Evening Star Newspaper, October 23, 1921, Page 10

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON- D. C, OCTOBER 23, 1921—PART 1. OFTREATY RIGHTS Note Denies That Proposals b (1) CADW REAL POVER INPARTY POLTS New Senator Worked Way to . T Harold ¥. Muchlan and Ray ¥. Guynn, | naugh, Bertha Howio Norrls and|degroo of bachelor of solence fn civi Dean Martin L. Ferson of the Law | Grover Cleveland Young, and for|engineering. School will present for the degrea of | bachelor's diploma in educatlon, | . master of laws Frank B. Smith of | Helen M. C. Rose. ] 7 Maryland, and for the degreo of | Dean Howard L. Hodgking of the| The sacred hooks of the Tibetans ar buchelor of laws Harrlot May Bar-|department of enkincerlnk will pre- |probubly Ui most exten‘ive of any bour of Oregon, Joseph C. Fehr of | sent James Alllson Buchanan for the 'ligion, running into 325 volumes. Utah, Robert L. Glass of Pennsylva- nia, Arthur Charles Keefer of Mary- land, “EeRoy Walter Nelson of Ne- braska, Harry R. Pool of Minnesot: | Etta Louise Taggart of the District of Columbia and Hoadley H. Willls ot‘ Connecticui. Dean William Allen Wilbur of the |, Columblan College will present for Woman Named for Government Post Superntendent of Schools Ballo to Address Graduates—Over Fifty to Get Diplomas. Superintendent of Schools Ballou will address the graduates of Georgs Washington University at the fall Top in Pennsylvania by ’ Sheer Energy. i | i | ARRIVES HERE TODAY Successor to Knox to Be Sworn In Tomorrow With State Of- ficials Present. William E. Crow of Uniontown, who has been appointed by the Governor of Pennsylvania to succeed the late Philander Chase Knox in the Sen- ate, will arrive in Washington today and tomorrow will take the oath of office. He will serve by appointment untii the elections in November, 1922, Senator Knox's term would have ex- pired March 4, 1923, and next year u senator will be chosen for the re- mainder of the term and for the full term that will end March 4, 1 Mr. Crow's entrance to the Senate will bring to Washi vanians of Sproul, Lieut other state offi when he is sworn in. A Ir. Crow Gov. Sproul stated that h had named who would be horoughly S of Penn- vIvania. and the other from the western sec- tion. Boies Penrose, a Philadelphian, has been a senator for twenty-five years and Senator Knox and Senator George T. Oliver were residents of | Pittsburgh. The home of Senator Quay was at Beaver, in the Pitts- burgh industrial district. Senator Crow was born on a farm In Fayette county and Uniontown is near Pitts- burgh. Unlontown is in a region notable for tales of Indian warfare and the romantic struggles of the French and Indian wair. Mr. Crow owns a farm which was the scene of battle on Gen. Braddock's ill-fated march against the Indiaus. Few men in public life have ex- perienced a more varied career than Senator Crow. A successful news- paper man, an able lawyer, a trained, legislator, equipped with business acumen, and a resourceful party lead- er, he has been for years an out- standing figure in the politics of Pennsylvania. He has been com- t his way in a state where politics is always strenuous, where strong men contend for the mastery and where the battle for supremacy is continual. The man who reaches the top there must fight every hour to hold his position against the ambitious ones below him, pushing and crowding for place. . lother MRS. BESSIE PARKER BRUEGGE- MAN Of St. Louis, who has been mominated by President Harding to be a member of the United States Employes’ Com- pensation Commisaien. ability. Uniontown is the center of the “soft coal country,” as the great bitu- minous region of southwestern Penn- sylvania is known. In the mines and at the coke ovens many thousands of for- | cigners find employment, always a tur- bulent element that knows no law but the law of the mines, violence and bloodshed when occasion arises to main- tain the right to toil. Probably mno art of the country has witnessed so many disastrous clashes of labor and tal, often leading to riot and mur- der, ending with the appearance of the state militin. In the settlement of these struggles Senator Crow exerted firmness and Judgment, and it is an evidence of his fairness and wise counsel that he al- ways has possessed the confidence of the workers and the mine operators. A state senator for fifteen years, Mr. Crow has had a hand in shaping all of the Important legislation en- acted by the Pennsylvania general assembly Huring this period and much of this legislation has been prepared by him. A forceful speaker, & trained parliamentarian and with a thorough knowledge of the vast commercial and industrial interests of Pennsyl- vania, he has been recognized as re- publican leader of the state senate. For years he has had an ambition to come to the United States Senate. Urged by potential party leaders to become a candidate for governor, he refused, saying that when he retired from the Fennsylvania senate it would be to enter the Senate at ‘Washington. In 1916 he was pro- posed as a candidate for senator, but would not oppose Senator Knox. In 1913 he was made chairman of the republican state committee and a year later directed the campaign for the election of a state ticket and the ra-election of Senator Penrose. The struggle for the senatorship was of nation-wide interest. Senator Pen- rose was opposed by Gifford Pinchot. candidate of the Washimgton party, or independent republicans, and A. Mitchell Palmer, afterward Attorney | : Are at Variance With Basic Principles. REFERS TO WAR’S EVENTS States China’s Declaration Against Germany Came After Shantung Transfer Was Recognized. The text of the latest note of the Japanese government to China, under date of October 19, relative to the proposed Shantung settlement made public at the Japanese embassy : It expressed a readiness' yesterday. to embark upon negotiations on the uestion at issue whenever the hinese government “in full appre- clation of the main purpose of the anese proposal and upon giving more deliberate consideration to the question now at issue, and in the interest of cordial relations between China and Japan, shall express their willingness to open negotiations.” The note reviewed the events in- Volving the Shantung question over a period of several months and as- serted that Japan hitherto had “spared no efforts to achieve a speedy settle- ment of this question.” 'he Japanese governmen it said in discussing proposals put forward in diplomatic exchanges, “are unable to comprehend the Chinese assertion that the Japanese project is entirely at variance with the principles under- lying all treaties between China and foreign power: s Discusses Chinese Contentions. Tranamitted in reply to the memo- ran of the Chinese government, dated October 5, the note discussed a number of “contentfons put forward by China vis-a-vis the Japanese pro- Ject,” declaring they “are inexplicit and In particular there are a number of points on which the Japanese gov- ernment invite the reconsideration of Chinese ." Continuing, ance, argument is advanc- ed by her that the rights formerly enjoyed by Germany in regard to the lease of Kiaochow, having totally ex- pired in consequence of China's dec laration of war against Germany, should be restored to China without conditiong This not only is an argument hardly warranted by the principles and usages of international law or by treatles in existence be- tween China and Japan, but may be said to aim at the frustration of effects of the Versailles treaty. German Rights Renounced. “On May 20 last the German rep- resentative in China declared in his statement, addressed to the Chinese foreign minister, that by virtue of the Versailles treaty Germany had re- nounced all her rights and interests which she formerly enjoyed in Shan- convocation exercises at cordia Lutheran Church, 20th and G streets, Thursday morning at 1 o'clock. will be presented to those who have completed their academic work in the departments of graduate studies, arts, engineering, law, medicine and teach- ers’ college. Dean George N. Graduate School Johan Edward Liljencrans for the de- gree of doctor of Baer and Willlam Hazen for the de- gree of master of science beth Weber for the degr of arts. Dean William Cline Borden of “the Medical School will present for the degreé of doctor of medicine Rich- mond James ) MISS RUTH AGNES BRADY | Of Balboa, Panama Canal Zome. Inj ! a contest with nearly 1,000 other | beauties Miss Brady recently was, | plcked as the most beautiful girl Seventeen eollege boys from the S. S. Ohio State acted as judges. Misn Brady is only seventeen years of age. Her father one of the veteran gov- ernment employes' of the sone. o China in virtue of the Sino-Japanesc jtreaty concerning Kiaochow and oth- er matters. “The Chine sntention, therefore that the rights of lease expired en- tirely as a natural consequence of the ~Chinese declaration of war against Germany may be said to be tantamount to wholesale abnegation of treaties in_ existence, as well as| of all established facts. “As regards the Chinese assertion concerning the Shantung railway, it appears that she intends to place its management under her own complete | control and to leave for the time being one-half of the whole value of the raflway unpald. Japan, while entertaining no intention whatever of operating the railway exclusively by herself in any manner, is unable, in view of the actual railway conditions obtaining in China, to concur in the suggestion that the rallway manage- ment should be left entirely in the | hands of the Chinese government. | “The Shantung rallway was operat- ed by Germany alone o long as it remained in her hands, and Japan has taken it over from her at the sacri- fice of lives and treasure. Further, it was in September, 191§, that it was arranged between China awd Japan to operate the Shantung rail- way as their joint enterprise. “It is to be observed that the repa- ration commission, after having duly appraised the value of the Shantung railway, together with appertaining mines, placed it to the credit account of Germany with a view to setting it oft against the indemnity to be paid by thatepower. It is therefore | the degree of bachelor of arts the fpllowing: William Clyde Cantrell. ‘“'aivl. Afleen Dean, the Con- More than fifty diplomas M. Ha liam Eliot Hudmon, Eleanor C. Judd, Conrad Kinyoun, Isidore Lattman, Morris_ Lattman, Willlam Yong Chick Lee, Michael Angelo Mussman, | James Francis Nolan, Emmett James Peterson, Howard Knott Shaw. Anna Bogenholm Sloane, Forrest Dwight Stout, Helen Margaret White, Wil- lam Franklin Wilder and Weliman J. Warner. ; Dean W. C. Ruediger of the Teach-, ers’ College will present for the a gree of bachelor of arts and the bachelor's diploma in education the followin Edwin Warfield Broome, Cecil Hogle Cantrell, Cora Joy Me- Henning of the will present Karl hilosophy; John and Eliz: of master Beck, Frank Dunn, Don’t Spoil Your Appear- ance with Unsightly Teeth When I will restorc them to roundness and beauty at a very small cost to you. I am careful not to hurt you. Come in and learn the true con- dition of your teeth free of charge DR. WHITE, 407 7th St. Opposite Weslworth’s Sc and 16c Store. Hours: Daily, 8:30 a.m. to 8 pom.; Sundays, 10 to 1. Phone Main 19 sDr. J. K. Freiot, Prop. “California Syrup of Figs” Enjoy the Comfort-Luxury of an Overstuffed Living Room Suite Mere words cannot express the luxurious comfort of this overstuffed furniture—what : relief to come home in the evening and sink into one of these soft, comfortable chairs, or to relax on the spacious Dacnport! $98 i Buys A 3-Piece to + ‘ Suite UNITED UPHOLSTERY CO. Manufacturers of Upholstered Furniture sive three-piece suites. 911 7th St. N.W. Main 3413 —and beenune we manufac- ture it right on the prem- Ixen, we save you ' to Y. ? Special---Half-Price Sale Electric and Gas Fixtures CONVENIENT TERMS IF DESIRED $12.85 Reg. Price, $25.00 $4.95 Wired Compicte and Installed, GAS BOWL FIXTURES $7.90 Complete In :;-nnu v‘:al;i;’l.\.y [;?,l,l\!pl(“ll [)l‘r(;:';)lll’:afése General, dhemofll'lL Setnllor Crow or- tung under Sino-German agreements inadmissible that l(f:hl?n thl;‘uld lclalm i maintaine s oxe = s n s 9 g . e aacoens ot the “repubiian |and that she was no longer capable | hropercias 1n her hands without con.| Delicious Laxative for Child’s Liver and Bowels e e e AR Eamay BN tion of the law of survival of the fittest. Started as Teacher. Senator Crow started life as a school teacher. He was educated at a normal school and at Waynesburg College at Waynesburg, Pa. While a country edi- tor and afterward a reporter in Pitts- burgh he studied law and was admitted o practice at Uniontown. He made a reputation as a lawyer, was elected dis- trict attorney and in this office made a record as u prosecutor of courage and purLp Yéun Love s Tans = "Look for the Love Pay for just what you get. TEN CENTS for cash; twelve cents PER SQUARE F per square foot on deferred pa TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT on unpaid notes if canceled within one year out interest. from date of contract. and the success of the republican ticket was due in large measure to his resourcefulness as a campaign manager. As head of the Pennayl- vania delegation to the republican national convention last June he was a prominent figure at Chicago. In Pennsylvania he is said to have a larger personal following than any other public man, with the exception of Senator Penrose. Mr. Crow fis fifty-one years old. He Is married and has three sons. Sign of the . Nest ents, with- NO INTEREST No interest is charged against a purchaser - buying on deferred payment plan. Every cent applies on the principal. NO TAXES Taxes on the lots are paidtz the owner ontil the payments are comple FREE INSURANCE l of restoring them direct to China. This declaration having been duly taken note of by the Chinese govern- ment, they are deemed to be fully cognizant of the effects produced by the Versailles treaty. It will be re- membered that the Chinese declara- tion of war with Germany was made in August, 1917, when more than two years had already elapsed since the tranafer of former German rights to Japan had been fully recognized b; properties in her hands without con- ditions. “As regards the Japanese proposal relative to public property of Germany, the Japanese government, while ready | in principle to restore the so-called administrative public property to China, has no intention whatever of retaining all other public property in her hands, her wish being to make ® * * a satisfactory arrangement| with China- looking to Imperial dis- position of such propert - may prevent a sick child tomorrow. Hurry mother! A teaspoonful of “Californis” Syrup of Figs today tive” is often all that is necessary. Children love the “fruity” taste of genuine “California” Syrup of Figs which has directions for babies and children printed on the bottle. Say “California” or you may get an imi- tation fig syrup. Beware! If your child is constipated, billous, feverish, fretful, has cold, colic, or if stomach {s sour, tongue coated, breath bad, remember a good “physic-laxa- Build Your Love Nest In alike. ASHTON HEIGHTS VIRGINIA This magnificent suburb will instantly appeal to those anticipating an opportunity to get away from the crowded city and enjoy the freedom of a most picturesque surrounding. Ashton Hejghts possesses those improvements which the city folk enjoy, is within easy reach of the very heart of Washington, yet sufficiently removed to bring untold pleasures because of its natural beauty. Read every word of this ad. It is brimming full of interesting particulars to investor and homeseeker 20 Wil ect nd Gas Fixtares, Let Us Estimate—We'll Surprise You. e and Ord. & $12 9 Solicitod. EAL 5 Manufactarers of Fixtures. $12.95 PENN ELECTRIC & GAS SUPPLY CO. 911145 Ninth St. N. W. Main 512 Save You Half. Open Evenlngs. * Look for the Sign of the Love Nest Do You Know That? ASHTON HEIGHTS is 275 feet above ses level, the highest point within a radius of two miles. ASHTON HEIGHTS is on the BEST TROL- LEY LINE OUT OF WASHINGTON, 22 min- utes from 12th and Pennsylanvia Avenue, on a direct car line without a transfer. ASHTON HEIGHTS is on Cathcart Road, the next road that will be improved by Arlington Every buyer is insured against loss of his property by death. If the purchaser dies at any time before the payments are completed a clear title is given his beneficiary without further ents. e TERMS Terms to suit the purchaser. A small cash payment and easy monthly payments without interest. \ $500 CASH WILL FINANCE YOUR HOME, $20 WILL RESERVE YOUR LOT Magnificent Shade Trees Wonderful View High Altitude A IMPROVEMENTS—WITHOUT COST - TO PURCHASER Concrete sidewalks, stgeets, gas, sewers, electricity. RESTRICTIONS Property sold only to persons of the Cau- casian race. Every house MUST BE DETACHED, thus adding to the beauty and desirability of the surroundings. Finance Your Home Free Autos leave 617 Bond Bldg. every hour during the week Only-three miles from THE NATION'S CAPITAL, twenty-two minutes by trolley. for an inspection trip to Ashton Heights Salesmen On Property All Day Sunday County this year without additional cost to you. . The progressive spirit of purchasers of Ash- ton Heights property has already been shown in the ization of an Ashton Heights Citizens® Associati streets, concrete sidewalks, gas, sewerage, electricity, magnificent shade trees, splendid car service, all for TEN CENTS A SQUARE FOOT, only 3 miles from 12th and Pennsyl- vania Avenue, cannot be duplicated. Land in ASHTON HEIGHTS sells for from one-thirtieth to one-sixth the price of land the same distance from the White House on other car lines. Reserve Your Four Ways to Reach Ashton Heights 1. Take car on Washington-and Virginia Railway, Falls Church braneh, at Mount Vernon Station, 12th and Pennsylvania Avenue. Get off at Clarendon, look for Kay-Alger sign. = Salesman at office. 2 Take bus at 36th and M Streets. Get off at Clarendon; look for the sign of the Love Nest. % Salesman at office. 3. By auto cross Aqueduct bridge at Georgetown, take second turmn to right out Wilson Boulevard to Clarendon station. Phone Kay-Alger Co., Inc, Agents, Main 3075, for auto to take you out any time that suits your convenience. The Progression of Rent Raises must eontinue until the nation can eatch up with the demand for homes. ‘The Lincoln Memorial Bridge is on a direct line with Cathcart Road which passes through the center of Ashton Heights. The President, himself, has asked Con- gress for an appropriation of $25,000 to hasten the plans for this bridge. Phone Main 3075 Sunday From 10:00-to-4:30, Free Auto Will Be Sent to Your Door Promptly Y-ALGER COMPANY, Inc. Exclusive Agents

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