Evening Star Newspaper, April 8, 1924, Page 3

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WAY BUDGET SAV Speaking Trip Will Give Cities Proof of Economies—Idea Now “Catching.” BY FREDERICK WILLIAM WILE tien, Herbert M. Lord, director of the budget, has started out upon a month's speaking tour, in the course ©f which he will tell the country how Uncle Sam has learned to save. This week en. Lord will talk ton, New York and Cambridge. Mass. and later on in Buffalo, Springfield, Mass., and Cleveland. < At Cleveland his audience will be the annual convention of the United States Chamber of Commerce. Every- where Gen. Lord will spread the gos- vel of the budget. He will show how the forty-threc “spending divisions™ of the TUnited States government— ien executive departments and thirty three more or less independent unit. ~have either willingly or unwillingly art of cconomy. v to be conta- 3 o Tord, “But’ It now cconomy that IS Jederal authorities cverywhere are watching the pennics, The dollars Wwill take care of themselves" sen. lord has a fascinating story 10 FeTi the peopic abont the practs workings of the budget system, which is not yet thre vears old. Tnited States si the war has been lously advising certain “militaris- to balance their of fact, America what she governments dgets. Asa m: been practicing preaches only since 1921, Up to that time. for more than a century, government financing in this country was conducted on altogether casual lines. Lord wants to show. tia ‘ve broken L ppy-go-lucky ain’ that iramount issue now before the peo- e-is dependent mainly, if not ex- vely ture Efiect of New Laws. al in the direc tren as been made. would an inevitable such sures, however postal pay sum plan em. He will ex- 3 of T there it be me; i liberali her. at the ork out at of $355.- tional sur- for 1924 would be Not only that, but. experts, tax dly be feasible. tor now has seven directors, known working with country to leep cxpense The. als who serve as Gen. | its, in a purely “side | The “area co-ordi- | ngland, for example, in the Navy, sta- uction The budgy deputy budget “area co-ord him all over the down’ government ure federal offi Lord’s adjut issue” capacity. 4 comni tioned at Boston. In addition to Lord has organized scven budget a_co-ordinator throughout th. called ““federal basiness consisting of | government officials of all kinds he has leagued together for team-wonk in Bos- | ‘catching.’ | The | ntirely with that | duction of taxation—the | on reduction of federal ex- rants e ! 1ol | The Fun Shop| Conducted by Maxson Foxhall Judell BY ROY FARRELL GREENE. One corner of her girlish heart she | yielded first to me, And halted there, because the rest Wwas occupied, you see, By tenants who were Kin t& her ! who, as you'll divine, [ 2 | Through’ having dwelt there many i years, had stronger claims than 1 mine. * {T quite forget which one it was my | spread of love displaced: | If Cousin John's or Uncle Will's heart | lodgings were effaced; ‘Ye( soon 1 found the quarters cramp- | ed, and with a wooer's art T coaxed an added portion to that cor- ner of her heart. I The Corner of a Heart. and . the ripple of her laugh When she avowed: “Your corner's grown till now much more than half { My heart you're occupying, dear. You well know what that means— That all the other tenants now are i crowded like sardines!" {*Well, more of them will have to " ove!” with candor I avowed, } “While those whom you select to sta ! must still more closely crowd And move they did (clear out at last) | which shows the greedy part {A man will play if he's allowed one i corner in a heart! The Stories That Aren’t Printed. “If you refuse me" vore, ety use me" he swore, “l She refused him. And, sixty vears later, he died. —Jean Benedict. Spirit photography Cause one cannot expect to obtain satisfactory results in this direction without entering into the spirit of the thing. The Compleat Golfer, or Tales From Bunkerland. i BY NEWMAN LEVY, } In the manner of— {HENRY WADSWORTH i LOW. {1 shot u ball into the air: It fell to earth, 1 know not where. I said some things that weren't nice. The ball was new—1I'd used it twice. LONGFEL- | Long, long afterward, in the rain, |1 lost anothdr ball again, And as I cursed. there at the 3y cad@y sold them back to n LIEUTENANT GITZ RICE. Keep your head down, Fritzy boy: IKeep Your head down, Fritzy boy. Today at three, on the thirteenth tee, I saw you, I saw you. you spoil every shot that one fault you've got. You want to be & golfer, take a tip from me, Keep your head down, Fritzy boy. L) . Stupid people are always refresh- ing. They are su_delightfully igno- rant about what they don't know. Fablegram. (With a bow to Aesop.) By ARTHUR N. KOBER. A Crow flew to u Cellar and was | ready to Pass away from want of a The transfer was arranged, and, oh, | i 50 called be- | TH BWVIEN JEWS IN RUMANIA Martial Law Declared | Bucharest After “Anti- { Semitic Outrages. in | By the Associated Press. | BUCHAREST, April 8 (Jewlish Tele- i graphic Agency).—Martial law has been declared by the government as a result of the continued anti-Jewish outrages. Several regiments of troops were called to ‘ald the police in maintaining order and a clash at the university between the soldiers {and anti-Semitic students ended in the enforced evacuation of the stu- | dents. 3 | The disturbances started about ten | days ago in conneotion with the trial {of eight Rumanian students charged | with conspiring to klll several cab- jinet ministers and prominent Jews. The eight 6tudents were later | acquitted. { CZERNOWITZ, Rumania, { (Jewish Telegraphic Azency). Jewish disturbances have been cor j tinvous since Thursday. Theaters, cafes and restaurants have been in- vaded, windows smashed and Jewish Zuests and passersby attacked the Bolice, with the assistance of & Eroup Of Jewish students, are gradually re- ! storing order. HATRED RUNS HIGH. | il G | Rumanians Fear Intellectual Dom- ination by Hebrews. ago Daily News. | | PARIS, April S.—Anti-Jewish oute breaks occurring recently in the prin- | cipal citles of Rumania, although they cannot be described as pogroms, are ; of a serious character. ! Rumanians never were friendly to | | the Jews, and until signature of the | peace treaty in 1919 the latter had no political rights. The fact that R mania_was forced to give Rumanian- horn Jews the same rights as Chris- ti: Rumanians never was received avorably by the government or the bulk of the population, and even to- | day, in spite of treaties. it is almost impoesible for a Jew to obtain a com- ! mission in the army or be called to the bench unless he embraces the Christian religion. Started in 192 Anti-Tewish persecution started in 25, when Christian students ob- {jected to Jewish medical students ! being allowed to continue their stud- lies unless Jewish corpses also were {brought into the dissecting room which had not happened previousl {it being against preseriptions of the | Hebrew religion. Acts of hooliganism occurred in {all Roumanian universities without {the authortities taking any serious measures against the ~Roumanian offenders: Later Christian students NG ST, SOLDERS PROFITY | memmix ot o e e Maj. Ge;. Harbord, However, De- nies Mystic Letters Mean “Blow } By the Associated Press. cadasa UL AEARS THE TRAIN WHISTLE WON DERS WHETHER TO LET HIS NEWS- PAPER GO, OR TO LET THE “TRAIN ‘(:c AND GET HIS PAPER. | FUMBLES DESPERATELY FOR~ PENNIES BUT [ANT SEEM TO GET HiS PINGERS ON ANVTHING BUT GUARTERS GETS ALL SET TO MAKE A SPEEDY TRANSER., DROPPING FIRST THE DIME AND THEN HIS UMBRELLA BEFORE WE Gl THE PAPER. SAFLLY INTO HiS HANDS € McClure Newspaper Syndicat: DECIDES HE PRANTICALLY A PAPER RLADY SIENA O HAVE TINALLY PULIS CUT THE WHOLE LOT REMEMBERS HE LOST ALL HIS PEN NIES MATCHING WITH T'RED PERLEN LAST NMIGHT L HAVE TO AL ON REACHING PLATFORM LEAPS ABORRD AND WHEN HE HAS ViN- HASNT GIVEN MIM HIS REGULAR PAPER. AND 15 MISERABLE ALL T —By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. {CHILD LABOR AMENDMENT { FAVORED BY METHODISTS Education and Immigration Bills Also Supported by Balti- more Conference. } By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, Md April gress of tne child labor amendm |#nd favoring adoption of the edu !cation and immigration bills wer jadopted at the cloxing session of th. Baltimorc Annual Conference of th Methodist Eplscopal Church vester- ay. DIGS INTO POCKET POR CHANGE AND PINDS IT'S IN OTHER. POCKET o/ WouLD BE,AT ATIME LIKE A memorial adopted approved the HS !nlnn of unification with the Metho- | dist Episcopal Church South, pro- posed by a joint committee on uni- fication, as the first step toward a lunlttd Methodism. A memorial opposing war, | was adopted, read: “To declare in strong and une- ! quivocal terms the unalterable oppo- sition of our great church to war and the whole war system, and to call upon our government to C0-0p- erate with other nations in every movement looking toward permanent world peact which BANK RECOVERS $6,000. | Two Men Arrested as Bandits | Who Fled With Money. i FORT SCOTT, Kan., April 8. : 'x n, alleged to be the bandits who Ihetd up the Union state Bank at i Cniontown, Kan.. near here. were ar- | rested at a farmhouse north of Fort Scott iast night. proximately $6.000, according to officers. Frank Brennon and Guy Judkins are the men held. ET, HEARING AN OMINOUS TINKLE BEHIND WONDERS WAS THAT A QUARTER THAT was L¥ GOT 45 BRIATH DISCOVERS THE BOY' You'd understand why any \ | | 7 | B Your Own Bazoo. i | 1 elicited a reply forcement to Be Dealt With Under Treaties. s the Associated Press PEKING, April 8.—China's » modify her new trade recent | note indicating she was not dlsDfl.“Pd‘ mark law yesterday from repre- ordinary blade hurts your l face if you looked through “B.Y. 0. B.” MYSTERY POWERS NOTIFY CHINA REPAIRS AIRPLANE |a microscope at its saw. REMAINS UNSOLVED| OF TRADE MARK LAW VIEW/ | Cases Growing Out of Its En- tooth edge! FOR HOP TO SITKA'mN..;..M.mm —_— to bite you. They don't :Mlj. Martin Expects to Start| chew—they shave! Treat Thursday on Next Leg of Iy_our'ehlntoa €. WordiFligt, Marvelous New By the Associated Press. & 3. —Reso- | lutions urging the passage by Con- | All e loot, ap- | recovered, ! | | i ! 1 i i i i H i | | ' 1 No Saw Teeth | —No Sore Face | “Billion-Dollar Hen Crop” The chicken and egg crop of the United States for 1923 is valued at $923.375,780—ncarly a billion dollars—due to the in dustry of the hen. But if it had not been for ice—the 9th industry in this country— most of the “Hen Crop” would have been lost—could never have been marketed. Ice keeps the “Hen Crop” fresh in trans portation—and keeps a supply always fresh in the big ice boxes of the cities. American Ice is always “on call” o keep food fresh and sweet in your refrigerator. A telephone call toda, starts regular service tomorrow. AMERICAN ICE COMPANY those head cold>, At the first sneeze, begin spraying the nose and throat with Zonite twice daily. It will help materi- ally to destroy the seat of the trouble—usually germ infections -somewhere in the nasal cavity. Zonite is the form of anti- septic which practically wiped infection out of the hospitals in France during the World War. Thanksto American genius,itis now available for use in every home. Your druggist car- ries it. onile NILLS GERMS ;. NEW YORK, April 8.—The myste iof the letters “B. Y. . B.” which were | interpreted by prohibitionists to mean | “Bring your own booze.,” when they appeared on invitations for last night’s third annual dinner of the| purchase, storage and traffte division of the war-time Army genersl Staff, to- day remained unsolved With a quart of sparkling: grape ljuice flanked by two quarts of min- cral water at each table, the-dinner was said by those who attended to have been bone dry and a great suc- cess. PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., April 8.— sentatives of the powers that they did | Maj. Frederick L. Martin, commander noe ‘wl"-;‘;‘clrh-g""wr'-' . \Y:lurlx:‘n;wl( inlof the Army air squadron attempting advising their EOVArNMENts 10 recog- 5 s hize the trade ‘mark Taw nor in re.| to encircle the world, was busy today | questing their nationals to register| with preparations for repairs on his trade marks with the Chinese trade| crujser, the flagplane Seattle, dam-| nKek Duraan | aged in landing Sunday after the 630- The reply pointed out that e aE & g mile jump from Seattle. 1 or compluints growing out of the en forcement of the trade mark law will| The commander hopes to have his have to Be dealt with in accordance | plane ready Thursday, when, with the with treaty stipulations other three cruisers, the Chicago, | New Orleans and Boston, he is sched- KILLS COMM(;N-LAW WIFE | uled to take off the next leg, a 200- s | mile hop to Sitka, Alaska. “Blow Your Own Bazoo." GEM Double-Life Blades GEM Sefety Rasors 'FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS _Service Charge Never Over $1.08 { Drink when he spied, behind & Group, : ded that the government should of Aspiring Cobwebs. a Pitcher. e & Mimit the number of Jewish students, T e, fpEnthe (et AND ENDS HIS OWN LIFE NAMED DEAN OF FACULTY SRS aneS. Maj. Gen. James G. Harbord said he —_— | i As @ homel taxpayers' mo: all hands are Lord notes the by the on of how the n be saved, v ling together, Gen. | example_recently set postmaster of Northampton, Mass. Presid Coolidge’s home town. Near West sbury, Mass., where th 1 Veterans' Bu- | reau hosp. uperintendent of | the hospital had some trucking to do. The postn r of heard : be had some | trucks d do the job and that | weren't % ai anything better ¥ the moment. They were loaned r the purpose and the Veterans' | Lureau saved the hire of privately | owned trucks. The other day the federal income tex unit at Boston needed 4,000 or B.100 extra feet of office space and Put in & requisition for the necessary rental in an office building. The bud- #el byreau reported that the prohibi tion unit at Boston had some extra »ace. The income tax people looked it over and found that it was ail right, but had to be fitted with pari tions for office purposes, “All right,” said the budget folks, “the War Department has a salvage bureau in Boston, where some sur- lumber is on hand.” Then the rans' Bureau vocational training ablishment ssked if it had ¥ carpenters. plied some in- 1ctors who service 1 “trainees™ the w its new a cent of cxtra sury ot_long rthampton | expense to ago the wanted FOR_ANY by myselt inson pl. n.w. 108 RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY CED WITH BEST 0 bossed paper, $6 to oor, Mariow bldg. fnoad mountings to BUDGES, ALL oses, evergreen, Tantet, 1 clats order and o <u_sell. T. A" HERRELL & S0: €5, 726 10 st oo, 9640 WANTED TO BRING A_VA! iture from New York. P 100, Del., and Richmond. SMITH'S TRANS }"I‘Bm CANEING PORCH ROCKERS RESEATED FURNITURE REPAIRING CLAY ARMSTRON IT. N.W. SEND POSTAL l?lfli‘i".lmh b TELL US YOUR - ROOF TROUBLES Boofiag 1221 Gta N.W. Company. Phose Mais 14, Adams Printing Have us interlock our service with ¥ your requirements. HIGH GRADE. BUT NOT HIGH PRICRD BYRON S. ADAMS, FRixTEa. it 512 11th 8¢, Buyers of Printing Yon receive 100% satisfaction at this million-dollar priating plant. {The National Capital Press 12101212 D 8t N.W. For Your Roof Don’t wait for rust to “‘pin-hole’ year tin and bring the toll of big repair bills, let us_apply Protec-Tin Roof Paint "NOW. Estimates free! KOQNS ROOEING 119 8rd st. s COMPANY _Phone Main $38. OFFICIAL NOTICES. ZONING COMMISSION OF THE_ DISTRICT Columbia, hington, April 7, 1924.—In order to test the sense of the commaunity upon the advisability of applying to Congress for 20 amendme! to section 5 of the zoming law t of Coogress of March 1, 1920), which il cnable the Zoming Commission to suspend any of ity reguistions at any time, wil It olice and without hearing, where they deem Ui “xigencies of the. sitiation demand such action, @ pablic h“rhf will be heid in the boardroom of the District_building_at 10 ®.m. April 17, 1924. ~ The text of the pro- posca "Ridition 1o section § in s follews: Provided farther, that the commission mhy t l"l.v llmwl. ‘l‘:fl 'fl'-h:llll louee..;‘e ‘Qfl.l” ¢ its regulations pending a b nerfln‘b“emn n’."'fi{“"" ..xl‘ JJoriae ki Saspensior. " o Vaiiding " perm Tstea " . ¥, BELL, CURO H. RUDOLPH, i OYSTER, 0. 0. " SHERRI VAYID LYNN. Zoning Commisslon of the 31t of Columbia, predty UBDERY, | e roof men of many years' x| He perched on it hoping to find Water therein. There was a Liquid on the bottom, and since his was a Beak that had no turning. he could not reach it. There were no pebbles on Land to | lower so as to raise the Liquid to the | Surface, and the poor Crow heaved a heavy Sigh into the Pitcher. struck the Liquid, which splashed to the Crow's mouth. 7T bird im- mediately aged and passed away. Where ie formerly stood there was now a bottle of Old Crow. \ Moral: What's Wrong With This Pitche i The Third Alarm. | , Kriss—Johnson's business is all run i down. | Kross—ves, fup. (Copyight. he's’going to wind it —Wwilliam Gross. 1924. Teproduction Forbidden.) 1$483,000 for spare parts for hydro- | planes. The director of the budget |(hnugh( that looked like a tall order and wrote the Secretary lof the avy, asking if it could by iany possiblity be scaled down. The inet result was that the requisition | was cut to §125.000. About the same {time the aquartermaster’s depot at | Philadelphia asked for $525,000 for {spiral puttees for the Army. The {budget bureau couldn’t understand why there needed to be such a heavy investment in puttees in peace. The 1Army finally contented itself with !something lke $260,000. “Tom"” Reed of Maine, which where Gen. Lord comes from, c: merica “& billion-dollar country’ famous occaslon. Nowadays we're {something -between a three and a four-billion dollar country, and prob- tably will remain so. Big Savings Are Possible. { But the budget bureau is confident that tens of millions and hundreds of millions of dollars can be saved from year to year. Gen. Lord personally is convinced there's a_way if there's § will. For the past three years in suc- cesslon, while total or estimated gov- {ernment receipts have been steadily | declining, there has been a steady ad- vance in surplus, or possible surplus. For 1925, for example, estimated re- ceipts are $3.693,000,000, and estimat- ed surplus, $395,000,000." That is a de- cline {n receipts compared with 1924, of $201,000,000, but an increase In sur- | plus of $66.000,000. © 1 It-is mainly the operation of the | budget system that hes made these {rcsults possible and paved the way { to tax reduction. (Copyright, 1924.) ‘CHARGED 'WITH MURDER ! FOR ACCIDENT IN PLAY i | Winston-Salem Youth Has For- ; gotten Pulling Boy’s Ears—Al- { leged Cause of Death. [ By the Associated Press. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., April 8.— Risdon Long, eighteen of the Long- town section of ~Yadkin county is awafting trial on charges of murder jin connection with the death of Char- {lie SHores, sixteen, one month ago ! as a result of Injuries alleged to have been inflicted to Shores' ear by Long in play in August, 1922. The warrant charging murder came as a result of complaint by the dead youth's father. b: on_statements by Baltimére physiciins who attended | the youth while a patient at Johns Hopkins, Horpital before his Jeath to the effect that death came as a re- sult_of a disease to the membranes in_the region of the ear. ed Shores by ' the ears a_sitting position on the ground on or about August 1,1922. Long denies that he has any memory of the incident. Long is awaiting trial under bond in the sum of $1,500. CEE A CAMP SITE TO BE FARM. Oats Will - Be Sown -Where Sol- diers Once Trained. JUNCTION CITY, Kan., April 8§— Camp._ Funstori, The training ground for thousands of middle west soldiers durin gthe world war, to become an oats field. A Army tractors are pulling up con streets. Seventy acres will ‘be sown. This | pretty | The warrant alleged that Long lift- | |.=im~.~. on account of the hibh cost of living, Roumanians were unable to attend the universities, which always were overcrowded with Jews, who i were supported financially by Jewish isocicties. Fear of Dominance. It was argued that if this state lof things continued in a few years {pratically all classes of Roumanian {intellectuals would be of the Semitic !race. University professors known {to have close connections with the government encouraged the students, | jwhile the authorities took only half- ihearted measures against the organ- jizers of the movement. Juries before whom the indicted {students were brought, were acquit- {ting the culprits and the police, who, in Rumania, ruthlessly and suceess- |fully suppress manifestations not fa- ivored by the government, arrived when the disturbances took place, too ilate to protect the molested Jews. In ' many cases it was the molested ones who were arrested. Rig Banker Attacked. { | The recent manifestations which | |formed one of the main toples of | conversations before the correspond- | lent's departure from Bucharest at) {the end of March were more violent | than usual and, although nobody was | killed, they were significant, because, | for the first time, prominent Jew: like Blank, the head of tke Bank Marmorosch, were attacked and bad- | 1y beaten up. Blank is president of | one of the foremost banks of thei near east and has done much to assist Rumanian credit abroad, some- times with personal sacrifices. Late- |1y, however, he had adopted an un {friendly attitude toward the govern. | iment, whom he accused of following ia financial policy which, although ' {very beneficial to the government's | friends. was disastrous to the credit | {of the country. i As a result of his attitude, he was | | | {beaten up and severely wounded by |bands of students while lecturing at the Bucharest Institute before a jlarge audience of Rumanian intel- | ectuats. i WAYS T0 BOOST TRADE OF GREAT LAKES SOUGHT 1 e Manufacturers of Region to Hear ! Suggestions on Foreign H Markets. By the Associated Press. ¢ CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 8.—Prac- tical aid in their efforts to increase output through the extension of sales in world markets will be offer- ! ed to manufacturers of the great lakes at the fourth foreign trade con- vention here today. i A round table dscussion was on the afternoon program, with the balance | of the day given over to addresses and discussions on developing Amer- ican trade in the East Indies. | Among the prominent soheduled ! speakers is Willis H. Booth. New | York, president of the Internatiohal | Chamber of Commerce. i The convention is held, by the| Cleveland Chamber of Commerce in ! co-operation with the federal bureau | of foreign and domestic commerce. | | LAMAR BACK IN JAIL, BAIL REQUEST DENIED “Wolf” Must Stay in Tombs Pend- ing Outcome of ‘Appeal From One-Year Sentence. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April' 8—David La- mar, “Wolf of Wall street,” was re- tarned to Tombs prison again yester- | < day, after Judge Winslow in federal | district court denied a motion for his | release on bail pending outcome of ! his fight to avoid serving any mara' | | | | i ! | of his one-year sentence for prevent- ing the shipment of munitidns to the allies, S Lamar, convicted of -a misdemeanor, based his plea for freedom on the ground that he was sent to serve sen- tence in the Essex county penitentiary, in New Jersey, where only felons are supposed to be confined. Judgé Wins- low ordered briefs filed before Thurs- Tis. [crete pests and_breaking up asphalt {day by Lamar’'s attorney and by the federal prosecutor. did not have to be told the mystic let- ters did not mean “Blow your own | bazoo,” while Gerard Swope, toast- master, said the letters would not be | necessary another year. But no one | explained the cxact meaning of the | letters. Intimacy of Several Years Temi-!nugu W. Jervey Succeeds Harlan nated When Woman Abandons F. Stone at Columbia U. Frank Lahey. NEW YORK, April 8.—The trustees ! of Columbia_University, it is_an- ln_v\x':-;sn;r:l;:]{l‘t(‘l |5 A trienasnip | OUTSed by Presiden Nicholas Mur- | ceiv - N V YORK, Apri -_ riendship | ray Butler, have appointed Huger W. peshrets were received from Gen.lof seven years terminated in a double | Jervey to be dean of the faculty of | Dfl‘)fl;, kegr- Py fral biher notaples | Kiling last night, when Frank Lahey, | law, in succession to Harlan F. Stone, i el = |aged forty, shot and killed Mrs. Lucile Attorney General of the United - Clark, a divorcee, and then ended his | States, whose resignation as dean After fifteen years' work on an inven- | life has been accepted. tion to remove snow from the streets | The shooting. police said. wae| Dean Stone has been on leave of with the minimum of labor, Mrs. Horatio | caused by a quarrel between the cou- | absence since October 1 last, since |N. Slater, wealthy society woman of [ple three weeks ago, after which Mrs. | which time the administrative duties New York and Massachusetts, is ready |Clark abandoned Lahey, with w of the Jaw school have devolved upon to complete the final details of the de- |she had been living as his common- | Prof. Thomas L. Parkinson as acting Great Liuxury Ships MAJESTIC OLYMPIC -HOMERIC ‘These are the great luxury ships— the express liners—preferred by so many travelers of distinction. And the chief reason for this unusual preference lies not in their superb interiors nor their exceptional steadiness but in the perfection of service and cuisine, the smooth functioning of their entire ship- board organization which is, itself, the highest achievement of more fl!ylll half a century’s experience in'operating great ships. Ask for Booklet; “What to Know About Ocean Travel”’—answers five thousand travel questions. AMERICAN LINE Express Sailings “on Saturday One of these ships sails each Saturday from New York to Cherbourg (France) and Southampton (England). Saturday sailings to Ireland and Liverpool are provided by the famous Big Four— Adriatic, Baltic, Celtic and Cedric. Fortnightly services by the palatial, new Red Sear Liner Belgenland and the distinguished Lapland to Plymouth, Cherbourg and Antwerp; and direct to London by the splendid, new Atlantic Transport liners Minnewaska and Minne- tonka—limited to first-class passengers exclusively. A cabin ship service is main- tained direct to Hamburg. RED STAR LINE An unprecedented program of 244 sailings to Europe is p; this year to meet the wis possible range of travel requirements in a European season of unusual bril- liance. Service is available to every European country, direct or through convenient connections. Accommodations range from the luxuricus private suites on The Magnificent Trio to comfortable berths on cabin ships orin second cabin for as little as $125. Consider the advantages of cross ing in May—It is the delightful month for travel. ATLANTIC TRANSEBORT LINE INTERNATIONAL MERCANTILE MARINE ComPANY 7 R. M. HICKS, 1208 F Street N.W., Washingtos. 3 d 7 Roommmd Bath Apt. Above 31-Ft. Frontage Including Side Lot Hot-Water Heat Electric Lights Excellent Condition Price, $15,500 Hedges 1334 H St. Realtors Experienced man cap- able of taking charge of Sales Dept. in old estab- lished real estate office; an opportunity for right man; don’t apply unless you have had general ex- perience and made good. Address Star Office. put into ily in & Middleton Fr. 9503 Why let else enjoy the things that are really within YOUR REACH? Prices 8.100 to $9.500 Easy Terms Over a Hundred Sold TO INSPECT By auto—Drive acruss ‘the Q Stroet Bridge. turn north block to R Street and one Box 189—Z, 36th Street out. HANNON_& LUCH Realtors Ouwners and Builders CHRINOS do more than give constant pleasure to the smoker—they sur- round him with an atmosphere of good ORIGINAL HoriETH At 36th and R Sts What a lot of happy and financially cessful men and wom- en would be added to the already big army of Satisfied Buyers! drive due west Street (right mext to West- ern_ High School). P Stroet car to 35th Street and walk north to R street or Wisconsin Avenue car o R Street and walk west to Or call Main 2345 for auto to take you Of the energy put into trying SCHEMES to get rich quick were getting a HOME for the fam- . suc- some one to _36th Or_take

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