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CENTER - PENNA.AVE. AT THST, - PHONE DISTRICT 4224 Sample one-way fares PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK ... a Starg Lines. thru ‘moudain scenery. b every Suodoy leaves BUS CENTER 0 AM. Standard Time Round Trip, $3.00 Tickets and information to all poinis in the United States. Phone DISTRICT 4224 ACID INDIGESTION! Acid indigestion causes gas pains, upset stomach, nausea—you “feel bad all over.” If you are suffering from these distressing conditons, you need Father Kelly’s Preparation, a pleasant liquid scientifically pure, tested drugs. long recognized for | their beneficial effects. Thousands of sufferers have found welcome relief and are recommending this excellent preparation to their friends. Father Kelly's acts as an.antiacid and brings prompt relief from gas pains, bloat stomach and consequent nausea. laxative. KELLY'S PREPARATION today. Only 75c, at all good drug stores. ~Advertisement. 45¢ AFTER 7 BM. INSTEAD OF WAITING FOR 8:30 STATION-TO-STATION CALL aritime Provinces. 922 Fifteenth Visit Canada’ Planned itinerarie St. N.W. Washington, D. C. STEAMSHIPS. WEST INDIES AND CARIBBEAN GUEST CRUISES every week with_the Great White Fleet, 10 to 1R days, $115 and up. United Fruit. Co.. Pier R. Tel. WHitehall 4-18 5th Ave. Tel. LAck. 4-6 Over 3 N on: famous - steamers of PROVI: BENCE LiNE, T8 ine Grotccted INLAND WATER_ROUTE. " RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Select Seashore Vacation d treditional cu rates, both Plans. WALTE! v A7ZAN T/ A7) ATLANTIC_CITY N. J.—Brighter and more attractive than ever. Hotel accommeda- tions. cottages and apartments (furnished or ‘warurnished) at vers reasonable cost: RITZ-CARLTON Atlantic City, N. J. ABORINNjoeeen cunnectic: #ame qual table maintained for past 30 £3.00 UP. ILY: §1 if X P. DAILY Ownership Management J P_ ASBURY PARK, N. J. H . "ALAMEDA. ASBURY PARK, N. 207 7th Ave—ONE BLOCK FROM BOARD- WALK. American or European Plan ularrates. ] SPECIAL WEEK-END RATES. Pop. Up L HARELA EH]T9,, e o ARECNT OCEAN CITY, MD._ FASTINGS HOTEL 92, eaz: -5 ] vate Ba O an ppnan Julv =5 FACING THE OCEAN. msflc From $3.25 Daily, $20 | Weekly. Meals Inciuded. Free Parking and Bathing. C Parker Smith. | THE LANKFORD| ©n Boardwalk; garage. M. B. Quillan, Prop. VIRGINIA. In the Mountains of Virginia. Bryce's Hotel and Cottages (near). Orkney Springs. 19th season. IU's the most unique Tesort in the State, American plan, modern; $2.50 per day, $15 per week: the best of £00d things to'ent fresh {rom our eardens: an awimming. bowling. dancing. of our fuests stay all Symmer er city eat, mosquitos. foul air. Here the air is cool ‘and bracing. Mr. and Mrs, William R. Bryce, Owners. P. .. B: A COLONIAL BEACH HOTEL en-the-Potomac—acres of shady play- 5 iful, healthful, restful—try your vacation place. Good food, water 2.50 to $23 weel $2.50 to $4.50 daily. Peninsuia Bus oui_door. Frank D. Blackistone. Msr. * VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. The Beachome Apartment Atlantie Boulevard and 28th St. @ay. week or month. L. T. ROWLAND. Mgr. Diving, Swimming, Canoe Ti ing, Sailing as well as Golf, Dancing . . . Concerts. Excelle: 3 ‘Alleghenies. 2200 Feet above Sea v beach. Special recreation facilities for chi n. A family resort with re- stricted cliontele. Writs today for folder and mop. THE CRESTMONT INN William Woods, Proprietor EAGLES MERE PENNSYLVANIA “YORK to PROVIDENCE or | information on request. | 50 STAR DRIVERS "RECEVE AWARDS Six Presented Watches by Company for Five-Year Safety Records. Fifty drivers of The Evening Star automobiles who traveled more than 1,000,000 miles without an accident during the past year received awards of the National Safety Council at the annual presentation ceremonies today. Six of the drivers, who have had no accidents for five years, also were given gold wrist watches by the com- pany as a surprise reward for their safety record. Among those recelving watches was Mrs. Melba Markham Fuchs, nurse at The Star’s medical clinic, who holds the distinction of being the first woman to receive a five-year safety award to a newspaper employe from | the National Safety Council. Others who received watches and five-year awards were: Fred A. | Straining, James William Thompson, | George B. Porter, Walter E. Thomp- | son and Eugene V. Smith. Straining | | has driven 190,210 miles without an accident, the best record among The Star's drivers. | serving Upper Marlboro. | Samuel H. Kauffmann, assistant business manager of The Star, pre- sided at the “surprise party” at which the watches were presented after the regular awards were made in the club | room. Drivers Congritulated. Frank B. Noyes, president of The | Evening Star Co., congratulated each | driver individually as he gave the | safety Council awards. | Capt. C. H. Ruth, superintendent, | who officiated at the presentation, | compounded of | Teferred to the death of Ivan John- | son, rural supervisor, who was killed |in a collision with an electric train near Annapolis last month as un- avoidable. A personal inspection of the scene of the tragedy convinced him, Capt. the co-operation of railroad com- lpm’lies and road officials in having | mecessary safety devices installed. Fleming Newbold, business manager of The Star, noted that there were only 15 drivers on the paper who had accidents during the year in which | the blame rests partially or entirely on them, and urged that group to strive for a safety award during the coming 12 months. ‘W. Galt Burns, circulation manager, expressed the hope that next year's total of safe miles driven by Star em- ployes would exceed the 1935 record of 1,188,952 miles. Four Get Four-Year Awards. In addition to the awards given those who have driven five years with- out an accident, 4 drivers received four-year pins, 7 passed their third two-year prizes and 21 attained one- year awards. The four-year drivers are M. S. Mc- Orink, Leslie L. Thompson, George W. Mehfelt gnd Edwin H. West. : Those who received three-year pins were G. H, Ogden, Harry C. Merry, J. R. Thompson, L. R. Hutchinson | Harry R. Robert F. Perkins and | Augustus O, Chinn, ‘Two-year awards were given R. M. Pobst, Charles L. Perrygo, M. Aubrey Grimm, Berry Payne, Phillip Herr- mann, James Leroy Thompson, John | W. Beha, Davie Quarles, Leroy B. | Ford, Irwin Pridgeon, Randolph J. Routt and Alfred Lyons. Winners of the one-year awards were: Samuel A. Nace, W. D. Gro- gan, Benjamin A. Burroughs, M. P. Beard, Samuel M. Jayroe, George C. Hesterburg, E. M. Parham, Carl E. | Bean, Raymond Bowie, Jobhn P. Adams. Karl Krebs, Henry C. West, C. G. Lucas, C. G. Thomas, Henry W. George, C. J. Fisher, James F. Had- | den, Hayes Jackson, James Lucas, John Boschet, and John C. Mueller. 13 Receive Certificates. “No accident certificates” and let- ters were sent to 13 other “safe” drivers, who have been with the com- pany less than a year and hence were ineligible for a Safety Council award. Those receiving certificates, all of whom have driven more than six, but less than 12 months, were: Vincent Charles A. Henry, J. A. Hawkins and Harry Goodman. - | Star less than six months and had had no ‘accident when the Safety Council's year expired, April 30, re- ceived letters of appreciation. They were O. V. Staats, Harry Wilson, Rob- ert B. Power, K. Stabler, Joseph P. Donohue, Angus Green and Francis Routt. Drivers who had accidents under circumstances beyond their control were not eligible for the “no accident” medals of the Safety Council, but 10 whose record during the past year placed them in that classification were given “certificates of careful driving” by The Star. Winners of the certificates were Claude A. Thompson, Walter C. Tuck- er, Roy Gray, Joseph Spriggs, Phillip W. Briscoe, Lawrence H. Poland, A. A. Allen, William A. White, James E. Henson and B. F. Thomas, SLEMP GRAN.TED $13,333 IN SUIT AGAINST HUSTON Former Republican Chairman Did Not File Answer in Party Fund Case. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 25.—C. Bascom Slemp, secretary of the late Presi- dent Coolidge, yesterday won a judg- ' | ment for $13,333 against Claudius H. % | Huston, former Republican National Committee chairman. Huston d§l nnot answer the suit for $10,000 and interest for expenses in the 1929 Virginia campaign. In a deposition, Slemp said Hus- ton had offered to pay him. tae sum in 1929 provided he would berrow the money for preliminary organi- zation expenses “for the Republican party and/or the National Repub- iican Committee.” - Slemp deposed he borrowed the money on his’own note, which he repaid, but that Hustaa had paid nothing. Health Official to Speak. . STATE COLLEGE, Pa., —J. R. Hoffert of the Staté Depart- ment of Health, speaks todhy before the Pennsylvania Sewage Works As- sociation, holding its ninth annual conference. Others who will speak are Frank Altemus of Norristown, R. L. Hunger of Buffalo, N. Y., and Grant M. Ole- weller ‘of Ardmore. The conference opened yesterday. He is a rural agent | year without an accident, 12 obtained | S. Free, J. M. Carey, Gilbert Smith, | Drivers who had worked for The | 2@, | THE EV Washington Wayside L] G-MEN AT WORK. ISAPPEARANCE of one of & group of newsboys during & tour of crime exhibits of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion recently caused a flurry of excite- ment that culminated in & “boyhunt” right in the Department of Justice, under personal leadership of the head “G-man,” J. Bdgar Hoover. After the various places of interest to boys in the department had been searched fruitlessly, Hoover returned to his office, presumably to order all his agents into the hunt. ‘The mystery was solved as Hoover walked into his big private office, how- ever, There, curled up on a big leather settee, was the missing boy—sound asleep. Tired from his rounds of the department, he had remained in Hoo- ver's office after a hand-shaking fest half an hour earlier. . * x X X SPEED COUNTING. When working at top speed a Treasury expert can count approzi- mately 40,000 new notes in & day. It's ‘much harder with old bills, it being possible to count only about 25,000 in an 8-hour period. * X ¥ X ORATORICAL HYPERBOLE: T THE Grass Root Convention re- | cently held in Illinois, one of the | back-woodsmen decrying the present tendency to scrap the Constitution, | said: | | “I'm for that Constitution all the | way through, but if it becomes neces- | ed | Ruth said, that the crossing should | sary to make a sacrifice I'm no piker. | 1t | be classified as “blind,” and urged the | 1t would be better to give up not only } has the added benefit of being mildly | drivers to report other dangerous!a part but maybe the whole of our | Get a bottle of FATHER |crossings, as he has been promised | Constitution in order to preserve the remainder.” e MORE NAMES MAKE NEWS. She sits all day at a desk in the lobby of the Agricultural Depart- | ment. Her duty is to steer all | visitors to the proper building and | 1o give them the room number of | the Agricultural personnel they | | = TWO BOYS ESCAPE | SENTENCES OF LIFE Young Kidnapers of Sheriff Get Mercy—One Freed, Other Given Light Term. By the Associated Press. | JASPER, Ind., June 25.—Justice re- t . Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. - wish to see. Her name? Appropri- ately enough, it is Miss Ruth Stehr. One of the principal duties of thé Soil Conservation Service's Agricultural engineers is gully con- trol. Gullies are controled, it seems, by flling them with earth. So won’t punsters have a fleld day when ‘they learn the Soil Erosion Service has employed a Mr. Phil Gully as assistant agri- cultureal engineer on a Meridian, Miss., project? * % % % SIGNS OF SUMMER. EmYBoDY eating ice cream cones. Boys waiting with their coaster wagons at grocery stores on weekdays now, as well as Saturday . . . “May I carry your order?” they ask hope- fully. Predominance of those military| “German” haircuts for the malé con- tingency. Brown and white, black and white, and white shoes on the counter in| shoe-shining parlors. | Said one bootblack: “I wonder why is it, the ladies always comes for the men’s shoes in the mornin’ an’ the men comes for the ladies’ shoes at night.” * % X X COLLECTOR'S ITEM. The Navy is asking for sealed bids on a long list of surplus ma- terials mow at the Boston Navy Yard. Any one interested can bid on lot 54, but they must take the entire lot “where is, as is and if is.” It consists of 1,223 hose wash- ers, 8 trousers hangers, 5 gas tank covers, 17 dogs, 5 airport frames, 21 lifting gear guides,’ 15 hinges, 52 pads and 2 dock rings. 2 CALLING ALL CATS. SEDATE Washington newspaper financial editor who has a pen- chant for feeding stray cats is dxs-i playing two badly clawed hands as the result of reverting back to the| small boy era. Several days ago he called some | of his alley visitors, who come to his home for food, into the kitchen and opened & can of salmon. Then he| pulled a little whistle out of his pocket—a souvenir of the recent| Shrine convention. Wonder what will happen, he| | thought to himself, and quickly blew | | & blast on the whistle. %5 ‘;f.mu: RN The terrorized felines leaped as | one into the air and tore at the win- | dows. The Good Samaritan's hands were clawed As he attempted to open the door to release them. | laxed its stern mien for two young West Virginians, and instead of pre- paring to serve life.sentences for kid- naping, one was frée“foday and the other faced s light term in the In-j diana Reformatory. Fourteen-year-old Béscum Ray, Jr., left with his parents, who live at Huntington, W. Va.; Maurice Sheri- dan, 17, of Huntington will start a 1-to-10-year sentence. Sheriff Ed Leugers, whom they forced to accompany them into an adjoining county last week, brought them into court yesterday. Judge John L. Sumner, setting | aside the mandatory life sentences he | pronounced last week, permitted the boys to plead guilty to automoblle banditry. Ray is to report to a parole | officer. Sheridan, said to have persuaded his companion to run away from home, drew a heavier sentence. N.E.A. OFFICER TO SPEAK Givens to Close Radio Series on Parent Educhtion. Willard E. Givens, executive secre- | tary of the National Education Asso- | ciation, will be the speaker in the final program of the series of weekly parent - education broadcasts spon- | sored by the National Congress of and Teachers, University of | Chicago, and the National Broadcast- ing Co. He will speak at 5 pm. Thursday from Denver, where he is attending the annual convention of | the N. E. A. | The weekly series has been in prog- | ress since last October. Plans now are being made for another series of similar broadcasts during the com- | ing school year. | Parents Visit Our Exhibit of Decorative Mirrors Types, sizes, shapes and ornements- tion individually designed te fit inte sny decorstive scheme for home or store — walls, panels, doors, etc. Tdess and suggestions submitted. Deslers Supplied. Write or phone. Hires Turner Glass Co. ROSSLYN West 2560 to Soothe Ugly Eczema Soothing, cooling, healing Zemo re- lieves itching distress and helps you escape from the tortures of Eczema. For 25 years this wonderful remedy | has produced such milnx‘mlh because of its rare ingredien! Get Zemo today—for Rashes, Pimples, Ringworm and Eczema. Worth the price because you get relief. Tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Bureau, No, 4874, All druggists, 35¢, 60c, MONGOLS AMAZED BYU.S. EXPEDITION Hotbed of Intrigue Wonders at Roerich Search for Drought Plants. By the Associated Press. KALGAN, Inner Mongolia, June 25.—Inner Mongolia, & hotbed of in- ternational intrigye, 1s greeting with mingled wonderment and amusement the activities of & botanical expedi- tion sent to this region by the United States Department of Agriculture. The expedition is headed by Prof. Nicholas Roerich, founder of the Roerich Museum in New York. Ac- companied by his son, George; four ‘White Russian guards and sundry Mongol and Buriat helpers, it arrived two months ago in search of drought- resisting plants which might be de- veloped for use in the American Mid- dle West. The Mohgolian mind cannot un- derstand why the United States would send an expedition half-way around the world “just to dig up a few Mon- golian weeds.” Japanese Watch Expedition. Roerich, whose luxuriant beard is a source of constant wonderment to Mongols, took up quarters 200 miles | north of here at the home of “Swede” Larsen, “Duke of Mongolia.” Mrs. Larsen, who is visiting in Kalgan, said she knew little about the activi- ties of the expedition, except “they are heavy eaters and seem always busy.” According to A. P. Friedlander Roerich’s White Russian representa- tive in Peiping, the Japanese are watching Roerich’s activities. The 70-year-old explorer has,written him, he said, he has made several important discoveries of plants which are likely to help the United States combat the drought problem and hss sent him numerous specimens of seeds for shipment to America. Roerich plans to push his expedi- tion farther into the interior through the Gobi Desert, along the 1ringe of Sovetized Outer Mongolia, thence southward into the Ordos Plateau of ENING STAR, WASHINGTON, ' D. ¢ °TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1935. Suiyuan November, Will Avoid Outer Mongolia. “He naturally will not attempt to ;nmm“ Mongolia, 'hge there being shot Reds,” Friedlander said. Roerich & year ago was granted an audience with Emperor Kang Teh of Manchukuo, to whom he presented a medal of his own invention. He is a frequent contributor to the White Russian press of the Far East, He is & Russian with French citizenship. The area in which the expedition is operating is at present a scene of ever-increasing Japanese penetration. Province, ; returning: faliout Glen Alden Coal Head Quits. WILKES-BARRE, Pa., June 25 (7). —Charles F. Huber has resigned as chairman of the Board of Glen Alden Coal Co. to assume his duties as ad- ministrator of the Anthracite Indus- try's new program of self-government. EDUCATIONAL. COLUMBIA UNIV. BCHOOL. 1024 B8th n.w—Prep. Eng.. Span.. Pr.. Ger., Latin. | . science, ete tered optometrist. £ASY ON YOUR MIND £ASY OM YOUR PURSE 5v't “exam. 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