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22 ¥ ARMS GONFERENCE FUND IS DISCUSSED & House—Fish Woyld Outlaw Aggressors. SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JANUARY GIRL SCOUTS Pine Cone Troop, No. 34, is a troop fortunate in having a meeting room which it can call its own. A large semi-detached room at the home of the captain, Vera Lawrence, has been turned over to the troop to be for the girls alone. At their meeting on Thursday, the girls were welcomed Into their new room. A cheerful wood fire in the open fireplace gave a fes- tive appearance as did cozy arm- chairs, o huge couch. and tables on which were Girl Scout handbooks, many copies of the American Girl Magazine, scrapbooks of nature ple- tures, another scrapbook of Scout clip- pings from various sources, dating back several years, and a nature speci- men case, containing birds' nests of many sorts, seed cones of different evergreen trees, including the long eaf pine from Alahama, cotton in va- rious stages of growth, a collection of pressed leaves and u discarded wasp’s nest, while in a_corner of the room Is a huge hornet's nest, which {was found many years ago on top of |4 mountain in New England Economic. | After the fim’s had had opportunity e M = 5 .| to survey thefr new quarters, the both | found little mercy at the hands of | ihg and fnally approving settement | Were followed by patrol corners. Work found | ; Y 8 $ of|ing and finally approving settlement | yqq then done on tenderfoot and sec- | those he once helped to betr | of the Itallan debt and discussed debts | nq class tests, with Lieut. Ina Law- How De'neySranisl Eonia .mn,”elf:: v"“('.‘jn":’;‘:‘:n"’:‘{;‘:“‘“;‘ ‘|‘j‘"‘h“‘_‘"$ rence and Patrol Leaders Linda Swain the subject of | crime—a_ much-dis, | 1§, Commission-_the ' body charged | ung " Josephine Rankin assisting the cussed and debated topic—was one of | v oot (CETIRHNE The Bettiements —whs | captain. The girls sang several songs, the problems considered here last | pctt ol G PICPATIRE to Moet the | toliowed by “Taps.” and the meeting | week by the Amerlcan Soclety of | petHIatives o other countries Wholadjourned ‘at & o'clock. The glrls are Newspaper Editors, whose members | piiion 'r:m"‘h = f'[‘,";) oo """"' making plans to entertain their par- represent some newspapers in the | GO T e ek P oo g | ents at an early date.—Seribe, May that | United States. Casper S. Yost, pri informed them that the. American | =" in-| dent of the society, called the preva-| Government inust decline their re Wilson flence of crime in the United States | quest for a further loan of $33,000,000 4| national disgrace. and proposed that| Wntl] they agree o terme for puyin the memt ]”“x‘ m:;p: o ("x';fl" back the $15,000,000 still owing this handling of crime | country, wd that publication | he ).mx.,sx..\ Debt Commission is | of crime news is one of the dutles of | now in Washington preparing to. dis | the newspaper as a matter of public| cuss their debt. and Senator Henri rmation, but he deplored the de-| Berenger, the new French Ambas- liberate pandering to vicious instinets | sador to Washington, reached the city in the publication of such materfal. | on Thursday of last week. He, it is | understood, "will take up negotlations > |over the French debt where they were 1| left off recently Coincident with hearings now in ither | progress before u committes of the explosion occurred at the mine of the | House to investigate forelgn monopo. Jamleson Coal and Coke Co., at Farm- |lies, such as rubber, Secretary of lington, . Va. About 3§ men. it is|Commerce Hoover, In a speech last | | feaved. lost their lives | week before the banquet of the Na {tional Automobile Chamber of Com- n\lfln‘e in NP\\‘dYol‘k. revealed definite st 20| plans now under way to combs ears in the future, there is already |Probln®\Ien WaY K¢ murf‘;fl"ehce' estingdiscussion concerning_a | {ePiSm, Wit something : stink on concerning St 4 . Mr. Hoover safd that | 4 drati 1[)\\ xex::;rfgl'; pre. | & Scheme has been approved for the wpper e § | expenditure of millions of dollars in 17. 1926—PART 1. tralning for second class began learn- | @ minstrel show. ribe, Joy Butler. | ing Morse code and putting it into practice. The second-class Scouts fin- hed work on their laundress badge oop 21 was first formed in 1915 by Mrs. McElroy. At that time Narcissus was chosen the emblem and yellow and white were the colors. The fol lowing year a troop flag was bought and became troop property. That flag has a long, interesting story, but for the last few years it has remained in the attic, hopelessly dirty. Too dirty for any use as it was, the captain decided—so with nothing to lose and everything to gain—the rest reads| lke an advertisement. The flag came back to No. 21 laundered fresh and fine as ever. Myrtle Alderton was elected flaghearer, and is now in charge of it. The meeting closed with ““Taps.”—Scribe, Laura Brund- age. Troop 60, Betty Adams, hel Myers, seribe, oper with patrols in cc peppy five minutes of “fiying Duteh man” the opening exercises held. The troop is working ha | second-class, but the new candid: Scouts are cloge on their heels. Cap Adams showed the girls how to drax captai ed fts mee Troop 37 of Woodslde held n meet e ing Janua Tho businens wan first taken up and it was decided that pa- | trols should be formed next week Several of the girls passed all but a few parts of thelr tenderfoot test. Those who had already puased the test played games or read up whout e Ara. thelr wecond-class teat. ~Tapa’ closed | e et i s e rotliing the meeting—Scribe, Frances Bene-) SOV €TI0 & fre: o & det. Current News Events Summary ‘of Important National, Foreign and Local Affairs Specially Arranged for the Convenience of Students I approve the Haugen bill to establish | a_division of co-operative marketing | within the Department of Agriculture. | The duties of the new division would | be to help the Co-operative Marketing | Assoclations in disposing of thelr » betterment of mankind. The |crops and spreading technical in- important of the league's ac-|formation among the farmers. It car- | tivitles now under contemplation in- | ries an appropriation of $223,000. [clude “the coming disarmament con-| w0 el o ok, ference and a proposed economic u)n—!"iod'j Senihcve Lanaiey of Kooy e { violation of the prohibition laws, I govern- | & final appeal to the United to death | Supreme Court and resigned his seat Alexander Nikulin, and thereby set.|last week. Now he {s preparing to! Na <ome old scores. During the |serve the two vears in the Federal the regime Nikulin was a govern. | benitentiary, in Atlanta, to which he| ment spy, and through his activities | Was sentenced. more than 200 revolutionists were |tried and executed. He fell into the clses of Troop No. 10, a business meet- ing was held. Iive new tenderfoot pins were awarded to new members. Questions on the history of the flag were given out to those who had not passed second-class. These were to be studled so the answers could be written next meeting. A bed-making class 1s to be held Wednesday at 3:30 at Capt. Hazel Scanlan's home. A hike | Is also to be tuken.—Scribe, Dorothy Reed. Troop 38 was called to order by the captain, with 20 girly present. It | being the first meeting in tho new | year, new officers were elected, as fol- | lows: President, Katherine Hensly: vice president, Margaret Kldd; secre- tary, Mae Sizimore; treasurer, Hester Slas; color guards, Jeannette Richard- son (bearer), Rebecca Hensly and Lula Kid; scribe, May Withauer: patrol leaders, Lucille Miller and Betty Jane Wright. A sick commit- tee was also appointed which includes four tenderfoot scouts and all girls| holding no office. A dramatic com- | mittee was appointed which will plan | the social meeting for the month of | February. Betty Jane Wright, Kath-| erine Hensley and Margaret Kidd | were voted for. A new dramatie com- | mittee is appolnted every month to| act for the following soclal. Plans | were made for a hike as part of next Saturday's meeting. The girls are to meet at the Lyon Park Community House at 1:30. Mrs. Brown and Mrs Withauer are to take charge of the hike to see the Falls Church Scouts. The meeting closed with the promise and laws, and The Star gled Banner.—Scribe, Mary Withau Troop 40, Mrs. Conrad I. Young,| captain; Ruth Schreiber, scribe, met | Friday in the annex of the Chev Chase Presbyterian Churc | Henry was invested at thi Those who have passed tenderfoot worked on their second-class tests After a long meeting the girls were dismissed. ! The League of Nations celebrated its seventh birthday last week, and a dispatch from Geneva says that {league circles are confident that the has embarked upon a useful of international co-operation We Guarantee stors ROUP STOPS ¢ captain, meeting Friday eve- ning in Calvary Church. During the opening ceremonies Evelyn Walcott was presented with a copy of the January American Girl, in which her poem ‘appeared on the ‘“beholder page.” She also received from na- tional headquarters the book “Girl Scouts in the Adirondacks. A game was then played reviewing the his. tory of the flag. After this Lieut. Shaughnessy took charge of the glrls interested in merit badges, while Capt ;"ngh»\' instructed her group in fire prevention. meeting ad Journed at 9 followed by court of honor. *rhe Hou esterds failed to reach a vote « 1o appropriate 70,000 penses sreliminary up but olution defray ex delegates to a ment conference in order again took a re of s Troop 26, Margaret Tuckey, captain; Dorothy Stubbs, scribe, held 'its regu’ lar meeting last Friday at 4 o'clock. Classes in second-c and first-class work were held. od-night circle closed the meeting. As Miss Cleaves, Troop ns m, t will ; | The Russian Bolshevist President equest ¢ 4N | nent lust week sentenced it the 1 e he confer rsed to pers the captain of could not be present, Betty took charge of the meeting. Formation and inspection were first, and then veral interesting games were played. After that, various girls practiced for tests and a few more games were played. The good-night circle followed.—Scribe, Sidney Jones. T o'clock, Indorse Conference. ter imitte Republican, Ohio surma th the w Troop 13 held its weekly meeting at the parish hall at East Falls Church on Saturday, January 2, at 3 p.m. The meeting opened with the practicing of the operetta, after which opening exercises were held. Capt. Bonell asked the girls to come next time prepared with a mirror, fiint, steel and scorched linen. She sald we would go out in the woods and try to make a fire without matches. She plained how to use these. —Secribe, Betty K. Harrison ent wid ind a step | of matio Lily-of-the-Valley Troop, No. 29, held a regular meeting at the home of Mrs. J. Peyser. The meeting was called to order by Lieut. Schwartz. Later a letter written by Capt. Miller was read to the troop. The girls were very glad to hear from her, and hope she will soon be able to attend the meetings. The meeting adjourned following patrol corners.— Scribe, da Stein. tion or treatment. Safe, s economical. Mrs.Wm. J Keyl of Red Bay, Til, say +‘Pratta Roup Remedy is poitively best thing I know of for roup. I have v. Democrat, ent for the Washing- ted from tried it sooften with the best results and would not use any other.” pr Wilson action to accept t “In death, who Glen Iicho met meeting. | | Friday night at 7:30 Commu- nity Hall. The meeting opened with the promise and laws, then the salute to the flag and The Star Spangled Ban- ner.” They were Instructed in draw- ing the flag. The clove hitch and sheep shank knots were practiced in preparation for the tenderfoot test. Later patrol corners were held. The meeting closed with singing “Little 2 Want to Be a Tenderfoot" Scribe, Vivian Wade. he Girl Scouts of ts Roup Remedy [ Tablets or Powder ) at the The meeting of Troop to order at its usual place. After hav. ing opening exercises, some signal ing was practiced. Games were played and a few Songs were sung. Betty Adams, captain; Rose Okun, scribe re, Democr was adled itative Lin Maryland =d can participatio the Representative Fish an amendment re- esident to insist that the Amer delegates introduce a resolution designed to outlaw nations waging wars of nilar proposal b d by the H re considerat ? tion, on the ground that it woul 1l advised to accept the invitatic then attempt to ap a ) not mentioned in i Troop 30 held Its first meeting of | the new year on January 8. Capt. Reld gave Helen Sudduth and Mdr. jory Menois their tenderfoot test. The troop is making preparations for a comical negro wedding. The girls hope that the m' or the audi torium of the school will be finished in time so that it may be used. A |trees, flowers, birds, etc. small fee will be charged to see it.|chose Lily Mae Raba a This is to enlarge the treasury. If| After the business a d this is successful the troop will try A few games were played. boih d belind Pr Euher stgrver ar mone; 1 returr-d Sold and Guaranteed by F. W. Bolgiano & Co., Dicker Bros, B. B. Earnshaw. N. 'Frunk & Son. K. Hopkiue, W, Janes & son. Wm. M. Lee, . Mann & (o H. . Pillsbury. 3. P. V. Ritter's Sor Garrett AL Sillivan, lderson & Hasden, P.T. Morun ¢ Troop 45, Mrs Wilma Sterba, order at 7 o'clock with present. After dues were much_information was gained from the Girl Scout book In regards to Curri fbe, wa The regular meeting of Troop 21 Narclssus, was held at Petworth School. After opening exercises, the troop was divided into three groups Those training for tenderfoot wrote their composition on a pet. Those questing There were two mine last week on two succ explosion in the main Degnan-McConnell mine near Wi ton. Okla., buried 105 men. Following the regular opening exer- Telephone, Southeast Store, Lincoln 44 Northwest Store, Main 3233 SPECIAL CREDIT TERMS FOR JANUARY SALE Telephone, $25.00 Worth of Goods | $50.00 Worth of Goods | $75.00 erd\ of Goods = [ i $1.00 Cash $2.00 Cash | $3.00 Cash 1 $100.00 Worth of Goods, $4.00 Cash . Balance on Easy Payments to Suit Your Convenience Although expert opinion is to the effect that another war is at least 20 GROUP HEADED FOR D. C. ite prope jator TO STOP SUNDAY WORK Nation's Hadesward Gallop Seen by Reformer to Bring Relief Ap- peal to Coolidge. e Associated Press W YORK, Jan 16 —Unless ibbath breaking they allop to hell.” Noah ct an of the thCrusaders’ upon h r his way to mmittee sk Congress to suspend inter: ce on Sunday Cooper and his committee also unday observance law t of Columbia, and will > abolition of Sunday and the state cc to the The crusader asserted that the “hell of divorce, high taxes, murders, the despofl homes and youthful prodizality,” all follow in the wake of Sabhath breaking acts If we don’t keep Sunday. just as God told Moses to teach the world, we to ruin fi sally Every person or church money in a Sabbath- husiness is inviting God's We may seem to prosper. but ruction will come at last.” POWELL HIGH SCHOOL ADOPTS TRAFFIC CODE Stud nts and Teachers Solve Prob- lem by Using System Same as City. Keep moving!” “Walk!” “Watch white lines! Keep to th out of No Man’s Land! Such sl on posters of orange. green, blue, te d black, greeted the students Powell Junior High School, Hiatt place and Lamont street, when they launched their aign for good traflic hablits. The placards were follow-up devices designed and executed by art students after general discussion and formula- tion of traffic directions by students and faculty. The present congestion demands traffilc conference; more than that, this young but flourishing school community expects a boom in its citizenry in February to the ex tent of 100 new rookies. Something had to be done—and it was done. Miss Bertie Backus, principal of the achool, in explaining the reason for adopting the traffic regulations, said “Powell Ju Hizh School opened Februa ith an enrollment of tudents. 'm we have 510, h of to the ngton, with th of solving our loca ining ourselves in in our efty made, instructions ed, white lines ; and the stage given, patnted po: ne the dawn of a new school day mark on steps greeted th the pupils eager to stampede striking posters greeted it's quiet this morning.” came the volce of one boy, a member of the student traffic commission Then he, too, fell sile “A_still ton makes a wise head,” and on th wall, “Talk less; think m: Still thinking, he came to the * ested no’ thorough- fare du school hours,” made his “right_tur " and kept moving ds his destination. Accosting a low pupil, who was apparently loftering at a c r, he was told, “Oh, this is a boulsvard stop.” The lower corridor to which he me was teeming with pedestrians aveling north and south in the zones reserved for them. The center zone, n's Land,” was at that instant In a moment a teacher aj in the neutral ‘territor: p out of No Man’s Lan d the vouthful traffic commis- sioner to Miss S—-, the offender. A little rookie, whose daily classroom vaceine against bad grammaritie has not established an immunity against childish idioms, overheard the student commissioner’s rebuke to the tea Chivalry and fruth prompted ineous_retort to the upper- Aw, Miss grader, man.” —_— His Theory of Color. From the Scientific American According to a theory of Prof. Julius Stieglitz, all dyes and pigments are so constructed as to have a positive atom which is short of electrons closely ad- acent to a negative atom possessing L surplus of planetary electrons, and the pull of the positive atom on these clectrons sufficiently detaches them rom their allegiance to the negative ) 10 enable them to vibrate to the stimulus of the passing light waves. t when he read, | | sentative Johnson in the House. This {bill would conseript not only men of | [ military age, but would put the wealth | of the country at the disposal of the President in war times. One of the ed purposes of the bill is to make war so unattractive to everybody, rich land poor alike, that Congress would hesitate a long time before plunging the country into a confliet. A tale of crime and butchery rivaled in the long story of Mexican banditry found the front pages of f ¥ I week under a date | b . in the State of | | Michoacan. Bandits entered a train as | | passengers and when near that place | Jocked the doors of the coaches and set { about robbing and butchering the pas- Sengers, escaping unhindered into the mountains. Fully 50 persons were killed by she bandits. Fortunately, there were no Americans on board. According to the Mexican govern- ment, 4,000 government troops round- ed up the bandits the following day. The President last week appointed Philip S. Teller of California to be a member of the United States Shipping Board to succeed Myer Lissner, who recently resigned. Mr. Teller is a busi- ness man of San Francisco. With Gen. Pershing on his way home from Arica. where he has been head of the plebiscitary commission seeking to carry out the plebiscite to| determine the nationality of Tacna and Arica, MaJ. Gen. William Lassiter, op- | pointed as his successor, sailed for Arlca last week from Panama. upert Hughes, novelist and pi mrngrrz, evoked o storm of discussion hera last week which had its echoes from all over the country when, dur- ing an address before a banquet of the Sons of the Revolution, he described George Washington as a “profane, i religious and pleasure-loving man e was rebuked by members of the <oclety for thus defaming the name of man who has become an ideal in this ountry, but he replied that he sim- soukht to plcture Washington as | and not the schoolbool 1 | paint him. He based his descriptio on history. but others countered t history warranted nothing of the sort. Congress. ye of North Dakota, ap- pointed by Gov. Sorlie of that State to Il the vacancy in the Senate caused by the death of Senator Ladd, was seated last week by a vote of 41 to 39— winning by a bare margin the po- ‘ition he has fought for, and which, & short time ago, there appeared little possibllity of his attaining. While party lines were disregarded, Senator Rye owes his victory to a coalition of { Democrats and insurgents, with some regular Republicans. He was elected s a Republican, but is considered a Progressive-Republican.” His ap- { pointment was contested on sround that there is no law in N Dakota providing that vacancies | the Senate shall be temporarily I'by the governor's appointment. L law exists in the majority of States. | hew Senator is 33 vears old and, with the exception of oung La | Follette, is the youngest man in the | upper branch of Congress. The spectal Senate committee which {nvestigated the Internal Revenue Bureau made its report to the Senate last week and charged that a total 0,655,360 had been improperly lowed in exemptions by the bureau. The report criticized many of the methods of adminigtering the income | tax by the bureau, and recommended | { corrective measures for incorporation | in the new tax bill, now pending in the Senate. un- e was The re nue bill, carrying tax re ductions, is about ready for report to the Senate from the committee which has been considering it, and the chances are that it will displace the World Court, now before the Senate, for o time at least. No one in the Senate—not even the most enthus- Senate—not even the most enthusi- astic proponents of adherence to the try's wrath by delaying a vote on the tax bill. Senator Simmons of North Carolina, ranking Democratic mem- ber of the Senate finance committee, announced his intention of having the tax bill reduced by $500,000,000. But the administration leaders look rather coldly on the proposition, as the House reduction of $325,000,000 is con- sidered by Secretary Mellon of the Treasury to be the absolute limit. Senator Simmons has let it be known that he has no intention of delaying action on the tax bill in inssiting on turther reduction, however. Favorable report was made last week to the Senate from the public bulldings and grounds committee on the building bill, which would make available $165,000,000 for building throughout the United States, $50,000,- 000 of which would be spent here in Washington. Favorable report on the same measure is expected from the House committee, and as the adminis- tration is backing the plan as an economic necessity, the measure prob- ably will be enacted during this Con- gress. After hearing the pros and cons of many plans to help the farmers with their surplus crops, the House agricul- tural committes last week voted to. i | and head | hope to add to their knowledge of establishing a rubber supply by Americans which will make them in-| dependent of the British and Dutch | monopoly. The money would be con- tributed by the automobile industry,| in part, and administered through 4 | corporation which would grow rubb9r| in tropical countries not under Brit. tsh domination. ! Each person in the United States| had $43.62 on January 1, which is 27 cents more than each had on first day of Decembe:r of last year according to the calculations of th Treasury Department for the per! capita cicculation of money outside | the Treasury. The figures are, of | course, theoretical, and not actual. | The peak of the per capita circu latfon was attained Nov mber 1, 1920, when it reached $52.63. This com pares with the per capita circulation for January 1, 1879, which was $16. The anthracite coal strike, now more than six months old, will go on After a conference which held high promise of peace once more in the coal flelds, the miners and operators | broke off ‘negotiations in New York | last week. The 158,000 miners who | went on strike so gayly last Septem. | ber will remain idle.” Mearftime, the | country, which has been reading about " attempts settlement and | burning soft coal the while. has | shown little interest in whether the | miners and the operators get together | or not. The Government maintains | strict silence, while the operators and | miners go about blaming each other for their stubbornness and failure 1o | recede an inch fro ions | Focete) ey m the positions | | Aviation. Aviation still occupies a pro part in the news of the day. deapiie the fact that Col. Willlam Mitehen | has, for the time being, retired from | the stage. The most interesting part | of the report of the Navy approprt. | ation bill to the House last week | was the revelation that the Navs | favors construction of another diri. | gible to replace the Shenandoah and | a general expansion in naval aviation, | although some economies would be | forced in other lines of the ervice | It also developed that the House ap. | propriations committee favors dis continuance of the Lakehurst avi atlon station, although the Navy does not side with this view. Hearinge were begun last week befors the naval affairs committee of the House on the proposal to replace the Shen. andoah, with high naval officers testi- fying. ‘In_ fourteen hundred and ninet two Columbus salled the ocean blu the old rhymne goes. Some time this month a Spanish aviator is planning | to “hop off” from Palos, where Co.| lumbus started his epochal vovage. for South America in an He intends to fly to Buenos Argentina; thence to Brazil Peru, and the United He then will return to Spain by way of E and, his entire voyage, according to aleulations, consuming about two months Science. Sclentists from all over the world Journeyed many thousends of miles to observe the total eclipse of the sun, which was visible along a | stretch 80 miles fn width and ex tending from Central Africa to the Philippines, on Thursday afternoon. Had the day been cloudy or overcast their trip would have been in vain, but telegraphic reports from various localities in the eclipse belt indicate success for the most part. Sclentists inent ! airplane Aires, Chile, States the corona obtained by the totall eclipse of the sun which was visible In this country last year. Music. Wilhelm Furtwaengler, director of | the Gewandhaus of Leipzig, one of the famous Old World symphony or- chestras, is soon to take up the baton to conduct the New York Symphony Orchestra as its guest conductor. In an interview last week in New York | he declared that symphony orches- tras in the United States now rival the best in Europe and this country is in a position to take the leader- ship In this form of art. He said that jazz_will have the effect of giving | symphonic composition more rhythm, a characteristic, he Said, which ha | been neglected since the days of | Richard Wagner. Yale Preserves Wild Life. What i3 believed to mark the first step by an educational institution in the direction of preserving wild life, both animal and floral, for the pur- pose of study has been taken by Yale University, according to the announce- ment of Dean Graves of the School of Forestry, says the Our Dumb Ani- mals magazine. Setting aside 200 acres of the Ray Tompkins Memorial tract near the new Yale golf course, the university will make a park where the wild ani- mal and plant life of Connecticut can be studied in its native element. —_— A rich man has something about him we all like, IS $1.00 66¢ WORTH The great bargains of the big January Sale are going rapidly- you will regret it if you This Big Money Saving Also Includes Our Rug Department— Regular $150 Wilton Rugs..... Regular $115 Wilton Rugs Regular $95 Wilton Rugs..... Regular $75 Wilton Velvet Rugs. Regular $60 Velvet Rugs..... Regular $50 Axminster $1.00 Delivers Genuine Round Fiber L colorings—60-inch Settee, and are absolutely $150 values. five pieces Beautiful ten-piece Dining Room Suites, in one of the newest de- signs and finishes. Chairs have slip seats covered in genuine leather. 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