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THE. RYEXNING AR, WASHINGTON. D. €. WEDNESDAY.: MARCH 6. 1929 | MORE DUBLIN ARRESTS. ment at about 30. It is expected that the question of reasons will be raised in the Dail today. The authorities have | declined to make any statement. Pres- ident Cosgrave, in the course of a speech during the Nort Dublin election, said the government would take steps to suppress | the conspiracy he described. . when still; he probably is never really still except when asleep. ‘Whether he is standing or sitting, his hands are always on the move, fiddling with his necktie or a waistcoat button. Such a disposition is wearing. It is be- ginning to tell on the Prince. There is still something boyish about him. But he is beginning to look a little worn. At times, though he may not| feel it, he looks very tired. (Next—The Prince’s Public Life.) Bankers to Meet at Lynchburg. LYNCHBURG, Va., March 6 (Spe- cial.)—Officers of group 4 of the Vir- ginia State Bankers’' Association will meet here Saturday evening at supper to arrange for the Spring conference of the Prince can dine quite well off a cut from the joint of a bit of cheese. That |often fs his dinner when he dines at {homa." | The host looked disappointed, but the | K | e rwate e |menu was cut to six courses. | | In the hunting season the Prince has | il : | preferred to spend such time as he had | o |frec of public engagements at his hunt- | |ing quarters at Melton or Nottingham ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. NW. 61st Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Round-up Believed Due to Hint of | Intimidation Conspiracy. By the Associated Press., DUBLIN, Irish Free State, March 6. —Detectives late last night made sev- . eral more arrests in a round-up believed Blast Freighter Off Reef. :10 h;;'e igee? }émmpbed ?))1' z: :;uternent NEW YORK, March 6 (#).—The y President Cosgrave tha ere eX- | American steam freighter Edith, hung isted here a conspiracy to intimidate ‘ high on a coral reef in the outer harbor 1 |rather than in London. At Craven The Prince of Wa!es Lodge, the Prince’s hunting quarters at | Melton in Leicestershire, H. R. H. last | Money Loaned to Members (As Told by an Intin:ate) on Easy Monthly Payments James E. € o yesident e | Winter virtually kept open house in the | |evening. ANl his hunting friends at | Melton were welcome to drop in about 9 and dancing went on till early morn- | ing. At midnight there was a_buffet | |supper. Music was supplicd by a first- | | i 3 |rate band, but there were always a| | couple of dances played by the Prince’s | 11-Car Train Bearing Friend-‘ ship Messengers Leaves | Capital for the South. juries and witnesses. of San Juan, Porto Rico, in last Septem- Most of the 40 youths who were taken | hers hurricane, was floated. yesierday from their homes early yesterday had | after 152 consecutive days, work by the been released last night, but the new |salvage steamer Killerig. which literally captures kept the total under confine. ted the Edith back into deep water. James F. Shea Secretary o i | Chapter X. own_band, composed of half a dozen of | VAR EHERTslps tht ughoc the | P his friends, with himself a5 saxophonist. | { King's Tiiness Interferes. | The King's illness, however, |fered with these gayeties. Since the Prince returned from Africa he has |hunted only a few times, and has then usually returned to York House in the evening £outh and_East, 107 Wisconsin tour- | on a 3.200-mile good-will mission | 1>{t Washington early this morning for | Taltimore, aiter witnessing th> inz here on Monday guration ceremonies President Herbert end calling on Hoover yesterdzy Traveling in an 1l-car train, the crty left Madison, the Siate capiial, a 12-day swing that far South as Jacksonville, 13-4 ¥ s are devoted to cx- hibits of Wi industrial, cultural, recreational and educat lif. Open to the public hero dey afternocn. the train wes visit approximately 2,500 persons, according to Lee I tkson, tour manager, who is secretary of the Wausau Chamber of Commerce. | Pure-Bred Cows as Cargo. Purc-bred cows are carried in the live stock car. The recreational car, de- ed to exhibits of Wisconsin fish and . carries & strong appe A to th2 an a2nd hunter, while no State’ , dairy and indv i two of the oth h representing leaning fe of various counties and ci‘ ‘es. Prominent among 13 tors are Sclomon:Le urer; Waiter A. Dul sioner of agriculfur: commissioner of mar M. Briggs of the Unives sin and Arlie Muck: Wisconsin Live St ciation and forme while a lete. ary agri- nal james H. Vint, ts: Prof. George | ity of Wiscon- | cretary of the | Breeders' Asso- | shot-put champion | Inaugural Dinner Held. | Wisconsin's part in national affairs— | iIndustrial as well as political—were told at an inaugural dinner Monday night at the Mayflower Hotel which was ad- dressed by Gov. Walter J. Koehler, for- mer Gov. F. E. McCovern, Mr. Levitan, | State Senator Thorwald Beck of Racine, George Vits, Republican national com- | mitieeman, and others. | Leaving snow-covered Wisconsin a | fortnight ago, the tourists have carried | the gospel of the Badger State to Chi- | ¥ | Hou | Gidn't like. University of Wisconsin ath- |S The Prince’s Life at Home BY W. T. MARSDON. | The Star and ‘the | paper Alliance. + | v North American News- per Alliance ) In betwecn his tours the Prince of Wales settled down to his life at home. | He had his public life and his private life. This article deals with the latier. | From the time hs moved into York | the Prince made it ciear that so | far as his private life was concernsd he | s not going to be hampered 2nd fet- | ed by what he regarded as the old- | fashioned restriciions of court etiquette He danced at night clubs, h> went to cafes and cabarets and he dropp: ually into the stalls of theaters and evinced a liking for musical comedy and revucs. He enjoved London night life d man_might. nd thot there | s vay of life for B w the heir to the thr H> attracted attention, which he ©One night he was at supper a well known caie in the West End. hen leaving he was surrounded by a | rowd, mostly of girls, who pressed in | on-~and more or less mobbed him in | their admiration. . ‘The Prince kept his temper outwardly, but he was extremely angry. “It is | demned _ridiculous,” he said to one of | his staff, “to think I can’t go out to apper in London like any one else | without being subjected to this kind of | annoyance. I won't be able to go any- where if it goes on.” | A member of his staff explained the | Prince’s view to the manager of the | cafe. The next time th2 Prince visited | it the manager had half a dozen private | detectives who took care that no one | got too near the Prince and his party. | And similar measures were adopted at | other places visited by the Prince. Leaves Cabaret in Anger. One night at a_cabaret, when the |§ | it pleases the Prince to go home, which | O Tai f | Prince was present, a singer gave a | iter gf,‘:‘tfl:fi;‘ g‘t’l‘:rillga“:!aclfs%nws""g coupling the name of the Prince | ville, Savannah, ' Columbia, Raleigh, | 11, ®, vulear and rather stupld way b | with the name of an actress with whom Richmond and Washington. From Balti- | the” prince had been dancing recently | more they will go to Harrisburg, Pitts- | burgh. Columbus, Chicago, Milwaukee and disband at Madison on Saturday. CANFIELD REPORTS LOSS OF LUGGAGE Effects Worth $500 Are Missing, Representative Notifies District Police. — Police were asked last night to seek luggage sent by taxicab to Union Station by Representative Canfield of Indiana, who was one of five persons reporting the loss of personal effects yesterday. After dispatching his baggage from & local hotel, Mr. Canfield was unable 1o locate it on arriving at the station. | He said the missing property was worth | $500. George Wyatt, 801 North Davis street, | Richmond, also appealsd to police to recover property left in a taxicab last | night.. He said his satchel, containing wearing apparel and papers worth $200, | was left in a taxicad in.{front of a hotel. | Joseph Falcone, 1224 O street, told Police an intruder was in his room yes- terday. The thief took a pocketbook | containing $30.in bills and gold coins | and a watch valued at $30. Herbert E. Reinberg, apartment 1, Eighteenth street southeast, was robbed of $91 yesterday. The money was taken from a dresser drawer in his home. Burglars were in the home of Dr. Claude B. Cooksey, 3606 - Sixteenth street, yesterday afternoon. Entrance was gained through the garage, police | were told, and a watch valued at $65, | & $10 goid piece and pint of alcohol | Thomas McLeareh Dies. WARRENTON, Va., March 6 (Spe- cial).—Thomas McLeareh, 70 years old, died Monday night at his home, near Meetze. He leaves his wife and one daughter. ) mhy Vi at a night club. The Prince left the | cabaret and did not visit it again. | Before long it became recognized | that to subject the Prince to this k‘"di of annoyance was grossly unfair, and | that he should be allowed to enjoy | London night life in his own way as any other individual might. Nowadays, of course, the Prince’s presence at night CONTINUAL | dosing upsets children’s delicate stom: .-achs. Vicks is applied ex- ternally and therefore can- not disturb the digestion. It acts in two ways: (1) The body heat re- leases the ingredients in the form of vapors which are inhaled. | | | | | | { (2) At the same time Vicks “draws out” the soreness like a poultice, ways | at once Tofes no time reh'evmg a cough inter- clubs or cafes attracts no kind of at tention. The Princ® formed many acquain- | tances of both sexes in the theatrical | The restlessness of the Prince’s dis- profession. Mainly they were in mu- | position, combined with an amazing vi- sical comedy and revue. He has beel | tality, drives him to seek in some form generous in helping poorer people of | of physical activity his amusements or the stage, but no one has ever been |yecreations. able to induce him to finance a show. | ' Next, to hunting, squash appeals to His_reply invariably is ,, . |him because of the severity of the ex- You must see So and So.” naminz | oreise His restlessness is one of his a member of his stafl. And this means | weaxresses. He is never quite happy there is nothing doing. s f The Prince dines at fairly frequent = — = - inger\'a";s at_the chouses of his ma:e; Bl d P ntimate friends. When he goes to inner this Is virtually 2lways followed | 00 ressure by a small dance. The Prince detests card games. The dinner has to be a short one. The pleasures of tho table make no appeal to him. rule observed by a host or hostess who entertains H. R. | H. is a five-coursc dinner served ot 8:30, and then dancing from 9:39 until A leading health authority savs: “Most people begin to work on their blood sure about twenty vears foo late.” % Blood Pressure is one of the most common disorders of middle life and old age—it takes a heavy tall. Don't let your blood pressure creep up—prevent the conditions which lead to High Blood he will not do until 3 or 4 in the morn- ing ’l, he is enjoying hims>If. His Simple Taste in Food. ’ ‘The old rule that the host who was to | entertain the heir apparent to dinner should send his secretary scme days be- fore a copy of the menu and a list of guests is not now observed. A few years ago a wealihy host with one of the best chefs in London did send & copy of the menu to the Prince’s | secretary when he was about to enter: tain H R. H. at dinner. The menu| showed 18 courses. One of the Prince’s stafl saw the host and said to him: “It is a splendid menu. but you know tive organs, functioning properly. Physicians recom- mend Mountain Valley Mineral Water from Mot Springs, Ark. as an aid to Nature in_maintaining mnermal condi- . Be wise and take this precaution, Ask vour doctor. Phone us for a case today. We deliver Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Ark. 212 Colorado Blds. Phone Metrovolitan 1062 WoobpwAarD & LoTHROP 10™ 11™ F axp G STrEETS ~ Impo;’_ted Ballibuntls $17-50 These smart ballibunt! hats for town wear, the essence of simple smartness and Jane Wandl perfection—are worn now with fur coats and will be worn later with silk frocks. This price is unusually low—even for Jane Wandl, who always combines. fashion and value. Four Smart Styles The Wide Brim The Up-turned Brim Every Desirable Shade MiLLINERY, THIRD FLOOR. “Dixie’s own flavor” ~ for your pancakes Now For A Good 0ld Dixie Breakfast WHEN' crinolines were still in style, Southern Pancakes and hot biscuits attained fame due to delightful flavor. The same delicious flavor is now revived for you by Golden Crown Syrup. A flavor distinctly Southern---that's the flavor you find in Golden Crown Syrup. No other syrup compares with this golden, full bodied, mellow, truly old time South- ern syrup. Enjoy daily this breakfast treat that calls up days and flavors of yore. At All Good Grocers STEUART, SON & CO., BALTO., MD. Booklet telling how to make “Temr ting Things With Golden Crown,” Write for it. Flavor With the True Southern ‘Should Be Watched Pressure by keeping your body free from | poisons and your digestive and elimina- | varticularly your kidnevs, | i | the dis‘%nct, which is to be held at e. Simpson’s Home Delivery Comes First Simpson’s milk should be your first consideration in planning your morning meal—and to be sure that you have it every morning avail yourself of Simpson's Home Delivery service. Can you get as high-grade a milk as Simpson's deliv- ered to your door every morning for 14c a quart? That's your first consider- ation. $ Atlantic 70 and of our collections. Ensembles, Women’s and il e Of Course, First at— rie Washington MHelleffs A FASHION INSTITUTION NewYork A Service for Everyone! Tomorrow—KNITBAC Hosiery Mending by a wonderful new machine! Uses no thread in closing the runs! Quick, flawless repairs—in- expensive. Now you will not need to discard silk stockings which have “run”—for 24-Hour Service Is Assured!. See for yourself —the wonderful KNITBAC Machine in Operation here in our store—right on street floor! Repairs while you wait if we are not too overrun with orders at the beginning. Only a slight charge— Single run repairs— 25c¢ Slight extra charge for darning heels and toes! Reduce vour silk stocking cost! . Jelleff’s first to introduce this wonderful new service to Washington. 10™ 11™ F axnp G STREETS Fashionables are being *“suited” at Woodward & Lothrop, where a complete selection of suit en- sembles—in every -version—is found. Swanky suits for sports occasions, formal styles for street and afternoon, but begin to classify the styles. Six models are sketched, which are representa- tive of the ensemble successes of the season— Women’s and Misses’ Tweed Suit $49.50 to $125 Misses” Silk Suit Ensembles, $25 to $42.50 The Walnut Room Silk and Tweed Suit Ensembles, $65 upwards Junior Misses’ Suit Ensembles $29.50 to $59.50 FASHION SctioNs, THIRD AND FOURTH FLOORS. Hlustrated Above N R tuck-in blouse, $69.50. TS WooDWARD & [LOTHROP Smatt Suit Ensembles Seen about Washington Come from Woodward & Lothrop Violet checked tweed ensemble with belted finger-tip jacket, with collarless neckline and silk Long coat suit of basket weave, with scarf. Frock and coat lining of printed silk—in con- trasting colors, $79.50. Tweed ensembles with full length coat with knotted scarf, tweed skirt and silk blouse, with “dressmaker” details, $115. Hlustrated at Left T Long coat suit ensemble, of navy blue -crepe, col- larless coat and “bordered printed” frock, with wide reveres, $75. Ensemble of tweed, with seven-eighth length coat, silk tuck-in blouse, in tri-colors, $59.50. Silk jacket suit, in twin prints, the skirt in “baby” print — the scarf and blouse in smart tri-color combination, $39.50.