Evening Star Newspaper, March 4, 1921, Page 27

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THE [EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1921 03 APRIL 18 DESIGNATED. | {r or° it ionesletar & wiscy | WEDDED SIXTY-ONE YEARS | 1o, 1,0 Editor, Says He Was BAKER FILES ANSWER. | oottt oreris” n Tusbort o2 wiaf 2 yards. Morris & Co. have one yea: = ‘:‘u..:]d“\;bmo necessary to ap- earing Regarding Packers’ Stock | {2 Which to sell and the decree of | fr. and Mrs. T. W. azsons” Cele- Tells Ohio Company It Should o | POl 3im"of the Morgan Company i L lowed by the board, it is ready tn have the in Stockyard Compantes. | 3¢ ivén (5 the Sourl of wvify'ssia] brate Apaivemesy. . K zdnaped on_Ford’s Estafe| ‘v s co o cuins H AN PERCHgRs Justicé Stafford of the District Su- sed whenever the Saie exceeds 250 Mr. and Mrs. Thergh W. Parsons < Newton, D. Baker, ratiring Secretary |Seare Mr. Baker says he referred TUnbolatering done. Flitt ia reme Court has designated April 18 ¥ shares of stock. of this city cetle:al:—-:.ed"t.h;’::;tyi:or;f i % 4ot Yar, terday filed answer to the ll_hq :‘x;‘:ru::(r‘g:;:r? cMn .:d‘ ‘or.l ST :;n;“m“ r the hearing of testimony concerns o ening. . The celebfation was | B the Assoclated Press. et wnd Xilled, and, bonds valyea at]rue; isnied aghinst:bim by Colef|Lslonof the ciaims oste: Be wuge Inc., 15 1smse ock of Armour & Co. and Swift &| VOTE MONEY TO AID m day - EVenINg. idense ot Mr. and Mre. | » TORONTO, March 4—Henry Pottdr, | $10,000 taken. ¢ | Justice MeCoy In connection with the | gests. that the claimant must. seck Ge. Plitt Co.. Inc., 1= 0., in stockyard companies. Coun- Lh]nntofl R. Purdy, White Plains, leditor of a Philadelphia Hebrew 1" for the packing firms and the N Y. Mrs. Purdy being a sister of [ 10 00 O b been attacking epartment of Justice are permitted | of the General Confederation of La- | Mr. Tiareons. 20 mandamus proceeding-brought by the | redress in the United States Court of ucky Shooting. Morgan Engineering Company of Ohio | Claims. @ e e e A ST Ky.—After James Spicer |to_ compel him to review the action fons in the interval por at Leghorn, 1y, Mr. Parsons served as clerk in the | He ed anti- s was killed, “d his son, Floyd Spicer, | of the contract board which has dis- aty, oral evidence Will | o uioe ror Italy, has ended, says | =A% FCrn partment for a period [and who recently was reported mys- | wounded, ~when attacked "by Olli¢|allowed a claim of the company for MADE THEM EVEN. 30!3'/: LONDON, March 3.—The conference take d and, it 1 Bo rece by the court on the dau:"I‘,:,:"e“'g’e!:::“:d}::‘r::ex“::: ‘:::: of nearly fifty years, being retired | \riously to have disuppeared while Spicer, another son, and Hiram Spen- | workc done on contracts which wefe| . D1 paid you $10 a few days 'f-r'r:'fmu:f":fisa appointed the Mun- | federation voted 1,000,000 lire in e O mCof the White Plains |sceking to interview the manufac- [ [l HERE herc, th fm“:”,‘“:l"‘:nd“"‘,:q,; armistice.. Secretary Baker tells the | 480 to eliminate the knocking in my Soap them n" y Trust Company to act as trustee | favor of the Moscow internationale. ' health department. turer, arrived at police headquarters | at passershy who' attempted to re- | COurt: through Attorneys John machine; now it's just as bad as ever. CHAS F. MI here yesterday with a story of hav-| moVe the dead® mam's -body. ‘A posse | Laskey- nfd Paul B. Cromelin, th&t| Mecbanic—Doctor, I may say the U.ER. lm.. same of my rheumatism, which you Bros.' A was formed by officials here and |there are pending 30,000 such claims ller . ll.l 14th Sl. 4 Doors PEN ALL DAY FRIDAY ing been kidnaped by three MEN ON | qiarted for the mountains to arrest|in the War Department and that it 3Mr. Ford's estate near Detroit. . the men. To the police and newspaper men — > = he told the following tale: $165,000 Cotton Fire. " That the night of February 13.| ATLANTA, Ga—Loss estimated at| ||| latter two in fectual attempis (o Seel§165,000 was caused here by the de- ; - S e was | Struction by fire of the warchouse of | ||| o n v in an automobile and |the Royal Cotton Products Company, 1 | 3 | | tened with death after making | manufacturers of materials from lint- was taken from Detroit, across the |[or 40,000 bales of linters and low- Saturday attempts to escape; that he | ersand low-grade cotton. About 30,000 . - - . < Open Dorder into Windsor, and that finally | 8rade cotton were destroyed. loth d For The Rainy Season L T S =y | - an Second Floor Tor: ation, Mayor Arrested in Shooting. | . | A - of Potter's reported WELCH, W. Va—W. G 0 0 D Y E A R et Futes Pt wmoh Mo e o | We do not quote inflted war prices treated. So we might call it sever for him. fearing | Lynchburs, Va, a deputy sherift of to make present prices seem small. | & lien through the icc | McDowell county, W. Va., died in a| (}§! on a pond on his estate. local hospital from a pistol wound| | i The police report they have found|received here late Wednesday. John| | i e e et | Men! Here’s Your Chance to Get a Full | Dress Suit for Less Than !; Price JETROLT, Mich.— Police were called | 0f charges preferred against Mayor DIETROT dcH disturbance | White, which were under investiga-!| | to quell reet, | tion by the Welc bak hop in Hastings own council. b men and women attacked! e T, sming fron N n 5 inst alle EATINA 3 carm.. . ‘v: have oo MY'FUII Dress S\l:lb and Saturday we will reduce our Sread taken from customers 1l Grain Agency, which stock yndlin' them at le 5 : b,.',;i..i‘ ‘wdthrown into the.| Will have for its purpose the handling | | h 00, * than wholesale cost. All this Fall's styles, street. The disorder’followed the re- of farm products direct to the con-| | worth $60.00. I o Ju It Gordo sumer, was organized by 250 farme port of Justice Arthur E. G 1 union’ representat A vising Detroi not purch; and nearby states, The i bread from dealers who chacged al- | Gy QOO Sates, The erganization l l leged excessive prices scribed by co-operative grain elevator F |-concerns of the union. Lepers to Be Transferred. 5 " BOSTON.—Lepers on the state reser men Protest to France, ° ! vation on Penikese Istand, Buzzards | <. N..D.—The. North Da- ! D "lfl\ will be transferred to the federal A sena dopted a resolution call- {Teprosarium in Louisiana in the near| jng” on' the ‘President. to. protest to | future, if present plans are com-|{he President of France, and to tha b blcted ! . Of the league of natic s| l & | j | ags uriher use of neero tr Sizes | Killed at Supper Table. 1 sccupied territory of Gern: { i ~. Jones.| X! solution, which was passed, 34 to 46 ; o This Price Holds Good Saturday Only i%% wagMEN $1 2'50 The uncertainty of March days makes it a mecessity for one to have a raincoat handy at all times. A combination raincoat and over- coat is the best garment imaginable for these days of unexpected downpours. You'll find quality goods and sale prices here. al at Dewitt, v 4 ‘an unidentificd assailant S Pwith wembers of his fam Epldemic of Coldx pper table. His son, 1 Jones. | Snreading over the country. Guard tant city marshal. #inst them king Father John's RAINCOATS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Sizes 4 to 14--$5.95 to $10--Sizes 4 to 14 kers to dis- { ported plan of the with their | | continu. working con workmen will be discu | I for many vears a resident of Wash- |inston, divd yesiera | eck ago while aiding | sdicine.—Advertisement. raid. H A . ! nother Special for Saturda; | Packers Plan wage Cut. JAMES C. LEE DIES. 4 = g $ 75 OMAHA, Neb. — Packing company [ e ——— Slllts w th 2 P . Lempiosen” from. cvers nacking house | Givil War Veteran of Staunton 1 alrs rants — e e s here Lived Here Many Years. next Wednesday, at which the Te-| p.o ooy L o eran and First showing of New 1921 Spring Suits and Topcoats. $25, $30, $35 at Stauntd Va.. follewing aun i ess of several months. He was eighty-four years | i | | i | 1 1 | i i i { | | ‘MAM‘ 1004 F. St. N. W. iambling. old Minnesota | During th prohib’t lin the 1st vote of | s to the form. e w | placed in pricon at Wilmi 4O Beras KoohintANte Wiesk: ‘)«nvl €oniéneed to death as R i i pardoned later, ' J. Harahan. pre and Ohio “Put Yourself in Hahn's Shoes” son of W. (3 " i it 2 fon a nill in Byrd Park. Harahan i escaped unscathed, but two membe " | O — u s oe S | of the party are in 2 hospital. A | { twentv o-month id haby in the | car miraculousiy cscaped injury. O et emen ous NORFOLK The coast guard' e l l | cutter Seminol doned tire search jfor the floating . believed to have i been of Germ, origin, which o ’ } i reported 600 miles off Cape Hatte February 20 by the steamer Lee's That Face Harding OSSINING. Y..~Guy Nichols of | Trimble. Ohio. was put to death in, | the electric chair at for the murder of S °"1'::.‘,§'§“§2’" 10th and F Sts. N, W. _ Second Floor \ The body will be brought to this city for interment A number of distinctive, new Spring styles have just been received. Shoes that maintain the highest standards of qual- ity represented by the name “GRO-NUPS.” Sing Sing prison | £ muel Wolchoek, A 1 hav {a Brooklyn stationer. on November | . 4 And }Felfit (::lfoallx' ,ptr(l)cci;l:le\; 3, 1915, In'nis Tagt conversation witn “Of all the Presidents who succeeded war Presidents, Mr. Harding wiil face the most appalling been he Wi awes, Nic eference for death instead of life o levels—based on purchases we E‘r:‘.p:lgz)::r;(-r;l,{‘:'l w,'.:.ly.']“‘J,'.!:l‘a‘fi ,,,‘?;l mess,” according to the New York Herald (Ind. Rep.), while the New York Natson avers that “with 3 e put to death in the chair as (o] _ made at a time when whole- ]sp‘r-r;?tjllhl- rest ot g ite here” e | the single exception of Lincoln, probably no President in our.national history has taken office with as . i tol the warden. * have t 0, - ; . . . sale costs reached their lowest TIShT e werl mu howi L hacatal pressing a burden of unsolved questions.” Mr. Harding “must meet and overcome obstacles eoreater Ak s g tacles greater mother. bro and_ sisters g levels in the past four years. hiave kapt than ever Roosevelt surmounted,” says the n request. mble, Ohio. Th from me at my o Newark News, which assures him “he need never fear that i , I could not fuceithem: T aull carcy history will tint his administration as drab.” White Nubuck Laced The Sale of i o 40 iy e by . B S e T : : e . Patents, White Tops Bovs and @il Shioss | N e e T | While the domestic problems of the incoming President are indeed formidable, peculiariy baffling Infants’ sizes to 5 \g;z, Comort i . i : The Ohte wtiities and fateful, journalistic observers agree. are the problems of foreign policy that confront him. Europe, coae < B oW, we wii] close ou 0 nissiol and T v attorney | e nelee 5 s O 2 . o . Py Child’s sizes 4 to 8. .. “ehort. lines” oft Misses’ and. Chil %"..'R’p”r!‘u et Tatirtecian with JERiiL] remarks the Outlook, turns to America “with mingled envy, fear, and hope,” and “it is for the Repub- es 83 to 11 dren’s, Big and Little Boys' and | omdy_ in “Ohio Teharging increased | lican Administration to justify that hope with assist: based upo ders i i Misses’ sizes 117 to 2 “juni}:r S ol s g i enger rates authorized by the | s | to justify hope with assistance based upon an un erstanding of reality, and Big Girls’ sizes. ...... $4.50 to $5.50, e nurbes e g | 4 in United States district court | to sweep. aside- that fear and envy with justice and good will.” The Providence Evening Bulletin (Ind.) styles in all leathers but not every | = recalls with approval Mr. Harding’s Armistice-day speech at Brownsville, in which he thus defined our . patents. Gray Tops size in each and every { Losen Suit Against Brokers. Pt i W i . f Ohio. — Henry A, foreign policy: “We choose no aloofness, Mo en d iy Tk e e $3 50 L e e gn g ess, we shll‘k no obligations, we forsake no friends, but we build il et i FoRE S g e futton &G0, brokers) Jon nationality, and we do not mean to surrender it.’ Misses’ sizes 114 to 2 " . el i hent e 7 FQ . £C Boys Sprmg Shoes | ey ';‘,w‘I;flnm“;;“]-“,a; e In the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, March 5th, there is a careful pres- s & ™ I bling one, only, d that no actual | B . ¢ i . A Growmg Glrls Of Extra Quality | purchases were made, o oo entation and explanation of the many problems that will confront President Harding both at home and | - O - M 1N, < £ leadi _uy - e it - H 2 el New Oxfords and p“‘“P’ Iontirely new stocks of new Spring g o oA, Rich- abroad Meetheruith SpLionStox leading newspapers of all political persuasions regarding them. I ”""-”':'ff] e '\‘rm\’\"" Loy \h\m“ g 3;;1 ;l":('f.( 'I'{'[) I{’I‘I e h.:',rc' |l-h;' ot e Mot Otligr news-featares of andoubted value and interest are: 1ere for * Jumo omer A\ smar Yy bes' i 9) grade, which y. as shot and 4 5 ¢ et p SV new Oxford in a new light Tan Calf ‘means the utmost in service. Shoes “ation nere. | ) and distinctive new Strap- Pumps that we could not have pome ol . s 5 o ith oo fll voo sud Sotd st spuing it | s - The New Republic of Finland heel. Si 2. to 6. Spe- $6 $7.50. Sizes 1 to 515 $5 45 i cial at S AtoD,at... 5 s - s K TG altase SRerke A Concise Historical Account Accompanied By a Full-page Colored Map Pope Benedict has A New Baby Loux s Pump v “u':-.‘.‘,;.:“:‘r"‘.).v‘.f.“.',l:’:'“fiily'}r’h‘“”“\'f&i{ : Mr. Hughes as Secretary of State The Englishman’s Day of Rest —that smart women are hound to ‘.',:.m.‘.‘; ‘;T“I n ’;'nu‘l;\\s‘ h\:':vlnll.u'lw 3 p:’l'l::E North DakOta,g FinanCial Crisis Jame‘ Gibbom Huneker like. Instep strap and contrasting j/ofi the EOBTRIN trimming of Suede. The low heel makes it a practical walking shoe. Brown Kid with Brown Suede strap and trimming to match. To Help the World Buy Our Geods Christianizing Our Orientals A Plan to Remodel the British Empll‘e The Workingman in the Church Busy German Shipyards .| Finding $50 Worth of Politeness in Chicago What Freights Mean to New Zealand Business, Plain, Mixed, and With Not Sure Men Are Bandits. DETROIT, Mich—Clerks of the Morton Bond Company were unable to positively identify through photo- | graphs, the two men held by New York police in connection with the recent robbery of the firm's office Li‘ht . Tm c‘“ with . here, in W l\l( ll two detectives ,“i‘ie Hllmanity" Drift T°ward Degeneracy Foreign Flavor. con= o . . < trasting Suede strap.and trim- Fme for Rheumatum Making Nurses in Eight Weeks How to Spot and Curve Defects in Brains g ; e A The Latest Way to Handle Express Sports and Athletics { Musterole Loosens Up Those | “ y A iSl:lfl‘ Joints—Drives Oput l}’(a‘ixcx The Craze for VOC&I Stunts ! ToP‘“ OEthe D‘y' The Moon-Calf Photographed Best of the Current Poetry Striking Half-Tone Illustrations and Cartoons March 5th Number on Sale Today—Newsdealers 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year $8.75 ATU RD AY at our 7th and 9th Street Stores only, continuing the sale of Women’s $8.50, $10 and $12 Low Shoes—Pumps Strap effects, Dress and Sports Oxfords. “Short lines” $5 95 of many of our recent “best sellers,” reduced to....... You'll know why thousands use Mus- terole once you experience the glad re- lief It gives. Get a Jar at once from the nearest drug store. It is a clean, white oint. ment, made with the oll of mustard. Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and comfort while it is being rubbed on! Musterole I8 recommended by many doctors and nurses. Millions of jars are " ‘Tis a Women's Saturday used annually for bronchitis, croup, “.fk °' H . S . 1 necl:. ll"llm;s.nagll"ilgll:v Pl!l;l'lly' u- osiery Pe$13 S e back °.:"u{fi"7’ DERIne. et e Distinction to Another shipment of those bruises, cl ain splendid Full-fashioned Silk S el Be a Roader of Stockings in Black and the 2 The Literary fashionable shades of Brown and Gray. Rare values at $1.95 414 9% S ' S°" 1014-16 Pa. Ave Tt &K 233PaAve SE Digest

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