Evening Star Newspaper, October 8, 1923, Page 3

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\ POLISH ARMY.HEAD GREETS PRESIDENT Gen, Haler, World War Hero, . in Capital.as Guest of American Legion. Gen. Josef Haller, Polish army leader, in this country as the guest of the American Legion, whose con- Vention fn San Francis¢o he will at- tend, was received by President Cool- 1dge at the White House executive- office today. Gen. Haller was accompanied to the ‘White House by the Polish minister, Col. V. R. C. King, representing -the American Legion, who will he with the general throughout his visit In this country; Col. A. L. Briggs, U. S. A., detailed by the War Department | as an honorary aide during the Pollsh lehder's stay in Washington, and three Young Polish military officers, his Dersonal aldes. Gen. Haller extended to President Coolidge the good wishes of the pec- Dle of Poland and assured him of his country's warm friendship. During a Prief conversation Gen. Halier snd his countrymen with him were deeply mpressed with the President's inter- €st in their country’s welfare. Irom the White House Gen. Haller 2id his party motored to Arlington Natlonal cemetery, and there he per- nally lald & large wreath upon the tomb of the unkumown soldier, Tho was made of “wrzos,” weculiar to Poland. saoms Idol of Polisk Army. Gen. Haller Is the idol of the Polish army and of a large element of the Polich people. In the early part of the world war he directed the recruit- ing of the Polish soldiers in England, and afterward was in command in France of the Polish volunteers from England and America. He led the Polish armies on the northern front when the 1920 inv. slons of Russia were repulsed. Du ng a considerable vart of the world war Gen. Haller was with the “Iron Brigade” of Poles who fought the Germans after the treaty of Brest- Litovsk. Gen. Haller was the guest of honor at a lunchieon at the Polich legation ¥ Elgx-dny. Among those in the gen- eral's party are Capt. Josef Sierocin- ski and Lleut. John Roskosz, both members of his staff; Col. Van Rensa- laer King of the American Legion, Lieut. S. H. Reany, secretary of the distinguished committce of the Amer- ican Leglo: Lieut. Roman Hanasz, ropresentative of the Polish Arm: Veterans' Association of America, and Dr. Teofil Starzynskl. SEES RACE STRIFE OVER. Governor Orders Troops Removed From Spruce Pine, N. C. By the Associated Press, RALEIGH, N. C., October S.—Gov. Cameron Morrison yesterday ordered that all troops at Spruce Pine, N. C., be withdrawn, it weing his opinion that the race trouble, which has ex isted there for the past ten ys, and which resulted in the driving away of nearly 200 negroes, is ended and that normal conditions practically have been restored. _ SPECIAL NOTICES. o410 Took new' We do that. Address ;. THEATER proper Call OWNER Columbia_158. WANTED TO BRING A VAN LOAD OF FUR- niture from New York, Philadelphia and Wil- miugton, Del, to Washington. SMITH'S TRA it AND RTORAGE CO. NG OWNERS. SPECIFICATIONS ‘yrepared for painting and repair work of all descriptions, made to insure uniform estimates and the use of long-life materials. Address valuation expert. Address 80-P, Star office. 2 [ Louts Stein and Harry Zimmer Carrying on a business as, talloring, cleaning and pressing_extablishment at 1719 20th st. 7w, have dissolved partuersiip and from now on will be conducted by Harry Zimmer alone. igned (Harrs Zimmer.) * FERSONS CTED WITH _ GOTT (either form) may now receive knifele treatuents of exceptional merit, yleld, Apply Ruom 1, Rover bid o. 1 sts. ' Main 7743. g T IN FIRST-CLASS ORDER; gopd, il; hedge and all kinds shrubbery. ‘F. 6 10th n.e. Line. 9640. A. Herrell & Sons, n. TIKE NEW; ood MADE TO LOOK Drop us a card. Elw Ixt n.w. 12 WILL THERE DE A HYDRO-LIGHTER FOR ihe ‘gas water heater fu the new home you buy? Tt not, why not? See demonstration 1405 N. Y. ave > 55 GRAND AND UPRIGHT PIANOS FOR RENT AL reasonable prices. ltented Instruments kept nd repaired free of charge. Planos , shipped and gioved. Sale agent for Hents F. Miller, Emerson and Bradbury . plans HUGO WORCH, 1110 G St. t. 1870, A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY, WE HAVE IT, You need it. Our perfected silver polish, used and sold by us for 35 years. Call Main 91 ety silver polish. Your name $oilt ‘b detfvered promptiv’e. o a. Fall size jer. R. HARRIS & CO., D nw. ROOF PAINTING! In this one ficld we're autlorities, Our' leadership is never questioned. 1f Jou want a solid, durble job by work- men_who know their trade—call us up. KOONS 100FING 1422 ¥ 3t. N.W. o 6. Tt Price, 35c. a_adds a." Price, cor 7th and COMPANY _Phove Main 988: There'’s Little Excuse —for driving a car whose looks are a reproach—not when we Repaint Autos so. reasonably. R. McReynolds & Son o in Palnting, Slip Cor Daags T o W o ST e HENRY B. BLESS, %%~ ? Jeweler Now located at 911 G st. n.w., 2nd floor. ‘Watch, clock and jewelry repairing. 13% Floors Renovated floors made néw and i DO siR, Brvortin agef ) Dolished. REMEMBER US —when you are ready to have Jour roof re- jaired. That is our business, and our servics n sure to satisfy you. Phone Main 14, IRONCLAD &xte 11210 0 o J. C. Ruzanski & Co. Fofmerly located at 611 0th st B mow . n.w. eh v and “Detter - tacilities; prompt Dert cabinet makers, repairers and ‘Specializing- on antique furaiure. on canl rvice. Ex| Tebulshers. PRINTING That Is FINE —both {n conception and execution. High grade, but ot high priced. BYRON S. ADAMS, ZRyTsR. Printing Such as Ours— —bears every mark of superiority. The Million-Dellar Plant, 1810.1818 D Bt. —Now s the time to have your The National Cagi"'al Press the roofing ex) Yotz “Toof "ana. sabi IStole Passage | So Child Could BeBornin U.S. By the Assoclated Press. BOSTON, October 8.—Mrs. Otto Linstad of Liverpool, England, a bride of six months, who stowed away on the boat of which her husband was a third mate, w: de- tained by the immigration officials here on the arrival of the steamer ‘West Cohas. - The woman _told Capt. Soberg of the West Cohas that she wanted her child to be born in the United States and could see no other way of getting here. She said she bribed a guard at the Liverpool dock and hid her- #elf in a small comfartment in her husband’'s quarters, where she re- malned for forty-elght hours with- out food or water. Mrs, Linstad is a native of Scotland. KNEELING PREST SLANBY WONAN Wife of Predecessor Kills Ukranian Clergyman as He | Hears “Confession.” 1 ! By tlie Associated Press, CHICAGO, October 8.—Mrs, Emma Strutynsky, kneeling in the sacristy of the little Greek Orthodox Church of St. Michael the Archangel, her {head bowed as if in prayer, shot and killed the Rev. Basil Stetsuk as he knelt before her to receive, by a spe- cial concession, a Sunday confession that she said she wanted to make be- cause she was very ill and was going to a Hempital. Her seream, “Cheat,” and the explo- sion and tiny spurt of flame of a pis- tol shot struck terror to the hearts of the parishioners who sat revently in the pews. The first bullet struck the priest full in the mouth just as he knelt and said: “My daughter, what is it?" Two women seized Mrs. Strutynsky as she followed the reeling priest from the vestry and fired four more shots at him, two into the back ape two which merely passed through his gown. She was saved by police from an angry crowd which quickly gath- ered. Half a dozen excuses dropped from her nervous lip$ as she sought to She would declare ‘ather Stetsuk was squander- ing church funds; mutter an expres sion in her natiye Ukrank of how her brother had #ain a Galician gov- ernor who had_oppressed her people and dwindle off into whispered chat- tering of a code of personal venge- ance. Planned Killing for Weekns, “My husband was sent away from this church,” Mrs. Strutynsky told the police. “My husband bullt the great church of St. Nicholas. He gave his life to it And then he was dis- missed. The wonderful church of St. Nicholas was turned over to Father Stetsuk. He was wasting the money of the parish. .Father Stetsuk cheat- ed my people. He was a cheat and a hypocrite. I had to kill him.” The police and representatives of the state’s attorney’s office sald they believe Mrs. Strutyn is mentally deranged. She said she set out five weeks ago to kill the priest, stopped at Pitts- burgh, Pa. and sent her daughter to Ramey to “be with my husband when he should hear of this.” The Rev, Strutynsky in Ramey last night told the police that he had no intimation of his wife's Intentlons. He telegraphed her he was coming here to aid her. Husband Under Indictment. The Rev. Strutynsky is under in- dictment charged with embezzlement of $50,000 or. more, which is sald to have gone into the building of the beautiful St. Nicholas Church here, the pastor of which also officlated at_St. Michael’s. Robert E. Crowe, state attorney, will declde whether to have Mrs. Strutyn- sky held for munler or committed as insane. Despite her reiteration that she alone was responsible, the police are searching for a man Who had been heard to say, “something is going to happen in this church.” Father Stetsuk was forty-four years old. He was secretary to Bishop Soter Ortynsky of Philadel- phia, head of the Ukrainian Church in America, when summoned to Chi- cago. He leaves a widow and two children. His parishioners declared was no baeis for Brs. Strutynsky’s allegations of financial discrepancies. HUSBAND IS SHOCKED. Enew Nothing of Wife’s Intentions ‘When She Left Her Home. By the Associated Press. DUBOIS, Pa., October §.—The Rev. Nicholas Strutynsky, pastor of the Lithuanian Greek Catholic Church at Ramey, a small mining village in Clearfield county, was stunned when informed that his wite, Mrs. Emily Strutynsky, had shot and kiiled the Rev, Basil Stetsuk at Chicago, and asked to be excused from making a statement. He declared, however, that he had no knowledge of his wife's intentions when she left about two weeks ago to visit some relatives in Rochester, N. Y. and added that he had not heard from her since. A daughter, Mrs. Mary Gambal of Pitts- burgh, arrived a short time after Mrs. Strutnsky left and was present when the priest was informed of the shooting. . ‘When informed that his wife had declared she shot Rev. Mr. Stetsunk over what she termed false accusa- tlons regarding misappropriation of funds, Rev. Mr. Strutynsky sald there had_been some difficulties over the funds of the Chicago church, but he denled .any responsibility. DEFEAT OF RADICALS ; SURE, SAYS BUTLER goh;ml;i. President Says They Will .-Certainly Fail in Pivotal States. there By the Associated Préss. NEW YORK, October $—A wild platform or a candidate cannot posstbly win the electoral votes of the pivotal states in the presidential election of 1924, Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University and promjneht in republican circles, declared in a statement yesterday. The pivotal tates are likely to include Massachu- sug, Connecticut, New York, New Jer- ;e)’. *Maryland, Illinois and Missouri, e sa President Butler sald the election of Senelor us . Johnson was mnot so much indicative of a change of asa sign that'the “uuv»nxm publican voters did not support his opponent. “The more the Minnesota figures are analyzed,” he said, “the clearer does it become that & republican can- te running on a purely republican o-© constractive . Hperalism plat will carry Minnesota in 19247 An inquest will be held today and ! THE EVENING SNAPSHOTS-—[%, Lipems wony, SAYS TD HAND THE LETTER, OVER -HE'LL TELL HER WHAT THE WORD IS SHE CANT MAKE OUT 1S TOLD THAT ISN'T THE WORD THAT BOTHERED HER . ANYONE COULD SEE “THAT ONE i5¢ TUES- DAY’ -1’5 THE ONE BELOW IT SHE CANT MAKE OUT TRIES SQUINTING THE WORD AT ARM'S LENGTH STAR, WAS STUDIES IT CAREFULLY WITh FREQUENT ‘HUM'S" AND ~ CLET'S SEE'S’ ARTER DEEP STUDY: A~ NOUNCES THAT IT LOOKS LIKE "BANANA? TO HiM AT SINKS INTO ABSORRED STUDY ANNCUNCING AT INTERVALS VAR- 10US POSSIBILITIES WHICH HE ADMITS WONT DO opyright, 1923, by The McClure Newspaper Symdicate. 1 GLUVE IYYILLIAMS -, Winter May Of Suffering Brin Uprising orkers in Ruhr U. S. Sociologist Says Occupation .las | Proved Only. Solution Lies in Gei- i Together of BY WHIT] WILLIAMS, Author of “What's On the Workers' Mind,” Ete. ARTICLE IV—=BAYONETS, BIG: BUSI- NESS OR BOMBS IN THE RUHR? GELSENKIRCHEN, Ruhr, Germany, | September 17.—“Now when a roof sounds llke this” (tap-tap with the top of his pick), so my miner buddy explained to me down in the mine a few days ago, “it's holding fast; it will not fall. But now see this here"— (tap-tap)—"ha! that sounds fine, but it may fall any instant. Now take my pick and get that coal down. but, um Gottes willen, watch sharp.” Believe me, it was unpleasant—but typieal. ulir street” is just like that. It may provide a sure, safe road to the peace which the politiclans have been discussing, or it may drop on these leaders, in spite of all the propping of either fair words or bayonets The last few days do make it look sistance is fading. Last Sundav I saw o huge crowd over at Bochum pressing in close upon some musicians glving a public concert. I was amaz- od to fing the band was not of Ger- man_citizéns, but French soldlers. “Quite the contrary,” @ French soldler replied when 1 asked if the Germans gave him and his comrades any trouble. “Love making?” he con- tinued; “well, the chief obstruction is, of course, the language.” Yesterday in a slightly frequented Cssen station 1 saw a pair ey young French Alpinists as. sailing with kisses a couple of local rvant girls. !s"am lé‘:st some of the matives here aren’t any more excited than that about holding out against the in- vaders, it's not strange if the gov- ernment in Berlin has begun’ to feel the back-breaking weight of sup- porting_the district's whole popula- | tion whether workjng or loafing. The ‘turden, of course, grows all the mora intolerable now that the mark has fallen into so infinite an abyss. ‘But even if the passive or active resistance of both thé district and the nation caves In, a very serious question still remains. It is this: Can the political leaders inside the | country and outside work out the de- talls of their get-together arrange- ments quickly enough? Winter Brings Menace. They must hurry, for if winter should come before those cellars can be filled which have been- to date kept empty by the French use of coal and potato. bullets in their cold-and- hunger warfare, then “Ruhr_street may be rocked with an explosion from which not only Germany but also Europe and America will suffer. That possibility is all the greater because of that complication 1 have earlier mentioned, namely, that re- volt here would be aimed not only against the district's military mas- ters, but also against its industrial and civil leaders. Of -course,’ there would be little logic or reason in such an outbreak of communism, and it would be a Jocal outbreak and not an “in-break’ from Russia. But these days of con- versation with normally reasonable and logical men give me ample evi- dence that communism does not come from the head, nor even from the heart. It comes mainly from the stomach. When a man is hungry when great groups of men are hun- gry, mainly because the machinery of the state-for fllling stomachs has broken down, then men’s stomach's simply tell heads and hearts to mind their own business till a bit of new machinery is put on the job. And ineither all the bayonets mor all the prayers in the world can stop them until that job is done. Can Germany and the allles so get together as to start the huge_and complicated engine of that Ruhr going aghin before snow flies? The answer ~to that question de- pends on a vast array of highly complicated matters -of, mainly, Ger- men, French, Belgian, British and Italian_economics, politics and 0l- ogy. But here are just.a few items which these weeks here make me think _important: Fru:’no a strictly military point Fr ‘occupatipn of the Rubr been, on the whole, well handled. Depredations_sand brutali- ties_there have been. But impartial s though the district's passive re- | room in the big and now dirty andl| Disputants. observers agree that the poilu has committed few, if any, more offenses |than would a body of average soldiers | trom other lands. Must Face Reparations. . The occupation has evidently {made a great many German industrial ! and political leaders, as well as many !aitizens and workers, believe that somehow or other thc payment of reparations must be faced more serl- ously than the fatherland has hereto- fore been willing to face it. . 3. But while the occupation has jbeen telling this to Germany it has jalso been telling something worth jwhile to France. It is this: that military success is fab from economic success. The economic or industrial occupation is, I believe, a good deal of a fallure aiid on the way to be- coming constantly more so. A few coke and other establish- ments are being put into shape and | operated by French experts in charge jof a few hundred Polish, Belgian lana other International strikebreak- lers. Local Germans cannot be em: ployed for fear of sabotage. The resultant tons of output are highly {expensive, even without figuring. in the cost of the army as an indis- pensable developmeat of this pro- | gram; German underofficials will not serve unless as partners and France cannot spare the required number of either executives or other skilled men. So_ France's plan of keeping the district going, either with the hand- ful of engineers she first contemplated or with the hundreds of thousands later found essential, is impracticable. Her hope is disappointed. This in- Qustrial or economic failure is thus preventing _the' enjoyment of the hoped-for full-flowering of military sucesses. What is to be prayed for is that this will make M. Poincare as reasonable as the British could hope. $.° Germany stands today more ready tpan ever before to get under the 36b of paying the price of defeat. She Paints, Oils, Glass and Brushes | Becker Paint & Glass Co. Cord Tires on Credit Pay As You Ride - A_SMALL_PAYMENT DOWN - "BALANCE ONE, TWO AND THREE MONTHS Guaranteed 8,000 Miles T. 0. PROBEY CO. Phone West 133 2100 Pa. Ave. NW. l AR I RIAIRIRIIT || DOCTORS RECOMMEND INDIGESTINE economy ‘l): operation prol ably establishes a new low level among the bet- AT LAST REPORTS BRIGHTLY THE WORD 15 ‘ TUESDAY® | PLAIN ENOUEH ADMITS THAT THE SENTENCE ‘LITTLE EFPIE EVERY DAY i LOOKS MORE BANANA' WOULD i NOT MAKE MUCH SENSE A i HINGTON, "D. —By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. 1 ! TEN MINUTES LATER HANDS LETTER BACK, RUBS SMOKE OUT OP EYES AND_SAYS IT DOESNT MAKE MUCH DIFFER- ENCE WHAT THE WORD 15, DOES M) , { has many of her tools ready, but bil- | lions of marks have been put into the | {new post-war factories, offices and ! {homes which are everywhere to be | seen. Germany now knows, too, that | Ber sword fs valuelers and that gerfu- | ine guarantees must be giver. But ] before she exercises either her new &ood will or her new tools she wants to know the size of the burden under | v-hich she is to place her shoulders. | As one of my coal miner friends puts | E | “We here will be delighted to help ! | the fatherland by putting our backs | into the job of placing our black diamonds into the palms of France, if | she will only tell s how much she iwants and when we shall be done. | Otherwise, the harder we work, the | {more France will demand and the | {longer we shall be at ft." | Germany’'s agreement with the al- | lles upon a proper amount and upon satisfactory . guarantees of that amounts delivery still remains un- | believeable difficult. There are a mul- titude of eplits which so depressingly complicate the situation: the split be- tween employer and tween' & tween Prussian and Bavaria and be- tween peaceful republican and the { war-breathing nationalist under the lead of Ludendorf and Hindenburg. Every day Stresemann steps upon the path of reasonableness. He may meet e ambush and the grave at exactly | he same spot where Erzherger, Rath- | enau and nearly a score of other reasonable and peace-desiring lead- ers have met their sudden doom at the hands of the war party's assas- since the armistice. Anothe obst cle_to_peace FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 ~ LEETH BROTHERS Service Charge mever Over $1.00 OUR troubles are more than_doubled when the house isalternately hot or cold. WINNEAPOUJ' of the Heating Plant” o o ey MUTUAL SERVICE NC. Distributors + 1411 New York A: Phone 3885 We'll locate your roof troubles instantly Fact-is, we've had such long and varied experience with roofs and roofing, that it’s well-nigh - impossible for any condition to arise that we will not be familiar with. Not only will we be able to place our finger on the trouble—and its cause—but we'll know how to remedy it— positively, and per- manently: Such knowledge makes - our service especially satisfactory —and decidedly eco- nomical. B Now’s the time to have us look over the. roof — and tighten' it up before winter weather sets in, | led brains ana verhaps not even Poin- . genuinely know' what France really wants. " Torn by t fear of the annihilatior. which might follow Germany’s return to economic Bealth, she seems to find herseif too unstrung to _ decide she would rather be neighbor to a strong Germany which pays or to an ag- grégation of states too ‘ruined and powerless to pay. I am a friend of France. By all means ‘she should have the money she 8o much deserves. Her fears are not 111 founded. They should be set at rest if it takes the Christendom to do_ it. But Christegdom is to be be worthy of the name, or if unhappy men and women in Germany and also in Eng- land’'s cities and America’s farms are to be made happler, then Christen- dom should do its best to help a proper-minded, word-keeping Ger- many ber of 'it. 12 6. The answer to it all is probably to be found to be union—a real co- operative unlon—of German and al- capital, coal and steel producers and buyers. In tnht case it {8 to be hoped that America, Britain and every other competitor in the world will be delighted to take his chance at a fair share of the business in such a reconstituted globe rather than continue longer in the present world-wide industrial and social doldrums. In conclusion, if I could take every fellow American by the buttonhole, I'd say something like this: “From all that T have seen over hiere, it's a cinch that bayonets can’ do the job of making Europe a de cent market for our farmers or our manufacturers and their workers. “And French big business can’t do to besa self-respecting mem- | German Workers Cross Swiss Line By the Associated Press. BERN, Switzerland, October 8. A rapid Increase In crop plun- dering by bands of workers and townsfolk 1s 'reported from Ger- many. Some of the gangs have even passed the Swiss frontler, helping themselves in potato fields near Basle until driven back by the police. Similar acts are reported from Silesia and - Saxony, where bands of 800 to 1,000 persons swarmed over the potato plantings. Some 600 of these plunderers were ar- rested at Jauer and trensferred to barracks. L | 1t, either alone or with the help of German-speaking slaves. Allied and | German big business, working to- gether as friendly partners, can come | closer to it than anything else. | " “But_they must hurry. If they | don’t, then the job will be attempted | with’the bombs of desperate hunger | rlotere. © | "“So it you want to help the situa- | tion, put your influence behind that | worid” opinion which would persuade | France, and make it proper and safe for France to calm her fears, make | her decision and name an amount her allies can find reasonable—or | eise leave the job to some one who | can, soon. | (Copyright, 1923, by North American News- | Daper Alliance,) ToRob Farmers| QUAKE IS RECORDED | HERE AND IN LONDON Sharp Tremors Believed to Be 5,000 Miles Distant—May Have Been in Pacific. LONDON, October 8.—A sharp earth- quake was registered by the West Bromwich selsmograph at 3:50 o'clock yesterday morning. The center of the disturbance is estimated to have been about five thousand miles distant in an unknown direction. Earth tremors, indicating a severe earthquake approximately 5,000 miles from Washington, were recorded Sat- urday night and early today at the Georgetown University seismological ‘obgervatory | Father Tondort, airector of the ob- { servatory, was unable from the record |made to ‘give even the approximate {location of the disturbance, but indi- cated that it was to the westward of | Washington, somewhere in the Pa- | etfic. The tremors- continued for two hours, beginning at 3 p.m. and ending at 12:53 a.m. They reached their maximum intensity’ between 11:34 and 11:38 p.m. _— Something like 20,000 original kinds of orchids are kuown to exist, and from ‘each of them as many as 3,000 crossed varieties have been reare FEIDI@I VI VB B> D> DCD D DEDCDEDEDEBE SPECIAL NURSERY Produced from Accredited Holstein Herds in Coiper. Bachrach MILK ation with the Eminent Smgeon'—-DR. J.THOS. 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L_Just say the word and we will set aside any instrument you se- lect, and you need not pdy a cent until you are ready to have the same delivered. ur Player-Piano Club A GENUINE AEOLIAN PIANOLA FORMERLY SOLD FOR §745 ‘095 i New world. which is music is appreciated. effected by years of study and are fully Manufactured by the Aeolian Co., York, the largest and best 0! known makers of Player-Pianos in the The trade-mark “Pianola,” owned and used exclusively by the Aeolian Co., is known all over the world. It has taken years to build the reputation they have. The superi- ority which put the Aeolian Company’s Player - Piano and Duo-Art Repro- ducing Piano above all other instru- ments of the kind in ability to render definitive, tangible and easily They are inventions protected by many patents. Many advantages are offered in our Player-Piano Club this year. Immedi- ate delivery, if desired, by paying $25 cash, balance in 30 monthly payments.

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