Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1925, Page 17

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1925. ez T, e AT THE FORTIETH ANNUAL HORSE SHOW. French officers attend- THE RULER OF CZECHOSLOVARKIA. The t photograph of Presi et ot it Pois Clute of b BB e €50 i THANKSGIVING DINNER FOR THE OFFICIALS OF BLAKE SCHOOL. Thix health demonstration school, the first establi-hed in the District, lent Masaryk, taken in his library. This is the cighth vear the President Lussardiere of the 0th Dragoons and Lieut. Xavier Bizard of the Tth Huzzars. gives special attention to children who are underweight. The pupils gave the dinner for the officials. Miss Rose Hardy is director of the inter- has filled the office and he has gained great popularity among the people Copyright by Up 00d & Underwood. mediate instruction. National Photo. of the country. SCORED MOST POINTS OF THE FOOT BALL SEASON. “Peggy”™ This is_the fashion prediction of SUNSHINE MACHINE” GIVES HOPE. The apparata< which is 1 Flournoy, star halfback of the Tulane University team, who has the sea- 1926, Miss Dorothy Chandler of : at the University of California by Dr. Ro-alind Wulzen. produc MOST POWERFUL RADIO TRANSMITTER INSTALLED AT ARLINGTON. e Navy has just put into son’s record for the scoring of points. His total score is 120 points, Los Angeles disMlays what the Pa- synthetic sunbeams, and it has been used successfully for discases of rats |} yeration this biz vacuum tube transmitter at station NAA, Arlington, Va. The apparatus has a power rating which is considered somewhat of a record for an individual player. cific Coast designers are planning and other lower forms of life. The machine will Tater he ed with of 20,000 watts and it is possible to put 25.000 watts into the antennae. ph shows W \I:l|uquA radio Photo by Acme. { for mext Summer. Photo by A human dis 3 Ph A engineer, beside the transmitter, Copy Harris & Ewing. TELLOFCRUELTIES © e wae.—* ZEALQUS CONVICT ““T{.llf.’,.".“{{{ OLDER AGrs (ROSSROADSPLAY o= s vomwrsve. oy ork CONGLAVE Youngest Ra Weary Willie as he plods the road so nilly, when the nights are long and W llll \~|ur.llmn~ of Boys in Higher Houw of chilly, and the farmers’ dogs are ¢ G . ; : e 'S @ p: d joyless figure : i oTess & b P A . T tion tri - A Witnesses Say Heat Was fles a bleak and joviess nzure, shok: Slayer Qvercomes Enormous ongress and in Supreme Court Great Centers of World Mnafef, Setuenins | - Some German and Finnish 2 2 handout bigger than the one he had 5 5 N g ver f. i Ud say A Blamed for Two Deaths, heror nothing, nothing wan anaicen Handicaps to Achieve | The compulsory education law f ie Sen ) 1 ! fic Usually Due to Natural taini have been Fundamentalists Want self-respect, by him forsaken; hoping the District of Columbia is ing b > 96 Se n v i i i for some eggs and bacon, he is knock- e | Bep 7 5 51" When 1 1 e Taw 1 . : : . Foilowing Beatings. e Sole Ambition. havoe with aspirations of certain | p\then e, oE i Conditions. in i New Conference. unshaven, eroaking hoarsely like a | voungsters to serve as pages in the [ 1908, prov » : e raven, and he has no othér haven 2 Supperne O SR e B et e S o . D00 g ¥ than the poorhouse or the jail; he is | Special Lispaten to The St o Loy ATte: Goaeiiion witn | ToRwoxL: : HE R I b E - ’ thitha fotheh E A MACKENZIE Novem shooed from every cottage, Shooes = IONTE. Fa: Novsiiber a6 = 4 s | Senate L e United States is : hat s also fou B B st whippings with adjectives and swat told to - BELLEFONTE, Pa., November 26.— | the officials of the Board of Education, | puaded in having i 1eov L 1 € i Jis The Sta 0 and éarn his pottage, told to hustle Two vears ago James Horvath was|iwo hoys have bheen dropped from the | that bovs emploved the fcale. He mignt ‘have the legal “committed to the West Peniten- | yolls of the Supreme Court, and the | shot inc oH ielty | tenc he might live in state and japy g eDoe o Chaiga of s s oo & before Judge 1%, S. | splendor, if he'd ruin a suspender, d‘iuf‘_" ”7“‘ n a charge of probable list of Senate pages will have | Ji | N0 Sy M S P ng magsitrate, hear- | working hard, as others do; but if he Second-degree murder to serve a term | g he considerably revised unless when | i understood that the House de- 1 will b tur e world streama e Bet nary trial of M. C.|must sprain his body to secure a cot- of 10 years. Today he is still & man | s meets there should be some | cided that it w - for the your = ; ! z War no important hankir County convict | tage gaudy. all our culture is but without a name—a man with a num of the mew law, which | Sters to go to school than to end S z y took place on earth 1 vi and Gerr shoddy, he believes, his mind askew. her_in the State Penitehtiary at »ut through last Winter. the ses: s of i R Lot S An Tndiss o t guardians of the financi < - o testified yestery So we have but little pity for the out- Rockview, but he holds a diploma as v ilsory education law de-| The Senate, howe has been Bpesty 3 ,““_ e world v e 5 R ' cruelties” extending over a | cast from the city, tramping where . graduate of the Pennsylvania S e o waior 11 years | to operate as' usual with pages under |the crossroads of the main transcon. ol e e nce for next Summer at Al period of several years the roads are gritty, when the night School of Mines and a certificate from | of age must attend school in the Dis- |14 vears old on the rolls. But the new | tinen al highways of th mited |t it theipalll tax foriane : 5 S ATeasiatie Some of the witnesses, white men. | is coming on; and it's little men are | the State bureau of mines, the latter | triot, whether they be children of per- | compulsory education law no | States. - d e e 1 Sidbney of itho. Finais who told the Ehiey wero Bt e | cartam IF L fos where e b leciue oo el W B . - | I Whele San B clien of B R e the Semaic e Mankind has mans remarkable 3 pLatie : e ey of the Finnisl gang” under the superintendent at | if he's deader than a herring on some | cvstem that sentenced him to a dec-|jans are only femporarily residing in | while bovs over 14 who com- | Crossroads,” says a bulletin o e ‘urope’s Civic Center. S he d the Lutheran the time, testified (o having seen Cran- | cald and bitter dawn. For the man gde of futility Washington. They must perform the | pleted eighth-grade work ma tional Geographie Soclety. SRt e ford whip two negroes on an after- | who doesn't labor with a sawbuck or | ““Thare is frony in that—there is also | sehaol work equivalent to the courses | mitted to work, the 5 There are crossroads of the sea at | -PTobably the best invest ¥ German delegates to the noon and that both men died early in|a saber, who is idle while his nelghbor | comething Infinitely imposing—for it | in the public Schoois. tation officials hive informed Senators | Singapore, Panama Canal, Hawall, | CFOSStonts teal jesfate = -al | Stockholm ference expressed un he night o . All of theeurns the shilling or the pound, and | yqrks this man Horvath—this “No.| In the Senate at its last s that they do not see any way f wl Tsland and Colombo; cross- | FeOBmbhers sy Banis o the o it ey vitnesses agroed that they were satis- | who thinks it smart and clever to|So and So? as one of the few men|where there are 21 page + cent | younger bovs to serve this year in of cable lines at Guam and the | 4,0 %ipevitable crossronds r tividual relizion with a gr tied the deaths were result of the |avoid all wise endeavor, and to bum i) Tiava “beaten the game” by the | or more were under 14 years of age. | (he Senate unless the kaw is imended es, crossroads of history in | [he inevitable : } s e rlsloniities frel whippings his way forever, might as well be gmple process of playing it accord-The custom has been for them to range .ssions of the Senate come dur. tine, crossro: of intercourse |18 plain, for it i u o ae : underground. g o thelniles: =5 15 s obaes ery | ing school hours, and there seems 1o Europe and Asta at Con-| | h ter i Soed asa latitudinaria “Over Heai” Given as Cause. lergeon N Sy 5 s from 12 to 16 years of age, and a very | ing e et many, the terrafean ¢ atitudinaria 1 "l“‘r\Y"; “l t )\ All ; h“(r t Comsotdli, £5 ) VLR R0 He was arrested December 8, 1 At | large number of them have been less | satisiac l’ way to adj he m; er. | S inople And now 2 i it Loire. When all parts of i t s temporaril 1 h 3 5 Yukon, Pa., charged with the murder |than 14, 8Epecially when first appoint-| It probably will b gued in some roads of the air at Prague Eors bennov At & . ] | Silenced. Paathe Schiocdainels .'m'}?x'l:f She e e ALEXANDRIA of his fatherdn-law. The details of|ed. The pages are to be appointed all | quarters that service in the Senat Great Cities Are Crossroads. capacit is. they s vill h Stockho's icked the confer the murder as revealed in the court | over again at the opening of the new [amounts to a liberal education for the | WEE S EZ S00 PRI eway. She has ea . n Y Tih oD e el e e e | SpecisliDlipRiAn R0 Thalstar procedure in February of the follow jon. Thelr appointments are part | boys, but the law does not recognize it it crossroads I | Mediterranean and A th concerning the guilt of the allie wation died " from “over| —The biggest raid on the hootleg traf- ‘;“;U\‘f”‘: ‘_",:}P'“F,“}’l‘ oy ] | tunts Chicako smis o fedgling cross. | Pyrences. She s moro convent _ Adwits Tnformation Faulty. heat.” fic in many months was made by the | P8 NEZ S0 Lo 15 10 vears of hard | the penitentiary near here, not {are meeting the same problems. But |roads, but the Windy City lays claim | 10 (he atlntic than Germany Rev. ¢ e hear of a negro in| Alexandria police early this morning | > =0t i o e onfinement. | completed, where usually only “light | Hovarth i courage ¥ to two records in fus streams of Hor beties has B |" S v informatior from becoming | when 72 gallons of Wi were cap- | > 5 | term” prisoners are incarcerated. He matriculated “ex collegio” in a|men and metal—its ‘traina-minute’ | her better than to Tngland, Spain |\, I Informati judge asked tutedint the) nocthiiend F the Wash Veteran of World War. | ""At Rockview the former Marine was |mining engineerinz cours - advertisement i3 o hint to its posi- | ItAIy. She has better access : s ok sitid he had not. ington Street Bridge, just outside the| py,.vah was a veteran of the World | given a position as a clerk in the | State College, with an insuper: fion s the World's reatest rail con | America than Japan = or China : il aid that he found no in-| city limits. War.having served with the fambus |office of the general stores’ manager. | determination to win, he sct about his | ter, its feverish trade gives to the |Lariy infernational atmosphere (oo ! e oG i abrasions or cuts, but ome one telephoned the police that | grp "y vines and having returned from | He was the second longest term man | work. Al lights at the penitentiary | intersection of State and Madison (5 BabL St Roms IERESESES Germany and s not looking for | bootleggers were transferring liquor | ¢po “turmofl of war to take up again | “doing time” there, and by the time|were supposed to be put out at 9 streets the title the ‘busiest |0 Paris’ not Rome. e cote t it was possible | from an automobile and hiding it|}id (Uil life, The murder had been |it was obvious he was regarded as a |o'clock, and before that hour, the | corner in the world.’ Fifth avenue The World's Zero Zero. caten to death |under the bridge. Chief of Police W. |13 Pl ) o5t mess, and while public | “trusty.” What had added fuel to his | corridors of the dormitory were vocal| and Fortysecond street. New York, - visible signs | W. Campbell sent several members of | o inion "ot one persuasion was crying | desperation was the fact that he had | with the strumming of musical in-|may make more people bump should- his motor cycle squad to investigate.| (u¢'from press and pulpit for his con- been contributing to the support of |struments and the cacophony of men | ere, but for thronging pedest » served under | As the officers neared the bridge the | (ion “there were others who pointed his aged mother, who, deprived of his |relaxed in rest. Through that bedlam | and vehicles Chicazo’s mos crowded hat he had suffered ' men fled, deserting the automobile |, hig\car record, his former unsullied 't, was virtually on the border- | Hovarth sat in his cell struggling with | cpossroads stands alone. il injuries from @& after wrecking it. The car hasa Vir- | career in civil life are things deserving | 1i starvation. is problems. The spot where Braddock met de. | Intude. and the zero longitade which it the Sollcy S ok the superintend- | ginia license and was headed South. | elonjency. But he was convicted and| Out of all of his conflicting emo- | He almost gave up. He went to the | feat, where the extending avenues of | o roeh Greentch, g, o= |a_ conference of Finnish bishops Through the commissioner of motor | e jegan his term. fon into which has been poured fear | chaplain, since resigned, who obtained | Rritish and French colonial progress | W ATPHIATY map crossroads of b lsinzfors to discuss the matter. Shows S . vehicles, Richmond, the police expect | "0 "{}. second day of his imprison-fand deflance, regret and hatred, am. | through the deputy warden, W. J. Mc- | ollided, 1s today one of the most re- | NGi: TS Potnr 1es in the GUit e _ ro showed “cars on | o identify the owner of the machine. | nent ‘he was made one of the instruc.{bition and then the blighting shroud | Farland, the permission fo use the | markable of-the United States cross-| 90 QU N 800 mlles oft Acera ; o SeehiniGloser Uniion. his v which he testified were from |, The liquor Z tors in the prison school, teaching the | of a prison sentence, he found one |chaplain’s office until midnight every | roads. The town of Brilddock. § miles | EOM( eoast of Afriea, = = o | The Abo conforence apparently will beat he hands of Cranford. headquarters rudiments of grammar, mathematics | moment of challenge. Some people | night. i out of Pittsburgh. on the Monon policeman and turned the. atop' sign | CCRter upon a policy of closer unior bl Pt e how | Judge Frede: and history to prison mates who had |call it conscience, others fate, still| For the entire month before the|pely River, is d to be the ton- | 4o0inst Europe in Palestine, he pro- | 0F Lutheran churches upon a strictly . ‘hesro, Henry Wooten, was | CoUrt tomorrow morning. i ot been favored with such an educa- | others the “breaks of the game. examination, in July, 1925, he studied | nage v traffic. Iron | 282inst Fiurope in Palestine, he po- | religious basis behind a truck for a great | “'\l‘hfll _services fu!" Mrs. Eleanor tion as his. For he 1d been gradu- It suddenly occurred to Hovarth Ill\l}l midnight and then rose again at| gre comes in from the North and coal which the world can ‘._[\VB ‘lh'\nk~ Archbishop Soederbloom, when in e, “Phe ‘nesto «icd €hortly aft- | Phillips, 45, matron of the Anne Lee | afeq ‘from the Kiski School. not far|that In spite of the years between |4 o'clock. Moments of depression be-|from West Virginia to feed the hun-|FRich the world can sive thanks |ierviewed, said that if Archbishon erward, Z [ Memorial Fome, who died vesterday, | from Pittsburgh, and had enlisted In | him and the life and laughter beyond |came fewer. He was winning the|gry blast furnaces. Six of the heavy | VaScO i Gumma went off on . Ge- | Johansson bad heen present at Stock Dr. Lentz testified that a guard told | Will be held at the residence of A the marines while a sophomore at a | the barred gates and the walls there | fight. % frefght-carrying railroads pass Brad-| {rrica’ and around Palestine, the |00 he would have better realized him the prisoner had been dragged | M. E. Garner, 413 South Fairfax street, | \yestern college. still was a margin of life. After all,| His was almost the enerzy of the|dock's front door. o SE A aORtaNE S oreats bt Sacishe | T8 mx.r rence’s spirit g hehind & t1ick. The guard, when put |at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. The | " Though the advancement to the po-| when he stepped forth again, a free |zealot or the fanatic. e lost 21 e e o most important crossroads of ancient | 0 i et hefore the court, denied that he told | body will be taken to Herndon. sition of an instructor was a signal | man, he would be in the zest of early | pounds, but he still fought on night i sies g Bistary - onl wiia® was a0l iwarse | coula 10t understand the animosit the physician t City Manager Paul Morton vester-| mark of favor on the part of the|middle life. |after night in the darkness of the| «London questions the American |0 qre Rt Airat . oot s agamat the conference, whose sole pur Judge MeBlroy said that he hoped | day completed moving stoves from the | rison officials, those first few week: The eternal question, brought to|prison, sibilant with the snores of | claims to street traffic records, point- | posite . pose was to relieve religious distres; | “A good question for a zeosraphy rland indicate tha nal examination is: Where is the | 2 B sson’'s repeated world's zero zero? Answer: The rence are not | intersection of the Equator, zero |2PProved 4 ] ty of the latitude, and the zero longitude which | C1€TEV there, wh rned h 10" comple " v and in- | offices of the City Hall, following the | of prison life had been brutally hard |the fore by pure stress of circum- | sleeping men. tn. {108, to the Bank of Englana corner. | JESNery O Ameriea woke We land create, Christian rapbroachmen ated that a bill would be sent to |installation of the new heating plant.| for him. Even to the ordinary man, | stance, kept battering, battering, bat-| His individual victory was not with-| Upler this frowning, austere facade | {xtpmua between the Red Sen s | o Juther.” he said, d a Chris the srand jurs for immediate action. | The new plant furnishes heat to ali|even to the hardened criminal, who | tering at the portals of his mind.|out its tribute from those sel to watch | vehicles and pedestrians in unending | l3iPUs between the Red Sea and |ian concilium that’ shouid do some departments of the city government. |<uddenly finds himself seated on a|What to do? What to do? him, for when the time for the ex-istrcams debouch from Cheapside, | they e Garede focamy ng ool s |thing to check the sreed of princes rthur B. Herbert, chairman of the | prison cot in the halflight of a penal| It is not known just what instincts |aminations came he was tendered the | Threadneedle, ~ Cornhill, Lombard, | bee the parade ground of conduer- |and “the dissension between princes PARIS FLOCKS TO RIVIERA. 1ocal committee in charge of selling | institution, there is an awful feeling | prompted him to Seize upon mining | almost unheard of privilege of leaving | King William, Queen Victoria and | Pamnes Satadin Tiehtd tho 1iay | 404 the moral and social wrongs of * | Stone Mountain coins for the Confed- | of futility. engineering as his objective. Of | the prison and going to the college to | Princess streets, ”“rr;ed Siladin, Richard the Lion | communities, instead of giving all of rate memorial at that place, will| For Horvath, better tutored in legal | course, any one brought up near coal | take his examinatio So strictly immutable are the 1aWs | (iviers. ~ No real empire could do | . aiiontion to minor, uhimportant Cold Weather Drives Society itart a drive December 9 and con-| procedure and the barriers that se; | mines learns the language and the cus:| When he was informed that he had | of geography =that - London SR s e R D L LR . tinuing until December 14, inclusive, | ciety has erected to separate the abM | toms and the problems of those who |passed the examination of the bureau | whirlpool today is the same cross-|p Ol ie TG CHe TORRSEE OF The | holn confe itrled 0 dot South Early This Year. When® it is expected, Alexandria's | from the weak, the vicious from the |delve for the black gold. Whatever [of mines he went back to his cell—|roads of England that Caesar's cap. | honeme Canal lust vear passed the | (Copsrint. 1 axo Daily News Co.» SARIS, Nove - 26 () —The cold | quota, $1,000, will be raised. true, it was even worse. it was, that inward voice, transcend-|back to the dull round of prison duties | tains established 2,000 years ago. The |/ Cn 350 S Oqn G % o F e RS T y! g U5, DoNEIn in bavis is send- | Practically all business w sus-| He taught classes night and day,|ing the irksome round of prison life, | —contented for the first time in his|Romans entered England by the 0 5 P DR ueory Burns Fatal to Womans e e e M1, | pended in observance of Thanksgiving | driving himself in a fever of despalr |ceased its interrogative whispering |life. Now, while carrying on his| Thames and by the Kent coast. The T T T : e Begiise sl s L R S ity officas were closed. Banke | in order to blot out those other vears |and said, “That's it! Go in and win, | duties as a’ clerk, he is still studying |6ld Kent road sought the most satis- Perfecfly Safe anuls Bty COloned, 22 qynatapold, e Tor the Mediterranean |and other business houses took a holi- | which in their passing seemed des-(man! That's it!” —studying texts of his profession, not | factory crossing of the Thames which 2 died at Freedmen's Hospital this morn. e on Al R et i Many Alexandrians went to | tined to make of him a thing like those | Studying any type of engineering |a profession, fortifying his mind|would be still wishin reach of the sea. | From the London Answers. inz as the result of burns received coast have been booked for the next |dav. NIV Ao hess the an. | about him-—snarling _mongrels that |in the best environment is difficult—it |against the years, planning great |‘Londinium’ became the crossroads to| Agent—Don't you want your office | yesterday morning while attempting tiee | weels, | ineluding even e | b ball contest between the Unl. | snapped at the heels of society. After | requires concentration and encourag- |dreams that cannol be dissipated by | the fertile midiand. London is not | furnishings insured against theft? | to extinguish a fire in her home, 110 sraine tunnine Som the Closse: DT 0 sity of Virginia and the University | he had served months he was told | ing instructors and a bit of talk now 'any discouragement—dreaming, dream- | only the crossroads of England to-| The Manager—Yes, all except the|Fourth street. Coroner Nevitt gave v the convenience of English trav lor North Carolina. I he would be transferred to Rockview,|and then with one’s classmates who ing, dreaming. | day, but also the intersection of many | clock. Everybody watches that. a certificate of accidental death. N 2 ‘h J4

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