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The Automobile Show should be suppressed. We were perfectly happy until we went to it the other evening but now the old car looks so bad to us that the winter is practically ruined, 2 You'll be satisfied with Wilkins Coffee no matter how many other brands you see or try. C CARS Model A Ford Roadster, khaki top, new-car guarantee Also_other Ford passenger and commereial cars of all models. HILL & TIBBITTS Open Sundays and Evenings 301 Fourteenth St. | S STEAK flavorful when GULDENS ‘ Mustard ‘ Own Your Own | HOME Six fine rooms, three big porches—airy, light - cellar— tiled bath, plenty of closets— good yard and a GARAGE. On Easy Payments Just Like Rent *8950 Exhibit Home 5024 5th St. N.W. Open Until 9 P.M. Every Day D. J. Dunigan, Inc. 1319 N. Y. Ave. National Phone for Auto 1267 to inspect SPECIAL NOTICES. THE ANNUAL MEETING_OF THE STOCK- holders of the Eastern Building and Loan Assoctation will be held at the office of the association, No. 336 Pa. ave. southeast, ‘Washington. D. C.. on Wednesday, February 6, 1929, between the hours of 2 and 7 o'clock p:m., for the election of officers and directors for the ensuing year and for the transaction of such business as may properly come be- Zore the meeting, WM. N. PAYNE. JR.. 8 Y. FLOORS SCRAPED. CLEANED. FINISHED: hand or machine work. R. E. NASH, FLOOR BERVICE. Columbia 2i1. BUIL ATERIALS htubs and brick from recently wrecked big frame Govt. build- ings now at our 3 yards! Good flooring, 11 foot; sheathing and framing. 2c: plenty 2x8, 2x8." 2x10, sash, doors, windows complete: Dlumbing ' fixtures, radiators, pipe: other items lowest prices! Large selectl HECHINGER CO.. 5921 Ga. ave. n. HECHINGER CO.. 6th and C st . HECHINGER CO., 5th and Fl 4 DRIAUNE and plastering. . Sol W, ne and plastering. Ca 4 bbins, Col. 3588, e oon Vg VANT TO HAUL FULL_OR PART_LOAD to or from New 'York, Richmond. Boston. Pittcburgh and all way ‘points: special rates NATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN., INC., N.Y. ave. Main 1460. Local moving also HIGH-CLASS SECURITY, PROVIDING monthly " income: - purchase and del through prominent national bank. many onl _request to Box_251-Z. Star office. B WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by any one other than my- self. HERBERT O. WHEELER. ___622 Gallatin St. N.W._7° ARE YOU MOVING ELSEWHERE? OUR ransporiation system Will serve you better. rge fleet of vans constantly operating bel iween all Eastern cities. Call Main 9230, DAVIDSON TRANSFER_& STORAGE_CO. ROOF _REPAIRING. Paintine Guttering. Spouting. REASONABLE PRICES. AJAX Roofing Co. 2038 _18th ST. N.W. North 5314, Day or Night. _ GEO. A. SIMONDS & CO., PLANT NO. 2 SUCCESSORS T HODGES BINDERY, 1011 E ST. N.W., Aze Now Located at 930 H St. N.W., THE PRINTCRAFT BUILDING. PHONE MAIN 1393 V/ANTED. ‘To haul van loads of furniture to or from ¥ew York, Phila.. Boston, Richmond and Boints south_ . Smith’s Transfer & Storage C 1313 You St._ _North_3343. Furniture Repairing Upholstering, Chair Caneing | 3 shops—same location for 21| years, which assures reliability| snd low price. Clay A. Armstrong Drop Postal 1235 lfl'lh S_E, N.W. Call Franklin 7483 For Estimates_and Samples. Send for us when the roof goes Wrong. Repairs our specialty. Roofing Company Planned and Executed —with fine discrimination and Print- skill. That's N. C. P. ing. iThe National Capital Press 21041211 D St. NW. Phone Main 650. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTOX, 7. ¢, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7. 1929.° {ROW ON RELIGION BELIEVED ENDED Heflin’s Demand for Show- | down on Church Flag May Finish Controversy. BY FREDERIC WILL}AM WILE. When the United States Senate on| February 5 declined to haul down the| church pennant from its traditional place on American ships of war, it took action, politicians say, of vastly farther- reaching importance than the incident itself. ‘They are persuaded that the 68 to 10 vote by which the Heflin amendment to the cruiser bill was re- jected has in all probability put an end to religious controversy on the Senate floor for a long time to come. It is a consummation that has been devoutly wished for for many months. For the first time since he inaugurated his systematic anti-Catholic crusade two years ago—at the time of the Mexican and Nicaraguan troubles—the senior Senator from Alabama ventured to risk a roll-call. He deliberately and spe- cifically asked for a vote against “the Roman Catholic flag.” Had he confined his demands to “the church pennant,” its official title, the Alabaman might not have precipitated the kind of debate he evoked and the rebuke that ensued. But he chose to drag in references to “the Pope’s crown” and other things that his colleagues interpreted as anti-Cathoiic. The result was a crushing vote againsé any tampering with the flag practice. Even the Navy Department’s readiness to fiy the church pennant elsewhere proved of no effect. Flown Under Signal Orders. ‘The church pennant flown above the Stars and Stripes on American warships while divine service is in progress aboard them is, of course, in no sense a Roman Catholic flag. It is a simple white pen- nant on which is super-imposed a simple Latin cross in blue. The general order providing for its display is contained in the Navy's signal book and reads as follows: “The church pennant will be hoisted immediately above the ensign at the peak or flagstaff at the time of commencing, and kept hoisted during the continuance of, divine service on | of the Navy.” In all probability, this writer is| authoritatively informed, the custom of | {using the church pennant was derived from the British naval service, which is responsible for many of our sea- service customs. The British fly, and| have flown since time immemorial, a church pennant during church serfice abroadship. Their flag consists of a pennant with a Greek (St. George's) cross next to the staff, and three stripes, making the pennant a red, white and blue fiag. The first reference to a chuyrch pen- nant in our Navy is found in the “al- lowance list” of the Navy in 1844. In 1844 there is a record of a commodore who was going to sea making formal requisition for “one church pennant.” The French book of flags, dated 1858, showed a cut of the American church' | pennant, which is the one still in use.| Naval records indicate that the pen-| nant has been “regulation” since at| |least 1850—or for roundly 80 years— | but most authorities agree it has been {in vogue virtually since the organiza- | tion of the Navy itself. Chief Chaplain Approves. About the time Senator Heflin first |aired his views regarding the church | pennant nine or ten month ago, Capt. ! ‘Cunis Hoyt Dickens, chief chaplain of | | the Navy. addressed the following letter | |to the head of a national patriotic | | organization in New England: “Of course, we occasionally hear of | people who criticize the hoisting of the | church pennant above the Stars and | | Stripes. But, as a matter of fact, it has a powerful inspiration back of it, {and especially to us of the Navy, who | are ever fighting for it or constantly | preparing to figat for that flag, which | we all love. “The church pennant is flown as a {simple and willing admission on our part of the supremacy of God and of his Son, Jesus Christ, over all of the temporalities of this life. ‘Wherever this flag is seen placed above the Stars jand Stripes, it is an evidence to those | who see it that the worship of Almighty | God is in progress. “Naturally. the Navy is perhaps more jealous of the history, traditions and | sacredness of our national ensign than any one else; for too many of our ship- mates have paid the great sacrifice in its protection, and we certainly do not| feel that its value has been lessened. | Rather has it been heightened by the display of our simple acknowledge- ment of the supremacy of God in the affairs of men.” (Copyright, 1929.) . ACID HURLER ATTACKS Narcotic Ring Member or Young | Man Who Threatened Daughter | Blamed by Detectives for Act. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, February 7.—Be- lieving that a member of a narcotic ring lor a young man acquaintance of his | daughter may have been responsible, Federal and city detectives today sought | an acid thrower who attacked Joseph L. Green, 40, a customs official, while | he slept. Green, field chief of customs in- spectors and guards at the Port of Philadelphia and noted for his prosecu- tions of smuggling cases, remained in a hospital, his face, neck and chest| seared with acid. Physicians feared for | his eyesight. Green was attacked early Wednesday when he was asleep at his home. Mrs. Green and two daughters, who were in adjoining rooms, did not hear the in- truder, who escaped by a rear door aft- | er taking several hundred dollars’ worth of jewelry. 5 A young man acquaintance of Miss Catherine Green is alleged to have threatened to disfigure her with acid when told their friendship must cease. This caused Green and his daughter to exchange rooms. Announcement There are a few apartments | now available in Davenport Terrace 4800 Block Conn. Ave. The only apartments in Wash- P 1 room, kit., bath... $45.00 2 rooms, kit., bath... 60.00 The above prices include Frigidaire. “THE APARTMENTS WITH THE . "BIG KITCHENS." Wardman Management Cleveland 1912 | J. L. Dennis, stepped down and shook { for which they would be tried by, King U.S. CUSTOMS OFFICER | | glass.” | lance is ever wakeful, our vengeance is ington with a yard. | 3 rooms, kit., bath... 80.00 || Land-Lubbers Are Sentenced for Innumerable “Crimes” by Royal Marine Monarch. CORRESPONDENTS VICTIMS Summons Tell of Dire Punish-j ment to Be Meted Out to Offending Hundreds. Note—Greater light and clearer perspective on Herbert Hoover's trip to South America, in which untold diplomatic advantages were recorded for the United States, are to be gained from_the_interesting story written by Rex Collier, The Star's own representative on the trip, which began January 20. The story, with all its intimate details, will continue in The Star until completed. BY REX COLLIER. Thanksgiving day found the U. S. S. Maryland ploughing through the cooler waters of the Humboldt current and within a day's run of the equator. A Thanksgiving at sea is something to remember, under ordinary circum- stances, but the observance of the holi- day on the Maryland was marked by an evert that made the day doubly interesting to all on board. The customary Thanksgiving religious services on the quarterdeck had been cut short by a shower, and all hands were reveling in an old-fashioned tur- key dinner when notice came that there would be a general muster on the quar- terdeck in the early afternoon. Mys- tery shrouded the announcement, espe- cially in view of the fact that all mem- bers of the good will mission were in- cluded in the ‘“summons.” At the appointed hour everybody assembled on the deck as instructed, a space being kept clear in the center of the crowd for a “mystery” speaker, said to be on his way. Hoover Greeted as Shellback. Suddenly there was a confusion of noises forward, as of bugles blowing and men shouting. Presently there burst through the ranks of the sailors a horde of black-faced hoodlums in fanciful police costumes, led by that swashbuckling buccaneer of the briny deep, Davy Jones, in person. ‘The fierce-looking emissary of King Neptune mounted a capstan, doffed his skull-branded hat, and bowing low to the President-elect and his wife, saluted them as ‘“veteran shellbacks” deserv- ing of homage “second only to that due his majesty King Neptune himself.” Turning to Capt. Kimberly, the pirate chieftain said: “On this voyage you carry guests whom his majesty has numbered for 30 years among his faithful shelibacks. Fourteen times one of their number has entered the royal domain, thus win- ning highest position among mortal shellbacks. His majesty felicitates Shellback Hoover as a potentate almost equal to himself. “Also, his majesty’s exalted consort, Queen Amphritite, deigns to welcome | the gracious lady who herself has ven- | tured so often and so gallantly into the sacred domain.” With these words Davy Jones, other- wise known as Chief Boatswain's Mate hands with Mr. and Mrs. Hoover, both of whom were enjoying the proceedings immensely. . Davy then unpacked a big bundle of “subpocnas,” charging each member of the good-will party with dire “crimes,” Neptune in person as the ship crossed the line on the following dr;)" Mr. and Mrs. Hoover, of course, were ex- empted from the court proceedings. Text of Summons, Each summons was headed, “Greet- ing and beware,” and stated, in part: . Whereas the good ship Maryland, bofind southward for Guayaquil, Ecua- dor, is about to enter our domain; and the aforesaid ship carries a large and slimy cargo of landlubbers, beech- combers, gutter rats, sea lawyers, lounge lizards, parlor dunnigans, plow de- serters, park bench warmers, chicken chasers, hay tossers, chit signers, sand crabs, fourflushers, cross-word puzzle bugs and all other living creatures of the land, of which low scum you are a member, having never appeared before us; and “Whereas the Royal Court of the Raging Main will be convened by us on board the good ship'Maryland on the first day of December, 1928, at longitude 81° 47’ west and longitude 0°, and an inspection of our royal high roster shows it is high time the sad and wan- dering nautical soul of that much- abused body of yours appear before the high tribunal of Neptune; now, there- ore, “Be it known that we hereby sum- mon and command you to appear before the royal high court and our august presence on the aforesaid date at such time as may best suit our pleasure, and to accept most heartily- and in good grace the pains and penalties of the awful tortures that will be inflicted upon you.” The charges then were enumerated. They were of varying degrees of “grav- ity.” Allan Hoover was charged with “attempting to burn the tonsils of his father’s secretary with a magnifying His father’s secretary, George Akerson, was accused of “interfering with King Neptune's messenger service by waylaying a dolphin at Cape San Lucas.” Miss Fesler, seeretary to Mrs. Hoover, was charged with “flirting with King Neptune.” Six of the corre- spondents were arraigned for the same offense—"defying all sea-going tradi- tions by going to sea with a silk hat and a-complete morning outfit"—and b King Neptune welcoming COURT OF KING NEPTUNE ADDS ZEST TO HOOVER'S THANKSGIVING OBSERVANCE AS “POLLYWOGS™ GET INITIATED ON BATTLESHIP CROSSING EQUATOR Shellback” Hoover to his “raging domain” on the occasion of his majesty's visit to the U. S. S. Maryland December 1 last. The documents were signed by Davy Jones and Neptunus Rex. Words cannot do justice to the scenes that took place on the forecastle of the good will battleship the next day. Those who had doubted that King Neptune meant business when he spoke of “awful tortures to be inflicted” on groveling landlubbers were destined to be dis- illustrated. King Neptune and his rowdy retinue know no restrictions and bow to no superiors on a battleship. The presence of so many civilians spurred them to even greater efforts. King Neptune has a particular aversion to civilians, and especially if they happen to be newspaper men. Unable to escape his majesty's wrath, early on the morning of December 1 six correspondents presented themselves on the quarterdeck in formal morning coats, striped trousers and silk hats and were marched to the forecastle to meet their fate. The fore part of the ship had been transformed overnight into a nightmarish rendezvous for Nep- | tune’s fantastically dressed mob of at- tendants and subjects. A “throne” had been constructed in the bow upon a canvas-covered platform, to one side of which was an ominous-looking tank built of boards and lined with tarpaulin. The high hat boys found that they were to act as honorary pallbearers for a Marine lieutenant who had been laid out in a “casket,” borne by six polly- wog sailors. The casket was to be carried in a long procession that was to open the ceremonies of the day. It was noted that other members of the mission had been seclected as “victims,” also. Allan Hoover, son of the Presi- dent-elect and Mrs. Hoover, had been routed from his room, taken to the fore- castle and placed in a wooden stock, consisting of a heavy plank, through which projected his head and hands. Others had been handcuffed and smeared with black grease. Honor Guests View Proceedings. President-elect and Mrs. Hoover took seats on the quarterdeck and the parade around the ship began. When the weird procession had completed its rounds King Neptune and Davy Jones escorted Mr. and Mrs. Hoover to the “throne” and the cruel rites began. The cringing neophytes were ap- prehended in all parts of the ship by howling gangs of “royal policemen,” armed with long clubs made of cloth stuffed with sawdust, and, on being turned over to the court, were smeared from head to feet with black grease and paint, stripped of portions of their clothing, beaten with the cloth clubs, made to drink of a bitter potion con- cocted by the “royal bootlegger,” sub- jected to an electric “operation for ap- pendicitis,” smeared some more over face and hair, forced to kneel on an electric plate to kiss the toe of the “royal baby,” and, finally, dumped backward on a collapsible bench into the grimy tank of water. In the tank, shoulder-high in water, were half a dozen blackened wretches, who took great glee in dousing the gasping victims each time they came up for air. Getting out of the tank was an ordeal in itself, for two burly shell- backs lay in wait at the edge of the tank to “paddywhack” the panting pollywogs as they climbed over the side. That was not all. Once out of the tank the initiate had to run a gantlet of club-swinging “royal cops,” and last of all, to dash through a stream of water spurted under pressure through a large fire hose. Seven hundred members of the crew, all but a handful of the ship's officers and every member of the good-will party, with the exception of Mr. and Mrs. Hoover, Ambassador Fletcher and Miss Fesler were forced to submit to Neptune's ‘“displeasure.” It was an ordeal that, happily, comes once in a lifetime. Minor casualties were numer- ous, and some of the victims were days getting vestiges of the paint from their heads. Take “Medicine” Without Complaint. Every one took his “medicine” with- out complaint, however, eager to win that most coveted of all diplomas—the elaborate certificate attesting that the bearer is a full-fledged shellback, for- ever afterward immune from equatorial inquisition. The certificates given the initiates on the cruise of the battleship Maryland they were ordered to appear at general muster on the quarterdeck the next morning dressed in full morning regalia. Disobedience Meant Reprisal. “Disobey this summons,” the sub- poenas concluded, “under pain of our swift and terrible displeasure. Our vigi- t_and REG.US PAT.OFF. | Gettingwell after“Flu” | The child that’s had “flu” deserves | your special care afterwards to pro- | mote complete return to good health. Continue to use Mistol in the nose and throat until all sign of sensitive. ness is gone. Mistol promotes quick | healing. Reduces irritated mem- | branes. Makes the child more com- | fortable. Use the dropper in the pack- i age. Buy a bottle of Mistol today. Connecticut Avenue Apartments of Distinction in Washington’s most exclusive building Seven and nine rooms and three baths with enclosed porches. Each apartment has a servant’s room and bath. Your Inspection Invited. H. L. RUST COMPANY 1001 15th St. N.W. N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N MADE BY THE MAKERS OF NUJOL TIL1L 21T I 11721 I 272711 A 111 1A T 1170177 were extraordinarily official, for they bore the signatures not only of King Neptune and Davy Jones, but of the “greatest of mortal shellbacks,” Herbert Hoover. ‘Thus did the good ship Maryland, bound on an historic mission of good will, cross the rim of the earth and set its course toward the other half of the swestern world, where seasons are rsed, where romance and life and colar abound and where good-will ships from the north are lamentably few. (Copsright, 1920, by The Evening Star.) Will Rogers NEW YORK CITY.—People that had a doubt about that peace treaty amounting to much can rest more assured now. ‘They voted the cruisers. Heflin found a cross on one of the flags that is used in the Navy. He wants to make it null and void to have anything to do with any flag that Betsy Ross was not the ar- chitect. He has traced the hem- stitching on this one right to the Vatican. Tom will be wanting to abolish boule- vards that make direct right-angle crossings (claim- ing that it was some sort of papal sign) and make ’em cross each other slantwise. P. S—Grundy is bringing the new tariff bill down for the boys to sign. MODERNIZE Your Home by the EBERLY PLAN LET US ADD AN EXTRA ROOM TO YOUR HOME THE attic, which is generally used for storing old furniture, etc., ¢ useful, liveable room. You will be agreeably sur- prised at the attractive a; we can “add to your home.” Let us give you an estimate, and have the your guests arrive for the Inauguration. Regard- less of the size of the job— NO READY CASH IS REQUIRED —convenient monthly payments arranged. LOCAL firm in business in Washington for nearly 80 years—and at the SAME address. Phone for our representative to call A.EBERLYS SONS 718 Seventh Street, N.W. COURT PROCEDURE REVISION IS URGED, Judge Says Century-Old| Legal Methods Should Be Changed. Dy the Associated Press. \ | Unless lawyers revise the century-old | legal procedure in this country, it is the opinion of Federal Judge Edward J. Henning of the Southern district of California that the American business men will do it for them. The judge; | expressed this view today in submitting | |a report to the Department of Justice on his observations on European court procedure. The jurist said that while “marvelous | progress” has been made in manufac- | turing, trade, industry and commerce, | American courts today continued | to operate substantially under the same | rules and procedure existing a century | ago. The courts need to get into step | with the rest of American civilization, he contended. American courts, he declared, have many phases of superiority over Euro- | pean courts, but the English criminal jury trials and criminal appeals are handled more efficiently. He said he regarded the American jury system as the outstanding feature of American | jurisprudence, and that the longer he | dealt with courts and juries the higher | respect he had for the verdict of a jury. The outstanding flaws in our jury stem, or rather the outstanding phases which bring about criticism,” he con- tinued, “are not the fault of the jury system itself. The fault lies in the first instance with the judges, and in the second instance with the statutes and rules govering the operation of the courts, particularly in the States. The remedy lles not in doing away with the jury system, but in getting at the faults.” In England, he said, the judges have unlimited tenure of offices and are shifted from one jurisdiction to another. The reason for this, he explained, was the theory that a judge, holding the position for life, was not interested in anything having to do_with litigation except justice, and at he could func- tion best when a stranger to litigants, jurors and bar. The most striking thing observed on his trip, Judge Henning said, was that trial by jury had been completely abolished in Germany. At trials in that country, he said, a senior judge presides, usually accompanied by one or two junior judges and by two lay judges. Ethics of the German system, he added, require that the lawyer have no contact or interview with witnesses to be called by either side. The witness is permitted to tell his own story and hen the presiding judge sums it up briefly for the court records, no record being kept while the witness is narrat- ing his story. GETS $18,500 VERDICT. Conductor Wins Suit Against Street Railway Company. RAID CASE CONTINUED; $2,000 BOND IS FIXED Alleged Owner of Property Raided Last Month Faces U. S. Commissioner. Alleged to be the owner of premises at 1438 Parkwood place, where police | are said to have found an assortment | of imported liquors in a recent raid, David Tavan appeared before United | States Commissioner Needham C. Turnage today, charged with violating the tariff act of 1922. The establishment was raided Janu- ary 31 by police, who are alleged to have discovered a quantity of intoxi- cating beverages. At the time of the raid the building was unoccupied and ‘Tavan was later arrested as the owner. He was released following his appear- | ance at the commissioner’s office under | 52,000 bond, as the” hearing was con- tinued until February, 14. The section of the tariff act under which Tavan is charged covers non-pay- ment of duties on importations and is seldom invoked. Farmer 105 Years 01d Dies. LOS ANGELES, February 7 (#.— George Griffey, 105-year-old farmer, died here last night. Griffey took Horace Greeley's advice 60 yeal ago, but the call of the soil delayed M. He was 98 when he reached the West Coast. The laws of nature have no police- men, but how you suffer if you break fhem, says the Atchison Globe. WILLARD SALES & SERVICE AN N Don’t Worry If your window shades are made of 2\ iy A8 &l I\ Ry Factory Pri 839 13th St. Save You Money $5.00 Value 98¢ @ONTINE ~ The WASHABLE WINDOW SHADE Rain won't hurt them—nor does sun fade thelr beauty. Ask for estimates. Factory made. N. Main 3324-3325 W. STOKES SAMMONS, Proprietor $5.00 Value 98¢ ONE OF THESE MARVELOUS FRENCH PARFUMS True Black Jasmine OR Genuine French Narcissus AND ONE $1.00 BOX OF FAMOUS COURRIER D’AIR Face Powder THIS COUPON IS WORTH ONLY 98¢ to regular $1 box Luther L. Russell, 906 K street south cast, a conductor ro;dthe Capital Trace tion Co., was awarded a verdict for $18,500 damages late yesterday after- | noon by a jury in Circuit Division 1| before Justice Stafford against the ‘Washington Railway & Electric Co. for injuries sustained by him when cars of the company were in collision at North Capitol street and Massachusetts ave- nue October 20, 1925. Russell claimed a car of the defend- ant company was negligently operated ! so that it passed over a crosstrack lead | and crashed into the car on which he | was the conductor. Attorneys Julius | C. Martin and Claude A. Thompson ap- peared for the conductor, while the de- fendant company was represented by Attorney Roger J. 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