Evening Star Newspaper, August 26, 1926, Page 3

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VALENTINO TERROR | OF NATIVEVILLAGE Beat Those Who Refused to " Admit He Was “Italy’s Greatest Bandit.” BY HIRAM K. MODERWELL. By Radio to The Star and Chicago Dally News. CASTELLANETA, Italy, August 25 (Delayed).—Rodolfo Pietro Filiberto Raffacle Guglielmi, known to the world as Rudolph Valentino, will #pend eternity in the cemetery of this village of his birth if the citizens can arrange it. % “It will make Castellaneta immor- tal,” they sal. “American tourists will come to our town by thousands to visit his grave. Everybody 1s Rodolfo’s friend now. But those with whom the cor ent talked admitted that every one breathed a long sigh of relief when he left for Taranto at the age of Terror of Village. This passionate, willful, Jealous boy ‘was literally a terror to the whole vil once she lage. His aged nurse. Rosa, had overcome her diffidence at the , told endless ane sight of a strange dotes rev boyhood expe : and traits which went to male the character whom millions of women adored Rudolph’s whole vouth was slonate revolt cipline which aga nis fathe to impose. He beat unmercifu boys who teased him or refi acknowledge that he greatest bandit.” \When his fused him pocket money he things on his father's charg and sold them for money with which to buy candy. He frequently filched candy, fruit espond- | > Fwarm furrow th {Life Story Reveals How He | Wasted Money Seeing ¥ Resorts. First Months Over Here Marked by Acute Need for Jobs. BY'GEORGE BUCHANAN FIFE. CHAPTER II. Now was Rudolph Valentino ready to brave the world with his agricul- tural diploma. He had done remark- 1ably well at the royal school for hus- bandmen -at Sen Tlario Lagure, on the outskirts of Naples, and it must { have scemed to his mother that her insistence upon his education had been rewarded. Ile was now 17 vears of age, his birthday having occurred on May 6, 1895, in the inconspicuous vil- lage of Castellaneta, in the south of Italy. yet strong: rather would j ploma, and that was | But this youth had in_ him. he wa; n temperament more volatile t an his mother he had a di at ous bt j of the farn farmers all something | of the drudgery inw in making ftwo of anything grow w e only one had heen g wn before. Thers wasn't omance in it fre his viewpeint, & far more to his liking to see world otherwise than from the roiled back from a shin nlowshare, a taste of freedom and adventure in the coll at Perugia where he and his fellows had swag zered about in their long blue cloa smoked, read romantic mnovels and her fancied themselves as blades In physique he was slen(ler,I little | had seen | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, | VALENTINO SPENT PATRIMONY ON RIVIERA; - | BROKE, HE DECIDED TO COME TO AMERICA D. 0, THURSDAY, AUGUST és, 1696, VALENTINO, TIRED OF SHEIK EPISCOPATE PLAN MEETS OPPOSITION Mexican Official Says Change in Law Would Revive Dark-Age Evils.’ By the Assoclated Press. MEXICO CITY, August 26.—Ac- | cording to El Universal, Secretary of | the Interior Tejeda says he is op- | posed to any change of the religious | clauses of the constitution, which | have brought about the present dis- | cord between the Catholic Churchand the government. and which the church purposes to endeavor to have amend- v Congress. The secretary said an amendment of the religlous section of the consti- tution would “throw Mexico back to the dark ages preceding the reform ! and would arouse new combats over the religious question.” The committee of the Catholic epi: copate today still was studying va- rious aspects of the situation and .| going through the detalls of the me- morial which is to he presented to | Congress seeking a change in the re {liglous clauses. The business slump due to the eco- nomic boycott called by the League for Defense for Religlous Freedom is growing worse. The prevalent opin ion among business men is that unless some solution of the controversy be- tween state and church is found. the country is facing the prospect of gen eral husines INDIANS HIRE 50 WHITES, BAR REST, AT OWN FAIR Palefaces Are ‘“Victims” of Wagon PART, MET DEATH AMONG MEN| Finally Es-&capecl Irksome Adoration, Which} His Marriages Failed to Dull—DBroad- way and Main Street Mourn. - BY ROBERT T. SMALL. NEW YORK, August 26.—The death of a moving picture star of the first magnitude is an impressive thing. It 1s possible in this country to compare it only to the passing of a President; in. Europe, to the death of a King. The stunned silence with which New York heard the news of the death of Rudolph Valentino was convincing— almost startling—evidence of the hold of the silent drama and its heroes and heroines have upon the great mass of the people. New York in this instance was but a symbol. Valentino did not belong to the metropolis. He was no more of Broadway than he was of Mafn street. He helonged to every community of the land, was known in every house- hold. The death of a President means revolutionary things to the Nation. It sets in motion the wheels of a new administration, with the always pres- ent degree of uncertainty and con- cern. But to the average man and woman a President is merely a figure —a respected figure, but a figure none the less. The great moving pic- ture hero, the sheik. is a distinct personality. 1iis every mood has been seen and studied. A President mav be much photographed, but he is never pictured like the stars of the cinema. These bright luminaries of the silver screen are living, breath ng creatures to the millions. When Rudolph Valentino passed on to face the last and greatest audience of all, the people of the countr: ably felt a personal loss. men ever could claim such a tribute. Few public unquestion: | there are so many more of them. They were the most ardent admirers of the sheik. He had written the word “sheik” in their language. 1t will forever remain. Yet Valentino, in his proper per son If not in his stage roles, was try ing to get away from this adulation. He wanted to do a picture which would gain him the respect of “red- | blooded he-men.” He was tired of the lover parts and wanted to be backwoodsman or something like tk But his managers knew his appeal. The box office told the unerring truth, and so Valentino wus being 'groomed for the greatest lover of all: he v to personify Benvenuto Cellini. was to be the climax of his making. 0ddly enough, Valentino's twe mar. riages did not dull the admiration of his feminine following. More than often it does, but in the case of the love- (Will move to 34,000 square feet of I foors [ d 9 sheik it was felt perhaps that his heart was not too much Invelved, and he was still a thing to be adored. . Perhaps there was just a b irony in the fact that. this of the screen died virtually only a distant feminine star ing”” at the news. Valentino died in the company he sought—the company ‘of he-men. BUNYAN BOOK OFFERS. High Price of First Edition Calls Out Many Volumes. LONDON, August 26 (), —The sale of a first edition copy of Bunyan's “Pligrims Progress,”” published in 1678, for 6,800 pounds has had a curi ous sequel. | During the next few days following {the sale dozens of people who had read the news carried coples of the | “Pilgrims Progress” to the auction rooms in the fond hope that they | might possess a treasure. he coples | submitted ranged from 10 to 100 vy lold and of course proved aimosi worthless. | - - | | Middies End Cruise. | Special Dispatch to The Star ANNAPOIS, Md., August 26 The practice squadron carrving midshiy men on their Summer cruise. retur ed today after several months of Conveniently located near travel along the Atlantic from New port to Cuba | Modern Warehouse The Western Electric Building 60 Florida Ave. N.E. larger quarters) fireproof storage on two iilroad and a short haul from the business section. Particular and bright colored ribbons, which he | even if he had paid for It all with e aiy . Hiabumen o cesiry smay = oD i | Train Attack in Pageant of s O Gl i bovs by pretending to drop them from Soll Not for Him. | Redskins' Progress. The crowds which gathered about request. the balcony of his home, catehing | xo the soil was mot for him. He | | 5 SRRt the Polyclinic Hospital when it was them a moment before th | had a bit of a patrimony. Now was | By the Associated Press o e T e EAVER BRO * Jealous of Loved Ones. | the time to spend it hefore he should ! "CRATERVILLE PARK, Okla., Au.|¥ith or - pe of - hecome an old man in the twenties. | gust 26.—Oklahoma Indians have up-|{0rY Were interesting phenomena in The vouth adored his mother and | S off he went on his own. off to take | | set the tradition that redmen should | {hemselves. They had no hope of see RE ] 4 I'ORS Rosa and was fiercely jealous of them. | the voung buck’s rightful place in the | Monte Carlo, scene of Rudolph Valentino's earliest reve Upper inset, | appear in ploncer garb to entertain | I anything. They merely folt some 7 e used to dare boys to say who was | world. Valentino; lower, Cornelius Bliss, his first employer in America. | the curious of other P emplgys| EEAL exentiwae (Mipending fid ey 809 15th St. N.W. Main 9486 the most beautiful wor 1 Castel- | There must have been many mis- == = - | ing 50 palefaces a of a raid | Wanted to be as much a part of it as| = - laneta, and if they named any ot givings in the mother's heart when | o " |and wagon train attack Friday as the possible. For long hours they stood | = than Rudolph's mother, he would boat | pee torm focamyhers heart Wher| ot as being spent in the dancing | down through them to wretched single | feature of the annual fair, opening | Falting for the news. ) such them soundly. He almost drowned | proved rather hopeless. declared his [ PIaces of Broadway. rooms on the West Side, lower East| here today. Whites have been barred | CFOWdS. In the time of this writer, one boy in the village fountain for | intention to take Paris by storm, But |, Rciease from the Bliss pay roll | Side Greenwich Village. He snatched | from all other festivities during the | €Ver have ‘gathered in this country | / this reason to whom Rosa|wasn't that the place to begin? Ru.|found —Young Valentino—still - Gu-fat chance jobs and it is recorded that | yeek. for any one else. And when it came | gave candy w beaten almost un-laginh was sure it was. He B esutsed | Bllelmi, however—pretty close to the |he washed dishes in a Greek restau Approximately 2,000 Kiowa, Co-|time to remove the casket, covered A “SHADE” BETI‘ER Eonacions. Tha oid nurse still hears a | GPh was sure it was. He disgulsed | ond of things. He must get work | rant downtown as the price of 4 day’s | nanche and Apache Indians are as-| With it cloth of gold—a last fwave r on her chin from a heavy glass | effort expended in getting that de. |Somehow. somewhere. Central Park | food. | sembled in tepee vilages in the moun. [E4udy gesture of “the profession:— pitcher which he threw at her 1n o | o s S Cei conontog, | 100ked ~agricultural (still that di-| Work at polishing hrass parts of | tains near here prepared to depict the Glipihoi I G G ELul D Lo Because we maintain a corps of workmen .| ploma!) so he went there and at last | motor cars was offered him and read- | progress of the American Indian dur.|Pital and the police had their hands «killed i the art of manufacturing window jealous rage tull trying to straighten out the con- shades, are assured of perfect fitting and fand aws e 1 Ry stie nvent | found work “in it as an apprentice | and a half. you But he was religious. His priests ; {1y nceepted e | 4 : s priests | jio what he iPitia : cepted. If. he could make the | ing the last centur The trequently o confession. | i ey e, 15]"'“;{'*"} '1‘.‘\3:"1? - I~“.:<'n landscape gardener. Now, come on, | price of a breakfast by sweeping out | “progress” is shown in many ways. fusion. q . easy rolling shades for less money. Deal with when questioned. sald he | have heon very far from what the |Yon world! |a store he reached for the broom. | the braves appearing in all forms of | ‘When word came as "m‘.“, el us and get the benefit of factory prices. tudolph died in | Y V0 SO AL O heve whe | o Shat e had Jearned stood him in| It was a matter of keeping body and | clothing from war paint and feathers | iid. it"spread from IDitoiipt kel May we estimate? good stead, but when he applied for | soul together. to plus-fours, while the squaws a t of his divorce, At el . | f 1y on his deathbed | fhuch of diversion and money. spend | permanent” employ was in-| Among those who had known him | displaying thelr conception of Fifth |21l the great city before the waiting of the church. | (i 10 1t 0 e ese enrriod him | formed. at.- the Civil ‘e Bureau | in the Broadway days it was no se- |avenue attire. Gl By Bl ol i Gl LU (G o Daily News €o.) | 1o Monte Carlo am ‘1 * "fh“: o M| that as he was an alien he was not |cret, this humble employment. But| AR A presses with their extr: Radio sta i 2 Monte Carlo and elsewhere along | eligiple, ~ Sb, exit Rudolph, diploma[no one ever heard him whine about | Hunl il (e Udocie Len Lot . the so-aptly named Cote d’Azur. Nice, |and all it Tth /6T Wi She Collects Bi: \! women, boarding subway and elevated oty AR PR all. t. If his thoughts ever went back to e Collects Binoculars. eay : ve ROCHESTER HOTEL SOLD s o, -| _With the loss of this job, Rudolph | Paris and the Riviera, to Castellaneta | p, Sih Wrainclico| OREoHt trains, called out the news to their fel- o afier another, lightheartedness, | Valentin, came into his bitterest and |and ita secure husbandmen, or even | oo o e il ot San low passengers and, with an informal- / TO OUTSIDE IN ind the ceaseless outflow of the GuS' | most desperate days. %o the Broadway of 80 short a time | ,MF® Miriam Auletti of San Fran |ity. a neighborliness, entirely strange TERESTS !iehni patrimor Now began a perlod in which this | before, he never fot his fair-weather | CiSC0: Whose peculiar hobby of to New York, all in the nolsy cars be- IR S b i P jminigrant boy, destined later to be | friends know, He had come fo Amer. | lecting fleld glasses of rare manugan to disouss the shelk and to ex- 5 10-Story Structure Built by Ward-| . ; . mourned as oniy kings are mourned, |ica to go to work in earnest, and | fcture and design has attracted con-|press their sorrow. Main 4874-8352 y Ward-| “Xext, Paris again, and then the|whose body lay in state with thou | wasn't he dolng it now, even if the |Siderable attention among her ac | The extra papers reached downtown man Now to Be Operated as | V#sh. Bankruptey. Somehow or other | sands walting hours in line to pass his | introduction had been a little delayed? quaintances here and elsewhere, re-|New York at the lunch hour when | W. STOKES SAMMONS, Proprietor 2 |the Youngster had managed to pur-| bicr. knew davs of gripping hunger.| But out of this slough of despond |turhed from the Iiast Coast W th sev-|the narrow canyons of the financial | y Commercial Hostelry. « i+ sn automobile and. according to | slept where he could, even in Central | Valentino was destined to rise to an | ¢Hal interesting pairs of glasses to|district. cleared of vehicular traffic. one of his er statements, two Irish | Park, and was compelled to turn his|eminence from which he commanded add to her collection. ’ are given over entirely to the clerk: The Rochester Hotel, recently com- | jumpers Jen the dust séttled after |hand' to any task that would insure|an audience of more than 50,000,000 | Mrs. Auletti left on an ostensible ?"d ':l)enom'"vher-v- officials who pour nto the narrow highw: vacation trip more than three months s in a great pleted by Wardman the | the crash both motor car and horses | shelter and a modicum of food. One|of the citizens of this country ! Southwes of Ninth and F [had vanished day he walked 5 miles to the down- it e L Gl e RO S Rtreets, has sold 1o outof-town | But there was more than the dust |town region of the citv looking for el during her long journey through the . Interests, w! the new |to settle, and the Signora Guglielmi|work. Iailing to find it, he walked | rppe third chapf (he life of |Canadian Rockies to New York and Flappers Mourn Adored One. hostelry had to atiend to this, and back to |back the 5 miles he had come. he third chapter in (he life of{pack through the Panama Canal on| The papers were swept away from This 1 Chstellaneta went Rudolph. undeubt.| The lodgings he occupied became | Rudolph Valentino will appear fo-|the Panama Pacific liner Manchuria|the stands as fast as they could be and contains | edly chastened-—for the time, at least, | less and less habitable. He flitered morrow. | to_gather binoculars and glasses. supplied. Loud, raucous cries of “Val- . BINIphCD. S thitlis dateat Aevices, snt Marining?. Aiter bails Lanal Sthe Notable among several additions to | entino dead®’ filled the canyons and a new :“. sidered one v;r the most ,‘,.,d,z;;.\-m,g. He should say not! What % i % .mx'-‘mlle:uun nllckm}_ up h_\'k.;\ll g Auh- echoed back and forth from the tower- | ’ ' commer sels in the cit else was there? Why, america: That | [¢a] I T k N O‘H'-l 1 N etti are two pairs of very old French | ing buildings. Fighting with the men While no purchase price was given, | was the place. And, on second taly 1s la mg o cla. otice | field glasses, found in a pawnshop | to get the papers were the swarms of no el b TEM it 18 undersic Ihvolied [houEnt: even Epnciitiie byer #here |in the city of Panama. The glasses | lappers who give the financial dis- Vi y AILEY were evidently brought into America by French engineers at work on the ¥rench canal before the present canal trict its mal touch of color and of fashion. These flappers of downtown New York are as much in the mode well over h: might not be such an earthy thing as it was in Castellaneta Of Rudolph Valentino Funeral Plans| . , about whom everyone is When this project was broached BT ] SP Rudolph found that It met with un- i was begun by the Americans. as the famed midinettes of Paris. And g | expected lack of opposition. As a| By the Associated Press explained that Fascist organizations —— ~ 3 % ) CLEAX AND| matter of fact, there is good reason| ROME, August 26.—No funeral|abroad have broad powers to act in e t o n s VTHANTEL | gor helieying that the Guglielmi fam-| wreath or any other kind of official [ Such matters without need of author- Enjoying It. a lng, eglnS mn eptem i ily had already decided to ship him ’ Shs s ization from Rome. Passerhy—Hey! You've got a bite! 5 s i ks Bl to the United States, where he | ROnor for Rudolph Valentino has been | officials are unwilling to discuss | Jisherman—I know T i e e S TRANREE do worse than he had done | #uthorized in behalf of the Ttalian|what honors would be shown the | longing the thrill. AGE . 196 of the slibe, government or Premier Mussolin dead movie actor here until it is |e——————— I ] TOVAT, SAL FINF rce of the money to trans. The government. the Associated | learned definitely whether the body - - O SEKEEPING port {he veuns man hither from his| Press has been officially informed. | will be brought (o Ttaly for burial. It | f1args < port the S ounE Hn K L i | Enows mothing of a/Black Shirt suacd| 15 arobable, nowever, that. vaintino's 1" BOOKS BOUGHT =2 JUS funeral would not be given more than fficial recognition. “Bring Them In” or Phone Fr. 5416 PEARLMAN'S, 933 G St. N.W. One version is that he ob ined a providentially withheld por atrimony. Another, that the fami ved together the nece: vy amount. %till another, that the indomitably optimistic mother gave it to her son. As for the amount involved, $3.000 has been mentioned. But this is rath er unlikely, for there could have been little reason to believe that Rudolph AND O | had been utterly reformed by his Paris 1802 Monte Carlo experiences, and §4.000 is quite a sum of money to in- eribed. Lof honor, said to have been posted at the-bier of the dead screen actor, but 0F sem REPATH N To keep up with the outstanding novels . . . to read them before publication in book form —that is why GOOD HOUSEKEEPING is the favorite magazine of more than amillion and a quarter homes. 1. L MOVE com- ITH Plenty of Sunshine. From the Chicago Tribune. Dudley Craft Watson, head of the museum extension department of the Art Institute, who is conducting a painting expedition of 33 artists in Far Northern countries, reports that | the pictur ueness of the midnight BODY OF VALENTINO BARRED FROM VIEW, DUE TO DISORDERS irst_Page.) A one &ay’s e;:cufsion To The EASTERN SHORE Alry, Spacious Apartments Rents Reasonable TO DISPOSE_OF TWO RE- all New Yo tations_to bot LIS tician NY JEWELER th & R sta. (Continued from ok Irust to An 18.vear-old with a high, [Woeod to attend the funeral. She IS|gun country exceeds his expectations | I wide and handsome record hehind him, mpanied by a secretary and and that hi ociates are so avid | a T o - Could Speak No English, Railvond offcials in Chicaxo | thit, they are painting all- night, | rage Accommodations g “’“‘""‘ Mgt L (ol goneral |1 ever, with enough to see him | orders to honor a return SHICRINE Sleep by ot pup (hdie e 100% CO-OPERATIVE APARTMENTS HidTE T | e, the vouth he was Todolfo [bought by Valentino in Los Angeles | America by September 1. stopping o | 0 2 SCHiDS o emniinsiplature o O THE PART: | ¢ i then-embarked for Amer-|{e Lic bLady is shipped there from | visit studios in Paris and London on verlooking Rock Creek Pk.ff picture of soft, level lands and | & LAWSON mber the | - Yorl their wa cool salt lagoons: of quaint old I03 [ Line steamship | New York. = 5 — . craft and quainter crews of s Negri desire capital of film- Mr: Ullman and M that burial be in the n in New York. bin immigrant. drowsing roadscapes and bullocks: | in the newest and finest of Washing- Nofed for Service Stronger Attraction. te ame i Sren"iie | When the Ellis Island authorities in- | dom. L ma of hoards fraught with dishes of 7 € v i " pleaid tim | orrogated hinn he wrote “agricultur-| Jean Acker, the ‘great lovers’ F'(;";o‘c‘;r l(h'l:'iylll;';;llluw about that eculiar, and h‘:('r(-dihle oodness {oie e Spsalinesd s g Ruike 7w | ist™ on that line of the blank form |fitst wife, saw his body at the under-| 45, atd about tha Fi f Buildi e B ings for £9.36 a square foot! Contrast 1 % | which required designation of his oc- |taker's vesterday and broke into| PUppon b o e (e o0 ew Fireprool ilding of a people leisurely, good-natur- | kT EN STAS 0¥ s taces ToGe Hnin ol MoHugh % Tason, | cupation. " 11e remembered the diploma | tears. She declared t p and herd oGy RSt VAW ICLION oL edly ceremonious, unhurt by the ¢ ShTeihs S o 4 LNE N MeHCGH fer all. At that time he could speak | former hushand had become recon-| W (8 B M oL i ; fevérs of progress, comparable house—then visit ) WELAWEON no word of English. ciled just hefors his death. She re- | e O O \\-T:‘t »*‘_':;" xcellent Location A 4 The plcture is true enough. The marvel, then, is that relatively few outsiders ever see the Fastern Shore, despite the hospitality for which it is so famed. Thousands vealed that she s in A room next in the hospital when he died. ing the ar- rto Guglielmd, 1t was not dificult for him to meet n this large cfty any number of per n » knew Italian, hesides caba 1t clubs and the like demand ingnis: equirements of their «o those early days imposed get for running ¢ to_a_milliner’s Erocer's shop next 1661 Crescent Plac In your de luxe fireproof are free from the care of n vour living costs are materi te ten: Iy lower, Despite the fact that the doors of The Argonne + hardships. The boy knew hu[\\ to|the funeral church were closed to gkt : Dend mone: throw it *. if ¥ou | the general publié, 500" men and wom of Washingtonians, even, have not 3 4 A i and Broadway soon took most lay formed in line this morning, only PR you have the h.-u of service and the of what he possessed. Now he was|to he dispersed by police. use of a magnificent lobby and roof And yet a satisfying visit to the Bastern Shore may be made very garder ce o fage with the actual problem fond and lodgipg, because the fam- 16th & Columbia GIRL FRIEND KILLS SELF. tea'te | Orhards. w1 assured him he was on hls Je ’ own for the flvst time. e ; " eomfortably in a single day. To DANCE & DINE at aking stock of his assets, he found | Pes8Y Scott, Actress, Dies in Lon Claiborne is but three hours— through fresh, fragrant country by swift electric train and across the don Flat, His Pictures Near. LONDON, 26 (A).—The that he had vouth and health. a smat- tering now of English, that obtruding nd a native grace and ap- “Procter’s,” Silver Spring, Md. (Orchestra) Dining at All Hours August Sneenal Chic er. $1 5 diploma - A : popecial Chicken Dunner, $iis0 |dhplonn; 1, & v S0 o s matly Mireor sava Pesey Seolt, an lovely Chesapeaks by fo_sturdy ivai Ty ora § <ideration | espectally true of the sensuous dances :‘;';{"’;s:fl-phl“‘,z‘]’:n"m"n“v:,‘;s otnd def_‘d and comfortable a steamer as the Tum R { Vv 1 miteg | 0f the Latins, the Argentine tango, |, 3. "aa¢ in London vesterday. The Governor Harrington—or the new the Apache acrobatics and their ilk. feet in Governor Ritchie. a0e ast ¢ newspaper does not give the cause ot the voung woman's death, but it s she had been intensely affected Splendid business 14th street near property ye n.w. ! But he set little store by hi those day save us agencies .to be {used n conveving him to places of PEACHES RIPE Not just white~ AT QUAINT ACR The journey may b& pleasantly in- terrupted, midway, long enough on Bl & | possible employment. But, the more | b the death of Valentino, whom she |} Especially adapted for furrier for a visit to the United States but rich creamy white D SHEht ab ey NSIRhOHE SUIETh nors coeingad) E"lhe Mirror auotes a friend of Miss | fll or beauty shop. Naval Academy and the historic Y U 1 NEVER DISAPPOINT e e WaS| Seott ns saying that she and Val- g buildings of the charming old town PRINTING R iion “hurge oot hin meck | iine met while spending x sacation |} W. C. & A. N. Miller, | ey | Wh is whitei i F about hin neck | ¢ Biarritz; that they were often to- ” en soap is white it shows that its : IN A HURRY fke an Ol e ot re real sm. | Kether, and at one time there was a | Builders—Realtors | Luncheons may be carried, of miakeesdonie have toldyeiit/some E was to affor st rea - i . Tumor of a love affair between them. course, but admirable and inex- . > ! 1119 17th St. N.W. pensive meals are to be had in An- color to hide the kind of soap it ployment in America, shortlived as it proved to be. Bliss First Employer. BYRON S. ADAMS Grads, but net bigh Hieb S50 B streer. Mo Many autographed photographs of Valentino were found in the woman's flat, according to the newspaper, which adds that the police took pos. really is. But Sweetheart is as dif- ferent from common white soap as Main 1790 napolls, on the boat, or at Clai borne. «.sdll ROOFS REPAIRED BY EXPERTS —men_of vears' experience are Call us up. This employment came from Cor- nelius Bliss, jr., who has an estate at Westbury, Long Island. Accounts vary as to just what Rudolph was to session of a number of letters, The Mirror says that Miss Scott, who had acted in motion pictures-as ‘well as on the stage, had been in Lon- the Finest Car The Best Bilt offers you a 1if ‘This excursion, including the re- turn to Washington, costs but $3.32; on Sundays only, $2.50. Children under 12, half fare. W., B. & A. trains leave for Annapolis rich milk from skim milk. It takes select materials, rich in soap value to make creamy white soap like Sweetheart. That’s why this soap atTvour service. Qo there, One says that he was to ekl bl s N don only a short time. L A plan an Itallan garden. but that be- time of cogven! at a mini-| every hour on the hour. . IRONCLAD &5, *Sia N2 | PN 40, T v carried out it was greater : D e o % 3 makes such rich, thick, creamy | lather in any water. It’s a big oval £ood appearance the highest degree. Lin. 10-100 decided to undertake construction of a golf course, which had not been included in the curriculum of the fa- | mous diploma’s source, so Rudolph | had to give it up. Such a version would indicate that Printing That Satisfies —the most exacting is the kind executed at this plant. The National Capital Pres: zest when seasoned in cooking with Train Kills Unidentified Man. Special Dispatch to The Star. CHERRY RUN, Va., August 26.— An unidentified man, about 25 vears of age. was killed by a Baltimore and cake delicately scented. Elegant soap in a simple package. Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Yet low priced —at your grocer’s 0-1212 D ST. N.W. e Ry el t | “” It GOING AWAY? | Mo Mieiing i oanother account | this. mornink. aa. he walked “on "the | G u LD EN’S ELECTRIC R. R. CO, It s rsndmm?‘-:‘;:.,n;_-hma1-.‘:\‘T7r:x-flg.l,a'(‘: :Z::u:ii‘i{::;é:%:}:g?’?ge‘?:l:agaf;? x;fi;{. ?\E’J}.’a’{‘iu?{}fiufi?&;fi | T | W!lfinflrl Tfmiul S B R e i Tor s day, o ad | bore e name-of . F. Otaon. Nor . Mustard .' ¥ Vconstrucrion | SR aaTeckdee. | b KQONS Eai, i s™ |t Iimton dugoma e dagm | iavo- b ' pesaranieny x 1 %4 TOILET SOAP IT LATHERS W3 o [} A

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