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12 ~ SHORE BOULEVARD | . PROPOSEDINBILL Maryland Points Would Be More Accessible to D. C. Motorists. &pecial Dispateh to The Star. ANNAPOLIS, Md 24.—Au- tomobile transportatfon between Washington and the eastern shore of Maryland will be considerably im- proved if a bill introduced ‘in the Maryland senate today calling for the construction of a Baltimore-east- ern shore boulevard is passed. The Dill was prefented by Senators Law- xence B. Towers of Caroline county Dudley G. Roe of Queen Anne county and John M. McDaniel of Talbot county. The sum of $750,000 would be appropriated to pay for the con- struction. According to present calculations the road would extend for thirty- six miles, beginning at Love Point, terminal of a ferry from Baltimore, to Queenstown, to Wye Mills, to Queen Anne and Hillsboro and then to Denton, where it connects with all the roads leading to the lower part of the eastern shore. From Wye Mills south to ton, Salisbury, Cam- Lridge and other points there already are “improved road One bridge would be constructed. Travelers from Washington to the different points on the castern shore of Maryland would be able to motor 1o Baltimore, board a ferry which would be established in the heart of dhe shipping district, cross the bay to Love Point and follow the pro- yosed road and its conne to_any point th The ferry would be oper Jialtimore and Eastern yoad Company, a sub ry of the Tennsylvania. ' The steamers would nake three rouad trips each day and would have a capacity of approxi- amately 100 automobile d a large number of passemgers. Pax Area Asked. A bill creating a special taxing area to be known as section 1, Cabin John Park, Montgomery count powering the county commissioners of that county to levy 1 tax of 50 cents on each hundred dollars as- sessed real and personal property, was introduced in the house of dele- gates by Delegate George L. Ed- monds of Montgomery county. The area would inciude all land now known as section 1, Cabin John Park and also the adjoining Bobinger tract bounded by the Conduit road and Cabin John creck. The special levy of 50 cents would be expended for the purpose of open- ing, repairing streets, lighting same and providing necessary Sewerage, police ang fire protection. Under the provisions of the bill a citizens' committee consisting of C. H. Godhod, A F i Maxin would be appointed to a ister the affai a. This com- mittee would would receive and collected in the district The county comm “ county would be directed to pay over to this treasurer any mone lected on account of the county road tax as required by law in the case of incorporated towns of the county. The citizens' committee also wouid be em; wered to assess the cost of gpecial improvements against abut- ting property ow and to hoid hear- ings when they become necessary. Asks Election Hour Change. Senator Eugene Jones of Mont- gomery county introduced a bill in the senate changing the hours for municipal elections in the town of Kensington, Montgomery county. f'he original hours from 4 p.m. until 9 pm. would be changed to from 6 Pam. 0 9 pm. Senator Jones stated that his main reason in offering the bill was to accorimodate the many employes of the federal departments in Wash- ington who were inconvenienced by the former voting hours. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md., January 24 (Spe- elal).—Robert Costello, until recently & long-time resident of the vicinity of Bluemont, Va., died early yester- day morning at his home, near Poto- mac, this county, aged sixty-four years. While apparently in excellent health, he was stricken in his home and died almost instantly, neart dis- ease being given as the cause. Sur- viving him are his wife, four sons and five daughters, among them Etta C, 2 am and Charles Costello of hington. The funeral will take place at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon from the Methodist Church at Poto- mac, burial to in_the cemetery mear the church. Mr. Costello was a farmer and dairyman. The county commissioners have ap- pointed Joseph V ed by the hore Rail sioners of the be, . Bowie a constable for Bethesda district and he has sub- #seribed to the oath of office before the clerk of the circuit court here. The report of Judge Samuel Riggs for the month of November, which has just been filed with the county commissione; shows that the fines and costs collected in the police court here during that month aggregated £1,654.10, which was considerably more than enough to pay all ex- penses of the county’s police system dur’mu that period. Licenses have been issued for the matriage, of John_ L. Stevens of Quantico, Va., and Mi§s Ruth Parks of ‘lga, ud Leroy S. Williams and’ M lle E. Gilson, both of Virgini While on their way to a small fire near Rockville, and: while ' traveling at a high rate of specd, automobiles operated . by Barnard = Welsh, a Rockville lawyer, and Edgar Reed, local garage inan, -hoth members of the Rockville volunteer fire depart- ment, collided rcar’the fair grounds here. 1Altheu; his machine struck and: demolished a large gasoline pump, dlost a wheel, spun around sev- eral “tlmes and came ‘within a few inches! of ; running into_a' big plate glass window. neither Welsh nor a companion, Willlam Gittings, = was hurt ip the least, although the auto was virtually demolished. Reed es- caped , injury and his car was not serioudly damaged. Accompanied by the Rockville Brass Band, fabout forty or more of the Yyoung ,people; of, Rockville y and Vicinity ‘tendered Mr. and Mrs. James P B. Veirs, . who have just returned from their honeymoon ‘trip, a sere- ngde at their home on the Rdckville- Gaithersburg pike, ‘mear Rockville, Taesddy evening. The band' played several appropriate selections -and titere was a rather nolsy demonstra- tion by “the serenaders, but, It was all unavailing so far as any Signs of Jife on the inside of the Veirs home were lconcerned. -~ Mrs, Veits was formerly Miss Loulse Fechtig of Hagerftown, Md. i e s LIEUT: W0OD ‘PLANNING ° FOR TOUR OF EUROPE Son of Governor General, Noted for Financial Activities, to Leave ° Manila January 25. By the Associated Press, " ,MANILA, January 24.—Lieut. Osborne C. Wood, 'son and aide of Governor General Leonard Wood, whose financial activities through which he is re puted to have made $800,000 in specu ation recently received wide pub- Jicity, will sail’from here January 25 +on the steamer President McKinley. Lieut. Wood will. chanke steamers ut Hongkong and go to Europe vi Sues. He plans to spend some . time in Xurope before returning to the United ALEXANDRIA. XANDRIA, Va., January 24 (Special).—Trial in the case of Luther M. Ketland, indicted; for perjury in connection with a divorce suit filed by him, set originally for today, was postponed until next Tuesday at the request of the commonwealth. Leon Basile, assistant attorney general of the state, will assist in the persecu- tion. Ketland is represented by At- torney Edmund Burke. Sarah Johnson was hed for the ac- tion of the grand jury charged with haviog illegally had seven half pints of whisky "in her possession. Earl De Von of New York was held for the action of the gramd jury on a prohibition charge when he was ar- rested aboard a train_between Rich- mond and this city. He had half a pint of whisky in his possession. Fire, cauved by the explosion of gasolfne ueed in cleaning a magneto, destroyed a large part of the Mutual Ice Company garage tool room late Damage was estimated | at_more than $600. While looking over the ground fol- lowing the fire, Director of Public fety Paul Morton discovered seven and one-half half-pint bottles filled with whisky in seven different * hid- ing places, under rocks and lumber piles. City Loses Case, The city of Alexandria lost its case against Wilmer Dove in corporation court yesterday, whbere Dove had ap- pealed the decision of the police court in connection with a charge of hav- ing been operating his automobile too close to fire apparatus answering an alarm. Dove's machine collided with a motor cycle operated by Patroi- man Magner, severely injuring the | officer and démolishing his machine. | Trial in the case of Richard Stuart, indicted on a charge of highway rob- bery, was postponed until the March term of court yesterday, when it was found that his attorncy, T. Morris | ‘Wampler of Washington, could not be present. The alleged robbery took place on the Fort Humphreys road on the night of July 1923. George Curtiey, colored, of V hington, was robbed of his automobile and its| cargo of whisky. Courtley identified Stuart as one of the men. Clinic to Be Opened. An ear, eye and nose clinic will be opencd at the local health office, ac- cording to City Health Officer Louis E. Foulks. Dr. Frank M. Dillard will | in charge and the clinic is to be nducted weekly on Fridays, be- v and 4 p.m. al services aner, who djed Tuesda s morning from St. Mar Church Burial was cemetery. Arrangements are beillg completed the first American Legion dance, which is to be held in Elks' Hali | February 7. Proceeds of the dance will go toward the building fund of the legion. H After the first day February | autoists operating their ¥ars without 24 license tags will be subject to t and fine. Less than 4,000 tags cen issued .in the local office, as against 9,000 last year. The office is being kept open until 5 o'clock _each afternoon and warnings to avoid the last rush have been issued by City Manager Rich. GIRL COMMITS SUICIDE WHEN CALLED TO COURT Anna Rallis, Fourteen, Had Been Summoned for Questioning About Absence From School. for” Peter 3.1 were held Cathalic 'St. Mary's By the Assogiated Press. STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, January 24. —Asking Probation Officer Edward Rutherford to wait until she got her | wrap, Anna Rallis, fourteen, com-| mitted suicide by shooting Tuesday. The officer had called at her home to summon her to juvenile court for leran of the |Harold Ley CONVIGTED IN JALL SUBSTITUTION CASE Sweeney and Pumphrey Guilty of Permitting Prisongr to Escape. Special Dispatch to The Star . BALTIMORE, Md., Jsnuary ~ 24— Former Sherift J. Arthe * Sweeney of Prince Georges county. was convicted yesterday by ea jury in the United States court of permitting a federal prisoner to eschpe and acquitted of the charge of conspiring to permit the escape in conection with the syb- stitution of prisoners at the Upper arlboro jail. Everett E. Pumphrey, s former deputy, was found glilty on both charges. Judge Morris A. Soper suspended sentences on a motion in arrest of judgment made by attorneys for the defense Bail of each was fixed at $3,000 pending hearing of the motion, John C. Stafford, a business man of Petersburg, Va., was the prisoner jwho was permitted to escape. He had been sentenced to three months in jail for violation of the Volstead jact. During the trial it was disclosed that Pumphrey ‘had Stafford and another prisoner In charge and took them in an automobile to Upper Marlboro. While in Washington, under his custody, the supposed prisoners were permitted to £o free for several hours, and at Upper Marlboro they spent a night in a hotel, it was alleged. The next morning Grover C. Hall, it was charged, sub- stituted as prisoner in place of Staf- ford " until _government agents” dis- covered the fraud. According to other testimony at the trial, the cell doors in the jail were seldom locked, and prisoners were given every liberty, including drinking of corn uor, entertaining, parties, the best of dinners and other privileges. Nothing was allowed (0 interfere with the 0 cial duties of the prisoners, it was ex® | plained. — JOHN McA. PARK DIES. Special Dispatch to The Stas CLARENDON, , January 24— John McAllen Park, attorney, died at his home in Leeway, Arlington county, Va., Saturday. Funeral serv- ices were conducted at his late home Sunday by the Rev. H. E. Brundage, pastor of the Eckington Presbyterian Church, in which church "Mr. Park was a deacon before identifying him- self with the Falls Church Presby- terlan Church. Interment was at Fannettsburg, Pa., Tuesday. Mr. Park was born at Fannettsburg, Pa., in 18 He was graduated from the University of Pennsylvanla in the law class of 1903. He was a vet- Spanish American war and was a member of the bar of the District of Columbia and had been admitted to practice before the Su- {preme Court of the United States. For several years he was connected | with the office of Indian affairs, and for the past three years he had served in the claims division of the Vete- rans' Bureau. Besides his widow he léaves three daughters and a son. e BELTSVILLE HQNOR PUPILS. Special Dispatch to The Star. BELTSVILLE, Md., January 24— Pupils of the Beltsville school per- fect in attendance up to the Christ- mas holidays were John Hitaffer, poldt, Henry Converse, questioning regarding her failure to attend school. Relatives say she was ! despondent over attempts made to | comipel her to goto school. about half t egg, stove and Interesting 1328 F St Hous An Inferesting Show ZuwuumUquoflgyfiblfiu SAVE HALF o Your Yearly Coal Allowance That's the purpose of this Show—to visualize for you the improved methods-of burning the same KIND of anthracite saving possibilit| Crandle Braden, Upton Jones, Eunice Miller, Ann Sherman, . Meare King, Jean Miller, Mary Hitaffer, Rebecca Miiler, Laura Cady, Elizabeth Hous- ton, Cora Wood and Lillian Kaufman, he present cost. ichestnut. . texhibits at the Exposition sl , At12.30,4and 8P.M. reet; BT }¢ eir bigger brothers?— W..;Washin L I A K i ! . ADMISSION FREE * \ CAMPBELL RECEIVES VIRGINIA COURT POST Washington County Judge ‘Nom- * inated for Bench of Virginia. Appeals Tribunal. SUCCEEDS - JUDGE KELLY lh_emonntic Caucus Takes Seven Ballots for Choice. By the Associated Press.~ RICHMOND, Va., January 24— Judge Preston W, Campbell, Wash- ington ‘county, was. unanimously nominated to succeed Judge Joseph L. Kelly, who has resigned from the supreme court of appeals,. effective February 1, by a democratic caucus of the Virginia general embly late last night, ’ The nomination was made after the seventh ballot, when H. C. Tyler, {Radford, a former assemblyman, and Judge J. Turner Clement, Pittsyl- |vanila county, retired from the race. Judge Campbell led in the voting on all but the first ballet, when Judge Clement and Mr. Tyler were tied for first place, with twenty-nine Ivotes each, on the seventh ballot the' Abingdon jurist received sixty- two votes, five less than the number required for nomination. He had in- creased his lead on every count and his selection on the eighth ballot ap- peared -imminent. E. M. Fulton of Wise and A. P. Staples of Roanoke were the other candidates voted on. At this juncture Delegate Warren of Pittsylvania withdrew the name of Judge Clement, who had clung consistently to second place, and an- nounced that his candidate’s follow- ers were free to vote as they chose. At once Delegate Norris, champion of the Tyler candidacy, announced the withdrawal of the Radford man and concluded his brief speech by mov- ing that Judge Campbell be nomi- nated unanimously to the vacant seat in the high court. gy Judge Campbell was named by ac- clamation amid a burst of cheering. — PASTOR SERIOUSLY ILL. Rev. Dr. S. 8. Lambeth Undergoes Operation. [] Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va.,, January 24—Re- ports received here tell of the serious illness of Rev. Dr. 8. S. Lambeth of Bedford county, who {8 now in a hos- pital at Roanoke, where he recently underwent an operation. ! Dr. Lambeth is elghty-six yearsold and served in the Methodist ministry for more than fifty years. He served many of the most prominent churches in the "Virginia conference and. was i for a long time its secretary. { EX-STAGE STAR DIVORCED. lnte;locutory Decree Granted Hus- band, George N. Crouse. SYRACUSE, N. Y., January 24.—An interlocutury decree of divorce in favor of George N. Crouse, Syracuse merchant, -against Mrs. Ritta Knight Crouse, well known for many years as a stage 'star, was flled in the county clerk’s office Tuesday. Justice Devendorf confirmed a re- port of Judge B. B. Parson, referee, recommending the decree after hear- ing evidence of Mrs. Crouse being found in_a Montreal hotel with John McCarthy, Syracuse base ball player, recently sold to the Omaha club of the Western League by Syracuse. ewWIves.: you are now using, at This opportunity to save is through-t}_le use dfv,the smaller - sizes of your favorite anthracite—buckwheat, rice and barley, " which sell for considerably less than “thi , how' the, moriey ies of the cheaper sizes of anthracite for,usein » the home, apartment houses, hotels, schools'ap i ' See the Educational Motion Pic 'institutions. . Among the exhibits'are machines ithat .automatically :put- coal on a fire, keep it hurningiand removesthe ashes; salf- . feeding devices for furnaces, special grates for burning buck- - wheat, rice and barley, and other installations that save fuel, secure'better combistion and reducewaste. N 3 . Howto G Downthe Gstof Heating i e « is one of a number of helpful books distributed at the show, or mailed- | ! This descriptive ! literature “describes the ) proper ¢ - free on request. : methods of using all kinds of coal-burning hea ting appliances.* Generql Comm;'lfee;'offlnfhméfl&b{p’e i \ . D:-C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1929 - : —_—— FALLS CHURGH BILLS BEFORE LEGISLATURE Would Give Town New Charter and - Crealte -S¥ccials School we Special Dispatch to The Star. , - FALLS CHURCH, Va., January 24. —Two rieasures,qf direct interest to Falls Church will be introduced in the state legislature at 'Richmond this week as specialibills. One bill is for a revisiom'of: the town charter along the lines of the draft recom- mended by a committee of citizens and approved by.the counctl; and the other is to create agspecial school district of the town of Falls Church. The school bilf is to corréct an im- possible situation which results from the “county.unit’lawrenacted a year ago, practically abolishing all local school boards andgwvesting title to property and control of funds in the hands of county boards. As the town of Falls Church lies_in two’ counties and four magisterial - dlstricts, the result was chaos in the local school situation and the enforced stoppage of all plans looking to:the erection of a new school building. The special bill is intended to re- store the conditionss which existed here prior to enactrient of the coun- ty unit law. The measure was draft- ed by Harris Hart, state superintend- dent of fpublic instruction, and has the @pproval of M..D. Hall, division superintendent for Fairfax county, and will be steered through the legis- lature by Senator Ball and-Delegutes Jesse of ‘Arlington county and Wil- liams of ‘Fairfax county. S. A. Roh-. wer, & member of the Falls Church s¢hool board, who was in Richmond this week in the interest of the meas- ure, expects the bill'to pass without opposition. When It becomes law the local board will go ahead with its proposal ‘for a bond Issue for a new school. Coples of the proposed new town charter _were forwarded today by Mayor Fellows to Sépator Ball and Delegates Williams and Jesse, and when the measuce has been introduc- ed and referred to'committees it is expected that hearings will be ar- ranged. * _— In America today there are pro- portionately more single women than in colonial times. This fact Is be- lieved to be due to<the change in the social status of unmarried wom- en as well as to the increased oppor- tunities offered them for self-sup- Rare Bird’s Visit Presages Trouble To Baltic People By the Assoclated Press. 5 DANZIG, January 24—Old " in- habitants.of the Baltic states shaking their heads doubtfully over the appearance of the silk- tailed winter thrush, known amon the superstitious as the “bird o disaster.” Tt has not been seen”in {geu reglons since the winter of 13-14. Residents of Fast Prussia and other parts of the Baltic contend that it is a matter of historical record that the birds were here- abouts in the winter of 1812, pre- ceding Napoleon's Russian 'cam- paign, and that their appearance on this edge of the Baltic at in- tervals of years has invariably been followed by famine, pestilence or war before the year was out. Early in 1914 the silk-talled thrush is sald to have gone as far south as France. This winter, ac- cording to reports here,, the birds have ‘scattered over central Bu- rope, touched Russia on the east and gone as far west as Belgium and the Ruhr. The snowfall in the vicinity of 'Danzig this winter has been the heaviest in thirty-six years, Sclen- tists say the weather has been particulagly severe int the far north, and that the birds probably came south on that account. COTTAGE CITY MEETING. Officers Installed and Smoker Held by Assocfation. Special Dispatch to The Star, COTTAGE CITY, Md., January 24.— More ' than fifty attended a meeting of, the Cottage City Association in the association's bullding, when of- ficers for the year were installed, fol- lowed by a smoker. Addresses were made by County Commisgioner George N. Wells and_others. 4 The new officers are: J. B. Morris, president; George N. Wells, vice pres- ident; Mr. Spence, secretary; Walter WeeKs, financial secretary, and H. N. Johnson, treasurer. Committee chair- men installed are: Mr..De Waters, membérship and finance; Victor E. Peterson, school and school building; Alan E. Leighton, sewer, water, sani- tation and fire protection; V. A. Sim- mell, street, * sidewalks 'and street Iights; Mr. Ofinger, public utilitfes, and Hugene Plummer, entertainment and publicity. C. C. Gray and Eugene Plummer, retiring and incoming chairman, re: spectively, of the entertainment and publicity ‘committee, had charge of the evening's arrangements. MARYLAND INFANT DEATH RATE HIGH Ninety-Four Out of Every 1,000 ., Babies Die Before Becom- ing Year Old. NEGROES SWELL FIGURES More Children, However, Being Saved Than Heretofore. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., January 24.—Out of every 1,000 babies born alive in Maryland minety-four died in 1922 be- fore reaching twelve months of age, which is elghteen deaths fn excess of the infant mortality rate for the birth registration area of the United States. These figures are given in the latest pamphlet Issued by the bureau of child hyglene, Maryland state department of health. Dr. J. H. Mason Knox, jr. chief of the bureau, said that although the death rate for infants in this state exceeds that in the reglstration area of the United States by almost twenty, yet since 1916 there has been a decline in the Maryland rate from 121 to 94 per 1,008 living babies. In ‘general, it is declared that the highest infant death rates are found in those counties having the largest negro population, and high death rates indicate unhygienic surroundings and increased danger to the whole com- munity, Three counties of the state—Dor- cheater, Kent and Queen Anne— recorded a negro infant mortality rate of more than 200 babies for each 1,000 live births, or one child in every five births. Including still births during 1922 there occurred in the counties of Maryland an actual and potential loss of human life of 2,989 lives. Total infant mortality rates for each 1,000 Jive births in 19 for the coun- tles of the state were recorded as foj- lows: Allegany, 81; Anne Baltimore, '67; ‘Calvert Carroll, 81; C i Frederick, 92: Arundel | gomery, 70; Prince George: Anne, 124; Somerset, 1 105; Talbot, 124; Wi ‘Wicomico, 99, and Worcester, 1. e e Swimming, diving, skating and tennis are the sports in which women will contest in the coming Olymplic games. : CONTROL DEFEATED Separate Enforcement Un- favorably Reported in Virginia Legislature. By the Amociated Press. RICHMOND, Va., January 24—The Barron resolutlon memoriallzing Con- gress for a separation of the state and federal governments in enforce- ment of the eighteenth amendment late yesterday received an unfavor- able recommendation in the Virginia senate soclal and moral welfare com mittee. Senator Barron, Norfolk, suthor of the resolution, stated after the meet ing that he would fight for passag: of the measure on the floor of th senate despite the unfavorable action of the committee. He was the only member that did not vote for the mo- tion that the resolution be reported with a recommendation that it be not passed. n this hopeless confusion of the federal government trying to enforce the prohibition law in forty-eight states,” he told the committee, “I be- lieve it is being realized more and more each day that the method is wrong. My resolution simply asks Congress to pass laws providing for strict enforcement of prohibition as it relates to importation and exporta- tion of liquor and interstate traffic in whisky by the federal government. leaving to the states the matter of enforcing its own dry laws througl its po’ = i ator charged that it was conceded that the federa nt had failed to enforce t generally governm Volstead act, but David Hepburn, su | perintendent of the Anti-s | League in Virginia, denied this. SCHOOL CONGRATULATED Special Dispatch to The Star. SUITLAND, Md., January 24 Prince &eorges county school official: have congratulated Miss Mildred Townshend, assistant teacher of Suit land School, and her pupils for per- fect attendance in September and December. E most inspired musical composition, the most gifted artist, and recorded with the utmost fidelity, represents only a waste of talent, skill and effort unless properly reproduced. For more than twenty has devoted the most splendid facilities ever assembled to the one purpose of making such records and instruments to really repro- duce them and reveal their full beauty. this statement, ask your dealer to play some of these new records on one of these instruments. '."f:mere.‘is ‘only. one, Victrola'and i¢hat'is made by the' Victor Company *—look\ for\ the Victér' trademarks. ' Out tomorrow erfectly rendered by years the Victor Company To know the trut of ~ New Victor Records Colleen 0’ Mine (0'Shes-Swickland) 'Tho’ Shadows Fall (Burms-Ms:Dermed) “Colleen o' Mine,” of course, is in Irish style. “Tho® Red Seal Records Shadows Fall” is avowedly in popular manner. sung in a voice of rare beauty. Waltz in A Flat (Tuhuitowiy) Pians sote Sergei Rachmaninoff Waltz in B Minor (Choris) Waltzes from master-com mastery of the piano. Light Voc‘al Selections The Far Green Hills of Home The Rainbow Trail Songs of home and place-sentiment. Lambert Murphy has never done anything finer. The orchestra floats them on soft, wvelvety harmonies. Blue Island Blues Blue Bird Blues bers with the jazz orchestra. mysterious accompaniment. Stay H Little Girl, Stay Home if She Was What She Was When S m‘;r:fi::rl; g;: nea-numlhthe understanding which has Eard Jopmsen}. 978 $1.50 Sergei Rachmaninoff iposers, played wllh consummate Lambert Murphy Lambert Mmhy Wendell Hall with The Virgini Weadel Hall with The Viromians 19226 Wendell Hall, of Chicago, presents tw: kabl - o he s orchesirss” Pihee Bird Bloce hare e DOUBLEFACED Number List b oz2 las375 Henry Burr 19230 Henry Burr ; Melodious Instrumental First retord Rudolph Ganz, . }s:. with skill and spirit. {TheBuyniidth’eBirds‘ g4 ‘IThe Lion Chase Descriptive band “specialtic Rudolph Ganz and Louis Symphony Orch. the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, under andled with superb susicianship and played Arthur Pryor’s Band ' A Bor s Band 19192 ies,” fantastic tales, in music, }ssz‘oz 'for the kiddies. ‘The boy whistles, and many birds warble, the lion yoars. | mofit—l’ox Dance Records ox Trot Trot } Panl Whteman and His Orchestra “Pm Goin’ South” is jolly, with railroad effects, and so on. | ‘4Steppin’ Out” is’'unusual in that no bowed strings are used. Toodl Wi | ing fashion. “Roll Along, Missouri’ Should I —Fox Trot . Mary Jane McKane) will put } “Why Should I Weep,” with Fox Trot « The Manhattan Merrymakers ‘eep About One Sweetie Brooke Johns and His Orchestra ) ; fox trot like “Toodle-0o,” (from _! humor. e singing, will keep you there. International Novelty Orch.1 1 0o o i rmatioma] Nevelty Orck. 119225 andhnlnpopuhrs_tyle,mdlndp u_in good ” introduces “) 19220 And ed in inspir- Donna.” ictrol STATEDRYLAW ~ s 2 %