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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, MARCH 14, MONTGOMERY G. 0. P. CLUBS PICK PLUMLEY iIakama Park Man Elected Presi- HLEY looked like two tiny girls | been acquainted with busts of Shakes | Dlaying on o living room floor. | peare. and Temnyson and Burns aui| dent at County Get-Together To the naked eye one of them [my life, and, personally, I think—I| Meetin was the daughter of the lady [am sure—I resent your putting ! g who was sewing by & window | Dickens under the floor for toursts o hnd the other, named Daisy dear, was | to walk on. I did stoop down to patf S the only child of a couple arou; his gilt letters, but—mighty poor | Skecias Iuspatch to The ¢ ! 5 corner, Mr. and satistaction. ROCKVILLE, Nid, March 18— Nrs. A, Blank “Tennyson and Burns and Chaucer [ Walter I'. Plumley of Takoma, Bl who Kept them! and the rest are fine poets, but, like| Was elected president of the Mont ves to them- Shakespeare, Dickens is a living pulse | Bomery .mn_\wzl.glnf ;n:mll“‘ o .‘; polves, and who, of the world. All the same, you have| Club t laigely attended & ' AROUND THE CITY During a conversation, Kreisler di- KREISLER PLAYS STOCK |, D.yr'nx %, conversation, Kreister di- MARKET AT LEISURE paying tribute to the violin as the king of instruments and conferring sotto voice with “Foley” as to the advisabil- Divides Time During Interview Be- |!LY, Of Purchasing various stocks. He noted the changing figures on the tween Praising Violin and board as keenly as any of the fifty-odd other traders in the room and finally Buying Shares. By the Associated Press. agreed with his companion on the TAMPA, Fla., March —Fritz buying for the.day. et S el Krelsler piays the stock market in his idle moments. | He Wouldn't Fit. A mewspaper reporter found the | rom London Answ noted violinist seated before tho black. | i (interested in 1 " board in a broker's office. With him | ¢ B L eLCT It a friend whom he referred to as|yarn)—And the cannibals didn’t harm oley.” The latter, he explained, | you, after all? was his officfal < buyer and ad:| Old Salt—Bless yer, no, miss! They viser on Wall Strect matters. didn’t have a saucepan my size. - 1926—PART 1. WALES SOON TO OCCUPY rooms to replace the old-fashioned English ones. The Prince told the contractors that MARLBOROUGH HOUSE | he would” visi the yiace evars few and ordered that he be informed of any changes made in the present British Heir Personally Conducting | ,jans. Work of Preparing Historic Home for Use. By the Assoclated Press. ! LONDON, March 13.—The Prince of | | Wales soon will have a new residence He has asked his mother, Queen Mary, to select the decorations for his new residence, and this Her Majesty has agreed to do. His Little Joke at 2 AM. i in London, Marlborough House, and | From the Louisville Courier Journa! he s personally directing the work of its preparation for his occupanc: | tail el | marked: “I thought this clock was at soon as the work was begun he went During the day wifey moved the Hubby coming in late re- over the plans himself and made sev-|the head of the stai; eral radical changes, insisting on the And then he went on: “Oh, I see. installation of American-style bath-!It has run down.” PRIEST’S RITES MONDAY. Archbishop Curley to Officiate at Wunder Funeral. Special Dispatch to The Star U, LAND, Md., March 13.— The funeral of Mgr. Edward J. Wunder, 74, rector of St. Patrick’s Church for 28 years and dean of the | Catholic clergy of western Maryland, who died this morning. will take place Tuesday with high mass of requiem with Archbishop Curley of Baltimor: as celebrant. The funeral sermon wil he preache: by Right Itev. Mgr. M. F. Foley o St. Paul's Church, Baitimore. B: will be in St. Patrick’s Cemetery. Club tuust dbe well Nxed, as to money, though the hus- %, like, but you were never more mis taken In your life, &% o= sor: = One was Mrs. Stevens, the lady ! \f the house, and the other was Mrs, Blank. And they were discuss. | ing thelr husbands and homes, the hostess being quite worked up over 1he high cost of living. ‘Now, don't you think that was a nawful price to pay for a simple little | woast beef dinner?” ‘I do' no.” admitted the visitor, who was Mrs. Blank. “We don't | have dinners any more—not since my | husb'n lost his Dove'nment oftice-— | we don't have hardly nothin’, an' we have to save mos’ of that for our Jittd da hter Daisy dear. You can’t have dinners when vou haven't | got no money —1 been hungwy so lon’ 1 don’t fink we'll ever get ‘nough to eat any more. But we don't let on 10 nobody becawse we's too pwoud, O, Mrs. S'tv'ns, I'moso atwaid husbn will do sumfin despit. e s sayin' it he was dead I could <e Daicy dear home to my people— | t I tellim, “John. 1'd wather starve with you than have evvy thing wivout you' O, Mre, S'tvns. vou | don’t know how dwetlle it is—it mos’ | bweaks my heart.” i The lady at the window got up from | Yer sewing and t into the hall vhere the telephone is, and called up her husband. who is & good and in- luential man. Then she looked in_on the children to tell little da 10 have a party with her toy because she wo fix up a luncheon for the two of thange of program whick accepted with a rhapsodic “Let’s And then the t back to th homes and hus i not just two Jittle children playing on o living yoom floor, but a couple of house: wives tulking together in that glamourous place of Make-Believe, which, geographically, is situated in Kingdom of Childhood—that lost Atlantis, neighbor. dewr, which wi once our home. but which we never go back to because there is a high. high wall. And we are on the outside. H < one woman in this town | for_whom Michelangelo lived in | vain. No personal zrudge. mind vou, | for she had never even heard tell of Lim until she came into an office und chanced to notice a print of “Mose on a woman's desk. And at that all she said by way of comment was— “You just ought to see the sar pletures down at Chesapeake Beac One day, early last summer. me and my hushand leaned over the bou walk rail for an hour. watching s young feller make dent Coolidge ruter wet sand—life size—and after | that a sailor horn, a Just beartily! o meand taste for art, and what pleased so much was the off-hand way it was done. was taken down soon after that don’t vou know, when my sister made me go to the beach with them for a family picnic, a couple of months after Tom died. T couldn’t stay—think- ing of how me them sand picty: togethe! There are times when argument 1< so much language gone 1o waste— | and this seemed to be one of the limos\: des: The woman who owned “Moses™ knew that the patron of rt was visioning, with memory-eyes, some aabbler under the b <. making S0 many set pictures to the fall of nickels, while she leaned over the rail- ing with a companion who had kept loving steps with her womanhood until they came to a cemetery gate. And hesi again: Any idea that gives you a better one is always a worthwhile thing. In this case, it reminded the Moses woman of other sand pictures—the ones that hang the cobwebby walls of forgetful- in the back attic of your brain— except for the occasional times you 1ake them down for a dusting. Here's one: A blue sea billowing on a beach, with two soldiers drawing a straight | line on the =and to let the wav know how they may roll in. s Royal Foolishness, inside the Jine. sits in his throne chair to watch the sea obey his command. And while he does it the breakers crash in: over the line, up to the throne chair. As if any Canute that ever lived can hope to control a world he had no hand in making! This is a Dbotter one: A park in Svracuse, with Archimedes on a h, drawing mathematical circles on the sand. You can see the Roman invader rushing forward to cut him Archimedes sees him, also, but o is something more important 10 he considered: Don't tread on the circle! You can hear his warning ery. as his blood soaks into the sand. “This is the best one of all: Another place of sand—with a white-robed figure stooping to write # sentence—and brushing it away, that man might forever wonder what the words were. And never knos * HEN vou ave paid your last tribute to the royal dust and for- ever living genius shrined in West- minster Abbey and have reached the just then deserted portal you give the hearest gray stone column a stealthy. pat of fareweli. And, because you #lways make belleve, to yourself, that ancient things grow a sort of human understanding—and the Abbey has had a half dozen centuries of birth- davs—you add to that farewell a few parting remarks, in strictest confi- dence, of course, because you dasent gay it aloud in England. “I am glad to get acquainted with von, and would love to know you bet- fer, but—I regret that I did not come here straight from home, before see- {ne the cathedrals of Italy and France, each a miracle of scuiptured splendor #nd some of them so vast they could put all your treasures in a corner and forget they were there. 1 don’t won- der England is proud of her bards, but after you have seen tombs and fmonuments that are altars, or foun- tains, or colossal figures, or draperies of marble lace—all dedicated to men who were once Michelangelo, or Ra-i phael, or Dante, or some other among the countless and supreme immortals | of This worldi—and, maybe, of the one | 1o which they have gone—and said | your smalt prayer at historically | vouched-for tombs of Bible apostles. | and even tasted of the silvery thread | of water that ripples its way over the | stone flooring of a church built over the stream where Paul was beheaded, why, you can’t—you honestly cannot 2 1 your dear t: er.’ e that 1 have my big admiration and love, dear together meeting at the ('qlll’\ll' Abbey, and it sort of hurts to feel|here Il l|lgl|(. Sl!('_&'?(‘flllll{ Joseph that I may never come agatn.” Mm-hl. Ees gt Glen Echo, temporary o - president. K:;,';‘:m‘,;‘:,“;f&;:f“c‘;.h‘e‘;’;x; i‘;’f}‘ Lepresentutives Frank Crowther of Then you eat your dinner, say your | chenectad R prayers, and sleep straight through |%ihl: T until time to start for Southampton |¢iPt1 speakers Zthlman u and your ship—and have to stay n | 4deption of system of port all day use of the strike of committees for catmpaign wor u the British b'“en You fecept the| ary fo the rezular party committee Sl ton Neerenely - iohok. 1L e s, but the plan met with cor tnfluence of a fa ble opposition and action 3 EWAEE 5 vour Yockor and o | postponea untit the next meeting to at home—but at dusk a tend | be held at the same ])1_1(\'(‘ 1WO we @ groun of arbit wlon; hence. when they have climbed : nference with the ca climbed back again the ¢ | to work and—the first thing vou know vou are in New York and have yvour feelings worked un a Young o rely glihps ing your with no rootings in. He even s at _your carefully made-out spend in small francs and lire and marks und things, and when you give sinister warnin that you might have diamonds and wine| bottles tucked underneath’ he iust| looks at you and And when ou have been welcomes happy s little crowd that & to meet | jga, N Cots Baueens ol you vou have u wil ant supper| Women's Clubs, had charge of the that lands you ar your hotel near ? ri . ar | cocial feature of the gathering. dawn. And the next mor the g bl s of you motor to Washington, with| T Comb Sage Tea in Faded or Gray Hair Drum-Hunt, eusurer; Mrs. . Getzendanner, former pr the County Federation of Women's Clubs; derick W. Page of Uni- 'k, Wilson L. Townsend of < and others s f all speakers that the pros big Republican v e ending upon ‘the extent bringing out the voters REPRISALS.POSS!BLE. Voiding of American Patents by | (..duorl i tifully darkened, glossy and attrac- . tive with _a brew A policy of ve | may be neces 3 4 v by the United States if fore Sulphur. When- ations continue the practice of void ever her hair took ing American patents in foreign coun- : on that dull, faded tries unless the article specitied in the or streaked ap- patent is manufactured abroad, Secre. pea e, this sim- tary Hoover indicated yesterd Die [ igie Svas S R A % with won- Recent developments in the intern: i ctiecy.: Ay tional patent law situation, Mr. Hoo- | king at any indicate that foreign nations | : e toward lenieney in patent | A S administration and may relax the law LiciAlS HEC S which now discriminata against Ame: Compound,” you will get a ican patentees. The Commerce S 3 bottle of this old-t ary said Patent C oner Rob. | improved by the additior ertson had been succestul at a con- |ingredients, all ready to use, ference at The Hague last Fall in |73 c This simple mixture can securin in international | | patent 4 TR ey been wholly successful in others— | “O07 $hC Drauty among them the laws which foree | \‘\( known « American inventors to protect their | body uses Wyeth Sul- inventions by manu: abroad. |phur Compou v because it These laws, Mr. Ho said, work | darkens so n and evenly that double harm on American industry. | pobody can te s been applie robbing this countr he fruits of [ i’ so easy to use, too. You si inventions of its 1 g il =S ymb or soft brush and transferring American indnstries to | Y To el ons Nidis R foreign nations. it through your hair, taking i strand at a_t morning Mile. eamaeel, | Bane's {the gray hair disappears; after an- woman mining engineer, dons, regula- | 0ther application or two, it is re- tion overalls when she descends into | stored to color and looks the min i utiful Foreign Nations Resented. ded vpon to A good visor will make you a RO driver. Protection where you need it More ln{ortant Than Four Wheel Brakes —is your line of vision! Sun glare and dazzling headlights may make you lose control of your car— but a few dollars invested in a Visor .will give you absolute protection against such hazards. Our Sale of Visors Will enable you to save money on this valugble acces- sory. We are closing them out, and they’re under- priced. Get yours before they are all gone. » E. J. MURPHY CO., Inc. 710 12th St. N. W. Main 5280 MOTHER :~Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation Wind Colic =~ To Sweeten Stomach Flatulency Diarrhea Regulate Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of W Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere r‘ecommmd;? kept her hair beau-| Reed Furniture Including, also, Fiber and Willow Suites, Tables, Rockers, Chairs, Settees, etc. The most comfortable and practical Furniture for Solarium or porch use. You will find a com- bination of beauty and moderate prices prevail here. Genuine Reed Living Room Suite Made of genuine Reed and consists of four attractive pieces. It is very closely woven, and the upholstery is of spring con- struction. The removable cushions and backs are covered with a patterned Cretonne to match the finish of the frame. The Settee measures 5 feet inside of arms. Oval Table—top measuring 23%%5 by 33, inches. throughout. decorated. Specially priced. . ................ Attractive Reed Suite ; Con‘sisting of Settee, Armchair and Rocker. Heav- ily braided outer edges to insure long wear. Uphol- stered backs and spring seats. The cushions are re- movable and covered with handsome art cretonne. The finish is Frosted Mahogany, producing a very attrac- tive effect. 392:2 Special price. Fiber Suite of Putty Color Has removable spring seats with pretty cretonne covering in harmony with the finish of the frame. ; Settee—Armchair—Arm Rocker. Special price ...... “eeeese Excellently constructed Frosted Mahogany decorated and Silver Gray 50 < rrrrreeo A Three-Piece Reed Suite Each piece is attractively finished in a rich shade of Brown, with cretonne covered cushions and backs to match. Settee, Armchair and Rocker are designed for comfort and are of splendid workmanship. Spring construction in the frames—cushions and backs are tufted. Special price. ... pleasmg Fiber Suite Three pieces—Armchair, Arm Rocker and Settee, in ‘cafe color. The seats have removable cushions, and with the backs are covered with cretonne of effective pattern. .50 SIBECTARPIICE: . o v civaiaiis sivee s Snsinmn s s57= Carriages Fiber Ppl]man Cart Upholstered in attractive cordu- roy on the seat and back cushions. Artillery type wheels—windshield —adjustable hood and long push- ers; reversible gear. Finished in Frosted Cafe and Frosted Wal- ; nut color. ity. Special Price, $33.75 “Whitney" on a baby carriage stands for the best in design, selection of materials and work-* manship. ‘_'_Sterlind" stamp of qual- Fiber Pullman Cart A verycomfortable cart,with long pushers and modern wheels of the artillery type. Very strongly made in a pleasing design. Col- ored in Frosted Cafe or Frosted Walnut. Special Price. $19.50 It is ‘the