Evening Star Newspaper, April 13, 1925, Page 3

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COOLIDGE WRONGLY QUOTED IN FRANGE French Papers Get Far From Right View of Attitude on Herriot. b , BY DAVID LAWRENCE. President Coolidge was completely misrepresented by the French press with res to his alleged comments T Premier Herriot. Such rritation is reported from France o crroneous press reports, is inevitable result of a tem hich not maintain a single special correspondent in Washington French newspapers. Had the representatives of French newspapers heard what Mr. Coolidge said the would not have been mis- led. Most of the correspondents of ¥French newspapers make their head- quarters In New York and are de- vendent on what they read in the J*re8s gen ly so that the version :YY‘MIV cabled is second hand the infurmation divulged at Whuite touse when {inquiries were vidde last Friday as to whether the President had any comment to make on the change in the cabinet in France That the Presid 1 of on the the nt did not know hat he could very well comment on resignation of Premier Herriot way would be helpful to the correspondents. Recalls Selection, President came into of a little more liberal and on a desire to ar- range some settlement with Germany relative to reparations. Now that was accomplished—and it is a real nplishment—the President thought 4 piece of work in which Premier Herriot could take a good deal of satisfaction. The President judged that M. Herriot had gone out of pow- €r on account of the great difficulty that has attended French finances, #nd the President noticed in the aft €rnoon newspapers the statement of the premier that he was not to blame about that, and that the difficulty ex- isted before he came into power and Wwas not the result of his action, That the President did not know What the effect would be on France Te imagined it would depend more or less on who came into power. That re recalled power on that ot the suggestion sovernment Situation Delicate, That the Pr comment about it because, of course, it was rather dellcate to say much of anything about it. The foregoing was, of course, 10 sense a culogy of Premier Her- riot any attempt to criticize the French for overthrowing his mini ry, but rather a pas: on’ the Dawes to settlement, which 13 an accomplished fact and on which messages of gratification were ex- changed at the time between ton and Pari Not having the remarks backgroua of the made here on the subject, and not knowing that the nawspaper men aj ask for commen:, formai or informal, on events happening in Llurope, the French editorizl writers have assumed that Mr. Coolldge went out of his way to praise M. a3d in a sense to lament his varture. Nothing was farther Mr. Coolidge’s mind, as o well how indelicate ent on a change of eign country. Officials here de- from he s t> com- cabinet in a are anxious to learn st how the French press was mis- | cd on the subject, and it may be hat American = Ambassador Herrick ill be asked to present the exact ords the White House spokesman used and learn the origin of misrepresentation (Copyright, POSSE SEE;(S—PEROES. Shoot Wrong Man in Hunt for| Assailants of Deputy. MACON. Ga., April 13.—An exciting chase is being conducted by a force f armed men in the Lizella neigh- orhood for Monroe and Tom Fowler, egroes. suspected of being partici- vants in a gun fight with Earl Mos- ley, deputy sheriff, in which the dep- uty was jnjured. David Johnson, an- other negro, arrived at the Macon hospital within an hour after the of- ticer was ought here for treatment. fohnson said he was shot by a band searchers, who mistook him for one of the negroes they wers seeking. _SPECIAL NOTICES. O RUG_WASHI CLEANINT D STORING. THE LU Co Rear 4_V st. o.w. North 9160, my7 WANTED T0 MAUL, FULL OK PART LOAD 20 OR PROM NEW TORK. OB WASH. D. C: BOSTON, PITTSBURGH OB WAY POINTS. SPECIAL RATES. NATIONAL DE- LIVERY ASSOC., INC., 1418 F ST. N.W. MAIN 1460 LOCAL MOVING ALSO . IF YOU HAVE ANY AILMENT, THY MY drugless system for rellef. Dr. D. C.. 1603 ¥ORNTIURE REPAIRING stering at your home: will go anywhere dresy Box “236.H. Ster o s {OUSEREEPERS—CYCLO “our rugs like new: Allons. © $1.25, delivered n; 6 PROGRESSIVE . Potomac my9e SPONSIBLE FOR ANY one other thy - HARDING DUNN, 1310 50th st 14 0 56 window : 1 Cleve- LUTHER L. 1 WILL NOT BE T debts contracted by self. WM. w. WE ARE ON THE JOB, AS ALWAYS, T v paperhanging painting " and siades with £rat- N0 JOB_T00 TARGE Phone Franklin 10329 and tell Estimates furnished promptiy. ) metal bathroom cabinets; cfter made. Our pric L KAMPF, INC., Factory Suita Ph . 10329, 18% LY TRIPS ¥ Wilmington Del., York City. AND_STORAGE co. E VAKE W) To Baltim®e, Md. and _'New SMITH'S _TRANSF HOW'S THAT ROOF Better be sure § clement weather. Roofing 1121 5th m.w, IRONCLAD &0, S i “Cleanliness Is Next to Godliness” Why wear Diamond Rings bedimmed with grit and dirt? Use Jem Eleno; large Bottle, 50c. R. HARRIS & CO., Corser Tth and D Sts. N. sate against in. Call Main 14, 53 Here | dent found it difficult | ng observation | Wasi- | i Herriot | knows ths| | A remarkable poison case is ex- pected to be uncovered with the tak- ing into cuntody of Mrs, Anna Cun- ningham of Gary, Ind., upon the sud- den illnexs of her remaining xon, David Cunningham, 24, and with the discovery by physiclans that he was suffering from arsenic poixon. Mrs. Cunningham’s husband, together with four of her other children. have all {died within the last xix years under | mysterious elrcumstances, in each case being sick but 10 days to 2 weeks. Bestdes David, there is one surviving daughter of 17. All the deceaxed were insured and the proceeds from these policies and the earnings of David as {a machinist have been Mrs. Cun- ningham’s maln source of support. When relatives learned of the dying condition of David, they motified the thorities, and it Is expected that all five of the bodies will be exhumed from thelr graves for poison evidence. The pictures above are of Mrs. Cun- ningham, -her late husband and twe of the deceased children. AR, WASHINGTO MONDAY, APRIL 13 EASTER OBSERVD ATTOMBOF CARIT Christian Peoples of World Represented in Jerusalem in Colorful Array. By the Associated Press. JERUSALEM, April American Catholic bishops, Protes- tant pastors and Jewish rabbis figured prominently in yesterday's Easter services in Jerusalem. The ity was crowded with more pilgrims than at any time since pre-war days. Under a hot sun thromgs poured | all day past the Jafta gate throush | the parrow streets to the Church of | the Holy Sepulcher, where people of | all religions and sects fought for standing room around the tomb of Christ. Armenians, Copts, Greexs, Syrians, Abyssinians, Ameri-| can rench, British and Spanish | jostled one another In a bewildering | varlety of dress. | The Right lev. Franels I. Tief, | Bishop of Concordia, Kans. led ai &roup of 100 American pilgrims into the edifice. The Right Rev. John J. Cantwell, ! Bishop of Los Angeles and San | Diego, Calif., who, with Mgr. John | Nash of Buffalo and Father James Coffey of St. Louis, Mo, were the | first Americans to celebrate mass on | | Saturday in the sepulcher, headed | |a group of French Canadians. EASTER STYLES QUIET. 13.—Seyeral | | | 1 Arabs, Russians, Little “Color” Noticeable in Fifth | Avenue Parade. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 12.— > went through its annual Spring coming-out yesterday throughout the | golden hours of a climatically made- {to-order Easter Sunday Crowds thronged Fifth avenue, the | i | { | w | 515,686 1S NEEDED | IN CHARITY DRIVE Returns Up to Noon Show Total of $39,314 So Far Contributed. | According to returns given out at the Social Ser House, 2 Eleventh street, 4 contributions have been received in support of the work of the Associated Charities and | tizens' Rellef Association up today. Each contribution been registered as a vote in support of the work of these family welfare organizations. Since the first of April, when this Easter referendum wa opened for the sixth season, 272 mem- Dbers of 6 of the leading trade bodies | and clubs of the city have registered their votes by contributing to this work of mending broken homes and saving children. Many of these con- tributors have given for the first time in response to the appeal of the | finance committee for a wider support from the professional and business men of the c This number, 272 does not include the larger number of the memberships of those same organizations who had given earlier in the year. The total in hands today of the joint finance committee of the As- sociated Charities and Citizens' Relief Association is $29,314, leaving $15,- 656 still to be raised in order to provide the minimum budget of $35,- 000 to carry the work to the end of the fiscal year, September 30. The committee, of which Milton E. Afles is chairman, and Ord Preston treas- urer, will welcome additional gifts sent to 1022 Eieventh street in order to complete the budget to noon has COMMUNISTS WINNERS. Obtain Organization of Canadian Labor Party. TORONTO, April 1 he Co. nist candidate, A. E. Smith, a Methodist minister in western Can- ada, was elected president of the Ontario section of the Canadian Labor party by two votes o Harry Ker win, the trades union candidate, by the 160 delegates at the convention of the sectlon here Saturday. The Communists also elected their candi- date, John McDougald. as vice presi- dent and secured control of the ex- ecutive committee. The delegates adopted the Commu- | nists’ resolution providing that the| party’s five delegates to the gather- ing of British Emplre Labor partfes in London next yesr be instructed to move that the colonial and semi- colonial portions of the empire have complete independence. An amend- ment to have “self-determination” substituted for “independence” failed { | | | DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE ILL Former Governor General of Can- ada Stricken in Ireland. By the Associated Press. WATERFORD, Ireland, April 15— The Duke of Devonshire, former Gov- ernor General of Canada, ex-secretary of state for the colonies and one of England's largest landed proprietors, had a slight seizure of illness yester- | day, while staying at Lismore Castle, his Irish estate near Lere. lie spent a good night, however, and his condi- tion today was declared to be satis- factory. The Marquis of Hartington, eldest son and heir of the duke, is on | his way here from Chatsworth, Der- byshire, one of the principal seats of the Dukedom. The duke year. s In his fifty-seventh The Best We Know How —thet's what we put into every print- ing job. HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, FRINTER. IT PAYS— To consult ‘his big printing plant—be- fore you place your order for printing. The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D ST. N.W. THAT MATTRESS Would feel beiter if it were cleaned and renovated. FUT_IT SHOULD BE DONE PROPERLY. Phone Main 3621, 610 E St. N.W. BEDELL’S MATTRESS FACTORY WHEN ROOFS LEAK B 119 8rd Bt. S.W. K‘S“ONS ROOPING. COMPANYX Phone Main 833. SHIP FIRE QUENCHED. Philadelphia Fireboats Save Ital-| ian Steamship. | PHILADELPHIA, 'April 15.—Fire- | boats from this city, summoned by, iwireless telegraph last night, suc- ceeded in bringing under control a| blaze in the No. 3 hold of the Itallan steamship Valrossa in the Delaware | | River south of Wilmington, Del. For a time the flames threatened | to envelope the vessel, but a desper- | ate fight by members of the crew, | headed by Capt. Federici. managed to | hold them in check until the arrival( of the fire tugs. Dense clouds of black smoke poured from the burn-| ing hold, handicapping -the crew in| its efforts to subdue the blazc. Upon | the approach of the fireboats the| Valrossa, which had been proceeding slowly up the river under its own power, weighed anchog in the mid- dle of the stream. b | shall de. {discharged from traditional stage of the city's Easter pageant. Coney Island, a dozen miles aw also furnished its fashion parade, promenading in two endless lines along the newly finished boardwalk. {Ordinarily these crowds held thelr Zaster promenades on their beloved RED ENLISTED MEN TRESEIPE LIGHELY, . {moaer v Tos peite te hox GENERAL SUGGESTS| The Coney parade was even a bit e more brilliant than the more exclu- sive Fifih avenue pageant, with the colors of the girls and women's clothes & shade more pronounced and the skirts quite a bit shorter, Probably the day's greatest sur- prise, In a fashion way of speaking, was the absence on Fiith avenue of the extremely short skirt that the mode-makers have been predicting. | aged 25.1 “Qujetness” was predominant in the 7alter M.|color of dress fabrics. Many biack Trumball, .aged to 26 vears'|costumes appeared, relieved, usually, B a hu v by small splasies of color here and charge .. from. the Army there. Black satin coats, the lower eral other soldiers edges trimmed in fur, also were suspicion of bolshevist ] worn. There was no fur at the neck but no conclusive evidence could belor sleeves, found against them. Some mayv be| Many of the women wore shoulder the Army. but none|poquets of orchids, sweet peas or to be brought to|pansies. decldres that “the|%One of the post-church strollers to has been remov-!gain considerable attention was a command, and that his!black-eyed girl, tall and slender, who “ideally sane, loy and | appeared clad in black satin pajamas, | ! almobt hidden by a long c (Continued from First and cases, everything but it m t ¥ and discharge fro quate punishment.’ Paul M. Crouch, a private as sentenced to 40 and pertaining to the| not unlikely that I} ars’ imprisonm i the Army ade sympath of them is lik trial. Gen. Sn poison of sov ed from his troops are patriotic 1 at of the | same material, and with a black satin {bonnet. She carried a long staff, un- Crouch and Trumbu!l belonged to)adorned. the executive committee of the| Many Hawailan Communist League at the!double-breasted Schofleld Barracks. Their letterhead|cheviot. These reads: {in the darker sh “Workers of the world unite. You| Coffee shade have nothing to lose but your chains, | kling of reddish bro and the world to gain. Hawail for|With metal and giving { Hawaiian workers. Arise, ve prison- | lights were conspicuous probably be- | ers of starvation! Arise, ye wretched | ?8use of the overwhelming predomi- of the earth, for justice thunders con- | #ance of rather severely plain black demnation! A ‘better world is in|and gray leathers birth.” . Here is some of the language ac GREAT THRONGS IN ROME. cepted by the court-martial as hav ing been uttered by Crouch at the Schofield Barracks in the presence of other soldiers “The majority of the common | people will be hard to swing into the red column. I am in favor of the overthrow of the United States Gov-| ernment—by peaceful means if it can be dome, but, if not. by any other| method that may present itself, in- cluding revolution.” Trumbull was found guilty ef ha Text of Letterhead. of the women appeared Ini coats of serge or were predominantly des. with fair sprin- bronze footwear shot off rainbow | | Basilicas Crowded for Pontifical Easter Masses. By (he Associated Press. ROM April 12.—Hundreds of thousands of Italians and Holy vear| pligrims from all parts of the worid, including thousands from the United States, crowded to the doors Rome's !four basilicas this morning when { pontifical Easter masses were cele- ing spoken as follows to his fellow |brated with traditional gorgeousness soldiers: iby cardinal archpriests. Great thongs “The President of the United States|also filled the city's 400 churches, in may be all right as an ind ual, but ! each of which a joyous mass marking as an Mstitution he is a disgrace to|the end of Holy week was celebrated. the whole damned country. 1 am|The churchgoers were favored with sick and disgusted with this damned |sunnny weather. country and everything and every-| The most splendid service was at body in it. I wish I could get away |St. Peter's, where, amid special dec- where I would not even hear of the|Orations illuminated by shafts of sun- name of the United States again. The |light, Cardinal Merry Del Val offici- flaz and country are a disgrace to hu. | ated as celebrant. The famous choir manity.” |intoned the Gregorian chants and All these terms were held to be in|Sang other music. violation of the sixty-second article | ”l‘;n‘z\\:rqfr(:lr-’:u.??\tdfl‘:n‘i?x(zh:“ x(r;;;r,&p!‘t‘f“o \POLICE GUARD'NG HOME the Schofield Barracks has been run-| OF WYOM|NG EXECUTIVE This alleged Soviet conspiracy at ning since February. It originated | Mysterious Man and Woman Ob- in a soldiers’ cla: ostensibly organ- ized to stud; Esperanto. Some of | the members were bona fide students, and it is asserted that as soon as| they discovered what was really afoot | they withdrew. Crouch is from North, Carolina, and Trumbull, who is from Massachusetts, is a graduate of the University of Delaware. Crouch and | Trumbull identified their propaganda | with the third internationale. Soms reports in Honolulu suggested that the Moscow reds have been trying to impair the loyalty of American sol- diers through the Workers' Party of America and the Industrial Workers of the World, but the sgitation at the | Schofleld Barracks is believed to have served Prowling in Vicinity of Gov. Nellie Ross’' Mansion. By the Associated Pres: CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 13.—De- spite statements of Gov. Nellie Tayloe Ross that “I have not seen any guards” and “I know no reason for guards,” two men were patrolling the grounds of the gubernatorial mansion here last night. State law enforce- ment officials also continued to evade explanations concerning the guards D e oas Jx ety and their need And Gov. Ross re- oem “staried indepandontly.is. | fused to admit that she had even seen Popular sentiment In Hawail is ad-| guards around the mansion. oy, Dtoviotiem In qr out Of the| Virtually:thie onlyafact-upon which v Ll » especially in| Cheyenne citizens are basing their o A S theories of the need for guards has Sealh i been the reported mysterious appear- ance of a man and a woman in the neighborhood of the mansion yester- day. Conjectures, however, of the need of the guards continue to run from bomb threats to fanatic fears. Gov. Ross was sald tonight to be planning to leave within a week or 10 days to visit relatives and for a| short respite from her executive dutfes. | After her departure the guards will | be withdrawn. T COLORED MAN IS SLAIN IN DISPUTE OVER CRAPS | William Jenifer Shot and George Mitchell Held by Police on Murder Charge. News €0.) Today’s Star Contains 22 advertisements for office help, including SALESMEN SOLICITORS CLERICAL POSITIONS ASSISTANT MANAGEK GENERAL OFFICE WORK ASSISTANT SUPPLY CLERK COUNTER CLERKS CLOTHING NALESMEN SECURITY SALE: BOOKK| OFFICK ASSISTANT TYPIST —and— 11 advertisements for office sit- uations, including TS E NTE! RAPHERS CLERKS DICTAPHONE OPERATOR The Help and Situation columns of The Star are the means of bring- ing together the empioyer seeking a certain type of office help and the clerk having the desired qualifica- tions. colored, 23 years old, of 1267 Third street southwest, was shot and Instantly killed last night at the home of George Mitchell, colored, 2629% Douglas road, Ana- costia, and Mitchell was arrested!| later on a charge of murder. | Information obtained by the police | as to the effect that Mitchell was' utting” a4 game of craps in one room, while dancing was going on in another part of the house. There was a dispute about money, it is stated, and Mitchell terminated the misun- derstanding with his weapon. Jenifer's body was taken to the morgue, where foroner Nevitt will pnduct an inqugpt LOmMOrrow.. William Jenifer, | | The best results are obtained by carefully worded help advertisements stating _fully duties _expectnd clerk situation _adve: giving qualifications ng of i weg the e dor the further tax reduction as the goal. Washington box half filled { pencil { by his clerks under the rule that the {stub of the old vencil must be handed in They const idge econony Shipping Board Governy ing agents are now engaged in ¢ ing the ann; those run to 3 so long Prices jumped huge an itselt nu nattlo saves money. omy program. Washington have put of & Now w apparatus, to cool it result much of the time, by all departments to great exte Union sult? sands graph tolls for government messages Put it are, used eling a corps of t Washingt | Government from 10 to is a considerable ernmen Exhibit E. We run lightl back agal Again And again and hausted hibits. Gireck alphabet, nese, omies put the drive toward further tion at Washington Certainly heard of a tenth of them individual economy to the White House | and lay mark one hem would to_him. the thing he | the paper cl {or great-gr: That idea v Coolidge aaministration. It hasn't beer: | these, with their origin and adopted four years as vet, been more than p Mob Attack Feared county prevent { citizens where Donald McLaren was arrested early yesterd: the person women the last year. hav ave resulted from the attacks of a moron have been hunting for nearly a year. leaving the vicinity Murray's residence. called the police and said that a man was standing between watching her daughter retire for the night. say Tom" it in his capacity as investigator in an effort to of the moron who has been terror- izing the town. att police hurried McLaren to Lewistown, the county seat. and has several children. WILL CALL C Union Official Hopes to Tie Up general union and non-union West Virginia Panhandle with the exception of Hancock. wil be issued n eastern Ohlo sub-district announced last night. | Veterans' Burcau a group of profes- sional single niiles wires {ALLEGED ASSAILANT | BY the Coolidge and Economy $150,000 a Year Paid U. s Experts Directling Drive Against Governmental Waste. BY WILLIAM HELMIL | wing Stor today starts a,sorées | The idea of saving the i by, Wilidafit Helm détatl- | money was not born in Calvin Cooildge's \nouiies being carvied out wn- | New England brain, much as its parent- | Cooiidge ad@ministration, with | age would do him credit. It was not born | in the brain of Warren Harding. It did not orizinate with Woodrow Wilson, | or yet with William H. Taft. It is an| old ‘idea, old as the foundation: Republic. For generations it around Washington. Ouce eve years the politiclans used to dress it | up and parade it befare the voters. At| other times it was neglected, forgot-| ten, entirely abandone { Warren Harding put it to work, and ! after he died Calvin Coolidge became | | its buddy. Under the genial Harding | the idea of economy got its start; under | Coolidge it was made to give up its union card and work 25 hours a day. Ever since Coolidge has been President | he has been riding the idea of economy | harder than hehas ridden his electric| hobby horse.. And how he has made it | perform ! In its details the idea has been turn- ed over to the Bureau of the Budget and by the director of the bureau, Gen. | { H. M. Lord, transmittted to the Govern- ment's working force. Gen. Lord has| gathered about him a staff of \\'(rr'ners; engineers | Whose sole duty is fo find new ways | vort 3 Ereat quantity |Of saving Government money. He| exhaust steam. Tor years this|Spends about $150,000 a year in running | n wastod itseif in evaporation,|Dl$ bureau, and most of the money it helps to heat the hospital in |80°S 0 pay selaries of men who think rter, and, through a refrigerating | UP New ways of spending le ummer. The| The business of saving 1 aanion LS ERIITIC et been systematized to as fine the great building housing the |@s change-making in a department store. The intangible idea of econ- has been dragged down from the ouds, given an outl a set of books, a corps of ass ants, and set up in business as unromantically as corner groce It has been thor- commercialized. 1t works ing machines, typewriters, ems. Once it was a poet’s dream; today it is like a sleek business man What Is It All About? How has the transformation come about? Who did it? How do the wheels go around? What has it ac-| complished? What more can it do?| And when it does all it has in mind, | of it? In other words. now | The B 3 a 2 On the budget directof's desi in there is a pasteboard ith exceedingly short stubs. They were turned in out. Cool- is glven A in the DLefore a n itate Ex on ibit At the Department and the ent purchas- Navy small contracts | fuel oil requirements of o great consumers. They ,000,000 barrels & year. Not | ago they were let in bulk. | in expectation of so| order, and the Government had to pay m Now the rerous small orders no longer un- prices, and the Government Exhibit B in the econ- fnto numerous t Over at the Naval Government Hospital in | to c has | a poir in | | | have system 1t-ow these Iinked into a thousands of | of governme ed telegraph Formerly wires, used by a few departments, were idle Now they are used | and have replaced the use of Western | and Postal facilities. The re- Savings, running into thou- | of dollars monthly, in tele- savers unified i ne, | ¢ | \ | down as Exhibit D. Discount on Hotel Bills. | Throughout the United States there perhaps, 200 hotels frequently | by Government employes trav-|swnat on official business. Thanks to|that we've got economy Govern- | ofessional money-savers | ment, what are we going to do with | these hotels no t and of what earthly it mployes a discount of |, the average man in the street? | per The result! ¢These are questions to which an-| aving to the GOv-| gwers will be attempied in this series | to the emploves. | ,f articles, But here and now it is opportune to say that thus far econ- omy in Government has led the aver- age man in the street to two tax re- cuctfons. It is on its way to a third reduction. . And after a time it will take the taxpavers to a fourth one This correspondent has listed 1,000 separate and distinct Federal econo- mies, all of them unknown little more tHan three vears ago. Each one of them has helped save money. Each one has contributed to past redictions in taxes and is helping in a coming reduction. About many of them nions differ, Some persons feel t here and there the w of econ- has turned to the vinegar of nginess. Maybe so; vbe not. fact remair the most gire concern 25 cent nd also Quickly the is_exhausted o ¥, Y. Z and w double A exhausted. will be ex- economy ex- ould use the| ssian, the Cai- econ- part reduc- alphabet down ting phabet agair ng the the Ry ) the in i Indeed, in identify into e as a of tax Put into effect by e not; the President never | To tote each | it on the doorstep would not | om, it 2s the President’s baby. Not | st in fifty riginated with Calvin | But the olldge—not one in a hundred. Most of | economical man—; wn affairs— seem angely unfamillar | who ever sat in the House is | riding his hobby hard for national brand of | benefit | in running | Space will not permit listing the| And of | 1,000 Federal economies in this series the st often-used | of articles. en if it were possible, children. grandchildren | the recital would become tiresome ndchildren of a single idea. | But some of the outstanding savings s adopted by the Harding- aight home to all of us. And manner | But all of them bear es—econor affa Government's all down to , are em, ! | | come but it has | of execution. will be detailed. rolific. (Copyright, 1925. 300 Out-of-Town Workmen| | found that not | more NEGROES ATTACK WOMAN AFTER KILLING ESCORT {Murder and | Near UTSIDE PAINTERS DENIED JOBS HERE Assault Take Place College Campus Dallas lie Ausociated Press. DALLAS was be compan b i in By as, Apri and his woma assaulte g near amp Apply for Places Vacated by Union Men. couple outhe hodist ged pisto Sterr, her Mr ous condit o than 300 letters painters seeking to repl on strike here have been by the Master Painte ciation, according to Woodhouse of that None of these men oyed, however, beca: to Capt. Woodhouse, t of open-shop painters sald he had made a sur ing of all the shops belonging to the Master Painters’ Association and one of them were in t of men and all were working Po riding negroes jur of the | At negr blocks and organization Snow Falls in Massachusetts SPRINGFIELD, Mass | Winter staged ficial began late termittently id that the association was than ever determined th crease in wa s time was therefore, ere would illiam J - National town until local union still con adquar- showing that They are de- their demar mically unsound they were dec be no incr Gallaghe Painters’ Union tonight ters remain the sam to to rganizer agnosis b is being conducted at - at union bools ters termined or $10 a While porary lull in the l:eretofore rapid developments of the situation, it is expected sult of a series of m held by both sides of the that there will be further devel ments within a day or so. Insurance Bldg. 15th and I Sts. SEVERAL AVAILABLE ROOMS W. H. West Co. 916 15th St. a re- to be NOTED U. S. EXPLORER AND LECTURER EXPIRES Dr. William E. Geil, Known Research Work, Claimed by Death in Venice, Italy for | We Put Skill and Common Sense Into Our Painting By the Ass < We aim Ap cablegram received here fror Italy, announced t Sunday of Dr. Willla: noted American explorer, lecturer and author. Dr. Geil wi his v home from research work in salem for the British museum Geil was best known for his explora- tion of the Great Wall .of China. which he made as part of a four-ye: trip around the world, started in 1901 He also made at different times ex- tensive tours through Africa, Austra- lia and the Holy Lands. Many of Dr. Geil's books deal with his travels. | Dr. Geil was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Socicty, the Royal As- | tronomical Society and a member of | the Royal Aslatic Society. He was| born near here in 1865 and was | graduated from Lafayette College. He | specialized in religlo literature, later becoming an Lvangelist. He i remembered for an evangelistic can paign in Cincinnati in the early 0 Dr. Gell is sarvived by widow Mrs. Constance Emerson Geil and one sister, Miss Ella Geil of Doylestown il putting into labor and 1t us_do better. pl doesn't cost any more to bave “bat we believe we do Phone West 2901 R. K. Ferguson, Inc. Pain pt g Dep Insurance Bldg., 15th & Eye Sts. You RIDE Aviator to Resume World Flight. | TOKIO, April 13—Maj. Pedro Zan- ni, Argentine aviator, today received! a more powerful engine from the United States for his airplane, in which he intends to resume his cruise | around the world. The fight was | interrupted at Tokio on account of | Winter weather conditions on the | transpacific_air lanes. T.0. PROBEY co. Store No. 1—2104 Pa. Avi he Hitchman and Glen- | Marshall County, which | Federal Court in- | not affect dale mines, are protected by junction OF WOMEN IS GUARDED | o in Tilinois| DESIRABLE APARTMENTS | FOR RENT in | The Dresden After Arrest of Man Accused of Many Crimes. sociated Press LEWISTOWN, 1l1, April 13.—The jail here is under guard to any possible trouble from of Canton, 15 miles away, | i | | and accused of being who has attacked many Twelve women been assaulted and two deaths for whom the Canton police McLaren wag arrested as he was of Mrs. M. T. 3rs. Murray had two houses | After an examination, police | admitted to ‘“peeping s, but declared he did SKILLED OPTICIANS We correctly Il the presoriptions of reputable oculists; not as dome by Tom, Dick and Harry. 610 Thirteenth Street N.W. Phone Franklin 171 DRAPERIES SLIP - COVERS WINDOW - SHADES Factory Prices Mean Big Bavings MC DEVITT Call Main 8311 for Estimates. 1217 F St., Dulin & Martin Bldg. McLaren activitie: learn the true identity He denied he ever cked any of the women. Fearing mob violence, the Canton McLaren, an electrician, js married OALETRIKE. West Virginia Panhandle. WHEELING, W. Va, April 13—A strike order affacting all mines in the | counties, | ¥rank Ledvinka, | president, today, It was specified the order would J i i F LAT TIRE? MAIN 500 I LEETH BROTHERS “NOTICE” To All Home Buyers Help Wanted —can be most promptly supplied through a Star Classified Ad. Those seeking employment Store No.2—12th & H Sts. ! BREAKFAST_LUNCHEON—DINNER | | Store No.3—9th & P Sts. N.W. ey A i F & 12th N.W McCormick Madical ~ Glasses Fitted Goliegs Eyes Examined Graduate Dr. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone Main 721 #09-410 McLachlen Bldg. 0th 20d G Ste. N.W. WANT TO LIVE BETTER? Your answer to this probably would be, Coesn’t cost any more.” Well, our answer ic It Costs Less That is the real secret of DURIETH At 36th and R Sts. N.W ‘We can not only PROVE this to you, but PROVED IT to over 200 other families. BETTER COME SEE Prices, $8,500 to $12,000 On Our Safe and Sane Terms HANNON.: & LUCH Members of the Operative Builders' Association of the D. DeMoll Twelfth and G Sts. N.W. s Sur - 4 we Emmons S. Smith ©. J. DeMoll 0. J. “Where the Piano Goes IWe Haove the Correct Furniture for Its Surroundings™ Fine Furniture scan the Help Wanted Columns in The Star daily for openings which they are qualified to fill. That’s why it is so ad- vantageous to go into details in your advertise- ment — attracting the most competent of ap- plicants. The Star prints MORE Classified Ads every day than all the other papers here combined—because of the better results ob- tained. “Around the Corner” is Star Branch Office We Have under constraction a new Home development thst undoubledly fulfills a long cherished wish of the buying public to get a respectable home in & refined neighborhood within 15 minutes of the center of the city. and where there is not the environment of a limited breathing space. but where they are privileged at a nominal outlay to have and enjos an atmosphere Of real home conveniences. These and many other advantages these ios will be under $8,000 and e oo 6. Sanie na ieh. ha thought of defeating the High Rent Pro ‘Wait for this eppertunity. Chas. D. Sager Realtor and Builder 924 14th St. Our new depnrtment. with its many beautiful pieces of fine furniture, should be seen by every one interested in add- ing to their home an occasional piece for the living room, drawing room or libra: Our manager of this department, who has had years of experience in this line. will gladly assist you in your home furnishings problem. We Cordially Invite Your Inspection

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