Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
g e HIGH MASONS VISIT SINGLETON LODGE Grand, Master of Louisiana and ‘Grand Secretary of Oklahoma Guests. With Joseph Sinal, grand master of Masons of Louisiana, and W. M. An- derson, past grand master, and now grand secretary, of the Masonic juris- diction of Oklahoma, as unexpected visitors, the grand visitation last evening of the grand master of Masons of the District of Columbia to William R. Singleton Lodge, No. 30, was of unusual interest. So far ay any one present could recall, it was the first time in local Masonic history that a grand master of an- other jurisdiction had been present at & grand visitation to a constituent lodge here. All possible honors were &ccorded the distinguished guests by Grand Master Finley. | In addition there were visitors from probably every other lodge in the Dis- trict, 1In order to accommodate the large attendance, the function was held in the Hall of History building of the American University One of the spacious asrembly halls was trans- formed into a lodgeroom, and elabo- rately decorated, autumn follage and the national colors predominating. Messrs. Sinai and Anderson made responses to the welcome. After the transaction of business Harry Lo Freer. master of Singleton Lodge, turned the meeting over to James L. es, past master, chairman in charge entertainment. He introduced the Almas Temple Glee Club, under the direction of Charles R. Bartlett. The club earned applause for several se- lections, as did Messrs. Quarter and Jackson, with violin and piano solos and duets of high artistic merit. As the principal speaker of the occasion, Representa Arthur M. Freer of California_discussed Masonic service and the Mason as a man. At the conclusion of the exercises all present proc to the lower floor to view e of a lavish display of fruits. become an annual af- neleton Lodge. Many varie- ties of fruit had been artistically formed in_ pyramids. After blessing had been asked by Dean Bratenahl, the command was given to “fall to.” ‘The next grand visitation in the cur- rent eeries will be to Stansbury Lodge, No. 24, Brightwood, next Monday eve- ning 8 o'clock. BIG AUDIENCE ATTENDS - COMMUNITY MUSIC FETE Playing of Army Band Was Fea- ture of Evening at Central High. An audience that filled the Central High auditorium attended the Com- munity Mus iati winter music fete last night The Army Band's the direction of W was a musical fea hy v playing, under liam .. Stannard, ature of the evening. Irma Mae Behrend, 2 cnd, Bohby Doris n and Mary Janin were a uded for their dancing and Leroy yer and Helene Loffier gave a demonstration of social dancing. Morse Allen, the Washington High School boy who has heen chosen to represent the District in the national stage children’s contest in New York, gave “the lightning dance” which he will present next week in New York, when national contest is to b held. Master Henry Goldstein, xylophonis was unable to appear ng_to a death in the family. Billy Clarke, juvenile drummer, assisted at the Piano by his mother. 1da Clarke, was bstituted contributed greatly to the even entertain- under the di- nce, was par- mmunity n of Rob ted in by the audie third winter musi danca car 1 will be tral High auditorium night, November 6. [ NURSE THINKS PATIENT NOT PROPERLY TREATED Miss McKenna Testifies Before Court-Martial on Charges Brought by Crippled Soldier. Miss Julia Meienna, a nurse at Fort | Va. Army Hospital, testified in the general court-martial of Capt. Samuel C. Gwynne, Army Medi- | cal retired, 1 with im- proper care of Private Guy Pendleton when a patient in his ward, whose legs Jater were amputated at Walter Reed | Hospital. Miss McKenna testified that Pendle- ton had suffered continual severe pain ‘when undergoing treatment on his leg: requiring many Injections of morphine: that she herself had expressed doubts that the medical treatment given him was proper, and that objections had been ised to the type of appliances :‘apl. une had used on Pendleton’'s egs. Yesterday the legless soldier gave a complete story of his accident and the treatment rendered him when he was under the care of Capt. Gwynne. After persistant resistance by Capt. Stephen Tiftany, counsel for the defense, Capt. Humphrey Biddle, conducting the prose- cution, won his point to have the dis- membered limbs entered as evidence. ALEXANDRIA. ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 19 (Spe- cial).—Interest on the $500,000 bond issue of Fairfax county will be paid when it becomes due November 15, but under protest and with the stipu. lation that the next instaliment, whicl will be due May 15, will not be paid unless the city Is given some definite assurance that the concrete road will be completed to the city lines. This wag decided upon at a meeting of the city council yesterday afternoon, and came as direct action on a suggestion by Mayor Smoot. It has been ascertained that a con- tract exists between the city and Fairfax county. This contract calls for the expenditure of the money on the road "between” Alexandria and Loudoun, rather than “from™ Alex- andria to FairfaX, the route lying over the Little River turnpike, four- teen miles to Fairfax Court House. There was no time limit for the bulld- ing of the road, which was construct- ed to within two miles of the city before all available funds were ex- hausted. Wilson M. Farr, commonwealth's attorney for Fairfax county, has as- sured Mayor Smoot that the contract will be let for the city end of the road early in the spring, when funds from the state highway commission become available, The city had contracted to pay halt of the interest on the bonds issued by Fairfax county to expedite con- struction of this road. Dewey L. Waters' automoblile this morning skidded at the cormer of Washington and King streets and smashed a telegraph pole and knock- ed from the ground a fire hydrant. The case was brought to police court, where Waters was dismissed in thé absence of any evidence that he had violated a trafiic regulation. A navai exhibit by the naval gun factory of the Washington navy yard will be held in the torpedo station here October 27 and again October 31, November 1 and 2, the last three dates named for the benefit of vis- itors here for the laying of the tem- ple-coruer stone. singing, Law The fete and is, tod Corps, cha { who | north. {on the under side wa: [RAIN ENDS LONGEST | DROUGHT IN EAST Present Precipitation Believed Un- likely to Alleviate Conditions Serious to Farmers. The longest drought on record for this part of the country was broken today by a rain that is general throughout the north and middle At- lantic states, according to the weath- er bureau. Only a trace of rain has been recorded In the last twenty-five days, and the record was smashed by the scant margin of an hour and a half. Although the rain was reported to be moderately heavy over its entire area, Forecaster Mitchell said the precipitation would probably not last through tonight and his prediction for ‘tomorrow is fair and cooler. Clear weather, he said, will continue several days, no southern air move- ments bearing more rain being in| immediate prospect. It is improbable, according to the | forecaster, that the precipitation will be heavy enough to more than barely | relieve drought conditions that have become serious In the northern states, particularly in New England. Anx- fous inquiries as to the’ prospect of rain have been pouring Into the bu- reau from farmers, but Mr. Mitchell holds no hopeful prospects as yet. HOLD 2 N GLASH OF KLAN ANDPOLICE Officials Question 13 Others, Including Woman, Over - Initiation. By the Ascocinted Press, LOCKPORT, N. Y., October 1 men are under arrest and the po: bility of an investigation loomed as the aftermath of an armed clash early today between police and dep- uty sheriffs and an initiation party of 600 Ku Klux Klansmen near Cam- bria Center. Those under arrest are William Lozier and Charles Turver, both of | Niagara Falls. Thirteen others, in- cluding one woman, were questioned at the district attorney’s office today but were not held. Lozier and Turver were held on an open charge. Reported by Motorists. Sheriff Benjamin Gould re ports from motorists late last night that armed men garbed in white were stopping automobile parties on the Saunders settlement road. The sheriff with two deputies and three Lockport pelicemen investigated. When their car reached the vicinity of a field in which a Klan initiation was purported to be taking place it was stopped by two white-garbed sentinels According to the officers, when the sheriff's party failed to leave as ordered. one of them was struck by a Klan guard. The sentinel was felled with the butt of a revolver in the hands of one of the investigating party. Shouts of the guards attracted Kilansmen from the field and as the sheriff started to advance toward the inclosure the little knot of officers j was surrounded. Gould and his men retreated toward the road and made {a dash for their As the machine sped away a scattering volley of shots broke out. No one was hit STAMPED PACKAGE USED AS AID IN SHOPLIFTING Carefully Wrapped Box Found in ved re- i Possession of Woman Argested in Department Store. A ecarefully wrapped box, stamped and sealed to give it the appearance of a pareel-post package, the latest device used by shoptlifters to help them rob department stores, an ar- rest by Mrs. C. A. Clark of the wom- police bureau showed today. The prisoner, Alberta Christian, aid she lives at 415 E street ast, was found carrying the box in @ local department store. Arranged a flap, according to the policewoma: through which the negress is alleged to have slipped stolen articles. ‘The prisoner forfeited $25 collateral today by failing to appear in Police | | Court. MAY “SHOOT TO KILL” TO STOP KLAN PARADE Development in Election Situation, Youngstown, Ohio, Brings Warn- ing From Acting Police Chief. By the Associated Press. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohlo, October 19.— Developments in the situation here in connection with the Ku Kiluk Klan jand the mayoralty campaign today included a statement by J. J. Me- Nicholas, acting chief of poljce, that if necessary his men will be ordered to “‘shoot to kill" to stop a proposed Klan parade here. McNicholas said late yesterday that he would not grant a permit for the Klan parade scheduled here for No- vember 10, that policemen would be ordered to disperse such a parade by peaceful means If possible, and if per- sunsion failed would be told to shoot to 1. it SLAYS NEIGHBOR OVER WIFE’S SUICIDE; GIVES UP Pennsylvania Husband Says' Shot Was Fired in Defense of Own Life. By the Associated Press. POTTSVILLE, Pa. October 19.— Brooding over the suicide of his wife on September 9, Adam R. Heffner of Pottsville shot and killed John Wil- liams, a neighbor, in front of the county prison today and then walked to the prison door, rang the bell and surrendered. ‘The police said Heffner blamed the suicide of his wife to her alleged friendly relations with Williams. Mrs. Heffner, when accused by her husband, threatened to return to her mother, and he immediately secured a truck to take her, their three small children and their belongings to her mother's home. While he was mak- ing these arrangements she shot her- self through the head while standing on the porch of her home. Today Heffmer met Willlams as the latter was leaving home to go to work and walked down the street with him. Heffner says they had an altercation and when Willlams reached in his back pocket as though to draw a gun he shot him. | buy {KIWANIS CLUB FETES | william “THE EVENING TAILORS ON STRIKE TIE-UP CLOTHING 200 in 22 Shops Idle Over Re- fusal of 23 Per Cent Wage Raise. Modish coats and swank trousers destined to grace the forms of many of Washington tailor-made Apollos are languishing in various states of Incompletion on the tables of twenty- two custom tailoring establishments, { while 200 wielders of the needle stand | idle, awaiting settlement of a wage controver: The workmen walked'out yecterday. Denied their request for a flat in- crease of 25 per cent in wages, the workmen, according to a member of a large tailoring firm, have taken with them old employes who feared vio- lence if they essayed tn» role of strikebreakers and remained at work at the old wage. The coatmakers have been offcred a compromise in- crease of 15 per cent, although no in- crease has been offered to the trons- ers makers, vestmakers, bushelmen, repair men and pressing men. View of the Employers. The employing tailors, according to one of their number, hold the opinion than an increase o per cent in the wages of coat makers would bring their proportionate wages up to the level of the other groups of workmen In reply to the walk-out by the men, numbering about 200, the employing tail- ors have told the agent of Local No. 188, Journeyman Tailors' Union, that un- less the men are b work by Mon- day, tailoring work done in the shops in Washington will be sent to other cities—probably Baltimpre or Rich- mond, John B. Colpoys, ‘conciliator of the Department of Labor, has been assigned by the department to the case. and will meet with the striking workmen next Monday. In the mean- time he is using every effort to effect a compromis ettlement of the wage dispute. Demand Held Exorbitant. The employers, according to one of their number, consider the 25 per cent asked an exorbitant one. im they cannot absorb such | ecage in their business and do | it to pass it on to their cus- have already absorb & in th without pa per cent general for the workmen is won, man stom tailors will have to go Living condition now, they add, do not warrant the request for such a heavy increase in wages. FIND SCENE WRITTEN BY SHAKESPEARE PEN | Scholars Establish Identity of Script—Press Defies America to Buy Rare Manuscript. By the Ansociated Press. LONDON, October 19.—"A Shakes- peare discovery of the first magni- tude” is announced by the Daily Ex- press on the authority of Vernon H. Rendall, former editor of the Athe- naeum, The announcement says that for more than 100 years there has lain in {the British Museum 147 lines of manu- seript constituting n addition to a play written by Anthony Mundy, th lizabethan writer, on the life of Sir | Thomas More. Iiblished about the vear 15 the play was corrected b. nds, and it hay been sug d that one scene was written by re now been established by scholars, rding to the; ment, that the handwrit- manuseript is actually t dramatist, inasmuch it is identical with that of six sig- natures ¢ his pame which hitherto | supposedly been the only exist- | ing specimens of the poet's calligra- phy The eminent present stat ing of thiv that of the grei sserts that the manu- most valuable in the it can never be Americans unless they I Museum. Express ript is th 14, adding ht by th the Briti W WOMEN AT LUNCHEON and Dramatic Stars| Vaudeville Are Special Guests at Hotel ‘Washington. boosts for d an elaborate fi‘n-‘ the | its | Hotel | With special every woman present tertainment prog local Kiman women folk vashington ¥ “()\\'i’x’\k: to nee of Claude ““'_”“'A president, Frank L. Wagner, first vice Dresident, welcomed the guests, while { Mather Lewis, president of jeorge Washington n sity, as- Sisted. by Douglas Gibson, dis- puted the prizes. lrll!):::'m[: the afternoon Miss ona Hogarth, playing with the “Stead- fast” company at th S(‘lxuhr‘rx—t ar- rick; Loney Haskell and the (hlln] Hun' Trio of the Cosmos Theater bill and Miss Beatrice Goodwin, local soprano, who directs the St. Alban's Episcopal choir, accompanied by Lion Nash, kept all present in good humor | with special numbers. Roe Fulkerson appealed to the membership for a 100 per cent at- tendance at the Capital District con- Vention, which opens in Baltimore today and continues through Satur- day. A concerted effort on the part of Washington Kiwanis and several southern branch memberships will be made to elect Claude H. Woodward, | former president of .the local club, District governor. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md., October 19 (Spe- cial).—Under the auspices of St Mary's Catholic Church here a dance will be given,in St. Mary's Hall the evening of Friday, October 26. It will be in charge of a committee con- | sisting of Miss Lucille Fisher, chair- {man, and Miss Helen Kirkland, J. Harry Gormley and Prescott Fisher. Licenses have been issued.for the {marriage of Miss Gertrude R. Wein- stock and Lacy R. Westfall, both of Richmond, Va.; Miss Helen Clement- son and Theodore Kettner, both of | Washington; Mrs. Clara Virginia Ricketts and James J. Florence, both of Rockville; Miss Virginia Davidson and Joseph 'J. Kane, both of Rich- mond, Va., and Miss Jessie Bowers and Andrew Scott, both of Washing- ton. In honor of Mrs. Bibbins of Balti- more, secretary of the Women's Re- publican Club 'of Maryland, and Mrs. Elizabeth C. Getzendanner, republican candidate for register of wills in_this county and the first woman to be a candidate for public office in the county, a reception was given at the Montgomery Country Club yesterday afterngon by the Women's Republican Club of- Montgomery county. Ad- dresses were delivered by Mrs. Bib- bins and Mrs. Getzendanner, a musical program was rendered and refresh- ments served. The affair was in charge of a committee, of which Mrs. Harry A. Dawson of Rockville, presi- dent of the club, was chairman. The clubrooms were decorated with au- tumn leaves, dahlias and other fall flowers, Willlam T. Griffith of Beallsville, this county, is in the west purchasing cattle for the members of the Mont- gomery county farm bureau. He will send glwht carloads to this coupgy. a ram as features, rain eon in th terday | STAR, MRS. SUMNER WELLES IS GRANTED DIVORCE Paris Decree Based on Charge of Abandonment—Couple Well Known Here. By the Associated Press, PARIS, October 19.—Esther Slater Welles has been granted a divorce here from Sumner Welles, whom she marrled in April, 1915, at Webster, Mass. The grounds were abandon- ment and refusal to live with his wife, Mr. Welles was formerly secretary of the American legation at Toklo and later chief cf the division of jLatin American affairs of the Ameri- State Department. Mrs. Welles is a member of a family which has large textile interests and which has figured in Washington social activ- itles. Both Mr. and Mrs. Welles are well known in’ social circles here and at one time maintained a residence in this city, Mr. Welles having been sta- tioned in Washington during his di- rection of the bureau of Latin Amer- ican affairs of the State Department. They were favorite members of the exclusive set and were much enter- tained. ANY OLD CASES NOLLE PROSSED U. S. Attorney Acts to Clear Dockets—Long List Re- ported as Fugitives. United States Attorney Gordon to- day disposed of another large num- ber of old cases which have accu- mulated on the dockets of his office. Justice Bailey ordered many of them nolle prossed Among the docket are carnal knowledge; non-support; John baugh, joyriding; Arthur Yasema, larceny; Samuel W, Phillips Harry Hopkins. non-support; Percy G Smith, non-support; Edgar F. Hack- ley, setting up gaming table; Samuel E. Lynn, fs pretense Frederick W. Koppen: Thomas Martin, joy- riding. The following “fugitives” v cases stricken from the John William Dickerson, Crick J. Biondi. William Stein- were Charles E. Wesley Maddox, Charles D. Jun C. Briley, James H. McCo Lewis L. Thomas, uel J. Semler, James F. McGuigan, . Benjamin H Carter, all non-support; Thomas R.J Campbell, larceny after trust; Simon Bailey, arson; Felix D. Richardson, Reinhardt €. Weaver, Thomas War- fleld, Samuel T. Potter, Alfred L. Wiggins, Tony Wisconsin, Peter Car- ragher, Bernard Johnson, John D. Maber shury Bolden, Robert Lee Johnson, William Arthur Smallwood Frank Douglas, Walter T. W. O'Con- m G. Blackwell and Walter ank Noland. Sverett B. Pratt, John M. Haywood, John Wran, Eugene Druver, Paul Par- del, Henry rland, Paul F. Bardell, Edmund Glover, John Edward Thom- as, Bartelo Dusso, Joseph A. Smith, Nowell Allen, Rudolph W. Beckert, John Kissenberger, Thomas John Read, William H. Thomas, James Ar- thur ' Butler, John Henry Warren, Michael E. Aldriani, James Beverl Harv Talbert, James Edward ott, athan M. Bell, Charles W. Jenkins, Abranam Albert Wolff, Isaac Patrick, Charles Lee Mezick, Thomas Martin, uy R. Lowen, Thomas J. Houke and v A. Wood, all wanted for non- support; Lawrence Keough, forgery and uttering; John H. Jones, larceny after tru: James E. Gateley, Frank A. Nelson, adultry; Darrell Price, grand larceny; J. Frank Allison, forgery and utt Z: Harrison Coom grand la ceny; Max Benthall, false pretenses; Harry K. Fawkes, forgery and utte: ing; Clyde C. Waltman, Raymond C. Jones, grand larceny; Charles A. Tur- nage, housebreaking; Percy Ford, joy- riding: Fdd Wilson, false pretense Paul Mitchell, blackmail; Edith false pretenses; James H. . larceny after trust; John ne and Joseph Edward Johnson, ult with a deadly weapon; James awford, embezzlement; Lewis H. Goodman, falee pretenses. —_— The reason so many flappers let their mothers do the housework is se they don't wish the parent old from lack of exercise. as John Quic reported Gray, "ROOF $7.50 PA]NT A GALLON Red and Brown. From the owner’s stand- oint. no other roof paint justifies a higher price. J. W. HUNT 1221 N. Y. Ave. " Phone Matn 1352. SPIRIN Say “Bayer”- Genuine! Genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’ have been prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years and proved safe by | millions for Colds and grippe misery. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost only few cents at any drug store. Each pack. age contains proper directions for Col and tells how to prepare an Aspirin gargle for sore throat and tonsilitis. MOTHER! Children Cry for “Fletcher’s, Castoria” SOLDIER AND WIFE JALLED FOR USURY Loaned Money at Walter Reed ‘as Excessive Rates, Without License, Charged. Following an official investigation of 'reports that soldiers at Walter Reed Hospital were paying 20 per cent a month for small loans, Detec- tives Fowler and Flaherty today ar- rested Sergt. Wilhelm Fennel, U. S. A., stationed at the hospital. Sergt. Fennel was arrested on a warrant alleging that he had engaged in the business of loaning money at the rate of interest stated, and when his wife, Mrs. Madeline Fennel, ap- peared at police headquarters from her home at 200 D street she also was arrested on a similar charge, the war- rant mentioning both husband and wife as defendants. The warrant al- leges that husband and wife charged more than 6 per cent per annum on loans, not being licensed to engage the loan business: o FnRamnn Sergt. Fennel told The Star he was the victim of a “frame up,” denying having ever loaned soldlers any mon- ey. His wife, he sald, had made loans to a number of the soldiers and incidentally, he added. had lost much money because of failure of the bor- rowers to make the loans good. ret. Fennel said his wife had done only what is being done at prac- tically every military post in the country. Married men in the service save their money, and when the sol- diers learn of it they start borrowing. He said it is necessary to charge borrowers interest on loans because many of them fall to pay, and it is only by getting interest from others that the persons willifig to accommo- date them are able to protect them- selves from losses. The soldier and wife will be required to appear in Police Court tomorrow and answer the charge. 65 DIE IN MINE. Explosion in Chinese Coal Project Reaps Heavy Toll. By the Associated Press, SHANGHAL October 19.—A patch from Mukden received here to- ays five Japanese and sixty were killed in an “explosion in a coal mine at Lohutal. The pit is still filled with gas and relief workers are unable to enter, the dis- vatch say There are only thirty stars known to be within 100,000,000,000 miles of the earth \ dis- | | WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1923. GETS FIVE-YEAR TERM FOR FAKE BGND DEAL Hinton Stafford Sentenced by Jus- tice Bailey—Key Thief to Serve Three Years. F Justice Bailey in Criminal Division 1 today sentenced Hinton L. Stafford, white, to serve five years in the peni- tentlary. The prisoner was intrusted with $100 by Augusta E. Bost, for which he is gaid to have turned over to her worthless bonds. James Jones, colored, was given three vears in the penitentlary for housebreaking. He entered the house of Howard W. Barry August 25 last and stole 38 worth of keys. A sim- ilar sentence was given to Robert E. Gayle, white, convicted of violating the marcotic law. Fritz F. Marx, white, was sent to the penitentiary for three years for passing a worth- lers check for $450. ; Terms of two years each in_the penitentiary were imposed on _John Brooks, housebreaking: Leroy Paine, forgery, and Beatrice Green, assault with dangerous weapon. = Maggle Warden was glven eighteen months in the penitentiary for an assault with a dangerous weapon. Hallle Henry, Lloyd Sloan and Mary R. E. Brown, all colored, were iven another chance. Justice Bafley gave each three years, but placed them on probation during good be- havior. Bernard Beckwith and Charles Lee were sentenced to one year each at Occoquan, but Dlaced on probation. TWO IN UTAH MINE 56 HOURS ARE RESCUED | Both Declare They Owe Their Safety to Strong Timbers Above Them. By the Associated Press. BINGHAM, Utah, October 19— Joseph Norden, superintendent, and Jose Ratalaza were rescued from the Utah-Apex metal mine last night aft- er being entombed for fifty hours, The bodies of two others were located in the rock pile near the place where Norden and Ratalaza were freed, but | because of the immense pile of stone | and timbers it was impossible to res- cue them. One man still is unaccount- ed for. T body of Dan Eden, the foreman, w removed soon after the cave-in which entombed the men. Neither of the two rescued last night was hurt. They attributed their good fortune to an especially set of timbers directly above when the crash came. —_— Mme. Poincare, wife of the French premier, has the reputation of being one of the best-dressed women in the world. them werey| strong | DRY ACT IS CALLED JACKASS STATUTE Senator Moses Assails Vol- stead Law-in Interview at White House. A “jackass statute" pronounced on the Volstead act by Senator Moses of New Hampshire, chafrman of the republican senatorial campaign commiftee, when he visited the White House today, after a swing Ive states in the east and was the verdict ~Asked whether, in his opinion, Con- gress would do anything about it at its coming session, Senator Moses sald it depended on “whether or not the baleful eye of Wayne B. Wheeler, sit- ting in the congressional gallery and sweeping the floors with its eagle gaze, has lost its potency.” Requested specifically to give his ophion of the Volstead act as vealed to him during his trip, he re- | plica: “It's a jackass statute. Any law tnat declares buttermilk to be an al- coholic beverage of necessity is a jackass statute.” The senator replied thus to a ques- tion as to prohibition enforcement in New England: ‘The are more trucks crossing the Canadian boundary and rolling through the vaileys of New England than there evcr have been trains run over the Bos- ton and Maine railroad.” The discussion which has ranged about Gov. Pinchot's suggestion that the President take over personal su- pervision of prohibition enforcement and Gov. Pinchot's own efforts at en- forcement also engaged the atten- | tion of Mr. Moses. | “Gov. Pinchot has endeared him- | self to the hardware trade with his talk of padlocks.” he said, “I pre- | dict there will be a boom in that commodity.” Senator Moses concluded that he was convinced from his trip that the country was dry as to sentiment, and that Congress would act {cord with that sentiment though such states a Pen: | New York and New Jerse. vote wet if a test were made. He | sald the purpose of his visit to the | White House was to arrange for a | conference later with President Coo- lidge regarding the political situa- tion. E vlvania, would SHENANDOAH FLIGHT OFF. NEW BRUNSWICK, J., Octol | 15.—A scheduled flight of the | Nayy dirigible Shenandoah over the | Antilles Field, the new athletic | ®round of the New Jersey College of | Woman, during the dedication cere- monies today was called off because of bad weather. The Shenandoah had | planned to strew flowers upon the | field, named in honor of the naval | transport Antilles N r giant and LASTS Theshoemakershould stick to his last— And the shoe-buyer is 8 tuck if they don’t last. But not here. That’s where our money-back without an argument 1219 Penn Ave., N.W. 625 “H" St.,N.E, guarantee comes in. The fact is—Beck-Haz- zard shoesdolast. Good leatherand good work- manship guarantee good wear, * The latest styles too. Not in price —but intheshoes. See our windows. ‘Worn on Fifth Avenue—but bought Z OES %.:%. ‘322 435 7¢h St., N. W. 1012 7¢th Se, N.W. FINE FLOORS OF HARDWOOD Requests for estimates on refinishing ald floors, or laying new onex, have prompt attention — without obiigation. Telephone North 6323 J. M. ADAMS 1503 Connecticut Ave. ‘Get the Facts PPLY business principles to the purchase of your clothes. Consider the quality of the fabric and trimmings, the workmanship, the style, the {it, and the price. Consider KUPPENHEIMER GOOD CLOTHES on this basis, and compare them with z;\ny other clothes you know. We are content to abide by your decision. rosner” 1325 F STREET