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h’// \\\\\\\\\| / \\\\ 3 S X ANNIVERSARY SALE TWO DAYS ADVANCE *SELLING—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY — BEST VALUES OF THE YEAR Tune in on WRC Today 5:30 to 6, 6:15 to 6:30 For Our Novelty Musical Program Satisfaction Since 1859 GSPALA 810-818 Seventh St. Paints and Enamels L] for Porch & Lawn Chairs Now’s the time to “doll up” porch furniture, lawn benches, swings, etc. We’ve the right finishes for the job; also Paints, Enamels, Varnishes and Stains for all other seasonal needs. € Quality finishes only, and buying at Reilly’s means the saving of— Specially Low Prices Galvanum Paint for Metal Garages HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS & GLASS 1334 New York Ave.—Phone Nat'l 1703 Drastic cut in price on SANKA CoFreEl Thanks to the decline in green coffee prices, the wholesale price of Sanka Coffee has been reduced. As a result, your grocer will be able - to offer—perhaps is already offering—this de- licious coffee at a substantially lower price. Take advantage of this price-cut—drink Sanka Coffee with every meal! COFFEE DRINK IT AND SLEEPI | Sanka Coffee Is a superior blend of the choicest Central and South American coffees—with 97% of the caffein removed. ©: 1990, 8. C. Corp. ¢ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, MAY 1, CONZAGA ORATOR WINS N CONTES J. Loren Freund Is Victor in Private and Parochial School District. An oration, well phrased and imagi- | native, yet concise and clear, with a polished, forceful delivery, yesterday won for J. Loren Freund of Gonzaga College the championship of the private and parochial district in The Star's 'area of the National Oratorical Contest. Although small in stature, the 18 year-old high school senior spoke in a | vital, resonant voice that carried to all || quarters of the auditorium of St. Paul's | Academy and riveted the attention of the capacity audience. Employing metaphor and simile, he || developed his subject, “The Foundations || of the Constitution,” portraying the struggle of freedom through the ages for recognition and its final embodi- ment in America’s basic law. Manner Reflects Experience. Preund’s manner reflects his consider- | able experience in debate and is marked with easy gestures and a deliberative tone which at times rises smoothly to || emotional heights, apparently without || strain or conscious effort. || _ The son of Mrs. Celia Freund of 1724 || Seventeenth street, he is president of || his class at Gonzaga and prominent in debating, dramatics and elocution. Last year he was chosen to represent his school, but was prevented from taking ipart in later eliminations because of |illness. The six judges were almost unanimous in choosing him to represent the private and parochial district in The Star area finals, five of them awarding him first place. In recognition of his victory, Freund was presented with a check for $100 by Col. Leroy Heron, advertising manager of The Star, who also made awards of gold medals to all the contestants. The winner becomes a contestant in The Star area finals May 8, the prize for which is a two-and-a-half-month trip to Europe in company with the six other zone champions, who will take part in the national finals here May 24. Ronald Hubbard Is Second. Second place in yesterday's contest went to Ronald Hubbard, 19 years old, || of the Woodward School for Boys. He '| spoke on “The Constitution; a Guar- antee of the Liberty of the Individual,” emphasizing its safeguards of personal freedom. His speech was delivered with animation and was received enthusi- astically by the audience. The other speaker, completing the group of contestants, was Eileen Halti- gan, 18-year-old senior of St. Paul's Academy, who is the daughter of Pat- || rick J. Haltigan, reading clerk of the House of Representatives. She spoke on “The Citizen; His Privileges and Duties Under the Constitution.” ‘The meeting opened about 3:30 in | the afternoon with Stephen E. Kramer, assistant superintendent of public schools, presiding. He delivered a brief introductory address, explaining the history and purpose of the oratorical || contest, and then presented Miss Halti- !|gan, who was followed by Hubbard. || Freund spoke last. The Holy Trinity Academy Orchestra rendered two selec- tions. || 'The judges were Dr. Charles Hart, professor of logic at Catholic Univer- sity: Dr, Leo F. Stock of the division of historical Tesearch, Carnegie Institution of Washington, and professor of Ameri- can history at Catholic University; Rev. George L. Farnham, professor of public | || speaking at George Washington Uni- versity; Dr. George Morton Churchill, professor of history at George Wash- ington University; Dr. Walter J. O'Con- || mor, professor of business administra- || tion at Georgetown University, and James S. Ruby, jr., professor of Eng- lish at Georgetown University. || 'The contest assembly was concluded with the audience singing “The Star Spangled Banner” to the accompani- ment of the Holy Trinity Academy Orchestra. ASK JAPANESE AID || Moscow Invites Engineers to Over- | haul Russian Railways. By Cable to The Star. 1—Moscow has_invited pant eers to overhaul the Rus- slan raflways as a result of the decline in Soviet railroad traffic, according to reports received here today. ~The Japanese railroad delegation of 20 per- sons, which has just arrived in Moscow, includes politicians and financiers. In diplomatic circles here it is intimated that this indicates secret Russo-Japanese co-operation, which might later be joined by China. (Copyright, 1930.) e g Buffalo in the Arctics. As & result of the success attending the introduction of the reindeer into in the northern part of the United States and Southern Canada. Nineteen American buffaloes were lib- erated more than a year ago at Jarvis Creek in Alaska, and while they have been carefully watched they have been given no special care, except an oc- casional ration of food when nature had cut off the supply. The last re- rts indicate that the animals were mflvlnx in the most satisfactory J. LOREN FREUND Of Gonzaga College, who won the finals of the private and parochial district in The Star’s area of the National Oratori- cal Contest, FORD LIKELY GARBAGE . CONTRACT BIDDER Experiments With Reduction Into Commercial By-products Have Been Successful. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, May 1.—Henry Ford's ex- periments with the reduction of garbage to commercial by-products was ad- vanced to a stage which encourages those engaged in the work to believe that the motor magnate soon may be in the market for all of the garbage of Greater Detroit. ‘The experiments, which have been conducted for a month, were discussed last night by an official of the Ford Motor Co. A special retort plant, built by Ford, has consumed a ton and a half of garbage from dining tables of the suburb of Dearborn dalily, he said. The result has been luction of commercial quantities of ethyl alcohol, methyl alcohol, benzol, and from each ton of garbage, in addition, two gallons of light oil, eight gallons of tar, gas which was used for heating the retorts and a considerable residue believed to be of value as a fertilizer. Ford has been using the garbage of London, England, in his plant there for some time. However, there is no effort made in London to separate the paper and tin cans and other refuse from the '?tl:la waste, as is done in American cities. ‘The City of Detroit rropef is now paying $400,000 a year for disposal of Its wet garbage by a reduction company. | RESORTS. RESORTS. 1930. wentieth Century Comfort in a Seventeenth Century Setting... The Log Lodge Hotel opens July 1st EUROPEAN PLAN 685 E22H3 ATLANTICCITY.N.J. AR e On Ocean an walk. New—Firep: HOTEL APOLLO 4! On Boardwalk, facing ocean. Central to gitractions. Rates $3 up; with bath, 33 manner. RESORTS. “Atlantio and temperate of ihe Eagles afford ideal boati bathing. hole and 9-hole. For details write THE LAKESIDE—John 8. Kirk & Son 'wo_splendid golf cou EDGEMERE_L_ B. C, Ligt p . Kiess THE FOREST INN—Edgar R. RESORTS. A mysterious land! Where totem poles tell family history. Where the sun shines ot night. Where the seme glacier is “dead” and going backwards . . . and very much elive and coming forwards. Towns grow on stilts and. cling to rocks. You have Northern Lights for a canopy . . - and bril- liant lowers for & carpet. Canadian Ask for Tour A-15 See it for yourself! On a Canadian Pacific Princess Liner . . . with all outside rooms. From Skagway cross White Pass Trail . . o for Lake Atlin . .. or down the Yukon to Dawson City. Enroute, stop at Banff, the Alpine playground of the Canedian Rockies. Spend a week ot the unrivalled Banf Springs Hotel. R C. E. Phelps, b | N ‘st New ;‘é'.‘;:‘ Agent, #lllfl. all up. Directors f LUCERNE-IN-QUEBEC COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION LIMITED and Members of the Board of Governors of the Seigniory Club ° H. M. SADDLEMIRE, President . HON. L. A, TASCHEREAU, Premier of [the Province of Quebec. E. W. BEATTY, K. C., Chairman and President of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company. HON. FREDERIC L. BEIQUE, K. C. President, of the Banque Canadienne Nationale. SIR CHARLES GORDON, G. B. E., President, Bank of Montreal SIR HERBERT HOLT, President, Royal Bank of Canada. LUCERNE-IN-QUEBEC OFFICES NEW YORK . .« 10 East4oth St BOSTON . . . . . Litle Bidg. PHILADELPHIA, . 1201 ChestnutSt. MONTREAL Dominion Sq. Building CANADIAN PACIEIC CANADIAN PACIFIC OFFICES: INEW YORK, Madison Ave., at 44thSt. BOSTON . « .« 405 Boylsten Si PHILADELPHIA . . 1500 Locust St 'WASHINGTON, 14th & New York Ave. PITISBURGH + o+ .« 338 Sixth Ave. BUFFALO 160 Pearl St. .o HISTORIC OLD CHATEAU PAPINEAU Generations ago, the Seig- niorial castle of Lovis Joseph Papineau. Today, the luxurious Seigniory Club House. sponsorecl lay the Canadian pac’ifié All the urban luxury afforded by these Twentieth Century days housed in a hotel of rustic type and appropriately situated in a forest domain of 80,000 beautiful acres! Intriguing tradition links this exclusive club vacationland to the romantic 17th Century, for Lucerne-in-Quebee was formerly the historic Seigneurie de la Petite Nation, one of the eatliest of the French-Canadian grants directly traceable to King * Louis Xl of France. 3 On July 1st, the Log Lodge at Lucerne-in-Quebec, overlooking the silvery Ottawa River and commanding a glorious view of the mag- nificent Laurentian Mountains . . . will be ready for the distinguished members and guests who are already making reservations. The Log Lodge ranks with the leading resort hotels of the world in luxury and beauty. It is-unique. Its architecture and interior decoration are in keeping with the simplicity and natural grandeur of its sur- roundings—yet its appointments rival those of any cosmopolitan hotel in Europe or America. It is 75 miles west of Montreal—ijust a swift overnight journey away (only a few hours distant if you travel by air). But the Log Lodge is only a part of this distinctive community in which you may live—all year, if you wish. Restored to its former grandeur, historic Chateau Papineau—stately “‘manoir” of long ago—now the Seigniory Club, will continue to offer genial hospitality to the gentle- folk who join Lucerne-in-Quebec's vacation colony. In this fascinating country you will find a new Stanley Thompson golf course (now building), and a 9-hole course now ready for play, @ beautiful outdoor swimming pool, tennis courts, archery range, riding stables and bridle paths, toboggan chutes, ski jumps and bob-sled slides. Sports for the four seasons and for lovers of all sports! You can become a member of Lucerne-in-Quebec and enjoy these recreational privileges forever. You can plan and build your own log cabin home, in your own bit of evergreen forest. Our craftsmen will build for you now or later . . . and your expenditure may be “conveniently spread over years. With your homesite purchase, you will receive a life membership in the Seigniory Club—plus full access to all its engaging social and recreational advantages, without initiation fees or annual dues. But this onlytells you a small part of the interesting romance of Lucerne- in-Quebec. Learn the complete story of the Log Lodge and the Seigniory Club membership plan. It's fascinatingly told in two beautifully illustrated brochures which we will gladly send you, without obligation. THIS COUPON FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 8 E-13 LUCERNE-IN-QUEBEC COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, Limited Dominion Square Building, Montreal, Quebec [0 Send me the LOG LODGE Booklet (Check) [ gnd the Membership Plan Bookiet Address e .