Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. FORSTER’S DRUG STORE 1133 11th St., Cor. M, N.W, bl We are celebrating our 25th anniversary today and wish to thank our patrons for helping to make this store one of the representative ethical pharmacies of Washington, and count as measure of worth the continaed patronage of many of our original customers. We are celebrating the day by giving each purchaser a souvenir package of useful articles. Be sure to visit us today, March 6th. CHICAGO MARKET CoO. 311 7th Street N.W. NAt. 2939 ; Across From Saks on 7th Sg’areribs Tt . 1 Qe SMOKED TONGUE ;= b. 22¢ SAUSAG e, e OLEO . 125¢ : 12%¢ N [ Ib. l4e “1b. 1@e b 2le In carton MFAT..... E~G, 29¢ That Good Chicago Nut BEEF ROAS LAMB STEW 7o FRESH PICNICS BEEF 00 aeis ic) . HAMS—HAMS EGGS—EGGS dor. 22e onarni - 6. 1Qec | Franks b 16e Pork Loin Roast | BACON, Sliced STEAKS PICNICS CHUCK, 15¢ Sugar Cured Strictly Fresh SIRLOIN and ROUND Smoked Sugar Cured Spring styles. All the new € ombination leathers, etc., LU the greatest val- ues in town and long wear, See for your- Boys’ and Girls’ BOYS' OXFORDS LOW SHOES A Black or Tan $1.99 ll Sizes 11 to 514 Growing Girls’ STRAPS & TIES $1.99 Black or Tan—Sizes 6 to 2 Season’s latest styles All leather Sizes 215 to 8 Crepe Sole $2.99 HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY., MARCH :6, 1981 e Chitive: Asked to Dincoln Marriage le in June. vitefition of Kentuckians to delipatory address June 12 of giarrisge Temple, to be | opejPiney’> Memorial State | Parpburg,|Ky., on the one huwventy-fifth anniversary of tof Themas Lincoln and Nax parents of Abraham Linj | " 'min hotise the cabin in | whiage ceremony was per- | fory 12, 1806, by Rey. Jesse Heghe cabin an altar will be dlcated to prayer and map cabin was removed o Hap 1911 by the Harrods- bunclety. The grave of the mirad is also located there | beshis wite. ‘s of Delegation. T to the President and Mrattend the ceremony was | giviames Darnell of Prank- Kentucky State Parks | andiive of Gov. Flem D. | Sarer Gov. Edwin P. Mor- | rowlennings _Price, former ! Gownama; Horace G. Al- brig of national parks, and Jarberg, director of Ken- tucimorial Association. The grovmpanied to the Wi HoiKentucky del:gation in Cot Bushnell Hart, historian of Washington Bicentennial Coms accepted an invita- tiogthe dedication and also thener planned at the same timburg. Dr. Hart will also be honor at the commence- merof Centre College, Dan- villmg June, jal Fund Voted. ation of $100,000 was votfess during the last ses- slog mremorial on the site , built by Capt. James Haj. It was from this fort in Georgé Rogers Clark left on expedition to extend Anjthwest frontier. The | majmemorial was taken up by §1 and Mr. Isenberg with Sedey of the War Depart- | mefiing Aris"Commission. Mrs, Hoover were also nd the commencement erea College. at Berea, College, and to recéive from both institutions. 'CGION HALTS L FOR MURDER 1W;n.ml.i{e on Ad- 1t Killed Woman and rl in 1924, in ex K By thPress. | RWyo., March 6—Henry | Bas| formerly of Carthage, | Mo.5 murder trial yesterday {in @shioh by admitting he | killéne Rowiand Grabe and | her | daughter Genevieve, &t | Rockn 1924, | Dge V. J. Tidball fmme- | diatled him to life. imprison- | men | _Thn followed testimony by |two i the State Penitentiary, ! whodefendant had confs the jo them while all were prisq county jail. Otwitnesses, identified only 83 ¢ 4651, said Morris told him both the womsan, with wih been living, and her daugetr, bodies were found buri¢ basement of the house wheb had lived, four yesrs aftedlers. SIOTTIE WITNESS lfli‘l, on Crutches, Prose- | Forgery Case. | Ld®s, March 6 (®)—Hob- | blinghes, Lottie Pickford, sis- | ter 1} Pickford, appeared in | Munfrt yesterday to testify rmer chauffeur, Harry d of forging Miss Pick- checks. actress, wife of R. O. ood clothing merchant, cap recently in fall in he testified briefly she Tsumura permission to tream of the Atlantic te of travel of no more mt s AR | : ou Need iAny Piano Pyer yesterday was in- i ‘Army Officer S “ifl MAJOR AND TWO BRIGADIER GENERALS ADVANCED. By the Assoclated Press. ECRETARY HURLEY announced today appointment of five general | officers to fill vacancies in the Army. | Two brigadier generals and a | colonel were promoted to the rank of | major general, and two colonels were | appointed brigadier generals. Col. Blanton Winship of Macon, Ga., was_appointed judge advocate general of the Army, with the rank of major | general, replacing Maj. Gen. E. "A.| Kreger, who retired recently for phys- ical disability. Brig. Gen. Albert J. Bowley of West- | minster, Calif., was made a major gen- | eral on the general staff in place of the | late Maj. Gen. George L. Irwin, | Brig. Gen. Robert E, Callan of Balti- | more was made a major general and | general stafl officer, ranking from April | 1, to replace Maj. Gen. Charles P.| Summerall, former chief of staff, who Tetires March 31. | Col. John F. Madden of Sacramento, | Calif., will take the rank of brigadier general to be vacated by Gen. Bowley. Col. Howard L. Laubach of Allentown. Pa., now in command of the New York | General Depot, will (ke the brigadier | generalship to be vacated through the | promotion of Gen. Callan, Nearly 4,600,000 gallons of gasoline | were taken Into North China last year, | an increase of 600,000 gallons over 1929. BOSCH of New York of Minneapol PEARL UPTON “LORENZO" of Chicago thei EVA O. STERM of Chicago MYNDALL CAIN of Omaha ( Brandels Store) ¥ Upper: Col. Blanton Winship (left) and Brig. Gen. Albert J. Bowley. Left: Brig. Gen. Robert E. Callan. JULTA AKERGREN in of San Francisco TOM JAMES of Dalla APror_noted. WALES TIRED OU INBUENOS AIRES Crowds bispleased by Hurry as Long Round of Func- tions Is Begun. By the Associated Press. BUENOS AIRES, March 6.—Buenos Alres gave the Prince of Wales and his brother George one of the warmest re- ceptions of their career upon their ar- rival here, but it was the warmth of & broiling sun rather than that of an enthusiastic public manifestation, Thousands turned out to greet the two prinees when they arrived at El Palomar airdrome from Mar Del Plata yesterday afternoon, but the British heir, burned and tired from a ride in an open plane, hurried through the reception and appeared to have an- tagonized the crowds rather than to have made himself popular with them. Many Functions Wait. A long round of functions await the two brothers as they rreplu’e for the principal event of their trip—inaugu- ration next Saturday of the British trade exposition here. The Prince of Wales, shortly after he reached Buenos Alres, called on President Uriburu, who & half hour later returned the call at the British embassy. Makes Talk in panish, At a state dinner at the palace last| night the Prince replied in Spanish to the President's welcome, remarking that he and his brother were happy to | find themselves again in beautiful Argentina and to renew acquaintances he had made on a visit in 1925, He sald he considered the forthcom- ing trade exposition a remarkable event in the history of Anglo-Argentine reciprocal commerce, and he thanked the government for ald given the ex- hibition officlals. He concluded with a toast to President Uriburu’s health and the Argentine’s evergrowing pros- perity, Turkey to Aid Briand Union Work. GENEVA, Switzerland, March 6 (#). —The Turkish government has ac- cepted an invitation to participate in the work of the commission examining Aristide Briand's proposal for a union of European states. Wife No. 9 Divorced, Lyons Club Loses Another Member Mrs. Lyons Finds She Had Eight Predecessor, Court Told. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 6.— Stating she no longer wishes to be Mrs, |Lyons of Cleveland was granted a divorce and restoration of her maiden {name of Parrish by Judge Samuel H. Silbert here today. She sald she learned she was No. 9 on Lyons’ list when a woman, who pro- claimed herself Mr: to her in this wise: “Trying to be funny at a tragic time like this, I might sug- gest that we all organize a Lycns club of our ¢wn,” Miss Parrish sald she wed Lyons in July, 1930, after a seven-day courtship. She hasn’'t heard from him since he left her to pay their nine-day hcney- moon hotel bill, Mrs. E. Sydney Chipman of Glen | Rock, Pa., wrote to Miss Parrish last | November and sald she had learned wives. “I was teaching in Hawaii when we met on New Year eve, 1925 Mrs, Chipman wrote. “We were married and went ‘to California. He left me after |18 months with a 3-month-old daugh- ter. I was the eighth one he married, &s I learned cn investigation. The others he lived with only & short time.” A sister, Mrs. Kathryn la Point of Buffalo, N Y., wrote to the court that she had known no address for Lyons “for years.” The court did not learn where any of the other marriages tock place or names of any of the brides, PUCTENEEY LORD ARNOLD QUITS POST LONDON, March 6 (#).—Lord Arnold, who accompanied Ramsay MacDondld to the United States in 1029, yester- day resigned as paymaster general on account of ill health and to allow more time for devotion to his free trade and temperance doctrines. At the time of his American visit Lord Arnold was frequently mentioned as a possible successor to Sir Esme Howard as the British Ambassador at ‘Washington. ROSE of New York FRANK GERLACH of Columbus, Ohio PIERRE, of New York, whose fame as a besuty specialistis international In over 1500 American Cities famed beauty specialists urge the olive and palm oil way to keep that schoolgirl complexion And more than 20,000 beauty specialists the world over agree—a vast profes- sional endorsement unlike anything ever known in the history of beauty culture RESH, exquisite coloring. Fine, smooth, flawless skin. They can be and they should be yours, experts insist. “If women would only learn the importance of foun- dation cleansing!” one hears over and over again. And it's this emphasis on foundation cleansing that has led to the recommendation of Palmolive Soap by more than 20,000 experts all over the world. In America, alone, specialists in over 1,500 cities repeat this advice to ir patrons. To keep that schoolgirl complexion ‘With the fingertips, massage a creamy lather of Palm- olive Soap and warm water into the skin of face and throat. Rinse it off with plenty of warm water, then with cold. An ice massage is a refreshing astringent. advise it! creams. Pierre, Robert, Fred, of the St. Regis. In Chicago, you find experts like Eva O. Sterm, of the Congress, Carter, of the Blackstone, Madame Condos—enthusiastic about Palmolive. 76 of the entire 80 shops in Hollywood Why do experts make such 2 point of the value of this vegetable oil soap? The reasons are numerous: olive and palm oils, of which Palmolive is made, have been the finest cosmetic oils known to beauty science for gen- erations. They aré gentle, safe, thorough in their cleanss ing action. And—which appeals to specialists tremen- dously—this soap harmonizes with the creams and other preparations used in salon treatments. It is made of the same vegetable oils as are used in the finest of facial | Miner C. Lyons No. 9, Mrs. Lucille 8. | _yons No. 8, wrote | KIN OF PRETENDER SCORNS THRONE Brother Says' He Wl;uldn’u King, but Relative Asks Ruler to Resign. By 11> Arsociated Press, SAN FRANCISCO, March 6.~Broth- |ers of Anthony Hall, 31, whe Fecently demanded the British throne on en- | cestral grounds, disclosed today how the elder had passed up chances to dispute the right of George V. to Tule Great Britain, ' | Don A. F. Hall, 40, and Robert Eyre | Hall, 20, who are in business here, ex- plained Anthony Hall had claimed the | British throne as a descengant of an | legitimate son of King Henry VIII and a legitimate daughter of Edward I. ‘The Halls asserted the British throne |after he deserted her four years before | that he had had at least seven other, reverted to the {llegitimate heirs of |Henry VIU when the last reigning | Tudor, Edward VI, died without an heir {in 1553, and that the throme should |not have been passed to the house of |Stewart and later to the house of | Guelph, of which King George 15 a scion. Young Hall, former Californian and |now a police officer in England, wrote | King George a l:tter last February 14 asking the ruler to relinquish his title and leave England. The brothers here sald they entertained no illusions about Antheny’s chances to become King, but | were hopeful of some sort of action in connection with the claim. Don Hall, the eldest brother, waved aside his senijority with the statement he would not accept the position of a King and asserted this action put An- thony in line for the throne, The three Halls are the sons of the !]lte Ambrose George Hall. They said their father came to Ca'ifornia in 1878 2nd amassed a fortune, . Canada to Probe Grain Trading. WINNIPEG, March 6 () —The Manitoba Free Press said yesterday: “An official statement announcing the appointment of a royal commis- slon to investigate trading in slln futures will be issued by Robert Weir, minister of agriculture, within 48 hours. Weir will not discuss the details pend- ing official anncuncement.” LATRD CAMILLE of Paris-Maltrise Philadelphia. AGNESE MORLEY MULLIN] of Los Angel ! 4 GRACE SHINN of Des Moines See Your Beauty ‘That’s the home treatment ‘Why not try it for a week and see what it does for you? OXFORDS New Spring styles, in all the new com- Men’s Goodyear Welt OXFORDS Il iy o BN Growing Girls’ bination leathers. Endicott - Johnson. Sizes 6 to 12. Misses’ & Children’s SHOES 99 Hi and Lo $ You'll soon be using Palmolive for bath as well as face. Ir-costs only 10c the ¢ake, you know. Refly; Atter this GREASTIEFF SALE, theseigny terms are thdrawn, We ithin_a radius . . Think of our favorite nd new Baby -ight Plano at wn and $100 T Wt those of ap- Dumas, of New York, sug- Specialist In your own city~probably just gests. So do Emile et Paul, around the corner from you ~—there s a trained, professional expertwho is equipped to offer you the many services beauty requires. Let her do for you what only a trained person can. Corisult her regularly. I's a beauty habit that pays. BATTEL Black or Tan of Boston ROBERT BISHINGER of Pittsburgh, Pa. i 1 allowant, "t 2 g OTTO DE DONA' EVELYN CASSIDY of St. Louls of Hallywood o [Gop that ADOLPHE of Atlanta JESSICA BOURNE o bortland, Ore, Retait Price 10¢