Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1925 — Page 4

The Indianapolis Times " HOT W. HOWARD, resident. FtfLIX F. BRUNER, Editor. MAI BORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of tie Scrlpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Cllerc #f the United Frees and the NEA Service • • ♦ Member of the Audit Bureau of Clrcul*tlora. Pubttahed daily exeeot St ntlafr by jodlsnapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis * * •Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week. • • • PHONE—Ma in 3POO.

Let us eat an irink; for tomorrow we shall die. — lsa. 22:13. He was a bold man that first ate an oyster.—Swift. REFORESTATION IpIVEN some tax bills, strar jo as it may seem, are deserving IHi | of support. One such bill in the measure that calls for • tai levy for reforestation. The measure, as introduced in the House, provided for a two-mill levy—that is 2-10 of 1 cent on each SIOO worth of property—to be used in reforestation work in Indiana. It was esti mated that the levy would raise about SIOO,OOO a year. The Legislature has cut the levy to *4 mill or 1-20 of 1 cent, raising $25,000 annually. Perhaps the need for reforestation work is not so generally known by Indiana citizens as it should be. In Indiana there are 2,2' T 3.300 acres of waste land—land that is producing nothing. AL-ost all this land is in thirty-three southern counties. A total of 48.3 per cent, or nearly half of these thirty-three Bounties, is absolutely non-productive. This is due largely to 'the fact that timber land has been cut over and no attempt has been made to replace the trees. Meanwhile many of these counties are a burden on the State because they are not self-supporting. Every year the remainder of the State must help support their schools. Every year roads are improved in these counties at the expense of other parts of the State. Why not put this wasteland on a paying basis, making it self-supporting. Reforestation will do it in surprisingly few years.

ARE YOU A THREE-CENT AMERICAN! q ' CARED the Reds’ll get you? Afraid communism will sweep the country ? Alarmed lest Soviet Russia plant her crimson banner above the White House ? Don’t be. Take our tip and put the cat out at bedtime tonight and go to sleep. All will be quite as usual in the morning. The latest official dope from Moscow states that there are now 369,436 members in full standing in the whole communist party. In addition there are 330,263 candidates for membership, making a total of 699,699’ working Reds in all Russia. Russia, therefore ? is no more ruled by the proletariat today than she was in the palmiest days of the .Czars. One small handful of exploiters has merely grabbed the rule away from another small handful. That is all. How do they do it? How do the few boss the other 160,000,000? By the red terror system. And mass ignorance. Whisper the letters, C-K, into the ear of one of the Russian rabble and watch him turn pale-. His jaw drops and his eyes roll in abject terror. Why? In Russian, the two letters are pronounced “Che” and “Ka,” or “Cheka.” They are the initials of “Chrezvychainia Komissia,” which means “Extraordinary Commission.” This in turn is short for the “All-Russian Extraordinary Commission of the Council of People’s Commissioners for Combating CounterRevolution, Speculation and Sabotage.” This politi cal spy system is the communist counterpart of the Czar’s secret police who kept the ox-like masses in constant terror of death, prison or Siberian exile. Hundreds and thousands of perfectly innocent people have been arrested and shot by this outfit. So today the very name of Cheka is enough to scatter a group of Russian peasants like children before a raw-head-and-bloody-bones. Now these are the folks that press reports say are sending $350,000 to America to convert it to communism. Their plan is to convert the farmers first, then go after the rest. As we have some 10,000,000 farmers, they expect to spend exactly 3 y% cents per farmer to win him over to their way of thinking. We have heard Russian Sovietists described as political pessimists. This obviously is a misnomer. Rather they are the world’s champion optimists. Ask the G. O. P. the Democrats and the Progressives who, every four years, attempt to convert the American voter to their side, if 3 cents will do the trick. Fact is there are mighty few 3-cent Americans in all our 115,000,000. What few there may be are not to be found among the farmers. The Russians would have better luck in Wall Street than in Main Street or on the farm as anyone who knows his America will attest. In this country some 15,000,000 voters have a battle royal every four years to see whether this or that party will guide our destinies for the ensuing four years. In Russia some 700,000 communists, backed by the Red Terror, arbitrarily rule the other 160,000,000. We have our faults, the goon Lord knows, but how many of us would swap system £ with terrorist Russia for 3y 2 cents to boot? Don’t all speak at once.

Power Calls for' Adjustment

F r ’““ OR the first time In history men can look back on the J customs and practices of their childhood as out of date, can recall how the production of food, fuel, clothing and shelter has ben revolutionized. We do not build houses as our grandfathers did, or weave cloth, or light our cities, or obtain water. We have learned to use steel and concrete as they used lumber,, we have discovered means of speed beyond their wildest dream. Where the dark and filthy city street caused them to seek some countryside, wt; males the night brilliant and the day clean. Where they grew strong through yielding the hammer and adz, we turn a switch and have leisure to pUyIndividually, we are not wiser than they, but we have learned how to labor together behind powerful machines. Steam, electricity, the combustion engine and other agencies of mechanical fores have wrought a profound change, not in commerce alone, but in our manner of life. Social conditions have been definitely altered, we have learned how to assemble in great cities without the risk of epidemics, how to xnobl-

By M. J 5. TRACT

11** free labor for the creation of wealth, how to develop tremendous enterprises in the pursuit of peace. What we have not learned Is how to adjust government to the new demands and obligations which all this change involves. To a measurable extent, we are afraid of the very institutions which mechanical power has enabled us to develop, afraid of the big city, the trust, the labor union, the massing of money and men, the rapid exhaustlon of raw material, the vast controls that are being set up over various commodities and | markets. We peroeH* that geographical alignments are giving place to trade and vocational Interests, that we are beooming factional where our grandfathers were sectional, but we don't know what, to do about it. We howl 'About bloc and group, yet we persist in enlarging an Industrial system which makes both inevitable. In one bteath we assert that the constitutions of a century ago are still adequate, and in the .next we proclaim how different community Ilf- and relations have become. There never wAs a time In the history of this Nation when it needed clear and fearless thinkers more desperately than it does today, or when the cheap, pandering politician was more than a curse.

GOVERNOR PINCHOT HITS AT $150,000,000 BOOZE RING

Pennsylvania Executive Moves to Stop Liquor Making in State, Bv NBA Service r— —i ARRIBBURG, Pa., Feb. 19. H Philadelphia la a principal center of the United States for the manufacture of Illegal drink from denatured alcohol. In two years the produuction of specially denatured alcohol in Philadelphia Increased from 800,000 gallons to more than 6,000,000 gallons. Completely denatured alcohol increased In 1924 by more than 7,500,000 gallons. These and other statements are made by Governor Plnchot of Pennsylvania. From another source the writer learns that profits gathered by the Pennsylvania bootleg ring in 1924 is estimated conservatively at $150,000,000. Would Name Board To stop the flow of bootleg through Pennsylvania and to other States Governor* Pinchot haa submitted to the Legislature a bill establishing a permit board which would give the State complete control of the manufacture, sale and Inspection of denatured alcohol. ‘‘l have complete corroboration of all my statements,” Governor Pinchot told the writer. ‘‘The facts were collected by special investigators, assisted by the State police, working under the direction of the Department of Justice. The work was paid for with funds raised by the W. C. T. U. for law enforcement after I had failed to get an appropriation for Legislature.” Booze Figures Here are some of the facts submitted to the Legislature by Pinchot: “Manufacturers” withdrew In ten months last year enough specially denatured alcohol to make toilet water, hair tonic and tobacco sprays for the whole world. Nine permittees during that time say the yused 185,000 gallons for tobacco sprays. This was enough to treat twice over the whole tobacco production of the United States in 1924 and half the production of the entire world. “Without exception, the big violators whose permits were revoked have had them restored." Pittsburgh is a center for illegal beer. Out of about 100 breweries operating in Pennsylvania, sixty-two were caught in law violations In 1924, and this notwithstanding that law officers are without authority to inspect breweries during two-thirds of each twenty-four hours. But only nine breweries were padlocked or permanently enjoined from business by the United States oourta.

Delaware Widening

To the Editor of The Times: mN reference to the widening of Delaware St. and the assessments therefor levied on property In the vicinity of said street I object most strenuously to the manner in which it Is being done and especially as to the amount of assessments levied on specially selected properties. My personal opinion as to how matters of this kind should be handled are better expressed in two sections: 1. Local—l believe that any part of the city should have such Improvements as It wants so long as it pays for them, 2. General—Public or general Improvements effecting the city at large, on the acoount of excessive

Torn Sims Says Girl in Chicago forgot her name. Could have been worse. We know some girls who forget themselves. Algona (Iowa) man shot at his wife and missed her. Judge gave him thirty years, but not for missing. Senator wants to probe shoe prices. Let’s hope he intends starting in at the foot and working up. The new spring hat may be felt, but not a much as its cost. A wise old fanner planning his crop tells us that as he sows so do the brokers reap. Los Angeles woman asks divorce. Says her husband hated bath tubs. And it Isn’t cold in Los Angeles, either. Three Jockeys hurt in New Orleans races. They will recover. Many bank rolls injured. They won't recover. News from Switzerland. Kicking on bread prices. Maybe they could make it cheaper by putting cheese holes in it. Better wear out all your old shirts now before the weather gets warm enough to leave off your coat. Better kick for a raise in pay before spring fever gets you. In Chicago a couple of budding young bandits were nipped in the bud. Does higher education pay? Not always. A West Virginia professor of 76 has married a woman of 28. There is one consolation about being a college professor; you know you are married for love and not for money. The child labor law is being discussed. '.?he schoolboy wonders if his teacher hta heard about it. Fifty years is usually enough to decide a question, but a South Bend (Ind.) couple asked divorce on their golden wedding day. Big hotel caught fire in Savannah, Ga., but not from what a guest thought when he got his bill. A spendthrift, according to some people, is a man who buys a home when the hasn't a shgle auto. (Copyright, 1926, NBA Service, Inc.)

RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA

By GAYLORD NELSON

Park i '“IN act signed by the Governor A I Tuesday authorizes Steuben l£2J county to Issue bonds for the acquisition of land beautifully situated on the shores of Lake James — one of the largest lakes In the State —for a State park. For two years public-spirited citizens of that county have planned this gift to the people of Indiana. Only in recent years have States made serious effort to develop park systems. Indiana has made a start spoiled fragments ural beauty for the Ktol JOl pleasure of present &kSM umi . fuiuie § r ‘ : wSPll|mp J park system run be greatly extended Without oVer-deVel-opment. - SF mHeH "Whatever addl■■Ai tions are made to must be soon. Ten or twenty years hence will be too late—wild land in Its natural state will have succumbed to the pressure of civilization. The increasing number of visitors attracted to State parks each season Indicates that they All a public need. They are becoming playgrounds for the whole people—as well as haunts for professional nature lovers. If the Lake James project becomes a reality the legislative act that makes it possible will serve and benefit the people of the State long after most laws passsd by this General Assembly are worn out and forgotten Trousers _ _ j IDE trousers that flop around \a/ the owner’s ankles like wet - v bath towels may continue to be essential ingredients of a college education, but well-dressed business and professional men aren’t wearing ’em. So declared A. W. Levi, secretary of the Indiana Retail Clothiers' Association, at the organization's annual convention in the city Monday. Other delegates concurred In his diagnosis. The news is heartening. Apparently the world Is made safe for mid-dle-aged democracy. Perhaps the wide trousers are silly —perhaps they are the greatest Invention since the derby hat. The controversy that has raged around them, however, Is not over their beauty, grace or utility. It's just

taxation at this time, should be approached in caution and not be ordered to be done unless by f.ood, sensible argument it can be shown that the city needs such Improvements and that the people want them. Then u v a people want such improvements and city really needs them, the people of ths city, all the people If you please, should pay for them. The widening of Delaware St between Twenty-Becond and Thirtieth, which question we now have before us is of no more material benefit to Alabama St. on the east or Talbott Ave. on the west than it Is to the city at large. " We, who live on the streets named, are now no more embarrassed for an outlet In this territory than are the people at large. B. M. RALSTON.

• Income Tax Various penalties are imposed by the revenue act of 1924 for failure to die a return and pay the tax on time, and for making a fraudulent return. Distinction is made between failure and "willful failure” tc file a return. For failure to file tht. .*' turn on time, the penalty is 25 .er cent og the amount of the tax, unless a return is later filed and it is satisfactorily shown to the commissioner of Internal Revenue that such failure was due to a reasonable cause and not to willful neglect. If a taxpayer exercised ordinary business care and prudence, and nevertheless was unable to file a return within the prescribed time, the delay is due to a "reasonable cause.’ For willful failure to make a ieturn the penalty is not more thc.il SIO,OOO or imprisonment for not more than ono year, or both, and in addition 25 per cent of the amount of the tax. For willfully making a false or fraudulent return, the penalty is not more than SIO,OOO or Imprisonment for not more than five years, or both, and in addition BO per cent of the amount of the tax, in case of a deficiency. If there is a deficiency there is added to the tax interest on the amount of such deficiency at the rate of 6 per cent a year from the date prescribed for the payment of the tax to the date the deficiency is assessed. In addition, there la added 6 per cent of the amount of the deficiency if due to r ,'gligence. but without Intent to defrvud. If due to fraud, the amount te’ded t addition is 60 per cent of t.'e deficiency. Lame Duek Law Under the present law we frequently have the injusti .* of , a Congress that has been disapproved by the people enacting laws for the people opposed to their last expression. Such a condition does violence to the rights of the majority.—SenAshurst (D) Ariz. Its Objective The purpose of the Child Labor Amendment is to prevent children from being overworked or worked at all under untoward, at least forbidding, conditions.—Senator Walsh (Deiy.), Montana. .’ i- Y ■V.

the old battle between youth and age. The young man who affects garb of exaggerated cut regards his more conservative elders as old fogies. The latter, gazing upon the habiliments of youth, audibly shudders at the degeneracy of the age. But if any middle-aged man would glance at a picture—taken twentyfive ypars ago—of himself arrayed in the height of fashion then prevailing, he would cease to shudder. He would swoon. Youth will be youth—and age will be age. Never shall the twain meet, at least not In style and cut of trousers and other personal accoutrements. Why should they? Valuation |r-p j HE bill requiring rate-making j | I valuations of public utilities 1 Ito be the same as the tax valuations passed the House the other day after warm debate. Probably the measure, even if it wins a permanent home in the Statute books, will not save consumers a dime. However, it might stop some of the utility juggling that Is rapidly making the public a nervous wreck. There is woeful lack of harmony in the utility valuation family. Appraisal for stock-issuing purposes starts for a picnic, and then ratemaking valuation comes tagging after. But if poor little tax valuation toddles after them the elder brothers fling clods at him and try to drive him back. v No more than simple justice would be done If they should be .ompelled to travel together. All are presumed to be on actual going value. But when one utility is appraised at $14,000,000 for one purpose, $19,000,000 for another, and over $20,000,000 for a third purpose, there Is obviously a brunette gentleman In the utility woodpile. „ That gentleman Is not working for the public but for the proprietor of the woodpile. Os course, the proposal to hitch valuations in double harness is bitterly opposed. But wherein is It Inequitable to honest utilities or the public? Retaliation G r "““J OVERNOR JACKSON is given discretionary power—by a bill which passed the Senate—to require registration in this State of non-resident automobile owners operating In Indiana. It furnishes him a weapon for retaliating on neighboring States when they harass Hoosier truck operators within their borders. It is a move in the* present war between Indiana'and Ohio. The latter Is charged with massacreeing, by discriminatory regulations. peaceful Hoosier bus drivers who venture across the line. The bloodshed so far has been nominal—but feelings are painfully lacerated. The State should take whatever steps necessary to protect the rights of its citizens. If retaliation accomplishes this, then retaliate until the cows come home. That's the average citizen’s attitude. The episode illustrated the interdependence of the States. When means of communication were poor each State was almost a soverign entity In fact as well as theory. It could regulate Its Internal affairs without conslderlrtg its neighbors. But improved communications. Increased population and commerce have changed this. Now one State’s actions May vitally affect people In adjoining Commonwealths. The Federal Government took over railroad regulation because State control lacked uniformity and hampered trade. Probably regulation of motor vehicle traffic will go the same way If each State pursues its own automobile policy without considering its neighbors.

Relief BY HAL COCHRAN I’ll gnvnt you it isn’t a feeling that’s great when you look on a task that’s before you. That’s why it’s so easy to wait till too late, with a tilng that you know’s gonna bore you. How better, by far, everybody would be if they'd suddenly lose track of worry. Accomplishment’s something that’s pleasant to see, end the best of it comes without flurry. Why is it the world keeps on moving along? Why is it that living’s worth while? The answer’s in doing what’s right, and not wrong, and then doing what’s right with a smile. It’s human to get a real kick out of work, though the way to succeed may seem hazy. You’re that much ahead when you plug ’stead of shirk; when you’re really ambitious, not lazy. Go on, do your frettin’ o’er where you are gettin’, but plug, and you won’t come to grief. The up and a-dolng, and not constant stewing, is' what really leads to relief. (Copyright. 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) One Way to Get In The deserting seaman method of gaining illegal entry has been practiced to some extent ever since immigration laws began to interfere w<th the unrestricted coming of all 3ns, but under the quota law, and especially during the past two years, such violations have grown to rather alarming proportions.—Report of the Commissioner General of Immigration. Ragging for Votes The.outstanding feature of the last political campaign was the interest manifested upon the pjart of all candidates and of all political parties In the farmers of the United States. I do not recall any time In the history of our cojntry such a deep-seated affection for any particular class of Voters as seemed to be manifested toward the farmers in this last campaign. Senator Borah (Rep.), Idaho.

When Irresistible Force Meets Immovable Body

An Irishman’s Ideas of Yankee Ads

By HENRY O’NEILL (In Dublin (Ireland) Magazine) r“““| HAVE just been Introduced to the most thrilling of all I * * literary pastimes. Good as are the American short stories, they long ago lost their charm for me. When I pick up a magazine I no longer read the table of contents. I turn my magazine over and if there is a good ad on the back I buy it. Then knowledge, rapture and the true realism! I finger my latest prize and, lo! a page of pastries in supernaturally natural colors. Overleaf I learn It Is “easier than one would imagine to gain the charm of a beautiful skin," and wish I were the man in the picture proposing to the goddess who has It. If I only had 12 cents I could write and find out “the toilet secret that has made American hands the prettiest in the world,” but because our currency is In ha-pence I must go to my grave in surmise. Useful Brush A young gentleman In his bath tells me that the brush with which he is scrubbing his back has sixtynine uses and if I wish them demonstrated in my home or place of business I can summon another young man from San Francisco by postcard. I had thought that after you had bought your wife the most expensive American motor car she would be satisfied. Foolish fool! Homes,

Our Nations Health

Times WasMnaton Bureau. 13lt New York Avenue. Feb. 19. \X/ How’s the health of the nation this year. Better, thank you, so far as diphtheria, measles and scarlet fever are concerned, answers the United States Public Health Service, with its finger on the pulse of the country. But there is more smallpox, typhoid fever and influenza and pneumonia than there was this time a year ago. Last year at this time 2,666 cases of diphtheria were reported and this year the total is 1,631 from thirtyfour States, or about forty-eight cases a State. In addition, reports from 104 cities, with a total population of about twenty-nine million, show only 902 diphtheria victims where last year there were 1,377. There is a very marked decrease in the number of cases of measles. Last year the States reported 14,092 and this year the total for the week Just ended is 2,115. Scarlet fever has claimed 4,186

THE BIBLE The most read book in the world is the Bible. Its language is woven into the warp and woof of the literature, poetry, and music of most of the nations of the world. What do you know of the Bible; its origin, its history, its translation into many languages; the curious and interesting facts about both the Old and New Testaments? Our Washington Bureau has compiled a five thousand word bulletin crammed wPh Interesting facts about the book. It Is not a religious treatise; it does not deal with nor attempt tc settle any matter o' religious or doctrinal controversy; It tells Instead the Interesting thirgs about the Bible that everyone ought to know, no matter what his religious connection or lack of it may be. If you want Jhis bulletin, fill out the coupon below and mail as directed: Bible Editor, Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin, the Bible, and enclose herewith five cents in loose postage stamps for same: Name * Street and Number, or R. R * City State I am a reader of The Indlan&poli* Times. Y 11Y1~* 1:1 ' 1 * 1. Y 2 r .. 1.

mansions, palaces have been wrecked by the simple line: “Lux urious upholstery—that expresses your personality.” Nor can you hope that she will not dare ask that the car be upholstered in her personadity. The ad puts the answer to all your protests in her mouth: “Decision on the mechanical end of automobiles can safely be left to the men-folks. But the choice of upholstery is a woman’s prerogative.” What mother would not seize her hat and run a dozen blocks for that particular syrup of figs which appears under the heartrending line: “If you don’t protect him, mother, who will?” * Dressing Babies I find out “the human way to dress a baby,” and that “we must strip a whole vine of its red, ripe treasure before we can select enough perfect, flawless (I read breathlessly on) tomatoes to make a medium sized bottle of our ketchup.” Another page and I realize that this age will be known as the one that .falls to "the vogue of the colorful towel” and I know that life will never be the same again without a “colorful towel” to match my all-over complexion as I step steaming from the bath. You think that after forty-seven years you know what to do with your face in the morning. Presumptuous worm! In flaming letters run the words: “Do you know how to dry your face correctly after it is washed?” Ninety-nine people out of 100 in-

victims, about two hundred less than the total for last year, according to the State reports. But the cities report 2,041 cases, an increase of about two hundred. There is a slight increase in smallpox. The figures show 1,224 cases reported by thirty-four States and 388 cases reported by 104 cities. The State figure is 120 over that for last Year, but the city figure is only increased by six. The cities report twenty-seven smallpox deaths during the week, sixteen of which occurred in Minneapolis. In spite of the recent scare about shell fish and typhoid fever, there were only 270 cases of typhoid reported. Last year there were 202 cases at this time. The cities had ninety-four cases as against sixtyeight last year. This week cities from all over the country reported 1,256 deaths from Influenza and pneumonia. Last year at this time the total was 1,074. The increase is probably due to the recent severe outbreak of influenza in a number of Southern States.

stantly lose faith when the question is put to them, and read nervously on: “If you value that school days complexion don’t scrub it and rub it as if you hated it, but wash your face lovingly and pat it dry.” A lump comes to your throat. For years you have wronged the only face you have. Thank God, it is not too late to change! But there is a still darker side to all this. Page after page is filled with things "indispensable to the home.” I had never thought of them before, but as I read on, I come to know, so well, that without them the word home is simply something to say to the Jarvey. I pass dreamily on, from page to page, until I am shaken back from the wildwood by the towering figifl of a great green Sphinx with an eP cellent set of very white teeth. I then discover the secret of an illburied Pharaoh; and it is that unless I, Henry O’NeilJ, use a toothbrush of that particular curve, specially designed for my teeth, all is lost. Three pages further on I am more lost than ever unless I use a toothbriish curved in an opposite direction. Ask The Times You can ret *n answer to any question of fact or information by wntinr to The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Aye., Washintrton, D. C„ inclosirpr 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be riven, nor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests eanno4 be answered. All letters are eoufultotial—Editor. What is the motto of the KuKlux Klan? “Non silba sed anthar," to which is given the meaning, "Not for self, but for others.” How should the small Oriental orange trees that one gets at the florist’s be cared for? Water a little each day and about once a month wash the leaves with tepid water, to which has been added flsh-oil soap. It will not require any further care. Who was Don Carlos? MA The son of Philip II of There have been others called by this name, tut hd Is the most famous. Os what is the gold alloy used in coins composed? Gold, copper and nickel. Who owns the Mammoth Cave in Kentucky? Dr. John Croghan bought the cave many years ago and willed it to his nephews and nieces, with instructions that it should not be sold during their lifetime, but at their deaths it should be sold at auction. It is now owned by his two nieces. What is the meaning of the term “Premier,” used in government? It means “first,” and is the term applied to the head of the cabinet of a government. The Prime Minister of Great Britain, for instance, is the Premier. How many species of oak are there native to the United States? About fifty pure species and half as many hybrids. What does the 5-5-3 ration, when used in connection with ship tonnage mean? It refers to the Navy tonnage allowed the United States, Great Britain and Japan, according to the terms of the Conference on the Limitation of Armament. It means that Japan Is limited to three-fifths the tonnage In cppltal ships allowed to the United States and Great Britadß

NEW FORDS FOR RENT Drive Yoareolf—All Model* No Red Tope. New Ceptesl N tot 100 LINCOLN GARAGE SS Kentucky Avo. Lincoln TtM