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Rheumatic pain? ~relief | Congestion, inflamed tissues +then persistent pain, Apply Sloan’s to break up congestion, ydraw out inflammation ~and stop that pain! an's Liniment ) ~kills pain/ i THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O. MONDAY, JANUARY 29 1923. 3 KILLED, 3 HURT IN FLORIDA BLAST Dynamite Placed in Paimetto Tree Is. Exploded by Shot From Revolver. By the Associnted Press. WE! PALM BEACH, Fla, Jan- pary 29.—Three youths were kiiled and five others injured near here yester- | day when one of them fired a shot into sticks of dynamite which had been placed for safe keeping in a knapsack hanging from a palmetto tree. They were on a hiking trip at the time. BY RADIO TODAY Schedule Entertainment. NAA—Naval Radio Station, Radio, Va. 3:45 to 4 p.m.—Closing live stock warkets. 4 to 4:16 p.m.—Hay and feed mar- kets. 6 p.m.—Weather report. 5:30 to 6 p.n.—Dally marketgram. 9:45 p.m.—Weather forecast. 10 p.m.—Time signals; weather re- port; ship orders (2,650 meters). 10:30 p.m.—Naval press news (2,650 meters). 11 p.m.—Weather forecast. (Except where noted, sending is CW 6,950 meters.) By Radiophone on 710 Meters. 6:45 to 7 p.m.—United States bureau of education lecture, “The Sleep of School Children.” | 7:05 to 7:20 p.m.—Lecture by De- | partment of Agriculture on “That Destructive Explosive Dust.” 7:2 7:40 p.m.—Labor Depart- | service broadcast on “The Balanced Diet.” WWX—Post Ofice Department (1,100 Meters). 3:30 pim.—Report on fruits and veg- stables. 5 pm.—Report on dairy products and grafn, 7:30 p.m.—Live stock and grain re- ports. 8 p.m.—Report o1 frults and vege- tables. 9:45 p.m.—Weather forecast. ‘WIL—Centinental Electric Company (360 Meters). 5:20 to 7 p.m.—Phonograph selec- tiens. y-Hill Electric Com- (360 Meters). 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.—Address by Roger Babson, statistical expert, and pro- gram ef music.” WMU—Doubled: » WIAY—Woodward & Lothrop (360 Meters). 2 to 3 p.m.—Selections on the phono- graph and reproducing plano. WJIH—White & Boyer Company (360 Meters). DANCERS FLEE FLAMES. Women Faint During Rush for Exits When Hoboken Hall Burns. HOBOKEN, N. J, January 29.—| Fire ‘originating in a store adjoining the Prlace dance garden here short- ly before midnight last night caused a mnesr panic nmong the dancers, during which more than a score of women fainted, while nearly 100 others, with their partners, Jemmed the hallways and_struggled down steep ladders in a frantic attempt to reach safety. D trola and reproducing piano. WPM —Thomas J. Williams, (360 Meters). 8 to 9:45 pm.—Concert by the Times-Herald Newsboys' Band, under the direction of L. E. Phillips. program, which has bee Ine, SAY “BAYER” when you buy Aspirin | At the first c_hill. take genuine Aspirin according to the safe and proper directions in each “Bayer” package, to break up | your cold and relieve the pain, headache, fever, neuralgia. ser, follows: * diers’ Farewell,” The dead are: Lawrence Haworth, nineteen; Robert Lincoln, jr., fourteen, and Martin Feuss, fourteen. The injured: Hall Nichols, twenty-four; Orson Morgan, fifteen; Thomas Math- ewson, seventeen; Lewls Hall, six- | teen, and Lawrence Clinging, twelve. Mathewson is the only one of those injured believed, to be in a serlous| condition. i | Comprized Hiking Party. | | All of the dead and injured are residents of Palm Beach county. Those comprising the “hiking” par- ty were the nucleus of a scoul troop which they expected to organize in their neighborhood. Lawrence Clinging, the only one of those injured able to talk last night, xaid the boys found the dynamite un- der an old house.near where they pitched camp the night before. They took out several aticks with the intention of taking them home to use in blasting out stumps on their | farms and hung the rest in the pai- | metto tree. { Shot Causes Blast. 4 to 4:30 p.m.—Muslc and features. | b “When Reube ture on “Benefits of the Country From Naturalization.” 7: H «“ ” 5 e 55 108 B Redvolan the. Cobt andy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Dru WEASIThe Iecht Company Mustc | 4spirin 18 the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Momozcetlcaciderter of alic: Store (360 Meters). 3 to 4 p. ectlons on the Vie- f War,” by the War Department. 8:06 to 8:20 p.m.—Public health How the children W<, sac... 481 love this {EEECGENSENEL | lunch ! ¥ Jelly Sandwiches R made with Tak- hom-a Biscuit. Better thanbread, because they don’t § |app o ” | *Bverything happened s quickly o1 4 v is T saw sandwich to get the ¢ { W::.[me A(‘ilm‘fl f&‘{l'r 'Hall Nichols, al- H ¥ i though desperately injured made his jelly. way three miles gown a sandy road to E . a settlement and notifled the boys asier to prepare. Easy to eat be- tamilies. Doctors and ambulances | were immediately rushed to the scene. l cause Tak-hom-a Biscuit splits-in- !l RADIO NEWS || two and doesn’t Delay of the Navy Department in crumble. oficially approving the plan to broad- cast the regular Monday afternoon ‘ood i concerts of the Marine Band at the Af fhut gves Marine barracks will prevent the pro- Mgfh for a day | gram this afternoon from going out of hatd Ph)’ on the ether waves. It is hoped, how-| Tak-hom-a Bis- cuit is sold in pack- ages with red wrap- ever, that the proposition will be| | “0.K"d" some time this week, in or-| er and blue and red end seals. Here Madam is a Laundry Soap yesterday, Ciinging said the boys were sitting around a campfire, Harworth fired his pistol, | apparently, Clinging thought, into the young | der that the concert next Monday | | can be broadcasted. A complete “Schubert program.” in | commemoration of the 327th birthday | | anniversary of the great composer, | will be broadcasted Wednesday night | by the United States Marine Band Or- | chestra through station NAA, in Ar- | lington. { 1 Jopse-Wites Biscurr (pMPaxy Branches in Over 100 Cities Some of thie artists who wiil ap- pear on the concert program tomor- row night of station WJH of the| White & Boyer Campany include Miss 1da TUliman, Miss Margaret Grant,| Miss Fay Moorman, Miss Audrey Van ; | Dercook, Mise Gladys Ullman, Jack | | G. Ward, John D. Powell, A. M. How- | lard and Mies Josephine Bird. ittsburgh~ The Steel .Hearto_{’AmeziCa 4 convenient trains daily Industrial America strides along on two gigantic legs—coal and iron. The contin- uous utilization of these tremendous re- sources has brought about the rapid rise of the great city of Pittsburgh, directly in the westward path of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. Realizing its industrialimportance, 4 trains are run directly from Baltimore and Wash- ington to this city. Whatever your busi- ness, whatever the hour of your departure, you will find that your arrival is timed for your convenience and comfort. SPLITS-IN-TWO " The New Way of Washing Van Camp’s Clean-easy Soap takes all the RUB out of washday Just cut up a half bar of Van Camp’s Clean-easy in a wash boiler of water. Boil and stir clothes for only 10 minutes. If you use a washing machine, chip the Clean-easy and use without washing powder. s It produces the fluffiest, snowiest clothes you ever saw without injuring even the most dainty colored linens and cottons. Made of the purest vegetable ails, blended with naptholeine by our new process, Van Camp’s Clean-easy Soap is washday’s biggest helper. You have a choice of yellow or white cakes. Each gets the same results. Van Camp’s White Naptha Every household needs two soaps— Just as Clean-easy is the ideal laundry soap, Van Camp’s White Naptha is the finest soap for general cleaning. It gives glassware a crystal clearness. It is unexcelled for cleaning tile, bathtubs, woodwork, etc. It is splendid for washing out delicate fabrics. Madefrom pure vegetable oils, it does not redden or roughen the hands. Take advantage of the free introductory offer CLEAN-EASY AND WHITE NAPTHA SOAPS today n ( amps Made by Van Camp Products Co., Indianapolis GUARANTEE: If you arenot satisfied with any Van Camp’s Soap, return !lpewnpp«toyourmmdhcwfll ly give your money. The trains are solid through trains and afford the usual high standard of Balti- more & Ohio-service. Whenever and whereveryou are going to travel, call Main 556 and ask “The Travel Bureau” for any information you may want. # Through Trains to Pittsburgh Leave ‘Washington 1005 A M. 122P. M. 1020 P. M. 12.15 night Tickets may be obtained at the City Ticket. Office, 323 Homer Building, 13th and F Streets, N. W. and at Union Station. . * fihltimorethio America’s First Railroad™ Zsastisied 2877 Vi SR 'With every purchase’of 1 ber or more of Van Camp’s s A T A ONB