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SOCIETY. ing Monday Begis The Franklin Sq. Hotel Coffee Shoppe D-I-N-N-E-R $ 1 % 14th Street at K Open 7:30 A.M.—Close 1 A.M. —suffer with the heat when ¥You can get cool in a new 7- Ppassenger car for $3 an hour? It is especially cool in Rock Creek Park and around the Speedway. The top will be put back if you like, Pierce Arrows, Cadillacs, Marmons, Wintons, Studebakers —or any other make. $3 per hr. b-passenger open and closed cars, $2.30 per hour. 7-passengcor meter cars. Lowest Ra‘es in the City. Mrs. E. F. Gregg Main 104. Franklin 5262 Get our unusual low prices on out-of-town trips. Unusual Business Opportunity Ome of our clients who is the dis- tributor of a highly meritorions non- competitive, widely advertised article, offers to Tight party the exclusive ssles rights in this City. $5,000 capital necessary. A most unusual engage in & clean, Atable business. Tequired. Write Harris Advertising Company Franklin Trust Building ‘Philadelphia opportunity to Neh class and Reference will Warren, The Ambassador of Belgium, Baron Cartier is Lapland for Baroness de ington in the autumn. Miss Laura Harlan ial secretary, le Court summer before his death. Capt. Robinxon-Strait Wedding in Bethlehem Chapel. of The marriage of Miss Helen Ensign Strait, daughter of Mr Strait, Have Gocd fl;:; And Clean Scalp Cuticura Soap and Ointment ‘Work Wonders EXCURSIONS THURSDAYS June 26; July 17. 31: August 14, 2 September 11, 25 and October 9 rouna - $16.80 From Washington Tickets good in parlor or sleeping cars on payment of usual charges for space oceupied. including surcharge. On sule at City Ticket Office, Pennsy Tuild- ing. 613 14th St N.W. Taion Station. Trip TRAIN LEAVES Eastern Standard Time WASHINGTON ... T:45 ADML Warren, be solemnized Alban's De Vries officiating. Miss of the bride, is Meredith, N bridegroom's at’ Colby Eugene Chilton of Lancaster, Va., bridegroom at The | Beorgette match. honor is and her and white sweet of the bride will be dressed in white canton crepe and her flowers will be orchids the chapel. The a graduate of Colby College Georze After July the Brunswick, The Mellon, William burgh, to Mr. Alexander Laughlin. J of Pittsburgh is tuking place at the home of the oaiety President and Mrs. Coolidge to Have Ambassador Warren and Their Sons on Week E HE President and Mrs. Cool- | Mellon. idge have with them at the White House for a short visit Mr. Charles Beecher who with their sons, John Calvin Coolidge, arriving this river | oPened short season. them on a Coolldge received informally afternoon 300 Maryland women who were in Washin Mrs, mother, guest. the | Mis: join The | and_Ca; today ‘on Europe and will Cartier in DParis Y ador nd Baroness de Cartier |l A pend the remainder of the sum- | Maguir in FEurope, returning to Wash- [Iied th sailing White Hou ves Washington tc home, at Mur- Her father, the ice of the Supreme established a | 3y some years a_recep for her summer arahe Bay, Canada Associate Ju John M. Harlan, residence there dinn Mrs. The co the | guests. Thurs Grace Ensisn | por Troy, N. Y., to|dinner obinson of shington will -k this after- Chapel of w. L. formerly of Albert Franklin Me., and t 4 ocl in_ Bethlehem Cathedral, the Rev. Lu ntertui Mrs. Martha Ensign Strait, sister maid of honor, and rl _ Webster Robinson of | B H., a classmate of the|season. College, best William and Elis Douthitt of New- G both _class s of the George Washington lished The ushers are Mr Cuba come a arrival chool. bride’'s gown is of gray crepe of pin plaiting, trim- | o™ gray lace, with hat to|{f.& Her bouquet is_of roses and | yip Wi of the valle The maid of | ; to wear a gown of honey- crepe silk, with hat to match. tlowers will be Ward roses peas. The mother Miss with Miss party i and lavender sweet peas.| ) Rjon lilies are the only decoration of | {{ Vassar and graduating bridegroom is | Ha. and also | is Miss Washington Law hool. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Robinson to their friends at Washington. bride attende Sage College latter. The taking the Alfred be ‘at home ushers. . zuests marriage of Miss Margaret| b daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larimer Mellon of Pitt Mrs among eric_sa toda; Lride’s parent: Mr. ecretary of the Treasu evening to will be Champaign, be performed at Church of the Transfiguration by the rector, the Rev. John J. Queally, and the home bride’s parents at 5207 Colo- rado avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Thilman Hendrick and Mr. and Mrs, Maguire. Corby fina | Mr. and Mrs. marriage will take Cathedral in officiating. vernor of N nd Trip. went to attend the Mrs. Stephen B. Elkins has closed | her home on K ‘street and has gone evening from Mercersburg, P, will|to Ven accompany trip on the Mayflower. Mrs. vesterday farm ton to visit the Department of Agri- culture. tnor, N. J., where Rudolph Max Kauffmann will he at home this afternoon from 4:30 to 7 o'clock, in her new home, Green- acre, in Chevy Chase, in honor of her Willls, is her house . Mrs. Godfrey C. 1L, who nna Katharine Droop, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Droop, milton Ewing Maguire, James Herbert be mar- eremony will nt. F son of Mr. of New York, is evening. The will 0 o'clock ption will follow in Karl Corby ner last night at the bia Country Club for Miss Droop and Hendrick and of the included the members and out-of-town Mrs. are sisters mpany bridal day e were given by party her uncle Carl A. ned at Alexander Mackay-Smith h, closed her winter home and is cottage Wildcliff, at r Harbor, for the remainder of the in her The TUnited States ambassador Gen. Enoch H. Crow t once to Washington in this country. Delphine Heyl iliam Charles Meekins, Heyl plans to n Pennsylvan The marriage of Miss Marion ( well Riordan, daughter of Mrs. Daniecl late Represent tive Riordan of New York, to Mr. Ed- ward Henry Cranwell of ‘Yonkers Patrick’s Cardinal of honor Smith, daughter of the ew York, and his son, Mr. is one of attending, the ceremony and will also be among' the which will be in the Italian garden of the Hotel Ambassador. dan and the place today in St New York. The m; Em E. Smith, jr. Gov. Smith at the reception, ieorge W. the passengers on iling today Pittsburgh marriage of his niece, and Miss Ailsa Mellon, who one of her cousin's brides- maids, went to Pittsburgh last week. she her summer home for were evening Miss Droop and honor guests at and Droop. who also the Columbia Country lub for the bridal party and & number of additional gue: 1| er, will sail from Havana Saturday and will will entertain buffet supper this evening for Marcia Chapin and her fiance. place June . leave Wash- ington about July 3 to attend a house Vanderbilt the Hom- from New York for England, where she will join her LD o &2 LUBERKSES. MME. DE LABOULAYE, Wife of the counselor and after the departure of the ambassador and Mme. flaires of France. She is with their children, Marie Therese and Francisco. where the former will be duty assigned to Miss Elizabeth Taylor Jones and her fiance, Licut. Marry . Slocum, 1 be honor guests 4t a4 swimming party of forty this afternoon to be given at the Edgemoor Country Club by Miss Esther I'raceer, followed by @ supper the residence in Edge- moor of Mr. and Mrs. John I. Cassedy, brother-in-law and sister of the host- ess Mrs. John Bell Smallwood and her cousin, Miss Mildred Stewart, have gone to Waukesha, Wis,, to visit Mrs Smallwood's mother, Mrs. Edward Estberg. Mrs. Smallwood's young duughter has been with her grand- mother for the last month and will remain there most of the summer. Miss Stewart luter will go to her home in Arizona Mr. and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, whose Newport villa is being occu- pied by the latt brother-in-law and sister, the minister of Hungary and Countess Szechenyi. are at New Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney entertaining a party aboard their yacht, Whileaway, for the annual Har- vard-' Yale boat races, in the company being their daughter, Miss Barbara Whitne whose marriage to Mr. Barklie' McKee Henry, captain of the Harvard crew, wiil take place Wednesday. The other guests are members of the wedding party. Mr. and Mrs. Whitney entertained at dinner last evening on the yacht, the com attending the dance at the Griswold. The United States ambassador to Germany, Mr. Alanson B. Houghton, will safl Tuesday from Southampton, England, aboard the Leviathon for a District Society, Dames of the Loyal Legion, gave a teu vesterday after- noun at her home, in Cleveland Park, in honor of the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Mary Logan Tucker, pres dent, National Society, Dames of the Loyal Legion. The guests were lim ited to the members of the District Society. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Mitchell have rented the Marvin cottuge in Newport for the summer and will take possession shortly after passing several weeks with her brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Wood- bury Blair, in ‘Washington. Mr. and Blair, who have a summer home Newport, will leave Washington Monduy and will pass a few days in New York before going to Rhode Island. Mr. Calvin O. Smith of Chicago is making a lengthy visit to Washing- ion and is staying at the Hamiiton otel. Mr. Meyer Davis is leaving today to spend a few days at Buyberry CIiff, his summer home at Newport, R. 1. Mrs. L. G. Blunt_of Port Huron, Mich., is visiting Washington and stopping at the Wardman Park Hotel She is accompanied by E. W. Blunt. Women's City Club Weekly Tea Tomorrow Afternoon. Miss Inez Justus will be hostess at the Women's City Club tea tomorrow afternoon from 4:30 to 6 o'clock, as- sisted by Miss Eva Bickerton, Mr: R. McCauley and Miss Frances Dees. Mrs. Charles Alger will preside at the tea table. Miss Mary Elcena Sutfin of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Mr. Henry Warner Austin of New York will be married PROPOSED TAX STIRS TRADERS TO PROTEST Uruguayan Politicians Plan to Fi- nance Pension by Levies on Foreign Capital. SCHEME TRIED IN ARGENTINA Regarded as Attempt to Favor Na- tive Business, BY CLAUDE 0. PIKE. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News.- Copyright, 1924, BUENOS AIRES, June 21.—Uru- guayan politicians, having discoverea the possibilities of raising more money from foreign capital and com- merce through the medium of a pen- sion scheme similar to that of Ar- gentina, have introduced in the Uru- guayan Congress an even more dras- tic scheme than the former, provid- ing for assessments of 15 per cent gainst wages—>5 per cent to be taken Trom the workers and 10 per cent from employers. In addition, a wholly unheard-of tax of 1 per cent would be levied on cash entries in the ledgers of business concerns, collectable by means of stamps uffixed to the books, which would be open to government inspec- ion. Foreign firms are alarmed. They declare that should the proposed as- sessments pass, the ssessments would be practically confiscatory, since they would fall on foreigners alone, naiive business men naturally finding means of avoiding payments. Project Considered Radical. It is expected that the workers, however, will resists the attempt to collect assessments in the same man- ner that the Argentine workers did However, it is possible that the Uru- guayans will adopt the same scheme that was adopted in Argentina, com- selling the emplovers to pay the workers' share as well as their own. Bankers, analyzing the project for | on cash entries, es- timate the measure would collect about $40,000,000 annually. The Uru- ional Bank, unless it were would have to pay $20,- 000,000 a year. It is also estimated that the lévies against salaries would bring in $25,000,000 annually, which, dded to the present taxes of the peo- ple, would be sure to increase the cost of living. The project is considered the wild- est yvet brought forth by any South American country At present it Seems doubtful whether the measure will pass Congress, inasmuch as it would seon absorb into the pension fund the politicians hope to create the entire capital of the country a 1 per cent levy pled, game Either W:y. From the Kansas City Star. **Bill, you can’t read, can you a Liverpool navvy his mate. “Nops 1 just kind of glance at the paper like. 1 never had no real school- ing. 1 did learn the letter ‘o, but it was a poor selection.” “Why so, Bill?" “It's no guide at all," explained Bill. “I'd beter have learned another let- ter. With this here ‘0’ you can't tell whether you got the paper upside down or ne * asked Cards of Thanks. MILLER. We wish fo thank our fricnds, the Oriental Social Club, the Charity Missionary Club and the organizations for their sympathy. donations and floral tributes during the iliness and_death of our son. husband and father, WILLIAM . M1, LER. Also to the pastor for the beautiful | sermon and_ the soloist for the appropriate | s0lo remembered. HIS MOTHER. MRS. CLARK. WIFE, HTER, many GEORGIE MILLER, AND DAT LOUISE MILLER. PDeaths. June 20, 1924, DANTEL MOR- GAN, aged 8 years, son of Mr. and Mrs. 1) W. Alexander. Funeral from hiy parents’ residence, 4707 Piney Branch rd., Monday, Jupe 23, 'at 11 a.m t ALL DIAMONDS TAKEN FROM 5 MINES BOUGHT Total Output Obtained by Contract London Syndicate Signs—=Good Profit Expected. Cablegrams reccived in London from Johannesburg state that the contract for the purchase on the part of the London Diamond Syndi- cate of the entire production during 1924 of the five leading African dia- mond mining companies has been «d. This agreement applies of- 1y to the De Beers, Jagersfontein (new), th Premier Diamond Com- pany and Consolidated Diamond Mines outhwest Africa, and provision made for the purchase by the Diamond Syndicate of this 3 output of the Angola Diamond Company. The terms are said to be very fa- vorable to the producing mines, of which only the New Jagersfontein and the Premier Diamond Company paid dividends on their ordinary or deferred share: respectively, during the past twelve months. The profits now assured under the sales agree- ment are expected to lead to the re- mption of distributions in respect 24 on De Beers and Angola and to a substantial maiden on the shares of the Con- solidated Diamond Mines of Southwest ALEXANDER. 1y prepared report for the of British Industries on state of trade in the diamond precious-stone market states that precious stones in general seem to have taken their p in the world markets a source of investment and it is curious fact that large sales are constantly reported us having taken place in those countries where the currencies happen to be most precarious. Pearl Prices Rixe. During the first month of 1924 the diamond market has shown great ac tivity in most parts of the world. Merchants, trusting to their experi- ence of former years, prophesied a ival about the middle of January si , after the Christmas sales, man ufacturers and retailers usually re plenish their stocks, but the activit displayed has far exceeded the most Sanguine expectations, and it is all | the more marked after the quiet| period during the last quarter of 1923, when jewelers purchased spar- ingly and only for immediate re- quirements. Reports from India, the pearl industry, show that while the price of pearls has in- creased considerably, the sale of dia- monds has not shown the improve- ment expected, a curious fact, since diamonds are largely sold in India as a counter-charge for the purchase of pearls, so that the prosperity of the one market is usually refiected in the other. the center of DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Deaths. ALLEN. Suddenly, Thursdas. LEROY "B belived son of Ethel M. Tune 19. 1 belived son of Eroest G. an uneral from his parents’ ot a1 . Teiatives ail fricads javite 1 BARFETT. Thur«day, June 19, 1924, at 11:30 pm. i Rochester, N. Y. ALICE BAR ETT. heloved wife of S J. Barfett of nston, D. C. 230 DUNNINGTON. Friday, June 20, 1924, at D40 pm. at the reddence of her dsush . Rainier. Md., widow of the of Ana vagiors of onday, at 2 pm. b FLYNN. Thur. 924, 5 pme. LOUIS e Al t Buand innie eioea: . Bumetal From Tiw 1t orin Capio " Monany e, thonca Aloysiu Cirarch, whers miss Al for Mount iy and friens {nvited Dlease cony.) HANSBROUG s June 20 w1 ar 4 cedmen's Tiospital R TiANS oved s of i ; frough, and 3 r R0 and New York Tpers piease. eops.s HEMPSTONE. suidents. dune 17, 1631 in New” York, FLAVICS T REMPSTONE brother o . 1. Temptone and father of Frank and Olga. in &1s T3t year. . Ruricd in Monocacy cemetery: Montoomery Com w5, M el HOWE. Friday. June 20, 1921, LYNDA M., beloved wife ot Willinm T Howe. Funersi from residene, 622 Portland At a.c. Son dnr. June 5.2 pom. . Interment Congres: il vometery B JACOBSON. T SARATL T, cemetory ELINGENFELD. 5721 The death on February 2 sur Seine. France, of Mr TIA KLINGENFELD, an Ameri o' citizen, is reported the American consul general at Paris. France. The leg represe “ can obta further | ng 1o the De partment of State. Washington, 1. ¢ LOOMIS. Friday, June 20, 1924, at the resi- dence of tix parents, Mr. and Mrs, George €. Loomis. 2122 Aximead pl. n.w.. CORN WELL HAKT LOOMIS. Fugeral from ti above reaidence June 2 MARTIN. Friday. Jun beloved husband of Funeral e chapel of F. Co.. 1113 3th st. n.w., Monday. June 25, at 830 am.' Requiem maxs at St Peters Church at 9 o'clock. laterment Arlington uational NELSON. Friday. June, OLANDO 'LED GEORGE. Martin. Geler's Sous 1921, st 610 Husband of Funeral OVERTON. Thursday, June DREW J.. beloved Busband father of Overto SOH. Co. A 1924, 4:40 p. RUTH QUINN n.w. Funeral Aunapolis, Md.; 117 Charies st RUSSELL. _Nuddenls, Thursdy, Jume 19, 3924, ut ctady. N. Y.. ROBERT E RUS ed 43. oniy son of the late Smith Husse . SLYE. Friduy, June 20, 1 At her rest dence, 212 A &t. s.e. Mrs. HENRY ANN SLYE. beloved mother of Join Queen Mass at Nt. Peter's Church. Mondas. June at 10" a.m. Interment (privaies Congressional ceimeters Louls, St sephi, Moy TERRELL. Departed Jupe 14, 124, %10 am RELL of 2000 e vt and 1 Friday, at 6:30 am., THER R.. be d of Mary A in the 79th car of his uge. 11e leaves to mourn their voted sons and duughters, Rich- . 'Wude 11. Trice. Washington, . Flaskett, Miss M tasmond Smith, thel J_ Trice, Mrs. zht grandehildren 1d one great-grandchild. Funeral Sunday. from Cranford Memorial Church, Va., at 2 p.m. Relatives and {riends invite ane Friday, June 20, 1921, at his hume Lorton, Vi, In Memoriam. COMPTON. Sacred fo the memory of our dear on-in-law and daughter, the Honor- | brief holiday in this country ble and Mrs. John Francis Amherst = Cecil, who have been spending their| Miss Frances Hawthorne Brady honeymoon on the continent. will leave this evening for New York to attend the Democratic national | convention as one of the assistant sergeant-at-arms, SINSON COMPTON, who this life wuine years DINTNG CAR ATTACHED Wednesday in the Playhouse, 1514 N street northwest. Mr. Austin, who is a graduate en- ginecr of Syracuse University, is em- ploved by the Interstate Commerce Commission, bureau of valuation. Following the wedding they will leave Washington for a short motor our. mottier. LENA peacefilly departed a0 fodsy, Juie 21. 1914 TER | DAUGHTER AND MAYME COWAN, COWAN REPETTL our dear Lustand and fatber, REPETTL who diel suddealy Abkent. but memory clings. EAR MISS DIX: At the rgmantic age of twenty-one I was engaged to| HIS DEVOTED WIFE, DAUGHTEE AND DA N he only woman T have ever loved, or ever will love, but two D months before the date of our wedding she eloped with a professional - SPARSHOIT. Tov pugilist. He treats her brutally, but she persists in loving him, although A s Jave Bis only assets are his powerful broad shoulders, his terrific strength and A D e T RTDIS almost gorilla-like features. LLIVAN. July. 19, 1915, &ud ROBBIE Why is it that women are more attracted by physical strength than p ARSHOTT, July 1. 19 anything else? Why are they crazy over athletes, boxers and wrestlers in| o appy saints! forever blest, particular? Why is It that pretty, quiet girls almost always marry rowdies |y, tiar dear bome. at Jesus' And roughnecks in prefercnce to decent, intelligent men, to whom nature sweet your rest = BAS Eiven slmost cvervthing that is desirable except a. strong physique?| LOVING DAUGHTER AND AUNT, MAME. FORTY-TWO YEARS YOU Girl Who Yielded to Ancient Cave Woman In- stinct ~ Why Is a Man Suspected of Wrong When He Is Just Polite to His Stenographer? A Soecial Offer A Beautiful Picture The ideal Route to Niagara Falls, & _ daylight ride through SON IN-LAW WILLIAM H g5 atiful Susquehanna Valley. g Proportionate fares from other points ] Mrs. Edmund Pendleton has opened her summer home, Langsyne, at Bar Harbor, Me., for the season. In sad but loving remembrance of WILLIAM two years Tickets good for 16 days Booklet sent upon reguest to 0. T. Boyd, G. P. A., Philadelphia Pennsylvania R. R. System The Standard Railroad of the World Wedding of Interest Here and in New York. Mrs. Ellen Mary Faulkner Swift, widow of Samuel Swift, well known Lieut. and Mrs. Kenneth Lee Coontz, U. S. N., the latter formerly Miss Virginia D. Byars, have re- York for many years as an turned to Washington from their music_critic, was_married honeymoon and are established in ¢ in that city to Mr. John their apartment at the Wardman|\an Nostrand Dorr of Washington. Park Hotel, where they will remain | yrs, Swift is the daughter of the until the middle of September, when |jate Bdwin Faulkner, esq they will leave for the west coast.|ren House, Leicestershire, England. She has two children, Mrs. James P. Warburg, whose husband is a mem- ber of the well known family of bankers, and Mr. Samuel Swift of New Mr. and Mrs. James D. Hobbs en- tertained a company of eighteen at dinner last evening in the Dower house, in homor of the latter's sister, Mrs. Verra Bobbitt. Loving _but sad EDWAR Mourning Blacks Dyed 3 5 5 = 24-HOUR SERVICE Bona-Fide Guarantee | Carmack Dry Cieaning Co. Against Water Rust & Defects S Keystone Copper Steel g 1 3 g 3 Members and friends of the Educa- tional Council of Social Hygiene So- cieties were entertained by Mrs. F. L. Ransome, assisted by Mre. Carl 4 : Voeghtlin, at her home vesterday aft- - ernoon from 4 to 8 oclock, to meet T A N dhreetor of the Drama | the new officers, who were elected for — : Breeze or Brofl. York. She isa director of the Drama | the year 1924-25—Mrs. H. Foster Bain, Answer: Probably a reversion to type. brother. We don’t seem to president: Mrs, William E. Chamber- | ;.0 gotten very far away from our cave ancestors when a man went out - Music School Settlement and a mem- : ] e 1 1 Whether you enjoy your home and your porch—or |ber of the Cosmopolitan, Macbowell | fifv Mrs: 1 Lo Griffin, Miss M. B. Ca- | 53" Wooed his mate with a elub. and dragged her back into his dugout by whether you “broil” with the heat is a matter of Awnings, |30 Decorators’ Clubs of Mo presidents; Dr. Lawra S. Brennon, | her lovely red hair. Most women still haxe & mecre e T e | 1 et sowr consel trover . |Mr. Dorr is a graduate and trustee | Presidents; Dr Laura 8. Brennon, | o¢ courtship, and probably even the m anced Sl s Your Drescnce, 100, Not a question of expense—but of moderate invest- |of Rutgers College. Among his clubs treasurer, and Mrs. Emery M. Foster, | | yshand of whom she is & lle afraid to one wilh is not only too much 4 i sour preseate, to8 A the Century, University, En- el g e entleman to strike her, but even to assert his a as hea And wish'T could only. tel ment—how moderate you don’t realize—and what a factor | zin Among the guests mvited were Dr. | §10 CUCT How very much 1 m a in lxvmg comfort you cannot appreciate—umtil you ex- perience the contrast. e neers and Chemists” of 1 Fork | wiiRone tl ki e $'pEv HER. * e O e of Washingcon. | William C. Fowler. Dr. William A. HCuet hundreds of letters from women who write that their husbands S D (Enom White, Dr. Mark White, Col. 0. Owen, [ .. T 86t Bundreds of 1ot ers A Stll, S0 evidently feminine admiration Estimates and suggestions willingly made—without ob- ligation. feet. bow In sad bot loving remem dear brotler, CHARLES H WASHINGTON, who departed this life one year ago today. Jue 21, 1923 Gone, but not forgotten. ‘WASHINGTON. brance of FUNERAL DIRECTORS. R. F. HARVEY’S SON New Fuueral Home, 1432 You St. N.W. Home-like Funeral Parlors. Ph. Potomac 2207, are Mrs, H. K. Hardon and Mrs. Don- | & ey DF- Abram Simon and Mr. E. | 4 the classic story of the woman of the tenements who weepingly declared O Graham, that she believed her husband had ceased to love her because he had not ald C. McMillan. both of New York. Mr. and Mrs. Dorr sailed today for given her a black eye for a month. several months’ travel in Europe and The Finest Burial that is known to science. Price of vault only $55. Former Representative James W. Husted of Peekskill, N. Y., arrived women. is not confined to FUNERAL. Embalming, Hearse, Cars, Beautiful Black or Gray Casket, fine quality ailk or matin lined, silver handles, engraved plate; Burial Case, Chairs, use of our Funeral Home and all detatls. No extra charges. But, com- plete, $100. ‘We guarantee to give more for the price than any one in town. ‘We have two showrooms full of the finest Burial 35 up Ambulances, city calls, 34 only. P W. W. CHAMBERS CO. 14th St. Cor. Chapin N.W. Phone Col. 432. STUDEBAKER Just Drive It; That’s All when you are about to place an order for glass is “How are your stocks?” Our four warchouses are always fully sup- plied; ::::':: or special ents can be quickly filled, and delivery prompt- ly made. This is just ©one more reason why you will find it an sdvantage to order your glass from us. Send us your ovders Pranded 1864 HIRES_TURNER GLASS COMPANY Pussssss W. 851148, bansger Tent and Awning The Copeland Company Franklin Square 1313 K Street N.W. Capital Awning Company W. E. Russell 1503 North Capitol Street Sunday Night Buffet suppers are served on between the hours of 4 and 9. The beauty and charm of the Section Merchants and Manufacturers’ Assn., Inc. ‘Walter J. Proctor Co. 210 to 214 H Street N.W. R. C. M. Burton & Son 911 E Street N.W. Suppers Sunday evenings surrounding gar- den makes this a delightful place for entertaining. The Garden House North Capitol and E Streets N.W. Management: Grace Dodge Hotel on their return they will live in New York. Col. and Mrs. Robert N. at the Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, and will remain during the Democratic national convention. Harper are Mrs. Frank Hight has been called from her summer home in New Hampshire to Boston because of the death of her mother, Mrs. George W. Cann. Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Boss and family have gone to Haven, Me., for the summer, where they will occupy the cottage of the Rev. Herbert Scott Smith. Mrs. Charles M. today on the Lapland to pass summer in Europ Mrs. Hugh Carnes Smith, president. FOUND. PURSE_Containing_sum of money, 12th st. e Brookland. Owner can have same by {dentifying. 1222 . Ffoulke will sail the BAT PIN_Platinam top. gold, with st etting: lost between 8th and F sts. n.e. and Tth and B stx. s.w., Friday. Cail Lincola 5563 Reward. ? COAT—Young_man's, Chase recreation fiel turn to 8767 Oliver s 5 DOG—Female police; yellow head, dark back. Name Bessie. Reward. 708 413 ‘s.w. 21 DOG Strayed from 2415 Bisdensburg rd, ¥ lice, male gray wolf, collar. _Re- doms s, SO = EYEGLASSES—Tortoise shell. in brown leath- er case, Wednesday, probably on 7th st. n.w. Name and address in case or eall Line. 8024. ¢ NITY PIN. A_ 0. Pi, near National Reward. _Frank. 463. 25 FITCH_FUR—One 3-picce in loge boxes of Poli's Theater, on Tuesday evening, June 17, If found please telephone Lincoln 6735. 21% SLANSESTorfoise shell, Wednesday, A tween East Capitol st. and 1ith st Sowntown. Address Box 99-B, Star office, 22¢ GLAS 911 Eye st. s.e. ek PIN_Piatinum top, gold underneath, set with diamond. Telepboe -Herudon 31-R, Herndon, Va. 1 PIN—Circular _diamond. Franklin 3987, Reward. NG _Lady's, diamond; pear K on 12th st. BN areday, June 11, Heward. 916 12th s e, o3 VRIST WATCH—Lady's, t:\nbltl: June 14. Reward 10 Fast Florence Court. > ZENETH SWISS WATCH—Gold chaln. Re- B Sotex, " Fraviiin 595, g DIAMOND LAVALLIER. Will the lady picking up by mistake three-diamond lavallier in Goldenberg’s fitting room Wednesddy return same and re- ceive liberal reward? NO QUESTIONS ASKED. Has sentimental value to owner because memento of dearly loved dead relative. Phone Potomac 099, . Teft on bench at Chevy Sunday afternoon. Re- Reward. Tnoitials M. L. 8. 10, small <M refurned to Apt. June 17; reward. F. W. Mevers, | yesterday at the Ne lard, where last night he entertained a few guests in the roof dining room. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Dalton of Woonsocket, R. L, are at the Hamil- ton Hotel for a week or so. Marriage Licenses. Marriage licenses bave been issued to the following: Albert T. Robinson and Helen E. Strait. John W. Jannes of Baltimore, Md.. and Hildn 'A. Todd of this city. William G. Molton and Alma E. Shelton. Arthur J. Tolson and Thelma M. Hampto James C.Sult and Lillian M. B. Tarkington. Young and E. Dell Albirte. Bush of Waco, Tex., and Helen L Foster of Shustisn, N. Y. cl W. Mendum &nd Catherine R. S. Forsyth and Dorothea E. Miller. e U. Ports and Harriott B. George. rze Broadrup of Richmond, Va., and A. Parks of Brookfield, Mass. David S. Barry, jr.. and Amelia N. Johnson. Herbert Hall ‘and Mary P. Lewis. arnell C. J. Wilson aad Cononelo M. corge F. Newton and Cora L. Tenneyson. Births Reported. The following births have been reported to the health department in the last twenty-four urs: Fred M. and Lillian V. Suthard. boy. Clrence O. and Margaret F. Puiliam, girL Edward and Bertha Fisher, girl. Aylor B. and Blanche E. Adams, boy. James C. and Ava 8. Kiimkiewicz, boy. Raiph C. and Stella E. Taber, girl. Manning L. and Isabela A. Connett, girl. Le Roy and Ruth Reinsmith, boy. Cornelius and Bexsie Haasell, boy. Louis and Nina Deshayes, boy. Charles and Bessie Applestein, girl. James W. and Eva Flannagan, boy. Joseph C. and Virginia H. Bennet, girl. James A. and Adella Tyler, boy. Benjamin and Mary Lucas, boy. Clay J. and Rosina Hill, girl. Ralph and Lucy Gant, boy. John and Grace Jackson, girl. Kerman and Irene Fraoklin, girl. Clayton and Izetta Frye, boy. Thomas and Mable Lyles, gi nd Bessie Atkinton, boy. Floyd and Aralessa Jackson. bos. s and Fannie Ellis, girl. John and Mamie Williams, girl. John and Pinkie Harris, girl. Charles and Imogene V. Mason, boy. Percy A. and Edoa M. Hall, girl. Deaths Reported. The following deaths have been reported to the bealth department in the last twenty- four hours: Hazel C. Piner, 19, 936 26th st. John J. Gearin, 57, United States Soldiers’ Home Hospital. Sylvia_B. Ridemour, 60, Georgetown Uni- versity Hospital. George A. Mills, 55, 1800 Connecticut ave. Dorothea Krebs, 84, German Orphan Home, Anacostia. Andrew J. Overton, 73, 1805 Kenyon st. Frank A. Schwars, 33, St. Elizabeth's Hos- tal. Louis E. Flynn, 48, 1206 North Capitol st. Walter E. Winslow. 56. 813 F st. n.e. Benjamin Tresler, 48, 656 26th Susie Lacy, 49, 2232’ 8th st. James Washington, 43, Tuberculosis Hos- ar Irey Acker, 65, New Je: A AT R e o o2 i pi _— oman rulers of large tribes In But the glorification of physical strength Men also put brawn above brains, or talent, or anything else. as is witnessed by the fact that men will travel hundreds of miles to witness two brutes pound each other beholding this gory spectacle. the greatest artist who ever much as a prize fighter makes in a few minutes. Pousands of frenzied spectators, but not & handful of people will will draw tho go to hear an intercollegiate debate. into a pulp and pay exorbitant prices for the joy of The greatest writer, the grea T lived, did not make in u lifetime of toil as st statesman, A college foot ball game The reason that gentle, refined girls are particularly attracted by brutal and rowdy men is because we are instinctively drawn toward our opposites. here is something alluring in the unknown type. e so that we will not have at one end of the adjust the balance of humanity It is nature trying to seale those who are all animal, and at the other end those who are all soul. But nature thinks only of the good of the race, not of the happines of the individual, and this difference which draws people together before marriage separates them after marriage and suc; for both parties. DFEAR MISS DIX: Why .. it when I unions nearly always end in misery DOROTHY DIX. . e a married man pays a little friendly ‘attention to a woman where he is emploved every one starts gossiping and thinks he is in love with her, even the woman herself? Most married men are well anchored and wouldn't give their wives for all the flappers in kingdom come, but every married man who is decently polite to a woman in his office seems to be under suspicion. Answe “Give a dog a bad name and hang him. employers have Lotharios, and so many MARRIED EMPLOYER. 1 suppose, Mr. Man, it is another illustration of the old proverb, There have been so many office eloped with their pretty stenographers, that the world has come to look with a suspicious eve upon even workers of the female persuasion. good-looktng. For a man to be seen out lunching with a pretty. the most casual kindness that a man extends to his fellow Especially when they are young and little, bob-haired secretary, or to take her home in his car, could set the tongues of gossip wagging, though his interest might be as innocent and paternal as that of any grandpa who ever fed a hungry voungster, or gave a lift to a tired one. But nobody would believe it, because the movies and the lurid melodramas and the sex novels portray the tired business man as a wolf in sheep's clothing, and every working girl as either an abnormally innocent lamb or as chief of the home-wrecking crew. All of which, of course, is tommyrot. Less philandering goes on in a business office than anywhere else in the world. concerned with smaking money instead of making love. Working people are Flirtation is a parlor game, not an occupation that pulls down a pay envelope. Furthermore, the men and women who work side by side are not apt to fall in love, because they see each other too clearly and too closely. They get all the disillusions that matrimony would bring without any of its compensations. The only thing that the average emplover ever notices about his woman employes is their efliciency, and he is far more concerned about their spelling or their salesmanship than he is about their eves. And the average woman employe does not see her boss as a figure of romance. wanting to get him away from her. She thinks him a grouch, and is sorry for his wife, instead of As for a woman’s mistaking the nature of a man's attentions, that is the commonest thing in life. The ability to believe that every man who is polite to her cherishes a secret passion for her is God's greatest gift to woman. It salves the wounds life deals her vanity. You will always find that the less attractive a woman is the more convinced she is that she is a vamp that no man can resist. 5 DOROTHY DIX. .. DEAR MISS DIX: Would you think it advisable for a sixteen-year-old girl Who has been brought up in a lovely home, and with every advantage ahead of her, to marry a boy a few years older than she? The girl really loves him, and is assured of his affection, but she loves another person almost as well, though not exactly in the same way. Do you think it probable that a boy who has given up drink and wild girls because married? Answer: he loves this girl would return to them after they are THE GIFL My dear child, any girl of sixteen Who has a good home and thinks of leaving it to gét married should be locked up in some safe place until her temporary insanity passes. And any girl of sixteen who even dreams of doing such a suicidal thing as getting married when she doesn’t know which of two boys she likes the best should be put in a padded cell. She's violently crazy with homicidal tendencies. - ‘Why do you want to wreck your life at its very beginning? you in such a hurry to plunge yourself into misery? Why are Why do you want to Marry any man when you are not in love with him, for you certainly have only a passing fancy for a boy if you doubt your own affection for him. Think it all over for the next five or six years, and then you won't marry either one of them, but you will choose a man wWho won't have to be reformed and whom you will know that vou love. © (Copyright, 1824 * - 198* Timothy Hanlon &1 H ST M.E Phone L. 5343, WM. H. SARDO & CO. 412 H st. 1. Phone Lineoln 524. Modern Chape! Automobile Funerals. r——THE ORIGINAL —— W.R.Speare T, 1208 H STREET.N.W MAIN 108 FORMERLY 940 F ST ALMUS R. SPEARE WILLIS B. SPEARE ——— CLYDE J.NICHOLS —— JOSEPR. Soxs A ESTABLISHED 1830 &8 MORTICIANS 17301732 PENNA.AVE. PHONES: MAIN 5512-553 Quick, Dignified_and Efficlent Service. W. W. Deal & Co. 816 H ST. N.B. LINCOLN 8200, Automobile _Rervice. Chapel. THO>. R. NALLEY & SONS 131 ELEVENTH ST. S.E_ Undertakers. Embalmers. Homelike Funeral Parlors. "Phone_Lincoln 480, " Frank Geier’s Sons Co. 1113 SEVENTH ST. W. M.in un Modern Chupel. Teiephone. as NORVAL K. TABLER 1526 L St. N.W. Main 1544 Perry X Walsh ¢ Boy M. Perry—Main 984—Gerald Walsh, JAMES T. RYAN, 317 PA. AVE. 8.B. Mode! Chapel. Lincols 142 Private Ambulances, _Livery n_Connection " HERBERT B. NEVIUS NEW YORK AVE. N.W. MAIN 2008 = Private Ambulance. o VL. SPEARE CO. Nelther the successors of mor con. nected with the original W. R. Spears establishment. Q4() F St. N.W, Phone Frank. 6626. Joseph F. Birch’s Sons (ISAAC BIRCH) Established 1841, 3034 M St. N.W. Etabimmea 184 J. WILLIAM LEE, Fuoeral Director and mode: crematoriam. Moderats 832 Pa_ave. nw_Tel call M. 1385 R CHAS.S. ZORHORST. | FUNERAL DESIGNS. Con. C A ffor Pl Geo. C. Shaffer %, 5™ EXPRESSIVE FLORAL _ 900 14th st. .w. EMBLEMS at MODERATB PRICES. Crompt awo delivery service. Artistic—expressive—lnespensive. DOROTHY DIX. Gude Bros. Co., 1214 F St