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G, CRADLATON FVENTS CONTAUE Class Night Exercises at|ii: Corcoran Hall Tonight. Diplomas Given Tomorrow. The 105th graduatin George Washnigton Unive held for the 405 members ¢ v ous departments at the Washing Auditorium tomorrow ni; o'clock Dr. David A, asslstant director of the Council 4 tlon, will ton 8 game th commenc: Willlam Mather Lewis, the instit will take box for a reco Honor Dr will hold the meml Tomorrow Willlam M annual rec to the at the street automobi tent and Gilbert rineeri s George an others Jeanne Gr teachers’ ¢ Ludwid, pres | his mind trving | other man had married for him, and | he does it nice *Tt is not often tk 1= readahl hand and a mirrored in a way that hs dispel dispel. “His public President we! single purp bee: er federacy.” BELL RINGERS SOUGHT. | Vicar Wants Men Who Will Stay used to remain had fimished th | | * | they sei AMUSEMENTS NATIONAL—"Little Miss Bluebeard” Irene Bordoni's show can be a. vivid success even’ without the incomparable le. Previous to 11 o'clock last no one would have had the te- ng the Nat e the Bordoni rd” and wresf (d-of measure of succ » is a slight differenc ed in the production as it is given National Players. When Miss mi played Collette it was the role in the piece that made an at all to the not by th also get opportunity to show that Mr. Avery Hopwood did a ;| nicely balanced bit of work when he Little Miss Bluebeard.” And and well. much more th y—she does m beginning to end, even A does nearly become plain husband” at times. Her ordont is dectdedly stion of pur- wrote worth wh Irench accent for atmospher he hardest thi with, unless one which other factors that con- of the Lotharian v: > colonial con-| ongly to make “Little Miss one of the me:ries vers' offeri the always re Phelps is d, very mu ublquitous ‘| show with T the ts the “ollette” | s best friend, clever ruse to keep ding out about his it leads to the ns of which master. If t know what kind this is, a wtunity to learn is offered 1 plays Charters, the writer, who vowed nd then nearly lost o win the wife an- Tierney gets but a Again, Dorothy Tierney rom the moment about all umanly possible. She is a of temperament—the kind up furnjture and china- - about two minutes in t she is splendidly con- . Mrs. Hibbard and Unfurnished | For Summer months or longer. Fine old semi-de- | tached Georgetown resi- | dence with side Eight $110 per month. yard. rooms, two baths. Apply Story & Company 812 17th Street that other members of the| o *| thees ees’ Iuf.” Fk. 4100 Your feet ™= are hard to fit Our “footograpir”” Charts will prove a pleasant surprise to you measurements your foot— fy in leng width and heel measurement. The outline slender or d stubby— shows just the sb required a [ COME AND LONGER WEAR. the Relief yHOE IN AP- a shoc that lez s these features: arvow heel and inste forepart — MAIN {RCH—a dep velicves and conceals enlarged joints. FEET H Y—straight inside iarvow heel and ‘instep—" forepart — M A VG ARCH—BOTH THE R * AND THE PRIN- CESS PAT, in “WHITE, TAN and BLACK SHADES.” roomy SPRI! RELI Shown in Pumps and Oxfords WOLFS = ulk-Quer "TAADR MARK RES. VS ME. T, 9 F St. N.W. SHOP THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. 0, TUE MINISTERS PROTEST CANCELLATION STAMP North Carolina Group Declares Training Camp “Ad” Fosters £ Spirit of War. By the Associated Press. GREENSBORO, N. C., June 8.— The Ministerial Assoclation of Greens- boro does not like the way Uncle Sam cancels his stamps. A resolution was adopted by the as- soclatlon yesterday condemning the use of “Let's Go—Citizen’s Military Training Camp” for the purpose of ellation. The ministers contended -that the use of this expression served to “mili- tarize” the mall. The following letter was mailed to President Coolidge yesterday ~after- noon: ‘At the regular meeting of the Greensboro Ministerial ~ Assoclation today it was unanimously voted that pectfully but earnestly protest the militarization of our malls the use of the cancellation stamp: Let's Go—Citizens’ Military Train. Camp.” We believe this use of s Hampden each have smaller hey are incidents, but quite ble. s, the gong of the show, “So is nicely present—a pert thing, even if the words are “So .| this is love. A fine opportunity to enjoy one’s self—that's what Leneta Lane and her friends make of Irene Bordoni's ne hundreds of miles WAy, You Can Phone If we have the record of your eyeglass prescrip- tion, in case you break your glasses. But— Why wait until you break them? Better have more than one pair, then you are safe. CLAFLIN Optometrists Opticians 922 14th St. 2251 square the mails conveys the impression abroad that we are a militaristic na- tion and that it suggests to the youths of our land that international differences are to be settled by war rather than by justice and reason. Furthermore, the use of this cancel- lation stamp on the mail of those who do not believe in the training camps makes them the unwilling promoter of a system of which they do not ap- prove. May we hope for your influ- ence in bringing about the abandon- ment of this objectionable use of our malls.” s WOMEN CALL ON HERRICK. PARIS, June 8 (#).—Ambassador Myron T. Herrick yesterday received the American delegation to the Inter- national Woman's Suffrage Alliance Congress, headed by Miss Belle Sher- win' of Washington, president of the Natlonal League of Women Voters. He said that women's work for peace was being recognized. He spoke of the great devotion shpwn by Ameri- can women in the cause of intern: tional co-operation. BOSTON COURT SEEKS EXTRADITION OF PONZI Wizard Will Be Returned From Florida for Resentencing “as Common Thief.” By the Associated Press. BOSTON, June 8.—Extradition of Charles Ponzi, onetime financial wizard, from Jacksonville, Fla., will be sought by Massachusetts officials in consequence of his failure to ap- pear in the Superior Criminal Court here yesterday for resentencing to from seven to nine years in State's prison as a ‘“common and notorious thief.” The sentence resulted from the collapse of Ponzi’s postal coupon reply venture here years ago. Ponzi, who is free from this State under bafl of $10,000, recently lost his appeal to the Suprer urt and was ordered to appear for resentencing a but ap- week ago. He defaultes ROUND TRIP $2.50 EXCURSION TO SHENANDOAH CAVERNS Sunday, June 13th, 1926 Special Train of First Class Coaches and Parlor Car Leave Washington (Union Station) Leave Washington (7th St. Station). . .. Many outstanding featu e to visit the : A 1 as Natural. be well worth-while. Springtime A visit at this time will Dinner and refreshments served at the Caverns Inn. For tickets, reservations, etc., apply City Ticket Office, 1510 H Street N.W., or Union Station SOUTHERN S. RAILWAY SYSTEM E. BURGESS 1510 H St. N.W. Phones, Main 5633 and 7063 SDAY, JUNE 8, 1926. pealed from Jacksonville that he was detained there under bond and needed s Rodrigu yesterday w sonment for dy station at Rio Grande, which the death of Police Chief Ferrer, on February 23. . When the time limit expired y day District Attorney O'Brien nounced that a_new default w would be 3 soon as extradition papers c pared an inspector will leave for Jacksonville to bring Ponzi back. of Samoyed dogs. m " Several Beautiful Dining Room Suites Reduced for Tomorrow High-Class 10-Pc. Dining Room Suites Values Up to $229. Reduced Down to I u have the slightest need for Din- om F ou antieip: we offer the values in o in_ se including ive Buffet, ful China Clos rs with soli ASY PAYMENTS AT PEERLESS, Dynamiter Gets Life Sentence. SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, June 8 (). a former police- ntenced to life miting a police caused Manuel Cloth is being made from the hair FR00.T. ~1 EES 9’7"&3 botcon HandEye] &% & On the other hand, suppose th sonal stocks, manufacturers w ] Just as the lenders don’t know who they are, neither do the out on an equall manufacturers, for instance—need more money able to furnish them. This complicates their problem exceedingly. The Bank’s Place in the Community ANY people realize the place banks fill in the community. Some do not—hence this little newspaper chat. Without banks we would revert to the primitive method of barter and trade; commerce would languish; enterprise would be stifled and barbarism ensue. & For instance, suppose there were no banks in this city. eople who have more money than they need for the month it to be safe, and, if it is a sizable sum, to be productive. SuPpose there are a thousand s requirements. They want But they don’t know where to lend it. So each must start out to find a borrower who needs just the amount he has to lend. No; this would not be practical. ere are borrowers—merchants who need temporary funds to carry over sea- ho need money to buy raw material, farmers who must harvest their crops. know who the lenders are! So, they must start ridiculous search for people who are willing to let them have money. Some of them—the than any one or two lenders (yes, perhaps ten lenders) are So that is not practical, either. Now comes a bright man who gets some moneyed people together and starts a bank. The institution is subjected to the national banking laws and is a safe and convenient place for each of the thousand lenders to keep his money. Furthermore, it:is an easy place for the merchant, the manufacturer and the farmer to go when they need funds. But they can get money only if they deserve it and the banker, having made a study of credits; can form quick and accurate decisions. war. Surely the lenders would have to give up their jobs and devote their entire time to finding responsible bor- rowers. And, very often, they would be incapable of determining which were responsible borrowers. Banking is a human service, an essential and funda- mental service. It is the heart that pumps the blood of finance into the arteries of the industrial, com- mercial and social world. Banks have extended the frontiers of business, mapped the continent with railroads, dotted it with great industrial plants, fur- nished funds, provided credit, infused new life into dying ventures and made the ocean gleam with the white wake of merchant ships, protected widows and orphans and, in time of peril, supplied the sinews of Banks do not break or bleed communities—they build them. This is the first of a series of advertisements explaining the relation between the banks of the city and their customers. DISTRICT of COLUMBIA BANKERS ASSOCIATION the District is under U. S Government supervision The radio ‘expert testifies “New” and “revolutionary” radio sets appearing with disconcerting ra- pidity. “OM” sets dumped on the bargain counter. Thousands ask themselves: “Shall I buy now or wait?” « e s e This is an expert’s answer. And the expert s the Radio Corporstion of America. Every expert must qualify in court— prove that he knows what be is talking sbout. So, the Radio Corporation first proceeds to qualify—prove that it is justified in predicting the future of radio reception. el s P JJ v Ceaseless research is the basis of the Radio Corporulmn of America's expert knowledge. Day in and day out RCA ing. They see ahead from three to five vears. For it takes that long hefore s basie discovery is made, tested in ex- perimental models, and finally embod- ied in commercial form. If any expert knows what is coming, it is the Radio Corporstion of America. ., o v e e Ty “Shall I buy now or wait?” As a qualified expert the Radio Cor- poration of America answers—NOW. The Radio Corporation of America gave exactly the same answer a year ago—with reasons still good. Perhaps you may remember the reasons—the joy that Radiolas have brought to mil- lions who did not wait, the sound values * represented by Radiolas, the basic ehar acter of Radiola circuits. But here are some more reasons. The present models of RCA Radiolas and Loudspeakers il not be superseded this year. The Radiola of today is therefore the Radiola of tomorrow. And the Radiola you buy today will serve in your home for years to come. In fact, in essential respects, the older Radiolas are still as good as they ever were—still bringing in the songs, sport-news, music. In1924 the Radiola Super-Heterodyne appeared—the supreme achievement in radio sets. A vear ago the Radio Cor- poration stated: “Itis doubtful whether any basieally better reception circuit is apt to come from the laboratories.” True then—true now. Today the Radio Corporation of America goes even further: There is mo circuit in #ight that bolds out any promise of surpassing the swper- heterodyme in performance. Remember, this is the opinion of a qualified expert. . . That Radiola Super-Heterodyne on which you have your eye—buy it now. There is no better circuit in sight. T ope model seems too expensive (although it is made to sell at the lowest possible price that high quality demands) there are other RCA Radiolas costing as little as fifteen dollars. “Shall T buy now or wait?” With Radiolas as permanent in char- acter as they are, with broadcasting what it is today and what it will become tomorrow-—who can afford to wait? Especially if the set has the basic Super-Heterodyne circuit—the circuit that the qualified expert sees no present prospect of displacing. DT Ask any RCA Authorized Dealer. to tell you about the following Radiolas and to demonstrate them: Radicla 30, Super-Heterodyne Price $575 (complete) Radiola 28, Super-Heterodyne Price $260 (with Radiotrons) Radiola 26, Portable Supgr-Heterodyne Price 8225 (with Radiotrons) Radiola 25, Super-Heterodyne Price $165 (with Radiotrons) Radiola 20, Price $115 (with Radiotrons) RCA Radiola