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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1922. - /£ ROLLSROYCE 4 NNOUNCES NEW PRICES GVARANTEED An Open Phaeton - $10,900 Exhibiting at Convention Hall, March 25th, to April ist, inclusive - D. W. DUNN Eastern Sales Manager Hoter New WiLLarD Territory of District of Columbia and vicinity ¢ assignment to for business man properly qualiied and fnancially respons Farther Information on sty from Ma. Do Dl ALL THIS WEEK Open 10:30 A.M.—10:30 P.M. CONVENTION HALL Fifth and L Streets N.W. Displaying a Complete- Line of Passenger Cars and Accessories History Shows How High Hupmobile Stands Even a hasty glance at automobile history brings out two significant facts with startldng distinctness. One is-that millions of cars of nearly 300 makes have been marketed in a remarkahly = short ot € The other—more startling and significant by far—is the astonishingly few cars which have built such & solid, enduring reputation for goodness and value as everyone knows the Hupmobile to enjoy. 5 Exhibited at the Automobile Show Spaces 36 and 41 Sterrett & Fleming, Inc., Champlain Street at Kalorama Road (Balow 18th Btreet) Telephone North 5050, Hupmobile freemsmssisssessessassossssssees s T se s s ses e TEEe - LIOUID REPAIRS LEAKS IN AUTO RADIATORS -Gracked Cylinders, Water-Jackets BOILERS; Hicior Low Pressuse Marine-Locomotive-Stationary-House Heating, The U. S. Gov., Gen. Elec. Co., Stand. Oil Co., Amer. Tel. Co., etc., have used it for years. Over 3 Million Cans Sold Every Year “X” RADIATOR LIQUID erice $1.50. roro size 75c¢. At Service Stations, Garages, Repair Shops and Hardware Stores “X” BOILER I.llllllll Price Q;nrt Can Six Dollars At Pll-lnborl. Steamfitters, Mine and Mill Supply and Hardware Stores Circular or Technical Advice on Request X LABORATORIES 25, 25 =maeer NEW YORK, N.Y. A. EBERLY’S SONS WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS 718 7th St. N.W. Main 6557 Wholesale Distributors X LIQUID Southern Automobile Supply Co. 1324 Fourteenth Street N.W. | | 5 KILED, 1 HORT N MEHGAN LS Radicals Run Wild, Finally Fighting With Catholic Groups—Troops Intervene. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, March 27.—Five per- sons were killed and eleven serjously wounded in clashos at Guadalajara. state of Jalisco, yesterday between radicals and Catholic groups, accord- ;:::r-em the best available information The radicals are reported to have attacked pedestrians and motorlsts indlgcriminately, the climax being reached when they met a group of Cathollc workmen who had atiended a labor meeting. The workmen were insulted and attacked and when they took refuge in a mearby church, the building was fired upon by the radicals. The body of one victim was found iIn the church. The radicals began thelr demon- stration shortly after noon when the usual Sunday procession of automo- biles was in progress around the main plaza of the oit; All traffic was stopp: while numerous ocou- pants of the cars were forced to alight and salute red and black flags. most of which were carried by woman radicals. 5 The demonstrators then went to the office of the newspaper EI Informador, Wwhere threats were made against the life of the editor If he persisted In his attacks on bolsheviem. The radi cals then marched past the cathedral. | © Invectives and fnsults were hurled at the priests and the clergy in general, after which a noisy demonstration was staged in front of the office of the Catholic newspaper Restafracion. Later the crowd began the indiscrimi- nate rioting which ended in the san- men. with the situation and federal troops yere rushed to the scene to restore rder. BELGIAN RULERS WILL BE RECEIVED BY POPE FIRST Sovereign’s Trip - to Rome May Bring About a hnoyal ‘Wedding. By the Associated Press. ROME, March 26.—Whether or not the coming visit to Italy of. King ibert and Queen Elizabeth of Bel- glum will lead to the engagement of - Princess Yolando, daughter of King Victor Emmanuel and Queen Helena, to the Duke of Brabant, heir to the Belgium throne, the visit is considered of great importance be- cause It will mark a new stage in the relations between church and state. The arrangements for the visit are expected to form the basis for the ceremonial of future visits by Catholic rulers. Pope Plus has taken personal in- terest in the details and has decided that the call of the Belglum soverelgns at the Vatican must take place immediately on their arrival in Rome and before any official functions occur, r:ulnary clash with the Catholic work- juch as a dinner at which toasts are exchanged with the Italian King, and even before the Belgium - monarchs visit Queen Mother Margarita. No objections having been made by the Italian court, this proceedure is considered to be deflnitely settled. Pope Pius has directed that five cars be placed at the disposal of the Belgium sovereigns and has ordered Prince Massimo, who claims to trace his descent fros early Roman history, to accompany them. The prince is hereditary pontifical post- master general. The prince married Princess Bon- caccio, whose mother was Mlss Hick- son Field, daughter of a New York banker. Prince Massimo, as well as the papal chamberlains, one of whom will be in each car, will be dressed in gorgeous medleval costumes. The drivers of the automobiles will wear black livery with gold buttons and cockades of the pontifical colors, white and yellow. WOODROW WILSON CALLED FRIEND OF WORKINGMAN Samuel Gompers Sees His Princi- ples as Guiding Spirit of World. NEW YORK, March 27.—The ideals of principles of Woodrow Wilson in time will be recognized as spirits guiding the world, Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, yesterday told a gathering of labor men and representatives of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, who met to discuss the plan to honor the former President. He characterized Mr. Wilson as “the firm friend of the laboring man,” ing the seaman’s act and the Cla: anti-trust law as instances of his forts toward bettering the toiler’s condition. Expressing disappointment that Mr. ‘Wilson's admirers had not already oversubscribed the $1,000,000 required for the endowment, Gompers said: “The American people, and particu- larly the working peopl owe it to the country to see to that this honor to Woodrow Wilson shall be successful. If there has ever been a man in responsible office in this coun- try who had the understanding and the vision of' labo: rights, it was ‘Woodrow Wilson.” NEW TAX IN GERMANY. BERLIN, March 25.—Beginning April 1 a surtax on customs duties to bring them to a gold parity will be ocollected. The surtax rate will be computed on the basis that fifty-nine paper marks are equivalent to the value of a gold mark. The police were unable to cope | ¥ Rare Achievement in Economy, ‘Says Coolidge of G. O. P. Rule Vice President Declares Harding Administration Has * Made Almost Unbelievable Progress—Discusses Arms Parley and Other Foreign and . ' Domestic By the Associated Press. tration has been & period of progre: with an almost incredible achiev ment in economy, Vice President Calvin Coolldge declared in in ad- dress yesterday before the Brooklyn . Institute of Arts and Sciences. Asserting that public employes had been reduced nearly 60,000, the Arm by 85,000 and large reductions pro posed in the naval forces, &ll. of which were beginning to show in the government's appropriations and ex- penditures, the Vice President sald: “Prior to the war the annual &p propriations were a little over a bil. lion dolla: For the last flscal yeal they were slightly more than five & one-half billions. For the present fis- cal year it Is estimated that this will be reduced to somewhat less than four billions, and for the next fiscal year, for which appropriations are now belng made, there will be a reduc- tion to about three and one-half bil- lions. The Interest and payments re- quired for the public debt are about one billion~ three hundred and fifty The cost of the Army and over eight hundred millions and an- other quarter of a billion goes into from present expenditures there be deducted those items that arose from the war and the extra amount now being expended on good roads and the Army and Navy, the present cost of running the govern- ment would not exceed the pre-war cost by more than two or three hun- red millions. “This represents an achievement in economy which is almost incredible. Stating that the Washington arms conference “proceeded on the funda- mental theory of substituting for the sanction of force in international re- lations the sanction of reason) Mr. Coolidge asserted: “It has been a year of progress al- together worthy of a great people. It does not mean that the burdens of existence. are to be lifted from man- kind. It does not mean that military establishments are to be no longer required. An agreement to maintain a parity between navies is not an agreement to abolish navies. There will be a great saving of expendl- ture, but it will not be so much in present costs as in future require- ments. These great remedial policie: which are being adopted are funda- mental in principle. They mean that hereafter a larger proportion of hu- man_effort can go into productive activity. They diminish the material waste of exiravagance in govern- ment and the spiritual waste of dis- trust in diplomacy. Liberty has taken increased guarantees. Reason is more firmly enthroned. Hope and faith are revealed more clearly as the great realities.” An adequate organization for ad- ministering government relief of war veterans was one of the first dom tic problems, he sald, which later was placed under supervision of the Vet- erans’ Bureau. “It is easy to realize,” he added, “what a stupendous task this work is when it {s remembered that there has already been pald to disabled vet- srans and their dependent relatives about 2 billion and a half dollars, and there is going out of the Treasury each day close to a milllon and a quarter dollars. The government al- ready has nearly 30,000 hospital beds and will soon have 35,000. There are about 29,000 men ‘already in hospltals who recpive, besides their keeping and care, from $80 to $157 each month. “The awards for compensation run —_— T e e Yours to Command Important reductions in price serve to emphasize even further the splendid value of the Standard Eight. At the auto show the new Sterling models of the Standard Eightare cynosures—and there are reasons. and fitments; upholstery which fairly breathes of comfort — and a promise of power which your first trial fulfills. STANDARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY. INC. P A G Hoes. ANDARD STEEL OAR 00., 1635 You Street Phone North 7054, Six-Sixty-Six The Best Performing Automnro- bile in the World—Was $2875 Now 3219 . 0. b. factory See it at the Automobile Show * Metropolitanz Motor Company PAIGE AND, JEWETT DISTRIBUTORS ae 1028 Conn. Ave. . Main 57 d[American merchant Problems. ver $200,000 each month and the wards for Insurance over $140,000, while there are 15,000 compensation claims and 1,200 insurance claims received during the same time. ‘There are about 105,000 men receiv- ing vocational training, most of théem under pay and at a maximum cost of $160 each per month. There are already In existence 107 hospitals which provide 182 employes for each 200 patients. There are 5,000 schools used throughout the couatry . for training ox-service men, and 7,000 institutions for placement training.” He sahl the.shipping board problem was “to get the government out of the shipping business with as little loss as possib! and to provide an marine that American goods might not have to be carried to market in the ships of competitors, and that there might be sufficlent 'ships to provide for adequate national defense.’ There is now a fair prospect, he assorted, that the country will have a merchant marine “supported from & small pro- portion of the revenue derived from shipping and holding a place on the aeas worthy of the American people.” Constructive economy, Mr. Coolidge Successful . B. Mansfiel Consulting Engineer President of the Mans- field Steel Corp. of Detroit, successful builder of the Quebec Bridge over the St. Lawrence, which twice collapsed under the direc- tion of other builders, con- sulting engineer for nine other leading automobile manufacturers, including America’s two highest- priced cars, the authority whose expert testimony practically won for Henry Ford the famous Selden patent suit; these are but a few of the high lights in the career of J. B. Mans- field, Consulting Engineer of Birmingham Motors, and recognized as one of the Country’s foremost Automotive Engineers. « Mr. Mansfield directs the production policies of Bir- mingham Motors which have enabled the Company to make such impressive headway in the short period "of its career. Birmingham Motors 828 14th Street N.W. ‘Washington, D. C. BRANCH OFFICES: 619 H St. N.E. 1341 Wisconsin Ave. New F-50 Mitchell Auto Show “4 Flow of Power” Space 5 Neumeyer Motor Co. 1823 14th Street N.W. be will. Nature has developed Goose for international travel. Sy See Them at the Show WILLS For Cold on the Chest Musterole {3 easy to apply and.it| does not blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Musterole is a clean, white oint- ‘ment, made with oil of mustard, Sim- ply massage it in gently with the finger tips: You will be delighted to see how quickly it brings relief. Get Musterole at your drug store. 350 and 65c jars and tubes; hospital size, §3. Better Than a Mustard Plaster | satd, has been the first thought and the ‘chief effort of the present ad- ministration. To secure that, he de- f ed, is to- accomplish reconstruc- tion. “There has been a steady detor- mination not to interfere in thuse Eurorenn affairs with which’ we had no direct concern,” he sald. "“Whe there wa: sponsiblli; on our governm the fixing of reparations it was firmly declined, but with the assertion that reparations must be et to the I'mit of ability. i There has likewise been a refusal to participate in the Genoa confer- ence out of a feeling that the chief causes of econortlc disturbance in Europe can only be settled by their own domestic action and our unwill- ingness to be-ome involved in any way in their political questions. The siucerity of American sympathy for Eurcpean distress s revealed and es- o pl EVerybody \ has a good word for the Willys-Knight Car at its greatly reduced price, all of its fine features are retained Tremendous mileage—free from repair costs. Exceed- ingly low gasoline bills. Smooth, flexible—with a velvet flow of power. De- pendability under all con- IF YOU HAD A NECK AS LONGAS THIS FELLOW, AND HAD enormous charities” | He referred to the refusal of Mexi- €0 to execute the treaty oifered to her “which would have recoj nlz(ddhlmr ~ed hwr adhe Uon of the rights & preperty which are mdrl. of a clvillzad s the | . “A more than frien the people of Russia,” he added, been declared in our willinguess conatder commercial relations on presentation of cvidence that therc is to be main:minel those rizhts of fooe labor, respsst for contracts and security of propery, withwut which there can be no commerce, and our £00A faith demonstrated b: at vitc charitfes £nd the appropriatiun of twenty millions of dollass for the jef of her marving popuiation carbon troubles. Freedom from body rattles. Theseare a few of the advantages which distinguish the Willys- Knight car and set its value above all other cars of equal ditions. Freedom from size and weight. Touring Car $1375 Roadster $1350 Coupe $1875 Sedan $2095 F. O. B. Toledo 1 'R. McREYNOLDS & about our business a one inour Dealing. Assistant to OUR FINANCIAL RELATIONS WITH THIS COMPANY ARE CERTAIN TO BE PLEASANT because there is never any misapprehension favoring US with your business you are re- posing a confidence in the National Electri- cal Supply Company which must be merited and repaid Mr. B. S. BEALL, our Chief Accountant and pany many years, training himself in the policies of our organization and the requirements of our cus- .tomers. Possibly that ig one of the reasons why our Financial and Accounting Department is such a friendly place to do business. v (Td be concluded Wednesday) NATIONAL u 1328-,3‘0/NevYorkAYg. LLYS-KNIGHT The Willys-Knight Motor Improves With Use 1375 SONS, Incorporated tors Distribu 1423-1425-1427 L Street N.W. Telephone Main 7228-7229. favoring YOU by accepting your nd your money. Rather, every big store family feels that by your f'n Quality, Service and Fair the Treasurer, has been with this com- ELECTRICAL pply Company Phone Main 6800 ey %{ AR 2 : T