Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1926, Page 6

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6 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., FRIDAY, JUNE 18 1926. ‘r‘omm(lmr after an outsider in the String Beans. Va teinon; andiastt and‘pepper to RO | Veal Cutlets Broiled. ‘:‘.‘.f_j_‘"“ had interrupted the proceed PoepaEe: A BoRAS wsual for | Keep moving the saucepan until the | i ang wipe six loin cutiews, sea ! | "Vautine Bell. the winner, who|cooking and boil until tender. Drain butter s melted. but do not stir or| gon \ith pepper, salt and one tahle. | spelled every word without hesitancy | o a1) the water, return 1o the sance. the heans mayv get hroken Lastly | spoontul of salad oil. turning several [ and with evident assurance, was chap- | pap' in which 1hey were cooked and |#dd a tabl ¢ MEAT fimes. Broil over a slow fire for five | eroned by her sister Temple, Who €0n- | ghake and toss them over the fire un. S'avy and « minutes an each side. Serve dn a ducts the little country school in | (|} the heana are quite dry. adohil Grayson County. Ky. 'The schoolmis: | qua.i of beans, measured hefore cook- | “The Himalavan cedar. Will Act on 12 Proposed Changes in Regulations hot dish with maitre d’hote} butis Veal cutlats may also be broiled Iress said that Pauline was an ardent | jne"aqq 10 the saucepan ix table: thrives well in Californ served with a highly seasoned farmerette and studled her speller | goooneyiy of butter, the juice of haif [favorite Christmas tree there whenever she was not washing the Considered Yesterday. and zarnished with stuffed pepp i i - |dishes or tending the chickens. Paul Pauline Bell Gives State Sec- |thcs o (i e e er. 31000 windfall 1o learning to he a teacher ond Title in Nation- | nerselt some day. . Betty Robinson seemed to think her | Wide Contest. | father should invest her winnings in a hond., a very sound idea for the voungest competitor. She hasn't made any definite plans for the future. | The Zoning Commissien will meet in | Acclaimed the natlonal spelling | hecause she savs she feels (oo escited | executive session tomerrow morning o 3 y e champlon, Pauline Rell. 13-vear-old | over her good fortune. | proposed changes in the 2 i 3 . vear n succesxion defeating a| Dorothy Casey has already sent her | Jations considered at a pu e e ; e boardroom of field of 5 zirls and hovs from all| prize of gold to the savings bank. She | mw’w”"mld"‘: e paris of the United States m a spir- | has just been graduated from the | K‘“‘“' wcipal Chanze proposes the ited contest at the National Museum |#ighth grade and will enter high et of & Jarse torvitory Iving be- anditorium laxt ni | school in St. Louis next Fall. " ‘o - L the covered purse of one hin Wrank Neuhauser. now only 12 jean University and the commercial, tial A ea. with commercial island the 1 A Frampton, president of the (€ 1 Heights ‘Citizens' Association, urged the com- dmission to postpene iion on the epplication for this 10 give the people in 1} .opportunity to submii sive, systematic and le” plan for developing the e ction Hits “Piecemeal” System. Charging that the present system of operation of the Zoninz Commis- ion is taulty because it deals with | the question of zoning plecemeal and responds to special conditions or local pressure rather than to hroad and| “general planning, Horace W. Peasice. | rhairman of the commitiee on 7oning | of the Washington Chapter. Ameri an Institute of Architects. advocatad | a review of the entire zoninz situa- | ion by the new National Capital Park and Planning Commission at a | ®pecial meetinz vest 2fternoon also that Iht‘ ‘eommission defer pn into effect some of the pendinz “sweeping regu Jations™ until after the Park and Planning Commission survey. Par-| ticular reterencs was made to the! recently adopted amendment to the _7oninz regulations which will permit ihe erection only of detached homes ,with two side yards in A restricted areas. The amended reculation will “not_become effeetive until January 1. | [Pl Louis Justement. another member of the architects’ committee. and B. ¥. Saul ot the Washington Board of Trade supported Mr. Peasloe’s recom mendation. Mr. Justement als sized that the com zive to much commendations of {and Essex Institutes. where repose | PRINCE TO SEE SIGHTS OF HISTORIC SALEM Visitors Guests Now of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Coolidge at Prides Crossing. By the As o4 Preas. PRIDES CROSSING. Mase. June 18.—Crown Prince Gustavus Adolphns and Princess Louise of Sweden were the guests today of Mr. and Mrs. Har old Jefferson Coolidge at their estate here. and not far distant from the estate where the Prince of Wales was feted on the occasion ef his American tour. ‘The program planned for today in cluded a visit to historic Salem and | the House of the Seven Gables, made | famous by Hawthorne; the Peabody | many intevesting past: a drive to Portsmouth relics of Salem's | N. H.| for luncheon with Mrs. Rarrett ( £ . Upper. left to right: Pauline Rell, who won first place, and Retty Robin: Ll who took second. wer: Dorothy Casey, who came out_third. GEORGIA WHEAT GOOD. Special Dispatch to The Sta The small is the hest in 1 1wo gold me | vears old> of Lonisville. Ky.. who last urnal of || vear won the first national spelling Chinlotte Observer. in | bee. wan an interested guest ai the Ning hee sponsor v reprp- | Auditorinm and voofed for rhe bovs. newspapers of “ilide, | The contesi was fraught with excite: by spelling “eerine” corvectly, afier MENt. for several children were called e ranner-np. Tty Bebinean. 11| Back ‘on the platform atter the judges | i the voungest child | had consulted the huge dictionary for had failed. | permissible spellings. The parents, in e irie A e hov. whe frafled | 18T efforts to further the chances he fair eyt gain the last of the e | ©f (heir own candidates, made fre Sliven ihe ordent “iniauent protests or pleas in’their anxle e e e i | tv and engaged in occasional tilts with K Courler-dommal, | €Ach other over the contest rules. lle entra. $1.000 and twa goid | . The words which stumped the final- second. Betiv Robinson, South | 58 10 I I e o Rend. Ind.. News-Times, $500; third, |Ped were ‘cowl xtol,” “beagl | Porothy Casey, St. Louis, Times, $200; | co0lie” and "cerlse,” an array which | fourth, Mary Flood, Seibyville, Del.,|MANY of the elders gasped ai them ery Evenir Wilminaton, $150.|S€lves. The 5 youthful orthograph LAfh. Harriet Blumbers. Rapitan, N.J.. | Were sreeted by President Coolidge | Home e o e iei ‘Sigu. | this noon and Misy Bell went to call I and sixth. Thomas Chegwidden. Rerea, | *0 1iepresentative Hen Johnson of | Ohio, o Pres “ley B 5 johlo ahe G s il morning. ‘This afternoon the voung Announcer Gets Laugh, visitors are being taken on a trip to | Mount Vernon by Russell Briney of Wf"’,‘_‘»"}'“"‘;'v'l‘;‘j"'_l;;"“."' in the spell (e Lonisville Courier-Journal staff. West Boviston. Mass,, nGazette of Warcesier pplause of the andience by Al bt the pr winners hadd spelled psychological” {ilton Ilotel, wh & during their vieit 10 Washington. Tomorrow the children will visit 1he filer sha hadl, neliedl @ National Cathedral and the Francie L can Monnatery before they take trains siderable mirth was provided by e on eI {uel M. North, one of the when he gave fhe word “spiritual” to| Hen highness the one of the contestanis as he tonk # | Bhopal. onl ss of water, and also when he an- | ounced the word ‘“nuisance” 1o alof her son. — . Begum of woman ruler in India. 10th and Jackson St. N.E. STATION B-R-O-D-T Broadeasting from Beautiful South Brookland. D, €. ing a sale inder of the 21 dei o less than row houses, Announc- hed and semi-detached Wrick homes That is why we sold Kentucky at the Capitol earlier in the | and tonight they are 1o be the honor | Riesis of that newspaper at the Ham- | re they all ave stav.| abdicated her throne in favor | their members do not have sufficient | dell, and tea at the Gov. Wentworth technical knowledze of the zoning | Hause. situation. history. bushels ertimate vielded {Us 4 more last w he wheat crop aised 1o 1 “Iin gzeperal the feeling here is Hhat the Zoning Commission has ac womplished and is accomplishing all ‘that could be expected of ft under the present system of operating.” said Mr. Peaslee, “but that the system is faulty in that it deals with the sub- fect piecemeal instead of along more zeneral lines, and that it is somewhat negative in character, responding to special conditions for local pressure rather than to broad and general Planning. Cites Attitude Toward Rows. ‘or instance. there is noted a gen-| ezative attitude toward group housing, either in_semi-detached. com munity, row or apartment buildings. regardless of the fact that the great hulk of the population lives in these huildings. The result has heen their exclusion from area after area with.| ont definite provision for their expan-| sion in other desirable areas. so that| the land available for their construe tlon is appreciated in vaiue until it} has seriously affected the cost to the | home owner. which cost has heen | passed along upon his shoulders. | has been the policy of the com- | jon to let zoninz laz. to follow | up and meet condition= as they arose: | hut it is submitted that it is time| tor a review of the zoning situation. ! Congress, in its recent legislation. has! already provided the machinery by which th review can he obtained. | Tt has definitely authorized the new | National Capital PPark and Planning | Commission to study and make recom- mendations on zonin: and our com mittee asks only that the Zoning Com mission request of the Planning Com fon this zeneral survey at the possible moment. deferring putting into effect even pendina sweeping regulations until such time | as some preliminary repert can he made. “The commitire assures the com miscion that it heartily supports the | fundamental idca of zeninz, but it is seriously concerned over the prospect of test cases carried to the courts by individuals who may feel that un fair regulations are being adopted.” e found among almosi ¢ species of bird and animal. gel up in kindness and be a jovous cxistenee. W hat a tonch of the Dizine! DRIFT TO CITIES. t NEW YORK. June 18 (#). “Plaus. ible artempts to prove that farmers ave not at &0 great a disadvantage as they think they are look very weak in the face of a steady drift of population | from the land to the towns and cities,” " the National Bank of Commerce in New York, reviewing | current market conditions. is sit- uatfon is the result of disparity which | has long prevailed between prices of farm products and of manufaotured goods. | New Franco-Czech Pact. ! PARIS. June 18 (#).—The foreign | minisiry announced today that France and Czechoslovakia have initiated « | new commercial agreement. supple menting existing agreements, 10 im prove their commercial relations. THE SPECIALIST in the commerclal ional line, the is the one who is maostly in demand. Why? Recanse he has mastered his particular line in every detail. Naturally th whose ix defecti consult an sight specialist. CLAFLIN Opticians Optometrists 922 14th St. s Franklin Square KINDNESS If we twonld ~ kindly all the day, wchat Complete Funeral, $125 A Black broadcloth or grav plush caskel, with a silk interior. 6 fine handles. engraved name plate, oulside cc embahning. washi dressin g and shaving if necessary, removing from any cily hospital or home, advertise the death, hearse of linousine ivpe and two fine Cumningham limousine When in Need of THE DEAL FU Our Service Call NERAL HOME 816 H St. N.E. Linc. 8200-8201 | 15 forecast hushels. h erop is over 1925 a normal he pecan vield ix 85 per mprov wple crop cent of normal and tobacco is making atisfactory progy — | SURELY, there are 100,000 ) Washingtonians who will gladly send oue doll; r more to honor the living and the dead of the 26,000 from the I mbia whe served armed War. bia ¥ Bank. hion Park Pa Featherweight Worsteds Tailored at Oxford Gray and other smart Coat and trouser suits. shades. Mode Tropical Worsted Suits— two-piece — plain col- 325 Suits . ors and stripes. . Two-piece Flannel Suits, in popular Tans .... Seersncker Su Palm Beach Swits ... Mohair Suits ... Fancy Mohair White English Linen S Stand By and Listen to This Former Price, $9,150—Reduced to $8,450 Small Cash Payment, Balance Like Rent Tune In on This: Seven rooms, oak Hoors. open fireplace, big yards, fine lawn, 3 porghes, one built in. Automatic water heater, laundry travs, bullt in Dath. shower and refrigerator, electric light, h.-w.h.. plenty of floor plt Evervthing 1o make you happy and comfy. Only 15 minutes ride 1o Treasury 5 BRODT REALTY COMPANY 10th i Sackem n.E. 1203 Eye Street N.W. Open il Lislved Phone M. 6318 Eve. Col. 9634 ol until 9 P.M. and all day Sunday. Bring Your Check Book and Make a Selection Free Auto Service Don’t Handicap Comfort —when you can capitalize it by a little digeriminating selection of your Summer Clothes. Fashion Park and Mode Tropicals have all the tailoring virtues of the heavier weights. Cut to the vogue; made to fit— and to hold their shape without an ounce of surplus weight. The Mode Glenkirk Tweeds A Mode Production $1 8.50 Light as a feather—with a dressiness that is exceptional. Many patterns. Se para te Trousers Flannels - Gray, Tan and White'.....cooneeee r-Kool 40 Fashion Park. Striped Linen Hop Sack Suits - 15.00 The Mode—F at Eleventh -$10 Striped Flinnel ..........$15 White Serge and Gray Stripes 12 English Cricket Cloth $]6.50 White and .. $3.75 inen | Knickers. Faney. Up from Severith Street are flowers ~but Susie is only four. Some day she’ll smell a rose. Some people think all cheese is just cheese—until they taste Kraft Cheese. Then they know the dif- ference. The pains we take to safeguard the quality of everykind of cheese carrying the Kraft name is just bound to be evident in its superior flavor. KRAFT CHEESE ‘A few hot days-will soon run your ice bills up unless you own a Leonard Clean- able Refrigerator. The ILeonard Cleanable with its 1!2-inch pressed cork board insulation keeps out the heat. Notwithstanding their everlasting good- ness, Leonards cost no more than many ordinaryrefrigerators. A sug- gestive few are-quoted. Leonard Oleanable, plece porcelain lined; 50-lb. oapacity .......... $58.00 four shelves ~ §765.00 75-1b. Teonard Cieanable, 100-1b. Toe Capacity Leon- equipped to take eleptric jce- atd Cleanabl one-plece making machine... $69.75 porcelain lined.... $79.50 Apartment Size Ileonard 76-1b. Capacity l.eonard Top-ioer, 20-1b. fce White Enamel Lined Front- capacity ........... $13.50 1COF 4u o $33.75 Three-door Front icar Two ghelf White Enamel T.eomard, whita enamel lined Top lear, JTaeonard, 1 $23.25 .. $2478 46-1h. Capacity l.eopard, Capacity Leonsrd White Finamel T.ined Refrig- white enamel OTALOT +covconnes- $25.75 cresiemneeas $16.00 "Porcelatn—iined T.eomard Cleanable, good family sise; 30-1b. Top-leer, lined MAYER & CO. Between D & E I . “For Reference, Ask Yonr Neighbor” e

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