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| ’ 'RAIL WAGE CUT HIT # THE EVE NING -8 AR, WASHINGTO BY FEDERAL BOARD { | i i Mediation Report Asks Line to Restore Old Pay Scale. Slash Held Unjustified. Urging the Louisiana and Arkansas Railway to restore wage schedules to the levels obtaining prior to a cut Feb- ruary 9, which precipitated trouble with the employes, the Railway Media- | tion E night called to the at-! tention of the management of the line President Hoover's policy of “no wage| reduction.” The board’s report on the several months’ cld dispute between the road and the American Federation of Labor contanded there was nothing in the | financial condition of the company | which justified the pay slash and the reduction “wholly without notice was | positively illegal.” ) The refusal of the road to submit | the conflict to arbitration was deplored | the report, which cited a threatened | strike of worl This possibility was suspended automatically with designa- tion April 16 of the mediation board to investigate. The railway said in October it desired to reduce the basic wage of 5 cents an hour to 2 cents an_hour, except for helper apprentices, and make other re- | visions After some discussion, the new schedules were posted February 9, ef- fective immediatel i President Hoover's conference with {ndustrial leaders and their pledge to maintain wage levels was cited in_the board's report, which also said the rail- way “should not disturo tne wage structure which other carriers, no bet- ter situated, are maintaining.” The Louisiana and Arkansas covers approximately 630 miles in those two States with feeder routes into Oklahoma and Texas. “QLDEST STUDENT” DIES Death at 74 Ends 55 Years at| Upsala University. STOCKHOLM (N.AN.A).—Upsala | University has just lost its cldest stu- dent, Hermen Baumbach, who passed | away at the zge of 74 after spending 55 vears at the university. A wily student. he was 61 years old before, after 85 torms' work, he took his first official examination. A When he did at last appear before the | professors he obtained his degree of | “candidate cf philosophy” with honors and his knowledge of Latin was found to be remarkable. English philology was his hobby, however, and he was an | expert on English sports terms and ex- pressions. (Copyright. 1931, by the North American Newspaper Alllance, Inc.) Happy Newlyweds movies. The two are shown in They met on the Pacific Coast their marriage at West Orange, CROONER AND BRIDE AFTER WEDDIN ERE they are—Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Vallee, he of radio fame and she of the New York after their secret marriage. and a two-year romance culminated in N. J. Toils of Enterta BY ROGER BATCHELDER. 4 COAI:bEALER, 90, DIES | Alexandria Murphy of Ferry Survived by Daughtej. i Special Dispatch to The Star. HARPERS FERRY, W. Va. July 10. —Alexander Murphy, 90, native of Bal- timore, died at his hom> here after an illness of several months. Death was laid to infirmities complicated by severe blood-poisoning in both limbs. He came here for residence in 1862, | and was a coal dealer. Surviving are one daughter, Miss | Mollie Murphy, at the home. A son, William J. Murphy, died suddenly at Virginia Beach a week ago, and was buried here July 4. Harpers | DANVILLE, Va., July 10 (Special).— William_ F. Burton, prosperous Pittsyl- | vania County farmer, who died Wed- nesday in 2 hospital here following a long illness with heart trouble, will be buried here this afternoon. He was 70 vears old and a native of Caswell County, N. C., but had been engaged in farming in this county for many years | and was active in_public affairs.” He leaves a widow and 10 children, SPECIAL Iy NE_WITN man by auto at NOTICES. _ IN( ACCIDE! TO onn. ave. and R st.. June Tn’. please communicate With E. UTERISON, 1400 K st. Phone T BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY s contracted by any one other than my- R. M. SHENK. 513 Elm ave. Takoma AFTER THIS DATE I WILL NOT BE RE- “ponsible for any debts contracted by any one other than myself. EO. R. CARLISLE, 4T Bye st mow 12¢ SRESSIONAL COUNTRY CLUB ACTIVE bership Address Box 2-X. Star office. 1ONG-DISTANCE MOVING — WE ~HAVE | been keeping faith with the public since 1 Ask about our country-wide service National 0220.” DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE_CO. INVALID ROLLING CHAIRS. FOR RENT OR sale: complete dinc of new and used chairs: | all siz s and adjustments; reduced Brices. -Alo" Tolding chairs. wood or metal. UNTTED STATES STORAGE €O . | _ 418 10th St. N.W. ‘Met. 1343 DON'T_PERMIT YOUR LIVING ROOM PURNITURE. AND RUGS to be destroyed | by MOTH! Let us Mothproot them for you 1931, by the North American ewspaper Alliance, Inc.) | NEW YORK, July 10.—Rudy Vallee can croon and sing, but not at home, by golly! That is on the authority of Mrs. Vallee, the former Fay Webb, a movie actress from the West Coast, who was married to Vallee, America’s sweetheart, only three days ago, thus breaking the| hearts of several hundred thousand | other women, fat and skinny, old and | young. | Positively diminutive, the bride look- ed up with great black eyes that would | make the normal male believe she could | cool: breakfast, or forget all about food | if she didn't. | Boasts of Cooking. ; “And I can cook breakfast, eggs or | almost_anything else,” she insisted. | At the start it was a sort of show, Mrs. Vallee's reception for ihe press. Rudy didn’t have his hair combed and the “battery” of photographers was a battalion. The newlyweds posed four times in their Central Park love nest . of eight rooms, and Rudy read a little speech in which he said he had first seen his wife in California and had passed completely out as the result of er charms. Then Mrs. Vallee stood before the microphone and said she (Copyright, N [RUDY'S WiFE BARS LOVE NEST TO HIS SOULFUL CROONINGS Home to Be Old-Fashioned Retreat From, ining American Radio Multitudes. in which a woman reporter was in- volved. “It must be a fine thing to be mar- ried to America’s sweetheart,” the re- porter suggested. “Just wbat do you mean by that?” inquired the bride. ““Well, T understand that he is break- ing up homes all the time—but perfect- | ly innocently,” the reporter hastened to! Glad to Be Married. “He is not,” sald Mrs. Vallee, under- | lining each word. “If the women of the country are so foolishly sentimental that they would permit such a thing, it's just their own fault. But I did do something like it myself, although no home was broken up. The bride paused to collect her thoughts. . “I know women must love Rudy. she resumed, earnestly, “and I know I should be properly mad about it. But I'm not. ' I don't care, for I can't blame them. He is the most marvelous person. And I'm glad every one knows he’s married. * Mrs. Vallee was a bit touchy when her capacity as a housekeeper was touched on. “I didn't like the question that young woman reporter asked me, whether I could cook or not!” she exclaimed. “I am going to take care of this young was "very happy.” | man from now on, when he isn't work- The show had to be done three|ing. He will find me at 5 Central Park | times, because something went wrong| West, and he will have everything he | INSURANCE PLOT SEEN N BURNING Man Who Escaped Flames Tells of Being Set Afire in House. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, July 10.—A plot to col- lect insurence on himself and his house was the theory police held today as they hunted for Luigi Raffa in connec- tion with the serious burning last night of Earl Spencer Fox of Syracuse, N. Y. Raffa’s bungalow was damagsd by fire believed of incendiary origin. Fox, who had met Raffa only yesterday and been invited to his home with the offer of a job as a soda dispenser, was criti- cally burned. $9,500 in Insurance. Raffa’s life, polics learned, was in- sured for $5,000, and the bungalow and its contents for $4,500. Police believe Rafla plotted Fox's death in the beliel authorities would decide he himself had been burned to death. His wife, police believe, had no knowledge of the plot. Rafla, Fox told detectives, told him he was spraying water on the floor to keep the house cool. Several minutes later, the youth told police, he awoke to find the house afire. He jumped to safety and ran for aid, his clothes surning. At a filling sta- tlon, near the Bronx-Mount Vernon line, he fainted. said he had a slight chance to recover. Incendlary Evidence Found. Assistant Fire Marshal Cashman re- ported to police headquarters that he found evidenge of incendiarism. He ordered that ®affa be brought to his office for questioning. Mrs. Raffa_returned to the burned bungalow and was stopped by detec- tives. She said she had not seen her husband for two days, nor had she heard of his hiring Fox to work at his !soda fountain. CUBANS ASK LABOR T0 FIGHT MACHADO Pan-American Federation Studies Complaints Against President. By the Associated Press. Cuban labor organizations have ap- pealed to the Pan-American Federation of Labor to urge civil intervention and oppose the regime of President Ma- chado. ‘The appeal was made in letters from several labor groups of the island re- public. They charged they had been mistreated by the Cuban administration. The Pan-American Federation said I the communications were being studied, but declined other comment. Previous action by the American Fed- eration of labor, with which the Pan- vention, was deplored by the Cuban or- ganizations. The Cuban complaints said Machado had failed to keep promises to the labor groups, and had “kept all our crganiza- tions in a dormant state * * *." “This situation is intolerable for those who are here,” the letters added. “Our | dignity and decency, our humah senti- ! ments, do not permit us to remain any | more in this condition of taunts and | indignity, and we are cbliged to join the | unanimous opinion of the country and ask for the fall of the most abject dic- |tatorship that any country has ever suffered.” RISKS PRISON TERM ‘TO'SEE DYING MOTHER Fugitive From Devils Island Faces Third Term After Arrest in Paris. By the Associated Press. Ambulance surgeons | American group is affiliated, in opposi- | tion to any armed or diplomatic inter- | RIDAY 1 Back to Stage || DIVORCEE RETURNS TO PLAY IN NEW SHOW, ER Reno divorce pushed back into history, Mrs. Florence Rice Smith, daughter of Grantland Rice, returned to her first love —the stage. She is shown here | up for a part in a Broadway A. P. Phot). H making production. _ NAUTLLS 10 BEG NEXT LAP LY 16 Wilkins Wires Stefansson Repairs Are Nearly Completed. TORONTO. Ontario, July 10 (C.P.A)! —Sir Hubert Wilkins hopes to have re- | pairs to the submarine Nautilus com- pleted within a few days and will leave | England upon the next lap of his trip to th> North Pole next Thursday. So| h> stajed in a cabled message to Vihlja- | mur Stefansson, noted Arctic explorer, who is credited by Wilkins himself with suggesting the idea of invadinggthe Arctic in a submarine. Stefansson is | here on a lecture tour. Conditions for submarine navigation are at their best, and even if Wilkins leaves Ireland July 16, he will have missed th most propitious tim> for the | Nautilus venture by a full month, ac- JULY 10, 4931. FARM BOARD FOE SEEN INCREASING Wrath of Private Traders to Be Expected, Says Carl Williams. By the Associated Press. Increased conflict with private tracers is expected by Carl Willlams, Farm | Board mcmber, as farmer-owned and ! controlled co-operativ-s expand. Following atiacks on th2 board by Pennsylvania’s two Senators after Phil- adelphia dairy wholesalers had charged | a co-operative with indiscriminately cutting prices, Willlams said it was only natural the commission men’'s protests should become louder as farmer com- petitors absorb more of their business. Former Chairman Alexander Legge and his successor, Jam-s C. Ston=, have charged the trade with attempting to| prevent formation of the farmer organ- izations. Cotton Policy Asked. After demands had been made last week for a more definite stabilization wheat sales policy, Chairman Stone ac- cused the grzin trade of inspiring the widespread_agitation. Williams' intimation of increased conflict came after three South:rn cot- ton exchanges had requested a new| statement of policy for handling that | commodity during the new crop year. ‘The P:nnsylvania case brought the board’s clash with private interests’ into full play again, with Senators Reed and Davis, Republicans, considering the ad- visability -of filing complaints with the Federal Trade Commission directed sp- cifically at the Land o' Lakes Cream- eries, Inc. of Minneapolis. Two Philadelphia wholesale houses charged the Government, in_effect, with granting a subsidy t> the Land o' Lakes with board loans. Foresces Private Loss. In replying to this complaint, Wil- liam F. ‘Schilling, dairy member of the board, wrote Reed the board “rec- ognizes it is inevitable that some pri- vate businesses will be injured.” He reiterated Stone's contention that pri- vate dealers have little to worry about if they are performing a necessary service at a cost as low or lower than co-operatives. The middlemen’s profits have been | pinched and they have carrled their protests to the White House, as well as to the board, and are expected to renew them next Winter, when the question of farm relief is reopened in Congress by organizations supporting | the export debenture and equalization fee. WRITER ASKS $10,000 OF BUSINESS COLLEGE Suit Alleges Plagiarism and 11-{ legal Use of Copyrighted ] i . i Article. | back-seat driving, | was spent in telling him how to berth A3 Wife as “Back-Seat” Pilot Tells Skipper How to Dock Ship i Cautions of Tidal Flows and Other Sea Hazards in 15-Minute Air Talk. SAN FRANCISCO, July 10 (#).—Even at sea, a man can't get away from| Capt. Andrew 'G.| Townsend of the S. S. Malolo com- | plained here tcday. { Capt. Townsend said that while the Malolo, which arrived yesterday, was still 300 miles at sea his wife talked to him from a radio stotion here and warned him to “be sure to consider the | difference in tidal flow when docking,” as he was to arrive an hour earlier | than the schecule called for. | Townsend caid his wife talked to him for 15 minutes, much of which time -seat driving, I'll | swallow the compass,” said the skipper. The occasion of the talk was a test to determine the feasibility of daily | broadcasts from and to ships at sea. U. S. Battleships Visit Scotland. GREENOCK, Scotland, July 10 (#).— The American battleships Arkansas and Wyoming anchored in_the Clyde today for a three-day visit. This will be their only port of call in the United Kingdom It is not necessary for Safe, Dependable Tires, for inctance— not necessary for @ Cash or Credit Make Your Terms e e e T0% ACUTE IND!GESTION strikes Night! ! late at (when drug steres are closed.) Why not be safe with Bell-ans on hand . . . Now! BELL-ANS W FOR INDIGESTION SR : . : BDOMINAL SUPPORTS Fitted Professionally GIBSON’S 917 G St. N.W. Regular Delivery Over 100,000 families read The Star ever day. The great ma- jority have the paper delivered reguiarly every evening and Sun- day morning at a cost of 13 cents daily and 5 cents Sunday. If you are not taking advan- tage of this regular service at this low rate, telephone National 5000 now and service will start tomorrow. S. Tires Free Covers Free Tire Cover to Every Tire Purchéser | cording to Stefansson. H : i Willard Allen Colcord, writer, filed b o suit in the District Supreme Court to- ‘There are six weeks each vear when , day asking $10,000 damages {rom 9 _s FREE Mounting 624 Pa. Ave. S. E. | declared. with the intake of fe “talkies.” But it was nore the less convincing, after | the third effort. There came a talk with Mrs. Vallce' likes to eat before him when he signs off at night.” “We're going to be happy, aren’t we? She just looked up at him. CAR CRASH FATAL T0 COWBOY ACTOR Richard Hatton, Film Star and Di- rector, Injured Fatally in Col- .lision at Los Angeles. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, July 10.—Richard | Hatton, 41, cowboy actor and film di- ight in_your own home—by the Konate process, which carries INSURED protection | for 3 vears” Now s ‘the time. = Reduced | rices. UNITED STATES STORAGE CO., | 10th_St. N.W. ME 1843 | SUCCESSOR TVERSIDE APARTMENT | 2145 C _street northwest PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, t pursuant to Section 4 of Article VII of | ce > of first mortgage by | between Riverside Apartment Corpora- | n and Willlam H. West, Trustee, dated sue of bonds ®old_serial cipal amount of | Y, successor in | izned as | ) day of July, WHEREOF. seal h 1931, "IN as 24-hour service. 1395 Florida aye. Ry WANT TO HADL 10 or from New Pittsburgh and all NAL PART_LOAD mond. Boston, | special 1ates. | .. "INC.. 1311 | LL OR X. P 11 BE SOLD AT | icr charses on | N £904 T 6250 0 Md. i NG CARS W Weschler's Public Auction h. 1931 Hudson ~—of any nature promptly and cepably I after by practical roofers. Call us up. Roofing 119 3rd St. B.W. | )_Company __District 0933. Make Your Appeal to your prospects through ¢ National Capital Press printed message. million-dollar plant is at your service. The National Capital Press! 1210 D St. N.W. Nat. 0650. " SUMMER PRICES —now effective on heating, new_installations or repairs. §ave money. Call Fl BUDGET PAYMENTS if desired. J. FL Cc 1411 v 0. s 00D 0. St NW. &7, Dec. 2700—Evenings, Clev. 0618 i i | rector, was injured fatally in a col- | lision of his own and two other auto- | mobiles at a street intersection here last night. Hatton was crushed between the steering wheel and door of his ma- chine and died as he was being taken to_a hospital. Hatton played Rustler's Roost” “The Boss of Western in and other films. The other cars were driven by Mrs. Elizabeth Knell, Los Angeles, L. Brown, Bakersfield, Calif. were uninjured. g i, | POLICEMAN’S WIFE DIES Mrs. Bertha D. Cox Succumbs in Home, in Alexandria. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 10.—Mrs. | Bertha D. Cox, wife of City Sergt. Rob- ert H. Cox, died at her home, 1908 King street, about 3 o'clock this morning. | She had been in ill health since Febru- ary and was taken worse last Sunday. Funeral services will be held from the First Baptist Church Monday morning at 11 o'clecck. The funeral will be in charge of Rev. Pierce S. Ellis, pastor of the church. Mrs. Cox is survived by one daugh- They and four brothers and three sisters. and DT | necessary to save their lives, ‘Tiny Siamese Twins Recovering After Being Separated Second Operation Neces- sary to Save Lives of Girls 4 Days Old. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, July 10.—Twin girls, joined at birth . here Tuesday but severed by a surgical operation declared to have few parallels, remained alive to- day, and surgeons expressed hope a second vital operation to save them would be possible. “They are doing better than ex- pected,” it was said at Mercy Hospital, as the twins began their fourth day of life. Without the second operation, the bables cannot survive, surgeons said. All their organs are normal except their intestinal tract, there being but one, and it was through this that they were joined. The initial operation, considered having been performed, the obligation to use the knife a second time developed to prevent a blind termination of the in- testinal tract of each child in the ab- dominal’ cavity, it was explained by Dr. Daniel J. Pessagno, who performed the first oparation. Otherwise life would be destroyed by the accumulation of poisons generated by food within the abdominal cavity, he said. ‘The second operation is not planned for several days. The twins weighed 4'; pounds each at birth. The mother, 36_years old, was in good condition. So-called Siamese twins occur but once in 50,000 cases, it was said by a Johns Hopkins specialist, and the ! ter, Mrs. Robert S. Keene of this city, | chances of surviving an operation were said to'be but 1 in 10. 1 NATIONAL MUSEUM DISPLAY TELLS OF “FAKED” INDIAN ANTIQUES ooed | Bogus Relic Trade Has Reached Such Proportions Action Is Taken to Protect Public. By the Assoctated Press. The bogus Indian relic trade has as-; sumed such proporiions that the Na- tional Museum is warning against it | with display cases of “false antiquities.” | Retouched and faked arrowpoints, counterfeit ‘“‘ceremonial crooks,” bogus Indian vessels, soapstone carvings “made by white men in imitation of aboriginal | work,” and an “Aztec god” which was not carved 1,000 years ago arc numbered | among the “relics” marked “fakes” and “grauds” by the experts, A placard for the information of every nasserby points out “the lamentable fact that many kinds of relics are being | Imitated and disposed of to persons not | well enough {nformed on the subject to detect the fraud.” “Every country where antiquities are prized suffers from this dishonest in- dustry, and colleciors should constantly be on their guard,” was the waining. Neil M. Judd, curator of American archeology, said that most of the frauds could be determined by tell-tale quall- ties of compositien or manufacture. NICE, France, July 10.—Twice a fugi- tive from Devils Island, Auguste Charles Rancurel was liable to a third term to- day because he wanted to see his elderly mother before she died. < Courting disaster by returning several months ago., Rancurel was arrested y | terday at his mother’s home and’ thro Rancurel was sentenced to Devils Is land, a penal settlement off the coa: of French Guinea, in 1915 to 10 years imprisonment, to be followed by banish- ment for life. He escaped in 1924 and was rearrested in Paris two years later. drawing an additional sentence of 13 months. Sent back in 1927, he again escaped in 1928 and roamed around South America for several years, residing for a time in Brazil. He left there several months ago when the urge to go home became too strong to resist. - |RIOTS AGAINST CHINESE IN KOREA CHECKED Japan Expresses Regret at Occur- rences and Reassures China as to Future. By the Associated Press. NANKING, China, July 10.—Foreign Minister C. T. Wang said today that no serious rioting against Chinese had oc- curred in Korea for several days and that the situation was in control of Japanese authorities. The Japanese government has ex- pressed its sincere regret at the violence of Koreans and assured the Chinese government that every effort would be made to prevent further disturb‘nnces. The Chinese Ambassador o Tokio has been instructed to proceed to Seoul and investigate conditions. SEOUL, Korea, July 10 (#).—Reports published yesterday at Peiping of an attack by & Korean mob on the Chinese consulate here were denled today. Will Rogers BEVERLY _HILLS, Calif —Edi- torials have been blaming France for not falling over themselves to cancel the debt. Well France re- ceives 95 mil- lion dollars more than she pays out to England and the United States. France is better off to- day than all of them. Why, ®e- cause of hard work and watching the pennies. France deal like Amos on the “Now wait a minute, Andy, of yours sounds mighty but in thgn:nd ‘;v);g; is we getting off.” e Uni | Siates & 'exactly ilke Andy, any- | ! thing comes up, “Oh, sho, sho, send it over C. O. We will pay fur it, or sumpin,’\ come on Vanilla, Je's go fishin” - l | is a | radio, that scheme { big and fine, | Baron von Kirchbach Says Shrines a sauc:r of water could be left at the North Pole and it would not freeze. These six weeks will have passed by the time Wilkins starts,” Stefansson said. “The delay, how:ver, will only hinder the expedition, not interfere with it. I have not expected him to do more than | reconnoitering work this year, anyway. “It seems to be the general idea that Wilkins' submarine trip to the Pole is foolish. Actually the submarine is almost ideal for such a journey,” Stefansson “The ice is not one great un- broken stretch, but is divided through which a submarine can easily reach the surface. Tce Caking Difficulty. | “One of the main difficulties he will | encounter will be ice caking on the sub- | marine. When this coating forms he will have to dive and remain down for ‘hzlf an hour or so to let the ice peel | off. This will be an inconvenience.” Stefansson contends that much of | scientific value in the study of marine | life and oceanography will be learned | as a result of the expedition. “The | Northern Ocean is the only one we don’t know the depth of, and the one | we know least about regarding currents and the life in its waters.” (Copyright, 1931, by the New York Foreign Servicer " ToT Sun U. S. MEMORIALS TO WAR AMAZE GERMAN VISITOR| in Reich Would Cause Protest Storm. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, July 10.—Baron Arndt von Kirchbach, dean of the Cathedral Society of Dresden and a member of the general staff of the German army during the World War, | said yesterday that if Germany were to perpetuate war memories by parks and memorials as is done in this country, “there would be a shout around the world.” Baron Kirchbach, before addressing the Lutheran Ministerium of Philadel- phia, said he had visited the Gettysburg battlefield and Washington's camp site at Valley Forge and felt if Germany were to attempt perpetuation of such shrines, “suspicious Europe” would denounce her as militaristic. SECOND MAN CONVICTED Joe Albritton Recommended for Mercy in Georgia Case Involving Four. COLQUITT, Ga., July 10 (#).—Joe Albritton was found guilty here yester- day of murder in connection with the death of Lucy Scott, colored, in May, 1930. He was the second white man convicted in the case. ‘The jury recommended mercy, auto- matically making life imprisonment the penalty. Meanwhile another jury was given the case of Jack Long, accused with Albritton, and court officers said the trial of Joe Brown Kirkland would start Guy Long was convicted in April. The State charged the four men killed the woman during an attack on her son, Jopn Scott, whom they sought to intimidate. CIGARETTE TAX 0.K. Ohio Governor Signs Bill Placing Cent Levy on Every 10 Smokes. COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 10 (®).— After September 1 Ohioans will pave to ‘pay an extra 2 cents for a package of cigarettes. Gov. George White today signed a bill passed by the recent General As- sembly calling for a State tax of 1 cent on each 10 cigarettes sold. The law was adopted to produce additional rev- enues for State operations despite vigorous protests by tobacco companies. It will be effective two years. —_— Carlos Gardel gnd his company of cowboy guitarists from Argentina are making a hit in Paris with their native |TAXI CONCERN REDUCES Strayer’s Business College for alleged | plagiarism and fllegal use of a copy- | righted article written by the plaintiff | in 1928 under the heading, “Why| Graduate?” i Through attorneys Charles S. Baker | and Benjamin L. Tepper, it was as- serted that the . defendant during| March, 1931, and subsequently caused | the article to be published and widely | distributed without giving credit to the | author. Colcord charged the college, | in holding the article to be its property, infringed and invaded his rights. i The matter is said to have been used | by the college as an advertising circu- lar sent out to hundreds of former stu-) dents who had not graduated. It also was used, it was said, as an editorial | in the college paper, Strayer Topics, | over the name of the director of the college. J RATE FOR “CITY PROPER” i l | | New Order Will Become Effective| Tomorrow Morning—Zone Will | Remain Unchanged. | ‘The Broadmoor Taxi Corporation an- nounced today that it would reduce its rate for the “city proper” zone tomor- | row from 35 cents to 25 eents. This company, which has 52 cabs on the streets, stated, however, the zone will remain the same, and will not be shortened. Three shoe plants at Hannibal, Mo., one rated the largest in the world, have been put on capacity schedules. at Gibson’s Friday and Saturday 50c Prophylactic "E ° l? th- rush, spe- cial 250 25; Listerine Tooth aste, spe- cial, 2 for. . 25C 50c Lilac Toilet Water, for use after shav- ing, spe- 50c Gypsy Double Edge Blades, spe- cial, 10 Sae: 1 25¢ 50c Gibson Floor Wax Paste, 1b., 25c special . . .. 25¢ — 100 Saccharin special, 200 for .. .'. s 250 50c Pile Oint- ment, spe- 50c H. B. & W. Milk of Mag- =i % 98¢ special 50c Poison Ofk or Ivy . 50c Genuine Lacq Cas- GIBSON’S 913 G St. N.W. BATTERIES 1234 14th St. N. W. 50 Sherman Ave. N.W.