Evening Star Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 12

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12 HE, EVENING STAR, - WASHINGTO -ANY CAMERA CAN USEDIREX, WHICH GIVESYOU BETTER, CLEARER PIC- TURES IN QUICKER 'TIME WITHOUY THE USE OF FILMS, A SHORT CUT FOR. AMATEUR AND EXPERT ALIKE. - MODERNIZE YOUR CAMERRA One-day finishing service * Leave rolls with any DIREX dealer POSITYPE CORPORATION of AMERICA 519 Thirteenth St. N.W. ‘Telephone Main 6053 Starting Your Vacation When the glad tiine of relaxation arrives. your happiness wil® depend not so much on where you go and what you do as on what you have to wear. Awell-packed trunk of garments carefully dry cleaned and pressed is neces- sary vacation equip- ment. —to settle next winter’s heating problem, by having Colbert in- stall a modern system of STEAM or HEATING Hot-Water Such work can’ he done \\E(h econemy at this time—also with greater convenience. i s for new installations, etc., promptly: made. STCOLBERT PLUMBING service Is always efficient—REASONABLE. YMAURICE J. COLBERT Heating—Plumbing—Tinning 621 F Street Phonc Main 13016-3017 The™ QRIGINAL Malted Mllk The “rooa Drink” for Au Ages Quick Lunch at Home, Office, ans Fountains. Ask for HORIICK'S, Awill Imitations & Substtuty PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent on shares mataring in 45 or 83 months. Tt ° Pays 4 Per Cent jon shares withdfawn be- I fore maturity. - . Asséts More Than | $8,000,000 Surplus More Than $800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY. President JOSHUA W. CARR, Sécretary Special Dinner Dance Saturday Evening . From 7:30 to 12:30 Wardman Park * Hotel For Tabie Rescrvations - AR Sizes on Hand S MUDDIMANS, BUDGET PLAN BE ‘SAYS GEN. SAWYER President’s Physician Extols Americanization Work of Kiwanians. Lauding the spirit displayed by its mémbership and predicting that through similar organizations true Americanism’ would be consumnateds Brig. Gen. Charles E. Sawyer ad- dressed the Kiwanis Club at its week- Iy meeting in the Washington Hotél sterday afternoon. Following ltluudn H. Woodward, who has just { submitted a report on the club's bud- get. Gen. Sawyer said that he was glad that the club used the budget system. budget is the best of all sys- he said. “The administration is g this. America has been too extravagant in m.mlpulaflon and ope- ration of public affair: The President’s physician also out- Itned the duty of all true Americans to aliens and said every inducement should be extended to foreigners com- ing to our shores to make them feel at_home. Charles F. Roberts presided, anal] after calling on. Mr. Woodward to pre- report, announced several of importance to the club that had been voted at a meeting of the board of directors. Mr. Wood u,.m report was accepted and th nt budget committee was reap lnnnhd to serve during the remain- der of the year. During the m tem: provi lighted th al solos. Mrs. Chamberlin and Sawyer were presented with flower for being the handsomest and homli- est gu present. Civitan Club Acti¥ities. The perplexing question that con- fronted the members of the Civitan Club at its meeting in the New Ci Club yesterday . was whether the forthcoming convention of Interna- tional Civitan here next year should take place before or after the Shrine Imperial Session, which is also booked ty. Following considerable , the matter was held over t week, when a decision will render e nvention 1s to be held efther b or a few days t after the than 2500 pe ifor the oceasion and the conference will t three days. Last night plans were discussed for the enter- inment of the visit d, accord ing to Chester H. Warrifigton, vice president of the local club, at least | 000 will be required for such pu; Mr. Warrington took the ini-|; al étep by offering to donate an au- | { tomobile to the club. { Cosmopolitan. ¢ | Following the election of three new { members to the organization, it wa | voted to hold the next meeting o !the Cosmopolitan Club at the resi- dence of Michael I er, president, Ford road. Members |, at the Trew Motor | street, and will motor to Mr. Heister's home. Those elected to member. terday at the Franklin ere John Cannon, haeffer and George B. e -SIL\IER SPRING GUARDS i * - PREPARING FOR CAMP ca Compa Michael | i | | Buck. | Schedule of Instruction at Edge- wood Arsenal Differs From Last Year's. busily preparing for the summer en- campment of the Maryland National g;\\;\ud arsenal, from t 5 schedule of instruction for the camp th r differs largely from that of pre years. The outstand- ing change is that only the mornings will be devoted to instruction in drill and the entire afternoon will be used for athletics of every description. The | evenings will be left for, the soldler to amuse himself as he will, although motion pictures, radio concerts and the 1st Negiment Band of forty-five pieces will be ever present. There are still a few vacancles in the NService Company, but Capt. Eugene E. Stevens, jr., expects it to be recruited to full strength before entraining for camp. ~ Applications for enlistment may be made Tuesday at th% armor: Silver Spring, Md ACQUIRES HADLEIGH. { Construction Company Bid Repre- sents $2.350,000 Investment. One bid was sufficient to secure for the Boyle-Robertson Construction Company ownership of the Hadleigh Hotel, 16th and V streets, when that went on the auction block sterday afterngoneto satisfy hold- ers of the fourth deed of trust. The: company's bid represented a total in- | vestment of approximately $2,350,000, including_incumbrances. S fabertbon, & member of the construction firm, placed the bid, iwhich was $25,000 above the in- cumbrances, consisting of three prior deeds of trust totaling about $2,256, Accrued interest, taxes and other liabilities brought the total amount assumed by the purchasers to | the foregoing figure. Adam A. Weschler was the auc- tioneer. A fair-sized gathering of real estate men, investors and curi- ous spectators attended the sale, Which took place directly in front | of the hotel. The building contains about 300 apartments and a number of shops. Unimproved land in the; rear of the structpre was included in the sale. It Is understood the purchasers | were the holders of the fourth trust. e CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS. Commission Makes Plans to Fill Many Vacancies. The Civil Service Commission has announced that examinations will be ! held to fill vacancies in the followin; Junior engineer, bureau of standards, 20 1,500 3 vear: junior physic- z rds, $1,200 to $1,- 500 & year; junior technologm. bureau of stemdards, $1,200 to $1.500 a year assistant examiner, {300 a vear; microscopist, public health | 0 wind tunnel | =t we wish tor were hundre gree, would { i | — MU‘I'I‘ AND JEFF —Sap and Co., Get Elghty Bucks, Mutt and Jeff Get Ten Bucks Each. i Aeronautical merce Says Public Should De- mand Passage of Laws. To the Editor of The St _The prominence w to aireraft ion to €5, J€FE, ACCORDING To THe LAW OF AVERAGES EUCRY GUY OUGHT To HAUE AS we #22.8¢ IN CIRCULATION JTHAT BGLONGS 70 US? AIRCRAFT LEGISLATION URGED TO CURB MISHAPS We therefore. request the attention ithe organized aircraft The Aeronauti merce estimate mercial aircraft in operation. the year Oct. 1. these flew 6.250.000 to 6,500,000 mno: 3 arrying njuries h al responsi Tresults be Yet these 30,73 al flight. nautical Laborati | V4., $1:800 a year; junior chemist, de- I\ar!menh\l service, $1,200 to $1,800 I' assistant marketing specialist wnnhouulng). bureau of agricultural ‘economics,:$1,620 to $2.40C a year; in- structer, ordnancé department at large, Watertbyn Arsenal, Mass., $1.50 an_hour; instructor._in machine’ guns achen, nadlunn :o‘);h- basic-salaries named above the.bonus of $20 a month-will om&fl the Civil Service Commhul ¥ 1724 ¥ street northwest. =5 SO S S GOES TO COMMAND BB.IGADE. f3rig. Gen. Grote Hutcheson ‘has been relieved from duty at the gen- eral intermediate depot, New York ; 3 nn\i'nasrgned to the command of ; ade_of the Hawaiian | division: On_his way 1o .Honolulu he will stop at Fort Sill, Okla., and take a six weeks' course of »nltrueflon i m artillery, 000 hundred of these plane: by gypsy fiyers, who la legal responsibilit dents, cAusing forty-nine to eighty-nine, period named. this among ed planes are eontrolled by operators with a fixed base or finan- | bili in realized more were federal Jaw in existence. operators. flights, {miles and carrying 1 gers, did not in the period named kill ingle person in straight commer- 1t Con there are 1 i is from rather than from that of the itinerant|of the Red Cross Life OH 42, 'Re BRoke THeRE'S COMPANY. LENCLOSING 10000 SHARSS ‘66 SAP SILVER STOCKS, = - PAR UVALUC [oNE cenT.PeR SHARE, OUR COMMISSION, \F. WE 2 SELL \T, WILL Be TWeNTY Fine: (U's/ FROM A SAP AND THeY SAY THeYRe ST, MAGING ! ONLY ONE CENT A FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1922, ~ SURE' (T'S A 5HMAE T SeLLh T HAVEN'T YoU ANYTHING of ) VALVE YOU CAN Hock So TO AN OUTSIDER Yov cAN BUY THE sToclkc HOURSE.LEL TVE GoT THIS DIAMOND- STUDDED. WATC H# THE KING OF ENGLAND hix horse’s mond W. accidents empl atall, turning the anfmal out to pas- | ture, was imposed upon Ray- Putnam of Wakefleld in the district court here yester- Putnam was charged with having failed to provide proper horse xhowed improvement at | the end of two weeks he would | not wet any further penalty. | meanwhile | at Herrin, 111, was put nators during the for hisx horse. | Man Who 1 y i that if the of a newspaper story of two negroes in Geo the urgent need for public ex- | | §a¥. demanding the immediate | | o 4 | food and shelter enact t ede S| on I - | actment of federal legislation regu-| | 5Uus M Riiey natd s | ber of editorial and news discussions | | {have been noted in your paper. but Doint out that regret = 11 not remedy the situation. | fiver that the safety to | be judged. of your readers: that|a basis, it industry for | law or local pa the ~Senate need. AERONAUTICAL by Representa- deration will be “ that' public amber of Com- 00 com- nurmg 1 | Red Cross Course Is Proving 1920-Oct. sengers, Six were piloted < corporate or pa And with this record”as is apparent that federal imposing regulation upon the last three vears has sought the|who at present are irresponsible will passage of regulatory law. | this end (S. 3076), s, ‘Wadsworth, months ago and is being revised for passage in the Hous ive Winslow. hastened to the degre demand is manifest. 1 have most beneficent results. ordinances are National control alone will meet the COMMERCE OF AMERICA, INC. | 200 STUDY LIFE SAVING. The life-saving lessons now ‘being of flight shoyld |'termed an effort lessness in the south. those live State ineffective. | Senator Harris, alder. list_of some of th in New York within hours, including twelv ew. CHAMBER___ OF said Senator Harris, lessness in chings. at Tidal Basin Popular. ~ deplore them.” Senator Sh Massacre. SENATORS IN DEBATE Two Nights in Stall | Penalty for OVER LAWLESSNESS Failed to Feed Horse s Chamber of Com- By the Associated Press. Harris, Shields and Dial Attack : e T s Calder and Condemn Herrin The massacre of non-union miners ebate in the Sen- ¢ southern senators, insertion of N the lynching gia. Of the 114 noci. | Elven at the tidal basin by Com-|that Senator deaths. and | modore Wilbert E. Longfellow, na- in the nort reported in fl = v | line, Teported Intional fleld representative of the all: | American Red Cross Life-Saving | Herrin, 111.. aln ass of fiyers. 25 are which. reliabilit to a de-|rial clas: such as The complatel strokes for life sav who made | given from 2,907,245 passen- covering 12 ficient enough to tests before record | examiners and this proving popular, 00 persons makigs up the ini- iessons consist of instruction lin the use of the common swimming to 6 pom. Monday and \\edncsdu) Eve; will be made to render students pro- the District receive the Store open until 2 P.M. o1 Saturdays the cit Skields. e killed, more it runs miners sacre. ing. and will be were today, effort committed crime. ving | lynched after the; board of |nslxn!n aving Corp pass i most horrible ma: We've Gone the Limit —and with it you have a remarkable opportumt\' for a Mode C Icarance 931e —-Regular and Sport- Models, plain-and fancy.. Suits up to $40.00 $24 Choice of all our 3- Plece Suits even single and double. breasted: Only one exception—Tropical Worsteds. Suits up to: $65.00 $34 These Tropicals— .Mohair.........$20 to $38 Tropical Worsted, $25 to $40 Mallinson’s SI“\ Poplin Suits ...... $40 A special in White Cricketing Trousers ......c..... Clearance of Mode Shirts Importcd Percales, Crepes, ctc,vthat sold up to 39 o $1. 3 for $4.00 Imported Woven Madras, Russian Cords, etc., that sz 29 sold up t0 $3.50. ... ... 3 for '$6.50 Fiber Silk dand Silk and Linen, that sold up sz 95 t0$5w........,,..... 3 for $8.50 Fmest of 'Silk Shirts—Broad- cloths, Crepes, Jerseys, $5 95 etc:, that sold yp to $10 -3 for $17. 00 are tailored for permanent shapeliness. ' Keep that in mind. Palm Beach...........$15 Gabardine—in regular and sports models. . .....$25 Shantung Silk Suits. .. .$25 Cloth $ 8'75 Clearance of Mode Cravats Mode Cut Silk Cravats & that sold up to $1.50.. . 79c 3 for $225 Mode Cut Silk Cravats that sold up to $3.50... sl.ss 3 for $4.50 Finest Silk -, Knitted $1.69 Cravats that sold up to $3.50 ... All Straw Hats, Including Panamas 1 OF 1 of Chicago, We do not know how many | anywhere | |Shields of Tennessee and Senator Dial of South Carolina resented what they to exaggerate law- | Senator Harris of Georgia, Senator | | | “There is more lawlessness in the city of New York, where the senator in one week than there is in the state of Georgla in a vyear,” addressing Senator The Georgia_senator read a crimes committed the last the murders of ear-old child, an Italian and Yet the senator from New York “talks of law-{ Georgia and refers The good people of Geor- gia and the south deplore lynching: Just as the good people of other states | 1ds at this point said aider had not mentioned | ything about the rible passacre of miners he shadow (10U OUGHT TO REALIZE ONG HUNDRED BERRIES = QNLT EASY_AS PIE: (Copyright, 1022, by H. C. Fisher. Trade mark registers2 U, 8. Pat. OF.) y L“Ns foure so, QUITE So. DN, . - (UNCLES Ger THE wATCH, AND YOUVE GOT THE Stock! OUR COMMISSION FoR SELLING eU THE STock 'S TWENTY Bucks. HERE's YouR TEN. —B; BUD FISHER. THIS 1S WHAT \© 3 cALLS HICH FINANCE | heelx for health to fo ] High Heels Heulthy r | | drexs aceessory also were to walk heel toes pointed in_the ew York invextigatio authorities Tne of high-heeled t feet. was clubbed and beaten. declared lynchers. the past da; few investigation. a The ¢ have represented to —— TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Ju Eugene V. Deb, a rest cure. Mr. Debs’ health constant * said S . to 40, according to the acc we do know that sixteen unidentified | buried after the mas-| and raised the white flag. I acre. !erippled foreman who could not run, from | unt, but | “These men who were lynched had | They had surrendered | were | t was al Even al 9 Men’s The famous “Bradley make.” All worsteds in one-piece style —all color com- binations. Sizes 36 to and piece trim with and oxford MEN’S SOCKS Men’s Working . Pants Dark gray striped material. Very ‘strongly maad good pocket: $1.0. For Women, Decree Orthopedic Experts NEW YORK, July 14.—High ix a health women bearing the rtl d toe, with the | raight nhend, thing suits, to avoid weak o And that| { was out near Chicago and tke local ||| aythorities have done nothing about | it and are not trying to punish these It is to the credit of the attorney general of Illinois that in| or 0 he has started.an | council and sheriff at Herrin have fgnored | wiul affair and refused to act| t this mob, Which is reported to 00 persons. DEBS GOES TO SANITARIUM. || has left for Chicago, | where he will enter a sanitarium for but he has become worn out through stream \\\\\u// Boys’ Very good quality. blue with whijte In white apd palm beach, ducetine and neckband styles. ing wear—cool and comfortable. »\\Vc | offer them tomorrow at < State of Coahuila. * The Ford Motor Company plans the establishment of a large plant for the assembling of fis ears in Mexico, ac cording to official advices received here | from Mexico Cit Representat] of the company told follows polluting of organ in the bod proposed piant. conferency gove Ford company s including the donation empt When toxlc poisons penetnte the intestinal walls—EXPECT THE WORST! the | to have an offensive hreath! This means the poisoning of | stipation can be blawied for them the advices state, recently confe FORD PLANT FOR MEXICO. 2 - s o o Tax-Exempt Land Offered Free by | tillo with a view o the nossibie tion of Saltillo as the location n result of , the advices declared. t or of ) all n from taxes for a rs and any other assi be possible 1o extend. ‘< ADV ENT. Con each day; and energy become low Old age | | the brain becomes sluggish. {and illness gailop in! Bran, cooked and krumbled! Keep | the eliminative tract open in health normal condition and you will Jive in health years longer. Kellogs’s Bran is simply nature's “remedy.” but | regularly each day—at least poonfuls; in chronic cases, | il meal—It will sweep the | qerigHuful Hread bowels, cleansing and purifying. Zems, ete. Recipes pack is good You cannot afford to feel sluggish: | age. Buy Kellogg's at all | to have your brain energy irgpaired: | of | I lieved . of constipal wo | You can avoid all that by perma- | through the iyl Bran. } nently relieving c; ati amily should ecat cause of 90% of all s Selluge s Bran e mont through the regular use of Kelloge's | \a|unbll‘ in the diet of children. It will robust complexion and r ious breath. wonderful. cereal or sprinkled over of or cold cercal ETOCETS. Vitality | It hastens old age just as it is re- | sponsible for illness! The aged can be permanent! make them grow v 1t clears a muddy or pimpiy oves an obnox Bran's health work | stron as a hot Kellogg's Bran is delicio ~_ Stop Suweltering i These are exception- ally well tailored suits, with full open French facings. The best of the season’s styles in both medium and dark shades. Sizes from 35 to 4. No reason now why you can’t have one at this price...... cept the price. SPECIAL price is ... - These are of very light-weight cassimeres PAIRS OF PANTS. extra wear. One- styles. In and blue | | WASHABLE SUITS 28 to 3. In all styles 2 and all guar- anteed fast colors. Sizes 4 to 8 years. Regularly $2.00 and $2.50. J B Union nainsook:, Collar attached Back. Adeal for out- weave. several suits. morrow for Of sxlk and silk: fiber. Sizes 975 to 11%4. thing' e'm'a good afoét tomorrow at this 910 Seventh St. “We Request, the Return of Anything That Can Be +Bought for Less Elsewhere” ---Get One of These Summer UITS Genuine Palm Beaches Gabardines, Wool Crashes and Tropical Worsteds Nothing "chcap about these suits ex- They're strictly HAND- TAILORED in sport models with half- belt in back. Sizes from 34 to 40. ular prices are $19.85 and $21. Boys’ Light All-Wool Suits ys Lig good quality Sizes 9 to 17 years. remarkable bargain tomorrew at. Well made of good quality elastic belt Sizes 34 to 44. = At this price you can afford Get them to- “All wanted shades. ow’ll agree there’s some- in a Heavy Suit Reg- But the 15| TWO $4.95 Boys’ Sport Blouses 5 65¢ A stripes, khakli, tan and blue chambray. Sizes 8 to 16 years. Offered at Suits in 48c price. ‘With cuff bettom. Sizes 32 to A big Saturday spec- einl at

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