Evening Star Newspaper, March 27, 1929, Page 26

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"THE EVENING STAR., WASHINGTOX, D. C. WEDNESDAY: MARCH 27, 1929. L S R R O P LY R AR A T N SN T PRI | aves g several week: | stance Bennett, was obtaining a divorce | wife until she was well recovered from BHERRY BlUSSUMS U. S. CRUISER GREETED. |FOUNDER OF COLLEGE lf;:“;'yCofl&:fiz,v:mrfirmt;ies{:m“fng i?n France were confirmed by BRIND | severe attack of Sppendieitis. They | ol ik county officials, has indicated losses of | Plant upon his arrival from Europe. - | were married at Greenwich, Gonn,, in : | IN KANSAS ARRESTED | from $500.000 to $1.500,000 to investors, Constance Benmett's Plea for Sepa-| -Yes." he said, “Mrs. Plant & get- | 1oss. B e e R L | officials said. Loans aggregating $3,500, s | i Courtesies in Constantinople Port, B bebelerment. n ObHHesEIE: WIEh | ggr:;‘:;;rgsdl‘r;;;;;::d:_&re!::‘x:‘sn‘:. ;’,k}?,_.; CENEPANETNQER Sut N A | i onn Conmbany Olarpea | volvsm | NEW YORK, March 27 (P).—Re- | fathcr, Commodore Morton F. Plant, re- | blades were used in other parts of the The United States cruiser Raleigh, s i 3 l | ports that his wife, the former Con- 'mained in Paris at the bedside of his | world last year. flagship of the naval forces in Europe, gainst R. S. Russ, 68, | N w rk | e arrived here yesterday, bringing Vice | py ine associated Press. | | {Capital’s Floral Fete Ex-|Admiral o M. Daston. The o Urkish| PITTSBURG, Kans. March 27.—R.| ! . government ordered that every cou . o be _extended, and appointed as 3 , 68 years old, founder of the Sunday, March 31 Your Life Special Through Trai t dr. Ertogrul, the high- | Kansas State Teachers' College here 3 u _ : : P i it f the | Farm Loan & Investment Co. of Pitt I Direct {0 Penna. Sta..ith Ave. st National Festival. mg‘:‘x;li‘r:nrwl since the foundation of the i S L TR R B el lnsurance P ans Leave Washinzton % The Americans were given free passes | f cmbezzlement in connection with I | ting a’ divorce. 'I expect the decrec | ration Admitted by Husband. | will be entered very soon.” ! S Plant, heir to the millions of his step- | More than 115,000,000 American razor A T T T I Y . Are You Carrying - to ll Siamboul museums and ferries | operation of the investment company |} Daserve the : N - | svamesiaecncosimae oy Rt ot s te v il se Bis, 055 _ Life Insurance—Enough? | | reception and ball in -honor of Admiral appearance April 3 at a p | floral pageant which will for the next' Daviom and Turkish naval officess will liminary hearing on the complaint, fed| Counsel Of a 2 3 I sin gl\';" hi dinner on board the battle- | by County torney Tom D. nter. | hres AweRks eritinnic The sl 0 ;Ship l'l{Td_)audne. An examination of the affairs of the | § ennsylvaniaRailroad' jwere grected with delight almost a| g Tooioriment hes granted pormis-| — | Specialist. o ; Life insurance is intended to replace the income || weck ago, when a few of the single! yon (i the seapiane cattied by the | 't you now provide, so that the support of your i white cherry blossoms began to show | Raleigh to make routine tests over ol y |ogainst the shining stems. Stamboul, B | DoFALSE TEETH i JET cosaansiaustings || wife and family may be conu?ued. Are you his lovely flower - o % ] A 5 I mac has become the magnet for an | Anti-Noise League Formed. | Rock, Slide or Slip’ | by study and experience = carrying Cnough to assure that? If not—take s e e | advise you in making your out more. It’s a wise investment. T AT | s | ;“,.2.:?3&@u‘,’“fik‘?‘u’iw’?”‘%!”.,.?fi;fi\.{ | o SR e sl e Thete Ittt ite I Nine out of ten beneficiaries are not experienced it it v JamnmfEm"r‘mmr':"y;ft"r(‘r;fm“m"?m A biast || Beasnnt Get asteeth s 3 Feoples able to accent the responsi- in hand.lmg lafge sums. .To'prc.vent loss, the bave regarded (he flowering cherry with | of their horn at cvery street corner. i R e I custom is growing of making life insurance pay- | admiration and reverence, ana_have | | e ee-Shey 1 y e e ) et | CANADIAN NATIONAL=TO LVERYWHERE IN CANADA || such men have united to | able. directly to a trust company as trustee in | the Department of Agriculture expiains | R o i i L order to insure lasting protection for the bene- in a brochure on thesc alien trees. | 2 b Y = as members of ey | Washingion togay is the home of the| SPETAE glOI‘IOUS vacation days in | Ao flras . AT LT T | unique spectacle which will be enjoyed ! by hundreds of thousands for the next ilvetwaRkalL ol i | The Life i This arrangement—called a “LIFE INSUR- | theaivision.of forcien. pande. of the | et N ; ‘ § ANCE TRUST”—meets with the hearty ap- £ N | Bureau of Plant Indusiry, and his stuay > S i ‘ Insurance Club proval of the insurance companies. Our trust | the most illuminating hitherto pre £ COLDS! i nrmibimii ‘ NATIONAL | of Washington i ik it A . 4 the cherry far back into the cras of | & { protection and consultation will entail no Stopthemin aday with HILL'S. Itcom - unwritten history. But more than a \ ar g 4 % bines the four necessary helps in one: | thowsand vears " of recorded hisiory | | SEigy T obligation upon you. 1.Stops the Cold i s iy S ' : 2.Checks the Fever | 1800 Emperor Tokugaw R;:gdhx‘nyr‘ec than Vacats idithe high MB bl tenii it | ;::.:fi;d i :':k“" 3. Opens the Bowels | ) acation amid the highest golf and tennis, swim in a . Lyncl 4. Tones the System Il trpaor::pl’?‘nf::e f;tz:'c‘w;‘ylgg; T ' Canadian Rockies at Jasper warmed pool. Intheevening | G. Lea Stabler®™ T H E W A S [-] IN‘ }TON LO A N BILL’S < This grove is among the sacred 2 Park Lodge—ride trail or ' ‘music, dancing and bridge. J. E. (Bill) McCombs | ispots in the blooming season, and the if motor to famous glacicrs, Enjoy glorious sport_or | Lawrence V. Lampson CASCARA-QUININE |trees SRS D e the | 7 canyons, mountain ks completerestand relaxation Dan J. ‘Harrison i AND TRUST COMPAN i In the RED BOX, Al Druggista | ™" POUA¢- , and wild life haunts. Climb in the bracing air of Cana- Kenneth H. Hunter ) | Yoshino Farliest in Bloom. | with Swiss guides, play da's Alpine wonderland. Charles B. Sinclair was the English botanist, John i o | 3 : 1= Main Office N . ot Nomlfh. who placed this GEO. L. BRYSON ames A. Maloney i Offi non-fruitful cherry in the class “prunius | © § For ookl and g0 L T S0 TR G Guy Withers F Street at Ninth 17th Street at G cerrulata” The earliest blooming information, cone fpip Nl Sany s Herbert L. Barlow OHN B. LARNER, President Tende!‘ specimens, those around the Tidal ault this office. Tet. Main 2333 Russell: Bhelk = J L ‘R, Presiden } B known as Yoshino. Pure Achin g white and single, they ate the sturdiest | [: ANADI AN N ATION AL il WILLIAM H. BADEN LEONARD MARBURY and best Known of all varieties, and | i - have been planied exchusively i the — ] Y ——— Frank D. Roach | . Trust Officer Ass’t Trust Officer : famous. park of Tokio, There are 11| . 5 A | Varby B Rical F EE T B different later blooming double specles | GIhe Largest Railway System in America i 99.9% % on the east and west drives leading t0 ' OPERATING RAILW AYS.ETEAMSHIPS.HOTPLS - TELEG! Hains Point, and these open their Dblossoms in rapid succession, beginning | {about the time that the single white | | flowers on the Basin begin to fade, | | thus making a continuous panorama of glorious blooms for more than a month. | | ° ° Those who -have heard the graphic | ' descriptions of Mrs. Elizabeth Bisland | A 1 l n e Wetmore, Mrs, Charles Burnett and the | [] 0 0 ° late Eliza R. Scidmore or have read | the luminous pages of Lafcadio Hearn or Pierre Loti on the Island Kingdom when the cherries are in bloom realize | ‘Hmmly what these flowers mean in that | part of the world. | Mrs. William Howard Taft has added | her eloquent chapters of explanation of | the Capital’s chief floral treasure, and | her erithusiastically expressed admira- tion, her constant visits from Manila {to various parts of Nippon during the | | flowering seasons formed one of the | strong reasons for the mayor of Tokio | S i ¢ S-Add " |presenting the City of Washington in 5 - ; {1911 with nearly 3,000 trees of some 27 e & 99 |different kinds. These trees were found Bathe Them: n ‘T infested with disease and were ordered A e ok 4 . destroyed. 3 e minute You put vour feet in “Tig" bath you (e,(:l{ e ainbring Mrs. Taft Plants Tree. drawn out and comfort just soaking | The second - consignment of more I o™, Rood your Mred. swollen: |than.2,000 came in the early Spring of | feet. Takes all the soreness out-of | Mfs. Taft planted the first tree of that | corns and callouses too. Get a box |glorious circle around the Besin, and of “Tiz" at any drng or department | Viscountess Chinda, wife of -the Japa- store for‘a few cents and keen yuur | nese Ambassador, the second. Col. Spen- feet fresh, sweet and comfortable, | cer Cosby, superinterident of public | A B — | buildings and grounds, and Miss Eliza i R. Scidmore were the only witnesses of | this momentous event. After the | method used in Tokio, the Yoshino early white single blossoming cherry | was selected because of the proximity | of the Basin to the city, and the blos- soms could be enjoyed 'by more people than in the instance of the later bloom- | . T D M e RAPH AND FXPRFSSSFRVICE -RADIO STATIONS |ing sort. In Japen visitors to the lovely trees walk beneath them, and to ride would be a sacrilege. Many recall the entire family of the former Japanese Ambas- sador, M. Matsudaira, leaving their machine at the outer edge of the park and walking in their native costumes o)ver the grass to the earliest flowering cherr; | President and Mrs. Coolidge loved to | see' the blossoms in the early morning, | and many times the East and the West met, the President and the Ambassador | chatting for a moment, while Mrs. Coolidge heard little Setsu, now the wife of Prince Chichubi, heir of the Japanese throne, recite the legend of the ' blossoms and the refrain which is sung 1 ; by the children of Nippon as they| them over the image of Buddha. In 3 their native haunts the cherry blooms . at the edge of dense forests of crypto- L meria, giant fir and pine, which are divested of the lower limbs in order that | a perfect background may be presented. ’ I \ s . | For the reason that the cherries on . Mak Roo For use in all MOLOE | inc riixi Sain have mach 5 paces | 0 € m |ground, they are ardently admired by mm- . cars at any seam~ | the Japanese Embassy contingent and | for Sprlng Stocks by all who have seen the glories of the for Sale by | East when the cherry blooms. On the Foint those odorous double pink flowers of the class Ichiyo, sometimes an inch ;F. & w. Grand |ond hreequartens “across - have "nol ! davdi s background at all and stand in isolated 400 Seventh St. N.W. groups. Few of the cherry trees were killed by the flood of last Fall $169 Pillow-Arm Living Room Suite Varieties on Point, 2 i 5 5 s three pieces, uphols In the class of the double deep. pink A magnificent suite of e pieces, upholstered flowers on the Point are the Fugenzo, in two-tone jacquard velour. Frames have large ball Shag s ura Mndthe Kotagen, o feet. Cushions are reversible ast is one of the strongest trees an : i bears handsome double pink blossoms, and spring-filled. The suite which withstand the. wind better than consists of a large settee, the more delicate Naden sieboldii, which $185 Kroehler Bed-Davenport Suite K $169.75 Combination Mohair Suite Throne chair, armchair and settee, upholstered A magnificent suite, with and covered in .comlginltion open cane backs and mahog- mohair. Each piece is made any-finished frame. Spring. with a mahogany-finished rail filled cushions are covered in top. Serpentine front. Save jacquard velour. You save 559.75. Buy now at the low $56 if you buy now ........ priceof .... Hoen 2077 {shows unusual lightness of color and hutfon-back chair fand wing !texture, but has barely a week of bloom- | chair. Save $34 ......... ing. The Japancse culiivate more than | 35 L = 7 77 70 20777, 7 7 e bavis i 0% S ' || }the Plant Industry Bureau. to whom the mayor_of Toklo sent some 25 varieties #in 1907, found that only about half that {number flourished under the soil_and | elimatic _conditions here. Dr. Fair- | e pratihare, Tor malss - $175 Rail-Top Living Room Suite $215 Genuine Mohair Living Room Suite ihome In North Chevy Chase have the Three massive pieces, luxuriously upholstered i n honor of being the oldest local speci- % S . Three luxurious pieces, wing chair, armchair genuine mohair, with frieze seat cushions—paneled mens of these glorious trees. This handsome suite is upholstered in blue and i | Another discovery of vital importance 3 and settee. Serpentine fronts, loose cushion re- backs, wood arms, carved ,made by the division of foreign plants | taupe or rose and taupe jac- A versible seats, covered ‘in wood legs, fronts and bot- L e S e poac quard velour. Loose cushion $ . 100% mohair and moquette. tom rail. . Large settee, arm- ‘::x"r!uhlll‘_""r ;rog:g'a‘bdm‘l(xi{ nl‘}]:: u(“:::e:;l:‘ Sl [-.ach' e fi“!sked \ Mahogany-finished top r?"' chair and throne chair. Save ment experimental farms to produce in with a mahogany - finished Velour on outside back. You $94.- Now'at ......c.c0.... g course of time mighty groves of cherries | $369 Genuine Mohair Living Room Suite favorable climate. Tokio is ot alone {in vast collctions of Movering cherry. R ) M/////////////////////%//////////%/////////fix/z%%////%y\i where p?lgrn;n;:; ;:cus: nAra:fn-Yn;;‘:: Lifts Right Of —No Pain |vhich iradition says was the first grove of flowering Yoshino visited by the sun 4 . . . 5 . et : {Ficy on ‘eac s of the River Sumia i i N illow Arm Living Room Suite “rsn::?n:v"h:é'n{:‘]nrli\:];'a (1"";\1\”;‘:;:‘];in]moshml each side of the River Sumida $119 Loose Cushion Suite $215 Pillo g ; eezone” on an achin ; | the cherry trees bloom valiantly agains| : : z . 3 that corn stops hurting, then shortly |the smoke and grime of factories. Upholstered in multi-colored jacquard, carve you lift it right off with fingers ]A n‘t.s}:we };finlr’n ;:*lrvflden nél Jn%&n Three pieces—settee, arm- . i mahogany-finished frame and legs. Reversible when the cherries bloom, and gradu- Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of | " Teonte of Washingion ace pe- | chair and wing chair—up- spring-filled cushions. 'lh_lls “Freezone” for a few cents, ginning 1o feel its lure. If the promise holstered and covered in- % 2 suite consists of a large pil- sufficient to remove every ;3_‘::’5 Qgfin“i‘“:m{’l“'_";‘;‘w"’v‘:‘; ;:‘:M;";‘fi jacquard velour. Loose cush- 3 low arm settee, button-back hard corn, soft corn, or corn ( | emerald foliage and radiant blossoms in ion seats. Save $44.50 and . chair and armchair. Save | between the toes, and the all the parks and byways, a national buy now ....... AL $46. Now at .............. foot callouses, with- | cherry festival may be proclaimed. o I mission to export" two black swans fo England,” where they will grace the estate of Lord Dewar. il. Sav i ial, 2 if v all over Washington and in cities of op ailReveiSic, Srects SayeScoit youlbivnne: - Z27%%2%%7

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