Newspaper Page Text
' 10,000 PLEDGE 1 TO "REDS" Justice Department Lists All U. & Citizens Said to Support Communist Aims. At leant 10,000 American 6ltl?eua are pledged to support the Com munist Party, alleged to be organ ^ lz*d to overthcpw the government by ' force. Justice Department officials bal d today. The Communist party was brand ed as a revolutionary organization vesterday by Secretary Wilson, who made the ruling following a careful study of the party's manifesto and consUtatton. List All Mentors. .Alien members of the party, under the immigration laws, must be de ported by Secretary Wilson as dan gerous persons or anarchists. Ap proximately 3.000 radicals, arrested, in recent raids of the Justice Depart ment. now are waiting hearings be tore Immigration commissioners as alleged members of the party. No steps can be taken against citi zens wbo are members under present laws, according to Justice Depart ment officials. Nevertheless Secret Service agents af the department are making lists ?f citizen members 'of the party. Sedi tion acts now ' before Congress can be used against cltlten members If written Into the nation's statute book, (' officials say. Justice department officials also kit gathering evidence against mem- i bers of three other radical organiza- | tions' like the Communist party, It wts learned today. Karh has a mem bership of citizens almost as large ? i 11 i ,ii YOU ?WANT TO DANCE? This Season'a New 8tepe taught by Prot CaJn, America's foremost dancing teacher. Teach ins exclusively at tbr HKIHTWAV SCHOOL OF DANCING, 1311 New York are. (bet. 11th & llth sta) Only up-to-date Dancing Academy South of New York You need not have appoint ment Private leasons any hour. Tic. Private room for bestnnera. Open > a. m. to 10 p. m. Phone Fr. 7(14. Rube Goldberg's Boobs Br IV 1+ UOLDWHU Cut>/rt?kt, lilt. THEY ALL FLOP SOONER OR LATER. Ouiiill, llll, H, K. L JuLl/BKHd. By Goldberg I'LL T?LL You a fcTDe Y ~rH*T is n-rrce OFF cotoR iF ypo Pfconise M<rr -to ~reiL \T | TO YoOfc VaJIF? I Go aheab i>? NJor o^e of tv-Scxse ows tmt tell THeiFt uttvjes I boM't LET < fcK>OU) too much f -4 a tbavj&img" 'SALESMAN TOOK. a | -TBLgPHONie GlSL out To blMUCR ere. etc. . ere. * \ J that's RICH - *?"e mWKA wooOLti ROSH tt-VGKT" KOhC AMb TeLL-THAX -to ,THert? vajin/os Bur nkt Mf -m?R?'s H?s VtfiFe KiouJ-ooHAT boesrO'T tcwoco VAJo#o*r hurt ?> hgr NEXT DAY as the Communlit party, It Is be lieved. Hnll>( by iMTritrj WIImi. Concerning the method* of the Communist party, Hecretary Wilton ?aid In his ruling; "It l> apparent that the Communlit party does not seek to attain Ita ob jective through the parliamentary machinery of this Government, e?ta| llshed by and operated under the con atltutlon. Thla la made sufficiently clear by the following excerpt from the party'a manifesto, which reads: '"Participation In parliamentary campaign*, which In the general struggle of the proletariat la of sec ondary Importance, la for tha purpose of revolutionary propaganda only.' "And again from the same docu ment: "'In those countries where condi tions for a workers' revolution are not yet ripe, the same process will go on. The use of parliamentarism, however, is only of secondary Import ance.' " In another section. Secretary Wil son pointed out that the manifesto reads: "The parliamentarism of the Com munist party perform* a lenrtei In mobilising ths proletariat against capitalism, emphasising the political character of the class struggle." '?'I'he parliamentary processes es tablished by our Government," de clared Secretary Wilson, "are to be discarded or used for propaganda purposely and othsr means adopted J for overthrowing the Government of | the United States. The conquest of the power of the state to to be se | compllshed through the mass power of the proletariat. "Strikes are to be broadened and deepened, malt Ink them general and militant, and efforts made to develop their revolutionary Implications. The strike is to b? used not simply as a means through which the Government may be conquered and destroyed." ST. JOHNS HAS ELECTION. ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland. Jan. 26. ?Premier Richard A. Squires and Minister of Finance Henry Brown rig* were re-elected with Increased majorities, according to the figures in the bye-electlons for the district of St. Johns, west, announced today. When You Buy From CASTELBERG'S Your CREDIT has the Same Purchasing Power as CASH!! PS no longer necessary for you to be without that' handsome Watch /? or beautiful, sparkling Diamond you have been so desirous of buying. Castelberg credit brings it within your reach, and do not linger un der the false impression that be cause you purchase on credit you have to pay an increased price for what you buy. A fair comparison of our merchandise and prices with those of other dealers will soon convince you that we are "The Credit Jew elers with the cash prices." Here's a Watch Value That Defies Competition One of the new thin model open-face Watches, guaranteed Elgin movement, fitted with 20-year warranted gold-filled case. Other dealer* are ask ing more for this type of Watch, but we are con tent to work on the basis of "a small margin of profit and a larger crop of boosters." $ 25 Pay a Small Amount Each Week If it is inconvenient for you to call at our store, phone us, and one of our representatives will visit you within the privacy of your home or place of business. A postcard will also answer the purpose er "THE LARGEST CREDIT JEWELERS IN THE WORLD" 935 Pennsylvania Ave. N. W.^ TODAY (Continued from Klrsfc l'uie.) two kinds of reading, like two kinds of sport. In one a bhort man sits on a bench watching others play baseball; in the other, he goes onto the field and plays. In one kind of reading a man reads along, watching another man think. The right kind of reader goes into a book to think as he reads. Clergymen discouraging profan ity will find use for Byron's line: "He knew not what to say, and to he swore " Profanity and slang weaken the mind by weakening your use of language, the mind's most im portant tool. Let men understand that profanity means ignorance, and they will stop, as men stop chewing tobacco when told that it means vulgarity. Mohammed, who nearly spread prohibition over the world cen turies ago, interested Emerson, as he should you. At the beginning of his easay, "Love," Emerson has these two lines from the Koran: "I was as a gem concealed; me, my burning ray revealed." That means that to be anything you must feel strongly.' The aver age man is nothing, because he be lieves nothing. Emerson's essay, "Heroism" begins with Moham med's words: "Paradise is under the shadow of swords." As you read about Mohammed and other leaders of thought and religion, you Will observe that in all religions except the true re ligion, God an4 future rewards and punishments reflect the char acter of the man back of the re ligion: "If the camels had a god, that god would have four legs and a hump." Mohammed couldn't imagine life without the sword, or Paradise except "under the shadow of swords." Others thinns that Mo hammed imagined in Paradise would putzle 1920 Prohibitionists. With Mohammed prohibition was for the earth only; when you got to Heaven you drank wines all the time, you associated with ladies that you had never met before. The wine never made you drunk, and the ladies never grew older. Read Carlyle's chapter on Mo hammed. Another quotation from the es say "Heroism." Brutus, who help ed kill his benefactor, Julius Caesar, is supposed to be speak ing, as he falls,on his sword to kill himself in the old-fashioned way after the battle of Phillip!: "0 Virtue! I have followed thee through life, and I find thee at last but a shade." Brutus interests you. He was one of the original reformers. Read Shakespeares "Caesar." Read it again if you have already read it, for there is a new Shakespeare for every year of a man's life. After that read Ferrero's "History of Rome," the big history in five volumes, or If you haven't time for that, the short one in two volumes. There is ten per cent of an edu cation in a thorough knowledge of the history of any great country. About reading, here is a quota tion from Emerson himself, from his essay, "Experience:" ?"A collector recently bought at public auction, in London, for 157 guineas, an antograph of Shakes peare; but for nothing a school boy can read Hn nlet, and can de tect secrets of hiRucst concernment yet unpublished therein. I think I will never read any but the com monest books, The Bible, Homer, Dante, Shakespeare and Milton." Another of Emerson's sayings may be useful to young gentlemen writing advertisements for fruit or flower merchants. It Is from bis essay, "Gifts." "Flowers and fruits are always fit presents; flowers because they are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utili ties of the world. These gay na tures contrast with the somewhat stern countenance of ordinary na ture; they are like music heard out of a workhouse."' Get. a volume of Emerson's "Es says" at your book store or at the ptiblle library, and, In reading Em erson, or any writer, do not swal low anything whole, look up names that are unknown to yon. To read ten pages with complete under standing Is better than wandering through fifty books. . Lastly, if you are one who takes himself too seriously, one of those too modest, not appreciating your own value, paste up these ten words of Kmerson's, where you can see them once a day: "Every man Is wanted and no man is wanted much." FIRE BURNS 70 PLANES. BERLIN. Jan. 2fl.?Some seventy airplanes. Including two giant ma chines. which were lying In hangars at Warnemuende. Meckle.nburg Sohwerln, were destroyed In a Are, : the origin of which is unknown. KANSAS CREATES COURT FOR LABOR DISPUTES New Tribunal on Industrial Rela tion* Designed to Protect Against Strikes. TOPEICA, Kan., Jan. 2?.?I.abor di? putea In Kanaka, which affect the pub' lie's Interest, In future will be solved by a court of Industrial relatlora. The bill creating auch a court, de signed primarily to protect the pub lic from "warring faction*" and at the name time gtre ample protection to both capital and labor, became a law in Kannaa with Ita publication in the official state paper. The menaure waa signed last night t>T Gov Henry J. Allen. The entire personnel of the court haa not been selected. W. L* Hugglna, of the lftwer houae, waa the firat ae lection. He is a member of the pub lie utilities commliilon. which body will be superseded by the new court. His appointment was to be confirmed by the HUt? senate. The other two members of the court probably will not be named In time for confirmation by the special session of the legislature, which will take flnal adjournment next Wednes day. BALD PATES TO URGE CUT RATE FOR HAIR TRIM WJNSTEAD, Conn.. Jan. 2C.?"Hair raising" features are promised for the next annual . banquet of the Bald Head Club of America, to be held in New Haven in AprlL The executive committee will meet in that city to arrange for tha big event, also to draft amendments to the constitution and by-laws. "Why should a bona fide haldhead pay full price for a haircut?" is one of the questions to be considered. LABOR SEES ROADS UNDER U S. CONTROL L*bor luliri here today dtclartd the tide hu bean turned in favor #f ?llemlon of Oovcrnmeat operation of railroad* for two year*, Instead o( tho Immediate retuin uf the roads to private management. "The roads are not |olD( back to private control March 1," said Secre tary Hcott. of the railway department, A. K of L. "The Cummins bill will not be passed." bupported by several big farmers' organisations. President Kamuel Gom pers. of the ?. V. of L., la leading a nation-wide agitation to estand Gov ernment control two years longer. Delegations of farmers and lab*r ' leaders from all parta of the country are waiting on Congreeamen and Sen ators dully. Malls of all Washington ! officials are Hooded with petitions for | extension of control. , This back-Are from the country ei plaina why Congrrsa has delayed In writing tho Cummins bill into the statute books, laboi leaders claim. The Cummins bill, passed by the Seuate to provide for Immediate re turn of the railroads, has been *?1. In the hands of a conference com mittee of both houses of Congre*.-. j together with a almllar bill pasav.l by the House. No compromise has yet been reached. SAYS MID-WEST WANTS R. R. CONTROL TO STAY Sentiment throughout the Middle West and Northwest la four to one h> favor of the Government retaining control of the railroads at least tw? rearer longer. Thie assertion was made bjr Benja min C. Marsali on hla return tonight from a tour taken especially for tlv purpose of determining how the pe.? ple of thfese two sections stand o i the railroad question. Not a single farm or labor osganl zation is In favor of the Cummlngi bill, Marsah declared. SOLF ENVOY TO JAPAN. HONOLULU. .Ian. 26? Dr. \V 11 Solf, former foreign minister of G ? many, has been appointed Germ i ambassador to Japan, according to a Tokyo cable to Nippu Jljl, Honolulu Japanese language newspaper. Heat all rooms alike $1 1Q Gives you a lifetime of low-cost heating * ^ New IDEAL-Areola Radiator-Boiler The IDEAL-Arcola is one of the world's newest and greatest of inventions. It is unique?being both a Boiler and a Radiator. Takes th$ place of a parlor stove, and distributes heat to the rooms, and through its water-jacket con veys the excess heat to connecting AMERICAN Radiators stationed in adjoining rooms. There is no coal-waste! Unlike stoves and hot-air furnaces, the IDEAL-Areola with its water-backed surfaces does not burn out or rust out?it will easily outwear the building in which it is placed. Heats the most and costs least! The Areola and the AMERICAN Radiator* are made in sections permits and can be increased or decreased in rise (Note that 65% of an building* are altered in sta.) Leg* cannot be kicked out. aa with stoves?hence no fire-risk to building. Does not overheat?henc* no danger to children. The soft, radiant, healthftil, cleanly warmth changes a house into a Aoma. The Areola may be painted or enameled in any shade or color to match woodwmk or decor* bona. It is not obtrusive like a store but may be painted to hannoniae with any Annishinga. Shipped complete ready to operate apte Mr of hratlnt ? rti ma ceBeriaea mun by IDKAL Arealakadiatv-aoilar aad ft** AIUK1CAN Radiatora. The beauty of the IDEAL-Areola method is that no cedar la needed. Everything is on one floor. If there are two or more tenants in the build ing, each can have his own Areola and make the tempo attire to suit his own needs?can make his own cUmatcl If you do not wish at first to heat the entire building, buy a small sice IDEAL-Areola one or two radia tors (at prices lower than herein given) and later on boy extra sections for the IDEAL-Areola and two or three more radiators to warm more rooms. Investigate at once this greatest value in building equipment. Catalog showing open views of houses, individual flats, stores, offices, etc., with the IDEAl~Arcola Boiler in position will be mailed (free). Write today a r?r , ?? | a ? ? ? ? IS " 4- ? ?? ?? as as .fLn " ?? ??.??? - " - S2 ?a If j { ?fralMAI^ala wtafc ft. * R.JUU? : a ; : : a : : " LA So - f?*F?Jrclud*jyT."l^n"T*"* D*-" Vdw^rtfM do amdfittin?? Radiation ie of regular Mm height 1 column *a eiaae aa neadad to ?rit yaw room*. RASY PAYUIN ?hipped complete f. a. b. our oeareet nnhnw Bprinefleld (Man.), Albany. Nn York. Phil WMhinftoa, Rich mood, Buffalo, Cincinnati. Milwaukee. Mlaaaapotto. St. Paul, or St. Louie. ?US MT . ITT an Ml SISS ITS ? "Of jwjuj* lebor^|4pe AMERICAN PAYMENTS. If deekal it Boaton. Provide elphie. Harrnburt. Beltlm Out Me Sold by all dealers No exclusive agents American Rsdiatob Hmupany Writ* Department W-30 1308 "H St. N. W, Washington. D. C Public eknwronaae at Cfcleaao, Nta York, Infoa, Proeldeaca, WwtMta, Philadelphia. Hinlihrt Newark, Wllkaeharra. Baltimore, Weehln?ton, Richmond. Albany. Syracuee. Rocbaetar. Baff.lo, Plttehurih. Cleveland. Detroit. Qtand Rapid*. I ndkanapolia. Cincinnati. I .out, villa Atlanta. Birmingham, Nee ~ Minneapolis. St. Paul, St. Loula. Kaneae City, Dae Motoaa. Oaaka, Dearer. Saa Prancieco. Loe Aagalaa, Seattle. Spoke r w Orleane, Milwaukee, , Portland. Toroato. Brentford (Oat.)