Evening Star Newspaper, March 10, 1931, Page 11

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() spEcIAL’ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGION, o, 1931, D. TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1 home he it time for any | ¢ ‘ ' @ i ANU]‘HER Pfll[ 'I'RIP MOTHER’S DAY DISPUTE BRINGS - 'GEOHBE- LIVINGSTON |Emciticsa ™ » = * == fi&%‘ B "oty smount - over| LICENSED TO WED . THREAT OF SUIT BY FOUNDER tispoFig Bars Ty Ibl.foruf are cheap now. Fix them in any style, but be sure you give them flavor with LEA & | First Mortgage Loans ‘You've the kind of security that really secures when you invest in our 6% First Mortgages. Im- been conservatively appraised. May be purchased in amounts from $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. National 2100 |} tne PLANNED BY BYRD Admiral Indicates He Would Like to Make Further Ant- arctic Explorations. By the Assoclated Press. MIAMI, Fla., March 10.— Rear Ad- miral Richard Evelyn Byrd, aerial con- queror of polar wastelands, is planning (nnothcr voyage toward the South Pole for further explorations, he announced yesterday. Byrd said no date had been set for the second voyage, but it will not be started until after scientists who ac- companied him on his first exploration have completed their work. This, he said, will take from eight to nine months. Neither would he name the goal of second expedition, but indicated it { would take him back to the Antarctic. He said: “There is a vast unexplored area on the other side of the South Pole about which nobody knows. It may be another continent and I am anxious to find out.” The region, Byrd continued, might be approached from South America or from Africa, with the lower tip of the fomer continent about 2,000 miles nearer the unexplored country. Airplanes would be the mode of travel best suited to the trip, he said, and he shought a base such as that in Little America would have to be estab- lished. HOSE STRIKE GROUP ROWS WITH POLICE A Woman Suffering with Arthritis writes “Mountain Valley Mineral Water rogress of my Arthritis, ¢ pain and sleeplessness. be without it.” For fifteen years Mountain Valley Water has been wsiving relief to sufferers in Washington with Arthritls, Neuritis and Rheumatism, Phone Metropolitan 1062 for free booklet. Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Arkansas 306 District National Bank Bldg. Lubricating Service $'1 .00 1—Lubricate chassis completely—37 Aittings. 2—8pray Springs with penetrating oil. Above Price Includes Material Steuart Motor Co. 6th at K N.W. Natl. 3000 Never Closed Yourmoney back it not. ré- 85c lieved by one swallow of 60c THOXINE ‘Watch Results You will drive longer upon Autocrat than you have ever dared to drive upon any other oil, and it drains from the crank- case with all the “look” and “fec]” of an oil that has gone hardly 100 miles. Try Autocrat the next time you need oil, and judge its QUART BAYERSON OIL WORKS COLUMBIA 5228 advantages for yourself. ROACH DEATH CRACK-SHO Tl 89 4o [ CAPS | ‘WILL STOP BOBBED HAIR NEURALGIA and all Headaches Why Suffer! Get a Package tod, of yous Druggise”. Fifty Injured, Two Severely, After Court Enjoins Acts of In- timidation. By the Associated Press. PHILADLEPHIA, March 10.—Hoslery strike sympathizers and police clashed again last night shortly after Common Pleas Court had handed down a de- cree upholding the strikers’ right to picket, but restraining them from “acts of violence, threats and intimidation.” The disorder occurred in front of the Strahan hosiery mill in the Kensington district, where more than 200 strikers and their sympathizers had congre- gated. Before the crowd was dispersed 78 persons, including 15 women, had been arrested, charged with inciting to riot. About 50 suffered cuts and bruises, and two were injured so severely they required hospital treatment. The authorities said the trouble started when some one threw a stone at four policemen who were arguing with: a group of pickets in front of the mill. The court’s decree yesterday granted an injunction to the owners of the Apex hosiery mill, one of the storm centers in the strike. After the decree was issued officials of the American Pederation of Full-fashioned Hoslery Workers announced that picketing would continue at every mill where a strike is in progress. TWO CAPITAI: MEN HURT IN MARYLAND CAR CRASH Pair Identified as Silas Cornwell and Norman Pulliam in Hos- pital—Quiz Started. Spectal Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md.,, March 10.—Two ‘Washingtonians were seriously injured today when a taxicab in which they were riding was in collision' with a tour- ing car on the Belair road near Kings- ville, Md. When extricated from the wrecked taxicab by State Policeman George Fauth and several motorists, the two men were unconscious. Patrolman Fauth rendered first aid to the victims of the crash pending the arrival of the Cockeysville ambulance. The injured were taken to the Johns tatively identified as Norman Pullia: and Silas Cornwell, both of Washin, ton. Cards in Cornwell's pocket indi- cated that he was licensed to operate a taxi. Physicians seid that Cornwell had a probable fractured skull and Pulliam was believed to have been injured in- ternally. Police later learned that Cornwell lives at 337 C street northwest. Puliam is said to live at 1919 Calvert street north- west. They are believed to have been returning from Philadelphia when the crash occurred. State police began an investigation of the accident. GAITHERSBURG DI\HDED ON FIREMEN’S TAX LEVY Pubic Meeting Unable to Agree on 5-Cent Impost—Petition to Be Circulated. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md., March 10.—Dis- cussion at a public meeting in the Gaithersburg High School building Saturday evening of the advisability of asking the Legislature, now in session at Annapolis, to authorize a special tax of 5 cents against Gaithersburg district property to raise funds toward support of the Gaithersburg-Washington Grove Volunteer Fire Department developed such marked difference of opinion that, in the opinion of Frank B. Severance, who presided, little or nothing toward furthering the project was accomplished. It was stated by & member of the fire department today, however, that the | matter will not be droppéd, but will be { pushed promptly and vigorousiy. It is derstood that members of the de- nt plan to circulate petitions the taxpayers of the district calling upon the mayor and council of | Gaithersburg to indorse the mavement | par | among | tion' is taken by that body the Legis- { lature will be called upon to enact the 3 lation. hat the proposed 5-cent e about $2,000 a year, he annual appropriation ty and the proceeds of the v encfits staged by the de- partment, would incure sufficient funds | 10 permit the organizat'on to function {in a business-like way and place it on a solid financial basis. |SISTERS ARE MARRIED AT DOUBLE WEDDING Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md, March 10—~A double wedding in which the brides were sisters, wes_solemnized here Saturday Hopkins Hospital, where they were ten- | evening by Rev. Bertram M. Osgood of the Baptist Church. The couples were Miss Emma C. | Rhodes and_Henderson Swain, both of | Middleburg, Va., and Miss Ruth Virginia | Rhodes of Middleburg and Wilbur W. | Utterback of Lenah, Va. The ceremony | was performed at the parsonage, the | couples leaving immediately afterward | for Washington. Dr. Osgood officlated at the marriage of two other cut-of-county couples here on Saturday. They were Leonard F. Brown and Miss Virgie Lee Day, both of Fredericksburg, Va., and Jake B. Rothgeb of Shenandoah, Va., and Miss Mabel L. Vetters of Lynchburg, Va., both ceremonies taking place at the home of the minister, Incorporator Files Protest Against *Commercialization” by Golden Rule Foundation. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 10.—The ques- tion of whose Mother's day it is any way threatens today to become an issue. | tU The Golden Rule Foundation had a luncheon today to arrange for “better observance” of the day, which falls this year cn May 10. Miss Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia, claiming to be the founder, incorporator and copyrighter of Mother’s day, has filed a protest against “com- mercialization” of the occasion. She has advised the Golden Rule Founda- tion she may bring suit unless its plans for “better observance” are dropped. Charles V. Vickery explained that the Golden Rule Foundation, of which he is president, secks funds from the children of those whose mothers are dead, to be uneg for living motheérs who are desti- Miss Jarvis maintains that the time for the Golden Rule Foundation to raise funds was én Golden Rule Sunday last December. A controversy some years ago de- veloped the fact that Prank E. Haring of South Bend, Ind., and Mary Towles Sasseen Wilson, a Kentucky school teacher, each claimed to have founded Mother’s day long before Miss Jarvis. e s Nine-tenths of the busses now used in Algeria are from America. rom, NEW YORK AVENUE ot Fll @ Keeping Washington Men Well Dressed @ - THEE Actual examination is necessary really to appreciate the con- servative lines and the long life leathers of this medium- weight Oxford. Dis- tincton and comfort are one in lasting grace and snug roominess. The hall- mark of good breed- ing is in this John- ston & Murphy shoe. Made in both Dull Calf and fine Russia Calf. $12.50. NVOY New York Avenue at Fifteenth quisitely fine Spring Topcoats COMFORTABLY WARM Wz chilly breezesblow you will enjoy a snug warmth in your new Spring topcoat. A wonderfully va- ried assemblage is presented here for your selection. Ex- of them imported and all tailored with painstaking skill and accuracy, to meet the critical requirements of gentlemen. $70 to $135 Bk Bty 1o fabrics, many New York Avenue at Fifteenth his ‘Washington previous maintained a Summer home at Cobourg, | special m He also served on| Ontario, and a Winter home at Town- | ol imj it committees when serv- send, McIntosh County, Ga. ing as commissioner. He was born at Cold-Spring-on-the-| He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi ‘Hudson, N. Y. in 1854, and was edu- | Fraternity, Alpha Delta Phi Club, Delta cated _at the College of the City of|Alpha Fraternity, Ontario Jockey and New York. He was a member of the|Toronto Hunt Clubs, the Congressional first board of governors of the Con- | Country Club, Chevy Chase Citizens’ gressional Country Club here, and served Columbia Historical So- as a school trustee in New York in|ciety and the Washington Episcopal 1886-1890. Following this he was|Church. He is survived by his widow, George {ivingston of WashingtonqSchol commissioner for 12 vears and | Lily A. Livingston. e o et ot ppne] Commissioner of public works in the o . Borough of Manhattan for some time. works in the State of New York, died | As school commissioner and chairman | Sir Flinders Petrle, the Scotch at Sayannah, Ga,, yesterday, according archaeologist, is entering upon the of the Committee on Legislation he to word received here. Mr. Livingston’s ' had introduced in the New York State fiftieth year of his excavations. Marriage Permits Issued at Marl- boro to' Two Couples. By ® Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md,, March 10, —Licensed to_marry was issued here | yesterday to Willis Fillebrown, 63, of | Fredericksburg, Va., and Elizabeth | Brown, 60, of the same city. Carl Au- | brey Nelson, 23, of Washington, D. C., and Oline Melissa Gormley, 18, of Uni- versity Park, Md. Tariff duties of automobiles im into England last year averaged - car. DIES IN SAVANNAH Washingtonian Formerly Was Pub- lic Works Commissioner of New York State. NEWS FLASH Miss Nichols' instruments recorded temperature of 55° below 2ero— and yet Amoco-Gas and Ameco Motor Oils and Greases functioned perfectly at all times. uth Nichols witng Amoco Products el new altitude . record for women, [ TAKING off frem Jersey City Airport on March 6, Miss Ruth Nichols soared to a higher altitude than any woman flier ever reached before. . Miss Nichols’ four altimeters recorded a height of 30,054 feet, 2,636 feet above the present woman’s record. The instruments are now at the Bureau of Standards in Washington for checking and official confirmation of this record is expected in a few days. Miss Nichols used Amoco Products exclusively— Amoco-Gas (Aviation Grade) and Amoco Motor Oils and Greases—just as she did in her record-breaking transcontinental flights. In the air or on the road —for superior performance and economical operation: —make it AMOCO all the way! The AMERICAN OIL COMPANY Afiliated with Pan American Petroleum Transport Company Washington Office: South Washington, Va.

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