Evening Star Newspaper, November 30, 1928, Page 5

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D. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, SUN DANCES REVIVED ervations, began a three- day Thanks- BY NEZ PERCE INDIANS |giving ceremoniai at the Nes Perce res- —_— ’(‘rvnnon near Lapwai, southeast of THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, AMERICAN RED CROSS Official Relief Organization of the Government DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CHAPTER MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL DUES | Annual |[Contributing! Sustaining | Supporting | Additional Please enroll the undersigned Jo, TR $10 | $25 | Donatlons PARIS RESIDENTS MISS CRANBERRIES Americans in French Capital | . Enjoy Turkey Dinners | Without the Sauce. ‘ | | By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, Idaho, November 30.— Tribal war and ‘sun dances abandoned !more than a half century ago as fea- tures of their Thanksgiving celebration | were revived last night by Nez Perce| Indians who, with several hundred service. NAMe ..occvevencnnncrnncsceccnncniiennnas Address .. braves from the Blackfoot, Colville, Ya- | persuade them to accept offices of an ‘klmn. ‘Warm Springs and Umatilla res- CHANQELLOR CONFERS | impartial super arbitrator, whose deci- | the employers later today. Three-Day Thanksgiving rattles the Indians, in full regalia, wml e tor Adept less both sides gave definite pledge in The Industrialists let it be known About $39,000,000 will be spent on| BERLIN, November 30.—Starting the | ment's proposal in principle. ute, Chancellor Herman Mueller to- e H known the world over for the 1928. 5 | sion would be binding. The chancellor IN GERMAN STEEL ROW intended to consult representatives of here. | He made it plain that the govern- Several Hundred Braves Engage in| To the music of tom-toms and snake Mueller Seeks to Persuade Locked- | ment would not name an arbitrator un- !contlnue the dances until Saturday. advance that they would accept his Ceremonial. . s Arbiter's Findings. findings. Army Costs $39,000,000. | By the Associated Press. |that they would accept the govern- the French army mext year, despite | direct intervention of the government | % i i ing | in_the Ruhr Valley Steel Works dis- various economics which are being Jipijapa, a little town in Ecuador, is made by cutilng down the term of | gay ' received representatives of the Panama | locked-out workmen. His object was to hats produced there. Address i 1. Only 50c of each to National, balance to your chapter for its growing normal need: By the Associated Press. PARIS, November 30.—Complete ab- Pence of cranberry sauce rather marred | the Thanksgiving dinner of American Fesidents of Paris. Eating Turkey with- ®ut cranberrics on the side, they shought they had a little less to be thankful for and they rather envied | their countrymen who snugly enioved the luscious red ce across the At-| Jatic. | British Premier and Wife Are Guests at Thanksgiving Fete in London. Reserve Funds. v Aside Americans observed | the day al manner. | There wer services in_the | American athedral, with Dean Beekman officiating, and also in the merican Church in the Rue Berri, e Normal Armour, American charge | d'affaires, delivered an address in the sbsence of Ambassador Herrick. Char- Rcteristic Thanksgiving day items were on the menus of all hotels catering to also represent- | By the Assoclated Press. e “;‘M;“l{‘;}m"‘{i LONDON, November 30 —Premier | recalled that |and Mrs. Stanley Baldwin were guest; President Lin- | of the American Society at a Thanks- 4 11"?“’"};: giving dinner here last night. A com- pany numbering 500, which included ative of embassy had been present each year. | Ambassador Alanson B. Houghton and | Consul General Caulin read President | Mrs, Houghton, ate a real American| Goolidge's proclamation. Rev. CIAVION| giner with turkeys from President ed prayer and Dr. Joseph | Coolidge’s farm in Vermont, cranberries Wilson Cochran preached on the “May- | from Cape Cod and corn frem South | flower Spir Hundreds of turkeys were consumed Carolina. @t various dinner parties, the hot birds blending with cold_ botties of French| Houghton Gives Thanks. [ wwine as the diners sang at least the first | Ambassador Houghton, proposing a | verse of “The Star Spangled Banner” | toast to the “day we celebrate,” said | Bnd other patriotic hymns. The most|all present had reason to be thankful popular song was “Yes, We Have No | because fundamentally friendly rela- Cranberries.” | tions of the British and American peo- ples continued unimpaired. He said he did not fear in this regard problems which have their basis in reality so 5 much as problems which are remults S .| of fear and suspicion and deep-seated #Elaborate Painting to Adorn Pic-|distrust. He said he was hope(gl. how- | | ever, that even these latter would prove less’ formidable the nearer they ap- proached, for, he said, “there is a new | HUGE WORK OF ART. eadilly Circus Subway Station. LONDON (Special) —What is be- | PrC 3 Sieved to be the largest picture of oils |Spirit in the world. a new conscience, in any railway station in the world is|and neither will long be denied. to adorn the ticket office of the new| Ambassador Houghton added: “We 3 y station.| have additional reason to be thankful | old artist, has|in that the King seems now to be | Iready sketches of the ! showing indications of recovery. We picture and has leased a big studio in | hope and pray for. his complete re- which to work. cover: The picture will be 75 feet long and feet high. Its central feature will be a map of the world, embodying the idea that Piccadilly is the center of the world. Lines will radiate from the map to a series of panels which illustrate various phases of life in which the pub- with a statement that it was a delight- ful act of friendship to ask an Eng- lishman to be present at the Ameri- cans’ most domestic family gathering. Proceeding, he confessed that he had originally declined the invitation to at- tend owing to the pressure of other | tans | Hull, Premier Baldwin opened his epeech | 2. All Major Disaster Contributions are spent therefor and deficiencies, if any. paid from diminishing Red Cross Hence need of Membership increase from 4,540,211 to 5,000,000. 3. Deductible from income subject to Federal Tax. Roll Call Headquarters, 1342 G Street. Telephone Metropolitan 4425. ble in which my old friend Houghton) has been getting. “On my first attempt to enter the House of Commons I was defeated and I know what it feels like.” he said. “And T thought it might help him if w victim held out his hand to- (Mr. Virginia Praised for Tobacco. The familiar fact that the premier s a great smoker gave added point to his facetious remarks regarding Vir- ginia tobacco. “I have a personal and particular cause for thanksgiving,' 'he said, “If there had been no America _there would have been no tobacco. It was tobacco that planted the English na- tion in America. Virginia—heaven bless it—is the enly counrty in the world that has had tobacco as its currency.” In a long appreciative reference fto i literature, the premier re- al vy in the autobiography of Benjamin Franklin of how the Quaker refused the request of the brother Quaker during public worship to lend him money for the collection on the ground that the asker seemed not to be in the right mind. “May I suggest to the Ambassador that any request to America for loans for armaments should receive that same answer?” Mr. Baldwin asked. BASE BALL THRILLS. British High Commissioner Praises Work of Babe Ruth. OTTAWA, Canada (Special) —Sir William H. Clark, new British high commissioner to Canada, saw his first | game of base ball when he saw “Babe" | Ruth and Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees thrill thousands of enthusiastic during an exhibition game in said Sir William, “and especially the appearance of Mr. Ruth. I have fiever seen this great man before. Of course, to the average Englishman the game does not compare with cricket from the point of view of excitement.” French Doors New, Glazed, First Quality, $5.90 (TN T0R00F 3 BRANCHES “I enjoyed the game very much,” | |U. S. AND CANADA’S FRIENDSHIP HAILED | American Minister to Dominion Speaks at Montreal Thanks- giving Banquet, By the Associated Press. MONTREAL. Quebec, November 30. —Wwilltam_Phillips, Unifed States Min- | ister to Canada, sald yesterday at the Thanksgiving banquet of the American Women's Club that the American peo- ple have “many causes for thankful- | ness and none for which we should be more grateful than for the continued friendship of Canada and the United States.” He pald tribute to King George, who is ill in London. After summing up the | var] s reasons why Americans and | Canadians had cause to feel thankful, | Mr, Phillips said_there was one shadow | which was causing deep anxiety. | " “Our sympathies this evening,” he sald, “carry us across the Atlantic to the 'silent multitudes gathered about the gates of Buckingham Palace, and our prayers are joined with their prayers.” PR Girls Go In for Acrobatics. Thousands of girls are now attending the saqhools for acrobatic dancing in Vienna, Austria. 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