THE EVENING STAR, With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY October 5, 1980 THEOD?mm W. VOTES.. .Editor The Erenlnr Star Newspaper Company oalneae Office; ITrTi St. and Pennaylranle New Tork Office: Tribune BuUdln*. Phlcafo Office: rirat National Bank Boildlnr. Bnropeaa Office: t Recent flit, London, Enfland. The Erenlnr Star, with the Sntidae morotn* 1!Tb' ** dellrered hv carrier* within the rltr at BO cent* per month: dalle onl.e. 4S cent* aer tooth: Snndar onlr. 20 cento per month. Or?*!"" toe* he sent by mall, or telephone Ifatn "00. Collection I* made br earrietn at tfen (fid flf an nh ntAnlU Kate by Mail?Payable In Advance. Maryland and Vlnrlnfa. Daily and Sunday X yr? ??.*?: I jikk.JSs Dally only lyr.. >6 00; 1 mo.. SOe Sunday only Iyr.,|t4?l 1 no.Me All Other Stated. Dally and Sunday.. .1 yr., $10: 1 mo., Wc Dally only l yr., $7; 1 mo., ?0c Sunday only 1 yr.. $3; 1 mo.. 25c I ... Ap Auditorium in Prospect. .7 The Knights of Columbus' tender ?* $r,.000.000 to the American I.egion *"r a memorial buildins in this city ~ accepted?and there would seem to be no reason whatever for not accept ins it In the spirit of its offer? Washington will at last be equipped with an auditorium suitable to its requirements. For fully half a century it has felt this need. Shortly after the civil war national organizations began to come here for their annual meetings. Steadily Washington be o^Anmlw/ul o? tV>A rieAnor rin!n /?f ?.aiiiv i c\ uf,iii(io Ltit; jji upt i k?'?'?v assemblage for bodies of Americans representing the people of all the states and interested in national questions. It became the headquarters of many such organizations, and is today the center of activity of some of the most important national associations. As time went on and the number and size of these bodies increased the city's facilities for their accommodation were shown to be inadequate. International conventions were held here in circumstances to hamper their work. Often Washington, both official and unofficial, was embarrassed by the necessity of making shift with improvised and insufficient provisions to entertain these gatherings. A convention hall large enough to meet the needs of the people of the country as they come to Washington, would he a questionable enterprise for local capital. Several times efforts have been made to create such a structure, but the financial problem has always been insuperable. It was hoped that the George Washington memorial project would develop to the point of early success and supply the lack. It has not done so, however, and a recent civic enterprise to the same end was undertaken and was about getting under headway when the Knights of Columbus' gift was announced. Though no plans are drawn and none but the broadest outline of the project has been presented, it is evident from the magnitude of the gift that the proposed building will be fully adequate for memorial and auditorium purposes. A suitable location is assumed. Protection Expenditures. The New York board of estimates is confronted with the same problem that the District Commissioners face, that Of trying to make provision for all the rifv domftmAntu without exceeding the appropriation allowance. The board is now taking up the detailed requisitions and finds their grand total Car beyond the prospective revenues of the city, even with a boosted tax rate. But there was one requisition that came before the board that was granted without question. This was an item of $200,000 presented by Polica Commissioner Enright to be used for running down radicals. He explained that the cost of hunting the anarchists is high, and that it is impossible for the local police to keep track 'of suspicious persons with the money at their disposal. He stressed the urgency of the situation and his requisition was granted Without debate. If the sum of $200,000 will enable the police of New York, not merely to watch the radicals, but to ehe?-v their pernicious activities; it will be money very well invested. The country will grudge no amount of expenditure that is intelligently and effectively applied to this end. It does, however, expect occasional demonstrations of success. Chut far the organized detective wi^V, both municipal and federal, has Act brought to light any assured facts Regarding the explosion of September IV, outside of those that were physically left by the blast- One man has been arrested who is a "prospect," but his discovery was accidental. Differences of opinion appear to resolve . themselves -into a question of whether the league - Of nations would prevent war or promote ft. ' This year will decide whether or not Maine is to bo taken seriously as the great prophetic state of the Union. The nineteenth Amendment. Yesterday the District Court of Appeals dismissed an appeal from the court below, which had refused an injunction to restrain the Secretary of State from proclaiming the suffrage amendment in force. It is possible that the case may be carried to the Supreme Court of the United States, but so little ground appears for possible reversal that it would acem a waste of time and energy to undertake the overturning of the nine teenth amendment. In all probahtliS? long before the Supreme rt could possibly rule enough states will have added their ratifications to cover every possible basis of objection to the proclamation. According to the case as it was presented in the Court of Appeals the recorded ratifications in five states are challenged. In Arkansas and New Hampshire it is contended the ratifloation resolution was not passed in identical form by both bouses, as required by law. In Missouri, it is asserted, the state constitution forbids ratification of a federal amendment affecting the present system of fran- t chise. In West Virginia, it is main- 1 tained, one member of the house who t voted for ratification was not entitled f to a seat, while another so entitled ] was debarred from voting. The Ten- 1 nessee ratification is challenged on t the now familiar ground that under i the state constitution the legislature t could not vote on an amendment prior to a general election in the state. I Since the case was filed in court i Connecticut has ratified, making thirty- a seven states on record. This may be x regarded as negativing the Tennessee t objection. There remain objections against the votes of Arkansas. New Hampshire, Missouri and West Virginia. The objection as to the first ^ two is purely technical and trivial, j. The rottrt will doubtless regard the ^ case from the point of view of public policy rather than a mere matter of j. routine. Both stales ratified in the 1 spirit of full apfwoval of the principle and the form of the amendment. On ^ the score of the Missouri objection it { may be accepted mat uie court wm never grant the right of anv state to ^ limit the subject matter of a constitutional amendment which has been \ formally proposed by Ccr.trcss. There remains for serious consideration only the West Virginia case, which turns upon the personnel of the ratifying f body. It is extremely doubtful if the court will consent to go behind the . face of the returns and scrutinize the personnel of the legislature and the * manner in which it applied its own rules Of organization. ' Long before the court can act the e women of this country will have voted, ? and there is now no ground for be- 1 lieving that the validity of their vote. 9 in the twenty states in which they are 1 enfranchised by this amendment, can e ever be challenged. ^ Tariff Revision. \ Senator Underwood is quoted as say- ^ ing; a "No matter who is elected President. _ Congress will be called into extra session late In March or early in h April to revise the revenue laws and ii place the United States on a peacetime financial basis. Our finances must be demobilized just as our Army 1 was. When we put our Army on a s war basis, we put our finances on a haelc nlcft Our 4rmv ns hr>nn S demobilized.'' Such is the general opinion. Mr. Harding conspicuously shares it, as is shown by the fact that he never f neglects an opportunity to stress the ^ tariff question. He is an avowed pro- j. tectionist. and if elected President will recommend to Congress a re- ( vision of the tariff on plain protection ^ lines. Gov. COX has had little, if anything, o to say on the subject. Presumably he j; is a low tariff advocate, and, if elected, J will use his power in favor of revision ,c on those lines. The present tariff law bears the name of the senator from Alabama. As a member of the House and chairman of the ways and means committee of that body, he presided over the original drafting of the measure and passed it through the House. In that shape the measure was exceedingly objectionable to the business interests of the country, and they appealed the h case, so to say, to. the Senate. The ls Senate held the measure five months 8 and made many changes in It, but t] failed to make it' acceptable to the J li business worici. The law had bat a brief trial before 81 the world war began, but one suffi- 0 ciently long to demonstrate that it was neither an adequate revenue pro- s ducer nor an encourager of business. e The war, of course, threw everything * out of gear both in this country and u everywhere else, and the record since 11 is not fairly quotable. lc If Gov. Cox is elected and with him a democratic Congress, Mr. Under- 11 wood will have much to say on the f< subject of tariff revision when it h reaches the Senate; and there is no u announcement of any change of view on his part since he was active in the House, now some seven years ago. S1 ... i t ri President Wilson fears that the L*. S. A. may be relegated to a subordinate place in the affairs of the world. ^ This should stimulate friend farmer " to further interest in production. Any Impression that the republican a campaign fund was to assert itself w as the chief issue has been fully disposed of by President Wilson's letter. Polish officials show an inclination for awaiting developments before enforcing an ironclad arrangement as to boundary lines. V In many states the impression exists that votes for women will serve mainly to emphasize a foregone con- ? elusion. , ,,, E Pawpaws! The bean vine and the tomato plant E have fallen under the lethal touch of frost, but some cheer can be had from F the situation. Frost not only sweetens the pumpkin and persimmon, but 0 ii xurns xne puip ul uic ? charged with nectar and ambrosia?to \ a gorgeous, golden yellow. To those who know the pawpaw there is no other fruit. The golden apples or oranges that the nymphs Hesperides or Atlantides cultivated in ' their dragon-guarded garden had 81 nothing on the pawpaw. The pawpaw grows plentifully around Washington. Among the g places where it reaches its richest flavor and its wettest Juiciness are spots along Neabsco creek, the shores n of Occoquan bay and in the woods of Freestone Point. Of course, paw- a paw devotees have preferences and p prejudices. Some swear by Piscataway c pawpaws and others swear by those that grow Mattawoman flows, but mmsc pawpaw, no matter in 1 rt of our great valley it grows, is a Jewel of a fruit! Lovers of the 1 pawpaw generally do not publish whore the bushes grow, and the information concerning those along t Neabsco creek is given in strict confidence. We Potomac people have never done quite enough for the pawpaw. No doubt the people of Massachusetts have compiled a genealogy of it, and the I people of Indiana have probably made a it the central figure in a historical novel. It was the great fall fruit of our Indians, it grows in moist woods t and generally along streams from the r I louthern states to Lake Erie. The Indians called It "assimin," and from .hat the early French explorers and lettlers named the tree "assiminier." ^rom that and from its compound eaf botanists now call It "asimina riloba." Why we call It pawpaw Is tot easy to And out because it is not -elated to the papaya of tho tropics. But never mind that. He who likes 'otomac pawpaws knows that there is 10 other fruit half so precious. And is the frost is on the pawpaw, all paw>awians are pawpawing toward their >elovcd pawpaw jungles. "Cribbing" Students. Scandal is stalking through the land. The other day it hit the professional ase ball players. Now it has cast a loud upon the student body at one of he great universities. 106 of whom lave been found to have "cribbed" in heir June examinations. Of this lumber 101 were dismissed for a year. iut the Judgment was suspended and hey have been permitted to return >n parole. One was dismissed pernialently. Three were suspended and the ase of another is now before the university authorities. Individual cases of "cribbing" have Iways occurred at the scnoois ana olleges of this country, but never bcore was such wholesale cheating reealed and probably never before was t undertaken. There is nothing much neaner than cribbing. A man who loes it is cheating himself. He is hissing altogether the point of his ducation. He is supposed to go to ollege not merely to "pass" examinaions and get a degree, but to learn omething. If he neglects his studies o the point of inability to answer the xamination questions, he has wasted is time. A degree that he may get hrough successive promotions efected by the cribbing process will be | rorthless to him. It may fool someody who wants a letter or two after man's name as a basis of employnent, but the real test will come when ic begins to apply the knowledge he 9 supposed to have acquired at school. The man who cheats at an examinaion that is supposed to test his cholarship will probably cheat hintelf at solitaire. "Uncle Warren ?"', Out in Ohio they are beginning to all him "Uncle Warren." His old riends, you know?men who have nown him for years, and now feel ery proud of him and want to tesify in some way to their affection, heir confidence and their admiration. All very well, but is the candidate Id enough for the designation? He 5 under sixty. Should any man uner seventy be so addressed? What ? the age limit? Or has it ever been xed? If not, now is a good time. Mr. Lincoln was called "Uncle" Abe, nd y?i .was only fifty-six when taken, tut those were war times, and Mr. lincoln was one of the most uncojientional of men. Gen. Grant was the old man" to his soldiers at forty. The main point, however, is this: las Mr. Cannon been consulted? And as he given his consent? The title i his, and he should have a say about haring it with another, even when hat other is his party's candidate for resident. "Uncle Joe'.' is an estabshed fact, not to say an institution, ecure in the esteem of both sides and f evervbodv. Mr. Cannon wears the title well and racefully. He was past seventy, howver, when it was bestowed upon him, nd he is now eighty-four. He, too, }, as Mr. Lincoln was, one of the lost unconventional of men. He >oks the title, acts the title and en- i jys the title. And sometimes when lings are not moving to suit, and he ?els called upon to express himself, e talks to the House like a "Dutch ncle." Base ball is determined to demontrate that it has no use for the getich-quick man. The big events in Italy are calcuited to make D'Annunzio feel like a bush leaguer." Senator Borah does not believe that league of nations by any other name ould be acceptable. SHOOTINQ STABS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON, Election Bets. Phen the votes have told their story. And the shouting's under way, did the glitter and the glory We will look for a display f a mighty set of whiskers Growing long and growing yet, ilegant aerial friskers, Due to an election bet. lats all battered 'mid the cheering vy ill wiui new uneo ue repaia. 'eanuts aome one will be steering With a toothpick up the grade! >'er the problems of a nation Serious souls will cease to fret V'hen we see the bland elation Due to an election bet. Gloom Explained. "Mr. Glummins seems to be particuirly gloomy." said Miss Cayenne. "He earns to have something on his mind.*' "He has himself on his mind." "X don't blame him for being loomy." Avoiding Magnificence. "A man's house is his castle," remarked the ready-made philosopher. "Don't say that," protested the ten nt. "The landlord is liable to think t over and make extra charges for a astle." Woman in Politics. 'he favorite soh we often see Intrusted with affairs of state, 'he favorite daughter now will bo A figure of importance great. "My idea of a man that's behind he times," said Uncle Bill Bottletop, is one who goes right on cultivating . mint patch." An AHbi. "I'm kind o' glad," said Bill the iurg, "that I never learned to read .nd write." "Why?" "When it comes to a showdown in his investigation, nobody can accuse oe of being a master mind." / Wholesale Selling Price of Beef in Washington PricM realized on Swift & Com* pany's sales of carcass beef on ship meats sold oat for periods shown below, as published in the newspapers, averaged as follows, showing the tendency of the market: Week RANGE PER CWT. Ending i.i.tt?m?b ?? Cwt, Aug. 14 21.38 Aug. 21 19.77 Aug. 28 20.09 Sept. 4 19.08 Sept. 11 19.41 Sept. 18 ......... 18.68 Sept. 25.... i W 19.37 Oct. 2... 15.00 I 30.00 ...$18.75 Swift & Company U. S. A. "You Need Selinger's Eye Service" I Most Headaches Result From Eye Strain j F.yc strain may disturb any " function of the body. Vet as far as tlie eyes themselves arc concerned, there may be no n:iin anil the vision mav be as strong as ever. Examination by either of our expert optometrists is thorough and accurate and will reveal the cause of the strain, how your eyes act under the strain and exactly the character of lenses they need. Attend to Your Eyes at Once. Selinger's Mfsr. .Irwrier* and Opticians 820 F St., Cor. 9th 'Look for the Big: Clock* i "Sport" Hosiery For Fall Showing the newly fixed prices on Fall Hosiery, as well as the improved quality Silk-and-Lisle, Silk-andWool, Cashmere, just right tor cooler days. 2.25 to 5.00 "Dollar-Hose" in abundance, remarkable for wear and satisfaction. The Hosiery Shop Arthur Burt Co. 1343 F I PERPETUAL 1 BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 II or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cen* on shares withdrawn before maturity Assets Nearing $7,000,000 Surplus More Thau $600,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. fi JAMES BERRY. President JOSHUA w. CARR. 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