Evening Star Newspaper, March 7, 1930, Page 30

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D. C. FRIDAY, MARCH 7. 1930. Glendon, N. C., on December 1, 1889, | service he carried without mishap, ap- | of the Secretary of the Navy at th now is on duty at Quantico, Va. Enlist- | proximately 1,700 passengers and 840,000 i Navy Dep.nmensz and was wlgessed h; ing in the Marine Corps in 1909, Sergt. | pounds of freight over terrain where a | Maj. Gen. Wendell C. Neville, comman- Paschal has seen service in Cuba, Santo | forced landing almost inevitably would | dant of the Marine Corps, and other Domingo, Haiti, Nicaragua, and in | have resulted in fatalities.” high-ranking officers of that organiza- Prance during the World War. In| The ceremony took place in the office | tion April, 1925, the major general com- mandant of the Marine Corps officially . commended Sergt. Paschal for bringing safely to the ground himself and his | plane, that had been struck in midair | by another ship. The commandant | again commended him in 1928 “for his | able ability as mechanic and assistant | pilot on a flight from Anacostia, D. C., | to Nicaragua.” | The citation given by Mr. Jahncke to Sergt. Paschal says that: | “During 1,040 hours of flying over mountainous and _partly unexplored jungle he displayed great courage and skill in attacks on hostile bandit forces | and in flights through dangerous weather for the purpose of locating and | supporting ground patrols. During this | olc———la]c———]alc———|o STAR, WASHINGTON, JAHNCKE PRESENTS CROSS TO PASCHAL| ‘Marine Corps Sergeant Wins Navy | Award for Daring and Skill in Nicaragua. IB_14 %« DIAMONDS | Over 22,000 diamonds bought in the past | 20 vears qualifies me an expert in selecting | technically fine stones ROKER AND_APPRAISER N HOFF 918 F St. Reoom 17 Platinam Ring. GALLATIY STATUE S " | Siddons Appeals to ' eal Estate Loans | : . ; (D. C. Property Only) of Capital to Aid Memorial 6 % Project. No Commission Charged You can_take 12 years to pay off youF loan without the expense of renewing, $1,000 Very Special— CONGRESS PLAYING and subjected to a difficult and tedious | | National Council of Jewish Women; procedure in order to recover it.” said M | Miss - Alice Edwards, American Home THE EVENING lar to that of Mrs. Owen by which a loyal and useful citizen is deprived of | | her citizenship without her consent, | . : Miss Dorof Straus, a New York at- i torney, speaking for the League of | Women Voters. _ Others who joined in the argument were Miss Margaret Lam- | bie, Federation of Business and Profes- | sional Women: Miss Cecelia Razovsky, Member of cOngreSs Fro Economics Association; C))lqh’s.(_ E. A? il Danly, Young Woman's Christian As- Florida Appears Before | wcistion: Mrs. Filis Yost. Womans Christian Temperance Union. and Edward S. McGrady, American Federa- | tion of Labor. House Committee. Acting Secretary of the Navy Ernest | | Lee Jahncke yesterday decorated Mas- ter Technical Sergt. Archie Paschal of the Marine Corps with the Navy Cross | for daring and skill displayed while on | aviation duty in Nicaragua. | Sergt. Paschal. who was born in ROVER ASKS PADLOCK FOR H STREET PREMISES Represenative Ruth Bryan.Owen of Florida appeared as a spokesman for | women’s organizations in appearing be- | | fore the House immigration committee | yesterday to plead in their behalf the An appeal for funds from Washing- tonians to aid the erection of a statue | here to Albert Gallatin, Treasurer of the ll | United States from 1801 to 1814, is be- || ing issued by Frederick P. H. Siddons. United States Attorney Leo A} for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets over $20,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY, Presid EDWARD C. BALTZ Secretary ==when you take these harm- less little tablets. Ask the druggist for Pap Compound; only 35c. Watch how quickly all the mucous discharge ends, your head clears and stops aching, and soreness all goes. Better than “doping!”” Remember the name. Any drugstore. coLb Compound CINCINNATI INDIANAPOLIS (OAKLEY & E. NORWOOD) ‘12 ROUND TRIP { March 8-9 " Leaves Washington ‘Washington. ... ... 4:33P. M. turday, March 8 >>>> 333 LR k] F3333 il | statue and has appropriated $10.000 to l| | Alexander Hamilton, on the steps of the il | headed by Charles M. | | the $50,000 and appeal s Cold | vice chairman of the Gallatin Memorial | | Committee. The campaign is under way in other cities to raise $50,000 for the statue. | Congress, by a joint resolution some | time ago, authorized the erection of the | prepare the site, near the statue of TreaSury. The New York committee. Sabin_of the Guaranty Trust Co., has raised $15.000 and a portion of the fund has been | raised elsewhere. The Washington committee, of which Corcoran Thom, president of the Amer- ican Security & Trust Co., is chairman, has been formed to raise a portion of Is to Washing- tonians to complete the fund neces- sary to erect “this long neglected trib- ute to & great public servant,” Siddons explains. The work will be executed by J. E. Fraser, who did the Hamilton | statue. | | “Subscriptions may be made payable | to the Albert Gallatin Memorial Fund, | addressed to Mr. Siddons at the Ameri- can Security & Trust Co., here. Other members of the local commit- | tee raising funds are Frederic A. Delano, | Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, Robert V. Flem- | ing, George W. White, John Poole, Ad- | miral Cary T. Grayson and Perry Bel- mgnt. amilton was the first of the great | Secretaries of the Treasury and Gal- | latin’s reputation during his term of office probably was somewhat over- | shadowed in his own party by Thomas Jefferson. Financiers and students of economics, however, generally agree that Gallatin played a great part in laying the fiscal foundations of America. | WOMAN WHO SWALLOWED POISON HELD SUICIDE A Ccertificate of suicide was issued by Coroner J. Ramsay Nevitt yesterday in the case of Miss Edna Crosby, 37 years : old, who swallowed a quantity of poison | at her home in the 200 block of Twelfth | place northeast last night following a quarrel with her sweetheart. | _Miss Crosby died at the Casualty ‘Holnltfl an hour after swallowing the poison. She told hospital attendants that she had a ement with her sweetheart that terminated their com- t)‘):rizmuhln and that she had no desire ve. Dr. Louis Jimal, staff physician, responded with the ambulance which took the woman to the hospital and gave her first-aid treatment. Conductor Sues Autoist. 00?1 J. ll(er. a conductor of the ‘Washington Rallway & Electric Co., residing at 649 G street northeast, has filed sult to recover $30,000 damages from e M. Wine, 1333 Madison street, said to be the owner of an auto- mobile which rammed a street car in charge of the plaintiff May 2 last, at Twenty-ninth street and Dumbarton avenue. The conductor says he was ren- us by the collision and has sustained serious heart trouble. H is represented by Attorney H. W. Kelly. —_— — ‘Wales Ranch Drilling Due. EDMONTON, Alberta, March 7 (®). —Drilling for oil on the Prince of ‘Wales' ranch at High River, Alberta, is to be undertaken this Spring by the Stonewall Oil Co. Ltd, which now holds leases on 120 acres on which the prince’s barns are said to be located. cause of citizenship equality. Using her own experlences as_an argument, Mrs. Owen made an effec- | tive appeal for passage of the Cable bill to give women the same rights as men to Tetain their citizenship when they marry citizens of other countries. ‘The Florida woman was born in Nebraska and later lost her citizenship and had to be naturalized because of her marriage to an English army officer. Her story culminated with an elec- tion contest which sought to dislodge her from the seat as Representative from the fourth Florida district on the contention that she was not a citizen | while the Rover and Assistant United States At- torney Harold W. Orcutt applied yes- terday to the District Supreme Court for a “padlock” injunction against premises 45 and 47 H street northeast and a garage in the rear, alleging that a | nuisance within the meaning of the na- tional prohibition law has been con- ducted therein. Anthony De Genaro, alias Tony De Genaro, said to have traded as_the National Bottle & Malt Co., and Rob- ert B. Storey, are named as occupants, property is_alleged to be of the United States at the time of her | cwned by Enola S. Marable. election. Thereupon the committee asked her to sit with it in considering | state that “buys” the bill. “We should have no more cases simi- Affidavits attached to the petition had been made on several occasions since December 21, 1929, by prohibition agents. of Southern Recipes sent on request As The Oid South Knew Them ES, Sir! The Southern Mam- mies knew their hotcakes in those days. knew their syrup. packed full of Not just sweet and sugary, but loads and loads of the flavor that everyone recognizes as True Southern Flavor. Only Golden Crown has it. OLDEN OWN TABLE SYRUP Yo But best of all, they For after all, it's the syrup that makes hot- cakes what they should be. Might as well think of moonlight with~ out the moon as hotcakes with- out syrup-—-the delicious Southern kind of syrup. And what it takes to make hotcakes fe-ll{ good, Golden Crown is With the True Southern Flavor! 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