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The Washington times. [volume] (Washington [D.C.]) 1902-1939, June 24, 1921, FINAL EDITION, Image 7

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026749/1921-06-24/ed-1/seq-7/

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the so E wsdC
~51SO LEI .
h yo d 'witht$ae
s .eSe en s o t red.
re and wollen. y"T
yo r tie,.ohng ore
Ite ore now a"
a tm red reot?
S an your ooth i
ott~&?5down sw4=U an
wean and olmy rfh
do t it Vt
n and busions, "Tl
eyo nted. 'aching, more
eNo e boo tightays'-no
ey ar and e Mre
dea tefeakenewith
tW i nd theird~ esmpzw
s.tw avid palm.
hey nerd Is a fhae bl
a nduuntier abd - AI e
as lgolbday
k tag have bted Dalys' hset
Abo - --year ondive M.
ithattthetrtent ta w
t abendt not toex
ing an gaem ucisrs
-&* dJ tStb rop
a by evs t e a
wo erfl rsuls. ou anoelanuf
80M ea a reOas Dre St dbo
hiS Every Railroad
nShould Read This
ato, o Ointment Co, Tue., But
W"WT"Dear Sirs: I wao afflicted
W batthe doctor.s sad were Van
WOO eel. ad uputil about ~oe
wek~~UN S gl aebeen treating the
g about a ysaran4 five nionthu.en
nlith al ue treatments that we
pveeribed to me by several doctors I
rqWW6 little beneft and they kept
sltaig and gave mn. much distress
&Md caused me to quit my work.
I was Induced by a brother brake
man to try Petersons Ointment and
after I had used two boxes I saw
Aul results. You can tell sut
tino on"e troubled with ugly, pIn
A1Tad horrid ulcers that your Oint
msent Is a cure for them when every
myin. nki'nrg yo may
ai n Ovr ame, you app fend.t
Ta1 ines hat tle Cemok, haveh.,r
l64o and tabes coftainonge write
vg, saf boteter ond Faloothat
Vitalsines intmeighls cnunredo
thol soe, satrem iles and
a su seasestandel brggiste
abig boy taot f c ned. MlorVt
te led bhy eto itmnt alo,
hels ofu ric e. and Oe on
ers esDdtrs Glycr-oatewilsupetly
geyne in ale .sin
IF Y OUde tabIEN hD e
AE moATEuta YE ASTo
~rany peopl are en ytn
ragest, retommand thisnewi
poerlaain tbe onta ini rop-e
t.ta n tablets a more eest
. eug store ring moreu
t4a
11
?bee
the Ae4 of petd s 9te pl -
the Mis Agase s a Citet
M and
leaders of atteIaptangt u
tpeed u 111404W~le&rt~i
b e a
t nt . . e.f .
Kouse Csmte
got inte esog theselveS
ore= the, bUa chai et
the committee.
- The rpebieea smambers et the
cede ta&if tf a.
Days . -asbt eb 9
the s
the Presideat. sp .d on by th.
Republies t$i I Committoee asd
by Republie "book hoele,"
stopped In. ghe few days
be has had lM24" 3 ead
e* of Congreau at the WhIteR
They roturmo6-to the CaWitel -
the et a tt the Prow
ident waatd bth' tarif and ta2
legisletion proided before the pres.
ant 'session oen, The situion has
altered sud4eulp. The "back Lre"
from the ountry is making Itself
feIlt. anl Gegress Is roaly beginning
to Speak up.
MAr ACT OW TAUMp.
Before the PresMent told the Re
puliSsa0edere he esmmoened to the
Wi4 e what the eouatry was
thinking of Congarw there seemed te
be little Proot of any immediate
action on e Astory was oar.
ret that a new ann law might net
be wrftten at Ol thie but left
to thegUlar deMn starts Is
~ub Rsd~tOare tkig
that the p t pri41
both now ' and ta - and
they will atteraet to ~7mply with the
mandate ef their party leader and
their oesstwtuats "ba heo" that
Congrene get bus and do. somethia
to relieve the esting economi
finasewa 4400eu fros whis Go
country is pufering.
SWAIN, WITH LICENSE,
- STARTS SEIG9 OF LOVE
moaawrewr, DOL. oo s4
Armed with a marriage iloense Ma&e
out in regdlar form a" obtaised
from the clerk of the peace of tI.
se county 1A this plae% vydi4 3,
Vapron. twoStyfour years old, ot
dia, Vea., laying siege to
the home of Will a N. Rogers, t
shelbyvile, waliting for -a ehanee to
marry his nineteen-year-old daugh
ter, MIva A. Rogers. at the trst op.
portunity. The Roger* family arj
guarding -the girl.,but young Dam
atom declares that their vigliames
will relax some day and that when it
dos horsnd Kiss Eva will be ma,
ried.
Ddumma had charge of the loading
of fruit express *ars during the last
strawberry season and fell in love
with the girL After a weeks esurt.
.hip, he s9eed permission to starry
her, but her pares refused, Coen
lng to this alaoe tast week, he get
the license.
"WISH YOU WERE HERE"
CARDS CATCH ELOPERS
NUW 1914K, Jtdne 24.--Pieture pest
cards of the "having a fine time, wisha
you were here" variety were ropen
ulie for the arrest ia e Anpoles of
two married elopers trom Ridgewood
and Glen Rock, ii. 3. The arrest Is
due to th~ fact hat while the elopet'g
are rnarri, thyare not maarried to
each other.
Arthur Huettemeyer, owner of a
taxicab line in Ridgewood,, and Mrs.
Lillian Dean., wife of Arthur Do
Baun, a garage owner, with a P.,060
bank roll, fled to California, and Mrs.
DeBaun found the climate so delight
ful she wan unable to resst the temp.
tation to send postead back to New
Jersey friends.
KOONS, 15 YEARS IN
P. 0. SERVICE, RESI0NS
John C. ICoone, $pesial assistant te
the Postmaster General in comings
tion with the Postal Comnmiein, han
resigned. effective *Uty 1,. to Outer
private business, Keons, who is a n..
tive of Patapeoo, arriolR eenty, Nd.,
Is one of the meet widet known ex
pert., on postal mpttere, Ho Wts
chaIrman of the pareel pent comamit
tee, which arranged 'for the estab
lhshment of the pieoel poet 5yst5ep.
When the Government sensae
etrol and operation' of the tale.
phone and telegraph systems during
the war he wag -next to Postmaster
General Burleson on the Wire Cone
trol Board. He entered the pogte)
service ini 19S6 an a pote~de in
spector.
F- )
17
Miii
Concernng StretRaiays Gy
Here are some excerpts from a public address which
Prsident Harding delivered at Cleveland, Ohio, a,
few months before he was nominated for the Ptesidency
* * *m. :
"There were some very severe and wholly undeserved penalties on
patriotic service during the war period, and which are still applied in its
fevered aftermath. But I know of none wrse penalied than theeectric railway lines of the
country."
-*
"The Government fixed the cost of operation, fixed the price of
supplies and maintenance, and prescribed the service to be performed.
It exercised the power to increase birdens, but had no power, or having had it. no inclination
to help in meeting them."
"In effecting the restoration we must wipe out the contributing
causes, and make sure from this time on that honest investmient in hrnest
public service shall receive an honest return for that public service. The capital which sEms
to render a necessary public service merits a square deal and it must have it."
"Destroyed credit must be restored and flexible scales of charges must be provided, so
that a public may pay justly for that which it demands. The exploitation of ten or twenty
years ago justifies no failure in good faith today. The public which is served has an obligation
no less than that of those who serve it."
* * *
'"Old time values are out of harmony in a new era of money's changed measurements. Stable
financing, righteous earnings, and just returns must te based on a proper charge foir a service
rendered. The nickel is no anger the standard of riding value, because it passed as maximum
when it ceased to be minimum, and lost its relationship when custom recut the luncheon pie."
WASHINGTON RAILWAY AND ELECTRIC COMPANY,
By WILLIAM F. HAM,.Presidmt

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