Evening Star Newspaper, December 19, 1922, Page 39

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1922, "3 BUUII-[GG[R -I-Ax "-_'!_ijlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllI||||IIIIIIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllg INVOKED BY STATE| Bishop in Boston VTennessee Imposes License |assembly of Congregational min 5 outlined his ideas of how & minister Fee Under Old Statute to |s:ouid spena nia time. “Many parsons smoke 100 '!_nm:h and Curb Law Violators. [ating snat, while he.aid mot. soposs There’s No Kitchen Cabinet Like either, “It should be remembered that the place for & novel is not in a Speeial Dispatch to The Sta: tudys a McDougall Kitchen Cabinet o . By e s e et g : CATTANOOGA, Tenn., December 19. | time. tha biehen sesas o7 8 2l Tennessee bootleggers are invoking| “One way to force yourself to study the injunction process in their battle |18 to teach a class; another is to write to stay in business, now that the|® HChlsey he added . . Bishop Slattery said he did not hold sulle attorney general seeks to levy wlz{n thlnu“clergymen who' refer to against them heavy privilege taxes|Pastoral calls as “pulling door bells® and “drinking tea.” but instead urged under old liquor laws. clergymen to make calls. SAYS CAPTAIN SAILED ~ FROM BOAT IN PERIL e. : =t Fountg\lfin;Pen “Parsons Smoke Much,” Says Bishop in Boston BOSTON, December 19.—Bishop Co- Joseph Goldenberg ég’ Quality Furniture for Cash [} Save One-third to One-half A practical gift at Christmas time is one that will prove of great benefit for many years to come. We have a gift sugges- tion that will aid you. " Consult one of our offi- cers. 'Why not a Qchnstmls gift for the home that will bring joy all the year ’round ? The legal battle of the dispensers of white lightning and blockade run- ners to find loopholes in the state laws entered its new phase with the 2 A granting of a temporary injunction AA I?I{, c DK& }lllen . ‘ ?2;1 Ch)l.n:lelllor Garvin to W. A K ; g8Y. olan, owner and operator Ramm ¥ Cabinet lightens = o of a “poolroom, cigar stand lnpd o:i’s et SIS chonner A Kitchen work— e e = fountain™ on Cherry street, restrain-| cuses Skipper of Mail Ship of 1 R 4 ! : ing the county " from collectin; Sgp o N — s e b vhole: and retailing liquor. happiness. P — = Liquor statutes of the autg of Ten- | By the Associated Press. S € % d.y 2 3 em, a, nessee contain no clause similar to SAN FRANC ). Calif., December that of the federal law under which *a earge \cKinnon, master an automobile operated by a boot. |of the Pa 3 cnger steamer Sele_ction and Service at THE MUNSEY TRUST COMPANY i MO SOOI s < legger or transporter can be seized | X 4 d formally R . by EY Munsey Building . Kitchen Cabinet h ) v ] ; . AL R e s mow | o poptseated By "the suais **he : : Best DealetstheWorld Over Pa. Ave. Bet. 13th and 14th Sts. N. W. he home of the McDougall. Every pattern— H arrested with cars full of liquor an 4 - Ay g L 0 & B = a. =) v AN W :V:rs'n;?lee—sw to $90. CEenns i ondl pending lons: |Tais T 8 L. E. Waterman Company, 191 Broadway, N. ! . hy ay was led W B o ’ ’ > 3 — : Sidl o oen s fas LIRSS nspectord ess) By Chp T 5 S ou Al e P, S | Sl EnmE Penna. Ave. and 8th St. S. E. AT e e A cham. | Sves Was' capaized anda sreat holg les of Hamllton county, Irate over|Wa# torh in the Newport. “The crew the Sontinual deflance of authority, | %cLi8 "Citinnon declares that the gearched the. statutes to fnd a way|noCilore carrving passengers, was in ness " He: turnod oo inottigf1PUsl | imminent danger and was forced to loense low Uined to the old Mquori ., e “while the crew of the Svea license law, which 'specifically pro- | 12ve, ] vides for state and county licenses|Was safe. 5 : of $500 for wholesaling und retailing liquor, and which states concisely MISSIONARY DIES AT 78. and particularly that the payment of this license does not legalize the sale TACOMA, Wash., December 19.— Porney weneral, thar ook Lo the &l-| missionary, died here at the home of term covering any and all classes of w, F. A. Hazeltine. Mr. ky d!sp!:ser'——lro liable to the vas president ;:f \,'mnnnlu‘o. is o 1 o ass Cor payment of the license, and that any | Ind., College in 1870, when he went to is here in greater assortments than ever and all property owned by them iu|the Argentine Republic ax o Meth- subject !hl! attachment d sale to|odist missionary “Hc lvet'umlve Un;ted * . . satisfy these taxes, if court convic- | States consul at OSar! and profes- before for the holiday season. tion has established the fact of their |sor of astronomy In the National bootlegging. University there. He established the Friday the attorney gencral asked |first Protestant missions in Peru, the county court clerk for a distress | Paraguay and E warrant to recover privilege license taxes amounting to $2,357.80 te and county against ggy" Nolan, who has been up repeatedly for possessing liquor. About thirty other operators who had been con- 9 - victed were similarly targets of d o tress warranis. The next day Nolan, ithrough his attorneys, filed a bill i«eeking to enjoin the execution of the warrant. He denied he had en- saged in the sale of whisky as a retail and wholesale dealer and {pointed out that he had never been convicted of selling. Chancellor Garvin has granted the temporary nction, upon leged bootlegger executing bond to Seventh at F after the matter is heard. The man has been convicted of possessing! liquor and Attorney General Chamlee ! is acting on the fact that this con- viction of possession is prima facie' avfidence of selling or the intent to sell, { —give“Her”a | HOOVER Nolan Reopens Place. Nolan immediately reopened his; soft drink stand upon issuance of the temporary injunction, but other places were closed under the distress warrant and are still under lock and “Pape’ " Breaks a Cold In Few Hours and you give R T 7,218 2o geae meve muse mo 3 her the best Tnstant Rel'sf! Don't stay stuffed- | The second and third doses usually In cases in which the defendants | dealeras up! Quit blowing and snuffling! | break up the cold completely and |nh~ve been convicted or have pleaded Sold by the following ce “Pape’s Cold Compound” every | end all grippe misery. ] | gullty to selling liquor the attorney | H. F. Dismer e has il thren dosen arw | “Papes Cold Compound” is the |Eenoral anticipates little dimioulty in | 3124 14th Se., N. W. taken. The first dose opens clogzed-up | quickest, surest relief known and | (rycks, business property and other Dulin & Martin nostrils and air passages of head; | costs only a few cents at drug |goods have been seized. 1215 F St., N. W. Fiopa mose. rumibg: releves lnad | stores Tastes mice. Contains ne | One of e reasons why Atiorney ME 10l Company \ ache, dullness, feverishuess, sneezing. | quinine. Insist upon Pape’s. e aiie) thaC el Ta having aifc 513 7th St., N. W. with juries. “It is not uncommon,” he ‘after jurors turn a boot- H’““& Herrman in legger l0ose, to sec them ease outaide 7thand I Sts.,,N. W. to congratulate the lawbreaker, shake S. Kann Sons Company hands with him and in the warmest 8th & Pa, Ave., N. W. friendship bid him good-bye. If con- . » victed, the bootlegger appeals to the Lansburgh & Bre. supreme court and gets a year's de- 420 7th St., lay. Recently we had two cases re- P versed by the supreme court where Mayer the only errorh W;sdlhxt Ilha 'clerk in 419 7th St., entering up the judgment of convi Palais Royal tion used the words ‘storing liquor.’ y: whe"uu"he should have used ‘pos- wluh -::Eas;N. Ww. sessing liquor.” loodwa throp “Usually the bootlegger runs away during the appeal, but stays only 11th and F Sts., N. W. o o o0 until witnesses have left and ean’t (Copyzient; 1962 ‘The Hoover Suction Sweeper Comj pan: MOTHER OF PRINCESS DIES, 609 14th Siveet,N.W. HBOME December 19 —Mzsvirsiait For Authorized Hoover Service Campbeli, mother of Princess Faustino, who was Miss Jane Cam Phone Main 8262 bell of New York, died yesterda: aged ninety-five. Grafonola Christmas PAY NEXT YEAR No Other Well-Known Phonographs Priced as Low as These Carriso Gorge,one of the most awe-inspiring wonders of nature, has finally been made comfortably accessible to man. Clrcllng towering peaks, piercing massive rocks an bridging mighty chasms, you will pass thr, this ru mountain canyon overa safe railroad bed, in the tri-weekly deepaur to San Diego on the Sunset Limi m the car windows you will see the most colorful o in the vmmmethn in _the dawn, smber under the noonday sun, and turning to mysterious purples in the haze of distant pesaks. Regardless of rhat part of Cnllfoml:lnu are going to, your trip may be planned to include the Carriso Om:lvhtfi-wnhn-blem«ldmdmma.the nset Pour. +California Brery mile a scene worth while LIMITED QGet Bim a Box of Enter woven | ,‘Goe and Heel The “Strand” Crafonola $125.00 $85.00 ,:rmome Balance Next Year. HARRY C. GROVE, Inc. 1210 G Street N.W. Carriso over ;btnr ll!.APNAe'CHB mfm%'fiffl%sl.«mzom. 3 After Californis, visit Hawail For “:\formation and Literature, address SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES . J. , Gt 1 mt, Passenger Dept., A e odaay. How ork Ol

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