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e e———— ————— SUN'SAYS ARMIES HAVE RUINED CHINA Blames Militarism for Pres- ent Chaotic Condition of Country. By the Assoctated Press. CANTON, China, July 3.—Militar- fsm 1is strictly responsible for the chaotic condition of China, according to & manifesto issued here by Dr. Sun Yet-Sen. Dr. Sun sald: The Chinesc people have suffered long under the heavy burden of milttarism, which has brought civil Wuar, disunion and anarchy. The re- cent deplorable bandit outrage on the trunk rallways, though startling the outslde world, is, to long-suffer- ihg Chinese, only another incldent of dnnumerable similar happenings in N blaces littie known, and is another count in their indictment against their oppressors. “When it Is pointed out that within a radius of 100 miles of Lincheng adjoin territories of five provinces under military jurisdiction of the most powerful ‘militurists of the north, whose soldiery number, offici- ally, 500,000, it will be realized to Wwhat extent the evil and futility of militarism is. Events in Peking. “Events transpiring in Peking dur- .ing the past twelve months, during which time a so-called president has been pushed Into office and dragged out of it, and a bewlldering number of premiers and cabinets nave been set up and pulled down, solely at the pleasure of the militarists order that they might gain thelr own ambi- tions, make one realize ths extent of unruliness and fickleness of militar- The Chinese people have voices and time and time again have rep diated the claim that such men could be their rulers. They have lenged for blessings, peace and unity In the 1ha. Proposed Conference. “The urgent needs of China are the disbandment of superfluous soldiery and the establishment of a united and efficient government.” Last vear, Sun said, he suggested a disarmament conference, but the militarists disliked it, and, instead, sentexpeditions and subsidized traitors to make war on three provinces, de- fying the entire Chinese people. “They were enabled to do that through possession of the historio seat of central government, which gdve them recognition of the foreign powers,” he said, “but the Peking Eovernment is nof, in fact or in law, a government, and does not perform the primary functions or fulfill the elementary obligations of a govern- ment. It is not recognized by the Chincse people as a government. « “The forelgn powers must all along have realized the farce their recogni- tion has been, and were prompted to 4o o by the notion that they must have some entity, though it be a non- eatity, with which to deal. However, by their action they have given Peking prestige and finuncial support | ape of revenues under foreign | control. so the Peking government bhas been enabled to exist by virtue of this foreign recognition, and by that y. perhaps. they have thus done something which th professed they would not do; that is. intervencd in China's internal affairs by practically imposing on the coun- try a government repudiated by it. They have. by supporting a govern- ment which cannot exist for a single day without such support, hindered China in establishing an effective and stable government, which the Wash- ington conference agreed to provide the fullest and most unembarrassed opportunity to China to develop and | maintaia for herself.” KODAK PLANNING *BIG DISBURSEMENTS | | | July 3.—The| By the Associated Press. ROCHESTER, ¥, Eastman Kodak Company will give approximately $700,000 to its em- _ployes under the wage division plan. Fifteen thousand employes in all parts of the world will benefit. Divi- dends amounting to $4.500,000 in! stock holdings also will be dis- iributed at the same time. In addition to these two items $200,000 will be paid in dividends to| mployes on 10,000 shares of stock, | which George Eastman, treasurer, set aside for employes who had been with the concern two years or more. Dividends distributed today are the| ar quarterly payments of $1.25 share of common, plus a 75 cents extra dividend. The prelerredj holdings will pay 1% per cent. ! The wage awards are 13 per cent| ©of the five vears' pay of each per- | son in the employe of the company for that period. ! BANKRUPT WALL STREET PARTNER IS INDICTED Police of Three Continents Asked to Arrest Hugo S. Joseph. H i ! i { By the Associated Press. GNEW YORK. July 3.—Hugo S. Josenh, a member of the Wall street importing and exporting firm of Childs '& Joseph. which failed for | $1,000.000 iIn January, 1922, was in- dicted April 14 by 'a county grand jury for forgery and ! making a false financial statement. it was learned Joseph now is in Kurope, it was said. The indictment followed a vear's investigation into the affairs of the firm, which had branches through- out the world. Josenh was accused of having prepared for banks a financial statement of the firm as of December 31, 1921, showinz Hflbllltiesl 1o be only $4,500.000, when, it was alleged, the labilities were double that sum. Harris R. Childs, senior member of the firm, died a few months after the failure. Joseph was accused by the district attorney of having withdrawn $650.- 000 and Childs a similar sum during ghteen months preceding the He also was accused of ng withdrawn $1,469.959 from the hile his ori; invest- ment was $125,000. The district attorney, it was said, had requested police in Europe, Asia . and Africa to trace Joseph and ar- rest him. DENIED PASSPORTS. Italian Socialists Refused Permis- sion to Confer in London. LONDON, July 3.—The Italian goy- etnment, says the Morning Post's | Nome correspondent, has refused passports to the soclalist deputies, Matteotti and Garibotti, who were chosen as representatives of their party’'s parliamentary group to a conference in London to discuss the Ruhr situation. The refusal was be- cause of the Italian government’s in- tention to terminate the anti-fascist! campaign organized by soclalists abroad, the dispatch adds. MEET IN CINCINNATI 1o, MILWAUKEE, Wi July 3.—The United States Junior Chamber of Com- merce will hold its convention in Cin- nati next year, according to Harry B. Mortimer of Milwaukee, who was elected president of the organization &t the annual convention here. THE EVENING- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1923. How to Torture Your Wife. I CHARLIE, \WE NEED SOME MEW Rott S FOR OUR PiArMOD. | WANT To PIN'S MAZURKA iy B, FLAT facn:ocf‘{‘?oms 2%, NO, ¥, ITS A LOVELY THING: . YOU KNOW THE MAZURKA 15 THE WOMAN'S DANCE - “THE FEMININE COMPLEMENT To THE MASCULIME POLONAISE, T AVOrI1C , THOUGH A |.¢>sc‘-\sn.L ‘DANICE OF THE PROVINCE OF MAZOVIA THE FIGURAMTIOM 1S TROPICAL AND WHENTHE MATOR IS REACHED Arip THOSE GLAMCtMG THIRTY, SECOMOS So CoYLy ASSAIL US WE REALIZE THE SEOUCTIVE CHARM oF CHOPIN, “THE REPRISE IS STitL MORE FESTOONED AND IT 1S ALMOST A RELIEF WHEN THE LITTLE, TEMOER UN1SOM BEGIMS WITH ITS PoSITIVE CHORD ASSERTIONS CLosiMG THE PERIOD By WEBSTER. “TH1S 1S WHAT THE CATALOGUE SAYS — HERE 15 A GEM, A BEAUTIFULLY AND EXQUISITELY COLORED POEM, 1T SENDS OUT PREHENSILE FILAMENTS THAT ENTUWIME ANO DRAW US INTo THE CENTER OF A WONMDROLS MELODY, LADEN WITH RICH OOoRS, ODOR S THAT ALMOST INTOXICATE — “THEN FoLLowS A FASCINATING, CADENCED STEP, WITH LIGHTS AND SHADE S, SWEET MELANCHOLY DRNING BEFRORE 1T JOY ArD BEING ROUTED ITSELF, UNTILTHE ANNUNCIATION OF THE FIRST THEME AMO THE DYING AWAY OF THE DAMCE, DANCERS AMD THE SOL1D GLOBE ITSELF,AS I\F EARTH HADJ COMMITTED SUICIDE FORTHE LOSS OF THE Sum™ be Martin’' Says: / BRYAN SAYS WETS | * HAVE UNMASKED Sees “Lawlessness” Invited by Gov. Smith’s Approval of Dry Repeal. ! | | By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, 1Ind., July 3.—Breaking his sllence on the action of Gov: Smith and the New York assembly In remov- Ing the New York state prohibition en- forcement code, Willlam J. Bryan de- clared here last night that the wet forces have thrown off the mask and are for unbrid'ed and open lawlessness without restraint of any sort Mr. Bryan sald he belleved the ulti- mate effect of this flat repudiation of the law will be to the advan@age of the dry_cause. “The wets have abandoned thelr hypo- critical assertions that ftney are not against reasonable prohibtion,” he said. “They make no further pretense in New York of limiting the sak of intoxicants | { Mrs. Lafe Bud's maid has| only been with her three years| |tory conclusion to the conversations between Russia and Japan, believing TOKIO PRESS EAGER | Bl a8 S FOR RUSSIAN PEACE;MUM ialis potalhid a Bl entone among Japan. Russia and Germany. or an economic understanding amens [ those powers {are pessimistic The Japanese papers generally regarding | the diplomatic conversations hetween | Russia and Japan which are intended |as a preface to a formal con.erence to discuss a resumption of relations | The view is expressed that Japan's Iinsistance that Russia assume re- sponsibility for the Nikolaievsk which Japanese will break up the parl Joffe and Toshihiko Ka- 3 Japan's spokesman, are shelving the questions on which an understanding is difficult, to take up *hose more conductive to agreement In the hope that time will make con- cessions possible, German Envoy's Interest in Parley Arouses Some Com- ment. By the Associated Press. TOKIO, July 3.—Interviews svhich | the German ambagsador is having | with Beran Goto, ex-mayor of Tokio, | and A. A. Joffe, soviet envoy to the | far east, are causing comment In the | vernacular press. Baron Goto Is an advocate of a Russo-Japanese ac- cord. The Kokumin Shimbun itself seeking to procure a | —_—— In cold storage plants the cold pro- ares | duced by means of ammonia is equal | 10 50,000 tons of ice consumed daily dec] to l’}%‘m wines and beer “The wets have used their control of the New York legislatire to bring about something far e fhan the saloon of bt he declared. *They stand for the unlimied traffic in liquors without any legal Imitations whatever Tihe sale not abne to men, but to women and minos, with e 1 lacl limitations.” iRl ir. Bryan soke at the Fricnds an’ already she knows enough | not t’ fill th’ water glasses too | full. ! No wonder th’ feller thatj starts th’ day with a smile is an| optimist. (Copgright National Newspaper Service ) DOE sN*T T Soump PER-FECTLY ADORABLE,CHARLIE? 'Lt GO Downrt AMD GET (T THE FIRST THIMG 14 THE MORMING W. A. Du Puy Sees Wars at End First Time in 5,000 Years‘ “At no point in the world today is there war,” declared Willlam Atherton Du Puy, speaking before members of the Lions Club at their meeting in the New Willard Hotel yesterday. “This is the first time this statement could {have been truthfully made for five | ister, and no public uprising will fol- thousand years. Never before since civilization dawned has there been a time when it could be #aid that there was no war. It is the most stu- pendous fact that has presented it- self in modern times. Mr. Du Puy, a journalist. who has devoted himself largely to a study of government, has for the past and a half been in Europe studying the situation there during a time which he pronounces most dramatic. He recently returned to the United States. Deciaration Raises Doubt, He Sayn. “When one says that there is no war,” Mr. Du Puy continued, “the first reaction to the statement is one of doubt. People do not readily get the idea that war, for the time at least, has actually passed. They stop to argue that there is war in the LYNCHINGS FALL OFF HALF IN SIX MONTHS, 1923 Fifteen Put to Death, as Against Thirty in Same Period of 1922 and Thirty-Six in 1921. By the Associated Press. year | VEAH.. SAY,FURMA , How BouT HAVIF LIVER A’ BACON FOR DINMER T MIGHT T "M GETTIN KINDA SICK OF ROAST BEEF At ROAST LAMG, BE A NICE CHANGE DON TCHA THIM ? I SAARE RULE BEFORF COUNCIL .OF JEAGUE Will Inquire Whether /rench Ad- ministration Comples With Treaty. | Ruhr, but upon analysis decide that | there is not. They turn to Russia to | find that, actually, there is not even local insurrection in existence. China | By the Associated Press. can muster nothing more disturbing | BY the A% / y |than a_bandit rald now and thenm, | GENEVA, July 3.+The council of | while Bulgaria can overthrow her |the league of natiof began its ses- | government, can murder a prime min- | yione here today wih & private meet- | ing. at which therewas a lengthy de- low. | : | Centilisus e Nestsikbe: | bate over the Brish demand for an | | inquiry into the destion whether the : “Two years ago there were twenty | = wars in existence. At that time the administration ofthe Saare basin con- | favorite entertainment of internation- | forme with thetreaty of Versaille: alists was for those who were op- | O™ il bsoni posed to the league of nations to bait | The Issue was s H |those who were in favor of it with |should be discssed publicly, as Lord | | the fact that twenty wars were going | “ecil emanded b on° “Back of that vne runs on through | Heeet Bricalr or in carmora e ol history Indefinitely and never finds & | Lpje] HanotaX of France advocated. time when there was no war." No decisionon the point had been \ Mr. Du Puy said he had attempted | ;eached up » this afternoon to determine what it was that had |’ The agene, In addition to the Saare |1ed to this universal peace which ex- | question. Acludes Austrian recon. | isted at least for the time. He said | stryction, Ae Canadian amendment to | |that, current report to the contrary | article X' the covenant, the report | notwithstanding, he had found the |of the o/um commission and the - ‘peunle! of Europe intense in their de- | giatys ofthe free city of Danzig. | war again. termination that they would not go to | ey peace, | STRL $15,000 LIQUOR. The feeling is all for| George Lewis presided. Bands Lock Four in Closet and | |COLLEGE PUPILS SUFFER j Loot House. ! CURVATURE OF SPINE! cicaco. July 3—six liquor ban- | ditfnvaded the home of H. T. Hol- | 1ipthead. a prominent business man, ' ENEE E Mt SEORGE W | e e Says Doctor, Who Blames Faulty | t{ and two servants in a closet and bed the house of liquor valued, Seats in Classrooms. NEW YORK. 3—Fifty | i | | i ' ording to the police, at §1 July per Church. A professor was teaching a phy ology class on the circulation of the blood. “Why is it,” he aske hat | when I stand on my head all my blood | rushes there, but when I stand on my . feet it doesn’t all go to my feet?”| coal mines and other,Just one little boy raised his hand. | i “Because they ain’t empty, sir.” i —_— Lady Rhonla has been called the greatest bushess woman in England as propertief she inlerited from her father mad* her director of several large compnies and owner and man- ager of \ast enterprise. More Wear Cut of Your Summer Clothing Get more service out of your summer garments. Keeping clothes clean, styl- ishly pressed, dyeing them in new and beautiful colors” are among the many features of our modern service. . Closed All Day Tomorrow July 4th Call Main 4724 CLEANERS & DYERS 72 3lh Street N.W. A FAIR PROPOSITION Use one bottle of Radium Hay Fever Solution according to directions, and if Hay Fever is not relieved, return the bottle and money will be refunded Price, $2.00 Radium Products Corporation 1105 Connecticut Ave. N.W. Main 6797 O’Donnell’s Drug Stores—Peoples Drug Stores e You'llBeGlad If You Inspect These Homes Tomorrow Tl!e last word in home-plan and building con- struction has been put into them. They are Kite quality, from foundation to roof. Mass. Ave. & 16th St.S.E. Sample Home is 1526 Mass. Ave. S.E. . We want you to go through it carefully—exam- ine every detail critically, and note the many extraor- dinary features you will find. The splendid arrangement of the rooms, their ex- cellent size, attractive finish, the superior woodwork tl?roughout—arfd the white sanitary tile-like finish of kitchen, as easily cleaned as the bathroom. Six rooms, with front veranda; convenient back porch, and upstairs a big sleeping porch. Hot-water heating system; separate hot-water heater; large closets; gas and electric installation. Note the prices— On Mass. Ave. . . . $8250 On 16th Street . . . $7.950 Convenient Terms Will Be Arranged Open for inspection every day and evening Built, Owned and For Sale by Harry A. Kite Incorporated 1514 K = Phone Street Main 4846 MOBILE, Ala., July 3.—In the first six cent of freshmen girls 4 [the nation’s colleges have curvature months of 1923, ending June 3o, there |Uie JAHIGTS colleres Mave Cucvatyre were fifteen lynchings in the United|Evelyn R. Bush of Louisville, h rdi to records compiled by | said yesterday, at the annual conv Ky i Member Washington Real Estate Board dustrial Institute. This is fifteen less | Sation. than the number, 30, for the first six months of 1922, and 21 less than the number, 36, for the first six months of 19: or Man quaint ways. “Vinegar Bible,” name by printing hose lynched two were whites and thirteen were negroes. One of the latter was a woman. One of those put to death was charged with the crime of rape. The other offenses charged were murder, two: killing_officer of the law, two: wounding officer of the law, two; no charge reported. two: assisting man charged with rape to escape, one: try- ing to pass for white, one; resisting posse searching for man charged with rape, one; participating in depredations connected with railroad strike, one; cat. tle stealing, one; trying to act like white man and not Knowinz his place, one. | The states in which lynching occurred and the number in each state are as follows: Arkansas, one; Florida, seve! Georgla, two: Louisiana, one: Missis- sippi, two; Missouri, one; Texas, one. DENIES $1,500,000 AWARD GIVEN FOR KEPT SECRET Mrs. Trenkman Legally Entitled to Fortune, Asserts Lawyer. By the Associated Pres | NEW YORK. July 3.—Denial that Mrs. Beatrice Nugent Trenkman, who esterday was awarded $1.500,000 of the estate of her grandmother, Mrs. Roxy M. Smith, received the money because she had kept secret the mar- riage of her uncle, Willlam E. Smith, to Miss Claire Staley. an opera singer, was made by L. T. Flatte, Mr. Smith's attorney. H Mrs. Trenkman in bringing action | to gain half the $3,000,000 estate left by her grandmother was reported to have asserted that her uncle promised to divide the fortune with her if she kept silent about his marriage. Mr. Flatte said that Mrs. Trenkman was entitled to one-half the estate of her grandfather, Willlam Van Rensselaer Smith and the action of her grand- mother in attempting to void the will by leaving the bulk to Mrs. Trenk- man's uncle was illegal. He said that Mrs. Smith was awar. of the marriage of her son to Mis; Staley and the story of attempting p tl wedding a secret from hi was a “myth. BRITISH AUTHOR DIES, LONDON, July Marshmont, the novelist, died home, in Bath, last night. 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Bismuth Citrate, and other in- gredients widely known for their medicinal value in the treatment of stomach disorders. Read what this indigestion sufferer have been “I tried every dyspepsia med cine on the market and had b comedismusted When ma aro gist recommended my trying O'Brien’s for Dyspepsia “I am now on my second hottle and all the Gas and bloatedness after eating has left me, I thor- oughly enjoy my meals now. as I have no distress after eating. “I certainly recommend O'Brien’s most highly to any one suffering with stomach trouble, and would be only too glad to have them call on me in person.” Mr. W. J. Stenens, 306 N St. N.W. Mr. Stenens' unusually stub- was quickly relieved y O'Brien’s. In fact, this time- tested remedy is so effective in treatment of Dyspepsia and similar troubles that we guaran- tee positive relief. 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A Robey, 200 Upxhur St. N.W.: Associated Drug Stores, Inc.. 7th and G Stx. N.W and O Sts. N.W.; Bayard Van Sant, 9th and P Sts. N.W.; SOUTHEAST: O'Donnell’s Pharmacy, 3rd and Penna. Ave, S.E.; Weller & Moskey. Rth and I Stx. S.E.: ALEXANDRIA: Gibson Drus Stere, King and Alfred Stx., Alexandrin, Va. i !