Evening Star Newspaper, March 12, 1925, Page 3

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ALESSANDRI LAUDS COOLIDGE AWARD Chilean - President Saysz Tacna Settlement Sets Precedent for Humanity. By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, March 12.—A dis- patch to La Nacion from Rio Janeiro quotes President Alessandri of Chile, as saying that his country will fulflll the arbitration award of President Coolidge with regard to Tacna-Arica. President Alessandri arrived In Rio Janeiro yesterday on his way back to Chile from Europe. “President Coolidge’s award,” he 1s quoted as saying, “amply satisfles the noble i{deals pursued by Chine in establishing arbitration and definiteiy solves’ the long-standing Northern question, enabling us to re-establis our old traditional friendly relaticns with a cister country which was our friend in the past and whose friend- ship Chieens sincerely seck and de- sire to 1etain. + “President Coolidge has done an im- mense service to America by remov- ing an obstacle which d el its tranquility. His award is of worid- wide importance. Humanity will cele- brate the precedent he has “The world, frightened b hecatomb oM wars, turns eyes hopefully toward the future for find- vation in arbitration. Presi- olidge has solved the case in 1 fashion, without taking ount considerations of another Consequently countries hav- questions to settle and which have faith in their rights, know that there is a judge to whom they can apply and who will recognize their rights. It is a precedent of grezt value owing to the great prestige of the au- thority imposing it.” PERUVIAN IS SATISFIED. Foreign Minister Says Coolidge Was Absolutely Fair. By the Associated Press. , March 12—Prof. Al- minister of foreign affairs, on Monday, the day of award of President Coolidge on the Tacna- Arica question was made known livered an address to Congress, the text of which has just been issued. “The “impression of the Peruvian government, relative to arbitration, is satisfactory,” said Prof. Salomon ““All dispositions of a legal character expressed by the arbiter are so minute and justified that no one with an impartial mind can but be im- pressed favorably. In reality, no pne can affirm that the decision is un- favorable to Peru.” LIMA STRIKE REPORTED. re the Called in Protest Over Tacna-Arica Award. BUENOS ATRES, March 12.—A de- 1aPed disprtch to La Nacion, which was filed at Lima, Peru, on Tuesday, indlcates that a general strike be- gan in the Peruvian capital at mid- night Monday as a protest against the award of President Coolidgse on the Tacna-Arica controversy between Chile and Peru. H The dispatch says that Tuesday morning vehicular trafic had ceased, many factories and shops had closed and the newspapers had not appeared. During the day, however, some of the shops reopened. The dispatch adds that the people, discontented with the decision, calm- 1y but feelingly reject it.” Owing to the failure of the news- papers to appear Tuesday morning the public in Lima had had no further news concerning President Coolidge’s award than the summary published in the special editions Monday evening. POLICEMAN IS FIRED ON. Runaway Motorists xn\ke Good Their Escape. Search is being made by police of the seventh precinct for two uniden- tified white men, occupants of an automobile, who fired on Policeman J. W. Duty of the seventh precinct last night, and who escaped after using a smoke screen. When the driver, accused of traffic violation, failed to respond to Duty's signal to stop, the latter com- mandeered a car and went in pur- suit. Several shots were fired at Duty. WANTED TO OR g NTS, FROM I BOSTON POT L CLASS ORDER WITH All kinds of hedges, rubbery furnished RELL, gardener, service to_ all 1. 0. FLOOD & Cf Phone North 6663. veu stomers, | T 2 1.000 satisfied 'cus 1341 W st. n.w. | | ING.. Night Cleve. 619, NTRACT- CHARLES Potomac 211.J, tonw., . icted under the trade ? Reisinger's. the adminis. said business and the Kk Maaufac. second. fioor. 179 LY TRI _Wilmington, ew York City. FER_AND § WE MAKE WE To Baltimore, Md.; and SMITH'S TRA " NOW IS THE TIME fernace, ‘roof, downs WHECY foarantee. "oU 00 guttering. TIVOL RAGE © Tinn HIN, & STORING. N. 9160 ROOF REPAIRING Our_experts will make your roof les Call Main I RRprodte Roofing. IRONCLAD &g T THERE CAN BE & printing than the fact th printing 2t 1T PAY! The Nativnal Capital Press 1210-1212 D 8T. N.W. We Are Good Printers —because our service is. as meer 100% as we can make It. A HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. 'ADAMS, FRINTER, = s * 512 11th St. ROOFING—by Koons \ A juarter century of crperience B 0. Resr 1414 V St. N.w. apse Eood reputation in Wash KOONS ing- 110 34.8¢t. &.W. Phone Main Roofing Company. MISHAPS TRAIL SURVIVING LUSITANIA SINKING Passenger on One Ship That Burned—Another Nearly Wrecked. Ezxplains Accidents That Caused Husband to Re- sign as Envo By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 12.—Mrs. John Wallace Riddle, wife of the United States Ambassador to Argentina, whose resignation was accepted yesterday -by President Coolidge, has explained from her home at Farmington, Conn., how a serles of sea mishaps which she experi- enced was the cause of her husband's retirement from foreign diplomatic service, Mrs. Riddle, then Miss Pope, wWas a passenger on the steamship Lusitanla when it was hit by a German torpedo off the coast of Ireland in 1915. Among | the 1,198 victims were her two traveling companions. Mrs. Riddle was thrown unconscfous into the water. The shock of the experience disabled her several months, and produced in her mind a dread of the sea that made ocean travel for her an ordeal. A year after the Lusitania disaster she was married to Mr. Riddle. “Soon after our marriage,” said Mrs Riddle, “it became necessary for u: to go abroad, in spite of my distaste for sea voyaging. On the trip from England to Iceland, a boiler blew up aboard our ship. On the way back the vessel burned at its pler in Nor- way. The two experiences, linked with the Lusitania horror, greatly deepened my distrust of the ocean.” However, when Mr. Riddle was ap- pointed Ambassador to Argentina, she went with him. Returning to New York in six months she again experienced Il luck. “On the way north,” she said, “the rudder of owr ship jammed, the ves- sel nearly turned turtle, and for a time we were in great peril. ' For three months after landing I was ill. “Now my physician has absolutely forbidden me venturing on the water. I cannot go with my husband and he cannot stay with me and retain his post. This Winter, when he was homé on sick leave, we decided he would have to resign. I took a letter from my physician, explaining the circum- stances, to Secretary of State Hughes, so the State Department would un- derstand. “Mr. Riddle sailed for Argentina last month in order to be at his post when resigning. FOOD PRICES DECLINE. Slight Drops Made in Month in 17 Cities. Compilation of retail food price changes in 19 cities, announced today by the Department of Labor, shows de- creases in 17 cities and slight in- creases in the other two from January 15 to February 15. The biggest decline was 4 per cent in Little Rock, while in Scranton there was an increase of 1 per cent, and in Portland, Me., an increase of less than one-half of 1 per cent. For the year ended February 15 eighteen of the cities listed showed increases in retail food prices, while in Milwaukee there was a decrease of 1 per cent HEIMER CLUES LACKING. $450 in Rewards Ofered Fail to Produce Lead to Murder. Rewards totaling $450 offered by the Police Department and Almas Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, for the apprehension of the slayer of J. Fritz Heimer, manager of the Big Four Candy Co. 668 E street, shot to death a week ago at his place of employment, have not yet been claimed. Detectives admit the absence of & single clue In the inves- tigation of the slaying, other than the hat dropped by the slayer. If I were a Housewife I'D HAVE one or more good flashlights where I could get my hands on them instantly. I'd use a flashlight whenever I had to rummage around in dark closets or attics or cellars. 2 It would be so convenient to use a flashlight, to say nothing of the safety from the ever-present danger of fire. I could tell you hun- dreds of uses for a flash- light, if I had the space. When I say “flashlight,” I naturally assume that you know 1 mean “Evercady.” Because thatis the flashlight! A Fine Food During Lent HESTENUAE Cheese is an excellent meat substitute it is rich build muscle, Chestnut Farms Cottage Cheese is now on sale in 12-ounce pack- ages in all the best grocery and delicatessen stores at 15 cents. This fresh Cottage Cheese in 15-cent glass jars is also delivered to homes direct from Chestnut Farms Dairy. / Ghestnut@FarmsDairy 16 Connecticut Ave FRANKLIN 4000 in the elements that bone and tissue. THE EVENING 'S'I‘AR. WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 1 MRS. RIDDLE, MRS. JOHN W. DEATH 0DD COINCIDENCE. Virginian Drops Lifeless Near Spot Where Wife Was Killed. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., March 12 rs ago Mr ott Ratc “hesterfield County was killed at a railway crossing in South Richmon | when the buggy in which she was| | riding was struck by a street car. | Yesterday her husband came to the city, and when within a few feet of | the place at which his wife met her death he was seen to fall. When as- sistance reached him it was found that he was dead GIRL CRUSHED BY AUTO. Alexandria Child on Way From Church When Seriously Injured. Special Dispatch to The Star. AL NDRIA, Va., March 12— While returning to her home from church last night in company with several friends,. Agnes Frinks, 11 vears old, was struck by an automo- bile a mile west of Alexandria and today is in a critical condition at the Alexandria Hospital, where it was said her skull and right leg were fractured. The driver, Edwin Clark Jones, 7 Groves avenue, Mount Ida, picked up the victim, and, after send- ing her to the hospital in another car, sought B. G. Durrer, Fairfax traffic officer, and gave himself up. He is being held pending outcome of the girl's injuries. Jones said he did not see the children. The girl is a daughter of Mrs. Rowena Frinks. RIDDLE. —_— WOMAN DRIVES BANDITS. in Car Rob Financial Institution of Over $9,000. PHILADELPHIA, Marclr 12.—Four masked and armed men, in a motor car, said to have been driven by a woman, last night held up four offi- cers of the Avenue Building and Loan Association and escaped with $1,735 in cash and checks amounting to $5,000. Four men were arrested ! nd held for questionin, | ' Stratford | Apartments 2010 Kalorama Road Four Men Exceptional apart- ments of three and five rooms and bath in new five-story building. El- evator. Oil-heated building. Refrigerator in each apartment. Shower baths. Beauti- fully decorated. Best location in city. One block from car line. Reasonable rentals, Apartments as low as $67.50. Moore & Hill Ine. 730 17th St. N. W. »»»monvmoanm<ofiooo~oo0voow'o'ooo“oooooqoooooooomnoooooo-ot Farms Cottage during Lent, as DYING WOMAN SAYS MAN POISONED HER Real Estate Dealer Held by Police After Death Follows Drinking Liquor. By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, March 12—Charged in a dying statement by Mrs. Dora Gage, of Atchison, Kans., with having given her poison so he might collect insurance policies she had as- signed him, Roy M. Turner, 25, was held here today for Investigation. Mrs. Gage dled yesterday shortly after she was found in a hotel room, writhing in pain. Turner, an Atchi- son real estate dealer, and former University of Kansas foot ball player, who came to Kansas City yesterday with Mrs. Gag was in the room when hotel employes forced an en- trance. Before her death the woman said Turner gave her a bottle which he told her contained corn whisky. She sald he threw the bottle out of the window after she had taken a drink. Turner denied that he had poison- ed Mrs. Ga He said he had two botties of corn whisky yesterday. Both drank from one bottle and later Mrs. Gage drank from the second * mt e avorof hot t beet: Evnmm{ loves cold cuts, with rich and piquant mus- tard to make their flavor right. But have you ever tried Gul- den’s to bring out the flavor of hot roast beef? Have you ever tried it on porterhouse steak, fish and chops? If you haven't, you don’t know how good food can be. Every day in the week is mus- tard-day to the man who relishes the taste of good food. That man wants his Gulden’s right beside his pepper and salt. Gulden's gives a better taste to all hot meats and cold, to sal- ads, cheeses, sandwiches. Try it on spaghetti and Boston baked beans. Send for our leaflet “How to eat a Steak, and Why.” It's a revelation! Charles Gulden, Inc., PP17, Elizabeth Street, New A Select Schosl INGTON Teeeee ree Has Your Baby ‘Reached This Point? The child \we show has grown into a nor- mal, heal th y. erect young treasure thru the use, at reg’ular hours and in _right quantities, of WISE'S “SAFE MILK for BABIES” He is about eighteen months young, and is quite at ease on two feet. Before long he'll be running, jumping and romping—and wanting more to eat. It will be about then that his parents, with the approval of his doc- tor, will change from our ligl\ter HOL- STEIN NURSERY MILK to our heavier and more nutritious Grade “A” Milk You, too, would en- joy the delicious flavor and added richness of this milk. 77y some. R R R R S R S R R R R R AR R R RS DD Telephone West 183 bottle, Turner said. She said the liquor tasted bitter, he continued. Sampling the second bottle without swallowing the liquor, Turner said be found It bitter and threw both bottles out of the window. Turner said he held $7,000 in in- surance policies on Mrs. ‘Gage's life, explaining that he had sold her a farm and was holding the policies as security for notes she had given him. 9 Sy 1925. CELEBRATES FOR LOAN. Polish _ Premier Gives Dinner to Prominent Americans. WARBAW, March 12. — Premier Grabski gave a dinner last might in celebration of the floating: of the re- Turner was under investigation in|cent American $50,000,000 loan. Amer- 1923 following the drowning of his | |o 3 4 > £ bride of five months when a canoe | !Can Minister Pearson was the guest | In which the two were rding cap.|of honor and prominent members of | sized. A coroner’s jury returned a |the American colony wers present. verdict of accidental death. It was|The dinner was folluwed by a recep- brought out that Turner would re- which was attended by high ceive $17,000 In insurance which his als and representatives of War- e ast Year As a Renter Should Be Enough for You GO SEE DURIEITH 36th and R Sts. NW. Nearly 200 Sold L On Easy Terms SHANNON &LUCHS) | HE popularity of these -new Cleveland Park homes is par- tially due to their splendid location and construction, and partially to the sound savings they represent for their owners. Don’t waste your rent payments—invest them in a CO-OPERATIVE Apartment Home 3018-28 Porter Street N.W. $58 to $72 a Month 925 15th § BB Eveni wano770 WARREN qas 5522/ Main 9770 OWNERS & BUILDERS "SPECIALISTS IN PIANOLAS ©0°J DemoOLL AND REPRODUCING PIANOS ™ EMMONS S. SMITH DEMoLL PiaNo @ Washington’s AEOLIAN HALL ~ Twvelfth and G Streets Sale Upright | Pianos Tomorrow As Low . -. $150 As Many fine Upright Pianos have recently come to us in trade on the Duo Art Reproducing Piano. We have about twenty of these instruments in stock that we pro- pose to move quickly. These instruments are worth from $225 to $300 each. Tomorrow they go on sale at the ridiculously low price of $150. Any one of these pianos would be a better buy than a new cheap one. Terms arranged if desired. TR MODERATE PRICED ,, DUNIGAN-BUILT HOMES &% ‘IN GROWING NORTHWEST RESIDENTIAL + LOCATIONS Tth and lngraham N.W. i = d (! REREREEEE INSPECT TODAY OPEN UNTIL 9 P.M. D. J. Dunigan, Inc. AN 23 12 3204-3208 N St. N.W. 044000000 0000000 000 1319 N. Y. Ave. M 1267 % L A Week End Food Values Now! Takoma Park Can Have 5¢ Bread Our New Market at 329 Carroll Ave., Takoma Park, Opens on Friday 29c Pork Loins 18c Half or Whole 37c Chuck Roast Sirloin Steak 2¥e 16¢ Lb. Lb. Lb. Shoulder Lamb 1+ Shortening v Lt Van Camp’s Snowflake Frying Chickens 1+ 39¢ Stewing Fowl 1+ 35c Fresh Eggs noz. 30¢ N. Y. Cheese 1 32c IcebergLettuce, 2/-25c¢ Tomatoes 25¢ Spinach 25¢ Kale 25¢ YellowOnions, 6.:25¢ Potatoes 15 s 23c Lb. Pineapple, 2% ca 25¢ Libby’s and Rosedale We Picked Up About 4,000 Cans at a Very Low Price Price Good Until They Are Cleaned Up Tomatoes Vo-2Cans 370r29c Peas Maryland Pack 3 for 29¢ Howard Brand Stringless Beans 3/:29c Van Camp’s Soup, 3/-20c Walnut Creams 1. 35¢ The Newest Sunshine Cake Borden’s Milk ¢ 9c Corn Flakes 9c Campbell’s Beans c 9c Campbell’s Soups 9c Pink Salmon c« 12%c Ready.to.F)y Gorton’s Can [ 20 Cliquot Botle ] ]c 2¢ Deposit Bottle 1 6c Canada Dry Sugar, 10 Lbs., 62¢ Package Can

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