Evening Star Newspaper, January 29, 1922, Page 7

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00PS ORDERED OUTINNEBRASKA Five Companies to Police Nebraska City as Strike Disorders Grow. By the Associated Press. LINCOLN, Neb. January 28.—Five companies of Nebraska National Guard troops, under command of Lieut. Col. Douglas of the 134th Ne- braska Infantry, will proceed at once to Nebraska City in response to an| appeal from the county sheriff, county attorney and mayor for military pro- tection arising from alleged disorders growing out of the packing-house strike in that city. Martial law Is declared to be in ef- fect in Nebraska City and all its sub- divisions, reads the proclamation of Gov. McKelvie. ROW CAUSED REQUEST. By the Associated Press. OMAHA, Neb, January -A gen- eral fight last Wednesday night, in which alleged strike-breakers, strik- ers and strike sympathizers took part, Nebraska City, at where packing | X Day Beds ‘These beautiful Pull- man Day Beds, which are so often shown in high- grade moving picture scenes, may now be pur- chased here in almost any period design and uphol- stering—at a mere frac- tion above their actual wholesale cost. Under- neath the seat of every Pullman is a comfortable bed large enough for two people to sleep on. Buy one now on easy terms of = $74.50 Tow price of. Dressers A hint to the wise is sufficient. A solid Golden ©Oak Dresser, similar to illustration, now sold on easy terms for as little as $18.75 $3 Cash—$3 Monthly Ranges Has extra large flues, roomy firebox, heavy Du- plex grate, removable nickel trimmings. Guar- anteed to cook and bake perfectly, and positively uses less hard or soft coal than any other range you can buy— $49.50 35 Cash—$1 a Week N T A TR plant employes are on strike, result- ed in the request that state troops be sent to take charge of the situa- tion, according to Sheriff E. H. Fischer of Nebrasks. City. The fight resulted, the sheriff said. When two private detectives employ- “by the Morton-Gregson packing plint led more than twenty alleged strike-breakers downtown to see a motion plcture show. ‘These men, Who the sheriff said were armed with clubs, rocks and other weapons, were attacked, it was alleged. by strike sympathizers, about 300 of whom were involved. Since; the fight no further trouble had ocaurred, the sheriff declared, but the busingss men of Nebraska City felt that more men than were avail- able locally should be on hand _to cope with any situation that might develop. INDIA STARTS REFORM. Government Introduces Bills to End Repregsive Laws. DELHI, India, January 28.—Ylome Secretary_ Montgomery announced in the council of state today that the government had introduced bills for the repeal of nearly all the repressive and restrictive laws on the statute books. Deportation regii@tions, how- ever, were excepted. These were un- der consideration by tha fnperfal sec- gomery, therefore, was vfig}!fle to make any definite statement- about their repeal. PRELATES LEAVE gin Have Little Hope of - Arriving to Vote. By the Assocluted Press. a successor to Pope Benedict XV. on February 2, 3 or 8. Cardinal Dougherty companied him from Philadelphia a special car this morning. |accompanied by Very Rev. of Philadelphia. Cardinal Doughberty declined il seats, upholstered in a shade of blue velour. Seats in leather upholstered rette, Full-length Vanit and Full-size Bow-end nut or mahogany finish... 3-Piece Living Room Suite rocker, similar to illustration, with separate sptring loose cushion on all $15.00 Cash—$2.50 Weekly donsisfing of Dresser, Chiffo- Dresser ed; wal- A S T l”llllllllllll:?ll\?lll|lIIIIIIIHIII:'{M\E:IIIIIIIIIIII|II:?/l\‘l:ilillll"llllilllil SR Here Are Quality Furniture Values That Defy Competition—On Liberal Credit Terms 1492 pretty 10-Pc. Quee Ane Dining Suite Your choice of genuine walnut or mahogany finish, consisting of Buffet with mirror back, similar to illustration; Closet, Serving Table, Round Ex- tension Table (Oblong Table, $10.00 extra), 5 Side Chairs, 1 Armchair. genuine China 51954 . This Beautiful Bedroom Sl,lite 1892 $19.00 Cash—$3.00 Weekly 6 600~ EETWEENOEE FATTITIE . THE SUNDAY STAR; ONTRIP TO ROME Cardinals Dougherty and Be- NEW YORK, January 28.—Cardinals Dougherty of Philadelphia and Begin of Quebec sailed for Havre on la Lorraine at noon today, seeking to reach Rome in time to join the Sacred | College for the final balloting to elect The cardinals said they entertained { little hope of arriving on time, how- ever, as the Sacred College convenes 2, while they probably will not reach Rome before February was ' escorted I to the steamer by more than a score of laymen and clergy, who had ac- in He was Joseph retary for India, and Secretary Mont- | Whitaker, chancellor of the diocese to | speculate on the probable successor o] UPope Benedict, apserting that “no one STRONG BEER BARRED BY POLES IN FUTURE; wottsncrorne, CHRISTIAN SIENCE it enony | RUSTEES CHOSEN ‘WARSAW, Januay containing more than"2 } @lcohol is to be forbidden in Poland in the future. The alcohol law, | passed by the diet today places the ban on beer of higher alcohol oon- tent, limits drinking places to one p:)‘ 2,500 population, prohibits sdloons, licensing™only cafes. and restaurants, makes proprietors liable to arrest in the of drunkenness on their premises, and places a tax of 20 per cent on all liquor stocks. . A Stiff fight in the diet preceded the” passage of the measure, the “wet” forces présenting lengthy arguments against, as one.of them phrased it, “‘compelling the Poles to drink hair tonic, as they do in the United States.” The “dry"” vic- tory is attributed largely to the E of the seven woman Massachusetts Supreme Court Appoints Three for Publishing Society. By the Asaociated Press, BOSTON, January 28.—Judge Crosby, in the supreme court, today an- nounced the appointment of Fred M. Lamson of Boston, William B. Mc- Kenzie of Cambridge and Jumes E. Patton of this city us trustees of the Christiun Science Publishing Society. The appointees will succeed Herbert W. Eustace and Paul Harvey, both of whom recently resigned, and Lamont i knows who will be the next Pope." Newspaper reports as to the leading | directors of the mother church. Their candidates have been the “merest con- | appointment closes one phase of ‘the jecture,” he added. He said he ex-|long-standing controversy between pected to be back in Ameriom for | the directors and the former-trustees. holy week. Mr. Lamson, who is vice president Cardinal Begin also was escorted | of the Old Colony Trust Company, was to the steamer by a group of clergy- | agreed upon by counsel for the for- men and laymen. He was accompanied | mer trustees and. the board of di- on the voyagg by Canon Jules La- | rectors. Mr. McKenzie, one of the | berge of Quebec. original trustees appointed by Mrs. | Cardinal O’Connell of Boston, Mary Baker Eddy, and former editor of the Christian Science publication, was named by the directors and op- Posed by the trustees. Mr. Patton, named by the directors, | was accepted by the trustees. e has been retired for several years. Judge Crosby also acted on charges by the directors that certain expendi- tures from funds of the publishing trust were improper. As to the payment on November 26, 1921, immediately after the decision in the main litgation, of more than +$25,000 to employes of the publishing society, Judge Crosby said: “I am constrained to find that the payments were purely gift$ or gratuities and contrary to the terms of the trust and must be accounted for and paid ove! by the trustees to their successors.” The court held also-that payment of a salary for three months in ad- vance to John R. Watts, business manager of the publishing society. and of $500 a month to David B. Og- den after he had resigned,as trustee were improper and that these amounts, too, must be paid over to the new trustees. Payment of $500 a month to Lamont Rowlands after his removal as a trus- tee; the establishment of a branch office at SansFrancisco; the payment of $2.000 to Mrs. Clementine Dixon, wife of Frederick Dixon, editor of the Christian Science publications; em- ployment of Paul Harvey, a trustee, as an agent at New York, and the employment of accountants for an audit were upheld by the court. ATTITUDE OF U.S. DISTURBS FRENCH Believe True Situation of the only other North American cardinal, {already is on the ocean on his way | to Rome. SIS II:Z || France Is Not Understood. PARIS, January 28.—Commenting upon the attitude toward the French government's foreign policies, as re- flected in certain sections of the American press during the past few months, the Temps today says that “France's true situation is unknown on the other side of the Atlantic, and her real intentions are miscon- !lrfixetd." eferring briefly to the report pub- lished by the London Morning ,ll’ost that President Harding and Secre- tary of State Hughes had refused to “receive Ambassador Jusserand, the Temps discredits the report, say- ing “it would have been M. Jusser- and’s elementary duty to report such a situation.” The newspaper suggests that one way of preventing misunderstand- ings would be “to make impossible the recurrence of certain blunders that have greatly harmed France in the American government's view by a better direction of French opin- jon. * * * Americans and French- men unquestionably will get along as soon as they begin to understand each other.” The Temps then proceeds to ex- plain American objections to the Genoa conference without drawing any conclusions, “as conclusions I might look like advice.” POLICE SAY CONSCIENCE DROVE MAN TO SUICIDE Oak Buffets Beautifully made and finished with large French plate mirror— $3 Cash—$1 Weekly [ By the Associated Press. | Believed to Have Sent ‘“Beauty Powder” to Wife, Which Son Took, Dying From Effects. By the Aswociated Prese TORONTO, Ont., January 21.—The nemesis of conscience, police declared today, drove James Buchanan of this city to take his life during the night. Buchanan's son, Anderson, died ten days ago after swallowing a con- Chitfonizrs Now is surely the time to buy that odd el iffonier that ‘you have :o long been planning {a your guest chamber. (me sim- ilar to illustrat’vn—fin- ished in Golden Oik. Now sold on 4 coction labeled “beauty powder,” (& W N which had been sent to the youth's terms for 18.75 mother anonymously through the only ... :nz“l.u“’l'gd:y ‘t:hemfa hretl;l boc}i’ was indentifie y C. McCa y, & Hami! $3 Cash—$3 Monthly ton printer, as that of the man who visited_his’ shop two weeks ago to have directions for the use of a “beauty powder” printed. The police belleve the death-dealing powder, which young Buchanan swallowed in Jest, was intended for his mogher. The father's body was found up- right in a chalr, in a gas-filled room of his home. A bottle of liquor was on a nearby table, and the dead man's lifeless hand still clutched a volume of Mark Twaln. —_ THREE DENY SEEING VIRGINIA RAPPE ILL Called to Counteract Defense Argu- ment of Long-Standing Bladder Complaint. By thie Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, January 28. Mrs. Katherine Fox of Chicago r sumed her prosecution rebuttal testi- mony today in the second trial of Roscos C. Arbuckle in connection with the death of Virgina Rappe, motion picture actress, Mrs. Fox was called in an effort to refute the de- fense evidence that Miss Rappe died as the result of a Jong-standing bladder complaint and not as the Duofold Beds Oak or Mahgoany fin- ish, upholstered in black or brown lather- $24.75 $5 Cash—$1 Weekly result of an alloged attack by Ar- uckle, Mrs, Fox testified that she had known Miss Rappe for a number of yeirs and never knew the actress to be ill. Mrs, Kate Hardebeck, |housekeeper’ for Miss Rappe in Los Angeles, also testified that Miss Rapp ealth always appeared to.be “very good.” Miss Helen Hansen, a Los Angeles motion picture actress, testified to taking long walks with Miss Rappe. “I never saw her ill,” she safd. ——— CHINESE DEMAND RAISE. VANCOUVER, B, C., January 28— Chinese crews on transpacific liners operated by the Canadian Pacifie ocean service have demanded an in- crease of 40 per cent in wages, Cana- dian Pacific officials announced today. They said the demands probably would not be met. _It is understood Chinese crews em- ployed by -other transpacific lines were planning similar demands for increases. 5 ASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY- 29, 1922—PART 1. Rowlands, who was removed by the ! of Commerce and private interests also appeared before the -Shipping | Boayd commissioners to protest, fur- ther retention by the government o plersand docks formerly operated by the Hamburg-American line and North German Lloyd on the ground that under federal ownership the property is untaxable and Hoboken is cut off from one of its largest sources of revenue. The government is anxious to_dis- pose of the Hoboken shore line, Brig. Gen. Grote Hutchison, representing the Secretary of War, asserted, al- though Capf. Charles O'Neil, acting vice president and general manager of the road, testified it is a great suc- cess in a financial wa. Since 1917, Capt. O'Neil said, the one-mile road, with its 11 miles of yard tracks extending from New Jer- sey terminals to the Hoboken docks, has shown a net profit, in_cash and liberty bonds in banks, of ‘he valuation of the road at $3,000,000. HUNGARY BREEDS CATS TO OVERCOME MENACE OF RUSSIAN RODENTS BUDAPEST, January 28.—Rats and mice are migrating in swarms from the Russian famine area, and Budapest is now overrun with them. All efforts to rid the city of this scourge have falled, and the devastation caused by them goes on_apace. The market halls, and warehouses are with the rodents, which run about, even in the daytime. So dangerous have they become that when dis- turbed they will turn and show fight. Several merchants have been bitten. The situation is aggravated by the dearth of cats in Hungary. During the war, when food was scarce, thousands of families ate their cdts. Since then the Increas- ing demand for cat fur as a cheap substitute for expensive furs has taken a further toll. As a conse quence, the comparatively exor, itant price of 3,000 to 4,000 kro- men is being offered for a kitten by shopkeepers. In some villages the peasants have given up poultry rais and have turned to the more lucrative business of cat breeding. PROTEST L. 3. SALE food _stores swarming is pl: LgFxe 52 By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, January 28—Sale by | the governmert of the Hoboken Shore | Railw a one-mile transfer line ac- | jauired by the -War Department in | 1917, was opposed today, at a hearing ( before members of the United States| Shipping Board, by representatives | of Hoboken, the local || I i )} [ | of the city chamber of commerce and the port | authority of New York. i The commissioners reserved de- | cision pending announcement of New | York and New Jersey port develop- ment plans. ! Members of the Hoboken Tax- | payers' League, the Hoboken Chamber | CLEANERS s\ f X * T Have The Hoffman Company UF UNE_M".[ RUAI] I give a new color to your i ? I ts ibbons ouses City of Hoboken, Chamber of Lingesie: Teommingss ‘Stockings Commerce and New York fIi@ Silk Shirts Curtains Draperies Interests Heard. : B e Eheowic. Ehoie CALL MAIN 4724 o l MAIN OFFICE: 730 122 ST, NW. ‘ PIGEDM FLIGHT FAILS. | Birds Fail to Reach Mrs. Harding cr Officials Here. NEW YORK, January 38.—Of the forty pigewons liberated In Mzudison Square Gharden Thursday, bearing messages flor Mye. Warzen G. Harding ‘and offici:ls at Whashington, only thres have been accounted for, it was announced tomight. One of tha birds, With a leg injured, flew into the Window of a New York fire statiop: another was found, numbed by the cold, in a lumber yard at Asbury Park, and a third came down on Long Island. Officials :it Madison Squire Gard said this i the first flight of its kl:a . | ever atterpted in winter. ‘fhe pigeons were expacted to reach Washington AU ‘ ( =l within six hours. 1 ! l ne. and DYERS '—from'thé bottom of her HOPE CHEST she brought to light Her Savings Bank Book and .a $1,000 Insurance Policy Of all the prizes contained in her Hope Chest the most cov- eted one of all is this Savings Account in the Citizens Bank and a $1,000 Insurance Policy, the Savings Account soon to grow into $1,000 of real money, with the added protection of the Life Insurance for a like amount. ALL FROM THE TINY INVEST- MENT OF 30 CENTS A DAY! . No wonder she is proud to show it t o her friends—it proves what a sensible head there is on her shoulders—and girls—listen to this—when your Prince Charming comes along and learns that you have had a thrifty eye to the future and have invested your small change in such a worthy manner, why, this particular Prince, €Charming is going to give up searching for the girl right then and there, because YOU’'RE THE GIRL. Write or Call at the Bank for Details, Which are Gladly Fumish_ed Without Obligation. £ Citizens Savings Ban A P 1336 New York Ave. N.W. c}&f o.o"'f;o" il A7

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