Evening Star Newspaper, September 23, 1922, Page 6

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S THE. EVENING STAR, WASHINéTOfi, D. C:, SATURDAY, SEPTEMEER 23, 1922. THE EVENING STAR, ‘With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY. .September 23, 1922 THEODORE W. NOYES...Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company Business nm.-'-_ umms:. and l’tnnsy!v!l'nll Ave. k O 2 2 Mens Fieat National fank Building. Chieago Ofce g European Office: 3 Regent St., London. Ecgland. The Evening Star. with the Sonday morning edition. Is delivered by carriers within the eity 8t 80 centa per month: dail) bilcen(sper; month: Snnday only. 20 cents per month. OF- ders may be sent liy mail or telephone Maln 5000. Colicction fs made by carriers at the end of each wonth. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. $5.40; 1 mo,, ©$6.00: 1 mo. $2.40: 1 mo., 20¢ . 85¢ 0c The Choked Schools. Cong zone the Washington public schools remain, They are in just as bad a state of con- gestion perhaps worse ev Cor sthing for as ever, as done them in the way of catchin: the, buildings of were needs. A provided for now available, e provided for during- the and their construe be accomplished. arrears more a year and stili But the addit of e past twe Tegistat iy do not make of the annual tuation rests sauarely upon Congress. Year after vear the District authovities, the beard of wlucation and the Commis sioners, backed by eivie orga ations W unorganized citizens ve been | for more funds for more and buildin nd more teache ants made have heen i adequate. Then at last a joint commit- tee was named which was charged with the duty of prep ing hensive plan for the development and improvement of the schools of the That a compr District. committee to report. t amed month It relief is not gr gton m has yet ago. will rgarten They are The high The Central | nt more pupils a to mmodate. High School is wholl 1 con- schoo be on ot hasis now, ed. cach afternoon, 1sis, and o rest hour to t end of schools are same condition. s reserted to in the grade are worked to the limit. yond the limit. Platoc The and th thousand ccommodations as many pupils as the increase In these circum th of cour that Congress will act 2 the next session. though a short one, to put the schonls npon the right basis as to equipment and teaching for It will take al years to re point of need. but the e be en ? with patience while e is assura the form of a constructive enacts and guarantees of tontinuous appro- that supply the s witt ear period and thenceforward ma annual enl ions Philippine Agitation Continues. s stated in a story from Manila notwithsianding the fail of en sion to this coun- tion in the islands to that end es, and that other missio w ) time to time present them- in Wa; on ard lay before ! thoritie: ims of Filipine t of the comp! of the chipelago. this is a tter within the | tion, so to s of the agitator ave the carfare—the price of s—and are willing to blow their money in in that way. who shall say them nay?” But is such a policy to be commend- ©d? Would it not be betier for thes men to address themselves to qual g for independence more by works than by words? There are many op- vortunitie or usefulness open to Fili pinos the public service, and the measure of improvement will mark their capacity fe pporting a govern- ment of their own. Such improvement wiil on America. It will be in not be lost noted - here, and entered on the baoks to the credit , of those who have made the record. Mere nagging, and persistence in it. will accomplish nothing. We do not need to be reminded every month or! 50 of the purpose we proclaimed when we took over the Philippines: and indorsement is necessary the Cuba can tell the Filipinos that we keep our word. —_————— The quantity of coal available for next winter is being so attentively con- sidered that the question of quali has not yet come up for discussion. —————— Ireland is described as needing lead- ership. The need of more consistency in following leadership is also fn ev dence. A Near-East Decision Soon. Expectation is expressed in di patches from Constantinople that b Monday the issue of peace or war will be decided. That issue apparently rests now with the Turkish cabinet at Smyrna, which has become, the fleld capital of the nationalist government. Kemal Pasha, it would seem, is for ¥ “heace, but he is under heavy pressure by less moderate leaders to force the situation by an advance to the straits through the neutral zone and to de- mand the right to cross the Darda- nelles for the occupation of Thrace. French influence is now being strong- Iy exerted to support his position and 1o effect an agreement for an armistice pending the holding of & conference of |- the powers, either at Venice or at than { up with | anted quickly the | h | g added ! month have provided for not half | |enough to stand the weight of fifty {children on the floor. Where was the | ment of uncertainty relating to fluctu- de- i independence, | back of his head. He, too, will try to capitalize his return to the Senate by offering to displace Mr. Harding as the leader of the republicans in 1924. Good stuff, In a way, but not for these times. The republicans of In- diana will not cut Mr. Beveridge at the polls in November, nor the Cali- fornia republicans Mr. Johnson, nor the Wisconsin republicans Mr. La Fol- llette, through any notion that thereby the path will be made smoother for Mr. Harding two years hence. In 1924 Mr. Harding will stand on the record. If it is favorable to re- some city in Asia Minor, as preferred by the Kemalists. A factor of much difficulty has en- tered the case in a demand reported tc have been made by Kemal that Russia be admitted as a party to the conference. This is undoubtedly at the instance of the soviet government, which probably sees in this new near- jeastern crisis an opportunity to edge jinto the circle of the powers. The so- viet's experience at the Genoa confer- ence was not satisfactory. It led to |no degree of recognition. Now is of- l((‘r{‘d a chance for a seat at the round itable, with perhaps a determining |publican success, he will be entitled to voice in decision. Meanwhile the so-|the usufruct. Nobody could defeat viet agent at Smyrna has assured | him for renomination. If it is unfavora- ' Kemal that in case the Balkan states take a hand in the fight against him Russian will used for a counter blow. England’s position is being appre- clabiy modificd. A statement has been issued at London which declares that the British government sceks only the neutr tion of the straits, and is to go into a conference with a ¥ open mind as regards Turk- ish claims to Thrace and to the o him. The republicans of the three states mentioned can hardly be divided In this campaign by bugaboos. —_—— Europe and America. A news note sa; Virtually all of the members of Con- eress expect to go home for the elec- tion campa nediately upon ad- A few are forces be cu- of e 3 i ar | Journment ; pation of Constantinople. Little fear | Juuinent ol LON s ot while others is now expressed at Paris on the score { will re: in in Washington to vwm‘k {of the British insistence. The danger | on 1o lotution for the next session in lies in the disposition of the Turkish ! oo Presumably, the men planning Eu- ropean trips are not candidaies for re- election. With time to spare before Winter sets in and the short session of dicals to seize a chance for the re- tablishment of the Moslem power in Europe, a chmnce which has been e fing 2 b surance just given ; 7 | res: 0 S, hey will employ I by sal of Irak that in the [ COMETesS S e Lt event of a contlict he will support |thelr leisure in® & 5 Europe made « war and gather- ing information bearing on the ques- {tion of world rehabilitation. Kemal. ————— i i Another Collapse. But, even for these men, will there Washingtonians are especially {not be opportunity for more excite- shocked by the news from Pittsburgh, {ment and far greater usefuln at iwhere 2 motion picturé theater lobby jhome than abrerd the coming six {floor collapsed yesterdad under the |weeks? weight of children embled | A most interestinz campaisn is in {awaiting admission. That only one was | Progi nd. with the adjournment Viilled was, in the circumstances, re: {of Congress. will take on new phases. markable. Doubtless the fact that the | Candidates for 1ts in the next Con ‘hildren fell with the floor beneath jgress will he oblized caused the comparative escape from |Selves freely in o death. This ident necessarily is | while their friends will be | suzgestive of the tragedy of last sist them in many ways there oon when near 100 pe Europe will keep. The ary in | g to the falllof war will not, more’s the pity, ns lost their lives owing nis cit, { of a motion picture theater roof. |@isappear. The rehabilitation of the | This Pittsburgh accident is particu- { world, more still the pity. will take wrly significant. inasmuch as it is a [time, ing that may happen anywhere in| But the complexion of the Sixty- places of concentrated a nblage. | Eighth Congress is a question that These children were standing quietly | will not keep. That will be decided in November: and all politicians with for the doors to open in a bout twentyfive by twelve | views on the subject and desirous of | feet. dead weight was too much | expressing them, and imp ng them for the structure. It was a new house, j on voters, must do so hefore election In this matter, America first is and the children were there on invita. | d tion as guests. Now. of course. there ! the best of slogans. be an investigation. the materials | ——————————— tw i will he examined and tested and per-| The pen with which an important haps somebody will be held as blame- | legisiative document is rned makes | worthy for bad construction. This will jan inte inz souvenir. It laid fnot bring the little dead girl to life, laway and its or is ended un 1just as the investigation and accu chance it should be rescued for re- tions here failed to restore any of the | newed service by an influential hand A pen. like an. vice, depends largely on who ating it. victims of the loc: ore jwreck. i But it would seem as though a hap | pening like that here would positively ———— {insure against collapse in new build. | As the e is preparing to take of this character, that the lesson ja wife and establish a home, it'may be arned and strictly applied jassumed that he is not one of those constructions, to make every-|who have been speculafing ruinously £ secure beyond any question, to |in German marks. be certain of a wide margin of safety —_———— {against any possible condition. Yet|{ A machine has heen invented for {here was a new theater not Strong|the destruction of the boll weevil. This will eliminate at least one serious ele- all pecticn there. while this building S under construction? e The Session. !alions in the price of cotton. ——e——————— Lenin’s announcement that every- i body will have to go to work will cause In commenting on the session just | many a citizen to comment bitterly on rman Adams of the repub- | the unreliability of a soviet prospectu national committee says: “No —_————— in time of peace ever made| There is an influential element in plendid record of constructive | Russian affairs that is always found station.” {either breathing defiance or sending In dealing with the same subject jout a distress call. | Chairman Hull of the democratic na-| —_————— tional, committee says: “The present| The Turks are accredited with so Congress promised more and has achicved less than any other legisla- {tive body in history.” A little strong on both sides. So, Mr. Vater, and Mrs. Voter, and Miss Voter.| There is evidently a reckless impres ou pays vour money and you takesgjon abroad that the U. S. A. is rich your choice.. enough to afford anothér war. There caii be no supportable dis- sent, however, from the fact that !hei present Congress inherited the worst | | mess—-the messiest mess—in all legi lative history. It was all sorts of a| mess. It related to the waste and dis- ! Tosed, IS uch a ongres: to the encouragement of would-be i profitegrs. SHOOTING STARS. The Detectives. crganization inherent in a great war |The hootleg runner skims the wi {which the country entered unpre-i @ motors through the land. jvared. lu related to obligations im-,he hold bank robbers won't behave posed by the result of that war. It! Anq street thugs take command. related to many things which the Con- 2 after assembling and assuming | its duties discovered could not be dealt with in & hurry. Hence the long session. Hence the posiponement of several measures for jwant of time. Hence the factionism i generated. and that caused delay ! The stumping period is a little less {than two months—a short allowance of time when there is so much to be said about such a number and variety It is a great relief to look. When daily toil is o'er. {In a detective story book | Where sleuths are sure to score. A horrifying homicide Remains a mystery deep; i A kidnaped infant brigands hide | And claim a ransom steep. 10h, Fiction. when the facts are known, | With what reliet you're fraught: It's in detective tales alone | of thines. But campaigning these| That all the rogues are caught. !days is expensive. and probably both ! — parties are glad of the time limit. | Taking No Chances. I “Your audience applauded you for ]!E\'El'fil minutes when you arose to One thing should be said in favor of Kipling. He did not deliberately dis- close his rhetorical indiscretions in an after-dinner, speech. He had to be run to cover by an interviewer. ———————— A pugilist is having painful sessions X with his dentist because his ring.an-| 1.4 Tunkins says in his town people tagonist broke a finely adjusted artl-|goom to elect a man to office simply ficial tooth. Pugilism is becoming al-{ ¢ the sake of having some one to together too rough. find fault with. Mustapha Kemal conducts himself | New Selections. with the untutored arrogance of a man } The winter wind we soon shall hea who never heard ‘of such a thing &s a{ With lusty music all its own, league of .nations. | Which, after all, I'd rather hear ————————— Than yonder jazz band saxophone. Three Bugaboos. e Sa Mr. Harrison of Mississippi. the democracy’s chief of scouts in the Senate, has made an interesting dis- covery. This is that Mr. Beveridge of Indiana, while a candidate for the|drama of yours had to be a trakedy. If Senate, has his eye really on the presi- { you could cut out the killing this story dency. If elected to the Senate this|of yours might make o firstrate bed- year he will ask his party for its presi-{ room farce.” dential nomination two years hence. A similar discovery has been made in the case of Mr. Johnson of Cali- fortia. He, too, is suspected of presi- dential desires and designs. If elected to the Senate this year he will utilize that success to push himself along the R e road to the White House. 1t might be worse. ‘The govern- And likewise Mr. La Follette. The {ment at Washington still lives. and { speak.” “Yes,” replied Senator Sorghum. “My managers saw to that. Applause |be sure of it unless you collect it in {advance.” | { | | | i Histrionic Sacrilege. “The play’s the thing!” exclaimed Hamlet. “‘Yes,” protésted the manager of the company, “but it's too bad this little “Edtin’ ain’ what it used to be, said Uncle Eben. “Where dey used to mention canvasback an’ terrapin de gimmen is now talkin’ ’bout calories an’ vitamins.". presidency is supposed to be in the} erect; ble, or even doubtful, nobody will try | to wrest the republean leadership from | little moral sense as to be indifferent, {is getting to be like money. You can’t | each day .sees a new filling statiom | | T is astonishing how many com- munications of an odd character find their way into a newspaper office, and in order that the read- ers of this column may have an op- portunity to view at first hand one of these peculiar contributions, the following is reproduced verbatim: “Life is a series of many hued com- plexities, its paramount purposes ap- pear to be the trying of tender souls, souls that have been jarred by the misshapen handiwork of mere mortal man. The combinations of atoms that comprises our materlal being are af- fected largely by the soft rays of the moon, the colors that emanate from the flowers of the fields, by cosmic disturbances brought about by the searching hand of real light; compare the gentle and diflident pansy with the savage mein of the lion. There is a complexity that can never be brought into a perfect tuneful con- cord. May I not ask if the material- ists of today would not lead happier lives if they were to retire to the | solitudes of the great wilds In search jof their souls in order that they may find the proper vibration that will bring eventual happiness? -Are we not drifting away from the higher and more intimate teachings of the priests of Pharoh’s days, would not the world progress more rapidly to- ward the gates of Nirvana? Why should man not forsake his pursuit after feminine conquests and take womankind by the hand and lead her {10 the great heights where she may behold the prismatic blendings of a peaceful and unrestricted liberty? Soul- | ful murmurings such as our soul slimpses now and then are the waves of frecdom that are trying to through the pail of darkness that has so enveloped us with something that nts us soaring to heights, to us, t, unknown. It will not be long - the harsh rays of red will be dispelled and in their place will come the lighter mental tones of lavender, soft gray and heavenly blue and when this result has been brought about Utopia will have been reached.” As re stated, the above is faithfully produced, and as far as known it is not copyrighted * * ght not be a bad idea for the companies owning the poles and other equipment used in the lighting of the city to inspect some of the sup- ports of the lamps that partly il- luminate our streets. Some of them i Show of Firmness Yet May Save the Situation. | The developments in the near east {are Leing followed with intense in- jterest by editors generally. It is feit that the attitude of the soviet has injected a note of the utmost seriousness into the situation because its support of the victorious Turks naturally will encourage them to re- fuse to accept the limitations of the treaty of Sevres. However there is a hope that if France and England can be prevailed on to stand firmly together the Turkish national party will modify its demands and assume a’more reasonable position. Admit- tedly, however, the situation is filled with dynamite. i The possibilities that complicate the situation are endless, in the view of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, which points out that the negotiations now T ‘progress at Chang Chung may mean a working agreement between { ¢ and Tokio, and that a “Ger- { ma an-Japanese alliance {been the most beloved bogy of th | onal alarmists since the treaty fwas signed at Versaille It is no time for treading warily. Tt s time for sudden decision and fearless fac- ing of the future” The immediate necessity. in the opinion of the Nor- folk Ledger Dispatch, is that France iand England stand together, because Uf they do not there is no means of Asiatic upheaval against European rule. a strength made doubly strong by religious frenzy.” But no initia- tive can be expected by the Unlted !Slales. the Petersburg Progress and Index Appeal holds, because “even the slightest action on the Dfl'l" of this government to stem the tide of ! Turkish cruelties would caus . cans to realize after demonstration {that Mr. Wilson was right when he | broposed the elimination of Turkey as R hation and the assumption of con- {trol by the league of nations of Ar- { menia. and other territory formerly | under Turkish_rule.” that “we see the blaze” and the “intrigues of { France and England in the near east {is an unnecessary demonstration of what we escaped when the Senate {refused the Wilsonian interpretation fof article ten. No one can doubt that had_we joined in the terms prepared | at Versailles the United States at this | hardest service in the theater of war iand its overrun territory adjoining. History s repeating itself in the ‘ Palkans, the Nashville Banner argues, {and, while “the great powers:-may {manage, by one expedient and an- | other, to bank the fires from time to time, 'so far as human judgement can | foresee, the flames will {smoulder underneath, breaking out whenever any sort of unusual breeze !comes to fan them.” The error of the alli crat believes, was in not stamping {out the Turk when the opportunity | wae afforded, and now “hope for set- | tlement” without a general war lies ilargely in the prevalent feeling that the Turks must not be permitted to {come back into Europ In_his ttitude, the Lynchburg News | thinks, “Kemal has in mind the at- | titude ‘of Russia, whose black shado {looms ominously in the present crisis. This is also_the bellef of the In- dianapolis News, which, however, { hopes that united action against the i insufferable pretentions of = the { Turkish autocrat “may make it pos- sible without war to effect a settle- ment that will not be wholly dis- graceful to Christian civillzation.” To achlieve this hope, in the opinion of i the Detroit Free Press, the allies must | “present a united front and take ac- | tion which will convince everybody i that they mean business and intend to see things through to the end.” A note of caution in'accepting refu- gee stories at their face value is squnded by the Cincinnati Times-Star which recalls that “murder and out irage are not unusual in the near east, {and that -suggestions that Kemal {plans ‘a general assault on western civilization, “is great talk, but the {danger still seems rather remote. As yet Kemal has done nothing more than to recover part of what had been his country for half-a-dozen centurles. The recollection by hundreds of mil- lions of men and women of what they went through between 1914 and 1918 ought to prevent another world con- flict at least for a decade of two.” In the opinfon of the Knoxville Sentinel, {nowever, the “come back” of the Turk “hits us with others,” and it is con- vinced that “the allied powers are the only hope of elvilization, and the Christian peoples of the near east and they cannot ‘act too promptly and vigorously for the salvation of all” Indorsipg this line of argument, the St. Paul Dispatch suggests that “the | Turkish nationalist government must realize that the United States will not n es to ite citizens in silence. i “Begretary Here and There in Was BY “THE MAJOR” break | has | estimating the strensth of a general: Ameri- | On the other hand, the Pittsburgh ' .{ Leader takes the positl minute would be assigned the job of | always | the St. Louis Globe-Demo- | Hay’s Ledger-Dispatch. are in anything but a safe condition. One of these poles in the northegst section of the city fell a short time ®go, and in its crash barely missed a passing automobile. * Kk K ¥ T will only be a few weeks before Armistice day will be here, and in this connection I am reproducing a letter reccived a day or two ago, which reads as follows: “On the 11th on November Armistice day will be celebrated throughout the country. In this, the capital of the nation, near where rests the body of the unknown soldier, fitting ceremonies should be held, and would it not be a good idea for the veterans of all wars, the mem- bers of the different organizations, such as the American Leglon, Vet- erans of Foreign Wars, G. A. R.. tho! who wore the gray of the civil war, the Spanish War Veterans, the wom- an's auxiliaries, the Red Cross and other bodles to formulate plans by which a well organized procession might be had? Let the members of these different bodles give a little time and attention to their forma- tions, so that the spectators who line the streets may appreciate the fact that they are representative bodies, not merely a collection of individuals. While I am fully aware that many of those who served in the late war are loath to don their uniforms, yet it appears to me that on an occasion of this kind they should be proud to once more wear the khaki of the | Army, the blue of the Navy or the {uniform of the marines. I feel that iit is a tribute that should Le paid to {those who made the supreme sacrifice, and 1 earnestly trust that vou will find room in your column for this let- i ter in order that those who served i their country, and, who in their ! heart's desire to pay tribute to the comrades who passed beyond, will give the matter serious thought.” * ok k¥ NI of the biggest selling cam- paigns that has ever been at- tempted in the United States will be launched by the Navy on the last Fri- day in October, which date has been set apart all over the country as Navy day. While those of us who live near |the coast appreciate.the manifold ad- | vantages of a mbdern Navy, there are i many inland sections of the country { who have not as yet come to realize thatt an eflicient Navy is just as essen- tial in time of peace as in days of war. . EDITORIAL DIGEST Pardicaris alive dead'—still expresses our n these situations.” The Sagi- News Courler also argues t there is no evading the responsibility that Christiandom rests under to save from the Turks the Christians they seek to eliminate.” The entire progress of events con- vinces the Brooklyn Eagle “that the Turks cannot be left uncurbed. barbarous treatment of foreigners nakes it necessary for Christian na- tions to protect the non-Moslems in Turkey. Their own greed and blundering created the present situa- tion.” While this is so, the Des Moines Register suggests that “if the ilies had done a little restraining in he case of Greece, even after setting her on, they would not now have to restrain the victory-inflamed Turks.” The New York Globe also holds that “the league of nations is the obvio agency through which control may be lexerc!sed, but so far as power is con- | cerned the league merely veils Euro- pean rivalries. The essential thing is | that England and France should want | peace badly enough to make conces sions for it. If these two countries do not cease their near east bickerings there is no telling how dire a catas- trophe they will bring_down upon themselves and the world.” Yale'’s Ban on Automobiles. Yale is not the first college to ban | the automobile for undergraduates. ibut it is the second large universit 110 do 80 by formal order. Yale does not consider the automobile a neces- i sary part of a young gentleman’s col- | lege training, and the undergraduates cannot keep or operate cars around New Haven without special permis- ston. The hardship this will impose upon | the young gentlemen it is only possi- | ble for any one who has lived in a college town to realize. What is | the undergrad to do if he can't tool | his. car through ehe streets at forty miles an hour with a hatless crew of his fellows? How can a senior make any hit at all round the state if he can't roll up in a big six? It {1s a positive crime to have to wait | for trains. Think of the time lost. { How are those dodos who teach effi- clency in college going to get round that? Gee, all there'll be left to do nights now is study or hang round the campus. What's the college life coming to? The boys who went to college twenty years ago had the real time. | Well, perhaps, they did, at Yale and | other colleges. And_they had the time without automobiles, for auto- { mobiles were then curiosities. had to hang round the campus. and | they learned to sing on the fence. They had time to cultivate acquiint- ances in their classes. They had rushes, knock-down and drag-out af- | fairs that cemented them closer as a class than classes get nowadays. There was not that, “Saturda: exodus” which has been ‘the problem of every university within 100 miles of a big city. Men actually liked to stay in their rooms and spend even- ings in discussion. They didn't think a fifty-mile spin after supper neces- and, if they had, they couldn’t have taken it. No doubt the order will cause a ! ruction at Yale, but Yale isn't the jfirst ¢ollege to 1issue the order. | Princeton did it a year or 8o ago Princeton is still in existence—Wor- cester Telegram. The Argonaut Mine Tragedy. ‘The drama of the Argonaut gold mine is ended. It was the tragedy that all feared it must be, but prayed, to the last moment of the rescue workers' desperate struggle, that it might not be. For three weeks the eyes of a whole continent were on the brave effort to penetrate to the tomb, nearly a mile be- low the surface of the earth, where it was hoped the forty-seven miners im- prisoned since August 28 might still be found alive. Rival mines loaned all their facilities to the Argonaut. The home miners did the job with all the speed of which flesh is capable. They drove through the cruel wall of rock with the endurance of Titans and the determination of comrades. That hope which has kept the world alive Since man’s first coming burned in their breasts and made them disregard the natural fear that their fellows had perished from gas, drowning or starva- tion. They did 2 job which no prize— not all the gold of the Argonaut—could repay. covery that the battle to save the pi oners was fruitiess. The only comfort comes from the knowledge that they died wquickly and without pain. The country turns away with regret for their fate and admmiration for the men who tolled 80 hard to reach them: turns away with a tear for the white-faced women_who, essed and waited in vain—New York Herald. The “dismemberment’ left some very husk: bia Record. It’s casier to lengthen a skirt tha sthe et Shbe of Turkey 'y scraps.—Colum- 4a dobbed head Their | They | sary to either health or education— ——jolc——olc—=lolli——=jal—=la]c—=—2] i P-ALN-TER-S —_— ,ROCK CREEK NURSERY Growers, and planters of ornamentul trees. shrubs plants. Will grow for you nursery stock, Evergreens ready mnow. It's Different Open every day to Octaber Call Arnnapolis 1 3. Order sea food or chicken din W. T. EMORY, Manager. |Nursery Near Halpine, Md. P. O., Rockville, Md. Specially built Hudson Speedster. Perfect condition. California top. $500 worth of extra equipment. For sale reasonable APPLY Mr. Stickley 128 Que St. N.E. fmmanmmon e The Lee House Fifteenth and L Streets N.W. Washington, D. C. A cordiul welcome awaits yo at this interesting new hotel —just four biocks north of the White House. Daily, weekly rates. ABSOLUTELY" FIRE! | i | | | i | | Burlington HOTEL Vt. Ave. at Thomas Cir. Main 8980 380 Rooms Single Rooms, $2.00 Up Double Rooms, $3.00 Up APARTMENTS HOTEL v 3§ as £ BEAUTIFUL kS and mont To the Trade Repairs for All Heating & Cooking Apparatus Grates. linings and vari- ous repairs, including all firing tools necessary Rudoiph & West Co. 1332 New York Ave. N.W. - = LOPEL n et sume REFINED AND D.J.KAUFMAN SOFT And STIFF COLLARS 15¢ WHY PAY TWENTY?[ RENTALS | | | | Let Our Expert ! on shares matur or 83 months. 1g i Make your home miore beautiful—free estimate. Pays 4 Per Cen o know how to : Yom dretter results from Your negatives. Lot us prov. 4 i R. K. Ferguson, s || o usseines bodusprove on shares withdrawn 1114 oth 8t Pheaes Maln 2490-2491. of negatives you have to fore maturity. be finished. Our work is proving satisfactory to many and we feel sure 1 1t we can ‘Same Day $8,000,000 The National Remembrance Shop (Mr. Foster's Shop) 14th SL, One door from Pa. Ave. $800,000 Corner 11th and E Sts. JAMES HERRY, JOSHUA W. CARR. Lo¢ pen in October week ends. LA FAYETTE SIXTEENTH STREET CORNER OF EYE THE HOTEL OF EXCLUSIVE CLIENTELE SPECIALLY ATTRACTIVE RATES FOR YEARLY LIMITED NUMBER PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Pays 6 Per Cent It Assets More Than Surplus More Than Prexident Secretnry N 1 ners. n 45 t be- N.W. = = Feraes s e | “The Best Dinn GE g i In The Bantam Only, 1332 G (TABLE s ICE) Mith from eow to you € When you dine at the “Bellevue Bantam™ you dine well ¢ Dine here tomorrow and experience the joy of good livis enjoy a REAL SUNDAY DINNER. such as you might hay vour own home, cooked and served under the most favor circumstances. is changed daily—varied enough to please all palates. A La Carte Service If Preferred &% Orders received for BELLEVU Delicious Apple, Peach and Ci eese Cakes, 60c Each: Pies, 50 1332 and 1334—1336 G St. Open daily and Sunday till 9 p.m. 1338 N. Y. Ave. l er in Town . Sundays §] .25 From 12 to 8 p.m. i ©The food is the best, the portions are generous and the menu PASTRIES for Home Delive BELLEVUE FARMS RESTAURANTS Open till midnight—clossd Sundays. [ ” : St. e able 2 Within a few days COLE will announce A FINER CAR Cuticura Talcu Soothes And Cools After & warm bath with Cuticura Soap there is nothing more refresh- ing for baby’s tender skin'than Cuticura Talcum. If his skin is red, Tough or irritated, anoint with Cuti- cura Ointment to soothe and heal. They are ideal for all toilet uses. Sampla Each PresbyMatl, Add: Lad- arstacies, Depe. 397, Malden 45, Mais ~ B every: where. Soun 2, Olntment 7 drd 0. Talcum See, Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. fl | fl | E | | District National Bank 1406 G Street —bright or gloomy? Isn’t it really up to you? “Light a light” now that will stream ahead of you on life’s pathway— keeping it free ‘from the shadows of misfortune. There is only one thing needed to do—SAVE. Save systematically and determinedly. And there’s only one way to do that—by opening a SAVINGS AC- COUNT. You can start it—here with us —for as little as a dollar—and once you begin to save we’ll guarantee you’ll see that the account grows. ‘We pay interest on Savings Ac- counts at the rate of 3%. Your ney makes ¥ P Fresident H. L. Offutt, Jr. shier W. P. Lipscomb C. J. Gockeler N. L. Sansbury Vice Preaidents What are your Prospects — ol alal—0a]ale——mial c—— alc——llo] 1

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