20 BLAIR HALTS ORDER ON YEAST COMPANY Suspends Haynes’ Until He Can Personally Rehear Evidence. Orders by Prohibition Commission- .er Haynes revoking the Industrial i alcohol permits of the Fleischmann Company, Inc, of New York and cleven of its agencies, were suspend- d tonight until Tuesday by Internal Revenue Commissioner Blair. The orders were suspended. Mr. ! Blair said, pending a rehearing of the case on Tuesday. He added that he i himself would hear the case. Mr. Blair's action was taken with the appgoval of Secretary Mellon, . upon the request of counsel for the Fleischmann Company for an appeal Action! gone into, as he would hear all the evidence on Tuesday. Quantities of industrial alcohol di- verted to non-medical purposes by Fleischmann agencies during the past year. revealed in testimony before the hearings held by Mr. Rutter, were made public last night by prohibition headquarters. At New York, out of 77.000 gallons of industrial alcohol fi handled, 42,000 were said to have been iverted; at Brooklvn, 836,000 gallons ere handled and 133,000 gallons di- erted; in New Jersey, 103.000 gallons were handled and 5,000 diverted, and in Bridgeport, Conn.. 69,980 gallons were handled and 69,515 diverted. RAPS U. S. DRY AGENTS. ! By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March® 4.—Henry Kaltenbach, vice president of the Fleischmann Company, Incorporated, manufacturers of yeast and alcoholic by-products, tonight asserted that the federal prohibition department “is in such a bad muddle it doesn't know what's going on. It doesn’t know what it's all about” His statement was occasioned by the announcement that Prohibition Commissioner Haynes' order revoking industrial alcohol permits of the Fleischmann Company had been sus- pended by Internal Revenue Commis- sioner Blair-and that seizure of alco- hol in possession of the company and Zareca and from the hearings on the case held | its eleven agencies would be held up. in Philadelphia before S. F. Rutter,{ “We shall continue to manufacture former assoclate federal prohibition |alcohol,” said Mr. Kaltenbach, “al- director for Pennsylvania, upon whose | though we shall respect the govern- recommendation Mr. Haynes issued|ment's orders by not shipping any of the revocation orders. it gnul Tu‘esdny.";n“'! that sevéral = ‘oncerning cl Setumre O dions el U hundred thousands of gallons of al- A final decision will be reached onlcorol had been “diverted to mnon- i Tuesday, Mr. Blair sald, but mean-:edicinal uses” by the Fleischmann i while the whole matter is to be held | Company, he said: iin abeyance. orders for the seizure | ~apparently the prohibition depart- of alcohol in Fleischmann agencies:ment s under the impression that all being held up, but the company|aicohol not used as medicine is boot- agreeing not to dispose of any alco- | jegwed. 'They seem to forget that it hol pending the determination of the | jg®extensively used in the manufac- proceedings. ture of perfumes, tonics, lotions and Decision to grant the Fleischmann ! "(0 00 Be¥ 0ret®y foq lets. Company an appeal from the orders | * 2010 O0 P20 R IUS with ship- revoking its alcohol permits was|ping alcohol on fraudulent permits reached at a conference late vester- | tnif G0 N R S what they are talk- day between Secretary Mellon, As-|ino¥ (00" “rrcvire all mixed up. To sistant Secretary of the Treasury|prove it, we recently laid out a bunch Dover. Commissioner Blair, Prohibi-| of Jiguor permits on a table and asked tion Commissioner Haynes and So-|prohibition officials to pick out the licitor of Internal Revenue Mapes. It| g ajlent ones. They chose several was decided to leave disposal of the | ynieh on a previous occasion they case in the hands of Mr.:Blair. had declared were genuine, and vice Secretary Mellon was understood to | versa. It seems they have no way of take the position that in view of the | getermining whether an alcohol per- importance of the case the compsny | mit is good or bad.” was entitied to an appeal. as tie| ™ yir “Kaltenbach expressed confi- original hearing had not been con-fgence that the government would ducted before Commissioner Haynes |‘“forget about the charges” and that or an actual deputy. operations of the Fleischmann Com- Amounts of Alcohol Diverted. pany would not be interfered with. Tho conference. it was said. did not consider the possible effect of the ELECTED. Tevocation orders upon the manutac. |[JACOB W. STARR RE- : ture of yeast, but Mr. Mellon was rep- | Jacob W. Starr was re-elected resented as belleving that methods | president of the Association of Re- tired Government Employes at could be devised for controlling the alcoholic by-product, which the pro- | meeting held at Grand Army Hall hibition authorities claimed had been | yesterday afternoon. Other officers elected were Capt. Robert Armour, diverted to improper uses by agencies first vice president: Dr. Benjamin of the Fleischmann Company. Summy, second vice president; Robert a conference between Mr. Blair snd{S. Kearney. secretary: Capt. George counsel for the company. Mr. Blair | Simmons, treasurer and Thomas H. said the facts in the case werge not!King. marshall. Date for the final hearing was set at Theapmes Own Columbia Grafonolas Not only because they can enjoy their wonderful music—but are freed from all worries—by reason of the perfect construction and fine finish. We feature these two models because they are favorites Type F-2 Formerly $140.00 Now *1002 With cabinet, equipped with automatic record ejec- tor, and non-set stop device. Formerly $125.00 Now 5852 With cabinet for records and equipped with non-set stop device. Have You Heard These Late - Columbia Records? | STEALING. Intro. “T Hold Her Hand and She Holds Mine.”) A-3531 (Sullivan.) (Bibo). Medley Fox-trot. The Happy Six. 10-inch WHY DON'T YOU SMILE. (Schwartz.) Fox-trot. The Happy 760 Six. Cnmedlenng.} A-3534 | WABASH BLUES. " 10-inch T5e (Melnken.) Dolly Kay, Orch. Ace. GOT TO HAVE MY DADDY BLUES. (Erdman, Cohn & Jones.) Dolly Kay, Comedienne. '‘Orch. Acc. MBER THE ROSk. (Simons.) Fox-trot. Frank Banta and Cliff Hess. Piano Duet. A ROLL ON SILVERY MOON. Intro. “Glow Little Lantern of i Lovey (Fisher.) Medley Fox-trot. Frank Banta and Cli Hess. Plano Duet. GIVE ME MY MAMMY, from “Bombo.” (Donaldson.) Al Jol- son, Comedian. Orch. Acc. A-3540 || MY MAMMY KNOWS (How to Cheer and Comfort Me). (De} 10-inch (il Costa and Jerome.) Charles Hart and Eilliott Shaw. Tenor! 760 i and Baritone Duet. Orch. Acc. i MARIE. (Motsan and Santly.) Fox-trot. Ted Lewis and His $ Band. =3535 10-inch The A-3538 10-inch || 750 'N THE OLD CHURCH AISLE, from “Greenwich Village Follles of 1921." Fox-trot. Ted Lewis and His Incidental talking by Mr. Lewis band. MIAMI Tenor Solo. Orch. Acc. A DOWN IN DIXIE FEELIN® (Hangin' Round Me.) ( 10-inch (Perkins.) Arthur Fields. Baritone Solo. Orch. Acc. T5e Hundreds of others to choose from—Come in and let us play them for you. i House & Herrmann Seventh and Eye Streets DREAMS. (Egan and Whiting.) Biily Joll!l} A-3539 * THE LSU—'NDAY" S‘\TAR,‘WASHINOI:TON, ‘D.-C.. MARCH 5, UNKISSED BRIDE GAINS FREEDOM FROM BRONCO-BUSTING HUSBAND granted an annulment of the mar- riage by Judge Stein in eircuit court No. 2 today. She claimed that she was carried oft and married against her will “‘Cheyenne OFFICERS ARE ELECTED. Officers for 1922 of the Societa Italiano Vittorio Emanuele II have been elected as follows: Presidente, M. A. Robertiello; vice presidente, F. Vito; secretario di cor- rispondenza, G. Panetto; secretario di Prodano; fesurierer, L. Od- ce fesurierer, A. Gerardi; curatore, V. Maranzano, 8, A. Glovanneti; capo dl v., A. Parrella; maresclallo, R, Castellara and 8. e sidio; p. b. Italiano, M. Anzelmo and : 2 G. Sapienza: p. L. Americana, G.| Albrecht Kaiser, seve.teen-year- e ! Chiezzi, and p. stendard,| ©ld Schoolgir], daughter of Harry F. Scaynelli. | G. Wibrecht of Baltimore, was Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md. March 4— Roped, bound and tied up for life with a daredevil bronco-busting rider of the plains, Mrs. Irene A Paramount If it's a T ———" The Tenth Birthday ~ of the World’s Greatest Photoplays Paramount Pictures ‘will be celebrated every day of March in every town of the United States. _ Every day brings renewed gratitude for mo- tion pictures. You know by instinct that you were not made for only the dull routine of workaday life. You deserve a life spiced by adven- ture and romance! And Paramount knows it! Paramount knew it in 1912 when it made the first feature picture—and Paramount has made the vast majority of the best feature pictures every year since! The Name Paramount Stands for Whatever Is Best In Motion Pictures The history of Paramount is the his- p tory of motion pictures—all the way from the day when Adolph Zukor start- led the world by starring “the divine Sarah Bernhardt,” in “Queen Elizabeth,” and Jesse L. Lasky and Cecil B. De Mille made “The Squaw Man™—up to such suc- & cesses of today as Cecil B. De Mille’s “Fool's Paradise,” Gloria Swanson, in “Her Husband’s Trademark,” and Wal- lace Reid, in “The World’s Champion.” What does it mean that more than half the theatres in the country (the best in every community) are full every day with happy peopleenjoying Paramount Pictures? It means that Famous Players-Lasky Corporation with Paramount Pictures, _ have, in ten years, changed the screen from & one and,two reel flickering stunt to the n:tfian's entertainment and a great modern art. That’s why this tenth birthday is worth celebrating! Enjoy Paramount’s Birth- day at Your Theatre! You are going to enjoy it if the Para- mount Showmen in your town and every town have their way! There will be something happening all the time in the way of shmul:tl::g P‘ah- mount entertainment. Something to see, something to feel, something to intoxicate you with the joy of life, the sharpest she of drama, the honeyed sweets of love, the ringing laughter of the spirit of Comedy! AII this in more than 11,000 theatres. Marguerite Clark in ““Miss George Washington™ Maeterlinck's “ The Blue Bird " Cecil B. De Mille's “Don’t Your Husband,” ““The Affairs of Anatol,” * and Female™ George Loane Tucker's “ The Miracle Man™ *“The Woman Thou Gavest Me" e . Wallace Reid in “The Valley of the Giants™ . Ince’s* a Half Hours Leave” ' Paramount’s anniversary gives you the chance to see a lot of great new Paramount . Sl Pic!umnd;lso-louhtyouh:;:mimd. ‘ Check up th photoplays shown * N-wuk.;h;ll“flghu. un!lnnnea'dhlh,: :‘nfivn—rymlw&!flm! by rovgh-riding cowboy, last Thanks- glving day. she separated from Kaiser im- mediately after the wedding, she il I I o W, 1922—PART - 1. sald. and saw him only ouce after | th= ceremony. In_ connection with the case, | which was heard before an | examiner, as her husband made | mo defense to the ruit, the~story of the whirlwind romance of the young schoolgirl was revealed. | | | 1 r LAND OFFICES UNITED. | Frank | | 1 | The offices of register and receiver | :um. of the United States land office at! Minot, N. D. are consolidated and the office of receiver abolished unaer presidential order, made public yesterday. - Joe” Kalser, a dencribe ki An unkissed bride, [ Picture it's the 0 | temperate,” but | drank his toddies I best show it = 6| ber” Man Who Took Many Toddies, Dead at 102 LYNCHBURG, Va., March 4.— Al e wi d wan formerly a ld_l--filln. Hin friend: L e in town - 3 RECEIVER IS NAMED. | Justice Bailey, presiding in i bankruptcy court hzs appointay Charles W. Arth receiver of th¢ | Mansfield-Sheater Paint Company o1 719-21 7th street northwest. The bond of the receiver was fixed at $45.000. The compary filed & peti- tion in voluntary bankruptcy. ‘B which its indebtedness is placed af $32,6850.32 and its assets are list at $55,382.32, of which $42.000 is rep resented by stoek in trade. - The First National Bank of Lidge wood, N. is operated entirely & women. LOEW’S PALACE WASHINGTON, D. €. March 9, 10, 11— “Love’s Boomerang,” ‘With David Powell March 12—All Week— “The World’s Cham- pion,” with Wallace Reid AMERICAN THEATER ‘Washington,. D. C. March 5, 6, “Don’t Tell Everything,” with Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson and Elliott Dexter; March 8, Betty Compson, in “Ladies Must Live™; 9, Marion Da- vies, in “Enchantmemt”; 11, Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was™; 16. Jack Holt, in “Call of the North”; 17, Ethel Clayton, in “Exit the Vamp™; 18, Wallace Reid, in “Rent Free.” APOLLO THEATER Washington, D. C. March 5, 6, A’Fnu Ayres, in “The Lane That Has No Turning”; 9. “Miss Lulu Bett”; 12, 13, Bill Hart, in “White Oak™; 17, Wanda Hawley, in “Too Much Wife"; 18, “Back Pay”; 19, 20, Betty Compson, in “The Law and the Woman.” CIRCLE "THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March_7, David Powell, in “Danger- ous Lies”; 11, Jack Holt, in “Call of the North.” AVENUE GRAND THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 7. 8, Agnes Ayres, in “The Lane ‘That Has No Turning”; 11, Alice Brady, in “Hush Money”: 17, Will Rogers, in “One Glorious Day”; 18, Wanda Hawley, in “Too Much Wife”; 19, 20, Bill Hart, in “White Oak”; 21, 22, Betty Compson, in “Law and the Woman.” . CAROLINA THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 5, Jack Holt, in “The Call of the North”; 11, Bill Hart, in “Three- Word Brand”; 12, Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was”; 18, David Pow- ell, in “Dangerous Lies.” SAVOY THEATER Washington, D. C. March 7, 8, Agnes Ayres, in “The Lane That Has No Turning”; 10, Alice Brady, in “Hush Money”; 11, Will Rog- ers, in “One Glorious Day”; 17, Just Around the Corner”; 18, Wanda Hawley, in “Too Much Wife”; 19, 20, Bill Hart, in “White Oak”; 21, 22, Betty Comp- som, in “Law and the Woman.” DUMBARTON THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 8, Bill Hart, in “Three Word Brand”; 13, Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was™; 16, “Experience”; 17, Jack Holt, in “7all of the North.” YORK THEATER Washington, D. C. March 5, Alice Brady, in “Hush Money”; 15, “Miss Lulu Bett”; 16, Gloria Swanson, in “Under the Lash”; 22, David Powell, in “Dangerous Lies”; 23, Agnes yres, in “The Lane That Has No Turn- 5.:; 3 18, Will Rogers, in “One Glorious Moore’s Rialto WASHINGTON, D. C. All Week, Beginning March 5 Lionel Barrymore In “Boomerang Bill” RAPHAEL THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 5. Wallace Reid, in “Rent Free”; 14. “Miss Lulu Bett: 3, David Powell, in “Dangerous Lies.” MIDCITY THEATER Washington, D. C March 6, Robert Warwick. in zouri”; 11, “Teeth of the Tiger Charles Ray. in “Red Hot Dollars™; Wallace Reid, in “Excuse My Dust.” VICTORIA THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 7. Wanda Hawley, in “The Love Charm”; 8, Bryant Washburn, in “Why Smith Left Home”; 14, May Mec- Avoy, in “A Virginia Courtship™; 15, Ethel Clayton, in “More Deadly Than the Male.” ELITE THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 8, Jack Holy, in “Call of the North”; 12, 13, Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson and Elliott Dexter, in “Don’t Tell Everything™; 17, Ethel Clayton, in “Exit the Vamp.” LIBERTY THEATER Washington, D. C. March 5, 6, Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was”; 7, 8, Gloria Swan- son, in “Under the Lash™; 9, Jack Holt, in “Call of the North”; 10, Ethel Clay- ton, in “Exit the Vamp”; 12, 13, Wallace Reid, in “Rent Free”; 15, David Powell, in “Dangerous Lies.” OLYMPIC THEATER ‘Washington, D. C. March 5, 6. Gloria Swanson. in “Under the La 7, David Powell, in “Dan- gerous Li 8. Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was™; 10, Constance Bin- ge_v, in “First Love”; 17, “Miss Lulu " RED WING THEATER Laurel, Md. March 7, Marion Davies, in “Enchant- ment”; 10, David Powell, in “Dangerous l‘,,iev":” 15'1;‘"1;(:]‘1’““]5 in “Exit the amp”; ion: “Boo‘:nmng 'Bill."o el arrymore, in IMPERIAL THEATER Brunswick, Md. March 6, Bryant Washburn, in “Mrs. Temple’s Telegram™; 9, Bill Har, in “Sand”; 11, Charles Ray, in “Paris Green”; 13. “The Miracle Man™; 17, “Re- becca of Sunnybrook Farm”; 18, “Re- modeling a Husband”; 20, Dorothy Dal- ton, in “The Dark Mirror™; 25, “City of Masks.” OPERA HOUSE Front Royal, Va. March 6, Bill Hart, in “Three Word Brand”; 9, “A Wise Fool”; 13, Betty Compson, in “Ladies Must Live”; 16, 17, “Experience”; 20, “Beside the Bonnie Briar Bush. [ LOEW’S €OLUMBIA WASHINGTON, D. C. Beginning March 5 Cecil B. De Mille’s “Fool’s Paradise™ With Dorothy Dalton—Conrad Nagel—Theodore Kosloff— Mildred Harris NYLIC THEATER Culpeper, Va. March 9. Marion Davies. in “Enchant- ment”; 10, 1. Wallace Reid. Gloria Swanson and Elliott Dexter, in “Don't Tell Everything™: 16, 17. “Get-Rich- Quick Wallingford™: 18. Jack Holt ‘in “Call of the Nortl 3. 24, James Kirk- wood. in “The Great Impersonation™; 25, Bill Hart, in “Three Word Brand™: 30. Jack Holt and Lila Lee, in “After the Show™; 31, “The Golem.” e PITTS THEATER Fredericksburg, Va. March 6, “Her Winning Way™: 8, “Room and Board”: 9. “The Lost Re- mance”; 13, “Too Wise Wives”; 20, Thomas Meighan, in “The Conquest of Canaan™; 21, “Dawn of the East™; 25, Bill Hart, in “The Whistle.” DIXIE THEATER Manassas, Va. March 6. 7. Cecil B. De Mille’s “For- bidden Fruit": 9. “Beau Revel™: 16, “The Great Day™: 18. Bill Har. in “O'Malley of the Mounted.™ OPERA HOUSE Leesburg, Va. March 10. “What's Worth While™: 11. Bebe Daniels. in “Nancy From No. ; 16. “A Homespun Vamp™; 18, “Silk Hosiery™; 30, Monte Blue. in “The Jucklins.” _—_— VIRGINIA THEATER Purcellville, Va. March 8, “Dawn of the East™; 15, Wanda Hawley. in “Too Much Wife”; 19, Mary Miles Minter. in “Tillie.” WARRENTON THEATER Warrenton, Va. March 8. “Life”: 10. Bebe Daniels, in “The Speed Girl™; 17, “Eversthing for Sale”; 24, “Room and Board™; 27, 28, “The Affairs of Anatol”; 31, “Wealth.” EMPIRE THEATER Winchester, Va. March 16, 17, Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson and Elliott Dexter, in “Don’t Tell Everything”; 23, “Dawn_of the East®; 24, Betty Compson, in “The End of the World.” - OPERA HOUSE Charles Town, W. Va. March 6, “The Inside of the Cup”; 13, Monte Blue, in “The Jucklins”; 20, %m. Swanson, in “Something to Think out.” VIRGINIA THEATER Harrisonburg, Va. March 7, “Chickens”: 9, “Deception”; 13, Milton Sills, in “The Faith Healer™; 14, “Proxies”; 15, 16, Cecil B. De Mille’s “Forbidden Fruit”; 17, “King, Queen and Joker™; 18, Elsie Ferguson, in “Sa- cred and Profane Love™; 23, “Sentimen- tal Tommy,” APOLLO THEATER Martinsburg, W. Va. March 6, Wallace Reid, in “Rent Free”; 8, 9, Bill Hart, in “White Oak™; 13, Thomas Meighan, in “A Prince There Was™; 15, 16, Wallace Reid, Gloria Swan- son and Elliott Dexter, in “Don’t Tell Everything.”