Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1924, Page 5

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18 1924. 5 «PARTY FUNDS PROBE lFr(m.k G. Curpenter Dead In China; ured in the schools of Washinston|voted following. His weekly letters |undertook his first trip around the | ho deans of the American journallatic Huntington, whose husband was for- | 55 the United States. He was also the|homes every Sunday, and many a orld, representing a number of|profession, and his two children I'l'lerly commercial attache at the ' Nolt’d A‘. I'oremosl T" l W -t author of “Around the World With |family scrap book is filled with the |€Wspapers and magasines. It was|were brought up here. His summer | United States embassy at Paris, of ELY lN AUGUST\ 2 S ave TULeT | the Crildren.” and a series of readers |clippings of his travel stories from |in the nature of a honeymoon jour- |home at Bluemoft, Va., has long been | Evanston, Il. For the last two years ! on how the world is clothed, fed and | foreign lands. ney, as Mrs. Carpenter accompanied [one of the show places of the section. |his Washington office has been in T i housed. Started for Heal him and served as his typist, having [ Following the loss of his wife he ;'.‘““K"‘ "‘f'i;“w»‘bfldw- I"ud‘}ekaxr- Borah Committee Investigating | - R Born in Ohlo. | His bent for travel was developed |1€aTned to operate the crude ma-|lived at the Cosmos Club, 0ccupying | ana the Ladies Home Journal who A § \ Mr. Carpenter was born May 8. 1855, | in his early youth. In fact, his first |cHines of those days. Then followed [a suite of vooms which once formed |is aiso directing the publication of Campaign Gifts Will Meet \ 3 5 at Mansfield, Ohio, and in 1883 was | trip aboard was taken as the result|!? T&PId sfccession travels in Mex-|part of the home of Mark Hanna. Mr. Carpenter's travel books, | i 5 5 . |ico, Russia, Germany and England, |Besides the Cosmos Club, Mr. Car- == f Hiago: married to Joanna D. Condict, Who|of the solemn warning of his PhYSi- |and twe sears 1nier he d China, | p . ;i he Raci in/Chisag dicd in 1920. Following his sradu-| cians that his health was so poor |Japan and Korea being. one of the |Ciab. (e Natmemeep,of (e, Racauet | CAMPAIGN SITE MOVED. e ation from the University of Wooster | that he had but a short time to live, | YeT¥ first American writers evor 4o |he was one of ‘the first members of m = : . 5 visit the hermit kingdom. In 1898 | ¢ Griairon Club ous in 1877, Mr. Carpe:l?; ;r;;;n:ed ‘l‘r; He renmne:l that if he was to dielhe made a complete tour of all the [of g airon nlb‘:\."“;;:‘e1-’(:}(':;:“115£:\:: Underwood Closes D. C. Quarters; newspaper work, and i e was | soon he might as well sce something |countries of South Americ @ two | and slso of that usioue organisation Y legislative correspondent of the|of this world before he passed on |YCars later visited the Philippines.|the Washington Literary Soclety. In Opens in NEwITOE. Wants Voluntary Information on | £ " Cleveland Leader, at Columbus, and|to the mext, and, accordingly, made |janq™ 1aviyesUpiralia and New recognition of his travel writings, | Campaign headquarters of Senator ! land. ' In 1902 he visited ever i 3 avel - i shortly after was made the specialia trip to Egypt. In deflance of the |portant country of Europe, chron- | fe etional eozraphic Sapiety con- | Underwood of Alubama for the Dem 3 Plans to Get Money. A ) Washington correspondent of _that | dociors® edict, he contimued fo ‘travel | Iclin the bekinnings of the American | (TS UPon, Wr, Carkenter &% hens | SELG PraNcal, eninagen, eord - | : : Ao paper. During hin eurly years in the | 214 Wrlte for practically half a cen |commercial invasion, ' His travels | ganization, und he was aleo a fellow | lomorrow al New York in the Wal- e Senate com ce horized to | & , . National Capital Mr. Carpenter wrote oy g s he: d - | spent h Rl ‘¢ |of the Royal Geographic Society of | dors Whe Seante committee anthorized o] | ational Capita D enjoyed vigorous health and experi- [spent a vear in writing of America's [ the SR Bl ilnaitist : B o 3 . sketches of men in public life in an | enced illness in every corner of the |war industries. About half o e = ate campaign contributions | IAtimate Style that bs it Shat time | Slobe. Y | e T pemt | Wooster he received degrees of bach = and expenditures this vear plans to | 4 L entirely new in American journalism. | = At the beginning of his career |in Europe. which he covered from | €10r and master of arts, while Wi establish headquurters in Chicago | 1 ? This led to his dispatches, which were | newspaper editors, likewise, tried to is to Stockholm and from liam and Mary College confer v( l and (o] leep & Chntmious cheek (on b t always signed “Carp,” being widely | discourage him from entering jdur- [erland to Constantinople, and in ppon him the degree of doctor of lit § g Y | . copied, and the rise of a new form | nalism. To get rid of him, one of | 24, he sailed from™ ture. He was a member of the | o these during the active period of the | of Washington correspondence. Mr. | the Ohio editors told him that the orient_on what he planned |Phi Beta Kappa and Beta Theta Pi| i) campaign, when it will > @ Carpenter had to a rare dexree the|only job he coyld giye him was col- [to make his last trip around the |c¢ollege fraternities, and also a mem- | Wol request of any of its five ; i \ gift of understanding what the aver- | lecting bills fo@advertising and sub- | world ber of the Authors' League of | SRl o . 5 . like man and woman wanted to know | scriptions. The youns man promptly America | CANTILEVER SHOE SHOP % 3 - and of telling them in language‘that | accepted and brought in &0 many Made Home Here. | Mr. Carpenter is survived by two | - 4 was simple, direct and easy to under- ftems n uddition to his €ash| A\ curpenter made his home wnd | ¢hildren, John C. Carpenter, member | 1319 F Street N.W. ided to*call on party ” 5 stand. In all his travels he wrote of | collections that he soon won a place [, o . |of the firm of Munday, Clarke and | - ’ For Teports every ‘ 5 A abroad in terms of at home, with the | gn the reportorial staff. cadquarters in Washington, where | Carpenter of Chicago and Washing- (Second Floor Over Young | B “ o result that he had a large and de- It was in 1887 that Mr. Carpenter ' he had long been known as one of lton, and Mrs. Frances Carpenter ' Men’s Shop) REPORTS EVERY TEN DAYS s a ing the name | It was further decided that ommittee would seek voluntary formation 1s for raising funds d the nam tho xpected to eontribu Ithough Chairman Borah sl e | B 2 . r Ofi\, é/l@ AVIE N U E d[' N - 1 1id it was un would be ary occasion hearings before the latter part of August. Any use of money in the vampaign which the committee thinks should be inquired into, he said. will he investigated with a vi to de- | veloping the “actual faets” Just how | FRANK G. CARPENTER. the primaries, the chairms . BY JAMES L. BUTTS. responded published w travel would be decided in & : s N { him for m than 1,500 ekt | equaled in American Journalism. > ) 4 Carpenter, well known American | was making hi: DIPLOMAS AT EASTERN |®uthor of travel articies, died at N R was writing & series of ar- STERN ¥ S | ticles’ from the far east. covering the e | king, China, this morning, ey, an (O Trom R0 2 e ees z attack of cystitis. He is survived by | hering material for the , Edwin C. Graham Will Preside at| . : ) = side .at | 4 son and daughter, who reside in|final volumes of the complete story of 5 , < : A e e e Tobe. whie GENUINE CLOTH ommencement Tonight in | Chicago. The author was stricken on | his May 25 with the illne: which re- | sulted in his death. He had been or about half th already appeared. School Auditorium. PHCEMent exere he | an extensive tour of th Sthool wili be hetd i H Visited All Lands, pugdicovium:_ton ; 'k.| The body will be taken Lo Chicago | yp carpenter had been in and writ- win C. Graham. member by Mr. Carpenter's secretary. Chester | 574 N iy every country | hoard education, will o Wathen. Diplomas will be presented ert L. Haycock, assistant superin- FAMOUS AS WRITER. eral time Dol that he had traveled half a million on earth, visiting most of them sev- . and estimated this vear | held their class night o night in the school. ' \William Gladstone Roudabush, ‘presi- | F- G. Carpenter One of Fathers of had traveled on every continent at cc ’ ’ dent the class, delivered the wel- | ™ le: twice, and had made thirty com s, Th rla v dicate. | was " A L | HewapRpesiiyn trips across the Atlantic. Death over- - ) Frank Lehnert, jr.- piaved two | nk George Carpenter was Anieri- | took him during his fifth trip to the o said i s on the cor lea's foremost travel writer and one of | grient. He often that he would prophecy was given by |the fathers of the American news-|DOt care to go to any country unless Groot and Dorothy Tripp. § he could write about it, and only a ade an address to the |Paper syndicate. His newspaper Writ-| o\ months ago expressed the hope vates und Nathan Clark ing covered a period of forty-five vears, | that he mizht in harness.” st B LA RIS e ey B W SRR SRR Old beliefs die hard. We're still meeti‘mg miles in gathering his material. He “rench. arpenter was especially well known of the class are. William pers that inciud » Evening | for his work for the schools. He was the man who arpsh presiient, Mar | star and others of the largest and best | sometines shoken oL the iag Ble the man who thinks of “Palm Beach” as nces Benzler. secretary, and | KnOWD dailies in America: Some of the | through his geographical reader: Donzld Willis Bingh treasurer. | papers for which Mr. ter cor- | which for many vears have been —— = ‘ a color. “From_the AVENUE o NINTH- As a matter of fact “Palm Beach” has no think of | more relation to color than the name of T any other fabric. “Palm Beach” is the name of a material---the coolest summer suiting ever woven. Wear any color you want. It is the cloth itself that is cool. You can buy a Palm Beach Suit in any pattern or any shade. But there’s the same S s A 1 b difference between a Palm Beach Suit that emi-Annua £ is properly tailored and one that is jus't Shil‘t Sale , *‘ LA put together as there is between a well- ; cut suit and a poorly made one in any $ .85 2 material. The style is built into Parker-Bridget Three for $5.50 T e e Palm Beaches---and built to last. Knickers survive rough usage. Continuing the The P. B. Semi-annual Shirt They do not wrinkle. Sale is scheduled to end Satur- da [ But the first day’s results seem Palm Beach Sults ::i::"-l.lne:’,l. I;;‘l:; :;e:: to indicate that it was a one-day event. Hardly any use to say anything more about the shirts—just ask iriend Jones—across the street. ! However, if you were out of town and didn't hear the good . news—here are a few details: Materials: ' Choice broadcloth from abroad, ‘madras, oxford cloth and pongee from " domestic mills, "All closely Avd, i Single and double breasted models. Silk lined. ;\‘\;_ri{\;pn to meet the usua . stan ¥ v Sizes for men of every build, shorts, longs, stouts Neckband and collar _attached : : and regulars. Colors: tan, sand, brown, silver, styles—: few di ith llar . . . ok (e i e e Byl i plain blue, blue and white, black and white, iy - : stripes and others. Dozens _of _color _ combinations 8 o Plenty of plain whites and tans. Many patterns, Sizes 1374 to 18 neckband. _Pre- <hrunk and accurately sized. Sleeve lengths 33 to 35. wrinkle. Comes in patterns and colors to suit every taste The Avenue at Ninth The Avenue at Ninth. - ’I[‘ H@N A_]L]LY W 7\ T WYY\ 7\ AVAS AVATA DS S

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