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So he died for his faith. That is fine, More than most of us do. But say, can vou add to that line That he lnul for it 1o An his death he bore witn As a martyr to the truth. ife do the same iy the past, ! “rom the days of his h? Jv is casy to die. Men k For a wish or a whim— From bravado or passion or pride, Was it harder for him? But to live—every day 1o live ot 1 All the truth that he dreamt, i While his friends met his conduct with doubt i Durkee and Scott Submit Reports! And the world with contempt. Was it thus that he plodded ahead, Never turnin ide Then we'll taik of the life that he lived, y Never mind how he dicd. “Life and Death, Ernest Crosby. Woodrow Wilson lived and died for his ideal. \merican_Tec_Company, \ SCHOOL BGOKS New and Used PEARLMAN’S SHOP 933 G Street Only| { WHEN YOU THINK —of Painting, Paperhas and Do ing think of‘T lw et i &7 Estimates made on zequest. HARRY W. TAYLOR CO, PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING 2333 18th St. N.W. Tel. Col. 1077 Different CHARACTER HOMES 14th Street Terrace At 1th and Ingraham Sts. N.W'. Over 200 Already Sold Easy Terms Our New English Hali Timbered Brick Semi-detached Ilomes, the ones with 4 master bedrooms and man's clubroom, the last word in modern, Home designing and building: Very advantageous pur- chases enable us to sell these homes at prices which no one attempts. to duplicate. They are unusual enough to take time to see NOW. Our Homes Here Don't Stay Unsold Long Prices $12,000 to $18,500 WHY PAY MORE .TO INSPECT e any 14th Street car best_serviee in Washing- to lnograham _Street, or out 16th Street 'and through Colorado Avenue. HANNON - & LUCH Reaitors Ouwners and Builders SPECIAL NOTICES. 0 | row morning at 11 o'clock, at the 2 L LOTS TO A l\'rnun-mwr. ER COMPANY, INC., MAIN 6433, ROOF TROUBLE Call Main 760 Grafton & Son, Inc. Wash. Loan ard Trust Bldg. Main 760. Jicating snd _Roofing_Ex) for 35 Y ROOF WORK —of any nature promptly and capably looked after by practical roofers. | ROOFING 119 3rd St. 8.W. Emma H. . Eichelberger - Chiropractor Graduste National College ot Chicago. 440 Riode Isiand Ave, N.W. Ditice Hours: 1 £ 8 p 5 one, Erank. 1401 A Your Home' opointment. * EXPERT WATCH AND JEWELRY 'REPAIRING 0D SER! LORENZ fl'-:WELRY co. Our Prmtmg —has made 8 legion of satisfied cus. tomers, The Na&onal Capital Press iy 0-1212 D 8t. N.W. ‘To Simplify Your Selling' Problems USE ADAMS PRINTI 11GH GRADE. BUT NoT HIGN PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, zaumes, Roof Repairing Our expert roofers are always available, Just give us a ring. JRONCLAD i 8 21 5t N, 'lione Malu 14, !LONG PROMINENT IN CITY |presented former Justice Stanton J. isity BOOK | i Mr. GOLD-INLAID CANE IS GIVEN TO PEELLE Former Justice Honorea by Howard University Trustees for Twenty- Year Service. for Half Year at Meeting. A gold inlaid solid ebony cane was Peelle to commemorate his twenty vears of service as a member of the. hoard of trustees of Howard Univer- at the semi-annual meeting of she board Tuesday. The presentation was made by Dr. Michel O. Dumas. chairman of ‘the board, and Assistant cretary of the Navy Roosevelt, con- stituting a special committee of the |board. Nears Eighty-first Birthday. Justice Peelle, in addition to the he has rendered Howard University for a number of years has occupied an import e in the business and civic life of Washington. He serve ustice of the Court of Claims, was & professor at B ¢ School for Washington of number of vears. He will be eighty- one years oid on his next birthday. Among those now serving on the rd of trustees of Howard Univer- Cl . Brown, chair- en, Conn.: Dr. Albert Cambridigg, Mass.; r-rl)llrl\" l)r. Charles Bushnell |Gen. John 1 Tair Thiladelp Col. Theodore Roos: )l O. Dumas, I Durkee, Andrew F. Hilye Justice Stanton J. Peell 1G."B. Pierce, Dr, F. J Me Rudolph and Thomas Reports Are Submitted. Dr. J. Stanley DurKee, president, d Dr. Emmett J. Scott, secretary d treasurer, submitted reports vering the activities of the univer- v for the first half of the fiscal r. A number of valuable recom- {mendations _were submitted by the president of the university looking to the further expansion and develop- Iment of the university. Dr. - sccretary and treasurer. gav iled report of the financi Walker. v $45 . bringing ts of the niversity up to | SEEK TO ELIMINATE GRADE CROSSINGS A bill calling for the expenditure of $582.000 for the elimination of five | railroad grade crossings was sent to the budget bureau for approval by the Commissioners yesterday after- noon. If sanctioned by the bureau, it will be transmitted to Congress. The measure was drafted following the accident of last October, in which three persons were killed when an automobile and a train collided on the Lamond crossing. The crossings to. be replaced either by viaducts or bridges, and the ap- Varnum street. at Terra 00: Michigan avenue at $180,563, and__Quarlee street at Kenilworth, $202,700. The bill provides that the railroad companies shall pay half the cost of that portion of grading and construc- tion within their rights of way. A i NEWELL B. CRAIN DIES; SERVED IN.WORLD WAR Newell B. Crain, assistant examiner of the United States patent office and veteran of the world war, died at Walter Reed Hospital vesterday after an_illness of more than'a month. Born in Nacona, Tex., June §, 1831, “rain came to Washington in his youth. He joined the District naval militia and was transferred to Ist Com- v, District of Columbia Coast Ar- Later he attended the first training camp at Fort Myer in 1917, and was graduated with the rank of lieutenant. He was promoted to be captain and commanded Battery | D. ith Army Artillery Battalion, in France. Mr. Crain was an_alumnus of George Washington University. He was No. 22, American Legion. 1 The deceased is survl\.(fl b)’ his father and mother, Dr. and Mrs. N. W. oF Nacona, 'Tex., and wite, Mrs. Louise Moore Crain. Funeral services will be held tomor- i dence of Thomas P. Healy, 11 Spring street, Chevy Chase, Md. Rev. Dr. ‘Abott of the Episcopal Church of Interment will be in Arling- ; cemetery with military C. S. ficiating. ton national honors. MRS. S. H. MANDLER DIES. Mrs. Eva A. Mandler, forty-eight years old, a member of the Order of the Eastern Star and the wife of S. H. Mandler, real estate man of this city, died at her home in Berwyn, Md., Tuesday. Funeral services are being conduct- ed at the McKendree Methodist Epis- copal Church this afternoon. _Rev. Charles A. Shreve, pastor of the church, is officiating. \Interment will be in the Rock Creek cemetery. Mrs. Mandler was the daughter of the late S. A. Terry, well known in this city for many years. She had been a lifelong resident of Washing- in Eastern Star and church circles. She is survived by a daughter, Miss Alice Elizabeth Mandler; a son, Ed- ward A. Mandler, and a brother, George E. Terry. FLAT TIRE? | . MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Servies Charge Never Over 8180 FOR RENT 1416 K St. N.W. Approximately 1,900 Sq. Ft. Of office space on one floor. Consisting of 9 modemn offices with all latest im- provements. Will rent to one tenant. ONLY $200.00 Month Morris Cafritz Company, Inc. 1416 K St. N.W. Main 617 % dau:hlp a member of Cooley-McCullough Post, || Crain | |} ton and vicinity and was well known || THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SUBURBAN HEIGHTS— (5= WAVES A CHEERY' GooDNBAT AND ASSURES THEM THEY'VE GOT PLENTY OF TIME TO CATCH TRAIN IF THEV HURRY MRS. MURDOCK JUST WANTS THE RIGHT TIME BECAUSE HER WATCH AND ALFRED'S DISAGREE AND WHAT TIMC DID HE SAY THE T‘QA\N WENT ) ~ FANT SHOUTS REQUEST THEM TO RAISE \WINDOW. MRS M. HAS MISSED A PiN - HASN'T TIME TO COME BACK-IF FIND \T WILL THEY MAIL IT TD HER. DRESSING PHONE RINGS SPEEDING THE G GUESTS, Ay SINKS GROANING AGRINST DOOR, GOOD LANDS' HE THOUGHT THEY'D NEVER. GET THOSE PEOPLE STARTED < JTARTS THEM OFF ONCE MORE, . AND DESCENDS TD FURNACE. MID- WAV HEARS SCURRY OF VEET ABOVE TELL THAT THE WORSY 15 / OVER AND START POR BED THEY AT CRIMCAL MOMENT OF UN- *|CAVALRY VETERAN TO BE BURIED HERE dol. Joseph Garrard Commander of Fort Myer for Three Years. Military honors will mark the| burial in the Arlington national ceme- tery, Saturday afterncon at 3 o'clock, of the body of Col. Joseph Garrard retired cavalry officer, who died San Antonio, Tex., last Monday. He commanded the post at Fort Myer, Va., from February, 1910, to Novem- ber, 1913. Col. Garrard was from Kentucky and was graduated from the Milita Academy “in June, 1 He served with the 4th Artillery at western posts for about thirteen years. In February, 1886, he the 9th Cavalry re, KllnPnl in severa labor strikes in ved with that Montana in He atter- wa 14th Ca for several s, including the nnnml of Cuban pacification. Retired for age in April, 1914, served since that date as comman. of the disciplinary barracks at S Francisco and as professor of mili- | tary science at the high school, Paso, Tex. He is survived bis wife and two M er, wife of Maj. V. S. Foster, ca . and Mrs, Droi- un;:nr. wife of Maj. Z. L. Drollinger | of Bosmn SUES FOR MAINTENANCE, ALLEGING DESERTION; | Mrs. Audrey Leigh Evans today filed suit for maintenance in the Dis- | trict Supreme Court against her hus- band, Ralph Evans, said to be secre- tary to Representative Hull of lowa. She charges desertion and non-sup- port. They were married at Fairfax Court House, Va., January 13, 1923, and the wife says her husband left her l.;sn October. Evans has a salary of $2 month, the wife tells the court, and also makes additional money writing for | newspapers. She asks suitable alimony. Attorneys Wampler & Lynch appear for the Navy Homes Men of the service must get contact in ‘Washington to Pro- gress. ‘What better medi- um could there be for this than an Archi- tecturally correct .E__i JEITH HOME At 36th and R Sts. N.W. Just the sort of Home that will al- ways have a ready market when Yyou leave. Located in a re- stricted up North- west residential com- munity. W ashington’s Educational Center Price Now 88,160 TO INSPECT By anto—Drive across the Street_Bridge, turn north - 55" Street and Btreet, or Wisconsin Ave- B_Btreet and nve car walk west to 36th Street. {310 040 NETTED BY BALL 'FOR CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL Treasurer Bepons Success of An- nual Event Given at Wil- lard January 4. Mrs. Eldridge Jordan, who served as treasurer for the annual charity | DRI for, the benefit af the Chidren's ]l\)\l”l.fl given ai 4he Januzry 4, announced today HIH‘I!O was raised by this entertain- ment and will be devoted t ing on the work of the org: | “The ball was perhaps brilliant f the xeason, i President and Mrs. Coolidge tendunce. The committee for the charity ball {included Mrs. Henry Leonard, chair- M ridge Jordan, Mrs, Har- Mrs. Cary T. Grayson, Frank Hight and Mrs, | Westeoit. in at- Probably the oldest postmistress in | transferred tof the U nited States in length of service | is believed to have commercial pos- Mr: 1 cha 1V, for f | | February 7 sell them. MARKED JUST DISCOVERED SHE'S GOT ON ONE OF HIS WIFE'S OVERSHOES AND WHAT HAD SHE BETTER DO ABOUT It Willard on | that | > | Ale Horace | HEARS A FRANTIC HALLOO FROM SIDEWALK AND UN= LOCKS AND UNBOLTS DOOR- ~ MR. MURDOCK. HAS JUST RUN BACK FOR HIS WIFE'S UMBREL- LA ‘WHICH SHE LEFT IN ‘CONSPIC* AND VERY SHARP RING OF DOORBELL UOUS PLACE SO's Rmcfilgm 5 = = RS MURDOCK AT THE STATION HAS BISHOP G. C. HUNTING IS CLAIMED BY DEATH uate of Alexandria Seminary. Widow a Washingtonian. Word was received in this city today of the death in Reno, Nev., yesterday, of the Rt. Rev. George Coolidge Hunt- ing, vor twenty-five years. Hunting was native of chusetts, and a graduate of the Virginia Theological Seminary, xandria, Va. He is survived by his wife, who was | formerly Miss Mary G. Pullman of this |city. She has a brother, E. H. Pullman and three sisters, Miss Katie M. Pull- man, Mrs. E. R. Anderson and Mrs. E. B. Donaldson, living I hington. Bishop Hunting | President Coolidge. “Wool"” obtained from S sibilities. During the war in Europe y.|it was woven into cloth from which | garments were made. 1319-1321 F Street STORE NEWS price. $40, $50, 21 | j 1 Episcopal Prelate in Nevada Grad-| Episcopal Bishop of Nevada for | near | was 4 cousin of | moyed dogs | THURSDAY, . FEBRUARY .7, ‘i92l.' —r o | REPUBLICAN GLUBS 1O MEET TONIGHT Birthday and Other Matters Wi Be Discussed. | The executive committee of the League of Republican State Clubs of the District of Columbia will meet | tonight in the City Club. i T. Lincoln Townsend will report on | Inroxreun in increasing the league's | | membership. Edgar C. Snyder, presi- dent, wHl outline tentative plans) If(‘rmulnt?d for the 1924 campaign.< Downtown campaign headquarters will be discussed. Mrs. James Carroll Frazer and Mrs. Harry Wardman. vice presidents, will | tell of interesting women in the Dis- | trict in republicanism. There will be a meeting of the | colored republican clubs of the Dis- | trict _tonight at Israel Church, 1st and B streets southwest. The colored republicans will meet at the .Cleve- land School, 8th and T streets, Tues- day night, to celebrate the birthday anniversary of Abraham Lincoln. MAN FREEZES TO DEATH. ST. LOUIS, Mo.. February 7. middie-aged man was frozen to death yesterday in the severe cold which | has gripped this city for the last two Cards lmsued to F. L. Piver in ductors Union were found in the St pock- ets. ———————— Clinical tests haVe proved that Zonite is highly effective in cases of nasal catarrh when used in dilution as a nasal spray. Itseffect is to cleanse the mucous mem- brane and reduce abnormal dis- charges, thus clearing the nasal passages. Note: Atomizer fittings must be of hard rubber. 8 AM. to 6 P.M. “Fashion Park” and “Stratford” Clothes These Bargains 4 —are NOT “odd lots” ; ’ lines of “broken sizes” You have selection from huge stocks that are complete in styles and sizes. Our man- ufacturers have a terrible surplus. They’re furnishing duplicates of the best values we’ve had through the season just as fast as we can Just look at the prices! And-we’ll guar- antee the quality of every garment—guar- antee it to show the full worth of its $60 OVERCOATS T $4() suits are $93 S50 suits are 529 $G() suits are $34 $4() Tuxedo.sits. now $90) All $5 Hats reduced to $2.50 All $7 Hats reduced to $3.50 , i\ You say you buy tobacco on its taste— Velvet tastes right because it’s made from the best Kentucky Burley tobacco that money can buy—and because e ‘03 bit of it is slowly and thoroughly-aged in w That’s why you'll find aged in wood Velvet 80 m;old;l and fine flavored. Remember—aged in w Licorrr & Myena Tomaceo Co. Don’t Be Fooled We've had a wonderful winter—one that has laid light hand upon roof conditions. But you know this month and next are capable of making up for it. So take oppor- tunity while you can—and let us see that everything is snug and tight. If it is, all right. If it isn’t, we'll report what’s needed —and what it’ll cost to put everything in proper condi- tion—the Rose way—which is not onl; the sure way— but the reasonable way from an expense point of view. 2120-22 Georgia Avenue Phone North 2044 SILOTI Master-Pianist Piays at the National Theater today Owners of the Reproducing DH(LAI't PIANO Can hear Siloti play for them on their Duo-Art every day in the ycor. Siloti, like many of the great pianists, records his playing exclusively for the Duo-Art. 0-J DeMoLL RO S S ' DEMOLLPIANO (0. Washington's AEOLIAN HALL ~ Tiselfth and G Streets MEN’S WEAR For Immediate Clearance All Suits ¥ - Off All Stein-Bloch Suits Included! $35 Suits Now $23:33 $40- Suits - .Now $26:57 $45 Suits .Now $30.00 Now $33.33 .Now $36.67 .Now $40.00 -Now $#43:33 .Now s (DRES¢ CLOTHES EXCEPTED) Alterations at Cost™ OVERCOATS in two groups Formerly $45 to $65 Formerly $70 to $95 35 | ~ %55 All Stein-Bloch and English Overcoats Included SIDNEY WEST (INCORPORATED) 14th and G Streets ! $50 Suits $55 Suits $60 Suits $65 Suits $70 Suits 67 STEIN-BLOCH CLOTHES