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MAY 23, 1930.' -un m Ingle Carpesiter, executor of | will be placed in a trust fund and only Engineer Plans for Future. the income will be available to her. NEW YORK, May 23 (#).—Congrat- She recently married Holmes Herbert, | ulatory messages to Gustave Lingen- # ‘motion re actor. thal, bridge engineer, on his eightietn § birthday, express the conviction that ha will do even greater things at 90. 1ie has designed various " bri over the East River and is active now in plans for spanning the Hudson. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, 1$633,760 INCE ESTATE GOES TO RELATIVES By the Assoclated Press. LOS ANGELES, May 33.—Final ac- counting in the estate of Thomas H. Ince, motion picture producer and di- rector, was filed in Probate Court Wed- nesday by Mrs. Ellen Ince Herbert, his' his THE EVENING COLORED SOUTS WL HoD ALY S aoou cwuulni has been supervis- District Offlelals of Boys’ Or- ing the plans tor the rally, -hlcg have arge of a committee ganization Are to Ad- [™ B B! Avro el 7, somiemarer dress Troops. FURNITURE MEET OPENS BATHTUB SINGING HELD FLAGRANT WATER WASTE BY the Associated Press. CHICAGO, May 23.—Singing in the bathtub is to Alderman E. .Y.. Kaindl total gross amount was set at ”n.'rn,u. of which the executors credited themselves with $296,972.03, leaving $633,760.51 for distribution. Under Ince's will the estate was divided equally between his widow and three sons, William T. Ince, 21; Thomas H. Ince, 18, and Richard Ince, 14. Under a that Ince’s widow mm not marry for seven years after death, Mrs. Herbert's fourth share MBRIDE EXPANDS LOBBY TESTIMONY \ltes Pmchot Victory as De- Teat of Association Against of Schools Garn wnkinnon. ln chnrn of eolnnd schools, is expected to be presen uhbeundnnuple- —_— An exhibition exelullvely of rlnung produced between 1850 and be held in Ulm, Germany. In the committee report, just made public, Alderman Kaindl men- tions that bath room baritones, tub tenors and bathing bassos are respon- sible for the waste of a lot of water and one of the reasons Chicagoans use more water per capita than any city in_the world. WORKMEN OF WELDIT CO. WELDING THE TAIL ON BUFFALO, AT QST BRIDGE. BEST FOR YEARS Prohibition. By the Associated Press. Expanding the view expressed before the Senate lobby committee, F. Scott McBride, general superintendent of me’ Anti-Saloon League, in a statement last night said the outcome of the Penn-| sylvania Republican primaries ‘“again indicates that the much-advertised re- action against prohibition is merely an hallucination of the wets.” “The result also emphatically shows the difference between real ballots and straw ballots in prohibition contests,” he added. “The nomination of Gifford Pinchot as Republican candidates for Governor of Pennsylvania was a most decisive defeat of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment and a most impressive victory for prohibition,” the statement said. “Pinchot's dry record | Mr. Kaindl professed to see rio mu- sical advantage in the practice that would offset the economic waste. He did not come right out and suggest | that bath room ballads be curtailed, but his meaning was unmistakable. Former Mayor Dies. OMAHA, Neb., May 23 (#).—Ed. Smith, forther mayor of Omaha, who was saved from hanging at the hands of a mob whose members burned the court house during his administration in 1919, died Wednesday night after a short illness. Smith was mayor from 1919 to 1921. He was seized by a mob which was storming the court in search of a colored prisoner as he sought to pacify them. He was saved by Ben Danbaum, a former member of the police force. Columbia are to address a rally of colored Boy Scouts of the District, con- stituting the 6th Division and number- ing about 500 members, in the Dunbar High School tonight at 8 o'clock. Rep- resentative Oscar DePriest of Illinois and Dr. Mordecai W. Johnson, presi- P.|dent of Howard University, have been invited to attend. Every colored troop of Boy Scouts in the District is to have part in the pro- gram, which is designed to show the parents and friends the capabilities and possibilities of scouting in developing in first aid, signaling, cooking, fire- making, knot-tying and a_candle-light ceremony, the latter to illustrate the Boy Scout laws. Scout Executive Lynn C. Drake, Col. youth. Demonstrations are to be given | NORFOLK, Va., May 23 (#).—Wel- Boy Scout officials of the District of | come was extended yesterday to 200 delegates assembled here for the eight- eenth annual convention of the South- ern Retail Furniture Association. A response to addresses of welcome was made by B. W. Elliott of Durham, N. C., president of the Southern Retail Furniture Association. Nagle Freshwater of New York de- livered the opening address of the convention. GRIDIRON SHOES FOR ‘BOYS Free—X-Ray F.inin. Service BE-IFABUILL —DR-A-BEAR. People who save a dollar here and there don‘t cry when hard times come. We help people save dollars by WELDING broken and worn metal parts—lawn mowers, pumps, sewing machines, motors, bumpers—in fact, everything you can think of, we can save your money by WELDING it. and dry views were very well known. He was considered the dry candidate for governor. He was indorsed and supported by the Anti-Saloon League of Pennsylvania. His dry stand and his record as governor were his chief elements of strength, for he had no factional party support, the political organizations of both Philadelphia and Pittsburgh being against him. Further- more, practically all the big city news- papers of Pennsylvania opposed Pin- chot.” McBride said Thomas W. Phillips, the wet candidate, was wealthy and had carried on an aggressive and well organized campaign, with the support of the Assoclation Against the Prohibi- tion Amendment, of which, the Anti- Saloon League head said, he was an official and “contributor of one-half of the salary of Capt. Stayton, its head.” “With the issue clear cut between Pinchot and Phillips, Pinchot, the dry, won the nomination,” he added. “The ‘wet was third, with second place going to Willlam Shunk Brown, who side- stepped the issue by declaring for a referendum.” McBride expressed equal satisfaction with the result of the senatorial primary. U. . POLICE SEIZE RIFLES AND STILL New York Coast Guards Report Seizure of Two Rum Boats and Sinking of One. Family Shoe Store 312 7th St. N.W. Here Since 1873 W, B, Moses & Soms SINCE 1861—SIXTY.NINE YEARS OF PUBLIC CONFIDENCE F Street at Eleventh Here’s a Scoop! An Amazmg Special Purchase s Sale!§ “Lovely Crepe” Print Frocks That Wash @ ? isas lovely does, and these frocks certainly deserve their name! < They’re LOVELY adorable in design, in color and in style. With capes, boleros, yokes, bows, frills, they’re smart enough to go anywhere, do anything. Besides, THEY WASH, and come up looking new as new. You’ll admit they’re rare bargains at $2.95—that’s because of this EX- TRAORDINARY PURCHASE we made—we predict the whole town will turn out to see them tomorrow. And so we say to you: COME EARLY. 2.95 SPECIAL! ALL COLORS IN ALL SIZES: 14 TO 20; 36 TO 46 Joses, Second Floor Weldit Co., 516 First St. N.W. Metropolitan 2416 Your Collar . . .. Your Shirt . ... Beautifully Laundered! W 9 AM. to 6 PM. National 3770 E have the finest equipment and facilities that money can supply and a corps of capable assistants . . . the result? Perfect Laundry Service! FRANKLIN—"An Easy Road to Cleanliness” FRANKLIN-=-- LAUNDRY .Ci | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 23.—Long Island police yesterday had: & rum runner’s arsenal of 29 guns and ammunition, enough o wage extensive war, all seized in a raid on an old barn in Manorville which housed a 1,000-gallon still. ‘Two sheriffs raided the barn and, besides the still, found .21 rifies, three .Sumd with silencers; seven sawed- shotguns, one automatic pistol and ammunition for all. They arrested Joseph Elmira and Tony Palma, bot of whom said they lived in Manhattan. On_the other side of New York City t Guard station at Clifton, Staten Island, captured a rum-running launch, the Annabelle, in Upper New York Bay and reported another rum craft in Staten nd Sound. Chief Boatswain Mate J. S. Barrett said the crew saw escape was impos- sible and set their boat afire. three members of the crew were icked up by the cutter, but the launch, lazing flercely, sank before fireboats from St. George could arrive. A cutter in charge of Chief Boatswain Mate Otto Estad captured the Anna- mmr Robbins Reef after a short Lower Prices Now, On Kelly Springfield Buckeye Tires —It pays to buy quality Tires. But it's not often you can buy them at such low prices. For your Decoration Day and Summer trips put on a set of Kelly Springfield Buckeye Tires and enjoy trouble free mileage. All Kelly Tires guaranteed one year on a monthly basis, against defects in workmanship and material, board. The Guardsmen of liquor when they made e QUESTION MAGAZINE EDITOR IN OIL FRAUD| District Attorney Exhibits Contract Calling for Sale of Pre-Or- ganization Stock. eir clpuu'e By the Associated Press. . _ OKLAHOMA CITY, May 23.—Roy St. Lewis, United States district attorney, Tevealed upon his return Wednesday from New York that Henry Knight Miller, editor of Psychology, a maga- sine published in New York City, has been questioned in the investigation of the Universal Oll & Gas Co. mail fraud case here. ‘The district attorney also brought with him purported contracts alleged to _have been signed by 8. E. J. Cox calling for the sale of §1,500,000 worth of the pre-organization stock in the Uni- versal Co. by New York brokérs, who | were to receive 40 per cent commis- sions. Cox, one of nine persons arrested on charges of using the malls fo defraud in connection with the Universal Co.'s activities, was in the county jail last night for failure to make $12,500 bond. Others charged in the case, including Cox's wife, Mrs. Nellie Cox, are at lib- erty on bonds. Lewis exhibited an alleged agreement by which Miller was to be paid 5 per oent of the brokers’ commissions for his efforts in advertising the company. MRS. CHAPMAN DIES Historian of League of American ,e_n Women Was 61 Years Old. | SELMA, Ala., May 23 (®).—Mrs. Katherine Hopkins Chapman, well | known writer, died at a hospital here | ‘Wednesday, victim of a cerebral hemor- rhage. Mrs. Chapman, historian of the Na- tional League of American Pen Women, 5.00—22 5.25—18 5.25—19 5.25—20 5.25—21 5.50—18 4.40—21 4.50—20 4.50—21 4.75—19 4.715—20 4.75—21 5.00—19 5.00—20 5.00—21 (32x5.00). (28x5.25).. (29x5.25). (30x5.25) .. (31x5.25).. (28x5.50). 5.50—19 (29x5.50). 5.50—20 (30x5.50). 30x3% C. O. S... (29x4.40).. (29%4.50). (30x4.50) $10.25 $10.45 $10.50 $10.75 (31x5.00).. .$5.15 Other Sizes Proportionately Priced Kann's—Fourth Floor. Vatco Seat Covers For Coaches, Sedans and Roadsters and Touring Cars $1.29 $2.50 —Heavy denim covers in striped patterns, made to fit every kind of a car from a Ford to a Lincoln. The ma- terial is cut large enough for the larger cars and may be neatly adjusted to the smaller ones. Designed to cover the seats and backs of seats, A. Cape model in polka Sets, for seats, backs, sides, dot. $7.95 . Cape | model—sham- C. Bows and Bows in polka dot. D. Bolero — note = deep scallop edge. For Coupes Real Estate Loans (D. C. Property Only) 6% No Commission Charged | You can take, 12 years to pay off your loan without the expense of renewing. $1,000 i for $10 per month, including interest and ;mn:npnl Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Assoclatlon —Vatco Seat Cover doors and arms; made of striped covert cloth, with leather trimming E. Capes again — floral pattern. F. Sleeve effect. G. Shirt front effect— again dots. H. Capes must have the last word. cap — cape