Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1922, Page 16

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e ere We Eat During the Snmmer? The Best Meals and Service Can Be Hau at The CROWN Réstauran Breakfaxt ~ Lunch Dinmer 510 1ith 1727 Pa. Ave. our 1rip Abroad o fl::.':':.'—:.'n:l".':.": e e Kll » in his ccol, elegant {liztudio. Phone Main 5809 for inforw) 710-712 Otis N.W. Nearly Ready for Occupancy Two-story bricks, contain- ing six rooms. tile baths, hard- wood floors. H-W.-H.; Colo- nial front and two-story back porches. Paved street and alley. See these homes before buying. Terms if desired. Floyd E. Davis 7th and.E S.W. Main 353 BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAWES BERRY. President JNSHTA W. CARR. Seeretary | Nature's Greatest Money Makers. Couatry Gentleman, Apr. 29, tells of 1 tree bearing sold for $32.50 per crate—ONE FORTY DOLLARS, 1 tree. 1 How many for rings tree to bearing age at 3 yrs. %o more expense. Annual income for life. A Yew trees mean Easy St. for you. Illus. book i Square Deal L. & D. Co,, 1120 W. FLAGLER ST, MIAMI. FLORIDA. FOR SALE BUSINESS PROPERTY 11th Near G St. Wide. deep store and two apartments.! Will rent around $500 per month. Imnrediate possession. Splendid buy. For Particulars Phone N. L. Sansbury Co. (Incorporated) Business Properau Dept., 1418 Eye Street N.W. Phones Main 5903-4-5 ERVICE you will appreciate—in ting, Paperhanging or Uphnmafinz. Maoderate Geo. le Co., Inc., E512% OSTEOPATHY For Colored .Cifiiem he District of Columbu | College of Osteopathy (Incorporated under the lawa of the District of Columbis.) ' Is Now a Reality ts te home in at 1828 8th street mr';(;twnl, Washington, D. C. Tr. T. Theo. Parker, ita President and Founder, is an experienced Ostes- pathie Physician, who has been prac- ticing Osteopathy for 15 vears, § years of which he practiced in the British Empire. He located {n Washington six years and has since realized the ‘need of Osteopatby. ~where amcation: o B¢ them to Getoopatnic. education, o em to b—mmopa Proficient Osteopathic Physi- "Dr. Parker thereupon set to york, and as a result of his effort, and ¢ co-operation of others, tfe above mamed College has been founded. It in in- corporated as a mon-profit, educational Institution. Its course of study is four years (3§ months), leading the _dey of, ToR OF ORTEOPATHY. (. 0. Class work begins 1! September, WnteforCnhhcu- Osteopathic is u system of hesling diseascs of the human body. Its Prie ciples and Practice are matural tional apd relisbi Osteopathic T NOTVE EXP[AINEB INDYEP PATENI SU Justice. Department Says| | - Government Would Save | Expenses. |STATEMENT IS ISSUED Foundetion’s Litigation Against United States Treasurer. The determination of the govern- ment to proceed against the Chemical Foundation. Incorporated, was de- itlared by the Department of Justice in & statement last night to be an jendeavor “to adjudicate the Whole jauestion in the most practical and ex- peditious manner possible and save llo the government and the litigants asgreat deal of unnecessary expense. The department’s statement. issue i ipartially as a reply to the statement | made in New York Friday by Francis | P- Garvan. former alien property cus- ;lodian and now head of the Chemical { Foundation, set forth in formal man- iner for the first time the motive im- pelling the government to make the demand on the foundation for return of all patents, copyrights and other property transferred to it. ‘The state- ment also teferred to Mr. Garvan's assertion that a delegation of Ger- mans conferred with Justice Depart- ment officials shortly before the gov- ernment announced its actlon, declar- ing that the German delegation “had absolutely nothing to do with any ac- tion of the department against the Chemical Foundation.” The statement, in explaining the government's motive, called atten- tion that tie Chemical Foundation had brought sixty-seven suits against the Lnited S.aes treasurer (o collect ! royalties paid that official on patents now held by the foundation while | they were in the trusteeship alien property custodian. It incumbent on the JInsticg Depart- ment to defend these suits, ahe gov- jernment, it !s added, decided that the best procedure required “the original conveyance as well as every Incl dental step aside and anew.” of the being the Text of Statement. | The statement issued -by the De- partment of Justice said: ““Officials of the Department of Jus- tice today took cognizance of the statement issued yesterday by Fran- cis P. Gar' . former alien property i custodian, and now president of the Chemical ~ Foundation, the return of whose patents; taken over from the |alien property” custodian the' govern- | ment has demanded.” “Officials of the department called attention to the fact that the Chemi- cal Foundation last week brought sixty-seven suits against the treas- urer of the United States to collect several hundred thousand dollars of royalties which had been paid to that official on account of the patents now held by the Chemical Foundation while they were in the trusteeship of the allen property custodian. They pointetd out that it was the duty ot the administrative offices of the De- partment of Justice to defend these suits against the government of the United States and that the decision to do so was reached In view of the fact that there ‘was only one way to act in the best interest of the govern- ment to adjudicate the whole question in the most practical and expeditious ) manner possible and save to the gov- lernment and the litigants a great deal of unnecessary expense. “Officials of the department, it was said, believed that since the Chemical Foundation had indirectly attacked the original conveyance by the alien property custodian sound legal prin- ciples required that in the defense of these suits the original convey- ance, as well as every incldental llap therein, should be set aside and: the matter considered anew. “It was further stated by officials of the department that the amount for which the Chemical Foundation is suing the government is a larger sum than the Chemical Foundation paid for the patents, and that the jpolicy adopted by the government of mieeting the situation in one suit was much more to the advantage of the government in bringing about a set- itlement of the controversy than would have been the case if the gov- ernment had become defendant in the sixty-seven sults brought by the Chemical Foundataion. No Notice of Suita, “With respect to Mr. Garvan's al- leged explanation of his reason for ying previously that President Harding’s action last week in "de- manding the return of these proper- tles was taken without consideration of or notice to the Chemical Founda- tion, officials of the department to- day called attention to the fact that the government had no notice that the Chemical Foundation would bring sixty-seven suits against the govern- ment only one week before the statute of limitations would run out—a cir- cumstance which might have been to the prejudice of the government. ! “It was also said by officials of the department that representatives of the German cartel, comprising the or- ganic chemical industry of Germany, called at the Department of Justice | recently relative to thirty-odd suits to be instituted by them against th government on behaM of their clients, i but that they had absolutely nothing to do with any action of the depart- partment of Justice had been investi- gating the transaction between the talien property custodian and the jChemical Foundation for many months prior “to the arrival of the German representatives, as Mr. ‘Garvan and his associates well knew, and prior to i the action of the Chemical .Founda- ition in precipitating an unexpected | situation by bringing sixty-seven | suits against the government; involve ing & very large sum of money. “It was pointed out that the return of these patents to the alien property | custodlan would in no sense benefit the former German owners or int r- ests. The action tdken by the go ernment has been wholly in th. ln- terest of the government itself. disposition of these patents after turn.to the allen property custodian, as well as all enemy p; rty held ! by him, must be determined by action {of Congress. ] INQUEST FREES DRIVER._ Child Blamed for Own Death Un- der Delivery Wagon. ,Samuel D. Minor, eolored, 1011 New Jersey avenue, driver of & 'motor de livery wagon that knocked down and fatally injured Joseph Rinaldl, two years old, near his home at 608 Irving street Friday morning, erated by & coroner's jury at guest held st the morgue vest nnemoon. It was ed that the child appeared in fromt of ln.nor- m, chine 86 suddenly that he was u to bring It to a stop in tim i the accident. aceld mtm. Minor sto; n and was ass! by Raymond mt.Al wrill ‘be. pant, to eare to Garfield l;‘u- for the ch Claims Step Forced by Chemcnll therein should be set|' matter conslderedl “GIVE ME MY COFFEE WITH MEALS, By the M’lltfl Press. CHICAGO, July 8—Brig. Gen. Charles G. Duwes, first’ director of the United States budget, connois- seur of pipes, bank president and exponent of plain talk, heartily ap- proves of President Harding's cof- fee poley. “They serve coffee with the meals at the White House,” he said as he sat on the veranda of his Evanston home Init'ating a new pipe. “You know 80 many places in Washing- ton insist on serving the coffee after the meal, but the President wants it with the meal,’and that's the ‘way I lke it, to Gen. Dawes, who returned to pri- vate life as & banker today, smokes with a relish and inveterately, and at Washington he was fres quently seen to enter the presi- deptial presence pufiing his briar, t0 emerge later, still puffing. “A great pive,’ he sa.d s he scrytinized nis new poss:ssio “and it tastes good for a new one. A wonderfully ingenious b R SHITIIIERTS .SAYS DAWES IN. BACKING PRES DE,NT work. I think I'm ‘olnl to like that |pt the best of any pipe I ever “One ol the things I like béat about getting back homé Is home caoking.” Gen, Dawes added. ———— e The Courteous l"mmh From the Argonaut. “Of course, they swindled me: out- rageously in Paris, but I'll say that they were mighty polite about it.” “Yes, they are a courteous people.” “One chap, especially, the worst bandit of the lot—he was very busy. but took twenty minutes of his time helping me look up words in my English-French dictionafy, 8o that 1 could tell him just what I thought of him,” ————— Subscription_books of $20. 000,000 B. F. Goodrich first mort, cent bonds were closed, the syndicate offering the Issue announc. ing that it had been largely oversub. scribed. Radio!—and Peoples We've gone into the radio business in our characteristic way. We are going to glve you SERVICE, plenty of it—QUALITY and LOW- PRICES. .l n‘c!oe PHYSMAI is RELEISED FROM ‘DESERTION CHARGE MACON, Ga., Ju! él-—‘bflnl on or- ders of Ordinary Wiley, ch!el 'of_Police '.l'homplon '.Ml nnm!n{ from the city bar- nnn Bchreibbr, who has T the Iadt ten days on a r e awaiting the ar- l'lVll OI OIflLell from ioston wi. warrants chary ln’ him with the abandonment of his mlnnr children, desertion und non-support. Dr’ 8chrefber was arrested June 27 on telegraphic information from Bos- ton. days before he had been taken'oufSide of the city, after he had been bound .and gagged, and ordered to legvefthe city. Immediately following his arrest counsel instituted habeas corpus pro- ceedings for Schreiber's release. At the same time a warrant arrived from _Atlanta for Schreiber’s arrest. He was charged there with larceny after trus He gave bond for lflflo for his appearance in Atlanta. Fromi fime to time the hearing o the habeas corpus writ was pos poned, fending the arriyal of office: from - Boston. Yesterday Ordinary Wiiey ordered the chief of police to releae Schreiber if officers had not arrived today at 9 o'clock. When the officers falled to put In their appear- ance at the appointed hour, the pris- oner was released, hesn /BLIC REAL IN TOURING That the American public can play the part of the Good Samaritan when necessary i# proved by Leorard Day, author, ‘of San Francisco, who is touring the borders of the United Stat a distance of 10,585 miles, upop the aid, entirely unsolicited from the people he meets while hikimg his way. Mr. Day, who arrved in Washing- ton last night, 1s the guest of No. 8 tiuck crew of the Distriet fire department, who were all enthused by the traveler's stories. Day started from San Francisco last Noyember upon his journey, with the unierstanding that he was not to ask for aid, solicit lifts, food, or smoke cigars. During the time which it took him to cover the 5,000 miles which brought him to the Dis. trict Day says that he has bee overwhelmed with invitation: in- cluding some 194 offers of rides 'n automobiles, which he refused. He has been entertained at the best hotels along the route in addition to being made a guest of chambers of commerce of various cities, civic or- [TRZATIIIET STORES IIQI-YIIK&N. . Ask our radio expert in our rau.o department at Seventh and E streets all the questions you want—he is right there for that purpese—anxious and willing to talk radio to everybody. Our radio department carries a complete stock of receiving sets and individual parts. Fine Westinghouse R. C. Re- ceiving Set ‘Wav-O-Meter Crys!nl Recelving .$11.00 Waltlnghouu ‘Aerola - Junior Set Receiving Set Complete Crystal Receiving Set with antennae and head phones. Vacation Essentials —things for comfort and convenience—priced low Eveready llnlnlllhh Wilson Goggl Pocket Combe. . . . Bicycle Playing C-rda et Soap - Gauze Bandage, C yards Ior . De Luxe Hair Nets, 6 for Pint Bottle Peroxide Footona (McCann’s Liquid Fnc Soq) E-Z Corn Remover ... E-Z Tablets ... Magnavox Murdock Phones, 8000 ohms N W W. Na7-116GS5.N.W. RE NoS-31sOMS.N.W. fig»t&omu Na: 13-653 Fe. AmS&E “BUDDY” BORDERS OF U. 8. ganizations, Drlvm citizens and last, but not least, the marines. Embilems on Root. ‘The sole companion allowed to Day is. “Old BilL"” a trusty cactus root, adorned with the emblems of the various fire departments that received him as a guest, among them being those of Henderson. N. C.; Richmond, Va.; Fredericksburg, Va.; Columbla, 8. C.; Atken, S. C., and Augusta, Ga. Day has to keep a record of all the ald he receives on his journey, to- gether with the address of the donors. Who ts l t govern the trip Day declares is a gecret, which will only be give; out upon the completion of the under- taking. ~Ball games, moving picture: aters and all forms of amusemen have been provided for this bronzed traveler, who declares that the sym- pathy of gome people whom he has met had to be dealt with firmly,-else he would have ridden all the wa: Indeed, one man from Richmond, V. wrote in Day’s book, “I have passed Day four times in one week, but the bird don't know enough to ride. Former Commissioner Brownlow, SAITHIHHINL: now ecity manager of Petersburg, Va. wrote his best wishes in Day’'s book in addition to giving him some ad- vance information about the District of Columblii Day declares that the public, con- Tary to the general opinion, ! etic to the needs of olhers will prove itself a real “buddy” Wi put to the te: Day traveled from San Francisco via Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Ala- bama, Florida, Georgia and the Caro- Minas, and will continue on through Maryland to Maine, and through Ohio, the Dakotas, Montana, Wash- ington. Oregon and back to Califor- nll, where he expects to arrive next 1,507 ARRESTS IN WEEK. Reports of Maj. Daniel Sullivan, su- perintendent of police, submitted to Commissioner James F. Oyster, show a total of 1,507 arrests made during the past week. Traffic arrests out- numbered the others, arrests for vio- lations of the general traffic regula- tions totaling 507, while arrests for speeding numbered 141. P e S — The Imperial valley of California re- cently established a new high mark by shipping neariy 500 cars of can- taloupes to the eastern market in a single day. SIS A LA ST Large-- Choice-- Select Manila “‘Manila Blunts” (Lon- dres), a /large size genu- ine Manila cigar, long filler and hand made. Every one fresh and sound. We guarantee these to Cigars Dictograph Phones, ! 000 ohms .... Radiotrons U. V. 200 Radiotrons U. V. 201. Other radio equipmient at cor- respondingly low priges. This Splendid New Hawkeye Camera Takes Pictures 2V in. x 3Y4 in. If you'll buy six packs of Eastman Films to use in this splendid Eastman Hawkeye Camera we'll give you the camera absolutely FREE. It s a sturdy, well-made camera that takes beau- iful pictures. The film packs cost 50c each and ontain one dozen pictures each. This is a traight out and out offer with no strings at- cached—just buy the films and get the camera free at all of our stores as long as they last. Bottles 79c Handsome new Ther- mos Bottles in rich brown enameled cases with aluminum cup caps. These are pint sizse and are very spe- cially priced at-79c. Genuine e c 7 s at our regular price of . give you this splendid Grape Juice P lnts 24c quantity is limited so Sl il d advantage of the offer ; i s B i i § : L i h p i phIEfE liv H i that FREE This Fine 50-Cigar HUMIDOR Buy a box of Carl Mitchell Cigars dor free. It isa handsome thing, well made and of exceptional quality. The be the best value in Manila cigars ever offered for sale in our stores. Packed in ribbon-tied bundles of six cigars. (No sale of less than six.) PRICES ARE DOWN ON TOILET ARTI CLES Azurea Face Powder. . ..\ Pebeco Tooth Paste. . . ... Nadine Face Powder. . ...... Java Rice Face Powder-. . ..... Dame Nature Face Powder. Preparations. . 35c Lustrite Nail Pnpflrdim De Miracle Depilatory. . . .53c, 89:, 31.75 El Rado Depilatory. . hampoo . . Far‘s Gmy Hair Color Restorer. ..27c, 45¢, 79¢ $4.00 and we’ll Pepsodent Tooth Pm 50-cigar humi- Kolynos Tooth Paste. . .....:.... 60c Car Mac Tooth Paste. . ... ... you must take without delly 60c Forhan’s Tooth Paste...... ..

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