Saturday, Mar. 31, 1923

Having perused well the chronicle of the week, the Vigilant Patriot views with alarm:

Sir Basil Zaharoff--again the shadow of his name crosses the news. (See Page 12.) Coal Profiteers (even though William Randolph Hearst is their most active foe.) (P. 3.)

A tiger hunter who is divorced on grounds of desertion and cruelty. (P. 27.)

Indications that the recurrence of universal war after 1928 will not surprise the British War Office. (P. 26.)

What Miss Abigail Harding may have expected to find in Greenwich Village. (P. 26.)

The resignation of a pacifist from the League of Nations Commission on Intellectual Cooperation. (P. 22.)

A matter of naval geometry which has fluttered the chancelleries of Europe and endangered the solidity of an American Cabinet. (P. 5.)

Murder of the authors of Tine Guilty One--momentarily expected! (P. 16.) Great American business men who can so far deny their sense of dignity as to be found playing Piggly-Wiggly. (P. 23.)

The Yank who ventured his unsophisticated humor upon the subtle air of Paris. (P. 27.)

A budget deficit that is likely to approximate $180,000,000. (P. 2.)

Free-for-all fights in the French Chamber and the Tokyo Diet. (PP. 10 and 13.)

Toboga Island--the Achilles' heel of Panama Canal. (P. 5.) Minds that list Maraschino, well-known cherry, as a Premier of Russia. (P. 19.)