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NINE FACE COURT FOR PLAYING GOLF [Tenth Charged With Interfer- Ing With South Carolina Sunday Observance. 3 i 1. t By the Associated Press. COLUMBIA, S. C., March 14.—The urge to play golf on Sunday in viola- tion of South Carolina’s 3 bath “blue law” was re: day for the name eppearing on docket books in magis- trate courts at Sumter and Camden. The name of a tenth, Charles R Villepigue of Camden, was listed on the charge of interfering with officers in their attempt, for the third con- secutive Sunday, to carry out Gov. Richard’'s order to enforce the old statute. Propose to Fight Case. All of those arrested announced they proposed to fight the case, while at the same time officials of the South Carolina Motor Club said they had re- tained counsel in an effort to work out some plan whereby court inter- vention could be obtained to prevent the “blue law" from permitting stranded motorists from sts at Sumter, witnessed by a crowd of spectators who flocked to the links, were made by the county sheriff after a number of golfers had failed on Saturday to obtain a court injunction to prevent their game being stopped. Meanwhile golfers Alken were unmolested in their pl & restraining order issued March and good until March 19, protecting them. Richards Away for Week End. Mr. Villepigue last night denied he | had attempted to interfere with the arresting officers at Sumter, and said he was on the links “through idle curiosity.” Gov. Richards was away from the capital for the week end, but before departing issued strict orders to offi- clals to make the “blue law" effective, RITES FOR G. A. ROUSE. Rapid Transit Employe Buried in Rock Creek Cemetery. G. A. Rouse, 43 years old, employe of the Washington Rapid Transit Co., dled at the residence of his sister, Mrs. Ernest 22 B street northeast, Saturday, after an illness of eight weeks. He had been a re: dent of this city since childhood. Funeral services were conducted this afternoon. Interment was in Rock Creck ceme Fred Huth, Mrs . Ernest C. Lee, foulk and Mrs. George Schoeneman and two brothers, Charles P. Rouse 9f.this city and Albert Rouse of Brook- | Iyn, N. ARMED ‘LIBERTY’ WANTED Cretians Would Erect Statue on Site of Battle. ATHENS, March 14 (#).—Inhabit- ants of the Isle of Crete are seeking erection of a Statue of Liberty, armed | from head to foot, on the heights of St. Elias, the highest point on the peninsula’ of Akroteri between Canea and Suda Bay. | n February 9§, 1 during the | Cretian rebellion against the ’Furtl:‘: the Christian, insurgents there were bombarded by the warships of Eng- land, Russia, Germany and Austria- Hungary. Among the insurgents was ,\:enize‘lus, afterwards Premier of Greece. 97, Oyster Exposition Postponed. NEW YORK, March 14 (P).—The first pedigreed oyster exposition, which was to have opened here ne Monday, has been postponed until O tober, it was announced today. The present oyster season has so far ad’ vanced, It was said, that the best type of oysters are not available, SPECIAL . NATIONAL BANK, WASHINGTON ‘ebruary 9. 1927 —By order of thé a) meeting of the shi olders of the ca 1 etock of this assocl tion will be and is hereby called. to be held he bank. No. 509 Seventh stréet northwe n (h& ll‘ of Washington, D. C., on e day. March 15. 1927, clock. p.m.. 1o tconsider and deiermine t"uuuon of " in- m‘im the capital stock in the sum of two fifty thousand dollare ($250.0¢ aking the total capital seven hung?t!d fty thousand dollars (8750.000). the sharc: olders of record to have the privilege of | subscribing for stch increase at one hundred ($175) per share in the the bank at or eees of the price of one hundred and seventy- Jfive dollars ($175) per share. as may seem roper 10 the board of directors of the bank ey to have full control of all matters ef {1 and proper to carry the fore. Thirty days' notice of | be given by publication | e xton Post newspaper in the City of | ston, D C. " VICTOR 'B. DEYBER. | t _WALTER W. MARLOW, Cashier | TP HERETOFORE EXISTING | ween Alphonso C. Burwall and Viment 5 omas. conducting the dr urwell & Thomas at *'fiw. was on the 10th day of Ma iutially’ disolved. “All debte owing 1o drm are 10 be paid {0 Vincent B Thomas nd all owed by the firm up 1o and ing iding arch 10th. 1927. are ed by Vincen Thomas. who W incent | usiness. and will appreci of the patronage he fhe patrons the sume they have always ¢ ings with th Y __VIN n ex- RATE ON B. Transfer, @ R R OF FURN COMPANY, " TAY ik y #dng Will be held +Bion _ Bldg.. Tuesd LLOCK_REPAIRING BY FACTORY HE d We call and deliver. by §n'bg i i OC! U ) 5244 i RE! TR Siehed firm ea PLITT. 1 mh2 BY OLD vered. guar- ANY MAKE 114 for. deli 30 7th 1 ROOFING—by Koons Teonirs APRIL SHOWERS BRING LEAKY ROOFS Talk with us today about making I NEVER h(«Al“l'OIN? BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY fgh Grade. but_not high ; HIeh O3S s dbees "Iy Priced A MILLION DOLLAR w—printing plant equipped to handle every &ind of printing ob. , The National Capital Press 01212 D ST. N.W. Phone M, 650 Call Us Today for New Shades and Screens Get an early start on your Sprin cleaning. ~ Call today for esti- ‘of ‘factory pri, EEBLATT 4&" Ste. N E. Window Shades and Screcns. Phone Linc 879 from | t obtaining | turb: at1of these countries ;|do without the white ARTICLE IX. BY UPTON CLOSE. War in China and nationalistic plans to oust the white man flare In our headlines; but who knows about the similar demonstrations going on in Indo-China, Siam, the Dutch East | Indies, the'Straits Settlements and all the deep fringe round the south shore -| of Pacific Asia to the borders of India® When 1 arrived in Indo-China I ound the French authorities forbid- | ding even foreign hunting partfes to enter this closely guardéd area. Why? Fear of communist propaganda is of- fered as the reason. In this French colony, full of irri- dentist segments of China and with a arge population of Southern Chinese deeply affected by the victories of Can- tonese nationalism, the authorities feel annot be too cautious. They have dealt very fairly with the people, and, as the ench colonial adminis- trators entertain little race prejudice, the social element of discontent is not serious a problem as it is orth. But racially the Indo-Chinese are closely kin to the Southern Chine who have produced most of the dis in Asia; so Indo-China will inevitably feel the effect of the revolt and the French government has i ries of its own not far Sayre Among the Advisers. What is remarkable all _through Southe ern_Asia is the self-reliance and their determi- nation, with deceptive peacefulness, to This is Siam, where some 20 “advisers,” all of whom have fundamental _services to the country, are being pensioned off and will not ept by Slamese ad- Francis ‘B. Sayre, son- aw of President Wilson, is the “biggest” man in thé group. There is no ill feeling about it. But Siam, a country as large as France, h'an efficlent rallway system run by a Siamese graduate of Oxford, with an excellent standing army and the largest air force in Asia, feels thor- oughly self-reliant. Ever since 1921, for instance, American citizens in Siam have been under Siamese laws, with the right reserved—very little exercised—to revoke cases back into consular jurisdiction. This is the most reasonable of all the solutions of the extraterritoriality problem, but it took a good deal of calm, determined ‘pres- sure on the part of the Siamese to get us to adopt it—and unfortunately things have now gone too far to use it to stem the tide of China's crisis. Uprising in Dutch Possessions. There have been threats of com- munist risings i nIndo-China, but they have actually occurred in the Dutch Iridies, and when I visited Su- matra I found the Dutch officials still seriously apprehensive of the recur- rence of outbreaks which came on un- expectedly and were put down with much difficulty last year. . In the great island of Java, the same size as Cuba, but with 10 times the population, the Dutch administra- tors have made lasting economic im- provements in the status of the Javans, but over in Sumatra a much more restive population, of a. less doctle racial strain, has risen more and more frequently of late years in the big towns and on the plantations. I found the Dutch East Indies not only the reciplents of communist prop- aganda from home—the secretary of the third internationale was for sev- happening in foreign given replaced, ministrators. lander, 8. J. Rutgers—but the particl- pants on their own behalf of an Asi- atic nationalism reflected from Russia through the large Chinese colonles which have been for years the back- bone of the nationalist movement in China. ‘Then, at the tip of the Federated lay States, is the center of British naval base-to-be at Singapore. It was no surprise to find that as my steamer passed out among the islands in which this base is to be constructed the order went out from the ship’s officers, “No photographs!” British Rubber Plans Menaced. Back among the Malay States them- scene of the great rulber in- which Britain relied upon to pay the greater part of her debt to the United States, another large Chinese community, perhaps, the wealthiest anywhere in the world, exercises an economic power wholly disproportion- ate to its numbers. This inese element was a perma- | lenge _from_ Can nent factor in the stability of British control a few years back, but the chal- ton _against British Phillips Terrace Apartment 1601 Argonne Place Just North of Columbia Rd. at 16th St. I 0 beaut exnosres Buiit-In_bath_fixtures Murphy beds, ete. and 24-Hour Telephone Elevator Service Inspect Them Today Before Deciding | William S. Phillips North 4300-J, | | h & Evarts | Sts. N.E & Co., Inc. Main 4600 Adams 8710 METH. | The First and On%ml Cold and- Grip Tablet more than a Quarter of i 2 EGEDS G A INPLUENZA aad as s Preventive. Price 30c. The box bears this signature Proven Saf RISE OF A NEW CHINA All South Asia Aroused by Agitations for Liberty. French Forbid Shooting Parties in Siam, Fearing Communism. prestige, the long struggle between Canton and Honggong and other rifts in ChineseBritish understanding in the East may vet embarrass British control at one of its most vital points in all these southern seas. What the traveler learns with the first impact of the new situatio along this route is that they eve where mean one thing—the predomi- nance of Chinese influence among the South Sea forces of discontent and re- volt. This was the original fortress of Sun Yat-Sen’s Nationallst movement The South Seas Chinese gave him the first substantial contributions which made his pretensions possible. They were the financial backers of the Chi- n Republic. They have watched with a_proprietary interest the subse quent history of that experiment. Now that the Natlonalist movement today has encountered British opposi as the most dogged obstacle to its development, they, too, are beginning to “think nationally” in their own quarter of the world. They will be heard from before the history of the rich and strategically vital countries which border those seas is much older. (Covyright. 1927.) The next article in this series will appear in tomorrow’s Evening Star. It treats of the danger to the British in India and their fear of a war with Afghanistan in the Spring, with Rus- sia supporting their enemies. eriicuea’s) PAID VACATIONS URGED IN INDUSTRIAL RANKS Tnion Leaders and Many Employ- ers Favors Plan, But Some Oppose It. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 14.—Many em- ployers and labor leaders favor an- nual vacations for industrial workers, says New Yo, a magazine spon sored by New York University. Willlam Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, wrote to the magazine, saying, “As the evi- dence accumulates that vacations with pay are good bustness, we should cer- tainly expect to sec an extension of this practice. Vacation benefits the workers physically and mentally and certainly makes for better industrial relations.” All employers are not wholly in ¢avor of the plan, however, and the magazine quotes George B. Cortelyou, oresident of the Consolidated Gas Co. of New York, and John B. Berryman af the Crane Co. of Chicago with ob- jections. Mr. Cortelyou sald: “A uni- form vacation might well call for re- establishment in_hours, rates of pay and otherwise. Nevertheless, the de- sirability of a liberal policy is so well recognized that the finding of a satis- factory solutlon- is worthy of every effort.” Mr. Crane said: ‘“Production in a modern shop is based upon a series of speclalized operations and any break in the chain will throw the whole system out of order. Should the vacations be given at one time the shop would have to shut down.’ il i BOY O?I RAFT RESCUED. Child, 10, Found Adrift 2 Miles Off Shore in Lake Ontario. , ROCHESTER, N. Y., March 14 (®). —Adrift on a small raft, 2 miles off shore in Lake Ontario and rapidly being blown out into rough water by an oftshore breeze, John Bush, 10 years old, was rescued yesterday by United States Coast Guards at Sum- merville near here. he boy was unconcerned as to his danger when the Coast Guard cutter reached him, his rescuers said. He had found the raft, made of two small water tanks bound together and cov- ered with boards, on the shore at White City, a Summer resort. After erecting a small plece of can- vass on the raft, he had “started for a rail,” he explained. MILK CREAM most formidable expression | “The best food is the best doctor”’ —the doctor himself will tell you so. BABY'S life food is milk. When the normal supply is insufficient or unsuitable many physicians recom- mend Wise Brothers’ Special NURSERY MILK, produced in co-operation with Dr. J. Thomas Kelley from accredited, scientifically cared for Holsteins. Small fat globules, correct fat content and uniformity assure easy assimilation and freedom from digestive dis- orders. Telephone West 183 for dependable delivery. L 3206-08 N Street N.W. West 183 1701 Connecticut Ave. Telephone North 9613 3302 Fourteenth St. Telephone Columbia 1452 THY YVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1927. 3 of the missing girl, was killed in an airplane crash near Galveston Febr) ary 15. Miss Cabell was great attached s ¥X>. His widow at Dallas, has said the girl has not arrived there. Police have been keeping watch on Summer homes of the Cabell's in New | anaan, Conn., and Virginia Beach, | Va. | Miss Cabell had a check for $100 and wrist watch and rings valued at; $1,000 with her when she disappeared. Her father discounted elopement or suicide theorfes. Mrs. Cabell, weak ened by worry and loss of sleep, was | under the care of a physiclan and a nurse today. PHONE CALLS CLUE 10 MISSING GIRL Daughter of Rich New York Lawyer May Be Hiding in Dallas, Tex. Working Out Example. From the London Tid Bits Magazine. A school teacher once received a note like this “Dear Mam—Please ixcuse Johnny He will not be at school. He s timekeeper for his father. By the Associated Press DALLAS, Tex., March - terious telephone calls received during ays by Col. Lawrence | in charge of the it | Officers Corps, requesting ‘mation concerning Lieut. P. F. | | Las ou gave him this ixample. | It a field is four miles square, how long will it take a man walking three miles n hour to walk 2% times around it. ohnny ain’t no man, so we had to send his daddy. He left early this morning and my husband said he ought to be baclk late tonight, though it would be hard going. Please make | the nixt problem husband can’t work. BOOKS BOUGH Al I\In S 14—M i | toda s acti and his widow, Mrs, Constance bell, gave rise to the belief that Cabell, Lieut. Cabell's half-sis- had arrived from New York by and had gone into reti ter, airplane ment. Mrs. Cabell denied knowledge of the | whereabouts of the girl, hut evinced | knowledge of any details of her movements befc e is supposed to have left New York. The funer: of Lieut. Cabell held at Galveston Kebruary 17. MAY USE FALSE NAME. R ord to lose a da JONES.” Police of Four States Seek Girl Who Bought Mourning Garb. NEW YORK, March 14 (#).—Police of four State were seeking “Charlotte Blake,” the name believed to have been assun Mary G. 1 Cabell, when shui than 50 | Cabell book at the This name, times, was found handwriting in a exclusive Spence § where she | was a pupil. Neithe » family nor | school friends can recall any one of | that name. Miss Cabell, 10 and weighing een Wedn o a complete mourning he told that she was going to to attend a funeral Cabell, half-brother ten in copy hool mory Miss 5 feet inches tall 180 Da Li offers an exclusive environment, acces- sibility and in- dividuality—y et at moderate cost. Villa Sites and Wooded Plots All Sizes Up to An Acre Savings Bank 710_14th Near G Phone er Call For Lithographed Map Showing Klaes, Ete. | Hedges & Middleton COAL! COAL! Frank. 1503 Is your coal supply running low, and will you need a little more to carry you through the Winter? A trial order of our clean, high-grade anthracite or bituminous coal will assist you in determining where to place your order next season. Our prices reasonable, consistent with high-quality coal and efficient service. W. H. Hessick & Son Phone Franklin 8128 Main Office, Yard and Trestle 14th and Water Sts. S.W. Opposite Bureau of Engraving and Printing 1412 Eye St. Pasteurized Milk Grade A Raw Milk Acidolphilus Milk EGGS BUTTER 5612 Connecticut Ave. Telephone Cleveland 1343 701 H Street N. E. Lincoln 7908 Center Market 343 to 348 o} ] o ———[o]—o].— —=[a] lo]e————=]a|——=lal——=10 CAMPBELL’S BEANS Special All This Week MAC;%[I’('ONI SPAGHETTI 2rs 19c 8@ /TUNE IN TONIGHT'! “&% . The A&P Gypsies broadcast a delightfal hour of music each Monday eve- ning, 9 to 10 p.m., through station WRC.—9 te 10 p.m. IONA BRAND BEARDSLEY’S PINK SHREDDE, SALMON CODFIS can 1 5¢ prg. 12¢ A Special Sale of FANCY MAINE 10 Pounds 27 or Buy an original 120-1b. sack. Fancy Salt MACKEREL 2 rih 25¢ One-Cent Sale! Fancy Florida o] 12 for 45¢c or 18 for 46 or 9 for 23c Blue Peter Imported SARDINES In Pure Olive Oi: 2 cans 25¢ BOKAR COFFEE Incomparable Quality . 45¢ ORIENTA COFFEE 6. 50¢ DOMESTIC SARDINES In Cottonseed Oil 2cans 11c 8 O’'CLOCK COFFEE The Finest Santos! 6. 33¢ RED CIRCLE COFFEE b. 39¢ CHEESE CHEESE ., 20c | w33c JELLY BEANS GRAPE JUICE e 35¢ & Lb. 1 5c Bottle COOKING LILITL 1111111 TS T 177 e o LA AL AT 2L IS ttention Veterans! ;s ez:ifydfad ":zplu from KIPPER SNACKS Boneless Fillet of Herring 3 cans 20¢ CRISCO 22¢ INOTE! By special a ement with the Proctor and Gamble Contpany we are offering for a limited time only—a cake pan free with each purchase of Crisco. 1-Lb. Tin The New Cheese Product 23c 10c PURE Per Pkg. 12-0z." 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