Evening Star Newspaper, December 20, 1922, Page 35

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DECLARES LASK'ER Millions of Farmers Misled gy } ACQUITTED OF SLAYING. |EX =i Horliy } = — ;\ " TheORIGINAL | Scobee Hardman ield Not Guilty | John Grasser, a former patlent at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, was found in Bal- G Saf, | of Killing “Turkey King.” timore Monday - with this_ throat - cut ; 3 (8 ; and was taken to the Maryland Gen i er: ospital, where surgeons si ¢ Mdln December 20.— | hig condition was critical. He Is re- For Infam acquitted by the ‘ported to have said he had inflicicd A ! f he charg of murder- ¢ wound because he was tired of [ « lovalids | ker, the blue grass N f Kig | s<er's condition at St. Ellzabeth's IO COOKMN, | W .uhu; cnr;nlmhslon mr§~ t\_vm. ‘surh that he had been given the *Pod- " 0] a4s s'ain by blows on the freedom of the ground The Drink™ for Au: Aq.3s | instrument. while m nth ago he disuppe €uick Lunch at Home, Office, o | Jfonntams. Ask for HOR: ICK'S. E 19-Lgoid Imitations & Substit av | g | ? : E T T L i e here In July. 2 itherine Renaker, his Later it developed that ry leesc Fox, a friend of satisiled to eare for him In re under indictment for and his efficts w in the alleged murder plot. * he Baltimore, where and dow. hospital her>, KAQH OPTICAL CO. 617 7th Si. N.W. Open Evenings Until Xmas Snecial Prices on Xmas Jewelry v, Diamond Princess Ring; al pla inum: extraordinar.y fine and beau- tiful (Cost originally $1,500— $850 $250 All-plat- fnum DI mond nner Ring; white : must Buying Di- fosen g, gorgcous platinum mount:ng, set with diamonds 375 lue %-carat Blue- White Soll are' Diamond K.ng, set In 1Sk. E 2 2-carat ‘“Per- white gold HE AR fect” Sol alre i:ldyl mount- Diurond Ring; s We Buy for Cash and We Sell for Cash, e Therefore You Save Money Buying Here 65 = $500 520 $100 Lady's Diamond $30 Solitaire Diamond Cluster Ring: piaunum e mounting .....ceeceeenee. Solit.udre Disn.ond R i.3; %-carat Pure White sot In lady's gold 200 Solitaire Diimond Ring; $50 mounting ........ S platinum mount.ng....... Onecarat Blus-white Soli- §215 Fino Bluowhite Sobi- | Searat +Perfoct” Solitaire talre D'amord Ring: vorv tne | taire D'amond Diaggoid Ring: cut. handsone (¥E) R Ring: gorgeous bluss- white ;) platinum DO platinum and. perfect mounting...... sl mounting....... OUtiidaiios o $200 All-platinum Diamond Watch Bracelet—A some watch . 3125 Platinum- ch "D'amond W atch Bracele; excwlmnfl 575 14-kt. So'ld Go'd Watch I.lmele!. g $17.5C 15-Jewel Gollfilled Watch Bracelei, warranted Sl 5 0 L 20 years. l‘old tilled Watch 18kt. White Gold Ring Watch; very fine movement; special 4 T 45 $250 Kum-a- «Elgin,” Gol Milled, 301 1-f! . 10 A wide selection nrnukt.mlr%“_' tace, W rranted 510 ey letion 4] Buttons $ o § years ) ol i- | Will appeal to the ":m“om“.;(;u— war-’ @95 | man of good taste, Sottd Gela Link | e e e .- =90 | raneing from Buiton, Set wi‘b 14kt s‘M Gold 535 sz tO 51000 tmends 150 | vt B & o . open-tuce Watch: §17 50 Flexible Pluainum Top warr. nted 20 vears Bracelets—Ser with one 11kt So'ld Gold diamond and two @GN B Piatmum § gamilton Watch, 17 350 sapphires. . ¥ Soutolr Se § Jewels ......- with fioe diamonds and sap phires; ex- cept onally h and some t r emendous $1,000 All-platinum Flexible Bracelet—SBel with flne qnni ity diamonds and $775 Iat'num Flexible bargain, Bracelet—Set with diamonds £490 oeo .’:L‘."’l‘i;‘"»:: 3 = tiful and fine $1,506 Others up to $2,000 \\.\1,/// i, 3330 g ben or diamonii 350 a‘;‘k. Bm . $2..5 3500 Platinum Diamond tar Mahoga! Eight day 512 Strike Clocks . Link i Mesh trnge reconstructed £35.0 . encrusted, , O tnk $7.5C np to 26-piece Rogers or Community Tu- dor plate, $10.90 “1847” Rogers 26-piece Table Set, § $19 26-piece Commu- nity Plate, warrant-§ ed 50 years. flt\mrfl .50 /{f.' 24-inch_Inde P97 stroctIhle Pasrils, dlamond KAHN OPTICAL C9. 617-619 7ih SL N.W. T °| by Senator Capper’s “Prop- aganda,” He Says. l 14 All\es we unltlmure. ere sent to them from NO $200,000 000 - SALE Bill Only Creates Market and Sub- sidy Is Exaggerated, Let- ter Asserts. Albert D. Lasker, chairman of the United States Shipping Board, has written Senator Capper of Kansas, severely rebuking him for presenting the ship subsidy bill to miilions of farmers throughout the middle west In a llght “wholly at varlance with the facts.” Through Capper's Weekly and other of the senator's papers the chairman of the Snipping Board says a great section of the country has been pre- sented with erroneous data on the shipping bill Recently these papers held a poll asking a secre: baliot on the shipping question and, according to Mi. Lusker, the bill was presenten lto the people from the po.nt of view y report on the biil. prepared by IRepresentative Davis, democrat of Tennessse, which. R ry one kno.s was a parti ort, framed for political pur- nd unjastified by the facts.” man Lasker charges that Sena- tor Capper hus presented-the shipping bl to the paple from this angle: “That the people. through their zov- ernment, shall scil the merchant fleet ; for about $200,000,000. lend $125.000.- 000 to recndition and bulld ships and then pay the owners about $750000.- 000 tn subsidies.” This. he says. is not the true purport of the bill. and the people of the nation should be put | right on the question. | Challenges Sale Report. Taking up the statements in order, Lasker wrote: “I challenge any one to find where the Shipping Board has ever proposed that the war-bullt merchant marine be sold for approximately $200,000,000. What can be realized from the gov- ernment flect depends on changing world conditions 78 well &3 changing tions surrounding the Amerfcan ant marine. One of the main 4 of the proposed bill Is to reate a market that will enable the at all, for, under the of government op- n. the Shipping Board, despite effort and what it deemed world s been able to dispose of so e tonn"ge as to amount to practi- y nothing at all. The pending it I8 belleved, will create a mar- { ket that will make possible the sale of the ships so as to realize largely | In_excess of $200.000.000. Wext, vour questionnaire states ¥hat "1t is proposed to ‘lend $125.000.000 to recondition the ships or build others.’ {1f it had been the purpose of those {who drafred the questionnaire to submit this feature OF the bill even with remote fairness, the question- | naire would have sta‘ed that the mer- { chant marine act of 1920. now the law {of the.land, already provides for a! { $125.000.000 ioan fund for the con- ! atruction of ships: that the proposed | bill makes only siight modification in lhr existing law to meet present con- ditlons more successfully. { No $750.000.000 Subsidies. “The statement proceeds to €ay. ‘And then pay the owners abou! $750.000,000 in subsidies and aids witn- | in the next ten years' Whoever con- | nected with your weekiy accepted this | | quotation from the democratic minority | report has, to my mind. willfully or ig- | norantly put forth a statement that | {does not remotely come within the | | f’i(‘ls “As the bill stands at present, ail| privately owned tonnage under the | American flag_(including that in the | coastwise ‘trade that could be used {on the deep seas) wore. Immediately ‘on passage of the bill, put into ocean | service. the fotal subsidy pald would bo less than $5.500,000. If in addition all the ‘rnment _operated fleet | {2 d into private hands the | the first year would be than $15.000.000. | t is apparent therefore, that (hel statement of a $750.000.000 subsidy cost | in ten years is not within the facts.” | TREASURY FISCAL BILL | GOES T0 PRESEIDENT House Finally Approves $115.; 386,510 Measure, Including En- I graving Burean Change. | s | « The Treasury Department appro- |priallnn bill carrylng $115.386.610.37 as agreed to In conference was ap- { proved” by the House yesterday, and | 1 row goes to tne President for his signa- | { ture. The action of the House was to | recede and concur In thres minor Senate | amendmen:s. ! The principal feature of the bill of | local interest s that as sent to the! President it carrles th. House pro- | 'pusal compelling the installation of| { of engraving and printing and makes | plate printers and plate printers’ as- | sistants. This would end a bitter labor {organization fight which has been carried on for more than thirty-six! labor-saving devices In Uncle Eims1 { blg monev shop by the Senate it carries Increases | 9.37. Ae agreed to In gonference it . carrh e $115,386.510.37 ‘he estimates for v.h\a year amounted to $117,833,- { | 768. The present mmnn { net_decrease of'$3 £58.318. { power printing presacs at the bureau | { mandatory the discharge of about 2004 years to prevent installation of such | As It passed the Houss the Treasury ‘ | bill” carried $116.112.310.37. as passed | ‘hrlm,lng thig amount up to $115,538,- | appropriation is’ |snu $44,828.38, 8o that the bill as 1t} {Eoes to the President represonts a | Nine Feet Long Late Discovery By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, chmhr 20.— Discovery of the thigh bures of a Patagonian dinosaur, each bone meas- uring two meters seventy centimeters (nearly nine feet) in lenzth and claimed to be the largest unearthed In any part of the world. is announced by La Plata Museum. These two bones, together with oth- er fossil remains of the gigantic unl- mal, were found by the museum’s paleontological experts at Neuquen on November 20. 1t s stated that the lurgest thigh bones pre.iously un-| = eurthed measured two melers ten centimeters and were dlscosered in the United States. The skileton of the great diplodocus asserbled at the Carnegle Muscum has thigh bones only one meter ity centimeters long, although (he enure skelecion measures twenty-live meters, and (ron se flgures It is conjec- tured that when the Patagoniin dino- saur roumed the mesozolc forests he was at least foriy-flve melers, or about 140_feet, long. Further exlorations are planned for next March In an_effort t. un- earth the remainder of the skeletom. CONSENTS TO $500 VERDICT. Birne T. ‘West, owner of a police dog, has consented to a verdict for $500 damages against him In favor of Catherine E. Chick. who was bit- ten by the dog Aprtl 12 last. A jury n Circuit Divis.on 1 has rendere | the verdict. Attorneys Hawken & Havell appeared for the plaintiff, who sued for $10,000. —_——— According to an o.d superstition the frst to cry at a wedding will be the next to marry. OuUT All Muddled Up. Waltsing the Blues. A-3729 DANCE MUSIC- Fox-Trot. Walts. Paul Specht and His Or- That Barkin’ Dog (Woof Woofl), John:z Dunn’s Original Jass For Christmas Candy in Fancy Boxes PAGE & SHAW 1 1b. Assorted Chocolates, 2 Ibs. Assorted Chocolates, 3 Ibs. Assorted Chocolates, 5 Ibs. Assorted Chocolates,\ MIRROW 1 1b. Assorted Chocolates, 1 1b. Preferred Chocolates, $1.15 $2.25 $3.35 $5.50 $1.00 $1.25 1 1b. Fruit and Nut Chocolates, $1.50 1 1b. All Nut Chocolates, Chocolate Thy Mint, 1b., ALLEGRETTI'S 14 1b. Chocolate Creams, 1 1h. Chocolate Creams, $1.50 75¢ <0c WHITMAN'S % Ib. White Nougat, 11b. Gray Package Chocolates, 1 1b. Fussy Package Nut Chocolates, 1 1b. Treasure Island Choco- lates, ‘1 1b. Salmagundi Chocolates, 1 1b. Sampler Chocolates, 2 Ibs. Sampler Chocolates, 14 Pot Preserved Ginger, 60c $1.00 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $1.50 $3.00 50c Masterpieces in Fancy Boxes 1 1b. Assorted Chocolates, 1 Ib. Holly Box Chocolates, 11b. Maid in America Choco- lates, 2 Ibs. Picture Box Chocolates, 80c $1.00 $1.25 $2.25 5 1bs. Holly Box Family Choco- lates, MAGRUDER S Main 4180 Four Direct Phones TODAY === 1 Found a Four Leaf Cloven, F‘mm"GflpWhih‘nSflb Three o’Clock in the Morning. Paul Specht end His Or- T8e chestra. POPULAR SONGS Columbia New Process RECORDS Fine Groccries $3.00 Connecticut Ave. and K Street chestra. A-3740 75c | Time Will Tell. Intro. "Olh SR TS How I've Missed You, Mary. Caroling in the Morning. Fron “Sally, Irene and S Ea Etrina® Orchestra e e 3 Cl ra. A.3737 78e Tlu Bum Siz. A-3741 78 ekl i ST X ¢ ntro. “Sweet- =ty s heart Lane’ Medley Fox. Ted Lewis and His Band. Trot. The Columbians. A3730 78 | Tomor S Srapestoe. Choo-Choo Blues. Fox-Trot. A.3748 7S¢ Intro. “Walking the Dog.” Medley Fox-Trot. Frank La Golondrina. Waltzes. Prince’s Westphal and His Orchestra. Dance Orchestra. A-3724 78 S A TSI ired Fox-Trot. Four o’Clock Bluss. Ted Lewis and His Band. Hawaiian Blues. Fox-Trots. A Dream of Romany. Fox-Trot. A-3738 78 All for the Love of Miks. You Need Some One, Some One You Can Have Him, | Don’t Want Needs You. From “Quecn o Him, Didn't Love Him Aay- Hearta. @ bow Blues. Mammy's Carbon Copy. From Van and Schenck. A-3738 78e “Queen o' Hearts.” Lost (A Wonderfal Ga). et Cever IR STATTES Al Jolson. Mississippi Choo-Choo. I You Den’t Think So, You're *Way Down Yonder in New Or- Craszy. Frank Crumit. leans. Blossom Seeley. A-3744 7Be A-3731 78 A-3727 Waestern Stars. Neapelitan Polka. Bolos. Guido Deiro. A-3728 Maui Girl. Frank® Ferera. A-3739 | [ECZEMA ON FAGE NECK AND HANDS In Small Pimples. ltching and Burning Were Severe, Cuticura Healed. ' *Eczema broke out in small pim- ples on my face, neck and hands. The pimples scaled over and wese very sore. Thehchln‘ndb\rnln‘ were'so severe that 1'scratched and nothing did much good until I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After a short time I got relief, and after using one cake of Soap and one box of Ointment I was healed.” (Slgned) {lw-m. R. 3, Box K, Sk tash Pres by el l i 1 tried muv‘:.l unefle- but | e l 'fi.fl'&—u-.‘ House Flute, o, harp. Trio de Lutece. Accordion Waltz, Moanalus Hula. Ukelele Solos. Soldiers’ Chorus. From “Faust.” (Gounod) anpahtan Opera INSTRUMENTAL AND VCCAL SELECTIONS For the Sake of Auld Lang Syne. 1 Know I Have Another Building. My Buddy. 1 Want to be Ready. Male Quar- Edwin Dals. A-3734 78e | et Fisk University Jubilss Orieatale. ~(Cui) Singers. A-3726 78¢ Yale Songs; Medley No. 1—Yale 78c Boola, Whoop It Up; Good- night Harvard; Bingo EN Yale; Down the Fisld. Yale Songs; Medley No. 2— - 78e Wake, Freshmen, Wake; Amici; Brave Mother Yale; Bright College Years. 78c Shannon Four. Robin Adair. Scotch Air. morbide.” (In These Soft | When I Was Seventeen. Swedish Silken Curtains.) (Puccini) Ross Ponsclle, . 75971 $1.00 | UK Bons: Florence Machoth o La Gioconda—*“Cielo e -Mar.” (Heaven and Ocean.) (Pon- “m the M-r-i-. Glories chielli) Charles Hackstt. Twine Around the Door. 98040 $1.50 | I Wonder How the Old Folks Are Homing. (Del Riego) ~ at Home. Oscar Seagle. O Promise Me. (De Koven) ‘ A-3725 $1.00 Carmela Ponstlle. A-3732 $1.00 | g, .} Dance, Op. 21. (Sara- Tannhauser March. (Wagner) sate) c.l';.;i j me “Concerto in sjor, ik “{y) Violin Solos. House & Herrmann 3 Seventh and Eye Streets . Columbia Grafonolas and Records ANl the Iatest hits [ all the time A-3723 7S¢ SYMPHONY AND CONCERT SELECTIONS Manon Lescaut, “In quelle trine Am‘ $1.80 SucM Jacobsen. A-6223 $1.850 COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHON-E COMPANY, New York " The Joy of a Record that is Virtually Noiseless HOSE grinding, scratching surface noises that have so insistently made themselves heard through the music you love will now annoy you no more. Be- cause Columbia has discovered a process which produces a phonograph record sur- face so fine in texture, so marvelously smooth that the needle travels over it almost inaudibly. . This new and unbellevably quiet sur- face makes the phonograph what it should be, a musical instrument of the highest and purest type—giving you every in- flectipn, the most delicate phrasing, ex- quisitely expressed shades of harmony that have previously been lost in ob- trusive surface sounds. The new Columbia Records out to- day are all made with this ultra fine, ultra smooth and quiet, new surface. And among them are two you'll want at the very first whirl—*“All for the Love of Mike” and “You Can Have Him, I Don’t Want Him, Didn’t Love Him Any- kow Blues.” Both are by Van and Schenck —singing in their happiest of happy harmonies. And they are deliciously free from irritating scratch or scrape. Tear out-the accompanying list, take it to a Columbia Dealer and listen to any or all of these New Process Columbia Records. Note the smoothness and full- ness of tone. Note the beauty of ex- pression. Only in New Process Columbia Records will you find this new and quiet surface. The process is patented. 1210 G Street N.W. Complete Stock Columbia Records and Grafonolas -PATIENT CUTS THROAT SHIP I]A'I'A FAI.SE Dmosau,. Bone, [ Estal;lished 1875 -

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