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Show , ' - "!?! ' i 1 4 t r r ' .1 -t ,, - - ,j r - ,4 .'::"! iH "1 ij!'. I i1 Washington. Political atudenU and observers In Washington find themselves In a Has 'Em quandary concern-Guessing concern-Guessing ln the objective! of the IJJew Deal administration because of a leriei of late developments. Frankly, most students of politics have to confess their inability to fathom the various developments of recent weeks or to measure their significance. I have written, heretofore, about the wide open split In the Democratic Demo-cratic party and about the presidential presiden-tial moves to heal that split but, instead of the new developments being be-ing of a kind designed to heal wounds, they appear superficially at least to be doing directly the opposite oppo-site thing. Confessing my own Inability In-ability to understand the political strategy, If there be strategy, let me merely call attention to such things as: Th recent radio speech by Senator Sena-tor Guffey, Pennsylvania, Democrat, Demo-crat, which thoroughly read out of the party such able men as Senators Sena-tors Wheeler of Montana, Burke of Nebraska and O'Mahoney of Wyoming. Wyo-ming. The speech of Postmaster General Gen-eral Farley before the Young Democrats Demo-crats at their Indiana meeting, stating stat-ing that there will be no reprisals against those Democrats who have seen fit or now see fit to object to parts of President Roosevelt's New Deal program. Democratic senators at a Washington Washing-ton hotel after the election of Senator Sena-tor Barkley of Kentucky as Democratic Demo-cratic leader of the senate, and the absence "6f "'President"' R'oo's'evelf from that meeting. The renewal by President Roosevelt Roose-velt of his criticism of "Economic Royalists" In his speech In celebration celebra-tion of the birth of Virginia Dare, the first white child born in America, Amer-ica, at Manteo, N. C. The speech of Senator Guffey in New York declaring without equivocation equiv-ocation that the Committee for Industrial In-dustrial Organization, headed by John L. Lewis, should provide a nucleus for an American Labor party. par-ty. This party should have among Its objectives the political destruction destruc-tion of any one who fails to carry through the New Deal policies or who opposes a program designed to make the court structure of the United States subservient to the President There are other phases, other circumstances cir-cumstances that might be included in this list, but those enumerated serve to show the confusion that prevails. They present to me a wholly nonunderstandable and un-explainable un-explainable hauling and filling breathing hot and cold without a change of face. There has been nothing of a purely pure-ly political nature create quite so much of a stir in Guffey a long time as did Causes. Stir the radio speech of Senator Guffey in which he called for defeat of all those who opposed the President's plan to reorganize the Supreme court of the United States by adding to it six justices of the President's own choosing. It was in this speech that Senator Guffey singled out Senators Wheeler, Burke and O'Mahoney for destruction. He did this because these three senators led the fight against the President's plan to pack the Supreme court Senator Wheeler and Senator Burke conducted the fight on the floor of the senate; Senator O'Mahoney wrote tile devastating report by which the senate Judiciary committee commit-tee advised the senate to kill the court packing bill Senator Guffey's speech was made at night When the senate convened at noon the following day. Senator Wheeler took the floor and delivered one of the most vicious speeches of which he is known to be capable. It was excelled in bitterness bit-terness only by the attack which came from Senator Burke. Senator O'Mahoney likewise made sure that the senate record revealed the feeling feel-ing of those who were convinced the President had made a vital mistake mis-take in proposing the court reorganization. reor-ganization. I have heard these questions asked many times: What can the , , President gain by What s the making Senator Answer? Cuffey or any man of his type a spoKesman for the administration? Further, can the President afford politically to strike at the very heart of the Democratic party by permitting permit-ting even secretly the political destruction de-struction of such brilliant men as Vheeler, Burke and O'Mahoney? The answer to those questions, as Jar as I can see it or as far as 1 have been able to gather opinions on the point must inevitably lead in the direction of a party purge. By that I mean, the President and hit closest New Deal advisers must be seeking to drive out of the Democratic Demo-cratic party, the machinery of which he controls, any and all Dem ocrats who are unwilling to be one hundred per cent for the theories of economics and aocial reform which the New Dealers counte-nance. counte-nance. If that be true, and I repeat re-peat it Is only an assumption, then the President evidently is hoping to create a class party, a radical party which can be made to Include such outfits as Uie John L. Lewis following, follow-ing, the communists and half-baked nitwits who are opposed to the principle prin-ciple of individual employment the accumulation of personal belongings and even the idea of owning homes by individuals, free from debt On the other hand I cannot convince con-vince myself that Mr. Roosevelt would make a political mistake of this gravity. For it would be a mistake mis-take in two ways, namely, virtual destruction of the Democratic party and the blighting of any hope the President may have for being elected elect-ed a third time. It is these combinations com-binations that make the whole situation situa-tion so difficult to understand. It may be that one result will be that Senator Wheeler or Senator Burke may find himself in a political politi-cal situation where one or the other will be forced to seek the Democratic Demo-cratic Presidential nomination in 1940. It is quite apparent now that the split in the party is going to cause a violent explosion In the next Democratic national convention. There Is no way to avoid it It may be added m the same breath that Mr. Roosevelt can go into that con-"WmM'Wa con-"WmM'Wa MttfrWI-'Owir-'tettewi nation because surely the Farley political machine cannot be dis lodged unless'th factional dispute spreads--to&he rank, and file of Democrats Dem-ocrats throughout the country. This is to say that, having control of the party machine, Mr. Farley can muster the election of enough delegates dele-gates to the party's national convention conven-tion to assure the Roosevelt nomination, nomi-nation, especially since Mr. Roosevelt Roose-velt demanded and obtained the' re-peal re-peal of the age-old Democratic rule that required a vote of two-thirds of all the sitting delegates before the convention nominates a candidate. candi-date. With further reference to Senator Guffey, Senator Barkley told the senate during the violent Wheeler-Burke-6'Mahoney attack that Senator Sena-tor Guffey had tendered his resignation resig-nation as chairman of the Democratic Demo-cratic senatorial committee a week previously. Senator Barkley's statement state-ment however, was not accepted generally: it did not have the ring to make it convincing, nor did it appear to be anything more than an attempt by Senator Barkley to save Senator Guffey's face. It may well be that the rupture i Democratic harmony will turn out to be a great is-May is-May Be sue as early af Big Issue tne 1938 congressional congres-sional and senatorial sena-torial elections. There are a number num-ber of senators who opposed the court packing bill and, therefore, fall within the Guffey castigation, who will be up for re-election next year. If the Guffey attack is followed fol-lowed up at all in the state organizations, organi-zations, those Democrats who opposed op-posed the President's will necessarily necessar-ily must defend themselves. The only way they can defend their course of action is by a counter attack at-tack on the President and those policies of his which the candidate for the senate opposed. I predicate predi-cate my prediction of continuation of the row in 1938 on the statement made by Senator O'Mahoney in answer an-swer to the Guffey radio tirade. In that statement of position. Senator O'Mahoney stated, to quote a single paragraph: "I would rather walk out of the door of this chamber and never return, re-turn, than to surrender any honest convictions I have. I say to you, senators of the United States, so long as I am in this body I shall raise my voice and cast my vote as my conscience dictates and nobody, whether he comes from Pennsyl-vania Pennsyl-vania or from New York or any other state, can tell me or the people peo-ple of my state what I should or should not do." Contrast that statement with the following declaration by Senator CufTey in his radio speech: "I was elected to the United States senate in 1934 because I assured as-sured the voters of Pennsylvania that it was my intention to support loyally and without wavering the program of the Chief Executive." And in calling attention to that statement of subservience. Senator Burke of Nebraska declared: "Pennsylvania may want that kind of representation in the senate, and, if they do, God bless them, let them have it; but to me it would seem that if the senate is to have that kind of representation, it might as well have a parrot in a cage in the secretary's office and bring it in when the senator's name is called and have him say, 'Yes. Mr. Roosevelt, Roose-velt, count me for that, too.' That is not my idea of what a senator should do." t Writerr Newspaper Union. News Review of Current Events SHANGHAI FEARS PLAGUE Cholera Adds to Death Toll . . . Chinese Planes Bomb American Liner . . . Britain Protests Attack on Envoy C WMUra 'Black Death' in Shanghai AS IF there were not horror enough in Shanghai, the ill-fated ill-fated city found itself face to face with a new peril bubonic plague. The outbreak of the disease, first discovered In the French concession, conces-sion, where most of the American population lives, was traced In large part to the sanitary difficulties in removing the bodies of Hongkew civilians ci-vilians killed by bombings, artillery shelling and machine-gun fire. Sanitary officers in the concession conces-sion and the international settlement settle-ment fought frantically to check the spread of the dread cholera. They were hampered by Japanese military mili-tary forces which insisted upon keeping closed areas where there still remained bodies to be burled. Admiral Harry Yarnell, commander com-mander cf the United States Asiatic Asi-atic fleet canceled all shore leaves for sailors and ordered Chinese hands off American ships. With the port of Shanghai closed to American Ameri-can shipping other than warships, because of the ever-increasing danger dan-ger of bombs and artillery fire, 500 Americans who had intended to leave on the next liners out of port were stranded, making a total of 2,000 American inhabitants who remained re-mained exposed to the double dangers dan-gers of warfare and cholera. Announcement by the Japanese that they had perfected a plan for bombing every air base in China was regarded as a warning to for-,ej.AUonAls,,to;QfihoHi for-,ej.AUonAls,,to;QfihoHi the JL0pq,:. DQO.sxiuare miles of Chinese territory terri-tory that they had better evacuate U , they. were, be safe. Evacuation of Americans from Shanghai was difficult with' the"ban on shipping. Warships appeared the logical means of rescue, but there were few in the Shanghai area capable of taking, aboard large loads of passengers. Accordingly, a cruiser squadron of six ships was being prepared to leave the United States, steam to Shanghai and remove re-move those stranded there. The Japanese embassy warned foreign nations that they had better bet-ter advise the Japanese navy of movements of ships into the vast blockaded area, lest these be mistaken mis-taken for Chinese supply ships. The embassy intimated that cargoes of ammunition and military supplies might be denied admittance and advised ad-vised foreign ships that it might be a good idea to permit Japanese authorities au-thorities to inspect their cargoes before entering the blockade. International Crises ONE grave international crisis followed another in the new Sino-Japanese war. Britain was still awaiting reply to her protest over the wounding of His Majesty's ambassador am-bassador to China by a Japanese airman when four airplanes, identified identi-fied as Chinese, swooped down upon the American liner, President Hoover, Hoov-er, flagship of the Dollar line, dropping drop-ping bombs which killed one person per-son aboard and wounded eight. The President Hoover, having deposited de-posited a load of refugees in Manila, Ma-nila, was nearing Shanghai to pick up another load when the bombs struck, tearing 25 holes In the ship above the water line. The ship immediately im-mediately notified Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, commander of the American Ameri-can fleet who took command of all American shipping in the emergency. emergen-cy. He ordered the President Hoover Hoov-er to continue to Japan, and radioed other vessels that they must not enter "hostile'' waters off the Woo-sung Woo-sung and Yangtze lightships. It was only a few days before the President Presi-dent Lincoln, another Dollar liner, had had to run a gauntlet of artillery artil-lery fire to get 160 American refugees refu-gees on their way to Manila. China's ambassador in Washington, Washing-ton, Chenting T. Wang, lost no time, in making complete apology for his government in the Dollar liner incident inci-dent to Secretary of State Cordell Hull. He said the President Hoover had been mistaken for a Japanese transport by a Chinese aviator. He offered to make full financial re dress immediately. It was indicated indicat-ed that a court martial was in store for the erring airman. More spectacular, but only be-ca.use-of the importance of the person per-son it involved, was the shooting of Sir Hughe Montgomery Knatch-bull-Hugessen. British ambassador to China. Britain's note to Tokyo was couched in stringent terms. It said, in part: "The plea, should it be advanced, that the flags carried on the cars were too small to be visible is irrelevant ir-relevant There would have been no Justification for the attack even had the cars carried no flags at all. "The foreign and even the diplomatic diplo-matic status of the occupants is also irrelevant. The real issue is that they were noncoinbaiants . . . "Such cves are inseparable from the practice as illegal as it is inhuman of failing to draw that clear distinction between combatants combat-ants and noncombatants in the conduct con-duct of hostilities which intcrnation- SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK Newspaper Union. Wounded by Japanese airmen. Sir flughe Montgomery Knatchbull-Hu-gessen Is center of strained international interna-tional relations. al law no less -than the conscience of mankind has always enjoined. "His majesty's government must therefore request: "FIRST A formal apology to be conveyed by the Japanese government govern-ment to his majesty's government; "SECOND Suitable punishment for those responsible for the attack; "THIRD An assurance by the Japanese authorities that necessary measures will be taken to prevent f ecttfrettee' oTevw acter." Tokyo's reply was temporarily withheld; pending a complete- investigation. in-vestigation. " "' "" ""' Trouble Ahead for Ford JOHN L. LEWIS' magic touch ef-" ef-" fected a compromise between warring factions of the United Automobile Auto-mobile Workers of America sufficient suffi-cient to permit the election of officers, offi-cers, but that failed to cover up the fierce dissension in the C. L O. affiliate's af-filiate's Milwaukee convention. Several times only a fortunately-timed fortunately-timed adjournment saved a day's meeting from breaking up in a riot The clashes were between the "progressive" "pro-gressive" faction of the union, headed head-ed by President Homer Martin, and the "unity" faction, containing most of the "left" members, who opposed op-posed Martin's program. In the end, the Lewis compromise forced Martin to retain several unity group officers he had apparently been anxious anx-ious to depose. New officers added were, however, chiefly adherents of Martin, and it was believed his faction fac-tion still held control of the executive execu-tive board. . . Of chief importance in the convention conven-tion was the decision to go ahead with the campaign to organise the employees of the Ford Motor company. com-pany. A special tax of $1 per member, mem-ber, which would bring in a net of something like $400,000, was voted for the purpose. Lewis predicted, "Some day Henry Ford is going to be so very tired he will be willing to accord to his employees the rights that are due them." War May Soon Be Luxury r NE good argumnt for peace is - that the riyjng costs of raw materials ma-terials are making war more expensive ex-pensive than ever. This was demonstrated dem-onstrated when London financial circles cir-cles revealed that parliament will be asked to vote supplementary funds to carHr out Great Britain's armament program for the present year. In February experts figured the cost of armaments at $7,500,000000 over a five-year period. Now it is apparent that many more millions will be required. The cost of antimony anti-mony has increased from $385 to $405 a ton, copper from $265 to $275, heavy scrap steel from $18.75 to .'22.50. tin from $1,135 to $1,295, and zinc from $105 to $115. Steel ship plates a year ago cost $46.75 a ton; now they are $57. Jersey Kids Picket Mayor 'TpHE next thing you know babies will be picketing their cradles for more milk. Spurred on by frequent fre-quent accounts of Industrial strike picketing or by the encouragement of disgruntled politicians several hundred boys between the ages of seven and thirteen years rose in revolt re-volt aRainst the city fathers of Jersey Jer-sey City, N. J. Shouting their war cry, "We want playgrounds!", the youngsters tied up traffic with their parade. They dug up cobblestones from the streets, sprinkled the pavements with broken glass, built barricades of boxes and stones which made driving hazardous for automobilists. The boys directed their campaign against Mayor Frank Hague and United States Senator A. Harry Moore, upbraiding them With placard plac-ard mottoes condemning their alleged al-leged failure to provide sufficient playgrounds for the safety of children. chil-dren. Police dispersed them gently at first, but when they reorganized and resumedTTie picketing, the officers offi-cers were forced to seize 15. uuij jmw " mil ii "in miii ' Y'; y ? 1 J f4mi, it ,,( ii, .Aft., a. i mii YOU Figure It Outl I T IS true that the first session of the seventy-fifth congress appro priated a vast amount of money, but Just how much? It depends upon your point of view. Rep. John Taber (Rep., N. Y.). ranking minority member of the appropriations ap-propriations committee, in preparing prepar-ing a compilation for the last issue is-sue of the Congressional Record, estimated es-timated that congress had appropriated appro-priated $10,252,892,356, all for use in the current fiscal year. He contended con-tended this amount of spending In one fiscal year would result in a deficit of between $3,000,000,000 and $4,000,000,000, and a national debt of more than $40,000,000,000. Publication of Taber's statement drew a reply from Clarence Cannon (Dem., Mo.), chairman of the committee. com-mittee. He presented a series of tables which he claimed proved that the last session appropriated only $8,427,605,854, of which only $7,448,-648,922 $7,448,-648,922 was for the 1938 fiscal year. Then, Just to sharpen the wits of laymen who sought the answer to the puzzle, Carter Glass, Democratic Democrat-ic senator from Virginia, who has often differed from the administration administra-tion on points of expenditures, offered of-fered his estimate that $9,389,488,893 had been appropriated. He added that the national debt is really closer clos-er to 40 billions than the 37 billions reported by the treasury. Puppet King for Ethiopia? w; HEN Mussolini captured Ethiopia Ethi-opia (or did he?) it was fre quently said that he would never be able to control it, much less develop it, for the Ethiopian tribes are wild and terrible. Apparently he is now coming to the same conclusion and is about to turn for help to of all people! the former emperor, Haile Selassie. It is known that the Italian government gov-ernment has made certain overtures to Great Britain to determine how she feels about the "Conquering Lion of Judah" ascending his throne once more, but strictly as a puppet for whom II Duce"'w6uld' pull " the" strings. Britain is said to be willing because of the ever-present Italian threat along her Mediterraneaniife: line, . ... .. France, too, has been approached on the matter. Frenchmen own the important railroad from Addis Ababa Aba-ba to Djibuti, but one of the principal prin-cipal stockholders in the French corporation cor-poration is Haile Selassie, and the Italians refuse to recognize his holdings. hold-ings. It is believed that it the French agree to the puppet monarchy mon-archy the validity of the emperor's shares will not be questioned. Then France will be able to buy them. The fly in the ointment is that Haile Selassie will have none of this. He will rest his fate entirely with the League of Nations, of which Ethiopia is still a member. Meanwhile the continual raids by native tribesmen, still faithful to their emperor, leave no Italian life safe in the African country, and are making 11 Duce s "colonization" a joke. Dictator Visits Dictator TJERLIN was preparing a hero's - welcome for Benito Mussolini, Italian dictator due to visit the German Ger-man capital during September's closing days. 'Throughout the city II Duce's obvious popularity was a realistic reminder of the friendly alliance al-liance which has developed between the two Fascist nations. Unter den Linden and the Wil-helmstrasse Wil-helmstrasse were being decorated with bunting, colored lights and huge German and Italian flags. Various Va-rious tours and military maneuvers ma-neuvers were planned for II Duce's visit. He was to arrive In a private airplane, his own hands at the controls. con-trols. During his stay he was to be the guest of Adolf Hitler in the presidential palace. Plans called for his appointment as honorary leader of der Fuehrer's private guard and as colonel-in-chief of a Nazi cavalry regiment. Japs Eye Sino-Russ Pact TN TOKYO it was widely believed that the non-aggression pact signed by the Russian and Chinese governments was accompanied by a secret military agreement which would ally the two enemies of Japan Ja-pan to the extent that Soviet munitions, muni-tions, military advisers and aviators avia-tors would be dispatched to China. The charges were that by the terms of the secret agreement China Chi-na fully recognizes Soviet activities in Outer Mongolia and the province of Sinkiang in return for a joint defense understanding against Japanese Jap-anese advance In China. Mediterranean Menace n EGARDED as a renewal of at- tacks on shipping in the Medi terranean due to the Spanish civil war was the submarine attack upon the Russian freighter Timiryazev off Algiers. Wh?n the ship sank after being struck by a torpedo the captain cap-tain and the crew pf 29 were picked up by a fishing boat and brought to Algiers. None of the crew could identify the attacker, although all reported they had seen a submarine's periscope peri-scope just before the blast Louis Retains Championship "TOMMY FARR. the Welsh fighter I whom all the "smart guys" thought was a set-up for Joe Louis world's heavyweight chifmpion' gave the "Brown Bomber" the surprise sur-prise of his life in New York, when he stayed 15 rounds. Louis got the eminently fair decision, but Tommy was still fighting like a tiger when the final bell rang. ...... ..,,A1.1,.1...U WHO'S MEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Part on mfiffffffffffttmmf NEW YORK. The Mclntyre and Heath partnership of 63 years is at an end with the death of James Mclntyre, seventy-nine, at his home at Southampton, N. Y. As Mclntyre Burnt-Cork Troubadours died, Thomas K. Stepped High Heath- eiehty-four years old, lay suffering suf-fering from paralysis unaware of his partner's demise. "Under the Gas Light." "Ingomar the Barbarian" Barbari-an" and "The Black Crook" were played straight and never burlesqued bur-lesqued in the flourishing days of Mclntyre and Heath's "Georgia Minstrels," as were Chester A. Arthur's Ar-thur's sideburns and Benjamin Harrison's fuzzy plug hat. Boys in short pants who tagged the parade, somewhere out on the kerosene circuit, cir-cuit, have grown old and died since the 40 burnt-cork troubadours, stepping step-ping high in linen dusters, stirred new life In remote towns. Their 63 years was not a record. Fox and Ward of Philadelphia were together, I believe, something over 70 years. Mclntyre and Heath, however, had a record in their 12,500 performances. per-formances. They never missed a show, and gave IT performances daily at the Omaha State fair in 187t. Appearing for the last time in New York in 1929, they said stage humor hadn't changed much. All they, did in refurbishing their old jokes, said Mclntyre. was to put in words like "airplane" and "prohibition" "prohi-bition" and "radio." To such oldsters, much that seems glaringly modern was really old ... - , stuff. The first au-Rabbit au-Rabbit bong' tnentic syncopa- Former Slave can 6tae was "The Rabbit Song." of jerky measure, with an accompanying hitch-kick, sung and danced - -by Melrrtyre-hr "!&?s - He-said He-said he got it from a former slave. They appeared in dance halls, music mu-sic halls, concert halls, variety theaters, the-aters, vaudeville, burlesque, musical musi-cal comedy, light opera, revues, extravaganzas, ex-travaganzas, pantomime, comedies, drama and motion pictures, They teamed up in San Antonio, Texas, May 12, 1874. They were in separate blackface song and dance acts on a vaudeville bill. Heath's partner became ill and hey merged their acts. Their first show was stranded in Louisville. They paid no salaries, but gave Riley, the bandmaster, the bass drum. Mclntyre Mc-lntyre got a job in a livery stable. They pulled the partnership together togeth-er again and out of it came the Georgia minstrels. "Hennery and Alexander" of "The Ham Tree" will be remembered until all who saw them have gone. "THIS administration helped many Harvard men to "rise and shine." Unhappily, two others come to grief at about the same time. Francis O. French, father-in-law of r, . . John Jacob Astor, Relates How who confes?es Harvard Pals bankruptcy, was Came to GricfH a r v a r d classmate class-mate and buddy of Ernst Hanfstaengl, former piano player to Adolf Hitler. Herr Hanfstaengl Hanf-staengl ducked his nazl captors in Spain, as they were planning to drop him out of an airplane, and is now studying Germany in absentia. The brief stock market slump of 1921 wrecked Mr. French, son of Amos Tuck French. When, trying for a comeback in 1923, he drove a taxicab, the papers spoofed him instead in-stead of giving him credit for his courage. All in all, he got a pretty rough deal. the other taxi-drivers liked him. One of them showed me a copy of the "Taxi News." to which Mr. French had contributed an essay on democracy which wasn't half bad. But he made only $17 In about a month of driving. Thereafter he sold overcoats on commission and now, at forty-eight, eases down into bankruptcy, owing a Chinese laundryman $1.48, this being be-ing one of several small liabilities. OH ROBERT CRAIGIE stopped ; several weeks in this country and visited Washington, en route to Japan as the newly appointed Brit-. Brit-. n , ish ambassador. Naval Expert He is Britain's na-of na-of Britain val expert. His Pays Us Call previous visits have touched off much newspaper conjecture, in whuh his trip has been interpreted as a move by England to get America Amer-ica to police her interests in the Pacific and the Far East All this. Sir Robert has suavely waved aside. He served 14 years in the foreign office and three years ago became assistant secretary of state. He is the son ot the late Admiral R. W. Craigie. He was chief naval expert ex-pert of the foreign office, knighted in 193tl. Mrs. Craigie, who accompanies him. Is an American. She was Pleasant Stovall, daughter of the late Pleasant A. Stovall, who was editor of the Savannah, Ga., Evening Eve-ning Press and minister to Switzerland. Switzer-land. it ConsoH't.-itMi News Features. VVNU Service. lemon juice cJ? 3 For Boiled BiA nam add a small " the ham ufcV is completed may fcefore the artlcl. lS XGh in JA bing gently with ff I -I moistened JfcJ Ironing Linen TbUii en table mats edged -Jl crochet require pinned in th, COrr faf roning sheet wh Jfi the pins close togJ lace joins the lint point of the iron and S Pinned out till th, JJj dry. Embroidered cS? should be ironed on tW over a thick underfed . Eggs and Musing ounces of fresh butter it J yiM, uieun over it 4 ft and add 3 scoonhi. mushrooms, teaspooc wpwmui ground wnfr oiii me mixture with t SDonn ovpr .u... thirkicVi Tine;.. ""oioicucy, t very hot on buttered tef t'se for Old Shirint Ik ui&c-djueu snavmg brairf i.;end.id,,lac.Ufiad.i3ai nenetrntes nartt n-k;i Tj r w n ,uu K stove-brush. stew rhubarb but not hi puuu. rui uisn uarsE rhubarb and sponge cab .. . ; . u i ., j 1 1 , ci wiiu jiruiuii jelly. IB and serve with whipped vv?iu 5rvlei Conceited Beau Beau BrummeU MX master dandy of alltial ! idolized by the aristocracjj don as an arbiter of rj manners that, eventual, came unbearably codcl night he even ordered tl out of his house, duriit tion, because her"dres!j too low in the back." ft man's taste was so e. he had to cover hit er she humbly backed 9t ballroom. Collier's fed. A- Help Them Oeami of Harmful Bodjl Tour kldaeyl uu nutter (raatkitWr kldneyi eonwti ht ) not ct u Nitsn MiaMi ' more lmpuriti I poison the tytimpi-body tytimpi-body tttchlnery. . Symptomi miT ""Of persistent heeded J""", jettins up tiftf, "Jy under the eyee- M ' nxiety end Urn d IW" Other eigne etba"" order may be boram", frequent urinitloe. ' There should bt tew" treatment i ".?" new friendi k , Tbey hive Are remmedd lyjnse" country over. A I " mm PHOTOGRAP rerge REAL ESTATX TO Ttt'V-SELt rig. THE. OlEflW l5 1 lost my UKere every could eA,; It Mr to rre! in ,aa r BEE HIVE REAWK '.I! J |