Evening Star Newspaper, April 4, 1928, Page 12

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12 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1928 = VATICAN EXPLAINS POPE'S REPRIMAND Rebuke Meant No Interven- tion in State Affairs, | Says Paper. Br the Associated Press ROME, April 4 —The Observatore Romano, the Vatican organ. appeared with an explanation yesterday of the Pope’s recent address to the Roman diocesan board, in which the pontiff Lost Literature | 1 Best sellers of the vanished years I Tun across forevermore, as I go pawing through the tiers of volumes in the old | book store. To this old store they find their way, to stand forgotten, gray with | dust, when they have had their little day, been praised and roasted and dis- cussed. Here is Miss Braddon’s master: piece, the “Lady Audley’s Secret” | book, that once from Labrador to Greece the heart strings of the people | shook. I.can recall the .bygone time when this great VArn Was newly spun. | pers announce that Marshal Wu-Pei-Fu and Lady Audley's storied crime was has retired to a monastery in Thibet as | on the lips of every one. It was the theme of servant maids who gossiped when the sun went down, and shud- | dered in the growing shades, lest Aud- most of the high ley ghosts should hit the town. And ladics, too, of high degree, discussed it in the drawing room, and argued, as they sipped their tea, concerning Lady Audley's doom. And often in the vil i store I hear the graybeards thrash CHINESE MARSHAL REPORTED AS MONK Whu-Pei-Fu, National Leade: Against Uprising of 1922-24, Goes to Thibet. By the Associated Pross, PEKING, April 4 —Chinese newspa- | a bonze—a Buddhist monk. Wu-Pei-Fu, who “hinese decoration: was at one tim one manding figures in | more N China. Latterly he | W been pushed further and fui entitled to wear | ox- | By the Associated | CANTON, Chin ril 4. —A 14-year- old street urchin yesterday was credited with having saved Canton from further bloodshed through a Communist uprjs- |ing. He informed police that the reds were intending to precipitate an upris- | ing similar to that of last December, when they seized control of the city. | held it for & few days and were ousted with a large loss of life, T, police were shown 18 red strongholds. They arrested 463 Communists. .| Two hundred and thirty persons, in- he | cluding eight women, were executed. of the com- | The victims died gladly, saying that 10 | reds would rise up where one | shot down. Large quantities of communistic lit- erature were confiscated in the strong- %_ | holds along with grenades, arms and _Chinese Street Gamin Nips Re“d Uprising; 230 Executed as He Tips Police to Plot | Under the leadership of the youth, the downfall of the government and threat- ened to use the torch to precipitate trouble. ‘The government is uneasy and mar- ial law has been in effect for some time, but the loyalty of the troops is doubtful. The government asserted that Russians were active behind the scenes in pre- paring for the uprising. Quality Beyond Question When You Find You Special Dispatch to The Star, John Bowen to Take Wife, ROCKVILLE, Md., April Bowen, well known in District of Co-|to mai M yi Dave, lumbia boxing circles, visited Rockville Iwuhlfion,m iy P - yesterday afternoon and obtained from |19. 4.—John | the elerk of the Circuit Court a license |late= in the week. His age iz 21 and hers The wedding will take place here CUSHION SHOES Need Glasses age expressed views contrary to those held | S y ade them | : D o 3 ose held | it out: that Audley woman m her toward B Tt eoitn by the Fascist state on the education of vouth, and als» upbraided the Na- tional Catholic Center party for its failure to go to the Vatican to pay homage to the Holy Father on the oc- casion of its recent convention in Rome. The article, which is signed with the initials of Count Delle Torre. director of the paper, declared that the Popels “was confined solely to . and was in no wise and did not con- sore, and stirred their bile, without a | doubt. Then books were sometimes | hard to get, they were not printed b; the ton: and men were filled with wi regret who had to wait three weeks or one. The man who owned the Audley | book was one all delegates would seek: they'd borrow it, by hook or crook, for just a fortnight or a weck. It was wonder for a time, it held the gasping world in thrall; and here it stands, all gray with grime, Jorgotten now, by one inction. From 1908 | he gradually arose | to hold the highest military rank. He | was virtually a dic- | tator at Peking and | commanded several hundred _thousan troops _from 1 until 1924 In the latter| vear, when civil similar to those worn in the December | aprising by the Communists, were seized. The youth said he had learned of the | Communist plans from overhearing | varjous groups of them talking in the streets, The reds openly predicted the | in the vicinity of the Great Wall About that time the socalled “Christian general,” Feng Yu-Hsiang, -withdrew | Bring your oculist’s prescrip- tion to us for accuracy in fill- ing; moderate price and per- fection in fit. Our registered optometrist is at your service. his allegiance, then sent his own forces | \ Fiad Glassea and Cameres. war broke out be- against Wu, and Wu was forced to re- Wu-Pei-Fu tween the Chihli and Anfu-Fengtien factions, Marshal| tire to Tientsin. i s Wu was appointed commander-in-chief | Gradually Marshal Wu's troops for- | Human Artificial Eyes of the national expeditionary forces and | sook him and lately he had been living '~ | off.oflakinIne. assumed personal charge of the fighting | in retirement. Optometrists Opticlans gt . nf i % P ———— e P ] s srowwrerssives. S s S SRR R | o, A IEALSE VS AP AR 2 ree! s will of 36 Years at the Same Address % /| and all. And I would recommend it still to those who love a first rate tale: if they desire an old time thrill, the Audley story will not fail. WALT MASON. 1028 tion the affairs of | /§ Agente for Zeies \ i an organ explained that on ‘ the question of the education of Italian | vouth, the Pope spoke in the name of stian_parents What the Pontff wished to point out added the Osservatore Romano, was that there remained misapprehension of the church's task, a problem which could be solved by rly defining the ficlds of action of church and the Insure Your Feet ~They Deserve Protection Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes have softness and resil- fency to protect every part of the foot. And this comfort is gained without odd shapes, bulges or unsight- liness. G The secret is in the soft lambswool inner cushion, the arch suEport and the combination last—buil# sn- side the smart lines of the shoe and wholly invisible. G The lambs- wool inner sole is a self-shaping cushion that upholds the foot and aids every muscle. It keeps out heat and cold, too. G People-who wear Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes say they are “like walking on velvet.” They make good feet feel better. O St)%e ... good wear . . . perf%ct comfort . . . Surely, the combination is appealing! Command Squadron Cavalry at Fort Myer. Washington's Leading Florist Maj. Thoburn K. Brown, U. S. Cav- alry, instructor of the Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kans, has been as- signed to the command of the 2d Squadron of the 3d Cavalry at Fort Myer, Va. effective June 15, as the relief of Maj. Berkeley T. Merchant, U. S. Cavalry, who is to take a course of instruction at the Army War Col- lege, Washington Barracks. Maj Brown is from Tennessee and Wwas | graduated from the U, 8. Military Academy in June, 1913. Gas “Delivery System Unmercelied” MR 3 BRANCHES 678 C Sts SW S™4FladeNE [ ROKBOTTON PRICES _/ 5021 Ga Ave NW Lt Gal, 10, Bas So Much Mother Amazed “My 10-year-old daughter had no appetite. Then we gave her Vinol, and now she eats so much we are surprised.”"—Mrs. W, Joosten. Vinol is a delicious compound of | cod liver peptone, iron, etc. The | very FIRST bottle often adds sev- - | eral pounds weight to thin children B O O N irrial npsesment | o adlults. ~Nervous, easily tired, was nullified by the and that | anemic people are surprised how Dr. Hundley actually died intestate. 1 finol gives mew pep, sound sleep | Brown contends that the will was|and a BIG appetite. Tastes deli- For Easter - - - Choice Lilies and blooming potted plants to bring a touch of col- orful Spring into the home. Let us have your order early and avoid disappointment. with virile op- said when he re- of the Catholic rtly before the Pope's horitative interpreta- uation has been given $600.000 ESTATE FIGHT T0 GO TO HIGH COURT Morton E. Hundley's Widow Gets Verdict in Mar- tinsville, Va. MARTINSVILLE. Va., April 4. —A suit over the $600.000 estate of Dr. Mor- | ton E. Hundley, which was heard here Monday, will be submitted to the Su- preme Court, attorneys have indicated Judge Turner Clement, after a lengthy hearing, held that Dr. Hundley died in- testate and that his widow. Mrs. Mary | Black Hundley, formerly of Spartans- burg. S. C.. is to the estate. | Dr. Hundley died in St. Moritz, Swit- gerland. while on his hon:ymoon last December. When his widow returned to the United States with the body ske brought a 26-word will, exccuted the | night before her marriage. in which her husband left one-third of the estate to her and two-thirds to Rives S. Brown, gifl 7 Dr. 35 ZZ Flowers and floral dec- orations for all occasions —formal or informal. & e Free Parking for Gude's Downtown Store Patrons—Fireproof e—Rel ble Attendant—One-Minute 1318 G Street City Club Bldg. FURNITURE CO., 827-829 7th ST. N.W. for Your Convenience 1102 Conn. Ave. Main 1102 Three Stores 1212 F St. N.W. Main 427 3103 14th St. N.W. Col. 3103 Telegroph Delivery Association valid and that Dr. Hundley, prior to his | cious.—Peoples Drug Stores. | Yinol marriage, had sold part of the estate to him. The estate was bequeathed to Hundley at the time of his second wife's death. Ten attorneys are appearing in the case. 1; decision in which is not expected with T. Members of Fiorists' Our Dollar Days have becqmo real events in Washington. People have come to realize that they may secure honest- to-goodness values in fine furniture at prices that are unusuaily low and only have to make an immediate outlay of $1.! at the time of purchase, the balance to be paid in convenient terms over a period of months. READ THE BARGAINS!! $1.00 puts any article or suite in your home. 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