Evening Star Newspaper, May 26, 1926, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1926. | Upper Silesia to the detriment of sev D, WEDNESDAY. - MAY 26, | eral German companies. The court ' . . . . ‘Smithsonian Botanist Off for Jamaica e s Cmianger, o iney| POLAND LOSES SUIT. The court drew from Allen Fox, at & R - also held that notification by the To S(“dy 500 Kinds of Tropica] Ferns | torney for the defense, admission that | World Court Calls Seizures in Up- | Polish government of its intention to | | use of Gen. Burnside’s name had been | | appropriate certain rural properties i | | T[] [}UNSTABU[ARY Ferns with leaves so small that a|pare a descriptive account of the/ferns 1 ‘dime will cover two or three of them, | of Jamalca for a series being Isssed i I 5500 UP New Apartments The most con- venient and preftiest rooms in Washington. Open Until 9 P.M. 1460 Irving Mt. Pleasant “very advantageous.” He intimated per Silesia Illicit. helonging to Germans or companies a lack of American humor was shown | yyp; G Holland. May 25 | controlled by Germans was contrary n suit a 4 e pub- | - . SRl ol *" 1o the Geneva « 3 lieity given Theodore Roosevel's | 4 St g ine) © AL s L and ferns 60 feet high with 10.font |P¥ the British Museum, . e the F B e Gl | petionat : mneed | Count Rostoworski, the Polish Siee Ballernon seaks to rentrafn.the | INCIt the selzire by the ¥ anno.nced that he was unabie ernment te W to the decision {leaves, will alike form the ohjects of | company from nsing her uncle’s name | Twenty-Eight Soldiers Ar-| cotiection and sudv bx 2 smunonizn| ANCIENT MOUND FOUND. | Woman's Charge Against soaviuerin, st tharkes thett i | rested in Philippines After Colgate Company Brings | the Smithsonian Institution, specialist Uncovered in Florida. | little island of Jamalca. Dr. W. R. {an Injury to the memory of Gen. nce H ings. on ferns, has recelved a grant from Maxon of the National Museum, under | Relics of Race of 2.000 Years Ago Burnside and a violation of her rights to privacy. | | "<l there ix no remedy for this the American Association for the Ad | plaintiff, then- the Legislature should | e vancement of Sclence and the .'\'a\\" Remnants of a race believed to have | - |make one” said Judge Erlanger. MANILA, May 26.—~Twentv-elght | “lyyouon 10 s only 150 miles long burial mound was discovered | NEW YORK, May 26.—A learned soldiers of the Philippine constabulary | Jamalca possesses 500 known kinds of | an idol, 35 feet tall de of sea man. | discussion of famous whiskers of his- 3 P have heen airested by the civil au-|ferns. as ;g.gnm iy the Vnited m‘x:v:.’ h\wun(lp ; x: it 1= | tory yesterday featured trial of the| [a— — CY a ’ p o | States and Canada. The wealth of called by those who consider it non- i85 5 x S thorities and charged with murder | BIAteR R0 CARAT U N0 e | decavable. The fentures. seemingly | & vont m Hiita o Vo treraem for Solas Wao HREERESHS (Ol EXncR Mooy 1 and vobhery the result of riotini 3 a ¢ v i nd ry he % | gial tnterest to the v Spanish ex. | those of a female, weve carved from | 5o 04" 8o 00 tha name and pho. | Reaches Ancient Tomb. Sn i v night at San Fernando, Pam- | g ey e i n plorers, hecause they 1ed that the | shells. They were alse of the Mongo. o 4 . pravince, Luzon. In which four | BOTeTR FECLUSE (A (riTe o make | lian fype. “The bady was fashioned | L08raph of her uncle, Gen. Ambrose | \NAHEIM. Calif., May 26 () 3 ! s . Burnside, in a shaving cream ad- |y M g ? il terns grow so hig. while In Furope from wood. e e I e vwe| Millon McMillan, geologial. saw a| they were 80 Inconsiderable in size. | Selentisis found the buvial mound il photograph shows | gyarm of hees entering a small ap e e iutorach to AbOuL (500 vairts ifyom Jtha JAtlntic | | Cbviant EEowtiiof shishkers, tucd (iMie wall of= okn¥on near he a s of par nteres Justice Erlanger 1ook the case un | iia et off a dynamite charge. sxpeet A Hereafter instead of soda take a ) tion of hicarbonate oi snda. leaving little “Phillips Milk of Magnesia” in | the <tomach_sweet and iree from water any tune for indigestion or|all gases. Resides. it neutrahzes sour, acid, gassy stomach, and relief | 22id fermentations in the howels and T30 H STREZET NW. 1315 NEW YORK AVE- 9 Eating Economy h and_dine on A Blossom In tone e ample—fond finest procurable. Luncheon. 11:30 (o 3 Dinner. 5 to & cent hott A quarrel hegan betwaen a civilinn X : Ocean. M is o 1. spots | the botanist, because its ferns and|Ocean. T is one of the highest Spolx | 4o) ;i dviement, but not before some | inc (o uncever a honey cache. bumped while dancing. Several con- | ot 545 p of the first white settlers who came | vears ago and were thus the fi "M world has ever known re intro- | jaining a well preserved human skele ich' followed. Other con- 5 = " | Bl e Lo b . hicl followed. = Other oon' | plied loosely to many allied but < Ordered to Arizona. |dent Arthur and President Hayes.| In a clay jug, hermetically sealed, | Will come instantly. gently urges this sonring waste from tinct kinds. and it is important e ke [ were theusands of vegetable seeds. i i . 65 y. | Scipio far more pleasant to take than soda. Descendants of the | hieroglyphics, presumably carved by ! oo gy vilians and used their bayonets. civil | apier this Summer's collecting. He Sth THCoates sserted. Many dancers | hag already made three coliecting . ceived in hair tonie advertisements. |the larze cavern, seated uprizht on a hrous “lrd Dhndreary had the mesi | nicha In the rock. A feotprint in the overcomes three times a and Af1s Gen. Crame, head of the con- | 1n ronund out his work, B " ed to he responsible He added: i these two men and [ will see that Gen. aid that one of these Br uu men used 20 rounds of ammunition | and that the other used his fiste. He asserted that other soldiers of the against S constabulary when enly | The detachment of constabulary n. | AR =3 volved was transferred to another BRUNGALOWS i o N FOR RENT | further trouble’ hecaure-of “in i tensely hitter feeling. Via Rladenshurg and Defense Highway, 28 ) war, 28 Miles CAIRO, Feypi, Mas %6 O Ae | eardin, = show that ihe Zaghlulists have won n downtown, 154 seats. the Liberals 25, Nationalists | |and a. constabulary soldier. Who | e plants’ were first descrihed of the conntry and the site of homes | ,t" o 100t notable whiskers the’| ' Instead he blasted into a tomb con v soldiers and a number of S [to KFlorida be described from tropical Amer 4 | duced. They included the hi ' - obj v s e < g y 3 on and other objects of archeolo re sald to have joined in the |.y,o names given them czme to be — e | pendages of lord Dundrear tatent aneolost 2 pere 4 [ Lt The baldness of Julius Caesar an the Svetem without purging. It is mnl\(- by the soldier who began k‘nm\ accurately the Jamaican spe- | (Abi. Francis S5th Infantry, Africanus Minor also entered |On many of the largest there were | Better Th ke E A ELIE e cles. | Juan, Porto Rfco. has he di p | : The constabulary fired upon the cf This Dr. xon will he able to do to Nogales, Aviz. for duty | yiter it argued. have offered no | membars of an early race. X Try a 25¢ Bottle ] : abjections (0 the publicity he has re.| The skeleton was farther hack in| Milk of Mags 3 Sl ! serfoed by physicians . wpen “Thillipe.” ned thry windows ta escape. | tyips to the istand, and hopes Making svnthetic silk requires large | s e tiaating, i beautiful whiskers in the worl rock measured 15 inches in length in the stomach as a sat aid that cnly two constabulary “All constabulary officers condemn they get what they deserve, even If it is hanging.” detachment Qid not use thelr rifies, and it was ahsurd for the eivil au On the Severn River twe men were implicated in the | TTNT . shantinz. FURNISHED v in neeordance with a vequest civil authorities, who sald they Two Golf Courses | . Excellen . t Bathing |ZAGHLULISTS WIN EGYPT. 1206 18th St. N.W. {o the Zaghlilist party the Main TH33 parl v clection returns 1o date Mr. Foster” #, Independents 3 and Tttehadists 4. Former Premier Adly Yeghen Pasha i« conferring with zarding the forma inet shinl Pasha re n of a new eah. She Paints—But Not Her Face With DAVIS Paint Although It’s Good Enough 100% PURE Best Paint Made Perfectly It costs you less because it covers 257, more surface, therefore it is 2579, cheaper. A Few of Our Specialities— French Floor Varnish Waterproof. Sclepreet, leatherprant Fres-co-lite Most modern Flat Wall Paint in 18 heautiful shades. Zan-Z-lLac Floor and Furnitu Makes old furniture ook MNke new. Lectrolite r Elastic Spar 8p: and weath 3 Floor and Deck Enamel Protects, beautifies sud es all kinds of floors or outside. H. B. DAVIS COMPANY Manufacturers of all Kinds of Paints and Varnishes Baltimore, Md SORE IV DU , RUDOLPH & WEST i 1332 New: York ‘Ave. N.W., Distributors o the to p of the World with“Standard”Gasoline Twice within one week “Standard” Gasoline has proved its dependable- ness under unprecedented conditions Story of Lieut. Commander Byrd's Flight to the North Pole After months of careful planning and prepara- tion, st 12:30 on the moming of May 9th, Lieut. Com. Richard E. Byrd and Navy Avistion Pilot Floyd Bennett elimbed into the three-engined Fokker airplane, Josephine Ford, at Kings Bay, Spitsbergen, and headed direct for the North Pole. ANl went well until within about an hour’s run to the Pole when the right hand motor began to leak oil. They pushed on, seorning danger, reached and cireled the Pole and started back. Would their gasolime supply hold out? A careful eheck showed that on gasoline economy their Wright air-cooled motors were cxe.u@iu their hest expectations. ‘‘Standard” (Aviation) Gasoline was giving more power, speed and mileage than they had dared to hope for. At 2:30 Spitsbergen was sighted a hundred miles ahead. At 4:20 P. M., their motors work- ing perfectly, they soared a mile into the air and spiraled down, completing the first air voyage to the Pole. A triumph of skill ‘and daring -a vietory for the airplane--another proof that for motor service anywhere, under any conditions, there is no better fuel than “Standard” Gasoline. ON May 9th, Lieut. Commander Richard E. Byrd, U.S.N,, and Navy Aviation Pilot Ployd Bennett made a non-stop flight of 15 hours and 51 minutes from Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, to the North Pole and back. The airplane was a three-en- gined Fokker. With all the fuels in the world available, Com- mander Byrd chose *‘Standard’’ (Aviation) Gasoline. He calls it *‘the best gasoline in the world.” On May 11th, Captain Roald Amundsen, with his American associate, Lincoln Ellsworth, and Colonel Nobile, the Italian designer of the ship, left Kings Bay, Spitzbergen, in the big, semi-rigid airship, *‘Norge,”” and made a three-day trane- polar voyage of over 2700 miles to the North Pole and across the top of the world, landing at Teller, Alaska. The most vitally important item of supply for this danger- ous flight was the propelling fuel. Any failure of power sup- ply meant disaster, probably death. Again ‘‘Standard” (Aviation) Gasoline was chosen. Again it demonstrated its absolute reliability when the “Norge’’ arrived safely at Teller, Alaska, on May 13th, after a-non-stop flight of 71 hours. For Amundsen this perilous voyage was the crowning tri- umph of a life spent in Arctic exploration. For the *‘Norge,” her designer and her crew, it was a vindication of their fit- ness for this extraordinary journey. For “Standard”’ Gaso- line, it was still another proof of its remarkable dependability in any climate or under any conditions. 3 STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) Story of Captain Amundsen's Air Voyage to the Pole and across the Arctic Om Tuesday, May 11th, Captain Roald Amundsen, discoverer ‘of the South Pole. the Northweet Passage and re-discoverer of the North Magnetie Pole, sailed away from Kings Bey, Spi . i the big, semi-rigid dirigible ‘Norge" for a fhght across the Aretic to Alaska. He followad Byrd's course tn the North Pole, them south to the lee Pole. conmiderad the most inaceessible on the earth’'s mirface never before reached by mam. AtR.15P. M Wadnesday, Point Barrow, Alaska, was sighted. Then the wind rose to a gale and snow hid the eontours of the land. The “Norge™ flow at the apeed of an express train only 100 to 130 feet abnve the ice. To avoid colligion with the moun- taing R course was laid for Behring Strait. lee formed on the gear and was hurled through the fabrie eovering of the ship. Patching matorials ran Orders were given to head for land and the neareet mritable landmg pisee. On Friday at 2.80 A. M. the “Norge” was brought down safely at Telter, Alaska. Tt had flowm over 2760 miles sinee leavi King - Bay and established a new non-stop n'n':: for dirigibles of this type. Tt had bisected the most extensive unexplored area of the giobe. Tt had put heyond qmestion the mitahility of “Standerd™ Gasoline for service under the most severe con- ditions. When the ‘“Norge™ landed she still had suff- cient “Standard” G for 700 miles of fiving. The ' same inherent qualities of dependability and power of “Standard’ (Aviation) Gaso- line that took Byrd and Amundsen to the North Pole are present in every gallon of motor gasoline you can buy at any ‘‘Standard’’ pump.

Other pages from this issue: