Evening Star Newspaper, June 21, 1921, Page 13

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CONTROVERSY OVER NEW POST OFFICE Merchants’ Worry Baseless, as Department Building Is Assured. MAY MOVE 11TH ST.OFFICE Station at 12th and G Streets, May Replace It for Better Distribution. Merchants in the vicinity of the Post Oftice Department building are quite satisfied with the coming establish- ment July 1 of a branch postal sta- tion in the big department building, it developed today. Fear has been expressed by some that the agitation by merchants north of them for the retention of the 11th street postal station migh induce postal officials to revoke the order es tablishing the branch in the depart- ment building. : Officials today were of the opinion that the branch in the Post Office De- partment building had come to stay and would not be changed, no matter what might be done in relation to the 11th street branch station, which. un- der present orders, is to be abandoned July 1, when the branch station is put into the department building. R The whole question of the location of branches of the Washington city post office is in the hands of the Post Office Department, in the final nn.al- ysis, decisions being made after City Postmaster Chance has made his rec- | ommendations. 11th Street Office Not Considered. The problem of the 11th street sta- tion, it is pointed out, has no partic- ular relation at this time to the es- tablishment of a station in the de- partment building. It has long been the desire to put a station in the de- partment, it being felt by many that ! GIRL, UNABLE TO SPEAK ENGLISH A YEAR AGO, WINS SCHOOL HONORS 8pecial Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md., June 21.— Unable to speak a word of English, Miss Helen Chase, fifteen-year-old adopted daughter of Mrs. Rachel Waldman, mother of Dr. Jacob Waldman, a local druggist, arrived in this country less than a year ago. Despite this, she has just finished the freshman year at the Hyattsville High School with a general average in studies for the year of 95 per cent, the third highest mark made at the school during the year. During her short stay in this country she .has learned to speak English fluently. In addition, she speaks German, Russian and French. Not satisfled with her_ scholastic accomplishments, Miss Chase went in fer sports at the school, and has developed into quite an adept bas- ket ball player. She was also a member during the year of the girls' cadet corps, in the work of which organization she also be- came quite proficient. She is among the most popular students at the school. She was adopted when two years old by Mrs. Waldman, and, to- gether with Mrs. Waldman, had many exciting experiences in war- torn” Europe before coming to this country. MEETTOCONSIDER FEDERALPOWERACT |Manufacturers Assert Legis- lation Is Detrimental and Invades State Rights. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 21.—Manufac- turers interested in the subject of water power, from the standpoint of the consumer, assembled here today for a | OFU. S. RESOURGES P he Washington city post of- | conference called by the Water Power fice was moved out of the department | League of America to discuss the ques- buiding some ten vers ago a branch| tions of power, power shortage, cost of WILL GIVE WARNING Executive Committee Formed Here to Educate Country and Disseminate Facts. Organization has been effected of an executive committee on natural re- sources, following a meeting of com- mittees from the National Academy of Sciences, the American Association for the Advancement of Sciemce and the National Research Couricil. It was announced today that the newly formed excculive committee plans the appointment of 2 paid execu- tive and necessary clerical force, with an office in this city. The purpose of the committee is the promotion of scientifically directed effort and education for the most ef- ficlent and advantageous use of the natural resources of the United States. An_immense nation has been built up, but at the expense of a much larger consumption and Joss of its re- sources than was necessary, it is stated. i Seekn to Maintaln Supplies. It seems, therefore, to be the most important duty of the scientific as- sociations and organizations, as well as of the educational institutions of the country, to disseminate informa- tion and instruction as to the real condition of our natural resources: to warn the nation where danger of exhaustion 1 and in the light of the best sclentific and practical knowledge that we now possess, and through new researches ected to this end, to teach the ways in which our resources may best be maintain- ed. These great economic problems are so involved with industrial, fina cial and political questions that little direct influence can be exerted by any scientific body without a long edu- cational campaign. This will in time bear fruit. but the longer the time that will be required, the more im- portant is an immediate beginning. Exact scientific knowledge alone can guide in this large field, but even science cannot take care of indus- triil waste. Such correction can be atation should be placed in the build- ing. Much unfavorable comment has been caused among visitors to the city over the fact that one could not buy a stamp at the headquarters of the postal service, Whether this thought is right or wrong. officials do not di cu they took into consideration, however, the fact that it was wide- spread. Accordingly, when the new admin- fstration came into effect. one of the very first things it did was to author- ize the Washington city post office to place a branch postal station in the department building at 11th street and Pennsylvania avenue. To Be Carrfer Station. station is to be a carrier h city letter carriers work- instead of from These car- territory This station. wi ing directly from it the main city post office. riers will deliver to the sonth of the office. 1t is pointed out that the problem of the present 11th street station might be solved by the later estab- ment of a station in a somewhat mote centrally -located place, in relation to the territory now left uncovered by a postal station. As was suggested vesterday, 12th and G streets is re- parded by many as a better location than 11th street between E and F stroets. The Post Office TDepartment is foread to consider the placing of atations in regard to the total popu- Jation to be served, it is pointed out. and must take into consideration the needs of the postal service as well 28 the needs of the people to be served. OFFERS FREE MARRIAGES. Rev. Simon P. W. Drew Noting Church Anniversary. The seventeenth anniversary of the founding of the Cosmopolitan Baptist Church and of the pastorate of Rev. Simon P. W. Drew are being jointly celebrated this week at the church, in & series of sermons by prominent col- ored ministers and laymen. The exer. cises began with services Sunday, June 12. and will continue to June 30, When what is termed as “a million- dollar wedding pageant” will take place. Dr. Drew will marry. on that date, free of charge, the first five cou- ples who bring in marriage licenses. Letters of congratulation from prominent _citizen re- ceived by Dr. Drei SLOAN TAKES NEW POST. James Sloan. who has been chief clerk of the executive force of the White House since Mr. Harding’s in- auguration, and who was a member of the secret service of the United States for more than fifteen years. was to- lay appointed secretary to A. D. La % er, chairman of the newly organized Shupping Board. Mr. Sloan entered up.on his new duties at noon today. have been ¥r. Sloan is a native ‘of Danville, nf, He served with much distinction as\al secret service operative during thel wdministrations of Presidents Roosewelt and Taft. Immediately upon Mr. Hiirding's nomination at Chicago, Mr. Slowan. who had retired from the service. offered Bis services to per- sonally ,guard the nominee. which he did throu'shout the eampaign. UNE NOWN MAN DIES. A man ap varently about thirty-five years old, w.|\0se appearance indicated he had been'n bad health, was taken sick at Penn::vlvania avenue and 7th street yestera:\y afternoon. He died at Casualty iiospital shortly after- ward. and_his \"ody was taken to the morgue. Two peDknives, tobacco and & pipe were in b8 pockets. His shirt was initialed “H. H. S.” Police today are trying to establish his identity. P-K quality is a:; known quali it here. a i s Sm Prime Becf Rib Roast.........Ib, 35c Chuck Roast.......}Ib. 18 Bouillon and Clod. . .;. Ib., 25¢ Boiling Beef. ... ....Ub., 10c Corned Beef...........Ub., 15¢ ‘The famous Mo “Supreme” brand. Ib., New Potatoes Fine No. 1 stock. | 10 lbs,, 25¢ * Tomatoes Mississippi Stock Ib,, 18c; 4-1b. pan, 60cr P-K Coffee P-K Blemd fo that's why yor 's fresh. fuel and amendments to be asked to|made only by an enlightened moral oked Hams Sugar Best American Cane Granulated, 1b, 6%c 10 lb&, 63c the federal power act. The league hopes to induce private capital to in- vest in the enterprises of water power development to relieve power shortage and reduce the cost of power to the consumer. Assalls the Enactment. The Water Power League assails the workings of the federal power act as “detrimental to water power develop- ment and asserts that the act has made it practically impossible for private ises to engage in these under- The league also asserts that the federal act has taken from the several states all their rights to in- ters| streams -within their borders and places them in charge of the fed- eral power commission, which is com- posed of the retary of War as chairman, the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of Agriculture. Also it Is asserted that the act takes from the War Department the authority vested in it by the constitution and relegates these powers to the com- mission. Officials of the Water Power League assert that there are on file at Wash- ington today more than 200 applica- tions for permits and licenses to de- velop wuter powers. The total horse- ower of these projects is estimated more than- 20,000.000, and if they were carried to completion it would require’ several billion dollars to fnance them. League officials stay, that without exception, all these projects have been halted by rules and regu- lations promulgatecd by the power commission, which passed out of exist- ence March 4 with the change of ad- ministration. Blocks the Financing. The league declares that “Ameri- can financiers refuse to consider the investment of hundreds of millions of dollars in projects which are made uncertain by the vagaries of a body of men subject to the changes which occur in American politics every four years.” It is to discuss these fea- tures that the Water Power League has called the conference. A statement from the league urges Congress to “pass the power act to create a body which would be able to grant licenses to prospective pow- er developers and relieve them of the tedious delays incident to getting a Lill through Congress for each pro- posed development.” Seek to Expedite Development. _The league announces its determina- tion to make an effort to break the deadlock in water power develop- ment in this country and bring about an immediate and general movement in the development ‘of every ounce of hydro-electric energy in the coun- try, to the emd that waning fuel sup- plies may be_conserved. Theodore E. Burton, for years chair- man of the rivers and harbors com- mittee in Congress, is head of the advisory council of the Water Power League. The officers of the league are: Charles * H. Ingersoll, president; Charles T.! Root, first vice president; John H. Allen, second vice president, and Fred- erick L. Long, secretary. —— JOHNSON BILL PASSED. sense. Immediate steps will be taken to secure the co-operation of as many as possible of the educational and scientific institutions of the country. The committee will not duplicate the work of any existing organization engaged in special work for the pro- tection and best economic use of nat ural resources of any kind: its pur- pose is to act in an _advisory ca- pacity to such organizations, (o he them in securing better support, provide for filling the saps to in the broaud field that ought to be covered and to extend to those societies that are now too weak in membership or resources to carry out adequately their purposes the influence of the great scientific bodics from which they derive their authority. Hopes to Provide Facts. By spreading information through the channels of the press, by means of lectures and by publications of ity own the committee will endeavor to attain more effective and co-ordi- nated instructions on the important subject of the relation of our natural resources to public welfare, in the colleges and universities. In the matter of correcting and fur- thering legislation that may bear on the subject of our natwral resourccs, the executive committee expects 1o provide the facts and information and furnish a broad scientific basis for state and federal action. keeping free of the handling of specific lesi lative problems, which would prop- erly pertain to existing organizitions. The following took part in the or- ganization: John C. Merriam, pr dent, the Carnegie Inatitution e;,l Washington:- John M. Clarke, dires tor, New York State Museum; J. Mc- Keen Cattell, editor of Sci Ver- non Kellogg. search Coun 3 rector, zoological laboratory. Univer. sity of Pennsylvani; Henry Graves, former chief United States forest service; Isaiah Bowman, direc- tor, American Geographical Society Barrimgton Moore, president, can Ecological Society; V . Shel- ford. professor of zoology, University of Illinois. Mr. Merriam is chairman, Mr. Clarke, vice chairman: Albert L. Bar- rows, secretary, and Willard G. Van Name, assistant secretar: URGES SUBMARINE PROBE. A resolution authorizing the Senate naval committee to investigate the types of submarines now under con- struction and operation by the and report on their suitabilti service and comparative efficiency as compared to submarines of other na- tions, was introduced yesterday by Senator King, democrat, Utah. ° McClung, —_— MISS ALIC 2 M. NEW BALL RENTS BILL INTRODUCED Senator’s Measure Would Extend Present Law Until May 22, 1922. Senator Ball of Delaware, chairman of the District committee, today in- troduced a bill to extend until May . the operation of the Ball rent 4 Unless this bill, amending the act, becomes a law, the rent act will; expire October 22, 1921 “The bill had previously been ordered | favorably reported by the Senate Di trict committee, and Senator Ball will | tile the favorable report LOMOrrow. i In a few particulars the bill amends the rent act in addition to extending its operatio! Buildings Exempted. piarages, warchouses. any buildings or part of a building or land attacked ex to a building used by the tenant clusively for business purpos: than the subleasing or other) contrac for us living condi- tions.” are cxempted from operation n o of the law after October 22, 1921 The bill also authorizes the appoint- ment of an attorney by the rent com- on at a salar 000 2 v e tinal section of U “That in all cases where the owner | prior to Anril 18, 1921, collected excess rents or charge, he may s8 to the tenant di-| rect, and in default of his so doing, then upon application by the tenant | to the commission a rule shall be is- sued against such owner and scr; in the same manner as other notices, from the commission, requiring such | owner to refund such excess to the tenant witkin ten days of such rule, | and in default of such refund within the said ten days the commis shall proceed to recover double the amount of excess, with cost and a! torney's fees, as rein provided." . ¢ bili provide: any return such exc. Senator Ball will seek to have fa-| vorable action upen his bill at an| early date. He believes that it will pass promptly in view of the fact that| the report of the District committee y upon the bill was practically unan- ! istrict committee will i | SHOOTS UP TOWN FOR HOUR. | BUFFALO, N. Y.. June 21—Three! persons _ were wounded today when Frank Fisher, a farmer. held the main, street of Oakland, thirty miles east of | here, for an hour firing with a rifle at| pedestrians and storekeep He w: Captured after he had uscd all his am munition. * was released from a state hos- ! for the insane a vear ago. P ) ' House Approves Admitting Auens" Who Sailed June 8. The Johnson bill to permit aliens who sailed on or before June 8 last to land at American ports was passed late yesterday by the House. The excess admitted over the June quota established under the percentage im- migration law would be charged off against later monthly quotas. The measure_was taken up by a vote of 171 to 70 under suspension of the rules. The number which the measure would permit to enter the United States at this time is estimated at approximately 10,000. The bill now goes to the Senate. . If you want the best you can get The Ham that is na- tionally known for its deliciousness. Bacon Hickory smoked, sugar cured, sliced with the rind off by ma- chine. Ib., 35¢ Fresh Eggs Country eggs shipped to us di- rect from tfia farm. Packed in cartons. Dozen, 32¢c 28c Special Flour Sale Gold Medal ar Pillsbury's 6Ib. Sack..... 38c 1Zib. Sack... 70¢ 24%lb. Sack...............SL35 r the day's sales— u get all the flavor’ i FURNIT 2 only woman member of the hotographed today in § on 1 CHARGED IF You Wisy LIUS LANSBU NINTH STRE . ROB ERTSON OPEN SHOP FIGHT IS WONBY LABOR Unions’ Contention Against Pullman Company Upheld, Halting Wage Cut. By the Associated Press, CHICAGO, June 21.—The Pullman Company lost its open shop fight be- fore the United States Railway La- bor Board toda the board upheld the contention of union lead- ers that the company had not oheyed the letter and <pirit” of the trans- when it conferred with mass meeting % out the co petition for a cut in the wa of | its shop employes and instructed it to £0 back and meét the “duly ¢ ed representative: th empl ‘The shop crafts and clerk i'ullman works are invo The board's drcil d n will on on a reduction in their eral weeks. in the de ermx of Transportation Act. Under the transportation act the mect the union lead- in event they fail to decision, file a pefition be- fore the board and ask a new hearing. The controversy between the Pull Company and the unions is a continuation of labor difficultics, dat- ing cveral years. over the open shop. The company has declined to deal with union oilicers in matters affecting all employes. taking th position that employes not membe of the unions are not represented by the labor organizations. When the company proposed a*wage reduciion recently mass meetings were held and all employes were in- i | vited. Representatives of the com- | v toid the labor board at the hearing to establish whether the compuny should be admitted to the | general wage-reduction hearing, that | large percentage of the employes -0 the meetings. Unions Charge Discrimination. Union representatives, who charged discrimination against their members, declared that the company's stand was mersly another attempt to break down the Jabor organizations, and d manded that before the company the ould pe aillowed to come befo cuts board asking wage hold “proper conferen These con- ferences, the employes contended should have been held with du elected representatives of the em ployes and not with the employes en ma B With a view to reducing.her wei; " q3° KING AND QUEEN OFF FOR BELFAST Given Remarkable ;Send-0ff on Leaving London to Open Ulster Parliament. KIDNAY EARL OF BANDON {Armed Men Raid His Home in County Cork—_-l[un Vio- lent Deaths. | By the Associated Press. . LONDON, June 21.—King George and Queen Mary were given a re- markable send-off at the railway sta- tion here today when they left for Holyhead on the way to Belfast to tuke part in the state opening of the Ulster parliament tomorrow. A preat crowd repeatedly cheered the king and queen and sang the ational anthem. At intervals there were shouts of: “Good luck and a safe return to your majesties” The station wus gayly decorated. The king and queen will embark at Holy- head on the royal yacht early to- merrow and proceed to Belfast. Specinl Safety Precautions. The royal steamer will by escorted by two light cruisers and ten de- slroyers on its trip across the lIrish ilaborate precautions taken by the pol 1 Belfast lo msure the safety of the are being king and queen wihile they are im of the roofs of build- purpose during the and gueen are in Bel- prohibited, and the au- and crown forces | PLANS ONE POLICEMAN TO EACH 20 PERSONS TO MAKE RIVERDALE SAFE Spectal Dispateh to The Star. RIVERDALE, Md., June 21.—If the plans of Dr. 8. M. McMillan, mayor of Riverdale, materialize this town is going to have a po- liceman to about every twenty persons. Aroused by recent brutal crimes in this section of Prince Georges county, he announces that he is determined to make River- dale safe for women and childre and the citizens generally. He has been given authority 1o name fifty bailiffs, and he says he intends to name that number. Riverdale, according to a recent census, has 1,056 inhabitants. Nine bailiffs have already been ap- pointed. TH STRGETFGAT STRS TAKONA, M. Highway Commission to Be Urged by Council to Favor Extension. That extension of 14th street through the grounds of Walter Reed Hospital is vital to the continued growth of the residential scction north of the hospital and just the line in Maryland will be urged be- fore the highway commission Thurs- day by the town council of Takoma Park, Md. The council met last night and unanfmously adopted a resolution in protest to the proposed closing of 1ith street at the hospital res rva- tion. It instructed the corporation over thorities of Deifast were today en- gaged in a thorough inspection of the sewer system of the city to make sure no had been hidden there by elements opposed to British rule in ‘the island. Face Round of Function: King George and Queen Mary will face strenuous round of functions temorrow in Belfast, for, in addition to opening the parliament, they will be called upon to preside at a’ jevee at Ulster Hall, confer honors upon a number of prominent Lrishmen. Considerable interest has been aroused in_this city by a rumor that the Irish Sinn Fein plans to make a proficr of peace to King George at Geliast tomorrow. Confirmation of this rumor 1s as yet lacking. EARL OF BANDON KIDNAPED. Armed Men Capture King's Lieu- tenant of County Cork. CORK, June 21.—Jwmnes Francis Ber- nard, fourth Earl of Bandon, was kid- aped this morning from his residence Bantry, County Cork, by a band of rmed men. Castle Bernard, his home, set afire, and early this afternoon vas stiil burning. ) Earl Bandon's whereabouts are un- known. i Earl Bandon, who hus been King's lieutenant of County Cork_since 1874, was born Scptember 12, 1850, and suc- cceded his father in the earidom in 157 He is the owner of about 41,000 acres of tand. after wkich the castle nd virtually destroyed. and the this morning, was set afire a Meanwhile Lady Bandon }servants had been locked in a room!yractically a full stop. adjoining the stables. EIGHT MEN SLAIN. DUBLIN, June 21.—Second Lieut. Brecze of the Worcestershire regi- ment was taken from an automobile in which he was riding near Dublin, accompanied by three young women, and shot to three military officers who were kid- naped vesterday while out walking near Fethard, County Tipperary, we! found yesterday near Clonmel soldier was shot dead in Carrick. At Rathcormack, County Cork, two ci- vilians who failed to halt when chal- lenged were shot and Killed. Col. Lambert, commander of the brigade at Athlone, was fatally shot last evening at Moydrum while re- turning from a tennis party in an automobile accompanied by his wife re A it should {and Col. and Mrs. Challoner. TAX RETURNS AS EXPECTED. Early_reports on collections of the June 15 installment of income and profits taxes indicate that the final results will bear out Secretary Mel- lon's cstimate of $57 a voung woman of Uniontown, Pa. hiked up a three-mile mountain road every morning—and _ gaincd thirty pounds. This Attractive Living Room Suite From the Period of Louis XVI Is Finished in Mahogany . The three pieces comprising this Suite are commodious and generous in proportion, with cane back and ends, There is a Large Settee, Large Armchair and Fireside Chair with valance at back. For Wednesday we have marked it at the moderate price of. ..... URE co i G ¢ officials report. With the outlying tricts still to be heard from it was aid the total already accounted for in the neighborhood of $500,000,000. counsel, J. Bond Smith, to present the resolution to the highway commission at Thursday's hearing on the Wads- worth bill providing that all streets in the hospital reservation shall be closed. Takoma Park is the largest town in Montgomery county and the four- teenth largest in the state. SMany of its citizens are government workers. Because of congestion on the Bright- AMUNDSEN'S SHIP 1S SWEPT ASHORE Arctic Explorer Tells of lce Packs, Which Made Him Abandon Trip. HELPLESS IN BLIZZARD Ore Propellor Lost and the Other ‘Was Smashed Ninety Miles From Cape Serge. By the Associnted Prese NOME, Alaska, June 20. early arctic ice last August locked in a rigid grip the vessel Maude, on which Roald Amundsecn, discoverer of the south pole, hoped to drift past the north pole, and a terrible storm swept' the xchooner ashore, ninety miles from Cape Serge, and smashed Fer propeller, he said, here today Capt. Amundsen appeared in Nome last Friday with the tidings that his ship was disabled and he would have her towed to Scattie for repairs, iater returning to the exploration. “When 1 left Nome carly last Au- gust.” the explorer related. 1 ceeded in the vicinity of Cupe where | was to pick up a native family to add to the crew, but the ice conditions were the worst in years, and we were forced o lay 1o for two weeks, during which time it was imps ible 1o reach shore™ Ninety Milex in Three Weekn. vapt. Amundsen plained that wiree weeks were required to cover wie ninety miles between East Caph aund Cape Sei . The Maude had lost one propellor going through the northeast passage in 1919 and 1 — £he is a twin screw type—and was pushing ahead with her remaining propellor. 3 i “While working the vessel into Cape serge a blinding blizzard swept the We had all our anchors out. but tne ice floes pushed everything ashore. wuere we found the other propeller out of commission, but no other dam- i where the kKing willi wood line, they are finding means of carl was Kidnaped at 5 o'clock { death. The bodies of | reaching their work are becoming increasingly difficult with the only relief in sight an tension of the car line on 14th street It is ai representation of Maryland at the hearing. as weli sive representation .of District. citi- zens' associations. The hearing which will be presided over by the Secretary s an ¢ BLAMES ELECTRIC LINE. I. C. C. Decision Regarding Fatal Collision at Shipley, Md. A side collis car and an automobile at Shipley. near Baltimore, January 31, which resulted in the death and injury to five persons riding the automobile, was caused by f: of the electric ratlway company provide adequate prot gerous crossing. the Interstate Commission has announced eral accidents have o Md 1921 Se cal | conditions surrounding { warrant the us until pates er protection are b rovided in Washington | red there will be a larze of War, will'be held in the ! board room of the District building. on between an electric of two lure | after. 10, ion at a dan- Com- curred at ! he commission’s an- | MT- - of a crossing flagman | proi me other adequalei he continued. was no cha of escape, he The schooncr was frozen in for There 1 " January 31 and April 10 De. nd Oscar Wisting, two of the ¢, ventured out into tha nd made an extensive of the interior country. . Waits for Rescuer. On May 27 Amundsen left the Maud™ Maud, and went (o East Cape to await tha arrival of a ce ship which might teke him to Nome. At East Cape he | wa. gruest of Charles Carpendale, 2 fur trade Capt. Amundsen said natives on the Dromede Island=, informed of his plight. told Capt. Pedersen of the schooner Herman, whe lost no time in going 10 Capt. Amundsen told him at Prince of Wales Island were = and Capt. Pedersen stopped to them food from the ship's stores. The trip to Nome was uneventful there- his_Tescue. native | SEESTARIFF BILL SOON. Mondell Predicts Permanent the crossing. nouncement said. and bulleting have, irs B Fosied TeGuiring Cars to be ue| Measure About First of Month..; operated a collision would be 4 by democrats for definite {impossible. Strict compliance, it add-|information ais_to when the perma- ed. would compel each car o make |nent tanff bill would be ready for the 1! Houx ntative ) Repr publican leader, said ¥ 1y would be reported wuys #nd means committee “about rst of the month.” i soon replace the old, a geon’s knife and the me they must go to be supe more accurate and more lamation, Health Conse vention are taught and adenoids, abscessed teet chronic ailments are re If you are a suffere address and description You are hereby given a whether we are able to treated by lady specialis for ladies only. Phone North 1468-J I and does not 7 KNIFELESS SURGERY AND DRUGLESS MEDICINE the latest miracles in the domain of Science, will bring no relief to suffering humanity. The sur- afford superior results and permanent relief. SUCH is the character of the methods we use at our “Health Service Station,” where Health Rec- ditions are treated without knife and all acute and from the antiquated methods, we are anxious to show you what we can do for you. Mail coupon printed below with your name, make an appointment with you for a treatment which will be absolutely free and which will not obligate you in any way to continue treatment. If you decide to continue treatment you will find our charges very moderate, so that you cannot afford to continue to suffer. Our lady patients are Consitltation by appointment. Health Extension Institute, Inc. FREE TREATMENT COUPON This coupon entities bearer to one treatment free of ch: involve any obligation to continue treatment. Health Extension Institute, Inc. L e —— ntiquated methods which dicine bottle are doomed; rseded by the safe, saner, scientific methods, which rvation and Disease Pre- practiced, where tonsils, h and other surgical con- lieved without Drugs. r and failed to get relief of vour case and we will chance to be the JUDGE relieve your suffering. ts on special days reserved 60 R. I. Ave. N.W. k2 J

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