Evening Star Newspaper, June 1, 1922, Page 35

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4 SR AL Up to a Standard, Not Down to a Price And this is just the way that every piece of good, de- pendable Life Time Furniture is made. Know- — ing this you can have confidence that no matter ' how low the ptice here, the quality remains the same. o RO O FURNITURR ATHLETIC UNION SUITS ° This week there's a particularly good-looking—and good—lot of bedroom furniture here and the prices certainly are attractive. lighted to see the many beautifully decorated enamel suites we show. You’'ll be de- And remember, too, no matter how surprisingly low the price, that every piece has been built up to a standard, not down to a price. Life Time Furniture Is More Thun a Name e beventh steet. WJAYER & CO. Betweenn £ For comfort and long service Roomy—Ilots of leeway under the arms—cut to allow perfect freedom of movement without being baggy. Made of light weight but long wearing nainsook, always cool, perfectly finished throughout. A garment that satisfies both the man who demands comfort regard- less of price, and the man who wants full return for his money. Any of the dealers named below will be glad to give you a measured fit, Ask for No. U-500 Robert Reis & Co. Producers and Distributors g s T0 CROWD FRISCO lMore Tha/n 300,000 Visitors Expected at Four-Day Meeting. g By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, June 1.—Three hundred thousind Shriners and friends are expected in San Francisco for the convention of the Shrine June 13-16. Ninety-odd temples will send juniformed patrols, with their organi- zations, and many of them will have bands and chanters in the parades. They will come from every state in the Union, from Canada, from the Ha- walian Islands and from Mexico. Medinah Temple of Chicago, which fhas a membership of 23,000, will send its delegation In five or more trans; other temples will send organizations on the five or six steamers coming through the Panama canal from east- ern ports. Thousands of automobiles will % the . hot sands of the , bringing individual Shriners the trails of the Argonauts, y of them to camp near Fort ason in San Francisco. Prepure for Pageants. One million board feet of lumber is being erected into grandstands in the Civic Center, along Market street and Van Ness avenue for accommo- dation of 40,000 spectators of three sorgeous pageants. Islam Templs, {host of the visiting nobles, and citi- zens of San Francisco, have raised $100,000 to do them honor. Ten thousand uniformed Shriners, seventy-five bands and drum s, will escort Imperial Potentate Srnest A. Cutts of Alee Temple, Sa- annah, Ga., June 13, to the Civic Auditorlum, where the Imperial Coun- cil will formally receive Shriners and their friends. Later, the council will hold an cxecutive session at Scottish Rite Hall, and in the evening the im- perial potentate will visit the several halls where balls will be held in his henor. The following day, Wednesday, the corner stone for a hospital for crip- pled children of any race or creed will be laid by the imperial potentate. Night Parades Planned. Wednesday and Thursday there will be night parades, Thursday's pageant to tell by means of electrically illu- minated floats and 10,000 uniformed marchers the story ‘of civilization. Airplane exhibitions, automobile races and yachting races will be provided for the tors’ entertainment, and they are expected to participate in trap- shooting. golfing and other sports. Imperial Council officers probably will be elected June 16. It is be- lieved the only contest will be for imperial outer guard, lowest rank of the Imperial Council. Imperial Deputy Potentate James S. McCand- fess of Aloha Temple, Honolulu, ac- ing to traditional practice, will me imperial potentate, and other officers will move up in their stations. The convention over, Imperial I'o- tentate McCandless will be escorted to his temple, Aloha, at Honolulu, the accompanying Shriners crossing the seas on their chartered steamer. Aloha Temple will welcome visiting nobles and friends to the Hawaiian Islands and do them honor., CHICAGO WANTS AERIAL POLICEMAN TO GET FLIER dese i alon, with Aviator Buzzes Disagreeably Close to Chimneys as Officers Helplessly Watch. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, June 1.—An aerial police- has be e a necessity in go, Alderman Eli Frankhauser asserted after a vain search for some one to arrest an aviator who, he said. has been buzzifig disagreeably above the heads of his constituents in Lake- view and Edgewater for two weeks. This aviator, the alderman com- plained, flew around the chimney tops in disregard of the city ordinances requiring airplanes to keep 2,000 feet or more in the air. “How you expect us to get him, lasso him?” asked Chief of Police Fitzmorris. ‘It would mean just one more policeman up in the air if we dia.” Alderman Frankhauser then be- gan to draft a resolution providing for the purchase of a municipal air- plane. ENS savINGS BANK —_— r‘-.jlfi s Z o~k == ANNRRRNNSY Travels’ Cheques N —any amount in demomi- nations of z Citizens Savings Bank, 1336 New York Ave. Goldenberg’s, 7th St. NNW. Woodward & Lothrop, F St. N\W. The Style Shop, 7th and G Sts. N.W. Sol Herzog & Co., 9th and F Sts. N.-W. Friendlander Bros., 428 9th St. N.W. King’s Palace, 810 7th St. N.W. ~ Frederick’s Hat Store, 825 7th St. N.W. E. West, 405 7th St. N.W. M. Stein, 920 9th St. N.-W. M. Stein 808 F St. N.W. ;Livingston’s, Quality Shop, 908 7th St. - "N.W. “‘The Shop of Quality, 623 Pa. Ave. N.W. - Arthur mhng‘:‘:luzz New York Ave. M. Wolf; 2157 K St. N.W. Hollander, ¥nc., N, Capitol and H Sts. N.E, \ Samuels, 1942 14th St. N.W. R. T. Cissel, 1304 F St. N.W. R. T. Cissel, 700 17th St. N.W. Herbert Co., 1235 Pa. Ave. N.W. Meyer’s Shops, 1331 F St. N.W. / The London Shop, 827 7th St. N.W. Arthur Yorton, 605 15th St. N.W, Phil Boby’s Co., 725 7th St. N.W. Max Cohen, 7th and L Sts. N.W. Sherr’s, 2940 14th St. N.W. ~ Herbert Haberdashery, 824 9th St. N.W. Bieber-Kaufman Co., 901-909 8th St. S.E. , Phillip T. Hall, Inc., 1411 F St. N.W. People’s Dept.Store, Pa.Ave.and 8th St.S.E. * M. Bendheim & Co., 3038‘M St. N.W, Sigmund’s,’ 1920 Pa. Ave. N.W, * 'THE EVENING. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY. L ||||||"“l|||||||||||““|||l“““|m||||"|||||||""Ill"“"; SHRINE GUN[:LAV ; WILL ELECT COMMITTEE. Voting to Feature Meeting of Thomson Community Centes. Election of an advisory committee to the community secretary of the Thom- son Community Center will feature a meeting of this organization in the Thomson School, 12th and L _streets, Friday, June 9, at 7:30 p.m. The com- mittee, under the new rules of the Com- munity Center department, will be com- posed of a representative from each parent-teacher association within the boundary of the Community Center, one from each citizens’ assoclation and two elected at large. A program of music will be rendered by the Kindergarten Band. Everast Harned will give a flano solo, Cathe- rine McCord an old-fashioned dance and Mary Elizabeth Borders a reading. IN SOVIET INQUIRY Refusal to Enter Hague Par- ley Not Seen as Oppos- ing Move. By the Associated Press, Although nothing has oceurr. H s ed change the status of the American i Satus of the American er. . gatm 4 LIFE SAVER MINT WITH THE HOLE —they give you that “comfortable” feeling. Always have a package ready! = JUNE 1, 1922, government's relation to The Hague conference, it was learned yesterday that theé project for American represen- tation on & commission to investigate Russian prohlems had not been dropped. ‘There were indications that In- formal digcussions on the subject still were in progress. In the absence of any definite step, however, State De- partment officials declined to discuss the situation or predict what might develop from if. Two Commissions Likely. . As understood here the plan mow under consideration by the powers is for appointment of two Russian commissions, the first simply to in- vestigate Russian affairs, and the second to treat with the Russian au- thorities with a view to restoring sound ecoromic and political condi- derstood to have taken the position that it would not object to taking part in the investigating phase, but that it did not desire to be represented on the commission which would deal with with the soviet government. ‘This attitude, it is explained, is a further application of the policy adopted by the United States toward the conference at- Genoa. Shuns Political Debate. Officials here believe that an ex- change between representatives of the powers and the soviet regime, even though it was intended to treat with economic subjects alone, inevit- ably would lead to a political debate in which the United States does not care to participate. It is presumed that the second or | negotiating commission, would in ef- | ;[‘(‘l be a part of The Hague con- 'orence, in which the United States | has declined to take the investigating comm is to be created with American member has not yet been definitels Whether decided, American. officials say} that the decision rests with the yE’l‘l‘- ropean powers, who first suggested such a plan. Something Your Health Demands During the Summer Months Only the improved and up-to-date Gas Range can affor‘rl you this necessary comfort. Various models and sizes in modern ranges are always on display in our Show Rooms and the EASY PAY- MENT PLAN enables any one to enjoy this comfort without burden- ing him or her with the expense. We are always glad to demonstrate and help you decide upon the particular kitchen equipment most sunitable for your kitchen and requirement days are upon you? Washington Gas Light Co. SALES DEPARTMENT—419 10th Street N.W. 4}/, | : NN\ - O /ER THE TOP! “‘/ From Lake Erie to James Bay —820 miles —in twelve hours—in one continuous flight! That is an official record of Wild Gray Goose. Q Over the hill comes the car that has startled him — the Wills Sainte Claire. Similar records of Why not see us THIS WEEK—before the hot continuous flights the length of the country. In this motor car the same reliance, the same power, the same certainty of fulfillment, the same smooth a motorist eager to tell his story. PHAETON ... $2475 ROADSTER .. 2475 Telephone North 5050—Showroom, 1223 Connecticut Avenue COUPE . . . $3275 SEDAN ... 3475 LIMOUSINE . . $3850 flying and effortless travel. O Everywhere today you find the Wills Sainte Claire, and everywhere Have you ridden in the Wills Sainte Claire? IMPERIAL SEDAN . $3575 TOWNCAR ..... 385 F. O. B. Marymilie STERRETT & FLEMING, Inc. Champlasn Street at Kalorama Road

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