Evening Star Newspaper, July 5, 1928, Page 3

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, THURSDAY, JULY 5 Several Thousand Pupils En- roll for Daily Sessions, Clos- ing August 15. With the smoke and firecrackers fair- Iy cleared away, several thousand Wash- ington school children enrolled in the Summer sessions of 29 elementary, three junior high and two senior high schools | SUMMERSHOOLS | e OPN DORSTODAY at 8§:30 o'clock this morning. |8 Classes are from 830 am. to 12:30} pm. The pupils embrace those who are | Teviewing subjects, and those who wish to do advance work. The Summer ses- gions will continue until August 15. | when all schools will be closed for a month before the regular Fall opening. | Of the schools which opened this morn- | ing. 21 of the elementary schools, two Junior high schools and one senior high school are for white pupils, while eight elementary, one junior high and one! senior high school are for the colored | children. ‘The schools and class list and re- spective classes follow: White elementary—Bowen, Third and K streets southwest, third to sixth grade; E. V. Brown, Connecticut ave- nue and McKinley street, third to eighth : Buchanan School, Thirteenth and E streets southeast, third to eighth: the Burroughs. Eighteenth and Monroe streets northeast, third to eighth: H. D. Cooke, Seventeenth and Euclid streets, seventh to eighth: Curtis, Thirty-second and O streets, third to eighth: Eaton, Thirtv-fourth street and Lowell place, third to eighth: Emery, Lincoln road and Prospect street north- | sast, third to sixth: Force, Seventeenth | \-e' and Massachusetts avenue, third sighth; Grant, Twenty-first and G ?ms. third to sixth; Henry, Sixth and | eotreets, third to sixth: Johngpn, Hiatt | lace and Lamont street, third to sixth: CAPT. ALFRED LOWENSTEIN, Noted Belgian financier, who fell from his plane while crossing the English Channel. * —Star Staff Photo. MYSTERY SHROUDS LOWENSTEIN FALL T0 DEATH OFF PLANE ___(Continued from PFirst Page) achieved the limelight almost overnight when he offered to lend Belgium $50,- 000,000 free of interest for a period of two years so as to enablé the countrv to stabilize the franc. Shortly after this he offered to lend France a similar amount at interest of only 2 per cent. He began to be regarded as the logical successor In European finance to the late Hugo Stinnés. He replaced Sir Basil Zaharoff as the mystery man of European finance. |SIX SUFFER BURNS | | IN CELEBRATIONS Boy, 13, Most Serious, Has Shat- tered Hand From Ill-Timed Cracker, Six persons who participated in July 4 celebrations with explosives found their way to hospitals. Jesse Gordon, colored, 13, 613 L street north- east, was the most seriously injured. He placed an explosive under a tin can while celebrating at his home, and when he thought it was not going to explode, police reported, he removed the can. There was an explosion and the boy's left hand was burned and | shattered. A physiclan summoned to the house found his hand so terribly lacerated that he had Jesse taken to Casualty Hospital, where nine stitches were required to close the wounds. his hand as a result of the backfiring of a “flower-pot,” according to report at Emergency HB®pital, where he was given treatment. He was not seriously burned. Frederick Keogh, jr, 12, 3333 P street, burned his hand while discharg- ing fireworks near the south end of Chain Bridge yesterday afternoon. He was given first aid at Georgetown Uni- ‘Versity Hospital. Carl Jones, colored, 12, 1114 Union court, was burned on both hands by a firecracker that was discharged in his hand, while celebrating the Fourth at his home. Physicians at Emergency Hospital gave first aid. Herbert Hines, 13, 1736 Fourteenth street, and Jack Campbell, 15, 1835 K street, were the other slightly burned victims of fireworks treated at Emerg- ency Hospital. Children in the agricultural districts average two inches taller and more than two pounds heavier than those from factory districts, according to recent statistics of the Leichestershire, Eng- ln:ifl.6 medical officers on tots aged 5 an B. A. Frank, 27, 1201 Brentwood road | . northeast, sustained a painful burn on| ¥ Will. Rogers BEVERLY HILLS, Callf.—I got to figure some way of laughing the man 1 bet with out of that five thousand that I lost on Calvin, T don't know just how five thousand bucks' worth of jokes is going to strike him He don't need the money, and, on the other hand, he may say he don't need the Jokes. 1 will repeat to him the nomi- nating speeches made at both con- ventions. The Re- publicans and the Democrats paid a couple of hun- dred thousand for them, so they ought to be worth five, by rights. Coolldge should be made to pay half this bet. He lald down on me. If he will pay half I will pay half in money. Or, here is another way out: I will bet the five I owe that Mr. Coolidge will “choose” to run in 1932, in case Al or Herb (whichever one gets in) don't turn out to be ‘what they are cracked up to be. So I hereby go on record as being the original “Coolidge for 1932 man.” Estimates Differ Fn;m Costs. The original estimate of cost for the Hetch-Hetchy Dam project was $45,- 000,000. On March 1, 1916, the engi- neer's estimate was $51,607,900. The project is not yet more than half com- pleted. There had been expended in 1925 a total sum of $54,470,816, and the estimated cost to complete at that time was $149,000,000 in addition to what had already been spent. TIC & PACIEI TEA co, Substantial Savings It is always a saving to buy good foods, but to buy good foods at the A&P is an added economy. (" wheRe econowy Ruiss™ Lean, Mild Cured Potatoes 5 Lbs. 8(3 | o | Lean Strip Small Lean e New | | J HAMS. .. 21c 15123¢ BACON. s 22¢c Standard Quality e Gold Medal CAKE Heinszearu. R s G 55(: Heinz Spaghetti. ... . ..3 “™ 25¢ Del Monte Peaches . ... ."" ** 8c (il Pel Monte Fruits for Salad 5, 39¢ S N Tomatoes | 7o 1 5c‘ _J 8c Heinz Ketchup..... ............."™" 15¢ FLOUR Bel Monte Cherries . ....." "™ {3c il Heéinz Vinegar.... ... ...."™ 12}c Pkg., 23c Del Monte Peas . .. oo vl Meat Market Specials A complete variety of Gov’t. Inspected Meats and Poultry—the latest methods of modern sanitation—courteous service and extremely low prices are to be found in every A&P meat market; > in other words, complete satisfaction at all times. justrial Home School. 2525 Wiscon- J -me Svenue, third to eighth grades and | Capt. Lowenstein said he had bullt up |2 domestic science and manual training: | his fortune by sound business “hunches” | j Ketcham, Fifteenth and U _streets {on industrial trends. As a young man utheast, third to eighth: Ludlow, | he staked everything on the future im- fisth and G streets northeast, third to | portance of artificial silk, hydro-electric suxth: Orr, Twenty-second and Prout | power and methods of mass production. streets southeast, third to sixth: Park- | 9 view, Warder and Newton streets, third Narrowly Escapes Death. 1o eighth. Petworth, Eighth and Shep- | He visited the United States jast herd streets, third to sixth; Pierce, April, coming on the liner Ile de France Fourteenth and K _streets northeast, [ with his wife. He was somewhat dis- third to eighth; Wallach, Seventh and gruntled because he had to travel to D streets southeast, third to sixth, and | this country by steamship instead of the West. Thirteenth and Farragut |by airplane. When at home, he said, streets, third to_sixth. he always traveled in one of his 20- ‘White junior high schools—Jefferson, | passenger planes. He was accustomed to Sixth and D southwest. and Macfar- | take with him on his trips between land, Jowa avenue and Webster street. | European capitals and money centers a corps of secretaries and typists. While in America he traveled by a 10-passenger plane. He brought his personal pilot from abroad to fly the X . craft. At Philadgiphia he tried to slip < The elementary schools for colored | away from phots phers as he alighted which today, are: | from his plane and walked directly be- | tween two of the propellers. Some one : | shouted “duck” and he saved himself, but he had been so near to death that ; | one of the whirling blakes knocked his hat from his head. Prodigious Spender. Capt. Lowenstein -always spent y. On his American tour he , two 1] a chauffeur, private dmm a masseur, an airplane pilot and two automobiles. His radio bill on the Ile Ask for sam- ples of DuPont’s Tontine Window Shade Cloth— I will not fade, [l crack or peel. I INDOW SHADES Made to Order at Factory Prices Satisfaction Guaranteed W. STOKES SAMMONS, Proprietor ’I‘g'l:ying Chickens . 45¢ Shoulder ' Lamb Roast LARGE SELECT Steamed Crabs Individually Wrapped 2 for 25c Offers Full Course. Central High School, offering full high school course and the eighth B Cillet of HADDOC Ib., 15¢ Boston MACKEREL 2 Ilbs., 25¢ New Cabbage 2 Ibs., 5¢ AEEA LT arrots. Only Until July 15th Summertime is just the time to have children photographed. ¥Ygu have ample time—children are ‘well—thelr ‘Sumftier wardrobe is at its best and you can avail yourselt of the 25% discount. " Underwood & Underwood photo-portraits are now priced as low as $15 a dozen. 35% disccunt on all pheto-portraits only until July 15th! ~ Thin Skin, Juicy LEMONS Doz. 2 7C B ancy Georgia | PEACHES SERGT. 0’BRIEN FUNERAL. Officials of Police Department at Rités for Late Detective.” Sennie player, golf and fencing profes- players, en profes- sionals on his pay roll. | Bunci | Banch Celer | Cucumber. ceem Honey Dew Melons. . . Fancy Iceberg x.? Lbs. 25(:} Head 1& ABNER DRURY| NATIONAL PALE DRY Light or Dark—Aged in Wood Ginger Ale 6 2ot 25¢| G §59c Ginger Ale Plus Deposit ::0 :-l:..t CIGARETTES | ROOT BEER Cantrell & Cochrane’s Imperial D 2 Bouln25c e 7 50 | L Old Gold, Single bottl ucky Strikes, ), Camel]| Single . Chesterfield, Piedmont, Yorktown makse & Bottle Peanut Batter . .....' ™ i 19c (§ of 6 | fl"i?:% 'tl-:l:il: ';é.'.i..'.".;i :: ::c | Sweet Caporal and Old North State i c | High Rock ‘wen 3w wi 250 | Frae | [L6¢ “Fio $[L2 | Widlar's Pickles. . ......= 10¢| Royal Gelatine. .3 » 23¢ | Stuffed Olives . ........» 10c § Asst. Preserves r 10c Plain Olives. . . v 8¢ Jello. . 3 vese 23¢ Pabst-ett ......."* 19¢ Cheese .. ™ 35¢ Fancy Large Cantaloupes, -« 15¢ APARTMENTS Farnished—Unfurnished 1, 2, 3 Rooms and Bath The “Clearance” of many $10.50 to $13.50 “Carlton” Shoes c&C BOOKS BIG BOOK SHOP, 933 G St. RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ;Yn.:nl one but myu‘u,[ Looms thriftily on fashion’s horizon National Biscuit Co. 5¢c pkg. Cakes | Fruited Ovals Zu-Zu, Lemon Snaps, Choc. Snaps, etc. || A Delicious Ginger Cookie, Jam Spread and Iced 3 Pres. 13c¢ . 19¢ Maxwell House Coffee. . . OrientaCoffee. . ... .. .. Wilkins Coffee . . SAUCE Can, 14c | 80°ClockCoffee. . .........™ 35¢ - S SUNNYFIELD ; Pancake and Buckwheat Flour | :’ WALDORF 2 Pigs. 15¢ KELLOGG’S OR POST TOASTIES CORN FLAKES 2 Pigs. 15¢ I al thousands back . Wrile or phone for further infor; 8 Mountain Valley T Co., 208 . Natl Bank Bldg. ¥r 'OCKHOLDERS OF e, Incorporated, u Auy 192 w1 This magnificent medium- vine- | gized Baby Grand piano has been returned to us by a very | prominent music teacher in order that she might have one of our incomparable Stiefi Welte Mignon reproducing pianos. Therefore, the new purchaser may have this beau- tiful instrument at a tremend- ous reduction, Chas. M. Stieff, Inc. 1340 G St. N.W. W. H. Evap. Milk. . . ..3"" =™ 25¢c Pet or Borden’s Milk. . . ."™ =" 11c Carnation Milk. .. ....."™ = Ilc Eagle Cond. Milk. . . .........* 19¢ T i X P&G * White Naphtha SOAP |4 coke 15¢| CAMAY SOAP For Toilet and Bath 3 Cakes 25c il APPLE Gofiars o) Tess as may regulsrly come meeting. Jofig'i.zw'fi SMITH. * “Trust L ROOFING—by Koons A reputation 1 Py ] every job's & sood job. Call us up. {This Milfion-Dollar Printing Plant rder oo small o aaretul sfiontion. Press The National Camlw ess 9210:1313 D 8. W ROOFERS..AND HOW! G. R. Smith, M, v‘l"nrl we have been repsiring roofs in Many of our newest “Carlton” Costume Summer modes. Were $10.50 to $13.50 —now $775. In.a most diversi- fied selection of spity styles. il IN another Sale, still higher priced “Carlton” Summer shoes. Reduced to $9.75 OLD DUTCH CLEANSER Chases Dirt hington! Let us tell you what your i but sool Beedh. ooy) Worth 38 or 2 ’ not harsh ; mpcfia AD wiorInG or bi ting' A i, | SHREDDED WHEAT GULDENE | Ps_10c 26North 27, 1207 F Closed all day Saturdays after the 4th PRINTING IN A HURRY e ey B B0 AW Ut - AW g P

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