Evening Star Newspaper, April 9, 1926, Page 26

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26 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1926. B”IZENSHIP ASKED Dry Agents Padlock' PIN[:H["' [}HARGES copies of long liste of names sisned | MAN IS GIVEN PARDON ~ |LIONS HEAR PEACE TALK. |t tcics en antton of Tiome Ciune | Gesme & -Lawie, Tom Eranany,s, - —e in Wilmington, Del., May 2 Schick and Harry Claflin. W. C. Vil vere taken f he official files at were taken from the officlal flles at | pap A5 YEAR-OLD THEFT James Sharp at Club Luncheon| Dr. George T. Sharp, W. J. Brown,'ler, president of the club. presided Blo‘ Tree Harboring A oo SAloh: hé -aagerted were roof of the perjury and i 5 Urges World Comity. 4 forger. A Fifty-Gallon sml o e Vare oot ot o] MFH Ferguson Frees Contederate| Urees World Comity. & i reached last night for a statement | Veteran Who Lived Four Decades SIPSCRID (O S The S S | = E = in connection with the Pinchot should wi toward the settlement of INVESTIGATE y Under Another Name. disputes between nations by some —— 2 e charges. | SR X April 8.—For {K, 1hé Aduoeintaill Preay | other method than by “forming two | | groupg of men to shoot down each Islands Governor Here Urg-| hierie on i; s :f,‘:.”.‘;'.ur;f,‘lu: Vare's Sensational Campaignf DELEGATES ELECTED. | avsmi. mex. awit am. & cal other when they hear no personal ani- Humboldt County, northern Cali- S [ Hoins & Eantedarmte vatetan; wakpab A. | mosity,” James Shaip, prominent lo ing Rights—No “Japanese fornia, has been ke e Also Featured by Perjury, NEW YORK, Aplfl 8 (®).—The|doned vesterday by Gov. Miriam A. s g ‘I";r:::‘:"‘r:l‘"’“" Sl va Episcopal Church in - the United| Ferguson for a crime for which he | 4l business man, 1 il" an fl{“’f'?" = Peril” Seen. r.breaking tree six miles from Governor Says. States has elected 10 representatives| was convicted 43 years ago. .‘:1‘1;\::\";1:"\‘:{:.‘ ‘}’nf.|'e‘;’\\lé:1'::«du\",n: i AURORA HILLS.VIRGINIA 24 feet SE to attend the World Conference on| Calhoun was sentenced in 1881 10 urged the developiment of a broader, i i i | deeper and better fellowship among Before You INVEST in a Home B i r. A hollow mber ReTg Faith and Order, which meets at|two years in the penientiary for stgal individuals and between nations. “If Full American citizenship rights in| in its base concealed a 30-gallon | ge .y ociated Press. L ftzer By _ e e = A il Asi {ero- ol 2 | .. ” Lausanne, Switzerland, in August,|ing cattle. He escaped after serving the continental United States for per- | ML g At wne | PHILADELPHIA. April 9. Gov. | {827, it was announced iast night. ' 54 days and took his family to Derid- | we want good will the best way to get i Bawallan Istands | (00, ioke disanpedredsthibugh ¢ [ Einchot; one of the canaidates in the | They. inciide: Bishop Edward L. o "0 80 sty 11t 1s to get rid of &Ib animouity, 'he R Delne il e o the tolisie. Entramea | Wrianglar race for the Republican | Parsons of California, Rev. W. | der. La., where he lived four decades @ said. ”“"»f.r:.‘:r“’:.‘r' e ihe CpAb T As conEealad | nomination for the United States |by Bell, professor at the Virginia | under the name .. Dozier. Later lace ' R. Farrington, €0VSrnor | 01| ofcanvas palnted Lo reserble thes | Sannie. last nightdeolaied that Whitle | Thestnelon) Sesinary: Ry B LT D e e Emwalls mow i Wkl A T St sale forgery of the signatures of | Rogers, rector at Sunbu a. sed man declires rring by the ni at | voters had been discovered in the | Frederick C. Morehouse l)fAHIM»qup ent of the charge. | gration nulhm'ue« of Hawaiian-born The “padiock™ ix a notice on the | [ Ll U A 5 tior Now ¢ children and my grand of the tree 2 & g petitions- filed by Repre- |editor of The l,l\,[ng Church, ow my children and my grand of hinese or | Side of the tree warning all that | iam S. Vare, who with | children ecan go through life under Americ s other Oriental origin i ome the | the treeis in the hands of the law. |00 Be Whartom P 4 | | thaic cieh d € on ' Pepper | bt names,” he said, upon re most ticklish political question in the | ¥ T n candidate for the senatorial | VOtes Confldence in BISIWP Bast. | ceiving the document that freed him | NEW YORK. ApMi 9 (®).—VYester- ‘ur the fear that some day he might | islands. Gov. Favrrington hopes to | Leaves $30,000 Estate. 4 achieve progress in the -em‘rm “»flfl | Spédial Dispateh to The Star “I charge.” sald Gov. Pinchot In|day's session of the New York Kast |have to serve out his uncompleted | solution before returning to Honolulu a formal statement, “that perjury | Conference of the Methodist Episco- | Prizon term. A 'l'oonl POWDER At the end of .\;u!h His Bt ivites are LOGAN "f;" "‘- "f:{-‘-(_:“lj;.[ji“:"-""-‘:’ and forgery are now added to ballot | pal Church voted full confidence in | . DoN g Ll e o over | honds valued at $30,000, Mrs. Anna E box st talsification of election. | the integrity of Bishop Wilton Bast of | A general wage inerease of 15 cents Cleans Teeth Safely pArment. which has jurisdiction over | bonds voiuel at S50.000. Are. Anna o -wide sticker | Copenhagen, Denmark, who was re-|an hour has heen granted to members - iy 26, chos & dlie life < 1) seandal of the Vare gang of Phila |cently sentenced to serve three | of the Boston building and decorating {ian S s ’.?L'w‘ '::w,‘.x o fnmh}“,'.,\“”.;;‘ ¥ e o '.'{h' ‘(;q.‘: { delphia.” months in jail on a charge of misap- |trades. The new wage of § ‘Wards off decay mmigration authorities is i a e no i3 Phe b o hibited photostatie | propri charity s our will be e v I Ap Siates immigration aithories b5 % lof the city ainec the d he governor exhibited photostatie | oropriating charity funds. hour will be effectlve until Apr mertal rather than practical husband, William Jacks, 12 tance, for it is the establishment o <ons helieved ) " eather than facilities to exer- She had 1 it on any large scile, that is r ought. What now happens is that searched her home and chen a Hawaiian-born American citi- [ bank box in an effort to find a will R : —— % . 2 zen of Asiatlc blood to enter | if one had been left . - U C f F the United States nei: = - ; : T e ; Use Crisco for , ‘ \ se Crisco for Frying tion authorities refuse to recogni developing a v profitable tourist 5 Ll % g birth certificates or United s | industry To us came 60,000 visitors # o 2 Fc h l ’ l l f . , ; g, T ish. It’s Ideal for passpofts carried by these America s e b A citizens, even though under governor savs that the people full authority by the Territorial gov- rerr . ar .. rylng an ng ernment at Honoinlu of the Hawaiian fifth civ C. Achl, jr. an American citizen of Chinese-Hawaiian ancestry, was | of it. Oahu, in istand of Ha- Stopped at San Francisco on his way | Wall, has been described by Leona fo Cleveland as a delegate to the Re-| Wood, governor-general of the Ph puhlican national convention. | tppines, as “the key to vur whole posi- Step fo Recognition. SRR W ° o “Prompt and unquestioned recogni = — — ) tion of American citizens born in | S a Hawaii, when travelling to any part o On countEs. aays Goy. Fareine: | ynagogue ’ al s or ls ton, “is another step needed to com- | Services Tonight, 8 P.M, plete the recognition of the Territory | cel of the United | 6th St. Synagogue as part _and parcel Staies The immigration authorities | Professor . 1. Smert S At present disregard the birth certifi- | b msetinmrn e [} cates which are evidence of the Amer- fcan citizenship of persons of Oriental | origin. The result is interference | with their right to travel freely in | their own country. The Hawaiian | qs‘ckne.’ and Legisiature in 1925 authorized vernor to appoint a commission to | Proceed to Washingion and present | | dampness go the matter to the appropriate de- | tments and to the C Ehin, on e Sume W) | tegether, (None Sold Until T “The prohibitory practic v in | t vosnt 1 Concierea s "y 15| | Werneut speut- ne S50 ntu 1 omorrow the end of our last fiscal year about | 000 o tica f Hawailan birth e e o | | M@-Will cause | | Setordioy Worrs e Tatsons e | | Both. Proteet e ay Morning) tion, including testimony of 5 credible witnesses. There have been property and a few isolated cases of fraudulent use s iil.'?.'.'?“f?i.,déi} feamen: | | health by using »-: aws VAPI‘C smuggle . " recognition instances. There imt the slightest an a8l danger that the country will be . inundated with orientals of American citizenship from Hawaii. I suppose It outlasts many times that the maximum of persons of that | | w R . % eccription who mizhi seek to enter| | ordimary commercial | : ? the United States would not exceed § ; 10 or 15 a month—iess than 200 a sheet metals o .g : R . g W S / vear.” : SOLD BY Predominance of Japanese. ! | ALL GOOD Japanese continue to he the over whelmingly prednmmam racial element | SHEET METAL pEan | ekt || RARRTT . R We bought 28,800 first-grade Hawalian-bors, and, therefore, Amer. | & 0. 3 jcan citizens. As compared to 35880 i g Americans. British, Germans and Rus- | - Ay A ¥ ¢ : . sians in Hawaii, the other leading! [} 3 i #h Tt S b ; vacial s arve 49335 Filipinos. | 930 E Street N.W. 3 o : ; qllallty I V‘V E I ( \/ E_quart Size sroups 27,470 Portuguese, 24, hinese and | Washington, D. C. 145 Hawaiians. The unique popuia- ¢ S i e || waee - o EREEd galvanized pails for this sale. Gov. Farrington extols the loyal | Americanism of the Hawaiian-born of oriental pedizree. With rare excep- | ¢ | & RPys N B AN .' tons, “he claims. it is bevond ques. | > e : Eay ™ S ¥ nh O r e b tlon. The governor ridicules the 3 i % L Y LY u S Ores es pal S theory that the day is cominz when | Japanese of American citizenship i e B i e ORI P be in great demand. The pails e S e | T W b R are not being given to you free, able to enjoy them. The sway of as Japanese nationals But Americans in the islands don’t, | Car and Sea Sickness at once, giving | | : 5 O R 4 L4 helieve any danzer threztens from perfect comfort on your trip. 5 S 4 AT . . that direction 7 . TR § SR DA u are eln l l “Hawaii is prosperous,” Gov. Far- f Pri 3 g, 5 Rt 3 l ls ea rington declares. **We ship more than | $10.000,000 worth of our products to | - % 5. & 3 - W % . apples. Then coffee. President (ool idge’s refusal to reduce the tariff on G g | Giln . G than we paid for each pail, in ol ¥ 7 TR “ carload lots, and there are two S o o i R e ' carloads of pails in this offering. A first quality Galvanized Pail, TWELVE- : quart size, is something which every housewife u r O f f er to that a new, delicious, dif- ferent center, and you have has use for. Get one at this very low cost when buying this soap offering. The quantity of soap listed to the left---and Here is the O ffer— one lz-quart Galvanized Pail. s 1 Pkg. Small Chi gyt S . oy . ination :;o;usthomerrmé.businm"mnlém}e 2 2 Cakes Star Soap b ; Comblnatlon for 59C a party, or a dance. Just before that last drowsy moment when you tumble into bed, . let Sweet Puffs bring you sweet dreams. - - B gt e, Tt % ((:::ll({es {Ma:dc) l“’hlte Note:—Galvanized 12-quart Pails such as we offer are o o b ey e .) 1vory Soap selling'at 33c to 35¢ regularly in various stores in the city, 2 Cakes Guest lvory Soap as determined by various purchases made prewous to this Value of Soap - - - - 45c | sale. Including a 12-quart galvanized pail worth 33c to 35c. This an advertising offer on soap. It will not occur Soap' 2and Pail for - - - - 59 | soon again. Better get one tomorrow. :

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