iv aararascriee Ls LICL AE 1 1 A w— wo NEWS REVIEW OF Fairly Pleased With the Record of Congress. By EDWARD W. PICKARD SENATORS and representatives have scattered to thelr summer resorts, following the adjourn- ment of congress; and President and Mrs, with their have gone to the secluded Lake Osgood in Adirondacks which is the summer White House. The Chief Executive jumped into his vacation with unwonted eagerness and celebrated its first day by catching a three-pound plke for dinner. His camp Is quite isolated but It is expected that he will entertain a visitors who will be put up In the eral cabins attached to Before starting for t Coolldge ran down to Phi delivered a Fourth of July 30,(0¥) people at exposition. His mainly on the unim of the foundatic American rather platitudinous but well phrased. homes or to Coolldge entourage camp on the good many ROV- the house. the government, was studious % yASHINGTON correspondents re ported that the President with the was fairly well satisfied the first session of the gress, Its main reduction of taxes, the debts and th court resolution. were urged by they the Dem matter of achie . acaieven President dismay by the hig t nis 1 win victory in ti was res mittee made 1 tributors to and the h were given it In Penn 1 » inquiry into the primary. The John D vere the dry caus tockefellers, father and son, the during the last eighteen ing contributed wmirman Stayton of the wet organization said it had collected approximately $800. 000, less than half of which had contributed directiy to the national association by sympathizers or cated to It by state subsidiaries. ow most liberal givers to months, B00. 500 By been allo- The largest contribution D,200--wag from n Mrs. Van Gerbig of Connecticut, The Investigation Into the Pennsyl- vanla primary was practically com- pleted and the committee separated to meet again in Chicago on July 26 for the purpose of inquiring into the ex- peénditures during the Smith-McKinley senatorial primary Reed hopes to unmask at that time some of the Influences behind the world court resolution, which is as ob- noxious to him as prohibition, contest, Senator PPOSITION to ratification of the lerenger settlement of the French debt has grown tremendously In the chamber of deputies Briand sald the cabinet intended to walt and submit the entire foreign debt program after the British prob. lem was settled and when certain were definitely established. Franklin- Boulllon attacked the Berenger agree- ment bitterly and was tumultuously applauded by almost the entire cham- her, Finance Minister Calllaux had manded that he be given dictatorial powers to carry out his plans for the franc, but this, too, was violently opposed, especially by the Soclallsts, and it seemed likely the chamber would not consent. The franc fell to a new low level —380.50 to the dollar. de- Former combatants and mutilated veterans of the war in Paris planned to demonstrate the Washing: against hanging American Ambassador Herrick protested against such an Insult bade the demonstration, but the angry veterans declared out their plan some modifications, ton accord by crepe on the embassy and the government for- they would notwithstanding tho fn new CALLES' war on Mexico reached PRESIDENT Catholles In stage last week when decrees were is- sued forbidding religious publications to comment on « ul and ries and religious orders political prohibiting m nr ation affairs onasteries, Hes provi fed government 8 Are BUF the purpose of the keep the Catholle 1" . politi ravers n Catholl pardo: decree unt pa the earthquakes in were folle Sumatra The and week, southern Eurape Asin wed by Java that lives. Mexico, and Japan growing After record-breaking the mountains of terrific cyclonie temblors In and took many Floods in Austria worse were fNnow- South storm storms In America, a tive floods nnd landslides, rains and high winds Ohlo, damaging the crops. Torrential FTER many months of persistent 8-51 was raised from the sea bottom off Block Island and towed to the Brooklyn navy yard where the rusted hulk is to be cut open with acetylene torches so that the twenty-four bodies Credit for raising the submarine Is given Lieut, Commander Edward Ellsburg who had charge of the engineering detalls, The S51, it will be remembered, was sunk last September In collision with a steamer and thirty-three men perished. YALEM, the Massachusetts town fa- prominence as a shipping port, is three hundred years old, and has been celebrating the anniversary with picturesque doings. On the maln day of the celebration Vice President and deliv. ered a message of greeting from Pres. ly speech on his own behalf. Speaking of General Dawes, he has let It be known that he Intends to spend much of his summer vacation on the stump in a coast to palgn for the reform of rules, const the CHin- senate partly tiled up by street transpor- strikes. In New York ti I and switchmen of the Rapid work and in tormen divigion, Interborough company, quit 1 lines. They demande Hundreds of employed by the partial New maintained, difficult service was Yorkers found It Street raliroad emg struck for mor nition of thelr iC he public there Hovees of RisO for recog nations i was not The police, the sirike riots of sawed-off shotguns and a: who rested a number of strikers HE new board of medi ated hy the Watson-Parker labor act has been appointed The of Massachusetts, former work members are "inslow and Morrow were Edwin P ger, who labor board cide the ma KE VERYONE Ir interested In assis of of 1.748 KK ixE) Sh Hu) The 1.0% 10) persons ; { } or one for every va ae four curs, 225000: Abyssinia China KRolomo i n . Wa, and 31.871. The 151.006; ane every with persons, h while Liberia nye has In 19 of 58 countries surveyed, at automobiles owned American manufac. ture: In American made cars constituted 80 per cent. South Amer. had the’ greater proportion, Eu ropean countries showed a much lower ratio. were of seven, UNIC Inscriptions recently found in the state of Washington been translated by Prof. Oluf Opsjon who declares the discovery Is the greatest Norse record ever found in the United States. The first inscrip- tions, found near Spokane, tell of the Journey of a band of vikings across the continent In 1010 A. D. and of thelr desperate battle with Indians und the burial of their dead. The sec ond group of Runes, in Grant county, have ming for thelr lives across the Colum bla. river to escape the Indians and starving beneath the river cliffs. It also is dated 1010, NDER to new llinols boxing law Chicago has again become a prize fight center. In the first affair, Sam- my Mandell of Rockford captured the lightweight champlonship from Rocky Kansas of Buffalo, The referee said Sammy outpointed Rocky in the ten round bout, but his decision was severely criticized, N ODD form New York city Ww of 1023 It for New usual had per news stands ¥ n in + field of material leaves, n not part In hut suhscribe market ple paper a i occur nomic » Of town, {dual vering the ach Indi deli of the community for Is really Follow a newspaper into any home Here are gathered the members of family circle—father, mother and ch dren. Within a few hours each read It and for each there must be that which he Is most interested in reading To this wealth of Information each member of the family and each In his pecullar was to one part of degree of will respond {init will re- uni- That part is the ad the newspaper common versal appeal. vertising columns, the adver were supplementing his labors d news American agic transfor: r mosphere of newspaper Compare with that a quarter « before age bank fa century come the banker had the newspaper wns a market place The another striking example of utility fleld public f offers still how newspaper as the market place of community has been utilized not but to to sell goods and service mote popular understanding and Ail. nr per It hag been estimated that news shortened by the ndvertising has one-half the services of such ut Ag In the of banks process of selling ilitlen case there hans the public and In that of the public The old-time suspicions and antagonisms, now rapidly disap pearing, have been replaced Marked Era in West The first United States land office wns opened In Detroit, under an act of congress passed March 20, 1814, says the Chicago Journal. Detroit was then n frontier village with only n few hundred people, and all around the town and westward to the Pacific the land was still In possession of Spain. Here were millions and mil. lions of acres of fertile land awaiting sattiora The opening of the Detroit wing a momentous event in the history of the republic, for it marked the be. ginning of the regulated settlement of the mighty West, Uncle Sam's destroyed by the fire which wiped out Detroit In 1815, Riding Log Carriage traveling back and forth In a space shout 40 feet long and reaching » and ambitions. so possible the distribu. the sale of our national mer same manner that an important plece of news of interest to all is, in a single broadeast to corner of the land, so the distributed by the And It is now an accepted fact that this message also is much the ' day, every can message of a product be advertiser “news.” Kaleldorcopic ag it appears to be, lization Is na stable civilization. How can stability exist amid much diversity? It could be destroyed if any large part of the American people become deliberately perverse, In this our civi nevertheless, larger sense the American constitutes the nerves of oud eniire social system. maximum speed of 45 miles an hour at every trip, then you have some idea of the terrific strain men riding the Just arrived in Detroit from an upstate lumber town. He sald the carriage was used to carry the carriage and the other to gauge the thickness of the boards cut.—Detrolt Nowe,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers