Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1923, Page 3

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ALIEN PUPILS JOIN INRED CROSS DRIVE Americanization Students Know Work of Organization in Own Countries. Pupils attending the Americaniza- tlon School, at Tth and O stree enrolling daily in the District Chap- ter of the Many of the Dupils hav work done by the American T ss in Furoy This Eht spot to Red Cross workers, who said today that the enrollment continues to lag through- out the District, the chapter being far from the §75.000 which it ne ¥ on its work next year. Paul Lum, of the W ington Automotiv ade A as written a letter to mem- the ition, reminding th oss ‘appeal and expressing the » that their firms will coroll 100 per cent of their workers The Mount Vernon enrolled its pupils and cent. M Harold Park 1he motor corps of the Dis r. today volunteered her se nd that of the members of the taking around quantities of N blanks. are ed Cross. Seminary has ff 100 per head of orps in en- tar continue to 't Chapter I in his fro button ed Cross, it was announced to- AMERICAN RED CROSS COLUMBIA ntributin ; supportir unt of dues, “hapter ENVOY TO GUATEMALA RES!GNS REPORTS SAY ulatin prose perican mini resident Coolid fused to s here in circ isslor the nt AVING BORDEN FOR FLORIDA 3 an tuk S OF THE CHARL nnpany re hereby noti. wiil be n meeting of the oy at the office of re o, . T ROVER HENRY TROEGER, Direstors ider” Company Baking of the com- will be held at the I strect gorth- at 1 the hours of 2 an for_books TOTLD CONSIT tifnl mudit rning for lectures. Chase Conn. ave. n.w XD KORW reasonnble. T Phone Line Sk ) TO BRING A VAN LOAD OF FUR- om New Sork, Philedeivhia and Wil Caning A 0, nure; 6 10th Kt e WANT niture TIANOS FOR Ttented instruments Kept of charge. Pianos Snle agent for " Miller, Emerson prices. sired fr and moy Henry F and Shippe T in_tune repaired Tranich and Rradh HUGO 1 WILL debts oth pers WM. AL 1 WILL NOT BE debts confracted by othe FRANCIS T. SCHEUCH, ne L) FOR ANY than thos 1 by myselt “Higgs Puis HEAT in Hoating Where Comfort Depends —upon Biggs Heating Equip- ment there’s a satisfied fam- ily circle. May we serve you? The Biggs Engineering Co., WARREN W, "‘G(w l’rrfl\dvn' 30 Vit y “Harey for llmnk giving. ., b, pail, 1 8¢ Isfaction uatunive Ariingion: ROOFING BY KOONS cnll, tell you what is needed— the cost will be. Phone Main 938, KOONS ROOFING 1422 Fst. n.w. CoM Phone Main 938, To Buyers of Printing Our Million-Dollar Pfinting Plant is at your service. The National Capxtal Press 210-1212 D St. Reputation Built on Merit —Roof repairing is our specialty. Call on us at sny time you have roof troubles. Roofing 1121 5th st. n.w. IRONCL Company. Phone M. 14. NEED PRINTING? equipment and loca- High grade, 17. Our experience, tion are all in your favor. but not high priced. BYRON S. ADAMS, Famen, Nokol AutomaticOil Burners —_rebullt and sold by the authorized dis- tributor under Year's guarantee at great s ing. Only limited number, so act quickly. Mutual_Service, Inc., 1411 New York ave. Main 8888. "~ Metal Weatherstripping? . Phone the “ACME," Col. 4753. 4823 14th St. N.W. Estimates Free, ot 1t. EFFORT T0 SAVE HELIUM PLANNED Cabinet Members to Urge Appropriation to Produce and Conserve Gas. BY FRED S. Shenandoah’s triumphs in ng and re-crossing the country the a’r have strengthened the EOVernment's purpose to establish great hellum ga reserves. The United States possesses a practical monopoly of the world's helium sup- PIy. In casc of war it would in a senso insure the American Army and Navy command of the air. For the purposes of peace it provides Amer- lean private enternrise with incom- parable opportunities for the develop- jment of commercial wtion b means of dirigible ighter-than- air” ships. The secretaries of the War and Navy shortly will recommending to Pr the approval, as an mearure, of a bill appropriating roundly 00,000 for helium gus Durpos, Such a project had the upport of President Harding. on it were held in Decem- before the House commit- © lands, but the commit- . ol that ac no jurisdietion. The. propotition has jmeantime been revived at the In- terior Department and, with pre ntial approval, will be subm the Sixt ceighth Congresa in d form Shenandoah's fine 2 68 fightswint e ns A pi and back and north into New siand, a gross distance of miles in 101 Tours ‘in the air out the sugrestion of a m fbeen an effective demon helium’s value as aid navigation Would Establivh Rescrve, The proposed legislation main purposes: The acqu the government of a h, field for the future needs of the Army vy and the provision of plants production and repurification helium for the use of the Army. | and other government services as_flelds in the neighborhood of Fort Worth, Tex., are the region in which, if the helfum bill is enacted the ‘s activi mainly | The general trend ing gases Is from T in the southwest, through Oklahon up through Ohio. southern through Pennsyl and taking in Wes tucky and Indiana helium outside of that commercial gas is virtually t belt. X in the whole world is helium worth talking s @ bit in the provin and some quan- cro in Interior, join in sident Coolidge administration tion of to aerial | tr i has two rement for | fum erve of Calgary ty in Tus Might Had the ( lium reserve es, the whole war might ha nly their hydrogen- flu.u and th f vulnerabl with non-in thus proof ag nition from anti have done British and Fren fighting lines. , then rd Bishop chemist of the bu- a of min com- mittes on public lands that if nece sary in time of war, America easily could up pla oukh to k oot or 2| shenandoabs” in the air filled with helium for four or five years. No one could rival us in that sphere. The United States was abut to ship 00 cubfc feet of hellum gas to France for war use when the armi- stice came along. We had already supplied some to Britain and France for experimental purposes. Helium is needed in enormous quanti- dirigibles of the Shenandoah's That leviathan of the clouds contains 0,000 cubic feet Might Lease Gas. During,the past year highly factory _experiments at the N plant near Fort Worth developed processes for cheap pro- duction of helium. At present there is a profligate waste of the gas—es timated at 500,000.000 cubc” feet authoriti ay enough every day to fill a ship of the Shenandoah’s size. The government’s chemists and scientists have been hard at work on ways and means to conserve e e foot of helium available. At the Navy planl heltum is extracted out of the currently used for the city of Fnrt Worth’s supply. The revized bill to be presented to Congress will put upon the Interior Department the responsibility for re- search in connection with improve- ment of processes, as well as for actual production of helium for cur- rent supply of all government serv- ices. The legislation also provides for the necessities of commercial aviation, such as the Goodrich Com- pany at Akron, which recently ac- quired all Zeppelin rights for Amer- ica, purposes promotingk. If at any time the government helium plants have on hand more gas than the federal services need the Secretary of the Interior will be empowered to les helium, under regul approved by the President, to pri corporations f in commerc ships. These corporations can store the helium thus obtained and return it to the government in case of need. About 34,000,000 of the contemplated £5,000,000 appropriation would be for conservation of helium-gas lands and about $1,000,000 for plants, processes and research. (Copyright, DR. AND MME. JEZEQUEL GUESTS AT LUNCHEON Dr. and Mme. Jules Jezequel of | Paris, France, were guests at an in- formal iuncheon glven in the Cosmos Club yesterday by Dr. E. O. Watson, secretary of the Federal Council of Churches. Other guests were Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Radcliffe, vice chairman of the Wakhington committee of the Federal Council of Churches, Dr. and Mrs. George M. Diffenderfer and Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Darby, president and executive secretary of the Washing- ton Federation of Churches. Dr. and Mme. Jezequel are on a tour of the United States under the auspices of the World Alliance for International Friendship Through the Churches, visiting the larger cities of the east. He is secretary of the Huguenot Church Union of France and treasurer of the Protestant School of Theology in Paris. His wife has been interested In movements in be- half of temperance, woman's suf- frage and peace for a number of years. Dr. Jezequel through the 1923.) was a _chaplain entire period of the war and received the decoration of the Legion of Honor. They paid thelr re- spects to ex-President Wilson during the morning and visited Mount Ver- i Senator | sugs ? C., SATURD.Y, TAKES LP POSTION ON FRINGE OF CROWD AND WAITS FOR SOMETHING TO HAPPEN MIDT RECCVERING FROM THE PASSAGE OF LARGE PARTY TRIES 0 TIND OUT HOV OPPONENTS MEAN - WHILE SCORED Q POINTS UTRS WILLAHS CHEERS AS BALL ON SCOREBOARD SUDDEN- LY MOVES TROM IELD T OPPON- ENTS 2 YARD LINE TOR TWENTY MIN- UTES NOTHING WHAT- EVER. HAPPENS, EX- CEPT THAT HIS HANDS AM\CUNCER'R AND FEET GET COLDER LS OUT WITH NOVEMBER 24, 1923. s WATCHING THE BIG 112 —GAmE ox A sconzsoann—BY Gluyas Williams l BALL EVIDENTLY MADE AFTER HALF AN AY THAS ?OlNT LARGE A MISTAKE FOR IT IM- HOUR BALL GETS PARTV DECIDES HE'S MEDIATELY MOVES DOWN DOWN T TIVE T00 COLD AND HAD TIELD ASAIN, BACK TO YARD LINE BETTER GO HOME 25 YARD LINE, FINALLY COMING TO REST ONCE MORE AT MIDFIELD THEN BALL SUDDENL JERKS DOWN TO L YARD LINE, AM) FINNOUNCER S (ORE O UPSV PRESHMEN V5. Po P AT END OF TIiRST PERICD 1S NOTHING - NOTHINC ANNOUNCER RET: AMD GROANS THROUGH CROWD TILL H. GETS POCKETED WITH NO HOPE OF MEGAPHONE McClure Newspaper Syndicate TAX CUT IS TOPIC AMONG SENATORS “Too Early for Details, How-| ever,” Say Lodge and Other Leaders. | a Senator and othe ators have a powerful voice in the councils declared yesterday one in favor of swever, made Because it is practice for ate in the u“\ . that it will subject for to 1as “Too tax reduction,’ n er, early yet of dge repub! who party Positive decl reduction was Lod most inv legislation to origi these senators point out a time b riously a riable loni action. Tax reduction much of an issue cussions amons of the re ing hopefulls King ire has the inf ators, it ir some | t for out of a isan | algng the seneral lincs and 5 are Democrats for Plan. i republican, Utah, ‘ who undd dly will be chalrmw of the powerful finance ed attention to the influential democrats for the Mellon program, and | ed his belief that a number hers will support it | bomus, Sons ! d that'such a measur a. 5 expresses it at the expen rduction. He | is not convinced that there can be any material cut in the national tax | bill if the bonus but the | tion ad ¥ some bonus Geates that ieither measure n acrificed for the other appe be gaining ground at both ends the Capitol Curtix Optimistic. tor Curtis of Kansas, the publican whii. is one of those who believa the bonus can b passe and the tax bill cut by some § 000,000 at the same time. He sas there seems to be a general in pression that the enactment of bonus bill will medn the immediate out of the federal Treasury | illions _of dollars, whereas » actual cost for the first vear of | plan. proposed in the last| bonus bill, would be only $80,000,000. SHOW ALASKAN BEARS | FEASTING UPON FISH: Films Feature Lecture Before Geo- graphic Society by Harold McCracken. No propaganda to “eat more fish" is needed among the big brown bears | of the Alaskan peninsula; they con- sume about 100 pounds of fresh sal- mon a day while their eating season is in full swing, according to Harold McCracken, who lectured last eve- | ning before members of the National Geographic Society at the New sonic Temple. Mr._McCracken WHEN YOU THINK oof Buinting, Paporhanging and Decorat- fng think of Taylor. #% Estimates made on request HARRY W. TAYLOR CO. PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING 2333 18th St. N.W. Tel.” Col. 1077 soldier: convin: he p ad be to of S w showed some re-? In the new Hupmobile you are “assured of still longer life, non in the afternoon. OFFICERS NOMINATED. Gen. Nelson A. Miles Camp, No. 1, United Spanish War Veterans, at a meeting in Odd Fellows’ Hall last evening nominated the following of- ficers: Commander, Arthur Ber- still more re- liable still lower costs. service, STERRETT & FLEMING, INO. Champlain 8t. and thiaum; senior vice commander, J. M. ‘Watts; junior vice commander, John | McDonald" Ind Frank Parrish; officer of the day, P. B. Shomette, Jerry Cos- tello and M. D. Mettee; officer of the guard, Robert E. Culin, and trustee, C._A. Belknap. Pomeroy P. Clark was elected to membership. Columbia 5050 BRANCH SALESROOM 1223 Conn. Ave. the 1 m; Dl be th w u ha known peninsular t ires details | tions in the arkable motion ming down from to meet the mon_in have little ch. Th the fish each oth s meal wi lecturs rith country 1e with a sun, unting them wit thrilling sport. Th pon the eng; mate shown 1d turned his ¢ tures of the ir hibernating oming hordes the spring. The trouble making y amble into a lite the s eir here heir started er hunti yut that he camera isfactory wers upon & big) found your i sashes shmled ycur coal this morning? nd ears als rown little en- mera upon the kimos whil aged in their folk < are the results With a coal fur- nace, carrying ashes and shov- eling coal are a perpetual job for some one. If you do it it’s dirty. If a janitor does it it’s costly. The Nokol heat- ed home mean- while gets auto- matic heat, with- out either dirt or labor. And it’s evener heat than any janitor could give. st five al round of the cresting activities ' FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Service Charge Never Over 31.00 BEST BUY IN Chevy Chase, D. C. Owner having purc) will dispose of low pric can ger house, at_very to purchaser who ke & payment detached Duteh style house with each side L 70 on $luntington Street ive living room A ) with open pantry and kitenen on or: three bedrooms and full tiled bath and large closets on second floor. (Cellar wunder entire house. with servants' toflet and andry trays. A two-car garage to match hou: The price is only 500. and owner will allow discount from this pr to purchaser ke a cash payment [mEarroRa’S Washington Board 700 Nokol Burners In Washington™ Mutual Service, Inc. Now. “over 21 a of $10.0: Mcxssvmmcos 1415 Eye St of Automatis Oll Hosting for Homee Bonded by the Fidelity and Casualty Company Members Re: marionettes are rigid below the | waist, the movements being confined | to_simple ones of the head and arms. Miss Sewall read the ballads, etc., standing in front of the draperies MARIONETTES HERE FOR GOUCHER FUND to 1,::--: side of "t“..“"h d lrnlnla}\ur» Rachel Sewall Gives Recital at; = : : ‘ The production was given under | auspices of the Goucher Alumnae Ambassador Theater for College Campaign. LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTE Club of Washington. AD CLUB TO HEAR TALK BY MAGNUS JOHNSON Senator Magnus Johnson of Minne- the benefit of the Goucher College | sota is scheduled to deliver an address | endowment fund. | at 12:20 o'clock on the afyernoon of No- A program of ballads, scencs from | vember 28 at the City ?luh before the ents from the cla: hington Adver: ng Ciub. An and Greek tragediey, | fumouncement by the chun savs tat selections and musical pan- | o advertioe oot SBout oy and ballets offered an after-| “A few s diversl and clever enter- | Club’ =on Rachel Sewall was heard in recital with her marionettes yesterday after- | noon at the Ambassador Theater for | cs, operatic tomime noon of tainment Originalitly was combined with ar- tistry in the entire program, which | was witnessed with enthuslasm by u | iudience. The marionettes itifully costumed nikins are in the natura proportions of the human figur tal wuppets being used for serious cetions. s self. e months ago,” cement, “Magnus Joh actically unheard of na- and his abillty as a whirl- ampaigner remal. unher- His m.rv\lwlmn ietory in says the d HOTEL INN F e Teain S150.9108 604-610 9th St. N.W. weekly: $10.50 rooms, hower and_lavatory, $10 om, 50 per cent more. Rooms Like Mot Istory aa one of ¢ s of world histo; ashington Advertisi tending a general invitation public to be present at Po- Lo | _$7 rooms, this | with toilef ror more the DUNIGAN Best Location Highest Elevation Excellent View Southern Exposure Paved Alleys EXHIBIT HOUSE 209 Varnum St.N.W. Off of Grant Circle These houses are exceptional values and are wider and larger than the average six-room house. Open and Lighted Daily and Sunday Until 9 P.M. It Will Pay You to See Them at Once TERMS ARE SATISFACTORILY ARRANGED Take 16th St. Bus to Grant Circle, or 9th St. Car Marked Soldiers’ Home to 3rd St, D. J. DUNIGAN 1319 New York Ave. Main 1267 You Can MOVG Right In as soon as you make selection of your Apartment. Fondon WHall Thirteenth at M St. N'W. is ready for occupancy. You'll find in London Hall the answer to every want and need you have had in connection with Apartment residence. A pleasant downtown location—and here it is—not five minutes from F Street. Apartments of small size—and here they are. But so practically planned and equipped that every housekeeping convenience and home-making comfort is provided—in an ‘environment «that is truly luxurious. Beautiful Living-room—that contains a Wall Bed con- cealed behind a handsome panel. Large Dressing-room— perfectly appointed Bath—and Kitchenette with gas range, dresser, refrigerator, etc. All the finishings—shades, draperies and woodwork are in harmonious tones. There will be maintained twent and switchboard service. The building is thoroughly fireproof—the entrance lobby furnished wnh superb taste—and the management is under our personal supervision. Open for inspection—day and evening. Boss and Phelps The Home of Homes Member Washington Real Estate Board 1417 K Street Phone Main 4340 four-hour elevator We Are Building a City Right in the Exclusive Northwest Homes here under our present program will he built to sell in price up to $12,000 and $15,000. The limited number now under construction are, as RESULTS PROVE, remarkable homes which vou can now buy from $7,950 to $9,000. Of the 102 homes under construction all are sold that are finished. Nowhere. have homes met with such great public approval as here. WHY PUT OFF GO SEE EITH AT 36th and R Sts. N.W. (Right at the Famous Western High School) TO INSPECT By auto, drive across the Q) Street bridge, turn north one block to R street and drive due west to 36th street (right next the Western High School). Or take P street car to 35th street and walk north to R street, or Wisconsin avenue car to R street and walk west to 36th strect. HANNON- & LUCH Realtors OWNERS AND BUILDERS

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