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THURSDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1927, GALLIVAN BITTERLY ASSAILS U. S. DlPLOMATIC SERVICE |Declares Most Members of Embassy and| Legation Staffs Are Ashamed of Country They Come From. 4 = 0. C.DEFIENEY BIL IS APPROVED House Authorizes All Items in First Measure Affect- | A fal : Built Espec.|ally for ing Capital Democrats in 1900. KANSAS CITY PLANS FORG. 0.P. PARLEY ;Republicans to Meet in Hall| our represeptative in the Irish Free State, where Americans are popular, and where every citizen i a potentiai Amerféan, and where it is dangerous |to Dbelittle or apologize for Americs, Iwould we have more Sterling Amer ‘l.er in our diplomatic service and fewer Whitehouses of ilifame to make us blush for the honor and geod name of America. T hate to vote away good Amerienn | money for bad American diplomatic sorvice, for those who misrepresen 'us, who injure our od name abroa and our pride at home, men wnwilti or unable to defend and strenzthes, our policics and purposes abroad: an. T wish we would rid ourselves of d matic detrimentals T honor the White House here Washington: by 1 should like to « the Paris Whitehonse tha diplomatic service saecula saeculorim.” The, | Hous | resentative vigorously those holdi first fireworks oratory thed waters of the Atlantic came vesterday when Rep- | those of the ancient river Styx have | Gallivan of Massachuseits 4 strange chemical action on heart wssailed the attitude of and brain: the trip overseas causes important positions in| them to adjure their native land and tic corps | transforms them into the most b | nd especially th in I'n:\‘ ened Germans in Germany, the | W snni 3 or President | “In consideri the item for de-|intense French in France. the [ etiinm seniiee B con Breatnent || EniconIting it WEmHOR et Nt b RaSHem DRI e R LR e | penditures which will be found in the [ of them into denatured Amer [l G e bill now hefore us” said | ashamed Sl g allivan, 1 would o phi a1 thifies Kaerican Convention Hall once more phize It on various matters touchin Ty IS EeDIeROnE ARG ALY A it original purpose after being | g and appertaining She fo e hity A e he i i S Rkl BSCR Hes of the spirit and sentiment of of concerts, athletic Departmant to. cation rit and sentiment of | industrial exhibitions and imbassadors and Ame e | [events of loss importance than wations and lickspittles fiihb bl tional political convention. et ol to thit 5t ankrupts i cein Convention Hall] gage of bunk and betrayal. treachery Hepiien wccommodate 18000 persons. and toadyism, falsehood and flapdood] Cataunilo is room on the floor for | insincerity and insolence. exhibited el W altes | under the comprehensive name of sKmEsent | n diplomacy, for which we party, how ean | [ | . Cut them off a I older and themiom America the world what was ve diplomacy. rougzh productiv results “shirt-tail servile, socially nationally noxious pregnant hinges lien courts pit shed American the in i, Tike | | | By the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, Mo, fhe hall built especially for the atic which ad heoted ont of America od in the | The committen the triet tr other for Honse today of the defici appre Decem Al whole items the in Dix Demo- #h v bill - convention nominated | « mici ENVOY DENIES CHARGE. olumbia dminis mas! ation and many =i nt National a political mel publican national AT te ans of < made Dy of Boston eldon Whit were wit items of expenditure « ember i in the apital, including [ of charg Tand District present, Galliva Cor vesterday declared tion £300.000 1 the For of The (isition fon will| they boretum out foind national sorve | for | the tests, to honor of « scene ) other | na nic s b to Gallivan's char v of New York had h upon by the Ameriean en his recent visit to Paris, W1 said that he had wired Départment in response ent query that the char utely ridieulous and with tion In tion | that the relations be Bitehotise hat th by Wi French | present. 1 Olds, Assisstant partmene of Friends of the den X ze th, Miayor iod duri ® Fo o the ¥ for t day and hind to st 90,000 The ex hee S00.000 requested for in the land 823,000 allowed for White icanism. t to snobs tion® and enlarge. and S0 e nd detrimental ft Ameriea can we with such Protected by publican tals made demireps who have W Gov to rnment Printi wors hou State r will | Ther Ul de pay n zood 0 4 was ah founda onal Record | vena office. $1.000 apening, 32,000 for 000 fo tives? ind the we get vid of then the T or what? I do not ich the Republican nation s that such a F; Kansas City, Mo This is the first tis or Sun. printing mindex view of the hug r the 19 An exter committee pic Weste CONNOR APPOINTE WAR COLLEGE HEAD Forrrer A;de to Pershing Had Distinguished Career Dur- 1..'."‘,\‘1.3"‘:‘l”l,.',;;.i»il‘.k;‘,l_' e i State =end inall pr 0 ity ing World War. L delegation instructed for Mr. cilities Adequat this e it was declared 'n Walker a friendls Tunct o more robust days Hotel facilities in Ka ted to be adequate army of visitors who will for the Republican meetir A vecent survey by th Hotel Association showed ¢ to he fifth in the numk al hotels. Within five blocks from Convention Hall, 9961 hotel rooms are availal and 500 | of them are in hotels built within the | last two vears, Within a radins of 1¢ blocks there are 169 hotel rooms. | The Chamber of Commerce plans to | L appoint housing commitice for® se- | lecting the best in downtown hotels for the wiblican delegates v other visitors who will attend the convention he Chamber of Com- merce powertul force in winni the Republican event for this city, lnl\ul the $150,000 guaranteeing t of all expenses incurred hy tv in assembling its delogate: 1 City ar for housin, . were mayor was given i which officials Robert of the con M the here June. [ tional come next Na the v of com- vadins of and New and for Office. 1< allowe Lon one e Alabama Virginin utive two York isina, ch 5 or Was Shadowed. cently the mavor of the eatest in Am visited Europe and and of we have HUGHES SUGGESTED AS KEY SPEAKER AT G. 0. P. CONVENTION from Ameri inclu cret . v the N prosecuting The item continuing H re Rewarded suave Kentueky ity rica as everywhere repr Our in oil cases ry De of of on te. Americ unable Kentueky litional hecanse was rewarded with thy in the convention of its switch from the Den cratic to the ublican eolumn ir 1924 and I rined three hy rea son of th that the Republiean vote in its fifth th and fourteenth congressional 1 X ed the 10,000 limit < which east le than that of vores for the ! Lepublic s are allowed only o e " onal conven tion: thosc d it are allotted two de ‘The convention will meet in the halt which was built especially for the | Democratic national econvention of | 1900. ‘which nominated Willlam Jen-| o 0" barts of the Nation to write natlon i ;:r‘.nu.”;' v“"l;vllt"l:"i‘:l'vm et | the Republican platform and 10 choose e o 5 o held | e nominees for 1 ent and Vice cre sinee Bryan was nominated. (1€ B0 The hall seats 18,000 pe PERSIRG ample voom for all ns, and has . del tes and | A SR TS R L T VARE DEFEAT SEEN NEW REVENUE BILL IN SENATE ACTION REDUCES TAX CUT REJECTING SMITH TO BUT $232,735.000| coniimun ri > was as a i eharze to account g the knee in and shows the i door. approprintion pairs, Civil lowed & 1se matic try. | home sented Service Commission 13,000 avies in the Dis trict of Columbia, $82 for travel ing expenses and $6.000 for continzent and miscellaneons expenses. The mploves « pensation ¢ mission was allowed £ salari in the District printi and binding and payment of compensation The public building: parks of the National ¢ Towed $16.560 in tha Distric eral expenses with the proviso not mave than 37000 of this is able for uniforms employes The item of $R0.000 the dome of the r tional History Building in the nithsonian group was approved. was al Wrontinued w e days York Republicans ave likely to do now An uninstructed delezation from New York may e the outcome. The first of the presidential pre “In Republic disty N Dist numb 0 candic e in the that exee tes n o for | 100000 fo rooms n for held The it Hoover hut This $10.000 W and pital o tional nd 14,960 public It the wra delegation uninstructed, Known to be vorable to Hoover Will be first blood in the primary § contests, some 17 in numbsr, It i ed that Hoover supporters will en- primaries - practically 1 States, and that Mr. Hoover will sppose their doin he excep probably will States which have favorite sons for the nomination. whom the Hoover people will not care o offend That readi the wave of crime that is over the city has reached youth whe have adopted a weapon never hefore used in the police annals of Washinzton was indicated last night when two small boys used a_slingshot to hold up and rob another hoy of $1.15. which he had heen saving for Christmas, Morrison Smith, 11 years old. of 1333 Fairmont street was the victim of the crime. He was servinz papers when two colored bovs halted him at Twelfth and Euciid streets and demanded his mones One of the bovs drew a slin from_his pocket to enforce th mand and the other took the Christmas savings as young Smith handed over the money. Connor, com at Fort Maj mandinz the Tex., William 1 24 Division < h the wi m | g !m this city | commandant of the leze, at Washing Connor was ing's staff when the United tered the war against the powers and was awarde uished Service Medal - and tireless enersy. was chief of staff of the 324 Division in the trench operations in the Relfort sector and later command ed the 63d Infantry Brigade in the {advance to the Vesle. Since his return from France he « served as chief of the supply divi-|race was always between K n of the War Department general and San Francisco, with De commander of the United!ninz a poor third. At one time ther Army forces in China and as|was talk of swinging the San Fran- ommander of the 2d Division in|cisco support to the Michigan city, but | while a few votes were shifted, com- pavatively little strength _developed, and the plan was dropped. Talk of the | Corps_of | proximity of Detroit to “wet” ( Philip- | militated against the choice of that | city. particularly among the woman members of the committee Following the announcement of the approved for power plant equipment { Teturning to the United Statcs, tie | vistory of Kanmis City at the conclu- for the Bureau of Si ! | ervea at various posts and at one | *ion of the twentieth hallot, Which Was The Bureau of S time commanded the Engineer School |greeted with cheers, the dove of peace allowed an item not to exceed £11,040 |then at Washington Barracks. ’l»th:Puulnod and Xational Committeeman for expenditures in the District on |officer also served at the Army War jCrocker of Californi: the subject of sugar standardization, as a_ student and was an|cholce of Kansas Cit ngineering at the West [imous. His motion National Training School. Point Academy in 1903. the committee adjourned after it had For the National Training School | SeVer: important ¢hunp~ in \;;T")J::;fl. ”:-ll}'\:. ")Iv‘n‘sllntv[s |‘1n4|-lmlnm ment of Justice Is allowed an appro. | Were announced by the Secretary of §i o n commi tion to the Secretary fioned in e Silin} illetacome | = mo‘ BOR O Nev uk o Neeingy enter v 2 major general December 10 on the |[C (00 (aMTering. NE tHe on has | at a total not to exceed $2.203.000 statulory retirement of Maj. Gen. |sived 1 & Miiar capacits during For the Neaval Observabors in. Edward M. Lewis. has been assizned ¥ past T ¢ 3 he committee discussed with rep- | A # comma o vision % i ich ar 'DL«(!}; 00 is al"““"‘d for rep: n:“» !‘j':nr g\:}!lm‘"fin:‘h r;‘ Divi resentatives from Kansas City the | for these items, some of which are 0 eating . tunnel. 8 bert L stk facilities of the city for the conven. | rensonably certain to he adopted.” Not to exceed $600,000 may be ex-| BUE- d"?"“'th:‘";",:"‘l‘"h?“n pame: | tion in considerable detail. | House leaders hope to have the | pended for personal services in the | COMMAnding the ! Ga.. has b | measure taken up for consideration District by the Pnst Office Department | %4 ":(‘“I"“;Aii“"rfi“"'“" e Lead Is Overcome. tomorrow. An effort will be made to Siicey . 5 ordered to v to comma g " LE - 2 : Al for repairs to mail bugs and equip-| {61k Brigade. : | The yecord of the malloting for the ! send it to e S g Brig. Gen. Henry 1. Todd, who will | convention which shows San | " Tatl Dt the committee dld hecome a major general December 24 | Franci ¢ in the lead only i o ercome in the end by Kans | not know whether the corporation i TRl : et atonis Adeatate’ reier. hut | of the SHAwARAN it is all that can safely be allowed at | Artillery district. Col. Abraham this time. i | Pennsylvania. Surely we are not ask- Lott, just nominated as a brigad uction in the corporation |ing ioo much when we say that at all neral; now in Hawali, has been IpDIY Lo taX payments | times we are entltled to have our two signed to the command of the due next March 15 on Income earned | Senators on the floor. Surely that i zhth Prigade at Fort McPherson, 1 d other reductions would | not an excessive request from the peo- Bt Lt Foiek o onkes vt | become effective 30 days after the bill | ple of Pennsylvania. When they sent e e L | becomes a law. to this body one who has served with s Houston. vesterday was ordered s of Col Gen, Persh assume the Army War Barracks on Probe Expenses Allowed. a member of Gen. es en central the Dis. or unusual In the Wenather tion a limit of $3 Rureau appropr 510 was set for per eonal services in the District on the item for collecting and disseminati meteorological, elimatelogical and ma- rine information Among the items ment of Agricultu was set for employment of porsonal services in the District on an in vestigation of the Mexican fruit worm And an appropriation of $3.000 was | allowed for the District to prevent ! spread of Japanese and Asiatic heetles A limit of $4350 out of a $50.4 appropriation ta regulate the impe tion of milk and cream in the United States was set for s v exnenditure in Washinzton Under the item for air ce the Department of Commerce lowed not to exceed §1 o0 for in the District. An appropriation of £100.000 was ty for the a vietory had _an the Mid lection of Kansas wention ety w airman Butler. who od his p for The tir ahility He c} for noune from First Page.) 1 for the a limit Depart- D nrt- inued from learned tod Those familiar the rule explained t E s entitled to draw pa m the date on which_the term hegins until there is'a session of the Senate and an op- portunity to have the oath admin- istered. In re.) with or-elect i First m The nsas City day wi most bitterly it the mem of members of the mittee who have served for the | | | | time endeavoring to make it reason: | - ably certain that when the law went into full force and effect it would not cause a deficit In the Treasur “In this connection it should be| borne in mind that the full effects of | the law as proposed to be mmhfivd‘ will not he felt until the fiscal year 1930. This fiscal y ling June | 30, 1928, will show a e surplus, as less than half the reductions pro- posed will apply to it. and the Tre: fury is likely 10 payments from Opposed to Creating Deficit. “Our concern is for the future. majority of the committee ave posed to any plan that would duce a defieit. “In this connection it should be | noted that the estimates of sur- pluses for future years, | of the present law, t of expenditu which w in the future, but which the sums appropriated in recent vears, such ax those for flood con- trol, agricultural relief, additions to the Navy, public hufldings, Boulder Dam, ete. A margin must be left w ding Smith’s case to commit- tee the Senate adopted the Novris reso- lution, which was based on the charge that officials of Illinois public utility corporations contributed to Smith's primary . and that Smith was chairman of the Illinois Com- njerce Commission. Senator David Leed, Republ Pennsylvania, in opening the de on the Vare case late ypsterday. ed legal and constitutional and made a plea to his colleagues for fair play. He said all that is known | by the Senate now concerning the pri- mary expenditures was known to the people of Pennsylvania when they elected Mr. Vare, Reed Appeals for Vare. ~In hix appeal to seat Vare pending 1 or Reed of Pennsyl- said, in part am not talking now for Mr. Vare. I am talking for the people of the | great State of Pennsylvania, and it a great State. if only in numbe Ten per cent of the population of the United States lives there. With the utmost deliberation and with their eyes wide open they sent their repre- sentative to the United States Senate. The Constitution cannot be amended in its provisions for equal representa- tion in the Senate. We do not get a proportionate representation in_ the | Sixteen States in the West| = have a populaiion aggregating small. er than that of this one State of Museum. who and was cademy s m Wisconsin ed from the Militars: gned to the he served In the and in the hattle of Manila. Growth is a sign of vitality raft in com- pines Other Changes Announced. | The, op- pro- | moved that the | be made unan- was carried, and Five months after assum- ing control, we record the greatest November sales in eighteen years of Paige history. ngements Quantico with authoriza- of the Navy to into contracts for construction are above the entative of his own c . the good old when this in I by the char ni S his Kinz and coun- | il 1o try and get something on s s Bt i o it et | oty i e ety ‘vover| His Holiday Savings ware above doubt and beyond ques- | tnrned into a s Jdit a dis nd diplomats are something | plomacy, methinks. My old colleg= | for mone- | Scotland to avold meeting the distin- centers, wherein those who can afford | failed him at the thought of the Tam- ism shine In the ledger of the Re-|an English accent, so blamed Englisa with the exception of Bradstreet and upon his angiization. much to| edge of peoples and languages, tact, | meeting an American Minister who is the legation can chatter and tango| gastronomicaliy generous and willin Dollar Diplomat in a dic in the museum: the 1 eminence and is visible to the naked can magnates. For all others—the “The real business of the legation, for the treatmént of visiting Ameri- flunkeys and minor parasites, most can callers, separate the sheep from boot and the ‘bum’s rush’ to the un- William. | flag and Republic are mentioned. Al- they serve and a slavering sycophaney | honorably received his |nl1r‘ by all except the diplo-| Ambassador to Franc “Loyalty Overruled.” Ohin and sick, was Nk ol colonies s onme Sheldon Whitehou l;()\fi l se SIIII“SIN)‘ e well paid Anac| whoe promptly pui detectives on T o Rob Anothe tre and spent his tme smelling, buy.| mayor who was a member of Tam. | /\n lh(r Of He. wuborning and skndering the na-| many Hall, a pelitical party not in f his methods and morals were dubjous, | here in our own Americn. Think of | T his love of and loyalty to his country |it, b n. Th Jegation asr o, lion. He went out of fashion with | tinguished America Rather and powder. Ame n diplo-|a base and contemptible piece of di- | nd marked by mediocrity, misfits | frie the Ambassiador to the Court | of St. James, fled to the highlands of adstreet, and the | guished Lourist. Valiant enough to "k and blue books of our financial | face a Scotch hagpipe, his courage butlers and bay windows are lifted, | manv tiger, but the visitor was met ind whose philanthropy and patriot: | at the legation by an underling with publican national committee, adorn | and so unlike anything American that | | our lezations abroad. All else, 1 say. | he congratulated the legation secre the Republican national committee t comic official’s embarrassment. [leather and prunella: culture, knowl-| “In Ireland he was fortunate in Kood manners and trifles of that sort |an American 23 hours a day and 36 ave needless, provided the ladies of |days a year. Frederick A. Sterli and are garnished with French dress ing, and the ambassador is gilded to spend and scatter and souse the socially select. “The old-style doliar diploma sported spinach and used tobacc ambassador goes in for cigarette safety razor, safety first and social eyes of only those wandering Amer cans bearing mandates from Republi- air, the landscape, the department of the_exterior. their habits, customs, usages, table manners and gules and regulations cans are provided by charges d'affaires, secretaries, clerks, valet resentful aliens attached to the pa volls, Their job is to appraise Ameri- the goat, give the elect the adminis- wration hand and smile, administer the worthy, apologize for being Ame cans and shudder when the American | most all legations have one thing in common—contempt for the countr for the country they are serving in. For diplomats and their attaches the | FORBES T0 TESTIFY ON NARCOTIC CHARGE Former Veterans' Bureau Chief Sradan e L &g Looto 4 Setpeit ¥ Summoned Before Grand Jury December 16. By the Associated Press ! KANSAS CITY, Kans., December 8. | —Col. Charles R. Forhes, ai- | rector of the United States Veterans' Bureau. vesterday was given a chance to make an early start on his an- nounced move to obtain hetter prison conditions. He was subpoenaed to tell | before a Federal grand jury here De- cember 16 his story of a narcotic traffic, beyond the control of the | warden, al the Leavenworth Federal | Penitentiary Col hes was Leavenworth Pri: in an article i Dispatch told of widespread use of narcotics by conviets at the institu- | tion ved a two-vear sen- tene to defraud the Gov Official cogznizance of the charges was taken hy Attorney General - | gent. who instructed the United States | district attorney to summon hos before the grand jury for questioning. | Col. Forhes is scheduled to appear before the grand jury December 16, MAIL PUBLICATIONS HERE CONSOLIDATED R. F. D. News and Rural Lnter“ Carriers to Be Known as National | Rural Letter Carrier. of the R. F. T). News. Jished for 15 years in this city, the National Rural Lette Mount Morris, Mich.. publication, was ! effected here vesterday by the beard | of control of the National Rural Let. | ter Carriegs’ Association, and C. ¢ MeDevitt, former Washi: on news. | paper man, who owned the R. F. D.! News The strife former released fr n November the Loui; m 6 the and Post- | st Merger pub- ind rier, consolidation over the status organ. it was declared Carl H. Howard of St. Pauls g president of the Rural Carriers’ Association | The consalidated publication will be | known the National Rural Letter | Carrier, and will be published weekly | here, with E. W. Smiser, Butler, Mo member of the b rd of control, editor. and Mr. McDevitt as publish Members of the hoard of control o the ational Rural Letter Association, who unanimou: tioned the merger and are in jngton attending an official conferenc at the st Office Department, follow President Howard, Ned H. Goodell of Ldinhoro, Pa., vice president; R. B. Dick of Farmland, Ind. treasu Roy Tricker of Sterling. Kans.. se retary: Editor Smiser, Ben L. Thomp- gon, chairn executive committee, Lewisburg, Tenn., and J. W. Welch of Conway, Ark. ends years of of an official last night 1 as | A w m-lmms: fox w ed by a | as chief of Field Artiller | which date M. has been assigned to the command of the 4th Coast Artillery district at_Fort McPherson, Ga. Col Charles W. Howland. chief of staff | of the 34 Division at Fort Lew w who has just been vwnnn’\lm“ as a brigadier general, has heen as. signed to the command of the 3d Field | Artillery Brigade at Fort Lewis, Wash. Artillery Chief. Fred T. Austin, Field Artillery enzaged in inspection duty in Philippines. has been nominated at the W with the rank of ma ive December . William J. Snow, the incumbent. will he transferred to | the retired list on account of disability incident to the service. During the World War Col. Austin <erved as a brigadier general in the Army nd was awarded the Distinguished = Service 1l for ex-| ceptionally meritorious service during the prevalence of a s epidem of |\]\hllll| fever New Col. now the Department. zeneral, effes service 5th Ma: B i ' hd in the Philippine insurrec- which followed shortly afterward ppointed a first heu- in the Regular the g Infantr 1R9%, tion Tn 1901 he was tenant of Artillery A and rhed colonel in September crved in many parts of the United | ates, wen: to nee in ke a study of the operation: the American Expeditionary Forces and has been in the Philippines since February, 1926, |25TH WOMAN ATTACKED | Fiend Escapes After Assault on Latest Victim—Deserip- tions Vary. By the Associated Press BRDIGEPORT, December s “phantom stabber” hix twenty-fifth victim t night | when he lunged at Mrs. Estella | Haupler in the darkness and es The woman was stabbed the as were the other v tims The latest stabber occurred on September Mrs, Haupler was attacked on her. way home into a nearby house and tr a wound about three-quarters of an inch deep. The mark was almost exactly the same ax in the previous cases. The ., Breast, r by 29, while taken | “phantom s every three he w ‘omen of hruary 20 has ap- 10 te Stari months the city he y section of the city, but has made it a point k girls of tender ages, rang- from 12 to 19. Mrs. Haupler 18, ts of Dublin er it had erowd through the stre recently, and was caught a taken refuge in a garage. In all attacks the stabber has made a successful escape. His vietims have siven varying descriptions of him. got | ed for | b b b s 1 1 i 1 1% T T Ti 0 o o Wi 102: ‘onsequently there will be a large { surplus for that fiscal year (the cur- rent fiscal year ending next June 30). which, under the law, will be applied on the public debt.” the report sai | d that while some pers corporations already 928 tax on to the con- economists generally agree tax cannot be passed on that the fonment of the delegates to the convention w he States, d the District of Columbia as Miasien Wik Mo i Nart | Ohia iR South Carolina path Dakol nnesser ... BY “PHANTOM STABBER"; { | District of Columy | “pines and Torto Rico. 2 each. New York remai ful delegation with 90 vot {in strength by Pennsylvania with INinois with 61 and Ohio with 51. 515 Votes Required. for 1t Prexident and for Vice P will require 545 votes, tion participate in the halloting. The total number fonment by . Kinsle 1 m V' subcommittee to pa matter, The subeomn jducted from the numix | previously allowed nine | added to the number from two States, in accord nati rmont, sx s upon ce had itself. tion from Democratic Tennessee, which in the 1924 which had losses gressional districts, accounting nnounced showing a total of 1,089 delez | Vi z Territories District. Total, . 11 the most power. . followed | of delegates and | was annmlm#d al commit- \ chairman of a ! delegates | tates and of delegates | e with the rules adopted by the convention ! The biggest cut was in the dele ot | presidential | election and therefore lost three dele- | gates-at-large in one fell swoop, and in certain con- for a than in exceptional cases corporatio sell for the highest with thé obtained. roadest market that can be fol- | Special Dispatch to The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md., December 8.- Police are investigating the shooting late yesterday of 13-year-old John Pue, son of M H. 8. Taveau Linthicum, by iott Miller, to have been accidental. Four H. E. Melvin, 14, said were standing at a cor- ner on Charles Will, Pue, a paper car- jrier among them, leaning o his hi- ’1-_\-1-10‘. A shotgun was in the hands o1 of Miller and was discharged. Police- man Fredericks was informed by one {of the onlookers that bad feeling had | existed between Pue and Miller and Mhm Pue exclaimed, “Don’t do that!” {just before the charge from the gun { plerced his head. One of the onlook- ers was Allen Miller, twin brother of *:xu— boy who possessed the gun, A inquest will he held tonight *ne e aene Give “Universal” ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES The Useful Xmas Laundry Irons Toasters Percolators Waffle Irons Curling Irons —Ete.— - Reasonably Priced MUDDIMAN. § 709 13th St. N.W. Main 140—6436 9, To win the Republican nomination | sident, it all dele- |Rates entitled to attend the cnmem} § the ! de- | . | i €. et *4 ¥ cut of five more votes from its appor- tionment. Arkan s, Oklahoma and Wisconsin/ Jost sbree votes eachByorth Caroling price consistent | of North | hoys, according to Magistrate | | credit for 14 years in the other branch of the Congress of the United States do we run great risk of taint when we let him stay here for the 60 days that are necessary to count these | ballot Answering the 3 Senator Reed, Democrat, of Missouri declared that while the spe quired into the P maries, it was prevented from going into the election by the Senate fili- buster of last March, which blocked the granting of necessary authority to the committee to function during the recess, The Missourian also called attention to the contest which has been brotight against Vare by William B. Wilson, who was his Democratic opponent in the election. GROSNER'S | | | A sandwich, a cup of Wilkins Coffee were paradise enow— and how! SIXES EIGHTS Paige Company of Washington, D. C. Factory Branch 1522 Yiourteenth Street N.W. E. B. Frazier Motor Co. Motor Sales & Service 518 10th St. N.E. 33 New York Ave. N.E. BREAKFAST Other Robes $13.50 up to $100 o * Genuine Tru-hu Radium Silk Mufflers $2.95 Other Mufflers up to $20 Ir'oSner. 1325'F STREET $325 F STREET & IDVERTSENENTS B ol RECEIVED HERE Day Pharmacy—14th & P Sts. Is a Star Branch Office You can get very quick ac- tion in supplying most any want which you may have at home or in your business through a Classified Ad in The Star. If you will write your Ad clearly, stating what you want, it will bring you prompt replies; for The Star Classified Section is read reg- ularly by nearly every one in Washington. Leave your Classified Ads for The Star at the Branch Office near you. No_ fees are charged for Branch Office Service; only regular rates. The Star prints such an overwhelmingly greater volume of Classified Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results. “Around the Corner” is a Star Branch Office. Rayon House Satin collars, cuffs and a corded silk belt—you’ll like the robe as well as the price —a variety of designs and shades. | | | THE ABOVE SIGN 1S DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES I