Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1925, Page 4

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1 Ed CLEAN-UP ACTIVITY URGED BY OYSTER Householders and Property Owners Told Importance of & Week’s Observance. Commissioner Oyster today appeal- ed to all householders and "property owners to co-operate in making a suc- of the Clean-up, Paint-up week, proclaimed by the Commissioners as the period from April 27 to May 2. The Health Department, which is supervised by Commissioner Oyster, has just completed a survey of the alleys, to improve sanitary conditions in them, and the Commissioner felt this should be followed by a general appeal to all Washingtonians to help make the city more attractive this Summer The proclamation for Clean-up week LTI THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, Money Is Needed t Depression in agricultural districts, which has wielded such a powerful influence in political conventions in the last four years. was felt in the thirty-fourth "Continental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution late yesterday, when the delegates firmly voted against an in- crease.in the initiation feas for mem- bership in the =ociety and an increase in the annual dues. Both amendments were lost by a count of 731 to 486, a two-thirds majority be- inK necessary to amend the by-laws. The proposals before the congress were to raise the initiation fees from 35 to $10 and to increase the annual chapter dues from $2 to $3, with the provision that each member would receive a subscription to the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution APRIL D. A. R. DEFEATS PROPOSED BOOST IN INITIATION FEE AND DUES| Depression in Agricultural Districts Principal Rea-| son for Action, Though Registrar Declares More 23, 1925 o Carry on Work. | | economy, and in it quite A number saw the possibility of strenuous ob- Jections to the proposed $2,000,000 auditorium this congress has been | asked to sanction. One amendment, to ( increase the dues of members at large from $3 to $5 a year. was adopted Nominations for the seven vice ! idents general and addresses by ¢ F. Atwood of Chicago, presi dent of the Constitutionals Anniver- sary Association, and Brig. Gen. Hugh | A. Drum, the Army’s assistant chief of staff, on the citizens’ military train- ing camps, made up last night's pro- gram of the congress. Praises Training Camps. Gen. Drum, who also brought greet ings from Secretary Weeks, declared, in his prepared address, that “the spirit of the Revolution is the spirit of =— | et Every Missing Milk Bottle is a spoke out of the wheel of service Multiply the one or more bottles of milk you buy each day by the thousands of customers who use Simpson’s (Walker Hill Dairy) Milk, and you will get an idea of how important it is to US that ALL | be returned promptly. When they are not, our service department is handi- capped. No grocer, for instance, could provide baskets enough to leave indefinitely with the delivery of each order. The milk bottle is a still more important factor mn our service. yottles ~ We will appreciate so much your thoughtfulness in returning them promptly. If you have an accumulation —Simpson’s and other dairics, phone us, Lincoln 1811 and we will send for all of them—and see they go to their owners. The others will be glad to get theirs back, too. Mgs.LoweLL F HDBART MRS,BERT REED Magazine free. The additional $1/ of joners Ru- | Mwe asne omt by Comd dolph. Oyster and Bell tod: d reads, p the annual dues was to have been |these training camps.” The greatest - e ey Otro Can.-Vice Pres Gen. contributed to (he magazine, an act | benefits of the camps, he nsserted. | Stare Regent , , arise from “gathering together in one that would have put it on the “map” family vouths of all walks of life, in “Whereas the Spring season is gen [ as one of the leading periedicals of W Milk erally accepted as the proper time to clean up and repair residences and the country. | spired with one main ambition—serv- outbuild hang awnings, remove Boli weevil in the cotton States of [ice to country, love of America and rubbish and generally beautify prem the South and agricultural depres- izenship. : {ses, and sion in the West and Northwest were | i N e m?lmal, mnl‘alb:nd ph_\;;h:. Vhereas the City of Washington, factors in deciding the issue. Both!qualities of’ man are best tested by | ¢ sk oo as the National Capital, should fur of the proposed amendments, Mrs. | demonstrated citizenship,” he con "Walker Hl” Dalry nish an example in this, as in all other Anthony Wayne Cook explained- to|tihiued. *The art of citizenship does the congress, had the unanimous ap- | Not come o people by nature; it must movements looking toward civie im- i 5 i Arlar et i PR Droval of the mational hoard of man- | be learned and facllity acquired by | 530 Seventh Street S.E. Phone Lincoln 1811-1812 ““Whereas, our parks. public grounds agement. Mrs. William. B. Burney |practice.” and p & premises should be kept took up the cudgels against the % amendments for the Daughters living | of trash and rubbish, 4\.’ all sor f ve, the Commissioners in the cotton States, explaining that rict of Columbia. in regu the boll weevil had reduced the PLEASE lar meeting assembled. do hereby pro- financial situation in the South to a i Cleanun metke tor the D 4 LEAVE THE trict of Columbia, hetween the dates 3 of April 27 to May 2. inclusive, Says Increase Is Needed. we call | | Does Your Suit Resemble a Leopard? “During this period the up premises. rid yards, and vacant lots of trash, repa and outbuildings and other: tify such premises. We also call upon s Mrs. M. Wilbur of New York. back ed Mrs. Burney by declaring she fear- ed an igcrease in either initiation or dues at this time mights prove a serious thing for many descendants | of Revolutionary heroes. One other | esidents of Washington to clean alleys all civic and trade organizations to N | assis s c b . % 4 Northern woman, Mrs. Lowell Fletch. = s assist in this work by calling atien : er Hobart of Ohlo, and two from HE Leopard cannot change his spots tion to it at their meetings and by 4 & iy s o ey e B b g aiding in a movement to keep our| : AR 1Y e s & ut a suit sent to Carmack gets rks and streets ¢ nf was! 5 K of Tennessee nd Mrs. Howard H a S S ) armac et parisand streedx clear of waste paper | MRSWM. D. GARLINGTON 2\§ ]MRSHORACE FARNHAM S e e sobetaiE Boo | rid of them completely. - Carmack - “We believe that B iconeesien Slare Regent - Texas StateRegent-Pernsylvania. State BegentVermont: Mrs. James S. Stansfield of the | g CH!NESE { = » action on the part of our residents| met———————— —— t also spoke in favor of the g Cleaners are expert in removing all I\mrl- will result in making Washington the amendments. i of spots—grease, fruit, grass, rust, paint o soil EMBROIDERY Mrs. Stansfield is registrar general, cleanest and most beautiful ecity in and she predicted that an increase in | stains from men’s, ladies’ and ‘h the United States d 3 er of | Newspapers and outlawing persons 2 25 past vear, hardly a week nas gone in an xncmas;ed u;cm')('rsmp. Mn" | i -amm‘ |Incfi Q‘C nr\v l"e 5 1 “ ; by without some Communist or Agra- < 7, y 7 Stansfield explained the expense her » i B | 0st ¢ anc icient ir city, all spots be JUGOSLAV INVASION by without some Commurist or Agta-| Process to Avoid Invalidating Votes| s et e esiatation "ot Wall Hangings, Run i it e pendent opinion holds that these crim e L candidates for membership in the so-| % ners, Piano Covers, Table 4 | S FEARED . inal acts are the work of the mili clety and emphatically declared it is|g (overs, Hat and Dress resisting spots and stains can be IN BULGAR'A. tary governmen in reality,| Candidates with a big “C"" occupy |a veteran on the credential committee. | sadly in need of augmented resources | moved irom woolens, satins or ‘which, Trimmings and miscella- neous bits good for lamp shades. to do the work properly . Mrs. ander Ennis Patton of Pen also favored the proposed iner Alex- | Iv e the minds of the delegates. Long before suffrage was given to women the D. A. R. had mastered the art of -asting the ballot successfully. They and no irregularities escape her eagle eve. silks without the slightest in- jury to the fabric. The Carmack Car calls reigns in Bulgaria RESENTED BY SOVIET. nia | . UPRISING IS REPORTED| Long es Wait Turn. Nominations Are Held. { By the Associated Press. OHOHORD 2 OO O MO0 UMY S0 0 0 0 O DO 0 O CIRRONADRGAA0ATARAIRBIO 0 Page.) vote by secret ballot now, and elab-| Long lines of voters sometimes promptly MOSCOW, April 23.—Much resent-|orate arrangements for the exercise | stand patiently for three or four hours - R o N S e > e Teds. although the Bolgar govern|ment is manifested in tne Soviet press|of thelr franchise is made, ~The awaiting the o o, With |2 ATBUTBnLS DOV o D SN E Sieve SLERRT. OG0, ‘Ck‘}’flml - ment denies the report {and government circles over state-|president general always appoints a |the ceremohy and precautions thrown | g70: SU0 URL o the s hik 5 (Copsrizht ' Chicagn Diils News Co) | MeNts circulated abroad fixing re- | chairman of tellers, and she has work- |around the voting it is & slow proc- | S021¥, B T8 & VEE | m e a nha sponsibility for the terrorism in Sofia | ing with her a group of women from |ess, but the sturdy spirit of their |2 “;f‘,” it Chiof he opudhtch | TELL OF SLAYINGS. upon Moscow. The executive com-|all States. The candidates are always | revolutionary forefathers seems to | foticeable that Werh ©of SRR e b | mittee of the Communist Interna-|gaceorded the privilege of naming two | Sustain them in the ordeal. o D et o 1720 H Street { tional in an attack upon Premier | fellers to represent them in the count.| Some vears ago voting by machine | ¥o1® W% Bnaliv, (LReR CAT0 Frow i Tzanoff of Bulgaria for attributing the was inaugurated. It did not prove an entire success, for some of the women unaccustomed to the mechan- The task of counting the ballots is not a slight one. Before a delegate is allowed to vote the credential com- | was an out-and-out victory for strict JOVUOTOOOGVOBTOTIGSOOL: DRYCLEANING Co. Jugoslavia, April 23.|bombing of the Sveti Kral Cathedral ee members of the British Par- | to its organization says l(l ment, w hU arrived \e‘('(’lda\ from Palilfi«fi"lrn and blackmail are be- " e ch s her name on its lists, | ism ulled the wrong levers B i S Tty o | i o el e B e S ke e b e e e R ECIAL EXCURSION 1120 Queen Street N.E. convinced several hundred per- | weapons of the adversicies of the | ARG (SR TSNS 16 Noles Are SR | IS, Mon the simpler. method has = sons were killed without trial and on | comintern (Communist iz ernational). | \oRKeH 00, 08 €0 iRl COMIEER! o0er noat effective, and considering | 1 Lincoln 239 rest presumtion after the re- | For months our enemies have been| ., as national political parties. |the fact that about 2,000 women will | t | b explosion in the Cathedral |forging letters, orders. decisions and |y, "Gaius M, Brumbaugh, the cap- | vote this morning, there will be only | | There are other Carmack Stations at | .$1.50 were | and other documents purporting to be Those who arrived {inder, | Signed by the executive of the comin- Werdgwood, W. Mac is |a very small portion of invalid ballot S e 139 B Street S.E. Lineoln 462 able chairman, a District Daughter, Harpers Ferry, W. Va. . and P. D. Malone, Union- |tern. The Tzankoff Fascist govern 6 Circle 2 They were in Sofia at ihe time ment has exceeded all records in this Emma T. Yilek. and two sons, Frank Charleston, W N s e Z Dupont Circle _ Franklin 5232 e o e e T e : FRANK YILEK DIES. g g Ry | Winchest v 2.30 1308 11th Street N.W. North 7430 seguent events Deny All Charges. e SE— | Funeral services will ho[lnmim tad inchester, &. ...y E L R ! 2417 14th Street N.W. Columbia 2376 rom the quantity of information | After declaring the comitern op e | at the residence Saturday afternoon at and yetursi 2469 18th Street NW. Co ia 63 we gather,” they maid, ~we are con. | posed to purely mmaisidual or localised | Was District Employe and World |3 o'glock and interment will be In = { et N. Columbia 636 several hundred persons |terrorism, the statement gives vigor- War Veteran. Arlirgton Cemetery. Sunday, Apnl 26, 1925 | re killed without trial and |ous denial to the Bulgarian allega- | on ihe merest presumtion tions, saving responsibility for the| Frank Yilek, 53 vears old, an em 3 | s of piSe: tpon e, v Tickets Will b soldy sood . M “We emploved all the influence at|evenis in Sofiia “must be borne by |jiove of the District government and || The Evening and Sunday Star Shrnandoats; Valley. will b o only on X i our disposal to prevent the militarists | Tzankoft’s bloody government itself. 2 Hk fesibap oty E RIS S 3 SPECIAL TRAIN from massacring men and women ap- | The_statement then calls upon the|& veteran of the World War, died at]] —Full Reports of the D. A. 2. an ecstasy of blossoms mnext leaving Washington 8:10 a.m. = Prehended in the course of recent|Workers of r'e?m;""ffie his residence, 4224 Eighth street, yes. ::::-'l‘;:l‘:'m it gt Sunday. Don’t miss the oppor- Returning same day. police operations. Thousands of per- | Wiy of"uhe Taaniott. Fa . Mr. Yilek became auadenty | B cunity fo witness his marel- WALTER P SHIPLEY. @ncies of belonging 1o the Lef|ernment” and concludes: * ill while preparing to leave home for e Cenaila. 206 ous sight that attracts many Asst. General Passenger Agt. Ja 80 G ne el | terror can stop the struggle of the |work and died soon thereafter { s s Gach Saat e 0 U J‘ e " ust09¥: | workmen and peasants for liberation. | M. Yilek was employed in the Dis. | Leave subscriptions with Star Washington The Evening The sympathy of the workers of the de of the of Bul- reasures 40 arrests within five minutes. is continued four days after trict repair shops. During the war he served with the Engineers. He was a native of Bohemia and had lived whole world is on the working class and peasant garia as well as those who in their BALTIMORE & OHIO representative at Auditorium, or Star Office, And t the police began their search. 11th and Pennsyl- “Although it was dificult fo obtain 4 var. Soeess PP, I EREEET e L s et struggles against autocratic govern-|in this city since the war S i atieinovis =t — — Dzures: oo S Said the arrests num-|ments are not afraid to face death He is survived by his widow, Mrs. | b hddd o g i “Public opinion outside Bulgaria |7 — == 3 ought to he brought to bear in the||!| | é interest of justice, that the persons 300 | detained ‘be “falrly” tried, 5o that in|| . B DRODEIS SONSICO, ol iz n nocent persons will not be punished WASRINGTON'S OLDEST AND LEADING MUSIC HOUSE i & on mere esumption, for it is evi- dent that or more could not|ll Foum Fou | have been implicated in the outrige Riaaed ol of the 16th of April ---or len years after our i | il |if i | y R e 4 “Duri the last four days we were in Bulgaria. we interviewed ministers i izali { l high officiais and the chief of the S Democratic, Social-Democratic and ()rgalll~a lo,l. ouls Ola Agrarian parties, as well as indepen 1 Gstit i isecbos Wetmony iner soren i deposits were $626,000. : , . | ’ Everything “*After serious reflections, we are ~~‘)‘h} ] firmly convinced that the outrage was| ||| 1" 1910, 39‘)0’ s 3 P the direct outgrowth of the methods of the government toward the opposi- ||| n_employing violent FLOR[DAP - “TuroucH ThE AR z } for Her ( Trousseau o 1920, today, $4.988,000, and $6,231,647 Our capital, surplus and undivided profits today stand $887 ,386 Without the confi- dence and co-operation of the people of Wash- ington we could not have attained the high plane of service which we are privileged to occupy today. Get acquainted with this old Bank and you will find prevailing here an atmosphere of friendliness and a will- ingness to assist you in any of your findancial problems. Lincoln National Bank 7th'and D Sts. 17th and H Sts. e FROM g 525 | ROUND TRIP—MIAMT it Tuesday, May 5th CORA | i - L GABLES AIRPLANE 3 & : i H i :: NEW YORK TO WASHINGTON * H H 3 AMERICA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL || SUBURB | VERY luxury and necessity of the bride’s Trousseau is ready for her in The Bride's Shop. Here she may choose the hand- some ensemble costume for her “going - away,” the slim frocks of satin and crepe, and becoming hats that are so easily packed into her wardrobe trunk, the indispgnsable top coat, the trim tailleur, and all the fascinating accessories it demands. Our Fashion Expert will advise on the wardrobe requirements of American and European resorts. THE BRIDE’S SHOP Gown and Veil Lingerie and Accessories Going-away Apparel FErlebackher Exclusively Different YWELVE.TEN TWELVE.TWELYE F STREET 40 Miles of Water Front N\ As rither on investment or home, Coral Gables properts has no rival. Millions are haing made your share? in Florida. Are you getting < 410 Bond Bldg., 14th & Y. Ave Main 3978 Brambach Baby Grand Pianos DELIVERED TO i | | Temporary Office | I | i | £ WILKINS BREAKFAST Droor's Music House 1300 GG STREET e i I i | | FOR THE FIRST TIME-IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD we have demon- strated the feasibility of carrying Pianos by airplane! Think what this means fo the further | development of commerce! Descriptions of this remarkable flight will be found in the néws i columns. | 155 The Pianos are on exhibition in our I3th street window. Come in and try them.

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