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i THE EVENI JOURNALISM PRIZES|Erstish to Flock ORKERS IN SLUNS AWARD New York Times Reporter Wins $1,000—William Al- len White Honored. By the Associnted Press. NEW YORK, May 14 awards of the Pulitzer Journalism and letters traveling scholarships, offered annu-! ally. were annourced last night by the advisory board of the Columbia | sSchool of Journalis Johnston of awarded example the year: The 1923 prizes in and of the| rd O the New York | . $1,000 priz for the best work during White, editor Kans. the ) Memph for the Itorious public newspaper The judges selected * by Willa Cather for for the Ame during the the whole i life of Americ znd m disinto wdered b service me of Our £1,000 pri pubilihe best presenied | o of Amer- standard n manhood. Award to Warren. given hook the upon es for} Court in} was | . and Wl play pe ) best represented 1 value ower in raising th good tast ~awarded to * of the s ood mor- | manners. cebound,” by Owen | ! Walsh, vas named | for the d dur- au- Edna St. Vincent Millay the winner of the $1.000 p; hest volume of verse publis ing the year by an Ameri thor. Three awards of traveling scholar-{ Rhips. valued at $1.500 each offered to duates of the Columbla School alism, who passed their ex- aminations with the hikhest honor and otherwise were found most de- serving, to allow each to spend vear In Burope studving the social political and m, condition of the yeanle ster and princi press, were Bertha o1d. Mills Merriman, Sessoms Britton, Alternateg for this Friederlichs Charles Ruggles Smith. Cambrides, ) and Jose- phina Lula Chase. B sfield, Calif. Music Scholarship. rship valued at studen music in the talented may con- to Kans.; Rost Gen Le Chicazo: 1 Clinton, Towa An $1.500 America dec and deserving tinue his stud advantase of European instruction, was a ed to Wintter Watts, Brookl) for a suite for orchestra “Etching d for a drama lad for voice and orchestra, “The Vin Henry Hen fn_the Nation Schools, was acholarship value to the art stude should be certified Academy of Design, Society of American merged. us the most deserving. No awards were nalism group of the fered for the best his fces rendered to t American pres: year, and the $500 the best cartoon published United States during the year. Mednl to Newspaper. The Memphis mmercial _Appeal was given the $300 medal for “its courageous attitude In the publica- tion of cartoons and the handl news in reference to the oper: of the Ku Klux Klan,” the announce- | ment stated, i The editorial which won the award | for William Allen White was entitied | “To an Anxious Friend.” and appeared ! in the Emporia Gazette July 022 | The Jury found that the editorial ex- | celled in clearness of style, sound! reasoning and its power to influence { public opinion in the right direction. | Mr. Johnson, selected for the $1.000 | prize for the best example of a re- porter's work, won the award. with his reports of the proceedings of the convention of the American As- | sociation for the Advancement of | Science, held in Cambridge, Mass., De- | cember 27 to 30, 1922. The works of Idna St Vincent | Millay, which won for her the $1.000 | award for the best volume of verse, | included “The Ballad of the Harp- Weaver,” “A Few Figs From Thistles,” eight sonnets in “American oetry” and a volume entitled “A iscellany.” Mr. Watts, awarded the music! scholarship, {8 thirty-seven years old, | and a graduate of the Institute of Musical Art. He has studied paint- ing and architecture as well as music and has written and conducted in-{ cidental music for several plays. The jury, which selected him, was com- posed of Prof. Daniel Gregory Mason, | Prof. Walter Henry Hall and Frank Damrosch, and stated that he has had instruction in organ and voice, both in America_and Italy, has made an extensive study of composition and has_taught theory. The awards originally were recom- | mended by jurles consisting of three ! members and were formally adopted Dby the advisory board of the Colum- bia School of Journallsm. The prizes will be presented in connection with the commencement exercises at Co- lumbia University. FIRE CAUSES ALARM | AT HOME FOR AGED| Inmates File From Dining Room When Bakery Blaze Is Reported. annual to the entitied a student ! of Design wal Chiearo, \eademy b; which the Artists has been | promising and de in the jour- $1.600 prize of- ory of the serv-i public s the preceding e offered for in the l Fire in the roof of the bakery, a one-story brick structure, at the Home for the Aged. Blue Plains, was discovered this morning by William Klinge, the baker, before much head- way had been gained. He immediately sent in an alarm, the local fire bri- gade responding before the arrival of the city firemen. Many of the inmates, about 300 in number, showed signs of uneasiness, but none were in danger, it is stated. Third Battalion Chlef Carrington directed the work of the firemen. Most of the inmates were in the din- ing room when the fire was discovered and they filed from the building with- out creating any disorder. Four companies of the fire depart- ment, Nos. 18, 15 and 25 engine com- panies, and No. 8 truck company. re- sponded to the alarm, and persons on the reservation complimented the firemen for the quick runs they made. Origin of the fire was not determined, and only slight damage resulted. Comfort Is Costly. From London Tid-Bits. A young American went into a bar- ber shop in Monte Carlo the other day and asked for a haircut. “Headrest all right, sir?” sald the ‘barber, as he got out his scissors. “No,” said the young man. “It's too comfortable. Raise it pleas You see, the last time I was in a Riviera barber shop I fell asleep, and <when I.woke up I owed the estal - lishment my next quarter's income. { downsta | fortnight. tof correction { ernoon’ below Oc ! raid were arr jwith a wooden outer casing and, LONDON, Ma; low rat of foreign exchange wlill enable hundreds of Englishmen to spend their vacations this summer with thir families on the continent, making the trip in the style pre- viously reserved for those of wealth. Never before has such a golden opportunity for continental n and, based on last ures, it is estimated that 00,000 English people will spend their holidays abroad. The cost of a continental trip is less than the expense of a similar time at gny English resort. 1t will be possible for any one to spend two weeks on the continent this summer at a cost varying from £ ch is far below the } L.u\h will not be the only 3 for even with the propensit; the contl tals to raise prices where Americans are concerned, the latter will be able to travel even more cheaply than last year. PAPAL ENVOY SEES RUSS BISHOP IN JAIL ‘Head of Mission Obtains Prison Privileges for Arch- hishop Zepliak. !By the Assaciated ¥ MOSCOW, May head of the papal relief mission, was permitted to visit Archbishop Zepllak in prison yester- d: i 14.—Rev. Edmund of & and mem- bers of the state and political police, the archbishop, who was brought | s from his cell to the office of the Butirka prison, said he was being well treated. although failing in health as a result of prison life “He looked badly, although any man unshaven for ten days would perhaps look the same,” said Father Walsh ater. In the pres In Cell With Priest. Archbishop Zepliak, who still wears his clerical robes, is not in solitary confinemen her Walsh said, but is Kept in a all cell with another priest named Zelinsky, who is await- ing trial. Previously the archbishop 1 been allowed only a half hour of ¢, when all the pris- out of their cells a tiny court- was able to 1 to one hour. to give the per and ely In- Father Walsl peried exter rmit v pencils, all of which were ¢ ted by the authoritic past sixt rs of age. epliak is making use of time in learning two new guages—English and Italian. To Visit Again. bishop It took Father Walsh one month to | obtain permission to se but he now expects to the prisoner. t him ever: he othe tholic prie scrving sentences are in very com- fortable quarters in a sort of hous outside Moxcow. institution located in a summer colony, where the prisoners are work- ing at various tra Some have taken up cobblin s school teaching. while one is the assistant of a noted chemist who is also a prisoner. Father W it was at the re- i quest of the ALEXANDRIA. One of the biggest hauls section recently by federal prohibi- n agents was made vesterday aft- squan, when half a swooned down on jon and captured a 11,000 gallons of arts of liquor. The in custody two men es, according to the of W, the latter in this | nts gallon still sh and six ts also 1o giving the nam { United States commissioner, Flynn and Samuel Mason, coiored. Afterward nearby visited a a place 200-gallon At this place the agents werce unable to find any one. The two men arrested in ihe first gned this morning be- fore United States Commissioner John Barton Phillips, waived the prelim- fnary hearing and were held for the grand jury, Another collection of relics has been placed in the Friendship Fire Engine Company’s museum. this be- ing the company of which George Washington was a member. The relics were presented to the company by Thomas D. Downey and they con- sist of eleven (‘hlno e guns and four annons, all of wh , it Is stated, are more than 500 vears old. The guns were presented to Mr. Downey of the quartermaster Corps, U. S. A, Fort Myer, by Gen, Humphries, T 5 A retired, and_they were in turn fented to SwWillam T "Humphries, custo n of the engine house by Mr. Downey. In_ addition a number of valuable books were also presented. The guns weight about seventy-five pounds each, and, it is stated, were used at the Chinese wall. They are of stel‘tl o course, made by hand. The four cannons weigh about 100 pounds each and stand about four feet high. ‘Alfred Thomson, Harry D. Kirk and Robert E. Knlght are the delegates and alternates chosen, Saturday after- noon, by th> state convention of the Travelers’ Protective Association, in Newport News, Va., to represent Post F, this cit at the national conven- tion of the order, to be held this summer in St. Paul. Col. Julian Y. Willlams of this city was boosted for national president by the state or- ganization. An automobile stolen Wednesday night from Harold Curtis of Del Ray, while parked on King street, has been recovered by Policeman Heber Thompson. It was abandon2d by the thief near the old canal and stripped of its battery, headlights and other parts. Henry H. Senne, fifty-two years old, a farmer, who lived in Fairfax county, several miles west of here, died Saturday. He is survived by his wife and several children. His fu- neral took place this afternoon from Pohick Church and burial was in Po- hick cemetery. An_ important business meeting of the ladies’ auxiliary of the Young Men's Christian Association will be held at 8 o'clock tomorrow night in the rooms of the Y. M. C. A., at 528 King street, at which time officers will be chosen to serve for the com- ing year. - - MEMORIAL FOR TUTTLE. Former Episcopal Presiding Bishop Praised in’'St. Louis. ST. LOUIS, Mo., May 14.—Memorial services in honor of the late Bishop Daniel S. Tuttle, former presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in America, were held at the' Christ Church Cathedral yesterday. Bishop William Lawrence of Massachuselts preached the sermon. “The bishop presiding at Bishop Tuttle’s consecration, John Henry Hopkins of Vermont, was himself consecrated by Bishop William White of Pennsylvania, the first of our bish- oPs to be consecrated by the Arch- bishop of Canterbury,” he said. “Thus these three Eplscopates cover the entire history of the American church. The life of this great Amer- ican spanned a large part of the his- tory of the United States. He was of New York farming stock, a-univer- sity graduate and frontiersman.” Russian | lan- | This | ED FOR 1923 Cheap, Vacations | {{L1) CONVENTION ‘Setflement House Heads Gathered for Annual Session Here. The second-day session of the thir teenth annual conference of the Na | tional Federation of Settlements wa | devoted for the most part to diseuw Following a brief | William L. McFarland, chal { music division of the conference open- led at the Powhatan with an addres; fon teaching m al in music schools and departments by Dr Thomas W. Surette, formerly exte sion lecturer at Oxford University, director of music at Bryn Mawr Col- lege and lecturer on music in the graduate school at Harvard Unive sity. The lecturer presented a selected list of musie. Sidney A. Teller of the Irene Kauf. mann Settlement of Pittsburgh. spo on advertising netghborhood r sources to the people of the loc community, Tells of Advertising. This was followed by a 1e negleet inciples in | istratic nt houses 1 Josephin the York was opened Alta House. talk on which R P. Anderson of conference then luncheon at Rausche John Tliott of Hud 3 nd presic Willi University djourned for where Dr. a_joint meeting of and girls' departments on and gamping was being held at the Red Cross building. where the sion w Miss lthel W l'uu(hflr( the girls | department The subject d | settiement camp; anization. After Mis of Goodrich House, spoken, camp equipment as gone into at length by Miss Starks of Grosvenor House,, York Included among the sessions we B. Mor: 4\|||-xh.1r| settlement o1k ) K Japan: Marion Perkins, now in welfare work in the de- region of France, and Capt Ell cretary ‘of Stapley London, England. Plans for Today. A dinner to the midwestern com- nittee and delegates will be given the University Women's Club at o'clock, and at 10:15 tonight a hour” will be held at the »whatan. The convention opened vesterday with a meeting of the executive com- mittee at the Red Cross buildir At 2:20 p.m. the conference pr. lled to order by D aham Tay- lor of Chicag The delegate The (s and or- Gannett land. had nd program A, New the delegates House, G were entertained at a by the Washington Handicraft uild at the Art Center during the afternoon, preceding which the music division met at the Wardman Park Hotel, when the presentation of the {report of the committes on qualii- tions and standardization was pre- nted. This was followed by a re- ntion Those in the receiving line were Dr. Thomas Surette, Mrs. W. B, Nickels of K s City and Mrs. Katherine {Saunders. The address of welcome { was made by Mrs. W. L. PITTMAN ASSAILS COIN SILVER PRICES {Says U. S. Morally Is Bound to Make Purchases at $1 an Qunce. The Treasury's interpretation of the Pittman act for the purchase of silver for subsidiary coinage was assailed {today by Senator Pittman, democra | Nevada, author of the act, in a letter to Undersecretary Gilbert. Although silver is selling at 67 cents an ounce, the senator said, that circumstance does not affect the go ernment's obligation to make pur- chases of it at $1 an ounce under the Pittman act. The letter continued: “The moral question involved is this: Should the government make a profit on handling the product of an American producer? Would it be just for the government to buy wheat at | |67 cents a bushel and sell it to the American consumer at $1.37 a bushel (The value of an ounce of silver in American coins). Such a thing is in- comprehensible, and yet that is what the government is now doing and has | for years been doing with silver. CLAIM SHIP BOARD HELPS MONOPOLY Lake Shippers Want Canadian Lines Given Chance to Compete. , The Shipping Board was charged with lending aid to the creation of monopoly by “one group of citizens to gouge another group,” in a brief filed today with the Interstate Com- merce Commission by northwestern and New England shippers using the great lakes transportation lines. Under provisions of the merchant marine act, ship owners having ves- sels under United States registry on the great lakes have been arguing for the elimination of the Northern Navigation Company and other Ca- nadian lines from participation in traffic between points in the United States, and_the Shipping Board at Commerce Commission hearings sup- ported their case. The New England Trafic League and chambers of com- merce in Boston, Duluth, St. Paul and Minneapolis declared teday in the brief that the Shipping Board had appeared “in a capacity that to us is most surprising.” “We agree that we should offer and extend all reasonable protection to ships of American registry, but when that protection reaches the point that it allows the operators of American ships to monopolize the trade of the great lakes, and as a consequence of that monopoly require and force the American public to pay_ higher rates and to endure just such char- acter of service as they care to ex- tend, then we say it s high time that a little. competition should be in- Jected, regardless of where that com- petition comes from.” ¢ ¢ ¢ Americar shippers east and west are absolutely a unit, the brief con- cluded, in demanding support for the established rights of the Northern | Navigation Company and other Can- adian lines to participate in great lakes traffic. Pleasing Father. From the Detroit Free Press. “You must ask father's consent.” “But is that necessary? You have promised to marry me.” “Ill marry you all right, but George, dear, you must go to father. It pleases him once in a while to know that we. s onsider him as one of the famil Abbot of the children's bureau, ! G settlement | Brillian ne poxt at % zero milextone, which Will Claim B 14.—Prof. American Viscountd Saturday daughter ot San D YORK, May Charles Ernest Pellew, citizen and the seventh mouth, was to the an Lord Pellew., British title Lt death of father, who sucecer » the February He: SAYS LERNER BOMB STORY IS “DREAM" Woman Here Calls Arrested Man “Harmless as Child.” Noah Lerner's story of his connec- tion with the Wall street bomb ex- plosion September 16, 1920. which re- sulted in his arre New York Saturday on of homicide was described by Mrs. Henry Bers of 916 R northwest as a fanciful dream concocted to make | him a hero in thé Kuzbas colon Mr. and Mrs. Bers occupied together wit lid mother prior to their departure for New York last year. Lerner is accused of having hired the little red wagon that carried the | said that Lerner was “a coward and | said that Lerner was rd und wouldn't_dare undertake like s harmle tou street H cow thing ork s an clectric rs characterized him mediocre “jack of all trades. was of a wandering disposition, erer with clectrical de could qualify as an electr id At one time. Mrs. Ber: ner. who was known t v to try watch repa Mr. Bers, proprietor of a stand in! the Center market, believes that Lerner is a neurotic and much given to the telling of exaggerated stories. “There ism't & doubt in my mind that he went to the Kuzbas colon he said, “and in his thoughtless wa with a desire to impress his radical associates, told the fanciful tale upon which he ix held in New York.” ROCKEFELLER INAID GIVES $76,757,040 Foundation Fund Expended Benefactions During First Dec- ade of Its Existence. stated Lut | tink- his hand as a | ! in By the Associated Pre:s. NEW YORK, May 14—The Rocke- feller Foundation, chartered by a spe- cial act of the New York legislature ten years ago, teday has expended a total of $7 ,040 during the first decade of its existence, according to a statement issued by Edwin R. Em- breem, secretary of the foundation. This sum represents all of the in- come of the fund and an additional $17,500,000 expended from the general fund or principal. A further sum of $15,000,000, payable in future yi has been pledged to various med schools and public health projects. A statement of contributions from the fund divides them as follows: Public health, $18.188,838; medical tion, $24.716, war relief, $22, 41; other philanthropic work, $10,445,628, and administration, $1,- 107.174. The statement discloses that the international health board, estab- lished as a part of the foundation in 1913 to promote public health throughout the world by demon- strating the methods and costs of controlling certain diseases, notably hookworm, malaria and yellow fever, has co-operated with twenty-seven American states and fifty foreign governments, and has increased its annual expenditures from $133,237 in 1914 to $1,842,249 in 1922. The sum of $1,000,000 was given to Herbert Hoover's child-feeding plan in Europe. A feature of the foundation's work fn medical education has been the building, equipping and maintaining of a modern medical center by the China medical board in Peking. The board has made appropriations also. to other medical schools and to thirty-two hospitals in China. Delightful Exercise. From the Tiger's Head. % Hatless and with the sweat runnms into his eyes, the young man dashe up to the gate as the 5:15 pulled out. As the guard turned the lock, he remarked: Trying to catch the 5:157° No, you idlot; I was just trying to grighten it out of the station.” STAR, WASHINGTON, Bands of Color to Guide Visitors ntex T, | aer it D. C, MONDAY, w and red are painted on the ograph shows bands beinz pain asury. which lends straight to the ull distun from Washington are Prof. C. E. Pellew Takes Bride; ritish Title Soon announc- ngland this renounce his ome a Brit- seut in the v of Washington, will start for He expects t n citizenship, be; i tuke the Amerte:. ish sub. as resided in cighteen LEAGUE OF NATIONS WILL BE DISCUSSED: President Lowell of Harvard and ex-Justice Clarke to Speak Here May 23. Dr. A Lawrence Lowell. president of Harvard University, will deliver an address on the “Humanitarian As- of the League of Nations, ich subject also will be discussed other speakers at a meeting to held Wednesday afternoon, May in Memorial Continental Hall, un- the auspices of the Washington branch, the League of Nations Non- Partisan Association. This meeting i in connection with the fiftieth an niversary of the National Conference of Social Work. The “Humanitarian Aspects of the League of Nations” also will be dwelt upon by John H. Clarke. former Jus- tice of the United States Supreme Court and president of the League of Nations Non-Partis Mixx Abbott to Miss Grace Abbott. director of the children’s bureau, United States De- partment of Labor. and representa- of the Unite on the league of nations advisc ommittee on the traffic in women and children, and R state commissioner of labor, a, and until re- centlydir nical bu- u. " international 1 After the “Humanitari of the league have heen di the foregoing speakers, Dr. Linsley Rudd liams, managing director of the National Tuberculosis Associa- tion and director since tuberculosis work of the Rockefeller Foundation in France, will speak on the “Health Work of the League of pects w by be | Nations.” Homer Folks to Preside. Homer Folks, president of the con- | ference of social work, at this meeting. Res made by of the Savings street mail t will preside Thomas A. Sims, chairman meeting committee, Union Bank building, 0 14th northwest, who will either ckets to the applicants or hold them at the association’s Washington office at the foregoing address, to be called for. SIX DROWN AFTER LEAP FROM TRESTLE Young People Who Sought to Es- cape a Rushing Street Car Perish in River. ROCK ISLAND, Tll, May 14—Six young people, three men and three women were drowned last night in the Mississippl river at Campbell's ]slaml just_east of this city, when they jumped from a tresle to avoid being struck by a street car, control of which had been lost by the op- erator. The young people were walk- ing back to East Mollne after a dance at the island. Only one body has been recovered, Evening & Sunday Star Oc; a Month Delivered by Regular Carrier 1919 of the| jons for seats are being! MAY 14, 1923. CHURGH ELECTING ! Swedenborglans Balloting at Church of New Jerusalem. Committees Report. Balloting for officers for the ensuing year and the reports of many com- mittees occupied the forenoon ses- sion today of the general convention of the New Jerusalem in the United States (the Swedenborgian Church). The report of the tellers of the elec- tion will be made Jate this afternon. A particularly happy incident of the morning scssfon was the presentation of an especially designed gold watch fob to Albert . Carter of Massachu- tts, who, after serving twenty years treasurer of the convention, refused all importunities this year that he continue in office. The presentation was made by Rev. William 1. Wor. cester, president of the convention who paid hign tribute to Mr. Carter's service. L Barron to Spenk. Tonight Clarence W, Barron, tor of the Wall Street Journal, ae just returned from an extensive | visit"to Europe, Egypt and the Holy | T:and, will address the convention on the sub, he International Situ- ion in 1 piritual Aspec he principal sermon of vest | services was preached by the Rev Clarence Lathbury of Cleveland, Ohio, a distinguished author as 1 as Iminister. At the spe Sundiy school session earlier in t Rev. W n L. Worcester of bridge, sident of the ventio address on Own r services the ressed by ! Newtonvil Mass., on the subject e Supper rd, Jesus Christ In the ening there was a_meéting under 2 Board of Home with Ezra Hyde president” of edi- who « , afternoon were John Goddard Alden o the board, There w evening b New Church S by the Rev. G rllhn Pulsford “The New Church of the Orient,’ nd by the Rev. Paul Sperry, pastor the Waushington Society of the New Church, on “The Re All of the Sun v services were ht-'»i in the ¢ w lem, at th and Corcoran ts. the na- tional church of the Swedenborgians The Rev. Dr. Lathbury's was on “The Humanity of God, in keeping with the keneral of th convention, he f largel to the d hrist. Like others who ha the convention bhefore him, Lithburs *Gid ot take the doubters ¢ to task..but strove ically to show i i To those who | know,” Dr. uring o Mind he athbur “If bec; teach the w; do & we still are children. our own- children to walk in of obedience. We do not greatly explain, because explanation }is inimical to their young reason | You must be brave. honest, fal nd pure, we sk ‘why? We answer, ‘bec i right; some day vou will understand.’ Most parental regulatior X the very nature of the seem equivocal to little children. Th must go forward blindly; often stul bornly. Only the traversad years can become the commentari ence and the dissolvers of doubts. We yearn to tell the child, as God yearns to make clear to us the riddles of our | disciplines, but cannot as vet. The sees little sense in mineteen- twentieths of our demands and im atiently exclaims ‘what's the use? And we know how to sympathize with him, having had identical rela- tions with the Great Parent |WOMAN, ABDUCTED, SHOT BY OFFICERS :Killed by Bullet Intended for Her Captors—One Man Slain in Auto Chase. E BLUFF, Ark., May 14—Mre. J. K. Snow of El Dorado was killed by officers shooting at two men who had abducted her Friday night, Sheriff Burks of Drew county said late Satur- day night. w Mr. “and Snow had left Kl Dorado by automobile to return to Mr. Snow’s home in Cincinnati, Ohio. | Their automobile was stalled in Moro bay bottoms, near EI Dorado, when the two men came up in their car| and suggested that they take Mrs. | Snow to Warren and_send back = mechanic. Meanwhile, Snow repaired i {his car and drove to Warren, but| could not find any trace of the others. Late last night, the two men. with | Mrs. Snow, presumably gagged, in the | automobile stopped in Monticelio to | buy gasoline. They refused to pay | for it and Marshals J. D. Rateree und | Prico were called. The men sped away, the officers firing one shot after | the “automobile. This shot, it was later dizcovered, killed one’ of th men, whose name is not known The officers took up the chase an overtook the automobile three mil from Monticello, | Mrs. Snow, it is said. ran toward the officers and the alleged .Lhdux.lur‘ attempted to escape. The officers fired and the woman almost in safety, crumpled and fel from a bullet sent after the escap. ing man. She died almost instantly. His Way. From the London Mail Jimmy, 1 want vou to help me make Tom jealous—awfully, widly jealous.” “Righto! Let's get married!” Not Quite So Low. From the Paris Le Rire. The Diner—My poor fellow, how you have come down in the world! Fancy becoming a walter, and in this restaurant, too! The Waiter—Well, have my meals here' I don’t have to CALL MAIN 5000 and the service will start A T ONCE NATIONAL OFFICERS | Go on Retired List Vet Shot21 Times In One Battle to BODY OF KIDNAPED POLICEMAN FOUND Cleveland Patrolman’s Corpse Near Spot Where Charred Clothing Was Discovered. Lieut. Robert L. Robinson, United States Marine Corps, de- clared to have recelved more wounds In a single engagement than any other man in the A. E. F., will be placed on the retired list by a retiring board now sitting at Marine Corps headquarters, it is announced. Lieut. Robinson was an airplane gunner and observer, and was struck twenty-one times by enemy machine gun bullets before his plane was shot down. He and his pilnl were attacked October 14 ¢ German planes near Zud ce, and in the fight that cnsuied the pilot was disabled and the plane literally shot to pieces. It crashed just within the French lines. Licut. Robinson was awarded the congressional medal of honor for heroism in this exploit. —_—————— John Kenlon, chief of the New York fire department, the largest fire-fight- rganization in the world, star lite as a sailor before the mast, fter running away from his home in CLEVELAND, Ohio, body of Patrolman kidnaped by a man he early Friday morning and w whom he had started for station, was found this afternco 300 feet from where remmnants of his charred clothing were found between Geauga Lake and Bainbridge, thirt miles east of here, rsterda noon. Griffin had baen shot twice thre head and once in the abdon Police one of the ) would have killed him. body was stripped of all clothi He was found buried in not ire than two feet d had arrested polic Itk 1hership gton Charn edule v Fric Now Serving Capital and Surplus 000 $2,000,000.00 Dencssiass An Old Age of Ease —is something we all look forward to—some- thing we all can insure by economy and judi- cious investment of sav- ings. Safe Depoxit Boxes at Very Moderate Rentals 7 Lay the cornerstone of vour “Fortune” THIS PAYDAY hy depositing part of your salary in an interest-earning account at this strong, old bank. We are serving 42,000 patrons satisfactorily. and will prove a compe- tent financial adviser to YOU. me in, we'll be glad to see you. DIRECTOR Temee's) Buchanan Watter & lapnase ™ Willlam V. Cox Rozier D . E Same Rate of Interest Paid orr Large and Small Accounts OFFICERS WILLTAM D. HOOVER WOODBURY BLAIR . .President st V. Pres. V. Pres. .Trust Officer Treasurer Secretary ec, & Asst. Tr. Trust Officer Trust Officer Victor Kauffmans Wik Eit, Aest. T LAgst. DAVID BORNET..Asst. Natlonal Savmgs & Trust Co. Oldest Savings Depository in Washington Cor. 15th and New York Ave. ey Nenry k. Wwiiard Year FOA N 22 F XK Offices For Rent Evening Star Building (The Avenue at Eleventh) .fl'f‘?» Y A 5 SR X =) Desirable Suite Vacant Two bright, outside offices, third floor, one room in corner of building at 11th and Pa. Ave.; other room adjoining on 11th St. side of build- ing. These offices are unusually cool in summer. In addition to being especially desirable for offices, these rooms have an exceptional value for witness- iug parades. Rent, including heat, light and janitor service, $110 a month. Large Room For Rent One large room on second floor, with private lavatory and running ice water. This office con- tains 1,990 sq. ft., has southern exposure and is partlcularly sultable for office employing many clerks, for light manufacturing plant or as show- room for manufacturer of nationally known prod- uct. Rent, including heat, light, iced water and janitor service, $200 a month. TR KRR KA F A I AN A I XA YA JH XA K FoA TN NI o Ao oo o AEFIIFKIIO o4 o4 545858 A X o I o YA ok I K o oo o 3ok T 3 3 4o ¥ ok o ok KKKk KX ¥ A KK P R et 2. 0.8.5.8.2.8.5.8.0.8.0.8.54