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Over the Coffee Cup ik Florida and California people will approve the thirteen- month calendar, providing the extra month is added to their winter season, ~Clermont (Fla.) Press. Add an extra month of summer to your cal- endar right here in Washington. Drink Wil- kins Coffee and the most cheerless winter day will brighten, DEAD? Formerly Main 500 LEETH BROS. Open Daily Sunday P\ SAM.-11P.M. SAM.-5P.M. DAVENPORT TERRACE (4800 Block Connecticut Avenue) A two-room, kitchen and bath apartment/on beautiful Connecti- cut Ave. at $60 monthly is in itself unusual. Add to this free electric refrigeration, high eleva- tion and spacious lawns, and you can understand why but five of the eighty-five apartments of this type are available. “The apartments with the big kitchens.” Wardman Managemcnt . Cleveland 1912 SPECIAL NOTICES. CHESTNUT FARMS DAIRY, NOTICE OF REDEMPTION. To the Holders of Preferred Stock of Chestout Farms Dalry, Inc, IS HEREBY GIVEN that Chest- Dairy, Inc., & Delaware corpora- tion, pursuant to the provisions of its cer- tificate of incorporation, as amended, Wi Tedeem on March 15, 1920, at the price of o hundred and ten doliars (3110.00) per share, plus ail accrued and unpaid divi- gends; the entire outstanding preferred stock cot mpany. Accordingly, on_March 15, 1929, there will become and be due and pavable to #tockholder of record, upon surrender certificate or _certificates at the office , Paris & Cor . 831 15th St. . as! n. D. & g0, of ne B and ten doilars (3 unpaid_dividends accrued M‘}; ..&h( mz&d-hlre held by every er of record. m and after March 18, 1929, dividends on said preferred stock will cease to acerue all “rights_ with respect thereto shall cease and determine, except only the rights of, the holders to receive redemptic Drie red wiack Wil e close ref s E-’ ‘business on March 11, 1929, and will not Teopened. the Board of Directors: By order of the Bos R Dated February 12, 1929. _£e12.19.36mh§ u; »t- ST 10tk s onv. and P nsible for debts Tantracy bersonally. | LOUIS M. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOOK- Polcers of Francke & Lustick, Inc., will be eld on PFriday, March 15, at the com- , for _the pur- and for other 42 Vof Turnitive golng to Richmond, Ve, Priday. _Fr. 7246. HAVE DUMPING GROUND ON CONCRETE FlehRay "Jist bevond Rishway Bridge in YVirginia, to accommodate 33,000 yards of sirt. HEDGES & MIDDLETON, 1413 Eve st. Pranklin 9 o ME ARE N Dinding and mprovementy. 1o u and jmprov S0er Nome.. Cash oF terms.” Rellable builder. Phone Ada! 12% dams 2 1 OT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS contracted by any one except myself. B.J. BURNS, 113 Ky. ave. s.e. 14 ARE YOU MOVING ELSEW transportation tem fleet of va BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS iracied By ‘any one. except mysell a( 5 FARRY ROSENTHAL, i1 R st. n.e. Aok, 1L | to be furnished for that purpose. Mr. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO: HOOVER OVERSEAS AIDES WILL DINE More Than 600 Expected at Banquet of Relief Work- ers March 3. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. ments are complete for the great unofficial pre-inaugural lovefeast to be held in Washington on the night of Sunday, March 3, in honor of Her- bert Hoover. It will be the fifth annual reunion dinner of the “Hoover Over- seas and War Service tions, 1914-1924.” The scene will be_ the banqueting hall of the Wardman Park Hotel. Between 600 and 700 guests will be present—a small percentage of those who have swamped the dinner committee with applications for places, all of which long since were allotted. The President-elect will not take part in the dinner itself, but will “drop in” during its progress and address a few friendly words to the men who were his co-workers in Europe and the United States during the historic dec- ade following the outbreak of the World War. The seven war-time and post-war agencies which comprise the “Hoover Overseas and War Service Organiza- tions” are the American Relief Admin- the Commission for Relief in Belgium, the European Technical Advisers, the United States Food Administration, the United States Grain Corporation and the United States Sugar Equalization Board. The “A. R. A. Assoclation” is the constituent body around which the Hoover associates rally. It has 4,000 members. “A. R. A" stands for American Relief Administration. Organ- |ized in 1925, it was the last of the BATTERY | war organizations built up to carry on the vast operations of the reconstruc- tion period in Europe. Purpose Explained. The immediate purpose of the “A. R. A. Assoclation,” in words used by Herbert Hoover at its initial meeting in New istration, the European Children’s Fund, | D. .C, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12’, 1929. |LIMA, BASKING IN GLORY OF ROMANTIC PAST, President Leguia Is Friendly to All, but Firm if Iron Hand Is Needed. HISTORICAL LIGHTS LURE American, Formerly Dixie Educator, Director of Peruvian Schools. 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 glary written by Rez 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. Modern Lima basks in the glory of her romantic past. Reverently she clings to old mem- ories, while keeping step with the pace of an advancing civilization. The capital of Peru boasts of many fine buildings of present-day construc- tion, but sentiment leads her to house the President of the republic in a 400-year-old palace in which the con- quistadore, Pizarro, was assassinated. The quaint streets of the aged city are congested with late model auto- mobiles of American manufacture, but Lima chooses to transport the President | and other high dignitaries in barouches, used long ago by Spanish viceroys. One of these curious conveyances, drawn by four spirited horses and man- ned by driver and footman in striking; uniforms, carried President-elect Hoover from the American embassy to the York, was to minister to the relief of 200,000,000 starving people living to the east of the old western front”” Mr. Hoover went on to explain that during the negotiations which led to the sur- render of Germany, in late October and early November, 1918, recurring state- ments by President Wilson indicated “the solicitude of the American people to bring distress in enemy countries to an end.” In the armistice terms there was & provision that food supplies were Hoover disclosed to his co-workers that the provision was introduced by the United States at his instance. The American Relief Administration was brought into being to give it effect. ‘The present board of officers of the “A. R. A. Association” consists of George Barr Baker, president; John P. Gregg, vice president, and J. E. Sey- kora, secretary -treasurer. The board of managers includes some of Presi- dent-elect Hoover's closest friends, such as Edgar Rickard, now with him in Florida; former Gov. J. P. Goodrich of Indiana, Gen. Willlam N. Haskell, Dr. Alonzo E. Taylor, Dr. Vernon Kellogg, Van Arsdale Turner, Julius H. Barnes, James A. Logan, jr, and John R. Ellingston. The R. A. Association” is nowa- days kept active by the more or less younger members, but nobody has ever devoted more enthusiasm to its work and meetings than “the chief” himself. The members hold one dinner a year and issue bulletins at such times as the spirit moves. Each bulleton cover is adorned with an old-fashioned map in- dicative of the various parts of the world in which at one time or another Hoover and his people functioned as almoners. They stretch all the way from Siberia to Morocco and from Fin- land to Egypt. Members Eventually Report. ition” are lost sight of for con- siderable periods, but eventually they report again. They range from such dig- nified, wealthy and influential men in the country as R. Fulton Cutting to fine fellows who hold modest jobs some- where. are Protestant ministers, Roman Catholic priests and Jews who ‘worked amicably side by side in Russia, ¥ | and who have not noticed that differ- rom | ence in the method of worship of one God makes people less miserable when m good has gone and the water is There's bound to be great fun in Wfihflntfi:n on the night of March 3 when Hooverians go through one of their fondest customs—the passing of the “A. R. A. Assoclation’s” loving cup. filled with ginger ale. It goes each yes * to the man who out the bes. case as to the distance he has tre seled to be present. It is a large tin afrair, which Prank Page, son of the late Ambassador Walter Hines Page, bought for a quarter and presented to the organization. cup once was won by & man who had journeyed through what he called the “Circumlo- cution Office,” meaning the State De- partment, across to the Metropolitan ? OUR | Club, where the dinner was held, and then up and down all the mysterious & . | staircases of the club. Once it was won by Father Edmund A. Walsh of George- town University, who had traveled all the way from Russia. Another time it went to a young man who had come back from Persia just in time to be present. Each year the winner, at his own cost, places a copper-plate on the g: cup bearing his name. P 1920, s said_preferred stock of the co be_closed _from the close of b oo otruary ig. 1058, ness on_Febru , 1929, Te1azng - H. M. KEYSER, PAPERHANGING—ROOMS, 36 UP; NEW 1929 samples; painting, pisstering and elec- st reasonable prices. ‘LOORS Feraped, e o }‘ LOORS ‘hand or machi ork. R. B. NASH, FLOOR SERVICE, Columbia 11, ROOF_REPAIRING. Painting Guttering, uting. REASONABLE gm A AJAX Roofing Co. ath ST. N.W. Nort’r?’%fldf: Day or Night. ¢ trical _work o Col._3588. 13" To haul Londs 87 Torniture to or from 08 York, Phila. Boston, Richmond and points south Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., !‘ILYOH 8t. North 3343. " Furniture Repairing Upholstering, Chair Caneing 3 shops—same location for 21 vears, which assures reliability and low price. Clay A. Armstrong Drop Postal 1235 10th 8t. N.W. Gl Franiin 7483 Planned and Executed —with fine discrimination and skill. Thats N. C. P. Print- ing. The National Capital Press 12101212 D St. N.W.__Phone Main 650. Send for us whle"n “’g fi'b‘.‘f :0" Wrons. PR & Haoitie O 119 3rd 8t. 8 Company Main 933 CHURCH_ANNOUNCEMENT. EPISCOPAL. “WASHINGTON CATHEDRAL WISCONSIN AVENUE N.W. NEAR WOOD- LEY ROAD. E_AND_SERMON, PREACHER, THE DEAK, EVENING PRAYER... B TAKE WISCONSIN AVENUE CARS ~_WOODILEY ROAD BUS LINE. killed - | his mother, Mrs. Mary Doyle, 73, with “|an ax, in (Copyright, 1920.) RADIO LITIGATION SUIT DECLARATION AMENDED Plaintiffs Would Enjoin Corpora- tion From Alleged Discrimination in Sales of Specified Equipment. By the Associated Press. ‘WILMINGTON, Del., February 12— ‘The plaintiffs in the suit of DeForest and others against the Radio Corpora- tion of America amended their bill of complaint in Federal Court here yester- day s0 as to confine it to the appucation tion for a permanent injunction re- straining the defendant from selling radiotrons and radio tubes for receiv- ing sets for amplification t&xrpolu to certain buyers and asking that the door be opened to all. The hearing may continue all of this week. Judge Hugh M. Morris is sitting. ‘The suit as originally brought charg- ed violation of section 3 of the Clayton act, alleging the existence of a license agreement in restraint of trade and violation of the Sherman anti-trust act. A motion for a preliminary injunc- tion was granted heretofore by Judge Morris. ‘This was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, clause 9, relating to li- cense ments, being held as in vio- lation of the Clayton act. The case was taken to the Supreme Court of the United Staes on a petition of certio- rari, which was denied on January 3. Today the plaintiffs came back to the United States Circuit Court here on an amended bill, which leaves out the tion of violation of the Sher- man and wailves accounting, prof- its and damages, confining ftself to the application for a permanent in- junction. e SLAYS MOTHER WITH AX. BOSTON, February 12 (#).—James F. Doyle, 28 years old, yesterday their Dorchester home. police, summoned by neighbors, he sald, “She has been putting poison in f¢ trying to kill others.” The police are convinced he is men- tally unbalanced. Sometimes members of the “A. R. A. | Associaf Pizarro Palace for the preliminary re- ception by President Legula. The historic palace, with its charm- ing patio of tropical shrubbery, wind- ing walks and fountains; its high stuc- coed walls of white, and its imposing reception halls, balirooms and_living rooms, was built by Francisco Pizarro when he founded the city of Lima in 1535. In it his adventurous career came to a dramatic and bloody end at the hands of treacherous soldiers. The old building had suffered from quake and fire, necessitating reconstruc- tion at intervals, but many of the original walls remained. Cavalrymen Escort Party. Cavalrymen escorted the Hoover car- riage to a great porte cochere, from which a specially carpeted hallway led deep into the palace to the ornately gilded and &‘i’"“fi“ reception room, overlooking patio. - The corridors were lined with palace guards in colorful uniforms, and the big reception room was filled to capacity with government officials, diplomats and invited guests. At one end of the room was & dais with a “throne chair” of carved mahogany, and around the walls were hung rare paintings, dipicting out- standing events of Peruvian history. " President Leguia, a short, spare man distinguished by keen eyes, a white moustache and a friendly countenance, walked onto the dais from a side door just & moment or two before Mr. and Mrs. Hoover entered. Full of activity, he shook hands rapidly with a dozen friends around him, conversing both in Spanish and English as he greeted various of the guests. A trumpeter heralded the entrance of the Hoover party, and President Leguia stepped down from the platform and B e S his . luc- tions were made in & most informal ashion, President Leguia chatting pleasantly for a few minutes in perfect English and displaying manners quite democratic. Defied Captors in 1909 Revolt. Senor Leguia could be autocratic when the occasion required, however. Conspirators who had sought his life during a previous term of office, in 1909, learned that those kindly features could grow desperately firm when danger threatens. The President, during the 1909 revolution, was overpowered by an armed mob, paraded through the streets of Lima to Inquisition Square and threatened with immediate death unless he resigned. It is not characteristic of Leguia to resign under duress, and he defied his captors to do their worst. His defiance inspired his loyal soldlers to rush to the rescue and the conspirators ‘were put to flight. President Leguia returned to the American embassy with the President- elect and had luncheon there with Am- bassador Moore. The luncheon was private and informal. Before leaving President Leguia personally invited Mr. and Mrs. Hoover to be his guests at a state dinner in the palace that evening. Following the luncheon, the Hoovers received the mayor and other municipal officials of Lima, and accepted their in- vitation to make a sightseeing tour of the city by automobile. Later in the afternoon, members of the American colony were received at the embassy. Sightseers Keep Busy. Time did not permit Mr. and Mrs. Hoover to make the intensive sight- seeing round they had hoped to, but others of their party were afforded an opportunity to visit the venerable ca- thedral where lie the mummified bones of Pizarro; the Inca Museum, the Uni- versity of San Marcos, oldest of Amer- a:an colleges, and other points of in- FORGES AHEAD AS MODERN CITY AND KEEPS PACE WITH CIVILIZATION, HOOVER PARTY FINDS President Legula of Peru and President-elect Hoover riding to the American embassy in Lima for luncheon. The open carriage was a relic of the days of the Spanish vice royalty. casket. Beside the casket rested a jar in which the Spaniard’s vital organs were preserved in alcohol. It was learned that Pizarro's body soon was to be removed to a special crypt being erected for it at the President’s palace. ‘The dark, musty interior of the old church was awe-inspiring. Along both sides of the building were alcoves con- taining famous shrines, behind locked iron gates, and supporting the vaulted roof were gigantic columns covered with gold leaf. Old tapestries, paintings and other religious works of art bedecked the walls. In the Museum of Natural History was _the finest collection of Inca and pre-Inca relics in the world. There were well preserved mummies, strange sarcophagi, and priceless ex- amples of Inca art in gold, silver and clay. A rug more than 2,000 years old was pointed out as mute evidence of a civilization that existed on the g];:’ffirn continent before the time of ‘The sightseeing included a tour of some of Lima’s modern boulevards, one of which, the Avenida Wilson, is a memorial to America’s World War President. Woodrow Wilson is one of Peru’s heroes, it appears. One Peru- vian explained that his nation felt that Wilson had been a “good friend” of Peru during the Tacna-Arica con- troversy. While Mr. and Mrs. Hoover were lunching with President Leguia at the embassy the remainder of their party were being entertained royally by the government at a luncheon in sylvan sur- roundings at the Zoological Gardens. There were several hundred official guests in the big pavillon-cafe, which had been garishly decorated for the function. On a stage at one end a program of Spanish and Peruvian dances was given. Music was fur- nished by a native orchestra, several members of which gave special num- bers with weird Peruvian flutes said to have been made from human bones. The musical ~profnm included several American jazz selections and a medley le) xl(;lk songs, from “Swanee River” to “Dixie.” The lavish luncheon ended with a | series of fervent toasts, with the entire company on its feet and glasses poised (Copyright by The Evening Star, 1929.) CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ‘TODAY. Emma Sanford Shelton W. C. T. U. will meet at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Joseph Phillips, 3823 New Eamp- shire avenue. ‘Washington section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers will meet at the Cosmos Club at 8 o'clock. W. H. Reichard will speak on “Auto- matic Train Control.” Holy Name Guild will meet at 8 o'clock with Mrs. P. J. Haltigan. W. S. Martin will speak. February meeting of the Sunday School Institute of the Department of Religious Education of the Diocese of Washington will be held in St. John's Parish Hall at 8 o'clock. Brightwood Rebekah Lodge will hold a heart social at 8:30 in the I. 0. O. F. ‘Temple. International relations group, Ameri- can Association of University Women, will honor Wolf von Dewall at din: at 7 o’clock at the clubhouse. Dewall will on “Germany’s Rela- tion to the League of Nations.” Soclety of Philosophical Inquiry meet at National Museum at o'clock. Card party. 1,000 Club of Nativity will 4:45 Church, at 8:30 o'clock at 6000 Georgla | avenue. Morris Sharnoff _will speak on “Women of Soviet Russia” before the Center Forum, Jewish Community Cen- ter, at 8:30 o'clock. FUTURE. Areme Chapter, O. E. S, will give a Valentine dance and card party tomor- row night at Wardman Park Hotel. The Arkansas State Soclety of the District will entertain at a dance and bridge party at the Lafayette Hotel Friday evening at 9 o'clock. ladles’ section of the Concord Cl’\lx‘gzwm ive a Valentine dance at 314 C :treeg at 9 p.m. Thursday. jonal Press Club will hold a dixt‘x:g-dnm in the auditorium of the club Thursday night from 9 to 1 o'clock. ‘The kly meeting of the Rotary Club ofw#lsglnkwn will be held Wed- nesday at 12:30 pm. at the Willard Hotel. A, W. Harrington will address the student branch of the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers on Wed- evening at_7:30 o'clock at ashington University. rican University Park ' Citizens’ MA:ehmn will meet in Hurst Hall, ‘American University, Massachusetts and Nebraska avenues, tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Soclety of Natives of the District of rest. English-speaking government officers to the party in their wanderings about the city. One of these hosts not only spoke English, but used a dialect peculiar to the Southern part of the United States. He was Dr. John K. Breedin, native of Charleston, 8. C, and erstwhile Dixie educator, but now director of education for Peru. ‘While guilding his guests about the city, Dr. Breedin told an interesting story of educational progress in Peru. He had introduced American methods of instruction in the schools with marked success, and education now was recelving careful attention from the| government and Congress. School at- tendance was compulsory, but lack of classrool enforcement of the law, he said. Great, strides were being made in school con- struction, however. Dr. Breedin report- d direct to President Leguia every week and enjoyed the full confidence of the latter. ¢ This confidence, incidentally, had been exhibited a few days previous in connection with an unpleasant congres- sional incident, it was disclosed. A To | Church’s Musty Interior Inspires Awe. legislator, for some unexplained reason, made a speech denouncing the policy of “bringing outsiders into Peru to help run the government.” Dr. Breedin was not named, but he presumed the shaft was aimed at him, so he at once sub- mitted his resignation to the President. The latter refused to accept it, and the legislator who had made the veiled at- tack issued a statement explaining that he had not had Dr. Breedin in mind when he made his speech. From other sources it was learned that the inci- dent probably grew out of the fact that Dr. Breedin had displaced a Peruvian, whose feelings were assuaged by the continuance of his name on the state pay roll at regular salary, although his dutles were performed by the American educator. Dr. Breedin piloted his guests first to the hoary cathedral and- conducted them to the crypt near the doorway where the gruesome remains of Pizarro l Re will be m accommodations precluded | Twentieth and B streets, Friday evening ill meet Friday night at 8 53}&"&'.'“;“ A, Emery will talk on George Washington. Phil Sheridan Post, G. Priday_afternoon at 2 G. A, R. Hall. Monthly meeting of the Mira Day Nursery tion, vAvfildrl:e”hzldylt the Hotel Hamilton morrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. ub of Washington will give a V-figntfn: party Thursday evening at o'clock in the McCoy Inc., to- { the Madrillon, 7:30 o’clock. Dinner wilk be followed by dancing. le Outing Club card party 2 m';: the Blue Triangle Hut, at 8 o'clock. man's Interdenominational Mis- | .siovx;':ry Federation meets at Mount Mef Episcopal Xlexru‘::g sl:l\:tc!: Massachusetts avenue ] O nth street, Friday afternoon at 2 | o'clock, : ‘The t Noble Grands Club will meet wle,d.:udny evening in the dining room of I. O. O. F. Temple. ——————— 3 land, is P ring & oSOy o scheme that wil inotuds 30,000 acres. FROM A MARMON OWNER “I am completely sold on my Marmon’s _ performance and you are to be congratulated on your Service Dept.” Edw. J. H. Carothers, Mgr., Airway, Inc, 202 Ins. Bldg. . A Straight Eight Marmon at $1,645 del'd, Fully Equipped . MARMON MOTORS, INC. 1727 Conn. Ave. N.W. lay on public view in a glass-paneled A R., will meet | REVOLT HITS VENEZUELA Cedeno Leads Attempt Overthrow Administration. HAVANA, February 12 (#).—The newspaper Excelsior-Pais yesterday sald that Gen. Arevalo Cedeno has pro- claimed an armed revolt against the ad- ministration of President Juan Vicente Gomez in Venezuela. He is said to be Gen. to |leading about 500 troops from Llanos de Casanare toward the capital. The newspaper quotes Francisco Laguado Jayme, representative of Cedeno in Havana, as saying that this is the general's second armed attempt to overthrow Gomez. Jayme received a cable yesterday containing the code sig- nal which declared the revolt begun. Miguel Araia, Venezuelan Minister here, sald he had received no news of n outbreak in his country. 1927 Ford Roadstes 1927 Ford Tud 1926 Ford Cou; 1926 Tudor _Sed: 1926 Ford Tourin, 1925 Ford Fordo! HILL & TIBBITTS Open Sun and Evenings 301 Fourteenth St. 1 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. Valet Service H. L. RUST COMPANY 1001 15th St. N.W. Main 8100 Alio spoonful rile. Mllwlut.J.en:n the head. .l;rl:c u’p exe cessive secretion. Soothes inflamma. tion and soreness. You'll find Mistol at all drugstores. Buy a bottle today. MADE BY THE MAKERS OF NUIOL ICHARLES E. HUGHES 10 AID FUND DRIVE Will Radio Address February 22 in Behalf of Washing- ton Memorial. Charles Evans Hughes will deliver a' radio address Friday evening, February 122, in the interest of the George Wash- inglon Memorial Association’s appeal for additional funds to complete the memorial edifice already begun here. | Mr. Hughes will speak over a Nation- wide hook-up from the New York | studio of the National Broadcasting Co. | at 7:30 p.m. About $7,000,000 is needed, according to Mrs. Henry Dimock, president of the association, for completion of the proj- ect. The site was donated by Congress and the foundation has been completed. ‘The main auditorium of the memorial will seat up to 14,000, and will be used not only for patriotic gatherings, but will also be available for conventions of all kinds, officers of the association de- clared. y Under present plans, there will be 18 number of other halls in the memorial, seating from 500 to 2,500, and these also will be utilized for meet- ings of either local or out-of-town |groups. It is also planned to have a| | restaurant. | _The 200 rooms into which the inter- | ior of the edifice is to be divided will! be used as trophy and exhibit rooms, | and also to house records of the Army | the Navy, patriotic organizations and | by (he States of the Union. | The assoclation, in order to afford | every citizen an opportunity to partici- | pate and have their name placed in the permanent archives of the memorial a: 2 donor, announces acceptance of sub: scriptions as low as a dollar. The Riggs National Bank is the repository. Among the recent finds in the grave- yard adjoining the ancient Abbey Church of Sempringham, England, was part of a Sax ASTHMA CAUSE | DISCOVERED Free Booklet Mailed on Request Indianapolis—Those who suffe asthma and hay fever will be learn tha last science has suc- | ceeded in discovering the basic cause of these two stubborn maladies. self. Fortunately for all who suffer from these diseases a way has also been found o overcome this basic cause in the in- dividusl instead of merely treating the jurface symptoms, as has been done in For full information write for impor- | tant booklist on the discovery of the ¢ause who will write to e ate Company. 126 8. Meridian Street, apolis, Ind.—Advertisement. This soft is sereened into stove and egx sizes over our electric sereen- machines. If you can mse soft coal. you will be delighted with this coal. John P. Agnew & Co. 728 14th St. Main 3068 A Magnificent New Detached Brick Home 3827 Cathedral Ave. BUILT BY WENGER BROS. At one of the highest points of the city, on paved street, between the Cathedral and beautiful Wes- ley Heights. Wonderfully deco- rated throughout; six bedrooms and three baths; General Electric refrigerator and oil burner; lovely big rooms and reception lhnm on first floor, Two-car built- Large lot. Fine Teasonable price. scross Wis- 6 on Cathe- Open Daily, 2 Until Dark Boss & Phelps MITKSt. Realtors ' Main 9300 Will Rogers NEW YORK CITY.—That Hoover is a mighty human guy, at that. Just yesterday he went away out of his way to encourage some old fellow, 82 years old, that had been working for years on some sort of a scheme he wanted to get patented, and didn't know how. It was to make synthetic rubber boots out of nothing but just soil and oxygen from a real estate sales talk. With Hoover’s influence, chances are he will get it patented. (Shows you what a pull will do in this country.) And Hoover wears rubber boots in fishing. Seems Henry Ford and Firestone dug this old crank up somewhere. They wear rubber boots, too. INJURED IN WRECK. Chicago Business Man Hurt in Train Collision in Germany. LANDSBERG, Germany, February 12 (#).—Albert Zollner, Chicago business man, was in a hospital here today with both legs broken and injuries to his head following a collision last night of a Berlin-Stuttgart express with a Ber- lin-Munich passenger train. His doctors said his life was not in danger, but added that their patient was greatly worried over loss of his hand baggage with a passport and other parsonal papers. [ “We Challenge Comparison” of these Room Homes with Garage 8.950 EASY PAYMENTS Just like rent Exhibit Home 5104 5th St. N.W. Open Every Day Till 9 PM. D. J. Dunigan, Inc. 1319 N. Y. Ave. National Phone for Auto 1267 to inspect Zollner has a wife and family living 2t 1407 Jarvis avenue, Chicago. 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" Where the New Model ABC, Which Sells for $3'75-00 —completely installed, with a 275-gallon storage tank in basement, is on This Oil Burner, manufactured by ome of the oldest manufacturers of Oil Burners in the country, is destined to lead the industry. The price is within reach of every home owner. “ABC reputation speaks for itself.” Factory Branch - Open . Evenings. Telephone Main 10455