Evening Star Newspaper, June 17, 1929, Page 7

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THE 'EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, JUNE 17, 1929. [ . | Eleventh and N streets, after 28 families | Hoboes Send Ambassador. powered in_convention assembled by| Find | whose ories of ““May Gioit gPant. you & J. ‘ were ordered from the building. Several | the International Brotherhood Welfare | $8,000 on Dead Beggar. '13‘0?3‘ F;:f:b:r!m ”-’-"mff Ygl: live for- Gets Navy Post | thousand dollars' worth of furniture| NEWARK. N. J. June 17 (P\— [ Association, of which he is the mew| STAMBOUL, Turkey, June 17 (®).— | cver with the one you love” and the e | | stored there was damaged by smoke and | American hoboes are sending an um-[ president, to confer with a view to es- | Nearly $8.000 has been found in the like appeal so much that the average bassador to Europe. Nicholaf Klein is| tablishment of “jungles” or cases in | tattered coat of a beggar who died re- cently. ADMR.D. F. SELLERS nakes much more than a laborer 1S GIVEN NEW POST Sucagetls Admr. Campbell as ludge Advocate Gen- + " eralof Navy. ‘The Navy Department today offi- clally announced the appointment of | Rear Admiral David F. Sellers as| judge adyocate genmeral of the Navy.| Admiral Sellers already is in Wash- | ington and will take over his dutfes im- mediateiy. He succeeds Rear Admiral | Edward H. Campbell, who has been | appointed commander of the Special | Service Squadron aboard the U, S. S. | Rochester. | Admiral Sellers was born in Austin Tex., in 1874, and appointed to the Naval Academy from New Mexico in | 1890. He was commissioned rear ad- | miral in 1927. He has had considerable staff duty during his naval career and was on duty at San Francisco during the international exposition in 1915.| In 1914 he was executive officer of the | U. S. S. Arkansas. In 1915 he com- | manded the scout cruiser, U. S. S. Salem. A course of instruction at the | Naval War College at Newport, R. I, | was undertaken in 1916. During the World War, Admiral Sel- lers commanded the battleship Wiscon- 8in and the transport Agamemnon. In 1919 he was on duty in the office of naval operations and later served on | the staf of the president of the Naval | War Co™ ze. In 1920 Admiral Sellers was on « aty in the Bureau of Naviga- tion and in 1921 he was selected as the aide to the Secretary of the Navy. Following that duty, Admiral Sel- lers was in command of the new naval training station at San Diego, then | as chief of staff of the commander of | the Scouting Fleet. Since 1927 Ad- | miral Sellers has been commander of | the Special Service Squadron. ‘ 3 Skl e | Dr. Carl Krause, Educator, Dies. NEW YORK, June 17 () —Dr. Carl | Albert Krause, head of the modern lan- | guage department of Jamaica High School and a ner instructor at Pur- | £ | | | \ { UNIERWS 0. REAR ADMIRAL SELLERS. TWO GLIDER FLYERS DIE: STUHM, West Prussia, June 17 (4. —Two of the best known German glider vers were killed instantly yesterday The wings broke from the fuselage of an_ airplane they were flying in the dedication ceremony of a war memorial here. Thousands of persons saw with horror the body of the plane separate | from the wings and the aviators crash | into the center of the market place, 150 feet from the mer . The wings fell into a small lake Y. One of the fi was Ferdinand Schulz, who was credited with world | records for both height and endurance in gliders. He was a war pilot and since had flown almost constantly in glider contests in many parts of Europe. Bruno | Kaiser, his companion, also a war ve | water. & | Pinding difficulty in coping with the | fire, due to the smoke which billowed | from the basement and up the elevator shafts, the first firemen on the scene turned in a second alarm, which brought out rescue squad No. 1. Members of sailing at his own expense duly em-' European seaports. | the latter unit employed their gas | Twenty-eight Families Tem- | masks to reach the scene of the blaze, | opening a path for the other firemen. While firemen extinguished the fiames porarily Driven Out by Fire in Apartment Basement. ing were so alarmed they began to re- -— | move their belongings, although the fire was confined to one quarter of the basement. | to the upper floors to assist residents to the street. Some occupants of the build- Donning gas masks to_protect them from the dense smoke, firemen extin- | guished a two-alarm blaze early yes- i terday afternoon in the basement locker | China has just ordered 14 two-seater rooms of the Alabama Apartments, light airplanes. Kay specializes in nationally advertized jewelry. Buy here on' credit at lowest cash prices. A year 75c a Week —buys this beautiful diamond ring and a dainty wrist watch with guaranteed jeweled movement. | in the basement, others were detailed | The city has 5000 beggars, | o; Fine Dry Cleaning Includes Safety HIS does not mean that every garment, if cleaned properly, will come out perfectly. Owing to conditions or age, frequently it is utterly impossible to dry clean an article without having it shrink, break or go to pieces. However, the experienced dry cleaner by looking at a gar ment, in the great majority of the cases, has an exact idea of what will happen in advance. He holds out no undue promises. From the background of his scientific experience, he talks to you straight from the shoulder. If he cannot be sure of doing vour work satisfactorily, he is not afraid to say so, for he would rather lose a job any day than disappoint a patron. Washington Cleansers Guild HALDEMAN CO,, Quality Dry Cleaners 1733 Pa. Ave. N.W. Franklin 822 WEST END LAUNDRY Launderers & Dry Cleaners Main 2321 BERGMANN'S DRY CLEANING & DYEING CO. (Successors to Tavenner's) 1006 H St. N.W. Main 3805 CARMACK DRY CLEANIN/ 1120 Holbrook Terrace L LERCH'S, Inc. 826 12th St. N.W. National 2021 SPINDLERS’ 801 11th St. N.W. National 2703 THE TOLMAN DRY CLEANING 6 Dupont Circle North 3445 abijlli'tg‘, M £ \ due, the ty of Cincinnati and Union Col Y., died yesterday at LIT a Brookly tel, where hg made his home. He was 56. He wag the author | of several modern language text books. | “Copyrighted, 1026" “Our~Word ix One “HBond” N SUITS $1650 He had given lectures at the University | | gissomhsrn California. _Surviving are | Open a charge account | widow, the former Miss Margaret 5 Bailey of Marion, Indiana, and a son‘l EISEMAN'S, 7th & F Pindley Bailey Krau: Y, The Julius Lansburgh Furniture Co., 909 F St. N.W. 7277777777777 7% WHEN ONE ROOM MUST BE TWO By BERKEY & GAY ) o Washington’s Largest Radio Stores - Announcing the New 1930 - SPARTON EQUASONNE Radio’s Richest Voice D Delivers a new Sparton Radio to your O home. No further payments for 30 days. S AN N N 7§, = W See these new models today — Beautiful console cabinets, new power tubes, dynamic speakers, shielded chassis and. marvelous tone quality. The New Equasonne Model 931 A complete new low-boy electric console with wonderful eye appeal. The face-to-face realism of this remarkable instrument will amaze you with its wonderful volume and tone fidelity. Complete ¢ Nothing Else |i!l | To Buy | The New Equasonne Model 301 An exquisitely carved high-boy of pure Italian design, ultra-powered and as grippingly har- monious as a rare old cello. TRADE IN YOUR OLD RADIO— SERVICE WITH EVERY SALE Kok KKk KA A Twelve Piece Group Created by BERKEY & GAY Designers and Arranged in An Ideal Setting by “ARTS & DECORATION” Magazine When one room must serve in the dual capacity of living room and dining room for the small family, this June Bride group offers a solution fashionably. Here are twelve picces, charming and perfectly harmonized in varying styles, so much so that Arts & Decoration magazine has offered an ideal room arrangement for the group as shown below. There are authoritative decorative ideas, too, which we will be glad to give you when you come in. Bought as a group by the June Bride for her new home, or individually as gifts for her, the group promises style that will stay in style for years. See it this week during the national presentation. A 1 i SIS For the entire group of twelve pieces exactly as fllustrated, or may be purchased separately. Convenient Deferred Payments Complete Nothing Else To Buy 7 and $—William and Mary console and mirror. 9—Early | American wing chair. 10— Renaissnce occasonal table. 1—Chippendale ladder-back chalr. 2—Sheraton-Colonial sec- Georgian 11 Heppelwhite high-back chair. 1:—Duncan Phyte drop- retary. 3—G sofs. 4—Art Moderne Coffee table. m! $—Louls XVI end table, 6—Georgian sofa chair. The cfulius Lansburghgfuraiture (30. Entrance—909 F' Street Qe Ehe Endae ] AT ST A TS AT AT ST g

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