Evening Star Newspaper, June 9, 1925, Page 4

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4 % STUDRRERS HERE FORCONVENTION Delegates Are Being Met by Committees in Charge of Tomorrow’s Conclave. Five hundred Sojourners from all parts of the Nation and a number of foreign countries are arriving in Washington for the fifth annual con- vention of the Sojourners of the United States, which opens at the Wardman Park Hotel tomorrow morn- ing at 10 o'clock The Sojourners, who are officers of the military services of the United States, and also members of Masonic lodges, are being met at the Union Station by commiiees tha local pter of the assock The meeting, it is most elaborate one ever gatheri Sojourners. The will be ad dressed by Col. J. Franklin Rell, En- gin Commisstoner of the Distr! Maj. Gen. Amons John A. Lejenne the Marine Cory Bishop Freeman Fi Maj. Gen commandant of others Committees in Charge. The o« tees in charge of the So- Journer lebration follows: General committee—Lieut. . Gilchrist, U. S. A., ¢ " E. Hopkins, s, U Col. an; Lieut A.; Capt ) Clifford L. G ‘apt. J. H Craige, U. 8 J. M lesple, 1. S S.; Lieut. M. C Sparrow, | \., and Capt. Nathan Willia Arrangement com i Gilehrist Dondero, O. R H. Guthrie. In Lieut. A. H C.. and Comd tations and tickets—Lieut. Col. E. F Hopkins, U. 8§ mdr. C. V. Hodg son, C. & ( J._H. R. Kautz, L Col. R. P. Parrott, Maj. George F. Lull, U. S and Lieut. B. L. Lankford, U. S. Printing—Capt. Nathan Wiliiams, R. C. Press—Capt. John H, C S. M. C., and Capt. Paul Surg. J. M. Gillespie, and Capt. W, J. Stan- Decoration: C T. Brooks, U. S. M Capt. Henry Jett, O. R. C tation—Maj. Clifford L. Grant, O. R C.. and Capt. John W. Zimmerman, o Finances—Lieut. M. G. Slar- row. U. S. N.. Lieut. C. Hart and Lieut. B. W. Shumak DROPPED OVERBOARD, BOY BELIEVED DEAD Searchers Fail to Find Lad Put Off Sinking Craft With Life Preserver. . Transpor- By the Associated Press. PORT HURC Mich Belief was expressed by Borner, chief of the Coast ard patrol bor Beach, that thirteen-year. 1mes McCoy had perished in the of Lake Huron, despite £ would-be rescuers June 8.— Capt. Paul with his wa Jame vounger brothers miles from shore on terday leak & life preserver around the boy, think- ing he would be carried to the shore father and two when thelr rowboat sprang a John McCoy, the father, placed by the current and his life at least would be saved The gestures of the trio remaining on the slowly sinking rowboat were seen by people on shore and the father and two boy were soon re- from the boat by a Coast Guard party When th reached shore they found that James landed search without BN NEWS PRINT DEFINED. Btandards Bureau's Tests Clear Up Customs Problem. ad not expected. and an Immediate was started along the shore of news ompanying tes when a given as been treated suf- ficiently passed out of the news print class and become liable to tariff duty, is one of the recent accom- plishments at the Bureau of Stand- ards. The need for exactness and ac curacy in determining what is news. print was encountered by the cus. toms service, which decides what shipments of paper may be admitted to the United States duty free. As the Standards Bureau finally worked out the problem, news print is print paper to demonstr. sample of paper to paper composed of 20 per cent sul phite fiber and 80 per cent ground wood fiber, containing no rosin size mineral filler, and having a low surface finish. Measurements to de- termine special each instruments these qualities by were laid down to guide the testers who will have o} work on the imports . |at least does not pretend to be other ut_about two | e Huron ves- | Loveliness Under Show Modesty Bores Her, Ruler Asserts. GOOD CLOTHES AID Many Little Tricks Add Much in Attaining Longer Youth. This is the tenth of a series of articles by Queen Marie of Ru- mania written exclusively for The Star and the- North _American Newspaper Alliance. She gives in a frank and intimate way her philosophy of life, love and work. The series marks ‘the first time that a reigning member of roy- alty has written under his or her own signature for a newspaper. MARIE OF RUMANIA. |CAN 4 WOMAN MAKE HERSELF | BEAUTIFUL? Beauty is a gift of the gods and ! must be treated as such, not marred pose or affectation. It must be ~arried lightly, a joy to the possessor as to the world at large. Or then {give me 2 thousand times rather the [plain girl with snub nose, freckles and a too-large mouth. A big, hon- mouth that can laugh gloriously is thousand times more attractive |than a stmpering mouth, too beau- | tiful even to bhe kissed. | "0t ‘course. there is the deliberate | beauty. the one which flaunts its col ors, the one which is the advertise- ment of a trade, and uses every atom of charm to be a lure, a ap, a means |of wealth, power, domination. In | other words, the courtesan Yet she than she fis Every curl of her lip, every quiver her nostril, every wink of her eye is an invitation. She | makes her living by trading with her | | face, her beauty, her charms. She | is like the beautiful peacock, spread ing out its tail for all to admire. She is decorative in a loud, gaudy, but sometimes exceedingly attractive way. All through history she has been a source of drama, ruin, sometimes even crime. She has been the de- struction of happy homes, the enemy, the danger, the “vamp.” I see her painted eves, her crimson lips, her disdainful movements. 1 see. 100, her cruel, greedy fingers, her cool, heart- less, vet passionate way. She fascl nates me. I try to look away, and ever again my eves ¢ e back to her. A woman? She makes me shudder, but I do not despise her. She is wear: ing no mask but her own Her heart must often ache, but she doesn’t show {1t, and no doubt if you give her a chance she will do vou a good turn ‘es, 1 think I prefer her to the he is one, beauty who cannot forget vet cloaks herself in a sham modesty which makes her neither one thing rior another—which makes her a bore, a fraud Can you maké vourself beautiful? Enhance your beauty? Can clothes, paint, tricks help? Youth Can Be Prolonged. Undoubtedly the woman who wants to be beautiful and use every atom of charm she has can achieve wonders. The French are past masters of this art. There are few really beautiful rench women, but they know how tc dress as no one else in the world, just as the French woman has & way of saying possibly, impossible things. Paris is, of course, the placeito go| to be beautified, and I believe London | and New York are now following close upon her heels. I for one haye never since the age of 17, lived In great centers nor could my busy life, even if 1 did, leave me time to exist solely for my face, beauty, clothes. But | have seen wonders done and I am | feminine enough to rejoice that wom. en can prolong their youth, their beauty and their “good time.” | Money and clothes help beauty. The drudge who does nothing but work, work, work, has little time to| cultivate her looks. Hence the great temptation to use a pretty face for other things than work and | who can blame her? Nature is her | ally and the desire of man. But to g0 more deeply into this would lead me too far. Tt is evéry woman's ambition to be beautiful, at least to be attractive charming, to please. All women want_to please. &he would not_be a T P SRR MAIN 1075 RED STAR LINE In Planning Picnics, Plan to Charter a Bus The moderate cost will surprise you Let Tolman THE real woman if she did not. Can I give any advice and rules to go by? A dificult question! But I do think there are one or two good principles which can serve all the world over: I. am positively sure that the af- fected, self-consclous, pretentious woman is the one who has least charm. What, then, does charm re. side in? Health? nthusiasm? Be- lief in one’s own “star? In an over- bubbling love of life? Secret of True Charm. It is hard to say. It can depend upon the tiniest little trick of nature —the line of an eyebrow, the tone of a voice, in a certain way of laughing, of throwing back the head, of being eager, attentive, of coming into a room. Charm is €0 subtle a thing, so immaterial; vet it is taking, pene. trating: it can hold you fast and never let you go again. The statuesque, languid, super- cilious, disdainful woman has seldom charm. She can be alluring, dis- tracting. She can make artists rave. Crimes even have been committed for her. She can fascinate, inspire passion. but charm is something else. WOMEN WHO USE THEIR CHARM WIN BEAUTY AND RETAIN ATTRACTION, QUEEN MARIE SAYS MARIE. The quiet. timid girl can be full of charm, less 80, evidently, than her | liveller sister, but there is charm in| the lttle gray mouse with large | anxious eves. But I think that the| great charmer is the one who does not | think of herself, the one whose inter- | est in others is greater than her self-| absorption. the one who in spite of | herself fascinates because without | knowing it she is all the time giving, glving of her best self Charm is not solely of vouth. The old woman can have it as well as the young one, the plain one as well as the beauty. There is often greater charm to be found in a fate upon which life has writ- ten its story than in a quiet young the possession face, unlined, unmarked by the hand of time. There is a fascination about eyes that have seen much and still remained kindiy, sadness beneath in a smile that has its outward brave gaiety. Painters love these faces and have made them their greatest pic tures. “How I Keep Young.” The thinkers, 1s0 love the poets and young these faces, eyes turn Owing to the funeral services of Colonel Edward A. Stuart, U. S. A. Treasurer of the International Bank The offices of the Bank will be closed at noon Wednesday, June 10, 1925 At Half the fou can refinish the walls Many stencil designs. of Wallpaper delicate, pleasing, cool tints that beautify your home, harmonize with your draperies, and, that are easily kept bright and fresh, at a cost that is less than half the cost of wallpaper. No Luster Wall Finish Comes In All the Soft, Velvety Tints Shades made especially for interior wall work. pleasing color combinations can be ob- tained, and they can be set off with appropriate The children cannot ruin the finish with solled hands or pencil marks. Luster {s as easily washed as are your hands. toward them because of the mystery |other time—but I think many others Wwguld be able to do it better than I. (Covyright. 1025, In United States aad Can- ada by North American Newspaper Alliance. 4 ) they seem to hold. Beauty and charm. The subject is 80 vast that 1 feel it keeps running away from me, branching out in a thousand directions, elusive, tantaliz- ing. I ought to sum up, come to some *conslusion, but like running water, my argumefit, my thought, my pictures seem to slip through my fingers. When I think I have come to an end, 1 discover there is more and more. Asked one day by an American re. porter what I did to remain so vounsg, I could not help smiling a young and vet world-old smile. “Good humor,” I answered, “good health, an overpowering desire io make others happy, a keen, never-io be.quenched interest in lite and all its problems, a natural disposition to be generous, amused, forgiving, a love of open air, as few cosmetics as possi- ble, and the good habit of washing my face well before going to bed. ‘Water and soap are not absolute Iy necessary. The really good lotions and creams have their advantage when wisely chosen. And one more recommendation: Next morhing 1 awake full of joy because another day has begun." Would you like more explicit, more practical, more positive adv That I would then have to gf FUNERALS, Complete, as Low as... Oscillating $15.00 Fans All Sizes and for All Purposes Central Armature Works 635 D Street Northwest Phone Main 3660 ‘¥ WANT French’s Cream " A Salad Mustard” is easy to say to your grocer. And what it does for flavor in salad dressings, on cold cuts and in cooking, too, will make that the most natural thing to say after you have once tried it.... ‘The next time you order mustard say, ‘I want French’s.” X Made only by The R. T. French Company Rochester, N. Y. Cost of your home in for New Era Pail boat gets. No Store Hours 7:30 to 5:30 Beautiful Wall Finishes & When You Paint Your Home Buy the Best—It Is Always the Cheapest It costs just as much to apply cheap paint as it does good paint. and covers properly more surface. NEW ERA HOUSE PAINT —is a 100% pure paint. made of lead and zine, linseed oil, turpentine and dryer. Good paint wears longer, The formula nt is the same that is used in painting the steamboats that ply the Potomac, and we all know what hard usage the paint on a No matter what the outside surface about a home that needs painting, you will find that New Era Paint will give the best results. VENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1925. All rights reserves The first high school Mrs. diplomas. Hoard of Jducation. 1. 8.8.0.0.80.8.0.0.8.0.8 . Armstrong Commencement. commence. ment, that of Armsirong Technical will be held in the Dunbar High School Auditorium Friday night at 8 o'clock. Rev. F. I. A. Bennett will preside and ralie ¥. Cook will present the Both are members of thelgraduates of Cutholic C. U. TO GRADUATE 345; Degrees Tomorrow—Bishop Shahan to Bpeak. timore will confer University CLASS OF RECORD SIZE Archbishop Curley Will Confer Archbistiop Michael J. Curley of Bal- degrees on 345 at the thirty-sixth annual commencement tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock. Tt is the largest graduating class in the history of the university. The exercises will be hald in the uni versity gymnasium. The faculty and students will march from Caldwell Hall to the gymnasium in academ procession. The commencement ora tion will be delivered by Right Rev. Thomas J. Shazhan, rector of the uni- versity. Henry Edward Cain will give the valedictory. Paying a n what you owe 1s a good way to get even with h: n 1 2.0.0.0.0.6.8.0.0.0 6.4 Frederick R. Neely of The Star, (left) With Captain St. Clair Streett in the Cockpit, Ready for the Start. B I I i e e o Captain St. Clair Streett of the Army Air Service has piloted Frederick R. Neely of The Star’s staff over the exact route taken by the mail carriers from New York to San Francisco—making the scheduled stops—and experiencing all the varying vicissitudes of the Mail Flyers—that readers of The Star may have a graphic account of the dangers these men face; the difficulties they encounter; the thrills they enjoy—all that distance may be eliminated and time overcome—and that the extremes of a con- tinent formerly five days apart may exchange mes- sages and merchandise in the space of compara- tively a few hours. Mr. Neely will go into the interesting details of the journey—describing each “leg” of the flight; and its attending exciting episodes. A real romance of the air—written for the first time—by a writer schooled in the art of flying— and tutored in the science of air travel. It will be a story of real human interest—told with all the enthusiasm inspired by a novel under- taking; but with conservatism of a poised and trained newsman. Watch for the story of the journey _ The first installment will appear in ¥ - Star Staff Man x X Flies the Mail Route * From where the sum comes up in the morning of today until it kisses the Golden Gate goodnight in the sunset of tomorrow—the great planes—bearing their burden of transcontinental mail make the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts near neighbors. New Era Paint is the best paint made. Gallons Only, $4.00 Don’t Have RUSTY WORN SCREENS WHEN YOU CAN MAKE THEM NEW FOR A SMALL COST Acme Quality Screen Paint is especially made for the wire mesh. It does not clog—dries with a hard gloss finish—prevents rust and corrosion. Quarts, Black, 75¢ Pints, Black, 40c 1 Pints, Black, 25¢ We sell only paints and allied products, conse- quently our men are specially trained for this business. They are always willing and glad to talk over your paint problems—to tell you what to use and how to use it—suggest color combina- Drop in and let us show vou color combinations, tell you how to prepare the surface, etc. In most cases the cost of redecorating a room is only— $9.75 White Enamel That Stays White and Is Guaranteed Not to Turn Yellow Everybody likes white-enameled woodwork. What they don't like is the fact that after a few months of wear ordinary enamel begins to dull and turn yellow. | WHITE ENAMEL —produces a snow-white gloss or semi-gloss finish, as desired. It leaves a surface as smooth and durable,as tile. Easily washed, it wears for vears and years, and, what is best of all, it is white when applied and always stays white. Vitralite is easy to apply—it does not show brush marks. A quart is usually sufficient for the woodwork in an ordinary room. tions—and, in fact, to serve you in any way Quarts, $2.35 i BUTLER-FLYNN PAINT CO. 609 C Street N.W. Main 1751—Main 4902 I R I TG Tub Your Light Frocks MANY Summer frocks are washable or not washable, depending on how they are washed. Your linen, tub silk and voile frocks retain their new look and beauty of fabric, color and cut when Tolman Laundry launders them for you. Only the purest soan that will not harm a baby’s skin is used here. Rinsing follows rinsing till every particle of loose soap is elimi- nated. Scientific drying, stiffening to the exact texture of the dress when new, and ironing that is an art in finish and intelligent application fol- low the tubbing. The dress comes back to you so near akin to a new one that you’ll don it with conscious pride. Try Tol- man and be pleased. X @he Foening Star ‘ Monday, June 15 ‘Mr. Neely’s articles will answer the hundreds of questions you have been asking yourself over and again — answer them from actual experience with every feature and phase of the Air Mail Men and those who co-operate with them enroute. Exclusively in The Star MO NN OO XXX Franklin 71—Franklin 72—Franklin 73 THE TOLMAN L AUNDRY F. W. MacKenzie, Mgr. 6th and C Sts. N.W, Route of the Mail FI; shaded lyers—the portion being covered in the night hours. NN NN NN X

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