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GRAEF EX-BUTLER ~ PLEADS GOILTY Admits Housebreaking, But Enters Denial to As- sault Charge. $20,000 BONB FIXED Detectives Fail to Find Revolver on Rockville Pike Site Where Hosley Said He Hid It. William Irving Hosley, colored ex- butler of Mrs. H. Campbell Graef, when brought to Folice Court tody to face arraignment on charges of housebreaking with intent to commit ault, pleaded guilty to the char of housebreaking, and not guilty to the charge of assault. on | The bond was fixed by the court 1 wm of the assistant srney, Ralph Given, i 00« ch charge. The case was continued for a hearing until Friday of next week. Woman Brutally Beat. The case grew out of the brutil Deating to which Mrs. Graef was sub- jected in_ her home at 1 hi Street during the early morning hours | f Thursday. il who had been | ischarged by th, efs a Week be- ! the ‘urrence, sted | was 2y ol mornir ! ing returned for a after tramp to | turning via the trolley lin Detectives Vermillion and Bradley i Hosley today to the of- ven, where preliminaries nment were discu Say Confession Signed. According to the police, Hosley | yesterday signed a statement declar- ing his intent to enter the Graef home for the purpose of stealing liquor. PFreviously Detective Lynn, with Detective Cox, had arrest- im vesterday, obtained a ver statement fr in which the the police the imitt 0 iraef home for In his s erday Hosley admitted that a ) found in the bedroom of Mrs. ¢ £ was his prop- erty and took detectives on a rch for the revolver, which he said in the statement he took from the drawer of the bureau for “safety first.” The. went out to the Rockville pike just below the (eorsetown Preparato School, but could not find anything in the bushes and dense undergrowth into which. they say, Hosley declared he threw the revolver. ALEXANDRIA. ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 15 The Alexandria Ministerlal Asso. Special). a- tion has decided that the ministers of the city will preach on the re- duction of armament, Sunday, July | 30, in answer to the call of the na- | tional council for the reduction of | armament. The ministers also con- sidered the invitation of the chautau- qua to close their churches tomorrow | night and join in & community serv- ice at the chautauqua tent. The M. | E. Church South will close, but the | other churches will hold their usual Sunday evening service. A mass meeting for the public will be held at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow aft- ernoon at the armory, under aus- pices of the railroad men who are | on a strike. A number of speakers | will be present and give the rail-| road men's side of the strike. The work of transferring the offices of the Virginia-Carolina Chemical | Company and the Bryant Fertilizer | Company from this city to Baltimore | and Richmond was completed yes- | terday afternoon. This eliminates a | olerical force of eight that was main- | talned here jointly by these com- fes. A small office, however, will, v is stated, be maintained here af { the company’s plant at Duke and Union streets, and be in charge of | W. G. Harvey, jr. president and | treasurer. Burton A. Ford, local man- | ager for the Virginia-Carolina com- | pany, hereafter will serve as district sales manager, with headquarters in Richmond, and V. Ward Boswell, sec- Tetary of the Bryant Fertilizer Com- pany, has been transferred to Balti- more as sales manager for the Vir- ginia-Carolina_company. Funeral services for Mrs. Alice Hough Chler. who died Wednesday night at Towson, Md., were held at 5 o'clock _yesterday afternoon at St. Paul's Episcopal Church by Rev. Dr. Percy Foster Hall, rector, and the in- terment, which .was private, was in Ivy Hill cemetery. Pallbearers were Arthur Herbert,” J. Randall Caton, Richard E. Acton, Judge L. C. Barley, Dr. E. A. Gorman and Kenneth W. Ogden. Persons who will be out of the city on August 1, the day of the senatorial | primary, who desire to vote by mail, must apply at once to the registrar of their respective wards, and the nec- essary arrangements will be made. | They have until midnight tonight to register. The band concert given last night by the citizens' band on Washington street near the Confederate monu- ment was largely attended. This was | the first of a series of such concerts { which will be given every Friday dur- ing the summer months. FORM POOR MAN’S COURT. Jurists and Merchants Sponsor Unique Tribunal in New York. From the New York Sun. A uniquo tribunal which will under- take arbitration of every kind of eivil dispute except divorce and which is expected to do away with red tape and reduce the volume of litigation 76 per cent has been orgenized in New York by a group of prominent Jurists and merchants. The Arbitration Society of America, as it is called, will have for its aim the granting of speedy -and fair de- cisions on an economic basis. It is the purpose of the society to have the state legislature pass uni- form arbitration laws conforming to those of New York and, with some alight changes, those in New Jersey. If this can be accomplished the mem- bers believe that the organization can be extended to become nation- wide in its scope. The question will be considered at the annual conven- tlon of the American Bar Association in San Francisco this summer and & bill has also been drafted for pres- entation to Congress extending the right of arbitration to admiralty cases. * ‘The purposes of the society were set for@® as follows: 1. To conduct an international campaign of education in promotion of the general cause of arbitration in all disputes and differences. | | rind were returning Iw {—According to an opinion | legisiature when a county-wide dog |each case. 2. To organize and operate in New York clity and in other cities of this | coffee. country tribunals of arbitration for |hard and the speedy, inexpensive and just de- termination of all disputes and con- troversies. 3. To move for a uniform arbitra- tion law in all states of the Union, | Person and for the insertion of an arbitra- tion clause In all trade and industrial contracts. BAND CONCERT. At the White House today st 5 ‘o'clock, by the United States Marine Band; Taylor Branson, second leader. March, “Gen. Lejeune”.Branson Trombone solo, of Spring” Musician Rol Grand scenes from “Natoma" «....Herbert Prelude, * Rantzau". . ....Mascagni “Les Preludes”. .Lisst “The Star Spang] ner” WOULDBE SLAYER TEACHES ANARCHY Assassin Who Attempted Life of Millerand Is Publisher | of Radical Paper. By the Associated Pres PARIS, July 15.—Gustav Bouvet, the | voung anarchist who vesterday fired at Police Prefect Naudin, mistaking him far President Millerand, presented an unprepossessing appearance in his cell this morning as he awaited arraignment on a charge of “attempt to commit pre meditated and wilful murder,” conv tion for which carries the death sen- tence. The assassin is a tall skeleton-like figure and in_an advanced stage of erculosis. He was employed as a ftsman in an automobile factory, but the weekly Anarchist himself printed as well as Youth, which he founded, writing it. | Gives Him “Good Character. er of the hotel where s him a goor cter ref- ring he was a with his payments. receiving neither’ visitors He was introduced to the the notorious woman annrcmsnl he The ke roomed gi erence, nd dec! regular alone, hauld, who was arrested Germaine in October. 1921, when a bomb was thrown after a communist meeting in Wagram Hall, wounding several police- Whs suspected of throwing She but was sentenced only for amphlets and copies of se were found in together with some “Comsade! which was purely nould be considered as a re- \ result of the sudden re- action sometimes occurring with over-sensitive, overworked brains.” fring to the military review at _ongchamp racetrack, from which Prefec udin and President Mille- when the attack < made, the newSpaper says: heatrical display of a military review, the sensational exhibition of troops—white, vellow and ,black—and the sight of perfected engines of rder cannot be expected to awaken instincts of pacific ness in the souls of the spectato: e ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md., July 15 (Spectal). given by attorney to the board of county commissioners, at the request of the board, all ordi- nances of incorporated towns of the county providing for the collection of dog taxes were repealed by the w John A. Garret tax law was enacted several years azo. A copy of the opinion has been sent to each of the incorporated towns and to the citizens’ committee of each of the special taxing areas Of the county. An annual tax, how- “ver. must be paid for each dog owned or harbored in the county and that tax is now due. Acc rding to At- torney Garrett, ail persons who have not vet pgid this tax are in arrears and are flable to a fine of $25 in The tax is payable to Thomas Gott, clerk of the police court, at_Rockville. For running his automobile in ex- cess of the legal limit of thirty-five miles an hour, Theodore Ricketts ot Tockville was fined $100 and costs by Judge Samuel Riggs in the pollce court here. The annual lawn fete for the bene- fit of St. Mary's Catholic Church here Will be held in the grove adjoining the church the evenings of August 1.2 and 3. Rev. John T. Coolahan. pastor of the church, is chairman of { The committee of arrangements and he is being assisted in the repara- | tions by a large number of the men and women of the congregation. The new hall near the church, which has been In course of construction for geveral months, is nearing completion and will be used for dancing and other amusements each evening. SIMPLE LIFE IN PERSIA. John Dos Passos, in Asia. There is something very pleasant about the simplicity with which mid- dle-class Persians 1 The rooms are often bare except for rugs and a few chairs and couches. There are no servants about; the sons of the house bring the pewter trays at meals and wait upon the guests. There are no beds or ornaments of any sort; at night and at- siesta-time mattresses and quilts are brought out of cup- boards and unrolled. seems to go on with strange quiet- hess and without fuss. Out of the patterns of rugs and cups of tea and foft-volced, subtle talk and the Yaguely cloving taste of sweet drinks 1a woven an extraordinary harmony of indolence. In Persia—I suppose it is the same throughout Islam—life gives me the impressiom of having no Surge and torrent to it. It is like a dry watercourse that has once been @ swelling river, but is reduced to & few quiet pools_reflecting the blue and the clouds. Yet such pools, trou- Blingly discontinuous, inteimittent, perhaps contain within their limit more intensity of wriggling, intri- cate life than ever the river did. ———————— " GREAT COFFEE DRINKERS. From the Kansas City Star. Consumption of coffee has been In- creasing in the United States at & greater ratio than population, and since the great war and prohibition the rate of increase has taken a steep upward slope. The United States is now using so much above a billion pounds of coffee a year that con- sumption is twelve an one-half pounds to each person. Counting off little children, confirmed tea drink- ers and those persons who “do mot use tea or coftee,” the per capita say “alarming.” 1t is believed that only the Dutch- man is a heavier coffee drinker than the American, though the Swedes and Norwegians are great drinkers of The coffee habit has had a tast hold on your Hollander many vears. The latest available statistics show that the Sweds and Norwegians drink about as much coffee to the we @o in the United States. In Great Britain and in Canada and Australia tea remains the most popu- lar table drink, and the consumption The only fee that will be asked will | of coffee is only about one pound per be & nominal one for the u: rooms of the soclety, but there will be no charge for the services of the of the |capita or per month. France takes abott five pounds per capita and Ger- many before the war used six or arbitraior uniess he specifically asks |seven pounds per capita, thou; . Gor ddicten o (B for compensation. The Worm Turns. Frem the Boswell (Okla.) Newn. We al rmans were much a uge of coffee adulterants and to cof- fee substitutes. The United States buys one-hal? of all the coffee grown in the world. It buys the most coffee from Brazil believed in that .old|and then come Colombia, Central adage of helping some poor soul, but | America, Venezuela, Mexico, th it seems that every time we got tight |Indes and the West Indies I:n&‘;' @ther folks forget it, order named. = Everything |. consumption by coffee drinkers is striking and the anti-coffeeites w.ull I.'M\ CERTAINLY A FINANCIAL WIZARD. YESTERDAY T WAS BROKE AND DAY T OWN 16000 SHARES OF SAP SILVER N MY Jeans: FIRST T HOCKED MY DIAMORD -STUDDED WATCH AND GOT 100 Bucks FoR\T ——. . TfiE EVENING .S;I'AR, WASHI>ON D. C, MUTT AND JEFF—Ten Thousand Shares of Sap Silvel", Par Value, One Cent a Share. . HANDS UB, 30, AND ) B THEN MvTT AND T GoT A coMmmisSion ofF TEN BUCKS EACH FoR SELLING 'SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1922, RIGHT- ABOWT - FACE me THE stock: SAFETY FIRST, IS MY MOTTO So T'0a GomnA BOT (MY AP SILVER STocle (N RIGHT ow. Emma Goldman Hiding in Berlin, Finds Every Door Locked to Her Under Assumed Name, She Is Expected to Be Cast Out. Berkman Also Keeps His Presence in Germany Secrel. BY GEORGE WITTE. By Wireless to The Star und Chicago Daily News. Copyright, 19: BERLIN, Germany, July 15.—Com- pelled by unrclenting fate and the eaually unrelenting governments of north and central Europe to accept the role of wandering Jewess, Emma Goldman fs living in Berlin just at present under an assumed name. De- spite her attempts to hide herself. however, it will ‘probably be a ques- tion of only a few d before the police find her out and compel her to move on. Russla did not want her, Sweden had no rouom for her and! ermany probably will cast her out once her_presence in this country be- comes officially known. Just at present Emma is living with friends In the fashionable West End residence district of the city. When I tried to Interview her today she sent out a message that she did not want to see any newspapermen be- cause they had all been unfair to her. She was unpleasantly sur- prised when she was made aware, that her exact whereabouls in Ber- lin was known. Miss_Goldma arrived In this city from Scandinavia two days ago, her intention being to remain in Ger- many for several months. German consuls in Sweden declined to vise her passport to enable her to enter this country. but there are all kinds in to be Water Made to EMWA GOLDMAN. most European cities. Russia refu- gees have developed the forging of passports into a fine art, but there is a heavy penalty for the violation of passport laws, and Emma Goldman, it she entered Germany with forged papers, is liable to be sentenced to a long term in prison and then to expul- sfon from the country. Emma hopes to 1eturn to the United States sooner or later, although there is no telling where she could go if banished from ! Germany. Alexander Berkman is in Berlin, but is not advertisivg hi ence here. Run Uphill by Newly Invented “Hydrautomat™ LONDON, June 14—A water-lifting apparatus which seems to flout the | natural law that water cannot run uphill, and by which the tremendous energy of the rising tides may be harnessed for use by man, is an in- vention of Thomas G. Allen, graduate ot Washington University, St. Louis, and now a British subject. The “hy- drautomat,” as the - apparatus is called, is the result of two years of experiments. A working model has been viewed by scores of englneers, some of whom The Relationship Between Sport and the Sport Suit. < tuece Are ALY g THOUSAMD S OF NUTS OUT WEL., ’M GLAO 1 DON' T HAVE Yo GO OUT AMD LAY TErtrus To- DAY, WONOER \WHAT PEOPLE SEE I 1T AND PHIL GOING U FOR A WALK. (NI OF GROW™ MEN GOING OUT VELIBERATELY AND WALKING AND I'M NAUSEATE S ME gl ERC { WELL,THEY CA™ HAVE THEIR StbLy SPORTS. GINEME A BCOK AND A COMFORTABLE PLAGE To STRETCH OuT HAPRY . THE THOUGHT OF PHYSICAL EXERCISE ACTUALLY have been baffled by the simplicity of the cycle of operation. It has lifted water twenty feet above the river level. The hydrautomat is designed to raise water in any quantity from a running stream to any desired height without the use of standard equip- ment, such as pumps, rams or water- wheels. The apparatus harnesses two natural sources of energy, the weight of a column of water and atmospheric pressure. By means of a series of tanks, one above the other, and a sluice gate, which alternately brings suction and pressure forces into play, 50 per cent of the energy of the Vs o 'A SAFE DEPOSIT BexX FASCISTI BURN LABOR EXCHANGE AT CREMONA Socialist Paper Presses and Co- Operates Stores Raided and ‘Wrecked. By the Assoclated Pres LONDON, July 15—Thousands of fascisti have occupied Cremona, Italy, and are conducting anti-sociallst demonstrations similar t6 those which recently took place at Bologna, says a Milan dispatch to the Times. The demonstrators attacked the labor exchange, overcame carabi- neers, wrecked the interfor, threw broken furniture, books and papers into the street and then fired the building. They raided the socialists’ newspaper, Eco Del Popolo, and smashed the presses, and later en- tered socialist co-operative store: smashing fixtures and scattering mer- chandise. Troops have been sent to Cremona to restore order. BANDITS LOOT DISTILLERY Masked Men Flee Toward Balti- more Withr 200 Barrels. YORK, Pa., July According to a report made to police headquarters by George A. Strine, internal revenue warehouseman at Foust's distillery, at Glen Rock, Pa., the distillery “was robbed early today of 200 barrels of bonded whisky. Strine says he was held up by masked men, heavily | armed. " The whisky was carrled off in trucks in the direction of Balti- more. FISHING STEAMER LOST. Stranded and Sunk Off Cobb Is- i land—Crew Rescued. | LEWES, Del.,, July 15.—The fishing isteamer Amaganset, stranded and |sank eight miles oft Cobb Island, Va., according to a report received by the icoast guard station here. The crew of thirty-one men was rescued by coast | Ruards.” The steamer hailed from Cape Charles, Va. pressure water used is obtained. The { height required is reached by carry- ing the series of tanks, alternating open and closed chambers, together with air-conducting pipes, to the de- sired height, | "It is believed there is unlimited scope for the hydrautomat on streams where hydraulic power developments are not feasible because of the small amount of fall. One of the first appli- cations is expected to be on irriga- tion projects. { In a broad sense, according to the | inventor, the purpose of the hy- drautomat is tc convert the contained energy of large quantities of water at a low head into that of a smaller quantity of water at a high head, or to compel a stream to hoist part of itself up over the land for commer- cial or agricultural purposes. The principle is fixed; the application is to be determined by local require- ments. ‘World patent rights have been is- sued. It appears that in the world's inventive records the principle of the hydrautomat has been remotely ap- proached, but never attained.. —By WEBSTER. =1 CHASING GOLF BALLS OVER THE LAMOSCAPE To-OAY THANK HEAVEN I'1 NOT CURSE D WITH THAT pMAaNIA () e e N ET AT NOW TAKE THESE MEN WHO Go CRAZY CVER BASE BALL — NEGLECT THEIR BUSINESS o0 oy s wiriane L S :‘fm‘x’&vn BALL AROUND A FlgLp. 1 PomT, GET I'TAVALL THERE, NOw, ARENT You GLAD | MADE You GET A SPORT SUIT ? You LooK PER-FECTLY - CWONDERFOL' TiRN uMiLe T ERSK You! POLICE ESCHEW REWARD TO MAKE DRY WAR COSTLESS Bpecial Dispateh to The Star. (Copyright, 1922.) NEWPORT NEWS, Va., July 15. Enforcement of prohibition in this city has been made self-supporting. Police Chiet C. M. Campbell so declared today. He said that his m e n all have agreed that they will not ask pay- ment of re- wards allowed under the y crdinance which was patterned in part from the state law. This became necessary be- cause, if the state law was to govern, the state would initiate and press the prosecutions, and the time of the officers would be chiefly devoted to attending sessions of state courts, appearing before grand juries and the like. “1 called all of my men before said Chief Campbell today, “and put the matter squarely up to them. They backed up the prom- ises that I had made to the city council that they would file no claims for conviction rewards, so long as there was no money in the treasury derived from lquor vio- lations.” The result is that we will MAN-EATI The death of a girl while swim- ming off the coast of Florida, as the result of being attacked by the ferocious barracuda, or tiger fish, recalls the fact that while the eastern Atlantic coast is generally free from the danger of man-eating fish, the tiger fish does occasionally come this far north, and one was caught off the Canadian coast only recently. This species of fish is known to be very common in tropical waters, it ranging principally around the northern coast of Brazil, in the vicinity of the Ber- mudas, Pensacola and Charleston, and was thought by scientists ta rarely come north of the Caro- linas. According to Dr. E. D. Reid, division of fishes at the Smith- sonian Institute, Woods Hole, Mass, was the farthest north of which there was any record of them having been seen until the recent capture of one by fishermen near Montreal, Canada. One of the chief peculiarities of this sea tiger is the shape of his teeth, which are called saber teeth, and which are as sharp as a knife on both the back and front sides, in addition to the ends of them being like needles. Six-Foot Specimen. The largest specimen sald to be about six feet long. How- ever, as their heads are one-third the length of their bodies, a three- foot one would be a dangerous customer for a man to meet while in swimming. According to Dr. Reid, there are also & number of different specie: EASY TO DEPORT LEADERS UNDER NEW EGYPT'S LAWS (Following 1s another of Mr. Wood's articles on the quality of Egypt's new independence.) BY JUNIUS B. WOOD. (8pecial Corresponds f The Sti pect MD:‘nl;e eiThy ar and Chicago CAIRO, Egypt, June 10.—The most conspicuous deportation from Egypt under British martial law Is that of Saad Zaghloul Pasha, the only elected officer of the moribund legislature, a former cabinet minister and the pres- ident of the nationalist party. He and five of his ablest leaders were quietly taken from their homes one day and sent to the Seychelles Islands. There were no trials. For many years Saad Pasha had led tMe nationalist party, which recently demanded absolute in- dependence for Egypt. He opposed the Curzon project and the party op- poses the present Allenby scheme and the cabinet which took office on that basis. There is no doubt that Saad Pasha’s campalgn was a cause of discontent and disorder in the country. However, he was the popular leader, is sixty- eight years old and is in 1ll health. Martial law cannot qulet the protests, though it can forbid their being made public in meetings. Another depoatation last week was of six British subjects. They were questionable characters, invoived in the traffic in cocaine and women. If they were too bad for Cairo's laby- rinths, England certainly is unselfish in taking them home. Cairo would be improved morally by the absence of several times as many similar citi- zens of other countries. Nelther “Trial” Nor “Hearing.” However, these men had neither trials nor hearings in their own de- fense. An attorney appeared in the British constlar court”and obtained 2 writ of habeas corpus. Before the writ was returned the men Were on the Mediterranean. The army law officer explained that he did not un- derstand the court order. He con- tended that technically a state of war existed in Egypt because Great Britain has not signed a treaty with Turkey, of which, technically, per- haps, Egypt is still a part. The court declared that martial law was here, and that it was not for him to say Whether it should or should not grant .al to the privy council, the high- S5t n the empire. ; ks Dlish anythmg about the case s] 2% ua rrespondents were advised what to cable and what not to cable to English newspapers. While the de- for._the general govd, T chows that martial law 15 (Copyright, 1022. by H. O. Fisher. Trade mark Tegistere2 U. 8, Pat. OF.) NG TIGER FISH REPORTED- AS FAR NORTH AS MASSACHUSETTS from the! AINthis s in the present. What re- TO VIRGINIA get action under the city ordinance and the men will not nave the in- convenience of awaiting the pl ure of the state authorities.” Incidentally, the new liquor law of Virginia, enacted by the last legislature, is working well, & cording to all of the reports re- ceived here. It gives the officers | of the law every possible right in sleuthing for whisky luw viola- Lts are not tions. Search warra | necessary in any case, while to | give incentive to the work re- | wards for arrests and convictions are offered. > There will be a test of the no- search-warrant clause. Noted law- vers characterize it as a violation of the feceral Constitution. In adi- tion complaint has been made that In certain localities it is being used for oppression by peace offi- cers. Men who entertain opposite views are declared to have had their houses and barns searched and their autos held up and given the *once over” more to show them “what is what” than because there was any real evidence that they had any contraband in their possession. There is the hottest kind of a political fight now in progress throughout the state, and certain of the wet leaders assert that the new state law is being enforced in certain localities in the interest of dry candidates. Charges are being very freely made by the drys that certain high state >iticials are condoning vislations of the natlon- al and state prohibition acts be- cause they personally are not :n sympathy with them. of sharks which are equally as | dangerous as the barracuda, How- ever, they are sald to be easier to get away from, as they are not s0_swift as the latter. Chief among these species are the great white shark, which is an inhabitant of tropical ‘waters, but which is said to range north and south on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, and the dusky shark, which has been seen around Cape May and in the Delaware bay. Also there are the tiger, mackerel and hammer-head sharks, which are said to be equally dangerous. Scar of Shark's Teeth. One of the chief peculiarities to be noted about a bite by a shark are the triangular marks or scars they leave, Wue to the shape of their teeth, and it is chiefly by these peculiar shaped scars that the bite of a shark can very read- ily be distinguished from that of | other fish, aeording to Dr. Reid. | ‘There has been quilte a bit of | 1 controversy among scientists as to whether a fish will really attack a man or not. Some claim to have been around sharks and barra- cudas without having been dis- turbed. However, others claim that when a shark or barracuda is mating or protecting its young it will bite anvthing that gets in its way, whether it be a fish or_man. Dr. Reid says that it is the cus- tom of a fish to strike and make a quick retreat, and in the case of the barracuda, it clinches its teeth and cuts open whatever it has hold of when it pulls back. This ac- counts for the deep gashes made in the flesh of the girl who was bitten n Florida. Sudan, a fortnight ago, the newspapers described how a delegation of Sudanese leaders had waited on him and request. ed that the upper Nile be retained un- (| der the present condominium of Great Britain and Egypt and not incorporated as a province in the new Egvpt. Local newspapers and delegations immediate- 1y protested, as Egypt claims the terri- tory the entire length of the Nile. The constitution framers joined in by mak- ing public a section which tentatively claims the Sudan, though the document is supposed to be secret until completed. The newspapers were ordered not to publish _anything about the section which slipped out, but the next day the_ prohibition was removed. One_experlence, amusing to all ex- cept the actor, but indicative of the Situation, was that of an aged street flower vender. To prove the home source of his roses, he mingled with his cries, “Long life, Saad Pasha and “Egypt and the Sudan are ours.” Pos- sibly this was an incitement to riot, for he was arrested and a process verbal was made out to take him before the military court. Arable Newspaper Suppressed. Last November El Ahary (The Peo- Here Bo! BARMUM WAS RIGHT ! Tee mains for the future in determining the extent of Egypt's independenc: nters around the four reservation which Great Britain has made to th: offer now under consideration. Brief- 1y they are. 1. Great Britain shall have the right to protect communication for military purposes in Egypt 2. Great Britain shall protect th: integrity of Egypt against any for eign powers and protect the interests Egypt. tain shall protect ti« Egyptian minorities an. nationalists are willing that Great Britain shall maintain mi itary forces on the east side of the Suez canal to guard that route to the t. Others are ready to assent to military forces with the necessary campments, aviation fields and ireless plants on both sides, but few eptians will willingly consent to w Eritish troops to continue their upation throughout the length of pt guarding the railroads, the Nile and the telegraphs. Even if Great Britain retains co-dominion over the Sudan this may be avoided being no longer necessary from military standpoint on account of - new railroad giving the Sudan cor pection with the Red sea terminal Port Sudan, e — The officials of the Union Transpor- tation Company of New Jersey esti- mate that they will save nearl: $14,000 annually through the substi- tution of motor rail car equipmen for steam locomotive and railroad and looks good. Free Estimate—Our expert will calf. R. K. Ferguson,? 1114 9th St. Phones Main 2490-2401. SEVEN-PASSENGER Limousines At “Taxi” Rates. 10 cents for each 1-3 mile, Phone Columbia 10000 ’ Ten Thousand Wardman Park Hotel Taxi Service ple), the local Arabic newspaper or- gan of the nationalist party, was sus- pended for six months. fast week it appeared @gain for two days before it was suppressed indefinitely. Pre- mier Sarwat Pasha in his latest or- der said that the newspaper “left no; room for doubt about the evil inten-| tion of its editors, and about their, action to mislead the people and ex-'| It is character- | = papers to distort or falsify facts to| suit their pleasure and as to person- | ercise their minds.” istic of some of the vernacular news- alities they are unbridled. The au- thorities did not disclose specific article had been false. Under the present independence of Bgypt’ no explanations, are necessary. movement has the . subscribers to continue paying in support of the editors. all actions under martjal law, relie ities and the Egyptian government of any subsequent claims for dam- ages or other tests of its validity. This would prevent a flood of civil suits from employes removed for cause, reappraissl of property requisi tioned for military purposes and similar actions necessary in wartime. Another s6-called indemnity act, in no way preliminary to the repeal of martfal law, would provide & pension and bonus system for. the present for- elgn officials and employes of the Egyptian government when they are inevitably replaced by Egyptian employes. \what | been started among | { An order removing martial law is) contingent on the enactment of what | is called an indemnity act to validate | us | ng the British army author-| eglect may cost you seriously . o one can tell when an accident is going to occur to the auto—nor what the extent of damage to prop- erty and injury to persons. It just isn't safe to run an automobile for an hour without Insurance. It's the cheapest invest- ment you will have made for your car. You'll find yourself enjoying your ride more after yvou have in- sured yourseli against loss of any kind—irom any cause. We shall be glad to give you details of cost, etc. Phone Main 601-602. Leroy Mark, Inc. Colorado Building PERPETUAL 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. JAMES BERRY, President JNSHUA W. CARR, Seeretary When we do your ge- veloping and printing you get results that you are proud to exhibit to your friends. Our work is always so carefully done that there i{sn't & chance that your prints will turn color with age, nor will they spot. We are so sure of this that GUARANTEE them. L we = If you want the best you will bring your work to this shop. We also carry & stock “of fresh film for all Cameras on hand. Remembrance Shop (Mr, Foster's Shop)