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GRANGE'S FOUNDER 10 GET MEMORIAL Granite Block in Honor of Oliver Hudson Kplley to Be Unvejled Friday. A memorial mopument to Oliver Hudson Kelley, the founder of the fa mous farmer's organization, the Pa trons of Husbandry, widely known throughout the counrty s the Granges, will be unvelled and dedl ocated by Louis J, Taber of Columbus. ©Ohio, master of the National Grange, in Rock Creek Cemetery next Fri-| day afternoon at 4 o'clock Ritualistic ceremonies have been prepared for the occasion by the Na tional Grand master, who will de liver the chief address, and by whose directions invitations to the veremony have been issued by the offilals of Potomac Grange, No. 1, of the order. The event has aroused unusual in- terest in farmers’ circles throughout | the country, and delegation re ex- pected from muay of the Grange o1 ganizations in nearby States. Prominent Officials to Attend. Among the prominent Grange of ficials who already have accepted in vitations to be present are Gov. Robert P. Robinson of Delaware, treasurer of the National Grange, who, with Mrs Robinson, will take part in the cere monies; B. John Black of Randalls town, Md., the national overseer H, Dewey of Gaines, Pa., master of the Pennsylvania State Grange; Brenckman of Harrisburg, Pa., secre- tary of the Pennsylvanie ‘State Grange, and A. G. Ensor, master of the Maryland State Grange. accom- a delegation of officers of Previous to the unveiling and dedi cation of the memorial, the visiting officers of the National and State Granges will assemble at the head- quarters of the National Grange in this city, 630 Lousiana avenue north west, where automobiles wil be in waiting to take them to the cemetery Officers of Potomac Grange, No. 1 will have eharge of the ceremonies during which the memorial, together with the cemetery plot in which Mr iKelley and his entire family are in terred, will be presented by Willlam H. Landvolgt of this city, executor and residuary legatee of the Kelly | estate, to the National Grange for perpetual care and maintenance. Both will be accepted by Mr. Taber, the aster of the National Grange Massive Granite Block. The memorial is a massive rugzed granite block. something above 5 feet in height, 7 feet 6 inches in width and | 3 feet 6 inches in depth, resting ong single massive foundation stone of | appropriate proportions. On the face and the rear of the main stone are hammered panels. 2 The front panel bears the ins tion .“Oliver Hudson Kelley, Founder of the Patrons of Husbandry, The Grange, January 7. 1826-—Jan uary 20, 1913," and below it “His Wife—Temperance Lane.” The rear panel bears the simple inscription “Daughters —Julia, Fanny, Grace, Garaphella.” The foundation stone bears simply the family name The stone was taken from the quar- ries at Barre, Vt., and the monument was rved and erected by McDonnell & Sons, Buffalo, N.Y. and Barre, Vt., in accordance with provisions made in the will of Mr. Kelley's daughter Fanny, the last survivor of the family, who died in February, 1925. It stands in lot 285, section I, of Rock Creek Cemetery STATION WAMD RETURNS TO OLD WAVE LENGTH Minneapolis Director Announces Decision Was Due to Threat From Houston, Tex. Br tne Associated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., July 3 Radio station WAMD of Minneapol ] Whgl Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Tomorrow's planetary ,aspects are | tavorable and remain so, with one or the entire day, although: after sunset | they assume a benign, rather than an | actively promising, nature. It is an {-excellent opportunity - for the initia- | tion of any, task that demands cour- | age and persistency, as these will be the principal emotions engendered by the day’s influences. The signs be- speak safety, as well as success, in travel and in the evening it would be | advisable to listen and to heed the | urging that will prompt you to reveal | | yourself to the one you love and who | loves you. Engagements made spell only happiness. | Children born tomorrow will be, as a result of inherent constitutional strength, more or less exempt from the ailments that are usually asso- ciated with infancy. They will enjoy uberant health and revel in their strength. Care must be taken that in | the early period of thelr physical de- velopment they do not overtax them- | selves. This is the one danger to be | avoided. Their moral make-up will | not have, however, the same strength. | They will be weak, and too easily dis- | posed to accede to the wishes of those { who will only lead them from the | “straight and narrow.” These chil- | aren must be disciplined in their youth and receive every encouragement to | do what is right {1t tomorrow is your birthday, you are considered by your friends: very pable, absolutely dependable and re- | liable, although they do ot fail to | recognize the fact that you are dis- { posed to be imperious and somewhat | headstrong, It is true, nevertheless. that when any of your coterie of friends find themselves in difficulties | or burdened with cares and worries, | they seek you out and tell you all about 4t, and invariably find, in your advice -or assistance, the relief that | they seek.. You are not an idler, nor | have you very much in common with | the multitude that is always seeking a | thrill - rather than derive complete | satisfaction from the rest and peace of | & home circle. ' This, in spite of the fact that you always show a decided preference for the companionship of | the opposite sex. You are level- headed, never downcast, and, on the | other hand, seldom enthusiastic. You { will love with an enduring affection and a tender regard, but will at no time be carried away by emotional | sentiment. Well known persons born on- that date are: Isaac Babbitt, inventor; Julian® M. Sturtevant, educator; Wil | iam J." Florence, actor; William R. Merriam, ex-Governor of Minnesota. William R. Harper, Hebraist and ed- ucator; George B. Cortelyou, poli- tician, (Copyright. 1926.) SESQU! EXHIBIT UNIQUE. | Pennsylvania System Shows Mini- ature Railroad. A miniature railroad, built by scale and showing various types of trains of standard equipment operating on four tracks representing a typical sec- tion of the roadbed, is the principal teature of the exbibit of the Penn- sylvania Railroad opened recently in the Palace of Liberal Arts and Manu- factuges at the Sesquicentennial In- ternational Exposition in Philadelphia. Tunnels, signal towers and other mechanical contrivances are shown in accurate detail and the landscape is | representative of the territory which the “Pennsy” serves. A huge paint- ing. showing the side view of a stand- ard steel coach, in exact dimensions, torms a background for the exhibit, while the reception room in front of the mechanical arrangement is fur- nished in the §tyle used during the Colonial period. OLD ENGINE AT SESQUI. | | Fifty-Year-Old Iron Horse Puffs { Way From Baltimore. Puffing its way laboriously from Baltimore, the largest passenger loco- | motive in use 50 years ago has taken |its place beside one of the mammoth “iron horses” recently turned out by the Baldwin Locomotive Works, at an exhibit of that corporation at the Ses quicentennial International Exposition in_Philadelphia. | The wonder-provoking engine of a | two very brief, uncertain periods; for } which jumped to a higher wave length | half century ago, which was one of a week ago, jumped back to its old | the chief attractions at the Centennial spot in the ether last night and will | Exposition in 1876, is a pitiful pigmy stay there, Stanley Hubbard, its di-|beside the massive locomotive designed rector, announced. p | for use in 1926. The Baltimore engine The decision to return 1o its origi- | took a prize at the Centennial Exposi- nal broadcasting wave was reached |tjon, and its noisy and slow operation after WAMD received a letter from |yas'a constant marvel while it was on the management of station KPRO of | view, Ho\;ston Tex which operates on - 296,9 meters, the wave upon which WAMD had just alighted, The let $65,000 IN PRIZES. ter suggested possible court action ’ if KPRO confirmed reports that its programs were receiving interference | Sesqui Live Stock Show Entries from the Minneapolis station Mr. Hubbard, in a statement last . Opens. night, pointed out the disadvantages | . 4 ; priority on its original wave, the DOS- | oy will inspect the entries and O O D entina) down | aalecki fiin winhers'in the Hve stock terfered with and the breaking down show which will be a part of the of good will and wrecking of co-opera , . i lis. | Sesquicentennial International Ex- tion among the broadcasters and lis. :pou\llun, in Philadelphia, from Sep. teners. | tember 12 to 19. More than $65,000 | ; ot in prize money will be, distributed. RADIO NEws The stock show will be one of the outstanding events of its kind, and | virtually all of the leading breeders (Continued from Page Thirty-four.) |of the country have announced they i will participate. Entries will be ac- 1922, should be progressively worse | cepted for the show until August 10. to 1928, and that in succeeding vears | Blanks can be obtained by breeders reception conditions should improve | and exhibitors from the live stock de- and be at their best again in 1933. It | partment, Sesquicentennial Exposi- will be interesting to see. whether | tion, Philadelphia. A banquet will be this occurs and whether future obser- | tendered the exhibitors at the vations on sun-spots will show a closer | Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Phila- correlation with radio reception con-| delphia on September 14. ditions.” : < e g s There is no definite relation between | < cadin iransmission eftects and the ~ High and Low Power Men. aurora or magnetic storms, Dr. Del-| gome people are born with more linger points out, admitting. however. | manpower than others, just as some that these phenoniena do affect the | automobiles are made with more wire telegraph . service, frequently |horsepower than others, according to paralyzing it entirely. The only af- Dr. Max Seham of the University of fect on radio waves is that in some | Minnesota. He declares, says the it has been knowr to either | popular Science Magazine, that you w increase the intensity of | ghould not expect a half-manpower the received waves. Weather, in gen- ) man to do as much work as a whole- . has little affect on radio recep- | manpower . individual. ‘The nervous tion: the principle cause of radio|system of the former is not equal to vagaries lie in the upper reaches of | the strain and may break underft. the air, whereas the Weather I8 1ATRE- | o st s }v manufactured, or changed in the | S lower fevels of the atmosphere. be- | low the clouds. Weather conditions and distant radio reception are quite | independent, he believes. Static, on the other hand, nsists of waves which are identical in character with adio waves, although they ure caused by natural electrical discharges in the air Lightning is another form of such discharges. Statis as is pretty well known. occurs most frequently in the torrid zones and in storm areas, being worse in Summer than in_Winter months. \ At present the only method of fighting static and other interference is by trying to| aveld them, but science, it is believed, will finally diminish the interference from these sources. Man Works With Teeth. Ben Pansie of Omro, Wis., is both a farmer and manufacturer, although he can neither walk nor use his hands His factory operations are all per- formed by the use of his teeth and chim, to the extent even of 'sawing, ainting, hammering and using a drill. {e writes with pen and ink, holding tho pen in his teeth. His infirmity was the vesult of infantile paralysis; = THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. JULY 95, 1926—PART 1 $APRIL X There is no factor of safety, from double thick genuine plate glass to the solidarity of the roof, which escapes the painstaking investiga- - tion of Fisher inspectors. Quality above all else, is the creed of Fisher craftsmanship. And Fisher has always regarded' the safety and - comfort of those who ride in Fisher Bodies the surest proof of Fisher quality. FISHER BODI " GENERAL MOTORS