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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. JULY 25, . 1926—PART 1. PANTERS AREBUSY VRN amomar exone: sicinway| ANMALS AMAZE AMERICAN DUCHESS WITHLONG FASTS FIGHTS FOR TITLE AT WH"E H[]US[ ; Slaying of Mellett Held a Direct Challenge to Country ‘ Indicating Need for Drastic Action to Wipe ; Sea-Elephant, for Instance, Former Helen Zimmerman to Goes 7 Months Without Oppose Renewal of Americans Paste French Money on Traveling Cases ‘WOMAN EVANGELIST, STONED, IMPROVING Man Who Protested Girls Joining Church Sought for Rock Throwing in Miami. Leaving Army | By the Associated Press. LONDON, July 24.—The suit cases of travelers arriving here today from the Continent, plastered with 5 and 10 French and Belgian franc notes, attracted much atten- tion. One party of travelers, con- sisting of young Americans and Job Is Being Rushed Before Out ViCiO“SEing- : President Stops Wreck By the Associated Press. MIAMI, Fla., July 24 | day sought an unidentified man as the person who threw a coral rock Police to- | | | | | land, Youngstown, Pittsburgh, and BY ROBERT T. SMALL. from these neighboring cities on out Speclal Dispatch to The Star. CANTON, Ohio, July 24.—Canton is not the wickedest city in America; it | is but a way station, or possibly what of Economy Plans. The White House is being painted inside and out, but those charged with the job of keeping the Ixecutive nsion spic and span are almost id to give it a thorough coatins. | aint costs money, and so does labor, President Coolidge watches the White House expense list very closely. The White House needs paint almost ever re one turns, and | railroad men would call a division | point on a national highway of crime. t the recently organized national commission for the study and pre- vention of crime would quit its head- | quarters in New York and come to | Canton it would get some really valu- able information. It would get a first hand view of crime in the rough. It would find itself at an outpost or a through the length and breadth of the Nation. The peddler of dope in Canton is a brother and ally of the peddler i San Francisco or Los Ange- les. They belong to a criminal fra- ternity. They guard and protect each other. There are certain recognized havens for criminals. Canton is one of them. The ‘“yegg” who pulls a “deal” in Cleveland can come here and be covered up. The skulking hired assassin who shoots to death a pub- lic-spirited editor in Canton finds refuge in any' one of half a dozen | crossroad of criminality. It would | learn that the study of crime will not done before the President returns and | be satisfactory if centered only In stops the brushing of money onto the | citles like New York, Philadelphia, walls during a sidential era of | Chicago and San Francisco. economy. | Canton, which has sent a red glare A ing to preserve | into the national skies. these last few the Siitface, @ amother Presi. | 4ays, has proved that vice and crime e courso of years, will not | have their boney-handed clutches on huve the expense of supplying a new | the smaller cities and even the vil- 5 ce for the paint, and thus run | lages, and only the most sweeping s about double the expense his | & of puble sentiment ever will predecessor saved. | be able to break the sinister hold. And, worst of all, crime here in Painting the East Room. Canten has struck at the very agency The biggest job, inside the mansion, | of public sentiment. Crime has boldl is the East Room, the main reception | attempted to intimidate the Natio: room where all the formal State func- | bress; has said that he who would tions take place. It is being com-|turn the complacent hand of justice pletely repainted, with three coats of against the vice ring must pay for the same colors, and during thi temerity with his life. eriod it will be closed to visitor: Y T husn't been painted for about 1 Saleng o0 Fross. vears and presents 1d appearance, | 1t-has been well said in_connection When the recently appointed house. | With the slaying of Don MéHert, the keeper at the Whita House & | Canton editor, that the first agency | she will find her quarters completely | of an orderly society is government. | ¥ This = housekeeper wili | The second agency, or pos inction not enjoyed by any | corollary agency. is the news| ears, for these rooms have | for without the newspaper to guard' not been painted since 1902, and it | and guide public opinion, government was believed about time to put the | Would be deprived of its greatest, its sinters to work, while the President | €ssential support. That is why the ek | newspapers of the country regard S & matter of fact, many of the | this Canton case one calling for the rooms have been slated for painting. | focussing of a public opinion which but those in charge don’t want to say | Will not be satisfied until “the under- | too much about it. They fear the| World” has been shown that it can President might stop it. They are | neither control nor silence an agency zoing to do just as much as they | Which supports government and can before he gets back, therefore,|Stands between the people and are loath to say what is to be done rehy. 32 this year. o | underworld” must be made to cities which can be quickly reached in the high-powered car, always the agency of escape in a criminal out- rage. Police departments everywhere are cognizant of the rising tide of crime. In virtually every American city to- pleas are being made for a vger_and better-paid police force. New York recently added something like 3,000 policemen. Pittsburgh has Leen demanding at least 600 more bluecoats. Canton perhaps has been more com- placent than some other eommunities. That is what stirred Mellett to ac- tion. That is what made him prefer charges against the chief of police and have him suspended, only to see him restored through political influ- ence. The chief of police in turn sued Mellett’s paper, the Canton ews, an entity in_the news league owned by former Gov. Cox of Day- ton, for $50,000 libel. Called “Political Dictator.” At the height of the quarrel be- tween Mellett and the Canton police Mellett was murdered. The chief of police came out with the statement that Mellett wanted to be the “politl- cal dictator” of Canton. The police, accused by Mellett of collusion with the “underworld,” were not friendly to the editor. Perhaps that is why county and State authorities have taken further investigation of the shocking crime out of the hands of the police. Today a séparate and distinct ‘“headquar- ters” was set up for the outside in- vestigators, working under direction of the county prosecutor, stirred to o much work has been mapped out, "but those in charge want to get it hi: Those who know the interior of the | understand that where the police sleep, the press is awake and alert; that where courts compromise with crime, the press stands as warder of the even hand of justice. Canton is evidence that crime in America is a sort of chain-store af- affair. It is, indeed, a vicious circle. Canton is not an isolated ulcer. Crime here is but the outcropping of an in- fected blood stream poisoning the life of the Nation. C lay is a high- 1y organized affair. It is unfortunately better organized than the police sys- tem, or rather its system or co-opel tion functions on a better scale. Com- munities and commissions are too | prone to regard crime as local. It is far from that. Many Cities Linked. The vice ring in Canton links up with other rings in Akron, in Cleve- PLOW PIT REFORM FALS TO GET 0. K. Local Committze Reports Ad- versely on Proposed Auto- matic Devices. mansion well, and those who have inspected it, have found a lot of things to be done, all of which will take enough money to put a crimp in | the little “rainy day” fund that the | President is trying to build up to the voters that he believes | should begin at home. But, anyway, | he is not at home now. I $6,000 Roadw n the pantry is said to be condition, and when | the kitchen attaches return they will | find that the engineering corps of the Army has provided them with a nice | new one, befitting a presidential home. Then, there is that little fund | of $6,000 that is being spent to put | down a new kind of roadway in front | of the White House, one that will hold the loose stones together, so that the dust from the presidential auto- mobiles rolling up to the door not lay down e screen to hide the president; from the sight- seers who line the walks when the Chief Executive departs or returns to his home. They could not have a adam road because the tar ex- uded on hot days, such as Washing- ton has experienced in the past week, would be tracked onto the marble floors, making the tasks of the house- keeper’s assistants a hard one. The Government offi spent a day in Philadelphia finding just the road material fit for a President to travel upon, and that material now is being laid There's that expensive new elevator to be installed, to replace the eccen- tric one which has done duty for years, and has caused embarrassment to numerous junior naval aides. It is an automatic—all you do is press a button, the elevator comes to your floor and the door opens. You close the door, press the button for the floor you d and when it is work- ing right it goes there, but most of the time the old elevator has been doing its stuff wrong. There is a story of a junior naval aide attend- ing one of the social functions, and who was assigntd the duty of intro- ducing some of the elderly ladies to the comforts of a modern White House. He signaled for the elevator which came down nicely, but when the button was pressed for the main floor it started up and did not stop again until the boudoir of the First | Lady of the Land was reached. Think- ing it was the right place, the aide | opened the door and was met by a jump from two of the White House dogs. He and the matron spent the rest of the after- ng to find the proper button that would carry them to the next safest and least embarrassing stop. Keeping Cool With Coolidge. In the matter of renovating the| ‘White House, the engineers have de- termined to give literal expre the campaign slogan of Cool with Coolidg: There will be no need for ice deliver! at the Exec- utive Mansion when the President re- turns, for an elaborate refrigerating plant is being installed, one that will supply ice for the mansion and at the same time pipe the chills to vari- ous parts of the building. And if this is not enough to keep cool, the building is to be supplied with new awnings to keep the sun’s rays from banishing the coolness of presidential atmosphere. The whole outside is to receive three coats of white paint, and this, to- gether with the inside refinishing and the installations, is about all the engi- neers feel they will have time to get with before the President re- turns, except a few rooms in the exec- utive offices adjoining the mansion, which will need some attention at the hands of the painters. As for the roof, that’s another mat- ter, and will not be urdertaken this year. They are awaiting wowd from the President when to begin this, be- cause when the operation starts the, President and his family will have to move into temporary quarters. It is declared to be in a dangerous condi- tion. He has been acquainted with this fact by the Army engineers, but he was' apprised as to the need of a new roof by civilian experts whom he called in to inspect it. AR RS How to Make a Camp Mattress. ¥rom the Populgr Science Magazine. A mattress or use on a small camp cot may be made from squares of ex- celsior packing, such as are found in egg cases, and cotton batting, in- closed in & khaki drill covering. The mattress is light and comfortable and makes a small roll for packing. Cut the cotton batting-to the length and width desired and lay squares of excelsior on top; then place another layer of cotton on top of the excelsior. Using a large needle and twine, tie all together, just as old-time quilts were fastened, spacing the knots about eight inches apart. Then make the cover and repeat the tying proc- ess, so that the mattress will hold its shape under rough usage. Proof. From the London Answers. First Knut—Can your girl keep a secret? Second Dito—Lll say so. We were | on T street near 4th street northeast. | warning when carriage of the pit is action by the indignation of the lead- ing citizens of the community. Al- most every train into Canton brings some new ‘“under cover” operative, including special agents of the Gov- ernment at Washington. It is small wonder Canton has call- ed for outside help. The police blot- ters here show there have been 48 murders in the city in the last five years, which is.going rather strong for a community of 100,000 souls, even in a Nation brimming over with crime. Thirteen murderers have been convicted, but not sent to'the electric chair. In approximately half of tho cases no arrests were made. Two murders preceded the Mellett case this month. Canton has become all too accustomed to the ring of the shot from the dark. (Covyright. 1926.) Installation of fully automatic plow attachment and detachment devices 1l underground plow pits of the Washington traction companies as | recommended by the Federation of | Citizens' Associations, is not practi- cable at present, the committee on safety of street car operation reported vesterday to Engineer Commissioner J. Franklin Bell, chairman of the pub- lic_utilities commission. The committee has just completed a study of the plow pits, and an- nounced that it was favorably im- pressed with the latest type of plow pit in use on the Washington Railway and Electric Company system at Georgia avenue and W street, and This type of pit, the committee re- ported, represents the maximum in| safety to the operator under the pres- ent stage of development. It recom- mended that this type be accepted as a standard of safety requirements but not necessarily as a standard in de- tail and dimension. /A recommendation was made that the two traction companies make a study of the practicability of in- talling a “telltale” light to give energized. The committee is composed of J. G. Hefty of the Federation of Citizens' Associations, A. F. E. Horn of the | Washington section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, R. H.- Dalgleish, chief engineer of the Capital Traction Company; .J. H. Stephens, superintendent of railways of the Washington Railway and Elec- tric Company, and Maj. Willlam E. R. Covell, assistant District engineer commissioner. FAMOUS GAMBLER BACK. John Drake, Who Won Million on One Race, Again Visits London. Special Dispateh to The Star. LONDON, July 24.—John Drake, the famous gambling plunger, who with John W. Gates won $1,000,000 26 years ago on Royal Flush III in a race at ‘Ascot, came here from Paris last week. He has not been seen on a race course since before the war, when he attended the Liverpool races and lost $1,000 in one afternoon. Hy That afternoon Drake dined witht Charles Mills in a Liverpool hotel and met there Charles Hannen, the most spectacular gambler on the Ensglish turf today. Hannen challenged Drake to shoot craps, and when he offered 12 to 8 on 2 coup, Drake asked, “'Hun- dreds or thousands?’ ‘“Hundreds,”| replied Hannen, who quit the game | six hours later after losing $100,000. (Copyright. 1926.) . RECEPTIONS TIRE KING. BUCHAREST, July 24 (#).—Should the King of Rumania go to the United States he should like to travel as a private citizen. Constant public receptions, in this royal view, “wear one out.” “I should want to give the Amer- jcan Government the least trouble possible,” King Ferdinand said, | commenting on the uncertain passi- bility that he might join Queen Marie on her proposed Fall trip to the United States. “Receptions are trying for the persons who arrange them and trying for those in whose honor they are given. One day’s official reception in the United States would be quite enough, I think. The re- engaged two s before 1 knew a thing about ¥ mainder of the time I should like to '‘aravel as a private citizen.” TWO SAFES Laborer Is First Affected by New Retirement Law John W. Wilson of this city, a laborer in the supply division of the office of the Secretary of War, is the first person to be affected by the act of July 3, 1926, giving laborers in the Government serv- ice the privilege of retirement at the age of 65 years. Wilson was born in November, 1859, and served as ‘“‘hostler” for Robert T. Lincoln when ‘the latter was Secretary of War in 1822 and later. Since then he has had con- tinuous service of nearly 24 years in various bureaus of the War Department. Instead of being retired for age, however, his tenure of office has been extended for a period of two years from date. The extension was granted on the basis of a re- port that Wilson is physically able to petform his duties in a satls- factory and efficient manner and his continuance in office, would be advantageous to the public in- terest. CRACKED IN MARYLAND TOWN $90 Taken From Store Vault, $60 in P. 0. Funds Left Behind. Arrests Seen Soon. Spectal Dispatch to The tar, ROCKVILLE, Md., July 24—With tools that were stolen from a nearby quarry and garage, two or more cracksmen broke into the combined general store and post office at Boyd's near here, early this morning, rifled two safes and fled into the darkness with $90 in cash. Apparently fright- ened while In the midst of their work, they left $60 more in cash lying on a counter Entrance was gained to the store, owned by Robert Willlams, by forcing the front door. With crowbars, axes and other heavy tools, the men then succeeded in wrenching the doors from two safes, one owned by Mr. Williams and the other belonging to the post office, of which C. A. Kings- bury is the posimaster. The $90 was obtained from the former safe and the $60, which was it behind, from the latter. The robbers completely ignored several registered letters ‘that were in the post office safe, both of which contained monsy. In addition, they left a profusion of fingerprints around, by means of whieh, Sheriff Clay Plummer declared tonight, he fully expected to make an arrest within _the next 24 hours. SURELY, there are 100,000 Washingtonians who will gladly send one dollar or more to honor the living and the dead of the 26,000 from the District of Columbia who served their country in the armed forces in_the Great War. Send to John Poole, Treasurer, District of Colum- bia Memorial Commission, g:tlllekrnlfimeflcm Njtional The Million Dollar Development Beautiful Shaded Lots 10c Square Foot and.Up Most_Modern , Improvements ‘We Finance Honie Buil 406-12 Dist. Natl. Bank Bldg. Main 2141 and 3747 Food or Drink. The fast of a person for so short a time as a few weeks is consfdered worthy of record, vet some of the lower animals regularly abstain from food for several months during each vear. In animals such as the cater- pillar, the crab and the lobster total abstinence from food occurs during the entire shedding season of many weeks. A marvelous duplication of this un- broken - fast “is found in the life of the young spider during the first few weeks of its existence. Sea bears and walruses deny themselves food for many weeks at breeding time, but they are put to shame by the fervid constancy of the gigant ea-elephant (a species of seal), which annually remains foodless from August until February. These animals, unlike the caterpillar, crab and lobster, which fast during the 'time of inaction, are at the height of their excitement, ex- ertion, responsibility and danger when they steadily refuse to feed in the midst of plenty. Eat for Five Months. Sea-elephants are about 16 feet in length and 16 feet in girth, and the ofl alone in their bodies amounts to approximately 250 gallons, yet the ap- petite which must have been neces- sary to develop such proportions has been so long disciplined and curbed that for seven months in the year they neither eat nor drink. During the remaining five months, when they eat enormous quantities, their food is not. devoted entirely to immediate ex- penditure, but day by day and week by week is held in reserve for future i in the form of fat, blubber and ofl. It is not the habit of mammals alone to store up energy for future use, for the penguin has the ability to defy hunger and survive what would be starvation conditions to any other bird in the world. The commoner Kkinds, which nest within the Antarctic Circle, such as Adelie penguins, goashore in the Summer, make nests amid stones and ice and endure periods of many days entirely without food. Their fasts, however, are slight, com- pared with that of the Emperor penguin, which defles all tradition by choosing the appalling gloom of the Antarctic night for its nesting time in places where no kind of nest is possible. The egg is laid on the ice and instantly placed on the upper part of the bird’s feet, where it is held in position by a naked patch of flesh at the lower half of the breast. For six weeks this patient’ bird stands in the raging winds of the polar Winter with its extremely low temperature. Through all this the constant and devoted bird remains foodless, living upon the fat stored in its body. Salmon Seldom Eat. The salmon, among the fish, is like- wise entitled to an important place among fasting animals, for there is never a month in which salmon are not ascending or descending fresh- water rivers, and, be their sojourn long or short, they preserve an un- broken fast. Now and then a salmon is tempted by the spinning bait of an angler, but the majority go without food and hence are uncaught while in fresh water save by the net, living in the meantime on the fat stored up during eager feasting in the far-dis- tant ocean. The ability to endure such hardship until it becomes no longer a hardship is the result of hundreds of thou- sands of years of slow evolution. Those best fitted to undergo the test have survived and transmitted their power to their posterity, which in turn carry on the ancient practice. - GENERAL RAISES ROSES. Chief of German Cavalry at Marne, Now 80, Turns Gardener. BERLIN, July 24 (#).—The one former German Army officer who most nearly approaches to having turned his sword into a plowshare is Gen. Alexander von Kluck, who directed the first German cavalry operations in the battle of the Marne. Passersby going to work in the morning never fail to see the 80-year- old veteran at work in his rose garden in the Summer colony of the Gruen- wald on the outskirts of Berlin. He rises at 6:30, puts on an old suit of clothes and occuples himself with rose hedges with boyish enthusiasm until breakfast, at 10 o'clock. Waterfront Property 6 Miles From National Capital In Great Demand 1 velopment. bi obligation. E.V.R. Sweet HAVE it. Read on, and if you be- lieve I.am right and desire to join me in this golden opportu- nity, call at once for full particulars. There are a-half million people in Washington looking for a close-in waterfront development that can be reached within 45 minutes, where there is swimming, boating, fishing and duck hunting in season. A place where they can build a Summer home and get there quickly after office hours. I have just such a property— 100 acres of beautiful woode erty, 6 miles from the city, on the Potomac River—which I am about to put on the market. People cannot re- sist waterfront ‘amusements. lieve there is a real opportunity for big money to be made, and I invite a few people to join me in the de- I believe every lot "will be sold within a short time after the first offering to the public. Come in and let me tell you more about this money-making opportunity. LIEUT. SARAH M. HEPBU The second oldest member of the Army Nurse Corps was placed on the retired list of the Army. vesterday. The nurse, a second lieutenant, is in her 66th year, and is the first Army nurse to be retired under the act of May 13, 1926, extending the privilege of retirement to members of that corps. She began her active service in the Army in 1900, and has an honor- able record. Her last tour of acti duty was at Walter Reed General H; pital, but at present she is at her home in Stoughton, Mass. APOSTOLIC LEGATE | LEAVES FOR ROME, { Special Dispatch to The Star, suit an; bill forbidding of divorce cases s d. the time with children and had no diff ing is another wornan but shrinks from the publicity the English duchess have lived fend her right to the title, which, in {the event of the would belong exclusively *o the sec- ond wife, tion in the French court, it is bel Divorce Suit. PARIS, Jul ~Fighting for her title, the Duchess of Manchester, the former Helen Zimmerman, daughter of the late Cincinnati brewer, refused to accept the - jurisdiction of the French courts when the Duke of Manchester filed suit for divorce at Nice in May, 192 As recognition is necessary by both cording to French law, the awn_ his proceedings, stood he intends to file nd, provided the new | publication of details | in The duchess lives in Paris most of het three grown-up ulty in prov- | F France is her I i d that the duke of divorce court proceedings in He and the t for 10 years. The duchess is determined to de=|t duke's remarriage, t recording to English law. Although the duke claimed uld be invoked in | However, according to his B. Delaney, the «d the right to bring t « Nothing looks so much like inno- |t sence as an indiscre i v Cardinal Bonzano Praises American ldeals as He Sails From New York. By the Associated Prese NEW YORK, July 24.—Cardinal = THTTHIT I John Bonzano, papai legate to the recent Eucharistic Congress at Chi- cago, sailed for Italy today. In a fare- well message to the American people he said: “The God of nations must look with approval upon the country that made it possible to give him such a tribute of love and adoration.” Throngs crowded the pier as the cardinal embarked on the Conti Bi ancamano, surrounded by his suite of priests and monsignori. the crowds as the liner moved away from the pier. Prior to boarding the liner, the s suite, Cardinal Hayes tended a fare- well service at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The cardinal's farewell messige said “The fine spirit of hospit: fested by the ward the pilgrims to the Eucharistic Congress is characteristic of a nation that has commanded the admiration of the world for its devotion to the high- | est ideals. This spirit touched the hearts of all observers and made re- cipients conscious of a most profound appreciation of the welcome accorded them. “The memory of the multitudes who crowded around each point where our journey led us, the picture of th leglons of children that lined qthe thousand-mile route from East to West, and the climax in the myriads who gathered from the utmost bounds of the earth will be cherished with profound gratitude.” TR i ‘While the distance between Cairo, | Egypt, and Khartum, capital of the Sudan, is only a little more than that from New York to Chicago, a journey between the two requires four days of continuous travel. He blessed | ity mani- | American _people to- Walnut and Gum combin | chifforette. 1 SWAT THE FLY Take advantage of an early start by an aggres- sive war on the fly at the beginning of the season. The Star has for free distribution wire-handled fly swatters. Ask for one at the main office of The Star, ‘or at any of the Branch Agen- cies. amount prop- I be- No 928 Investment Bldg. Mmmz Simmons BED OUTFIT Includlng$15.75 Simmons felt and cotton mattress, Sim- mons twe-inch post in wood- finish, Simmons twin- Iink spring with band edge. i T JOHN 1. DEVINY BOOMED | of gates bo is a former president of the interna- Lesher, Washington suite of exceptional design. pieces, including dresser, vanity, bed, The workmanship could not be better if you paid twice the Canadians, alse had French franc note adorning their trunks along side the hotel and steamship labels. Several of the tourists had paper money pasted on their camgra cases. TO HEAD PRINTING GROUP | Assistant Director of Engraving Bureau Supported by Many Delegates to Convention. John J. Deviny, assistant director the Bureau of Engraving and >rinting, s being hoomed for presi- | dent of the International Association of Printing House Craftsmen, { bolds its annual convention in Phila. delphia_this week. which Deviny, who is one of the dele- from the Washington club of he association who leave by special ar this a{ternoon for Philadelphia, Mr. ional organization, and is understood now to have the support of a number ashington delegates -, Public Printer; ! superintendent Publishing Co.; J. H. uperintendent of the Na- al Press, and George C. Dexter Folder Co. Th special car will join rain carrying other clubs to the con- ional Cay ‘ole of th vention. |[THE_WRIGHT COMPANY | [[] Not merely reduced prices —but Wright Company Good Furniture with a guarantee of satisfaction at Special JULY CLEARANCE Reductions == 4.PC. BEDROOM SUITE ation. A Large DAVENPORT TABLE Ma hogany finish; turned stretchers to s make it strong and rigld. CABINET Center glass door, in Queen Anne or Tudor design. Wal- nut or Golden Oak finish through the window y ght and Berg, § Vi Brandt P to conduct before started nightly service ‘The woman e unconscious, but members of the lice said a trap w her last Thursday received letters threatening th less she closed her angeli recoves congregation. of the anteroom Alliance struck Just her t was knocked d and called Po- s laid to kidnap and that she N t un eetings at once had a she would meet a fate me than “another well known of the same faith experienced. Male members of the con armed themselve id guarded the church and Mr home last night and some rs of the con- gregation prayed all night for her Police started working on the theory that a man who objected to two little girls joining the chu ng the meetings had thrown the stone, but | they withheld his name. Mrs. Berg is said to be fmprovin: today. o serfous ngelist There is hardly a single politician worth painting, though any of them would be the better for a little white. washing. | Only 20 Short | Minutes’ Drive 0 EDGEMOOR BATTERY PARK ! I METAL BRIDGE LAMPS With imitation parchment shade of various colorings, Complete FRONT ICER White en- amel lined. 35-1b. ice ca pacity .. I I FlB!-;.R ARMCHAIR OR ROCKER Cretonne upholstery; loose spring cushions; decorated or 505 LOW TERMS of Payment