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2 . TITE FVENTING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. MONDAY, MARCIT 5. 1928 CUBA CONSIDERING NEW CONSTITUTION Revisicns Extend President’s | Term and Power—Isle of | Pines Claimed. \VANA, Mareh 5—The principal| prologue measure, or | changes to_the Cuban | 1 be placed before the| h‘(h\ for final nl-l in the| C; terri- | ted within the “over 21 and not dis- or} viction shall <angc will be regulated urbances., the president power, and may d certain articles of | ber n! senat ors is h\(‘rr’\\(\i‘ rnr of office Those of as Sl e empteeRtioR MBS for cach 25000 in- independent FACE QUIZ BY I bocome d appoint are_extended for | in th> future the | will be for six years. | will be held every | Xt one in 1930, 1l not bo permitt 4‘ p and the | \Axl' be- | or (or a full term of nine | may be created of | vith more than 300,000 inhabir- is for the purpose of feder- e City of Havana). | al leaders hold that the As- as full power not only to ac- reject each article of the pro- | asure, but also to modify them | reported that few | o n the permar of 1\? law, th> transitor es will be modified to allow Presi- Machado to run for office again CAPITRL JEWS HOLD PURIM CELEBRATION| Entertainment Program at Ohev Sholom Synagogue Opens Ob- servance of Feast. | An entertainment program was pre- sented at the Ohev Sholom Synagogue h«: night as an opening feature of the of the Feast of Purim, cen moraf ng the deliverance of the Jews from the oppression at Shusan, 23 The observance will be y 'md tomorrow in all | ! and with| onies. oday’s program was the r held by the Sister- el in the Jewish Com- is afternoon, while to- that organization will dance at the center as the t entertainment at the Ohev Sholom Synagogue was arranged by Rabbi J. T. Loeb and included a special concert by Cantor Abraham Kalmus of the synagogue choir, led by Lazer Fenik. with piano accompaniment by Miss E<"lle ‘Teitelbaum. e! Pcrgamr» on was rendered bV Kas- tein as “Kay the Dfumrnrr dmmal.c sketch, “Misphat Two children’s celebrations also were held erday as part of the Purim TORTE] At the community center a om ’X’h.mb wedding was staged by the Synagogue and a masque | n for the -youthful mem-| bc-s or the cungvegaucn BELTSVILLE MAN DIES. Harry M. Ulle, 51, Victim of Com-! tions After Mary” Months. d.. March 5.—Harry 4, son of the late Ulle, died yester- iz while being transferred e here to a hospital after | s of several months of com- | ed and leaves sev- | rs—John and E. lle, William and Fred | D. C, and Mr* Eliza- | rgaret 2 sister, h 9. last year. 1 ent of this com- | uneral services will be held | zt 11 am. at St. John's| with burial in the church cem Forfl' Wardens to Mect ) The Star Md., March 5.—A eonfer- | vardens of Charles ed alss by several | and St Mary: held here tomorrow. 10 am. State Forester P seneduled 1o address the il be a talk by a United Btates For- | e lookout roend | ’\\\\\\\\\ Chest 4..1mr Arranged. MARL J//I‘U Md Mayth 5 lluuh l,m!y-‘ | ¢ VAMOrToOw morn - by the Maryland Vartioutar People Cae MENU PEAS « they wre better. Ack your "JAMES M. DENTY Wholessle Distribmior JAN. ] 3 FEB MAK munths 12k out for your eough— check it at the start, At the o phtest throat irritation, take PER- SLSSIN freely IT CLEARS THE THROAT ! —telieves the cough and sorhes the ir- ritated tissues. Liortrs Lave prescribed it fur 24 years. Sold at oll drwggints, Safe for Ev;ry Coughf {\\ Boyer and her_adpoted son, Joseph PROBE BIRTH DATA OF BOYER'S “HEIR”;‘i” U. S. and State Start Inquiry., Deportation of Boy May Be Delayed. By the Ascociated Press. DETROIT, March 5.—Federal and State investigations got under way to- day in the case of 4-ycar-old Joseph Boyer, disclaimed heir to the Boyer millions. An effort to delay deportation of the child to Canada until the State can make a thorough inquiry into the alleged fraudulent record of his birth was planned by Harry H. Metcalf, as- | sistant attorney general At the same time, Mrs. Boyer. who is alleged to have adopted the child and represented him to her husband as their baby. faced question- ing by immigration authoritics unless th~ child is returned to Canada. John L. Zurbrick, district director of immi- | gration, said he had ordered Mrs. Bover 1o appear with the boy for questioning Mrs, Boyer can sidestep such an in- vestigation by taking the child to the American con: at Windsor and ob- | taining for him a visa and paying a head tax. ‘The child then could Zurbrick said. son of Joseph Boyer, chairman of the board of directors of the Burroughs Adding Machine Co., filed a suit to expunge “the child’s birth record. The child had passed as Boyer's son and had been named heir to a $5.000,000 trust. Bover charged his wife purchased the child from an ur | married mother in Windsor, Ontario, smuggling the infant into his home as a new-born son. MIDSHIPMAN 1S HERO. Rescues 200-Pounder From River After Failing to Pass Test. ANNAPOLIS, Md, March 5 (#).— Old Dame hwe‘sfl) rmally forced Mid- shipman Oscar L. Otterson of Butler, Pa, to pass his life-saving test, after he had failed for three years to meet the Naval Academy requirement. Returning to quarters Satur after witnessing a card of sporting events, Otterson, who weighs pounds, dragged Ge . . a student, weighing more than pounds, from the choppy waters of th Bevern River, after he had gone down for the second time, in 30 feet of Both Otterson and Williams were ams, )0 { water. Myron L.| be | contracts awarded by the Post Office night | 115 | TIGRATION MEN ' Sereen Film to Show | s . . | Workings of Brain to Educators| iated / YORK, March 5.—A film de- to depict on the screen the complex workings of the brain has been brought to America to be placed at the disposal of American calle and universities, the Ameri- can Society for Cuitural Relations | With Russia announced yesterday. | “The film is the work of Sov Kino, the Soviet motion picture trust, and | demonstrates _the "theory of [Prot. { Tvan Paviov sian phy MAIL CONTRACTS ASKED | FOR PRIVATE SHIP LINES Move Would Transfer U. S. Vessels, Run at Loss, to Civil Control, White Holds. Declaring that Government operation of ships during the past seven years has cost American taxpay more than $250,000.000, Chairman White of the House merchant marine committee, in an article in the Nation's Business | Magazine, urges the inauguration of a | policy of long-term and adequate mail contracts as a means of aiding the d velopment of a privately owned mer- chant marine | The broader application of the mail Department for foreign mail carrivng would result in the transfer to private | ownership of lines now operated by the Federal Government at a loss, he de- |clared. At the same time, he added, such a plan would insure permanecncy and healthy expansion of other existing lines now pn\m operated. Kl]mms Trainer Dies. | JOHNSON CITY. Tenn, March 5 (P).—Tom Morrissey, 84, Civil War | veteran and trainer for Jake Kilrain in | [he cclebrated Kilrain-Sullivan battle t New Orleans in the 70s, died at the National Soldiers' Home here. "DANDRUFE | ‘5 A Sure Way to End (3 one sure way that to remove dandiuff v, and that is to dissolve s it entirely. To t about four ounces uin, yary liquid arvon i it at night’ when retiring | » moisten the sca uw gently with the fin- treated at the Naval Hospital i }\‘\“\‘\\\\\\‘\\\\\\\\\' | 400 FEET % RAILROAD FRONTAGE ¢ ’ BETHESDA, MD. Immedately Availubie For Term Lease LEON ROBBIN Attorney At Law 230 Woodward Bldg. M. 2635 Sdhdeddadededodedede i R R S Duc de HAT American can imagine a time when ice cream didn't exist? i only from 1774, when a French chef served it exultingly on the table of the Duc de Chartres, Imagine what consternation reigned when this cooling, taste-appealing dish ap- peared! And, unlike many of the famous dishes created at that time, value, Sick, ne cream, providing it is Ice cream made with eith Cream for its base is a dish for building stur- Both at your corner grocery. bodics, ZANANANNANANNNNY sick and strong can eat ice . most if not all of | your dandrutf will be gone, and two or three mare applications will completely dissolve and en- tirely destroy every single sign and trac it, no matter how m » in ¥ emedy never fails Charlres But it dates it had a sound health made of pure products, r Simpson's Milk or ’ Lansburgh & Bro. 7th to 8th to E-FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—Franklin 7400 O-Inch Crepe de Chine and Flat Crepe Regular $2.00 Grade 40-Inch All-Silk Crepe Roma It will give cxceptionally good wear and is $2 00 established as onc of the smartest fabrics for Yard Spring. Including aqua green, ivory, orchid, monet blue, red, navy, black. 40-Inch Black Satin Worn inevitably—invariably by the woman of chic. For she realizes that nothing is so consistent in its smartness as the rich, lus- trous beauty of satin crepe—especially when Y'xrd it's BLACK. The firmness of the quality will delight you. Crepe de Chine and Flat Crepe There seems no end to the uses of these two $2 00 popular_fabrics. Frocks, lingerie, negligecs, Yard slips. You will find no tronble in ehoosing the color you want—inasmuch as you have a hali a hundred from which to sclect. 0 B 40-Inch New Printed Silks $1.55 she who is gay there are patterns riotously lovely. You will be amazed at the numher of Yard designs and colors in this altogether delightful selection, ; 35.Inch Orkeda Radium When you see—and feel—the exceptionally slips and lingerie—and countless other articles. g 5C In all the most desirable shades. Lipstick \M'" con fine texture of this fabric you will wonder at Third Floor—Lansburgh & Bro. o Crepe Roma strikes that “happy medium” 5 i visp of a handkerchief, between the formal and semi-formal fabric. wisp of a rics just the excellence in qu: Crane Grey Marron Glace Rose Beige Brier Rose Hydrangea Independence Oak Bluff Canton Blue Swiss Rose For the demure young miss there are pat- terns quietly subdued and conservative. For There is a_substa makes it espec able” with or w hout coats. An White the modesty of the price. For linings, frocks, Clearance of Late Models in WINTER COATS Were $59.50 to $89.50 $309.50 Think of it! These smart, fine Winter coats offered at wholesale cost and less! Smartly tailored of splendid fabrics—extraordinary values! It would be wie, indeed, to buy one of these coats now and have it put away for you until next season. A small deposit will hold it, Late Winter models in tan and black, trimmed with generous shawl and mushroom collars and cuffs of skunk, wolf, fox, squirrel and Manchurian wolf. Sizes 14 to 20— 36 to 46. A Small Group of Women's and Misses’ Winter Coats, $25 Mostly black and tan. Fashioned of broadcloth a with shawl and mushroom collars and cuffs of fine fu sizes 14 to 40. suede. Broken Second Floor—Lansburgh & Bro. Continuing the Remarkable Sale of Silver Plated Hollow Ware The Surplus Stock of the Famous Reed & Barton Co. at Savings of 33V4% to 50% and More! So astounding are these values—that it scems incredible that they may offered at all. Values in Silverware that are far and above any before presented at Lansburgh & Bro. Dozens of delightful pieces of all sorts—each made with the exquisite perfection and beauty that Reed & Barton are noted for! '50.95 Yicces Worth $15 to $22.50 Tea Pots, Cottee Pots and other pieces. Pieces Worth $7.50 to $10 Waste Pitchers, Waiters, Bowls, Cream Sugar Bowls, andlesticks. $35.00 to $42.50 Flower Baskets and Serving Trays, $15 $25.00 to $35.00 Soup Tureens Areamieis. Caf fio Chiokos §12.58 Pots and Tea Pots, Nreet Floor—Lansburgh & Wro, 50 to $15 Sugar Bowls, FOR ONE WEEK ONLY These Special Onyx Pointex Prices onys"Frinten Week Oly 505 Chitton. Silk to the top with ..:uon n~.‘| \‘”‘ l$ Service sheer. Silk to m.~ ’ * hem - cotton feet 750 Chifton, toe 0 350 Service weight, Silk from l 's ROPILR 108 (o eicnvanosvs S009 Wesutar Style Tilce 155 Service sheer. Silk “uh cotton tops and feet S41 Chitfon. Silk to the l\rln —cotton feet .., An Electric Doughnut Maker 4 $12.95 G l!:e”llutn “.I.I\T:‘\'m h:lllh Nn s 850 Service sheer Silk from top to toe £20 Think ol licious making crisp —de doughnuts yight at the table—minus smoke and grease Four at a time, at that! This ex traordinary contrivance is made of heavy cast aluminum, heavily nickled with heat proof handles ‘The heat 1s controlled by push button switch in plug. An article every modern howsewife will want Math Floor Silk !mm top ln Nireot Flonr-—Lanshuiah Lanshurah & Wre. Whether you are contemplating the creation of the newest—most difficult dress, or thé tiniest “friends in need,” indeed! satile in their adaptability. $2.98 All- tial firmness to this splendid qu: alit v suitable for Spring irocks and e you will find these fab- For they are ver- Riclr, heavy, lovely— ality that the woman of .59 Yard discriminating taste demands! 37 Distincti ive Shades Castillian Betty Tan Starflower Blue Skies Goya Red Monkeyskin Lucerne Kasha Beige Clove Pink White Tvory Pink Maize Aqua Green Coral Turquoise Peach Jade Athenia Blue Spruce Fallow Grecian Rose French Beige Old Rose Mother Goose Silver Grey Queen Blue Peking Blue Th hurgh & Bro. Silk Canton Crepe ' $1.95 on crepe tha extra heavy Row Coc qual Beige h Beice ma Third Floor—Lanshurzh & Bro. . . . New Collegiate Lingerie Already Popular with Young Moderns Yes—they are collegiate— for they extreme the slim silthouett the same time allo and eas 5O necessary t:\ the voung modern of today. Dance Sets, $3.95 Of fine heavy quality crepe de chine—soft and luxurious. Trimly made over the English sport style, with wide waist- bhand and straight legs. Bandeau with two-tone straps to match! Costume Slips. $5.95 Smartly tailored—perfect fit- ting, with inverted side pleats s0 as to allow just the neces- sary fullness. Fashioned of fine quality satin, in both fiosh and white. Hip hems! Crepe de Chine Slips $2.95 Shadowproof slips of fine quality crepe de chine! Lace trimmed and smartly tatlored styles, with inverted side pleats and wide hems. French Panties, $2.95 Dainty crepe de chine pan- ties. well taflored and smartly finished. Fine quality that will give more than their worth in service In flesh and white. Sizes 13, 15, 17, Third Floor—Lansbursh & Bro. Advance Sale SHRUBBERY Make Reservations. Now for Delivery at Planting Time or Probably the Latter Part of This Week Roses and Hardy Shrubs, 35¢ 3 for $1 Hybrid Tea Roses (Monthly) Duehess ot Welllagton e orance abia (nink) A Tewitts Tuberous Flowering Pl the Valley ‘ hl«nn Augusta Ve torta (white) Nillarney (wink). Lors. Aaron Ward vl White Killarner . NN cclan L. Moek Charles Kuseell . et TVinteur Wiectot (vet- "arteats ¢ Ly tee Rose (vellow w ey TAewer k) Augeles v Witteraweel. i SAr Small Fruits Flowering Shrubs \lihea sk Honer suekle Ked Wark Dagwood Purute |llae New and Rare Tea Roses—Se- d Stock, 69¢ cu X for S2.00 ey N eI Clawe e Reaes (roivar. (Filde ot Rochenter) Flowering Shruds EUS gy smelllig iy W mew batt Flowering SAtuds rSe (Sweet N ihus Hedge Plants Callturuia Piivet. 43t 48 duehen. 83 plduts” e h-n}onn Thunbeigl 19 ‘n I! h« hes 10 plania o N e v Fucule SN Floar, Lawsharah & Bee A ek - Ned, Vaveader.