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DYNAMITE CHECKS FRONT ROYAL FIRE Women Aid in Night Work to i . Prevent Flames Again [.. - - Breaking Out. LOSS FIXED AT $225,000 Mill Explosion Believed Cause of Blaze That Burns Eighteen - Buildings. By the Associated Press. FRONT ROYAL, Va. November 22. Dynamite stopped the spread of the fire which threatened the destruct of this town yesterday after eightecn buildings had been estimated loss of $225.000. For several hours the combined fire-fighting force of Front Royal, Winchester Strasburg fought a losing battle wit the flames, Leing icapped by watcr pressure and a high wind. Residence Blown Up. Finally the flames we when a residence in the path of the! Are was demolished by Avnamits 1t about the same time the wind down. Th abled th make their feeble water supply tiv in the starting of ont pany. quickly enve aided by the hich wird dly to buildings. both sid were in roa as if the struction. Appeals for Help Sent Out. Appeals were sent cut for hely doomed to de- town was firemen from Winches or and by Alded the an In the he burg responded. arrivals. virtually village and many efforts toward saving last night they worked another outbreak. Panicstricken wom fled to the outiving c n and children with them what pe they conld tuke. turned to the homes th from the f established de'initely, the mi 1 the be due to an explosion. —_— TURKEY DEMANDS ALLIES RESTORE FRCNTIERS OF 1913 (Contin from } Page) statment will be direct and brief.” Lord Curzon, who presided, replied in cordial terms and expressed pleas- ure at the presence of the American representative: The speakers were M. Barrere of the French dele| ion: Marquis Di Gar- roni. for the TItalians, Lord_Curzon, for the Japanese. Eight Powers Participating. Elght powers are actually partiei- pating in the conference as full mem- Ders. They are: Great Britain, France and Italy, the inviting powers; Turkey, Greece, Rumania, Japan and Jugoslavia. When questions affecting the regu- Iation of the oBsp and the Dar- danelles are under consideration all the states bordering on the Black sea may participate. TI means that Bulgaria, Ukrainia, soviet Russia and Georgla will be given a voice in the straits settlement, if t so desire. Bulgaria is aiready represented here, but the Moscow government has de- ‘clined to participate full powers on all the questions un- der consideration. In view of the lack of representa- tion of the Moscow regime or any of its federated stat:s, the conference nas decided that other countries not originally Invited to.the mecting may ! be admited to ask information and discuss matters as may affect their interests. They will have no vote, however. Turkey went on record today as being_opposed to dealing with these sutside powers in this conference; that is, the Turks are they ehould be heard they shall not have than consultative powe: FEDERAL JOBS OPEN. Service Commission has The Civil announced officially examinations fowed for most positions the basic vacancies: I Printer (machine operator), Camp A. A. Humphreys, Va.. at $2,160 a year, plus the bonus of $20 a month: junior toxicologist, chemical warfare ~serv. ice, Edgewood Arsenal, Md., at $1,400 to $1.500 a sistant toxicologist, chem al warfare service, Edgewood Arsenal, Edge- wood, Md., at $1.800 to $2,500 a year: iaboratorian (chemical, cal, en- gineering), United ‘Washington, [ days a week) surface draftsman, grade works department, navy York, N. Y., at $6.80 a da dairy husbandman. da'ry reau of animal indu of Agriculture, at $: ., at 3488 a day (five topographic and sub- A, public to $4,000 a (irrigation and drainage), Indian service at large, Albuquerque, N. M., at $1,680 a year: junior illustrative draftsman, division 5f publications, Department of Agri- culture, at $1,200 a year. In addition to the salaries named the bonus of $20 a month will be al- lowed for most position the basic salary of which does not exceed $2,500 a year. Full information and application blanks may be obtained at the office of the Civil Service Commission, 1724 F street northwest. NAMED ADMINISTRATRIX. Mrs. Emma Allegra has been appoint- ed administratrix of the estate of her husband, Sam G. Allegra, who, the po- lice claim, was shot to death November 8 by Mrs. Fannie Goldblum. The prop- erty includes §1,000 of personal estate, the widow declaring she is not informed a5 to property in ltaly. . Goldblum, charged with man- slaughter in connection with the death of Allegra, has been released on bond of $3,000. Seven W eek Days Left To Pay D. C. Tax Bill And Avoid Penalties Only seven week days remain in which to pay the first malf of real estate and personal tax bills for the current fiscal year. Beginning December 1, the collector will add a penalty of 1 per cent for each month the first installment goes unpald. All personal tax bills have been mailed, but real estate bills are malied only upon writ- ten request. The time for pay- ment is now so short that Col- lector Towers has appealed to property owners to call or send for their real estate bills. ‘The remalning half of taxes will,be due in May. Taxpayers their bills in full at B time = 1f they desire. destroyed at an ! % i the serving of milk luncheons a new | unless granted | wiiling that ' but insist that | anything more ok JIVENLE COURT BLLS EXPLAINED AT MEETING Mrs. Kalmbach Urges Women of District to Support Measures. Ald of the District Congress of Moth- ers and Parent-Teacher Associations in the movement to secure the passage of bills affecting the Juvenile Court now pending in Congress was urged by Mrs. dward Kalmbach, chalrman of the Ju- venile Court committee of the organiza- tion, at its meeting yesterday afternoon in the Ebbitt Hotel. Among the meas- ures particularly feeded, Mrs. Kalm- bach pointed out, are those glving the Judge of the Juvenile Court concurrent jurisdiction with the Supreme Court of the District, the extension of, the proba- tlon age and laws affecting custody of ckildren and the giving of chancery jurisdiction ta the court. Mrs. Kalm- bach’s recommendations were embodied a report on ihe work of her commit- Mrs. George S. Frazer, chairman of clothes conservation committee, uested that each parent-teacher ion work to obtain shoes and vis for needy school children. explained that it Is nccessary for many children to stay home from hoo d. because they are not properly Slie also made a plea for cast- iing. which will bLe renovated tered in the workshop of her commitice at the children's house of t trict Child Welfare Society, street. chairman of eported that are shewing great activi i . weighing and measuring school chil- dren L Among the other speakers were Mrs. | Mary Wright Johnson, Dr. Stanwood Cobb and Mrs. James Edgar, Jr. 'W. C. BICKFORD; CIVIL WAR VETERAN, IS DEAD | Was for Fifty Years in Treasury | | | Department—Prominent in Ma- sonic Fraternity. WARREN C. BICKFORD. Warren C. Bickford, civil war vet- eran and for fifty vears in the service of the Treasury Department, died to- day at his residence. here at 2146 Pennsylvania avenue. Mr. Bickford was born in Malne, May 2, 1845. At the age of sixteen he enlisted in the 16th regiment of the Maine Infantry as a private, and served throughout the war, and was wounded at the battle of Fredericks- burz. but returned to service, and, ! after the fall of Richmond. was the official me: nger from Gen. Grant to President Lincoln, bearing the report of the capture of the city in person to the President. At the close of the war Mr. Bickford came to Washington. and was given a post in the Treasury Department, where he served faithfully until his retirement in 1916, when he ws ten- dercd a banquet by his associates. The former veteran. who 1s survived ! by a son. Warren I Bickford of Pitts- ! bugh, was & member of Hiram Lodge. No. 10, F. A. A. M., of which he was | BAREREVOLUTION master in 1586 and 1887, and for many years was grand tiler of the Grand Lodge. 3 Funeral ‘arrangements _have not been made. ;wo MAN SENATOR | IN MAIDEN SPEECH| { (Continued from First Page.) of them occupled thelr time looking the ceiling. Over the cartoon was written these wonderful words: “Will | they ask the lady to take & chair” ! A ripple of laughter ran over the ate and Mrs. Felton continued: want ‘to Teturn my thanks today | for the beautiful, hospitable welcome that you- accorded to the lady when you gave her a chair. Thankful to Georgin. “I alsa want to return thanks to the noble men of Georgla. Georgia was very slow in her promises with i reterence to woman suffrage. She has {been rapid to perform. For the first ate in the Union of the forty-eight | states, one chivalric governor went to the front and said: “‘Send that old lady there and let her look at the Senate for a short time.’ senator-elect from Georgia he shall have her day ther and T want to thank him in this presence. He is a worthy successor. I want to plead for your gracious attention to him. He has been most chivalric. The sitting senator from Georgia has been most obliging. In deed I feel like I am the hap; woman in the United States. I am at home in the Senate for a minute. I appreciate the peaceful home and beautiful attention to me everywhere. “I want to say further that I com- mend to your attention the. 10,000, 000 woman voters who are watching this fncident. It is a romantic inci- dent, senators, but it is an historical event. " If Lady Astor, from the state of Virginia, can go to London and be accepted as a member of-the British house of commons, you can take this remnant of the old south that has never flickered in her patriotism to her country and you can be very well assured that she is not going to disgrace her commission. ‘Women Would Afd Senate. “Let me say that when the women of the country come in and sit with you, though thers may be but very tew in the next few years, I pledge you that you will get abillty, you will get Integfity of purpoee, you will get exalted patriotism and you will get unstinted usefulness. “Mr. President and senators I thank you very much for this hearing. Senators on- the floor and the occu- pants of the galleries applauded. Mrs, Felton_ vigorously as she took her seat. Many of the senators went to her and warmly congratulated her upon her address. - Mrs. Felfon continued after- the.| swearing in of Senator George to oc- cupy her seat on. the floor. Mrs. Huek, the new woman House member from lllinois _came into the Senate cham. ber and took a geat beside Mrs, Fel ton, chafting with her Tor a few min- utes. | vey. b; f:” ¢ PLOT N LONDON | Newspapers Predict Riots Through Communistic Operations. THREAT TO USE FORCE UPON DOWNING STREET Refusal of Premier to Receive Spokesman Not Accept- ed by Them. Ry the Associatad Iress. LONDO! November 22.—The widely heralded army of 100,000 or so desperate characters who were expected to assemble on the Em- bankment and try to beat their way through to Downing street to enforce their demands for an audience with Prime Minister Bonar Law was missing this afternoon, and none of the comparatively small number of demonstrants showed any pronounced inelination to chal- lenge the authority, of the police. LONDON, November 22.—An alleged communist plot to provoke revolu- tionary trouble in ‘London today in connection with an anticipated dem- onstration by the unemployed Is the feature of this morging's newspapers, some of which pregict serious riot- ing. The organizers of the alleged plot are said by several papers, which claim. sufficient official support for their statements, to be dangerous communists working in co-operation with Moscow. Their plan is said to be the exploitation of the large gather- ing of unemployed who marched from the provinces to London last week to call attention to their condition and to ask the premier to receive a depu- tation. Mr. Bonar Law declined to receive spokesmen of the unemployed, but promised that their cause would be heard by the ministers of labor and health. The leaders rejected this of- fer and insisted upon seeing the premier. 5 Rumors, supported by the police, spread throughout the city yesterday to the effect that organizers of the unemployed were determined to force an entrance to Downing street from White Hall today, and if the interview was still refused, to start a fight, many of the demonstrators being known tq possess arms. It seems probable, however, that the lurid suggestions made by some news- papers as to what may happen today will not be fulfilled, inasmuch as three labor commoners, after an interview with Mr. Bonar Law last night, agreed to aguise the leaders of the unemployed to accept a conference with Sir Mon- tague Barlow, the minister of labor, and abandon any plans for an attempt to force an entrance to Downing street: The Daily Herald says that this advice was accepted and that a deputation will see the minister of labor this aft- ernoon. Police Forbid Demonstration. A police order was issued last night forbidding any demonstrations within certain areas around the houses of par- liament. This district is always under proscription for such purposes while parliament -Is sitting. Extensive precautions were taken by the London police against trouble in connection with the proposed demon- tration. ‘When the hour arrived for the assem- bling of the demonstrators on the em: bankment, mounted police in great nume bers were on hand there and through- out the Whitehall area, prepared’ for any emergency. Shortly after noon a few demonstra- tors began to assemble on the embank- ment, some of them with red flags, and the police recelved reports that other bodies were marching in from various suburbs. PREDICT SHIP BILL WILL PASS HOUSE (Continued from First Page.) federal Treasury for education, rec- lamation, rural sanitation, agricul- tural extension, good roads, rivers and harbors and the widely extended activities of governmental depart- ments from destruction of the bol weevil to the carrying out of the maternity law are not begrudged, 1" is pointed out, by the taxpayers, who contribute three-fourths of the rev- enues to be expended in.states that furnish on - It is expected .that suggestion of the rule of “turn about is fair play” will ‘be heard.in the, appropriations committees of the two houses, whe the applicaats for “federal aid” come passing the hat for contributions to their -own particular causes. It is a fact, considered worthy of attention, "‘that appropriations are now controlled in one committee f: each house xllvlnz qmnge:;nud -n‘r; & small group-of. the deman rmer] ber of "committees. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, WEDNESDAY,'~NOVEL&BER 22, 1922, SMOKESTACKS AND SHELLS OF WALLS ALL THAT REMAIN IN FIRE-SWEPT DISTRICT OF FRONT ROYAL, VA. (Photo by A..N. Carroll, Front Roy: who was rushed to the scene in one of the Bolling 'Field planes. Alr view of the fire, made yesterday by Army alr scrvice photographer, va.) l Maj. Gen. Hines Will Con-| fer With Secretary Weeks. Harboard Plans to Give Up Duties About December 1. Maj. Gen, John L Hines, command- ing the 8th Corps area at Fort Sam Houston, Tex., who has been selected to succeed Maj. Gen. James G. Har- bord, as deputy chief of staff of the Army, will arrive here early next month for consultation with Secre- tary Weeks and his military as- sistants. Although Gen. Harbord will not be transferred to the retired list until December 29, he will relinquish his present office at the War Department about the first of that month and take a few weeks' rest before formally as- suming his new duties in New York city as president of the Radio Cor- poration of America, When Gen. Hines comes here to familiarize himself with the duties of his new office he will be accom- panfed by his pefsonal aide, Capt. Charles L. Bolte of the infantry, who will serve him in the same capacity | at the War Department. He wil relleve Capt. Gustave Villaret, fantry, one of the aldes-de-camp of |, the retiring deputy chief of staff.!p who will be assigned to other duty. Lieut. Cornellus C. Jadwin, cavairy.| the other alde of Gen. Harbord. has in- | % him In the same capacity and will re- main on duty at the War Department. | |and as an administrator. Born in West Virginia. he entered the United ber, 1887, and four vears later was appointed second lieutenent of in-, fantry. He took part in the cam- ! paigns In Cuba in 1898, in the Philip- pine insurrection { i D. C. “SAFETY WEEK” TO BE PERPETUATED A (Continued from First Page) age the adoption of laws, rules nndi regulations in connection with any of | the above objects. 8. Conduct educational programs and campaigns, hold meetings and generally doing all such acts which may be necessary for the above pur- poses or some purpose ancillary thereto for preventing accldents of | any nature. Main Fight Concerns Traffic. In its by-laws, which are to be presented to the temporary body for option tomorrow, the Washington fety Council piedges to work es- i | 1 ! FIRE PHOTOS TAKEN BY ARMY AVIATORS Flyers Brave Bitter Winds on Trip to Front Roy- al, Va. Within a few minutes after head- quarters of the Army Air Service had been notified by The Star yesterday afternoon that a fire was raging in Front Royal, Va., where the Army re- mount station Is located, a photo- graphic airplane took off from Boll- ing Fleld and returned two hours later with photographs of the town which definitely red officlals that the Army station was not in any danger of destruction. The airplane was piloted by Lieut. David R. Stinson, commanding of- ficer of photo section No. 3, and car- ried Sergt. Andrew E. Matos, de- clared to be one of the best aerial photographers in the service. Taking off in the teeth of a strong wind, the plane, after reaching Alexandria, followed the tracks of the Chesapeake and Ohio raflroad to Manassas Junc- tion, where it picked up the railroad running to Front Royal. Throughout the trip down the big plane bucked a stiff wind, which held down the speed considerably, After one hour and fifteen minutes of flying, Lieut. Stinson arrived over Front Royal, where, from his height of 2,000 feet, it appeared that one big factory was on fire. He encountered much difficulty in getting his ship in position for Sergt. Matos to “shoot” the picture, as a fog hung jover the ctiy. Took Five Pictures. Because of this, the bumpy air and a mountain which is close to the city, Lieut. Stinson did not descend from the 2,000-foot level. The plane flew over : the eity for more than fifteen minutes, land after Sergt. Matos had shot five |glct\lrel and accidently dropped one of s gloves over the side of the plane | | i the aviator returned to Washington. Alded by the same stiff wind he was forced to buck on the downward trip, only twenty-filve minutes were required to bring the plane back to its station. Lieut. Stinson landed at 4:25 o'clock, and both he and his sergeant were blue from cold. The photographic plates were rushed to the developing room and by 5 o'clock the location of the fire was determined. Lieut. Stinson has been at Bolling Fleld about six' weeks, he having suc- ceeded Lfeut. Guy Kirksey, who was transferred to another fleld. He came {to Washington from Mitchell Field, ‘where he was stationed for more than & year. Sergt. Matos has many ex- cellent photographs to his credit, a number of which will be on exhibition at the field today in connection with the aerial demonstration. As soon as Lieut. A. B. Baker, ad- Jutant of the fleid, received orders from Maj. W. H. Fraok, executive of the Air Service, to dispatch a plane to Front Royal the special photo plane was rolled out of the hangar, inspected d warmed up. In ten minutes it was In the alr. Air Service officials last night pointed out the value of Bolling Field for emergenty cases which was demon- strated by this feat yesterday. VETERANS IN PROTEST. Spanish War Men to Oppose Re- ported Dismissal Order. Gen. Nelson A. Miles Camp of the United - Spanish War Veterans at & meeting 1n the Perpetual building last night discussed the dismissal of veterans_from the Washington navy yard. * After hn.rln’ reports at the meeting that two of the members of the camp had been notified that they would be dropped from the rolls of the the - camp authorized its Baxter, to e pecially for the reduction of acci-|from Fart Meyer, on ! % |denls on the public streets and in i grounds yesterday afterncor at {traffic. It intends to retain a highly o'c’ock. trained expeit to advise it upon the| After assembling the colors wer and conduct campaigns and Interest all persons in such measures. It will have a permanent headquarters in charge of a paid secretary. ny corporation, association or in dividual will be eligible to member- ' ship in the council, and already many of the largest business men In the city have signified their desire to join the council. Individuals are to be charged $10 dues a year and sustain-, ing members. such as large busines: houses employing many automobile: or other vchicles, $20 a year or more. ure $15.000 will be required to run the council the first vear, and they expect to have $10.000 of that sum before the end of the week The main work of the council will be directed by an executive committee, whose membership will be composed of men and women whose dally interests bring them in closest contact with the city’s needs for a reduction of acci- dents. In addition, there will be a special committee to handle the ques- tion of traffic, which will be the big- gest work of the council. It will be | | charged with the duty of keeping track ' the dcath of Jo memb H of all traffic laws for the District and [of the House of It s frov suggesting changes it thinks might be | Californiz. was adopted by Columbi beneficial. { Typographical Union, No 101 of thi y. i Week of Inauguration. ,c“fl set forth that the union Sunday, | “sincerely mourns h Safety week, which opens will really become a birthday party for the bigger movement to make the | prevention of accidents in Washington a perpetual care. Government depart- ments, busines houses and individual citizens are swinging into line rapidly | now, and those in charge feel assured | the week will show excellent results. The committee of women who will have charge of the memorial meeting Sunday afternoon, when thousands will assemble in front of the District building to pay respect to the mem- | ory of ninety-seven children twho ! were killed in a single year. ha been announced. Its membership is| composed of the following persons: Mrs. William H. Herron, chairm Miss Ethel Bagloy, Mrs. George Bowerman, Mrs. George W. Mrs. Herbert E. Day, Miss El Eastman, Mrs. Joshua Evans, Mrs. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, ) Randolph Keith Forrest, Mrs. ! Y. Forrester, Mrs. J. W. Frizzell, Miss Sara Grogan, Mrs. Wiiliam | Mrs. W. J. Hardy, Mrs. W. C. Jobhn,{ Mrs. Charles R. Lindsay, Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, Mrs. Wallace Radcliffe, Mrs. Giles S. Rafter, Mrs. Susie Root Rhodes, Miss Rebecca Shanley, Mrs. Lyman B. Swormstedt, Mrs. Theo- dore Tiller and Mrs. Otto Veerhoft. Made air photographs of the conflagration. Left to right: Lieut. David R. Stenson. pilot, and Sergt. Andrew E. Matos, cameraman. Dr. Wellington Koo in Flight As Chinese Cabinet Resigns IPeking Crisis Follows Ar- rest of Finance Min- ister by Li. i Lo Wen-Kan Accused of Part in Plan to Float Big Teuton Loan. By the Associated Press. HONOLULU, T. H., November 22— The cabinet of the north China gov- ernment has resigned as the result of the arrest of Lo Wen-Kan, minister | of finance, on the charge of recelv- | ing a commission for the proposed | flotation of a loan of £6,000,000 ster- | ling by a group of German and Aus- trian financiers prior to the war, ac- | cording to a cable dispatch received | by the Nippu Jijf, local vernacular newspaper from Tokio. In addition to the resignation of the Peking cabinet, the dispatches state, Foreign Minister Wellington Koo, who offereq his personal guarantee in an effort to obtain the release of Lo Wen-Kan, has fled from the capi- tal to Tientsin. Lo Wen-Kan was arrested upon the orders of President LI Yuang-Hung, ! D. C. COURT ENLARGED. New Division to Begin Work De- cember 5. DR, V. K. WELLINGTON KO00. who, it was sald, was induced to act against the finance minister by Wu Ching-Liang, speaker of the house of representatives, and Chang Po: Lieh, vice Speaker, who produce documents, some of them alleged to have been forged, purporting to im- plicate Lo as party to the receipt of the loan commission. GETS YEAR IN PRISON. Motion Picture Operator Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Little Girl, Beginning December 5, there will| Orney J. Riley, twenty-seven years be a third criminal division of the |old, a motion picture operator charg- District Supreme Court. The justices ed with an attempted assault on a of the court in General Term have | nine-year-old girl, was permitted to assigned Justice Siddons to preside in | plead guilty yesterday to a simple cr;x::.ul l:xlvlllotn :h ¥ = assault before Justice Bailey in Crim- action of e court is bas inal Division 2. He was sentenced oy oo Seponited States Attor- | to serve one year at Occoguan. 1 Riley is married and was charged rge number of cases on the crim. inal docket ‘and the necessity for a|with improper conduct toward the who had been engaged to dust third court. While the third criminal court is in_operation Chief Justice the chairs in the theater where McCoy will hear all the equity caset | Bii¢y was employed. The evidence of Both the equity and law dockets aré ['yng prosecution failed to make clear that a felonious assault had been com- well advanced and it is only the eriminal cases that are far behind. {.;iteq, o Justice Bailey allowed the or and called a —_— . Rev. Orfetta. Stoddard, a_fourteen. B pleaded guilty to 3 ) and recelved mistrial. Rils year-old girl -of kla., “is ‘a | thé. lesser Classified Section.” e 1a 11 ed. her, iter | regularly oenl p;le Adgo New Deputy Chief of Staff To Be Here Early Next Month ar 4 rt He went to Franca in May been requested by Gen. Hines to serve | command of the 16tk Infantry, later | commanded the 1st Imfantry Brigade Gen. Hines stands high as a soldier , then th States Military Academy in Septem- |the aryistic. Th est gradd in 1901; was ad- |ism in action at Berzy-lc jutant general of the punitive ex-|July 1 | torious services gade, division and for disp | the issons and onn 'SQUADRON OF CAVALRY Remarkable Exercise of Jumping Through Flaming Arch in Demox- stration on Monument Grounds An exhibition drill was given by 1 | second squadron of th presentation of laws and regulations | formally received from Maj to educate George by Troop G and prescnted to the squadron. | formed in a column of platoons and i passed in review. first at a walk, the a trot and, finaily, 1 which an unusual horses jum arch was given by a number of the soldiers, who Those sponsoring the movement fig- | jnant arch in’ the e manner that they would have ridden them over an or dinary jump. i _The affair was witnessed by Briz Gen. H. H. Bandholtz and other prom- Army people. com | mand were: Maj. C . squad- ron commander; E Troop: Capt and Capt. M. i PRINTERS MOURN NOLAN. Resolution Extends Sympathy A tends to kis I }well as to the workers who are his untiring the deep o0ss.” ASKS $100.000 DAMAGES. Defeated Candidate Alleges He Was CORN AN Papers asking $100.000 « ag | charging William H. | perintendent of the Ant v | right of this cit for assembly &1 ments ® ! pub! cial pa and on c: the propaganda caused Mr. Cortri defeat. The United States d layer Israel No. forty-one and a half m “They Came, They Saw They Bought” “If people bought your goods, they must have seen them. “If they saw them they must have come into your store. “If they came into your store— “They must have read your ads in the ‘Christmas Gift Suggestion’ column of The Star’s Alphabetical That’s the way a good many Christmas stories will run this year. Drop a Postal or Phone Us— Main 5000, Branch 64—and Our Representative Will Call pedition fnto Mexico in the spring o 1916, and chief of staff to Ge ing in oy | vember, { During’ the early part o Perst from No brusry the v atioms in Me 1916, to ¥ he was at Governc . as adjutant of the I ment. Saw Service in Franece. nd 4th Divisions in su finally commanded the up to the siguing of 1) th e of the high the fact that ingulshed arv hero- - . France 3 ind the distinguished ice medal for exceptiona i wd corps commander, ing marked ability ir atdidier, at el and awarded ope -Me fensives. IN EXHIBITION DRILL ¥ The equadron then a den.o through stratio ng a flaming them through th A D Representative’s Family. gret ove resolution ebted 1o him energy in tl mpathy ave fee ) Libeled During Campaign. NG. N. Y. Novembher Saloon Leac derous statements. ha attorn for I defe on th ion and soc con. ed in the Ameri per of the Anti mpagin docun L nts and th ced ol an hour. 98 h