a-re»-..——¢ ..-.,_..-._- . -—. .w-/-. ... A__..__ .. ..... __.. ......_._._.._.a. A _. _ l I J i l . THE l'.'VDliNG lumber aaait Bureau 01 gnulsfivlt .’Pu!l.>‘ll.ahed m'eves1ng except Bu 41! nut. Ito. “'°d'ml!.l3lsl‘.I?t?:: '.1‘;'?=".°‘i‘-L... - ' Buahaa.li5'.N¢'|-3'“ second-ell: melded for in Ad of octebgr 8. I317 anthorind Rvtlllbcr 83.73; 8 months, Cull: Boon . tear. 8-8: 0 ID00333- ' 8 months, It cents. Outside the - use s months. 8125: After a League of Nations is formed. will we still have race riots? These are not. the days when you can all you can, but when 3'00 C811 9“ you can'ralse the price for. m Austria is to have an arm)’ of 30.- 000 men. in the old days there were more than that in the Vlenesee musi- cal comedies. PREITY IAIDS ALL IN A Roll‘ A crop of freckles! A crop of weeds! They have sprung up in the blink- ing of the eye. The hot summer sun has called them both. But. if the weeds worried folks as much as the freckles worry Elflh then no one uld be arrested. The same sun tha.t makes the weeds grow will make flowers grow. There really is no hard and fast division in the plant _world that causes weeds respond to one environment and flow- ers to another. They are like people. The flowers are the aristocratic. the beautiful girls. the weeds are the ne’er-do-wells and the tramps of the r-0 0 They take tin do not give. You remem r the little rhyme you learned when you were ever so pmall ami young; "Mary. Mary. quite contrary How does your garden grow?" "Little bells and cockle shells And pretty maids all in a row." The House repealed the soft drink tax. is the basement supply getting low already? “'hlCh.I:s correct, Kiauchau. Kinc- chau. Klan-chau. Klan Chow. Klau- chou or Kiao Chow? BASEBALL l.\' El’R0l'l>l “Strike three. the batter's out" may some day be a cunmon sound in France. England even in Russia. The American doughboy has done much to carry our great national sport into these European countries. The Euro- peans. especially the French. enjoy watching baseball as played by the competent soldier and sailor teams The ’only difference in French specta- tors is that they don't root because they don't know when to root and that they think whistling is unsportsmam like. Although the young men of these collntries like the game they and it far to difficult to play themselves. This, however, is no mere European lacking because even Americans over twenty-five iind it extremely hard to learn. But with the young boys the game is very popular.’ They learn rapidly. like it and perhaps in future years European countries may have teams expert enough to compete with little ouipment except Americans. but with resumption of normal trade American manufacturers should remedy this. Perhaps in 1930 the New Yorlt Giants or the St. Louis Browns mdy play the French Blue- devils at the Polo Grounds for the world's baseball championship The statistician who ought to know about such things maintains that the Smiths and Joneses won the war. A large percentage of the big worth- while jobs in the world are held by college-trained men- Year after year I‘. is becoming a greater rarity to find captains of industry who never went to college. A university education has a cultural value which is an even greater asset than the added earning power. That "broader outlook on life." the vaguest and hardest thing to deiine for those who have it not. is yet one of the real things in life to those who by means of college life and training have had new vistas unfolded before their developed un- _ dersinndings. _ DOCUU£.\"l‘ 3'0. 40 Document .\'o. 49. published by the Government printing oifice. is the Treaty of Peace with Germany. it is ‘a voluminous document. having 194 pages containing about 80.000 words. On the one part there are the Big Fire. the United States. the British Empire. France. ltaly. Japan. and twenty-two associated powers oi which seventeen are republics, and on the other part there is Germany. , number of‘sheep. 100.000. to be (V03 THE EVENING IISOOUIIAI. OOLUIIM. IIQUIL EUISDAL JUL 1' 8!. PLAIN PACT2fl_RUm SLEEP Paris Wain Anselm Lulu: Loosi- . —.—— , fact that twenty-seven nations interested. each one having the rich! ideas. it should be considered as O warvelous piece of work. to the French govermnent in month- ly installments. is enumerated. TWO among the items oi reilflli-10118 Belgium. -For ten years German)‘ 171051 deliver to France 7.000.000 tons of coal annually, and to Belxinm 8.000.- 000 tons of coal knnunlli 10'’ 019 torical trophies and works of ML All: the astronomical instniments stolen‘ turned. Article 246 contains the Pl’0'l vision that within six months from the coming into force of the treaty. Ger- King of the Hedjax the original Koran . removed from Medina by the Turkish: authorities and is s‘aid to have beenl given to the former Emperor ‘William ; 11. Also within the same period Ger- 1 many will hand over to His Britannicl Majesty's government the skull of the‘ Sultan .\i'l{wawa which was removed? from the protectorate of German East 3 Africa mid taken to German)’- nrned_ Germany would certainly rank 1 rates of the World. Sounds almost; like the I. W. W ‘s. . ‘Whether or not the “'l"l'el1." 0‘ P9399 sellers is doubtful. THE NEW BOOKS h_.._—__——————-——————-——-——-—- °°'l‘vrt-lve lien.” in "Twelve Men," Theodore Dreis-.-rp has given a composite picture of American life by an analysis of char- acter of twelve extraordinary men. vfhom he had met. The chosen sub- jects are men who are dii!eront—odd. capable men who stand out. One of the characters dealt with is his older brother. Paul. ‘His sister’ and his own lamlly relations are told- in an :nterestins- 1103161)‘ W3)’. The author has given the reader a good picture or his own character by NI. reactions to these twelve virlle men’ of different types. Each chapter. consisting of a star)‘ of a single man. is approached from the standpoint of the reporter or of the feature story writer. Details are brought into the story in a fascinating manner. Yet the style is s comprom- - use between the free. creative color of ‘ the short fiction form and the colder..- more stated order of the conventional biography. The hand of the experi-N enced newspaper man is seen behind the scenes. , (Bani and niverlsht. New York; cloth; price. 81.75; 359 93890.) I -om - DR. W. S. Wlll'l“_l‘LE T0 PBA("l‘l(‘£' Takes Dental Ofllce of Dr. Sydney; Smith. Who Goes West. . dental business of l)f'.IS)'dll9}' Smith‘ yesterday. Doctor Whittle will begin practicing September 1. Doctor Bmlth : Doctor Smith has been practicing dentistry in Columbia for the last twenty years. Doctor Whittle recent- ly returned from Europe. where he served eighteen months with the Am- also Division. He spent in Germany. Vlrtrll Hawkins to Daily Tribune. Virgil Hawkins arrived yesterday’ afternoon from Muskogee, 0kla._ where he has been working for the last few months. He will tluccc-ed Jerome 1"Joe"l ("rear-cy as linotype operator for ‘lw (folumbia llnily Tribune Mr. ("~l‘P89)' will become associated with A. E. Rothwell in the Columbia Print- ing Cotnpztny. lll which Mr. Cross)’ has recenH)"ptlr'rhased a half interest, the certainty that aviation is quickly to become one of the big industrial throughout the entire world. Paris “°*"""“‘ "“'“ ‘ml ’5'°°° '°" "t: has I warning for all of her sister cities of American and ever! Other country. read or all the stolen things to rev; municipal hospital. ‘tofles during the war installed them’ the former soldier is able to pay for. rat in the Exalted Order of the Pi- ‘selves in the vicinity and the medical . Ignomnce of the condnolgs govern. anthofllils 00%’ refuse to let the C11)’ .in;: the insurance pros-isons is another .Aus. su. 7:30 3‘: to. thrill nn. Dr Warren S. Whittle bought ihei“*'lll 1*’! 8 In. llondny, clan Wtlfk be ' ' ins. ll |llr-t ‘:7 .8 s ll Monday to Dec. '-n_ and his tamily are going to Calitor--’ nia to live. '1)... flkw U erican army dental corps. 'l'hlrt)'-F‘lftli ‘ several I months with the Seventh Army Corps ' lug shops near Cities. PARIS. July 13 (by mall).—Wlth H1980 i signed. The warning Is this: man beings have to live and sleep. 1 from China in 1900-1901 must be re-‘mounted has to be tested and to be up to date within eighteen months‘ leflted ls 3luChQd to ‘ huge benCh'frOm the dale of tug 5o|djef'3 dis-l d fan OOIIUDUOIJBU 31 charge from the army he must pay the i . or platform an top speed, with hundreds of horsewpremgum for the 51-51 mom]; of grace, ower back of it. for at least twenty- v ' low _ -3 many will restore to His Majesty 15°‘ 2,.” hours and sometimes fort)‘-ell“«:rt;itE1tlu;“ol)l:eiOmTi:il?|:n :l(lic‘ltml‘icLh‘“. . During 1118! period of time nobodfireinstated. Thus it is not necessary; , of the Callvh Othmfilh ‘M95 “"”,lit‘lng within bearable distance can'm my {or the insurance durlng the Ttitne it was invalid. The 1K'nr Risk Insurance offers pro- ed l0? loflyrelflhl 1101111 11 bl!‘ been tection to the amount of :l(l,tI(I0 With-3 necessary to close an adiu‘-en! 0¢h00-- ! in live years from the (late of the dec- ; Al. Pul£*8'll!. the inhabitants declare [nation of peace the policy [nay be} "transferred to an old lzne company‘ At Courbevole the city council bas.without another physical exarmnaiion l It is not At Filth)’. the Oil)‘ had bought 3-policy for the full amount; instead it 7°’ large tract of land for the erection of . my be chgnged to an old line policy} possibly sleep. I At Suresnes. where motors are test- they have not slept for months. resigned as a means of protest. Airplane fI.C- 'fof any build its hospital in such a death-ln- reason surint: locality. The Department of the Seine has into more Isolated localities. to Pay Return Visit Sooaubeen i England LONDON. July 12 (by mail).—Tbe visit recently paid by four scientists and research investigators of the American Bureau of Standards to the’ British National Physical Laboratory at Tuddington will soon be returned. In August a British party will go to ‘Washington. thereby renewing the peace time relationships of the two kindred institutions. l rat-1 CALENDAR l Anicliat l—l'i--ulr on Prof J E. “'rr-nch‘s in n for ills-it-ry and unrlnl aria-nor tour];- on Aug. 2 T--sellers‘ Examination for five- yt-iir certificate in Agriculture] Air rlitnrium st 8 o'cloc more- in Aug 4 null Iisuntit-it will give a pisnol r-c 0311'!!!) 18 IOITHS GRACE Galllaseetchsseeinlelnsmtefhelr W Risk Insurance. If soldiers discharged from the army are given eighteen months in which to reinstate their War Risk Insurance lapse, by a ruling of the government insurance department Out of more than four million men in the army when the armistice was ’insurance policies have lapsed. This Enact imme- =1. puny due to the fact that the sol- dlltely. ellher mm. munlcifil. Or Dl— me" in “med nne‘~ in cfiy- 1 . U1C€l‘¢C' f were unable to make the h 6 _ tlonal legislation prohibiting “nu, no “me “mod” wmnn 8” mom 3 Jr .tion of airplane factories sn)‘wher¢.DarInents required. W393‘ mu‘ '°"‘°"° l° “ace ‘" "' ! within hearing distance of where hu- j mason mm the depgnmem ruled that leighteen months be allowed for rein- l'3"'-‘T.\' “HD1399 W010’ 597°"? 1‘ "-“statement. When the poiicy~is brought the large number of soldiers letllnr: “"'“h Germany’ “"1 be one of the be“ « been forced in the interest of public :2: n:(:~1ewl.::nl:I;l:§a lP!lU£l:\'t:‘:.:'Sl¢::’all;>l:l l TN-‘Bill! 10 1-Elle IIIGBSUTBS 10 IIOD lb?/give iniormalion to soldiers on the-‘Ti ——-—-—————-——-——---—-'* airplane factories and not theln-130'-id policies and to advise them in regard; ‘to payments and challges 1 W G. Stephenson of (‘olttmbs has appointed by the Treasury De- partmen to ‘Columbia and to co-operate with dis- charged sold.ers in any way that they may request. Open/1: Usual Dar’./3' Till Six 0'6/océ C/axed T/'zur.r(1'a_v their policies were allowed to approximately three million it was for this i necessary to transfer the‘ l amount, up to the $10,000. that 1 given by the department for handle this situation in "1" BOOK T0 RE PUBLISHED Plan is lndorlell to ‘Advertisers by W. Galfi. The "11" Book will make its ap- pearance this fall after being neglect- ed two years because of the war. About one thousand dye hundred of these books will be presented free to the freshmen entering the University this fall. They will be guide books to the places and the activities of the University and Columbia ter to the merchants of the town say- ing, “at a meeting of the board of di- rectors of the Retail Merchants Asso- ciation the Y. II. C. A booklet giving information relative to the University and Columbia was indorsed as a most isudihle undertaking." ‘ He also wrote. “We know no better or quicker way to get acquainted with those who will be your future customers." Joseph Hunt is editing the book. George Freiberger is the adverusinz manager. Associate editors are Law- Tbe secretary of the Commercial‘:-ence De.\iutb, Clayton Gordon. Doyle Club. W. W. Garth. has written a let-[Cotton and Sam Broadbent. and Souvenirs of 1!. I‘. The Logical Place to Buy Quality Fountain Pens. Stationery. Too. THE co-or STORE’ It's on the Caglpus. Student Clerlés are employed. Mail your letters at the to-Op. There's lots of Missouri Spirit. And we share our profits with you. Etvrryf/lirtg the student new’: at Ask to use our Memory Books. THE C0- ’ Buy an Evershsrp Pencil. a Time-saver. OP BASEMENT ACADEXIF HALL z4_/‘temoom /-/mm'rzger’5 Jewelry Store’ ital er the lfnlverslty Audlto-. rium at 7:30 p in. Aug 6 to a m.. l'nl\'r-rsity Assembly. ad~ ' drvss on "nsrnstortnln the Exprriencv-s of an fl t - merit-an I-‘rrnt, , ft-sour Burg:-I Johnson of Vassar‘ (‘nth-gr No'$nlV'l'rIli3' classes this‘ i l Entertainer " Pro ' hour. August 14--Summer t rm of the University ends - August 2! 26--1‘--lnmbls rhltltnnqul on ' 8!!-phrns (‘allege on p I ; all Tern: of Cnirenity. Aug 28. Tl’. Tm-sday_ \\'e-dru-minty, Thursday, entrance examination tug 213. an Pridsy. Saturday. registration * Rnlurdsy opening‘ mu . .. _ . - tiuoll. . [sturdny drst term. ta-0-year win in agriculture . Blot. '."l- Thursday. Thanksgiving Day, holiday. 1 '.'.0-noon. Saturday. full term ends; Ulirlstmnt holidays bcg1n ' Winter Tens: of falreraity. 30 —'l‘ut~sdn,r. registration 730 p in, Tuesday. opening cot: rm-at-iln ‘D91’. Ill 45 fl tn, Wei.luca4la)'. Mass work begins 1 lit-t‘ ‘I»-«- :14 . . Wednesday to Feb 2’... , I'll). 1 p m.. Friday. second term, two-rt-nr winter course in sgr t 76 'l"Q‘lI. 22-Sunday. WnIhlfllitin'I Birthday f April I8 -Sunder. llactzslnun-atr Address ' April 20--4 p. in. Tuesday. winter term 1 it t .. April :1‘ ’I‘hlirsduy_ t'nn||nQl|r'(vI1lPDI [lay . | uprillg-Kumtrwr Term of (‘nits-rsity. ‘ japrii '14 itsturduya registration. _.\|aril ‘H T150 to In. Naturals)‘, w)lll'm‘I(l0n. ‘April Lil} Ii a m., ll--ll-lay. class work luv | gin ‘ lJum- I9 '5-llllfdfl)‘, flrst half of term cndu . ‘June ‘.'I -.\Iundny. so-rout] half of term ho ; gins uponitig Ant’ H Soon. Rnturdsy. spring numm-r. ends- Scfiool of A University Professional Management. Trafllc and N ortlivvestcrn University No wonder the senators at Wash- ington have been reading the treaty for months and are not yet able to 5"" "“°'°§l-138 Ind comprehensive interviews uoncenting it. No wonder the Peace Ooulsn.-nee was in session for seven months. Considering the 515 Nortfi whim University Btu’/ding L4_4If4;zd Durban: Strrttr Cfiifagv I N07?//2 western University who have two, or three yearsgol college work. pro- lessional courses in commerce. which lead to a degree. and which prepare lor business leadership. SP¢¢i&l Opportunities afforded to specialise in Busi- ness Administration. Accounting. Banking riance, Merchandising and Advertising, Factory Trade. Employment Management. ideally situated in the town loop of Chicago. next door to all of the city’: great commercial activities. Write for book"oi courses. “ 1 l ! Commerce 3 School ollers to students and’ Fi- Transportation, Foreign School of Commerce is I 2 AW: / /‘V ; I I’ .,, , /" I . ; / ‘,4’ 4;’. II E’ O ' 4' _’ v .1 l I ’ / ‘ " I W- . '4 ’ 5‘, . // ‘M... you'll find them the real thing. They're built to wear-to give you the kind of economical service you want. And that’s just what they do. THE TERROR OF FIRE is always present in the mind of the woman of the house, especially if she has a little one. And she also worries a lot about what she would do if her home burned and it was not insured. if you have a wife and a home and perhaps a little one. don't you think it your duty to insure them against in-lug made homeless? Better latte out a policy today. SMITH & (‘ATBON REALTY C0. 200 Exchange National Bank Building Phone 27 United States 'llrcs are _G29_c_l Tires The Real Thing Right ‘rilmugl. Put United States Tires under your car and Hundreds of thousands of’ regular users will vouch for that'—lots of them right around here. ‘There are five distinct types of United States Tu-es—-one for every need of price or use. We have the bum for your car. blow W. C. Bowling Renic. Hardware Co. John N. 'I:aylor E. L. Edwards :5: United States tires are good tires. That's why we sell them Supp Implement 6: Motor Co. B888 Johnson Mercantile Co.—Ashland C.» C. Quint-:nbcrry—-H allsville Co. The Tire Shop - L ‘'1. LL». .A‘_ ~ ...._.___4._. ._i-.a.uv ' .. 4: on‘. sun‘. h’l"A‘A'.1. . 4}.‘ ,_..'J.-“'_ . l,‘ - A 3 '\»§h“"‘- 1‘ LaA.. _nt