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STAR, WASHINGTON, ., MAY 16, 1926—PART 1. you feel—makes you know—that no convict may hope to escape from Nevada State Prison, and yet, Lord love her, she keeps a horseshoe over the_door. Nevada, even then was tryving \w] find some death system more merciful than rope or chair, and the gas exit is her attempt at mercitul progress. So ‘As the day approaches for the next man to enter the lethal chamber—one of the two has had his sentence com- muted—the law will turn on the gas v 4 sleeps. And what happens next | Tound us a tub. 'The Blavatsky So-| 85 16 SNU Colgn il mever know. clety of London offered to pay the T} « divides childhood’s | cost of further excavation, but the| A IMeASnte SONIE (oo board of prison commissioners refused | (¥4 DAY ST (0 e, "but when (guard’s information, understand).|(ovada sends her condemned to Also he told these things: | Genth by the sleep route ft does not | “We consider this the most humane | (cOb 0 b could end 1fe with a more | | prison in America. A convict doesn't| o rorting appeal than the baby | y lose his identity when he comes here, prayer he learned at his mother but keeps his name instead of going | Lnes by a number. Our system encourages 2 . men to make good cords, because | “If T should die before 1 \\.q\\‘('k‘ when freedom comes th vy know 1 pray the Lord m: soul to take Nevada will give them a fresh chance. x %k * Out in this country we give a man, credit for redeeming himself, instead of everlastingly hounding him be- cause of his fall. One of our leading cltizens was here for 12 years, and he doesn’t try to hide it. He wants the boys here to know, because it is YHE SUNDAY AROUND THE CITY ] Kann’s—*The Busy Corner” Veterans of Great War |of the Joint Memorial Association of | Military Societies, Chaplain Maj. O. | J. W. Scott, U. 8."A., will be the prin- legislative committee, declared that | ¢iPal speaker In connection with the Congress will go home without acting | Prosram at 8 p.m. . on the legion's three bills unless| Hdwin Taylor, Robert W. Adams, Jeglonmnires throughout the country | Cornelius A. King, Richard E. Banks take Heps to prevent it by writing (#nd Dr. Albert Ridgley were elected their r ntatives in Congress to | 10 membership. press for action of these bills, ” . The legion wants action on the| American War Veterans' Club, | {00 m0 0N ot Tohnson bill for the disabled, the| The successful conclusion of the| gy to see the crys- Pitzgerald bill calling for the retire- | initial banquet, installation and ball | fai 'ball. But you ment of disabled emergency of the American War Veterans’ Club| can't walk ahead officers and the Green bill ayflower Hotel last week 18| on a trip like that. mendments to the adjusted compen- | to be followed by an automobile cara-[There are too Sation act favorable to) ¥eberans. van next Sunday to Frederick, Md. | many curious in- | The first bill advocated by the| David C. Winebrenner, 3d, secretary i torests on the egion national convention at Omaha |of State of Maryland, who acted as|way: Casts of In- which was enacted by Congress was | toastmaster at the banquet last week | d1ans chipping that giving rellef to men who mis- | until the installation of Lieut. Col. | pictures on stone, epresented their age in order to en- [ Fred B. Ryons, as president of the| with one dashing list in the World War. These men, |club, was so impressed with the new | young prehistoric who had previously been given a dis- | organization of veterans of all wars | hunter wea ring honorable discharge because of this |in which the United States has partic-| shell _bracelets misrepresentation, will now be given |ipated, that he joined the ranks and|just below the artificates showing that they were | Will be initiated at a special cermony | knee: & suit of honorably discharged. In addition, | being arranged for next Sunday at|armor with « a help. i the law provides that they may re. |IFrederick, Md. Secretary Winebren-|grim suggestion There is a bathing pool that looks eive thm same rights, privileges and | ner is past commander of Francis|of a man. hidden lke a quarter-acre of glass. roofed Lenefits as honorably discharged sol- |Scott Key Post of the American | inside, like a snail | over by unquarried stone. This nat- diers, | Legion at Frederick, Md. and has|in its shell, and a long double row of | ural stream of hot water has to be A resolution authorizing the | taken an active work in the interest | war heroes resurrected into blood, | tempered by cold water, piped from tary of War to deliver to national | 0f the ex-service men since the|bones and live muscles by an artist | outside, as’the prison doesn’t grow 1 rou mustn't, you know-— &7 (A headquarters of the legion & repre- | World War. The leglonnalres and citi- | with a few chalks. 1t is such a won-| cold water of its own. The men are | 50 10 560D Y08 BTS00t after f -'w///f & o N h 3 ks 7 American Legion. BY NANNIE LANCASTER. John Thomas Taylor, national vice chalrman of the American Legion's claw-prints of aquatic fowl, tangled outlines of water-weeds and the deep bedded, close-together tread of some mammoth with feet as large and HE next time vour desk is cleared run over to the Mu- seum and tell the elevator man to put you out on the second floor. Being a most helpful elevator man, he will tell you to go to the far side of the hall and then walk ahead—Ileastwise, he said it to one For a Little While Longer— A $25 Allowance For Your Old Machine— WOMAN was waiting in a big chafr in a big lobby of a big hotel while a companion was getting long distance. The tinkle of music somewheve behind 2 palm-screened balcony and the interweaving of voices—men and women, registering or checking out, or buying magazines and cigs, or coming together in ever- | ‘hanging groups—sorted of united in | @ lullaby for brains that had been car- rying double all day, but she didn't| sentative collection of war trophies |zens of Frederick are making elabo- | der-world of silence up there, that|required to bathe at set o o babbling o for museum . purposes has . been |rate preparations for the reception | when the woman in search of a.crys-| most of them spend oo g tbul | three young ladies got to babbling on vassed. The legion is seeking to ar-|0f the members of the American [ tal ball canfe to a glass case filled with | play time in the water—nothing like range at mnational headquarters a | War Veterans' Club, who Jjourney | dull-colored bowls, hatchet heads and |a warm plunge after breaking rock highly representative collection of [to the Maryland town next Sunday |the like that had been dug up in her |all day. A small tunnel, which had books and trophies bearing on the | morning. own Maryland the sight somehow | been extended into the wall of un- war, As the result of the brilliant affair| hypnotized her back—far back—into | quarried rock at the request of the at the Mayflower Hotel last week,|a bare-legged tad on a treasure hunt| scientists, to prove th the foot- A mnatlonal member-getter contest, |congratulations have been pouring|for arrowheads in the fresh-plowed | prints had not been faked by the con open to all members of the American | into national headquarters in this| fleld that had been furrowed by black ¥ the lounge alongside. “The idea of having to wear a coat | this late in the season——'"The one | who was complaining had on some: thing in baby-blue satin, with a ruffle of silvery fur down the open front Mum-maw says she wishes we had on at the beach”—and you fonal Auxiliary finding and re < the greatest ruxiliary m: tter in the wor has been announ by Mrs. Do Macrae, « ma national the auxil: The member. who, unaided. secures e most members for the auxiliary | w the vear 1926 will be awarded a suftable trophy before the national | convention of the auxil at Phila- | ielphia he official title | if “world’s champion member-getter of the American Legion Auxiliary” iso be conferred on the winner s must be bona-fide mem- wusiliary and must sign their dues and turn | money into their local unit by their own individual efforts. T hope each department, surely, and 2 each u in the c unlry; will rod p at 8 one outstand- e de- | v women who | ke exceptional membership records &hould inform national headquarters | of their ac ¢ that they may be | duly entered the contest and be given national mention for their good | work “The auxiliary has the finest oppor- tunity fo make u great increase in | membership this Mrs. Macrae | he perennial ~superstition membership activity must of ck up in the Summer | buried this year. forget all supersti- tion and the hot weather and go out and enroll the greatest membership by far auxiliary has ever known. Distri f Coiumbia Department of | the American Legion may win na tlonal honors and District leading the legion’s na- tional convention parade to be held in | your Philadeiphia in October during the sesquicentennial celebration there, according to information received here from national headquarter The 1 on in the parade of na- tional convention delegates from this department, their place in the con- vention hall and the c of hotel ac- commodations they receive will be de- termined by the legion membership in the department on June 15, as com- pared with the aver membership of the department for the past four vears, according to the word from headquarters. This department has a splendid ¢p. portunity to e its membership hy June 5 sufficiently to win the konor of leading the Nation in the PhUadel- phia_parade, department ofdclals of the legion here declared. The legion’s annual national con- | vention parade, which wms reviewed | in Omaha last year by Peesident Cool-| idge, has been deseribed as the “most | colorful and impressive parade in | Amerfca.” Tt will be witnessed this prestige for the | of great pos th the purpose | city, congratulating the officers and board of governors of the new club on of the affair. The many inment was a surprise to those tending. Representative Henry H. Rathbone of lllinois, in a letter to the club. sald: “I cannot refrain from taking this earliest opportunity of expressing my admiration for the splendid way in which the banquet ceremonles of the American War Veterans’ Club of the District of Columbia were conducted. As one who has all his life taken a deep interest in national defense and in the record of our Army, Navy and Marines, I was particularly glad to be present and to learn more about the purposes of this splendid organi- zation." Representative Morgan G. Sanders | of Texas wrote: “T enjoyed vour ban- quet thoroughly. It was one of the best I have ever attended. Every- thing was done well and in the right way. You cannot improve on it, and I congratulate you on the splendid manner in which it was put over. Your organization is engaged in a great and patriotic work and has my best wishes.” Lieut. Col. Willlam R. Brooks, pres- ident of the Nebraska Reserve Of- ficers’ Assoclation, sent a telegram expressing regret at his inability to be present with the other members of the club, but sent his best hes and said to count on him for a liberal donation to the bullding fund. Mrs. Grace Darling Seibold, past president of the District of Columbia War Mothers, in a letter to the club said: “I desire to congratulate. | the members of the American' War Veterans' Club on the formation of 5o splendid a club, which gives evidence ibilitles in the interest of many worthy objects. The purpose of organization, if faitfully ob- |served, call for the admiration and co-operation of all other patriotic bodies. T take pleasure in expressing my commendation and apprecintion of the evening's entertainment, which was an enjovable success, reflecting great credit on all those who made it possible.” Veterans of Foreign Wars. National Capital Post 127, Veterans of Foreign Wars, No. 127, held its reg- ular meeting Monday evening at Path- ian Temple, with Comdr. A. E. Plerce presiding. The degree team, consist- ing of Past Comdr. Daniel J. Leahy, Senior Vice Comdr. Everett Miller, | Junior Vice Comdr. William P. Cava. naugh, Chaplain Thomas J. R. Cava- naugh, Adjt. Harry P. Clements, Quartermaster Ernest Wickstrand, Otficer of Day Michael Guifree, mus- tered to membership Otto Fellows, Baking Company No. 3, World War, served in France, and Michael N. For eler, Co. C, 312th Machine Gun Bat- vear by ‘the vast throngs attending the Sesquicente celebration to commemorate. g of the Declaration of Independence. | National Comdr. John R. MeQuigg | In & membership message to depart- | ment officials expressed the opinion | that this department will be up among | the leaders when the great legion pa-| rade gets under way at Philadelphia. tils message read “You will be glad to know definitely that our national membership is such hat we are assured of a very consid- | rable increase for 19 The next im- | portant membership contest closes on | fune nd is to determine the posi. tion of department delegations in the parade at Philadelpi This race for onvention honors ises to be very hotly contested. A number of depart- inents are running neck and neck and every department 18 to ‘be deter- mined to get the best possible position. 1 feel sure that partment will make an exce The regular mee of 0. 8185 oh Jones Post. No. 2, American Tegion, was held Mol evening at the Endion Club. The commander zavé complete details of the birthday | pagty to be given May 21, at 8:15 p.m., | in the oak room, Raleigh Hotel. A program has been arranged, after | which the birthday cake will be cut. ‘The remainder of the evening will he devoted to dancing. All members are | invited and urged to attend. The post has been given the honor ation of the kers on Sixteenth street | re committee, headed by | Ulla R. Tracy, invites all members of | the post to assist in this ceremony, which will start at Sixteenth and Up- shur streets, May 30, at 830 a.m. A floral boat will also leave the Navy Yard at 10 am. for the marine cere- monies. The post also will participate in the parade and memorial exercises at the Amphitheater, May 31. | A special committee, of which Mrs. | Mayme E. Smith is_chairman, will decorate the graves of deceased mem- hers of the post. Mabel Staub is chairman of the poppy sale commit- Lee, and has appealed for members to aussist At a meeting of the James E. Walk- er Po: American Leglon, Thursday night, at the Twelfth street branch Y. M. C. A, plans for the an- nual poppy campaign were approved. Finance Qfficer D. B. Fantroy will be assisted by the entire membership in the campaign. Comdr. F. Cole- man gave an account of the partici- patlon of the post in the unveiling of the memorial to 23 chaplains at Ar- lington Cemetery, May 5. A donation was made for the bene- fit musical and dance for ex-service men at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. Allled with Charles Sumner Post, No. 9, G. A. R.: Gen. Guy. V. Henry Garrison, No. 9; Julia McEn. Henry Auxiliary, Army and Navy -Union; Rear Admr. Charles M. Thomas Camp, S Sergt. George Berry Camp, No. va Allensworth, No. 2, and Vir- inia Berry. No. 6. Department of the I’otoma: Spani; War Veterans; pe Post. No. 5; Ken. neth Lewis Post. No. 28, and auxil iaries of the American Legion, the post will participate in_a joint memorial service May 30, at Metropolitan A. M. 15, Church, M street between Fifteenth and Sixteenth gtreets, under auspices tery. The post made a contribution toward the Memorial day floral fund nd s making arrangements for notifying members to participate in the exercises at Arlington Cemetery, Post colors will be in charge of Michael Guifree and Thomas J. R. Cavanaugh. Everet E. Miller, chair- man of the buddy poppy committee e a report. _ The post went on record express- ing appreclations to Representative Thomas L. Blanton of Texas in his efforts in champloning the cause of helpless men. Arrangements are being made to give all Veterans of Foreign Wars members and their “buddies” confined in United States hospitals an outing June 6, and an appeal is made to all members and their friends having cars, to commu- nicate with Charles Kohn or John J. Allen. Past Comdr. Daniel J. Leahy, in charge of visitation, announced the visit to Camp Humphreys, Va., Thursday evening, May 6, when the degree team initiated 25 new mem. bers to the local V. F. W. post, and that the trip would be to Middleburg, Va., May 23, when another large class would be mustered into the local post. Jacob Orken, chairman of legislation, announced that the Johnson-Reed bill | favoring legislation to the World War Veterans and their dependents ap- pears favorable for passing this ses- sion of Congress. The committee in charge of decorating graves of de- ceased members will hold a meeting {in the near future and buddy poppy wreaths will be placed on all graves. Charles H. Reilley, department com- mander, junior vice, and Frank G. Thomas, department poppy publicity chairman, made addresses. The Ladies' Auxillary, National Capital Post, met Tuesday evening at Pythian Temple with Mrs. Margaret Lidstone presiding. Committees will be assigned at next meeting for han- dling the sale of popples, and for par- | ticipating in May 30 memorfal exer- cises at Arlington Cemetery. The auxiliary will take part in the Flag day exercises to be staged on the east steps of the Capitol on the evening of June 14, Flag day. All members are urged to purcure & regulation American flag for the occasion. At the last meeting of Equality- ‘Walter Reed Post, No. 284, Veterans of Foreign Wars, a resolution was adopted favoring legislation granting hospitalization privileges and medical treatment for woman welfare workers who accompanied the American Ex- peditionary Force and served the troops, but did not have a military status which would permit them to enjoy the privileges of the personnel of the various military organizations. Steps will be taken at the next depart- ment encampment to place this matter before the next Congress. The following new members were received into the post: Raymond V. Shepler and Leroy B. Foster. Comdr. Guy H. Birdsall wha deco- rated with the Veterans of Forelgn ‘Wars *“Booster’ button in recognition of his efforts in obtaining mew mem- bers. i Military Order of the World War. The general staff of the Military Order of the World War has accepted the invitation of the Greater Phila- delphia. Chapter to mwget with ‘it in Philadelphia_as its guedts in national convention October 7, 8 and 9. The Bill Pye and these in the many vears, turned up to be Iml!u\\ed‘ as an ancestral treasure and framed in silver for a pin—to be lost again, forever. Then the trail turns and you see the crystal ball shining far ahead through a rainbow loveliness that proverly be- longs to flowers and tropical butter- flies, but are minerals instead. The big. ball, sheltered under glass, of 13% inches. It was made from cut from a boulder of 1,000 pounds, vies, had under its arch a plank on |} his mules— just 1ike | which a small bird had it e e; all to be played With | and s fes e o and lost—except for one that, after |the guard sald: “There are men in re for selling whisky to Indians win {turn | they get their chane them we have stage robbers (this was | some years ago, remember) and bank | snap this breakers and 8o on, but if any fellow was to come along and intentionally ‘knock 1{\:; peat off that plank, there sn't a y here that wouldn't take ing weighs 100 pounds, with a diameter gand in the killing of him, for this | pesfect ird 1s the special c: o i rock crystal and is sald to have been | yiot and the zfmflro:cr:n: ro;‘:?!fu" ‘Which seemed was sitting on her eggs. And into mighty fine citizens when | girl the largest of its kind in existence. If | hace caged men, a live wren was of you are interested in the occult you that the crystal came from Burma, was cut into shape in China and pol- ished in Japan, the process requiring some 18 months foy completion. It was loaned to the Museum by the Fu- kushing Co. of New York. Naturally, necromancer ladies and gentlemen and the fiction writers could tell you that Eastern magic is in this ball, and that no future is too complicated crystal depths, but, honey—just stand before that ball and study its reflec- tion of every breath of movement around; shadows and high lights; its seeming nearness of objects yards away—its concentration of surround- ing scenes into ‘“personal interlors” and {ts tricky way of drawing you into its intimate circle, and you will know that crystal ball occultism is bunk, 8o far as personal belief is con- cerned, and that another superstition has gone to smash. It is magic, all right, but the seeress {is Mother Nature, who explains herself only to those wise enough to understand. Sure, people have seen things—seen them, mind vou, in balls. Why, at one breathless instant the woman saw over her shoulder a real nice- looking man. Then the man turned away—which would have been a per- fectly natural proceeding—but it was only a reflection that had caught him yards away. While the big, round ball is the su- preme mineral in the collection, you get more genuine pleasure out of the colorings of the general display. There is no tint too delicately lovely to be found in that world of minerals —many of them from soil to which nature has denled the gay varieties of flowery growth. There are ap- parent saucers of pistache ice cream —the tone changing from Nile to deepest forest greens, alternating with frothy white. A tourmaline from the Far West and as big as a peck basket is of pearl white, flowered with chryvanthemums of old rose— as natural as if designed by man. A citrine quartz, from Brazil, is a solid chunk of golden sunshine, and you can see imaginary brides in snow white and silver, second-mourn- ing widows in amethyst and shiny black bead inserts, and fluorites of every gorgeous hue that a flapper's fancy could think up—especially a poor little flap whose imagination was richer than her purse. After you have had a long, glori- ous afternoon all to yourself—with merely a here and there tourist to share the big place with you — you enter a door. And as you cross its threshold you know you have stepped back into the World War. It is a large, square room with the life of that conflict pictured on its walls: Pershing, as like as life, and just the same size, standing by his horse; President Wilson, his mind on the paper before him, and a something in his face that betokened the greater thing to come; French Marshal Foch, with his blue-cloth breast covered with ribbons and gold and bronze, and, most splendid of all, a tall and slender figure in the scarlet beretta and cassock of a. prince of the church, and the expression of a man both soldier and saint—a cardinal, but also a fighting Mercier. At the lower cor- ner of the frame was fastened a great sheaf of laurel-palm tied with purple satin ribbon. Just as you are saying to yourself that you 1 stay in this room for hours a clock sounds, and it is time to go home. * k% X NOT meaning to be morbid, but— if you have read about two men who are to be put to death by gas next week in Nevada, you may be interested in this: Out on the desert there is a prison not built by hands, in that it was originally a mountain of volcanic stone that has been shaved off at the top nénd quarried out and hewed around into one of the most impreg- nable strongholds in the country. But a horseshoe hangs above the entrance. ‘Which puts Nevada one over Dante. In the course of the quarrying and hewing a convict's pick found a human footprint, 40 feet under the stone. Careful excavation discovered other prints that now track the court- yard of the prison, and have been de- scribed by scléntists from the Smith- sonian Institution (which puts this yarn in the local zone) as tracks made by a man 12 feet high, who wore moccasins. The distance from one print to the next is double the normal stride, and is so remarkably perfect in impression because—quoting a guard—the petrified clay was once the bed of a stream. In proot of this are occasion will be the Sesquicentennial in Philadelphia and the 150th anni- versary of the Declaration of Inde- pendence. Headquarters for the con- vention will be at the Bellevue-Strat- ford Hotel. Commander-in-Chief Maj. Gen. Mark L. Hersey is appointing various com- mittees to arrange for the convention. At the last meeting of the District of Columbia chapter new members were elected, as follows: Col. Law- rence C. Crawford, Lieut. Col. Dennis P. Quinlan, Lieut. Col. Warren' P. Morrill, Lieut. Comdr. Richard E. Johnston, Lieut. Wallace B. Hoover, Lieut. Col. LeRoy Foster Smith and Lieut. William A. Cable. Col. Fred B. Ryopns. was_elected treasurer to |. succeed Maj. Davis G. Arnold, re- signed, trustymade #reen. fold how Tracy, Nevada's most des- | took iilled himself rather i not a wise man write to this unit that v ces life is made up of small things? perate outlaw, to be visioned in ita|POEate cutiaw, kil more importance than the footsteps E may find an extra charm in the fact | ot’renictoric man. . = the walls and waiting bloodhounds | except r, and it 1 Children, and sometimes adults, eat too much and then suffer severe stomach aches. For years the only remedy that gives immediate relief has been Cham. berlain’s Colic and Diarrhea Remedy. Ask your drug- gist for this old remedy today! Have it ready for an emergency! For trial size, send 4c to Chamberlain Medicine Company,711 Sixth Avenue,DesMoines,Iowa CHAMBERLAIN'S #enerr COLIC ano DIARRHEA Auto Route Distance Atlas Maryland, Delaware, North- ern Virginia, District of Colum- bia, New Jersey, Pennsylvani New York and New England. Compiled, arranged and distributed by @he Zoening Star. AND The Sunday Star When You Motor take The Star Auto Route Distance Atlas—along The Atlas is to the autoist what a sailing chart and a compass are to a sea captain. It gives you reliable directions as to desirable routes—and accurate running distances be- tween points—handily arranged for ready reference. You'll enjoy your trip more if you carry The Star Guide in your car. D L This Coupon and 15¢ Buys a Copy of The Star’s Auto- mobile Route and Distance Atlas —upon presentation at The Star Business Office—at The Star Want Ad Branch Office in your neighborhood—or at of the newsstands in the leading hotel: he meant Palm. | e in t otherwise was of the d good men who will | are to have seemed and along with | the weuther no Summer “Why, time in Winter, while the balls are chang from green to white—but if you want Jim'’s reason, the North Pole s mak return perfectly wild over that plane trip? And to think neither the commander nor the pilot saw a living thing up to show that, to|there—-." | he might have mentioned | Byrd flew over the Pole”—and in the middle of the humorous jeers { It is cheerful out in the big court, | that belittled this sample of wit the | with its bits of green patches made of | ¢t “imported” earth, and the bird under |sa the arch, but: Inside, there ar beneath the flooring, and armed senti- | nels on walting —always the » and was cells | & movie. Nothing mpinion had long-distanced a mes. | | to outside on bunch of The guard |a revolving door fo his good time coming - middle, shingled an sh in cadet gray biu Iraid and buttons itic opinion that we hut the far | perfectly satisfled with | have May—snow always visit. Aren't you suggesting waffles and tell about, of course it was just the way a s talked while watching some one who and did | RGN A% dd 3c for & “Free Westinghous —on the purchase of any 2% Electric Sewing Machine The Free Westinghouse Sewing Machines have more im- provements and labor-saving devices than any other make. Adjustable knee control—easier to thread—better stitch and has wing lamp attached to motor throwing light or stitching and cye of necdle. Tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Institute sewing machines, they And besides being most efficient re_beautiful pieces of furniture There is a moxdel and finish for nearly cvery purpose. They may be used for console tables, writing desks, sewing tables and ra Convenient Terms at Only Desk Model tables $2 DOWN Balance in Monthly Payments Kann's—Fourth Floor You Ought to See How Clean it Cleans The Greater Hoover has cleanliness. Hoover ever before built preciated. 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