Evening Star Newspaper, June 3, 1925, Page 10

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3 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1925. ELEAYNAED | INVHEELERASE Washington Attorney Ap- pointed Special Assistant to Prosecute Senator. THE EVE G _STAR, WASHINGTON, —BY WEBSTER D. C, THE TIMID SOUL. WHAT DoYoou THink OF 1S Mew Book - NARROW My TH 7 VTHINK TS GReaT! A REMARKABLE HA-HA-HA! AUTHORS in the June Golden Book W. J. Locke Owen Wister C. B. Fernald de Alarcon Charles Dickegs Jack London .Lord Dunsany Prosper Mérimée Samuel Johnson Alex. Pushkin A. Nietro _H. W. Phillips Emile Gaboriau Zarathustra Lao-Tze Gautama Muhammad Thoreau John Masefield Longus Samuel Pepys Thomas Carlyle Schamyl Shadwell oosr rravsensnsssenest ormal announcement by the De- $artment of Justice of the appoint- ent of William 1 B Bsistant Attorney 1 to co-op. istant Attorney eneral Robert in the prose- ution of the inst Senator Wheeler of Mon arged with fent, sets 1 tions that ! ent, sets at rest all suggestions f i he Government ght eventually HAW- HAW-HAW! bandon the against Mr. Wheeler, in he acquittal of dr. Wheeler in na t Senator Wheel out of the city nd his chief counsel, Senator h of Montana, is not expected une 10. After Senator lans of the defense ¢, it is expected may be brought now be predicted , owing to the fact oth, former s nt of the Inter »n Campbell, oil operator of both of whom are under in- Bictment with Mr. Wheeler, have in $tituted proceedings which must be bandled before the se can come to trial. Mr. Booth has demurred to the fndictment and My. Campbell is resist OF COURSE | DION'T READ W Boox VERY CAREFULLY — | TUST SKIMMED | THROOGH IT M FACT AnD — | WAS LAUGHING AT A SToRY | HEARD ABOUT RED LEWIS, THE MAN WHO WROTE THAT BOOK. with former Paniel W gssistant United & £ Colu ipated in many important ases here. He was a special prose- &utor in the “Nick; *'Mr. Leahy ha rofessor on th committee of He HOPING TO DEVELOP ' KING TUT'S DIALECT @erman Project Designed to Du- i plicate What Webster Did for Shakespeare Language. v the Associated Press *CHICAGO, June 3.—A project which, 4 is expected, will do for th published in in- | n under the direction of and other dpta for s@liciting of funds fro ns to fin $ The dict ifhperial g sbbsequently by the ;HELD UNDER MARN ACT. Banville Man Accused by 18-Year- H 0ld Divorcee. Shecial Dispatch to The Star. $DANVILLE, Va., June 3.—Henry illard, is held for the Federal grand | 500 bond, charged with | jgry under Vdlating the Mann Act. $His accuser is an 18 rfcently divors 182 withheld nissioner C. T. Barksdale, Tillard_the HereYou Are Just the opportunity you have been looking for to match your last season’s Palm Beach Coat with a new pair of Genuine Palm Beach - Trousers We have just the shade you want in sizes 29 to 42. Buy a pair or two at this ! extraordinary low. price to- i morrow. We are offering very spe- cial prices also on Palm . Beach Suis. LISTS CLOSE TOMORROW FOR PRIMARY IN VIRGINIA Governor, State Treasurer and At- torney General Are Only Posts to Be Contested. | Spectal Dispatch to The Star RICHMOND, Va., June 3.—Five of | es to be filled in 1h0' the eight pla August primary will be uncontested. These are, secretary of the common wealth, superintendent of public in- struction, commissioner of agriculture, the State Corporation Commission and lieutenant governor. The lishs lare to close tomorrow. For governor there are three as pirants, two for State treasurer and two for attorney general. Addresses Optometric Society. Dr. P. W. Kimball spoke on phoro- metry and the muscles of the eye at | the monthly meeting of tRe District of { Columbia © | night at the Optometric Raleigh Society last Hotel. Two new members were elected. Dr. Ber | nard A. Baer presided. Itu CRAB SHORTAGE LOOMS AGAIN IN CHESAPEAKE Earle Believes Failure of Virginia to Enact Protective Legis- lation Is Reason. | Special Diepatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, June 3.—While indi- cations are that the supply of crabs in the Chesapeake Bay will be short again this vear, as in the past sev ceptionally plentiful irf Chincoteague and Sinepuxent Bay, State Conservation Swepson Harle. |~ Advance information from the Cris- |field section, where most of the crabs are caught, is that few are running |this year. They, however, are of good | size. | Most of the crabs have seemingly taken a fancy to the Potomac side Good quantities are reported there. |But in the main they are small and |not the kind to find a ready market. ices for the Maryland shellfish, probably ‘will be as high r as they were last Summer, rle said. re of the Virginia Legislature Commissioner leral seasons, the crustaceans are ex-| according to| | | | | | | IT SEEMS THAT- to enact laws protecting crabs in Virginia waters was given by Mr. Earle as the chief factor in the pres- %nl crab shortage in the Chesapeake ay. g Wire Your House and Lighten Housekeeping Labors. Get Our Estimate. THE PERFECT ELECTRIC IRON The even heat guaran- tees best re- sults and makes = pleasure o f a task. ELECTRIC IRONS That We Guarantee—From 3.75 up The Electric Fan Season 9 Little and Bie Fans for cable. ceiling and wall, here at the Fairest P e e ese: The Home Electric Shop 517 10th St. Main 6549 ouldnqt be done” ---but we DID IT! White Kid Ivory Kid Black Satin "Il MPOSSIBLE—at less than $7.50 to $8 pair!” exclaimed America’s biggest shoe distributors! “Our most popular number at those prices!” Imagine identical style and $5.95 “Hahn Specials.” their wonder—to see the quality——in these famous And over 50 other Summer fash- jons just as astounding! Colored Kids, thing—all $5.95. . ‘Whites, Sports Modes—any= Cor. 7th & K Sts. 414 9th St. N.W. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 233 Pa. Ave. S.E. More Comfort Outsize Pumps for larger women! Black satin, kid or patent, with graceful straj e 50 outs Comfortable Light- weight, Turn-sole, Strap Pumps for house and street. Arch sup- §3 () porting .. ‘White Reignskin or Black Kid Strap Pumps. Cool, serv- prieed . $5.95 “Juliets” For wear around the house. Soft black kid. E3 Elastic goring. $4 Flexible sole... Kenelm Digby S. T. Coleridge Robert Burns Samuel Hardy Emily Dickinson Robert Southey George Moore Jefferies J-R. Lowell ‘Walt Whitman R. W. Emerson R. L. Stevenson Turgeniev Donn Byrne James Hogg A. Montgomerie E. 8t. V. Millay W.B. Yeats Matthew Arnold J. Wing C. G. Rossetti C. R. Dufresny Edwin Arnold Rudyard Kipling Homer Pliny Plato Geoffrey Chaucer Giraldus de Barri Sir Thomas Malory Alexander Pope Washington Irving Lord Byron George Eliot Anatole France ‘W. M. Thackeray Laurence Sterne Nicolas Udall George Meredith Moliere W. S. Gilbert Anton Chekhov John Galsworthy H.G. Wells Robert Browning Henry Fielding Ben Jonson Erckmann-Chatrian Johannes Ewald Charles Dance Edna Ferber Sir Hugh Clifford W. E. Fisher Thomas Williams J- K. Goodrich von Hochberg Isabel Burton Bishop Joseph Hall Roger Ascham John Dryden John Milton David Hume * George Borrow W. D. Howells J-C. Harris Voltaire Bernard Shaw Dr. Samuel Johnson has written a delightful article about a lady who rode horseback a thousand miles in a thousand hours, in the June GOLDEN BOOK = WONDERFUL IDEA,” says Mary Roberts Rinehart, referring to the GOLDEN BOOK. This is the idea. A million stories have been written in English, Freach, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian, Japanese, Chinese. A few hundred stories out of this million are so fine, so thrilling that they will live forever. These are the masterpicces of the masters; the stories you have always meant to read. ‘The GOLDEN BOOK selects its stories from among these few hun- dred perfect stories, and from them alone. Each will enchant you. And yet, the stories are only one of the features. There are rare, revealing human documents. There are ex- quisite bits of immortal verse. There are fragments of wisdom from the best minds of every age. Whatever other magazines you buy, you must surcly buy the GOLDEN BOOK. It is like no other, and no other can be like it. Father Time is its editor, and nothing can get into its pages unless he has marked it “great.” Buy it today, and talk about it at dinner tonight. You will find the other guests talking about it too. At all News-stands and Book Stores

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