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7 % GEN. HINES T0 STAY AS VETERANS' HEAD P ent Hoover Returns Resignation, With Request That He Remain. i ranid i Coll Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines. who has been director of the Veterans' Bureau for the past six years, is to continue his present position during the admin- istration of President Hoover, it was learned definitely at the White House today. It came as no surprise, inasmuch as it was known that Mr. Hoover was anxious for Gen. Hines to remain, but it had not been learned whether the latter would consent. In common with the other directing heads of the various Government de- partment and bureaus, Gen. Hines tendered his resignation when Mr. Hoover assumed the office of President, last weel It was learned today that Mr. Hoover sent the resignation back with the request that he continue as head of the Veterans' Bureau and Gen. Hines' consent was received today. Lord Held Anxious to Retire. The impression at the White House {5 that Brig. Gen. Herbert M. Lord, director of the Bureau of the Budget, is anxlous to retire from public service, and that he has consented to remain at his present post only until Presi- dent Hoover will have selected his suc- cessor. Gen. Lord is on the retired list of the Army and it is understood that he has several attractive offers to become identified with private busi- s, who is a native of Utah. was appointed to head the Veterans' Bureau by President Harding following the resignation of Col. Charles Forbes. During the war he was chief of the Transportation Division of the Army. The manner in which President Hoover has proceeded in-appointments to the major positions in the Govern- ment strongly suggests that he is en- deavoring to complete this important task before turning his attention to the diplomatic service. The feeling is that the new President is anxious first to get the departments properly manned $o insure smooth run- ning before he does anything else. Moreover, he does not care to take up the question of diplomatic appointments until he has gone over the matter wjth Henry L. Stimson, his Secretary of State, who will arrive in Washington from Manila later this month. D. C. Posts Unconsidered. The President has not yet given his personal attention to empty positions in the District of Columbia—the newly created Supreme Court judgeship and the place made vacant on_ the Public Utilitles Commission by the Senate’s failure to confirm the nomination of Col. Harrison Brand. Associates of the President are known to be collecting infromation regarding those persons who have been recommended for the places. It is known that friends of Henry G. Glassie, who was nominated for the judgeship by President Coolidge, and of Col. Brand are working to have them renamed by Mr. Hoover. It is thought likely that Mr. Hoover soon will be able to name the Assistant Secretary of War to succeed Charles C. Robbins of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who wants to retire. There 4s a rumor that Patrick J. Hurley of Tulsa, Okia, who ‘was identified mx‘;rommzndy with the Hoover campaign in that State, stands at the top of the list for the present of those being considered. Mr. Hoover was represented today as not having determined on_a successor to Charles H. Burke as Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who has tendered his resigna- tion. Neither has the President reached a conclusion in the matter of filling the two existing vagancies on the Fed- eral Radio Commission. Few Changes Expected. The impression has been given by Mr. Hoover that it is his intention to make as few changes in the personnel of, the major positions as possible. and it is likely that more than half cf the officials who have tendered resignations will be retained. Among the patronage seekers at the White House today were Senaters Sheppard and Connally of Texas, who urged the President to appoint Willlam E. Lea of Orange, Tex., to the place on the United States Shipping Board now held by Commissioner Smith of Louisiana, whose term is about to ex- pire. The President was reminded hy these Texans that this place on the board, which represents what is de- scribed as the Gulf section, always has been given to a Democrat. Senators Goft and Hatfield of West Virginia admitted following their call upon the President today that they are hopeful of retaiping West Virginia's share of patronage. Representative Fish of New York presenfed the name of one of his constituents for the posi- tiop of Assistant Secretary of War, but did not make it known. Church Crowded to Limit. President Hoover enters upon his second week today, giving the appear- ance that yesterday’'s rest was bene- ficlal. He was at his desk before 9 o'clock and soon was absorbed in the routine of his office. Accompanied by Mrs. Hoover and Herbert Hoover, jr., and his wife, the President attended religious services yesterday at the Quaker Church, Thir- teenth and Irving streets. This little church, which does not comfortably hold more 300 people, was crowded to capacity. In the afternoon the President and Mrs. Hoover went for a long motor ride through Rock Creek Park and the nearby section of Maryland. Several personal friends were guests at dinner and in the evening. SERVICES FOR STUDENT. Beulah Davis Holtzscheiter Died Wednesday. Funeral services for Miss Beulah Doris Holtzscheiter, 16 years old, stu- dent at Eastern High School, who died at her home, 335 Kentucky avenue, Wednesday, were conducted in the Wil- son Memorial Church Friday. Miss Holtzscheiter is survived by her mother, Mrs. Dudley C. Bosworth; her stepfather, Mr. Bosworth, and a sister, Miss Ina Marie Holtzscheiter. Miss Young Draftsman Is Made Baronet of Old British House By the Associated Press. VANCOUVER, B. C., March 11.—A 29-year-old bachelor draughtsman has become a bar- onet, the head of an ancient house of the British peerage. Eric Windham Francis Car- michael-Anstruther, known to his friends as “Ricky,” be- came eleventh baronet of Au- struther and eighth baronet of Carmichael on the death of his cousin. The baronetcy of Anstruther was created in Scotland in 1700 and that of Carmichael in 1798. The title carries with it the hereditary honor of carver to the royal household in Scotland and one of the masters of the house~ hold. Sir Eric has gone to Scotland and is expeeted to return to Van- couver after arranging the af- fairs of the estate, PLANE FIRM PLANG Letters received by a friend disclos Carlotta Menterey (left), actress, as so00; O'Neill is now in France. NING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1929 se that Eugene O'Neill plans to marry n as his present wifc obtains a divorce. NOCKVLEPLANT Commercial Aircraft Corpor- ation Will Build 52 Craft First Year. Plans for establishment near Rock- | ville, Md., of an aircraft factory of the | Commercial Alreraft Corporation were | made known today .by J. Edward | Cassidy, president of the United States | Air Force Association, who is to head the enterprise. Cassidy said the corporation planned | to occupy 40,000 square feet of flom’: space within three months and proceed | on plans being worked out by E. A. Stalker, consulting engincer, of Ann Arbor, Mich., that contemplate produc- tion of 52 twin-motored commercial planes in the first year. Use Cengressional Airport. ‘The plant will be erected in proximity to the Congressional Airport at Halpine, | Md., Cassidy said, and will use the air- port as a testing ground. Plans con- template production of craft capable of carrying a 1,000-pound “pay load,” Cassidy said, in passengers or freight. Cassidy said the original investment was $500,000 and that New York inter- ests were handling the financing, The Commercial Aircraft Corporation is in- corporated for $15,000,000 under the laws of Arizona, he said. Associated with him, he said, are several figures who at present are affiliated with other airplane companies. Producgion at the rate of three planes each week is planned for the second ear. The corporation will be prepared ter to bid for the operation of carrier lines. In addition to a new design in commercial plare, the company will be equipped to produce all-steel planes of commercial and military type after de- signs of the Armstrong-Whitworth Cor- poration, a British firm, he said. Build Two-Motor Planes. ‘The factor of safety is demanding of commercial companies the provision of twin-motored craft, Cassidy said. “Three-fourths of the accidents in fly- ing are the result of motor trouble and the single-motored plares naturally suffer,” he said. “We are designing a plane with two motors, each of which will be capable of maintaining the plane at flying speed.” Application for license will be filed with the Department of Commerce as soon as the plant turns out a plane for testing, Cassidy said, and production will be started as soon es possible after the department’s requirements are met. ‘Transfer of the Berliner Aircraft Cor- poration from Alexandria to Baltimore recently removed from the vicinity of Washington the only factory capable of producing planes. Composing Room Employes Knickerbocker Press Return to Work. By the Associated Press. ALBANY, N. Y, March 11.—Com- posing room employes of the Knick- of erbocker Press, who have been on strike since November 23, last year, returned to work yesterday. Employes of the Albany Evening News, also owned by the ‘Press Co., will return tomorrow. ‘The Press Co. announced it had signed a new contract with the printers extending over a three-year period. A settlement was made about two wecks ago between the union and the BYRD’S GEOLOGIST BEGINS EXPLORING MOUNTAIN RANGES (Continued From First Page.) ather went bad. So far the last two since he knew he could go, Gould d been the first up every morning W E ha | to take a look at the sky and then im- pale the meteorologists with his sarcasm on their inability to control the weather. He had been packing his equipment during odd moments for a week, sew- ing chamois on the theodolite screws so he could handle the instrument easily and gazing fondly at his chro- nometers and themometers and sketch- ing materials, while onlookers assured him solemnly that “there's rocks in them thar mountains, Larry.” Yesterday wind and drifts ceased. It was a beautiful day, calm and clear to eastward. The Fokker plane was warmed up and Gould trudged out with his bags and bundles, a broad smile on his face. Bernt Balchen piloted the plane and Harold June went as radio operator. Both will help Gould in his work at the range. They carried a tent and plenty of supplies so that they can live com- ‘armbl,v for some time if bad weather elays their return. At supper time Comdr. Byrd heard that they had landed safely between two large peaks and were ready to go to work. As today is fair, they are probably accomplishing a good deal. Six on Dog Team Expedition. Just before Gould left the dog teams started south. They also had been held up by the storms of the past week, which made it impossible to see for more than a few yards. ‘There are six men and four sleds in the party—Joe De Ganahl, the nagi- gator; Carl Petersen, radio operator, and Norman Vaughan, Eddie Goodlae, Jack Bursey and Fred Crockett, as dog drivers. Each team is hauling about 850 pounds of supplies. Attached to Vaughan's sled is the sled meter and wheel given to Byrd by Roald Amundsen. The sleds are com- pletely equipped for every emergency and a careful procedure has been worked out to safeguard the men when crossing crevasses. Every one in camp left work to see the teams start out on the first real sledging journey of the expedition, even though it is a short one.¢ The dogs were more excited than the men and filled the air with staccato yelps of joy. When released from their chains they ran to their harness and seemed eager to get into it and away. It is a fact that these dogs enjoy their work. to do more than stand by the harness and call and the dogs come gamboling up, cavorting and shaking their heads and barking like made. Once in harness they show =all the idiosyncrasles of widely differing individuals, for some lie down calmly and wait for the com- mand to start, while others roll in the snow or jump forward wildly and dig holes in frenzy impatience. Huskies Off at a Run. They were all harnessed and the ALBANY PRINTERS SETTLE |1oads checked up to make sure noth- DlFFEfiENCES WITH PAPER| ing had been forgoiten. - Vaughan gave the word and the dogs started off at a full trot, going so rapidly thgt drivers had a hard time keeping up. Before leaving the inlet they slowed down to a walking pace and finally turned the cape among the pressure ice and disappeared. They will be gone about a week, but will be communication with the camp by radio every day, the first time such a feat has been attempted on a Polar expedition. Comdr. Byrd is always in touch with whatever any of his units is doing, no matter where it may be, and he is not only informed of the situation in the | field, but is also able if necessary to direct the movements of the men who are out. What with his correspond- ence with his ships and with his New York representatives, his room is more like an office than the headquarters of | an explorer. Times-Union, the third paper affected by the strike. Representative Mary T. Norton, resentative Cdith Nourse Rogers, 1 Keft to right: Representative Pratt of New aw Jersey issachusctts; Representative Katheiae Langley, Kentucky. (Copyright. 1920, by the New York Times and | the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. All rights for publication reserved throughout the world.) Six woman members of Congress attended a luncheon meeting of the League for Political Education in New York. ork, Henry Morgenthal, Representative Ruth Bryan Owen, Florida, Representative Florence B, Kahn, The drivers seldom have | & ENVOY'S WIFE DYES WOOL FOR WEAVING Mme. Bachke Conguers An- cient Tapestry Art Dating to Viking Era. BY GRETCHEN SMITIL Since the days of the Viking Kings the art of tapestry weaving has been one of the favorite pastimes of the ladies of Norway, and as an exponent of the art Mme. Halvard H. Bachke, wife of the Minister from Norway, has proven herself a true daughter of the Norsemen. Not unlike the Gobelin tap- estries of France and in quality some- what_similar to the antique Flemish, | famed throughout the world for their beauty, the Norwegian tapestries bear | the distinction of having the same fin- | | i ish on both sides. The reason for this {is explained by Mme. Bachke. “Many centurics ago, the Norwegian nobles lived in castles which contained | but one immense room. This room was partitioned off into numerous apart- ments by means of the tapestries made by the women and as both sides of these hangings could be seen, it was | necessary to have both sides perfectly | finished. In this way the art of weav- | |ing a pattern showing the same on both i | sides developed in Norway and I be- lieve it is the only place in the world where such tapestries are found.” A study of unusual interest is told by Mme. Bachke relative to taking up the |art of weaving, which now forms onc | 1of her favorite interests and pleasures. | Many beautiful tapestries, rugs and | hangings have come from her loom and | have been exhibited in Oslo. “Several years ago,” she said, “my little son was very ill, and_the doctors told me that the only way I could save his life was to take him up into the | mountains, where the climate might | help him recover. I obtained a cottage | high in_the mountains, far beyond Oslo, where I knew I would of necessity live a more or less retired life, away from my friends and the diversions of the city. I decided that before going into my mountain seclusion I would try to learn something which would occupy my time and retain my interest. I| had never done any weaving, but long had_been intcrested in it as an art. Realizing that it is & work which re- quires much time and perseverance, I concluded it was just what I wanted to interest me during the long Winter months, when the deep snows far up in the mountains would keep me in my cottage for days at a time. So I went to a very fine old lady of Oslo, Mme. Frida Hansen, who was an expert in the ancient art as known in the primitive day of Norway, and I asked her to teach me to weave. Mme. Hansen her- self had mastered the ancient art of weaving by untiring research and in- defatigable work among the few persons left in my country who really knew the secret, the old peasant women living in out-of-the-way and practically un-s| known parts of Norway. For weeks at a time Mme. Hansen had visited these people, living among them and adopt- ing their rustic customs, until she had mastered the method of weaving as practiced by them and their ancestors for more than a thousand years. Proud of Mastery. “Mme. Hansen had & patriotic and | justifiable pride in her mastery of this | ancient Norwegian art, and she had no sympathy with those women who in later years started the work as a fad and then gave it up before one piete‘ of work had been finished. When I asked her to teach me to weave, she said she would do so if I proved I had the patience to do the work. I proved to her satisfaction that I was serious in my desire to master the art, and so she consented to take me as a pupil. It is to this dear old lady that I owe all I know of weaving, and several of my tapestries have been copled from the { original _patterns _designed by her. Many of Mme. Hansen's works are found in the leading musiums of the world, including the Louvre in Paris and outh Kensington Museum in London. “1 feel that it is really through the works and the efforts of Mme. Hansen that this ancient art of my country has been revived. Many times in the past 1,000 years tapestry weaving, as known to the women of the Vikings of the fifth and sixth centuries, has practically died out in Norway, then, suddenly, it crops | up egain from some section of the country and becomes quite the fad of the moment. But no one can really| learn the art unless they are serious| about it and have infinite patience. “For three years I remained in my | mountain home. A governess and the servants were most of the time the only companions of my son and myself dur- ing that time, and I would work on my tapestries many hours through the long Winter days and nights. Then, when the Summer came, I would have long hours of daylight, as the night did nnli fall in that far Northern country until 10 or 11 o'clock. “Part of the pleasure of my weaving was purchasing the raw wool and dye- ing and preparing it myself. I would buy many pounds of the natural wool as it was clipped from the sheep. Then I would have a woman wash it. Some- times it was necessary to wash the wool at least 15 times, as it was exceedingly | oily. After washing it, I would then dye it the different colors which I wanted for my pattern.” “How did you do your dyeing,” Mme. Bachke was asked? “It must have re- quired a special stove and many vats and pots for so much wool.” “No,” replied Mme. Bachke,” I did all my work in the tiny kitchen of my mountain cottage. It was great fun in Seated: California; George W. Wickersham, Rep- MME. HALVARD H. BACHKE, Wife of the Minister from Norway, photographed before her loom. 43 Japanese Seamen Saved by U. S. Tug In Wreck Off Guam A colorful rescuc Saturday of 43 Japanese officers and men in the Pacific Ocean by the U. S. S, Napa, a sea-going tug which Is station ship at Guam, was maae known today at the Navy De- partment with receipt of advices reporting the feat. The Japanese steamer Eankokn Maru sent out an S O S Thursday, giving her position 470 miles south~ wess of Guam. Responding to this summons, the Napa proceeded to her assistance and on Saturday | | found the vessel abandoned near Kama Islands, one of the Caro- lina Islands group. The department was informed that the crew was safe with no casualties and that thc Napa is proceeding with the 43 rescued and will land the crew at faipan, making the dyes and hunting for the | materials to make them. “In Norway,” conthiued Mme. | Bachke, “the country people weave practically all the materials used by them for clothing, and they dye the materials with dyes made from plants and flowers. We have many +books which tell what flowers or plants make certain colors. So when the first flowers of Spring came, I would go forth into the woods to gather what I needed for my dyes. I used leaves, tree roots and mo Sometimes if I should use too much moss or too much of a certain root or leaf, my dye would be too deep, and it was necessary to make it again. But it was remarkeble how seldom I failed to get the same shade of dye, no matter how often I found it necescary to make it. I have frequently had to dye wool the same shade at least eight different times in order to have enough to finish a tapestry or rug I was weaving. After dyeing the wool, T would send it back to the peasant women to spin into yarn for me. These dyes never fade. I have exposed some of the yarn to| the rains, snows and suns of two years and never had the slightest change in the color. The rugs and tapestries which I made, were with me for five | years in Soutt merica beneath the most vivid sunfight, and the colors re- mained as brjght and unchanged as they were the ‘day they were finished.” Used 180 Pounds of Wool Mme. Bachke stated that in one of her rugs she used 180 pounds of wool | in the making. These heavy, large | Tugs, exquisitely finished, have been woven and handled entirely alone by this slender, highly cultured woman, whose long, delicate fingers weave the most intricate patterns with ligh!mEg speed, and as one section of a rug pr tapestry is finished it is rolled up on the loom by means of a winding spool attached for that purpose. The paticnt worker never knows how her entire pattern is going to turn out until the whole is completed and let out to its entire length, from where it has been rolled in the process of making. Mme. Bachke considers the finest thing she has done is a tapestry, which, in design, is a copy of Previsde Cha- vannes' famous painting of St. Gene- vieve watching the sunrise over Paris, It was necessary for her to obtain per- mission from the director of the Beaux Arts in Paris to make a reproduction of the painting. The tapesiry was made during her sojourn in her moun- tain retreat and took her a year and a half to finish, “It would have taken me 10 years to make under normal conditions,” she said, “but as I worked on it incessantly morning and night, I finished it in 18 months’ time.” S e Detailed to Special Duty, Vinton Chapin of the United States | Foreign Service, on duty at the State | Department, has been detailed to duty | at the Conference on Saftety of Human Life at Sea, to be held at London, Eng- land, next month, following' which he will assume the dutics of vice consul at Prague, Czechoslovakia. French Legion Honor Accorded American Lawyer and Daughte By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 11. New York lawyer and his daugh- ter are both entitled to wear the bit of red ribbon which shows the wearer to be a chevalier of the Legion of Honor of France. ‘They are said to be the only father and daughter in America s honored by the French gov- ernment. Charles Robinson-Smith several years ago was decorated with the order for his work with the Bel- glan Relief Commission and today the French government office here announced that Gertrude Robinson-Smith. his daughter, had been made a chevalier of the legion. Miss Robinson-Smith's award was made for her work in raising funds for 10 ice-making units for the French army in 1914. She looked after their transport and installation and visited the front on several other ocgasions. SOURCE OF ANIMAL Study of Mice by Michigan Scientists Traces Type to Ovary. By the Assoclated Press. ANN ARBOR, Mich,, March 11.—One cause of a certain type of cancer has been traced to a definite internal organ —the ovary—by research at the Uni- versity of Michigan. This achievement is not in the c: cer of human beings, but of a cerlain strain of brown mice. The value of the discovery at present is that workers have been attempting for 20 years to establish definitely this one possibly significant fact. = The Michigan work indicates also = the patient, ceaseless campaign under way in laboratories all over the country, a campaign usually carried on quietl: ‘The discovery about mice is made public for the benefit of other cancer ‘workers. Transplantation Figures. Responsibility of the ovary for a type of cancer was indicated by the high percentage of cancer in females with ovaries, and few cancers among those from which they had been removed. The demonstration which scemed to clinch the case was transplantation of ovaries to males. The males had possessed a perfect record of no cancers, until the transplantation took place. Then about 7 per cent developed the malady. Dr. William S. Murray, who made the experiments, concluded that “the occur- ence of cancer in this strain of mice is linked very definitely with the ovary and the activity of its secretions.” Unusual Race of Mice. Success of the transplantations was | due to an unusual rage of mice, de- veloped by Dr. Clarence Cook Little, president of the University of Michigan. ‘Through inbreeding they possess what is known as homogeneity, a similarit of physical characteristics that tends to make grafting parts from one to an- other more than ordinarily successful. “Starting in 1909 with a single pair,” Dr. Murray says, “this line has Jbeen developed by Dr. Little to the present time, by brother to sister matings for the most part. Contrary to prevailing opinion in regard to inbreeding, such a | process does not have a deteriorating | effect upon the descendants of these animals. The colony today is as virile and vigorous as any of the less closely bred stocks in the laboratory.” District Couple to “;ed. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., March 11 (Special).—A marriage license has been ismied here to James Craig, 24, a print- er, of 1825 A street southeast, and Miss Julia M. Fletcher, 20, 1321 Emerson street, Washingtor New Bus Service FOUR TRIPS DAILY WASHINGTON TO PITTSBURGH FARE 34 Leaving Raleigh Hotel, 7:30 AM. 9:30 AM. Arrive Pittsburgh 6:30 P.M. 9:30 P.M. Arrive Johnstown 4:45 P.M. The Blue Ridge Transportation Co. SEVENFACECOURT .| SUPREME COURT AGREES ONLIQUOR COUNTS {Four Others Are Released When Camalier Refuses to Issue Papers. Seven persons arrested over the week | end faced arraignment in Police Court | today on liquor charges, Four others | taken into custody on similar counts | were released when Assistant United | States Attorney R. F. Camalier refused | to issue papers, declaring that arrest-| ing, police failed to secure proper war- | rants or made searches and selzures | without probable cause. ¢ | Executing a warrant charging a dis- orderly house, Sergt. O. J. Letterman {and Detectives R. J. and G. C. Mc- | Carron attempted to enter an apartment in the 1200 block of H street Saturday. | A man who responded to their knock re- | fused to admit them. Gaining a mittance, police are said to have dis- | covered Lena Hessen, 32, and dJoseph | Owens, 50, attempting to destroy jars of alleged liquor. Recovering a portion of the liquid, | police charged the pair with second of- | fense possession. Helen Roberts, 22, and Lola Coyle, 20, who were in the premises, were charged with vagrancy. Apprehended in a raid on the premises | by the vice squad in February, they| | face charges of possession pending in ! Police Court. | Colored Woman Ts Held. Gertrude Lloyd, 34, colored, of the | ‘GU() block of Franklin st . charged with sale and possession fo lowing a raid on her home. Agents J. J. Tolson, J. S. Oliver and J. T. Fla- | therty are said to have seized 33 quarts | of alleged liquor Saturday night. Charges of transportation and pos- session were lodged against James Ed- ward Mitchell, colored, following his | arrest yesterday by Officer Carl R. Burr. Two others who accompanied Mitchell at the time of his arrest were charged | at the fifth precinet, but later released on orders of Camalier. Dro Pizza, proprietor of a grocery store in the 1200 block of L street, ar- rested Saturd: s charged with pos- | session. Detectives S. F. Gravely, R. V. | | Ratdtchaw and P. S. O'Bricn declare that when they entered the establish- ment they found a gallon jug of al- leged Tiquor. Observing a machine emerging from jan alley, which he said contained 14 quarts of alleged liquor, Officer Herbert M. Smith arrested Albert Coleman, 19, of the 2200 block of Ninth street yes- terday. He was charged with trans- portation and possession. Garfield Jones, colored, of the 1200 block of Third street was charged with ssion_of one-half gallon of corn Deteetives 1. T. Headley and J. G. Sayer of the fourth precinct said | they noticed an object protruding from | the youth's coat. When police ap- | proached, he fled, but was apprehended. TO REVIEW TRUST CASE | iValidity of Virginia Tax Is Ques- | tioned in Suit by Balti- more Company. The Supreme Court today consented : to review the case of the Safe Deposit | & Trust Co. of Baltimore vs. Virginia, | involving the validity of a tax imposed by the State on trust property held in Maryland, for the benefit of a resident | of Virginia. In this case, property was left to the Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore | in trust for the benefit of the two sons of the trustor, with the provision that | when_the sons will have attained the | | age of 25, each receive one-half of the | principal and the accumulation of in- | come, and that if either of the two should die before receiving his share | of the principal and income, then the | entire amount shall be paid to the sur- | vivor. The trustor reserved the right to | revoke or modify the trust. i | The State of Virginia assessed taxes | against the property held by the trust company for the benefit of the two who were residents of Virginia. The ny maintained that the State had tion to tax the property, but of Virzinia sustained the | and the company petitioned th> Court to review the case. | tax, 61 ARE TAKEN HERE ON DRY LAW COUNTS | Eighteen Charges of Sale | Transportation Are Filed Over Week End. |, Eighteen charges of sale and transpor- | tation of intoxicants in alleged violation | of the Jones law were preferred agais persons arrested during the 48 hour: ended at 8 o'clock this morning. There were 23 charges of possession filed under the provisions of the Volstead act. | Seizures during the two-day period included 722 quarts of intoxicants and 5 automobiles. There Were 61 arrests ! for intoxication during the 48 hours. | | Three persons were arrested on charges | | of driving automobiles while intoxicated. | and .40 Penna. Ave. & 12th St. 12:30 P.M. 6:00 P.M. 11:30 P.M. 5:30 AM. 9:45 P.M. “THE SCENIC ROUTE” MIRACL PPP is coming to ? ? P Try this TREAT for hair and scalp :::you have never hada shampoo that left your hair so beautifully lustrous and your scalp so remarkably soothed. The reason is that Conti Castile Soap Shampoo is made from melted bars of a soap that doctors have recommended for genera- tions as the best soap for the skin—Conti Chstile Soap. “This shampoo means pro- tection for the beauty of your hair. It contains noth- ing that may irritate the most delicate scalp or harm the loveliest hair. It rinses quickly and thoroughly. All the qualities of the {2 Conti pure olive oil Castile are found in this shampoo. Get a bottle today and you will know how good a shampoo can be. CORNTy CASTILE SUAP SHAMPOO At Leading Drug and Department Stores DAETRAEER TR TN Avoid Embar, t of | FALSE TEETH Dropping or Slipping LITTLE STORIES FROM REAL LIFB. ... A\ PN Fo;g ing a Son’s Career VENTY years ago a stal- i wart immigrant, with wife and baby boy, landed in this fabled Eldorado. Visions of weaith and happiness were be- fore him. During the years that followed, ke sweated and toiled in the heat of a roaring foundry, while his dream of success slowly faded with the passing years. There was one great compen- sation, however. I3 son now grown to manhood, had finished the public schools, graduated from College, and was now completing the last year of his medical course. Asked by a friend how he had financed so ambitious an educational pro- gram for his son, the father smiled proudly. He went to a drawer, returned with some papers, and said, “Here are seven cancelled Morris Plan notes. Each one represents the yearly expense of sending my boy to college. Fach one was paid up in twelve months. That's how it was done!” “And.” he concluded, after a pause, “there would have been no other way. These loans made it possible for my boy to pre- pare for a profession. When he opens his office, I'm going to present him with every one of these paid-up notes, and another —the last—on which I am now paying. I will impress upon him the sacrifices I made to realize through him the ambition which T have been unable to accom- plish for myself.” THE BMORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision of U. 8. Treasury 1408 H St. N.W. THE -