Evening Star Newspaper, November 14, 1930, Page 46

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON QUEST FOR NEW OFFICE IS DENIED BY ROBSION D. C.. FRIDAY, NOVEIIBER 14, 1930, AS](S $10,000 DAMAGES ::n:’“ln- fall ‘out:".lmm. e 5 n & fall on e sl I The District of Columbia and the | front of 501-3 Kennedy street Decem- Cafrits Construction Co. were sued | ber 15, 1928. She charges that the de- jointly for $10,000 damages yesterday | fendants negligently permitted & de- Ey: Marie Sweeney, 4728 Fifth street, ' fect to remain in the walk after notice | ¥ either elective or appointive,” he said. have not discussed with any one an other job.” Senator, Robsion retires December 1, | ilmaginative Police Adventurer Found In Midst of Flames Inventor of SituationsMay Be Victim of His Own VERS separate cushions, 1o your furniture! stripe, $16.50. TEST FINGERPRINT ON FATAL BLADE Portland Authorities Find when his successor for the short term takes office. Declares, After Calling on Hoover, |8Kes office. = @ o defnite plans for the future and did not know He Is Not After Elective s b l wi or Appointive Job. ye en he woul d.rnum home. Senator Robsion, Republican, Ken tucky, who was defeated in last week’s | election, said yesterday after calling upon President Hoover that he was not seeking another office. Newmye: 518 28th St. for the plaintiff. “Efficiency in Murder” was the sub- Ject of a lecture given by a private iu‘omnn detective before the Efficiency | FURNITURE Club, composed of business and pro- | Reason to Doubt Suicide of Mrs. Nelson C. Bowles. For Rent The Argonne 16th and Columbia Road N.W. 2 Bed Rooms, Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Reception Room ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION (D. C. Property Only) 6% No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the expense of renmewing. $1.000 for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets Over $23,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY Presl EDWARD C_BAL Subscribe Today It costs only about 1, cents day and 5 cents Sundays to ve Washington's best newspa- per delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- Telephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the end of each month. IT SURELY DOES RELIEVE PILES gAll Distress Vanishes Quickly | Piles are a burden to anyone, oft- times they mean days of agony— i nights of misery—Ilcss of emplo; lmenb—en(emed absence from sccial | gathe: E Get rid of piles quick and be your old energetic self again—you can re- | lieve the itching and distress promptly with Unguentine Cones. | | You can subdue the inflammation, | | reduce the swelling and be free from | | this humiliating affliction in a few days if you will follow directions that | come with each box. Unguentine Cones do help you to rid yourself of tormenting piles—by their use operations have been avoid- ed—an achi“vement of the makers of famous Unguentine—all druggists gfi Norwich Pharmacal Co., No wich, N. Y. —Advertisement. | By the Assoctated Press. PORTLAND, Oreg., November 14.— Authorities sought today to identify a fingerprint on the serrated blade of the breadknife, which Wednesday | caused the death of Mrs. Nelson C. | Bowles, 33, Portland society matron. The lone fingerprint was discovered yesterday. Police said it was located immediately below the handle of the knife and expresced the opinion it had been left by the little finger of a hand which grasped the handle tightly. They doubted it could have | been left by a person who merely had picked up the knife. The fatal wound was_inflicted in the apartment of Mrs. Irma Loucks Paris, 25, former secretary to Mrs. Bow husband, while Bowles and Mrs. Paris were present. The tragedy preceded a discussion of Bowles' al- leged friendship with his former sec- retary. Bowles tcld police his wife stabbed herseif while in the apartment kitchen to get a drink. Police refused to accept the case as one of suicide without an investigation. Friends and relatives of Mrs. Bowles said they did not believe she died by her own hand. Police were handicapped in their in- vestigation of the case, they said, be- cause the body had been removed to a mortuary and the apartment cleaned before they were notified. | FODDER-FED HORSES | in the Illinois Department of Agricul- SUFFER NEW DISEASE Corn-Stalk Poisoning of Stock Is Thought by Veterinarians to Be Effect of Drought. By the Associated Press. HERRIN, Tll, November 14.—A new disease, apparently caused by fodder, but as yet unnamed, has brought death of more than 120 horses and mules in Southern Illinois, and veterinarians and county agricultural agents are warning farmers to guard their horse stock. Dr. W. H. Welch, chief veterinarian ture, in a warning, points out that for- age, or corn-stalk poisoning, is unusually prevalent this season ana urges farmers to muzzle horses and mules used in har- vesting corn and to keep live stock from grazing in the stock fields. There is no treatment for most cases, Dr. Weich said, although a serum developed at the University of Illinois is good in eertain limited cases. More than 100 horses and mules have died from the disease in the Herrin regicn, Dr. T. M. Treece, veterinarian, sald yesterday, end reports from Benton are that morz than a score of the ani- mals have dixd there the last few weeks from such poisoning. The drought is thought to have caused a condition in fodder that is responsible. GERMAN PRINCE SEEKS JOB WITH HENRY FORD Grandson of Former Kaiser Ad- mires U. 8. and Hopes to Re- turn Should He Obtain Work. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 14.—A grand- son of the former German Kaiser has arrived in the United States to look for a job. He is Prince Louis Ferdinand Hohen- zollern, aged 23, and the second son of the former Crown Prince of Germany. His ambition is to start an industrial career under Henry Ford, he said. He came here from Buenos Aires, where he took the 18-month course offered by the Ford Motor Co., progressing from workman to salesman. Prince Louis, a dark-haired youth, more than 6 feet tall, left for Detroit immediately to see Mr. Ford. He ex-| pects to sail for home on the Bremen this week. He said he has admired the United States greatly since he visited here two years ago and hoped to re- turn in a short time, although that guéd depend on his interview with Mr. rd. Peach, cherry and plum trees in North Alabama have bloomed twice this year, due to the drought. GENERAL ELECTRIC FULL RANGE R A DIO for the same reasons that you will choose it. This ultra-modern radio combines every good quality known to radio science: —Full-Range Sensitivity to penetrate staggering dis tances —Full-Range Selectivity for hairline separation of stations —Full-Range Tone to reproduce every vocal inflection, every musical note naturally. And it is General Electric . out of the House of Magic where scientists and engineers, for years, have been making radio history. Our object always is to give our customers the best value in radio receivers. Hear it! See it! Compare it! Three extraordinary radio at ordinary prices. Come in beautiful models LOWBOY—Adistin- guished example of early American cabinet design. Harmonizes beautifully with any surroundings. Super-heterodyne ccuit, 9 cubes—four of which are acreen-grid. More selective and sensitive than any set hitherto offered to the public. Ingenuit By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 14.—The Baron Munchausen of the Chicago police | force,. Eldridge Curran, has had a new | adventurs—and it may be real. He al- ways has escaped harm, but this time he got hurt in a mysterious fire. He was found apparently unconscious and painfully burned in the bed room of his apartment. Several years ago Curran fired a few shots in the County Building and told investigators he was the target of as- sassins, who mistook him for the State's attorney. A 12-hour search by 100 policemen in the underground tunnels of the Loop ended when he admitted the story was imaginative. A few months later he reported he | was ambushed in a police car, but it | developed he had fired his own pistol at the automobile. Again he was found seemingly un- conscious on an eclevated platform in mid-Winter. Not long ago he seized a boy, beat him, fired at a supposed companion after an alleged robbery attempt, and locked the boy up. The youth testified that Curran leaped | on him without provocation, and was freed. Piremen have started an investigation | incident. “I am not a candidate for any office, | fessional women, in London recentl; SPEND THE WINTER IN SUNSHINE LAND FLORIDA Carolina and Georgia Resorts Bo e B . T Flotida P ool 8 ~The | Oranoe Carolina | Blossom Golfer _| Special New York- Florida Limited “Southern States - N el Special . Washington .. . Jacksonville ampa St. Petersbur uep apy ysng 9a auy sag sota nih Boca Grande Myers . Wini L Wes 533333333333 61 ‘61 *991 1L 1541 § 0861 30am w rate round-trip Winter Touris n_sale, daily. Loy th, '1930; January 12th and 24th, ound-trip t ts now o excursion November 15th, December 13th and 27! Pebruary 9th. March 14th and April éth, 31, One-way coach es reduced, All are special Travel bargains. Seaboard Dining Car Service is & el pleasure. Write for Booklet No. 1, “SOUTH IN WINTER Booklet No. 2, “HOTELS AND GOLF COURSES.” For further information or reservations consult your local Ticket Agent. or Telephone GEO. W. VIERBUCHEN TRAVEL National District Passenger Agent BY 0637-0638 " washingion, I TRAIN Washington, D. C. S AIR LINE RAILWAY eaboard moes fo the city. Sad pii; who forgot to put Everready Prestone, 22, in his radiator. The Byrd Anfurctic Lspedition could have told him about Ever- ready Prestone and how it keeps cooling-systems from freezing up—Advertisement. ¥ Ty Wy ALAIS ROYA TOYLAND Watch the Sky Between 11 and 12 O’clock Tomor- row Morning. See him disembark at Hoover Field between 12 and 1 o’clock---then meet him in the Palais Royal Toy- land.

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