Evening Star Newspaper, April 23, 1926, Page 4

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4 0L CONSERVATIN URGED AT MEETIG Experts Also Discuss Need of Research to Find Cheaper Auto Fuel. the must THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1426. (COL BELL OBJECTS -~ TOUTILITES BILL RETIRING PRESIDENT GENERAL AND PAGES OF D. A. R. CONGRESS MAN FOUND GUILTY OF KILLING OFFICER Ohioan and Brother Accused BOYS SPECIAL GUESTS. | Temple-Noyes Masonic Lodge Host to Sons and Grandsons. Temple-Noyes Lodge, No. 32, F. A. M, last evening acted as host to | the sons and grandsons of its mem Murder While Resisting bers, and had as special guests the 25 or more boys who reside at the Ma- | Detectives. sonic and Eastern Star Home. The CiEA latter were transported from R As Rewritten, He Says, Measure Makes No Provisson | nome, near Lamond Station, ‘ 5 sonic’ Temple, Thirteenth st -\’"1‘»\‘\ -l\llrl\ “"’ ].”-‘ for Army Engineer. e A [ founa “guilty of first -a 1 entertainment included a |for the riate moving pictu lan ter comedian 2 nd Master Sydney Jacobs made a few time buffet supper 5 Hanson is master of Past Master Ralph chairman of the ent mittee. of verdi a deliberation of ined no recommendation MeGraw and | Lyon’s home i nd other ] e Conserv troleum tained ana rch encouraged it tion resources Nation's pe- 4 / 4 3 § W A . Fear that the District will lose the % inatne | . S / - o 4 é ? services ot Maj. W. E. R. Covell, As s : § 4 5 5 L o s sistant Engineer Commissioner, as s ot e " i A 8 g s signed to public utilities, if the hill | the United | providing for a separate public uti-| use ties commission 15 passed by Congress | in its rewritten form, was expre J today by Engineer Commissioner J.| Franklin Bell. - - The revised bill, Commission : explained, contains no provision for | Address Tonight by Dr. Grenfell. the appointment of an Army officer as| Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell, who for 35 1 member of the commission or an ad-| vears has been conducting medical | viser to it. It provides for a A'ivnhm)mI\'mmm on the coast of Labrador,|on April engineer. will address a mass meel the | Jocks wi While objection has been made to}Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G | caped, Iy the large number of Army officers on | street, tonight at 8 o'clock. The ot- | himself detail in the Districj Government, Col. |ing is being held in the interest of | [oeon: Bell said that he knows of no one,|Mcreased membership in the Fror e civilian or Army engineer, who is bet. | Association of America, g nt |’ ter qualified to handle the affairs of of the Intern the Utilities Commission than Maj. | Covell. “I went without an assistant | for six months,” he said, “just to be| sure that I could get Maj. Covell's services. He has proven himself in - valuable to the commission.’ Unless some provision is made the bill providing for Maj. Covell’s as- | sistance, Commissioner Bell does not | believe that the proposed new utilities | commission would functions as satis factorily as it dc now rect " Februar lodge the >, Barnard States is to continue its present ts, speakers of six overnmental organ- | Cosmos Club last | of a nation- | attention on meetin; . — but were ca ers in Michi d sl Betl the part focus sources. | ations | meet. | v powe ional prometi in Subscript the District of ! Columbia War tenisial may he paid into and welfare foundland and Labra tations in N lor. methods s aw a The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair—it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. - for of motor cars industry. { Auto v ter tors, lig engines the seating of delegates. Her State | »ming. sther prominent New Mrs. Livingston Rowe Schuyler, regent the Manhattan chapter, mer presiGent of the Daughters of the Confederacy and also of the New York | Hospital Musiczl Association, and now at the head of the Washington Head HERRISE EMING Yorke For each $50 or! fractionborrowed you agree to de- posit $1 per week in an Account, the proceeds of which may be used to cancel the note when due. Deposits may be made on a weekly, . semi- monthly or monthly basis as you prefer. MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U.S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W. “Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit" Loans are pas. ed within a c ortwo after filin application with few excep- tions. Easy to Pay Weekly Deposit For 50 Weeks $2.00 $4.00 $6.00 $8.00 $500 $10.00 $1,000 $20.00 $5,000 $100.00 $10,000 $200.00 | had been our first Ambassador to|signer of the Declaration of Inde- France. The Paris Daughters have| pendence, and from the ninth Presi- just finished raising a memorial fund | dent, Wiillam Henry Harrison. Her to equip and maintaln a beautiful| grandfather was Maj. Leo C. Ord, |room in the American Hospital in|after whom one of the Arlington |t t0e : ‘| piipe Neuilly, e He Giset i- | uarters Association, and on the na Other chapter regents who are|grandfather, Col. Philip G. Marste R T Ar e Temen diti apilst present at this congress from abroad | of Virginia, aide de e E week she was the only woman ame are Mrs. Clinton H. Morgan of Alask nd his honorary the 17 men on the program. She and Mrs, Moseley of London. ve palibearer and his | = - T X s determination has been. She | G e, & lical acy also a Colonial Dame. | dent D b | Among the honor guests at the|grandson a choir b the Was = it i s long been an active member of |, i | 4 : . From California comes Mrs. Lyman i congress is Mrs. H. 8. Mulliken, a! ton funeral), is buried in old Christ | g 4 Sl £ the ' society, her national number be- s - o L Stookey, the war regent of the e e v, | member of the Dolly Madison Chapter | Church in Alexandria. e Rl Chatiar 1o basatgslas B 2, and AR O e Tviugaton | Nere and president of the District| Miss Alice McDuffie of Kalamazoo, | —named for the California poppy. Mrs i macn s g branch of the League of American|yich., elected historian general on | Stookey - he West (who administered the oath of oftice to | p, Y e ch., ec . hi lan g @ Stookey is well known in the est, thiok s | Pen Women. Mrs. Mulliken has lived | Mrs, Brosseau’s ticket éd on the tivilies Thave. INCTHASE 't | Washington) and the Schuylers of |, e > ) Mrs. au's ctivities heve included the bon meet bty abroad many years also, both in U- | national board as vi regency of Californ from 1922 it of the con. | New York. rope and in Mexico, where her | eral from Michigan fro and the district chairmanship It has been an unusually col-| |band was superintendent | ; | i the Mr. Ses petroleur 1 with awn _from | ed that| BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER. ching improvement can be| vy e pilgrimage to Mount Ver- * i production, niNS | wa 1ol L e rette el T on, and that the chapter is ield s developed as a | fh tomb ‘of S w | comparatively young, it s possible not by accidents of own- | S iy o and the =+ | 1o understand something of what Mrs. Loan $100 $200 $300 $400 lished by living th the national when you are s long 10,00 miles away from MORRIS PL notes are usual made for 1 though theymay be given for any period of from 3 to 12 months. oduction d,” he tal Con; the end. Last night's v the newly elected nationa! culminate tc ot those offic sress cen the nd are ex “Our said are prac- | »al should be | o ver prac- | per loss of gas ser limited,” he b Home Was in New York. and consul New York until with her son, ago. She -| For three years she of A erican citizens par. She s and, un Cook's. | ing “engineer of the second la rm‘fllhl;m'n "ur 5 nlu« hmlut «Er \\J"::, ‘::‘ .”hf:\i:\".l.'r‘. ;»mx'\‘n.fik. ‘);. lead mine in the world. They went| 923 she made national chairman | stead, the place of chairman of the ,through the arduous days of the many | of Americani on. She had working | bonds the auditorium there, and | revolutions there, knowing Pancho | with her 51 State chairmen in all the | she has led California to an excess Villa and his generals rather too well! States and Territories. She has held | of 140 per cent above the quota as for comfort, and finally having to turn | nearly all the signed to it. She is corresponding | the key in the lock of thefr beautiful|in Michigan retary of the Los Angeles house and leave it with everything in|from 1919 to 1 Club, one of the oldest and it, to escape across 500 miles of|lowing the World War clubs in the country, having ovi northern Mexican desert over a route | able work for the members no white man had ever taken before.|through the or P . | Daughters in her 3 Active in World War. she was decorated with the Cross of During the World War Mrs. JEEEy DySche T ot v directed the Women's | Her home was in One of the interesting elem: e went to the tropic ent this year has been the r |an Army officer, 16 ye irn of the foreign chapiers on the has organized several chapters in loor. It is a matter of pride with |various places, and was on the abroad to “keep the home | Memorial Continental Hall committee burning,” and American clubs | for four years. almost universally existent \\'hn*r—‘ Mrs. H. S. Dickerson of Missour{ is declared to be heating home; wallwood ring and fol- most convenie her remark- expensive, Prof, charges must of any heatin cost of h v there is a sufficient colony. But|the regent of the chapter in Shanghal, where her husband was until recently in the American Bureau of Education. - A member of the Paris Chapter,and | 1 very different thing. Not all na- | the overseas vice regent, is Miss Ada | | S 8 friendly to such idea. | foward Johnson, who is living here in | liken One of the representative women even as we regard with suspicion|ine District now. She reports that| Transport Corps of San Antonio, Tex., | from the West is Mrs. Frank W. Mon- since the late war any patriotic S0 | per chapter, founded within the past|and she has been active in the work | dell, a former vice % | ciety of some other country foundinZ | tey years Ly Mrs. Hoover H. Hanger, | for the blind of the Amenican Red |of the D. A. R 1 - pr | ithin our owniportala It is & i ‘;“\-hn had been a member of the Cross, having put several books into |dent of the Children of the American | tribute, dndeed Cto ithe Daug e or | Franklin_Chapter here, ‘was named | Brallle. She comes of distinguished | Revolutior or three vears she has Need Better Insula 9 the American Revolution that they | ne ““Benjamin Franklin” out of com-|ancestry—on her mother's side from | been in charge of the elaborate pro- | of Homes,” he s have been able to establish and main- | pjjment to Mrs. Hanger, and because | the Cressaps and Van Swearingens of | grams of the Daughter nd, in ad- estion of cffi outside of our own territory, |t was especially fitting as a reminder | Maryland and on her father's, by di- | dition to that sufficiently strenuous ac preference. Ho rters that have met with co-ODera- | yhat the author of *“Poor Richard”|rect line, from Benjamin rrison, | tivity, has managed the boxes and F the eosts of conl|tion and respect from the nationals i B El B T R 3 z oy coallwith whom the members were resid Manufacturers | In8: F St. N. U‘ [ ] rmation of units of the major anization of the United ten » under other flags than our own | the 1ting Mul- otor instz n, repairs Anthracite cost, firing the feature of PERFECTION The only assurance of value in the purchase of a diamond is its quality—and its quality is contained in its perfection— AMOND —are enhanced by gorgeous mountings. Only the tremendous buying power of our three stores allows us to have these wonder- ful mountings at such a price. The services of the most expert jewelry craftsmen are employed constantly in their production— s Y100 AN OUTSTANDING VALUE—a “perfect” blue-white diamond, backed by our written gyarantee of perfection—and our written security of value—andour prom- ise to exchange at any time for its full value on the purchase of a larger PERFECT DIAMOND. We illustrate just a few of the many mountings you select from. 00 FIRST PAYMENT elimination ning bituminous coal and tion of homes i fur-| es to preserve the heat produced.” | Pari arch work on ofl injection en.|Which are flourishing. . for airplane use In our own island possesions, there fuels was described by are the ones at Man with a mem- | chim of bership scattered over four of the is- onautical | 1ands of the Philippines, and the one done achim said, in con.| 4t Havana, which was responsible, with the National Advisory | after vears of effort, for the raising ttee for Aeronautics and the|Of the Maine, that the bodies in wvy Department. | it migik be sent to Arlington, and “Use of heavy fuel of low vo will reduce the number of fir plane crashes,” he Paris, London and Shanghai. Such chapters have been those of | London and Shanghai, all of tnity | for the reburial of the gallant and after | ill-fated ship at sea with appropriate servie Hawaii has an_excellent | chapter, whose greetings were brought | —=| by Gov. Farrington to the national | oclety on Wednesday evening. There e | is one Alaska and another in . Panama. The Evening and | “Mrs. Sund: R Truman S. Holt, who an- mpletion of the Philip- 5 nounced the c Star D: AYR. E 80 O | ment of this $20.000 that will give | Philippine girls the advantage of an ollege education, so that 0 back to help their peo- The discouragements have been but she and the fund have sur- them and now succes is noteworthy that her own chap- in Manila—she is state ands—subscribed § | total fund. When it considered | | that it takes a vear to get member- 3 in the Daughters estab. ‘GIFT TO YOU! ¢ Pay for One Dress or Coat and Get i E t § o prepaid. . and Canada, 35¢ Foreign, T0c. the PERFECT HUNDRED ve subscriptions with Star t D. A. R. Hall, Star Office, 11th sivania avenue Never in your wildest dreams have you pictured Coats and Dresses like these at such an astound- Another with Our Compliments,Free! ingly low price! Only the liberal policy of CHAS. SCHWARTZ and SON could make possible such an offer, and such terms. i 1 two years to pay —enjoy wearing while paying FEDERAL STORAGE Wiz COMPANY E. K. MORRIS, President. ROBERT B. HALL, General Manager. 1707 FLORIDA AVENUE A Modern Fireproof Depository Thoroughly Equipped for the Safe Handling and Care of Household Effects. VAULT FOR SILVERWARE COLD STORAGE FOR FURS AND RUGS RUG AND CARPET CLEANING Private Rooms for Furniture—Motor Vans for House- hold Removals—Heated Plano and Art Section— Packing and Shipping—Display Room for Estate Appraisals—Fumigation—Insurance—Lift Va: for Foreign Shipments—Dead Storage for Automobiles. ADAMS 6304 Or 2 Dresses for $10 Or 2 Coats for $10 Your choice of fashionably tailored cloth coats and beautiful silk dresses in flat crepe, crepe de chines, flowered silks, etc. Suitable for business, afternoon or street wear, in a .wide assortment of col- ors and sizes. : VISIT OUR NEW STORE Equal facilities await you as in our main store—the same service—the same assort- ments—a possibly more convenient shopping center. SEE THEM IN QUR WINDOWS! Look for the Home Schwartz lock -/\\\’\hlfl//, Y DD 709 14th St. N.W. of Perfect Diamonds 709 14th St. Perfect, $100 3123 M St. N.W.

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