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4 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, MONDAY, HEARINGS ENDED IN GAYUGA CASE Decision in Favor of United States Expected in Indian Dispute. Al interest be ramifications 1o arbitral ou wn-British Charles justice o < | cheap; get which to there carry out policy | CONCERT OF HARVARD DEATH FOLL()WS ALLEGED| GAME *HOLD-UP” OF POKER y.. Authorities 1 by Fatal Shooting A and Jury May Investigate. DRAMA ““STUDY OF LIFE.” Speaker Sees Genuine Americanism I 0 A possible in New York. HA, Ne Genuine Ame pre tne icter of the consequent and tastes make line A ced in ) v it nd i possible for drama to be proc ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILL! (Special and son, a brother Mrs. Humphrey D. v | more females than males in the city »shen M. E. Church. sented 1ecently to St opal Church of Brighton name in Wash held as to hut was o to be and the services were con the rector, Rev. Gu who delivered the address. 1es Hutton participated in the Eight Mexican Miners Killed. MEXICO CITY, December 28 (£).— ated reports reaching Mexico City that ¢ miners were killed nd more than 40 burned in an ex sion in a government railway’s coal mine n Pa in the State Move into new offices next year and you'll ind the b ccommoda tions and rvice in e ermont Building Vt. Ave. at L Street ed, built and equipped n Office Building—to give xd the professions the , comfort location—handy to car and bus li'es—reasonable rentals. MCKEEVERMG(B GREALTORSSH Rental Agents 1415 K St. Main 4752 {tc L et Dlscouragemcnt ] —_— b PREDICTS INCREASE OF TORNADO TOLL Few Cities Will Escape, Says Weather Bureau’s Meteorologist. < Little boots it what you're doing, in this tear-stained moundane place, men will come to you beshrewing, saying you are off your base. All your work is effort wasted, say the cranks who come to bat, and they'd have their { counsel pasted in the lining of your |hat. Are vou writing noble sonnets such as Milton might turn out? Men will come and rend their bonnets, suving, “What we need Is kraut. He who rs heads of cubbage where of fold the thistles grew, brightens up this dismal, drab age more than bards can hope to do. In his hut the poor | man curses and the stricken widow wails if you try to feed them verses when they sigh for kraut in pafls.”” Are you nting splendid plectures, which should elevate men’s souls 1uks will come with bitter strictures d with caustic rigmaroles. * T beans the sad world suffers, people sink and faint, while of dreaming duffers waste the moments spreading paint. While vou use vour paints and washes, men and won in despair, cry aloud for Hubbard squashe 1 there are no squashes ther philosopher in- vour vain and am of horses, and earn your n who think all nt in heavy toll, < motors, digging If they saw a it would make they would s: thing useful By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, December 28.—The death toll of tornadoes will increase in the Middle West as that section be- more thickly settled, S. D, meteorologist of the United States Weather Bureau, Topel Kans., forcast before the Americ Meteorological Society in convention here. Such disasters as claimed 725 lives | in southern lllinois a - ago will be repeated many time Flora | said, and unless construc homes and public buildings is improved, few large citles will escape the dev ion of windstorms. Predicts Citles Will Be Hit. stability reinforced concrete never be known strikes the bus , Mr. Flora I pursuit L plow and ome greens There should be ; corn, reps dorses 50 ke Noel in t Shakespe: he nd grieve he should be find achie (Coy of modern s building: until a tor! 1ess center of a gry ntinued, as, by the {law of probability, it surely will in the course of time. He suggested. however, that man, some day, may lessen the extent of havoe. s of m: *d over obstacles | CLUBS GRLA APFRIR | sousis oo e WALT MASON | ultrmately strip the least part « The m {meettng conven tlon for rel sts are holdi tion with the annual he American A on of the ated tal Program in Mayflower Ballroom. nvention will continue through The Harvard Unive {mental Clubs gave a 1t was enjoyed by a 1 of Sevt supied by collexzes v Instru concert rge audience ly the gec and geography section of the association held a meet the May#ower |ing today, with a general ton of 10f the |the organization scheduled for tonight s | sities, and | being CETETE Weather Due to Sun Spof Wellesley, Georgetown shington University prominent betw at perio 1 sun spots heir own a | occupants. | ege o iven by these Sousa ub, which | his “Of the open 158 was also | tion by the He held that it would ke agricultural pred » far obtained through however. » of evidence sug safe to m: boy was s as hich the m: periods. | Recent - | Observato shown that the mean period between | {the maximum and minimur |ance of sun spots | hypothests, which ¥ , | somewhat of r _ is that weather per do exist, and that the close up o as to kee he varfutions of the sun s pvin Delibes. such classics of the ditions “Schneider's ny Ha t appealed a « Y Arrangemen Kammenoi-Ostrow ve a hurlesque of course, “Falr e — EBURNEifl SCHOONER LAST OF ONCE NOTED FLEET One of Six-Masters Prized by New England Shipping Before itable Steamers Developed. MURDER SUSPECT KNOWN By the Associated Press, | with ONLY AS “THE OLD MAN" Mysterious Individual Sought Connection With Death of Mu- . December 28.—The schoon- er rence, destroyed by | fire vesterday at Portla the last of the fleet ol the pride of New England before the development of m and ofl burning vessels. in shipy latto Woman Twice Shot. o NEW YORK, Decembe | terious individual design | *“the ¢ | vivor of the fleet when the Wyoming foundered off the Cape Cod banks dur. ling a storm three years ag other six-masters from New England, the Addie M. Lawrence and the ward B. Winslow, were lost on the rocks of the French coast while carry- ing supplies for the allies from Boston to St. Nazaire during the summer of 19 S —A mys- ated only as ought today and eastern ion with er, mu- wounds ut connec L. Lus: 1d with two bull Saturday ich., girl; | . both bt | “rneil about 15 years ago the six- masters were used almost exclusively £ for transporting coal from Chesapeake s who Bay and New England ports. In re nd ha ccrante is be e. The dead 3 » convicted of murder, | show, but waz pardoned in bei d that an insult offered - constituted a “miti- with the n her alive detained | competition_with steam vessels. The dward J. Lawrence, in consequence, had been idle in Portland harbor for three years. | sating circ N, WOMEN EXCEED MEN. Agree There Has Been Increase. pecial Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, December 28.— The city Health Department and a na- | tional agency making surveys in more than 100 cities throughout the coun- try find Baltimore has more women 1 men he national agency Two Baltimore Surveys SOUTHLAND BATTERIES Built to Last Service Guaranteed WHY PAY MORE? Southland Battery Co. 910 Pa. Ave. M. 5555 shows 11,000 }in 1920 and 12,000 more in 1 The | Health Department indicates that there were 8,459 more females than males in the city in 1920 and 9,255 | more females in 1925. These figures |are for whites and blac| | EE A AT MY AVEIIE END OF THE MONTH SALE BARGAINS INODDS AND ENDS Men’s Ribbed Ribbed All-Wool oS | e i]ndrened Kid Gloves colors. They Chalmers Ribbed —in gray. Lined 1 39 In ecru Very qual- SHIRTS and DRAWERS and with strap. A s In mostly all 59c good quality glove sizes. A nationally At @ very special Flannelette Pajamas known garment at price of. keep $1-29 PAJAMAS Trimmed with §139 —will a special price Lo Cotton Pongee warm. Ext nil cut and trimmed with silk frogs. Bowe oo oo 910 Seventh Street N. W. “We Request the Return of Anything That Can Be Bought for Less Elsewhere” SR SRR SRS silk frogs, in blue, tan, pink and white colors. A good selection at 704 | were taken modern | he Lawrence became the last sur-| The Child's Discovery Prevents Prob- DECEMBER 28, 1925. Any Old Job Looks Better to Me Than Mine. “THIS LOOKS LikE LN % T4 PLACE, MIKE. LEMME OUT AN Trigm PARK TH Bus Rouno T CORMER. g THESE COMIC PAVERS SIMME A PAIM WITH THEIR STUPID TOKES N 1BOUT PLUMBERS FERGETTI THEIR TooL S I'LL 66T CUR PUBLICITY DEPARTMENT T MAKE A HOLLER /BovT \T /\é\w“’””w i f —BY WEBSTER. Ut YA SEE,MIKE? \ TOLOJA WHAT A DOG'S LAFE PLUMBIN 15, YA SHOULDA Toow UP 11.50 |Army Aviation Surveyors Fly 8.000 SOMETH ELSE - BANKIN OR. SOMETAIN LIKE THAT WHERE A 60Y'S GCTA LIL LEISURE. | WISH'T YDA OOMENT iREJECTlON OF GIFT FUND Miles Mostly in Sub-Zero Weather BY UNIVERSITY SCORED account have been visited ir 1the nom An 8.000-mile flight | never ditions that kept between 10 and under w the ther 27 degrees bel dow w zero a large part of prope last night |V left out time of found on storm com: the time was made publ by the Arms The flight was undertak Eugene C. Batten of The ice Dayton, Ohio, and 1 with axes Plank, Engineer Corps, and Mechanic | however, it w T. J. King, to map the United States- | overcome the ice d Canadian border region north of Du-[operate the amphil luth, Minn. under an arrangement | temperatures with the Dominion government Many records for cri The aerial survey covered about|flying in amphiblan types of 000 square miles of territory dotted lakes and thickly forested. A Loening amphibian was used to per 4 mit coming down on either land or | with full load for six a water. More than 1000 photographs | partly at an altitude of Eiving a wte informa-|and a4 non-stop fl f the country on|Chi 420 miles the line that probably | three hours Afr Service. 1S ulties very Cook Field Duluth, wa n ce fi to ht at 13.000 tion on both sides in slight ble and were broken during the trip from Me mong_which Duluth @ half hours, | & it from Duluth to Alumni of Wisconsin Protest Ac- tion of Regents Which Forbade Acceptance of Endowments. 1 Press. PAUL, Minn,, Detember t Disappro the action of the re | gents of the University of Wisconsin in deciding that no gifts shail be re- 10| ceived by the inst from educa- to | tional endo ts was expressed in cold |a report tc of a committee repre- | senting the ersity Alumni Asso. iation | The report, made public here today by Oscar Hallam of St. Paul, former justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, sald that “we are opposed to sweeping rejection in advance of iy and all gifts from educational foundations. The Wis adopted w of e f over onsi) re t Quite Different. From the Open Road Maga During a bad dust st the camps a recruit sot the cook’s domai FAMILY ESCAPES FIRE. ne rm at able Death Toll. Alter Special Dispatch to The Star FREDERICK, Md., December 2 Fire, starting from an overheated wood stove, last midnight drove Mrs, Leslle Gross and children, in their nightclothes, to the home of a neigh- for. The fire, originating in a bedroom, was discovered by Mary Gross, 8 vears old, who gave the alarm. The loss is | estimated at $8,000. “If you put the 1id on that soup.” The cook glared. “Sce here, m {sour business is to serve vour try Yes,” interrupted the rec not to eat it.” . Turbulent times {n C Japan's exports to that country ht shelter time broke an awkward silence by sa you wouldn't get so much dust ir na increased |it hereafter no g d be receivec | “from anv incorporuted educationa lowments or or ations of like T followed de on_of $12 rom the general in ation hoard for medical reses he | work in seeking a cure for a specif aving: | disease kettle the [ Singer Opt v1ad.l poRT WAYNE, coun- {(®) _lorence McBeth, soprano of th. <put | Chicago Civie Opera Company, ated upon here Saturday night for ap |pendicitls, passed a comfortable day | yesterday and her condition is good nnounced. An early recove erated On. Ind. December is ant e Sale of Men’s -$29.75 EW Overcoats of beautiful ma- terials, consisting of plaid backs, in all the popular colorings. The Overcoats in this sale have ordinarily sold for $35 and $40. There are several shades of gray and blue-gray, also the popular soft-finish through and through overcoating. It’s a difficult feat to offer so much value at so moderate a price— twenty-nine seventy-five. Single and double breasted box coats and town ulsters with half-belts. Saks—Third Floor O n regents last August oper- | WOMAN HELD IN ITALY IS ORDERED RELEASED Mrs. Elsa Briggs, at First Thought American, Proves to Be Au and Is Freced 15 th wiated P PALERMO, I | The Austrian consul has orde release of Mrs. INIPRESSIVE STORY RETOLD N DRAMA Van Dyke’s “The Other Wise Man” Portrayed at Luther taken nto custody Place Church' :‘nf an irregularit He intervened h was the attorne | American |lett for Vi Mrs. F ltaly with a o m from a New York art p for a | When status that & engaging 1t this was T trian December dau named Henrs Christmas Van Dyke's beautiful post story of “The Other Wise Man’ given its initial presenta tion in dramatic form as arranged by Vess Davis Schreiner at Luther Place | lisher g 1 Memorfal Church yesterday afternoon | torial worl and last night. It will be given a |#uthorities third performance tonight at 30 [#rrested b w porte ocloc Particularly beautiful and [h2d been suspected of impressive was the music used Inci- | ®SPlonage activities, dentally in the production. It in.|confirmed cluded “works built largely upon Ori- | = 1 mot nd arranged for the | Cutter Reaches Grounded Ship harp by Katherine Riggs, who also| p.p - yon o g played them. There were works by {, 4% “TMOR 2 1ton, MacDowell, Brittain, Frie- | Willis, Girieg and Gounod, with traditional ancient melodies. s the pastorale from it Organ nata, played by Miss Anstadt. Nina Nor- | man, who plaved a young Hebrew mother in one of the episodes, sang a hauntingly beautiful old Hebrew lullaby, “Oi, Shlof Main Feigele Other Program Features. Walter Reck Me who g the tioned her and December n, which ingier 1s Saturd: Coast schooner w about feet an even keel. Baltimore to Florida crew of five mer reported su | Mrs. Mary & of Milwaukee |the oldest te nt Ore., supr 2 chased originally be laid at the |— of the infant Jesus, along with | the gifts of the other three magi, to save three human beings from death He read his lines well. Gi. M. Diffenderfer was excel. | as the old rabbi, and Judy Lyet 1y slave girl. Mrs. Fred:| () 3. Farrington read passages of Vin Dyke's work with clear, cool | no LOSS TO ANY INVES tion, and Conrad Young gav atic beauty to his L and First Mortgage Bonds Callor write for Booklet N, 1 The F.H.Smith Co. o eh Building, 813 Fifteenth Sireet - ¥ R IN 32 YEARS The colorings of costumes and the fdea of upper and lower scenes well k The lighting at time: tore v vell of illusion, other times was excellent Others Included in Cast Others participat tion were N. K. C monson, John W. tabidle, Irving Kock Keister, Ed E Chindblom, George Gates Margaret Eberly, Helen Gardner. Shoemaker, Ruth Chindblom hel Theiss, Ann Lynn, | Mae Mcllwee Nadine « na Mae . Elizabeth E Burger, Virginia | Ellerstadt, Burruss | ng in rdne Martin, John and Ralpt the produc PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION PAYS 5% Compounded Semi-Annually Hattie Mcliwee, : i Detailed to Battleship. | B. Stephenson, United | Marine Corps, San Diego, f.. has been detaile leship Maryland for dut , battle fleet A. Oster Commencing January 1, 1926 Assets Over $10,500,000 Surplus $1,000,000 Cor. 11th & E Sts. N.W. JAM BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Sec'y. fi : relieve , who is t base first nutomobile trip from I capital of Afghanistan, to the frontier was accomplished ir Francis Humphrys, | er at_the Amir’s court, | the 384 miles in four who covered Every year a certain number of our friends ‘ : ; | wait for these REDUC- | JH =) | TIONS! It's not im- portgnt that we give a long, drawn-out story— we simply say that these are AFTER-CHRIST- MAS SPECIAL PRICES —featured in our HALF- YEARLY | EDUCTIONS On Hundreds of Kuppenheimer and Grosner SUITS O’COATS | Two Important Groups $29.75 $30.75 TOSIICI 1325 F STREET House' of Xuppenheimer Good Clo!’lu