Evening Star Newspaper, June 2, 1922, Page 34

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Blank Books We Make Them for You Our Plant is Equipped to Make Blank Books Complete, Including Printing, Ruling and Binding. We depend on no outside help. Every phase of the work is done in our own establishment. Let Us Quote Prices STOCKETT FISKE - CQ PRODUCING STATIONERS 010 -E -STREET'N'W Seeker, Collector and Lover Home. Antiques—Reproductions n Furniture, Mirrors, Jewelery, Silver Objects. A. F. Arnold Art Galleries Auctioneer 1323 G St. N.W. This Your Guarantees V Satiajaction A haven of interest to the Gift- of and Shefield Plate, Brasses, Curios, Diamonds, Art SHRINE CARAVAN OPTIMISTIC : OF WINNING 1923 CONCLAVE|{.™ r. and Mrs. Sol 8] o Lansbu ul‘u‘-'xé'.'» 11, | Sotin Hogh A Kenmian A E ben: nison, Bancroft T. Foley and Fred D. Bradford. Almas Military Band—Conductor, W i C. W. Sprenkel. M. P. Fred Wilkl Rose Jafte, Miss Jafe, E. B. Adams, Mrs. Annie C. Wood, Rob: ert Heimer, Miss Vora E. Lacy, Mi Bd Noble, Mra, Man p? b‘dy Mre. é..' of‘nfl? e Oatley, Miss Lil- Wiliam )fi’uneh, I Bgtofi cr‘?h A Miss Mary A. Skinne: C. Dayles, Mr. and Mrs. Col Wood, Mr. and Mra. ln %\a LS na O, 5" Lonse, | Mrk Cooper, Miss_Henrletta E. Lea, ir.; Willlam M. t A, Lanum. Mrs U rray Wolf, Robert B. E. McEwen, Willlam TA. L. Eillott, llon, Mrs. D. H. . Ritter, Mr. and M gxfi. Dr. Mark_C. Bullls, es, Mr. and Mrs. Charl MI:- Boi; Gsz:ebil e B. AT R ey, O, R, Bamson; MPa. Hassall, . D. Gordon, Miss Carrie Armstr i1, B Gorgon Mise, Carclp, ASRRIERE: | FING. Mrs. R. P. Parrott, W. M. Collins, Ashcom, H. +| Thomas, Miss Lucille Bac! L. G. Pratt, ¢ H. T. Cole, P. &. E. Dehler, George W. i) G fl ver Graf, Willlam 'i‘f”u.fi.m Ardinger, Ml rths :lll. Mrs. Charles Ethel TucE)ar, Mrg, Amela B Zeltman, Mr. and Mr: Gary, Miss BMattie Gary, ll;-. J. Feldse: ns, § 'gh, Mii ‘et )l:. ambers, Ars. ret C. R&“%‘;zfl clll%:.’%fl“lm 3 ra. B, ¥ Dumbsreh, 3rs. G, . Mr. and Mrs. O .'fi “:utl,’; Gi 3 ATl Graves, 188 fi\u Edn: oat:n.yor. Miss When the Argonauts of old salled forth in search of the golden feece. their staunch craft did mot carry more enthusiasm mingled with grim determination than will il the blg fleet of Pullmans called the “Almas special de luxe,” which will leave Unlon station tomorrow evening with the Shrine delegation bound for San Francisco. More than two hundred:and fifty nobles of Almas Temple, with their wives, sisters and daughters, will make up the delegation which, Wash- ington is sending.to the session of the Imperial Council of the Anclent| Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine to win for Washington the session of that council in 1923. The invitation of the Capital c has already been extepded. It is dorsed by the President of United States, himself an enthusiastic Shriner; the District Commissioners, the Board of Trade, the Chamber of Commerce, the Rotary and' Kiwanis clubs and a host of others who main- ) tain the clvic pride of Washington. Bids by Other Citles. The Shriners themaelves consider it have their home e Imperial Council city,” and ther always llvely com- petition each year among the cities to be thus crowned. Portland, Ore. subscribed a guarantee fund honor amounting to more B Harr; t, W. n A. Miller, W. A. McRory Kohn, Dr. C. C. Fietcher, i Sarcy Kimabel Wil or L H._ Bilkton -8Smith, Ho w. ¥. . C. Thorpe, ,w'. sfl gmll wr&e g glnu.'&. Marle L. n, Miss Virgl 1 Sirta So with all the news—The Star is re- liable, full and complete in its scope—over- looking mnothing; but keeping its readers informed on everything that is happening the world over. A newspaper that can be carried into the home because it is clean and wholesome—even as it is progressive and aggressive. _The latest news from the various cam- ‘g:,lg-n camps is being served to Star readers trained political observers and writers. V_O(@sl?ington, perhaps more than any other city; in the country, has a very 'intimate intexest in the entire Cangressional per- sonnel, and for that reason The Star has a correspondent stationed at ‘every center of activity to report the trend of political sentiment. Francisco's contribution. fell but little short of $400,000. Other. cities throughout the Eountry have bid equally as lavishly for the honor | i} and the reason is not difficult to dis- cover. The Imperial Council session. as a rule, brings with it an influx of from 150,000 to 250,000 Shriners and their families and frien Th is a business z3pect to the event that no city can afford to overlook, and few, if any, of them do. i 1t the Imperfal Council chooses ||| Washington as its convention oity next year, the order will find for the first time in its hitory a noble of the Mystic Shrine also a President of the Uhited States, and, it ia said, he has expressed the hope that the conven- tion may meet in Washington during his term of office. Almas Temple, therefore, is on its mettle, and the joyous party that will leave the city, constituting, perhaps, the largest transcontinental delega- ition that ever left Washington for such a purpose, is bent upon present- ing the claims of the National Cap- ital as against all other cities of the country in a way that may not be resisted. Steuart Heads Delegation. The official delegation of Afwas Temple will include its potentatd. Leonard P. Steuart; Past Potentatd, Henry Lansburgh, Recorder F. Law- renca Walker and Capt. Colin E. E. Flather, who will be representatives of Almas in the Imperial Council. With them will go in escort the Almas Military Band and the Almas Arab Patrol to represent the temple in the mammoth Shrine parade, which is one of the unique features of the Imperlal Council session. The special train will leave Union \ ures in [ % | PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares maturing in 45 or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 ll Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY. President JOSHUA W. Secretary CARR, In especially recommend- ed for the complexion as it is known to have an immediate purify- ing effect om tl-'hlool, Wm. Graham Egerton Distributor on shares withdrawn be- ff Station at 7:30 p.m. via the Southern || Railway as far as Charlottesville, Va., where the route will be over the | Chesapeake and_Ohlo to Lexington, Ky.; thence to St. Louls, to Kansag; City, to Fort Ritey, Kans, where} Brig. Gen. Milan Creig, commandant of the Army post there, has promised a splendid entertamment for the party: thence to Denver, to Cheyenne and Rawlins, Wyo., to Ogden, Utah, where a stop will be made for a sight-seeing tour of the city and up Ogden canyon to the Hermitage Ho- tel, where entertainment will be pro- vided by the Ogden Nobles: S‘enu to l| |Salt Lake City. where a twelve-hour ]|l stop will be made to visit the punul of interest and to attend a spectt organ recital in the great Tabernsecl || with time also for a visit to Salta Beach and a dip in the great salt togravure Has No At last a process has been devised that makes it possible to reproduce in attrac- tive tint people and places and occurrences concerning which there is public interest. Each Sunday the Rotogravure brings you a glimpse of the things you have been rfiading about—and the people doing them. s o B o The Editorial Section Something new in newspaperdom that attxacts widespread interest—treating as it does each week upon subjects of im- portance—with those most capable to dis- course upon them as authors of the articles. The Sunday Mazagine Designed to provide literary entertain- ment for everybody—thus its selections are varied in character—a library in itself. “Tin Canners and the Gypsy Trail” An article by James B. Buchanan con- cerning Washington’s camp for the auto : lake. . Leaving Salt Lake City by the - o tourists. Illustrated with pen sketches by Uni Pacifi tem, Ri ide, Cal., v | orion s sy niveras, ol The Page for Girls Courtney Allen. breakfast at the Mission Inn, and for l|a sixteen-mile auto ride through orange groves and to the summit of Rubidoyx Heights, overlooking the great orange belt of Southern Cali- fornia. Thence the party will pro- ceed to Los Angeles for a peep at the immense photoplay studios at Holly- || wood and surrounding places. The | stop at Los Angeles will be for the | In it is discussed those things which are uppermost in the minds of girls of the family—a little of everything about everything they want to know. “The Naked Man” By Richard Harding Davis One of thg best stories ever written by this famous author—a tale of the newly- weds, a social arbiter and a strange visitor. “The Mirrors of Hollywood" Another of those fascinating articles by Karl K. Kitchen on the Movieland of Cali- fornia. Real fun that old and young will enjoy. All the favorites—Mutt and Jeff and the others, grotesquely colored—will pay you i Sreater part of two days and at the e 2 Sew Rossiyn Hotel. I a visit next Sunday with The Star. Get Tour Along Ocean Beach. | ready for a series of hearty laughs. On the morning of June 11 the| i party will leave for Del Monte, Cnl.l s = il | via the coast lines. A stop will be made at Del Monte for a aeventeen- mile auto ride along the Paclfic ocean, for a trip to Santa Crusz, the home of the big trees, amd to San Jose, where the party will be entertainad on the estate of Representati Arthur M. Free, and to Palo Alto, the seat of the Leland Stanford University. San Francisco will be reached the morning of June 12, the day before the first session of the Imperial Coun- Are In Friday’s and Saturday’s Star during the season are printed authentic reports If youiwant to keep posted concerning the activities of your favorites of the foot- lights and the camera, read the Special Pages in The Sunday Star devoted to the theater and the_screen. The news is authentic; the gossip immensely interesting from the fishing grounds up and down the river. The condition of 'the water; bait, boats and everything else you want to know before you go. “The Booze Burglars” An article by Edward H. Smith, long a student of the methods of the underworld— an article explaining the big “booze bur- nobles have made lavish preparations for the entertainment of the visiting nobles during their stay. There will be auto trips to Golden Gate Park, to the Japanese tes to Clft House for a peep at 1 Rocks, and to many other points of nearby interest. Few, If any, will} miss the chance for & peep into the Yosemite, After -the festivitles in San Fran- cisco a choice of five routes home- ward is offered, each with its prize points of special interest According to calculations the average duration on Seal “The Caurt Took a Recess” By Holman Day Fiction of the better sort. One of the especially selected stories for The Sunday Star’s Magazine. With these weekly letters Washington ladies are enabled ito keep in close touch with what is fashionable, and what is forecasted for the immediate future, upon the authority of the noted designers of the French capital. 2 *The Pink Section with The Sunday Star is a veritable handbook, containing all the facts concerning all the sports and pas- times—with gossip of the prominent play- ers, professional and amateur. 3 Other articles and fiction by Sterling Heilig, Sewell Ford, Ring W. Lardner, William Le Quex and others. : of the trip will ba about, four weeks. S 280 witl go to Homoltlu, the k perial potentate, Bafo e ur}: re;rn:anuuvu Ve ‘lrrln‘:d or H o escort him thera TR e List of D, C. Delegation. I The Washin sts will in- | and Mrs. Steuart, Past Potentate |} Henry Lansburgh, Recorder F. Law- || Potentate s, Steuart . It i tha honors. clude Potenufaw?‘m P, Steuazt | il Walk: Colin_'E. E. ———— . = — Get the Invisible Color Book for the Youngsters color—just wet the 'brush and pass it over the pictures. Like magic they burst into glowing colors. There are four other pages of drawing lessons, cut- outs, stories and games—all of interest to the youngsters —and all to be had only in the Invisible Color B ith The Sunday Star. ; : ook with or phone the office and have the carrier ~ Make Sure You ‘" TThere was a scramble for them last Sunday that, well nigh exhausted the edition. It is a regular feature now of The Sunday Star. There are four pages of dull, color- less drawings that ean be transformed into handsomely colored pictures by means of an ordinary paint brush and a glass of water. No skill is required; no knowledge of Place an order NOW for next Sunday’s Star with your newsdealer; nnison, Misses Y 4, C‘l‘(::‘ hl(om:( IDen}rill&{. an, Miss Hul nd Mrs . ve it _ Have the Evening and Sunday Star D ~ To Your Home by Star Carriers—60c a Month by

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