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GALES SWEEPU. 3. SHIPPING PERILED Heavy Rains and Blizzards Bring Property Damage to Various Areas. By the Associated Press. Freakish Midwinter winds which brought torrential rairs and blizzards, together with property damage and various climatic changes, to scattered parts of the Nation, had died down to- day, but the devastating effects re- mained. Idaho and other Western States pre- sented scenes of snowdrifts that piled as high as six feet, while Southern California checked the havoc wrought by a drenching downpour of rain, ac- companied by a gale that endangered lives and shipping. Rather than face the storm at anchor in the harbor, two battleships and a destroyer put out to sea from San Pedro. Los Angeles measured 2.07 inches of Tain, of which half an inch fell in 12 minutes. Snow fell early today in the citrus fruit sections at and near Riverside and San Bernardino, Calif. But (he‘ crop loss was expected to be small, as 3t melted as it hit the ground. Minjature flood reports kept -police busy and 15 families were taken from | the Canoga Park district when a tor- | rent became threatening. A brid over what normally was a_“waterless” stream was closed to traffic when it became weakened by the surge of water. Power lines were down in Michigan @s a result of a 50-mile gale that shrieked and whistled across the State | and stirred up mountainous waves on | three of the Great Lakes—Michigan, | Huron and Erie. | In Chicago the wind reached a velocity of 59 miles an hour and put | an end to a January warm wave. | New York counted extensive property | losses from the effects of a 55-mile | gale, which instead of cooling the State | off warmed it up to a maximum of | 61 degrees above zero at Rochester. | Duluth, Minn,, had real Winter tem- | peratures in the vicinity of the zero| mark. Kansas City and the Southwest es- caped the winds, which blew eastbound aviators to new records. THREE MISSING IN GALE. Trapper and Two Flyers Feared Lost in West. SAN FRANCISCO, January 20 (#).— Three persons were reported missing, highways were blocked and a Nevada town was snowbound as a new storm | was reported sweeping down from | Alaska today. | Searchers set out to look for Jack Blackmer, 20 -year - old Dorrington, Calif., trapper, believed to have been caught in the Mother Lode country of the Northern Sierra by heavy snows. Harry Clark and E. M. Moore, last seen flying over Las Vegas, Nev., in an open-cockpit airplane, were feared lost in a_ blizzard between that city and Ely, Nev., reports here said. Ely was reported completely snowbound, with all highways blocked by deep drifts. LIGHT KEEPER STRANDED Also Marooned on Island Last Year With Dead Companion. KINGSTON, Ontarlo, January 20 {#)—Word has been received here that Robert Graves, light house Keeper at Lallop Island, in Lake Ontario, 23 miles off Poinj Traverse, Prince Ed- ward County, has been marooned. Graves' home'is on the United States side and a Rochester broadcasting sta- tion is in communication with the ma- rooned man. Graves was marooned on Grenadier Istand last year with the body of a dead companion, during the last few days of navigation. He was rescued by Coast ‘Guards. BOXER TO F.ACE RETRIAL $50,000 Buit Against Ace Hud- kins to Be Heard Again. LOS ANGELES, January 20 (#)—A new trial of the $50,000 damage suit brought by T. L. Parks against Ace Hudkins, the boxer, was ordered yes- terday in Superior Court. Parks was awarded $1 damages in the first case by a jury which heard him tell how the Nebraska Wildcat knocked him unconscious. Parks said he remained unconscious for eight days. Hudkins said he merely “shoved” the plaintiff, METHODIST LEADER DIES Mrs, E. B. Chappell Was Former Editor of World Outlook. ATLANTA, January 20. (#).—Mrs. E. B. Chappell, 72, widely known Methodist Chuxch woman and former editor of the World Outlook, died here yester- day. Mrs. 's husband, s Methodist minister,” was for 24 years editor of all Sunday school literature of his church. She at one time was chairman of the Committee on World Friendship and International Peace, and a member of the General Board of Missions of the Methodist Church. HE MOST UNUSUAL manship. Among our Coffee, Tes, Sugar, Cream and Waste— Paneled design, 5-pe. Colonial Set. -pc. Georglan-designed Tea Service b i with Gadroon Border B-pe. Perfectly Plain Sterling Tea Service, b of Colonial Design. B-pc. Antigue Service, of simple RIF 15 TABLE ¢ HOJ in Sterling Services of the finest design and work- e ey weignt. $250 Other Sterling 5-Pc. Tea Services, $275 to $385 DULIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana l” ~ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, .FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1933. KENTUCKY SHERIFF THREATENS - States May Determine Fate of Staged “Safar1.” Island®” He sént deputies to invéstigate and they returned with reports that residents of the island feared their live stock and other property would be endangered by the hunt. Should it be decided that the small towhead on which the Wright party is encamped is a part of Missouri, the “cafarl” will be confined to a space about 200 yards long and about 50 yards wide. The island, formed within the last few years. is overgrown with \\'m;o!ws and cottonwoods. No one lives on it. But if the hunt is attempted on Wolf Island, Kentucky deputy sheriffs will intervene, Sherift Faulkner said the “safari would be stopped just as ef- fectively as when two Missouri deputy sheriffs shot two lions with which Wright attempted to stage & hunt on a former occasion, but without blood- shed this time. By tho Assoclated Press. CLINTON, Ky., January 20.—Sherift C. R. Faulkner said today he would not permit Denver M. Wright, St. Louis manufacturer, to stage a synthetic lion hunt on Wolf Island, in the Mississippi River. which is part of Kentucky. Informed Wright's party. with two lions ready to be released when the weather was favorable, was encamped on Hog Island, a small towhead a half mile south of Wolf Island, Sheriff Faulkner sald he considered the tow- head part of Kentucky also. Sheriff J. O. King of Mississippl sald the towhead was a part of Missouri and under his juris- diction, and he had no plans to stop the hunt. There is no Missouri law against lion hunts, he said. Sheriff Faulkner said he had received scores of letters of protest since Wright announced his projected hunt on Wolf TO STOP SYNTHETIC LION HUNTi Question of Jurisdiction Between Twol ha Avenue”=Tth, Sth and D Ota, Semi-Annual ance NOVELTY FOOTWEAR (Y 1306 F St. Next to Palace Theater When children won't eat— and won’t gain weight— Try This! The youngster who has no appe- tite, probably has stasis. A little fig syrup will soon correct this condition —thenwatch the child eat—and gain! Mothers should never coax a child to eat. Nature knows best. Remove the cause of a youngster’s poor appe- tite—get rid of sfasis. Children who don’t cat are sluggish. Read what the “California treatment” is doing for sluggish, listless children in every part of the country! A Pound a Wec“ Your child will eat well from the ¢ day and hour you conquer sluggish- i ness. But that girl or boy with furry tongue and a bad breath should not be dosed with salts! Begin tonight, with enough pure fig syrup_to cleanse the colon thor- oughly. Less tomorrow, then every other day, or twice a week, until the appetite, digestion, weight, com- lexion, tell you the stasis is gone. t\'ben :lz o;:g']l oll; othe{e aih}l\en! has again cl the system, fig syrup w%l! soon set things to right. When appetite fails, tongue is coated white, eyes are a bilious yellow, California fiF syrup_will gently stimulate the colos and 'ie child you used to coax to eat will fairly devour his food. Just One IF—The claims made for California Fig Syrup aretrue and itwill do the same for you—IF you get genuine’ CALIFORNIA fig syrup. Don’t accept ‘any of the substitutes. values are now to be had comprising $125 ° $135 $125 S.pe. Sets, as {llustrated. n muscles— Featuring All-Wool Cheviot “Prep” Suits With TWO Trousers #13.85 Sizes 14 to 22 —Fine all-wool cheviot that will wear and hold its shape. Fine tailoring usually found in more expensive suits. ... Single and double-breasted models. One pair of pants is a dressy style . . . the other slack style longies. . . . New Spring merchan- dise! Kann’s—Boys’ Store—Second Floor. H Sale! Boys’ Oxfords $1.99* Leather Soles . . . Composition Soles —Sturdy, all-leather construction. Smar$ shoes for hard wear . . . at an attractive low price. 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