to be convinced that the former Justice will make an ideal President. Also it is known that Mr. Taft places a very high esti rtate upon the statesmanship of the man he sent o the Supreme Court of the United States to the displeasure of Col. Roosevelt, and there can be no doubt that Mr. Taft will take a promi nent part in the campaign. The prospect, there fore, of bringing his own active torce to bear to further the cause of a man he doesn't like and n so doing to make common cause with the former friend of whom he made a bitter politi :al enemy, cannot be regarded by the defeated candidate at Chicago as inviting. And yet here lies the Colonel's great if not his only political apportunity. He has never made a sacrifice for the party that has so greatly honored him, for his declination of the Progressive nomination cannot be called that; and now, for the party's advantage no more than his own, he is called upon to sacririce only pride and personal prei erence. The conclusion cannot be avoided that he was honestly surprised to discover that he wyas not the first and only choice of an over whelming majority of Americans. hut convinced. as he must now be, that the man nominated at Chicago is truly representative of the party's will, it is his duty, and nothing more, to sup port him, if not to take an active part in the c.. ign. There is given to him, too, the opportunity to give some effect to hi, condemnation of the policies and method, of the party in power. For two years now he has been cenouncing each successive act of the administration, to no pur pose except to attract attention to his own uperior wisdom and Aiericanis:. The state m:ent of principles of the Republican nominee certainly must -.ti-fy hui . I h e believes that Mr. Hughes will n.ake an earnet effort to put them into deeds he can scarcely justify himiseli if he remains silent when by his aid the natior may be as ed from what he has repeatedly described as a process of destruction at the hands of the present Democraic government The time has come when the possibiltty of his own words being put into deed: presents itself It is no time for him to become silent. So if Col. Roosevelt, after taking his bear ings and surveying the horizon, decides to clear his decks for action there need be no sur prise. No circumstance connected wsith his re huff at the hands of the Republican convention reflects upon hint, upon the delegates or upor the party. He lost in a fair fight, but one blow doesn't defeat a fighter of the Colonel' caliber, and his place is in the thick of the new and bigger battle. It lie is found there what events may not the next four years wit ness? A reorganized and strengthened Re publican party would be assured. Reconciliatior with Mr. Tait suggests itself as no le- of a probability than the election of Mr. Hughes And four years in the \';hite House nay be :suite enough to suit Mr. Hughe,. It may well he believed that he would have preferred to re main in the Supreme Court, and plainly he the type of man who could readily di-pense with n expression of public confidence and <atisfac tion in the form of a second term. It is a long txcursion into the future. but e'en eight years from now may see the opportunity for the grati hcation of Col. Roosevelt'- anUition to spend four more years in the \\h:te House. But if he -tays out of politics in this ca:mpaign year, slim indeed will be the chances that he will find it ossible to come back. He has i weighty de rision to make, but all things considered the probability is that he will be tound actively aid ig the cause of the candidate of the G. O. P. Chancellor's Change of Tone. In striking contrast to h:s previous utter ences while the war has b en in progress was the last address of Imperial Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg to the Reichstag. The aughty attitude of the conqueror, offering im possible terms of peace, to be accepted or re .cted without parley, wyas no longer evident, and the tone of the chancellor was rather one of ?esperation, if not res ena'ion. Before, lie told e German triumphs, s the blows falling upon a 'eaten foe that mad'y ins steel upon aun hilation, -ather than submission to what Germany offered. In his last speech he dwelt upon Germany's 'bility to withstand blows and tn continue fight ng against armies and starvatio.n. "My belief in my people and miv love for my people," he said. "gives me a conviction tirm a- a rock that we shall fight and conquer as we sav'e fought and conquered hitherto. Our ene rnlies wish to let it go on to the end. We fear -teither death nor devil, not even the hunger -levil which they wish to send into our country. The men who fight nut there around Verdun, ,sho fight tinder Hindenbtirg, our proud blute iack-ets who showed Albinon that rats bite, are ashioned from a breed that knows how to bear privation also. These privationis are here.I idniit it calnmly and openly even to foreign :ountries, bitt wse will hear th em." These are brave and patriotic words, hut they ire not the words of the conqueror who spoke snly a few weeks auo. They protest too mutch. Be spoke, too, at length and regretfully of the -efusal of the allies even to consider Germany's leace proposals. 'The chancellor's speech con -eys a distinct impression of a waning of German :onfidence in the outcome, And since its de ivery the tide of battle has gone ste-'dil" smins' he Teuton arms. The Russians have debi'. red heir smashing defeats, V'erdutn seems as dista in objective as ever, and the em-tiness of thes 'victory" in the North Sea is apparent to the i-orld. May it not have been the "hunger devil" that forced the German fleet to battle and is still stalking3 At any rate the chancellor's speech and ev~ent- - followed it sugget that before 'overtures, not so rigidly restrie ce of the map," may A Vacation Where Power Dwells By ORISON SWETT MARDEN. "Sometimes I am worried by the thought o the effect that life in the city will have o1 coming generations," said John Burroughs in recent interview. "Living in the city is a dis cordant thing, an unnatural thing. The city a place to which one goes to do business; is a place where men overreach each other ii the fight for money. But it is not a place it which one can live." When Daniel Webster was visiting in th West a ranchman who boasted of the immens wheat and corn fields in that section inquire of his guest, "What do you raise on the rock acres of your New England farms?" "Men, was Webster's reply. No matter what comforts and convenience man's skill and ingenuity provide for moder city dwellers, we know that power dwells i: the country as nowhere else. The very stability the level-headedness, the sound judgment, th vigorous initiative, the genius for leadershi which enable men to accomplish the marvel that surround us in the city, are largely physica and man's physique attains its maximum of de velopment and power in the open country, no under the artificial conditions of city life. Out of a recent list of one hundred leadin; men at the head of great enterprises in Nes York city it was found that over ninety wuer country bred And of sonic fifty cuinently successful me interviewed in different centuries, nearly fort of them were from the country, and most a the remainder were born and reared in smal sillages. Similar conditions exist in the grea cities of Europe. The vigor that does things, stamina, force fulnes' and virility, are generated close to th soil. Nature gives us a life draught that th city cannot brew. The city could no nor supply the demand for strength, for vigorou stalwart men, than hothouses could supply th food of the world. The sun-kissed frelds an I the wind-purified hills must always be relie on for men and bread. The farm has ever bee the world's greatest gymnasium, the greates :tanual training school in the world. Masterfuless, physical and mental vigor, gri pluck, persistence-these are the forces that nov the world, and these are the qualities we are a' ::bitious to acquire. Yet in spite of the fac that the men who, as a rule, possess them in th ighest degree, nine-tenths of the men who d the great things in :ife-our statesmen, our lead ing business men and financiers, the heads c innense manufacturing interests-laid the four d;ation of their carers in the country, multitude of people seem to think that they can acquir these very qualities under the artificial condi lions of the city, which is practically man made We seem to forget that we ourselves cam irom the soil and the sunshine: that all th chemical elements in our bodies came fror nature, and that nature alone can heal and re new those bodies, repleni'h their strength. How often I hear business men in the cit woih for the robust heath, the physical vigo and stamina of former days, when they lived i the country. Now, my friend. if you really 'war to get that phvsical vigor and stamina, the los of wTheh you bemoan, you must go where the ~re generated, in rature's vast laboratory. The place to find the man you once were i the same place where you found hint in vou young manhood-in the woods, the pasture chnibing hills, mountain,, wading streams, fih n< in brooks, working at chores on the farn Here :s where stamina is bred, here is w her rain fore is generated, here is where natur buids men. Now is the time for those of us who nus live and work in the city to leave it for a whil and get back to Mother Earth. A vacation i the country will help us to find ourselves agair The pure air, the sunshine, the exercise in th open country, the beautiful landscape, the nes environment which our eves, ears and mind wil feed upon are nature's healing balm for all on ills. Tust as specialists restore valuable, fadet soiled and illegible manuscripts or legal docu rnents with certain chemicals, which bring ou the dim lines and make the words and figure stand out clearly on the page, so a vacatio in the country restores failing vigor, bring back lost enthusiasm, ; eburnishes jaded brai; cells, and makes faded mental manuscript! wIhich have become illegible through wearines and fatigue, stand out with renewed freshnes and vividness. The man or the woman vo, once were will come back. You will be bori A Law That Honors Heroism. When Roger Waters, a workman employe by a building foundation company, went to th rescue of an employe of another company wh< w as buried in a cave-in, he voluntarily riske is life and was killed. He did not wait for or dees. Nothing in his contract required him t try to save the other man. He was brave an< generous by instinct, and he acted from a nat nral sense of duty to his fellows. And he los his life. In upholding the award made by the Work~ men's Copensation Commission for Waters' death, the Court of Appeals took thse just an< reasonable view, Waters did what every enm ployer in the circumstances would look for hi men to do. The emergency prompted himnt< render aid in a way that a self-respecting em ployer should praise and gladly reward, not con demtn out of selfish regard for his own pockel There is a growing disposition on the part o the courts to be nmore hunmane in their inter pretation of laws for the protection of worki men. In former days it would have been sufin cient to prove that W\aters did not come to hi death through the negligence of his employei It was actually contended by the company tha entploy'ed him and the insurance company whic1 carried the insurance that his fatal injuries di< not result from his emipioyment. On that the ory it would be necessary to look for cowardice not heroism or self-sacrifice, front workome facing danger, because their employers demand ed it. The Court of Appeals makes short work c that supposition. "It is inconceivable that an miployer should expert or direct his employe o stand still while the life of a fellow-workmal fewv feet away was imperiled." It takes ac count of human nature. It recognizes the mora responsibilities assumed by omen working sid by side, it justifies them and holds them upt employers who seek to evade the law as a mnirable and praiseworthy,.-New York WVorld. The Gun in Kentucky. In a church fight in Kentucky, last Sunda) eight persons were shot, Has the gun habi become a religious observance in Kentuckv? OW COJY * ?Df~I ~SON Pledged to Tariff Reform. Published by a spcciai arrangement with the Presder:t through The McClure Newspaper Syndcafe. (Copyright, 1901, 1902, by Harper & Brothers > (Copyright. 1916. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) s pecial Nottee-These articles are fully protected under the copyright laws., which impose a severe penalty tr infringemuent by use either entire or ia part. Mr. Crisp. whom the House chose It was hardy a rropatl time at I Speaker, was of the silver group within Which to undertake a ret-ison of the his party, but felt bound, as the party'. tariff The D, Ociats w. re pledged. official leader in matters of legislation, to nevertheless t"" it- rloke ;I That was give the President all th- support the the only reform to a ch they wer- x authotity of the speaker'he: could afford 'licitly pleeI they had Mr. Cleveland asked for a sn5el5, specinc roth r.cuv- at- \r i'eceland was 5 act of relief, the repeal of the purchasing- President clause of the Sherman A. t f 1'.% andl The Maneoa! legislation most mine Mr. Crisp held together ac he could the, diatel' and t-i-pc 'ti reeds as out - members who were iniIned to meet th ef the a a'a t rises as the rweds anf the Trolur seem-t ac n.asth e-d of the- Trs-asury acem le Iar befote rh. : -r., ". oita not lace ed to demand. t cnt-y ada t 01. the tariff a t Public opinon out of doors pressed un- stould th a. a ' reds-- their prom comfortably,. too. Panic had al: eady, se in the talt! . . ,. tiLn .4 the S(0imo in the monnv market. and the b citis ,leas of the country was :.fferimg the; The House s's t - e o 2v, and consequences. \'eane had her pre1srat:,,r of a A repealig bill was introduced on Au-I t ri hil . . 5.-on at - gust 11th, and on the Lath was passed. by; w cit I t b ait t- pus Sass of a vote of 24 to 11'x sn e.-nttively did the " or had ,ef ' ' t. ad I-efore House feel the aira of opinion and the 'he ti set fnt the eg ar seon 5f necessity for acting :. good faith with Lecti ber I au mane I buc he termt of the President for the relief of the Trea.-the ee-.-c I i, r'.- to ,rot-rts ' t-. In th ll'I rae . ~ .tile o~f lcatty t But the Senate would make no such' presnr ,sage Re; 'ned show of compliance There the silverea-y in J 0. passed I y tho men mustered so strotg Inat it was not, let -f F ar 'vethe. a.t:. an In -lear until the autumn had rome that a terna 'r. t C t aot to make good e ajority for repeal could h obt.ained at the estimated ', tsors ii the t'c:eilta all, and everv delay knwct to the leisure- at the port 'ly rules of the body a-as made use of to' It wa a get- re measure of reform It hold action off rooeeded oes' the that t Meanwhile the country took the conse- ra materia a ' 'fact re 'ght or quences. Cred;t collapsed, loans could the most- t,, b_ entire. freed from nowhere be obtained, tr.e very currency1 d.t' that 'here tde throughout the seemed to disappear. beirg hoarded and, whole let of d t:ah:s- art -e as n kept out of the crreits of trade mn such etahie at-ens_ -o of dart-a as a rudent Sextraordinary quatntit:e that those who retard It- -.-s'ej tses'- ac' 1d permit. need. must have it w-:c oh.iged to pay and that e ad -alcrers a prenuam for it. as and the bant-s used rather to - in I rder that th' tclearing house cert.rat-s in its stead. itdn t-rsgtt vr Failure followed *u r- The very pro- cast be (~al, iron ore. ceases of manuia. I re stood stilt. and a par %-,n the free ltst Business nien knew r.n: what to do Tb intern, r' i-rue 11.1 sotated watl f The business of the r otrv was sound. the revis.,n e---oe -' as ite chief feat 1 its resources weoe !~11e There had arca t and at ircreaa been no spec ulati e ti :e no ;rregular el .-a'ise , t pt-ita I operations that < ad j ;stify panic or The tr> : before. in the' e :mpair confidence N. h:r.g was awry Set T'e - "c-te-raio:: of the -xcept the puble .n,:. en could not rati e is'er.t as :t woe: lie sure of the a:. f the money the( rot et'de:y -r t:.e ldcus- Senators a. - iand:ed. It was I.t -ertain that the la-'s the''..- is's +r he et-scoed to par { government wou d rs t tt all exchanges tucular i.: . ''le-:gee aside upon the silver ia-.. 5 -ry lgh . :en ro had The woat aas er before the Senate rgot the ce-.-'i s acted -it;..e at-.:,}ed er for hs our dserets F -siness of sheer necessity recovered fore the a-.re get it ,i Sees its tone; and wh1en at ast. at the very hand, they had art-rd t a r- o - end of October. the r- 1eal became law. r - 55it-. pt -nce -male Strade and manf. !tlre began to stir at- '<ab rate s s'50u e n! si ni sugar, again with reaes-irtm evidences of re- lad taken oal at C ion ca ',--t t fre " turning life. ;t. had anged ad va o-'it dates :o * Bit the results of pa-rc and failure e;'ctc. and hai a t o g he hi were rot stai-d A Trea .ry report ofrisar atte sso - hile re tacO toe t:: 19th of it tober showled a falamg r~, c ." r,-ed te lc - 'off :n the reve r,.'es. as o-mpared unth each senetor exe-*'rg s the estinates during the precedng three sewed ti se -e ,sec c m ionths. Which wol noe n : , ontinued .age for I o f a dei'. iof $5 ', . I *r the r ,scal :ve -very 't stry was s.ace ned impr's Tomorrows An Embarrassed It was hady ro_ ti e a 1hw to undetak a rete of the . . Trw ThHrldsAryarf They Deawrenpedtd neerheesd" tdrik-n Tht a Lt a M Cth noue , and Pern l elhdw it Then fir-an.e: egsato m os :mme- . crem' he t~\'i. ..:r$ rooa" diwAt:.ery an ipeaiv .eee a u The He thad' eAwav. and and e a .enty Latest nd Mos Comple Nw St.earcefe tem Taon Publhe t- pl~t, t , .s a n : c t' e Ta-c- - ternr. r.on th ai -e re lan c l,: . ..r t:e s w-i nso l th erf .. 'h t red ..a th r pr m :prr in the m-e-t'- tt rr : >o tu; s . n b ia~.t 't n- : r t s > ti-as t, .r In e art.' a':. Ace. ' Ced tTha c House. trm -t:Otee on ., a It snot . 'e that tbere a rraratr ofot a wcmuch die b .n mare- f - half vat-so ship cr t - . it the preentben rt t, a rd bfre. I of the '. t -a ri is causing ri e'l "'5"''.. n.'"f a'F conscern At 'he presont time s,..ed iSot-'et tie. se t rsi -he - a ses n of laborers which wt. ;uid otherwise he ad; scde; c - e e .f :he. mefrg a m.r or es. actin. hatt beerH tr . t-w ark..te' eic largely drafted ne the munitions factorte i'ng-ti--c of ' a e v .. at -agee n-tetot Irled-clt the hop ef rur ' sevh wot: C.a ceafiil compettlen f-am the navy .et '' m Insofar as rvrts v'-1;, 'sadang rumS ''tCet wStile tsp' a t-"-f 'A are c etnedh the etho- imtest:nn e, it i.snsi thc.: to be the areatest -s'acle to a ra leld 'ep oto lup of h:r,tlleysp 'or trsiction Sever.,: , ~hc;the arm platn for it ccasing their t rrd ea agni-eo etue ret-ft ofr It. facilit ies. crrtabed the Fore Rsvsr p r-. I-te atat p any, the Nes Yorkpa t!b- e nt i ed frm pat atl the Newport Nethas Sthi':;:.- :d e t ro uegh th log Company At the sa., r;"a-ed If th.- q'uestion of skilled labs. can hs Pressed to a co i .b aexe" a ni'the sol-cd it-i the rear future-and a c"- Wa- Colege re.- fe d-s an; uo elusion of hostilities abroad would de:. cr the hiv: the ma :"ct i ou ;pnoet. solve the .uhot- problem. officers biPee 0 h 's -' 'c. F-hr a there seems to he. a reasonaoble prespect more. su' *eapo . t-r .-. ! ofQuick work on1 s-s which may' ! the chasr deet in uder thath tihauthorized at the present ses:ton Bchef" a ecI- a- , "ge" -ps a: floe Europan oat-aha:not-..assci:so-e and a. m-e- - -d cxed the s'iprii.-deip'rits *er"a3 T:.s' ce - terati-no h I Te cm Clb f merca1' at~ I er r the;: Les maient a :-n the ilso CainetanduponCont-ev Ie hte es-arcs the attchedg. totr the dea hatthe um o Iti~ii*'. tho culare .:-- ms-hsos gpa.:lr~es: sde a-asappoprate 'i theretcot-ri sin t rmy. ther- a: 'ns p:tcal r: cia. id .edietsch for h a owr. hne. B ioorgahization bilgfor Armt.eaetene t not shffuoientvehen totprod.:ts- ret--ab- Crtt forces. tvhic:i- shoul oaeratt :n once mert dtanGab.,Mast Looku~ o dHe Laugr Ihari taken tolattract morecps'ftomsthe toeI th:~ eritenlnt. th Aer -It.I otI had 1hage ad valrtn aut-. c to '5 d t ninuhe~ ofConrec- I isp ec latd ha-- a:' thoghce -h - pointd outthatthe s rx'es have bepr...r:. d byeto.: -ou1K tioi fr te crealztio ci-is c-t acd h s'~ ent exetrg set as matotnan of he enice -i's'sera ge1 fo htle impe.- Is ..' at-- rw::s. Is.-t lice ciifor orde a'oTo- nrw t Ano : tonst Emb ras-e pe witdaics tha:r de ntiatn'ts. c 0o5t 1.00' rie I r Thet mantiearaal'sArmy and N avy Depa-rtkennito Ltatet han fostd Comersto News Srvile ti-d thesone' o Pubbsed ae porionib-eeplnestoeac ainr h ascantton. bogh 'eC-tor 'cm nasta sco n arcialsdon esareaches tent- csilefrc tsrantm figmprog o 4.:. per :year aranxm sesac rrsts a NoI ls ntha ex5o 5d isa neee fo arhefre otk ret i tterei t.bo dahydis vois-erved;;evet morfo shupdrornsr-y aste i the preentrgatu hni ass rNb-s toi thill are take e causid nd r:0 ealsilt tciniern Of ths preseint it isme. hol skti ta n ht'ssdd smn labores w chltb nathrwise f-o to-0 050010testee lne.Rc 1 prgelye orftedirigibles mnosatorie- s s.Io.adcolat afeie at--w.g-m whe icltdnt op of sur-e ilago alal ts iraeta tcssfu opeton an-omlthenavvei 'Tnpraeol Th thioarkssit of'i "-n so tv ".'et eirdloecmsnotonswt SArtillnernCrpd. h aoin quest-oesetems ai- hn n uoe hs h acodntob h ratice rbteports ah hve poetadms oastodno h been annoued itruin thevps era to oso h ath sarayfil dahey.d Ofaer eanth anourov-it cttewyeopoprtyadbt tpan crgice asmgllast the icrdeased facilites rtenlocahe ormmRnver inan- Tercri fHiadodtercr so~len theg. nearcl futre-and. ascofecon-eza RWEV YORK iY DAY E YDAYA My O. O. MeI%T1Hu ' br-a. (orntuedet o! aThe Un .rc!- et New York. June 11 -Herbsrt Bayard Swope. city editor of the Morrang World was a star reporter before ::e was se. jected to gulde the local staff on the great Pulitzer newspaper Down on Park Rtow they tell a story or Mr Swope when he was the ubbiest of cub re tortern, which shows, t-st sometime, even a c-b wil! reveal his aw It was the time of morring wher the paper has gone to press and the staff tite around waitir.g to ,ee : a make iver s necesery before the comp:ete run is off the prets A cop, reader b. pre-arrangement went down to 'he neighboring drug store -and <aled up in, city desk and the man answerlr.g '. phone appeared to he wild ..carIc' -What's that' he ehouaed. G. That's a whale of a tor - And :.er he hung up the receiver w .le eve, present was appare.t:v or his t.proe ready to supri er : the corne: ?" Swope tapp:ng away at his !"ysw rte sudder.ly stopped hp.rg , Br:' 'he staff grew r'er er-.. .. r2 aite orders were ger. :n w -.p;-re are her Mr Swope cae:- rear Itry wac.n look at .:m strangeiy and ker 'er auiet (f cc.rse he worerec uat' wa a o :ot and hac no idea tn., were torit hazing him Tt.t niMet he went rome v-nm-h .iscouraaed, 0a .r: es wa . h- mere a e.dent. he et tn:.-C orto a b.g tnrrcew store. 'd.ed up : r.anagc:rg ect-r. got the fact, rush.-. hac to the off: and w;oth the r'anag:r^ editor a-.d - tt prmite-r .rrec.v ca;ed got o..t ax, extra 1t.at tat iv- r, w T.' ounud , - a sk!t freom t, b e-. 'tage -1 .' actua.ily happer., r. ir e H e be.-- A r. 'rot e . Ing. N V . tr:ec . shake r.ar.as w -. hi.... .. . a. ma r r a: the e.c r a n - way -r hen .'-. rar. n'r. ,e g,. enlr: V Rn. eh' Th. dar- 'r.i masters from .. e over -'.e cou. rs a r 'a, re-ne r -.-. .- C . es rk see: n.- s, .'-. . death re: c- r. waC2.e i pe of darree and c-en t' I-a .d 'n-step is e erdr.rze- a:d der.at-ored Ir. eact. :rrg 1, going back to the uf' r n'a" e-' - ,re simplicity N w cr . r C..coago terps.core a' a. t, a ::r.' the Dog w t The stockina - u n ed a-r ' :".. 7b o h to ied 47hin .ewsbo Busan .au r ce er - -rer -- ' h 'ee tce s ne A 0FAE (epr.t p rdng t" Bd Coul Not Sle t Nitts. ite and Bured 'C aa HELEDo Bys CUTURA spread to my ec aJ and11c t go so ba I c -nt \!ee at. h - . T -r ",- b ued and t : -e was the sr-:artss. ombden tn ::e ta . . fac ry' sher Iw ls Asamedmto Go Anmahyrer. sopread to mnecn Iy t1 at-' a.' ofe my fae t anduon cae ot I:a emece SbmmpeEac Freept sMrailr W tth3- e akino was reduea: d sos oswr haCatra Dept.s T ve aa. as hanne, toh world, ere