Evening Star Newspaper, February 24, 1930, Page 6

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A-6 UGHING You get almost instant re- 35¢c lief with one swallow of 60c THOXINE Te Baltimore “ollrly Exprell Motor Conches A. M., then 8:00 A. M. to P. M, 9:30 P. M. and :00 Midnight. one 8 = 'l- round trip 6 Motor Coaches Daily to PHILABPELPHIA 0 _ ound 8650 Conmecting at Philadelphia for Atlantic City NEW YORK one 82F0 _ round KEHDO way trip For timetables and information Telephone—Metropolitan 1512 Ticket Office and Waiting Room UNION BUS DEPOT 1336 New York Ave., N.W. (Al at Hotel Willard) People’s Rapid Transit Co., Inc. Owned ania R. R. and Philadeiphia Kapid Transit Co entine Offer Modern Formula Recognized as H Supremely Efficient | Pharmacists the country over are { praising Unguentine Cones — they ding them to those customers who are afflicted with ‘burning, itching and bleeding piles. These sincere men who devote | their entire life to the service of suffering humanity realize that The Norwich Pharmacal Company with its world wide reputation for su- premacy in pharmaceutical achieve- ment would not offer to the public any product but the vesy best. Almost every druggist in America knows that Unguentine cones will || stop the pain— the itching — the burning and agony of piles promptly. They know from the lips of those | who have used these speedy acting| suppositories that the soothing, heal- | ing daily treatment will cause the| most stubborn hemorrhoids to swiftly shrink and in a short time| the trouble will disappear. | They are dispensed by druggists everywhere for 75 cents a box with| the absolute guarantee that they| will not fail to fulfill all that is promised for them. The Norwich Pharmacal Co., Norwich, N. Y.— Advertisement. 809 15th Street N.W. POISONER'S PLOT Detectives Guarding Con- fessed Slayer of 10 Find Two Guns and Knife on Him. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, February 24.—James Baker, 23 years old, self-confessed siayer of 10 persons by poison and shooting, was in jail here today after detectives bringing him from Detroit frustrated a plan to kill them by dis- arming him of two guns and a knife. Baker, who told Detroit police and authorities here that he had poisoned | eight men in various parts of the world during his wanderings as & sailor, and | had shot his stepfather and a Detroit railroad detective to death, was booked on a charge of homicide for the killing of Henry S. Gaw, night watchman in | the Guggenheim Laboratories, 14 months ago. | Detectives George Fitapatrick and | Arthur M. Horey arrived from Detroit with their prisoner yesterday after an | all-night vigil which followed their dis- covery that Baker was armed. Although he had been in jail in De- | troit several days, and police there as- | sured the New York officers that the prisoner had been searched, when time came to retire they searched him as a special precaution and found a .38-cali- ber pistol in his coat pocket, a 45-cali- ber gun stuck in the waistband of his trousers inside'his shirt and a heavy hunting knife in the top of his sock. |one guard with the knife, shoot.the | other and attempt to escape from the | train at Pittsburgh. He refused to say where he obtained the weapons, insist- | ing that he had them when arrested in | Detroit, where he said he never was | searched. | _ Detroit police said they had searched | Baker three times, and declared it was & mystery to them how he obtained the weapons. EXILED STUDENT GIVEN Celebrants Shout “Down With Monarchy” in Tumultuous Dem- onstration in Madrid. | By the Associated Press. dent exiled under the Primo de Rivera | dictatorship, resulted in a tumultuous demonstration by several thousand uni- versity students. ‘The students first greeted Sbert, hailing him as a hero and martyr, in the great Plaza Castel ‘Then they went to a large restaurant on the out- skirts of Madrid for a long afternoon banquet. Bystanders were amazed that the police did not interfere. ile the gay youths were wining and dancing they cheered incessantly, shouting “Down with the King and the monarchy! Death to Primo! Down with the new dictatorship!” Some ! cheered for a republic. .The Washington Building Takes’ Pride in Welcoming as a Tenant The Postal Telegraph Co. . 4NOTHER national institution is now located in “a Wash- ington landmark,” the better to serve the thousands of people who employ its facilities in business and private affairs « + « These beautiful new quarters will provide utmost conveni- ence for patrons of the Postal Telegraph Company because of the manifest advantages of this building’s location. - EAVE.B‘ BRO' District REALTORS s T0 KL 2 FOLED ‘When they disarmed him Baker coolly | explained that he had planned to kill | WELCOME ON RETURN, | MADRID, Pebruary 24.—Return here | Saturday of Antonio Maria Sbert, a stu- THE EVENING HOOVER LETTER PRAISES TEUTON HUBER RESEARCH | Connection Between Families May | Be Established, Showing German Ancestral Line of President. By the Associated Press. HEIDELBERG, Germany, February | 24 —President Herbert Hoover is inter- | ested in genealogical investigations into the history of the Huber family in eighteenth-century Germany. Dr. Dan- iel Haeberle, the Heidelberg professor, who last Fall gathered additional data on the Hubers of Ellerstadt and sent his treatise to Washington, has re- | cetved a letter from Mr. Hoover stating | that the material was “of great interest to me and other members family." Whether the President has been con- | vinced that the Andreas Huber Huber, | Who, in 1738, emigrated from Ellerstadt, really was the founder of the American | line "of Hoovers, the letter does not | say. Dr. Haeberle and others who have | worked on the question are positive | that part of the ancestral credit for Herbert Hoover's achievements should g0_to Germany. | Ellerstadt is a little town in the Rhenish Palatinate, between Ludwigs- hafen and Bad Duerkheim. in one of the most picturesque sections of the valley of the Rhine. 'HUSBAND HELD IN DEATH, Body of Estranged Wife Found Strangled and Beaten. WEBSTER, Mass, February 24 (). Strangled ‘and cruelly beaten, the ‘bodv of Mrs. Celia Trudeau, 26, was | found near here yesterday. Her es- | tranged husband, “Leon Trudeau, 26, was arrested on a charge of murder. Trudeau claimed an alibi, but police said there were two and one-half hours of Staurday night for which he was unable 0 give a good account of him= Use of solid automobile tires has been | prohibited by law in the Gold Coast of | Africa. | I Stomach Upset Get at the real ca !| what thousands of stomach suf- ferers are doing now. _Instead of taKing tonics, or trying to patch up a. poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the || ailment—clogged ' liver and dis- || ordered bowels. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets help arouse “the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are performing their na- tural functions, people rarely suf- || fer from indigestion and stomach Aroubles. Have you a ba tongue, poor appetit care . feeling, no energy, trouble foods? Try Olive stitute for calome Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound. Know them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief. Eat what you like. All druggists. I] 15¢, 30c and 60c. That' ambition th undig d blets, the sub- Little""Junior used to come in crying wee.his hands got so CHAPPED B ’ v ’ esountil another mother told me about \ oxzema Cream T FELT so sorry for little Junior. His hands used to get 50 chapped and sore from playing out in the snow and cold he’d come in crying. But recently a ncighbor suggested Noxzema. I tried it and it works like a charm—hcals his hands wonderfully and protects them, t0o. Junior won't go out in the cold now until I rub his hands with Noxzema. “Tuse it myself, too. It keeps my hands from getting red and coarsened when I wash dishes." Mrs. R. Scher, 1475 Townsend Ave., New York City . This is not just one isolated case. It is typical of the good work Noxzema is doing in healing and preventing chapped hands for millions of children and grown-ups cverywhere. That's because Noxzema contains just the proper bland, soothing, medication to relieve the smarting and burning in 30 scconds—to restore the softening oils in dry, rough skin—and keep the tiny skin cracks antiscptically clean and promote quick healing. Noxzema is a dainty, snow-white vanishing cream. It is not greasy or sticky and cannot stain or soil clothing. Get a jar today—your druggist NOXZEMA CREAM has it. FEEL LT B8 Ak of my: STAR, WASHINGTO SIEMA CH FRAT PLANS FOR PARLEY | Two-Day Regional Meeting Opens Friday—Secretary Hurley Banquet Speaker. Four Eastern provinces of Sigma Chi, national college fraternity, which in- cludes chapters in 12 States and Canada, will be represented at the regional meeting held in the May- this week. Patrick J. Hurley, Secretary of War, a versity chapter, convention host, will be speaker at the banquet Saturday night, flower. Other addresses made by Harry S. New, former Post- master General, former Governor of Virginia. Rush L. Holland, former assistant Attorney General of the United States, heads the general convention commit- inciude Dean Davis of the Board of |"Tax Appeals, “R. S. Doyle, local at- torney; John G. Harlan of the Treasury Department, Willlam Warfield Ross and C. E. Randall of the forestry service, local chapter, H. B. McCawley, local at- flower Hotel, Friday and Saturday of | member of the George Washington Uni- | 7 o'clock, in the ballroom of the May- | are to be| and E. Lee Trinkle, | tee. Other members of the committee | T. C. Larey and W. T. Snow of the| D. C. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1930. torney; and John A. Purington of the Board of Tax Appeals. Some of the guests to be present will be Roscoe C. McCulloch, Senator from Ohio, James Francis Burke, general | counsel for the Republican national | committee; Assistant Secretary of In- terior John H. Edwards, James E. Fetchet, chief of the Army | Air Service; Logan Morrls, chairman of | the Board of Tax Appeals, and William R. Green, a member of the board. |PROFESSOR QUITS MISSOURI STAFF | University Administration Criti- cized for Sex Query | “Interference.” By the Associated Press. COLUMBIA, Mo. February 24.— Criticizing “Interference” by the ad- ministration of the University of Mis- souri in freedom of teaching and. re- search, James Harvey Rogers, professor of economics at the university, today President Brooks and the board of curators. The resignation was tendered in order that Prof. Rogers could accept a pro- fessorship at Yale University, his alma mater. Active in support of Prof. Max Meyer in the recent sex questionnaire investi- |gation at Missouri University, Prof. Roger's reference to “recent most tragic happenings” at the university are taken here to indicate the suspension of Dr. Meyer and the dismissal of = Prof. Harmon Degraff by the board of cura- | tors, following an investigation, 1 practical Remember, Cadillac-La Salle merchants have built a reputation for dependability—honest Maj. Gen. | announced his resignation in a letter to | 150 GUESTS AT FETE MADE ILL BY POISON Food Served at Salvation Army Banquet in Salt Lake Im- perils Throng. g By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, February 24— Poisoned by food served at a Salvation Army banquet here, nearly 130 persons, most of them children, were recovering with few exceptions today as authorities began a three-fold investigation to de- termine the cause of the near tragedy. While there were no deaths reported, at least a dozen sufferers were still in a serious condition at the San PFrancisco Hospital. Among them was Col. A, W. Crawford, second in command of the PIANOS Address factory representa- tive for interview concerning factory-to-you method of a high-grade piano in all models, including a famous reproducing grand. Four outstanding char- acter features new to the piano industry make this ~utput the best yet offered at 50% less than dealers’ prices. Lowest terms. 30 days’ free trial. 25 years’ guararitee. ADDRESS BOX 181-V STAR OFFICE Golden Gate Division of the Salvation Army and father of Rheba Crawford, former Salvation Army “angel of Broad- way.” Citr health officers began an anplysis of food served at the banquet yesterday in an effort to determine the nature of the poisoning. Emergency Hospital physicians said the symptoms resembled those of botulinus poisoning, but with- held a definite statement pending the analysis, More than 500 persons attended the banquet as delegates to the annual young people’s conference of the Golden Gate Division of the Salvation Army. menu included veal and chicken, commercially preserved corn, potatoes, cranberries, a gelatin dessert, milk, tea and coffee. Records disclosed 107 were treated at the Central Emergency, 97 of them children ranging in age from = 8-year- old boy to m"“ in their early b!n.lm. Twenty-two officers and cadets of the Salvation Army were given aid at the Salvation Army Traini Mission Emergency Hos“;fhl. Dr. J. J. Carroll, who attended many of the victims, said a preliminary in- vestigation indicatéd the chicken had poisoned the banqueters. for SORE THROAT AND USE IT TS way Wispesubee et to buy a car at a Real Saving See the great variety of Good Used Cars now being displayed by your Cadillac-La Salle dealer—all offered at reduced prices. The spring selling season will soon be at its height and seasonal demands will quickly dis- pose of the choicest of these bargains. These cars cover a wide range in price, from $100 to $3,000. There is a car available for ly any need. values—fair dealing— permane: among the soundly es- The offer tablished business men of every community. many thousandsof miles of excellent service, in nce. They are used cars they will give you keeping withyourneeds, Here 1s an opportunity Only the choice used cars come to Cadillac-LaSalle deal- ers. These are being offered #ow at bargain prices. at a price that will mean a considerable saving. Many of these used cars are on a guaranteed basis—a guarantee backed by a reliabl¢ mer- service. chant who has earned the good will of his clientele by years of scrupulously fair dealing in all depart- ments of his business—used cars, new cars and The used cars now being offered were taken in trade on new cars during the winter Easy G. M. A. C. Terms Pay Out of Income Your Cadillac-La Salle dealer will make the purchase of a used car simple and easy. Use, if you wish, the General Motors De- ferred Payment Plan. Engoy the car now and pay for it out of income. OPEN EVENINGS Cadillac-La Salle months. There has been ample time for their conditioning. Don’t forego the this time than genuine satisfac- tion, the real pleasure and the actual economy this opportunity offers to a greater extent at at any other period of the year. See your Cadillac-La Salle dealer and secure a dependableused car now. CADILLAC MOTOR CAR COMPANY Division of General Motors ¢ Detrois, Michigan Our dealer in your community is: The Washington-Cadillac Co. 1136-40 Conn. Ave. Rudolph Jose, President Decatur 3900 ®11)

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