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- Phone West 190 for “PALMER BRAND” Carbonated Beverages Ten flavors, including CHERRY SMASH and GINGER MINT JULEP WANTED: Laborers, good pay, steady work, good working conditions. All employes insured after three months. Apply Hydraulic Press Brick Company, Arlington Junction, Va. One- quarter mile below Highway bridge on Alexandria car line. If children have Goiter Blame yourself NEARLY 50% of chil- dren under 18 con- tract it — yet none need suffer. Morton’s Todized Salt used as ordinary salt is used will prevent it. This new salt tastes no different. Its t&lualny is unquesnoncd e same as the salt that “pours” only with iodine added to pre- wvent goiter. Ask for Morton’s Todized Salt at your grocers. MORTON SALT COMPANY CHICAGO Kor looizeo Write Dept. 212 for S FREE BOOK MORTON’S SALT ___ WHEN IT RAINS—IT POURS I Certainly am Tired this Morning! Is constipation making sou feel that way, 100 DR. BOICE S | Prescription Tablets for constipation at other good drug store. vourself around any longer. Try these inexpensive and reliable tablets to. night and get up tomorrow morning feeling fine and ready for a good day’s work. Cleans Typewriter Type Use a cloth saturated with Carbona. ‘moves the gummy dirt and dust that (Iol zh- ty) Makes writing clear. 'r. ‘without wiping. Peoples Don’t d 208 30 €00 &1 St et o o3 it S Eczema h quickly yields " to Resinol No matter how long you have been tortured or disfigured by itch- ing, burning, raw or scaly skin trou- ble, just put a little soothing Resinol Ointment on the irritated spots and see if the suffering does not stop right there! Healing usually begins at once and the skin gets well quickly and easily. At sll droggists” Resinol No More Sore Feet! Corns and Bunions Gone— Why suffer from tired, aching, ewollen and sweating feet, painfal corns or bunions, when you can get instant reliet with “Allen’s Foot-Ease? Shake it nto your shoes in the morning—then walk | all dayincomfort. For those who like to dance, hike, play golf or tennis, Allen’s Foot-Esse {8 in- dispensable. It will increase your enjoyment and efficiency. Tvialpackaze and & Fool-Ease Walb- ing Doll Free, address, PEACE MANEUVERS ATHAWAI PLANNED Pan-Pacific Conference Ties Seven Nations in Move for Hairmony. By the Associated Pres NEW YORK, Ma maneuvers” by seven follow. ‘the war game In the Pacific’ when the new Institute of Pacific Re- lations holds its first conference at Honolulu for two weeks beginning July 1, Ray Lyman Wilbur, president of Leland Stanford, Jr., University, American group, an- ““Joint peace countries will chairman of the nounced yesterda This, the first pan-Pacific conference ever held, Dr. Wilbur said, will be non-political and unofficial. Prominent nationals, 150 strong, representing Canada, Japan, China, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippine Islands and the United States, will discuss com- mon problems arising from increasing intercourse of their peoples. John D. Rockefeller, jr.; Bernard M. Baruch, Wallace M. Alexander, the World Peace Foundation. of Boston, President A. Lawrence Lowell of Har- vard University, W. Cameron Forbes, former governor general of the Philip- pines, and many other business men, publicists and educators were named among the institute’s supporters. Launched Two Years Ago. The Institute of Pacific Relations was launched two years ago by citi- zens of Hawail. Frank C. Atherton banker, one of the founders, is chair man of the central executive commit- tee there, which is in immediate charge of this year's arrangements. The July meeting, it is expected, will decide to organize the institute permanently along the lines of the In- stitute of Politics at Williamstown. Mass. Advocates of the permanent institute favor further establishment of clearing-house machinery for con- tinuous investigation and exchange of Pan-Pacific ideas. Racial and other studies would be made in accordance with a co-ordinated plan, with all countries co-operating on equal terms, according to Dr. Wilbur. All but about $25,000 of the required $75,000 budget has been pledged by a group, including John D. Rockefeller, jr., whose gift of $10,000 is conditional on the raising of the full amount Wallace M. Alexander, Bernard Baruch, the World Peace Foundation and others. Japan has subscribed $5,000. Hawaii advanced $25,000 at the outset. William _Allen White, President Mary E. Woolley of Mount Holyoke College and Robert N. Lynch, vice president of the San Francisco Cham ber of Commerce, have promised to join the large American delegation attending the institute. Japan will send Prof. Masaharu Anezaki of Tokio Imperial University and Nagao Hampei of the Interna- tional Siberian Railroad Commission with its large delegation. The Chinese delegation will include Dr. Z. T. K Woo, general manager of the Han Yeh Ping Corporation, and a dozen | others. WORLD PEACE IS HOPE. Welfare of All Peoples Is Goal of Pan-Pacific Conference. BY EDWARD PRICE BELL. Correspondence of The Star and the Chicage | Daily News. ON BOARD TAIYO MARU, in the Pacific, May 1.—Conferences almost without number have been held in Honolulu, all predicated upon thel theory that as go pan-Pacific rela- | so will go the future of the But this year the beautiful r4'vl al of Hawaii is more than ever before the center of pan-Pacific pre- occupation. Mimic war, with the fate of the Pacific basin the theoretic stake, has encompassed Oahu Island. Now approaches—July 1 to 15—an interracial and international con- ference, which is expected to examine pan-Pacific problems with a thor- ughness hitherto unknown. “We all feel that affairs in this great ocean cannot be allowed to drift,” said Frank C. Atherton, chair man of the executive committee, in whose hands are the arrangements for the forthcoming conference. Mr. Atherton is a leader of the Honolulu { community, prominent in business | and distinguished for his generosity d public spirit. He continued here is too much misunderstanding about. There are su | tations that want d expect the July conference not only to clear the air considerably, but to put on its feet a_Pacific institute like the Institute of Politics in Williams- town, Mass. Hope for Universal Peace. “Such an institute is needed, for no single conference however representa- tive or able, can solve the Pacific prob- lem in its comprehensive sense. It will require the study and the con- structive labor of vears. We think the outlook promising. With all its complexities and difficulties, cific is neither a warring n. like ocean. Its traditions of forbearance and friendship. Euro- pean feuds are unknown here. In- terracial contacts are continuous and growing. Hawaii presents an almost infinite intermixture of bloods alons with a high desree of economic pros- perity and social harmony. On the comparatively clean historical scroll of the Pacific some of us dare hope to write the opening chapters of uni- versal peace. “Our pan-Pacific conference, with the permanent organizations we ex- pect it to create, seeks accurate in- formatfon from Canada, Japan, China, the Philippines, Australia, New Zea- land, Mexico and the United States concerning all matters that touch the welfare of the Pacific peoples and which are international in their bearing. “Conditions in all the Pacific coun- tries will be studied. What peoples feel and think and say will be studied. Light will be sought also on why peoples feel and think and speak as they do. Each nation will try to see itself as others see it. It is hoped that many important things - [some other boys in the University —things giving impetus to improve- ment of interracial and international relations—will be revealed in the general illumination. Atherton’s Associates. Assoclated with Mr. Atherton in his determined effort to have a mem- orable conference is a strong Hon- olulu committee, of which Dr. Arthur L. Dean, president of the University of Hawafl, fs vice chairman, and Charles F. Loomis, territorial secre- tary of the Y. C. A. There are Japanese and _Chinese members, among them Dr. Tasuka Harada, pro- fessor of Japanese history and lan- guage, and S. C. Lee, professor of Chinese history and language, at the University of Hawail, bath men of remarkable character and learn- ing. Two other outstanding mem- bers of the executive committee are Romanzo Adams, professor of so- ciology and economics at the Uni- versity of Hawaii, and Dr. Herbert Gregory of Yale, who spends six months each year as director of the Bishop Museum, in Honolulu. Reports from the other Pacific States indicate large and representative at- tendances. Canada and the Pacific States of the United States will be THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, social workers, histo- s and publicists. Tariffs, immi- gration, contrabands and nareotics, exterritoriality, educational - policy, racial equality, labor, religious prob- lems and a hundred other matters of human relationship in the world do- main will come before the conference in one form or another. Unity in Race Diversity. Hawali breeds and interbreeds, ‘works, goes to school, plays and sings its haunting music, goes forth on surfboards and in outrigger canoes to meet the green swells out of the blue deep—und over it all broods the au- sury of enduring union. Hawali, the indegeribably mixed—Hdawalians, Chi- nese, Japanese, Koreans, Fillpinos, Portuguese plantation workers (classed with the colored elements), South Sea Yelanders, negroes and Caucaslans of every type and strain! ‘And why this uity in diversity? ““Because,” said Dr. Dean, “we know one another. Our daily lives are of a | piece. We have interracial sports. In base ball you will see a Filipino pitch- ing, a Portuguese catching, a Chinese at bat, a Japanese on first base, a Hawalian at shortstop, perhaps a negro at second or third and mixed breeds in the field. Bassing the whole lot may be a boy belonging to any one of the races or racial mixtures in the team. As there is no racial amour propre and no nationalism in science, 30 we find none of these in our games and athleti Possibly the great biological and social experiment now running in H: aii has not gone far enough to warrant conclusions, but from what we can see mow there seems good reason to await the final demonstration with confidence.” “At one time,” said Prof. Romanzo Adams, “certain of our business inter- ests went before Congress with an organized agitation in favor of bring- ing in Chinese lahorers as an_ offset to what was represented as the ex- actions of the Japanese plantation workers. It was asserted that the Japanese were disposed to use their labor power to dispossess the white planters and put brown planters in their places. Strikes, it was argued, were the means whereby the con. spiracy of Japanese capitalists and workers was to be effectuated. As a matter of fact, it was the Filipinos, not the Japanese, who were striking. Anyway, the agitation failad, the Chi- nese were not brought to the rescue, the matter was dropped and the white planters are still in possession. “Pan-Pacificism is developing a pan- Pacific race, except that the Cancas- fan is not numerously involved in the So far we cannot detect a ue, biological, intellectual or social. Apparently we are building a sound community, comparatively free from crime and other abnormality.” Prof. A s has made the intere: ing discovery that the Japanese and psycholpgists, rian Hawaii are taller than their Chis fact he put down to thelr rous and diversified diet. In the | university a woman instructor has fed | two white rats, one on an Orientnl | and the other on an Occidental diex. | and the latter is much larger more vigorous than the one which has lived on rice and a paucity of vita- mins. Prof. Adams s not vet inclined | to venture upon' a large generaliza- tion, but he has little doubt that the: biblical implication of the fxity of ard | DOHERTY FIRM GETS CANADA OIL FIELD 1,400,000 Acres on Prince Edward JIsland Involved in Transfer From Oklahoma Man. By the Associated Prees. NEW YORK, May 25.—An option to lease all Government-owned land on Prince Bdward Island in Canada for oll exploration and _subsequent drilling has been obtained by Henry L. Doherty & Co., it was announced vesterday, from Hugh J. Mackay of Sapulpa, Okla., who possesses & license granted him by the legislative assembly of the province of Prince Bdward Island. The property em- braces 1,400,000 acres. Six geologists of the petroleum divi- sion of the Doherty org on their way to Charlot X I, to begin a survey of the most promising districts of the island, pre- liminary to a drilling campalgn, should indications point to oil in com- mercial quantities. A statement by the Doherty com- pany said that in a general way the geological and structural conditions of Prince Idward Island, which is 145 miles long and 34 miles wide at its greatest breadth, are similar to those in the Mid-continent fields, while at Moncton, in the neighboring main- land, natural gas and oil have been produced on a small scale for a num- ber of years. The Canadian government pays a royalty of 26 cents on every barrel of oil produced within the Dominion of “anada, in an effort to stimulate pe- troleum exploration, said the state- ment. Col. Parsons Ordered Here. Col. James K. Parsons, U. 8. Infan. try, at the Naval War College, New- port, R. 1., has been ordered to this city for duty in the office of the chief of Infantry, War Department. —-bay inand —Day Out —your roof is “on_the job,” exposed to driving rains, straining winds, or whatever else the ele- ments offer. leaks or develop. {Colbert Tinning seniccg other defects provides effective reme- dies for all roof troubles, and at Reasonable Cost. C> Ready for your job. Maurice J. Colbert Heating—Plumbing—Tinning human stature wants re-examination. (Copyright, 1925, by Chicago Daily News (0.) Phone Main & | 621 F Street 30';13»3"5 Hepwrm vz ME TRy Dr. Lyon's when you tire of either the harsh grit or powerful flavor of your dentilfrice. You will like the change—nosdrugs, no risk. Dr. Lyons POWDER EaNs TEETH A5 e Color Palette he Continent Early Visitors rode hundreds of miles on horseback to See Southern Utah— BUT you get off the Pullman at Cedar City— into a big motor car—and — zip! yoou’re in a new strange land! Here is Colorland. Color reigns supreme; playing in myriad tints and shades on plain, on moun- tain and on canyon wall. Amphitheatres where the wizardry of erosion has carved out faity cities more beautiful than ancient Babylon! Pyramids, castles and temples, striped in reds, blues, greens and yellows. Color and beauty everywhere i Z10N NATIONAL PARK Canyon- Cedar Breaks Bryce See this new land this summer. Few have been there, 80 it’s still a pioneering adventure, but with all the comforts of modern travel. The Union Pacific has now opened the way, provided motor tours over good roads, good living accom- modations—and it doesn’t cost much! Optional side trip to the Kaibab Forest and the North Rim of Grand Canyon. Send for Free Book in Natural Colors and let us tell you about low summer fares and how you can also combine this trip with a tour of Salt Lake City, Yellowstone, California or the Pacific Northwest. Season extends to Oct. 15. F. L. Peaking, Gen'l Agent, 508 Com'l Trust Bidg., 15th & Market Sts., strongly represented. Japan and China will send some of their greatest ALLEN’'SFOOT-EASE Le Roy, New York scholars and internationalists. From Australasia_and the Philippines will come anthropologists, sociologiats, Union Pacific No wonder g‘ Lb., 49¢ Negseeccan il S0 b e o) D. C, MONDAY, MAY 25 1925. WHERE QUALITY DOMINATES A&P Brand EVAPORATED MILK Made From Pasteurized Milk 325¢ Combination Sale 1 Can Blue Peter Brand Imported SARDINES 1 Package Uneeda Biscuits—Both for............. Tall Cans Combination Sale 1 Package Table Napkins 1 Package Waxed Lunch Paper G&G Ginger Ale Sparkling, Refreshing and Invigorating 3 Now for the Picnic! You will be pleased to know we have Reduced the Prices of Uneeda Biscuits Uneeda Lunch Premium Soda Oysterettes Cracker Meal Cheese Tid Bits To 18¢ pkg. Regular Value 23c Regular Value 22c gl - 2c Refund on Returnable Bottles A&P Brand Midget STUFFED OLIVES Stuffed with Spanish Pimientos 2 " 2e Tona Brand MAXWELL House COFFEE “Good to the last drop” Iona Brand TOMATOES Solid A&P Brand Baked BEANS Oven baked, with right pro- portions of Tomato Sauce and 3 25c¢c TUNA FISH 5c PEAS Maryland crop. pack; ripe and luscious, 10c Med. Size Cans Med. Size Cans Suc Can 2 7,000 Lbs. % Size Can. . of Fancy Memorial Special Assortment, direct B Mcats NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY For Sandwiches 1/, Size Can. .. .5¢ 1/, Size Can. . .10c The high eating quality and delicious flavor of this mixture will appeal to you. Christo Beverages and Coca=Cola Constantly on ice. You’ll enjoy these cool- ing, refreshing drinks. Bottle ' LOFFLER’S CALA HAMS Sugar Cured, Closely Trimmed Little Hams Lb. 16C Big Double Loaf, 24o0z......... CORBY’S BREAD “It’s Full of Life” 16-0z. Loaf, 8 24-0z. 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