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OUDOUN COUNTY TEACHERS NAMED Board of Education Increases Tuition for All Pupils From Clarke. @pecial Dispatch to The Star. PURCELLVILLE, Va, April 16— Action on the petition of Middleburg patrons and friends of the school for | consent of the Loudoun County Board of Education to accept a donation of S 81,000 and employ a new regular teache: at Middleburg was postponed until May 12 at the regular meeting of the board here yesterday. The supe mu ndcnt ‘was requested to invite the visor of high schools to visit the Middle- b burg School and advise the board as to | its policy. The board ordered that beginning in | the 1931-2 session, Clarke County be requested to pay tuition at the- rate of $30 per pupil for all children attend- ing Loudoun County schools. | The Loudoun Light & Power Co. was granted permission to set poles on| unds and trim trees along their wires case of the Willisville and Woodburn Bchools, the privilege to be Tevoked at the pleasure of the school board. Mrs. Hemseley to Teach. Mrs. Hemseley of Carter School was given permission to teach one Saturday order to atlend the league meeting at ‘Warrenton April 17, The following transfers were made Henry P. White to Leesburg and A. O. Hutton to Lincoln, ‘Teachers were appointed Aldie—J. B. Potts, princif ) Hume, high school assistant. and Car line Porter, grades 4-5 M Charlotte ‘Weadon, Lyon, grades 1 Mrs. Irene Bluemont—Principal, Miss Eliza Lunceford; Mrs. Elizabeth P hvl'e\ Virginia C. snrmg Hamilton. Evelyn' T. Adams, principa | ‘mediate grades; Mrs. | , primary grades. Leesburg Appointments. | |« Leesburg—Helen Kerr, high school Alice Kerr, high school as- | sistant; Margaret Taylor, high school sssistant; Ruth Crim, grade 7; Mrs. Helen B. Redrick, grade 6; Mrs. Urcell | Bradfield, grade Mrs. I p che Anderson, grade 2; Nan Lewis, grade 1. Leighton, Mrs. Rebie C. Piggott, grades 1-7. Lincoln—Ma- tilda Coleman, high schocl assistan !u-he:h Thomas, high school assist- Grace Clevenger, intermediate 'Mes Susie Trussell, primary grades. .| claimed Downs, grades 1-7. Neersville—Louise Mentzer, grades 1-7. North Fork “l;‘l“!l G. Cockerill, grades 1 Philomont—Mrs. Helen N. Simp- son, grades 4-7; Mrs. Ida R. Bocock, ades 1-3. Purcellville—Mrs, Frances Graham, grade 6; Miss Hildred Barker, grades 4-5; Miss Grace Shoe- maker, grade 1. Red Hill and Syco- line—Miss _Grace Trittipoe. Round Hill—Mrs. Fannle J. Harrison, grades Mrs. Minnle B. Trussell, grades 1-2. Sterling — Mildred _Orrison, grs 4-7; Elizabeth Weadon, grades Sunny Ridge—Clara Wood, grades Unison-Bloomfield — Alton Neale, principal; Mrs. Edith M. Beavers, high school assistant; Mrs. Mary E. Monroe, grades 4-6; Virginia McGehee, grades 1-3. Waterford — Katherine Bridges, high school assistant; Jane Crawley, high school assistant; Minni Russell, rades 4-6. Wheatland—Lillian Law- n, grade: Woodland—Mattie L. Hite, grades 1 REDUCTION IN CROPS | CONFRONTING SOVIET| of Seed Presents New Threat, Moscow District Complains, Inefficient sttnbntmn By Cable to The Star. MOSCOW, U. S. S. R, April 16— | With the country emerging from a hard | Winter and Spring sowing in the Soviet | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1931 ° 5 AUTO DEATHS DRAW TWO INDICTMENTS Prince Georges Jury Charges Manslaughter in Plisco and Bowling Cases. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., April 16. —Abe Plisco of Washington, widely known as “Jew Boy Dietz,” was indicted | laughter today by the Princ es County grand jury as a re. sult of an automobile accident last Fal in which Robert J. McKnight. Bladens burg schoolboy, was killed. The Plisco | indictment was one of 20 returned b the jury. According to police, driver of a car which ran down and | fatally injured ung McKnight. Plisco | Plisco was the | |CANONICALS LOANED | gained _considerable notorfety in 1929 when he was seriously injured in a gun battle in the old Ram'’s Horn In Another Manslaughter Charge. One other man was indicted on a manslaughter charge as a result of an automobile accident. He was Wallace Bowling, driver of & car which struck | a telegraph pole at Clinton, a few | months ago. Raymond Grimm, a pas senger in Bowling's machine, was | fatally injured in the crash. | Mrs. Margaret T. Bolin of Bladens- | By the Associated Press. ville, were jointly indicted for house- King was indicted for as- nuu -m.n ‘Intent to kill, assault and battery. Oliver Johnson was named in a three- fold indictment charging storebreak- ing, larceny and receiving stolen goods. ‘The man is accused of taking four overcoats from the tallor shop of A.| Elmo, in Hyattsville. Other Indictments. Others indicted and the charges against them are Robert Jackson, housebreaking, larceny, receiving stolen goods; Robert Archie Ford, statutory offense; Alice Chase, housebreaking, larceny and recelving stolen goods; Howard M. Dove, non-support; George ‘Washington, non-support; James Med- | ley and Theodore Green, larceny and receiving stolen goods: John Fred | Nichols, non-support; Ernest Catonia, two charges of larceny and receiving s goods:; Henry Crump, statutory offense; William ‘Talbert, | rceny and receiving stolen goods; Clar- | ence Walters, larceny, receiving stolen goods, and James McKenney, larceny nd mehlng stolen goods. FOR JERUSALEM VISIT JERUSALEM, April 16.—The Arch- bishop of Canterbury, wearing borrowed canonicals—his own having been left in the Morgan yacht, the Corsair—to- | day made simple, solemn entry into the | ! Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The orthodox patriarch officiated at a special service in his honor in the Union behind, further complaint comes | burg was indicted on charges of house- | Church of the Crusaders, known as the | ¢ mportant ficiency is threatening | reduce the crops. trict April 10, it 000 tons of per cent of date. ibution cf seeds, whicl ss-ntial for crops. is sy hind_collectivizaticn, evel though the work in the fields is delayed by cold weather,” says Rabochaya Moskva Though lagging in Siberia and Ar- menia, the program o: grouping peas- ants on collective farms has been ac- accomplished. Reports of | April 10 show that 11,188,000 families have been collectivized. embracing 45 | 1t of the so-called poor and mid- ¢ it was reported that 737.000 families had joined, in February, 1,521, 000, and in March. 1.662 000. | (Cor . 1831, | SIX LEAP INTO ACID ‘ Wol‘kmeu by Flames Seek Escape in Tank. KATOWICE, Siiesia, Poland, April 16 (). —Panic-stricken, six workmen today sought to escape from a fire after an explosion in the Laura Foundry here by Panic Stricken ! | jumping into a tank of chloric acid. When their comrades pulled them out, badly' burned, one of the workers begged for a priest and his fiancee and was married to her just before he died. Condition of the five s hopeless. | An Emglish ;srdenfl has made a assault and battery. he is said to According | have broken into the house of Harold & mcds J. Rohrback, a neighbor. Lewis Georme, Albert Joseph Rose, who were arrested & Oriente and ould have been distributed by an alleged attempt to crack the safe'canon, in & Sanitary grocery store at Hyatts- @ 000008 Home of Special- Wearing FREE STORAGE Thru the Summer Months MR. —is_naw associated with us in Draperies——Blankets ALBERT KAHLERT foscow agricultural | preaking, assault with intent to kill and | Orthodox Cathedr: A small mixed crowd witnessed the procession, which included_the hop, on its march from JaTa he ‘archbishop was accompanied by the Anglican bishop, the residential | the archdeacon and English, | American and Palestine chaplains, arch Process Cleaning @ 990 6¢ ¢ Apparel Let us thoroughly clean them before they are put away. Clean- ing protects them against moths. There is NO CHARGE FOR STORAGE when they are VOGUE-CLEANED our Rug and Drapery Cleaning PHILIPPINE PHYSICIANS ILL WITH BLACK FEVER| Contract Worst Form of Malaria | ‘While Trying to Sanitate Culion Island for Discharged Lepers. By Cable to The Star. MANILA, P. I, April 16—Drs. An- tonio Ejercito and Alberto Laurel of the Philippine Health Service have con- tracted malignant black fever, the worst form of malaria, while trying to sanitate the interior of Culion Island for & colony of lepars discharged from the treatment colony on the same is- land Scme fear is sicians’ recover: ing to treatme: expressed for the phy- as neither case is yield- the islands’ best malaria specialists. ‘This incident illustrates that even the primary problems of leprosy are un- solved.” The doctors have pioneered in behalf of the Philippine Anti-Leprosy Soclety, which aims to resocialize lepers proved negative and able to support themselves. Wy (Copyright, Continued improvement in China's general political situation is causing rosy predictions of a marked economic advancement. ave itwhen You want it When you feel the inesistible de- sire for good candy « - how satisfying o have a constant supply of delicious Testyeast always dy in your homel Buy it con- veniently in Both patients are at | ! the hospital and are being attended by Lovettsville—L. A. Womeldorph, prin- | eipal; Laura Potterfield, high school mwsistant; Elizabeth Cockerill, school assistant; Rymple Cr 5-6; Dorothy Wiard, grades 3-4. etts—Mrs. Mary J. Simpson, achool assistant; Elizabeth Decker, high school assistant; Mrs. Mary E. Mundy, grades 6-7: Mrs. Lucille S. Utgard, r‘dlu 4-5; Marion S. Porter, grades | “death wand,” whlch h~ Middleburg Teachers. Middleburg—Mrs. Eleanor G. Adams, | grades 6-7; Mary J. Trainham, grades | fi; Eugenia Norman, grades 3-4; | rion Carr, grades 2-3: Marie Gum, grade 1. 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You will be grak