Evening Star Newspaper, August 11, 1922, Page 4

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The first day you drive your new Cadillac you begin to get back what you paid for it. Mt earns its cost by its constant readiness to serve you and its perfect perform= ance. Open Evc}flngs Tl;e Washington Cadillac Co. 1138-1140 Connecticut Ave. * Frankiin 3900-3901 ~ Keep Your Property i—looking mew—a coat of goed Paint Twill do it. Free Estimates—Our expert will call. » much what you pay as what you get for what you pay. The best for the money is what you get.here. Lansburgh Decorating Company 1756 M Street Neat to Conmeecticut Ave. | | Julius Lansburgh Manager, islike choosinga business partner and the tests are —character, a ity and true re- liability. ‘Washingtonians. in fact. peosle frem over the world. furn o Dr. Wyeth and Staft of exgert careiul dentists. because thy find in them thase cscant 5 Vears of goad henest dentistry our recerd. Terms_of_paym Examination Cleantiness our many featurrs o suit. [ Is ons of striking Suction Teeth will not sltp . Otier sets of teeth, $5 up. wns and Bridgs Work, $3. $4 tooth. 505 fo S1 up, ‘in goid. sllver. vies al tree. Coon @ am == 08, WYETH 9 Seventh Street N. Lansbu~gh & Bro.. and over Grand Union Tea Co. Largest and most theroughly equinced paslors in Washington. Ph. M. 7066. Lame backs and overworked mus- cles, rheumatic joints—all external aches and pains vanish under Sloan’s Liniment. Spread itongene tly —don't bandage- penetrates without rubbing—then enjoy quick relief and complete comfort. —it kills pain! Prices cut to cut-out the summer stuff. . Now’s your chance to pick up geod pickings. Palm Beach suits— all the wanted colors— all sizes from 33 to 50 ... 39,10 now. Mohairs, nothing wear,now 911.75 Tropical worsteds, the fipest of Summer v $17.75 now..... Fd A 0 HARTWANTS " DIVORCE QUIETED lic” Hear of Cruelty Charges and the Like. CALLED MODEL BY HAYS| Special Dispatch to The Star. LOS ANGELES, Calif., August 11.— | Bill Hart, the good bagd man of the: screen, who has made it just about “unanimous” at Hollywood, vowed today that he would not stand for any charges of extreme cruelty .on the part of his wife, who is about to sue him for divorce. ‘Mr. Hart says he cannot let such heartless changes go before “his public.” The Hart explosion has nearly com- pleted the wreck of Hollywood's do- mestic domain. It is true the Pick- ford-Miller marriage was a sort of happy interlude in a sea of scandal | and divorce, but the wedding bells {of that romace had scarcely ceased | to peal in movieland ‘when good, old | Bill Hart “went wrong.” i | The sad part of this latest epi- | sode is that Will Hays, grang censor | and amhassador of a new moral life {in the movies, had just given Bill { Hart a clean bill of health. On his i visit to Los Angeles and Hollywood | two weeks ago, the former "Post- | master General pointed to Hart and | referred to him s “an ideal example { of what American thome life can be.” Hays was hardly out of town before { the first public rumblings of the im- | pending break at the Hart fireside i were heard. These rumblings were | to the effect that the young wife. | soon to become a mother, had fouad that “the ideal example of what | American home life can be,” as she | learneg it from Hart, is no atmo- | phere for a gentle and loving lady. Denies Cruelty Charge. Just what Bill Hart will be mc- | cused of formally is not yet of record, i but Bill himself steps Quickly to the front with a denial that he cin be i charged with cruelty, which may_be {a good Iint in itself. He saye he has | never done a wrong to man or wom- an. Tears swell in his eves and his mouth twitches with. emotion-gs he says it. But these arts fail to im- [press Mrs. Hart. { “Tell it to the judge,” she says in effect. But Bill and his friends don't want it told to the judge. They are trying {to arrange a nice quiet little movie jdivorce, with mo public scandal or {anything of that sort. Mrs. Hart has not as vet agreed to the plan. She is ver; itter and the money set- tlement for herself and her unborn child will have to be extremely heavy to appease her anguished feelings. Hart has a large fortune. Mrs., Hart {knows it. She hetself, as Winifred | Westover, has been a star of the screen and she knows something of the extravagant salaries of a short time ago. Hart has alwavs been considered in | movieland a thrifty person. He says | he has made what he feels is a most | “liberal offer” to Mre. Hart. Her at- torneys luugh hoarsely. They say that Bill hasn't begun to approach { the right figures vet. Therefore ne- | sotiations still are under way. Situation Like Chaplins. Tt would appear that Hart is in ‘D.rPlt,\: mllu'h the same posit®n that iCharlie Chaplin was when his loving wife. Mildred, decided he wanted her freedom and a large cash settlement. | Chaplin also is on the thrifty side. but it was a case of business before { pleasure and he to come through {handsomely. Tt was a painful expe- jrience. Now Bill Hart wants to start making pictures and resume his Ing fer the boys' and girls' mag- azines. A divorce, with a lot of un- pleasant notoriety, is about the last ithing he wants. But a divorce with- | jout notoriety is something else again. ' Whatever becomes of it, however. Bill Hart has made it unanimous b joining the screen stars in the divorce | field. 1€r it is quite sure the differ- | ences With his wife canuot be patched | up. The roll can be called from A | 10 Z now and it {& difficult to find a movie home which hus not been scorched. Bill is in good company at the moment, for Blanche Sweet has separated from Marshall Neilan after a brief married career of less than two months. Meantime there is great sympdthy n Los Angeles for Will Hays. He ias such an easy job. | (Copsright, 1922.) Movie Star in Chaplin’s Fix, With Possible Demand for’lig : Payment. | | i the be enjoined from removing Mrs. Aller's name from the list of practitioners pub- lished in the Christian Bcience Journal. Mrs. Aller was notified late in June, says, that the directors would g on July 10, to consider P " 4 NSRRI Woman Practitioner Alleged for Her Removal. By the Associated Press. in letters Aller a in Phoenix, Ariz., that persons the councils of the Christian church had circulated false teach Christian Science, figure that the directors of the First of « hristian Science Publishing the bi hold a_mee ! ST WASTI T WIS PAONTH about a Phoenix woman accredited to in equity flled by Mrs. Aller in the fed- {eral district court here. The bill asks i "t e vl You've PICKED Ty EH‘M fl‘(aeac “LTSNYNM’TN 1SHIN' RE . WE GOT %M AS FAST ASWE COULD RulL) ‘End OUT — GREAT BiG- 'Uns. Do’ BLIEVE | GoT¥ A RAmrBow TRouT OMOER. 4 POUNOS (CHURCH DIRECTORS ARE NAMED IN SUAT Files Bill in Equity Against Chris- tian Science Heads. DEPOSED AS LECTURER “Defamatory Statements” Given by Board as Cause BOSTON, August 11.—Charges made ritten by Mrs. Catherine Christian Science practitioger high in Science rumors n a bill Church riet, Sclentist, and the trustees of Society ‘1’, fL (BREGON SEIZES removing her name and later was in- formed that this action had been taken. 1t quetes the letter from the directors as taving the board would consider at dence that might be availabie for the of determining whether AMrs. Aller was eligible for advertisement as @ practitioner. and particulariy her fail- uré or refusal to &pply for a card in % ‘meeting all written or printed evi- | * ERNAKS FARYS EL PASO, Tex.. August 11.—A de- cree signed by President Obregon of exico expropriating 1,217 acres of valuable agriculture land near Gua- dalupe, thirty miles east of Juarez, is published in Diario Official received in Juarez today. Official communica- tions are published in Diario Oficial, The land expropriated was owned by the German firm of Ketelsen & Degenau of Chihuahua City. Much of it is velued at $200 an acre. The decree does not state what the former owners will be paid for their prop- erty. 3 This land together with 13,120 acres tions.” by her containing “‘what defamatory statements i members of the mother church. not notified of any definite i behalf. the directors have not the JoWs Journal. of federal land in the same vicinity will_be distributed among heads of families residing in Guadalupe, the official communication states. The government also indicates that it will take over the 8an Emilio ranch of 5.000 hectares, which also is owned{" by Ketelsen and Degenau, and the 3,800 hectares of land which com- prise the Lizno de La Jota ranch, now the property of the International Mortgage Bank of Mexico City. expropriated, the bulietin states. owners must prove unquestionable {headq title o' this property or it will be]House. Other Conferences. 2 at Durinig UPHAM HERE TO CONFER ‘OVER SENATORIAL RACES G. O. P. National Treasurer Leaves After White House Call and his stay in the city he' the Journal “and answer pertinent ques- and the contents of her letters to the board and a printed letter signed ppear to be againet two In the bill Mrs. Aller says she was charges nst her and wes given no opportua- to present any evidlence in her own She asks the court to determine that to 1e- move practitioners names from the Fred W. Upham, treasurer of thel.- - republican national committee, re- turned to Chicago Yesterday, after 2 -day - visit to republican national The | two-day A talked SPAMISH MEETING HELD. with several senators and representa- tives nfi\d around the luncheon table had a conference with Chairman Adams of the national committe, Secretary of War Hispano-America Makes Its First Public Appearance. A “surprise meeting” of the Na- tional Spanish Association was held at the roof garden, Alston apart- Falk, secretary cf the association, pre- riding. The “surprise” feature was the first public appearance of “Hispano- America,” a modest little publication launched by the association to pro- mote & better understanding between the people of the United States and the Latin American republics. Brie¢ talks were made by Chuichi Ohashi, secretary of the ~Japanese embassy; Senor Rodriguez Capo of the National Geographio Socfety, Miss M. L. Flint of the Pan-American Travel Bureau and Mrs. Charlotte M. Smith, secretary of the ‘American Highway FEducational Bureau and delegnte to the interpational road congress, to be held in Seville, Spain, next Moy, . Mr. Ohashi gave Jepau's view of the importance™ ofx the international oxpasition, scheduled to open--next month &t Rio < de . Janeiro, Brazil. Papers were read by Belden K Howell and Daniel” Dofiovan "and- recttations were given by Master Richard Hunt|place to be is on & train, sscond. and others in Spanish. ‘Weeks, Maryla: ally shook Senator Medill McCormick, chairman of the senatorial campajgn committee: Senator Moses, Jemes E, Watson and David Mulvaxe, natienal ecommitteeman from Senator e It was said that Mr. Upham's pres- is 2 number Sightseeing Here. esterda: Maryland farm boys and girls were received by the President of the Unit- ed States amnd the Becretary of Agri- culture- ence in Washington had to do with finaneial affairs of the national com- mittee and a discussion of ,vollfiul ments Wednesday night, with Walter | prospeets Where sharp senatorial contests are expected between the two partles. 300 SEE PRESIDENT. Marylsnd Boys and Girls Are states The '300 boys and girls came from College Park. where they are the guests this week of the Unfversity of Secretary Wallace person- hands with each boy and girl :and congratulated them upon their various canning work, | ——— During a thunderstorm, the reeords in farm and safest th bed i g i Laad FEED. . NOU'D BE R Tiong 7 TRy Porete ) Y AINT MO By tire Ausociated Press. NEW YORK, August 11.—Two members of the crew of the White Star liner Adriatic were killed, five were serfously injured and one missing, as the result of an explo- islon of undetermined origin in her | No. 3 hold, according to a wireless message received today at the White Star line office. The message reported that the Adriatic was proceeding to New York at half speed. INDUSTRIAL COURT BENEFIT DETAILED Protection to Public, Ameri- can Bar Association Con- vention Is Toid. SAN FRANCISCO, August 11.—Fred Dumont Smith of Kansas gave an ex. planation of the attempt of the Kan. sas industrial court to settle contro- versies between labor and capital, be- fore the American Bar Association | convention here. | _Coming in the midst of railroad and coal mine strikes, the story of the | Kansas industrial court, teld by, Mr. | Smith, ynember of the 'Kansas state senate and author of the law which created the tribunal, commanded close attention. Mr. Smith sald that the court’s procedure was entirely differ. ent from arbitration, which always failed becauee it included both sides | on the arbitration ®bard, and inevita- bly resulted in a diplomatic peace with | terms dictated by the strongest power. | Protection to Public. i “The two main factors on which our law rests are public peace and pub- lic safety,” he said. “When a strike | ithreatens either of these, this cn\lr!“ {begins to functior. It unearths all| the causes which led up to the dis- pute.” Que result of the operation of the . was that Kamsas City Iwage the on city where last winter's strike of packing-house employes was uot attended by violence, and | another that trains were rununing ouv | tie, railroad shops were In opera- tion and coal wae being mined de- spite the railrogd and coal strikes. “Kansas looks with equanimity to next winter's coal sitwation.” he said. DAKL Winters cops Sumstion S he s | | {law, be said AL VAKE FA OUT IFA WANTA BUT 1T won'y DO MO GoOOD - " T FEE S . TOAEY WO T MOUNE 60T T FEESH THiS PLACE 104 WHE N T WRTER'S THERE'S OME N THINMG ABDUTY FiISHIN TACKLE — 1T LL Bure ANY MOMTH M THE Blast on Liner Adriatic Causes Two Deaths in Creiw; Five Injured iTo HALT “VULGAR PLAYS” Coal was stored in the No. 3 -beld and officials of the line, in the ab- sence of details, thought that spon- trneous combustion may have caured the explosion. The men killed were a fireman and a trimmer. Those injured included an electrician and other employes of the engine room. The Navy Department. which has ‘been in constant communication with the Adriatic, on which an explosion occurred: during the night, said to- day information indicated that no asaistance was needed. “Our law declares foed. fuel and clothing are necessities of life.” the speaker explained, “and although lhe right to strike is not denied, we for- the public peace or health.” Next winter. according te the speak- of judges of the industrial court still further out of politics by transfer- Ting the appointive power from the governor to the state supreme court.” JOINS ORDNANCE BUREAU. Commaander Arthur C. Stott, at- tached to the receiving ship at Phila- delphia. hae been assigned to duty in the bureau of ordnauce, Navy De- partment. Safest and Best Way Let us do your papering and painting—Xo dirt or —No disappointments. CORNELL WALL PAPER CO. T14 1R¢h V.W. “THE PERFECT LUBRICANT” Keeps Your Engine Cool During Hot Weather. SHERWCOD EROS., INC. Bulk Delivery. Do - the focusing’ muscles of your refuse to accommodate your vision to long dis: ask us for an examina- ‘We refer you . to - Stere, TIZ 1i¢h S¢. | ESEUPTICAL (& thetransparency of glaes —that ie Corrugated Wire Write for farther informetion ] Founded 1884 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY ‘WASHINGTON, D. C. Reastyn, Va. * ' {DYNAMITE CHURCK bid any one to conspire to threaten er, Kansas hopes to take the election | M. 5373-837¢ Emmee | MINISTER MOBBED Two Outbreaks Against “Holy Rollers” in Maryland and Pennsylvania. SERVICE IS BROKEN UP Attempt Made to Choke Pastor. Cutting of Ropes of Tent Imperils Worshipers. Special Dispatch to The Btar. CUMBERLAND, Md.; August 11.— The Pentecostal Church at Chaneys- iville, Pa, north of Flintstone, this county, of which the Rev. Walter Long of Cumberland i{s pastor, was I"nkad with dynamite, according to word received in this city. The sect is known by some as “Holy Rollers,” although the members generally re- sent the appellation. The sides and ends of the building were blown out and the roof eaved | in. Over a year ago the church oty the same sect, of which Mr. Longi was pastor, at Gilpintown, near Flintstone, was destroyed by fire of supposed incendiary origin, and later jon an attempt was made to dyna- mite the home of Mr. Long. The acts are charged to persons opposed to the sect being estdblished in that community. Tent Service Mobbed. Special Dispatch to The Btar. S HAGERSTOWN, Md., August 11.—A 1aob late Wednesday night swooped ~owWH On & Peutecostal meeting at! Breadfording. near this city, and put ! to rout the Rev. William Myvers and worshipers. One of the invaders grabbed Rev. Myers by the throat and attempted to choke him, while others began cutting the ropes to ths large tent in which the srvices were being held. Feeling Agninst Sect. | There hus been a strong feeling against these services among certain classes in this vicinity because of { the peculiar customs of the sect,! sometimes culled “Holy Rullers.” | They begin their services with| prayer, which sometimes continues for an hour, and which 2 followed ! by a sermon and singing. Many of the congregation become hysterical and fall down in a trance before the | altar. There they lfe for many hours. apparently hypnotized. The meeting often continues until early morning, | until all of the converts have re-! gained consciousness. PASTOR MAKES FIGHT Rotary Club Asked to Act for Pro- tection of Morals of Wash- ington Children. Declaring that certain vulgar and | degrading plays being produced by 2 local playhouse” are having a bad effect upon the morals of Washington children, Rev. Charles T. Warner of £t. Alban’s presented w resolution at the weekly meeting of the Rotary Club Wednesday protesting against their presentation. The resolution was re- ferred to the board of governors of the clu Rev. i 1 i Mr. Warner said that the reso- H 'CASTORIA ‘ For Infants and Children | InUse For Over30 Years i Always bears the | Gignasare of Grab Clearance . About 100 Palm Beach SUITS To Close . About 300 GENUINE MOHAIR SUITS...... ' About 500 Fancy Swuits, Black Suits, ) Blue - Serges. Soid ! wpto$45. .ooon.n \ MONE & number of persons had brought the customers. providing for its comparison with the club constitutiol sence of President Willlam Knowles Cooper. SHOP TOMORROW Before 1 P. M. From the real genuine pickings in Summer and Outings. .$ 9.65 ) 13.75 Jution had been drafted Y him after| RIVER VICTIM IDENTIFIED.’ After burial in the cemetery for unidentified persons, the body found floating in the Potomac river Tues- day was identified as Charles Leroy Ciffel, forty-three years old, of 110 O street northwest by his wife. Mre. Ciffel was ab’e to idemiify her hus- band by several pleces of clothing which were returned to the morgue after the body had been buried. The body will be reburied at Poolesviile, 3d. ’ matter to his attention. In a brief talk, W. W. Griffith, a local coal dealer, explained the man- ner In which dealers are now get- ting fuel to supply the needs of their Former Gov. Edward L. Stock ex- lained the mnew constitution of otary, and a motlon was passed Arthur Marks presided in the ab- “Resolve to perform what you ought; * perform without fail what you resolve.” Benj. Franklin (1771). You know you “ought” to save something out of your earnings ~ —gvery one “ought” to do that. Resolve NOW—to do it HERE We Specialize in Savings. Washington'’s Great National Savings Bank. me FRANKLIN NATIONAL sanx Corner Pennsylvania Ave. and Tenth St. John B. Cochran, Pres. Thos. P. Hickman, Vice Pres. & Cashier A cigar “chuck” full of real qual- ity — mild — mellow tobacco. A cigar you can smoke with infinite pleasure and hand to your friends with pride. At all— * THE MANS STGRES - 1005-1007 PA.AVE As We Close At That Hour Off a Bargain or Two All White and Striped Cricket and Flannel TROUSERS. $850 to $10.50 Values ......... 569 All $2.50 and $3.00 SFRAW HATS 1.35 723 Y’S WORTH OR MONEY. BACK Ail $1.50 Fancy SOFT CUFF SHIRTS .......> &Je 3 for §2.50

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