Evening Star Newspaper, April 15, 1925, Page 12

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b ONING LAW FIGHT | FUND CONTRIBUTED, Lincoln Park Citizens Vote Aid in Court Contest i Against Measure. The Lincoln Pa ciation joined the in Washington tion last Citizens® Asso cht to retain zon when it voted ar night to help de-| lezal expenses incident to the court fight in which the Zoning mission has become engaged. The held in the Br | et between Thirteenth ( rteenth streets southeast. re adopted urging the to instruct the Wash- [ v and Electric Co. to on | eenth | ziven a testimonial by the natlonal | o Fifteenth stre aid that | ris stretch of sidewalk is impassable tor several da nd the many liigh School, who are its chief ave forced to use the street, thus mitting themseves to traffic dang Objection to any change in the park way in the center of Pennsylvania from Second to Seve s after each rainstorm | students of Eastern | Pershing Soon Will Meet Call of Duty In Latin Country . John . Pershing, called by his the greatest American traveler of modern times, is expected to return to this city in a day or two from Lin coln. Nebr., where he has been the guest of his sister most of the time his return from his triumphal tour of South America several weeks - will then complete plans for longed visit to the South- ent as head of the joint mis h is to supervise the plel e to determine the nationality ¢ Tacna-Arica territory now in’ dis- pute between Chile and Peru. He wili be accompanied on that mission by a large staff of officials of the State De sine partment and Army and Navy officers, |and a battleship will be used for the transportation of the party The date of departure has not heen fixed, as certain important details to be made by Chile and Peru are still unsettled. Next week Gen Pershing will go to New York c where he will be organization of the American Legion | at the Hippodrome Saturday evening, April 25. As a special compliment to the commander of the American ex- | pedition forces, the Secretary of has ordered the United States Army Band at Washington Barracks to New York city to take part in the testimonial. Gen. Pershing was in fluential in the organization of that band as the natural successor of the THE EVENING SUMMER JUNIOR HIGH SESSIONS PLANNED | Macfarland and Jefferson Schools Expected to Be Opened as | Demand Grows. Two junior high schools probably will be operated for the first time this Summer a part of the vacation school system. Walter R. Patterson, director of special schools, pointed out today that there has been an insistent demand for the opening of Summer courses in junior high school work, and as a result he is considering rec ommending to the Board of Educa- tion that two junior high schools be added to the vacation school system. Summer school classes have been conducted in past years exclusively for elementary and senior high school pupils, but the rapid expansion of the junior high school system in the Dis- trict, it was explained, makes it vir- tually incumbent on the public schools to provide Summer classes for pupils in the junior high schools to make up subjects in which they are deficient. Mr. Patterson has not decided which of the two junior high schools he will recommend opening for the Summer | work. He has in mind the Macfarland | and the Jefferson. When Hamlet said something was | rotten in the state of Denmark he | may have been referring to the STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1925. NEED MILITARY LEADERS NOW, PERSHING DECLARES Next Phase of Developing Defense Act Is to Choose These, General Says. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 15.—Gen. John J Pershing last night gave to the coun at the meeting of the Officers’ Re- serve Corps Association of the S6th Division, here, a message that the national defense act of 1920, which he sponsored, is entering into the second stage of its execution as a safeguard of the Nations welfare. During the last four years, he said the work of creating an organized re serve has been carried to completion, under the act. The next phase, which is under way, he pointed out, will be to create within this Nation-wide army reserve a picked group of leaders un- der whom a citizen army may be Insurance Bldg. 15th and I Sts. SEVERAL AVAILABLE ROOMS W. H. West Co. quickly and efficlently mustered in time of emergency. Gen. Pershing declared that the most important mission of the de- fense act, to his mind, was the de- velopment of this trained body of military leaders in organized army units Gen. Pershing was accompanied by Vice President Charles whose guest he is. He arri ¥ The_general will builds energy in you like a dynamo gener- ates electricity a meeting of the Chicago Assoclation of Commerce today. French railway receipts are greater *han a year ago. ERE'S the hit with candy fans everywhere. Nuts, car- amel, milk chocolate and butter cream—a “team” that will win your favor right off the bat. Your Income may be derived from either or both of two sources—your own work or the work your money does for you. Your income from work may shrink or cease, and the only substitute is income from your investments. The Union Trust Company will gladly aid you to accumulate, through a Savings Account, a substantial sum which will work steadily for you. 2% Paid on Checking and 3% on Savings Accounts UNION o~ {4 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA EDWARD J. STELLWAGEN PRESIDENT . drama, says Montague. band at his headquarters in Paris | : | during the World War. 916 15th St. 4 An AUERBACH Confection that the s thoroughf the pa hile tk »e impaired. | = sims BT i To remove rust from needles stick them into a piece of flannel that has Street Paving Asked. v hine oil The Commissioners will be re Enterprise Serial Building Association 643 Louisiana Ave. N.W. 54th issue of stock now open for subscription. Shares of stock, $1.00 each, payable monthly. Five per cent interest paid on stock withdrawn. James E. Connelly, President James F. Shea, Secretary Hummer, Max Goldberg, George shley, Harry‘J. Callow B. Scanlon, J. William Dr Surpt, Philip E bins, Wil teenth strei nue to C rom C to E and from Fifteenth to Nineteenth and A [ Hamburge street from Eighteenth to Blau, Robe: street. A report from the Post Office | H. Greenber; Department refused installation of | Catherine Geddes, Mrs. Ch mail boxes and improved service in|Douglass, I.. Hillman and O. Zeltzer. he sections named because of the| President Guilford E. Jameson pre. | mpassable condition of the streets. | sided. 3 Paving of the sidewalks will be re-| quested on A street between Eight- eenth and Nineteenth streets, Six teenth street between A and B and Seventeenth street between L tol and A. Reques nade for improved lightir Massachusetts roce; 1. Katzman, Mortgage Loans \ FOR SALE BY J. L ending the Holy Comforter and the Bryan Schools Daniel A. E ds was the unani- mous choice of the clation as nominee to the Citiz Advisory Council. Harry E. Warner, chairman of the committee on schools, was in- before the Board ucation on April 20 and present 1n outline of the school needs of the | Southeast section. Mrs. J. 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