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OGATHERTOPAY HONOR T PURGELL Oyster and Sullivan Praise Dead Policeman at Church Meeting. Five hundred persons gathered in the Nineteenth Street Baptist Church | last night to honor the memory of | Policeman John W. Purcell, colored, who was fatally wounded on October 15 at 2d and D streets southwest. Commissioner James F. Oyster and Maj. Daniel _Sullivan _joined with Prof. Kelly Miller of Howard Unl-1{ versity and Emory Smith, secretary | of the Howard Alumni Association, in paying tribute to the work and record of Policeman Purcell. . A voluntary contribution of - $115 1at elled the Purcell fund tol 7 for the henefit of the widow hans of the late policeman. Oyster Pays Tribute. oner Oyster's speech elicit- | cd warm response from the audience. ¢ lle said: “We do well to meet in this | way to pay tribute to the devotion to duty which is 1 conspleuous trait | of the Washington police. In eman failed to render punt of his stewardship. better T 1 for every it of character and efliclent service n had Officer Purcell The Commissioners jfoin with you your regret for the loss and praise Speech by Sullivan. Maj. Sullivan gave an address which interpreted his keen appreciation for the work which Purcell w time of the fatal injury. He e d the scnse of loss which the police department felt at the death. Prof. Miller based his address on duty «nd pointed out t @ policeman as a guardian of peace and property was a corner stone in the structure of society as it is now constituted. He praised the sense of duty which was typical of the police- mai. mory Seott also gave a short ad- dress on the merits of the work of | expressing_the re- | zret which was felt by all who knew | § Vo oy Purcell him, Dr. Wil Robert L. Car ecinct, a fellc ton Presides. 1l of the fourth pre- officer of Purcell, and Dr. D. Williston, who preside e {h charee of Rev. Dr. Walter H. Brooks, pastor of the church, turned over the building to Dr. Williston for the evening, mak ing a few short remark Tho Purcell fu nounced today are as follows: Received by B. He! department: Pretiously acknow dged. . .$1,06 no | ent of that merit has the colored | an excel- | s doing at | t the work of | Event to Be One of History—New Subscriptions for tickets to allow veterans to see the Army-Marine game, an address by William Mathe: Lewls, president of George Washing ton University, an¢ adoption of the report of the law and legislation committee asking for an jmmediate appropriation for an adequate build- ing for the recorder of dceds office, featured the meeting last night of the Washington Chamber of Colimerce at the Willard Hotel. Disabled veterans of the world war at Walter Reed and other hospitals near Washington will see the great foot ball game at the Griffith Stadium on December 1, if plans of President Isaac Gans and the members of the chamber are completed. More than {400 of the veterans are just as good as Seated at the park now, because jthat is the number of tickets bought last night. Ralve $500 Quickly. Following _appeals by President Gans, Gen. Smedle; D.” Butler and Gen. John A. Lejeune, commandant i pointed out that no funds w jable to pay for seats fur the veterans, jmembers of the chamber rallied and #8300 was raised in a few minutes. At the close of the subscriptions last night Mr. Gans announced that n _individual canvass by letter for additional tickets for the veterans wou'd be made throughout the mem- bership. Plans are going ahead rapidly to {make ‘the game one of the biggest {events ever held in the National Cap- ital. Following the contest a dinner will be given to the coaches and in- {vited guests at the City Club, with a iball at the Willard for officers of both | Army and Marin. In order that the |enlisted men may also be given en- | tertainment, the Arcade dance hall {and various theaters have promised upward of 4,000 free tickets to mr in uniform that night. The organl- zation feels that it is but a stepping stone to bringing other athletic events of national importance to { Washington. | Cltes University's Value. Plans for the future of George Washington University and the rela- tion of the university to the business Intere: of the District were cited iby William Mather Lewis, newly chosen president of the university, Pointing out that the university had an enrollment of approximately {5.000 students and that more than a {mi n dellars a year spent by these students in the business center re Business Me: of Pennsy nis tween 9th an Dr. S. S L. Burton Total ived ation 10.00 1.00 1.00 . 5.00 Grand total TRAVELERS’ AID HELPS YOUTH AND AGE ON WAY Journeys of Man of Eighty-Six | and Boy of Seven Are Made Easier. youth and a ed by two Traveler's Washington travel was il- handled by rranged | -ful old ma 1tion of the ¥ He the Travelor's Aid whole distance And 1s begun his_return i ed on te the Washingion agents the society v day. wnd several hours in the Union during which time he partook of the | kind of & dinner gratifying to youns boys, ter thut he wi i leeping car bound for the Wes d at each important point on Journey he will be m 3 » sentative of (he T FOUR-STORY FALL FATAL TO APARTMENT JANITOR Alfred Kalson Succumbs to In- Juries Hospital—Was Native of Norway. Alfred Kalson, fifty ftor of an apartmen Prospect avenue nc a fourth ing vest in ne years, jan- house at 3400 | thwest, fell from | the bulld- aused death at Emergenot Hospital sev- hours later. dson’s left hip and shoulder were actured and his liver ruptured. He remained conscious until a few min- utes before his death. He landed on the turf in rear of the building. Coroner Nevitt gave a certificate of accldental death, Kalson, a native of Norway, had been in this country number of years. He was unmarried. O. Louis Cleven, a cousin, §10 9th street northeast, arranged for the fu- neral. —e FREED IN BOOTLEG CASE. Seven Colored Defendants Were Ac- cused of Conspiracy. Justice Bailey in Criminal Division 1, vesterday directed a verdict of ac- quittal in favor of William Blackwell, colored, who was charged with Blanche Brown, Lawrence Hall, ward Blackwell, Clarence Brann, William Wright and James Braxton, also col- ored, of conspiring to violate the Volstead _acc by selling bootleg ‘whisky The court then quashed the indictzuents against the other de- fendaats on the plea of counsel that the mdictment failed to set forth any overt act of the alleged conspiracy. This is the first case in which the national prohibition unit sought to use the indictment as a means of im- posing penitentiary sentences on boot- leggers. Assistant United States At- torney Kelly stated he would lay the vidence before another grand jury in the hope of securing a new in- dictment. FILES BANKRUPTCY PLEA. John C. Hope, who conducted a cafe here, has filed a petition in vol- untary bankruptey. He lists his debts ‘at $10,275 and declares he has no assets. _ Attorneys Donaldson, Johuson & Fralley appear for the Ppetitioner. Irooms are e of Washington, Mr. Lewis said that, | bestdes this fact, the coliege intend {ed to go ahead and interpret the Na i tional Capital and its ideals to people living In other states. He called attention to the conven- | of the Natfonal ation, which will > of next year. He said ¢ tended to hold of the attending the convention in ton by means of special i S free le ducational meet here As- n planned. he | asserted, with 3 34 tmportance. Urge national New Deeds Office. £ deeds” of- lation e chamber on this proj » of the recorder of d the District of Columbia ned for business in the year 17 This _office located in t Tnited States courthouse until 19 The offi of jwhen the courthpuse was remode Since that time, the office has been located on_the first four floors of the building, 412 5th street t. office of the recorder contains 00 deed books, and there s 1t sixty-seven clerks, tvpi and comparers emploved therein. Space Ix Inadequate. here are twenty-nine rooms on ors mentioned, but th tirely too small for th which t are 6.000 are fect o two-th boc for purpo; 3 betw: Th =qu 1 « rooms, ing taken up by 1 leaving for the s seve ves of the office, their typewriting machines, and de: only about 2,000 square feot wit 1 by the recorder | too small y lighted 1. The public, to examine the r s, should have ampl Srtable surroi The lawyers a frequently forced to t floor to the fourth floor ords, resulting in great The quarters provided by the recorder for the title exam- iners and the general public are wholly inadequate for their accom- modation, these room for efficient and poorly aving the all which to loss of time, { of the rooms, being b too small Facilities Are Strained. “The records of this office show that the number of instruments received for record has been greatly increased, as Will appear from che following table: FISCAL YEARS. Month. July ‘Augnst Septembe; October N “This phenomenal increase in the business of the office, coupled with the inadequacy of the quarters, has so delayed the delivery of the recorded instruments that it is now almost in- possible to record an instrument earlier than a year after it is filed for recordation. “In addition to the sixty-seven em- ployes of the office of the recorder of deeds there are about twenty exam iners, clerks, copyists and stenogra- phers, representing the local fitle companies, who work in the office nearly all the time. Tnable to Rent Space. “Under the existing iaw, it seems that the District Commissioners are charged with the duty of providing the necessary quarters for the re- corder of deeds. but these officials have not been able to work out any satisfactory arrangement whereby more space could be secured. The Sixty-seventh Congress inserted in the deficiency appropriation bill for the District of Columbia, a provision allowing the recorder of deeds to lease an additional floor in the Cen- tury ‘building at the present rental rate of $1500 per annum, but the owners of the building refused to rent such’ additional space. “There are approximately 200,000 instruments in the custody of ‘the recorder of deeds, which have not been returned to their owners and which must be properly safeguarded. Vital Records in Peril. “There are 69,806 deeds, mortgages and other instruments in the office of the recorder filed for record this vear which have not yet been spread on the records, all of which are in danger of being lost or des fire, and which, if lost or could not be replaced. s Tact alone is of vital importance to every property owner in the Distriet of Columbia, as there are thousands of homes involved .and milllons of dol- lars invested in properties evidenced by these papers, making it imperative that some adequate provision be made for the proper protection of these valuable records. “Another reason for remedying this Py Strongly Urged. ommit- ¢ ke tm- | used | racting land | 0 | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ’C.,V WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1923. C. of C. Gives 400 Tickets to Vets To Army-Marine Foot Ball Game Biggest in Capital’s Deeds Office. | deplorable condition is thé fict that | the lease on the four floors of the | Century building now occupled by he recorder’s office expired on the 0th day of June, 1923, and tha| owners of the building refused to enter into another lease, and brought uit in the Municipal Court to re- | cover possession of these floors. The suit for possession has been con- tinued, howe until the first day of March, 1924, to enable Congress to take whatever action it may de-! sire before final judgment is rendered , beyond doubt, a most urgent need for a suitable building for the office of the recorder of deeds, and it is thought that the Chamber of Commerce should use influence to secure such a building. Resolution Ix Adopted. The committee recommended the adoption of the following resolution: | “That the present quarters of the recorder of deeds of the District of | Columbia are wholly inadequate and ' insuflicient for the proper ecarrying on of the a rk of the i corder_of 5 r the prot tion of the valuable records and pa- pers in his custody. “That the committee on law and legislation be, and it is hereby, author- | ized and directed to exert its best| efforts to secure from Congress, dur- ing the next session, an appropriation for a suitable building for the office of said recorder of deeds.” The committee also went into the question of a bond issue for the Dis- trict of Columbla, but asked that & 1 tion on this part of the report be de- ferred on account of the Commis- sloners’ decision not to take it up at sent time. Mabel Boardman, former Commissioner of the District, made a stirring appeal on alf of the Red Cross roll call, which Washing ton so far has falled to meet. She told members of the chamber that while more than 100,000 letters hml} been sent out by the Red Cross, urging a subscription of only $1, only 3,300 replles had been recelved, which left Washington far behind its quota. She asserted that unless Washingtonlans met the emer- gency the probability was that the Iocal branch of the national organiza- tion would be closed. U. S. WARNS PACKERS OF LEGAL PENALTIES Must Throw Open Books by No-| vember 23 or Face Court, Wallace Announces. to open their book artment of s taken to i by the 1 [tors of the D n of records have been con- ! |ducted for a year, the Secretary said in_announcing his declsion, but als have insisted that yrized by ation of | on s | scops and | igaged in Wallace we have {their rights sought to_determine methods of the business lh\' the companies, and M satd he was convinced th full right under the law n |it through examination by auditors »f the packers and stock yards admin- istration of the depariment. | COURT TEST FORESEEN. | | Packers to Fight Audit of Books by { United States. CHICAGO, November ght to test the authority of gov | ment auditors to have full a ing companies ai- cated by the statement of L. F. Swift, president of Swift & Co., that his con- rn will resist the attempt of the tary of Agriculture to investi- ompany affairs such_attempted régulation of the {entire business can but result in con- and_the confusion *Mr, Swift said. “It to let the 21—A court rn- | i to | 1 | | flict_of re: | of the Industrs probably will 1 courts cide th ssue.” s E, bel he “onstitution gives a little privacy to citizens and we want to find out,” said Thomas | Creigh, general counsel for the Cudahy Packing Company. ‘There is nothing the packing ~and o rards act which will permit an offi i ik into vour office, sit dow: a desk and teil you how to run { business.” { Creigh indicated that the concern he represents will refuse to comply | with the request of Secretary Wal- lace. BONDSMEN MAY TAKE CASE BEFORE JUDGES Request for Hearing on Opposition to New Regulations Is Considered. A petition was filed with the judges of Police Court yesterday afternoon by Milton Kronheim, a professional bondsman, representing the twelve men engaged in that line of work, asking that the judges meet the bondsmen for a hearing of objections | of the bondsmen to the recently adopted bonding regulations. Judge Gus A. Schuldt said today that the petition filed is now under ! consideration and in all probability the professional bondsmen will be | invited to meet the two judges in| conference at an early date. —_— MISS LA SALLE EXPLAINS TESTS USED IN SCHOOLS Stresses Need of Study of Individ- ual in Address Before Civitan Club. Presenting a comprehensive outline of the work being conducted by the Tesearch department of the Distriet public schools, Miss Jesse La Salle, its head, addressed members of the Civi. tan Club at their weekly meeting in the Hotel La Fayette yesterday. She explained methods now used to standardize tests for grade classifica- tions, showing the handicaps suffered by those children, both under and over graded, resulting from the old system. Miss La Salle stressed the recessity of individual study by the teacher of each pupil, and said the crying shame of the past has been inability of cer- tain instructors to overlook immaterial errors on the part of the student. Miss La Salle was introduced by Civitan Ben W. Murch. Clarence L. Harding presided, and made severai announcements pertinent to the or- ganizat.on. A ladies' night entertain- ment wii. be held next Tuesday night, _— The cvilery industry is one of the oldest in Britain and from the very beginning ShefMeld has been = its recognized center. Written records show that the industry was in a flourishing state in Sheffield in the #eventeenth century, while some au- fhorities assert that it was thri ng 100 years ago. i YOUNGEST MEMBER National Prepossessions Woe Of History, Dr. Jameson Says National prepossessions—which date back at least to the reign of anclent King Mesha of Moab—and not a few minor inaccuracies that may seep into present-day text books are the twoe of history, Dr. J. Franklin Jameson, director of the department of historical research of the Car- negle Institution of Washington, as- serted last night in an address that opened the Institution's fall lecture season. Far the most profitable advances which modern history can make,” Dr. Jameson sald, “lis in the gradual crealon of a clearer atmosphere, through which things can be seen as they are. False atmosphere, not false details, are the bane of history. the 1 REPRESENTATIVE LISTER HILL. HIL ALABANA, 2, BABY 0FCONERESS Because of Interest in Edu- cational Matters, He May Who is Congress? This distinction is claimed for sev- eral. For example, Representative T. Webber Wilson of Laurel, Miss, who succeeds Representative Paul B. John- son, has been mentioned as the congres- sional “baby.”” He is thirty years old. Then, too, it has been published broad- cast that Representative John C. Schafer of Wauwatosa, Wis., successor to Representative John C. Kieczka of Milwaukee, is entitled to this honor. He is twenty-nine years old. Now the friends of Representative Lister Hill, coming in from the second Alabama district, %o fill the vacancy caused by the death of Repre- sentative john R. Tyson, set nim up as the real “baby, ice he will be only twenty-eight years old when he taki his scat. He was born December 29, ative Hill known all over the I circles as well alegionnaire pr of the Ton the “baby” member of is already well ountry in_edu Montgome when he d board -two y youngest Unit, city school ed on the consider a progr lool system of th country model for BALLOU DEPLORES SCHOOL FUNDS CUT Explains Rising Cots of Education ! to Rhode Island Ave- nue Citizens. Expl ing that an expenditure for schoo?s last year of more than double ount spent in 1911 gave no an educational w upt. of Frank W. Ballou deplored the of se 'l estimates by the bureau, in an address last at a meeting of the Rhode Island Avenue Citizens' Association and the Parent-Teacher Association of the two schools in the assoclation territo iy and mao h. cutti budget night » in chers John_ Burroughs Langdon 1s and Selden M. ncipal of the fifth n. attended the meeting at the wood Presbyterian Church. 1 Ballou said that building of a constructive education- - cssential If the edu young people of the nation is | <. Many educators left the| during ihe war, Dr. Ballou said, ve not been replaced by teachers the same efficiency. Representative John M. Robison of Kentucky delivered a_short address interspersed with storits. A muslical { program was glven by Earl Car- bauh, assisted by the Woodridge or- chestra. Readings were given by Mi: Ruth Bolen. R. H. Elsworth, chair- man of the school committee of the Rhode Island Avenue Citizens' Asso- ciation, presided, GRAND MASTER VISITS TWO MASONIC LODGES Finley Pays Official Call on Na-| tional and Arminius Sessions. Resuming the series of annual grand visitations of 1923, Grand Master Finley, accompanied by the officers of the Masonic Grand Lodge of the Dis- trict of Columbia, last evening pald his official call on National Lodge, | No. 12, of which Walter E. Kern is | master, and later on Arminius Lodge, No. 25, David Busch, master. The latter, having the “lond end” of the visitations. presented a musical program, following the transaction of | the necessary husiness of the occa- sion. ine reports of the secretaries and treasurers of both lodges, as epito- mized by the grand secretary and the grand treasurer, showed commendable progress, and earned the congratula- tions of the grand master. The visitations this evening will be to Osiris Lodge No. 26, at 8 o'clock, and to Washington-Centennial Lodge, No. 14, at 8:30 o'clock, both in Masonic Temple, 13th street and New York avenue. ¢ _— SCHOLARSHIP OFFERED. A scholarship in the Felix Mahony School of Fine and Applied Arts will be given the member of the Washington Boys' Club who shows the most talent, it was announced yesterday at the luncheon meeting of business men, in a campaign to raise a $35,000 two-year budget for the- club. A total of $2,491 was turned in yes- terday as contributions to the campalgn fund. This makes a total of $13, that has been secured by the business inen in two days. While about $22,000 yet remains to be raised, the teams are confident the sum will be raised by Sat- urday, when the campaign closes. —_— RESIGNS REVENUE POST. The resignation of Francig G. Mat- son, deputy commissioner of internal revenue in charge of ‘the miscellane- ous unit, was announced today. Mr. Matson_will enter the practice of law with offices in New York and Wash- ington, He is a former newspaper man, and came to Washington with Senator Reed Smoot of Utah. as com- piler of the Congres I x the Sixty-sixth Cuqre [ ! ! | 1 The historian may paint his scenes with all the minute fidelity of Hans Hemlinc, but if he I through’ Claude Lorraine "% Lorraine them glasses, that make all the greens look blue or yellow, will' not sa: all his fidelity vo him: TooHw of Give Low Visfbility. “Prepossessions, landscape or glving its actual features, af discoloring detail the low visibility to ttach themselves to every form of human_association. The students of Western High School, 11 other ferent best state high sc which i; earn from one of them with whom I have frequent opportunitie: versation, are, slon, distinctly s of con- by their own admis- superior to those of Washington There are in this city forty- opinions as to hools. -eight dif- s the to hall from, and even here are those who think one of our great political parties to be more virtuous | than the other. e Be Put on D. C. Committee. |DEADLINE CLUB PLANS FIRST BIRTHDAY PARTY Newspaper Men’s Celebration lntBertram G. Willard Hotel Will Be Unique, Says President. Arrangements for the first birth- day party of the Deadline Club, com- posed of local newspaper men, were | announced at the regular meeting of the club at night. President Hotel for I Saturday night has reserved December 1 at preparing the ready under way so large, [ Demand for id, it 1s that the the Ebbitt Hotel last| Bernard McDonnell stated that a ballroom of the Willard | seats ex ecutive committee has been forced to place a limit of 250 upon the guest list, which the’ club. “This dent Mel all the ele; will include first birthday The program will no Festivi 11 o'cl this hour obtai will both pape members of with special permission for d from the B. P, -WSpaper morning safe prediction lebrating the first v, men 0. of news- that ear of stence of this organization will tending souver Open e different nat Evenings Until 10 P:M. [N IMMEDIATE DELIVERY “But no prepossession seems to be more deep seated, and certainly none does more to prevent just views or the political, military and diplomatic history of the world than preposses slon of nationality. Far back in He- brew history the Israelite chronicler relates how his king, Jehoram, by the ald of Jehovah, won an overwhelming victory over King Mesha of Moab, and King Mesha, in his inscription on the Moabite stone, relates how, by the aid of his god Chemosh, he won in that same battle an overwhelming victory over Jehoram.” + Down Through Agens. Down through the ages, the speak- er continued, has come this same dan- gerous inheritance of national pre- possessions. While a British states- man, lecturing at Oxford, declared America “must win, if not by falr skill, then by prearranged trickery or violence,” Dr. Jameson said, many American newspapers were ' Tepre- senting the United States as being a gulleless infant. surrounded by adult and bewhiskered pirates, ceaselessly scheming to filch away its candy— the most malignant of these pirates being always pletured as Great Brit- c: Dr. Jameson said, “is full of this kind of talk. What can we do about it, when surgical operations on the human brain are still in their infancy. That some- thing should be done about it is plain, for, while such extreme positions as 1 have cited may perhaps be taken by only a moderate number of ultra- chauvinists, most of the world's read- ing matter on any of those fields of history where nation encounters na- tion, whether in war or diplomacy or in any other form of competition, is more or less colored by these per- vasive national preposzeseions.” | POTOMAC RIVER IS TOPIC |OF ILLUSTRATED LECTURE Foster Traces Course of the Waterway for More Than 500 Miles. | “The Potomac River, From Source | to Mouth” was described by Bertram G. Foster in an illustrated lecture before the Columbia Historical So- clety at the Cosmos Club last evening. Tracing the course of the Potomac river for more than 500 miles, Mr. Foster described in detail the many points of historic inte ranging over a period from a time when none ! but Indians inhabited its banks to | 2 ent. Starting at its origin in | the northern part of West Virginia, the speaker carried his audience | through the rocky slopes of the Alleghenies, the Blue Ridge moun- tains and through Cumberland and where the Shennan- Potomac. { < place where Wash- ington lost his first battle, July 4, 1754 also e depicting moun- tain in their humble cabins; old forts, the Chesape slides in winte Alexand 1 joins th nes of tk botl vashington, . Mount Vernon, and con- | 1 'to the mouth of the river ake bay, were {ncluded. | The pri portation st ne the | sparsely bited water fronte ulso dent of the society, presided, Allan | d an Genuine Victrola MONEY DOWN ACT!! 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