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SureRelief i FOR INDIGESTION { 6 BELLANS Hof water 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere BOOKS BOUGHT “Bring_Them In" or Phone FRANKLIN 5416 || PEARLMAN’S, 933 G St. NW. /| INSPECT the Ml‘ml new APARTMENTS ar erclusive New Apartment Building 5435 Connecticut Ave. N.W. o Jour-stors apartment buildmg Washington's high-class residential urh: containing sixteen two-room. bath apartments. All vitside apartments, commanding an excellent view and should be excep- tionally cool 1n Summer. Within one square of moving picture theater and Rents, 857.50 to $62.50 Only four apartments left B. F. SAUL CO. Main 2100 925 15th St. N.W. ard Coal All sizes for immediate delivery. and Reduced prices on coke and New River Egg. John P. Agnew & Co., 728 14th St. ‘M. 3068. ! — SPECIAL NOTICES. ED AT ONCE — FULL OR_PART ol snecial rate; AVAILABLE FOR LOAD TO or South: special price. Call . care fix‘-‘nlnnlle Gas and ttaville, d. ot Mo munt. 3, nt." s A .';mcfu'i‘z'm,m HAW ING C. A D- umfim Potomac || EVEB A A fine Baso WAI\TED‘A REI‘L‘K\ LOAD OF FURNI- ture from York. Philadelphia or Balti- THS TRANSFER AND STOR- LIST OF PATENTEES WITH i not, earlier than 1923, o A shrubber: ut in furnished Ind ratclass order EDG! green. Ta R Herrell, I eil is day ira W) L eania® ooty Sxinting . Detwan” Wi tolt and Joseph Epstein, under the firm name | d st Epstein & Lipstein. engaged in the mmnm of operating the Potomac Lunch | 4t 1708 Pennsylvania ave. n.w.. Washington. B R Ihat e far es. eiatin 15" vim o | ~ald “firm is dissolved. ~ The business will | able to said firm and pay all debts and liabil- itiea of the same and perform all its executed contracts. Dated at W: 20t day of March ALFRED L. : £35 Southern” Bui mrm-,u ITH THE TARGEST 3 Jnown and nalmnali And 1 have to offer my repuiation as a ormer partner in the largest business of it kind in the city and 20 Fears' experience. T will be pleased to arrange a meeting to further explain my proposition in detal] to any ‘person of reputation who 8 interested in 1m-<A»..‘§.]ux $35.000 tor 507 cires iR \L M ACHINE . Gear cutting, shafting and cold rolled steel, cast phos- pher bronze bushings. H. C. Cragg Mig. Co, 228 K s.w. THERE’S NO ROOF LIKE AN OLD ROOF —especially when it's leaking. TS et tosetner and Take your roof sound and leakpre IRONCLAD Eooflng 1121 6th N, w L) Company __ Ph. Main Real Printing Service Our Work Speaks for Itself HIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED. BYRON S. ADAMS, (ERixTER, WE LIVE UP TO OUR SLOGAN- On Time All Time! The Million-Dollar Printing Plant The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D § " Tf You Have A Good Curlzd Hau- Mattress Main_3621. ROOFING-—By Rowa 119 .|r‘ St ST y__ Phone, WE'LL SAVE YOU MONEY ON SCREENS Now is the time to have us make them to measure nnd ave them ready tr iy, uuL. ¥ac un. & H Sts. N, wmduw Shades —l’hnnr Lin. 870 | torial | throughout | zovernor great nations of the world, it has been found by a committee of distinguished scholars, attemptir, est in the work of young Italian au- thors. 900,000, has hardly a dozen important bookshops, and these are largely de- political books. the University Club. of Rhode Island and Both Senators Brown, District of Columbia_will meet, o'clock, ment Building. Brig. Gen. Campbell King, assistant chief of staff, War De- partment, will deliver an illustrated THE | address on China. : |[bourne, executive officer, office of chief of Coast Artillery, will Speak of post- war developments of the Coast Artil- artillery, sound ranging. All officers, U. S. A are invited. of Minnesota, 4 Literary Man and the Bible,” 8 o’clock, E. §., will have its annual mid-Lent dance and card party | Park Hotel. Dancing, 10. streets, will have for its study subject “Reincarnation,” welcome. i house. {on o'clock, at room 802 F street. jec Static New Thnughl gram and refreshments, patrons of 1923 will be special guests. performance of its minstrel show at the Jewish Commu- nity Center, night, for clubs have reserved seats, has been designated will meet at 7:30 o'clock Hall. lin M. E. r're.qm dinner in anm\ Temple, 4209 Ninth NORBECK IS NAMED b. 0. P. CANDIDATE South Dakota Convention Puts Gunderson in Race for Governor Again. By the Associated Press. SIOUX FALLS, S. Dak., —For the sixth time, South Republicans have placed their of approval cn Peter Norbeck. They voted him the ~ Republican | nomination. for Unlted States Sen ator in yesterd: State-wide primary in which Gov. Carl Gunderson won the party’s guberna- nomination March 24. Dakota stamp again, enator Norbee ned an early ead and held it the of the returns. opponent, J. Dan forth of Sioux SENATOR NORBECK. Falls, conceded that the Senator had won Farm Relief is Basis. Norbeck, at his home at said he had won “a great tabulation unoffictal His George victory. His headquarters here statement stating that attributed his victory to tion of the business men alike that agriculture Is the single in- dustry on which our welfare depends and that they are looking to Congdess to remove the handicap that at this time oppresses the farming industry.” Senator Norbeck was the first native of this State to become its governor and the first South Dakota born man to represent the State in the United States Senate. He served four years as governor and went to the Senate In 1920. Before entering politics he was a well driller. Gov. Gunderson held a comfortoble lead over his opponent, C, E. Coyne of Fort Plerre. Neither would make a statement. My nderson was elected lieutenant 0 and hecame governor in 1 . Coyne has been secretary of State. The few hundred votes cast in the only Democratic contest, that for governor, showed marked lack of party interest. W. J. Bulow of Beresford led R. ( Richards of Huron for the guberna- torfal nomination. The election is November 2 - ITALIANS READ LITTLE. ROME, March 24 (#).—Italians read less than the citizens of the other to create inter- Rome, with a_population of nearly voted to the classics, technical and ORGANIZATION AGTIVITIES TONIGHT. Brown University alumni of Wash- ngton will give its annual dinner at Senator Metcalf enator Sackett f Kentucky will be guests of honor, are graduates of Reserve Officers’ Association of the 8:15 in the new Interior Depart- Col. Charles E. Kil- ery, including anti-aircraft, railway heavy tractor artillery and Richard Burton, Ph. will lecture on D., Univ n Georgetown Presbyterian Church. G. A. R, will . A. R. Hall. Mount Pleasant Chapter, No. 34, O. Burnside Post, No. 8, at Wardman Cards, from 8:30 o'clock. 709 1 United Lodge of Theosophists, 1ill Building, Seventeenth and at 8§ o'clock. Al | The Center for Psychic Develop- ment will meet, 8 o'clock, at the Play- Dr. Jane B. Coates will Jecture “The Spirit World, Where Is 1t?" E. A G lecture, 8§ Sub- Thought vs. Admission free. Linn le will Dynamic New Naomi Chapter, No. 3,0. E. §., pro- Matrons and Viva M. January nity Auditorium, Knowledge and Wisdom,"” M. IH. will lecture in 1326 T street, on at 8 o'clock. . will give the first eleventh annual The Y. To be repeated tomorrow hich a number of Jewish THE EVENING U. S. Asked to Pay Falsely Arrested Mjssourlan $2,500 Congress is asked to pay $2,600 compensation to a Missourian who spent flve months in Jail just be- cause his name happened to coin- cide with that of another man who previously had run afoul of the prohibition law. The name that caused the trouble was W, W. Ford. Ford No. 1 was arrested and forfeited his bond of 2,000. A year and a half later Ford No. 2 was taken in by an officer who didn’t understand all the facts. But No. 2 could neithér make bond nor convince the au- thorities of their mistake, 8o he stayed in, Representative Hawes, Democrat, Missouri, has introduced a bill that would entitle Ford N 2 to a check for $2.500 from the United States Treasury. REFERENDUM STILL HOPE AT ALBANY Four More G. 0. P. Votes in Sight Following Defeat of Yesterday. By the Associated Press ALBANY, N. Y., March 4. Advo. cates of a State referendum on the question of asking Congress to modl- fy the Volstead act claim they can muster enough votes in the lower body of the Legislature to turn a de- feat of yesterday Into a victory. A referendum proposal yesterday was supported by 59 Democrats and 14 Republicans, 3 short of the 76 nec- essary. Minority Leader Maurice Bloe however, asserts that four more Republican votes are in sight, which would insure victory if the pro- posal were resubmitted and other votes remained unchanged. Drys in the lower house are wor- ried by continued failure of a com- mittee to report out a State enforce- nmm bill, which was defeated, 27 to . In_ the Senate Monday night. Somewhat the opposite situation ex- ists in the Senate judiclary commit- tee over the referendum measure, which was killed there once by a vote of 7 to 5. Reconsideration is being sought. While the assembly was defeating the referendum proposal yvesterday it buried a resolution to petition Con gress for a constitutional convention to repeal the eighteenth amendment. WHITE RUSSIANS HELP HOLD TIENTSIN Accompany Shantung Troops and Manchurians as National Army Is Routed. By the Associated Pross. TIENTSIN, March 24.—Russian cavalry accompanied two train loads of Shantung troops that arrived here yesterday in pursult of the retreating Kuominchun (national) army troop of the Peking government. The trains which came from the south were operated by crews from White Russia. Other trains containing Marshal Chang Tso-Lin's Manchurian troops arrived from Tongshang, and Tientsin i8 now in the hands of those who oppose the government. Officers of the Feng Tien army, from Manchuria, protected by an armed bodyguard, left their train at East Station in an attempt to enter the city through the Itallan con- cession, despite a warning that they would not be allowed to pass while armed. Local Oficen Transferred. Army officers stationed in this city have been assigned to duty at other stations as follows: Lieut. Cols. Howard 8. Miller and Claudius M. Seaman, War Department General Staff, to Fort Winfleld Scott, Calif., and Fort Hancock, N. J. respectivel Maj. Edgar E. Hume, Medical Cor Surgeon General's Office, to Fort Benning, Ga.; Lieut. Col. Frederick L. Dengler, War Department General Staff, to San Francisco; and Capt. Frank U. Greer, Infantry, District of Washington, to the Panama Canal Zone. BRAND-NEW APARTMENT 19th and Mintwood Place N.W. One Square from Columbia Rd. New four-story apartment with all modern improvements, convenient to £ a1 crosstown bus serv- Good stores within ‘eaay walk- ln‘ dlslu\ floors: hue rooms. all nul-lide. and’ larg Seli avangea kitchen. 2 Rooms, Kit., Rec.eption Hall and Bath, $57.50 to $60.00 and which Club night."” 0. 4, C., Burnside Corps, W. R. at G. A. R. The Ladies' Aid Society of Ham- Church, Sixteenth and Al- lison streets, will hold an Easter bazaar and dinner, in the social hall, beginning at 5:30 o'clock. The ways and means commltlea of Joppa Lodge Chapter, No. 27, O. E. will serve a chicken and ice street, from 5:30 to 7:30 After the movigs! After a hard enough day at the office and then thestrainof theflickering movies, your eyes will welcome being soothed and refreshed. SE& — ASSS. B \{Q =, s ~ EYE LOTION B. F. SAUL CO. 925 15th St. N.W. Main 2100 UNDER PULL- MAN SEATS EASTER TRIPS NEWEST STYLE Visiting Cases 3 24, 26, 28, 30 inch Reg. Pnce $11.50 THIS 8 a5 24 and 26 inch sizes Lovely lining, shirred pocket in top, strong tray. Leather bound, straps, comers—hrown, russet, black. A value! ENS kL (luflliln: eye eu your LEATHER GOODS 1314 G Street N.W. ‘WITH BECKER'S 35 YEARS STAR, WASHINGTON, STOCKTON PRAISED ATG. W.U. SERVICES Picture of Former President, Who Saved University, Is Presented. Close friends and associates of the late Rear Admiral Charles Herbert Stockton, president of George Wash- ington University from 1910 to 1918, lauded his service to the university yesterday afternoon at the ceremony incldent to the unveiling and presen- tation of a life-size portrait of Ad- miral Stockton, which was held in the assembly room of Stockton Hall, the new law school bullding. The portrait was the work of Rich- ard S. Meryman, a Washington art- ist, and was. provided through pri- vate donations of friends of Admiral Stockton and those who had worked with him at the university and in the Navy. The ceremony was attended by about 400 persons. The story of how Admiral Stockton rescued the untversity from financial stress and placed it upon a firm basis, doubling its enrollment in his period of service there, was unted | by Dean William Allen Wilbur, who presented the portrait to the univer- sn)’. “There are cr in the history institutions that demand not only wi counsel, but also personul devotion | suid. “It wus such Washington Universitysgyhen Admira Stockton accepted the presidency. He | laid it down as « principle that the e penses must be kept within the re- ceipts, himself leading in the sucrifice thiy entailed, and held the university to it. “His own quiet confidence restored the shaken morale throughout the uni- versity and inspired new confidence and hope. He and Mrs. Stockton to gether entered into university affairs of faculty and student interests with genuine affectionate concern, and they | Created a new esprit de corps in the university. This was followed by tending indications of increasing pros- | perity. When he became president in | 1910 there were 1,200 students, when he resigned the presidency in 1918 | there were 2,400 students | “In a stormy time Rear Admiral| Charles Herbert Stockton was & strong, stjl man the Navy gave (o us. | He Iy enshrined in the affections of | living men and women." The portrait was received by Dean | William Van Vleck of the law school —Here is a new apartment house that has every modern conve- » nience, and which provides un- usual service at moderate cost. f you are going to move you * can get the best values in the District — furnished or unfur- nished—long or sh»n terms. e wmx—s?&im@w% APAR'I'HENTS K 21% e € STS. ux The Pioneer House on the Park R R AR R RSN R SRR R AR fiuwmiumfi(%ifififlfii@fififiiifi Su D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, Pigeon Uses Auto For 40-Mile Trip, Navy Report Says pigeon story about a rarrlpr bird that went A. W. O. L. from a Canal Zone sta- tion for a year and then returned toduty was capped today in an of- ficial report from San Diego of an aerial messenger which stole a 40- mile automobile ride to deliver its message. The San Diego pigeon arrived at the Navy station there perched on a motor car driven by Mrs. Evelyn Johnson of San Diego, who sald it had boarded the machine at Ocean- side, 40 miles away. It promptly took up its residence in the quar- ters of the officer of the day, drew rations, rested a bit and then took the air to make its home port at the nearby naval aviation station under its own power. The bird had been released presumably from a plane with a message addressed to the aviation station. An address on the life of Admiral Stockton also was made by Rear Admiral Edward H. Campbell, judge advocate general of the Navy. N. Landon Burchell was chairman of the committee which planned the memorial portrait, which {ncluded representatives of the Navy, the uni- versity, the vestry of the St. John's Episcopal Church, the Loyal Legion, the Order of Washington and other civic and patriotic organizations with which Admiral Stockton was associat ed. The committee on the portrait was Dr. Douglas Putnam Birnle. Admiral Willard H. Brownson and Dean Wil bur. who aided were John president of the board trustees of the university; Arch ibald Hopkins, member of the board Walter Stilson Hutehins, Nicholas Luquer, Maj. Ord Preston, Capt. 1. P. B. Sands of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion; Col. Robert M. Thompson, and Vernon H Brewster, secretary of the alumni as- oclation. Anthracite COAL Immediate Delivery Egg .......$15.25 Per Ton Chestnut . . Per Ton .$15.50 Buckwhgat . $9.00 Phone North 177 A.P.WOODSON CO. 1202 Monroe St. N.E. Two street bined if desired.) This high-class building, with the latest |mprovcmcnts cinerator, ef /E CH ALLENGE VALUF MOORE & 730 17th Street designed including tiled baths; heated COMPARISON FOR Cresthill Apartments 1430 Belmont Street frontages Building finished March 1st 25 apartments rented—23 left There's a reason for these apartments renting so rapidly at this unseasonable time—unusual advantages—low rentals. Large porches—some have two porches. Look at the front porches and then go to the street in the rear and look at the porches and the view they command over the city. 3 rooms and 4 rooms and bath each. $55 to $90 EACH. Exceptionally fortunate in being in this unusual situation—on the crest of the hill, affording an unobstructed view over the city, sur- rounding country and, indeed, down the Potomac. (Several may be com- elevator service and about all of by oil; in- REAL RENTAL HILL, INC. Main 1174 AN apartment in the best resi- dence district of Washington, for one or two adults. The building is new and possesses every advantage of modern con- struction. T‘flz apartment is on the first floor, looks upon Massa- chusetts Avenue, and comprises living room, breakfast room, kitchen and bathroom with built-in tub and shower. Living room has Murphy bed, when not in use. which folds into a cupboard Similar apartments, elsewhere in the building, at rentals from $55 to $70 a month. W. H. WEST COMPANY, Agents 916 15th STREET, N. W. 24, 1926. . MARCH 24, KIRBY SENTENCED FOR MAIL FRAUDS Gets Seven and Half Years I and $7,000 Fine—Appeal Motion Is Denied. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, March 24.—Josiah Kirby, former president of the Cleve- 14nd Discount Co., today was sen- tenced to seven and one-half years in Federal penitentiary at Atlanta and fined $7,000 by Federal Judge John M. Killits on charges of using the mails to defraud. The actual sentence aggregated 35 years, but stipulations that separate entences passed by Judge Killits for various of the 14 counts in the Indict- ment, run concurrently, reduced the time he must serve. eThe sentence was imposed after Judge Killits ovérruled a motion for a new trial. Kirby was granted a stay of execution until June 14, when he faces trial on “jury fixing” charges on which he was indicted by the Federal grand jury. To these he pleaded not gullty immediately after his sentence on the mail fraud charge. Kirby was given his freedom for the first time In elght weeks on bond He has been held a prisoner since his conviction January 30 pending investigation of the jury rowing out of his Movie Fills Room With Catalogues in Buy-at-Home Drive By the Associated Press. YALE, Okla., March couraging a ‘“buy-at-hom: paign a local motion picture thea- ter has accumulated a room full of mail order catalogs. The management offered a free admission in exchange for a cata-* logue and 625 were brought in by patrons within a week. city’s population s less than 2,100. — EX-COLLEGE HEAD DIES. Dr. John A. Kern Was Once on Faculty of Vanderbilt University. DALLIS Tex., March 24 (#).—Dr. John A. Kern, 79, formarly a member of the faculty of Vanderbiit Uni- versity at Nashville, Tenn., died to- day at the home of his son, Dean Paul B. University. The body will be sent to Winchester, Va., for burial Dr. Kern formerly was president of }mndulph‘Mufiuh College, Ash- land, Va. = g B. Keman, Grocer, Bankrupt. Benjamin Kerman, a grocer at 2408 Fourteenth street and 1651 Ninth | street, today filed a voluntary pet {tlon in bankrupt He Hsts his debts !4t $33,404.20 and assets at £30,000. At- |torney Milton Strasburger appears for the grocer. one-half of women are Pennsylvania’s under 25 About working Kern of Southern Methodist | 3 Mighty Lak a Rose The pudgy little radish, in hi bright red coat and green plumage, is pleasing to the eyc But when his jacket has been cut to resemble the petals of rose and he has been iced to crispy crunchiness, he is a posi- tive delight to both eye and palate if served on a bed of sparkling Americen Ice. The gayly-bedecked vegetabl- midget is a true harbinger of Spring, and clean, pure Amer: can Ice brings it to the table in the way most tempting to the jaded Winter appetite. American ICE __ Company FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 __LEFTH_BROTHERS A Very Desirable Apartment Furnished or Unfurnished THE DRESDEN John W. Thompson & Co., Inc. 1636 Eye St w. Main 1177 Nature 5 ChoiceS? pring Jonic OTHER NATURE made Strawberries bright red and lucious so that you would not OVETIOOI( them . She knew, just as dieticians today know, that every Spring the body needs the tonic and vitalizing properties of the Strawberry's vitamines—so abundant in its invigorating juice and fruit. Ready for You! Every dealer of CARRY'S has this excellent Spring Tonic now ready for you—the rich, de- Lightful berries themselves, mixed with the smoothest and finest of Ice Cream. and dessert and Spring tonic all in one. some today—and regularly! It is food Have Delicious Ice Cream © “"It's thebest” If there 1s no CARRY Dealer near you, telephone— Carry Ice Cream Co., Inc. “LINCOLN 5