Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DR.BELL'S Baniah those quictly, simply. Dr.Beils— Tenedy — breaks tight, Tasing eovghe. I10seus phlegm, soothes irritated throats. Check ?“fi“‘:‘ the stas cy Dz, Bell's Brighten Up the Interior OF YOUR HOME ‘With Good Painting ! Let Us Give You an Estintate. R. K. Ferguson, = To the Trade Repairs for All ! Heating & Cooking Apparatus Grates. linings and vari- s repairs, including all firing tools necessary. Rudolph & West Co. 1332 New York Ave. N.W. | Daugherty Says Business and Other Organizations Can Aid in Crisis. “RULE FOR MAJORITY” Attorney General Deplores Radi- calism Behind Acute United States Conditions. i Atiorney General Daugherty, in 2 let- ter to the Philadelphia Board of Trade, which had in- dorsed his attitude ] on law enforce- ment and brand- ed recent ‘charges against him as “prompted by po- litical antagonism, declared in a state- ment Thursday that action by business and industrial trade associations to maintain re- spect for tho law and the govern- ment would g0 far toward pre- ME. DAUGHERTY. Venting ‘“unrest among our peo- ple, engendered by certain dissatis- fied and radical elements.” Mr. Daugherty declared he was “whole-heartedly” in sympathy with the board's declaration demanding aintenance of the supremacy of law and overthrow of those de- which oppose the So long as thel orderly processes, mass of the people realizes, the At- PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 435 i or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- tore maturity, Assets More 'l'lmn . $8,000,000 Surplus More Than Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAVMES BERRY .President | JosHUA"W. Cal Secretary SUNDAY EXCURSION INEW YORK Sunday, January 7 Special Through Train -@ (3] 1eaves Washivzton Satagday Midaight, 12:20 a.m.: arrives Vi in the heart of New York City, 6 S Returning, leaves New York 5:30 P.3L. f;-s'xmi * excursions Sundays, Feb: S £ Mazch 3, April 15 and May 13. Tickets on sale beginning Friday proceding date of excursion Pennsylvania R.R, System The Route of the Broadway Limited RINGWORMS 0 NECK AND FACE Itched and Burned. Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals. “1 was troubled with ringworms which broke out on my neck and soon spread to my face. A ) ot of ot and f ) quarter of a 3 time I went out in the wind or bathed my face. 1 lost a greatdeal of sleep at night on account of @ the frritation. “The trouble lasted forthreeyears. I began Cuticura Sosp and Ointment was comilnoly healed.” (Signed) Mrs. J. E. Ham- ‘mons, Box 522, Devol, Okla., Mar. torney General said, that government can ondure only through *‘righteous observance of the law and order and justice” the nation has nothing to fear. Government Facing Crisis. “Our government today is passing through a critical stage,” the Phila- chamber was told. il war has the nation beer with cconomic conditions so o _complex, o fraught with Yet we are not isolated in s respect. All the nations of the th have felt the blight, some more fous!y than others. Some have re- cd, others are recovering, and a few possibly never will recover. At this period of our history, especially, the economic or substantiul basis of constitutional government must be preserved and fostered at all hazard, for out of unstable economic sub- stances pour the fumes of unrest, dis- ebelllon against organized and authority. Placidity of na- tionalism throughout the world is more essential today to peace and prosperity than ever before in our civilization. “Since the termination of the world wur our government has met and conquered most of the economic ills t threatencd our body politic. From eriod of inflated and unhealthy o levels we have come back to a o cquitable basis. Our industries and our finances are stronger than before the war. The unemployment | problem that dazed the country for a brief spell was mastered. Subsequent nation-wide industrial disturbances were corrected. Today the nation is prosperous and at peace, militarily, with the rest of the world. On the surface, or superficially at least, it would teem that little remained on our national horizon for which we might, be seriously concerned. “The public is not disposed to e dure minority rule, whether it be the conduct of government, business or industry; for the pubilc has &| primary interest in the operation of government and all the agencies that make up the component parts of gov- ernment. “Yet there are in our midst today some elements striving vaingloriously for the plaudits of those who would tear down constitutional government through viclously founded theories and violent attacks upon those public servants called by the mandate of the whole people to preside over and preserve the sacred ideals of the greatest government ever established d brain of man. we have a nationallsm purged of malice and hatred, and dedicated to all that is best in gov- crnment and people, then shall we have little to fear from those con- tentious elements which, in their in- finitesimal minority, seek to practice deceit upon the people through un- healthy and viciously acquired views.” PLAN ANNUAL MEETING OF TEACHERS’ COUNCIL 2 Z Sessions to Be Held January 12 in Central and Dunbar High Schools. Final arrangements for the annual meeting of the Teachers’ Council, which will be held January 13, have been completed by Alexander T. Stuart, director of intermediate instruction in the public schools. The program will be submitted to the board of education at its meeting Wednesday for approval. _ Sessions will be held simultaneously at Central High School for the white teachers and at Dunbar High School for the colored teachers, beginning at 9:30 o'clock in the morning and contin- uing throughout the day. The schools will be closed for the occasion. The institute speakers wili be Dr. Henry “Louis Smith, president of Washington' and Lee University, who addressed the teachers two years ago; Miss Charl Ormond Willlams, field director of the National Education Assoclation, and Dr. Frank G. Graves, New York state commissioner of edu- cation. With the exception of Miss Williams, the speakers will address both the white and colored teachefs. Miss Willlams_will talk only at the Central High Sehool sesston. Dr. Smith will speak on ‘“Democ- racies’ Peril—the Teacher to the Res- cue”; Miss Willlams on “Some In- equalities in American Education,” and Dr. Graves on “Educational Movements of Today.” Music will be furnished at the sessions under the ||l direction of Edwin N. C. Barnes, di- rector of music in the public schools. A luncheon will be served the teach ers in the Central lunchroom, COAST JAPANESE PLAN ! EXODUS INTO MEXICO Dy the Associated Press. | LOS ANGELES, Calit, December 30. | —Japanese farmers in ‘California are | planning to quit the state and estab- lish themselves either in Sinaloa or{fi Nayarit, Mexico, according to a story the Los' Angeles Times published to- ay. The Times states it is about to an- ||} nounce that “negotiations” for~ the removal “of the entire Japanese agri- cultural colony in California” already “have been taken IlD.Wll-h the Mexi- can_government.” “The anti-alien land law of Cali- fornia ® * ¢ throws tliousands of Japanese farmers out of their land with the first of the year,” the paper continues. “What these farmers would do has been a question until now unanswered.” N. Jobayshi, who has lived in Mex- ico many years and who is marfried to a Mexican, a native of Guadalajara, has become head of a new department of the Japanese Chamber of Com- |l merce of Los Angeles to handle Jap- anese-Mexican industrial affairs and to arrange for the new Japanese col- | |l ? the ony on the Mexican west Mexican government grants the nec- essary permission. RGESPONITON | | OF LW RESPET) With The Star to keep you reliably posted upon the world’s doings—and with the many carefully chosen special features to entertain and interest— you will be equipped to form comprehensive opin- ions and to discuss know- ingly the engrossing top- ics of the day—local, na- tional and international. - . . / 1. C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30. 1922 C McGraw’s ‘30 es n Ball” —begins its interesting run exclusively in Washington in The Star Friday, January 5th —and will continue, daily and Sunday, until thesc inter- esting memoirs of one of the most outstanding figures in base ball have been given to the public. McGraw will tell you things that heretotore have not heen revealed; he will relate incldents in his long experi- ence that will prove most interesting reading to all lovers of the game. The Star’s special —is an unique feature of The Sunday Star— giving you first-hand views upon important subjects—either in in- terviews with the prin- cipals; or personally written articles on their writers assigned to cover the doings of the Congress make inter- esting observations in The Sunday Star—re- viewing the grist that is going through the pet subjects. great legislative mill. For the Girls A feature of The Sunday Star is the Girls’ Page, edited by a girl who is keeping in closest:touch with the activities and inclina- tions of her sisters. There’s a personal touch to her observa- Frank G. Carpenter’s special articles appear- ing weekly in The Sun- day Star are graphic observations of condi- tions as he is finding them over there, Il- lustrated by actuai pho- tographs. tions that add to their readableness. “The Old Blockade Runners”— Thrilling incidents of . exciting days in the past by & master story-teller, e Dr. Shufeldt. Ring W. Lardner Samuel Hopkins Adams “Cruise of the Dream Ship”— Another installment of that delightful narra- tive by Ralph Stock, concerning the search: for pirate gold. —is translated for ‘Washingtonians’ read- ing by cabled dis- patches irom Star cor- respondents resident in the capitals of the world where history js in the making. On the Financial Page of The Sunday -Star is digested the important news of the week in the money market, Over your Sunday morning coffee you can review the whole situation. Don Marquis Finley Peter Dunne J. A. Waldron - ‘The Zoening §1af4—§fih¢ S “Trilby May Follows a Hunch” —A delightful bit of fic- tion for the JFord fans.” 'Fashion Forecasts Anne Rittenhousc, in her weekly Fashion let- ter from Paris, goes into details of what the great master de- signers of the French capital have in prospect for the feminine ward- robe. aarmn ) Photogravure o Section Always an entertain- ing feature of The Sun- day Star—reproducing with wonderful accu- racy those people, places and incidents most prominent in the news of the week. The Sunday Magazine Caps the Climax = A literary feast, spreading 2 menu that will appeal to every taste and fit every humor, from the pens of famous authors: “Sewell Here are Some of the Other Writers Who Contribute to The Star’s Sunday Magazine Er Shelly Anne Rittenhouse Holworthy Hall “The With The Star coming to vour home every day — Evening and Sundayv morning—nothing that is worth while can escape your attention. as everything always is in The Star, it’s a perfectly safe newspaper for uncen- sored reading by every member of the family — old and young. Printed _The Stage Philander will have another of his special articles upon the stage and stage folk—intensely inter- esting because of the familiarity of the writer with his sub- ject. Johnson Clean Comics You'll laugh heart- ilv at the antics of your old friends of the Comic Section next Sunday. They are out-doing themselves in gro- tesque situations and ludicrous episodes. Four colored pages of pure fun. New Europe”—Llrank Carpenter is now in Belgium, and he gives you an interesting story of conditions in that country. : —will be delivered to your home by Star Carriers— 7 Issues a Week. 60c a Month; Circulation Deth—Maip 5000