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r ? . pets of PRISON TERROR | CRPS CARROLL Paroled Producer Writes of‘ Forgotten Men Who Pace Cells. | | Re the Associnted Press NEW YORK. October York tou righted article 24.—The prints a copy hy rl Carroll. the atrical producer, who was paroled from the Penitentiary at At lanta last week, in which he pain picture of prison life as “a thit struck terror to my mind.” fears he will never shake that ter: After stating that there are men in the prison, Carroll, who ser part of a sentence of a year and a day for perjury in connection with the | “girl in a bathtub™ episide, says Army of Forgotte | “There is a corridor there, a long sepulchral lane, along which each day there marches this army of forgotten me It is n silent army. for during | their passinz ovee the stone floor | there mmst be no woud spoken. | “The constant of so many feet has WOrn two grooves or ruts in the pavement. Even when the light | nd you can't actually see those n feel the depressions vour f And in_those | slone furrows are plowed and plante the souls that go the ““Fhat is the road the men tread who have sinned against_society. I don’t Know the answer. Certainly theve is | reed for the protection of society, and its answer is prisons. | “As a producer of plays and a man | with a sense of the dramatic, I could not help but sense the immense | drama of a prison, with its ever trudging, ever-grim and stark-souled army of forgotten men. Will Never Lose Fear. i “It was tragedy so real, so dread | that it struck terror to my mind: a ror that 1 fear I never shall shake. | an you wonder why a few poor | creatures, misled, misguided or pup- | . 8 ger hack to the free dom that is blinding—just as it blinds | me now- nd cannot have the sola of loving hands or understanding | hearts? i “I wish that some of those dear | frends who gave me their help could | have given it to those who need it if ever they are to come from the | depths of the penitential pit.” American Federal passi FIELD TRIALS OPEN | FOR CAPITAL DOGS Members’ Derby First Event of | Two-Day Sessions at Centerville, Va. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, Va. October 24.The annual Fall meet of the National Capi- | tal Field Trials Association opened at 7 o'clock this morning over the course at Centerville, in Fairfax County. | Some of the finest hunting dogs in this section are entered ‘in the con- tests being run teflay and tomorrow. | Judging is being done by Warren Rice of Winchester, Va.. and Capt. H. M. | Dickinson of Washington, D. C. ! The members’ derby for yonnz dogs | was run at the beginning of the ses. | sion this morning. Drawings for both members’_and all-age derbies were made at The Tavern last The | following pairings were drawn for the members’ derby: First brace—Twin Pine Mandy, owned by Mathew Trim- | ble. Kensington, Md.. paired with Sam | Valiant'’s Trump. owned by Ford Young of Washington, D. C. Second brace—Sym's Dan Mohawk, owned by ¥. E. Symosakie of Washnigton, with Bobbie McPherson, W. A. Lewis. Red Hill, Va. Third brace—Dauntle: Lucy, Jack Dunn'of Baltimore, Md., with Dillard’s Big Boy, Dr. F. M. Dil- lard, Alexandria, Va. Fourth brace— Dauntless - Jack, Jack Dunn, Balt more, Md., with Sam Valiant's Sallie. Yord Young, Washington. Fifth hrace—Fred Alexander. A. M. Pullen, Richmond, Va., with Jane Pace, owned | by Jack Dunn, Baltimore, Md. Sixth brace—Kengla’s Sage King, Charles A. Kengla, Washington, D. with Little Eliza Jane, Emmett Colbert, Fredericksburg, Va. Seventh brace Bald Knob, Mr. Guy of Charlottesville, Va. with Redland Ranger. Watts Farmer, Derwood, Md. The all age derby, which will be started late this afternoon. will have the following entrants: First brace, Valentine’s Wild R Allen Valen- | tine, Richmond. Va., with Madge Mo- hawk, Father John T. Coolahan, Rock- ville, Md. Second, Ann Jackson, D. C. Grubb, Rocky Point, Va., with Hunt stone’s Nancy, H. J. flunt, Chevy Chase, Md. Third. Mount Vernon Relle, Dr. F. M. Dillard, Alexandria, Va. with Sam_ Valiant's Rodfield, ¥ord Young, Washington, D. C. “ourth, Twin Pine Betty, Mathew Trimble, Kensington, Md.. with Eu- gene Mohawk, Dr. J. F. Robertson, toanoke, Va. Fifth, Hunt's White- stone Freckles, H. A. Hunt, Chevy Chase, Md., with Aristocrat, Capt. W. ¥. Norman, Washington, D. C. Sixth, Miss Clarke, M. D. Hart, Richmond, Va., with White Rod, Dr. F. M. Dil- Jard, Alexandria, Va. Seventh, Pohick Comanche R., Jack Dunn, Baltimore, Md., with Chop Tank River Nick, W' ¥. Norman, Washington, D. C. Eighth, Belle the Devil, Jack Dunn, Baltimore, Md., with Aristocrat Junior, Capt W. ¥. Norman, Washington, D. C. Ninth, | Capt. Herndon, H. Larlton Hane: Herndon. Va. with Dan Woolton Dunn. Baltimore, Md. | Tenth, Ben Florendale, €. B. Stick- Vaucluse, Va., with Valentine rest Prince, Allen Valentine, Rich-| mond, Va. Eleventh, Westfield Don, A. B. Bolton, Charlottesville, Va., with Congressman, Capt. W. F. Norman, | Washington, D. C. Twelfth, Kenil-| worth, V. P. Hawse, Harrisburg, Va.. | with Prince Halpine, Father John T. Coolahan, Rockville, Md. Thirteenth, Ferris Jake's Jim, H. B. Mitchell, Herndon, Va., with Sandy MacPher. son, V. P. Hawse, Harrisonburg, Va. These dogs represent the aristocrats of the hunting world. The runs today and tomorrow are attracting a large gallery of dog lovers and interested | spectators. The dogs are henched on | the grounds of the Fairfax County | Fair Association. i PLANS RUMMAGE SALE. |+ Benefit Tomorrow. A five days rummage sale for the henefit of the Episcopal Church Home | for the Aged will be conducted by the | hoard of managers of the home at | 1006 F street, beginning tomorrow | morning at 10 o'clock. It will be open | each day until 6 o'clock in the eve- | ning. | ‘The committee in charge of the composed of Mrs. W. H. Ro- chairman; Mrs. J. Elvans May Mrs. John C. Felton. Mrs. W. Owens, Mrs C. P. Shoemaker, Thomas Bright, Mrs. Alexander ind Mrs. William H. Cross. Mrs Eull Cash and Register Taken. Purglars robbed the Arabian Coffee- Tea Co., 918 Ninth street, between closing time Saturday night and open- fng time this morning of about $50 Wnd a cash register. | in_dolla | many Ends Library Work COMMERG 10 HEAR HOOVER Managers of Foreign and Do- mestic Co-operative Bu- reaus Meet Thursday. E Secret Hoover will address the man the distriect and _co operative offices of the Bureau of For eizn and Domestic Commerce dur ing the annual conference of the nanag to start Thursday and end Saturday, at the Commerce Depart ment. Extension of the domestic and for cign trade of the United States, and how this trade may be continually in creased by improved co-ordination be tween business firms in this country ind in foreign lands through the Commerce Department will be dis cussed at the three-day meeting Four hundred firms recently told the department they have ired more than $£10.000.000 worth bus through the efforts of the di offices. while many others have hene- fited by the same service, although unable to estimate the exact amount of business derived. Dr. Julius Klein, director of the bureau, will open the conference Thursday morning, talking of Euro pean competition and the results of recent observations in Europe. Other speakers Thursday will be T. R. Tay- lor, assistant director of the burean Clarence M. Young, director of aero nautics, and Dr. Frank M. Surface. Commissioner O. H. Caldwell of the Federal Radio Commission will open the afternoon session with an explana tion of the workings of the commis ry ill talk F v after- noon at lock and will be fol towed by Axel H. Oxholm and Dudley . Holtman of the committee on wood utilization. In addition to managers of the 23 district offices the representatives of commercial organizations and trade associations will attend the con- ferences. == AUTOMOBILES HALTED IN DRIVE ON TAGS Authcrities Seek Break Up Practice of Citizens Using D. C. Plates. Virginia to Special Dispatch to The Star. CLARENDON, Va. October Believing that many Vi dents are using only Columbia tags on thel the office of the motor vehicle com- missioner at Richmond launched a drive Saturday to break up the al- leged practice. J. T. McDermott, deputy motor vehicle commissioner. stationed him- self on the lower Alexandria-Wash- ington road and stopped all c. Washington-hound hearing District of Columbia license plates. Those who failed to give satisfactory rea- sons for using the plates were ordered to appear before Judge Harry R. Thomas in Police Court of Arlington Jounty tomorrow morning. It is said that approximately 40 motorists were summoned to appear. RELIGIOUS EDUCATION COUNCIL WILL CONVENE Thirty-fourth Annual Meeting Begins Tonight at Lutheran Church. The District of Columbia Sunday tool Council of Religious Jduca- ion, representing the Protestant churches of the District, will open its thirty-fourth annual convention in the Keller Memorial Lutheran Church to. night at 7:45 o'clock. Rev. Homer J. Councilor, president of the council, will be one of the speakers, and an ddress of welcome will be delivercd by Rev. S. T. Nicholas of the Keller Memorial Lutheran Church. Meetings will be held in the church tomorrow and Wednesday evenings, The opening’ session will be devoted mostly to discussions on subjects re. ited to Sunday school work, and €roup conferences arc to be held to. morrow evening. A dinner of super- intendents, at which W. W. Millan, past president of the council, will speak. will be held in the church to. morrow evening at 6 o'clock, preced- ing the regular convention program. Mrs. J. M. Dawson of Texas will be the principal speaker at the meet- ing Wednesday night. . VISIT PRESIDENT. President Coolidge today conferred with Wallace R. Farrington, Governor of Hawaii, and John W. Garrett of Baltimore,” Md., both of whom have been mentioned prominently in con. neetion with the filling of the vacant rnor generalship of the : conference were held both Farrington and id afterward that the ques. tion of appointing a successor to the late Gen. Wood was not discussed. District automobiles. MATERIAL AT LQW PRICES each. each Philip- | THE SHOOTING HONORS O TOMARON Wins Individual Champicn- | ship of District National Guard Contestants. EVENING Keen competition marked the clos events of the annual Distriet of Columbia imal Guard rifle matehe when 100 marksmen vied for honor day at the Camp Simm's range He te. Licut. Bdward L. rters and Servie 3 zinecrs, demonstrated that pick and shovel” expert could be qually proficient with the service ifle hy winning the individual cham Lpionship of the Capital militia with [ the gold medal total of 333 points out fof a possible 350, | _The two most consistent riflemen of | the Guard, Second Lieut. Henry C. | MeMahon Comy St dau Ist K BEspey, Company B, 121st Engineers, and Sergt. George E. Votava, same mpany. fought tooth and nail for silver medal honors, the former win Iniz with a tie score of 331. i Votava Has Bad Lu | Arter running i six consecut at the final 600: who won | the champior had the ymateh in his 1 defectiv cartvidge or less marker caused his eighth shot to be siznaled a miss, | a quirk of luek that cost him a well deserved victory and caused him to he | outranked for second place as well. & Votava had some consolation howeve when the bulletin board showed him to have tied and out ranked First Lieut. 11t rett, ir. Company A, 121st for the zold medal offered in_the expert's { It is quite a coincidence t | year in this same match | Byerett’ took second place with |id tied score of out of i i eves and vard Third place and went to Lieut. MeMa hen with 240 points. ¢ Over 200-Yard Course. The expert’s match was fired over the o-vard qualifieation course pre. seribed by the War Department nd consisted of 10 shots, slow fire, in ench of the pr 1 tions. 5 shots siiting inz and 10 shots each, rapid fire, the prone, from stand and sitting from standing positions. In order to encou tion of those sharpshooters who pric- ticed with fr nd earnestress during the j . the guard offi provid which could not he entered by the more experienced national match | experts. Corpl. Malcolm ¥ | anding posi- | nd_kneel- | in | mpl | | Railey. Company | a “tyro,” who was instrumental ! |in his company’s overwhelming vie-| fory in the team match on Saturaay | captured the gold medal awarded in thie event with the score of Pyt | i, Battery A. 260th won second honors! Pvt. A. B. Smih Headquarters and Service Comy 1215t Enzineers. outranking his t mate, Pvt. Donald F: perfect scores at both rapid-fire : zathered up the bronze medal with points. The course of fite was the same as ihat laid down for the ey pert’s match McMahon Wins Again. Moving back to the 300-yard ranze, | where the 10-inch buil's-eye rescmbles | n pinhead, Lieut. McMahon won ad ditional laurels by ringing up 7| hull’s-eyes out of the 10 shots in th sitting and kneeling positions for a 47 total and a gold medal prize. Since “xperts_only could compete for fi I in this event Pvis. Ger | n second and third ach taking home another medal with | respeetively. ddeus A Riley ingineers. had more re of luck in kecping the '.'w»im-hi rd ranze | with 48 n the ex poils, and | veceived his than his sh; 1704 1917-lot ammunition in hull's-eve at the long and won gold medal honos points out of 3 perts were refused furthe; as a result Pvt. G third silver medal. Sergt. Luther B Hall. Company D. finished one point | hehind Geraci with a bronze medal 43 Other Events. Remaining events on the day gram and the medal winner nounced by the preliminary ar follows: ovice match, ve completed their offi practice for the vear 1 failed to qualify as mar ter—Gold medal, Staff Sergt. George | A. E. Rheinbold, Company E, 12ist | Engineers, score, 189: silver medal | Pvt. Arthur A. Tomelden, same com pany, 177, and bronze medal, Sergt William H. Mattoon, Company D, 1; Instructor’s match. Class A. open to | those who have never before qualified | as marksmen or better at_any time— al, Pvt. George C. Danforth na Ser Company 15, score, silver t. Thomas A. Reneau. same company, 221, and bronze medal, Pvt John M. Crandall, Quartermaster De tachment, 218. Instructor's mateh, Class B, open to those who have qualified as marksmen | previous to Janyary 1, 1927, but did| not attempt the course this year—Gold | medal, Capt. James D. Eggleston, Bat y B, 260th Coast Artillery, score siiver medal, Sergt. Morris ter, Company D, 12ist Engineers and bronze medal, Second Lieut Alfred L. Jorgeson, Company B, same regiment, 208. McDonald Wins Pig. In the intervals between the vari ous events, the competitors amused themselves by participating in the an nual turkey shoot and oyster roast. Staff Sergt. Edgar 8. McDonald, pany D, won the grand prize of the day, a real live pig about the size of the Marines' former mascot, Jigg: Sergt. McDonald seemed to have a more difficult time carrying the squeal- ing animal home than he did shooting for it. pro as an bulletin who target and smen or bet- | to tho open medal, | | Ask Permit to Adopt Child. James Walter Hunter and his wife, Addie, have applied. to the District Supreme Court for permission to dopt their prandchild, Albert J. Smith, son of Albert R. Smith and Helen I Smith. The child's parents are separated, and both agreed to the adoption by the grandparents. Attor- ney George 1. Horning appeared for the petitione: Screened Soft Coal in Popular Stove Size JohnP. Agnew & Co. 728 14th St. Main 3068 { By the Associated Press. { likes hi | of the I { inghou | pass into his hands, at the ¢ | which [ dny AMERICANS MOST | an unprec | agement | nae | such | comfort and respec STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €. MONDAY, OC HEIR, 2, PROVING HIS RIGHT TO FORTUNE BY STOKER JOB, Millions Left to Allison B. Stout if He Makes Good. So Youth Starts ' at Bottom. college. He showed | nd—well, you n 1 was still in father thousht 1| but it's all right W 1 were the world.” when T was in only intelligent 1w school, was pretty vouns, b in the stoker department | anyway. Father plant of the West- | closcst {riends in the e Eleetric Co., and he intends Hiad to stick to it for the present As s‘"f“ ':" " He told newspaper men who souzht sophomor him_out yesterday that he is malkir aenie nod where he is. and that fact inte i wsts him more for the moment than |V the fortune left him by his father st week. PHILADELPHIA Al n B. Stout, October sen, ied Stout ientific Mis: rex. \delphia. The youthful heir said that reports from Chicago th his father's estate was valued at 000,000 were all wrong “I am sure the estate amounted to that much,” he do not know what it is, but $2 is an exaggeration. Besidc 1 have three married sister: and then, there < mother. ik m not think #nz much about the estate ht now. I'm too busy. to make good. v to | termined to do t in he of While heflield married 1S School heth Getting His Training. Frank Deming Wid to have been one of Chi althiest men, imposed the injunction on his son to | “make good,” ‘and the son believes that is what he is doing. Out of Yale | never | only two years, Stout asserts that hv‘ nid. T 000,000 needs business experience and that he is busy getting it. The will. disposing of an es riously estimated at $2,000.000 to 000,000, left most of the prop v the son. but stipulated that the young [ It will be nine y het must prove himself capable of [ eomes into the principal and accumu andling his fortune bafore it would | lated earnings of the trust fund pro of 3. | vided for him And then. acec e of the will, | to the will, the estate does not become go Wednes | his unloss his mother and whoever is | president of the Tllinois Merchants Trust Co. in 1 yable of handlin: nd T had already de nyhow King of this featy was filed in Chics the son said: Father was almost the will may always rizht and " have been made C00LI0GE, HOOVER PRODUCTIV RACE OR HUGHES 77 ‘S!emp Says President Is Not | Out of Consideration as Candidate. Labor Department Solicitor Compares Record and Pros- perity of World. | 3pecial Pispateh to The Star HAGERSTOWN, Md., Octobe | ¢, Bascom Slemp, former secreta | President Coolidge, stopping over here on his way to Washjngton from Ci ve an interview to the press today in which he said Coolidge, oo | ver or Hughes would be the Republi | ean nominee for President. It is un | cortain that Hughes will he again put [to the test he said, but as substitutes in case Coolidge should not accept he nd Hoover are the logical party lead . and would earry on the policies of he present administration. re the most ny Ame due s today 4 e people of uy age in the world, enjoying high standards of living' and employing to reat advantage to the lahorer and to the country as a whole machinery to ented degree, Judge Theo e G. Risley, solicitor of the De rtment of 1 slared today opening forum meeting of the week observances here on at the City Club ies of addre held nder the auspices of the City Club in o-operation with other local eivie and | g ERC O sved. A anizations, will be continued | P G e nominee out the week. trouble will follow in the Demoer party over the religious and wet-dry fisone e #aid he personally desired to see {the present administration policies < | continued four years, address that various re waivedall expls for the present prosperi 1 do not choose. the United States are the generai em- | sl result to be accomplished n ployment of labor at high wages, the | qouhtedly the phrase was an invita increased effi 3 abor and man- | tjon for other candidates to enter the agement, Inereased productivity, effec | ce = <aiq Slemp. “I have no author- tive financial co-operation and the i 1o gpeak on the subject. but it is automobile industrs | my personal epinion that the decision D] el T|of the President not to run is not that labor Is the creator of all wealth,” | i1 ind merely was a statement of he declared. “In the depths of the |, /"o If another candidate in mine, in the gold of the harvest, by the | ", i ‘fith should enter the T throbbing engines, the flaming fur- i ,icht result in another cl i . the whirring. spindles and on | qoclaration or a genel accepts foam-crested “seas labor ereates |, e part of the public of the Pres produces the products of neces-|jent as not desiring to be a candidate comfort and heauty that are es- |yt B8 EAE VARLIE T GRS Vew elothe.” support and | pyy timent at this time is a de The United States is enjoying re. | \(Mining factor, ,t"‘.‘"",,"”“"""""‘ ble industrial and economic | Sontacn mug T woald 1 elonton be. vrosperity wlhile other mations are || N0 e RO e T e e it struggling to meet the problems of [ THIF the PUPHC has ot mAcE up fte unemployment and economic depres. [ 114 along the line of a suitable suly id the speaker. One of the| U ng achievements of modern in | history has been the rapid | process by which this country has re- | covered from its disturbed and de- ranged social, industrial and economic conditions following the World War. he said. Millions Are Re-employed. The re-employment of several mil- | lions of unemployed laborers and the maintaining of a wage scale pi equal to, and in_many instances | ater than, that of the war scale i rded by other countries as less than a political phenomenon,” the speaker continued. | ssing the vast number of legislative enactments and proposals affeeting labor of this country, Risley declared that the objects of | hor legislation should be the | Available Without safeguarding of the rights and the in | Red Tape i terests of th horer, the conserving | ; 1“'“’ and in of his health, and to afford him oppor- | Any Amount tunities which enable him to live in| bility, properly to educate and rear his family and to en | able him by thrift and indus by enough to care for his fa to shake off the haunting fe v in old age. pro- | country or of | | ennati Man- | ¢ it a luncheon ses: ni Labor in Prosperity. L of Pr nted Taking as his topic n the Maintainin Judge Risley comn hi *in favor of a more than ever the ind dustrial Voluntary Bankruptcy. Willlam H. Wormsley has filed petition in voluntary hankruptey. his ets at $500, which he claim exempt. He is represented by Al- orneys Welch, Daily & Welch. Construction Loans Consultation Imposes No Obligation B. F. SAUL CO. Main 2100 925 15th St. well have milk 'HERE isn’'t a home which we serve that doubts for a minute that tomor- row the Milk will be at the door. But, as in those other branches of public ser- vice, the telephone, electricity, gas or transportation, its there, ready for you— Nature's Greatest Food, just as Nature made it. Keeping this perishable food in its pure form for you is a task to which our men —Giants of Service—are equal and know fully their responsibilities in seeing that tomorrow you shall have Shompson's 1 2012 Eleventh Street, N. W.' al. #¢ " Phone Decatur 140 They live in a suburb of | Dad left the injunction | e Stout | linz | tisfied he is Smith | ield now | nominate | TOBER 24, 1927. PRESS CLUB RADID Miss Trumbull’s Escort Mistaken By the Associated Press NEW BRITAIN, Conn., October 24.—~Hundreds of persons who e perienced a romantic thrill Friday evening when they saw Miss ence Trumbull and her father john H. Trumbull, at a I ater_ with a young man_ they for John Coolidge, son of the Presi- dent, learned yesterday that Miss Trumbull wa; ed to the the. ater by Everett M. Williams of this city Williams. a Three-Program Capacity Is‘ Planned, Says National Brodcasting President. of time, Sound-proof andling three pro will be equipped within the nest two months in the National Press Club Building for the National Broadeasting Co.. its president, Merlin Aylesworth announced todey. in making the de | tails public. The wpany, which | inages and operates WRC for the | Radio Corporation of America, Mr Avlesworth said, will use 20 reoms on studios, capahle ms at one duate of Norwich University in 1927, is a second lien tenant in the Cavalry division, O fers” Reserve Corps The romanticists were only ticipating a_ bit. however, {0 Saturday Miss Trumbull was st of John Coolidge at Ambe witnessed the defeat of eleven by Wesleyan of the “Little Thre n n on a st the in con e = l Amberst the firs tests. !'the past X is under tha pany’s studios or buildin handled su Piment two duplicate transmitters of now located 1t Fourteenth and Park road, wilk remain they are. Additional eperators | employed, three channels ailable in_the new sfudios the working of the new system, Mr. Aylesworth said it will be possible to pi m in_one lio and br over WRC, | with another presented in the second studio. being nsmitted to National Broadcasting Co.'s 'w York terminus for distribution to wsociated stations, while a third pro- | gram can be received in the control | | room from an outside point 'PROPOSED BRIDGE ROADS | TO BE STUDIED FURTHER Fine Arts Body Not Yet Ready to Make Final Recommen- the tweifth and thirteenth floors, with | one studio 20 feet wide, 33 feet long | tand 20 feet high and a smaller studio Sy o s | aceupy oms to be 20 feet long. | 120 feet w and 20 feet high | The control room. located betw | the two studios. will he the me size | ! |as the small studio, M Avlesworth | | explained, and Ges Irath, engi- | | neer in charge of W is supervi construction of he new Acounstic of the H B least have heen assistin wing up the plans for el b months, but now worl i Aviesworth =i | Trafiic Officials Puzzled Over rnment halls B 2 Washington an he Permit Issue With Maryland. under the new ar WRC, ot e he be on as to whether the Dis its automobile city with Maryland, quired to extend to motorists of that State the privilege of operating in the displaying District li a submitted today to A triet, I es will Wit under recipro relations is it 3% District, cense tags, the corpe cars w ion counsel’s office for a legal opinion The question has heen puzzling Dis trict traffic officials since Maryland \mended its traffic code so as to per- mit motorists from other jurisdictions with whieh it has reciprocal agree ments, to operate v bearing the State's license tags. Traffic officials feel that in view of the privilege that Maryland now extends to District drivers the Dis. trict should reciprocate. Police Court Judge John P. MeMahon last week, however, convicted a Maryland resi it who was arrested while driving \ machine displaying a District license 2. He held in his decision that the District traffic act, interpreted to the hat motorists driving District tags should driver's permit. | Inspector E. W. Brown, in charge | of the Traffic Bureau, and other traffic | authorities believe that under reci- procity agreement with Maryland the District should extend to motorists from that State the same privileges which it extends to District drivers nd for this reason asked the corpora tion counsel’s office for an opinion. — Time Heals. From the Detroit News. And now a movem=nt is under way to erect a monument to Jesse Jam Ah \\'lVIl_A vears from now they'll be proposing a temorial to the tick croenlator, dations. h Further study of the east approaches the Arlington Memorial Bridge { must be made before det for the proposed under nd final ment of the approaches can he | arrived ccording to the Commis sion ot Fine Arts Mem of the comur ferences with the Natio Park and Planning Commission, McKim, Mead & White, the brid; wrehitects, decided several wee that an underpass near the wate at the east end of the structure be necessary to divert traffic bound | south into East Potomac Park away | from the expected stream of traffic from nearby Virginia into Washing- | ton across the bridge. _Certain details construction, both { in_connection with the roadw: a with the plaza on the west side « the Lincoln Memorial, still remain | 10 he worked ont '} LINDBERGH FOUND SUPREME SATISFACTION | WHEN HE REACHED ?‘? Le Bourg‘et YOU WILL ALSO FIND SUPREME SATISFACTION IN AN APARTMENT AT Washingt‘on's Le Bourget No. 2127 California Street N.W. NEW FIREPROOF BUILDING WITH APARTMENTS OF One, Two, Three Rooms, Bath and Porch LARGE ROOMS—MURPHY BEDS APARTMENTS, $40.00 to $70.00 Per Month Open and Lighted Until 9 See Resident Manager or FLOYD E. DAVIS COMPANY 733 12th St. N.W. Main 352-353 to aj He | ists his debts at £1,101, and estimates ; Black Velvet, especially smart in evening gowns and slippers. Style pictured. black velvet; also silver or gold Kid - -§14.50 Unusual ornaments; pictured, at like one Touches of silver on strap and especially Rhinestone Heels, effectively set off black slippers. Pictured an unusual costume model with Rhinestone ornamentation, -at... 78 5() at Opera Pumps with Rhine- stone and steel ornaments or Rhinestone Heels are most correct. Shown in satin (may be dyed to match your cos- tume), black or brown velvet, silver or gold kid. $H.50 to §13.50 hicles in Maryland | re-| " ol ROSE SURRENDERS: PLANT TO BE LARGE| For John Coolidee GIVEN 14 YEARS Narcotic Seller Who Walked Out of Court Gives Up to Peake. alias Jack York nig the Di Jacoh Selomon, proprietor of a New who walked out of Court Octoher ce on two charg Harrison anti surrendered liam I.. P'eake. superintende District this_morning declared that he did not realize he < when he left court Solo brought I« Chief McCoy in Criminai | vision 1 and was sentenced to s¢ total of 14 vears in the peniten B On each of the four counts of the first indicty the chief justice fixed a penalty of two years on each count te run _econsecutively and on the ond indictment an additional term of two vears on each of the three cour The prisoner told the court that did not realize at he was doing and declared he was in a daze wher teft the it and was sick As 1 he recovered, he said, he sur rendered. ‘The court refused to cept the statement of the pr wnd sugsested that the surrender the com v of his assoc P, Miss Audrev Dubois, r¢ old. and her committal to jail ymething to do with Solom: nder. \ssistant_ United s Attorney John W. Fihelly. who prepared case against Solomon. dec <ale of narcotics made by § n agent of the Government in city last February was worth 3 Solomon was said to be connected with a New York ring, which was disposing of narcotics throughout the st. prome inz sente th ntarily Sclumon what 1< o 1 ¥ w w ' by 100, . French automobile manufacturer: cutting production. .S its the FULLER DRY MOP which you will want to ex- amine when thg Fuller Man calls with his ®any helpful suggestions to simplifiy the business of home-keeping. It’s fine for polished floors. WASHINGTON FULLER HEADQUARTERS 618-19 National Metrorolitan Bank Bl4; Telephone 3498 Main ‘W. A. Trescott, Manager . FULLER BRUSHES 43 88USRES - 49 USES - HEAD TO 7007 - CELLAR TO ATTIC Beautiful Ne w Evening Slippers .FOI‘ Ha”dween Rhinestone Heels As a Halloween Week Special we offer most at- tractive Rhinestone Slip- per Heels, regularly $7.50, 3.95 (No charge for attachin~ them to your shoes.) Women's Shop 1207 F St.