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Graf Will Start Back to Germany With Queer Cargo ‘FEMININE EXPERTS HELP FARM BOARD Highly - Speicalized Woman Scientists Contribute to Pres- ent Agricultural Era. Set of Bowling Balls and | Canned Pears Are Two of Items on List. By the Assoclated Press. THE EVE NING _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1929. 29 1‘BOBBY’ JONES WON'T RUN FOR CONGRESS Georgian Modestly Declines Idea; to “Work at Law and Make a Living.” By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, August i.—Robert Tyre known to the golfing world as ‘‘Bobby,” Jones, Atlarita atlorney, affectionately | bitions in announcing he would not be- come a candidate for Congress from the fifth Georgia district to succeed the late Leslie J. Steele. Citizens of Canton, his grandfather's former home, yesterday suggested that he make the race, and expressed the opinion that Bobby's “ability as a law- yer and international fame as a golf player, would make him a serious con- tender.” “I am deeg]y appreciative and grate- ful,” said Bobby, in announcing his de- cision not to enter the race, “that any- body from my grandfather’s home town should think of suggesting me as a candidate for so dignified an office. But my _inclinations are not political, even if I fancied I had any ability in work at law and do my best to be a Georgia lawyer and make a living.” gt Piendiet New Airport Urged at Canal. By Cable to The Star. BALBOA, Canal Zone, August 1.— Establishment of a commercial airport at the Pacific end of the Canal has been requested of the government of the) Panama Canal Zone in a communica- tion from the Panama Canal department of the American Legion. Army air| fields and the one at Panama City are the only existing fields. Establishment of modern commercial facilities in the | PERMITS CHANGED PLEA BY EXPECTANT MOTHER Judge Sets Aside Judgment, to Al- low Young Woman Trial by Jury. | By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, Calif, August 1.— yesterday set aside his judgment in | sentencing Mrs. Thelma Holland, 22- | year-old _expectant mother, to San Quentin Prison for prohibition law vip- | Superior Judge Emmet H. Wilson late | woman to plead not gullty to a charge | of possessing a still. Mrs. Holland previously had pleaded | guilty to knowledge of the possession | of a still by her husband and to hav- ing aided him in its operation. Mrs. Holland remained in the county Jjail last night in default of $1,000 bail. Ehe will appear today for preliminary hearing. Tuesday the judge granted a stay of sentence for six months to allow Mrs. Holland’s child to be born outside prison walls. The husband, Charles W. Holland, was sentenced to Folsom Prison for | from seven years to life because of | STRIKE PEACE HOPE DIM. | British . Textile Manufacturers Study Labor Situation. MANCHESTER, England, August 1 (). —Lancashire entered its fourth day of the textile mills stoppage with hardly a gleam of hope for early resumption of negotiations locking to settlement of the dispute between employes and operatives, Notices affecting 6,000 operatives have been posted by the Cotton Waste Spin- ners and Manufacturers’ Association for a wage reduction. This association met NEW YORK, August 1—The Graf|yesterday disclaimed any political am ICED COFFEE WEEK the first l('g of her projected \\orld' fiight with almost as strange a Cargo as the apes and oil paintings she is |SeneiE xf}“;;‘mkling balls, consigned to | President von Hindenburg, and cans of | American pears will be two of the This is Iced Coffee Time! And A&P stores have a well-earned repu- tation for quality coffees. A&P representation in the famous marts of the world assures you of the choicest grades—and A&P prices mean savings in your budget. Serve Iced Coffee tonight—so tempting and re- freshing—just the right thing to round oie % off a delicious dinner. that direction. I'll stick along and | Zone he aim of the resolution. lation charges and allowed the youig | prior liquor law violation convictions. | today to consider the general si tuation, By the Associated’ Press. To the Federal Farm ard era of American agriculture highiy specialized women will make contributions. A cytologist, @ biometrician, a fem- | inine “husbandman, s well as woman | nutritionists, bacteriologists and en- | ro included in the De. |items, the Hamburg-American Line an- scientific staff | nounced last night. The bowling balls scientific staf | Routeed Tt e 1 Thumm of New | York to the German President. | " Other items in the return cargo will !be one automobile tire, motion picture films, a typewriter, silk stockings, sacks of flour and {wo cases of }i]nsecé;c\de i c! e 2 © G e .| Special train rvice S en - i ;‘-l\:um mdm\.{ R Ped so that the Graf's passengers ¢ when the Farm Board nceds|Wwhen they arrive at Lakehurst will be them as a basis for assisting in co- |able to step almost dlrs‘icfil) fran:heni operative marketing campaigns. M;my»dmzmlv to cars, which will spee of the great co-operatives now are |to New York. basing thefr advertising campaigns on - —— tific'data of food values, Christen- GAS-I-UNIA -|-R|A|-S ace in the ¢ampaign against gapeworms, REUPEN AUGUSI 26 worms and gizzard worms which | )y $38,000,000 worth of poultry an- 'Judge Orders Murder Case| to Be Taken to Mecklen- burg County. which Uncle Sam places at the disposal m Board-in its job of Armers. Christensen, s planning a s by Louise Stan- Farm ) ies of | amin food te Studies Parasites. Rubber-booted and rubber-gloved, Dr. Eloise B. Cram pursues studies of para- sites in poultry yards as well as in the laboratory, She is the Government's ESTABLISHED 1859 S Eyerlastingly = Junior animal husbandman in the sheep and goat office” is the title of ¢ J. Brandon, friend of the wool In charge of the wool-scouring laboratory, she weighs thousands of samples and eompiles statistical tables. She conducts sheep studies on a Mary- land experimental farm Ruth Starrett is a cytologist, study- ing cell structure of sugar plants i achieve & single cross-section stus | a leaf-hopper injecting curly-top virus as she sucked sugar water from a beet leaf, M rett made 100 trial slide: The beet growers profit by her pail as the sugar cane growers: profited by her study of mosaic, the mottled disease of sugar cane. Twenty-Year Triumvirate, 20-year trium in the n — Lucia McC F and Mary ! Two New Openings Tomorromw our new combination Grocery, Meat and Produce Market at - 1721 Columbia Road our completely remodeled combination market at Indian Head, Md. *Branch 1721 Col. Rd. will be open for Public Inspection Tonight 7 to 10— Everyone Invited By the Associated Press. RALEIGH, N. C., August 1.—Trial of 16 officials and members of the Na- | tional Textile Union and affiliated Com- munistic organizations, charged with | the murder of O. F. Aderholt, chief of police of Gastonia, will be resumed in Charlotte, August 26. This announcement was made at the >ffice of Gov. O. Max Gardner yesterday, The defense was granted a change of venue from Gastonia. The trial will be presided over by Judge M. V. Barnhill of Rocky Mount, who, after hearing affidavits and evi- dence of prejudice and intimidation for two days, granted the request of the de- fense for adjournment to another county. He ordered that the case be taken to Mecklenburg County. The group headed by Fred Edwin Beal, Southern organizer for the Na- | tional Textile Workers’ Union, is held in the Gaston County Jail. Three women defendants, Amy Schechter, Vera Buch and Sophie Melvin, are expected to be released on bond, the charge against Brown, now on the West coast com- | them having been amended to second bating an outbreak of crown gall in |degree murder. apples. She is a nationally known ex- - P Emma F. Sirrene, in charge of purity fmsmnlc ST. JOHN'S YEARLY PICNIC HELD testing of seeds, protects the farmer Conducted Annually for A Tea Hedg es of to- beans and caulifiower. ~They ed adjoining de same laboratory since 1919 Dr. Annie Mae Hul i Ch L. Martini, whose title is bio- ician, combat cereal diseases has her specialty and the ag; cludes valuable aid to the farmers who produce wheat, oats, millet, broom corn and sorghum. First aid to the fruit grower is Nellle A matoes, Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Fancy California ORANGES Doz. 19¢ FreshPeas......ccccoece0.0..21bs. 25¢ Tender String Beans. . «..lb. 10¢ Ear Corn 4 - 19¢ In Our Meat Markets Fresh Killed Tender Frying or Broiling CHUCK 52¢ Bokar Coffee ;> 23c*45¢ Chickens ROAST L. 43¢ L. 20¢ The choice of the famous Byrd Polar Party and Clock Coft | 8 o o o ee Lb. 37¢ o, Bt Fresh Boston Mackerel.............lb.m + the personal blend of a great coffee planter. Fresh Croakers .................3 Ibs. 25¢ BECSHETEOURE. .../, oo voiv oo oansmosrinss IDSISE Crab Meat, regular lump............1Ib. 39¢ HARVARD BRAND Fillet of Haddock 1. 19¢ from low-grade importations. BETHESDA GIRL WINS | zvent CLOTHES-MAKING pngl‘ More Than Century Draws Big — Throng to Forest Glen. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md, August 1.—The annual picnic for the benefit of historic St. John's Catholic Church, Forest Glen, an uninterrupted yearly event for considerable more than 100 vears and probably the county’s oidest in- stitution of its kind, was held on the church grounds yesterday afternoon and evening and attracted a very large throng from the county, the District of Columbia and elsewhere. Rev. Charles O. Rosensteel, venerable pastor of the church, headed the general committee in charge, and many First prize was awarded to Miss|Men and women of the congregation Margaret Benson of the “Just Girls|8ssisted. A dance at night was an en- Club” of Bethesda, for her outfit of |ovable feature. four garments, made in 1929, for e sports wear, and Miss Lavina Rice of | Autoists of Indla are refusing to buy the Travilah Club won first prize in|anything but the latest model cars this the cotton school dress contest. season. These young women will represent the county in similar State-wide con- tests to be held at College Park during 4-H Club week. The judges were Miss Dorothy Rob- inson of the University of Maryland, Miss Jean Nicol of Travilah, and Miss Blanche A. Corwin, home demonstra- tion agent for the count FARMERS BUY SHEEP THROUGH MARYLAND U. Order for Co-operative Shipment of 285 Pure-Bred Ewes Received, By a Staff Gorrespondent of The Star. COLLEGE PARK, Md., August 1.— Having recelved an order for a co- operative shipment of 285 head of pure- bred Hampshire ewes, valued at about $7,000, K. A. Clark, animal husbandry specialist of the University of Mary- lany, yesterday started for Deer Lodge, Mont,, to select the herd. This is the second importation of pure-bred sheep to_the State, the first | being brought in five years ago, and consisting of only about 100 head. The sheep have been purchased by farmers at Frederick, Baltimore, Queen Anne and Calvert Co\mflcfi Banks to Merge. LYNCHBURG, Va., August 1 (Spe- cial).—The Commercial Trust & Sav- ings Banks of this city and the Bank of Monroe will merge, if the merger plan meets the approval of the State corporation. The local bank is to take over the insolvent bank at Monroe and will operate it as a branch to the Lynchburg bank. e By a government decree all grave- yards of China are to be combined. Boscul Coffee Everlastingly Fresh—in a Vacuum Sealed Tin Lb. Tin Gets First Honors in Contest Held at Picnic of Montgomery | 4-H Clubs, atch to The Sta August 1.—The the Montgomery | Clubs, held at the the Montgomery | Bpeclal Di: ROCKVILLE, Md., ennual picnic of County 4-H Girls’ game preserve of County Fish and Game Protective As- sociation, near Middlcbrooke, and at- tended by half a hundred club mem- bers, was featured by a clothing con- test in which there were 20 exhibitors. A master blend of five of the world’s best coffees—coming to you oven- fresh, with full flavor, strength and aroma preserved in the vacuum sealed Highest quality Santos Coffee. The largest seller in America. Maxwell House = 49- Also Lord Calvert and Orienta. hue, use the tea of Del Monte or Libby’s Pineapple Kellogg’s or Corn Flakes 2 -18e Red Salmon -2 « 49ec Tomato Soup w 15e Evap. Milk " 3 & 25¢ Lux Soap Flakes ' 22¢ Palmolwe";‘;%:Soap 639 |4 P Lifebuoy Soap 3« 17¢ Ivory Soap 4! 25¢ delicate flavor National Blsqult Co. Lemon Jumbles Deliciously flavored fresh-baked cookies L. 25¢ GOLD MEDAL CAKE FLOUR Look for the special apron and towel coupon on the in- side of each package. IZ-oz. Pkg zsc Waldorf Paper, 3 rolls 17¢ Scott-Tissue. . .3 rolls 28¢ 0ld Witch Cleanser, bot. 15¢ Del Monte TOMATO SAUCE 3 Cans l7e Lge. Cans Encore Macaroni Spaghetti and Noodles Bulk Lard.......Ib. 15¢ Package Lard....Ib. 16¢ Nutley Margarine, Ib. 23¢ Van Camp’s The Ginger Ale h of KII’IQS"‘ \ 'P Im M“ ”!lr l WNrmnu..'.“l“lhm.. I || 1 n l nf!’fll m’!!l..l.l.m l Cantrell é’ C oc%;mzen,, i Cches DUBLIN -+ NEW YORK - - BELFAS