Evening Star Newspaper, June 22, 1923, Page 16

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,/THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, FRIDAY, JUNE —By WEBSTER. | NAMED LATVIAN CONSUL. | SEAMAN BLAMED FOR FIRE| DEMANDS HIS PRESENCE. Music. NEGRO EXODUS HELD y NATURAL PROCESS By the Assoclated Press. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 23.—The present migration of negroes from the south is a matural process which will result in good, James Hardy Dil- lard of Charlottesville, Va. said in an address at the Harvard alumni exercises. T We KNOW ¢ —rNA'\' e C ES. KlRiYo'sx_(; REMOVE THE UICTIr To A SHADY SPOT AuD PLACE i On Fis BACK , KEEP THE CROW! 60 THAT HE MAY HAVE PLENTY OF A1R., LOOSEN HIS ClLoTHinG VICTIon S OF SUNSTROKE HEAT PROSTRATION 7,831 DIED FROM IMPROPER howing. able growth in holding property, in undertaking business projects and in | supplying from their own ranks the v better understanding between the races in a new relation is as fast as it could well be in order to steady | progress without harmful reaction. | 1 re and more convinced of one fact, that it Is not wise to be | continuaily pulling up the plant to| | see how It is growing.” | He said that in all material ways | the south is making a wonderful ad- | vance and remarked: | m not right in saying that| these southern cotton mills have al- | ready overtaken the mills of New | Engiand in the amount of cotton | consumed?” The outstanding problem in edu tion in the south, aid, was how to improve the quality of the high schools, which were. multiplying | [/ INCORPORATED z:ldrcu Cflmmunic."ah'ona to President, 2325 18th St. N. W. - Phone Col. 9855 DAILY GROCERY SAVINGS--- at the D.G.S. Store in your neighborhood--| See Page 69 of the city Phone Book for complete list GOLD BAND BUTTER | GOLD BAG COFFEE Uniformly Good 28(; Pound 29; Pleases Most Discriminating Tastes 48¢c Pound e LOFFLER’S Fountain Brand Hams KINGAN’S BACON VIENNA BREAD ;i35 g scincider Baking Co. CI%RES(_)TA FLOUR D.-G. S. WHITE of the World” F LOA TING SOAP 51b:. 27c§ 21bs. 57¢ 3 bars 14c 10 Ibs. SUGAR . ...... 98¢ ORIENTA COFFEE 1b. can 39c Campbell’s TOMATO SOUP Can 10c¢ FA-MUS GELFAND’S CAKES Bresp sl " MAYONNAISE “The Housewife’ M. Holzbeierlein S e —— Competitor” 25¢ 12c Jar 25c¢ Jar TING TONG TEA Sauc’t’rg'ek and Because Products They're The Standard by Which Quality is Measured 11b. Carton 37 4 ib Can 23c KELLOGG’S CORN FLAKES pks. 7c PALMOLIVE SOAP 3 bars 20(.‘. BEAUFONT GINGER ALE 250 25¢ DISTRICT GROCERY SOCIETY STORES . i I Edgar Schwede Coming to U. S, From Post in Berlin, BERLIN, June 22.—Edgar Schwede, the Latvian consul general in Berlin since 1920, has been appointed charge daffaires and consul eneral to .the United States. He is expected.to as- sume his new post some time in July. is_Seya. acting minister for uis via in Washington, who recently |‘ed has been charge d'affaires at Kevno, has been named as minister to Lithu- *1t is simply a matter of fig ures. - We have the figures. Our survey of Digest readers shows that 73 per cent have reached By the Assoclated Press. TOULON, France, June 22.—All the officers and men of the French trans- port Vinh-Long, on trial in connection with the butn!ag of the tsnsport in the Sea of Marmora last December, were acquitted with the exception of Seaman Adolph Bert, ert | imprisonment for having left, a light- cigarette among a4 which ignited and started the fire which destroyed the vessel and caused the loss of fifteen lives. 29, -1923. Wite' of Banker Challenges Him to Trial for Separation. 2.—A lenging her husband, Beverly .Harris, former vice president of the Nationai | Clty Bank and nowin St. Louis, Mo., was sentenced to six months' cinema films, o1 ow and her attorney an- nounced he would ask that it either be set d%wn for immediate trial or be dis- se m - | jury,” Henry L. Stimson, former se. 'h ence of the here. . 'his st ‘act emerges from th report of the committee on navy esti- and in the future | mates, which recommends cutting pay zing and reduc | ing the administrative departments. D ————— e NEED OF LEADERSHIP. ATLANTIC CITY. N. J., June 21.— “:hu‘w is ':m m;,ara‘erllrecnve xWay of showing that the industry is right than by your willingness to submit But Cost Nearly Double, labor controversies to an impartial | py e Asmociated Press. MORE PAY WITH LESS MEN - rsonnel of the British - |been reduced from 151.000 t mission, told delegates to the confer- | since 1913, the aggregate pay ha: Mr. Stimson emphasized “the abso- lute necessity now of constructive leadership” to meet all around and organ: he problems of the coal industry. = | £ {l Imagine all our American towns and cities as hills rising from a level plain—hills of endeavor. The inhabitants living on the sides of these hills, their altitude depending on their worth-whileness in the community; the poor and shiftless and in- dolent clustering around the base and struggling a little way up the sides—the more able they are, the higher they get up the hillsides. At the bottom are the people who never- read a newspaper, or anything else. As you go up the hill, you begin to reach news- paper readers, and as you go higher the people get better and read better newspapers, and read more intelligently. And as you approach the top you reach the cople who are the leaders in thought and action in that community—the heads of its businesses and the leaders of its professions. They read the newspapers, but they demand something more than newspapers. They demand The Digest. You can go as high as you like after that, you will not get above The Digest. So all the upper section of any community are newspaper readers. And the upper section of the newspaper readers are Digest readers. On the upper reaches of these hill-towns are the men and women who have got somewhere, whose positions are so high, whose contacts are so many that they are multiple customers, buying goods or influencing buying in many capacities for theis homes, for their offices and for their factories.* The upper half of the hill-towns of America is composed of Digest readers. As they think, act, and buy, so goes the community. British Navy Personnel Reduced, LONDON, June 22.—Although the navy has, National Coal Associa- |creased from £8,800.000 to £14,000,000.

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