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CHEST CHRISTMAS PLANS SET RECORD Thousand Children‘ and Aduits to Receive Toys or Necessities. Several Practically all the 64 Community Chest agencies have completed plans for welcoming Santa Claus in a fashion which will do credit to Christmas and all it represents. Plans for a happy Christmas for the more unfortunate of the city are the most extensive in years, and several thousand children and adults will receive through Chest agen- ! cies not only toys and gifts but actual living necessities 2's proverbial sled is undoubtedly to the Children's 1 Vincent's and St Joseph's Schools and Homes, the Epis- copal Home for Children and the Wash- ington Home for Children. It will make a previous stop at the Children's Hos- | pital Dispensary, leaving stockings bulg- | ing with toys. Santa will appear in per- | son to the voung patients in the hos- pital on Christmas day. Tree at Country Home. The youngsters referred to the Chll- dren’s Country Home by the hospital clinics will be entertained by the chil- dren <\I board members Chn(lm’n eve. | a tree and distribute um to the little patients during the Pageants and partics feature celebra tions at the Joseph's Home and School and Vincent's Home and i The Christmas schedule at St Joseph's begins today with a play pre- sented by the home children at 3 p.m. | boys of the home will receive s Xt Wednesday the girls of St. | Vincent’s Home and School are to be entertained at a party given by the| Ladies' Auxiliary, at which time they ! will present a play and be recipients of gifts and goodies. A Christmas morning celebration around a tree, followed by a |~ turkey dinner, is in store for the 120 girls. Episcopal Home Fete. The 75 youngsters at the Episcopal | Home for Children will gather around | A tree, sing carols and receive gifts. The children are to have their Yule- tide feast at the home. Sixty stockings will be hung arge fireplace in the play Toom of the Washington Home for Chil- dren. And the next morning those old enough to toddle will meet Santa. The ions Club is scheduled to furnish the hristmas morning activities, and in | n will be entertalned by the young- | A Christmas eve celebration for the mothers and children of the day nurs- sponsored by the Lions Club, will ure_the Neighborhood House activ For four nights following Chris| the house will be the scene of | holiday gatherings The officials of the Noel Community Fouse announce a club night for the boys, & boxing show for the community and a Christmas eve party. More than 250 neighborhood youngsters are ex- pected for the party. Goodies and gifts | be distributed and entertainment | rnished by the boys. Joy for Cripples. Members of the Boys' Club will assist the Kiwanis Club in entertaining a| group of crippled children at the club' An athletic show is to be pre- sented Tuesday, and the big party for | members of the club only is scheduled | ew Year eve | riendship House will be the scene of more than 20 Christmas and New Year . which began vesterday. Boys and girls of the Christ Child Society will present a program of carols Christ- mas eve after group parties during the week. A number of features have also been arranged for adults. Young women at t Florence. Crittenton Home and St. Rose’s Technical School will exchange gifts and listen to musical programs around a tree. Be- | sides a pageant given by the girl re- gerves of the Florence Crittenton Home Wednesday. no ams have d ency. | y headquarters, | Mrs. Herbert Hoover will distribute the first 500 bas- kets prepared for the poor. The after- noon event is to be followed by a chil- dren’s party at night. holiday program which began last | day and will continue through New Year day is taking place at the Y. W. C. A. building at Seventeenth and K | streets and 614 E street. The schedule | udes supper parties. musical pro- ams. pageants, dinner parties. toy ex- ibitions and distributions, carol sing- | ing, story hours and dances | WOULD BAR BOOTLEGGERS Finnish Drys Ask That They Be Denied Vote on Referendum. HELSINGFORS, Finland. December 19 (P1—Organizations in favor of re- taining the Finnish prohibition law to- day petitioned the government to take measures to prevent participation by bootleggers in the prohibition _refer- endum to be held on December 29 and 0 B h sides are conducting an active | , and this evening e faculty nki University recorded an over- ng majority for repeal in a straw of Hel whe SPECIAL NOTICES WILL PARTY wio m,m—nwn» tion Dec. 5 sword cane w blade piease MOVIN vantage nf B the operation of faction ~since 1396, D Storage Co., Natl 0960. pitfes 3 NG 02 17th 5 RE RESPONSIBL other NteCARTED WILL debis Contracted SUMN ERFTELD BE RESPONS icied by 34V DESIRED SIBLE_FOR WV| myseif. HARK REGARDING ot | orida 0 'mcunnu, Tess Box 1635, Sth ; WILL NOT BE HESPONSIBLE_FOR ANY ne “other than | ALLATI‘\I, IBH F‘l - GET _ YOLR CHRISTMAS TREES AT 7th and_ Oonstituti + Tight by the old | A t. Thousands to select from. A’((» wreaths. holly, mistletoe and | ISt Nw. I CHAIRS, FOR line of new and used chairs: ustments: reduced rs. wood or metal. TORAGE CO. _Met. 1243 FNVALID ROLLING sale = W TO NEW YORK C 1A "STO! *Fhoncs th HONEY S-1b. can. best. 90c delivered. ¥HE HONEY POT. 1065 31st St. SERVICE DAY OR NITE Plumbing Tinning and Heatiny o Sar BN Tianing, and Heat "Work- manship. No Job Too Small. BUDGET PAYMENTS if desired. 1411 V. St. N.W. 2700—Evening. Cle! “GRAPT JUICE —for sale at Terminal Refrigeia 11th and E sts APPLES, SWEET CIDER | We have a large supply our usual | ®igh-grade apples and swee Rockville Fruxtnlsarm ~T. W. Binnix & Bro. +Ransee_Latrobes Repaired. # Emnm & Re.fiunnc. Cornices, NLTR wn Write THE SUN F eted at Capitol WILLIAM TYLER PAGE IS HONORED. NDAY STAR, WASHINGTO RITES FOR DIANOND!LOST GIRL BOARDED PART ONE, BASCOM N. TIMMONS ELECTED NEW PRESIDENT OF PRESS CLUB KIDNAPED GIRL | Each y ¥ | Abram | sale, Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.; | | school tree celebration, Wedne:dsv at t. & pam., when 4 ILLIAM TYLER PAGE. who began his carecr a half century ago as a pa continuo e in the clerk’s office of the House of Representatives and has been slv employed at the Capitol in various capacities ever since, photographed reading congratulations which flooded his office yester- day from friends felicitating him on the completion of his 50 years | of service. Mr. Page served as clerk of the House for the past 14 years and now, since | the Democrats have obtained control of the House, is employed as special clerk to the minority —Underwood Photo. HOOVER 10 OPEN YULE TREE RITES President to Press Button| Lighting Sherman Square for Ceremonies. For the ninth nt consecutive time a Pre: of the United States will touch an electr: button to light the national community Christmas tree in Sherman Square on Christmas eve, The ceremony. which will begin promptly at 5 o'clock, will be attended by the President and Mrs. Hoover and | prominent officials of the Federal and | District governments, as well as hun- dreds who will gather around the open space in the square. When the myriad of lights flood the living tree in light Boy Scout buglers stationed throughout the city will blow the tidings and a great star flare will light the sky in token of the star of Bethlehem Elaborate preparations are being completed for the most impressive cer- emony ever held around the community tree. The ceremonies will be presided over by Vice President Curtis, who is national chairman of the civic celebra- tion. Concert to Precede. Although the actual ceremonies will begin at 5 o'clock, when the President and Mrs. Hoover. escorted by Boy and Giil Scouts, make their appearance. a Christmas concert by the United States Marine Band will take place at 430 o'clock. _The band. conducted by Capt Taylor Branson, also will play during the ceremonies. Four choral groups will sing during the program, which will be broadcast over a Nation-wide hook-up. The lighting arrangements for the tree are being made by the Electric League of Washington, as in the past. It was during the administration of President Coolidge. in 1923, that the league first lertook _this service. efforts have been made to secure different lemz effects. This League has had a ufactured of a different color and shape from any previously used to light the community tree The ivc Committee in charge of the tion is headed by Mrs. Elizabeth K. Peeples, director of the Community Center Department. She has arranged. with the co-operation of the American Automobile Association, to issue Christmas greetings invitations to attend the ceremoni sent to all guests in the ¢ various hotels on Christmas eve. The subcommittee of which will be | Mia y stopping at | M:;:mp League in charge of the lighting in- ! cludes L. T. Souder, Carl Gershanick, R. J. A. Kaemerer and M. C. Clay, work ing in co-ope: of the Community Center Department A. F. E. Horn, chairman of the league’s | Lighting Committee, and M. C. Turpin. | leagu~ president | Executive Committee. Forestry Group Co-operates. ‘The American chich is represented on the Executive Committee by Ovid Butler, vice chair- man of the 1931 Committee, is co- operating closely in preparation for the event this year and is providing for the colorful souvenir plrogmnm being pre- ared for the occasion. i Headed by Vice President Curtis, the members of the National Committee are Senator Arthur Capper. Representative Mary T. Norton, Col. U. S. Grant, 3d; Representative Sol Bloom, D. C. Com- | o missioner Luther H. Reichelderfer, J. G. Yaden, Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, Dr. Simon, Frederic A. Delano, Mrs. Frederick Edey of the Girl Scollm of America, Walter W. Head of the Boy Scouts of America, Joseph Lee of the National Recreation Association, Mrs. John F. Sippel, General Federation of Women's Clubs; Mrs, William A. Lock- wood of the Garden Club of America, | Marshall E. Sampsell of the Society for ! Electrical Development, Maj. R. Y. Stuart of the Forest Service, Mrs. Elmer J. Ottaway of the General Federation of Music Clubs, E. C. Graham, Dr. E. N. Barnes and George D. Pratt of the American Forr:lr) Asmclatlon BUSY HOL|DAY PLANNED AT FRIENDS:! ticipate in Christmas and New Year Program. Children and adults alike will par- ticipate in the Christmas and New Year festivities planned at Friendship House for the next two weeks. Open house will be observed throughout the pericd. The Christmas program, which began last night, will continue as follows: Carols and stories tonight from 6 to 6 o'clock; Girl Reserves' bazaar and toy nursery | 10:20 am.: day home party at 12:3( pm.: Girl Recorves visit to hospital with tovs, at 2 p.m.: caroling in neigh- borhood at 8 p.m, Thursday, and Plav Club party Saturday from 1:30 to 3 p.m. The New Year activities, featured by & masquerade dance Friday, January 1, from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. will begin next Sunday, concluding January 7 at the parents of the are members of the g ash Forestry Association, ‘Svlmafleld"n THE WEATHER District of Columbia, Maryland, Vir- ginia and West Virginia—Cloudy, pos- sibly light rain today; slightly colder lonlghl. partly cloudy tomorrow. Record for Last 22 Hours. (Temperature.) Midnight, 41; 2 am., 37; 4 am. 36; '6 am, 55; 8 am. 56; 10 a.m., 60; 12 noon. 65: 2 pm.. 67; 4 p.m., 65; 6 pm,, 62: 8 pm. 59; 10 pm. 58 Highest . 67. Lowest 36 Temperature same date last year— Highest, 44. Lowest, 36 Tide Tables (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today. 4:24am. 11:01am 52 p.m. 50 p.m. and Moon. Sets. 4:48 ‘Tomorrow. 5:15am 11:50 am High Low High Low L The Sun Sun, today Sun. tomorrow 4:49 Moon, today 3:12a. Automobile lamps to be lighted onp- half hour after sunset Rainfall. Monthly rainfall in inches Capital (current month to date) Month 1931, Average. Janua 1.56 February ... 136 March 3.50 April 2387 May 484 June 212 July 423 August 592 September .. 2.79 October ... 1.28 November .. 101 December .. 147 in the Rerurd ~ Precipi- tation. § g SR 0 Bm 8pm 525 0.20 Chicago, Cincinnati, _Oh} Cheyenne,” Wo Cleveland. Ohio Datenport. Iowa Denver, Colo Des Momes ch Kansas City, \ Little Rock. Los Angeles, Louisville, Ky Marquette, Mich. Memphis, Tenn. Alal Orleans, rk, N La.. Yo x. the Electric | North Platte, Nebr, Nebr. aha, tion with Harold Snyder | Portland. Portland, 02 St. Paul. San Antonis, Tex. an Diego. Calif San_ Prancisco, Calif.. ta Fe. N. Mex..... 54 Minn, 058 044 T Toledo. Ohi Vicksbure. Miss WARHINGTON. D, C. Clubs to Give Tableaux. A tableaux and & program of Christ- mas carols will be presented by the Glee and Dramatic Clubs of Friendship House at 5 o'clock this afternoon at the settlement. A Christm | o P HOUSE | Children and Adults Alike to Par- || B land and Pennsylvani the Greenhouses. ARGE Assortment of F. Begonias. AKE Your Selection Set Aside. WREATHS, § FLORIST % | for Boston. She went to the home of a oy O Burton’s Flowers T Grown Cut Flowers and Plants from Mary- derful Array of Color in ( ‘vclemen, Poinsettias, ALL PLANTS APPROPRIATELY PREPARED FOR GIFT GIVING GOOD ASSORTMENT OF MEMORIAL ’ We Telegraph Flowers All Over the World Open Sunday and Evenings Until Christmas 'S HELD; QUIZ PUSHED \Wake for Slain Gangster. Guns Studied — Girl Search Fails. NEW YORK, December 19 (7. A | wake was held over slain Jack Dia- mond's body here tonight while these | developiments interested officialdom at Albany, where the emaciated gangster was put on the spot in a cheap board- ing house yesterday: 1—Two guns were used to put away | the mobster, instead of one as hereto- ! fore believed. The pearl-handled “police positive special” 38, found in a churchyard near the scene of the slay- ing, fired two of the slugs lodged in Diamond's head. This was determined by ballistics experts here and reported to Albany police. The other slub came | from another .38, whose whereabouts is | a mystery. Misses Sweetheart. 2.—District Attorney John Delany, who went to Boston to question “Kiki” Roberts, chorus girl sweetheart of Dia- mond, was en route back tonight. He failed to find the girl, although her flamboyant story of love with the gang- ster was told from a Boston hideout to A newspaper. She admitted secing | Diamond later, perhaps. than anybody clse. She fled to Boston at the cry ! of newsboys that Diamond had been | slain Diamond apparently died penni ame from somewhere to buy an $800 mahogany casket. over | which the wake was held. Diamond's | wife said she “didn’t know where” to get funeral money. | Police at Par 4.—The Albany Times-Union says it has learned Sergt. Fred M. Broderick of the suburban Watervliet (N. Y.) police force attended Diamond's ac- quittal revelry Thursday night in Albany cafe. The gangster left celebration, visited Miss Roberts, made his wa where he was ¥ sailants. He had been acquitted | Thursday at Troy of a flogging charge | made in connection with racketeering | Upstate. Diamond’s body, claimed by his ‘wxduw was removed from a Manhattan | funeral establishment. after Mrs. Dia- mond had said she did not see where the money was coming from to bury him. It was taken to Maspeth, I Island, in an $800 casket, and place in the home of Mrs. Diamond’s sister According to tentative arrangements burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. be- side the grave of Diamonds brother, Eddie, who died several years ago. Girl in Hiding. “Kiki” Roberts sat in hiding in Bos- | ton, where her mother lives, and told the Boston American that “my sweet- heart, Jack.” had been with her a short time before he was n in al drab Albany (N. Y.) boarding house. but that she knew nothing about the murder. Alive, “Legs” had been hunted by police, tracked down by personal en mies and publicized as one of gan dom’s most nefarious characters; dead, he was ignored | His body was brought here from Al-| bany shortly before dawn. Widow in Deep Mourning. About noon Mrs. Diamond arrived, | dressed all in black. While she was in the building it was understood she ex- pressed concern over how she—widow | of the man reputed to have made a| fortune in the world of bullets and | Lmrlt]ps —was going to pav the funeral | il | In its copyrighted story the American | quoted Miss Roberts as saying, “I was | in love with Jack Diamond. I was with him in Albany. N. Y. a short | time before he was killed. But I don't | know who killed him. or anything | about his murder. The last time I saw | him was last Thursday night at 11| pm. He drapped into my room at| | Albany to tell me the good news of his | acquittal for kidnaping. “He said to me: ‘Did you hear the g00d news. bab; “I said, “Yes, I'm glad for your sake.' Girl Says She Fainted. The American said Miss Robert s | stated she had an understanding with | Diamond that she was to come home to Boston and her mother as soon as the disposition of his case became known. | He promised to drive her to the rail- | road station in time to take the 10| o'clock train Friday morning. Miss Rcberts said Diamond was with her only 15 mirutes and left saying he had | | an “appointment with newspaper men. | He dic not tell her he was having a party to celebrate his acquittal. “After he left me Thursday night I went to bed.” Miss Roberts was quoted as saying. “My first knowledge that he was killed was the next morning when I heard newsboys calling the extra out- side the house. I thought at first they were crving out that Jack Diamond had | been acquitted. Then—it was like a | dream—I heard the boys calling, “Jack | Diamond killed." “When I awakened fully to know | what the words meant I fainted. Lean- | ing out the window of my room on the | third floor to hear that ominous cry I neariy plunged to the ground. I col- | lapsed on_the floor and I don't know how Jong I was there before I came to.” The former actress then took a train friend when she got here, called her mother and then, with the reporters of the American, went into hiding. A year ago she was in a New York hobel with Diamond when he was shot down and seriously wounded by gang- sters. She told police she was taking a bath and the running water drowned out all sounds of shooting, so she knew | nothing about the assault. a Growers. Fresh out of oliage Plants and a Won- Early and Have Them 1.0 AND UP Phones— Hyatts. 785 Atlantic 0162 | able 4000 Baltimore Boulevard NURSERYMEN oppostte Fort Lincoin Cemtery Representative of Several Papers Honored by News- paper Men. TRAIN, POLICE SAY Penfield Believes Daughteri May Fave Suffered | Memory Lapse. Officers to Be Inaugurated at N \ Ceremonies Late Next Month. 500 | | | By the Associated Press | PHILADELPHIA, December 19— De- tectives said tonight they learned that Virginia Penficld, 19-year-old Colum- bus, Ohio, girl missing mysteriously for | two days, had boarded a train here for Cleveland on Friday night. The girl's father, Clare J. Penficld, wealthy chain store owner, said he be- lieved - he had suffered a lapse of mem- d may be wandering around in Approximately Washington | president of the National Press Club. A veteran Washington correspondent newspaper circles. He ‘represents a number of newspapers. including the (:lll-\vland News and Houston Chion- icle Timmons succeeds Eugene S. Leggett as president of the club. Otker officers elected are: Raymond P. Brandt, St. Louis Post Dispatch, vice president; Lee Poe Hart, New York Journal of Commerce, | secretary; George E. Durno, Interna- tional News Service, financial zecretary, | and Charles A. Hamilton, Troy Times, treasurer. The board of governors will be _com- Five Men Bare Trail. City Detective Raymond Latchford sald five men had been found who de- | clared they saw the missing girl, a student at the fashionable Mary Lyon School, on the Cleveland train the night after she was supposed to have left Philadelphia to spend her Christ- mas holidays at home. Frank Rupert, one of the men, told police the girl got on his train at the | Thirtieth Street Station of the Penn- | sylvania Railroad at 10:48 pm.. and Jlighted at the North Philadelphia tion a few r ater | The four other ported seeing the girl. including Charles Cherry porter, said she boarded the Cleveland- bound train at the North Philadelphia Station at 11:20 p.m build and described by her father as “a decided blonde.” FAILS TO REACH HOME, Relatives “Completely in Dark” Regard- ing Girl's Disappearance, COLUMBUS, Ohio, December 19 (4) Miss Virginia Penfield, missing stu- dent of a fashionable school at Swarth- more, Pa., did not arrive here tonight as her mother had expected, and mem- bers of the family admitted they were | | “completely in the dark” whereabouts. Mr. and Mrs, nati, missing girl, met the train, after a tele- phone call from Clare J. Penfield, the girl's father, who is in Philadelphia, had indicated she was on the train on her way home. However, they found she was not aboard. They said they would meet other trains from the East in the hope she might have txken a different route, FACES I@AN CHR|STMAS SANTIAGO, Chile, December 19 (P —Chile is facing the leancst Christma since before the World War, but the government hopes to bring holiday cheer to 100.000 unemployed men and their families by promulgation of a new unemplo: ment project now under con- sideration A decision is expected by Tuesday regarding the recommendations of a committee of experts who propose to raise more than 100,000,000 pesos ($12.- 000.000) by raising income taxes and levying a special tax on luxurics. of Delightful Dinner 6900 Eager to Get Home. McCreery ot Ardmore. a classmate of Miss Penfield's, who left her at a department store at 3 o'clock | Thursday, said the missing gl was happy and eager to get home to her | family. She also expressed her eager- | ness to ride her prize-winnng horse again | “We parted at the entranc> to the | store and I went on home.” Miss Mc- Creery said. “I wished her a happy holiday and she talked about how ex- °d she was over going home. That was the last I saw her I never knew her to talk of boy friends as her conversation was almost alw about horses and outdoor things." “I do not boy ds. Miss Jeanette C. 1. Loos of Cincin- believe Virginia had any T her father said, “and | annot account for her disappearance. he did not drink or smoke and was always an average happy girl." Plan Nation-wide Search. Miss McCreery and her father, E. McCreers, went to New York to- ation-wide radio Philadelphia detectives conti search here on the meager clues avail- Penficld had $75 in travelers’ a $10 bill and a $10 gold piece she disappeared. She wore a green knitted dress, black t, brown shoes and stock- let of little gold horses ches tall, of medium Miss checks, when raccoon coat felt sports b ings and a br She is 5 feet 5 7 Connecticut Ave. at Porter St. Phone CL. SERVED FROM 12:30 TO 8:30 Fresh Shrimp Cock!ail Celery and Green Olives Juice Kraut am of Green Split Pea Soup ed Spring Chicken Giblet Bauce Prime Rib @ Beef Au Jus inia Ham, Raisin Sauce Grape F Juice o Half Roast Stu Reast Baked V of Sole, Tarter Fresh Broccoli Fresh Brussell Sprouts New Beets Au Buerrs Oandied Sweet Potatoes Mashed Potatoes Salad Elsie. Prench Dressing Hot Mince Pie Diplomat Pudding Coftee. Tea or Milk Pried Fillet Ooleslaw Hot Corn Muffins “and Oh what a difference” Hot Parker House Rolls $]1.00 Cuisine under direct personal charge of our Internationally Famous Chef. Valuable Stock of ORIENTAL ART GOODS Purchased from Assignees of ORIENTAL EMPORIUM STOCK ONSISTS OF Clotsonne, M Canton Imarie, Brasses, Gongs, In- ust cense Burners, Vases, Trays, Cig- arette Boxes, Smoking Sets, Candle- Be Sold sticks, Door Knockers, Vase and Boudoir Lamps and Shades, Chi- nese Lanterns, Pottery, Tea Sets, In Teakwood and Lacquered Stands, Rings, Beads, Bracelets, Souveni Embroidered Wall Hangings, Scarfs and Kimonos, Beverage Sets, Carved Miniature Ivo Soapstone, Slippers, Wall Pnhn, oo Days! EVERY ARTICLE IN THIS STOCK WILL MAKE AN IDEAL XMAS GIFT 61 THIRTEENTH ST. N.W. Nothing Reserved or Added as to her| :aa:azmz&:&%nz:w:m. (-xa: newspaper men went to the polls yes- | | terday and elected Bascom N. Timmons | Timmons is widely known among the | Nation’s political leaders as well as in | post Time: phi New | Wa | Associated Press; George W. Stimpson, | the | Lonisville Times. The officers will be installed at in- | 'augural ceremonies late in January. HOUSE ACTION ON HOLIDAY Bil The bill declaring December 26 and January 2 legal holidays in the District for | da brother-in-law and sister of the | in the House, to be called up und ani | " This legisla tan bus Con a few hou day | The Senate included a provision to insure payment for and New Year fall on Fridays, %0 as to | fl\de a three-day holiday at each week | en BELIEVED S-AiN Cincinnati Police Find No Trace of Marian McLean. Los Argeles Case Similar. By the Associated Press CINCINNATI, December 19 (P)—A | parallel of the Marian Parker cams - that was the theory police worked on tonight as they widened scarch for | Marian McLean, 6, and her foreign- | looking kidnaper. ‘ Subway tunncls, Gypsy camps and empty freight cars have been searched in vain for the McLean girl, who dis- | appeared Thur: v evening when duced by a tall, dark, hatchet-faced man to follow him down an alley. Polica belicve tke abductor was demented Unlike the Parker girl, daughter of a Los Angeles banl the McLean child is of a family poor circum- stances, but police feared the latter been slain, the same iate as overto the California schoolgirl four years ago. Remote Places Searched. Officers groped through the lengths of abandoned subway tubes, made | swift raids through ~Gypsy camps, scurried through cellars and basements and with the aid of railroad police searched every empty box car in the ‘h‘:lflh[ where Ma | Kentuc BAN(OW N. ’ll‘fl‘\l() NS. ed of Sir Willmott Lewis, William C. Murphy, a Public Ledger; York Sun; shington Post; in London Philadel- Ralph A. Collins, Aubrey E. Taylor, Robert S, Pl(x(‘rfi Pathfinder, and Lorenzo Martin, o Northern fake clue woman. ours BILL SEEN TOMORROW Is i"eld on Speaker's Desk to Be Called Police helicved ‘he been returned by now other small he last Two were body of the thir in a pillow slip on the doc home. Marian. too ill to attend school in a third floor tenament. and had been permitted by her mother to go down stairs to the narrow street fresh | air. The child walked up street block where she watched Jul vizzi, 18, a friend, wash hi Zervizzi said he saw Mari down an alley with a stra MONEY - irst Mortgage L. W. Groomes, 1319 Fre St. I, Passed by Seuate, 16 v never seen Under Unanimous Consent. fonbihe dotitote lived this year only, because Christmas which passed the Senate last Fri- . is being held on the Speaker's desk un- mous consent, probably tomorro on is_especially impor- t because of its relief to the banking iness. Without formal legislation of 1gress, banks would have to open for s on each of these two Satur- 1 walking those days to per diem employes of the Government the same as all annual pay roll employes. Street car and bus fares in Edinburgh, Scotland, which zoning plan, now have a rate of 6 cents for FOR SALE Just East of Col DETACHED. AL RES .8 RoOM ATTIC. FU] GARAC SLATE' ROO} have been only on & a ride of any length on the same vehicle - fi( i 39 Christmas Trees (3 to 5 Feet High) planied 'in (he yares special prices. WREATHS of All Kinds Beautiful Potted Plants for Gifts el EVERGREENS 7![[65‘," DELIVERY ASSOCIATION tree i heary Christmas Wreaths in a ree Box Woods, Junipers, Living Evergreen Retinosporas high .. cee GEORGE A COMLEY (Florist) 3209 M St. Phnne mn o109 A. ]\AH\ INC. Diamond G i f { S—from the Gift Store for all the People 930 Solid Platinum DIAMOND RING An unusually at- tractive thirty-four hundredths perfect diamond, set in & solid platinum mounting with 2 small diamonds on either side . . . very moderately priced. Platinum-Diamond BAGUETTE WATCH Twenty-eight select- ed diamonds, beauti- fully mounted in a solid platinum baguette ease , , . the 17-jewel movement assures time-keeping accuracy . . . adding practica- bility to beauty. The moderate price is $9. *95 Countless Diamond Gift Suggestions PINS BROOCHES NECKLACES BINGS WAICHES PENDANTS SOLITAMRDS DINNER RINGS « BRACELETS Jewelers Platinamsmiths A. Kby e Arthur J. Sundlun, President 39 Years at 935 F Street