Evening Star Newspaper, May 20, 1930, Page 10

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PECIAL XCURSION _ North Carolina Points One Fare for Round Trip Plus Twenty-five Cents 7 On Sale May 22nd, 23rd, 24th i:‘Good 10 Days Atlantic Coast Line 1418 H Street N.W. SILVERWARE e, sutomoblle parts, ehw reh s E‘.";‘t. e o, cquered at moderate cost by tor RSN GTS Bre ST MW, BMet. 0047 finance relief activities. ‘Teams of men cal to organization, “ sacrifice of of therefrom are being used 607-609 C St. This Is Paint-Up Clean-Up ployment to ‘worthy enterp ‘The vets will be paid rise.” who make to the contribution work is Commissioners. Calif,, John® F. Bell, actor, residence as Beverly the issuing divoreing Pasadena atforney. charged Bell has played PARIS, May 20 for “61” Porch Furniture N |=enk Ttzsnational ick Drying Enamel $1.80 qt. 31 .00 pt. hours. No sticking to e "" °',':'.‘,,:.:m Tondes MEtrv. Olil BUTLER-FLYN 607609 C St. Phone for Color Card two The _International foot ball team and now in Typioal Scenery Along the Overland Route—Columbia River Qorge Overland Route=—the “royal road” to a real vacation in the PACIFIC NORTHWEST No place in the world has finer summer days. Travel 200 miles through the Columbia River Gorge via splendid daily trains to Portland with through service to Tacoma and Seattle. Frequent sailings to Alaska and the Orient. ony 130,45 tivierm Seattle, Vancouver FROM WASHINGTON Victorla and Return Easy side trips to Rocky Mountain and Yellow- stone-Grand Teton, Zion-Bryce-Grand Canyon National Parks. Go Overland Route to see the most and get the best. THE Indorsed by President Hoover and by State and munijcipal officials throughout the country, the annual “Buddy Pop drive of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will be launched nationally on May 23 and will continue through May 29, with workers bent on raising enough money to maintain the orphans’ home of organization for another year and to \nvassers in the District lol the by ex vewr!:‘ n\mu; Hospital at North , Long "l‘he campaign,” the Pmident wrote the commander-in-chief “is & fitting lmhol ol those who died in the service of our country, and should re- mind us of the obligations and mcrmee demanded of all good citize: peace “The fact that the funds derived for the main- tenance of & national home for widows and orphans of deceased veterans and other pelief, including the fact that the manufacture of these popples gives m- ex-service men, adds to the worthiness of the cause. to give my heasty indorsement to this for their time. the organization pointed out that much relief work is done locally in addition to the orphans’ home, and that a yearly report of this submitted to the District ! e MRS. HINDS BRIDE AGAIN Pasadena Social Leader Weds John F. Bell, Actor. 'RENO, May 20 () —Mrs. Duvt.hy V. Hinds, soclal leader of Pasadena, ‘was married here last night to ‘who yesterday her from Samuels Hinds, She Hinds with cruelty. ‘They were married in 1915, screen parts has appeared in Southern California BANK SHARES GO FAST French Oversubscribe Issue of In- ternational. Inldt\mon (/7).—Shares of the were offered to the ‘public today and with PFrench investors. k of ately. 140 times in less Bank 'med to handle World War repara- Miss @iannini to Wed Grid Star. C’EO?’I(A! 19 (®)- f Clifford Hoffman, caj tain of 'the 1928 Stanford Unlvcmy mmplevununlormmtmd about Dy” f the tnd ns in time Iam glad the poppies Le-den of Foreign Wars buddy for fln ‘buddy poppies. Miss Arline Smith, one of the buddy poppy poppy anchor, which was made by the disabled men at the United States Veterans' Bureau Hospital, Northport, Long Island, N. Y. be placed on the waters of the Potomac on Memorial'day by Robert E. Peary Ship, hn. 427, in memory of those who gave their lives at sea. is anchor is on display at 1407 H street, which will be a headquarters py girls, with the Veterans of It will —Star Staff Photo. ARCHITECTS MEET INANNUAL SESSION Publicity Promotion Discuss- ed by Producers’ Counci in Advance. ‘gave following of & decree and Discussion of methods of wblmty for architects, the ‘meeting today of the Producers’ Ommcfl an organization affiliated with the American Institute of Architects, in the Mayflower Hotel. ‘The council met preliminary to the meeting _tomorrow of the institute proper. Both orlmlnf.lnm will con- tinue sessions through Friday. | Louis mume of st tu&eu il be the prine speaker al annu has just in the May- guests will include officials of the Department of Com- merce and numerous out-of-town arcl F. 8. Lawrence of New York, execu- tive secretary ot the council, will spesk between marked Settlement Byington of N Ymim ident of of New , pres| uneo\mmlwulbethevnndpnl session of the institute Vacationists Who Want Comfort— Go by Train Make certain the first few hours of your vacation will be pleasant. Travel via Overland Route and enjoy every convenience and._comfort. Overland Route serves 15 National Parks, more of the scenic West than any other railroad. REDUCED RAIL FARES ALL SUMMER ot little more than half the usual fares fo: Pacific Northwest and Alaska California and Hawaii Colorado Yellowstone-Grand Teton . Zion-Bryce-Grand Canyon Rocky Mountain National Parks “If it's a National Park, it's probably on the Overland Route” For complete information, cost and illustrated booklets, call on our Bureaus of chem ll'rlvel or mail the coupon. H.L.Lauby o C.N. 508 Commercial 201 Franklin Tnnt Trust Bldg. Building 15thand MarketSts, 15thand Cheltnutsu. Philadelphia, Pa. Please send me complete information and booklets. 142 1 am interested in a vacation trip to SRR . —mmmmmececce—————— ¥ ] Blabasatintiag bane ) OVERLAND ROUTE Chicago € NorthWestern -Union Pacific- mmwnhhtmbedwmdwmul- ing public archif and competent architectural services in the design of bulldings. itecture | Va., while the judges for other flowers are BUDDY POPPY SLE M IRIS SH(]W [}PENS T0 BEGIN MAY 23 Veterans of Foreign Wars Will Raise Orphans’ Home Money. AT BOTANIC GARDEN Approxlmately 8,000 Flowers | 5 of 40-Classes Placed on Exhibition. Approximately 8,000 flowers in a total of 40 different classes were on exhibit at the annual iris exhibition, under the auspices of the National Capital Dahlia and Iris Soclety, in' co-operation with the American Iris Society, in the green- houses of the Botanic Garden, on the south slde of Muyhnd avenue between Second and Third streets, at the open- ing of the exhibit this afternoon &t o'clock. The exhibit is to remain open :?fiu 10 o'clock tonight and wmorm exp!n hortie fly in selecting the winners in the various classes. In addition to the exhibits of irises, there were peonies, roses.and groups of mixed and hardy flowers on exhibit in several classes. There are many prize_awards. A coveted prize is a handsome silver. cup offered by The Evening _Star through the American Horticultural Soctety for the best exhibit of a local garden club or civic organization, -the membership of which is compmd large- ly of persons living in- or within & radius of 30 miles of Washington. . ‘The first organization Winnmg the cup three times in succession” will entitled to permanent possession of it and each year the winner'’s name is engraved on the trophy. The cup is awarded for the geratest number of points scored in competition on the basis of a first place giving 5 points, a second 3 points and a thlrd 1 point. Dr. E. W. Sheets and H. P. Simpson are among the largest individual ex- hibitors, each having some 1,000 flowers on_exhibition. ‘The judges for the irises are Charles G. Gersdorff of the Department of Agri- culture, and T. M. Fendall oé,mlbu{‘. e les and Peter Bissett, F. L. Mulford and David Lumsden. TODAY, AS FOR. YEARS Ask for a Copy of Buick’s Owner Service Policy The complete, focts n'flfdlnu Buick service, including Buick's new Qwner 'ovilu and Change of Residence ileges, may now be had in a brief, compact booklet, Fuick Owner Service Policy.” ! e Bulck would like everyone who now owns— or expechs o ewn=a Buick car to be !hmhly.quflmd with the be | grandmother, Mrs. FLYING CADETS NAMED 236 Civilian and Enlistéd Candi- dates Include 4 walhlngton Men. Four residents city are in- dmmcflnoxzuuvum:mdeu- ry flying Tps, commencing . They are: Richard C. Hughes, n.reet Jack D. Magee, Tnstersiate ission: Commj Remo J. Pl’vl'nflfl. llSl ‘Twenty-third stren md Richard: E. Ziegler, Clifton ll;{i partments. One of the enlisted ldlte! is Private Edgar B. Franklin, !d Cavalry, at Fort Myer, Va. Including those named, 114 of the candidates will pursue their intensive { eight months’ primary course at the primary school at Brooks Field, San Antonio, Tex., and the remaining 122 candidates will attend the flying school at March Field, Riverside, Calif. Each of the candidates will have the status of “flying cadet,” and those who qualify in the suhlequent four months’ course at the Advanced Flying School, Field, Tex., will be commissioned second lleutenants in the Air Corps Re- se'r‘v; and receive the cherished “wings.” CAR CRASHES CORTEGE Hastening to Grandfather’s Fu- neral, Man Hits Mourners’ Car. DECATUR, Ill, May 20 (#).—Hurry- ing to attend his grandfather’s funeral Dale Booker Sullivan met the funeral procession on & country road _Sunday, t'u:u? (’)ut for an on:ominz tar that rying pass the cortes skidded into lhe mourners’ w‘epl:),\l)‘? ably fatally injuring his maternal 8. H. Booker. Five others, including young Booker, were hurt. Willlam J. Pope, who was driving the mourners’ car, swore out & warrant, g -young Bool charging ey th reckless Film Star Intends to Wed. LOS ANGELES, May 20 (#).—Paul N. Boggs, jr., son of an oil executive, and Dorothy Dwan, motion picture actress and widow of Tnounced. Semon died two years ago. BALTIMORE GROUP WOULD END D.C. TIE Labor Committee Petiticns Separate Charters for- Two Localities. By the Associated Press. % SALISBURY, Md., May 20.—Reor- ganization, excluding the District of Co- lumbia, was considered today by a com- mittee from the Maryland State and District of Columbia Federation of Labor as the second day’s_session of their annual convention opened. A resolution, sponsored by 35 Balti- more locals, urges William Green, presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, to revoke the charter of the yreunz group and issue ‘a new charter thc Mary) ind federation. t federation asserted it was '.he only one with geographical juris- diction extending beyond the political boundaries of the State and declared the situation on occasions made lm&ol sible either ‘“economic or political unanimity.” Delegations from Hagerstown and Cumberland were said to oppose the proposal. SEEKTO REVERSE VERDICT MILWAUKEE, Wis, May 20 (#)— An attempt to obtain a reversal of the jury verdiet which recently exonerated Gov. Walter J. Kohler of charges of violating the State corrupt practices ‘lgc;d‘wu begun by the prosecution yes- A aeries of motions asking Judge Gustave Gehrz to set aside the verdict and find the governor guilty, to alter favorable answers to a series of ques- tions answered .by the jurors, or to order & new trial, were flled and were taken under advisement the court. Judge Gehrz said he would give a de- that the culon ina !ew“dlyu harged The prosecution mmor luthorlnd agents to act for excessive sum dur- Ml pflm Ty campaign. BUICK DEDICATES TO THIS BASIC POV CENAN HORT I LIQUOR CHASE W. C. Wrenn Caught Between Machines—Three Colored Men Arrested. A policeman was injured, two men arrested on liquor charges and a third charged with blocking a police machine following two liquor chases yesterdays Seventh Precinct Patrolman® W, C. Wrenn suffered a wrefiched back and bruises to his-left leg when he was caught between a poliec car and a liquor-laden automobile abandoned while in motion by two colored men at Thirtieth and M_streets. Wrenn and Officer A. J. Loftus sighted the liquor ur at Thirty-second and M streets and . AS he of between the two car and was “wfil” freed himself renn fre and m: to hold one of the men while m“m 4 tured the other after a two-block ‘00‘ race. ‘The tyo men, Martin Harris, colored, 21 years old, and Robert Johnson, col- ored, 28 years old, were booked at the seventh precinct on charges of trans- portation and possession four gallons of alleged liquor. Wrenn was treated at_the police cllnlc and :1ven slck leave, Later in the day Robert colored, 22 years old Was lmd when, police say, he drove his lumobfle in front of the automobile of Policeman C. F. Smith during a liquor chase near Nk:thm‘ avenue and Howard road south- ast. Galloway was charged at the eleventh precinct with alding and abetting in violation of the national prohibition act and later released on $2, bond. Officer Smith said he was driving at @ high rate of speed when Gt.llownrl car -uddsnl.v swerved tn fmnt e! bim, forcing him to give up thi Florids’s 1029-30 eitrus crop brough! 418,000,000, wwrdm: to - estimate, The yleld was 15,000, ITSELF SERVICE POLICY., “Satisfy the customer.” the service policy of the Buick Motor .Company throughout the twenty-seven years of its history. And so faithfully has_ Buick followed this policy that today the familiar blue and white emblem of Authorized Buick Service is a guidepost to prompt, efficient and courteous main- tenance to more than 1,500,000 Buick owners. Buick has twice as many owners as any other.companyselling cars priced _above Here dre just a few of the many impor- tant provisions.of Buick's Service Policy: More than 4,000 factory-supervised Buick Service Stations — equipped with genuine factory parts and tools —assure all Buick owners the same fine standard of skilled Buick liberal provisions of this Policy. You may obtain a &py of this Interesting booklet from the nearest Buick dealer, or by writing direct'te Buick L Stanley Motor Company, Flint, Michigan. H. Horner 1015-1017 14th St. " ‘Bury Motor Co. Anacostia, D. C. Bowdoin MOt'or'Co.' Alexandria, Va. CWHEN S =T TAR Lodge Motor Co. Pur'cellvxlle, Na.. AUTOMOBILES $1200. service. A written Warranty, covering the first 4,000 miles or the first 90 days of ownership, whichever ‘shall* accrue first, guarantees every new Buick car to be free from defects in material or workmanship. Should parts or workmanship prove defec- BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, Division of General Metors Corporatioa Canadian Féctories Meclaughlin-Buick, Oshawa, Ont. Buick Motor Co. 14th at L WASHINGTON D. C. ARE RULLT This has been : Fred N. Windridge Rosslyn, Va. of performance. five atany time during the Warranty peried, Buick dealers will supply the parts and perform the necessary labor free of charge. In addition to careful pre-delivery tests, the Buick owner receives fwo major inspections without cost—ana after 500 miles and another after 1500 miles of driving. These include a thorough road test of all elements The “Tourist” and “Change of Residence” clauses permit the Buick owner to change his residence as frequently as he desires or to tour any part of the U. S. or Canada and still receive the full Warranty benefits from the nearest authorized Buick dealer. The basic underlying principle of Buick's service policy can be summed up in these three words—the creed of the entire Buick organization—satisfy the custom- er. selves to the task of All Buick dealers dedicate them- serving promptly, efficiently and courteously — providing maximum service ot minimum cost— that owners of Buicks may remain friends of Buick always. FLINT, MICHIGAN Builders of Buick and Marquette Motor Cars Emerson & Orme 17th & M Sts. N.W. Rushe Motor Co. Hyattsville, Md. . BULCR W C.C. Gaithersburg, Md. Waters & Sons

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