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SEPARATIST MOVE GAINING INMEXICO Abolition of Celibacy Priests Among Tenets of New Church. of Ry the Associated Press CHIHUAHUA CITY, Mexico, 6.—Priests of the Rom preaching | against a division of the faith, but| the Separatist movement seems (o gain headway, according to officlals watching the ation. Additional followers, , are being added atist party, headed aquin Perez of Mexlco no churches have The constitution of the new church as promulgated in Chihuahua reads at the independence of the Mexican Catholic Church from the Roman church is recognized. he payment of the various kinds of taxes by the Roman Catholic Chuch. The celebration of all kinds of ceremonies in & humble spirit, ac- cording to the spiritual doctrines of Christ The absolute acknowledgment of the Apostolic (new church) delegates. Abolition of the celibacy of the priests he construction of hospitals and ariums for poor people piritual life and consolation for | the suffering people. | The moralization of all the churches and priests. All of the tenets of the platform | were written by Perez and his fol- owers in Mexico City and have been forwarded to varlous parts of the republic, it Is sald CITY TO LAY PLANS FOR NEW AUTO CODE Appointment of Traffic Inspector ‘Will Be First Matter for Consideration. With the Inauguration over, the Dis- | trict Commissioners will turn their at- | tention to the task of putting the new traffic law into operation, The first and most important thing is to appoint a director of traffie, and in this the city heads intend to make careful search for the best man avail- able. District officals were under the im- pression today that some few of the sections of the law are intended to be effective immediately, while most of the important provisions are to 4 in operation within 60 days. The phraseology of the bill was modified in conference at the last minute, and the city authorities have not been able to obtain copies of the measure in its final form. CONTROLLERS ORGANIZE. Group of Merchants and Manufac- turers’.to Meet Often. The controllers’ group of the Mer- chant and Manufacturers' Association, which will be affiliated with the Controllers’ Congress of the Na- tional Retail Dry Goods Asscciation, was organized Tuesday afternoon in the assembly room of the Merchants and Manufacturers' Association. i By unanimous vote, R. B. Rives, controller of the firm of S. Kmnn‘ €ons Co., was elected chairman of the | group. The group voted to hold a | monthly meeting the second Wednes- | day in each month, beginning Wed- | nesday, April 8, 6:30 p.m, to be held in connection th a dinner. The subject for consideration at the | first meeting will be “Receiving Room Methods.” Chairman Rives will ar- | range for a speaker to lead in the discussion of this subject at | and under tr | or the Scenes of Sadness THE EVENING Have Mingled With Those of Joy at White House Funerals and Weddings Have Followed Along in Fairly Close Succession—Cleveland Only President to Wed in Building. Scenes of sadness as well as of joy | have had their innings at the White House President Willlam Henry Harrison died suddenly in the White House at the end of a heart-breaking campalgn ult of a merciless hand of offic s, . John Tyler, wife of the Presi- dent, and President Zachary Taylor died there The blue room held the body of Col. Ellsworth, who was killed in Alexandria, Va. in the early days of the Civil War because he snatched a Confederate flag from a flagstaft over a hotel of that city. President Lincoln’s small son Willie died in the guest room and his mother | would never again enter this room | green room, where his body | lay for a time awaiting its departure | for the grave Lincoln's body rested on a white | catafalque in the east room and a great crowd passed his bler to pay their last respects to him following his assassination at the Ford Theater. Father, mother and son were lald to rest together at Springfield, IIl. F. F. Dent, the father of Mrs. S. Grant, lay in the White d his funeral was held there. Envoy Drops Dead. In 1883 President Mr. Allen, Minister had just shaken har the envoy was stri the floor while the President sought to assist him. The scene was a re- ception and the music of the Marine Band was stilled when the messenger Arthur received om Hawaii, and 5 With him when en and died on P (1 G et” of death entered the room. The guests hastily departed ard the White House was promptly closed to visitors. When the Washington home of See- retary of the Navy Benjamin F. Tracy was burned in 1880, and his wife and daughter perished In the flames, their bodles were brought to the White House and placed In the east room by direction of President Harrison. The next deceased ocoupant of this chamber was the wife of Harrison, who died in 1892, A month later her father, Dr. Scott, was buried from the White House. The corner stone of the present White House was lald October 13, 1792, The edifice was opened in 1800, at the end of John Adams' administration, and a little less than"a year after the death of George Washington. It was fired August 24, 1814, by the Brit- ish under command of Maj. Gen. Ross and Admiral Cockburn, but a sudden heavy rain extinguished the flames before the walls had been seriously damaged. Three vears later repairs were completed and the walls were painted white to efface the scars of the fire, and they have ever since been painted white. Numerous weddings have been held in the White House. John G. Jack- son of Virginia married Miss Todd, a relative of Mrs. James Madison, and this was the first. The first wedding in the east room was that of Elisa- beth Tyler, daughter of John Tyler, to Willlam Waller of Willilamsburg, Va. Miss Tyler was just 19, which was also the age of Nellle Grant, daughter of President Ulysses S. nt, when she married Algernon Colds uick! —Don’t Wait For Chills HEN vyou feel a cold beginning, take hot lemonade. Then go straight to bed, under warm covers. You'll perspire, but in nine cases out of ten the cold will go. In the morning there won't be a trace. Thus, over night, you'll save days of sickness and their cost together with the dangers of pneumonia, “flu” and other ills that often fol- low colds. Millions profit in untold ways by this measure of prevention, This New Model Range At a Popular Price! And on Convenient Terms Newest 1925 model with such desirable features as a lower utensil compartment, roomy 18-inch- wide oven, and patented door handles which in- sure an absolutely tight oven at all times. The frame, cooking top and doors are of unbreakable “angliron” construction. The broiler pans and oven tray of glistening white, easy-to-clean enamel —as is most of the range, in fact. All of these features are embodied at a popular price, with the priviiege Phone or write us if it to call. of low terms if desired. is inconvenient for you Washington Gas Light Company SALES DEPARTMENT 419 Tenth St. N. W. Main 8280 But they “get” the colds before the colds “‘get them.” If you are sneezing, if you ache, take hot lemonade tonight, and cheat the cold. It's the cheapest, simplest, surest, safest way. Just squeeze the juice of 2 lemon in glass or cup of hot water. The effectiveness of hot lemonade is due ta more than its heat. Add sugar if you wish. Ask for California lemons, the tart, juicy, practically seedless kind. They make the most effective lemonade for colds, Chats With Your Gas Man! O UR community life of today is built around the essential services of light, heat, communi- cation and transporta- tion rendered by our public service com- panies. As these public ser- vice companies func- tion successfully er un- successfully, so the community prospers or stagnates. By the qual- ity of its public util- ity services a com- munity becomes at- tractive or repels mew enterprises and new population. We are glad to be a part of this commun- ity and to co-operate with the other people here, to make the com- munity a fine place to live in by affording good service at reason- able rates. The interests of this community and the in- terests of the company are in every way iden- tieal. The minute there is a division of interes both parties suffer harm that is im- peossible to remedy. Few other cities are furnished as high stand- ard gas as Washington. . 7.5 cubic foot of gas. T letters staud for British Thermal Units, wged in measuring Reat. STAR, Sartoris in the east room, Miss Grant was given away by her father, who ill-concealed his emotlon, tears falling from his eyes. John Quincy Adams, jr., married his cousin, Miss Johnson, during the in- cumbency of his father. Two weddings occurred during the Jaockson administration. Miss Easten, Jacksen's niece, wed Mr. Polk of Tennesseo, and Miss Lewls of Nash- ville married Mr. Paqueol, later French Minister to the United States. Preaident Monroe’s Daughter Wedded. Martha Monroe, daughter of Presi- WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, who was his first wife's niece. President Cleveland was also the only Executive to marry in the White House, The wedding took place In the blue room, June 2, 1886. Between his first and second terms his daugh- ter Ruth Folsom was born, on Oc+ tober 3, 1891, at New York City. She dled early and lles buried beside her father In the cemetery at Princeton, N. J. His seecond daughter was the first_and only child to be bern in the White House. When President McKinley was as- sassinated on September 14, 1901, at Buffalo, the body was sent to the old MARCH - 5, . .1925. grave In Myrtle Hill Rome, Ga. Jessle Wilson, daughter of the President, and her sister Eleanor married Francis B. Sayre and Secre- tary of the Treasury Willlam G. Mc- Adoo, respectively, at the White House, and Miss Alice Wilson, niece of the President and daughter of Joseph R. Wilson of Baltimore, aiso was married there. Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt married President Wilson at her home in Washington in 1915, iess than a year after the death of the first Mrs. Wh- son. Cémetery at dent Monroe, was ouly 17 when she married Samuel Gouverneur, for a time her father's private secretary, In_the east room. Miss Emily Platt, niece of Presl- dent Hayes, married Gen. Russell H ings In the blue room, which w decorated with an Immense floral bell and other flowers. The first President to marry in the ‘White House Grover (leveland, who wed Miss Frances Folsom, who, after Mr. Cleveland's death, married Thomas J. Preston of Princeton. The Folsom-Cleveland wedding was the ninth to be held there. President Tyler had the opportunity of being the first, but he went to the home of his brid M Gardner, in New York, for the ceremony, and in New York also wa performed the cere- mony uniting former President Ben- jamin Harrison with his second wife, | home at Canton Ohlo, after it had laid in state at the White House and the Capitol. The Roosevelt administration was enlivened by the marriage at the White House of President Roosevelt's daughter Alice to Nicholas Long- worth, now Representative from Ohia and the next Speaker of the House, to whom was recently born a daughter, Paulina, at Ch 0. Helen Taft, who had become a teacher at Bryn Mawr College. in Pennsylvania, was married July 15, 1920, in Canada to Frederick Man- ning, but this was while her father was an ex-President, First M Wilson Died in’ 1914 The first Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, nee El Lou Ax , died in the White rvices were held in also at the President Haraing died August 2, 1023, at San Francisco, and his funeral followed from the White House, with interment In Marion, Ohio. The ill- ness which proved fatal to Mrs, Hard- Ing at Marion started at the White House. Calvin Coolldge, jr, second son of President and Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, was taken 111 at the White House and died at Walter Reed Hospital, Wash- ington, July 7, 1924, The Interment was In the family lot at Plymouth, vt. When hd p CORNS No pain at alll Drop a little “Free- | “Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient ¢ | zone" on an aching corn, instantly that|remove every hard corn, soft corn, o corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift| corn between the toes, and the foo | it right off with the fingers. | calluses, without soreness or irritation Your druggls a tiny bottle of | Lift Right Off With Fingers Seeretary of Agriculture Henry C. Wallace died last year in Washington, the funeral was held from the White House, and the body | was sent to Iowa for interment. The last funeral was that of Mrs Hubert Work, wife of the S of the Interior, who dled last e i X; Rinso, unaided, gently loosens dirt. You don’t have to stand over the tubs rubbing, lighter work of CThis new kind of soap does the Washing e leaves you just the rinsing to do only the rinsing .~ E)f YOUu NOw - “We got into an Argument about the Whys and Wherefores of Different Soaps” N MORE than a million homes every week women are now getting sweet, clean clothes with almost none of the usual heavy work of washing. rinsing, the makers of Lux named this new soap Rinso. It is as wonderful for your weekly wash as Lux is for your silks and soft woolens. 14 I “I LIVE in a three family house and one day when my wash was on the line at 9:30 and the other women in the house were still at their tubs, I asked one of them why she didn’t use Rinso. I told her her hands wouldn’t be so rough and red if she used Rinso. “Well, the other woman joined us and we three housewives got into an argument. I suggested that we try an experiment right then and there. “We took three tubs and put some very soiled clothes in each. I used Rinso in mine and the others used two different soaps. After letting the clothes in all three tubs soak for two hours we soused them up and down, and gave them a good thorough rinsing. I was through in no time and won & box of candy and two sworn users of Rinso! My clothes were spotless, sweet-smelling and you couldn't say that of the others. (Our three homes are now united on Rinso as the best laundry soap for washday.)” Mrs. A. H. B., Bast Longmeadow, Masa. Whatever way you like to wash, this same amazing freedom from drudgery awaits you. This new kind of soap, the perfect Jaundry soap, alone does most of the hard work of washday. You don’t have to stand over the tubs and help it wash by rubbing and rubbing. It spreads its wonderful cleansing power through every drop of the wash water loosening all the dirt so it floats out. Then your work is just rinsing the clothes. Because it changes your hard work on washday into the lighter work of Rinso saves you saves your , || “clothes/ (| SE Rinso the way you like best to wash — for soaking, for boiling, 21 leading makers of washing machines recommend Rinso for use in their machines. For the best results: Dissolve Rinso first in boiling water to set all its good cleansing power free. Pour this rich solution into the wash water, let the clothes soak, and give them two or three good rinsings. Get a big new package or the regular size from your grocer toda Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. > In addition to telling us how they use Rinso for washing clothes, thousands of women have written how wonderful it is for washing dishes, porcelain sinks and bath tubs and linoleums. DIRECTIONS Simply put Rinso into a saucepan and add boiling water to set free all its wonderful cleansing power. Rinso dissolves quickly, completely. Pour this rich, soapy solution into your tubs or machine until creamy lasting suds foam up. Di your warh in. Gently, safely—as your clothes soak—Rinso loosens all the dirt—the dirt you used to rub out by main force! Only a little light rubbing may be necessary on. edges and the like where the dirt gets ground in hard. Quickly, easily, you rinse them out clean— with Rinso there are no soap flecks left to cling to the clothes and turn them yellow under the iron. Now hang them out on the line—how proud you are to have your neigh- bors sec your snowy, sparkling wash!