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5 = = * TTHE _SU) FANIED DERBY WON *BY BUBBLING OVER Kentucky Horse Captures Classic, While Stablemate Is Second. BY ROBERT SMALL LOUISVILLE oie end of uer ~welled frow Downs tiis ¢ ful chestr Kentuc Col. E. R downi the \raerican ng Ove irough a axd reared i ronight Col ¥ debutante ‘and declarea & Over would go on ipse the record mad Warasa 3 he colt wo of a ton Ty was bred great chorns oatsat Churchill al the colors iy ternoon wher bearing and old sportsma Bradley, came thunder stretch a moenarch of th f. His B nd he was a colt Kentu radley o equal 1g in the brow: Nnt only did Bubbling Over off by himself. but in the moments race nis stable o panion. Baggenbaggage dropped {r nowhere nd tool cond moncy Thus Col. Bradley rcpea s victory in the Derby of five when his tweo colts, Black servar second fi Bubbling Over Leads. "o1pe 1gent the Dert and for a-quarter hese two as the turf Over leapea e bar: leaped to b an for th rle. The wise men o has ever seen to the fv ut of Kent bhig test canie home stretch but for B » signal of victor Albert John de coit. heard the field throtbing flanks. He did not look back f it was Pompey or any of the ot ite just gave Bubbling Over a )¢ the hand. The game chest \ad plenty in reserve. He had se sace the entire distance, but he was eady to g0 on and or. Pompey's rider went to the whip. e lashe The great son of Sun Briar with great sweeping clouts, but this ».year-old of the Kast had run hi race. Horse after horse flashed by im and at the end Pompey’s colors were trailing in the ruck. Tt was Finishes With Esse. Pompey was not alone in his 1ge to the West. There IZastern colts in the Der 1ot know what a race horsa wae they undertook the task of catch the fiving Kentuckians. There was Display, winne Kast's historic Preakness Pimlico last Monday. Ther ifarry Payne Whitner c which finished second at r'hers was Canter. which the East expected to win his way Bubbling Over ran as i rothing in the race to ext made his own speed and vritho ing pressed at the finish L within two-fifths of a secor.d of ng the Derby record of 3:03 5 r ny Old Rosebud back in 1914 Bubbling Over's victory wus only popular as a Kentucky triumpl over hated rivals from the Fast. but it was a great victory for the bet ‘ors. The Bradley entry was an whelming favorite Backed by Keutuckiaus. It was confidently expected tiat Pompey would bs made the favorite through the weight of the “big money” which w: coming in from the Bast. Everywhere except in Ken- <ucky Pompey was favored by the e perts to win. Local pride and a knowl- | edge of twhat Bubbling Over a <nown in trials made the Kentucki: so to him as one ma 1nay have sent in its 10 and 20 and thousand dollar bets on Pompey, but the 2-dollar bettors of “Old Kaintuck ‘airly swamped the machines heir wagers. They drove {he odds down und down, it seemed they would never get *hrough betting, and some of the ot ot the Blue Grass were still strug- ing valiantly to get their mone: across the betting counters when the cry went up, “They're off.’ The cheers of the Ken gan when Bubbling Over peared on the track. Ho w ast in the long line as the post. id what a 4 ¥ rade waw. It was agreed, hows it Bubbling Over was the hand ast of all. He is a strong, big cc ne looked trained to the minute. P pey was dry and appeared a bit d h kians be. first Keen horsemen at the track said at | once he would not do. Their judg- ment was more than justified Rebel Yell Breaks Out. ¢ continued as the iorses post, where there was a srief delay, and then, as the Bradie olt rushed past the stands the first ‘ime, leading the fleld and running as smoothly as a well oiled machine. the chant of victory began. It never -eased for & moment after that. The rebel yell pierced the JOver reveled in the n and when, "t last, he came back to the judges stand and t of roses ~trung across auiet and_docile an old debhin in a quiet v When Col. Bradley, tall rect, was called "0 the ‘eive the goll vase w Derby winner in additio: han $30,000 in cash eteran of the turf was trembl ike a leaf. The colonel's color white and green. Today Le hose colors in the hathand ~traw sailor. His necktie vas wt ud green. There is mentim nt about rorse racing in Kentuek Mayor Jimmie Walker ity presented the « It was vident that Kentucky today had not wly captured another Derby but had aptured Manhattan's mayor as well. I'he mayor ade a pretty littie speech which he paid tribute to all that (‘o). Bradley has done for the Ameri- an turf. The mayor said he had ruly experfenced the thrill that omes once in a lifetime, the witness. ng of his first Kentucky Derby. He said he spoke for horse in congratulati and he added We have much to learn from the sroughbred. to alwaye do our best nd never to of o alibi The chee: vent to the as unperturbed go atreat. sparse but and to re. 1 goes to i to the more New York champion | ap- | to | Bubbling | cery lover of ' Col. Brad- | PRESIDENT AT WILLIAMSBURG | Left to right: ¢ centennial celebration LI.D. degree, and Rector W. A. R. ( FARM LEGISLATION KEY T0 ELECTIONS . 'Many Western Republicans | Fear Failure of Bills Will | Hurt Party. BY G. GOULD LI I'he probable endin m | zislation and its eff | congre: 1 prima . is exercising members of hoth the te and the & f dire ve ministration fowa and Illinois, ency with alarm the other hand are foun rember: both houses fre | West and Middle West also who re gard with considerable equa bility no surplus crop | a* the present session. Same Talk in 1924, was recalled yesterday that prophecies of defeat for the (o idge adiinistration and Republicar menbers of Congress were frequent 4 lecanse the original McNar had failed in Congress, blicana. TI of But the elections | the Lte ee leans years. of 1924 returned to powe gressio in the victory of eputlicans in the West | m of additional » wiil mate Brookart, enemy of the tion, in his race for the Re. or the Senate Cummins, place Ju Jowa Fas heen the storm center of t ema for farm relief legislati ose oposing surplus crop legisla o ses it lnid awa Iowa election Primaries Cause Delay. Tie Pennsylvania primaries, which the entire State delegation the Ho must be nomins ! been responsible in pa - in voting cn the H House. It b jose of the I aver. | before ths | practically large Penn- | of the their own Haugen ! gistricts The £ | determin { the House | of its tripiet | will_endexvor to lop off two of the | heads 5o that the othe ve | i On Tu > consideration ded farm program and | and be =ent to the Hen: X The Haugen bill, with its vevised 5 tund to be useu crops 0 ¢ prices equalization fee. is Leaten, to estimates of stren h made by con | gressional leaders | President Opposes Bill. Thiz will cause the administration | 10 pengs. The President and his ‘retary of Agriculture have bLeen | steadfast! against this measure. | It remains to be seen whether one of the two other bills reported to the | { Honse. the Tincher Bill or the Curtis Aswell bill, can be passed, or whethe 2 combination of the two can com- | {mand sufficient strength. Whatever the House does with the farm relief hills, the Senate will | e called upon to consider the bill now | on the Senate calendar, reported from | {the committee on agriculture by Sen {atow McNary of Oregon. This is the | Tlouee hill providing for the creation {0t . division of co-operative marketing {in Department of Agriculture, plus | an amendment authorized by the Sen ate comr ee setting up a Federal | Farm Advisory Council and providing {a revolving fund of §250,000,000, to be used in maintaining prices if there Dbe a surplus, with an equalization tee to be charged against the producers, This amendment is a modification of the old MeNary-flaugen bill Success Depends on House. If the House fails to pass any leg- | islation dealing with the surplus crops | it s not likely that the Senate amend- | ment to the bill setting up a division ? co-operative marketing would have | ny chance of being accepted by the House, even should the Senate agree t0 this amendment, which is doubtful. But it may be possible to save the bill for the establishment of a division lof co-operative marketing, a bill {fathered by the administration and supported by many of the great farm co-operatives of the country. The administration is willing to ac- {cept the Tincher bill, with its $100,- | 000,000 revolving fund to be loaned to the farm co-operatives to aid in the | more efficient and better marketing of | surplus crops. But the supporters of ! 2o Haugen bill declare that the farm- | ers do not need further loans; that | they meed is a system which will enable' them to meet the losses which will irevitably occur if surplus | crops are to be marketed abroad. Omly two methods to meet such! § . Byrd of Virginia, President (o Willlamsburg, Va., where the Wil li ! organizations MENOR A been expected to |, : lezislation will be 3, | the World W | of | an I 1 rwodwin (right) of Wil liam and Mary selves. sy the sup iple of the McNary One is for losses present then porters of the prin and Haugen Dills lossas to be mad up through ization fee. and the other for th ury to meet the losses Denounce Tincher Bill The Tincher bill, they remedy at all The economic weakness of the so- lled surplus crops bills futhered by McNary and Representative and by many of the farm lies in the probabillty that the very remedy set up tc the surplus evil will cause gres pluses The & in the House insis, is uo e nator Hauge! sporters of the Haugen bill ve made every effort obtaln the ald of the members from the cotton-growing he ith. Their latest proy cuttir revolving fund to $176,000.0 provides for the loan of §75.000,000 to | cotton farmers without impc equalizatic Rut tt Vides for put of the protecti be fixed on the the the years. . a_vers (umber w This 1 Haugen bill has gone on the Representative the best wa House in t shall be defeated. under which the Ho arm legisiation fore that body swell bills 1 1AL GIFTS ADTENPLEFUND nd the Hange Wothers and Fathers of iien Who Died in World Wai Contribute to Shrine. \ an fmnposing Park soldiers, ug @ n < battle or aftes 3 service on t o csponding res thi r ian architecture, all who served the boys wr the cause by having pon the ong. X s for £ honored rames inscribed ceiling of the temple. sives in Son’s Memory. jcal letter from ome of the be- at of Mrs, 1. L. Hurle will be their marble v check for please find w fund. D. . memorial n is in ¥ w. Hurle swho lost his life in the serv of country during tlie World W August 2 1918." Another is that signed by Leila D. and Alberta Warren, »r GGovernor Thomas Children of the Amer- , as follows: ““T'he inclosed check is a contribu- tion from the Senior Governor Thom- vellee Soclety, C. A. R.. for the memorial commission fund. It is in honor of George V. Seibold, one our members who gave his lite for his country and who i3 numbered among the unknown.” Another contributor. Mrs. Mary T. Wood, 0 ¥ place northeast, contrib Janes aply: d please 1ind my check for © memorial. in memory my two sons who Jack B. Wood and Pv Wood, the latter decease wishes for the drive Memorial Fund Growi With best nother interesting communication | came from Mre. L. M. Bourne, who wrote: “I am sending vou my check for $25 as my contribution to the Holy Memorial for our brave boys who served in the great war, in honor of | and especially in memory of my own and only son, Lieut. Thomas Randolph Bourne, Ordnance Corps, A. E. F., who served in France 10 months with the muni- tions and supplies department. My son killed soon after his return from France in the terrible Knicker- bocker Theater disaster.” The memorial fund, of which John Poole 18 treasurer, is growing steadily day by day. fund should be made payable to Mr. Poole, care of the Iederal-American National Bank. of our heroe: Baden-Powell Sails. NEW _YORK, May 15 (P .—sir Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement. safled today on the Majestic with Lady Powell, after reviewing 50,000 Scouts in two weeks while vieiting sfx centers. [ DAY e, wearing the traditional and Mary College yesterday bestowed on him the Checks for the temple | STAR, | ap and gown, at the sesqui College. HOUSE WILL DELAY VOTE ONANNUITIES { | Plans to Wait and See Which| of Two Bills Senate | Finally Passes. The ent to which the present | ralize the civil serv may be determined | 5 week, with t | to a large extent | Kes { Club expec | | one supporting the lpro- | 1y, | ng other wtre 4 1dget Bureau's modified i fa 1 Jureau p ¢ Lehlbach hill to the House by pe, L0 @ Mo Drogr: the T. tuation Is Complicated. t Bureau plan is ti » i the House ned that this {: ‘Che Rudg the und sen Senate House b there ¢ who be- | enate bill | and the retirenient at age | | limtts lowe uge of compul- | I sory re nt, i determined effort o to have the repate ac-| ot Bureau plan by Sena- | esents all at this | | cept tie Buc tors who feel that bill,re rnment ehould » toward inereasing @ te Vote Uncerta no reliable i asterday as to which when i vote {8 reached in the Senate. The debate will be resumed tomoOrrow afternoon nd il is possible a decision may be veached before adjournment. Tho: think the prove more libe: hopes on the fact) a c<imilar measure passed the | » last year and on the further | the civil service committee {0f the Senate reported out the $1,2 bill. On the other hand, there are Senators who take the view that it is _better to pass the bill approved by'the Budget Bureau than to run the risk of getting no retirement legisla- tion through at this sesston When the Senate resumes considera- tion of the question tomorrow Smoot, Republican, of Utah will offer a eubstitute for the committea bill, which will embody a $1,000 maximum annuity, using $1,500 as the maximum salary for computa- tion muitiplfed Ly the number of vears of service and divided by Senator Smoot beileves thls is as far as Congress should go at this time in changing the retirement law, and it s expected he will make a strong effort to have the Senate accept this substitute. Stanfleld to Defend Senator Stanfleld, Republican. ~ of Oregon will defend the bill, which he reported from committee, carrying the $1,200 maximum annuity and the |following provision for voluntary re- tirement: The group that is auto- matically retired at the age of 70 may retire voluntarily at 65 after 30 ¥ vice; the group .that is automati ired at 65 may retire voluntarily at 62, while the group re- | tired automatically at 62 would re- ceive optional advantage. the Senate debate Friday, B Smoot went into detalls to show that the method of computing {annuities, both under the existing law land the pending bills, results in |inequalities between employes who enter the service early in life and re- | main 40 or 50 gears and employes who are appointed in middle age and retire {after a shorter period of service. | Senator Smoot sald he was not pre- | pared at this time to work out a solu- tion for these discrepancies, because it would require careful study. He predicted, however, that some day a more equitable method of computing | annuities would be worked out “so |that every employe, no matter | whether he gets $960 per annum or $7,500 per annum, will all be on the | same basis as to annuit In analyzing -what he termed the discrepancies in the present method of computing annuities, Senator Smoot gave illustrations to show that in | many cases employes would get more out of the retirement system by resigning from the service just before arriving at the age of retirement and drawing out their refund than by re- do wer {at the Cupitol | plan would carry p Wi WASHINGTON, {third annual N: | tours of Furope, the award of the nu | represent the United & o ) | rollment. is betwe | ern High School senfor | victo: D. €, MAY 16, PERSHING TOJON HONORS T0 ORATOR General Will Present Cup to! Vigtor in National Con- test Here. Gen. John J the handsome large loving cup to the victor in the national finals of the tional Oratorical Con test, to be Leld at the \Washington A ditorium on the night of June 4, it was announced vesterday. Gen. Pershing | will sit on the platiorm and make the | presentation immediately after Chief | Justice Wiilium Howard Taft and his four colleagues on the Supreme Court bench have decided which of the severn contestants merits (he title of national finalist. | Inasmuch as Miss Myrtle Posey, 17 vear-old F ) High School senior, and each of the other six district final-| ists from the m sections of the | United States are assured three-month tional finulist cu~ will be an outstand- | ing feature of the evening. The na- tional finalist ) will be entitled to ek in the in | "ld here next | ) speak 1 this Summnier Will Get Gold Pins. The gold pins of the Constitution Club will he presented to each of ti seven district tinall t the banquet to be given in their honor Hays 11 ationally t the lutter’s « urday R n will by Rob essions, 1925 finalist, Who wiil make sttend the 1926 contest. This pin hield shaped, with seven gold stars iu a field of blue, emblematic of seven district finalists who are n each yvear Others Are Qualified. Including the seven district finalists this year. there are 21 members of the Constitution Club, 14 already having qualified in the two previous years of the contest. Donn Tyler winnar of the 1924 char 15 exp 1 finals to be b ternatior Fall and n be mas national t on June 4 > (onstitution ene . Mc ralist last year y of the club 1924 and 192 territory: Vai flip Glatfelder of the contests. meel, Puclfic Coast Ruth Newburn, = Asenath Graves, 192 Barnes 1924 and 1925 students at versi Three Girls, Two Boys With of -t saven 1 tinalists selected, interest now cente in the district final be held icagn next Iriday night and at Philadeiphia on the following Friday night, May 25 The victory of He hert Wenig of Hollywood High School in the Pacific oast district, carried in dispatches received here yesterday, brings the number of boy districo finalists to two, one behind the girls, who hold three district titles. 'The other lad to score was Joseph A. Mul- larky of Augusta, Ga. * of Miss' Ann Hardin of | ool | h S is for Atherton 1 Hsville, Ky, achievemorn sid this > an ints, of which 9 were xpected to be accom Washington by Miss 1924 oratorical final a tavorable im now vile She 1s panted to eanor Huber, . Who created pression. Miss A Journa. n prep New York to Send o ;i & ordeal Delegation. s expected York to d. who is pre: * Genernl Organ- Lool largest gir! i world. The en en 4,000 and When It comes to support, however. none will ba in &0 enviable a8 Miss Myrtie Posey, | fr rzed ns toe high school: , who was the first to join the ranks of the district finalists by virtue of her successive es over the many Washing Maryland and Virginia contestants entive section of Auditorium is being reserved fc of Eastern High School | dents who express a desire to Le pr ent on the night of June 4 Governors Participate. Governors of two States participat prominently in the finals of the New York region. which resulted in fss Bylund's victory. Gov. Alfred . Smith of New York presided. while | Gov. A. Harry Moore of New Jersey served as a judge The contest was held in Town Hall, New York City. Gov. Smith made considerable sac- rifice on this occasion to show his in terest in the contest. He slipped away from Albany while in the midst of his busy “30.day period,” during whic short month he is compelled to devote himself to reviewing and acting on ; important biils Moore has always been keenly interested In youthful oratory and was an orator of fame in his school days, and his naturel and cultivated inter- est in this subject has been accentu- ated by the object of the National Oratorical Contest, which is to create interest in and knowledge of the Con- | stitution. DENVER BROKER IS SHOT; HOSPITAL PATIENT HELD Latter Said to Have Confessed on Ground That Victim Kept 0il Stock Security. BY the Associated Press DENVER, Colo., May 1. . Hall, wealthy Denver broker, was shot and seriously wounded in his downtown office today by Joseph H. Holtz, a_ patient at Iitzsimons General Hospital. Hall was rushed to a hospital and Holtz was over- powered by attaches at Hall's offices and turned over to the police. Hall was struck twice, both bullets entering his left side directly ahove the hip. Upon arrival of police, Holtz is said to have admitted shooting, declaring he had become enraged at Hall's refusal to deliver to him some shares of ofl stock he had posted with the broker as security for payment of additional stock. R e LOAN TO GREECE SEEN. Athens Paper Says Balanec of U. S. $32,000,000 Credit Will Be Paid. ATHENS, Greece, May 15 (P).— The newspaper Eleftheron Vima states that Gen. Paraskevapoulos, who was commander-in-chief of the Greek army under Venizelos, has telegraphed his acceptance of the premiership and will shortly arrive from Paris. According to the same paper, the American Government has decided to grant Greece the balance of the credit A, tiring and taking the annuity. than 2,600 passengers were in the past year by the five operated airplane lines in i More | carried privately Australis. | of $33,000.000 which was placed at Greece's dispopal in 1919, but which was withheld after the late King Con- stantine’s return. Greece will under- take to refund the amount In 15 years. specal visit | ' m, 1926—PART 1. PRIZE CUP FOR WINN L Pershing will present| John | night, June | 1 GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING, Who will make the presentation DROUGHT BROKEN Y HEAVY SHOWER 0.34-Inch Rainfall Ends Dry Spell Which Delayed Gar- dens and Hurt Lawns. bur down o position | ¢ ar-old East- | n forecasier | would fall te began about 100, Was t registerin an inch to 8 o'clock last 1 rain | terday's measured well | d of the to ril s than fo and that of last more than a th precipitation in le Storm Broke at 4 O'clock. teavy thunder clouds which bung over the city from noon ou broke | with thunder claps fter 4 o'clock, driving golf play- ers to shelter and the hearts of gardeners heavily for more than then awindled off to a lasting through it April broke all of precipitation, Weather Bureau ohserve up to yesterday, bade fa the rainy month’s rainless record. Nothing approximating the .78 inch of rainfall recorded on bureau In- struments during April was recalled by officials. The normal total rain- fail for the month averages inches. ; Up to yesterday Washington had not experienced a real rainfall sir April 11, and only two-tenths of inch fell on that occasion. May to vesterday, of normal, the total for the ¥rst two ks being but one-tenth of an inch. 1 resulted from one-hun o nch precipitation _on May 3 and 0.09 inch on May 14. The | District, up to yesterday, was short 4.79 inches of rain for the entire period since January | Rising Temperatures Forecast. The Weather Bureau forecaster could see no rain in sight for today and also predicted a rising tempera ture. Monday will be fair, with con tinued rising temperature The weekly regional bulletin of the | bureau yesterday showed a particu Jarly dry state of affairs in Pennsyl vania, Maryland, the District of Co- lumbia and Virginia. Pastures were said to be withering | for want of water and ctops. badly de- layed by the hard condition of the | ground. Reports to the Weather Buy reau vesterday from the Washington forecast district showed that corn, shich should have been flourishing for the early market, Las barely been able to germinate, becauwe of inabil- ity of farmers to work the sofl. To- | bacco erops in Virgluia were also sid | to have been seriously affected. | DIAZ TO ATTACK LIBERALS | Leaves for East Coast of Nicaragua With Large Detachment. MANAGUA, Nicaragua, May 15 (®).—-Gen. Jose Solorzano Diaz has left for the Atlantic coast with a large detachment of troops to engage the | liberal revolutionists, who recently | captured Bluefiel .« and El Bluff | ‘The governmer ( has dispatched 3,000 | troops to oppuse the forces of the revolutionists, which arc believed to number about 1,206. most ecords for decorain i | dredth ORATOR | i MISS ANN HARDIN, Winner in Louisville Zone. HERBERT WENIG, of Hollywood High School, winner il Pacific Southwest. MISSING ARMY #LYER IS SAFE AT PITTSBUR Army MeCoo! aviator, i Field, Day tonight. ~This als at Rodgers field at Aspinwall chief mechant: the official Al ps came dow The weather result, Han- ed to stay relatives, | ton was threatening. k said, P rer with chief m; 1 Phillips tol Lim he expected to resume his journe to Mctouk Field tomorow or Monday Lie ould not bhe located Rodgers 1ield. Between the Lincoln Memoria GH 1o take-off from | CONGLITON NS STRIER T0 J0BS Baldwin Goes to Country for Week End—Nation Near Normalcy. By ths Asociated Prevs. LONDON, May 18,—Premier Baldwir has gone to Chequers Court. his coun try home, to spend the week erd. The brief anrouncement gells the stors | that the country is at peace again Normal conditions am being resui ed and without waste of {ime theatera and other places of amusement haie reopened. Voluteer workers have prac disappeared from the street: Asitor to London would see its appearance and a nothing unusual in save the ment depots, and these are be turned over to the publi the course of next week Many more of the sumed work today, and so “big lines were able to announce a from tomo: The dock resumed Southampton orts, but in some places thers wkward details to settie bafore imption of work Newspapers to Resume again service have other are a: full at tion existed cspapers, bu es lasting arrangement has nmediate r in the printing thro! the country. The { newspapers will be able 1o anne ete form Monda tlement provides for the ent of the men he same a before a dav-te e 1 ric mong the r {prolonged confere. | Leen re. {tion o ent. At this con 1 e with regard ‘e ages, but steps to avert a recurrence or any similar acts nges of be take ! strikea in the fu The government's coal proposals vis had a good reception although it is sill not known her the miners or the oWners v aceept them is hopefu that an acceptable set | reachied from them, even be the miners ¢ No Resentment Cherished L powerful effec the lead! 1. \ on Tuesday angrily demanc e Trades Union Congress dissolved, prints editorial toda der the heading “No reprisals it says this i the the trads or for imposing ndas Ships Are Being Loaded. 1ips at Cardif, the pro ce et dockers will resume |work Monduy on the terms of a se tlement signed by the Transporters The union undertakes in the t to inetruct its membe: 10 - nationally, sectionally or 3 any reason. without ex | hausting the conctliation machinery of the rational agreements. The dockers will be re-e | their former wage scale the s n advises other ports to agree 1 flar conditions The Labor party | strike ‘M in a sa. For the purpose constitutional governments and : ing as a defensive weapon in the in dustrial battle of labor, the genera strike has its place. but the em pation of the people from capi and the re.establishment of socfa must be achieved primarily by a educational und political organiza ) of check 1 o n semmp e William_Tohill of Killygut Kilres .| Ireland, who is 116 years old, has heen active until this Spring. when fll health confined him to bad. 4 1 1 Reflecting Pool and Tidal Basin, i Potomac Park, there is to be erected soon a beautiful memorial temple to both the dead and the living who r the armed forces of the great Worl As both a memorial and a plac c structure will serve a du Of exquisite beauty, dignity an built of white marble. By it the n. not only for their country but fo epresented the District of Columbia in d War. e where military concerts al purpose. d Greek simplicity. the temple will be ames of those who made the sacrifice r you, will be preserved to posterity ay be held Names will be placed either in the marble dome above or sealed within the sacred crypt of the cornerstone. We appeal to every Washingto those for whom some one near a favored. Your contribution to the $200,000 cost of the memorial, whether it for $1. £10, $100 or $1,000, or an { but a personal tribute to the one, shrined. who means the most (Signed.) to yo « MEMBERS O Charles A. Baker Gist Blair, FEdward F. Colladay John Joy Edson Mrs. William Corcoran Lustis Ts, Je e o o e WASHINGTON, D. C District of Columbia Memorial I hereby subscribe and promise to pay to the order of John Poole, Treasurer, the sum of 1 inclose check in full payment of above subscription. [ will pay my subscription June 1, 1926, $ Aug. 1, 1926, $. Sigued Mail Address Please Make Checks Federal-American National Bank MEMORIAL COMMISSIO! John M. Gleissner nian to contribute to this memorial: t: nd dear served, and to those net so he ntermediate sum, should not be a bwec<n out of all the 26000 names fo &% ¢ 0 FRANK B. NOYES ni Columibia Memoria!l Commissio aac Gans Frank B. Noye: G. Logan Payne Tulius 1. Peyser Anton Stephan Lester Jones dward B. McLean R. McDonald 1926 Commission (€] ) Dollars, Payable to John Poole B o o o e i i 5 e i e 2 e . P S e —