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SCULLEN 15 NAMED K. OF C. NAVIGATOR General Assembly of Fourth- Degree Members Elect New Officers. ) Anthony 3. :Sgullen, professor of en- gineering at the Catholic University, was elected navigator of the Washing- n General Assembly Fourth Degree . . Knights of Columbus at a meeting last night in the Mayflower Hotel. He suc- ceeds J. Eugene Gallery, who has been appointed master of the fourth degree fbr the district comprising Maryland and the District of Columbia. James B. Flynn was elected to the office of faithful captain and chair- man of the lecturers’ committee, Michael Casey was chosen admiral, Frederick J. Diegelmann, scribe; Eugene C. Baczenas, comptroller; Thomas K. Gallaher, purser; John B. Coyle, inner sentinel; A. J. Merriman, outer sem- tinel. Maj. Eugene C. Edwards, past faithful admiral, conducted the installa- tion ceremonies, assisted by George Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public, ‘The American Tobacco Company invited Mr. Irvin S. Cobb to personally witness and to review the reports of the distinguished men who have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE’S famous Toasting Process and report his findings. The following is the statement of Mr. Cobb: 44 HAVE SEEN” IRVIN S. COBB Viehmann, standard , and John Hollohan and Philip A. , guards. Wililam G. Feely, State deputy of the Knights of Columbus, on last meeting of the State the United States in New Y ‘The assembly made further plans for the Columbus day banquet to be given by the Knights of Columbus of this city undcrsthg l\upleg olt :;:e Fourth Degree, Sunday evening a! e Mayflower Hotel. The banquet is being given in celebration of Columbus day and is expected to be attended by at least 500 members and their friends. Mr. Flynn, chairman of the general committee, announced that Mr. Feely will be chairman of the reception com- mittee and will be assisted by the fol- lowing past State deputies: Charles W. Darr, Leo A. Rover, Dr. H. J. Crosson, William\H. Callahan, Edward P. Har- rington, P. J. Haltigan, Dr. Charles I Griffith, William P. Normoyle, Francis P. Sheahy, Michael D. Schaefer, Maurice A. McAuliffe, James A. Sulli- van .and the present grand knights of the five Washington councils, John E. Burns, Michael J. Cook, John P. Dunn, George F. Howell and Timothy J. Quirk. Voluntary Bankruptey. Frank C. Williams, a baker, 2225 Newton street northeast, today filed & petition in voluntary bankruptcy. He lists his debts at $5,224.63 and says his assets are $40. Attorney Leonard Block appears for the bankrupt. o Dues of labor unions in India now are 4 cents a month. Says Noted Author *“The old time watch-word—‘Let the Buyer Beware’ has given way to the modern slogan * of confidence, ‘Buy in Safety,’ and this miracle was wrought by the honesty of man- ufacture which characterizes every fine American product. A notable example of the modern manufacturers’ constant desire to give the public the best is your use of the Ultra Violet Ray in the ‘Toasting’ of LUCKY STRIKE tobaccos. Anyone can see this as I have seen it on my visit to your LUCKY STRIKE Plant. It’s magnificent.” THE EVENING CHINESE NATIONALS CLAM NEW VITORY Capture of Chengchow, Held Probably True, May End Present Civil War. By the Assoclated Press. NANKING, China, October 7.—Na- tionalist government military head- quarters tonight claimed its forces under President Chiang Kai-shek had captured Chengchow from Northern rebel troops commanded by Gen. Feng ‘Yu-hsiang. Although the claim was not verified, it was regarded as probably true. If 59, it no doubt means the end of the present civil war, Chengchow, important raflroad city in Northern Honan Province, was the headquarters of Feng, who for weeks had held his ground against many de- termined Nationalist attacks. ‘The Tment announcement said Nationalist forces also had taken § ~ >~ STAR, WA§HINGTON. D. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1930. Honanfu, 50 miles west of Chengihow on the Haichow-Tungkwan “;n with a mmnmmntru majority of 100,000 soldiers to a point north of the Yellow River. An end to the present conflict has been expected ever since the recent in- tervention of Manchuria, whose troops occupied Peiping and Tientsin, forcing the retirement of Yen Hsi-Shan, Gov- ernor of Shanshi Province, from the revolutionary picture. Yen and Feng were the principals in the Northern rebel movement. After Yen's withdrawal Feng contin- ued to hold his ground in Northern Honan despite an announcement by President Chiang that the rebel general had expressed a desire to retire and surrender his army to the Nationalists, whom he had been fighting. U. S. BOAT FIRED UPON. Admiral McVay Reports 3-inch Guns on Panay Silenced Attack. By the Assoclated Press. ‘The United States gunboat Panay was fired upon early today by Chinese on the right bank of the Yangtze River, 2 miles below Havoc Rocks Beacon. A message to the Navy from Admiral Charles B. McVay, commander_of Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 Also in Tablets fhevian. ess il CITES CO-OPERATIVES Hyde Holds Price Variations .in Drought Areas Can Be Avoided. ‘The independence of co-operative pur- charges was emphasized by United farly expressed in a statement public here Saturday n, out that prices of farm feed stuffs advanced “more than justifiable in many sections.” -~ BATON ROUGE, La., October 7 (®).—| < chasing and fixed reasonable handling % States Secretary of Agriculture Hyde in a telegram yesterday to W. B. Mercier, State agricultural extension director, which said that “wide variations are noted in prices paid by farmers in the drought-stricken areas for wheat, hay and oats.” Secretary Hyde declared that “this 3{(\ be avolded if concerted action is en. His views on the situation were simi- Subscribe Today It costs only about 114 cents per day and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington’s best newspa- per delivered to you regularly g:ry evening and Sunday morn- g. Telephone WNational 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the cnd of each month. Our’ es are for cumlvp:‘:y only, W. A. Egg. . $14.60 W. A. Stove. $15.30 W. A. Nut...$14.75| W. A, Pea...$10.40 Buckwheat .. .$8.10 Coke ........$10.75 Fairmont Egg $8.25 New River Egg, $11.00 Also fireplace xindline wood. Al o a Screen full “welght susranteed " B. J. WERNER 1937 Fifth St. N.E. North 0079 made of the finest tobaccos =the Cream of the Crop — THEN =“IT'S TOASTED.” Everyone knows that heat puri- fies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows=that's why TOASTING includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. “It’s toasted” Your Throat Protection—against lrrlfctlon-cgcinsl' cough, IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday and Thursday evening over N.B.C. networks. © 1930, The American Tobacco Co., Mfras LUCKY STRIKE = the finest. cigarette you ever smoked, e THE AVENUE AT SEVENTH thhing can take the place of facts—and these facts prove the better value that’s in 2-TROUSER SUITS 53759 1—Finer hand-tailoring, and more of it, than ever offered at $37.50. 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