Evening Star Newspaper, February 6, 1930, Page 3

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“COMMUNITY CHEST +4604,000 Shortage Imperils Campaign, Due to Close at 7 P.M. Today. (Continued From First Page.) scriptions if a shortage exists in the general budget. Every radio broadcast system in * Washington carried its appeal for the Chest last night and other means of publicity were used to the utmost in a final desperate attempt to stave off | possible defeat. Mr. Delano, Frederick J. Wise, governor of the Capital Divi- sion of Cosmopolitan Clubs; Mr. Poole and Harlan Wood, past departmental commander of the American Legion, all sppealed to the people of Washington. In addition, “Radio_Joe” Kaufman dedicated his usual Wednesday night program to the workers of the Chest. Hoover Speaks Over Radio. . President Hoover's speech, which stressed the moral factor of the Chest, ‘was broadcast throughout the city over Stations WMAL and WRC and indica- tions early today showed that it is inning to have excellent effect on the amount of subscriptions pouring in. Right Rev. James E. Freeman, Bishop ©of Washington, offered the motion at the ¢onclusion of the President’s speech . to form an advisory committee to Tender aid to the Special Gifts Commit- . lee. His motion was seconded by Mrs. ‘Whiteman Cross. ¥ “To fail to raise this sum of $1,786,~ ;'57 7 would be a disaster that would <:flect greatly on the moral worth and the moral character of the community which we live,” Bishop Freeman e lared at the meeting. Newbold Noyes, chairman of the Spe- «lal Gifts Committee; Mr. Poole, Mr. X-a00 and Elwood Street, director of €he Jhest. addressed the meeting, ex- plaining the critical emergency which Maces the campaign. hn figures, as announced by the wuditing department, represent every dollar*that has been turned in to date 1o the general Chest fund. “We are holding back no surprise for this eve- ning,” Chairman Poole said. ‘The final report from the Group So- HANGS IN'BALANCE GIWVEYONEES, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, FEBRVARY 6. 1930 FORMER TEACHER IN GEORGIA NAMED TO TAX APPEAL BOARD 2 AL, =6 Mary R. White; $250, Mr. and Mrs. H. Barrett Learned; $200, Harry S. Wolf, Mrs. Maud F. Gibbs, J. Frank Kelly, Inc.; August H. Plugge, Albert W. Wal- ker, Charles A. Layman, Leon S. Ulman, West End Laundry, Inc; Mrs. E. D. Rheem, Willlam King & Son; $166.50, employes of Emerson & Orme; $150, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Fenning, Dr. and Mrs. Lewis C. Ecker, Robert F. Shepard, Mrs. Robert F. Shepard, Miss Alice B. Shepard, C. C. Rogers & Son, Mr. and Mrs. Carlton George Van Emon, Joshua Evans, jr.; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. C. R. Darnell, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. McCabe, Dr. and Mrs. William K. Butler, Na- tional Cathedral School, N. I. Urdong, B. H. Meyer: $135, Eleanor M. Connolly. Anna G. Connolly; $125, Mrs. W. T. Davis; $120, Dr. and Mrs. Clarence B. Allen, E. Gundersheimer & Sons, Max Hersch; $112, Employes of the Munsey Trust Co; $110, Mr. and Mrs. Richard ‘Waterman; $105, E. A. Harris; $100, W. A. Gruman, Corson & Gruman Co., St. Cyprian’s Church, W. D. Campbell Co., R. E. Milor Co., Anne M. Carrere, Dr. J. R. Palkin, Miller Dudley Co., Kathe- ryn Sellers, Rev. Louis T. Ott, Albert I. Cassell, Mrs. Charles Edward Barten- bach, Mrs. W. P. Van Ness, Edward H. Ross, August King Smith, J. R. Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Cunningham, Mrs. C. Willard Hayes, James P. McKinney, H. M. Crandall, National Biscuit Co., Jesse R. Hildebrand, O'Hanlon Plumbing licitation Unit was awaited anxiously in view of its quota of $260,000. Oniy a small part of that amount had been raised up to yesterday. but there was every expectation that the final report would show the quota goal pledged. Totals by Units. JRevised figures submitted by the auditors this morning show yesterday’s total divided as follows: Special Gifts Committee, $10,469; Group Solicitation Unit, $4,467.28; Metropolitan _Unit, $52,976.67, wl includes $3,099.21 from Region Five, which embraces the «colored population of ths city. Contributions received by the Metro- Politan Union were reported as follows: Region 1, of which Simon Lyon is chairman: Arthur Adelman, Division 1, $892.50; Lee D. Latimer, Division 2, $1,410; Graham H. Powell, Division 3, $2,681; Dion S. Birney, Division 4-5, $819; G. B. Craighill, Division 6, $3,438.25. Region 2, of which H. L. Rust, ir., is chairman® F. A. Birgfeld, Division 7, $3,962.75; James B. Evans, Mrs. Charles A. Goldsmith and W. C. Hanson, co- chairman of Division 8, $5,255.50; Leon S. Ulman, Division 9-25, $1,850.50; J. Leo Kolb, Division 10-24, $1,54 Hardell, Division 11, W. ) Chauncey G. Parker, jr., and Coleman Jennings, Division 12, $6,717.80. .50; ht N. Burn- Division 17; $1,197.50; F. E. " Rogers, Division 18-19, $1,790.75. Region 4, of which James E. Colli- flower is chairman: M. M. McLean, Division 20-21, $325.50; Dr. Percival Hall, Division 22-23, $949.10; Harry N. Division 5 26, $864.21; Mrs. Allan Davis, Division 27, $931.05; G. M. Yeat- Division 63 iberty tional Bank, Washington Savings Bank, Crane, & Co., G. M. P. Murphy & Co., Glover & Flather and F. B. Keech & Co. Based upon the scale of giving, the ‘workers at the Jewish Foster Home Community Chest, according to rt received yesterday. The Jewish unity Center was another 100 per cent organization. Large Gifts Reported. Gifts of $100 or more reported yes- terday were as follows: $1,000, C. A. Snow, sr.; $700, Mr. and Mrs. Fenton M. Fadely; $500, Junior League of D. C. Gertrug ., Mary de Durant; $300, Georgetown Visitation Convent, Mrs. S SPECIAL NOTICES. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY GeD13 oiner than those contracied by MO, ROY C. GORDY, 919 Kennedy st. i A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE U. 8. ‘Treasury Department Beneficial Association wi held February 9, at 3 it the of R. E. Pilkinton, treasurer. 1627 0] .. for the purpose of considering proposed amendments to .the association’s ro) constitution so as to extend the privilege of membersshi; me €At they may receive. as well as the method for handiing collections in the field J. F. MOODY. Sec: n. STORAGE CO.. INC.. _418 10th St N.W. Metropolitan 1845. AN ADJOURNED ANNUAL MEETING OF the Natlonal Homeopathic Hospital Associ- ation will be_held " home at 11:30 am. February 13. An important “change in’ by-laws is contem- Plated and all members are requested to be present.Myrtle S Sappin WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO or from New York. Richmond, Boston, Pitts- Bureh and all way Doints. gA'flONAL DELIVERY ASSN.. . N Nat. 1460, Local moving aiso. 3 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY flflh"-l other than those contracted Ly my- selt. WM. T. GRIPFIN. Kensington, Md. fibfinm&oifiu:kofilxbs.‘ $2 AND UP TP ave 3 ng samples. Zou have the paper; will bring sami o NOTICE — UPHOLSTERING, _ REPAIRING, Bnishing furniture at low price if done w._Address Box 15-S, Star office. __* WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS €ontracted by any one but myself. EDWARD M. WILLIAMS. 431 Warner st. nw. __ 1° WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR AN¥ ®ebts other than those contracted by myself. ANTHONY J. WERNIG, 1322 12th n.w. WANTED—RETURN LOAD OF FURNITURE fom New Yok, Philadelphia, Atiantic City. 3 o) J.; Richmond, Va. and Baltimore, Md. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co. L1313V 8 North 3343 _ Don Britt, Haberdasher, Formerly at 1209 Pa. Ave. N.W. AT 1423 F ST. N.W. o Bet. Willard and Washington Hotels 7 Supply Co., George S. Ward, Charles H. Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Otis F. Tabler, H. G. Taylor, L. M. Betts, R. H. Aishton, M. J. Gormley, E. W. Thompson, Charles W. Bolgiano, E. B. Farren, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund F. Jewell, Dr. Abram Simon, George M. Morris, Howard W. Phillips & Co., Matthew L. Rue, Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Hillyer, Rev. John O'Grady, Edward Costigan, Mrs. A. A. Saul, W. E. Clark & Co., Mr. and Mrs. George T. Summerlin, jr.; E. C. Fos- ter, Miss Georgia B. Phillsbury, Charles B. Heinemann, Strayer Business Col- lege, Claude W. Owen, Mrs. Claude W. Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Gilbert, Miss Mabel L. Pillsbury, Mr. Mrs. J. E. Wholean, Mr. and Mrs. F. Cloyd Awalt, anonymous, Frank S. Pohanka, Melvin H. Coulston, Mrs. R. W. Hills, Labor Co-operative E. and P. Societi. Maurice Davis, Dr. Adajah Behrend, ! Miss Esther M. Behrend, John D. How- ard, Arthur Meyer and Sol Goldstein. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ‘TODAY. Circulo di Converszione Italiana, re- organized under direction of Prof. Mario Barra, will meet at 8 pm. at 301 Tennessee avenue northeast. All interested in the Italian are welcome. Brotherhood of American Yoemen will meet at 8 p.m. at Odd Fellows' Hall, 419 Seventh street. Meeting of the Potomac Palisades Garden Club will be held at 8 pm. at the home of Bernard M. Lane, 5327 Conduit read. Kit Carson Woman’s Relief will hold a benefit card party at 8 o'clock at the Grand Army A moonlight hike will be taken to- night by the Red Triangle Outing Club, meeting at 8 o'clock at the end of the tral through ook reck Sark. Bring 0! ek Park. flashlight. Bill Greenley, leader. A card party and dance will be held this evening under auspices of Temple Chapter, No. 13, Order of the Eastern Star, at the Wardman Park Hotel from 9 to 12 o'clock. Sara Peden is chair- man and Martin Smith is associate FUTURE. Alpha Delta Phi luncheon will be held w?dmmw, 12:30 o'clock, at the Hotel Gordon. tonight satf District of Columbia Association Op- posed to Blue Laws will meet tomorrow evening, 8 o'clock, at the Annapolis Hotel. A play, “Ninety Days' Grace,” will be iven tomorrow evening at Plerce Hall, Fifteenth and Harvard strecis, at 8:13 o'clock. Meeting of the Woman's Interde- nominational Missionary Federation will be held tocmorrow afternoon, 2 o'clock, in Mount Vernon Place M. E. Church South. William Richie, sec- retary of the Free Gift Bible Mission of Philadelphia, will speak. Miss Adele Greene of the Church of the Covenant will read letters from the field concern- ing distribution of Bibles and Testa- ments among the children of mull workers in the mountains of North Carolina under the home mission de- Y | partment of which she is chairman. University of Michigan Women's Club will hold a luncheon tomorrow at the A. A. U. W. club house. ‘Walter Hinton will speak on aviation at a luncheon given by the Women's City Club Saturday afternoon, 1 o'clock, at the club house. Mrs. Merritt O. Chance will preside. “An Evening of Poetry” will be given by Dr. Joseph Themper on Saturday night at 8 o'clock at the League for the Larger Life, 1628 K street. invited. Admission free. Congress Lodge Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold a card party for the benefit of the chapter fund Saturday evening at the Northeast Masonic Temple. Biological _Society of ~Washington meets Saturday evening at 8 o'clock in é}l\ebnew assembly hall of the Cosmos lub. Woman's Benefit Association card party will be held Saturday evening, 8 o'clock, at 1750 Massachusetts avenue. Legislative committee, District of Co- lumbia Daughters of the American Revolution, will meet Monday eve- ning at 8 o'clock at the New Willard Hotel. Senator Alben W. Barkley will speak on “National Defense.” “My Own California” will be the subject of an address tomorrow night pefore the National Geographic Societ; at the Washington Auditorium by J R. Baumgardt. Color pictures of scenes in the State will be shown. ROOF WORK of an» nature promptly and capably Y ra Shokea sty EOONS Dete 2 DR. KRASKIN SPEAKS. - “Blood Pressure as Aid to Eye 5 BB W District 0033, A Printing Service R, S ga Ee National Capital Press 10-1212 D ST. N.W.__Phone National 0650. ., ROOF REPAIRING , Gutter. 'mfig!‘w‘h’lbk price. . AJAX"ROOFING 2038 18th St. N.W. North 8314 Pay or night. Diagnosis,” Optometry Topic. Dr. Lewis H. Kraskin, member of tié Cipal Speaker at » piceting of the Mary- cipal s) er at a mo of the Mary- land Academy of Optometrists held last night at the Emerson Hotel in Balti- more. Dr. Kraskin presented a paper on “Blood Pressure as an Aid to Eye Diagnosis™ and supplemented his lecture mt.h"clmlul records of numerous pa- nts. ] Public | Address Chest Fund Checks to Director At 1418 I Street ‘The Star has received many in- quiries from persons who wish to contribute direct to the Com- munity Chest fund, yet do not know to whom checks should be sent, All such persons arc directed to mail or have checks delivered to the Community Chest head- quarters, 1418 I street, Elwood Street, director. Any contributor who prefers to have a solicitor call for the contributions or who wishes to receive a pledge card may tele- phone to Director Street at Met- ropolitan 2284. PLANS ARE ADOPTED Committee Appointed to. Arrange for Pan-American Commer- cial Conference. The governing board of the Pan- American Union yesterday approved and transmitted to governments of the American republics conclusions adopted by the Pan-American Commission on Customs Procedure and Port Formali- ties, which are designed to facilitate trade and intercourse between the re- publics. It was recommended that the con- clusions, in the form of a draft con- vention, be incorporated in the program of the Seventh International Confer- ence of American States for formal ap- proval and signature and for submis- sion to the several governments for ratification. The board appointed a special com- mittee to arrange for the Fourth Pan- American Commercial Conference. The last commercial conference met here in 1927. It was agreed by the board that the vacancy on the Pan-American rail- way committee, caused by the death of Minor C. Keith, should be filed by a Peruvian engineer, and the Ambassador of Peru was requested to communicate with his government relative to the name _of the engineer to fill the va- cancy. VETERAN DENIED PERMIT TO MARRY WOMAN, 65 She Tells Clerk Paralytic’s Gov- ernment Compensation Would Support Them. By the Associatea Press. KANSAS CITY, February 6—One the advice of officials of the United States Veterans’ Bureau a marriage license was denied here yesterday to Francis N. Jensen, 29, disabled World War soldier, and Mrs. Victoria Vicroy, 65,s0f Leaven- worth, Kan. Jensen, a paralytic, was removed to the Veterans’ Hospital. The woman, who had registered herself with Veterans' Bureau officials as Jensen’s aunt, re- turned to Leavenworth. by the dis- Mrs. Vicory, accompanied abled man, applied for the license and did all the talking. She told the clerk she expected the $100 a month compen- sation Jensen received from the Gov- ernment would support them. Jensen had been boarding at the eld- erly woman's home for the last two years. Veterans’ Bureau officials said he would not be permitted to return to Leavenworth. His parents live at Ber- thoud, Colo. £ e NEWTON RITES TODAY. Addressograph Branch Manager to Be Buried at Garfield, N. Y. Funeral services for Hira C. Newton, 43 years old, manager of the Washing- ton branch of the Addressograph Co., who died Tuesday at the Georgetown University Hospital, are being held at the S. H. Hines Co. funeral home, 2901 Fourteenth street, at 5 o’clock this afternoon. Interment will be in Gar- tomorrow. Mr. Newton had been manager of the local Addressograph Co. branch for the two years, coming_ here from phis. Besides his widow, Mrs. Ethelyn M. Newton, he is survived by a son, Wil- liam Newton, and two daughters, Miss Wilmette Newton and Miss Martha Newton. The Newton residence is at 106 Leland street, Chevy Chase. | i g ITS TASTE DECLARES IT IS WORKING If PEBECO tooth paste didn't taste so distinctive you'd probably not rea- lize that it is doing something none other can do. But PEBECO'S sharp tang tells you that this scientific tooth paste is actually working. It cleans. It whitens without abrasion. And it definitely retards decay by checking the mouth aclds. You may not at first like its taste—but bear | with it a few days and you will, ‘What's more—you'll also note a real difference in results.—Advertisement. Miss Annabel Mathews Over- comes Prejudices Against Women in Business. Promotion Comes Over Heads of Many With Whom She Has Served. & lgt;«‘i years of bucking t‘l_‘ne‘ ;?n;!rnli:;;g rejudices against women hol business positions, coupled with the in- tense application of a mind peculiarly fitted for the task she has chosen in life yesterday won for a former North Georgia schoolmarm a coveted post high in the Government service. Over the heads of many men with whom she has worked as a Government clerk, Miss Annabel Mathews yesterday ber of the United States Board of Tax Appeals, and will take her place as the only woman on the body of 16 tax au- thorities, Home Town Proud. Gainesville, Ga., the little North Georgia town which is the legal resi- dence of Miss Mathews, today was re- ported “mighty proud” 'of Miss Anna- rise to fame and fortune at the bar with both wonder and admiration, for women lawyers in North Georgia are still uncommon. The “home town” re- members, though, how Miss Mathews was a star student at Brenau College and showed great promise of rising to better things when she taught school there and at Thomasville, Ga. Miss Mathews was born in Monroe County, Ga. on December 31, 1883. She came to Washington to enter the Internal Revenue Bureau on March 4, Gainesville regards Miss Mathews' | THOMPSON QUITS | PENSIONS BUREAU Gifts Are Presented to Offi- | cial Retiring After 41 | Years of Service. Dr. Alvah H. Thompson, Bureau of Wwas confirmed by the Senate as a mem- | | ANNABEL MATHEWS. |1914. Apt in her work from the start, her advance in the service began less | than a year after she had entered it, and she developed into one of the out- standing experts on the huge staff em- ployed by the Government. Served U. S. Abroad. She_received her law degree in 1921 from Washington College of Law, after which she was appointed an attorney in the office of the general counsel of the Internal Revenue Bureau. So ex- pert had she become in tax matters, es- pecially those relating %o double taxa- tion, that she- was selected over the men of the office to attend interna- tional conferences on tax matters held abroad. She was nominated to the Board of Tax Appeals to serve the unexpired term of William R. Green, which runs \to 1936, by Senator Harris of Georgia. By the Associated Press. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., February 6.—A joint committee of representative Holly- wood motion picture actors and pro- ducers at the end of a closed meeting here early today announced adoption of important revisions of the standard form of contract in vogue in Hollywood studios. The joint committee, which met at the instigation of the Academy of Mo- tion Picture Arts and Sciences, thrashed out its differences under a contract provision which allows for revisions, mutually agreed upon, as working and producing conditions change. The re- vised contract form will become effec- tive as soon as it can be printed and distributed. The principal revisions adopted pro- vide when an actor starts work on a picture he shall remain on salary until the picture is completed. No double may be used for artists, unless to meet requirements of foreign censorship, or to perform some act of which the artist is incapable. Pro- CUSTOMS PROCEDURE [CONTRACTS IN HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS GET NEW BASIS Actors and Producers Announce Revision of Standards Governing Filming Operations. ducers must give actors reasonable notice of dismissal. f an actor is called back for re- takes within six months after com- pletion of a production, he must work at the salary he received during the original filming. If he is called back after six months, and salary since has increased, he is to receive the same salary he would receive in a new pro- duction. A twelve-hour rest period axfil be guaranteed between studio An agreement was reached by the producers that actors employed by the day, to whom the standard contract does not apply, shall be accorded an eight-hour day, with one-eighth of a day’s salary for each hour of overtime required. ‘The committee ratified a previous agreement of the Hollywood actors to refuse “to support or countenance a strike or any radical action by any group of actors that might be injurious to the motion picture industry so long as the letter and the spirit of this agreement, is observed.” Will Rogers Says: 8. 8. ILE DE FRANCE.—The one person that I have missed on this trip home was Charles E. Hughes. On my last one, no one on the boat will ever forget his cheerful good nature and the wholesouled fellow that he showed himself when he landed. Everybody was in favor of giving him the same position in America that Mussolini so thorough- ly enjoys in his country. 1 especially missed him last night in the charity entertainment. He is @ fine fellow, and smarter, too, than you would think he is; not so much in book learning, but in his rough, uncouth, native way. He will make us a good man on that Supreme couch, and he can't possibly do us any harm, for Supreme Court de- cislons will always remain the same, five against four. When its six to three that’s called unanimous. So good luck to you, Charley. $470,000 LEFT TO CHARITY NEW YORK, February 6 (#).—Town institutions in Santa Barbara, Calif., were among the beneficiaries in 28 charitable bequests totaling $470,000 in the will of Mrs. Emma Robbins, which was filed for probate yesterday. Mrs. Robbins died in Atlantic City, N. J., January 22. The petition said she left no_heirs-at-law. The Salvation Army, the Santa Bar- bara Orphanage, St. Francis Hospital and St. Vincent's Orphange, all of Santa Barbara, recelve $5,000 each. L Ia rich flavor in ) 'GULDENS | ‘Muflarfl‘ Stop colds from becoming more seri- ous. Use Mistol at once. A few drops up the nose with the handy Mistol «dropper, and quickly your head clears and soreness is soothed away. Gargle Mistol. Blandly it protects irritated tissues. Keep your cold from workin; any further down. Doctors use it. All druggists have it. It costs so little and it means so much in and com- fort. Get a bottle today! " Made by the Makers of Nujol FLEET UNITS AT CUBA. GUANTANAMO, Cuba, February 6 (®)—Fifty more units of the Atlantic and Pacific Divisions of the United States Navy have arrived here to par- ticipate in the annual Winter maneu- vers and target practice. The total number of ships expected is 136, manned by approximately 100,000 officers and men. Both divisions will sail for Panama, to return to Cuban waters before de- parting for naval bases on the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts. Italian Wealth Is Estimated. ROME (#)—Italy’s private wealth amounts to $25,000,000,000, accord- ing to computations by Dr. A. Degli Espinosa, a financial expert. About $8,000,000,000 of this is in land values. Foreign bonds account for $1,250,000,000. (_ FINER USED CARS ) BEN HUR Would have bousht ome of our FINER USED CARS | HAWKINS-NASH \ 1529 14th St. Dec. 3320 Pension official, voluntarily'reti - terday from the Gnvernmen'.‘r e;:rm | after 41 years with the bureau, | " Among the important positions he has: occupied are: Chief of the finance division, disbursing clerk for the pay- ment of pensions, ?rlvnle secretary to the Commissioner of Pensions and chief of the board of review. During the past year, as a fleld representative in | | charge of the Philippine investigation, | he reorganized the pension ng\edlcal |'service in the islands. ! A committee of four bureau officials w}ma;:ged grm’ll;;\oll;psfn with a travel- | ing an 0ld at a luncheon yes- terday at the Continental Hotel, e RS AND TUG | OLD CRUISE | BRING U. S. $286,707.20 Mavy Department Announces Awards for Obsolete Serv- ice Vessels. The Navy Department today an- nounced awards for the sale of six obselete cruisers and one Navy yard tug. which will bring into the Federal Treasury $286,707.20. The awards follow: U. S. Albany, New Orleans and Salem, at the Navy Yard, Mare Island, Calif,, to D. C. Seagraves of San Fran- cisco for $89,305. U. S. 8. Charleston, at the Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Wash., to Abe Goldberg & Co., Seattle, Wash., for $49,111.60. The U. S. S. Frederick, which was formerly the U. S. 8. Maryland, at the Mare Island Navy Yard, to Rothenberg & Sugarman of Oakland, Calif.,, for $68,400. U. 8. S. Huron, formerly the U. 8. 8. South Dakota, at the Puget Sound Navy Yard, to Abe Goldberg & Co., for $69,- Mare Is- 110.60. at the he et Sound The yard tug Lively, land Navy Yard, to the Pug Tug & Barge Co., Seattle, for $10,780. “Starboard” oziginally meant “steer- board,” the old Vikings of Norway, from | | \ | I | |in the smoki? BEN WILLIAMSON, | Ashland, Ky., business man, has an-| nounced himself as candidate for the Democratic nomination for the short term to the United States Senate ‘rom Kentucky. —Associated Press Photo, SOLICITING AID DENIED. The Salvation Army is not making | any independent canvass of the city for funds, according to a statement issued today by Maj. James Asher, divisional commander of the Salvation Army, when confronted with a report that workers of his organization had received complaints from other team workers that the Army is making an appeal for money because it does not get enough from the Community Chest. | Maj. Asher declared that the Salva- tion Army is supported entirely by the Community Chest and makes no effort to obtain any contribution from any source aside from the Chest. He said that the work of its members at the present time is devoted exclusively to Sbtaining money for the Chest. whom we get the word, steering their fixed near the stern of the ship. SPENCER L. WISE Vice President Acidophilus Milk: Will vessels not by a rudder, but by an oar' Wise Brothers EVY RAYMOND J. WISE President-Treasurer SEVEN ON LINER HURT IN GALE Veendam Is Battered by 100- Foot Waves in Fighting Way to New York. By the Associated Press. HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, February 6.~ With five members of her crew and two passengers injured, the Holland-Ameri~ can liner Veendam arrived here yester- day, three days overdue from Rotter- dam to New York, after battling one of the severest storms on record. On January 30 the Veendam encoun- tered a storm described by her skipper, Capt. R. W. Braun, as a hurricane, A wall of water which, he said, was from 80 to 100 feet aigh, swept over the ves- sel from stew to stern, clearing the decks of ges~ and lifeboats and virtu- ally wreckiof the control bridge. hatch wi+ battered in by the force of the wats{ flooding the third-class quarters. Sif% persons were trapped room when ropes and gear blockea the passageway. Women and children shrieked in terror as pas- sengers waded up to their knees in icy water, A Valentine Thought “Sweetheart Baskets” Dainty creations Blackistone Florists. $3.50 & $5.00 Baskets of Spring Flowers, well arranged with the Red Heart sup- ported on a trellis. of the (Our New Address) 1407 H Street D ol % N National 4905 BERNARD M. WISE Secretary Wise Mothers Prefer Wise Brothers’ X% is 11 months old and weighs 25 pounds. I have giving him Wi \ Brothers’ Milk since birth. You can see what a wonderful baby he has turned out to be.” Wise Nursery Milk is produced in co- operation LEY. with DR. J. THOS. KEL- Progressive physicians an d parents praise it. LS DAIRY eone, WEST 0183 The SUPERIOR QUALITY of ouR DAIRY PRODUCTS HAS STOOD THE TEST OF TIME Promote Physical Energ) ACIDOPHILUS MILK supplied by us is a product of the WALKER GORDON LABORATORY For this reason we have no hesitancy in including it among our Highest Quality Dairy Products and Rated 100% by the District Columbia m%q»mm 4 1 founded february Frest E]ECT that “below-par” feeling from your system— Walker Gordon’s Acidophilus Milk provides those health-giving properties so necessary to aid proper digestion. We advise that you consult your physician for this “below-par” condition—the remedy may be simple. Acidophilus Milk has been of great benefit to hundreds of people in similar condition. Try it tomorrow—a note in your bottle is all that is necessary to have it delivered to your home fresh daily.

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