Evening Star Newspaper, April 4, 1921, Page 13

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leges Plan Intelligent Study LEAGUE OF LIBERALS FORMS AT HARVARD. 250 Students From 27 Col- f - 1,000,000-Egg Order From Pacific Fleet Stirs Valparaiso VALPARAISO, Chile, April 4. —Officers of t e supply whips | which accompanied the United tates Pacific fleet on its recent South American cruine struck a staggering blow to the uride of local produce merchants, when 1 exgn were ordered for the 15,000 bluejackets on the Teturn voyage to American weaters. ! | | | i PREMIER 10 OFFER COMLCRS VEWS e e Appears Today-in-Gommans, While Britain Seeks te- - THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, [HOUSTON PREDICTS PROSPERITY | IN ANALYZING NATIONAL SURVEY tary of Treasury Sees En- couraging Future, With Taxes Country’s Biggest Question. APRIL 4 1921 ROCKEFELLER AIDS | YONKERS DRY PLAN Other Prominent Financial Support Given Prohibition Enforcement Organization. —_— i Red Legislator Lashed for Failure to Carry Out Wishes WARSAW, April Z.—Feasanis Y ANNIE LG DEA ATNDR !Famous Prima Borna of Fittv Years Ago Among First of Great U. S. Singers. oY VALK Exx laying tn ich : tri ers. : i 0‘\ Problems of Day. In these Tntitaden at thix coason Meet Strike Dangers. By the Associated Press. some rdication®iiof a change in this Tncidentatiy, Maven Informed \ nd it in doubtful whether the | | By the Amaciated Prel . -~ - BALTIMORE, April 4 —David F.|GSlon, 4 oot to certain| CORNWALL, N. Y. April 4 —| | (hose abled that ke hnd NORWALL | Coxtss Aptil Mi—dnnls S rhgAseh i e e S bt et LONDON, April 45The coal strike jHouston: former Secretary of the Treas- | rayorable domestic conditions, The cost|P1edges from John D. Rockefeller.| | voted i favor of Louise Cary, favcus prims dopea to fill pne-third of the bix order, TRADE CONFERENGE OF THIRTY NATIONS Ambassadors and Ministers CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, April 4.—The Intercollegiate Liberal League, an orgunization which, through liberal clubs in colleges and universities, plans “to crehte among college men ang women ah intelligent interest in the problems of the day,” was or- ganized at Harvard University yes- teréwy by 250 students, representing twéaty-seven educational institu- tio & S anvouncing its purp the Jedgue said it proposed “to brins about the fair and open-minded con- situatfon continued -the -forefost topic . of discussion throughout .all secfions of Great' Britain today, with labor, commerce,” trade and finance deeply agitated overthg-serious con- dition into which the community has been plunged by thé shutdown of the collieries. R 3 Every one was awaiting the ex- pected ~ statement - Dy.«-Mr. Lloyd George, the prime. mfnister, in_the house of ‘commons ldte this after- noon, which_ - it-.was-hoped would have a_clarifyig dnfluence. Mr. Lloyd George arrived during. the morning from Checquers Court, ury, in analyzing a country-wide survey, of industrial, financial, agricultural and ‘other gconomic: conditions, declares that “the’ big national question is taxation, with pedce settlement and international trade next.” The survey, made in all of the geo- graphical divisions of the United States by fleld agents of the Fidelity and De- posit Company of this city, consisted of answers to thirty-sixwuestions by farm- ers, bankers, manufacturers and public officials. An interesting feature of the statistics is that in every section except New England and the Rocky mountain states building operations. show a of Jiving has .appreciably diminished. Building operations in a number of dis- tricts tend “to" increase. There have!: ntly been no strikes of consequence.. ity of labor per man terials are plentiful, and physical trans- portation conditions are good, . There have been no business failyres of mo- ment. The crop. outlook is satfactory and the banking situation has improved. The country is better off today than it was three months ago., and manufacturers {n. growing numbers are planning definite _production schedules. - Information from other quarters- than _this -&urvey indicates that the . automobile industry and Jr.. and others of financial support of “the Yonkers plan™ of enforcing the national prohibition afiendment were announced here last night by William H. Anderson, head of the Anti-Saloon League of New York, at the annual State conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Mr. Andergon, in the course of an address in which he formally omened the campaign of the Alted Citizens of |. America to nationalize the method of law - enforcement which has given Yonkers wide publicity, declared that in New York alone 200,000 persons are back of the movement to intpoduce it ©considering it the futnre stromg- hold of social Feactions. atrokes homemade cat-o’-nine-tails for voting against the judgment of | his constituents. ed a c was { New York banke mond she had i ed here death was due to the in | |ase. ! | Annie Louise Cary | | Wayne, Kennebec oount with a 1841. She first sang pub) FRANKLIN STATUE TO BE® at the age of cighteen. | graduated from ' the v in Maine at the age one and studied for a taymond, . and as Mrs. Ra was born t her homa the widow a former since 1883, (She was seventy-nine years old and firmities of 1 v Men ih licly in the Rowe Street Baptist Church. Boston. She was Gorham Sem- of twenty- time under eidwration of social, industrial. po- - o > B rta- | Some textile lines are picRing up|: ] CONVEYED BY T £ 3 his country marked increase. General transporta 1 : O othe Y : studied liical and_international questions | g t Invitation to N At o eabinet meaatiee: and presided| fion conditions in every state were re- | ROW. But the pubile T still restrict- | 00 other states © P A K Lo W Whediers oh ciiaon 1B by, groups of collese stuaents” ~ | Accept Invitation to New | i tres Tonatasress “The ey | PoTted: “good” and raw materials plenti- | inE its buying and probably will con.| o “TRENE (AL e AR Sl under. Corst in” Milen Towo vehrs <o i use n s S 3 Savi 3 SUrVe e s - b3 S e e e vt ernment’s position, it was antici- ;g“;“_adbai"r:g‘i’ O, oon tates. 4 retail price reductions become more|Years ago “to uphold American ideals|Sons of Revolution Plan to Take |later she made her debut in opera ereed or principle other York Convention. freedom of assembly pated, would be clearly defined in Police officials of twenty-seven states |nearly equal to the . reduction and the United States Constitution, at Copenhagen. Later, under the and Gesussion 1a the colleges.” tho the prime ministers statement, and | (@ PRI Teen @ moticeable in- |in manufacturers’ and wholesalers'|and partlcufirly the eighteenth| Sculptured Memorial Over Route |direction of Maurice Sirakosch. she o, s Ak By the Associated Press. the altusgion Side for discussion of | crease in crime over last September, but | prices. 3 R iAo soni i eaianed He Used in R appeared in opera with Christine NEW YORK, April 4—Ambassadors, g Y (QMmorrow. a decrease was reported in Massachu- Approaching Normal. purpose is to put into opera- sed unaway. Leaders n Movem Among those who addressed the delogates were John Haynes Holmes, tor of the Community Church, ew York city: Augustus G. Di edjtor of the Crisis, and Harry V fidler. executive searetary of the Intercoilegiate Socialist Society. . Holmes told the students th: way to amount to something ministers and commercial representa- tives of more than thirty nations have accepted the invitation of the National Association of Manufacturers to at- tend a conference of ambassadors and ministers on world trade during the association’s three-day annual con- vention in this city, beginning May 16. “long_years of | conterence on the second .day of the and the period fconvention, unless some unforescen of revolution is here, Dr. Holmes |circumstance should, detain him in continued: Washington. A specfal train bearing The world of labor has made up |the distinguished guests is scheduled its mind and there i8 mothing more |to leave the capital at midnight to be said. The crisis, in other (May 16. Words, is Tight here on the threshold. | “This important gathering.” a stat ment said, “which w! e the Laber Fundamentally Right. its kind ever held in this country, has “Labor is _sometimes Wrong INipeen arranged in order that repre. Asserting that the evolution are gone o- of Rush of Water Stayed. As far as the colliery districts were concerned, the best news was that the Tush of water into many of the pits was being stayed, the manage- ment, with the help of vélunteers, manning the pumps. In other mines, with_fewer volunteers available, the waters were gradually. gaiming on the workers. ; volunteers were forced to quit by striking miners, but disaster.so far ! has been averted not only in the south Wales, but in the Yorkshire, Notting- hamshire and Northumberland dis- triets, Authorities at London were pgo- ceeding today with their arrange- ments for the provisioning of the peo- ple of the country, if the meetings called for Tuesday and Wednesday setts, M The maintenance by retailers of a relatively high price level has been perh: the chief stumbling-block to quickened industrial activity. The great cut in producers’ and whole- salers’ prices last summer and fall was not followed by proportionate reductions in the ptices to consumers. It is apparent that we are approach- ing the point where many manufac- Maryland, ginia, West- Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Ken- tucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Missis- Sippi. b In every state the consensus of opin- ion was that the farmers. have not dis- they can furnish goods at a cost within the consumer’s reach. An appreciable reduction in wages s noted in every section and in vir- tually_every kind of industry. The fact that savings accounts have in- creagsed in the industrial sections, however, would seem to indicate that in such district wage and salary re- ductions have not been_as great a the reductions in the prices of com- modities, and that, therefore, fortu- nois, lowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and the Pacific coast states. The crop outlook for 1921, however, in every case was reported fair or good. Criais Passed. ‘The survey indicates that the bu: ness world is still feeling its way, but | with increasing confidence and with the conviction that the worst has passed,” said former Secretary Houston. “The country has successfully borne the strain caused by a most notable drop in tion all over the United States the “successful experiment in_ practical civics,” which, he said, had been made in Yonkers, his home city. In telling of its results there he said: Police Must Do Duty. “City officials no longer are indif- ferent or defiant, and there has been created a tangible majority sentiment for law observance. The Allied Cit- tained respecting violation of, the prohibition law for the sole purpose of publishing it, -in order that citi- 2ens may know the degree and kind of enforcement they are getting from their public -officials -in return for their taxes. Every one' pays taxes in some form, and they have a right to know what they get for their money. ‘We have always refused to turn over any evidence to be used to 1723, month. ned for the due here parade will from’ Battery Park to th A detachment of Boy Scouts will act as guard of honor throughout the trip. Elaborate ceremonies are plan- reception of the statue, on April 23. accompany plaza, where exercises, direction and Brig. Gen. will be held. of Col. Henry by NEW YORK, April 4.—Plans for trucking Paul W. Bartlett's statue of Benjamin Franklin from Baitimore, Md., to Waterbury, Conn. as nearly as possible over the-route taken by Franklin when he ran away from home as a printer’'s apprentice in were announced today cials of the Sons of th E Revolution. A offi- Nilsson. . ! The first public appearance of the contraito jn New York was in 1570. In 1873 she created the role of Pri cess Amneris in the initial pr tion in this. country of “Aid: 1874 Miss Cary went abroad and ap- peared in opera with Adelina_Patti. Sha returned to America in 1576 and sang many times until she retired from opera in 18§1. ” was to identify themselves “to the In the Ske posed of all their last season's crops. That organi i 3 5 Hmt with the labor world.” and to| In making the annoucement the as-|wales, a fire z::hz;’:,fl‘;‘:"‘fgfimg' Tow prices and shortage of money and | turers can get materials at prices|iZens of Y;m"fc“e”‘nfi“:“ rely insisted | planning patriotic Qrem‘zo‘nl‘i:: at wi/\llr:,ov::rno'¥rl!'(‘:ip|\s:el Fay vt PPedcn “the gospel of free soul and |sociation stated that . Secretary of |which it was feared would destroy |1abOr are said to have caused a reduc- | they can afford fo pay, and With|oyoji ‘carn their salaries, . |cach stage of the journey. which will | Kellogg, Campanini and Carlotti Ofiigee Susitadon State Hughes would formally open the [the workings. Some of the Fifeshire | iOR In acreage in all states except Ili-) lower wages and more offic] “Under the plan evidence is ob-|D>¢ Made during the latter part of the | Patti. She sang on_the concert stage for a year and retired from profes- Oliver 'B. Bridgman, The Franco-American sional life when she m Raymond, in 1552, Took New York by NEW YORK. April 4. A patriotic the statue e City Hall under the W. Sackett ican singers to hecome wo She made her operatic deb narried Mr. Annie Cary, who died at her home in Nor- walk, Conn., was one of the first Amer- orid famous. ut in Amer- muany specific Issues. Labor at the {sentatives of other nations may have present time has a false answer 10 lan opportunity to explain to the men many questions. Labor is using |nost intimately concerned in financing means which I_cannot approve of |and extending our foreign trade how but, fundamentally, from the stand- |the constructive forces of the United point of dreams and ons of thelStates may be co-ordinated best to ages and tr?‘r;l u-leblr.vlrg: n:'c;:!l;i:; serve the needs of the world. of “huptan (e Inhor I T8 Demands to Be Discussed. orted by all those b, i et - “There will be discussions of the who hope and dream and would give their lives for a better Nocid: re | Dest methods to meet the demands of “Here in America we have mo! : B S T ety tham in any |Europe and other countries for raw other country of the world, because |and manufactured materials, and to the revolution will be longer de-|extend the credit that is so essential. layed here than anywhere else. We | The National Association of Manufac- o Cuge Enis time and opportunity |turers comprises 6,000 manufacturing to prepare, and if we thus succeed {enterprises, which produce more than as liberals there will be a revolution | 75 per cent of the entire manufactured in this country which will indeed at |output of the nation, and this conven be the commonwealth of man |tion will give their members an op upon earth.” portunity to obtain the foreign view- The officers of the league elected | point direct for the first time in their are: Muriel Morris, Wellesley, presi- | history. dent; Donald Mazor, Columbia, and |’ Each session of the conference will be George O. Arkin, New York Uni- |devoted, it was stated, to a particular ice presidents; John Rot group of nations and each will have as Mary | an-honorary:chairman one of the am- - that group of nations. speciat~information section will be ‘where each country may have special literature or special tion for the benefit of the nately, the decrease in wages has not necessitated a lowering of the standard of living. The credit situation is improved. Interest rates range from 6 to 8 per cent for the country as a whole, but Society, of which Dr. ray Butler is ticipate. One of the most impressive cere monies of the journey is plan: 1 Philadelphia for Suzda): p‘:::;‘l'ld l"Tl the 131st anniversary of the death of Franklin. A memorial meeting will be held at the Franklin grave, at 5th and Arch streets, whioh will be pre. ceded by other meetings at Inde- pendepce Hall and other historic Places in the Quaker city. Exercises also will Wilmington, Del.; Borde:t%w:,’"‘l"m:f ton, Washington's Crossing, Primee ton, New Brunswi boy, N. 3. swick and Perth Am- 1 prices, particularlyof a vast volume of raw materials, and has weathered a trying period of ‘liquidation. “The demand for finished products hds not deveioped to the point where @ur factories feel justified in taking the requisite quantity of ,our surplus | banking funds are reported available raw materials to furnish fhe necessary | by every section except the south and relief to their producers, but there are ! Rocky mountain region. - 400 HENS TO TAKE/éART NUMBER HURT IN CRUSH. IN.3-YEAR EGG CONTEST [street Car Passengers Stampeded Secure convictions; that is ghe very essence of the plan. Publicity in the form of the organization's affidavits telling ef liquor infractions helps officicls who are doing their best and enables the weeding out of those who wink at violations. Thus, as we have operated in Yonkers, we shall enable the people of any com- munity to exert the same pressure of public opinion to force officials to_do their dut; Mr. Anderson said that the Allied Citizens was designed to supplement the Anti-Salobn League. Organiza- tion of the Allied Citizens, he said, will be started by the league this cholas Mur- resulted.in the railwaymen and, trans- president, also will par- port workers deeiding to throw in their Tot with the miners and join them in striking. Plants Ready to Shut Down. Announcements that additional big industrial works were preparing to suspend their double: shifts, prepara- tory to total clesing and tht damping down of the furnaces, came during the morning. In line with other méasures restrictive of ordinary activities be- jcause of the, strike, the races sched- uled to be held at Lingfleld were abandoned. A No moye was made by either side looking to fresh proposals for settle- ment, but'is was considered in both labpr- and- political = circles that ,the sitdation was likely to be clarified by the sessions of the house of com- mons today and tomorrow. GOVERNORS TO ATTEND. Accept Invitations for Annual Meeting of Community Board. School superintendents and gover- nors of all states have been elected sonference. counselors of the national community Among the' countries whose am| - ebae e | R S b SRR it N s D mee! it ton Arsemtise e i m“‘i'“"“ "'g"g'r'“é‘;l‘; - | was--announesdtoday. . Henry 1ivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chile, China, Co- E -J n, .The board of Up Tom: - lombia, _Costa . Rica, Cuba, 0-| trustees of tlie orgafiization will meet Imperative need of more adequate |Yakia, Denmark, Dominican republic. qeeding 4 armory epace for the National/Guard | Ecuador, Finland, France, Great Brit- | g PrS uu{;fi Sordated? to rulnil of the District will be pointed out to|ain, Greece, Guatemala, Ital regommendations , made by - sixteen members of the board of directors of | Nethertands, Nicaragua, Norway, divisions of the féderal government,” the Washington Chamber of Com-|ma, Peru, Poland, Persia, Portugal, Ru-| IVI®0R® 0 o0 "Com, Focommenda. merce at their meeting in the cham- | mania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and |- rollowed a year of weekly oon- ber’s rooms, Homer building, tomor- | Venezuela. feromicon. | The PHrpose’ lso. was to take over the community work which row night at § o'clock. At that time it is expected the boa: i Wil Gatermmine on what OsTactne s s plans to transfer its work to Con- ‘will be given its legislation committee | armory and convention hall be con- gress and the states within a period with her art, her superb voi posing stage presence. As a gir) exceptional beauty and extraordinary range of her voice were recognized, her compass being three and a half octaves. In America, the singer zlw. billed as a contralto, reducing the com- pass of her voice to two and a half octaves. In January 1874, she sang the role of Ottrud at the academy. being the first American woman to appear in a Wagnerian role, although the opera was given in Italian by the Strakosch company. She continued singing in opera, concerts and festivals until the spring of 1882, her last appesrance £ at the festival in the Seventh Regi ret Armory, under the direction of Theodore Thomas. vear she married. Before her American debut the singer studied for a year in Milan and for three vears appeared in opero in various European countries, singing about forty roles, some of them written for a high soprano voice and others for a baritone. In September, 1870, she made her first professional appearance in Amer- ica at concerts with such celebrated artists as Christine Xilsson, soprano, and Vieuxtemps, violinist, sharing hon- ors with them. The troupe gave sev- enteen concerts in New York to over- flowing houses at enormous prices. Miss Cary's ancestors came to this country from England early in the seventeenth century. Her father, Dr. Howard Nelson Cary, was a direct de- scendapt of the Carys.of Somerset, where a village, still_called Castle Cary, was the home of Norman barons for ‘generations. Her mother, Maria Stockbridge, was directly descended front Elder Brewster of Mayflower fame. fame. —_— G. W. U.’S BIG INCREASE.- Statistics Show Enrollment Nelnrly + Quadrupled Since 1911. Statistics just compiled and made public today by Prof. Elmer Louis Kayser, secretary of the George Washington University, show the en- rollment at tie institution has almost quadrupled since 1911 and practically doubled since 1916. Present regis- tration is4,106, but last season’s sum- mer school enrollment brings the grand total for the academic year 1920-1921 to 5,139. Registration in_the various depart- ments follows Schgpl of graduate studies, 222; Columbian College, 2,019 college of engineering. 539; teachers' college, 302; law school. 897: medical school, 413; pharmacy school, 14, and ast season’s summer school, 1,033. Columbian College today is almost twice.as large as the entire university was in 1911 In June of that Stephen C. Mason, president of the association, will preside at the five ses- sions of the orrow Night. . by Short-Circuited Wires. Bace to Be Conducted by High| Four persens wers seriously inured P T y hurt yesterday | ficials. Schools, Who Will Market afternoon when passengers on a west-1 Quoting from Mr. Rockefeller's e Product. bound Cabin John street car, alarmed|pledge, he read: “The question of at. smoke from short-circuited wires, | the wisdom and propriety of national MURPHYSBORO, Iil., April 4 —Four | stampeded for the exits. prohibition is po longer at issue, hundred hens have been entered to | AMONE those injured in the crush|having been decided by the adoption aum! = 5 were Miss Dorothy C. Rogers, seventeerr) of the federal constitutional amend- @ate’in a three-year national eS8-1ay- | years old. 221 1st street northeast; Mrs. | ment and sustained by the United ing contest, starting -here November | Thomas McCoury, thirty years old, 2309 | States Supreme Court” It is now 1. The race is regarded in Illinois | N street; Mrs. Thomas Higgins, thirty-|the law.of the land. 7 held, five years old, 1231 New York avenus,| “To fail in_ the observance and as the first of its sort ever held, |and Miss Gladys E. Scheutt, twenty-|enforcement of such a law strikes The contest was planned and Will | four years old. at the very foundations of orderly be conducted by Paul Arndt, high| Mrs Higgins received a fracturs of|govermment, and is in that way an sehoal. instructor of vocational edu-|her left ankle and suffered from shock, | attack upon civil liberty, for in a o tion here, and his class of frty boys. | att injiry to the right knee temporarily | republic there can be no freedom Wide interest has been aroused |disabled Mrs. McCoury, Miss Scheutt’s|for the individual if there is no amone poultrymen, and eighty breed- right arm was fractured and Miss| respect for enforcement of the laws.” ers from widely ' sattered sections Rogers received an injury to her right | of five hens|leg. ey receiv 5P reatment, ! L D B T 3 <Barl Toward, twelve Years oid. 3024 LINDSEY SENTENCE WAITS. s have ,ace{ Nicliols Sivenue;: Auacostia.. wie kol DENVER, Colo., April 4—Exccution JETQ'S“& &1 ivin, Teate super- | down by an automobile driven by Frank] of sentence upon Judge Bep B. Lind- fntendent of vocational agriculture,{Deuterman, 523. Virginia avenus: sey of Denveg’s juvenile t, grow- it assure breeders that their poultry | east, at 6th and I streets southeast, yes-| ing out of his _conviction Y e ee the best attention. Busi-|terday affernoon. He was taken tol of contempt of court for refusing t W rece Vot Murphysboro and poul-{Providence Hospital, where. the' police| testify to what a ward of his court e ot the vicinity have under- | reported, physicians said he was not|had told him about murder. was de- Waitten the race for $1,000. seriously hurt. \ i ferred today until next Saturday. The boys will market the eggs, pro. [ —-- viding chicken feed in return without - cost. A market has already been ar- fanged for St. Louis. The privilege - of selling the eggs, it is belleved. wil ' ) offset the nen:; - ~ ; < 2 ] X 8 = m;‘;':gn';:y that the hen that does the . Peckling gets undue credit for laying, ; the egz. Poultry houses of the latest 7 L >~ 4 type are being erected by the high (o s ] 6 school boys m w a” / f i I L = 3 o E with regrd not only to the question |structed. yruri r arm pace The committee on library is expect- o ;'en?':nt ngnro ?’::':nstter g?m' Fec. | ed to bring in & report on the ques-|°f twenty-five years.’ ommendations to Congress on. the|tion of mfl tic Library cxtension, and i repo; s0 e “hear m the : : S o, '€, ImPprovement of the |08 S eaith committee on the loca.| A Little Thing That Counts. Brig. Gen. Anton Stephan, com-|tion of a soldier rehabilitation hos-| Her Husband—What are you fuss- ‘manding general of the local National | Pital here, from the committee on re-|ing about now; your new dinner Guard, will point out the difficulties |tail trade regarding its efforts to re<|gown? in the way of the raising of the|turn the buyer to the market, and the| Mrs. Skirtzuppe—No guard units here, particularly telling | membership committee. ner gown is the lgast of the need of additional armory space. The chamber's committee on National Guard will present its rec- mmendations _that a _combination We're responsiblé for your complete satisfaction; get it or your money back. Mgison Francaise 1213 Connecticut Avenue Affiliated Establishments Whose Business Standards Are Strongly Endorsed by the Connecticut Avenue Association. GLOVES AND MITTS, $5.00 Every One Guaramteed. 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