Evening Star Newspaper, September 9, 1921, Page 13

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SO TNEPS—— + ———— N e TEACHERS MAY WIN | HIGHER PAY RATES, Cutting Process for School " Budget Has Not Reduced Salary Schedule. OFFICIALS STANDING P'AT Have Hope That Commissioners of . District Will Approve Their i~ ' Present Estimates. With school authorities slandmzl Pat for the increase in salaries pro-| ‘vided for officers, teachers and clerks in the school system in the budget for the next fiscal year, they may go! through the paring process unscathed, | in the opinion of some District offi-| cials. - The Commissioners alreaay have slashed $4,000,000 from the “original estimates for $12,000,000, but the cut- ting process, it was said today, has not yet affected the salary schedule. In reducing the estimates it is ap-; parent that the Commissioners gave some intimation that they would probably use the scissors on the in- creased pay scale. School officials| ‘upon learning this hurried to the Dls-] trict building and pleaded with the city heads to approve the increases they inserted in the budget. 2 Other Cities Studied. ‘The new salary schedule was draft- ed by school authorities after a care- ful study of wages paid school em- Ployes in various cities throughout the United States. It is designed to give the Washington school. workers a wage which will compare favorably "'hl';hlhhl riceived by school employes n other cities of the same siz National Capital. ST Increases provided for teachers in the estimates range from $700 al year basic for_ superior- high school ! teachers to $200 for elementary! school teachers. A raise of $1,000 a Year is provided for principals of the Junior high schools, while the high’l and normal school heads are slated for an increase of $1.300 annually. Perhaps the most urgent of the Jn- creases desired by school officials is that provided for the clerks in the school system. It is pointed out that the salaries now paid the clerks are by no means sufficiently high to re- tain a trained force or to secure | trained material to fill vacancies and new positions. The pay of the clerks is far below that of similar employes | of the federal government, and in many instances is below that of simi- :::nimployes in the District govern- Leave When Trained. “With low entrance salaries and small chance for promotion,” said an official, “the public school system can secure. only the most inexperienced clerk. Weeks and months are then spent in his training, but as ex- perience is gained and the clerk grows more valuable he yields to the attractive offer of positions out- side the public school system, and In- stead of becoming an asset, the cost of his training becomes a liability which is ever increasing.” Clerks receiving a minimum of $960 a year are recommended for an in- crease of $240 annually in the budget, provided with an increase of $200 B{ year. - One of the items in the budget | which probably will not be elimi- nated is a prevision for the creation of a paid corps of twenty-five sub- stitute teachers. Such a corps of teachers has been the aim of school authorities for years and has been pointed out by Supt. Frank W. Ballou as one of the fundamental needs of' the District public school system. FINAL DECREE SIGNED. Justice Hoehling of the District Su- Reiley. The father is given the custody of the daughter, Eleanor V.| Relley, and the mother is to have the son, Luther W. Reiley. Attogney P. J. Ryan appeared for the husband. . .THE "EVENING Love” .... Finale, “The Moon Shines on the Moonshine™ Wedding March, one-step ... “Lohengrin” ....,. - trot _characteristic, .Olman apd -~ lon “Spring . BAND CONCERT. By the United States Soldiers’ Home Band, at the bandstand today, beginning at 5:60 p.m. | Von' Concert by Community Cen- | ter's Band, James E. Miller, di- rector, at Smithsonian grounds ‘Caresses. ...Sousa “The Star Spangled Banner.” .Wagner Al Jolson “The Star Spangled Banner” -— PANESE CROWN John §. M. Zimmermann, band- master. \ Maveh, “Bombaste® .... Farrar Gverture, “A Hunt in the Ar- A dsnnes” - -..Marie 5 Metceau. “Canzoneita” Herbert Grand_selection from opera. 2 Given Great Reception Upon Retqrn From Tour of Occident. By the Associated Press. J TOKIO, September 9.—Tokio's two and one-half million people today dt 7:45. el gave a characteristci expression of March, “The Steel King,” Japanese loyalty to Crown Prince g & St. Clair Hirohito, the heir apparent, whose Walts, Worship to the Beau: | |recent successtul tour of the occident Populah number, Reveries,” has appealed to popular imagination ; Freed | land undoubtedly aroused new and March, “American G“ard'Brnoks more democratic interests in the im- Era o Freed | |perial family. Overture, “American chist:(v:‘.;‘! Mayor Goto gave a popular recep- Vocal solo by Chester Dodso Whom the’ pecpia now +emard an e real head of the empire, owing t | |illness of the emperor. Thousands roared cheers of greeting as the the IKIWANIAN OFFICERS . GIVEN FINE PRESENTS Harry Karr, International Presi- dent, at Gala Event in This City. In the presence of their interna- Harry E. Karr, more than 300 Kiwanians, represent- ing Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and Wash- talked intercity luncheon of the local organization at the Hotel Washington yesterday aft- tional president, ington, serious laughed, business Joke: at ernoon. Elaborate preparations made by the Washington clubmen for the entertainment of the visitors, when at 1 a’clock the several delegations entered the hall tire assemblage, led by Cheer Leader e famous “Sis. demonstra- tion, much to the delight of the out- and Jack O'Rourke, gaye boom-ah-ah-ah—Kar: of-town guests. Immediately grets” from Harding, .in _which after tumed the “Ba but the Maryland of tional - President the forthcoming year. In_ an wanis shows no_favor or race. that our country will petty jealousies that. freedom we enjoy. owing brief addresses by Harry Mark Lansburgh, dents Karr and Horn were pre- sented with handsome presents as tokens of esteem M which they were held by their Washington club fel- mball _and lows. On behalf of the Pittsburgh Club Messrs. Henry Hickox and Fred Mc- speeches, which Frank Wagner responded, Towner, chairman of the committee on inter- 4 congratulated Librarians in the schools also are !work done by the class of the Capi- tal district, and made a strong ap- peal for the continuance of same. the reading of a bus Cullagh made short +Henry E Capital _distric ci meeting: Following ness paper by Frank P. Morse, took ' as his subject oodie’ Karr, d and the reading the local flicial inspiring address on Spirit of Kiwanis,” Tommy Lyons of the Baltimore club brought his audi- tors to their feet when he said, “Ki- creed Jews, Catholics and Protes- tants are all as one in our organiza- tion, and it is only by such a spirit tp any be purged of |; the narrow-mindedness, bigotry and it carried on, will eventually undermine the great ‘Taxicabs,” President Woodward announced that the local club had voted to accept the invitation of the Washington Rotary Club to be.its guest October 26 at the Columbia Country Club. During the business session the had been the en- “ros vanian Warren G. President pledged his attendance at a meeting in the near future Claude H. Wood- ward, president of the through courtesy to William G. Horn, head of the Baltimore organization, over to him, quickly passed the “buck” along to Interna- who briefly outlined the program of Kiwanis for “The club, crown prjnce, with bis democratic bearing and easy oratorical manner, addressed the multitude, voicing sat- Istaction over the efforts at municipal improvement in keeping with Tokio's place among the world's great cities. Urges World Peace. Tonight a mammoth proce: bearing a hundred thousand Japar lanterns, serenaded Prince Hiroh palace. He again addressed the mul- titude, “emphasizing the urgency of STAR, WASHINGTON, BY GEORGE WITTE. Bpeclal Correspondence of The Star and Chicago Daily News. BERLIN, Germany, August 15.—Al- though the allied nations have done thelr hest to cripple Germany's avia- tion, Germany is leading the world in commercial exploitation of the air- plarie. France has left Germany very little In the way of airplanes. France is afraid of Germany's aviation and will not even permit her to build air- planes that are meant for commers be cial purposes alone and wou'd impracticable for warfare. Ne: theless, by making ‘over the few ai planes left them, the Germans? havy inaugurated an aerial service that not only enables one tosfly from Berlin to almost every important in- dustrial center within the borders of Germany, but also to make connec- tions with the international air lines. [, Thus. one may fly from Berlin to Bremen and here catch an airplane to Amsterflam, and thence on to Lon- don or to Brussels and Paris. Or one may catch the Paris-Warsaw airplane at Nuremberg. and go in_either di- rection. Another line takes one to Copenhagen and Stockholm, and still another makes connections.at Danzig with the Baltic airplane for Riga and Reval. 1 e made numerous trips in Ger- man airplanes, besides having flown all the ‘way from Paris to Berlin, stopping at London, Amsterdam and Bremen to change planes. Many Airplane Routes. Germany is the fifst country to make commercial aviation practical, establishing world peace and allud- ing to the necessity of doing every- thing possible to contribute to the success of the forthcoming Washing- ton conference on limitation of arma- ments. The events of the last week tend to show that the throne is b brought closer to an abandonment of the ancient period of exclusiveness. It is understood that Takuma Dan with numerous other prominent Japa nese men of Tokio, Yokohama and Osaka, will soon sail for America and later will go to England, The newspaper Nichi Nichi Shim- bun says the object of the visit is to convince America that Japan does ful and economic development. EX-SOLDIERS SEE PLAY. tients, Entertained. As guests of the National Disabled Soldiers’ League, 330 disgbled ex- hospitals in Washington, were enter- tained yesterday afternoon at the Shubert-Garrick Theater, where they witnessed the performance of “Wait Until We Are Married.” The invitation was obtained through the courtesy of Miss Marion Coakley, who is playing one of the leading roles in the play, and who a sister of Frank B. Coakley, na- [ tional treasurer: of the organization, and Miss Jean Shalby, who is also in the cast.. The two young women acted as hostesses to the men, dis- tributing cigarettes and refreshments before the performance. SSobpas atceie - HELPS NEAR EAST RELIEF. Representative Hoch's Daughter | Sells Lemonade for Fund. Mrs. Cabot Stevens, honorary direc- tor of the Near East Relief, has re- ceived $7.26 from little Jean Hoch, daughter of Representative Homer Hoch of Kansas, for use in feeding the starving children of the near east. Little Miss Hoch and two compan- ions, Helen Marion Thorp and Richard Reid, made the money in Marion, Kan. by selling lemonade. “We hopé you will get lots of money for the little hungry children,“ she wrotr Mrs. Steven, to the ho followims appropriations were voted & ing the District jail, by the local club: $1,500 for screen- $2,000 to Gessford for the purpose of enforc- ing prohibition, $2,500 to enlarge the preme Court has signed a final decr-e ; hot air intake at the Capitol; $5,000 of absolute divorce in favor of “=- | for Boy Scout activities, and $10.000 bert S. Reiley against Elizabeth M. |to further the campaign of John J. Boober, local aspirant for the posi tion of governor of the Capital dis- trict, which is to be decided at the forthcoming Norfolk convention. Much applause greeted this gen- Maj. make the Vienna H Announcing the Yienna Hats For Fall At the new lowered prices $3.00 to $5.00 The finest materials and the most careful workmanship combine to at superior. Smart, exclusive styles. Colors: Pearl, Tan, Seal Biawn Dark Gray, French Brown and Black Hats of \ All Kinds ] Cleaned and Blocked in our factory, 435 11th St. N.W. Vienna Hat Co. 410 %th St. NW. erosity, but Mr. Woodward announc- ed the proceedings were out of order and that all. such donations would have to be decided upon by the board. again featuring with us. X . "Brown Russia Calf. for Autumnof .... -k tion invited. < . not intend agression but only peace- | Former Service Men, Hospital Pa-]| service men, patients in the various | despite the fact that | poorer than France or England, and | the government can support the Ger- | man aircraft industry to only a lim | ed extent. There are twenty-eight aviation companies in Germany and air lines that give regular The most important are the | Berlin-Bremen line, the Berlin- Munich line and the Berlin-Danzig line. They are the backbone of the | German air scryice. They make stops | at various other cities, at which they meet other planes flying in other di- rections. It is impossible, for in- | stance, to fly directly from Berlin to Hamburg. But one may take a Berlin- Munich airplane, land at Leipzig and teh a plane for Hamburg. would-be passengers, hearing the pilots’ tales of how old their machines are and what a hard job it is to keep the motors in good repair, cancel their passages at the last mo- ment. Others, more courageous, make the trip, but with the they would never take another chance in a German plane’if they sur- vived the first. Yet the number of accidents has been less than 1 per | cent of the number of flights. and not a single passenger hns been killed or even seriously wounded in two years of commercial aerial travel in Ger- many. : | * Planes Small But Strong. Close to 30,000 airpines were built in Germany during the war, 17,000 in Ia 3 . The output of tane motors exceeded 10,000, Last year Germany built 150 airplanes, that | being the number allowed under the v of Versailles. Most of these erial limousines de luxe and are being used for the seaside resort serv- ice. These planes are not as large as those flying between London and the [continent, some of which have a seat- | ing capacity | Four and six passenger machines are the rule in Germany, but they are much heavier and stronger planes than the majority of the French and Eng- lish passenger planes. The Junker monoplanes, which are being used on the Berlin-Koenigsberg: Riga route, and, since Jufy have carried on the service between Stock- holm and Reval, are perhanps the strongest made. Although America’s experiences wtih the “J. L.” all-meta planes, which were bought from Ger- many, were none too gratifying, avia- tion” expertd here still contend- that the Junker has not been surpassed for general stability and power of re- sistance in all sorts of weather. These planes are equipped with a 185-horse- power motor and can make up to 180 kilometers (nearly 102 miles) an hour. Most of the planes used on the main German lines are former war ma chines. The famous Rumpler “Taube,” one of the earliest fighting planes brought out by Germany, is used be tween Berlin and) Munich: the “L. V. G.” between Drekden and Hamburg, Newest Arrivals in omen’s Autumn Footwear You're always sure to find THE NEW THI} WEAR at the Family Shoe Store. Moderately priced at 35, $6 Women’s Black and Brown Oxferds, Our Leader for'Autunin ! All the newest styles and lasts, welt soles, shown in Black Kid and - All sizes and widths. Made according to our specifications and of very excellent materials. At the very special price f Getting Little Folks Ready With New School Footwear This store’s reputation for Serv%ce and Kncwled'ge of Correct! Fitting the growing feet of Boys and Girls is the result of years of conscientious effort _and study. -Right now we’re ready with the largest and most comprehensive stock of Juvenile Footwear we have'ever carried. Important Hosiery News for Saturday Women's Fancy Silk® Novelty Hoslery—All | th:v::v': lace anfilocked effects. ; Your Inspec- ‘Women's Special ... she’ is much | resolve that | of thirteen passengers. | And, as usual, we are’ many models and styles that are exclusive Just received another lot of the’ popular “Sally” Two-Buckle Pump _ With the cut-out vamp, as sketched, and military heel. Very excellent quality in all patent leather. All sizes and widths. $11 Womén’s Plain Toe Patent Leather Oxfords . One of the latest arrivals and destined to become extremely popular this fall. It has the wanted plain toe, new flange heel, and comes in all sizgs and widths. Very moderately priced at— Pure Silk Hosiery—Very fine quality, in Black, D. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921. : and the “Sablatnig” between Bremen and Berlin. All these are two-passen- ger machines and equipped with power- ful motors of over 200 horsemwer.l As these high-powered motors are | quite out of proportion to the weight | of the planes, and the machines have, to carry and consume an enormous amount of gasoline, the German com- panies lose twice or three times the; passenger fare on every trip made. _Iopes for the Future. By “As soon as the bon on Germany's; > Germany will put into effect a net-! work of airplane lines that will sur-. prise the world,” says a director of | the Deuische Luftreederei, an lane’ company that is subsidized by the Hamburz-America line and -the General Fleciric Company. At a recent meeting othe Delag, the company that holds all the pat ents and rights to the Zeppelins, one cf the direciors announced that hu: Lad well founded hopes that in the rot distant future Germany would be | by from capitalists in the United S and South Arerica. | “In a few yearste a regular Zeppelin passenger service will conncet - Eu- rope and the North and Soutn Amer- ican continerts” he asserted. While.prohibited from building air- planes and airships, aviation experts lere are continually working on new types of motors and plenes. There is much experimenting thkough Ger- many. and it is safe to say that when the time comes for Germany's air- t industsy to blossom out again, 1 ‘ge number of ncw inventions will con ! ‘!m placed on the market and perhaps rive Gi any the leadership in the world's aviation. DEPUTIES ARE ARRESTED Office Robbers Fled Face Charges. By the Associated Press. TOLEDO, Ohio, September 9.—Sam Zimmerman and Andrew Szemtko, idepuly sheriffs on duty at the Lucas county jail Labor day, when Joseph i Urbaytis, George Rogers, alias Lewis, and Charles Schultz, convicted of® con- spiracy in the $1,000,000 post oflice robbery here last February 17, es- ped,” were arrested today on war- charging ,* federal prisoners to escape. Warrants for the arrest of the two men, who were discharged from the M bee: Col a ued at the re ) trict attorney’s office after an investi- tion conducted by Assistant United States District Attorney General Gerard i Pilliod, in conjunction with County Prosecutor Stuart. No trace of any of the three es- caped bandits has been found, federal authorities announced today. GIVEN NEW NAVY POST. Lieut. div ord er an cid sho | Hawkes Charge of Publicity. Lieut. Commander Wells Hawkes, an | officer of the naval reserve force, on active duty, has been assigned .to duty in charge of the division of | publicity, Navy Department, as the | successor of M. H. Mclntyre, re-| | signed. Commander Hawkes is a for. i mer newspaper man, with connec- { tions in this city and New York, and | is particularly well equipped for his new post. During_part of the world war he as publicity officer for the Navy, at ! New York, and afterward attended | the peace conference, at Paris,_as a member of the naval delegatiofi ORDERED TO PANAMA. Lieut. Col. David S. Fairchild, jr. | Medical Corps. stationed in this city. has been ordered to the Panama Canal Zone for duty on the stafft of the Panama .canal di Commander in for | for N\ NGS IN FOOT- and $8 22 White and Brown. $1.50 and patrick was twenty-eight years old) 4nd before here lived in Bridgeport, Conn. Othe kne suicide. that the excitement and strain of the rald temporarily deranged him. deputy marshals and twenty policemen | were the suicide Was reportcd to the authori- | The raid was und Srnest L. Langley, chief fed agents and articles delivered suspicions were aroused. INVESTIGATION IS ORDERED. The report of the narcotic div gav { cember | Adkins : Justice Hochling of the District Su-, pre; | ! sented to the petition of Edmund C. | Robertshaw and_his 7 Attorneys H. Sees Germany Leading World ’SU'[:"]E FOLLOWS I In Use of Commercial Airplane DRY RAID BATILE Agent Kills Self After Fight With Greek Sailors in Which Seven Are Shot. the Associated Press. EW YORK, September .—After a bullding of airplaines is removed,!raid /by federal prohibition and nar- jcotic agents on the Greek steamship King Alexander today, in which seven air- {members of the crew wero wounded pistol shots, Frank J. Fitzpatrick, jchief narcqtic officer here, who had taken part in the raid, committed sul- |cide at a nearby pier, according to a police report. Other federul agents were convers- nis with Fitzpatrick in a room of a llowed again to baild airships and {{erry house near the King Alexan- Qirplanes for commercial purposes, |4¢r's dock in Brooklyn, when he shot and that the Zeppelin company had |himself in the heart, the police said. Vocelved offers of financial ussis The wounded members of the crew had just been sent to a hospital and the prohibition and narcotic agents| wer ¢ returning to Manhuttan with fiscated drugs valued at $75.000 liquor valued at $15,000. Fitz- joining the federal forces feder: no d they agents declar: motive They expressed for the belief nited States” Marshal Power, thirty nt to the King Alexander after , to arrest all members of th d and take them-to the g for n r the direction of al en- forcement zgent in The i FOR CONVICTS’ ESCAPE !2gents searched the v oroughl. e the crew fleeinz before them below i —_— deoks. There were intermittent pistol i shots from bdth crew agents {Officers on Duty When Toledo Post |the search progressed and when the battle subsided three of the wounded ' sti fforeeze at 300 imen were found lying in their bunk. None of the prohibition wounded. agents W r. Langley said that $390 had just n paid by one of the advance part of the contraband when the crew’s . Forrer Goes to New York to | Probe Fitzpatrick’s Death. Immediately upon receipt today of | eport from New York of the su jcide of Frank J. Fitzpatrick, chief narcotic agent for the city, est of the dis- {a raid on the steamship King . ander, Col. A. G. ant to th Forrer, executive ief of the ion of the internal revenu ered to New York by Commission- | Blair, with instructions to make ! c: inv. ion. i e no reason for Fitzpatric the report merely i tehimself after th - . CHANGE BOY'S NAME. born De- | M amed John decree of me Court. The boy's®mother con wife, Vera M to adopt the n & Havell appearcd permiss the petitione 7 KAY JEWELRY, CO. Just Purchased From a Retiring Jobber 350 Brand-New Guaranteed Genuine E " ting.. Ruby jewels. * posed ' pallet stonés. expansion balance. gulator. Patent recoilt click and_self-locking .setti \\'é purchaséd from a anteed Genuine Elgin Wa of low price of $10.50. secure one of these‘Elgin It’s all in the movement. Buy one of thesesgenuine Elgin Watch Movements at this bargain price and you're sure of an accurate timepicce. Watch Cases Furnished, All Styles, $2 Up Every One of These Movements Guaranteed by ourselves and the manufacturer to be up to the highest standard of excellence for which the celebrated Elgin movement is known. - - Ladies Complete in 10-k. isights and Springficld rifle special am- following | d, in which | four seamen had been wounded. Watch JENDANT Winding and Set- Bx- ‘Cut Breguet hair spring,, with polished re device. * Plates damaskeened.” If your old Movement js worn out you can replace it with an entire brand new movement for little more than it would cost to have your old movement repaired. This chance may never-happen again 1 > Elgin Wrist Watch guarafiteed for 20 years—with gold filled flexible bracelet. .Also dainty ribbon bracelet. The complet€ outfit for. . ... .. —_———— Cguesious b | |IEN AT NAVY YARD PROTEST WAGE CUT Of Northwest Indians Further Action Will Be.Taken at a Mass Meeting Sunday Morning. ber 9—Indinnw in the near north are in @anger of becoming an extinet species unless measures are takem by the province to | safeguard them against conta. xlous diseases, Dr. W. W. Bell, A formal protest against the award of the navy wage board decreasing wages for employes of the Washing- ton navy yard was embodied in & resolution for presentation to Presi- dent Harding, adopted yesterday at a health inspector, declnres in a report made public today fol- meeting of the metal trades organiza- tions ing members employed at lowing = trip through the the navy yard. Wabasknwa distriet. Lr. Bell urged reguiations pro- | mibiting overcrowding in room tepecs, in which two or morc families frequently are | The meeting was held in Naval Lodge Hall, 4th street and Pennsyl- ania avenue southeast. In effect the stand taken by the organization backs up the uncflicial position taken at A& found, and urged that n detne { ment of mounted police be » ticned in the district to enforee » and other health regula- tons. He alxo attacked the govern- ment ration thue, declaring it had done much to degrade the | Indiank. Many of them, he an- | | rerted, use the rations only as stakes in gambling for prunes and raisinx, which they uwe to brew “hootch.’ WARKSMEN OF D.C. meeting of the machinists’ local union of navy yard employes Wednesday vight. Further action will be taken at a mass meeting +vhich 3,000 are expect- ed to attend Sunday morning at 19 o'clock in the Avenue Grand Theater, Pennsylvania avenue southeast. At | this meeting, which will be under the jauspices of the hinists’ local union, arrangements wiil be made for anm- other formal protest against the wage board award, which will embody the specific complaints of the machinist employes of the yard. The resolution adopted at yester- day’s meeting made the following WAKE HIGH SCORES Fitzpatrick’s | iGuardsmen and Civilians Shoot With Distinction points of disagreement with the award at Camp Perry. 15 the wage board: & | The rd admitted that the men at Special Dispatch to The Sta: <he na ard are entitled to 4 ents ! CAMP' PERRY, Ohio, September 9.— | per kour if they are to maintain the standards of living which held good | Washington guardsmen and civilians | }etore war. Thix compilution 4 participating in _phenomenal | y on the Department of cores being run in the National Rifle | 1. hor budget for the vear 1 s Association matches th RV ek into consideration pri Reynolds of the United States forestr. quoted, in "May of this year. captain of the I s strict of Co. civilian ooting in a scored sixty ves in knowledged to be the lowest of the {lumbia) tea: year. y-1” Allowing the bare T S or Ane inou the award doe: CSCODE the me trades represe {not only deprive the emploves of the rd buil's-ey using two consecutive r match, Winches munition S S. S = District of | DEVY ¥ard of funds necessary to main- CotaEbis copields of the District of | tain standards of living. but w ty-eight shoot. i imperil the n, sities for maintain- ing special pringficla | iBE “health and decency.” Irifie as issued, leading all national| The data submitted the repre- {guardsmen in the Winchester ma < e! the wage i Shields is an empla of the Lure brought out that the w in {of insular affairs. R. H. Mc n and vicinity for the 1ype of the internal revenue bur |of worik under consideration had not ofthe Nationall Can | suffered a general reduction. In cases Won fourth place in the westers | Where reductions were made. accord- s with thirty-one consecutive|in® 1o the resolution, they hase { ves at 900 Srd ane 2lly been drastically unfair publ which deviated from and the emploves of th= tend that the United & while it on the outsid- nt service when they d not follow the exa rds in the | iddleton of the Washington ey Business High School ran elghteen consecutive bu Peters jmatch at 600 vards high up les on the list of winners. Corp. J. C. a deviation from public Jensen, Sergt. Martin Frincke and but #hould disrezard them . Sidney Morg: Distric the petition which ~will be n up score ated to President Harding. . ible 1l utive buli's-eves, won a place in Peters match, also a place in th i tional Rifle Association members’ and Bisner kneeling | s, Sergt. Shields and Corp. H. H.! | Miuir won places in the members' m: Sergt. Henry Robertson won a pla i the Remington match, h for: in the retail prices of food comparced with July were own in statistics for fifteen additional made public by the Department of Labor. te fifty " In Rochester, N. Y., out of a possible fifi, at 1,000 yar: {crease of 8 per cent: in Bu e e T !timore and New York., 6 hard Taylor, a_six- | k and Norfolk, 5: teen-vear-eld boy of Cherokee, Tenn., | lle, Ky belicved to be the youngest regn- |and Portland, M 1 school superintendent in | . and Dal th a. 1 per cent. % 7 N ) LGIN Movements To Be'Sold at the Remarkably Low Price of $10.50 Cashor Charge retirin_;\;: jobber his entire balance of 350 Brand New Guar- tch Movements, which we are enabled to sell at the unheard % % %, 72 ng ng ? your lifetime. Get in early tomorrow and Movements at $10.50. Same price cash or charge. Y Also Purchaséd in This Lot . gold filled cases— g4

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