Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1922, Page 4

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SU -—one word, but when suits are linked with Goldheim quality and Goldheim serv- ice it means something. Come and see— Norfolks Brooks Model (3 and 4 Button) Have the Call Right Now $27- to %60 “Pledged to Quality” Fourteenth St. at N. Y. Ave. Try Muth First Suniast Draperies Phome —In i~ newest weaves, de- Matm S'@ns and shades is 21 c¢cDEVITT Our Price on 50-in. only §2 3x6 Wisdow Bhad 1003 Hth Kt _ MUSICAL INSTRUCTION WASHINGTON CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC All branches. -Voies. 28 . Ave. M. 7855, Myron W. Whitne MUSIC STi DI xE YOR YViolin, mandolin, “banjo, goitar add uk; Frivate instruction. Free orchestra practice. & Ragtime in 20 Lessons Popular “Afnvie. ¥ B ;) Fopular %oy e, Booklet, | Chelatenstn itar, Banjo, Hawallaa ¥asembie Practice he Nordica Clabs. ESTABLISHED 1894 WALTER T..HOLT STUDIOS PHONB COL." 946, 1301 COL. EN. Masdali», G Ukiul with MOVING, PACKING & STORAGE TUNITED BTATES STORAGE co. MOVING, PACKING, SHIPPING. PHONER: M. 4220 ¥ 2423 FIREPROOP. OLEAN. DEY WTOKE FOR FURNITUHE and pianos. Estimate cheerfully giver [ ‘venient location. WE: ILER'S, 920 Ps m.w. Phone Maln 12: SPECIAL PATES To ¥. Y. City, Dayton and Columb RED BALL TRANSIT CO. National, Householg Movers, 8. ome Main 21 Branch Offices ia All Principal Clfln.fl' ave 57705-0 Fin. Ave PR SEPARATE ROOMS, $§ Lecal and Long Distance MOVING. By Careful Men. Hates Reasonable. P G BY EXPERTS. ods lusuted wl in eur long-distamce vass e — LEGAL NOTICES. I, Attorney. OURT OF THE T DIS- r 1 t thereupon, upon consideration thereof, The const. this 1oth day of Octoser, A1 103, ged, ordered decreed as foilows: at e described In the bill of compla 43, In wqnare 276, ¢ District of Columbia, built wpon and improved by brick dwellings numbered 1 1202, 1204, 1206, 1208 and 12083 S st. n.w., and 1732 and 4 12th st. Scrivener be, ‘and tea to sell lished to the in kind between the partien to this caitse without lows and injury: that the sald trustes shail give an undertaking, with surety to approved by the court, in the maximum pen- alty of 325,000, conditioned for the faithful performance of Lt ihe offer of Hairy A. Ko ilars ($38,000.00) Y, ot set forth in by the court, an: chase mopes the said trustee ahall the salf Harry A. Kite all of his rig) interest and estate in and to the same and deltver possession thereof to him, utiless caube to the eontrary be shown hercin on of before November 3, 1922 Provided, a copy of this grder be pudlisncd in The Eeening Gtar on Ogtober 17, 20, 24 and 30, 1922, and in the ten_Law Reporter ‘on -October 21 and ¥ SIDDONS, Justice. ud H. BEACH, [AM, Asst. Clerk. 0017.20,24.80 BANKRUPTCY NOTICE. N THR_SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS- trict ot Columbia, Holding & Bagkrugt Co the mattet of William P. I’L d T th ihe credi £ Wittlen 3 e "creditors I Br ‘2nd William T, Brows. Individusi and & - SusRTsr o e i, 2, sng the ecity of Notice is it my office in the ‘Wilkins bullding. H st. n.w., Washington, D, e of November. 1 prove _their clal examipe the bankrupts and T LIVING WAGE VITAL. TO ALL, DECLARES ENGINEERS’ CHIEF The assertion that “a living wage is something that every person must have in order to live," was the only comment Warren 8. Stone, grand chlef of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, would make today on the attack of the public and raliroad &roups of the Rallroad Labor Board on the theory of “the living wage” as a basis for determining the pay of railroad workers. Mr. Stone, who was a caller at the White House, sald he wantad to see the full text of the pronouncement made public last night in Chicago be- fore entering into & fuller discussion of the position the two groups hud taken. The brotherhood chief said his call on President Harding was only a ‘personal visit" d th hey did not discuss “rallroads, politics or labor.” FREAR SAYS REVENUE ACT 9 )i COVERS CORPORATION TAX Tells Mellon High Conrt Rule Has No More Relation to 1021 Law Than' Mohammed’s Edict. The Treasury should invoke a sec- tion of the revenue act designed to reach large surpluses accumulated by corporations to prevent payment of indlvidual _surtaxes, Representative Frear of Wisconsin, republican mem iber of the ways and means committes, | reiterates in another letter to Bec tary Mellon, which he made public +last night. | "Mr. Frear wrote that, in previous !letters, he had told the Secretary he {was expected by Congress to enforce the penalty “and save the Impending loss to the Treasury of several hun- dred million dollars.” Doubts Story “Eyewitness Told in Hall-Mills Murder NEW YORK, October 30.—Wireless serve in sounding the facts In a mur. synopsis of the mystery of the mur- i?"r\e\'en.‘ 80 r'-m::lt.; as ul:e ina low: !in New Jersey. e natives, coache: der of the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall | i "n " (Hiet, in the description of and his choir singer, Eleanor Rine- some primitive crime, will tell com- hardt Mills, was the first greeting | bined stories which coincide with p extended far out to sea to Sir Basil | fect precision ana that very prects = ¥ | proves the fraudulence of the stor: Thomson, K. C. B, called the embodi- | Honest evidence about a crime ne ment of the fictional Sherlock Holmes, | coincides. who arrived on the Carolina today. | T et ," he sald, “are u Sir Basil, son of the late Arch-' yersal, but the principals are usuaiiv bishop of York, was formerly the|younger than in this case. Mone head of the criminal investigation | ambition or other material causes : department of Scotland Yard. Told of | usually the motives of middle-ug- the newest character in the Hall- |crime.” Mills case, Mrs. Jane Gibson, who| The British criminologist has rc claims to have been an eyewitness | ccived several requests to investig to the murder, he was Inclined to|the New Jersey murder, but has place little credence In her story. fused them all, he sald, principa “Yet the very discrepancies may | because of his meager knowledge prove the authenticity of her evi- | the case, the cthicai question conce: dence,” Sir sald. “Experience |ed and the pressure of lecture cr with South Sea Island natives gagements. WINS ABSOLUTE DIVORCE. TREES, SHRUBS & PLANTS 300 Varieties ROCK CREEK NURSERY P. 0. Rockville, Md. RAIL RUIN SEEN IN“LIVING WAGE" Labor Board Report Says Annual Deficit by Plan Would Exceed Two Billion. as I suppo: ‘BASED UPON MAKESHIFT’ Method of Computing Impractical, Road and Public Groups De- clare in Opinion. oner revenue “is the official authorized by law to act” and in effect that the stock dividend decision of the BSu- preme Court rendered the revenue act section void as to penalties, Mr. Frear ! declared the decision had no more re: lation to the 1921 law than an edict . of Mohammed. He added that he had consistently tried to prevent the Sec- retary from falling Into serious error. HANDICRAFT EXHIBIT. American handicrafts assembled by the American Federation of Arts will be placed on view at a private exhi- bition Wednesday afternoon from 4 to 8 o’'clock, according to announce- ment by the regents and secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. The ex- hibit will be in the National Gallery of Art at the United States National More than 100 children in the vicinity of the Plaza playground, 2d street | Museum. The recently added McFaden and Massachusetts avenue northeast, Saturday were given a treat, when d Perkins collections of old masters Miss Katherine Swanxon, director, and Miss Huth Neal, assistant direetor,|ulso will be on view. zave them an old-time Halloween party. Prizes were given to the children fur the best costumes. A number of games were played, and refreshments served. i fore maks only a start in that direc- ion at'present, the opinion said: Would Keep te Law. may By the Ausociated Press. u.‘\'~‘H:ICAGO, October 30.—Attacking © theory of * & : the living wage” as| such a proposition is entirely il- a basis for de-|logical. If the living wage Is the terming wages of |Just and reasonable wage authorized Mrs. Bannon Awarded Decree by Justice Siddons. Justice Siddons, in Equity Court No. 1, has awarded Mrs. Irene A. Bannon a final decree of absolute divorce from Thomas R. Bannon, whom she married | in this city in 1918, marking the final | step in two court proceedings by the | wife. | The first a suit for annulment, | | which was heard by Chief Justice Me- Coy, and the wife was refused a de- cree on her complaint that her hus. band deceived her at the time of mar- misrepresenting his former c situation. It was alleg«d in the first suit by the wife that Bannon claimed never to have been married before, but the records of the Balti- more court showed that he was a divorced man. Mrs. Bannon sued the second time for a divorce on the railroad groups of | commanded by law, then it ls not the § duty o e board to adopt it mow the Railway Labor | or hereafter unless the law be chans- ion made public last night, de- clared such a | course, “if carried| Py} to its legitimate |\ ©) conclusion, would wreck every rail- road in the United States, and If ex- Be Sure to Ask For and Get Adoption of a family of five with opinion, which asserted that t census showed there were 4.4 persons in the average family, bu 1.4 dependent children B (hrie lhllhex erts before the boaru took as a hasis, and that there wer: tended to other in-| 36" workers instead of one in thc dustries would tamily. carry them {nto] "Commenting upon the governmen m \ ownership if the living wage pr! A. 0. WHARTON, ruln. . Tho opinion, in the form of a re-|CiP3l Wus cstablished,” the opinio joinder to a dissenting opinion flled photograph shows, left to right, Madaline Burriss, honorable Ruth Domdera, first prize, small girls; Frances Hice, honorable nd Georgia Diamantis, first prize, lurge girlx. “Smooths the Way to PERFECT LUBRICATION" by A. O. Wharton, labor member, In the recent decision increasing the pay of maintenance of way employes 2 cents an hour, declared if employe were granted a 72 to 78 cents mint mum wage for common labor, with corresponding differentials for other classes, an Increase of 125.7 per cent the nation's railroad wage bill would be necessary. This, the opinion said, would add $3.122,952.387 to the nual pay roll, bringing it to ¥5. 1 deficit to the car- riers of $2.241,639,518. ight-Cent Minimum Hit. Even If the 48 cent minimum wage requested by maintenance of way men were granted, and corre- sonding differentials were made for other classes of employes, the opinion #ald. an increase of 50.45 per cent in wages would be necessary, adding $1,249,390,994 to the annual wage blil of the roads. bringing it up to $3;- 725,884.540, thus forcing the carrlers to face an’ annual deficit of $378,078,- s The phrase “living wage" was term- ed in the opinion as “a bit of mellifiu- Public Weuld Pay. “Of course, for those who desire government ownership this would be 2 quick way of getting it, for iL is a sure thing that the public «ould no stand for the imposition of higher rates to pay such a deficit” It as- serted that in the last analysls the public would pay for the in creased wages and that most of it wou'd come from workers in othe: Industries. Commenting on an article by Wil- liam_Randolph Hearst, included in Mr. Wharton's dissenting opinion, in which the ement was made that the unjustitiable lowering of the wages caused the shop- men's strike, tie supporting opinion declared such a statement was not important, except that in so far as it was adopted and indorsed by a ember of the board. Shop Strike Called Blunder. “In the judgment of the majority of the board,” the opinion continued. ‘and, we bellove, of a great majorit of the people, the shopmen's str was a blunder without any real justi- fication, and that it is said with the Kindliest feelings for the employes who nave suffered most trom its ef- 3pecial Dispatch to The Star. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., October 0.—A silent and plainly apprehensive -ongregation at the church where the jurdered rector and choir singer .sed to worship; a subdued air of jruwn curtains and secret watchers t the two homes most concerned; i determination on the part of the .emetery officlals to keep the grave »f Eleanor Mills safe from trophy hunters and a carnival of vandalism i t the Isolated farm where the crime sccurred—this is how New Brunswick 0ok its tragedy on the sixth Sunday since the erime. After weeks of excitement the feel- fngs of the 40,000 townspeople 1s taut “Lure of Horror” Still Leads Curious to N. J. Murder Scene small, had started oot to punish an aristocrat for a supposed sin against the community news of their inten- the murdered man at the Church of lums. “Either by them or by a paranolac,” the psychologist belleves “the placing of the clergyman's cari sgainst his shoe, the scattering of the torn love letters roundabout and the placing of the dead man's hand beneath the woman's shoulder have » grimly humofous trend char- acteristic of paranoia or of a group of self-appointed moral censors, “If a_group of avengers, however tion would léak out. Consequently there would be many people lurking out the spot to see what happened. ou will recall that half of New runswick seems to have been round De Russey lane on that fateful night.” The elderly clergyman whose task it i3 to substitute in the pulpit of ground of misconduct. Attorney Ray mond Neudecker represented Mrs. | Bannon in the second suit. SHERWOOD BROTHERS, Inc. Bulk Deliv: Mars, our nearest neighbor, at the nearest possible point to us— 35,000,000 miles—in 1924. Tired of That Frock? We all tire of dresses that are en- tirely too good to be discarded. Ever consider dyeing it? You'll be surprised how fresh and new it will look after we have transformed it. Bring it in—or phone us—today! Lincoln 7700 Six branches St. John the Evangelist took for his text Sunday the words, “Thou, Geod, Seest Mo To a congregation vitally interested Jn the crime Rev. Dr. La | Espero spoke at length from Genesi on the story of Hagar, cast off by fects. It has wrought harm to all and good 1o none. It has burdened the rajilways with an unjust expense, has_inflicted great los upon the ecially the food producers. ‘o the breaking point with mutual suspicion and morbid anticipation. Nor s tha straln relieved by the fact ihat thousands of motorists and pe rians came yesterday from place ous phraseology, well calculated to deceive the unthinking.' Living Wage Granted. Ther’s one good thing about taxes—they keep us aroused an’ RE_AVE, NE. | ithat higher rates of wages were be- t | tran Hoardt v | “If the contentions were that the board should establ a “living wage' the majority 1 readi |cede to the proposition,” the opinion |=aid. “and_as a matter of fact, the !board in tais instance. as in all oth- ers, has granted s living wage. But the abstract, elusive thing called ‘the {living wage,’ confessedly based upon & makeshift and a guess, cannot re- ceive the sanction of this board, be- {cause it would be utterly impractical {and would not be ‘just und reasona- ble' as the law demands. Mr. Wharton's dissenting opinion and the supporting opinion in reply are attached to the formal decision increasing the pay of maintenance of way employes 2 cents an hour, estab. {1ishing & minimum ranging {to 87 cents. The United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes, raliway shop laborers. held a strike order affecting 400.000 men in abeyv- anee last July after the board had reduced wages pending a request for an Increase based on the contention | that the costs of living had advanced 'and wages in other industries had {been raised. Raised Two Cents an Hour. When the case came up mainte- nance of way officials asked the board to subscribe to the prineiple of the “iving wage” based on a budget of what was required for an average family of five persons to live in health, and reasonable comfort. A majority of the board refused to sub- seribe to thie principle, asserting that the transportation act called for es- tablishing a just and reasonable wage and that a just and reasonable wage was in effect a living wage. The maintenance of way organisa- tion asked the board to establish min- fmum rates of pay of 48 cents an hour to replace rates then in effect ranging from 23 to 35 cents. After | a deadlock of several days the board made public ite decision formally handed down today increasing rates of pay 2 cents an hour and adding about $20.000,000 to the railroad pay- roll. The decision asserted that the ih- crease was due mostly to the fact Ing pald for the same classes of work in other industries, and that there had been no appreciable increase in the cost of living. Wharton Files Dissent. Mr. Wharton in nis dissenting opin- fon maintained that the “fundamenta! error’ of the decision rested on ure to Inquire Into “the adequacy | of rates of pay established for sec- tion men und unskilled laborers.” He asserted that rates of pay in other industries of similar character should be made a.Secondary consideration {and that the prime factor to be con- sidered was whether the rates fixed were just and reasonable, which hé | d meant an adequate and living | wage under the transportation act. He maintained that the law of sup- ply and demand which operated in private Industries to fix the puce of labor should not be taken as a basis by the Labor Beard. The boatd, he contended, should find what Should ! be a just and reasonable wage by computing a family budget contain- ing the expenses of the average family. Budget Method Attacked. Hé maintained that the IVIng-wage principle was practical. asserting that added labor costs would be ab- sorbed in large part by increased ef- ficle of the men and by managerial abllity. Pointing out that Mr. Wharton would ignore the provision of the rtation act directing the Labor o cofisider wages pald in other industries of other similar nature in fixing wages, the supporting opinion declared that those responsible for the decision eonsidered this ap well as other factors set forth in the law. Attacking the budget method of de- termining what should be a living wage, theé supporting opinion says: t it would be wise and practical to undertake to establish an arbitrary standard of living for several mil- lions of persons is not apparent; that the desires and requirements of all men are equal and alike i8 not cor- seots and & “.‘-!'3' committee of ex- perts co se an average livin swendard upon which i H could be practically based been demonstrated anywhere. Living Standards Impreve. “That standards of livin aduslly improving in_this c';nnt y vmdouMnd}ry true, and this s as it should be. 'Thete Is no member of the Labor Board who does not pro- foundly desire improved living con- ditions fof comon labof, but it is our belief that this movement must be continued along lines indicated by human expetience and that it canfiot ' be consummated in the twinkling of | pors n eye by artificlal expedients.” Aswerting experts testifying for the maintenatice o mitted that immedi of “Hving . wi . monkey Wrene e ate establis ol hment fail- | o way organization, ad- | Bu into the L‘.:"‘Yr:.? i lu that the board theres |} resuited in an approximately 1$177,535,524 loss to the strikers. For |all this. the men on strike have won I nothing. They have galned no con- { cession as to any matter upon which they struc For months the strike has been merely & struggle upon the part of the men to regain their posi- tions.” Contrasting _the situation of the intenance of way organization, which withheld its strike and appealed to ¢ b received about since July 1, which would have been log had they gone on a strike, and in ad- dition have recelved an incre wages of about $20,000 790 a year. Preferred Two Cents to Nome. “Perhaps there Is no better time and place,” the opinion adds, ‘“to emphas the belief of a majority of the Labor Board that rallway strikes are utterly useless and wasteful, and .that the em- ploves will always gain better results at the hands of any tribunal falrly con- tituted and representative of the peo- ple than they will by making war on the cary d the public.” In addi dissenting and supporting opinions. the_document contained a statement by W. L. McMenimen, labor member of the board, as to his reason for voting for the 2-cent ralse for the trackmen. He said he favored a latger increase, ted for the 2-cent raise after the Labor Board had been in a long dead- lock, during each day of which the men were losing about $70.000, and when he feared that no increate might be ob- tained if the 3-cent raise advocated by the public group was not accepted. THE WEATHER District ‘of Columbia—Fair tonight and tomorrow ; little change in tempera- ture; gentle to moderate north and northeast winds. Maryland and Virginia—Fair tonight and tomorrow ; little change in tempera- ture ; moderate to fresh north and north- cast ‘winds, est Virginia—Fair tonight and to- morrow : little change in temperature. Records for Twenty-Four Hours. Thermometer—4 p.m., 58 8 p.m., 50 12 midnight, 43; 4 am., 40. $ am, 43; noon, Barometer—4 pm., 30.09 30.11; 12 midnight, 80.12; 4 a.m., 80.17; noon, 30.11. Highest temperature, 62, occurred at P yesterday. Lowest temperatiire, 40, occurred at 6 a.m. today. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 64; lowest, 51. Condition of the Water, Temperaturs and condition of the water at 8 a.m.: Great Falls—Tempera- ture, 53; condition, slightly muddy. Tige Table; (Furnished by United States coast and geodetic survey.) Today—low tide, 10:80 a.m., 11:02 p.m.; high tide, 4:20 pm. Tomorrow—Low tide, 11:18 a.m., and 1 ;'0 pm.; high tide, 4:51 am., and 5:16 pm. : 8 pm. am, 80.13 and 00 am., and The S#A and Moon. Today—Sufi rose, 6:32 a.m.; #un sets, :11 pm. Tomorrow—=sun rises, sets, 5:10 p.m. ‘)\lfu:m rises, 2:46 pm.; setn, 141 am. utomobile lights to be light: half hour after sunset. N Weather in Vatious Cities. = 6:33 am.. sun Stations. *ugm aen Wauoy ~awgaoyak Alban; : Abilene, Tex, 2004 74 Ibany’ .....380.16 Asbuty P 2 2888 Bismarck Boston Buffalo Charlesto; Philideiphia. 80.14 e Portiand,Me. ore B8HBRIIREEL: BREILTLRLBANLLLTS R TR TR P RS R DEREE N PR n a radius of 100 miles and from early \t the Mills and Hall homes, ran- sacked tha Phillips farm once more, fiiled De Ru. of motor horns and went away at last with handfuls of popcorn from the roadside vendo d the satisfaction derived from a spent happily in the midst of horre Tree Almost Carrled Away. Before the day ended th crabapple tree beneath which the bodies of the rector and his choir singer w found was nearly all car- ried away. Some days ago the tree had been stripped by souvenir hunt- 5 and branch. Yes- terday the energetic vandals brought great pocket knives and even saws. By nightfall the slender trunk had been chipped off and hacked al- most to the ground, which itself was trampled bare of brush, golden rod and even the grass blades. People brought the children along. The boys shinned up the trunk, under the indulgent gaze of their mothers. and did remarkable execution with their jack knives until some one came along with a small saw. Around the boys gtood groups of men and women gazing at the holes left when chem- fcal analyists dug up the blood. stained eurth beneath the heads of the vietims. Around these groups was a great circle of parked motor cars. Others came With tooting horns making their way slowly through the steady stream of people who came on foot and on bicycles. House Rannacke: Beyond what remains of the bushes in which Mrs. Jane Gibson says Eleanor Mills hid until the slavers dragged her out, stands what is left of the empty Phillips farmhouse. A wide~apaced gracious old building, with big fireplaces in every room. the century-old mansion has been looted of everything but the heavier jeces of furniture. Bureaus have een yanked open and their contents borne away. Books and magazines have been stolen. Pictures even have been taken from the frames on the walla and a dressmaker's form stood on thé front porch yesterday walting to be packed into a car by its new and triumphant owner. The only reason that Mrd. Gibson's farm has hot been overrun by “the curious is that state troopers 6 here guard- t. 1 188 ot that any of the things looted are valuable. Not at all. Their value fies only in the fact of their connection with a dreadful crime. The Mills plot in the cemetery In which 15 the body of the murdered singer would be denuded long befors Tow if the ocemetery officials had not strictly forbidden visitors. The balloons bought from the roadside vendors whom the police are tardily ispersing have not been bought for ?hekr ntrinsic beauty but for their association with the spot. Envy Given as Cause. This souvénir frensy which has broken out around the Philllps farm ke a plague 18, to & psychologist, lo‘n. of %he most interesting phases of the crime. An eminent New Yotk psychologist, who has mate an ex- pert study of this crime, and whose sincerity is vouched for by the fact that he declines publicity, even to the extent of allowing his name to be mentioned, has given the writer An explanation of the crase. “These people are drawn to the #dene of the murder by a vicarious enjoyment both of the crime and what led to it.” he sald. “Uncon-!{ salously the visitor to such a place puts nfm,u or herself in the place of the victims or the avengers or: in the place of both. This is sclen- ! tific fact. Horror is the Jure, but the horror is largely mads up of envy, unconscious envy in most cases, but envy just the same. The visitor, an morbi might like to do but dares not. Who is the self-appointed moral censor | of any community first t6 scent! scandal and to spread {t? The! ‘spunder’ himself, or the gossip who falls of a place in the llme‘l}!ht of o _community’s romantic life. “Taking away relics of a murder serves to keep the thing fresh in the visitor's mind. It 1s_a search for thrills, but & search definitely inspires By morbid envy.” iornl ' Hobdlums.” st pointed to the fre- ‘who have eing beateh The psycholof Quency With which peopl Been godsiped about are «sometimes killed—by masked bands, hateur gangs of “moral hoodlums. artly as & result of the emotional orisis of ll“ 1-: clandestine phil- iidering s 1ikel fi 0 1nEr i 1 dodlumism” will ihcfeass and, with, the frantié rush for souvenirs of intéresti morning until after dark stared| The atmosphere inside the church % pass lane with the clamor | through much trial and tribulation. and sympathizes with every one of said: T famous } aithough James Mills, the east. southwest. wt Capitol avenue northeast. ) d Use “Moore” Printing! [OF THE Abraham at tho behest of Sarah. e. wag ter & of 00 us are going to | said the minister. “But God sees us. Remember who hold | the keys of life and death. Most of the members of the con- gregation whose names have been entioned in the case were present, xton and husband of the murdered singer, and their daughter Charlotte were con- splouously absent. Mills opened the ! c for the services and returned after it was over to close it. {Copyright, 1922.) Births Reported. The following births have been reported o | the health department in the last tweaty-four onrs Joseph L. and Peggy Brooks, girl, Ranzel Frank C a Patrick J. and Mary K. bo) , 3r.. and Stella M, Davi Detl y. idson, boy. & e Jencey, gl Wilkerson, boy. L. Poole, girl. on A. Hildebrand, gitl e B Spaniding. boy. and Fiossie Slanghter, giri. scas, girl. Deaths Reported. The following deaths have been reported to the health department in the last twenty-four hour Georgetown Hospital. Edward McGee, 80, Catherine Roseita Huttos, 76, 1004 M street 6, 3124 Georgia avenue. St. Elisabeth's Hospi 60, Providence Hospital loney, 78, 833 C street joran, 83, Little Sisters of the Poor. lcremiah Lyach! 87, United States Bodiers' ome. Wajse Howard 16, National Trainleg Scheol. Margaret Hayden, 3, 2283 14th street. south- | s Horace Edwards, 03, 224 B street Juf Alice E. Latimore, 52, 823 T street north- Hospital. ost. ¥rank H. Booker, G Casualty Johnson, 1 month, Georgetta Coomer 212 —_— LANDLORD TAKES APPEAL Albert E. Sawyer, owner of the Had- lelgh apartments, at 16th and V streets northwest, today noted an appeal from the decjsion of dJustice Hoehling re- fuging him a_writ of prohibition to prevent tie Rent Cominission from heating an application of Mina Frite for a reduction of her rent of $215,000 annually for the property. Counsel for the owner did hot give a_supersedeas bend, so the commission is at liberty to proceed with the heating, despite the appeal. BETTER KIND| at “The Ston of Good Prénting” | | Moore’s Printcraft Shop 735 13th St NW e PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on, shares maturing in or 83 munths.gllt b il 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. NW. [f' JAMES BERRY.. JOSHUA W. CARR, m anxious t’ vote. Live so you kin remember where you wuz last night. (Copyright National Newspaper Service.) Did you realize that - just $8.20 will start your $1,000 Insured Savings Account? If you do not live to complete your deposits, the in- surance company pays whomever you have named the full $1,000 at once; and the Banks pays the balance to your credit in your savings acconnt. Come into the Bank and find out all about this splendid new plan for savings. There are many more interesting details to tell you. ' . For your econvenierice—Open until-5:30 p.m., to- morrow and Wednesday. Capital and Surplus, $1,475,000.00 R Commercial National Insured Savings Pln - Commercial National Bank ‘. One Deposit Both Saves and Insures 916 G St.N.W. 1301 Connecticut Ave. Q.20 It seems a modest sum—just $8.20! Yet, at the average age, this lii- tle sum deposited monthly in an INSURED SAVINGS ACCOUNT will, in 120 months, accumulate $1,000 in cash—for you. But it is more than a splendid plan for systematic thrift. It in- cludes insurance for your loved ‘ones. Through our arrangement with the Continental Assurance Company of Chicago, the moment you are accepted under the plan 81,000 life insurance is in full force and effect. SR

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