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BONAR LAW SUFFERS RETURN OF ILLNESS Condition of Throat Causing Con- siderable Worry Among Friends. By the Assoclated Press, LONDON, October 23.—Former Prime Minister Bonar Law has had a recurrence of the throat trouble which caused him to resign the pre- miership, and his condition is giv- ing considerable worry to his friends. Mr. Bonar Law suffered a chill a few days ago and now is confined to his home with a cough. He is un- der the constant care of doctors, but his throat condition aparently is not readily amenable to treatment. NEW HOSPITAL NEAR CASUALTY PLANNED Group of Washington Phy- sicians Will Open It When Alterations Are Complete. | GREEK REVOLUTION BELIEVED BROKEN Athens Quiet, Government Confident as Rebel Troops Return to Post. I Tiy the Associated Press. ATHENS, October 23.—It is reported from Chalcis that most of the provin- clal soldiers who revolted under the leadership of Gen. Metaxas, the royval- ist, are returriing to the ranks. The men assert that they were duped by their officers, whom they followed under the belief that they were want- ed for regular service Yesterday passed without incident, the circulation of the population throughout the city being forbidden aften 10 o'clock last night, except by special permit. The government is issuing r aring statements, but no definite information as to the situa- tion in the Peloponnesus is available. The Greek fleet is anchored off Cor- inth, and the passage of any insur- gents into the mainland is conse- quently impossible. Communication Cut. pey be; fo ga on A group of prominent Washington physicians have purchased a building Communication between Athens and | if the vicinity of the Casualey Homi- Pelopennesian points has been inter- | tal in which they Will operase rupted. ; nhospital,"ft was learned today from a Military headquarters maintain that | Feliable sourc the government 1s master of the sit| The h will be opened as soon uation cre is no s s alterations on the building o ‘:LV((H ol ‘r(\l‘.lhh‘!(‘(l, regardless of whether the the directors of all of them having |Casualty —Hospital continues to *“NRTAIM& red with Gen. Metaxas. tooperate. avold arrest. The re-establishment| o HoRpItal, of martial law is philosophically re- | i pe o soobmablic is the Casualty Hospital. ceivedsby the masses. One of the proclamations issued by | gpen a new hospital in were taken by the ph the ~counter-revolutionists, besides calling upon the povernmen Te- i Wag learned that © would clos sign, appealed to the king to assume M. Vlachos, manager o Casualty Hospital will continue oper- paper Kathimerini, h ation until notified of their disband- and will be court-mart ment, Mrs. Margaret J. Vaughn, pres- ident of the board, announced today jat the lar monthly meeting, the Ebbitt Hotel. Mrs. Vaughn said that at present there much need for the auxili- tic an are in Athen re published t fin stood, | on, as | it is unde instity] e northeast ns when it ualty probably the news- en arrested dled. PRESS BLAMED. i Violent Anti-Government Cam- blood. they might have been from a chicken which he had killed. the hiding of his clothes in the raft- ers of the Baumgartner barn by say- ing that he them. Beckwith's about through town tou the road n tion prisoner thoriti, At th a verdict of murder at the hands of Harry son of the slain couple, testifie cellar of their THE EVENING RAMP ADMITS BLOODY CLOTHING an Held in Cline Murder De- nies He Killed Couple, However. Special Dispatch to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Robert Beckwith, tramp, arrested yesterday as a s Ma., October 23.— sixty-one-year-old s- ct in the murder of John and Re- cca Cline, on thelr farm near here, today admitted the ownership of ajfered. blood-soaked hat, shirt and shoes und in the barn of Marshall Baum- rtner, across the Pennsylvania state line. Beckwith declared that the stains his discarded .clothing were not He later said, however, that He explained had no further use for arrest was brought a party of Hagers- sts who passed him along hippensburg and no- answered the descrip- by the police. The be grilled by the au- ed that h broadeast will today. coroner’s inquest last night unknown J n Cline, the was seventeen-y returned ir-old to the ding of his parents’ in the body hom 07 STRIKING TAILORS GET NEW WAGE OFFER Employers’ Proposed 15 Per Cent Flat Raise in All Branches Held for Vote. paign Held Revolt Cause. {ary as there ever was. There is work to do, she said, and the board A committee of custom tailors rep- resenting twenty-two establishments STAR, WASHINGTON, SAILORS AND MARINES. TO HONOR ROOSEVELT Special Arrangements Being Made for Celebration Saturday, 4 Navy Day. Special arrangements are being made for the large number of uni- formed sailors and marines expected to attend the Roosevelt patriotic memorial exercises at Metropolitan Memorial Church, John Marshall place an@l C street northwest, Sat- urday night. The day being set aside as Navy day, the veteran ex-service men will celebrate jointly at the Roosevelt anniversary exerclses. Many stories of the life of the late President Theodore Roosevelt will be recited by men from the Army and Navy who knew the former Presi- dent personally. Reminiscences of { Roosevelt at Santiago, in the Spanish war, and eulogies of Roosevelt, the President and statesman, will be of- His true Americanism will be held as an ideal for all to. follow. Similar Roosevelt memorial serv- ices will be held in many other cities simultaneously. In New York the house in which he was born will be dedicated to the public as the Roose- velt Museum. WHITE INDIAN TRIBE FOUND IN PANAMA Have Light Skin and Flaxen Hair, Says Discoverer. Warlike, Natives Declare. By the Associated Press. ROCHESTER, N. Y. October 23.— Discovery of a race of white Indians, with flaxen hair, in the almost im- penetrable jungles of eastern Panama, was reported today by Richard C. Marsh of Brockport, an explorer, just returned from the isthmus. Mr.} Marsh, the first white man to advance Into that unexplored region of Central America since Balboa, brought back with him photographs to substantiate his claims. The story of the discovery is told by the Rochester Journal and the Post- Express in a copyrighted article. was in a native village when I e D. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1923. GIVES CAPT. GWYNNE CLEAN BILL IN TRIAL Sergeant Says Accused Surgeon Always Acted According to Orders. Capt. Samuel C. Gwynne, Medical Corps, retired, now being tried by a general 'coun-mnrfll.l on a charge of malpractice in the case of Private Guy Pendleton, a patient of his in the Fort Eustis, Va., Hospital was given a clean bill by one of the chief witnesses for the prosecution today. Sergt. Lewls S. Bowen, connected with the Fort Eustis Hospital, testified that Capt. Gwynne at no time took the initlative in the treatment of Pendleton, but took orders from Maj. George W. Cook, in command of the hospital, who was personally super- vising the case. Sergt. Bowen testified that he be- lieved Capt. Gwynne to be an excellent surgeon and that he was most dili-] gent In his care of this particular case. On direct examination he brought out that plaster casts, originally made on another man, were used as Supports for Pendleton’s fractured legs, and that when these were removed bad pressure bruises were found. “I expected to find that,” he testified Capt. Gwynne had said. ' On cross-ex- amination the witness said that the casts had been made according to or- ders and specifications from Maj. Cook, and that they were strong, well padded and the best that could be made in his judgment. Deaths Reported. The following deaths have been reported to the health department in the last twenty- four hours: 3 Jean M. Overman, 80, 6322 Blair rd. n.e. Marie G, Smeltzer, 76, 2521 University pl. Lydia 8. McElhingey, 8, 70 Q & Lawrence M. Roche,' 54, 1324 8th st. Edward Horne, 70,336 24 st. n.e. harles M. Bawsel, 50, 42 Bryaot st. Mary 3. Weaver, 74, 1708 8 st Margaret E. Donaldson, 4, 514 234 Infant of William H. 'and Ruth Kopplolky, Garfield Hospital, o pimily E. Trout, 6 bours, Walter Reed Hos- ivia P. Newsom, 17, 987 Florlda ave. aria B Jackson, 62,508 Kastle pl. n.e. clle, Smith, 30, 221 K . omi Stewart, 16, 800 3d st. e.w. belle Hawkins, 58, Galllhger Hospital, 2, 1321 Huatoon pl. s.w. Savanna M. Gilbert,’ 9 months, 1106 48th st. ne. Melvin Gant, 8 months, 1343 B st. n.e. Pearl 1. Ware, 1 month, 939 Snow CRITTENTON HOME DRIVE ORGANIZED Captains of Teams and Divi- sions Named to Solicit for Funds. Justice Frederick L. Siddons of the District Supreme Court will be the principal speaker tomorrow evening at the Hotel Ebbitt at 6:30 o'clock, when members of the Florence Crit- tenton campaign organization, which is to ralse $200,000 for the Florence Crittenton Home of Washington, held their first dinner. The executive committes in charge of the drive for funds, of which Ro- land Robbins is chairman, announces that the following line-up has been declded upon personally to solicit the money required to erect the proposed buildings and guarantee the 1924 burget: . Division A—Merrit O. Chance, lead- er of five teams, which will be cap- | talned by Orville B. Drown, Frank E. Ghiselll, Charles H. Hillegeist, James R. Mays and Caleb W. O'Connor. Division B—Gen. Anton Stephan, leader of flve teams, captained by Har- old A. Brooks, Frank H. Bryson, J. Max Cunningham, Charles W. Pimper and H. B. Plankinton. Division C—Mrs. William E. Cham- berlin, leader of six teams, captained by Mrs. Edgar Brown, Mrs. Willam L. Fulton, Mrs. Blaes Hallencretz, Miss Rachel King, Mrs. Emory M. Foster and Mrs. Caroline E. Shaver. Division D—Mrs. John H. Harwood, leader of seven teams, captained by Mrs. Mary A. Anderson, Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs. Warren M. Florence, Mrs. W. Boyer Pain, Mrs. Fred G. Mitchell, Mrs, Robert L. Rauch and Mrs. Lamont A._Williams, Division E—Mrs. A. B. McManus, leader of seven teams, captained by Mrs. A. L. Craig, Mrs, E. J. Diffles, Mre. R C. Hess, Mrs. john W. Lynch, Mrs. Clarence McConneli, Mrs. Eugene Ohlander and Mrs. H. L. Barrick, Division F—Mrs. Stephen L. Tabor, leader of sevem teams, captained by Mrs. W. Y. Brady, Mrs. Merton A. Eng- lish, Mrs. Albert L. Harrls, Mrs. E. A. Parker, Mrs. W. T. Pollard, Mrs. Clin- ton L Wollcott and Mrs, Alexander Wiley. = i1 MISS S. L. BUCHER DIES; NOTED SOCIAL WORKER Service of Thirteen ¥Yoars With Board of Children’s Guardians Praised by Superior. Miss Sara L. Bucher, supervisor of investigations for the board of chil- dren's guardlans, dled at Homeo- pathic Hospital last night from a. complication of Aiseases. ! Miss Bucher came to Washington trom Philadelphla twenty years ago and for the past thirteen years has been in the service of the board of guardians. Mrs. R. Thomas West, former ex- ecutive agent of the board, today de- clared that In the death of Miss Bucher the board has lost one of its most efficient and experienced social workers. For seven years prior to her appointment Miss Bucher was with the Associated Charities. Miss Bucher resided at 2517 14th street northwest. ROLS N SHOLS SHONTRINGAEASE Enrollment in the District public schools is 732 greater than at this time last year, according to statistics compiled today in the office of Robert L. Haycock, assistant superintendent. The total enrollment is 66,81 Although the school population is somewhat lower than the officials an- ticipated at this period of the scholas- | tic year, an increase is expected! shortly before the convening of Con- gress, when the senators and repre sentatives return to Washington and | place their children in the schools. The high school enrollment shows | a slight gain over last vear. A slight | increase also is noted in the graded | schools, ‘while the normal schools ! have fifty-eight more students than | last year. | = — Typewriters | | | Lowest Rental Rates ., i | General Typewriter Co. 2 Stores 1423 F St. N.W.—616 14th St. N.W. LATIMER CONSIDERS NAVY RESERVE BILL Admiral and Convention Go Over Each Proposed Amend- ment to Measure. Amendments to the proposed bill to reorganize the United States naval reserve by the United States Naval Reserve Officers’ Association at its convention yesterday were presented to Rear Admiral J. L. Latimer, judge advocate general of the Navy, who appeared at the meeting today. Admiral Latimer and the delegates went over the amendments, many of which are proposed legal changes in phraseology. The bill now will o back to the department with the sug- gested changes, where the judge ad- vocate general and other officers will analyze them. The convention adjourned shortly after noon, and the legislative com mittee went to the bureau of the bud get for a conference regarding esti- mates for the support of the naval reserve for the next fiscal year. PAIR SLAIN AT DANCE. Killed, Chauffeur ‘Wounded, St. Louis. ST _LOUIS, Mo., October 23 and Mrs. Richard Grant of Chicago were shot and killed in a dance hall in the western part of the city early today. Wilfred Stalnaker, their chauffeur, was _wounded seriously. Police were told the shooting was done by highwaymen IT"S NOT A HOME UNTIL IT’S PLANTED Buy your evergreens, shrubs and plants dif the grower, 450 varieties. Svery plant covered b a 100% gua. antee. Copy of “Home Ground ‘Their Planting and Planning, maliled free. Visitors welcomed. ROCK CREEK NURSERY P. 0. ROCKVILLE, MD. Nursery entrance on Rockville pike halfway between Montrose and Halpine. Man and Wife |noticed three girls passing into the in Washington met today with unin |jungle,” Mr. Marsh said, “They had representatives a e o | bodies as light as a sunburned white | Sl atives and presented to the } 3, ¢% 14 "Gecidedly light halr—a | striking workmen a proposal for a |l A0S CECCET T ngruous sight | flat increase of 15 per cent in all lamong these black and rag-clad ne- branches of the custom tailoring in- | roes. dustry. The union delegates wr»rui not empowered to take immediate By the Associated Press. LONDON, October statement ed ernment, received here from Athens, ascribes the revolutionary outbre olent ant nment paign carried on in Athens, w | must continue its efforts. An opti- {mistic note was injected into her| announcement when she intimated | that it was possible that the board | would continue its work in the future, | implying that some relief for the sualty Hospital finances us in_sight. | Routine matters land simi al are concerned I formed the topic of discussion fer ithe greater part of the meeting. Wild and Warlike. “It was then I was told they be- , {longed to a white race living up the action on the proposal and took the | (h\iinaque river. The negroes told | matter back to the entire body of ime these whites all had light brown . the strikers for a vote as to its ac- |or vellow hair and were wild and| ceptance. | warlike. Two hundred employes of twenty- | he skin of girls’' faces was tan- two custom tailoring shops of Wash- {ned, but free from that colored pig- ington struck Thursday for a general | ment so distinguishable in all brown increase of 25 per cent In wages. The |and darker races. The features of IU | employers_countered with a conces- |the eldest girl were of a high oval on,of a 15 per cent increase to the |face. thin 1ips, well shaped chin and R rialeers Enjtofts 60 no s |aquiline nose., They spoke no Span- to pants makers, vest makers, bushel- |ish.” men, repair men and pressers. The union held out for a general increase e gl possinan FROM CHINESE BANDITS n so far as linen | fying the fals, “This modera ment, “apparent in the province i ness and encour: ev- | | Ninth and F Streets N.W. Entrance 909 F Street eral provincial “Those at Kavala, Crama, and Verria already have n quelled, the mutineers laving down their arms without bloodshed. “The mutineers at Corinth, Patras and Calamata still are holding out, but they are few in numbers and it is expected they soon will be reduced to submission by troops from other gar- Chale Value is Emphasized in Our the employers declared if a general 25 per cent raise were granted many of the custom tailoring establish- ments would have to close down. | Girl Who Left Baby in Willard | / Room Left Alone—21 In- The tailors have already absorbed a large increase in the tariff rates on woolens, they said, without passing the increase Two British Missionaries, Scantily Clad, Dragged Through Moun- Fine October Display of Furniture dictments Returned. OVERSTUFFED LIVING ROOM SUITE, as pictured; uphol- stered in a very good grade of tapestry; with spring seat construction and removable cushions. The last word in beauty and comfort. 9. 75 Blankets and Comforts Re-Finish Your Floors and Woodwork Berr;“hros. Pure Orange Shellac FOUR - POS- TER BED; ma- hogany finish; 3 ft. 3 in. sige; very well made. Will harmonize with any style of fur- ROCKVILLE clal).—Nof n “All the other garrisons in the government. 19: at the me time the ministers on to their customers, by amnesty e e e Dy the Associated Press. ceeding as usua six years old, who engaged a room near Washington. | the Misses Mary Darroch of Glasgow, |infant there last July. she was ar-| 600 MEN JOIN IN SEARCH i | tured by bandits In Honan province Summoned by Grand Jury, He Will} been in Lynchburg, Va. {is described in dispatches from Kal- By the Associated Press. of joy-riding against Morris Thomas,‘ Ozard Mountains. {has been trailing the bandits in_the | 157204 one of A terviewed a messenger from the kid- ury today with all books and papers | against Ogden Marshall. L a > i . supplies were sent from here today |fering and hardship undergone by the Judge Ben B. Lindscy of the juvenile | poried x B included in “nd sultering from munger ana place in the mountalnous country of aught August 27 la e to giria. he Anmounced Inst night after caught August 27 last in the tpree-year-old daughter of Lem | Reports from Honan indicate utter ot and Gilfoy ice say | disappeared yesterday and since then % e velevesy Teapect for thoipurs | Cinooti snd (Giltayle e polios Say | C-EsEi ! v had the bandits surrounded October 1, | about illegal operations, of which I' they regarded him as responsible | 5150 will be sent to several members |clashed with other troops. but were DT L Tl “refute to tell any |, A charge of robbery is made in an| No trace of the child has been found. to number about 1,000, and are de- | snatched ~the pocketbook of Missjs feared she either has fallen prey to lers. Gen. Wu Pel-fu, head of the gov- | | ROCKVILLE; Clark, who accompanied Miss Mc-| The child, it is believed, attempted from the effec® of the excitement| Men from all sections of the coun this county, about against them are: John A. Hankins, | in the region have been depleted and | He found a party in/ avsault with dangerous weapon; | forward hungry. uous manner housebreaking and _larceny; Curtis | ingtea was charged w-ch Keeping a|pon; George Pierre, housebreaking and’ larceny; Robert Williams, robe { i country, including that in Athens, and the entire fleet are standing by the everal arrests have been made including M. Goudas, who was tried in | were executed, and condemned to life imprisonment, but recently was released H and to grant such a large increase to tain Strongholds, Is Beport. ‘.\lhni;w and I‘lradcuT arfi{:\hsnlumly their employes would force many of calm. Business and city life are pro- . y = The grand jury today igmored the ! MO0 OF DORNCT the local estab- | PEKING, China,- October 23.—The case against Nellle Plymale, twenty- | lishments is being done in other cities | plight of two British missionaries, LINDSEY WILL REFUSE !at the Willard Hotel and left a young | | Scotland, and Mary R. Sharp of Mill TO BREAK CONF'DENCES | Kent, South Australia, who were cap- rested and released on bond, since {'which time she has been caring for FOR 3-YEAR-OLD CHILD‘ms: month andgare being held in the the infant. Her home is said to have Fasans {mountain strongholds of the outlaws, ntr ReepfiSecrats Hntrusted They also ignored a charge of as- \]F°°d Supplies Sest to Hungry o - to Him. sault against Lucinda Matthews, one | Posse Which Is Exploring the F. S. Joyce, another misslonary, who DENVER, Col, October 23.—Sum-|a charge of pandering against Jack hape of obtaining the release of the | moned to appear before the grand |Davis and one of carnal knowledge | Py the Associated Pross. '~~~ , repor 2 WALDRON., Ark., October 23.—F00d | ,,;,0r5 who told of the extreme suf- from his office which might throw | Return Twenty-One ‘Indictments. |, 'ino wilds of the Ozark mountains, | women since their capture. He sald light on cases of women in his conrt,| Twenty-one (ndictments were re-|;, seott county, where 00 men, foot- | they had been dragged from place o . e e which was a charge of housebreaking ! sore Honan, and were clad only in thin, :‘d‘:‘;l‘co“q"ll:“'““‘;"“? ‘\‘"'}“:‘n:;"" Cony lagainst Samuel Peele, colored, who | exposure, continue the search' for the | ragged garments. c ght home of Mrs. S. W. Diffenbaugh, 722 | fha {1a | lack of official co-operation in the ef- 5’.‘,%,:5“:5‘&'5.”&’1‘&" fssued | by District | Quincy strect northwest. by Detec Turner, a mountaineer. The child} (Tl Pleccy e the women. Troops le had only recently been dis- posses have combed the hills in un-|but, after three days, allowed them to | s and & P . anta = ¥ F:;*h:(u;h&:"!;"_;‘;“} A arged from the Alanta penitentiary | ceasing search. Medical assistance |escape. Ten days later the outlaws 3 be § 1,000 in number of housebreakings about | of the searching party reported suf- |short of ammunition and fled after a x‘;i',.'i.‘.fixkflf’yin‘l. 'r:n‘pl(.}&?\m Lindsey. | the time of his arrest. | fering from exposure. | brief skirmish. The outlaws are sald Sl e deonecs that | indictment against Frederick E. Hope of finding the girl alive vir- [manding enrollment in the Chinese ! :;nl\:;’n;‘:»gdmyedl; {kfls(ggirz‘.mes | Perry, colored, who is said to have i tually was abandoned last night. It army before they release their prison- Elizabeth MeCrink near the Capitol |wolves or succumbed to hunger and |ernment troops in Honan, has thus grounds last September. ~Mrs. Elsie | exposure. far refused to negotiate ;:R::: thae.mn é;};‘mg‘edee L‘r:"bcha;g i m‘ follow her father into the moun- e e er 27 | tains. Md., October 23 (Spe p i ting from a house i and chase, it was stated. {try have joined in the search. Food | [this county, about| Others indicted and the charges | supplies in the scattered farm houses - Burdine to make anl forgery and uttering; Henry P. Rol- | for hours the rescue party has pressed progress there and the guests were [ James R. Jones, non-support of two enjoying themselves in such a stren-|minor children: Thomas Xe“’“‘“"BANS] MAN STREET CARS strained to pla e of inder | Bonds, grand larceny; Howard Wash- | '} arrest. . Thomas J. Sande. of Wash ington, assault with a dangerous wea- —_— { Oakland, Calif., Resolves to Put| bery; Wilson Jones and Lee fiuncan, Them Out of Business. aurice disorderly hous d R. B. Murray, W. B. Blake, S. E. James and J. A.| olan, all of Washington, had charges of disorderl ferred against them. women were brought but it was decided charges against them. Several youn to prefer gin which he found in the house. Mrs. Eliza Allen Buried. conduct pre- to Rockville, | no Officer Bur= dine took charge of twenty pints of receiving stolen property; Turley and John Shipley, violation of white slave law; Harry Johnson, as- + | sault to rape; Luther Spencer, assault | with a _dangerous weapon; John Brqoks, Lorenzo White and William | Jones, housebreaking and larceny. OAKLAND, Calif,, October 23.—The municipality of Oakland has entered | upon an avowed .campaign to “put the | one-man street cars out of business.” | Big city-owned motor busses appeared | in front of the city hall with-the an- | passengers anywhere a Special, 85¢ Qt. LOUIS HARTIG Paints Oills Glass Seventh and K Streets N.W. nishing. widow of Adbert Allen, who died at street car would take them and for The funeral of Mrs. Eliza Allen, ALEXANDRIA. her home, near Potomac, aged seven- ty-two years, ,took place yesterday morning from ‘the Methodist Church at Potomac. Rev. Albert Watkins, pastor of the church, conducted the services and burial was in the cemé- tery near the church, Licenses have been issued by the clerk of the circuit court here for! the marriage of Miss Eleanor E. Gladfelly of Oakland, Md., and John M. Robert of Billingster,” Md.; Miss | andria Chamber of Commerce. ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 2% (Spe- cial).—Alexandria_has all eyes turned toward Richmond today, Where the state corporation commission is to de- {cide whether Alexandria and the coun- ties of Arlington and Fairfax were to £o on in peaceful ways or whether they were to part in the decision regarding the granting of a bus charter to J. M. Dickerson over the protest of the Alex- th of th one cent less fare. ordinance against jitney busses using In additien, the e main streets was suspended. The city recently ordered the one- man cars off the street on the ground that they were undesirable. Just because she eats two pounds candy every day is no sign she is e sweetest girl in town. Irene G. Loomis and William A. Link, | While representatives of many_ thou- both of Washington; Miss Rose A.|sands of county citizens and also of Mayhugh and Charles H. Smith, both | many of Alexandria’s citizens are in of this county, and Miss Irene John- | Richmond to fight the proposition out son and Robert Mahoney, both of this | before the state corporation commis- county. sion, there likewlse is a large delega- Sunday School Rally. tion'representing the Alexandria Cham- he Sunday school of the | ber of Commerce, which stubbornly At T o e U S romery | Btands to its initial conviction that a bus County Sunday School Association fline would ruin the Washington-Vir- was held at Kensington Sunday aft- | ginia raiiroad and consequently hurt the ernoon. Six hundred Sunday school |business of the city. children, teachers, ministers and oth- | On the other hand, if the chamber of ors attended, the schools represented | Sommerce wins its point, it Will bring including Warner Memorial Presby-|down upon the entire city the hate of tarian, St. Paul's M. E. Christ Epis. | the thousands of county citizens who copal and the Baptist of Kensington, | form a considerable proportion of the Bethesda M. E. and_St. John’s Epis- | City’s trading population. copal of Bethesda, Union of Garrett Park and the Chevy Chase M. E. Those In attendance assembled at Warner _Memorial Presbyterian Church and, headed by the Washing- ton Grove Band, marched to the Bal- timore and Ohlo railavay station, where open-air exercises were held. Walter S. Pratt, jr., of Capitol View presided. Mr, Phelps of Chevy Chase delivered an address; Rev. U. S. A. Heavener, pastor of St Paul's Church, Kensington, and Rev. J. W. Nicol, pastor of the Kensington Bap- tist Church, led in prayer; Rev. Rob- ert Atkinson, pastor of Warner Me- « morial Presbyterian Church, Ken- sington, read the Scriptures, and the . benediction was pronounced by Rev. J, L. Neff, pastor of the Chevy Chase B, Church. The music was a easing feature of the occasion. started this morning at 10 o’clock and the outcome here is awaited with in- tense interest. The fight also has considerable po- litical bearing and the decision will act_as the test of a new law, the con- stitutionality of which will be at- tacked by attorneys for the bus line. of Prohibition Agent J. D. Lambert, who was shot while raiding a still near Belmont Park, 18 being detained in the Alexandria jail for the Lou- don county authorities. According to a statement made by State’s Attorney Connor, Costello fired the shots that killed Lambert, and he was the only man near the still to haye a gun. The other men arrested in connectjon with the shooting are being held Leet burg. » content -of Gude’s was }y | absorbed by the system, that it did, The hearing was scheduled to have | not irritate the stomach or the teeth, and that it quicl effectively toned and s the in bof Free Trial Tablets value of Gude's Pepto-Mangan, send for gen- Clarence Costello, alleged murderer | erous Trial Package of Tablets. Send no posel i;i"“t your name and THE BEST WAY T0 GET YOUR IRON O you know that one of the reasons why physicians have prescribed Gude’s Pepto-Man- hysicians found that the iron readi and tem. At druggisf v system. our S5 liquid and ‘tablets, Te for yourself thehealth-buliding address to tenbach Co., 53 Warren St.. N. Yo Gudes Pepto-Mangan Zonic and Blood Enricher CAPSULES FOR BAD HEADACHE Take One or Two—Count the| Minutes — Presto, the | Headache Is Gone. i | 'NO NEED OF DANGEROUS COAL TAR, DOPE, OPIATBi The use of dangerous, heart de-| pressing, nerve and brain injuring | powders, tablets- and pills is_de-| creasing as their dangerous char-| acter becomes known. Far better to have a raging, throbbing head- | ache every day than to lose health | through habit forming, heaith de- nouncement that they wm::‘.?e.:.xflusg M."‘BUR.N'S ; i | gan for 30 years is because of its |stroying marcotics, opiates, powerful ample supply of iron? 1drugs, etc. | Local drugggists say tho { Washington never dream Of using | anything more powerful than two or three Milburn Capsules. Re-; sults are equally quick, sure and much safer and lasting. A whole | box costs only a few cents at any ' well stocked drug store. Keep| them handy. Use anytime. Take Presto, the headache, cold, touch of fever, chill or grippe is gone. Drug- ists can conscientiously recommend ilburn Capsules—a famous pre- scription used by thousands here. Get a box for those occasional headaches, sudden colds, feverish, achy spells, chills or attacks of grippe. See directions inside. Mik burn’s Capsules, 35 cents, all drug stores. SPINET DESK; in Mahogany finish; grace- fully designed and con- veniently arranged. A distinctive piece for any © home. in| one or two and count the minutes— ’ | GATE-LEG TABLE, as pictured; Mahogany finish, wth solid mahogany top, with drawer. It will lend distinctive charm to the room in which it is used. DOUBLE COTTON BLANKETS 60x76. All good quality and new $1.95 Comforts—Assorted Designs and Colors $4.95 $3.75 Portieres, Lace Curtains Plain Tapestry Portieres, pasr. $7.75 An Odd Lot of Irish Point Novelty Net Lace Curtains, Plain Net Lace Curtains. Portieres, pasr. WOOL-MIXTURE BLANKETS Double-bed size, 66280 $4.95 $5.25 Chenille $9.75 $3.75 Pair *..$1.00 Pair Nottingham Lace Curtains. .$2.75 Pair