Evening Star Newspaper, June 30, 1929, Page 3

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| PN | WiLLIAMS OIL BURNERS Easy to Own—Lib- eral T erms — Small Down Payment. Phone Potomac 2048 Now . Prepare for Winter! ESTIC SERVICE ORPORATION -d- Mn.v-lul Guar- I.IICIY Ti6 ' We Want to Know HOW and WHY You Haven't Given ~—US—? a Trial Before To show you the wonderful new luster we can put on your old rugs and remove all dirt. We are respor sible, reasonable, dependable. Shampooing, washing, scouring, sizing, re pairing. Sanitary Carpet & Rug Cleaning Co. ROBT. LEE PYLE 106 Indiana Ave. N.W. 3 3257 3257 M. 5 M. 3o A RAZORBLADE SHARPENER SThat operotes almost as FAST AS LIGHTNING Price, $2 o time wasted stropping or fuss- ing—just put the For_Sals by Mr. Fosters Remembrance Shop THE BOARD OF VETERINARY EXAMINERS Fill'give an examination for licenise to pracc Tice fn tne District of Columbia July s and 0. Apply to Dr. F. W. GI . 1916 H st. n.w., secretary. 3 JAMES, BARBER, FOI & JAYT08 New otk aves 1 no R‘ isiness, for himself on ‘the ¥, corner of 4 "(‘t'd“"k ave. Friends and cus- invite o UILDER, remodeling, nrcnu Caiaed, Jobbig, Coriages, salows; 20 Sentecxp. Wash.. sub ood Wor 2821-J. 2% iy Al Sent i 8 redueed race aine about July 3, x?x‘)d“lnlmuud A PULESTON, Pot. 4877. FOR BALE, om'xu ESTATE, ONE th st. store. one corner detached 'home. For appolnment, call 141 west of 16th st. Adams. HURRY. CALL QUICK ELEC. 1017 i3th st. TURBER sraie prices. W. H. LVILLE, - ING, SLIP COVERS AND 257 "aiscount this week to keep UPH. CO.» RUGS CLEANED, SHAMPOOED, STORED. Qur ‘prices” save vou STANDARD ‘money. CO.. 403 11th._ Navl 4902. MOVING TO SOME OTHER cITY? Get_our return-load rates. Full andpart load shipments to Philadelphia, Boston. Pittsburgh, Richmond points.’ Special rates. ~Phone KAT'(()NAL DELIVERY ASSOCIATION, INC. & AGE CONSTRUCTION. Concrete. block: SFICK. oF tiler arifstic ap- arance. maximum strength. HEAT, COI d FIRE RESISTANCE. have others? Decide niow. ~ Congtruction i St ot Mount. Llnler Phone_Hyattsville 1419. RETURN LOADS. e 8ES rwobon =To ,w furatture to o trom for Boston. Richmond Smith’s Tranlfet & Ston% Co, 1813 You St. d, cleaned. flnllh'd. FLOORS - JPC machine work. R. & MASE. FLOOR SERVICE ~GOLUMBIA 21i.. lODUCED AND LOSES VICTORY He and Espm_osa to Play Off Tie for Title Today. (Continued From First Page.) a holable putt for an eagle 3 and took 5. His putt to tie at the eighteenth was a putt born of despetation. It barely lobbed over the lip of the cup. After that 8 on the twelfth hole Es- pinosa was counted out of the cham- pionship and the chase after Jones be- came the business of young Shute, whose chance came when Jones took 7 on the - fifteenth. But Espinosa settled down to serious business and played the last six holes in 22 strokes, or 2 under par, to set the pace. At the of bumps and knobs. He stroked the ball and it hit the back of the cup a mite too hard and jumped 6 inches away. Had it dropped the champion- ship would have been his. On such slim margins hang the na- tional championship and thou.unds of dollars. Situation Explained. This was the situation: Jones' great round of 71 in the morning of the final day gave him a 3-stroke lead over Sarazan, Jones with 215 and Sarazan with 218. One shot back of the little Italian American came Espinosa at 219, Densmore Shute was 220 and Tommy Armour was 221, while Leo Diegel, play- | |ing under the handicap of an attack ;| of lumbago, was 224, a shot behind Peter O'Hara. Von Elm was 223. And every one of them except Es- pinosa cracked on the first nine holes of the final round. First it was Sarazan, out early, pushing his iron shots to traps and putting poorly. Then it was Armour with a 7 in the fourth. Then it was Jones with a 7 in the eighth. And then it was Shute, starting badly with a 6, adding another 6 at the sixth hole and finally getting out in 38. Es- pinosa, sandwiched in between Sarazan, Armour and Jones, was out in 36, had picked up two shots on Jones out—9 of 38—and stood only two shots back of Atlanta’s famous son and in a good spot to breeze in if Jones faltered. This Z | Spaniard. swarthy of face.and stocky of build. is a scrapper. He plays golf Summer School Commercial Art—Interior Decora- putts on the sixteenth, where he had | eighteenth hole Espinosa's second shot | {left him a 35-footer over a green full THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JUNE 30, BUBBY IUNES lAGS | SPEED-Y JUGGERNAUT STIRS OBSERVERS WITH PERFORMANCE I Combination tank and armored car that was demonstrated for the benefit of Army men by the inventor, J. Walter Christie, yestera: tion — Costume Design. Children’s class. Low tuitions. LIVINGSTONE 1333 F St. N.W. REDUCED SUMMER RATES polts oy to learn any m Frivate 'or_class Tnstruction: s1at FREE TRIAL LESSON Berlitz School of l.lnmges 1115 Connecticut Avenue el. Decatur 3932 SCHOOL, Inc. The Secretarial School " of ludmd-l ln-cr-ermn CAROLINE B. o Send Tor o 1420 K St. N.W. The Practical School of INTERIOR DECORATION Course includes: Period furniture a: backgrounds during entire course; fessional knowledge of color and dra ijpie¥iiles; sllp cover cutting and o A thorough: pruuul Dusiness course, including arithmetic and ing. to fit you to take ottt ishing Sourse. " Professional. practi Structors of long experience only are em- Ty, Slass, for pupile of schoal 55 The Master-Sch ave o Baturdsy Bammey and evening classes. Eleanor A. Gleason 1770 Columbia Road N.W. Col. 6606 If you would like to become seli- supporting, we can help you. Begin a course of shorthand, typewnhnx, bookkeeping, letter wntmx, spelling, arithmetic and English. A 10 months’ course, day sessior costs $100; evenin, .f session, $50. Ya& would be pleased with the course and never regret the preparation. WOOD’S SCHOOL 311 East Capitol St. Linc. 38 COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF DRAFTING “A Profession With a Future” Paul J. Leverone, President All branches—3 to 6 Month Courses Day and 13th and E Sts. N.W. BOY! K m&?‘m‘fl. yecks. Sier Vo Metropolitan 5626 orihand Tn % Sehesl fearnea. st rapid. Mununu L E GisE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL Approved by American Bsr Assoclation of Assoclation of American Law Summer Seulon 1929 | Secona T August 1-September 14 Registration days, July 30 and 31 Stockton Hall, 720 Twentieth Street West 1640 For Practical Results Study at _ ool For Beginners' Class of lnterior Decoration Specializing in Interior Decoration nd offering an Practical 'l?‘.‘.: and Professional Training Course in all the Branches of the Interior Arts. Rudolphe de Zapp, director Representing Arts & Decoration, New York 1206 Conn. Ave. North 5236 e ———— Fruax Wanenv's WATIORAL SCHOOL @F FINE AND APPLIED 4 ART b Connecticus Avenme and M Strest 0767 Rbode Lolasd Avenue) North 1114 v Now Classes Now Formias . . . Day and Eve- whng. .. Children's Saturdey Mornins Clasess Lodivideal lastraction by Ms. Mabony and Stafi v We tench you o become an asver in the COMMERCLIAL ARTS Professional Fundamental Conrse fits you to oe0ept & position ia laterior Decoration, Cos- = Dysemis Symmetry, Coles and Commereial Ast. Send for omr catalos. like his conquistador ancestors fought. With a delicate touch, he combines the strength of a Castilian bull. Sarazan was out in 41 and had dropped 3 shots to Jones, virtually counted out of the championship. Armour was out in 39 and was too far back. That left' only Espinosa, Jones and Shute, and it seemed that the Ohio lad was cracking too badly to figure. Jones had a 4 at the short tenth. so did Espinosa. Jones missed a putt of loss than 2 feet at the eleventh for a birdle 3 and Espinosa ook a 5. Then came Espinosa's big blow-ug A hooked tee shot at the long twelfth, where the bunkers loom up like the sand -dunes of the Virginia ocean front and a badly hooked second which found a trap on the thirteenth fairway, left him a hard pitch across another bunker to the green. He put the blfl in a trap near the green, took 2 to get out and then took 3 putts for the 8. Did he quit there? He did not. Instead of that he buckled down to business of retrieving that 8 and suc- ceeded. His birdie 3 on the seventeenth gave him his chance and he would have won the eighteenth had his putt stayed in. Bobby Gets in Trouble. Meanwhile out behind him was the Jones boy, fighting to keep out of the traps and getting into other kinds of trouble. He missed a 15-footer for 8 birdie 4 at the twelfth, put his tee shot far over the green at the short thir- teenth for a 4. and got his par 4 at the fourteenth. Then came his waterloo, that fearsome fifteenth, where the ball must be kept well to the left to give an onen shot to the green. He pushed his tee shot badly to the woods which fringe the fifteenth fairway, chipped out on the fairway, and missed his third shot, putting it to the right of the green and knocked his fourth shot over the green. He was just on with his fifth and man- aged to hole out in two putts. As if that wasn't enough Bobby made a hash of the sixteenth, a par 5 affair which is not a 5. but should be a i He knocked the ball so far from the tee that he home with a spade mashie and had & utt of on.ly 18 feet for an eagle 3. But gl tt ‘was "n:“ll:d l';: b|ew a plm of a yard for isn’t like the Jones boy to do these things. When he gets them down they usually stay down. He usually is a re- all the wny to make up that 7. finished with a brace of 4s. and what 2 4 that last hole was! His ueond shot ran across the green on slope and he made a weak: which left him a 12-footer. The putt barely staggered in to tie Espinosa. All that had gone before with young Shute came to a climax at the fifteenth. Here Jack Forrester, with 'hmn he had played over the final day, took the ouncltar ulde and told him what he ild Cool of countenance, unlmllln‘ u l ways, Shute hit & tee shot into the wind at the fifteent which bounced off a rock and left him a playable shot to the green. He knocked it out into a strip of rough whslch bisects the fairway, and got a 5. He then was one shot back of Jonu. n three 4s to tle. And he hi the ball fully s'lo mnu on the slxmenth. leaving him h _he hadn’t had before in !ht chlm Iofl.!hlp‘ hy, former Wi ‘amateur, g’l gallery marshal. The lad n.ruck um‘ ball truly for the pin. What he wanted was an eagle 3 and victory. He ;v‘nnkud no ti;. ‘But the ball :ltb;)n the ck edge of the grgen and boun over. A weak chip shot gave him a pr 5. And Dunphy said he knocked his tee shot so far he didn’t know how to Perhaps he was right, for Shute pl.lyed it with a mashie niblick on a par 5 hole. had a birdie and a par to tie. for a 3 on the seventeenth just bi past the lip of the cup and he over- pitched the eighteenth to take a 5 and place him in a tie with Sarazen for third position. MacKenzie Ends 45th. Roland Mackenzie, Columbia ama- teur, finished the final day with 84 and 78 to take forty-fifth place. He will Iuve to qualify again next year. f course, every one knows who Bob Jonen l-lv but Espinosa is just a hll] figure to most golfers. Last Lu' went to Kansas clty lnd won t) N American 0] Last Fall he won uuuyln:q:wnd in the professional matcl rnament at timore and went w the final round, where Leo Diegel beat him. This year he has been playing particularly o He told George Von & been hitting eblllls'ell as he had been mmng it in this champlonship. :’nd thne‘ result of the final day shows His lncumru came to Olll{ornh in ship back in the seven- teenth century. He has four brothers and a sister and all are golf profes- sionals. ‘The present tie is the fourth in which Jones, admittedly the greatest golfer ol the present day, will have tied with Bobby lecnhmk at lnwood in 1923 and won on playoff. He tied with Willle Mlchrhne at Worces- ter in 1925 and lost on the gl-yofl He tied- again with John Farrell last year at Chicago and lost on the playaff. He is due, if the law of averages means anything, to win tomorrow. His round of 79 today is the worst he ever has played in an open champi ‘The young colossus of golf took 'ID in the third round for the open at'Columbus in 1926, but he went ahead to win when Joe Turnesa cracked. His round of 79 this afternoon was his.-worst in any championship. He said so himself, so it must be so. It isn’t often that the Jones boy takes a brace of sevens any round of golf. ‘But he did it toduy, at a time when he had the champion. ship safely tucked away. Jones' rounds in this championship were 69, 75, 71 and 79. [Espinosa’s rounds were 70, 72, 77 and 75. Who will win? Weré we to be asked | to ‘we should say Jones will win. The odds favor him because playoffs fnl' the Dflen are an old story to him. -n old nl! :xlmn ‘which ecutinm om ot to bet hylmu makes his gro at the game, Nevertheless, Jones d win, for he has lost two and won one playoff. — Found Dead in Bed. PETERSBURG, W. Va, June 29 (Special) —Mrs. Florence Alt, 65, a vell kncwn lmtn*n of Grant County, widow of James Alt, was found dead in bed at her old home, where she had gone on an errand from the home of her daughter, where she lived. Death was laid 10 acute indigestion, ced | caught between advan troops he never had | b HIGH-SPEED TANK AMAZES EXPERTS IN SEVERE TESTS (Continued From First Page.) trical timing device used in A. A. A. speed tests. Capable of making even faster time, {in the opinion of Army experts, the tank took several steep embankments at break-neck speed. The dispatch with which the caterpillar bands can be put on and taken off makes it a formidable weapon of offense in war- fare, as the tank performs on the road like any other nuwmohue, Mr. Christle, who produced the first front-wheel-drive automobile, and who once was one of the outstanding speed kings of the world, said he was inspired to build the combat machine to meet the needs developed in the World War. Gen. Pershing, after the armistice, in- spected the machine, then under con- struction, and expressed the opinion that 100 such Ipeed tanks in the Ar- gonne would have saved the lives of many men. Technical details and specifications of the armored tank were kept closely guarded from the public at yesterday's demonstration, “The importance of a heavily armed machine, with an inch and one-half of armor, capable of moving 50 miles an hour across country, can easily be seen,” said Mr. Christie. “Mobility is the secret of military strategy, and I believe I have developed one of the most powerful in- struments of war ever produced.’ Mr. Christie said the Army, 'hlch assisted in earlier experiments, has al ready pronounced the machine & suc- cess, and negotiations are now under way for its purchase by the Govern- ment. = SANDIND BANDS MENACE HONDURAS Government Sends 600 Men to Border to Aid Defenders. By the Associated Press. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, June 29. —With the departure of the Nicaraguan leader, Gen. Sandino, into Mexico, his h’{‘,} army has disintegrated into irregular groups_threatening the safety of Hon- duru border towns, An irregular band, about 100 strong and under the leadership of Sabino Diaz, recently attacked a Honduras border patrol 6 miles this side of the border. The patrol returned the fire, kfllln‘ Diaz and five of his men. Honduran government has dis- ldwd 600 men, under Gen. Toriblo San irregulars, are concentrated at a point only a mile from the Honduras border, will be cing Nicaraguan and United States Marines and the new Honduras force. oA TARIFF AID FOR FARMERS IS ASKED BY FEDERATION |34 Directors of Organization Believe President Sought to Create Parity With Industry. By the Associated Press. CHXCAGO June 20.—A demand, addressed to members of the Senate finance committee, that tariff rates on agricultural products be revised to place them on a par with rates on industrial products, was voiced today by directors the Ameérican Farm Bureau Federa- President Hoover’s recommendation in his muule w the session of tive body act arm rellel md limited changes the tariff, flle Farm Bureau expressed the bellef that the Executive “wished to bring about a rmy - tween tariff rates on agricultural and industrial products.” LABOR BILL SIGNED. Minnesota “Yellow Dog Contract Measure” Drastic. MADISON, Wis. (#).—Gov. Walter J. Kohler, himself a millionaire manufac- turer, has signed one of the most drastic pleces of legislation ever ad- vanced by labor. ‘The measure, known as the “yellow dog contract bill” voids all contracts in which employes agree not to join labor unions. It also voids contracts in which farmers agree not to become members of co-operating marketing associations. Similar measures were presented by the American leration of Labor l,c each of the 48 latures. and were defeated in every State but Wisconsin. iy PARAMOUNT BUYS HOUSES JOLIET, II., June 29 (#).—Sale of Great States Theaters, Inc., an organi- zation controlling 60 houses in is, the Paramount-] Players group was announced today by Jules J. ‘Rubens, vice president of the former concern. Pa -Famous Players controlled 30 unt of the common stock rm.‘nm‘w the sale, and acquired the stock, uu a reported consideration of $ g British Strikes Decrease. LONDON (#).—Labor is being weaned from the strike habit by conferences with employers. The Minister of Labor Gazette reports that the number of strikes in 1928 in Great Britain and Northern Ireland 302, the smallest in "upx:.y year since @atistics have' been CHURCH SERVICE URGED ON WOMEN California Pastor Points to Advantages Given Them Through Christianity. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 29.—Rev. C. Pick- enscher of Slcrlmenw Calif., speaking today at the two-day expofluon ‘which closes the thirty-fourth triennial con- vention of the Evangelical Lntheran Missouri Synod, urged that “Christian women devote more time to service in the church.” For one thing Christian women should realize the advantages Chris- tianity has given them in comparison to the social and economic status under which women of non-Christian peoples live, he said. hases of Missouri Synodical wnrk rom foreign missions to home service, are represented in the expo- sition bogths. Musical numbers and pageants being presented in connection with the expo- sition are contributions of Lutheran conl'l‘entlem in Chicago. Hurrying guests of the Sherman Hotel paused today as the voices of 1,500 children rang through the lobby singing religious hymns. ‘The exposition depicted in miniature, picture or diagram all phases of work in the synod. It will continne through Sunday. It is estimated that 50,000 persons will attend -mnd. MISS A B.SUTTER ATTENDS PARLEY Dry Bureau Section Head Has Little to Say at Meet- ing of Educators. By the Assoclated Press. ATLANTA, Ga, June 20.—Anna B. Sutter, head of the educational and statistical section of the Bureau of Prohibition, occupied a booth in the exhibit hall at the convention of the National Education Association here to- 1929—PART. 1. BULGAR-JUGOSLAV RELATIONS UNEASY Agrarian Quarrel Has Es- tranged Neighbors—Italy Seen in Background. Special Cable to The Star. VIENNA, June 29.—Diplomatic rela: tions between Bulgaria and Jugoslavii have reached a critical stage, according to the Novosti of Belgrade, organ of the Agrarian party, in connection with the recent frontier incidents, the liml tion having become such, it says, ti even optimistic diplomats see no possi bility of the normalization of neighborly relations. ‘The campaign against Julfldlv‘h conducted by the Bulgarian govern- ment, it. adds, looks as if it were in- tended to provoke a conflicl of conse- quence, hut the bellet 1.; e that the camj is ne engineered on the !nmlflve ot th! Bulgarian gov- ernment itself, but that the latter is acting under the influence of a big power hostile to Jugoslavia which wishes to demonstrate that the treaty of Neullly has broken down. In this Novosti alludes, of course, to Italy, which not long ago sent a naval md alr squadron with much flourish an fanfare to B If one is to believe the reports from Belgrade the Bi government is preparing & dlplomtlc step to be taken Tn by its envoy in Belgrade, but this sounds unlikely. Information from the same source is to numerous n‘xeeg:‘s o(k?r‘oc;tt h:.ve ‘been held in Bul against Jugosiav “en- troachmenu"" along the frontier and that at these meetings many irredentist speeches have been delivered, includ- ing one by Lieut. Col. Ilieff, calling Jugoslavia sharply to sccount for al- leged prosecutions of innocent Bul- garian peasants in the lost Bulgarisn provinces. At the same gathering, one Nurigian, a former press l'-uche of the Italian legation at Sofia, declared that Italy will always assist Bulgaria in the latter’s effort to obtain satisfaction. At another meeting an Ifalian Jjournalist, Bentiveni, nid that Italy will do everything possible to obtain & revision of the treaty of Neuilly. The Belgrade Pravda reports that a group of Bulgarian comitadjis tried to invade Jugoslavia over Greek ter- ritory at the southernmost corner of Jugoslavia territory, but were beaten back by gendarmes, who killed one Bulgar. The trouble started when Bul- garia refused to ratify the Pirot peace pact because the Jugoslavs demanded me establishment of a ne\lml Dbelt six miles In width and extending all along the border, thus to obviate - frontier incidents in futur &upymm 1020.) 2,000-MiLE MILE FENCE ON BORDER URGED TO CHECK LIQUOR, (Continued From First Page.) but explained that his depln.mznt was lnnlunun. it carefully. The wire fence along the Mexican border has been taken as a basis of the study, Mr. Lowman sald. The proposal for the northern boundary contemplates three lines of barbed wire over a wall stantial steel posts. Gates at Intervals. Gates would be maintained at inter- vals to regulate legitimate traffic over the international boundary. of heavy meshed wire, supported by sub- of the Treasury in charge of prohibition enforcement, the patrol force could be greatly reduced with the aid of the fence. It was point- ed out that the barrier would be a con- siderable aid to the United States Gov- | ernment in preventing other forms of its efficacy, and the view of ested lden is_that no oflenle would be given to Canads, since obyious purpose would be to chock day, but excepting a brief and formal | liquor sm statement, issued to newspaper men, she retained strict silence regarding her mission and circumstances under which she came. “I am here as head of the educational and statistical section of the Bureau of Prohibition,” the statement read, “to answer inguiries of teachers interested, who desire to know what facts are available in the Bureau of Prohibition bearing on observance and enforcement of the eighteenth amendment and laws enacted to carry it into effe Beyond that Miss Sutter would say nothing. Questions regarding a pam- phlet reported to have been prepared for distribution at the convention in vocacy of- pmhlhltlon brought a hell’ty )lu‘h but no answer. lhtemem " she sald. "Thll is .ll I have to say.” SPAIN MOVES TO STOP DECLINE OF CURRENCY Rigid Regulations Ordered to Sta- bilize Peseta—Return to Gold Standard Not Desired. BY the Associated Press. MADRID, June 20.—The Spanish government today in issuing a state- ment regarding measures to be taken to counteract the fall of the peseta de- in |clared the present time not propitious for a return to the gold standard. Among the relief measures are: confl\lmp lon of me “c thus limit tions, cur- rcntly enjoy reduced cuswnu duties, Stimulation of home production of wll;,umli:é uwlw?'-. e'ol:eton. corn. lon for ish B e o1 Span! automo- “Racket” Flying Schools Attacked. CHICAGO (#).—Extermination of “racket” flying schools is the object of the newly formed Illinois Aviation So- clety, made up of aviation enthusiasts in the State. It is an outgrowth of a series of conferences held to map plans for a war on mushroom flying lcgooh which offer sludenfis “nothing but a certain opportunity to lose their lives. on Lhe%u‘?'hlnd. it was admitted in some dry quarters that Canada’s un- to the United o( liquor exports itates illegal, was a factor in the move w nln ® liquor wall between the two “Thl.s would greatly cut down the number of places on the border where people may cross.” Mr. ex- plained. The practically indiscriminate crmln: at many points would be ended the whole border watch tightened and bootleggers’ mndlnfl] Teduced. States to Be on Line. easury estimates will be within a few months. o mu.n estimate of $10,000,000 was fig- ured unofficially on the basis of $1 a Toot for ‘about 2,000 miles. The fence would run across upper Maine, New to co-operate to the extent chances corre- VALSPAR Four-Hour Enamel 70c Y; pt., $1.15 pt., $2.15 qt. Weathershield A General Purpose Paint 70c qt. $225 gal. Prompt Delivery National 6386 Expert Paint Advice Free Certainteed Red Roof Paint $1.50 Gal. MUTH Quality Sinee 1865 710 13th St. N.W. FLY TO NEW YORK IN 90 MINUTES Fare $25.00 WASHINGTON-NEW YORK AIRLINE Metropolitan the effect thatj ‘The present szmhlre Vemnnt and sz Yo‘;k u: densburg, to resumed again af Duluth and be cln’led over )flnnuflh wun!? lem.'z, mumum Idaho ington e Pacifi At _some pomu the fence i would run Xew miles south of the mnduy. within American ter- Ty. Concentration of Federal forces on the Detroit River has forced the liquor runners out of that area and into Lake Erie for their mljol;h operations, u:- cording to reports to terday from the chief cununl Etm! omeen at Detroit. of the Menl patrol force len back to the Ohio shore, be- tween 'l\wledn and Cleveland. Mean- while there have breaks in the blockade at other points of the in- ternational boundary. Hopes to Break Ring. By continuing the present concentra- tion of customs agents on the Canadian boundary in the administration’s cam- paign to check the flow of liquor into this country, Mr. Lowman was hope- ful, he said, of breaking the back of other polnu where Winter smuggling 1s pronounced. The umm on the Canadian boundary, while now on a basis which wamm o%o cost_the oovemmrfl!;nt .% a_year, acco officials, has not sent up the general cost of the prohibition enforcement fight, since the extra forces were drawn from other areas where the fight was not nearly so Annie Arnot, l‘ed 25, of Hackbridge, England, died recently from the effects of a mosquito bite. , | tles. urpose said | ports was to assist the directors in map- K.OF C. DIRECTORS END COUNCIL HERE Supreme Board Adjourns After Preparing for Mil- waukee Convention. ‘The board of directors of the Supreme Council of the Knights of Columbus, which has been in session at the Wil- lard Hotel since yesterday morning, will adjourn this afternoon after having made advance preparations for the in- ternational convention of the order at Milwaukee, Wis., in August. ‘The final session of the board’s meet- ing, which has been attended by lll l\m nati officers, will be taken largely by the report of ldwufl h Hearn, former supreme knight of the order in the United States, on the rec- reational work which the K. of C. has been conducting under his direction m Rome since 1922. Mr. Hearn, whoss home is near Boston, had charge of un Knights of Columbus war work France and when that duty was nom- pleted he was assigned to the conduct of child recreational activities in ane where six playgrounds were Yesterday's session of th brought forth di order is in a flourishing conditi quarters and in all its various activi- The pi of the various re- , ping out a program for the coming con- vention. The sessions here were held under the chairmanship of lllrfin H. Carmody, supreme knight, of Grand Rapids, Mich. Electrification ot the R.Iwna region in France has been ONLY 2 MORE DAYS: MONDAY and TUESDAY By “De Vonne” Present this d to he Sen. Bhlehludioe Sxpentes, e wad we 3-a y Night, July —Limi/ One THESE TWO STORES ONLY Natlonal Press Pharmacy | 1336 F STREET—NEXT TO FOX THEATER Albany Pharmacy 17th & H STREETS Mail Orders Aceepted—Add 15 for Packing and Postage Stieff Grand PIANO It has been used as a demonstrator and is in as good condition as a brand new instrument. It positively can’t be told from a new piano. Come in and see it—run your fingers over the keyboard— you'll say it has a wonderful tone. [Originally Priced at $1850—SAVE $600] Chas. M. Sfieff, Ine. 1340 G Street N. W. Piano Manufacturers for Almost a Hundred Years INSPECT TODAY 17th & G Sts. S.E. Just North 17th & Pa. Ave. Street Cars FIRST TIME OFFERED See Many New Ideas Shown in These Very Attractive Homes Large Built-in Garage Green Celored Porcelain Plumbing Closed Sleeping Porch Four Outside Bedrooms Green Porcelain Gas Range Large Built-in Refrigerator Three Large Porches Armstrong’s Linoleum Hardwood Fleors, Entire House INSPECT TODAY Open & Lighted—Why Not Come Out? - INCORPORATED

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