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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, /‘D. C, MARCH 17, 1929—PART 1. 5 BEAUVAIS AMENDS which he desires to make Flo Leeds a |them co-defendants with Stillman |nd‘ PR'CE 'NCREASE DEN'ED. COL. SOUTHALL SPEAKER. co-defendant in the $500,000 slander m";‘}';tfccdl;nphlnt bl s s i action he has instituted against James : 1 b persons conspired against him because | Dire Cos SLANDER PAPERS f & Stiinan. Tne SHllmans hive since)| ha Serise 0. testlly falsely nastase| T/ Corts Do Not Warrant Ralse, | Editar.ctSaivation Sy WA Cry to Be Heard Here Tonight. scorned _thelr | Stillman, and that when he| proffered bribes they | Desi T I e e b L e e G et mow poveona®f | AKRON, Ohlo, March 16 UP).—James| Col. John Southall, editor of the Sal- ;Denrex to Make Flo Leeds Co-de-|Beauvias was of unblemished reputa- | wealth who formerly employed him to D. Tew, president of B. F. Goodrich (:n.‘ vation Army War Cry of Canada and | 3 i | tion before the Stillman trial. and that | act as guide for their wives and daugh- v ol v is o fendant in $500,000 Still- $e7s 0o g trust i announced today that his company is|an officer of the Salvation Army for ; | his education was o good that he | 'ef8 B0 foRBCE SrUst IO o ow | MOt contemplating any increase in tire; more than 40 years, will address a pub- man Suit. | never would have written the illiterate | couce on Monday why Flo Leeds, John Prices lic meeting tonight at the army's Teme Japanese Curio, 179 Years Mo , A | notes introduced at the trial as having | Fos and Richasd Roe thould not be | “There have been many rumors cir-| o fe o Bonctet e ) | passed between him and Mrs. Still- O~/ culated as to the possibility of an im-| 0ld, Found in Bank of By the Associated Press | man. HERERSO— | Mediate price increase for tires.” he| Staft Capt. James Asher, in charge of 4 NEW YORK, March 16- Fred K Beauvias allcges the letters were |said. *“So far as the B. F. Goodrich Co. }”)p army in the District of Columbis, Brook Is Puzzle. o 2 become reconciled. Mrs. Tew Declares. } AND FINDER i Beauvias, Indian guide who figured in | forgeries made by agents of Stillman.| Members of the Brenham (Tex.) |is concerned, I can see no justification | oy e titiman divorce. proccedings in | Mo Leeds and John Doo and Richard | Rotary Club speak eclght languages: |for a change in tire prices, and prices | [V bt s oo 1922, filed in Supreme Court today a|Roe. He does not know the real names | German, French, Spanish, Czech, inow in effect, in my opinion, will be | be music by the Salvation Army Head- copy of an amended complaint by|of Doe and Roe, but wants to make | Polish, Portuguese, Greek and English. | continued for some time.” | quarters Band. | How did a Japanese inkwell and brush case, of bronze inlaid with deli- cate silver tracery and dating from approximately 1750, get two feet under ground near Marshall, Va.? | A. D. Bohon of Marshall found the curious object sticking out of the bank of a brook the other day, and since then curiosity has been at fever heat in the Fauquier County town. Nobody could even hazard a guess as to what it was. Some said it was an Indian smok- ing pipe. Some insisted that it was a | Revolutionary powder case. Bohon, accompanied by his neighbor. | Whis strange/looking Japanese inkwel) and brush/case of ibronxe inlaid with O. K. Lee, vesterday brought the relic ' sflver was found near Marshall, Va.. by A. D. Bohon (inset). The inkwell dates to Washington and sought the expert pack to 1750, according to the National Museum. —Star Staff Photo, opinion of Dr. Walter Hough, curator | — — e — of anthropology at the National Mu- seum. Dr. Hough was puzzled at first, Joshua Evar Mrs. A. E. Graupner, | stedt. Mrs. Philip Sydney Smith, Miss but finally decided that it was similar | Mrs. Robert vard, Miss Josephine | Ethel Riley, Mrs. O. L. Veerhof, Mr: to the inkwells used by Japanese writers | Junkin, Mrs, Thomas Walker Page, Mrs. | Chester D. Watts, Mrs. H. A. Whitney, of the middle eighteenth century. D. A. Robertson, Miss Cora Rigby, Mrs. | Mrs. Henry E. Willard, Mrs. J. R. Yates | They wrote with brushes. First the | Thomas W. Sidwell, Mrs. L. B. Sworm- | and Mrs. A. H. Paul. brush was dipped in the ink and then pointed in the hollow tube attached to | the well The object was evidently of original make. The cover of the inkwell repre- sents the head of an elephant and the end of the hollow tube the head of a | dragon or serpent. The symbolic mean- | ing is unknown. How it got under the ground at Marshall is another matter. It may have been carried as a curio by some | Revolutionary or Civil War soldier and dropped on the march, It may have been the possession of some wealthy collecter in the neighborhood. BENEFIT PERFORMANCE OF “COQUETTE” SLATED | Helen ‘Hayes, Former Washington Girl, I= Star of Play to Be Shown April 21. A benefit performance of “‘Coquett&’ has been arranged for April 21 at Poli's Theater by the Washington branch of the American Association of University Women, in connection with the drive | which is being conducted to raise funds for the $1.000,000 fellowship fund of the organization. This fund, which is being raised by a Nation-wide campaign, has now almost reached the half million mark, and will be used to endow 30 or more research fellowships for women. Helen Hayes, a former Wa: 1, is starring in “Coquette, d & successful run of over a year in | Kew York, but has not yet been seen in Washington. Mrs. Samuel Herrick is chairman of the fellowship fund committee which is arranging the benefit. Other members are Miss Sybil Baker, Mrs. George W. Bowerman, Mrs. Frank Edgington, Mrs. For Impaired Vision =—Consult an E)‘e P’l}'sician Your eve physician will prescribe the proper lenses that your vision demands. Use them even though immediate relief may not be ob- gerved. EDMONDS == O PTICIAN—= 918 Fifteenth Street WASHINGTON Established 1899 ONE DAY OFFER~ MAIL ORDERS Bearing a post- mark prior to 12 o’clock ncon Monday, March 18, will be filled if the piano ordered has not already been sold. COME EARLY Our last one day sale was such a tremendous success. All pianos were ‘'sold by 3 p. m. Ludwig . . .. Krakaver ... ..mww Kohler & Campbell . . . . Mansfield . . . . . oo Emerson . ., . 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