Evening Star Newspaper, March 14, 1926, Page 19

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TELLS OF CAROL BROKEN ROMANCE. Events Leadlng to Annulment Suit Given hy Friend of - Morganatic Wife. | Marcn 13, hine widely known former mor, ney” o he final episol with Carol. T now would like | ~ehool divected > has no name s e insufficie suitable instiuction 1 Annulled Without Hearing 1€ Lambrine’s 1. so that she her husband the right to resume living | BED CROWDED BABY DIES | Trenton Couple Take Infant When | Crying. Later Roll on It. i to The Star . J., Mare 1d his wi wey Special Disp: TR A John Katziek ng they infant who wa Hed with them Jier when cry ig 2. During the nigh- 6 Dol Dacss ollod upon by cither the | Iather or motl When the was not found their (Iulrl ‘ . they called red the bty A buriai Coroner on with | about an | issued 1 © a consu sician Mitche County Phy Wxsconsm Editor Dead. Aareh 13 (8- |,; Wiscon- | S ish ner | Gazette, e was THE On the Atlantic “!the " [ smaller anin < ready has left W until the cold is ended. | GASCARA 82 PRESIDENT HOTEL APARTMENTS @HOSE who want_ luxurious homes with com- slete hotel service at a lower cost than hotels can |Claim Motorists Use Private Drive To Avoid Red Light Complaints that motorists in or. der to avoid being held up by traf- menphu at Seventeenth street and chusetis avenue run through me private drive of an apart- corner were Traffic Di- he offenders, : ‘to the reports, are mo- torists who want to make a right- hand turn into Seventeenth street and are held up by the ved stop drivers tem to ives wve found s old being held up b it at the inte hteenth street and ) Bureau has been d by Mr. Eldridge to de. plain clothes operatives at intersections i effort to i up the pr . AFRICAN EXPEDITIONS TO AID ONE ANOTHER| : Field Museum Group, After Small| Aninials to Help Smith- sonian Men. The Field Museum expedition to Af- vica in sea jungle s mens will te with the Cf expedition Washington un- $5 the, na | i William M. | d from the Chi- | lininz th two e understc r esting that jeditions co-operate, it is 1 announced y sies and wor The Chi ntists are sec <. while the local group the bagging of such s giraffes \i elephants. The objectives of the | wo_expeditions consequently do not conflict. One member of Dr. M hington, 0 and Dr. da or fann been Calvert St Bet 18th & 19th N\.W. (Just Tall Block New Ambassador Th TODAY Roast Turkey and Roast Capon DINNER $1.00 L PM. 1o 7T PM. Service and Fosd Unsurpasscd Parking_on ‘l"hm Streef Col. 504 Don’t sts Until you gnd that Cold A cold is a germ_attack. highly contagious. Be careful. Don't kiss Bl near others’ faces. You can end a cold in a day— if vou use the effective method You can check the fever. open the howels, tone the entire system. HILL'S does all these things. docs them prom . without il effects, Tt is so efficient, so complete that w= S1O00.000 for it. P Eit HILL'S promptly Ever: hour of delay lets the cold get ted. Be sure you get . because of what this hely has dunc for millions. for help that is quick. effici complete. That means HILL'S. vour drug store. Price 30c LININE Be Sare It's Get Red Box %2G3510% with Portrait City Boardwalk offer, will be interested in the following— Furnished Apartments of 1. 2 and 3 rooms. Combination Bedroom-Living Room Apartments. Silver, linen, china, glass, electricity, rel 1 and maid service included. Apartments. kitchen. Sea water in all bathrooms. Available valet service. Serving pantrie Restaurant service from well-appointed Artesian well water. Facilities for ccean bathing from Apartments. Indoor seawater swimming pool. Turkish Bath de- | partments for men and women. Commissary department. Servidor system. Spacious lobbies and porches. Garage accommodations. g Rentals, $1200 a Year, Upwards The special -season rate, upward. 100 transient rooms $5.00 European plan. Ready for Occupancy May Fi:-t May we cend you Booklet and Renting Schedule? W. F. BANKS, General Manager specimens of | Don’t sneeze | a letter out- | | nn's party al-| another | Saturday. \VOTES PURCHASE OF LINGOLN RELICS Senate Favors Provision of The purchase of the Oldroyd col | for better protection,” said v, latest lection of Lincoln relics, now on ex- | Willis, “There may be wisdom ir th ‘hicago poets to achieve recogni-|ern interpretatio hibition in the house in Tenth street {a plan, but I prefer to see them where | tion in the free fon of poe where Abraham Lincoln died, is | they ure.”” He added that he under- ike his Lew i for in 1 by th - | stood the Government now owns the t, who is des rtificial ato late. yesterday u the urgent- building. lon" of the metropolis for the nator Willis of | The bill which was nd the plains, Drury, after | their predecessor: { rccommendation { Ohio, its author House action. WASHINGTON, D. . MARCH 14, 1926— l’Am‘ 1 Illolul Capital,” he.ull; of the xll\ seen through lh(r{ et i v de. | NEW. FREE VERSE POET | uvcortsonat ey " vivid th him in this de- and believe that the Lincoln ist HAS VARIED CAREER John Drury of Chicago Has Been # a Bus Boy and a Ship's thought they should be retained in | thelr present place, the historlc build- | Mess Attendant. ing to which Lincoln was carried ———— . THE SUNDAY STAR, The city bs o nd | adventure, of « b and quiet dr s should be owned by the Go | ment, and should be retained alw in the Capital Cit Senator King of Utah asked where it was proposed to keep the relics it the llm(‘nl should purchase r Willis replied that he it fare than that offered by the verse librists, such as Carl S \\hu spoke of ( of the W nt shapes and Thus Drury writes: For all_your blind brut 1 have been surprised By sudden facets of beauty Jn the soot and dust Of your smothered streets after he had been shot in Kord's Theater across the street, and where he died. “It has been By the A‘flluiiflud Press. ,CHICAGO, L —s ion | 0,000 for Oldroyd Col- lection Here. sufligested to me that this building is not_fireproof, and for that reason the Lincoln collection should be moved to other qu other Chicu; ttention on t outh American trade—these are ¢ chapter headings in the unwrit- h the movement as One of the searching for adventure and color in the outlands of the world, has come notes to distingu one in its own right. voices is Drury’s. he bill now goes to | quy similar to one th consideration and the last. Cong th admiration and Willis called iad wonders of metro- ator old Iylufi garden . . . chrysanthemums . . . {tion. 'The sum of $: . 00 establishments for pride {as may be nece b the artificlal rearing of fish. Less hrough | than one-tenth of the eggs reach ma e | turity, 19 [\\‘iml.«rr with Queen and prob King to Visit Windsor. LONDON, March 13 OP).—King |4VI¥ stay there during April Cieorge's health is so good that he will | . not spend F in the Med - Boring insects causged $40,000, 000 o He will %o to'da ranean this to timber in the past Grow Your Own Roses In our 100-page free “Star Guide to Good Roses,”” you will find “Hints to Success with Roses,” on page 12. It is so easy to foliow, that with “guaranteed tobloom™ Star Roses, you can positively have glonous blooms of your own growing from June until ost. Weguarantee this. Tohelpyou select, thereare 18 Rose pictures in natural colors, and over 50 kinds in black and white. This beautiful 100-page *GUIDE"is free. SEXD FOR IT TODAT! THE CONARD-PYLE COMPANY Star Rose Gro s Rov ll" Weat Girove, Pa. Star Roses bloom, or mo funded Are you paying for a Packard —wzthout owning one? Very likely you are paying the Packard price for motor car transportation while believing you cannot afford a Packard. Thousands do. Yet while they long for Packard Six comfort, beauty and dis- tinction others own and drive these fine cars at an actual saving You too can own a Packard Six. Before you buy your next motor car, use a pencil and a scratch pad before you use a pen and a check book. Most of the items of cost in owning a car are the same as between a Packard Six and any car at even half its price. and tires. It costs little more to insure the Packard than the half-price car. No more to garage it—no more .to license it—no more for a wash and polish! Interest on your Packard investment will be a few cents a day higher—but less frequent and lower repair charges under Packard’s flat rate service plan far offset that item. Packard Six owners report 14 to 16 miles to a lower-priced gallon of gasoline, 1,000 miles or more to a gallon of motor oil, 15,000 to 20,000 miles per set of tires. What half-price car does better? On such a But those items, so strongly stressed by most manufacturers, are relatively unimportant. Depreciation is the really important charge. De- preciation costs many motorists 2 or 3 times as much per mile as they pay for gas, oil and rubber together. in money over the cost of compromise transportation. Packard Six buyers had been driven an average of only 15,087 miles! Depreciation cost every one of those owners eight cents a mile! They, none of them, spent a total of over three cents a mile for gasoline, oil . If you are one of the thousands who buy a half- price car every year or two—every 15000 to 20,000 miles—you can own and drive a Packard Six for less money. More than twice as many Packard Six cars were sold last year as in 1924. And 70% of all these sales were made to those who had been buying cars frequently. These Packard Six owners know they can keep their new cars two or three times as long as the cars they turned in—and they intend to do it. basis they drive the car they have always wanted at a Iower-per-xmle cost than they have ever paid. It is a fact that 98% of those who have bought Packard Six. cars during the past five years are still Packard owners. They are not paying a o . : heavy depreciation toll every year. You need The used car most often turned in last year by not do so either. The Packard Six five-passenger sedan, with all necessary accessories, including spare tire, and with freight and tax paid, is delivered at your door for $2,782.10. Thousands have boug]lt Packard Six cars without ever paying out more than $200 in cash at any one time, used car allowance conerereJ the payment seldom exceed- ing $150 a month. Packard cars are now being sold 0. COOLICAN, PRESIDENT. ~0f a dlstmgutshed e Connectlcut at S on the basis of the new tax rate Packard-Washmgton Motor Car Co. Potomac 5000 SFPACKARD B

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