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Learn Public Speaking To Persuade, Convince and Influence Gthers This § success and social triumphs. poise and personality. Overcomes Self-Consciousness Should be studied by Salesmen, Club Members, Lodge Officers, Organization Secretaries and by all who want to be leading figures in every gathering—also those who wish to advance in business through ability to “Put Their Ideas Ac.ro Y ating art brings business Develops w who The ng is dir Lewis Course o Spoak- ted by I Call Lectures il Power of Conce requires 15 a wee and le 1oy apply hers me. You o that thes er e personal business adv r yourself. Lewis Hotel i i Training Schools jadershin | Pennsylvania Ave. at 23rd St. LET US SHADE YOUR WINDOWS We awill make to measure shad that will harmonize with the appointments in your home. Thousands of Washington Tiomes bear evidence of our skill. Factory prices save you < = %‘S‘ or Maln 4874 Phones Main 85 |33013msu{_.w.\ ES SAMMONS, Proprietor e Moorex Dowerown s " 19 Grades STAR SERICE STATION 12th and C Sts. N.W. The Boss Says— “LUBRICATION? We have two large. high-powered Alemite Grease Guns (service etation i of exerting s ‘we are he oil into ever iny where it's needed. T, with ¢ ssure of 10,000 lbs! Jno. R. Briggs, Mgr. The Linen of Years Ago TURN BACK the pages of history. You'll find that a century or two ago Linen was a mark of wealth and aristoc- racy. The low-cut dress vest that men wear today is a relic of the open-front waistcoat their ancestors wore, to show that they were among the fortunate few who owned Linen. Your TOLMANIZED tablecloths and napkins are richly aristo- cratic in their snowy spotlessness, new- like fabric body, and luxuriant drape-abil- ity. They are washed in filtered water soap, rinsed repeatedly and ironed to perfection. Our service, in its excellence and promptness, is keyed to aris- tocratic demands. But its cost is democratic. Phone Franklin 71 for our driver to call weekly. convenient—and permissible —to stop at our Dupont Circle office to leave your bundle when driving downtown THE TOLMAN L AUNDRY F. W. MacKenzie, Mgr. 6th and C Ste. N.W. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1925. SAVSU.S.SHOULD CVECHNESEAD Congregationalist Professor Says Coming Parley Is Important. | Meeting of foreign powers at Peking | October 26, to take up the customs question in China will influence the future of business in the Far East more than any man can forsee at this | time, according to Prof. Wynn C. Fair- | field of Oberlin College, who is in | Washington attending the conferences | of the Congregational Church Coun- |cil at the Washington Auditorium. Prof. Fairfield goes on to Oberlin, ! Ohfo, to report on educational progress | in China. He came from Talku, where | he dean of the schools “Oberlin- in-Shansi” that have been supported by Oberlin College men and women since 1907. Outbreaks Imminent. reign governments,” said Prof. airfield, whose long resldence in China 1s put’ him in close touch with the | leaders there, “have taken from Chi- na valuable gorts and concessions and | poisoned China with opium at the cannon’s mouth. As long as present conditions continue outbreaks are Ii- | able at any time. Chinese have been excluded from their own territory and in the treaty ports Chinese have | been refused any representation in | the administration of concessions. The 1 ms conference October 26 at ing is of great importance to the of this country and the | Pe | business L cannot afford to be a cats- | paw for Great Britain in her present difficulties. She should take the actual |lead in proposing a falr readjustment | of the present basis, so that China will | “France has delayed ratification of { the Washington treaties for four years in order to secure from China the | payment of the Boxer indemnity at | the exchange rate for gold francs in- {stead of that for depreciated French | currency. “The growing bolshevist influence in :('hlna owes its main strength to the | fact that Russia concluded a treaty with China in which China was treat- ed an equal. ““Diplomatic leaders have done their best to prevent development of an un- distriminating anti-foreign sentiment. They have tried to limit agitation and {anti-British and anti-Japanese dem- {onstrations. They have been helped {in that attitude by declarations by | Senator Borah, and, in less degree, by | the attitude of the American Govern- | ment. Simply carrying out the Wash- ington treaties will not be enough to satisfy the Chinese now. Tariff au tonomy is demanded instead of mere increase from the present tariff of & per cent to the proposed standard of T1; per cent. | “Extraterritoriality, by which ecftt- zens of treaty nations are exempt from prosecution in Chinese courts and under Chinese law and may be prosecuted only through thelr own consular courts, has now been abolish od in every independent country in the world except China.” At the call of W. F. Bohn, assistant to the presiden‘ of Oberlin College, rally of Oberlin g-aduates will be call- ed during the wee.. Rev. Jason Noble Pierce, pastor of 1'resident Coolidge's church, is a former pastor of the First | ;'nngrem\tlonul Church at Oberlin Col- ege. MASONS BESTOW HONOR ON BURBANK (Continued from Fourth Page.) erick Herman Soehl | Stuart, William Ern | Oregon—Chester Valentine Dolph, Alton Cass Jackson, Einar Wilhelm | Lohse, John Bell Patterson, Kenneth { Mervyn Robb, Thomas Affordby Ro- | chester, Robert Tucker, Edwin Boone ‘Wheat. Philippine Islands—Joseph Alley, William Wiley Larkin. Porto Rico—Brisco Jose Gomez. { __South Carolina—Morris Fass, Leon | Moore, Edward Hall Pinckney, Jacob j Theodore Solomons, jr.; Alfred Holmes ’\'nn Kolnitz, David Joseph Watson. ] John Lindley Wells. Henry South Dakota—Edgar Milton Hall, Hazelton Harvey, Elmer Ray Heaton, Frank Delbert Kriebs, Em- 1 1 mett Isadore Lewis, Olof Nelson. | _ Tennessee—Lots ' Dilliard Befach, | Robert Lamar Brightwell, Charles | Frederick Bunbury, James Oscar Burge, John Willison Edwards, Henry Pank Erskine, Abe Lewis, Francis | William McElravy, George Edward | MacKenney rl Edwin Roach, Mau- | rice Weinberger, Benjamin Harrison | Wilkins, Henry Francis Williams. 1 = Convenient Accounts Charge Extended Thoughts Are Turning to Christmas For her, the merely ordinary piece of Jewelry is not in keeping with the spirit that prompts the gift Let the gift carry a charm of in- dividuality that will add both value and forethought scnti- ment to the remembrance . For such gifts we put at your disposal the services of designers and craftsmen of rarest skill and originality and assure you that the gift of jewelry you bestow will be most admirably and incom- parably the gift unique. . It is not too early to ma! Christmas gift plans NOW . Another thought: Why not make use of our at-hand facilities to have some out- of-date picce of jewelry made over into the wonder of modern beauty of design it will speedily become under our recreating skill? GOLDSMITH & CO. WASHINGTON’S JEWELRY GIFT STORE 1205 | Street p-u SINCE 1833 | who is here for ‘the sessions, a big | Frank Copeland Bolton, Beaumont i Bonaparte Buck, Alfred Castleman Bull, James Ladd Burgess, Willlam Esterbrooke Bursley, Albert Jefferson Caldwell, Willis Mitchell Carter, John Allison Clouse, Martin McNulty Crane, John Dalrymple, Irving McDonnough Diletz, Willlam Arnold Diffey, Preston Beverly Doty, Chauncey Anstin Eg- bert, Thomas Huston Fisher, Fred Fletcher, Thomas Fletcher, Willlam Madden Fly, Roy Jesse Frye, Wren Melvin Glenn, Robert D. Hardcastle, John Edward Helser, Frank Holt, Al- fred Henry' Johnson, Edward Mervyn Johnston, Willlam Danridge Claiborne Jones, Isidore Anchel Keller, Willilam Ethelbert Lea, Ellie Alexander Levy, Daniel Edgar Little, Charles Russell Loomis, Robert Hunter Looney, Ur- ban Willlam Martin, Plerce Mayer, Joseph Francis Meyer, jr.; Richard Henry Moers, Henry Thomas Pons- ford, Spencer Cone Relyea, jr.; Alonzo Alverly Ross, Espiridion Garcia Ruiz, Harry Kent Rupp, Thomas Walter Scollard, Frank Louls Simon, Wayne Lewls Slaughter, Breedlove Smith, Charles Adolphus Sterne, John Splers Telfair, William Hull Teifair, Asariah Moss Thomas, Adams Thompson, George E. Vickers, Willlam Bell Watt, Sam Webb and Harry Graham Wharton. . Utah—Fred Morgan Nye, Dana Tyrrell Smith. . Virginia—Hugh Henderson Adair, Charley Ellis Alderson, Edwin Pitz- hugh ~ Atkinson,s Hardin Kendall Bache, Benjamin Dexter Arthur Samuel Bell, Junius Wheeler Calvert, Joseph Lougheed Carson, John Willlam Estlow, Henry Thomas | Haley, George Robert Jones, John Wesley Kessler,~ John Lockridge Manley, Riley Wise Nixon, Robert Duncan Macpherson Ogg, Benjamin Wellington Pullin, Peter Rasmussen, Joseph Augustus Ricketts, Thomas Wiltred Robinson, jr.; Glenn Brady Updike, Jesse Edward Wagner. ‘Washington—Russell Calvin Bar- low, Will Hannum_ Borrow, Homer Lee Carroll, John Harrison Claney, Arthur Albert Dally, Charles Heath, Willlam Asbury Johnson, BEdward Beaumont King, Ch: > Knight, Warren Herbert Lewls, Jo- seph Butler McMillan, Jacob A. Reshoeft, Bertram Edward Sherman, Thomas FEdward Skaggs, Amos Slater, Charles E. ¥tohl, Eric P. Truedson. West Virginla—Albert Bertram Calfes Bray, Willlam Henry Bycott, Charles Richard Carder, Os Emroy Carson, Henry _Alexander Davidson, ~Charles Duffy Phineas FEarle King, Mason, Harry Walter Meyer, Morton Nickell, Harold Oakley, Raymer Parris, ‘Willls Poling, Seth Cameron Savag Albert Neilson Slayton, Warth Tavenner, jr.; Frank Stanis- lau Webb. Irs Harve; ‘Wyoming—Jerome Samuel Atherly, | George Edric Brimmer, Frank Theo- dore Cummings, Joseph Moyses Lowndes, Willlam Arthur Wyman. Beamer, | Dana | floyd, | 4ally papers by reports of Iynchings Thomas Juhn.{ Clarence | George J. G. SAUNDERS DIES. Here for 40 | | in who doesn't put his name umbrella generally finds he sn't an umbrella to his me. Hotel Inn Phone Main 8108-8100 604-610 9th St. N.W. kly: $10.60 rooms. $8 er_anc lavatory. $10. e. Rooms sermon on 10} Jike Mother's. % % | el Connecticut Ave. and K St. Stores Shops Professional Apts. FOR LEASE Low Rents {SHANNON, & LUCHY] Main 2345 RIRRINIRE DAY Is RE EI-EBTED Northeast Merchant, | Years, Expires. | James G. Saunders, 62 years old, in | the butter and egg business in North- . east Washington more than 40 years, |died at George Washington Univer- S sity Hospital Tuesda Death was : i due to heart disease. American Association Hears|“‘Xithousn sufterini from neart ais- i 5 | ease for the last aever:l‘ll ye:ra,thc“:\' not_seriously ill until “about thre Race Discussion by weeks ago, soon after he returned | from a trip to El Paso, Tex., where Atlanta Man. he had been visiting his son, C. F. | Saunders. 4 e | _Mr. Saunders was a native of Vir. Rev. Wil - ridge. | ginia. _He enlisted in the United tev. William Horace Day of .uf,'fl“"’[ e o enlsied Bt aten port, Conn., was re-elected president| o ,.voq for five years, after which he of the American Missionary Assocla-|came to Washington and went into tion at the annual meeting held in the | the business in which he continued = esterday | untll the time of his death. tional Councll of Co : A. M. He is survived by Churches of the United States. Allce R Ssundans Vice presidents elected were: Rev. | L T ;Olm; John Gordon, Illinois; Sol C. Johnson, | 7 Soniin Fer 1( oL Georgla; Snell Hall, New York;| @ Saunders and Gordon H. Rev. Carl S. Patton of Los Angeles | s s clty, and C. F. and Frederick J. Lowery, Hawail. Saunder ELPp He also leaves {rOnlesulithe white|andi negroitaces | SeXen Srandenildven. H8 o1 L LS |live together on a basis of equality,” | Fumer ces wil conducted | Brof. Piato Durham of Atlanta de-|St -0l late home, 426 Wighth etzact | clared in a stirring address last night, | Rortheast, under the auspices of the | “the . United States will be torn|Masons, iomorrow afternoon at 2:30 asunder.” Prof. Durham took for hi| 2clock. | Rev. 12, Hes Ryl o topic “Christian Race Relationships'| clate,, Inteérment will be on Glen and spoke under auspic of ithe | Wo0d Cemetory. American Misslonary Assoclation, as | aid the Rev. Dr. who delivered Bridge Builders i | Denouncing race prejudices of the American people, the speaker, who is | | & professor in the Theological Semi | nary in Atlanta, declared that the United States will be a coward nation unless it offers the same protection of | the flag to the negro us it does to the | o &7 whites, and if there be no process si} wih soise under our religion to live together in | 2 in rovm. 50% o peace “we must get another religion. Prof. Durham voiced the conviction that there is a new day dawning on | the South. Through the interracial commissions, the negro and white races are meetin; together the | same basis and discussing their trou- | bles. | He stated even the editors of the Southern newspapers are being trained to give credit where credit is due. | Space once consumed in Southern and crimes committed by ne Mr. | Durham declares, is now be led | with prafse for meritorious work ac- | complished by negro citizens. Other speakers at yesterday's an nual gathering of the American Mis- | Assoclation were: Principal n “The Highlanders f. W. H. Holloway, | a Half Century | ments,” and Dr. | “Christianity and | Studehaker fradeforonetaday | sionary ‘ Edgar H in the South”; on “Dividends Up of Missi Robert I the Ra - From_ the AVENUE Exclusively at the P-B Store Hickey-Freeman Glen Spray Topcoats - Londonair Suits Travlwear Suits Canterbury Suits An imported Scotch woolen, something like a fin strength. With an Eversharp e homespun, of amazing effort, you can force your pencil between the strands of varn. Then give the cloth a couple of pulls and t Best of all, he hole has disappeared. Traviwear Cloth is tailored by Hickey-Freeman into Travlwear Suits, of exceptional comfort and style, as well as long life. *65 Suits made by Hickey-Frecman cxclusizely for | GFCP P AP > T Q0 TCH P FRIDAY AND Sirloin,Steak, Ib., 28¢ Porterhouse, Ib., 32¢ Pork Loins Fresh Shoulders, 1b., 22¢ Sauerkraut, 1b., 29c Veal Cutlet ! Loin Chops. .lb., 45¢ !Shoulder .. .1b., 25¢ Smoked Picnics, Ib., 22¢ Sliced Bacon .lb., 48c 32c |Large Pumpkins 4401y PO Croanrcrer ) ‘Round Steak Chuck Roast Smoked Hams Ritter’s Mayonnaise O0ld Dutch Coffee gMaryland Corn SATURDAY! w. 25¢ Rump Roast, Ib., 25¢ Boneless Plate Beef . lb., 12ic w. 29c Pork Chops. .1b., 30c End Chops qt., 12Vc Breast Lamb, Ib., 17¢ . 55¢ Rib Chops. . .1b., 42¢ Breast .. ... .lb., 18¢c . 29c¢ Piece Bacon, lb., 35¢ Pure Lard. . .lb., 20c FRYING OR BAKING CHICKENS Lb. Del Monte Asparagus 35¢ The Large, Square Can ‘Del Monte Pineapple’.. 25¢ Large Jar 19¢ . 35¢ 3 Cans 25(- S | Apples, Black Twigs, 6 Lbs., 25¢c; Bushel | Basket .. Tokay Grapes Florida Oranges | Grapefruit {Concord Grapes Quinces. . . Cranberries Kieffer Pears. . . . Cabbage Potatoes 1 .$1.25 ...2Lbs., 19¢ .Doz., 55¢ 3 for 29¢ Basket, 33c ..3 Lbs., 25¢ 2 Lbs., 35¢ e o 6iLbs:; 25c woseene s ~JOVEDSS; 23¢ .. .10 Lbs., 33¢ Michiga Va. Sweet Pancake rw 10c SUGAR 10 Lbs , 86¢