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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 95, 1924. . ERVANPLARNIG WIER CANPAH Will Go Into Five Western States and Also Is to Come East Next Month. Tr the Associated Press. NORFOLK, Nebr., September Under changed plans announced to- day. Gov. W. Br Democratic vice presidential candidate. will carry his campaign into at least five ad- ditional Western State early in Octobe and possibly ake a trip E . n recently announced that would make only oec- casional jumps outside Nebraska, to enable him to keep up with aftairs at the State capitol, but requests have Leen so heavy, he explained, that it was impossible, in the interest A of his party, to decline some of them. Following his speech October 4, at Oberiin, Kans, Gov. Bryan has in- 1 Senator Claude wanson of of the Democratic that he would like v each to v Mexico, @ chairman * Burez ing October 16, at Yankton, Sewztor Swanson had . to reserve some time for an espec in_Ohio and Davis, the standard bearer, a had re- ed him to speak in West Virginia. : been determined. but it was made pl that G Bryan \ probably would go as far East as Ohio. An invitation to speak at Cumber- land, Md. has been rejected because of other plans. Gov. Bryan has telegraphed Wil- %iam G. McAdoo at New York expres: ing his gratification over reports that he was ‘ready to commence campaign work at once” and inviting him to spend some time in Lincoln with Gov. and Mrs. Bryan on his way West. Asks Progressive Aid. Br the Associated Press. COLUMBUS, Nebr., September 25.— Gov. Bryan, in his seventh campaign &peech in Nebraska. delivered here yesterday before a large crowd at- ( tending the Democratic day celebra- tion at the mid-Nebraska exposition. explained two more planks in his party’s national platform—Ilabor and child welfare—and served notice on the progressive thinking people that if they want their hopes to material- ize they should vote for none other than the Democratic ticket. Declaring his party had been the Yeader in the fight fOr every progres- sive measure adopted in the last 12 years and that the only way the progressive Republican Senators and Representatives had been able to “serve their country without betray- ing their constituents was by bolting their party and supporting the Demo- crats.”” the Democratic vice presiden- tial nominee said the progressive clements now have the opportunity to support directly in the Fall the only party that has espoused their cause. Hits at Dawes. “The Democratic party,” he said, “holds that labor is not a commodity, but that it is human. It the Demo- cratic oarty had been controlled by the organization known as the Minute Men (an organization sponsored by Charles G. Dawes), do you suppose the ecight-hour day law would have been passed?” The nominee eriticized President Coolidge for vetoing the postal sal- ary increase bill, declaring “it was the Democrats who favored giving the postal and railway mail employes a living wage at American standards, but it was the administration in Washington that vetoed the bill for such an increase, although that same NOTICES. FoR XoT ® ANT _DEBTS other_thai cted by myself. i MeVEY e TAVE AN OPE ty parior operators in our n ciasses. Garden Rose Beauty M CHLORINE ATME COUGH, T AND FULL I BOX 145-E. STAR OFFIC] 28 FOR SALE. | AM CLOS- ably low prices. the nursery 33rd and Rittenhouse sts. WHOOPIN( OR_TREA n.w.. vvergreens. sirubs. roses and fruit trees, for auick sale and immediate delivery. See me on the premises or ftelephone Cleveland Tos”a. w._sHipe 1 GUARANTEED NURSERY STOUK FOR SAL v Zornamental b, fruit * trees, ch peonies and perer Full line ‘of ever recns. Col 8 Park Yiew Marke WANTED from Washing Baltimore. 1104 6th st nw._ Tel . ) FROM Raltimors; Boston. moving. A VANLOAD OF : k._Philadeiphis. Bethle- Wilmiagton, Del.: De- ., to Washing RA 0. WANT! alture from NORWAY SPRUCE, AL of evergreen and shrubbery furnished planted.~ Lawns put in first-class order, with wofl acd manure | F. A" HERKELL, 728 n o LD SILVER GBT ces. We pay considerably more thap 3 b get cisewhere. We aio Bus dis monds. eoidgend nlatinum. We carcy s large Tine of anlld ~ Iver teasete: antique Early Ame; SHEFFIE] COMPANY Conn_ave. ! WANTED D FROM WASHINGTON T0 | Wilmington, Fhila. or Atlantic City Oct. 2. | E. R DOWNS. Flmer, X. 1 BAD WL o Addre Is Not Far Off Retter have us cxamine sour OO NOW 1181 5tr nw. You Won't Mind Paying Roofing —the fair prices we ask at Our Auto Repair Shop. They're work. popularizing our R. McReynolds & Son ROOF PAINT § Will_Apply if Desired. LI Free Plans & Estimates., Flomes, stores. garages. aifernations. peirx. , Tight as a Drum! Is YOUR roof sound, free from leaks, Why reads for storms? in any stress of weather. Call us up! KOONS ROOFING Phone Main 3. COMPANY _ 119 3rd 8t. 8.W. Money Can’t Buy Better Printi Let the Million-Dollar Printing Plaat furnish estimates. ‘The National Cagt't’al Press 12101212 D 8t. N. Try Us —and you'll be completely satisfied with our quality work. HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED. BYRON S. ADAMS, PRINTER, 512 1ith 8t. SHEED TOTRRER oth arantees ecomo- B e wiilas vetataciie 3o sl cmpleying Lham, Company Phose Main 14 in Painting. Slip Covers and *Tops. L_ST. N.W. Main_7273. N YEARS OLN 7113. 1% o Harrix. 1010 F st o.w. Frank. 10271. ¢ 5 take chances? Our thorough repairs are bound to hold 4,000 D. C. HOOSIERS ENTITLED TO VOTE G. 0. P. Seeks to Encourage All From Indiana. Regardless of Party to Register. There are more than 4,000 men and women living In the District of Co- lumbia who, according to the ab- sentee voting law of Indiana are en- Litled to cast their ballots in the com- ing election, and inasmuch as the last registration day for Hoosiers is Oc- tober 6, the local Republican cam paign committee is intensively this week full Indiana vote comes. It is not known definitely how many of the Indianians are Repub- licans, but this is not stopping the local committee in its effort to get out this big vote. In impressing upon those residents from that State the importance of voting and the neces- sity of registering if they want to vote the committee makes no dis- tinction between Republicans or Democrats. The Indiana absentee voting law fortunately does not require re-regis- tration except on change of residence and in those counties where new registration has been petitioned for. The counties requiring registration this year are Marion, Madison, Dela- ware, Vanderburgh and Vermilion. Many persons with legal residence in Indiana are calling daily at local headquarters, 1324 New York avenue, | to obtain further information regard. ing the registration and voting laws of their State. campaigning to get out a when the time DEMOCRATS TO RALLY. Virginia State Club Calls Follow- ers to Meeting. There will be a rally of the Dem- ocrats of the District tomorrow night at the Washington Hotel, under the auspices of the Virginia State Dem- ocratic Club, Gen. H. Oden Lake, president, presiding. Among the other Democratic or- ganizations which will attend the rally in a body are the Arlington (Va.) Democratic Club, the Clarendon (Va.) Democratic Club, the Washing- ton-Blackburn-McDonald Democratic Club, Davis-Bryan Democratic Prog- ressive Club. and the Davis-Bryan Democratic Association. The speakers will be Representa- tive H. B. Steagall of Alabama, for- mer Representative R! B. Mahny and solicitor general under the late Pres- ident Wilson: H. F. Byar of Winches- ter, Va, chairman of the Virginia State Democratic committee; Senator Claude A. Swanson, chairman of the Democratic national committee speakers’ bureau, and Col. R. N. Har- per. assistant treasurer of the Demo- cratic national committee. John F. Costello, member of the Democratic national committee for the District of Columbia, will make the address. TAGUE TO M;\KE CONTEST. BOSTON, September 25.—Represent- ative Peter F. Tague, Democrat, who was defeated for renomination in the tenth congressional district in the recent Massachusetts primaries, will be a candidate in the November elec- tion, running on stickers, it was an- nounced today. At the primaries John J. Douglas had a plurality of 1,700 over Representative Tague. administration had voted a four-bil- lion-dollar increase a vear to the tar- iff beneficiaries.” “The only economy the Republican administration had practiced,” he as at the expense of hu- “When there has been a contest be- tween the dollar and man,” he con- tinued, “the Democratic party has taken the same position as Jefferson and Lincoln, who declared in such conflicts that man should be given first consideration.” absolute dependability in al 1418 Eye St. N.W. MEMBERS WASHINGTON K Streets their unqualified stamp 11-story Wm. L. F. King, Prosid BUYING—SELLING—RENTING INSURING For over two decades we have been proving our Our advice is always founded on a full knowledge of conditions surrounding a proposition. Consult us about any of your realty problems—we can solve them N. L. SANSBURY CO., Inc. “Everything in Real Estate” etter Busmess —is the merited reward keep apace of the times. And nowhere is this truth- more marked than in the loca- offices or stores. tion and character of By already occupying over 90% of the office space, Washington business men have placed INVESTMEAT BUILDIANG. Your choice of the modern stores and lobby shops in the building is somewhat wider, but they are filling up rapidly, Moderate Rentals W. H. WEST COMPANY RENTAL AGENTS Cummings, Secretary.Treasurer DAY OF MAN’S HARD WORK TO END BY, NEW ATOM-ENERGY UTILIZER (Continued from First Page.) he discharged from his apparatus sev- eral million watts of electricity. As a result experts at the Bureau of Standards are frankly skeptical that a professor at Sheffield Univer- sity has finally succeeded in doing what was heretofore impossible, with- out something of his secret having become known sooner. They will watch with interest, however, for his official report in accepted scientific publications before either condemn- ing or accepting his claim. An atom, it Is explained, is really a solar system in mimiature—that is, a positive sun about which revolve negative electrons in numbers ex- actly equal to ghe units contained in the sun. Scientists no longer find it difficult to attract these negative electrons from their sun, but it is in the latter that the energy is stored And it is energy in quantities man has never before dreamed of manu- facturing. 5 For instance, there is so much en- ergy in the atoms that make up six teaspoonfuls of water that were it possible to extract it there would be enough power generated to propel the &iant superdreadnought California all the way across the Atlantic Ocean without the assistance of coal or man-made electricity. If the ertire energy of a single atomic sun were unleased at once it probably would re- sult in a concussion that would de- y not only the world, but reduce our entire solar em back to the eas whence 1t is said originally to have come. Many scientists believe that it is quite possible to obtain a part of this energy. and Sir Ernest Rutherford of Cambridge has actually succeeded in disintegrating the suns of 10 or 15 different varieties of atoms artificially in his laboratory. He did this by di- FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Service Charge Never Over $1.00 Nokol saves labor Nokol ends heating dirt Nokol saves health Nokol costs less than hard coal Investigate Nokol now while your coal bin is empty Automatic Heating Corp. 1719 Conn. Ave. N.W. North 627-628 1 branches of our business. Phone Main 5904-5 REAL ESTATE BOARD of those who Fronts on McPherson Square of approval of the new, E. G. Perry, Vice President recting a powerful electric beam into the atom, which literally blew it to pieces. But before he could coax together enough electricity from his laboratory apparatus to penetrate the atomic sun, figuratively speaking, he had generated several millions of watts at a cost of hundreds of dollars and lured from the atom +just about half a watt. He could have bought that much power from the nearest electric company for a fraction of a cent. Sir Ernest used radium particles to attack the atom. After numerous tests he figured that if he used up all of the alpha particles of one gram of radium, at a cost of $100,000, he could extract from one aluminum atom a thousandth of a millimeter of hydro- gen, which makes the coveted energy. SERVICE As a result, the noted British scien- tist publicly stated that he no longer believed it would prove commercially advantageous to regard atoms as a possible source of power. If Dr. Wall, however, has really found a memns of fretting @t the atomic energy through a simplified mrethod, his discovery will change the order of things in the world. There is no doubt, scientists say, that the energy is there. The thing always has been how to get at it at a reason- able cost. Once that is discovered fears -of coal strikes in the dead of Winter will pass, for there will no longer be any use for coal. The world will get its heat from the countless billions of tiny atoms, invisible to the naked eye and even to strong magnifying glasses. * Ready to use » GULDENS DEPENDABILITY Who' does your washing? You can save money, work and muss in your cozy bungalow with a sunnysuds Electric WashersWringer $10 AND THRIFT INSTALLS ONE! Sunnysuds Features Standard size; corrugated copper tub; pressed steel frame ; automatic lubrication; aluminum wringer; finest quality rubber rolls; auto- matic switch stops machine instantly in case of accidental overload; only 14 moving parts; beautiful white enamel finish; large, easy-running casters, and the compactness necessary to make it ideal for the bungalow or apart- ment. One year’s supply of RINSO, with this sale only Main 7253 Bl il Main 9900 Come See Our Sample Apartment Completely Furnished by W. B. Moses & Sons You will be as interested to note how at- tractively these Apartments can be furnished, as you will be pleased to know how easily you may own one. (SIX NEW BUILDINGS) 3018-20-22-24-26-28 Porter Street Northwest One and One-Half Blocks West of Connecticut Avenue OPEN UNTIL 10 P.M. DAILY AND SUNDAY Telephone Cleveland 2252 for Motor to Inspect EDMUND J. FLYNN CO., Inc. THIS IS NOT A SALE—IT’S AN OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU! WHEN THE FEW RE- MAINING WASHERS WE HAVE ARE SOLD —THE PRICE GOES UP! REMEMBER : THIS IS A STAN ARD, COMPACT M CHINEBACKEDWITH THE STRONG SERV- ICE GUARANTEE OF THIS COMPANY TO GIVE YOU SATISFAC- TION. TERMS: $10 CASH Balance in 10 Months POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO. 14TH AND C STREETS N. MAIN 7260 OWN YOUR OWN APARTMENT HOME— DON'T PAY RENT These Apartments are being sold under a co-operative ownership plan, which has been operating satisfactorily over 50 years. You can own your own apartment home by making a small initial payment and monthly payments less.than usual rental charges. #58% TO #75% A MONTH Including all expenses, such as taxes, jan- itor, coal, etc. CLEVELAND PARK APARTMENTS 1412 Eye St. N.W. " A OLD DUTCH. Week End Food Values Mean ' Large Savings to Every One . Smoked Hams, Lb., 22¢ Baltimore hams. Mild new cure. As we were only able to get a little over 1,000 hams for this sale—better market early. Fresh Shoulders, Lb., 17¢ Kingan’s—home-dressed—about 4-1b. average. Pork Loins, Lb., 23c Small loins—but we will cut you half at the same price. All steaks and hind-quar- ter cuts are selling at about 40% less than usual. Bargains in home-dress- ed veal and genuine Spring lamb. Veal Cutlets...lb., 42¢ Sirloin. ..... .. .1b., 29c|Veal Shoulders, 1b., 15¢ Porterhouse . .1b., 34c|Veal Breast, 1b., 124¢ Leg of Lamb. .1b., 28¢ Shoulder Lamb, lb., 19: Breast of Lamb, Ib., 10¢ Top Round. . .1b., 29¢ Bottom Round, Ib., 29¢ Bodillon . . . ..1b., 27¢ Spring Chickens, Lb., 39- From 115 to 2 Ib. sizes. Holland Belle Milbrook Eggs Butter in Cartons Lb., 48¢ Doz., 47c¢ The finest and highest quality | Large size — strictly fresh sold in Washington. Express shipments. Smokeg_ P{cm'cg. ..1b., 15¢|Sugar Loaf Bacon, lb., 19¢ tncinnati cure. “’.’ Izl/zc | Smoked Picnics. . .1b., 14c Pork Hocks . Spareribs . . ......Ib., 15¢ 3 to 5 Ib. average |Smoked Picnics. . .lb., 13c Ereshiibams ..1b., 23¢ Pure Lard. .". .. .2 Ibs., 35¢ 8 to 9 Ib. average. Cincinnati Hams. .lb., 27¢ Pork Chops. . . . . . .Ib., 29¢ Center cuts. A different cure makes them Pork Pudding . ...lb., 17¢ worth the difference. | Cincinnati Sliced Ham ..........lb., 47¢ Tokay Grapes,Ib. . . . . . . 9% ‘N Y. Bartlett Pears,41bs. . . . 25c Sweet Potatoes,41bs. . . . . . Ilc Cooking Apples, 6 Ibs. . . . . 23 ‘iYellow Onions,41bs. . . . . . Ilc 1 Y& Sweet Panzs! Dig iEoo s I & . 25¢ 25¢ I, 2 25¢ SUGAR, 10bs,, 75 Your Best Salad Dressing Bet! | T housand i Island Dressing | or Gold Medal Mayonnaise Small Large - Tlc . . 25¢ 2, 3 ph: e fiiik, 3cans . . . ‘s 4 _zmp's ‘Campbell’s Beans, 3 cans . . . [Kellogg’s Bran Flakes, 3 pkgs. . Maine Sardines, 6 cans . . . .