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QUEEN PATRONZED RO CREK LS Society of Natives at Outing in Park Hears Story of Early Industry: A s of the days when what now 1s Rock Creek Park was a thriving milling enter was recounted yester day afternoon to the Society of Natives of the District of Columbia by James F. Duhamel, when the fety participated in the annual pic nic in the park. So wide was the fame of the flour nd out there that the Queen of nd used it in preference to that produced in the British Isles, Mr. Duhamel said, and the mills also served us the principal soul of for the Continental Arm: the mills whose names are perpetuated by roads in the park, Mr. Duhamel recalled, were Lyons Mill, Adams Mill, Pierce’s Mill, Blagden Mill and White Mill, and the whirring vheels were only silenced, he said, vhen Georgetown, a century ago, be came a center—the head of a brisk trade route on the Potomac. Tells History of Park. Mr. Dubamel also outlined the hi tory of Rock ¢ telling how nd forming it A grant, in . to Anthony Holmead, | Ninian and Henry Darnall—| men whose descendants still are num- | bered on the membership rolls of the | society Entertainment which prizes and popularity contest the picn Th afternoon’s singing by n who stood i old historic Mi s Mare: 1 of the ithietic cont | Kopdrup, chairman of the gen- | eral committee in arge of arrange- mients for the h a prize in sippreciation of ar the | Mowing | program op: Vote in Popularity Contest. All men members the society were then lined up on one side and the women on the other, voted for the most popular of the opposite sex. M Hungerford won the f women, while Mrs. Lew was second, with ) third of Bright Kondrup was awarded the first or the most popular man. Wil H. Grovermann was second and gett Proctor third athletic events were started | Kondrup, assisted by Miss The prizes consisted of pocketbooks, neckties and other articles The first wome Rattle, Mildred M. E. Jol P Ham John ClI single | Mildred | Miss | Miss race-—for won by Miss ter of Dr. Battle n was second and en third foot daug Other Winners of Events. and e wit as fol mar st nd races h the were Foot race for a Dowden, ham, second, “Thor s, men-- M Mrs. Howard Mrs. Le | | | | | { 3. Moeckel, and A for men- first: Lee D. Latimer. G. Bishop, thir Potato race ginia Pechin Green, second, ham, thi second Miss Vir- Mildred Irene Dun- for fi and women t: Miss Mrs, e for men- Hurley Bishop, second, aud Albeit . Scott, third 5 mning bre men—H. A. La tance of 14 feet second, and T | young | mer, with ‘a_dis: inch S. Allen, Huff, third. a jump f I Personnel of Committees. Members of the various committees were as follows Mrs. Kondrup, ger committe S, W. Stinemetz and Percy I fresi Miss M Kondrup, prizes sisted by Miss Marg: Lewis D. Bat Lee D. Latimer. muel S. Adams, v, assisted the of the ed by Mrs. B. Lipscomb | . Dowling, re Bright and chairman transportation. Dr. president of the varfous commit. s0C tees. a 1 the followin; Mrs. J. Bruce McArthu and songs; Walter Holt, Tallman Houff, drum: saxophone; Mrs. David vocal solos and recitations, daughter did several solo dance selections on the mandolin b; Marjor Burton and Miss Mildred | Battle. ! DRIVER HELD BLAMELESS Jury Gives Verdict of Accident in Case of Boy Killed by Truck. A coroner's jury vesterday after-| noon returned a verdict of accidental death at the inquest into the Killing of & old Robert Dalrymple, jr. 238 Willow avenue, . Takoma Park, ld., who was crushed to death on Friday afternoon on Blair road by an Armour & Co. truck driven by Ed- ward E. Johnson, colored, 722 Eleventh strect northeast. The operator was absolved of all blame, upon his own testimony. According to Johnson, the child dashed in front of the vehicle so sud- denly that he was unable to apply the hrakes in time to avoia the fatality. he boy’s father, Robert Dalrymple, employed by the Federal Trade ommission, while his grandfath Clarence L. Dalrymple, is sergeant of the White House police detail. Tribe of Giants Found. A new tribe of giant negroes, who are ruled by a 7-foot king, has been found in Central Africa, according to William J. W. Room, secretary of the British Foreign Bible Society, recently returned from Africa. The tribe com- prises 2,000,000 persons, whose aver- age height, he states, Is between 6 and 7 feef. The men are fond of athletic sports. With their height and strength they easily surpass our best sport records, and would have no difficulty in carrying off the honors in_the world’s Olympic games. The ruling caste appears to have descended from ancient Egyptians who came to Central Africa by way of Abyssinia. In striking contrast to these giants, \Ir. Room found in the northwest Congo a race of pigmies about 4 feet high. ment was Mr. and recitations jr., banjo; Jugene Allen Kincheloe while her nd | rend Ancients Used Nursing Bottles.* That the ancient Egyptians had nursing bottles for their babies, superior to those of the present day, is asserted by Ralph V. G. Magoftin, president of the Archaeological In- stitute of America. He exhibited one in use in 1200 B.C. to prove this. The bottom is heavy to pre- vent tipping over and the sides are square, to prevent rolling. el % Amundsen Began in 1896. Roald Amundsen, the only man who has visited both the North and South Poles, began his career as a polar ex- plorer in 189697, when he sailed as mate with the Belgica Antarctic ex. pedition. ' The Soclety of Natives of the District of Columbia on picnic in Rock Creek Park. | IN FEW MORE DAYS All Preliminary Work Com-| pleted, Vessel Expected Spectal Dispatch to The Star. NEW LONDOX After seven months’ delay due chiefly to rough se: last is re ber 26 last, 15 miles east of Block Is- when mer City of Rome. sun Unless pestuous water again men who have worked long sistently that up to and has b with her crew of 36 officers and men. She is on the sandy fioor of the At- > Ocean, and the bodies of perha lant face Three nine others were recovered Moored above he vond sight with 500 men, have been just craft April scene overcc little sentiment as well 'as a prac- | tical purpese forts though. some sa sea s the Government wishes of relatives of the victims and also wants to_honor the men at a funer The practical view of the situation The Government spent $: : constructing it does come up its hull, Navy als say, will have a value of about is in | whe offic: $1.000, much again. All Prel All prelimina {the submarine have been What remains is for the s: ers to force compressed eight ma | surface. be bro; Last unk, b either early Monday the submarine will come the s silence of the deep. he lies tonight W Si of me ather and shifting conditions to the 200 difficulty pon ine and buoy the vessel up to the If the Navy succeeds in this zreat attempt it will be because it en- listed all the instruments and powers of science available to overcome the mysteries of the sea submarine in all lkelihood never will F the what all desperate persons do. sorted to brute strength in the form | their force, were unable to budge the craft from the sandy bottom holding Tt worked without any plans. That was be- cause the Navy was never confronted !'with such a job before. The raising of the submarine ¥-4 | 1915, during marine maneuvi has | been pointed to as a problem sir to the raising of the S-51, but Navy officials now agree this is not so. The F-4 was successfully dragged by der- ricks to a spot where it rested only 40 feet below the surface was brought to the top. But this plan s not feasible In the case of the §-51, and the Navy found It necessary to call The Nav |to the use of pontoons. Eight pon- Jmuns were placed, six of them near |the bow and only two at the stern. This was because it was the bow that was nunetured by the City of Rome and therefore, being filled with water, had to have more buoyancy. The tern compartments are all closed and believed to be practically water- it to Rise Soon. , Conn., June 19.— , the United States Navy 1dy to lift the submarine k on the night of Septem- it was rammed by the 10 2 Water to Be Forced Out. swells and tem-| 2 o Naviv intecfere, the | Vhen the Navy and per- | to salvage the vessel hope ite tomorrow night or ground blown com: toons. The pontoon will be free of water and will be fed pressed afr. pumped from the salvage ship Falcon. A large reserve supply of high pressure air also is at hand in | case the original supply is not suffl clent The air will have to be forced into the pontoons gradually and slowly, for were they to reach their maximum buoyancy quickly the submarine mizht be dragged to the surface with such force that serious damage prob {ably would result Salvage workers have | themselves it will not be necessary to have derricks to drag the submarine from its sandy bottom. During the past few days tests were determine how solidly she is sunk in the sand. At first the submarine w: | listing to port about 15 degrees. The port ballast tanks and two after pontoons were blown. irface from the darkness | in the place that she sank her grave since 130 feet below the sur- up within her are s 24 of her crew. re saved and the bodles of cooped ix Boats Working at a lonely of land, | who since early | constantly at the | operations, attew:nting to | the handicaps of angr dominated their ef- the submersible. Al-| The result the bottom of the | the Navy officlals that when the only grave a sailor asks, | pontoons are filled with compressed has considered the |air and are ready to drag the sub. marine upward there will not be dif- ficulty in forclng it out of the sandy ! bottom. ise the memory of 1 Whole Year of Idleness. Because 1926 is a “Sabbath vear' v will nave a yalue of about | mentioned in the Bible, members of a be put into service |religious sect in Arkansas, known as the “Incoming Kingdom,” are resting SO T | this year, says the Capper's Weekly RIS . ¢ | Magazine. They base their belief on ies to the raising of | {his passage in the 25th chapter of completed. Leviti o ze work air into the to the sub- the submarine | vears thou shalt sow thy field vears thou shalt prune thy d, and gather in the fruit thereof: but in the seventh year shall toons attached a Sabbath for the Lord: thou shalt | neither sow thy fleld nor prune thy j vineyards.” If it falls the In1 . according to their interpre. 1'.’“101’\ of the Seriptures, they should have raised a ter the submarine was | them over their year of rest, but only in desperation, did |ordinary crops were producéd, so the It re- | colony has been buying up the sur- plus of its neighbors to carry it through to 1927 Nav with all Coupe, $2,415 Delivered PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP The owner of a Locomobile never explains his car. His choice reflects an intimate knowledge of the world-wide preference of persons of importance. The Locomobile Junior Eight is a Locomobile in every sense of the word, but through volume production it is available at a price never before thought possible. ‘Brougham $2,435 Sedan $2,435 All Prices Delivered at Washington. THE CONNECTICUT LOCOMOBILE CO. Salesroom 1517 Connecticut Avenue North 962 Locomobile Model 90 $5,500 to $7,500 With Custom Built Bodies {. 0. b. ‘Bridgeport T-H'E B4R ST sunk 305 feet off Honolulu in March, | satisfied | and then | resorted chiefly this time | him well from yestery s ready to lift, air | |lines will be inserted into each pon { channel | thought the tide would wait for him. | | quire French, e made to | | of two miles, by a crowd of school was clear indication to | | The i | | be a Sabbath of rest unto the land, | [ double harvest to tide | mother 'PAPER SUPPLY TEAM DEFEATS PRINTERS| HELMY'S ARRIVA PLEASES EDERLE | Base Ball Game Is Outing Feature for Typothetae on Benedict, Md., Grounds. Egyptian Swimmer, Late as Usual, She Cables—Also Rather Fat. The paper supply men of the Na tional Capital defeated the printers in a spirited base ball contest yesterday at Benedict, Md., on the annual out- ing of the Typothetae of Washington, the score being 10 to 4. The outing was attended by about two hundred | members of the organization. The supply team was composed of Karl V. Eiker, F. T. Parsons, ir;J. D. | Flannigan, “Tke” Anderson, W. W.! Langtry, Edward Walsh, Jim Sullivan, | Jdward L. Hutchison and A. Rose! Jim Sullivan was captain. The mem. | bers of the printing team_included : " | Davia Crockett, Charles H. Cooke, ar. Helmy 1S | popart Greenwood, Edward Jump, W at least an hour late for all his ap- | o. Fdelblut, Fred Stringer, Charles pointments and even was late in his | Miller, John P. Ruppert and Unger Srompts, PN | Murnan. " The captain was ¢ harles H. | "The start was made yesterday morn ing at 10:30 o'clock from Peace Monu- ment, headed by Lew Thayer and | Howard Fisk, as pilots. Athletic Program. At 1 o'clock the base ball game was staged, followed at 2 o'clock by an athletic program. The winners in the various events were as follows: Fat men's race, 50 yards, won J. D. Flannigan: second, Charles F. Crane. 100-yard dash, won by F. T. | Parsons, jr.; second, Roy Bayshow | Threelegged race, won by Jim Sulli- | van; second, E. A. Merkle. Horse- | shoe pitching, won by Hallet H. Pot- second, J. D. Flannigan. Sack , won by “Tke”" Anderson; second > A. Merkle. Shoe race, won by Ralph A. Packwood; second, Fred tringer. Tug-o-war, won by team composed _of A. ‘Merkle, G. W. | Beamer, Earl Coldren, 8. Knopkasand | Fred Stringer. Nail-driving contest won by F. McCord; second, J. P. Mori- rty. Pitch to barrel, won by Howard . Fisk; second, George A. Stmonds. Fishing contest, largest fish caught, won by C. R. Long, Bureau of Engrav- ing and Printing; largest number of | fis 1ght, won by William Baum- second, W. C. Hinegardner; | smallest fish caught, won by H. P. Dawson. Table prizes, won by George | B. Kennedy; second, James D. Blight; third, Carroll C. Ross; fourth, Robert | McP.” Milans tra’ prize, won by | John H. Mace. ectal prize, won by | Willlam L. Roberts. The judges in the contests were | George Cole, George Kennedy, Car- | roll . Ross and Albert L. Tennyson. |The starters were W. A. Edelblut| |and Fred Gauss. The judge in the | fishing contest was Lewis M. Thayer, | who was runner-up for the largest Not Pachydermatous. {fish caught. From thesBoston Transcript. | Shore Dinner Served. A little Philadelphia boy went home At 4 o'clock a shore dinner was and told his parents his teacher had |served at the Hotel Messick. The re- called him ‘a scurvey elephant.” His |turn trip was made during the eve- was very angry and made [ning. Copies of the “Benedict Blot,” trouble over it. It came out that the | containing all of the news of the out- voungster had been Inattentive and |ing, were issued in a special edition ill-behaved and the teacher, in the | by Jim Sullivan. The different com- course of her remarks, had spoken | mittee follow of him as “a disturbing element.” Entertainment committee—S. Percy BY GERTRUDE EDERLE. By Cable to The Star. CAPE GRIS-NEZ, France, June 19, ~—There has been great excitement to night as a result of the arrival Shak Helmy. He came a day lat which did not surprise me, as I kno he to swim the channel o fat he possibly will cross Helmy s to tr again. He is s be able to float He is like a big happy boy. laugh ing constantly and never troubled by anything. He speaks perfect Eng lish, French and Egyptian and is a good interpreter for us when we re vy at meal times, Margaret and I walked to the neigh Wwring village of Audignon today, re turning to Cape Gris-Nez, met Elijah, an adorable boy of §, who visits us nightly at the hotel. Elijah smiles cherublcally and his smiles get him many centlmes. Upon meeting the little tot emerging from the school at Audignon, he smiled and we paid He spread the word to the othe pupils and_thereafter we were fol- lowed to Cape Gris-Nez, a distance | a children. We felt like a couple of proteges of the pied piper. The children here are dressed in dark colors and are pitifully thin They wear heavy solid black shoes aud aprons of blue gingham, looking all alike. They most friendly toward us. The children attend school from § in the morning until 5 in the after- noon, walking two miles each w; start to school when they are years old. T accompanied the burgess on a mushroom picking expedition by way of walking many miles over the hilis and not realizing the distance. The burgess collected a huge mess of mushrooms vesterday and Margaret ed them in Madeira wine. They so deliclous . that tonight the crowd demanded more of the same. (Copyright, 1926.) n E Roadster $2,265 Touring $1,925 Terms if Desired Service Station 1123 18th St. N.W. Main 8029 Model 48, Series 10° $7,400 to $12,000 ‘With Custom Built Bodies f. 0. b. Bridgeport AMERICA | operated DECLARES GRLS ENTTOSLAVERY Tampa Juvenile Court Judge Makes Wholesale Charges | Against Officer. By the Associated Press TAMPA, - Fla., June 18.—Charges that girls were sent 1o cities in ot States to be subjected to “slavery con’ ditions” and that young boys were | confined in jalls for weeks without | hearings on’ charges against them | were contained in signed statements laid before Gov. John W. Martin at Tallahassee early in the week, it be came known here today. | Judge E. C. Darlington of the Tam- | pa Juvenile Court has requested the chief executive to dismiss J. M. Las siter, Hillsborough County probation | officer, from the service. | In addition, Lassiter was charged in affidavits with having “converted to his own use funds donated for the purchase of delicactes for orphans in the Children's Home of Tamp | The juvenile court magistrate charges that in an investigation, con .ducted himself, he found Lassiter con ducting “a court of his own” and t he found several boys in jail against whom no official record of charges were made, Judge Darlington decla where Lassiter had been sending Prot estant girls to a convent in New Or- leans, where he said he had learned | they were employed in a large laun- | dry, shirt factory or other industry by the convent. Several | other instances were mentioned by | Judge Darlington where he alleged Lassiter had been active in sending children to the New Orleans institu tion. Use of blank commitments, signed by Judge Darlington, by iter sending children to the various in: tutfons was also charged by the mag istrate, who explained that in such cases the children would not have re celved a hearing before an authorized court. d he found | Oliver, chairman; James D. Bligh, » chairman; P. M. Becker, jr.; John Colpoys, Charles H. Cook Dunn, W. A. Edelblut, Karl V » E. Eynon, Oscar S. Fisk, Thurston L. F Ford, Charles Gunn, E. J. Frank P. Howard, John C. George B. Kennedy, E. Thomas L. Moore, A. W ney Oliver, Ralph’ A. Packwood roil C. Ross, Frank W. Rowzee, Smythe, J. R Edward William XN. livan, Albert L. ke Heirling, H. C'€ James B. on Sul llam N. Schaefer, Joseph D. Edward L. man; V Ashby, Howard . Fisk, Roger W. Wheeler, | Bernard Wagner, Ben F. Durr, Decorating cars--James B. Sullivan, rman: Benton Webb, Louis Tyrell, Charles O. Miller, Cedric Wood. Publicity—Howard S. Fisk, chal man; John P. Ruppert, Willam N Freeman, Ralph I.ee, Unger Murnan. Tickets—Ben F. Durr, chairm: John H. Davis, Peter M. Becker, jr. Program and advertising—Karl V. Eiker, chairman; Ralph A. Packwood, Oscar Fauth, George Mc(los] Prizes—James D. Bligh, chairman; Earl McPhilomy. Guests—Frank P. Howard, chair- | man; Charles F. Crane, Willlam N. Freeman. Seating in cars—George A. Simonds, chairman; Thomas I. Moore, Will Dunn, James D. Bligh, Frank B.| Keyes, William L. King. Lunch boxes and soft drinks— Harry Stanford, chairman: Carroll C. Ross, Sidney Oliver, Edward L. Hutchison, Thurston L. Ferris, Fred Stringer. Merry-go-round—Ralph A. Pack- wood, chalrman; Walter Connolly, James D. Bligh. Athletics — William A, chatrman: Lee E. Eynon, Etker, Carroll . Ross, George B. Kennedy, George Cole, Alfred L. Tennyson, E. A. Merkle, Charles H. Cooke, Cedric Wood. Fishing—Lewls M. Thayer, chair- man; Clarence F. Bright, Charles F. Crane, Robert McP. Milans, Samuel M. Darragh, O. T. Wright. Edelblut, Karl V. BOTH limited and buying will be for terms. Singer, drop head ... Singer, drop head Needles Reg. 25¢ value 15¢ Doz. Rl uth, Howard | rris, Cornelius | Dinner—James B. Sulllvan, chair-| Hutchison, A. W.| Noack, S. M. Hudson, S. Percy Oliver, | | Johnson, colored, 1301 G machine guaranteed from 1 to 20 vears. ‘Reg. 25¢ value 2 for 15¢ Machine Selects Cigars According To Color of Leaf Dispateh to The Star YOREK, Ju minute a new sort- ichine picks up a cigar, : i} and selects the com “tment where it helongs uccord- to the shade of its brown col- or\ng. Mechanism then deposits it in \ne yroper place The new dev utilized by seve: nufacturers, cell si 19. cig . Sixty T which is being 11 prominent cigar actuated by a flar to those elevision. Light from lls upon the sensitive ing inside the cell, resulting in a shower of electrons which, properly controlled in electric circult, act upon a relay cir cuit. CIVIC FEDERATIONS LAY LAISION PLANS Representatives of District, Montgomery and Arlington County Bodies Meet. is alkali metal the establish- laision between Cltizens' Associa ns the civic federations of Montgomery County, Md., and Ar lington Coupty, Va., through an inter change of delegates, were luncheon conference last week tween representatives of the three ations. who attended the conference esse C. Suter, of the District federation 3. Ply- | male, president of the Ar . ty Civie Federation, and Maj. R. B. Lawrence, secretary of the Montgom- | ery County Civic Federation and | chatrman of its special | pointed to discuss the question with “tha Washington organization Active | ment of an advisory ation of steps toward the |t | M Fede! and | | i The interchange of delegates was first proposed by the Montgomery County federation as a means of con- sidering interests in common to both organizations. The Virginia federa- tion was invited to jof 1 the con- ference on the plan, as it is thought that if Montgomery County is repre. | sented in the District federation the | to the south also | neighboring county should have representation. There is little likelihood that definite plan for carrying out the pro | posal can be adopted before | when the District federation recon- venes after its Summer recess. In the meantime, it is hoped, through ad | ditional conferences with representa tives of the three organizations well as civic leaders in the District to work out a tentative scheme for { the consideration of the federations “The whole question now,” Mr. Suter said last night, “is only in the co versation stage.” Personally Mr. Suter is in favor of the idea. I see great possibilities,” he declared, “in a connection or fra- ternal acquaintance of some kind be- | | | tween the Federation of Citizens | soclations and the civic federations of | Arlington and Montgomery Countfes.” Colored Woman Shot. Pearl Wanza, colored, Plckford place, northeast, was shot in the arm and stomach early today during an altercation at the home of Joseph street, north- east. Police are searching for John son. The woman w: taken to Casualty Hospital where it was found that her wounds were not dangerous. Alaskan Volcano in EYuption. CORDOVA, Alaske, June 19 (£).— A small voleano two miles from the Copper River and Northwestern Rail road, northwest of Cordova, was re- ported today in_eruption. Puffs of smoke were visible for 10 miles. Ex- treme heat was felt in the vicinity. Hand_signalling by frelght train |crews is being eliminated by an Eastern railroad with the installation of telephone service bétween the caboose and engine. SIDES OF 7™ AT K ST “THE DEPEN Big Slash on All Floor Samples Domestic Sewing Machines Here is just the opportunity that every housewife has been waiting for. samples Domestic Rotary, Electric and Foot-power Machines, Desks, Consoles, Por- table and Combination Electric and Foot Power go on sale at very low prices. Every Shop early, as the quantity of each style is brisk. $10.00 Other M Oil Leather Belts 19¢ Bottle, 8c oun- | ommittee ap- | October As- | "THINKS ‘DEAD SON UAS IN ASYLUM |Georgia Woman Refuses 1o Believe Report He Perished in World War. Assocta ' ATLANTA, | Rag,®ag th™ of : fused to believe n Government report 4that her son had b AFiken |ing the World War, has reve P | story here that is stranger than fiction i Seven years ago, after her son was officially dec st at sea by the | Navy Department, Mrs. J. C. Perry of | Kingsland, Ga., located a man whom | she and other members of her f {assert is her son in the 1l | Asylum for the Insane at Kankaker Sailed on British Tanker. Thomas W. in the ¥ her received his prelim! ing at Norfolk, Va arrival there Perrs he was soon to sail on the British tanker Arca as an emer; | ber of the United States N | Corps assigned to th department records Arca was logt at sea October and that virtually all honr vessel perished. The Dep ment communicated the news of death of her son to Mrs. Perr: to pay her war insuran: e allotment benes. Refuses. te Believe Him Deaa Perr; show that taken at a: be | ment | searet | him in a vist alive. The search led h [n01~ Asy received : man answering gave her among its in ited the institution, the man she immediately identified as her son | who was registered there as 7 | W. Perry, address and histor | known, failed to recognize hex mother. Two weeks later Mrs. Perry urned for a second visit and this he man greeted her affectionately “mother’” and recalled incidents of his { childhood Released Year Later. ear later, through the effo: of Perry w released tution and returned with her home at Kings liand. He was suffering from loss of | memory and physical exhaustion | Upon his arrival with Mrs. Perry, the man was positively identified as the lost son and brother by her h and their sons and daughters Although the Perry famil the man with the sam son and brother, t a foreign accent which crops out ever, his mermr stored and the T dvertiseme Mrs. Perr: ¢ me | | stat | trom the inst. Mrs. Perry 1sband ak are ree: person. Found in Danville, Til. | Records of the Kankakee showed that Perry had bee: jon the streets of Danvi 4, 1921, a victim of an |an exhausted ph | was sent to the Soldiers |as only his mame was o identify_him. he w | to the Kankakee ir { was found and claime Mrs. Perry. | Perry’s case wr | Veterans' Bureau was sent to the Governmer at Augusta for treatment, where he now remains. The Veterans' Bureau has again brought up the Perry casa and is endeavoring to make his ident fication offictal through finger print and other Government records taken t the time of his enlistment in the Navy. nd i ition. He Home, bu ailable to ter transferred ion. where he as her son b: ught before the ta and he hospital The growth of the use of au telephones in Lurope res in profits, in the past year. of $800,000 for the Automatic Telephone Manu facturing Co. of England, breal g all of the organization’s recovds. All floor Small down payment delivers any style of machine to your home—balance can be paid on our club plan—$1.00 weekly or $5.00 per month. No interest or extras Traded-in Sewing Machines at Low Prices Singer, electric, portable. . ..$39.00 Singer, 5 drawers, drop head . $35.00 akes at $10.00 Each MONDAY ONLY Regularly 25¢ I Sew-Lights For Night Sewing Fit Any Make Machine $3.75 Reg. $5.00 value