Evening Star Newspaper, January 13, 1924, Page 18

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18 * THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 13, 1924—PART 1. ANT e S T 'Gardiner Believes Government [JURY WILL PROBE LABOR PARTY HELD French Officer Coming to America |Shop Gew-Gawcs Snare |FALL DENIES TRYING By Macdonald Will Be Surprise CONVICT UPRISING b X , S;-gp Gew-Gaws Snare \FALL DENIES TRYING ANCE o Campaign for “Panama Straits®| 104 Women and Girls; FISTTO HIT FR ' t " P pe Thefts Aired in Court TO ESCAPE SENATOR - : i n ont X -Varil i By the Associated Press. By the Associated Press Macdonald Advised Not to Fall |7 4hor Jogder, Steered by Asquith, Already Has Cre.|Alabama Mine Revolt Said to Be leutC : noal : Wr:r:;: RZ;‘::::E Z?ksc::'i‘;fi: wlfldeu of NEW YORK, Junuary 12—The | JACKSONVILLE Fa. Janiusy 14 Into Trap Set by Older ! Due to Hatred of “Dog- : 0 hollday lure of silks and fileries |—Albort E. Full, former Scoretors With Sea Level Course. » : s icy ! brought 104 women and girls before | the Interior, tcriient dens 5 Parties. ated Favorable Impression Defimte Pol | house.” Judge K.-rum‘)m’n”(lt);:)‘ on charges |08 attorney, "\ R ;.::m'::'rfi of A A of shoplifting. With few exceptions, | 3 ASRINELOn, "thit Lo had avolded er. THIERS VISION RECALLED the prisoners were young workers; |fOT8 of Senator Thomas J. Waish |MAY NOT ©PUNISH MEN| 5y the Associated Press. the first one. to preach on the same| Wh never before had been charged |, ejie “Cite s ne insésil _— NEW YORK, January 12.—Lieut.|date, for a Panama straits.” Thirty-elght girls had attemptea | With him 2 Sditistacate | 5 . . |Col. Phillippe Bunau-Varilla, the| KFrequent Viaitor to United States. | to steal silk stockings. The others Mr. Walsh was last night BY A. G. GARDINER. the prestige of the country in foreikn ' Corporal Punishment Question Will irrench solater-editor-engineer, is ex-| Before and since the United States| Variously iricd to take perfumes, |Sa¥ine that after addressing u letper affairs. Be Di a Dected to reach here on ghe steamer | UNdertook to push through the canal. lingerie, necklaces and gaudy bead to Mr. Fall he took e Discussed. Toward European Turmoil. English Leader Has Chance to Set s : e ope e et | o IAne has suffered from s Sck Lisut. Col. Bunau-Varilla—then a| All but the “old timers" were re. |hotel manag nd asked him RPES s S fom s e Uit e o cmanty i, 06 Bo | ool piontegly i, o 1| o sl Teapeiite B 0055 68 GERMAN SHIPS SUNK e house of s, and not a | Mere bre e it s Tie |18 Erentine n In the mind of the | “00° e against authority is ] ¥ L a | o scat in the house of lords. after the manner of the fat Loy Pick- | French public. which is, disposed to | The strike against authority 18 qecide whether It would be worth | Why They Fear Us. wick. But this does not represent the | attribute it to machinations of the | J{ /% FEN® FRAVRES QEURGIE\PE FIN7 1840,000,000 to take the digging Job| AFTER WAR TO BE RAISED! “These two oceurrences, now nine in current of opinion of the res; British aaclior jthRnito dhie inexitable JuSarithe himndslof; tistNren: Sicom e 2 | 1€ | ninan, who I3 alleged to have pun-ioos. years wpart, have the samie cause sible business and financial world. sonsequences of Polncare's Dpolicy. {igheq three of the convicts the day |P2"Y lack what mo politician eligible Moreover, murders In the Palatinate | iitt L EES G L0, SOVICE (N0 Ghe Calls It Hix Vindieation. | By the Associated Press. 1 the cabinet of England dare ia x Asquith Holds Reins. have brought the whole scandal of | prigoners during the outbreak made| The lock canal was built and much | LONDON, January 12.—A Queens- clusively national pride. The eon- | Iven if Ramsay Masdonald separatist Intrigues in the Rhine- | PEESRErS, QOriie, Lo o8 orea e meeel . : it Jitoie o slikes fo ater has flown over its controlling | borough, Kent, firm vesterday entere “ervatives and liberals, united by com- la revolution and to set up a guillo id to a head and England is no | gh, Xent, ¥ ay entered m a property tax and iy Trafalgar Square he would \ger able to turn a biind eye to LoUS®” @ nurrow booth wWhere pris®lGatun Dam since then in the passage |into a contract with the admiralty to soci tion of hasic industries, {helpless. He will be in the shafts origin of the mischief. |it ia charged, while being disciplined [0f ships between the Atlantic and |rajse sixty-eight German warships| threatened by us, could easily form @ ipye Mr. Asquith will be on the drivir Will Recognize Russin. for infraction of the rules. Pacific. To Lieut. Col. Bunau-Varilla | yunk at Scapa Flow. Most of the war- | Somtition " fmeat’ witl hand on the bra Recognition of Russia will be one | The mutineers surrendered late | ‘the magnificent display of gorgeous | .. " pon” aisea. will be sold to don't of 1 There is every intentton on Mr. As- o i the creation of new po T 2 q art not to upset the labor uards entered the mine. Dynamite |personal reward and vindieation, <o danzerous to capital and |9 © aroinde T put Jas {ernment. Demand for this has been ! was us the prisoners to blow |8aid in a letter “to the Assoclated |be used by the adr ty for target two historie par TR Y Mot |ErO s fart e e s o in: | s the mining machiner, |Lress ‘befors ha embarked on the jt 0o e the M Tnate ple | Creasing ev that the temper of | causing estimated dumage of $30, | Paris. i nd indisputable | {3050 Hets was being modified by ex- | o005 5 | Now, he said, he will voice before perience and thai tride relations on | the Cincinnati ' Commerc b his| At the conclusion of the war the A bik seale rannot be reswmed until | = =7 | long-cherished vision o @ Stralt |German warships were taken to after rocogniton. ¢ s expected that | HALTS STATE COLLECTION. (1.000 feet wide, 50 feet decp ai the |seapa Flow, an expanse of seu in the 0 et ] oA Vit 4 1L which will reaet (o the advantine | PULUTH, Minn., January 12.—Judge Panama and Coton. witheut axking a |South of the Orkneys used by Admiral arm themselves |1 ¥ 1 the new ge nment. How long | Willlam A. Cant, in feder: urt here | cont of the $1,000,000,000 necessary |Jellicos a8 his chicf naval base, to be unavoidable 5 the or government will lve is ultoday. | an order tem rily re- from the American Tr pulsion o cause they desire i &l r A 1 0 kept # {yniuen discussed problem istraiuing the state of Minnesota from | “All will be p in advance by the Hed 14 ) unload this burden on the labor fervor, coupled U . holitical authorities expect |collecting royaltles on iron ore mine mal BeEEI he wrble In 1401 1]German crews scuttled vessels, party. which is unfettered by tradition » statement of Prac- gofuc by May., The most optimistic |Pending a hearing on permanent in< icamc to preach for a lock canal. I|and the entire fleet, with the excep- or otherwise view is that the government will last {Junction to be held in St. Paul April \returned to the same city and the tion of the battleship Baden, five It Qs we nust show Franc g lines laid down he can main- 5 Tuv aah 7. Taxes estimated ut $1,000,000 are same club, upon an invitation signed |light cruisers and some smaller ves- and ke clves unpopular tals support of the liberals vrol The salvage feat in history is about |involved. by the son of the ‘man who sent me sels, settled to the botto: and, alreads under an_in at the cost of shedding the eX- |5 Le undertaken, The British ad- ternati v dumaging reputation ot [tremists of his own party. miralty this week let the contract for | {king the Germans, sink The most satisfactory feature I8 |(he raising of the German fleet now | impotent c fon party as soon prominence onald assigned | |ving sunk at the bottom of Scapa | the dictacd the Quay d'Orsay {to securing u Furopean settlement. |fiow. It is probable that the change become tractabl :’arl;'“l;“r\:‘!‘a:\l{'lfl;: B‘f \:l;‘?him uirc“hal of government will put an end to the | - |the parliamentary coi on tn Lon- |much criticized v velopments repare Ladder for Us. {don Tcaves France master of the con- | Naval opinion is" math Srciaet med wish prepares the ladder for lyineneal situation. These calculations pinton is quite hostile to the re premature. The writer antiei; 5 { hat Macdonald will improve greatiy ' iCopy 19; Europe Right. waits the opening of parllament next [ of policy and timidity. 1t has been | Paris tomorrow to open a campaign|major—has been a frequent visitor | leased with judicial admonitions of |liver it to Lie former s, Ml oo T, Tuesday with deep interest and anxlety. :;-:::nl-ga'\nlh:o'r'l’\“mv;::nm’ ang Ger: | for the construction of a §1,000,000,- |to the United States always In some | fincs of §1 dr 32 e e o Sl : 3 been due ‘ Py e o s e | connection with the canal. > sald M was no BY MAXNIMILIAN HARDEN. But it would be untrug to suggest that| ¢, four of Freuch aeroplanes. This By the Aksociated Press. 900 “Fansma stralte® to replace: thef SRl 00 A aiac fub nhonid) be tered at the ho ut Me W S et we are panic-stricken, Js complete misreading of the public BIRMINGHAM, Ala, January 12— |present Panama lock canal. done and his predictions of disaster |[FRENCH WRITER BETTER. | L,t5d, the n y \‘m.-; -l‘\ ul- o TG wElar The Times criticizes severely Mr. mlun.l Huglsn? :! s yr.o n-nlr..r I"n!lllt;h Corporal punishment of state con-| e will present his plan on Jan-|through I.\nu(-u A.‘mlx uu-,u] mu:iulu . “h|; P\r\-(hd“ln IRLIN, January m < A 0 .. | aeroplanes and the French are quite i " - v 19 hefore innati Com- |under the methods adopted, we —_— i o wern Tamsay Macdonald he would |Liosd George's message to America |ty Sl posing that the Jubor | ¥Icts came to the forefront us an ls- [UAry 19, before the Cincinnatl Com- | Jor, the, methots, SRS (8| ) 00— e i hold 2 monologue, while en route to |Comparing our condition to that of Rome | party will be indifferent to national 'sue in Alabama again today with an- {merelal Club, where twenty-three | o), vl OF BIO0REE Yo aamn - 's Rheumatism Pro- _m‘“_. kin e l'“_]”“& on the approach of Attilla. The Times | defe iw- i;]l :nruxu;--s necessary to nouncement that the Shelby county |Years “A'go, vm. the height of the con- .-’u ‘|'n; ;ockx ".‘“"m’.‘,.‘lii',fi‘r}‘.}’?,‘l.f,?i nounced “Less Alarming.” “Fifty yeurs ago Adolphe Thiers, |Fightly describes this as pestiferous [ Segurity will be taken. = o lgrund jury would be called Monday ftroversy over whether a lock or sea- |borted he had obtaine through Co-| PARIS, January 12— Anatole F: f LS _yodrs 280 2 L nonsense and suggests that the former | do what ne oth v Y vl [ to investigate conditions at the Al-|level canal should be dug through | Wax f the etminens cten 1o o rence: ¢ Wi p1in Arst president of the third French re- i N e il declare emohatioatls for See: drich mines, where slxty-six mutinous the fsthmus, he appeared as a Strong | “Hut when the Panama canal was| his oI 8 ® Lonfined Nio from the fo by i S % Iy [prime minister should be pensioned and | He will declare emphatically for rec- | rich L by ut when the Panama here in conse- o form. ublic. prophesied that internationally | Prime minister s onciliation, will formally arraign | Somvicts surrendered last nig] advocate of the less costly lock sys- |completed he ded the ceremon rheumatio at- the most lmportant event next to {‘ H‘l‘ s o i i ro. | the Ruhr poliey and will take a stand | & &% O€ SO0ROR, 00010 e bector |tem. declared Gen. Gocthaly could be Presi. | ta ck. | His condition was character- Egropenn revolution would e thol o el O e ovin. | Lahestintingly for the leAguo of BA= |cyljes Tt Dawis anuounced that| That wasith 1901 Tdeut Col Bu- |80 of Frsmeeit he ive Forance St iy loew alarming.’ M| Santa Claus should be spelled beginning of a soclalist government |V at the prospect of a labor govern- | tions. ' In all this he will have the | (nCR o B0 (O 2y “the A Varils s Goraaiad 15 bhol T bookar L e ,.C i) bo elghty years old on v The name is Dutch for S ns |ment, and tha movement of capital to | enthusiastic suppert of the liberals | . A s interested ruction 8 Aprf Nicholas. in England. That great hour has|ment, and the movement of T(‘l‘n : O e ihe e L iBia Memm”‘m;zr:;y ’:;;_um’m::“{u;:uz:( (antll @ gecond French company, which was| In the world Jar |Yl‘d|4v~! = légv’:\“ I e I o A T 2 “In 1015 the golf club of my native |ENIAE Dhenimmncy In the conunn| e fie SEamicr Lolitnce Wil Bd 0 | Harwell G. Davis has re-[dig & canal along the route of the|his valor at Verdun. H isited | = town expelled me because I refused fstances. There always plenty of | English opinion_formally mobilized | SISt SOrFell (5 POVIE BOS, €0 Sergpen . N s tiie | Ble SOaaty e s Mrench dalicari to)Ee against his policy and expressed with | ~ present one and at the same time gard eve a hun or [nervous people ready to lose their < Frdipd il RprOes iprobe at Columblana, the county seat th lMtical diffeulties im- | the Washington arms conference in b osty | heads and think the country is going to | ' Tha & situntion _Letweew the two|of Shelby county. Solicitor W. W.|overdome the political difficuities Ji- | ygsy OR a wild beast. In 1 his majosty s antry e situation Dbetween the two Vice Jof the iightesnth judiclai |Posed by isthmian governments. The . T F Tequires e to form a cabinet despite | the dogs, especially with the Rother- | countries undoubtedly -will be deli- { (700 (O (gireet the inquisitoria) | United States already was debating In the New Building 1416 K STREET N.W. For particulars and rates, see after a sq d {prosperity shown by the c of the first acts of the new lahor gov. ROahtIatier R salAd of SlEliteen | Do ers, while the others will | MORRIS CAFRITZ CO = 1416 K Street N.W. Interned there. On June 21, 1919, the Main 617 ca the : i ldwin., A H < SRR BRITISH LABOR RULE ROPER SAYS MADOD | acemaker for the nobility | ! [ ke 1S FEARED IN PARIS FOR TWO-THIRDS RULE| ot B ih'“_‘;,],c'éf:_".’.‘,:.:i - * ;;rl;'{\1:{:l:;:‘tti:‘,d\\'4l:‘:vn‘.‘;‘l:'iv’ i‘iflugl’di;‘;g}‘rance Has Grave Misgivings as to| Declares Candidate Stands for No| P gere wiat wo accred | Ramsay Macdonsld as Pre- | Abrogation of Convention A eragation. and | mier in Britain. Practice. ‘ d the erection of a super- | I R | st BY ANDRE TARDIEL. i No effort will be made on behalf of | people, not other worldly | py 3 . William G. McAdoo, candidate for the s, and will air ARIS ¥ 12.—The advent of | democratic presidential nomination {@ labor movement in England, with = ay Macdonald as premier, now corlingland hus today B Peepts to|Scems assured, and its importance uq‘i:{\‘wflwi of spending money to arm nnot be overestimated. Establish- her “eastern allies. An appeal fof|ment of socialist rule in a gTeat revision of the treaty of Versailles!oouneec e A - the n: which that treaty created {heavily in the world’s history. S rotas Macdonald’s Albert Hall speech, “What docs France want? Secur-|full of ardent idealism. was such as ity against , money to order| . o 7 her badly ganized finances and ' “1 appeal, with perhaps some slight as much coal and coke as are re- reservations, to all men everywhere auired for full exploitation of heriwho have mot given up hope of a ores. All three wishes can be fu! {patter world and a mo 4 filled only through an understanding | oo m';‘“w” o w,s““’m’ oo Taboration —with Germany, But that is nothing new, for human- nd mu rther this under- ity ing in of hindering it as|ends. It has failed thus far to agree : ridiculously dema-ionly on the means for attaining them. that_the Ruhr occu-|° Macdonald has . repeated weverni our commerce | times that he Is determined to up- ublished by |told the t of the British Y. foreign effice, which constitute pre- must profit|cisely the obstacle which we have of German mining countered at numerous times dur- It is al and since, it hardly of a " o - that the soclalist gov- union wo rnment will abolish between Lon- first Never- don and Parie what Macdonald calls cless n attemy 1o m the jconstant squabbling and pin-pricking. world belisve zood England desires | Fri " return to powe nd abil to dll!r\]ll ok iSO B0, true, as '"“.“j in the goods is @ stupid | hypoerisy. | Th|British press, that labor's rise to newly arising economio union woul wer has been recelved in France tako carc of the European econti-|With scorn and hostility. Our press nent, including Russia, and lZmflvl:l‘—i““nUSt unanimously has adopted a 1y recreate the purchasing power of | COUrteous tone. If there also has 300,000,000 people {besn = tone of reservs, it 1s because g . we cannot forget that in the past __ Would Prevent Wars. at critical moments the future pre. “Stnen it would insure against war |mier showed himself sadly lacking and militarisni, it would find ample |in international _clairvovance. We oredit In Amirica, and the whole | remember his speech of August 4, 1514, hase for pledges, foreign dictator- | in which he said: territorial expansion and secret| “My friends and I of the labor acty would cease party solemnly declare that such “It. is our main task to restore!frlendship as unites us with France nzlish laborer to the highest cannot in any case oblige us to go which he cver en-|to war in defense of another nation must assure | And whatever opprobrium may be unconsumed third | heaped upon us, we hold that this the cheapest|country should remain neutral.” Tf, at that tragic moment, England lowed Macdonald, German im- eim can be reachied only by honorable | sm today would be reigning means and that sland, | Just over the world. Should we be su she existed after of her falr- |prised at this capital error of judg- est daughter, van also be |ment which, alas, may be repeated Lealthy and strong losing Buro- | when another opportunity offers? pean supremacy. And this proof will | The writer thinks not. simulta stow socialism h British unions throughout their not onl ical but also construc- | history have been much more strictly our product aompetition can We labor men will ive forces. {limited to labor questions than those | | of the continent. Only recently, and | (Copyright, 18 {under Macdonald's influence, has the [ British trade union adopted the ten- MACDONALD CABINET |¢gisiis, uathggaceruters of con- | Was Pacifiat in W FACES LABOR STRIFE |, s nesites b rpecct o 103, e Industrial Upheaval in Britain| o) Renent Cernony. o are to have Likely to Be Added to Bur- anclent foreign office traditions min- gling with doctrines of international dens of New Premier. sociallsm. Does this prospect offer any hope for solution of the problems Which have walted 80 long for an an- swer? By the Associated Press. Macdonald’s recent pamphlet on la- LONDON, January 12.—J. Ramsay : bor's foreign policy contains nothing Macdonald, the labor leader, in addi- ies tion to the natural difficulties in- separable from the taking of office for the first time by a totally inex- perienced government at a moment of great industrizl and commercial ssion with unemployment in- ! rathor than diminishing, ems likely to be confronted also with two first-class {industrial up- eavals. The first is a railway strike and the second similar trouble with the coal miners, who are discontented with and are trying to upset their national wages agreement. The miners are now taking a ballot off ferminating this agreement three months hznce. and_the result of this ballot will be officially announced next week. It fs known that it will be overwhelmingly in favor of a new agreement, but it is understood that the vote will not be regarded as a suandate for a strike, but rather for negotiating modifications in the wages ugreement. 1f the niners will be advised by their executive there will be no strike, | R but danger always exists for the| widening of a dispute through one side or the other proving intractable. —_— ' Manchester, England, is to be the [N ‘meeting place this spring of the aec- ond international conference of the |N ‘Women's Boclety JOIN OUR $2.00 a week, for 50 weeks. $5.00 a week, for 50 weeks. long been in agrecment on| to overthrow the two-thirds rule in | the next democratic national conven- | tion, according to a statement by Daniel L C. Roper. former commissioner of in- | | ternal revenue and prominent in the| MeAdoo campalgn. Mr. Roper said that | | Mr. MeAdoo was opposed to.a change in | the present rules for the mext conven- | tion. | Referring to some recent published | assertlons that it was planned In be- helf of Mr. McAdoo to substitute a | majority for the two-thirds voting rule, Mr. Roper said: ! “While I cannot anticipate the ction of the national committee at its meeting next week, 1 do know | that Mr. McAdoo has cxpressed the | view that no effort should be made | 10 abrogate this rule as related to the 1924 nomination.” | [ After the 1924 nominees are chosen, | Mr. Roper said his personal belfef was that the convention then might con- sider a change in the rules which now requirc two-thirds votes for the | | nomination of President and Vice | President i There have been reports that the | democratic national committee next | week would take Eteps to abrogate the two-thirds rule, but prominent party leaders have explained that the committee was without power to change the rules, this being the prov- ince of the convention itself. There |is said to be a sentiment. however, for substitution of a majority vota for the two-thirds rule after the 1924 nominations are made, and the na- tional committee is expected to «c sider a recommendation to that effect. —_— new which suggests an afirmative He wants Burope reconstru d and Russia recognized. But Da | Llovd George worked throughout 1920, | 1821 and 1922 for the same cbjects with- | out_sues | Moreover, we know that throughout the world a certain group of sccond- rate financiers, especially at Amster- dam, have not hesitated to co-operate | we find these groups today aligned | against France. We may fear, there- | fore, that labor doctrines, in o far as | | they are hostile to France, will find | plenty of speculative support. ! Courtesy Amsurcs: H It goes without sayire . hat any | French government, whetfier Premier Poincare’s or another, will observe the friendliest courtesy toward the | British labor government. We have | no prejudice, and if Macdonald s ready for broad and complete con- | versations—which his predecessors have never seemed to want—we _shall gladly meet him half way. But that hasn’t happened yet. ‘And mean- while it is well to recall the reasons why the labor government has not Inspired the deepest confidence here. In the fact of remascent Germany arming herself, the advent to power of the man who was so dismally mis- taken in 1914 is scarcely reassuring for a nation exposed to invasion. (Copyrigat. 1924.) Checks Will Be Mailed November 29, 1924 CHRISTMAS - SAVINGS CLUB for o were .. $25 e 5 weks....... $50 ; % $250 ™ Citizens Savings Bank with the revolutionary parties, and | 1336 New York Avenue Come Early! The Bést Bargains Are the First to Go! Sale Starts Promptly Monday Morning! All Pianos Carry the Liberal Jordan Guarantee and Free Exchange Within choice. One Year This represents one of the best bar- gains in our sale. The instrument has had very little use and can hardly be told from new. Plays any standard 88-note roll and is equipped with modern expres- sion devices. It is a snap at the special price of $245.4 EASY TERMS | Confidentially An:anged I this sale. You folks who have been waiting for this great sale have a great surprise in store for you. Our December business was the greatest in our history as— and we took in trade many fine upright, player and grand pianos, all of which have been priced at ridiculously low figures for quick removal during Jordan’s great semi-annual clearance sales always create history, and the abundance of bargains offered in this sale make it our greatest campaign. Here is your chance to secure your favorite make of piano at a fraction of its value. The best bargains will naturally go first and we urge you to call early in order to have the best Our confidential easy terms will make immediate possession possible. NEW BABY GRANDS We only have four of these beautiful lit- tle new baby grands to offer at this low price. They are beautifully finished in mahogany case, and are the regulation apartment size grands. Your old upright will be taken in trade and full resale value allowed.... PIANO G Street at 13th *397 Included the sale you will find such makes Chickering Steinway Wheelock Emerson Behning Francis Bacon Cable-Nelson Gulbransen and many others This player will be sold to some lucky purchaser at the ridiculous price of $185. We only have one player at this low price. It will be the first to go, and if it is not sold when you visit our store, ask to see it. PAY AS LOW AS $2 PER WEEK. DELIVERY H Within a radius of | i twenty miles of Washington ‘Home of the Chickering Piano All Planes Not Exactly Like Cuts Shown

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