Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1927, Page 7

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TDMWLLATIEN) MEETIG TONEAT Dyer to Be Speaker at Ses-| sion on National Repre- sentation for Capital. for the the mass interest of the Dis at the impletec ade, arrangements held in ntation Final meeting to he national repr trict of Columbia this eve Willard Hotel have been officials of the Board of 18 sponsoring the move announced More than sentative citizens of Washir offiolals and meimber attend the s The princiy resentative Dye digcuss the movement for a ment which would gr: child city" the righ dent > P men. held under Ington Bc vital impor residents of Official re the 50 citi Distriet, which c ized citizenry of t the meeting. Theodore . Noye the committec of + on national rep the session wi tivities of 190 B other groups interes: ment. A bill now is pending which would recogr taxpaying District r a voice in their own which would provide for ment to the Constitution of the United States granting to Wasl zens representation in the the House and the privi for President and Vice Pr _Brief addresses will Edwin C. Brandenburg man of the Board mittee; Paul Lesh, committee men of othel the organization. PLANS SHOALS HEARING. by vice chair Trade's com ry of the of chair s of House Committee to Begin Lease || Sessions Tuesday. By the Associated Pres The Mu Shoals problem was dis cussed in secret session today by the House mil committee. The committee decided to begin hearings = Tuesday for all interests which desire to lease Muscle Shoais The propo: must, however, include | a contract for manufacture ol lizer for the. farmers during peace and be prepared to turn over the works to the Government during war for manufacture of nitrates Any proposal, the committee de. cided, also must provide for contin- uous operation of nitrates plant, No. 2 SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and Sailings From New York. ARRIVALS YESTERDAY | Thuringia—Hamburs Mongohia ¥ -:w-u.mu'.u 8an Tuau—La G DUE T(u)\\ Araguasr-—Bermuda George— Bermuda t. John's outhampton and Cher E TOMORROW velt—RBremerhaven pLon penhagen vives—Santa Marta AEXPECTED ARRIVALS AT NEW concagua—Valparaiso . Adriatio—Mediterranean Algunia—Liverpool . American - Merchant—London ‘American _Trader—London Antonia—Southampton livar—Puerto Colombia Carlier—Antwerp Celtic—Liverpool erviise | Laconi; Majestic—Southampton Manuel Apnue—Cadiz Maselll Mexico—’ 5 Minnewaska—London Moreas—Piraeus . Musnchen-—Bremerhaven 3 Scoga—Trinidad astores—Puerto Limon ident Adame—World criiee Haves—World_« nd:m Polk—W Lee—Havana Bo(l\lmboxm—flmr- Roma—Gen BoterdnmeRotterdam San Loreno—san iian Samta_ Elisa—Valpar tavenger fjord—O; ransylvania oW Upited States—Copenhagen Venezuela—S. Western World—B Blasrow enos Alres 00 PM. | Noon Buren-—World | 5:00 P.M LING TOMORROW Doric—Mediterranean Munargo-—Nussau Bogota—~Cartagena Rk es—Maracaibo ‘.\pdk—(nmnhum 1:00 P | flower Hotel ittorney, « ¢ | comptication of dise To Urge District Vote REPRESE! TIVE DYER. STEEL SPECIALISTS HOLD CONVENTION Rection Meeting 250 Delegates. | McCracken Will Speak. ists of the eastern sec- | today f the ting at the May \hout 250 delegates the country opened a | session for Steel with in atcendance J. G. Yaden velcomed the neeting this mo »f ingerest to the steel indv Outlines Industry Here. Gathmann Baltimore, detailed review of met: ivities of the Washington-Bal re district, outlining the growth f the industry in this vicinity during Scentific papers were Merten of Pittsburgh Jordan of the president of the Fed Citizens’ Associations, eel men at the e program al topics Emil ve a past decade ! by W. J W. Quick and L. Burean of Sta This afte livic me the de will of them going to Balti inspect the piant of the Bal timore w.m,u 1 ng and Co., while others will visit thi States naval gun factory tes more l'm)wl Banquet Is Tonight. | The delegates will assemble socially | @ banquet tonight, Com- | chief of | v De: of the lmmnmm\ imiral C. C. Bloch, f Ordnance, N: w Bur n rtment, t, will be guests of horior and dn | liver brief addresses. The convention will cl night with a technical session devoted | to a consideration of abnormal steel. The meeti are purely informative | ind there is no business to be trans- wcted se tomorrow | Sl:ter of Late Funeral Todw for Attorney. Miss Mary E. Darlington Joseph J sister of Darlington, local | her 1610 | Tuesday night after | due to a s culminating at residence, street, ness. Twentie a long in pneumonia. She was about years old s Darlington was born in Due | and came to Washing- | making her home ner hxu(hm until his death four She is survived by two Anne Darlington and | Simpson, both of ices were held afternoon. | Funeral at_her residence thi | with American So- | | jobs here % | THE EVENING REPORT CUSTOMS QFFICERS ARRESTED Buffalo Evemng News Says Two Canadians Caught for Liquor Smuggling. | By the Associated Press Buffalo oms officers ha been arrested within the past 10 da at the American end of the Fort Erie | charged authorities ferry over the Niagara River. by the United States liquor smuggling nadian and Ameri ned to discuss the ca Officlalg the News says, are known The first arrest w Ferguson of Fort days ago. when the ferry, 2 quarts of whisky. accordi to the American customs records. was charged with smuggling and leased on bail, and later was dismi from the Canadian customs sei The second arrest came yesterda when Louis Lamb of Bridgebu Ontario, was found to driving car hlleged to have contained quarts of ale. . LEE WINS CLASH that of Al Ontario, automobi e tain 2 OVER APPOINTMENTS| of Exceeding| Speaker, Accused Rights, Upheld by Vote of Maryland Assembly. Special Dispatch to The Star Md., January Brooke Lee of Mo gomery County. of Delegates, exceeded his were made in jand Assembly s gate Daniel C. down. Speaker Lee stated in reply to seph’s charges that he was willi that the House should make pointments and offered to cancel that he had made. As speaker he in charge of appointments. number of applicants for dorkeeps clerkships and other places had Jected, because only a limited nu: -ould be taken. Joseph said t itments should be made by tion. Lee explained that no & were taken e mpamliu aSNOWSTORM GOES SOUTH. ‘th Wind Sweeps on Toward Colorado From Wyoming. DENVER, Colo., January 20 (#).— With the mercury near the zero mark, a north wind today drove Snow across Montana with the prospect the storm would continue through Wyoming and || Billings and into Colorado tonight. Bozeman, in southern Montana, | ported temperatures of 6 below zero | with a fine snow fa\lml 1J ackass Speed Ban | ToBeLiftedif Ohio MiSS DARLINGTON pies. | Repeals Old Laws | By the Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio, January Ohioans with a flair for sports soo may be able to play games o Decoration day or even race jackass faster than six miles a hour At present, however, such activ! ties are specifically forbidden. Archaic statutes containing in- hibitions against these and other actions popular among Ohioans of a half century ago have been un- earthed and will be repealed if legislative bill is approved. In all some 200 obsolete sections in the Ohio statutes would be re- These include drunke the bill. penalizing moved by paragraphs stage drivers and punishing those who would “crash” toll gates of !nrnr)lku ening News says today that i u fcan customs but the sallent facts was found to con 264 20. speaker of the House authority in making appointments to legislative | the Mary- ; on today by Dele Joseph of the fourth 3altimore district, but promptly voted Jo-| LIEUT WRENN DIES. the ap- A large been ex who could not 20.— and still be within the law. THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1927 THREE SERIOUSLY INJURED IN WRECK | Engine Jumps Track and| Piles Up Six Cars Near | Hancock, Md. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 1Virginia Recovers Rare Colonial Book Taken in Civil War From Stafford Court By the Associated Preas ELIZABETH, N. J., January book of records, said to contain wills of relatives of George Washington and proceedings of the Stafford Coun- | Virginia, after the society decided to ty Orphans’ Court of Virginia during |return the relic, caused Mr. Mcll Revolutionary days, was turned over|waine to make the trip hecause he to H. R. Mcllwaine, librarian of Vir-|was “afraid the book might be I ginia, by the Union County Historica . Sm‘(",\' today. 1 wills in the haoi The book was taken from the Staf-|those of John and Henry Washingtor ford County courthouse in 1862 by I.|the degree of whose relationshin a member of the Union |the first President was not le WII.I.IAM D. RITER DIES FROM II.LNESS Burial of Attorney Will Be in: Salt Lake City—Served Under Harding. ces, which flrru,v(Pd the lmlM‘le a Civil V battle there I reached the oty after pru through the hands of several persons. Communication with Gov. Byrd 20 rned Spectal Dispatch to The Star HAGERSTOWN, Md.. January 20 Three trainmen were injured, prob- ably fatally, when a Western Mary land freight train jumped the tracks 1t Woodment Club, just west of Han cock, early this morning, turning over | the engine and piling up six The ictims, brought to the Washington | County Hospital here, are H. G. Hunt gineer: W fireman, and Hoffman, tor nature of their injurie ascertained. All reside in ve T 'ain Nips Foot Of Section Hand Asleep by Rails ve of se, Special Dispateh to The Star HAGERSTOWN, Md Marvin Wells, a section hand of the Western Maryland Railroad is in Washington an 10 le, January town was tied up several hours wccident. the cause of whic | |has not been fixed. The train | running at scheduled speed from Hagerstown to Cumberland at the | time of the accident. No others were reported injured On aceount of several previous acci dents and reports that sympathizers in the long-standing wage dispute be tween the Western Maryland and striking employes had been active, an investigation immediately started by officials of the railway will be ex haustive ARCHITECTURE IS TOPIC. Praises Amer- 20 William D. Riter, years old, | former Assistant Attorney General of » with one of his fe the United States and recently a| 1 night he lay practicing attorney of this city, die ;I'\“ ”""‘k :"1;' Hancock e i & ves, to take nap, and whi in Walter Reed Hospital yesterday| gslumbering threw one af his fee after a long illness. across the rail. When he awoke Appointed Assistant Attorney Gen-| the dust and clangor of a pa eral by President Harding April ng County Hospita He re. ed n beside where he ay, I8, a Howard Walker Type in Lecture. The American people are becoming sincerely interested and more thor oughly apreciative of individual types | of arehitecture in choosing homes, C | Hloward Walker of Boston stated in an illustrated lectu on ‘‘American Domestic Architecture” last night at Central High School. The lecture was iven under the auspices of the Wash-Y ington Society of Fine Arts, Miss Lella Mechlin presiding. Mr. Walker pointed to Monticello the famous home of Thomas Jeffer son e of the finest examples of uthern colonial architecture, as well 1 other homes along the James River B iy B the histavy: (S Vixginfa Capt. Gordon C Greene Dies. anuary 20 (P ene, 64 vears old ene line of steam- the best known n the died suddenly nere today. ican By the Associated Press nt coast as: ng Titjiiciss Matal. to) Oiicer 'at, Fort| Huachuca, Ariz. Lieut. William B. Wrenn, 10th U. S. Cavalry, died at Fort Huachuca, Ari: last Monday as the result of injuries received while riding, Acruldlnz y War Department advices s from Pennsylvania and du- ated from the Military in 1924, all is er, ¢ ‘uu\lm of the ican Bar Associatfon and the Bar 1897. Traffic Is Delayed ters, Miss Virginia Riter and Miss | harbor and departing ocean liners aboard, wh'e pler at midnight with 665 passeng and train he was minus the foot 1921, Mr. Riter served in that office | Assoclation of Utah, where he prac He served in the Philippine Islands | Helen Riter. | Incoming at sea or tied | bound for Hamburg outhampton Withey limer For until January 15, 1924, when he re. tired 10" enpage i e vractice 'of| DENSE FOG HALTS ticed law for many ve: as a par nerof Justice Gaorge Suthesland: at as a member of the Utah Light Arti lery in 1899. He was a thirty-second | The body will be taken to Salt Lake |were held at anchorage City tomorrow for funeral services|up to their docks in the harbor. Ferry was forced to tie 1 tine. Visibility limited to 1,000 feet made 250 passengers, anchored antine private law here. He was a member of the District of Columbia Bar Association. the amer- LINERS AT NEw YORK lie: . | Many Boats Tied Up at Docks or| Salt Lake City Mr. Riter was born in the latter city and was graduated Anchored at Sea—Ferry in law from Columbia University in degree Mason. | iy anuary 20 | He is survived by his widow, a| NEW YORK. fanuary genss | son, Denton Riter, and two daugh-|f8 that Dlanketed the threw trafic into confusion today. RHO L0 ELUIoN service was delayed The liner Albert Ballin, with Alanson B. Houghton, Am dor to En the Royal Mail liner Araguaya. from | Bermuda. drop anchor off ndy He The Homeric of the The fog was likely to continue dur ing the day, the Weather Bureau reported. afternoon. hoats rivermen Quar- | « m he off | S wa ;;r Academy re- n n a n a d n n Plane and Fire Boat Scour Lake For Man Seen Floatmg on Ice Cakel| | By CLEVELAND. the stroke brings the Associated Press | Hoping | | some January of 20. that who efforts went forward | from the man or | for luck times those seem doomed to die today of Lake hoy sighted last Erie rishly ue water a + hobbing of reach of land the murk | lake and a | through the | he rescue at- | ance failed | sighted from | night on cake of ice just out An that cireling in hung the tug, nosing its way floes off shore, led But hours of v the figure airplane low over temp! to locate You need shore last night just as darkn closed. over the wat. James Vaneck saw it at the foot of Kast 140th street. notified author boat, John A. K rescue. Its searchlights played hours upon the rolling field of without success. The boat but back ight, of lite guards. before dawn went hunt with dayl ed by a_forc to A stiff wind blew shoreward today and added to the fear that the cast- away had been toppled from meager piling ice jam. only one fiour for all your baking, if you use the right flour Pillsbur Best Flm);f' for Pastry, Biscuits and Bread rom the pier ies and soon the fire rley put out to the returned to its moorings for a short time just its crew augment- foot hold or crushed in the ess “To Me, Violence is Fundamentally Morai” “Twentieth Century People Are Destined to Live in a Gloomy Period of History” He for ice the the The man.who uttered these opinions, is one of the two or three statesmen in the world capable of realizing his ideas in deeds. Benito Mussolini! A few years ago a private in the world war. Today, the most powerful ruler in the world; more nearly abs lute than any other ruler of a state the size of Ital) Mussolini has reiterated that Italy must have “breathing space.” Is this a threat of another tremendous war within our generation— perhaps within this decade? George Sylvester Viereck, has drawn from Mussolini skillfully an exposition of his philosophies and intentions. Viereck’s interview is searching and significant. Il Duce has ex- pressed his theories on democracy, on women, on war, on liberty forcefully and clearly. An interview which may forecast history! “MUSSOLINI SAYS” By GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK The Sunday Star and The Coening Star JANUARY 23, 24 and 25 e 7 OLD DUTCH SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY gLL- Fresh #5ix Sausage, Lb., 25¢ Usually Sold at 35¢ to 40c Per Pound Pork Loin Roast Whole or Half Lb., 28¢ Pork Chops, end cuts L&, 27¢ Fresh Hams 8 to 10 Lbs. Each Lb., 32¢ ":RESH FRESH Spare Ribs. . .1b.,22¢ Pig’s Feet, 2 lbs., 15¢ Smoked Hams, small sizes, Lb., 29¢ Smoked Picnics3 to 6 Lbs. EachLb., 22¢ The Finest Cuts of the Best Spring Lamb. Leg of Lamb b., 35¢ Shoulder Roast Lb., 20c Breast of Lamb Lb., 15¢ Loin and Rib Chops Lb., 45¢ BEEF — BEEF — BEEF Do Not Confuse This With Ordinary Quality. Prime Rib Roast Lb., 35¢ Blade Cut, Lb., 25¢ Newport Roast Lb., 40c Chuck Steak Chuck Roast Lb. 19¢ Lb. 17¢ Porterhouse Steak Lb., 37¢ Sirloin Steak Round Steak Lb. 3ac ' Lb} . 30c Lb., 27¢ Top Round Roast V4 Lb. 10c Sliced Dried Beef Not More Than 1 Lb. to a Customer at This Price BUTTER Lb., 58¢ The Fl'nesg, Full, Sweet Cream Butter Ever Sold— V4-pound Portions, of Course. Millbrook E'G GS, DOZ., 45C Guaranteed Fancy Milk Fed Stewing Chickens ¢ F(:ncy Milk Fed Roasting Chickens HOLLAND BELLE Lb., 33c Lb., 39¢ Exceptional Values on No. 1 Brands of Citrus Fruits Grapefruit, 4 for 25c Grapefruit, 3 for 25¢ Doz., 15¢ Medium Size Fancy Large Size Fancy Medium Size Fancy T angerines Fancy Sweet Florida Oranges (35c value) Doz.,25¢ . Note: Some of our markets have smaller sizes at lower prices, but not in sufficient quaritities to advertise. Medium Size California Seedless Oranges Limited Quantity Doz., 29c Iceberg Lettuce, fancy white heads, 9¢ & 12¢ New Cabbage, early York, Lb., 7¢ Sweet Potatoes 6 Lbs., 19¢ BREAD, 16-ounce loaf 6¢c WASHINGTON FLOUR 5.1b. Sack. .........29¢c 12-lb. Sack 24.1b. Sack. .$1.15 Pure Gold Syrup 1v5-1b. can, 15¢ Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour 2 for 25¢ Borden’s Evaporated Milk SMALL SIZE, 3 for 17¢ LARGE SIZE, 3 for 33¢ MUELLER’S MUELLER’S SPAGHETTI. . .pkg.,11c MACARONI.. .pkg., 11c SALADA ORANGE PEKOE TEA, V/,-lb. pkg.. . .43¢ VAN CAMP’S HOMINY,No. 3 can. ...........10c LE GRANDE PEAS, can. . . s . 10e Extra Tender Early June Grade TOMATOES, No. 2 can, 9¢c—3 for. . .. .25¢ THOMAS’ APPLESAUCE, No. 2 ct;n. SRR 'OLD DUTCH COFFEE, Lb., 37¢ Our Special Blend HARTLOVE SUCCOTASH, 2 for .. sise st COCOMALT, Vylb.can ......... Sassanceniai This Chocolate-flavored Malted Milk Preparation is Really Delicious Hot. Very Simple to Prepare. FISH—FRIDAY ONLY FILLET OF HADDOCK . . .. et L BUCKSHAD ........ .Lb., 28¢ SoaUT . i e L de SALT MACKEREL ......................Each,8¢ This advertisement applies to markets in the Dutfld A

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