Evening Star Newspaper, January 24, 1926, Page 20

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Organization Celebrates State Day, January 29, Ev- ery Year With Banquet. MARGARET B. DOWNING. in Washington conduct irs exactly as those who re in the homeland. and in conse e the State Soclety of the Sun sion fs unique in local unnals y that it has a flourishing member &hip totalir almost 500, but it meets ¥ on year. This mesting i State day, the the ter main the north th wind »Yspring wind and w Kansas, ed into the e States. Ever sinc Kansans have in their annals, & e bent on h family no d all their ach suc t than \ speak Janu in the the patrioti 9 is declared a he Kansas ¢ 1, and all day patriots pour in. listen to orations on the founders of their Commonwealth, talks on their material have concerts and recep- in the evening there Is a et spread in the larg city contains, and all overfiow well tuken care of by vari ees of citizens and pro- h every comfurt Nociety 30 Years Old. State back 4 soclety when he Washington first as a wember of the Viftythird Congress. But it was a political body of strong Republican idencles, and prospered as its party prospered. During the eight vears of the Wilson tenure it all but expired. A few loyal Kansuns still got together, but reg meetings wera few and far bet But when Warren . Harding was elected the Sunflower State Soclety loom and took on i and importance among orzanizztions. William on. now head of the Tariff C of the society. reorganized it ron-political lines with a dis soctal bent and introduced the a custom of having one great on Kansas day and expending me und energy all on this 1t N the Spring 9 vne of the { the Winter. the fate of so many well hat this date coincided with en. after two and high wind lapse of the Knicker- ¢ members of the society seiduously to make that n epochal affair guests could not come the raging storni. Gen s the guest of honor, but ke S0 any others. departed to | could 1o the | nde: all the aid they ims of the Knlckerbocker. tor Curtls, who was to have honors with Gen. Pershing, was de. tained at the Capitol and was di- verted from joining his people by the disaster Undaunted By Trouble. But, undaunted by this depressing occurrence, the Kansas Society has inued {is traditions, and the offi Sena. shared Club and was most brilifant dinner par- of that season. More than 300 Kansans sat at the board, und great men and notable women from the State answered the toasts. Each vear since the banquet has approached more closely those which mark State day in Topeka. Last vear's hanqu Chase (‘luh one of the ties the prairie land, who the wheat girl.” and who to euch guest bug of flour for w ent officers of the Kunsas William Smith Cul- | president; Mrs. Charles E 11, first vice president and act- president since Mr. Culbertson salled; Miss Margaret Hanna, second vice president; Merle Thorpe, third ident: Mrs. Frances Crossley, nd Mrs. C. B. Kincaid treasurer. The advisory committee is made up of Senators Curtis and Ca Der and of Representatives Daniel R. Anthony. Hemer Hech, Jumes William A Ayres, J h W. H. Sproul and U 8 ilays B. White, former mem ingress, is also on this board. n of the e fng her, er. = guests of honor, and 1 e will be Represent: tive Robert Luce of Waltham, Mass., who will give an address on the part which the \47('1.11‘ and Massachusetts ved in the admission | the Union Repre v Bascom Steagall of il give the Southern side ase. Senator Curtis will be The banquet will be Wardman Park Hotel, and an 300 Kansans have written T names as patrons of the affair. The feast begins about 7. After the 4 and the speeches there is the THOMPSON TO SPEAK. Federal Trade Commissioner to Ad- dress Woman's Group. Huston Thom Yederal Trade the speaker at n of the Woman's atic Club, at the clubhouse, onnecticut avenue, \Wednesdav The subject of Mr. Thompson" will be k From the W which he ss the agr pituation Representative Raine, Wriff at the last luncheon JEWS IN #nnual Affair of Cantors’ Body in New York February 21. Invitations have been extended to Washingtonians of the Jewish ith to attend the annual concert of Jewish Ministers Cantors’ Asso- tion of New York, which will be given Sunday evening, February 21, at the Mecca Auditorium, New York City, to benefit needy Jewish minis- ters of the Nation Three hundred cantors of the or- ganization will unite for the occasion and &lyp 2 program of Hebrew music. © of the will be program National e o1l fa th But | ‘i When in New York et, | ) the State | spoke on the | VITED TO CONCERT | Tanm s Fona Left to right: Willlam Smith _Cul- bertson, president; Mrs. Frances Oroas- ley, secretary, and Mrs. C. B. Kincald, treasurer. LEESE IS BACKING INDUSTRIAL SHOW C. of C. Head Asks Support | for Exposition to Be Held March 3-13. The industrial exposition committee of the Wa n Chamber of Com- merce will recel the whole-hearted | backing of A. Leese, newty | elected president of the organization, according to announcement by that . xposition be held March the next big event on the er's program and every member give his utmost to make it the ne of should ¢ kind ever held in said Mr. Leese. *I exposition committee | every 4 ¢ 1s my firm conviction that Wash- tngton should become more thoroughly acquainted with this important side of itself, and I think of no better way of achieving this end than by marshaling all of the city's industries in such an {event as the exposition. Commercial | concerns play a vital role in the eco- nomic well betng of the National Cap- i adily seen {n recent ow that products last year were statistics. w manufactured he 4 At S72.000.000 That these products ranged from automobile accessories to hairpins is something that I believe the average tonian does not know. Expansion of these businesses along proper lines i= something 1 be lieve every resident of Washington { would welcome. They will see the in | ereased opportunities for emplovment | for aduates of our school system, ! who now are forced to go rclsewhere | to 1 | cial ““This important item in the | chamber’s program and one that merits and doubtless will receive gen- eral and unfl Rudolp ! the rman_ of . stated that & made to assem- ble in 1 shown truly representative sens of the handicraft of Wash- { ingtoninus Asks Limited Divorce. the number of exhibits which | THE SUNDAY OFFICERS OF KANSAS SOCIETY. Mary A. Bishon Will Sustained. The will of Mary A. Bishop, dis- posing of an estate valued at $50,000, has been sustained by the verdict of a fury before Justice Hoehling in Circuit Division 1. Florence Col- lins, & half-sister. filed a caveat to the will in which she was not re- membered Attorneys George P | Hoover and Arthur Peter defended | | the will. George U. Seitz has asked the Dis- trict Supreme Court for a limited divorce from his wife, Margaret Seitz. She left him July 4, he says. They were married at Richmond August 3.1 ve no children. | s | Miss Roma Stew Premier of Prince the fi daughter of the dward Island, is to qualify for the that province. {} Live at Forest Hills Inn—fourteen minutes from the center of the theater and shopping districts en- tirely under cover from Pennsyl- vania staton. Golf, tennis, horse- 1] ba . A hotel catering to 1 ng transient and per- '} mane uests American plan. vear | Forest Hills Inn Forest Hills Gane | Write for B T lustrated K. HALPIN. Manager. WHEN Y;)U NEED A KEY| You need our imstant Duplicate Key, 25e Bring your locks to the she) TURNER & CLARK Basement 1223 New York Ave. || TEST FREE | & Dull—Unfit Watch a sparkling drink change things in an hour Often men and women rise in the morning feeling dull and unfit, be- cause the system is clogged. The poisons and wastes depress them. There are long ways and short wavs to a remedy, but the shortest and pleasantest is this: | "Drink a glass of water on | either hot or cold. Add a litt Salts. It will make a sparkling, ant drink. That will flush the Note the radical change The results come from ids de- rived from lemon and grapes, plus lithia, etc. And they are at your command every heur of the day. Learn what Jad Salts mean to you. How soon they can change condi- tions. They may save you countless hours of depression. The coupon will bring you a liberal sample. Ask us for it—now. Wyeth Chemical Co., Inc 898 Madison Aveniie go8 sadizen Avenio " FreeTest Mail me a Free Sample of Jad Salts. 23 e e e 3 3 e e e T ke T ke Tk e sk sk e sk sk e sk gk e e sk sk sk sk ek ek ek ek ok e kokok STAR, HEBREWS T0HEAR S, SLVERNAN Noted Jewish Worker Will Speak Tonight at Adas Israel Synagogue. Mrs. Archibald Silverman of Provi- dence, R. I, one of the most promi- nent Jewish women In America, who has won the respect of all elements in Jewish life for her services to the Jew- ish people, will lecture at the Adas Tarael Synagogue, Sixthand I streets, tonight at & o'clock under the auspices of the Washington Chapter of Hadas- sah and the Districi Zionist organiza- tions. Mrs. Silverman spent lust Spring in Palestine, closely investigat- ing the recent developments in the Jewish national homeland along the lines of social justice, and will give a vivid description of this visit Understands Problem. Having traveled widely in forelgn countr| Mrs. Silverman, it was pointed brings to Jew. ish problems sympathetic under- standing with the out- standing Jewish move - in the work of the Amer- Assoct WILLIAM ULLMAN Automobile Editor 1 Jewish Relief Committee, during | dation and n ccupies the position of ho ‘e president. In all the s for the Amer WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 24, ican Jewish Relief Committee during and after the war, Mrs. Silverman was conspicuous for her untiring work. A leader in the Zionist ranks for many vears, intensely interested in every phuase of activity for the re- building of Palestine, at the recent World Zionist Congress at Vienna, Mrs. Silverman was one of the two women-—Miss Henrfetta Szold, presi dent of Hadassah, being the other— elected & deputy delegate of the inner actions committee of the World Zionist organization Member of National Board. Mrs. Silverman is a member of the national board of Hadassah. She is also a member of the women's com- mittee for the Jerusalem Synagogue Center. During the past year, Mrs. Silver- man has spoken before capacity audt- ences in many important cities of the Unired States on the establishment of the Jewisn homeland in its relation to Jewish problems the world over. Her recent address in New York at the McAlpin Hotel where she was the principal speaker was acclaimed a rterpretation of the Two Sentenced to Penitentiary. ¢ in Criminal Division 1 has sedtenced Kirby E. Dellinger, a former railway mail clerk, to serve two years and six months in the penitentiary. Dellinger stole pack- ages from mail znd when hix home w is sadd $6.000 worth property Justice Bail the \ents here, she | cred For violating the Mann act jamin F. Nalley v in the per 011 He took an 18- Washington to ged. Yy s W LNy Ay 1926—PART 1. GET NITROGEN FROM AIR BY FINDING CATALYZER American Scientists Put Industry on Practical Basis by Success in Solving German Puzzle. By the Associatad Press PRINCETON, N. J.. January 28.— Nitrogen from the air now can be produced in America upon & practical | basis, according to an announcement | made today at the Palmer Laboratory, | Princeton University | This is possible through the discov- | ery in the nitrogen fixation labora- tories of Washington, associated with Princeton in the work, of the catalyzer missing from the German formulas. During the war, the Germans pro- duced nitrogen for explosives and fertlizers by this process, but the great Muscle Shoals plant, which was | bullt for the xame purpose, faled to | | -fimwmq tradefor | udebaker| Pouer Durability Finish | Bumsteauswormsyrup To children an angel of merey. VER FATLS SAN rections are followed IT NEV cld everywhere, e t. C. A. Voorhees, M. D | | Philadelphia function because of the catalyzer. The nitrogen fixation laboratory had dlscovered that the adoption of small quantities of alkaline oxides In the fixation process increased the vield of nitrogen, sufficiently to make the process practical. It also was found that these substances emitted positive electricity in the procest. To determine the nature of the positive current, apparatus wus built missing at Princeton by Prof. H. D. Smytl and Dr. H. A. Barton. Their experi ments showed that the positivels charged particles were single atoms which had_iost one electron, knowt as jons. This confirmed the theors of Prof. Hugh 8. Taylor of Princeton, who recently suggested that thy presence of certain chemicals intensi fled chemical activity under the prop er circumstance, without ente into chemical ci Commercial Garage and Showroom L Street Near Conn. Ave. Two floors and cellar. Over 10,000 square feet. Alley entrance, with automobile elevator. Excellent location for taxi service. Near May- flower Hotel. Lease for term of years Thomas J. Fisher and Co., Inc. 738 15th St.—Main 6830. 1.2.2.2.2.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.8 ¢ Automobiles Coinci.dent with the Automobile Show, which will be held in Washington next week— he Sunday Starc January 31st Containing a full account of the purpose of the Show, a complete list of the new cars, the outstanding features of each, together with a description of the new acces- sories, body finishes, motor improvements, etc.—so that when you attend the Show you will publish a greatly enlarged Automobile Section will be well infermed concerning what to see—and how to see it. It will be a real Show number—full of unique features—instructive, informative, interesting—gathered and prepared by William Ullman, Automobile Editor of The Star, and his staff of assistants. Automobiles and automebiling occupy a leading place in the public thought these days—and The Star’s Automobile Section is accepted as a reliable encyclopedia on Particularly will next Sunday’s issue be a comprehensive and exhaustive one—going into details concerning every phase of the motor question —body design, engine type, price, etc.—those things about which you will want to know—including the progress on the roads to date, and what is on the program for the immediate future—treating the entire subject with impartial fairness — so that the motorist can rely upon the information given as being a dependable guide in making this interesting subject. his motoring plans. v mobile Section—next Sunday—January 31st. N If ycu are interested in the subject of automobiling—from either standpoint—com- mercial or pleasure—you’ll want The Sunday Star’s special Show number of its Auto- 1 2. 6.0.£.6006.008008006080608080800808°500000.08.¢.¢.8. *k W XN YN OO NN NN M MO O O N X O N YO X

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