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PARKING CONCESSIONS N. L. SANSBURY CO., INC. 1418 Eye St. For Gibson’s Shoe Dept. Men’s $5.00 Shoes Special $3.49 Many Styles—Not All Sizes 10c Shinola ........ B¢ 35c Shinola Outfit. Men’s Fancy Hose. .45¢ Men’s Fancy Ties 59¢ and 85c¢ Men’s, Shirts, Genuine Bro?dcloth, Special $1.00 and $1.50 GIBSON’S 915 G St. N.W, Specials at GIBSON’S $1.50 Padre’s Wine Elixir Tonic ... 40c Squibb’s Tooth Pint Pure Russian Mineral Oil, special. .59¢ Two pints 25¢c J. & J. Baby Talc. .14c 75¢ Hudnut’s Three Flowers Face Powder.66¢c 50c Dr. West Tooth Pint Bay Rum, opccul..“c Four 10c. Lux Soap....25¢ GIBSON’S 919 G St. N.W. AT Half Pri Discontinued Items of+ Well Known Makes. Among these are very seasonable goods, such as Screen Enamels Four-Hour Enamels Auto Enamels Flat Wall Paints Outside Paints Varnishes STOP ROOF LEAKS Bay State Red Roof Paint $1.50 Gal. 4-Inch Brush, Bristles Set in Rubber, 89c Ezpert Paint Advice Free MUTH Quality Since 1865 710 13th St. N.W. !PI:CIAL NOTICE. WANT TO HAUL FULL OR SART LOAD oML tiom ‘New Yotk -Rienmond, Bosion, Pittsburgh and a NATIONAL DI e Nat. 1460._Local moving & OAD OR PART LOAD _TO 'ro peake and North Beach, Also part ford B Epping. Forest: Auto Express Co.. Metropolitan 4536 'ACCIDENT ~ WITNESSES—WILL PERSONS by Ford #lifomonile, please communicate with Grom- elin & Laws, National Press Building? T. TARMON, 4905 41st n. FOR "—O] CE SPACE WITH STE. nographer for business man requiring_office ith smail expense: central location. Phone Franklin_6675-W_for int TADIES SUITS. COATS ALTERID RE- mod:led to latest styles: furs rennlred lnd Temodeled and !ecuuly kept in cole . ALBERT. 2222 18th CONTINENTAL D!Jl load system, 1235 N. Y. art loads.” N. Y., Bo lehmond, Pitisburen: Gleveland: Brie, Net 6298. _Special rate. Eve. phone Lin. 1708. 6* I WILL BE RESPON!TBL!I FOR NO DI other _than thulu concurred by mylell FRANK 0 TAYLOR, 617 M st. n.e. RENT _SUITABLE FOR m SYRACUSE, N. FROM Nrw_mvonx AND Pom'jll‘!sm i | WHE AMERICAN' STORAGE AND TRANS- 2801 Georsia Ave_ ___ Adams 1450 ~ Wanted—Return Load i Furniture 'g"‘a .%55‘. ‘and rm-gmrd:. mith’s Transfer & Stouge Co. 1313 O 8t North 3343. q:mnt Acres Nurseries Stiver ng - Colesyille pike. Ghoice plants at riasiive rices. ‘n Sovwana pink ma! nol[l‘ Japai lower- greens, le, crepe m: lower: nl cherrleh X, shrub vln ow m’lc Only 5 mll!x lrom the Dlnflct Furniture Repairing. ox.!vrnmc LOCATION 21 RE, Ms %ot Lo PRICE AKD HIGH-GI RONG'S, AMUSEMENTS. SND THEA 9th and D Sts. Sunday, April 6, 2 to 11 P.M: Ceet B Mifie’s Speriacuier Fhot “KING OF KINGS® One Day_ Only Admission, 25c and 50c Brive out, sny 11° o'clock in the evening, under the aus- 14 Houston, Tex.; HIGH SCHOOLS NEAR FINALS N ORATORY Representatives of These | Groups to Appear in The Star Area Contest. Four Washington high schools will | choore tieir representatives for The Star area finals of the National Ora- torical Contest within the next two weeks. During the same period the group finals of the Maryland and the! private and parochial districts will be held. Each of the local high schools is rated as a separate district and the winners of their elimination competitions auto- matically become contestants in the finals for all the territory in which The Star sponsors the contest. By order of local public high school authorities every student at Central, Western, Eastern, McKinley Manual Training and Business High Schools wrote an oration on some constitutionat subject, making their participation in the orstorical contest 100 per cent. Arrangements for Schools. ‘The institutions holding their contests within the next two weeks include McKinley, Western, Central and Busi- ness, Eastern, Cardoza and Arm- strong have already chosen their school representatives, while the date for the Dunbar contest has not been set. The first of the coming competi- tions will take place Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock at McKinley High School before the assembled history classes which are studying the Constitution. | Six youthful orators, five boys and a | girl, ‘will vie for honors. For several weeks they have been trained carefully | by Mrs. Edna B. Frost, faculty con-| test committee chairman. The contestants with the names of their orations follow: Joseph Bend- heim, 16 years old, “The Birth of the Constitution”; Gordon H. Hornsnell, 16 years old, “Person stitution”; Tomalee Nix, 16 years ald, “Advantages of a Rigid Over a Flexible Constitution,” and Richard Bowman, 18 years old. “The Constitution in the Daily Life of the Individual.” Later Contests. Next will come the Western High School finals, to be held April 11 at 8 vices of the Western Home and School Association. Again five boys and one girl will compete. Miss Rose Stutz, history teacher, is contest committee chairman. Several members of the faculty have assisted in coaching the contestants. The orators are: Stephen W. Hold- erness, 16 years old, “The Citizen; His Privileges nnd His Duties Under the Constitution”: Katherine Ireland, 17 years old, "Fruspemy and the Consti- tution”; Forbes Burgess, 17 years old, “John Marshall and the Constitution"; Edmund Gullian, 17 years old, “John Marshall and Federal Supremacy”; Philip Ferris, 18 years old, “Our Con- stitution, a Way to World Peace,” Philip Edward Kent, 16 years old, “Daniel Webster and the Indestructi- bility of the Union.” April 15 the Central finals will be held at 9 o'clock in the morning at an assembly of the entire student body in the school auditorium. Here, the finalists have been narrowed down to three, all boys. They are Earl Kennahan, 16 years | old, “Lincoln and the Constitution”; Arthur Smith, 17 years old, “The Con- stitution of the United States as a Model for the Government of a Future World Union.” and Griffith Johnson, 17 years old, “The Constitution; A Symbol of the American Spirit.” ‘The Business finals will take place April 16, but the finalists have not yet been chosen. Twelve candidates for the honored positions "lll compete in the semi-finals, April 9. | DELINQUENCY STUDY {ON WOMEN’S PROGRAM League of Voters to Convene in Louisville Last of This Month. By the Associated Press. ‘The clinic for the dlagnosis of juvenile delinquency and the future of the Federal maternity-infancy program will be two subjects of chief concern to the League of Women Voters in its national convention at Louisville, Ky., April 28 to May 3. Announcement was made from na- tional headquarters here today that Mrs. Percy P. Waldon of New Haven, Conn., and Mrs. Willlam T. Healy of Boston would conduct the juvenile de- linquency conference. Addresses will be made by Judge Charles W. Hoffman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Dr. James S. Plant of Newark, N. J,, in charge of Essex County Juvenile Ciinic; Miss Rhea Kay Boardman of the Pub- lic Education Association, and Dr. Miriam Van Waters, San Francisco, president of the National Conference of Soclal Work. Mrs. Waldon will also pre- side over the conference to consider next steps in the maternity-infancy program. e OFFICERS TRANSFERRED TO NEW ASSIGNMENTS Col. James B. Kemper to Leave War Department for Manchester, N. H. Col. James B. Kemper, Infantry, at the War Deptn.mem has been to Manchester, N. H, for duty with Organi ; Lieut, Col. .1. 8. Chambers, Qlllmrmlller Corps, the War Department to Fort Maj. L. H. Tllhlero. Field Artillery, from New York City to Fort Sill, Okla.; Maj. John W. Meehan, Medical Corps, from Walter Reed Gen- eral Hospital, this city, to Fort Mc- Pherson, Ga.; Capt. H. A. Gibson, Medical Corps, from Hawaii to Denver, Colo.; Clpt, F. A. Irving, Inhnn-y fmm Hl'lfl Fort McPherson, G F. L. Christian, Coast Hawall to Fort Monroe, V. Rice, Infantry, from Fort 8, Gn. to Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa.; Capt. F. P. Coffin, Infantry, from Fort Howard, Md.,, to Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, Baltimore; Capt. J. W. Denton, Quartermaste: Reserves; old Vogel, cout Artillery, from Monroe, Va., to Hawail and Capts. G. b‘ 'k and Nelson Dlnxlzy. ‘Third Fort Monroe, Va., to the Phllbplml. nml about four blocks to THE SUNDAY CENTRAL AND WESTERN Above: Western group, left to right—Edward Kent, Forbes Burgess, Philip Ferris, Katherine Ireland, Edmund Sullivan and Stephen Holderness. Bottom: Central orators, left to right—Arthur Smith, Grifith Johnson and Earl Kernahan. —Star Staff Photos. APRIL 6, 1930—PART ONE ECONOMIC PARLEY CALLED IN SOUTH Governors of Three States Accept Gardner’s Invitation to Attend Meeting. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, ORATORICAL FINALISTS By the Associated Press. RALEIGH, N. C, April 5.—Govern- ors of three States have accepted the invitation of Gov. O. Max Gardner of North Carolina to attend a sectional conference on problems of agriculture and industry at Asheville April 26. Govs. Horton of Tennessee, Richards of South Carolina and Pollard of Vir- ginia have announced they will at- tend. The Governors of Florida, Ala- bama and Georgia have been asked to attend. In outlining the purpose of the con- ferénce, the North Carolina governor said that “the economic, agricultural and industrial conditions in our South- eastern States appear to have reached a stage where certain general problems are of sufficient common concern to demand their consideration by the ex- ecutives and business leaders of those States.” Two problems he listed as mount” were: “The agricultural situation, with par- ticular emphasis upon the condition produced by the large number of fore- closures by land banks of farm mort- gages. “The industrial situation prevailing in the section, with particular empha- sis upon existing unemployment and | some co-operative plan along the gen- eral lines already advocated by the Tex- tile Institute for eliminating overpro- duction.” The conference will co-operate with the United States Department of Com- merce, the governor said. 59 OFFER THEIR BLOOD ATLANTA, Ga, April 5 (#).—Phy- siclans attending Mrs. Fannie Quinn, employe of the Southern Bell Telephone Co. here, had their choice or 59 blood donors when they found that their pa- “para- MIDDLEBURG RACES HAVE 50 ENTRIES Big Crowd of Enthusiasts Drawn by Annual Running for Hunt Cup. Special Dispatch to The Star. MIDDLEBURG, Va. April 5.—The attention of the sporting East turned to Middleburg, Va. today, when the season of famous racing meets that have helped further the tradition of Virginia horses opened here. ‘Ten thousand _sporting _enthusiasts from Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Del- aware and the District of Columbia followed with keen interest the tenth annual running of the Middleburg Hunt Cup, a 4-mile cross-country race held under the rules of the National Steeplechase and Hunts Association on the property of D. C. Sands, president of the Virginia Breeders’ Association. | Ideal weather prevailed. The wood: ed slope on the Sands estate overlool ing the stretch and finish line pre sented a colorful scene, with the tho sands of society folk and horse love: watching the satin-coated 'bluebloods of the equine world as they raced over the course and topped the barriers along the way. Many were on hand to obtain & line on the thoroughbreds that are destined to race over the Virginia-Maryland- | Pennsylvania circuit this Spring. Several Accidents. A few accidents marred the race. Sea Soldier, owned by Millcreek Stables, | was injured in the first race, and Dunks | Green, winner of last year's Hunt Cup, also was injured in this race. Jack Skinner, rider, fell in the Rose Hill, as also did Early Potter in the same race. Neither was badly hurt. The feature fldlnx of the show was that of Bobby Young of New York, who rode Mr. Langley’s horses. There were more than 50 entries in the four races, which included, besides the Hunt Cup, the Loudoun Plate, a 2-mile steeple- chase over brush jumps; the Rose Hill, a race for half-breeds, and the Hunts- man’s race, a 3-mile cross-country event. Some of the entries came from as far west as Illinois, while colors of two New York stables were represented. Day’s Winners. Following are the winners: Middleburg hunt cup—First, Ballast, 2d., owned and ridden by Noel Laing, Amissville, Va.; second, Sea Soldier owned by Milicreek Stables, Chicago, and ridden by Regan McKinney; third, Thornbrack, owned by Miss Mary Eliz- abeth Algenus and ridden by Jack Skinner. Loundoun plate (first purfl»—l’lr:t‘ Princess Clodelly, owned by Robert Winmill, Warrenton. and ridden by M Castleman; second, Skipper Gray, own ed by David Pullerson Boston, and rid- den by Rlndolph Duffey: third, Paul Small, owned by Duncan Reed and ridden by Mr. Pomeroy. Loundoun plate (second part)—First, H-Kyy Novelt; y. owned by H. M. Luf d ridden by Thomas 'l‘hovmw second, Park Maid, owned by Ji Hughes and ridden by Willlam wmz- ney; third, Maid of Morn, owned by J. FOR SALE Beautiful new de- tached 8-room and 2- bath home . on lot 60 by 145, at— 412 Old Georgetown Road Battery Park, Md. A house with an ideal living room, including an all-brick fireplace, with con- servatory adjoining; very at- tractive, spacious dining room with Southwestern exposure, and a large, mod- ern kitchen. It is one of the few homes at anywhere near its price that has four separate bed rooms entered directly from the hall, each with ample closet. The Price Is Only $12,750 (Also an attractive Dutch Colonial hnme n 414 Ol Come Out Sundcy‘ Open 1 to 5 P.M.| left on Old Georgetown Road W. H. West Company | ed by Miss K. Woodward and ridden | Sands’ | dition papers arrive from Tallahassee, tient, after a serious operation, needed a transfusion. Practically the entire nel of the exchange where Mi inn was em- ator, ployed &flel’!d bl Miss Felen Thompson, day oper: was selected for the transfusion, which physicians said was successful. xlz l‘.Yho)'man and ridden by Luclan elth. The Rose Hill—PFirst, Marlhill Boy, owned by W. C. Langley and ridden by R. B, Young; second, Manifold, owned by Mrs. Walter J. Salmon and ridden by Lyman Wright; third, Belle of Erin, owned by Mrs. T. H. Summerville and | ridden by Mr. Bedford. | Huntsman race—First, 8o Dear, own- French Use Diesel Engine. PARIS () —A trial Diesel engine for airplanes has been approved by the French ministers of air and a group of the new motors are to be made for the army and navy. PINEHURST SANITARIUM by Harry Duffey; second, El Maro, Queen's Chapel Rd. N.E., Near District Line owned by Col. D. C. Sands and ridden by Robert Maddox; third, Gold Finch, owned by R. C. Winmill and ridden by J. W. McClannahan. Following are the winners of the Mid- dleburg hunt cup since its first run- ning: 1921, K. E. Hitt's John Bunny; | 1922, C. H. Smith's Fairweather; 1923, E. M. Baker's Dr. Barlow; 1924, D. C. Cock O’ the Run; 1925, W. C. | Seipp's Delta; 1926, Mrs. C. C. sey's Skyline; 1927, Regan McKinn Flint Mill, 1928, R. Penn Smith's St Patrick; 1929, Mrs. Walter J. Salmons Dunks Green. EXTRADITION SOUGHT | FOR CAPONE AIDE Chicago Detectives Are in Miami to Return McGurn on Concealed ‘Weapon Charge. This_old e has been taken over by the Harriet Lane Hospital, 1654 " N.W.. and will be opened on April 8 as a sanitarium for the care tment of diseases of the lungs and general medical cases. Both institu- Il be under the same medical supervision, We Grnnd Them At Castelberg’s you get com- plete optical service. Regis- tered optometrists examine your eyes, and prescribe the proper lenses, and we also MAKE the lenses. All lens grinding is done in our shope ~—under strict supervision— and ALL GLASSES ARE GUARANTEED! By the Associated Pre MIAMI, Fla., April 5.—~William Dflll’)’ and John Howe, Chicago detectives, ar- | rived here today to take “Gunner Jack” McGurn, said to be Al Capone's right- | hand man in gang affairs, back to Chi- cago to face charges of carrying con- cealed weapons. ‘They will leave here as soon as extra- McGurn was arrested several days ago on a Miami Beach golf course as a fugitive from justice. At that time he was identified by Chicago police bul- letins as being sought for jumping bond | and to face weapon-carrying charges. If so, try the DEAF? LITTLE GEM EAR PHONE Daily Demonstration —at— GIBSON'S 917 G St. NW. OW Noiseless N NO® D CSOAL AUTOMATIC OIL BURNER 50c a week pays for your glasses! 1004 F Street N.W. First in Washington Built by the World’s Largest Manufacturer of 0il Burning Equipment As Low As .00 IS0 Completely Installed with 275.gallon tank Terms if Desired Automatic Heating Corporation 1719 Conn. 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