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NELOEG LEAS LATNS 10 ES00 Ambassadors and Ministers of 21 Pan-American Nations in Party. Led by Secretary of State Kel- logg, as chairman of the governing board of the Pan-American Union, 4mbassadors and Ministers of 21 Latin American republics departed from the Union Station at 9:15 o'clock today aboard a special train for Philadelphia to participate in “Pan-American day” at the Sesqui- centennial Tnter ional Exposition In the party were: Dr. Hernan Velarde, Ambha or from Peru: S. Gurgel de A Ambassador from Brazil; Don Miguel Cruchaga Tocor- nal, Ambassador from Chile: Tr. J. Varela, Minister from Uruguay; Francisco Sanchez Latour, Minis: ter from Guatamala: Dr. Enrique Olaya, Minister from Colombia; Dr. Ricardo J. Alfaro, Minister from Pan- | ama; Don J. Rafael Oreamuno, Min- | ister from Costa Rieca: Dr. Richard | Jaimes Frey Tinister from Bolivia; Hannibal Price, Minister from Haiti; | Benor Luis Bogran, Minister from | Honduras, and Dr. S or Castrillo, | Minister from Nicaragua. | Prior to the departure of the official | party and while it was assembling | in the President’s room of the station | the United States Arn land gave a| 16-minute program of Latin American music at the entrance of the room.| The band accompanied the party, and | is to have a prominent part in the exercises at Philadelphia. A feature of the day's observance will be the ceremony at the forumn of the founders. There the national flags of the 21 Latin American na- tions will be raised from a semicircle of flagstaffs in the court of honor. As each emblem is raised, in alphabetical order, the national song of that coun-| try will be played by the Army Hand.‘ At the same time a gun will be fired for each flag, constituting i~ all a national salute of 21 guns for the 21 | nations. sa REVOLT AT “SLUSH” CHARGES ALARMS BACKERS OF VARE | t Page.) (Contimued f leaders protest, is the faithful Repub- lican electorate of the Nation's banner G. O. P. State called upon to for- sake party lovalty on the slush fund issue. The commonwealth gave Hard- ing 700,000 plurality in 1920; George Wharton Pepper 350,000 plurality in 1922 and Coolidge nearly a million plurality in 1924, Absolutely noth- ing has happened in the estimation of Pennsylvania Republican chieftains to induce the State to turn its back on the party for which in the past it has hitherto rolled up these tremend- ous margins of victory Expect Sympathy Vote. Vare spokesmen even talk about the “sympathy vote” that is coming to their candidate from Pennsylvanians who “resent” the Senate's rude intru- sion in the State's election affairs. Yet all concerned recognize that events have converted the 1926 cam- paign into the kind of a fight Penn- sylvania Republicans have never be- fore had to wage. To meet the unfamiliar peril is the G. 0. P.'s acknowledged task. Danger is not discerned in the State’s 600,000 or 700,000 normal Democratic_votes, for against them is a normal Repub- lican vote of hing from 1,250,000 upward. What is worrying Vare managers is how many ordinary stal- wart Republicans are going to stand for Vare? How many of them, like Gov. Gifford Pinchot, refuse to “stand for” him and will vote for “Billy* Wilson, Democratic and Labor party candidate? How many ordinarily stal- wart Republicans, even if unmoved by the slush fund ue, are unprepared to “stand for"” Vare on the prohibition issue? How many Pennsylvania work- ing men, who usually vote the Re. publican ticket, are going to desert the 5. O. P. next month and support Wilson, who has the indorsement of labor? It is also asked how many old-line THE Republicans are going to follow the Philadelphia Public Ledger out of the Vare camp into the Wilson lines? How many Republicans of the George Wharton Pepper breed, who, before the primary, advocated “throwing Vare into the river,” are going to vote accordingly 11 days hence? And, es- pecially and particularly, how many Pinchot Republicans, who voted for the governor in their tens of thou- sands at the primary, are going to “scratch” Vare and mark their ballots for Wilson? These are the redletter questions which one finds G. O. P. managers in western Pennsylvania asking them- selves, and asking in only thinly dis- guised accents of alarm. In the same breath the dangers in the situation are acknowledged they also are made light of. It is on his sopping wetness that Vare's leaders expect to puli him through. They are evidently persuad- ed that Pennsylvanians, broadly speaking, are far more interested in their liquor than in their politics. They profess to see no signs of a groundswell, to say nothing of an earthquake of moral indignation over the slush fund business. Whatever swell, or quake may develop will be drowned out, they allege, and washed away by the wet flood which is ‘weiling up in favor of Vare, light wines and beer. They seem ready to make full al- lowance for the slush fund protest vote, for the Pepper sorehead vote, for the Pinchot bolter vote, for the Wilson labor vote and for the dry Re- publican vote, and still willing to claim that Vare will carry the State by a huge margin. One of the Pitts- burgh organization leaders assured this writer in all seriousness that “Vare will probably outstrip ‘Dave Reed’s record senatorial plurality (1922) of 367,000.” Even in the Pennsylvania Demo- Drink E returnable are often the result of irregular elimination. Magnesia, the efficient laxative that has no weakening effect. For your health’s sake, insist on Sealed in new non- for your protection. H EADACHES A Remove the cause. EVERFRESH Citrate of MAGNESIA | bottles i politicel universe, Pennsylvania | watchers in batches run into big| money. The plain implication in cur-| rent G. O. P. plans is that the 1926 election may prove as luxurious an affalr as the 1926 prima From the western Pennsylvania Re publican standpoint there will be noth- | ing unjustifiable about that. Sena-| tor David Reed has just reaffirmed at Washington that there was “no evi dence whatever of fraud or corrup-| tion in the Pennsylvania primary dis-| closures.” It is on that version of the | slush fund that the Republican organ ization is asking Pennsylvania votel to disregard the principal allegatic now levelled at Vare. They are asked o blame the 3 comings of the p not on Republican leaders. Voters are besought to remember that “Pennsylvania s a big State.’ that it has nearly 2,000,000 voters an that it cost Mr. Vare $150,000 simply to mail a harmliess leiter to each one of them. On no account, organization system and | candidates and | — *0:22 BOSTON OR PROVIDENCE Sunday, October 31 Special Through Train via Hell Gate Bridge Route | Leave Saturday Night, Oct. 30 Lv. Was| on_(Union Station) i:10 P.M. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31 Ar, Providence W Boston. N (South_Station) Retnrning. L HE H R R ation) P Prosiden 705 P Bunker Church: Hill U Monument: Ol arvard | University s Tongfellow's Houne: - Paal' " Reverce]l | House: Faneuil Hall: Roston Common:(l | Museum of Fine Arts; Numerous sight-J] | seeing trips by auto. Pennsylvania Railroad BN Parrs for STEAM HOT-WATER and ‘ HOT-AIR PLANTS Stoves and Ranges | Complete Stock of Andirons Fireplace Grates Spark Guards 0il, Gas and Electric Heators Stove Department | —————— | Second Floor Rear ‘ | | Rudolph & West Co. 1332 New York Ave. Main 4870 Established 1835 E C LOTHING EQUATIONS <. FABRIC& STYLE + TAILORING & FAIR PRICE Goy “Parker Boy” Suits at $ pairs of knickers and come in about all the fabrics, styles and shades a boy could want. There are lots of other to say about them, but there's more * shop to room in the boy. the newspaper. 15 have two gooa things talk than in Let’s finish the story there. Lumberjacks in Bold Plaids—$6.50 Others range in from $4.50 to $8.75. Boys who love the ou of-doors find them just the thing for sports and camp. Sizes 6 to 18 years. Shaker Knit Sweaters $4.85 to $12.00 /%’ $71 Shoes “Rerivtared™ and Oxfords chilla, wool linings which add to their appearance. price Chinchilla Juvenile Overcoats at $16.75 Genuine Germania Chin- with smart plaid All the leading shades— . blue, tan, gray, cinnamon. Others from $10 to $25. ~wa e —— i For Boys Sturdy Shoes for school wear. Boys know these famous Teck Shoes for their fine' quality, style and fair price. Official Boy Scout Shoes—$5 and $5.75 A complete size range of these popular Scout Shoes. Rugged, extremely well made, with rubber heels. officials everywhere. Official Headquarters fo Recomiended by Scout r Boy Scout Equipment A Barber Bill Shop Where Kiddies Enjoy a Haircut The Avenue at Ninth * NATIONALLY KNOWN STORE-* cratic strongholds including the min- ing counties around the Scranton- Wilkes-Barre regions Vare people con- tend that Wilson, minor himself, will be stopped in the House of his wet Democrat friends. Doubt Senate Unseating Move. As Vare managers hereabouts pooh- pooh the possibility of his defeat, so do they snort at the suggestion that the Senate will ever deprive him of his seat, should he be elected to it: The United States will pry open a pandora’s box is the way one dis- tinguished Western Pennsylvania Re- publican official puts it. “If Vare should be unseated,” he added, time may come when somebod: “the will open up the question of how Southern Democratic Senators are elected. Some- body may even want to know whether ‘Jim' Reed ever got any financial as- sistance from the German brewers of St. Louls. Some one may even be in- auisitive enough to ask how it comes that Utah Mormons are always able to put their own men in the Senate.” Joseph F. Guffey of Pittsburgh, Democratic national committeeman from Pennsylvania, Is authority for the statement that “Wilson senti- ment” is running over the State like a prairie fire. It is creating senti- ment for Judge Bonniwell, ths Dem- ocratic candidate for governor, too, although leaders do not expect Bonni- well to amass nearly as impressive a vote as Wilson. The gubernatorial candidate is an Christmas Card Special Liberal Commission Oash in Now Call 7:30 P.M. to ® P.M. 412 Albee Blig. STEVENS 1113 G Street offer a Saturday Value!!! Featuring Silk Chiffon HOSE Silk to the Hem Exquisitely Sheer $1.55 3 Pairs, $4.50 Exclusive New Shades— Ban Tan Vagabond Silhouette Cherie Beverly Lido Silk Hosiery —Exclusively N EVENING S'I"AR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER: 22, outspoken wet, while the senatorial nominee is an equally uncompromis- ing dry. They seem to be conducting their own. respective campaigns, and voters give no indication of holding against the Democratic ticket the fact that it is arid on top and moist underneath. “The way things are going." said Guffey, “we shall reach Philadelphia with a ‘majority for Wilson and Bonni- well, including Allegheny County. Make no mistake about the immensity and intensity of public indignation over the slush issue. Also the Re- publicans would do well to realize the impression Senator Norris, Republi- gan progressive of Nebraska, is mak- ng on the voters of the State. It is a long time since the moral aspect of politics has been as effectually stress- ed in Pennsylvania, as Norris by election day will have depicted it in Here's one of our exceptionally good shoes for boys Note that it is designed along the strictest anatomical lines—wide enough to allow full five- | outcome of which no Republican can 1926. every voting center of the State. “I am too old a hand at politics to overestimate Democratic possibili- ties in this State. But unquestionably Pennsylvania is undergoing such a ferment as made Robert E. Patterson a Democratic governor a generation ago, and therefore something, the afford to predict with cocksuredness.” (Copyright. 1926.) ‘JeWis Considered, ‘1 Tonight! 8 P.M. toe room for natural growth. Built for comfort and long wear—uppers of strong leather and soles extra stout. 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