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4 WOOD SEES “BEAL” : G. 0. P. CONGRESS Representative Tells Presi dent of Party’s Expected Gains in Membership. A real out-and-out Republican Con gress was promised President Cooi idge today by Representative Will R. Wood of Indiana, chairman of the Republican national congressional committee. He told the President that tlie people are thoroughly dis- j gusted with men parading before | • lection time as Republicans and get - . ting elected on the strength of tins' and then deserting tl>e party when' they arrive at the Capitol. Representative Woods declared that ! the Republicans will make many 1 gains in the membership of the next ' House of Representatives. He looks I for these in New York. Pennsylvania,; New Jersey. Indiana, Illinois and j Montana. He said also the party has i an excellent chance to elect two Rc- ; publicans from North Carolina, one j from Florida, one from Virginia and 1 two from Alabama. Would Wipe Out Croup Rule. The Republican gain*, he said,! Would wipe out the domination of the ! House by the 20 members ••! the |,a ! Follette group, which «vrejsed a balance of power in the last session. I "We are going to have a real Re publican Congress this time." said Representative Wood, "for the reason that we have not it real Republican majority now The people have bad a demonstration of the futility and confusion caused by the Ha Kollette group and they are determined that the condition shall not continue. The j Sixty-seventh Congress, with a real. Republican majority, enacted more . constructive legislation than any' proceeding Congress, especially in the ] way of legislation beneficial to the farmers The next Congress will be; a Republican Congress." t <>l. Waldo Seen President. Col. Rhinelander Waldo, former police commissioner of Nt w York. ■ today conferred with the President concerning a plan to cxt n.i to other 1 cities the Coolidge Son-Partisan : Heague of which he is president. The • bib's activities in New Voi-i: i C'ty have proved such a success, he Said, that it is now proposed to organize branches throughout the country. "An average of 2.l.<Hm) persons daily are coming into our headquarters in the old Shaniey restaurant at Times Square," he said. CiVc are open 12 hours every day. from noon t.. 1 ; midnight, and every minute there is' a speaker talking for Coolidge and Dawes. Ttie interest manifested in these speeches i* remarkable Thou sands of Democrats tell us they are going to vuti for Coolidge" Indications now. are that John W. Davis w'll carry Missouri despite the optimistic claims being made by some of the Republican leaders, according to C. S. Yost, editor of the St. la.uis < '.lobe Democrat and president of tee American Society of N v: paper Hd itors. who was it caller yesterday at the White !!■ USi . Not only did this .Missouri editor give his opinion about the political situation in his Slate to newspaper men at the White House, but he bad the temerity to so express himself to President Coolidge. He said today he wanted to give the President the bene tit of his observations. <\eu though they were not quite so ros y as the reports he lias been receiving. I.a Kollette \ o«e I.urge. Mr. Yost bases his opinion regarding the outcome upon the growth of the Ha Kollette movement in Missouri. The Wisconsin Senator is going to poll a large vote, the greater portion of which will come from the Repub licans. lie said. President Coolidge asked many questions regarding the tight in m.d- V.’est States and appeared grateful to Mr. Yost for tin frank manner in which he presented his observations. So interetsed was the President in Mr. Yost's campaign story that he in vited him to Vie his guest at lunch eon, when they could go further into the subject. Mr. Yost said he told the President that the American Society of News paper editors. <;f which he is the head, has decided to hold its future meetings and banquets in Washing ton. and they want him to attend these. The next one will he held late in November or on Franklin's birth day anniversary. January IT. II—iII—IIiBUIIII 11118 111 l | HIM Mill —Min— Chestnut Farms Milk ■ I “The Knowing Mother Will Have No Other” [££l i E L E G A TES The Chemist thorities from and Bacteri- abroad, constantly visit us to olo£ist. study the model conditions nJkc” IHg hV r un(ler which milk is made su standards pre- nerior in qualitv for you here, vail on the farms from which the Xo other dairy 'in the world milk comes, by . ~ . . . aiding the shipper S° es mor e scientifically into the i 1° i overco . me perfection of its milk. Our ex » faults that reject ‘ his milk. Also. perts, in our own modern la these specialists , , , , key the sterility boratory, check, analyze and t'acle"used."from teSt OUr milk at eve, T se P a ' thc farmer's milk rate step of its progress toward pail to the bottle left at your door. your door. OftestnuJ^cmusTtow lti6 CcmnocticatAFa* *fftANKUN 4000* TYPOTHETAE HOLDS ELECTION TOMORROW | Entertainment Program and Danc ing Will Fellow Busi ness Session. 1 The Typothetae of Washington j will hold its annual election of offl- ; • ters at a meeting tomorrow at the j t'ity Flub, to be followed by a »pe- : • •ini program of entertainment with dancing. Honorary membership will be con ferred on Maj. Wallace W. Kirby, di rector of the Bureau of Kngraving and Printing, similar to the action last year in electing George H. Car- j ter. public printer, to membership. , The principal speaker will be Merle I Thorpe, editor of Nation's Buffi ness. ’ | Tile program includes a banquet at ' I pm. in the ballroom of the • '*ity Club, followed by a business i session which will include the elee i tion and reports of committees. Wil- : i Ham John Kynon, president, will pre i side at the business session. Dancing i will occupy the remainder of the I evening. \ The present officers are as follows: j President, Mr. Kynon: vice president. ; Oscar T. Wright; recording secretary, iS. Percy Oliver; treasurer. Samuel i M Darragh; members of the board jof directors. Thomas W. Cadick. I'harles K. Sudwarth. George H. Judd, ' Franc. K. Sheiry. Charles F. Crane. Frank P. Howard. Robert McP. ! Milan*. John H. Davis, John G. | , Hodges, Maxwell IJones. George H. Kennedy. Frank B. Keyes. I>*wis M ' Thayer and William N. Freeman. WASHINGTON RACE CLOSE. WITH SLIGHT EDGE FOR COOLIDGE • Continued from First Page * doubt but what Ha Kollette will fail ‘ to carry the Slate. They hope to in fluence many of the legion members to vote for Davis, if they do not care j ! to vote for Coolidge. The Republicans are encouraged to j believe that the State is "eonserva- ( live” because, in the primaries held j September ft. Hie conservative candi-j ; date for governor on the Republican | ticket nn far ahead of the Progn s-j sive candidates for that office in the number of votes cast. Also, in the 1 J fifth eotme siontil district, the only | & Makes a Family Supply {| i| cf Cough Remedy J pi £ gj Kent I > better than ready-made dD cough syrupy, and saves about Lg I'.usily and quk'kly prepared. p] If you combined the curative prop erties of every known “ready-made” remedy, you probably could not Ret as much real curative power as there is in this simple home-made coußh syrup, which is easily pre : pared in a few minutes. (iet from any druggist 2'- 2 ounces of Pinex. pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with syrup, using ■ either plain granulated sugar syrup, clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, as desired. The result is a , full pint of really better cough syrup than y ou could buy ready-made for j three times the money. Tastes pieas i ant nd never spoils. This Pinex and Syrup preparation gets right at the cause of a cough and gives almost immediate relief, j It loosens the phlegm, stops the nasty throat tickle and heals the sore, irritated membranes so gently and easily that it is really astonish j iug. A day’s use will usually overcome the ordinary cough and for bron chitis, croup, hoarseness and bron chial asthma, there is nothing bet ter. Pinex is a most valuable concen trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, and has been used for generations to break severe coughs. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for “2 1 / x ounces of Pinex” with full directions, and don’t accept anything else. Guaranteed to give ; absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded. The Pinex Co., ! Ft Wayne, Ind. TOE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. t WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1. 3024. district of the State in which there Is now a Democratic Congressman, ttie Republican nominee. Ferguson, is a conservative, winning over his Pro gressive opponent. Corkery, bv some | 3.000 votes. j Drive (irla I niter Vtny. The intensive campaign is just now ! getting under way. due to the late | ‘late of the primaries in Spokane, for' ! example, the Republican headquar- I j ter-; opened this week. The Hepubli | can, 1-a Follette and Democratic Slate i I headquarters located in Seattle tire! ! only now beginning to be very ac- ’ j live. Senator Wesley M Jones, Re- j I publican, is preparing to start on a j State-wide campaign for the national I ticket and the State ticket. He is a 1 good campaigner, and the national | committee has urged him to make | speeches in other Stales. But Sena- i tot Jones believes lie is needed in ! Washington, and will stick to the ' 1 State —another indication of the present I | closeness of the contest. Dnvis Support Split, j Tile Ha F dlette ticket undoubtedly ! I is cutting into the Demoeralic ranks ! of the Stale deeply, probably just as 1 deeply at not more so than, into tile! Republicans For example, Carl S. j Kvans. the iac Follette chairman in j Spokane, head of the Central Habor| Council. formerly was a stanch | Democrat and secretary of the Demo- j cratic organization. Not long ago | he resigned the last position and j came out fiatfootedly for 1,-a. Follette. ! Washington has one Republican 1 Senator and four Republican members I of the House, it has one Democratic 1 Senator and one Democratic member of the House. Senator Dill and Rep resentative Hill of the fifth district, 1 which includes Spokane, are the j I TWO [ GOOD HENS , Peck, Scratch and (Tiuckle All Day Long To supply the richness we mix into every order. of WAFFLES Served with Syrup and Butter. 20c The AUTOMETER RESTAURANT New York Avenue (Between Mth and 15th Sts.) :|g| g-^rg^i^-yoeoE• :;■ TT Tr ~ ll ■ I M&Si I I I of dU kinds-** ’®; IH A proper range and de- pi pi sirable variety of coats ® B is hard to find just now. M jg But not if Smart Style g H is on your list. For buy- jjjj H ers are surprised at the I— § unusual array of right- I® M priced garments to be @ H found on the racks here. E We Solicit Charge Accounts ® | JtfjJtion&J&f ■ g Pennsylvania Avenue at Eighth N.W. * pgj Democrats. Roth played with tho I-a Follette or Progressive groups in Congress, and Progressives here claim that, privately, both are boosting for Ha Follette in the National election. Their public statements in regard to Candidate Davis have been exceed ingly lukewarm, to say the least. This too. is encouraging the Ha Follette | people to believe that they are go ing to gel u heavy vote from the Democrats; on the other hand, it has j angered some of the Democrats, ; vv hose support Hill will need against • Ferguson, and he may lose in the fifth district. Democrats, who are supporting Ha Kollette in thisi State in the belief i that ft is belter to throw the State to the Progressives and so prevent i Coolidge from getting the electoral | vote, making it probable that the I election will go to Congres's for final • decision, are playing with tire, just , sis they are in other States. The Ha Follette people are avowedly out to i form a new party. If their movement succeeds, it is more than likely to \ w ipe from the political map the Dem ocratic party than the Republicans. \fw Doctrine Spread, j The doctrine is spreading more and 'more among the Progressives that If | there must lie a choice for President ! betkeen Dawes, the Republican con ! servative, and Kryan. the Democratic i Progressive, it would he more to the | interest of the proposed new party jto have Dawes in the White House jthan Bryan. j The I. W. W's. of Seattle and other | parts of Washington, of which so I mui h has been written, are not a political force of any moment in the j State. Very many of them are not citizens of the Cnitcd States, but aliens, furthermore the I W. W's. i ■■■■'" 11 1 ■ " Dinner Dance p!-J fj »! Saturday, October 4 jyHjJi jp II life Starting at 7:30 P. M. Wardman Park Hotel flntiKjEVjTf THE PECK-MILLS ORCHESTRA BOERNSTEIN’S WARDMAN PARK fd/i HOTEL ORCHESTRA Call Columbia 2000 for Reservations are a wandering lot and many of them will not be able to vote because of lacking required length of resi dence. Their votes will go either to Ha Kollette or to Foster nominee of the “reds.” While Follette Is going to get the votes of a great many of the workers in the Staley, he is not going to get them all. for example, some of the older railroad workers are going to vote for Coolidge or Davis. I heard a barber here in Seattle excor iate 1-a Follette with as great free dom as might have been expected of a capitalist. In a Spokane hole!, I asked a wait ress whether she would vote for Ha Follette or Coolidge. “I-a Follette," site replied, with great firmness, add ing that her "dad" was a leader in the unions. But another waitress in the same hotel said she would oast her ballot for Coolidge, and so it goes. The Hi Follette waitress was the prettier of the two, if that Is any j consolation to the progressives, but it . is gfdng to be difficult to deliver the j labor vote as a whole. Farmers Illiwtallsded. A farmer, or richer a former farm- j or, compelled to quit fanning by the j h.*rd Hire;., hanging about the Ha I Follette headquarters In Spokane said | that "nearly all the farmers,” in that 1 part of the State were going to sup port I-a Follette. He had a son work ing in a lumber mill whose wages re cently were reduced to $3.40 a day. he. too, was for I-a Follette. It is largely the discontented elements who are supporting the progressive ticket, though, of course, there are many progressives who will vote on principle. Farmers who sell their apples at 00 cents to a dollar a box and later see the same apples sold at retail for sl2 a box In town, are not satisfied. The wheat crop in Washington has been short this year, and the Increase iw prices of gram. therefore, does not help as much here as in some of the other Stales. The I.a Kollette cam paigners are having their troubles here over their electors on the ballot and the place they shall occupy, just as they are having trouble in other States. The courts have been asked i to intervene against the tiling of other lists of alleged I.a Kollette supporters, so as to prevent a division of the La Kohelte strength when election day rolls round. One group is filing a "La Kollette Mate ticket" also, to which serious objection is taken by the La Kollette managers, who claim that this group has no right to use La Kollette s |— , 402-404 Seventh Street Very Exceptional Values in I if Distinctive Fur=Trimmed Models Jj |v" H I Tliese Coats are unusually attractive in Brytonias, II /y | q Wool Velours. Kcrami, lustrous Bolivias and Angora Sport Weaves. Collars and cuffs of Black Wolf. Hand ; some linings of Silk or Venetian. i > All s zes for women and misses Another Le Mar Special Exquisite Opera Pumps, with one and two straps and Spanish heels, etc. Patent Leather ^ 1 ' fllows Hisßep r/'/r ♦*B lO fat 11 oclockf in OES he find his energy low U about an hour before lunch? Docs he find his spirits lagging and his mind in “Slow motion?” Ask him tonight. He needs his pep—needs it all the time. Ho needs that hour from 11 to 12. Auth’s Sausage for breakfast —that’s what he needs. At 11 he’ll be as prime as at 9. He’ll like it, too—pure pork, flavored just right and steaming hot. And you’ll like it—in less than ten minutes, you can have a real meal. Start Tomorrow With Auth’s! Sr rfutAXr Sr Pork Stow Pork Puddin * Scrapple Cooked Han. toT 1 SAUSAGE MEAI * natn*. ?M1 tliis is helpful to the Re publicans. Stair* UrnifM'rnlM Hum?. he I)emo<Tatic campaign Is mi tering: largely in ih»* rontc-st for tin governorship and for members of I'omtrfsx. It is hinti <1 i liat for mid-! [uirl for their noininct s for State aiul | congressional office, flu- I ii'morrats | I fade support for the La Kol- ' lettc-Wheeler national ticket. 'l'ln- Republicans point to Hit- fart 1 that Washington lias long been a i strong IP nnlilii-an Stat. They say i t-hai in 1!<22 Dill, tin- Demo-rat, only Poindexter for tin- Senate, Lin.- | 37a to 121!.;,56. with tin- Karrm-r-La rfor candidate getting 33,352. The defeat of Poindexter, they add. was due to his unpopularity and his vote for Newberry in tin- Senate. They figure that all of the Republicans who for Poindexter will surely vote for • 'ooUdge, and many others besides.. That being the ease, and with I,a Kolb-tle and I'avis splitting the other vote, they see <‘oolidge and Itawes winning hy from 13,0(1® to 30.000. In the presidential election four years ago Washington gave (larding 223.0ft0 ; votes, fox M.o«*o and the Parnier ‘ Labor candidate 77.(Min. 1 In Republican circles on<- hears ir-s --; intently the statement that a few | weeks ago tin La Folk-lie- movement j was going strong, but now it seems Ito be weakening. The Republicans believe that they have launched their | attack in time to stave off the defeat I that threatened hem. If you need work, read the want columns »>f The Star.