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* THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, JANUARY 22, D. C. FRIDAY, RY 2 BROTHER T0 PLAGE MURRAY IN RACE Petitions in North Dakota Prepared by Relative of Governor. OVERSEAS REMOVALS For shipping household goods, works of art, etc, ||| abroad, Security (steel) Storinvans provide the utmost in safety, conveni- ence and economy. They are availabie for stor- age, too. | By the Associated Press. | brother President today | Permission to enter Gov. W. H | (Alfalfa Bill) Murray in the State pri- | mary election hasn't come yet. But | George T. Murray. proud to call him- {self & “dirt farmer,” says he is | certain the Governor’ will speak af- | firmatively before voters express them- | selves March 15. Beruritp Srorage : 1140 FIFTEENTH ST If/oetn feiiee T oities, ocar an state: | Now he believes “Brother Bill" is the A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 40 YEARS | man to lead the Nation to better times C.AASPINWALL . PRESIDENT | He plans an active campaign for the | close relative he hasn't seen in 25 | vears | Petitions to Be Circulated. The immediate project is circulation | of “petitions so the Governor may be | entered as a Democratic candidate be- | fore the Pebruary 13 filing dead line | Prwsray anticipated no difficulty. “T am doing this” he said, “not only | because I think my brother is deserv- ing of the nomination, but because I believe him to be most competent for the_office. BERTHOLD, N. Dak, January 22.— | | A farmer who finds Winter work a bit | slack right now set about electing his | | American, Adviser to Rail- way, Says She Does Not Seek Domination. Hopes to Aid in Solution of Economic Problems and Assist Chinese. Japan hopes to aid in the solution of her own economic problems and at the | same time assist at least one portion of the Chinese people by forcing the establishment of a stable government in Manchuria. 2 | "This slant on the situation in the Far East was given here by Henry W. Kinney, former American newspaper man, who is adviser to the South Man- churia Anilway Co. and has for 13 years made his home in that part of the world Disavowing any inclination on the ! part of Japan toward imperial domina- | tion over a land where she has more than 1.000.000 subjects, Kinney, the only foreigner employed on the South Manchurian line by the Japanese, | says the hope s for & Chinese i civil government which will bring about !5 regime of peace and order as soon as | possible. Turn to Industrialism. As Kinney explains it, the Japanese opulatio! Domething like 1,000,000 annually. n is increasing at the rate of | JAPAN HOPES TO FORCE STABLE GOVERNMENT IN MANCHURIA| Polates, are “one up” on their comrades | at arms in this country, having added | | trench mortars to the ‘machine guns | | Yecognized as “standard equipment” in | first-class bandit. circles One of the first things necessary the restoration of the country will be to get rid of the “excess ban- | dits,” leaving the people to worry along | as best they may with what might be | | called the average quota | Stabilization of finances will be an- | other matter to be dealt with During the last years of Chang Tso- | 1in, that ruler happened on the idea of issuing great quantities of paper money, ’Youth Shoots Student to Death in | | went to his home to commit suicide. [ its chatrman, Dr. 3. Rosier Biggs, that | | the medal will be presented to Wash- | BY COSMOPOLITAN CLUB | ington’s outstanding citizen at a lunch- | {eon next Thursday in the Carlton | Hotel. The name of the recipient will | mportant to Japan s s the Panama | BONNETTE 1S HONORED Canal to the United States. The more | than a million Japanese nationals in | the country, he adds, have farms and | crops that are the result of toilsome | EXPERT SERVICE years. | Silver Coffee' Service Presented Re- BYRON S. ADAMS All this, he concludes, must be pro- I 1ot be made public until then. tected, and the Japanese aim has been and Others | Joseph D. Kaufman, chairman of the! VMW to guard against further harm | speaker’s unit of the Community cmn.j | Receive Tokens. made a plea for support of the chest. of the Japanese movement is over and | As he sees it, the “military phase” now comes the reconstruction period.| Gordon Bonnette, retiring president Mr. Kinney, who is at the Mayflower, | of the Cosmopolitan Club, was present- 1s making one of his triennial trips to . i e suniry from his home, in Darlen, | ¢4 With a silver coffee setvice by the In the course of these journeys he visits | club at a meeting yesterday in the principal cities and studies reactions to | Carlton Hotel. Harry Huntsbery, re- Japanese polices. tiring treasurer, was given a flat_silver S | service, and Michael Schaefer, who re- KILLS GIRL, ENDS LIFE RUSH PRINTING tiring President, CHAS. SCHWARTZ & SON 708 7TH ST. the Schwartz Gold Clock on Seventh Street ... points the way to satisfaction and security you will be sure of 100% satisfaction, because all DIAMONDS purchased here . . . are Chas. Schwartz & Son PERFECT DIAMONDS CASH A delivers it | cently ' was re-elected secretary, was presented with a check The club's Distinguished Service | Medal Committee announced through Fit of Jealousy. I EDGEMENT, S. Dak, 22 (). —Apparently moved by a fit of jealousy, John Vivian, 22, shot and killed Belva Petro, 18-year-old high school senior, at her home yesterday and then killed himself. Police said Vivian shot the girl as she returned from school and then FOR SALE, $10.750. Just East of Colorado Ave. Extended DETACHED. ALL _FACE BRICK RES: 6 ROOMS. BUILT-IN BATH ATTIC: FULL CELLAR. BUILT-IN GARAGE. PORCHES. SLATE ROOF. Lot 70x104, $6,000 1st Trust. Ea: L. W. GROOMES, January Terms. 1719 Eye. Here’s a Hard Coal —that vou cdn pit against Winter's worst cold—and come out a WINNER. It's our Famous Reading Anthracite — mined from the world’s richest hard-coal veins, then pre- pared by modern methods that add milliens of extra heat units to every ton! Order it | Emigration being neither feasible nor | possible to take care of this great num- ber, the country has turned to the prin- ciple. of industrialization to furnish work’ for the people. MEODAN: Dependable Coal Service Since 1858 Basement Office for Rent at 1719 Eye Street W. GROOM Kinney explains, which the farmers | were forced to take in exchange for their crops, which were in turn disposed of in Dairen or Vladivostok for silve which went in part for the military | establishment and in great proportion to line the pockets of officialdom “He knows every word in the Fed- eral Constitution and helped frame the constitution of the State of Oklahoma. Besides. he has had wide experience in public office, including his terms in | ' por this to be successful there must Congress | be a source of supplies of raw material | ““A man can't go wrong if he knows|ang a market for the finished product. STEN IN ery Night L1 E 3 STATION Chas Schwaitz: Son what's in the Constitution and Wil- Manchuria is the solution. Terrific taxation and land tents added | Marlow Coal Co. WRC Constipation Gone! . liam H. is one of the keenest consti- tutional minds in the country today. | Looks Like Brother. Murray, a North Dakotan 30 years, looks much like the Governor. Many years ago, on a wager, he attended a meeting of a lodge of which William was a member. Even the door guards| couldn't tell them apart. | Today George is clean-shaven, while| “Alfalfa Bill" has his flowing mus- tache. They were close friends in boy- | hood and George has watched his| brother’s political rise with interest, although far aw "TRUGE IN TRUST LAW | URGED UPON HOOVER| | | Steel Institute He-d Appeals for Two-Year Suspension to Aid Business. A clogged _intestinal tract Kly. safely and surely cleared | | s {1 Tiexatol. the dependable saline | | | | | laxative. Banishe: weakens you. The morning sUr s spoc & glass of water and drink your own health. At all good drug stores. HEXASOL Before Breakfast for Health By the Associated Press A two-year truce in the anti-trust laws as a “wartime measure of relief” was urged upon President Hoover yester- day by Charles F. Abbott, executive di- rector by the American Institute of Steel | Construction. Abbott said he told the President “destructive competition has driven prices to unreasonably low levels and eliminated all trace of profits.” ‘Something has got to be done,” he sall In asking for what he said was emergency relief, Abbott contended temporary suspension of the anti-trust laws would allow trade associations to take steps “to protect a stabilization of conditions without the fear of legal prosecution that now prevents such action.” In his regular message to Congress President Hoover recommended that particular attention be given to in- dustries in which destructive competi- tlon has produced waste of natural re- sources and brought “great hardships upon operators, employes and the public.” Uxaot1 A UXI7IA ux226 uxa227 ux280 CHURCHILL TO LECTURE | British Statesman Will Speak Here | February 12 on World Problems. | | Winston Spencer Churchill, former ' chancellor of the Exchequer of Great | | Britain, will lecture here Priday eve- | ning, February 12, under the auspices |of the Community Institute on “World | Economic Prices.” | The British statesman will be in- | troduced from the platform of Con-| | stitution Hall by John W. Davis, Dem- | ocratic candidate for President in 1924. | With a_heavy demand for tickets al- | ready evidenced, Mrs. Lyman B. Sworm- | stedt, institute secretary, announced | | ognized occupation Of untold resources, agricultural and mineral. Manchuria is the logical place from which to draw supplies when they can be produced. Populated by 30,000,000 people and with room for 75,000,000, a stabilized governm Mr. Kinney adds, would Attract colonization, principally by the North Chinese, who can stand the rigors of the climate, and thus build up the necessary buying market. The Japanese already have extensive s in Manchuria, acquired as the It of the war with Russia, and are prepared to invest more there. But foreign capital also is needed, and Kin- ney sees peace as the magnet to draw this. Will Follow “Open-Door” Policy. In this connection he emiphasizes that the Japanese government will follow enthusiastically the “open-door” policy. China as well as Japan would prosper under such conditions as he outlines, Mr. Kinney emphasizes. The present move by the Japanese— Kinney insists that it is no “war’—is simply the culmination of & long series of abuses, brought to a head by the destruction of a small section of the South Manchuria, north of Mukden, by Chinese soldiers in September. Standing by itself, that incident is of little moment, he explains, but as a link in a chain of outrages it assumes im- portant_proportions Manchuria, he says, has been an un- happy land, plundered and pillaged by those in authority, no less under the guise of law than under a reign of law- lessness Banditry is one of the great problems, this activity having been almost a rec- Soldfer-bandits, or bandit-soldiers, are practically inter- changeable professions, Kinney explains, adding, more humorously, that there another class—the “occasional bandits,” who turn to this method of livelihood when other businesses, farming, for in- stance, grow dull, Thousands overrun the land The Chinese bandits, Kinney inter- | 830 13th st. N.W. | W. STOKES SAMMONS The Average Window Shade Is a Catch-all for Dirt There is only one way of cleaning it— to the distress of the farmers. Chang Caught Between Fires. Chang-Hsueh-liang, son of Chang Tso-lin, succeeded his father upon the death of the latter in 1928, and though, Mr. Kinney continues, he started out with the best of intentions, he was soon caught between the fire of opposing | cliques, and the country has suffered more intensely, Chinese along with for- | eigners. | Sentiment has been stirred against | | the Japanese and the Koreans, who are | subject of Japan, intensifying the | trouble | | The sum total has been chaos, Kin- | ney says, and it is this condition that | Japan is attempting to iron out | So far as concerns the part played by | the League of Nations in this instance, | Kinney says that the request for with- | drawal of Japanese troops to their own area could only have been based on a misunderstanding of existing conditions To draw a comparison, he said, “if Americans in the Panama Canal Zone were being killed by South Ameri- |cans, I don't think this Government would hold off assistance.” The Japanese investments in Man- churia, he says, total more than two billion” yen. including the South Man- churla Railway, which, he adds, is as REWARD FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS will be paid for information leading to the arrest and final conviction on a mur- der charge of the parties who rob. bed the Garden Tea Shop. 1835 Co- lumbia Road, April 3. 1931. The source of information will be held in absolute confidence. W. B. Javnes, Rooms 400-401, Kellogcx Building. 1122 F Street Nortnwest. Phone National 6399 Home of Perfect Diamonds 708 7th St. N.W. Last Minute News at 11 P.M. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 “] have no hesitancy in saying that the work and example of Thompson’s Dairy have been of a nature that has assisted in rai. the standard of Dairy Products in this Di: trict to its present level.” DR. FOWLER, DISTINGUISHED HEAD OF THE D. C. HEALTH DEPARTMENT, RECENTLY WROTE: v 100% PLANT RATING' = HIGHEST AVERAGE FARM SCORE" v HIGHEST BUTTERFAT CONTENT today they would be placed on sale| that is by SCRUBBING. But the ordi- shortly at the T. Arthur Smith Bureau, | |1330 G street; at the A. A. A. head- | | quarters, Seventeénth and G streets; in ! the Willard Hotel, and at the institute’s | office, Franklin School Administration Building, Thirteenth and K streets. Will Rogers Says: nary window shade cannot be scrubbed as it is not made to stand such treatment. Window shades made of du Pont TONTINE CAN be scrubbed, not only once, but as often as desired, thus keeping them perma- nently and spotlessly clean. Ask for estimates. Bring In your old tubes and we will test them with the most modern equipment in the city. LONDON —Flew from Paris yes- terday. Americans always make this trip, but won't fly at home Yet we have 20 lines as good. I sure miss Char- Put Them All Together 2= 22 B iy Mon v LOWEST BACTERIA COUNT" is not enough of - y v HIGHEST GENERAL RATING' where we need him. 1 bet you they call the Lausanne Repa- rations Conference off, as we are not there You can't have a picnic lunch unless the party carrying the basket comes. Honors from the District of Columbia Health Department are by no means new to Thompson’s Dairy. Over a period of years we have received ALL of the above high ratings from the exacting District of Columbia Health Department. And in addition to getting tha purest, richest Dairy Products for your home, it is also grati- fying to know that you are patronizing a 1007, Independent Washington Industry. 6% THOMPSONS DA DECATUR 1400 IRAIDIO 1 400-11% 5t.NW. 1350-F St.NW. 3218 - 142St.NW, SPECIAL NOTIC ressional 02-J. Star T WILL NO' | | ANy | 5 | Hard coal from the world’s self BICENTENNIAL POST Colors Wooaward Murphy's P st. stores GOING? WHERE? TELL UE WHEN A SO move your furniture and take & Lothrop's richest mines! Ist Mige. Notes for sale; on detached all- brick, new and modern homes near 16th St. ex- tended. GROOMES. 1719 Eye St. Ist Mortg. Notes Since 1901 Even, steady, healthful comfort! that PAPERHANGING—ROOM PAPERED, §2 AND up, if you have the pape w Cail Col. 3583 e A size fits your on Saturday. Jan- | heater! 1, fsted to| isted to J. C. | E-5860. listed Prank Thom Oldsmobile Tourls C. E-4104, listed to - o [ het = burning fires! Y « Oldsmobile Sedan, no ta by Michael err CALL ‘CARL. INC 614 H St. NW 2 True economy from longer- %. D. c. to Call King today. Buy where For Maximum Return From! your dollars buy MOST! Your Printing Dollar— [ The National Capital Press FLA. AVE. 3rd and N N.E. _Linc. 6060 ROOF WORK— | —of any nature promptly and capably per- Jormed by Practical roofers s up! Roofing S Company. WANTED—LOADS ORK TSLAND 10 Donits L William King & Son COAL MERCHANTS ESTABLISHED 1835 Main Office Georgetown 1151 16th Street 2901 K Street Phone Decatur 0273 TO NEW ¥ TO_LONG FROM OHI North BROWNING & BAINES Oxienta Coffee 1f's Vacuum Sealed 13 UNW._ Phones North 3343 FREDERICK W. McREYNOLDS BION B. LIBBY AND MEREDITH M. DAUBIN ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, /ANS BUILDING eapbons chanted from Nationai 0358 tp PR NATIONAL 2292.