' THE WASfflNGTON HERALD PUBLISHED EVERT MORENO BT The Washington Herald Company 425-427-429 Eleventh Sb*t\ PW.M»a 3300 WAITER ». ROGERS BERM A \ """ FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES! THE BECKWITH SPECIAL# AGENCT New York. World Building; ChJcago Trlbune BulldlnKl St Post-Dispatch Building; Detroit. Ford Building; £*«*»»» City. Mo.. Brya l Building.; Atlanta. Or. 1415 Atlanta Trust Building. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BT HERALD CARRIER IN WASHINGTON AND VICINITY pally and Sunday. 1 month 60c I Dally and Sunday. 1 year *7.20 SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL PAYABLE IN ADVANCE BSS £2 MS: 1 w« ISSS: 1 Stamps of lc and 2c Denomination Accepted. § I t Entered at the postoffic* at Washington. D. C.. as second class mall kiatter. SATURDAY, JUNE 19. 1920. Women and the State. The fifteenth biennial convention of the general convention of the Federation of Women's Clubs is in session now at Des Moines, la. Many hundred delegates representing 2,500.000 clubwomen are present, and they will stay in session discussing important civic issues for a week. No partisan alignment on divisive issues will be permitted; but free discussion of the most vital of our domestic probftrms will be encouraged. Leading national pnd State officials, social service experts, and able women within and without the club circle will share in the process of education. Adjournment Will find a considerable number of voters in the coming elections better prepared to vote intelligently than when they left home. They not on y *>rin vote as conscientiously but also as intelligently as their husbands, 'brothers and sons. The International Woman's Suffrage Alliance recently has been in Session in Geneva, Switzerland, dealing with the most vital issues facing women who, to loyalty to the political welfare of their sex. add a profound interest in a better world-order in a law-governed world. The alliance has not allowed the passions and enmities following the war to narrow its tests of membership or to becloud its moral ideals. Though women suffer most from war horrors and post-war poverty and disease they have shown by their conduct at this conference that they more quickly than men rise again to the altitude of goodwill, and sooner than the male fighters begin to think with an "international mind." These two conferences are symbols of new facts in contemporary politics that begin to be reflected in the platforms of the historic parties Jmd especially so in the programs or platforms of the newer and inchoate parties that are looming up on the horizon. The Republican party's platform adopted last week at Chicago bears, visible signs of the pressure upon the leaders and platform makers of the National League of Women Voter s demands in their'woman s platform so carefully framed and so finely balanced in its groupings of facts and arguments. The league is not wholly pleased with the d^eeto which it was obeled; but it certainly got more than ever was conceded before. Later conventions of other parties may concede more. Upon the final » «he last partv to assemble and a comparative study of all the platforms many women will determine their votes. They are bent on protecting promen and children. For that end they will dedicate their votes. The State of the Payrolls. The wholesale resignations from the government service scheduled to reach their peak on July I. are essential in order to make payrolls $t appropriations and in the evolution from a war-time to a peacetime basis. ,. Since the signing oi the armistice there have been .21,5.23 dismissals from the service, and when the figures up to July 1 arc finally computed the number dropped is expected to reach closc to 40.000. [Washington on April 30 of the present year had cxactly 96.337 rcdera1 employes, and with the payrolls once more on a normal basis Jhe figures are expected to be well below 75.000. Before the war there were 3^77 Federal employes, so that in round numbers the civilian force has been practically doubled by the agencies created by the war which must continue until the period of complete adjustment has been reached. \ tendency to dwell upon inflated payrolls and to call for a return to pre-war figures of employment by some misguided students of economy fails to consider that there are certain government functions left as a war sequel which must be continued, and they involve the services of thousands of employes. I The War Risk Insurance Bureau and the Federal Vocational Branch are but two of a number of such services which must continue indefinitely. It is possible to conceive the wave of protest which would sweep the nation over any neglect of the wounded soldiers or inattention and delays which wholesale discharge would involve. There was no Eighteenth amendment or Volstead law before the war, nor the collection of income taxes such a stupendous task. The enforcement of the law and the collection of these vast sums require a vast armv of employes not necessary in 1917- These all come under the Treasury Department, and partly account for the increase from 8,285 of pre-war days to the personnel of 3'>^ *' present. The Liberty Bond Bureau is another necessary service which accounts for hundreds of employes, and the taking and tabulating of the 19.20 census swells the rolls of the Commerce Department by thousands. It can thus be seen by a very simple analysis that the pre-war figures, which many set as a goal for the government to once more attain, do not allow for the normal growth of Federal activities and seemingly disregard the after-war services which must be continued and which involve the employment of thousands. The worst handicap the McAdoo campaign has yet encountered is the fact that the Wall Street gamblers favor him in the betting. Only a week ago they favored Wood and Johnson. Over in Europe they're beginning to say that the league of nations won't amount to much if America isn't in it. Over here both pros and cons have known it for a long time. Women as a rule don't like to play second fiddle, and yet they'd be very happy with the Vice Presidency if the Democrats really want to get rid of it. Boston, as she lands in seventh place by the census figures, will probably retort that while figures don't lie those that make them frequently do. So Mr. McAdoo won't accept the Democratic nomination. Better iy)t bet your last two pounds of sugar on this statement if you're short of sugar. . . M * ' , if a certain well-known brand of soap should jump in price, now or in the immediate future, what a merry time confronts one unsuccessful campaign manager. Reading President Wilson's latest interview the belief prevails he'» following Gen. Grant's advice to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer. ^There's no disputing that all the Democrats' comfortably bound for San Francisco favored at least one kind of reservations. Snow flurries ended eight days of heat in Omaha If there are any moft of them left ship them to Washington, D. C. «« Philadelphia is still third in the standing of cities and Mill last injehe American League standing. Caruso is showing a lot of our footlight stars how to get publicity without a press agent. J * \ t 4 Ll ' " P"New York City ] 1 Br O. O^llelwtyw | New Tork. JiM 1» . »' «**rythln« continues to drop like prices have In Manhattan recently eome of our bent tenors will find themeelVee the owners of deep baas voices. The old clothing placard "Take me home for 1122.60" has been dusted off ana hangs out front on the suit that was selling for $7S a few weeks ago. And those sprightly young men of .the Rlalto who are connected with the best families.by telephone .find that they can dress In all their pre-war glamour, for the PullMe-In shops near 4he Pennsylvania depot on Seventh avenue are disposing of nifty made-over seconohand clothes for »7 each. And so the young blades may have a suit for every day In the week. It was rough picking for them when even a hand-me-down second hand suit sold for )35 for It was their "front" that permitted them to pose as young swells around the hotel lobbies and cabarets cadging drinks and making small flying touches. Now they may strut and affoct the English drawl with the same old abandon. Several of the big cafes have ctiv down prices slightly but hardly enough to notice. The best news com-» from »h< Bowery where Beefsteak John has restored the 15-eent dinner.steak, potatoes, coffee and a vegetable. When the Kaiser went loco he had to charge 25 cents and It was a serious blow to the human driftwood that looked forward to at least one good meal a week at his sawdust carpeted culinary palace. A new retail candy store just oTT Fifth avenue opened with a bang several days ago and announced old before-the-war prices. It put quite a crimp In the Fifth avenue shops that are charging 11.75 a pound for almost every kind of candy. Silk shirts in many of the best shops are marked down to $4.50 and the tailor-made shirts are now being sold for $15. whereas they formerly sold as high as $32.50. Most all of us will sympathixe with Ed. Wynn, the comedian, who complains that the laundries do not clean his collars anymore "They sharpen them." he says Gradually all of the New York hotels are lifting the ban on dogs. It used to be that all of them permitted dogs, if not in the rooms in kennels in the basement. Then an English concern came along and built an exclusive hotel and they literally retailed exclustveness One thing they refused to permit was a clog. Several other hotels have scientific kennels and those who haven't kennels are permitting dogs of all kinds. But they are making a charge of $1 a day. And What is that to a man who loves his dog? Some way or other the bobbed hair prejudice Is disappearing It is true that the big department stores will not employ girls who bob their hair and this in spite of the fact they employ floor walkers with balfl heads and Van Dyke beards.but It seems bobbed hair has come to stay. Greenwich Village put a stigma on the fashion at first. At one of the last nights of grand opera a music critic counted ten women in private boxes who had bobbed hair. At the race*, smart cafes and theater they are frequently seen. Many of them are married women who have found it is the only way they can keep their hair and still others find it the most becoming way for them. One of the society journals tells of a matron past 60 who recently appeared at a social function with her silver hair bobbed. That Is perhaps going too far. WEATHER VERDICTS. The weather man dispenses bunk. his daily prophesies are punk: there is no merit in his song, for he predicts the weather wrong. This morn he gave the verdict "Clear." and claimed no cloudy days were near. 1 took this verdict as my guide and came home soaked unto the hide. "No rain today." so runs his line."Tomorrow clear and full of shine".but let me trust his weatherbill.and down the rain begins to spill. Or If his verdicts call for floods. 1 doll me up in storm-proof duds and e'er I'm fairly on my way there breaks a hot and shining day. I cannot trust the weather man. he fails me every time he can; In weather bad or weather mild, his prophesies are always wild. ' N. A. Lt'FBURROW. (Copyrl^tt. 1020. by The McClore Syndicate.) ~ ' Shrinking Gowns Bring Symphony Of Protest Here Catholic women of Washington endorse the stand taken by Father Antoine. of St. Louis Cathedral, in New Orleans, who recently ordered a bride away from the altar to put on a gown more in accordance with his ideas of modesty. Although leaders of Catholic women's organizations in tWs city claim they have had little trouble with girls under their direct charge in the matter of immodest dress, they have been shocked by feminine attire seen on Washington streets. "I certainly am In accord with the action taken by Father Antoine." said Miss L». C. Flavin, director of the Calvert Club. "While our own girls have been very modest in their dress something should be done about tome of the extreme styles we jee elsewhere. 1 believe business men who employ such girls are as much to blame as the girls themselves. "If they insisted that girls dress modestly there would be less trouble." Miss Cox. director of the Maura Club. 2408 K street, said: "Some jf the extreme styles seen on the streets shock other modest jlrls." The I^adies of the Sacred Heart, national sponsors of the Children of Mary.' the sodality al girls and young women in all parishes of the country, have issued a stringent rule regulating both the length of the skirt and the height of the bodice in girls' dresses. Notes by a Was Government Half-Holi Marion Shopkeejx While Sui Washington today begins ita auramer Reason officially. The various government 'department. which have observed the eight-hour day for the fall, wftiter and spring 1 months go on summer schedule and Saturday half holidays will be tn» rule. An enterprising, and close student of the system of calculating leaves, employed In one of the government departments, haa worked out to his satisfaction that he can take eighteen days' leave tn July and by deducting holidays and Sundays make his actual time away from his duties extend from July 1 to July 26, which comes very near making one day do the work of two. Senator Henry K. Ashurst, of Arizona, has left the hospital following a minor operation and hopes within a short time to leave Washington for a summer of'recuperation. The Senator's physicians had recommended for some time that he submit to the operation but It was not until the close of the session that he felt he could afTord to spare the time from his duties at the Capjltol to go under the knife. Marlon, Ohio, Is going to make hay while the sun shines, according to reports reaching Washing-. ton. Requests for information as to reservations for the summer that have been made by several ntwspa- Democrats Will President's Vl Says Cc * t CONTINUED KKOM PACK ONE. honest and was meant to be dls' honest." . "Will your platform be unequivocal on such questions as prohibition and Ireland?" I asked the Democratic chairman. "Yes." he said. "On those subjects. too, we shsll do what is right about them. And, at any rate, I whatever we do will be comprehen- sible and will not be mere language :Chosen for the purpose of conceal- ing thought." ' Cummings as temporary chairman will deliver the keynote address. It is to be a bold and unqualified vindication of the Wilson admlnis- iration. An equally straightfor- ward pro-Wilson not will be struck by Hainbridge Colby, Sec- retary of State, who is to be perma- nent chairman of the convention. Colby will leave Washington next Tuesday and is due to arrive In San Francisco on June 26. Palmer Moon on Derk. Attorney General Palmer will arrive on the 25th to take charge of Ills boom. Postmaster Ueneral Burleson will also be a member of the administration forces. It Is under- Hood he will sit in the convention with one-eighth of a vote in the Texas delegation. Senator Owen, of Oklahoma, is thus far the only can! didate on the scene. Senator Carter Glass, of Virginia, will be chairman of the committee on resolutions and become personal- j League Issue at In Presidentia Developmer Dnrjopvicnls following the annou IH Usui threaten to bring the league the I'residential campaign. The Repuh ;//* platform. President Wilson in hi. \that he zi-ishes his party to take. Th rations follow: Republicar "The Rerublicar rarty stands for agreement among the nations to preserve the peace of the world. We believe that such an international association must be based upon international justice. and must provide methods which shall maintain the rule of public right by development of law and the decision of Impartial courts. and which shall secure instant and General international conference whenever peace shall be threatened by political action, so that the nations pledged to do and insist upon what is just and fair may exercise their influence and power for the prevention of war. We believe that all this can be done without the compromise of national independence, without depriving the people of tne United States in advance of the right to determine for themselves what Is Just and fair, when the occasion arises, and without Involving them as participants and not as peacemakers in a multitude or quarrels, the merits of which they are unable to judge. "The covenant, signed by the President at Paris failed signally to accomplish this purpose, and contained stipulations not only Intolerable for an Independent peop e. but certain to produce the injustice, hostility and controversy among nations which it proposed to prevent. "That covenant repudiated to a degree wholly unnecessary and unjustifiable, the time-honored policy in favor of peace declared by Virginia Democratic F Indors "The Democratic party ot Virginia favors a league of nations as the surest. If not only, practicable means of maintaining the permanent peace of the world and terminating the insufferable burden of great military and naval establishments. It was for this that Atnerica broke away from traditional Isolation and spent her blood and treasure to crush a colossal .scheme of conquest. We not only congratulate the President on the vision manifested and the vigor exhibited In the prosecution of the war, but we felicitate him and his associates on the exceptional achievement at Paris Involved In the adoption of a league and treaty so near akin to American Ideals, and so intimately related to the aspirations of civilised peoples everywhere. "We commend the President for his courage and his high conception of good Talth in steadfastly standing for the covenant agreed to by all the associated and allied nations at war with Germany. a»d we coa40 . » * ' hington Observer days to Begin Today, trs to "Make Hay i Shines." > » . i per* have developed the l«t tkit prices in the little Ohio Wwn ran* favorably with thO»e Of any thriving metropolis. It la supposed, la Wathlnfton. that the Inhabitants of Marlon feel that It la not often that any town haa the opportunity of betag the residence of a Presidential nominee, and that such an chance muat not be overlooked. The announcement of the census figures of Detroit and Cleveland proved an absorbing topic yeaterday for Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War. In common 'with all other loyal cltlsens of the Ohio city the Secretary had cherished the vain delusion that Cleveland might be able to keep It* place above the Michigan city this year. The result left him rather dumfounded and h«> could only remark on the wonderful showing that Detroit has made. Warren O. Harding's "bosom friend" Is said to be F. E. Scobey. of San Antonio. Texas. Mr. 8cobey is at present In Washington, and with R. B. Creager is a guest at the home of the Republican candidate. Mr. Scobey and Mr. Harding have been close friends for many years. The former Is spending a good part of Ids time while in Washington at the office of Mr. Harding. The two are frequently seen together after Mr. Harding has brought his day's work In the Capitol to an end. I F. W. W. Accept ew on League mvention Leader l ly responsible for inclusion of the Virginia league plank In the plat-- form. Senator Glass will arrive In San Francisco on June 25. He will bring with him the text of the) treaty plank as personally edited and approved by Woodrow Wilson Secretary of the Navy Daniels Is due at the Golden Gate aboard the battleship New Mexico, the day before the convention opens. Secretary of Agriculture Edwin T. Meredith, of Iowa, a delegate-at- large and possible Presidential candidate. will be another member of the Wilson administration on the scene. The Friends of Irish Freedom have sent their Democratic convention vanguards here. C orltran to l.ead Irish. They will present to the committer on resolutions through the eloquent mouth of W. Bourke Cockran, a Tammany delegate, the "moderate" Irish plank, which the Republican committee on resolutions rejected at Chicago. That does not provide for recognition of the Irish republic, but for sympathy with the "aspirations of Irish people" as expressed at their elections. The same rose under a sweeter smelling name. The Irish already on the ground ssy the Democrats have a golden oppor- tunity and they are confident they will not bo "short sighted" as the Republicans at Chicago. William J. Br>an is expected to I rovoke seme trouble, but appar- ently. none that is seriously feared, Cl'opyrifhl, 1920, by Public Ledger Co.) Forefront I Campaign its Now Judicate ineement of his position by President of nations issue to the forefront in 'lican parly has taken its position in s indorsement made plain the stand c salient features of the two decla i Platform Washington and Jefferson and Mon- roe and pursued by all American administrators for more than a century, and it ignored the universal sentiments of America for Ken- erations past in favor of International law and arbitration, and It rested the hope of the future upon mere expediency and negotiation. "The unfortunate lnrlstence of the President upon having his own way without any change, and without any regard to the opinion of the majority of the Senate which shares with him in the treaty making power, and ttv> President's demand that the treaty should be ratified without any modification, created a situation In which Senators were required to vote upon their consciences and their oaths according to their judgment upon the treaty as it was presented, or submit to thf commands of a dictator in a matter where the authority under the Constitution was theirs and not his. "The Senators retformed their duty faithfully. We approve their conduct and honor, their courage and fidelity, and we pledge the coming Republican administration to such agreement with the other nations of the world as shall meet the full <Juty of America to civilisation and humanity In accordance with American ideals, and without surrendering the right of the American people to exercise its judgment and its power In favor cf justice and pcace." Matform _ ;ed By the President demn the Republican Senate for Its refusal to ratify the treaty merely because It was the product of Democratic statesmanship, thus Interposing partisan envy and personal hatred In the way of the peace and renewed prosperity of the world. "We Indorse the action of Virginia's Democratic Senators and Representatives In sustaining the President's view of our International obligations and for voting against reservations designed to cut to pieces the vital provisions of the Versailles treaty and against resolutions for separate peace which would disgrace the nation. "We advocat* prompt ratification of the treaty without reservations which would Impair Its essential Integrity. Only by doing this may we retrieve the reputation of this nation among the powers of the earth and recover the moral leadership which Wilson wqr and whlclt. with amazing indifference, paltering Republican politic!*** at Washington sacrificed." 1 "»v 1 A DAILY LINE 0; CHEER By John Kradrick Banc* CASTLES IN THE AIR. Build *11 the Castles in the Air to which your heart's Inclined. And let the Critic efteer and blare. nor heed hie taunfs unkind; The finest folk I ever knew have reared their Castlee thu», And even ai these Castles grew dally more numerous 80 grew their stature, and the rdals they nobly strove to win. Were worthier since they made their Souls more lit to dwell therein. «Coprrif it. 1000. by The MrClaie Syndicate.) G. 0. RCOUNCIL HERE MONDAY TOMAP WORK CONTINUED FROM PAG* ON*. In conference with this group. Mr. mltteeman from that State. Mr. William* went to the convention as one of the supporter* of Senator Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Mr. Hamon supported Mr. Ix»wden at the convention, after falling out with the campaign for Gen. Leonard Wood. Mr. Hillls was one of the active supporters of Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler. Harding probably will choose the executive committee 4° co-operate with Mr. Hays In the administration of the campaign. Mr. Hording conferred at length yesterday morning with George H. Clark, chairman of the Republican State advisory committee, relative to political matters In Ohio. Mr. Clark was afterward questioned as to what ^attitude would be taken toward Hud K. Hynicka. chairman of the Hamilton County advisory committee, for his failure to support his Instructions to support Mr. Harding at the Chicago convention. "I think that those two votes at Chicago were a political debt-paying proposition." Mr. Clark said, explaining Mr. Hynickas votes for Gen. Wood. "Col. Procter had saved Mr Hynicka the position as chairman of the Hamilton County advisory committee several years. He was asking Mr. Hynicka for something in return Mr. Hynicka never forgets a friend." Hrandegee A gala Caller. Senator Frank B. Brandegee. of Connecticut, was again among Mr. Harding's callers yesterday, but the nature of their conference was not divulged. Representative Addison T. Smith, of Utah, called on Mr. Harding relative to the reclamation program of the West. "The Republican nominee." de- clared John Barrett, director gen- eral of the Pan American Union, fol- lowing a conference with Mr. Hard- ing. "stands for practical Pan Amer- j icanlsm. Senator Harding's idea of Pan Americanism is of the sort that will be of benefit to every l.atinAmerican country and individual Just as much as the United States." Franklin MacVeagh. former Secretary of the Treasury, sent the following message to Mr. Harding yesterday: "Please accept the hearty and loyal good wishes of a beaten Wood man. My acquaintance with you. that I regret is not greater, and the things 1 know about you give me a personal Interest in your success which added to a keen sense of the importance of a Republican victory makes me very anxious for your election. Predicts Harding Success. "My guess is that inur attitude in the campaign.from the beginning. will show that progressives of the Wood stripe are easily included in >our political sympathies; and that as a candidate.and subsequently as President.you will stand as a pro- gressivc conservative, which is as near as need be to the resultant of the opposing tendencies of the party. And with that impression made upon the public mind, and aided by your fortunate personal advantages, you will surely succeed." John C. Price, attorney general of Ohio, expressed confidence in Mr. Harding's election in a letter to him, and pledged his support. Helen Varick Boswell, chairman of the women's division. Republican County committee of New York, sent the j following message to Mr. Harding; "The women of New York con- ! gratulate the party and congratu- late you on your nomination for the Presidency. As one of the two worn- en delegates from the State of New York 1 had the satisfaction of actually voting for you. and in doing this, know that I was representing many thousands of women who are delighted that Ohio is again to give a President to the United States. Women to Give Service. "The women of New York County I are content to give their service for ! the party working under the guid- j ance of the men who have for long been leaders and know what should be done. We shall start our cam- j paign for you right now and shall | keep it up with earnest enthusiasm until the day on which you are elected." OFFICIAL APPROVES TRADE SCHOOL PLAN Secretary of Commerce Joshua W. Alexander yesterday formally approved the plan of the Summer School of Foreign and Pan American Commerce to conduct a "Plattsburg" for business men in Washington from July IS to August 21. "The U. S. Department of Commerce receives daily information indicating the need for trained men for the foreign commercial field, and we also are informed as to the scarcity of men for this service." reads a letter addressed by the Secretary of Commerce to Clarence J. Owens, executive director of the school. "I am. therefore, in a position to know of the positive need that exists for the present and immediate need for intensive training courses such as those proposed by you." Hstali And aawntandi In New York City wkara Th« Washington Hsrald is «a salsi HOTELS: ANSONIA MURRAY KILL ASTOR NAVARRE BELMONT PENNSYLVANIA BILTMOBK PLAZA BRE8LIN PRINCE GEORGE BRETTOf BALL RITZ-C AKLTON COMMODORE SAVOY IMPERIAL ST. ANDREW KNICKERBOCKER ST. REOIS MANHATTAN VANDERBILT McALPIN WOLCOTT MARTINIQUE WALDORF NEWSSTANDS: US BBOADWAY. tso BROADWAY. WOOLWOKTH BLDO. too FIFTH AVENUE. METROPOLITAN BLDO. THIRTY -SECOND ST. * FOURTH ATS. PENNSYLVANIA *. R. STATION. M. X. COR. CORTLAND * CHURCH ST1. TIMES BUILD INS. ATLANTIC CITY Tks WASHINGTON HERALD caa k* fvrckased at lay of tk* (tvutalt ee °-r Talk m Wiartaal Ketakt 9 In the Limelight »X George Perry Morris. Amherst College hu taken rather longer than ahe should have In making Alexander D. Noyes the receiver of an honorary degree. He has had few. If any, peers fer some yeara In the responsible Held of "financial Journalism." serving twe constituencies regularly, the New York Evening Pest and 8crlbner's Magazine, and many others Irregularly. Tou may not have the chance for brilliant writing In this department of Journalism that is to be foun* In other domains of the craft, but It Is one of the most responsible posts, calling for much intellectual ability, a knowledge of the history of business and banking, and flawless honor. Noyes has It In him to be ironically brilliant and powerful In polemics, and when 11 knew him as a lad In high school we all thought he was the coming »Tom Nast. We would have said that he would come to be editor of Tuck instead of what he haa become. The twig certainly was in- clined jestward. but the tree is a regular Old Hickory of sobriety and reliability. Town planning is forging ahead in this country faster than most persons realize who have not kept run of events. Moreover, it is un- der way in sections of the country! where its ardent advocates in the general population are few in number. Thus In Dawson, Colo., on the broad bottom lands and surrounding bluffs of the fertile Yampa Hiver Valley a model citj^ is to arise 200 miles from Denver. Farming; and coal mining, fruit raising and stock ranching are the main sources of income of the people. Impulse for this future "planned town" comes from men who have invested in the mines and who do not want a typical "industrial community" such as is found in the Kast or in England to arise. The town is to be zoned from the beginning into residential, business, industrial and agricultural areas. Streets are to be laid out with all the topograph- ickl variations of the site in mind. Paiks. of course, are a natural feature of the progressive plan. The miners' and other residents' homes are to be standardized. The expert who is co-operating with these new type of industrial town builders is John Nolen, whose work is scat- tered from the Atlantic to the Pa- < iflc and from Massachusetts to North Carolina. His books on town planning are sold widely. Bishop Charles D. Williams, of Michigan, who is prominent in the counsels of the "Coram ttee of j Forty-Eight" that is planning to put a third party ticket in the field.! is the leader of the progressive "social Christianity" element of the Protestant Episcopal Church and a man of large calibre and much -in favor as a preacher to university audiences. He is not as radical as Rev. Percy Grant of the Church of' the Ascension, New York City, but he is out on the "firing line" of j ecclesiastical, political and social reform. Mr. Frederick Morgan Klrby. of Wilkesbarre, Pa., has given $100,<000 to Lafayette College. Easton. Pa., to found a chair of civil rights. The instruction must be on "absolute rights." The fallacies of socialism and kindred theories. I abhorrent to the donor, must be refuted so as to aid in conserving1 "individual energy and thrift." The college has accepted the gift. Now the selection of the man to fill the chair falls upon the trustees. "Absolutists" are not as common nowadays as pragmatists. Ellery Sedgwick, the esteemed editor of our esteemed contemporary. the Atlantic Monthly, having been taken to task by some of his readers for publishing articles by Russian and German authors dealing with contemporary events in a way quite different from the editorials of the Boston Transcript, lets these complainants know that he is not running a chauvinistic American monthly, but an interna- ' tionally-minded review. This is not the first shock that Mr. Sedg-* wick has given the conservative readers of the Atlantic. He personally has praised Bryan and Wilson; he has admitted Giovanitti's poetry; and he has a keen scent for auto- biographical material showing how the plain folks of the nation live, residents of the ghettos, school teachers in Western mountain regions, and day laborers in shipyards and stockyards. Wallace W. Atwood. who succeeds G. Stanley Hall as president of Clark University. Worcester, is well known in Washington scientific circles owing to his twenty years' connection with the United States Geologic Survey, which brought him to the survey's headquarters for longer or shorter stays. Chicago is his native city and he grew up in that section of the country and In time became a professor in the local uni- versitv. having academic connec- tions there for fourteen years. In 1918 he went to Harvard* as professor of physiography. , | - ii CELLINI a made Italy's . with Paint, Bru Chisel. CJ Verdi cai ! instead of stone; he instead of pictures comes a new express! It reveals itself 'neath of these chocolate tribu ing skill of America's genius.the delicious 11 week-end assortment gi to Washington country CORNW !:i: B UN G A L "5 Room ft Hidden 'neath the ten ing chocolate, finest ni nested in creams and juvenate your tired tasU flavors and the delight c and a quarter box is he $1.85 TOI C0RN\* 1415 H Events of Today j Tryouts, District run team, for national meet at National Oaard ran re. Annual picnic Indiana Society; Potomac Park. J:M p. m. Michigan Society picnic at Marshall Hall. 2:S0 p. ra. Convention of American Asaoclatlon of Asrlcultit il Editor*. Hotel Harrington Meeting Delaware Society; Chevjr Chase Lake. 1:00 p. m. Uwn fete Ladles' Guild. Casualty Hospital; Second and East Capitol streets. RcK»iar mitthly meeting ft Connecti Society at the Thomson Scb ,ol. Twel'th abd L. »treels northweal, S o'clock p. TTi. AavMfiti. Belasco."A Thief In the Ni*htOarrick.Oarrlck Players In "Parlor. Bedroom and Bath." National.Aborn Opera Company In 'The Lilac Domino.** Poll's.'The Whip." Cosmos.Vaudeville and fllma. B. V. Keith's.Vaudeville. Loew's Palace . William raversham in 'The Man Who Lost Himself.' Moore's Rlalto . Wanda Hawley In "Miss Hobbs." CrandaM's Metropolitan . Clara Kimball Young in "For the Soul of Rafael." Moore's Strand . "Ideal" ana "Nurse Marjorie." Moore's Garden -Hobart Boswortk In "Below the Surface." Loew s Columbia.J. Warren Kerrigan in "Number 99." Crandall's . Gloria Swanson in "Don't Change Your Husband." Crandall's Knickerbocker . Shirley Mason, in "Molly and I." Glen Echo.Resort attractions. Great Falls Park.Resort facilities Steamer Macalester.Daily excursions to Mojnt Vernon at 10 a. m. and 2:30 p. m. Marshall Hall . Resort amusements; steamers at 10 a. m.. 2:30 and 6:30 p. m. Chesapeake Beach.Resort attractions The Weather | ^ '/ Forecasts for Today *nd Tomorrow. District of Columbia and Maryland, Fair today and tomorrow; moderate temperature; gentle north wind*. Virginia: Partly cloudy today and tomorrow; moderate temperature; gentle nortli and northeast winds. Local Tomperatnres. Midnight 69 12 noon 72 2 a. m.... (Ml : p. 73 4 a. m 63 4 p. m 75 Ha. m 62 Hp. m 74 ft a. m 66 ft p. m 72 10 a. m 70 HI p. 6# Highest. 76; lowest. 62. Relative humidity.8 a. m.. 66. 2 p. m.. 4o: ft p. m.. .">7. Rainfall ift p. m. to « p. m.). 0. Hours of sunshine. 14.0. Per cent of possible sunshine. 94. Departures from Normal. Accumulated deficiency of tempera turf since January 1. 1920. 200. _Exceae of temperature einee June 1. 1920. 17. Accumulated deficiency of precipitation since January 1. 1920. 2.5ft. Excess of precipitation since June 1. IMP, 0.94. Temperature came date last year.Highest, 84; lowest. 6ft. Other Temperature!. Lowest Highest last Rain* today, night, ft p.m. fall. Aakerflle, N\ C Mi 64 70 Atlanta. Ga M 72 72 O.Oft Atlantic City. S. J. *6 .%6 62 0.18 Laltimore. Md...:. 7R 64 72 .... RUmarck. N. Dak.. 70 4« 66 .... Rjaton. Mass ."2 4ft 4S 1.44 Buffalo. X. T 64 54 60 p M Chicago. Ill 62 52 ft) .... Cincinnati. Ohio.... 74 TiO 70 .... Cheyenne. Wye 60 . 44 %6 0.04 Cleveland. Ohio f!2 ."4 62 ... Iiavenport. Iowa... 72 T«2 70 .... Denver. Col 66 46 62 0.«*i Upe* Moines. Iowa.. 74 54 70 .... Detroit. Mich 6H ."2 64 .... Dulutli. Minn 64 .VI .">6 .... El Paso. Tex 94 6* 92 .... Galveston. Tex ft4 mi k2 .... Helena. Mont 64 2 62 0.18 Indianapolis. Ind... to ."ill 6r .... Jacksonville. Fla... 90 74 ft4 .... Kan«as City, Mo... 70 6* Little Rock. Ark... 6* 6S 6*» 0.:S Los Angeles. Cal... K! 60 76 .... I»u;srtUe. Kv 76 52 72 .... Marquette. Mich.... 64 r»2 62 .... Memphis. Tenn 71 61 kk o 66 Miami. Fla ft*i 74 Hi Mobile. Ala *4 72 Ml 0.12 New Orleans. La... ftft 74 7* 0.1H New York. X. Y... 6J 54 56 0.12 North Platte. Neb.. 5ft 54 56 0.10 Omaha. Neb 72 56 6* Philadelphia. Pa... 6ft 56 «4 0.74 Phoenix. Arix 106 66 104 .... Pittsburg. Pa 6S .'2 64 ... Portland. Me 54 4> 4S 0.42 Portland, Oreg 70 52 Tti .... salt I*akt City T2 .%6 70 .... Ht. Lonia. Mo t4 58 70 .... St. Paul. Minn... 72 50 70 .... San Antonio. Tex.. 92 74 90 .... San Francisco. Cal. 7ft 54 72 .... i Springfield. Ill 76 *2 70 .... ' Tampa, Fla 90 74 ft2 .... Toledo. Ohio 61; 52 66 .... Vitksbvrg. Misa ... ft2 7ft 0.44 nd ANGEL0 Art everlasting sh, Mallet and ved statues in tone made note pictures of note. ^ Now ion of Genoese Art the glossy contours tes to the candy-makgreatest confection Lalian chocolates in a ven for the first time ward sojourners as s ^ CELL'S OW BOX Sioct(<" ipting charm of altarit and fruit fillings jellies await to re with new, refreshing f novelty! ft A pound re for you. )AY AT CELL'S i Street 1