The Ames Review. (Ames, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1921 Page: 2 of 8
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THE AMES REVIEW AMES OKLAHOMA
IRISH SITUATION
AT A STANDSTILL
DR OTTO A GLAZEBROOK
DRESSMAKER
MADE WELL
FoDowtolaNelflibor'a Advice
Fordney Ueituri Goes Through ! amw 11 Meiketa o?u5V’om U I and Took Lydia E Pialdiam'a
After Bitter Fight by Vote I J? I Vafotablo Compound
of 287 to 127
HOUSE APPROVES
THE TARIFF DILLl
l£0V£BI”EAI MFIET FIFCDI
Proposed Parley Depends on
Attitude of Sir James Craig
and Do Valera
HIVE HOPE FOR CONFERENCE
Ulilir Premier and Blnn Fein Leader
May Meet toon to Discuss
Their Dlfferencee
London— Tbo future couree of tbe
Irlih negotiations eoema to turn on
two Important point— fir I whether
another meeting between 8lr Jamee
Craig the L'later premier and
Eamonn De Valera can be brought
about In Ireland and aecond wheth'
er De Valera can be Induced to con
ent to n aolutlon of tbe altuatlon
through an amendment to tbe exist
log home rule act presuming that
such a aolutlon can be worked out
Tbe second question appears to
hinge en a desire on tbe part of the
contending parties to hold to their
ideals Mr Lloyd George as a con
cession to tbe Unionist section of tbe
coalition wishes to save the home
rule act and De Valera and his party
on tbe other hand would vastly pre-
fer to destroy tbe hated “partition
act”
I Ovation for De Valera
Mr De Valera had an ovation as he
was returning to Dublin He Is ex-
pected to spend tbe week-end there
in informal talks with his colleagues
and he probably will summon a meet
lng of the Dall'Elreann to examine
the government's offer
The convention of the Dali Eireann
it Is considered here would be an in-
dication that tbe offer was regarded
as tbe possible basis for further nego-
tiations The supposition is that if
tbe draft offer Is not approved by Ar-
thur Griffith Prof John MacXeil
Michael Collins and other leaders
tbe Dail Eireann will hardly be con-
vened while if the leaders accept the
draft the sanction of the Dali Eireann
is certain to follow
A Two Weeks’ Delay
Among the Sinn Feiners in London
no definite development in the nego-
tiations seems to be expected for ten
days or a fortnight The terms of the
government's proposal apparently
will not be announced publicly with-
out a prior agreement between Pre-
mier Lloyd George and De Valera
According to apparently inspired
statements however they are of a
somewhat tentative character intend-
ed to indicate the lines on which the
government considers a solution of
MORE ARTICLES OR FREE LIST
rr
Wtele tv pet IS frwm
au NIMI at it couaiori
WMttiMnM n C— Far tto wsak sad
las July ii nn
Oral
Prim avmto kr for wk ai-
Itwit trvad woo iMdefinlta and trading
woo only rir stimi IihIiimI
to bo bulllh but Ira4ro wro fiooir
ovr flluro of awhile lo buy trM
ly and IM lurk of sustained epurl ik
maud I'lwl) out of tuny accounts Was
I 'up new during nk ajiully bull
dwere
Cation OH Flnlstod Lumber Hld iSTT teve
Leather and Shoe ta Cama In
Fraa af Duty
'ahlngton— With finished lutn-
Uermnny ao4 knland Wro no
buyro of cash wbaat al aaobuard at
time during wak Country offering
wore but lari Jn ftKuo raah market
Nx r4 wlntay wbaat tlua4 ft If Xu
I hard II It Xu I yalluw rurn No oalas
nuulr No I mld corn lie Xo I white
Dr Otta A Olasabraak af Washing-
ton D C American carsul at Nice
Franca
DAWES PLANS TO SAVE BI6 SUM
Head ef Budget Bureau Find Chiefs
Ready te Practice Economies
Where Poaalblc
Washington — An estimated saving
of 112512 628 can be effected In tbe
appropriations of approximately 4 bil-
lion dollars available for government
expenditure In tbe current fiscal year
President Harding was Informed by
Charles Dawes director of the bud-
get Included In the estimate of possible
saving General Dawes said was 22-
822111 pertaining to continuous ap-
propriations for building and con-
struction which would be postponed
for expenditures In future years
The estimate of government econ-
omy possible in the present fiscal
year was contained In a letter direct-
ed to the President by General Dawes
who presented the amounts by which
expenditures could be reduced in the
various departments and Independent
establishments
In part the letter said:
“The fine response to your request
from the heads of departments and
independent organizations and bureau
chiefs incidental to your assumption
of responsibility as the business head
of governmental administration In-
fers the existence In their minds of
three principles involving improve-
ment In government business that
should not be overlooked
“1 That the business organization
of government hereafter assumes that
the minimum amount of money to be
expended in any fiscal year is not of
prone U
mand at distributing markata muallyio- DJ J(n Stephen ’aXjWHrienC
the situation possible provided both necessity the sum appropriated In ad- cent ad valorem on long staple cot-
a a L II I r W nuarg CVIR gw Ok WHllg
br bidet leather aboea oil and cotpota 1:0 vr ih w—k cWm July
ton on tbo free list the dyo embargo
knocked out but tbe American valua-
tion provision retained the Fordney
tariff bill baa been passed by the
houee by a vote of 27 to 127
8even Republicans voted against
the bill nnd seven Democrats voted
for It
Tbe hill now goes to tbo senate
where the finance committee la
scheduled to begin its consideration
by hearing tbe representations of In-
terests attacking or defending the
duties fixed by tbe bouse
May Rush the Tax Bill
The ways and means committee U
to begin drafting revised tax legisla-
tion at once and If the house should
send the tax bill to the senate before
the tariff bill reaches tbe senate
floor It is probable tariff legislation
would be suspended In the senate
long enough to permit passage of the
tax bill without delay
The house reversed tbe action of
the committee of tbe whole on three
lmi -rtant amendments — those relat-
ing to the dye embargo free hides
and free cotton
By a vote of 209 to 193 the house
adopted the amendment of Repre-
sentative Frear of Wisconsin strik-
ing out the sections that give the
tariff commission authority to Impose
for three years an embargo against
foreign dyes such as are manufactur-
ed in this country Tbe committee
of the whole had rejected the Fear
amendment by a close vote
Hides on Free List
Hides were restored to the free
list The amendment approved prev-
iously by the committee of the whole
imposing a duty of 15 per cent on
hides met defeat by a vote of 174 to
239 This was the result of the re-
fusal of the committee of the whole
to approve compensatory duties on
duties on leather and shoes
Long staple cotton also went back
to the free list for the same reason
as hides Tbe bouse voted down an
amendment placing a duty of 15 per
Venwo T— “Foe thiw years I
offered aatold Sffooy each month with
pains hi my sides I
round only tempo
rary relief w doctor '
modi cine or anything
else 1 took until my
husband saw an ad-
vertisement of
Lydia E Hnkham's
Vegetable Com
pound 1 mentioned
It to a neighbor and
sbe told mo she had
taken it with food
results and advised
me to try It I was than In bed part of
the time and my doctor said I would
have to be operated on but we decided
to try the Vegetable Compound and 1
also used Lydia E Fink ham 'a Sanative
Wash 1 am a dressmaker and am now
able to go about my work nnd do my
housework besides You aro welcome
to use this letter as a testimonial as I am
id to speak a word for your
medicine’— lira w M Stephens 1103
f4 Commerce SL Vernon Texas
Dressmaker when overworked are
te such ailment and should profit
Ulster and the Sinn Fein are able to
agree and request the government to
amend the existing act
ARRESTED ’KIDNAPPED' SON
Thomas Randolph of Sharon Pa
Taken Into Custody When He
Arrived at Home
Sharon Pa — The "abduction” of
Thomas D Randolph 32 years old
prominent of Sharon dramatized In
soul-freezing letters to his father
closed with a slap-stick finale when
Randolph returned home later
Shortly after his return he was ar-
rested at tbe home of his father-in-law
Boyce Fogle on orders of Mayor
Frank Gilbert Randolph was held
without bail on a technical charge
Tbe police were searching In sev-
eral towns for Randolph when he re-
turned All along the detectives had
held that when they found Randolph
they probably would not find any abductors
vance by congress but to the smallest
amount upon -which the business of
the government can be efficiently ad-
ministered under tbe program outlin-
ed by congress
‘2 That the minds of tbe business
administrators of government have
been diverted from a too easy re-
liance upon the custom of deficiency
appropriations
‘3 That where congress has direct-
ed the expenditure of certain sums
for specific purposes an executive
pressure will now be exerted for
more efficient and economical admin-
istration in order to produce greater
results from the given expenditure
and also wherever possible to com-
plete the given project tor a less
amount than the total appropriated
for tbe purpose”
ton by a vote of 198 to 217 The same
amendment was approved earlier In
the week by tbe committee of tbe
whole
Crude and Fuel Oil Too
No roll calls were demanded in the
case of two other amendments
which were given preferred consider-
ation in the committee of the whole
and in tbe bouse under special rule
One of these amendments placed
crude petroleum and fuel oil on tbe
free list and the other placed asphalt
on tbe free list
UNEMPLOYMENT EXPENSIVE
Idleness In United States Costs Three
Billion Annually Saya Engineers’ -Committee
Report
RUSSIA IN GRIP OF A FAMINE
Official Bolshevist Newspaper Print-
ed at Moscow Tells of Terrible
Sufferings of the People
MAY TIE UP MOVIE STUDIOS
More Wrokers In the California Pic-
ture Plante Expected to Strike
At Any Time Now
Los Angeles — With 850 skilled stu-
A SOVIET AGENT ARRESTED I dio workers on strike and two more
of the largest producing organize-
I 4(ai4 el tx Arid fnw Vi a etwllrA
Prominent Business Men are Believed
To Be Involved In Plot For
Ruaslan Trade
Chicago — The arrest by federal
authorities of Max Schallman a na-
tive of Russia and the action of
United States Commissioner James
R Glass in holding him to the grand
jury in bonds of 5000 for violation
of the espionage act Is believed to
have uncovered deals in which Influ-
ential business men of Detroit Cin-
- cinnatl Chicago and other cities are
aid to have urged their congressmen
and senators to hasten recognition by
the United States of the Soviet gov-
ernment so that contracts totaling
450000000 could be consummated
with Russia through Schallman
tlons slated for the strike list the
impending general tie-up of tbe mo-
tion picture industry loomed as an
immediate probability
Tbe Universal and Robert Brunton
studios were to go on tbe strike list
at once according to announcement
by Verne Ostenderf secretary of the
joint strike committee of tbe central
labor connclL
Two Dead In Airplane Crash
Reno Ner — W A Keddle of Fai-
Ion Ksr formerly state senator and
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES
— Grover Cleveland Bergdoll Phila-
delphia draft evader who escaped to
Germany probably -will not be extra-
dited through Canadian influence be-
cause of an old German treaty offl
cials of the Canadian department of
justice said today
— Half a billion dollars a year In
wages la being lost In the building ln-
dusetry through unemployment de-
clared a report made public recently
his pilot John Austin Frost of Ely by tbe committee on elimination of
Jtov were killed testanly new Elko m Industry of the Americas
whea their plsae collapsed sngineerin connclL
New York — The official bolshevist
newspaper Pravda of Moscow under
date of June 25 telling of the terrible
sufferings of tbe Russian people says
that “as a result of tbe drought and
the crop failure famine Is raging
among a population numbering about
25 million"
Berlin — The German government
is sending physicians and medicines
into Russia for relief of the plague
sufferers it was announced the other
day
Washington — An unconfirmed report
came out of Russia recently that
more than a quarter of a million Rus-
sians are dying every twenty-four
hours from cholera typhus and fam-
ine Tbe whole of tbe southeastern
part of Russia is reported In the grip
of the plague which is spreading at
an alarming rate owing to the lack of
sanitary and medical supplies
New York — Half a billion dollars a
year in wages is being lost In the
building industry through unemploy-
ment declared a report made public
by tbe committee on elimination of
waste In industry of the American
engineering council
Tbe committee appointed by Her-
bert Hoover when he was president
of the council asserted lack of work
was the outstanding fact in this in-
dustry Tbe report said waste was causing
huge losses in bnlldlng which includ-
ing all trades and common labor
ranked second among Industries and
contributed more than 3 billion dol-
lars yearly to tbe wealth of tbe na-
tion The chief sources of waste:
Irregular employment Inefficient
management wasteful labor regula-
tions customs or conditions prevail-
ing throughout the industry poorly
offering 3 a day
NO BASIS FOR IRISH PEACE
Preliminary Negotiations Between
Lloyd George and Do Valera Have
8truck An Obstacle
' Defeat Mexican Rebel Band
Vers Cruz— General Pelascletas
the revolutionary leader has been de-
feated at Chinampa and his troops
dispersed by federal soldiers nnder
Sanchez
— The Oklahoma City Clearing J
Houee association definitely pledged
tbe Oklahoma Cotton Growers' asso-1
elation credit of et least 1 million dol-
lars to help ftasace the 1921 crop
London — The Irish peace negotia-
tions have struck an obstacle A for-
mal communique was issued at Pre-
mier Lloyd George's official residence
saying that a basis for a formal Irish
peace parley has not yet been found
De Valera will return to Dublin and
after consultation with his col-
leagues ' will return The official
statement said:
’The basis of a formal Irish peace
conference has not yet been found
Mr De Valera has arranged to ra
torn to Ireland He will communi-
cate with Premier Lloyd George
again after farther discussion with
his colleagues”
The communique was Issued short-
ly after Premier Lloyd George had
banded to Eamonn de Valera the Eng-
lish government's peace offe
Write to Lydia E Pinkbara Medicine
Co (confidential) Lynn Masa about
your health Your letter wiU be opened
read and answered by a woman and
held In strict confidence
If people were compelled to follow
the advice they give thero would soon
he an advice fumlne
It Is much easier to be critical limn
to be correct — Disraeli
fcfc
GENUINE
M
iOJHLt:
DURHAM
tobacco makes 50
flood cifla reties for
10c
IVostorn Ganada
Offers tleiHh end Vextth
I sad to brought contentmsat and happiness
I to thousand of home seekers snd their (ami-
I lice who have started on her FREE bomeeteads
or boutht land it attractive prices They have
aatabiiabed their own bomea and secured prow
perky and independence In tto gnat piis
i atiil to to tod on oasjr terms
I Fertile Land at $15 ! $30 aa Aara
—tend similar to that which through mi
years haa yielded from 20 to 45 bush
of wheat to tto acre oata barley and flax
steo in gnat abundance while raising
horee cattle obeep and hose I equally
profitable Hundred oi farmera io W eaten
Canada have raised crop in a single season
worth more than tbe whole coat of their tend
Healthful climate good neighbors churches
schools rural telephone excellent market
mid shipping facilities Tto climate mid mil
offer inducements for almost every branch id
agriculture The ad vantages for
Dairying Mixed Farming
and Stock Raisins
maha a tremendous appeal to industrious
settlers wishing to improve their circum-
teancee For certificate entitling you
to reduced railway rates illustrated
literature maps description of farm
‘ nities in Manitoba “ —
urn Alberta and fj
tteh Columbia etc write
F H HEWITT
SOI Mala Street
Ksnue City Be
New Shoes
Old Shoes
Tight Shoes
' all feel the same
if you shake
into them
some
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE
Ttee anavpdle Mewling Pswdar
Takes tto friction from the ebne frseb-
lens tto feet and (Ives new vigor At!
night whan your lest are tired aore
land swollen from walking and dancing
(Sprinkle ALLEN'S FOOTEA8E lathe
((out-hath amd ewa
iwtMial ea ada
f Over IJNat aoaofi at Feud er tee th '
fPaetwura aead hy Army md Navy dm-
(lag the war
I Asti lew ALLOTS FOOT
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The Ames Review. (Ames, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1921, newspaper, July 29, 1921; Ames, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1759017/m1/2/: accessed May 22, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.