Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SUBURBAN NEWS.” THE EVENING ST R.” WASHINGTON. D. €. SATURDAY, MARCH g, 1920. SUBURBAN NEWW ‘;Stop That Cough . | Quick! | Famous Prescription Has A Double Action | The phenomenal success of a famous doctor’s pagacription called | Thoxine is due to iis double action. It immediately soothes the irritation | and goes direct to the internal cause not reached by patent medicines and ups. The very first swallow relieves even the most obsti- nate cough. ‘Thoxine contains no chloroform, dope or other dangerous drugs. Safe and pieasant for the whole family. Alzo excellent. for sore throat. Quick relief or your money back. 35c. 60c, and $1.00, All druggists.—Advertise- ment, T —— SAVE MONEY ON STORAGE S MITH'S A L FIRE - PROOF L T % ¥ Y U AGENTS ALLIED VAN LINES LONG DISTANCE MOVERS CRATE AND PACK BY EXPERTS 33y ST. PHONE NORTH 3343 | IDRY CONVICTIONS SHOW Blc INCREASE 1,717 in Virginia Found Guilty in 1918 and 15,297 Last Year. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., March 2.—Convic- tions for violations of the prohibition {laws in Virginia increased from 1,717 in 1918 to 15,297 in 1928, it is shown by figures contained in a letter written by Gov. Harry F. Byrd to J. M. Doran of the Federal Bureau of Prohibition. Convictions for prohibition violations have shown a yearly increase since 1918, with the single exception of the year 1920. Prosecutions for prohibition climbed from 2,400 in 1918 to 20,005 in 1928. Sentences Show Gain. Commitments to jail for other of- fenses as well as violation of the pro- hibition laws numbered 21,631 in 1918, as compared to 39,254 in 1928. Com- mitments to the penitentiary for all offenses increased from 452 in 1918 to 1.036 in 1928. Prohibition commit- ments to the penitentiary were 6 in 11921, the first year for such a case, as | compared to 86 in 1928. The complete data furnished by Gov. Byrd are as follows: PARADE PLANS MADE. Arlington to Have Hundred March- ers, Besides Mounted Units. CLARENDON, Va., March 2 (Spe- cial).—A dozen horsemen, a drum and bugle corps, an official automobile and at_least 100 marchers will constitute Arlington County's contribution to the ! inaugural parade, it was announced to- /day by Edgar W. Pumphrey of the Re- publican Club. Pumphrey said that the permit was issued to the Republican Club and League of Republican Women. The music is to be provided by the drum and bugle corps of the Arlington Post, American Legion. While the permit was issued to the two Republican or- ganizations it is planned to make it an entirely Arlington County contingent. JURY DISAGREES IN“LABELLE” SUT 9 to 3 Against Painting as Da Vinci, Reported Standing After 14-Hour Debate. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 2.-Unable to decide whether the painting, “La Belle Ferronniere,” owned by Mrs. Andree TOWN DROPS PLAN FOR INGORPORATION College Park Group With- draws Request After Meet- ing of Leaders. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md.. March 2 day was officially informed that all e forts on the part of a group of eivic leaders of College Park to have that community incorporated during the present session of the Legislature have been abandoned. In a letter from Prof. S. S. Steinberg | of the University of Maryland the Sena- tor was informed that decision to aban- don the incorporation efforts was reached at a conference between two proponents of the project, two oppo- nents, a representative of College Park Corporation and of College Heights. Prof. Steinberg stated that in decid- ing to abandon the fight for incorpora- tlon the proponents expressed an in- tention to inaugurate a campaign to in- form the population of the advantages of incorporation. Those who attended the meeting were | Prof. Steinberg and Dr. F. B. Bom- berger, proponents; Elmore Powers and W. K. Durnbaugh, opponents; Byrd, representing College Park Cor- poration, an edjoining subdivision, and —State Senator Lansdale G. Sasscer to- | | menf | Preller, ! [0 ARE ARRESTED IN DOPE INQUIRY Trail From China to Balti- more Believed Found. Doctors Involved. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, March 2.--Federal agents here believe they have discovered | the end of a dope trail that has con- | nected Baltimore and China. Further investigation of the effects | of Joseph J. Preller, arrested with five | other men and four women and the ac- | cumulation of data on Preller’s al leged activities, led them to this be- | lief. His operations, they said, had been traced to British Columbia and the: claimed to have unearthed enough in- formation to show that morphone ship- ts from the Orient moved through British Columbia to Quebec, thence to New York by boat and to Baltimore by ! motor and rail. Of the 10 arrested, threc were releas- ed and the remaining seven. including | were arraigned before United | States Commissioner Supplee, Preller’s bail was set at $15.000. ! The Federal authorities are now in- vestigating two physicians who, agents say, have sold morphine to hundreds in Baltimore. “A leys. | Africa Mrs. Lidde: looked hard at his the Lidderleys, Tonges “I didn't know M old cl Cape,” (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) RS Marshalt, rt of a woman was she?” “She was a little thing.” absently on the detective, word,” wasn't she wiry!" There was relief in Marshalt's sigh poster. derley you mean. her out.” | “Did you get her address—where she was staying? ho am I that T should take the address of a soused lady ger, his eyebrows rist “Mr. Marshalt, d— the other. There are so many cases | tell you, Tonger>” ped on the door. There was no an He knocked more loudly and when a voice spoke apparently car. ‘Who is that?" He looked around in bewildemq There was nobody within 20 him, and yet the volce— And he saw the small grating let inf stone pillar of the doorway and @ solution to the mystery. Behind t! grating was a lflud-!pe:yk!nl telepho I am Capt. Richard Shanron frd Scotland yard, and 1 want to to Mr. Malpas,” he said, addresing invisible instrument “Well, you can't!” snarled the vol and there was a faint click. Dick tapped again, but though d for five minutes no voice sp trom the pillar, and the do ed his pressure. There must E v to get in touch with this ma and his first act was to search t telephone directory. The name of Mal pas. however, did not occur as 8. Tey dent of Portman square, and he we ack to his flat a little baffled. ‘T day, however, had not been unprafit ablv spent. He had met the Ragge! Princess—ragged no longer—and Kkne: where she was o be found. Dick Shan! non was resolved that she should b found. and found as often as he could in common decency call. By Edgar Wallace THE RA PRINC Copyright, 1925, GGE ESS by Chicago Daily News {vou have a peculiar objection to caba- | ret singers.” | Lacy Marshalt paced up and down the big drawing room, his hands behind him, his chin on his breast. The whole thing is nexplicable to " he said, taking the news with greater calmness than Dick had ex- pected, “and 1 can only imagine that at some remote period 1 have done Malpas an injury_beyond forgiveness. Why don't you call and see him, Capt. ’ A . Shannon?” he asked, and added quick- little woman® She was an_im- | Shan 5 , = Probably she knew the Lidder- (I¥: “It is nerve on my part to make heard from South | Sugrestions to you! But I'm curious to | oan O ere i Fie | have this gentleman identified ! sorvant. ~You knew | | Bt Dick Shannon had aiready made P {up his min a e would see the | “ | mysterfous Mr. Malpas and the sug-| To Be ""‘“"“.‘"“ ‘Tomorrow.) gestion was unnecessary. | Tonger was waiting in the hall when | Lynchburg Woman Dies. CHBURG, Va., March 2 (8 came out and opened the front | for him. LY! “Is anybody to be pinched?” he asked | cial) —Mrs. Mary Jane Davis, 75 ye pleasantly. “We've got a cook we could of age, widow of L. B. Davis, died ves.| ldo without. Come one day and try terday at her home. She s survive ® her pies!” by a son and a daughter. Dick went out into Portman Square chuckling, He strolled along to the door of the next house and looked up |at the blank window. This was not his first visit to the residence of the CHAPTER XVI. LIDDERLEY!" slowly. said “What Tonger's were fixed ‘But, my eyes ‘The last time Tidderley. The | hap married after we left the | " sald Tonger, “if it's Julius Lid= | 1o Anyway, 1 pushed | door ' asked Ton No, Lacy- n vou!" flamed “How many times am I to Junipr League “Promoted.” CHBURG. Va.. March 2 (Spe he Junior Welfare ° o League, B. Shipley, representing C | against them, it was said, that several| “It slipped out,” said the other un- | ' $3.25 Chester : $3.00 Wilmington AND RETURN Sundays, March 10, 24 SPECIAL TRAIN een.. T30 AM. N Philadelphia Broad 740 PM.. West Philadelphia 745 P.M. ' Chester 805 PM. Wilpmgton 825 PM. Similar Excursions April 3. 21 Pennsylvania Railroad st f COARANTEE D 1007 pURE iR OIL [PENNSYLVAN| 0 Fill up with Autocrat. Maintain the oil level, but. don’t drain again for 1,000 miles—a thousand of the finest miles you ever drove. Nothing is more important than thorough lubrication. AUTOCRAT—THE OIL THAT IS Commitments to jail—21,631 in 1918, 24,394 in 1919, 20,353 in 1920, 27,248 in 31,411 in 1922, 26,506 i 3 5 in 1924, 31,957 in 1925, 32,075 926, 32,770 in 1927, and 39,254 in 1921, 28, Cemmitments Listed. Commitments to penitentiary-—452 in 1918, 569 in 1919, no figures shown for 1920, 856 in 1921, 1,039 in 1922, 684 in 1923, 616 in 1924 (a nine-month | period), 899 in 1925, 890 in 1926, 883 {in 1927, 1,036 in 1928. Commitments to penitentiary for pro- | hibition violations—No figures shown for 1918, 1919 or 1920; in 1921, 6; in | 1522 and 1923, 44; no figures shown for 1924: in 1925, 113; in 1926, 111; in 1927, 101; in 1928, 86. Prosecutions for violations of prohi- bition—2,400 in 1918, 3.136 in 1919, 2,328 in 1920, 4,271 in 1821, 6,814 in | 33 in 1923, 8,637 in 1924, 9.485 | 15,871 in 1926, 17,209 in 1927 | 05 in 1928. ictions for prohibition viola- | tions: 1,717 in 1918, 2,435 in 1919, 1,492 | in 1920, 3,184 in 1921, 3,129 in 192; 5438 in 1923, 6,278 in 1924, 7,207 in | 1925, 12,017 in 1926, 13,102 in 1927 15,297 in 1928. e WORK TO BE STARTED ON OVERHEAD BRIDGE State Roads Inspector to Complete{l DIFFERENT FROM ALL OTHERS Beware of Substitutes, Bayerson Oil Works Columbia 5228 Arrangements at Hyattsville Monday for Layout. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 2. 1,000 positions open in Hotels, Clubs, Apartments, Institutions, Schools, Col- leges. Rooms, ~ Reéstaurants and (o] el América’s third largest in- Age is no obstacle. ast ex- s unnecessary. school ~ with _specialized he i id mana- lars today of phenomenal nd big salaries earned by hun- Lewis-trained men and wo ster mow ~for Midwinter Classe: School ei.iwl'vsx-ah,bu.lrzol‘a:on P.M. TRAINING SCHOOLS Penna. Ave. at 25rd Street Get_ b b dreds of Initial steps in the building of the overhead bridge across the gnllrmd tracks at Hyattsville will be taken Mon- day, when Inspector William E. Amick of the local office of the State Roads Commission will complete arrangements for commencement of the layout work by the contractor Tuesday. This layout work and the task of get- ting equipment on the location will re- quire about 30 days, according to of- ficials of the G. B. Mullin Co., Inc., tv.f;;:lic‘:}x last week was awarded the con- ct. Inspector Amick has been assigned to the project by District Engineer E. G. Duncan, and will devote his entire time to the undertaking. The contract calls for the completion of the viaduct within a year, DR. H. J. DEUEL RESIGNS AS U. OF M. PROFESSOR Teacher of Physiology at Medical School Will Go to Southern California. Special Dispatch to The Star. iat 3:13 yesterday afternoon. | Hahn, was the work of Leonardo da | Vinei ‘or a copy, a Supreme Court jury that had been debating the question for 14 hours and 17 minuter reported a| disagreement at 5:30 o'clock this morn- ing and was released. Mrs. Hahn sued Sir Joseph Duveen, British art expert, for $500,000, con- tending that he committed slander of title when in 1920 he said her painting was not a genuine Da Vinci. This state- ment, she alleged, prevented sale of the | painting to the Kansas City Art Insti- tute for $250,000. The jurymen said that at the time they reported a disagreement the vote | stood nine to three in favor of the de- fendant. . ) Burden of Proof Defined. Justice Black in his charge pointed out it was essential for the jury to de- termine whether or not the Hahn painting was genuine and that the burden of proving this rested on the plaintiff. He also declared that if Sir | Joseph's statement was false, the jury| must believe it was made with malicious | intent. The case was given to the jury The jury, which for four weeks had been hearing testimony in the case, re- turned several times for instruction. At 3:30 o'clock it reported inability to reach an agreement, but was asked by Justice Black to deliberate a while longer, as the trial had cost the county more than $10,000. °8. Lawrence Miller, counsel for Mrs. Hahn, had a 400-to-1 bet that the jury would find in favor of his client. While the jury was deliberating he overheard ! a bystander offer 500 to 1 that the ver- dict would be against Mrs. Hahn. He produced a $1 bill and offered to take the bet. The bystander then found he had only $400 and the bet was made at those odds. Testimony at Variance. During the trial an imposing army of art experts gave opinions on the origin of the picture. Some testified that the work was undoubtedly by Da Vinci, while others had been just as certain that it was nothing more than a copy. On the stand Sir Joseph was frank in his characterization of Mrs. Hahn's painting. He said the mouth of “La Belle” was “flat as a pancake”; that her hair was “mud” and that the eye- brows grew “out of paint, not out of flesh as they do in real life.” On the other hand, Vadin Chernoff, Russian artist, testified that in his opinfon the Hahn painting was a genuine Da Vinci and that the work in the Louvre was a copy. He said the Hahn painting eventually had been damaged and rather clumsily retouched and that the copyist who painted the Louvre picture had copied all the bad retouching on the Hahn work. A deposition by George Sortais, art evxpert of the Department of the Seine, Paris, supported Mrs. Hahn's conten- tion, but Capt. R. Langdon Douglas, | London art expert, declared he had | never heard of Sortais and that there was not the slightest trace of repaint- ing on the Hahn picture. LABOR SECRETARY Heights, another adjoining subdiv The meeting was held at the sugges- tion of Senator Sasscer, when, at the public hearing on the proposed incor- poration before the joint session of the Senate and House of Delegates, it de- veloped there was considerable opposi- tion to the idea PARENT-TEACHERS by Rockville School Organization, Special Dispatch to The Star ROCKVILLE, Md., March 2 campaign to increase the membership of the Rockville Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation was decided upon at the month- ly meeting held in the high school a sembly hall and conducted by t president. Mrs. J. Somervell Dawson. A committee, censisting of Mrs. Thomas Barnsley. chairman: Mrs. Carey Kingdon, Miss Irene Schwartz, Mis Virginia Karn, who are members the school faculty, and J. Brawner Nicholson, was named to conduct the drive. The association also decided to con- tinue the campaign for a new huilding for the primary grades of the Rock- ville school. F. Bache Abert, chairman of the committee placed in charge of the movement several months ago, of- fered a resolution, which was unani- mously adopted, declaring the present facilities to be the poorest of any pri- mary school in the ccunty. NEW CHURCH TO OPEN. Services to —;rfleld in Ballston Edifice Tomorrow. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALLSTON, Va., March 2—The regular services of the Ballston Chris- building at the corner of Wilson boulevard and Tyler avenue, beginning with tomorrow morning. C. N. Willlams, evangelist of Wash- ington, and Minor C Miller are expect- ed to be the speakers, with special music. LAND HELD IN TAX SALE. 900 Parcels to Be Auctioned Mon- day at Upper Marlboro. By a Staff Corrsspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 2. —About 900 parcels of land, the owners of which have failed to pay their taxes, will be offered for sale at public auction here Monday, according to County Treasurer R. Ernest Smith. During the past two months notices Membership Campaign Is Planned | tian Church will be held in the new | weeks will be required to prepare the {data for submission to the grand jury. The investigation which led to the | raids and selzure of narcotics valued at 1$14,000 is alleged to have revealed thousands of dollars worth of drugs was sold to the ring by the physicians. YOUTHFUL BRIDE FREED OF MOTHER'S CHARGES | Mrs. Schlorb, Wedded Under Age, Was Accused of Incorrigibility. 1‘ Husband Held for Perjury. a Correspondent of The Star UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March | —Lack of evidence caused the Govern {ment yesterday to nolle pross charges of incorrigibility against Mrs, Pansy D. Schlorb, youthful wife o i Schlorb, 21, of Suitland, when she ap- | peared before Judge J. Chew Sheriff in Police Court here yesterday. |" The charges were preferred by the | girl’s mother, Mrs. Mary Donaldson, of | the 4400 block of Grant road, Chevy | Chase, D. C.. who also has obtained a | | warrant for her son-in-law for perjury. al Follow its example,” growled Lacy Marshalt, and slammed the door behind his disrespectful servitor. measure,” he said. many years, and is certainly true that we were ‘Lacy’ and ‘Jim’ to one another in the old days, and that makes it more difficult. I feel a horrible snob T've had him so it | when I insist upon his showing me a little courtesy, but you will see for your- self how extremely embarassing the volatile Mr. Tonger can be!"” Dick laughed. He had been an amused spectator of the scene. Tonger was a type that he had met before in other households—the pet dog that no- b had the heart to destroy, despite awkward qualities “As to Malpas,” Marshalt went on, may be, and probably is, somebody on whose corns I have stepped at a period of my life, but if I have to pass that category in review, why, I shall be sus- picious of a hundred description of him? “None that you would recogniz Dick. “The only thing I know is that he's an elderly man, very ugly, and that he commissioned a cabaret singer to molest you, | Hearing on the latter case was con- | | tinued before Justice of Peace Thomas | | D. Griffith Thursday night on request of | | the complainant’s attorney | The couple were married at Upper Marloboro December 28, 1928. The next | day Mrs. Donaldson had Schlorb arrest- | | ed for perjury and kidnaping. The cou- | | ple agreed to separate before a_justice | | of peace, who is said to have declared | their marriage annulled and nolle | prossed the charges. i Three days later Mr. and Mrs. Schlorb | | reunited, and the present set of charges | was filed against them this week. | Schlorb is under bond of $100. \SUSPECT CAPTURED | BY CROWD OF NEIGHBORS [ Man Accused of Robbing Home | and Beating Woman With | Hammer. | By & Staft Correspondent of The Star. | _COLMAR MANOR, Md., March 2. | Cornered by neighbors after he is al- |leged to have robbed the home of Mr. |and Mrs. 5. M. Newman here and as- | | saulted Mrs. Newman with a hammer, | | Henry Radtky, 58, of Colmar Manor | was ‘arrested last night by County | | Policeman Claude Reese on charges of | housebreaking, robbery and assault with | | intent to kill. He is being held with- | jout bond in the Bladensburg jail for | hearing Wednesday. According to police, Newman and his | { wife returned home late last night, and | {as the husband was putting his car | away, the wife entered the house. She | identified Radtky as the man who hit | |her over the head with a hammer, | knocked her down and beat her. Neigh- | seemed hardly worth the trouble, unless ashed. | Have you any | id | “That fellow exasperates me beyond | eccentric Mr. Malpas, but never befors had he sought an interview. He looked |for the bell, failed to find it and tap- which was organized three years ago, has been made a member of the Na tional Association of Junior Leagues. We Can Give You I don’t know anything about him. He | the Best of Service —by reason of our central and convenient location, together with our fully adequate facilities, plus that important personal element, which is a feature and factor in the conduct of this Bank. “The Bank With a Smile” Washington Savings Bank Tenth and Grant Place Thos. E. Jarrell, Pres. an action which to me | 1. D. Leonard, Vice Pres. & Treas. Lactobacillus [_L. A__.J Acidophilus —in Culture Form for Convenience— The important thing in acidophilus efficacy is the pedigree of the strain— and that the L. A. Brand has established. It, of them all, “sets up house- keeping,” so to speak, in the intestines most readily—to the quick and per- manent eviction of the poison-producing germs that cause the trouble— colitis, constipation, flatulency, etc. This precise same strain is used in L. A. Culture—which in its concen- trated form is easy to take and handy to carry if traveling—for the tenure of its maximum potency is much longer than in any other form. L. A. Culture is to be taken with our specially prepared lactose. L.A. Brand Lactobacillus Acidophilus Milk for those who prefer it. It's the L. A Brand— which insures its virtue. We will deliver the Culture and Lactose anywhere in Wash- ington ‘and suburbs. Or it can be safely mailed to any distance without impairment of efficiency. We'd like to send you our plain talk Booklet—on the whys and wherefores of Lactobacillus (L. A.) Acidophilus. Your request will bring it. bors, aroused by her screams, succeeded | in cornering the man. He held the! crowd at bay with the hammer until| Policeman Reese arrived. National Vaccine and Antitoxin Institute Bacteriologists have been sent to 1,705 delinquent tax- | payers, only about 800 of whom have | settled with the county, according to | BALTIMORE, March 2.—Dr. Harry James Deuel, jr., professor of physiology LAUDS COOLIDGE| HONOLULU. NEW ZEALAND Royal Mail Steamers 1 Apr. 3, May 2! HIYB 1, June 26 y Can. 'ac. Rwy., 905 . or to the Canadian Hastings St. W. INAUGURAL SIDE TRIPS TO ,OLD POINT COMFORT NORFOLK VIRGINIA BEACH :Via Historic Potomac River and Chesapeake Bay— Modern Steel Palace Steamers St. Wh; i Daily From Seventh St. Wharf S.W. 6:30 P. SPECIAL ALL-EXPENSE TICKETS Including Stateroom and Accommodations at {CHAMBERLIN-VANDERBILT AND CAVALIER HOTELS NEW YORK & BOSTON BY SEA City Tichet Office, Woodward Building, NORFOLK & WASHINGTON STEAMBOAT CO. 31 15th St SHIPPING 816 EVE ST.N.W. + MAIN 2010 _STORA COMPANY {mioma MOVE Without Worry or Risk. Re- “ sponsible service— Rates Storage in rooms, 32 mo. and up. Expert packezs for shipbine. NORTH 104 . 05 Fla. Ave. N.W. 9 | Los Angeles. at the University of Maryland Medical School, has resigned to accept a posi- tion as professor of biochemistry at the University of Southern California, at It is expected he will leave for Cali- lml;“ai in June. e is a graduate of Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., and did grndugce work at George Washington University and Yale University, where he received his degree of doctor of philosophy. ROCKVILLE. ROCKVILLE, Md, March 2 (Spe- cial) —The monthly meeting of ghe Cabin John Citizens' Association will be held Tuesday evening. Following the ! business session, which will include consideration of reports relative to Con- dult road improvements, school and courthouse bond issues and other mat- ters of big interest to the people of the neighborhood, the Boy Scout trocp wall | give demonstrations of Scout activities with the assistance of a picked troop from Washington. The Cabin John troop will be presented with its charter by Washington Boy Scout officials. Through the joint efforts of the school trustees, the mayor and council, the! Civic Study Club and the citizens' as- sociation, the grounds surrounding the i public school at Garrett Park will, it is stated, be greatly heautified in the not very distant future, the Cole Tench Tilghman Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, | delegates and alternates to the Con- tinental Congress and State conference, to be held in Baltimore, March 13, 14 and 15, were selected as follows: Continental Congress—Delegates, Mrs. Franklin C. Getzendanner, regent; Mrs. William H. Talbott, Mrs. J. Frank Wil- on: alternates, Mrs. Frank B. Sever- ance, Mrs. Raymond Gloyd, Mrs. W. S, English, Mrs.” William H. J. Brown, Miss Lucy L. Bowie, Mrs, Ernest H Darby, Mrs, J. D. Ashford, Mrs. Russell Karn and Mrs. George G. Bradley. State conference—Delegates, Mrs Franklin C. Getzendanner, Mrs. Rav- | mond Gloyd, Mrs. Frank B. Severance, Mrs. William H. Talbott, Mrs. William H. J. Brown and Mrs. W. S. English; alternates. Mrs. J. Frank “¥Vilson, M Clara Mobley, Mrs. Milton Darby. Mis. Enoch G. Johnson, Mrs. Vernon H. Dyson and Mrs. Ernest H. Darby. Miss Sarah O. Parker, 21, and Lacy E. Hailey, 23, hoth of Richmond, Va., were married in_Rockville Thursday night by Rev. §. J. Goode of the Christian Church/ The store of H. Clyde Pumphrey at Germantown was broken into Thursdey night and robbed of $80 in cash anc a quantity of goods of various kinds. Schurz Born 100 Years Ago. NEW YORK, March 2 (#).—This is the 100th anniversary of the birth of Carl Schurz, German immigrant, diplo- mat, general of the Union Army, Sen- ator, Secretary of the Interfor and edi- tor.” A memorial signed by more than 1,100 prominent citizens refers to him as one of the greatest of American citizens and an idealist who had an extraordinary carcer as a leader of thought and action, At a ‘recent meeting in Rockville of |’ - |the government to file their addresses Says He Has Served Eight Years With Nation’s Greatest Pub- lic Administrator. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 2-—James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor, said last night that he was rounding out eight years of public service “with the man I believe to be the greatest public ad- ministrator that ever sat in the White House.” Speaking at the annual dinner of the St. David's Society, he said that he had seen standards of living improved “until today we see what years ago we would have thought impossible.” “As we close these eight years,” Sec- retary Davis said, “we see universal peace among the nations of the earth, peace in the industries of America and employers distributing earnings.” ‘The Secretary added that he believed the incoming administration would con- tinue to raise the standard of living. UNREGISTERED PRIESTS CLASSIFIED AS REBELS New Offensive by Mexican Govern- ment Awaited as Period of Grace Expires. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, March 2.—Mexican clerics today awaited a new offensive by the government by which those| whose addresses were not registered | were to be classified as ‘“rebels” and civil action taken against them. The period of grace allowed them by expired at midnight last night. While exact figures were not available today it was believed more than 1,100 had {complied with the order, which was issued by Acting Secretary of Interior | Canales " on February 11, after the bombing of the President’s special train in the state of Guanajuato. How many had failed to comply with the order was not known, In explaining the order government officials said it was given on account of “the subversive attitude of part of the Mexican high clergy” and “for pur- poses of public security.” ‘The civil action threatened would involve con- fiscation of all property and estates. W. E. Goff Dies at Age of 50. LYNCHBURG, Va., March 2 (Spe- cial).—W. E. Goff, 50 years of age, died Thursday night at 12:20 o'clock at his home in Rustburg. He is survived by his widow and several children. , o Church Honors Pastor. LYNCHBURG, Va., March 2 (Spe- Smith, HAY BLAZE SMOULDERS. Flames Defy Efforts of Firemen for Four Days. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, March 2.—Stubbornly refusing to yield to the efforts of fire- men who have been at work on it con- tinuously for four days, a huge store of hay still is smoldering and blazing spasmodically today in Union Stock- yards. A barn containing 13,000 bales, or 2,350,000 pounds of hay, caught fire last Tuesday. Ten firemen with hooks have been at work pulling hales out of the mass and throwing them in a field ever since. Their task is only one-fourth completed. FINES IMPOSED ON TWO. Man Tried for Speeding, Woman on Liquor Charges. By e Staff Correspondent of The St UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 2. —Ernest C. Barnes of Clinton, Md., was yesterday fined $26 and costs by Judge J. Chew Sheriff in Police Court for speeding and reckless driving. He was arrested by Constable A. C. Thompson. Miss Pear]l Butler of Cedar Helghts was fined $50 for illegal possession of liguor. sl . < Minstrel Will Be Given. HANCOCK, Md., March 2 (Special). —Hancock Fire Company is arranging to give a ministrel show two nights during the first week of April. Mrs. Lalla Biays will be coach. Former Mayor Thomas Gilleece and Dr. Homer E. Tabler, president of the Chamber of Commerce, will be end men. e i 'Woman Dies at Advanced Age. OAKLAND, Md., March 2-—Mrs, Elizabeth Glotfelty Hinebaugh, nearly 89 years of age, died at her home. Her husband, the late Willlam Hinebaugh, was one of the early superintendents of education for Garrett County. IMPERIALISM WILL BE THE SUBJECT OF A Mass Meeting At Plasterers’ Hall 507 E Street N.W. Sunday, March 3rd, 8:15 P.M. JOHN HARVEY STEELE Former_Soldie in Hawalis Isls ‘Travelea Through AN ‘Latie "E° American Countries OTHER SPEAKERS WILL BE OTTO HALL of the American Negro Labor Congress cial) —Rivermont Baptist Church did honor Friday night to its pastor, Rev. E. B. Willingham, and his mother, Mrs. R. J. Willingham, the occasion being the anniversary of the first year of Mr. Willingham's -pastorate here. PAUL CROUCH S tary of the 11-A. e - ctiars, 8, B lAnionn deu Ausplces: All-American Anti-Imperlalist ADMISSION FRES ALL WELCOME Administrator Appointed. HANCOCK, Md. March 2 (Spe- | | cial) —Rev. Austin’ Fleming has been | | appointed by Archbishop Curley of Bal- | timore as_administrator of St. Peter's | Catholic Parish here. The pastor, Dr. | William E. Ki was _stricken by a | | heart attack while saying mass several | | weeks ago and is now in Mercy Hos- pital, Baltimor I Plenty of Heat and Hot Water | You know what a rar- I ity that is when you are I boarding. In The Conard | 13th and Eye Sts. N. you can enjoy the com- |l forts of this capably con- ducted apartment house— Il equipped for housekeeping, if you wish, with private bath and 24-hour elevator Il and switchboard service. I Monthly rentals. 1 voom, kitchenette and bath —5$35 to $47.50 @ month. 2 rooms, kitchenette and bath —565 a month. Now under management of 'B. F. Saul Co. 921 15th St. M. 2100 INAUGURAL VISITORS! You will carry home pleasant memories of your trip to Washington if you DINE at A W YORK AVE. 1318 N0 N it One block from U. S. Treasury Delicious Food—Pleasant Environment REASONABLE PRICES. 1515 You Street At the first sign of a head cold or sneeze—take U-CO COLD CAPSULES U-CO fortifics the red and white blood corpuscles, en- abling them to fight off the millicns of cold germs that weaken your resistance. was first prescribed by a physician in Philadelphia and has been successfully used ever since. e - = = The capsule that “knocking colds” is —U-CO—a doctor tell us how grate- ful they are for the relief that came with the third or fourth capsule. S Take one capsule every two hours for three doses with water, then one every three hours. Drink plenty of water. You can work or go outdoors while taking U-CO. able in Washington, Maybe you've heard about it already tion that thousands of folks start taking at the first sign of a head cold or sneeze. Folks has been now avail- ’s prescrip- RY g Sy North 89 It U-CO is now available in Wash- ington at all Drug Stores throughout the city. The next time you feel a head cold or a sneeze coming on whisper U-CO into your druggist’sear, U-CO Cold Capsules are casy to take and convenient to carry, Sold at all drug stores «IT KEEPS YOU ON THE JOB”