Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
6 — JOINT CELEBRATION 4 FORALL ARLINGTON County Will Unite in Elabo- rate Independence Day Program. Bpeciul Dispateh to The Star. CLARI DON, Va., June 30.—For the entertainment and enlightenment of all citizens of Arlington county an elaborate Independence day program will be offered on the grounds ad- juining the Fort Myer Heights School, With the Fort Myer Helghts Cltizens’ Arsociation os host. in view of the fact that pra=dcully every civic organiza- tion and all county officials are to participate in the celebration, that it will surpass from a poiut of interest and attendance anything of its kind ever held in the county. Principal Speakera. Philip . Campbell. former repre- sentative in Congress from Kansas, who now resi Arlington couny, and Maj. ¥ of Ballston are announced as the principal speak- ers of the occAsion, both of whom ar expected to talk along patriotic lines. Audresses also are to be made by Sirtually ull candidates for office in the county and those who have as- pirations for places in the general ussembly. An automobile parade of passenger cars, commercial trucks and fire de- partment equipment, to o®lock in the morning, will open the day's program. at’ the schoolhouse and will through all the thickly tions within a radius of about two ailes, Its route will take it west on Wilson boulevard to Ballston, north to Cherrydale, cast by way of the Lee highway to Rosslyn, re.urning to ihe starting polnt by way of Picketts I Prizes are to be awarded in three distinct classes for the best deco- rated cars. the first with for re will prize will be Arlington Motor Jairs or accessord §15 credit with cessories and the third will be a cessories nad the third will be a €tag-horn carving set valued at $10. The commereial truck selected as making the most attractive Will be awarded a tire or its e lent, the second prize will b brace and side-cutting wr the third a box of cigars Fire trucks finishing first, second aud third will receive two tons ot coal, an order for $10 and one gallon of varnish. valued at §6, respectively. Tie address of welcome will be delivered by R. D. McPherson, presi- dent of the Fort Myer Heights Citi- zens ation, who will also in- troduce the speakers of the day. Flag Raising. Another outstanding feature of the celbration will be flag raising exer- cises, at which Commonwealth Attor- ney Ball will deliver an address and Robert Skillman, a Boy Scout, will recite “The Declaration of Independ- ence.” This event will take place im- mediately after the parade and will be in charge of the Fort Heigiits Boy Scout troop. The Clar- enden Communtiy Band will be heard In wThe Star Spangled Banner” and other patriotic selec! Sther tic selections during these Athletic important 25 credit Company u the Rossiyn events have been given an place on the program. These will include a base ball game between a team representing the Clarendon Baptist Sunday School and the Cherrvdale Resery and games of all 2irls and even adults of to be entered. Hoy Scout Demonstration. Still another event which promises to be of unusual Interest will be in the e o demonstration of activities of th - zanization. Scout' Dateols - shioaih out the county are to participate and iliey are to be seen in close order drill, signal contest, first aid contest and - patrol tug-or-war. The scouts will compete for a handsome silver loving cup, which will be awarded the patrol scoring the largest number of points Charles R. Taylor. candidate for the office of county treasurer i coming election, and A. rarke Pavne. ate for a seat in the house of gates, it is announced, have ac- cepted an invitation of Presldent Cushman of the Washington Districf Ctlizens' Association, to address the next meeting of that organization at the Washington Country Club Friday evening. Mr. Taylor, it is sald, has been requested fo take as the sub- Jeet “Incorporatig It Afrect: County,” while Mr. Payne on economies in’ county all ages are speak start at 9| The parade will form | pass | settled sec- In the vassenger car class | , the second | Myer | field | sorts in which boys and | Dpatrois through- | * ALEXANDRIA. | ALEXANDRIA, Va, June 20 (Spe- ‘cial)—Announcement is made that the Friends' Playgrounds, located on the north side of Queen between Washington and Columbus streets, will be formally opened at 9:30 o'cloc] ‘tomorrow morning. Miss Margaret Bahrenburg of New York, a graduate of the Sergeant School, Boston, will {e instructor at the playgrounds this season and all of the children inter- ested in the playgrounds are request- ed to be present at the opening hour to meet Miss Bahrenburk. Mrs. T. Clifton Howard, of the playground work in this cit stated today that within a compara tively short time she hopes to be able to have three other playground cen- ters opened (n various parts of the lcity In order that children of every section may have a playground of itheir own. The grounds, it is an- nounced, will be open daily from 9 am. until 12 m. snd from 3 pm. |until sunset. | Canadian Gets Degree. )r the first time since Alexundria- Washington Lodge of Masons was chartered in 1783 a lodke from a foreign Jjurisdiction last night con- ferred degree work on u candidate in that lodge. The Master Mason degree was conferred on a candidate from Loric Lodge of Toronto, Canada. The dtans arrived in Washington yes- ¥ morning und after a sightsee- ni trip they came over to Alexandria d were guests at dinner served at ¢ o'clock last evening in the audi- torium of the cliaumber of commerce. James H. Price, grand master o Masons In Virginta; Charles H. € han, deputy grand master, and others made speeches, including some of the forty Canadians in the party. 1 Ta- Construct New Sewer. The work of constructing on King street, from Union westward a distance of approx 1.000 feet, has begun under the di- rection of City Manager Wilder M. Rich. The sewer is egg shaped and con- structed of concrete and will take care of the drainage from the $5,000,000 temple at George Wa ington Park, being erected by George Washington Masonic Nation- al Memorial Association City Manager Rich stated today that ultimately the city will extend the sewer to take care of George Washington Park. where many houses are now. in course of con- struction. The sewer is twenty- seven inches in diameter. Give Gont to Ledge. A large delegation of members of Alexandria_Lodge, No. 738, Benevo- lent and Protective Order of EIks tomorrow afternoon will make a pil- grimage in automobiles to Freder- fcksburg Lodge of Elks and present that lodge with a goat which s en- route to the natiomal convention to be held next month in Atlanta, The newly_elected officers ‘of Poto- mac Lodge, No. 85 Odd Fellows, will be installed next Friday u Fellows’ Hall on_North Columbus street by N. L. Willlamson, district deputy. During the evening among those scheduled to make addresses are Robert S. Barrett, James R. Ca- ton, J. Randall Caton and others. Religlous services will be held at 8 o'clock this evening In the chautauqua tent erected on the lot of the Young Men's Christian Asso- ciation, just north of Harvard street near Cameron street. They will be conducted by the Rev. Ezra Floyd Ferrie. superintendent of the chau- tauqua, and will be participated in by congregations of many Protestant churches of the -eity. There will be singing by the joint choirs of the churches participating. The Rev. Mr. Ferris will take for his subject “Plant u Tree. Services tonight at Trinity Methot | dist Episcopal Church will be held at 7 o'clock, and at the First Baptist Church at 7:15_o'clock, in order t the members of the congregations of these two churches may. services at the chautauqua tent. The chautauqua was closed with a lecture by Opie Read. Announcement ig made that the four candidates seeking the demo- | cratic nomination for the state senate in the primary which will be held Au- gust 7 will at § o'clock tomorrow night deliver spceches at the Arling- ton county courthouse hefore the woman voters of that county. The i candidates are: Robert . Barrett, Alexandria; Frank L. Ball, common- Wealth's 'attorney of ' Arlington county; Walter Tansill Oliver, Fair- fax, incumbent, and James Sherier. Falrfax county. . The funeral of Mrs. Mary A King {took place vesterday afternoon from jher residence. 216 South Fayette i Services werc conducted by Dr. Frank A. Kilmon. pas- tor of Trinity M. E. Church, and burial was in the Methodist Protestant cem- etery. RECEIVER IS ASKED FOR FRUIT CONCERN wer tation sh- government expenses and will present | comparative data on costs of operat- ing county and city governments. What promises to be the most im- portant political meeting so far in the "present being ar- ranged by the nized Voters of Arlington County, to be held at the courthouse Monday eve- ning. The women have invited the Apple Growers' Association, With 2,500 Stockholders, Petitions Court for Action. Women | four candidates for the state senate 10 be present to teli of their views on several important state and natlonal guestions, The candidates are: Walter T. Oliver, the present senator; Frank L. Ball, ‘commonwealth attorney of Arlington county: James Sherrier of Fairfax and Robert §. Barrett of Alexandria. 4 STUDENTS OVER 60 AT SUMMER SCHOOL Maryland University Class of 369 Ranges in Age Down to Sixteen Years. Special Dispateh to The tar. COLLEGE PARK, Md.. June 30.— That old saying “You are never too ©ld to learn” is believed in by a num- ber of Marylanders who are taking part in the courses of the summer 8chool at the University of Maryland. In the list of 369 who are registered for the six-week course, which began on June 25, to continue until August 1. inclusive, there are four who are Sixty to sixty-one years of age. From sixty-one, the ages range down to sixteen, every number be- tween these two extremes being rep- resented one or more times. However, the great majority of the students cange between the ages of eighteen and thirtz-five. Despite the fact that the greater percentage of students are feminine, only two were timid ahout stating their ages. One registered as “over thirty-five” and another put down her years as “more than forty." Evelyn May Barrager of Old Town and Elsie Chiswell of Dickerson share the distinction of being the youngest students. BEuch is sixteen vears old. There also are two who are only gev- enteen and quite a number of others still are in the teens. Most of the students are teachers who are taking advanced work or high school graduates who intend to take up teaching for a livellhood. Many of the teachers are “old hands” t the game, as is exemplified by the case of Roger I Manning, principal of Brandywine High School in Prince Georges county. He began teaching m reaching a voting age and has heen continuously at it for thirty- uine years, Two others taking the course at Maryland have been teaching for thirty-eight years and a score of oth~ ers are “veterans” in this great work. Their attendance at .the summer school is testimony to the fact that they are keeping abreast of the times in edycation and the Maryland school system is all the better for thir de- Special Dispatch 10 The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md. June 30.—An echo of the fallure of F. Mertens' | Sons of Cumberland and Washington, { founders of the Green Ridge orchard product, after several million dollars i had been invested by about 2,500 per- fsons, representing many states, was |heard yesterday in the filing of & peti- {tion for a-receiver by the Apple Grow ers' Co-operative Association, com- posed of a number of the original tract owners, who organized after the Mertens failure in the hope of saving Something out of the wreck. |cause by August 4 why a recelver {should not be appointed. The board of directors of the corporation passed ja resolution that a dissolution was {advisable and the stockholders have | concurred. Since many of the tracts | have come into bearing the income.of the company has been so reduced that it is impossible to handle and market jthe fruit. Another reason is that for |several years loss was suffered from { frosts. There are several hundred stock- holders listed, living in Ohfo, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and other states. The original ten- acre. tracts sold for $1,500 each. The Mertens agreement was to cultivate for five years and turn the orchards over to the purchasers In bearing con- dition. but the firm went bankrupt in |the meantime. The purchasers then | organized into independent groups and took the cultivation into their own hands. MAN KILLED, FIANCEE HURT ON WAY TO WED Auto Crash Ends Bridal Party in Tragedy—@irl in Hospital From Injuries. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 20.— Tragedy today stalked in the wake of what_was to have been a bridal party. The prospective bridegroom is dead and his flancee is in a hos- pital suffering from Injuries recelved shortly after noon, when the auto- ymobile in which they were riding to the court house for a marriage license turned over. James Thompson, twenty-one, for- merly of Pearson, Ga., and Miss Vada Morris of East Port, near here, were to have been the principals in a wed- ding this afternoon. They had aj plied for a marriage license this morning but had been told it would be necessary to bring the young woman’s mother in to give her con- sent. They returned for her and were rushing back In an effort to reach the courthouse before it closed at 1 o'clock when the accident oc- curred. —— Miss Mabel A. Buell! only woman scenic artlst in New York, earns large sums of money by designing sets and painting curtains for the theater. in charge wately | big | the | big | of the| attend the | Judge Doub passed an order to show | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY I, ‘Scientists Fail to See Flaw In 400-Y ear-Old Turile’s Record | T RAINIER REALTY WORTH §1,623.970 iAssessments Are Completed ! for Town and Subdivisions. Growth Shown. | | Special Dispateh to The Star. MT. RAINIER. Md. June 30.—At | meeting of the mayor and com- jmon counell Fridey night to survey {the work of the town's ussessors it was learned that the new assessed i valuation of the property In the «or- {porate limits of the town shows an {increase of about one-third over the Enpprul.«‘vnwht for the past two years. { The report shows the subdivisions appraised s follows: Mt. Rainler sub- Aivision, $393,500; Rogers' first sub- tdivision, $195.640; Rogers’ second sub- faivision, $24 Pickford subdivi- sion. $19,050: Rhode Island svenue ubdivision, $336,470: Rhode Island fuvenue second subdivision, $102.750; Funkhouser & Marshall subdivision, SSL750: Yost subdivision, $28.450 Hariclift subdiviston. $49,327, and mis: cellancous, $62,075. The total assessed valuation is now $1, 970. Charles i Relchelt and David Laing were the assessors. Tax Rate 40 Cents. The mauyor and council in going jover the town’s expenses fixed the tax rate for the ensuing year at 40 cents on the $100 assessed valuation, which is the same as it has been the past |year. However, the special road and [ ¥ldewalk assessment on 'the recent | bonid Issue was reduced from 25 cents per $100 to 15 cents, while the front |foot ~assessment for property im- {proved under thiz bond issue was jreduced from 35 cents to 30 cents. The period for payment of the cost f sidewalks was chanked to three {years from the two years which has been previously The rate allowed. fixed this year for sidewalks laid by {contract was 56 cents per foot. al- {though it is felt the work now being done by the town under municipal superviston will be materfally under that. Chautauqua Successful. | The chautauqua which has heen {running here for a week has been a | most successtul onc. This is Mt. | Rainier's first experience with such amusements, and it {s belleved it will be o regular thing here from now on. {The local committee which handled the guaranty to the Swarthmore jcompany exceeded in season ticket sold the amount they belleved pos- istble. The guaranty was practically raised in its entirety, leaving but a small deficit to be met by the guar- {antors. - An open | r motion picture garden jis being er cted on 34th street, next jto the Pri; Georges Bank, and those {behind the venture say they intend to bulld a large theater on this site for the fall and winter season. The regular meeting of the Citi- zens' Assoclation was deferred until a later date because of the other ac- tivities in the town at the time of {meeting. H. W. Blandy, secretary, ¥ in a statement In the Prince !Georgean thut pressure of business Imay make a special meeting neces- | sary. Bib] Class Entertainment. The Baraca Bible class of the First Baptist Church held an entertainment {and social in the church building Fri- day night. L. B. Bergerson. president of the el introduced Mayor Fred Negus, who gave a brief address. |Others on the program were Mr. and {Mrs. M. M. Clark of Hyattsville, who {entertained with voral and whistling i elections: Sherley Bauckman and his ‘one stringed” violin and “musical” saw; Rev. H. M. Nichol church: Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bessie Hinsley. sion of the program were served by the church. Mrs. Carrie V. Nicholg of 3120 Date street died at her home Thursday aft- ernoon. She was seventy-five years iold. She is survived by five daugh- |ters—Mrs.” Elizabeth C. Watts, Mre. |Sadie An Mrs. ence N. S. Lee and At the conclu- refreshments ladies of and_ by three C! .. John R., and James .\ Nichols. Interment was from the ichols Memorial Church at Odenton. Md., this afternoon. Garage Company Reorganized. The Superfor Garage Company, {which is having erected a large bufld 1ing on Rhode Island avenue, has been ircorganized, with the following offi- icers of the firm: Lester S. Homan, ipresident and treasurer; Ralph Keves, {secretary. Charles J. Peckham, also {a member of the firm, has been made | manager. The company’s name has {been changed, and It will now be known as the Superior Motor Sales i Company. | _H. C. Maynor, prominent real estate promotor here, has enlarged his busi- ness activities, organizing the H. C. Mayhor Company and opening - a branch office in Woodridge, D. C. C. {W. Cawthorne is in charge of the {ranch. . sons, —— \INDUSTRIAL COURT | JUDGES MAP PLANS Kansas Governor’s Request That They Retire. TOPEKA, Kan., June 30.—The three judges of the Kansas industrial court, asked today by Gov. Davis to retire, will meet Monday to consider a reply to the governor, Judge John H. Craw- ford, one of the members of the court, said tonight. Gov. Davis, in a_leiter to Judges Crawford and J. A. Mcllermott, repub- {licans and Henderson Martin, democrat, suggested that they retre. asserting it would save the state 440,500 annually. Gov. Davis cited yxtrn(‘ts from the recent United States fiu cision which he said automotically re- moved from the coirt all powers ex- cept that provided under other statutes. He declared it would be sufficient for the three judges to convene once a month, to be paid on a per diem basis, thus saving to the state virtually all thelr salaries of $4,500 each, also the salaries of four employes. _ CONCERT AND DANCE. St. Cyprian’s Choral Society Pro- gram Tomorrow Night. { St. Cyprian’s Choral Society is to | give a concert and dance at 8 o'clock fomorrow night at the parish hall, 13th and C streets southeast. Prof. Scott Mayo is_to direct the operetta, with Miss Frances Hall as accompan- ist, Officers of the society are Franels | Giilem, director of dramatics; Anna Harris, secretary; Bertina Rudisill, treasurer, and Francis Spriggs, busi- ness manager. 1,075 ARRESTS IN WEEK. Offenses of All Characters Included ‘in Report. Police reports show a total of 1,075 arrests made the past week for all of- fenses. They include 164 for violgtions of the several provigions of the law relat- ing to the handling and drinking of intoxicants, 368 for violations of the minor traffic regulations, 126 for speeding and_various numbers for dis- orderly, assault and theft. ———— A young French chemlst named Mazasin has invented & new alloy re- sembling gold, and it has been called Zireum.T St has the brightness, dura- bility and inoxidability of gold, which qualities will permit its substitution in jewelry and other manufacture: where gold 1s pow, useds | i 1 | pastor of the | rson, Mrs. Olive McKeown.'| Disley and Mrs. Flor- | To Meet Tomorrow to Consider! preme Court de- | SPARKPLUG. What cruel fate o'ertook the Gala- pagos turtle Capt. James Cook left In the Tonga Islands in 1773 that it should be blinded in the very bloom cf its youth and become a decrepit, squeaky old reptile in the xcant span of but 150 years? Alas, say scientists, in answer to thelr own questions, it must have lived too fast a life in the romantic South weas, and may even have fullen victim to the lotus blossom. Four hundred years is mot an traordinary age for a glant tortoi to reach, and vet Capt. E. T. Pollock, governor of American Samoi, report- ed to the Navy Department that when he found the turtle the great English mariner had abandoned a century and w half ago, it was sightless and squeaked so much when it walked that it sounded worse than the old bus after a weck's rain, That Capt. Pollock’s discovery is no argument against the species’ accept- ed_proclivity toward longevity rec- ords, however, was the unanimous opinion of sclentists here, and yester- called upon Spark Plug, the ar-old Galapagos in- ational Zoologlcal Gar- dens, to substantiate their theory. And he succeeded far beyond their most optimistic expectations. any-Golng Life Enjoyed. Spark Plug has lived the easy-going life that is suspected of having some- thing to do with the longevity of most respectable turtles. When he and hix mate, Antediluvian, arrived at the Zoo just twenty-five years ugo, he weighéd only 75 pounds. But yes- terday four husky men holsted him protestingly upon a truck, bumped him to the park scales and weighed him again. He tipped the beam at 208 pounds, an argument in favor of the scientists' theory and a compli- ment to Washington's climate ot only has Spark Plug WHIP DEATH TRIAL WITNESSES SCORED Wife of One Says He Was Home When He Said He Saw Lashing. seven fant at the demon- By the Associated Press LAKE CITY, Fla. 2u.—At- tacks on the charac the stte witnegses by more than a dozen pe | =ons called b Ithe o session today in the trinl {of Thomas Walter Higginbotham, convict whipping b charged with the murder of Martin Tabert of North Dakota The impeachment efforts were cen- tered on J. W. Jackson, J. M. Tyson, Graham Ward and Walter Lyles, tate’s witnesses, who have testified to have prepared Tabert's body for Lurial after he had been lashed. by Higginbotham more than seventy-five times with a strap weighing veven and one-half pounds. Wife and Son Textify. Jackson' wife ind his son Solomon testified _against him, declaring he was at home the day he is alleged to have preparcd Tabert's “brulsed £nd lacerated” body for burlal at the stockade of the Putnam Lumber Company's logging camp at Claru, Fla. . His wife claimed the defense coun- s¢1 had called on her at her home to et her to testify tund, and that she was summoned here by judge of Dixie counts and assured she would get §2 a day ©nd expenses.” Had Secured “Loan.” Jackson, who was characterized in evidence ‘a8 being known as “Hard June ers of Leen separated since January last penses to come here to testify, but he admitted he had succeeded in secur ng a “loan from an unknown man’ water and _some clean clothcs. Clifford Griner, a saw mill man, de- clared Graham Ward, who testified for the state that he had counted {elghty-seven licks given by Higgin- hotham, had informed him he wa: ret_all he could out of it sald Ward named $5.000 as his f On belng cross-examined, the w ss declared Ward had told him he hed seen Higginbotham whip Tabert, tut that he did not want to get Hiu- ginbotham in trouble, but would Le willing to if given $5,000. HARD BATTLE URGED FOR CHINESE TOWN ’S\m Yat-Sen Forces Fighting to Capture Waichow, on East- ern Front. ] By the Assoclated Press. ‘ HONGKONG, June 30.—The constl- {tutionallst army of Sun Yat-Sen . on 1me North river front is advancing Grinder and has acoupled Yingtak, from which the Kwangs! troops retreated, according to advices received here. Heavy fighting is reported from ‘Waichow, on the east front, where Chien Chiung Ming is holding out in his home town against Sun’s drive. The {ssue at Walchow still is in doubt, with both sides claiming a victory. Kwangsl forces,on the west front| are reeelving strong reinforcements and a new battle is expected there in the near future. W. C. ALLAN ON TRIP. Walter C. Allen, executive secre- tary of the public utilities commt sion, left Washington vesterday. for a six-week vacation in his native state, California. During his absence Elmo J. Milli- gan, chief clerk, will.act as execu- uve secretary, to .the COmMMISSIon, / - insidious | the defense consumcd | against her hus- | Times,” declared he and his wife bad | His ron, on cross-examination, d-nief | that he had been offercd $25 and ex- | f §10 during the week to buy soda | going to testify for the state “and | -y of_Kuropean workers and peasants.” | 1923—PART 1. IWOMEN IN RACE FOR 6. 0. P. POST Former ~Senator Jackson Looking for Associate on National Committee. Spectal Dispateh to The Star. BALTIMORE, Md., June 30.—Former Senator Willlam P. Jackson, member of the republican natlonal committec from Maryland, is wrestling with one of the most perplexing problems of his long political career, and that is: “Which woman of the hundreds fully qualified for the, post shall T select as my assoclate member of the nu- tional committee?” Bpeculation and ‘expectation, hope and aspiration bubble in republican feminine circles In the state and a dozen names are juggled in the dls- cusslon, Several Prominently Mentioned. Mrs. George L. Wright of Towson, chalrman of the State Federation of Women's Clubs, appears to have en- | thuslastic indorsement, and the friends ot Miss Gruce j Spofford of Haltimore, chafrman of the City Fed- ’t.mllon of Women's Clubs, seem to be cqual fn uumber and 1oyalty. Over on the eastern. shore, where Mr. Jackson has his home, is Mrs Al phonso Boley of Tulbot county, who made a fine record in a run for dele- gute in the general ussembly Many eyes are turned to Mrs W. Biaden Lowndes, wife of one of Mr Jackson's warmest political and per- sonal friends. Mrs. Lowndes having of late emerged from retirement und strated the ability of a turtle to live far from his native habitat in re- { spectable sobriety, the sclentists de- clared, but they quoted Raymond L. | Ditmars, curator of the Bronx Park | Zoo in New York city, who wrote of |« tortotse that had lived to the mel- |low age of “at least” 400 years. | There ure other examples. Innumer-} able to prove that zoologists' ac- | cepted theory as to turtles’ ages is | well-founded and that most of them at least pass the three-century mark. Survivors of an age when reptiles grew to tremendous sizes, the glant tortolses are to be found now most- | Iy pagos lIslands, 500 miles | off the coast of Ecuador. There they bask peacefully in the scorching rays of a tropical sun and reflect back 3 Wpon thelr earliest ancestors through [Shown narked interest in affairs of bewlldering ages of time, for ”‘"i“" party. From Alleghaney county, iu glant tortoise alone of all reptiles|the far west, come whispers of ‘the has survived the convulsions of na-|4Vallability of Mrs. Forney Young. ture unchanged, according to scien- | Other names discussed are those of tists. They alone fall to show any | rs: Howard Schwartz, Mrs. Calvin phase of the obliterating sway of | Gabriel and Miss Gertrude Leimback, degeneracy. all three of Baltimore city. Generally Accepted Theory. B T e Eae 4 ocratic leaders of Baltimore Although there are no official rec-| o THCC (RASTE, OF , Bultimore ords to prove it, the generally accent- | e’y act entered into a month age ed theory is that Capt. Cook stopped | by purty leaders of the atate, provid at the Galapogos Islands on one of |ing for nomination of Gov. Ritehic his famous cruises, captured u num- | without u primary fght | ber of these giant turtles and re-| Af a mecting 4t Towson, where a leascd one in the Tongas group, with|county harmony ticket was agreed the date carved in its thick shell, so|upon for the fall election, the con- that when future generations found!sensus of opinfon was declared to be they might attempt to gauge its{that the county delegation to the It is supposed Capt. Cook must {state convention should vote for the lected & youns turtle for the|governor's renomination. The dele- experiment | ®atton to the gene: assembly, sin But the farly, should vote for re-election Siane hive John' M. Deunis as state treasurer, it contributed nothing more was declared. to science than the knowledge that) The meeting not only achieved this some turtles grow old rapialy and | “ratification,” on a county basis. of | others gradually. His has proved to|the party peace, but obviated a fight | be only a poor, well laid they important famous mariner proved nothing: of Jeni- Burton, cleventn DBy the As<ociated Press. MOSCOW, June 30.—The “revolution | in constitutes combated on proletarian “U cclares Leon { Thomas Shepard, EDUCATIONAL. NATIONAL SCHOOL FINE! & APPLIED ART FELIX MAHONY, Director, Mi 1760 Conn. Ave. and M “Study Art With a Purpose” Day and Evening Classes Children’s Saturday Class OQLUMBIA ONIVERsITY flcfl%fi —. mw. Todiv. Toxtruction; college preparatary, rato fanguages. mathematics, physice.” <l hemi Open suminer; duy, night; co.ed: moderate. OCONNOR SCHOOL. of EXPRESSION Study With a Purpose. E That Speech You Will Make. | EDUCATIONAL. |5 COLUMBIA School of Drafting Roy. C. Clafiin. President ¢ Are You Sharing in the Country’s Prosperity? DRAFTSMEN are in con- stant demand. The pay is big, the work is interesting. We prepare you during your spare time In '3 to 9 months. Indlvidual Instruction, day or night, throughout year. ENROLL NOW! Call, write or phone for interesting par- ticulars. 14th & T Sts. NW. Phone North 272 ¢ 1 SPANTSH. aching for high school FRENCH S$CHOOL, Connecticut ave. Personal Charm, Poise. In | Life’s Drama Play Your Part. | Day and Evening Classes. MILLS BLDG., 17th St. and Pa. Ave. ' Phonen North 5545 and Franklin 3537 E. E. FOSTER Studio i 1517 H St N.W. Hours: Room 20 $:30—11:30 a.m. Opens July 5th Adding, Bookkeeping and; Calculating Machine School Competent Operato BURROUGHS ADDING MACHINE SCHOOL 724 17th St. N.W. S ro ap ORTHEAST CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL Monroe, 9th and 10th Sts. WASHINGTON, D. C. Classic and Scientific Courses College Preparatory 1d_Progress SUMMER COURSES, nul_Institute, 1018 Fre Ttalian classes rivate le SCHOOL OF WASHINGTON Conversational Pt nw. M PANIS 9. from Spain Moot Court Constitu- tional Law July 2—August 10 Summer Law Courses 20—7:30 P.V. Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays Y.M.C.A Main 8250 1736 G St. Co-Educational HOTELS—TEA ROOMS APARTMENT HOUSES Empio FREE New Wi Leo Hou Ontario Purple Harring Cosmos. Chaumor Tabard Army & Capitol The Childs Savoy Congres: Day an 00111171 o W 1441 1 " i Ul [ MUSICAL INSTRUCTION John Philip Shaddick Six-weeks course. Regiuniog July 9th, coaching, class teaching end beginners who have good, natural voices. | ‘Shecial Tates for summer course. Phone N. 7424 1525 18th N.W. EDUCATIONAL. i LANGUAGES | A1l modern ‘languages taught by experi- | enced native teachers. Day amd Evening | Classes. Private Lessons. tuitiou. Catalog on request. | ree. Teduced Summer Rates, BERLITZ Schuol of Languages 316 14th n.w. Ph. Fr. 2620 10 Reasonable Trial Lesson sea island—a veritable | eral men who have gone off the rese { ston. TRADE BOARD ORGANIZED. our continent from economic disin- internal power of the American aded by capitalistic America’ and at tortoise beach comber. vation in the past. All sfections Sherifft—Caleb C. A board of trade has been or- tegration and enthrallment by the| bourgeoise is still very great. The first perhaps by Great Britain also, Jonely turtle gone|between factional leaders and Tined | wrong in the balmy us fields of an|{up with the organization forces sev- i enticing South the county were represented. State’s attorney—H. Courtenay er, eighth district, incumbent. County treasurer—Thomas C. Hunt- er, seventh district, incumbent. i . |, House of delegates—Frank . Given, . fourth district; Milton Tolle, four- teenth district; Louls McLane Merry- | | man, cighth district; James J. Lindsay, {3r.. ninth district; John S. Mahle, first listrict; Wildam Helfrich, first district Given and Tolle served at the last ses- | atstrict. : = Delegates to state convention—Ed- Creation of Proletarian; wira“i Burke: € ‘Gus Grason. HBen- 4y |J2min F. Ridgely, Carville D. Henson, “lni | John Hubner Rice, George Hartman, United States of Europe” i5onn e Tictie | e H pState central committee—Jonn M. ennis, John I. Rowe, incumbent; - | First Necessary, He Says. |Dsnnis dohn & Rowe, incumbent; £d- ! Intosh, jr.; Mrs. Frank S. Hambleton and Mrs. Fdward F. Anderson. America” is far distant, and this| condition which can bey o h109 4t Betterton. Maryland's by the creation of &} ¢;yorjte summer resort, and the fol- ited States of Europe.”| jowing officers elected: President, - Trotsky, soviet war|poward Turner; vice president, Wal- minister, in a lengthy article in the ! ter §, Mrice; secretary and treasurer, newspaper Pravda, indicating the! lizabeth M. Brice. view that America will be the I:ul! A compaign of publicity has stronghol talism already been started. Betterton has | S shold et mn_‘. s 2 ~ ! had a larger number of visitors dur Closer economic co-operation among | had & 1ar&er number of visitors dur- the European nations is necessary tory. he adds, “as the only means of saving o mighty American capital. “Having got what she wantes.” he: continu “America withdrew hvrl hands from the European mess and ! returned home, and she is now calmly | awaiting the agony of European econ- omy to reach u crisis in iwhich Europe may be bought up, as was Austria, | for little money. * * * ‘War Made U. S, Stronger. America emerged from the war not weakened, but strengthened. The | rovolution in America, therefore, is in the di; nt future.” M. Trotsky declares the workers of arope must be shown the way tc revolution, regardless of how the movement develops on the other con- tinents. Europe, he concludes, can no more walt for the American revo- lution than could Russia for the European. M. Trotsky predicts that “the work- ers and peasants of Europe, block- will be able to withstand the on- slaught and develop a close milltary and- economic alliance. “Unity In Europe's Need.” nnot close he | 2 > the fact that the danger| of the United States bringing about | the ruin of Europe and preparing to, enter upon the right of inheriting | {its dominions makes it absolutely imperative for the Kuropean nations | to combine firmly in a united stat 1" The principal reasons for the slow development of the “world revolu- tion,” M. Trotsky thinks, were false hopes built_ in Europe on “the| American Uncle Wilsonism, tke ph lanthrophic penetration of the famin. stricken districts, the American loans and so on.” However, he predicts that the Eu- ropean revolution will inevitably give impetus to the movement of the proletariat. NEW Y. W. C. A. CAMP WILL BE READY JULY 7 Kamp Kahlert, the new Y. W. (. A camp on Back Bay, fourteen miles from Annapolis, will open for the summer July 7. There are forty-five acres of land, with a grove of trees and an orchard and a stretch of good beach. Three well equipped buildings wiil house elghty girls. An artesian well 600 feet deep supplies the drinking wa- ter and sanitary conditions are good. Hiking, swimming, boating, tennis, picnics and the ever-popular camp- fire will be some of the attractions. The camp will be under the direc- tion of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Chapman, assisted by the secretaries from the girl reserve and business girls’ de- partments of the Y. W. C. A, and several counselors. A difference has been made in rates for junior campers between the ages of ten and eighteen years, while a_special price is also offered tp em- week ends at camp. The purchase of Kamp . Kahlert was made possible through the gen- erosity of the late Mrs. E. G. Kah- lert, who_left a bequest in her will to the Young Women’'s Christian Assoclation of Washington, and ‘the camp is named in her memory. Reservations are already ' belng made for the opening week. All registrations must be made from the administration building, 614 E street, on the Thursday preceding the week i i * or week ¢ud desired, A ke but also in P00 1000 0y oving City Club Iris ; Cafoterias Lafayette Washington Powhatan Mall Cafeterlas Hotel Gordon Kenesaw Roosevelt Martinique Grace Dodge Cafeteria Prepare for Good Positions Manage In Washington m 1 to 10 Lewis St Our Employment Student and Empio Wardman Park Driscoll Government Hotels Blossom Inn Blics School Noah's Ark Raleigh Grafton Burlington Continental Meridian Mansions Allies Inn Providence Hospital Franklin Square Little Tea House Shoreham New Hamilton The Senate Chevy Chase Club Colonial School Cornell Cafeteria Blue Moon Tea Room New Willard Coffee Shop ) tn illard use ton Club nt Inn Navy Club Park sional d Evening Classes Now 5 ¢ 1ses and Tostitu- Room _and ugement—Hotel Account- M Checking and Open 9 A.M.—8 P.M. | Lewis Hotel Training Schools ) 1340 New York Ave. ] CLIFFORD LEWIS, President 'Sunday, 70c a month. Full State News —-Maryland and Virginia--- Is now featured not only in The Sunday Star— he Zoening Star The important local activities all over both States are fully and accurately covered by a . competent staff of correspondents. You can be sure of all the news of these neighbor states by subscribing for the Star. Mailed to any address in Maryland and Virginia. : 'Evefing Star, 50c a month; Sunday Star, 20c a month; both Evening and FXEXXR XX XXX X XXX