I—Dan Moody, who will be the tee hearing evidence In of Senators lexus ="Trutlic Reed and next governor a on wheels est Ingle fund” commit- ablished NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Mexican Government's Con- flict With the Catholic Church Reaches Crisis. By EDWARD W. PICKARD presen CALLES man Cathol : hurch now in tl stru outcome, and est A ph sh re hy ma We dem: ¢. tolerance tice. We desire welfare You are a and mother, and we hope that you hear our appeal” Directors of the glous Defense——the wanization—has ind equit peace, unio woman, § wif will League for Reli- lay Catholic or- | been arrested on | charges of se the league appoint. ed new directors hut kept their names t secret. All last week the churches were thronged and baptisms, con firmations and marraige ceremonies were astonishingly numerous. Organized labor demonstrated its | adherence to Calles' policy by holding | great parades in Mexico City and oth- | er centers. “We are determined to | fight the Issue to a finish in the inter- est of the liberation of the working man from the trammels of centuries,” said a prominent labor leader. “AS We gee the question, the issue Is whether we workmen will be allowed to think | or have our thinking done for us by the makers of creeds and preachers of superstition. We are behind the Pres {dent to a finish, through peace or war.” ng ftior HAT the Illinols senatorial pri- | / inaries cost, where: the money | came from and for just what purposes | it was pald out were the objects of | the Investigation opened in Chicago | just week by the senatorial “slush | fund” committee. Chairman Reed | he is In effect the committee until the | time comes to write its report—found | out a lot of Interesting facts, great many concerning the of the Anti-Saloor Middle We AS sull the dig fn more, the {ties it politic 1 league In t 1 had been expected, t} 1 he public utilities magnate, wns l character in the part of the proceedings qared that he was a both frat Hrsst eading K sort of parties and of the Republicgn party ’ Mr. to the DAVIS, Der in Democratic conven- at twenty Democratic na- avor the Davis hpwever, that if elther rule is retained, neither should be dis arded, members believes, IREMIER POINCARE at this writ- has good prospects of putting program through the deputies, which already ing ing his financial chamber of } 131 vote, The veteran statesman pro- poses to raise 5.000.000,000 francs In and when the financial commission of the chamber refused to approve one section which calls for a 15 per cent Increase in passenger and freight rates, Poincare told it that the project could exist only as a unity and he would make the passage of every article, once the plan reached the chamber, a question of confidence. The commission natural ly did not wish to contribute to an- other cabinet crisis so it approved the whole plan, adding to it a clanse In Communist deputies are still op- posing the premiers plan, but the necessity of adopting these new taxes on French business and indus try Is generally recognized. The government also has introduced a measure designed to safeguard the Socialist EMONSTRATIONS against Amer leans In Paris are decrasing but ceased, President his summer camp, has D i i | ] i ; i } i i of the through urges the notice and ents there he rance 3 le to adopt an attitude of tion, forbearance ward Europe nations struggling ravages of war, repair the ec He tiousness momice espeelally deprecantes the tourists t Nassau wis id tl i Nn ne yANN iN) Over i there were heavy outlay, naval and aerial budgets, 000, or £12.00 per capita. 1 annuni France has expenditure of The figures for the United States are $454.. 000.000, or 24.04 per capita. Italy's per capita expenditure for armaments fs 83.86: Japan's Is 83.68; Russia's Is £1.45, and Germany comes last of the nations noted with £1.70. The British house of commons was officially In- formed last week that Germany has failed to keep faith with her disarma- ment promises. an average LINCOLN, last gurviving son of the Emancipa- tor, died Inst week at his home in Manchester, Vt. The end came peace. fully in the night, death being caused by cerebral hemorrhage. The body will be placed In the Lincoln tomb at Springfield, 11, beside that of his fa- ther. Mr. been eighty-three years old on August 1. had a noteworthy career. He was Presidents Garfield and Arthur, and President Harrison appointed minister to Great Britain. death of George M. Pullman Mr. Lin coln was made president of the Pull man company, which position he re signed in 1011 George Inness, Jr, an eminent more Cragsmoor, N. Y. ters In Florida and many of his ple tures were of Florida scenery, noted artist, passed away af HALL. PA. EIVCEGL because lines must Then starts himeelf ceeding "The best author to do years of training at school yes an Interne and dnally to bulld up a practice for which is a long, arduous pro. have ne Hed out thing for the would-be is to take a position on a newapaper. The training he recelves there ia invaluable He ia probably pretty young when he goes there, and the first thing it does for him is to give him experience and a perspe tive on life He learns to write every day about what he secs. He begins to write for magazines, and he sends out things which promptly come back to him Now, the difference between learning to write and Jjearning other profes- gions comes here When a young doc- tor begins to practice, he does not con- him at once He tells he is not well not come to ances ates something--a story, a Famous Roman Temple The Maison Carree is a Corinthian the country. It has nt present as a musenm. The struc ig rectangular in shape, meas uring S85 by 45 feet. Fw A J are ou have anything to say, you will ind your market.” Another authority on the writer's art who was caught In the far South west and Interviewed for the magazine 12 John Galsworthy. tell stories, same Asked how he got the ideas for his he sald: to “Really, no me at once ‘Veually some idea, as such, for a story, some little, ir incident, occurrence, some character, ap- peals to me and takes form so that 1 it in the shape of some kind of a story 1 do not deliberately shape it to carry out an idea; it seems naturally to shape Itself It is impossible give you a rule for this “One can Indicate it by taking some definite example In "The Broken in ‘Caravan’ you will short story that grew oul of an ironi- cal Ingident. lIronieal situations, some- how, always appeal to me most, “It happened that 1 met an actor in a country town where I was stopping. he began ileal see 1e led to the opinion that it was erected during the period of the Antonines (188-180 A. D.). It ig sald to have suggested to Thomas Jefferson the plan of the state capitol mond, Va. Here It Is Again would be the result if the steamer plunging through the fog. nad ana half What a great is in him! deed, what a shelf of novels | has nany forms as there human delusions, times he Is an evangelist, sweating to transform Oklahoma City or Altoona, into the New Jerusalem. times he Is a strict Sabbatarian, hawl- ing for the police whenever he detects neighbor washing bottles on days morning. “1 throw off the guess that there are at least forty novels in him, What are which this most typical is novel even nned 1n- For he are Some as va- Some 1 his Sun- harass and punish his fellow men? is the work for the novelist, which is to say for the professional anatomist of character.” the captain replied courteously, "just And the old lady was greatly relleved.—Lon- don Tit-Bits, Fuchsia’s High Place The fuchsin is one of the gardeners beauty of its flowers and graceful form of the plant but also because it 3 ders and grows with such freedom and