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E DR.- CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist ne National 0321 -410 McLachlen Bldg. YRR ane G Blar N Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, echecks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three da. 2666 Also in Tablets ROACH DEATH tional 9136 616 EStN Po FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip asteeth : e O g e o feeling. - Mures ot “ana pleasant. Get Fasteeth today at | Rett’s, Peopies. or any good drug store. Advertisement. g||nl||nu|||u|||;|'|||7u|||nnn|nu||||1umnm‘:mmuuu PLUM POINT BEACH Delightful Salt Water Bathing at Chesapeake’s Finest Beach Fine Shade Pure Artesian Water E NG Home sites on gently roll- ing hills with view of bay, and with beach privileges at pre- development prices. Plum Point Beach 1125 14th St. N.W. Phone National 2034 L TR e AT Cdol Trin on CHESAPEAKE BAY | TO CLAIBORNE i Sunday, July 27 | $1.25 Round Trip From Washington. Cool and el Throurh heart of Marvland t Old Annapolis View of Naval Academy en Delightful 4-hour Trip Down CHESAPEAKE Almost out of sight of land. Leave 12th and N. Y. Ave. 11:00 AM. Home about 6:00 P.M. Good Meals on Steamer Washington, Baltimore & | Annapolis Electric R. R. Co. Rectal Irritations and Iteh Torb Suppositories are uncon- ditionally guaranteed to give | Capitol in 1793 is being used by the FORN.EA.BUILDING I Grand Lodge of Masons Offi-| ciates at Ceremonies of Association. The corner stone of the new adminis- tration building of the National Edu- cation Association at Sixteenth and M streets is being laid this afternoon | with impressive exercises. The Grand | Lodge of Masons of the District of | Columbia_is officiating, with Col. C. Fred Cook, deputy grand master, pre- siding in the absence of James A. West, grand master. United States Commissioner of Edu- cation William John Cooper is the principal speaker. Rev. George Culbert- son, assistant pastor of the New York | Avenue Presbyterian Church is giving the invocation. The program was ar- | ranged to get under way at 3 o'clock. Other speakers include Walter R.| Siders of Montclair, N. J., chairman of the board of trustees of the as- sociation; Joseph H. Saunders, super- | intendent of schools, Newport News, | Va., a member of the board of trustees | of the association, and Miss E. Rut Pyrtle, first vice president of the as- sociation. The trowel used by George Wash- ington in laying the corner stone of | the central building of the National Masons in laying the corner stone. Bible and Flag in Stone. Among the articles to go in the cor- [ ner stone were: The Bible, a United States flag, the | signature of the 3,750 life members of the association whose dues have made possible the new building, a list of of- ficers and staff of the Nat‘onal Educh- tion Association, typical publications of the association, copy of the program of the corner-stone-laying exercises, copies of the addresses made at the exercises, proceedings of the Grand Lodge of Masons of the District of Columbia dur- ing 1929, the Masonic calendar of the District of CoJumbia for 1929 and the Masonic code for 1929, ‘The new administration biulding is being erected at a cost of approximately $350,000, and is expected®to be ready for occupancy probably next February. One-fourth of the space in the new building is to e rented to organiza- tions, such as the National Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Inter- national Kindergarten Union. TO RECEIVE GUESTS Battalion at Fort Monroe Will “Spruce Up” for Reunion ‘With Homefolks. After several weeks of weather soldiering, the C. M. T. C. Battalion- at Fort Monroe will “spruce up” to- morrow for a general reunion with homefolks, when the annual visitor's day program will be held at the fort. With parents from all sections of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and ‘Washingten attending, military and athletic awards will be presented to the b‘ntullcm at the formal parade exer- clses. Among the many awards to have been donated by the District depart- | ment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Gen. MacArthur Medal to the best advanced student and the Commander- -in-Chief'’s Medal to the best basic student. The presentation of awards will be made by Gen. Henry D. Todd, jr., commanding officer of the 3d Coast Artillery district. A tour of the historic old post will | conclude the program. { JULY CUSTOMS DROP 50 PCT. FROM 1929 hot C. Officials Explain Decline by Citing Great Quantities Rushed CORNER STONE LAID THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, JULY 25 %930. PERUVIAN ENVOY The new Ambassador from Peru MEE PRESIDENT to the United States, Senmor Dr. Don Manuel de Freyre of Santander, is shown leaving the White House with Warren Delano Robbins (right), White House ceremonial officer, after the Ambassador presented his credentials to President Hoover. LADY OWEN'S MAID TRIED TO STOP ACT ~ FORMER PREMIER Failure of Phone Message Decree Calls Waldema\ras,| Appears as One of Causes of Shooting. By the Associated Press. VERSAILLES, France, July 25.—The failure of a telephone message today appeared as one of the causes of a drama of jealousy in which Lady Owen, French-born widow of Sir Theodore Charles Owen, Wednesday shot the wife of Dr. Paul Gastaud, French radiolo- ist. ki Lady Owen, who was questioned by the investigating magistrate here day, wounded Mme. Gastaud four times with a revolver. The shooting was the climax of a triangular drama. For a year she and Dr. Gastaud had had a romance. ‘While her ladyship was telling the magistrate that “the question of money ruined my romance” her maid re- counted an unsuccessful attempt to avert any accident. She said that when she learned her mistress was going to the doctor's home at Mareuil-Marly, near the sub- urb of St. Germain, she tried to warn the doctor by telephone, =he failed, and Mme. Gastaud was hit by the bullets apparently intended for the doctor. - Lady Owen accused Dr. Gastaud of having abandoned her after borrowing money from her and after promising her marriage when he secured a di- vorce. ‘The shooting capped the climax in a lengthy series of ‘“passional” crimes that has kept the public of Paris and its environs more or less excited for months. On the same day, a stenographer at the headquarters of the French Boy Scouts organization was assassinated brutally by an unsuccessful suitor. In the majority of these crimes it has been the woman who shot and the man who paid, Many of them have been blamed on the exhaustion of a woman's pa- tience or the excess of her passion. Lady Owen is supposed to have in- herited a_ considerable fortune from the titled Englishman she married. She lived in one of the most fashionable neighborhoods of Paris. Her acquaint- ance with Dr. Gastaud began when she | became his patient. 31 RADIO STATIONS ~Harris-Ewing Photo. LITHUANIA EXILES | e One-Time “Strong Man,” Danger to Order. By the Associated Press. KOVNO, Lithuania, July 25.—Prof. Augustine Waldemaras. former premier and virtual dictator of Lithuania, has been banished to an unnamed provin- clal town by order of the commandant of the Kovno district. The one-time strong man of Lithu- ania, who on more than one occasion caused the whole machinery of the League of Nations at Geneva to halt while he fought to regain Vilna, now a Polish city, for his country, was pro- nounced “a danger to public order” in the decree of deportation issted by the commandant. The authorities declined to divulge the name of the place to which the former premier was exiled. Motor lor- ries removed his belongings from his home, which was sealed. Led Independence Fight. Prof. Waldemaras’ political career be- gan in 1917, when he took part in a congress of Lithuanian leaders in Len- ingrad, then St. Petersburg, and led the faction, which stood for Lithuanian independence. During the bloshevik revolution he escaped to Berlin, where he became in- terpreter for the Ukranian legation. His knowledge of nine modern besides Latin and Greek soon made him an indispensible factor at the legation, and he cleverly used his position to make propaganda for a free Lithuania. At the Versailles Conference in 1919 he was the official representative of his fatherland. He was deeply gricved, however, when Vilna was awarded to Poland. From now on the fight to establish Lithuania’s claims to Vilna became his absorbing object in life. Premier in 1926, Waldemaras became premier in 1926. His clashes with Marshal Joseph Pil- sudski and Foreign Minisier August Zaleski of Poland enlivened the se: | sions of the League of Nations for se! eral years. His professional disquisi- tions “on the historical development of Vilna, on the other hand, caused ex- | asperation in League of Nations circles anxious to get on with business, Meanwhile, he was able to main- tafn himself at home only by running the country under a dictatorship. This | languages | i HLLER 5 NAVED TOVETERANS PLACE 1. 0’Connor Roberts Is Made | Special Assistant to Administrator. Proceeding further with the organi- zation of the new veterans' administra- tor of the Veterans' Bureau and in this Adelbert D. Hiller, for the past four years assistant to the director of the Veterans’ Bureau, has been appointed assistant to the administrator of vet- erans’ affair, and J. O'Connor Roberts, formerly assistant general counsel of the Veterans' Bureau, will be special assistant_to the administrator of vet- erns’ affairs to handle matters per- taining to legislation, appeals and consolidation. Discharged from his World War serv- ice as a commissioned officer, Mr. Hiller came to the Veterans' Bureau in 1919 and served as chief of the statistical division until his appointment in 1926 as assistant to the director. He is a native of Massachusetts, where he was graduated with the degree of bachelor of science from the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. Mr. Hiller is a member of the Stuart Walcott Post of the American Legion. Mr. Roberts has served in various capacities in the Veterans' Bureau since June, 1919. A native and resident of the District, Mr. Roberts served two years in the World War, mostly over- seas, and also studied law at the A. E. F. University, at Beaune, France, com- pleting his studies at Georgetown Uni- versity upon his return and being | admitted to the District bar in Octo- | ber, 1922, In January, 1925, Mr. Roberts was made_legislative adviser to the direc- tor of the Veterans Bureau and in this capacity has participated in the formu- lation of practicaily all legislation in behalf of World War veterans since that time. He was appointed assist- ant general counsel of the Veterans' Bureau in 1926. Mr. Roberts is past commander of Stuart Walcott Post of the American Legion, past grande chef de gare, Forty and Eight, the American Legion, D. C., and is department judge advocate of the American Legion, D. C. He is a member of -the American Bar Asso- ciation and the Federal Bar Association. 'ROUSSEAU FUNERAL WAITING ON WIDOW | Body of Rear Admiral Who Died on Duty to Be Landed at Charleston. Funeral arrangements for Rear Ad- miral Harry H. Rousseau, 3238 R street, | who died aboard the Cristobal yester- day while en route to the Canal Zone, will be completed upon the arrival here | from Maine shortly of his widow, Mrs. Gladys Fargo Rousseau, the Navy De- partment_announced today. The Cris tobal will put in at Charleston, S. C., for the body to be landed. At the time of his death Admiral Rousseau was on the way to the Canal Zone on Navy business and to consider problems _in connection with the Panama Raiiways, of which he was director. ~ Admiral Rousseau was 60 years old. Admiral Rousscau once acted as a co-receiver of Government oil lands during the Elk ‘Hills naval reserve scandal and was made a rear admiral by an act of Congress because of his work on the Panama Canal. He was director of the naval petro- leum reserves as well as chief co- | ordinator of the Bureau of the Budget. He had been in excellent health, and reports to the Navy did not divulge | the cause of his death. | Admiral Rousscau served for three | years as a receiver of the Elk Hills | reserve and because of his familiarity | with the problems later became direc- tor of all naval petroleum reserves. As a member of President Roose- { velt's Isthmian Canal Commission he had charge of considerable construc- tion and after the workers had over- come maleria and finished the project he took charge of the design and con- struction of the Canal terminals, dry- Some on Broadway Would| | the mail they | worried look from his face. | “l Want to Think | Can Al-| ways Return, Even if in Disgrace,” He Says. Ruin Him for a Few Dol- lars, Crooner Asserts. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. BOSTON, Mass., July 25 (N.AN.A). ~—Obsessed with the fear of some'im- pending disaster, Rudy Vallee, radio® laughed Wednesday night at Marlboro, Mass,, but that was the showman. He is nervous e He works and plays under a strain. Broadway has left a mark on him which he cannot erase, until he | bids Broadway good-by forever. And he doesn't want to do it. | “I have enough money.” he told the people of his home town, Westbrook, Me., the day before. “I could retire to- morrow. But I want to go on working. There is happiness in music if you put | happiness into it, and I want to go on | doing that. But I think that if I knew, a few years ago, of fame's drawbacks | and the price one must pay, 1 would | have hesitated before accepting it. I| might have taken :. different course. | Likes Crowds of Friends. | “I am not referring to the crowds around me or the people who rush me | to shake hands. I love that. It makes | me feel thdt I am bringing to people some happiness in life. I love to read send me, folks whose days are spent gazing at a ceiling. I love to put more and more into music | for them. It isn't the envious orchestra leaders who sometimes go out of their way to make trouble for me. I don't mind them. Most of the leaders are my friends. Paul Whiteman is one of my best friends. “I am referring to a power which I cannot combat. Fame has brought a féar of disaster, and no matter what happens I want to think I can come home to you, even though in disgrace, and always find a welcome here.” Roar Welcome to Him. Maine men and Westbrook _citizen: roared their intentions of always wel- | coming him, but it did not take the| Speaking | before the University of Maine men, who honored him last week, Rudy | touched again on the fear of disaster. Speaking later_before 600 of the men and women of Westbrook, he went even further, “I am referring to a power somewhat akin to that of the Columnists, who | continually dig at me and poke fun at me,” he said. “I mean a greater power than that, a power that is continually searching and seeking for something to | twist and turn and sensationally print for a_monetary gain, regardless of the cost to me or my family. There are men in New York, who would stop at nothing to drag down one who has achieved fame. Says Maine Folks Called “Hicks.” “On Broadway they call us folks from Maine hicks. I hope youll never change, never lose that home spun | simplicity, that honesty and character of small-town people. In New York, people live in a world bound in by subways, high buildings, ferry boats and noisy whistles and roars. They live at a tension. They know nothing of the leisurely existence of the small town. We're hicks. Don't ever change. Your'e honest, you're sincere, you have a simplicity ‘they can not appreciat, but those of us who have known it, love it. “I am going to keep on working as |X always have and I'm going to come back home again. I hope I'll always have a weicome here, ‘even though return bruised and bleeding. They're out to crucify me and they are men { who would crucify me in a minute fo: a few dollars. They might ruin me, they might kill my mother and father, | but it means nothing to them if they | can get a few hours publicity and a few thousand dollars gain. { Fears the Crucifivion. “I love to work. I want to work, but I fear the crucifixion that certain ones | are trying to give me. “Don't you change! Don't your lose your simplicity. No matter what comes greatest crooner, played and sang and | RUDY FEARS “CRUCIFIXION," HE TELLS MAINE HOME FOLK RUDY VALLEE, VOLUNTARY WORKERS | SEEK NOISE MAKER Bring Out Squad of 110 From Abatement Commission. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, July 25.—One hundred and ten voluntary members of a “se- cret service noise squad” prowled the by laws of the city last night.to guard the slumber of din-disturbed New ‘Yorkers. ‘They were under instructions from the Noise Abatement Commission to hale flagrant violators of the new anti-noise ordinances before the police. These si- lent and unidentified partollers will be |on duty by night and by day—in shifts -and will cover the whole city. In the words of Edward F. Brown, director of the commission, “they are not snoopers in any sense of the word, but honest, fearless and competent cit- izens, who are confident that flagrant noises are a detriment to health, and know how to aid in the abatement .of the nuisance.” POLITICIAN BLINDED BY EAENYS 101 |Little Hope Felt for E. J. Den- i nis, | South Carolina State Senator. By the Associated Press. MONCKS CORNER, S. C., July 25— Political hostility that has existed for | years in Berkerley County today was | blamed for the shooting of State Sen- | tor E. J. Dennis, “bosy” of “Hell Hole" politics With election day only a few weeks . Dennis s in a Charleston_hos- with little hope to live. If he s he will be blind for Iif Buckshot fired at him yesterday as | he was purchasing a watermelon pierced his brain and optic nerve. Dennis active in fighting moori- shining in “Hell Hole,” a name applied to the county because of its numerous feuds and wldespread liquormaking He has campaigned vigorously against it. Dennis told Gov. John G. Richards | In Columbia recently that he had been | warned by political rivals that he was | & “marked man.” W. L. Thornley, a young Moncks | Corner man, is being held in the State | penitentiary, in Columbia, charged with | the shooting. | Witnesses said he drove up near the | market, parked his car on the opposite |New York Anti-Noise Ordinances|side of the street, got out, leveled a shotgun across the hood of the machirie | and fired at Dennis. He then drove off. i i | SAMUEL W.-NOWLIN HURT Kensington Man Injured When Car Hits Viaduct Support. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. SILVER SPRING, Md., July 25.—His car crowded against a support of the Georgia avenue railroad viaduct last night by another automobile which failed to stop, Samuel, W. Nowlin, 40 years old,' of Kensington, Md., was injured. At Walter Reed Hospital, where he was taken for treatment, physiclans seid he was suffering from a brokén rib and probably from internal in- juries. His condition is thought to be not serious. A copy of Capt. John Smith's “Gen- eral History of Virginia,” published in London in 1624, was soid in that city recently for nearly $7,000. The Bank that Makes You a Loan with a Smile The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair —it is not necessary to have had an accou For each $60 or Jraction borrowed Easy you agree to de- sit $5 a month in an account, the {roceedx of whic may be used to cancel the note when due. Deposits may be made on a weekly, semi- monthly or monthly basis as you prefer. $540 $1,200 $6,000 nt at this Bank to borrow. to Pay Monthly Deposit For 12 Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing ap l;cation— with few escep- tions. MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year, rhou’h they may be ven’]})rrm:ng o; to 12 months. $45.00 $100.00 $500.00 MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W. ““/Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit™ ’ Originators of the BUDGET- BUYING PLAN in Washinkton relief or your money will be I hope there’ll always be a welcome for refunded. If vour drugrist does not have end one dol- | PUT ON PROBATION | brought him much enmity. | docks, plers and other essentials. Con- h { In May, 1920, he had a narrow es- | gress then elevated him to the rank of | me here.” P | cape from death when a bomb was|rear admiral. Only two other men| The fact that every one in his home have been thus honored by Congress— | town smiled at him and greeted him thrown at his party as it was about to enter the siate theater here. His warmly seemed to please Vallee ex- in Ahead of Tariff. OPEN ALL DAY | Excessive Deviation From Assigned ith worth-while Many motorists think oil is oil, until they get acquainted with Autocrat Motor Oil, then they appreciate the difference. Nothing is more important than thorough lubrication. AUTOCRAT—The oil that is ~aiflerent from all others. Beware of Substitutes, Try Autocrat the next time judge its advantages for vourself. Dealers QUART BAYERSON OIL WORKS you need oil, and At the Better 3m COLUMBIA 5228 Gc; " Vgrood TAN . 18 were held responsible for the de- | By the Associated Press. Customs collections for the first 23 days of July declined about 50 per cent, as compared with the same period of last year. Efforts by importers to get their | products into this country before the | Dew tariff duties went into effect June crease by offictals. Duties collected in the first 23 days of June, 1929, were $37,521,584. Th this month have totaled only $18, 347.268. Customs officials, however, expressed no concern. They pointed out that just | before the tariff act went into efiect, | approximately $30.407,000 was collected :nn impors, | have been spread over a long period. | That brought the total collection for | the 1930 fiscal year to $588,000,000, or | | 81,000,000 less than the previous fiscal | year. - Treasury estimates have esti- | | mated customs receipts for the present | | fiscal year at $585,000,000. | Officials said one reason they were { not alarmed over the July decrease was {that a large quantity of imports was | ! held for appraisal under new duties and | eventually would come n. { SHRINER CABLES $1,000 | FOR EARTHQUAKE RELIEF| Imperial Recorder Price at Rich-| mond Acts Under Instruction of Order's High Official. the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va,, July 25.—James H Price. imperial recarder of ths Ansfant Arabic Order, Nobles of the Mystic| Shrine, today cablea 81,000 1 Fruner | | Mussolini of Italy on behalf of his or-| ganization to be used in immediate | carthquake relief work. | | Mr. Price, wso is Licutenant Governor of Virginia, said he had acted under in- | | struetions from the imperial potentat: Shrine, Esten A. Fletcher, of ster, N. Y L% WITHOUT BURNING! OW you can get a nice, smooth healthy tan without painful sun- burn or dangerous blistering. Simply apply Noxzema Cream before expo- sure. It forms a protective film over the skin and keeps it cool and moist. And if, because you haven't taken this simple precaution, you do get burned—apply Noxzema as promptly as possible. It ends the pain instantly, prevents blisters and quickly heals the burned skin. Noxzema is absolutely greaseless and will not stain the clothing. Geta jar today at any drug or department store—take it with ’1 to the beach. ¢ 2 ott T Frequencies Is Principal Cause of Complaint. After weeks of secret investigation the Federal Radio Commission has placed on probation 31 broadcasting stations who face possible revocation of their licens: for failure to adhere strictly to the terms of the radio laws Bombarding these stations with blanket charges of infractions of both technical and legal provisions of the | law, the commission has issued to them | Resident of Washington for 93 | temporary licenses which expire on Oc- | tober 31. Before then these stations which ordinarily would | Must stand hearing, at which they will | Died Wednesday. be required to show cause why their licenses should not be revoked “‘Wobbling,” or excessive and per- sistent deviation from assigned frequen- cles, which causes heterodyne interfer. ence, is the leading cause of complaint, The stations given temporary licenscs are WBRE, Wilkes Barre, Pa.;. WCLS, Joliet. Tll.: WCOA. Pensacola, Fla.; WDAE, Tampa. Fia.; WELL, Battie Creek. Mich.: WGOM, Gulfport. Miss.; WHEC, Rochester, N, WKBO, Jer- sev City; WKBQ, New York Cit WMAC, Cazenovia, N. Y.. WLTH Brooklyn: WMAN. Columbus, Ohio; WMAY, St. Louis; WMBJ, Wilkins- burg. Pa: WMBQ. Brooklyn; WRBI, Tifton. Ga.; WSMB, New Orleans WRL, Woodside, Y.: KBPS. Port- land. Oreg.; KFQ' Scattle, Wash. KFUL, Galveston, Tex.; KGAR. Tuc son, Ariz.; KGBZ, York, Nebr.: KGFG. Oklahoma City, Okla.. KGMP, Elk City, Okla.: KMPC, Beverley Calif.: KTRH, Houston, Tex.. KVOA Tucson, Ariz.; KTNT, Muscatine. Towa; WEVD, New York City, and WODA Paterson, N. J. (Copy#izht, 1830, by Consolidated Press.) Segrave Estate $82,000. LONDON, July 25 (#).—The estate of the late Sir Henrv Segrave, who lost_his iife when his power boat Miss land I upset in Lake Windermere ast month, was $82,000, it was an- nounced yesterday. I' SUBMARI The V-5, one of the largest ships of her type and first of the Navy's new “submarine cruisers,” shown durin, ncetown, Mass. The V-5 has a cruising -of 15,000 miles and IN SPEED | aide de camp and his stepson were killed. | His fall from power came last Sep- | tember, when the general elections | failed te give him a majority. His! entire ministry resigned, Andjuozas Tubells succeeded him. RITES FOR G. B. TOWLES | | HELD THIS AFTERNOON Years, Civil War Veteran, Funeral services for Gilbert B. Towles, 93 years old, who dicd Wednesday, were held this afternoon at St. Stephen’s and Incarnation Church, the rector, Rev. George F. Dudley, officiating. In- | terment_was private. | _Born here in 1837, Mr. Towles was a Civil War veteran and an Army officer. Attached to the White House honor guard, he personally assisted in_the presidential inauguratiors of both Lin- coln and Cleveland. The state funeral of Henry Clay, the famous Kentucky | statesman, was one of his most vivid ! boyhood recollections. | A lifelong attendant of the Episcopal Church, Mr. Towles for 35 years was a member of St. Stephen's and was the first senior warden under the present rector. He was also a member of King | Solomon Masonic Lodge, No. 31. | His widow, Mrs. Caroline G. Towles, urvives. The Towles residence is at 3358 Eighteenth street. | Bowling Row Brings Fine. BERLIN, July 25 (#).—Debarred from proving that a friend is the greatest ! idiot in Europe, Walter Teichmann, a | dentist, is out $7.50. He and Hans| Martens, a teacher had a wordy row at | a bowling match. Prosccution for slan- | der ensued. The defendant pleaded his | remarks were true. Tne court held | proof was impossible and imposed a fine. TE { gold watch and three cuff links, specd mm.uuuunwuh:x: eling. Robert E. Peary, discoverer of the North | Pole, and, Richard E. Byrd, South Polar | explorer. McCENEY HOME ROBBED Burglars at Silver Spring Take Watch and Cuff Links. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. SILVER SPRING, Md., July 25.—The burglary of his home near Four Cor-| ners by thieves, who entered by cutting a hole in a window screen and stole a was reported to police here last night by Samuel McCeney, an employe of the State Roads Commission. He told police he valued the watch at $60 and the cuff links at $5. The rob- bery was committed yesterday while he was away from home, Mr, McCeney de- clared. MARRY ON VATICAN SOIL Americans Have in Chapel in St. Peter's Basilica. VATICAN CITY, July 25 (/). —Wal- ter John Q'Neil of Omaha. Nebr., and Mary Katherine Hart of Gloversville, Y., were married on Vatican sofl Wednesday. The ceremony took place at St. Joseph's Chapel, in the Bascilica of St. Petet’s. Ceremony 10 Degrees Cooler i “Fort Stevens Ridge” A group of six new English-Type Houses Just Completed Price, $8,100 Semi - detached - six rooms, hardwood floors and trim, ttled bath. built-in tub with shower: built-in garage: unusually large kitchen and cellar. Chain Stores. Schools, Churches. Drug Stores and Street Cars are all within a r of two blocks. Drive out dnd see our Sample House at 829 Tuckerman Street N.W. HARRY WARDMAN Builder and Owner 1437 K St. NW. District 3830. 4PILE o1 PILES this quick, easy way and_unguents of PILE-FOE dra 1l pain and soreness. Brings | Tellet. Money-back guarantee. §1 Peoples PAINFUL IACHING Photo. ¢ | jrritation promptly, what you need is ceedingly. He spoke of the boys with | whom he had quarrelled when he was ja youngster, boys who had “buried the | hatchet” ‘He seemed to yearn for the weck for the first time since he left home five short years ago. He talked of the things he would not write about in his very straight-forward _story of his life, “Vagabond Dreams Come True.” But, like the showman e is, he went immediately from that mood to en- tertainment. He smiles, a carefree boy before his orchestra. He seems to forget thes» worries and obsessiens in his music. But away from the (heater, the studio. the dance hall, the fear grows cn him again and he strains beneath it. (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- Dpaper Alliance b 904 10th St. N.W. Storage, Packing, sI TICE CREAM FOR Fresh Peach and Fresh Banana DRIVE OUT TO McKEEVER BROS. Kensington, Md. REFRIGERATION $195 Up —is the coldest of domestic re- frigerants known—thrifty and entirely automatic—no work or worry. Made by the makers of Made to Suit All Requirements— DOMESTIC SERVICE CORP. 1706 Conn. Ave. Phone Potomac 2048 Wm. H. Gottlieb, Manager To stop the itching and soothe the H * ATURDAY Specials ;;vemals that ace very special for the one-day only... come downtown tomerrow ... to HERZOGS AND V ON. THE ITEMS BELOW. ————————————————————————— I All Specials From Our Regular Stock I White Flannel Pants, $10.00 and $12.50 L S Sennit Straw & Ofi All Hats for Saturday. . ‘hair Sport ~ Coats, camel ds, $18.50 and tweeds $22.50 value. Sat- Fancy and Plain-color Pa- urday only with or without col- elastic waistbands; all $ poirs 5‘2‘"5 %l;?? 31-49 “Saturday Only MANHATTAN Union Suits Athletic e 69c 2 for $1.25 * Saturday Only Blue Serge & Pin Stripe All-Wool PANTS 2 sUITS 52 55 $40 Values * Satur day Only Tropical] Worsted SUITS '16 $27.50 & $30 Values Rayon, Broadcloth and Ma- dras Underwear, . pull-over shirts and shorts; 3 69c - fancy and plain col- shape ors. 2 for $1.25. W, Ties (full 35¢ - Beach four - in - hands), color warranted. 3 for $1.00. Extra Light-weight light colors; Golf Hose, fine quality rib; plain colors. Saturday P TR RRRA * Saturday Only Reg. $2, $2.50 & $3 SHIRTS §7.49 Broadcloth _and Madras, in_ plain color and 3,ter o1 HxR20G F Street at Q4