Evening Star Newspaper, March 20, 1928, Page 6

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THE EVEN G_STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1928, FEDERAL ,[,’Afi PROBE %Yale Freshmen Were Errand Boys VYRR S o Under 18th Century College Rules| members of an upper class without he- | Ing asked, and were compelled to allow | Roman Tea Hounds Rapped. thelr superiors to pass through any gate | Correspondencs of The Star. or door before them, and perfoim “rea- | ROME.—Tea-drinking “Johnni sonable” errands for the upper classmen. | their lady friends are out of § Set Hunt, who graduated in 1768, was | Fascist Italy, says Mario Carli, Fascist Training Table | For Debate Team Decreed by Coach By the AssoNated Press. MIDDLETOWN, Conn., March 20.—A training table for members of Wesleyan's debating squad has been arranged by Prof. Snow, debating conch. The experiment is to give mem- bers opportunity to discuss debate subjects rather than to maintain a balanced diet. Those squad mem- bers are required to take two meals daily at the table. w3 KAUFMAN 1005 Pa. Ave. 1724 Pa. Ave. Kindred, New York, Would Pro- vide Civil Engineers Appointed By the Associated Press. ulations established by authority for | the owner of the original set of rules. editor. by President for Inquiry. NEW HAVEN, Conn., March 20— lh; ‘Pgeu-rvltlun of decency and good I T T | order. UL i) An investigation Into the causes of | UPPer classmen of Yale were masters e all “comparatively recent disasters” and first year men were errand boys m;};"“mf,'v‘;'gézu";,‘dh";fiep bl R 1 Of Fine Used Cars caused by the breaking or faulty con- | pack in the 1700's, it is shown in the | freshmen were forbidden to wear their | | | AT PONT BARRON Radio Messages Describe | Trip Over Alaska Prepara- tory to Arctic Hop. WILKINS ARRIVES | | United States has been proposed by || . . : o | have been printed for private distri- | ident’s or professor’s house, or within Representative Kindred, Democrat, NeW | jition by the Yale University Press. | 10 rods of the person of the president, Home of “2-Pants™ Suits Charge Acc'ts Invited | By the Associated Press SEWARD, Alaska, March 20.—Ex- | ploration of the Arctic “blind spot” by Capt. George H. Wilkins was a step | | nearer today after completion of his | flight from Fairbanks to Point Barrow, | Alaska, first hop on a contemplated :mxht to Spitzbergen on the other side of the North Pole from Barrow An almost continuous radio communi- | cation kept the United States Signal |Corps here in touch with Wilkins | throughout his hazarcovs fight over 500 | miles of Arctic waste wom Fairbanks | vesterday. With Lieut. Carl Ben Eielson piloting the piane, Wilkins operated the short-wave radio. | The messages described the trip over | the high Endicott mountain range and over the barren tundra. Leaving Fair- banks at 11:25 a.m., the fivers were over the Endicott range at an altitude of struction_ of dams controlled by the |.yai preshman Laws.” coples of which | hats in the front door yard of the pres- T I Outstanding Values in Reconditioned Auto- mobiles of Popular Makes and Models— , COUPES, ROADSTERS, TOURING CARS. ETC Yorl The preamble of the laws, the orig- | 8 rods of the professor, and 5 rods of a * [his admission into Yale College is re- | quired to conform to the following reg- | rooms not completely dressed, play with intended to make public all the facls g = =g = _— IKREAREAEAEASAEASAEAEAEATAEL he George Tylerfan propaganda 1or | may be, from defective construction or National Theater. ational Th when you can effectually and safely espondence of The Star. Goldsmith threw his own personality |t~ ough school. i It tones up instead of tearing he Kindred measure would provide || The preamble of the lays, the ong: | § (o% | who would co-operate with five mem- | regarding dams and construction work ) i v = ! Key's Is the Key to Better Hygienic Conditions honest English literature on the Stage | ongineering, loss of life or property . ' years must elapse before pl b gt e i BOULDER, Colo. total of $125,000 with so much candor has often been | = ideas he himself has not fully grasped down the delicate membranes. It's & s beyond “Twinkle, Twinkle.” Last night's for intment_by the President of | i n"‘m',“?")"’n‘} “‘1“',‘:“_0“;"n‘""wm“:l’,"“‘;‘r:m‘; |sets forth that “every freshman after | They were also forbldden to wear AR - | gowns, carry canes, appear out of thelr bers of the House in the investigation. | A 1 | b Mr. Kindred said his resolution was | o S o Y w | controlled wholly or in part by the NATIONAL—"She Stoops to Conquer.™ o ornent in all cases “where there | again asserts itself with “She Stoops 10 | damage.” Yot donte figh 3 s at the | " . 4 want to fight germs Conquer” taking curtain calls at the P with tissue-destroying tablets, etc., Ms 3 Students Earn $125,000. of delightful quality once relegated to | ¢, “the classics” emerge from the glogm | e of pedagogic restraint into normal hli- |45 earned annually by 500 University of K man interest. This drama into which | Colorado students who work their way ! ey S o hit apon as a means of wearying the | & A t t P d patient teacher struggling to impart Don,t Be Skmn stringent rowaer and weaning no less the faithful pupil who has not gotten far in poetic taste e to BFOE MR skfetly SEDA FOP‘ Reg',ar Fe”ers A Spring Song in Spring Suits $29.75 $35—$40—$45—850 "For Stout Fellas A Spring Somg in Spring Suits For Long Fellows A Spring Somg in Spring Suits $29.75 $35—$40—8$4 1005 Penna Ave 1724 Penna, Ava’. 112,000 feet about 2 o'clock. Wilkins | messaged that it was “a bit cold up | here” ‘as they passed over the range Half an hour later they were over the tundra and into the usual fog at that titude. At 4:10 they passed through a bad storm.” and just 10 minutes later ! sighted Point Barrow From Point Barrow Wilkins plans to make his third attempt to learn if the | fabled Arctic continent really exists. He | plans a 2,100-mile fiight to Spitzbergen heading in & great semi-circle over hun- dreds of miles of unexplored regions. Two of Wilkins' previous attempts to ex- plore the region were unsuccessful be- cause of atmospheric conditions and | machine trouble | STREET IGHTS COST D..C. $1.24 PER CAPITA Maj. Covell Sends Report on City's Thoroughfares at Request of Toronto. Washington has 590 miles of streets, covering an area of 60 square miles, | that are lighted with 25.833 street lamps At a per capita cost of $1.24, based on a population of 552,000, according to in- formation sent to the city government | of Toronto yesterday by Maj. W. E. R. | Covell, senlor Assistant Engineer Com- missioner of the District. According to Maj. Covell's statement, | there are 15,390 electric and 10,443 gas lamps in the city streets maintained at a total cost of $682.185.56 a vear. The average yearly cost per mile is $1,56. | None of the information includes ‘l\.hu in public parks. which are ii- luminated by the Federal Government. | and subwaps, which are lighted at the | expense of the railroads AUTO DRIVER ARRESTED IN SEIZURE OF LIQUOR iPrlmner Claims He Was Hired as H Chauffeur—Furnishes Bond for Appearance. Arrested late last night as he drove up to a house in the vicinity of First | and P streets in a motor car lcaded with 192 quarts of corn whisky, accord- | ing to the police, Bernard McCoy, 24 years old, of 505 Twelfth street south- ! west, was charged with illegal possession |and transportation of intoxicating liquors. Acting on a tip received by the po- lee, Detective R. B. Carroll, Sergts. N. ©O. Holmes and O. R. Hunt and Patrol- {men J. P. Flaherty and J. S. Oliver | nabbed the driver as he brought his car to & stop. He denied ownership of the car and said he had been hired to drive it, the police said. He put up a $500 bond for his appearance Farrell Appointment Asked. Senators Dale and Greene of Ver- | mont urged President Coolidge today *o | appoint Patrick J. Farrell of Vermont, | at present chief counsel to the Inter- state Commerce Commission, to the audience was no assemblage of juvenile enthusiasts. It was a gathering eager to forgive the dull school master and take the poet, first hand. into its Leart. | ‘When public interest is aroused by a great work of writing, curiosity is in- evit v excited as to the personality of the To Oliver Goldsmith a witty fellow poet referred as: Dear Noll, Who wrote like an ang: talked like poor poll.’ Noll here reveals, perhaps inadvert- antly, a little of himself. Recruits from the old guard of the theater were rssembled to give culti- vated tasts and seasoned experience to the performance. Of course youth was in evidence, but it was the sort of youth that has 1 and ouse. Among them fe Carter shone effulgently. As M Hardea: the aristocrat who knows how to defend her dignity against ruthless attack, she succeeds in sound- ing & new note in her career. Witho the spotlight of “Zaza” or a “Du Barr she steps forward and scores by per- sonal quality alone the credit for a memorable impersonation Lyn Harding, whose repertory has ranged to historic heights, reaching that of a king himself, enacts the part of a squire who reflects the gentle genfality of Sir Roger de Coverly himself; with moments of whimsical perplexity that bring him into relationship with Pick- wickian recollections. A figure which always catche: tion irresistibly is that of Tony kit Glenn Hunter modernizes the role v giving it a certain graceful touch of elfin mischief, in contrast to the de- liberate heartlessness that has usually characterized the impersonatic Young Marlow is the character in which Goldsmith may be assumed to have written with a hint of auto- biography in describing contrast of a modest deference in artificial circum- stances and a reckless audacity under others. In conventional wooing he talked like “poor poll,” but in expressing serious feeling young Marlow rose to poetic warmth. The part is taken by Wilfred Seagram with fine and impres- sive contrast. His sccnes with Fay the girl who gives the pls had a charm which could be attained only by two players of skill and perception. One of those parts which would not ordinarily amount to much, that of the clumey but willing servitor “Diggory,” becon.’s brightly prominent because it ds of the pla is played by the favorite, O. P. Heggile. | A prologue as recited by Pauline Lord becomes & thing of beauty, and even the very minor role of young Mariow's father, who appears only at the conclu- sion of the piece, calls for a hand of welcoming_remembrance as Lawrence D'Orsay. Patricla delightfully girlish, Horace Braham is a gallant lovemaker, and. should recol- lection falter, others may be content with the chronicle which gives each and all credit for holding his own in excee | ingly good company. That the play was staged by Willlam Seymour accounts for the element of precision that con- tributed so much to its pleasure. This presentation of the old Gold- smith found hilarious greeting, as it afforded opportunity to restore what became for a while the task of a stu- | nctive comprehen- | sion of the best and permanent stand- | harmless to humans—so you need not hesitate to p a box of KEY'S ASTRINGENT POWDER handy by—ready for regular and emergency use. 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