Evening Star Newspaper, December 11, 1922, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, SAVANTS WHO LOST | Plgin Americanism Needed LIMBS TO SCIENCE p ; To Down Evils, Says Beveridge DECEMBER 11, 1922 TURMOI FOLONS POLAND ELEETON ) AMERICAN NOT GULTY OF “SPYNG” IV PAN | HOLDS PUBLISHER. | REFUSE TO PRINT SCHOLARLY WORKS KIAOCHOW GIVEN BACK T0 CHINESE, Trent Amalgam More_Heat—Less Cost’ No_Clinkers New Purified Coal Fuo! CARNEGIE HEROES PARIS, December 11.—The Carnegio ny ssociated Presy. Burns Steadily—Lasts Longest gold medal has been awarded to Prot.] 0 | NEW YOI Decembe No Kindling Wood Necessary Bergonle of Bordeaux University. anadlCals, Taxes an(li Paucity of “scholarly works” iz LT PROMPT DELIVERY recent victim of X-ray research, ! not due to any lack of scholurs to B ; 1 TORIO, Docember 11 - Viscount Lea: il produce them, but to a dispo: Hostility Toward Naruto-| Ziees: pubisencrs not foreign minister. repiying to the | them, Pean ¥ erick J. ¥ of Ambassador Warre: hods employed by the Jap- wicz, Chosen President, ' bridge of the graduate facuiti whose right arm and three fingers of the left hand were amputated. Dr. Charles Vaillant of La Riboislero Hospital, who recently underwent his ‘Telephone Main 2832, 2623, 2624 Trent Amalgam Co. 3 W. il 15th Interference Hit l in Speech. ’Japanese Restore Territory With Scant Ceremony. Columbia University, reported to < < thirteenth operation of amputation, s g with R. M Fears of Trouble Pass. made nécessary by the witherin of- | Likely to Result e Cibridge uscd phens an Amerlcan, said 1t was 5 fects of X-ray, and Prof. Leray. an- y . T n BE t no charge ths other l‘“d"er)%r"':‘ ihatraye ::"4' e Jail Profiteel‘s and, i .m\mr.x!hc history of the .\mr-lr'h ut no charge that Andrews was o1 S, 2 : ————— ! can colo oua. Ile ey 2jon y celve money grants from the Carnegle | i SRR T T Ut e Jrr e l:'m"“r "_"’. elegpation. Ty the Associated Press. Founcatlon. By the Associated Press. work were published several ve 13 R e ©of c=pionage was TS1 hantung. December 11. —_— Uphold Lau;s Says | WARSAW, December 11.—The ago, but it_was not until ! based on unfounded rumors. —The of ~Kiaochow was|y ) Ed /| | tion on Saturday of Gabriel Duwight W. Morrow had provi i am glad the decision of the court Wwith a striking lack of ceremony. S | today to excite hostile demonsira they have been ready for the press | th establishme: “with The Chinese flag for the first time in | !tions, and there were many predic-| for Eome time. i fir: of Andrcws & George, twenty-four years was raised over the administration bullding, which had been used by the Germans and later by the Japanese, who seized the Pays 6 Per Cent teiritory during the world war. on shares maturing in 45 fil| A cman group of Japaness and or 83 mounths. It officials exchanged formal Chinese Pays 4 Per Cent ddresses and drank mutual toasts before handing over the final docu- on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. ments which completed the transfer. Assets More Than {tions of a culmination of a serious: Which Andrews is & member, had | situation. | The nationa deputies have an- inounced officially that they will r fuse to support Narutowicz or any cabinet appointed by him. He was a dark horse candidate and is declared by the nationalists to be highly un- satlsfactory to them. They assert he was elected by the votes of the Jews, | Ukranfans, Germans and Russians, ireceiving only 186 Polish votes, while 227 Polish votes were cast for Count Zamoyxki and there were twenty-nine blank Polish ballot B the Assoc’ated Press. CHICAGO, December 1l.—Radicals, reactlonaries, foreign propagandists, high taxes and government interfer 2nce with business were blamed for Sh v America’s troubles b former United S s Sen: ‘Alb . Beveridge in ! op Strike Secretary Says |siete; senssor Mbert & booeriee 1y Breakdown of Equipment the Indiana Society held here Saturday Is Cause of Situation. is called, it was an- VLADIVOSTOK REFUGEES <= with chary rulsing in the waters of a mlli- T court L while his motor bou of id belongines wers s States Ambassador Warren the THE USEFUL PRESENT | Attractive and original designs in Lampa , Unusval furniture. mot to be found elsewhbere. ! Open Saturday aftermoonms. A Chinese gunboat in the bay fired a alute at noon and then the Japanese ice headquarters were taken over by the night. The preservation of American in- stitutions, he said, is the supreme duty of the present, and added that more disintegrating influences are at 12.000 Held Aboard Nine Ships. | o < Admiral Stark Seeks to Land | cniercd & vigorous protest agaim Them or Get Supplies. Japanese governor gen- of ~Kizochow, and the remafn- ling Japanese troops in the territory eral ALBERT J. BEVERID( By the Associated Press. will depart December 15, The staffs EW YORIK., D b vid|work upon them than at any time e Sketch of His Career. | ,000,000 v ; H X NE . December 1l.—David | ¥OT or Jabor: put profiteers in ja 5 = = 1 By the Asnociated Press. which have been on the docks and | willlums, secretars of the e m‘,‘r the civil war. . o Narutowicz was born in 1863 at wharves will remain ten days longer, “permanent revival of plain horse then be replaced by Chinese. strike committee of the metropolitan |sense and straight-out Americanism,” { 3800000 . dn;ouqmd Shantung troops ar-ldistrict for the railroad shop workers. h;o)ulz);:l a"l-'l')‘llz_l:):"“l,h‘:l:'u::‘nlml‘l :'r‘(‘.]l.,,.'. { rived here before the territe - > iof plair can d women, : Toreign mimicter o Ching who pe-{dents with “prime responsibility for |ation. t Carner 11th and E Sts. N.W. the territory from the jthe coal famine.” VFor such plain Americans, he said. ® il Jupancse, said he wax confident there | He followed his statement with a |there s but one motto: “All American JAMES BERRY. Preaident would be no trouble from the bandits. | telegram to W. H. Woodin, state fuel |Institutions. not merely some Ameri- JOSHUA W. CARK, Scerciary ;H:- declared that now the only pos- {administrator. declaring = that the |Can Institutions, must and shall be isibility of danger is from Japanese |famine in coal now threatening is [Preserved. { roughs. the direct result of “the breakdown Would Jail Profiteers. e i prodlzionaliask i nelsald Miniater Wang of car and locomotive equipment.” “Correct abuses promptly and with n to weld 8o perfectly our peatediyiiespre ¥ to charge four railroad president|a firm hand,” he advised. “whether |various racial groups that there will o dbEstandiuig < promised by ( With prime resporaibility for the coal | these abuses are practiced by capital iemerge at last a homogeneous people.” the Japanese for the police had not |famine,” said Mr. Willlams in his arrived. Jopan, he sald, has post- |Statement, “L. F. Loree of the Dela- poned the delivery of the arms three | Ware and Hudson, W. . Besler of the times. He said he had 2.300 police |Jersey Central, William H. Truesdale troops within the city and 10.600}0f the Lackawanna and E. E. Loomis troops on the boundar: of the Lehigh Valley.” He sald he did not wish to accusej Mr. Williams said the lack of coal Japanese authorities of double deal. | Was traceable to the lack of cars on ing, but he erted relations existed : Fallroads. He dald that the railroads hetiween the Japanese subordinates and |Knew of the shortage but refused to the bandits. Warg denled there was|OPerate the shops with trained men. friction between himself and the Shan-| “The skilled repairmen on tung tuchun. on these roads are ready to m managements at any time,” his tele- GIVE BANDITS $100,000. othier erimina SHANGHAL December and a loaded with refugees from v itvostol. under cominand of miral Staric anti-bolshevtie Tussian | cader. which have arrived here have i ST B CORNELL WAL PAPER C0. and foreign authorities. The refu- |- = s ees, upward of 12,000 in numher, are | Li4_ N.W. ] officers and soldiers and 1lies of the whi Viadivosto? eastern authoritics recentl over the government on the evac ation of the Japanese. All ar. Telsze, now a part of Lithuania. He received his education at Libau, the technical institute of Petrograd. and the Polvtechnic Institute of Zurich, | witzorland At the last named in- h g {stitution he was given a diploma as at heart and work for the Interests | Prottiscd this profession in France, "x'.rfhu'flr':-j-‘"x"l?r “fluf“'fl-:l d'ld"([:‘:{i“.u made professor of utilization of | ., interests of the Uni A water power by the Polytechnic In- stitute of Zurich. After the world|f: war he became a member of the in- ternational commission for the utili- 2ation of the waters of the Rhine. Member of 1920 Cabinet. In 1920 Narutowicz was mad, : ister of publio works in the Gradski cabinet in Poland and held the same rd and at any d order.” He warned sgainst foreign entan- glements, asserting that Americans 1d be “level headed enouxh and Surplus More Than = in an interview, re- The ships first we san, Korea, where the officers say they were refused permission to lai h fused i 1! | Py the Japanese authorities. although n they were given fucl and supplics portfolio in the two ministerles of L ot Premier Witos and the two headed | Sufficlent to carry them to Shangha: by Premier Ponlkowski. He was|They report $.000 other refugees al- ol md e b eron e o e Gonan i ready landed at Gensan In a Lorrible conference and held the portfolio of | P!Eht. minister of foreign affairs in the| SiX more ships are expected with islivlnskl and owak cabinets. a short time, when the total num- ber of refugees at this port will be | st approximately 20,000, “heon re-|ACT OF FASCISTI ROWDIES |, Admira) Stark sceks cither permie. | cted hecause both were seized by | il the Greeks and are regarded as tos slon to land his destitute charges here or provisions and fuel to carry acesssible to invading armics. Brusa, | Theater Performance of “Falstaff” Turkey's ancient capital and the i 3 el P in Milan Halted. Hosiery Stamboul to Remain Religious ks Center, With Kemal at Angora The Giit Supreme for Wife, Mother, Sister, Friend. By the Assoclated Press LAUSANNE, December 11.—Con- stantinople probably has ceased to be Turkey's capital for all time. It re- mains the seat of the caliphate and danger of a_ sex nd_ Afinm-Karal gram continued. “in an effort to settle the strike, as they have done on the New Vork Central, Erle, timore { and Ohio and other lines. ey will get the equipment into shape with them to Lurope. . ‘hinese Government Also Takes | Silk, silk-and-wool and 2Ule 1.C00 on Police Force. the greatest possible speed.” | the religtous center of Turkey and biiri lm';"';::‘n'rfl‘,‘j,’p‘;;,{f"{::‘:fufif"f"f;iBvc s e TIERNAN PLANS TO ANNUL | }‘,ngllih 11” \\AOU]. ]'" the Associated Press, i jiehe BtoslemBworld gbut fthegTuriishitwicnin r?n;:l Sffsteat feunsiicuflich s Sy "’l";hfi’rl. 1?“."’"’ o8 Hls SECOND : beautiful colors. weav- PEKING, December 11.—The go -! dclegates at Lausanne say that sea of Marmora. RO TR MARR[AGE‘ 2 5 | N A i cernment annonunces that it has ef- Blow to Diplomats. The permanent location of E Turkish capital at Angora will e aiformance of ! 'nited States and other | Theater in Milan insisting that the! ns which have fine embassles in|orchestra play the fascisti hymn. Sig. { Toscanini, who was conducting, re- | 2 sed the request and threw down Life will be | his baton and left the theater. Angora for the foreign diplo-| Later the fascisti were pacified so accugtomed to the soclal bril-ithat the opera could continue, the which the sultan's court and!performance being finterrupted only the navies of many nations imparted { accasionally by the singing of dis- ,to diplomatic activitles of the old|turbers. | capital. 5 | After the performance columns of Angora is a dreary interior Turk-|fagscisti paraded through the streets Mustapha Kemal PPasha and his heip- ers in the construction of nationalist Turkey have no thought of re-est lishing Turkey's political heart with in range of foreign warships which :ay enter the Dardanelles and the Bosporus. Angora Safe Nefug After centuries of world tance as the capital of the B: B | ana Ottoman empires, Constantinople in Towa for Button Industry, |w!ll be relegated to a place of sec | ondary importance. as Petrograd ha: Decision in Appeal. glven way to Moscow. Angora ha eap country, 200 miles east of Con- H proved a safe refuge for Mustapha | 1 4 i Kemal's national assembly. just as € Hosiery Shop I Moscow afforded the soviet govern- b Speclal Dispateh to The Star. ment protection from the on-zweep. ntinople on a branch railroad and ; Ing German army and the allied war z SSC, = cem| £ 200 miles south of the Black sea.! Q)PERA TENOR UNDER KNIFE. Arthur Burt Co., 1343 F T INE, JOTR. December 1l | hips. and It probably will become the and quoted, then read and quoted e Joy Christians, a new religious center of the large pearl button in- irowdy fascisti iy interrupted the per he ected an arrangement by which the | alstaff” at the Scala H | bandits in"the province of Shantung | { have been temporarily appeased. The | | i § COURT SAYS SHELLFISH 1S NOT WILD ANIMAL Mussels Illegally Taken From Land . ing and patterns, in gift JOXCS. Brother Announces Former Pro-: fessor Is Reconciled to First Wife. NEW YORK, December 11.—"Posi- tively the last statement” to be given | to the public regarding the marital difficulties of John Tiernan, former professor at Notre Dame U ersity., Indiana, was issued la<t night by h brother, Peter Tiernan. who is co i ! { bandits reccived $100.000 on condition ! | that they refrain from violence after | the withdrawal of the Japanese. { One thousand bandits have been in orporated in the Tsingtao police | e. The central government. with. | . military power. was compelled ! 10 make this compromise in order to | avold the appearance of baing unable | to administer the restored territory. — | mats. !iian Eyesight Specialist i L ish town of nbout 20,000 population. | singing songs and ihioaten; e e e aho s oon: 410 McLachlen Bidg.. 1t fs situated In a great cattle and | eaminiowith caseon ofl 08 Tos- § o New York. = e L 0.5 After announcing that John Tiernan ' was now in seclusion in this city andi was | reconciled with [ Augusta, and_three children HEMSTITCHING BUTTONS COVERED Mrs. M. E. Holley Col. 8371 | | i | i | i ! i BY the Associated Press. MOSCOW, December 11.--A non- ou pact. providing for an ar- >r board, has been fully agreed pon by the limitation of armaments { conter here. attended by dele- {gates of Hussia and the border states jof Russia. Details of the form of iarbnration have been let to be work- ied out after ratification of the pact. termine, Lawyers argued unti] they | cannot be considered because of the museum. were hreathicss briers were prepared | —— - that ran to e hundreds of pages. 'I' RY DF WEAL.[H 1“JOY CHRISTM A4S,” ) LIQUOR DEVOTEES, ision_in_the case., docketed as ames S. McKee et al.. vs Benjumin Gratz, meant thousands of dollars to musty law books were mulled over FORCED TO DESIST By the Assoclated Pres '] ROCHESTER, N. Y., December 11.— Th, lbu!ton manufacturers ir this city, the s - & c - ilroad that phlegmatic. sluggish, shelifish, mithontSany@connettioniibysfina ROME, December 11—Lucien M: 3 ate anent capital. 1and with the highw closed half the ~OME. e Lucien u- t the fresh water mussel. backbone of |permanent capltal =\ . alcorg ratore. the operatic tenor, has been |- “An action to annul the seeond mar- Russian and Border States Agree on Non-Aggression. |ois. Tere: And now tomen the e, cision of the highest court of the land y fresh-w ve is sect formed here with a pledge to follow the example of the Lord as s % S envesi year. It Is scattered about among the (the pearl button industry centering ) Re, B0 ved the advisability of ruins of Roman walls and is rich in|operated on a second time for appen- | riage will be instituted by me imme: | I But it required a decision of no|moving to various other places in!fragmen of Greek and Roman (dicitis. Consequently he will be un-|diately. I am prepared to meet any iess an authority than the Supreme {Anatolia, but Angora always defeat- . sculpture. which the government {5 able to leave at present for a concert ' insanity proceedings that may be in- {Court of the United States ts oo dec|ed all other rival applicants. Smyrna assembling preparatory to creating a jtour in the United States. stituted.” {that the lowly ater bival seek Army CUt A‘So- fa domestic animal, and. as such, the iproperty of the owner of the land| Ithrough which flow the non-navlln-i ble_streams of its habitat. drinker of the wine of His day suffered a reversal when a federal rrohibition agent from headquarters in Buffalo advised their “pastor.” A. ! Stanly Copeland, to postpone his sec- Christmas Checking List For the Street 1Woman Suspect Denies Plot to Kill Husband Who Deceived Her. dustry of the United States. Gratz is a promirent St. Louis lumberman, and the mussels which caused all the trouble came from water that flowed through land owned by him. Diggers sold the mussels to McKee and others. Later, Mr. Gratz presented a biil for ond “communion.” c 200 & anes . .00 to $20.00 attention to the matter of army re-|gerted, and he should be compensated. } Pr the Associated Prems, : | land a bottlelof beer intended 13r the Cloves 2350t 630 2 > fich., December 11.—|services to have it analyzed and also OFSS % 0 : - First Suit Dismisse DETROIT, v.)ll:u had been tricked |a copy of the sermon which the or-| Silk Mufflers 395to 15.00 No concrete proposition for thel! The first suit was dismissed. Then | Charges that s s ¢ groat |E2nizer of the new sect intended to Umbrellas . 150to 15.00 limitation of armaments is being con-janother in the rsr. Louis courts| into marriage by *‘Bloflfld 01 :? ;‘ d;lh" Cnpe’land)::fllefl ofl}x'he_scr‘\"- {sidercd us yew as several of the con- | brousht a ruling for the defendants,| wealth and generosity and that shejthe law requires he prove he is the i o0 lthe court placing the mussels in the & Iy frantic” | responsible head of a responsible re- ferces are of the opinion that this| jags with a muskrat, holding that, | had been ‘driven so neur:’ :l“t!:n ligicuzoranizationibe orenewould FO]’ “le Person imatter involves many technicalities {;)though on owner's property, title|by the actions of her husban b A llowea to ais b ite pins: o | requiring the advice of experts. and jwas not perfected until they actually | gt times she suffered 1oss of memonfl Copeland Friday evening held a Belts ... Xl - !this may not be available for months { were in possession. Upon motion for d responsibllity, will be the de-}“communion” at which a quart of Belts, with buckles. 195to 16.50 Hot Coftee pechapss 2 rehearing the court reversed itself|and resp g Ford when | Wine was dispensed to the “worship-| Handkerchiefs, in Cold W A | Poland Would Cut to 280,000, and found for Gratz In the second | fense of Mrs. Ml)'hBlennh enlimien in’ w0 od-fashioned Deer s 750 230 - - | hearing the court determined that a{ghe goes on trial here charged w glas he “pastor” has been hav- silk . - &- mn Co eather | At Saturday's session Prince Feral. |hearing the court determined that a{eho & e e Ll aseeaine ban e e e e et 3 nand Radziwill, representing Poland. g plotting_the death o Imcultyiniset(ingfaniadequate ieh initial 35to | tentatively propesed cutting__ his a8 it remained on a certain property } Xoy 'y *Ford of Dearborn. supply of liquid refreshment for with initi COFFEE was not icountry's armed forces to 280,000 |t belonged to the owner of that land | ™1y’ Ford, held in jall here because | congregation” and Friday morning| Hose, silk . F5to Within a year, with plans for further | McKee appealed, and then the animal | 4o “cannot” procure” $25.000 bail. is)he called at police headquarters o] pose, silk and wool.. 100to drunk by the English until 1652. It was an American who in 1672 ! opened the first ccffee- t house in Paris. §Wal- lis coffee is so good . that many people drop | in on these fine, tin- gling late fall days for a steaming cup, and a second one, with their ime bite. charged with offering to give a local detective, who posed as a gunman. $20,000 to kill her husband and burn the body. ‘Tho w’omnn told newspaper men to- ay that she intended to tell the jury ‘everything about my unhappy mar- ried life and let that story be my defense.” Mrs. Ford, who says she was a former Toledo clubwoman, declared she first met Ford when she was em- reductions annually along lines work- ed out by a board of army experts of the signatory countries. Maxim Litvinoff, however. contend- ed that more drastic reductions were desired. especially in the interests of the budgets of the states represented. He asserted that Russla was eager to make the conference a success, and as a means of meeting the Polish vroposals, finally agreed to a reduc- tioa in the red army to 600,000 along It proved a life saver. Lawyers conjecturing upon proper measures to take in “tracking down the wiid mussel” brought a laugh even to the :d precincts of the appellate courts. wever, the decision is expected to establish a precedent in many actions country-wide involving liability, not alone of fishermen and hunters upon land and water to which they have no title, but also to those who buy their wares. lines of Prince Kadziwill's sug- « ight, 1922.) ployed as a masseuse in & Toledo gestions. ! iy ‘.t‘ - beauty parlor. Russia Wants Cut. i Disappointed in Home. ‘Mr. Ford first Wr{;"t?‘ to the mg:; o) the place, said he was a ne :5;;':1% :f Renry Ford, that he had reat wealth, was generous and de- sired a wife,” the woman said. “The letter was turned over to me and I answered it. Immediately I received Plans for cutting the armies of the | Baitic states were not gono intd in | detail, M. Litvinoff holdin to the; point ‘that the conference was called | primarily to consider limitation of armaments. As matters stand it is limitation of PRESIDENT FELICITATES armaments upon which the fate of WOMAN 100 YEARS OLD a reply in which the matter of riches request the authorities to give him some seized liquor for his new cult. _—— BROKERS DENY EFFORT T0 DECEVE CREDITORS Kardos & Burke's Attorney Says Charge of f;suing False State- ment Is Untrue. ted Pre: Neckwear, knitted. Neckwear, silk Shirts, dress.. Shirts, madras Shirts, silk .. 600to 1 Suspenders 50to Underwear 150to 1 House Wear Silk Lounging Robes..$10.00 to $75.00 Wool Lounging Robes 2250to 40.00 Smoking Jackets...... 7.50to 15.00 Slippers «........ 135to 5.00 Night Wear Bath Robes . Extra-ordinary Christmas Special! Men’sBlanket Robes $4.85 The most sensible gift you can give aman. A big, warm blanket robe and relationship to Henry Ford was enlarged upon. He came to sce me and we were married. “Ford took me to his farm at Dear- born to live. I found a house that the conference hinges, as Russia con- tinues to urge that this point be included in the pact before it would be satisfactory to Russia and ready | for signature. Bath Slippers Pajamas, flannelette Pajamas, madras.... Pajamas, silk. for chilly nights and crisp morn- ings. These robes are especially L. Ross. attorney for the bankrupt stock brokerage firm of Kardos & Burke, has denied creditors’ charges that a statement issued by the con- Mallis’ Mr. Harding Writes Letter to “Washington’s Largest statement, he said, informed The i i i st ) vas misleadi d E 5 : Restanrant” e ! Moryland Resident on Birth- | ned, been Sachelons $UILS {00 L G hat Dot deutured st homr well tailored, are roomy and come and G Str i to buy dishes an ag given | ing yesterday 2 3 3 £ 12th G Streets N. W. 3294’333 ESTATE LEFT ! day Anniversary. ;‘%‘.’“":" p:oc:e’d the house, varnished | bankruptey. Outdoor Spofls i aleactise eI and fioared the floors and cookéd for ten or Flannel Shirts .. BY MARSHALL WILDER| fifteen men during the harvest sea-|creditors that a reorganization then R R Special Diepatch to The Star. son. planned would insure a 100 per cent{ Golf Balls . effects. Other wool, silk, and silk —_————— = | CUMBERLAND, Md., December 11.—| “"«And then I learned that if my |scttlement of all liabilitics. The re- Golf Caps - = ———— "33 |Dwart Humorist Wills Property { Mrs. Alice D. Willis, who celebrated | nusband was related to Henry Ford | organization plan did not materialize. ] Golf Hose . d wool robes up to $75. Dont Let That COId her one-hundredth ~ birthday anni- it would take a geneologist to dis- | however. He sald evidence would bel % 7200 cy an Chiefly to Son and versary at Schellsburg, on lhol Bea}- cover it. My;x:;bud didknttfl. 'i.”“‘" :nxr(ztducel‘] ?( 112::;:; lrlf;irf;: ;‘\re:::; Colf Shoes . ford division of the Pennsylvania{know Henry Ford to speak to him.[ing to refute cl C el Tm lnto 66 u” Daughter.: rallroad. a few miles above here, last | The latter passed our place, looked books are in a badly muddled state. Golf Suits . .00 All merchandise is c.tchangcablc NEW YORK, December 11.—Marshall | Saturday, was greatly pleased with a j curiously at the name on the mall| ~Accounting for a shrinkage in Knitted Vests . 675 Rub on Good Old Musterole | w . o Dige arshall | jetter from President Harding, which | box. and then drove on. assets since the first creditors’ meet- | SRICS VSIS, 700t 1400 ¥ on P. Wilder, the humorist, left an es-|said: "My husband refused to let me|ing, Mr. Ross' statement said: b SR 10008 1200 5 o ks Cashed S5l Vi ed af 2! v ISE, V: i jothes because he feare n the plan of reor; ization e 3 o - That cold may turn into “Flu,”|tate valu t $294,333, it was re-| THE WHITE HOUSE, Washington, | wear good cl b he feared In the pl: f reorganization th Gloves, fur line Christmas Savings Chec ashe Grippe or, even ‘worse. Pneumonia, |vealed when an application for the ovember 24, 1922, | other men might smile at me. Helfigures were based upon the assets of Wool Scarfs . 250to 5.00 i 1 By the Associ b NEW YORK, December 11.—Arthur lled me ‘fat tub’ and spoke to|a going concern. which naturally ycr::ullke e did the heifers on his|were much larger than what a liqui- farm. Hfs brother struck me during | dated defunct concern could realize. unless you take care of it at once. Rub ‘good old Musterole on the settlement was filed court, seven in surrogate's Mrs. Alice Willis, Schellsburg, Pa. ars after his death. 3 My Dear Mrs. Willis: 1 learn from your grandson, Ross Willis. that ou are with- For Motoring congested parts and see how quickly | * yvilder, a dwarf of peculiarly mo- |in a few days to ceicbratc the 100th anni- | & quarrel and then followed the Since the statement was made by : £ it brings feliet. bile Countenance an AgHe humoy, was | VEISARY of Your birth. I want to con | divorce bills ‘and ‘an injunction to| the ereditors' commmitiee on reorgani-| Camel's Hair Coats...$2500 Cold: 1y congestion. Mus-|one of the country's most popular|gratulate you and give expression to | drive me from the farm. gation and since > estate has un- Fur Caps ..... 5.00 & .olds are merely congest . 3 %, = hav 5 Murd Plot. dergone administration in the lastj 2 = le, made from pure oil of mus-|vaudeville artists in the 90's. His|the hope that vou ‘nay have many e aracr Tt {ght months. assets which would| Jur-ined Overcoats..119.50 0 187. :::3 e’camphor menthol and other | fret public e oo ma e e macsasslon) fiFacutiteaniol| L Eorai nireilidetect ves to) ek into Give remained with the reorganised| Gauntlet Gloves - 350 to 12.00 . i3 o cents = wi rov v - simple ingredients, is a counter- | 5553 na piayed hefore the Peince of |apbraise the wondertul century you|MY apartment, They Resrw, Sieoe oo el il b opout | SAwtomobileliRobes. . A0 L0825 00) jeritant which stimulates circula-|Wales, later King Edward VII|have witnessed and look hopefully to | naped so I couldn't testify at the | O¥ SIEQUCTyC “The assets in for.] Steamer Rugs .. 450to 25.00 a still more wonderful future. Most sincerely yours, WARREN G. HARDING. —_— DYING OF BLOOD POISON. i Prayers for Recovery of Doctor Known as “Miracle Man.” NEWARK, N. J.. December 11.—Dr. Miller Royal Whitenack, widely From 'then on he billed himself as the entertainer of princes and the prince of entertainers. The estate will go chiefly to 2 son. Marshall P. Wilder, and a daughter, Grace. “SEEING IS BELIEVING,” HEIR TO MILLION SAYS tion and helps break up the cold. As effective as the messy old mus- tard plaster, it does the work with- out the blister. Just_rub it on with your finger- You will feel a warm tingle s it enters the pores, then a cool- ing sensation that brings welcome refxei. divorce tria H Mrs, Ford, asked if she went to an apartment here to malie arrange- ments with the supposed gunman to have her husband Killed, answered: “I remember nothing, or could any woman so persecuted.” “My twin brother, a big business man from Fort Wayne, is coming hero to help me,” the woman said. | “We have money, friends, everything. It_will be a great trial. Date for the trial has not yet been sot. Mrs. Ford entered a plea of elgn countries were attached by dif- ferent forelgn creditors and, there- fore, were dissipated in the courts over there.” TEXAS MAN WHIPPED. FORT WORTH, Tex., December 11. —Emmet Clarke, ice man, was taken | from his automobile Saturday night A f.’.mu§# R, Q "“q\\\ 35c and’65¢, in jars and tubes. Better than a mustard plaster ELIZABETH. J.—December 11.— ‘Seeing_is belleving,” is an axiom to which Eugene Berue, sixty-three-year- old street cleaner, intends to cling while reports flourish that his wife's brother, Mrc?mel Kelly, real estate operator, had died in Kansas leaving them $1,00 Berue says he will continue to piy his brush until he has the money in his hand. known as a children’s physician, was reported dying at a hospital here. He 1s suffering from blood poisoning. Thousands of persons in Newark united in prayer yesterday for the recovery of the doctor, who is called the “miracle man.”” ~ The hospital where he confined has been be- sleged throughout the day by thou- aands inquiring as io his conditiom. not guilty when arralgned on a charge of attempted murder. —_—— In Russia it costs more than twice as much to subscribe for a magazine for two months as it does for one month. The publishers have to make allowance for the expected depre- ic Tuble. . by three unmasked men to a m)lnll west of the city and severely lashed. “You have been a bad little boy and have mistreated your wife. We are going to punish you,” the men sald, according to Clarke. They then stripped him to the waist and applied the lash, he sald. His stomach was & mass of bruises and in spots the skin was broken. He sald his back was in ‘a werse coadition.

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