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GREAT PARADE ENDS ELKS’ CONVENTION Thouunds: March as Atlantans Cheer—McFarland Installed as Grand Exalted Ruler. By the Associated Press, ATLANTA, July The Eik tribes literally overran Atlanta today. It was the occasion of their grand an- nual parade, the closing event of their 1923 Grand Lodge convention and reunion, and thousands of members of the order, with their two scora bands, drum corps and other musical units, their picturesque floats and their handsome uniforms of purple and white, received ovation after ovation as they marched block after block through the heart of the city. Following the last session of the' Grand Lodge, at which the new grand cxalted ruler, James G. McFarland of South Dakota, and other grand officers were installed, the parade was the princinal feature of the day. Charles H. Grakelow of Philadel- phia, esteemed grand esquire of the order, had charge of the marchers Approximately |1ine and presented a brilliant ‘spec- | tacte 'as “they swent through the islrm»ls and past the reviewing stand | erected ‘in’ front of eity hall. i o {COAL.EXPORTS JUMP MANY TIMES IN MAY pared to 140,623 During Previous Month. Coal exports from the United States for May amounted to 666,122 tons, as compared with 140,623 the previous month. F. R. Wadleigh, federal fuel distributor, in making public these | figures, said that during June there was a steady flow of American coal into foreign trade. Figures are not obtainable yet to show tual shipments for the month, French occupation of the Ruhr, | which produced 60,000 tons of coal day before military intervention, has | reduced output there by an uncertain amount, the fuel distributor said, re- | ports indicating, however, that 12,000 to 15,000 tons were still being mined. | coal export is still increas- Wadlet added, amounting 90 tons in May. - Chnemists have found a way to make synthetic thymol from a waste prod- uct of the paper industry. to 7,684 |FIVE KILLED, TWO HURT | WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO Terre Haute Machine Said to Have Been Stalled Upon Crossing. By the Associated Pre: TERRE HAU Ind., July 12— | Five persons were killed and two others are in a local hospital suf- 'fering from injuries as the result of |treir automobile having been struck |by a fast passenger train®near here yesterday. Jack Ellis, his wife, a daughter, Lilly, Terre Haute; Margaret and Ernestine Dunlop of Seelyville. The injured are Mrs. Fred Sterchi and her daughter Dérothy of Seely- ville. The automobile stalled on the track in front of the fast approach- ing train, it was said. - The Hutchison Shield for ficiency In first-aid among Canadian National Railways terminal employes has just been won, for the first time, by a team composed of women The winning team was made up of women employed in the general of- fices in Montreal. West Dunlop 1200 Union S 07 3 for $2.75 Tailored for cool comfort—of soft, white striped and plaid madras and checked nainsook. All sizes. 900 Pairs Silk Socks, 55¢ Full-fashioned pure thread silk socks. slight substandards. and dropstitch fiber silk of perfect quality. white and colors. D. 1005-7 PA. AVE. / Three pairs for $1.50. Money's Worth or Money Back J. 1724 PA. E MANS STORES OF WASHINGTON Plain and clocks. Black, AVE. All Rambler $3.00 Straw Hats Known as the smartest line of straws ever brought to town— yuality headgear, in every approved braid and block. Get a gen- uine Rambler at a genuine saving! Money’s Worth or Money Back Cape | A bronze tablet in memory of six- teen officers and men of the United States Army who died of starvatfon and exposure in the arctic in 1384 is now ‘on the way to Cape Sabine, Ellesmere Land, where it will be placed at the scene of one of the most tragic disasters in the history Sabine, Where Monument To 16 Will Stand, Bleak Ice Block by Dionald MaeMillan, arctic explorer and lleutenant of Peary on the voy- age which resulted in the discovery of the North pole. A bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National 0~ graphic. Society describes the region of Cape Sabine and the hardshipsen- countered there. 1883-84. Their sufferings, both physi- cal and mental, were acute. They grew too weak to hunt successfully and attempted to keep themselves |, alive on scraps of old uealskin and rock lichens. One after another sick- ened and dled, but still the survivors kept up fafthfully the scientific ob- servations for which they had been | sent to the arctic. The original party twenty-three men was reduced to | seven when on June 22, 1884, they | ‘were rescued. Of the seven, only two | or three were strong enough to move | from their sleeping bags, and even the strongest could hardly walk in stumbling fashfon. But the scientific | records, which added greatly to the| world's' geographic, meteorologic and magnetic knowledge, had been care- REILLY’S WAY —should be your way whenever your needs include decorating mediums such as oils, Paints, Stains & Varnishes “Though Cape Sabine is itself very far within the permanently cold re- glons and throughout most of the year is a bleak region of rock and of American arctic exploration, the refuge camp of the Greely expedition. | Set in the rocks at latitude 78° 45’ | north, more than 800 miles above the | Arctic circle, this will be one of the | most northerly monuments in the | world of the Greely expedition,” says the bulletin. “That was at Lady Frank- }Jin bay near the northern tip of Ellesmere Land. Cape Sabine, some 300 miles to the south, was the closest point ‘to aivilization to which Greely was able to take his men Lives to Sciemce. | blet is inscribed “To the memory of the di | under Lieut. A. W. Greely, he nsure the final and | complete success of the first scientific | co-operation of the United States | with” other nations, 1881-1884." two promised annual relfe: tions failed to reach them. Worked On in Face of Death. “There in a temperature far below zero, with practically no fuel and The tablet eing erected by the | with provisions sufficient for only a National Geographic Soclety and will| few weeks, the party fought for life during the pri t summer | through the winter and spring of PO THE MANS STORES ¥ OF WASHINGTON -~ CLOSE SATURDAY 2 PM. ice, it was not the northernmost base | when they retreated southward after| expedi- | fully kept until forty hours before | the rescue. “The expedition, with another in Alaska, represented the United States in scientific work in which ten governments took part by making simultaneous observations at a series The best brands only find room at Reilly’s, and we sell at Specially Low Prices. ACTS AS PEACEMAKER. | et R A ! 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