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SOCIETY. THE EVENING STAR, Revision of Order ’ Deaths. In Suit of Parent AMOY IS FADING | { HOUSTON. e Cleaned Shampooed Scoured Washed Stored | Sanitary Carpet Cle. Co. Phone Lincoln 1181 & Lincoln 7638 Wilkins Coffee Is Not A Blend Originated Twenty-five Or Fifty Years Ago! It Is The Result Of Twenty-five Years of Experience Plus Improvement! u etc., and maps howing alternate utes to your desti ion are practic: insurance against trouble on the Let us “i Road maps, guide q]bm\ksund every item of desired travel data you will find here at nsure The Nationa! REMEMBRANCE Shop Mr. Foster's Shop 14th St. at Pa. Ave. Also 1229 Perna. Ave. OC iy .| President and Mrs. Coolidge Include Secretary of State Kellogg in Week End House Party. HE Pre idge sident_and Mrs. Cool have the Secretary of - te, Mr. Kellogg, with them as a mem! of their inter esting week end house part E White Court 1t understood that the Secret will come to Wi ington the first of the week. His resi- dence, on Nineteenth street, is entire- ly closed. and Mrs. Kellogg is at their home in St. Paul Polish Charge d’Affaires To New York for Week End. | The chgrge d'affaires of Poland, Mr. Hipolit wie, will go to New York today and will remain until Tuesda when_ the nister of foreign affa of Poland, Count Alexande: s will arrive. of Miss Dorothy Josephine Mason, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Buffam Mason, {to Mr. Eddy Baker Rynex of Thrifto: Va., took place today at noon. The ceremony was performed in the home of the bride’s parents at Cherr: Va., the Rev. Charles B. Sparks of Cherrydale officiating. The house had a pretty ngement of ferns, laurel and Midsummer flowers, wedding®? breakfast followed for company of relatives -and int friends who witnessed the ceremony The bride wo gown of orchid crepe de chine, made on straight lines, trimmed with cream lace, a_ hat orchid taffeta, and she carried yellow tea rose Shortly Mrs the crepe They 1 N The marriage after the breakfast Mr Rynex started on a motor trip latter wearing a gown of blue with a small white felt hat will be at home after August Cherrydale Col. Charles Keller. Commissioner of the rived in Washington, accon: |Mrs. Keller, and they have taken a uite at Wardman Park Hotel. After his resignation from the District gov ernment Col. and Mrs. Keller return {ed to their home at E¥anston, Il former Engineer District, has av anied by Mr retu October and Mrs to their accompanied daughter, ( Morgan Shuster will Washington home in by their son-in te Giulio Cac Ranghieri and Contessa aghieri, who were married in Lau- sanne, Switzerland, Tuesday. June The ceremony was performed jn Chapel of Ouchy, Lausanne, and was ollowed by an elaborate supper and at the Beau Rivage, favorite rendezvous of Americans and aristo- cratic Europeans The bride and bridegroom first met Florence when Miss Shuster w visiting that city. Conte Ranghier fascinated by her fair southern | beauty immediately engaged accom. | modations at the hotel where she was stopping and remained until he had secured a formal introduction. The courtship that followed saw chapters dance IN BEST TASTE I'o know how to arrange a Floral | merly of | and | the | written in Milan, Via Reggio, |and along the Riviera. | Contessa Ranghiert, Miss Litie McElroy Shuster, is well known in New York and Ken tucky as well as in Washington. She attended the fashionable Miss Baird's | School at Orange, N. J., for four years |and went to Europe to finish her edu- ation | Her father was former financial ad- | viser to the Persian government and |since then has divided his time be. tween his Washington home on Q | street and New York. The bride is a granddaughter 6f Hayden Trigg of | Kentucky, and her mother, who was formerly Miss Clara Trigg, was one of | the famous Kentucky beauties. Con | tessa Ranghieri’s grandmother, Mrs | Willtam * Morgan Shuster, lives in | Washington, where she ha$ an apart ment at the Somerset. | Conte Ranghieri is 29 and the last | lineal descendant of an old Roman | family dating back to the tenth cen | tury.” He and his mother, the Con |tessa Emma Cacclaguera Gottl, are | | Nice who was for- the owners of vast landed estates near Florence and Arezzo. He served in the Italian army during the World War, and, aside from other decora tions, was awarded the order of Chev. alier of the King's Crown. His father, the late Conte Ranghieri, was one of Italy's leading agriculturists, having taken a deep interest in the improve ment and management of his vast estates. Conte Giulio has visitd the United States a number of times, and two New Yorkers, Oliver Jennings, ir and Adolph Dick. were ushers at the weddi The bride was escorted to the altar Col. J. W. Krueger of Washington, uncle, and Miss Ann Krueger, a cousin, acted as flower girl. The bride’'s mother. Mrs. W. Morgan Shus ter, also was present. The church ceremony was conducted according to the rites of the Catholic Church, a special dispensation having been secured from the Pope. As the ride was under age, according to Swiss law, the cabled consent of her father, who could not be present, was necessary. A civil ceremony preceded the church wedding. The vows were made both in English and Italian, in deference to the bride's wishes and because of the many American guests The bride’s lovely wedding gown, a | Molyneux creation in the style of the “Moyen Age,” was of white georgette, entirely covered with pearl beading in design of Venetian lace. The slender | line of paneled skirt was accentuated by a long train of white radium panne. She carrfed a large bouquet of chids. The by an local music during artists who furnished the service were as sisted by Mr. Burnell Lundbec of Chillicothe, 11, who sang the “Ave Maria.” Mr. Lundbec, who s study- ing singing at Milan preparatory to entering grand opera, recently played | for four months with John Barrymore during his success in London with “Hamlet. After the supper and dance at the Beau Rivage, Conte and Contessa Ranghieri started for an extensive CONTESSA Formerly Litie McElroy Shuster, Shuster of this place in the Catholic Chapel of Ouchy nd Signor Francesco Guisi, Ttalian nsul to Lausanne. Capt John Jackson U. S. N., who has been at Hot Springs for some time, has returned to Wash ington. Mrs. Jackson remained the resort with her parents, Mr. M Max Surth. Capt. and Jac! l(w\n will sail for France August. and Mrs. Member Here For Short Visit at Willard. Representative Charles A. Eaton who will sit in the next Congre: at the Willlard where he arrived to day from his home in Plainfield, N.J. Mary a sm on the New Jersey Tucker enter- at luncheon ard roof. Logan Wil Mrs tained s. Willard Williamson has just returned from Philadelphia and At lantic City, stopping en route to visit Maj. and Mrs. G. W. Jorss of Chatham at| RANGHIERI daughter her marriage to Count ( of Mr. and Mrs. W. Morgan ulio Cacciaguera Ranghieri took Lusanne, Switzerland started on a mot ve The ami wh the remainder of )¢ tour of the Sot destination they will vear spend Ma\ nage LICCI]SCS . in | CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. Mrs. James Dickinson, organist | annuat Ideal Harhor Gradually Being Deserted as Trade Turns to Formosa. “Amoy, China, one of the ports at which the presence of warships has been requested to protect foreigners, has a in the history of the 4 ution. although few Americans know it,” says a bulletin from Washington headquarters of the National Geographic Society. “It was from Amoy, then the world’s pre rier tea port, that the ship sailed in 1773 which figured some months later the famot e Party.' oy was of the earliest se citles to have contracts with the West. The Portuguese established themselves there in 1644, but w expelled before long. - The British then zan operations in Amoy and con tinued trading through that port ex clusively until 1730, when they wel ordered to change to Canton. For a long time Amoy was the world's leading port in tea exportation for a century this trade has been de- clining. of Formosa Great Blow. “T'he greatest blow to Amoy trade came in 1894, when Formosa, just off the Chinese coast from Amoy, was taken from China by Japan. For- mosan tea and other products had reached the through Amoy Since Japan the big island its own p been developed and trade s of dol has been lost to Amoy with 4 population of about 150,000 And nothing can take from it the dis tinction of having one of the best har bors on the Like Hongkong the town is situated {sland Ame ind, which circum The nearest penin ila of the mainland mile wway. The arms of the nd the mainland whose islets malke of *the pic Chinese coast string of and south, breakwater of Amoy's Loss of inclose a bay 1s st body of w turesque of Outside Amoy Isl the and a north ellent natural to the value stretching £ Amoy has two divided Jpped by old self in whick 1 be named * mor an o footpa; which nkey picks way Has Dubious World's Record. “Amoy popularly accorded a i t one to be proud eitizens. Many unspeak- able ) have seen th and s Oriental centers insanitary Abou-ben of 4 vis an the 1se ently visited b e matter | 1 mile of salt Amoy and AS CHINESE PORT but | Luey K {no re Qver Son’s Cus tod 'y" | merToN Court Changes Ruling in Case of Philip L. Wormely, Jr. Justice Jennings Bailey of the trict Supreme Court yesterday held a private consultation in his chambers with Philip L. Wormeley, jr r old, whose custedy is being litigated by his parents, Mrs. Lucy D. Worme ley, 1527 Thirty-first street, and Philip L. Wormeley of East Falls Chu Va. As a result of the inquiry to the boy's wishes the court r ed the conclusion to make a ch in the former order regarding custody of the child Under the former ruling the f was to be allowed to have the for a continuous period of six week beginning July 1. The court dec the interest of the child would be bet ter advanced if this perfod were up into three periods of 10 days ea g the Summer months day period at Christ he complaint of Mrs. Wormeley that their marrled daughter ley, had kidnaped the was disregarded by the court Mrs. Kelley and the f: that she ha gged the had taken along two m the boy by force from his mc Attorneys Douglas, Obear & D and J. V. Morgan appeared for the wife. who by the new arrangemen will have her son retu next Monday. Attorney P. shall represented the father COL. E. B. MORRIS DEAD. Was West Newspaper and Widely Known Dis- child Botk dented child ar ther Founder o Virginia newspaperman, founde n County Herald, died nesday at the Plaza Hotel, New City, after extended illr Morris was attz 1 to the Gov. Glasscock of West Virginia ing the latter’s term He was presented with a gold me by the Government during the W Wag for meritor the G ‘e ni plant at Mu Seven ct dren, including one son here, as do also his fathey and Wed: survive mother CITED BY CREDITORS r., Charge of Insolvency. John Bros.nan. in Court John Brosnan of the Provident has been cited creditors, who clain t and who are adjudged bankrupt aims total ir., f ardson. The proce nan personal is stated ar to remove | | STEWART FILM MAN’S BUTLER HELD. Sent Drugs to West Virginia Jail rector is is on Kolon: uh to With Design that will be expressive with- of St out transcending good taste is an art of which we are past masters. Court, Philadelphia Comdr. C. D. Jewell entertained a | | motor trip. They will reside in Flor ence or Milan. Among the guests Amoy consulate: at _the wedding Announcing the Inauguration of a “Pool” Car Service to Florida Points In Addition to its “Pool” Car Service Sprays, Wreaths And Other Designs '?5 up ” 14th and H Phone Main 3707 to California were: The Contessa Emma Cacci- aguera Gotti Ranghieri, mother of the groom; Mrs. W. Morgan Shuster of New York, mother of the bride; Princess Ivor Ruspoli of Rome; Count de Miguet of Paris, Mr. Oliver Jen- niggs, jr., of New York, Adolph Dicl ew York, Mrs. Thomas P. Dickin- son and daughter, Miss Ballard Dick- inson of Glasgow, Ky.; Col. and Mrs. |J. W. Krueger of Washington and Berlin, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. House of New York and Nice, Afrs. Elinor Perine of New York, Mrs. Willlam Johnson of Washington, Miss arlotte Robertson of Bowling Green, Mrs. H. L. E. Johnson and Miss Mary Johnson of Washington, Mr. L J. Clawson Primm of St. Louis and lorence, Agenor Krafft of Montreux Reduced rates and increased security for household goods and luggage. Securitp Sforage Gompang 1140 Fifteenth Street (between L and M) (Established 1890 as the Storage Department of the American Security & Trust Co.) 4 Blocks North of the White House C. A. ASPINWALL, President small party at luncheon yes the Willard roof, Thurston Culthbert of Clear- Fla., who has been the house guest of Mrs. Joseph Lee Crupper jr., at her home in Cleveland Park has gone to Lynchburg, Va., relatives before returning to Florida. M Culthbert s remembered . in shington as Miss Lucil Fields of Lynchburg, Va., having attended one of the fashionabl here Mrs. Peter A. Drury., jr. several days at Wardman Park Hotel She is en yute from Cha ston, W Va., where she spent the Summer, to Princeton, N. J., to visit her mother, Mrs. C. C houn, at her Summer estate there Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. water, school Louis Vernon Slon- aker, who have recently returned from a motor trip to Aflantic City and Va ley Forge, are at the Calverton, whe they have taken an apartment. Mrs. Clark Munford and Miss Nor vell Munford, who recently left Wash- ngton to be absent for the rest of the Summer, are now at Orkney Springs Hotel, Orkney Springs, Va Mr. and Mrs. Crupper and Son Motor to Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph jr.. and Joseph Lee motored to Richmond vesterday to spend some time with Mrs. Crupper’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Reeves Shepherd. Mr. and Mrs Franklin Clark entertained at an dance last evening for their daughter, Miss Frances Clark. There were about 20 young people and the danc- ing took place in the drawing rooms, which had been transformed into a garden with a large artificial moon at one end. Miss Julia Perry Watts has gone to Asheville, N. C., where she will be the guest for this month of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Galliher at Grove Park. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall King are spending the week end at their coun- try place, Ben-Venue, near Warren- ton, Va. fr. and Mrs. George Deed Mayer of the Clifton Terrace Apartments LOST. g &= TREDALE—Name Ivanhoe. alias_ Sport: #ndav night: registered. Reward. 1511 T"n st. nw BILL FOLDER. $75. ‘marked Alice Finneran roludrn to the Cairo Hotel war: BULLDOG. Lee Crupper, Crupper, 3d, Containing between $60 and Finder please and receive re- brown_ white spot ol eye defected. Call North 1089 EYEGLASSES. shell rim: vicinity Calvert and Biltmore ste. hetween 19th and 20th. or Hth and Mass. sve. Return 1933 Biltmore &t Reward. Adams 1749 FOX TERRTER. black and white wire. ired._from it ne. "Reward, ¢ Fox TeRmI tag 14381 ans ward.__161 GOLD PIN valied section: v o NOSE GLASSES_Shelitex rims_ white gold bridge; hetween Monument and Patent Office. Main 7870, NOTARY PUBLIC SEAL on Bureau Standards _car, Friday morning about o'clock, - W. T, Dixon. 1453 Church st. nw. Reward. _Phone N PIN black ongx. with ‘old HIF of “Valley epray, July 8, downtown. Call North S5t POCKETBOOK. containing driver's DH‘IHH, (3410 \lMumbl‘ about $17. E»“erdA 1618 H st Franklin 128 POODLE—White, male, no collar: except leg: ‘|flll June 8. Reward, "W, Dyer. 215 Wash. ave.. Aurora Va. SCARF. dark blue and henna sil 3 night. ' Finder will please bring it 0 1533 P_et. n.w. Liberal reward. SUNDAY SCHOOL PIN. Methodist. O-year on 131 Reward. 16 Fenton st TARPAULIN, heavy canvas. stenciled Md and Va. M. B. Co.: lost July 6 between 101 St n.e. and Union Stafion. Reward. Call ‘otomac’ 2300. 23 TENNIS RACKET. in case. from machine. between 400 hlock Hobart st. and Ga. ave. and Otis pl. about 9:30 Thursday evening. Reward. _Col. 6761 UMBRELLA, July . 10:30 now 2 VANTTY COMPACT, green shelled. three com- s. old fashioned. coral set: Thureday_in' downtown Box 104, Falls' Church, child’s. Tceensake. reward. Tost_on Mount Pleasant car am. Return 117 19th st. 1?lrtments..'7guglhlgpr lla;' llu(x'\gn F‘Ir?;g .fiur ay; Jul one. Line. 6625, 12 Buieo) 2. el to visit . is spending | Barber | informal | held & that a numt | ists will attend University Club will hold Ilu‘ 1 Monday afternos Club. Dir annu: the C o'clock rom Georg ne at | noon. e and the D! ORGANIZATION ACTIVITIES. TONIGHT. Municipal Council, 1:]~ | meets at Temple. Pythia held the & supper and g this ev uxiliar; | Chapter, No. 3 E. dence of Mrs. Daisy |Son and Arthur s A-B_ Building will give a 18:30 o’clock, = ivm.n;r nt Hotels. rden party will the benefit rd of Hope , at the resi Weadon, Jeffer ets, Riverdale | be dance ation Hall, G Bast Washington Post, 983, Ve erans of eign Wars, meets at the District Armory, Fifth and K streets, the usual hour No, ROCKVILL | L ROCKVILLE, Md., July 11 (Spe —A campaign to add at least 400 members to the adult departments of the Bible County w of Sun cial). schools of Montgomery 1s inaugurated at a meeting school workers in Grace | Methodist Church, Gaithersburg. Fol- lowing an address by Dr. W. H. Best, superintendent of the adult division of the Maryland Sunday School a committee, consisting ¢ Spurrier of Poolesville, Goode, Rockville; Rey E. mith, Laytonsville; W. Gy Davis, | Gaithersburg, and karle Linthicum, Damascus, was named to map out a ! plan and report at the annual meeting of the Montgomery County Sunday School Association on September 4 The meeting was conducted by Rev. A. E. Owens, pastor of Grace Church, and Rev. S. J. Goode, pastor of the Rockville Christian Church, was sec retary. Licenses have been issued by clerk of the Circuit Court here for the marriage of George W. Hamilton, 29, of Harrisburg, Pa., and Miss Leah Knowl, of Mechanicsburg, Pa John Edward Eddy, 21. and Miss Stella B. Pumphrey, 18, both of Wash- ington; Robert Woolf, 21, of Leesburg, Va., and Miss Evelyn Coylar, 21, of Auburn, Va. Under auspices of the Rockville In- quiry Club and for the benefit of the Rockville Volunteer Fire Department, Dr. A. U. Hoenshel of Virginia and Florida will deliver a lecture here the evening of July 20. His subject will be “Where the Shamrocks Grow Charles E. Mossburg of German- town and Miss Hester E. Thompson of Rockville obtained a marriage li- cense from th of the Circuit Court here yesterday Mrs. Lynette Stamper of Somerset, this county, has instituted suit in the Circuit Court here against the Wash- ington and Rockville Electric Railway Co., claiming damages in the amount 75.000 for personal injurles. She is represented by Attorneys Dawson and Welsh of Rockville. She charges that on April 9 as she was in the act of boarding a car at the District line the car started before she could enter it and she was thrown heavily to the ground, receiving permanent injuries. She is the widow of William §. Stamper, who was prominent in Dem: ocratic politics. ay ocia How- Rev. A P AARE SR Denmark has the most telephones in proportion to population of any «of the countries of Europe. The Wanderlusters start on a hike | Md. | the shady al <h 1 all, with western lines, ‘the | idences buflt amon; and b ve hools t hes its this Paradise long is known as f South China.’ “Amoy is a great gate smigration, especially to st Indies. About at Amoy each y part of this n ingapore and 000 natives has one ind s port's trade is staved off largely ittances sent home by th tes. This ‘tribute’ to Amoy than $12,000,000 an- largest and deepest draft ves orld can be accommodated Amoy's commodious harbor » of its excellent harbor facili 1s selected by the Chinese in 1908 as the port at hich to receive and fete a section of the United States fleet, then on its tamous trip around the world.” |FOUGHT IN INDIAN WARS. | Capt. Douglas A. Howard, U. S. A., Retired, Dies Suddenly. ANNAPOLIS, Md., July 11 Capt. Douglas Howard, U. | retired, a v an of the Indian wa died suddenly at Carvel Hall here Wednesday of heart failure, superin- duced by the heat and an attac gestion. Capt. Howard, e, saw eight yvea Indian wars in the Black Hills. He was a brother of the late Admiral Thomas B. Howard, U. S. N. Capt. Howard was a native of Ga- lena, Ill. Since his retirement from active service in 1594 he had made his home here. ). — A, 68 yvears service in the MRS. SUSAN A. BOX DEAD. Dothar o Waxds HUDeAahtatrva T ? Congress Succumbs. Mrs. Susan A. Box, mother of Rep- resentative John C. Box of Texas, at Jacksonville, Te: early to- rding to word received here. 7 years old Representative Box has long been well known in _church circles here. having taught the Box Bible class of Emery Methodist Episcbpal Church South for several years. Births Reported. The following births have been reported to the Health Department within the past 24 | hours Clowas 0. and Helen A, Drew. eir] Albert R. and Mabel C. Thomas. Robert I. and Helen E. Davis. boy David P and Emma R. Morton, b Gordon MeC. . "Worsham, boy. s John E. and Mapy E. Temple. boy. Horace M. and Marie L. Brennan, boy. Bdward B. and Edith A. Rogers. ‘boy’ polhristopher” A, and Angela P. Hopwood, Yenyy ¥. and Alma V. Gareia, boy. Wilfrid M. and Elizabeth P. Blunt, girl. Dennis R.and Sobhie E. Shirley, Clifford L. Johngor, man, gir] She was boy. and Kathleen wirl. girl. Ges bo. Joseph and Anna L. Silverman mond L. and Fiossie Euba Frank and Mabel Shaw. William K. and Mary E. William F. and He! Charles and Vinie John R. and Deaths Re;orted The following deaths have been reported {o the Health Department Within the bast 21 Cetiy, Abhott. 50. Unlted States Soldiers’ < ospital H“R‘uced oMoore. 62. on street. Connecticut orter bl ¥ Snomas F. Xydia, 38, 042 New Jersey ave. RO Gutes 03 Galinzer Hospiial Juiths Preczfield, 00, Emereency Hospital. onn F. Schacfer, 52, Providence Hospital. acific 'P. Millett, 77, 1817 Corcoran st. B\.\m‘l;l .Ythlon 40, D. C. property wharf 200 A0 Shinson, 49. Gallinger Hospital. Wil Washinkton, 36, Georsetown Unt- versity Hoei |Lll0)d Lew! 11 months, Children’'s Hos pitl, Bemice V. Edwards. § mouths, Childreo’ HOMDI boy. Smith, boy. B. Petefson. boy. y for coolie | k of | Inmate, Is Charge RYE, N. Y., July 11 (#).—( he sale of narcotics to a prisone: ntington, W. Va 36, who describe s butler on the estate of and, motion picture directc homes here and in New and Hollywood, Calif., was arr in_the Rye s tol e Federal ager ed him that he had been en vears on the Roland ed knowledge of the to have contained nar was Ty Rye, alleged cotics which and, r to hi Cath_s nf Z!Zhanks. BEYANT. THE WILLIAMS. _The famils_o GERTRUDE _GOODE ~ WIL the many friends £0 generous wi mpat i ta ing her illness and for their ngs at death Deaths. July 9. 1 at the residence of Mg W. Britt BARBER. arl ¥ FAMILY the Mrs n\)nn!in delphia. GEORGE T husband of 1 B from his late I it vectfully A _special _comi A. M. will o, No. 26. F. A, held Monday, July 13, 1835 at 10 a.m for the o £ % the funeral of our late br GEORGE T. BARBEF PLA BIRCH. Master. 12 BITZER. Frday. July 10, home of he Mrs. Cam trick Chath EL BITZER Monday unication at 1 pm. WILI AN BROWS. The beloved hu band ‘of Brown. H. mourn their 1oss a loving wife and a host of relatives and frien leep on. dear husband. and fake yo: 1 loved you deariy, but God iov HIS LOVING WIFE. * 10, ¢ Hine nw.. Saturday. Ji D.m. Departed this life Thursd . at_Hartford. Conn. FCHCOCK. wife of Col Interment at Arlington Cemete Monday. July 13. at 10 am. Rela and friends invited, 1 CRATTY. Thursday, residence. 5 13th et CRATTY. Funeral from her late residence Monday. July 13 0 am.. thence to the Church 6000 Geo e celebrs July A rment Drivate, 10. 1 at he 70 Sherman ave. n.w.. after long period of illness. in full trium; Chr faith, MARY JONES DIC] ~beloved ®wife of John J. D unéral from Metropolitan Baptist Ch Sunday, July 12, at 6 pm. F relatives ‘invited FISLER. _Saturday morning. July 11. at her residence, 628 Lexington place ANNIE ELIZABETH FISLER. ' daughier of the late J. E. and S. G. Fisier of H risburg, Pa.. aud beloved aunt of Miss Daisy ¥. Fridley. Notice of funeral her after. (Harrisburg. Pa.. papers bplease copy.) - GILMORE. _Thursday. July 9. 19 Freedmen's Hospital. BETTY ' GILMOR! beloved daughter of Rebecca Gilmore. tice of funeral hereafter. W. Ernest Jar- vis Co. in charge. HILL. Entered into eternal rest Friday ev ning, July 10, 1925, &t 4:40 p.m.. at her Tesidence. 415 4th st &6. afier a long and lingering illness which she bore with Christian fortitude. LOUISA. devoted wife of the late James A. Hill. 'She leaves to mourn her departure & joving daughter, Trenc. Chapman. and a foster daughter Flizabeth Muse. and other relatives and frends. Funeral from Ebegezer M. E. Church. 4th and D sts. se.. Waiters R e tng. Monday ‘&t 130 nam. Inter- ment at Harmony Cemeters. John T. Rhiines & Co.. funeral director, in chace HILL. Ladies’ Crispus Attucks Relief As- sociation: _You are hereby motified to at- tend the fuperal of Mrs. LOUISA HILL Monday, July 13. 1928, from Ebeneser ME. Chireh, 4th and D ais. . INE MARSHALL. President. JENNIE B AARNES Ree. Sec HOLTON. Saturday, July 11, residence. 1335 C st. so. HOLTON. beloved husband of Mary ton and father of Mary A. Dyson and Mrs. Florence C_ Bolden.- Notice of funerai herealter. W. Ernést Jarvis Co. in chary: WARD. ¥ ARG AT York | EDLIN. A \d relatives who were | |-l NERAL DIRECTORS. Timothy Hanlon 681 1 ST, N3 P CHAS. S. ZURHORST 301 EAST CAPITOL ST. chapel Drices. Quick 816 M ST. 2200 Automobile 5 Chapel Frank Geier’s Sons Co SEVENTH ST, X T B COSTELLO NOW LOCATED_A 1324 N. CAP 81 NORTH 78 Wm. H. Sardo & Co. (R E e Lincoln 524 AMES odel Chape L 1009HS$.N.W. Joseph F. Birch’s Sons ISAAC BIRCH) 3034 M ST. N.W. Established 1541 Phone West 98. "Gawler Service Funeral Directors Since 1850 Main 5512 1732 Penna. Ave. N.W. g _FUNERAL DESIGNS, Geo. C. Shaffer "0 {msesw. FLORAL EMBLEMS Tatn S41d PQIOBERATE PRICES. Prompt Di BLACKISTONE'S Floral “Blanket Sprays" And Other Beautiful Floral Prices. 14th & H Prompt auto delivery Artistic—ex pressiv Gude Bros. Co., { Moderate xpensive. 1214 F St