Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1928, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D.” 0. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1028° 7 voting began. Each State had a ballot| A Maryland member was petitioned g H. f P -d . l El t. box of its owln, and when its vote wnns by his %angmu;nt‘.; w;e“vi‘dtlc‘:kwdlege;‘; PAPER IN NEW HANDS ['y cast the ballots were taken out and|son an real e 3 — The ISto o !‘CSI entla eclions counted. If Jefferson had @ majority, | would not. It was not until the thirty-| o0 worge Morning Telegraph to — two. little slips with his name on them |sixth ballot that the Federalists gave 3 St were made out, and if Burr had a ma- |way. Jefferson was named President Specialize in Sports. V—The Jefferson-Burr Tie in 1800 | jority his name was placed on them in- |and Burr became Vice President. stead. If the vote was a tie, the word | Bayard said afterward that the man-| NEW YORK, October 5 (#).—The 4 . BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN “Divided” was written on the slips, ner of casting the last ballot was ar- | Morning Telegraph today printed an ’ Author of “The American Goverament.” Then came the sergeant-at-arms with | ranged only & few minutes before the | announcement of the sale of the paper it oy artists anas two other ballot boxes. One of these|vote was taken, and that but for the|to Joscph A. Moore, chairman of the 45lips was put in each box, each by a | attitude of a Connecticut member not | board of the Butterick Co. and a group While lack of system, lack of trans- | went for nought, for the returns showed | gifferent member of the State delega- |a vote would have been cast in opposi- |of associates. Mr. Moore indicated the portation and communication and wide- | the downfall ‘of the Federallst party. iion if more than one was present.|tion to Jefferson. The Federalists had|paper, under the new management, ly scaitered and divided opinion made | Dickey Strop informed his friends that | gach state then chose a teller to assist | determined to vote blan:. but this Con- | Would specialize in sports. g the electoral system of doubtful success | he would have to raise the price of |u'he Speaker's deck, and cight tellers | necticut member refused to acquiesce | The sale was made by the Herman or 1 e hands of oth ei” artists in 1796, the perfection of political party | shaving the Federallsts, as the electon | counted the slips in each ballot box. in the caucus agreement, and that de- | Publishing Co., which is headed by Mrs. machinery almost wrecked the whole |had made their faces so long. | The reports from the two sets of tellers | termined the other Federalists, with a|Lytton Gray Ament, widow of a former scheme in 1800. UP to this time there | When the returns showed that Jef-|ggreeing, it was considered the true|few exceptions, to stand pat on Burr, | owner of the Telegraph. Tiad been so many scattering votes that | ferson and Burr had tied Jefferson an- | \e’G¥ine’ House. On the frst vote |He asserted aiso that the means did |- y pl ell | it. six Burr, o . at two men, Jefferson and Burr, each | plan of tying up the election by dead- . et ol recsived every CDW'WHUC-RW“"““"\FDC'“"B e e tfi"d“'?g:?' balloted 27 times that day .nd,if?;&‘.‘“%sh“i? izt s ecuied ¢ REPAIR PARTS DELIC‘@TEI.‘Y’ l«_')vmg_ly, slowly, slowly, the Mason & i Federaiits were afmost equally | Guties of ihe. presidency “upon_the gLt Many members sent home for| majority of tvo States” For Furnaces and Hamlin Piano is built... by sensitive hands, skilled ¥ : i - i S s 3 election as - . k > . e 7| Shilders ot ithe Drisidetrt of ShiaiBen [shawls: and/opereoats, “1ay about ethe | “Goyteat: car ‘ever: haprien agaich Hot-Water Boilers through decades of service. Hands that perform their tasks Single scattered x"’mnsrut in all the clcc-}n}ndu}\e would have had fo call another e i oheie aat ThfFioune | aakes 1t imposeible for a canaiaate sor || FRIES, BEALL & SHARP || with that exquisite precision that transforms labor to art. toral colleges. The States were also or- | election. There was such a general | S°¢PIg In akes 1t impos o . " ganized and had sbandoned the district | howl ofer this progrem that it was | Doeakinel e Fecessed mud moon ;"_°y‘f|mscrti;recilfifr;t flo oppose the head of 734 10th St. N.W. Artists, indeed, are they who create this supreme instrument!. .. B e o e [AncihEUSpPEC R EROE R e e And under the hands of other artists, it wakes to incomparable BStates B Shows Patriotism. |lot. When the thirty-third ballot was| Tomorrow— g 3 ara S | taken a recess followed until Monday. ' of 1824. music! Votes each, Adams had 65, Pinckney 64, | ' Hamilton showed his patriotism by | ® fecess foroved anip tfonday, ol 1928 John Jay getting one vote from Rhode |trying to avert the election of Burr, He — — 2 " o ’ ¥ 1 Island. | declared that personally he was frisndly | "Rt e et Few people, of course, will ever possess the Mason & Hamlin The defeat of Adams had been fore- | with Burr, while if there was any mn |~ ! divappoint. Ask S, Piano. Few of these instrume: ade— r seen, but the Federalists did not give up fin the world he ought to hate it was| p BRi- ey fo mwes : ents are made and they are more without a struggle. Gouverneur Morris | Jefferson. And yei the public good | JAMES M. DENTY costly than any other pianos in the world. But if your ear is one had written to Washington an appeal t0 | should outweigh every private feeling | hich di 5 1 Tun again und save the party. but the |and interest. ‘Speaker Sedgwick, hafl: I Wholesale Distributor to which true understanding of tonali beauty has been granted — Father of His Country died without an- | ing from Massachusetts, declared the { - H v s g : swering the 1lenera Hamilton, au(ha\fit: | electoral system a failure, since it "h:xs.,‘ . = then the Mason & Hamlin should be your piano. You will be com- not wholly pleased wi ams, fought |at one election, placed at the head of / ! e ini i 1 out to the end in the face of the x(tg-luur Goyssmen-ia e mmuia St} : 5 = \FA pletely happy in its possession. popularity which had descended on the |in his soberist senses is the greatest| 1 s : : . ” Pederslist administrtion. | maiot T nature. and at (he next one| B . i g Please come In at any time, to enjoy hearing and playing the Intrigues Crop Out. |a feeble and faise, but enthusiastic, | Mason & Hamlin. | theorist and a profligate without char- | When the campaign got under way acter and without property, bankrupt | there were all soris of intrigues. Ham-|in #sth.” i t ilton wrote Gov. Jay of New York, in | Hamiiton wrote James A. Bayard, the | The “Helen” < 2 the home cf saving the State to the | Federalist leader in the House, hailing AT TD, 3 BRANCHES N az nn am In " Fed-alsts, to summon the retiring|from Delaware, eppealing to him to| s 4 2 676 C. Sts SW. % W) Leg:slature, whish yac Federalist, and |prevent the clection of Burr. Bayard | g —for the modern miss Sm4 Fia A NE [t 1% 1t g-lzct Fedorai‘.t electors. Jay, in |replied that he was obliged to yield to | who demands distinc- FRICES MADE IN BOSTON filing it away unanswered, indorsed the | a torrent which could not be opposed, | tive style. One of our - % - Ijior “pronceiag a reeecure for pa although it might be diverted. That ¥ many new models. 5 which I think it would not be | he afterward did it the results show. | i cf me to adopt.” In Penn-| Te were great doings in Washing- | Developed in pat- COLORED = nmae:\}éfl; ;?&&:&"”é’{;fi'.‘ ‘gn :‘1):;1:\ ‘;? ;npigéxd}::;{y.x(fi%)éuzfi :R’ ;»l:nc'- I f!’tltsémth"" priceg | COLUMBIA HEIGHTS An initial payment of 10% 4will place the Mason & Hamlin aliot it would have been over- ney to Washington was tiresome and 5 | ¢ 0 Mas Republican, while on a coa- | expensive, people hastened there by the || Modern Miss Dept. | Located S Columbia Road fust in your home. You Jave several years to pay the balance. o o Vi i o Sen off 13th In finé condition. currsnt vote it was a tie. The Senate |hundreds. In one boarding house 50 3rd Floor e ey held out and divided the electoral vote |men slept on the floors because no beds by ; n and 7 for Adams. The|were to be had. After the electoral | | ! : ceping poren.” garase; i ARTH R JO R DAN PHAN (o) C O 13 Fodersilst legislotors in the Penn | count the Senate retired and the House | ; 9 | @ sExcellent “locaion for profes- ° sylvenia Sencte, who tack the choice of | got down to its serious business. Sum- ( : % 5 3 electors away from the pecple nd |fer of South Carolina was sick, and so | I H S Price only $12,500 ! G Street Cor. 13th forced the Legislature into given 7| was Nicholson of Maryland, but he was | R ble T votes to AZams, were hailed as the im- | carried to an adjoining committee rcom easonable Terms Bhso L oyt o / F Street at Tenth BURTON & CONDIT : MASON & HAMLIN - KNABE - CHICKERING « THE AMPICO husetts and New Hampshire |doors closed, and the delegates from ||| Prices from $1,650 °d Pennsylvania in disfranchising | each State grouped themselves together, = North 3278. 1206 18th St. the people in this election, but it all |chose a teller if they saw fit, and the 4 We've reached a new high point in these CHRISTMAS ' we P-B Super-Value DIAMONDS | Blue Suits Each with two pairs of © trousers ¥ ! Super-Value Suits are an achievement 66 —accomplished by critically selected --Select PERFECT Gems weaves; ldefinitel,\: dictated style imd mak- Tt's quality IN 2 ing specifications—to which we add the 4 price, further emphasizing the exception- alness of the offering. 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