Evening Star Newspaper, June 26, 1923, Page 4

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4 WESTERNNEN YOR RAVAGED Y STORM Damage From Wind, Rain and Lightning Estimated at High Figure. Ty the Assoctated Press. ROCHESTER, N. Y. June 26— Western New York today is cleaning the debris of one of the worst wind and rain storms iz ifs history. Damage is expected to reach hun- dreds of thousands of dollars. Farm lands were hit hard, the deluge in nany places washing out erops and destroying farm buildings. Hundrels of trees were uprooted. came from the west late last night and temperatures dropped from the nireties to the low seventies in a few minutes. Lightuing Hits Ammunition. ¥l Sportmen’s Club, v frame building, was de- stroved when lightning set off sev- enty thousand rounds of ammunition stored in the place for trap shooting purioses. Only a hole in the ground now marks the spot where the club- house stood. No one was injured by the blast, - The coast guard at Summerville, on Lake Ontario, rescued three men and three'Women from a yacht which the wind drove far out into the lake. In Bufialo belated travelers were ter- rorized by £ tie v storn away one s blown started by the li Fires Despite Rainfall. The spire of the Bethlehem United Bvangelical Church was struck at 8 and immediately burst Into flames, which swept through the tower and spread to the surrounding roof before fire apparatus could be summoned. Almost simultantously fire hurst out in a private home de- spite the heavy rainfall. Panle-stricken passengers rushed wildly for the doors when a bolt crashed through the trolley pole of a car, shattering all the windows and setting the car on firy MOLE HAS LEFT ITS 0BSCURITY Museum's Reward Brings the First Nests and Young for Examination. From the Dy While been rc rems rolt News. ntific expeditions have ming far afield to study the ns of animals long extinct, one little animal close home remained a vuszle. The habits of the common mole were unknown. In literature there we data based on first- hand study a ©'s nest. No scientis known, had ever seen a mole The Museum of Natur: New York therefore of $25 for a comple no of History in offered a prize 5 : nest with a mother and young. Since the reward was posted on April three pests and a total of nine voung have been sent in from New Brunswick, Tyner, Ind., and Marietta, mak it possible at last to the nesting habity of the mole. reward has been withdrawn. Valuable part of Finds. The valuable part : finds, ae- cording to the muscum authorities, is that definite "information about the nests was available in each letter from the Indiana finders study The ing corn. It was in a ditch bank of sandy woil, about twelve inches be- neath the »d, with a tunnel leading down the bank so that no water could get in the hole. The nest was made of grass. Further details about nests were contained in a letter received from C. E. Cooper, Harrington Park, N. J'. who reported that he had found four nests while plowing, and that they were always made of grass woven together in much the bird makes nest, three to five a nest, are born without fur. W Mother Mole and Young. L. O. Mulkey of Marietta, S, C., gave | accurate detials of his find and told of the mother mole coming back dur- ing the night to hunt for her young. | This nest had three runs leading to} it, was made of old dead grass, and| was found on the edge of a cornfield. “This is the first authentic infor- mation about a mole’s nesting habits that I know of,” said Dr. F. A. Lucas, | director of the museum. “and, as far | as 1 know, the groups which we can | make out of our specimens will be | the first in any American museum. | 1 had been unabue to find any one who knew anything about the fam- | i life of a mole until I receivaed the accurate information of the finders of the nests we now ha Dr. Lucas plans to -use the ne papers in further hunts for unusual specimens of animal life. He said; that for three years he had been trying to get hold of a family of young raccoons under a month oid. | In spite of a reward of §100 for such a family he Nas never been able to get one. He also said that he was after a famil. The Endless Line. From Collier's. We have 3.000,000 office holders in the United States, including those em- ployed by the states. countles, citles and towns. The pay roll for these public employes is $3.000,000,0000 a year, of which $600,000,000 is spent by the federal government. Richard H Dana, president of the National Civii Service Iteforgn League, says that a quarter of the salaries are wasted in| UNNECESSATY. rk, bad management and out-ofdate methods. Chief Jus- tie Taft E suggested that the President receive power to make ap- pointments to all offices without Senate confirmation. this power to be delegated to the Civil Service Com- mission. This would free members of-Congress from the “importunities of patronage seekers.' No wonder cabinet officers, besieged by the endiess procession of con- gressmen who bulldoze and wheedle them, cry out like Maebeth: ‘What; will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?” . Magic in the Teacup. From the Kansas City Star, The art of forjcasting future events from the position and arrangement of tea leaves in one’s cup is a mysterious lore which originated In the high- lands of old Scotland. It is idle to speculate as to whether it is truth or twaddle that is.foretold, but there is a certain fascination about the teller- of-fortunes. ¥ two spoons accidentally fall in oné saucer there soon will be a wed- ding-in the family. Bubbles that rise to the top of the tea indicate klsses or money. If round the edge of the cup, kisse: if in the center, money. To insure success in love and fortune these should be sipped up before they vanish. s, o A leaflet floating on the top 'indi- cates a stranger. If short, thick and hard, your visitor will be a short man. If long and thin, then a tall, thin person may be expected. A lot of odd tea leaves floating sbeut on the top of the tea means worry. Gather them all up in a spoon and the worries will be slight ones, —_— e Our idea-of & good barber is o ;:mmor spegks untll he is -pok; The storm | that their nest was found while plow- | { The young, from i through the Interstices in the reed of | ITURKEY-PORTUGAL WAR DANGER ENBS Former Permits Latter and Bel- gium to Adhere to Lausanne Treaty. By the Associated Press. LAUSANNE, June 26.—Turkey an- nounced at the near east conference today that she would permit Belgium and Portugal to adhere to the major parts of the Lausanne treaty now being framed, thus permitting an end being brought, for one thing, to the state of war between Portugal and Turkey, should the Lausanne treaty be signed. Turkey also stated that Czecho- slovakia could negotiate with her and obtain for (zechoslovak citizens the rezime applicable to foreigners in Turkey wh is part of .the treaty. Long awaited instructions from the various allied governments con- cerning the treatment of the Ottoman debt problem are exvected tomorrow, when the allies will decide upon their common attitude toward the Turks on this cuestion. The Turkish rep- resentatives are ontimistic and are predicting the end ot the conference before the end of tho week. Others among the delegates are less hopeful. oo ey STYLE REFRIGERATOR FOR AUTO CAMPING From the New York Evening Tost. When you have to carry food any at distance in an automobile, es- 1ly when you camp each night wherever you happen to be, you are contronted with the problem of pre- serving perishable fresh food. “When you go through towns you can readily obtain fce at confectioner grocery, ice cream and other store If you buy a steak from the butcher he will likely give you a quart or two of cracked ice, and this amount will carry your foed for twenty-four hours, It is not difficult to huild yourself n ket for automobile o need of eating canned milk, dried vegetables and general :k. You may,” when automo- Dbile camping, eat just the same as at home. The use of ice on tour makes this possible. There is on the market a refrigera- tor basket that is little more expen- sive than a good lunch basket,and | that keeps your butter d, {milk £ Ad sweet, fruit and veg tables crisp, your meat or fish pre rved nicely all day in the hot sun or will carry ice-cold drinks. Basket With Wooden Cover. The basket is made of reed with a wooden cover. The Interior is lined with metal, which makes it easy to keep clean, and between the lining and the exterior there is a padding jthat is u non-conductor of heat. | Hence “this refrigerator basket acts much like the thermos bottle, holding {the cold air in and keeping the hot {outside air out.” In one end of this | basket 1s the compartment where {perhaps two quarts of cracked ice { keep your food fresh. {2, Feady-made iccbox should be {about twelve wide by thirty six_inches long, of half-inch lumber. Perhaps you n d just the type {of b the grocery store. Inside | this box you must build another box {about one inch smaller. Between the to form the la s { i inche of ¢ fi {two sawdust | non-conduetor. | o, Ice In this homemade portable r | trigorator may be kept In @ galvin- [ ized covered pail in the center of the ith the food packed around it, v simply & wooden compartment may e built in one end especially for the e. You will need to provide for drip, and place the refrigerator either on 'the running board, where the drip is through a hole bored through the boxes and the running board, or in he tonneau, allowing the drip to run thronsh a hole in the floor. Ready-Made One Preferable. However, the manufactured prod- uct is so effective and reasonable in price that perhaps you mizht better buy one. The hasket has the advan- tage of being portable, while the hox is far too heavy to move out of the car. You can make yourself a re. frigerator basket of a well made reed basket with cover and handles, with a cover that fits tight about the top, Have a tinsmith make a lining of galvanized fron, smaller than the in- terfor by ahout one inch, is packed { | { and its lining should be well packed dry sawdust. The sawdust will fall the basket unless this is lined’ with heavy cloth or burlap. Near the top edge of the basket, after the lining and fnsulation has felt strips to cause the cover to fit tightly In place. The cover jtself should be felt padded all over the underside, which helps to make it & better_non-conductor of heat. Inslde your refrigerator box or bas- ket carry your food jars with screw tops. arry nicely in the cans in which yeu buy it. Ice cream may be packed with the lce and served on the camp table later in the day. ALASKA AS FARMLAND. i { Bemoval of Thick Ground Moss Has Brought Fine Results. From the Boston Transeript, Ceasing to be moss-backed, Alaska is thawing out. It has been found as years or more that where the thick layers of ground moss which cover I|nave been removed the .underlying trozen soil gradually thaws, per- mitting general agriculture. Travelers and others have frequent- 1y noted and told tHe world about th frozen earth that lies all the year not far below the moss-covered sur- face, and this has led many to bo- leve that agriculture would always be Impossible. This i not so in the experience of the experimental sta- tions of the Department of Agricul- ure. 2 situated within about fifty miles of the Arctic Olrcle, grain growing has been. carried on successfully for more than twenty years. The first clearing was made in 1900 and a layer of mbss removed from. the land. At that time the soil was frozen to within elght inches of the surface. Aftdr one sum- mer's exposure the ice had melted to a sufficient dept to_permit the first crop to be planted. The ice layer has now receded to a depth of six or seven feet and it is still gradually being lowered. The presence of this frozen subsoil is not without advantage in the in- lterior of Alaska, where the rainfall 1s Hght and dry seasons sometimes prevail. At such times the moisture from below is brought to the roots of plants by caplllarity and crop pro- duction is assured. The receding of the permanent ice 18 shown in other ways. At the Holy Cross Mission, on the lower Yukon river, a well was dug in the summer of 1899 to a depth of twenty-five feet and no permanent ice encountered. The place where the well was dug had been under cultivation for about ten years. At the Fairbanks station in the spring of 1909 a_well forty feet deep was dug and no frost met with except in the first two feet on land cleared in_1907. These instances show that if the moss is removed the ice will thaw to a greater depth in summer than it freezes in, winter. T Too Many Crabs. From the Ricnmond Times-Dispatch, A recent symposium disctsses the burning question: “What does the world need most? The answer, the way we see it, is & whole heap less sympokiums on the | subject. The world.is all right, ex= cept for the crabs In It, o The Insulation between the basket | been packed, tack | in glass fruit | Some food will | the result of the experience of twenty | so much of the area of the territory | At the Rampart station, which is| THE EV ENING STAR, At the Bottom of the Ladder. SIX FACING DEATH - - JYEARS RELEASED IArkansas Negroes Were! Convicted Twice of Part in | Elaine Riot. i By the Associated Press. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., June 2 negroés, twice sentenced by AT sas courts to be clectrocuted after twlce being convicted of murder in| connection with the Elaine insurrec- tlon in October, 1919, are at liberty today, a misunderstanding or contra- dietion of orders having brought them release 1y this morning, sud- denly and unexpectedly, as they stood knocking at the outside gates of the state penitentiary near here. Shertft A. L. Calloway of Lee county bad brought them from the jail at Marianna on orders from Judge E. D. Robertson of the Lee county circuit court, he Warden Hamp Mar- tin had no orders to receive them, he said, and refused to admit them. They were set free. Recovering from their bewilder- ment, the six, with attendant rela- tives and attorneys, climbed Into au-| tomobiles and returned to Little Rock to spend the night as they pleased fo the first time since, three and a half years ago, they were arrested and charged with complicity in the uprising which resulted in the death of several white persons and an in- determinate number of hegroes and the calling out of the United States troops. Court Dixminses Case. An opinion of the Arkansas supreme court yesterday directed the dismis sal of the case against the negroes on petition of defense counsel, which asserted that two terms of court in Lee count: whe their third trial had been set have passed without their having been brought to t The_ negroes, Ed Ware, Joe Fox, John Martin, Alf Banks, Albert Giles and Will Wordlow greed before leaving the penitentiary grounds t they would meet in the office of a attorney in Little Rock today, when further actlon on their status is ex- pected. Six other negro defendants in the Elaine affair are in the penitentiary {here awaiting action of Federal Judge Trieber on their habeas corpus ple, which was based on the allege ground that they did not receive a jfair trial at Helena, in Phillips county, the locality of the insurrec- tion, Verdict Was Reversed. The first reversal of a verdict of guilty and a sentence of death in the case of the negroes released was caused by the failure of the jury to name the offense for which it found he defendants guilty. Its verdict i was, “Guilty as charged. Reversal in the sccond conviction | And death sentence was based on the fact that no ‘negroes were on the jury which found the six guilty, the supreme court declaring that they had not, therefore, been guaranteed a fair trial. A change of venue was then granted to Lee county, where | the last term of court the state’s at- torney requested the postponement of the trial. He expléiped that witnesses by whom he had obtained convictiony in former trials were not available. Riot Occurred in 1919, . The Elaine trouble started when a party in an automobile, including an officer, was fired upon’ early in Oc- tober, 1919, by persons concealed near negro meeting house at Hoop Spur, n_ Phillips county. Investigation later disclosed that armed negroes were patrolling the vicinity of the house, in which a great number of negroes were congregated, armed. In operations by federal troops and posses hundreds of negroes were captured and disarmed. Qulet was restored after several white men, in- cluding a deputy and two members of the Helena American Legion post, had been killed. The negroes, it de- veloped, had been persuaded by an agitator, posing as a government agent, to arm and drill in preparation for the day when they should take over control of affairs in that section. OFFICER KILLS BOY. Shoots - Youth Twice in Railroad Yards. . CINCINNATL, - Ohio, June 26.—A youth giving his name as Carl Stein, twenty-three years old, Abbotsford, Mich., shot twice by Sergt. Harry Bur- brink of the Big Four railroad police, dled at a hospital here today. Burbrink reported to police. that Stein’ leaped out. of a box car as 8 train arrived in the yards last night. While questioning him. Burbrink al- leges, the youtn suddenis tripped tim. urbank alleges he fired and ‘when the youth at nr:d,.mll k2 him shot, | WASHINGTON, D. ., TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1923, —By KESSLER. Pay to U. S. for Army on Rhine VILLIE . You 6IT OUT ‘0 THAY HOARHOUND AND LICoRICE NOW ! CLEAN UP TRAT | WORKED AT TH PALACE DRUG SToRE THEY ©0TrA SopY FOUNTAIN ‘N 'EV'THING D.C MacMillan Exi;lorer to Send| His First Message } From Schooner. | Instructions Issued to Amateurs for Catching Report. ! { Washington’s amateur radio opera- tors who can read the dot and dash language of the ecther will begin| listening-in tonight for reports from Donald B. MacMillan’s tiny schooner, | the Bowdofn, on the first lap of its trip to the north pole. Every night and during the early morning hours of the adveturous journey Donald Mix. the radlo operator on the Bowdoin, will flash messages to the radio operators of the world From the Bowdoin every week will} comn a story from M Millan. Thirty thousand members of the American Radio Relay - League, who are co- operating with North American Newspaper Alliance, of which The! r is @ member, will pick up these: dot-and eopies of | which x The Star and decode: being decoded they will be published in The Star. Here is the complete set of in- stryctions for T ateurs who will aid in enabling The Star to print, from week to week, the pro- of the voyage of pr. In_ the m-| ructions the “ham” is told of the | need of constant watchfulness in or- | der that any urgent message sent by Dr. MacMillan—equivalent to a ship's 5.0.8—may not be lost in the air without acknowledgmen: Paste these instructio; your radio set. The MacMillan party plans to be gone fifteen months; it} may be held in the arctic for a much | longer perfod. | If any modification or revision of these instructions is found necessary, | up beside | the changes ‘will be published in The tar and notice of them will also be issued through radio channels. These plans were worked out by officials of the American Radio Relay League, including Hiram P xim, president; F. H. Schnell, league’s trafic manager, neth B. Warner, sccrewary, in i jumction with Dr. MacMillan and the ‘orth American Newspaper Alliance. The American Radio Relay League, which has headquarters in Hartford, Conn., publishes an official magazine, QST, in_the July issue of which (pub- lished July 1) the following instruc- tions and schedules will appear. The league's official broadcasting stations, which broadcast every Sunday and Monday at 12.01 a.m., local time, will keep the amateur worid informed of Clipper Ship Sailors. From the Maritime History of Massdchusetts. A foremost hand on a Yankee East Indiaman was the best paid, best fed and most competent. sailor in the world, regarded by coasters, fisher- | men, ‘'whalers and man-o’-wars-men as the top dog of his profession. And the officers must ne more be judged by the brutality of Capt. Thompson than other professions by their black| sheep. A Yankee shipmaster, in 1840, was the world's standard in ability and in conduct. The Massachusetts mer- chant marine was commanded for the most part by men of high character and education, navigators who could work Junars as well as Bowditch him- self, and who Inherited all the prac- tical seamanship of the old school; “merchant captains” who owned part of their vessel, and had full respon- sibility in trading. Most of the fa- mous clipper ship commanders had their training during the thirties and forties, which we.may fairly call the golden age of American merchant marine. He’s Not the Only One. From the Brown Bull. The speaker waxed eloguent and after his peroration on Wwoman's rights he said: “When they take our girls, as they threaten, away from the co-educational colleges, what will follow? What will follow, ¥ repeat?” And a loud masculine voice in the apditorium replied, “I will.” Is No Joke. From the Boston Transcript. Brother—What did you say to that old chap just now? Stater—I only thanked him for picking up my. handbag. Brother—-My dear girl, you must | No; QENATOR \ALLIAM B. MSKINLEY OF ILLINCI® STARTED IN BUSINESS IN A SPINGFIELD DRUG STORE. AT € 4.50 A VEEK: . Radio Fans May Catch Signal Tonight| . e DONALD H. MIX. the progress of cemmunicating with the most adventur n yet to be given a sign VNP (Wireless Pole). Heore are the them by you. Wave Lengths. WNP will transmit on wave l¢ of about 185, 220 and 300 meters, ac- cording to the demand of the receiv- ing operator with whom communi- cation is being carried on. However, it may Dbe expected that the 220- ster wave will be used oftener, and only in unusual cases when commu- rication is without the bounds reas will a change be WNP has authority to use any instructions. Keep occasion demands a departure from Schedule (Eastern Standard Time). ! 10 pm. to midnight—WNP QRX for press_reports. Midnight—WNP will QRX for re- ports via NSS (17,000 meters). -1 am. to 2 m.—WNP will municate with amateurs. 3 am. to 4 work a special am. to municate with amateurs. Dr. MacMillan will permit Mix to te every night, but due con- ation must be given the period of operating hours of the transmitter because of the limited amount of fuel which is carried to operate the Delco outfit. At other times it may be necessary for Mix to “turn will com- will com- However, WNP can be listening at times, even though the transmitter is not being operated. These are things which must be taken into account with the forego- ing schedule. It may seem rather late for . yet we must give the fellows on the west coast the same chance as is given those on the east coast. *WNP will QRX on about 750 meters for epeclal work with limited ations. [STITCH IN TIME Stitch in Time Saves Nine. This old saying is more applicable to Orien- tal Rugs than anything else. A little hole, a lit- tle raveling, small moth- eaten places, soon de- velop into large ones that cost much more to repair. Let us take ;Jnrge of your rugs and carpets this year. Nejib Hekimian Established 1901 1512 H St. NW. learn mot to be so beastly grateful. || s not don @ nowadays, made. | s o | ‘#nd lend @ hand” in rigging the ship. | expected to be | : May Cut 1924 Deficit Two-Thirds Terms Fix Annual Remittance of $20,000,000. Estimated Budget Would Be Shy $30,000,000. With the return to his desk here of Assistant Secretary of the Treas- jury Eliot Wadsworth, who as special representative of the State Depart- ment, was successful in negotiating in Paris for payment of $265,000,000 to the United States for expense of ,the Army of occupation in Germany, {it was learned today from the bureau of the budget that the $20,000,000 an- nually now expected from the repara- tions payments on the American bill had not been included in earlier e; timates of the budget. As a conse- quence, the deficit for the coming fiscal vear, ending June 30, 1924, probably stands at present at the tentative figure of $10,000,000 Instead of the $30,000,000 announced June 18 by President Harding before the bus- iness meeting of the government of course, depends ou Ger- The big “if” pay sufficient sh into the reparations coffers of Europe for the United States to get under the agreement, its $20,000,000 payment. Cuts Defleit Two-thirds. But if Germany does pay, the deficit for the next fiscal year, which begins next Sunday, been sliced of two-thirds already. President Harding told the busi- ness-organization of the government he confidently expected that the es- timated deficit would be wiped out. During the present vear, a deficit of more than $500,000,000 was turned into a surplus of $200,000,000, and on July 1, comes the development that two-thirds of the estimated deficit will be wiped out by payments from Europe. Under negotiated Paris with terms by the of M. allled powers, DENIES UNFAIR METHODS IN FILM PICTURE DEALS Vice President of Stanley Company Defends Booking €orporation Be- fore Federal Trade Commission, the agreement Wadsworth _at this By the Associated Press, PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—John J. . vice president of the Stan that the ir methods of ca fon picture business. that the Stanley Com- rica had obtained a n from the Famous Play- Corporation, but declared never beem an agree was to exhibit Fa- pictures exclu admitted A 1 that his comp: mous Players-Las sivel The hearing here is a resumption of the investigation begun in New rork several weeks ago of charges the gbvernment that several of country’s largest motion picture concerns were attempting to mono film business. From thi: commission will go to New Orleans, Dallas and Los Angeles for hearin The Stanley Company filed a formal denial of the charges that it was con- €d by the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. Willilam G. Willcox. YORK, June 26.—Dr. Anson former secretary of elected chairman f trustees of Tuskegee tute at the annual meeting. He ds Willlam G. W/ count of ill health. approved the budget of school purposes next W $160,000 for year. [ — There’s a Time for Fawning. | From the Boston Transeript. Woman Friend—No wonder dith won't look at you It's your own { fault. Yoy act like a slave—fawning H cringing before her as if vou iand ! didn't dare to call own. Mr. Wormley—Don't wemen like 1 that kind of thing? Woman Friend—Um, not until after rr METAL GARAGES “Only the Best’ As Low As $5 Cash, $7.50 Per. Month Phone Main 7984 WASHINGTON GARAGE CONSTRUCTION CO. 701 Continental Trust Bldg. Comfort Baby’s Skin With Cuticura Soap And Fragrant Talcum e P terctarion Bept ¥ WA e ince: m i i i i | 1 I Ehe cocoanu oil_ shampoo, § e g by | now before the next fiscal year opens | ape- | nt | Atlanta, | HEADS TUSKEGEE BOARD.! nths | D Anson Phelps Stokes Succeeds | ilicox, who re- ' vour soul your | ELIOT WADSWORTH. government is to be paid.the 000,000 bill for the army of occup tion in twelve annual instailm. with America holding priority claim on the cash payments from Germany. During the first four years the Ameri- can bill has clatm on the cash pay ments up to twenty-fiye per cent of years the American claim holds | annual payments. Amount Is Uncertab Whether Germany will make suf- the total, while during the last eight | priority over the entire German cash | KENTUCKY G. 0. P. MEETS TO NAME STATE TICKET Choice of Charles I. Dawson for Governor Virtually Conceded. Horse Racing Issue Injected. By the Associated Press. LEXINGTON, Ky., June 26.—With the nomination of former Attorney General Charles T. Dawson fcr gov- ernor on the first ballot virtuui.y conceded by the opposition and the platform ready for the fnishing touches, interest of the delegates to the state republican convention to- day was centered on slate-making for the minor off on the state ticket. George Colvin, superintend- ent of public instruction, is the prin cipal opponent of Dawson A sh ght on the floor of the convention is in sight over an ex pected attempt to inject a plank ad- vocating repeal of the present la permitting horse racing with pari- mutuel betting machines, Colvin has declared b ad the fight for the anti-bettin ik, which it is said will be su ted in the form a minority port of the committee on resolutions » intention to WE SERVE YOU WELL / One Merchant to Another: AVING TIME, get- ting full value for my money in food and service is the | ficient returns to the reparations com- | mission to carry all of the American $20,000,000 annually for the first fc | vears is a question which no officai | would attempt to answer. But th agreement was completed, and stands { ready to divert from Berlin the first | funds each year to this government | Officials believe that some funds | will be forthcoming, even if the entire | amount expected do r 3 Mr. Wadsworth was congratu by offcials and friends upon the | cessful termination of his im |international mission: As a { secretary of the Treasury is in charge of foreign loans, payments and advances to railroads and a group of miscellaneous Treasury business, in- cluding the bureau of engraving and printing and the bureau of supplics. He is secretary of the World Foreign Debt Commi which has {completed & ng: agree- | ment with Great Britain and Finland. “AMERICAN LEGIONAIRE” VETS’ BALLOON ENTRY Baltimore Man Will Pilot Craft in Race at Indianapolis July 4. By the Associated Press. INDIANATOLILS, Ind, June War | reason I prefer the Bellevue Restaurants. ’ Bellev ue Farms “ Restaurants 1332-34-36 G Street N istant | Better Than You Can Serve Yeurself FOR LEASE BUSINESS PROPERTY 14th and Eye Sts. Large Store Room Attractive Office Rooms Hedges & Middleton, Inc. 1334 H St. N.W. Main 1028 i ! ‘The American Legionaire” will be the natiomal elimination balloon con- test to start here on July ¢, Lemuel Bolles, national adjutant of the v erans’ organization, announced day. The balloon, which will have a ca pacity of 0,000 cubic feet, is bei furnis y commanding o of the nip C : eral Headquarter: 3 > a, and will be pilo: : ough of Baltimore, . with Lieut. Carlton F. Bond United States air service, Aberdecn (Md.) proving grounds, as aide. Mr. Cullou cas a_captain in the | wi ar_and is vice chairman of national committee on over, who won the mination balloon race, and_part cipated in the James Gordon Bennett international balloon race, which was arted from Geneva, tzerland LANG DEFEATS JONES. . PHILADELPHIA, June 26 —Jerome Tang of Columbia University today defeated Arnold W. Jones of - national juglor singles champion, 5-—7, 6—2, (—4, in the third round | of the national Inercollegiate tennis { tournament. Lang is holder of the New York | state -intercolleglate singles cham- } pionship. 1922 nation: | Comfort Clothes— Clothes ored, and fit mind as well. know how t thin weaves shapeliness. Palm Beach hand-tailored silk finished, Mohair Suits. . Mallison’s Tan Trousers Trousers . ural—special ‘White Golf Ho: special . ... the entry of the American Legion in| nd was aide to Maj. West- | that feather weight—and, be- cause they are rightly tail- are as comfortable to your character and permanent Linen Suits, 516.50 and 520 Tropical Worsteds— Gabardine Suits, $2 5 to $40 Fine White Flannel English Cricket Cloth Trou- sers—our own impor= tations ...... Striped Flannel and Serge Linen Knickers—Tan and Nat- The Mode—F at Eleventh i \ Apartments May be secured now in very desirable mod- ern buildings. | | Excellent Locations Reasonable Rents Phone Main 1028 for Particulars Hedges & Middleton, Inc. Realtors 1334 H St. N.W. Main 1028 of are distinctively, Mode tailors o treat these to give them Suits that are and silk fin- 325 © %40 .520 to 338 and Brown Silk oo 434.95 se—

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