Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HISTORIC FLAG LOCATED May 1, as president of the Assoclated Charitles, send a Sixty Are Arrest MINNEAPOLIS, rrests for drunkenness and conduct by police and . vigil either in public or private dining EAP.I.. EVANS GlVES FASHIONABLE HOSTELRY . - 4 Of Love’s Victory Over Rlches-m NEW YEAR MESSAGES WI. NISH itself must have been more palatable | | The proprietor at the Chase re- ' : i with great | Volstead act was made by the dry rellsh. ; i miral Sims and Gen. Harbord. : <t Oldest Inhabitants Reads CHICAGO IS UNDISTURBED. - fions were held. Whisky and other force Milk and Raisin Dry Agents Do Not Molest Down- | prohibition ageni, previously had an- | town Cafes and Hotels. | Louis. 1 Warning has been served by ti, welcomed the advent of 1923 in char- | hail of missiles. A tot cqll was sent | word of thanks through The it S fail to put enough milk into e 4 q n ‘ wateh parties o Two shots were fired duriug’ the tur- Christmas opportunity appeal ood, read. y Placed in Capital. ed by federal prohibition enforcement | cery and Meat Company H and happler in these fourteen outlying places were dQistorbed. A . 1 1, butter, c e A comprehensive review of the|peuvinE places were disturbed. A |H. Bode, jr. was shot in the fool. 750 contributors to date sutter;icondensed| mitic i quested is not yet in hand, we gated by the Department of Agriy ©f the Association of Oldest Inhabi- | “FRRNE DECES-© L o revels will |infured fn the scufe. The trouble every eftort will be made to adopted.by the Secretary of Agric: {into the trash basket” said a sum- |k dozen agents and a squad of police | 19th and H streets, to- | pay er. three children in these oppor- federal officials in enforcement of t 3 any shortage in the response. Bakers in the District are belleved Evans wen teresting sum- | dicated, recentions and dinners mark- | Witnesscs said they were unable to culture sald today " Waltor Gf CASIS both to member f the association | any ospitals and 8 ons. harrage o ensils ang )] re o members of the association!in many hospitals and institution: barrage of utensils and {ableware | druge act, said, as far 48 he kuew, the MeCart} Sponding secretary pe anihy Salicd the/ At e ; G "oty s ] 1 acures of national defense were | “Whi cse mew standards do not ‘ AL s L ® danty said, “they are in effect a s what became of the old sun dial that [disorderly E Sie St ol ho chase night by Secretary of War John W.| Ttiat ATt peraos THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1923. rooms. Reservations sold usually at A feature in some of the dining rooms was the unprecedented popu-| (Continued from First Page.) urity to which a ceptain_ brand of | 7 sauce bottle with a meroifully con- | ported record-breaking reservations than usual, for guests who ordinarily | ported 2,600 reservations. Measurss for Hatio Defense #gents and police who patrolled the & | liquors ‘were confiscated in several in- | Summary. A NEW YEAR WORD Bread Standard ;. nouneed he would make this New Year | By the Associated Press 3 304 d Press. The dry sleuths and police were Department of Agriculture :gpe % acteristic manner, celebrations run-|in and several patrol loads of polic tht ‘1 el and seve ol loads o ce : New Year day to / Seek to Have First U. S. Emblem |ning from church sorvices and home | mere dispatched E o i y T milk bread, or neglect to put ¢ of them struck ohn Pazdera, | of the organization? Notice to all such sk agents. ne of the prominent down- | below the knee as he was dancihg with | e e foninen skimpers is g arrests were made, according to W singe: . events of 1922 in the National Capits . Woman Slighily Hurt. # have provided by their gifts. singer ale, cayenne . of entertainment visited by the gov- Mrs. W, H. % 2 can’ assure all who have shared % -4 % ture. tants of the District of Columbia, fhe great or small by comparison with | started when Gus O. Nations, chief fod- 5 gt carry out the purpose of the i 2 ture. upon the recommendation of mesting of the asgoclation in Unionj entered the hostelry. Observing liquor day. "ven gauads of federal prohibition !of the offl tempted to place one | tunity homes need be separated deral food and drugs act, are, ia | Most of the social welcome to the| Some one threw a chair. { t ¢ wel v | (Signed) CUNO H. RUDOLPH. o be well within the standards by month, giving an ing the calendar. Entertainments by | te!l who fired it. January 1, 1923. 5 bell, el of the bureau of chemistry and to the city generally rected the officers, who re- | NEW YORK, January 1.—New bakers were within the new lied D ety e Minn., January 1—of reserves outside i nd soon severa sersons | B ¥ s Tk " 0 that all persons inte stood for many vears between the jma X personet : ; G VAN s e W ecks, Rear Admiral Willlam S, | : i Men's Assoclation estimating that | : : TUlly 100000 peranna memetin® voar | CHAIRS AND CHINA FLY IN y outhful Elopers ’l’ell Story PI-EA FUR U s SAFEIY Hostesses at Receptions } T U, Marking the New Year. $15 a plate plus the customary king's L cealing label attained. And the sauce for celebration of the New Year. i b took only & few drops of it consumed | | A dozen arrests iolatioa_of the | Chronicler of Association of | tock enly i re v drops of 1t ¢ ests for violatio of Urged by Secretsary Weeks, Ad- Uncle Sam Prepares to En- yarious public places where celebra- Blances. Gus O, tions, local chief | ' 4 Irevelry thé driest ever known in St OF THANKS A : 4 CHICAGO, January 1.— Chicago | firiven from the main dining hall under bakers throughout the country w to the 11 who have responded to the _ 3 watch partles to liquor larks and all | T ¢ ! Flown in Foreign Waters i § i g00d, sound raisins in thefr ai Revelers virtually were undisturb- | vice president of the Consumers' Gro The year 1923 will be brighter town cafes and hotels and fashionable | his wife. He fell to the floor George g e ot e aTlclias that new standards and definitions eports, and some of the minor places i i ho ! Ve e JtHiL Aoaat: el and oil of cassia have been , on | by Capt. George W. v chronicler |Of entertalnment Robinson was slightly i in this Christmas offering that These new standards and 6-anitio featured the annual New Year day [the one which sent the 1922 calendar |eral dry law officer in St. Louis half {mary printed in a morning new RO GotcHR® fougol Shandy . Jodura; apmittee, for the gutdance engine house, 'being served at one of the tables, one o CaTR WOre ol 5 F ths e from their mothers because of effect, warnings to violato: Hegiuning with dagt Januars; Capt rcement oflicers were on duty. of the gu arrest. i « through the year, month inew year will come today, it was in- | ment followed and a shot w P me today ollow i ey CUNO officiuls of the Department of Agri »mary of every occurrence of interest, | stars and actors will be glven | Women became hysterical, ard the which enforces the pure food sid orces the cod an At the business meeting John B. | e o Year messages urging stronger andards. them remembered or had ever heard SINty Gussts from nearby nearing | BT g fv ; PR cnt (o the American pub last | have the force of law.” Mr. (i ds by federul azents on eighteen|{Nf Sooh screrd e ninine may know that due warning has been Treasury and White House. Mr. Me- Sims, retired, and Maj. Gen. Jam. Carth; aid this natural timepiece was five feet hixh and was one of the attractions of the city in its day. Old residents of Georgetown, oft _drink establishments, with twen- | WiTe #athered about the enfrance. a. n. Violators now know what Harbord, former chief of staff, U. rests, marked the coming |, .vious to the attempted search and t to obtain, and if they are not © Dew Xearingic jasked for Chase Ullman, the pro-| [8 : 3 7 A X such products may expect jprietor. Ullman was out at the time, i e K o v A. through the National Security || (: pr | he said, so he handed a blanket war- . ’ 2 i League. 1 i act utions under the food and drugs Kansas City Sober, As far as could he ascertuined to- CITY, Mo.. January 1 the time from the old dial as they passed it from day to day ©1d Papers Presented. John = Clagett Proctor inquired if any of the members knew what be- came of the old Von Steuben statue Although downtown cafes, hoteis and abarets could not accommédate the | | | | | | he’ sall, were wccustomed to getting o ! crowd ht, prohibition officers | | said that there was less liquor co congumed here than o since natio any New Year prohibition went into The Interrupted seach followed. Later, when the ofticers were waiting in front of the hotel for reinforcements, Ullman asked Natlons if he wanted to 8o back. MR. AND MRS. CALVIN WILL, ' rant giving him the right to search : ' s Gk Wi g | the hotel premises to an attend: nt. | i i Secretary Weeks' Message. “On previous New Years,” said Sec- retary Weeks, “there may have been | some justifiable doubt as to the prac- | ticability of making effective the na- day, local bakers are believed to be complying with the new standards for bread, and little likelihood of prosecution is expected. The stand- ards obtain for the District, however, and close watch will be kept by in- that was erected by the Grand Lodge | #ffect. The celebrators were merry, of Musons the old Washington | but, for the most part, sober, the offi- Schuetzen Park. One of the mem- | cers said bers announced that he umderstood | About fifty persons were arrested, shed yet.” that it now reposed in the German of whom were accused of| “All right,”” Ullman said, Orphan Asvlum in this city | being intoxicated. The others were|about five men in with you.” W. W. Maloney, one of the veteran held on charges of carrying conceal-1 “Not on yovr life,” Nations retort- members of the association, presant- {ed weapons and firing them within the | ed. 11 take the whole detail with ed to the association a large assort- | city limits me if T go in there again, including ment of historic speeches and pamph- | —— the reserves.” lets, many of.which were more tha Score Meld in St. Paul. e e thorauish fifty years old. Among them were| 7. PALT =5 are ] More | moTe trouble if the entire detail went the following cches by JOhn 4 | (e & aeor ol January L—More | iy, "and Nations decided to_“let it £o | Crittenden, Stephen Do o encore or men were taken fromiat that® and departed. No arrests Green, Owen Lovejoy, J. P iown cafes ca 3 i were made in connection with the D.W.'D. Voor holsor nceralenentsion New: Year lgior [ Hioraar T Walton and President Lincoln’ on 2o B D s lofend Tn s aid: It { tional defense act of 1920, wherein | specto to see that the new defini- | proviston is made for an army of the g tions are observed. 1 United States composed of the Regu- The standards define “milk bread” . 2 jlar Army, the National Guard and as bread obtained hy baking a wheat s(-rlbes sllde Into 1 | the organized reserves, and addi- bread dough in which not less than b d | tfonal <raising facilitios in the B one-third of the water Ingredient has ! | serve Officors’ Training Corps and been replaced by milk or the con- R b -] G the citizens' military training camps. stituent of milk solids in the pro- ose u& "' A % i Today, I know that this plan is en- portions normal for whole milk. It 1 ' [tirely practicable | must: conform to the moisture limi- — o ; | After praising the response of the tation for wheat bread. This latter, £ | varicus units enumerated to the plan according to the new standards, calls Trip Around World \ N L Cire one hour of more. atier bakins. Join public must indicate its approval of Rye bread must have not less th wemea 0| Refused to! [en a bt ne-third of its flour ingred Droblems that. contromied eIl on | county jail. The agents raided one| od-natured affair at first, but 4 g | i b : ) i soft drink pai \d - arrested it as e int Shahis o i try during and prior to the civil w T into a rough and tumbie. T ; ng Hushan Young Hushand. rens ool e ot o st | Mrss Calvin Wall 'De- quite finished yet. “take ced by rye flour. B A E Warning by Rear Admiral Sims Bittor Besalations, Rear Admiral : o Ewin e e D e e B i obtained e ah 1o oh np emen baking wheat bread dough, to This increases : of {dxe, wife | Which have been added sould ra! | Had we been before who, with her|in_quantity equivalent to at | Te i ote o Hie e he official and | three ounces for each pound of the many would not have defled us.” diplomatic world at the New Willard | P2ked product, declares the new “National def ' said Maj. Gen. | this afternoon. ESuisycs proceedings of the national REGRalGtor. 1 do know who fired the shots. convention at cinnati | We couldn’t do anything. One woman copy of the Washingt: 01d Year Rained Out. had me by the collar as we January 7 and a numb January 1—The | leaving." Rl e nd_ other elebration was a tho Aolozen arrests for violation of thed A story of the victory] of love over pers on mor events of un- oaked” one in this sectio t were made by the police | b=t < usual fnte 5 b from early yesterd arious leading hotels and restau- | Wealth was told today{ by Mr. and} were Hughexs, to 6 o'clock :{HOUSE MEMBERS VIEW BAD STREETS Page.) inued from on a cas (Continued from Firs association extended its thanks | and” a few persons |ances were reported. teen years of age respectjvely, who are | : i whether or not this country shall he | Jower: Mry. Charles Eva (D Per o e e et ang leks than Maloney for his presentation. | b inciement weather to S5 Waalinmty Xt e x) 3 i A placed in a position to endure—with | Wife of the Seer | ) ¥, \ o K d Church, which 1 6th and D | Prohibition enforcement agents re- | alleged by them to have|been thrown | e e Btrects from 1821 to 1877, the church | ported the night passed auictly with| up by T. H. Lilly, weal{hy father of | Church at 16th and Harvard streets Accompany Cabinet Crisis. The voung counle afe living at} 3 . : 2 0! an o7 o Silias WILL. ace and M Patlsce. da st 33.7 per cent. I TOR e e e e e IN GALA MOOD AS ;R W e Joseph I Keefer reported that he| MERIDEN, Conn had located w 4 | Sa day night ents of the 7 r the first American flag tha er | the crew of Monitor, which defeated | Saturday nigh @ $ Mrs. Wiil 1 that she was delight- Secre: »d Mrs, DOt more than 7 per cent of crude will be made to have it placed in th D re e A do o 3 Capitol building. The flr:u: was un-! Mr. Will hml,xz n H iton, W. Va,, FRENCH ATT”’UDE Marchienne and his American wife | Lillie Husting, and arranged for his fon’s release nd the members of his staff. the la- | baugh, sister of M vis. - ! Jones, e brought st him by a UNCHANGED ON EVE pecially watched for on account of The assocfation, through Viece Presi. their exquisite gowns and striking | The Secretary of "’ and Mrs, who have rich laces and furs. No Ladies With Brazilians.. m 3 to 6 o'clock George Wright filed In the .rchives a feeble attempt to usher out {or without the consent of the rest of Congre o contain adde e BOMBS ROCK LISBON. l g IR Sl R ; OFFICIAL CIRCLES cont of mill ot nor lecs than 3 January 1.—Charles | oxp1oded in various parts of the city |f Mr. and Mrs. Frederick{H. Will, par- | 4th street home that he would not re- and 1 { than cocva fat, mot e “inati™ 50 210 Col. Harvey Is Positive B S e Do S BlnE 05 | seceetary sisaver Neens onon Homse,| , itk oo, - . . . hotel on charges of cashing a check | Ll e . g ettt Britain Will Pay War Debt /i v S e OF PARIS PARLEY |seteszorics of o, suchas”jewels ; ——— | _The ambassador of Peru, Senor Don | near the home of On motion of Washington Topha early this “mor ts where record-breaking attend. | Mrs. Calvin Will, ninetedn and seven- | { Harhord, “is purely a aquestion of Butter must contain not less than 5 L stacles ! |oring ma “ondense 5 - photographs of the first Unitarian | the old year with tin horns month’s stru gaijst obstacles {of the worla fexius Sondensedaniik exxp Explosions in Various Parts of City : % SN0 T iatreots. Endithe new Uotaal the bride, of Hinton, W.|Va. B 2 1, ‘milk “solids. with e Ty MONITOR SURVIVOR DIES. is supposed to be | A. Burr, seventy-eight, last survivor of bridegroon|, who have | turn without the vounsste NEW YEAR DAWNS |dargaret i Moines jmore th total ash and of Centerville, Md., and that efforts|YS truction in the Portuguese schools.| mpa return was accomfplished after IR T, dore W. Noves and his family. M. {in bank. Mr. Will objained .§1,000 While Chairman Madden gives very positive assurance that the $240 so- bonus bill will be’ rushed rough the House if the Sterling-Li el e py ning all o bond Friday night, and learly Satur- 6 memb f the association an ” - = - g, the ble Jeft with Mr. ~ A their families a happy New Year. " g 2 day morning, the couple ?v t with Mr. | i AL >t now s 5 : e i O 8 to ki Will for Washington. | ISper cent g many b lo now ,}]“ mbassador of Spain, has seen many {members of the Dej bach.reclassification bill is not passed el b Thedcits - i paid a total of +.400.000,000 marks.|more years of diplomatic service in|merce, ding before the end of the fiscal year. no et R e BT Spend New Year Here. | zuvas as follows: Cush, 2100~ | Wachiniton than his rank amons am- | Huston. the Misses Hust : e s L Following the rea chron- morning, and are spending ) a 5 b3 00000 a secretary ttion years v ra priations committee. folatar (;:L-L'w--urrf,:-mr"‘fn?rlt'h?n::m:ge day with the parents of the bride- | “5icd terrilors hive " ben dls- | ¥as accompanied by’ Senora de | 3 3 g | PChairman Madden s that while otk Taschoe e (i 5 peg and members of the staff, whil and Mrs, E.|the committee has eve ton_ of groom | Brazilian ambassador and his sulte David B | continuimg the so-called bonus of $240, s e were quite noticeable in that no ladies { (4 g rge Uhler, |if the reciassification bill is not passed, tell: : fady were with them. T A ibbey, Mr. and | he and other members of th REVELERS ROUT DRY Lo e el TG TR | i, v on Novemver 7 the clope, ek, iy | Almost, more famitir to Washing: | 55, Rchaz £ ket M7 and 3ty | an s ol Bad tne Wi e ng Reliium, | tonians than any other diplomats are Herter, Mr. and fourd hefore the close of the Eession to ¥ g ;T e in il g Y ain. $00.000.000; | those of the British embassy, Sir|lam Mull and Mr. Mrs. | gt the Sterling-Lehlbach bill “enacted AGENTS IN ST. LOUIS; 2 = i ’ nion, Hnd the "girl G ritain, 100,000 operty \<fers | Auckland Geddes, the ambassador, | CATNCE S on, | fito law, €0 that the new s reputed to be 4, s ; 170,000,000 marks had a larger staff with him than & A3% long been the ‘custom of | aries for vario des can be put NEW YORK RIOTS SRR 9 i i That Uioped. Calvin from First Page.) | President | Federico Alfonzo Pezet, who, like the and wi ted by the | mssociation partook of a luncheon in the basement of the old engine house. 1s follows ,000.000 . and Mrs. Here's the story the joung couple ls 200.000.000. CGrant Britain, §0,000,000; |had any other of the ambassadors. | m“;‘“ffu‘lv.f;,"[hfl,’,fl”“" Supreme | th her | Japan, 60,000,000, Lad) ddes was with the ambas-|goucs (0 Phom he home to his asso- | S o o) R S sador, and the ladies of the suite were | C 240" ie bench and the judiciary window. In her words the elopement e Bedthn worked out us follows: | \ particularly attractive, st stufied two ]n”iflwtl Into my Certain sums in both cash and kind Many New to Ceremony. D 18 ! bed as a dummy. Then Iitied a couple | 5re still undistributed. On Belginm's] ' The ambassador of Germany _The Speaker of the House and Mrs, | Mrs. L. H. Hadley and Mrs. of sheets together and fet down my | oo™ oo 500 000,000 marks re- | Mme. Wiedfeldt, who came to W: Gillett will receive at their residence, | George M. Young. one “knockdown and dragout” affair grip to Calvin, who was pelow. Then | 355 In addition Germany has)ington in May, were strange to the 1525 18th street, from 4 to & o'clock,| Presiding at the tea table will be that cnlivened the evening at the G o 2 v T got up and climbed ouf on the roof jmain due. In addition Germany has)ceremony and were looked for with great | and will With them Mrs. Gil- {Mrs, E. W. Roberts, Mrs. D. U. Fletch- thrice raided “Monte Carlo.” . v v A ey { of the sun parlor and otjer the porte | paid toward the cost of the armies of | interest, his excellency being accom- jlett's daughter, Miss Louisa Hoar, and | er, Mrs. Atlee Pomerene, Mrs. H. M Greenwich Village and outlying sec- 4 2 " 5 5 cochere. The only way|I could get|occupation 2.500.000,000 marks, of prated by & smutier ataft fl_fin had |others. | Towner and Mrs. O. B, Ward _Assiat- tions profited by the concentrated drive down was by sliding dofvn a water- | s e e 2 as | most o e ambassadors. e re- 5 $ {ing will be Mrs. Ladislas Lazaro, Mrs on Hrrxwivm,\'.) owever, and reports lrum’ & ,‘,.pef And 1 lan in i rosebush. |Wwhich sl ,}my more th an halt has | MOt received ambassador of Italy, Congressional Club a Mecca. ‘y_““'_ N Mrs, W. E. Humphre S hiots cinters wers thet oot Honed i . i 2 G come to Franc 1 the remainder | prince Gelasio Caetani, who succeeds | The mecca of the congressional set | Mrs. I Léatherwood, Mrs. H Greclyin evenvtiing but or The ; S 1 Entrain for Cincianati. has gonme to Great Britain and {Senator Vittorio Rolandi Riccl, was | Wil be the Congressional Club, where | teoside, Mrs. L. W. Mott, Mrs. A, W. ity set a record, too, in the number of | % : 1 Z “We got on the trajn that was|gium. The cost of occupatic another figure to add interest to the | OPen house for the members and their | Barkley, Mrs. W. A. Rodenberg, Mrs. home celebrations, sumably wet, | > . scheduled to leave at 1§:01. It was n fixed arbitrarily at 200,000,000 { fifty or more diplomats who were |friends will be K from 3 to 6{C. R. Chindblom and Mrs. J. Can- if one is to take as a umple one five minutes late, and 1ithought cad {narks for 1922 and for cach succecd- {attending their first ceremony of this |0'clock. The beautiful clubrooms are | trill. ) i rich Park avenue home, where might find us at’ any mjnute. Well, . sort in Washington. gay with Christmas colors, and there| A dance at the Congressional Club butler got so hilarious the family had | the train pulled out at 12:06 and we ormany has pald also for the up-| With the exception of the reception | Will be music and the good cheer of a | tondght s for the younger members, *49 have him carted off to jail | Z ot Into Cincinnati earlyin the mbrn- allied commissions. | to be held this afternoon by the Sec- | tea table. B |A.,.d a large oonum.rmhu (be the V. Celebrators with arms rolled up " o 7 ing. It must have been about $:30. to @ total of 50,000,000 y of War and Mrs. John W.| Mrs. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, i- |school girls and boys here for the & casualty list ¢ ally wounded “Then we tried to get married in g { Weeks for the officers stationed injdent of the club ve the holiday: and seven oth riousiy hurt, Cincinnati. The license bureau clerk ny’s present financial {and near Washington, cabinet recep- while others, apparently convinced told us that it was impgssible to ob- | tion has been thoroughly investi | tions take on quite a civilian apect. they were burning up, gave the fire tain_a license unless ofe of us had |by the reparations commission Officers calling upon the Secretary of | department thirty-four unnecessary lived there for thirty days. The taXi-|of the essential figures are a War on New Year day wear their Tums in the hour that straddled the man then told us that hq knew where |lows: Gold rescrve, slightly more than {uniforms, and the Secretary of War ©ld and the new years. we could be married, M& we went to |1,000,000,000 marks: total mote circu-{ang the Secretary of the Navy have | ASSATE Wiihington ien: Newport, Ky., across thi bridge, and | lation, '980,000.000,000 paper marks,|always added to the ladies of their i pr 7 Squire Bertelsman marrfed us. the amount increasing daily. The | ganiiies a number of young woman fha Sirouble at ghe! “Monte “Th.n we came back. | Dad had de- | gold value of all this paper money 15| gssistants to add charm to the re- eame shortly after midnight, when it dowing us, but we didn't |only about 580.000.¢ ceptions. Mrs. Wecks has to ist merrymakers there, as elsewhere know that until the nlext morning, ‘The i & { her today during the hours from 3 Sk the White: Wiay, Shaal Borked COL. GEORGE HARVEY, when I saw one of then. He came | future repas Jayments, i 110 6 o'clock the wife of the assistant Sentment - agiinst " ihe Cpromibitien | United States ambassador to the Court of St. Jamew’, on S. S. Berengaria, | down later and I had to{go back with B s u00.000 i | et o e WalnwTignt, agents and policemen, many of whom | RFFIVing at New York Saturday. He has been summoned to Ameriea to | him.” { = e il hon appeared surreptitiously in evening k of the city. but Mr. Justice and Mr | guests, assisted by Mrs. W. H. White, Taft are omitting the reception today | Mrs. J. E. Watson, Mrs. Frank nued from First wed from | from necessary causes. gs. Mrs. F. B. Keliogg, Mrs. M enforcers and determined breakers of the dry law, and at least . INDERWOOD The Star Carrier's Creed BELIEVE in The Evening Star of Washington as a newspaper of the people and for the people. whose just power is derived resting to note that theo- | b, confer with the President and his cabinet on the economic situation. i vl o e theo- | Devides, wnd o’l(hers Sl olothes. By the Associated Py Jinton, stepa|almost covers the entire note eir- Mr. Mellon Keeps Open House. Agents Charles Grill and Otto Fab- | BY the Associated Pres: s SHeD The Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. ricus of the Washington enforcement EW YORK, January entire natlonal Mellon, assisted by his daughter, ~ 3taff were the vietims—particularly |George Harvey, American ambassador Miss Aflsa Mellon, will keep open e iyben T entered Grill ipotted lto Great Britain, who called himself | B vt hioheltol axento VN ra s brass manufucturer. who was enter, | messenger boy, returned home yes- | he asked. o'clock, and several officials of the taining a party of friends, Mo essiyed | terday on the storm-tossed liner| He talked in jerks That is. he an-| 1t was at this junctureithat the boy's| ' ¢ mue sar and Chicago Dally | Qeoaetment and. chelr wives will an B N o Sameety e i e 7 { 8wered questions politely, but not at | father got busy. - Employpd In the gov- | (% News. Copsright, 1923.) sist, and Miss Mellon will have with e i gsomebody sent him |Berengaria. to report to Washington | aii “Auently. And he waited for cach | oer ke prncis ome] ho. obiaimed BERLIN, January 1—The German |her a number of her younger friend: d the battle eraphereuttothedaw foy information he was asked to get | question—never permitting his inter- | jeave and went to West \irginta on De- P 2 oS e i Gt T N A e B s e Uy, R ondon | viewers to approach affairs of state |cember 2. From that tithe until short- | people expect only the worst this| The Seeretary of tho Favy aud Mre SanTicus silocn Neara 2 told “ il a X < {and matters which, he sald, rightfully | Jy before Christinas he yorked against, year—unless the United States comes | DeRaY S8 Ohn S OV SROSY 209 s “."'.;M_ e “"i‘h‘t»n.; ‘t“‘»fi« fl}:"a"-l wi ”n:L and can:m grant an |,.}x;on,;cd at v}'.’mhinglon‘s disposal. | forces which sought to! separate the | "t} i asqistance. In official quar- Marine Corps will pay thelr respects Tenche browe: Ansny micw inthe ava” |nterview.” he said as he met news- ut the colonel did discuss siik | young couple he said, whon he had to | %0 thelt assteianct, °0 SFICH duar | Marine Cotpe B | e e | Berengaria encountered heavy weath- After the return to p 1.—Col. | er almost all the way. He had made | were taken to separate the couple, ac- culation. plus oo | forty-four crossings, he said, but this | cording to their stor L;;Lhurges were was the worst of his experience. brought against young Will, and final- ow what else can I tAlk about?” |1y he was arrested on insuticient| LOOKS TO UNITED STATES. fund check” charge. clothes and women In low-cut gowns paper men In the de luxe cabin of the swirled about the two, shouting im- ship, “but I will talk a bit informally Precations and swinging chaire, bot- Ties #nd figts with utmost impartiality. Pretty Girl Wallops Grill, The agents seemed at the point of quelling the disturbance unaided, when suddenly & comely young wom- an dashed in and willoped Grill in the eye. The fight was on again. Grill finally escaped in a shower of bottles to the street, where he fired flve shots into the air. A score of policemen rushed up, fought their way in and extricated Fabricus, who still <lung to Nevins' collar. Nevins was one of more than 100 revelers who were booked during the night on various New Year celebra- ton charges, mostly for possession or sale of liquor. The West 47th street station, where most of the Broadway 7 prisoners were taken, seethed with ' fashionably attired victims through with you.” It was while he was talking in- formally that he said theré was no question of England paying her debts to the United States, and added that he had come home to bring informa- tion on that subject to President Harding. i ust n Messenger Boy “I am merely coming home to re- port to my editor-in-chief and my managing editor,” he said, “and am really nothing but a messenger boy. I can say this, however, the present English government plans to settle and to pay its debt to America. But it is a delicate job. It will pequire very careful handling. “I believe the men on the American mission and those named on the Brit- ish mission, which is now en route here, will reach a decision if any one ‘whose midst professional bondsmen, fathers and mothers and sweethearts eircled, seeking whom they might wid. S. Prisoners Held. The prisoners who had the relative- 1y good fortung to be arrested by po- lice were released in bail. Those who tell into federal clutches saw the gray New Year down through the station house bars.* The cabarets, whose patrons had been warned in advance of what was to_happen, did not have quite their ©ld accustomed crowd, Seats we! available in almost all of them. Ho- 2els, however, were Jammed, the. can. They face the biggest financial transaction the world has = ever known, but they face it as the best men that could possibly handle it. “Stanley Baldwin, chancellor of the exchequer, who heads the mission, is a remarkable man. He s extremely able. In fact, he is one of the ablest men in British public life. Montag Norman, governor of the Bank of England, while of retiring disposition, is a man of ability and power. That was all Col. Harvey would say about affairs of state. Enjoyed His Trip, He declared he was a good sallor and enjoyed the trip, although the breeches and their significance s uni- forms at courts, although not quite that way. “‘Before the war,” he sald, “Amer- fcan ambassadors at St. James were both lonesome and consipcuous at court functions. There were ambas- sadors of all sorts near them, and all wore uniforms, which were, to say the 'least, resplendent. There w gold lace a-plenty. But the American representing a democracy was attjred }in common everyday dress clothes, “Then came the results of the whr. The monarchies began to tumble, Along came more republics. And American ambassadors have lost tus distinction, if it was that, of being the only clvilians at court. At the last function I attended I was not lonesome in full dress clothes. There were fifteen others, and the Aus- trian and German representatives were dressed as 1 was.” Will Not Speak. Col. Harvey sald he had no inten- tion of making any speeches here. His mission, he sald, was to go to Washington when they wanted him to go, tell what he knew, then await orders. The ambassador’s last word to the reporters was that economic condi- tions in England wers better—grow- ing better every day. “There is ‘some unemployment,” he went on, “but not much.” There some dissatisfaction, but very littl Conditions are better, much better. And while T am talking, let me that the best friend America has in all Europe i Lord Curzon, He be- lleves in Americatt Teturn to Washington to protect his po- sition. He went back shprtly after the Christmas holidays, and lafter his sec- ond arrival begins a ndw chapter in the romance. The girl, taking up thq story at this cture, eays : Tt Friday_night silortly after 9 oclock Calvin was releaged from jail. He came to my house. “At that time my fathler was in my room giving me the razzlabout cutting me off and everything.| It Is true I was romised a trip arohnd the world and everything. But when I found that it would mean [ would lose Calvin I said. ‘Nothing] doing.’ Tells Calvin to] Run. “Well, my father was{ giving me a talking to, when the bebble Calvin tossed from below hit| the window. Involumtarily I sald: “Fhere's Calvin now. My father took &l gun from his pocket and ran down s T yelled out the win| Calvin to run. “‘But I came here to yelled back. “That's all right’ I ‘Dad is coming downst with the revolver.' Thei But he did go fast. “While dad was out I vin with the gun, I pack: the house. I went to th torney Dunlap. Then I voice talking to his la most could have brok door” rs after you he ran. My! king for Cal. up and left office of At- eard Calvin's er; and 1 al- down the The couple got aboard & train not long after this and camd to Washing- ton with Frederick W{ll, who had pledged his word to his tion as to what may develop in 1923 is met by the query, “What will the United States do?” Some Germans go so far as to say that the nation’s fate will be decided this year—perhaps even this month. Without the moral and financial as- | sistance of the United States Germany |may fall a prey to any or all o the | following calamities: A further de- {cline in the value of the mark, fol- {lowed by unemployment, shortage of food and clothing and consequent rioting; serious differences between Germany and the allies as the result | of Germany's inability to pay. its | reparations debts and French ocaupa- tion of the Ruhr basin. This would make Germany’s in- ternal situation still more critical, It is feared that German fascisti or Ger- man bolshevists, who are gaining In strength, may triumph. The republi- can government appears to be grow- ing weaker daily. —— ‘WED AT ROCKVILLE. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md,, January 1.—Miss Olivia P. Linthicum, daughter of Mr. end Mrs. Garrett B. Linthicum of Hyattstown, this county, and Edgar G. Jewell of Poolesville were mar- ried in Rockville a few days ago by Rev. Nolan B. Harmon, jr., pastor of the Methodist Church, the ceremony taking place at the home of the min ister, Tranaa { Gregory, Mrs. Thomas Washington, of naval operations, and Mrs. Coontz, who will receive at Wardman Park Hotel from 4 to 7 o'clock. Mrs. Coontz has assisting her a number of the wives of admirals and others, the list in- cluding Mrs. Albert G. Winterhalter, Mrs. John D. Beuret, Mrs. Luther 1. Mrs. Edward R. Stitt, Mrs. Henry J. Jiegemelor, Mrs. Harry W. Hill, Mrs. James A. Drain and Mrs. Charies F. Preston. Other Cabinet Officers Receive. The Postmaster General and Mrs. ‘Work, the Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Wallace and_the Secretary of Labor and Mrs. Davis are each re- celving In their private suites at Wardman Park Hotel. Dr. and Mrs. Work will receive from 3 to 6 o'clock and will have assisting them the as- sistant postmaster general and Mrs. John H. Bartlett, the third assistant postmaster general and Mrs. Warren Irving Gloyer, Mrs. Robert . Noble, Mrs. John N. Speel, Mrs. Guy Despard Goff, Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, Miss Lena Hitchcock and Miss Kathryn Hitchoook. The Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Fall will receive this afternoon from 3 to 6 o'clock in thelr apartment at Wardman Park Hotel. Assisting them will be their two daughters, Mrs. C. C. Chase of Texas, and Mrs. Brant Elliott of Virginia. The Becretary and Mrs. Wallace are observing the same hours for receiv- ing the officials of the Department of Agriculture and others and have with them: Mrs. Andrieus A. Jones, Mrs, James C. Davis, Mrs, W. B. Greeley, from the devotion of its readers. Carrier—aged 12. @ A fine city and a fine newspaper—from District welfare inseparable: upon the principles of patriotism, public service, truth and wholesome reading. founded @ I therefore believe it is my duty to my paper (as a regular Star carrier) to serve it diligently, loyally and faithfully, and to uphold it above all other newspapers. DAVID FREILICOFF, 1308 Que st. n.