Evening Star Newspaper, February 6, 1933, Page 10

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\ A—1) STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1933. flegt safled out of San Pedro’and San | have for its objective the defense of the Diego harbors January 23, joined at a | West Coast against an air raid by a o THE EVENING Coast close enough to launch his from the aircraft carriers without FORMER D. C. MAN'S CHILDREN DROWNED Lieut. Godwin Ordway, Jr., . Father, Tries in Vain to Revive Two. By the Associated Press. | HIGHLAND FALLS, N. Y., February | 6—Two children of Lieut. Godwin| Gtdway, jr, drowned in a small pool on the Herbert L. Satterlee estate yes- tercay. Both the father, a West Point in- structor, and a group of men who warked for two hours in an attempt to: revive the children, believed that the 7-year-old boy, Albert, slipped in the snow and fell into the pool first and that his 4-year-old sister, Margaret, Jumped in trying to help him. Albert and Margaret Ordway were the grandchildren of Col. Godwin Ord- | way, sr, U. S. A, retired, and Mrs. Ordway of 1710 Thirty-fifth street, | Washington. Lieut. Ordway, who at- tended Georgetown University cne year | before he entered West Point, was| from Fort Benning, Ga., last Summer to become an instructor at.the Academy. He has served also in’the Phili and at Fort Custis, | Va. His w ormer Miss Chris- | tine Sloan-, of Mr. and .‘\‘Irs.;s Charles W. il of Sands Point,| TLong Island. The couple have younger children, Godwin Ordway, 3d, amd Claire Ordway Another of Col. Ordway’s sons, Cadet Rodman Nicholas Ordway of the West Pejnt third class, died of pneumonia af ‘the Military Acacemy a month ago, anfl was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. | Col. Ordway has left for West Point | to be with his son and daughter-in-law. | }?ARAGUAYAI\!S ADVANCE ASUNCION, Paraguay, February 6 P).—The mi er of war yesterday is- que saying the Parag- e at the. Fort Herrera sec- iran Chaco “is continuing tl n four officers were found,” the com- | munique said, adding that the Fort Nanawa and Fort Saavedra sectors were quiet. Tishume- ~atureto give least thought to the things with which we are most familiar, Consequent- ly people don't think ¢ out the sugar they use. But, sugar is the one essential food to which you should give most serious attention. Sugar is made from a variety of-things. It is made in many countries—made un- der widely different sanitary conditions. (et e 3 Ust® There is a way in which you can be certain that the su- gar you and your family use is pure, clean, wholesome sugar. Then you will know that the sugar youuseismade from sugar cane Then you will know it is made under the most modern, sanitary conditions Then you will know that it is 100% Pure Cane Sugar.Madein theU.S.A. and guaranteed by The National Sugar Refining Coy of N. 1. ‘There IS a !Difference In Sugar — 'BLIZZARD TRAPS 200 Report to Helena Says BY the Associated Press 200 motorists last night were rcported two | Butte, as a result of a blizzard which | Padbury, Helena attorney, said 14 of highway. Minute Mysteries | Solution to THE COUNTERFEIT RING (See page A-3) The killer we will call X. (a) As Leighton and the kill- er came from the same town, this eliminates Leighton as the killer. (b) Eliminates the engraver and Helen as the killer and as Helen fronted for the gang she was not the engraver. (c) Eliminates Black and Har- ris as the killer or the engraver. (d) Turner eliminates himself as the engraver and as every one else is accounted for it estab- lishes Leighton as the engraver. And as the engraver was elim- inated as the killer this leaves | | only Turner, who is therefore the killer. I YOU MAY INITIATE, BUT | | NEVER COUNTERFEIT.— Bal- | 2ac. | | ON MONTANA ROAD 14 of| Stranded Motorists Are Suffer- ing From Frost Bite. HELENA, Mont., February 6.—Nearly tranded at Boulder, between here and clogged the highway over Boulder Hill.|among the friends who accompanied In a telephonic communication, George | he group at Boulder were suffering rom frost bite. A snow plow was sent to open the Temperatures near the zero mark JEALOUSY BLAMED FOR SUICIDE LEAP Erskine’s Adopted Son Tells Police That Companion Feared Rival. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, February 6.—A fit of jeal- | ousy was believed by investigators, they said today, to have prompted Miss Vera | Hayburn, 25-year-old unemployed ste- nographer to leap to her death from | the thirty-third floor of the Medinah Athletic Club Building after a visit to| a night club with Albert Russell Erskine, jr. 24, adopted son of the president of the Studebaker Corpora- tion, motor car manufacturer. The young woman's body, broken and | frozen, was found by a chambermaid early yesterday, lying on a ledge eight stories below Erskine’s room. Accompanied Friend. Erskine told police Miss Hayburn had | been his companion at the Chee Paree | Night Club Saturday evening. After the ties, he said, he had placed | he: in a taxi, presumably bound for her home, and that he then spent the night at the home of a friend, A. G.| Atwater, son of a wea | y manufac- | © Platter, Not Fame, Is Probable Fate For Jumping Frogs By the Associated Press. ANGELS CAMP, Calif., Febru- ary 6.—Jumping frogs of Cala- veras County, famous since the days of Mark Twain’s Buckshot Handicap, may be destined for the platter this year instead of athletic fame. The committee in charge of the annual jumping jubilee ad- mitted . as much today. With many sighs and headshakings, it was generally agreed the finan- s for a 1933 renewal of the amphibian games were not ,bright. In fact, members of the com- mi‘tee indicated, even funds for the red flannels used by trainers to entice their entries into bigger and better jumps appear doubtful. that the girl had gone to Erskine's apartment to demand an explanation of what she considered an affront and that, not finding him there, she became morose and leaped to her death. Danced With Another. An elevator operator at the Medinah Club said he had taken her to the floor on which Erskine's apartment is lo- cated about 3:30 Sunday morning. Erskine said he had seveal dances at the club with Miss Glad. “Vera,” he said, “didn’t | when I danced with Gla: and looked at the show until cleck and then de~'ded to leav A coroner’s inqu-s. was called for ay. turing executive and_brother-in-law of | ¢ g, Philip K. Wrigley, official of the Wrig- ley Chewing Gum Co. Erskine was not held. His story was corroborated by Atwater, who was him to the night rendezvous. Lieut. Patrick B. O’Connell, who con- Train Switchman Killed. EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill, February 6 (®)—William H. Trusty, 43, a switch- man for the Southern Railway, was ducted the investigation, said Erskine's| killed vesterday when he slipped and recount of a misunderstanding which | fell under the wheels of a freight train arose at the night club when Miss Hay- burn resented his attentions to another | girl in the party offered ‘a plausible ;l':;e reported at Great Falis and Lcw-i solution to the affair. iston. Lieut. O'Connell expressed the opinior ILLUSION: One of Napoleon’s soldiers rose to fame on the *‘ Burning Oven”’ trick. A roaring fire was built in an oven...the tem- perature rose to 600° F. Into the oven walked the ““fire king,”” in the railroad yards here. He was helping make up the train. i X et S ok Air-cooled trains are to be tried on a railway in Chi M. Chabert, carrying several raw steaks. A few minutes later the doors were flung wide and out he stepped. ..safe and sound «..with the steaks thoroughly cooked. EXPLANATION: Heat rises. When Chabert entered the oven he hung the steaks above the fire, in the center of the oven, then dropped to the floor at the side, covering his head with a hood made from his shirt. He breathed through small air holes in the floor. When the steaks were cooked he threw back the hood, grabbed the steaks, and stepped out in triumph. KEPT FRESH IN THE WELDED HUMIDOR PACK ¢ Pure cane sugar, as refined in this country, has established a ; definite standard of quality by which America’s sugar values are measured and judged, Liise [#1 f Copyright, 1933, B. J. Beynolds Tobacco Company | predetermined rendezvous at sea and proceeded to Hawaii. which was later ‘When lhl; force, 5 - |a ented by two naval oil tankers, | ] "dglm edPrrom our naval base at Pearl | | | Hi r today it became the “Black . L] iflee!." under command of Vice Admiral |Prank H. Clark, commander scouting | force. |West Coast Maneuvers| Launched With “Blues” “Defending” Coast. Plans Made Year Ahead. Once each year the Navy holds its major war gime, plans for which have been worked out a year in advance. The locality in which the game is to be | played varies from year to year. Through. | these mimic war games the problems of defending our 4,000 miles of coast line ! and outlying possessions are worked out. This year the West Coast from Puget Sound to the Mexican border and the sea area as far West as the longitude of the Hawaiian Islands will be the boundsries of the playing field. Instead of the fleet being somewhat equally divided, as is generally the case, in these maneuvers the problem will BY LIEUT. E. A, SOLOMONS, U. S. N, | Assistant operations officer, staff of com- | 7" mander in chief, United' States fieet | _ ABOARD U. S. S. PENNSYLVANIA, | SAN PEDRO, Calif., February 6.—The |two giant carriers, - Saratoga |and Lexingt 7 10,000-ton cruisers | and 12 desiroyers of the United Siates 1 THOUGHT YOU WERE HOME NURSING A COUGH ? [ GUESS AGAIN= SMUTH BROTHERS COUGH SYRUP FIXED IT FAST. “It was raining cats and dogs that day. By the time I finished with ten hours of traffic I coughed like an old machine gun. The Mrs. gave me some Smith Brothers’ CoughSyrup.d’ll be jiggered if the cough didn’t calg down right away. In the morning it was gone and me feeling fine.” i _Michael McGovern, Jersey City, N. J. (Smith Bros. Syrup costs only 35¢) very fast mobile force, the major offen- sive strength of which is its aircraft. McNamee. . Black Fleet's Objective. The training of the Seet as a whoig ‘The problem which confronts the|for its major duty, the defense of the | commander of the Black fleet is to con- | United States and ' its , is & | duct the vessels of his command to a|never-ending program, continuing from strategic point or points on the Pacific year t detected and destroyed by the Blue under the command of Admiral A LITTLE MONEY WILL BUY A LOT of Phillips Delicious Beans with pork—the plump mealy beans, the tender white pork that tastes so ‘good to you. Shop around if you like. But you'll surely come back to Phillips De- licious — QUALITY with ECONOMY. HILLIp DELICIOUV CAMBRIDGE, MD, 175 zov 70 22 Loorzp ITS MORE FUN 70 Avow “The Burning Oven” is an old illusion which has played a leading role in cigarette advertis- ing. Its modern name is ‘‘Heat Treatment.” EXPLANATION: All cigarette manufacturers use the heat-treating process. Harsh, raw tobaccos require intensive processing under high temperatures. The more expensive tobaccos, which are natu- rally mild, call for only a moderate appli- cation of heat. The first Camel cigarette was manufac- tured under the heat-treating process. flavor. " Every one of the billions of Camels pro- duced since has received the necessary heat treatment. But remember that heat treatment never makes cheap, inferior tobacco good. It is not in heat treatments, but in more costly tobaccos and matchless blending, that Camels find their appealing mildness and It is a fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. You sense this quality in the mildness...the distinctive flavor...of Camels. More costly tobaccos and a matchless blend tell the story of Camel leadership in public confidence. Try Camels. Judge them critically. Compare them with others for mildness, for throat-ease, for good taste. Key your taste to quality! Camels come to you fresh and cool...in the air-tight, welded Humidor Pack that keeps dryness outside and freshness inside. —— NO TRICKS ..JUST COSTLIER TOBACCOS - IN A_MATCHLESS BLEND

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