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AVOID RISK Send Silver and Valuables to Our Safe Deposit Vaults Securitp Storage 1140 FIFTEENTH ST A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 38 YEARS CAASPINWALL , PRESIDENT Every “Best-Built” Metal GARAGES No Cash Needed nch of Home Improvement —and up According to the type you select. $o"Fe cort: Your House PAINTED YNO CASH NEEDED as long as YEARS TO PAY Binest Materials and very Job fui raniced JsHiGToy 1205 Eye St. National 8873 for sore throat When your whole throat aches and throbs with the agony of hoarseness or coughing—gargle a spoonful of Mistol quickly! How soon the painful, scratchy feeling vanishes as Mistol blandly soothes the soreness away! Some in the nose checks head colds, too. Doctors use it. Keep Mistol handy and play safe. Get a bottle today! Made by the Makers of Nujol ;T YOUR HOUSE 1S FOR ‘SALE, MAY 1 elp you sell it? No fee or commission asked. Address Box 363-E. Star office. ROOF REPAIRING. PAINTING, guttering, Spouting; reasonable prices. North 5314, dly or night. Ajax Roofing Co., 2038 18th st. n.w. LADIES' SUITS. COATS ALTERED; RE- mod>led to latest styles: furs repaired and remodeled and securely kept in cold storage. ALEERT. 2222 18th st. n.w. = TO HAUL FULL OR PART ] (el : {ro York. nd. su-xon. Fu'ls- all_way_points:’ special ra ATIONAL DELIVF‘EYLO c NT NENTA Joad system, 1235 N. art loads, Y. ichmond, Pitfsburgh, Clev €298, Special rate. Eve. phone Lin. 1708. 6° 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FQR DEBTS contracted by any one other than myself. THOMAS T. MOTT, 1520 14th n.w. 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR AN' debts contracted for by any one other the: myself, " MORRIS WEGER, 950 Shephy st n.w. WILL PERSONS WHO WITNESSED ACCI- gent to elderly, lady at 19th and’ Pa; av Friday, March 20, 1990, between 7 and 7:30 ;. Kindly phone nrpwnn- THOS. C. an: WANTED—LOADS OF FURNITURE From NEW YORK CITY. APR, 75 NEW YORK. crrv i HEADQU. ONGADISTANCE | \xovms ONITED STATES STORAGE CO 418 10th 8t. L wuouumnn Tiss. Pamtmg——Pa crmg ork_guaranteed. Loci S dTern siee 1910, National 0385 Edwin S. Rucker 1210 H St. NW. ___ NT!D—PART wADs T NEW YORK EN ROUTE, Amm. AU ROCHESTER, L' 17 SYRACUSE, N. APRIL 11 FRO! W _YO! OINTS EN APRIL 8. 11. 15 THE AMERICAN' $TC AND TRANS- 2801 Georgia_Ave. Adams_1450 Happy Days Are Here Again —time for us to perfect your Drinting plans for Spring 1930 {The National Capital Press 4210-1212 D St. N.W. Phone National 0650 Quaint Acres Nurseries ihe Silver Spring — Colesville pike olce plants at attractive prices. = Pin) "dogwood. pink mnanohl. m co. Japanese red ring cherries, ‘Rower- ng cral ue ox, sbriibs, vines. rose trees, azal zaleas, _rhododendro: Tow brice on brivec. hedge. day. _Only 5 miles from_the District. ROOFWORK of any nature prcmvtly and capably looked ctical _roofers KOONS fixms, "1t i1 08¥ Wanted—Return Load Furniture lle' ‘fl’k. Pblllfl!lghll luenmonc cago, ant Snmh s Tnnsler & Storage Co. BYRD BARK HALTS IN SGMLE GALE City of New York Heaves to as Storm Catches Her , Half Way to Papeete. By the Associated Press. DUNEDIN, New Zealand, April 3 (Thursday) . —Rear Admiral Richard E, Byrd's Antarctic expedition, the City of New York, radioed today that for 30 hours she had been hove to in a storm. The wind velocity was estimated at 80 to 90 miles an hour. The bark gave her position as lati- tude 35 south, longitude 159 west, or slightly better than half way from Dunedin to Papeete, her first stop on the trip home to New York. The ship {was riding well in the heavy seas, she reported. Admiral - Byrd announced he will leave New Zealand from Wellington on the steamer Rangitiki, which is due at Panama about May 20. The Antarctic explorer leaves Dunedin Monday for | Christ Church, where a civic reception will be held in his honor. LAST LA VARRE PAPER TAKEN OVER BY WEBB Federal Commission Assumes Con- trol of Columbia, S. C., Record Under Court Order. By the Associated Press, COLUMBIA, S. C, April 3.—William | La Varre's last newspaper holding, the | Columbia (S. C.) Record, was taken over yesterday by J. T. Webb, jr., Geor- gia Federal Court commissioner. |~ The young publisher had held onto the Record, with the aid of various ! court orders, for several months after ‘Webb had taken charge of the Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle, the Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald and the Spartanburg (8. C.) Journal. He assumed control of the pa- pers in compliance with a Federal Court order issued by Judge Bascom S. Deaver at Macon, Ga., last September. Judge Deaver ruled that Harold Hall was an equal partner in the newspaper enterprise launched by Hall and La Vatre with money advanced by the In- ternational Paper Co. La Varre con- tended Hall was only an employe and had ‘sought to oust him from the or- ganization. When it was agreed that | the two could not operate as partners, | Webb was appointed to take charge of the paper: CIRCUS AND CARNIVAL TO BE HELD APRIL 23-26 The circus and carnival given by the | Men's Club and other organizations of | the St. Stephen and the Incarnnunnl Episcopal Church will be held April 23, 24, 25 and 26. s G unasr theairestioniotis | | Percy Oliver, with George G. Stones | braker, ringmaster, will be staged_on | the first floor of the parish house, Six- teenth and Newton streets, while the | carnival will occupy the second floor. | | The latter will be under direction of Arthur C. Houghton. The church or- chestra, directed by Harry P. White, will funish music for dancin Committee chairmen are: Edwin A. Heilig, tickets: Charlton M. Clark, pub- licity; Otho T. Beall, concessions: Wal- ter S. Stutz, music; Thomas S. Scrivener, freaks: Henry U. Milne, decorations: S. Percy Oliver, talent; D. J. R. Tubman, ushers and order, and Phillip A. Latimer, | seats. | | RECITAL IS.ARRANGED Robert Richard Dicterle, baritone soloist, and Malton Boyce. pianist. will | appear at the University Club of Wash- ington at 8:30 o'clock tonight in a joint | program arranged as a feature of ; “ladies’ night.” Mr. Dieterle, who recently returned | from Europe, where he had been study- | ing at Berlin and Vienna, has given 1| number of recitals. both in this country | and abroad. Mr. Boyce, a graduate of | the College of Music, Nottingham, Eng- land, is an organist and choir director | of considerable experience. Marriage Licenses. Leon Rabinowitz, 21. and Bess N. Golove. 19. both of Philadelphia, Pa.; Judge Robert | E. Mattingly. V. Manning Hoffman. 32. and Hilda R. Haries. 22: Rev. John E. Fort | Richard Taylor. 21. and Cornelia McNeil. | 18:_Rev. James T. Harvev | (g<epnetn M, Ineram. 26. and Edna D. Lang. | B Gonrve Bt T Bethesda. Md.. and Helen E. Manville. 25. this city: Rev. F.rl— Patrick H. Allen. 27. 2L, both of Petersburs. Va.: 22. Jamaica, L. Brig 24.”'this city: Rev. G'en Blackburn, Nelson, Gmrla 1. O'Neill. 27, and Rose M. Ricker. 19, both of Baltimore, Md.: Rev. Allan F. i dore Casper G. Ada m~ 21 and Merrell Lorick. Rey. James L. d chnnrd 20 and Nancy 8. Ellis, . 8. B Daugherty. Iton Berman. 37. and Esther Levin, 32; | Jane F. Pow. 17. thig esse W. Farrell, 35. Ashevilie, N Marjorie V. Jones. 30. Richmond. Va. John C. Copenhaver. A Few Attractive Sites Still Available In this Exclusive Section F.ELIOT MIDDLETON REALTOR 205 Investment Bldg. Mes. 2827 PRIVATL AW[AIZING (ARS SHOPPING 1.10 PER. HOUR CITY DRIVING *1.50.PERHR ANY DISTANCE CITY PROPER. NO CHARGS FOR EXTRA _PASSE! MerropPouiTan 1727‘ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, APRIL -3, - 1930. FIRST PICTURES SHOWING RETURN OF BYRD PARTY TO CIVILIZATION , _Upper left: Rear Admiral Richard | E. Byrd, with his pet fox terrier, de- | barking from the City of New York at Dunedin, New Zealan | " Upper ;" Byrd with R. S. Black, | mayor of Dunedin, who headed the of- | ficial group that welcomed ihe Ameri- | can explorers. | Lower: Half of the population of Dunedin on the wharf of the city, wait- | ing to greet Byrd and his party. The | pictures are copyrighted by Wide World Photos. The pictures were rushed to Balboa, Panama Canal Zone, aboard the liner Tamaroa, and from there Lee Schoen- | hair, erack pilot, picked them up and | flew them to New York in the Goodrich ‘Rnhber Co.’s Lockheed Vege monoplane | Miss Silvertown. | s | Because no one could be found to ' translate English into the Somali lan- guage, the only one spoken by a seaman | charged with entering the country with- out leave, a case in London recently had | to be adjourned. WOMAN REFUSED CELL } WITH HUSBAND GETS AID Juror Who Voted for Man's Con- viction Provides Home for Prisoner’'s Wife. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, April 3.—Nona vxae] Walton, 22, who tried to go to prison | with her husband, James, and failed, is | going to have a home. Mrs. Earl Eames | | of Glendale, Calif.. a woman juror, who voted for her husband’s conviction on { burglary charges, said today that the young woman had accepted a po:mun in_her home. Mrs. Walton asked the court to send‘ her to prison With her husband, who car from Kentucky and of burglarizing | several stores here when he could not | obtain work. The wife said the pros- pects of supporting herself were poor and she would be lonely without her husband _during his seven-year sen- | tence. The court would not grant her | request. Cammumsts Jailed in France. PARIS () —Prison terms that to- tal 1,000 years face French militant Communists in jail. There are 155 of these men, orators, soldiers, sailors and | “militant,” serving sentences for direct action offenses. The list was published by L'Humanite, daily newspaper of the Moscow movement, when the govern- ment recently pardoned 11 Communist agitators at the same time it par- | doned Leon Daudet, royalist leader. - Siam's Bureau of Fisheries is now headed by an American. AUTO BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—We hold the record, unchallenged, for form- ing clubs and organizations for no earthly reason at all, for every kind of “goofy” project, both national and international, but occasionally somebody does come through with a great idea, and having these Gold Star Mothers visit their sons’ graves at Government expense is a master- piece and makes up for all the “cuckoo” other things we do. That will be by far the most rep- resentative American pilgrimage that ever left our shores. There goes your real “good-will™. delegation. No diplomacy, no schemes to put over; just mothers, the same the whole world over. We can't wish them happiness, but we do wish them con- tentment. FOR SALE 2ND COMMERCIAL CORNER Excellent location, 30-ft. alley. Street grades will permit drive- way entrance to three floors. 14,306 Sq. Feet WILL IMPROVE To Suit Responsible Purchaser C. H. GALLIHER CO,, 1010 Vt. Ave. Nat. 8397 Absolute Protection for: FURS WOOLENS AND OTHER FABRICS CARPETS AND RUGS TAPESTRIES UPHOLSTERED - FURNITURE ETC. qWe 920-922 E St. are installing the very latest type of MOTH-PROOF STORAGE VAULTS—a scien- tific development which super- sedes all former cold storage methods. QFurs and other goods are being accepted, and will be properly’ cared for until our Ncw;fy e Vaults are completed. Merchants Transfer & Storage Co.. MOVING-»PACKING—SHIPP!NG—STOR.\GE ¢ N.W.——Phone Nat’l 6900 Ovwer 30 Years of Qualxty Servicg The Last Word MOTH-PROOF STORAGE FRENCH JUSTICE GETS ITS FIRST TYPEWRITER Machine Seized by Police, Borrowed for Use by Judge, Leads to Order for Others. PARIS (#).—The typewriter and the vertical file, indespensible devices in any modern office, have just won places in the French Palace of Justice. Hitherto judges and clerks have been content to wield steel pens and the files, as in nearly all other administra- tive offices, have been carboard boxes or big pigeon holes built of unpaint- ed boards. The change started when some one in the department of justice borrowed a typewriter which had been siezed by the poilce. Now Parliament has au- thorized purchase of four machies, the hiring of four young women to run them and the installation of one verti- DECISION UP TO \{H' the brush, promises don't go. Adver- tised claims cannot help—the tooth paste must make good, PEBECO rests its case on this. PEBECO wiil let you decide if it doesn't clean and whiten more effectively in a shorter time than any other. PEBECO will let you decide whether it doesn't leave your mouth more refreshed than ever before. Why wait when you should today be getting the extra benefits PEBECO can give?— Advertisement. | cal file. 13285-F~- STREET Two typical GROS- NER SPECIALS. Extremely low prices that offer real qual- . Tomorrow's the Regular $1, $1.50 & $2 Ties FRIDAY ONLY 63 Three for $1.75 Newest colors for Spring...new designs ...new stripings. Hundreds to select from. Silks of selected quality. You've readily paid $1, $1.50 and $2 for the samec Ties. Reg. $8 and $10 ‘Wool Knickers Friday Only CROSNERS 1325 F STREET ‘When you put a little tooth paste on ' FOREST HILLS A beautifully wooded lot, con- taining approximately One Acre, with 235 ft. frontage on improved street, Could be made a show place in this wonderfully devel- oped subdivision. 5,750 HEDGES & LANDVOIGHT Tower Bullding W, Fr. NEW MILL WILL REDUCE | COST OF MEXICAN SUGAR | Calles and Associates Start Con- struction of Largest Factory of Its Kind in Country. MEXICO CITY (#).—Reduction of the cost of sugar within Mexico is the | aim of Gen. Plutarco Elias Calles and others in starting contruction of one of | the largest sugar mills in Mexico in the | | El Mante diversion project territory | — in the State of Tamaulipas between | ‘The mill_started operation early in ll February. More than $400,000 worth of with th produce 3,000 tons of sugar daily and it very soon commercial messages will bc . Musta rd . This Week End machinery from the United States was flavor of the is planned to dispose of all the product | transmitted from Tokio to London in YOU’LL ENJOY THESE Your phone order will receive exacting attention. 14th & K Sts. N.W. 9503 installed and plans call for more than $1,000,000 added expenditure for ma- worlds finest Fitbln the roublic In s mune: | Wl mustard seeds only 4 few minutes. FLOWER SPECIALS! A Box of Beautiful ROSES and chinery next year. When in full operation the mill will sugar from its present high rate. ‘ E u LD E N’s Baron Togo, an official of a Japanes: | radio company, recently declared that ' selected SPRING FLOWERS Usually $5.00 $3 00 . 1407 H Street National 4905 E Do You Know That You Can Buy Enough STERLING SILVER For a place setting in the PINE TREE PATTERN Consisting of: Dessert Knife, Fork, Salad Fork. Bouillon Spoon, Teaspoon and Butter Spreader, only.... $]16.67 Or $100 for 6 Complete Covers Divided Payments in acc:rdance with Sterling ‘Silversmiths Guild Plan Roldsmith & To. 1225 F. Strect. NW. NEAR THIRTEENTH STREET R L EC B B Bt BO BC BL EC RO BC DO BE B A New Department for the Washing of Tontine WINDOW SHADES Tf your home is cquipped with Tontine Window Shades—you'll be glad to learn that we have a separate department devoted to cleaning these Washable Window Shades. No tter how soiled they are, our cleaning process restores them to their origmal beauty. —and what is also interesting, is the fact that this work is not costly Order your milk delivered in Cream Tops No Extra Cost! HINK of it!—a pitcher of thick, rich cream, heavy enough for whip- ping, with a “bottle” of milk. Both in one bottle and at the price of the milk alone. You can use all or part of the cream, as desired. For the children, you can mix cream and milk simply by turning bot« tle upside down. For home servi.c, write or phone: Wise Brothers CHEVY CHASE DAIRY Main Office & Plant 3204-08 N Street N.W. ’Phone x WEST 0183 - PRQGRESSIVE DEALERS o | | % % |