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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (. MARCH 5 1922 PART l | WASHINGTON “The Slgn of Service" ROOMS AND APARTMENTS 1319 F and 18th and Columbia Road ST~ Bhie SPORTSWOMAN ZarberBridget Women' Specialty Section Warwick Lodge Topcoats for Spring Developed in English and domestic tweeds, in gray, blue, _ tan and biege; model as illus- trated priced from $29.50 to $32.50. Other Warwick Lodge topcoats are $27.50 to $59.50, and include worsted jerseys, English cheviots and camel's hair Polo Coats. > * Warwick Lodge Sportwear (Suits, Capes and Coats) is exclusive with us—and with you. Sizes for juniors, misses and women from 14 to 46 are stocked. G The Avenme at Ninth = Ghe SPORTSWOMAN ParbepBriclyed WomensSpeciaity Sention The Latest in Sweaters, Shirts and Skirts Sweaters, full-fashioned in. wool, silk and wool and pure silk, are priced from $14.50 to $80.50. ( Strictly tailored shirts in striped and plaid dimities, oxfords and siiks (white, colors and combina- tions) are $8 to $13.30. (Skirts with fringe and without, wrap- srounds and circular models, basketweaves, homespuns, tweeds and silks are from $7.50 to $19.50. 'S CLEARING HOUSE FOR 112000 NOVA SCOTIA MINERS MAY STRIKE Union Chiefs Refuse to Sign Letter Urging Men to Ac- cept 20 Per Cent Pay Cut. Scotlan coal miners loomed today when J. B. McLachlan, secretary- treasurer, andy two district board members of District 26, United: Mine Workera of America, refused to sign a letter advising the miners to accept a compromise wage offer e by the British Empire Steel Corporation. i Although other members of the board signed. the letter, some union officials expressed doubt whether the comproinise measure could win ap- proval without sanction of the three diesenting members. MeLachlan es- peclally was said to have strong in- fll_:_!hn('p.\wllhqlh(‘[\rork!r;. 9 e Nova Scotlan workers will' vote. o the offér March 14 "ll' the uglle time that other districts are.casting { ballots on the question of authorising strikes. No strike ballots have been issued in District 26, as the district reserved the right when it was organ- ized o negotiate its own wage con- tracts Independently. The compromise offer of the British Empire Steel Corporation, which was ccepted by a majority of the wage scale committee on March 1. subject to union ratification, calls for a 20 per cent wage cut Secretary Davis Considers Making Report on Arbitration Efforts: Intimations were given yesterday at the Labor Department that Secre- tary Davis might make public tomor- Tow reports of such progress as has been made in the attempt authorized by President Harding to obtain a na- tional conference between emplovers and employes in the bituminous mining industry before April 1, when a general strike is threatened In unionized flelds. It is known that Mr. Davis, with the assistance of the division of concillation and media- tion. has made direct personal ap- peals to some mine operators, asking them to enter such a conference, even though they regard a split with the miners’ union over the Wage question as Inevitable. The deparsment’s appeale are un derstood to have been particularl insistent to operators in the Penn- where the competitive he coal market, caused by the very heavy production of non- union coal in West Virginia, has led a large number of the Industry’s lead- ers to take a determined stand against any continuation of the sys- tem of contracting with the United Mine Workers to fix wages on & ni tional baais. that no report: of their progress would be made pub- lc in advance of his prellminai tempts to secure an underst among the coal operators. ANOTHER TEXTILE -~ STRIKE SETTLED Woonsocket Falls Mills Com- | promise—Hope Held Oth- ! ers May Follow. By the Associated Press. - PROVIDENCE, R. I, March An- nouncement was made today by the management of the Woonsockst Falls mills at Woonsocket, R. L, thii strike in that plant, whiel ‘began three weeks ago, has been settled by compromise. The mill, which employs 150 hands in the manufacture” of 4 plush; wiil reopen Monday morning. ‘This is the second plant in the { Blackstone valley to make peace with the strikers. Karllier in the week the Acme Finishing Company in ll’uvtucket had agreed to cancel its — !'notice of a fifty-four-hour week and a 20 per cent wage reduction. Ac- cording to today's announcement. the Woonsocket Falls mills will retain i the forty-eight-hour week and the | workers will accept a wage reduction ‘a( from 6 to 10 per cent. 2 Pickets to Reaew Activity. ! Tonight both James M. Dick, or- i ganizer of the ‘Amalgamated Textile Workers, who {8 heading the strike forces in the Pawtucket valley, and. ‘Thomas F. McMahon, president of the United Textile Workers, general of the Blacstone valley strikers, de- clared that Mondey morning would see renswed activity in all sections of the Rhode Island textile area. A policy of “intensified picketing” was announced to the strikers at mass meetings throughout the day, and Mr. McMahon stated that one Black- stone valley mill, which he did not name, ‘would see “m. picketing.” In the Pawtucket valley, where th Hope Company’s mill at Hope was.re. opened Thursday and pickets wi later driven from the vicinity of the plant by cavalrymen and machine ganizer Dick announced. Monday is the time set for the test. Board Re-Enters Situation. The state board of mediation and conciliation, which failed early in the ! week to induce mill owners and strikers to submit their differences to arbitration, re-entered the situa- tion today. At the close of & meet-: ing lasting two hours and a half it was announced that the board had at arbitration. thé statement FAMILIES GO TO amm.‘ Departing From Textile Bections as * Strike Continues. | MANCHESTER, N. H, March 4 sixty familtes of mill operatives have city for the province of Que- the start of the strike whic! yme 30,000 employes of the d Stark cotton mills idle ks. Most of these French Canadians ve sald that their de- parture was marely for the purpose of visiting r)olnlvu and that they 1 turn laf w%‘:r?kr: leaders said today that they were ready to m | manic mclfl:tum tl::p‘mmi.x b urpose, o [BCus! gtrlkc. which 1led -be next w‘: 'wlth 2‘2:‘? who s expe 0 Lens .:'nd ‘would press their congressional investi- New Hampshire textile number of girls walked up an‘; ld';;'n the. lmlo.t;‘ tn‘cagol:. '.p;:: G ‘:u* effort. A ry has been opéned at re sold at cost prices to resent union cards. e tain climbers in Bwit- Tiand l.mnl’:l"'l.htlf faces with soot to zerla; protect them from the rays of the sun, The company originally introduced & 35 per cent cut, which was cut to 26 per cent by an arbitration board. The union re- fused to accept this award. MAY TELL OF PROGRESS. | By the Ansoclated Press, SYDNEY, Nova Scotia, March 4.— Possibllity of a strike of 12,000 Nova MARRKI MR. AND MRS. G. WEDDING ANNIVERSARY | IS CELEBRATED TODAY Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Arm-trongl Have Been Married for | Fifty-Five Years. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Armstrong will celebrate the fifty-fifth anniversary of their wedding tomorrow night at their residence, 1507 Park road, when they will recelve a amall, body of Iriends at an Informal gathering. Mr. Armstrong is still hale and hearty. Last Christmas eve. despite i elghty years of age, he entered the bowling tournament at the Arcade alieys, nearby, and walked home with 1 first-prize turkey, much to the sur- rise of his wife, who prepared the ird for the Christmas dinner. Both came here from Syracuse, N. Y., where they were married on March 8, 1867. Mr. Armatrong was an officer in 8th New York Cavairy during the | ivil° war, and he still exercises on | orseback. Mrs. Armstrong aiso is | xceptional health at her eventy-seven. There is but one living relative of son, Lieut. G. W. Arm- the couple, N.. who is now at strong, Jjr., U. Port-au-Prince. 15TH WRECKVICTIM DIES N HID TOWN Crossing Watchman Testifies Motor Bus Failed to Stop for Signal. By the Avsociated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 4.-—7he death list in the crash at Painesv:lle, Ohio, 1ast night betwesn a New York ‘entral express train and an automo- bile bus mounted to fifteen late today, when Mrs, Martin Steinbeck of Fair- port, who sustained a fractured skull in the collision, dled in the Paines- ville Hospital. Of the four remaining injured one is expected to dle, Nick Nenno of Fair- port, who sustained a fractured skull -George E. McGhee of Medina, Ohio, who died the Painesville Hospital today from a fractured skull, was the fourteenth victim. At the inquest this afternoon, A. W. Barnes, New York Central ‘railroad watchman at the ocrossing, testified that the motor bus which was struck by the fiyer went on to the tracks de- spite a white rn wa nlnf swung directly in its th for a minute by him. He sald he saw the train's head- light when it was four miles away, and that he saw the bus coming about two minutes before the crash. in his opinion, he testified, the train was running almost forty miles an hour. i —— PARTNERS, HELD, ACCUSE EACH OTHER OF CRIMES Man Indicted of Fleecing Women Charged With Plan to Cheat France. " NEW YORK, March 4.—Alfred E. Lindsay, under seven indictments for |8 fleecing society women out of large sums of money, was accused today by his_former ociate, Dr. Knute Arvid Enlind, of having planned to sell the French government three and gunners, strikers will “test theiria half million tons of phosphates picketing rights “to the limit" Or-| t from mines pictured in e Florida everglades. Dr. Enlind, indicted yesterday for I grand larceny, was quoted by As- sistant District Attorney Murphy as having said that Lindsay persuaded him to get out of the Army in 1919 in order to help carry out the pl Lindsay did not own the mines at the time or the place where they were supposed to be, Dr. Enlind was reported to have said, but was confi- dent of financing a scheme to acquire ! them Under this reported scheme, Dr. Enlind, who spoke French, was to go to France to conduct negotiations with the Paris governmen Dr.' Enlind said he had known Lindsay since 1918, when the broker was a private detective and strike- breaker. He and Lindsay bitterly attacked one another today, Enlind claiming that he cashed certain checks only to take the.money to Lindsay, and the broker avowing that he had practically supported Enlind for years. PREDICTS EARLY BONUS. MacNider Says Bill Will Be Passed Within Few Weeks, AURORA, Ill, March 4.—“The sol- diers’ adjusted compensation mistakenly called the bonus bill, will be passed within the next few weeks and will not be vétoed,” Hanford MacNider, natfonal commander of tird American glon, predicted today in an addres: Moose Heart, Ill, where he went to inspect & ;:aatl::ntlh-cmszl for disabled gervice men e Na- tional Vocational School of the Loyal .Order of Moose. ——— HEAT REVEALS LIQUOR. - SAN FRANCISCO, March 4.—Steam with alcoholic flavor was found by oustoms officers here to be escaping 1 the bollers of the liner Ventura, from the oriént. A soft per- of Scotch whisky pervaded the el. Investigation disclosed 120 O N out a sen bottles under pressure of the 3 ‘W. ARMSTRONG. WISCONSIN TICKET NAMED. MADISON, Wis, March 4.—The pro- gressive republican state ticket to enter the primaries next September was an- nounced today from the office of Bena- tor Robert M. La Follette. It includes Senator La Follette for re-election and ov. John J. Blaine, also for re-election 'WOODRIDGE STUDIO | Mrs. Grace Hazard Wormelie, Director THIRD YEAR 3108 South Dakota Avenme N.E. Phone North 10276 VOICE—Placing and Developing, DANOCING—Raliroom. Folk and Stage. PIANO—Technique and Interpretation, ELOCUTION—Pubiic Bpeaking and Dramatic Arc Froquent _Student tals In Preparation—Children's Spring Festival OoN hristian Science (One-balf hour) y Cl W. Chadwick, C. 8. B, of . Member of Bosrd of Lec- of The Mother “hurch, the First of Christ. Ncientist, .o Boston, Under auspices of Firat Churci of Christ, Sclentist, Washington, D. C. AT POLI'S THEATER Friday, March 10th At 12:30 p.m. Free Lecture Christian Science BY Clarence W. Chadwick, C.S.B., Of Omaka, Nebraska Member of the Board of Lecture- ship of The Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. AT First Church of Christ, Scientist Columbia Road and Euclid St. N.W. Thursday and Friday MARCH 9th and 10th, at 8 Under the Auspices of First Church of Christ, Sclentist, Washington, D. C. NO COLLECTION. ALL WELCOME Sixteenth Street Properties § bave a distinctive charm and_positive § value. In a prosounced residential loca. 5 ) tion is offered a very handsome colonial &5} Ej type awelling, containing 17 rooms and (& 6 baths, with other modern conveniences. (S eminently suited. vantage ‘of belag on a corner & g to s ailey upon which Is & largs garage. n offer of $77,500 is invited. A Unique and Charming plendidly located in the northwest sec ion; brick constraction; hardwood floors; hall, parlor, dining room and kitchenatte on first floor; library, bedroom, dressing Toom, and bath on second floor; two bed- d bath on third floor; laundry, sert room, bath and furnace foom in basement. Lot Tuns to alley. House is attractively decorated and furnished refinement in evidence. for property a: 1108 Sixteenth Street N.W. Phone Main 4792 'Detached House Saul’s lllA«:ldition Just Finished 1232 Crittenden St. Open Sunday, 2 t ‘Week Days, OWNER, C. S. BATTISTA. rooms and bath; 6 bedrooms, parlor, dining room, reception hall, kitchen, cement basement; garage. Large Lot, 50x1 H.w.h., electric lights; fram buliding; hardwood floors down- . stafrs. = ) One of the Nicest Houses in the City. .. At ANSELL, BISHOP & TURNER’S TOMORROW FOR THE FIRST TIME The New -Console Model VICTROLA *160 We will offer, beginning tomorrow, the latest product of THE VICTOR CO.—sa genuine Victrola of THE NEW CONSOLE DESIGN—this instrument is the last word in modern cabinet construction and em- bodies all of the new features of VICTOR SUPREMACY. —and a GENUINE VI VICTROLA || pnawes In a Handsome Mahogany i 3 i Lo | ssReadd r AR CONSOLE [FuEShugy p Iustrated from oxr stock—imme- diate delivery; the same day you purchase, if you desire. All other | models of VIC- TROLAS — the largest stock of | all-wood finishes in the city— from $25 aup. FREE! FREE! A lifetime guarantes of free mekoneat o Tn every hased here—X0 RS Whfll_ IEPAIR BILLS ‘RR‘NGED TROLL RN vers Car e No in condition FREE. INTEREST Washi ’, i ington’s Leading 70 PAY. Victor Shop Bring Back Your “Honeymoon Home MULTITUDE of unappreci- ated things in your home, that once were lovely, are still underneath their scratched, worn surfaces, as All they need to make them new again is the lustrous glow, the gleam- ing sparkle, and 'the rich color that is in every can of Devoe Mirroldc. in many artistic, effective enamel col- ors. Easilyapplied. Extremelydurable. Devoe Products are time-tested and proven,backed by the 168 years'experi- enceof theoldest paint manufacturing concern in the U.S. Founded 1754. Devee & Raynolds Co., Inc. New York Philadelphia » PAlL STA Vi 1 xds 1 ] ]