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PIANOS TO RENT $5 Per Month DE MOLL’S Graduate McCormick Medie: College Beginning 915 Thursday Feb. . 27% Excitin i@/yea for a "Tl’le Flowers That Bloom in the Spring Tra-La™ by M}".angfl er Because they liven the liver and claanse poisonous waste irom the in- testines, Dr. Tutt's Pills bring re- freshing, new energy and improved health. il senen e ot ‘Take Grove’s Laxative BROMO QUININE. The dependability of this well balanced formula is your safe-guard. Its merit as a remedy for colds is recognized the world over. It has alarger sale than all other cold remedies combined. Grove’s Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets Successful Since 1889 20c at all druggiste | people’s lobby, declared today he intends | | dent of schools, asking the latter to | ating in obtaining the repeal of the law | of 1907 requiring a parent to request | | day after he was 12, § 80od showing in the public interest. MARSH TO FIGHT FUND FOR CADETS People’s Lobby Secretary Asks Ballou to Aid in Anti- Military Drive. Benjamin C. Marsh, secretary of the to fight the appropriation for the Wash- ington High School Cadet Corps “pos- sibly this year, but certainly next year.” Under date of February 20, Mr. Marsh wrote Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superinten- “again demonstrate your fitness to head | the public schools of the Capitol of the world's wealthiest Nation, by co-oper- that his sons be exempted from military | drill in high schools.” In that letter Mr. Marsh condemned | | the law as “‘a disgrace to every intelli- gent person in the District,” and he | contended that the “burden of proof as | to why a boy should be trained to fight in & high school within about a mile of the White House, where the Kellogg | peace pact renouncing war was signed, should rest upon those who favor that | pact, instead of the parents, who know their job is to take control of govern- ment away from the wealthy criminal classes.” Mr. Marsh wrote that he “actually was asked to give reasons” why his son, who entered Central High School “thc should not take | military training. He said he gave the | following reasons: “No intelligent educator advocates it | unless he is a kept tool. Only a gov- ernment of crooks needs a cadet system in schools or colleges. Every advocate | of such drill tells us the two parties | which got us into the World War were | lying about its being the last war or| want troops to kill off efforts to get economic justice here. Neither excuse | holds water.” Mr. Marsh contended further that in the next war “it is we parents who ought to do the fighting.” No boy should take military training until he is old enough to vote, he said, and added, “Of course, we should not have it (military drilh) in a voteless city.’ Commenting today upon his letter, Mr. Marsh said he is expressing opin- ions solely in his own behalf and not in any way for the people’s lobby, which is described as “‘one organization which calls itself what it is” He ex- plained that he believes firmly in the principles of the New York Assoclation Against Military Training, but that he is not a member of that body. WISV STATUS AIRED IN REPLY TO APPEAL Federal Radio Commission Files| Brief Answering Claim of Richmond Station. Another phase of the tangled radio | situation_involving the location of sta- | tion WJSV, the highest powered x.mo; broadcasting station near Washington | was aired today before the District Court of Appeals with presentation by the | Federal Radio Commission of a brief in reply to an appeal from a commis- sion decision taken by Havens and Mar- tin, Inc.. operators of station WBGM | of Richmond, Va. The commission recently denied the application of WBGM for a change in frequency and power, in which the Rich- mond station attacked the legitimacy of WJSV's claim to allotment as a Virginia station. The Richmond station opera- | tors thén noted an appeal with the Dis- trict Court of Appeals. Station WISV is | operated by the Fellowship Forum of ‘Washington, while its transmitter is 10~ cated at Mount Vernon Hills, Va. If V/JSV_were transferred to the status of a District of Columbia station, the brief said, a station in Roanoke, which has applied for a construction permit. would then be entitled to con- sideration, and the Virginia regional fa- cilities would then be the same if WISV were removed from its Virginia alloca- tion. ‘The commission said it does not con- sider it necessary to make a finding on the location of WJSV because it is im- material to the application of WBGM for a construction permit. The brief claimed that Virginia has more than its | quota of cleared channels and local channels and the fact that it is slightly | under its quota of regional facilities does not require the commission to grant any | application for use of a regional channel to a station that happens to make a e S Relativity to Be Filmed. NEW YORK, February 24 (#).—Prob- ably not very exciting, but certainly educational, are some “talkies” that are being prepared for showing at the Chi- cago World Fair in 1933. Mathemati- cians at Harvard, Princeton, Brown, Northwestern and the Universities of Chicago and Wisconsin are preparing films on Einstein’s theory of relativity, why a circle cannot be a square and the fourth dimension, etc. Infected Teeth Are Great Danger throw pus and poison into the stomach boay with every swallow? Free Examination and Are YOU SURE your teeth are perfect? Are YOU SURE your gums are healthy and you have no abcesses that THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SENORA DE OLAYA TO LEAVE CAPITAL EARLY THIS SUMMER Washington Will Lose One of| Most Attractive Diplo- matic Hostesses. Wife of President-elect of Colombia Plans Gay Social Life. The recent election of Enrique de | Olaya Herrara, Minister from Colombia, to the presidency of this country, will take from Washington one of its most attractive diplomatic hostesses, through the departure early in the Summer of Senora de Olaya for Bogata Modest, informal and shrinking from | publicity, few persons are better able to withstand the scrutiny of the limelight than the dainty, dark-eyed, young wife of the newly-elected President of Co- lombia. Dressed always in the most modish attire, her black hair becom- | SENORA D ingly bobbed, Senora de Olaya might well be taken for the sister of her two young daughters, Maria and Lucia. Accomplished Musician. Few women of any land ever have been better equipped to occupy the position of “first lady” than the wife of Colombia’s President-elect. ~For not only is Senora de Olaya young and | charming, but she is weli informed upon all important subjects, has an en- | thusiastic interest in subjects vital Lo women, and is an accomplished musi- cian. : Several months ago through a seri- ous iliness, Senora de Olaya came into close contact with American hospital life, its organiation and the nurses and doctors composing the hospital staff. “T can never tell you,” she said, “how I admire the American hospital organ- ization. Your nurses, your doctors and the hospital organization are all so ef- ficient. Until my_illness, I did not realize what splendid work they are do- ing. I hope, when I return to Colombia to urge our hospitals to follow as closely as_possible the American methods.” The women's organizations of Co- lombia will find a sympathetic sup- porter in their new “first lady.” “I want to help the women in every way I can,” she said. “Although our women have not yet been granted the vote, they were wonderful in my hus- band's recent campaign. At the time of the election, women did splendid work for Senor de Olaya. They also were an important factor in bringing about a peaceful election.” Pictures Colombian White House. A vivid and attractive picture of Co- | lombia’s White House, or the Palace de | la Carrera, as it is called, was given by | Senora de Olaya. | “It is a very handsome building,” she said, “of Spanish architecture, with spacious corridors, beautiful reception _Nature gave this oil Fgreater resistance to heat, iwear and _dilution.” It “meets all the trying condi- tions of automobile engine jlubrication. Nothing is more important _than thorough lubrication. AUTOCRAT—THE OIL THAT IS % DIFFERENT FROM ALL OTHERS ABewau'oi Substitutes. If your dealer can’t supply you, telephone us, and we 1will “tell vou the dealer’s name convenient. ly located to you. o Bayerson! Oil’ Works' Columbia 5228 to Health can F OLAYA. —Harris-Ewing Photo. rooms and a handsome ball room, where the inaugural ball probably will be held on August 7, the night of the inaugura- tion, Fortunately, the president’s per- sonal living Tooms occupy a separate wing of the palace, and the family may go in and go out, without always hav- ing to have the salute of the guards at the entrance.” She explained that it used to be the custom for the president | and his family to enter and leave the where their palace by the main entrance, military guards would sound trumpets. If Senora de Olaya's health parmits, a gay social life may be expected by the Colombians during the next four years. “I love music,” said_the senora, “and the greatest sacrifice I have been forced to make through my recent iliness was giving up practicing. However, I hope when I am in the Palacio de la Carrera to have many concerts. The Colombians all love music and no Colombian girl considers her education complete with- out having studied music.” Bogata Is Hustling City. Bogata, the capital of Colombia and the home of Senora de Olaya, is a beautiful, bustling city of about 150,000 inhabitants, with handsome buildings, wide avenues and a beautiful opera house. Situated in the mountains, the senora tells you that the journey there sually is made in two stages from the landing port, Puerta Colombia, in order to avoid too sudden a climatic change. “It is possible now,” she said, “to make by hydroplane. In all probability, Senor Olaya’s older daughter Maria will make her debut during her father’s term of office, as the young lady, who now is 16, will have completed her education before the expiration of his term. Senorita Maria at present is a student at West- ern High School where she is special- Khanbah and throughout the Advice — — — Gas Administered — — — SET OF TEETH THE PRICES: ) Guarenteed o F s 1 Gold Cr. "22-kt., $5 | Filling, Gold, Porcelain, Alloy Al ranteed $10 $15 $20 ) Quality t and Last Work Gi ~ BRIDGEWORK $5 $6 and $7 PER TOOTH = L W) Cor. 7th & E—Sts. Coughs from colds may Jead to se- rious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and in- hibits germ growth, Of all known drugs creosote is rece ognized by high medical authori as one of the greatest healing agencies for coughs from colds and bronchial drritations. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing W™ 26 Years' Practical Exper Dr. LEON, Dentists A THREE DAYS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL nce W Attendance Entrance on th Street Over “Tiggett's Stare Drug Phone Frank. 7438 COUGH IS N.W. elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the ir- ritation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac- tory in the treatment of coughs from colds, bronchitis and minor forms of bronchial irritations, and is excellent for building up.the system after colds or flu Money refunded if not re lieved after taking according to direce tions. Ask your druggist. (adv.) CREOMULSIO FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG ON Akbar Akbar Kermanshah ‘Kermanshah Sarouk ‘Kermanshah Khanbah Doultabad Sarapi l‘ the trip from Puerta Colombia to Bogata ' couventional 9”.x 12’ s 27'x18! 21'8"x14’ 209" x13' 11" 25"4" x 12',3" Antique Korhassan17' 9" x'15’ 234" x 11’ 10" 20"9" x 10' 9" 21' 6" x13' 10" i7. 3" x11 8" 18’ 6"x 118" DO FRED A. JOHNSON SUCCUMBS AT 72 Former Newspaper Corre- spondent Had Been Resi- “dent Here 36 Years. MONDAY, place, | Washington newspaper correspondent, representing the St. Paul Dispatch, the | Minneapolis Tribune and other papers in the Northwest, died at his residence at_5:40 o'clock this morning. Born in Columbus, Wis., January 8, | 1858, Mr. Johnson has been a resident | of Washington 36 years. | After his early years in Washington | newspaper work he was connected with various members of the Minnesota ;cmgresslorml delegations and was spe- cial clerk to the Senate committee in- vestigating the Taft-Roosevelt cam- paign_expenditures of 1912. time he was connected with the la: Senator Moses E. Clapp of Minnesota. A few years ago Mr. Johnson became connected with the Internal Revenue Bureau and remained in that service until shortly before his death. Prior to coming to Washington, Mr. Johnson was chief clerk of the Min- nesota Legislature. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. e | Hilda A. Johnson; one son, Maj. Gerald | A. Johnson, United States Marine Corps, stationed at Fort Benning, Ga., | | and two daughters, Mrs. James L. Wright and Mrs. Bathurst L. Chambliss, both | of Washington. | Funeral services will be at the home either Tuesday afternoon or Wednes- | day morning. PRIVATE CHAUFFEURS TO STAGE ANNUAL BALL Several Hundred Washington Dri- vers to Substitute Tuxedos for Livery Tomorrow. Tuxedoes will supplant the carefully tatlored uniforms of Washington so- ciety’s chauffeurs tomorrow night while the “Mr. and Mrs.” will have to drive thelr own or hail a taxi if they are planning an evening out. ‘The annual ball of the Private Chauf- feurs Benevolent Association will be | held at L'Aiglon, Eighteenth street and Columbia road. The association is composed of several hundred chauffeurs working for prom- inent Washingtonians, and the event is the outstanding feature of their annual program. Family Life Feared Going. NEW YORK, February 24 (#).—A breakdown of family life is feared by Cardinal Hayes. In his annual sermon at St. Patrick's Cathedral he declared | family life in America is being un- dermined “by strange movements which are a shock to Heaven itself.” izing in English and public speaking. which she anticipates will be of great value to her in later years. Senorita Lucia Olaya, who is 14 years of age, now is a student at Notre Dame of Maryland in Baltimore, and already has evinced unusual talent as an artist. Several very pretty pastels hang on the walls of Senora de Olaya’s study, the work of her younger daughter in’ Bal- timore. “Please say for me,” concluded Senora de Olayo “that although I go to my country with great happiness after an absence of nearly eight years, it is with genuine regret that I leave Washing- ton because I have had the most de- lightful time here and I leave behind me many lovely friends, both men and women. - But I hope I will see them all again as some day I hope most surely to come back to Washington.” FEBRUARY Prederick A. Johnson, 3433 Holmead | who was for many years a| 3000.00 2500.00 4000.00 4000.00 40000.0 400000 3500.00 2200.00 2000.00 1500.00 24, 1930, BROKER SLAYS SELF. Drinks Poison After Attempt to Kill 3-Year-Old Son. 'OAKLAND, Calif., Pebruary 24 (#).— Phillip Frisble Lewis, 37, prominent in- vestment broker and amateur artist, killed himselft by drinking poison in his home here last night after he was said by police to have administered a similar dose to his 3-year-old son, Phillips, jr., in an unsuccessful attempt to_take lad’s life. Phillips, jr., was taken to a hospital, where his condition was pronounced critical. The elder Lewis, according to ‘he version given police by the widow, Mrs. Beatrice Lewis, reprinanded her over a trivial matter and heated quarrel ensued. During the argument, police were told, Lewis went to another room, tak- ing their young son. A few minutes later, Mrs. Lewis said, the boy screamed and she ran to the room to find Lewis writhing on the floor, FUNERAL IS ARRANGED FOR VETERAN AVIATOR |Body of Lieut. Randolph Gilham Page to Be Interred in Arlington Grave. Military funeral services for Lieut. Randolph Gilham Page, 36 years old, veteran fiyer in military, air ‘mail and | commercial aviation, who died Thurs- day at Fort Worth, Tex., will be held tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock in the Arlington National Cemetery. Lieut. Page, the son of William Nel- son Page, retired consulting engineer of Washington, engaged in active air- fighting during the World War, serv- ing on the Argonne front as flight commander of the 85th and 9lst squadrons. The funeral procession, accompanied by a flying escort from Bolling Field, will form at the receiving vault in Ar- lington Cemetery. Military services will be held at the grave. Army aviation officers serving as pall bearers include Lieut. C. W. Sullivan, Capt. William J. Flood, Lieut. Howard A. Craig, Lieut. D. L. Hutchins, Lieut. J. Beveridge, jr, and Lieut. Arthur L Ennis, Canadian Horseman Dies. ‘TORONTO, February 24 (#).—John Joseph Dixon, 63, director and former president of the Canadian National Exhibition, died here last night of heart trouble. He was president of the ‘Thoroughbred Horse Association and a director of the Ontario Jockey Club Association. AL Town Is Under Martial Law. AHMEDABAD, India, February 24 (#).—The village of Una, in Junagadh State, has been placed under martial law after serious clashes between the Moslem and Hindu population. Eleven Moslems were arrested. It is reported 21 Hindus were injured, including sev- eral women. The Moslems looted Hindu shops and burned Hindu homes. 1*********** We Can Supply Everything to Enclose Your Back Porch e all the necessary including W indow windows. ~ Celotex, aint and hardware. J. Frank Kelly, Inc. 2101 Georgia Ave. N. 1343 Lumber — Millwork — Du Pont Paints rdware — Building S ek sk sk ke dkokokokok »* »* * »* »* * * * * X x x X x x x X X Our "Fé,bfriuva‘rfy Sale Offers Reductions in LARGE ORIENTAL RUGS 'OR;rooms that’require Oriental Rugs.largerithan_the, ze this;Sale offers a splendid collection’ in"a"variety of .weaves, rich in colorings and-de- signs; many:of them woven:to.ouriown:specifications. The few listed below are from Persia, India and Turkey ‘and show.the prices in"effect’during February. Regularly: $3500.00' Now $2500.00 24'8"x14'8" “ « 230000 '1800.00 3000.00 3000.00 3000.00 3400.00 2900.00 '1600.00 1500.00 1100.00 & J. SLOANE "WASHINGTON, D.-C. “The House with the Creen Shutters® 709-711-713 TWELFTH STREET, N, W. HOME FOR CAPITAL MODELS IS SOUGHT Advertising Club Wants Per- manent Place for Public Exhibition. A permanent home for public exhibi- tion of the models of the Federal and municipal buildings now under con- | struction and planned for the future in the National Capital is being sought by the Advertising Club of Washington. Conferences will be held this week with Government officials, it was announced, with the hope that space may be found for the models in the Capitol, National Museum or some other suitable building. The models and maps, now on dis- play in the show windows of Woodward & Lothrop’s, will be returned to various branches of the Government at the end of this week. ‘Want Visitors to See Models. Amplified by background, additions and embellishments, the exhibition in the windows of Woodward & Lothrop’s has been seen by many thousands dur- ing the past month or so, and it is the belief of the Advertising Club that they should be made permanently available to_the public and visitors, Ernest S. Johnston, president of the club, consequently has authorized the managing_director, Charles J. Colum- bus, to take the steps to obtain a per- manent exhibition home for the models through arrangements with officials of | the Government or such other agencies as may be helpful. “No more comprehensive demonstra- tion of the future greatness of the Na« tional Capital has ever been had than these models erected in the same set- ting for permanent showing will have the support of every agency of the Fed- ;r;u Government, from President Hoover wn. “Crowds are coming to Washington this Spring in connection with conven= tions and the usual army of visitors. The advertising fraternity feels that it would be especially valuable to have this exhibit in place for the convention of the Advertising Federation of America, which meets in Washington May 18. “The Federal Government has admir- able locations for the display, such as the United States Capitol, the Con- gressional Library, the New National Museum and other points to which the sightseer will travel. “The Union Station concourse and other semi-public and private places of assembly have admirable possibilities. “The " Advertising Club of Washing= ton already has placed the matter in- formally before some in authority, and | there is every reason to believe that the plan will meet a practical response.” | ot intes | TEN KILLED IN HAVANA. Explosion Wrecks Building Water Pumping Plant. HAVANA, February 24 (#)—Ten workmen in the Palatino Pumping Plant of Havana were killed early yes- terday by the explosion of a glant | boller. Four others were seriously in- Jured. The explosion, occurring in one of three great boilers, completely wrecked the pumping building, where 80 men were working. The district was shaken and windows of houses for 10 blocks were shattered. The water supply for a section of the city had to be cut off. The damage is estimated at between £75,000 and $100,000. A fire that start- ed was quickly checked at “It’s a Great Coat for Wear Right Through Spring ...” Now ...and Knit-tex Topcoats $30 The all-weather . . . that sheds rain, snow, wind, hail . . . wrinkleproof . . wearproof. We mean it when we say you can’t get a better thirt: dollars’ worth. And it’s a great topcoat that never goes out of style. ing variety of pl terns. Direct Elevators to Department, Shown now in a good-look- n shades or pat- And all sizes. the Men's Clothing Becond Ploor, Knit-tex Topcoats for Women ... $30 (Third Ploor, The Hecht Co.) HE HEecaT Co. “F Street_at_Seventh”