Evening Star Newspaper, October 8, 1921, Page 5

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FILGRIMS LAUDED BYVICEPRESIDENT {Their Compact Bedrock for| | memithy and ime " he § mprovements sin American Institutions, He | | war in the working conditions Says at Newark. of these girls, their number ix Tir the Associated Press. decreasing, for the petite Pa- | risian ix turning to typewriting | | and kindred occupations. | 'The midinette's life was mot | NEWARK, N. J, October S.—The| | *\layflower Compact,” signed in the | cubin of that historic ship as she lay | | ot Provincetown, Mass., November 11, Turning to New Jobs As Milliners Mourn By the Associated Press. PARIS, Sept:mber 19, —There in, alas, a shortage the ranks of the littie midinettes in Paris, | and there i a gloomy forebod | ing _among the leaders of i-Ml'dineltes of Paris 1 i always rosy, for she had to pay to be apprenticed, earned little when the apprenticeship was ended and faced enforced ldle- ness when business was bad. “ So, notwithstanding the zay 1620, was declared to be “the bed- e etTot her pointed by P rock on which rest American insti- risian artists, it is not surp: ing that the Parix work! e} [ in turning to other vocations. Vice President Calvin tutions,” by ddressing the Coolidge last night in Lilgrim celebration her While the bases were first stated in ernment and belief, and, one re- sult, sent Pilgrim and Puritan to New guceintly the compact, he said,| s much of them were stated “by the Greek philosophers 2.000 years 4go.” We cannot determine.” Mr. Coolidge . said, “what impulses were first stir- ring in the human breasts which IN I.I.AI-IANS’ HANDS England. We do know that men and women of that stamp of character are the product of a long series of | wrought these great conflicts of gov- events, both of heredity and en\»imn-vEnvoys Invited to Venice.for' ment. Their works do not perish i : night; before them stretches a oundle: future.” Deseribing the Pilgrims as of a oo Parley—West Hungary Tolding flaming determination to 5 b free, an abiding capacit Held hy Guerrlllas. | government, and a dee o religious conviction ident de [ By the Associnted 1 iree traits are combined in a people,; BUDAPEST, October ‘The Ttal- they are on the way to make an end | ian, British and French representa- ©f Al kinds of human slavery from |yjvay pere have notified the Hunga- whatseever source imposed.” ‘America must think their thoughts 1 live in accord with their idex he declared. { has not been fixed. CANADIAN SCORES : EMERGENCY TARIFF =, e e - R. P. Sparks Declares De- i stacle to the transfer of west Hun- creased International is:lry to the tattered domain nf"? 5 5 accordance with the officia Trade Results. { tria, in accordance { agreement of Budapest. is a firmly in- | | frenched line of Magyar guerrillas, tion of fraterniz- | rian government that they agree to { Italian mediation in the Hungarian controversy. The Itallans immedi- ately invited Count Stefan Bethlen,! { Foreign Minister Banffy to Venice | for a conference. the date of which| Frmly Intrenched, Determined to Keep Unity of Hungary. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. & Copyright, 1 cfated Press. { who show no indi T | ILLE, S. C. October S, — | ing with the Austrian gendarmes’ or- i £ et S e der to occupy the ceded country. R. P. Sparks, president of the;“ 4 {rip from Wlener Neustadt to Conadian Association of Garment| Sopron (Odenburg) in the course of i v e which the writer talked with some o the guerrilla leaders, convinced me that west Hungary will not be aban- Manufacturers and one of the out- standing figures in the textile world, in a spirited address at the textile products show here criticised the emergency tariff and related what he termed was its unfavorable effect. He criticised the United States for|fire on Hungarians, and the Austrians failinz to recognize Canada’s right|do mot want the tergitory —CECF to a place at the council table of the | enough to risk a wa® WeEL Tl O ations. He commented on the seri-| Nominally the countrs B PEASE. 0 ness of the exchange situation and jin the hands of the ertentl EIE S suid the United States has made it|to whom west Hungary WoZ el smpossible for Canada to Seil to this |nically delivered by the FLIRECH CLio country, and also commented on the |The Austrians refuse to Acrow eGur | failure of President Harding to invite |the transter because the Austiion Sk Canada to be represented at the nature was not attached and Pronfye disarmament conference in Washing- |bands are in actual possessiod. - ton w°~t month. entente commission seems to be in a In_discussing the trade relationship |weak position, having only the fors in 1921, Mr. Sparks said that “during !mer guerrilla leader Osztenhure the three months of June, July and Au- |his men as a police force. The EUer- sust that your emergency tariff has rillas fear Osztenburg. but are deter- been in operation our exports to you |mined to fight any troops sent to dis- lave fallen to abott ‘50 per cent Jess |perse them. than the same months in 1921 and your Warlike Appearance. exports to us have decreased a like isputed territory Is amount” He predicted that the trade |, raoially e e ipgeatance. for the remaining three months between {mrenches with barbed wire are being the two countries I likely o total!constructed, patrols are on the forest| about one-third of what it was last sentries are on guard near year. Mr. Sparks said he was strongly :g:d;r:rr\\‘lii:f“i‘n :heltern constructed of the opinion that “our tariff legisla- |from boughs. The strongest intrench- tions should be based on a recognition [ments a¥e near Wiener Neustadt, of economic oneness of the American {where the Austrians fear that the continent, and that its object should be | Hungarians might attack the indus- to increase rather than to lessen the |trial region. The Czechs have forti- ‘Volume in trade. |fied the Pressburg bridgehead strong- Moeting Exchange Situation. 1%. They have an armored train on Mr. Sparks declared that the ex. | the other side of the Danube, but only change situation is so serious that |® few troops, which apparently have Canada is compelled by the forces of |no Intention of advancing. Thus con- economic pressure to take every step | VEFging upon west Hungary from which would right the balance of ;the west are the Austrian reichswehr trade by refusing to buy from “,,..d»mrl.memn, from the north the Tnited States anything they could {Czechs and from the east the Hun- possibly get along without. = “There | arian regulars. Not far to the south are only two ways in which to right iare the Serbs, while within the dis- the exchange situation,” he said, “one {puted region are the entente police is to sell you more and the other is |and different bands of Hungarlans. to buy less from you. You have made | Firing, But No Fighting. it impossible for us to sell to vou.| % You will therefore have no cause to | o There is plenty of firing. but no i t lomatic pressure. The bands are not e mumbering all told only a few thousand, yet no_troops are available to fight them. Hungarians will not T T8 e o o o | fighting. The bands are made up from you o the lowest” poseivie | mostly of younz Hungarian aristo- point.” crats, who while patriotically in- flamed because of . i ment of Hungary are enjoying the siting Canada’s contribution to the | adventure. Last night the rattle of cause of the allies in the world war, | machine guns caused the Bukarest nd also her natural wealth and the | Oriental express to awalt daylight character of her people, Mr. Sparks i before it was considered safe to pro- the dismember- . §. Attitude Toward Canada. said Canada demanded as ixht a!ceed over the route to Ebnefurth and | place at the council table of the na- {Odenburg. All the guerrillas the tons. He said “We regret exceeding- | writer encountered in a long drive 1y that your nation has not s to acknowledge that right, is no other nation whose of our manhood we t!to find the train were very courte- ous and not at all like the blood- i thirsty pillagers they are claimed to { be by Hungary’'s enemies. They were re t a alue upon.” He protested against well armed with new equipment and the argument that if Canada and the j plenty of ammunition. Though in other colonies were granted a_ma- | makeshift uniforms they were clean tional status this would give Great | Britain a preponderance of influence | in the council, as Canada proposes | to take an independent stand. : and well disciplined. ~They could easily be taken for regulars on ir- regular duty. They claimed they were not paid and had to supply their Mr._Sparks, in speaking of the dis-|own food, being only partly aided armament conference in Washington, [ from “awakening Hungary.” They 1id that had Canada been invited to | Scoffed at the idea of west Hungary re a representative there he be.| being an independent state and said lieved that her position on the ques- | they were not fighting for a king, for tion of immigration of Asiatics to the | Pronay or for Friedrich, but to keep Pacific would be identical . | west Hungary with Hungary. Stand taken by the United { It will be a difficult task to dis- conciu: ate ; band the guerrillas and drive them xpression to | from the forest-clad hills, for with- d that the ob- | out artillery or heavy machine guns sought t that he that the!and with only light equipment they werld should be made safe for de-! can strike and hide, menace the roads mocracy. Perhaps it would take a|and make it unpleasant for a large lung time to achi ration, but let us th ‘my. And_there is no large army see that in so far as | in sight ready to attempt the job of American continent is concerned | hunting them down. it at least ihe spirit of freedom | - — and democracy shall triumph.” | MANAGER IS SENTENCED. —_— . PLAGUE K".LS HUNDREDS; {Accused of Making False Railroad PANIC GRIPS JUBBULPUR Entries on Car Repairs. i DAVENPORT. Towa, October 8. — i {Theodore W. Krein, general man- ger of the Muscatine, Burlington nd Southern railroad, was sen- itenced to a year and a day in the ederal prison and fined $1,000 on | each count vesterday by Judge Mar-| : tin J. Wade In federal court here Tr the Associated Press. when he pleaded guilty to three ! LONDON, October 6.—Hundreds of counts charging him with making | persons have died of plague in the la};: emrg‘e! gn car repair cxardl.d g > e railroad company, also de-! of Jubbulpur, Eritish India, sav8{sangant in the case, was fined $1,000 ; o dispatch to the Daily ‘Mail from!each on the three counts. \llahabad. The victims of the scourge; According to the statements made so numerous, it is said, that it i{s at the hearing by R. Granville Cur-: most impos: {ry. counset for the Interstate Commerce wdies of the is reported to be almost panic|pany for 1919 showed charges against stricken. other lines for car repairs amount- | Jubbulpur is the capital of a dis-|ing to more than $30,000, whereas | rict of the sume name in Central In- ' the actual value of repairs done -to diz, and is located about 200 miles|other line cars was not in excess of southwest of Allahabad. It is usually | $1,200. i @ center of trade and industry, the| Curry estimated that the company manufactures being cottonhad obtiined nearly $50,000 through #ueds and carpets. It has a population | false charges during the six years, of about 90,000, most of whom are |Krein has been general manager of | Itindus. ythe road. 3 Attorney Joe R. Lane, counsel for PUT ON RETIRED LIST. ! the defendant, filed an appeal bond ! . Louis J. Regan, Medical Corps, ! this noble aspi- People Die So Fast It Is Almos Impossible to Bury or Burn Bodies. of $5,000 and announced the case would be carried to the Supreme “ Court. There were fifteen counts in ently stationed at Fort Sam Hous- ton, Texas, has been placed on (hefi;‘:‘ CHginet an@iecment! Tetumncd retired list of the Army on account of priL & ability incident to the service. He ew York, and was graduated Trom Tthe . modtcal deparement. of| ASSIGNED TO ANACOSTIA. corge Washington University in| Lient. Charles C. Ammerman, Naval “13, and from the Army Medical | Medical Corps, attached to the United States steamship Bridge, has been assigned to duty at the naval al station, Anacostia, D. C. ihe Army Medical Corps in September. i the Hungarian premier, and former | doned without military or strong dip- |’ BRITISH UNKNOWN HERO MAY NOT GET U. S. MEDAL Goverament Fails to Notify Gcn] Pershing of Arrangements for Honoring Tomb. e By the Associated Press. PARIS, October 7.—The British gov- erament late tonight had not notifled Gen. Pershing of any arrangements for placing the American congres- sional medal on the tomb of the un- known British soldier in Westminster Abbey, and it was said there was a strong probability that the function would not -be held. The specially trained battalion 0(1 American soldiers from Coblen: which was to accompany Gen. Persl ing to London as a guard of honor at the ceremony is still being held in Paris, and probably will remain here until the first of next week. The decision of the British govern- ment not to permit any of its officers or soldiers to accept ‘foreign decora- tions is advanced by some as the pos- sible reason for the present situa- tion; but it is felt that since congressional medal of honor was granted under a speclal act of the American Congress Great 'Britain hardly would include this in her deco- ration rules, Hope was expressed tonight that some reply would be received within a few days from the British govern- ment explaining the delay and fixing a date for the ceremony. the | SENT TO BAY STATE. Man Arrested in Frederick, County on Charge of Auto Theft. Special Dispatch to The Star. FREDERICK, Md.. October 8. —Two weeks ago Le Roy Paul, twenty-three years of age, of Worcester, Mass., is alleged to have confessed !/ that he stole.an automobile belonging to Al- fonso Howe, a farmer. With a male companion, he reached Frederick county. Here the pair attempted to trade the car, a Chandler, for a Ford, and aroused suspicion by asking cash balance of but $400. s Paul was sent, under guard to Worcester, Mass., to face a charge of theft of the machine. GETS FIRST PASTORATE. Rev. W. J. Meredith Goes From ‘Winchester to Harrisonburg. Epecial Dispateh to The Star. ‘WINCHESTER, Va., October 8.—Rev. William J. Meredith, assistant to Rev. Thomas A. nkin, pastor of the Church of the Sacred Heart here, has been appointed pastor of the Chwrch of the Blessed Sacrament, at Harriso burg, by Bishop O’'Connell of the Rich- mond diocese, it was announced today. It is his first regular pastorate and he succeeds Father De Gryse, now of Charlottesville. Father Meredith’'s successor here has not been announced. l 1 B HOLDS $10,000 A YEAR INSUFFICIENT | CHURCH MEETING HELD. |STUDENTS PLAN 0 URGE TO PROVIDE FDR FAMILY OF FOUR By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 8.—Prof. Henry Lane Eno of Princeton to- day confessed his inability to pro- vide a “suitable” home for his wife and two children op $10,000 a year. Prof. Eno, formerly rated as one of the wealthiest educators in the United States, stated, in a petition filed in surrogate's court, that he had financial reverses six years ago, which had forced him to sell his estate in Bar Harbor, Me., and two houses in this city. Because his income had been re- duced, he asked that $30,000 and $12,000 be advanced to him an- nually, as guardian for his chil- dren, out of the estate of their uncle, Amos F. Eno, whose will is being contested. The educator set forth that, whichever way the cat jumps, his children will re- ceive between $1,500,000 and $2,- 000,000. The professor's petition added that, up to 1914, he had frequent- ly, with his wife and children, employed the best instructors and tutors in music, foreign lan- guages and science for the educa- tion of the latter, and gave them the social and educational oppor- tunities appropriate to their situa- tion. His reverses, the- petition continued, forced him to change his entire mode ef life. SOVIET WARNS RUMANIA. Threatens New Invasion of Bes- sarabia Territory. By the Assoelated Press, RIGA, October 6.—The Rosta News Agency says the Russlan soviet gov- ernment has issued another mnote which warns Rumania that the Rus- sian red army may have to invade Bessarabia in quest of the forces of Gen. Petlura and other anti-bolshevik leaders. Putlura “and his staff are reported as having arrived In Jassy, Rumania, where Petlura is attempt- | ing to organize a new Ukrainian gov- | ernment. —_— i{ ORDERED T0 ARMS PARLEY. LONDON, October 7.—J. Butler Wright, counselor of the American embassy in London, has been ordered to attend the forthcoming confer- ence on limitation of armaments and far eastern questions in Washing- ton. He will sail for America Oc- Ftober 19 on the steamship Adriatic. | Fauquier and Other Counties in | Nation-Wide Campaign. Special Dispatch to The Star. WARRENTON, Va, October 8. -— A group meeting in the interests of th) nation-wide campaign was held Wednes- day at the Episcopal Church at The FPlains. All the Episcopal churches in Fauquier and some in near-by coun- ties were represented by their rectors and lay members. Morning and after- |noon sessions were held, consisting of addresses and dlscussion of the program of work lald out by the diocese of Virginia. In the afternoon a conference for women was held in the church, led by Miss Lou Davis and Mrs. Barton, and one for men in the parish house, led by Rev. Mr. Everett. Among the clergymen present were Rev. Nelson P. Dame; missioner of the diocese, Dr. E 1. Woodward, who re- cently resigned from The Plains to ac- cept the position of dean of the church i achools of the state; Rev. Paul D. Bow- {den of Warrenton, Mr. Everett of Mar- {shall, Mr. Brown of Haymarket, Rev, | Stuart Gibson of Manassas, Mr. Nelson 1 of Winchester and Mr. Burwell of Up- perville. —_— ORDERED TO DUTY HERE. Commander Claude A. Jopes has been detached from duty on the bat- tleship Tennesaee and ordered to this city for duty in the bureau of en- gineering, Navy Department. PARLEY TO END ALL WARS !enneylfinl- State College Would Have Big Delegation Come Here. By the As. ed Press. STATE COLLEGE, Pa. Octub —A bid for students in the univer- sities of Europe to join the under- graduate bodies of America in & con- certed movement to further the aims of the conmference on the limitation of armaments in Washington was made here last night at a mass mee!- ing attended by 1,200 students of Pennsylvania State College. - Without a dissenting voicel th meeting adopted resolutions callin: for a simultaneous pilgrimage of stt dent delegations from every un sity and college in the United to Washington with petition ing the armaments conference, name of the nation’s young manioo:i, “to end wars.” As 2 means of accelerating the terest of other colleges in the pia December 3 was set as the tentative date for the delegations to present their pleas to the Washington c feren N R The keeping of pigeons in Englani was introduced by the Romans, who used them for carrying, as well ax for the table. most publicist readers weekly their L Each Sunday in - the Star Appear special articles contributed by Francesco Nitti, former premier of Italy Maximilian Harden, Germany’s fore- Andre Tardieu, former French high com- missioner to the United States George N. Barnes, British labor leader and member of parliament d On European problems, of which we all want to know all about, and which this quartet of brilliant minds gives to Star | Satisfying to Evéry Member Vof the Household ] he Zoening Star— CThe Sunday Stac “A Complete Newspaper” Never sensational; always reliable--admitting nothing to its columns that is questionable % valuable opinions. Features and Fiction In the Magazine of Tomorrow's Star “The Emperor Hadrian”—Complete story by Bernice Brown. One of the best stories of the season. Illustrated by Frank Godwin. ¢ “The Mirrors of Downing Street”—The story of Lord Kitchener by “The Man With a Duster.” One of a series of . famous character sketches. “Benny, the Book Ageni“—-One of Ellis Parker Butler’s yarns. The author of “Pigs Is Pigs” at his best. “Getting Tagged by Gerald”—Another Trilby May story by Sewell Ford. The Rambler writes of Centerville, Va., where gray and blue armies fought during the civil war. “The Face at the Window”—An exciting and inftensely in- teresting bit of fiction by W. D. Pelley, - - Star’s Sunday Magazine. Many other features and short stories—timely and to the point. Rittenhouse Fashions\‘ . 60c a »~ Anne Rittenhouse, The Star’s fashion authority, is now in Paris, writing for Washington women the very latest news on French fashions for fall and winter. Miss Rittenhouse is one of the greatest style authorities in America. Her article for next Sunday contains Poiret drawings, especially made for her. g Don’t take chances of missing a single of The Star—Daily or Sunday. Order it delivered to your door by carrier who will hfw'e it there “within the hour.” - Call Main 5000 . - ~Circulation Department month ’ writer new to The Each issue chronicles the latest news of the world as reliably gathered by the great Associated Press, the Washington Star —Chicago Daily News Special Cable Service and its own staff of trained correspondents circling the globe—giving first-hand . reports of the happenings-everywhere. Through its exclusive coterie of celebrated writers the engaging topics of the hour are i entertainingly and authoritatively discussed by those best informed upon the various subjects in the public thought. ! the portership— Droll -pictures for everybody. Daily and Sunday Comes that masterpiece of-pictorial re- The Rotogravure Section | Showing persons, places'and events— local, national and international—that | are in the public eye—with the accuracy | of the camera—reproduced by a process | that preserves every detail faithfully. The Comic Section | enjoy as much as the youngsters. Real fun, purely presented. A hearty laugh issue Each Sunday With Star that the mature will

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