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[ PATRIARCH SENDS AMERICA GREETING Vassilios 111 Blesses Subjects of Orthodox Church After His Election. BY JUNIUS B. WOOD. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News CONSTANTINOPLE, July 14.—Vas silios, 111, a kindly quiet man of 75 vears, received thls correspondent within a few hours after he had been elected patriarch of the Ortho. dox Catholic Church yesterday. It for the patriarch to respond to greetings he receives instead of sending greetings first, sald Vassilios IIT, his gray-bearded iips breaking into a smile when it was suggested that possibly he had a mes- sage for the communicants of his r-!turvh_ in America “However, the New World does things differently and faster than we in the East and 1 am zlad to respond to its enthusiasm Requesting paper and ink, Vassilios wrote the message and placed it in an envelope, which he addressed in his own hand as follows. ‘“To all Orthodox Christian and to Greek Orthodox churches of the United greeting.’ The message within, written with- out alteration of a line or the chang- ing of a word. translated into Ei ish reads: it Dear children splendid occasion ecumenical patriarch and my inter view with Mr. Junius B. Wood, I send vou all hearty blessings and fath erly love. May vou ail benefit from the great spiritual and material prog: ress of America so that you will be come better and stronger men for vourselves and for your brothers. Con- stantinople, July 13, 1 Praying for God's blessings upon you. (Vas- silios of Constantinople).” © Daily News Co.) is customary people Christian States, of God of my on today's electlon as BAND CONCERTS. Tonight at 7 Garfield Park 0 o'clock. at Second and F streets southeast. by the United States Navy Band, Charles Wise, assistant director March, “Invincible Empire. Losey Overture, ' Rossini Ballet Semiramide,” music, “Spanish Desormes (a) “Sequidilla (b) “*Habanero (c) “Bolero de Cadiz (@) “Cachuca.” (e) “Zapateado. Grand selections from the opera “Herodlas Ma Waltz di concert “Dolore Waldteufel Selections from the comic opera “The Grand Mogul Luders Some We'll Again Van Loan “The Star Spangled Banner. Popular Meet Finale Day At United States erans’ Hospital, No. 32, Mount Alto, tonight at 7 o'clock. by a section of the United States Marine Band, Taylor Branson, second leader, conducting March, “Men of Valor”...Klohr Overture, “William Tell,” Rossini Indian *Hobo. moko R .....Reeves Selection. “The Wizard of the A Herbert Yradier ights of Gladness,” Ancliffe Excerpts from “The Runaway Girl - peCREYY “The Star Spangled Banner.” War Vet- intermezzo By the Army Music School, at Washington Barracks, to- night, at 6:0 o'clock (senior bandleader students conducting), Capt. R. G. Sherman, com- mandant; Wiliam C. White, principal of music March from “Tannhauser” Wagner (Conducted by Staff Sergt. Joseph Dressler.) Overture, “Tl Guaran: omez Fox trot, “Yearning, Just'For You" Lyt L eyl Solo for cornet, “Bride of .the Waves'" . Clarke (Played by Staff Sergt. Joseph Svee.) (Conducted by Staff Sergt. Juan Mellado.) 1dyll, “The Glowworm,” Grand selection from di Lammermoor” (Conducted by Pvt. (First Class) Ernest B. Gentile.) “Invitation a la Valse," Von Weber Strauss Eugene J. Lincke *“Lucia . Donizett! Pizzicato Polka (Conducted by Sergt. Papi.) Excerpts from “Katinka," Friml (a) Fox trot, “I'll See You in My Dreams’. Kahn (b) March, “Hostrause I Chambers (Conducted by Sergt. Henry Chura.) “The Star Spangled Banner.” At the United States Capitol tomorrow, at 5 p.m., by the United States Marine Band, Willlam H. Santelmann, legder; Taylor Branson, second leader. March “The Kiwanians,” White Overture, “Norma'......Bellini Intermezzo, “Indian Summer” Herbert Cornet solo, “King Carnival” Polka de Concert........Kryl (Musician John White.) Grand scenes from “Maritana,” Wallace Waltz, “Immortellen” ...Gungl Reminiscences of Bellini Godfrey e Star Spangled Banner.” WILKINS COFFEE IS BLENDED ROASTED CUP-TESTED : AND PACKED RIGHT HERE IN ONCE UPON A TIME s L UREGON TOWNSMEN DENY LABOR RIOT Japanese Workers Not Offer- ed Violence, Toledo Commit- tee Informs Governor. By the Associated Press. SALEM, Oreg., July 14.—Grievances connected with the employment of Japanese labor at Toledo by the Pa- cific Spruce Corporation mill were voiced by a delegation from the Citi- zens' League of Toledo, which called on Gov. Plerce and United States Sen- ator McNary here yesterday. The delegation, “headed by Mrs. Rosemary Scheneck, wife of the To. ledo police chief, blamed the manage- ment of the mill for the conditions there, pointing out that the Japanese were ‘hired on the green chain gang at $2.40 a day, whereas white labor- ers had received $3.60. Men who pro- tested against the use of orfentals were discharged, it was asserted Japanese Not Attacked. Reports of the disturbance Sunday, when nearly a score of Japanese were taken out of the city in trucks, exaggerated, the delegation told the governor and Senator. It was admit- ted that guns were taken from the armed guards at the mill and that there were a few fist fights. The Jap- anese workers were not touched, and were given 4 hours in which to pack their belongings. They were given transportation to Corvallis and fur- nished tickets or sufficient money to get_to Portland Ed Stack, secretary of the State Federation of Labor, attended the conference with the governor. He said he had taken the matter up with the Japanese consul in Portland, and that the consul had advised his coun- trymen to keep away from Toledo if they were not wanted. Oriental Workers Gone. Bellef that the situation at Toledo would adjust itself, and that all Jap- anese employed by the Pacific Spruce Corporation in the large mill had left was expressed by Willlam A. Delzell, private secretary to Gov. Pierce, and C. H. Cram, State labor commissioner, who spent Monday investigating the situation. Members of the Japanese colony at Portland sdld yesterday that the la- borers ousted from Toledo will be cared for by their countrymen in Portland until they are able to return to Toledo or until other employment is found for them. H. Okamoto, Jap- anese consul in charge of Portland, said today he had no official knowl: edge of the incident at Toledo and was taking no action regarding it. NEW TOBACCO PLANT. American Company to Expand at Richmond. NEW YORK, July 14 (®).—The American Tobacco Co., virtually has completed plans to build another large cigarette manufacturing plant at Richmond, Va., employing 1,500 work ers. Although part of the company's clgarette output now produced else- where will be manufactured at the new Richmond plant, a material in- crease In production Is contemplated. Mrs. Nellie Ross, Governor of Wyoming, is a member of the Busi- ness and Professional Women's Clubs of Cheyenne. o WOLF SA(D,"LITTLE PIG,LITTLE PIG LET & COME IN " TO WHICH THE LITTLE PIGREPUE] WNO, BY THE HAIR OF MY CHINNYCHIN CHIN. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1925.: > N < AN RN . h«n ILL HUFFAND ILL PUFF AND (LL w voqn HOUSE INI'SAID THE WOLF © McClure Newspaper Syndicate SIDELIGHTS ON By the Associated Press. DAYTON, Tenn., July 14.—An en- terprising Western city is seeking to make capital out of the Scopes evolu- tion trial. At the counsel table vesterday At-| torney General Stewart recelved a telegram from a Chamber of Com- merce secretary in a city beyond the Rockles suggesting that the State's prosecutor change the site of the legal conflict over evolution from Dayton to “the gold spot of America.” scene of trial,” the message our magnificent climate, incom- | parable scenery and a desert which has been turned into a garden of the gods will be such as to mellow the soul of even lawyers, who admit noth- ing, deny everything and demand proof and (the climate presumably) will place evolution in the pipe-dream class. * ¢ ¢ Our outdoor court- room seats upward of 25,000 people. RS VP At an early hour today the attor- ney had not announced any plans for a change of venue, Dayton was in darkness several hours last night as a result of a break in the town's water main. The mu- nicipal power plant is operated by water power, and until the break could be repaired the sceme of the Scopes trial was without lights. The prosecution counsel includes two McKenzies, two Hicks and two ns. Ben McRenzie is a for- attorney general of this, the eighteenth, judicial circuit, and is one of the most widely known lawyers in AMUSEMENTS NATIONAL—“Twin Bed: A rollicking performance of Salis- bury Field and Margaret Mayo's ever- laughable farce, “Twin Beds,” by the National Theater Players kept an al- most capacity audience laughing and applauding last evening until nearly midnight. Woven around feminine weakness and embarrassing situations, vet ever free from wickedness of any kind, it is always enjoyable entertain- ment, and missed nothing by its pres- entation by the capable stock com- pany that seems to have landed squarely in the favor of Washington theatergoers, sufficiently so, indeed, to draw midwinter audiences even with midsummer near at hand. And this is due not to the outstanding ability of any particular member of the com- pany, but to general excellenge throughout and a co-ordination that makes the general result of their work thoroughly enjoyable. “Twin Beds,” like its predecessors, served to bring into the spotlight an- other player, Lillian Dean, in an un- forgettable characterization of Norah, a burglar-catching maid. Romaine Callender also furnishes a very amus- ing characterization as a stammering bridegroom of excellent intentions who, nevertheless, is forced into very embarrassing _situations because of his commendable zeal to capture what he believes to be a burglar. Leneta Lane is very clever as a young married woman with an irre- pressible penchant to make friends with strangers, thereby needlessly arousing her husband's jealousy and making life miserable for him. Her characterization is, to a degree, simi- lar to that of last week and quite as well presented. Minor Watson, as the husband, meets the farcical require- ments even if he does overdo a bit. Edward Arnold, in the difficult role of Signor Monti, & susceptible opera tenor, lends much to the hilarity of the farce, while Dorothy Tierney is quite adequate as the sweetheart and then bride of the stammering, bur- glar-chasing husband, who nearly {fwhere dls ZMAYVIEW <MANOR Blowing Rock, N. C. Has Highest Courses East of Rockies (4,500 feet up) WASHINGTON Cash&CarryFlowerStores | Funeral Flowers Delivered Free—Nominal Charge on Other Orders 807 14th 804 17th 2467 18th 1209 Wis. Ave. Phone Fr. 5412 Phane Fr. 70391 Tel. Col. 9097 T HE economy of Cash and Carrymprices is well illustrated by our Values in {unerfll de' signs. Wreaths —SPRAYS and other effective Floral Tributes DELIVERED $2.50 Phooe West 1703 SCOPES TRIAL eastern Tennessee. His son, J. Gor don McKenzie, is the present judge of the Rhea County Court. William Jen nings Bryan, jr., is a Los Angeles at torney. The Hicks “boys,” local prac titloners, are graduates of the Unl versity of Kentuck) In the scramble for chairs the pre cution_seems to be qualifving as “goat.” When Attorney ( art left his seat yesterday to look : a document some one appropriated his chalr. At the afternoon session Judge Gordon McKenzie and Walte Hag- gard of State counsel were left stand- ing, and Sheriff Harris came to the rescue. The seating problem had the genial sheriff on the run, but he was given full credit for tryving. Ofter “O yez-ing" the court into action he yelled, t down,” when not more than one-third of those within sound of-his voice could sit down The Dayton post office is perhaps the most overworked place in town. Every one here apparently gets some malil, and some of the leading figures in the trial are being fairly flooded with letters, many of them special de- livery. Judge Raulston's mail day after day is winning a decision in the Aqua_Hotel contest, and the office of the Hicks boys is being swamped with letters for William Jennings Bryan Clarence Darrow and Attorney Gen eral Stewart also are being given tention. John T. Scopes, the defend ant, has suffered a decline in his one- sided correspondence. Time , was when he was the village champion, with George W. Rapplevea in runner-up position blasts his marital ever meaning to. The farce Is well staged drawback is the interruption of the swift action essential to farce caused by the waits between acts, a defect that {s well nigh insurmountable in stock performances with a change of play every week relations, without Poland Ratifies Pacts. WARSAW, Poland, July 14 (P — The Polish Diet has ratified a series of treaties with Austria, Latvia, Es- thonia, Finland and Czechoslovakia, including arbitration conventions with the last four states. The other con- ventions deal with judicial, sanitary, tourist and consular questions. nd re- Girl stenographers in i k average of the | The only | Bo HE HUFFED AND HE PUFFED AND HE LEW THE HOUSE IN. PRESIDENT TO ACT TO PROTECT PUBLIC FROM MINE STRIKE (Continued from Page.) opportunity Mr. Coolidge has had to see his executive advisers in a body | since he went to Washington in 1921 | to take the oath as Vice President. Dr. Henry A. Garfleld, president of Williams College, son of President Garfield, will call upon the President shortly. While he is coming to pay his respects only, it is expected that | he will invite the President and Mrs. Coolidge to attend one of the sessions of the political institute which will bring together at Willlams this year notable authorities upon international affairs, and especially the financial representatives of the foreign gov- nments indebted to the United ates for war loans. MEDIATORS CONV! ATLANTIC CITY, N, J., July 14 (®) —The subcommittee of anthracite operators and miners charged with working out a new contract effective September 1 resumed its labors this afternoon upon the arrival of Alvin Markle of Hazeltine, Pa., selected to act as chatrman at last Friday's ses- | sion. Mr. Markle, who has presided |over wage conferences for many | vears, will have a voice, but no vote, |in the proceedings. | The discussion today is expected to be general and to center about the | ability of the operators to pay the in- | creases demanded by the men without seriously impairing the markets for their product and reducing the num ber of working days in the mines. The miners are expected to persist {in their argument presented last | week, that profits of the operators are sufficiently Jarge to permit granting the inc ases asked without increas- ing the cost of fuel to the domestic consumer. |* W. W. Inglis of Scranton, Pa., will | have charge of the operators’ case and Phillip Murray, vice president of the United Mine Workers, of the case of the men in the absence of John L. Lewis, who left here yesterday to take up questions connected with the bituminous side of the coal industry, | Eldridge's Salary Raised. Traffic Director Eldridge has been notified by the District classification committee of an increase in his sal- |ary from $5,200 to $3,600 a year, to | bring him up to the average of his S MEN’S SUITS. .. 801 11th St. N. LADIES’ SUITS. BLANKETS.... PINDLER LEAN and PRESS ALL and DELIVER (Silks and Linens Excepted) W. Main 2704 | grade .....50c and $1.00 MR. AND MRS. HOWARD 'W. THRIFT, of Washington, D. C, learn from the newspapers that The Hecht Co. half-yearly sale of fine furniture is on its way. They need e new dining room suite and Mrs. Thrift was heard to say “let’s wait for The Hecht sale and see what they have.” A splendid plan for all who expect to refurnish. Our half-yearly furniture sale this year represents the greatest effort we have ever made in all our 30 years of doing business. The Hecht Co. ro.MORRON. THE NOLE. Militant Moros Ask More Roads And New Schools Moro tribesmen of the Philippine Islands, noted for their war-like traits, has appealed to the Manila overnment “for more roads and -hools.” The information was cabled the War Department today by Gover- nor General Leonard Wood, who has just concluded an inspection tour.” The governor general found conditions genersally quiet, with the exception of minor disturbances in Lano, incident to old causes, friction between Moros and Fili- pinos. * HATTER'S HOBBY AJDS IN ISOLATION OF LONG- SOUGHT CANCER GERM (Continued from First Page.) secret had been kept longer, as he feared that some sufferers from the disease might be encouraged to false hopes from the Pesults as now pub- lshed. Unhappily, nothing of the kind could be encouraged and he reminded his culosis had yet been found, although its cause was discovered many years ago. BELIEVE CURE FAR OFF. NEW YORK, July York sclentists said today 14 (P).—New that the mno HE ATE UP THE LITTLE PG, MU TS TME SETOND LITTLE Pra- interviewers that no cure for tuber- | GENUINE BY W. J. ENRIGHT wWeT ENRIGur British development in the study of cancer was the result of discoveries | here Dr. Peyton Rous of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research found | that tumors in chickens were caused by an ultra-microscopic organism too small to be seen through the ordinary | mieroscope. With Dr. Hideyo Noguchi, also of the Rockefeller Institute, Dr. Kot perfected an instrument known as ultra-microscope, with w found In a chicken a sarcoma with a ten through the bod an emulsion was prepared jected into the boc and produced which, in so death.” In 18 some of the a produced include and mice Doubting that sc Wood, the cker fund, Columbia Univi 3 Tuberculosis Germ Known en the 4 cause of mal: George C: pec disc Cancer tute, departmer c welfar S , sald T an interestir new gro scopie v ) be carcinoms mice, rats | $1 Wil Open a Savings Account Open at 8:30 A.M. Daily Capital, $250,000.00 911 F —but get a few dollars | Wl’lCl’C" in life. ful thrife partner. Let us Our Savings Dept. Pays The Columbia National Bank Surplus, $300,000.00 Street Don’t Bank Upon Expectations of your own in bank EVERY PAY DAY, if you want to “get some- 1] You'll find in “Columbia" a steadfast and help- cash your current salary check—and keep a little of it to start a “nest- egg’ in your name, in Our Savings Dept. [}l || Open Until 5 P.M. Tomorrow and Thursday Compound Interest —— ANSELL, BISHOP & TURNER, INC. the most sensational an- nouncement ever made to the Washington Music Public VICTROLAS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES (Our Entire Stock---All Brand New) CONSOLE MOD! LOW TERMS UPRIGHT RADIO ELS | COMBINATIONS Every Victrola before heard of offered to t gardless of cost of EVERY get yours AT ON ~ Perfect SIZES ONE AB FAST ALL ALL WOOD FINISHES must go—PRICES never public. Re r profit—WE WILL SELL AS WE CAN— CB! And you get our regular FREE LIFETIME SER- VICE GUARANTEE PURCHASED DURING THIS SENSATIONAL WITH EVERY VICTROLA LE —OR AT ANY OTHER TIME Thousands Payments Weekly or Monthly SPECIAL EXTRA Discount for CASH WARNING-ACT QUICK Every Sel Don't confuse this with former MACHINES ARE “BRAND NEW"—NEVER PLAYED BEFORE—LATEST MODELS—AND, BEST OF ALL, THEY ARE EVERY ONE THE PRODUCT OF THE VICTOR TALKING MACHINE COMPANY OF CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY. ALL MACHINES MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES ACT QUICK---DONT LOSE TIME---COME IN---TODAY The F Street Music Shop Waskingtaor's Leading Victor Shop SELL BISHOPS JURNE 1221 F ST N.W. Radio, Pianos, Players, Grands, Musical Instruments, Victrolas, Recards. Red Seal VICTOR RECORDS Fresh Stock from the Factory of Famous Stars 65° ection—Single Face reductions. THESE K oo : PIAOF{OS .