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.. CLAIM BOY ADMIT - THREE ROBBERIES Police Say Youth Held in Gas Station Burglary Was No Novice. Ralph Paul White; 19 vears old, of 1417 Monroe street admitted partici- pation in other robberies, it was said by police today, following his arrest|' Yesterday by Sergt. Sidney J. Marks in connection with the robbery of the gasoline station of the Standard Oil Company, Harrison street and Con- necticut avenue. These confessions were made, it is said, before Detec- tives B. W. Thompson and R. H. Mansfield. According to the police, former employe of Norman W. ter, cafeteria proprietor, admitted having stolen a 150-pound safe con- taining less than $100 from the lat- ter's place of business at 3316 Four- teenth street. Antomobile Recovered. It is further asserted that White admitted participation in the robbery of the home of Capt. John S. McKay, U. S. A, 3821 Jenifer street, stealing wearing apparel and a pistol. The automobile found in possession of White and his accomplices yesterday morning belonged to Walter Gib- son, Victoria apartments, who re- ported it stolen July 29. Manley Marquis Harris, Oak Hill, Va., arrested vesterday by the pre- cinct police, also is said to have ad- mitted participation in the cafeteria robbery, both prisoners telling of how the robbery s planned and exe- cuted. In addition to the foregoing rob- beries, White is said to have admit- ted participation in the attempted liquor theft in the home of G. W. Forsberg, 4907 Fourteenth street, more than two months ago. Much expensive liquor had been prepared for removal from the premises, an Policeman Guy Rone and a comn- panion were arrested on the premise 1t was charged that they were there to cart away the liquor. Suspended From Force. Rone's explanation of his presence on the premises s that he was there in line of duty, having learned that burglars were to remove the liquor from the premises that night. He was off duty and out of his pre- cinct, however, and was arrested for a grand jury investigation and sus- pended from the force. Walter Richard Metz, 17 cent place, Takoma Park, Md. who ‘was arrested in the vicinity of the gasoline station vesterday morning and alleged to have been a member of the trio implicated in the robbery, is not alleged to have had any con- mnection with White in the other rob- beries. The third member of the trio has not been caught. 1714 Cres- A Mixed Up His English. From the Pathfinder. Jullus Fritz tells about an old Ger- man friend fo his who got badly tan- gled with the English language re- cently. It seems that the old German owns a factory and he learned that his foreman not getting down to work very early, so he thought he would catch him. He got up early one morning and went fo the plant. The foreman, who had received a tip as to what the old man was up to, was down early himself that morn- ing. When the old German him he remarked: “Abh, I see you're early of late. You used to be bekind before, but now you're first at last.” What Pa Said. From the Philadelphia Ledger. “So you have got twins at your| said Mrs. Besumbe to little ma’am, two of ‘em.” “What are you going to call them?” “Thunder and Lightning.” “Why, those are strange call childrén.” “Well, that's what Pa called them a8 soon as he heard they were in the | house.” SPECIAL NOTICES. DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP. _TAKE notice that the partnership of Hartzeil & Em- ery, formerly engaged in the manufucture und sale of doughnuts, and located at 501 O st. gton, D. C., was dissolved on Au- 7 SUMM Est. frec. Geo. M. M. Walker. Col. . 710 Morton st. n.w.. formerly head tuner for Percy 8. roster and Knabe Co. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts incurred by any other tlan mysel {hls aate, ‘Ausust 28, 1921 D J. PLAS el NTED—TO BRING A VANLOAD OF FU piture from New York, Philadelphia, Bethie- hem and Easton, Pa.: Wilmington, Del.: . J.. and’ Richmond. Va.. to W SMITH'S TRA R & STOR AMERICAN PAPERHAN Bedutife your home & ou ean enfoy it at “very reasonable rates. 1525 North Cap. S W. N scraped, cleaned, finished. waxed by electri machine. K. E. Nash, 2871 9th st. Col, 4251 Maximum Results Are always obtained when dealing with us. Phone MAIN 14 for roofers. Roofing 1121 th n.w. IRONCLAD goxtee 2121 Main 14 Need Printing!! 1¥ YOU DO, CONSULT US. HIGH GRADB, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED. BYRON S. ADAMS, ranes, Good Koof Work g Every dollar paid us for repai: - qurmed”with ‘horouan work, o0 best: e erials. " 1f you meed & robter o GOOD ‘rooter. Call us upt J0" "eed & KOONS 290kING COMPANY Just Phone Us —when you need printing. We'll gladl. getimate. The Million-Dollar Peioting Planf 3 ‘The National Capital Press 12101212 D St. N.W. Phone Main 988. 11030 St W, ired and Baivecd. ACME FLCORING Bl . wera) a n| . CME 1 T80 H ot n.w. M. 980, BT & person 60 years of age has speat approk pe mately 1-3 ‘of it, 0,D¢I: oot Make your flll(nll:lh;nd :l‘x ;Dfln‘l feel RI SERVICH Bedell Manufacturing Company OVATION € B st N.W. Phone M. 3621 Closed All Day Labor Day ~ Palmer Brand Beverages You'll Avoid Delays - —on the road by having us Overhaul Your Car before your Fall auto trip begins. R. McReynolds & Son Specialists {n Painting. Slip Covers and Tops, e 145 L ST, NoW. Maiu iz, espied | names to | Calf Arrested For Violating Traffic Rules A calf, destined for slaughter, and Policeman Milton D. Smith of No. 4 precinct, president of the Policemen’s Assoclation, mixed up in a traffic jam near the Auth Pro- vision Co., on D between Sixth and Seventh streets southwest, yester- day afternoon, which attracted a crowd of several hundred highly amused spectators. President Smith is an expert traffic officer, and, when at head- quarters yesterday afternoon a hurry call came from the Auth Provision Co. for assistance, he rushed to the spot, discovering the. calf had, as he charged, broken the traffic rogulations by navigating on the wrong side of the street. Using his best traffic-regulating form the association president finally persuaded the animal, which, he said, seemed to have highly erroncous ideas about the city regulations, to come to a tem- porary halt up against a building. There is was roped by an Auth Co. employe and led back to the slaughter pen. MARVELS AT TREE EXISTENCE N ITY Superintendent of Parking, in Annual Report, Tells of Ob- stacles to Be Overcome. Outlining the tremendous handi- | caps under which Washington's beau- | tiful shade trees must not only live {but to bear out such traditions as “The City Beautiful” and “The City of Trees,” Clifford Lanham, superin- | tendent of trees and parkings, in his nual report submitted to the Com- missioners today_ pointed out that it is remarkable that they live at all. “The condition of the shade trees of Washington is, generally speaking, the best that can be expected when the adverse circumstances attending their growth, health and life are con- sidered,” said Mr. Lanham. *“For in- stance, the city tree is deprived of the natural seepage under which its country fellow thrives. It depends on its miniature and unnatural park- ing for rain water. Contrast this alone with the country tree that has acres of surface seepage and then marvel that the city tree, hemmed in by miles and miles of concrete, its roots writhing about leaky gas mains, blocked by electric conduits and wa- ter pipes, lives at all. Add to these auuarently insurmountable obstacles salt water from ice cream freezers, oil from roadways and motor vehicles, the indiffere: of the curbsetter, the conduit layer, the lineman, the plumber and the hardihood and beau- ty of our trees present one of those | superb feats of adjustment that ia | my opinion should rank well up in arwin's theory of survival and a { natural adjustment. Autos Damage Trees. “Latterly another menace has {arisen. Consider the thousands of | automobiles that pass any given point downtown in a single da Now con- sider the hundreds of thousands of cubic feet of poisonous gases that are discharged by these automobiles and that must be neutralized by the life forces of the city tree. Constder this and then do not ask why a tree is apparently failing but rather why it lives at all.” Mr. Lanham reported that 1.034 young trees were planted in their | pormanent positions during the last { fiscal vear, a net increase of 976 over | the previous vear. The majority were | planted for the purpose of filling va- cancies in existing rows. The report shows that 1,552 trees were removed during the year for various reasons, 9,610 were spraved for the extermination of leaf-eating | insects, and 10,884 were trimmed. | There are now a total of 104,294 curb trees in the District, a decrease of 299 under the preceding year. It has been impossible to plant trees along the recently improved Mr. Lanham told the Commis- because of inadequate appro- priations and the loss of two nursery | sites. CINCINNATI POLICE SPURRED TO COURTESY | Safety Director Wants Them Gen- tle Except to Hard-Boiled * Motorists. CINCINNATI, Ohio, August 30.— Harsh adjectives which many traffic policemen use on tourists have been officially replaced in Cincinnati by courtesy. The city’s traffic police- men have become polite salesmen, “selling the city” to strangers. Each guardian of a Cincinnati street corner has been given a letter from William Tudor, safety director, which stresses the point that courtesy is something that costs nothing. He urges traffic officers to he prepared to give a soft word of caution to the motorist who has unintentionally violated a trafic ordinance. He | points out that slight violations of traffic laws are often caused by a mind obsessed with cares collected during a day's activity, and adds: “The average driver will appreciate the situation.” Must Accept Proffers. To care for the driver who does not accept suggestions of the traffic policemen in good faith, Safety Di- rector Tudor says: “By no means do 1 want traffic men to stand for abuse. If a driver becomes ‘hard’ or defiant, argument accomplishes nothing. A citation will end the incident and the court will settle the dispute.” auto transients should find the wel- come sign hung on every policeman, Safety Director Tudor says. A stranger should be given every con- sideration, for “a stranger within our gates always remembers kind treatment and never forgets rough treatment. With a little considera- tion on our part the stranger will sing the praises of our city to others in his own community or wherever he may go,” the letter concludes. Chicken-Catching Eel Caught. Near Deposit, N. Y., farmers have Yeen missing their chickens for many weeks and the marauder could not be apprehended regardless of how careful the watch. Recently, S. D. Peters caught a 4-pound eel and when it was dressed it was found to con- tain two young chickens which had been gulped down whole. Caterpillar Is Strong. A goat-moth caterpillar, found in the London Zoo, has become the ob- ject of study on the part of natural- sts because of its great strength. This caterpillar was placed in a glass jar covered with a heavy leaden lid in which Holes had been punched to admit air. Over night the caterpillar had chewed away enough of the lead from around one. of the 'holes to escape. Another caterpillar of the same type was housed in a cigar box, but chewed its way out, ate a hole in the top of a piano and was later found wandering among the works, a Tourists and automobile visitors or | i | THE EVE Snapshots of a Junior League Shortstop. £ 5 WATTHES HOT GROUNDER. TER'S AS GOOD AS OUT AND $IZ2LE BY A UTTLE D WIS > ASSURES PRHER TS BAT~ NOT T WORRY, OLD KID, HE'S GOT THE WHOLE TEAM BEHIND HIM LEFT MUTIERS SOMETHING ABOUT BRI, EXPECTED T CVER ING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY —By GLUYAS WILLIAMS. WANTS TO KNOW WHY SECOND LEAVES IT TO REST OF TEAM BASEMAN DIDNT GET THAT - CANT HE COVER ANY MORE WHETHER THAT WASN'T NEAR- ER TO EDDIE THAN TO HIM - GROUND THAN A PANSY- WHA'S WELL THEY MUST BE CROAS- WHE MATIER WITH HIM ANWAY EVED, THAT'S ALL IATELY LEYS AN EASY ONE THAT BALL TDOK - RELD'S ROCK- POP PLY DRIBRAE THROUGH HIS LEES IER THAN A QUARRY € ¢ 8 STOPS SUDDENLY SHOUT GROUND DEMANDS 15 THE FIRST BASL- ING' TAKE. 1T JUST _MAN GLUED TO HIS BAG OR A% BALL DLOPS TOWE WHAT - DIDN'T HE HEAR HIM THOLLER T TAKE IT - GOOD Ni6HT AFTER THE 6AME WHAT A BUNCH OF BONE HEADS SPANIARDS FACING | R o 5. i STRONG OPPOSITION Critical Situation in Morocco Is Revealed in Official Statement. By the Associated Press. MADRID, August 30.—The seriou: ness of the situation in Morocco, where Spanish troops are engaged in a struggle against the rebels, is brought home to the people In an official state- ment todas. “The invasion by Riffians and Go- maris,” it says, “has caused a general uprising in the western zone (Tetuan) and creates a situation necessitating intensive protection of the Xauen- Tetuan road by two strong columns, who are engaged in constant fighting in a mountainous region against an almost invisible enemy along the Lau River. “The Spanish forces are compelled to fight for every inch in their at- tempt to bring relief to besieged po- sitions, but they do not fear so much the fire of the enemy as the difficult terrain in which these beleaguered positions are situated. To this is added the fact that water must be carried from their base, as the water- ing places along the front are too dangerous to be utilized. Casualties Are Reported. “Some of the besieged positions have lost their heliographic com- munication, and those who still can use it report casualties from fighting and illness. “Raisull (former bandit chief) is doing everything in his power to aid and fight on our side near Xauen. “The Spanish government in this statement has tried to tell the whole truth which the people can and nfust know as regards the actual state of affairs in Morocco without being in- discreet and revealing secrets or mili- tary plans which the government and the general staff have worked out to bring about a successful ending to the warfare against the rebellious Moors.” — Hamon’s Widow Wins Divorce. ARDMORE, Okla., August 30.—Mrs. Georgia Hamon Rohrer, widow of the late Jake L. Hamon, Republican na- tional committeeman from Oklahoma, was granted a divorce today from William L. Rohrer, Chicago art col- lector, by District Judge A. E. ‘Waldon. She charged cruelty and non-support. Abe Martin Says: = 22 Splurgin’ around on borrowed money is bad enough, but men- acin’ life an’ property in a bor- rowed car is jest awful. Wherever there’s knickers there’s allus some snickers. | We allus feel like we wuz in a losin’ game when a p’litical ora- tor tells us our Gover’'ment is a gigantic business enterprise, an’ we are all stockholders an’ part- hers in it. Lafe Bud, who’s bein’ sued for $122 rent, remains unmoved. Jake Bentley has traded his seven-passenger car fer a one- seated roadster, so some o’ th’ family ’It be left t’ run th’ farm. If you want t’ make your wife mad, don’t notice that her hair’s bobbed, (Copyright, Joba F. Dille Co.) —_— On a street car in a small Ohio city was the sign, “All children 42 inche: r over must pay.” P Gun Elevations President Coolldge made it known yesterday he would assert all rights given this country under the treaties of the arms limita- tion conference in regard to the elevation of naval guns. The President, however, s loath to make any move in thi regard which would stimulate further competition in armament between nations, feeling that foreign countries should pay thei debts to this nation before spend- ing additional money on arma- ments. RUM FLEET INFESTS SHORES OF GANADA Liquor Smugglers Reported| Constantly Flocking to Cape Breton Caves. By Consolidated Press. LONDON, August 30.— W, The whole world knows of the an stead squadron that lubricates York by means of submarines, hy planes and high-powered motor boats. The whole world does not know that Canada also has an Atlantic rum fleet. Many great waves beat on the rugged coasts of Cape Breton, but no wild nor'easter as wild and law- lessness as the waves of rum. The writer has recently stood on the very crest of these rum breakers and watched them foam shoreward into hundreds of smugglers’ coves. A glance at a map will show at once that Cape Breton is ideally adapted to pluck bottles from the sea. It is the hand of which rest of Nova Scotia is the arm and the Straits of Canso the wrist, It runs out to sea in innumerable long headlands like eager beckoning fingers. Or perhaps it would be bet- ter to say that Cape Breton, Cape Percy, Point Aconle, Cape Smoky and Cape North are tongues—quivering and thirsty tongues. Vessels Ot Every Headland. Off every headland is some vessel of the fieet. It needs little magic to summon spirits from the vast deep. The rustle of bills at the three-mile limit is all that is required to lure kegs and cases from the holds of the rum boats into the holds of the rum Tunners. To serve as barriers against this tidal wave, the dominion government has three revenue cutters, the largest of which is the Sagamore, command- ed by Capt. Peters. These watch dogs of the customs, if they took their eyes or their telescopes from the land, would realize in a moment that they are not dykes but sieves. The customs officials cannot watch so gTeat an expanse of sea on a coast as wrinkled as a human brain. At its full strength the fleet amounts to 40 sails, 15 off Cape Bre- ton and the rest off Halifax, Lunen- burg, and Yarmouth. And they are really “sails” They ride at anchor with salls up to serve as a sea mark to customers and to steady them, the boats, into the wind. Only a few are steamers or have auxiliary engines. Some of them are just one masted, almost one cask, fishing sloops. They do not need to be as large as the vessels in the sea caravan that serves the great American Sahara. They supply not half a continent, but only three small provinces. Being able to anchor 3 miles offshore and not 12, they do not need to be so seaworthy. Their source of supply is St. Pierre Miquelon, only a hundred miles dis- tant from the extreme north of Capt Breton, while the “home waters” of the American fleet are in the Bermudas and the Bahamas. It should rejoice the hearts of pro- tectionists to learn that this Canadian fleet has no truck nor trade with the Yankee fleet. It occuples the extreme tip of the great marine horn or cornu- copla which so coplously bedews the Volstead coast, but it is not in direct contact with it. Between Maine and New Brunswick, where the 12-mile limit ends and the 3-mile begins, there is a gap. One rum fleet is, as it were, “in the air.” But it prospers as a strictly Canadian enterprise, limited to a Canadian market. It was estimated by a Sydney newspaper man that Cape Breton alone buys in one year $2,000,- 000 worth of lquor from the sea. The ships are mostly owned by Canadians and belong to Canadlan ports. They laugh at American com- petition and occasionally dump goods on the American market in spite of Republican anti-dumping laws. Many a Nova Scotlan liquor carrier makes a dash into American waters as though on a Highland foray into the Lowlands and trades headaches for dollars. Ships of the rum fleet, it seems, are like the whales. In rough weather they keep well out to avoid being blown on shore. When the weather is fine they come in and bask in the sunshine on the 3-mile limit. The rum fleet never does do a brisk busi- - mess where there is a brisk breese. JOINS REST OF INFIELD IN SHOUTING *MINE!" AS BATTER SENDS UP t | born, the | from the many [to get b e T 777 VERY SMALLPEBBLE A:-uE ND DEMANDS DID EVERY- WWHOLE TIAMOND AND IMMED- BODY SEE THE CRAZY BOUNCE RUNS ™ GENERAL DIRECT- 10N OF FIRST BASE AN- NOUNCING LOUDLY THAT HE'S GOT 1T @ McClure Newspaper Syndicate RETURNS T POSIMON OFFER- GRADUALLY GETS BACK T NORM- NG TO TAKE ON FIRST BASE AL AND TELLS PITCHER NOT TOWOR- MAN OR ANYONE EISE RY-MAKE HIM HITIT HE CANT GET 1T PAST THIS INFIELD, OLD KID- NOW| THEN EVERYBODY PLAY BALL EVANS DENIES KLAN BAN ON JEWS LIFTED Wizard Declares Only Native- Born White Gentile Protestants May Be Members. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 30 —The Jew- ish Telegraph Agency in this city to- day made public a letter received from H. W. Evans, imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, in which he said the prerequisites for member- ship in the Klan had not been changed The telegraph agency written Mr. Evans inquiring if current re- ports were correct to the effect that | the Klan had modified its policy with | ard to Jews who had served in the | re American Army, making it possible for them to join the order. Mr. Evans' reply sald, in part: “Our organization is founded upon the Christian religion and as a prereq- uisite for membership thevein we require that applicants be native- white Gentile Protestant Ameri- can citizens of good moral character. “We recognize the right of all men to associate themselves together. The particular group which ve are en- deavoring to associate, come under the prerequisites heretofore given in this letter, WOMEN ARE RECRUITED FOR SCOTLAND YARD British Police Hope to Outwit Criminals With Fair Detectives. 3 ted Presa. SYDNEY, Nova Scotia, August 30.— wiles, wit and charms versus criminal craftiness is a possibility of the future, | and the outcome is expected by Scot- land Yard to rope in more crime per- petrators than has been the case recently. Recruiting for the new women's police force is opening shortly, and, applicants the crim- investigation department hopes some bobbed haired, daintily gowned detectives who will prove more than the equals of the wily jewel thieves+ and dope traffickers who have hitherto eluded attempts of mere man detectives to track them down. The authorities are satisfied that many of the present crimes and rob- beries are engineered by a new set of smart criminals who can only be countered by detectives of the same outward smartness and equal wit. By dressing up to the part, these future sleuths will_be able to move leisurely about the West End without attracting as much suspicion as male plain clothes detectives and they will be able, by their personal charms and manner, to disarm suspicion. Invite Trinkle to Speak. RICHMOND, Va., August 30:—Gov. E. Lee Trinkle has been invited to speak at the Lafayette-Marne exer- cises at Baltimore on September 6. If unable to go the governor will send p representative. inal Branch Office DISTRICT NATIONAL BANK Conn. Ave. and K Street No Parking Restrictions “Park Your Car at the Door” TIGER! TIGER None Better!!! I Do You Want a Home In Chevy Chase? QUINTER, THOMAS & CO. Main 8416 FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Made in Tampa Ask for them At All Smoke Shops 10c—2 for 25¢—15¢ Strt AUGUST 30, 1924 IMILLIONS TO HEAR FLYERS GREETED WCAP and WEAF to Broad- cast Patrick Congratulations on Return to America. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, August 30.—Millions of radio fans will listen in on a historic occasion when the American round-the-world flyers. soon after landing at Ice Tickle, Labrador, don headphones and receive greetings and congratulations spoken by their chief, Maj. Gen. M. M. Patrick, whose voice will be broadcast on ‘the air from Washington on the evening of the Labrador landing. Secretary of War Weeks, if in Washington, may precede Gen. Patrick with a spoken greeting. Admiral Magruder, Capt. Lyman Cotten and officers of the United States cruiser Richmond will be among the party listening at headphones in the ward room of the Richmond awalting the greeting. Gen. Patrick will speak into a microphone at sta- tion WCAP in Washington. His voice will be relayed by wire to station WEAF of the American_Telephone and Telegraph Co., New York. The broadcasting will take place at or about 9 p.m. eastern daylight saving time, : According to advices received today by the North American Newspaper Al- liance, all shore gtations, Navy ships, other ship and the radio beacon at Battle Harbor, Labrador, will be si- lent for at least five minutes at this time, thus insuring the uninterrupted reception of the greeting on board the ship. The safe arrival of Lieuts. Lowmell Smith and Erik Nelson at Indlan Harbor will, In the opinion of avia- tion experts, mark the virtual com- pletion of their historic world gird- ling tour, as the remainder of the flight presents no exceptional dif- ficulties. The greeting by radio from the chief of the Air Service. on this occasion of the fiyers' return American contineut thus assumes the nature of a historic event. (Copyright, 1924, Tnited States, and Great Hritain by North Americ paper Alliance. All right reserved.) - Scientific Whaling. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Whaling has now been established on a scientific basis by the Norwegian industry. After years of extravagant killing, when nothing but the blubber was utilized, whales are now being | utilized completely, boneless whale meat being an important product. | Fresh whale meat compares favor- ably with other meats, according to scientific tests conducted by Chris- | tiania University. {© —YOUR HOME FOR || THE WINTER, IN- SPECT OUR APART- MENTS. AT THIS |, TIME THERE ARE AVAILABLE SEV- \" ERAL VERY AT- TRACTIVE TWO, THREE AND FOUR RO OM, KITCHEN, RECEPTION HA LL AND BATH APART- MENTS. _ REASON- ABLE RENTALS {© AND TWENTY. FOURHOUR SERV- THE lE THE CORNER-STONE OF HAPPINESS IS WHEN When we supply the material to build your home, we are as proud of that home as you, because we know it ha# a tangible value and one that will last. Our hobby is qual- ity, prompt service and ma- terial that will stand the test of time. Consult us. 30t and K Sts.Nw *West 2370 = to the | RUMELY ASKS PARDON; WOULD RESTORE RIGHTS By the Associated Press. WHITE PLAINS, N.Y., August 30— Dr. Edward E. Rumely, formerly pub- lisher of the New York Evening Mal, and one of his attorneys, Nor- PEACE INHONDURAS conspiracy against the government | AMerican Charge Instructed were commuted last Spring by Presi- dent Coolidge, have appled tor run| to Use Friendly Offices. Other Countries Aig. pardons which will restore their civil 1.5, SEEKS TOMAKE ¢ 4 rights. This became known today when officlals at the Eastview peni- | tentiary received requests from the | Department of Justice that the men's records be sent to Washington for examination. Rumely, Lindheim and S. Walter Kauffmann, another attorney associ- ated with Rumely, had served a month of a year's term in the East- view penitentiary when the commu- tation was announced. The three were released April 18 Stokeley W. Morgan, American | charge d'affaires at Tegucigalpa, has {Been instructed by the Washington Government to use his good offices in a friendly effort to bring about an agreement between revolutionary factions in Honduras. He will be as- sisted by representatives of several Central American governments, which d to A GARAGE FOR PAVED sty | $7,650 | TR | 645 MORRIS STREET N.E. (Between 6th and 7th, F and G Stx.) SAMPLE HOUSE Open Daily and Sunday for Inspection Until 9 P.M. “A Well Constructed House, Beautifully Finished” N. L. SANSBURY (0., Inc. 1418 Eye St. N.W. Phones Main 59034 Members Washington Real Estate Board Money Immediately Available For FIRST TRUST LOANS On Improved Property Current Interest Rates—Reasonable Commissions LET US HAVE YOUR APPLICATION We have also a limited amount of money to I t 5%.%. Desirable loan applications for amounts 'l’ol:y szg.oo;"t‘o'mé% CKEEVER =GOS Maximu) ervice General Agents of the Globe Indemnity Company W. H. WEST COMPANY Announce that ROBERT B. CUMMINGS Has Become a Member of This Firm —and will be in charge of the Loans, Investment and Bonding business of the organization. W. H. WEST COMPANY WM. L. F. KING, President EDWARD G. PERRY, Vice President ROBERT B. CUMMINGS, Secretary and Treasurer 916 15th Street N.W. Main 2474 General Agents of the Globe Indemnity Company NEW HOMES Inspect Today Sunday or Labor Day $500 CASH 212 to 232 15th St. N.E. Just N.E. of Lincoln Park —OR— 1327 to 1337 E St. S.E. Just North Pa. Ave. S.E. Easy Monthly Payments Large Lots to Paved Alley Room for Garage . Hot-Water Heat Electric Lights Sleeping Porches, Large Front Lawns Open Evenings and Sunday G INCORPORATED 1311 H° STREET NORTHWEST