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ADD VALUE TO YOUR HOME BY HAVING TT_ PAINTED PROPERLY BY OUR EXPERTS R. K. Ferguson, 1114 Bth St. Ph. M. 2490-2491 TABLETS 60 DOSES 23¢ . At Peoples and Other Good Drug Steres ~— WINEN! WORN FADED THIGS HEW Sweaters Dresses Draperies Skirts Kimonas Ginghams Coats Curtains Stockings Waists Coverings Everything Diamond Dyes @ 13-cent packaze of “Diamond T contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things new, even if she has never dyed before. Buy Diamond Dyes—no | other kind—then perfect home dyeing is guaranteed. Just tell your druggist whether the materfal you wish to dye is wool or stlk_or whether it is linen, eotton or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never, streak, spot, fade or run. |GREATER WARFAR LOOHS INIRELAND Fresh Outbreaks Expected After British Convene Parliament. By the Assaciated Press. DUBLIN, November 14.—The cur- rent Increase of activity of armed forces opposing the Irish govern- ment is attributed to reunion of the political and militarv wings of repub- licanism. This, among other things. resulted in the reappointment of Eamonn De Valera as “president of the Irish republic,” with a council of state claiming sole legitimate author- ity in Ireland. There is a wide divergence between the accounts published by the govern- ment of its successes against the irregulars and those put out by De Valera’'s party. The government claims to be winning and gradually restoring order, while De Valera's followers record severe losses they are inflicting and assert that the Free State already is beaten. These assertions are made partly in propaganda sold upon the streets and partly through large inscriptions painted nightly all over Dublin on lampposts, billboards and bridges. The civil guard and the metropoli- tan police pace up and down all the thoroughfares, but they seem unable to check these manifestations of lre- internal dissension. ay government agents go ar paint solldly over the inscriptions, but the next morn- ing they appear again. Seeks British Attention. The intensification of activity by the irregulars is supposed to be partly aimed at the British political crisis, with the deslgn of bringing home to the British the thought that the Irish question remains unsettled despite the treaty. When the new British parllament assembles and the constitution of the Free State is sub- mitted for ratification, it is anticl- pated that the activities of the Ir- regulars will be further Intensified. Except in the south, all large bodles of republican forces have been dis- persed in a wholesale manner by na- tional troops, but small bands are able to inflict constant losses and humiliation upon the government by their activities in Dublin and else- where. Repressive power has been granted to the government by the Irish par- liament. but the republicans never have believed these powers would be fully exercised, and so far their fore- casts have been, for the most part, accurate. The Free State government has 30.000 troops fully equipped and cost- ing nearly $8,000,000 a vear. Yet the attacks of the irregulars are made in confidence of escape and with the thought that even if they are caught they will suffer nothing more than detention in prison. If members of the Irish parliament, which resumes Wednesday, express in public what some of them have been saying in private, there is sure to be searching criticism of the gov- ernme ineffectiveness against the irregulars. The latter's policy of dis- locating railway traffic Is witnessed daily fn the wholesale burning of sig- nal boxes, some of them on suburban lines quite close to the city. It has become a common thing to seize a train and let it run loose at full speed, certain of a smésh-up. Appalling consequences of this wild practice have been obviated so far only by good luck. Arrests Not Feared. Considering some arrests which have been made and others .which have not been made, it is inferred that there are differences of opinion in the Irish cabinet as to what ought to be done to put a stop to the ir- regulars. Apparently the republican leaders are not seriously evading ar- rest, for the whereabouts of De Valera and his principal colleagues are suid to be well known. Only the other day Erskine Chil-| ders, one of De Valera's leading licu- tenants, was arrested at his cousin's house—a place where he has fre- quently resided and where it would seem natural to look for him. It was inferred that he must either have ex- pected immunity, such as had been enjoyed by his chlef colleagues. or else he wanted to be arrested. There are some who think such a desire is shared by De Valera, and that hence it ought not to be gratified. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1922. PLEA MADE FOR RELEASE OF CONVICTED SLAYER Idaho Citizens Urge Pardon for Henry Orchard, Who Killed Ex- Gov. Steunenberg in 1905. By the Associated Press. BOISE, Idaho, yesterday to free Henry Orchard, con- fessed slayer of Frank Steunenberg; former Governor of Idaho, in'1906. The application was taken under ad- visement until November 27. Senator Frank Gooding, governor when Steunenberg . was murdered; James H. Hawley, another former governor; I. N. Sulllvan, former chiet ijustice of th¢ state supreme court, and |F. A, Jeter, secretary of state-elect, November 14.—On | wera the notables who asked leniency the contention that his confession and | for the prisoner. turning state’s evidence extenuated Each speaker declared emphatically his crime and that he rendered the|that he was not representing Orchard state a service at the trials of his al- |in any manner, but that his appear- leged superiors, an array of promi-|ance before the board was from his|A. opening here today, according to nent Idahoans urged the pardon board sense of duty as a citizen. mittee. BE BARRED BY Y.M.C.A. Proposal to Be Brought Before In- ternational Convention—Promi- nent Speakers Listed. By the Associated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., November |2nd Rev. parts of the world. Among the will 14.—Independence from ecclesiastical control was one of the {mportant pro- posals to be brought before the in- ternational convention of the ¥. M. C. \CHURCH CONTROL MAY ! | an announcement made by members China. of the approach to the churches come The proposal is expected to arouse spirited debate among the 2,000 delegates attending from all |Illegally Entered Aliens Say They convention Agriculture speakers be Secrotary of Henry C. Wallace, J. M. Walnwright, | ren natives of Spain, members of the Aszistant Secretary of War; Willlam T. Manning of Bishop 4 New York;|here Friday night in alleged violation Dr. A. Davis of Geneva, Switzerland, | o¢ the federal immigration laws, have Henry Emerson Fosdick, | paen New York. The convention continues | pention Inspector MeDavid to face de- for the balance of the week. jec » Association. BT Ants whick can eject poison through | and state officers searching for them. a hollow sort of tube exist in Indo- | Paid for Passage to U. S. FORT MYERS, Fla., November 14.—| party of twenty landed at Naples near taken to Tampa by Immi- inur!mion charges. The others ten; o aliens gtill are at liberty, with federal | One of the prisoners was quoted by Sheriff Tippens, who with his depu-| problems. Homer L. Kitt Co.--*‘Home of Knabe Pianos’ ’.-1330 G St.N.W. SEATS YOU At This, Your PLAYER PIANO Delivered and Set Up in Your Home Ready to Play For Christmas Begin Paying Next Year—*2* Per Week Want a piano that reproduces hand-played records? Want to play your own kind of piano music with your own expres- sion? It is ready for you at less than the price you expected to pay. ; Scanning the market of to- day, you will marvel at the im- portance of this announcement —THIS 'IS A BETTER PLAYER — IN A BETTER PIANO THAN WAS PRO- DUCED BEFORE THE WAR™ AND THIS AT LESS THAN PRE-WAR PRICES. The time to buy is now. The maximum in value is offered— The most convenient and lib- eral terms are quoted. The _Homer L. Kitt Company takes a long step forward in estab- lishing new values. 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SHIP CAPTAIN AGCUSED. |}l mage e srvote o swiog ther —_— schooner $100 each for passage from Havana to the Florida coast. CITY MANAGERS MEET. KANSAS CITY, Mo., November 14.— City managers from all over the United States were here today for the opening session of the national convention of the City Managers' Two hundred managers many others interested in the managers’ plan of municipal govern- ment will participate in the program. which calls for discussions of dvic