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ALEXANDRA RUW " LAW FNESJwp Big Increase in March Gives, Sum of $2,297.50 in Liquor Penalties. Bpecial Dispateh to The Star ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 17.—Pro- | hibition fines took a big jump here during March and exceeded the low record for February by $920. The to- tal for the month was $2,297.50, as Im! $1,377.50 the previous month. | 7 figures have just been released | by E. F. Hoffman, clerk of the court. The number of arrests also took a big jump for the month, and as usual arrests for drunkenness lead the list. A | total of 343 arrests were made, 100 of which were for drunkenness. Prohibi- tion arrests totaled 50, were 28 taken for disorderly Thirty-four sauto accidents are shown on the monthly report of Capt W. W. Campbell, in addition to which there were four out-of-town crashes investigated. Six persons were injured in the city and three out of the city, while police investigated one death from traffic out of the city. Headquarters provided a night's lodg- ing for 212 persons during the month, 137 white and 75 colored | Property reported stolen amounted to $2,077, while property of a total value | of '$2,434.25 was recovered. Besides this $750 in property stolen out of the city was recovered by police. Unrecovered property in the city for the year now totals $1,242.75. Other ~arrests, exclusive of minor | trafic and speeding, were as follows: Violating loitering ordinance, 11; minor | assault, 11; no city license for auto, 10; | investigation, 9; gambling, 8: petit lar-| ceny, 7: grand larceny, 7: abusive lan- | guage, 7; disorderly and fighting, 741 adultery, 6; breaking glass in street, 6; hit and run, 5; THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT [ ruer swanomn cavers ] ADETS TORECENE | PLAQUE FOR DRIL Military Order of the World| Washington’s best drilled high-school cadet company will receive this silver non-support, 5; driving | tablet, donated by the Military Order of the World War. while drunk, 4; trespassing. 4; destroy- ing property, 4: disorderly house, 4; vagrancy, 3; violating parole, 3; assault, 3; rape, 3; firing gun in stre: ; €S- caped convicts, 2; reckless driving, 2; concealed weapons, lunacy, no permit, 1 each. |GOTHAM CENSUS FACES MANY INACCURACIES Enumerators Quit in Numbers Be- cause of Difficulties Such as Finding “Nobody Home.” NEW YORK, April 16 (N.AN.A).— In this most populous city the Federal | census will be most inaccurate, and the supervisors freely say so. Enumerators are quitting in numbers because they can't ind anybody at home and have made .ghmmy visits that the pay is | not wort whflfi; ‘They have left blanks AMERICAN U. SENIOR AMONG TEN HONORED | Otis Fellows of Connecticut Ap- pointed to Teach English in France and Study French. Otis Fellows of Norwich, Conn., a senior at American University College of Liberal Arts, has been honored by appointment as one of 10 students from American colleges and universities to %o to France for teaching English and study of French. 4 Fellows is president of the French Club, secretary of the Student Council for the second year, a member of the Jesters' Club, Poetry Club and a for- ward on his class basket ball team. He has been active in college dramatics and is preparing to appear this Spring in | Shakespeare’s “Midsummer _ Night's Dream,” a ?roducflnn of the Dramatic Club. He plays traps in the college or- chestra. The appointment to study and work abroad was made through the Franco- American relations committee and the name of the school where he will be located will be announced next month. He expects to sail about October 1 for Solving the EASTER Europe. Fellows matriculated first at Originaters Amberst College, but transferred in the ot middle of his freshman year to Ameri- 1098y can University. Budget Plan in Schoolboy Art Show Opened. Washing- ton. BRUSSELS (#).—An exhibition of the paintings and drawings of Mexican schoolboys was opened at the Palais des Beaux-Arts by Dr. Prancisco Cas- tille Najers, the Mexican Minister. His young son Luis has several pic- tures on display. S ——SOL HERZOG. Inc. m—1 —— SOL HERZOG, Inc. HOME OF THE BUDGET PLAN being well dressed at Many men have found that our Budget Plan enables them to be well dressed without affecting their savings . .. Let us arrange your budget so that you are able to pay out of your of drawing from the bank. o1, HERZ0G 1. F Street at Qh to be filled in and the tenants have neglected them. Enumerators, interpreters and police have failed to get the necessary in- formation, in some cases. While the residents in suburban towns resent the fact that gossiping neighbors are ask- ing the questions, city enumerators are fretting use those living in tene- ments know nothing whatever about their neighbors. In a city so large it is hard to get enumerators. Some are inefficient and others are careless. People com- plain that the enumerators have gained from the servants what information they could and have departed, saying that they would make up the rest of it themselves. Problem of Time salary, instead A Man’s Easter Wardrobe lected here. workmanship. Fruhauf Westyle Suits Suits and Topcoats from $40 from $50 Westyle Topcoats from $30 2 Wellington Hats $5 $2.50 . . . should include— A New Spring Suit and Topcoat There is never a question or doubt about the style or quality of clothes se- And our Spring stocks exemplify the finest traditions of ! “the tailor’s craft — in style, in fabric and in Resilio Cravats in harmony with the season $1:50 to $6 Hats for Spring in the newest color tones By DUNLAP $8-50 & #10 Plain Color WOVEN MADRAS SHIRTS—Collar Attached Sidney West, In 14th & G Sts. EUGENE C. GOTT—PRESIDENT 000000000000000000000000800000000000000900000000604 | War Offers Trophy to Best Company. Establishing a precedent this year, the District Chpater of the Military Or- der of the World War will award large silver ern, Western, Central or Tech Schools at_some day to be announced later. In making the award, the organiza- tion, composed of officers who served in | the ‘World War, hopes to combat un- | American propaganda in the schools by | stimulating patriotism and character development through competitive mili- | tary training. The designation of the winning com- | panies will be inscribed on the tablet, which becomes the property of the first school to receive the award for the third e. The tablet, now on display in a sport- ing goods store in the 1300 block of G a committee composed of Col. Courtland Nixon, ad- jutant general of the service organiza- Neville, commandant of the Marine Corps, and street, was selected b tion; Maj. Gen. Wendell C. Maj. Ennalls Waggaman. b s FAVOR McLEOD BILL A petition bearing the names of 4 000 Michican ex-service men, McLeod, Republican, of Michigan. Carried in two suit cases, the bulky | |3 document was brought to the House Office Building by Capt. Edwin S. Bet- telheim of the Veterans of Foreign He was accompanied by Fred Beard of Detroit, of the same organiza- Wars. tion. Such « HERE [t’s Safe And by the Way, We're Showing. 900000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 J plaque in June to the cadet company which the War Department selects as the best drilled unit at lflut- igh The War Department designation | probably will be made next month and the presentation ceremony will follow urging favorable action on the McLeod bili to make immediate payments on the face value of adjusted service certificates was presented _yesterday to Representative Truly the Spirit of Spring So Many Colors. . .and Styling. Really One Can Hardly Resist the Urge to Buy Several Pairs. Of Course, Our Usual Perfect Fitting X-Ray Machine Service. FAMILY SHOE STORE 312 7th St. N.W. SINCE Your Children’s Shoes Here Children’s Department is in Charge of Thoroughly Experienced Men. by the Great Variety of Easter Styles Moderately Priced $3:00 to $5.00 : X-Ray Machine Fitting Service FAMILY SHOE STORE 312 7th St. N.W. Here Since 1873 D. C, THURSDAY, Will Rogers Says: \ BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—Just reading these late census reports, and it shows that the small town is passing. We not only ought to regret it, we ought to do something to remedy it. It was the incubator that hatched all our big men, and that's why we haven't got as many big men today as we used to have. Start to have a presidential election nowadays and have to postpone it; neither side got anybody big enough to run. Take every small- a | town-raised big man out of business and you would have nobody left running it but Vice Presidents. You can kid about the old rubes that sat around the cracker barrel, spit in the stove and fixed the Na- tion, but they were all doing their own thinking. They didn’t have their minds made up by some propagandist speaker at the “Get Nowhere” Luncheon Club. One Vote Elects Town Clerk. MILTON, Il April 17 (#).—One vote, unsolicited and _unexpected, _elected Ollie McCann village clerk Tuesday, the vote ocount revealed yesterday. There had been no candidates for the office, but some one wrote his name on a ballot. gD “ Furnished Layton Woodworking Co. 2103 Ga. Ave. N.W. Pot. 5670 Night Phone, Dec. 2408 A Distinctive “0‘WWWWOWMOO“‘ 1873 To Buy While Children’s Feet are in the Formative Stage is Just the Time When Expert Fit- ting Service is Needed Most. Our You’'ll Be Surprised PPLPE04800000690 0908999930000 00000P0P090PS000000 APRIL 17, 19830. DEATH SILENCES GUSLA |mesmo. i desd and his gusla, or oy OF MONTENEGRIN BARD | “A SMontenegro 1s mourning nim, for p— every man, woman and child in the country of the Black Mountain knew “Father Jevrem,” Prominent|pin ang his folksongs. “Father Jevrem,” whose family name Pigure at All Festivals, to Be was Ustschumalic, took in every national festival, and 1925 was Heard No More. crowned king of the bards in Sarajevo CENTINJE, Jugoslavia (P).—“Pather | {n competitian against 80 others. Jevrem,” the national bard of Monte-' Before that he had been in the United RALEIGH HABER States. He went there about ago and learned the prln.a‘ worked at it by day T his indiapensadl ls. Thus he saved ::eflcunt to enable him to_return to his native country, where he built & and devoted himself to fpllylnl at weddings and popular festi Austrian sound-film _interests are seeking government support. DASHER 1310 F Street Ready for E aster? Hart Schaffner & Marx two-trouser 'SUITS '35 Smart single and double models. . . .worsteds and chev new shades of pewter gray, v and Dicken’s blue. TOPCOATS Tweed Mixtures tailored by Hart Schaffner & Marx . . . Manhattan Shirts $ 2 65 2 Laundered Collars to Match Blue—Tan—Grey R Men’s Silk Neckwear $ 1 50 Resilient Construction breasted iots in the ellum tan 525 a Leigh Hats - Snap brims Welt Edges Grey—Tan—Brown Ra Leigh g Shoes *8 For Street, Sport, Dress