Show i ' ' : -- TTiii r m I ' " - p wnimi mini iin - " ' j : mr ' ' ' m nimnnm 'iiwwMiiwwiwfflffWEWff iiiiiiiiiirownrawmfflra mMnB-1- f SECOND NEWS SECTION — p — pj'j rnm i Germans dhow — —T - - i —— —r— -- — 7 Little Interest But Munich 13 also headquarters of the Folkish who have for years abused and insulted Herr Stresemann personally in the most violent manner The minister chose for his meeting the great Brauhauskeller where Hitler and Ludendorff attempted their futile putsch in 1923 The place therefore has a symbolic meaning for the radicals of the right Herr Stresemann bad hardly announced the meeting when placards were posted throughout Munich to visit the summoning meeting Hence trouble was expected The hall was overfilled and thousands were unable to get in The moment the foreign minister began speaking interruptions by hecklers berin arid when' he answered his disturbers the uproar grew steadily greater compelling him to quit and leave the hall anti-Semit- NO RED DANGER While Herr Stresemann Is thus opposed by the extreme right his colleague in the cabinet Minister of the Interior Von Keudell has taken action against the left by forbidding' the "red front fighters" a communist organization corresponding in aims to the republican "reichsbanner" Nobody saw any real reason for this prohibition The "red front fighters" have not disturbed the peace anywhere recently and there is no communist danger in Germany Minister Von Keudell should at least have forbidden also the fighting organizations of the right The German minister of the interior possesses no executive powers but must receive help irom the state governments for the carry- A ing out of his decrees The affair was chiefly aimed at Prussia which has a socialist premier and was obviously designed to compromise this official with the masses and thus weaken the party Not only Prussia but all other states except Bavaria and Wurtemburg refused to carry out the decree They opposed it before the supreme court as unconstitutional and the court upheld them However the minister of the interior-cannot resign for the pres ent government holds office until the elections and no minister can be changed now In any event the court's decision further weakened the already weak position of the German nationals But one cannot tell to what extent that may be offset by the success of the right in the French elections It is highly probable that a shift to the right in the French chamber pan influence the composition of the next reichstag in a like sense HOME CRAFT IS TAUGHT IN SCHOOL WASHINGTON May Home craft courses for 5—(AP)— both boys and girls have proven a success says Martha Binkley home economics teacher in the high schools of Tulsa Okla The boys and girls of the high schools of Tulsa writes Miss Binkley in the current Journal of Home Economics are given a series of courses in all phases of home craft and economics and after three years of the experiment teachers and children parents agree that it has been a success The course for the grirla includes study of the horaems a social center and the family as a social unit the influence of heredity and environment marriage and divorce health of the individual and of the family home care of the sick first aid child care and training domestic architecture household management household finances labor (saving devices and the servant problem The boys' course is not quite so extensive The girls and boys' courses are carefully correlated'" writes Miss Binkley "because it is believed that better social and economie understanding results from the boys and girls working together There is opportunity for them to exchange ideas on the topics they are both studying- and this makes a good foundation for later assumption of the duties of making and Keeping a home" LIEUT ROAH mlQ9Q ! BIRD (Special Radio" Dispatch to The ) away Europe's attention turns towards Germany where three weeks hence parliamentary elections of crucial importance will be held ' This is he first time German voters have been given a plain choice between two diametrically opposed national policies —that of collaboration with the rest of the world and that of sulky resistance to world currents Germany'3 ardent and active nationalists undoubtedly have been encouraged by superficial evidences of reaction toward nationalism in France and the German voters now are being asked to believe that such slight as were obtained by theadvantages conservatives in the French elections mean that the French press is going back to a policy et pitiless coercion of the Ruhr days PRESS TO BLAME For this misjudgment the French press is largely responsible having too long crowed victory when last Sunday's results were published It now is apparent to all honest observers that Foreign Minister 's pacific foreign policy is in no wise repudiated and that if anything Premier Poincare is in a stronger position to enforce liberal policies both at home and abroad than before the elections Now the French press is moderating its tone realizing that too much greediness can have only one result namely to reconcile the warring elements on the left side of the chamber of deputies and reestablish the socialist liberal cartel Premier Poincare himself has made it clear that he does not Consider last Sunday's results as a con' servative triumph POINCARE'S ATTITUDE Probably also the German voters no longer regard M Poincare as the ogre they once thought him For two years in collaboration with M Briand he has pursued an extremely conciliatory policy toward Germany and it is difficult to believe the reich electors will be misled into fearing that he will reverse this policy simply because a few conservatives have been elected to the French parliament v Germany's system of proportional representation will give an accurate reflection of the state of opinion but unfortunately it can hardly give a working majority to one party or homogeneous group of parties As usual a coalition will be necessary among parties of widely divergent views Nevertheless failing an almost inconceivable upset based on false impressions of the French elections meaning it can be confidently predicted that Foreign Minister Strese-mann'- s program will be rectified and that the work of pacifying of Europe will be continued Bri-and- COFFEE CAKE COST IN PARIS 6 — (AP) — Real PARIS May American coffee with cream in it at 30 cents a cup is a recognized money-makhere A stack of hot cakes and a cup of coffee at a dollar is another sure proposition The cost of eating- for tourists who insist upon American rood in the American fashion is going to be higher this summer than it has ever been before in Paris Griddle cakes with syrup and butter and a cup of coffee out of a sealed tin with an American label on it costs in the neighborhood of 80 francs at the American rendezvous in th opera district With a few franca for cover charge and io per cent of the bill for the wait- er VVJfth j " V IHEPAL GARCIA ID WKOM Tlis GENERAL GAROAS HEADQUARTERS - y Hubbard Madet±ated int0 almost every tCuba was occupied by the Faithful Vel iairds Alone Elbert Ian" -- Famous Lieutenant PHILIP !J SINNOTT NEA Service Writer SAN FRANCISCO— Thirty years agd in May an outstanding jAmeri- cai hero later immortalized by Hubbard wis- made On that date d quiet lieutenant in he U S array "on bis own" in a momentous mission fdr his government accomplished & feat that hai since become a universal ph: ase for initiative and determination :! Sfe carried "Ai Message to GarBy El-bei- ft ' - j cia" I Mere in San Francisco today that forpier lieutenant now a retired colonel modestly shuns th$ limelight andMives a quiet life of a stddent and booklover lie insists that he did nothing more than any otHer soldier would do 'Of course I am proud of my acliievement" declares Rowan an urgent message from President McKinley to General Garcia the Cuban insurgents opposed to Spanish rule Jas Elbert Hubbard wrote Rdwan "took the letter sealed it up in an oilskin pouch strapped it over his hartv in four days landed by night off the coast of Cuba from ah open bat disappeared into the jungle apd in three weeks came out on the other side of the island haying traversed a hostile country on foot ahd delivered his letter to Garcia" It was just 30 years ago that Rowan completed the first half of a mission that still inspires the nation After hardships and dangers ok sea and land and 'slipping through the Spanish lines he galloped into the headquarters of General Garcia at Bayamo His appearance stirred the courage of the harried rebel Cubans who had been living the lives of hunted beasts as tfie Spaniards searched plateau and jfingle for those favoring "Cuban ' ' delivered? Where were the Spanish positions what were their forces and their morale?" These and similar matters Lieutenant Rowan discussed with General Garcia Information obtained llowan started on his return trip Two Cuban genthat afternoon erals and two sailors accompanied him In a small boat with gunny-&a£sails and with scant rations the party eluded the Spanish guns and patrol launches and left the harbor in the teeth of a menacing storm There was a landing on the Curly Keys transfer to another vessel capture and incarceration as yellow fever suspects at Hog island transfer to another Vessel arrival at Key West Finally Rowan and his party reached Washington on May 14 and reported to k By HORTENSE SAUNDERS NEA Service Wrjiter ATLANTIC CITY — 'The bath- ins suits down nn thp hpnrh are rtif feient: but the people them ar4 not— it is only the ebrterhals of isidi life that change much in a duarter of k century" !' fo said Dr Henry M lishr (if m just year rounding out his twenty-fift- h of service as rabbi of the Beth Irael Reformed synagogue— a mellow ph losophical man who believes thit America is a prefty sound coiintry and that the ihajority of us have pretty good hearts no mat-tei- f how we argue to thp contrary HOME IS NERVE CjENTER ie has seen Atlantic City grow from a small Jersey resc rt tp a He hai seen playground thi automobile and the jradvie lure people from the home and the ra did lure them back He has watched all America in its pursuit of pleasure and play and still remains an optimist 4 England's Greatest Liberal Editor ill - na-ticjn- al 1rie-- i bathinqf rv bub the peopJeaKenoL' Rev Henry MFisher j Naturally" he agreejd ("when people go away qir pleasure trips not go away :o iattend thy do And church yet the c lurches of this city always are filled Half my! congregation and it If the same with other churches are strangers j CULTURAL PROGRESS ' People play more and play hard- 1 w III j - BisMo pi! Paul's I The bishop is a mild pimple minded The dean is acid scornful d'sttrtictive modernist and pug- naciotife Hitherto the bishrim ha not vbhtnred to cross swordu with his f6mdable and disruptive colleague! fOr whom he is notoriously no in illiktual matchf although pn one offcaiion he expressed his opinion oi fleins in general saying they were (unnecessary to the function of th church whereupon j Dean Inge Hbpljed : "No matter what" the PROSPERITY IS IHIIERIC So Says I?rench In Discussing Ingram and Dean Trite r mst! strangely assorted iairo? divinib'ver associated with St the KEY TO WORLD Write Euro- pean Politics By GERVILLE REACHE One of the Foremost Journalists of bishoW France (Special Radio Dispatch to The Standard-Examiner- I ) PARIS May 5 — The nrincinnt ta suit of the parliamentary' elections s4yshe can't do anything" BISHOP IS STUNG ° - Thej ceaseless belligerency !of the dean) however this week j stung Bishop Ipgram into public retort Deanlngfe declared on Monday that the center of gravity of the (Anglican church had silently shifted on the sbjefct of miracles The belief in miracles he said belonged to the darkfagej? when man groping for an explanation of the phenomena of life opposed supernaturalism to naturalism Belief in miracles he addeel belonged to the catastrophic philoophy of history but science has' rjeveiled that life Is evolutionary and Subject to laws The' spiritual world differs from the natural world iw that it is invisible eternal abovs form time and space 1 i In pursuit of this thesis Dean Inge claimed the church had! abandoned thp old argument from miracle and prophecy apd declared that when any young candidate for holy iprders intimated that his' belief la tre divinity of Christ was independent of dogmasf about the virgin birth and the bodily resurrection feV bishops hesitated to or ' as the writer predicted in these df?! patches i3 that the party situation remains practically unchanged rm — jiiie cummunisis acune on or ders from Moscow played'' a hW nana and thus" helped elect a few more conservatives but neither in rrance — nor let us hope in Ger many— will they attain their object which is tto provoke conflict bet tween the nationalistic elements in both- countries ahd- - thus bring aoout another war and favor th triumph of bolshevism Premier Poincare will far th new chamber with the same cabi net except that one radical mini ter has been defeated Foreign Minister Briand after ti severe ness is sufficiently recovered to lay retain his post This means that tne coalition of rival parties will con tinue until thM end of theyear at least giving ii Poincare time for two important measures: First the flotation of an immense conversion dainim loan consolidating about ten bilThis whs a direct challenge to lion francs of short term paper and' the bishop of London who liotor-iouslsecond the signing of an agreement dops not share the dean's with the United States and Great modernist views He replied chargBritain for the payment of the thir4 ing thV dean with absolutelyl misof the Meilon-Berengand representing the prevailing pelief annuity Caillaux-Churchiamori: biihops with regard to miragreements j :' SOUND MONEY POLICY acles!! Meanwhile the bank of France VOTE IS CITED continuing its sound money policy Whatever the dean may have is preparing to purchase another done JBisnop Ingram declared) the hundred million dollars of gold be- bishops have not given up their fore the end of July with money belief sin miracles lie holds that wnicn jtne treasury will repay to "acceptance of the doctrine of bodl- the bank on account of advances This money will come from the pro missiob tq holy order and declares ceeds or the conversion loan the bench of bishops with one exThus when stabilization comes ception hld this view He pointed the bank will be in position to take out that vlhen a who shares bishop possession of -- 1400000000 gold Dean ng'8 views moved in the francs now pledged abrdad discussion! of the prayer book that Stabilization is on its way but no the story of the miracle of Can a be body knows whether it will be pos- omitted as a Sunday gosper besible to effect It between June 2 cause it nirrated a miracle he was wherf the chamber of deputies con- on ther of Bishop Ingram venes and July 15 when the cham- himself motion defeated by 35 votes to ber prpbably will adjourn or one! whether it will be necessary to wait Theiisliop admitted that the viruntil autumn r gin birth stands on a different level V AMERICANS BUY of evidence from the' resurrectiton After 18 months of de facto stab- and that in two cases he has op ilization few serious obstacles re- dained men who confessed differ main Americans who ences regarding that dogma in tliv foresaw the results of the correctly elections hope that! time and study would and have been buying on the Paris remove the ::" difficulty bourse in the last three weeks The bishop Insists that miracles showed good judgment However may be explicable on higher laws being accustomed to Wall street's of nature I than any' laws the b much more active market they mindlhas yet apprehended lie have pushed certain stocks too hard instanced wireless and other and created a shortage in them as showing how what in while neglecting numerous excel- one state 6t knowledge seemsmir-aculous'i- s lent shares which are certain to n another state of knowlrise lnjteliglble There has been consequently edge Tniriri t not thfi TiiRhon'ii Ion great Irregularity in bourse moveahd he lays hlmseif open l6 ments notably among bank shares point the dean s retort that if a rnysteny Altogether nobody can examine is explinible on natural groundsj the situation attentively without it eeasefs to be a miracle which is realizing that the kejr to world surierrtatural the setting aside 'cf prosperity j is In New York r and natural Haw Washington and that after the American and German elections a world crisis cannot be avoided ex- the sens te jchamber has been In thi wing a rectcept by rendering the position of exact c sntr of the room with the angular shaped European debtors easier chairs anddesks arranged in semicircular formation The reconstruction program URGING SUNNIER ?b the moving of the chamtide of th SENATE CHAMBER ber to tne northern wing alpowing direct access of sui-ligaria ilrWASHINGTON May 6— To give Senator Itoyal S Copeland the senate more of nature's sunshine and fresh air a bill is be- XevTorK' author of the bill and fore congress tor reconstruction of conditiotos In the chamber' are such the senate chamber as m to oi senaiors neaitn impair David Lynn architect of the cap-it-- i 5 n 1 has completed a set of plans for of the chamber and many senate offices and has them WIRELESS RESCUES ready for use if the bill Is nassed NATIONAL 1&NTHEM The senate appropriations commit j tee has recommended the voting of By NEA Service $500009 for the work LONDON April 5 — A very emSince the' senate wing haj addsituation was averted ed to thecapitol building In 1859 barrassing and Egypt greeted King Amanullah upon theijr arrival them I have been tremendously and from Bombay with proper cereinterested in the spiritual develop- mony thanks to wireless ment here and I have found it A frantic message pipked up1-bmost satisfying" the Pj and Oi liner "Rajputana Rev Fisher came to Atlantic from an Egyptian operator bethat Egypt was not City immediately after he finished moaned the fact his religious training in Cincin- acquainted with the Afffhan naianthem The purser had ft nati He was to be given a ban- tional wirelessed to Port Said where it quet on the date of his twenty-fift- h deciphered — note for note-rawith prominent re- was upon anniversary the arrival of the royal ligious and educational leaders as pair they were grertcd with a perguests fect rendition of their anthem L - : y j s f i not but a taste for them had to be cultivated before they-coul- d be appreciated Today people are eager for the arts" Rah-b- i 1 Fisher observed "Nor do I remember that the young married set of a quarter of a century ago were so interested ifc social service and in community good as they are now ! VARIETY THEN AND NOW : "Of course the whole" truth is that the people of 25 years ago were not all the same just as they are not today There was casuists and enthusiasts and the 'dilettantes and the mass that followed their various leaders "Certainly not everyone then was interested in religion or morality or in being so saintly They were just about like we are today in different hats and coats and a slightly different political and social set- ting" er ll - -- j j - con-ternp- iat ht In matters of education he point ed out Improvement too A member of the Atlantic City school board for 16 years he has been r close to the Bubject "The schools have broadened out Immeasurably not only in curriculum but in vocational guidance"1! Dr Fisher said "Schools recognize the responsibility of fitting pupils-- j for life as well as for examinations "Certainly the whole country is more prosperous and more generous CHOOSE YOUR GOAL "I have always preached optimism and altruism I honestly believe that you find just about what you look for in life and if you look for what is splendid and uplifting you will find it jShG Stayed out until ll — she StBVS OUfc until "It is particularly true in a place such as Atlantic City There are wild tales of wild goings-o- n here " or lack o£ it in any ee ii vn hok rrcirecs he said and I am quite sure if one started at the external and the obvious VTwenty-fiv- e year? aso people cut to find them one could I myi : no ont can Culturally deny our were not so interested in lectures self have not been interested in a - (SpeciaV radi8 dispatch to Thd Standard-Examiner- ) LONDON May 5— Disintegration j Jf the Anglican church has been one of the moxt significant features of post-wa- r England has received a new impulse With the quarrel between the tnch of bishops and Alehouse of commons on the subject ofl tie revised prayer book still unsettled a violent open xonlroJversy has brokeii 4ut between Dean Inge and the bishop it London on the subject i j of miracles Secretary of War Alger and General Nelson A Miles He had "carried the message to ' Garcia " THANKED BY McKIN LEY President McKinley thanked Rowan for carrying out Ms order? in such a satisfactory manner Nearly 20 years later the war def partment made a belated award of a distinguished service cross Since his retirement from the army in 1910 Colonel Rowan has resided here with his wife devoting his time to writing and studying He seeks no praise for his historic feat and insists that any soldier would have done the same if he had the chance "I'm glad I brought back the goods shortened the1 war and hastened peace" is all that the veteran says - " l l By A G GARDINER t 1 i Hi books music art and the sciences as they are today True they werb Same Though Ext e'pials Change 1 h KEEN CRITIC OBSERVES US ON PARADE F rids People Are U ' isnop and lieaii warmly pjebate' About Miracles Self-preservati- com-mandi- Lieutenant onel Andrew S Rowan as he gaies from his comfortable home on Russian hill across the vista of San Francisco bay "I'm glad I libre" wak chosen for the mission — but TALKS WITH GARCIA It's) all in the life of a soldier you j "It was a matter-of-fac- t soldier tklk we had' that day" Colonel kniw" J IMMORTALIZED ACT owan says "The United States The retired colonel now gray-haire-d lad declared war against Spain was "the fellow by th name rVhat could be done to "tnake this of Rowan" whoscj daring deejl gave hort and decisive with least cas- Eltfert Hubbard the in spiration for How could a joint his famous preachment "A Mes- Salties? Carried on by Cuban and sage to Garcia'" Thi latter has forces? "What supplies bet n circulated py ntillion and would the Cubans need and where Co i as befbre 11 as it is after" soup or to feed to pigs coe--tmuch as a whole can of it does on I)r Fisher believes we can-gethe corn-befide of the Atlantic no estimate of the real brciaress lt f V er than they used to fThey ride mounts to something more than one faster and live faster '"he! whole snver doiiar Keal American cof- teriipo of life is accelerated Where fee sells at the standardized price thq young woman of 25 jvears ago of seven francs a cup on the boulestajjyed out until 11 in the evenihg vards Corned beef hash without thd flapper stays out until two lint a poached egg costs as high as 50 cents a plate and a dish of stewed the! difference is only —relative— a corn considered by the French fit matter of three hours ind It is only to use as a basis for thick just as easy to get into difficulty s C--Z 1 —B l 1! Self-preservati- Conciliatory Policy Toward Germany Cause of Change PARIS May 5 — As the smoke of the French election battle clears : f EDITOR'S NOTE: On the thirtieth anniversary of his hUtoric feat in "carrying a message to Garcia" Lieutenant Colonel Andrew S Rowan U S A retired has written for The Standard-Examine- r and NEA Service "A New Message to Garcia" Colonel Rowan stresses the need for adequate national preparedness in the Caribbean In his ' article appearing below By LIEUTENANT COLONEL ANDREW S ROWAN U S Army Retired NINETY-EIGHto 1928— and time and the hour have EIGHTEEN a generation In 1898 time RAN as it were now time FLIES With Lindbergh shall we say? A new epoch— that of expansion— was ushered in by the Spanish-America- n 'war A new era— that of flying— has evolved from the world war From the wreckage left in the wake of Mars mankind assembles the best and advances— haltingly mayhap — with Janus-face- d n banners inscribed with platitudes pacific but" with suspicion at heart: is the first law of nations The lowest microbe and the finished product mankind and all that lie between have that desire born in them and It is but natural that what they produce should resemble the creators Like master like man war Leaving out the accepted causes of the Spanish-America- n let us consider the results Cuba won complete freedom after centuries of oppression America won Cuba's gratitude acquired military control of a strategical fulcrum and avenged an insult to the flag In the blowing up of the Maine In 1819 when the United States acquired Florida through the pernicious activity of General Andrew Jackson Cuba became a strategic point Its western end commands the entrance — exit of the gulf of Mexico and closes the mouth of the Mississippi It lies athwart the sea lanes from New York to the Panama canal and the proposed Nicaraguan route You cannot reach these arteries of trade without? kowtowing to Cuba' It was Lord Salisbury who as prime minister of Great Britain said that if great nation should acquire the moon it would not be long before some army strategist would show the necessity of occupying Mars to protect the moon Hence to Florida Cuba was necessary The Panama canal— protected somewhat by Cuba — has shown us the necessity of the Virgin isles With a completion of the Nicaraguan canal— the best interocean route— it will be necessary to add to Cuba the Pearl of the Antilles a whole string of pearls all of the AVest Indies — and so give us the whole of the Caribbean sea Writh this closed sea the demise of the moribund feudalities that once constituted the old Spanish main willbe hastened and on their graves will rise garden paradises that can supply the world with we say tropic food and exotic beauty The Spaniards called Havana "the key to the new world" But a key must have a bridge a stem and a bow In the case of Cuba the stem consists of the Greater Antilles- - (Leeward islands) and the' bow: is Lesser Antilles (Windward island) With this key In the admitted as well as the physical possession of Uncle Sam all ithat would b& required to insure the safety and welfare of the western world would be universal training ef our youth in physical as well as mental development a very great price for a very small vice May it never again be necessary for America" in the advent of war to find it necessary to dispatch an officer through enemy lines to obtain information that should be on file ready to be passed to the commanding general at a minnte's notice in order to enable him to act with prompt decision The winds may not always blow from the right direction as they did thirty years ago "To be prepared for war is "one of the most effectual means of preserving peace" was the message of Washington He knew OF fOINCARE DOLLAR -- age-wor- BETTER VIEW Standard-Examiner- — —-- : T OL AS? anti-Semit- — —— t : : MESSAGE TO GARCIA BERLIN TAKES By WILLIAM - Col Rowan's 1928 By GUSTAV STOLPER Noted German Editor and Economist 5 — The German election campaign has been May BEHLIN on since Easter but thus far one sees little battle The turnout at political meetings is poor and the spirit masses show little interest There are no exciting slogans The really decisive and vital questions in German politics such as revision of the Dawes plan and reform of the constitution are not involved in the campaign struggle— the reparations question beeause there are only "small differences of opinion among the parties regarding foreign policies and constitutional reform because the parties themselves are divided on it and nobody can see clearly whither the roads are leading —— — The main task Is to be accom- - ABUSE AND INSULT —— '—- ROWAN NOW LIVES OUIETLY IN FRISCO Campaign there -- — WRITES NEW "MESSAGE TO GARCIA" i plished in Bavaria The increase in the reich's power at the cost of the states finds most vigorous op position there Hence the fact that Foreign Minister Stresemann Is for the first time a candidate for a Bavarian mandate has symptomatic significance The German people's party "whose leader he is has heretofore taken a relatively stronger stand for centralization Herr Stresemann was recently iil Bavaria and opened his campaign csx OGDEN CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING MAY 6 1928 — 0 y'rHi FOREIGN AUTOMOBILES CLASSIFIED -- ol ori f his-quee- n i nd |