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Cleveland 1 CANTON, AKRON, Ohio | Saturday, March 15 AL TRAIN g ALL STEEL EQUIPMENT " Pennsylvania Railroad @ W, gy sio, DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES " Eyesight Specialist £.F. ALBEE DIES; PIONEER SHOWMAN Heart Attack Is Fatal to Vet- eran Theatrical Leader at Age of 72. By the Associated Press. PALM BEACH, Fla, March 13— Edward F. Albee, pioneer showman, who with the late B. F. Keith created and operated a transcontinental chain of vaudeville theaters, died here last night oll a heart attack. He was 72 years old. ‘The theatrical man died unexpectedly in his hotel room. He had been suf- fering intermittently from a heart dis- order for some time, but apparently was feeling weil shortly before his death. Plans were made today to take the body to New York tomorrow. Arrange- ments for funeral services will be made Te. Beginning as a young man with P. T. Barnum, the circus magnate, Mr. Albee became an imj nt power in the amusement world, building scores of elaborate show houses and employing such stars as Fred Stone, Al Jolson an M. Cohan. His association with Mr. Keith in 1883 in the presentation of a modest variety show in Boston, led to the founding of the cross-country eircuit of theaters, which was merged last Novem- ber in the Radio-Keith-Orpheum con- solidation. ~ Mr. Albee retired from active control of his enterprises at the time of the merger after spending more than 50 years in the amusement busi- ness. Mrs. Albee, the former Laura E. Smith of Boston, and a son, Reed A. Albee, who were here at the time of Mr. Albee’s death, and a daughter, Mrs. Ethel A. Lauder, survive the theatrical magnate. GLEE CLUB TO SING INY.W. C.A. CONCERT Lucy Clark Street to Direct Eliza- beth Somers Organization Tuesday Night. Directed for the first time by Miss THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGLON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1930. [Convict Pardoned| Because King Rode In Locomotive Cab Belgian Monarch Takes Throttle From Son and Then Pleads for Father. By the Associated Press. VERONA, Italy, March 12.—Carlo Sasselli, 76, affer serving 34 years in prison for murder, has King Albert of the Balkans to thank as well as his own King Victor Emmanuel of Italy for the royal pardon that set him free. One of Sassell’s sons is an expert locomotive engineer on the state rail- ways. When the royal train bearing the then Princess Marie-Jose of Bel- glum, her mnu and Drothers came through M in January, the engines were changed and the younger Sasselli was engineer for the royal party. Albert of the Belgians, something of a mechanic himself, climbed into the cab, took the throttle for a time, and then talked to Sasselli. “You're a good engineer,” said the Belgian monarch. “If there is anything T could do for you, I should be glad to.” ‘Then the engineer -told how his father had tried to have his trial reviewed, d | and how, after all those years of con- finement, he wanted to see his aged wife and family before he died. “I think,” said Albert, “that I might say & word to my ‘cousin’ of Italy.” True to his word, he did, and the elder Sasselll is finally at liberty. FLYING LECTURE GIVEN. Dr. Hugh Dryden Addresses Stand- ards Club on Aerodynamics. ‘The second of a series of five lectures on aerodynamics was given by Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, chief of the aerody- namics section of the Bureau of before the Standards Flying Club last night in the Bureau of Stardards East Building. Dr. Dryden discussed the use of model tests and of the conventional curves of airfoil characteristics. Next Tuesday evening Lieut. Ralph S. Barnaby, the only Navy glider pilot and this country’s first qualified soarer pilot, will ss gliding and soaring. A group of employes of the Bureau of Standards now is constructing a pri- l'n;rg training glider for flights this 8. ‘The three remaining lectures in Dr. Dryden's course will be given March 25 and A 1 and 8 and will deal SAMUEL M. FELTON, RAIL LEADER, DIES War-Time Director General of U. S. Lines Is Paralysis Vietim. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, March 12.—Samuel Morse Felton, chairman of the board of the Chicago Great Western Railroad and director general of military railways jege and during the World War years, died last , night, at the age of 77. Beginning his career when 15 years old as a rodman, Felton, after his graduation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was actively identified with American rallroading and continued so until last November, when he was stricken with paralysis. For his war work Congress awarde him the Distinguished Service Medal, while the Prench government bestowed upon him the Cross of the Legion of Honor. Felton's father, Samuel Morse Felton, as president of the Philadelphia, Wil- mington & Baltimore road, arranged the secret passage of President Lincoln from Harrisburg, Pa., to Washington after a plot had been laid to wreek the train and assassinate the President. Mrs. Felton died in 1923. Four chil- dren survive and burial will be in Philadelphia, Waynesboro Fireman Injured. ‘WAYNESBORO, Va., March 12 (Spe- cial).—Fire partly destroyed the home of Earle Sayre, on the outskirts of this city, yesterday. Fireman Elmer Kern, in an attempt to save some of the belong- ings, was injured by a falling beam. The loss is estimated a ut $5,000. LEAG PERRINS' 2. SAUCE odds a zestul, ap- petizing flaver to fish of every kind. Particularly fine on |MAJ. GEN. HARRY BISHOP LEAVES HAWAII POST Distinguished Artilleryman to Sue- ceed Maj. Gen. Austin, Retired, in High Washington Duty. Maj. Gen. Harry G. Bishop, who suc- ceeds Maj. Gen. Fred T. Austin, re- tired, as chief of Fleld Artillery at the War Department, has been relieved from command of the 8th Fleld Artil- lery Brigade, at Schofleld Barracks, Hawali, and ordered to this city to as- Honoluht about the 16t of AprL 8! o Gen, is from l‘hgnl was emy in June, 1807, the the Army Staff College. Most of his service was in the Artillery Corps. He took an active nlnLherfl:- pine insurrection following the Spanish ‘War of 1898 and in the World War and was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal for exceptionally meritorius serv- ices while in command of the 3d Field Artillery Brigade during the battles of the Meuse-Argonne and in the subse- quent advance to Sedan. Since his re- turn from France he has been stationed at the Army War College, the War De- artment, Atlanta, Ga.; at Manila, . L; Fort S8am Houston, Tex.; Fort 8ill, Okla,; Fort Hoyle, Md, and in Hawaii. OFFICERS TRANSFERRED. Col. Musgrave and Col. Nelson Are Assigned to Hawaiian Duty. Lieut. Col. John R. Musgrave, Coast Artillery, at Cincinnati, and Lieut. Col. George E. Nelson, Pield Artillery, at San Francisco, have been assigned to duty in Hawall; Maj. Joseph B. Pate, Infan- try, from the Army War College, this city, to Fort George G. Meade, Md.; Maj. James R. Hill, Cavalry, from Bal- timore to Jeffersonville, Ind.; Maj Thomas G. Tousey, Medical Corps, from Fort Slocum, N. ¥., 11 - sity Medical College; Maj. El L. will move the bowels without any pain and depressing after ef- fects. Sick Headaches, Indigestion, Biliousness and Bad Complexion quickly relieved. Childrenand Adults can easily swallow Dr. Carter’s tiny, sugar coated pills. They are free from calomel and poisonous drugs. All Druggists 25c and 75¢ red pkgs. CARTER'S [E PILLS Radio Department This department is man ade under his personal supe; perfect service to our customers. guarantees by one of the best All installations ision, which Let Us Demonstrate the RCA RADIOLA We guarantee our prices to be as low as can be found in the city. Special terms. DE MOL Piano and Furniture Co. 12th & G Sts. Pianos—Victrolas Radios—Furniture Titus, Medical Corps, from Hawail to the State University of Iowa; Capt. Robert O. White, Quartermaster Corps, from Baltimore to San Antonio, Tex.; Capt. T. E. T. Haley, Field Artillery, from Purdue University, ‘Indiana, to Paris, France, for duty in connection with the of the Gold Star Mothers fig'mn cemeteries, and DECEIVE YOU HUSBAND— VEN if the caffein in coffee does keep your husband awake, you know he'll keep right on drinking it at night. So give him coffee—but not caffein! Give him Sanka Coffee —genuine, deliciouscoffeewith 97% of the caffein removed. Make the night-test! Make the night- test. Serve Sanka Coffee tonight. Then tomorow morning ask your hushand how he slept. His answer will prove that he can drink Sanka Cof- fee—and sleep. Your grocer carries Sanka Coffee—always fresh, ground or in the bean. He sells it on the basis of complete satisfac- tion or your money back. Let your husband have his coffee—and his sleep. Getacan of Sanka Coffee with problems of airplane design and control. Glee Club will appear in its third an- nual public concert Tuesday night at 8 o'cle in Barker Hall of the Young ‘Women'’s Christian Association. A special attraction will be a trio including. Miss Evelyn Scott, violin; Miss Alice Allen Merrell, cello, and Miss Catherine Benson, piano, Folk music will have a prominent place in the prgglm, including numbers arranged for ral mug )y Deems Taylor, H. T. Burleigh, Forsyth and Thomas F. Dunhill. ' CCUMULATE $100 in this bank at 3% then take out a Time ficate paying 4%. .A Time Cer- tificate matures in 6 months, but if neces- sity forces you to draw upon it be- tween (h; interest yment dates, you ;fll receive 3% in- terest. Bowers, El 3 Campbell, Nellie Cannon, Ellen Katherine Erwin, Mas $10 Delivers—12 Months to Pay ISTRICT ANNOUNCING the New Colonial Room Hapz:ness 11TH & G STS, Constance . Weik, Lueille Wheaten and Inez Zeigler. COMMISSIONS ARE ISSUED. Charles P. Clark Is Made Lieuten. ant Colonel and Specialist. in the Reserve Corps of Commissions the Army have been issued by the War Department to Charles P. Clark, 3133 lleutenant colonel THE DEPARIMENIAL “YOUR BANK” 1726 Pa. 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