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HOUSEHOLD DEVIE PRCEFIGHTLOONS Department of Justice Likely to Proceed Against Mak- ers of Supplies. * \ Reports American Offer to Buy All | Diamond Output By the Assoc LONDON, Capetown, South Africa, corre- spandent of the Daily Express Quotes the South African National- ist member of Parliament, Mun- nik, as saying that an American syudicate headed Ly J. P. Morgan lLas offered to buy the entire out- put of the DeBeers and Premier diamond mines for a vear. The ofier, he divulged, was made . and the representa- Kimberley Co. im- mediately cabled European head- quarters ‘urging that it must bid higher or lese control of the market HELLOGESHOSTS T0 KING AND QUEEN ted Press. February 7.—The Investig, Commission i a number tion by the Federal Trade 7 competitive conditions of household utility trades already has been carried for- ward by the Department of Justice, In several eases to a point indicating possible action by the department to prevent monopolistic coutrol of prices. tonclusions and ind several investigations Wway or contemplated. by ment were reported by Attorney Gen- eral Stone m a letter to the commis sign last night Of the half dozen commodities in | the household s=upply industries dis- | cussed in the letter. aluminum was | I racticea. v ita “pracuicans com. | British Majesties Break Long| plete control” of the supply of raw | g Precedent by Waiting | on Ambassador. | ations in the Iready under the depart- made, th uminum pany of | America. the Attorney said is “in a position to, con ol the domestic of sheet luminum to the manufac- | irer: » Manutacturers Under Fi LONDON, February i —The King Refrigerators, washing machines, 2nd Queen and a distinguished com- | sewing machines, brooms and vacuum | Pany of Britons and Americans were cleaners were the other household |(he dinner guests last evening of Am- ntioned fr the letter. As|bassador and Mrs. Kellogg at Crewe 8 Stone said, the|House, their London residence and | commission’s ¢ appeared to show | one of the few remaining mansions | greement “not only to maintain, | built on a grand style that still stand also to increase prices” and that|in modern Mavfair. Mr. Kellogg is| ihe department was prepared to take |leaving soon to succeed Charles Evans appropriate action.” | Hughes as Secretary of State. Although it has been definitely The gathering at the American's, tablished that certain trade practices|abode was significant in more than a | of washing machine manufacturers|social sense, for it is seldom British | were open to severe criticism, the let- Majesties break bread at other ta- ter said, the Government is not yet|bles than their own, and there is no in a position to take ‘definite steps|recent instance of their having at against them. Investigation so far|tended a formal dinner at the hom has shown no violations of law by (of any diplomat assigned by a for- the vacuum cleaner manufacturers or | €ign nation (o their court any recent or present violations in| Baldwin Shares D ihe sewing machine industry, .\lr.I With ithe iing audlihis connet af Stone said, while further investiga-| p, Kellogg board sat the head of his| n is being made as to brooms and |, .; s government, Prime Minister | : | material from which aluminum is| ¥ the Associated Press articles T to refrig er. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SAPSHOTS OF A MAN—VWaiting for His Wife—By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. CALLS WHY DOES SHE BOMHR DO HER HAR OVER - IT LOOK- £D ALRIGHT TO HIM- AND TS GETTING PRETTY LAE DECIDES BIET way TOGET o MIND OFP TEEEING TIME 157D AD THE PAPER , BUT PINDS HiS ATIENT.ON INSISTS ON WANDERING U RE \ v Z HEARS HOPEFULL TOONDS TROM UPSTARS AND BRIGHTLY BUTTONS COAT, | PRONT DOOR |DOG’S DEATH GRIEVES SEPALLA, | HERO OF 245-MILE MUSH TO NOME Scent of Reindeer Starts Animals at Sleds to Fight- AFTER BRIP EXCHANGE (P RL- MARKS PROMISES " HER IP SHE CAN BE ANV WHAT PROGRESS 16 BEING KER THAT WAY BY WAY OF ADRCOIT REMIND- LR ASKS CAN RiorT TIME - PINDS IT WAS A PALSE ALARM, DECIDES WP SHE HASMT €6 BY TIME HE'S WALKED TIVE PUTS ON HAT, AND OPENS TIMES, UP AND DOWN HALL HES .JUST THE SAME GOT TO SPEAK OUT GETS HiS CORT ON AND NOT TO HUR- LIGTENS INTENTLY T SEE MADE UPSTRAR® KILLS A FEW SECONDS BY RE EXAMINING TICKLTS VOR FIFTH TIME SHE TELLHIM HE SAYS 740 WIFE APPEARS JUST IN TIME BUT HE STARIS ™ DAWER PEPPY DISCOURSE ME SAvS LISTEN, RE ISNT TRYING TO HURRY WER BUT SHEL UN- DERSTANDS. THAT THIS # 0'CLOLK SHOW DOESNT SHE, Wi~l:@ 15 AN TINDS IT INCREASINGLY HARD' TO CONTAIN HIMSELF AND BE- GINS AUDIBLY TO TAP HIS FOOT, Z0UGH, AND SNAP HiS ‘WATCH SPEN AND SHLT SUDDE LY CLURHES POCKET AND RATHER SHEEPISH! LY W TERS HE HASNT A HANKY HED BETTER START ALONG AND HE'lL CATCH UP WiTH HER Manufacturer Va., Fe VIRGINIA MANSION SOLD. Detroit Historic Estate Near Casanova. Special Dispatch to The § WARRENTON, Acquires bruary ® | Maj. Joe R. D. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1925. (HUNDREDS ATTEND ENGINEERS DANCE 121st Regiment Observes First Anniversary With Fete at City Cluh. With one of Tts most successful so- clal affairs since its organization, the 121st Regiment of Engineers, National Guard of the District, Thursday night celebrated its first birthday anniversary at the City Club with a military ball. Thursday ‘marked one year from the date of the unit's recognition by the War Department as a Federalized mili- tary force. Several hundred couples attended the fete. The baliroom was decorated in the National colors, the regimental standards and guidons, and standing out in bold relief was the two-starred flag of a major general. To the untiring and ceaseless lead- ership of Lieut. Col. Harry E. Glad- man, general chairman, with the as- sistance of both officers and enlisted men of the regiment, is attributed the success of the first of what is to be made an annual event under the spon- sorship of the newly formed 121st Engineer OMcers’ Association. The regiment i{s commanded by Col. John W. Oehmann, bullding in- or of the District, who, was of- | ficial host Assisting Lieut. Col. Gladman were McKey, commanding the 1st Battalion, master of ceremonies; Maj. Julian S. Oliff, commanding the 2nd | Battalion, chairman of the reception committee, the subchairmen of which Lietus. Charles E. Smithson J. E. Magruder, battalion adju- Maj. George J. Allen, com- | manding the Hospital Corps, was chairman of special ommittee; Capt. William F. Jorgensen, com- manding Company C, chairman of the public order committee, assisted by Lieut William E. Beuchler, Lieut. Raymond Peak and Chaplain Smith. Lieut. Robert G. MacCartee was per- | sonal adjutant to Col. Oehmann A Slip Costs Brakeman Leg. | Special Dispatch to The Star. | CUMBERLAND. Md., February Mrs. Carnegie Plays Hostess to Singers ’ Unbidden to Home| Taxi Driver Brings Fred- | erick Schorr and Wife to Wrong Party. By the Associs NEW YORK, February 7.—The en- tertainment of two uninvited guests at the home of Mrs. Andrew Carnegie was disclosed yesterday. Frederick Schorr, a singer of the Metropolitan Opera, and Mrs. Schorr, soprano of the Berlin State Opera told the story before departing for Europe. They had been Mrs. Otto Kahn. misunderstanding lish of Mr. “Carnegie invited to tea by A taxicab driver, e imperfect Eng- Schorr, jhought he said instead of “Kahn” and €0 he drove Mr. and Mrs. Schorr to the Carnegie residence. There the singers were ushered into the salon, where other guests were listening to a musical number. Tea was then served and it was half an hour be- fore the Schorrs learned they were in the wrong house. They left hur- riedly for the Kahn residence s PRESIE)ENT APPROVES VETERANS’ POPPY DRIVE Sale of Symbol of “Service and Sacrifice” Commended in Let- ter to Gen. Dunn. President Coolidge indorsed the an- nual pop drive of the Veterans of Foreign Wars yesterday in an inter- view wtih Gen. John H. Dunn, com- mander-in-chief of that organization, at_the White House. The President presented lowing letter to Gen. Dunn in the presence of Capt. Edwin 8, Bettel- heim, jr, chairman of the Veterans of Foreign Wars' legislative commit- tee, and Capt. Henry G. Lawson, ad- | |jutant general of the Veterans of | | Foreign Wars. The letter read as| follows: he annual saie of poppies, |made by disabled ex-service men | throughout the country under the fol- Wars, HUSBAND DESERTED HER, WIFE CHARGES Mrs. Ella B. Ward Sues Stationary Engineer—Shoe Salesman Sued for Divorce. Mrs. Ella B. Ward yesterday sied James H. Ward, a stationary eng! neer, for a limited divorce and al mony, and asked the court to require him to give bond to remain in Washington pending the hearing They were married May 4, 1922, and the wife charges her husband aban doned her and she had to take boarders. He placed spies in th house, she asserts, and accused lie of intimacy with some of the lodgers She is represented by Attorney James P. Farmer. Limited divorce and alimony are asked in a suit filed by Mrs. Marle Hupp against Lew J. Hupp, a shos salesman. She charges cruelty, de sertion and unon-support. They werq married July 3, 1924. Attorney Joh S. Hornback appears for the wife. Clarence E. Nicholson teday filec an answer to a suit for an absolut« divorce brought by his wife, Estella E. Nicholson, and denies her charges of infidelity. He also flled a cross petition asking a limited divorce and charging his wife with cruelty and desertion. He asks the dismissal of his wife's suit. Attorneys Daniel Thew Wright and Philip Ershler represent the husband. SUNDAY EXCURSION NEW YORK SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8 B Special Through Train Dirset to Penna. Sta., Tth A and 334 Bt oom handles. | Stanley Baldwin, and the primate of ! J. M. Hibbard, & manufacturer of|Ear| R. Trenton, Keyser, W. Va., brake- RULE REQUIRES VOTE | | terbury, with their wives. From the {continent two prominent Americans jcrossed the English Channel to at- the Archbishop of Can-| ing—Bitter Blizzard Adds to Hardship. histo: estate near Casanova, Detroit, Mich.. has recently purchased the handsome and Castle ric Melrose Va., man on an extra westbound Baltimore and Ohio freight train, slipped from the top of a car last night, near Swanton, particularly appealing regard “for and interest in the dis-| abled ex-service men. It is calculat- | ed to perpetuate the fine sentiments | sentiment Scott Carter. This mansion, a reproduction of Melrose Castle, Scotland, was built by Dr. Murray long before the Civil War and during the war was alter-| nately in the poss ion of the Fed- | eral and Confederate forces, the| Federal troops using it as a barracks for a considerable time. Up to the present the castie has been the headquarters of the Casanova hunt. from Mrs. E. Md.. and his right leg was crushed off. = k e e e He is married and has two children American Ambassador to France, and | Seymour Parker Gilbert, agent gen-| e iy eral for reparations payments. Mrs.| 1/ 1as Leonard Seppala’s forced | 0f 245 miles which insured the swift d Gilbert accompanied her husband. | o - i e sislie kot guests Be- | liery of the diphtheria serum at Nome. | sides those already named, those who [ gig""}3 "G00 Driver Proud of Part Played. which have made the poppy so pecu- |8 rgimilar Excarsion liarly symbolical of the services and | § March 8, April 5, May 3, the sacrifices of the men who gave 50 | i Jume 28 much that freedom might survive in|g | this world | “I am glad to comply with your re- quest for a word of indorsement and approval of this campaign.” ON POSTAL PAY BILL Resolution Brings Kelley Measure Named to West Point. The President has appointed Keith Roscoe, San Diego, Calif.; John H. Mc- Clellan, Manlius, N. Y., and Russell W. Lyster, Los Angeles, as cadets-at-large «f the United States Military Academy, subject to the usual examination. of the reindeer and were fighting all the time. The wind was coming strong from the direction I had tra- versed. I had made one and a half day's mush In one day then, but I turned without rest and went all the way to Bonanza fighting 18 dogs crazed because of the reindeer scent. I couldn't manage to keep the serum warmer. (The Bonanza of which he speaks is not Bonanza River. He has not vet recrossed Norton Bay.) Make Dash in High Wind. When T arrived at Bonanza I cov- ered the parcel and took 15 minutes | to change my socks and mitts. T then struck across Norton Bay and went 25 miles before it got dark, with a strong wind blowing in my face. That's kind of a mean drive. On the §2-mile run from Shaktolik, across the bay, I made an average of |88-10 miles an hour. The blizzard froze my left cheek. But that's little or nothing in the life of a musher. it didn’t freeze one of my Tickets on sale two diys ceding date of excursior Pennsylvania Railroad The ‘Standard Railread of the Werld = | Gunnar Kasson, who made the last lap, This champion musher | sat at the Ambassador's table were|juq to deal with fighting dogs 6 well {Austen Chamberlain, secretary of | g with cold and storm, and came out of state of foreign affairs; Lady Astor,|nis greatest achievement with a great | Herbert Asquith. who will soon as-| grie/, due to the loss of Togo, his famous {sume the title of Earl of Oxford, and | lead dog, whick ran away on the trdck A resolution under which the Kelly | & i il | wife: the Marquis and Marchioness|of a reindeer. stal as w postal pay and rate increase bill will e e <o | ©f Londonderry, ;’-?,,;:;::.:TE:G,:‘K_‘::; i h'ym"';;gru:er. Cora, Countess of Stafford o s - | Viscount and Viscountess Grey of P he resotation woula make in order | Falodon, Viscount Coudray, Viscount- on Tuesday a motion to suspend the | %88 Harcourt, Lord and Lady Desbor- . rules and pass the Dill prohibiting |OUSN (lady-in-walting). lerd Col-| ) _They told me to go siow—to AuS nnets froin this ficor: brooke (lord-in-waiting). Lady North-| 04\ -"Tney, told me 10 £o Sloviiin | 2 Ramseye a, a | COt. Maj. Reginald Seymour (equerry- 1 No» r Shaktolik, where T plRepresentative Rameeyer of Towsa, @ |1y waiting),. Counselor of the Em- | Ll ‘"'“fh:‘:“:m e R o oot todae to “fle | bassy and Mrs. Frederick A. Sterling, Before the House on Tuesday Next. TWRARRRRPRDIEVILEYIRRIINPEIRR AR EYRAARRRRE How much real value stands back of the stock you are asked (o buy? @ EY NED LEONARD SEPPALA. ecial Dispatch o The Star and New York World. NOME, Alaska, February 4 (delay- Kalorama’s Advantages for 1 got to Isaac's Point at 7:45 o’clock and the blizzard was gaining strength. Here I examined the l0g of the other musher, which had been handed along, as well as read direction which sald 1 was to keep the serum inside in the roadhouse between relavs to avoid freesing. | Rans Inte Blirzard. After three hours I was fairly warm, and, wrapped In furs to keep me from the cold of the eariy morning hours which were coming. I got ready.to leave. T had the sled in the house ready and left at daybreak. I ran into a bad blizzard crossing Greek | River, so named on account of the | delta, and was forced to Stop between the river and Elin to rub the dogs' flanks to avold freezing. That was a bard blizzard! While I was crossing Norton Bay | [ overtook and passed four teams, in- cludfng the mail. The trip to Golol- nin was uneventful except for the wind and cold. There I met Charlie Olso. who, by the way, froze his hands and fingers and got his cheeks badly frostbitten while blanketing dogs with rabbit skins to keep out the cerrific cold during the blizzard. His Recreation—Business—Home N the weight of these words depends the dif- O ference whether real estate of today will_be a_real Estatc twenty years 1in the future, or whether it will still be only a plot of ground. Recreation is in fact a part of life here. Rock Creek Park stretches away from the very edge of Kalorama. Mile after mile of motor roads, bri- dle paths and walks cross and re-cross the stream bordered woodland park. Plans are well advanced to extend Rock Creck Park Southward to the Po- tomac River. by a continuous parkway from the Connecticut Avenue Bridge to Haines Point. A. F. O—FT PLANS DRIVE T0 BOOM UNION GOODS to Stimulate | { DRaay; and M ik & Sierlin& lfor the dash back. I had understood = oW e {ra: John €. Lanvence. Ty :| that just one team was on the way minority views on the fiouss ProRostl | nrst ‘secretary of the embassy, and p'ol I S0 (3058 TS, ©F Jhe U Sk { Boyleston A. Beal, special attache of | "} p;q0 Solomon (about 40 miles) BODY OF CONSUL DYER | the embassy on the first day. -On the second day 1 Decorations of Room. | the trails were in the best shape I'd ARRIVES IN WASHINGTON | 7he Ambassador's table was Bot i evers sven s fond Tiass Reali e the spacious and dignified dining hal ! V! . T T of Crewe House and was decorated in | double the run of the mail Hed sach U. S. Representative in Coblenz |flaming colored azaleas, with tall silver day 1 got to Elim by night, ani | candelabrae. There were tall gilt bas- | found the people were worried about Was Formerly in Mewspaper Kets of pink azaleas and ferns about the | one child who had throat trouble. hall. In the yellow drawing room | When they heard the news of the Work in Capital. | there were pink and white lilies, while | Nome epidemic from me they closed i p 3 lilace and white tulips lent color to the | the schools. Several small settle- The body of Francid J. Dyer. Amer- |lllace and white tul ments were quarantined. From Elim fean consul at Coblenz, Germany, who |ETSEH CramilE TOOUL o o o armi to Tsaacs Point is 30 miles across a died there 'December 26, arrived in [ Ambassador Follosk €ave DS AU o101 o Norton Bay, and then T had Washington today _and is now at| .o thE 4uect =8 He Breeot 0y logg | to make my big drive across Norton J. William Lee’s undertaking parlors, ; e e "f anied by his majesty. Mrs, | Proper after stopping for an hour for awaitjug arrangements for funeral ‘{‘\_33“3“0 P coeation of a Paris.|lunch and to feed my dogs. I had services. Mr. Dyer was formerly for | €elo8% wore @ croation Cf O ol | made a record on this run. The trails many years a well known Washington | lenne designer, a gown of soft jade | S0, (00T Ul good. newspaper correspondent and was | Breen chifion velvel. AR OPCTeStT (The run was of almost 165 miles. stationed here at the State Depart- |Played softly thraughout the CIanet. | seppala, speaking of a point of Nor- nient for some time O B O e forroal oo tioniat]| ton ' Bay,: sppesently’ reters to, the Born' at Dyersville, Towa, June 21, | be the guests at a formal recepti Drojection. of dand terminmting in 64, heywas educated in high school | the home of Lady Astor. Cape Darby. This was a mush of 1nd a theologieal preparatory school | 30 miles. Elim, a settlement so small Dubuque, Towa., and later attended | that .it is not shown on the maps, is orthwestern University. i on the westerly side of this projec- He was Washington correspondent | tion and Isaacs Point on the easterly.) for the San Francisco Chronicle, the los Angeles Times, San Diego Union LIogs Haemt Motanear: Albany Journal and the Portland. 2 = Nearing Shaktolik the dogs scented Oreg.. Journal. He also wrote for! Year's Campaign reindeer and became hard to handle. several magazines and syndicated ; . Dogs go crazy whem they scent rein- Dyer's Washington Letter” and sup-| Buying of Products Carrying J0S" 82 CUOI¥ SO JOCK, S€0re Fog -y sl S s L Label Is Approved. of Shaktolik 1 met the son of Ivanoft ewspape - an old-time Russian chief. He had|relay was short. I think mine was Ho was appointed Washington com-{ By the Assocated Press. B started the relay and had a lot of | the longest. missioner to the Panama-Californiai MIAMI, Ela., February i.—Promo- .y, ple with hisdogs. They had been| On the firsf day I made 32 miles and Ixposition in 1911 and was commis-|tion of the sale of union-made|fihiins because they smelled rein- | the second 84. Under good conitione aloned American consul to Swansea, products will be sousht by the Amer-|gce, “(Here begis s the return jour-|though, and with dogs in training. I Wales, Apcll 3, 1915 He went ican Federation of Labor through gl have run 100 miles a day In the consult to Ceiba, Honduras, in Septem- | year's campaign by the union label | "}’ (.o 1014 o transfer the serum, | sweepstak Bt A ey b ber of the same year and was assign- |irades department, under plans in- |, 85 JCFC [0 SCARFEL 2 0€, SOV | SUSERRIRICR UL (s / «d to Tegucigalpa in March, 1917.|dorsed by the executive councid m — e y He was afterwards assigned as con- |session here. As a preparatory move; 1 s s % W = = 2, I #t Nogules, Mexico, in 1919, and|a conference of the reprexentatives of | GREAT COUNCIL SESSION |A. J. GLEASON HELD SANE Business districts are reached b.‘ motor 1n eight minutes. was appointed American consul at |the 111 afliliated national and inter- ! o e . C . . .. Coblenz, May 17, 1922, [national wnions will be hetd In Wash- 1 oo pen MEN' 1S oAl LED onnecticut Avenue is within three blocks of Kalorama 2 S {ington this Spring. & ENGRAVING BUREAU CUT | iainiorees, Rho snccaslind the 20 G Wife Had Questioned Mentality of on the East and Massachusetts Avenue is three blocks ¥ pamuel, Compers den | Business College's Head . ; |declared in an address that the fed- | Mestings to Be Held Monday and ge's Head. : TO BE DECIDED TODAY | ration would keep up its efforts to] o ¥ NEWARK, N. J., February 7.—Al- distant on the West. These stately avenues are connected Ipromote better understanding be- Tuesday Nights—Reception bert J. Gleason, head of the Drake o h K l h e K l i sl [T5eon capital and ‘Tabor. and 16 glve| gapoi e Business Colleges, was declured vane with Kalorama home sites over Kalorama Road to the cast Treasury to Know If Finances Will | the workers “high wages, reasonable | g by a jury of 24 men last night, after d . [hours of work and tolerable condi-| Tne eightieth great council session |30 iNquiry which was instituted by and over Belmont Road to the west: the property begm- Make Furlough for Work- | tions of employment.” | of the Improved Order of Red Men will | MFs. Gleason, and which had been in : B i | . - ! be held in the Red Men's Hall, Nine- | PFO&ress several days. It had been ers Necessary. [ D e Ens T | contenea thit: (lasssnsivast une v mng at Belmont Road and Tracey Place. *he Treasury Department will de-| MORGAN GlVES $'|00,000 | avenue, Monday and Tuesday night. ;fim::‘kfe care of his business and 2 4 stk | followed by an' entertainment ana - Lot Sonay IWHether . imional T _lreception Wednesday night. All ses-| EXperts, testifving in behalf of Mrs. e o e e rraving | EAnker Contributes to Fund for|sions will start at 3 o'clock. Gleason, had said that Gleason suf- O > Duican of Sngraving | " The entertainment and reception |fered from paresis, but this was con- . [ will be in honor of Charles E. Pass, | tradicted by the testimony of other 1 Baltimore Eye Hospital. Your home here will be located amid the most select society and embassy life of the Capital. Permanently Zone-free of com- mercial crowding on the city side, with Rock Creek Park along Kalorama’s whole front, your investment offers protected space and freedom. Kalorama residents include an ex-President, a Justice of the Supreme Court, Diplomats, Senators—a long list of distinguished names. Less than twenty lots remain. Two Cars in Cne— STUDEBAKER Duplex Phaeton PERPETUAL SEEK RUM-CAR CONVOY. | N n o BALTIMORE, Md., February 7.—J. p. | €Teat incohonse, and Herbert F. | €Xperts. THR2E BLOCKS Budget and determination ex- | treatment of eve diseases, it was an-{ Chlefs of the Great Councll are: {cal School. The fund is within $500,- | McCracken; great junior sagamore, | great sannap, Alva Thompson; great Comes—Rescues Pup Also. Snice Pond water by Afra, a police | Income Tax Reports. { excitement Gus Clough, 16, and Howard where the bank drops abruptl e > oW | York L Mg dacis cer, fef of records of the | = = ZROM CONN. The question of a supplemental| Morgan, New York banker, has con tzer, great ch RO! . astimate to be submitted to Congressi tributed $100,000 to the $3,000,000 "unul at Council of the United States. AVE BRIDOE far wdditional money to run . the | being raised for the William Holland event will be held in Pythian |- hureau was before the Bureau of the| Wilmer Institute for the study and | Temple. St i Shrie i e os nounced here foday. The institute is | Great sachem, Robert A. Humphries; REESEIE anter some e o lto be established in connection with 2t prophet, Frank D. Seiffert; R S | the Johns Hopkins Hospital and Medi- | &reat senior sagamore. James J. DOG SAVES BOY IN POND. i schocl The 'tund i Sidhin ssia” | cCracken: ereacJunior mgumore; e | by next Wednesday, it was added. | wampum. Thomas H. Dennis; acting | Holds Child by Collar Till Help | p SR i S wat chief of records, Robert Strobel; | COLLECTORS ASSIGNED. |munisha .\,J uknge;: great guard e, * jof wigwam, . Baker, and great Fr'l ;‘ “'w‘" “w ‘";; :Im‘ 27 o - —_— | guara of, forest, Charles Scheerer. Jang. 13, was rescued from drovwning | Will Aid Maryland Citizens With | N dog. who also dragged out her three- | | month-old pup. into the water during tue of saving Lang were attracted by the gff ng struggling in the watery bad recently been cut. He cvlose to the shore, but at 15 feet. The dog ran ahead, reachec the drowning lad, grabbed his coat collar between his teeth and held him until Clough and Condos came up. Reserve Officers Named. Edwin B. Hesse, ohief clerk of the District Police Department, has been appointed by the War Department a captain in the Finance Department, and Franklin I. Winter, 910 Maryland avenue northeast, a captain in the haplains’ Corps, both in the Officers’ Reserve Corps of the Army 2t B ERSE A juniper tree, believed to be not thn 3,000 years old, is still stand- & In the Cache National Forest in 1a%, fo. wh.ch -had fallen | The Internal Revénue Service, with! a view to assisting citizens of vari- | ous sections and communities of | Maryland in filling out income tax| Elanks. have assigned deputy | llectors to those disiricts. Col- | fectors will visit the following com- |, munities on the dates given: Annapolis, February 16-March 14; | Cumberland, February 26-Mdrch 14; | Frederick, February 24-25; Hagers- town, March 1-March 14; La Plata, February Prince Frederick, February Hyattsville, Febru- ary 28-March 3; Laurel, March 4-6, and Rockville, March 7-11 Katz Closes Exhibit Tomorrow. leo Katz, Austrian painter, will ~lose his exhibition of art at the Na- tional Museum of Art, Smithsonian Institution, tomorrow, instead of on February 15 as was originally planned. The change was made nec- essary by urgent requests for the ex- hibition in other cities. Mr. Katz will be at the gallery on Sunday aft- ernoon. Police Pursuing Supposed Bootleg- zer Warded Oft by Motorist. Occupants of a touring car, a man and woman, managed to escape ar- rest last night by extinguishing the lights on their car at Fourteenth and Harvard streets while being pursued by Policemen Schotter and Ehlman of the second precinct. Identity of the man is known, however, and the police say they will procure a war- rant for his arrest on charges of reck’ess driving. Schotter and Ehlman, occupants of a motor cycle and sidecar, sighted a supposed_rum car at Seventh and Q streets about midnight and when they started in pursult, they stated, a cer they suspeoted was acting as a convoy was driven in an apparent effort to crowd them to the curb, enabling the driver of the supposed rum car to disappea - o~ . Before you Invest—lImvestigate. BUILDING . ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be. fore maturing Assets More Than $9,500,000 Surplus $950,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY.......President JOSHUA W. CARR...Secretary BELMONT ROAD KALORAMA Lalorama ALLAN E. WALKER & CO., Inc. Call Mr. Godden, Main 2690 813 15th St. N.W. (Southern Building)