Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1926, Page 28

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28 T : THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢ BE CHEERFUL, SAYS FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1926. BOTANIST TELLS OF WORK TO FIND HAY FEVER CURE Many Pollens Supplied to Scientists U. S. FIGHTS FOR $500,000 PROPERTY negie station for experimental evolu tion, declared that after exhaustive ex periments he had reached the conclu sion that mutations in plant grow from one generation to the next, i either the chromosone or the gene are not dependent upon a hybridized for This Study He Calls Wrong- | ancestry. 1y Labeled. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, April 28.—Many of the commercial pollens supplied to sclentists and physicians for diagno: tic tests in the study of the caus of hay fever are not what they are purported to be, largely because of the ignorance of some manufacturers. This statement was made by D | George . Moore, director of the Mis Louis, in CHAUNCEY DEPEW Still Hopes to Reach 100 by His Rule: “Smile, and Be Moderate in All Things.” Help build the marble temple in Potomac Park to memorialize the valor of 26,000 Washingtonians in the armed forces of the United States furing the World War. Guild' Tentatively Reorganiz- { ed to Provide Medium for , Distribution. ! NASH A ; A ted Press souri_Botanical Gardens, St. In order to furnish u “clearing | o Toate. Apsil 81 Chavitosy | an address before the American Philo-| Dependable used cars now on dis- | IBoets 1o dharat o T M. Depew is 93 years old today. In sophical Society, in annual convention | play in new second floor Showrcom i pwers to “sharve” and those M. s 93 y 3 ) v | 4 3 intimate friends = S il he | at L Street. in need of flowers. the \Washington | e O which expresses the attitude | Ay ed s | 1700 by Spaniards i Forto Rico, BOW | 11,6 preparation of a number of mh-m-‘R, McReynolds & SOn Branch of the ional Plant, Flower [InE O, o me outlined to re.|ANCIENE Porto Rico Fort-|reported worth $500,000, and which | ;¢ P experiments with ¢ various #nd Frult Guild was tentatively r || toward life ‘; = ll\\'e‘nl' ird. annial > S Uncle Sam is trying to get back from | | 00 50 "Chich the species may be | Sales—Service organized at a meeting last night at Borters onsctie Staen o ress Now Held by For- |retired naval ofiicer. Tentified | 1423.25.27 L St. N.W. the Burlington Hotel Sadglgece gy A ST N T 7 | The results of these experiments, if | iy oy WIS . | The former United ates Senator - s ‘€ D L If M 7228 Mrs. George E.SHIll, of New Yotk 4 is still keeping regular office hours as mer Navy Officer. HARD COAL PRODUCTION |guccessiul, he added. will be appiied Saten s - gt SNER OIS O 14th and Park Road N.W. from the national headquarters of & erson: f- chairman of the board of the New i B i the guild, addressed the meeting on.| o e fering from hay fever. o ihe aims and purposes of the orgar T ::’“_“)‘r;‘\',,"“‘xil"m‘fh o ol cench] THil of the inites. Btales Gavernc| = DIIPS 35,536,000 TONS | “Dri¥ Albert i Biakestee of the Car- Leon S. Hurley, Mgr. Col. 2619 ation. and today announced the | the century mark, and his campalgn | ment's suit to cancel the 999-year lease | | - — tonians. as having identified them. | to reach the goal s based on very|held by Lieut. Comdr. Virgil Baker|Figures for Mining Year Show Big | TR | e TRt i simple rules: “Think about cheerful S. N., retired) on the old Spar ¢ : Il The Glasser Millinery Co. || John B. Larner s ced things: don't brood or be morbid; don't | fortress of San Geronimo and 10 acres Gain in Tonnage Since | § . |l e be angry or hate things; cultivate|of adjoining land has been started in | End of Strike (New Location) | Ly Mrs. Hill, has been named treas young people; laugh and make others Federal Court at San Juan, Porto | 1502 Connecticut Ave. Mallory urer; ) Philip srmer ok o ; r; Mrs. Fuillp M = augh, for God’s most useful creature | Rico. | By-the. Assoctaten Pr s 2 president of the Bethe o is he who makes two miles grow| The Government charges Baker | (e Astociuted Trew o onan Millinery, Handkerchiefs, ary . where there was one before. Above |obtained the lease through fraud by | > * i R Gifts, Hosiery 35,536,000 tons in anthracite produc cting chairman of the execu all, be moderate in everything.” transfers similar to Teapot Dome and | Hats Made and Trimmed to Order “\';1mm”"x‘;‘:wm man of the meeting (Ul fe Sen Rt m [ i tie Bieneiy 00,000. | tion for the coal year ending March (e | s Shelton Cameron, who | Sl anproves of the World Court, be: | contends tne properey 1a. ot wortn | 01 compared with 102425 was re.| “QUR ENTIRE BUSINESS Yes, you can buy some e as a member of the lieves in temperance, but thinks the |one-tenth the government valuation, | POrted by the anthracite coal con- | Now Located In Our Qwn Blde. | other gear lubricant for Washington committee. Volstead act “going a little too far,” | The lease, executed in Washington | ference board. 922 14th St. | I Bl nose cae Further Steps Planned. and favors railroad consolidation and | following approval of the tr This was attributed to the anthra it Midikiie P y { - steps in organization will a protective tariff. by Theodore Roosevelt cite strike which cut In half the cus 7 owners would rather not S Sehs s g Mr. Depew deplored the ease with retary of the Navy in 1 tomary production for the first 13 | i . : pertected within a short time, Mre. which divorces are obtained. He ad at it was given in consider: | weeks of this year, although the re L e penalize their car for a T e vised young men to marry as soon as | ation of 9 acres of land transferred by | sumption of normal production was | T o Giiitane mere few pennies. o ot e, aneiaR they are able to support wive Baker, $1 in money and in recognition | marked by weekly volumes which ap- | oth_und ¥ =ad O LS e | “Many marriages that everybody |of valuable services to the government | proathed the record. The week end- | City ¢Tn At, dealems in five-nound enne, 1,091,000 Checkerbourd pump. onls. out with 1,963,000 | inst the 'he committec already appointed to | forward the work of the organization, by Ba German thinks will be unhappy turn out well,” he said, when asked what he thought r during the war Empire and in oth taken which was formerly active in Wash- | of the marriage of 5l-year-old | San GGeronimo was one of the reported for the previous week. geton life, but wa & R Edward W. Browning with Frances |outposts turned over to the { KA 2 e R CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW, Heenan, 15. States at the time of the American rEnthe Plummers ndw Dat 3 bove-named office; includes the Idest nurse of age, is the Occupation. tempor offi A ! « t | ] Dr L. Mulford, tions: Visiting Nurse Society, |in the United Btates Ar Hhe has ANTITOXIN INSTITUTE W. R. B Bureau of Priendship and Noel H Asso. ot been ab 0 y one 3 ‘ dustrs rtment of Agriculture slated Charitles, District vie BACK U. S. CITIZENSHIP WITH EINSTEIN THEORY |i: through illness ’ Stodda manager, Belasco | American Red O Traveler: .-\hl.‘ —_— —_— Theate Harding, architect: | Sunshine Society, United Hebrew » Chi 3 ; A i b= ISe it B Mo ven Tohaitronnt of | &t Hovia tar iR Een Ern TN | Daughter of Cherokees’ Chief Mar-| President of American Physical wa )mm\n i';ee <rf|vhe ?a:mnal Capital | ¢ Child Society and Home for In-| ried Rumanian 14 Years Ago and | Society to Discuss “Relative Drift of the Garden Club of America; Mrs. | curables. = G. H. Powell, Travi Aid Al he Smscting Bl SRS MbIsan: Lost American Rights. of Ether” Above Atmosphere. Carol Morgan of the Junfor League:|speaking for J. H. Tonge, manager | i NMrs. O jr.; Girl Scouts: | of the Washington Terminal Co., be. | BY the Assoclated Prese £ HHC R L B and Mrs. Mohun, Bo spoke co-opération of the company NEW YORK, April 23.—Wahletka Prof. Dayton C. Miller, !xx‘esldflnl of uts; Mrs. C Sheldon. Gir nd said arrangements could be made | Cherokee Indian *“prince: had to gu’”"‘ Am:;rl an Ph «lm‘l N'ch-ll.\; rhus 0. A Oehmler, president | fop facilities for receivi g resf 3 > be a a | prepared a paper to be read before i illiam 1 Gulle, | tne fboers Bad Friirts dh anmlic | L oL Yostandiy. £ fbe declared @ | the soctety’s meeting tomorrow at the Sohn VeE|iie ti ol citizen of the United States. She told | Burenu of Standards in. which he R Garfield Riley of | Herbert A. Poole represented Mr.|Federal Judge Thatcher she was the | differs with the Einstein theory that % the Women’s City Club: Russell T.|Larner at the meeting and will co-|granddaughter of John Ross, for 40| there.is no relative drift of ether Edwards of Nature Magazine; Ru- | operate with the organization for M. | vears chief of the Cherokees in old |POVe the strata of atmosphere over dolph Jose. Civitan Club: Clifton | Larner as treasurer. S iih s i the earth. . and Mrs. L. Helen Fowler of | “imcenaive work formerly was car. | Indian Territory. Fourteen vears ago | Reporting for the time on his enilworth Shore Lily Farms, Mrs. |ried on here by the guild, Mrs. Hill |she married Victor Allen Rc 1, who l“‘y‘)ll‘ observi t l)!f' _,\lmml Thomas Bradley, president of the reporting that the first presi- | had come to America at the age of 2 | \ilson Obsery in California, | Georgetown Garden Club, and Mrs. | Henry Cabot Lodge: | from Rumania and who thought him.|GUring which 34,000 readings were | Gilbert Grosvenor. |the first honorary president, Mrs. self a citizen by virtue of the natur- :l‘"‘lm ‘i'r"";“_”i{,‘”flucgv";n m“fl: : il i | Phoebe Hearst, and the first treas.|alization of his father. Recently it wax | hNEINE & i p s et To Name Advisory Council. | Ih lbrencs . HRGIIG, IOEE | b aner iee the Vi | drift and that the results conflrmed | An advisory council is to be named, | pres had been Mrs. Thomas|had never been natur: B e L g St ed including representatives from insti- | Nelson Page and Mrs. Robert Bacon. | “princess” oy her marriz he sgciety’s Kansas City meeting. tutions and organizations which will| The natonal organization .was es- | citizen automatically of her husband' -z = i i = be most in need of flowers to cheer |tab) ed in 1893 and incorporated in |country. After telling her story, tho Have you done your bit to honor f 2 the sick and lonely, it was announced, | 1906, Mrs. Hill said, and now has | “princess” was given back her citizen. | Washington's veterans by contribut- A ways more Ior your money 1s The advisory council will consist of | 400 branches throughout the country, iFhip. She appeared in court inl ing '.-';a] the District World War ’ representatives from the following or- | operating in all but two States. | Cherokee grab. . Memorial? more than a slogan here . When you buy a Bond suit you ) A \;{‘/ ( 1 » ; ) p & always get an extra pair of pants, y @ N | P —, 1] » L 4 -~/ d f 4 . /) an you never pay extra for # 3 : ESTABLISHED 1861 thém! . . 9 4 gp 6} S You always get a suit that’s worth 2 e wn/bz ano Ercels from ten to fifteen dollars more o 4 9 / - ~ 1 . than the price_you're asked to § R [ X 4 ] W/ as EITK%{OK,) > NG pay! Bond Cloth ilored in- —Don othes are tailored In ’ our own factory and sold direct to you, at one profit, through our own twenty-two tremendous retail stores! o Tonight and Saturday ¢ Z’V/eafure cf the ?;sé)ion (Sfi’ow will’ ; be an exhibit o/’ orfyinaffiainfl)ys the /5[%\:21’177 wellEnown artists DeLuxeSuits Tol’coats o o Two-Pants | e finet ety o ve American School’ I yoe o dukien B Madeofthe inest tabric wit| EAbnder Sk of sciiand . e : custom care — the best that « [ francis %u}bfg Bruce Crane, & 7Nm(7 Couse, g)eo e 7[20(7ed e siat e Sl 0 g ooy | ¢ - . 5 e fund your money cheerfully— Frederick k emington, %garl Nickol ,@fian enth . i o Q (;)ugean Ochool’ %fifx’u iem ~ [~ O. @fz{ys ‘r'%g?;z)auléw HATS ¢ -~ : 3k p r) - ; Rakish, lnll?-:oiwn artin r/ebcqo; &. Pieters sk ” Tawny Tans — Cin- L : . g o i o . & 3 . i ) every popular p: . ©ening receptions Mo sales at 1335 F Street N.W. o $3.35 A. CLYDE CONNELLY, Manager , . ,e«lo/ninfl chefhm ! Store Hours: 8:30 AM. to 6 P.M. Saturday, 9 P.M. Concert Broadcast From 7:45 to 8:45 P.M., Friday, : g : - Pt Through Station WCAP .+ - . %

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