1
CAMPAIGN FOR ! BILLY KELLY . Commander J. K. L. Ross' ¦"Juvenile Hero Will Start in 3 Kentucky Races. Billy Kelly, jtnrenile hero of the Saratoga summer meeting of 1911. a folding for which Comdr. J. K. L. *oca, of Montreal, owner of the lead- ng money-winning stable of the imerican turf last season r.nd an es- ablishment this year th**t looks con¬ siderably stronger than his comblna- ion of last season, paid 127,500 early n August last, has proven that he rill race this year, as last, to the sat. sfactlon of H. C. Bed well, his train- r. So Bedwell authorises the announce- oent that Billy Kelly will go to Ker*- ucky presently to start, first, in the 30.000 Derby which will be run at Thurchill Downs on May 10. and after hat Jn the Kentucky Handicap, a *10,000 race of 1 1-4 miles for 3-yeai- »lds and over, that will be run later n the new Louisville Jockey Club's ?pring meeting, and after in the $15.0<*j .aton.a Derby at Cincinnati. Billy Kelly will be personally con- lucted to Kentucky by Bedwell. who expects to make ||wo or three trips to he Blue Grass belt while the Plmlico. 'hurchill Downs and Latonia meet¬ ings are in progress, some time after the first of the month. Bedwell delayed announcing definite¬ ly that Bflly Kelly would ship to Ken¬ tucky for the Derby until after -fffe gelding had raced at Havre de Grace in the Harford Handicap, a sprint of furlongs, that was decided on Wednesday, he winning easily in heavy going from that accomplished mudlark Pickwick, because a man can never tell what a gelding will do from t to 3 years old. Oftener than not a great J-year-old gelding fails to make 9n 'even passable 3-year-old. Never¬ theless Billy had worked so well for Bedwell at Laurel Park, where he wintered. Bedwell was not without bone that he would do just what he did. J pennsyMlay REAL OLYMPICS More First-Class College Teams Entered in Carni¬ val Than Ever Before. Pennsylvania's twenty-fifth annual reiay carnival, to be held on Frank¬ lin Field. Philadelphia, next Friday and Saturday, promises to be the rreatest set of athletic games ever held in this country and to rival in standard of performances the world's Olvmpic gardes. Pennsvlvai^'s games have come to be a classic track meet of the year and news of the results are flashed not only all over-this country but to a^l countries where track and field athletics are played. More first-class teams will be seen this week than have ever before. In each of the bic relay championships several real con¬ tenders «re in evidence. Harvard. Cornell. Yale. Princeton. Columbia.j Syracuse. Pittsburgh. Chicago. Mis- Muri. Northwestern. Notre Dame. Ohio State. Georgetown. Johns Hop- kins. Michigan. In fact the big col¬ leges of the country with but few exceptions will send their teams to the Quaker city for both Friday and Saturday. Some of Friday's events will be most interesting. The pentathlon has sixteen entries, of which the best known are Bartels, of Pennsylvania. the present champion; Thomson, of Dartmouth: Gilfillan. of Notre Dame, the Western champion, and Liewis. of Missouri. All of these men are very- high class performers and the com- ptition should be very close. Sev¬ eral of the other men are real dark horses. Earp. of Swarthmore. is a very fine all-around athlete, while Gillo. of Colgate, is another. Gillo has a national reputation as a foot-1 ball player and weight thrower. His success will depend on his ability to run and broad jump. Georgetown is counting on their entry. Le Gendre. to win out. He hss been showing very good form in practice. At any rate, the pentath- Ion is very representative and the winner will well deserve the title of all-around college champion of| America. HAVRE DE GRACE ENTRIES. FIRST RACE- For maiden C-yesr-oId fllli#*; 4 furlonga Rryn Child. 114; Sea Queen, 114; Harriet. 114; Skittles. 114: Pawnee 3d. 114 ;j Panoply. 14; Wendy. 114; Locust Leaves. 114; Mis» Stathrm. 114; Optimistic. 114: Toncanet. 14: Rounding Billow. 1:4; Powder Flank. 114*. SECOND RACE.For niarr-. 3-.". ear-' Ids and, up; claiming: 5furlong*. Mim Sterling, HE;' Ideal. 113; Margarrt Ellen. 1K>; 113; .Ina Kan. 1H>: .Jill. 100; Low Degrte. 110;' Ruaan M.. 102; Favonr. 110; Irish Maid. 110:1 Sophie K W»; 'Napoli. 100; Unwise Child, !«; Irene. 113. THIRD RACE-For 4-vearolu* and up; claim-' ing: 6 furlongs. I'olroma. 108; Alias Bryn. W";! Rabetfe W0: Tnie as Steel. 112: Clark >».. Mackenzie, 115: Rar One. 108: Zinnia. ICJ; .Aweet A9ma. 98. Sister Emblem. 110; SibolaJ »W; 'Zouave. 108; Ocean Prince. 108; Kr«a«te.'i 'Encore. '03: Sir William Johnson IiC;l 'Snains. 107; -Salratelle, *. # PJURTH RACE.For 3-> ear-olds and np;l The Port Deposit Selling Handicap 6 furlona-. RaJlast. 10*: High Cost. HH; \Viar>t Fool. 9®;' Kirisran, 1«. 'Cobalt K Jack Mount. .»* Km Bli«s. WO: MVar Zi*»e 35: Kate Rnght. 106 FIFTH RACE-1-'or Wear-old*: The Wilming¬ ton Piine; furlongs. Toto. 118: Pigeon WteflU 00; Crystal Ford. 114; Ticklitb. 114; Ifilk Maid.; RartMp. 136. *IXTH RACE.For 2 vear-olds; claiming; 1' mile and TO ;arda. Cain Spring. 108: *Transr«ro. Fairy Prmce. 106; 'Pluntua. 100; Houdint 'Antoinette. 108: .SyNano. 101. SEVENTH RAClt-For 4 v ear-old* and np; laiming: 1 110 miles Lucius. 107: N. K. Heal. IT: Graphic. :W 'Pnts and Call*. 104; Thorn Bloom 111; 'Dolina, ??; 'Bn<»m Ped- iJ3. Leonard Training Hard. New York. April 20..Champion Benny Leonard is working harder 'very day as the time approaches for his eight-round bout with Wil¬ lie Bitchie at the Sportsman's Club, in Newark, on Monday evening, April J*. Benny boxed seven fast lounda yesterday, first going fourj ounds with Freddie Reese and then taking on Johnny Harvey for three mora. Leonard is last rounding up 'nto condition. Him de Grace Selectieas. By -RIG." Best rating.Miss Sterling. First.Miss Stathem Wendy, Sea Queen Second.Miss Sterling:. Ideal. Ina Kay. Third.Ocean Prince, Sosius, Salratelle. Fourth.Wisest Fool. Kate Bright. Fort Blips. Fifth.Milkmaid. Pigeon Wing. Toto. Sixth . Antoinette. Plurenzi. 1 Fairy Prince. Seventh.Dolina. Broom Ped- ler. Graphic. .. I BUREAU OP ENGRAVING AND PRINTING sfSss-NEWS The Government Baseball League has been organised with the following six clubs: Naval Operations, Marines, Bureau of Engraving and Printing Bureau of Standards, Zone Finance and the Sixty-third Infantry. The opening came will be played on May 3 between the Marines and Naval Operations, with the Marine Band to liten things up. On May 5 the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and the Bureau of Standards will clash, ana the Bureau Band will give these teams a good sendofT. On May 6 the Sixty-third Infantry will tackle the Zone Finance, and it is expected that the Infantry Band will be on the job. Jack Carr has been ap- pointed umpire for this league. Now for the rooting. Miss Fannie Tolley, of the examining division, is visiting her mother in Monkton."Md.. for a few days. Weath- er permitting, she will participate in the egg-rolling. "Walter Scheller. a Harris pressman in the surface division, is Just back from military service. He was dis- charged at Camp Meade. Miss Katherine Armstrong, of the wetting division, is spending Easter and the following week at her home in Charlottesville. Va. Clarence Brower, of the macerator room, will use up several days of his annual leave this week. George Wells, who superintends the heating of the dry boxes in the; examining division. is* off for a. week. Mrs. Ethel L. Heflin. of the sur¬ face division, left Saturday for a week's visit to her old home in! Delos. Va. j Everywhere you turn in the Bu- reau. one of the new Victory Loan posters just naturally hits you in the face. There is no escape from this big event. Miss Nannie Small, of the office' force in the examining division, is! excused for Monday and Tuesday. There was some racket in section 8 tjie other day. hut it turned out to be simply a modest send-off for Miss Mary Jones, who is to be mar- ried some time this week. Edward J. Leahy, foreman of the machine division, has been appoint¬ ed on the committee to canvass the machine division in interest of the Victory Liberty Loan. Mr. Leahy is surely the right man in the right place, as it was large¬ ly due to his efforts that this dlvi-l sion went over the top in all the previous drives, and he feels con¬ fident that the machine division will do just as well or even better this ^time. Get behind him. boys. Ted Wagner, of sectioh 8. has been enjoying a few days vacation. Miss Elsie E. Swan resigned her [position in the surface division April 15. The job of removing the gallows from the motor presses in section 8 is now in progress. The Bureau Band will hold its regular rehearsal this afternoon. Ai brief business meeting will precede the rehearsal, and all members are urged to be on hand and on time. Arthur Hunt, of the numbering* division, is taking three weeks, fleave to visit friends in little old) New York. Ts Miss Edna Thomas, of the num-l bering division, going to plant a .Victory garden? She has been seen' lately hard at work in both her! front and back yards. Timothy J. Casey, of the mace- rator room, has been using up some more of his leave. Miss Bridget Condon. Miss Martha Kealey. Miss Mary Deale and Miss Anna KidwelJ were excused yester¬ day from the stamp perforating di¬ vision. The stamp perforating division reports Miss Fannie Huline. Misfe [Nettie Edwards. Miss Margaret Fleming and Miss Lula Robinson on the sick list. EBBETS BUYS KONETCHY. Big First Baseman Will Join Dodgers Soon. Boston, April 20..President Charles H. Ebbets. of the Dodgers, announced here tonight thai he. had purchased Ed Konetchy from the Braves. The amount paid for the veteran first baseman was not disclosed. Kon- etchy. who now is in St. Louis, did not sign the contract sent to him by [g. W. Grant, the owner of the Bos- ton club. Ebbets offered Konetchy the amount that he demanded from lfhe Braves. I^ate tonight the owner of the Robins had not heard from the player, but it is expected that he will join the Dodgers within a few days, ^'hen he does report he will be placed at first b*.«e. TO REORGANIZE LEAGUE. Maryland-Delaware Circuit, After Long Layoff. Coming Back. Elkton. Md.. April 20..The Mary- land-Delaware Baseball League, which was in existence several years ago. ai»d disbanded at the outbreak of the war. will be reorganized Monday! night. An informal meeting was held in Wilmington. Del., last week, at! which plans were outlined, but on ac- count of representatives from only five clubs being present nothing defl-j nite was accomplished. Arthur Da- vies, sporting editor of the Evening Journal, will no doubt be re-elected president, and the other officers will be selected from towns on the cir-; cult. GEORGE BU^NS MARRIED. Athletics' First Baseman Wedded to Miss Marion R. Harris. Philadelphia, April 20..George Burns, who was the heaviest hitting tnfleJder in the major league last year, took a day off from the national pastime yesterday to wed Miss Marion R. Harris, a school tAicher, of 244 West Tabor road. In taking out the marriage license Burns gave his age as 26 years and that of his bride as 27 years. The newly-wedded pair are on a short honeymoon trip to the seashore, for George must be back on his job of Tirst basing for the Mackmen at Washington next Wednesdsy. Ruth Make* Record. Baltimore. April 20..'Babe" Ruth, of the Boston- Americans, in six sup-{ cessive times at the bat, four in Fri- day's exhibition with the Baltimore; Internationals and two in yesterday's gum. adored, six bome rnn^ SUNDAY THEATER OPENINGS ¦ "THmif " "Sunshine," a new musical comedy by the author* of "Fiddler. Three." had Its (lr»t apwarance at Poll'i The- ater last night Vnd revealed a nun- ^,.of P®lnta recommending It to a public hungry for new fun and mel¬ ody. Foremoat among them la the mjplcal score, marked by the same bright tunefulness and rich orches¬ tration with which Alexander John¬ stone won popularity for the previous Play. Next la order should placed the eight so-called "shimmying seno- ritas, Who if they actually shimmied did so Without exciting this staid re¬ viewer. but wbo at least honestly shimmered with goods looks and live¬ liness. Then there are Several of the p»ln- clpals in the cast who give honest measure in the way of entertainment. *or Instance, we are especially In favor of Mtaa Susanne Wllla, wJ>o has temperament and can act. and gets some subtle fun out of a comedy role that has no great wealth of matter for her to work on. If the part could be brightened somewhat In her behalf she would make one of the play's best talking points. ST Miss Jane Kichardson is another member worth watching, and also listening to. for her soprano is one or the musical assets of the piece. Carl Cochems exhibits a basso with] clear marks of his operatic training and reputation, but for some reason lacking In power and animation. There are other good voices in the company, but none of outstanding merit. Harry Short and Edgar Norton fur¬ nish most of the comedy, with well- known and sure-fire methods This brings us squarely before the ques¬ tion of the book of the play, which is by William C'ary Duncan. Well, then, the book of the play. It must be squarely stated, offers little in the way of novelty or brilliancy. The author's imagination wanders stead¬ fastly among familiar fields, seem¬ ingly reluctant to launch forth into any untried levels, and not disdaining to pick up bodily such quips and quirks, and even songs, as may be readily lifted. When the curtain goes up one's first instinct is to glance at the program to see if by some mistake intrusion has "°t..^een made on a stray performance or Carmen." so perfect is the illusion given by the identical setting and cos« tumes. But the music reassures, and it appears that the story is laid in the south of Spain, with a matador instead of a toreador for hero./Car¬ men herself is visible In the/ hand¬ some person of Miss Juiette Lange. only her part Is called Dolores. There are smugglers and villagers. Ameri¬ cans homesick for Broadwav. a jeal¬ ous Spanish policeman and other fa¬ miliar figures. The second act shows a handsome Moorish interior, with the Rock of! Gibraltar seen through the open arches in the distance. .IbBbert-Belaseo."Tlie < ronried Hoar." Of tne making of war melodramas there is no end, and the latest of! these, and perhaps the greatest. Is I The Crowded Hour." which strikes! a new variant of an ancient theme; with a considerable degree of sue- cess. That theme.the purging of hu¬ man character in the crucible of the big show".is made more poignantly I realistic in this new Selwyn-Pollack Piece than in any other play of the war period that has come within our ; 'u,every scene is written with a vivid sincerity which carries it far! beyond the reaches of conventional melodrama. Its virtues as a well- constructed piece of dramaturgv are obvious, it, fallings as , human document are no less so. Peggy r«wrence I. the joint Sel-1 wyn-Pollack heroine.a "Follies" girl I whose liaison with a New York youth has broken up his "home. War comes the New Yorker Is turned by the' death of his brother at the front! °m slacker complacency into a cru-1 sader of the A E. F. The girl fol-I lows him across, enlisting as a tele- phone operator. Her motive frankly was selfish.to keep her lover for her- , B"' she also is purged and ex- her bi* chance comes. Ail that there is to "The Crowded- Hour is packed into one pulsating, concentrated scene in which Peggy holds her key and switchboard even o who hld broken through the British line below St. Quentin. are coming swiftly onward. She stays at her post until a "connection" j8 made ?k i? W,rt"' and hcr earning of I, PH!'VeaohCS a vision in dangci of enfilade. So cunningly is this scene contrived that a genuine illusion a genuine "feel" of war, is created; the stand of the American engineers at Uiaulny ourlng the *ctisational open- ing of the German drive a year aso is the historical background of rh«' episode. If it were not for the fact that mod¬ ern war is itself one^ great super- melodrama which makes all theatrical efforts at its simulation seem pale and drab. The Crowded Hour" -would' \frJP and a punch far beyond .that which we are inclined to award it. A jaded, hear'-slck world gives & faint reaction to the old stimuli in these days of convalescence. Now ?" .°.r "ve mo"'hs there has been no slaughter, no further clangor of war. the play radiates that curious and in- definable suggestion of belonging to a past age. of unfolding incidents lhat! seem remote and alien to the leaping! hearts and minds of men-the men whose eyes are turned anxlwly an(1 wnriHV 'J"® fUtUre h<?aIt"S of the world s wounds. i4 well-acted, although we hardly think that Florence Johns, in ei.K., ,P °f JeKf5 ' 18 R°"'S to cause either Jane Cowl or Willette Kershaw niKhts Allan Dine- v.~. n J"Z" Wa"hlngton In "A very Good Young Man," enacts the part of Billy Laldlaw in an acceptable ;.,r; Keighley p,.y. %eu't. Caswell excellently- Eugenie Nau as Grandmere Buvaise. Eugenie Geinova as Marthe and Emile De Varny as Capt Soulier gave realistic French at- mosphere to the piece ,.ec production is Of the character¬ istic Selwyn standard and nothing has been left undone to preserve the qual¬ ity of a melodrama which undoubtedly ranks as the chief American contribu¬ tion to war drama for the current season, at least. Shufccrt-Garriek.<"Mgfetic MSht." before the curtain rose on Nigbtie Night" at the Shubert- Garrick last evening, a young man in the audience was heard to re¬ mark. with a pleased smile, that he guessed it was going to be a "very- naughty show." Maybe it was-. lioni soit qui mal y pense.it all de¬ pends upon the point of view We thought it a mildly amusing farce that might be presented with pro¬ priety by the dramatic .dub of ¦ fashionable young ladies' seminary Certain it is that young husbands' should not leave their bridss at home while traveling and have un¬ expected meetings with former sweethearts on the train. The re¬ sult mig|}t have been tragic last vin^H i "NL*h"e a"d pre- fh-? «. and merriment at the Sliubert-Garick had not the humorous aspects of the case been from "first't by a CaSt' »htch sr^v^p,.8pj[pre.°f ®u,le* w»" a delight as the running train," just married and running away from her husband with a further dis- J-C.UKf. Rll.'.y g.y. ft JQ~ pT'Frtnci'.'B.JL °f M HV--k r . 2SS? .upp0^r,'e proprtetT b°Und' of ¦tr,et TW* <. evidently a t*«i ance of "Nightie Night" mE£Tu w»l prove more worthy 0f M ,rt JI n tins used la»t nTJhf' one met~ been r2w!£l fV" ' '.I1"*. to hkv* l-ome «tSu« m the "rret <" «-«W» Palae^*.,, plr.^r. Jr.," the nr«°D? t" "C'ptatn Ki'dd. given the " re '' "J'8 ,hl" ,Ur h" furnishes th ® . "ome month*. Picture fans t|?*t h®®rta of moving houses whenever . a"ure« P»cked mlrers *r°W """¦». her IS- addhenoptrh";nt cb^r.*'Tu b' - p"°v«"» her 1p. f. contention that the f,ZVT «e due to And auM.hit d" 11 <Jlrflo||lt to 4>I.. ^ V,creen m»terlal. Captain Kidd, Jr .. start. «... .? Pace that promises a dim story tha* descemU h" ">« U.oon withanhi. v. *Ck Sen"«tt caliber, with all his cheap and coarse comedy star holdi^® ¦Upreme U1«f>t. of the hokum reletge!' *b°Ve t!" Jhe .. pfcture '* limed from the the'* Rida Johnson Toung with the scenario, credited to Frances nlecl°ofIltt^!?*Ky McTavl«h the niece of an old bookseller. To his second-hand store come, a box of books'from the estate of a wealthy merchant. Among ,.e volumes ^ one giving the history and location cLrt."UP.Pn°rd.K idden lreasur' with mv.ter K expected air of mystery about the wealth. The In- urten»ahi M1'8'" Wh° "eeks ,he treas-l k j innpcently slipped out of' hands is introduced and his machinations when Mary and her party set out in search for the buried rortune are introduced. ,.The,!oca,« then "hifts to the coun¬ try village where the treasure farm .. located with the village "con- stabule and all the other overdrawn characters here injected They don't find the gold they are looking for and the story takes an unusual and surprising twist to bring about the required happy ending. It is a very ordinary story and some very clever subtitling is mar¬ red by the introduction of unneces¬ sary profanity which cheapens the; production. In addition to the feature a Christie comedy. -Sallies Blighted! Career, is offered and an unusually* Interesting news weekly, with a' unique Victory Loan appeal. I.oews ColuUs.Charles R«, -Greased l.lgbtnlag." An unusually brilliant vein of comedy characterises Charles Ray's latest "boob" characterization, which \ ts seen to splendid advantage in his latest picture. "Greased Lightning." which had it. first Washington! showing at Loew's Columbia yes¬ terday. Julian Josephson. the au-| thor of this latest Ray effort, com- bines a bit of George Randolph Chester atmosphere with a touch of! "East Lynne" and caps the whole' with a thrilling bit of speedway ex-, citement. The production, through-! out. is high-powered, with here and there dashes of travesty which are of distinct comedy value. Ray appears as Andy Fletcher, the village blacksmith, inventor of a patent potato peeler, and sweetheart of Alice Flint, the village banker's daughter. The youth is smitten! with the motor erase and the potato peeler goes In exchange for a bit kf motor wreckage which ta christened "Greased Lightning." The climax is evolved when "Greased Lightning" the means whereby Andy thwarts the confidence men who have beaten Alice's father and the reward of merit is Alice's hand, in the good! old-fashioned way. An excellent cast has been fur- nished Ray by Producer Ince. thU cast including Wanda Hawley. Rob¬ ert McKim. John P. Lockney. Willis! Marks. Bert Woodruff and Otto Holt- ! man. In addition to the Hay feature.1 the Palace program includes an in¬ teresting variety of short-reel offer-! ings which include a scenic ramble with Robert C. Bruce; a Mutt and Jeff animated cartoon. Ford Sterling in "The Love Chase" and the Gau- mont-Herald Graphic. OandallV "The Poppy Gifl's Husband.". Wil¬ liam S. Hart's latest picture, showing at Crandalls yesterday and todav is a screen version of the popular "Bos¬ ton niackie ' stories and consequently a play dealing with underworld ch«i- acters and having its locale in the .£adr £ prls"n walN- hero.! Hairpin Harry Dutton. is introduced as a long-term convict in a California penitentiary. Shortly after he is paroled he finds that he has wor¬ shipped a shallow idol and that his wife, who he had believed was wait¬ ing for him all those years with their son. had divorced him the year after his conviction and married the police ?hlervl. ° ha<® *ent llim up Revenge then becomes the one object in his life. Harry'* love for his boy changes his purpose, and,he takes him away to a little mountain cabli^ where they And happiness together. Craadall'n KslekerbMker. Seldom daring Pauline Freder¬ ick's screen feareer has she appeared to batter advantage or been sup¬ plied with a better vehicle than in "One Week of Life* which was given Its initial local presentations at Crandall's Knickerbocker yes¬ terday. This is a "dual role" story, but unlike many of its kind. It possesses real novelty and does not depend on trick photography) effects for its success. It Is adapt- 'ed from a story by Cosmo Hamil¬ ton, which was arranged for the screen by Wlllard Mack. Miss Frederick is first introduced in tfoe role of Marion Roche, a girl of high ideals and honor. The second character Is that of Mrs. Kingsley Sherwood, bored alike' with society life and her hypo¬ chondriac husband. The woman frankly voices her desire to steal away and spend "a w*ek of life" with the man she loves. At this point, the man, Le Roy Scott, meets Marion and is attracted by hen striking reaembfence to Mrs. Sher¬ wood. Playing on the girl's love] of luxury, he induces her to take the place of Mrs. Sherwood in the latter's home for a seven-day per- iod. The succeeding events bring, the story to an unexpected climax! of great power. This program, which will be repeated tonight,' was completed with the showing of several entertaining supplementary ftatuies. Crandall's Avenue Grand. An appealing story, well presented by a cast of capability, is revealed in "Daughter of Mine." yesterday's of¬ fering at Crandall's Avenue Grand. Its chief character, portrayed by Madge Kennedy, is Rosie Mendelson, who lives In the tenement district. Professing to have found the manu- script of a story, she induces her em- ployer, a publisher, to let her read It to him. As a matter of fact it is aj wildly romantic narrative the girl has written from memory, an exaggerated version of a novel written by her erstwhile sweetheart from whom she is separated and eager to find. What happens when this plan is carried out brings about a climax In keeping with the melodramatic adventures of the story within a story. A number of popular favorites ap¬ pear in the supporting cast, among whom are Tully Marshal), John Bow¬ ers. Arthur Carew and Abraham Schwartz. The comedy, "The Way of a Maid." proved a pleasing auxiliary attraction. Tonight's program will consist of "Marie. Ltd.." featuring Alice Brady, and a topical news reel. CrnndaH'K \ polio. « Wallace Reid adds materially to; his popularity in "Alias Mike Morsn." This picture, which was shown yesterday at 'Crandall's Apollo and scheduled again for to¬ night, owes its origin to Orin Bart- lett's story. "Open Sesame.' Larry Young, a chifcken^hearted clerk, is mortally afraid of the rifaft: He bribes Mike Moran. a lormcr convict, to impersonate him. News comes that Larry Young had been killed in action after dis¬ tinguished bravery, and this fans the few sparks of manhood yet re¬ maining in the slacker, and he de¬ termines to enlist under the name of Mike Moran and win some honor to repay Moran for glorifying his name. The succeeding events show .that he not only realises his am¬ bition. but also wins a bride. Mr. Reid's support, which appears to have been carefully chosen, in¬ cludes Ann Little. Emory Johnson ^and Charles Ogle. Crandall'a Savoy. "Good Gracious, Annabelle." as re- corded on the screen at Crandall's Savoy yesterday with Washington's favorite, Billie Burke, in the leading role, provides five reels of particular¬ ly agreeable entertainment. This fea- tiye presents a comedy-drama relating the experience of a flighty young girl who had been kidnapped by a muchly- bearded miner, who called himself "The Hermit" and forced to marry him. After this romantic experience she goes to New York and lives a but¬ terfly existence on the quarterly in¬ come, always drawn considerably in advance, sent by her unknown hus¬ band. The story ends, as the photoplay en¬ thusiast expects all stories of this type to end. with the lovers in each other's arms. An interesting topical news reel completed the program. The Turn In the Road" and "Too ^lanyj Sweethearts" are listed for showing tonight. Gayefy.<'.Hell*. America!** Joe Hurtig's "Hello. America!'*! Company, which opened to crowded audiences yesterday at the Gayetyj Theater, presented a patriotic musi-j cal comedy revue that met with approval. Frank L. Wakefield is responsible for the book which puts: across live and up-to-date musical and dance numbers, which Sam; Lewis and Sam Dody. who are called upon to carry the burden in the: comedy kept their audiences in an uproar from curtain raise to the', finale. ¦*. The extravaganza is plotless, but it furnishes plenty of opportunities for both Dody anS Lewis, while many novelties and specialities are introduced. Dody and Lewis hold the spotlight as Hebrew and Italian characters during the opening bur¬ lesque. which is presented in four scenes, while their work in blark- face in thrf last part, which ends! with an old-time minstrel show. Is! about the beat In this line that has been seen at the Ninth street house this season. Miss Margaret White, the dainty soubrette. puts across her numbers in brilliant style, while Misses Kitty Glasco and Dolly Barns help great¬ ly toward making the vehicle a suc¬ cess. Shaw and Lee,* at soft-shoe i% Compound Interest Paid on Savings You Can Buy ictory Bonds it this bank for Cash, or on the Ten-payment Plan.10% down and 10% per month. Buy Victory Liberty Bonds to evi¬ dence your faith in things American and to Help Bring Home the Boys. HARRY V. HAYNES, President. Robert D. Weaver, Vice Pres. Harry L. Selby, Cashier. G. L. Nicolsfcn, Vice Pres. C. T. Cropley, Asst. Cashier The Farmers & Mechanics National Bank 31st ud M, Georgetown dancins. Introduce many new steps, while Owen Martin, aa the wlae nr. handi out enough bunk to keep Dody and Lewis working overtime aa the "yes men." A new record In the matter of lavish scenic equipment, daullnv costumes, la es¬ tablished. while the chorus Is com¬ posed of shapely rlrla who ean staff and lion. THREE MURDERED IN TRAGIC CRIME AT LAUREL, MD. t . t COKtinnD PROM PAGI ONE eral hours later lying on hla back with a .32-caliber U. a revolver In hla hand. Finding him alive, physicians ordered h;ra rushed to the Baltimore hospital. In the pistol were two cartridges. one discharged, one good. Ingratitude features the theory of the murder, Mrs. Allen's reputation as a house¬ wife and a neighbor Is held above re¬ proach by the~countryslde. Was IHsg^k Message. She had been In the habit of sup¬ plying milk to the less fortunate families of the vicinity. TV> the Sloates house she often hao taken mltk and provisions. The rislt contemplated to the Sloatea home on the night of the tragedy, however, was not one of charity. Bradley Allen stated yester¬ day that she had Intended -asking Mrs. Sloatea to care for her family while she was fltay visiting relatives in Robertlee. Wis. She was to have left lest night. A railroad ticket and 127 was found in her apron pocket, disproving any theory of robbery. The ingratitude of the murderer isj again evidenced, according to neigh¬ bors, in the killing of Mrs. Sloatea. Sh* had cared for, clothed and fed Englehart during periods of his non- employment. The little oottage had been primarily conducted for his com¬ fort. Saiyth lB*ffrmi>r. Smyth's reputation is that of an in¬ offensive, harmless little Cockney Eng¬ lishman. He was employed for odd Jobs through the vicinity. He was gardener, farmer, furnace man and all-round handy man. All of the principals in the tragedy were well advanced in life. Mrs. Allen was between 40 years of age and 43. Englehart was 48. his sister was a0 and Smyth was 48. "When my wife had not returned late Saturday night," Allen declared. "J became anxious and stsrted a search for her. I went over the ground to the Sloates residence. When my son and I srrived there we found the bodies of Smyth and Mrs. Sloan. "Then we started back through the path toward my residence again. My son saw the white material of his mother's apron and called to me. I found my wife dead. We are now making arrangements for the funeral The body in at the Fisher undertaking establishment." VIRGINIA TROOPS SENT TO DEFEAT ATTACK OF OUTLAWS CONTINUED F1UIM PAGfc ONE. the Standardsville jail, cnarged with aiding Morris to escape. All Greene County is on edge for the coming clash, for those who know Morris say he will attempt to carry- out his threat to storm the little courthouse at Standardsville. Standardsville is fifteen miles from a railroad or telegraph station. About it is the wild and unsettled moun¬ tain country which only men like: Morris, born snd bred to the crags and gulleys, know. Aided by his knowledge of the country, Morris has the loyal protec- tion of his clansmen, for Morris is a member of one of the oldest moun- tain families in the country. Magistrate Sullivan held office at Standardsville for yeaYs. and was one of the leading citizens of the little mountain community, now threatened with a bloody clan warfare. County officials have asked Govern- or Davis to kee?» troops here until Morris can be captured and tried. Boy Suffers Injuries When Auto Overturns Capght beneath an overturning auto- mobile driven by F. C. Plate, his! father, Albert Plate. 14 years old. I street northwest, was treated at Emergency Hospital for bruises about: his head and body. Young Plate was "treated at the scene of the accident and was not seriously hurt. The machine overturned on Georgia! avenue near Bright wood when Mr. Plate lost control rounding a turn. GIRLS "Hie neneM complexion fn.l is d«rwiUo liquid powder. It iustantK beautifies the complexion¦ whiten* the skin, stays all day and astonishes all who try it. Never be without it. l>erwillo Ifives you a rosy, peach like skin which erery- hody will rave about. It's absolutely hannles*. l>racgirt* refund the money if it fails. See large announcement soon to appear in this pa;*r. In the meantime get it and try it..Adv. The Safest Invcstoneati An tlxjas taat .* not fluctuate Omram 2XZ rss srscu -j" sssL-jsFm?. rf|t investments aid do not depma nam the flnaocia.1 responnUlity uf tadfvldpaia corporation, for tbetr stability VT« caa ¦apply rich inveetemnts tn amounts from m ¦ps-d. Bead for booklet "CoecareJ^ Loans and Investments " SwartzeU, Rheem & Heasey Ca. 727 PiftMB Street Northwest, Market Conditions Analyzed Straight ahead possibilities at present market prices that are good buys in our opinion. Write to mm for .pinion stocks yon are now holding. Sullivan&Co. 1421 G Street N. W. M. P. DRAIN, Local Manager. Phone Mala 1*40-1-2. Correapo^eat to F. G. "Roberto & Co., Menkem of Slew York Con¬ solidated Stork Ezfhaage. CALLS KOREANS | UNFIT TO RULE Dr. Rhee, Secretary of State, Also Objects to' Jap Influence. "The other Oriental peoples ore well mtye to take care of themeefvee. .o let Japan flfht for her own peo- pie." This was the statement made yes¬ terday by Dr. Syngman Rhee, secre¬ tary of state of the provisional gov- ernment of Korea, In reply to the as- sertlon of Baron Bhimpei Goto, for- mer foreign minister of Japan, that that country was "willing to grant Korea independence as the United State* is to grant the Philippines freedom." The baron, though, de- clared Koreans Incapable of self-gov- ] ernment. "Japan," said Dr. Rhee. "cannot! claim the championship of Oriental peoples. She is too materialistic, ego¬ tistical and aggressive. There should be no such thing as an Asiatic Mon- roe doctrine, because It would en- danger the peace not only of the Tar [East but of the whole world. "Xhe Koreans are Just as capable1 of self-government as are the Japan- ese. Japan must remember that Korea has always managed to main¬ tain her independence through all the centuries of Invasion by China and Japan, until 1910. and she will still manage to regain her independence. "The baron claims that no other power should ^be tolerated to inter- fere in the Korean question, saying that it is a domestic affair. That claim is very weak. If Japan-ahould be allowed to continue her terrorism and wholesale massacres in Korea, the allied powers should not have said or done anything agdlnst the Hun's barbarism In Belgium. Al¬ though the Koresns sre not asking the allies to fight for their country, as they will dot all the fighting them¬ selves, the Inhuman treatment and atrocities in Korea are enough to arouse the entire world to righteous indignation. "Japan has by no means crushed cut the Independence movement in our Peninsular kingdom. Jf she has done so why does she send fresh troops to re-enforce the already large army she has stationed throughout the coun- try? With all of her mighty army, though, she can never reduce the 2b. <**),000 Koreans to a permanent serf¬ dom. Our fair warning to her is that jshe* give up the dangerous policy of Prussian militarism and adopt the modern principle of American democ¬ racy which has almost encircled the entire earth. "The Japanese government has de¬ nied the reports of the arrest of American missionaries and of the ciuelties of the Japanese soldiers in Korea. We expected such a denial. Ji pan never admits any wrong done by her. Even the current reports of th* atrocities committed by her sol¬ diers in Tientsin are all false, accord¬ ing to her official statements. "Nevertheless the time has come *'hen the world will no longer allow itself to be hypnotized by the clever diplomacy of the Japanese. Nu¬ merous reports from American army officers in CTuna and American mis¬ sionaries in Korea are too overwhelm¬ ingly clear for the Japanese denials to effectively discredit them.** $4,283 in Cash and Bonds Donated for New Church An Ewter offering which amounted to S4.2S3 in cash and liberty bonds was received yesterday at the Vermont Avenue Christian Church for the.pro- posed new church building, many members making their first payment on pledges. The pastor. Rev. Dr Earle Wilfley, preached to crowds that packed the church, both at the morning and evening services Four¬ teen new members joined the con¬ gregation Mu; Shot in Muaick. Copenhagen. April 19. . Exchange Telegraph dispatches from Munich today stated that the communists have started wholesale executions. Many civilians have been shot. Other lead¬ ing citizens are being held as hostages and will be executed if government troops attempt to capture Munich. IF BACK HURTS USE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Eat Less Meat If Kidaeys Fee) Like Lead or Bladder Bothers. Most folks forget that the kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasion¬ ally. else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, severe hcad^ches, rheumatic twinges, tor¬ pid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kid¬ ney region, get about four ounces of J«d Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few- days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimu¬ late them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids in the urine ho it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. .Ta<i Salts is harmless; inexpensive: makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kld- neys clean, thus avoiding serious com¬ plications. A well-known local druggist says he sells lota of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble .Adv. Simple Ceremony Will At¬ tend Nuptials of Steel King's Daughter, New Tork Ajwil *.The maniac* of MIm Margaret OarHMte. dauCMet of the ttwl kins, to Enaicn Roowell Miller on Tu«»d*y afternoon will be conspicuous for Its qulelneas There will be no attendant* and the decors tlona In the Can»c«ie mansion on Fifth avenue, where the waddtns will be solemnised, will be of the atmptect. the fowiu and flowers have been se¬ lected on their merit* of simplicity The cuests will be few and the pres¬ ent* limited. Ttie popular conception of «he mar riase of a millionaire's daughter will be Iscklni on Tuesday afternoon The quietness will reflect the well-ordered routine of the domestic life of Mr and Mrs. Carnegie and tlielr dauftiter PEDESTRIAN ROBBED BY THREE SOLDIERS Mount Vernon Man Loses $35 I* New Jersey Avenue Hold-up. Three colored soldiers, wearing the insignia of the Engineer Corp®. held up and robbed Paul Lavenburg. of Mount Vernon. X. Y.. stopping at the Union Station Y. M. C. A., of 136 in bills late laat night. Lavenburg was walking on D street, between New Jersey avenue and North Capitol street, when the colored men ap- proached him. and with a curt order to hand over his money. The men were said to have been intoxicated The footpads fled east on D street and made good their escape. Their victim was able to give the police a good description of the robber?. MRS.DOOLEY'S ! ADVICE TQ . j WORKING GIRLS i Milwaukee. Wis.."I wish all girls who work and suffer from _ functional dls P orders would advice and take ham's Vegeta¬ ble Compound. Before I was married, when I came home out with pains which dragged me down. I took Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound and it made me (eel like a new woman I can work from morning uptil night and It does not bother me. and I wish all girls who suffer as 1 did would try Lydia E. Pink- j ham's Vegetable Compound.".Mrs H. Doolet, 1135 25th St., Milwau¬ kee, Wis. Working girls everywhere should profit by Mrs. Dooley's experience, and instead of dragging along from day to day with life a burden, give this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege¬ table Compound, a trial It has overcome lust such conditions for thousands of others, and why not for yon? For special advice, write Lydia E. PlBkham Medicine Co, Lynn. Mass. The result of their 40 years experience is at^yrmr service. [' After Your Baby Is Born Think Now About the Time to Come Afterwards. j When you hold in your arms your tiny new infant, be sure that you can feel that before its arrival you did all in your power to give to it a happ> pre-natal influence. Scientists say that the thought* and feelings of the expectant mother greatly affect the health and disposi¬ tion of the future infant. F*or over half a century thousand." of women who have used the tlme- honored remedy. Mother's Friend, say that they entirely escape nauae*. nervousness and that peculiar dl*- tressing feeling so usual where nv ture is unaided. They thus preserved m wonderfully bright and happy dis- posit ion. which reflects so markedly upon the unborn child. By the regular use of Mother s Friend the muscles are made and kept soft and elastic to readily yield to nature's demand for expansion without the usual wrenching strain. The nerves are not drawn upon, and as a consequence the expectant mother Is calm and serene and tha nights are not disturbed with nervous twitchings. and the crisis is one of joy and happiness. Write the Bradfleld Regulator Com¬ pany. Dept. K. Lamar Bulldkig At¬ lanta. Georgia, for their Motherhood Book, of value to every woman, and get a bottle of Mother's Friend from your druggist and begin a treatment that will bring real results. "LETS ALL DRINK TEA" For Superior Quality and Satisfying Refreshment l^dffasqys &°'£»7ea "Safe- Tea First" / f Packed Only in Tin to Keep the Flavor in. In l-lbM i-lb., i-lb. and 10c Sizte.

CAMPAIGN FOR I BUREAUOP OPENINGS CALLS ......Toto. Sixth. Antoinette. Plurenzi. 1 Fairy Prince. Seventh.Dolina. Broom Ped-ler. Graphic. I BUREAUOP.. ENGRAVING sfSss-NEWSANDPRINTING

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Page 1: CAMPAIGN FOR I BUREAUOP OPENINGS CALLS ......Toto. Sixth. Antoinette. Plurenzi. 1 Fairy Prince. Seventh.Dolina. Broom Ped-ler. Graphic. I BUREAUOP.. ENGRAVING sfSss-NEWSANDPRINTING

CAMPAIGN FOR! BILLY KELLY.

Commander J. K. L. Ross'¦"Juvenile Hero Will Start

in 3 Kentucky Races.Billy Kelly, jtnrenile hero of the

Saratoga summer meeting of 1911. a

folding for which Comdr. J. K. L.*oca, of Montreal, owner of the lead-ng money-winning stable of theimerican turf last season r.nd an es-

ablishment this year th**t looks con¬siderably stronger than his comblna-ion of last season, paid 127,500 earlyn August last, has proven that herill race this year, as last, to the sat.sfactlon of H. C. Bedwell, his train-r.So Bedwell authorises the announce-oent that Billy Kelly will go to Ker*-ucky presently to start, first, in the30.000 Derby which will be run atThurchill Downs on May 10. and afterhat Jn the Kentucky Handicap, a

*10,000 race of 1 1-4 miles for 3-yeai-»lds and over, that will be run latern the new Louisville Jockey Club's?pring meeting, and after in the $15.0<*j.aton.a Derby at Cincinnati.Billy Kelly will be personally con-

lucted to Kentucky by Bedwell. whoexpects to make ||wo or three trips tohe Blue Grass belt while the Plmlico.'hurchill Downs and Latonia meet¬

ings are in progress, some time afterthe first of the month.Bedwell delayed announcing definite¬

ly that Bflly Kelly would ship to Ken¬tucky for the Derby until after -fffegelding had raced at Havre de Gracein the Harford Handicap, a sprint of

furlongs, that was decided onWednesday, he winning easily inheavy going from that accomplishedmudlark Pickwick, because a man cannever tell what a gelding will do fromt to 3 years old. Oftener than not a

great J-year-old gelding fails to make9n 'even passable 3-year-old. Never¬theless Billy had worked so well forBedwell at Laurel Park, where hewintered. Bedwell was not withoutbone that he would do just what hedid. J

pennsyMlayREAL OLYMPICS

More First-Class CollegeTeams Entered in Carni¬val Than Ever Before.

Pennsylvania's twenty-fifth annualreiay carnival, to be held on Frank¬lin Field. Philadelphia, next Fridayand Saturday, promises to be therreatest set of athletic games everheld in this country and to rival instandard of performances the world'sOlvmpic gardes.Pennsvlvai^'s games have come to

be a classic track meet of the yearand news of the results are flashednot only all over-this country but toa^l countries where track and fieldathletics are played. More first-classteams will be seen this week thanhave ever before. In each of the bicrelay championships several real con¬tenders «re in evidence. Harvard.Cornell. Yale. Princeton. Columbia.jSyracuse. Pittsburgh. Chicago. Mis-Muri. Northwestern. Notre Dame.Ohio State. Georgetown. Johns Hop-kins. Michigan. In fact the big col¬leges of the country with but fewexceptions will send their teams tothe Quaker city for both Friday andSaturday.Some of Friday's events will be

most interesting. The pentathlon hassixteen entries, of which the bestknown are Bartels, of Pennsylvania.the present champion; Thomson, ofDartmouth: Gilfillan. of Notre Dame,the Western champion, and Liewis. ofMissouri. All of these men are very-high class performers and the com-ptition should be very close. Sev¬eral of the other men are real darkhorses. Earp. of Swarthmore. is a

very fine all-around athlete, whileGillo. of Colgate, is another. Gillohas a national reputation as a foot-1ball player and weight thrower. Hissuccess will depend on his ability torun and broad jump.Georgetown is counting on their

entry. Le Gendre. to win out. Hehss been showing very good form inpractice. At any rate, the pentath-Ion is very representative and thewinner will well deserve the title ofall-around college champion of|America.

HAVRE DE GRACE ENTRIES.FIRST RACE- For maiden C-yesr-oId fllli#*; 4

furlonga Rryn Child. 114; Sea Queen, 114;Harriet. 114; Skittles. 114: Pawnee 3d. 114 ;jPanoply. 14; Wendy. 114; Locust Leaves. 114;Mis» Stathrm. 114; Optimistic. 114: Toncanet.14: Rounding Billow. 1:4; Powder Flank. 114*.SECOND RACE.For niarr-. 3-.". ear-' Ids and,

up; claiming: 5furlong*. Mim Sterling, HE;'Ideal. 113; Margarrt Ellen. 1K>; 113;.Ina Kan. 1H>: .Jill. 100; Low Degrte. 110;'Ruaan M.. 102; Favonr. 110; Irish Maid. 110:1Sophie K W»; 'Napoli. 100; Unwise Child,!«; Irene. 113.THIRD RACE-For 4-vearolu* and up; claim-'

ing: 6 furlongs. I'olroma. 108; Alias Bryn. W";!Rabetfe W0: Tnie as Steel. 112: Clark >»..

Mackenzie, 115: Rar One. 108: Zinnia. ICJ;.Aweet A9ma. 98. Sister Emblem. 110; SibolaJ»W; 'Zouave. 108; Ocean Prince. 108; Kr«a«te.'i

'Encore. '03: Sir William Johnson IiC;l'Snains. 107; -Salratelle, *. #PJURTH RACE.For 3-> ear-olds and np;lThe Port Deposit Selling Handicap 6 furlona-.RaJlast. 10*: High Cost. HH; \Viar>t Fool. 9®;'Kirisran, 1«. 'Cobalt K Jack Mount..»* Km Bli«s. WO: MVar Zi*»e 35: KateRnght. 106FIFTH RACE-1-'or Wear-old*: The Wilming¬

ton Piine; furlongs. Toto. 118: Pigeon WteflU00; Crystal Ford. 114; Ticklitb. 114; Ifilk Maid.;

RartMp. 136.*IXTH RACE.For 2 vear-olds; claiming; 1'

mile and TO ;arda. Cain Spring. 108: *Transr«ro.Fairy Prmce. 106; 'Pluntua. 100; Houdint'Antoinette. 108: .SyNano. 101.

SEVENTH RAClt-For 4 vear-old* and np;laiming: 1 110 miles Lucius. 107: N. K.Heal. IT: Graphic. :W 'Pnts and Call*. 104;Thorn Bloom 111; 'Dolina, ??; 'Bn<»m Ped-

iJ3.

Leonard Training Hard.New York. April 20..ChampionBenny Leonard is working harder'very day as the time approachesfor his eight-round bout with Wil¬lie Bitchie at the Sportsman's Club,in Newark, on Monday evening,April J*. Benny boxed seven fastlounda yesterday, first going fourjounds with Freddie Reese and thentaking on Johnny Harvey for threemora. Leonard is last rounding up'nto condition.

Him de Grace Selectieas.

By -RIG."Best rating.Miss Sterling.First.Miss Stathem Wendy,

Sea QueenSecond.Miss Sterling:. Ideal.

Ina Kay.Third.Ocean Prince, Sosius,

Salratelle.Fourth.Wisest Fool. Kate

Bright. Fort Blips.Fifth.Milkmaid. Pigeon Wing.

Toto.Sixth . Antoinette. Plurenzi.1 Fairy Prince.Seventh.Dolina. Broom Ped-ler. Graphic.

..

I BUREAU OPENGRAVINGAND PRINTINGsfSss-NEWSThe Government Baseball League

has been organised with the followingsix clubs: Naval Operations, Marines,Bureau of Engraving and PrintingBureau of Standards, Zone Financeand the Sixty-third Infantry.The opening came will be played on

May 3 between the Marines and NavalOperations, with the Marine Band toliten things up. On May 5 the Bureauof Engraving and Printing and theBureau of Standards will clash, anathe Bureau Band will give these teamsa good sendofT.On May 6 the Sixty-third Infantry

will tackle the Zone Finance, and it isexpected that the Infantry Band willbe on the job. Jack Carr has been ap-pointed umpire for this league. Nowfor the rooting.

Miss Fannie Tolley, of the examiningdivision, is visiting her mother inMonkton."Md.. for a few days. Weath-er permitting, she will participate inthe egg-rolling."Walter Scheller. a Harris pressman

in the surface division, is Just backfrom military service. He was dis-charged at Camp Meade.

Miss Katherine Armstrong, of thewetting division, is spending Easterand the following week at her homein Charlottesville. Va.

Clarence Brower, of the maceratorroom, will use up several days of hisannual leave this week.

George Wells, who superintendsthe heating of the dry boxes in the;examining division. is* off for a.week.

Mrs. Ethel L. Heflin. of the sur¬face division, left Saturday for aweek's visit to her old home in!Delos. Va. jEverywhere you turn in the Bu-

reau. one of the new Victory Loanposters just naturally hits you inthe face. There is no escape fromthis big event.

Miss Nannie Small, of the office'force in the examining division, is!excused for Monday and Tuesday.

There was some racket in section8 tjie other day. hut it turned outto be simply a modest send-off forMiss Mary Jones, who is to be mar-ried some time this week.

Edward J. Leahy, foreman of themachine division, has been appoint¬ed on the committee to canvass themachine division in interest of theVictory Liberty Loan.

Mr. Leahy is surely the right manin the right place, as it was large¬ly due to his efforts that this dlvi-lsion went over the top in all theprevious drives, and he feels con¬fident that the machine division willdo just as well or even better this

^time. Get behind him. boys.

Ted Wagner, of sectioh 8. hasbeen enjoying a few days vacation.

Miss Elsie E. Swan resigned her[position in the surface divisionApril 15.

The job of removing the gallowsfrom the motor presses in section 8is now in progress.

The Bureau Band will hold itsregular rehearsal this afternoon. Aibrief business meeting will precedethe rehearsal, and all members areurged to be on hand and on time.

Arthur Hunt, of the numbering*division, is taking three weeks,fleave to visit friends in little old)New York.

Ts Miss Edna Thomas, of the num-lbering division, going to plant a.Victory garden? She has been seen'lately hard at work in both her!front and back yards.

Timothy J. Casey, of the mace-rator room, has been using up somemore of his leave.

Miss Bridget Condon. Miss MarthaKealey. Miss Mary Deale and MissAnna KidwelJ were excused yester¬day from the stamp perforating di¬vision.

The stamp perforating divisionreports Miss Fannie Huline. Misfe[Nettie Edwards. Miss MargaretFleming and Miss Lula Robinson onthe sick list.

EBBETS BUYS KONETCHY.

Big First Baseman Will JoinDodgers Soon.

Boston, April 20..President CharlesH. Ebbets. of the Dodgers, announcedhere tonight thai he. had purchasedEd Konetchy from the Braves. Theamount paid for the veteran firstbaseman was not disclosed. Kon-etchy. who now is in St. Louis, didnot sign the contract sent to him by[g. W. Grant, the owner of the Bos-ton club. Ebbets offered Konetchythe amount that he demanded fromlfhe Braves.

I^ate tonight the owner of theRobins had not heard from theplayer, but it is expected that he willjoin the Dodgers within a few days,^'hen he does report he will be placedat first b*.«e.

TO REORGANIZE LEAGUE.

Maryland-Delaware Circuit, AfterLong Layoff. Coming Back.

Elkton. Md.. April 20..The Mary-land-Delaware Baseball League, whichwas in existence several years ago.ai»d disbanded at the outbreak of thewar. will be reorganized Monday!night. An informal meeting was heldin Wilmington. Del., last week, at!which plans were outlined, but on ac-count of representatives from onlyfive clubs being present nothing defl-jnite was accomplished. Arthur Da-vies, sporting editor of the EveningJournal, will no doubt be re-electedpresident, and the other officers willbe selected from towns on the cir-;cult.

GEORGE BU^NS MARRIED.Athletics' First Baseman Wedded

to Miss Marion R. Harris.Philadelphia, April 20..George Burns,

who was the heaviest hitting tnfleJderin the major league last year, took a

day off from the national pastimeyesterday to wed Miss Marion R.Harris, a school tAicher, of 244 WestTabor road.In taking out the marriage license

Burns gave his age as 26 years andthat of his bride as 27 years.The newly-wedded pair are on a

short honeymoon trip to the seashore,for George must be back on his jobof Tirst basing for the Mackmen atWashington next Wednesdsy.

Ruth Make* Record.Baltimore. April 20..'Babe" Ruth, of

the Boston- Americans, in six sup-{cessive times at the bat, four in Fri-day's exhibition with the Baltimore;Internationals and two in yesterday'sgum. adored, six bome rnn^

SUNDAY THEATER OPENINGS¦ "THmif "

"Sunshine," a new musical comedyby the author* of "Fiddler. Three."had Its (lr»t apwarance at Poll'i The-ater last night Vnd revealed a nun-

^,.of P®lnta recommending It to apublic hungry for new fun and mel¬ody. Foremoat among them la the

mjplcal score, marked by the samebright tunefulness and rich orches¬tration with which Alexander John¬stone won popularity for the previousPlay. Next la order should b» placedthe eight so-called "shimmying seno-ritas, Who if they actually shimmieddid so Without exciting this staid re¬viewer. but wbo at least honestlyshimmered with goods looks and live¬liness.Then there are Several of the p»ln-

clpals in the cast who give honestmeasure in the way of entertainment.*or Instance, we are especially Infavor of Mtaa Susanne Wllla, wJ>o hastemperament and can act. and getssome subtle fun out of a comedy rolethat has no great wealth of matterfor her to work on. If the part couldbe brightened somewhat In her behalfshe would make one of the play's besttalking points. STMiss Jane Kichardson is another

member worth watching, and alsolistening to. for her soprano is oneor the musical assets of the piece.Carl Cochems exhibits a basso with]clear marks of his operatic trainingand reputation, but for some reasonlacking In power and animation.There are other good voices in thecompany, but none of outstandingmerit.Harry Short and Edgar Norton fur¬

nish most of the comedy, with well-known and sure-fire methods Thisbrings us squarely before the ques¬

tion of the book of the play, whichis by William C'ary Duncan. Well,then, the book of the play. It mustbe squarely stated, offers little in theway of novelty or brilliancy. Theauthor's imagination wanders stead¬fastly among familiar fields, seem¬ingly reluctant to launch forth intoany untried levels, and not disdainingto pick up bodily such quips andquirks, and even songs, as may bereadily lifted.When the curtain goes up one's first

instinct is to glance at the program tosee if by some mistake intrusion has

"°t..^een made on a stray performanceor Carmen." so perfect is the illusiongiven by the identical setting and cos«tumes. But the music reassures, andit appears that the story is laid inthe south of Spain, with a matadorinstead of a toreador for hero./Car¬men herself is visible In the/ hand¬some person of Miss Juiette Lange.only her part Is called Dolores. Thereare smugglers and villagers. Ameri¬cans homesick for Broadwav. a jeal¬ous Spanish policeman and other fa¬miliar figures.The second act shows a handsome

Moorish interior, with the Rock of!Gibraltar seen through the openarches in the distance.

.IbBbert-Belaseo."Tlie < ronriedHoar."

Of tne making of war melodramasthere is no end, and the latest of!these, and perhaps the greatest. Is IThe Crowded Hour." which strikes!

a new variant of an ancient theme;with a considerable degree of sue-cess. That theme.the purging of hu¬man character in the crucible of thebig show".is made more poignantly I

realistic in this new Selwyn-PollackPiece than in any other play of thewar period that has come within our

; 'u,every scene is written witha vivid sincerity which carries it far!beyond the reaches of conventionalmelodrama. Its virtues as a well-constructed piece of dramaturgv areobvious, it, fallings as , humandocument are no less so.

Peggy r«wrence I. the joint Sel-1wyn-Pollack heroine.a "Follies" girl Iwhose liaison with a New York youthhas broken up his "home. War comesthe New Yorker Is turned by the'death of his brother at the front!°m slacker complacency into a cru-1

sader of the A E. F. The girl fol-Ilows him across, enlisting as a tele-phone operator. Her motive franklywas selfish.to keep her lover for her-

,B"' she also is purged and ex-

her bi* chance comes.Ail that there is to "The Crowded-

Hour is packed into one pulsating,concentrated scene in which Peggyholds her key and switchboard even

owho hld broken through

the British line below St. Quentin. arecoming swiftly onward. She stays ather post until a "connection" j8 made

?k i? W,rt"' and hcr earning of

I, PH!'VeaohCS a vision in dangciof enfilade. So cunningly is this scenecontrived that a genuine illusion agenuine "feel" of war, is created; thestand of the American engineers atUiaulny ourlng the *ctisational open-ing of the German drive a year asois the historical background of rh«'episode.If it were not for the fact that mod¬

ern war is itself one^ great super-melodrama which makes all theatricalefforts at its simulation seem pale anddrab. The Crowded Hour" -would'

\frJP and a punch far beyond.that which we are inclined to awardit. A jaded, hear'-slck world gives &faint reaction to the old stimuli inthese days of convalescence. Now

?" .°.r "ve mo"'hs there has been noslaughter, no further clangor of war.the play radiates that curious and in-definable suggestion of belonging to apast age. of unfolding incidents lhat!seem remote and alien to the leaping!hearts and minds of men-the menwhose eyes are turned anxlwly an(1

wnriHVl° 'J"® fUtUre h<?aIt"S of the

world s wounds.

i4 well-acted, although wehardly think that Florence Johns, in

ei.K., ,P °f JeKf5 ' 18 R°"'S to causeeither Jane Cowl or Willette Kershaw

niKhts Allan Dine-v.~. n J"Z" Wa"hlngton In "Avery Good Young Man," enacts thepart of Billy Laldlaw in an acceptable;.,r; Keighley p,.y. %eu't.Caswell excellently- Eugenie Nau asGrandmere Buvaise. Eugenie Geinovaas Marthe and Emile De Varny asCapt Soulier gave realistic French at-mosphere to the piece,.ec production is Of the character¬istic Selwyn standard and nothing hasbeen left undone to preserve the qual¬ity of a melodrama which undoubtedlyranks as the chief American contribu¬tion to war drama for the currentseason, at least.

Shufccrt-Garriek.<"Mgfetic MSht."before the curtain rose on

Nigbtie Night" at the Shubert-Garrick last evening, a young manin the audience was heard to re¬mark. with a pleased smile, that heguessed it was going to be a "very-naughty show." Maybe it was-.lioni soit qui mal y pense.it all de¬pends upon the point of view Wethought it a mildly amusing farcethat might be presented with pro¬priety by the dramatic .dub of ¦fashionable young ladies' seminaryCertain it is that young husbands'

should not leave their bridss athome while traveling and have un¬expected meetings with formersweethearts on the train. The re¬sult mig|}t have been tragic last

vin^H i "NL*h"e a"d pre-fh-? «.

and merriment atthe Sliubert-Garick had not thehumorous aspects of the case been

from "first't by a CaSt' »htch

sr^v^p,.8pj[pre.°f®u,le* w»" a delight as the

runningtrain," just married and

running away from her husbandwith a further dis-

J-C.UKf. Rll.'.y g.y. ft JQ~

pT'Frtnci'.'B.JL °f

MHV--kr .

2SS? .upp0^r,'eproprtetT b°Und' of ¦tr,et

TW* <. evidently a t*«iance of "Nightie Night" mE£Tuw»l prove more worthy 0f M ,rtJIntins used la»t nTJhf' one met~been r2w!£l fV" ' '.I1"*. to hkv*l-ome «tSu« m the "rret <"

«-«W» Palae^*.,, plr.^r.

Jr.," the nr«°D? t" "C'ptatn Ki'dd.given the

"re

'' "J'8 ,hl" ,Ur h"

furnishes th ® ."ome month*.

Picture fans t|?*t h®®rta of movinghouses whenever .

a"ure« P»cked

mlrers*r°W """¦». <° her IS-

addhenoptrh";ntcb^r.*'Tu b' - p"°v«"»her 1p. f.

contention that

the f,ZVT «e due to

And auM.hit d" 11 <Jlrflo||lt to

4>I.. ^ V,creen m»terlal.Captain Kidd, Jr .. start. «... .?

Pace that promises a dim story tha*descemU

h" ">« U.oonwithanhi. v.

*Ck Sen"«tt caliber,with all his cheap and coarse comedystar holdi^® ¦Upreme U1«f>t. of the

hokum reletge!' *b°Ve t!"

Jhe ..pfcture '* limed from the

the'* Rida Johnson Toung withthe scenario, credited to Frances

nlecl°ofIltt^!?*Ky McTavl«h 1« theniece of an old bookseller. To hissecond-hand store come, a box ofbooks'from the estate of a wealthymerchant. Among ,.e volumes ^one giving the history and location

cLrt."UP.Pn°rd.K idden lreasur' with

mv.ter Kexpected air of

mystery about the wealth. The In-

urten»ahi M1'8'" Wh° "eeks ,he treas-lk j

innpcently slipped out of'hands is introduced and his

machinations when Mary and herparty set out in search for the buriedrortune are introduced.,.The,!oca,« then "hifts to the coun¬try village where the treasure farm.. located with the village "con-stabule and all the other overdrawncharacters here injected They don'tfind the gold they are looking forand the story takes an unusual andsurprising twist to bring about therequired happy ending.

It is a very ordinary story andsome very clever subtitling is mar¬red by the introduction of unneces¬sary profanity which cheapens the;production.

In addition to the feature a

Christie comedy. -Sallies Blighted!Career, is offered and an unusually*Interesting news weekly, with a'unique Victory Loan appeal.

I.oews ColuUs.Charles R«,-Greased l.lgbtnlag."

An unusually brilliant vein ofcomedy characterises Charles Ray'slatest "boob" characterization, which \ts seen to splendid advantage in hislatest picture. "Greased Lightning."which had it. first Washington!showing at Loew's Columbia yes¬terday. Julian Josephson. the au-|thor of this latest Ray effort, com-bines a bit of George RandolphChester atmosphere with a touch of!"East Lynne" and caps the whole'with a thrilling bit of speedway ex-,citement. The production, through-!out. is high-powered, with here andthere dashes of travesty which areof distinct comedy value.Ray appears as Andy Fletcher, the

village blacksmith, inventor of apatent potato peeler, and sweetheartof Alice Flint, the village banker'sdaughter. The youth is smitten!with the motor erase and the potatopeeler goes In exchange for a bit kfmotor wreckage which ta christened"Greased Lightning." The climax isevolved when "Greased Lightning"!¦ the means whereby Andy thwartsthe confidence men who have beatenAlice's father and the reward ofmerit is Alice's hand, in the good!old-fashioned way.An excellent cast has been fur-

nished Ray by Producer Ince. thUcast including Wanda Hawley. Rob¬ert McKim. John P. Lockney. Willis!Marks. Bert Woodruff and Otto Holt- !man.

In addition to the Hay feature.1the Palace program includes an in¬teresting variety of short-reel offer-!ings which include a scenic ramblewith Robert C. Bruce; a Mutt andJeff animated cartoon. Ford Sterlingin "The Love Chase" and the Gau-mont-Herald Graphic.

OandallV"The Poppy Gifl's Husband.". Wil¬

liam S. Hart's latest picture, showingat Crandalls yesterday and todav isa screen version of the popular "Bos¬ton niackie ' stories and consequentlya play dealing with underworld ch«i-acters and having its locale in the

.£adr £ prls"n walN- "» hero.!Hairpin Harry Dutton. is introducedas a long-term convict in a Californiapenitentiary. Shortly after he isparoled he finds that he has wor¬shipped a shallow idol and that hiswife, who he had believed was wait¬ing for him all those years with theirson. had divorced him the year afterhis conviction and married the police?hlervl. ° ha<® *ent llim up Revengethen becomes the one object in his

life. Harry'* love for his boy changeshis purpose, and,he takes him awayto a little mountain cabli^ where theyAnd happiness together.

Craadall'n KslekerbMker.Seldom daring Pauline Freder¬

ick's screen feareer has she appearedto batter advantage or been sup¬plied with a better vehicle than in"One Week of Life* which wasgiven Its initial local presentationsat Crandall's Knickerbocker yes¬terday. This is a "dual role"story, but unlike many of its kind.It possesses real novelty and doesnot depend on trick photography)effects for its success. It Is adapt-'ed from a story by Cosmo Hamil¬ton, which was arranged for thescreen by Wlllard Mack.Miss Frederick is first introduced

in tfoe role of Marion Roche, a girlof high ideals and honor. Thesecond character Is that of Mrs.Kingsley Sherwood, bored alike'with society life and her hypo¬chondriac husband. The womanfrankly voices her desire to stealaway and spend "a w*ek of life"with the man she loves. At thispoint, the man, Le Roy Scott, meetsMarion and is attracted by henstriking reaembfence to Mrs. Sher¬wood. Playing on the girl's love]of luxury, he induces her to takethe place of Mrs. Sherwood in thelatter's home for a seven-day per-iod. The succeeding events bring,the story to an unexpected climax!of great power. This program,which will be repeated tonight,'was completed with the showing ofseveral entertaining supplementaryftatuies.

Crandall's Avenue Grand.An appealing story, well presentedby a cast of capability, is revealed in

"Daughter of Mine." yesterday's of¬fering at Crandall's Avenue Grand.Its chief character, portrayed byMadge Kennedy, is Rosie Mendelson,who lives In the tenement district.Professing to have found the manu-script of a story, she induces her em-ployer, a publisher, to let her read Itto him. As a matter of fact it is ajwildly romantic narrative the girl haswritten from memory, an exaggeratedversion of a novel written by hererstwhile sweetheart from whom sheis separated and eager to find. Whathappens when this plan is carried outbrings about a climax In keepingwith the melodramatic adventures ofthe story within a story.A number of popular favorites ap¬

pear in the supporting cast, amongwhom are Tully Marshal), John Bow¬ers. Arthur Carew and AbrahamSchwartz. The comedy, "The Way ofa Maid." proved a pleasing auxiliaryattraction. Tonight's program willconsist of "Marie. Ltd.." featuringAlice Brady, and a topical news reel.

CrnndaH'K \ polio. «

Wallace Reid adds materially to;his popularity in "Alias MikeMorsn." This picture, which wasshown yesterday at 'Crandall'sApollo and scheduled again for to¬night, owes its origin to Orin Bart-lett's story. "Open Sesame.'Larry Young, a chifcken^hearted

clerk, is mortally afraid of therifaft: He bribes Mike Moran. alormcr convict, to impersonate him.News comes that Larry Young

had been killed in action after dis¬tinguished bravery, and this fansthe few sparks of manhood yet re¬maining in the slacker, and he de¬termines to enlist under the nameof Mike Moran and win some honorto repay Moran for glorifying hisname. The succeeding events show.that he not only realises his am¬bition. but also wins a bride. Mr.Reid's support, which appears tohave been carefully chosen, in¬cludes Ann Little. Emory Johnson^and Charles Ogle.

Crandall'a Savoy."Good Gracious, Annabelle." as re-

corded on the screen at Crandall'sSavoy yesterday with Washington'sfavorite, Billie Burke, in the leadingrole, provides five reels of particular¬ly agreeable entertainment. This fea-tiye presents a comedy-drama relatingthe experience of a flighty young girlwho had been kidnapped by a muchly-bearded miner, who called himself"The Hermit" and forced to marryhim. After this romantic experienceshe goes to New York and lives a but¬terfly existence on the quarterly in¬come, always drawn considerably inadvance, sent by her unknown hus¬band.The story ends, as the photoplay en¬

thusiast expects all stories of this typeto end. with the lovers in each other'sarms. An interesting topical newsreel completed the program. TheTurn In the Road" and "Too ^lanyjSweethearts" are listed for showingtonight.

Gayefy.<'.Hell*. America!**Joe Hurtig's "Hello. America!'*!

Company, which opened to crowdedaudiences yesterday at the GayetyjTheater, presented a patriotic musi-jcal comedy revue that met withapproval. Frank L. Wakefield isresponsible for the book which puts:across live and up-to-date musicaland dance numbers, which Sam;Lewis and Sam Dody. who are calledupon to carry the burden in the:comedy kept their audiences in anuproar from curtain raise to the',finale. ¦*.

The extravaganza is plotless, butit furnishes plenty of opportunitiesfor both Dody anS Lewis, whilemany novelties and specialities areintroduced. Dody and Lewis holdthe spotlight as Hebrew and Italiancharacters during the opening bur¬lesque. which is presented in fourscenes, while their work in blark-face in thrf last part, which ends!with an old-time minstrel show. Is!about the beat In this line that hasbeen seen at the Ninth street housethis season.Miss Margaret White, the dainty

soubrette. puts across her numbersin brilliant style, while Misses KittyGlasco and Dolly Barns help great¬ly toward making the vehicle a suc¬cess. Shaw and Lee,* at soft-shoe

i% Compound Interest Paid on Savings

You Can Buyictory Bonds

it this bank for Cash, or on theTen-payment Plan.10% down and10% per month.Buy Victory Liberty Bonds to evi¬

dence your faith in things American andto Help Bring Home the Boys.

HARRY V. HAYNES, President.Robert D. Weaver, Vice Pres. Harry L. Selby, Cashier.G. L. Nicolsfcn, Vice Pres. C. T. Cropley, Asst. Cashier

The Farmers & Mechanics National Bank31st ud M, Georgetown

dancins. Introduce many new steps,while Owen Martin, aa the wlae nr.handi out enough bunk to keepDody and Lewis working overtimeaa the "yes men." A new recordIn the matter of lavish scenicequipment, daullnv costumes, la es¬tablished. while the chorus Is com¬posed of shapely rlrla who ean staffand lion.

THREE MURDEREDIN TRAGIC CRIME

AT LAUREL, MD.t .t

COKtinnD PROM PAGI ONEeral hours later lying on hla back witha .32-caliber U. a revolver In hla hand.Finding him alive, physicians orderedh;ra rushed to the Baltimore hospital.In the pistol were two cartridges.

one discharged, one good.Ingratitude features the theory of

the murder,Mrs. Allen's reputation as a house¬wife and a neighbor Is held above re¬proach by the~countryslde.

Was IHsg^k Message.She had been In the habit of sup¬

plying milk to the less fortunatefamilies of the vicinity. TV> theSloates house she often hao takenmltk and provisions.The rislt contemplated to the

Sloatea home on the night of thetragedy, however, was not one ofcharity. Bradley Allen stated yester¬day that she had Intended -askingMrs. Sloatea to care for her familywhile she was fltay visiting relativesin Robertlee. Wis. She was to haveleft lest night.A railroad ticket and 127 was found

in her apron pocket, disproving anytheory of robbery.The ingratitude of the murderer isjagain evidenced, according to neigh¬

bors, in the killing of Mrs. Sloatea.Sh* had cared for, clothed and fedEnglehart during periods of his non-employment. The little oottage hadbeen primarily conducted for his com¬fort.

Saiyth lB*ffrmi>r.Smyth's reputation is that of an in¬

offensive, harmless little Cockney Eng¬lishman. He was employed for oddJobs through the vicinity. He wasgardener, farmer, furnace man andall-round handy man.All of the principals in the tragedy

were well advanced in life. Mrs. Allenwas between 40 years of age and 43.Englehart was 48. his sister was a0and Smyth was 48."When my wife had not returned

late Saturday night," Allen declared."J became anxious and stsrted asearch for her. I went over theground to the Sloates residence. Whenmy son and I srrived there we foundthe bodies of Smyth and Mrs. Sloan."Then we started back through the

path toward my residence again. Myson saw the white material of hismother's apron and called to me. Ifound my wife dead. We are nowmaking arrangements for the funeralThe body in at the Fisher undertakingestablishment."

VIRGINIA TROOPSSENT TO DEFEATATTACK OF OUTLAWSCONTINUED F1UIM PAGfc ONE.

the Standardsville jail, cnarged withaiding Morris to escape.All Greene County is on edge for

the coming clash, for those who knowMorris say he will attempt to carry-out his threat to storm the littlecourthouse at Standardsville.Standardsville is fifteen miles from

a railroad or telegraph station. Aboutit is the wild and unsettled moun¬tain country which only men like:Morris, born snd bred to the cragsand gulleys, know.Aided by his knowledge of the

country, Morris has the loyal protec-tion of his clansmen, for Morris is amember of one of the oldest moun-tain families in the country.Magistrate Sullivan held office at

Standardsville for yeaYs. and was oneof the leading citizens of the littlemountain community, now threatenedwith a bloody clan warfare.County officials have asked Govern-

or Davis to kee?» troops here untilMorris can be captured and tried.

Boy Suffers InjuriesWhen Auto Overturns

Capght beneath an overturning auto-mobile driven by F. C. Plate, his!father, Albert Plate. 14 years old.I street northwest, was treated atEmergency Hospital for bruises about:his head and body. Young Plate was"treated at the scene of the accidentand was not seriously hurt.The machine overturned on Georgia!

avenue near Brightwood when Mr.Plate lost control rounding a turn.

GIRLS"Hie neneM complexion fn.l is d«rwiUo liquid

powder. It iustantK beautifies the complexion¦whiten* the skin, stays all day and astonishesall who try it. Never be without it. l>erwilloIfives you a rosy, peach like skin which erery-hody will rave about. It's absolutely hannles*.l>racgirt* refund the money if it fails. See largeannouncement soon to appear in this pa;*r. Inthe meantime get it and try it..Adv.

The Safest InvcstoneatiAn tlxjas taat .* not fluctuate Omram

2XZ rsssrscu -j" sssL-jsFm?.rf|t investments aid do not depma namthe flnaocia.1 responnUlity uf tadfvldpaia .«corporation, for tbetr stability VT« caa¦apply rich inveetemnts tn amounts from m¦ps-d. Bead for booklet "CoecareJ^Loans and Investments "

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Straight ahead possibilitiesat present market prices thatare good buys in our opinion.Write to mm for .pinion

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Phone Mala 1*40-1-2.

Correapo^eat to

F. G. "Roberto & Co.,Menkem of Slew York Con¬

solidated Stork Ezfhaage.

CALLS KOREANS |UNFIT TO RULE

Dr. Rhee, Secretary ofState, Also Objects to'

Jap Influence."The other Oriental peoples ore

well mtye to take care of themeefvee..o let Japan flfht for her own peo-

pie."This was the statement made yes¬

terday by Dr. Syngman Rhee, secre¬

tary of state of the provisional gov-ernment of Korea, In reply to the as-sertlon of Baron Bhimpei Goto, for-mer foreign minister of Japan, thatthat country was "willing to grantKorea independence as the UnitedState* is to grant the Philippinesfreedom." The baron, though, de-clared Koreans Incapable of self-gov- ]ernment."Japan," said Dr. Rhee. "cannot!

claim the championship of Orientalpeoples. She is too materialistic, ego¬tistical and aggressive. There shouldbe no such thing as an Asiatic Mon-roe doctrine, because It would en-danger the peace not only of the Tar[East but of the whole world.

"Xhe Koreans are Just as capable1of self-government as are the Japan-ese. Japan must remember thatKorea has always managed to main¬tain her independence through all thecenturies of Invasion by China andJapan, until 1910. and she will stillmanage to regain her independence."The baron claims that no other

power should ^be tolerated to inter-fere in the Korean question, sayingthat it is a domestic affair. Thatclaim is very weak. If Japan-ahouldbe allowed to continue her terrorismand wholesale massacres in Korea,the allied powers should not havesaid or done anything agdlnst theHun's barbarism In Belgium. Al¬though the Koresns sre not askingthe allies to fight for their country, asthey will dot all the fighting them¬selves, the Inhuman treatment andatrocities in Korea are enough toarouse the entire world to righteousindignation."Japan has by no means crushed

cut the Independence movement in ourPeninsular kingdom. Jf she has doneso why does she send fresh troops tore-enforce the already large army shehas stationed throughout the coun-try? With all of her mighty army,though, she can never reduce the 2b.<**),000 Koreans to a permanent serf¬dom. Our fair warning to her is thatjshe* give up the dangerous policy ofPrussian militarism and adopt themodern principle of American democ¬racy which has almost encircled theentire earth."The Japanese government has de¬

nied the reports of the arrest ofAmerican missionaries and of theciuelties of the Japanese soldiers inKorea. We expected such a denial.Ji pan never admits any wrong doneby her. Even the current reports ofth* atrocities committed by her sol¬diers in Tientsin are all false, accord¬ing to her official statements."Nevertheless the time has come

*'hen the world will no longer allowitself to be hypnotized by the cleverdiplomacy of the Japanese. Nu¬merous reports from American armyofficers in CTuna and American mis¬sionaries in Korea are too overwhelm¬ingly clear for the Japanese denialsto effectively discredit them.**

$4,283 in Cash and BondsDonated for New ChurchAn Ewter offering which amounted

to S4.2S3 in cash and liberty bonds wasreceived yesterday at the VermontAvenue Christian Church for the.pro-posed new church building, manymembers making their first paymenton pledges. The pastor. Rev. DrEarle Wilfley, preached to crowdsthat packed the church, both at themorning and evening services Four¬teen new members joined the con¬gregation

Mu; Shot in Muaick.Copenhagen. April 19. . ExchangeTelegraph dispatches from Munich

today stated that the communists havestarted wholesale executions. Manycivilians have been shot. Other lead¬ing citizens are being held as hostagesand will be executed if governmenttroops attempt to capture Munich.

IF BACK HURTS USESALTS FOR KIDNEYS

Eat Less Meat If Kidaeys Fee)Like Lead or Bladder

Bothers.Most folks forget that the kidneys,

like the bowels, get sluggish andclogged and need a flushing occasion¬ally. else we have backache and dullmisery in the kidney region, severehcad^ches, rheumatic twinges, tor¬pid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessnessand all sorts of bladder disorders.You simply must keep your kidneys

active and clean, and the momentyou feel an ache or pain in the kid¬ney region, get about four ounces ofJ«d Salts from any good drug storehere, take a tablespoonful in a glassof water before breakfast for a few-days and your kidneys will then actfine. This famous salts is made fromthe acid of grapes and lemon juice,combined with lithia, and is harmlessto flush clogged kidneys and stimu¬late them to normal activity. It alsoneutralizes the acids in the urine hoit no longer irritates, thus endingbladder disorders.

.Ta<i Salts is harmless; inexpensive:makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everybody shouldtake now and then to keep their kld-neys clean, thus avoiding serious com¬plications.A well-known local druggist says he

sells lota of Jad Salts to folks whobelieve in overcoming kidney troublewhile it is only trouble .Adv.

Simple Ceremony Will At¬tend Nuptials of Steel

King's Daughter,New Tork Ajwil *.The maniac*

of MIm Margaret OarHMte. dauCMetof the ttwl kins, to Enaicn RoowellMiller on Tu«»d*y afternoon will beconspicuous for Its qulelneas Therewill be no attendant* and the decorstlona In the Can»c«ie mansion on Fifthavenue, where the waddtns will besolemnised, will be of the atmptect.the fowiu and flowers have been se¬lected on their merit* of simplicityThe cuests will be few and the pres¬ent* limited.Ttie popular conception of «he mar

riase of a millionaire's daughter willbe Iscklni on Tuesday afternoon Thequietness will reflect the well-orderedroutine of the domestic life of Mrand Mrs. Carnegie and tlielr dauftiter

PEDESTRIAN ROBBEDBY THREE SOLDIERS

Mount Vernon Man Loses $35 I*New Jersey Avenue Hold-up.

Three colored soldiers, wearing theinsignia of the Engineer Corp®. heldup and robbed Paul Lavenburg. ofMount Vernon. X. Y.. stopping at theUnion Station Y. M. C. A., of 136 inbills late laat night. Lavenburg waswalking on D street, between NewJersey avenue and North Capitolstreet, when the colored men ap-proached him. and with a curt orderto hand over his money. The menwere said to have been intoxicatedThe footpads fled east on D street

and made good their escape. Theirvictim was able to give the police agood description of the robber?.

MRS.DOOLEY'S! ADVICE TQ .

j WORKING GIRLSi Milwaukee. Wis.."I wish allgirls who work and suffer from

_ functional dlsP orders would

advice and take

ham's Vegeta¬ble Compound.Before I wasmarried, whenI came home

out with painswhich dragged

me down. I took Lydia E. Pink-ham's Vegetable Compound and itmade me (eel like a new womanI can work from morning uptilnight and It does not bother me.and I wish all girls who suffer as1 did would try Lydia E. Pink- jham's Vegetable Compound.".MrsH. Doolet, 1135 25th St., Milwau¬kee, Wis.Working girls everywhere should

profit by Mrs. Dooley's experience,and instead of dragging alongfrom day to day with life a burden,give this famous root and herbremedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege¬table Compound, a trial It hasovercome lust such conditions forthousands of others, and why notfor yon? For special advice, writeLydia E. PlBkham Medicine Co,Lynn. Mass. The result of their40 years experience is at^yrmrservice.

['After Your Baby Is BornThink Now About the Time to

Come Afterwards.

j When you hold in your arms yourtiny new infant, be sure that you canfeel that before its arrival you didall in your power to give to it a happ>pre-natal influence.Scientists say that the thought* and

feelings of the expectant mothergreatly affect the health and disposi¬tion of the future infant.

F*or over half a century thousand."of women who have used the tlme-honored remedy. Mother's Friend, saythat they entirely escape nauae*.nervousness and that peculiar dl*-tressing feeling so usual where nvture is unaided. They thus preservedm wonderfully bright and happy dis-posit ion. which reflects so markedlyupon the unborn child.By the regular use of Mother s

Friend the muscles are made andkept soft and elastic to readily yieldto nature's demand for expansionwithout the usual wrenching strain.The nerves are not drawn upon, andas a consequence the expectantmother Is calm and serene and thanights are not disturbed with nervoustwitchings. and the crisis is one ofjoy and happiness.Write the Bradfleld Regulator Com¬

pany. Dept. K. Lamar Bulldkig At¬lanta. Georgia, for their MotherhoodBook, of value to every woman, andget a bottle of Mother's Friend fromyour druggist and begin a treatmentthat will bring real results.

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