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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 1923. ©__ mycLovaswians | Joo) ¢ pui ol REPORT ON STRIKE Economist Charges World Movement Presented False Affidavits. Complete Inertia Necessary To Success of Coue Formula Snapshots. aqed That’s why Velvet Tobacco is fine in your pipe and topnotch for cigarettes ‘Voice of Consciou Analysis Must Be |, Stilled, Says Scientist, Before Repeat- ing Talismanic Sentence. | tainly be obeyed, only the chances are that something else would then g0 wrong as a result of insufficient knowledge or perhaps complete ig- | norance of physiology on the part | of the conscious mind. | Relax All Tension, So just the subcon- | scious. Avoid all When you recite vour phrase, “Every day, in every way, 1 am getting better and better,” you must rel=x all strain Article 1L BY EMILE COUE. After the preceding explanations of the theory of autosuggestion, my readers are certainly anxious to be initfated in the method of putting it into actual practice. We have seen that our physical organism completely dominated by our sub- conscious self, which, obeying every|and temnsion. Do not seek to con suggestion, of no matter what na-|centrate your thoughts. Concentra ture. transmits it as an order to|tion Is very valuable and necessary 5 e i the | When conscious reasoning is to be every fiber of the body, and that the ! gone, but fatal to the success of latter responds or reacts immediate- | autosuggestion. Isolate yourself from The only obstacle to the perfect | everything likely to distract your omplishment of the operation is ZA = tention, howev Close your eves s possible. You can_obtain mental the intervention of the conscious will at the same time. What isolation in a crowd, in a street car, know, therefore, m." | By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, January $.—An at-| tack 8n the crédibility of the famous ire]mrl of the Inter-Church “or!d‘ Movement on the 1919 steel strike is contained in a 500 page document made public yesterday by Marshall| Olds, economist. i THAT POINT SETTLED TRES IT A HAR TO THE RIGHT it_to effort. leave is The Inter-Church World Move- ment's report bitterly assailed the in- I dustrial and economic system of .lhg; [United States Steel Corporation and} now Mr. Olds has come !uru‘flrd with charges that in some instances the churchmen's report contained mis- representations and fraudulent af- fidavits and that in other cases the { persons who co-operated in supplying |information’ were of radical or liberal political afiiliations The foreword to the Olds document is by Jeremiah W. Jenk research | professor of government and admini- stration at New York University and la former associate in the Inter- {Church World Movement. The Olds| | T must insist on the necessity of pas e T o T icn s epart siveness and inertia. Do not think | ‘]‘ et menme You must struggle to impose your - - | serious question in the mind of any | | suggestion, The very fact of mak- w‘th»nl of social problems and those TEUS HER TO HURRY UP 5AYS HE IS TOO BENG erested on of he | table and its effects demonstrated "’”: it n effort “,l,l” Ivrn‘n: Ihm" N'(l\\ \f',']’m"fh IE‘ ‘i',:(,‘}_f‘l’”u,“"f.“‘," '“,,,“,. ,;f:‘ R ' AND DECIOE BECAUSE HS CAREFUL) IT JUST SLIPPED EXCEPTIONAL VALUES ARMS ARE GETTING TIRED BECAUSE HIS ARMS ARE NUMB All t is' necessary is to place|actually raise a barrier between the fif.ln‘«ur‘u]‘\”(“y;:;!\; ‘:lx\xr .':;:‘“u:‘[‘h‘.-lh[;:\‘rl”“;;] one’s self in a condition of mental pas- | subconscious and the suggestion and PORTRAIT OF A COUPLE HANGING A PICTURE e d ! scussion and solution -of wclous analysis and then deposit in Now, from what I have said of the | {1y econnected with the Inter-Church ! R S ; o the ever-awake subconscious the idea | superiority of a general formula :x.’ I e Moy entents | m(;nl ...l:.-n'u rmhr;np and the prices are all y(..“( . c ;, ):A t and W\ Commercial Aviation. Inva uable Adjunct to Military, Gen. Patrick Says. or reason want mechanism by control of our other words, ac The method is si simple that it has be all simple solutions complicated problems have been scoffed at. But logic is irrefu if need be, and there is no reason } which we may acquire why vou should not practice auto suggestion in such conditions in the} ! time, always providing you suc i abeonscious self—in | ceed in ‘putting vourself in the right state of p: iveness. At the risk of being accused of tedious repetition, of seemingly crre & Mrens Tonacco Co CHEERY VOKE CAUS BEDROOM JUST TO HOLD| IT A LITTLE LONGER TiLL| SHE TINDS HER GLASSES| FLORIDA Through Sleeping Car Service T HIMSELP —in Furniture, Lamps and Shades To the application of suggestion to spe- reply, the result of nearly two Years'{ | Southern Pi e Kormula to Repeat. e application of sugges > spe Every night, when you have com-|clfic complaints. On the contrary work and in effect an exhaustive de ‘ CORNELL WALL PAPER CO. C: Camden. S. €. Savannah fense of the United States Steel Cor- Brinswitle Ga - ] chsanwll D ca vourself in ked and| It is.toibe racommended unveserved) poration, was preparcd by him en-|714 13th N.W. Lo T wd Z fortably set ¥ bed AN lin all cases where it is desired to re st L sl o enal anaiwiths amp: rasota and the point of dropping off 10 Tj.yve pain, correct functional dis Lt ansltancel thom (he igruat. cor Petershurg. Fla murmur in a low but clear’ 0.0 o iileviate their symptons. < i o ) = M . Just Toud enough to be heard s 3 poration or any of its agents. More- ALL YEAR TRAINS ourself, th little formula To Banish Pain. over, Mr. Olds states that Eibert H. = et Yivery day. in every way, 1 am get-| For such purposes. here is my pro- Gary, chairman of the United States | Mid-South Special ting better and better.” Recite the |cedure: To cause pain to vanish, rub Steel Corporation, has refused to ap- Florida Cuba Special Then(ike ‘& litany, twenty times|{io affected spot lightly, but rapidly, his document. On the othery Seatioard! East Mail or more, and, in order tb mhml’](h\; with your hand, at the same time re- Eimous tracting your attention by the effort|peating in an undertone, So swiftly ot of counting, it is an_excellent idea|ag to make of it a mere gabble, the Seaboard Florida %o tick the number off on a piecé of | words “ca e (pronounced “sah T s string tied in twenty knots. 4 ase”). In a few minutes the pain A ullman Train Puerile!” l’.-r!:.m.x‘ \‘n it ‘smlh-'v should disappear, or at the very least Resumes Service Jan to set in moton n the desred drec-)pe consid bly diminished. The rea- ton the stupendous forces of which |son for gabbling the words is to & pnsurpassed. o may be masters, if we will. It!avoid the risk of any other ex- Dining Car Service Use Seaboard Travel Service Know Before You Go—This office 1 plea unnecessary ex- (C) Whzeler Syn. 1nc. are on sleep, voice, Eyes Examined McCormick Medical Glasses Fitted DR.CLAUDE S.SEMONES Eyesight Specialist 409-410 MclLachlen Bldg. 10th and G Sts. N.W. Phone Main 721 Graduate Jofttre Is Invited To Reorganize Soviet Red Army PARIS,January 8.—An invitation to, send Marshal Joffre as the head of a French mission to reorganize the soviet red army and the Russian military services has been addressed to the French' government by the soviet government, according to an announcement made by the Matin. The newspaper asserts that the pro- posal was brought to France by Deputy Herriot, who recently visited Russia. The Matin savs the French govern- ments's reply Wil be along the line ! that it is not exactly disposed for the moment to send the hero of the Marne | on a visit to the signatories of the ies of Brest-Litovsk and Rapallo. SMillstones, Hot | | prove {hand, Mr. Olds declares that he was s Ve Vi assist: b, former | From Grinding, |53 557 s, b, tems Explode, 5 H | Movement who realized too late they urtlmd been made parties to an alleged T fraud. | MERIDIAN, Miss., January 8.—Two | ! | grist mill grinding rocks revowving in| INDIANS TO PROTEST BILL ! | opposite directions, becoming heated S I- | when machinery breaking allowed them to come together, exploded yes- terda causing probably fatal injury to W. T. Keeton and serious injuries to four negr The men were struck down where they were work- ing and the mill was almost demol ed. Keeton's leg was broken and was injured ternally. Each of the negroes suffered broken bones. —_— Limited De Luxe 1st, 1923 “To-morrow” is the dance hit of to- day. To know to-day how good “To-morrow” can be, buy “To-morrow” to- day as played by Ted | Lewis and His Band on Columbia Record A-3709 “‘Homesick” on the other side. At Columbia Dealers. Is a mere suggestion. but that sug-|traneous or contrary thought slip- zestion cast into the mysterious labo- Tatory of the subconscious self i instantaneously translated an ive, living force. The ancients well knew the power —often the terrible power—contained in the repetition of a_ phrase or a formula. The secret of the undeni- able influence they exercised through the old oracles resded probably—nay. certainly the force of suggestion. Yes, my method of self-cure, by Auto-suggestion, is undoubtedly sim Dle. Tt is easy to understand. and Just easy to practce. Vet the human mind is today what it was in| +the duys of oracles, it insists on asso- jating the healing of the body or wind with complicated theories and processes, which, in reality, are quite | Unnecessary. Why complain if things are made easy for you? Detalls Not Needed. People may wonder why tent to prescribe such a general and vague formula as “Every | .1 am getting bet- ter and better” for all and every ail- he reason is, strange as it that our subconscious mind need the details. The gen- that everything “in going well is quite set_up the procedure which will carry its effects to different organs and improve every function. T have had remarkable demonstration of this in the course of my long teaching and experiments. Time and again, I have seen patients cured, not only of the particular disease for which they gought relief, but also of minor dis- abilities which they had almost for- zotte The fact our subconscious knows much more than we can ever know ourselves about our physical organism. Fortunately for us! Just think what a mess we should make of things if we had to look after every function—breathing, digestion. for instance. Who is it that takes charge of such a complicated job? The subconscious mind, and if it ever does its work badly, it is always be- cause, in some way or another, we have voluntarily meddled with it Every organ or function is connected | with and depends in some degree wpon others, and if the ordinary man or woman were to begin ordering a subconscious tinkering with a par- ping in through fissures which might from more distinet but For the same reason dvise Inglish-spes people to | ck to the French . it being much easier to say “ca passe” quickly than the lonzer and more aw rd expression “it is passing” or is going. Sufferers from sleeplessness proceed in another way. tled themselves they will repeat zoi 3 in a auie { | Pueblo Delegation on Way ueu= | Against Bursum Measure. § Pueblo Tndia re sald to be on ir way to Washington to protest | zainst the enactment of the Bursum | bill to validate the claims of settlers | jon lands originally granted to the | Pueblos. They will appear before the | Secnate public lands committee. They | contend that encroachments of alleged | “squatters” upon their lands, obtained under Spanish grants and assured to | them by President Lincoln, and ap- | propriation of their irrigation water into shows the way to comfort a re and elim enditure. Write or call authentic mation, reservations: also booklet— intering in the South.” Geo. W. Vierbuchen, D. P. A. SEABOARD AIR LINE RY. 714 14th St., Washington, D. C. i u rates P will Having set- comfortably in bed, (not gabble), “I am I am going to sleep.” d. even voice, av ing. of course. the slightest mental effort to attain the desired result. The soporific effect of this droning repetition of the suggestion soon makes itself felt: whereas if one AID TO PREPAREDNESS Chief of Army Air Service Cites Nation’s Need of Potential | War Reserve. leg, or finger)” and the cure is ac-! ss i3 kept alive by the | idea. according to the law | L1® Daralysis has healed already, the lof converted effort. Insomnia. indeed, | Jat}Nt has lost the habit of using his |affords a_striking demonstration of | L"b, @04 Still ‘thinks he is unable the disastrous effect of the exertion | 55 §p,3%, oL I8 obvious that, strong of the will, the result of which is o pconsclous’ notion may: be Just the contrary to the ‘bne desired, | iT, itS effec ', those of 3 contrary no- | Patrick. chief of the Army air serv-| Cure for Stammering. the suggestion ‘can be conveyed 1y | i¢: declares in his annual report to tammering. again, a painful | the subconscious mind. That is the |Secretary Weeks, made public today afflic which readily yields to| WOl secret The value of a well organized system autosuggestion. 1 have known cases | of commercial fiying is discussed at of cures being affected in one sitting, some length by Gen. Patrick in con- though this, naturally, is rare. What nection with his report on the co- is the cduse of stammering? Merely operation of the Army air service the fear, or the idea, that one is going {with ecivil and other governmental to stammer. It vou can substitute agencies, su, et o he stimulation of competition re- sugestion that you are not going to g t stutter, that if you can say ten words sulting from an extensive use of air- ithout stuttering there is no reason craft for commercial purposes will Shy you should samke D insure the greatest progress in design eleventh, then you are cured. {and production and will at the same Nervousness. “timidit time serve to provide a manufactur- mdence ing industry capable of meeting the ence and, still wo increased demands of national de- not only co: that can be tion, but itute the greatest given to commercial avia- “will prove of tremendous value in promoting the organization and training of units the Air Service Reserve.” He for legis- lation and appropriations to accom- plish such an undertaking. Increase in the ‘enlistcd strength of the air service in order to permi organization of additional air fo units also is requested by Gen. P: rick. Recommendation is made for legis lation “to solve the probl of maintaining the air service as an or- anization properly balanced in its oned grades.” Gen. Patrick that under existmg laws it is festly impossible to bring about a proper proportioned number of officers in the different grades, du to the relatively large number of younger men required. The air chief offers as a solution “to this problem” provision for temporary commissions or authorization for calling to ac- tive duty in the air service a number of younger reserve officers who might be retained while their flying ability is at a maximum and then revert to their reserve status Disposal of Surplus Urged. Some method of disposal for tl have reduced the surviving Pueblos to poverty, and that passage of the Bursum bill, which has the approval of Secreta Fall of the Interior De- partment, will destroy them through starvation and diseas According to those who have been advised of its plans the Indian dele- ation, said to be the first to come to the National Capital on such a mis- {sion since the days of Lincoln, will advocate enactment of a bill recently | introduced by Senator Jones, demo- crat, New Mexico, providing a_ self- sustaining system for reclamation of arid tracts owned by the Puebles and for a court to adjudica claims of settlers. The Snyder bill, pending in | the House, is said to arouse the same objections'from the Indians that they find in the Bursum measure. 3 —_— MEETING ON SHIPPING. Means to Increase Earnings to B Discussed. Hope that the meeting of the Na- [ of dis ; tional Merchant Marine Association t arge quantities of Surplus and unserv- | be held iz Washington F -7 wilt |args quantities of surplus and unsers_ | be held iz Washington February 7 wil e var {2 aeea for by rn. PotriaE | devise means for increasing the carn. e n e St i hy Sen TUUKE s of Ametiens siive bl boves o o ey Gouoly shisstioniie: Lthi comiiey Sim i heson LS Saxs ito det any amihisiunssre- | gebtor nation int e eamed Ty e of buvers whose lives would be en- | 10f Ransdell. democrat, dangered if they undertook to use jt. : President of the assq There are already too many fatali- | 21 call for the meeting {ties dug to the use of aircraft which |, ~A1thoush our favorabie balances o | |t Shever be own, “horaft Which | trade, evening allowing for foreign ship ernment should endeavor to lessen | DINE earnings” Senator Ransdell % COUGH? Try Piso’s—aston- ishinely quick re- lief. Asyrupuniike all others—pleas- ant—docs not up- set stomach—no opiates. 35c and 60c everywhere. The growth and development of civil aviation constitutes an invalu- able adjunct to military preparation in time of peace, Maj. Gen. Mason M. \ 1am con- apparently day. in every W ey on , and Cap. Tr. Co.;s bus lines now running s not ral suggestion ery way flicient persua 3 7 otk World (Press I pany). Al rights reserved. Uniicensed reproduction in full or in part expressly Massachusetts Park te ion the Surrounded by Washington's finest residential scection. Containing seven million fect of forest-covered land, with six miles of improved streets. Includes what remains of “The Triangle of Increasing Values” between Connecticut, Massachusetts and Cathedrai ave- nues (Woodley Rd.). Over four million feet of land sold. Over ninety homes from $15.000 to $200,000 built and under construction. Wooded villa sites, lots and finished homes of brick and tile, with lots from 30 to 115 feet iront; or if desired, we will build your home in the same substantial manner that has characterized our work since 1899. Park Office. 32d and Cathedral Ave. (Woodley Rd.). Middaugh & Shannon, Inc. Builder—Exclusive Agent—Owner. Woodward Building, 15th and H Sts. Booklet Mailed on request. of con- nervous phe- ] | By the Associated Press ROSEWOOD, Fla., January 8.— Rosewood is quiet today following| the racial disturbances of the past| {few days, in which seven persons were killed, as the result of a search | by officers’ and citizens' posses for Jesse Hunter, negro, wanted for an alleged attack on a young white woman at Sumner last Monday. Offi-| Main 6935 education or its equiv owed uniforms and fro; — —_— practice of autosuggestion, fRusoiinica st ST/AD e ferent train of suggestions by quirements of war, and because of the you will be surprised. i in Woods Manufacturing facilities are, in them- | {ig unnecessary loss of life by pe. | S2id. “have run as high as $3,100,000- member. They can all be cured, easi- necessity, must be limited in number, | Cazualtie: | succeeding fiscal ar it was onl o in general nursing | annual meeting of the stockholders of the equipment beyond the time it has|tnat period, the report adds, was thag | (DAL SteDS to prevent this can be de 4 fhe office of the B0th_and M sto. prohibited. o e a0 e eradicsted by fense in case of an emergency,” says such infirmities must set up fayihe air force capable of meeting the re- Burned Are Stlll Hiding suddenly murmuring “I am calm,” and | of dircraft is equally untenable.” ability to use the affected limb or aside as a war reserve and which, of | ,ort shows the following crashes and | Calclated as §2 00,000; but for the "NICIPAL. HOSPITAL | NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN THAT THB equipment Involves the use of this old |56, The outstanding accident during | 4¢Ptor nation again. T am hopefu Tnaintenance n n separate home for | be bronght before the meeting, will be t and full mainte in arate home for | be brougl iz, will be held at now being used are rapidly deterio. | ron o108 of thirteen officers, six- the are simply the consequenc of S UVER Would Encourage Manufacture. am not nervou I am well an rapid deterioration of aeronautical " There are quite a number of c selves what the air service must rely | fysing to sell any such unservicable | 000 Since the late war. we are now or | ly, certainly. Implant the notion: “I he added. Number of crashes, 330; number of | 000,000". SDaleds; tha * sHrmking ar high ehool | Capital Traction Company. for the election of | heretofore been considered safe to|of the airship Roma, which erashad | Vised at the coming convention.” OF OFFICERS | Jv. Wi suggestion ©of a wrong, unna from - nation,” he declares, “can af- full of confidence; all is going well equipment in storage, the proposition of paralysis which are only due to upon as a potential war reserve to|eatit% 10, * {the downgrade. For the fiscal yea: | ticular organ, he or she would cer- can walk, I can move my arm (or Inadequacy of appropriations for | racalities. 69: numbce. terermic jor | balance is offset by an increase in a1- | aboard of dircctars for fhe ensuing vear and iy, Gen.. Patrick declares. Recent | panie s 1.7 1002, “aich erashe and_directo) Eastern Building and | pojis will be open from 11 o'clock a.m. until Character. Those who - suffer = 4t Negroes Whose Homes Were | ford to support 'in ‘time of peace an In a fit of anger, try the effect of to maintain a sufficient war reserve the patient's belief in his or her in- augment any supply of planes set|“In il the fiscal year 1921 the re. | €nding June 30, 1921, the figure i: | SPECIAL NOTICES, SPECIAL NOTICES. the " Teplacement "of war-produced | Joialties, €9; mumbce soverely in- | Ll ings we shail coon be £ onth | the_ransetion of much other bUAINEss o may irvess e staet: suowiihs alrptshen| LT o Lt et ‘Nor(olE Ve Tooan Amsoclation. will be held on Wednesday, | Bor'srepimy Paoch® 3. H d at the banking house, Wis- consin ave. and M st. n.w.. Washington, D, C., | on Tuesday, January 9, 1023, for the election of directors for the ensuning year and for the transaction of such other business ns may properly come before the meeting. Respect fully, H. L. SELBY. ¢ SEDD e e e e repairs on your Plumbing, 706 10th Heating, Lighting and Tinning BEAUTIFUL FLOORS F ted by MORRIS Dih st. now SSTONSITLE one other than myself, | h n. | BRING A LOAD OF FUR- | hington from Baitimore Phili k clty. SMITH'S TRAN Y. AVERY, 111 3 debts FRANK F. WANTED— iture to W delphia and FER AND STORAGE €O, 5 THE HOME BUILDING A A z anized 1853, pays 5% on your savings of $1.00 ‘month or more. Now is the time to start an | Treasurer’s ofl ‘made by = 0, and the' work will be done per- OLD FLOORS MADE of 507 Kresge bidg. n.w. announces that be- 5 sinning Monday, Jan. 5, 1923, he will be Jo. fated at 712 1ith st n.w.. where he will com- ne his business with the branch M. A. Teese Optical Compan . FLOORS REFINISHED & FOLISHED - BY ELECTRIC MAGHINE. R. E. NASH, NORTH 7908, 3 ROOF REPAIRS SLATE, TIx, A New Roof With a Brush feze Let me apply one coat of Liquid As Rooling Cement to any kind of roat. 1 pesset tee same. Also sold in bl Duckets, del SON CLAR| jehard F. Clanghton, treasurer. THE AN OF THE STOCK holders of the Lincoln National Bank for the election of directors, and such other business | 2% mav properly come before the meeting. will e held at the banking house Tuesday, January ‘between 12 m. and 1 p.m. Books for | fer of stock will be closed from De- 22, to January 10, 1923 RT TELY. Cashier. OTICH TO STOCKHOLDERS. al meeting of the stockholders of ngton Loan and Trust Company | ‘tlon of directors and for the pur- business as tockholders. Lot ot “fransacting such other of transacting such may Jawfully come before the TR eneral ‘meeting. will be held at the main oMice of the, said company, 9th and F streets pow. Washibgton, D. C., at 12 o'clock noon. on Tuesday, Jsnuary 9, 1923. “The polis will Jemain open to receive votes for such election between the hours of 12 o'clock noon and 2 ‘clock p.m. on that i ARRY = FHOEMBER 81, 1022 —AS PROVIDED BY By laws, the anmual meeting of the sha hiiders of the Continental Trust Company will De held at the offices of the company, 14th and | ¥ ats. B.w., Washington, D. C., on Tuesday, January 9.71923, at 1 &'clock for the Transaction of such business as may come be- fore the meeting. Polls will be opened from 1°to 2 o'clock. Ty order of the board. F retary. M. J. WINFREE, Secretary. LAy NOTICH _THW_ ANNUAL MEETING OF THE agton, D. C., for the election of direc: " Washington, D. C., for the electi e The Natio Capitd P tors for the ensuiiig year and for the trans o ¢ such other business as may be prop- s Al brought before the meeting will_be held 1210-1212 D at. We Make s Specialty of at the bank at 12 o'clock moon, on Tuesday, RELIABLE PRINTING Jan. 9, 1928. Polls will be open between the HIGH-GRADE—BUT NOT HIGH-PRICED hours of 12 noon and 2 o'clock p.m. VICTOR B. DEYBER, president. THE SERVICE SHOP, BYRON S. ADAMS, FEu NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE INTER, > 512 11th 8¢ annual meeting of the shareholders of the Right Where We “Shine” in D. C. epaired Coal is_too high to waste. Get the full amount of heat from your U3 DUt 1§ 1n pertect codition ' U7 baving R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. Heating Dept.. 1114 9th st. Ph. M. 2490-2491. FLOOR SCRAPING Floors scraped or cl d mate.” Call Frantiin 06w, O B PRot PRINTING ~—the kind —that gets | 'HE MILLION} DOLLAR the election of officers and directors and such } other business as may properly come before it “will be beld at the office of the treasurer, 2008 Peuna, & Tuesday, January 9, 1923, at & o'clack JAMES M. WOODWARD, Sec- etasy. Tiggs National Bank of Washington, D. C., for the election of directors and the transac- tlen of such other business as may come before ‘the meeting will be held at the banking house on Tuesday, January 9, 1923. The polls will remain open from 11 ‘oclock am. unthh 12| =0 ooq | Makiag Auto Tops s u spe- o'clock noon. R. V. FLEMING, Cashier, nerai ?ill for w):lth we're mu:;n‘t, THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE 8T00K-| AUTO |1 becoping more widely holders of the Home Bullding Association for sooid | e e S8 At g Repairing. | the R. McReynolds & Son Spectalists in Paintlng, Slip Covers and “ops, L2125 L st now. Main 7238, n. pm. cers are still without a clue as to the whereabouts of Hunter. Officers are inclined to believe that the burning of twelve houses, all that was left of the negro quarter of Rosewood, Sunday afternoon marks the end of the racial clashes, they assert. The negroes whose houses were fired still are taking refuge in nearby woods out of fear. The houses were burned by a number of white men while a crowd looked on. The burning Sunday afternoon came as a sequel to the previous destruc- tion of a_ large part of the negro section and the clashes between white men and negroes in which the fatalities occurred. Two white men were killed in the ccnflicts and five negroes fell victims, two of the negroes being shot to death in a rain of bullets on a dwell- ing in_ which the blacks barricaded themselves, and the other three being slain_at different times. Authorities have in custody several negroes in connection with the clashes. —— DEMAND “EQUAL RIGHTS.” Women Plan Nation-Wide Cam- paign for State Laws. Inauguration of a nation-wide cam- paign for ‘equal rights” for women was announced today by the National Woman’s Party. The movement is being supervised by leaders of the party, and soon will swing into mo- tion in forty-one states, it was said. Equal rights bills have heen drafted, it was added, for introduction at state legislative bodies this year. Eflorts will be centered around the following states: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Con- necticut, Delaware, Idaho, Iilinois, Indiana,’ Towa, Kansas, Maine, Mas- sachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis- sourl, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Caroiina, North Da- kota, Ohlo, Oklahoma, Oregon, Penn- sylvania, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming. LIFE PRISONERS ESCAPE. DOUGLAS, Ga., January 8.—Two convicts serving life terms on the Coffee county chaingang overpower- ed and disarmed a guard near the convict camp and made their escape. The convicts carried away the guard's pistol. John Theas, convicted in this county two years ago for the murder of a little girl, and Nina Broxton, convicted in Ware county two years ago in connection with the murder of two young boys, were the convicts, 5 rating. Considerable reconditioning has already been done, he said, and it is contemplated to remodel the last of the DH-4s into DH-4Bs, some 225 in number, from funds provided for the fiscal year 1923. Three Years of Waiting. Gen. Patrick points out that de- liveries of new airplanes ordered in the fiscal vear 1924 cannot be ex-; pected until about July 1, 1925. “Even if this war-produced equip- ment Is made structurally safe for continued use by greatly increased expenditures for maintenance and re- pair, Including extensive recondition- ing,” he continues, “the air service can hardly be expected to have on hand any considerable quantity at the end of three years. It is strongly recommended that a proper program for the production and purchase of new aircraft be carefully considered and funds provided from year to year.” Federal legislation for the adequate control of various national and inter- national matters connected with air navigation is strongly urged by Gen. Patrick in his report. Commercial agencies engaged in the manufacture of aircraft or other development of aeronautics, the gen- eral declares, ‘“hesitate 'to apply themselves whole-heartedly to con- structive programs, owing to the lagk of such legislation to guide their efforts; the promulgation of varying rules and regulations by the several states of the union, and the probabil- ity that federal législation will pre- sent still other requirements, make it difficult for such concerns to under- take progressive development.” [ Needed Rules and Regulations. The air service chief states that rules and regulations for . aerial traffic must embrace not alone those which make for safety in the air, but also those ~which provide uniform regulations for licensing pilots and aircraft, for the periodic inspection of aircraft and for safe landing fields. “They should include provisions for the adjustments of claims for injury or damages to persons or property resulting from the operation of air- craft, whether licensed or not, and should be so liberal in the provisions which cover the determination of resporisibility for accidents that aerial transportation companies or other agencies directly concerned will not hesitate to assume the lia- bilities which might be incurred by them in the commercial operation of aircraft.” “The confusion,’ he declared, “aris- ing from conflicting state laws with regard to motor vehicles and railroad transportation should serve as a ‘warning. The time for the enactment of uniform legislation is ripe, and it} is recommended that such action be taken without further delay.” Gen. Patrick also urges the devel- opment of airways throughout the United States, declaring that they employes. WILL CLEAR DAUGHERTY. House Committee Expected to Re- port Keller Charges Unsupported. The House judiciary committee at a meeting tomorrow plans to formu- | late a report to the House holding there were no grounds for the im- peachment charges filed by Repre- sentative Keller, republican, Minne- sota, against Attorney General Daugh- erty. The committee also is expected to adopt a report by a subcommittee de- claring Mr. Keller was not exempt from obeying its subpoena, directing him to appear after he had with- drawn from the case while the hear- ing was in progress. Members indicated, however, this report, if adopted by the full committee, would be presented to the House “without recommendation. Mr. Keller has been kept indoors by illness for the last two weeks, and his physician said_today he probably would leave Washington Wwithin the next ten days for Florida. BORAH INVITED TO EUROPE Senator Asked to Explain Constitu- tional Policies of U. S. Senator Borah of Idaho has re- ceived an invitation to visit European capitals and deliver a series of ad- dresses explaining to the Europeans the constitutional policies of the United States and the sentiment of American people. The invitation, it is understood, has come from edu- cational and civic organizations, primarily Norwegian. Senator Borah, beyond admitting that such an invitation has been re- ceived by him, declined today to dis- cuss the matter. It is understood his acceptance will be gocverned largely by the situation with regard to Congress. If no extra session is called after March 4, it is said he probably will make the trip. that Buy or Rent Dr. Coue’s Book THE RIGGS NATIONAL BANK Announces the Opening of the NEW BANKING ROOMS For Its 14th AND PARK ROAD OFFICE Today, January 8th And extends a cordial invitation to the public to inspect this office. Open continuously from 8:30 A. M. until 10:00 P. M. -