Evening Star Newspaper, November 1, 1923, Page 42

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42 ees THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. WHITE HW}EJ After 16 Years , ELEVATEDOGLIFE 0ld Names Passing for Such . as“Laddie Boy,” and 4 Styles Change. Special Dispateh to The Star. SAN FRANCISCO, November 1.— When Laddle Boy and later his suc- cessors, Laddie Buck and Peter Pan, invaded the sacred precincts of the White House and won for themselves places In presidential affections they set an entirely new era In canine names, also in canine styles. The elevating influence which the exalted White House Alredales have brought upon all dogdom is reflected in @ state-wide survey, just completed here by the California Kennel Asso- clation, which covers both names and prevailing social status of California meat hounds. No longer is man's most faithful friend compelled to lead a dog's life by masquerading under such a plebeian cognomens as s Skip or Shep. Gone are the e Rovers and the Towsers de axo. Instead they, too, Laddie Boys or Laddie Peter Pans or, falling in guished namesakes, they almost as eminent and snations. 210,000 Licensed Dogs. 10,000 licensed dogs in d approximately one- of re now Bucks o hifalutin’ de: v cousins. Barn- | mostly to comic Same as Home By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 1.—Ed. Howe of the Atchison Globe has had his first look at New York in fifteen years and his heart has not skipped a beat. Describing his impressions today he sald he couldn't see a great deal of difterence between the metropolls and his own Kansas home. He seemed to see the city through Atchison eyes. Broadway flappers couldn’t draw a second glance from him. “We have ‘em in Atchison,” he sald, “and_they drink bootleg, t0o.” Peo- ple he met on surface cars talked with him_friendly like, just as they do in Atchison. Cooper Union reminded him that Abe Lincoln had made his first New York speech in Atchison. As _he shouldered the Broadway crowds in a way to belle his seventy years, he was asked if he walked for exercise. no $1,000,000 FUND TO HELP YOUNG MEN WITH IDEAS By the Associated Press. LONDON, Ontario, November 1.— Plans to establish a $1,000,000 sci- entific research fund for the encour- | agement of young men with ideas, | were made known by Dr. F. G. Bant- ing, discoverer of Insulin, at a lunch- eon glven In his honor by the Canad- fan Club and Chamber of Commerce. | The movement, he said, had been| started by John W. Rogers and Ed- he replied. “I work. I ward um of Toronto, who propose ise the fund and make its Tesourc atlable to any man, regardless of degree or university ons, who might have an irthy of developing. A com would make the decision. fund would be used exclu- actual research and sci- dy necessary to bring a to a successful conclusion, | Town in Kansas shock wheat, pitch hay and make gar- den on Potato Hill farm. Bankers Town Bullders. Mr. Howe was dlis: erable banker, who now He saw Mr. Baker's son, however, and assured him that bankers are the men expostulated, Indignantly. aren’t; they're the representa the best men in commercial life. He was taken to Chinatown, the Bowery, to Washington Square, but he eschewed a sight of Greenwich Village. He explained he had “kin livin' down there, but guessed he dldn’t care to see {t." He took & look at the lower East Side, with its tenemented millions, and decided that “the new American looked all right” “I don’t ses much call for all this agitation against im- migration,” he said. Ho enjoyed himself, but confessed he would be to get baok te Atchison. The h& of “The Osp with the RED Sap" oannot sepa- rate from the. oap becauss it 1s wire: SE D = E- PI? into place 3 oK) Xy milk from ‘contami- oation. Your milkmas osa get all Jobbers or The Amerl Company, Washington, D. The lovers of things beautiful will be particularly interested in this An innovation! A display and re- vue of modes and motors. Quality automobiles and beautiful a; hand-in-hand, as will be enced o this Style Show, which is to be in the showrooms of our new buil Thursday and Frida; ber 1st and 24, at 8: BODY OF YOUNG WOMAN FOUND IN NEGRO CHURCH By the Associated Press. TUSCALOOSA, Diacovery of the skelston of a young woman In the ashes of a negro church, four miles from Tuscaloosa, which was destroyed by fire, caused the entire force of the sherift's office to atart an investigation of & case that has immediately developed what they term many mysterious angles. Coroner 8. T. Hardin said November 1.— that a ® | creliminary Inquiry has revealed that the woman was youthful and that hé could not say whether she was white or negro. The inquiry dis- closed that the skull had baen frac- tured and several ribs broken. By the side of the skeleton officers found the steel reinforcements of what was belleved to have been an expensive suit_case. B LGS Headquarters for Armstrong Linoleums Lansburgh & Brother Studebaker is synonymous with beauty and quality—and it Is natural then, that the discerning woman will insist that her car be a Studebaker. The car that so ’F:rfectly harmonizes with beautiful apparel and exquisite appointme: Modes that will ap] newest colors, all af decorations nts. e car of performance unexcelled! Gowns by Jelleff A presentation of the most wearable fashions from New York and Parls, and excellent to women of discriminating tasts, featuring the vwaflmmm Elabarate floral oseph McReynol Selling Satisfactory Transpertation in Washington fer 35 Years ~ COMMERCIAL "This Is o Studebakor Year™ AUTO AND SUPPLY CO. 14th Street at R C., THURSDAY, NEWCASTLE CONSULATE SOON TO BE REOPENED Controversy Over Shipping Be- tween United States and Eng- land Is Ended. By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 1.—A settlement of the controversy over the American consulate at Newcastle-on-Tyne has been reached between Foreign Secre- tary Curzon and American Ambassa- dor Harvey, and, according to Mr. Harvey, the consulate will be reopen- ed within a fortnight. The Newcastle consulate was closed on February 2 last, after the British government had withdrawn the exe- quaturs of Consul Fred C. Slater and Vice Consul Russell M. Brooks on charges that they had attempted to divert passengers from British to American steamship lines by making Victrola Style 80 NOVEMBER 1, 1923 difficulties over the issuance of visas to passengers not traveling on Ameri- can boats, and further by hinting that the passengers were liable to encounter inconvenience in the United States unless they traveled by Amer- ican lines. The American State Department, after an Investigation, exonerated the consular officlals. Considerable dip- lomatic correspondence followed, the | United States refusing to compromise on the matter. After the closing of the consulate Mr. ferred to Corunn Brooks to Dresd the present settle: as persona grata government, but will not return to Newcastle from their present assign- ments. It is expected they will go to other stations within the British em- pire. ent they are held with the British —_— Relics have been found in Celebes which seem to prove that tobacco was used in the island for/'smoking so0 long ago as the dawn of the Chris- tian era. Music Is Essential Victrola Console Style 215 The Most Popular Victor Outfits Victrola 80, with 8 75c Victor Records (16 selec- tions.) Terms— monthly Victrola Console No. 215, with 8 75c Victor Records (Tlfi s:%l?)ctxons). erms down, $8 monthly $156 In choosing a Phonograph, remember that you must choose the Victrola or something which you hope will do as well; then remember that the Victrola—the standard by which all others are judged—costs no more. Victrolas, $25 to §725. Easy weekly or monthly terms arranged. . Come in or write. te Homer L. Kitt Co. | 1330-G'STREET Slightly Used Victrola Specially Priced Wall Duster Keep your walls dusted regularly with this Wizard and you will save having to clean the wallpaper. Can- not streak the most delicate tinted peper. Unusually helpful in keeping the walls, monidings and pictures ly clean. Made of washable white or purple yarn, chemically treated. 60-inch handle. Prices: $2.50 and $2.00 Polish World’s greatest dust mop in size, quality and service. Washing does not hart its special chemical dry treatment or its soft absorbentquali- ties. Patent elbow joint, special pad- ded metal frame, jumbo strands make it the most durable, casiest and safest to handle. Prices: $2.50, $2.00 and $1.50 The most perfect polish known for furniture and floors. Guarantsed to produce a hard dry lustre ‘with amazing/quickness and ease. So greaseless that you can even polish a mirror with it Sold in all sizes from 4 oz bottle to gallon cans. Prices: 30c to $3.00 A granular preparation that absorbs the dust of carpets and rugs while sweeping. Prevents rising and spreading of dust. Brightens the colors of the patterns, makes rogs like new. Makes sweeping an easier and more sani- tary operation. Every home needs Wizard Carpet Clean. Price: 50c and 25¢ ULN&MARTING 1215-1217 F Street and 1214 to 4218 G Street Store Hours: 8 Linoleum Floors Save Money In Floor Upkeep BUSTN'FSS floors are the world’s champion ab- sorbers of street dust. Street feet knock and scuffle, thud and shuffle over them. Seams open; tiny, invisible dirt pockets form. Chas- women scrub. Overhead mounts. Your dire-containing floors cost you moneyx. Hanpmommddnmdyou;“flo:: A telephone company in Chicago -ar:ulmmordofdumndmziminingfloon economies. The entire cleaning and waxing cost is less than a cent and a quarter per square foot per month. Do you think your customers are not, at least subconsciously, aware of the state of your floors? ;;h Kansas City Bell it o-uz:;: sz Brows Liseksssm is in- staliod ringy, resilient quality inoleum is as resilient is a noise reducer. It is there- fore an overhead reducer from another angle. Every noise that breaks a business thought in your establishment costs you money. And every em- ployee who fights off noise with his mind while working for you is under-producing. Business men like Arm- strong’s Linoleum for its cleanliness. When properly laid, it has no unsightly, open seams. It is smooth and even-surfaced; and, if waxed and polished, a daily brush- ing with a slightly waxed dust-mop serves to keep it ick-and-span. 45 to 5:30 In selecting a floor of Armstrong’s Linoleum for store, office, restaurant, or any pubhic building, you can choose suitable designs in plain colors, Jaspés (two-toned effects), tile m- laids, marble inlaids, and arquetry inlaids. Lino- floors with borders, “built to fit the room,” offer decorative floors for offices, stores, and smart shops. They may behad in designs and colors in keep- ing with the finest fixtures and appointments. Your architect, contrac- tor,or any good linoleum merchantcan give you in- formation on the economy of linoleum and its low upkeep cost. Or write for a free copy of our 48-page book, “ Business Floors,” which shows colorplates of the new designs and gives Recent Installations of Armstrong’s Linoleum City Hospital, Buffalo Commerce Building Onondega Pottery Co. Holy Trinity Charch Baltimore U. S. Naval Home West Penn Hospiral— Nurses’ Home —Pittsburgh public or semi- A Few Rochester Syracuse Philadelphin Look for the CIRCLE A" trademark. the burlap back complete information regard- ing laying linoleam floors and their care. ArssTrona Corx Compawy, Linolewm Division, LancasTss, PENNSYLPANIA mstrong’s Linoleum for Every Floor in the House

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