Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1922, Page 19

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

T S e iiouse Committee Accepts ORD mOFFER Muscle Shoals Now is the _time to buy choice lots in WASHINGTON HEIGHTS, Subdivision Muscle Shoals District, Alabama $200 Each, Terms. Price of lots xoon to hs advanced as lund values are rapldly ancing Dexcriptive Beokiet of this great project znd Itn influcnce on the South FREE National Capital Realty Co. Developers and Owners < Suite 354 Munsey Building Washington, D. C. Phone Main 7397 %###*éé*+4‘%*+‘l’#¢‘#+++é*¢‘=+ Real Buys Several used cars that will stand any inspection. Traded-in on new Nash Automobiles. e donteodesdeodeoderderdeodeode e e E NASH TOURING—“HURLEYIZED” 2 1921 DODGE TOURING o 1918 BUICK TOURING—“HURLEYIZED" 3 1922 DODGE TOURING 3 NASH 7-PASSENGER TOURING 54 1918 BUICK COUPE—“HURLEYIZED” >3 1921 FORD TOURING b b 4 - . k4 % HURLEY MOTOR CO. § Used Car Derartment '§ 2 14th St. 1. W. Dliene Neorth 6462 »'; et Al A et B 2 AL LB B e brlndgore Ao aslets I ’ \ \\l I I !lml ‘ Things You Ought to Know As a protection against moths, the soil chould be completely removed from a'l draperies, portieres, rugs, etc, before they are stored for the summe-. If you will send us these articles for thorough dry cleaning NOW, they will be ready for immediate use and free from moth-holes next Fall. CALL MAIN 4724 22 CLEANER; MAIN OFFICE: T KAHN OPTICAL CO., 617 7th St. JEWELRY SPECIALS 24-In.Indestructible | Gold Filled “Elgin” French Pearls, $5 Fine Mesh Bags, Green Gold Finish, $5. Solid Gold 14-Kt. Watch Bracelet 15 Jewels Watches, $10 DIAMOND BARGAINS 34-Carat Pure-white Solitaire Diamond Ring, Tiffany mounting. . i cee....$125 $300 Blue-white Solitaire Diamond Ring, hand- some platinum mounting. . . ceon...$225 21g-Carat Perfect Solitaire Diamond Ring, hand- made mounting. . ... i e s e s S350 $125 Lady’s Diamond Cluster Ring, platinum $750 Diamond and Sapphire Flexible Bracelet, all platinum.. .. $150 Blue-white Diamond Scarfpin...........$100 $850 Diamond Bar Pin (blue-white gems). ... .$650 $1,750 Diamond Flexible Platinum Bracelet (blue-white gems)......... ...$1,250 $75 Diamond Masonic Ring, 14-kt. gold mounting (very handsome).............c.ci0euee.. $25 1/-Carat Man’s Solitaire Diamond Ring........ $50 (See Us Before Buying Diamonds) Kahn Optical Co. | 617 Tth St NW. | Opp. U. 8. Patent Office Bet. ¥ and G Sts. #*++M+W+NOWfi: 1. ofoodoefoodoste fouteod ofesfoodesteodentiofeodesd ofoofunle e oo odeofoode e e ool oo dp ool oo el oo oo THE -SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ( IPLAN BIG REUNION FORBOYS IN GRAY ;Richmond Meeting Probably the Last on Great Scale. Other Virginia News. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., June 3.—Two weeks from next Monday the Con- federate reunioh will be in full swing !in this city, when thousands of the | 01d soldiers of the Confederate states | army will come here for what is per- | haps the last of the affairs on a great | scale. The people of Richmond are {10 do the proper thing in'the matter | of entertaining the old soldiérs, and ! the state and the city have made an | | appropriation for the care of the; in former years illey have ! | | I i | veterans. Leen able to sleep in tents and on | | cots, but they are now of that age | jand decrepitude that prevents them | j remaining in the open at night. , There will ‘come many women of the south when the reunion begins— i the Daughters of the Confederacy, { the memorial associations, the spon- Isors and the like/ And right here | |it is not out of place to say that the ! former fighters are complaining of | | the attention given to the sponsors | | to the neglect of the soldlers, and of | !lhe lavish entertainment for them to the exclusion of the veterans. "The veterans will begin to reach here two | weeks from tomorrow. i Marital Troublés Alred. | From a decree of the law and| chancery court of the city of Nor- folk Arthur C. Humphreys has ob- {tained an appeal. The case is a | mixed affair. Several years ago 1 Humphreys married a Miss Carter in Fairfax county and they made their | ome in Norfolk. Humphreys deeded {a handsome home to his wife. A few | years later she is alleged to have left him, and when he appealed to her | she returned. * Later she is allexed ! to. have again left him and to have itaken up abode at Reno, where she |sucd for divorce and was allowed 13250 a month and_counsel fees. She { then returned to Virginia and in 1920 § {she married Richard U. Strong in | Washington. Then she brought an iaction to oust Humphreys from the | {home she had received from him. | After that Humphreys brought suiti |for divorce from his wife on the i grownds of desertion and this was| denied, the validity of the Nevada divorce upheld. The case will be i argued here this fall and is expected to be one of the celebrated cases in Virginia jurisprudence. 1 Medical College Ansured. | There will be a medical college In | this city, according to the members of | the Alumni Association, the friends {of the school and the business men | |of this city. Whether the present: i medical college will become a part! | of the University of Richmond, which | lis expanding in many ways, or be- | come a branch of William and Mary College, or with some other institu tion, is to be determined by the as sociation. The matter is in the! hands of the executive committee and | this body is to have a talk with President J. A. C. Chandler of Wil- liam and Mary and take the subject {up with him. Dr. Chandler is ex- pected to lend hearty co-operation in | {the matter of retaining the college | here, as it will mean an institution : to which the graduates {rom his col- | lege can go for the higher profes- sions of medicine, surgery, pharmacy, | dentistry and nursing. TURKISH ATROCITY PROBE IS UNLIKELY, British Believe Effort Use-| less Unless U. S. Co- | { Lo i o Movement of freight through the . Operates Spectal Dispate 1 T stac OO T B = i N FREDERICKSBURG, Va., June 3.—|month of navigation ending May 31 BYACONSTANTINE IDROWN Visitors to this city from Dahlgren egated .645 short tons, ac- By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. | King George county. state t Rog to the report of United States Copyright, 1022, |D. Eastlake. United States naval| wrs’ office made public today. CONSTANTINOPLE. June 3.—The {aviation mechanic. has been trans- [This is a decreame of 2,838,418 tons British proposal to send a commission | ferred to the 1 hlgren provin | compared with the movement in the ! rounds, from which station he was|same period a vear ago. Vessel to investigate the alleged Turkishj&rounis; tom Wil SIf A0 "0t s | pacsages numbered 1.303, compared | | mpssacres in Asia Minor is making | little progress. The French agree to adhere to the proposal provided a! isimilar commission Is sent to the| Smyrna district to investigate the alleged Greek retaliations, while the British believe that the work of both | commissions will be fruitless without American co-operation. Yusuf Kemal Pasha, the natfonalist foreign minister, declared in the na- |tional assembly that the government could not allow any investigation In Turkish territory so long as the report of the allied commission which in- vestigated the reported Greek cruel- ties in Smyrna in 1920 remained un- published. Soviet Treaty Amended. He also informed the nationalist | parliament_that a new annex to the bolshevist-Turkish treaty had been signed and would be published early in June. The annex provided new military clauses based on the guar- anty by the soviets that “a Balkan country will soon join Russia and Turkey.” Though Yusuf refrained from mentioning the country, it is an open secret in the near east that, as soon as Russia decides to adopt an aggressive policy toward her western nelghbors, Bulgaria will throw in her | lot with the Russlans. The discontent prevailing in Bul- garia since the people have begun to realize that good behavier does not pay In politics is increasing rapidly. the Turks, who were defeated by the allies and have been branded repeat- edly by the civilized world as mur- | derers of Christians, have been offered i better terms because they have shown that they are willing to disturb the peace again, while the Bulgarians, | who have faithfully carrled out the treaty of peace, are harshly treated. Grievances Against Allfes. Furthermore, it is added that the allies have not only failed to keep their promise to glve Bulgaria an outlet on the Aegean sea, But have allowed Serbia and Greece to take purely Bulgarian land. While the peasants, who are all Ilanded proprietors, do not believe in communistic ideas, their grievances against the allies are increasing daily. | On a recent trip in Bulgaria the! writer found the townspeople as well as peasants indignant because they were compelled to pay the extrava- gant expenses of the allled repara- tions commission. BUSINESS WOMEN ELECT. West Virginia Federation Chooses Miss Virginia Foulk President. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. FAIRMONT, W. Va., June 3.—Hunt- ington was chosen as the next meet- ing place for the West Virginia Fed- eration, Business and Professional ‘Women's Clubs, whieh closed its sec- ond annual session here af! the following officers: Mi: Foulk, Huntington, president; Christine Coffey, Charleston, national vice president for state; Miss Ruth Merrifield, Fairmont. first vice presi- dent; Mrs. Elizabeth Peck, Morgan- town, second vice president; Miss Anna Stephenson, Pafkersburg, re- cording__secretary; Miss Effie Ash- mond, Huntington, corresponding sec- retary, and Miss Grace Maxwell, ‘Wheeling, treasurern, i | the article published by Sincell. w (eatimony L oLAtbe TRors continued. < s 1o who started Only one witness was examined in the Bethany Pike | the case, although about twenty 3 the morning of persons had n summone ding to charges Garrett county and were . nts of contempt !testify. The defense de w0 let far court n of Judge Day- i characte: {EASTLAKE AT DAHLGREN. | Even moderate Bulgarians argue that | L, Jl AUTO ACCIDENTS GREATEST LOSS TO ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY. Walking on the platform of mov- ing trains is a risky business, but sitting down quletly in the couch, as most persons travel, In so sate that the companies are llable to have a double liability clause. alls have decreased to & com- paratively inconspicuous place, amounting to only 12 per cent of the claims paid. In the eleven years only five persons who car- ried accident policies with this company were murdered. This ac- counts for 3% per cent of the money paid out. Drownings stand fifth in amount of losses and there were eight cas Among them was the only claim ever paid in_Hawali, and it arose from the effort of the in- sured to rescue a friend. And then there are accidents that never happen. In all these years. and with thousands of poli- es outstanding, there are several sorts of claims that have never been paid. On_ that list are loss of both < actual scparation at or bo the wris%; both feet by sparation at or above the ankles; entire sight of both eyes:; speech and hearing. entire and frrecover- able; one arm by actual separa- tion at or above wrist; and speech or hearing, if entire and irrecov- of the about Special Dispateh to The Star. BALTIMORE, June 3—The auto- mobile now comes to the front as the most prolific cause of losses to thcse who insure a dodging humanity against the damage to life and limb likely to be done by falling bricks, speeding joy rid- ers and holes in the strcet. The ficures haye been kept and com- piled by one of the largest, insur- ance and bonding companies here which wanted to learn what cauged the heaviest drafts upon | its treasury. The automobile is | blamed for 25 per cent of losses from 1910 to 1921, inclusiv 4 Firearms lead the list in point of numbers of cases, giving rize to thirty-eight losses, while the automobile, causing twenty-three Tosses, took the lead in the dollars and cents involved. Fal's, until two or thre® years ago, had been the most expensive class of accidents. Accidental gunshot wounds ac- count for 18 per cent of the total of all claims pald in the eleven vears. Some of these “accidents” were suspicious, but proof of de- liberate fintent was not to be found. Accidents from hunting most frequently arise from the habit of standing the gun against w fenco h the re- interesting is that most the figures while climbing over. w t ¢ sult that a thoughtless movement tio of death claims to all of arm or leg knocks the weapon pecific los is approxi- hunte o three to on ONE CENT DAMAGE WITNESSES CLASH WON BY POLITICIAN - IN'TRIAL OF MINER ;SpinOSa Case Adjourned as Defense Alleges Deputy Began Shooting. Maryland Ex-Legislator Sues Oakland Republican Editor | for 310,0.00. | By the Associated ress Special Dispatch to The 8 3 St = £ CUMBERLAND, Md John | PARKERSEURG, W. Va, June 3.— Shartzer, five times member of xn.-““”“ 'l“ evide :.,',. {fmm complet- 2t d house of del ates from | €% and o of the defense witnesses e | still on the stand. an adjournment | rett county, was awarded one cent for Ga damages by a jury in $10,000 against Benjamin was taken in midafter- the trial of Ramon the miners charged over Su his suit 5 in H. ¢ of editor of the Oakland Rey (D miincrs) chareed published at Oakland, Md., for ede s J“m‘ publication of an flle lous SERIES Sl Virginia-Pitts- just outside of ! Judge 4 court in order us witnesses an the afternoon but cautioned mine burgh Frederick Fox in t tion campaign in Sep- The suit is . ticle signed b primary tember, a bitter ctio county republic o be 1l s here in for renomination, to John W. McCullougt R icher faction having knife artzer regard terday as a vind on Si gainst Frede Monday at 100 of these nterested in Wellsburg and nearl the n » seven defense witnesses | a ick Fo flatly contradicted on the upon Robb, in t t tor tions ton’s_in pany's excey deferse Without as well as the other 5 the previous r whe e ed the ion the witn admi cirenlars of alieged libelous nature, whi fternoon, testified that all the shoot- (Shartzer) had cireulated. ing was done by Dan Alleman, guard tended for ten Sincell prin nd deputy sheriff in charge of al The defense, on this admission. con-,squad of non-union miners on their to work that morning. STRAY BULLET HITS BABY. tended Editor Sincell had justific in printing the ferred, campaign of Gist . wh among county for Congress wi Special Dispatel to The Star. 1 to what became of his camp | BLOOMINGTON, Md. June 3.—| N I Michae!, aged 0 years, Mr. | tleme e e hoee |and Mrs. Patrick Dugan, a sat | Pentlamen who e a little mestlin his eart. his mother working in the | | egg anc wits wounded in the cheek. | ed Mr. Blair had just three votes” 1.4 The court instructed the jury to flnrli for Shartzer. e Jofs with a rifle on the oppo- side of the river were blamed. | i | SLUMP IN LAKE FREIGHT. | SAULT STE MARIE, Mich,, June 3.— | with a year vife last September. 24 N E_4, 1922-PART 1. ° { TR " T TTT TR e G e - DENIES BAN ON JEWS. | "= s THIRD PLANE AEADY President of Harvard Heads OF ~ wavess A - ' Legislative Inquiry. gt Rioe b0 a8 sume Transationtis Pligh Inted by the o |, HOSTON, June & —President A 3 : Bresigens e "o . Lawrence Lowell of Marvard Uni- | Yyl S el w0 . . \ . versity called on Loring Vnu'll‘ml " ’ . apeaker of the house of representa- | Mpewker Younm o Harvard slumeus | ot & tives, at the latter's request toduy, | added that apinion - because of the Introduction of orders for a legislative investigation of re-|as It has hee ports that Harvard Intends to din- | university for all the peopis criminate against Jews in admission ' upon the fun ental prineiple of students. greatest service to the community Hurvard we Tuture It's Time for Summer Rugs and replace sides giving Now is the time to put yvour wool rugs away them with inexpensive summer rugs. D a cool-looking appearance. summer rugs will add to the brightness and cheerfulness of yvour home. Here at Mayer's Lifetime Furniture Store yvou'll find the famous Crex rugs, the strong, fine-looking Rattania. the soft, good-wearing rag rugs. and a whole lot of others. All are good-looking and inexpensive. For instance. a 9x12 Rattania is only 814.75. Come in this week and look them over. Furniture Is More Than Name Mayer & Co. Lifetime a Between D & E % . Seventh Street i Ty L As Long as They Happen And weddings, anniversaries and graduations seem to happen just regularly as ever. Usually gifts are good, yet seldom are they . gifts that will last for long. as A good piece of furniture‘not necessarily ex- pensive—is a gift of a lifetime, a gift to cherish more and more with each year of association—you'll find such gifts as you'd like here—and quite low in price, too. And every piece, too, will be not mere furniture but Lifetime Furniture. MAYER & CO. Seventh Strect Between D & E ST . ZURNITURE P o Dainty as the Breakfasts You'll Serve Erom Them Furniture is usually so somber and dark that the light dainty enamels on these little breakfast suites are delight- ‘ fully refreshing. Just to eat breakfast at one of these little tables is enough to start the day right. A dozen of these little suites are here for you—and in just about a dozen color combinations. All are beauti- fully designed and good, too. Particularly good are several by Karpen. We'll be glad to show you Monday. Tuesday or any other day—and there’s a “peach” of a little six-piece suite at $95. Lifetime Furniture Is More Than a Name MAYER & CO. \ Seventh Street Between D & E 1l N I A i T

Other pages from this issue: