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PATRIOTIC PAGEANT PLANS PROGRESS Fireworks Display at Capital However, Is in Doubt. Funds Lacking. ’ [ Although the fate of the fireworks display planned ‘on the Monument July in col ction with t celebration the 150th of the establishment of independence, is stll in doubt, awin: to the lack of response the appeal of the committee on contributio; Arrange- | seremonies on the east ont of the Capitol progressing satisfactorily, it was announced ves- terday by Chairman k. C. Snyder of the commit arrangements, The patriotic address will be de- livered tepresentative Henry R Ruathbone of Ilinois, who will be in- o ced by Chalrman Snyde How ing an inspirational program of Amer- jcan mu to be plaved by massed nds, o number to be conducted by Capt. Santelmann of the Marine Band, and one number conducted by Capt. Stannard of the Army Band. The awards to the six winning contestants in the Declaration of Independence essay contest will be made by Com missioner .1 ranklin Bell \ll essavs are now in the hands of the acting director of the community center partment, Mrs, L. W. Hardy, and will be turned over by her tomor row to the committee of judges, Dr. William Mather Lewis, Rabbi Abram Simon and Judge Mary O'Toole, for final se tlon dur this week. early ever division of the Distriet public schools has it in the re quired six essays, which include the best two from the elghth, the seventh and the sixth ades in that division. The judges for the eight junior high Schools essuys were Miss Mathilde Eifter, M Ethel Vass and Dr. E. B, Dykes of the senior high schools. A special col iittee judged the essavs of the private and parochlal schools in preparation for the final selection this week, the committee being com- posed of Ira Bennett of the Wash- American finance ments for the | | United States, with cotton fields one- | make it lentils and bea THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D.' C., JUNE 20, IPLEADS NOT GUILTY 'U. S. MAY BE FORCED TO GROW - LONGER, FINER FIBERED COTTON | Egyptian Growers of Kind That Is Used in Auto Tires Reported Ready to Reduce Acreage of Product at Th Time. It 18 a question of labor the | in Egypt ‘ <. Plma cotton costs more | and of pri the ele- | to produc ‘pt, one-tenth the size of as it requives greater care. | than [ Bgypt has cheap labor and can com pete successtully in spite of transp | tation rates The prosperity. of Egypt twentieth as big. can twist 3 Although more d cotton crop RrOWS ¢ Amerifean soil and a third of all the cotton in forsign mills comes out of American gins, American manufactur- | with its cotton, the most important ers get exceedingly nervous if a few |crop. It is helieved by people who dusky Egyptian planters decide to | have observed conditions that the gov thix year in- | ernment manages this goose which lays the golden egg with utmost care When cotton prices go low, Kgypt re stricts the arca to be planted the hext season, untl prices climb up again | When ‘they ko high, the government attempts (o peg the price by huying in, the market and doling it out in wise quantities, fuctuates siead of cotton, The reaxon is that there fs colton and cotton. The kind that grows under Egypt's desert sun has the longest, fineat fibers of any In the world. ‘except tho Sea Island cotion which grows in small quantities in the West Indies. American manufac: turers like to use {t for cord tirex and tre fabric, and it is also used in mak ing very fine cotton gonds. The Egyptian government, which regulates all agriculture, (hrough the simple fact that it can turn off the |jteelf on ar b water supply be water in ita irrigation canals by & |cause it practicdly never rains. It mere twist of the wiist, occasionally | ypust exercise grant economy to brin deegns it advisable to take a tuck or | comparative ecoromic comfort to th two in the cotton acreage. This has | 14,000,000 peopie that crowd the na been done at least tvice In the st frow valley of the Nile. Although the 10 years, United States Department of | areq under yptian rule is over Commerce officlals say. And mow, | 300000 square miles. onlv litie over they claim, restrictions have been pro. [ 12,600 square miles is arable posed for the 1926 crop which Will | [ is alwiys possibie be planted th this farm faad by more ¢ Hoover Sees Explanatio | gation, lmited of A statement by Secretary Hoover to [amount of water the ‘ongressional committee investigat. | Thousands of ing forelgn monopolies that control | of Christ American neceesities 13 as follows: | Tut-ankh he motives hehind the restriction | tived in of acreage may be attributable to ene [old system wax used until recent of two reasons, or possibly both. Cot “Im.ew and under the rule « ton in. ERypt 18 raised under freiga- | Britain it was developed to its ton depending on the reservolrs of est heights the upper Nile, and trom time to time | The Nile there are shortages of water, and we | keeps Egypt may consider this the ¢ How. | heart of Africa ever, there appears to be con [and flo Imoxt dition exiating at the pre tnie, | Medit u and there is reason to believe that the | ahout milex, or intention to restrict acerags during the | from New York to San Francise coming season is based upon the de- | ubout the last 1,000 miles of its Feypt Stand Logleal. | | blame wmay uattach to | be remembered that it (hat hms to maintain Whatever Egypt, It mus lis a country iner tensive irri by the supply years before the time back in the duys o irrigation was rac tically the same Nl and Amen KV DU of thut the \ is a alive, at due te great It ast | ington Post, Gideon A. Lyon of The Evening Star. Charles W. Darr, Ar- thur Alexander and Mrs. James Car- roll Frazer. | | Pageant Is Planned. The spectacular feature of the cele. bration at the Capitol will be the presentation of ““The Story of Amer- ica.” a pageant of liberty, written and directed by Marie Moore Forvest, of the Community Center Department, and presented by the committee on | arrangements under the auspices of the community centers. More than | 27 outstanding orkanizations in the city will present scenes of vital his- toric interest, the scenes heing played on the steps leading » to the ro tunda, with the dome as background | for the colorful spectacie, Five scenes will be given: “The Foundation of America,” opening with & dance of the primitive forest, fol lowed by an Indian camp scgne, and then the coming of the Norsemen, led by Lief Ericson: Chrisiopher Co- | Jumbus and the Spaniards, the Cava liers of Virginia, the Pilgrims, the Dutch led by Hendrik Hudson, the Huguenots, the Quakers—all forming A sreat picture on the Capitol steps | which opens at the center, i as from | out the rotunda come George Wash ington and Thomas Jefferson. great warrior and great statesman of America. Five Scenes in All Scana 2 will be the “Declaration of Independence.” and scene 3. “Wash- | ington Resigning his Commission at | Annapolis, in 1783.” to be played by | members of the Sons of the American | Revolution and the Minute Men, | assisted by the Daughters of the ! American Revolution. Scene 4 tells | of the progress of America, opening | with a symbolic dance of the vital | forces of Ame trength. ‘Then | will come groups of the early - dents and | the pioneers, men of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, men led by Dantel | Boone, the [orty-niners, sclentists, the old fashloned school teacher and | her little puplls, the old-fashioned American family, and the first college graduates —all leading up to America’s great triumvirate, Clay, Calhoun and Wehster, and finally to Lincoln—as the hand plays *'Mine Eyes Have Seen >ry of the Coming of the Lord.” “The Strength and Hope of 2 will open with & dance of ind hope, in her, white and and then will come a vast force, reperesenting the industries, the floral oup. the agricultwral group, the fisheries group, the business group, the pro fossional sroup, the Lted Cross, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Campfire Girls, Army Nursing Corps, Instructive Visiting Nurse Soclely, the church, capital and labor, the famlly, arts and letters, and many others. Then the bugle call—and America enters, with torchbearer bearing the flag, escorted by platoons of soldiers, sail- ors and marines, forming a vast and inspiring picture under the dome as the bands play “The Star Spangled A liberty blue arrz marching Banner” and the audience stands at | attention. DISABLED VETERANS | EXPECTING 5,000 Sixth Annual Conventign of Asso- ciation Will Open in At- lanta Tomorrow. wciated Press. A, Gu., June 19.—More than 5,000 delegates are expected 1o attend the sixth annual convention of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, which convenes here Monday. Among the delegates arriving today were those from Dallas, Tex.: Detroit, Mich.: Denver. Muskogee, Okla.. Salt Lake City. Chicago, Cincinnati and Minneapolis John R. McQuigg. national com- mander of the American Legion is expected to reach Atlanta tomorrow, and will address the opening session. Other speakers will include Mayor Walter A. Sims and Mrs, Sam D Jonds, president of the Service Star Legion. who will deliver the address of welcome, and Mrs. Lola Sidney, national secretary and vice command- er. who will respond. The principal adaress will be by M A. McClure < as City, Mo., of thé Amerlcan r Mothers' Association. Otticer f the D. A, V., In ex tive session, ure: John W. Mahon, ational commander; Jobn W. Scott, Ind., second vice commander: L. wary, University, Va.; Wentworth, San Francisco; J. Brown, Scranton. Pa., and en Young, Salt Lake City, junior ommande! Vivian D. Corbly, Cincinns ational adjutant, and Maudrich, Chicago, sergeant.t-arms An elaborate program for the enter- tainment and instruction of the del- egates has heen arranged. By the A Milk prices in parts of Palestine are cut in half because of the abun- GB%R ©of pasturage this season. FLYER PLANNING " PHOTOS OF SUN | the sun—something that has never |ego, will be held up another month, |18 trying to better it even before he sire to influence prices.’ Jjourney it is not augmented by Although the United States raises single tributary stream. a small amount of Egyptian cotton of | Although the most selfish methods its own in Arizona and California, it [of Egypt could never bring on an | has not been as popular as the im-|economic crisis in the United States ported kind. Spinners claimed the |still they could cause a temporary American long staple or pima cotton | discomfort in manufacturing fields could not he worked as well hecause | If the boll weevii should be conqu it was not as carefully handled as | at some future time, the fine that from Egypt. At any rate the Sea Island cotton mighi again demand tupered off. and the produc- | grown in the Carolinas as it once was. tion of pima cotton dwindled from | Bringing cotton to the 1'nit over ninety thousand bales in 1920 |is like carryving coals to 10 about four thousand in 1824, but it is, ax hax been s There is no real reason why the |of the kind of cotion. China, India United States should be dependent on | Peru and Mexico also send us some of Egypt for this product, in case of |their cotton, which finds fts way into | nes "The climate and length of sea- | blankets, woul ixtures und cheap | son In Arizonw 1s very much us it s yurns. 0 = Holland Markets Interesting. 1 The cheese market at Alkmaar and [the egg market at Roermond are two of the interesting places in Holiand, und places to which much of Europe looks for supplies Kggs sold at Koermond last year| amounted to more then %3.000.000, or nearly 6,000 tons, all sold by fon under the rules of the Co-ope | Producers’ Association. On Ap: . , the egg les amonntad to 3 Long - Distance | aon." and ‘o raund out the das the | auctioneer sold 1 000 duck eggs that being the gre: ay for busines: in the egg market. | | Goddard’s Camera to Be Given Hard Test at Outset. One of the Oldest Customs. The custom of drinking healths is of | great antlquity At an entertainment | given by Hengist, {n the fifth century, | to the British king. Vertigern. the daughter of the host, Rowena, kneit | and presented the wine cup to the | king, saying as she did so: “Dear| king, your health” and this is gen- | erally quoted ax the origin of the cus. | tom By the Consohdated Press. DAYTON, Ohlo, June 19.—Lieut. George W. Goddard, aerial photogra- phic expert at McCook fleld and author of an ambitious scheme of long- distance aerial photography, is not letting any g grow under his feet while perfecting his preparations to photogrspi Detroit, 218 miles away, | from the air above Dayton. s Lieut. Goddard announced today | |FEE= that he was making prepurations, | while walting, 1o make a daylight | photograph with his gigantic long-dis- | [fi tance camera of the outer corona of | been successfully attempted. The project of photographing De. troit from Dayton, announced a month | Lieut. Goddard said, while the plane from which he will take his pictures | is remodeled so that It can attain the necess; height of 20.000 to 35000 feet —between & and 7 milex To Use MacReady Plane, Lieut. Goddard plans to use the same high sititude plane that Lieut. John MacReady used on his unsuc cessful effort to set & new world | helght mark, and it is this airplane that fs delaying the photographic ex- periment. While some mechanical changes are being made on the piane so that it may go above altitudes to which Mac- | | Ready drove it, Lieut. Goddard is im- | proving his photographic equipment. | He fs further trying to improve on | the film he will use for his Dayton- Detroit test. Already Lieut. Goddard has avallable the finest supersensi- | tized flim for his experiment, but he | — e ? EVERY DAY WHAT EVERY unmiTURR BUSTER Pasray gets the chance to put it to the |f severest kind of test. The camera ftself is four feet long and weighs 100 pounds. The lens, the fastest vet built for high-altitude alr photography, is nine inches in Qiameter and is 14 inches thick. It comprises six elements of concave and convex lenses with special ray | filters in between for cutting through the haze. Camera Cavefully Trained. SAMITARY BRUSH | dore | at | ted i f |ing “the Big Hardware and Housefumishing 11™AND G STS. THE BIG TEN =0 IN'BOMB OUTRAGE Parallel Drawn Death of Nurse and Slay- ing of 20 Years Ago. recinl Dispateh (o The Star. KYRACU N, Y., June 19 An ther tragedy Is heing written around the denth last Sunday night of Mrs Arline Curtis Kelly, 48,0 nur Killed by the explosion of a gift package in 1. Ralph Seay 37. a World veteran of lomer hose tlons she Lind rejecto nd whom suspecte nding her the bomb, was charged today with firsi degre mur Ber wax urreste but no el gainst him ountil 1 5l 1 almost at onee guilty and his exami tor next Friday. I'he setting of the case corr lavgely with that of the cel case of Chester Gillette, cony Killing (¢ ece Brown of South Ot=el 20 years ago in the Adirondacks. ar “lectrocuted forhis crime later at uburn prison. Was Backgr The Gillstte case provided ound materi nd detail for r's novel. Gillette, hop In the West, the 1t exhorters, had been taken vich relatives engaged in the pcturing business at Cortland or. in his placed wax ar Monda was e plead fon ‘was set sponds d of Novel. back Theo lier son of he stly wooed @ village iployed In the factory. She met ¢ death on a Fourth of July outing Movse Lake, and her lover sted later ut Hagle Bay Fourth Lake, and tried for killing her He claimed she died accidentally in the upset of their boat and that he ar | <ent bomb case the accused |of tong killings were coming in from | ge which is a suburban of Cortland. Both communi- | in the heart of the conntry, celebrated classic by Edward vil in the Noyes ott. ainst Seager, according to the r authorities, the man whe ac- | companied the accused on a trip to a | va to buy dynamite for illegal fish- | lives on & farm near st & Homer. “ollowed Other Cases. In the Gillette case it was brought out that the accused had read in the newspapers several weeks before the purposes, | tragedy an aecount of an unexplained aceldental drowning of a voung cou- Ple on & lake in New England. The bomblug in Syracuse followed within three weeks the printing of ac of the killing of August Krum- | his Jdsughter Janet, und her William Prauk, at Three Lake near Muskegon, Mich., in a vengeance plot inspired by political | hatred of Krumbsech by a 1.val, since | convicted in the case | Mrs. Kelly, a matron mother of five grown sons and daugh- ters and with crippled husband liv-| in New York, had rejected the | atientions Seager, according 1o the police Either cour Laech ance Tavern, comely of had_a premonition or | | joked with the Krumbaech case in mind just before the explosion, for | s<he remarked to a fellow lodger who | [handed her the gift package that it ht be a_homb. he named Seager as her probable killer before she died, according ‘o Assistant District Attorney Mawhin ney of Syracuse. she Drawing the Line. From the Atchison Globe °T ‘have every confidence in m® wife.” an Atchison man said, “but T am not going to give her lessons in pistol practice.’ 1 BRUSH SET HOME NEEDS o Chestnut Trees Facing Extermination By ‘Blight in South Appalachian Area ‘The problem of quickly using up in the next growin south Aj ing the in Recenti""" the forestry various and R, of the half of t will he b helieved aren will Becaus ready he owners of chestnit trees are urged by [the hope of finding a blight resisting | the dej before 1 blight ha made by Products the blight strength But, like blight-kil is N San Francisco's Chinatown Con- tains “Geneva" of Chinese on “Geneva' cific Coast Ix in San Francisco’s China- town, brick Wo is on bu P about w so-culled renewed A few ther quiet A an yavid |lack of violence was probably things two Sergt. J¢ |lice officer of the San wver ol becl rincipal wit | partment. 1 T o g 5 Manion is chiefly the reason why the | e i Agriculture, estimate that 80 per cent | of all the chestnut trees in more than | into “Peace Temple.' ring factions have their round tabl The camera will be mounted in the rewr cockplt, pointing parallel with | the right wing. It wiil not be a hit oranies attempt, as every detall has | peen carefully figured. Certaln marks ! have been painted on the right wing | #o that at 80,000 feet or higher, when one of these marks is pointing at Indlan Lake, about $0 miles south of Toledo, the camera will be on direct line from Dayton through the west- | | ern edge of Indian Lake to Detroit. | To make sure that the camera will function when called upon. it will he heated electrically, and as an extra | precaution will get heat from the ex- || haust manifold. This insures the | amulsion on the film and will act as | a preventative to a stiffening of the| rubber parts of the camera. | Because of the excessive weight, | Lieut. Goddard will be obliged to make the flight and take the picture alone. All arrangements are heing | made so that he can operate both the camera and the ship without moving from the cockpit. | Lieut. Goddard does not hope to get | mfich detail of Detroit fros fie says the military value picture will lle in the fact that if the town were shelled, the smoke from the ruins would show on the plate. Or if u fleet were anchored in any of | the harbors, the detall on the picture would be sufliclently sharp for mili- tary purposes. Ship's “Eyes.)’ “Kyes of a ship” is a term applied | to the foremost t of the bow, s0 called fromthe anclent practice which still obtains in parts of the Mediter-! ranean and elsewhere of painting a | [l large eye on each side of a vessel's | cut-water as an emblem to avert the evil eye. 5 COMPLETE ASSORTMENT KEEPS THINGS CLEAN ONLY STANDARD MATERIALS USED ESSENTIAL BRUSHES IN ILLUSTRATED CARTON THE BEST YET--THE BIG SET~ HKOW Z= UMAAPTY —HMn Z~ UMIVCIW «» g ®OW Z= UMAO>TY M Z— MIuCIwW S « = g High-speed Ice Cream Freezer, two- quart all gal- vanized fron— $1.00 Peerless Ice Cream Freezer, two - quart size, with wooden bucket — $2.00 The Everedy Bottle Capper, with spring handle to fit any size bottle; com- plete with 12 doz._caps— $1.25 Stone Jars, six - gallon size, glazed fnside; first_quality $1.00 size; e 1900 Cataract ectric Washer — the safest and easfest way to wash the most clothes cleanest in the least time. Free demonstra- tion in your home. $10 down, $2.50 per week. ' " 8128,50 price. .. Complete Line of Eriez Gas Ranges and Kitchen Cabinets ~ Third Floor dead tree. The sur which was going on, few years the chestnut trees & on the 33,000,000 acres of ppalachian woods is confr United States Forest departments of the|ern limit ol . Dr. G. F. Gravat | area. forest patholo; tutes Department nt tates tod Mar fted org American « tis u foreign this tan region | nursery st lighted by 1830. By 1935 It Is |ago. In it that ninetenths of forest| was not as have passed thut stage. e the lumber shortage 18 al | munity. ing felt In the United States | chestnut ar he south Appala rtment to utilize their timber | kind he rotting that follows 8 canused heuvy losses, Tests are wholly the United States Forest |variety and Laboratory have shown that | shown som alone does not impalr the or durability of the wood. n tree ringed with an ax, a | led chestnut when lel stand on rotted by the wood-decay to rej of the tan country in and, with t | “Hague | etently | disputed by |is arbitratic weisen. 1le | Woey™ g1 N PEACE TEMPLE Pacific Coast. f Manion | the Chin The ‘ moved. Pa- | app: ! pledged to peace. He was he a Tune .19, of the Chinese on the N the lding. g Woey." third floor of a dingy hey refer to it as| which in English solicemel Here the war. |, dollcemen haye cards players to the k hich representatives of the | “high binder” tongs recentiy their pledge of peace. months | Kk whe 1 - rEROrts | ) therwise t as possibie Although 1 gambling in merican cities d order prevailed comparative | here. The | due to Temple and | trapping po- | Franeiseo de- | the P J. Man! There h ings in ¢ and hoth pointed out phn n it 000 0O Thcrc‘s a Size Of Leonard for All NCcdS Leonard Cleanable, onc piece Q5 porcelain lined, 50-1b. capacity. $58 J.eonard Cleanable, equip- §GO 75 ped for electric refrigera- $09.75 tiom, 73-1b. capacity. Porcelain lined, Leonard Clean- able, equipped for electric re- frigeration. $75 small white P type, Teonard top apartment enamel lined. $13.50 Three-door siyle Leonard §23 25 e b ot capoce. $29-25 ity, white enamel lined. . -1b. capacity top icer, white enamel lined, golden oak finish. $24.75 Leonard Polar King Re- frigerator, white enamel lined, front icer. $25.75 100-1b. capacity Leonard Cleanable, cquipped to ac- commodate electric unit. $79.50 All White Porcelain Leonard by Cleanable, equipped to ac- $1/6 commodate electric unit, 75 lbs. Service [ infection has now No practical conty the trees had acquired Many the | While none have yet been found that | The Americian chastnut supplies h nation, a new econe fungi that gain w foothold in the ! be met, it is stated TONGS ARBITRATE Pribunal Hix authority | and not in streets or | six years as the h town police he has been “chief of police” When it became known that a trans. The request was g tion the tongs met again and this tong peace orders to break up whers offense ix repeated th cover and at a minimum 1926—PART 1. Largest Round Table. ‘F;flm the Pathfinder | The table of Round | the wor Knights of London is sald to he 's largest It | stands in @ room of a fameus Strand the the 502 UP ) round table New Apartments The most con- venient and prettiest rooms in Washington. Open Until 9 P.M. 1460 Irving Mt. Pleasant blighted area | restaurant there. Consisting o7 & sin 24, and is still | gle cut ey of the begun in 1 has shown that the f:tal reached the south- | lar f the comme oss the trunk of a ihogany tree, it s also the one-y table in the world. | it ix %o large that, when nt was being rebuilt it could not be moved, igantic inl chestnut | In 1is known anfsm that §s Killing th shestnut by the wholes: \ fungus that was brought untry on contaminated | £ ok from Asia a few ye % native home the fungus | deadly as fn America, for | a w0 im foreign varieties of e heing imported now with | place the ones destroved. | glishman roat a ning extract used t the manufacture he species facing exter problem must . Model Maker small metal and electrical devices 3 for competent man. strong Hnancialiy Address Box Acc parts positi rentoh urate: hardwood Permanent Largs com. Locatad in 55-B. Star office. | the funetions efti i virtually un the Chinese and hix hobby »n of difficulties that have | is insistent that “Wao Ping he place to settle. quarrels Kk alleys. For 1 of the China ‘mayor” and of the district voom had to be built around it able was first exhibited at the exposition in 1851, Though it old, it is vowng when o the order that owns it .,; the Knights of the Round | : s formed in 1720 S | o;_/g:nurrr_b > 2 NITURE Just a Nice Compliment. MADE TO ORDER m the New York World You may select from a wide 1WA, Bishop, the English fiy- | of materiale ani we il “maice r‘a‘x;‘[fl;;fi: 3 nd that | ing ace—he had 94 victories 10 his | i and beants. "snd ‘sava vos moner ™ 1 E | New York the other day e matural reststance. | ou " mer wonderrut| Standard Upholstery Store If | dancers. An K panted in | 2810 13th St. N.W. Open evenings. Col. 4038 in this}a pretty girl's e dance the |* 5 PR leather | gther night: | | “iirs awfully good of yeu to Charleston with me—me, the worst Char ner in the ballroom.' lere he trod on her foot for thirteenth time, and she laughed and | 1 | ‘O, how can you say =07 Why, vou hardly seem to touch the flool New York World AreYou Going With the Dealers of Center Market to Marshall Hall, Wed., June 23? PROGRAM AFTERNOON: and Sack Race—Opent fo all. 100.Yd. Dash—For Boys- 18~ and under, 100-Yd. Dash—For Girle 1% and under, 60-Yd. Dash—For Women. Slegged Race—Open to all, 100-Yd. Dash—For Men. Baseball Gam NIGHT: Charleston Contest Open to All and Old-fashioned Prize Walts “ontest Open to All PRIZES FOR ALIL._ EVENTS—NO PRIZE VALUED AT LESS THAN $5.00 “Romething Doing Al the Time" Boats Teave 10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M. and 630 P. M. CENTER MARKET DEALERS' ASSOCTATION ergt ed by e not nted. In considered for s cirenl t he eing petition w asking th 40-Yd. Dash—For Boys under. 40-Yd. Dash—For Girls nder. Potate Race—Open to all. 60-Yd. Dash—For Boys and under. 60-Yd, Dash—For and under, bserve the | 2 preside at t 1o him anew was asked meeting under 7 and Manio game of | more notice is given place and if the place is closed he police interfe in the Chinese bere undoubtedly ndulged in, it is kept N working I @ ther 1 this jer of the Girls 12 as little oms some is been only two tong kil hinatown within the vear of these, Sergt. Manion “were on my night off i it I e Good Enough For Electric Refrigeration The Leonard Cleanable The new 1V/5-inch pressed corkboard insulation in the Leonard Cleanable Refrigeramr makes it especially practical for electric refrigeration.’ All practical sizes of Leonard Cleanable Refrig- erators at Mayer's are so equipped that you can use ei'}ler ice or an electric Yefrig&rfl!ion “n;t. Lfficient With Ice The nice part about the new Leonard Cleanable is that you can use ice altogether or you can use ice for awhile and later install an electric unit. Or you can install an electric unit at once. MAYER & CO. Seventh St. Bet. D& E