ment in the District of Columbia. 3 Statue of Dr. Crawford NEWS REVIEW OF out of Cologne, the Bonn of Moers, Thus French and the Pelgians Prusseldorff and Alx Ia OSH O00 turned to the Chapelle, sovereignty of the It wag sald in Paris that the ac on forces would be reduced to GO .O000 Accuse Each Other of Playing Politics. By EDWARD W. PICKARD presiDeENy in conversation with ton correspondents ar a White House country last his administrat and ously, Mr. Coolid; y to the 3 investi ment of Justice ngainst Secreta company, to ris that the tionable board fr mendatie eral trade commi sald these that the in enforcing tacks govern were No nade sooner public an f Mississip t } express | them. He “matchless pe rison o described i hecome does White not House to speect political tinge sneeches nn Speed hes, the farme ber of coms not made a New York to Chicago win favor politics in his suaded some side of the aisle t with to Ir the seven MONG A of .the nating from the these: The the Nations of preparations for a disarma ment the conference materialize, Mr. Coolidge will return to his original plan to convene in Washington another conference on further of naval armaments, Mr. Coolidge is still posed as ever to the joining the League of Nations, be lieves the country still overwhelming ly determined to stay out, and regards our entrance into the World court not a step toward the league, but a ternational performed respect peace world he one wonders of the world the importar President's attity White House President Is disappointed } | postponement by the League conference, and if league's does not reduction ag much op dem- entanglement, The President condemns publicity statements emanating from the War and Navy departments charging de. terioration of our national defenses, characterizing them as misrepresenta tions, designed to obtain larger propriations. Mr. Coolidge regards the condition of the army and satisfactory. navy as ERMANY'S application for mem bership in the League of Nations probably will have reached Geneva be. fore this is published and it is expect. ed that Sir Eric Drummond, the sec retary general, will convoke an ex- traordinary session of the council at once to act on it, The next procedure will" be a special meeting of the as- sembly, probably In March, to take Germany in formally, The foreign af- fairs committee of the reichstag by a vote of 18 to 8 decided to apply for membership and the presidents of all the German states were summoned to Berlin for a final discussion of the form of application. Germany will be the fifty-sixth member of the league. Occupation of the first zone in the Rhineland by the allies came to an end when the last British troops » 1 od the of SH (HM EK) declare: Ook per ijurer Hoey officer H exe ing to Boivin, minister told pariiam the Ise institute He said the smuggling of silk tion demanded cotton goo arettes and wit! return cargoes of whisky, was not con fined to the Quebec border, tions at Toronto, Windsor through to Vancouver thorough probing which ment prepared to vative leader Arthur Meighen ex- pressed entire accord with the pro posal to hold a wide open public In quiry. tobacco Into Canada, Condi right the govern onser and needed the was give, NOTHER attack on the dry laws, | from a rather unexpected source, | came last week. Rev, Dr, James Em- | pringham, national of the { Church Temperance of the | Episcopal church, that a i secretary society announced | poll of the 20,000 members of the so- clety an overwhelming pre- ponderance in favor of modification of the Volstead act. Consequently tor Empringham reported to a i ing of Episcopal clergymen in New 1 York that the society as a whole was | In favor of such modification, for | these reasons : » “1. Because the effect of prohibition has been to put an end to scientific temperance teaching. “2. It has discouraged the consump- | tion of wine and beer and increased the demand for distilled liquors, which today are mostly poisonous, “YG. It has resulted in Increased drinking among young people. “4, It has brought about disrespect for all laws, “6, It Is class legislation, nating in favor of the rich. “6. In our survey found intem- perance increased.” The society has no official connee. showed Doe meet- diserimi- we ! i i | Episcopal clergymen are not in ac of abolishing capital of house judiclary bill punish discoverer sulphuric | cord with prohibition JK eNTUCRY autho hibition wf effi rote iri i ting queen paper act the Rn imani the pe an falsifying arlia r deceive the people NOTHER the gallant rescue snpilors on marked sinking storm The steamer swept Atlantie the week yew of Dutch Alkald was taken off by the men of the Hamburg American liner Westphalia mid | ocean, the rescuers displaying great bravery. Captain Fried and his men of the President Roosevelt, who saved 25% men from the British { Antinoe, have been awarded gold. sil ver and bronze medals by the British the in and Lloyds. porIuGAlL had another of its ciplent revolutions the other day under the leadership of Col. Justinlane But the government put It down with neatness and dispatch and the leader and his lleutenants arrested while they were | to capture the barracks at Campolini The day before two batteries of arti] lery revolted and were submission by the | George, | In Greece a communist plot to as sassinate Premier Pangalos and other | government leaders was uncovered by | a raid on a Communist center. Esteves, were shelled fortress of San INANCE MINISTER DOUMER of France announced that the govern ment was ready to receive offers from | any American syndicates for the pur chase or lease of the operation of the telegraph and telephone system and the monopolies In tobacco and matches, An American group, reported to be | backed by the American Tobacco com pany, recently offered approximately £1,000,000000 for a .year monopoly on the sale of matches and tobacto, A syndicate has been dickering for a long time to take over the operation of telephones and telegraphs, Pennsylvania News in Brief The Susquehanna is gorged with ice that forms a wall 25 feet high almost across the river at Herndon, A movement to establish a univer gity in Scranton launched at a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce. Michael MeClelland, aged forty-five, burned } when an over- stove to home in Wis Was to death heated jellevae Snow get fire his winds tions ak an- drifts caused by high have closed a number of road s¢ in ern Penns officials the department highways vivania wes! of nounced of the Central Pennsylva- Fellows’ Orphans’ planned a fire depart of the Direct Odd Sunbury, or nia East ment among the older more than 300 students A $250,000 contract for about a relocation of : 1 ®t ‘ha — mile of track and the con concrete hridges AF road for the Montour Rall. Company h been awarded John F Snow drifts deep have stopped traffic on ar Casey Company feet h {eh high- fro r ty g rom four y €} ways in Hy, excep Nations yaad se fon g hetween nion- ryland state line is SNOW rm it i mountains } the Worst resid Agains anniversary 12 Peterson of of Allegheny College Increased to $250 at board Penn hotel, nesting of Willian the driv enable e just will the all the indebted. mmunity and except Ouse the last official act of Judge Arthur of Center county was to grant an ap village of Port Matilda into a borough holders. sions in the central section of nuded of their populations by the en- croachment of busine « the annual Army-Navy football game 27 at Soldiers’ Field This being year, by all rights the game have gone to Ph'ladelphia. One of the reasons for building the great stadium on the sesquicentennial exhi bition grounds was with the under standing that the West Point-Annapo- lis classic would be staged there. Presenting the appearance of a great Arctic ice field, swept by wintry blasts, the Allegheny river is frozen from Brandon to above Oil City, more than 20 miles, The great gorge has 80 lengthened out that it appears more potentially perilous than ever when warm weather comes. The head of Miss Anna May Diet. rich, whose dismembered body was found in the woods vear Media, was discovered beneath the ties of the Pennsylvania railroad bridge over Naylor's creek ne: r Bywood, a suburb, There were no murks on tlie head to Indicate how she bad been killed. Stadium, should GOOD ADVIGE ON CARING FOR CAR Preventive for Every Ill That Cold Weather Brings to Driver. a, that biles preventive for every fil } brings Unfortunately, thint care of their cars trouble of mid cold weather to automo many owners do not realize by taking they oral Inry mich ine and ox fo i Is caused by » hattery for the is bom Hour or cold to for the Lightens Battery Work. Wwe f $ I'S » ire of (LR | Cracks Permit Current I cakage in Spark Plug Ceanked Car With Wheel Helps in an Emergency The real test of motoring qualifics tions comes with the tions. Hecently the Scientifie driver stalled New York street crossing. his starting cranking unexpected situa- observes a writer in American, his engine an owner on a busy When he pedal the failed to glaorage fol motor mechanism run-down gearch that tart due to a The frantic owed fulled to d ligcjose a hand erank in the tool box or under the In di sis hi ing 13 rofl ¥ gust the traf f ii ance More careful driving elimi and the of 1 railroad crossings will les motor accidents, is the opinion Wait, forineriy of the New York stite highways department and an authority on highway construction, He also believes it is now necessary in the designing of roads to build them wider, do away with sharp | curves, high crowns, and use a mate. | rial which will give a nonskid surface. | “Skidding.” continued Mr. Wait, “is the cause of many of the serious ac | cidents, and while some of these ac: cidents are caused primarily by care. | less driving, the innocent traveler, | who gets hit, can be protected to & great extent if the pavement has a low crown and a nonskid surfece. “Highway engineers, in general, now realize the advantages of such a type of pavement and are now build. ing quite extensively of reinforced conerete. This gives them a gritty surface on which the automobile tires | obtain * great resistance in «kidding, | and this material, not being affecid | ue to in New York. by water lying on its surface. can be built with a lower crown than most of the other types of road construction. “By the of concrete the sity for and inated, does use neces oiling is which away with many accidents as well as damage and de preciation on cars. covering elim “When we consider,” continued Mr. Wait, “that over 11,000 lives were lost last year, enough to populate a small am sure that the public in the future will be protected by the highway en- gineers of the country, as far as pos kible, by the building of wider and “At the same time it will be neces. in providing money for the elimina. in suburban will not have to walk on the road ways, and & taking measures to curb the enreless driving”