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LT THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1927 POLIGE DISCIPLINE ‘Trade Board Group Named| for Investigation — New Vagrancy Law Urged. The need for greater discipline ment through the penalties force found del or guilty of vio studied by the cor on public tack on the ment and ol cipline w! a means the 7 levying of enforcing of heavi s of the r duties membe: s e of th a spe order fol men on t he had nc 1 by _Odell public a- | in n, Law Urged. Mr. Rayner Vagrancy The attack iminis tic of the lic ment came at the ing at which the report of a com- mittee headed by William H. Calla- han, calling for the enactment of a new vagrancy law, which had been drafted with the aid of Maj. Hesse, was unanimously adopted. The pro- posed new vagrancy law, which is much more drastic in its provisions than the existing law, is to be pre- sented to the full meet Board of Trade, followi expected to be introduced in Cor at this session. by on the | e Depart- of the meet- CHRISTMAS GIVING SERVICE IS PLANNED Central Presbyterian Church to| Observe Sunday School Custom Friday. There will be a Christmas giving | service in connection with the Sunday School at the Central Presbyterian Church next Frid: For a number of years it has been the custom for the Sunday school of this church to make its Christmas service a giving service, at which time gifts of cloth- ing, shoes, books, toys, candy and money are received and sent to the various schools and orphanages. This year the objects to which these | gifts will be made include the moun- tain schools at @rundy, Va.; Stuart, Va.; Claudville, Va.; Biue Ridge, V: and Banner Elk, N. C. Gifts will also be sent to the Pr erian Orphans’ Hpme at Lynchburg, Va., and to the Central Union Mission and Salvation Army of this city. In connection with this service there will be the singing tmas songs and a program anged for the occasion. v Night Bible Class under the instruction of Rev. Dr. James H. ‘Taylor, pastor of the church, will omit the meetings during the Christmas holidays. The class will reconvene January 6, and contmue the study of the early Christian Church. The class is taking the Book of Acts as the basis of this study. The young people of the church are arranging for a Christmas entertain- ment for the benefit of the boys and girls who are returning home from college for vacation. GALLOWAY TO ADDRESS SOCIAL HYGIENE GROUP MemVBer of American Association Staff Principal Speaker at Pierce Hall Tonight. Thomas Walton Galloway of the aff of the American Social Hygiene Association 6f New York will be the principal speaker at a public meeting of the Social Hygiene Society of the District of Columbia tonight at 8 o'clock in Pierce Hall, All Souls’ Unitarian Church, Fifteenth and Har- vard streets. Dr. Galloway and other will tell of the efforts to promote fuller and better instruction and guid- ance in the home, school and church with reference to sex, marriage, parenthood and family life. _ Other speakers will includ A. White, Dr. speakers Dr. Wil- superintendent of St. ephen E. iperintendent of Lovell of This meeting will mark the close of a fouraveek visit to Washington by Dr. during which time he number of parents, ana work ELECTIONS TO DELAY | STABILIZATION OF FRANC| teachers, ministe Y | Paper Quotes Poincare as| Indicating Nothing Will Paris Be Done Before. ce depart- | | *Do sit down.” | she had smiled so much that her face 'GEN. LEWIS RETIRES TODAY and World Wars Won Many Honors. Service With 2d Division Gave Him Part in Famous Battles Abroad. \ With 44 years of service to his ord, Maj. Gen. Edward Mann Lewis, suished veteran of the Spanish can and World War placed on the retired list of the Ar nande atly, ien relieved as comr Department ended a orient of the | 1d is now re- turning to Washinston en in command of the Ila rime nee Jannary 13, or to then he had been e Hawaiian division rracks. sir { ported to b 11 [ MAJ GEN, EDWARD M, commander of separtment and commander Provisional Division and i Grande, Tex the in Albany, in bor December 10, 18 nd was ap- | At 1 pointed to the United States Military | Gen. L ¥ m that te, t the th T in 1886 lle had obtained his carlicr | Auzust to | education at DePauw iversity, | commar | Greencastle, Ind., and at the Universi- |in Paris | ty of California, and from the former, | 5, 1915, 1919, he received the honorary de.| ' Leaving the T aree of doctor of laws as one of its|Lewis was pu | most distinguished graduates. 34 Brigade of t serving at Chateau Thierry until July 13, 1918, when he was made mander of the 30th Division with th vank of major general. He parti | pated in all the camp: of Camy; Mexi | Ler durin 2 e Ind., Lew horn der outbreak of the World War 1 placed in command o intry Brigade, N. G, fror wember, 1017 and ther the United Stat »m December 1, 1917 to May district, command_of Gen. the Saw Much Active Service. 44 vears service in the Lewis saw much active nd during 1919 he Washington in the office of staff of the Army. duation from Wi promoted throu ank of colonel in 1917 and at the outbreak of the World War he was appointed a brigadier general in the National Army, rising to the rank of major general before the war ended. in of the chief After his gr Point he w srades to the of the wr For his distinguished services in ance, Gen. Lewis was decorated h the Distinguished Service Medal v the American Army. From other overnments he awarded rank as a commander of the Legion of Honor and the Croix de Guerre with two palms, by France: Commander of the He served in Cuba during the |Order of Leopold and the Relgian Spanish-American war_as adjutant |Croix de Guerre: Knight Commander of the 20th Infantry and participated fof the Order o Michael and St in the Santiazo campaign with such |George, by Great Britain: Grand Off \lantry that he. was breveted a of the Order of Danelo, by Monte- ptain in 189 Then came the Philippine insurrection, 1899-1901, fter the World War, in addition to Lewis served during m iled to the office of the 1s and was on dut of staff, Gen. Brett was presi- follow dent of the Infantry h nd com- in 1906. manded at C glas, Ariz.; the The Vera Cruz campaign found | j i mp Pike, Ark.: Lewis commander of the 19th In nd Camp Travis, fantry and he served throughout that | . where he headed his old com- campaign, ending as treasurer of the |mard, the 2d Division. Military Government. After the Mex-| Gen. Brett is a member of the Sons ican trouble, other details caused Gen. |of the Society of the Lewis to be stationed in command of [ Army of de Cuba and Is a by Truth About Mrs. Penn. HERE was something wrong ahout Mrs. Penn, the woman who lived next door to M Shaw and opposite to Mrs. Dil- worth. Mrs. Shaw and Mrs ilworth had been brought to sp about it that afternoon as they sat together. They were fast friends, and they had been telling each other a great many private things for years. It was inevitable that the matter of Edith Penn should come up between them some time, although they were loyal to her as a neighbor and char- itable to her as an acquaintance and a woman. She doesn’t ring true,” Mary Shaw T've often thought that,” Mrs. Dil- worth _sighed. “There's ~somethini about her I don’t understand, although I have tried to—something that repels me. I've never mentioned it before o i tho s HthCHo fege because I supposed that I was the OOKE g 16 At eves and . : gave herself to confession. only person in the neighborhood Who | ®“uy’ c}0ia ca ' it has all heen a bluff,” felt that w about her.” z It 1 ibout her. wg | She replicd. sick of bluffing. feoiiou aren't,” Mary Shaw sol ‘2|I'm tired ‘of pretending. I—I hate LR T e 1t for going round with that silly i e - &rin_on my face and trying to make better. ~She's always agrecable and|jeoplg believe it came there by itself. pleasant — too pleasant. Apparently But it doesn't. I put it on ever: she never has any reason to be other-| o nins just the way I do my clothes. wise. I guess tl : 1 'Let me tell you. I took you that can- lil:ytttht (;‘t e dy this afternoon as an excuse, hoping she we I'd find you alone. I thought maybe son nm‘er.m' have n]nnn_ 'mcet or ‘rj;'-“; I could tell you, but Mrs, Dilworth D O . reen valleya—well, ¥ | Was there. Oh, ‘my face aches with suppose we can’t understand a person | FTIME And my, heart aches with who seems to live constantly on the| ways made the best of everything. sunny hills of ex!smflfl"] 7S to be | My whole life s one fabrication, and Penn certainly A oy unnieat | What good has it done to me or’any- o e D oD e e e ont | 2097 Siee? T dowt beliewe it's trids aps that's w Y 4 ways up | that the world is better for your keep- understand her. Its a B0od wavs,uP | ing your trouble out of Sight. AMrs, Shaw suiped & littie and wiped | leve that the give-and-take sympathy B eap vallcy was tho | Crentes @ bond between peoplo—a loss of her husband, who had been her | "STF50 S0P 0 oo that Mary true companion for more than thirty | gL PA¥e ! g il years. "\:“r; Dlllx\‘\l?:"}a:{‘(}g ";:'l’r‘l“"'lflr; ~ “I've always had to cry my eyes out only rocked a hee oo [in secret while I smiled in the face Joars :erlr:'rge SI;ZH 1:“10;“; ;‘;“‘I’ o | of the whole world,” Edith Penn went hild on. “Even my husban as ever bereavement was still very acute at| uiicceiq that I had l’cl\:fl hd;fll','(.,‘]"' times. : ngle tear. In that way I haven't There was a tap at the door. a brisk | joan true o him, perhaps, but it wa v I come in?” and Edith Penn en-| {6 \cav T was brought up. My moth- th a small dish in her hand. | o, \vas'the kind of a woman who would She was a woman as old as either of | ;. "0 Ginner away to somebody the two who started at her appear-f ., qign't need it, while we did, jus ance, but she had a vouthful air, f0r| ¢ "the sake of keeping up appe Het ioren Wi blue and her face | £7% é danced with smi Bred Ul T've brought you over a bit of dl-1, o ip.p. “yintil aid to Mrs. she told me—t Dilworth months at best to d, ‘Six months is a Then T came home smiling. But I've her face in her arms, a pathetic, grief. ken fizure. As Mrs. Shaw bent { over and Jaid a hana on her shoulder {she started and looked up. demanded Mrs. Shaw, sinking down beside her and putting an _arm about her. “Are you sick? Tell me so I can do something for you But Mrs. Penn merely sobbed inco- herently. | him see this for the world. He has neyer seen me er Mrs. Shaw locked the doors and then returned to her seat beside the weep- i ‘woman, said, with that un- t comes on once in a 1ps, n to the it’s all been a bluff, derst; nf]m" tha llmn best of men, hasn’t it?” Edith Penn gripped the kind hand, Yesterday “has only six I smiled. 1 long time," and kept right on o glad Mrs n_enjoy it, too. Mrs. Shaw accepted the candy with just o’ shade of embarrassment. S \ sense of guilt in that Uine o el e ebont “hor imelghbor and was ;;"j"'n"l’l'”" mil ccepting a gift from her. S L he candy is lovely,” she said. _\m““’“-‘«l‘pr‘y s e Mrs. Shaw soothed and com not Edith Penn’s first decp ny means, but it v wilked there with | woman who knew the length ith of deep valleys - e had found the friend ny more. am going to lose her. head, still Shaw that Mrs. miling, Penn shook her It came to Mary = : |1|\l tinie s { anothe nd bre haw 1ad taken on a rather set look, a strained look, one might say. “No. 1 must hurry back. TI've a By the Ascoc PAR P a ing reg franc: You know perfectly well will be d jefore ¢ Poinca 1 wddressed to the editor A B> tIn r that t that st n cot sl o= k ated Pres: Decemt otes Premicr I stal, o ¥ ho de | as say- wion of the | nothing 1 not a stir ¢ bilizatic nite ket ‘The da tions has not probably be either of ‘April or the begin May. | STRIKE DECIS!O SEEN. | Intenmtmnll Unwn May Prevent Chicago Trolley Tie-up. CHICAGO, December gion on the threatened cago's transportation strike of street ployes may evolve of local and irterr Detroit yeesterday. William D. M president, whose sary for a leg that he v action before then. 10 (1) tie-up of system and elevated em from a conference onal officials in Chi by a the &nd of the w Commissioned in Reserve Corps. Robert T. Norman 19 cut avenue, has beer the War Departmer tenant of cavalry in of the Army, Connectj oned by nd liew rve vorps thousand things to”see to,” she re- turaed gayly, “You are always so rushed,” Mrs. Dilwe rth offered. “And only just you | and \.r. Penn and the little boy to do for.”” The little be Mrs. Penn's | randson, who had come to her when | his young mother died. “I sce you have 1 Y i only one night. . Penn could spare hould have seen the house rank kept! I had a stack dishes that hizh to wash.” She hed and vanished. women looked at each ravely. But they said not aj, oo Tt \trully they tasted L Tt was delicious Po st night to sour in our mouths | prictor of a laundry | after the way we've talked about her, needed. And Mary Shaw, | something which she would in_time make known to all women—a hrave heart that had masqueraded under a smile in order to hide its suffering. THI § too, had found n to visit your LEE POY ROBBED 3ED OF $10. Third Hold-up in Two Days at Local Laundries. The third other | word more. the candy “It ought wo The holdup of a Chinese by Lee Poy, pro- at 1607 Twelfth that two colored last night as | street. men ente he was unsuspec and, at the him of $10. One of the men held the revolver while his companion empticd the cash register. They ran out of the door. jumped into waiting car and fled. According to Lee Poy, he ran after them shouting, “Robbers,” but no one seems to have paid any attention to The colored men answer the tion given of two who looted other Chinese laundries. imed his place tingly puint of a pistol, oing to say that,” Mrs. ilworth agreed. Mrs. Dilworth went home y Shaw washed the empty bonbon | dish from which she had emptied the candy, for in their conscience-smitten ness they had not been able to cat it, and, throwing a shawl over her head, went to return the dish to Mrs. Penn. She found Frankie making a snow robbed ‘Go right in, Mis" Shaw,” he lisped. | n's making me a pair of pants.” haw tapped lightly, as a warn. | 2, and entered. She heard a sound sohbing and stopped, motionless {with amazement. Sobs! They came from the sitting room. There was something else, irs. Penn was “Oh, dear!” over and over Press Official Is Divorced. RENO, Nev. 10 (P).— | James A. Buel National Prs vorced by Fthel District wurt Thursday on &round of cruelty. Buchapan did not contest the suit. i December Association, was Ruth Buchanan in s sick—in paln,” Mary Shaw {thought, and hurried forward. Mrs. Penn lay on the couch with AFTER 44-YEAR ARMY SERVICE SIUI]Y m BE MADE\ Veteran of Spanish-American JEWIS, the Northeastern the forces d Division, com- zns of this com- | bat division throughout the remainder I be- reached the point | I love | }| were asked to approve plans for the ! deprived of the maximum park- she | i two days was reported to ironing shirts | anager of the | di- the PLEA FOR TRAINING CANIPS BY MAIL HH ]Advertising by Postmarks E May Alarm Europeans, | Dr. Abernethy Says. | The method of advertising the Citi ns’ Military Training Camps by p | marks on letters was hit by Rev. Abernethy, pastor of Calvary B | tist Church and 1 of the Citi- zens’ Association for Law and in an addr S P! y. Re- : to letters so marked and sent he asked: “What do the people there think of it? Abernethy, who was {at the weekly luncheon of [inzton Round Pable in the ub, had reference to the stamped on the envelopes: “Citizens' | Military Treain Camp, Tet's | Such advertising on mail sent to fo | cign conntrics, he indicated, i foreigners the impression i United States i8 lo forward other war. | Blames War for Tgnorance, | War itself was bl n the rance of man in solvin his problems. The same lack of m the part of man was blamed by the iker fc failure to solve the pro- hibition question and other matters. ‘We haven't discovered just how to BarRie i boore aiiationy tireter | \\mhmm"(hn ivancement of man | through ge ms to his ability to | iearn,” D hy declared there e son man does not learn, namin to settle | disputes without war as one He said he would not “s about™ the Citi: ' Militar; Camps, but declared, thing, it is the man who goes with & pistol in his pocket who gets into a shooting scrape sooner or later.” Urges Reading of History. Abernethy, who had chosen to Brass Tacks” as his address whereas eve spe the W Univer: sentences ive imed > thine the problem of how between countries of them. Dr. “Getting Down the subject of however, that not all right, the world is g ter, and that persons incli pessimistic should read history and ancient writir The latter, he point- ed out, will show that men thonsands of years ago thouzht that everything | was gettir Rev. Dr. W. W the convention League here, was con and delive which he declared “The good is get- | ting better and the bad is getting his, comparison, he said, m still worse. d to gt | Stale; the , delegate to Anti-Saloon | the lunch- address, in | of BUSNESHENH N PRI UL Thirteenth Street Association | to Consider Angle to Parallel Change. Protests over the new parking regu- | lation affecting downtown Thirteenth street, which went into effect Monday providing for parallel instead of angle parking, held to be necessary by Dis- trict officials to relieve traffic conges- tion, will be considered by the Thir- teenth Street Business Men's Asso it tion at a mecting at 3 o'clock Wednes day afternoon in the office of Charles 818 Thirtcenth street. P. An- sociation, s to submit the effect of lation on the ong the street ities there. nts along the s with Traffic the change in F. Carusi, In calling the meeting Ro drews, president of the has asked the membe actual figures showing the new parking reg business of the firms and on the parking A number of mercl street have filed prote Director IHarland over the parking regulation, charging that the prohibition against angle parking, which provided for a gres ter nu'mhl'r of cars parked along downtown Thir- teenth strect than the paraliel parking 1 N, nd served to 81! away from the street. Urged by Harland. The change in the parking regul tion, it is said, was recommended s eral wecks ago by Traflic Dire | Harland, before petitions for this change were made by representatives of the Washington Rapid Transit Co. and by the Capital Traction Co., which ha bus lines operating through Thirteenth street. Protests against th regulation have heen filed with city offieials by 1 sentatives of the Arthur n Pis Co., Brownley's and C. A. Muddiman Co. These firms plan to ask the Thirteenth Street Busi- ness Men's Association to send a fo n prot to the Commisisoners asl ing that angle parking be again pro- vided on the sticet. Frank H. Kimmel Jordan Co., termed the prohibition st angle parking, which he declared had caused I)\V\HU‘\ to firms along the the number of shopp | could fina parking space on Thirteenth street, He points out that at the time the merchants on Thirteenth street anager of the highly unfair” the street a year or mor given assurance t would be permitted. ssessed 40 per cent et widening, he houses there are widening ¢ oy were king ing space for their customers Assails Parallel | As a result of the parallel parking | rezulation and the placing of a bus stop at the southwest corner of Thir- teenth and G streets 1ys, the Jordan Co., whose | a5 a frontage of 73 feet on Thirteenth, has spaca left for but one parked car, in- | stead of nine or ten, as formerl | A said vester- | day ‘n convinced that the new rule providing for paral- lel parking had served to hurt the| business of the Thirteenth street firms. He pointed out that under the present could stop at the str <hit from | their cars’ without traflic | through the street, whereas under the ing plan_cars entering ¢ out of parking spaces often | halted all traflic on the strect for a time. Mr. Andrews also said he not more than 10 per cent of parked along the street wer shoppers, but rather were employes of concerns in the vicinic These car owners, he believed, occ sionally moved their cars from one parking space to another in order tc avoid violation of the one-hour park- ing rule there. The congestion of traffic, therefore, he argues, is not caused by shoppers' cars as much as by those of employes of the concerns on and near Thirteenth street. Parking. shoppers those those Walt Whitman Home Razed. NEW YORK, Deeember 10 (#).— The old house in Brooklyn where Walt Whitman wrote much of his poetry, fell under the blows of the hous apt to | MUSIC MARION TALLI An audience that filled Pe and was headed hy M Ivin Cool- idge welcomed Marion ley, the young_coloratura soprano of Kansas now of the “Met,” with hearty at her firs erday youth personified. till young. Alw Theater With_the exception of the tle “Vergebliches Standchen,” by Brahms, it was in the simple encore \ch as “Juanita,” John Prindle “False Prophet,” the Christian snce hymn, “In the City of Fadeless | Days” and “Comin’ Through the Ry |that the audience scemed to find the inger most pleasing. She sang two operatic airs, “Ah, non Credea Miran- ti,” from Bellini's “La Sonnambula,” nd “Je Suis Titania,” from Thomas' Mignon,” and the very florid La Iorge arrangement of Johann Strauss’ “Beautiful Biue Danube.” John Corigliano, a young violinist, who also was with Miss Talley in her last year, has fnproved and and inte; g encore was the of Godowsky's an e Wille w Talley 10 YULETIDE SERVICES 0 BE IN THEATER Women’s Clubs’ Group Spon- sors Six-Day Program, Starting Monday. ler's “Old abanera” with skill terpretation. ITis Kreisler arrangement “AlL 3 1 at slow tempo. Stewart companist_for both Miss The fourth annual Christmas serv- ices under the auspices of the Depart- ment of Religious Fducation of the Women's Clubs will be held at Keith's Theater for six days, beginning Mon- from 12 to 12 The program will be: Monday—Irayer, Rev. Miss Lose Tollio; k Brown larnis; inia White Spec —Prayer, 1 C. H. But- ler; solo, Mrs. Lidna Hillyard Howard, address, Dr. James H. Miers; chalr- man, Mrs i Dinwiddie. Wednesday—Prayer, Rev. W. S. Waltemyer; mu cred Heart ir; address, v und A, chairman, John W. Frizzell. Rev. Walter from aye | Smith; music, choir Baptist Church, ~addr chairma n, Nrs. York Avenue Church quartet; address, Dr. Joseph R. Sizoo; chairman, Mrs. G. L. Peck- ham. Saturday—Children’s da Rev. Mark Depp; Christm: pictures, Mrs. Charles Wood; chair- man, Mrs. Howard Hodgkins. Seeks $6,200 f‘rom Firm. Henry Schrot, trading as Schrot Bros., 617 Louisiana avenue, was sued 200, by Jacob F. Pletzman. The il the amount due him |under an agreement by which he was and) discover He is represented | place of the blue goose, seen by the (mp]ovcd as manager on a salal n bn wmyer & King. dope of any wreckers yesterday. A chain cigar store will be built on the site. PUTNAM DESCRIBES BAFFIN ISLAND TRIP 5,000 Square Miles of Terri- tory Eliminated From Map as Result of Exploration. Navigating in salt water and find- ing their boat in a position shown as 80 miles inland on existing charts was one of the experiences related b George Palmer Putnam last evening before members of the National Geo- graphic Society at the \Washington Auditorium. This adventure and sub- sequent observations to check their findings resulted in eliminating from the map about 5,000 square miles of Baffin Ixland. scene of explorations of the party headed by Mr. Putnam last Summer. till is enoush_ of the island left, however, not to affect its rank as the next lar; island in the world to Greenland, he said. Mr, Putnam went North in the Morrissey, schooner of Capt. Robert rtlett,” whom he characte the world's greatest ic With fthe party were two boys, including David_Putnam, the motion picture own reve these lads in_games on ice floes, playing foot ball with fish spears as zoal posts before the more serious work of the expedition began. Robert Peary in Party. Another member of the party was Robert Peary, son of the discoverer of the North Pole, whose skill as an engineer was put to the test in affix- ing a new propeller hetween tides after crunching ice packs had torn the old one off and otherwise damaged the little schooner o that it had to 1 before the wind as did early ex- plorers. The speed made by this mode of mavigation, including the help of motor boats, was 7 miles in seven day: Motion pictures of remarkable ice scenes were obtained, despite continu- ous rongh weather which the speaker described as being “all weather; no climate.” One of the most remarkable of the motion pictures was that of an iceberg capsizing, the first of its kind obtained for the films, and other views show the coastal peaks of northern rising 6,000 and 7,000 feet cr's edze, and affording nnot be duplicated, nywhere along the llesmere Island to the lecturer said, Atlantic from Pa Other motion pictures depicted in- resting customs of the Baftin Lsland S, a thrifty, courageous, Kindly t people who, Mr. Putnam aid, would not take a match without king for it. When given one, the iskimo would split the match in half to make it go a longer way in light- ing his inevitable pip Skillful Wood Carvers. Theso Fskimos are wood carvers of nd one of their ingenious devices is a pair of wooden spectacles with narrow slits to shield the eyes from One of the patriarch sl the explorers that he had concluded | the Southland must be a dreary land, indeed, after he had watched, for the ice floating south. imos, and not the South a Islanders, to whom the palm for dancing must be given. Arriving on a Thursday morning at an Eskimo vil- lage, a dance siarted in their honor, the speaker said, and when they left, on Monday morning, the dance still was in progress. A major scientific result of the ex- pedition, aside from the mapping of be properly fueled- the shores of Fox Channel, was the imthat region of the nesting thon: ands over L NO-NOX GAS that smooth Gulf No-Nox Motor Fuel is Non-Poisonous and no more harmful to man or motor than ordinary gasoline—that it contains no coal tar kind—that the color is for identifica- donmly—thltkpodfivflywmmthutthe motor, winter or summer. GulfNovNorMmM is priced three cents gallon hilhfl' ordinary products or LATEST HAPPIEST The Trade Mark POLLYANNA'S DEBT of HONOR y Harriet Lummis Smxth Author of POLLYANNA of the ORANGE BLOSSOMS and POLLY ANNA'S JEWELS, which are POLLYANNA: POLLYANNA GROWS U Sequels to THE GLAD BOOK and THE SECOND GILAD BOOK, by Eleanor II. Porter. $2.00 each wherever books are sold Here comes Pollyanna again—this time as an irresistibly lightf charming story of the G young matron. A de- d Girl grown up that will bring happiness to all of her old friends and thousands of new ones. THIS IS ANOTHER POLLYANNA YEAR! l Publishers L C. PAGE & COMPANY Boston B et VERTISENENTS ReCEIVED HERE Herbert’s Pharmacy—10th & Va. Ave. SW Is a Star Branch Office. THE ABOVE SIGN 1S DISPLAYED BY AUTHORIZED STAR BRANCH OFFICES If you have lost something or found something that someone else has lost, you can quickly get in touch with the finder or the loser through a Star Classi- fied Ad. Don’t bother to come way down to the Main Office, but make use of the facilities of The Star Branch Office in your neighborhood. No fees are charged for Branch Office serv- ice; only regular rates. The Star prints such an over- whelmingly greater volume of Classified Advertising every day than any other Washing- ton paper that there can be no question as to which will give you the best results. “Around the Corner” is a Star Branch Office. 1is THE magic of power in motoring comes from an efficient motor fuel. The modern motor must Otherwise annoying knocks. Gulf No-Nox Motor Fuel stops knocks, pings or detonations in the motore this insures an efficient engine-~developing maxi- mum power.