Evening Star Newspaper, March 31, 1930, Page 3

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[ WILLIAMS (9) 17 Trouble Free Clean—Economical Cost Less—Last Longer Installed in One Day Terms Available DOMESTIC SERVICE CORP. 1706 Conn. Ave. Phone Potomac 2048 Wm. H. Gottlieb, Manager 1 WATCH . for the v n; See Tuesday’s Star | side, Calif., yesterday and was expected | to arrive at Sacramento some time to- 10 PLANES MOVE FOR COAST ATTACK Army Craft Will Defend San Francisco in “Battle” Be- ginning Tomorrow. By the Associated Press. SACRAMENTO, Calif, March 31.— More than 60 American fighting planes | were “on the line” here today and nearly 100 others were heading toward Sacramento from distant points for the annual maneuvers of the Army Air Corps, which will seek to repulse an imaginary enemy force advancing upon San Francisco. The simulated warfare will begin to- morrow, when about 160 ships will have reached here. The maneuvers will con- | tinue until April 24. Adverse weather delayed the west- ward movement of the third attack group of 27 planes from Fort Crockett, Tex., and the 22 ships of the first pur- suit group from Selfridge Field, Mount Clemens, Mich. The third attack group reached River- day. The first pursuit group started 'Q CERTIFY THAT 1 WILL NOT ible for any debts contracted other THOMAS L. MANSFIELD, RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS one_other than mysel 3122 Dumbarton - ay ANNU, MEETING OF THE STOCI holders of the International Medicine Co., ;mch ‘was scheduled Jan. 28, 3 be beld at 2507 Rhode Isiand ave. m.e. 8¢ 330 pm."oq Saturdey. April 15 NELL M. WIN Secretary. 23 THAT rity id Trust Company has T regular dividend of three per on its capital stock of $3.400.000. pa: April 10, 1930 to the stockholders of d at the close of business March 31. rom ‘ai 3 us your problem and we'll tell you how uch it will cost and how long it Wil take. aticnal Delivery Ass'n, Inc., Nat. 1460. NG-DISTANCE MOVING — WE HAVE n keeping faith with the public since 1896. 5k about our country-wide service. Cail National 9220, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. CHAIRS FOR RENT_SUITABLE FOR BAN- uets, receptions, bl’llxe parties or meeting: 1 to 20c per day each: new chairs. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO., 418 10th . D Metropolitan 1 . Any one aforesaid business will please present same Yo the undersimed on or befors Tuesda, il 1st, 1930, ITAL ADJUSTING & FINANCING CO., Sth Floor, Dist. Nat. Bank Bidg. Robert B. Holll der, Gen. Mer. Tel. Metropolitan_4813. 4814, 4815 ANNOUNCEMENT. On and after April 2, 1930, Weschler's au- tomobile auction will be held in fireproof building, No. 613 G st. n.w., every Wednes- day and Saturday, commencing 10 o'clock am. LADIES SUITS, OOATS ALTERED; RE- modsled to latest styles; furs repaired and Temodeled and securely kept in cold storage. ALEERT, 2222 18th st. n.w. W NEW YORK CITY APRIL 7 'O NEW YORK CITY ..’ IAPRIL 14 Special rates for pari'icads to and from Philadelphia, New York and Boston. UNITED STATES STQRAGE CO. INC, 418 10th St. N.W. __Metropolitan 1845’ WANTED_PART LOADS, TQ NEW YORK AND s W EN ROUTE THE AMERICAN 2801_Geo Furniture Repairing. UPHOLSTERING. CHAIR CANEING. SAME LOCATION 21 YEARS. WHICH ASSURES YOU LOW PRICE AND HIGH-GRADE WORK. STRONG’S, ETROPOLITAN 2062 Quaint Acres Nurseries On ‘the Silver Spring — Colesville pike. oice plants at attractive prices. Pink iorwood, pink magnolla, Japanese red ma- owering cherries, flower- 2238 10th ST jow Drice on privet hedge day._Only 5 miles from_the District. ROOFWORK of any nnt:ue promptly and capably looked d St. S.W. Company. __ District 0933. ~ Wanted—Return Load Furniture «from New York, Philadeiphia, va. ghir:l«l, llll:. and Pittsburgh. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co. _North’ 3343 _ NDERS. years use of if will do. _Tell your roofer 1o use BROS. ROOF COATING AND CEMENT, or consult us about it. ROSE BROS. CO., 2120 GA. AVE. ____ NORTH 0B4T. Happy Days Are Here Again —time for us to perfect your printing plans for Bpring 1930 The National Capital Press 2210-1212 D 8t. N.W._Phone National 0850 THOSBE WHO_ WANT TO SLEEP AND WHO DOES NOT? Yo can't on a jump or hollowed mat- tress. But it_cab be renovat FEEL LTKE A NEW ONE Richmond. | Pa. , Window Shade That Can Be Cleaned is Decidedly Economical . out-from Cheyenne, but turned back to that city because of bad weather. These fiyers probably will reach here tomorrow. ‘While these planes and others were winging their way here, Brig. Gen. Wwilliam E. Gillmore, commanding gen- | eral of the provisional wing in charge of the maneuvers, and his staff were completing plans for the aerial activities. Radio will play an important part in the demonstrations. Orders will be transmitted from the ground to fiying planes, and from plane to plane, in this | fashion. JOHN S. BARNHART DIES OF PNEUMONIA ATTACK | Beltsville, Md.,, Nursery Owner Succumbs at Age of 78 at Home of Son in Hyattsville. Funeral services for John S. Barn- hart, 78 years old, of 57 W street, pro- prietor of a nursery business it Belts- ville, Md, will be conducted at his residence tomorrow morning at_ 11 o'clock. Interment will be in Fort Lincoln Cemetery. Mr. Barnhart died at the home of his son, John F. Barn- hart, No. 2 Shepherd street, Hyattsville, Md., Saturday after a short illness. Death was due to pneumonia. He is survived by three daughters, Miss Helen V. Barnhart of this city, Mrs. L. M. Caton of Bridgeport, Conn., and Mrs. Joseph Munroe of Hyattsvill four sons, John F. Barnhart of Hyatts- ville, Jason D. Barnhart of Bridgeport, | Conn.; Randolph J. Barnhait of Aus-| tralia, and D. Hall art of this city; a brother, Peter Barnhart of Los Angeles, Calif., and a half brother, Charles S. Donaldson of Avon Park, Fla. e S Constructed in 1916, chiefly for mili- tary purposes, the Aden-El Khudad Railway, in Arabia, is to be discontin- ued, having been operated at & loss for several years. ' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1930. ’ I On Honor Roll ' } MRS. ELLEN SPENCER MUSSEY, Only Capital woman to gain place on the partial honor roll of the League of ‘Women Voters in connection with the tenth anniversary of woman's suffrage in_the United States, Edge Refuseé t6 Eat On Exhibition for| French Cafe Diners | Manager Offers Tickets at $3.25 for Patrons to Watch Ambassador. By the Associated Press. NICE, France, March 31-—Ambassa-| dor Walter E. Edge, arriving here yes- terday in pursuance of his indusirial inspection tour of southeastern France, | had a shock when he discovered a large restaurant was advertising the fact that the American Ambassador would™dine there that evening and that it was sell- ing tickets for 80 francs (about $3.25) for those desirous of dining in the com- pany of an Ambassador. Mr. Edge, who is on a tour of com- mercial study, felt this was carrying commerce a little too far and an- nounced he would refuse to be put on exhibition at any price. The manage- ment then arranged to have his party secluded from the other diners by screens, plants and palms. In the course of the dinner the mem- bers of the Chamber of Commerce com~ plained that the American duty on olive oil was too high. Mr. Edge promised to list this complaint with the other data gathered during his trip. Today he will visit Grasse, center of the Riviera per- fumery industry, and then return to Nice, where his present trip will end. \ S e AR Gull Gets Ball, Ruining Golf. ‘WILDWOOD, N. J, March 31 (#).— ‘Ted Austin, high school golf champ, has an alibi for losing an extra hole match. A seagull picked up the ball and headed out to sea. Ted could have had a free d;'up, but his opponent was close to the pin. WOMEN DUELISTS TAKE KNIVES AS BULLETS FAIL TO TOUCH MARK Quarrel of Waitresses Over Cabaret Cavalier Ends in Battle of Principals and Seconds. By the Associated Press, MEXICO CITY, March 31.—The second duel between women for the lf-‘ fections of a man within three days oc- curred here Saturday, when two wait- resses of a cabaret fought with pistols under the street lamps of a lonely suburb. The duel was entirely a woman’s af- fair. Each duelist had a young woman friend as a second, and the duel be- came a double duel when the seconds jumped into the fray with knives. All four women were wounded before po- licemen arrived, ending the battle and arresting the women. The principals were Maria Luisa Gonzalez Lopez and Enriqueta Her- nandez Juarez, and the seconds, also waitresses at the cabaret, Concha Meneses and Margarita Hernandez Gutierrez. ‘There had long been a rivalry be- tween Maria Luisa and Enriqueta for the affections of Sergio Augusto, hand- some cabaret cavalier. Another waitress suggested that they fight it out with pistols. They went to a lonely street in the suburbs, where they selected a dueling ground under a street lamp. Maria Luisa and Enriqueta took their places back to back and walked 12 steps in opposite directions. Each turned and fired six cartridges at the other. Neither was wounded. Infuriated by this result, the sec- onds flew into the fray with knives. The other women immediately drew knives in turn, and the melee went on violently until the arrival of two police- men who arrested principals and sec- onds. & Any Distance IN City Proper NO (HARGE FOR EXTRA PASSENGERS METROPOLITAN 1727 PPING OR {10 n INESS CALLS hy OUR Procu Divided Payments re a Matching Set of STERLING SILVER A place setting in the WILLIAM & MARY PATTERN Consisting of: Dessert Knife, Fork, Salad Fork, Bouillon Spoon, Fruit Spoon and Qyster Fork, only $]6.05 Or $96.25 for 6 Complete Covers in accordance with Sterling Silversmiths’ Guild Plan Toldsmith & To. 1225 E Strect. NW. | Dupont TONTINE is therefore replac Factory fresh indefi Prices Save You Money washable shade cloth— washable to the point of SCRUBBING— ements are fewer and they may be kept clean and Estimates and Samples Upon Request tely. We are HONOR ROLL NAMIED BY WOMAN VOTERS League Raising $250,000 Fund to Memorialize Out- standing Leaders. As a partial national roll of honor the National League of Women Voters { has announced the names of 23 women, memorialized by their home States as outstanding in the women's suffrage | movement. Susan B. Anthony of Kansas heads the list. ‘The league is raising a $250,000 foun- dation fund for the memorializing of | the women leaders. A memorial tablet or scroll also will mark this phase of the celebration of the tenth anniversary of adoption of the nineteenth amendment. Definite plans, however, have not yet been announced. complete national roll of honor is to be announced at the annual League of Women Voters' convention in Louis- ville, Ky., May 1 in a formal report by the jury of award. ‘The 23 names announced today, with their States, were: Susan B. Anthony, Kansas; Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Towa; the late Dr. Anna Howard Shaw and Mrs. Wilbur Brotherton, Michigan; Mrs. George Gellhorn, Missouri; the late Mrs. Isabelle Beecher Hooker and Miss Caroline Ruutz-Rees, Connecticut; Miss Julia Lathrop, the late Mrs. Florence Sylvester Cheney and the late Mrs. Katherine Goode, Illinois; Alice Stone Blackwell, the late Julla Ward Howe and the late Lucy Stone, Massachusetts; Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton and Judge Florence E. Allen, Ohio; the late Miss Maria Sanford and the late Mrs. An- dreas Ueland, Minnesota; the late Rev. Olympia Brown Willis, Wisconsin; Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey, District of Co- lumbia; Mrs. Armenia Smith White, New Hampshire; Mrs. Guildford Dudley and Mrs. George Fort Milton, Tennes- ¥e. and Miss M. Eleanor Brackenridge, ‘exas. F. RUTH ESPEY DIES Ex-President of Phi Kappa Tau Expires at 21. Miss F. Ruth Espey, 21 years old, a graduate of the class of 1926 at the Notre Dame Academy here and farmer president of the Phi Kappa Tau Soror- ity, which she helped found at the academy, died at her home, 19 S street, yesterday after a long iliness. Miss Espey is survived by her mother, Mrs. Gertrude B. Espey; three sisters, Miss Mary Espey, Miss Elizabeth Espey and Mrs. R. A, Moore, and a brother, William Espey, all of this city. Funeral services will be held in St. Martin's Catholic Church Wednesday morning at § o'clock. Interment wiil be in Mount Olivet Cemetery. TIRE BARGAINS Genuine " DUNLOPS 30x4.50 Dunlops are better and cost no more than mail order house tires. LEETH BROS. 1220 13th St. N.W. Met. 0764 elastic must By Pamla Hill New lines for old!—The new Silhouette is a matter of personal accomplishment; a matter between you and your Founda- tion Garment. Remember that when you buy your new Foundation, Remember 100, that your Foundation is the one garment that you buy, not for what it is, but for what it does. Its only measure of value is in its performance. ‘That is why makers of America’s finest Foundations are 50 scrupulously careful in the selection of the eLm_me active element in the service of the Garment and the Fabric that makes possible the new Silhouette. They use one supreme quality knitted elastic—Kenlastic, ‘That you tecognize this superla- tive fabric that insures complete and perfect accomplishment in your Founda- tion, every piece of uine Kenlastic is marked :; top nm;] bottom borders with @ wavy blue line. It is your guarantee of supreme quality knitted elastic, Kenlastie ~ the life of fine corsets ©1540. Jamss K. Kondrich O, Ine., Philadalohio, New Yord Will Rogers Says: BEVERLY HILLS, Calif, March 30.—I see by this morning’s news- prints that Secretary Cotton says that Mr. Hoover says, “We are with the American delegation,” and he is right, too. From the looks of things we are coming nearer being with them every day; I look for 'em on any boat now. If they can just get out of there before war is declared | they will be fortunate. We can | charge the whole thing off as a | business loss, but a social success. | It will go down in history as a | dressmakers’ triumphal conference. HELLEN NAMED DELEGATE Will Attend Family Welfare As-| sociation Meeting. - Arthur Hellen, member of the board of the Associated Charities, has been | elected as the board's delegate to the Family Welfare Association of America, & national organization made up of 234 local family welfare societies. Mr. Hellen is asked to participate in the conference of the national organ- ization in Boston next June, when the status of family life in America today. the future of family relations, the effect of the present unemployment situation on family life and kindred problems will be discussed. Asks Pay for Parrot Fever. HAVERSTRAW, N. Y, March 31 (#).—Mrs. Evelyn Singer of Spring Val ley has applied for workmen’s compen- sation on the ground she contracted parrot fever while at her work. . DEFENSE HOPEFUL ININDIAN'S TRIAL Woman’s Counsel Expects Today’s Testimony Will Re- fute Charge of Murder. By the Associated Press. BUFFALO, N. Y, March 31.—Confi- dent that a single day would suffice to refute the charge of murder lodged against the Indian, Lila Jimerson, her counsel marshaled & dozen witnesses for the’ opening of court today. ‘The two attorneys, assigned by the court, were prepared to show before to- day’s session ended that the State erred in charging Lila conspired to murder Clotilde Marchand so' she could realize her ambition to marry the woman's husband, Henry Marchand, sculptor of Indian figures. They believed they could show that if any one wrote letters over a fictitious signature telling Lila’s tribeswoman, credulous old Nancy Bowen, that Clo- tilde Marchand was a witch and as such should be killed, it was not Lila. They also were ready to prove that the 35-year-old consumptive Indian woman did not know the withered old Nancy was going to Buffalo from her home, on the Cattaraugus Indian Reservation, on March 6 to beat and chloroform the artist’s wife, For injuries received to his left wrist when he was run down by a speedboat while swimming at Brighton, England, J. H. W. Reiner was recently awarded $9,300 damages by an English court. Floral Service No matter where yo town, you may depend service, u may be, in town or out of on us for the ultimate in Your wishes will be as carefully looked out for as if you called in perso of flowers. We will offer helpfu asked for. n and made direct selections 1 suggestions when they are Ours is a Perfected Organization 1407 H Street National 4905 HOOVER PLAN PRAISED Raoul Lizaire, charge d'affaires for Haiti, in a radio address here yesterday described President Hoover’s Haitian policy as a “fortunate solution of the Haitian question.” Our Store Will Be CLOSED Tuesday, April 1st On Acount of Death in.Family H. ZIRKIN & SONS SERVING WASHINGTON SINCE 1901 STORAGE Get our low rates FIRST on Furniture Storage Don’t trust the storage of your furniture to inexperienced hands. Consult this reliable old concern, which for 29 years has served Washingtonians. Our storage serve ice assures 100% satisfaction. Mod- ern fireproof warehouse...private individual locked rooms. Phone Metropolitan 1843 United States Storage Co. 418-420 Tenth Street N.W. (Opposite Gas Office) [Established 1901 Allied Van Line Movers—Nation-Wide Long-Distance M . RITITITII S, Never Before in 80 Years Elgin StrapWatch $1 0.95 50c a week! We know something about watch values—we’ve been learning for 80 years. And we know what we’re talking about when we tell you that this is the greatest Elgin valuewe’ve offered in all our 80 years. Never before has a genuine ELGIN Watch sold for as little as $10.95! It goes on sale tomorrow—don’t miss it! Extra Mesh Band FREE! Handsome flexible metal-mesh wrist band, with patent clasp, FREE with this Elgin Watch,in addition to the regular leather strap! 1004 F Street N.W.

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