Evening Star Newspaper, March 7, 1924, Page 3

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Sixty-five Million Tons of Ice Annually | About seventy-five years ago the first “icing machine” was 1t was on the order!| churn and turned out' At first it was used exclusively in| the homes of the rich. Today in every city in our country; 65,000,000 tons are made annually, and the price is less than a cent a invented. of a about six pounds of ice. ice is manufactured pound. American_has 4 plants in Washing- ton, most of which work all winter to meet the heavy demands of summer. Pure, clean American Ice costs but a fraction of a cent a pound. AMERICAN ICE COMPANY THE EVENING STAR, WASfiINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 194 The True Story of Woodrow Wilson By DAVID LAWRENCE. CHAPTER XII. How Woodrow Wilson Nearly E: braced the National Progre Ticket fn 1012, Woodrow Wilson foresaw long be- fore he entered politics as a candi- date for Governor of New Jersey that the democratic party of the nation needed new leadership. His letters to friends indicate that he looked for- ward to the campaign of 1912 as the occasion for a rebirth of the demo- [eratic party. Prior to 1910, whan ha became Governor of New Jersey, sug- gestions that Mr. Wilson himself might prove the new leader did not appeal to him as possible of fulfill- ment. He had no party following. He had made speeches from time to time, = IF YOU LOVE FICTION Attend this sale here to- morrow—hundreds of new and used books of high-class fiction, by popular authors. Special Tomorrow 2 "R’ 75c¢ FOR EARLMAN’S 'BOOK SHOP 933 G St. Only FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Service Charge Never Over 3180 Polished Floors of Hard Wood Extimates on anything i thix e—cleaning, polixh- ing, seraping or Inying new foors—turnixhed gladly and phone. Nord J. M. ADAMS 1503 Connecticut Ave, it is true, on public questions and had spoken from one end of the country to the other before civic bod- ies and educational Institutions, but not until the democratic leaders in New Jersey sought him for the guber- natorial nomination did he begin to think that perhaps at last the road to the presidency had been opened. As if with prophetic instinct, Wood- row Wilson wrote a friend in_the spring of 1912: “Roosevelt and Taft are bysily engaged in splitting the republican party wide open—so that we may get in." Resisted by Organization. Mr. Wilson was then Governor of New Jersey. He entered the demo- cratic primaries in various states and { found himself successful in some, but resisted as a rule by the organiza- senti- and re- publican parties had |IPL|XH to crystal- lize. The reflex the Taft-Roose- velt controversy on stand-patism and 1t in the deme was not diffi- Kinate 1 m and organiz: There had been times when Mr. Wilson felt so indignant over boss control in the democratic party that he was not unsympathetic with the idea of having a mew party formed by the progressives of both the re- publican and democratic _parties. Just after the regular republican convention renominated Mr. Taft, a third party, with Roosevelt at the head of it. representing the progres- !sive republicans, and \Woodrow Wil- son as his running mate, represent- ing the progressive democratic sent) ment of the country, was not onl sted ‘among progres < a moment when | Woodrow Wilson himself thought of it, too. ‘It was in those weary hours when the democratic vention at Balti- more was deadlocked and it looked as if Champ Clark might be nominat- ed. Mr. Wilson had persuaded him- seif that a victory for rk would be a victory for the bosses in the {democratic party. and he felt that somehow in the call street. This was £0 ideeply ingrained in his mind that at a critical moment in the balloting {he turned to members of his family and remarked that he might not be S?EGIAL NOTICES. n st univate & womn Snday BiEnE. * organ; will tell ab Tgain. Centenninl Rapt. Ch.. T persol as i Welrs with the \xnx Company. formerly at 1 nav., will please eall fo the "office of Albert K. Colorad Washington. articlex are not cadled for prior to Apr t il dolph 1 WILL tr it i been lost, all b that if it has priated or i without ' the of the Caledoniwn-Am pany e ity ugents and such poli Al NDS_OF SH s, evergreen, furnished and Lawis put in first. rder a “IRich_soll. F. 28 104 OUSEHOLD Tou need it. and xold say silver polish. 361l "be “delivered promptly € and address o.d. Pri Full size Jar. ANTED TO BRING A VAN LOAD NOTICE 1S HERERY GIV) meeting of the stockholde: insuragee’ Company of the' U Amer held at 501 Wilkins building, 1..]2 H ity of Washington, D. day, March 11, 102! 10 o'cle noon of said d ROBERT D. LAY, Secretary. ruck | with . HARRIS & Co., cor. 7th and States of e Cles ar of ul)ll- to support the democratic ticket Wa tured the demo- party. When a friend standing suggested that the third party convention would soon be held and lum Mr. Wilson might be tendered the nomination for the vice presiden- the then Governor of New Jer- remarked that ircumstances make such a development Pos- the were incidents Call Main PHL Prospect Hill Cemetery The -nnn-x meeting of the lot owners will be held at Concord Hall, 314 Tuesday, March 11, 1924’ at 8 eive (he anual riporc Sf'the (rusices io elect seven trustees for the ensuin fo elect seven VAL MARTIN, Beeretary. This Million Dollar Printing Plunt fs ready to execute your every printing require 1210-1212 D St. Adams” Impress On Your Printing 18 A ouuuvng CT! T NOT HIGH PRICED PRINTER. BYRON S. ADAMS Expert Roof Men —at your service > make the roof lea] proof. Just phone . IRONCLAD it . The National Cagml Press| 1221 5th N.W., Phone Maln 14, A Richer Milk for Growing Children, Invalids & Homes Rated 99.06 by the Health Department UR Grade A Milk is an exceptionally rich milk, of a deep golden color, delicious flavor and heavy cream. It is the very nour- ishing milk of accredited Guernsey herds, and is cooled, bottled and double sealed nght on the farm—miles from the city dust and grime. 1t is a noticeably superior milk. that finds favor with thoughtful mothers of growing chil- dren, invalids and even those who d6 not ordi- narily care for the taste of milk. It is recom- mended by physicians for its superior nourish- which led to the nomination of Wood- row Wilson for the presidency, stranger xtill are the tales of how it was accomplished. The Wilson forces seemed like crusaders. They had re- sponded to Willlam Jennings Bryan's outery against boss control. They refused to make trades and political bargains. They refused to yleld even when Champ Clark had passe§ the majority mark—never before had a candlidate gotten so far without win- ning the necessary two-thirds. tional political conventions are rarely susceptible of precise analysis. Too many things happen at once as the numerous tacticians concentrate their subleties and cajolery. Coinci- dentally the floor leaders are working in a half dozen places to accomplish the samo general result. The newspapers at the timd gave ‘Willlam Jepnings Bryan substantial credit for ¥ringing about the nomina- tion of Mr. Wilson, but ever since then prominent delegates have in- sisted that in the many secret con- ferences of that convention Mr. Bryan, after successfully blocking the nomination of Champ Clark, really favored himself, proposing from three to five other candidates on the Mon- morning _following the Sun- dn) adjournment, on the theory that the convention was “hopelessly dead- locked.” Irrespective of what really happened, the country was given the impression that Mr. Bryan played an effective part in sefting the stage for the nomination of Woodrow Wilson. And Mr. Wilson not unmindful of the Bryan influence in preceding demo- cratic conventions was inclined to share that view. Fearful of Third Party. Without doubt the fact that the third party convention would meet a week or so later and nominate Theodore Roosevelt as the national progressive candidate was consantly in the minds of the democratic dele- gates, who, as usual, were not a little influénced In selecting a candidate by the thought that he deserved the nomination who had the best chance of winning the election. Would the democrats permit the third party to draw progressives from the demo- cratic party? The nomination of a progressive democrat like Woodrow Wilson, his champlons at Baltimore argued, would checkmate such a pos- sibility’ and give the country a new view"of the democratic party. There was something fascinating, if not sensational, about the spectacular rise of the college president to fame as a courageous administrator and a fear- less spokesman of democratic princi- ples. Also, he had carried New Jer- sey by approximately 50,000 majority only “two years before and his strength was undiminished by the record he had made as governor in a state repressed theretofore by boss management of bi-partisan effective- ne Convinced that he won the nomina- tion at Baltimore on principle, Wood- row Wilson endeavored to conduct his campaign on the same high plane. Not once during the 1912 contest, for instance~did Mr. Wilson mention the name of Theodore Roosevelt. Never during his eight vears of the presi- dency did he make a direct reply to any statement by Col. Roosevelt. He tried to avold personalities in politics. He was much more interested in prin ciples, preferring always to deal with persons implicitly rather than ex- plicitly. (Copsright, 1924, by the George H. Doran Company, in the United Btates, Canads, South {merica, 'World publication 'rights reserved by Current News Features, Incorporated.) {Tomorrow's chapter tella of Mr. lar motions about party d campaigning.) wil vl-uw-- “SAFE MILK for BABIES” ment and merits the Health Department rating of 99.06. Try this milk. A telephone call—WEST 183—or a postal will start service 'to your home. Let Us Pamt Your Automobile By the 17k glaes process. We save you time \ and money. A complete paint job—: o new in 3 to 6 days. mates _cheertully given. PAINTING SYSTEM. 2018 tomac 101 OLD ROOFS —can be made to give satis fce for miany years with thi knowledge of repairs. Let us save old roof—consult us first. KOONS RooriNG OOMPANY, 12th st. n.w. 119 3rd St. B.W. Phone Main 983, Frone or calle "Eets LYK GLAS mo 3204-3208 N 1641 Connecticut Ave. Street N.W. '3302 Fourteenth St. N. w. Stand 20 Park View Market PLAN CATHEDRAL PREABHING MISSION College to Be Established to Aid in Drive for Great National Revival. Organization of “a great“preaching comparable to some of the movements mission, most effective ' religious in the history of the world,” and he: Ing as its nucleus a college of preack- ers at the National Cathedral here s under way, it was announced today by the National Cathedral Founda- tion. The alm of the mission will be a re- vival of Christianity, it was stated. That Christianity “is caught in one of the decisive crises in its centuries of_struggle,” that “it must summon all its statesmanship to maintain itself as the world religion,” and that | “it must mobilize all Christian forces not only to rescue Christ’s religion, but also to protect organized society,’ is the opinlon of the founders of the college. he Rt. Rev. Dr. James E. Free- man, Bishop of Washington, is now engaged with the leaders of the Epls- copal Church in organizing the insti- tution that will typify the spirit of the national cathedral,” a statement by the foundation today pointed out. “The foremost preachers, clerical and lay, in the United States a the crusade that is expe come as dramatic in some.of its as- pects as the preaching of Peter the Hermit, of Whitefield, of the Cowley Fathers, or of ten. Booth. The first sessions of the College of Preachers sturt this summer. “In carrying out the program of the on ‘dependence not be placed upon for . but audi- torlums, lase religions presentations wide as those for athlctic and amuse- ment presentations. Renowned Preachers to Come. “As a first step, men of great repu- tation, who have won renown in Eu- rope and America for their scholar- ship and ability in preaching and teaching, will be secured from time to time. Each Sunday afternvon Bishop ¥reeman or one of these noted visi- A WARNING. I have bien advised that un- authorized persons are going from house to house Soliciting funds for the bullding of tMe Washington Cathedral. No one {8 authorized to do this without carrying a letter from me or from the National Cathedral Foundation. JAMES E. FREEMAN, Bishop of Washington. tors, will preach at the eathedral, “ither in the Bethlehem Chapel or out of doors. The service and the sermon will be broadcast. “In_addition, these men will be sent to varfous industrial and educational centers, to carry to masses of Ameri- cans, outside rather than inside the church, the fundamental principles of Christianity. Spitable occasions and opportunities will be arranged for them. Mass meetings, conferences, gatherings of all sorts will be held, ‘o theaters and halls, in the great aniversity stadia, in ' the highways and_byways of great cities; every- where any anywhere that mien and women can be assembled to listen to their strong appeal for Christ and His religion. Will Rush Plans. “As rapldly as possible the perma- nent organization of the ‘College of Preachers’ will be perfected. This means a group of resident students, young men, recently ordained, marked by mental gifts and preaching power. They will be under competent direc- tion and leadership. As a result of this training of the best materfal, the cathedral will have its own staff of preachers available for the service the church. ‘The cathedral Ilibrary, construction, will be a most tmpor- tant adjunct. This library will be as completely equipped with nece sary books, covering all fields of Christian learning and actlvity, as it is possible to make it. Students will be welcomed, as there is room, who desire some ' special trajning or to cial line of research. now under curity and vrosperity of this country rests. upon a revival of Christian falth and #orals; convinced that the spoken word rather than the written word i the power which alone, as history proves, can reach effectively the men and women outside the church, &nd In the hope that Wash- ington Cathedral may serve as a power house for the spiritual life of the church and the natlon, this foun- dation seeks to perform this service for Christianity in America through its ‘College of Preachers.’ Let's Go. From the Notre Dame Juggler. He—Sweetheart, I'd go anything for you. he—Let's start on your bank ac- through count. GRIPPY COLDS During the period following colds, coughs, grippe, influenza or other prostrating illness, when your body is weakened, is the worthwhile time to prove the strength- restorative merit of | It’s all regular stock—the same top quality | you've found here the entire season. Labels in | the coat pockets will give you the makers’ - ff names. You know their suits sell for $40 to $60. | Alterations Will Be Made At Actual Cost To Us | I Our %40 SCOITS [Ml]lSION It is the food-tonic with world-wide prestige, that strengthens and helps build up the weakened body and restore the normal balance of health. If you are run- 1319-1321 F Street STORE NEWS “Fashion Park” and “Stratford” Clothes ANY of the suits in this final clear- ance of winter stock are just right for Spring wear. There are and other light colors; the coats are un- lined, and plenty of them have trousers cut with the fashionable wide bottoms. ure the saving! CAPT: W.:L. McMORRIS ' WITH D. C. TRAFFIC BOARD |- Assistant ' Shief [of = Park Police . Represents "Office, of Public Buildings and Grounds. Capt. Walter L. McMorris, assistant chiof of park police, has been detailed to represent the office of public build- ings and grounds on the new traffic board of the District. Utllization for parieing purposes of roads in the White House Ellipse and other fed- eral parks is one'of the questions to be considered by the board for the relief of traffic congestion in the business districts. WOMEN REGISTERING. Will Participate in Exercises of “Day of Recollection.” Registration was begun today at the Mount Carmel National Retreat House of women and girls who will partici- pate in the exercises of the “day of recollection” Sunday. The exercises will be conducted by Rev. Mr. Robert of the Cross, a retreat director of the Order of Barefoated Car- melites. The services will begin at 10 o'clock Sunday morning and close at 6 o'clock in the evening. e Signers of Declaration. { Declaration of Independence | men who represented | many vocations. There were 24 law- yers, 14 farmers, 9 merchants, doctorg of medicine or surgery, 1 min- ister, 1 manufacturer and three who had | cous callings. Washington | The was signed by Ki-MoiIbs | l AFTER MEALS | SURPRISING | RELIEF | For I | I | i INDIGESTION AT ANY DRUG STORE SECOND-HAND BOOKS 50c EACH PAUL PEARLMAN 1711 G St. N “NEVER” has a client of ours lost a single penny in either princi- pal or interest—a record we prize most highly. Our conservative methods that have established for us this enviable achievement rec- ord undoubtedly will guide us in the future. Notes of $250 up Bearing 7% Now On Hand Chas. D. Sager 924 Fourtecnth Street N.W. $50 and $60 SUITS | SUITS *21,°29 Don’t miss this chance to buy one or two | suits for next winter. Look at the prices! Fig- ’ I | | | 36 Loan Dept., Main 2 8 AM. to 6 P.M. smart grays Smoked Picnics, Ib. o Saturday Specials . Pork Loins, Ib. 16¢ Half or Whole—Small Loins—Strictly Fresh Fresh Shoulders, Ib. . 10c 4to0 6 Ib. Average 10c 18¢c Half or Whole—8-1b. Average Smoked Hams, Ib. 8 to 9 Ib. Average—Fine Quality s EGGS Pure Lard, 2 lbs. By the Piece lb., Two Dozen 55¢ 25¢ Pork Chops,Ib. . . . 14c Shoulder Cuts Sirloin Steak,Ib. . . 32¢ Chuck Roast, Ib. . . 17c Creamery Butter, Ib. . 52¢ Chicken Livers, Ib. 30c¢ Potatoes, 10 Ibs. . . 19c U. S. No. 1 Graded Onions,51bs. . . . . Yellow Fancy New Cabbage, 2 Ibs. . Fresh and Green Celery, 2 bunches . . ' Fancy, Clean Stock Beets, 2 bunches . Fancy Florida Oranges, 8for . . .. - Florida’s Best . Lemons,doz. . . . . Clean, Bright, Juicy Spinach, Ib. 19c 19¢ 19¢ 19c 19¢ 19¢ 15¢ Fresh and Green | Sweet Potatoes, 3 lbs., 25¢ Carrots, 3 bunches . 25c¢ || Iceberg Lettuce, 3 hds., 25¢ Grapefruit, 3 for . . 25¢ Hecker’s Buckwheat,pkg.10c Ritter’s Catsup, large 16¢ | Ritter’s Beans 8c Corn, Maine Style . . 9¢ Tomatoes, No. 2 can . 9c Del Monte Loganberries, 19c Pink Salmon, 2 cans . 25¢ Heinz Beans, 3 cans . 25¢ 4

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