Evening Star Newspaper, December 23, 1922, Page 4

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a Claus and ‘Heat S ANTA; CLAUS has never recorded his im- pressions of - chimney : but we know that the hotrest are conne heating p ones he descends ted with G H nts G & H Heatin Pre & “Found wou 917 H St. N.W. Ty, e GLASS EvVErY ounce in quality pays a pound in satisfac- tion. Founded 1864 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY WASHIN Rossts 'ON, Thayer’s Printing Office (Small Work™ Exclusively) Now Lecated at 909 12th St. N.W. (12th and Nawo Telephone Main 1816 ‘Howard S. Fisk, Manager ye Stw BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, Preeiont JOSHUA W. CARR, Secreca:y PAINTING Interior and Exterior Tet Us Give You an Extimate. 1 R. K. Ferguson, Paint Dept.. 1114 9th St. Ph. M. 2490-2491. FACE DISFIGURED “WITH PIVPLES For Many Months. Hard, Large and Red. Cuticura Healed. *“For many months I was troubled with unsightly pimples on my. face. They were hard, largeand red, and festered and scaled over. They would. often sting and burn, and my face was disfigured. 1 was very much embar- rassed when in company. *‘Ireadanadvertisement Cuticura Soap and Ointment and | sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuti- cura Ointment I was healed.” ed) Miss Ethel Dowdy, Rock- ‘Use Cuticuraforall toilet purposes. repps g oy s ‘Cuticura Soap shaves withoit mug. f[IITIZENS SCORED 1 | Practically Every Request in | Face of or in Ignorance of | Facts, He Says. iE'XFLAINS BUS ATTITUDE | Letter to President of Northeast Association Deplores Lack of Support. ing that do not receive !Kind from the Commissioners upport of a proper mmunity in general,” Commissioner Keller toda; nkly s on utility letter to Evan H. Tucker, Rinee wrote f | matt come and in or in ignor someth'ng be dene felt to that the Comm forbidden in do." the L il letter colonel's i concluded. Che communication was prompted {hy two resolutions from the north- 1t association, one disapproving a decision by the comm ssion_and the ot dvocating abe of the 2 wrote the disapproval of the pol- E by the Public Utilities Commission as to the establishment { Lus route: no quar jicns differ at I have tion of pe ult one in may readily n iduals who have something - 1o gain in the establish- s a di ch_opinion of ceurse, merely hum: fmer a bus line. cither in the w for n cenvenient o direct service | or in the w of a personal profit. | cverlook the general ]l\lll;h" | the maintenance of an | |vl!nw.vv,( transpertation system, and s cheer Prohibition y should advocate the bus e’ tha e a Shoule DSatete Ty that! commissioner 1 ¢ mas | It is also natural that individuals | mes today to “friends of the uld. in weneral. favor whatever | af h amendment” in which he! the Northeast Citizens' | BY COL KELLER) i r advantage- | % of its effect | M THE EVENING S TAR, WASHING : TON, FIREMEN MISSING, MANY INJURED. WHEN BLAZE WRECKS T i i Harridon avenu the beams gave way. Deputy ard Westwick and five other men. A number are missing, and the fire {Haynes Greets Drys With Warning gainst “Nation-Wide” Propaganda tined in pro hers whem they have | hibition er t gave “every rea tie interest or of friend- { san for hoy tification and | s wever, the duty of the . | {Public Utilities Gnitolicon= | Cooeratlatiogs i r the bublic int as a whole | ot disuayed.” take such om_as, in its | said Mr a nation-wide | will best serve the general R quite natural for Commission to upon proposals to tH aly ting with the st ystem, which at pres jent and probably for many ars to ! must be the main reliance of t of Columbia in the tran the majority of its ded by Experience. { “When, therefore. the commission e to the establish- nt is proposed to nd resolution favors the ! Iy visited with, as I state above. opinions and preferences of those i ing an obvieusly direct personal epresentatic constituting as it} does the most pre- | tentious mos purnicius propa- | ganda to under- mine enforcement sinee the enact- ment of amendment “Admi ihe run between points 1dy served by Evol an esisting stre lway line. the T o on is merely adopting its so- some ‘“ o ion of this diffic problem ac- \1yvm~~ ve \rdince with its best judgment and | the law best inforn that it has on{ HAYNES. cannot "the subject. unaid Ly the not be eaperience of communities elsewhere, tiously denied that the past some of which known te have | heen marked with rapid strides found necessary to enforce a simi- | ward th me Lree enforceme lar policy. The commnission might ! . perhaps he in a different Situation | e —————— were it aided by d and construc- | ECTS $15.000 tive studies of the-local wtransporta- ! ire the nt of other t i isport than those OF HAYWO0OD'S SURETY t now exist { 5 = In place of such studies we avel B o0 T W. W. Leader's Bonds. Forfeited When He Fled to Russia. t of the present Public ¢eAGO. L. Dece imission and a reversion States was enriched 10 the eX- ion defining in exact terms; United Stat nEoe h e be charged for ' tent of $ UUSMEN of course. realize flight to vears awso. of onally derive no ad Ze il D. Haywood, 1. W. W. lea serving blic utilities com e tience <t the] Ao’ either of my nor It is an added duty imposing ed_responsibilities, often of a ble Kin power lodged in the Public ("tilities Commission is defined by and under the oft-repeated decision of the courrs, there is comparatively permitted in the fixing h rates mpensatory. and their level is therefore determined by going business conditions in a manner simi- lar to the fixing of prices in retail | Lusiness Costs Now le. | “You are a bu man and you are as familiar as T with the fact that practically everything that we buy nowa costs in the neighbor hood of twice as much as it did be- fore the war. Bread. milk. shoes, clothing. rent—practically all th i of life are very much er than they ever were, and th true as well of the public utility mpanies, which pay more for co: { for labor and for services of all kind: - did before the war. A the community as whole under the law, forced to pay more ! for public services than was the case i when the price of evervthing that jenters into our lives was more rea- Congress _itself cannot fix ver than the present on such rates permit a reasonable i profit to be earned by the companies Rate. i lower than this would be atory and would probably be set aside by the courts. Lack Proper Support. “May 1 be permitted. in all courtesy. + to question the correctness of the atement made in your resolution | that no rates had been reduced by the Public Utilities Commission? I have | been commissioner for about a year. yDuring that time the rates on every service performed by a public utility company wtihin the District of Co- {lumbia have been reduced as much as {was permitted by the evidence before the commission, and the commission will eontinue in the future, as in the past, whenever occasion arises, to ad- just the rates so as to permit the fair Teturn required by law, and no more than this, to be earned by the com- panies. “It is, as I have said, a matter of in- difference to me how the duties now committed to the Public Utilities Com- {mission are to be disposed of. As long as I remain a public utilities commissioner I hope to discharge my responsibilities in accordance with my | conscience and my best intelligence; but I wish again to repeat that up to the present time my experience is that the commissioners have no support of a proper kind from the community in general and that no constructive views or plans are ever presented.” S DRUNK ARRESTS GROW. New York Statistics Show Big In- crease Over Last Year. NEW YORK, December 23.—Arrests for intoxication during the third quarter of 1922 in this city showed an increase of 50 per cent over the cor- responding period of 1921, City Mag- istrate William McAdoo has reported. . In July; August and September, 1922, 2,125 persons were arrested, as com- .| pared with 1,414 during the same pe- riod last year. The total number of larrests for intoxication during the first three quarters of this year was 6,930, compared with 4,796 in the same period last year. 1 ncerned. L] must always be ! i ie ! munist < under The money T his bonds nted the s paid by | pre William Te prison_af! tion of th been commu law had Otto_Chris The anti-synd 1. and for “harles Ross by now in Hun also were paid. Payvment of the b < pointed out, does notm it w her of the men can escape should they return to America. { | i FREED AFTER 28 YEARS. this cit eat his Christmas di peniten ight vears, w er with his ¢ ol mother | Reading, Pa. rom e | iaon which hie entered at the age of | thirty vears, h been ared the action of the te board of pardons At Harrisburg in_recommending the granting of his fourteenth app! tion for a pardon. Webber was conv gree murder in Reading for the Kill- ing of his her-in-law during a quarrel. The death sentence later was commuted o life imprisonment. Webber has been an inmate of the prison for the longest continuance term of any of its occupants. REWARDS LOYAL MEN. DANVILLE, I1l., December 23.—Em- | ployes of the Chicago and Eastern ted of first-de- & { Illinois railway here who remained; at work during the strike of the shop- iren have received checks from W. J. | Tamieson, president of the road, as a | foken of appreciation of their loyal | services. Approximately $120.000 was distributed hege in chec ranging | from $350 to $600. : == —_ | | | SUNDAY EXCURSION INEW YORK Sunday, January 7 Bpecial Through Train 2] Direct to Peans. Sta.} 7th ave. & 3tnd st. hi iSaturday Midnight, }g:&enw. n‘-‘r‘i‘v:: vP!n:l Sta. in the heart of New York City, 6:15 a.m. Returning, leaves New York 5:30 P.M. milar excursions Sundays, February March 4, April 15 and May 13. jckets sale beginning Friday T reteding “date ot excursion | Pennsyivania .5, Systo ‘The Boute of the Breadway Limited which routed more than 1.000 persons T The collnpse of a roof showered fircmen with bricks and other debrin, and many al#® fell to t Fire Chlef O'Hara of Brooklyn was severely injured, an were ¢ wing them to daxh for their lives, it 0op avenue, in the Williamsburg section Bartlett street, Gerry street an ullivan may have caused several deaths. More than fifty persons were treated for THE WEATHER District Columbia, cloudy night; tomorrow fair; little change temperature, lowest tonight about i lerate southwest, shif f th W obtains in 1 o northwest winds, P laws, none of whic and. cloudy tonight 100 per cent” little change Cites Officinl Awakening. lerate southwest, shifting to t winds o the Lot Air toni 1z the ope and tomor- saloon as onin change in temperature; o B moderate (o fresh southwest and west the part high officials. Yir 3, gerteraily JEaly county and municipal mighnis S b iight and tomorrow, dittle chang - onngundimus 1 tomorrow . little chang ! Records for Twenty-F state and Thermon reduction in the lidnight, 1ed liguor nd the is tak t tempers ta e same, lowest, tion of th and - “that real liquoer is alm to obtain at any price. s fully realize that th bootleg product is nd he the law enforce when aver- | rous to will. to an | itselr IRIQUOIS INDIANS AND CANADA SMOKE THE PIPE OF PEACE' By the Associated Press. TOEONTO. Iroquois Indiang have n with the Domi Threats of vations of the e (] . Stations Stats of weatler g Dec The peac mher ion government igration to the r ion in the United the Dominion lear Kpow Clear States, ause would not recognize the red men independent nation. have otten. The hatchet was and the peace pipe wa at Ohsweken early in De- reen the aheh, leader of fighting for independence. the to the the tion, but accepted stoically the other iu the outvotea He and his ntained that their were properly matte ternational court of la dependence having heen re «d by a British sovereign aders of the lovalists, the win- Lo Kansas Los A | nntecilte issue couneil i at wher chiefs him. ma POW-Wow followers had grievances in for an . their tiand,Or e gh. N T Ral S n al). Azores. Iain members of which are elected for life Ly the women of the tribes. The loyalists, it is announced, will work for an elective council. “to conform with the democratic trend of the times and to do away with a remnant of feudalism.” ning faction Ohsweken, were |\ chiefly from the Christian tribes | of the Mohawks and Delawares |y 'hey were well sa ied with the o t th : w-wow, but now | LD oufcomers DoN VoY 5 { (S am., Greenwich time. today.) propose to go even further. Their | srations. Temperature. Weather. ibe: ave v v e - | Landon, England . 4 Part clondy tribes have virtually no represen- | fandon. Engiu nars ooy tation on the hereditary council, | Copenhagen, Denmurk Tart clo i b aba. ... ‘anal Zone.. 8 —_— Havana, Colon, The Paris municipal of a million dollars in six months. Baker's Chocolate (PREMIUM No. 1) For making cakes, pies, puddings,. t:stm' g, ice cream, sauces, fudges, t and cold drinks. For more than one hundred and forty this chocolate has been the standard Ea ity, qualiy 2 It is thorou ghly religble. . MADE ONLY BY WALTER ‘BAKER & CO. LTD. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. - Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free D. C, SATURDAY, DECEMBER tax on serv- ants has raised about three-quarters 92 3, 1922, ellist in the orchestra at the Motro- politan Opera House, New York. Not long afterward he moved to Wash- ington, playing in many concerts here d elgewhere. In this city he mar ricd Miss Mary Simons, u Washington tiusle student. For a number of years he xerved as conductor of the Georgetown Or- chestra and other local musical or- In 1891 he was made an ipt | pre- hick- old {ERNEST LENT DIES; | NOTED MUSICIAN Long lliness Fatal to One of |* Best Known Washington i Artists. { ganizations. honorary member of the Mamusi was of New York and the concert stage . under direction o Setdl. In concert appes o & number of music us, not only for his favorite instru- t and for orchestras, but the soprano voice and for the § 3 Lent later became a pi Ao, Linest Lent, one of W having been chosen to appear t known musle! nt | 48 soloist with the Boston hony of the Natonal Capital for more than |3 memorizi 1o the eomporer fuhin. forty died last night at his | ste Corcoran street north- —_— Lent, who was sixty-six | Every farm woman in Minnesota ha 1d, had been suffering from | Deen invited to attend the annus frouble of long standing. | ot o radion, wnien 1e to e BODY OF U. E. EMPLOYE | William ‘. FOUND IN DANZIG SUBURB Robertson, Attache Consulate Slain by Bullet, Re- port Made to His Father. BOWLING GREEN, Ky of Willi body al fces, to which rela- [ Leld in St Paul during the first weck nd close friends are invited, ! 0f J2 ¥ beld ut the residence tomor- mow afterncon at 3 o'clock, with Rev. P. Pierce, pastor of All Souls’ 5 ariun Church, as officiating | 3 s e biny b i Meyer Davis’ Le Paradis Band £ Is Available for Society Functions After 1:00 A A/ dnd daughter, % : their way home from wd Betaeeen the Hour Daug ANLIVEN your party with the s Mr. Lent is survive i 1o zain su ¥ for Ca £ two onsg and two s, e | R who fur ertainment 5 s ar K. connected | g music—incluging the teamn o & with t r-Hammer Company of [§ their various clever fmperse i Milwikee, Wis, =~ and Rudol iric drummer. Band under lead, Lt publisher of the Passaic il e B J. The daugh Meyer Davis' Executive Offices 4 Miss Margarcte Lent her ; 3 i rt in the public Jos. Moss, ‘”f/" . 1 Thou 50 trict, and M » ] of fireat p pupil Sl ot Auer, who is returning f Lits g emier concert app nd Dresden. ndenburg, € music in - of Music under Rei Ko 4 Schroeder. masters of the n In addition 1o the cello ndertook the study of other lowing his gradu mus Scandinav work in Budapest and | rmany by furthe First Played at Metropolitan. to the United States to become first | Lent y-five ne years ago i i A Merry Christmas and A Bappy DNew Pear fosll THE GREAT ATLANTICePACIFIC TEA COMPANY If the Wish of the Studebaker ) RNV 5 ’ & b 3 ¥ A v A organization A , comes true-- 2 g The Joy of a Most | g . & Happy Yuletide Will A Come to All of You. g F i A Merry Christmas 5 1 to you all! ” ” ‘ £ JOSEPH McREYNOLDS A President :‘é Commercial Automobile and Supply Co. fi i Telephones iz 30i¢ 817-819 14th St. N. W. I A t—— Washington Is a Studebaker City -g

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