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8 » MEMORIAL RITES 10 BE EXTENSIVE Tributes to War Dead to Last From Wednesday Through | i ! m of memorial ad in and vicinity has the veterans’ or- their auxillary through a joint committee under the direction of the Grand Army of the vices for th thie National € Republic. The s s will begin Wednes- he Vincent k. Costello American Legion, at av. will erect a Ilanders in front of the District slections of sacred music aved on the McKim Me- Chimes of the Epiphany the services. I monuments to the ry heroes in the public v will be decorated -O'Connell Post of Nation’s mili parks of the by the N the Legion under the direction of the Oflice of Public Buildings and Parks. Rites at Wilson Tomb. The first of the services for deco- r of vetera n all cemeteri -, will be con- Rood and ries by the George and Auxiliary of the cation with other Services ar- ranged by the jol committee for the other reteries will be held 1ext Sunda Memorial day on, 3 t Commander Julius I 1 be joined by members of reign Wars, Span- and representa- Arlington Rites Monday. organizations will ge to Arlington Monday, May 31, to hold ser the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and place a wreath on the tomh. The Marine Band and y Band will be in the line of ch will form in front and Grand ania avenue. and a brief All veterans’ foin in the pilgr National Army Hall After these service: service to be held by the Jane A.|B¥ Delano Post of the Legion in the | nurses’ section. the o zations | will form in front of the Amphi- | theater roc e W Wa h > r Davis will speak at services to be held next Sunday morning, at 11 o'clock, at the Wash- ington Hebrew Cemetery under the auspices of the Vincent B. Costello Post for the vet of all wars who vest there. Comdr. Peyser will pre- side at the services, which will be conducted by Rabbis Simon, Loeb and Schwesel. A section of the tes Army Band will at- memorial committes appointed Comdr. Peyser for the American T.eglon is composed o J. Frailey, se te the departn Raymond A. Bu pt. Paul J. MeGa Williama ¥, Frankiin and Frances I. Miller { HOSPITAL WORK LET. $870.000 Walter Reed Construction Contracts Go to Local Firms. | pproximately fon at Wal- | been let by | it was an- nounced yeste firms getting the bulk ‘of th The contracts ave a zeneral follows: George construction, | mbing, $35,- electrical, Raltimore, refrige- | . | against the advice of friends who thought it would be too much for her. M a had packed into a hollow iron ball | boy went to his room and was filllng Mayaro Bergenstiord yndam . . Stuttgart. . S Resolute '(Worid Cruse DCE TODAY. Duilio ra. Freetown, DUE TOMORROW. A0 . ransyivania Relgenland. . DUE TUESDAY ‘American lezion Biienos Aires. Dante Alghier: enoa, Olympic . altic : +ranconia (World C: Finland. .. .. ¥ New Amsterdam—Rotterdam . Scrjhig—Livernool e Andanta—London River Tigris. “finnequa—Copenhagen ¥gremont—Port, Said . osta Rica . iroquois—Monte - Christi Ancon—Cristobal ... ... .. <an_Jose—Puerto Colombia. Southern Cross—Buenos Alr ¥londian—Cristobal . a SRS TR K B pRREEZZ Ex KEERRTX Victoria—Bermuda i Macneil—Cape Town socrates—Rio de Janeiro. . T WEDNESDAY. " Midnight. i legrete—Santos . winburne—Para ' THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (. Mrs. Margaret Waggoner Mitchell of Kansas City, years old October 14, went to the hairdressers a few da. manent wave. She had her hair bobbed two years a; ording to M Mitchell, it got so she couldn’t do anything with it, so she took a wav Mitchell made her first trip across the country to Kansas in a covered wa, with the pioneers to timt State. This photo shows the 99-year-old woman the hairdresser’s parlor. Explosive, Designed to “Make a Noise,” | s . . 3 v . r oo o Kills High School Boy in Terrific Blast nical High. had explained to him that | May 22.—Er- | he mixed certain chcml'm\ln he s | would be able “to make a noise.” died today | Toppg hoy's mother knew that some | night when | sort of an experiment was going _on, The By the Associated Prese PROVIDENCE. R. win Wood Fradbury, 16 from injuries received la self-concocted explosive which he|but did not realize the danger. and was holding between his knees|the ball, packed with the explosive, | exploded. when there loud explo The | Despite terrible injuries to the lower t shook the building. Pieces of | part of his body. the hoy lived sev-|the iron ball were driven into the| eral hours and W able to tell the {boy's body and his lower limbs were | details of the accident. He said two |crushed. The pieces of iron W | companions, one a student at the Tech- | also driven into the floor and wall Ancient Egypt Had Cinderella Queen Snubbed at Courl; Stone Reveals 1 “the snobbish | -Queen Tiy in|c vound their necks | ent 1 Cinderella, Prof. | stc inscribed with the warning that | Jumes H. Breasted, noted F. th remember that Tiy gist of the University of ( recently returned from osed tod ; | The King sutt CHICAG » stone bore the name of Tiy's 4 | parent the inscription recited Interpreting the inscription on a|that “She is the wife of a victorious | stone, he reported that Queen | King whose southern houndary is | Tir, who in spite of her lowly birth | Karoy and whose northern boundary was taken to wed by King Amenhotep | is Maharin.” ained at the 111, who reigned from 1411 to 1325 | university aroy was in the B.C.. but was snubbed by the aristo- | heart of Afr d Maharin near the crats of the court. Euphrates River. CONCERT AT HOSPITAL. Last of Season’s Indoor Affairs|the { Thursday Held for Tuberculosis Patients. | e e The last of the season's indoor - Soviet to Have Encyclopedia. entertainments at the Tuberculosis | The Soviet government in Russia Hospital, Fourteenth and Upshur!will issue, in the next vear, a “Soviet streets, last night was featured by -velopedia,” the work being done a concert program given by ihe the government, the Academy of Government Printing Office Orchestra and the various simflar so under the direction of W. C. Bucking: | c It is said the work will be ham.. The program also included | mere complete even than the best baritone solos by Stanley Willlam |known encyclopedias now in use. The Bel !o( the hospital, announced that the first outdoor concert in the new band- | stand, donated to the hospital by Kiwanis Club will by the Army Band. 1. ! cost will be more than a quarter of a Dr. J. W. Peabody, superintendent million rubles in gold. Beds and Backaches MANY a backache is simply the protest Y1 of a system overloaded with fatigue poisons due to improper sleep. When bodily organs are compressed all night, they cannot perform their proper functions. When a sag- ging bedspring twists the spine—no wonder your back “seems like it is breaking.” be given | What relief you feel the instant you change to Rome Quality De Luxe, The Bedspring Luxurious. This bedspring supports every part of the body in gentle balance—lets every muscle relax—gives you new health, new vigor from perfect sleep. The dealer who sells Rome De Luxe Bed- springs renders humanity a true service. In justice to him as well as yourself, let no one sell you a substitute. These bedsprings are s0 honestly and substantially built that they keep their resilience for a lifetime. Buy them for economy as well as health. 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