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[ Pullman Revolving Seat Day Beds ed in Velour or Tapest Four-Post Bed Outfit By placing a beautiful Day Bed $60.50 Consisting of full or twin —_— size Beds, beautifully made and : A ranteed sanitary, before vyou is a comfortabie bed, —like this—in your living room. large enough for two grown people to sleep on. During the day it serves as living room furniture—at night the seat A day bed simdlar to {llustration—finished in brown mahogany. Add an Extra Room to Your Home may be revolved, and right there $10.00 Cash—$1.50 Weekly special at. . $5.00 Cash—$1 Weekly T hree-Piece Querstutfed Tapestry Suite Consisting of Large Settee, Chair and Rocker, with Lux- $ 00 urious Removable Spring Cushions in seat. Upholstered in a very fine quality verdure tapestry................. ’ $19.50 Cash—$3.00 a Week B larvie L 3 = > Graceful Queen Anne Bedroom Suite Consisting of Dresser, Chifforette, Full-length Vanity Dresser and Full-size, Bow-end Bed; walnut or mahogany$195 00 finish . . o o . 10-Piece Dining Room Suite Your choice of genuine walnut or mahogany finish, consisting of Buffet, similar to illustration; China Closet, Serving Table, Round * $ L.00 Extension Table (Oblong Table, $10.00 extra), 5 side Chairs, 1 Arm- B chair. Seats upholstered in genuine leather. \ $19.50 Cash—$3.00 Weekly 735 Tth ST FWEEN G, Jge-IBg' Come to the Phillip Levy store tomorrow—Fkere you will find quality farniture priced within the reach of all, on terms you can easily afford amel curtains— $4.00 Cash—$1 Weekly ; Porcelain-Top Kitchen Cabinet Made qf solld oak; white ent inferfor and roll front $34.75 Congoleum used in every rugs_ may be room in the house. Guaranteed to make Food or a new rug froe. Room Size 9x12 Congoleum rRucs, $16.20 Rccm Size 6x9 ., Congoleum rucs, $8.10 Room Size 9x10Y; Congcleum rucs, $14.15 Rocm Size 9x7/» Congoleum RUGS, $10.10 Solid Oak Buffet Rich highly golden finish, polished. Extra well made. $29.50 $3.00 Cash—$3 Monthly Solid Oak Dining Tabiz Beautitully finished, highly polished; extends to 6 feet when open, with three leaves. $16.75 &6 > B - ww . THE SUNDAY, STAR, WASHINGTON, 3 lmuu_\- that he had not advised own- \ = ! ments of the steam vacht Satilla, once 5| surik | IN MANTLE ENGAGEMENT = :Former Yacht and Navy Patrol Car- : | Bahamas and Canada by the motley | D. C., FEBRUARY 2, 1922—PART 1. - [RHODE ISLAND ACT TOEND MILL STRKE ‘State Board Calls on Both ! Sides to Accept Judge Hahn as Mediator. By the Associated Press. PROVIDENCE, R. L, February 25.— The state board of medlation and owners and strikers to end the dead- lock which has closed many Rhode Island textile mills for the last five weeks, by placing the entire dispute in the’ hands of Judge J. Jerome Hahn as sole mediator. Judge Hahn is chairman of the board. The bourd proposed that the strik- ers Hf mills in the Blackstone valley tentative wage scale to be set by Judge Hahn, that the final wage de- cision should not be retroactive, that both mill owners and strikers agree | to abide by Judge Hahn's findings, and that the hours of labor be left as before the opening of the strike. | This appeal was issued after a day; of testimony offered by both sides and at the conclusion of a shorty executive session. 1t called for an| answer from both sides not later; than 4 o'clock next Tuesday. i Parties Withhold Comment. | eaders and mill owners: } made no comment on the proposition. urther than to say that it would be before expiration of the!l The board's statement fol- | fter numerous conferences with manufacturers and employers i concerned in the existing contro- % v in the textile industry various n ers have been presented to this board in answer to the request of the board that the parties Jjustify their position in regard to the cut in wages and changes in hours. The employers have stated that they were unwilling to furnish the information required to the public generally, but were willing to furnish the same to the chairman of the board. The only solution of the difficulty appears to us to be that the entire matter should be referred to the chairman of this board as umpire or arbitrator to adjust and settle the differences between the parties.” Offer of Troops Denied. Col. Cyril L. D. Wells, commanding the troops at Pawtucket, said ers of mills in the Blackstone Valley to reopen their plants under mili- tary protection. He declared that his sole duty was to preserve order and protect property, and added that relations between the national guardsmen and the public at Paw- tucket had been satisfactory so far. An inquest into the circumstances surrounding the death of Jose D'As- suncao. who was shot and killed in last Tuesday's riots at the Jenckes Spinning Company plant in Paw- tucket, will open next week, nrob-‘ on Thursda¥ At a meeting of | 1 workers at Ashfon and Berkeley | ay a resolution was adopted de- ving the action of the Pawtucket i in “firing on defenseless men d women who were striving to voice their protest in a Ilerfu‘ll.“. legal manner against reduction of wages and inerease working hours.” MONTANA GETS SURPRISE abl. in | —_— | i {Former Senator Came to America | i With Mother and Crossed Plains as Boy of 12 in 1864. { BUTTE. Mont.. February 25.—For- {mer Senator Mantle, whose engage- | i ment to marry Miss Mary Etta Daly was announced today in Chicago, long has been prominent in political ; ind business cireles. Mining cluims equired in early days one of the wealthiest men of the state. He has a handsome me here, (which, until her death aj was presided over by | n the former senator left here | i few weel ago for the east, none »f hix friends was aware of the! | romance sed by the announce- ment in Chicago. Miss Daly is twenty-five years old. | { She was born in this city.” Her fa-{ { ther, a miner. died several vears ago, | {and her nother and sister live in| San Francisco. | Mr. Mantle was born in ‘Birming- ham, England, December 13, 1851. His father died before he was born. ! His mother brought him to Americ and he crossed the plains in 1864.1 As a boy he worked on farms .n | Utah and as a telegraph operator. 1n 1877 he came to Butte as Wells Fargo Express agent and local man- ager. He was elected mayor of Butte in 1802, He was appointed to the United States Senate in 1893 and | clected to that office in 1895 i COAST GUARD WARNED | OF NEW RUM-RUNNER | rying 62 Tons of Whisky, Officials Claim. NE YORK, February 25.—Coast guard cutters from Maine.to Florida have been ordered to dog the move- the plaything of O. T. Ledberg, a wealthy Bostonian, later a patrol of the United States Navy at Bar Har- bor, and now reported by customs of- ficials about to don the disguise of a rum-runner. Secret agents of the department, = { who are making every effort to halt|” the smuggling of liquor from the | fleet of small craft plying along the | American coast, have learned that the Satilla recently was purchased by a Brooklyn “importer,” sald Capt. B.| L. Reed, head of the coast guard serv- ice in this district. H She was brought to New York, | where her society make-up and war paint were removed. She was outfit- ted, manned with a crew of nine, re- christened the Edith and dispatched to Nassau, in the Bahamas, to under- go_extensive repairs. ! Customs officials claim knowledge that the craft was loaded to her sixty-two-ton capacity with whisky, which she will attempt to discharge | on Long Island. RESCUE INSANE PATIENTS FROM BURNING BUILDING | ——— | Baltimore Firefighters Take Six | From Medical School—Students Save Old Documents. I Special Dispatch to The Star. ! BALTIMORE, Md., February 25.—| Six insane patients in the old building | occupied by the University of Mary- land Medical Department, northeast corner of Lombard and Green streets, were taken from the place today when fire swept the auditorium, burned to i the roof and endangered the dental department adjoining. Hundreds of patlents, physiclans and nurses in the hospital watohed the removal of the insane persons, who were from Spfing Grove, and Jater viewed the battle with the flames. The building.was damaged to the extent of several thousand dollars, and valuable anatomical exhibits, it is sald, were destroyed. N Important documents, including rosters of faculty end students since ? | the beginning of the university, were i arrived soon after the fire was dis- covered during the recess hour. conciliation late today called on mill: H saved by sixty or more students, whol KOO AND SZE ACCLAIM HUGHES’ PARLEY EFFORTS Secretary Given Lion’s Share of Credit for Success of Wash- . ington Conference. NEW YORK, February 25—Secre- tary Hyghes is entitled to the lion’s share of credit for the success of the armament conference at Wash- ington, Dr.\V. K. Wellington Koo, Chinese minister to Great Britain, declared in an address today before the Lawyers' Club. 5 Without Mr. Hughes, he ‘sald, the Shantung question could - mot have been settled, and without emlicable disposition of that question, none of the other treaties could have been signed. Dr. Saoke Alfred Sze, Chinese min- ister to Washington, also lauded Mr. | Hughes’ work, and declared the con- | ference had served to strengthen | China’s belief in the altruism of the United States, Although China did not get all that | she hoped from the conference, the | | things accomplished far outweighed | those left undone, he said. Last Day of Contest— || See Page 12, Part 2| | I DRAFTING DESIGHS TRADE MARKS ARTHUR CORNELIUSW_ 605 OURAY BUILDING C NORWOOD For resurfacing old floors a ‘ones of hardwood. Workmanship suaranteed. " 1428 B St. S.E. : Phone Linc. 2031 . You Will Be Well Fed If You Eat Holmes Health Bread Phone Main 4537 An Initial Payment of 00 Secures Delivery of Any Pathe Phonograph to Your Home—Balance Equal Monthly $5 Because the Pathe Freres Phonograph Company was facing a critical business situation, we purchased a large stock of these phonographs at exactly half price. 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