Eniermos hie bd tavern on old Santa 1 Last Missouri by Howard Land's End, NEWS REVIEW OF | CURRENT EVENTS Iowa Shows Her Resent-| ment Over Farm Neglect by Retiring Cummins. ius Vanderslic Qe, By EDWARD W. PICKARD NS because of any especial Hkh for Smith Wild: irook hart because { i toward but Ren we to Brookhart that Mr. the admini re-nou An pared wit} indicates that voted the Repul suppositic as he would November Most cast lieved feated there and ir have assert, will they vote for him, 80 easy fust as Steck. against kK, again Brookhar will be enough hart to affect the Republi even if Brookhart is 0. P. may have lost cannot be counted on In party anagers, lowever, elected. the GG neidered frtyte irLun le iy io a seat in the zgenate, for he the f matter of regularity, U NMOVED by the Iow / sult, the administr 1 prir tion is flatly opposed to the corn belt gtabllization y fi the pects a rT pric ©» pros- for far lief legislation at decided bloc were The submitted their st of the an opinion of that if this session of congress ly faint last leaders week farm irplus con to for trol plan ury Mellon ness looked ft with favor the President might won But and cotton states Secretary Treas. ita sound and he on he oped over the the corn helt senators genators could ure if the equalization made applicable to They might fall into line if this appli cation deferred years and made optional then, if one-half of the proposed $150,000, - 000 revolving fund the cotton market the corn belt gible, Senator Fess of Ohlo the MeNary-Haugen blll partly because it would, in his opinion, be dritish rather than to American In terests, He sald it would “sovietize the great agricultural Industry” in America and assure Great Britain a cheap food supply, transferring that nation’s unemployment problem to the United States, cotton at once, fo cotton were were allocated operations. This, men sald, was impos opposes LORIDA'S primaries, according to unofficial figures, gave renomina- tion to Senator Duncan U. Fletcher. More Interesting war the apparent de- feat of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, daugh- ter-of the Commoner, for the congres- slonal nomination in the Fourth dis trict, which Includes Miami. Incom- plete returns showed that Congress bullt 100 years ago at end of world's longest ea » shore ENATOR REEIYS campaign vestig committee | 1 : ang Per neyivania tepublican prin je work ady has found ths within the think we consti solve Eighteenth suhatitute for power {to Congress one, 1 should hope that some one now pre set up In this who are fighting Bren. ifieation referendum pleas that plan, Wads modification decidedly ed with worth's admission the qu wonld salve 1 westion, not M EMBERS of the + tions nitten Com traffic were meeting League on the anger In Arthur commissioner he committee for not recommending action the drug traffic committee, declared, had the offered, government opium to their by roygsed in Geneva former police of New York, the when strongly curb he solution any The ignored which Is of all factories handling of opium and strictest control {to only ownership control de coca the on the des. records kept of the names and ad- Holland Is the chief was Herr Van Betton of that country “It 1s unjustifiable comes here for the force all his I protest en- ergetically against attaching such im- portance to his statements.” Chairman Bourgeois sald he would try to get Mr. Woods to tone down his statement, but the New Yorker de- clared afterward he would not his report and the committee could take it or leave it who arose to say! that Mr. Woods time and tries to council opened Its sessions In Geneva It appeared that the quarrel over permaisent gents was to he con- tinued. The RBrazillan only an underling. represented by now purchased bronze and ym New York there will be sent by the pops i expected the con more than a million [)srarcHEs from Tangier tell of the of revolt the appearance of a new leader France Ahd-el He ig Ouldfar, a bhrigand ¢} inst Spain and to Wf the aga place « fallen ief of the Dieballas. and already his men have captured Chechaouen, the of northern Morocco, sacred its RI garri aacred and m son. TI nx ough WAr on the Riffs, they also hope to drive out the French and Spanish. YECRETARY MELLON announced \ that, owing to the volume of rev. coming onnes in to the treasury, the suing treasury securities would not be He said there had been in- most neg eRsary. ftems of receipts, of pecially In and the treasury thereby enabled to do away with an quarterly fiscal operation for the first time In more than eight The treasury will be able to go to the middle of September securities. There income taxes, wns years, through June 30 will approach 275,000,000, or $20,000,000 greater than last year, BREF ftems of Interest: Ukrainians of East Gallela, who demand autonomy, have been fighting Zazhloul Pasha refused the premier. ship of Egypt and the place vas given to Adly Pasha, friend of Great Britain. Chicago-Minneapolis alr mall route was opened: Pllot Elmer Partridge wae killed on his first trip, Admiral C. F. Hughes was appointed commander In chief of the United States fleet, President Coolidge plans to leave Washington for his vacation in the Adirondacks about July 4 If Congress Director of the Budget Lord asked an appropriation of $325,000 for n new roof for the White House and £25,000 for the President to pay rent while mer, what story mary at Yale—u: ground you significance max it produ ball politics Years ball profits Walter Camp, “Caesar of F before a gathering of athletic heads and a had contrived to save football Astounded sum, they were Mr. Camp's great footabil arena, the Yale Bowl, a BRO, stood versit) that 135.065) out receipts by ayikde 3 ¥ ammlious {ANS new boathouse fully equipped, new athletic fleid Questions Immediately the minds of his this secret fund? Where did it from, and why? There was tomary Investigation. He might withstood the attack, but the gation disclosed that Camp, who was then a member of the faculty, had received some compensation for his services, No Yale coach had ever taken for bis services. Camp had not been paid for coaching, but he had received a modest sum, about one-fifth or less even than the remuneration of a pres ent-day coach, for his services as treasurer and manager of Yale letics and his job on the faculty. But they were after Camp formed I listeners. Whence Come the th cus ght have investi pay and articles for magazines and news- papers. He had turned his knowl edge of football into money. that several hundred other Yale men were receiving money by this time for coaching and writing on football was overlooked. break came. Sharing the fate ungrateful republics are pleased bestow, Walter Camp and his wizard ry, which for many years had not only kept Yale football supreme, but also | dominated the entire football world was deposed forever as adviser and director of the sport at Yale. At the time of Camp's death on | March 14, 1925, the New Haven cor | respondent of the Boston Globe, In writing a resume of the football wiz- ard's career, pointed out that two that Discovery of Bacteria The first recorded observation of the bodies we now recognize as bac terin war made about the middle of the Seventeenth century by Anthony Van Leeuwenhoek, a Holland lens’ to the Royal society of London In 1683, Continuing his Investigations, Leeuwenhoek discovered the presence of bacterin in the mouth and In the Intestinal evacuations, and It Is Inter. Umd erm Grnckey woo Cornmnittee Te versity WAS much fo ceived, at : was downgrade « past two seasons Today Yale American coll raising a fi morial to Carved 1 in stone names of and prep scho ng possible this w » ¥ 11g nt expo popular ath American etics on committee in ures in the world of Hall of Dartmouth, ar EK . who for gport chairman Alonzo A sity of Chicago, ke, University of Plans for the memorial were gigned by a Yale man, John W 1000, and have been approved by the Yale corporation. The National Col leglate Athletic association is func ¢ Stagg. Univer. and Robert C. Zupp Iiinols de . Cross, the colleges of the country, and early in the project of recognition for the “Father of American Football” fe assured “Walter Camp took that was that it coul he recognized as the predecessor of mod ern football and made It over into a of strategy, Rcientifically bal anced as between offense and de fense,” commented Albert Barclay, the New Haven correspondent of the Bos. ton Globe, in reviewing Camp's life. “Into it he put new ideas from his | resourceful mind, ail the time careful- | EYCCORs fi game i not possibly esting to note that there followed | these discoveries a germ theory of | disease no whit less far reaching, if less accurate, than that which exists at the present day. The New Type of Inn “There Is nothing,” wrote Mr. Sam- nel Johngon, “which has yet been con. trived by man by Avhich =o much hap- piness ig produced as by a good tavern or inn.” The modern god Economics, slew the old Inn. Hundreds nowadays can afford to travel, can afford inne, | to college \ i Yale le for fifteen years knew making reasurer hus- chosen few were gan to unfold his football arena, New plans, a gre to-dlatte bonthouse, and a field. and he told Yale £135,000 toward an up athletic $3 ) Anat ie carrying nen waved it You've story. ¢ downf ready heard that past Thane, briefly, you what Waiter Camp did for foothall at Yale, and the reward he received. “Like all men who sacceed” con tinnes the New Haven writer, “he was But the sad part of the attack upon Walter Camp by his own college was that it came from an insignificant minority.” r 4% have the outline of to the dozens of inn patrons a century and a half ago. But the years have brought compensations for the loss of The great hotels, with their daily visitors, offer a variety of life, a richness of contact, which the small tavern never gave. The Imagination must grasp this to appreciate it. Look around you and you will see that it is only the background of Doctor John son's statement that has changed. Its feeling still Lolds true, ~
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers