Evening Star Newspaper, April 17, 1930, Page 10

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| A=I0 "% THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 17. 1930. ! 1 | | | j":y Lhclrsdoel«x-hrntin.n n: ,th' vmey Aicn - | i m ost wholesome influence in restrain- | ing_careless administration of the peo- | pr A “proper division of the costs” of | | | the case will be made later, the court | states, e ‘r | \.IJ:;pmp attn?rssd 1|n éhts case were | . e State Senators Lansdale G. Sasscer an Brothers Indicted in Bomb Judge Mattingly Case Cannot Be Tried for Injunction to Halt Denies Plea walter J. Mitchell, Corporation Counsel Before Wednesday. l Bond Issue. | D. Nourse of Dawsonville were named MONTGOMERY MEDICAL delegates to the annual meeting of the SOCIETY ELECTS HEADS | S5, Merecting ey attendea by 26 physicians from this county, the Dis- trict of Columbia and Baliimore. Dr. Emil Novack of Baltimore read a paper on the importance of early diagnosis of cancer: Dr. C. C. Clapp of Baltimore discussed the relationship of eye symp- toms to general infections and Dr. John Collinson_of the State Department of Health offered suggestions as to how the | physicians can best co-operate with the | State department of health in pre- the spread of contagious THERESURRECTIN Thousands to Witness Unique Religious Service in Okla- homa Mountains. Frank J. Broschart Elected| President of Organization at Spring Meeting. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., April 17—Dr. Frank J. Broschart of Gaithersburg was elected president of the Montgomery County Medical Society at the Spring | State meeting_of the organization at the|YeDUng M . . e diseases. N D oD, Iast e g Pna| _The other visiting physicians included made vice president, Dr. Jacob W. Bird | Drs. R. M. La Compt, Joseph D. Rogers, of Sandy Spring, secretary-treasurer, | John L. Lloyd and J. G. Cumming of and Dr. William C. Mitcheil of Silver | Washington. It was voted to invite the Spring, Dr. Katharine A. Chapman of | District of Columbia-Northern Virginia- Kensington and Dr. William Linthicum | Maryland Medical Society to hold fts of Rockville censofs. Dr. Thomas K.|May meeting at the Manor Club. A Farm House Burned. LEONARDTOWN, Md.. April 17 (Special) —A_ two-story residence on the farm of Paul Dunbar at St. Inigoes. about 20 miles from here, was destroye by fire yesterday afternoon. The house | until recently was occupled by the fam- ily of Mr. Dunbar. The cause of the Bird H. Dolby and John S. White. LY GEORGE PORTER. Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md. April 17 . By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md. April 17 —Trial of Lawrence Leroy Brady and Special Dispatch to The Sta LAWTON, Okla, April 17.—The vison of a struggling young Congre- gational minister, Rev. A. M. Wallock of Lawton, on Easter morning again will become an actuality when thousands of visitors from all over the country ather at the Wichita Mountains, over- ooking Medicine Park, to witness and participate in what has become a unique religious service in America—a symbolic representation of rection, coupled with tableaux depicting the more important scenes of Passion week. These historic mountains already are rich in Indian lore—abounding with crumbling evidences of the red man'’s worship of the Great Spirit—and they are to be re-created as the West's reli- glous shrine under the plan of Rev. Wallock, who is to make this ambitious project his life work Tomb Is Reproduced. High up on the mountain side there been constructed & rock reproduc- tion of the tomb and stark against the sky nearby looms the cross. A trail was made leading up from the valley, and from the foot of the mountain to the top this is bordered by wayside shrines depicting scenes of the life of Christ. Near the tombd is a pul rough rock used by those who narrate the story of the closing hours of the life of Christ. At the present the services are con- fined to Easter morning, starting at 5 o'clock while it is still dark, and com- mence with the tableau of Gethse- mane, followed by the tableau of the three crosses, the healing of the lepers and ending with the picture of the resurrection, respectively illustrative of the four thoughts “Thy will be done,” “Come unto Me,” “The great Physician healing the lepers” and “The abundant life.” In coming years, the services are to be expanded to cover three or four days, commencing with the Last Supper. Cars Pour Onto Scene. During the night a constant stream of cars heads toward the mountain. Flares along the trail pick out the path to the tomb across the breast of the monarch of the Wichitas. Promptly on the hour of 5, chil- dren in procession place their garlands at the foot of the cross. A prayer is offered. The story of Gethsemane is told. The garden itself has disappeared under the withering rays of the burning sun of the East, but suddenly it will re- | appear on a nearby mountain. There the watchers may see One in prayer. “Oh, my Father,” he crles, “if this cup may not pass away from Me except I drink it, Thy will be done.” this tableau vanishes, there will be heard the strains of the familiar hymn “On a Hill Far Away Stood an Old Rugged Cross.” In the distance on another mountain three crosses will appear and the Roman guard may be seen leaving them deserted. Lepers Approach. As they fade out, two lepers will be seen approaching. Coming closer to the ‘Tomb of the Lord, they begin to realize the Master is dead. Their steps be- come feeble—they can walk no farther. But assistance comes in a strange way. A band of Christians from the resur- | Herman Brady, his brother, who were fire {8 unknown. —Upholding the constitutionality of the Conrad of Chevy Chase and Dr, Upton | dinner preceded the meeting. | indicted- yesterday by the Prince Georges | County grand jury for the Seat Pleasant | bombing murders, will not open before | | Wednesday of next week, with a pos- { | sibility of the case going over until the Features of the religious service planned for Easter Sunday morning in the Wichita Mountains, in Oklahoma, showing Mary and the angels before the tomb. be portrayed the tragedy and once more, for thousands, the events of the | | resurrection will take on a living actuality. | The far-reaching effects for good in | the lives of those who thus find the Christ brought close to them are in- calculable, according to Rev. Wallock. | and it is an appreciation of this, he | feels, which justifies him in devoting | | his Tife to making this the outstanding religious tableau in the country. 3 This same feeling is evident among | the hundreds who participate actively in the portrayal of the various scenes. 1t is noticeable in their daily lives in | the little community of Medicine Park. | | From outside there come frequent | | offers of help, but the principals still | are_drawn from those living nearby. The part of Mary is taken by Mrs. | George Rothrock and the two angels | | | are twins—Misses Marian and Mar- gery Baird. R. L. Mansell portrays | AUGUSTA MEN PAY HIGH " FOR DYNAMITING FISH Trio Assessed Heavy Fines and Costs for Using Explosives in County Streams. Special Dispatch to The Star. STAUNTON, Va. April 17.—Dyna- miting fish-in the streams of Augusta County is an expensive pastime, as evi- denced by litigation in Magistrate W. C. McComb's Court in Waynesboro Tuesday. A total of $45 in fines and costs of $31.75 was the price paid for their “e: perience” by Herman Dodson and Paul and James Palmer when they were haled before the squire by Game Warden C. C. Clindinst, charged with dynamit- last week in May. " These were the two alternatives open today as prosecuting and defense at- torneys and judges of the court were scheduled to confer and set a date for | the trial. The court will be occupled with civil cases until next Wednesday. The criminal docket will then be started, but only eight court days are available, the judges being required by law to open the Spring term of Circuit Court | in Calvert County on the first Monday | | of May. Will Take at Least Week. Inasmuch as it s generally agreed the | Brady trial will require at least a| week, and there are about 20 other | prisoners in the jail who are also| anxious to be tried as soon as possible, there is considerable likelthood that the | | case will go over until May. If the| | case were removed to another jurisdig- | tion it might be brought to trial sooner, but defense attorneys still contend they will not ask for a removal. The Brady brothers were jointly ac- cused in three indictments of murder returned by the grand jury yesterday | after & four-day investigation of a bomb explosion which killed three mem- bers of the family of John Hall on New Year day. The presentments read: “The grand jurors of the State of Maryland for “the body of Prince | Georges County do on oath present that | | Lawrence Leroy Brady and Herman | | Brady, late of the county and State | | aforesald, on the first day of January, | 1930, with force and arms in the county aforesaid, did kill and murder Margaret Naomi Hall, Samuel L. Hall and | Dorothy May Hall.” Presented After Noon. ‘The presentments were brought into court shortly after noon and immedi- ately scrutinized by Judge Joseph C Mattingly and William A. Loker. A bench warrant was then issued for the arrest of Herman, who had been at liberty under $1,000 bond as a State witness. He was taken into custodv at his home, near Mitchellville, by County Officer Nichols and lodged 1w the county jail in a separate cell from his brother, who has been locked up | since January. | | The Margaret Naomi Hall, named in the presentment was Herman's wife, and the bomb, disguised as a Christmas present, was addressed to her. | Witnesses for the State, cs listed on | the outside of the indictment, are: | Lieut. Joseph Itzel, Sergt. Charles | Schalter and Raymond Kennedy, detec- | tives, of Baltimore; County Officer | Frank Prince, Mrs. John Buckely, on | | whose porch the bomb was left by mis- | | take; Stewart Carneal, who helped carry the bomb to the rtight address; | Leslie Hall and Mrs. Nora Hall, who were also injured in the explosion: | | Emmett Brady, brother of the accused; Mrs. Ella Brady, their mother; Mrs. | Leroy Brady, Esther and Russel Jones | and Dr. James I. Boyd. | | in the town | named the contra act of 1929 by which the General A: sembly of Maryland authorized the town of Mount Reinier to borrow 8 per | cent of the valuation of all property in | the town appearing on the county tax books, Circuit Court Judge Joseph C. Mattingly today handed down an opin jon_declaring the suit for an injunction against the mayor and council in which the validity of the act was attacked would have to be dismissed. | Bond Sale Delayed. | The suit against the town has delayed | for several months the sale of a $130.- | 000 bond issue which was to provide | funds for the paving of several streets | A Baltimore firm had of- fered to buy the bonds and the sale was about to bé consummated when the suit { was filed. The company then refused to | complete the deal until it was settled A $64.727 contract with the firm “” Jarboe & Houghton and a $60,210 con- | tract with the Fred Loomis Construction | Co. had been signed by the town before | the suit was filed, and most of the street. work specified in those contracts has been completed. | The suit was brought by Rufus E.| | Milor and Henry J. Mulholland, through | their attorney, Charles B. Calvert, and | ors as joint defend- | ants with the mayor and council, In his opinion Judge Mattingly re- views the statutes involved. These in- | clude the act of 1927, authorizing the | mayor and council to borrow an amount equal to 8 per cent of the assessed | value of property within the town as appearing on the books of the town | treasurer, to issue bonds for that amount and to build concrete roads | and sidewalks with the money. | The assessed value of town property | as appearing_on its own books was | $2413.701, while the county assessor | valued the property at approximately $4,000,000. The town assessment is smaller because made by local assessors, while the county assessment is made under the supervision of the State tax commission. When the contracts with the two construction companies were made last Summer there was already an outstand- ing indebtedness of the town amount- ing to $193,000. This clearly exceeded 8 per cent of the town's own valua- tion on its property, but was less than 8 per cent of the county assessment. Other Legislation Considered. Other legislation, such as the re- enactment of article 81 of the code of general public laws, concerning rev- enue and taxation, permitting any municipality to adopt the county as- sessment as its basis, was brought to the attention of the court, and upon the insistence of counsel, carefully con- sidered. However, the issue of the cases revolved around the constitution- ality of the act of 1929, the opinion states. Such tests of the legality of munici- | pal legislation as made by the case are | beneficial, the court declares, conclud- ing the opinion with the following para- graph: | “The effect is frequently salutary when citizens take sufficient interest in the affairs of their community to be willing to sacrifice their time and sub- Most Styles Q. DRASERR AR For Easter Style Perfection 'OR greater mileage. For preserving their orig- inal fine appearance — and comfort — after months of grueling service. Five million men, all over the world, will step out in new spring Florsheims this Easter Sunday. keen, canny, fashion wrong! Exclusively in Washington at the “Hahn’ Stores And that many ise men can’t possibly be Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th & K 3212 14th Licensed to Wed at Fairfax. FAIRFAX, Va., April 17 (Special). — el | the Apostle John and the two lepers | C gep‘ers. T"ieydrfige"&i; ngn.m)‘x‘:.\:gs ? -"é:,“" by Reas Russell and Adel- | ing fish in Back Creek, near here, last their leprosy. There is no doubt in the her. week. stance in the effort to have municipal| affairs administered strictly according Our “Arcade” Shop—3212 14th St.—open evenings warden reiterated lives of these early Christians. | Then dawn comes and, break of day, Mary arrive opens—the away—and two angels approach to tell Mary mountainside rings with “Christ Arose,” as thousands of voices 3o1_1x=h in the joyous expression. us Assisting Rev. Wallock are Dr. H With the | White, Oklahoma City University: Rev. The tomb | L: J. Marsh, superintendent of Congre- rush | gational Mission, Oklahoma City; Rev. John H. Lamb, Rev. Robert Ray and Master has risen. The | Rev. H. B. Smith of Lawton, Okla. the song = \ The first sheet of paper is stated to | have been made from the bark of a mulberry tree in the year 7 trightened guards the gain for the fourth year will HARRY KAUFMAN: 1316-1326 Seventh StNW. OLIAL DAY FRIDAY These and hundreds of other $1 Day Bargains not listed throughout the Store | —Look for the Green Dollar Day Signs i $1 Full-Fashioned Hose, machine —No Mail or Phone Orders Filled ! ! ‘ $1.69 Glove Silk Undies .............$1 | Boys’ 79¢ and 89c Knickers .......2 prs., $1 ' $1.59 Rayon Crepe Gowns .....reze-. . . . . . $1 $1 Feather Bed Pillows .........2 for $1 59c Felt-Base Floor Covering . 3 sq. yds., $1 Men’s 50c and 75¢ Fancy Hose. . . 3 prs., $1 29c Cambridge Pillowcases . . ... .7 for $1 Women’s $1.95 House Slippers .......$1 Women’s Sateen Bloomers . ... .4 prs., $1 ! 69c Opaque Window Shades . . .. .3 for $1 mended .. ... 0L ossnrasss s SIDESH S $1.69 Cretonne Drapes . . . ... 1 39c Plaid Turkish Towels .......5 for $1 Boys’ 69¢c and 79c Blouses and Shirts. . . $1 Boys’ $1.95 Pullover Sweaters ........$1 59c¢ Pinafore Aprons ...........3 for §1 29c to 39c Wash Fabrics . . .....6 yds., $1 Men’s $2.50 Broadcloth Shirts. .. .....$1 Children’s 1-pc. Pajamas . . ......3 for $1 121c Unbleached Sheeting.. . . . . 10 yds., $1 Children’s Oxfords, sizes 81 to2. ... .. .51 $1 Ruffled Voile Curtains. . . . . . .2 prs., $1 !l Women’s French Voile Chemise . . . 2 for $1 ‘The game morning that there would be vigorous prosecution of any further violation of the fish laws wherein dynamite is used | Joseph Ralph Mace, 22, of Washington, 'D. C, and Ellen Louise Tubman, 21, of | Baltimore. Blues Especially the new lighter-t h a n-Navy Riviera Blue. Six this | A marriage license has been granted to!to law and to be watchful lest irregu-| larities subvert the methods of local| government. They may not be right al- | ways in their construction of the law Excellent Reasons Why You should choose “Cherry Blossoms™ Graceful T-strap sandal— A pple Green, Beige Clair, Violet, Red or Patent. Pumps One of 37 differ- ent varieties— Blue, Beige or Black Kid, and save a-plenty on Spring “Dottie” Pumps, ties or straps; lue, Green or Beige, with contrasting trim. priced fashions, which for beauty and class may be compared only with much higher- footwear for EASTER Hosiery and handbags must Straps An_aristocratic model, in Beige Clair, Patent or finish measure up. gest “Lady Luxury” new dull- Hence, we sug- allsilk hose, $1.19 to $1.95 “Lady Luxury” matching bags. Beige Clair, Brown, White or Black kid, con- trasting trim—one of many lower heel models. $2.95 to $4.95 Women’s Shops 1207 F 7th & K 3212 14th Every little girl and boy expects NEW EASTER SHOES from Hahn’s EASTER SOUVENIRS! Our famous long-wearing low-priced “HAHN SPECIALS” Extra-Quality “GRO-NUPS” YOUR girls will be charmed with these beauti- ful new Spring shoes. - Splendid wearing Goodyear welt, reptile calf or patent dress pumps, or strap effects. Also, two-tone elk, crepe rubber sole sports shoes. in Calf black And many 11 to 131 ltob..... s smart l!!l'lt g‘lrlhl id l'.ll: 11% to 2.... And it 3 4t Ty SR mmtne $3 to $6 NEVER have we presented such a popular ar- ray of boys’ shoes: this famous, bi, group. Dressy or black oxfords—with sturdy oak soles—real “He-Man” styles. Also, two-tone, rubber sole sports oxfords. “PHOENIX” Juvenile Hose “PHOENIX” mesh lisle Alse silk long socks with ered for girls. Bey: % “in “many Zippy “DEBS” for big girls High « styled. low - - Y T smart 50¢ ;._.:"?f.‘:’f".‘u_;n&"i.':"‘. sttt 35¢; 3 prs., $1 sports new patterns. NOTE: Separate children’s departments at our 7th and K and 3212 14th st. stores. Our better grade children's and junior women’s shoes—also in “Juniortown,” F St. Shop.

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