Evening Star Newspaper, August 15, 1924, Page 9

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" WOMENOFG.0P GETTING 10 WoRK Committee Members in| Washington Give Optimistic Reports From States. Organization wom-~n for th Coolidge-Da rapidly Hert, vice o can national came to Wash of the Republican ampaign to elect the ticket ix progressin ording to Mrs. Alvin rman of the Republi-| ommittee. Mrs, Hert izton for the notifica- | tion of President Coolidge. Other Re- | publican women. active in the vaign who expr 1 confidenc the outcome of the tion today, in-| cluded Mrs. John ¢ ional | committeewoman from Ohio: Mr Alfee Collins, member of the notifica- tion commitwe from Utah: Mrs. | Wilma S. Le Van, member of the no- | tification committee from Ohio, and ! Mrs. Julia 1. Ashbrook, member of | the notification committce from Dela- | ware | “1 feel entirely sutistied that every | Republican woman on the job” who spent rk headquarte the New Y ing with wom nd and discussing ¢ “They all tell me 1 nds of women are volunteering | rvices, ‘giving up their vaca- | ind putting their shoulders to| eel” | Demand for Spenkers. Mrs. Hert reported that there was an increasing demand for woman speakers throughout the country. She stated that Coolidge and Dawes clubs for women were heing formed in every State and that women were | conducting campaign schools Mrs. Jeannette Hyde of Utah has char of the formation of clubs in Western States, including Utah. vada, Arizona, New Mexico, Montana and Idaho. Mrs, Hal Browa, | Mrs. Hert said. had just been ap-| pointed as national leader for the colored women for this campaign. | “The women of Ohio.” Mrs, telle said, “have an important task whead of them. The majority of our women feel that it is all-important that we elect Coolid and a strong Republ i Fall. We all know the nts | record on legislation affecting women | and children and it is a record which cannot fail to commend him to the | mothers of the Nation.” Wextern Women Active. Collins said that the women est have always taken an &ctive interest in politics and in pu lic questions. This year their inter- est is ed. she said. “Speaking for Utah.” she said, “there is no doubt whatever that this State will be in the Coolidge-Dawes column. Not only will Utah be for Coolidge, but our women have awakened to the fa that a President is handicapped un- less he has a Congress that supports him. Therefore, we are determined to give him men in the House and in the Senate who will work for his principles and his program. Mrs. Le Van said the women voters | know the President’'s record in legis- lation, particularly affecting women in industry, and the welfare of chi dren is one of the aspects of his pub- lic activity which the women are not | losing sight of in this campaign. “It was largely through President Cool- idge's efforts while Governor of M: sachusetts that that State took fore- most plage in enacting legislation af- fecting public welfare: we believe in | him,” she said. Mrs. Ashbrook said: I think Dela- ware is absolutely safe for Coolidge. | In the primary, held on August 2,| more women than men registered. ¥ per cent of these women are Republicans, and their anxiety to register may be taken as a reflection | of the interest that the women of Delaware are taking in President Coolidge.” AUTOIST SUES OFFICERS. Asks District Be Forced to Re- store Driver's . Permit. A suit to compel the District Com- missioners and Inspector Albert H. Headley, in charge of the [Police | Traffic Bureau, to restore his permit to operate an automobile, was filed today in the District Supreme Court today by Russell A. Murray. Through Attorneys Whelan and ©'Connell the plaintiff claims that his license was revoked by the de- fendants last June 16, and that re- peated requests to have it restored have been refused. Murray claims that he is being deprived of his rights to use his property through alleged un- lawful action of the defendants, who falled to proceed with due process of law = . Potash Industries Agree. BERLIN, August 15.—The German Potash Syhdicate and the French- Alsatlan, Potash Association have reached-an agreement, it is announc ed, regarding the sale and distribu+ tion of potash in the United States. R ST THE FIN AL AUTHORITY Magazine An Intsrview with J.P. BAscocx Mah-Jongg—Its Authentic Source. T O e Originator of the formatory Double. ‘Wisus C. WHITEHEAD Principles of Play—When there is more an One Chance for Game. H.B. Maxrv Important Golf Championships. Franx J. SHALL American Chess Champion Chess and Auction Bridge. AUGUST the finest issue of this Most Fascinating Magazine Now On Sale 25c. a Copy $2.50 a Year Buy the American Code of Laws for Mah-Jongg complete in the July itsae, still 0a your newssaand. Foemulated by famous Authorities and Experts J. P, Bascocx: L. F. Hanav F.Form Joun H. Surrn e ron C Wi is a Presc Colds, Grippe, Dengue Fever, Cbastipation, Bilious Head- | symboliz | tozether | tale of b |another great jburney. and long re- | memibered was the havoc he worked among the Qogs of the many villages along the Mackenzie, across the Rockies and down the Porcupine to the Yukon. He reveled in the ven- geance he wreaked upon his kind. were ordinary, unsuspecting « They were not prepared for wiftness and directness, for his k without warning. They did not know him for what he was, a lightning flash of slaughter. They bristled up to him, stiff-legged and challenging, while' he, wasting no time on elaborate preliminaries, snap pinz into Action like a steel spri was at their throats and destroying them before they knew what was ning and while they were yet in dept at fighting He never wasted his never tussled. He was in for that, and if he missed, ain too quickly. The d the wolf for close quarters s Star.) sould never learn the him alone in camp. pursuing him and crying defiance “at him. the lesson of the previous nizht was erased, and that night would have to be learned over again, to be as immediately forgot- Besides, there was a greater sistence in their cmlike of him. sensed between themselves and him a diffeience of kind—cause suf- fieient in itself for hostility. Like him, they were domesticated wolves, t they had be-n domesticated for nerations. Much of the wild had en lost, that to them the wild was the unknown, the acing aragee and ung to the wild. He was_its personifica- that when they showed their teeth to him were themselves against the powers struction that lurked in the sha s his to an unusual degree. He f the forest and in the dark berond |could not endure u prolonged con- the camp fire. | tact with another body. Tt smacked But th was one lesson the dogs | of danger. It made him frantic. He did learn, and that was tos keep | must be away, free, on his own legs, White Fang touching no living thing. It was the rible for any of them to face single- | wild still clinging to him, asserting handed. They met him with the | itself through him. This feeling mass formation, utherwise he would [ been accentuated by the Ishmaelite have killed them, one by one, in a |life he had led from his puppyhood. night. As it was, he never had a|Danger lurked in contacts. It was chance to kil them. He might roll a | the trap, ever the trap, the fear of dog off its feet, but the pack would | lurking deep in the life of him, woven be upon him before he could follow | into the fiber of him up and deliver deadly throat In consequence the strange do, troke, At the first hint of conflict | encountered had no chance ag the whole team w together and | him He eluded ther fangs. He got faced him he dops had quarr. them, or got away, himself untouched among themselve but these we in either event. In the natural course of ‘things there were cxceptions to this. There were times when several | dogs, pitching on to him, him before he could get aw: there were times when a single dog scored deeply on him, But these were accidents, In the main, so efli- cient a fighter had he become, he went his way unscathed. Another advantage he poss that of correctly judging time distance. Not that he did this consciously, however. He did not calculate such things. Tt was all | tomatic. His eves sa correctly, the nerves e the vision cor- rectly to his bra The parts of him better adjusted than those of wwerage dog. They worked to- more smoothly cadily a better, far b 0 FTVOUS, and muscular c rdination When . his eyes conveyed to his brain i moving ima an m. h without con ws effort, knew that limited that action and required for its completion ould avoid or the drt its fang same monient could sssimal fraction of tim deliver his own t. his was a mo Not that he Nature still ¢ it, and fmpuls strengta, | too quickly W tion; s forgotten when tr with White Fang On the other hand, try the would, they could not Kill Whit Fang. He was too quick for them, o0 formidable, too wise. He avoided tight places and alwayvs b out of it when they b r to surround him While as for getting him off his feet, th was no dog among them capable of doing the tr feet clung to the carth with the s tenacity that he clung to life that matter. life and footing nonymous in this unending fare with the pack, and none kne better than White Fang So he became the ¢nemy kind, domesticated wolves the were, softened by the fires o weaKened in the sheltering shade of man's strength. White bitter and implacable. - T him _ was so molded 3 vendetta against terribly did he liv Gray Dgaver, fieree could not but marve f he swore anima uble was brewin as w of his they d hus he other dog, ind at th the infin | which to tody and brain, ed mechanism to be praised for it like of t in_‘stran ind the sword th. Indians likewise z Do When was OUR AUGUST FUR SALE has proven that women will buy ahead of season providing a proper inducement is offered. You can buy your coat.now at $30 to $100 less than you will Pay any time this year. 5 DOWN SECURES ANY COAT In order that everyone might take advantage of these wonderful savings, we are extendi MOST LIBERAL TERMS OF CREDIT. EVERY COAT GUARANTEED Every Coat in this sale has been thoroughly inspected as to workmanship and ? quality of skins and is guar- anteed to be absolutely as represented. RACCOON COATS First quality, well matched skins. Dis- tinctive models, Beautifully lined. SAV- INGS of $40 to $50. PAY $5.00 DOWN NATURAL MUSKRAT Marfy beautiful models fashioned of se- lected akins, Rich silk linings, SAVE $60 10 $75. PAY $5.00 DOWN FRENCH SEAL COATS (DYED CONEY) Fine selected skins, large collar and cuffs beautifully lined —SAVINGS of $60 to $75. PAY $5.00 DOWN And Many Other Beautiful Models CORNER 7th AND E STREETS Over Kresge’s Store. Open Saturday Evenings. punished | d | ap of an- | more generous to him than to the average animal; that was all. It was in the summer that White Fang arrived at Fort Yukon. Gray Beaver had crossed the great water- &hed between the Mackenzie and the Yukon In the late winter, and spent the spring in hunting among the western outlying spurs of the Rock- ies. Then, after the break-up of the ice on the Porcupine, he had built a canoe and paddled down that stream to Where it effected its junction with the Yukon just under the Arctic Cir- cle. Here stood the old Hudson's Bay Company, fort;: and here were many Indiuns, much food and un- precedented excitement. It was the summer of 1898, and thousands_of gold hunters were going up the Yu- kon to Dawson and the Klondike. StM hundreds of miles from their ®oal, nevertheless many of them had beén on the way for a year, and the least any of, them had traveled to get that far was 5,000 miles, while some had come from' the other side of the world. Here Gray Beaver stopped. A whis- per of the gold rush had'reached his ears, and he had come with several bales of furs, and another of gut- ewn mittens and moccasins. He | 7 7 7 Oow We are W, 2270 7777777 had been S 4 22 729-731 7th St. N.W. Growing Girls’ Pumps Broad and narrow toes. Solid leather soles. Rubber heels. $1.98 $1.98 Growing Girls’ Pumps Both patent and brown Oulfakin. Goodyear welt soles, Rubber heels. $3.49 Women’s Brown Oxfords Broad and narrow toes, Rubber heels ALl sizes. Men’s Trouser-Crease Oxfords Brown only, Goodyear leather soles Rubber, hools. $2.98 Barefoot Sandals. to size 2....... Infants’ Patent One- strap Pumps. Sizes 5% to 8. R 98¢ $1.49 3100 M St. G.R. would not have ventured o long a trip had _he not expected generous profits. But what he had expected was nothing to what he realized. His wildest dream had net exceeded a hundred per cent profit; he made a thousand per cent. And like a true Indian, he settled down to trade care- fully and slowly, even if it took all summer and the Test of the winter to dispose of his goods. It was at Fort Yukon that White Fang saw his first white men. As compared with the Indians he had known, they were to him another race of beings, a race of superior They i po: Claflin Optical Co. /24,5, 5. New Branch Store, 922 14th St. OPPOSITE FRANKLIN SQUARE TO ALL New Edison NERS prepared to give you SUPER SERVICE in Records. You will always find here a COMPLETE stock of the latest— New Edison Re-Creations as well as Victor and Brunswick Records Why not open a Record Account —order the new records you want . .and. pay $1 a, week. Mail orders promptly filled. Kinney’s Opportunity Sale Offers Shoes for Every Member of the Family at Tremendous Savings Gun Metal Pumps For growing girls. Goodyear ‘welt soles. Rubber heels. $2.98 $2.98 Misses’ and Children’s Patent Cut Outs Also variety of colors. Extra big values, Sizes 8% to 8. $1.98 $1.98 Women’s Imitation Alligator Big Reductions Children’s Department Play Oxfords. Up to size 2. cee Boys’ Trouser Crease Oxfords, rubber heel: brown only; all sizes. . 98¢ (] 729-731 7th St N.W. Both Stores Open All Day Saturday sessing superior power, and it is on power that god-head rests. White Fang did not reason 1t out, did not in his mind make the sharp generaliza- tion that the white gods were more powerful. It was a feeling, nothing more, and yet nona the less potent. As In his puppyhood the looming bulks of the tépees, man-reared, had affected him as manifestations of power, so was he affected now by the houses and the huge fort all of mas- sive lo, white gods were strong. sessed greater mastery over matter than the gods he had known, most powerful “among which was Gra Beaver. And yet Gray Beaver was a child-god among these white-skinned ores. (Continued im Tomorrow's Star.) They pos- The real optimist is @ man who can make a molehill out of a mountain of troub! | 9e- Sentence Is Suspended. Willlam [, Drain, 58 years oldi™ pleaded gullty to intoxication before Judge McMahon in the District of Columbia branch of Police Court t day. A sentence of 15 day in Jail was suspended upon the understand- ing that Drain would get 3 move on him and hike to the peach orchardg of Maryland. where, he told the court had work FOR 3 DAYS ONLY To Advertise the Values Offered PIANO SHOP,” Ave. S.E. GUARANTEED PLAYER PIANO Wonderful at “THE 227 Pa. down. NO MONEY DOWN 3% Read the Facts & If you have a piano or phono- graph to trade in, we have decided to make delivery with no money 183 Including Bench to Match—FREE DELIVERY 30 DAYS FREE TRIAL P READ THE FACTS - Purchase this of 30 d: piano and have it delivered to your home. If at the end you are not thoroughly pleased, you may select any other player in our store and we will allow all you have paid—making no charge for the exchange. Bring This Coupon $25 RADE VALUE COUPON This coupon and $25 entitles vou to 850 credit on_the player you select. Only one coupon accepted on each player. LTI THE SOUTHEAST PIANO SHOP 227 Pennsylvania Ave. OPEN NIGHTS :ihlmIlIlI:IIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIlll"llml"IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIlll'||IIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I|II|IlIIlIlIlIlIlIIIIlIlllIIIIIlIlIlIIlIlIllHIlIlIllllllllllllllIIHIIlllllllllilllllllllllll‘ Fashioned Silk Hose 98¢ Pure thread lisle tops. white shades. S perfeciions 1n top. Clean Up! Men’s $5 to $6.50 Low Shoes Crotce of Yemaining stock of me; better grade low shoes. All Goody e with rubber heels: brogue and’ blacks: Showing Beautiful Fall Hats | 5 Just unpacked Ypriced very closi give a real $5 value Up-to- the-minute styles, in at only $3.95. deep-pile in black rich, vets; colors, matron. HAR KAUFMAN: 1316-1326 Seventh St. N.W. A STRAW HAT FREE WITH ANV MAN'S WO(?LEN SUIT 2 Price for miss or $25.00 Suits $30.00 Suits $35.00 Suits $45.00 Suits Remember, Mr. Man, this means your unrestricted choice of our entire stock of woolen” suits, every one included. Sizes 32 to 48, and you save as much as vou|g spend and get a straw hat free with every suit. Children’s $2.50 to $3.50 Pumps & Oxfords Balance of children’s Oxfords and Strap Pumps; Tans and Patent leather: spring_and 'low rubber heels. Sizes 8% to 2. Values $2.50 to $3.50, colors on and, e to vel- and RY Extraordinary Value-Giving When We Sell Real 4 Normandy Voile DRESS orth $2°45 &$8 - Beautifully stvled dresses in this well known fabric, in assorted patterns and dark and medium Many are lace trimmed, and some have embroidered eyelet collar and cuff sets, or ruffles of the same materials. ‘a rare opportunity to get two or three little dresses to finish out the season and to take away over your vacation. In white, pink, blue or orchid, lace trimmed Full cut. $12.50 $15.00 $17.50 $20.00 $22.50 e, TGO Sale of Boys’ $2 Scout Shoes Extra Special! Boys' and Youth’s Brown All Solid Lefither Scout Shoes with full double soles to heels, for knock- about and school wear; sizes 13 to 2 and 21 to 5. grounds. Here is Sizes for misses and women, 16 to 46.

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