Evening Star Newspaper, May 19, 1930, Page 4

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FLOWER SOCIETIES |- SPONSOR EXHIBIT Congress Guests Invited to Attend Botanic Garden B Spring Event. Members of Congress and representa- tives of local horticultural societies will attend the opening tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock of the Spring exh!bmen M the Hnlonnl Ctplur mmhmuu v fi' Irises dominate the 42 classes olwfl!owen to be displayed dur- ing the show. There will also be & pro- fusion ol!‘ peonies, roses and various perepnial Senators and Representatives have been invited as special guests tomor- row. Officials of the American Hor- ticultural Society, the National Ca) ul Federation of Garden Clubs, and ! lar organizations will assist in the opening. The show is sponsored by flower growers of the District and suburbs, under leadership of Joseph A. erbert, jr., chairman. HPT:nln’ will be shown in collections ©f 13 varieties, 6 varieties, single blooms; collections of Japanese peonies, single and classes for peonies in & vase arranged for effect. A sweepstakes specimen bloom, m-umuuor: pe locen, Prises ered for the most artis- tioally arra e o basket of nardy peren- nial flowers; likewise for a similar ar- 1, in s vase and in & xmemmto! mpd et 0 mdfarunb- n{uo{mulndfdr the best collection of 8 T the extuibition One entire section hall t aside for exhibits of R "oh-l:dm clube from istrict of Columbia, Marylan e Toets for The e st mmpeu or B;“ml loving cup, cultural garden club to to win this be awarded '.hn'fi.m. “lll L3 ‘The Hya —odh mubmm ‘winner h 1929. m.mn Mnl Allmy B, s mmlm- haM ."-hn N ai tal Mmum of Garden Clubs. will mlndmlmnl :no .m. tomorrow, after % which ""‘"‘ [ et ylm Jura blic will be invited to .m. to 10 pm. on the st 1o from 10 8., 10 10 pm. ing day an ?Smwnne-w EXODUS STARTS MAY 20 19. .!nvnflé d todsy notifi prvperfl unz jc—Liverpool \n—Southampton Catemala—8 hmuu -l‘=====.u ST Feim DUE TOMORROW. ba—Havans n—Pir] it Bt oot DUE WEDNBSDAY, MAY 3L Alres DUE PRIDAY, MAY 3. Bermud da . uitania— Southampish &‘Ifl!nt Roosevelt—Ham! (DONEY—HAVADS +vvensr DUE SATURDAY, MAY 8. et Balin _Hamburs. . aukee—Hamburs . Calamares—Port Limon eniand—Antwerp Emeutrl.—leuthlmn ayette—Havre .. ripsholm—Gothenbure OUTGOING STEAMERS. SAILING TODAY. BN P s, BAILING TOMORROW. rbours, Southampton and Brem- ansdesLa Celte and Tels. 8801 Bernini-Sontevideo Montevideo n\uur—hmmm Columbi acific orgla—Trinidad. inburn—Pars. SAILING WEDNESDAY, MAY 31. Myuretania — Plymouth, Oherbours and Innhubu S Gherbours, Southampton and Wighinston—cobh, Pirmoutn, Cher- e apd Hinbi —] Im’Mfl s Guayrs, Puerto 8] Olrtl"nl PN erury—Pars. B b ethe pacific Const. to. ubst—Pernambuco. ‘revose—Montevideo. SAILING THURSDAY, MAY 3. eident Wilson—-World erulse. > Grasse—Havr lin—Boulosne, Southamplon and Bremer- nte Domingo City. et g A8 SAILING PRIDAY, MAY 33. Oumnl-—c»h Plymouth, Havre and Lon- lllllb. Santos, o Sl R e fl:t‘mdu—flmutl. Boulogne and Rotter- &.Hl—mflbfi‘h l t:::md“;’“ Iltl.l. Havans. ‘Onerbours and Ant- RGNS ana Orizabe—Havans, Prosreso and Vers Orus. SAILING SATURDAY. MAY 34. and anclsco. and Copen- ot Servgmr s, jon. rto Cas- . | lina Gen. 3 , Vi o | Reed General Hospita, has H take charge of the Stones River and 7(J. W. Mott, Infantry, from Ale; “UNCLE SAM AT Let us observe the tariff law in operation. remote outport of a South Sea island a cargo of native products is being loaded over the stern of & vessel salling for New York. The shipper of the mn is before the American consul, nearby, filing & “consular invoice,” or list, priced at market values. es are sent to the imporur tohoepfle' York customs MEN OF REVOLUTIO PRAISED AT SERVICE Representatives Hold Rites in Congressional Cemetery. Four Representatives made s pil- grimage to Congressional Cemetery yes- terday with a delegation of the District of Columbia Society of the Sons of the American Revolution and m ute to former Representatives respective States who served in the ca: tinental Army during the conflict of 1vie and who are buried in the ceme- delegation was headed by Wil- lam Knowles Cooper, president of the District of Columbia Society, Sons of the American Revolution, and Col. Alongo Gray, past prulflznt. ummou lmthn placed on the graves of the Revo- u heroes. itative Charles L. Abernethy of North Carolina spoke of the soldierly qounflu of former tative James | Ings fllllgb of North ine. Repre- sentative Lindsay O. Warren, also of sentative Richard P. Freeman of necticut praised former Reprelenuun Uriah Tracy of that State and Repre- sentative Butler B. Hare of South Caro- f the soldierly qualities of o wvi Casey of Revolutionary fame .nd former Representative of South At the cerémony incident to the plac- ing of medallions on the grav was sounded by & bugler ot uu United States Army. ‘haplain L. H. Warring closed the exercises with bened! Mlnn. COL. H. S. WILLIAMS AWAITS RETIREMENT Maj. Kilner, Air Corps, Is Trans- ferred Here From Lang- ley Field. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, MAY 19, 1930. How Customs Are Collected. YOUR SERVI In & ship “enters” in America and to leves is due. Arriving in New York Harbor, the master of the his “manifest” at the customs house. That is, he files a complete list of the goods he has brought from foreign lands. The importer, ceiver of the merchandise, also makes an “entry, which he states the amount of duty which he be- On paying this amount he is Te- " on rmitted to remove the greater part of the shipment. 30,000,000 FEET OF PULP FORM RECORD VIRGIN TIMBER DRIVE Husky River Lumber Jacks, Toiling Amid Hazards, to Deliver Logs in Annual Meacham Drive. Special Dispatch to The Btar. MALONE, N. Y., May 19 (NAN.A). —“When hell broke loose and sluiced the upmce-'.he Meacham drive went thro thu ‘water raging beneath 80000- 000 feet of spruce, east branch of the St. Regis River gorged with & ~ | groaning, heaving jam of pulp wood, & crew of sweating, red-eyed river drivers dll’lll death hourly as they toll to gh on u.me, and nplu ‘The Meacham log drlve is on, the lut and greatest of the North woods. virgin forest floating down in the molt colorful drive of recent times. Sixty-three thousand cords of pulp, drlve long the river banks, corded in streets of a ‘timber city” near Millbank, in t booms on the ice bark while the sap ran them. The spruce, balsam and hemlock of 7,000 acres of virgin forest in the Meacham tract and the second wth of 22,000 acres in the Everton were red over. Logged All Winter. All Winter long the logs were hayled in huge sleigh loads over to great landing places on the frozen lake and streams so that Spring floods 'ould move them. were built so that when the tmhfl waters receded the logs could be flutedmthzdmlmm:nwm-ed to “sluice” the logs through with a head of water behind them. A‘drlvlntmfl;' of lu! lm 50 %n must keep mass o mo ding course of the rlnr' over the rapids and through the still waters, g up jams and throw- ing in thousands of cords along the ‘Then eventually the end of the mmmyhrmhednthn]-ekmh ordered w exlmuuuon for nntunmt' lllj w mm, Vm. ;lf lerm-nk Maj. W. I. Cornell University, New vm lstmmuflm'flnat mu,oi‘ 5 , Infantry, 3 0.; c G. caid, Medical Corps, Chlplll.n S. C. Ramsden, at Fort !-m Houston, Tex., have been ordered to their respective "homes to await re- tirement; Capt. G. A. Schlieker, Infan- 10 | try, fmm Versailles, France, to Fort Benning, Ga.; Capt. H. J. Conner, Qulmrmuter Corps, from Fort Hum- phreys, Va,, to Murfreeshoro, Tenn., t.hu: Fort Donaldson National Parks, reliev- 4| ing ing Capt. G, M. Chandler, Quartermas- lered to Fort Bliss, Tex.; from lntm'.ry. rt Williams, H Capt. T. H. Ramsey, Infantry, from Fort McPherson. Ga., to the Pennsyl- vania State College; Capt. C. kinson, Coast Ariillery, from Fort Tot- ten, N. Y., to the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Capt. William McK. Scott, Quarter- master Corps, has been transferred to the retired list; Capt. J. M. Sanderson, Fleld Artillery, from Fort Sam Houston, Tex., to Fort Ethan Allen, Vt.; Capt. n . L. C. nnsylva- La, to the Philippines; Caj Wheat, Infantry, from the y nia State College to Hawali: Capt. F. ‘W. Hyde. Infantry, from Lehigh Uni- versity, Pa., and Capt. F. M. Smith, Infantry, from Mississippi Agriculturai | ing College to the Philippines, Rev. Herbert F. Moehlmann has been appointed a first lieutenant in the Corps of Chaplains and assigned to_duty at Fort Leavenworth, Kans. The President ln( the has accepted the resignations of First Lieut. Marcus D. Kogel, Medical and Second Lieut. Harding Palmer, ;: fantry. FIVE IN PERIL RESCUED Party Taken From Damaged Launch Near Highway Bridge. ‘With their boat slowly settling in the water after striking a sunken pile just| south of Highway Bridge last night, five rsons were taken off a 35-foot launch | the harbor precinct their boat towed to the harbor station’s ‘whart, J. E. Gibson of 1230 New Hampshire avenue, his wife and three other per- sons, whose names police were unable to obtain, were taken from the sinking craft when the police patrol boat, oper- ated by Policeman C. E. Adams, came -lonnxde in answer to their cries for hel Tt was the second time in as many nights that such an accident had oc- curred. A motor boat manned by Po- lloemln Olin D. of No. 6 pre- ct nmlmd n ll the same spot Blturdlfir rs, his wife and g{;ur children wm saved by harbor po- lce. DUSCH RITES IN NORFOLK Bervices to Be Held Tomorrow for Heart Attack Vietim. ‘The body of Willlam F. Dusch, “Ndnfluhu dealer of Norfolk, xa. raltar. T near St. Falls, where 40 cars are - loaded in & ble-shift day of 20_hours, 10 _hours to a Ahm. Here the peeled slides dhnl g‘tnflc eonmur waiting cars r while the rough vulp is passed through a ENVOY FEARS TARIFF WILL HURT TRADE | Swiss Minister Foresees Loss Both in Imports and Exports. The ‘“high and almost Ibitive duties” of the pending tariff bill of this country were alluded to by Marc Peter, Minister from Switzerland, in a radio address here yesterday, explaining the economic life of his country. ‘The Minister, after detailing the leading industries of his little nation and noting that export trade was nec- essary to support the industrial popu- lation, said it was “not without eon- cern that they heard in Switzerland of the new American tariff with high and almost prohibitive duties, which threat- ens to impair the economic relations of our two countries, because it is not always e to buy where one can- not_sen!” ‘The Swiss said his country bought s | great_deal of raw materials and ma- chinery from the United States. His talk, over a Columbia Broad- Co. network, was one of a series by foreign diplomats in the conclave of nations’ program. Count Laszlo Szechenyl, Minister of Hungary to the United States, discuss- “New Hungary,” will be the Hons Drogram Busday afiemeon, May program lay 0on, 25, from 2:30 to 3 o'clock. Two Hungarian artists, Miss Rossl Varady, cellist, and Miss Marta Ling, violinist, have accepted the invitation of the Minister to take part in the musical program. Count Szechenyl will be introduced by Nicholas Longworth, Speaker of the House of Repruenuuvu POLICE SEEK BURGLAR rum boat md‘!m‘nprlntl Used in Effort to Identify Jewel Thief. Police fingerprint experts were today examining the premises of Harry E. Adams of 1901 Kearney street north- east for traces of tell-tale marks that would help them to identify a burglar who entered the house last night and made off with several articles of jewelry and & small amount of cash. The in- truder was surprised by Adams, but succeeded in making his escape after striking his victim. Entry was gained to the house through a rear door that had been left unlocked, police reported. et GO0 g Consuls Reassigned. Paul R. Josselyn, Jows, of the For- eign Service, who has been on duty at the Department of State, detalled as consul at sh-n(hnl. Chins; Henry B. Day, Connecticut has been detalled as vice consul at N.g'lu Italy, consul, lum:'nrt, omnnny mo zurwh. lvm-r an Deaths in ixmltq Listed. ELPHIA, May 19 (#)—A re- the Presbyterian the family residence in Norfolk | Gene: w. Mr. Duuh‘s death was ascribed to & 'k superinduced by l!clk- ment, after e“h:‘“fihll home run at a mmflz'" AR ion Sad PATAGeISMe BATIrey. leedlo:rudl ! barking drum which tears the bark off_before the logs are los is the Meacham Lumber OCo. operation of H. P. Gould and John E. Johnston. The pulp to_the Inter- national Paper Co. mills at Pyrites and Plercefield. It will take three years more to complete the cutting. But this Spring the drive is twice as large as the next three will be. John Da: ), z.\flwper Lake, is superintendent of the ive. 30,000,000 Feet of Timber. No workmen on this job remembers a gu ‘when as much &;l Ip was gotten out one drive and sight of 63,000 cords of'“&llp, equivalent to 30,000,000 feet of ber, and worth at least & nullbn douln. is one m live in m:mory h & of grea be-uly. Nowhere in the Adirondacks has nature been more lavish than at Meacham Lake and down the winding 8t. River outlet. The contour of the hills and the sweeping bends and waterfalls of the river form a land- scape at every turn. ‘They are no weaklings, these men of the drive. And they do not work union hours. Three to four dollars a day is the wage. ‘The men are awake while the owls are still flitting through the tall pines. Breakfast is at 4:30. They dare death lnd m{ fighting the dflve from dawn mly 30 minutes for lunch from & pacl many a night 1n ‘God's great public pnrk Cold baths wheflever a misstep made and death behind every tmnn landing, behind every treacherous log| ™ jam. Tony and John, two plegmatic and taciturn Poles, were workrn on the top of a huge landing just below the Mea- oham outlet when the whole landing started to quiver and tremble like an earthquake. “Look out, look out!” yelled 8i Del- core, boss of this crew, “get away from there quick.” Clung to Limb. But it was too late; the Poles were trapped in the moving avalanche of pulp. Both grabbed s huge limb and clung to it durerluly as the 4,000 cords of ) crashed down beneath them for & whole hour. They knew if their fin, slij they would be ground to‘;ru.lp tged i But the strength .llntd oo{ use of the pick-pole and the pu‘? h saved lives. When that slide end- ed they were 30 feet in the air above river and they lost back to safe tren: I.Ikc emlfllpllyln comparison. A driv- h(mvlnhndntermtmlhoek of the lumber woods. They gh!lh‘.&ll! ft, Inured h oss of sleep and long In{nlo& lu md shirking have no place on a ';';;kdmr Men laugh at dan- ger an e & narrow escpe crushing death. BScenes such as these hardy men now ennctln! in the Ad\mndmn wm soon pass into history. The virgin for- est at Meacham was the last unspoiled primeval woods in the northern section of the mountains. It takes 40 years to sow pulp, so that after this operation completed only & few of this genera- tion will ever see a real drive in these parts and never again such a big on: (Copyright, 1830, by North American paper_Alliance.) The Loaf That Speaksfor self For sale by grocers and delicatessens ¢ | they have throy 'k basket and sleeping the At least 10 customs se: T cent of every lot is retained by the ce for examination by the “appraiser.” He may find that the shipment does not agree with the description on the several “entries” previously made, therefore, another rate of tariff applies. There is often difference of opinion among the pat cerned as to class, value and rates. On mt!ement of differences, the importer receives the balance of his WILL PLAGE RADIOS IN BACK COUNTRY Education Office to Test Modern Substitute for Book Learning. About 100 families of hill-billies and backwoodsmen, who have had little contact with the outside world, and many of whom never have seen an automobile or train, are going to learn about the wonders of radio. Radlo sets are to be installed in iso- lated mountain homes here and there throughout the country by the United States Office of - Education to get the reaction of these rather primitive folk to radio. It will throw light on the possibilities of radio as a medium of educating these people, who know little about “book learning,” and who have gathered whatever worldly knowledge ugh the spoken word. 'x‘hue battery sets have been donated Interior Department by the Un!ted States Chamber of Commerce. Some of the sets, too, are to be laced in homes of non-English-speak- g foreigners in large cities, for the same purpose. As an educational experiment the un- dertaking s unlque according to Dr. L. R. Al ialist in adult educa- ee of Eduation. It will bé months before any real re- sults will be derived from these experi- ments, Dr. Alderman said. State universities are collaborating with the Federal Government in the ex- periment, and will make the surveys in eir respective areas. The locations will be suficiently divergent to serve as n cross section for the country as a e. Many of these mountain homes can be reached only by mule trails and footpaths, Dr. Alderman explained. The department wants to know, he said, if radio can take the place of reading as a melm of contact with persons whom rec le may never see, and whether it will ulate the desire for reading and formal education. It will learn from the experiment what programs these isolated people enjoy mo.t lnfl how they affect them educationall; (Goprisnt, 1090, by the Conseridased Bress.) BISHOP FREEMAN CITES QUALITIES OF LEADERS Names Lincoln and Wilson in Ser- mon as Men of Strong Con- viction, “The man who believes, who has strong conviction and who is pursuaded is the man who influences the age,” as- | srted Bishop Jumes X, Freoman, Hishop of Washin, on "Convu:- tion” at the lplscopll Church of th Lincoin and Wilsen were depleted coln an n were dep by Bishop Freeman as men of strong con- viction, Lincoln's Oenyubuu lddre!s being immortalized beca: its con- vl.neml ualities. “President Wilson once sald,” Bishop Freeman continued, “‘I would rather from | 80 down in defeat in a cause that would ultimately triumph than be victorious in & cause that has no conviction.’ ” “Much of the present- literature, while mentally brilliant, lacks convi tion,” Bishop 'man sald in closing. $200 Taken From Desk. John W. Wood, with offices in the Evans Buudl.n(, -t Nw York avenue and Fourteenth street, reported to police last n%m that hu desk was nnucked and in cash stolen. Swedish offers a pleasing change in bread You'll enjoy something different from the standard white bread now and then —and Swedish Rye makes a delicious substitute. Full of wholesome nourishment — with 2 flavor all its own—a delicate sweetness that's most palatable. con- po; “Border Smugglers.” Patent Office. Will Receive Medal DR. ALBERT FRANCIS ZAHM. DELPHIAN SOCIETY CHAPTER PLANNED Meeting for Organization Will Be Held May 27 at Roose- velt Hofel. ‘The first meeting in a movement ize & local chapter of the Nltlont.l De iphian Society, described as & “na- Y.lonll cultural mowme'nt for the de- velopment of women,” will be held at the Roosevelt Hotel May 27 at 10:30 am., it was announced by Mrs. Lillian R. Bernhardt, fleld secretary of the na- tional society, who has come to Wash- ington to launch the local chapter. The meeting will be addressed by Mrs. Harriet V. Rigdon, treasurer-gen- eral of the National Society of Daugh- ters of the American Revolution, who is a member of her own Delphian chapter of Wabash, Ind. “The Delphian movement,” sald Mrs. Bernhardt, “stands for greater interest in education, personal improvement and social progress among wohien. "It is non-sectarian and non-political.” Kitchens Enter Society! FORDYCE, Ark. (#).—Arkansas kitchens are to _have a social standing as well as a culinary standard. A kitchen improvement contest has been started in Dallas County with 83 entrants. Blue ribbons, says the an- nouncement, will be awarded “for the most improvements—both culinary and R — Uruguay phnl to spend $21,000,000 in road construe “Uncle Sam at Your Service” Scrap Bwks Al gizes Ill kinds here Stockett-Fiske Co. 919 E St. NW. UITA| SCRAP BOOKS of these m Rye (ALl rights protected. Trade Dorsch baked—means it'll be fresh to the end of the loaf 10c Phone us—North 0386 —if you can't get it Try It Tonight and You'll Buy It Often Made in the bakery owned and operated by Dorsch lu'muff for a third of a century By Quig Staver Alrcraft fast becoming & factor Key Wut‘ sc Punl and !nme were the first af customs offices established. irport As air-borne eommers merk Teslstered U. 8 ZAHM WILL RECEIVE 1930 MENDEL MEDAL Library of Congress Aeronautics Chief Will Be Honored for Scientific Work. Albert Francis Zshm, chief of the division of aeronautics, Library of Con- gress, has been selected by officials of Villanova College. Villanova, Pa., to re- celve the 1930 Mendel Medal, pre- sented annually for distinguished serv- ice in the advancement of science, ac- cording to an announcement *oday by Rev. Joseph M. Daugherty, O. 8. A, dean of the Villanova School of Science. Dr. Zshm was nominated for the honor by dent of the college, the faculty ot the bcl&nu achool and the college’s board trustees. The medal will be pre- lmted June 5 at Villanova in con- nection with the college’s commence- ment exercises. Dr. Zahm made the first wind tun- nel with precilc measuring apparatus for the study of air flow around the nrucmnl parts of airplanes and air- fof - ” _— invented lrl‘,hlree-m:n'que control for anes; an airplane meter and shrgck recorder. pHn m author of books on aerial navigation, aerodynamics and airplane stress analysis and of several hundred offi- ehl rz rts on aeronautical tests and es for the United States Nl'! Abtxm Gregor Johann Mendel, whom the Villanova medal is memorial, formulated his famous gl;ln ciples of genetics in an Augustinian monastery. Vuhnov‘ is the only Au- (umnun coll ete m the United States. LODGE AID AIDS CHARITY Brightwood O0dd Fellows Stage Carnival on Georgia Avenue. Charity will receive all the profits from a carnival being mnduczed at G venue and lelor street by the Lodge of Odd Fellows. A band will furnish music from 7 unfll 11 o'clock tonight. Numerous and pleuuu-providm. devices will be d};:lkx the public every night this Ty is chairman of the wmmltu?Wm of the Ifllll’l.c The arrangements ‘committee col of Harry Bellnlor, chairman, m:.n: Arthur 8. J You Wil Thoroughly Enjoy Yourself in a Rev. James H. Griffin, presi- | d \HUSPITAL OPENS FUND CAMPAIGN Casualty Asks $50,000 to Reduce Debt and for Addi- tional Equipment. Casualty Hospital's campaign for $50,000, the money to be used in retir- ing part of the indebtedness on the new $200,000 hospital building and for pur- chase of additional equipment, was officially launched today under the direction of Roscoe Fertich, chairman of the executive committee. Sixty Workers Listed. The drive for funds will bs handled by 60 workers, half of them members of the board of lady managers of the hos- pital. Campaign he-d’ arters are be- ing maintained in the former offices of the Continental Trust Co., Fourteenth and H streets. ‘The campaign, which Will be con- ducted in a manner similar to that employed by the Community Chest, is expected to last two weeks. Erectlon of the new hospital building has enabled Casualty to broaden the scope of its service to the community. It is the intention of the officials of the institution to use part of the money raised in the campaign for the pur- chase of sclentific equipment to enable the hospital to give its patients the highest degree of attention and care. Lady Managers to Meet. A meeting of the 30 members of the campaign committee of the board of managers will be held at cam- paign headquarters tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. At this meeting progress reports will be made and plans for carrying on the drive will be discussed. A similar meeting of the men workers will be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock. Dr. Joseph D. Rogers is president of the institution. Under his [uidmee the ital has greatly enlarged its fleld g the past five years. FIGHTS DIVORCE DECREE Bogert Will Ask Court to Set Aside 1927 Action. NEW YORK, May 19 (#).—An ac- tion by Jack I. Bogert, salesman, to set_aside the divorce obtained in De- troit in 1927 by his former wife, Maxine Elinor Bogert, will be filed in !Ilprflnl Court_this week, 's attorney, I Nick Gordon, said Bogert filed a $250,! alienation of affections suit against Raymond J. Funkhauser, Park avenue manufacturer, Saturday. He alleged Funkhauser prompted Mrs. Bogert to bring her divorce action and that when she obtained her decree Funkhauser falled to nmrry her and she sued him for breach of ise. Funkhauser settled the m|t out of leclares. court for $50,000, Bogert d OUTBREAK IS FEARED Troops Stationed in Santo Domingo to Curb Violence. SANTO DOMINGO, May 19 (#).— Mounted patrols of government troo) were placed in strategic spots in the capital today as a precaution against demonstrations - growing out of the arrest of Federico Velasques, opposition cardidate for President in the campaign Just ended. Velasquez was taken into custody at his home last night by soldiers on charges of fomenting a revolution. FOUR-PIECE SUIT along the green— on the tennis court—= up the fairway— in the office— these suits believe in Work and Play HADDINGTON Especially appropriate for the young man who must k?:ve the best of assurance of st le' at reason- able prices—Blue-grays u':g‘ 'ramlnc bl'DWnl are favori $35 Others at $40, $45 ROGERS PEET To those who desire the very top-notch in custom tatloring, we suggest these four-piece stits in cool Summer weaves to give you the assurance of- style in better dress. $65 Others at $70, $75 Drop in.before you go on your vacation. Meyer’ 1331 F St s Shop R N

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