Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
AT ATD Mao‘“tr of Cafl'ton' Huteli Sg_gv_ed as Captain Over- seas During War. M4j. Leigh V. Rovaar, U. 8. A. re- tired, menager of the Carlton Hotel, died at Mount Alto Hospital after an ‘iliness of about a week, He had” Hved in Washington about two yearsiand .was made manager of the Carlton about six months ago. Previ- ously, he had been assistant munager today | BY BENTON E. JACOBS, (Copyright, 1931, by the Associated Press ) ACKSONVILLE, Fla. November 18.—Bringing with him a word of optimism for the future, John D Rockefeller, sr., resumed the role of “Neighbor John" as he mrtived in Plorida today for his Winter sojourn Ih poem, praver and meditation the 94-year-old founder of one of the world’s largest fortunes exprested his ! sentiments on the “sunlit deys” that are ! ahead. It is eustomary for Mr. Rockefeller to find expression of his own thoughts in the words of others The first warm rays of the morning | sun, which he comes to Florida every | Winter to enjoy, filtered into the draw- | ing room of his private car, where he THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON, Rockefeller Finds Sunlit Pays “NEIGHBOR JOHN” READS POEMS AND PRAYERS IN MEDITATIO! PEACE OF WORLD | ELDDEBT 0F . Baker Advocates World Court’ | Entry and Reduction in ! Tariff Barriers. | | i By the Associated Press BOSTON. November 18.—Newton D. | Baker, Secretary of War in the Wilson | declared that de- isive action for preservation of the | world's pence wns among the debts of the United States as the principal cabinet, yesterday VEDNESDAY “Ameriea Is NOVEMBER 18, Dreamland” JOSE LAVAL WANTS TO COME BAGR AGAIN. Special Dispatch to The Star. RIS, November 18 (N.AN.A).— “Americs is a magic dream- 1and, and T can scarcely imagine I have ever been away from Prance” said Mile. Jose Laval, daughter of the Ffench premier, who accompanied her father on his recent jonrney to the United States. “Everything combined to trip something like a hallueination.” she added. Mlle. Laval had insisted that she wouldn't give an interview. She has just started her studies at the Paris Law Acedemny and wants to devote most make my magnificent of her time to her work there. She was semted in her own little boudoir in the ministry of the interior, where the premier has his residence. BOY PROT LAUDF™ FOR SEA HEROISH Seven Companions Praise! Youth for Guiding Lost Boat to Safety. By the Associsted Press \ PORT NORRIS, N. J., November 18. | —A 16-year-old schoolboy was ac- claimed a hero last night by seven per- | sons whom he piloted safely through @ | |fog in which they had been lost onm | Delaware Bay for 20 hours. BANKRUPT IS CHARGED WITH LARCENCY OF $3,000 Martinsburg Man Who Tisted $46,000 Lisbiiities and $600 Assets Provides Bond. Special Dispateh to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., November 18.—Miron L. Parsons gave $1.000 bond here yesterday to answer larceny of $3.000 from a Winchester | (Va.) bank. The warrant was issued in Winchester November 13. but net served here until Monday. Parsons was ad- judicated a bankrupt here recently in Federal Court. In his petition he listed liabilities at $46.000 and assets at $600. Among his creditors were listed several Virginia banks. 7 o f was an Annapolis pennant pin- 4 1] R e and two feminine members of his house- creditor mation of the world, Baker | THers was an Annapelis pennant p Enthusiastic townspeople blew whis- | Ma} Rovzar was born in Kensas City+ M6, in 1889, and was graduated from,, Lafdyette Upiversity, where he wAs A member of Delta Ka Epstlon fraternity. During the World War he setvad iy PRAmce as a captain in the Pield-Artillers, 33rd Division. and was ady ed to the rank of major shortly atfe i Oushis ‘retirn from France. Maj Rovaar fvent to Mexico City, where he | was coppécted with the Comision Na- | citnal de Caminos, the federni highway | commjssion of that country. In Mexico City Je was a member of the University Club gf Mexico and founded the Allen | Seeger Anferican Legion Post in Mexic City. of which he was first commander. Rr&nlnx to the United States. he becagye asélstant manager of the Stev- ens tel, Chicago, and subsequently came o the Wardman Park here He,Wgs scoutmaster of the Boy Scout Troop, gonsored by the Christ Child nd was a member of Wash- s, No. 1. American Legion s hi§ wiGow. Mrs. Aimez Dutour ar, he is survived by his mother, Ada’ V. Rovzar, and five sons H.. jr.; Alexis Eugene, Anthony Robert Richard and Eugene ick Rovzar. Puneral arrangements had not been made téday. He will be buried in Ar- lingtoh ‘National Cemetery. | BOYS’ CLUB TO HOLD POSTAL RUMMAGE SALE Prospéctive Bidders Must Get Lot Numbers Today—Articles Go on Exhibition at C and Third. The -annual Post Office Department dead letter salé—a combined grab-bag and rimmiege sale—wil be held, begin- ning Wit $:30 am. tomorrow, in -the Boys” ¥Clab -Building, Third and C streets: 1;Seme 800 lots of & bewildering srray” of merchandise- will be auctioned . - ‘The ‘articiés to be sold are being exhibited today from 10 to 3 o'clock, in the-Boys' Club Building. Sales wili be made by lot numbers alone and those who expect to bid are advised to Jook over the exhibits today. Many of the articles are left from Jast Christmas, when they were mailed as gifts but failed to reach those for whom they were intended because of faulty addresses. As an added feature there will be sold ® number_ of ‘forelgn coins, postage stamps and “first flight covers” or let- ters sent out on the first flights oves new airmail routes, THE WEATHER District of'. Columbis-—Showers this #fternoon; mostly cloudy tonight. and tomorrow; lowesi rafure tonight #bout 40 degrees;’ ite. shifting :ilndl ‘becoming genti€ nosh or north. it. Maryland—Mostly cloudy and cooler tonight and tomorrow; probably show- ers in southeéwst portioh tonight; mod- ml-u shifting winds-Necoming north- erly. ‘ Virginia—@loudy, with occasional showers tonight #nd probably in south portion tomorrow: cooler tomorrow in interior tonight; moderate to fresh southwest winds shifting to northwest or north, diminishing tomorrow. Wes Virginia—-Cloudy and cooler to- nightuand- tomorrow; probably showers in somth and east central portions. i Report for Last 24 Kours, ! ‘Temperature. Barometer. 4gm. . 8 pm. . Mignight 4am. . ;'Dm. . ogn H‘,‘ihe. . igo. &4 T dgo. 58 i 1 Tide Tables. (Purgished by United States Coast and ! Geodetic Survey.) Today. 2:33am 9:17a.m. Tomorrow. 3:28 am. 10:06 a.m. 3:09pm. 4:0lam. 9:49pm. 10:45am.| n_and Moon. H Rises. Sets, High Tow | High: t The Su Sun, foday Sun. ftomorrow 6 i Moon, ay 1:51 am. 12:05 p.m. | Aufomobile lamps to be lighted one- | It nowr after sunset. | MdhtHly rainfall in inches in the| Capital fcurrent month to date) M. Average. Record 3 709 82 B4 ‘91 H o) | November ... Weather in Various Clear 6.04 Cloudy Clear 026 Clear Snowing hold were having breakfast. as an A: sociatet! Press staff writer was ushered n You are just in time to share with us our morning meditations.” he smiled cordially, waving his visitor to a seat beside the table, after felieitations had been exchanged “I think there is a particularly timely entiment expresed here. Won't you read it slowly for us, please?’ He handed the reporter a Folger McKinsey's “Sunlit Days, It read: We'll sing of the better things, my friend, And we'll think of the better ways: We'll trust fomorrow to heal our s0rrow As beauty has healed today's We'll sing and think of the better things For the Who need t py of ke of those we know e sun and the shine of life On the rocky rond th: We'll trust in the better things friend, And hope for them. and smile We'll sing of the light instead of the night. And ‘twill come true after while; We'll chase the shadows and grief away, By thinking of better things: And maybe God’s answer will come some day To the heart that sweetest sings A tear trickled down the cheek of the aged multimillionaire as the poem was concluded my “Ah." he murmured, “that is. indeed.q & beautiful and timely sentiment. Will you read the prayer?” A baked apple’ cereal and tea sat upon the table untouched as this brief prayer was read: 1 would be gquiet, Lord, Nor tease, nor fret; Not one small need of mine ‘Wilt Thou forget. Amen. Mr. Rockefeller's own daily medita- | tion, & fixture at the family breakfasts, coincidentally expressed in religious ferver a word of optimism. It was headed “Eshilarant Spirits” and quoted & line from the Psalms: “He maketh my feet like hinds' feet.” “I think of Wordsworth’s lines. in which he described a natural lady, made by nature herself: “ ‘She shall be sportive as the fawn. ‘That wild with glee across the lawn Or up the mountain springs.’ “And,” the meditation continued, “it i8 this buoyancy, this elasticity, this springiness that the Lord is waiting to impart to the souls bf His children, so they may move along the ways of life with the light steps of the fawn. “Some of us move with very heavy feet. There is little of the fawn about us as we go along the romd. There is reluctance in our obedience. There is a frown in our homage. Our benevolence is graceless, and there is no charm in our piety, and no rapture in our praise, We are the victims of the ‘spirit of heaviness’ and yet, here is the word PLANE FOR AVERAGE PURSE DEVELOPED 475-Pound Ship Built to Sell for| $1,000—Does 100 Miles Per Hour. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 18.—A group of Chicago engineers have developed “radically different” girplane weighing only 475 pounds empty, which they think will eventually sell for $1,000. Maj. R. W. Schroeder, plame expert nd airport manager, said the new ship would bring aviation within the reach of ‘the average man The plane was not & motored glider, Schroeder said, but was built to stand strains usumily réquiring a much heavier ship. Its secret lay in the motor, de- veloped by Wiliam R. Beckman, H. McKay Steele and Wiison Herren. The plané was desigried By Clairé Linsted The motor is four cylinder. radial air-cooled. valveless, two cycle, and burns ordindry gasoline. The plane is {a two-plfce tandem open biplane, with 24-foot wing spread, sand is 19 feet 6 inches long. The top speed is 100 miles an hour and its cruising radius 349 mies at 85 miles an hour with a full fuel load of 16 galions. Aid Society to Entertain. The Norwegian Ladies' Aid Society will entertain_at 8 o'clock tomorrow night at the Y. W. C. A.. 614 E street Songs and esthetic dances by Miss Lois Lillie, Miss Viola Randolph, Miss n Oglie. John Norberg, Miss Lil- lian Sathe and Miss Edn'ee Malm are on the program. | chamber as one “who might bé con- JOWN D. ROCKEVELLER Shown before he boarded the train in| New York on his annual trip to his Winter home in Ormond Beach, Fla. Associated Press Photo. that tells us that God will make our feet ‘like hinds' feet.” He will give us exhilaration and_spring, enabling us to leap over difficulties, and to have strength and buoyancy for the steepest | hills. Let us seek the inspiration of the Lord. ‘It is God that girdeth me with | strength. and maketh my way perfect: As the Teporier stopped reading, Mr. Rockefeller reached for his handker- chief and wiped a tear from under his famous hinged and tinted eyeglasses. There was a brief pause, as “Mr. R." as he is known to members of his house- hold. added further expression of con- | currence in the thoughts expressed in | the morning service. The talk turned to lighter things. | “And how.” the reported asked. “is | vour golf, Mr. Rockefeller; as good as usual?” He threw back his head and laughed heartily. “Bless you" he replied, “and that | might not be so good. at that.” But he plays every day, he said. “It is a great game, and some mighty fine people play it. The golfers I know are | all very fine.” The interviewer was the first to greet Mr. Rockefeller upon his arrival | in Florida and he was rewarded with & shower of shiny new dimes, but only one for himself. The others were des- ignated for various members of his im- | mediate family with a “bl ss you” and | “bless them” prefixing the presentation of each, | This is the first season Mr. Rocke- feller has come to his Florida home | before Thanksgiving. €Caddy Overhauls Man Chased Over | Links by Policenien Possession of Liquor and| Reckless Driving Are €harged in County. BY # Btaff Correspondent of The Star | CHEVY CHASE, Md., November 18 An glert caddy on the golf links at the Columbia Country Club here who perabbed & man being pursued on foot by two Montgomery County policemen ended the search for the man who is | said #o have escaped from another of- ficer geveral weeks ago. Charles H. Weadon, 28, of Janeta near Rockville, the man captured, is said by police to be the one who es- caped from Officer Raiph Howard fol- lowing an exciting automobile chase on the Quince Orchard road. Weadon was charged, following his arrest, with possession of whisky with intent to sell and reckless driving. In default’ of bond he has been committed to the county jail at Rockville to await trial Officers E. R. Jones and Webb Hers- perger were at Chevy Chase Lake when one of them observed Weadon seated in the rear of a touring car which passed | going in the direction of Washington. Jones gave chase on his motor cycle and Hersperger followed. but as the of- ficers drew near Weadon jumped from | fhe moving machine, it is alleged. and | started running across the golf course. The officers were about to lose him when their calls to stop the man reached the ears of the caddy, who grabbed HOREHAM DINNER AME RUMOR hath it, a3 the highlight of Washington gaiety—and rightly so. epicures proclaim the ginners (7:30 to 9:30, $1.50 per person, or a la carte service) the culinary magic of town. extol the scintillating rhythm ham Orchestra, which awaits the late-comers secking supper dancing (10 to 1, couvert 50¢ except Friday, and Holidays, $1). Robert Kehl, Adams 0700, for réservations. & SUPPER DANCES The The knowing of Lowe-Nevin’s famous Shore- Held Over LAMAE & ALICE LOUISE Direct from South America Jeaturing VENEZUELAN TANGO | projects | lution once offered by Senator Capper |States in the World Court as a great |ate would “stop putting the accent on spoke before the Hoston Chamber of Commerce and over a Nation-wide radio hook-up. ‘The United Stages can assume an im- | pesing place in the move toward uni- | versal pence, Baker said, by various | hey included entry of this | countr Court and | reclamation from and adop- | tion of the Capper resolution to pre- vent the United States from becoming a benevolent neutral in times of war be- tween natioms which had agreed to ar- bitrate international differences. Reduction of tariff barriers to permit debtor nations ‘to pay their debts, in part at least, through the exchange of products, and the strengthening of our domestic fimancial structure were advo- cated by Baker. Not Motivated by Politics. Although the former War Secretary. who has been regarded in some political | sectors as a potential Democratic candi- | date for Prosident, was introduced by | President Henry I Harriman of the | sidered for the highest position in the land,” he asserted in opening his ad- dress that it was “not motivated by po- litical thoughts . Firm pronouncement by the United States that its industrial and financial resources would not be at the service of apgressor countries in times of war would put an end to ingernational war- fare, Baker said. He firged passage by Congress in the next session of a reso- of Kansas. in which the United States policy would be to prevent it from be- coming a market for finances. farm and industrial products, and munitions for aggressor nations which had pre- viously s eed to arbitrate international troubles. Though enactment of such legislation in times of war was apper- cntly beyond hope, Baker said during the current peace times it should be accepted. Hopes for Senate Action. Visualizing participation of the United inspiration to end war. Baker said that in the next session he hoped the Sen- deliberation and put some on action in regards to the court.” He asserted that, although he would not discuss the propriety of the United States joining the League of Nations, they “seemed to be getting along well with it.” He referred to the presence of United States officials at League Council meetings and similingly safd: “T would feel more honest if the United States paid its share of the rent for the buildings at Geneva." Among the potent causes for future wars were the bursting of the bounds of overpopulation and political ques- tions, Baker said. | The solvency and security of our | financial system, Baker continued, was the Nation's first line defense in the event of war. He made laudatory ref- erence to the Federal Reserve System and said: “Congress should pass a law to make very bank of deposit operating in the United States become a mem- ber of the Federal Reserve System or tax them so they would have to go out of business.” Such a program, he said. would pre- vent bank failures and business upsets. Urges Lower Tariff. ‘After portraying the change of the United States from & country owing $6,000,000,000 to European interests in 1914 to one being owed $21,000,000,000 by the principal nations of the world in 1930, Baker suggested there should | be a horizontal reduction in the tariff | to permit our debtors to make payments through the exchange of produets. This theory, he asserted, was that fob- | lowed by Jefferson and other early lead- ers of the Nation in paying off the debt incurred during our formative period. | Whether the tariff problem should be solved by international agreement, by reciprocity or our own initiative, Baker would not venture to say. He declared, however, that if the United States was | unwilling to permit payments of debts | through the exchange of products, “then we are in the position of saving the greatest debt of all time owing us and erecting barriers at our waters' | edge to prevent payment of that debt.” Jobless Barbered Free. DENVER, November 18 (#)—Den~ ver's jobless will not seek work un-| shorn. Union barbers will each give three haircuts a week until things pick_up, they announced . : e e e e e 'y Let Tolman Launder Tolman specializes on the laundering of fine banquet and table cloths, on beauti- fully embroidered linen napkins and exquisite tow- els. We wash them with Ivory Soap and restore to them the lovely body and gleaming surface they had when new. Let us mder vour precious linens for you. We guard them with appreciat- Tolman Laundry Offices 5310 Wisconsin Ave. Cleveland 7800 6 Dupont Circle North 3445 2469 Eighteenth St. satiny, | man Pord automobiles. ned to the wall, intertwined with the colors of the Sorbonne. ‘That's my only troph: sald, pointing to the fiag. the Naval Academy at Annapeli was my biggest surprise. People had told me and 1 had read so much about the drabness of the American land- scape. 1 couldi't believe my eves when 1 saw all those smooth and beautiful roads and the houses nestled in the green. It was surely an entirely dif- ferent America from what I ha pected.” Women Show Taste. “What impressed you most on your visit?” she was asked. “The wonder of America to me was right on the sidewalks of New York,” the premfér's daughter replied. “Never have 1 seen so many well dressed women. Taste? Why. every girl in America seems to have it. IUs certainly not the monopoly of any class. “It was & big surprise to me, T con- fess. 1 knew American women wore good clothes as a rule, but I had no idea this was universal. I saw stenog- raphers enter big buildings in the morn- ing on their way to work, and the same girls would have been taken for soclety folk in Paris, so well they looked. “You know,” Mlle. Laval went on, “there are lots of people who try to scare us with the idea of Americaniza- tion. They say it means standardiza- tion of everything, including clothes. They would have you believe American men and women are just automatons who function with machinelike preci- sion, who are always efficient, who laugh as one and who weep as one. just hu- But I know dif- ferently now. If what I saw is Ameri- canization T am not afraid of it. I like it. I wish we had more of it in Prance. Liked Midshipman Bryan. “Bverybody I met was charming, from the moment we set out from Paris until we got back. We danced a lot on board, | and father says the financial experts e took with him to do a lot of calculating came back first-class hoofers. This is no gibe, please understand me. It's a compliment. Mile. Laval went on to tell of her tour of Annapolis, in the company of Lou Bryan, Navy foot ball star. She implied that her teatime tete-a-tete with Midshipman Bryan compensated her entirely for her disappointment at not seeing the Navy eleven play Prince- ton. She admitted having wept over that_disappointment. “There were some things I didn't like.” said Mile. Laval, “notably, the whirl T was in. Everything seemed to be dancing before my eyes at times. My impressions were ail mixed up. When I close my eyes now and think back of the United States it is as if some one were rapidly unrolling a news reel. “Skyscrapers tumble about in gorge- ously lit dining rocms, crowds flash by, photographers mass in front, by my side and behind. It is a mad jumble of scenery gone crasy. “Some day, when I finish my law course, I would like to go back quietly 82 Years at 718 Tth St. NW. MODERNIZE Your Home by the EBERLY PLAN Now in Our New Home 1108 K N.W. A. EBERLY’S SONS (Ine.) A BANK for the INDIVIDUAL - A Specialized Bank Service Having several debts is more hurtful to your credit than hav}ng just one - - - thc totzl of ll-nem a“. Use your Llnk credit here to consolidate your debt it is an advisable credit-standing sound. By making over fifty-thousand loans to Washingtoni their yeuonaI standing has been }ICIPQJ T‘Le care of your temporary money needs through the facilities of this bank. Repayment is arranged through regular mnndxly Jepu:iu over a 1eu'l time. Morris Plan Bank ond see America for myself. I had only a glimpse of it, and it's just like esting a little (f some savory, you want mere. Wants to See People. “I want to see how the American pes ple live in the villages. Cities are a ways more or 1°ss elike. They give you no time to size up the life that goes on behind the externals. Por that you need leisure and contemplati-n, at least in Prance. I think it's the same in! America. “I have no hankering to see the big | buildings. I want to go to the South, | to see Virginia, and also the tranquil places of New England. I would like to catch that atmosphere. rather. “'As 1 threw a coln into the Potomac, | T am bound to go back to America some day,” she laughed. “Do _you know,” Mlle. Laval added suddenly, “people think I did the | illiest thing any French visitor to| America could do. I went shcpping for | gloves. American women come to shop | for gloves in Paris. Well, I did it just the other way around. and I got a good | bargain and a perfect fit. “Paris locks so quiet and sedate now,” she went on. “The city seems like an | old lady, but s gracious one. Wh: would they say in Paris of my expei ences in Washington? I sat for studio portrait in the morning, I went to luncheon, and when I left the hote: I saw framed ccples of the portrait hanging in the window. That's Amer- ica for you. A wonderful land (Copyriaht, 1931, by the North ¥ American jewspaper Alliance, Inc i Supper Is Planned. GLENN DALE, Md. November 18 | (Special). —An old-fashioned supper | will be given at St. George's Hall, Glenn | Dale, Md.. Saturday, the proceeds will be used to help finance the citizens' school bus which is transporting 28 | puplls to Laurel High School. The sup- |per is to be prepared and served by members of the Citizens’ Progressive | League. MADAM FLORENZ ine N45 CONNECTICUT AVENVE | Onee more the | Madam Florenz || Salon startles Wash- ington with mest un- usual values. Absolutely new Fall Evening Gowns that have been sell- ing for $49.50 Now $377:38 Each one hand se- lected by the noted stylist, Madam tles and sounded sirens ties an s at news of their Harper Chance, voutiaful pilet of the 28-foot motor launch Cnlun’;‘ll. lold”(‘)f anchoring when the fog rolled in on the party near Cape May Sunday after- noon and how on Mondav he guided the boat cautiously to the Fourtesn- foot Bank Light House by the sound of its fog horn There the party was found vesterday by a Coast Guard pa- trol beat and brought asnore. Women Praise Youths. Three young women in the party. | Millville High' School teachers, mdded their encomfums to those of the four boys, students in the high schbool. “We weren't terribly uneomfortable at any time during the trip,” said Miss Isabelle McCaughey, 25. “We started out with sandwiches and wafer Sunday afternoon. buf had caten those when Sundsy night came wera’ very kind to us, giv- ing us their coats to cover us while we tried to sleep during the night. Mon- day morning everybody was hungry, but when we got to the light house the keepers prepared a big raeal for us. We had fish, potatoes and Biscuits. shi Members of Party. | Members of the party in addition to | Chanee and Miss McCa Hennah Ewan, 21 Miss Alma Mover, | 26; Irwin Bwan, 18, Miss Evan’s broth- | er; Marshall Roe, 18, and his brothers, | Kenneth. 15, and Harwood, 17 They had been sought by three sea- planes, two dozen Coast Guard and pri- | vately owned hoats and more than 200 men when they failed to return Sun- day night after embarking at 2 p.m. for a cruise down Delawere Bey. RECEIVE COMMISSIONS | Three Capital Residents Made Re- serve Lieutenants. Commissions in the Army Reserve Corps have been issued by the War De- partment to the following Washington residents: ughey were Miss | |l TONITE ...and erery W ednesday, Saturday and Sunday nite to the best music in town. forms o cing taugh one of us suffered any great hard- 6% You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the expense of reuewing. $1,000 for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Richard D. Field, 11 S street, second | |f lieutenant in the Signal Corps; Orville A. | Beerbower, jr., 1819 G street, second lisutenant of Infantry, and Joseph McG. | |f Michaelson, 2548 University place, sec- | ond lieutenant of Cavalry. SO GRATIFYING Has been the respomse to our sensational offer that we are going to continue it for one additional week. ANY Two Dresses Cleaned and Pressed $ l .50 Men’s or Ladies’ Felt Hats Florenz, for their unusual style and in- dividuality. No Charge for Alterations Street and afternoon dresses included. Sizes 14 to 40 move to keq: your 14th Street N.W. 17th Street N.W. Park Road N.W. 18th Street N.E. H Street N.E. Columbia Read N.W. Georgia Avenue N.W. Pennsylvania Avenue N 14th Street N.W. Georgia Avenue N.W. Georgia Avenue N.W. 2 Men’s Suits, or 1 Suit and 1 Overcoat Cleaned and Pressed B 35¢ North Capitel Street 3903 14th Street N.W. Plant, 1343-1347 S. Capitol Street IN THE GARDEN OF ALLAH EUROPE s/ AFRICA n AMERICA on lbenw/?flfie de/uxe OLDEN STATE LIMMITED . | CALIFORNIA “There ie No Finer Train™ Sports of Biarritz, S Rndrewe, W rmbledons Epsom Downs and theold time West— in the America of roma Out door life in the nce and celor. land of the palm and oleander, orange grove and cactus giant. Luxurious hotels. UNUSUAL SERVICE to this UNUSUAL LAND NO EXTRA FARE The Rock Island - Col. 0636 Under Supervision U. S. Treasury Stopover at Excelsior Springs, Missouri. Por further information and reservations, address CONN. AVE at CALVERT 6th and C Sts. N.W. Met. 0074 .W.MACKENZIE, Pres. “‘For Health’s Sake, Send it all to Tolman” LINCOLN BURGHER, Dist. Pass's Agent Lines ROCKISLAND 1408 H Street Northwest U PEUED DR B BT B R T SN R R § .