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CHEVROLET SERVICE | 6I0 H ST..N E LIN(OLN '0200 FRED J. KRIEG president and eeneral of Krieg's Express and Storage Co. is new in business for_himself ‘at— 904 10th St. N.W. Storage, Packing. Mosing (padded vans) and Shippink. Phone District 9115 formerly Glasses Fitted Eyes Examined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone National 499:410 Mciachlen Bide. 10t and G Sts. Graduate MecCormick Medical College Two Rooms, Kitchen and Porch, $37.50 The Wilson 412 Fira Street SE. ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. NW. 64th Issue of Stock Now Open foy/Subscription ‘muam in the 6,000-mile derby, Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments | James F. Shea || James E. Connelly Presicert Secretary FURNITURE RENTING _ | Don’t Endure Sll'pp’ingi FALSE TEETH Do vour faise teeth drop or siip when you t laugh or sneeze? Don't {in London. | planes in the all-American Air Derby | terday from Lincoln, Nebr., | beanmnoved and embarrassed a_minute || Tonger. Fasteeth, & new. powder to sprinkle on your plater. holds teeth firm. || Gives fine feeling of security and com- fort. No gummy. gooey. pasty taste or feeling. Get Fasteeth today at Liggets, Peoples or any other drug store.—Ad- Vertisement Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 Also in Tablets T e PR Interior Paint “Acme” Quality has hard, enamel-like finish. MEtro. 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN® 607-609 C St. Phone for Color Card Why Run the Risk| of offerding others with perspiration odor When 1t 05 so. easy to save yourself this embarrassment? A dab of Odor-Sweet. a harmless snow- white cream, under each arm before You =) eet_neve, Doesn't o0 normal func- Completely neutralize icnsive odor caused from perspiration Get a 25c 3 favorite toilet yourself that it effective_deodoran at PEOPLES ODOR-SWEET The Perfect DEODORANT for fastidious people Als: e other Good” Drugeists ice. form has moved to larger pect ave. n.w. West THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- holcers «f the Potomac Insurance Company will be_held at 900-6 P street r Augiist 4. 1930, ks of stoc Sioaea Srom Juiy 51t ALEXANDER K. PHIL Piano. $40; 1o pay storage cl BTORAGE CO. 418 10th st RETURN 1OAD RATES TO AND FROM of the 1y, Let us prove we u mfu\rw a ve satisfaction "'936 Wood ward hoT BE Rrsm-mmr Fol ions contracte RANT WARNER. R LONG-DISTANCE _ been keeping fa 20 & STORAGE CO $00MS. PAPERED FOR 2 work guaranteed. Call HE: Phone_Lincoln_8565 ROOF REPAIRINC ing: best materi ing Co., North » MOVING — s Coumiey DAVIDSO! ED _RETURN LOADS From NEW YORK CITY AU From NEW YORK CITY From (liy\FLA\: : - OR - Richn points S LOAD Boston. T ebectal Tates 1317 ¥ siso_* I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS contracted by any other one ihian myself. SAMUEL | FFIT, 38 Hidee bl 5.6 AND PAINTE . " jopbing. Co.. 61 N's S ooeP st 3 Wanted—Load New York. Philadelphia. Richmond, Chlum 1i.; Pittsburgh, Pa., ond Hen- S de‘l";un”lluhulm N Y. Md. snd Harrisburg. Pa Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co,, 1313_You St __North 3343. Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity ‘The National Capital Press 1210-1212 D St. N.W.__Phone National 0650. _31¢ 33,50 esti- t.nee. Cumberland, | engaged in transporting liquor. | while standing on a street corner. | sued in the case WEDDING REVEALED BY ATTAGHE'S SON Charles M Wesson 3d, and Miss Catherine Lawrence to Reside Here. Charles M. Wesson, 3d, son of an at- THE EVENING NG | tache of the American embassy at Lon- | (don, and his bride, who was Miss Cath- lerine Lawrence of Philadelphia, are prl‘p)‘irmfl to make their home in Wash- ington, following an elopement to near- by Maryland two weeks ago. | Mr. Wesson, who is 22 years old, and his bride, 21, motored to Montgomery County on the evening of July 16 and were married by Rev. Bertram M. Os- good, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Rockville | The bridegroom'’s father is Lieut. Col Charles M. Wesson, assistant military attache at the United States embnu}'\ The son is connected with company_in this city. | an investment | The couple motored to” Rockville from | the home of friends here on the eve- | | ning of July 16, and their marriage was | known only to their immed; quaintances until today. 'DERBY PLANES OFF ON FINAL FLIGHTS Lee Gehlbach of Little Rock Still Safely in Lead Back to Detroit. By the Acsociated Press. CHICAGO, August 1.—The surviving today toward Detrojt—and the Little Rock, Ark., was | | still safely in the lead, and, barring | Lee Gehlbach, |an accident on the last lap, was as- | sured of victory. The Arkansas traveler | was three and a half hours ahead of field, Mass Bayles led the pack into Chicago yes- with a fly- ing time of 3:38:30, but he cut only 10 | sinutes off the elapsed-time lead held by Gehlbach, second in the Windy City dash. The take-off for Detroit was at 11 am. (Central standard time), with | the planes leaving at one-minute in- | tervals in the order of their elapsed- time standings. | The homing lap to Detroit ended a sweep down the Atlantic Coast, a span across the Southern States to California and backtrack over the mountains and across the Middle West. The derby be- gan July 21 and was designed as a re- | liability test for small planes. Of the 20 starters, only second-place Lowell Hayles of SprIng-‘ 10 planes | were left in the final lap. WOMAN IS ARRESTED FOR QUESTIONING IN BUCKLEY DEATH PROBE _(Continued From P‘Ir<t Page.) State Reformatory, at Ionia, where he served two and one-half years for hold- ing up a saloon. Police said Robert- son’s neighbors declared he had been shot in the back by an unidentified man The nan escaped. Police now are holding 12 gangsters, in raids since Jerry Buckley One warrant has been is- Angelo Levecchi, be- lieved by police to_have been the man who pointed out Buckley to the three gunmen who shot him, was arraigned yesterday and held without bail for examination August 8. He is charged with murder. Four of five men arrested in a raid on the home of Sam “Singing-in-the-Night- | time” Catlanotte, late “King of Detroit’s Little Italy,” in the exclusive suburb of Grosse Pointe last Sunday, were charged yesterday with murders of gangsters. Joseph Catlanotte, nephew of Sam, and Elmer Macklintwerz, accused of slaying Patrolman Barney Roth, Hamtranck undercover agent, and John Mietz. alleged bootlegger; Joe Amico and Joe Locano were arraigned before Judge Thomas M. Cotter and charged with the murder of Caspary Scibilia and Sam Parino, slain May 31 in the first out- break of the recent gang war. Biaggio Bonvonatti, also taken in the Grosse Pointe raid, still is held for investiga- tion. SEEK WOMAN IN PITTSBURGH. Former Detroit Re&ldenl to Be Ques- tioned in Buckley Probe. PITTSBURGH, August 1 ().—Pitts- burgh detectives early today were dis- patched to an apartment house in the fashionable Oakland district to question Mrs. Levy Lefgref, former De t resi- dent, concerning her movements the night of July 22 and the’ early morning of July 23. The Detcctive Bureau here said the inquiry was being made at the request of Detroit police officials in- vestigating the slayiyg of “Jerry" Buck- ley, radio announcer At the apartment the detectives were told Mrs. Lefgref was not at home. They took up & vigil on her doorstep. WINS MEDALVIN TRAINING A Philadelphia youth, F. C. Richter Ledig, won the gold medal awarded by the District of Columbia department, Veterans of Foreign Wars, ta the best advanced course candidate at the Civilian Military Training Camp at Fort Hoyle, Md., it was made known today. Ledig was presented the medal at final ceremonies at which youths pro- ficient in_athletics and citizenship re- ceived various awards EDISON WINNER ANI | boats | being overhauled | Sasebo base in readiness for duty At top is a view of wrecked houses at Puglia, near Naples, one of the hardest | hit communities in the western sector of the Italian earthquake zone. The center scene shows inhabitants of the city of Melfi living in the open in hastily erected tents after their homes had been wrecked. More than 300 lives were lost there. The lower photo, also at Melfi, shcws young victims of the disaster being carried to a Red Cross station. A and W RED WAVE SPREADS INTO SHANGHAI AS 500 STUDENTS RIOT (Centinued From First Page.) “World Phatnc He was | —— the invaders, the situation was question- able because the Nationalist forces were not strong enough even to support their own pickets. Japanese Erect Defenses. Authorities in the Hankow Japanese concession have erected barbed wire entangléments about the area. Chinese authorities have already disclaimed re- sponsibility for foreigners in Kuling, south of Kiukiang, after three day and the fate of Kiukiang itself was in doubt, although additional British gun- the Yangtze patrol Communists claimed Nationalist re- sistance in the vicinity of Nanchang was crushed. Some reporis said Red troops were advancing en masse upon Kiukiang and Kuling British naval authorities reported | their gunboat Teal was fired upon yes- terday as it was reconnoitering = off Changsha. The Teal was not damaged and did not return the fire lest she harm foreign buildings on the island which were belleved intact British sources also understood 4.000 Red troops were marching on Kiukiang and foreign residents had been warned to evacuate. Seven United States Warships. With seven American gunboats scat- tered along the Yangtze River between have been ordered to reinforce | Nanking and Ichang, American naval | authorities apparently considered the | situation did not warrant strengthening of the river patrol by adding destroyers Summering off Shantung at Chefoo or Tsingtao. American gunboats now on the | Yangtze are the Palos, at Changsha; the Monocacy, at Kiukiang; the Oahu, at Ichang; the Guam, at Hankow; the Parrott, at Nanking;, the Luwon, at Kiukiang, snd the Panay, at Yochow The gunbogt Tutuila, now at Shanghai is destined for the upper Yangtze River within ten days. Japanese naval authorities said four destroyers were being held at their n China if needed. Two hundred Japanese Marines also were standing by at Sasebo for emergency orders. Anti-Foreign Tone. Anti-foreign feeling in China has sup- plied the supporters of Communism with a readymade medium for the spread of propaganda. Dozens “of Communist newspapers, presumably financed by the Third In- ternational, have appeared throughout the country despite the efforts of the national government authorities to keep them suppressed. ) D. C. CONTESTA t TIMELY WARNING! Before the storms come let us the roof ready. We make a specialt of repaire_ thoroush, dependable ‘wor 1 roofe KOO! by Nm" | 1gofers. Call ug u Company et District 0933 Frederick C. Roop of Washington (left), who finished fifth, and Arthur O. Orange Yy Y. ' w, Williams, jr., East Providence, R, I, the winner of the Edison scholarship at West | history and other | to sa | Higher-salaried HINGT FRIDAY, STAR, WAS ‘ PICTURES TELL STORY OF QUAKE DEVASTATION | ™o, B C, QUESTION OF WHICH TO SAVE STUMPS EDISON CONTENDERS Ncarly All Decxde Flancee and Friend SIm‘uId Be Returned From Desert but Divide on Others in Party By the Associated Press \ WEST ORANGE, N. J., August 1.— “Which would you save?” stood out to- day as the biggest poser in the exam- | ination to which Thomas A. Edison sub- jected 49 boys to determine this year's | winner of the Edison college scholar- ship. The boys, one from each State an thaiDisteat Gt iColimbi. rmergrde(mrg [(cbasas i, o ueeibee Jacibeen thelr six-hour ordeal yesterday to agree | L2l PAPNC Filese T e "Ppm‘:'\ RMSALIT qusstions In chemisBy DRyalon | 03 CoSol et ol eenu o s o e compared with one dealing with an ex- \j‘gu“"f not to drive the car on country pedition stranded in a desert with a Robert H. Smith of Las Mex., was the only one who said he would save himself. “I live near the desert and I know how things are," he explained, The presence of Henry Ford in West Orange during the examination did not |abash the boys when they came to tie Vega., N, AUGUST 1, 1930. [TALY RECOVERING FROM EARTHQUAKE ‘Mlmster of Public Works Re- | ports Steady Resumption of Normal Life. | By the Associated Press. ROME, August 1.—The minister of public works reported to Premier Mus- solini today a steady resumption of normal life in the earthquake area. Minister Crollalanza submitted his seventh resume of earthquake condi- tions which indicated there was a gradual demobilization of relief forces and development of rehabllitation of the stricken towns. The report said the local population | ‘hnd been found to be in extraordinary healthy condition in spite of the lack | today returned to their homes which | ‘of sanitary and other conveniences which were wiped out by the quake. the ‘ Restoration of electric service, help ‘mInlslcr sald h: been of gri * A-3 Vacation RUINED? Suppose risht vacation fum, strikes! be sure. ood Six Be 25¢ and Will Rogers in the midst of your It may net—but you never can What will you do” Have your times ruined” Or will you thank W FUR COATS Cleaned Glazed and Stored acute BEVERLY HILLS, Calif —Kinder though Mr. Coolidge would have to get around to criticism. It's fine to just keep saying everything is great, but about the only way to prove it to peo- ple is for things 10 be great. Even our old family doctor can't fool us. We are the one that's got the stomach and we know whether its hurting or not. So Calvin hopped on the Farm Board in yesterday’s “sermonette.” The poor farmer can't get a break. Just when it looked like he would be able to sell his land for real golf courses some ' pecial prics body invents golf that you can play Cleanion uf sour in.the Kitchen sink. cart -emodeled Hot water, 3¢ everywhere. BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION ans, an ieed cold storage. = Special Prices in Remodeling Expert Workmanship Work Called for and Deliv-ien NEW ENGLAND FURRIERS Benjamin Sherman, Prop. 618 12th Street Nat. 2458 in restoring confidence. Many citizens the government experts had pronounced | safe. Movement of troops out of the | zone progressed rapidly and public rationing has ended in some towns. MlLK From Fine lnspected Herd k= question asking how much they would | RE-TESTED OUR own laboratories are the last stringent pre- caution in producing Milk so Fine that it has long enjoyed the approval of Physicians and D. C. Health Department. Your Home Deserves Thompson’s Milk iimited supply of food and water. Only three out of seven could be saved. The question supposed that the party | was composed of a brilllant scientist, 60 years old; his 39-year-old wife, whose interests were chiefly social; her 6-year- old son, the fiancee of the leader and his best friend, & person of his own age | with a_promising scientific future, and two half-breed guides, ages 58 and 32. Some of the boys relied on the rule of | “women and children first” to guide | their choice. Those who did not gave | small _consideration to the socially- || minded wife. Several decided to sacri- | fice the small boy And the aged scien- | tist on the grounds that their ages made | their use to society problematical. Near- ly all wrote that they would send out | their fiancee and the friend. Jonn Alexander of Golorado Springs | chose the scientist, the girl and his best friend, adding, “I know that my best | friend’ would get my girl out of the desert or die in the attempt.” | Robbin C. Anderson of Louisiana said, “It would seem a point of honor || the ladies, but I don't think 1| -| would. CIVIL SERVICE TESTS Commission Announces Exnmhx‘-w‘ tion of Transcribers. | The Civil Service Commission has || | announced an open competitive exami- nation for dictating machine tran- | scribers to fill vacancies in the depart- | mental service. Applications will be | received until August 26. | The entrance salary is $1,440 a year, | positions are filled | through promotion, | Age limits are 18 and 50, | P information and Appllcauonh blanks may be obtained from the Civil Service Commission, 1724 F street | northwest. picnic. ‘CONSTIPATION Feenamint | 4 A phone call or a note in your milk bottle will bring chocolate milk to you icy cold every morning or special in time for your next Chestrut 9m@aay | the cooling smoothness of CHOCOLATE MILK I is delightful! It's fresh and sweet, wholesome and pure. Chestnut Farms Chocolate Milk is made from no other ingredients than fresh milk and sweet chocolate syrup--combin- ing all the nutrition value of bot/ and c\pcul\ blended to , delicate flavor. B “at it! bring You'i. and, fln&d 100% by the District of Columbia Fealth Department. Phrone. Potomac 4000 for Service