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" JAIL BREAD DIETER CRAVES BEEFSTEAK Thomas Nelson Feels Ill on Fifth Day, But Doctor Sees | Nothing Serious. By the Associated Press TEKAMAH, Nebr., September 15. Nothing alarming is apparent in the condition of Thomas Nelson, 50-year old liquor law violator, who is on his | fifth day of bread and water punish- | ment, to demand an immediate change | of diet, County Physictan H. to be under-| nourished afier ng a week on the diet and his s e was altered to | provide 10-day streiches on bread and | two 20.day periods jail sentence, as Judge Chatt when cellmate ordered by Carson and n i be comple explained, the blood tests t be an Omaha lnbor Dr. periods of brex made reducing t injunction | *t Court here, | S| child, Mrs. Gertrude I street southeast, today filed in the nst her husband, Alton C. White, she says in the declaration, is | la poultry ket. having an income of $7,000 a year. alleges that he has the hoard he ton in the the hourd the ¢ No action ha en taken in be half of I sentenced 60 days o o 1at Harting ton, the f d alternate 10 da of which must le served on Lread water dfe . County Judge V Hrvant, wiio sentenced Dirks when he | pleaded f trans wortin < he wpplication 1 a respite fro ahu \ 1926. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ‘C.. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER -15, (Covypight. 1020, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc. ooVt Mark ReeD.€ P G ight, 1926, by The Bell . 2% 30 GERMANS ARE DEAD IN EPIDEMIC’ OF TYPHUS 1,100 Cases Reported of Raging and Unchecked Disease—Red Cross Rushes Aid. ted Press. iermany, September typhus is raging @ been 30 deaths nd 1,100 cases of the ase have . The Red Cross Is rush 500 beds and ambu in, Hambung and al barracks al iy have been erected here have been 2 d cases of the dises " PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION BY GENE BYRNES ths and 40 Sy PAYS son had weighs 119 pounds. WIFE CHARG.ES CRUELTY. Twelft who. She sive, they we January Mrs torneys d said he “must have eaten too much bread.” keep thinking of beefsteak,” Nelson declared. Paays and that « rted her. s ma w Wilton J o found that Car- | Yeatman and Alfred M. Schw lost 4 Comdr. H. AIR COMRADES TO HONOR LIEUT. NORTON AT BURIAL Fellow Marine Officers Will Fly Above Grave at Arlington Dur- ing Rites Tomorrow. pounds. 1le now Nelson weighed @ loss of 6 pounds since lowing Lawson H. omplained of fllness yes and W. L. “1 orave a beef- {are over they The body of Licut. Harmon J. Nor- ton, U. 8. M. C.. who was killed in the crash of the Navy Curtiss RXC2| Y W, g plane Monday fternoon off | < Point, will be laid to rest in | Arlington Natlonal Cemetery tomes. row afternoon by his comrades of the + limited divorce, alimony tody of their 17-month-old White, 518 Howard W, tired navy services will Myer chapel er_of The sbyvterian funer be conducted in the I at 2:30 the Quan: body then will be placed on a caisson and will be escorted to the grave by arines from_the eld. Norton's organiz four Marine Corps ed v officers at the field, formation, with one fils At-|left blank in tribute to the noted H. | airman Honorary pallbearers will be Lieut. District Supreme Court a member of ler in the Eastern Mar- Mr navy retired f Da ttention to other w Lieut. head | Quantico, e plaintiff sa 8 ried in Baltimore, Md., 1924 hite is represented b, Lamber at 2 o'clock. N. reau of Aeronautics, marine Harold, Major and J. Sanderson, McKittri During the brief s grave the formation pull to one side and when the rites passing down over dropping flower his home, 3117 Monday after a short illness. yard for Mrs. Mary Squ Funeral servi at. the residence’ tomorrow son_will officiate. in Glenwood Cemetery. Mullinix of the Bu- and the fol- tors: Capts, . Moore, Lieuts. C. F. Schilt vices at the overhead will will form into column, the grave and 'DAVIS EXPIRES. Davis, 58 years old, re- d machinist, died at uth Dakota avenue, He was the choir of the Sher- wood Presbyterian Church. s was empl ed at the bout 24 years until rs ago. He is survived “harlotte Davis: a rna Dav: nd a e. be conducted fternoon Walter I, Eagle- Interment will be s W Rev. ow ready for you | Men of Washington! Clothes that would cost fully $35 elsewhere! ECAUSE we were very successful in concentrating on one price in our out-of-town stores, we've decided to adopt that policy for Washington! From now on, $22.50 will be our one and only price! With Bell Clothes, it's not only a matter of low price-tags—it's the QUALITY of Clothes you can be proud of! Thousands of Suits! UR tremendous stocks include all the new Fall patterns and colors.. Chalk stripes, tans, Autumn browns, plaids in all new shades. Serges, worsteds, silk mixtures. Every cloth and style you'd look for in a $35 suit! The $22.50 price is possible only because we make the clothes in our own factory—we buy every stitch of thread and buttons that goes into them. We're satisfied with a small margin of profit—and concentrating on one price only permits the greatest clothes value in Washington! Splen- did $35 clothes for $22.50! 920 F Street 941 Penna. Ave. q {7 ) B, ) ) : G take place at the Jefferson Hotel where the Atlantic Deeper Water- ways Association is holding its annual meeting, and the delegates will be guests at the ceremony. Mayor J Fulmer Bright will make the presen- tation on behalf of the city. The members of the Kappa Alpha Fraternity will later in the evening |RICHMOND TO GIVE MEDAL TO COMDR. BYRD TONIGHT Hero of Polar Flight Will Return Flag He Carried on Trip to Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Special Dispateh to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., September 15.— Lieut. Comdr. Richard E. Byrd this evening will be the guest of the city. He will be presented with the handsome gold medal voted him by the city in recognition of his daring in being the first man ever to fly over the North Pole. The presentation will will receive from him the flag of the fraternity, which he carried with him on his famous trip. The flag was { presented to Comdr. Byrd on the eve jof his journey. The dinner is to take place at the Commonwealth Club, the arrangements heing under the direc- tion of Col. Jo Lane Stern. The members of the family of Comdr. Byrd, including his mother, will be on [ By PETER is a sprightly, What It Was N. W. Ayer & Son say: “THE audience to be reached by school advertising is high- ly restricted. e is himited 10 areading public with children to educate and with the means to send them to private schools. When the time comes for children to goaway to school, the first question which parents usually ask is, ‘Where shall we look for re- liable and adequate informa- tion? " .... Private Schools in America spend more money for -Advertising in Cosmopolitan than in any other magazine. tender a dinner to Comdr. Byrd and | F mop Forestville Woman Dies. | Special Dispatch to The Rtar "ORESTVILLE, Md., September 15. |-—News reached here vesterday of the | death at Providence Hospit: |ington, D. C.. of Mrs. Lau | Fowler. She is survived by fiv 5% Compounded Semi-Annually Assets Over $12,000,000 Surplus, $1,000,000 Cor. 11th & E Sts. N.W. Temporary location during econstrne- tion of onr new bide.. 1004 F St. N.W JAMES BERRY, Pre: nt JOSHUA W. CARR, Sec’y Funeral services will be held tomor row at the Episcopal Church here. ising novelties in [ consisted almost alntings and pr masters” are giving way to modern ideas. American abroad equipment r will have a that of 1922 B. KYNE joyous Novel of a Girl Who Knew All About and a Young Man Who Counted His Million Before ItHatched. Itbeginsin OCTOBER sts lnternational combined with olitan NOW ON SALE