Evening Star Newspaper, March 19, 1925, Page 3

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ASK CONGRESS' AID INFIGHT ON CARTER Union Printers Urged to Make Concerted Drive for His Removal at G. P. 0. Union printers % concerted driv ngress for the of Public Printer in a state president, e cretary, respectively, of tI Typographical Union, N appear.in the 1 issue of the eraphical Jour Tresident Si bold set forth w u long series of g Yy the printers at the vernment's ig print shop, climaxing in the re dismis a second’s removal from e and Secretary Sei- assert is s suffered did not s shown by thos: At no con- given to character « wced it was easy to see whatever “One operator | who had the an average highest ok 2 . Neither did question of whether one was a scrat or Republican appear to ve had much weight. It rather had the earmarks of the ‘stoolpigeon’ Seeing that good records and high ge count for nothing, there is a of insecurity on the part of cally the whole force. = Those i homes are naturally d state of mind, while templated doing The tensen ing is simply indescribable. ing into the office of about four g0, George wishes of well contented derably more than 1,000 The officers of Columbia e particularly friendly to- In fact, the then president v assisted his for the position Soon ng charge he began to from a union printer's forgot it. public ward him. of ndidacy after assum t queerly standpoint When he ordered a discontinuance of the collection of union dues at pay time by the chairmen in the face of sessment he gave us.a 1ght was as uncalled unprecedented, which icapped us, as was no When he issued the ‘silent’ treatment rded those refusing to pay the as- ment would not be tolerated, all those who did pay it—and that em- braced all but about a half dozen— thought that he was meddling with something that was none of his busi- ness. When he Issued his infamous ‘stoolpigeon’ order, under which he requested all those having even a knowledge that other employes played the races, negotiated for bootleg liquor or Violated any rules, should report their knowledge to him or be deemed equally gullty, and be dealt with accordingly, he completely shook the confidence of all the right-minded printers and made informers out of the rest. When he attempted to dab- ble in the union's election of officers it was with the usual result attending the meddler in a family quarrel. When he locked all the exits of the big shop except one for apparently no other reason than to force employe 10 eat In his cafeteria he added a lit tle more fuel to the discontent. When he sent letters—referred to by print- ers as ‘speedballs'—to the homes of iployes telling them that if they ala not set more type they would be fired, he frightened a good many wives into nervous collapse. When followed, one upon another, foolish wnd purely meddling orders that did )t pertain to printing it is no won- der that those who could get away commenced to look elsewhere for wa S?ECIAL N OTICES AND CRAB_ CO. rves, il be 'open b fiul We bandle our own fish and guarantee d Service, and also best pric FOR “SALE _MEMBERSHIP IN sional ~Country Club, subject Address Box 178-D, 1 WILL T TH 5 soll sad mestie.. Wil Vi ke, os, and eheubbery furaished and . A HERRELL cardener, 12 10t oin LIF.AT!:G evergree: planted. b b.e. mmx.. LUMBER—S. & vered—oak, Dopisr, mapie, nit o ousand feet Bt o Heart of Marrlan WE MAKE WEEKLY TRIPS To Baltimore, Md.; Yilmingtoa, Del., Now \'m City. ND SAHLIAS, auumu A\D CANNAS, RBA- 5'"3’: for Jut A THA " HALL SOME 1 PEOPLE THINK that bair mattresses are the only kind that EOEr0y ARD TEmER KINDS g b D1 RENOVATED catet 1y Bedell ufactunng Company _610 B 8t N.W T Ao PEASTERS Fallen temn‘s replaced without removing ld_plaster. piinznteed. B erfully give: B, ELY G0 Department. ¢ NOW IS THE TIME to have ou expert mechani rej s repai your furnace, toof, downspout tering. Written gua 1l ARt TIVOLI [noeanc Adums 1 1648, Heating. 3475 14th N.w. LET YOUR ROOF —reflect_the care of the prudent hou: owner. Thoroughly repaired: well pajnted and guaranteed by this reliable firm, 3rd St. 8. W. ANY _ Phone Main 933 CALL MAIN 14 FOR ROOF REPAIRING We do the kind of work that you want. TIRONCLAD 25, 5th n.w. Phoue Main 14 I(tflr l!l. V St We Are Good Printers vocauseour serrice 1s an neee 2007 as we can make if HIGH GRADB, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, Eristes, THERE CAN BE —po_better reason for giving us your printing than the fact that IT PAYTS fo do so The National Capital Press 1210-12i2 D ST. N.W. . | of miles. “The battleship is still lord of th the general board of The battleship is pi Admiral Sims, ret is already a Gen. Mitchell of 1 th vou are disagreeing none ean d or the issue before the great were debating this auestioned whether imperfect as it was could not ma The war seemed to prove that the battleship remained monarch of the comparatively speaking, agains it, undersea | air showing in , the one square ar. Ger- rines as ed back the s Rear ttleship except _ex- of battle. war naval the in men those Still, the radic t“did not h; Is su British fleet i 1 no one knows what 1 lessons ested s of their capital ships with er-tight compartments oward the end of the the Germans carried under- construction one stride forward their “submarine cruiser: British constructors, since Eone further r L and’ eight-inch guns Vicious Commerce Raiders. In one feature, perhaps more im portant than fleet action, marine proved its usefulness to the new warfare. It was altogether the t vielous commerce s own to history. The never kept in action at any time mor: than 30 commerce-destroying subm rines; and those of a type now con- sidered archale. Yet in the Spring of 1917 all but starved out the | British So far as concerned war on merchantmen, they had the British and French navies, somewhat reinforced by Italian and Japanese units, thoroughly beaten. Only arrival of the Americans and the adoption of the convoy system tipped | the scale. Even at tha went on, a handicap and a deadly menace. the war a Cassandra with a double |twist. His government listened to which would bring the United State: into the struggle—and thereby lost the war. cried, “Submarines, submarines and vet more submarines!” they might have won the war. ' Now comes a new peril battleship. Attacked from face of the seas and from under th seas, Bombing planes have increased in range, bombing devices in power. bombing fire in accuracy. Tests in |have proved that the airplane, it it has not rendered the battleship obsolete, can complicate the task of : commander in action. Regarding th extent of the menace, there is a viru- | lent difference of opinion. I will re- serve consideration of cated question for another ment. install- Need Planes on Ships. One thing stands proved—the ne- cessity for putting on capital ships | airplanes of the observation scouting type. The one will the fire in action: out the enemy. When this proposal was first made, certain conservativ seadogs swore they would never have those contraptions on their ships. They have yielded since not only to superior authority, but to the logic | of the situation. An airplane hovering over the objective, informing the gunner by wireless where each shot is fallin will be just-as useful and necessary to sea artillery as to land artillery. And the scouting plane has become indispensible to naval plans -of strategy. In old times, as in our Spanish war, the admiral looking for an enemy could see only as far from his own ship as the curve of the horizon permitted; a range of 20 o miles. Now, with the airpla ouring the air above the seas, he | can, in practical effect, see hundreds direct ! battleship of our fleet now By way of Every rries three airplanes. unching them with economy of | space have of late perfected— after one sad failure—a type of catapult superior to anything else of its kind. Reasonably conservative naval authorities say that in naval airplane equipment we are at least equal and perhaps superior to the (4re You | Carefree in Your Apartment? Or are you bothered with unpleasant neigh- bors, non-attention to needed repairs and the constant thought of lost rent payments? Like many others, you may find a delightful solution to all this in a Co-Operative APARTMENT HOME Here your monthly payments constitute a sound real estate investment, you yourself help to choose your owner- neighbors and you combine pride of ownership with the satisfaction of co- management. Why not run over evening and sce that HIBIT APARTMENT HOME at 3018-28 Porter St. N.W. Furnished by B. Moses & Sons w. A Small First Payment and $58 to $72 a Mo. M&ERB this taction | submarine, | clause days, | agreer er any surface vessel | promises the sub-| NING The War Over the Air By Will Irwin. Chapter V—Aircraft and the Navy British—the century-old criterion for t in one point. The British, expressing their advanced knowledge lof building airplane ia the | programs are question | have two K fu af w counting fau ri little chance a | The | th spot” ould | en | w naval technique, are the fleet. When exist completed we st they will have seven made one startling ries to have the seven are new fight of th nt. They between Washington re curious the past and na tu Battleships they will Th in front, s behind rapldly carriers as auxil- ing hall And it Even | parture from established naval idea: | 'two o <hips, building under the replacement ing val com- the be r fore ¢ the familiar turrets ith terd unchir 1a > & rplanes. They fight a tion in buttle ould be in a they ot With least anything in iction. Mention thes n naval circles and the gaping big gun: the be a r ment seems certain naval bomb without airplane c out feet ng ctor. er ships ainst one %0 equipy more ginative naval lieve that d ima any by general battle , perhaps hundreds of miles in The winner in : of the Heets. is engagement would then hold g advantage. could maneuver horizon line and more tell what Napoleon could not. _He 11l below the nemy could no as doing than Their for or 60 bow they | their un ship: as ar auxiliaries would stanc ped. erities major action would in an He could for his own guns; the enemy at the he tell | that Blucher was coming up at Wa- | te | to servative now as to deny naval | the the sinking | follows tomorrow.) | ana Admisar Von: Mispitslicame out af | teuesAlliacesy | | ormed and conservative groups Jewry Rabbis J. T.| it is attacked from the alr.|y,eph. Abra \(\ of educational th rloo. Fleet airplanes are battleship tactics; none that. would add that airpl. therefore, a prime men rriers are, ty. (“Can sixth ries on article of the aircraft Wil Irw controve: oz, (Coprright. in United Sta Gr Street Synagogue. Representing the orthodox, in Washington, Bombing, as 1 have said, nother matter, to be considered sep- arately. indispensable | so con- Most | ane ne- is Airplanes Sink Battleships?' in's rsy, s, Canada ain by North American News Mim when” bu advocated ' policy jEW|sH YOUTH IN AMERICA Had they listened when he | Subject of Symposium at Fifth re- ot m Simon and Louis J hwefel will participate in a sym- um merica on “The Jewish Youth Synagogue, Fifth The symposium is one of a se pro. e committee on extension activi in Sunday night at 8 o'clock in | Great Britain and the United States|the Fifth Street even | I streets. and ries red by | thes J of the Jewish Community Center. The forum will be supplemented by a pro- | that compli- | gram M: lin, of music aster Isaac by Miss Minovich, and Cantor Dora New York and formerly of Lodz, |1a | ish melodies. m the other will spy | nd. who will sing traditional J plegler, a member of unity Center, will preside and piano and vio- Abraham Kalmus of | 9 B LY GULDENS S Po- ew- the | and | hoard of directors of the Jewish Com. | 600.00000000“’000“0000 4000000000000 00060000000000000000000000000000 000000000 0000 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000¢ P00000000000 0000000000, 2 to 5 “The Neglected Age” N medical circles, from two to five is called “the neglected age. " Foritis dunng this penod that malnu- trition, the deadliest enemy of childhood, so often gets its first start and gains l’\eadway. Malnourished chil- dren are found in the homes of the wealthy as well as the poor. They are undernour- ished because they do not get the right kind of food. Wise Brothers’ Grade “A” Milk If your child is un- dcrweig}n try giving }lim our Grade A“ Milk from accredited Guernsey cows—richer than ordinary in the vital food factors grow- mg children need. Give him from a pmt to a quart a day m the form of cocoa, custards, milk soups, creamed dishes, ete., if he dislikes to drink it alone. Tclefl:ofie West 183 3204-3208 N St. N.W. P00990000000 0300000000 - R 333 0000000000000 000000000000000000000000:000000000000000000000000 000??_0_“0QQmOOOOOOOQ000000?00000?00!’00OQ““OQ STAR, WASHINGTON, TWENTY INJURED INFLORIDA WRECK Atlantic Coast Llne s “Tam- pa Special” Derailed—Four Victims May Die. By the Associated Press, LAND, Fla., March 19.—A score of persons were injured, four seri- o when Atlantic Coast Line train » the “Tampa Spi was dera ne here late yesterday The cause niflhb derailment is un- knewn, but fals said it probably resulted from a split switch. The engine left the track and plowed along for nearly 300 feet One day coach, one combination coach ind one baggage car were overturned, s D. Martin of Sanford, baggage- master on the train, was huried through the window and his throat icriously gashed. He s not expected to 1 The engineer, E. H. Weekly nford, and negro fireman, who ined in the engine, were not in- | jured. | Among the more seriously injured Hesa, Lumberport, W kle and wrenched hip do, Ohio, badly cut F. Harle J <'kfinn»’ Davis of Union, minor cuits and bruises The station at Bonds Mill, where the accident occurred, was demolished | when sideswiped by a steel baggage | car. \u"rrcd | Fire at Beinse Plant. Fire in & metal building at the Di trict refuse plant, Montello a\knu» and Mount Olivet road northeast, clalmed the attention of No. 10 E!\gmt i Company about 4 o'clock this morn- ing. Origin of the fire was not de- termined, police reported, and the| ge amounted to thm H HERE'S a tang and asnapto Gulden's that you'll find in no other mustard. We search the world for the choicest mustard seeds. It takes several different varicties of se- lected seeds to give that zestful relish. Then we blend them with the finest vinegar, aged in wood for years like port wine. No woader Gulden's adds that magic touch to foods that enriches favor, eharpens appetite, mide digestion. Maks sure Gulden's is on your home table to- n(lht Tell lh. ‘waiter at your hotel or restaurant that want Gulden's .—m the ori ginal Eend for our leafiet, “How to eat @ Strak and Whv.” Charlys Gulden_ Inc. (P.P.'19). Flizavetn Street, New Tork, | | | D. C., THURSDAY, MARCH POLO TEAM TO STOP HERE Army Entrant in International Contest to Sail March 25. Members of the Army polo team which has been training in Florida for the international military polo matches to be held in England next June, will visit this city Saturday on their way to New York City to board the steamship March 25 for England While here, the team—personnel and equipment—will be inspected by Maj. Gen. John L. Hines, chief of staff of the Army, and other Army officers at | Fort Myer, Va, Sunday morning at 9:30 o'clock The team ts composed of Maj. Loule | Beard, Quartermaster Corps, cap- of the team; Maj. A. H. Wilson, Peter P. Rodes, Field . Charles H. Gerh: Eugene Mt y. Fleld Artillery, and First L John A. Smith, jr., Field Artillery Thirteen enlisted men and 25 first- class ponles will accompany the team to England. If I were an Inspector I wWoULD carry a flashlight, you can bet on that. No matter what I had to “in- spect,” my flashlight would help me do a better, more thorough job. Because there is no port- able light to compare with a good anhh ht. It throws a bright, whnc spot of light right where you want it. And there's no danger of fire. Being an inspector, and having a critical eye, my best judgment would tell me to choose an Eveready Flashlight! L’AIGLON CAFFE AND BALL ROOM 1808 ADAMS MILL ROAD NORTHWEST TION CAFE NECE BEEC, THE N L BEAUTIFUL WITH ALL FURNITURE OCECUPANCY; TAILS APRLY ESSARY CAPACITY CAPY FULLY AL’S MOST EQUIPPED FACILITIES, IMMEDIATE 600. FOR DE- FOR District National Bank TRUSTEE 1406 G STREET NORTHWEST BEAUTlFUL WOODSIDE Sixteenth Street Heights Extended New Detached Home on Corner Lot, 46 ft. by 140 ft Brick construction, with slate-faced roof. Large living room, with open fireplace, French windows. Dining room opening onto side porc Four large bedrooms; 2 Slecping Porch; it-in Garage. 2 tiled baths, hardwood floors; hot-water heat. Yery Attractive Electric with built-in tubs. tures. Plen(y of Shatle Trees and Flowers. Best Value Near Washington Price Only $15,000 Very Good Terms B. HOUSTON McCENEY Real 1653 Penmylvama Ave. Estate Telephone Main 6152 serges. ideal for Spring wear. 1319-1321 F Street STORE NEWS “Fashion Park” and “Stratford” Clothes An Easter Tip! PLENTY OF LIGHTWEIGHT FABRICS AND COLORS IN THIS CLEARANCE OF FINE SUITS $25 8 AM. to 6 P.M. $40 & $50 Values Easter is “just around the corner,” and breathes there a man that doesn’t want a new Easter suit? This clearance of every suit remaining from our stock of the season just ending comes at a most opportune time—particularly when you consider the saving you are bound to effect on that new Easter suit. As mentioned above—this stock includes a very liberal assortment of lightweight fabrics and colors Featured are light cheviots and soft French flannels—also the conservatxve blue Coats only half lined. Alterations at Actual Cost MONEY-SAVING FOOD VALUES FOR THE WEEK END Pork Loins . . . . Ib., 25¢c Half or Whole Fresh Hams . .lb., 28c|Fresh Shoulders, Half or Whole Ib., 19¢ Spareribs . .. .lb., 19¢ Eo P 8, 3 Rib or Loin Saurkraut . .2 gts., 15¢ Pork Chops. . .1b., 24c Chuck Roast . End Chops Center Cuts . B, Ie | Loin Chops. Sirloin Steak . .1b., 30c|Round Steak . Plate Beef . . . .Ib., 9c|Prime Rib. . . .1b., 29¢ .1b., 29c Leg of Lamb . . . Ib.,29c Finest Spring Lamb .1b., 48c|Breast Lamb . .1b., 16¢c :Potatoes, No. |Spinach . . . . 31bs., 23c Veal Breast. .lb., 14c|Calf Liver. . . .lb., 50c S T 14-1b. Prints Cheese .. ..lb., 34c|Eggs N. Y. June Make Boxled Ham .} doz., 34c Nearby % Ib., 22¢|Chipped Beef, } Ib.,15¢ Grapefruit . . . . each, 5c New Cabbage . . . Ib., 5c . stalk, 10c . 4lbs., 17¢c 15 1bs., 22¢ Apples . . . . . 31bs.,25¢ GROCERY SPECIALS Peas, No.2 cans . 3 for 29c¢ Stringless Beans . 3for29c Van Camp’s Milk . 3 for27c Corn Flakes . . . 3for27c Domino Sugar, 2-1b. pkg., 23c Coflee . . . . . . Ib,638c Morton’s Salt . 3pkgs., 27c Campbell’s Soups, 3 cans, 27c Campbell’s Beans, 3 cans, 27¢ Pink Salmon . . 2cans, 25¢ Clicquot . . . . bottle, 10c Deposit of 2c Required 5c Sunshine Sodas . . pkg. Tomatoes . 3 cans, 29c WASHINGTON FLOUR 5 Ibs., 12 Ibs., 24 Ibs., 32c 66¢c ‘1~ Sugar . . . . . 10lbs., 62¢c Milk : Bread quart, 10c loaf, 5¢

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