Evening Star Newspaper, January 9, 1927, Page 5

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\ X gommis watershed, v FOREST PRESERVE PURCHASE FAVORED Woods’ Conservation on Po- tomac Tributaries Will Pro- tect Water Supply Here. 'd the water supply pital fo future of Agriculture will of virginal nt and Pen jonal the Department purchase $4,000 mountain tervite dleton countie . which will be annexed to the Monongahela National Forest. Authority for given vesterday the the acres this purchase was by the National F est Commission in approving the project, which carr the indorse- t of Secretary Jardine. Repre tive Frank L. Bowman of West Virginia. an active member House District committee, the project and has Leen intensively itercoting State and Federal author. during the past voar ual purck: ctions ected to he begun until June, when the commission will another semi-annual acquisition gram, according to its custom, but already negotiations are un wa with owners of parcels of land in the section. Cost to Be About $300,000. While it i 1t this time to estimate addition will cost, it figur> will amount to close million do! an price paid reservations in recent The new area will tegrai part of the for designated gahela Nutl ready an ac ld dopt is probable to cost of average fores an stern vears hecome st resel the Monon which al 400,000 Forest area_of about in_West Virginia and will form another link chain of national park Appalachian Mountains Shenandoah National ind the area of the proposed doah National Park, all of ust hevond the door to the pital he purchase of the new area was decided upon at a full session of the | which has as its mem- | Sec ary of War Davi re- tary of the Interior Work, Secretary of Agriculture Jardine. Senator Henry W. Keves of New Hampshire, Senator Lee S. Overman of North Carolina Representative Willis C. Hawley of Oregon and Representative Gordon Lee of Georgia Regulates Water Flow. Other officials having to do with the purchase included Col. W. B. Greeiey. chief of the Forest Service, which awency will act in the purchas ing und maintenance of the forest aresa; Evan W. Kelley, district for- est " E. Hedge, forester, who for many 's has been assigned in the Monongahela section and made the report on the new which the commission acted it the he in the areas ir includir Forest Shen: new area and | of the great forest de- ein were held to be of » than casual importance to the “apital City because of the part un dergrowth and forests located an a uch as is that section of West Virginia, in regulating the flow of water from rainfall. Tt was pointed out that the forests check the flow of rainfall, permitting the water to seep slowly down the slopes of the watershed and ulti- mately into the tributaries of the Potomac, assuring a normal flow of water in the Potomac, on which many Places, including Washington, draw for city water. Loss Would Cause Floods. On the other hand, it was explained, should this Potomac watershed area be permitted to become barren of trees, through exploitation of the tim- berlands, 1orest fires or other de- structive agencies, the rainfall would sweep down the mountain sides and into the river, causing many floods, | deeply eroding the surface of the area and causing the Potomac to become a_muddy, siltfilled stream. For these reasons, Mr. Hawley as- “serted, is of vital importance to Washington that this section be put | under protection as a reservation.” Purchase of forest reservation lands made each year by the Forest rvice out of a lump sum appro- priated annually by Congress to cover such needs. Last fiscal year approxi mately $2,000,000 was spent for such purposes, largely in the East, and for the current fiscal year a sum of about $1,000,000 was provided. It is ex-i pected a total of nearly $2,000,000 will be recommended for the purpose | of | of the | sponsored | fter | pro- | {the spokesman for the President got MONONGAHELA NATIONAL FOREST THE SUNDAY *HrGERSTON JFREDeRcy ment as a forest reserve. W. Va., adjo Shaded portion of the map shows territory to be acquired by the Govern- The land lies In Grant and Pendleton Co ng the Monongahela National Forest. ties, | By the Associated Press | A satirical thrust at that “mytholog- | ical creature,” the “spokesman fm" the President,” so frequently quoied in the newspapers, was made vestel day in the Senate Senator Reed, Democrat, Missouri, amid frequent | bursts of laughter from his col-| leagues. rising to debate anew the Nic uation, the usually fie declared in a soft voice tha: for some weeks he had been “wandering in the mists of doubt and uncertainty with | reference to the public business of | the country ‘ Immediately leaned forw: from cloak newspaper headlong for by the Senate was about | raguan sit. Missourian the crowded rd, Senators rooms and corgi correspondents rushed front seats in the press | gallery with the expectation that | Senator Reed was about to lambast | the administration on its Nicaraguan policy. galleries | therad | ors and Veiled in Mystery. ; ““There was suddenly mter)v(‘lod\ into the news items of the press u mysterious and nameless Individ | designated as the ‘spokesman for the | President’,” continugd the Senator, | still in a mild voice.” ““The certificate | ' in doubt and uncertainty. “Who it was that had risen io the dignified position and the responsible | task of envisioning to the American | people the mental processes of their | Chief cutive nobody appeared to | know. Naturally, what we obtained | was in the nature of hearsay evi- | dence. It came from the ‘spokesman | for the President.’ And we did not | know who was the author ever. of the hearsay or secondary statement. 1 have been questioning. all of these ! months, whether he was some myth ological creature who had been in vented by the wicked newspaper re porters of the City of Washington. “I am now in a state of hopeless confusion and it is in the hope that we may get a little light that I am venturing to take the time of the Senate. Reading from an article in the Washington Post, in which both the President and the “spokesman” were | quoted regarding Nicaragua, Senator Reed said: “I am in confusion now and doubt and uncertainty as to whether, when speaking. the President through something himself, | ventured to say 'REED FAYS HE'S BEFUDDLED BY "WHITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN"| {Senate Laughs as He Wants to Know How to Discover Identity of Mysteri- ous Individual. | fou |ing |less sitence | comes more desperate because I read of his appointment remains :shrumlml‘m | of his administration.’ or whether this is a bit of bad news- paper work ‘My confusion is worse ded when I turn to the W on Herald of Vesterday morning. There 1 find the statement flatly ‘President Coolidge yesterday pledged all the resources of this Government | to protect American lives and prop- erty in any part of the globe erever they may be in danger. That sounds as though President Coolidge made the statement. But the next sentence is: “‘“The statement, delivered through his official spokesman, was aimed di- rectly at th vexing situation in agua.’ 0 1 do not know which of these two. statements to believe. 1 do not know whether it was the President who spoke this, whether this tongue- d been broken by him, somehody ventured o him on this important But as 1 proceed through mental_condition be- or whether speak for question, the article my this +‘Standing and reading the ancient documents of the American threat of Mexican invasion of 1878, President Coolidge was unusually grave, solemn and firm. He explained that it was a note prepared by Secretary Evarts nd delivered to the Mexican govern- by Minister Foster. President | Coolidge reaffirmed it as the policy He Seeks w why Enlightenment. should the President have looked unusually grave and solemn and firm as the spokesman delivered this message to the Ameri- an people, or is it true that the President stands beside the spokes- man, or behind the spokesman, or inside the spokesman, and thus the spokesman’s change of countenance properly reflected the emotions which surged through the breast of the President so that the spokesman stands unusually erect, grave, solemn and firm? Or is the President there at all, and has the newspaper man represented the true situation? “1 am asking these questions now in the hope that there may be some one close enough to the White House to enlighten the Senate as to whether or not the President’s spokesman is the President himself or whether there is really a third party acting in a representative capacity, and if so, who the third party is, in order that we may determine whether he is a faithful reporter of the senti- ments of the President.” ‘ORGY OF CORRUPTION’ LAID TO REPUBLICANS Kentucky Sennwr-Elect Calls Pres- ent Tariff “Boldest Exam- ple of Iniquity.” By the Associated Press SPRINGFIELD, Mo., January Republicans were assajied as perpetra- tors of an unprecedented “orgy of cor ruption” in a Jackson day addres: here tonight by Representative Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky, Democratic United States Senator-elect. B SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at and_Sailings From New York. ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Estonia—Copenhagen Conrad Mohr—Bergen iers .. mazone—Port Sprewald—Hamburs Schodack—Havre. Agwistone—San Pedro Medea—Maracaibo Sarcoxie—RBordeaux A Singapore Maru—Hambirg DUE TODAY. Caledonia—West Indies. . MOX Lapland—Antw {Business Squad to Exercise on STAR, WASHINGTON €., JANUARY 9 EDWARDS RENEWS POISON RUM FIGHT Urges Rededication of Demo- | | cratic Party to “Liberty- | Loving” Creed. { By the Associated ATLANTIC CITY §.—Renewing his attack on the Anti Saloon League, denouncing “Mr. Mel- | lon's poisoned rum' and pleading for | religious tolerance, Senator Edwards, | Democrat Jersey, last night | n of his party to | creed of Andrew Wilson | Demo- | N. J., January the “liberty Jackson and Woodrow At the gnpual dinner of the atic executive committee of Atlantic County, Senator Edwards said that ‘if the fires of liberty burn more brightly for everyone—white and black, Jew and gentile, there will be | no necessity for antisaloon leagues or any other super-governmental leagues, because the people will then govern themselves.” “Insufferable minorities have been in the saddle driving a willing beast to destruction,” he continued. “It is | far more important to take the poison out of some citizens mouths and un warranted activities than it is to take it out of rum. | >oison rum the dere the men whose lives are already but a poisoned democricy combed with a toxic intolerance whole nation ‘Again, poisoned rum kills the ones for whom laws are enacted Laws are passed to protect ignorance, not to protect intelligence. “A government which must resort | to murder without trial and without | warning to enforce a law will ulti mately resort to wholesale repudia tion of her citizens’ inalienable rights. | “And when this day arrives, God | help Amer; ARREST MAY COST WIFE AND FORTUNE Son of Boston Woman Faces Loss of $250,000 Due to Theft Charge unfortunate, | and women spaired of, honey kills kills the very | By the Associated Prese. CHICAGO, Janu: L frowned thrice today wpon Luman K Beede, said to be a member of a wealthy Boston family, who pondered tonight in police cell over his multi plied misadventures which may sepa e him from a quarter of a million | dollars’ inhabitance, his wife and a $1,000 diamond ring A few minutes after Beede had been lodged in prison charged with larceny of the ring—said to belong to his sis ter-in-law, cago—a deputy sheriff served a sum. mons that his wife had begun action for a_separate maintenance. And to cap this predicament Beede's attorneys told him that his entangle ment with the law probably would cause him to lose the $250,000 which he was to’have inherited from his mother, Mrs. Abbie S. Beede of Bos- ton, on his fortieth birthday anniver- sary, on condition that he ‘“behave himself up to that time.” When his mother, whose family had lived for generations in the fashion- | able Back Bay region of Boston, died, five years ago, Beede's attorney said she ‘created a $250,000 spendthrift trust fund for her son She stipulated that if Beede, then 30, should prove himself a worthy heir by working hard. remaining sober and refraining from misconduct which might gain him unpleasant notoriety, | he should be given the principal of the trust when he reached the age of 40. In the meantime he was to be paid $200 a month from the income of the trust fund. MACHINES FAIL, MEN | WILL TACKLE SNOW| Fortune Blocked Highway That Defied Plows. By the Associated Press. ASHLAND, Wi January Store-softened muscles are to attempt | to regain some of their lost prestige | and at the same time win a Winter's 16 KNOWN DEAD | Many 0ther Injured Refugeesl | By the Associated Press. | tainsides | ceived | others we Mrs. Ruth Stevens of Chi- | | panied | pletely the morale of the sorely tried PROGRES: S BEING MADE ONSTONE MOUNTAIN MEMORI “W P75 g 'llll"' / | "fllllllluml'v:a- P O ull‘ll b \\\\w" \ [ \\\\\%\ R AN n\\\v \v m\\m )).M)l"/ Approximately 400,000 cubic feet of stone has been removed from the side of the mountain to give the carving ow working on the last and The picture shows the relative size of the 0 cubic feet of stone was removed. dicular surface. The work is being done by “benches” and th the top of which is on the level of the kness of the hors completed. lln 'h» first bflu ch™ ea a_perpel 1 “bench, ntractor is Y MOUNTAIN CARVING. FAST TAKING SHAPE IN ARMENIA []UAKEt Figures of Gigantic Horse- men Soon to Stand Out on Memorial. Figures of the gigantic horsemes of the Stone Mountain Memorial will | slowly begin to stand out by the end | of the present month, according to J. | J. Haverty, business man and art pa- {tron of Atlanta who is chair- |man of the construction committee {of the Stone Mountain Memorial As- ation Already there has been removed nite from the face of the mountain mounting to more than 400,000 cubic This almost marks completion f the first stage in the undertaking. the Amerlcan relief | Following the removal of this super- | refuge in the opes | fMIOUS rock, the “roughing out” of the | 5 : | figures of soldiers and horses will be | undertaken. Both the sculptor, Au | gustus Lukeman, and association_of- delighted with the fact | carving contractor continues p at least three months ahead | schedule. his enormous volume of granite, the equivalent of 40 trainloads of cars each,” states Chairman Haverty. has been removed in a little more | than 90 days, at a labor cost of 2'4 cents per cubic foot. In the opora- tio conducted by the former artist, 130,000 cubic feet were removed in 18 months’ time at a cost of 50 cents | a foot. “The present contractor is now working on the final ‘bench’ of 4 se- ries of six such stages,” continued Mr. Haverty, “the top of which fs on a level with the knees of the horses. This will bring the carving area to an approximately perpendicular sur- face. The second operation, to com- mence almost immediately, will con- sist of outlining roughly the figures of steeds and riders. The third and final operation will be the finished carving. Brave Snow to Seek Mountain Safety. a AKAN, Armenia, January bitants fled from their homes | wept plains to the moun for shelter when severe earth shocks, lasting ne minute, shook the whole of Southern Armenia yesterday Sixteen persons are known to have been killed, 19 re- serious injuries and several ightly hurt. less violent recurrence s today. During both over sno: There wa of the quak disturbances worke took accom. the 1 ed com convulsions, rumblini destroy! ive by loud few months have Since November 60 shock population. have been nearl ! everal days ago the well-known seismologist of Russia, Prof. N forov, predicted that a far more ter- rible earthquake than that which de astated Armenia last May might oc cur there at any time. He described Leninakan, which was the center of the May disturbance, as in a vast amphitheatre of volcanic action. It was his theory that gigantic layers had been loosened and that the subterranean rock and earth, seek- ing to find a level, would cause con- vulsions for months. Avalanche Buries Village. TIFLIS, Republic of Georgia, Janu- ary 8 (P.—Most of the inhabitants were buried alive when avalanche: crashing hundreds of feet, obliterated an entire village in the Kudar dis [ trict of Southern Ossetia, which is | the name given to the central part of the main Caucasus range. Soldlers are working desperately to extricate the victims. the Okon- sky district snow slides have de-| stroyed more than 300 peasant homes | and the headquarters of the local government, with a heavy death toll b5 SRTAAE NOTED HORSEMAN DIES. LAPAYETTE, Ind., January 8 (®). ~—Ji|\!hd Crouch, widely known im- | porter and exhibitor of French, Ger- , Belgian and English bred horses, died today in his eighty-fourth year. Influenza caused his death. In addition to his stock farm here there | Sit Ru{ht Down -any time between 5 and 10 p.m. daily, or 12 to 10 Sunday | of SAVE ANCIENT RELICS Belgian Authorlhefi Preserve Spot | e in Janus 8 ties taken in Belgian BRUSSELS, an authos the spot the Africa for Scientists. charg: Kongo where Stone Age tools recently uncovered by engineers new railroad. The curiously shaped other weapons, appear to those of the Neolithic to indicate that life in Afri tools, to be ttme closely resembled life in The protect Belgian autborities the spot until of excavation. building s well as arrowheads period, were and similar | wnd | at that ! urope. | want competent | | | archaeologists can supervise the work | | LaGuardia a1 Baker, DRY FUNDS USED FOR BRIDGE CLUB- Frokibition Money Supportes - New York Organization. Mellen Tells House. to fReilitate laws The House verse report res ary Mellon for tion with the New Secretary Mellon wrote that | and Ralph W. Bickle were empl )y the prohibition unit cover” agents. He declir how they spent the mc them, saying “that would laying open to violators deta the means used by the Treas obtaining ev It has been the effort,” § v Mellon said, “to discover and [ | the prosecution of large conspiracie.f in violatic he law g Mr. Bielaski hag been ‘\.wwv,' fruitful Through him, many lar . . Cement Plant Projected.'.' ses have been brought to trial a Di: | convictions had teh to 1 "INSBUR nstruction A capacity o full oper tion w MAF |s—c | with when in | in connec en started by me Co.. it officially by J It will employ H announced today president | men —) Hotel Inn 604-610 9th St. N.W. Iv. $1.00. $1.50. $2.00 §7 fopms, S0 weekly: $10.50 rooms. $8: | §14 with ‘ioiler. ehower and avatory. 2'in room. 50 % more. Rooms like Mother D. J. KAUFMAN== 1005 Pa. A ve. 1724 Pa. Ave. CHARGE ACcCOU T3 _INVITED —Big Values! —Low Prices!! Busy Days 1444 That’s the story of January, 1927 Radin ot 500 Thirty-five Dollar SUITS & O'COATS —pull up your chair, spread your napkin and revel in our new $1.50 Regular Dinner Bigger helpings and better cooking — fresh, flavory eatments — in surround- ings to delight your wife, too. (Welcome to our 6ic Luncheon, as well!) Bert L. Olmsted OLMSTED GRILL 1336 G STREET Invitingly Open Sundays for the coming fiscal vear. | ATBert Bafiin.— Hambiirg | Cameronia—=Glaskow Minnetonka—London Fort Victoria—Bermuda Mouterey—Progreso Colombia—San Francisc DUE TUESDAY battle with nature. | he maintained branch farms at Lon- pirhe snowblocked highway that con | don, Ontario; Nashville, Tenng Sedali, { s and and erior is to be | Sacramento, Calif. ortland, the temporary gvmnasium. Incident- [,f,'}“_. St iStautiton. Va, |Hehak ally this road has been the victor In | exnibited horses at every State fair in e efforts of man-made machinery | he vmited State to clear a path for traffic i ae Ashland business men, numbering | | Authorization for the purchase .)75 He referred to the present tariff as such forest reservations dates back | ‘the boldest example of legislative in- 1o 1911, when the Weeks act was put |iquity ever crystallized into law,” as dnto effect preservation of | result of which “the cost of living still avigable rivers. Later, [ mounts.” 2 ssage of the Clarke.McNary | “An effort is being made and will act enlarged the scope of the law to |be made to blind the people to their provide for the development of timber, | misfortune and to the misdeeds of . some of their leaders by building up Funds Go for Roads. !a myth around the talk of fabulous | Acquisition of the 54,000 acres in |economy practiced by the Coolidge |{ West Virginia will open that section (administration,” he sajd. e in the near future to much greater | He declared the cost of government (Robert E. Lee—Havana public use through the development |had ‘increased, and “at the \\hnv\“‘“"‘ Ana—Valparaiso of highways with the aid of Federal | House itself, which has been heralded | DU funds and many smaller rc nd |as the fountain of all economy, the | purie—Havre forest trails. For not only is the 4 |increase has been greatest of all,” in {alombo—Genoa subject to allotments of funds under | creasing from $200,000 the first Hard. | Lara—Maracaibo the Federal aid road act, but also to |INg year to $483,000 for the last Cool- | DUE THURSDAY contributions made for road and |idge vear. p, Buren—Marseille school purposes which are paid to !hl—l ‘counties from receipts of the forest reservations themselves. Under law | 35 per cent of the gross receipts from Ahe forest reserv =, accruing from the sale of lumber, leasing ng | lands, etc.. is pay to the county | nment school an 1 pur Ansonia—Southampton Aquitania—Southampton Asturias—Southampton Banker—London ban—Buenos Aires Lorenzo—San Juan = . Pact Up Again Tomorrow. After a two days’ truce, the Senate will resume tomorrow its consideration of the Lausanne treaty with Turkey, which was called up in executive ses- jon early last week. Proponents of | the measure are seeking now to ob. tain an agreement for a time for a final vote. Get Ready NOW to Be a Bricklayer! Pay Runs From $12 to $18 Per Day —Get These Facts— 100, decided the opportunity had come to bolster up their physiqu well as to demonstrate the superiority of man over machinery. So they agreed | to take up pick and shovel and try to whittle down the snow-packed high- way. At the first sign of a thaw the men will go to work, and continue at the task only long enough for decision, which, in_their opinion, will be a highway clear of snow. Reminiscent of war days, a ‘“chow wagon,” with ‘a cook on board, will accompany the diggers they at- tempt to make an impression on the five and one-half miles of impassable highway WEDNESDAY President V; Miunargo ) 3anta Mart . .Dec. 30 Jan Jan Jan! Jan Jan Jan POWERS THREATEN WAR IF SHANGHAI HARMS FOREIGNERS Page.) Georke—Bernitda. . DUE FRIDAY. | Stuttart—Bremen DUE SATURDAY an—Liverpool kholm—Gothenburg fornia—e | Orizaba—H 1 OUTGOIN Fine Wool and Worsted Suits—in all colors, all sizes, all models. Oregon City (Virgin Wool) O'Coats in single and double breasted blues, browns and greys. $ 1 .65 Two-Fifty Winter 3 for $4.75 o Jan Man Struck by Auto. Jim Margino, 43 years old. of T14 Euclid street was knocked down by an automobile operated by Luther Berrick of 3701 Grant road while walking on Tilden street in Rock Creek Park e vesterd: Margino was treated by Dr. R. J. Benoit at arfield Hos al for a shoulder. He later went home. Jan Jan Jan Jan MA (Continued rmm First $4.5 expe Authorizatior 00,000 for € f or- | in 8| the 1 tional v n additiona $3,000,000 to n the forest d 2 t themselves, fiture o 300 British women and children | | were landed in this ¢ They left | | Hankow Thursday with but scant| ' | notice, some of the children being car mesorted officiall % cun | ried away wrapped in blankets 00 T 10 MYy of this SUM | The refugees made the long rive s in W Vir |rip in two badly overcrowded boat SAILING TUESDAY the Poyang and the Loongwoo. - One | pyonia—pansie " £ide g vessel equipped to uccommodate only in Good Condition. 20 forelgn passengers cs the east of | The other, with a capacity area, along | 180 & rd Branch, | Little Food on Vessels. River. | yvpon the rioting Chinese took over | NRINZ | the British concession at Hankow | N AVer | Wednesday the British women and! Hedge | chjjaren of the district were hastily e dam- |y ken uboard ships in the river in| e I VeXy | commandeered lavnches P Dt e At midnight, little exploited, | . me worse, orders were given the, A8 qamre or vessels to depart The vessels were not ndequ:\leh‘w,’”‘! ket provisioned, but by means of ration- | Allante—Barcaiona | ing sufficient food was supplied to|Spreewald—Hamburg | every one until the vessels reached |Monterey—Progreso orenzo—san Juan ‘\tmk‘hm where they were reprovi- | afan Ruria—Crisional sloned [ Nova Scotia—St. Thomas anghai organizations made ample | ILING FRIDAY arrangemints to take care of the ref-| prijceiown—o ugees, many British and other uhna‘um.‘.m residents offering their homes. Among | Matura—¢ eorgetown > arrivals were two British police. I,,;";‘,f[’j\, it who with other foreign ‘mem- | sirudshoim=-Santo Lamiigo Lers of the British police, had been | Amazone—P . pluced on the black list by uit to be killed at the first opportunity SATLING The secretary of the British muni- ‘A..-'-uwfiknu.‘rm’,; pal council, also said to have been |Minnetonka—London blacklisted, is understood to have been Aquitania—Southampton taken aboard a gunboat | Lapland—Napies Asturias—African criise Saiicon—Genon Six-sided nursing bottles that not roll have been put.on the market. ecn made | some o MERS, SAILING MONDAY ia—Alexandria : jexandria Bampton Castle—Cape Town is be spent $23.000 $4. Virginia ginia. Forest The new tract lies to the present Monongah: the North Fork and Sou tributaries to the The ar has an from 1,000 age of 2,500, 8 to be remarkably age, its forests good condit said, has 1 jnasmuch as it inaccessible. Pointing Union Suits Ecru or grey (34 to 46) $1.39 3 for $4 M Argentina will produce 223,000,000 AL00 A M- | hushels of wheat this season. 300 P e B:00 PM - DNESDAY With our JOB ANALYSIS PLAN OF INSTRUCTION we will train you in three months to work at this BIG WAGE TRADE. —You learn BLUE PRINT READING, Figuring and Estimating Along WITH YOUR TRADE. for 3 North—St SAILING W/ Kranconia—World cruise President Harding— Bremer ourdonnais—Bordeaux ovidence— N ar Johns. | rern Potor elevation r to 4,000 feet, with is said by M free from eed is very now Midpight Noon 11:00°AM. 3200 PIM. 1:00 P'M Noon Noon 6:00 P.M Noon 11:00 AM Two-Dollar Pajamas rrilio Cambric or Flannel e R L S when the situation be. | collstone—Buenos Al being All colors—all sizes 69c 3 for $2 less SAILING THURSDAY 6:00 P.M 4:00 P.M Noorn 6:00 P\ 11:00 A'M Noor D 3:00P M. Ties or Hose. Silk, Wool, or Silk and Wool. Novelty or plain. All sizes te the dang f er t ting this to be destroyed as for est area. Mr. Hedge reported it to he Very definitely subject to erosion “One of the big assets of this sec ton,” Mr. Hedge said, “is the re +tional possibilities. Its big, or streams, rugged mountains, olifts and quiet and restful camping tites make it a veritable paradise for f-door lovers. whatever their whimsies." Our Winter Class starts Monday, and by en- tering it you will be ready in the egrly Spring to “CALL FOR THE LIN Easy Payment Plans BUILDING TRADES SCHOOL 710 OFSt. N.W. high Day and Evening Classes Money's Worth or Money Back D. J. KAUFMAN:= Free Lessons Coupon This COUPON entitles you to ONE FREE LESSON IN BRICKLAYING presented any d: this week at the BUTLDING. TRADES® SCHOOL 710 0 Si. N.W.. at any hour be tween 10 'AM. and 10 P.M. “ what she believed were purglars working in her home, % vear-old Rachel Weinrich of London, Lrept downstairs alone to surprise | them, and extinguished u fire’ that inreatened to destroy the home in \vhich her parents. brothers and sis ers werg slequng : RocK-BOTTOM PRICES Hearing SATURDAY Noon | 1:00°AM. | 1AM | Yoor Noon a0k | AM. e Main Office—6th and C Sts. S.W. Camp Meigs—5th & Fla. Ave Fathiamet—Acera Wil pirie—Havre Alanta—Liverpoot

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