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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1922, It will soon be Paint-np and Clean-up time. mates now. PAINTING Got our esti- INC. N.W Ph. N. 231-232 G DEPARTMENT PAINT IRE REPAIR Conscientious Work Guaranteed American Motor Service 1612-22 U St. N.W. North 10-400 . e ! . Finishing— Jt makes all the dif- ference in the world how Your mnegatives are fin- ished. If you are not particular, almost ny of developing ting and il satisfy. mand_the best. want US We are alists in this line and when you get your prints from this shop you are going to be satisfled. We feel so sure of this that we do not hesitate to _guarantee our wor! service if you want it. The Nationa! Remembrance Shop (Mr. Foster's Shap) 14th St. (One Door from Pa. Ave.s = E'LL do Your Papering and Painting at a Saving —that's worth-while If you or- der now. SPECIAL PRICES 20 as to bring In work for our experts “between seasons.” HARRY W. TAYLOR CO. PAl Ju mper Tar COMPOUND Best for 35¢ a Bottl at Druggists— 2 Doses One Cent DONT EXPERIMENT This o'd reli- mble family remedy has relieved thousands—it will relieve you— Cnh"ural’mmotesfieodflmr Trestment: At night rub Crticura Ointmert into partings £l over the scalp. Next morning shempoo with Cuticvra Scap and hot water. Re- pu: h two weegs. Custserntate -u-m-_\, e Tad Bt Sy = e Soeare 5. Orgtmens 2 ma b, Taigam oicura Soap shovves wilbagtmas. USE SLOAN'S T0 EASE LAME BACKS OU can't do your best when your back and every muscle aches with fatigue. Apply Sloan's Liniment freely usthout ruboing, as it penetrates and a quick glcw of warmth and com- fort wiil put the “pep” back into you. for rheumansm, neural g lumbago, sciatica, sprains and =trams. ;:ses an({‘ pqr;s. brflutsee. stiff joints, | weather alter-effects. For 40 years Sloan's kas been the standard liniment in thousands lhomes all over the world. ) You'll find it clean too—leaving no skin stains, muss or clos pores. Its very odor—health sumulat- ing—suggeats the goofi it will do. Keep a bottle handy for you never know when you will need it. At all druggists—35c, 70, $1.40. ploan’ iniment | freely m\ For pimply faces use frecly every bt be .urpnud at the quick im- i aod othes skin troubles: of Dr. Hobson's Family Remedies. LL my colds used to make me a ‘shutin,’ butno Ionzer. for l take Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey nt flle first warning of a oold soon relieves & cold, S enea m tick- ing in'throst. Safe tur theitles it folks too. Get a boitle from DrBell’s. Pine-TacH Jor Coughs and Cold: .\ == Inny unanimously. of | BAR ASSOCIATION MEETING CLOSES {Recommendation for Addi- tional Two-Year College Education Adopted. Recommendations of the Amierican Bar Association that future members of the bar be required to have at least two years' college education in addition to their regular law school work were adopted as the closing work of the conference of bar asso- tions of the country at Memorial ‘ontinental Hall late yesterday after- noon. This action of the conference places the various bar associations partici- pating under the moral obligation of striving to have this educational standard set up in their states and universities. A Tesolution asking that state bar associations be empowered to estab- lish sheir own regulations for ad- missi®i to the bar was defeated. Elihu Root took the floor, amid much discussion, and rapidly put the dele- gates into a frame of mind in which | they approved the two years of col- | lege education qualification practic- Mr. Root Makes Appeal. Mr. Root made a siirrinz appeal. in S {which he asked the deiegates from state, county and city bar associations | from’ all parts of the country not to permit the “illustrious examples of the successes of the past” to diock the {purification of tne bar of the future. The speaker painted conditions under which he declared it is possible for crooks and blackmailers to “prac- { tice fraud under the protection of a shingle.” A banquet at the New Willard Hotel llast night brought. the gathering { formally to a close. Attorney Gener- al Daugherty, Senator George Whar- er of Pennsylvania, William on, former solicitor general nited States, and Cordenio A. Severance, president of the American Bar Association, spoke, The general topic of the speakers was that of legal education, pressing approval of any eff might tend to raise the stan the American bar. Attorney Daugherty said that the ambition of the Department of Justice is 1o be helpful in_ installing “a judiciary which shall be a credit to America and American institutions, and (> the profession to which we are all proud to belong.” emies of Law and Order. Enemies of law and order are more active than ever before in sowing “the poisons of iawlessness and un- jsound and experimental theories of government,” the Altorney General said. “They have a small portion of the American press, and likewise their orators, scattering and propagating their cious theories of government and cesting unjustifiablé reflections on men holding public office v intent to undermine the confidence the people in them. These forces must be met and combatted.” Mr. Severance, who presided, said that while the government requires an emigrant appiying for citizenship to ‘\\e.xsr his devotion to the Constitu- tion, *“we permit the youth of our country to have their unformed minds warped by lecturers and professors who are about as devoted to the Con- i stitution as Lenin and Trotsky.” | This condition has been ignored, the | speaker continued, adding that in an 1 effort to overcs e or correct it, the American Bar Association has taken a step ferward in advocating advanced requirements for the practice of law. IPRESS CLUB STAGES | FAREWELL TO MR. HAYS Amusing Skit and Laughs Galore | on Eve of Resignation as Post- | master General. | Its walls covered with motion pic- ture posters, the National Press Club last night bade farewell to Will H. Tlays, good scout and Postmaster General ‘for a few days more before he_goes into the “movie Marines, letter carriers, motion pic- “actors” { ture and others took part ng_“skit” with which Good-bye, Biil.” and General displayed his i famous smil: time after time at the good saliles whicA marked the on. Theodore Tiller and Avery {Marks took the leading “roles. | ““The moticn picture is already the ‘pl;lnn ipal amusement of the majority of | i 1 the people; it is the sole amuse- said Mr. Hays, who an organization of motion | producers after March 4. “The potentialities of the motion pigture for moral influence and educa- | | tion are ! said Mr. Hays. | “Therefore itegrity should be i protected as we protect the integrity 15 our churches, and its gquality | should be developed as we develop the quality of our schools. he men who have ploneered In the industry hdve already accomplish- od' wonderful things 10 uniting now to strive jointly for the purposes of the new national association—that is, }'to attain and to maintain the high- i est-possible standard of motion plc- ture production,’ and ‘to develop to { the highest possible degree the moral and educational value of the in- dustry'—these men are looking very far ahead, indeed, toward a great good for all the people, and will render a distinctive public service.” President Robert Armstrong, on| behalf of the club, expressed the | friendship and good wishes of the nawspaper men of the National Capi- tal toward the rotiring Postmaster | General. and distributors —_— i TEACHERS’ AID URGED { - FOR HIGHER PAY BILL i Aid of the District public school teachers in securing the passage of fthe higher teachers’ compensation bill now pendirg in Congress was urged by school authorities at a meceting of the Teachers’' Institute { yesterday afternoon in the audi- { torium of.Central High School. | Alian_Davis, principal of Business High School and president of the | Teachers’ Council, urged every teach- { or who s personally acquainted with {2 member of Congress to secure his | support of the new pay schedule. He | 210 outlined other: plans for a cam- ipaign to stimulate interest in the | salary bill { James T. Lloyd, member of the {hoard of education, pointed out the i need for supporting the salary legis- !lation. He ruquested the teachers to ! accept the salary measure as drafted and refrain from having amendments to it introduced in Congress. Dr. William T. Foster, director of the Pollak Foundation for Economic i Rusearch, spoke on “The Morale of | the Senool.” s | —— |INQUIRE INTO ELIGIBILITY. {Senators Named to Investigate Debt Commission Appointees. The Senate vesterday directed its ju- diciary committee to investigate eligi- | Lility * of Senator Smoot, republican, Utah, and_Representative Burton, re- vublican, Ohio, for appointment. to the allied debt funding commissign, to which they were named recently by President HarJing, together with Secre- taries Hughes and Hoover. A resolution by Senator Walsh, demo- crat, Montana, proposing the commit- tee’s inquiry. was adopted without ob- jection. Senator Walsh contends that under the Constitution Senator Smoot and Representative Burton are inelig! Blo. bechuse they would be “civil ofi cers” as well as members of Congress. Actlon _on the nominations of debt commissloners will he suspended during the committee inquiry, which is-to be concluded next Tuesday. 1920 Proftts of U. S. Farms verage Lowest in 10 Years By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, February — The American farmer, who rose to un- precedented heights of prosperity in 1918 and 1919, earned less in 1920 than he has earned in any year of the last ten, if his income is reckoned in dol- iars having the same pu-chasing power as in 1913, according to esti- | mates made public today by the Na- tional Bureau of Econamic Research. Reckoned in actual dollars paid to him in 1920, the farmers' income, as shown by the repoft, was less than in ithe preceding three years, but was greatos than in the #even years from 1910 to 1916, inclusive.” The figures, taken from a detailed report of an exhaustive, nation-wide survey, showed that tha country's 6,450,000 farmer's in 1920 earned ap- proximately $7,200,000,000—a drop of $3,650,000.000 from their income for the year before. The farmers, who represent about 16 per cent of the gainfully employed, have received during the past decade a share in (he total national income varying between 12.3 per cent in 1911 and 17.4 in 1917 and 1918, until 1920, when it dropped to 10.9 per cent. The farmers’ share, in billions of dollars and per cent of the total, is estimated by the bureau to have been in each year, beginning with 1910, as follows: Aggrezate of dnal Per cent of total re- celved by farmers, 13, Farmers' incgme (hiltions). nes (Siitionn). $30.0 5 63.8 *Approximate. The final figures for the total come in 1920 can only mated owing to the dela ing the income tax returns. When these flgures are translated into terms of the purchasing power of ‘1913 dollars,’ it is again seen that the purchasing power of the farmers was at its lowest ebb in 1920,” says the report. Here ars the comparative figures in billions o. dollars: FARMERS' INCOME IN DOLLARS AT THE UNIFORM PURCHASING POWER OF 1913. $4.010.000,000 in- 1920 1| Geo. Plitt Co.,Inc in dollars of 1913 purchasing pdwer, are given as follows: of farmers. in 1420 (Ile the rest of “They had ad “lk will be seen farmers fell faster t those guln{f\;lll) emnl ¥y arther to fal h“\l\'lmt the results may have been In 1921 cannot yet be dclermined, be- cause, while farmers azain suffered heavy losses. the rest of the country aigo ran into a period of severe de- pression.’ ASKS FOR RETIREMENT. now on 18 *Approximule, .'\n official summary of lne report Brig. Gen. Henry Jervey, leave of absence and scheduled to com- mand a brizade of troops in the Hawalian Department, has applied for retirement in April, after thirty-eight years' service. ie recently completed a course of instruction at the Field Artillery School at Camp Knox, Ky. During the world war he was in charge of the operations division of the War Department general staff, with the rank of major general, and was awarded a distingvished service medal for the great success of his adminis- tration. He is from Virginia and was graduated from the Military Academy at the head of the class of 1886. He was assigned to the engineers and served in that corps, in this city and elsewhere in the United States, until made a brizadier general in e National Army , 1017, He \s about fifty-six ge, and would not retire regularly before 1930. LITT —offers the kind of service you want, in Painting, Paper- hanging or Upholstering. Mod- ernte charges. 1325 14th St. 1¢ | Main 4224-5 666 will break a Cold, Fever and The per capita income of tie coun- | Grippe quicker than anything try as a_whole, and the per capita income of the farmer, both measured we know, preventing pneumonia. Bargain 6th Floor LANSBURGH & BROTHER COL Discover That Rich and Rare Flavor—- Be a Coffee Columbus! 1922 is 1492! And every day is Discovery Day for some good soul who gets his first taste of Sanitary’s F amous Green Batr Coffee. Chances are you've already made this glori- ous discovery in happiness. No? Then why not embark today on the golden sea of mealtime joy—join the merry crew of lifetime voyagers--become-a complacent Co- lumbus of Coffee! No need to pawn the crown jewels, either— S. F. G. B. Coffee costs only 25¢ a pound. AND ROASTED FOR B SA& ITARY @‘mcm M | SANITARYS FAMOUS GREEN BAG - COFFEE , For Sale Only By Us 255, SANITARY GROCERY Stores Everywhere— One Near Your Home CO., Inc.