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HARRY BOLAND, FORMER DAIL ENVOY TO AMERICA, SUCCUMBS TO WOUNDS By the Associated Press. DUBLIN, August 2.—Harry J. Boland, former representative of the Sinn Fejn In the United States, died last night in a hospital here of wounds recelved early Monday morn-. ing in the Grand Hotel, in' Skerries, a fishing village north of Dublin, while attempting to evade capture by troops of the national army. SEEK ENCAMPMENT HERE. D. C. Spanish War Veterans to At- Wide lot, 147 feet deep to a paved alley. Th';ex:tnl::l :;:::::IA )(l:;:lln:l i@ Open for inspection and salesmen on premises tomorrow, Thursday, = e Y No. 1, instructed delegates to the between 2 and 6 o’clock £ twenty-fourth - national encampment THOMAS J. FISHER & COMPANY, lnc. at Los Angeles, beginning the 20th Main 6830 of this month, to strive to bring the 738 15th Street N.W. Prisoners’ Aid Head to:Undergo Test By Lie Detecting Machine FOR SALE New Semi-Detached Houses 2945-2947-2949-2951 Upton Street Near Bureau of Standard and Holy Cross Academy East of Connecticut Avenue; 2 stories and attic, cement front porches; 8 rooms, 4 rooms on first floor and 4 bed- rooms and 2 baths on second floor, hardwood floors, espe- cially planned and exceptionally well built, particularly at- tractive. Have gas and electricity and hot-water heat. next convention to Washington, to be held about this time next year, at their meeting at 1101 E street north- | : west, last night. It was stated that the Chamber of Commerce had pledged _assistance financially and that local members of the United Spanish War Veterans wanted the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Spanish war to be celebrated here and that they also had hopes of * Every Palm Beach Suit » Every Mohair Suit - * Every Tropical Worsted p I Sold as High as $19.75 ’ Going Out Fast at One Price $13.75 Your choice of several hundred Conserva- All sizes and all cuts, 33 to 48. * Every 3-Piece Fancy Suit ' * Every Black Suit * EverySmall Lot Blue Serge L_Sold as High as $45 ! tive, Young Fellers’ and Sport Models. Sl I x Every Priestley Mohair ;,Every Tropical Worsted xEvery Silk Suit * Every Gabardine Suit ' Sold as High as $33.7:5—\ Gai.ng Out Fast at One Novel Price $23 There's a suit here for any man of any | build, of any fancy, any size, 33 to 48. All $3.50 and $4.00. | STRAW HATS All $2.50 and $3.00 STRAW HATS | MONEY’S WORTH OR MONEY. BACK . d many other persons attorney an took at Huntington, W. Va. U. C. V. CAMP CONDEMNS CENSURING OF LINCOLN who Chattanooga Veterans Say Resolu- tion at Richmond Passed When Few Present. B the Associated Press. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., August 2. —N. B. Forrest Camp, United Con- federate Veterans, last night com- mended the action of its delegation at the Richmond reunion in June in refusing to vote for the resolution which laid the blame for the civil war on Abraham Lincoln. The resolution adopted declared that the great majority of the soldiers of the confederacy held ol posite views to those expressed Richmond and that hereafter no m: ter of such import should %be co sidered at a reunion until thoroughly understood. Forrest Camp’s resolution declared that, due to a heavy thunderstorm prevailing at the time, few delegates in the convention had understood the contents of the resolution passed at Richmond. P. 0. SLEUTHING WINS. | | Locates Lost Father Here for Girl in England. The Post Office Department is the original sleuth. Miss Violet Dowse of London, Eng- land, lost her father, and after many unsuccessful attempts to locate him she appealed to President Secretary Christian re- Harding. ferred the matter to the Post Office Department. The father, A. Dowse, was last heard | from a year ago in California, and with that as a clue, the department, by tracing through the postmaster at Balbou, Calif., succeeded in furnish- ing Mis Dowse with her father's pres- ent address. —_— & ' making It the biggest celebration so i " . far held. ks Maj. E. J. Rowan, who carried “the message to Garcia,” will be one of Dr. m M. Marston testing hix invention, the “lie detector,” on Dr. E. E. | the guests at the encampment in Los Dudding, president and founder of the Prisoners’ Relief Society. Angeles this month, and Gen. Emelio Aguinaldo, leader of the Filipino in- Eager to prove the practicability) part in_the trial of Dr. Dudding | surrectionists. will be a guest of -|Dr. on Is inviting them 5 of the sphygmomanometer as a ma- (7 Yh OO Y N g participate in| The delegates from the Miles Camp i chine which will unfailingly detect| the retrial of the prison reform head|are Capt. John Lewis Smith. chairman il 1005-07 Pa. Ave 616 17th St. N.W. lies and have it sanctioned in District | with the aid of his sphygmomano-(of the legislative committec of the I a. ve. < G M courts, Dr. E. E. Dudding, director | meter. He has also secured some inational organization; Past Depart- I > S RS ¢| 200 pages of original testimony. The | ment Commander Gustav E. Rausch; liif| ana tounder of mel EEtonae Rell: | retrial ‘will take place at the prison | Fast Department Commander Charles i lues Get the Business Society, with one of the machines at- | reform headquarters here on E str S McCaffrey, Department Adjutant S eiGive theAValk and B tached to his arm, last night began fF;g?"‘"& u‘l F:;;;:;rf: u:;‘;:l‘el‘.l;](afl g}lllyborr-(g 8. Close, Jessie E. Sprinkle, i ces | 2fternoon the te: B 3 es Camp uarterm 3 l EXCLUSIVE AGENTS HATCH ONE-BUTTON U’SUITSIlflil | renearsing the harrowing experiences| i, night, barring a recess given |George D aster, and ! which led him to kill his uncle twelve | for supper. As & result of the ordeal o3 Dr. Dudding declared this mornin, years ago. ring th ) RDERED | Del puaaine LHopea)thes teatal will | il masiunsblektolaicepiarsinE e 0! HERE FOR DUTY. il prove his contention that he commit- “It was an extremely strenuous| Lieut. Commander Hugo W. Koeh- It ted the killing without premedita-|gession.” commented Dr. Dudding, “in |ler, naval attache at the United States i or e o tion and in self-defense. He was|fact, worse than the first day of the |embassy, Warsaw, Poland, has been 5 < tried and convicted in February, | original trial, which lasted six days.{ordered to this city for duty in the 1910, in Huntington, W. Va., and & T Thoticed they were able to teli|office of naval inteiligence, Navy De- tenced to five years In the West Vir-| whenever I was holling anything |partment.- o] a ' ginia penitentiary, which he served. | back.” . Undaunted by the severe tests made| Dr. Dudding had never met Dr. on him last night at the American|Marston or Paul E. Hadllck, secretary . . University, Dr. Dudding declared to-| of the American Psycho-Legal So- (o] ——|o] B l Sal day he is willing to undergo the|oclety, who assisted Dr. Marston, un- : ig Clearance e x asse ¥ il o st 0] doiy, eho esmut D e 5 and the supreme public test of Aug-| Every effort was made by Dr. = ust 9 1 he can convince the District | Marston to throw Dudding off his - authorities of the value of the|guard by abruptly asking him ques- f Quallty at a price % Shhygmomanometer and prevent juries | tions similar to the following: I bei b d from convicting innocent men and| -“lso't it a fact vou carried that women and judges from sentencing|gun to get your uncle at the firs rings the crowds them to long terms in prison. Jus-|opportunity : tice McCoy in Criminal Court No. 2| “What makes vou believe that you barred the use of the lie machine in|were not justly convicted?” { a recent trial. Dr. Dudding maintained throughout || Dr. William M. Marston, director of | the two-and-one-half-hour grilling research of the American University | that he killed his uncle in self-dg- and inventor of the sphygmomanometer, | fense. Who made the test, expressed the| Had Dr. Dudding at any time toid opinion last night that Dr. Dudding|a lie. Dr. Marston explained, the in- was justified in shooting of his|dicator on the lie-detecting machine uncle.” However. no official analysis| would have jumped from 50 te 60 of the tests will be given out until|points. after the public tests of August 9. Fear. pain and anger. Dr. Marsten Writing to the judge, prosecuting |further stated. are the three agen- cies which will cause the indicator o jump. I Our entire stock of i luggage -t 155 OFF REGULAR U FRICES. “We' 2ota how fhe Te- —+ ductions rangs. $22 to $150 Wardrobe Trunks Reduced to $18.50 to $132 - $2.75 to $25 Visiting Cases Reduced to $2.34 to $21.75 $9.50 to $40 Dress Trunks Reduced to $5.07 to $34 3 RECLUSES DETAINED WHEN FIRE SHOWS DEAD DOGS IN LACE SHROUDS By the Associated Press. MILWAUKEE, Wis, August 2.— Through years of decadence, Jane, o] o] =T c——]o[c——[olc——o]c——]c][c—] Margaret and Charles Mellon, all e e e el middle aged, occupied the old Mel- A WIN P ESSTS0 | KKueessts OUR “ONLY” STORE lon home here, once & soclal cen- ter, with blinds drawn, unmolested by neighbors. Their chief inter- est in life apparently was cen- tered in their pets. Yesterday smoke issuing from upper windows summoned firemen and policemen to the darkened old house. The fire was trivial, but in examining the house firemen found nine dead dogs enshrouded in old laces and shawls. Eight -living dogs were found. Enthroned on a couch was a white silky-haired oee 425 Tth W, dog which seemed blinded from =n===0 ! long confinement in the dark. [ Harrington Mills, 1st V. Pres. J. H. Baden, V. Pres. & Cashier The- Sale You’ve Been Waiting For The P-B Semi-Annual CLEARANCE SALE Now Going On! Drastic reductions on men's wool suits, shoes, furnish- ings, straw hats and leather luggage. duced. Boys' suits re- Women's sport specialties at one-fourth off. The Avenue ;t Ninth bF[——c]——]o]—=lolc———]al——=lal——=]a]—=]3 Commercial National Bank Fourteenth gt G ‘We have made our banking system just as comprehensive and complete as pos- sible. It is divided into departments for your convenience; but all dominated by that one policy, which has made the Com- mercial Bank famous for its service. HOW a thing is done—is of quite as much importance as what it accomplishes. No matter what phase of banking con- cerns. you and your interests—you’ll be impressed with the cordial way we go about doing it for you—as if it was a pleasure, which it is—instead of a task. Join us and enjoy the Commercial's facilities. o2 v There are Many Ways We Can Serve Our Customers Jnnel- B. Reynolds, V. Pres. Laurence A. Slaughter, V. Pres. l—0——[o|c——=[olc—Zolc——] The occupants of the residence |- F had inherited the house and other property from their parents and seemed to have converted the place into a domicile for dogs. After the fire the Mellons were taken to the psychopathic hospital. FARMER, 87, WEDS BRIDE, 66. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., August 2. —W. T. Logan, a farmer of Yadkin county, eighty-seven years of age, and Miss Sallie Lee Tucker of Winston- Balem, sixty-six, were married here yesterday. After the ceremony they climbed into their automobile and, un- :ar showers of rice, left for the groom’s ome. TAKE INSTRUCTION COURSE. Lieuts. Frank E. Beatty and Willard A. Kitts, at Philadelphia, have been ordered to the naval proving ground, Indian Head, Md., to take a course of instruction. e Mrs. Charles Pitzke has entered for the office of sheriff of Taylor county, Wisconsin. G 7 Autocar 1922 Wherever there's 8 road What a motor truck buyer . wants to know 1 With whom he is personally dealing 2 Respansibility and experience of manufacturer 3 Trade in, rebuilding and reconditioning policy 4 Design and mechanical superiority 5 What size and weight truck he needs 6 What loa$l he can legally carry 7 Insurance and license expense 8 Necessary gas and oil consumption 9 Cost of replacement parts 10 Assurance of immediate service” $9.35 ;1‘:95'3- fl Any Straw Hat in the House || ‘Men’s Suits " Made to Measure -~ Just a few more days left to share in this important clearance event. The greatest savings ever known are now possible.on all the remnant lengths—enough for one or two suits, Fast-Color Blue Serges are Included as well as some fall-weight suitings ° No man should miss this once-a-year opportunity— for there are actual savings up to one-half. 'Remember— just a few more days and this salé comes to a close. Hurry J in at once! Youcan rely that the 'stylg' and weorkmanship will be of usual Newcorn & Green standards—known to " ‘well dressed men for the past 23 years. . : | Newcorn & Green Because he wants continuous -economical transportation .4 cylinder 4 to,6 ton.Autocars Unladen chasmis weights only ., TN\ 7200Te.1 7400 Ibe. Prices (chassis) .. - - $39% $4100 Wheelbaselenigths . . . . . . . . . . 1l4ios 138 tna) ‘Maximum overall capacity (chassis, body and load). 15,000 Ibe. 15,000 e Unladen chassis weights only . v 7 5200 Ibs. 5350 b, Prices (chassis) .-: ‘ $3075, 2 cylinder’1 n "Autocars overall O Prices (chasdis) » £ QTR 2 cylinder 1Y5-2 ton Autocars Rebuilt) 2 cylinder 1¥3-2 ton Autocars (Reconditioned) Wheelbeselengths . . . . . . . . . . 9Tim 120 ins. Maximum overall capscity (chassis, body andload) 11,000 Tbs. 11,000 Tbs. Prices (chassisy- ¥ $1100 to $1600 ‘A motor truck is only as good as the sefvice behind it THE AUTOCAR SALES AND SERVICE COMPANY : Ty . 1240 Pennsylvania Avenue N. W., Washington -, i .. ' DIRECT FACTORY BRANCH OF.. ey S (o] ——p|c———olc——]olc——lolde——]olc——©4]