Evening Star Newspaper, July 22, 1928, Page 3

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. JULY 22, 1928—PART .1 HINDENBURG REMAINS ACTIVE s o DERAL REFUGE NAVAL RESERVES OF THE 'DISTRICT LEAVE ON SUMMER CRUISE - DAMEELLENTERRY " WILLLIE N STAT Mourning Is Absent, How-| ever, at British Home Fol- lowing Actress’ Wish. gland. Ju dears, famous beloved v b The noted acir and gres 1 id, Mourninz. n felt the heavy ha But at the Faum the edge of this ancient har there was littie to indicaie c had boen a great change. T was an air ot subaued activity, ds werg drawn and no o Tne reason for ti iie notice tacked St upon t last wish the fiy lcas he noted actress, old. died at 8:58 o'clock afier an uncomf which she sank had been ma: against a_com! and ccrebral hemorrhage s g slowly last Tuesday noughout the day m sympathy poured in from all paris of the world. They were from the friends of her long and wonderful lifetime, some from friends whom sh2 had known for haif a century. To Lie in St Until Tuesday, hor body will i r nome. Then memb y and the villagers will ioj her along the winding country road to little village church where th» 1 will be held. The body will b | cremated in Londcn and then, if sug- gestions now being made are followed her ashes will find a last resting plac> near thoss of Garrick and other| famous siage folk in St. Paul's Church in Covenpt Garden. This is known as t ctors’ church because it has been! closely assoctated with the theatrical world for generations | This evening Ellen Terry was resting in a room overlooking “th> historic | Romney marshes which sweep away toward tree-clad green hills in thz distance. She was fond of this view because, as she once wrote, “The long Jow-lying marshlands give me rest. BROADWAY PAYS TRIBUTE. Stage Folk Tell of English Actress’ Greatness. i NEW YORK. July 21 (P).—Broadway expressed its sorrow today at the death of Dame Ellen Terry, famous actress. | g “The one great light on the English- i speaking stage has gone out.” said Ethe! " = | Barrymore at her Mamaroneck home. T once had th= honor of playing with her for nearly a year and I know how | great she is” | id: “The stage | of her | Henrietta Crossman sal has suffered a great loss, for, although | the was not piaying. she carried the ideal of a great artist.” Edwin Milton Royle, author of vari- ous Broadway successes, declered: | “There will never be a greater actress.” Chi;zon Dies Abroad. HALBERSTADT, Germany, July 21 (#) —Vice Chairman Wiedenhoft of the S RS JUDGEMAPS COTTERLL FLES AMERIGANLAWYERS FOR GOVERNORSHIP to the turnerfest which began today at Cologne. and was visiting relatives here efter an absence of 44 years. | __SPECIAL NOTICES. | OR | RT_ LA | - | i TO HAUL_PUI R_PART LOAD r from New 'York. Richmond. Boston tsburzh and all way points. Special rates TIONAL DELIVERY ASSN. INC. 1317 | By the Assoclated Press. | | the U. S. S Above: Reservisis waving farewell as (hey left the mavy yard yesterday on Abel P. Upshur. Center: Officers on the eruise, left to right—Lieut. B. M. Coleman, Licut. | W. E. Locklin, Lieut. H. E. Richardson, {C. G | | | | | LAW N NEW PHASE AT JHNS HOPKINS Institute for Research to Be Fioneer Force in So- cial Field. | BALTIMORE, July 21.—An institute | | for th> study of law is to s!nb‘.\shed} | at Johns Hopkins University, with the | hope that its rescarch will accomplish | | for that protession what the Hopkins | Medical Center has achleved in its fleld. Dr. Jossph 8. Ames, acting ps.sident | of Johns Hopkins, in announcing the | | establishment of the institute, the first | | of its kind in the country, pointed out | | today that 1t would devote .itself 1o | research concerning legal problems and | their social and economic significas’e, | rather than to the training of lawyers. | ‘ The institute will be organized when the university opens this Fall, and jour | of the faculty already have bsen ap- pointed. They are Walter Whoeler Cook, professor of law at Yale: Herman | | Oliphant, protessor of law at Columbia Leon Carroll Marshall, director of ec | nomics and business at the University of Chicago, ana Hessel Edward Yntoma, professor of Roman law and jurispru- | dence at Columbia. Culmination of Long Study. Capt. M. L. Hersey. Lieut. Comdr. M. Nor Licut. M. C. Hutchinson, Lieut. McKinney, Lisut. J. M. Few:ll and Ensign H. M. Jones. Below: One of the first duties learned on the crvise, L. A. Stickley and . E. Stone, Naval Reserves, splicing rope. NAVAL RESERVISTS START YEARLY TRI Second ,Contingent ¢f D. C. ant Baitimere Officers Due in Newport Tcday. With 15 days' sea sorvice ahead of them, during which they wiil b2 wrained 1) tak> their stations on ships of the ve fleis In time of emergency, 10 officers and 90 enlisied men of the United States Naval Reserve Battalions | of this city and Baltimore, left day aboard the United States Destroy Abel P. Upshur, training ship assigned to th: Washington reserves. The ves- sel is commanded by Comdr. Mark L. Her: United Sta Navy. Assignments which the officers will fill during the period of the annual crujse were given by Comdr. Her: just prior to the departure, as follo Assignments. Lieut. Comdr. A. M. Norris, Balti- more, exccutive officer and senior en- gineer; Lieut. Comdr. E. A. Harringion of this city, assistant engineer officer; Lieut. N. E. Aubr neer; Licut. A. P. Willlams, Baltimore, assistant engineer officer; Lieut. Harold E. Riclardson of this city, gunnery and_watch and division officer; Lieu C. G. McKinney, Baltimore, navigator and watch and division officer; Lieut. (junior grade) Wilbert FEr Locklin of this city, assistant navigator and watch and division officer: Licu (junior grade) J. M. Fewell of this city (first lHeutenant) and junior watch and division officer: Lieut. (junior grade) B. M. Coleman of this city. com- munications and watch and junior di- vision officer, and Ensign H. M. Jone: Baltimore, assistant communications and junior watch and division officer. This' is the second of three trips which the Upshur will make this Sum- mer in order to give all of the reservists attrehed to the local battallon their annual period of sea training. The UNDER PRESIDENTIAL DUTIE royer | . Baltimore, engi- | | Never Rises Later Than 7| and Begins Day’s Work | at Desk by 9. German Executive Impartial to Parties—Fond of Family. BY LOUIS P. LOCHNER, Aasoclated Press Stafl Wr.ter. BERLIN, July 21.—The day begins {carly with Paul von Hindenburg, the | | octog~narian President of the German | | Republic. | " He never rises later than 7 o'clock and | after a simple breakfast, usually served {in his bedroom, takes a brief stroll | througn the spacious garden ad |to the exccutive mansion. His |herd dog Relf is his constant com- panion. After the stroll, the President often | reads on the glass-inclosed veranda of | the exccutive mansion. He still sub- | seribes to a paper of his home town, Hanover, and follows local happenings there with interest. Biography infer- him most. Memoirs of men like ck fascinates him At Desk at 9. Prompily at 9 he sits at his desk in the executive siudy. The first man | to report to him is the chief of the government press burcau, Dr. Walter Zechiin. Like o1l men attached to Hin- denburz, Zechlin i3 expected to come land go without haste. All his life Hindenburg has stood for procceding quietly, oraerly, without fuss or com- | motion. His mastery of difficult situa- aseiibed to this profound com- on the d: news of the whole world 4 hours before the s than an hour. Zech- | lin never tails to include the cartoons. |and the President often has a hoaity | laugh over caricatures. | There follows a special report on military matters by an officer of the | | defense ministry. Veteran soldier that |he i, Hindenburg naturally takes a ecial interest in the army and navy. jen., Heye as successor to Gen. von Sceckt, and Gen. Gr 2 successor | to Minister of Defe both-his personal choice. | Above Partics. A third daily report is that by State’s £ ary Otto Meissner, whose position is that of the American secreiary the Presi- | of polic?, and in gen- | cral acts as his right-hand man on all oTicial mat the Presi- s book in nter their names in Ji2u calling upon him, and tell him who each caller | d whom or what he represen President’s only sm, Maj. Os:ar { von Hindenburg. has been made his| adjutant and personal aide. As such he reports on the President’s personal, | nen-official correspondence and makes | his_personal apointments ! Hindenburg’s s°nse of justice in po- | liticel appointments is illusirated by | the following occurence. When the for- | cign office suggested Von Prittwitz as | Ambassador to Amorica, ~reactionary ! Nationalist circles tri>d to get the Pres- | ident's ear and provent the young dip- lomnt’s anpointm-nt report the progre: th> post ¢ which peaple ¢ ¢ M 15 an The Does sw that | von Pritt 55m?2 one asked. “Well, just the man for th> place ways heard that Amcrica cratic country. “But h2 is too young,” jooted. “It's a good thing to promote young men from time to time to important positions. That puts new pep into the whole 1egiment.” jwas the rejoinder. Friend)y to Russfans. In his relations to others.it is the human qualities which decide the Pres ident's personal attitude toward the For Instance, Hindenburg always bows ith particular grace to . Vera Krestinsky, wife of the Russian Soviet Ambassador. He cares not that she is {a bolshevist—to him it is sufficent that she spends her mornings in the “charite,” treating poor German chil- gratis. he is a good woman—her political | views don't concern me,” he observed to a high official. Before the President signs any docu- ment, he studies it carefully and often suggests changes. ‘“But the President is constitutional to the dot of an 1. one cabinet member observed. “He will | never excoed his powers, but lats the cabinet do the governing. In that re- | spect he has taken William I his {model. He even uses Willlam's ex- | pression. meine minister,’ when speak- |ing of u | One da {came with a | it seems to me, he is Have al- a demo- then, another re- | the ministsr of the interior | docres providing that the lute whenever the chan- I e | touched if, on leaving church or at- o PROTEETS GANE Coolidge Likely to Dedicate " Huge Area on Upper Mississippi. By Consolidated Press CHICAGO, July 21.—Instead of fac- ing gradual extermination, the wild life of this country is finding increas- ingly extensive havens in which to ward off the encroachments of civilization that has been rather ruthless with their forebears. | One more evidénce of this fact is going to be given shortly when the im- mense upper Mississippi wild life refuge, xtending for 300 miles along the low- !lands of the Mississippi, is dedicated probably by President Coolidge. This is the latest and one of the most im- conservation projects which portant birds and aim to protect wild animals, fish for future generations. Mr. Coolidge has been esked to par- ticipate in dedicatory exsrcises in con- < nection with the official opening of the There foliows an afternoon nap. and | vast refuge, and if he accepts, the cere- now the aged President is free, at least mony probably would be held at La until the evening, for engagements of | Crosse, Wis. The Federal Government a personal and private nature. | is spending $1,500,000 to make th low- Ofter old frionds (not including. |jand proserve a reality, end already however, Ludendorff, with whom he has | nearly 203,000 acres are available, broken complct»ly) come to see him Breeding Ground for Fish. then, and reminiscences of military s campalgns are revived. Often, too, This refuge consists of parts of Wis- consin, Iowa, Iliinols and Minnesota relatives drop in on him. The only trouble about them is that they seem It is located along the natural fiy-way s Harassed by hunters constantly to muitiply. “It almost looks A of migratory fowl. as though. local federations of the | on every side, the ducks and geese has Hindenburg family were being formed,” | steadily been decrea until ma the President once observed with a thouzht they would be lost to the Mid- genial ehuck! “I never knew I had dlewest in a few years. Now they a so many relatives.” protected alonz His devotion to his family is one of | ory in which thes his outstanding characterist Be it lested. the wedding of a grandson, the ccn- Reaches of this river territory have firmation of a granddaughter. the bap- 2 rugged beauty that equals any river tism of a great-grandchild, th» birth- scenery in the country. The overflow day of a nephew, the President never | area of the river is a principal breed- fails to grace th> occasion by his pres- | ing ground (nr‘ gal fishl and the bird ence. Eighty years though he is. he | and e2nimal life is profuss. When t will travel long distances to participatc | Government stepped in this arza w in these festive occasions. about to bz drained, ruining the coun- From time to time, of an afternoon, | {ry’s greatest hatchery. Hunters, vir- he motors to Potsdam to visit his aged | tually unregulated, had just about end- sister. Like this 76-year-old sister, the | ed the bird shooting. Reports from the President is pious and God-fearing and | district.now say that as a result of re- never hesitates to bear testimony to | cent protection. ducks and geese are to his bellef in the tenets of the Christian | be seen again in great numbers. faith. | “Some of the animals originally found in this territory have been exterminat- ed,” William T. Cox, superintendent of the refuge, But just about all types of the bir have managed to survive despite the mest persistent hunting 2nd trapping. There are ruffed and sharp-tailed grouss, ducks of many species, snipe, the bald eagle, the great , and many other songsters, insect eaters, waders and /ON HINDENBURG. daughters of ths President’s only son, Osear. Fond of Children. Hindenburg is cxceedingl children. He is alway fond of genuinely tending seme function. a child steps forward to offer him flowers, especially if this action is an impromptu one. MacMahon,” a high German official observed to the Associated Press corre- spondent. “They cught to have attend- ed the demonstration at the 1i Stadium in honor of Hindenburg's th birthday anniversary. They would then have seen the difference. Children filled the arena and brought homage to their beloved President. Mac- Mahon wouid under similar circum- stances have had the army there.” The President’s evening is normally taken up with quiet reading. He vir- tually never goes to theater, except when, on his swings around the circle, gala performances are staged in his honor. Nor is he to be found at con- ceris or at the opera Oniy very rarely, while in Berlin, does Highway for Birds. “The Mississippi for centuries has been th> great water and aerial high- way for the semi-annual flights of birds. Then among animals, there are muskrats, raccoon, mink, foxes, skunk | and other fur bearers. Beaver and otter will need re-introduction and careful protection. Deer also must be brought in_again." But with 300 miles of protected terri tory, ld life is expected to increas: rapidly. The intention then is to let refuge be opened in parts to the hun- | ter and nsh;r. 1M“§h of the l:;;u is to th> President venture out'in the eve- | De replanted in forests although a ning. Thekonly engagements which, as !:’:mg;“ of hardwood timber still is far as is known, he accepts regularly | * 5 are 3 dinner by the chancellor, one by | The Izaak Walton League was the the foreign minister, a reception by the | Principal backer of the project to turn Prussian government and a “bierabend” | this lowland area into a refuge and it at the Bavarian legation. This latier IS arranging the dedicatory eercises invitation is accepted because the Pres- | soon to be held. ident spends his annual Summer leave | - in the varian Alps. | What. seems to touch those in at- ! tendance at these functions particu- larly is tife chivalry of the vensrable | President to the ladies. The way he | kisses the hgnds of the older matrons as he pressnts them with a bouquet, the manner in which he bows to the young- er set and addresses a kind word here and there to them—these are impres- sions left indelibly upon the minds of those who have been honored with in- vitations. STRESEMANN IS BETTER. Glbnten: FORIE M Rter Takves Health Resort. BUEHLERHOEHE, Black Fore: Germany, July 21 (#).—Dr. Gust: Stresemann, German foreign minister, left here tonight, much improved in health by his month's stay at a private | ' sanitarium, but intending to go to | | Carlsbad to complete his cure. While physicians insist that Dr. l Stresemann still needs a protracted rest, he intends to go to Paris to par- ticipate in the signing of the Kellogg anti-war pacts the latter part | b gai Why sweiter when you can get d e p e ndable, fully guaran- teed electric fans at so small a cost. Reg. Pr. S e $3.75 CARROLL ELECTRIC CO. 10-inch oscillator . $4.95 August P A ? | nav; a s B3 ave Maie G0 . Lot lAsviie ale Speaking of the foundirs, of Pirst Fleet Division from Washington. ':“;‘];”‘r r\‘.&"p:fsm\!. — PRIVATE _ SWIMM N ING INSTRUCTIO! men and boys only; indoor pool 3 North 8 “Divorce Mill” Attacks French Attorney Accused in Enters Washington State | | institute as the culmination of 20 vears | commanded by Lieut. Richardson, is | of planning, B. Howard Griswold, jr.|making this cruise, while the Second | chalrman of th> trustee committee on | Fleet Division, will go in three more et us take care of it for ¥ou in our PIRE FROOP WAREHOUSE—stored in our conven i-nt Bageage Vaull for only T5c per month You can have access to your Trunk at ans tme —at no additional cost. UNT ETATES STORAGE COMPANY. 418-420 1 nw _‘opposite the Gas Office) _ MA FUSINESS SITES POR_SAL! st busy intersection. 15th an ne. ub for city delivery. fronting on Bladens- 2urg rd.. the.national highway. adioining W F&AR R Is & nd commercial t owner. SID} 4025 6th & C sts. 5w STONE NATIONAL PARK. BLAC Information and personal ser: d money G L SNIDER .8 Dak_ Washington references HE HOME BUILDING ASSOCIATION A nounees the 'pening of ite 46th series 1 1 Payments, 3] per month on each s-are. interest raie, 5% . compounded monih. Join nos Apolications are solicited for 1astall iret gans: no commissions r bonus charged W T GALLIHER. Pres AMES M _WOODWARD. Sec.. W K. REEVE enna._ave, nW._ STOCKHOLDERS OF “THE NA tal Trsurance of Dy uant of trust th a hu tees of the Na- th day of nce with the provisions supchaoter 4" of solders of July 27th. AT 1922 ~ WORK Vork, frepiaces. eeneia bt phone BRACE CEMENT WORE coping, gerage fi NORTHEA 627 7t “TUSED LUM WANTED 1a.. Boston are Lo or Rick trom To pave ven P sn0 York Plums BUBHEL Baunk ¢ rosd Three mile “Falls Church Orchards” AL OF 8 HILES PROM WASHINGTON 10k | th | jetter, satd representatives of s a| Contest, Announcing Op- position to Smith. i | i [ | | Prosecutor. By the Associatsd Press. OLYMPIA, Wash, July 21.—George F. Cotterill, former mayor of Seattle and lifelong Democrat, filed his decla- n N el o ration of candidacy for the Democratic ot eminent an legal NOMInation for governor with the ‘hief of counsel for the ac- | secretary of State here today, after an- ed on the public prosecutor nouncing he would not support the presidential candidacy of the cratic nominee, Gov. Alfred E. Smith. Cotterill recently declared he could not support Smith because of the New The entire audience, copposed prin- | York Governor's views on prohibition. | cipally of members of the bar, greeted | In a statement issued at Seattle, this denunciation with approving shouts. | Cotterill sald he refused “to be driven Earlier in the proccedings Judge Wat- | out of the Democratic party by the tine, presiding at the trial, grilled the | abusivi aefendants severely. Beveral | lings and. thelr imitators in the State ican attorneys also came in for [of Washington.” He sald “no Demo- sharp criticism i crat is in any way obligated to support The judge declared that the Ameri- | this ‘wet’ post-platform sought to be r i reprehens roles and | imposed by Tammany trickery after an mposed upon French jus- | honorable law enforcement declaration itioned specifically Dudley | had boen adopted, and a presidential former collector of the | nomination based on it port of York: Benjamin H. Con- | “When Gov. Smith violated the 1. president of the American Chamber | unanimous platform committee and of Commerce of Paris, and Charles G. | convention agreement, and made his Loeb, attorney for Bainbridgs Colby | ‘direct appeal for the vote of nullifica- the latter was refused a divorce. | tion resolutions, he absolved every Col entire subject, of “divorces while | stitution and law respecting Democrat received an ajring. The | from any party obligation to his accused soven was formed of | . g sy documenty by viier v PLANES ORDERED for several would-be | Large Craft to Widen { the principal charges | candidacy.” parties to divorces The cited a number of cases in | FOR ITAL'A sEARcH Hunt. By the Associated Press. PARIE respecting the “American div in Paris developed from an anonymous en ac- cused French lawyers when the defense had ¥ Avoca circles and | cused, turni and cried | “You to sleep at your post | You allowed lawyers to take the wrong road, and now vou proseeute them be- | cause you did not halt them.” md between ence fast,” 4 SEEN IN AMITY MOVE. lement of s documents by which al- lease was used to cstab- | Judge | Captain of Baze Ship Sends for Two the accu | | | | | - Germany Works for 3et By the Assoclated Press. Vilna WARNEMUENDE, Germany, July 21 July 21 (P)—The frindly | —The Heinkel sirplane plant has re- Oty assoctated itselt | ceived a wireless rush order from Capt desires expressed in London, | Romagna of the base ship Citta di d Moscow for @ peaceful solu- | Milano at Kings Bay for two large the Vilna question wes con. | Hoinkel type, recently 1o Premier Aldemaras | Atted to alight on lce, water or snow learn-A hea. lby{ Ths plancs are to be delivered In 12 Jerman | Min‘ster a1 | days for the purposs of continuing the & on instruetions from the | scarch for the six missing men who B offce were carried off In the bag of the understond o have sug- | dirigible Ttalia May 25 Lithnanian premier that 10 15 beileved that the Heinkel ma- proceed noths utmost circum- hine will have a wider radius of action | spection to & d anything likely to in-{ than th: Norwegian seaplanes now at ace the diffeulty of the Lithuanian- | Bpitzbergen and that they wili need Polish situation. very short unway,. Question. BERLIN hint that with yed y the e v Demo- | tactics of Tammany Hall hire- | 600-horsepower machines, | | its foundation, recalled that ‘four men, | | the Jdate Sir Willlam Os!er, Dr. Willlam | H. Welch, Dr. W. S. Halsted and Dr. | Howard A. Kelly, started the Medical | School and added: “We regard the| | celection of four men for th2 founding of this new institution as a happy omen for success. “Just 85 the four great dostors started the Medical School without the re-| straint and limitation of a plan fixed | in advance of their arrival, =o the four | new professors of the institute for the | study of Jaw will have in their hands | every liberty in th formation of the | institution,” he said. Provision for Support. | Financial provisions have been made | to support the institute for five years, | and in the meantime an effort will be | made to provide a permanent endow- (ment, Dr. Ames sald in his announce- ! ment. | Among those consulted concerning | plans for the institute, Dr. Ames said, | were such jurists as Charles E. Hughes, | | Harlan F. Stone, Elthu Root, President | Ernest M. Hopkins of Dartmouth Col- | lege, Judge R. A. Burch of the Supreme | Court of Kansas, Frederick R. Coudert | of New York, Willlam Draper Lewis, dircetor of the American Law Institute, and D. F. Houston, former Sccretary ; of the Treasury, | During the academic 1928, while the faculty members will con- | centrate on their own research prob- | | 1ems and formulate their course for the | future, no students will be enrotled, the | announcement said. Properly qualified | s who wish to be associated with searches of members of the facul- ty may make application for the privi- | leges, Dr. Ames added, explaning that ! later there would be provision for teach~ | Ing to the extent that might be neces- | sary for training students in the science {of legal research, CAMP QUOTAS FILLED. | Third year Group Will Begin Outing| This Week. | | ! The hot weather has brought to ca- | sacity applications for ths third party of | camvers to spand two weeks at Camp {Good Will in Rock Creek Park and samp Pleasant at Blue Plains, operated under the Summer outings committes, located at 1022 Eleventh street. This {third group will arrive on Tuesday and | Wednesday to take the place of the sec- ond party ending its outing today and | tomorrow . Alr pilots of Alaska declare that Win- | | ter fiylng is safer than Summer, for in the coider weather each of the hun- dreds of ice and snow covered lakes that dot the Interior affords a suitable land- ing field, weeks. After the Upshur returns, two weeks honece. she will lie at her berth at the Weshington Navy Yard for a week before starting the third and final cruise. Newport Today. The vessel is scheduled to make New- port, R. I, this afternoon, and there will join the Destroyer Fox with the New York Reserves, and these two ves- sels will cruise as a “make-up" division for the two weeks, the Upshur taking charge, as Comdr. Hersey is the senior officer ‘of the two ships Heretofore the Upshur has joined the Atlantic scouting fleet for maneuver: but this part of the Navy left Newpor last week and now is at sea. The ves- sels will make Menemsha Bight their base, and will put in there several time: durinz the vovage, going probably next | Saturday and Sunday to Martha's| Vineyard for liberty for the crew. TWO VOLUNTEER TO FIGHT | FIRE, ARE SLIGHTLY HURT | Passersby Suffer Burns as They Battle Explosion Blaze Before Firemen Come. * Two men were slightly burned early last night while fighting a fire which followed an explosion ecaused by the combustion of an accumulation of gas around an automatic water tank heater in a small room In rear of a stoge and apartment house at 1602 L street. The injured men were Carl W. Quack~ enbuch, 26, Arlington, Va., who was burned on his left arm, and E. J. Mudd, 8, 3707 Brandywine street, who suffered a slight burn on the face. The men, who were passersby, fought the flames with small fire extinguishers brought to them by persons In the neighborhood, until the firemen arrived. CHURCH ANNOUNCEM BAPTIST. National Baptist Memorial | 16th St. and Columbia Road. REV. G, G, JOHNSON, Pastor. Services 11 AM. and 8 P.M. Rev. Carter Helm Jones, D. D. of Atlanta, Ga. Preaches at Both Services “Mr. Minister, are you very keen on this provision,” Hindenburg asked. “It seemes to me if Bismarck and the other chancellors were not received with sa- lutes. there is no need introducing the | custom under this republic. Let us not | be more pompous than royalty.” The provision was promptly eliminated. After the ministers' reports come the diplomatic receptions, followed by visi from distinguished men in all walks of life. The President appreciates ability and accomplishment in whatever phase | of human endeavor it may show itself and is glad to receive representative men. On the other hand, he does not approve of the “shake hands” idea ig vogue America. An audience with the head of the nation should be ex- clusive enough to be a distinction, b apparently believes Lunch is usually taken with the fam- flv. As all things in the President Iife, it is a simple affair, brightened th> presence of his two_grandchildren, MT. VERNON STEAMER Charles Macalester Leaves ith St. Wha Daily 10 A.M. and 2:30 P.M. Round Trip, 85¢ Admissien, 25¢ d Luneh Counter ernon not_open an v COMING DOWN IN OUR NEW BUICK WAS SURE SWELL YOU RE- MEMBER HOW WE UNED TO WORRY IN THE OLD BUS of — || 714 12th St. NW. Main 7320 | VITA Exerciser and Reducer BOOKS All Kinds. (‘lnnglnclnd Browse! BIG BGOK SHOP, 933 G St. Wonderful Value Phone Us for an Estimate George Plitt Co., Inc. Phone M. 4224 20 East Oxford St. Chevy Chase, Md. 8 rooms, 3 baths, finished attic, garage, completely re- modeled and refinished. A splendid machine for home ex- ercise and scientific weight reduc- tion. Come tn for tree demonstration Priced at cost to present owner Reasonable in Price Terms nd on your own terms Open daily from 9 to 3 and from 6 to 9 P.M. L. W. Groomes, 1416 F St. Get It _at GIRION Transportation Bui ding 17th and H Sts. N.W. 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