Evening Star Newspaper, March 20, 1922, Page 13

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Chicago Smoke Cloud Brings Dark Pall Over Streets at Noontime. CHICAGO, Mareh 19—A pall | | n noon yesterday. n turned cm their signs in the EXECUTIVE ORDER - LETS ALIENS STAY; 2,500 Over Quotas Not to Be Deported—Plan Con- sular Vises. Approximately 2,500 aliens admitted into tho United States under tem- porary permits which would expire March 23 and leave them liable to ne deportation, have been Eiven an indefinite ext ion of time . Commissioner General f the immigration burcau d. © ord of darkest might descended at Chicago Automobi| headlights, wan ed by the weather bureau, which re- ported that a sudden shifting of the winds “piled up.” all of the clty’s ke In one mons- trous cloud blanket through even n single sun- foree its way. ‘The phenomenon lasted only a few utes, the lifting of the cloud haying the appearance of a wecond sunrixe. i “PUBLIC OPININ” ' 70 GUIDE SENATE hour An executi s issued urday for the purpose, Mr. Husband explained, because an act which sed the House last week, and i expected to pass the Senate shortly provides for the mission of the aliens erned into the U od States without regard to prov s of the general law restricting im- migration. cm‘“ r»rzslicnllf\' all cases the aliens | icerned, wlo represent almost H i every ‘European natienaiy ana ' | Speaker Gillett, at Spring- addition have a percentage of Asiat mnE, thelr number, such as Serans | field, Speaks on-Treaty | Ratification. nded in the United States after the legal numb nals of their | tational > to the United | SPRINGFIELD, Ma March 20. Power of put opinion, despite the tubborn opposition of partisanship d been result f relativ in the United hausted. pecial represen- | i religious bod- | the require of mient for rtation Was |joglousy and perversit will not enf m. though in | 2CIOU b 3 the case of iplond of “Hun. | dominzte the United States Senate garians the Cunard Steamship Com- |and secure the ratification of the! Dot roveris Sovernment came into | treatics'which resulted from the con- | a_controversy of their arrival. The immigrants, after their release from detenti t the port of arrival. | scatt®red over the United States, and | the cost of reassembling them for | deportation, as well as the humani- ver the circumstances | ference on limitation of armament, |declared Speaker Frederic H. Gillett| {of the House of Representatives in an | address here vesterday. He attributed much of the success of the conference to public opinion, and tarian objections to sending them |asserted that because of its power back to the countries of departure, |there was great assurance of peace have induced the enactment®of the |fOr the future. The speaker said ihat he believed . the condition of China is really the key to the problems of the Pacific. Japan and the United States, he said, are the two great powers which have | emerged from the war with unques- special legislation. ‘Would End Disappointments. Commissioner Husband. in co-opera- tion with the Senate committee on immigratiom. h practically com- vleted preparation of amendments to | tioned solvency and with the finan 1 the pending general immigration bill. | ability to continue on a large scale | ed to extend the provisions of | equipment for war. These two p Nisting quota law. These |ers, he, added, “have, in the Pa amendments are directed to ol {treaty. " joined with England and| ituations such ax the one which | France in zn agreement that they med the exveutive o today ' will not g9 to war with e oth IF the wre approved by the | without mutuzl conference and dis- ul desiring to . and have put an end to the ted States after July 1 treaty, which was a e to secure from the Ameri- can consul in t country of resi- i dence a certificate which will show | that the quota of immigrants to the | Urnited States in which they are | 508 SMAL.LPOX DEATHS' cnumerated has not been exhausted. |Census Issues Warning After Not- Steamship companies or others trans- ing Increase in Year's Figures. porting any alien to the United States | Wwithout such a certificate would then be subject to fine and other penalties. | rmpere were 508 deaths from small- pox in the death registration area of the United States in 1920, as com- The immigration authorities con- sider that the adoption of some such 'pared with 358 in 1919, the census bureau apnounced today. It was plan would prevent thegdisappoint- mnent and hardship suffer®d by many pointed out, hgwever, that virtually the same low ‘rate was maintained individuals who abandoned their for- mer means of livelihood. sold prop- during _the year as had prevalled | since 1904, which was the last year erty and severed family and business relationships to come to the United | that the death rate from the disease exceeded one per States. only to find themselves inad- | missible on reaching American ports. | tion. At the same time. the relative !1y high death rate in some cities and LEAVE WALTER REED. e e (o rate ot b Col. Henry C. Bonny Castle, Quar- 100,000 in Louisiana. s | termaster Corps: Maj. Theodore R.|a warning. it was said. of the need | iy, Coast Atiliers Gosps: of vaccination. Murphy. Coast Artillery Corpa: Chan- | ©' V(L 00 M qeatn record for. the | ain Garrett L. Allen and First Lieut | pistrict of Columbia for 1920 was not Warren Hayford Field Artillery, | tabulated. In Virginia during 1920 have Dbeen relie from further | there were twelve deaths from small- | treatment at Walter Reed General [ pox. compared with nine in 1919, lospital. this city. and ordered to | while there were no deaths in Mary- their regular stations of duty. | 1and in 1920 from the disease. i 38 Stores Fancy California Dried Fruits Prunes, lb.,.. 16¢c Peaches, Ib.,.18¢ | Apricots, 1b., 31c L | | i California Dried. Lima Beans . Y Oc ! ,lZc | T No '2 Can La Panza Peas . 10c 2 Can Maryland Choice No. Tomatoes { No.2Can Prlde of Mlinois (Fancy Country Gentlcman Corn) 10¢ 15 . - | brothers 100,000 of popula- | P | engine or other trouble. It is re ~ THE MRS OYSTER WINS PONT N BATTE Court. Denies ‘Motions of Dairyman’s Brother and Sis- ter to Dismiss Suit. Mrs. Cecile R. Oyster. twenty year-old widow, of George M. Oyster, Jr. Washington dairyman, today won the first round of the legal battle over the Oyster estate. Justige Bailey of the Ulstrict Supreme Cofrt denied the motions of James K. Qyster. District | Mrs. Anna 1. Schulties, dwin C. Brandenourg, nd_ trusi of N. owner of the dai miss the equity suit prought by widow, attacking the contract under h Brawner purchased the busi- and asking that the administra- tion of the estate be transferred from the Probate Court to the Equity Court. Annwets in Twenty Dayn. Justice Balley directed the pro- pounders of the motion to dismiss to flle answers to the bill of Mrs. Oyster within twenty days. In support of her motion Mrs. Oyster had the back- hn. of D. William Oyster and Mrs, Marian Rutherford., brother #nd sis- ter of the deceased dairyma: The and sliters « e deccased equally divided on the position, Commissioner Oyster and shulties joining with the execue in opposing the widow's' ple The se will now x aring on the thus merits of the widow The effect of the court’s action today, according to Atiorneys Daniel W. = O'Donoghue and Alexander, representing” th lis to take the entire administration of the case out of the Probate Court and require all future be had under the- jurise Fquity Court, €xcept the contest ov the second cogicil of the will, which Mr. _Oysl his widow Off with $25,000. Wil ‘Bequest Renou Mrs. @yster filed a cavi renounced the bequest contained in the will, and declared her intention to stand on her dower rights, which in v attempted to cut t and also includes one-haif the personal estate. | Attorneys Tobriner and ,Gral for the exccutor take a different view. They point out that the « jof the court today is merely i and that on a hearing er has been filed the that the wve the Court, sh not diction of the Probate has already begun the of the .~ The today s purely a they which ad ation mot denie technical on st —_— KITE TO AID SEAPLANE. Equipped With Antenna for Radio {l Forced Down. Naval experts have developed a kite antenna system for seaplanes which will permit the aircraft to keep in radio communication with shore sta- tions or distant ships even if forced | to light on the water. The develop- ment was the outgrowth of efforts to provide a way to keep in touch with pled seaplanes forced down b as of great value by naval av officials. 1t has been recalled that it was lack of means of communication while on | the water that resulted in loss of the NC-1 and NC-3 at the time they wer forced down during a gale close to the Azores on the first transatlantic airflight. The two ships were ®recked by sea and wind before the destroyers | could find them, and the NC-4 alone completed the trip to England. ion PIGGLY-WI arded | “ D €, MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1922 LORD AND LADY LASCELLES ON HONEYMOON. pred on_ the grounds of Wes: nt the first few days of their honeymoon. The princess is feeding Fly dy Bradford, WEB PRESSMEN TO ABIDE | BY ARBITRATOR’S RULING | |But Union Men in New York Vote to Take Certain Issues Be- Leaving $100 and Corkscrew, . Dodge Slips Out Rear of Jail By the Associated Press. DETROIT, March At 9 o'clock tomorrow i must appe: morning he in court at Kalamazoo fore Committee. 20.—John Duval NEW YORK P i ;! h and face a charge of reckless driving. of Web P'r. No. 2 Dodge. possessor of a fortune of $1.-{ ¢, cing « midnight aut i« ployed on New York ne | 600,000, 1cft the Detroit house of recentiy ring which meline adopte recommer their pection this morning with $5 in his Kwalkcrnank, We B Normal who sat as | Drison sentence for zutomobile specd- f and sustain ous with ing. e A His release came at 8 o'clock and Kgon driving o ttee of was carricd out with the g = | e creey., at the request of the prisoncr. | Viol 1 Leatuceh or Mentanis | Dodge was taken to the rear of the ;‘“'f““’ he la David ident of the | house of correction, allowed to slip| He put in several hours vesterday union, said he would appoint the | unobserved through a back door, and | writing _an_article for the Detroit | union’s two members on the commit- | tee tod: The publishers are ex- | pected to.name their two representa- 1ess, published by the mobile to the home of h mn..r.lp,,“,,s eticle follows, tn/nart: i i was whisked away In a prison auto- | 10USe of correction newspaper Prog- tives shortly. in-law, M. P. O'Connor, in this city.| “Your conception and my conception The principhl objections -of the| Given his freedom an hour earlier|of prison life have been decidedly | union center are provisions that the | than the time originally set, the|erroneous. We all were of the opinion | | publishers may reduce the number of | prisoner escaped a battery of news- |that pr officials were cruel, burly pressmen _employed and that the | paper camera men gathered in front | bruisers with no humanitarian mo- working shift in the future shall be| of the institution. The camera and | tives. eight_ instead of six hours. Shorten- | newspaper men waited invainin front| *We thought inmates of prisons ing of the luncheon period also is! of the prison for Dodge to uppear. | were, on the whole, coarse, illiterate | opposed. When Dodge entered the prison | ruffians, beaten and cowed until there Judge Manto Thursday he had £108 in his posses- | was no manhood left in them. | fective on March 1. sion. He paid $100 of this to the city, We were wrong. award became ef- | but the |vl|\:]|~‘hers‘ | deferred putting its provisions into the amount being exacted as a fine |- “During my enforced incarceration forg union asked for fur- in addition to the jail sentence. Dodge | I have been gr i | ther left so hurriedly this morning he for- thing. th | Several me | got to take with him a steriing sii | publishe R all | ver corkscrew that was among his the union and the negoti | possessions when he entered the committee m-rm‘ o r»1mn|nfl! d re pils n. e i sl ratif i of the award. specif he corkserew will be mailed to jection of the publishers” compromise | Dodge, prison authoritics said. . SENT TO HAMPTON ROADS. offer and submission to the joint com- | Although his punishment for violat- Lieut. Frederick P. Culbert of the tee of the debated issues | e publishers announced they | would put the terms of the award iinto force at once. | ing the city speed limit is ended, with office of naval intelligence. Navy De- the exception of the 1oss of his auto- | partment. has been assigned to duty mobile drivers' license for a year, at the naval air station, Hampton Dodge is not yet “out of the woods.” | roads, Va. TWO NEW STORES JUST OPENED 2 1 Upshur Street N.W. Our Store at 1159 21st Street N.W. Is Just a Few Steps Off New Hampshire Ave. “Your Luck” COFFEE Pulverized-Percolator or Steel Cut Price, 40c per Pound \ . Potatoes, Ib. New Florida Cabbage, lb Fancy Florida Tomatoes, lb. . 15c Norfolk Spmacll--Kale Ib. Complete Line of Seasonable Vegetables To Give Pertect Satisfaction or Money Cheerfully Refunded 10c \ 12¢ 3c . 5S¢ Best Western Packed Apples, Ib. . 20c i~ “ox, one of Lady | prisoners. | GLY 13 SCOBEY IN OFFICE AS MINT DIRECTOR ! Texan Sworn in Today as Successor to Raymond T. Baker. | | Astor Will Commute From Office to.Home Daily Via Aeroplane. | EW YORK, March 20.—\in- | 1 announced, in Manhat- n home, Ithine- | heck, on the Hudwon, thix sum- mer im an aerial imousl traveling at a wpeed of miles an hour. The new tation special” is a mono- ne wii five wents of the type thet holds the workdix altitude record for fiying bonin" —I19,500 feet. It will be de- ; | ! | livered in June. Mr: Asier who Mn 2 Neenned ¥ ey of San Antonio, Tex., pilot. wax' n naval reserve : Lo aviator at the beginning of the wi rnin today as oo i | L for a term S S arvmond T akoer | ’Ih ot was administered office ¢ Metton b ‘ In g nllrz.vm of the mint, Friends of Ousted Governor“"r'.”‘.,‘..‘."f friends | worth and l‘lilx(unl s i of Mr. Seobey also witnessed the cerc- Reported Arming Fed- 5l Siaisinr i ine outicials in felicitating the new director, follow - ing the f the oat eral Troops' shortly I'hotograph By the Associated Press. e e ana | MEXICO CITY, March 20.—The sit- MATKS | vation in the state of Jalisco is grow- ing grave in consequence of the atti- jiie dir tude of former ov. Pasilio Vadillo. the mint, e s ol [who was unscated recently by the lo- With the o ponsac cal legisiature ecause of alleged ir- UV 1 Rt L e re Deputy Ant mint at Philadelphia, Denw | Valedez Rtamirez was nime U Shates an- | nor by the local legislature than S2.000 oD e action” was recognized by the fe AU Npdileradn i government. proximate X0 Senor V s to recog Buker reeeiv - | the legislature’s decision and is W detter thanking him for his to be planning establishment of a |cflicient conduct of ik nint. Mr. | new state government. His follow- | Baker plans to make his home in | ers are reported as considerably agi- shington for a while, it 4 tated and are said' to be organizing ned, and will then make a tour armed units. He plans then to return to Gen. P. Elias Calles, chief of the|Nevada, to resume banking at Reno, abinet, has issued a_statement de- | Where he is president of According to a re ker for his « aring that the question is local to | alisco and that the federal gov | ment will not interveno, The fede todaz, the 1 forees in Jalisco. however, huy nstitutions app instructed 1o remain in readiness to the four i cl. i nece the new governor. Senor Vadil Partido Libc and the tate in Orting sup| Ty, WILL INSPECT SCHbOLS. Dr. Ballou Starts Visits With Su- i 1. the tabooed Colnage. arizing his five \aker for the t the ¢ pervising Principal. An inspection of the public schools |of the District was begun today by | Superintendent Ballou. Accompanied r term the Uni {by Dr. E. G. Kimball, supervising | . 0k | principal. “the’ superintendent visited | Juring the calendar 2 number of the schools in the sev- | 1320 Incusive, thun during any periei enth division. | y 2y A & e, 7 Schools in the seventh division are | INE the war period, he said, approx- the Brent, Carbery. Dent, Edmonds, '\L";’_‘q ‘_1’“;" e e, Cowme Hilton, Maury, Peabody. Wallach. | Were struck off by ihe mints Towers and the French manual train- &3P0, Doxer alone per v » = Dr. Balou plan it the schools in other di GIV"‘N ARMY DUTY HER" v Field Clerk John x returned from dut has been igned to dn quarters, commandant of of Washington, War Department. He will relieve Arr -1d Clerk Charie H. Collins, who is transferred 1o th Army War College. Washington bar ¥ ent, at Camp Meade, Md.. racks, for duty with the historical |been assigncd fo duts at the LAt | section of the college. ' States arsenal, Augusta, Ga. 38 Stores - e ST Best Creamery Butter Brookfield .. ...............]lb, 50c Gilt Edge .................Ib., 50c Cloverbloom ................Ib,48c } Strictly Fresh Eggs . . ...Dozen, 28¢c (In Cartons) . George W. Graham, onln.n oove. Full Cream Cheese,. . . .1b., 29c¢ )( 19¢ S ——— Wisconsin i emae. g~ )( Crisco, per pound Gold Medal Flour 6 Ibs. 35¢; 12 Ibs. 67c; 24 Ibs."$1. 30 Pillsbury Flour 6Ibs. 35¢; 12 Ibs. 67¢; 24 Ibs. $1.30 e Alaska Pink Salmon White Meat Tuna . ° (Chicken of the Sea) .

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