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A—10 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D.. G, MONDAY, DECEMBER™ 7, 193 EXRANGER SLAIN BY TEXAS SHERIFF Quarrel Over Money and Self- Defense Plea of Sub-Ma- chine Gun Wie!der. By the Associate RANKIN, Tex., Decembe Barnett, 41 years old, a gun_yesterda The sheriff ghots at r f the victim from a w machine. intimated @ ) e financial matter t Ba any of th 45 calib he was armed sheriff, towr cer as w “I had “It was eit eam of bond. sheriff Alpine an from Barnett th: said Tragedy on Main Street. The s g o n the mair Barnett's station sherift away s com- called to him Fowler then ling the stopped paces pani to “star lowered iff 1 and began shoot- is survived by his widow and five children, yoade a repu- tation as a marksman in his youth. At 18 he killed Will Rabb in Langtry Tex. He was tried and acquitted, as he was also in the death of “Noisy Watson in 1925 in Reagan County REDS ARE. ENJOINED Court Restrains Them From Yo- Strikes. P). —A issued menting Cigar TAMPA, Fla Pederal injunct against 140 3 hibiting them the peaceful condu dustry he Pederal Jud; fnjunction yester Jerome Regenb: g & Sons tw oups December 7 has bee Akerman signed d petition ary of ac were stormed cigar factorie last week the injunction set r industry of Tampa prosperous until other cities imory P. Eldredge, ad- inspector-instructor of units at Kansas City Ensign Robert J. Ramsbotham, de- tached Submarine Base, New London, Conn., about Decembe to U.S. 8 8-21 Ensign Charles O. Triebel, detached Submarine Base, New London, Conn., about December 16; to U. S. S, 5-25. Ensign Donald F. Weiss, detached Submarine Base, New London, Conn., &bout December 16; to U. S. 5. 5-43 Medical Corps. (Junior _Grade) Morris duty Naval Hospital, 16 Lieut Rubin, to Diego, Calif. M. San D. Moyer, Washington, D. to U. 8. 8. Cin- Yard C., about January 2; einnati Chief Carpenter Ernest P. Schilling, detached U S. Pensacola; to Navy Yard, New Y N Y Asiatic Dispatch Orders November 30, Lieut. Comdr. Alexander D. Douglass, detached command U. 8. §. S-38; to U 8. S. Beaver as executive officer. Lieut. Comdr S. Thurston. detached U. 8. 8 to duty as Recruiting Sta- Samuel Beaver Mas Andrew R. Mack, de- 8. Tru: to U. 8. 8. as navigating officer ir. Homer L. Grosskopt, Houston; to command T Lyman ached command U s. K. Swenson, S. S. Isabel ut. Comdr. Forrest L Naval Libenow, de- to Navy Is Fitzgerald, jr Simpson; to apolis, Md. Deaths. Frederick Asser Asserson, U 2 November 6, 1 Vewport, R de- An STAMPS FREE WITH ALL PERSONAL Christmas Cards Make many your selection from eur samples and get a free postage stamp with every card ordered COHEN’S, Inc. 1231 G St. N.W. beautiful If This Fails To Knock Your Cold In a Few Hours Feel Like a New Person Almost Before You Know It Hn.r S Cascara Q! TEED to knock d in ‘To break ay nothing a jiffy relieve th tightness. 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Pianist, Presented at Arts Cl; PIANO recital w ing classical program was given by Eleanor Colburn at the Arts Club Saturday evening was presented by Fell played the second movement of the Sci which con certo in A Mir the program Miss Colburn played from start to finish with complete Her performances moments were the Minor Rhapsody,” in Chopin's richly text C Minor, in the se bussy’s “La Cathed! in the third. This with & feeling bers. The slow bass quality and the weir: bells in the story Miss Colburn c CAME THE bedrock of Camel popularity is the inherently fine quality of the tobaccos that ”m were clear and straightforward. The high apd which one missed in®the other num- soprano of the music vividly to mind eates mus ef nd News of Capital‘s prngrams. fects, but th and contrast t make pletely convincing tremendous v rhythm in Chopin’s onaise.” An audience will not take the trouble to find a theme if it is dden in a maze of arpeggios, as in first of the “Concerto,” nor t m of ub. ith an interest- One expects nsistent Miss Colburn ian Garzia, who no in the first umann “Con- ed 50 e to may be taken for granted and focused on the more ab- nessage which the music can ener that self-possession uniformly There was a moment of real feel- ing in the legato section of the Concerto” just before the recapitu- lation, also in the recitative intro- uction to Chopin’s “C Sharp Minor which came earlier in the D. C Brahm's “G the first group ured “Etude in cond, and De- rale Engloutie ) last was played am imagination Correctedl Repertoire Announced for Opera Co. \ EW YORK music circ buzzing with com ban Berg had a resonant d intonation of brought the les are still on Al- op “Wozzeck,” which the Philadelphia Grand Opera Co. brought to the Metropolitan Opera House a week or so ago for its Gotham premiere. Leopold Stokowski, incidentally, made his New York debut as an opera con- ductor in the same performance. Many of the reviewers took occa- sion to praise the work of Ivan Ivantzoff, singing the title role, op- posite Anne Roselle. This Ivantzoff is & singer whom Washington will shortly hear more of, it seems, for he is announced in prominent Toles in “Il Trovatore,” “Carmen” and “Pagliacci,” three of the seven operas the Cosmopolitan Grand Opera Co., Jacques Samos- soud, conductor, will present at the National Theater, under the man- agement of Mrs. Wilson-Greene dur- ing the week commencing Monday, January 4 A revised and corrected gepertoire just received indicates that the Cos- mopolitan Grand Opera Co. will open its week's engagement with a per- formance of “Rigoletto” in Italian on Monday evening, January 4, with Dorothy Dickerson, Dimitri Onefrei, Joseph Royer; “Il Trovatore” will be given on Tuesday evening, in Italian, with Dreda Aves, Bianca Saroya Mario Valle, Armand and Ivantzoff; “Romeo and in French, will be given at the Wednes- day matinee, with Gladys Mathew Ralph Errolle, Mario Valle, Armand Sjovic; while 'a double bill, consist- ing of “Hansel and Gretel,” in Ger- man, and “Pagliaccl,” in Italian,” will be offered at the Wednesday evening performance. “Faust” will be given in French at the Thursday evening performance; featuring Saroya, Alexander Kur- ganoff, Viadimir Dubinsky and Jo- seph Royer; “Carmen” Friday eve- ning, in Prench, with Aves, Dicker- son, Valle and Ivantzoff featured “Hansel and Gretel” will be repeated at the Saturday matinee, with “Pagliacci” as the other half of the double matinee bill, while the final performance on Saturday evening, January 9, will be given over to an- other performance of “Rigoletto.” Conductor Samossoud will conduct all performances, and a price scale of $1 to $3 will prevail. An orches- tra of 35 men, with chorus and ballet of 40, are features of all productions. New York Philharmenic To Present Adolph Busch. RTURO TOSCANINI, who cently returned to this country after a strenuous season of musical activity abroad, will conduct identi- cally the same program in Washing- ton as he played in New York when he took up his baton again with the New York Philharmonic So- ciety. The soloist, Adolph Busch, who is making his debut at this concert a w Tuesday, will play the Bach certo in A Minor” and Beethoven's “Concerto in D Major.” The sym- phony will be Mozart's youthful “A Major,” and other rks on the pro- Te- gram el inetnde (aese “The Redemption,” and the over- ture to “fne r.yug ou.coman DREISER CHARGE SCORED Prof. John'Dewey’s Protest Read at { ‘Mass Meeting in Gotham. | NEW YORK, December 7 (#)—a | protest by Prof. John Dewey of Co- lumbia ' University against charges of | criminal ‘syndicalism made against Theodote Dreiser and others who in- | vestigated ,conditions of miners in Har- | lan County, Ky. was read yesterday at a mass meeting he; Dreiser did not appear at the meet- ing, which was sponsored by the Na. tional -Committee for the Defense of Political Pisoners, of which he is chair- man. Prof. Dgwey's protest was read by Louis Mumford, author, who acted as chaifman. “Other speakers included John Dos Passos and Sherwood Ander- | son, ‘writers. ! . German Womah Hops From Soflafi’ SOFIA, Bulgaria, December 7 () — | Elli Beinhorn, man woman fyer, | | who landed here yesterday after a fRight | from Budapest and announced she was | out to win the Hindenburg Cup for the | | best flight of the year by an nmatnur‘ pilot, took off at 11:10 am. today for Istanbul, band'’s slayer was sentenced to life im- prisonment, Mrs. Cora Hamilton, 38, WOMAN BANDIT DIES — died at her home here early yesterday. Wounds Received in Attempnng[bs‘hrdh&gmbe‘enbl:edrut g!rx‘lce hel('nhuu- & ind, e ut; eriff A to Rob Oil Station Are Fatal |Hamilton, was Killea ‘October 31 e SACRAMENTO, Calif, December 7 | & liquor raid. Lemon Hamrink, Curtins P)—Mrs. Mary Hicks, 22, ‘ g ot of Pasco, | Ferry, was convicted and sentenced for Wash,, died last night of & wound re- |the murder of Hamilton Saturday. celved when she attempted to hold up | a service station near here Thursday. | The young woman was shot by W. J Hasley, service station proprietor, after she had fired at Hasley. Bonnie Legas- pie i held as her accomplice. Police suid he admitted his part in the at- tempted hold-up. Italy expects a larger wheat yield than a year ago. EXPERT HEATING and ROOFING SERVICE Remember your heating trou- bles last Winter—let us correct them. Full Line of Coal Ranges and eating Stoves Parking Space for Our Ci in Rear W.S. JENKS & SO 723 7th St, N.W., NAt. 2092 Washinoton’s_Oldest Hardware and Stove Store DEATH FOLLOWS TRIAL Deputy's Widow Dies After Slayer Gets Life Sentence. SUMMERSVILLE, W. 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