Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
L PLEDGE OF CAROL: TO 217 REVEALED Love Affairs of Former Prince Play Part in Trial of Alleged Plotter. Br the Associated Press Rumania, November A lotter written by former Crown ce Cavol to Zizi Lambrino, his first and morganatic wife, declaving he would never cease to consider him selt her husband is among the docu- ments made public by the government to prejud'ce the country against any movement looking toward Carol's return Documents dealing with Carol's + renunciations of right of suc fon to the throne included a letter ritten to Premier Bratiano in 1919 declaring, “I will never give up my wife, Zzi Lambrino.” al name of the titian-haired Lupescu, with whom Carol ed prior to his third renunciation is revealed in the documents as Leah Wolf, daughter of ¥ F: Reveals Carol's Al Before these documents were made public, M. Manoilescu, former under 8 of who is being of ‘complicity in a ¢ about the return of wred that the exiled prince ek the throne, but only membership on the regency which rules for his 6-ye Michael. Carol was conv , he said, that there was a growing de. mand for a repubiic, and desired to strengthen the regency. “Despite the annulment of our mar- ringe I shall never cease to consider ns. myself vour husband,” Carol wrote to Z Lambr 1918 at Od: moon the coup was disciplined by his father, the late King Ferdinand, and finally sent on a world tour. While he was on this tour the marriage was annuled on the tech- nical ground that members of the Ru- manian royal family were not per- mitted to marry Rumanians. Then in March, 1921, Carol married Princess Helen of Greece. On September 1919, Carol wrote to Bratiano, saying: *Do you believe T am a puppet and do not know what 1 want? You make a mistake. I re. nounced the throne only as a last re- sort. You believe time will temper everything. Whatever impediments Yyou place in my path, T won't give up my wife, Zizi Lambrino. Manoilescu’s Defense. Manoilescu, speaking in defense of himself at his trial, said: ““The only change necessary to attain tl' end Carol and I had in mind was first, a simple change in the law which forbids Carol to return to Rumania. Second, it would be necessary for one member of the present regency to re- sign. The solution, therefore, which he had in mind, was absolutely legal. “We live in a state of political ab- normality without issue or’ hope. The only solution is the return of Carol through the joint action of opposition leaders and persistent moral pressure or_the country.” The statement that Carol was firm- 1y convinced of a growing movement in Rumania for a republic startled the courtroom. “Every .day's events trengthens the prince’s convictions,” Manoilescu said. GETS YEAR.I_N PRISON. North Carolina Official Convicted of Dry Law Violation. WILMINGTON, N. C., November 12 P).—Walter M. Stanland, recorder of Brunswick County, was sentenced to a year and a day in the Federa) prison last night, folléwing his con- viction vesterday on a charge of con- spiracy to violate the prohibition law in connection with the arrest of six al- Jeged rum runners and the capture of a $10,000 cache of liquor here several months ago. no. whom he married in After a brief honey- SPECIAL NOTICES. ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SHAREHOLD- ers of the Perpetual Building Association”at 500 11th st. n.w. on Monday, November 14. at 7:30 pm. By order of the board of directors. W. CARR._Secreta 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ebis contracted by ansbody other than my- il 'Siened) Lieut CHARLES MUSIL. front of the Times- it 6:30 pm. or any witnessed _the accicent gith LEON PRETZ- other persons who lease communicate FLOEL o S0 ™ SUPREME_COURT OF THE, DIS- e O mbia oline: i Bty Cauet. n re dissolution of New Masonic Hali Corporat No,” 45539 —In ol * on day of X nf ¢’ the New Mason Hall Corporation. public notice is herehy given of their appointment: all creditors of e corpor reauiired o present sheir o 8 WILLIAM L. HQUSTON, 615_F. THE CELEBRATED CIDER BARREL WILL, be open daily until December 20th: all cider on ice: ~hoice avples: hour out Frederick Dike. T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR BILL b yaclt *personall unless * cont gl EV T MINIMU XPENSE WF DO BOOK- ceping and accounting for fir, - not requir- ull-time . bookkeeper ddress _Box office NG TO SOME OTUER CITYY Get_our return load rates '~ Full and_part toad shipments to Philadelphia ~ New York. Boston " Pittsburgh Richmond and | way ints. Specia s, Phone Main 146 NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSOCIATION. INC APPLES, SWEET CIDER At the Rockville Fruit Farm. one mile out of Rockville. Md.. on the roid to Potoma: Stayman Winesap, Black Twig and York Imperial avpics The cider 1s made fi sound. rioe. hand-picked anpples. 13° Make Weekly Trips & STORAGE " North 49 - Expert Roofers, —with many years' 1o serve you TRONCLAD ROOFING CO. Oth and E Phones Sorti experience, ready T MATTRESS OF Y Been slept on a zood while Now and needs renovating. You Are Also Wondering ~why the bed Inoks humpy and feels un- comfortable. Wo are awaiing vour order 10 renovate it Main 3621 Bedell Mf, and Fredericke Bivd.. between and Hyattstown. Come and en- Joy your chicken dinne niort. With steam b un PRINTED WORK That reflects our policy of “none but thy best.” At vour service. The National Capital Press T REVER DEATPOINT BYRON S. ADAMS PRINTING High & n o Rooms hut not bigh priced. NEED A ROOFER? Send for us before big rains come to’1mn plaster and tions, make a spe work and iiarantec every o us up, KOONS Pootine Main 933 Company 119 3rd St. 8.W. le were separated. Carol | |Son Will Preach Mother’s Funeral Sermon Over Radio By the Associated Pross, PHILADELPHIA, November 12. —A funeral sermon for his mother, as she is being buried in California, will be preached over the radio i Sunday by the Rev. Dr. Donald G. Barnhouse, pastor of the Tenth Presbyterian Church here. Barnhouse’s mother, Theodore Barnhouse, died in tsonville, Calif.. last Tuesday. Unable to make the long journey attend the funeral, the preacher anged to have the sermon broad at the same hour the services are held in California. The sermon_will be on Death Brings D MILLS WOULD BAR TAXONU. 3. BONDS Treasury Official Holds Pres- i ent Law Favors Corpora- " tions, Not Individuals. Mrs. ‘When ear.” By the Associated Pre WORCESTER, November 12.—Be. cause of the surtax on Government securities, corporations fix the price at which Treasury issues are keted, Undersecretary Mills tonight in an address advocatir the Treasury exemption of sccurities from that levy. Speaking before a joint meeting of the stockholders of the Boston Fed cral Reserve Bank and the Worcester Economic® Club, Mr. Mills declaved that corporations have the power to drive the individual investor from the Federal securities field, as such hold- ings held by corporations are tax exempt, while the individual is re-| quired to pay the Federal surtax “United States securities,” he con- tinued, “are sufficiently atiractive to | corporations to make them more than | | willing to take the entire block of new | issues offered from time to time. | Small Investor Handicapped. “This being the case, the price which corporations are willing to pay inevitably fixes the price at which the United States is able to markel its securities. Since the corporations are wholly tax exempt on their in- comes from such securities, whereas the individual income derived from these securities is subject to the sur- tax, the former are in a position to pay a price which might well make the securities unattractive from the standpoint of the individual investor. “Such a situation is undesirable. During the war, Government securi- ties were distributed very widely and at the time it was held, and rightly held. that it was desirable. But under | existing circumstances. as the war loans are gradually being refunded into securities bearing a lower rate of interest, the number of holders of United States securities tends con- stantly to become more limited. “How could it be otherwise, when States and municipalities are in a_po- sition to_issue their securities free from all taxation?" the undersecretary asked. ‘““The average rate of interest paid by all States on their total in- debtedness during 1926 was about 414 per cent. while the man with an income of g0 only 3.02 per cent on a 16-20-year 3% per cent United States Government bond. ~ Moreover; even after Federal taxes, he can receive approximately 4 per cent on the highest grade of public utility bonds. _ Exemption Is Urged. “These figures make it perfectly ap- parent that in so far as the individual investor is concerned, the United States Government is at a serious disadvantage today in marketing its securities because of the provision in the Liberty loan act which limits the tax-exempt privilege to the normal tax. “Under these circumstances, the Treasury Department believes that the Congress should give serious con- sideration to an amendment of the second liberty loan act as amended, authorizing the Secretary of the | Treasury in issuing securities in the future to make them exempt from the surtax as well as the normal tax. “The enactment of such an amend- ment‘ would not in any way interfere with the adoption of a constitutional amendment permitting the taxation of so-called tax exempt securities, should Congress and the States deem this to be desirable. Taking the long time view of the situation, I believe that the enactment of such a constitutional amendment is desirable, for I con- sider it inconsistent with our prin- ciples of democratic Government that our laws be 8o framed as to permit any class of our aitizens to escape | their just tax obligations.” | ELKS’ LODGE UNVEILS | GERMAN FIELD PIECE Colored Organigation Places War Trophy on Lawn of ] Home Here. A captured German field gun was | unveiled by colored Elks of Columbia | Lodge, No. 85, vesterday afternoon on th. lawn of Columbia Lodge Home, | Third street and Rhode Island ave. | nue Ci vester H. Epps presidad. Herbert E. Jones, exalted ruler of the lodge, welcomed the spectators, who included 3 >presentatives of colored Civil War Veterans' posts, the United Spanish War Veterans, Department of the Potomac; Jame.. E. Walker, James Europe Reese and Kenneth Posts of the American_Legion, ard University R. O. T. C. unit and band, Reserve officers of the 428th In- fantry. cadets of Dunbar and Arm. s~ g High Schools, the servic: tachment at Fort Myer, Woman lief and Boy Scout organization all colored EIks' bodies of 1. ton and Culpeper, Va, George C. Wilkinson, assistant su- perintendent of schools, paid tribute to ' me_ro's part in all American wars. The German field piece, which had been allocated by the War Dep: to Columbia_Lodge, was unve World War Veterans after of presentation by Dr. Emmett J, Scott, secretary-treasurer of Howard University, Dr. Scott referred to {he fact that ‘400,000 co'red men werc | called to the colors in the World War, and that 200,000 of them went over. se1s “to fight £ - o democracy which had been pictured to them as an fdeal- sm as holy as ever a cr o forth to battle for.” et Dr. Scott called attention act that the Ist Separate Battalion of th District of Columbia Infanry al Guard, was th first military unit called in connection with the war. The field picce was accepted by J. Finley Wilson, grand exalted ruler of the Ilks. Music was furnished by the Howard University R. O. T. C. ity Band. i Accidentally Wounds Self. Samuel Hampton, ored, 1930 Ninth street; shot himself through the | left leg just below the hip about 2:30 o'clock this morning. He was handling TAF EVENTNG STAR. WASHINGTON. D. T, RATURDAY. NOVEMRTR T2 gy FOUR MEN KILLED - INSTREET BATILE Two Policemen, Father and Son Slain After Fight in Alabama Town. By the Associated Press. OPP, Ala., November 12.—Armistice day in this small southern Alabama | town left in its wake four dead from participation in a spectacular gun bat- tle and two witnesses suffering from bullet wounds. Policemen Ed N and Lee Clark, 45, were fatally wounded last night. but not before they had brought down Cleve Dauphin, 40, and O. C. Dauphin, 18, his son Earlier in the night the two officers had attempted to stop a car driven by young Dauphin E have been making ing at his automobile failed to stop him, and the youth returned soon afterward with his father. ports of the trouble had A large crowd. which dispersed firing started with the approach of the policemen. No words were passed by any of the participants and they advanced slowly in the open firing and relonding their weapons until they tell. When the firing ceased only Nix INVESTIGATE Solid value: assured operating cost, as in the o INCOMF 4 stores. . .$12 8 apartment; P r rent Eleetricity 3 Net annual income s property located un _first let at rents reminiseent of pre. Usolid value—assured income: T lne is ar Feds ark system and is the ‘link “favorable future.” LOCATIO BUILDING element of convenience and finish. SERVICE night or. day which also 1+ absence. throughout the apartment space and privacy. Modern Convenience. - 3d & T 1362 K ONLY $50.00 the weapon, police reported, when it was accidentally discharged. He was treated at Garfield Hospltal, BEFORE YOU INVEST income—favorable mple below cited: $352.00 $1,430.00 583.00 44.00 34.00 $2,127.94 moderate_rental. o This area is benofiting by, the_expenditure of ‘sévoral million dollars on the PRICED TO YIELD 11.6%, NET Address Box 494—K, Star Office ~ The Qrgonne SIXTEENTH and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST PHONE COLUMBIA 4630 Convenient to three main street car lines, two bus lines, churches, schools, markets and thea- ters, yet located on high elevatfon in embassy district of upper 16th . street .at new residential hub of Northwest section. d A modern, spacious, eight-story, fireproof struc- ture, containing 229 apartments of from one room, kitchenette and bath to six rooms and two baths; with large reeeption halls, all outside windows, built-in baths, entirely complete in every Service on phones and elevators is uninterrupted through our own efficiently conducted service room, ives and redelivers packages sent during occupants® Individual servants’ rooms and garages are obtalnable in the building—in short, a_happy combination of semi-hotel service with Pay us a visit, let our resident manager take you through the bullding, and whether you rent or not, we shall be amply repaid in having an additional advertisement, far better than this one. COLD WEATHER You Can Buy One of These Homes for the Rent You Are Now Paying Why Not Come Out? MONTHLY PAYMENTS LIKE RENT 1210 Hemlock St. N.W. Beautiful Semi-Detached Homes Equipped with Every Drive Out 16th St., Past Walter Reed Hospital, and Turn to Right 15th & Lawrence Sts. N.E. A Semi-detached House at Row House Price— Four Bedrooms, Large Porches Ride out R. I. Ave. to 15th St. and Turn North to Lawrence St. 1621 Monroe St. N.E. Great Big Rooms—Lots of Light Drive Out R. I. Ave. to 17th and Go North to Monroe Under the Shadow of the New McKinley High School, a Real Good House at a Very Low Price 1018 3rd St. N.E. Drive Out K St. to 3d St. N.E. 813 Kentucky Ave. S.E. Just North Pa. Ave. on Wide Street 1630 Gales; St. N.E. Six Rooms and Bath—Hot-Water Heat—Electric Lights—Big Porches ' SEE THEM TONIGHT Open Until 9 O’Clock P.M. 1311 H STREET NORTHWESY was found alive, and-he died at a hos- pital a_few minutes later. Miss Effle Davis, an Andalusia_school supervisor, and Grady Paul, 17, both | were wounded by stray bullets. Miss Davis was carrying her sister's baby. which was unharmed. Police doclared both Dauphins bore records as liquor law violators. . SHIPPING AID PLANS VARY LITTLE, PRESIDENT HOLDS | Executive Sees Hurley Proposal as Continuation of Present Law With Interest Change. By the Associated Press. As President Coolldge understands it, the proposal by former Chairman Hurley of the Shipping Board to strengthen the merchant marine by an appropriation of $500,000,000 for loans to private shippers at a low rate | of interest, does not differ from the | 4y, law already in effect, except as to the amount of the interest to be charged. {“ At the White House it was sald the |, President considers the plan, there fore, merely an extension of existing arrangements with added tnducements to private shippers to build up the marine at a small cost to them. c pi of du 19 fe! Maj. Tinker Transferred. Maj. Clarence L. Tinker, Army Alr Corps, has been relieved from duty in the office of the chief of Air Corps, Munitions Building, and ordered to Kelly Field, Tex., for duty a sist- ant commandant of that field, effective December 1. SEEK future—modera rental—low Superintendent ofMcon, th ho explalned, have ol hecn #sosedel gain of 2, and (hin war the Iy LAIMS HUGE INCREASE IN TELEPHONE SERVICE Clagett | Hopntta 142,030 Stations Served by 11 Contrnl OMces In Distrint Wushinglon'n oversspaoding (s wone wystem has now renchied s fotal 142,089 statione seyvad by 11 penle It was ity nrles I Clagett, genern) v erintendant of the ¢ b tomne Tolephiofie (o | neo Heplomber, My Clagell st 00 tolophonss hitve bisst wobded 1 The et wali L while b Bl el o Ineronse wis | A47 Fhen e anhatcet aring any penee e windhe sl 16, 0 Decombor, 1007, duving 1 vorlnh netivitien of the war, o 0 (olophiones net galn one month in the Distiiol Invgo Ancvenns My Clagedt | a out M the pesult of any o number of Wataladons n o rrleulne locallty, bt tneludes hoth ness and rentdenco elephones 1o aectlon of the District, Y ENTERPRISE SERIAL Building Association 7th St. & La. Ave. NW, 59th Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money Loaned to Members on Easy Monthly Payments dnmes E. Connelly dames F. Shea President Secretary 0.00 pe: month oo e “ $4,224.00 per annum 00 days. It is valued on these rents which connecting adjacent Maryland, assuring 24 hours. Milk and ice delivered Four Sleeping Rooms Sts. N.E. and Walk North a Few Steps St. S.E. PER MONTH INCORRORATED RADIANT Stove and Egg Size - PER $8-J TON Sold Exclusively By J. EDW. CHAPMAN NSt NW. North 3610 Corcoran Courts 23rd and D Sts. N.W. “CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN” Why spend the hours riding to of- fico when you can live in these De Luxe Apartments At moderate rentals {as low as $35). with unusual service, attractive lobby; 2 fast elevators vlenty of heat and hot water. Call the Resident Manager, Main 10030 for a floor, plan or come and look “at "the Planned Apartment in the City. CAFRIT 14th and K M. 9080 You WNever Knew This House Existecl ITISA TOTAL URPRISE T}fis home is, of course, in Bur- leith. But it is a unique dwelling— its location makes it so. On the west is the Archibald Estate, and about it are Government Park Reserves which forever assure you a pleasant and unobstructed outlook. The lot itself is 125 feet in depth. The house contains 6 fine rooms, a sunlit basement. a tiled bath with many built-in features and a kitchen which is fully and scientifically equipped. The terms of purchase will suit your $ individual requirement and the home is Lo T T e L) 3641 R Street N.W. (Model Home) SHANNON & LUCHS. - 1435 K St. N.W. Main 2345 The Parkway 100% CO-OPERATIVE This Efficiency Unit $4,800 Minimum Cash Down $480 Monthly payment, including prin- cipal, intere:t and upkeep Facing Connecticut Ave. $7,200 Minimum Cazh Down $720 Monthly payment, including prin- cipal, interest and upkeep : $68.91 ‘Cleveland 764 100% CO-OPERATIVE 3220 Connecticut Ave. (Corner of Macomb) Exhibit Apartments FURNISHED BY The Hecht Co. This Non-Housekeeping Unit $3,600 Minimum Cash Down $360 Monthly puyment, including princi- pal, interest and upkeep You are cordially invited to inspect the model ex- hibit apartments which have been furnished by the Interior Decorating Department of The Hecht Co. The Parkway contains 83 apartments, ranging in size from a non-house- keeping unit of one room and bath to larger units of five rooms and two baths, with prices from $3,500 to $13,500. BED R®M @ o<y Corner Apt.—2 Bedrooms and 2 Baths -Southwest Eaposure $13,500 Minimum Cash Down $1,350 Monthly payment, including prin- cipal, interest and upkeep $129.20 A staff of represéntatives is at your service in the building every day and evening, including Sunday. Raedy & Suit rmoiciee