Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Charleston Daily Mail from Charleston, West Virginia • Page 6

Location:
Charleston, West Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIX THE CHARLESTON DAILY MAIL, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 3, 1933 h- i i TW CHARLESTON DAILY MAIL E. Clark ud Morning Bailor idltof BusbMM Manager AdnrtWni Manager I Circulation Hnumr 'A, 9r. fapfrinlnnOtot The probability is that eventually she will. She may think nnw that she can continue to defy world but such is not likely to prove the case. Her statesmen would do well to recognize this before it is too late for the consequences to be avoided.

Wwt Virflnia: Beautiful State 1 MOKBAT, APWL Wrtl Cutting of approximately $400,000,000 from veterans' benefits would an economy move of major importance at any time. Comirg now, when government's credit Is endangered by an unbalanced budget and a constantly mounting deficit it becomes of transcendent value. greater part of the credit naturally goes to President Roosevelt The executive was able to da it through authority conferred on him by congress, but the latter WM forced to this course by its own timidity and public opinion. It was afraid to make the reductions itself and was equally afraid of public opinion, if it didn't. In its dilemmn, it decided to pass the buck to the President by giving the latter the necessary powers to make the cuts.

That the President had the courage to accept the responsibility and Noisy The demonstrations staged Mexican communists against the appointment of Josephus Daniels as ambassador to Mexico City are without important significance. They do not represent the feelings of any formidable element of the Mexican people. Because Mr. Daniels happened to be Xs'nited States secretary of the navy in 1914 when American rnari IBS were lancied in Vera Cruz and two Mexicans were killed in the nsuing disorders, the group of Mexican reds protesting his appointment try to hold him responsible and call him a murderer. Much water has flowed under the bridge since 1914, and the relations between the United States and Mexico have become more cordial than for years.

Much of the credit for this is due to the work of the late Ambassador Morrow. The Americar. and the Mexican people understand each other better than ever before. Neither the government of Mexico nor the people, of that country are likely to permit a small group of communists desiring publicity to upset this condition. The demonstrations mean nothing and deserve only to be ignored.

As the World Wags Sugar refineries use burnt bones to filter, whiten, sugar. Argentina is trying night football under flood lighs, a la American. The earth has a distinctive moan or wail--from no explainable cause. Soviet Russia is after Italy's ma, caronl trade with a new 11,000 ten bv factory. Road Safety Increased West Virginia has occasion to view with decided satisfaction the of the law relating to compulsory examination of motor vehicles.

The large decrease in the number of fatal automobile accidents last year, in the belief of thinks that commenting on it, "the success of the to discharge it in a highly satis- Commissioner Tompkins, was a di- fylng manner is something for i rect result of this law. which the country should be and! It is pleasing to note the favor- la grateful. Mr. Hoosevelt proved able impression created outside of that had at heart the interests the state by the statute. Commerce ef entire country rather than Industry, that of any particular group, and that he was prepared to risk the political consequences for protecting the former.

Such an attitude in a public official is all too rare days when organized minorities have become so influential in governmental affairs. The cuts made by the President that executive acted with West Virginia state law requiring compulsory examination of new motor vehicle drivers has set a precedent for safety which may well be studied and adopted by other states not having this system." Tlie a Dominion- A boy born at Bethany, dur ing the money shortage was named Scrip for a m. ddle name. New York public school children will raise frojs 500,000 ol them-from eggs, to study their growth, development. The tobacco crop of Chemung county, N.

one of its biggest crops, is still unsold in the warehouses despite an offer to take a reduced price. Collon, a Spitz puppy, fell from a third story window in Milwaukee, landed on a sidewalk. She wagged her tail on entering the hospital; next day was all right. A Handicap Golfers association, for duffers, has been formed in New York, backed by the United States Golf association. A championship play will be arranged.

Physical fitness depends on mental growth and activity, says Dr. D. W. Roberts, neuropsychiatrist quette's medicine adults, he thinks, childlike. Paris consider organizing a group of women police.

More than a thou- applications immediately received. Several tailors were invited to consider the prqblem of suitable uniforms. A play before the Milwaukee school boari eslls for vacation from December to March, summer sessions with a two vacation in July. Aim: save fuel, light; decrease health hazards for pupils. C.

W. Lemanski, Bayonne, N. got court permission to call himself Lemon because his name was un- American, misspelled, mispronounced, too long, and most people called him Lemon anyway. Anthony Staubwasser, former restaurant captain at the old Waldorf- Astoria. one lime banquet manager for Louis Sherry, and owner of Toni's restaurant in Newark, died at the latter place of pneumonia last week.

of Mar- school. a are emotionally A new loaplike substance, of synthetic petroleum arids and salts of sodium, imitating skin glands in healing of infections, is reported to the American Chemica! society by Miss Claudia Burwell. Michigan university. The convention for the limitation of manufacture of narcotic drugs is in danger. Drawn up in 1931 for ratification by April 13.

1933, it is not yet ratified by Great Britain. France, News believes that more important I Germany, Holland, Switzerland. careful and benevolent considers- results than yet experienced from tion of various classes affected. the law lie ahead. Taking notice It was but proper that the greatest reduction! should be made in bene- dent rate already manifest, which A I ap; Railroads and allied equipment Under the Dome NEWS BEHIND TBZ NEWS WASHINGTON, April 3.

French airplanes can destroy Berlin in three hours any time they choose They are always ready to fly. The Germans have no defense. That startling bib of inside news tails a lot. It came to ou- officials confidentially from their watchful eyes in Europe. It came in response to their inquiries asking how much there is in all this war talk you are hearing nowadays.

It means there will be no war in Europe unless the French will it. They hold the whip hand yet. It also discloses that all Mr. Hitler amounts to right now Is a big bellowing voice. His bark has no bite behind it.

There is one chance that there will be general war. That is the chance that France will decide "it is better to fight Germany now when sne is thsn to wait until Hitler builds hor up for battle again. It depends on Hitler. French sources whisper that at present they are not seriously worried about him. If within the next year Hitler makes Germany formidable that will be something else again.

French officials know just how much arms and ammunition Germany has been able to hide away. It is enough to conduct localized fighting. It is not enough to run a first class What will probably come in Europe is localized fighting in the i without declarations of war, That is the new fashion in wars. They fiave been scratching each other's eyes out in Japan-China, Paraguay-Bolivia and Colombia-Peru disputes. They use all the weapons of war but they do not call it war--just a lot of playful boys killing each other in good, clean fun.

You can bank on thp.t expectation in Europe. At least it is the studied udgment of those officials here who dare not speak openly but who know what they are talking about. A friend of Mr. Hoover called him the telephone to tell him about hiidish rumors that he and Mellon were hoarding gold. The ex-Prssident said he already had heard about hem.

The friend suggested something should be done to stop such un- 'ounded idle talk. "Oh, let them go," said Mr. Hoover with the air of a man who has had so much said about him that one more ie makes no difference. "Anyone in authority can look over my stuff any ime he warns." Mr. Roosevelt was much more upset about these stories than Mr.

Hoo- At one time the President thought ibout issuing a statement denying inch malicious falsehoods in behalf of lis predecessor. He decided against t. The stories were too irresponsible to warrant official denial. A statement could well have been issued about a prominent Democratic hoarder in New York. He bought Air Propaganda German Official Sees Nothini Wrong With Plan From Time Called the youngest German ever ti hold major cabinet rank, 38-year-old Dr.

Paul Joseph Goebbels (Ph. D. Heidelberg) recently became of propaganda and popular enlightenment, a ministry which he promptly organized in five departments of na tion-wlde dictatorial power, props ganda, radio, press, cinema and theater. "I demonstrated to President von Hindenburg," Dr. Goebbels said, "how necessary it was to create such a department.

We must create a press joyously conscious of its responsibility to the fatherland! We must the soul vibrations of the German people. Ah, Meine Herren, think of the press as a great keyboard on which the government can play." Asked if his brand of soul vibrations might not prove in the end te- dioi'S, Dr. Goebbels slapped his thigh "You know me!" he cried. "I am a sworn enemy of every sort of boredom! Best of all, our propaganda is not going to cost the German people anything. Instead my ministry cannot fail to show a profit--the radio advertising, you know!" Dr.

Goebbels, having at his disposal German radio stations of sufficient power to encircle the entire world with Hitler propaganda, said that he would begin by putting on the ir 11 daily short-wave broadcast in English and German aimed at listen- irs throughout the United States and Canada. At first the programs will stress German music and such--proceeding gradually to enlightenment and propaganda when a sufficiently large audience has been built up. Dr. Goebbels asked about the ethics of his plan to radioiie the United States cried: "Why not? The Poles have done it!" of the improvement in the acci- companies'expect good business from 0 d11b 0r an Utr movement of bevr. Schlitz, Pabst, I for a loan at the bank and several other big breweries I his name wouid not be among the have contracted with General Ameri- I The amount was supposed can Tank Car for refrigerator car requirements.

woman who married a foreigner to retain her American ciiizenhsip. It is opposed because ot ensuing immigration tangles. Oliver Locker-Lampson. Conserv alive member of British parliament. to be two million, but that il probably exaggerated.

fits to veterans for disabili-1 fulfilled predictions made at the ties having no service connection, time the law was enacted, it says: These payments have constituted -it is possible to predict further the mort unsound and unfair feat- that once an entire generation of Women are besieging the house im- of veterans legislation. They drivers has been subjected to the! migration committee in favor of a unjust not only to the tax- i rigid tests that are laid down, an biu whicn would permit an A-noncsn but, as well, to deserving: even more noticeable improvement suffering from disabilities jn present itself." due directly to their part in This view represents a logical i expectation, provided there is no President has rendered an i i ax ity in enforcement of the lew. important service to the country in success, like that of other I offered a house in rerv- his revision of payments to veter- statutes, will depend upon the way ants for one vear to Professor Eii- forgot about it. No Republicans are ans. If he has made enemies among jt jg enforced As a safely meas- i Curing his self-imposed i i going to get any advertising there those affected by his action, he has ure we believe it has popular sup- i Sent i T'r won supporters within and outside: ort behind it, and the diligence BU mailed of veterans' ranks by the courage; jt which the police have en- and fairness he showed in handling orc ed its provisions is responsi this difficult problem.

ts success to date. They growl when you mention the name of Young T. R. at the war department now. He quietly played a little publicity trick on them.

He sent his retiring Philippines report to the department for release in newspapers of March 1 27. He knows his publicity as well ss his illustrious father did. So does the war department. It dropped the report down a cubbyhole and promptly Language a Handicap An Anonymous Writer in Scvibner's Magazine The psychological effect of an elaborate ideographic language, as in Japan, is itself enough to obscure and warp logical thought. The language neither adequate nor adaptable to modern needs--a fact which is proved by the large number of foreign words mostly English) commonly used in.

Japan, and written in the clumsy and distorting syllabary. and by (he growing movement for the adoption of Roman letters in writing. Anyone who has been educated in an ideographic language seems unable to think thoughts--he thinks fl rto not pretend to make a. psychologically accurate statement but sucli in fact is the impression given. You may oftn see an oriental in conversation drawing a character upon his open palm, too differentiate h's meaning from the many other words of identical pronunciation.

The Japanese words for hair, paper, and god are the same with a possibly slight variation in pronunciation: this is of the countless examples.) In the beginning Chinese culture no doubt elevated this nation from a comparatively i i i position, but at present it is a drag upon her ambitions, her needs, her native ability. Units of Society Theodore Dreiser in the American Spectator Boys and girls should be made to see themselves as part of a great mass of people with whom they are connected and to whom they are socially, economically and in other ways responsible as co-sharers in all the benefits of that immense mass-coordination known as organized society. Early and clearly, it seems to me, NOW FOR A REAL TOUGH ONE Books and Writers By Lewis Gannett The Roosevelt administration will be made or msrred by its handling of international debt issuo, Frank H. Simonds says in a vigorous booklet, ABC of War Debts, and the ieven Popular Delusions A Them," which Harper's issues. He the President to ask congress or a moratorium, for he is convinced hat "war debts are as dead as Fenan bonds or Confederate securities," nd that the only alternatives are de- ent burial on American initiative or European default and general bad eelinf.

His booklet is. Mr. Simonds says, a ort of taxpayer's inquiry into the late ot frozen assets; and he sweeps ut of the way some unnecessary rgument by assuming at the start hat the debts were justly due, that tie original settlements were fair and quitable and that cancellation or re- will inevitably throw the bur- on the shoulders of the Ameri- sft taxpayer. "Seven popular delusions" stand in Questions Answered By Frederic J. Few American! realise how much their for them.

of Dally Malt can draw on all govern men activitlM through our free information service. The area test Ubrariea, laboratories, experimental itatlonc at their command. any question of fact and it will be answered, iree, -by mail direct to you. threa centa In coin or Rtampi for reply pottage. Do not poitcardf.

Daily Mail Infor- mation Bureau. Frederic tor. WMhlncton, D. C. aily Haitt ln, Direc- Q.

How many people attended the movies last year? B. --The? average attendance was 60,000,000 week. This makes the astounding total of 3.120.000.000 ad- Trails on Broadway With PtuTHmrrifom NEW At a quiet and unofficial little ceremony in Forty-eighth street, Alfred B. Smith opened the season for the town'i favorite outdoor iport--exca- vation watching. He stood by the rail observing a busy steam (hovel, but he loon realized that more people were witching him than wtre watching the digging.

That didn't seem fair, so he strolled away Fanny actress, can't remember names. other day she couldn't recall her husband's name during an attempted In, Iroduction. If this will help any, his ms, or about 25 shows for every a Bi Ro o( person the United States. speakeasies such weak much higher than an air- isn't unusual to set cus- plane did Prof. Piecard ascend? N.

P. tom er lkin their own drinks from A. He ascended 10.954 feet higher pocket flasks There usually in his steel ball than the airplane rec- se Jack Dempsey'. ord of feet held by Lieut. Sou- cek.

Q--Does solving puzzles do a person any good? L. E. puzzles may benefit a person in various ways, particularly he way. First, the famous Coolidge in the exercise of mental elusion: "The hired the i Manv the when he's in town. He them himself, but wishes could afford orchids If O.

Henry here today, he'd write, about. Bagdad- irl-the-Subway. Musical mendictats, playing saxes or singing, lurch through the cars. Fiddlers actually lental powers, set up JitUe tables between indulged in a stops and display cheap And niii, il l-j i I I TM- I. they should be apprised of its im- idn't they?" No, says Mr.

Simonds; the Present time are educational and the underground shops in sta- inense ramifications and duties, of which they must be a part, however they never got money. They took goods, not cash; the American gov- A Corcoran, man. co his time had come, drew his I copies of it'to many Washington 'cor- umbl1 f' with all by the ernment borrowed from one group of nvl ''5" respondents who are friends of his. I hat lhey I ln a built Americans to pay another group of Japan and the World Mitchell's Proposal Yosuke Matsuoka, now visiting The proposal to merge the army the United States on his way home, an the navy into a single unit of from Geneva where he was chief national defense has made its re- the Japanese delegation to the appearance in congress, with Colo- i i of Nations, defends Japan's, ne i William Mitchell among its i course in Manchuria by telling i most ardent advocates. Americans policy is not Appearing the other day before i wnetn tn licensee had anything to rr An i understood.

I the house military affairs commit- He emphasizes "anarchy in tee. Colonel Mitchell told the latter China" and cites that as being "at that a consolidation such as he root of all the troubles in the favored not only would increase 1 by ordinance, any -trunk or orderly person shall be safely taken home in a closed car at the expense of any "lirensee" into whose place of I business juch person shall wander- I i i i I I 1 I Tar East. Peace and welfare, he efficiency but would result in a ers of its highwav bonds the choice of Insists, is the purpose of Japan in saving of $300,000,000 a year. The taking per cent bonds or getting no Far East and "the reason for big saving would be brought about i lritere st at all, and defaulted a Manchukuo." by relying mainly upon bond interest All of this old argument. It submarines and dirigibles for de- been used repeatedly by Japa- fense purposes.

nese officials and hag become stale. Like his colleagues in Tokyo, Mr. partial to airplanes, believing that: front Colonel Mitchell long has been the train crow picked tne In Golden Vallev. Minn after April I ne mitting are legally imperfect 1 verbiage. They suggested he let the legislative drafting service have a hand hereafter.

Mr. Roosevelt smiled and said "Fine--fine!" Everyone here now knows tnat means he may do it and again he may not. The other side of the story is that Mr. Roosevelt is thoroughly fed up with Washington's former way of doing things by indirection. He evidently recalls the a.iserlion of Jusiice Holmes that the legislative a i service apparently "works by implication." You never hoar anything about the men who really write these bills in the Roosevelt program.

The credit always goes to somcunj else. Frederick Lee, attorney, had as to do with writing the farm do with the condition or not. Mr. Roosevelt's bill for federal supervision of investment securities was introduced by the senator A i state have given hotd- A fast train and a Pana. III.

March car met at a A mile down Matcuoka sees the situation solely i they have made warships and vir- from the Japanese viewpoint, total- tually all ocean surface craft im- Ijr disregarding the important ques- practicable as war weapons. tlon of Japan's treaty obligations That aircraft must constitute an which have been so flagrantly vio- important part of any adequate of the auto from the engine, bill as anyone else. Joseph Davies lo- nl back to lork for bodies. They ca i attorney, framed the railroad bill. the rest of the car upright, windshield and windows line-racked: its occupants inside--speechless ith fright.

defense pi.n nearly al, i i a ry that world opinion thorities agree. That warships have publican; the latter refused the for- lated. He admits is against Japan, but it is a case been made absolete, though, mostjmei's invitation to resign, so the where all nations are out of step of the latter doubt. No convincing! councilmen bedeviled the police except Japan. demonstration of this yet has been "It is not a pleasure for me to had, and until more proof is forth- flght," "but I have had to coming than has been produced it fight for my country.

I have tried to make the world under- would be foolish and dangerous for any nation to abandon warship stand the difficulties of Japan's construction. position. Japan has been wagi.igl Economy is a popular watchword a war against a world that has these days. Colonel Mitchell proba- misunderstood her, and she has bly expected his claim that with all snrts of schemes lately ordering a 230-pound sergeant to learn to ride a motorcycle. He refused.

Fordham university has been feeding daily teaspoontuls of a very rnild poison to several and a chimpnn- zee, beside lower animals, to gee hov the body changes the poison to rid of it. The human bndy anrl chimpanzee changes it In precisely the same way; the tower animals used a dinerent one. My Star suffered a defeat. I believe time 000,000 would be saved annually, will justify her action. I am con- under his plan, to win popular sup- that at a not far distant date port for his proposal.

National de- the rest of the world will say that i fense, however, is a matter in have not been wrong or selfish i which economy should be a minor now in our motives." consideration. The chief thins is to Of a certain star misunderstanding is on have an army and navy capable of Is, it can throw pan's part rather than the world's, defending the country. Experi- i i the angled span ruthlessness with which Japan; mcnts for the sake of economizing ignored treaties in pursuit of would be dangerous. territorial conquest is a firmly cs-! much might be saved in a Jew tablished fact in the minds of all years could be quickly wiped out who have followed the Japanese should the defense forces prove un- policy. This can not be dodged, equal to the task placed on them And, to the maintenance of a war.

peace in the Far East, where is any peace there? The flames of war continue to spread with the torch in the President's taking off of batng borne by Japanese hands. congressmen the burden of trying Japan that needs to awaken. to do any thinking. a of red, dart of blue; However Ti ji mv Jr i cnds have said Another form of ret'ef is found They would fain see, too, My star that dartles the red and the blue! Then it stops like a bird; like a flower, hangs furled: They must solace themselves with the Saturn above it. What matter to me if their star is a world? Minr has opened its soul to me; therefore I love it.

Robert Browning, The reforestation bill was really drafted by Robert Marshall, a forest enthusiast. The farm refinancing bill was the handiwork of Professors Meyers of Cornell and Otiphant of Johns Hopkins. What bit the oil crowd during their recent visit was a suspicion that the Standard Oil boys were trying to put something over on them. They did not mention the name Standard openly but that is what they were driving at in those statements charging their meeting had been packed. The underlying situation there seems to be that their crowd is run like old-fashioned Democratic gatherings were before Mr.

Hoosevelt took hold. They all want to be leaders and each one has a' different idea of what should be done. A slick inside job of leading has been done for Mr. Roosevelt by Senate Leader Robinson. He nogoliatcd Ihe return to the fold of all these bolting prodigals.

One of his prize pupils hws been Senator Mc- rarron nt Nei-Hria who started out like a Kansas whirlwind. McCarrcn now is classed as an administration supporter. Salve was the biggest weapon Robinson used on his wild flock. lie was ably assisted by his lieutenant, Pat Harrison, who carried a bucket of oil around nowadays to keep Ihe waters culm. The man who has done most backstage lo get Hitler to quit, persecuting I Ihe Jews is ReiiHlui- Borah.

He has been in confidpnha! communication viilh German authorities. well as their fathers' lo help to build houses for others, build roads, do something. Children should be taught their rights. One would i going through school, that I i i i a American citizen had no rights. No mention is ever made ot them.

I would, at the outset, instruct pupils concerning their property rights. Production of Houses Julian Huxley in tha Forum and Century AL the Chicago exposition this summer we are to see the first specimen of the methods of scientific mass-production applied to housing. Fifty yeats hence, of the new nonce's creeled will be of this type, as different from Hie constructions of today as modern motor car is from a gasoline buggy ot the B. F. (Befpre Fold) era.

The human pasiion of qunintnrss rind snobbishness, for be! "difl'er- enl." "Ye Old Style" in home life, will i induce many persons to live in rococo. Tudor, Colonial, and maybe even Victorian pastiches oJ houses crertcd by commerulol builders from architecls' plans; but plain economic necessity and common sense will driv-fn the majority to plump lor the cheapness end scientific planning ol majs production. NOT LIKE From Punch, London adjusted to their capacity to pay, but never to our capacity to receive payment. They could only pay by selling us goods. We our choice: to take their goods and let them repay or tc bar their goods and renounce payment.

We never were really willing to be paid, says Mr. Simonds, pinning dow his third delusion. We wanted everything. We nursed our agriculture with the farm board, our industry wilh a tariff, our merchant marine with a subsidy; we obstinately refused the Europeans a chance to pay us in any form of goods. Fourth delusion: That Europe never paid us one red cent.

The Hoover moratorium, Mr. Simonds, insists, did contribute actual knowledge. a person were killed in a crevice on the glacier, Mer de Glace, is it true that the body would be preserved for years? C. L. Mer de Glace is a glacier in Switzerland which, like other glaciers, is caused by a body ol ice at a high altitude which does not melt because of the low temperature but continues to flow down the side of the mountain.

It is true that bodies buried in ice of this kind are very apt to preserved for years with very little deterioration. tions you can buy anything from a pork chop for supper to a in Jersey Mrs. Paul Whiteman, helping book about reducing, thinks she'll title it "Whiteman's Burden" Franklin and John bossing for the biggest affair of younger socialites during Easter holidays For who want to get-awny-from-lt-all, a steamship company is offering a one-year cruise to nowhere in particular. For 1.300 you can go aboard, yourself at home, bask in sun, worry about conditions at (a wher- is meant by "higher criti- ever the host goes, and finally off in re ar( to the Bible? B. D.

right you started Win- which seeks to! dow-card in a Madison apsrt- is the determine the time, place, circumstances, nature and authors of the Biblical is traffic in two directions managed in the Holland tunnel? C. R. Holland tunnel which connects Jersey City New York city In hlg which in gw i tlm is composed of twin tubes. It is 9.Z.W or bad wjll SU pp ort enter- feet in lenglh. Each tube is of 28 ft.

t.inment novelty, thert are 47 ment: "Madame Hammer--Piano The town's prettiest postured in the model parade during Art Editors' Frolic at the Boh club. And Lejiren Hiller, illus- trttor, scoffed it all bids for his job of tape-measurinc each beauty. not stop a flow of payments; 6 extcrna diameter, wilh interior establishments called a Europeans never had been paying dway 2 clearance They're mostly store sites, with a cou- been ei ht 13 in. Each tub. has them.

We in- a 'fi one direction only. rTM' 1 1 I ihTTuotation "A lit.le anything which we had not currently furnishing abling the Germans to pay the allies and the allies to pay us. When our loans to Germany stopped, allied payments to us perforce ceased. Can the war debts still be used as a bargaining counter? That's the fifth delusion, according to Frunk Simonds. Suppose they lower their tariffs, they still won't be able to sell us goods unless we lower ours; if we don't take as much from them as we sell them wo shall have to lend them more money to pay the difference.

Similar- knowledge is a dangerous thing" found? A. P. correct wording is "A little learning is a dangerous thing." It is in Pope's Essay on Criticism. pie of floors gaily repainted and given over to dozens of games. And run by the Chester Brothers--Frank, Charles end Ernest--who can shoot a meaner of bagatelle than any of their customers.

In Australia, where they were born, the brothers sang in an itinerant children's opera company, managed by long did it take to go from ln mother, until their voices I Boston lo Savannah by sUge-coich? What did it cost? W. F. H. A. By 1802 unbroken communica- changed.

Then they came to America, where they picked up odd around theaters and finally tion by stage coaches- was available I interested In trick mechanical and In connection with the Slno-Jap- he says, the British cannot return from Boston to Savannah, the journey occupying days. The fire was $70. The route went by way of New York, Philadelphia and Chsrles claimed that they are doing it to make the world safo for democracy. "Remarkable Remarks" The wealth invesled in tax-exempt securities has failed the nation in its hour of economic need. Senator Costigan of Colorado.

The. corridor, thut indisputable land is not merely the reasurcrt heritage nf over 30 Polish Honerations. It is also our only national seacoast. Ignace Jan Paderewski. anese hostilities there Is one great to the gold standard unless we leno ton, and was in all about 1,200 miles consolation.

So far neither side has them money with which to linance traversed at an average speed ol S3 it; if the French cut their armament miles per day. About (25 was required costs it will only enable them to un- for board and lodging an route. dersell us and hurt our industry; if they gave us their colonial islands it would only add to the burdens of our treasury and enhance "iir colonial problems. There is just one way to get paid, says Mr. Simonds: another xvar.

Then we could accept payment in goods and services. And still it would be expensive! The mug has got to have a racket If he he gets knocked off. He can't reform no more than any other crook these F. Humpty Jackson, reformed New York yegg. I am a i cousin, about to be Roosevelt, ret i i governor general ot the Philippines.

IN BRIEF From Boston Herald Over in Europe they are speaking of Uncle Sam ss Uncle Shylock again. If what he's got back so far is any criterion, we'd be inclined to think that Uncle Shy was nearer the truth. SHOULD BE TRIED From Chicago News Former President Hoover, urging the nation to support President Roosevelt, probably realizes that a political moratorium would other moralaria unnecessary. lighting effects. They built all sorts of Illusions moving ships and treadmills for rices snd things that.

Being fans for all kinds of sports, brothers began experimenting with miniature mechanical Their first successful one, though, was Great Balloon Race." wherein two contestants twirled crsnks a pumped up toy balloons. The first to burst was the winner. The Chesters wtre responsible for "Laughter and Jeers" AM Easy Marks "I've been two years collecting this i rnost of the mechanical golf, soccer, baseball, boxing and bagatelle fames What a lot of friends 'hat spread around the country, in drug stores and hotel lobbies. They dropped out of the manufacturing end, though, when other companies library." "Goodness! you Transcript. Already Punished Judge--Prisoner, explain how it is you stole those articles snd left a valuable gold watch at hand untouched.

Prisoner (humbly)--Don't find fault with me lor that, your honor; my wife has been hard enough on me for it Zealand Leader. Limitations "This liniment will help you." "Will it make me smart?" "Tills, is a medicine." responded the rlruggist, "not educational --Louisville Courier-Journal. began to put hundreds of similar contraptions on the market. Now buy up the beat of the machine) and Install them In Uelr own nickel casinos. TOO LATE From Florida Times-Union The man who thinks he spesks days finds that his listeners have changed the subject.

IS SPRING From In Ihe spring younfl man's fancy i turns are caused by 2 -arm driving. I J..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Charleston Daily Mail Archive

Pages Available:
114,805
Years Available:
1914-1977