Evening Star Newspaper, July 12, 1930, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1930. LIQUOR FIGURES IN CASES | KILLS 2: 1 DYING ™22z =" DIES IN ALEAANDRIA DETAILS QUTLINED Engine Explodes on Seaboard , SFEER MARLSORo! i T 12| ellcot Air Line EXDI’OSS Near and two others charged with driving | ranges for Convention at. Petershurg. Kensington August 1. LOCOMOTIVE BLAST Commissioners Plan Im}:rovemenul in Western Metropolitan Dis- | trict of County. [ By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. | BETHESDA, Md., July 12.—The com- | at Rockville misisoners of Monigomery County are Session advertising for bids for two street im- | provements in the western metropolitan district, which probably will be com- | pleted this Summer. | One project calls for the grading and | constructing of curbs, gutters and side- | walks on Maple avenue in Rosedale Park and West Chevy Chase Heights, beginning at Wisconsin avenue. The second project provides for a cnerete roadway, curb and gutter in Chevy Chase boulevard in Chevy Chase Ter-|lican State Central Committee for the sy county recently decided to,call for Pri- Two Pay Heavy Fines on Driving- ‘While-Drunk Charges—Others - Could a prince desert his princess, elope with the wife of a military attache and re-establish him- self over night in his Confederate Veteran, 79, to Be Buried Tomorrow at Middieburg. while drunk at the weekly session of | the local branch of Police Court ves- terday. | Claude Ritchie of Ritchie, Md., was fined a total of $102 by Judge J. Chew | Sherifl after convictior. on charges of | ! driving while drunk, reckless driving | ~Two | and operating without a license in his| GROVETON, Va. July 12—Death | lics in a POssession. Edward Williams, colored. | yesterday merning claimed one of Fair- | burned | hrc annston, was fined $101 for drlv=| ¢, Gounty's best known citizens, when ing while crunk and reckless driving. | f2 : today, the victims an exploding | {wh men were arrested by State Po- | George Kerfoot Pickett of Mount Ver- ocomotive on which they rode as it | liceman W.T. Booker. | {non district patsed away in Alexandria ! e o maml _Charles Holle of Oakland, Md., Who | yocpital. He was known to a wide circle pulled an express freig i was arrested by Deputy Sheriffs Dutrow | oo “ x line of the Seaboard Air Line Railway | and Blackwell. was fined $150 for illegal | 0f friends as “Uncle Gecrge.” Active i | possession of liguor. ‘Thomns Marshall, | until the end, this 70-year-young-old Fred D_Drewry, Raleigh, N. C. en- | Colored, pleaded guilty to_the S&Me|man was a leader of most of the pro- gineer. and S. §. Tavlor, Middieton ;:‘:;‘;" e éo“‘-:n’l"""‘dp*fi"_ e | gressive enterprises of the distriet. N. C.. fireman, died in the hospital lasé TeS ) ¥ Policeman Claude | i e ‘ e oo oreg il § 2 | Death was due to heart trouble, from e B o Wieink Raleeh. N O, . | which he has suffered more or less con- | (irom woe oo of | POLICE TO LOSE JOBS | fi"veeve vee e wer mrken v | - UNLESS LIQUOR STOPS Gonductor S. Wheeler, also of Fetersburg. said he heard two explosions s office in Al:xandria Thursday morning, | when the train was a mile and a balf | J]timatum By the Associated P PETERSBURG, Va, July men are dead and a third Petersburg hospital critically Special Dispatch to The Star. Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE. Md, July 12.—The county convention, which the Repub- 12 of Bids for the work will be received at| day, August 1, to select candidates for the Rockville offices of the Board of | the 'offices to be filled in the county at Commisisoners, July 29, at noon. the November election, will be held in o | the town hall at Kensington at &o’clock [in the afternoon, it was announced at MRS. RIDENOUR WINS |2 meeting here vesterday atternoon of ¥ |the State Central Committee and the | chairmen of the various precinet com- ROCKVILLE DIVORCE | mitee: 2 | Would Avoid Primary. | The convention, It was stated, is ex- pected to select ‘only persons of the | highest type. and this probably would |avoid any primary contests Sep- tember. Various persons regarded as available for places on the ticket were consid- Judge Peter Signs Decree for Wife of Engineer—Another Also Gets Separation. Logan. Petersburg in the caboose with | finally consenting to allow himself to | be taken to the hospital about 1 o'clock. | All the immediate members of his fam- | ily were with him when the end came, south of Petersburg ning north- ward The first 10 cars behind the locomo- tive piled up in wreckage and caught | fire. The train was 50 cars long The theory was offered that low water pressure in the boiler was responsible for the explosion. Railway officials planned an investigation to determine the cause of the blast TWO FARMERS HURT | BY TRAIN AT GRADE One Dying, Another Seriously In-| jured and Third Escapes in Crossing Accident. @pecial Dispatch to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., July 12.— David Walker, 56. was believed fatally injured: one brother, George. was seri- ously hurt: another brother. riding the horses, was not injured, and a son of the last named. Cleveland. was slightly hurt when the group. driving on a wagon to & wheat field for a load of grain, was struck by a westbound B. & O. passenger train at a private grade crossing 3 miles west of here about 8:20 this morning. ] All were brought to the hospital here, | where at 10:30 David Walker was dving. The condition of the others was not expected to prove serious. Two of the four horses attached to the wagon were injured. One was subsequently killed. All but the uninjured man were on the empty wagon. The accident hap- pened near a curve on the railroad which prevented the farmers from see- ing the asproaching train. An east- bound passenger train was flagged a few minytes later and the injured rushed to this city for emergeney treat- ment. FARM BUILDiNGS BURNED | practically been stopped in the town a on Bootlegging in Mount Rainier Issued to Force by Mayor. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. MOUNT RAINIER, Md. July 12— Bootlegging must stop in Mount Rainler or there will be changes in the person- nel of the town police force. the town balliffs were tola by Mayor John H.| Beall at a closed meeting of the counell | and police commissioners last night. | Beall declared. that sale of liquor had | few months ago, but recently it had in- creased, and the town authorities were determined to close all existing * speak- easies.” TWO DIE, THREE SHOT AFTER DRY LAW RAID Interference With Arrests Given as Cause of Fatal Clash Near Grundy, Va. By the Associated Press GRUNDY, Va, July 12—Two men were fatally shot and three others were injured, one seriously, in a gun battle | in the Paw Paw section of Knox Creek atter what officers said was an attempt to interfere with arrests of persons charged with violation of the prohibi- tion laws. Hyson Baker, Buchanan County con- stable, and Thomps Dotson, one of the men sought by the officers, were killed. Howard Justus and David J. Smith, deputy sherifts, are in the Hurley Hos- pital, the former in a critical condi- tion. and Hillman Tester, another of those the officers sought to arrest, is under arrest in a Richlands hospital. Tester also was wounded. $11,000 Fire at H. E. Nichol's| Place Near Nokesville. i Specia] Mispatch to The Star. \ NOKESVILLE, Va. July -12-&.- spite the viliant efforts of farm he=2| and neighbors, the dairy barn, equip- ment and other outbuildings on the | farm of H. E. Michael, near here, were destroyed by fire Thursday. A call for help brought the modern equipment of the Manassas Pire De- partment to the scene, but their ar- rival was too late to do more than throw a stream on the smoldering debris. Sparks from the fire ignited wheat near a barn on the adjoining property, but this was extinguished by the Manassas equipment, with the en- gine drawing water from a nearby creek. The 1oss on the barns, outbuildings and equipment was estimated at $11,000, covered in part by insurance in’ the tum of $6,500. FREED IN AUTO DEATH oecial Dispatch to The Star. PREDERICK, Md. July 12.—Run down by an automobile operated by J. F. Byme. son of Dr. 3. Francis Byrne, this city, as he walked along the Toad Thursday 4 miles east of Fred- erick, Bert L. Shafer, 40, Mahoney City, Pa., was so badly injured that he died 8t 'the Prederick City Hospital about half an hour later from a fractured skull Byrne, accompanied by Philip Hite- shew, this city, testified at a coroner’s inquest that he did not see Shafer until it was too late to avoid striking him. The fender of the automobile struck the man, hurling him to a concerte shoulder. Justice Guy K. Motter, acting coroner, | decided that further investigation would not be necessary and exonerated the | youth. ALEXANDRIA. ALEXANDRIA. Va.. July 12 (Spe- clal) —Sidney Weil was eiected com- nder of the local post of the Amer- lean Legion at the annual election of officers held last night at Gadsby’s ‘avern Russell Hawes, 114 North Payne gtreet, reported to police that he was | bitten on the arm this morning by an airdale dog belonging to J. Sid Douglass, 913 Cameron street. He was treated by Dr. Snowdon. and the dog ordered chained up until an examination could be _made S. Hollenga, business manager Chamber of Commerce, will the Westminster Bible Class | cond Presbyterian Church morning, in the absence of Frank W. Noxon, the regular teacher. Funeral services of Arlington. Va. who died suddenly Thursday afternoon while on her way to the Alexandria Hospital, will be held | at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in | the St. Paul's Epi Baileys Cross Roads oe conducted by Rev. W. Kennedy and burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery, Falls Church. Her body 1s now at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. An- drew W. Cleveland, at Baileys Cross Roads. Besides her husband, the de- ceased is survived by a son, Paul, aged 10; her parents and four brothers and ! three sisters ! One hundred and wnei Church at ‘The services will sixty-three bottles | of alleged beer, 24 of which were on | ice. and three one-half gallons of al- leged whisky were reported captured by local police in a raid on an ark off the river shore in the northern section of the city yesterday. The raid was made by Capt. W. W. Campbell and Sergt. Lawrence Padgett. who said they acted Work Can Be Done Only During | HOUSE, Va., for Mrs. Catherine | Trene Rowles, 30, wife of Ellis O. Rowles | Early Wednesday, according to the officers’ report, Hyson Baker and Ho ard Justus raided a still in the Paw w seclion, arresting Ballard Tester, Early Dotson, Clark Dotson, Tom May nd Harman Dotson. The officers reported that a group of men rode past them as they started for Grundy with ‘the prisoners, firing on them and warning them not to come back into the neighborhood. Deputizing Smith at Grundy, the of- figers returned, and the exchange of fire followed. SCHOOL ADDITION WORK SOUGHT BY 15 FIRMS| | Arlington Board Rejects All But| Two for Construction of Lee High Annex. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON COUNTY COURT HOUSE. Va. July 12—FPifteen bids, ranging in amount from $132.400 to $177.939, for the erection of a 32-room addition to the Washington-Lee High School were opened Thursday by the | School Board. Construction of this and | additions to other schools were author- | ized by a recent election on a bond issue After a careful study of all the bids, Thomas N. De Lashmutt, president of | the School Board, announced that all { had been rejected but two and that the final selection of the successful bidder would be made next week. The bids under consideration are those of J. H. Coleman of Lynchburg. Va.. which was $132400, and the J. J. McDevitt Con- struction Co. of Charlotte, N. C. amounting to $134.800. Both of these bids provide that the construction shall be finished by next January 15, a penalty of $50 daily being provided for each day over that time. ARLINGTON HIGH PUPILS GET DENTAL SERVICES Summer Months County Doctor. by By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. ARLINGTON COUNTY COURT July 12—For the first time in many years the services of the school dentist, Dr. C. R. Boyland, are made available this Summer to high school students, it was announced to- day by the county health department. Dr.” Boyland is working in _the various elementary Summer schools during the vacation period and, while high school work is impossible during the regular school term because of the large number of elementary stu- dents requiring his services, he is now in a position to care for any high school students who may wish to make appointments through the health de- partment. His services are available to graded school students throughout the entire yesr. CHILDREN AT ALEXANDRIA Fresh Air Delegation Arrives From New York. Special Dispatch to The Star ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 12.—Twen- ty-two children, most of them from New York City tenements, have arrived here for a two week's vacation, under the auspices of the New York Tribune fresh air fund. There are 14 girls and 8 boys. The youngsters are housed in homes in and about the city, not more than two being in any one house. The iocal on complaints received. They arrested braham Lomax, colored, and Robert rrell. Both men were turned over to Fed- eral authorities, who have jurisdiction over the river, and both plead guilty to possession before Deputy U. S. Com- missioner Phillips at a hearing Jester- day afternoon. Both were held for the December term of the United States Court on $500 bail each. Possession of 69 bottles of alleged beer and one barrel of mash was charged to W. B. Braydon, 42, of 809 South Fair- 13x street,” following his arrest during & raid this morning. The case was set for Wednesday in Police Coiirt, and the @eer will be analysed for alcoholie con- f£nt in the meantime. [ committee in charge includes Mrs. H. D. Kirk, chairman; Mrs. Mauchlin Niven, Mrs. Henry B. Steiner, Mrs. Irvin Diener, Mrs, George Roop, Mrs. Edwin E. Davison and Mrs. Charles M. Shep- person. U D S —— Dies Following Operation. WINCHESTER, Va., July 12 (Spe- cial).—Funeral rites will be held Sun- day for Mrs. Irene Inskip Keyser, 39. wife of Carson I. Keyser, farmer and fruit grower, of Kernstown, who died in a hospital here, following an opera: tion. She was a member of Opequon Memorial Presbyterian Church. Sur- viving are her husband, two sisters and three brothers, | of the board for part of that time, an Funeral Tomerrow. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 1 o'clock at the residence of his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. P. Reid, on the Richmond high- wi Interment will be in the family lct at Middleburg. George Kerfoot Pickett was born March 11, 1851, at Rock Hill in Fauquier County. the son of Rev As a boy of 14 he served as a scout in Mosby's command. He has been a member of Marr Camp Confederate Veterans of Fairfax County, the young- est of the surviving group. He married Mary Lewls Smith of Fauquier County and moved imme- diately to Clarke County, his mother's former home, where his father gave him a farm. After he moved to Fairfax County he settled on the farm at An- nandale now owned by R. T. Creel, moving later to Mount Vernon district in what is now Groveton. In Realty Business. After giving up farming he served for 30 years as inspector of internal revenue at the Alexandria customs house. He recently has been in the real estate and insurance business. He was a member of Alexandria Lodge | of Elks, a founder and one of the direc- tors of the Fairfax County Chamber of Commerce, his last attendance at any public gathering being last Tuesday night at the chamber’s annual mecting at Annandale. He was a member of the Alexandria - Arlington - Fairfax Real | Estate Board. He was a member of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors for approximately 20 years and chairman office now held by his son-in-law, W. F. Reid. He was at one time a candidate for office of county treasurer. He has been for years a justice of the peace for ‘Mount Vernon . district, functioning actively until his death. He has been prominent in the councils of the Demo- cratic party, serving as election judge at Pullman’s precinct and as a member of the County Board of Canvassers until about two years ago. He is survived by four children, Mrs. W. F. P. Reid and Mrs. Arthur Kirby of Groveton; George E. Pickett of Alexandria and Edgar M. Pickett | of District Heights, Md. Three brotiters survive, John of Cincinnati, Ohio; Henry of Chicago and R. Lee of Falls Church. MAN FOUND HANGING TO LIMB OF TREE Charley Philips, Culpeper County Resident, Wanted by Police, Declared Suicide. Special Dispatch to The Star. WARRENTON, Va., July 12.—While picking blackberries in a thicket near Remington, two colored girls glanced upward and saw hanging to a tree by a rope the body of a man identified as that of Charley Philips, 30 years old, Who had threatened suicide following the issuance of a warrant, at the in- stance of his wife, .growing out of do- mestic difficulties. Philips disappeared about a week ago, after making his threat to end his life, and Dr. George Davis of this place, Wwho issued a certificate of death by suicide, expressed the belief that the body had been hanging to the tree about a week. The dead man is a na- tive of Culpeper County. CATHOLIC CHURCH PLANS PICNIC AT GAITHERSBURG St. Martin's Parish to Hold Event July 30 and 81, Adjoining Building. Special Dispaich to The Star. GAITHERSBURG, Md., July 12.— The annual picnic, supper and festival of St. Martin's Catholic Church here will be held in the grove adjoining the church July 30 and 31, it was decided at & meeting of members of the congre- gation in St. Martin’s Hall. As a feature of the closing evening, it was decided to hold a dance, and James B. Neel was named chairman of the committee in charge. The fancy table will be looked after by Miss Marie Stang, Miss Mary Bumbacher and Miss Katherine Riordan, and the heads of the other committees are: Supper, Mrs. Arthur V. Hogan; cakes, Mrs. Bernard Diamond; candy, Kenneth iMeem; nov- elty stand, Douglas Diamond; sand- wiches, Mrs. Genevieve Selby; games, Francis Mullican; ice cream, Bernard Diamond; publicity and advertising, Russell Gloyd: decorations, Mrs. Hobart Ramsdell; soft drinks, Elmer Walter, and cane table, Leo Walter. ROCKVILLE, ROCKVILLE, Md. July 12 (Spe- cial) —Charging that the conduct of the defendant toward her was so inconsider- ate that she was forced to leave him, and alleging that he was guilty of in- fidelity, Mrs. Elsie V. Abell of this county has filed suit, in the Circuit Court here for an absolute divorce from Stew- art Abell of shington. The plaintiff is represented by Attorney Kenneth Lyddane of Rockville, The couple, according to the bill, mar- ried in Baltimore on May 25, 1906, lived together until September 17, 1929, and have four children, three of them of age. Mrs. Abell asks to be allowed ali- mony and counsel fees. Licenses have been issued by the clerk of the Circuit Court here for the mar- riage of Lawrence T. Hendrick, 21, and | Miss Phyllis N. Brown, 20, both of Sil- ver Spring, Md.; Leroy F. Self, 23, and Miss Margaret L. Jones, 21, both of | Washington, and Edson L. Johnson, 24, | of New York, N. Y., and Miss Dorothy Norie Findcon, 30, of Detroit. Announcement has been made that Clarence Taylor of Baltimore will be the praici) speaker at a Socialist meeting to be held this evening in the Methodist Church at Spencerville. Mr. Taylor, 8 carpenter by trade, has been Socialiss candidate for office several times in Tecent years. Rev. George C. Minor of the Christian Church officiated at the marriage here of James D. Bbwman and Miss H. Eliza- John Stafford | Pickett and Sarah Ann E+foct Pickett. | | George Special Dispatch to The Star. ROCKVILLE, Md, July 12—Judge Robert B. Peter signed two divorce de- | crees in the Circuit Court here yester- day afternoon, in one of which, an ab- | solute divorce was granted Mrs. J.| Blanche Wright Ridenour of Chevy Chase from F. Berton Ridenour, a civil engineer of Washington, and allowed her alimeny at the rate of $110 a month beginning today. | Mrs. Ridenour's petition charged in- fidelity and named an employe in her husband’s office as co-respondent, and alleged desertion on June 1, 1929, The couple, according to the petition. mar- | ried in Washington on September 3,| 1921, and have no children. Attorney | Milton Whitney of Takoma Park rep- resented the plaintiff. A cross-bill filed by the defendant, in which he charged desertion, was dis- missed. In the other case Judge Peter grant- ed Thomas C. Waters of this county an absolute divorce from Mrs. Florida P. Waters on the ground of desertion. The bill set forth that the couple| married in_Hagerstown, Md., June 12, 1914, and have one child, Thomas C. Waters, jr.. aged 13 years. The plaintiff | was represented by’ Attorney Kenneth | Lyddane of Rockville. BALL GAME DISPUTE |ENDS IN POLICE COURT Judge Sheriff Tells Defendant Youth His Manner Was Unsportsmanlike. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star CAPITOL HEIGHTS, Md., July 12— Police Court Judge J. Chew Sheriff, whose official duties require him to ad- minister justice in many a matrimonial wrangle ‘and public brawl Thursday was called upon to settle in a legal way a base ball diamond dispute that had grown too serious for the conven- | tional umpire. | ‘The testimony showed that Raymond | Romasa, 11 years old, and John New- man, 14, both of Capitol Heights, had | come to blows as to whose turn it was | to bat. Raymond claimed John hit him with the bat and preferred charges of assauit and battery. The court told | John, who is much bigger than Ray- | mond, that he acted in an unsports- manlike manner, and imposed & fine | of $1. | Henrietta Lynch, whose home, on | Crystal Springs avenue, was raided by Deputy Sheriff Blackwell and eeveral town officers Sunday, demanded a jury trial on charges of running a disorderly house and illegal possession of liquor. | Her bond was set at $1,000. | Arthur Evans, colored, arrested in a | raid by Blackwell and Deputy Sheriff Jones, was convicted of illegal posses- | sion and fined $50. } | VACATION SCHOOL OPENED AT LINCOLN Church Institution Begins Classes With 40 Pupils Enrolled for | Three Weeks. Special Dispatch to The Star. LINCOLN, Va. July 12—The Lin- coln Vacation Church School began Monday at the Lincoln High School Building_ with an enroliment of 40 pupils. It is expected that more will | enter later. The school will continue | for three weeks, and will meet each morning, except Saturday and Sunday, | from 9 fo 11:30. There are four classes | for children from 4 to 14 years of | age. No tuition is charged. | George Selleck is principal of the | school, and other workers are Mrs, Selleck, _intermediate; Miss | Mary Ann Nichols, junior; Miss Ces celia Beiser, primary: Miss Emily Tay- lor, kindergarten; Miss Lula Neill, sec- retary. Miss Anna Branch Nichols, planist, and Lawrence Lee Taylor, as- sistant’ in boy's handwork. .Mrs. Tenley Seeks Divorce. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., July 12.— Mrs. Enid Tenley of Brookiyn, N. Y has filed suit in Circuit Court here for divorce from Mahlon C. Tenley, now & resident of Prince Georges. Through Attorney Waldo Burnside she tells the court that they were married November 4, 1925, and that Tenley has since de- serted her. publican State Central Committee of dropped in on the meeting and shook | fantt, 42, Beltsville, Md.: Julius A. And- | rasch, 22, Washington, D. C., and Rosa- | Leslie Preston Cox, jr., 21, COLONIAL ANTHRACITE ered at the meeting yesterday and those reported as willing to run were said to be of such outstanding fitness as to arouse genuine enthusiasm among the party leaders in attendance. It seemed the unanimous opinion that the con- vention is certain to indorse a ticket of such strength as to render its chances of election excellent, in view of the serious split in the Democratic ranks. Discuss Party Welfare. ‘The meeting also considered various | matters pertaining to the party welfare, including suggestions, and there is said to have been an informal understanding that everybody would put his shoulder to the wheel and overlook nothing that might advance party prospects in No- vember, Galen L. Tait, chairman of the Re- Maryland, who happened to be in town hands all around. Licensed to Wed at Marlboro. By a Staff Corrsspondent of The Star, UPPER MARLBORO, Md., July 12.— | Marriage licenses have been issued here to the following: William A. Nolte, 46, Silver Spring, Md., and Annie A. Boni- | lie Straut, 24, Congress Heights, D. C. and :mrr'. C. Connor, 22, both of Washiny on ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. N.W. 64th Tssue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments James E. Connelly President James F. Shea Secretary G anteed No ate, No Clinker: Ask the Man Who Uses It Ralph J. Moore Coal Co. 1406 N. Cap. St. Pot. 0970 Pot. 0971 YOU’'D BE SURPRISED At the improvement that has been made in evergreens by Nsl#.\' feed- ing with CARBIUM PLAI FOOD. Three cents a pound in any quantity. Delivery charge for quantities less than 50 pounds. CONGER BROS. Distributors for the District of Columbia 23rd Street & New York Avenue District 977 Red or brown metallic finish. [ Excellent quality. | MEtro. 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN 607-609 C St. Phone for Color Card ALL-EXPENSE TOUR WASHINGTON to BALTIMORE By Boat and Rail $12.12 Round Trip Follow the pioneers through the torically interesting country. 320 mi delightful eruising—down the Potor up the Chesapeake Bay. Return by fast R trains. a_ day on water. Pirst - class accommodations, _excellent meals, congenial people. Modern steam- ers Dorchester and_Talbot. Leave 7th Street Whart 4 pm. (Standard time). $1212 per person Al information. iterature, etc.. at Penna. R R. Oity Ticket Office. 613 14th Vel OF Asent’s Office, 7ih Street art. Balto. & Va. Steamboat Co. his s Mon. and Sat., Minimum cost. If Judge Capital Awnings for Their Character and Quality it's a competition in price Capital Service Rendered with Capital Satisfaction Awnings Tents Tarpaulins , Flags Window Shades Canvas Goods Phones North Capital beth Newcomb, both of Richmond, Vi and Patrick A. Skelly of Phoebus, V: and Miss Irene T. ins of Paterson, N. J., both place 2958-2959 William E. Russell we are not interested—for price- cutting is quality-cutting: and that's something in which we won't indulge. Our business has been built upon quality—and grows as fast as it is growing, we confidently helieve, because of the quality Capital service in- sures. If you want Capital Awning service we sure want your order —and it'll only cost you what it is intrinsically worth. Compare quality and we'll satisfy you in price. Our budget plan ar- ranges payments conveniently. Awning Co. 1503 Street e Cias ARSElCESg [ " Crert Nevoporer North Capitol Country's favor? + + # Leland Stowe will tell you about the return of Rumania’s prince in a series of interesting and author- itative articles . . . . . CAROL’'S RETUR TO THE THRON Begins Sunday, July 13th in he Star of The Nation’s Capital :

Other pages from this issue: