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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1928. TRIBUTE TO MEMORY OF DIAMOND KING TEPPELINPLANT SOUGHTFORD. Industrial Council Outlines Facilities for Goodyear Expansion. | | ST LR | The Goodyear Zeppelin C«‘rw\muon.l P nufacturers, now located at on, Ohio, which is planning a new 1t to take care of projected expan- | invited to locate in!f s announced today, | | ial Council of the | | P gton, Joint Ind upport of the po: t 1 Qquestion. ported, announc- dy of the pro- | o Joint Indus- on at ge : N laid for the : of the Board ci An assistan. at work on the new structure of Cecil Rhodes, upon which John the Willard Hotel, Tweed has been engaged for some months past in his Fulham studio in England. | It is 12 feet in height and will be erccted in Salisbury, Rhodsia, South Africs of Maryland are ccial guests, includ- d delegation in Con- | . the commissioners of Montgom- | and Prince Georges Counties, judges, | the planning commissioners, the com- | missioner of roads school officials. | Speakers will be Senator Tydings of | Afaryland, Maj. E. Brooke Lee, speaker of | the House of Delegates of Maryland; | Hipresacte Zinmen casman of Detective Misses Stolen Auto, But Finds the House District committee; T. How- | Another on Way Back to Police ard Duckett, chairman of the Suburban Headquarters. ALLIGOOD TREES FUGITIVE AFTER COAT CATCHES IN DOOR Sanitary Commission, and President E. C. Graham of the Board of Trade. The three District Commissioners will be honor gu FUNERAL RITES HELD FOR MARY BYRD WHALEY W. C. T. U. Leader Will Be Buried in Fairfax—Survived by MNother and Sister. Funeral services for Miss Mary Byrd Whaley, who died in Providence Hos- pital Monday, were conducted in the Marvin Methodist Episcopal Church South this afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. Rev. W. D. King of St. Paul Methodist Detective Sergt. F. M. Alligood, the | teenth and I streets the suspect, who, relentless automobile sleuth of the Po-|whe narrested and charged with joy-rid- lice Department, was about ready to!ing, gave the name of John Taft Neil, !admit this morning that in addition to |19 vears old, 800 C street, reputedly { his regular equip- | started to drive off in a machine parked ment he packs a {at Thirteenth and I streets and owned horseshoe in each tby William S. Sammons, 3312 Wood- | pocket. ley road. | " Following a chase , As the detective jumped into the | 1ast night, in which he peeled out of his B~/ coat which had 3¢\ caught in a car door and literally & | succeeded in tree-dy, ing a fugitive in < |the rear of the | White House, he |set out in search {of a car.this morn- | overcoat When y | reached the station the driver observed | |that the door opposite was holding the i detective’s coat, and made a break for pulling it off and leaving it in the car. He chased the fugitive into the park {back of the White House, where the youth ran into a tree, giving him a N chance to catch up with him. | " As Allizood was on his way to report | for duty this morning he observed a car | parked at Tenth street and New York {avenue. He noted the license number, was active here in the Woma tian Temperance Union, having served |ing. but found it &s sccretary of the Southwest branch | missing only to re- for several years. She also had been ceVver another actjve 1§ the Philathia Sunday {stolen car on his school class of St. Paul Church. She| way back to the was a native of Fairfax and resided | station. here at 411 Ninth street southwest. She | .Last night he reported trailing a man jand when he got to headquarters found was employed as a bookkeeper for the|for more than an hour, watching him | that it was a stolen machine. Hasten- Bharon Dairy. |examine more than 20 automobiles|ing back to Tenth street and New York She is survived by her mother, Mrs. | parked in the downtown section. He at- avenue he found the car had gone, but Francis Cross Whaley, and three sis- | tempted to start several machines, the | two blocks away. at Tenth and G ters, Mrs, Lucy F. Jones, Miss Irene K.{detective stated. in one instance run-|streets, he discovered and recovered an-" Whaley and Miss Anna M. Whaley, all i ning a battery down. |other stolen car, the property of Mel- ©f this city. and a brother, Everett R. Alligood bided his time, and at Thir-|vin Eikleberry. 1236 Eieventh street. Whaley of Birmingham, Al | —_——— JAR THROWN FROM AUTO ! LEADS TO ARREST OF TWO | ™*° Colored Men Placed in Custody | CRUISER KEEL LAID. VIOLENT QUAKE OCCURS. Years Will Be Required to Three Volcanoes Active Following Finish $12,000,000 Craft. | Tremor in Kamchatka. { CAMDEN. N. J. March 7 (®.—The| MOSCOW, March 7 (#).—A violent kecl of a new $12,000,000 scout cruiser | earthquake has occurred in Kamchatka, After Half Gallon of Alleged | yas 1aid yesterday at the shipyard of | in the northeast part of Asia. This w . le -Boveri Co. Two e : Liquor Was Wasted. 1-h= American Brown foliowed by the eruption of three vo! 8 | years will be "q““"dl"’ complete the | canoee which have been ejecting flames Throwing & balf-gillon fer from their | p, which will be of the latest type | (" iples Tor two davs. The quake car uhacrmc; machine dre'fi;dp :1on15-vf§;"3=;° ;}:E‘:‘_ ‘t‘gg“‘;gf- as ‘}:{‘;‘ 1:w;aused deep cracks, but no fatalities side them when t stopped to let | the 4 . | have been reported. traflic pass at Fifth and L streets last | the completed hull of B Sister ship on | (On January 26 Moscow reported the two colored rien were arrested | Which work was stamted about fVe | gnevellutch volcano, on the east coast George M. Little and his |MONhs ago. oM o o Ghe crumer | Of Kamchatka, as having suddenly be- rged with violations of | _ AlROUg he oo e ag0 by the | come intensely active. It had long | War Department, the naval prmm.‘bwn regarded as extinct.) rgt. LINDBERGH STAYS | INSECLUSION HERE Lone Eagle Succeeds Dodging All Efforts to Locate Him. in| Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, ocean fly- er and dodger extraordinary, was still | “missing” early this afternoon so far | |as newspaper men and the public-at- | \large were concerned. No trace of the | fiyer could be found at Bolling Field, | | where his Ryan monoplzane has remain- | od following its arrival early yesterday | morning with Lindborgh at the stick, or at the Racquet Club, where the colonel had stopped Satur: visit to the Capital. At Bolling Field it only was Col. Lindbergivs whercabout | unknown to the flying at the sta- | tion, but that his plans for the immedi- | ate future remained a mystery to them. His plane, a Ryan cabin machine, mained in its hangar without perticu- lar attention, it was said, but airmen pointed out the machine was in such condition that it could take the air on 30 minutes' notice. Club Pleads Ignorance. The Racquet Club plead similar iz- | norance when asked at 12:30 o'clock this afternoon if Col. Lindbergh had been | there or if he had been heard from The aviator was not at the club at that | time, he had rot been and, 5o far as | {the club knew, he would not be there, | it was declared by telephone. | | e | vas said that not | Lindbergh, whose hiding ability seem: 0 be competing with his flying prowess, nded at Bolling Field at 6:30 o'clock yesterday morning, within 20 hours | | after his departure from the city by air. Following his landing at the fleld | the colonel was hustled in an Arm: | automobile to an unidentified destina- | tion, where, it is supposed, he went into seclusion. | Message Held Here. | The Western Union received a mes- ! sage for the flyer, vainly tried to reach | 'him, and appealed to the Associated Press for assistance, stating that | | Bolling Field officials had declared they { knew nothing of him since his depar- | ture yesterday. | Both Assistant Secretary of War for | Aviation, F. Trubee Davison, and Brig. ! Gen. James E. Fechet, chief of the| Army Air Corps, were unawire that Lindbergh had landed until informed | by newspaper men, and declared they | did not know of any official purpose in his visit. Fechet also denied a re-! port that Lindbergh would accompany ! nim and Davison on their flight to Panama later in the week. | Another emergency crew was on dut at Bolling Field last night, and th | floodlights were turned on, but officers | said this was done for local operations. | | An officers’ dinner fs scheduled for to- night, but officers refused to say whether Lindbergh would be a guest i - - = | District Heights Meeting Set. | Special Dispateh to The Star DISTRICT HEIGHTS, Md., March 7 freedom, gaining the street as the de- | —The Citizens' Association will meet |ed | tective struggled with the coat, finally | at 8 o’clock tomorrow night at the field coul | office of the District Heights Co. | | | { By the Associated Press, NEW YORK. March 7.—Principals {of New York City schools today in a |general order had their attention called to a section of the State education law making instruction in the effects of al cohol and tobacco compulsory. | The order was issued by Dr. Harold | G. Campbell, acting superintendent of schools, on receipt of complaints that | the subjects which are part of the physiology and hygienc courses were | not being taught with sufficient thoroughness, The law was passed a quarter of cen- tury ago and makes such instruction | mandatory for the major portion of the clementary schooling and the first two years of high school Rules of the department of education long since adopted ere that puplls en- | KAUFMANN’S y while on a tlying | 'WILKINS PREPARES New Yorl; School Princigals Ordered 7 To Teach Evils of Alcohol and Tobacco Heads Relief Work DRY LEAGUE SEEKS LIQUOR $PY FUNDS | Florida Meet Favors Action by Congress in Unani- mous Vote. | By the Associated Press. | ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 7.— { The Southeastern States prohibition | convention of the Anti-Saloon League went on record In its final session here | today in favor of a congressional ap- propriation to obtain evidence in pro- hibition law violations by undercover agents. | “Acting on a motion of David Hep- burn, superintendent of the Virginia | State organization of the league, the convention in open forum expressed its | sentiment in favor of the proposition by | 2 unanimous aye vote of the approx:- | mately 100 persons, including delegates | in’ attendance. Pay Raise Plan. r East Relief at| A proposal advanced during discus- Beirut, S She is the only American | sions on the floor to request higher nurse working there for the Near East | compensation for Federal enforcement Relief. officers and Government pensions for the families of those killed or injured in line of duty was referred to thc convention's resolutions committee. which was meeting in executive session | all the time to draft the official pro- | nouncements of the meeting on political | and other problems of the drys. | While the morning meeting resolved |itself into an open forum for public conferences and discussions, a resolu- | tions committee went into executive session to frame the convention’s pre- sentments that were expected to deal | vigorously with the candidacles of “wet” | aspirants to the presidency, party plat- | {orme "and other phases of the dry ques- By the Asso Press. ‘llr);l. i ¢ 1 definit B 3 % ' __| In his argument for a definite appro- FAIRBANKS, ~ Alaska, March T.—{ jobion for undercover work Hepburn With his acrial dash to Spitzbergen | formed it the most important feature from Point Barrow tentatively set for of prohibition enforcement and de- the first week in Avril. Capt. George | clared it “;flsul,m&\r to compel ;nd:;- H. Wilkins, Australian aviator-explorer, | COYCF SECHIS to bOreoF, MORCY, B FEOC and Lieut. Carl Ben Blelson, Nis|prough their operations that the Gov- sourdough pilot, marked time here yes- | (SRS (00 F SRTEICD i the “higher terday in readiness for the preliminary {FMCEL N8, VEE O g Hop lodhe e on motion of G. W. Heck of Penny " S, . L Vir= put together here in five days and ,fi"nfig‘;s‘ :;flhmllh&»;:'éfl?nfi: m‘: MG 11s taken up for its first test m‘y;urc)msc of evidence” to “the securing | Alaska yesterday. Today it was pro-|;eovigence the Floridan declaring | nounced ready for final loading of fuel s i g | and supplies for the 500-mile jump to | that the original phraseology “sounds | Point Barrow, where additional stores | 100 much like purchasing votes. | of gasoline and oil are available. | Voices Women's Demands. The longer days will permit Wilkins | Dr. F. Scott McBirde, superintendent to land on the ice northeastward of lof the Anti-Saloon League, who was Foint Barrow to enable him to take | presiding, concurred in the proposition | soundings, look for traces of the | for increased pay. i fabled Arctic “continent” and acquire | A request by a New York City visitor | other scientific data, the accumulation | named Willilams, who withheld his first of which is the purpose of the expe-' name, that the Anti-Saloon League ition. hold a convention soon in New York Wilkins' departure for Point Barrow | and “beard the lion in his den” was from Fairbanks is tentatively sat for | jooked upon with favor by McBri next week, although weather conditions will affect final decision. SS ANNA STEIGER, is in charge | FOR HOP IN ALASKA Australien Aviator-Explorer Plans Dash Across Arctic to Spitz- bergen in Avril. monoplane was who said he was going there Tuesday | | and would consider it. | A warning to party leaders that the “dry” women of the South and West will insist upon candidates for Presi- ! dent and Vice President in the next clection who will declare unequivocally for prohibition and its enforcement was | unded before the convention by Mrs | | Jesss W. Nicholson of Chevy Chase | A president of the National Wom- | |en's Democratic Law Enforcement | | League: American Woman Gets Decree. NICE. France, March 7 (P).—Mrs. James Henry Watson, the former Hazel Sloan of Chicago. has been grant- divorce by the Nice courts. The was married in Chicago in Jan- 1020. There are no children. The United States had 21,000 forest fires in 1926, and the greatest cause was smokers, with sparks from railroads as_the second cause. Q EE US b5 w for "“ LUMBER MILLWORK PAINT HARDWARE We'll supply your needs Smalt Orders Given Car i L —No Delivery ree J. Frank Kelly, Inc. 2101 Georg N. 1343 Lumber— il ' tering elementary schools at the age of 6 shall be warned to avold the use of alcohol and tcbacco; the next year they | shall be warned that alco > prevent mental and physic At the e of 9 they shall bs taught that cigarettes discolor the fingers and | alcohol blotches the skin and cau: a ed nose; at th e of 10 that tobacco s blind and dea and at 11 that alcohol lessens mu vigor, | alertness and enduran Al the in- | struction includes warning that wood | alcohol causes blindness; that even tha best alcohol fs related fo jnsanity and | crime and that employers do not like | persons who drink or smoke. The final lessons are that alcohol causes firre- sponsibility, disregard of social dutfes' and rights of others and has a bad ef- fect on the community and Nation. | = fid g5 N f STREET N.W. e jar thrown into the jumped from their 4 the men, and te 10 scoop up some of iquid from the broken glass on the About half a pint was salvaged i | was 50 arranged that work could not | start until this month | At the present rate of the chestnut Embodied in the ship will be the blight's spreading, it is predicted that latest innovations for safety, speed and | the blight will kill most of the chestnut comfort of the crew. The crulser will | timber in the southern Appalachian re- have a speed of approximately 25 knots. | glon in the next 10 years. Pullman Davenport Bed Suite and Robert Gooden, 24 ng in the rear of No Both were charged | ass on the street, and | in addition Gooden, the driver of the | car, was charged with transportation | 1 lig hile Proctor | second offense trans- | slon | the time of the G. C. Deyo and R. F. Cornett | PAYS TRIBU.TE TO DIAZ. | Legion Post Resolution Honors Ita i When Night Goes [ome and the Sun Gets Up DawN is a Revelation at Atlantic City...you can’t lcan overthedeckrail of The Board- walk at sun-up without realiz- ing that there is Somebody Upstairs. .. this is no place for cynics except to cure them and to restore a sense of reverence for the miracles of creation. n Hero's Memory. e memory of Gen, Ara- | der of the I sch will be ty fund of the eAtlantic City benefits are both physical and spivituall N O ATLANTIC CITY N AR D S Write to cAny of the Follow TRANSFER & STORAGE LOCAL 8 LOKG GISTANGE MOVERS wooern FIREPROOF suining WE CRATE, PACK AND SHIP) PHUONE NOKTH 3343 1313 YOU STHEET N. W, v Rater o~ Keservations A plate of o OYSTER STEW tastes hetter with s teaspoonfo) of LEA & PERRINS’ SAUCE LAFAYETIEA MARLBOROUGH- BLENUIMA £ MORTONA PENNHURST.A SEASIDE A BHELBUKNER AMHBASSADON-B BREAKEKS A-E BRIGHTON A CHELSEA A K CHALFONTE- HADDON HALL-A DENNIS A GALEN HALL-4 GLASLYN-CHATHAM A HOLMHUKST 4 KNICKERBOCKER-A-K SIRAND A-E TEAYMOREAE WILTSHIRE. il N A Suite of the Smartest Fashion— ‘The artistie frame i of birch, finished In broy mahogany; loose spring-Ml hi Davenport-Bed, length over all 82 Inches, helght of top from floor 37 inches, depth of seat 23 Ine Armchalr and wing chalr to mateh, - $269% Kaufmann’s Are Washington’s Exclusive Agents AT 0 ( -‘.mxm \W“‘ (T (TG True Value Measured by Genuine Quality Kaufmann’s 1415 H STREET N.W. T G i AT i o '\ PO, A RIS ey A T P v o aracter- As an exam- PO survound vourself with beauty is ¢ istic of the modern homemake ple of beaunty plus conventence, suggest that you place this Pullman suite in vour home. Per- manence is built into cvery line—as are beauty of design and comfort. Its loveliness will extend throngh the vears—sereing in the home twenty- fowr hours a day if need be. e recommend this charming group to a homemaker secking the dis- tinguished in living room furniture, | 18 Months to Pay W *For every week~for every festive occasion” Calendar of Specials MARCH 3 TO 14 At The Velvet Kind Dealers— An Ice Cream Confection! BurTERSCOTCH AND . BURNT ALMOND ICE CREAM The Velvet Kind Ice Cream in one of the most tempting For Easter Remembrance Your Photograph Easter is a season of joyous remembrance Gifts, not of price, but of sentiment, are the rule. Photographs carry friendship or love in beau- titul manner. Prices from $20 to $225 the dozen. And miniatures—and oil colors—framed portraits for the home, office or for traveling. Have Your Sitting This Week. UNDERWOOD 8 UNDERWOOD Portraits of it) 1230 Consecticut Avesse. Q'?fu...’ Main 4400 0 <00+ B « s P o e - < - < D+ <o« P o Y E Each Spring the beauty of “Murco” Lifelong Paint makes homes fair- ly glow, in contrast to their previous state. Be- cause “Murco” is 100% Pure it lasts as well as it looks. Let us give you further information about “Murco Magic.” E. J. Murphy Co., Inc. 710 12th St. N.W. Main 2477 PPROMISES LONG, HEALTHY LIFE 10 WEAK, THIN-BLOODED PEOPLE Scientists Discover “Mysterious Substance” in Beef Livers That Makes Rich Red Blood and Creates _Strength, Vigor and Vitality—Often in 8 Days. There's help for men and women who are run- down, weak, tired-out and thin-blooded. In New York and other big cities progressive physicians are prescribing a diet ot beet hiver, They have found by actual tests that patients far gone with pernicious anemia=so far gone that | hife wseli was only a matter of months—have been restored to health | © In order to get this “Mysterious | Substance” or Vitamines in a greatly condensed form one of New York's famons Laboratories is put- ting up a liguid elixic Known to pharmacists as Hemo-Liver How 2 woman WAV Ky Wi II:;)' blood 1w This preparation is not a patent - medicine=the vitamines are ex- tracted by a new process from tresh heets hiver so that the blood waking health creating substances are » saved, I "Men and women wha are sufter 1t is not & patent medicine but a [ME om lowered vitality, general pleasant to take ehnie which all| )} SIRRENs, overwork, nervous hreak- And Ahel Shange hal thin-blooded people and especially those who need more vigor and vi tality are weged to tey, Hemao-Liver is now dispensed by down or anemia can put thewr fanh | i Hemo-Liver, For teeble ol peo- | ple, pirds 13 to 18 and in convaless | cence 1t won't faill 1t strengthens | the nerves, ereases the red hlood | ASD FALLING “I!A‘I- i s voe DAy Tiger fur ocal _M:I’u;;:l/n- :A Whyke :z: Nl;r 14 - American Plan — E- ¥ 0 flan A E~=Boh Plans) e ———y Home of & Hundred Hotels Offering ¢ Comforts of 1 wne lall druggists. who keep abreast of | |the times with the distinet wnder- | | standing that it one hottle does not help—wondegiully = your money will he veturned vells, promotes health and rebuilds | energy so quickly that often cians are astonished ™ You can get | Hema-Liver at Peonles Drug Staves | Advertisenent 4+ wilaments. B r MuoeyF @ corveicntin o1 v, 1998 - —— o e TWENTY-ONE STORES IN TWENTY-ONE CITIES —-*