Evening Star Newspaper, June 26, 1930, Page 36

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVEN GEN. DEAKYNE WAIVES PRIVILEGE OF RETIREMENT | ‘Will Continue in Service as Colonel, D. C, THURSDA JUNE 26, 1930. to additional duty in the office of the| her Virginia. She charges that he chief of Engineers, Munitions Building. | SUES FOR "AINTENANCE has hb‘m addicted to drink and is Gen. {i)ealyne i:"l nll!“; ':f !De‘=-i ASAB———— maintaining a “love nest” for another ware and was a star graduate of the | band Has | Woman. ‘West Point Military Academy class o(;xn' Newldy: Siskos: Mus ¥ Attorney Joseph Stein appears for ’1590. HeAmved as & h?,f'dé;' f;uenl. Failed to Keep Agreement. the wife, National Army, during the World War, |and commanded the 19th Engineers| Separate maintenance is asked in a ey e Deta et e |t Rasirs. ‘anidthe 1101 Jegimesns | Bull fllad'in (s Disheiot Sapremme OOt serve Work Here. on the British front and was chief en- by Mrs. Eula Bewley, 1811 Wyoming | gineer of the 2nd Army from the time |avenue, against John M. Bewley, a sales~ mfr';‘n'*‘r’:“‘ Herbert Deakyne, Corps of |of its organisation until the close of | man, 3121 P street. The wife compiaine| becdered T torm as assistant. thiet of Engi. | ¢ War. During his long career he |that her husband has fafled o Keep the 3 . ects_in . the ip- | w romised 110 moon of retirement on that date in his present | pines, New York City, Philadelphia and | ;,mfm‘ e.xfd has .,,&.2;{ E.'.{g'.‘..,“",.n' '.‘mu. 1:.: opal lamp. o N oo ":‘cfife’f:g“‘g“m‘“&"r‘g‘fig; |on the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. | Whether It’s the Porch ether It's the Por Itself or the Edmonston & Co., Inc. Exclusive Washington Agency STACY-ADAMS & CO.’S Nationally Known Shoes for Gentlemen CUNHANCONVITED ON WEAPON COUN McGurn, Capone Lieutenant, Once Suspect in Leading Chicago Murders. Map Luncheons in Paris. with meals is the latest ACY-ADAMS OES FOR MEN The Highest Type of Footwear made for the American grade of colonel unil he reaches the statutory age for retirement, in cem- 2 ber, 1081 An ' oraer imued Jiodny Fenders Outline Busses. detalls him for duty with the Organized| Fenders tha: show the driver the | Reserves of the 3d Corps Area, with |clearance of his vehicle are being in: station n this city, the headquarters of | stalled on busses of Berlin. Germany which have just been establisned in the | They are in tie form of frames which Walker Johnson Building, on New York |are clearly visible to the driver o that By the Associated Press CHICAGO, June 26.—“Machine Gun | Jack” McGurn, reputed marksman for | “Scarfare Al" Capone, was convicted last night of a charge of carrying a con- cealed weapon. McGurn is one of the best known gangsters in Chicago and was once ar- | Tested as & suspect in the Valentine's | day massacre of last year, when seven followers of George (Bugs) Moran were slain. Chargss in this case were dropped | as they were in several other instances. Last night's verdict, returned after 2| hours and 40 minutes deliberation. was | the first conviction obtained against | McGurn, although his name has been | mentioned in connection with most of the big gang slayings of the past two years T McGurn was the second gunman con- victed of carrying concealed weapons in two days. Anthony (Red) Kissane, who was quoted as teliing arresting officers he “worked for Jake Lingle,” was sen- tenced Tuesday to onc year in jail and fined $300—the maximum penalty. Lingle. a Chicago Tribune reporter, was Kkilled June 9 supposzdly by gangstera. MeGurn, subject to the same penalty | as Kissane, will be at liberty on $10.000 | bail until his motion for a new trial is argued July 3. The arrest on which last night's con- viction was based was made on Feb- ruary 1. the day Julius Rosenheim was slain. The gangster was stopped by de- | tectives in the Loop and he obligingly told the officers that he was carrying his pistol in his right hip pocket. ITALIAN LAKE PERFORMS DISAPPEARING TRICKS | Vanished in 1805, Reappeared, Left | Again, Now Returning and Extending Shores. ROME (N.AN.A)—The fame cf} Leprignano, the little village about 25| miles from Rome, would never have been noised abroad had it not been for the meagic disappearance of a mysteri- ous lake one night in 1895. Subsequent- 1y the lake disappeared, came back once more and then vanished until February of this year. Now it is extending its shores and really looks as though it has come to stay. Its growth is causing a great stir in the neighborhood, but the geologists are allaying anxiety by their reports that the causes of thg phenomenon are not volcanic. Underground ravities, produced by the corroding action of saline waters, they say, are literally and figuratively speaking, at the bottom of the excitement. (Oepyright, 1930, by North American News- Daper Alliance.) TURKS’ CANNINESS PROVED BY SKULLS Study by Government Shows “No Backwardness” in Racial Mentality. STAMBOUL (N.AN.A)—That the ‘Turks are very fine fellows has lately been proved by thie University of Stam- boul in no uncertain way. Circum- stantial evidence is not for them. They have examined a thousand Turkish skeletons with the highly satisfactory result that “the Turkish anatomical structure shows no backwardness,” par- ticularly as regards cranial develop- ment. People may now say what they will, but the unspeakable Turk is, especial cranially, a superior being. We shall not, therefore, expect the absorption of the Rcman alphabet to worry him much and he will in due course waar the European garb that is being more and more thrust upon him “with a dif- ference.” (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) Giant Pipe Organ in Paris. Having 4,800 pipes, one of France's largest pipe organs was recently dedi- cated in the huge Salle Pleyel, a con- cert hall in Paris. The instrument has T1 stops. Its concealed machinery 1s controlled by 750 wires contained in one cable connecting the organ with a chamber under the stage. ‘Talkies for Blind, Deaf. A talkie apparatus is to be installed in the Royal School for the Blind at Leatherhead, England. Officlals of the institution say that the totally blind will be able to follow the story by sound, the partially blind will see and hear and the deaf and dumb, of whom g: :i’l:hw] contains a number, will see THE NEW Rumors have been revived throughout Rumania ef the likelihood of new ef- forts to place Archduke Otto upon the throne of both Hungary and Austria. —Associated Press Photo. BEOKER ASKS DAMAGES FOR AUTOMOBILE HURTS Declaring that he was rendered un- eonscious when an automobile in which he was a passenger was negligently driven over a rut in the roadway, Charles Riemer, a stock broker, 1015 Quebec street, has filed suit in the Dis- | trict Supreme Couri to recover $20,000 damages from Frank J. Albus, 1338 Kalmia road, owner and operatcr of the car. Riemer tells the court that he was riding in the defendant’s automobile June 26, 1927, when, between Orkney Springs and Mount Jackson, Va. he was hurtled from his seat to the top of the automobile as the car was driven over & rut. He sustained a fracture of the skull, he asserts, and was prevented for a long time from engaging in his business. At~ torney Ralph A. Cusick appears for the plaintiff Swz'ft » Luxurious Service to Cbicago. ; by the cool route West . . NE of the most luxuri- ous fleets of trains in the world is that of the Penn- sylvania‘ Railroad . . . bind-! ing Washington to. the in- land cities of America. . 8 trains run daily to Chi- €ago . .. 6 to St. Louis. ° And each travels'the cool route West through the beau- tiful wooded valleys of the Appalachians. LIBERTY LIMITED Leaves Washington Arrives Chicago. .. .10 A.M MANHATTAN LIMITE] Leaves Washington . Arrives Chicago. .. 7 ALAN B. SMITH, General Passeng Agent, 613-14th Street, N. W., Wash- ington, D.C. Telephone National 9140. | PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD The Cool Route to the West PeerLESS Product of America’s Oldest Fine Car Buslder The name—the experience— the resources—all necessaryin- gredients of an even greater Peerless fine car leadership. avenue between Seventeenth and Eight- | he m: eenth streets, [ 9 AN IMPROVEMENT OVER KALSOMINES CALLOUSES - BUNIONS Instantly relieved ; For painful corns, tender toes, callouses and bunions, nothing is 80 soothing, so healing, so instantly effective in ending pain as Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. The secret is in their soothing medication, combined with their protective, cushioning feature, which emoves the cause —friction and sressure of shoes. Dr.Scholl's Zino-padsare madein special sizes for these foot troubles, $mall, thin, dainty. Doctors every- where recommend them. At Drug, 8boe and Dept. Stores—35¢ box. Dr Scholls Zino-pads Put one on—the #pain is go 10TOR OILS Greases Later he may be assigned | of traffic in —e judge distances in narrow lanes wded streets. Porch Swing —that needs “dolling up,” the right finish for the job can be bought to greatest Gentleman. These shoes have been the ac- cepted standard for comparisons for many generations. | 4 7 / Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads are safe. No risk of blood-poisoning as with cutting your corns er callovses, or of acid burn, caused by harsh liquids or plasters. k- advantage at Reilly's. PR [l caaivo || SANITARY WALL COATING READY FOR USE WHEN MIXED WITH COLD WATER VARNISHES, ENAMELS, Specially Low Prices “BARRELED SUNLIGHT” HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS & GLASS T DON'T KNow, LUBRICATION FLEW BYRD TO THE SOUTH POLE. ‘ ; il P WHAT'S EB CALC'LATIN® TO Do -- HOP OFF || We're Washington's rec- ognized headquarters for de- pendable inside and out- PAINTS & STAINS LACQUERS, ETC. 1334 New York Ave.—Phone Nat'l 1703 the custom of S.-A. & Co. ts in the o perfect- the result unquestioned ut with maintain ing the product is opened, that S.-A. Shoes leadership. Fitted by Experts Here—Assuring Comfort as Well as Correction, When Needed. EdmonstonsTo CARL M. BETZ, Mgr. 612 13th St. —West Side— Bet. F & G Sts o= DB Give ‘em complete lubrication, and you can't hold 'em back MOTOR CAR MANUFACTURERS oY Change Oil every 500 to VEEDOL 1000 Miles. Buick, Chevro- let, Dodge, Essex, Hudson, Graham-Paige, Hupmobile, Nash, 'Oakland, Oldsmobile, Reo, Studebaker, Willys- Knight, Whippet and many other instruction books tell you to drain every 500 miles in Winter and every 1000 miles in Summer. Ford says 500 miles Winter and Sum- mer. Are you doing itP . .. Change now. MOTOR OILS AND GREASES MADE 100% FROM PENNSYLVANIA AND OTHER PARAFFINE BASE ORUDES Drive your tired, Winter-worn motor car on a lift, - or over a pit. . . give it Complete VEEDOL Lubri- cation .. .and watch it come back to life with a bang! actual performance record. In the Graf Zeppelin. In the South Pole planes of Rear Admiral Byrd. Get this same super-quality in motor, transmission, differential and greasing... At any orange-and-black VEEDOL sign. Done strictly in accordance with car manufacturers’ specifications. Don’t delay. The vital points of your car must have correct lubrica~ tion, at once. TIDEWATER OIL SALES CORPORATION MAIN OFFICE—1225 K St. N.W. PLANT—Rosslyn, Va. Telephone Metropolitan 0158 Telephone Metropolitan 0159 —~ = e o - WMADE BY THE WAKERS OF TYDOL ETHYL AND NY.TEST Censem)- vVooi- GASONAN This is Spring! Thinned, worn-out Winter oils and greases are all in. Tired. Worked to the limit. You need fresh, and heavier lubricants on every moving part of your car. You need em now. Today. No motor oil in the world can match VEEDOL'’S Threenewcars; three proces; all Eights. Custom under $3000; Master under $2000; Standard under $z500. (4t Sactory) Peerless Motor Company 14th St. at P Decatur 3400 Open Evenings Until 10 P.M. After 6 P.M., North 9697 PEERLESS: “ALL THAT THE NAME IMPLIES®

Other pages from this issue: