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| e 4 MESSAGE JSrom NEW YORK York — plus the fact that the McAlpin proudly maintains its Jeadership as “New York's Most Popular Hotel"— Significantly indicates that thoughtful guests appreciate the courtesy, comfort, convenience and exceptional service of the Hotel McAlpin. Of course it's no secret—the McAlpin has entertained millions | of folks—and through this exper- | ience knows what constitutes per- fect hotel service—and how to renderit. > o 0 (M4 A, tions—to me perso 1700 ROOMS ; £3.00 to $12. 3- LUXURIOUS SUITES | £10.00 t0 £30.00 per day [ el islie | HOTEL \ “The Centre of Conrenience™ BROADWAYat 34th Street NEW \ ORl\ CIT\ QMMU ntly with' THOXINE ettt thbds | HAM .. that’s always handy Bor TEAS ... For BRIDGE or whenever you serve Sandwiches 20: CANS IN CARTONS OF & Alse 2S¢ snd 40¢ Sizes gNDERWOO sample. After using it the eruptions began 10 disappear 80 | purchased more, and after using four cakes of Cuticura Soap end four boxes of| Cuticura Ointment | was beaied.” (Signed) Miss Willie Mae Perry, Wainwright, Okla * Cuticurs Sosp, Ointment and Tal- cum ste iceal for daily toiiet uses. &anlfl '»—n B ant Woe. Taioum 'STOP BAD BREA People sBicted with bad bresth find quick relief through Dr. Fd- wardy’ Olive Tablets, The pless- ant, suger-costed tablets sre taken for bsd bresth by sl who know them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets set gently but firmly on the bowels snd liver. sumulsting them to netursl wetion, clesring the blood end gently purdying the entire They do thet which dun- gerous calomel does without sny of the bed slter eflects Ol bring po griping puin or oy disugreesble eflects Dr F. M. Fdwards discovered formule efter 20 yewrs of practice smong patients sMicred with bowel snd liver complaint, with the sttendant bud breath Olive Tablets sre purely a vegetsble compound mired with ol you will know them by their ol olor. Tuke nighfly for 4 week und note the effect 15¢, e, e AN Druggists. ches kill them with FLIT the € il COLOMBIA CEDES | Boundary Pact Covers Area Known as Commissariat of Putumayo. THE EVENING STAR, oW ASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, MARCIT 20, DAUGHTER OF A GIFTED FAMILY ~ ~ e o T ~ > 4 > Y £ 4 ['ALPIN| | Wade Hogers in the Federsl appellate ll | Michigen and president for 10 years | { By the Associated Press. BOGOTA, Colombia, March 20.—| ‘('nder a boundary treaty just ratified | between Colombia and Peru, Colombia | { cedes to Peru the greater portion of | | the strip of territory known as the | Commissariat of Putumayo. | An immediate result is the reduction | of the Colombia-Ecuador frontier to| about one-fourth its previous length, { Ecuador hereafter facing Peru across | much of its eastern as well as its | southern boundar: | The ceded territory extends eastward from a point abcut 70 miles southeast | of Pasto, capital of the Department of | | Narino, ' where the Cuhimbe River | empties into the Putumayo. From |'here it runs to the present Colombia- Peru frontier, except for a narrow strip | at its eastern extremity which Colombia | | reserves in order to have access to the Amazon River. All the ceded territory lies between the Putumayo River and the present Colombia-Ecuador frontier. It is like a finger. nearly 300 miles long | | and from 15 to 60 miles wide. i | Cession of tne Putumayo territory | | from Colombia to Peru is a step in the cated of the many South American | boundary disputes. The ceded district is a portion of a large and virtually un- | inhabited area about the headwaters | {of the Amazon, which has affected | | Peru, Brazil, Ecuador and Colombia | since colonial times. In its modern aspect the problem has involved treaties dating back to 1876. { when Brazil and Peru agreed fairly well MISS K | Whose mother, Louise Homer, _ stud | on" thelr frontier. This was st ur-| FIVE CHINESE TO HANG ther clarified as late as 1925, when Sec- | retary of State Hughes used his good Silioes ‘1> quiet_objections by Brazil to | Sentence t‘or Murdnr Aflirm»d by the cession o° Putumayo River territory | to Peru. Arizona Supreme Court. : PHOENIX, Ariz., March 20 (#).—The | conviction and sentence of five Chinese | to be hanged for the murder of Tome | King, Chinese restaurant keeper of | Kingman, Ariz, in what was said to ‘ha\e been the carrying of a Pacific Coast tong war into Arizona, was affirmed by the State Supreme Court here yesterday. Three successive Friday mornings, be- | ginning May 25, were set by the court - WILLIS J. FOWLER DIES IN HOSPITAL |Deputy Controller of Curren- cy Had Been Iil More the first ever convicted in Arizona of as the date on which the five Chinese, | | {of the Burton resolution to prohibit | | tions. er, in Paris, where she is murder, will pay the Their names and the dates on which the Chinese will go to the gallows are B. W. L. Sam, May 25. Shew Chin, June 1, and Gee King Long, Jew Har and Wong Lung, June 8. mmonsmmx CALL s Fl R!~PR°O F RAGE mmmomm LONG DISTANCE MOVERS PACK BY EXPERTS AND 1313 YOU STREET, N.W. PHONE NORTH 3343 Than Year. e Mr. Fowler had the distinction of rising to the responsibility of deputy controller, where he served 18 yurfl | from a minor government position. Born in 1851, in Kingsville, Ohio, Mr. Fowler moved to Hillsdale, Micl with his father, where the latter w & professor in Hillsdale College. The younger Mr. Fowler was luated | from Hillsdale, College in 1871 went to Chicago, where he was con- | nected until 1876 with a news agency, | conducted by John R. Walsh. | In 1876 he went to Fort Wayne, Ind., | where he was a newspaper reporter, | and then published a newspaper there for some time. In 1882 he was appoint- ‘ed @ proofreader in the Government ! Pflnfinz Office. | He remained in the Government | | Printing Office until 1886, when he was appointed to a clerkship in the office | | of the controller of the currency. In August, 1898, he was made chief of the | organization division in the office of the controller, serving in that capacity | | until promoted to deputy controller in || 1909. He resigned from the latter po- | sition in February, 1927, due to falling | health. | Mr. Fowler was a Mason and a mem- | {ber of the Indiana State Society here. He made his home in Hammond Court | Apartments prior to going to the Wash- | STUDEBAKER Removal Sale Of Fine Used Cars —Now Gomg On Outstanding Values in Reconditioned Auto- mobiles of Popular Makes and Models— SEDANS, COUPES, ROADSTERS, Backed by a Dealer of Known Responsibility JOSEPH McREYNOLDS, inc. TOURING CARS, ETC, DISTRIBUTOR Corner 14th & R Sts. N.W.——Phone Potomac 1631 ington Sanitarfum and Hospital about a || vear ago. He leaves his widow, Mrs. | I | Bdith P. Powler, and a daughter, Mrs. | T. J. King, the latter of Chicago, Funeral services will be conducted in | Gawler's chapel, 1730 Pennsylvania | avenue, Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock. | Interment will be private. TAX ISSUE TURNED DOWN BY U. S. SUPREME COURT RBefuses to Pass on Revenue Bu- reau Delay in Filing Suit on Guarantee Bonds. The Bupreme Court yesterday refused | |to pass on whether the Federal Gov- emmml could sue on the bond [lvcn to guarantee taxes in dispute when the commissioner of internal revenues had falled to act in five years, the time al- | lowed by the statute of limitations. The question was presented In a Government appeal in a case brought | by the John Barth Co. of Milwaukee, | Wis. The Circult Court of Appuln lll.td for instructions, but the Buprem: | Court today decided it would be impos- | |llble t answer all the questions pre- | sented without a sweeping review of the revenue law, and this will make it { necessary for the Circuit Court o dis- pose of the Government appeal with- | out assistance Imm the Bupreme Court HONOR JUDGES MEMORY. | Portrait of thry Wade Rogers Unveiled in New York. | NEW YORK, March 20 (#).—The un veiling yesterday of & portrait of Henry | i | { | i { { | “short-cut” FYHIS service is Bt machine 1 neatly ready to use a pound Its court room was the occasion of many U the late presiding justice of nited Btates Circuit Court of Ap- He died in 1926, having been aean of the law schools of Yale and your valuable ves yon mone versity. Prosident | s will Jike it Wilson sppointed him w the hench in 1913 i Terrence Carmody, president of the 10¢ Connecticut Bar Association, was o the exercises, Judge Edwin apiece extra womas of Connectieut was among When hose who attended placing them inside SAINT'S DA.Y MARKED. Dinner Is Given 200 Inmates of Home for the Aged BL Joseph's day, honoring the patron saint of the Little Bisters of the Poor was celebrated yesterday at the Home [for the Aged Becond wnd M streets northesst, with & dinner o the 200 in- | | mates of ‘the institution, The old peo- i ‘ph were waited on st table by the pa- Bons A Bevatomions of oo Bors doi | the dining heils and tables were bright | | with flowers sent by friends The altar of the chapel was decorsted | with roses wnd carnations from the | White House snd at both high wnd lo | missses special prayers were said for | Mrs Coulidge’s complete recovery L hewith, In the afternoon, 10 convert were confirmed and the day's eere- | monles clused with benediction 1101-1109 Raum burdle ied perfectly clean a hittle tonching up by The flat work and plain body clothe This service economical in every aves you hours of hard work, it s strength and energy, you want to use this feature, ur Everything-Ironed Bundle 12 a pound FEverything Ironed ideal for the Every large ironed by Only fancy hand. folded at only way. aves Try it this Shirts Hand Ironed wrap your shirts seperately Phone—OQOur Driver Will Call Members of the Laundryowners’ National Assoclation N.E. Lincoln We Also Call in Nearby Virginia death penalty | LANSINGNOTE CITED IN MUNITIONS ROW |Foes Attack Burton Plan to! Ban Arms Shipments to Warring Nations. if such shipments were denied mani- festly the application of this pcllcyl would result in every nation becoming an armed camp. Representative Fish, Republican, qu York, said he had spoken to Mr. sing ‘about the resolution and quuud the former head of the State Depart- | ment as saying that it would do no| harm to try out the Burton proposal. | Chairman Porter asked Robbins ul the fact that Germany supplied Spain with war munitions did not engender ill-feeling, but the Assistant Secretary said that he had been struck in the breast in Cuba with a German bullet | and that all he regretted was failure by the United States to buy as good | Warehouse Is Burned. STAUNTON, Va, March 20.—Esti- mating the fire loss at $17,000, about 90 per cent covered by insurance, Ernest E. Higgs, member of the firm of Higgs | & Young, whose warehouse was de- stroyed by fire Sunday, expressed an opinion that rebuilding operations will be started at once. Local firemen bat- tled the flames through snow and wind for hours to save nearby buildings. Be- ing outside of corporation limits, fire- men laid on 1800-foot hose to get water from north of Jefferson high- way DANDRUFF A Sure Way to End It There 15 one sure way that never | falls to remove dandruff completsy, | and that i to dissolve it. This cia. | troys it entirely. To do this, just! get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arvon: apply it at night when retiring; use enough to molsten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all of | bullets as those procured by Spain. Missionary Inspires Art. Correspondence of the Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO.__Eighty years ago | william Taylor, Baltimore gold rush missionary, paid $2.50 a pound for but- | ter and $500 a month rent—then wrote a book. Now murals based on his writ- | ings will ‘adorn a new hotel here. | your dandruff will be gone, and two |or three more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely destroy | every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You wili find. t00. that all itching and digging ‘of’ the sealp will stoo”inetantly. | and_your hair wil fluffy Instrons Xinsey sitky and sott. and look ‘and Tee) @ hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drue stors ‘and” four_ouncen in” all yo 'wiii need. This simple remedy nesse fails.— Advertisement The note written by Secretary Lan- sing to Austria-Hungary defending the right ot the United States to ship war ‘ munitions to the allied powers was brought up today at a House foreign | affairs committee hearing by opponents | A0S A stomachic—aids the flow of digestive juices; a carminative — expels gases. Ktcpl you fit! Your Physician Knows Same formula since 1824 Delicious in Grapefruit, etc. munition exports to belligerent na- | . ‘Assistant Secretary Robbins of the| Twelve countries in Eurdpe may now War Department said that in this com- | communicate with each other by tele- munication Mr. Lansing argued that phone. | 1319-1321 F Strest STETSON HATS March 20 Hours: 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. BORLRIANS Some Notable Bargains In Our Sale of The Fine Stock of Chas. Kaufman & Sons In purchasing their entire stock we had to assume their con- tracts for Spring suits, and among the assortments mentioned below you'll find the new models and patterns for the season that is close at hand ‘45 Two-Pants Suits = 50 - *55 - ‘60 Suits (Some With Two Pants) Necessary Alterations at Cost New Spring Topcoats, $24.50 English woolens in smart Spring patterns, designed with the modish raglan shoulders. Most shops would price these coats at $35 to $40. $6 and $7 Wool Knickers, $2.95 Bargains in Windbreakers $12.50 Values, $9.25 $16.50 Values, $12.25 $18.50 Values, $13.75 $60 - $65 Winter Overcoats, $25 Blanket and Terry Cloth Robes, $12.50 styles, $7.95; $10 styles, $6.95; $T50 styles, $445; & All Silk Lounging Robes ()no-’l’hird off $10 Clark Cigarette Lighters... . $4.75 $5.00 and $7.50 Wales Lighters.. $2.98 $1.00 substandard Holeproof Hose, full fashioned and seamless; all colors; 6 Golf Hose, values up to $5.00.....$1.65 50 Madras Union Suits.........8¢ Pajamas, up' to $7.50, plain- and fancy, 3 for $5.50, suit. . $1.95 $10.00 Imported all-wool Flannel Robes .... s G DT $2.00 and $2.60 Cut \llk Nm kwear. . 95¢ $1.50 Cut Silk Neckwear. .. .. ..6de¢ Good White Ilzuulkm'vhiofs. per (L7 R SRR e .. $1.65 $3.50 and $56.00 Silkallo Ties; full silk lined, perfect knotting, wear resisting cravat, Ultra in style, $1.85, 8 for. . $4