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THE EVENING RECH EADSAGRE OUTLOK IS BREHT 1932 Justifies Hope Worst Is Over, Von Hinden- burg Declares. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, January 2—A distinct note of optimism was discernible yesterday | in the speeches with which Germany's leaders ushered in 1933 Both President von Hindenburg and Chancellor von Schleicher, in an ex- change of congratulations, indicated their belief the Reich'’s future now ap- pears somewhat brighter, although, they agreed, there is much hard work ahead. The 85-year-old soldier-president, leaning lightly on his ebony cane as he greeted diplomats who called to pay thelr respects, astonished them by his! apparently undiminished vigor. President von Hindenburg stood at the door of the old chanceilery, his temporary home, and received the re- port of the guard of honor yesterday morning. Subsequently he greeted the traditicnal deputation of salt mine workers at Halle. By an age-old privilege, these work- ers preceded even the diplomats in pre- senting solemn New Year greetings and bread and salt to the head of the state. Sightseers Jam Street. ‘Wilhelmstrasse was jammed with sightseers when the roll of drums King Ignores Fails to Include Capt. New heralded the approach of the diplomats at whose head was Msgr, Cosare| Orsenigo, Papal nuncio in Germany, who after paying the compliments to tHfe Presi health declared the Reich, ce cifficu’t had im cnal rolations while T ernal'y and so had truly kable achieve- | ment. : To this Von Hindenburg replied that | 1t had indeed taken extreme efforts and | unusual measures to master the difficul- tles of the old year, but that the crisis was not yet past and millions were still ; in want “The powers of a single country are not sufficient to give work to all its citizens,” he said. “It needs the sympa- thetic co-operation of governments and & far-reaching reorganization of com- mercial relations if living conditions everywhere are to be made more bear- | able.” After the diplomats had bowed them- | selves out, President von Hindenburg received members of the cabinet at whose head was Chancellor. Kurt von | Bchleicher. Chancellor Praises President. Gen. Von Schieicher polnted to him @s one giving a shining example of | devotion to duty in reassuming the heavy burden of his office last May. The chancellor said the two men who had preceded him in office had followed suggestions contained in the President’s previous New Year message and had succeeded in freeing the Reich from reparations problems, thus clearing the way for general economic Tecovery. Moreover, Herr von Schleicher con- | tinued, the principle of arms equality | now has been recognized. “We will return to the disarmament conference in order to_ bring about genuine disarmament while obtaining | the same security as have other na-, tions,” he said. President von Hindenburg replied: “Many difficulties that were overcome 1n 1932 justify the hope that the worst is over and that an upward course lies before us. “Let us hope that an improvement in international relations will further ma- terialize. The nation’s finances which were in deadly peril last year have begun to be restabilized.” —t A. P. TRAFFIC AGENT DIES C. A. Wayman Was With Boston Bureau. ARLINGTON, Mass,, January 2 (®). A. Wayman, traffic department representative of the Boston Bureau of the Associated Press, died last night at his home here after 8 week’s illness. He was born January 26, 1903, at Louisburg, Kans., and entered the serv. ice of the Associated Press April 2, 1923, at Pittsburg, Kans. He worked subsequently at Jefferson City, Mo.; Sedalia, Mo.; Kansas City, Chicago and New York and was appointed at Bos- ton, August 2, 1931. The widow and three children survive. made Connected CAPT. JAMES A. MOLLISON. | new in 9 today By the Associated Press. ONDON, January barons were listed Britain's titled array. The King's annual New Year distribution of rewards for pub- lic services also created privy coun- cillors, 6 baronets, 28 knights and many companions. | There was surprise in some quarters because the names of Capt. James A. Mollison and his wife, Amy Johnson. | both famous flyers were not included | in the list. ‘The new barons are: 1 Sir Joseph Duveen, internationally known art collector who has been dec- | orated for his activities in that field | by four governments and a baronet since 1926. Sir Thomas Horder, physician to the Prince of Wales since 1923 and_holder of important posts in several London Hospitals. Noted Flyers . and Mrs. Titles. Mollison in PField Marshal Sir Gecrge Milne, chief of the imperiz1 general stafl. Sir Charles Nall-Cain, prominent usiness man Sir Rennell Rodd, former Ambassador to Italy and former American non-na- tional member of the United States- Venezuela Peace Advancement Com- mission Sir Walter Runciman, prominent shipping operator and father of Walter Runciman, president of the Board of Trade and member of British cabinet. | Among those named baronets were Sir Owen Seaman, editor of the humor- ous magazine, Punch, and Sir Ernest Musgrave Harvey, deputy governor of the Bank ‘of England. Joseph G. Latham, minister of foreign affairs in the new Australian government, was made a privy councillor. Rev. John Scott Lidgett, president of the Methodist Church, was named & companion of honor. By the Assoclated Press. | NEW YORK, January 2—In basement studio full of faces that grin | and scowl, “Tokio” Payne has worked | seconds—and at the same time give | her subjects one of the best facial treat- | ments they ever had. It took a year of experimentation. during which many a superstitious | janitor and garbage man rebelled at even touching the gruesome plaster | heads she threw out the back door. But today the dynamic young artist —sociglly prominent daughter-in-law | of Frederick Payne, Assistant Secretary | of War—bustled about preparing for a | Fifth avenue exhibit to celebrate her | success. Studio Walls Covered. The walls of the studio are covered with masks of celebrities—Francis Led- erer, the matinee idol; Rosamond Pin. chot, the nun ‘in “The Miracle”; | Groucho Marx, with glasses, cigar and mustache; Edward Johnston, the opera | singer, and Assistant Secretary Payne. | Some are in bronze, tin and porce- | lain. One is of translucent glass. “Death masks are common; life masks are not,” explained Mrs. Payne, as she put on a Japanese smock which heightened the Oriental appearance that won her the nickname of “Tokio.” “Under the process generally used, the ‘patient’ has to lie with plaster on his face too long. When the French LIFE MASKS EASY TO MAKE | AND TREATMENT HELPS FACES “Tokio" Payne, Prominent Daughter-in-| Law of Assistant Secretary. Takes Only 90 Seconds for Process. artist Houdon ‘did’ George Washington, a | the President spent hours with the Stuff | ness became slo on his face.” Mrs. Payne has changed all that. She won't tell much about her method out a way to make life masks in 90| for fear some cne will copy it, but this | the bills of his business Mr. J. borrowed much she disclosed: Instead of sticking goose quills through the plaster so the subject can breathe, she has made breathing per- | fectly normal; she has eliminated the | weight of 5 or 6 pounds of plaster by an ingenious device, and she has cut the time from hours to seconds. Like Whipped Cream. “The mixture I put on looks and feels like whipped cream. The appli- cation is as beneficial to the skin as a mud pack. “Many men who won't pose for art- ists or sculptors, and shy clear of pho- tographers, have a naive interest in seeing how they really look, without ben- efit of ‘corrections’ at the hands of re toucher or artist. “Of course, being an artist myself, I often spend days touching up the face or painting naturalistic or impression- alistic colors on the mask.” ‘Women, she finds, are more ideal sub- jects than men. “I guess it's because they're so used to having facial treatments. “And how did 1 start? Oh, ves, T was anxious to see how I really looked myself, so I began making my own mask.” NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING, meeting of stockholders of 111'be held at the th Street N.W., 10 o'clock &.m., on VSN, C. TRUE. Secretary. _ JNNUAL MEETING—THE MUTUAL BUILD- G ASSOCIATION will ld its annual mee;]nllq' ce vashington. D. Yuesday, January C., at 10, G Monday, Janu- p.m.. at its office, The reading of ihe election of officers is meeting. THOMAS P. BROWN, President. THOMAS E. PETTY | | e annual repo Wil be held at THAT , THE Iders of The the election e ensuing year | other business | eeting, will | pany. 36t | . D. C. on . st 10:45 | CE_18 HEREBY GIVE reeting of the Stock! on_Company, { ec AMPTON, Secretary. | ING OF THE STOC! ss0 - A n M. WOODWARD. Secretary. _ 3 OF THE STOCK- olders of ¢ Association of ngton. tr o'elock noor GEORGE R. REPETTIL i 4 Seormtary . - .. %6 THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE NA- tional Capital Insurance Company of the President. Distriet of Columbia: uant tion passed by the Board of Trustees of th National Capital Insurance Company of the | District of Columbla, at a meeting held on | regulate m Columbi authorizing sueh CE F. DONOHOR, R REPETTI CLARE! GEORGE HOWARD A £S TER H 1S F RICE B 5. A, HERBERT, JR.. Belng & malority of the Board of Trustees “Gloomy Dean” of St. By the Associated Press. LONDON, January 2—Dean Inge of St. Paul's Cathedral, whose comments | on life have brought him the title of “The Gloomy Dean,” is strong for sun bathing, but not nudism, and thinks churches should support the eugenics movement. “I have no sympal ries of the nudists, with the vaga- of the skin to the sun and air is the | most valuable part of open-air bathing. | “The churches have no sympathy | with those squeamish town councilors who wish to insist that all persons en- he told a health | d | education conference, “but the exposure | DE;\N iNGE ADVOCATES SUN BATHS | | Follies dancer, suffered a fractured jaw | BUT SHUNS ‘VAGARIES OF NUDISTS’ | Paul Cathedral Believes Churches Should Support Eugenics Movement. A clergyman should legally be al- lowed to refuse to solemnize a marriage between unfit persons, he said. “The Church ought also to condemn that kind of marriage as wrong. If married persons believe that their chil- dren are likely to be diseased in body or mind, it is right, and not wrong, for them to prevent comception of those children.” STALLS CAR, KILLS MAN | Oklahoman, Angered by Incident, | . [ 4 Doetors Come to Rescue, tering the water should be fully clothed from neck to knee.” As for eugenics: Shoots Three Victims. | 23, apparently angered by the stalling | of a motor car tn mud, shot and kille: | one companion, W. M. Edwards, and Good Reason Seen At Last to Stop Studying at Home vehicle. | . The injured were E. G. Edwards, | brother of the man killed, and E. J. | Smith, & brother-in-law. Ed Walsh also in the car, escaped injury. | lived in Seminole. Police were search- | ing for Counts. | but Set Bedtime at 8 P.M. for Children. By the Assoclated Press | ST. PAUL, January 2. —Listen, chil- o | dren: Don’t let your parents know we told you, but the fact is, you shouldnt do any school homework. And if dad and mother insist, tell them physicians of the Minnesota State Medical Association say grade and ju- nior high school kids should do all their stucying in school; no more of this arithmetic and grammar stuff after dinner. | If the folks are still skeptical, you can learn the following quetation from | the Medical Association and rattle fl‘ VANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO {rom New York. Richmond, Boston. Pitts- urgh and ail way points < ATIONAL DEriVER?RESN PINE. THTY Y. ave. Nat. 14 SMITH'S 13 You long_ex- ct methods U Tesults. A8 A LEN. Col' 2333 TN BUSINESS FOR MY M. Bealth, of your Bucintes - MLl ood and Guplicating of Al kinde: Bin 1406 G "w. oft | | “Excessive demands made vpon the| children by both school and home | schedules have a tendency to impair | health, The six hours required of & child in school is enough time for him | o devote to formal learning. “If he cannot learn enough reading, writing and arithmetic in that time omething must be wrong with cur teaching or with educational require- ments.” | Of course, you don’t have to say anything about the “best general rule” the association mentioned. That rule making all kids go to bed by 8 pam. Park avenue apartment, in Ne Irving Lehm: son of the Governor; oath; Hilda SEMINOLE, Okla, January 2 (#).— | | “The church should actively support | Officers said yesterday Raymond Counts, | the eugenics movement and discourage . | the prejudice which exists against 1t.” wcunded two other occupants of the | ERBERT H. LEHMAN taking the oath of office as the an of the Court of Appeals. Left to right: Arthur Jane and John Peter, dsughter and son of the STAR, WASHINGTON, OPPORTUNITY FUND - ASSURED SUCCESS |Grand Total of Contributions Within $37 of $10,717 Goal. D. C., MONDAY, Success of The Star's Christmas Op- portunity Fund appeal for 20 destitute | families virtually was assured today | when the grand total of contributions soared to within $37 of the goal of $10,717. As the fund reached this point near the peak, another family's needs were wiped from the “mercy” list, lenving‘ only one home short of its charity goal. | It ‘was hoped delayed mails would con- | tain sufficient donations to meet in | full the needs of the remaining family. | The case still open is Opportunity | No. 3, which involves a mother and her four children of school age. The sum of $1,000 was needed to support this worthy group for a whole year. Of this amount, approximately $1,043 has been raised. Even if the $37 required to close this case is not forthcoming, the family is assured of the necessities of life for most of the year. | The family whose needs were fully | provided for by belated returns was | listed as Opportunity No. 14. The fam- | ily consists of a disabled father, a| faithful mother and two young chil~ |dren. — An excess of about $20 alloted |to this family has been turned over to Obportiinity 3 Today's 1 Name. Acknowledged om Sl No. 3. ist of contributions follows: No. Amount. e (T Oppt. No. '3 2.00 Oppt. No. 3 1.00 Oppt. No. 14 1.00 Oppt. No. 14 1.00 Any Any Any Any Any Any Any Any Any Any Any Miss N Anonymous Miss N.. Anonymous Anonymous Cash total $10,210.44 The remaining “opportunity” follows: Opportunity No. Father Is in Prison. Still needed (approximately)..$37.00 At one time the J. family was well | {o. Mr. J. had almost paid for a small |modern dwelling in the residential sec- | |tion of the city. He owned & small | 1clotlung store and did fairly well until | ‘the depression came on. His main con- | | cern was caring for his wife, who was iaufleflng from heart trouble, and his | | four youngsters, ranging from 2 to 9| years of age. - In 1929, however, busi- | W. Mr. J. was no longer | | able to keep up the mortgage on his | | property and the mortgage on it was | | eventually foreclosed. In order to meet |from every source, and when his cred- |itors pressed him he became frantic. | He knew only one thing—that his wife |and children must not suffer. He began passing checks. Things ‘went along smoothly until the bank brought the matter into court. and four children still must be cared | for. Mrs. J. has heart trouble and it |1s impossible for her to work, even if a ‘,Db could be found. She hesitates to |accept assistance, but she is helpless ‘Bnd knows she must depend on some lone to see her through this crucial |period. Mrs. J. is a good manager and can care for her family’s needs on $90 |a month. The sum of $1,080 would give the family food, clothing, shelter | and medical care for a year. DANCER’S BROKEN JAW | PREVENTS POLICE QUIZ | Inability to Talk Stops Inquiry Into Injuriss at Lawyer's Estate. By the Assoclated Press. MINEOLA, N. Y., January 2.—Efforts to learn how Feon Van Mar, former early Saturday on the Long Island estath of George E. Kent, were post- poned yesterday when the girl was ound still unable to talk. Inspector Harold R. King of the pital, but was told the girl's condition | would prevent questioning for two or three days. George E. Kent, jr., son of the retired | lawyer, who drove Miss Van Mar out to | the estate Friday night, telephoned the hospital to inquire about her condition. Police expressed the theory the girl fell from a second story porch while wandering about in the dark. Kent said he was asleep at the time and was unable to explain the accident. \MANILA THRONG GREETS WIDOW OF ROOSEVELT | g o i | Visit to Som, Governor General Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Draws Native Demonstration. By the Associated Press. MANILA, January 2.—A large crowd greeted Mrs. Edith Kermit Roosevelt, 1-year-old mother of Gov. Gen. Theo- | dore Roosevelt, jr., on her arrival here today from Seattle aboard the President Madison for a visit with her son. | Mrs. Roosevelt, widow of the Presi- | dent, was accompanied from Hongkong | by her daughter-in-law. Manuel Quezon, president of the in- All | sular Senate, yesterday requested his | to Minnesota by his parents 96 years | countrymen to turn out and greet Mrs. Roosevelt as an indication of respect. Lehman Takes Over Reins in New York OATH ADMINISTERED BY BROTHER. Governor of New 'w York City. oath was administe! the oath; Mrs. ‘Governor. Mr. J. | is now serving a sentence. His wife | | Nassau County police visited the hos- | Lieut. Gov.-elect Vic Meyers of Washington leading his jazz orchestra through the streets of Seattle during his campaign. Speclal Dispatch to The Star. SPOKANE, Wash, January 2 (N.AN.A) —Citizens hereabouts were surprised and amused when this met their eyes: Democratic victory ball. Lieut. Gov.- elect “Vic" Meyers and his 12-piece jazz band. The garden. Tuesday night. Such fs Democracy—a jazz maestro elevated to the seats of the mighty It was thus Victor A. Meyers of Se- attle, Democratic gift to the State of Washington as its lieutenant governor, was introduced to Spokane and the eastern part of the State The jazz musician, amazingly elevated | to & State office of distinction, appeared on this side of the Cascades, not only to present himself as the lieutenant governor-elect but, as the jazz band leader he is, to conduct his 12-piece band at the Democratic revel, in cele- bration of a State victory that gave the Jeffersonians a clean sweep from the governorship down. When the State of Washington gulped its surprise in discovering, the morning after election, that it had a jazz band leader for a lieutenant governor, it read Mr. Meyers' naive comment and marveled: | “I don't know why musicians can't make good office holders. Paderewski was a musician and he became premier | of Poland.” It all started as a publicity stunt Mr. Meyers and his band were having tough going in Seattle. Depression and some prohibition lockouts had NEEDFOR U S.AD INNICARAGUA ENDS Special Relations to Tiny Republic Considered Closed Here. By the Associated Press. | The Marines have been withdrawn from Nicaragua and the State Depart- | ment considers the special relationship | by which the United States intervened | | in that country’s internal affairs in 1926 | at an end. \ The department, in a review of the Marine occupation promised that “no American armed forces will remain in that country, either as instructors in the constabulary, as a legation guard or in any capacity whatsoever.” | Secretary Adams yesterday sent New Year greetings to.the American forces, the last of which were scheduled to sall for home today. He said the “rec- ord has been excellent throughout and reflects great credit upon the Marine Corps and the whole naval service.” The State Department said the pur- poses for which the Marines remained in Nicaragua had been fulfilled. Tbey were given as the organization and training of a non-partisan national con- stabulary and the supervision of the 1928, 1930 and 1932 elections. By tonight, all of the 1,400 officers | and men will have lef. At one time— July, 1929—there were 5365 Marines and 456 naval officers and men in Nica- ragua. Since 1926 five American officers | and 29 men were killed in action against bandits and insurgents while 14 officers and 85 men died of wounds. The cost of keeping the Marines there over and above expenses had they been at | home, has been estimated at about $1,000,000 a year. | ST s UNION VETERAN STARTS | 101ST YEAR BY SINGING |Oldest Inmate of Minnesota Sol- diers’ Home Hospital Keeps Pledge at Birthday Party. | By the Associated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, January 2.—Felix | Cornayer, oldest veteran in the Min- nesota Soldiers’ Home Hospital here kept a resolution yesterday and started | and leading u goat. JANUARY, 2, 1933. “Mahatma” Meyers Wins in Election JAZZ BAND LEADER CELEBRATES VICTORY AS LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF WASHINGTON. TIRKS AFFERORS - OF 10000 ALIENS Nationalist Move in Line‘ With That of Exchanging Greeks for Moslems. | By the Assoctated Press. Nationalist Turkey’'s movement fo force 10,000 more foreigners out of jobs in Istanbul is viewed as being in_accord with the Turkey-for-Turks policy inaugurated in 1923, when 1,- 200,000 Greeks were moved to Greece in_exchange for 500,000 Moslems. That was the greatest mass move- ment of population in modern times with the exception of the migration of Chinese farmers into Manchuris, which prior to 1929 approximated 1,5 500,000 yearly. The latest movement to make jobs | for Turks provides for the explusion of* foreign waiters, bootblacks, grocers, | musicians, cabaret performers, janitors, | gardeners, lawyers, engineers, chemists, dentists and doctors. Most of the for- | eigners In the lower categories are Greeks, but many Germans and Arme- nians are among the professional men. Reprisals Threatened. sadly interfered with his profession when the fates suddenly began to smile upon him. It must have been the fates for nobody else in Seattle seemed to, not even a Democrat, Last Spring Seattle was having its mayorality race when Mr. Meyers con- ceived the idea of running for mayor as a publicity stunt. Used to cajoling his jazz public as a facetious master of ceremonies, he launched a campaign of nonsense that brought him front page space Seattle’s municipally-owned street. railway system, that has proved a rav- enous white elephant, served as the first butt for the band master’s humor. “If I am elected mayor, I will im- mediately put the street railway system on a paying basis,” he told Seattle. “I will put hostesses on the street cars |and serve cracked ice and ginger ale on the owl cars.” At a political luncheon he appeared as Mahatma Gandhi, wearing a loin cloth and a pair of horn-riramed glasses ‘When it came time for speeches, Mr. Meyers was called upon and gave his contribution, he dis- | played a placard that proclaimed “This is my day of silence.” Mr. Meyers' Gandhi is said to have been flawless, except that his heavy set muscular body didn't look as though it had ever undergone a day of fast. This feat broadcast his fame to the far corners of the State. “Vic” Meyers headlines that spread themselves across the papers acted like a heady elixer Germany has threatened to make re: prisals by closing the doors of its uni-" “and he began to think perhaps he was | versities to 500 Turkish students who | as good a politician as a band master. |are studying there, and Greece has | Mr. Meyers began to take himself | threatened to expel Turks employed in | serfously. Greece. But when Election day rolled around, | = American, British and French busi- Mr. Meyers awoke to discover he had ness and professional men very gen- Tun ninth in the mayorality race and | erally left Istanbul years ago and only s;mllfsr body politic breathed & sigh | two Americans are affected by the re- of relief. cent law. Including th However, this defeat didn't discourage | affected forelgners the men Taes o the band master. The State election | force 40,000 persons to leave Istanbul. was in the offing and he looked over | Turkish commerce has suffered as s political possibilities to discover that he | result of the bar against foreigners could file for lieutenant governor on al made the change the Democratic ticket. He reallzed that* file for the office, he asked how to spell pear temporarily, but said it was his lieutenant. | “But whether he could spell the title | s, o teach Turks how to handle |of his office or not, Mr. Meyers won Purthermore, he urged that the elim- the primaries and’ when Gov.-Elect|ination of foreign political Clarence Martin was swept into the| political intrigue | governorship by a plurality of 130,000 | ¥ould make it possible to rebuild Tur- | tion to the staggering realization that | the Nation's Democratic cataclysm had ?f:“g;s;l — Air}r‘l:rl::zr:ngfonon;lc expert shoved a jazz band leader on to his | 47, B %0 O e extension of Turkish staff of lieutenant governor. Possibly, | e os. Mr. Meyers was equally surprised, but f Transfer in 1923. N et be was mors plodsed han | g4 1e2y’ Cireess: who'wers Yattid B r. Martin. Mr. Meyers Hkes to declare in public | é‘e’;figmb“fi% (St wi:bon"x: o utterance, “I am 34, the next to the | n, bu who were i youngest of 16 children. I always tell | and Eastern Thrace, the European part this to the amusement of the men and | of Turkey, were not forced to migrate the amazement of the women.” l‘:e o ‘Ng)n lfi:&l:vfir, those whf dh.a' i3 ctive politically were expelied in (Copyriant. 1933. by Naeth large numbers, and ever since that time (American News- | Can VYou, Solvglt o } (hrough new lavs imiog she setviics GAS VICTIM REVIVED BY NEW DYE INJECTION| in which fofeigners are permitted to.: San Francisco Man in “Fair” Con- engage. Armenian communities also migrated | dition After Artificial Respiration and Use of Methylene Blue. in great numbers when the Greek armies were defeated by the Turks in the war over Smyrna, which resulted so | By the Associated Press. key which were so suddenly uprooted. | __SAN FRANCISCO, January 2.—Allen | Turkey lost most of myccmmmm. D. Mabry, 54, who sought death by car- | artisan and industrial population disastrously for Greece. The League of Nations, the American Committee for - | bon menoxide poisoning Friday night | through this vast movement. It also Relief in the Near East and many other organizations helped Greece in rehabili- tating these Christian subjects of Tur- O + criminopory | 410, Was resuscitated by artificial res- v Fordney fs professor of criminolosy | piration and subsequent injections of oo Y. f s aVICE I8 QILh | methylene blue dye, was in a “fair” con- ses. | dition at a hospital here yesterday. | Dr. R. J. Millzner, who used injec- ::Z;dn;ounn. hundreds of c;nmkmnhmuN;g"om ‘%‘ th]io,-m:;hy;l'm gblue'_h:nfl al ry_your wits on it! It takes but ONE | monoxide pof victim for rst | E d! Eve v M TE 0! WP A 209, SV | ime on record, said Mabry apparently story itsel{—and there is only one answer. | Was developing pneumonia and other How good a detective are you? complications, but that his mental con- A dition“was ‘hx;conung rational. = e methylene blue treatmen not Tea for Two. » heart stimulant, but combats the ac- tion of the monoxide, which crowds the BY H. A. RIPLEY. | vital oxygen away from the blood cells. 8 Roach patrolled his beat, Mrs. | — - Jones flung open her dcor and A screamed: “Officer, omcer. come| WARDEN MAY REMAIN here! Something terrible has happened!” By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. Rushing across the yard, he entered the Jones kitchen. He certainly was not | 2 Urhonas coine onl L anuary prepared for what he found. At the|gas warden of the count; jail, it ap- table in the breakfact nook sat & Eirl. | peared todiy. aitlonat she BouULD: blood from & wound | Bea o Gl Tosdet lod | State Central Committee recommended staining the linen | that he be replaced January 1 by How- cloth. A hasty ex- | ard Prottor of Brandywine. amination was| ~While Sheriff W. Curtis Hopkins said sufficient. Out | he “would rather not” comment on the came Roach’s note | case, he has failed to take any action bcok. He wouldn't| toward appointing Proctor and Talbott gl.:v 'zfli"fl'n w}ie | served mell‘s to the prisoners yester- > ay, as usual. tance Kelley at-| e e, S tached to them. o it dead from ROBBED OF $32 through heart. ilood still c1'llaw§ngt. James, B. Joyner Reports Hold-up | pparently jusi shot; .32-caliber re- to Police. e O feble. 0| James B. Joyner, 607 Florida avenue | with daintylunch— | ROrtheast, Teported to police last night small tea cakes, hot | he was held up at Fourth and G streets blsé\&l}{: a;‘x;f mrslse&gmhd and preserves.| about 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon by Acme Manufactuting Co’s agent’s kit | tWo colored men who threatened to e L L | stab him with a knife and robbed him Girl's purse, 85 cents; no identifica- | Of $32. Attacked by five colored men, tion ‘C;gg: Graham, 1122 Sixth street, was » robbed of $10 at Columbia street near Woat does {t all meant? queried|p'yireet early yosterday, according to al police report. — e . Motint Sinia Baptist Suffers Loss of $12,000. Mrs. Jones hysterically. “Why did she come here? ~What did she want? I den’t even know who she is?” “Were you in the room when it hap- pened?” “No, thank God! While waiting for | my luncheon guest I went into the living room to relax for a few minutes | and fell asleep M my chair. Thirty minutes later I was awakened by the shot and rushed out here to find every- |thing as I left it but for that dead | his 101st year by singing. | body!” Pire which started in an_adjoining | house yesterday wrecked the Mount | Sinai Baptist Church, colored, 1133 New red Lehman, 'S Herbert H. Lehman; At the conclusion of a luncheon cele- brating his 100th birthday, he joined with the guests in singing “The Star Spangled Banner,” as he had told friends he would do. Although con- fined to a wheelchair, Mr. Cornayer chatted gayly with old cronies and his grandchiidren at the party and enjoyed his birthday “immensely.” ‘There were three birthday cakes, with 100 candles on each. Mr. Cornayer was born January 1. 1833 in Lyons, France, and was brought | ;g0. He served in the 2d Minnesota In- | fantry during the Civil War. York in the panelled living room of his by the new Governor’s brother, Judge the Governor’s brother; Peter Lehman, 5 Fhoto, Jersey avenue. The blaze started in the home of | James Perry, colored, 1131 New Jersey | avenue, and spread to the church. | Members of the congregation attempted to save fixtures, but were unsuccessful. The total loss was estimated at ap- | proximately $12,000, Shoots Brother Accidentally. Playing with a gun in his home yes- | | terday, Charles Harris, colored, 19, of | BODY FOUND HALF BURIED 1019 Florida avenue, accidentaily shot Youth Had Been Hunted Since De- | his 15-year-old brother, Sherman Harris, | | in the abdomen. The boy was taken to | cember 14—Father Still Lost. | Casualty Hospital, where his condition | DUNNVILLE, Ontario, January 3 (), | a8 said to be serious. —Lake Erie last night had yielded up | SR | Five thousand ds the body of 21-year-old James Foster, | are being used in France who, with his father, Richard Foster, | pounds of perfume essence. has been missing since December 14.| - : Half-burled in the sand, 100 yards from | shore, the body was found 2 miles east | Despite her denial, was this girl the expected guest? “None of that!” chouted Roach as Mrs. Jones opened the door and turned on the electric fan. “You wcn't have much chance when the inspector gets my report!” WHY? (See Page A-10 for solution.) of tuberoses | to make 212 “See Etz and See Better” lost mcst of its professional men, and the lack of doctors and dentists was for a time a serious problem. Prominent Citizens Appeal for Charity In New Year Talks Calvin Coolidge, Al Smith, Mrs. Roosevelt and Dr. Butler Speak. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 2.—Co-opera= tion and charity were urged in New Year messages from Calvin Coolidge, Alfred E. Smith, Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt and other prominent persons- made public last night by Claude Bowers, author and political writer. Asserting the country’s resources are “sufficient to meet our requirements if we use them to help each other,” Mr. Coolidge's message said “we should co-operate to promote all kinds of business activity. We should do what we can in the way of charity. If all that is implied in these two words could be put into operation not only would our economic condition steadily to improve but our destitute would secure ample relief.” The message from former Gov. Smith sald “let us all highly resolve that for the new year we will stop complaining, put our shoulder to the wheel, keep working until we bring the United States of America out of the fog of business depression * = *.” Mrs. Roosevelt said: “Let us solve in this new year to lay aside old en- mities and old fears—to face life with & new courage and determination—to think, not only of our own problems, but of the problems of our country and the world, and to unselfishly strive for the good of all in whatever we do.” A message from acting Mayor Joseph V. McKee predicted that “the close of 1933 will find us safely out of this se- vere depression.” Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, saying that “to face forward means to achieve a new, larger and a higher view of the mean ing of a nation,” declared no nation “can reach and maintain prosperity alone.” “To prosper,” his message continued, 'a nation must quickly learn that the whole world is now economically and politically interdependent.” — AR Vessels Register Portuguese. LISBON (#).—The local branch of the Vacuum Oil Co. is changing its vessels from American to Portuguese registry so as to save on port dues and taxes here. of Port Colborne. Richard Foster, 52-year-old Mohawk Island light-house keeper, and his son had Deen the object of an intensive search since they failed to return to their "Dunnville home from their light house station at the close of navigation. The body of the eider Foster still is be- ing sought. RS ST DRUG STORE IS ROBBED Stamps, Liquor, Narcotics and $300 in Cash Taken. Thieves broke into the Taft Phar- macy, 3300 Wisconsin avenue, early and took & Post Office De- nartment safe containing $120 worth of tamps, several cases of liquor, $150 worth of narcotics and $300 in ‘There is only one safe lan to follow—that is to ve your eyes examined ;:‘{he first sign of discom- Optometrists 1217 G Bt. N.W. Material Now, any house or apartment with any space to spare, from a niche to a whole wall, can have bookshelves of architec- tura: quality. You buy the ends, tops, vertical divisions (10 inches deep), backs, and adjust- able shelves (8 inches deep) with beautifully x‘l‘m:olded front edges, to Sketch and measure the space you wish, filled and we will tell you how little it costs. LUM .l‘;d MILLWORK 0th & K N.W.