Evening Star Newspaper, July 31, 1927, Page 4

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e vt 1927—PART 1. Woman of Fulure‘;tREQUIEM SERVICE Seenas Wage Earner| HELD FOR FERDINAND For‘Less Strong Sex’| STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C evosue] (FFICIALS T0 01 IN BRIDGE OPENING 1F’rince of Wales, Dawes and| | Kellogg to Speak at Buf- falo Next Sunday. K DAWES PLAN HELD BURDEN ON BERLIN Reinhold Doubts Germans’ Ability to Meet Pay- i i THE SUNDAY _JULY the Patriarch of the Rumanian ortho- dox church chanted a Te Deum. Queen Marle was attended by Tleana, Prince Nicholas and the for- mer King and Queen of Greece. Be- side the king's tomb, three silk cush- fons were placed and on these knel: the queen and her two daughters. At each of the four corners of the tomb stood vases filled with red Ililes which Marle herself had picked. The widowed queen wept throughout the ceremony. At its conclusion she By the Associated Press. foll 4 the i R o ollowe: e ancient Roman custom by CURTEA DE ARGES, Rumania,| gistributing food, clothing and mone July 30.—A solemn requiem service, In | to the poor of the town. | which Queen Marie, the remainder of | the royal family, members of the Lady Cynthia-Asquith has receivel regency and the Rumanian cabinet [authority to write e life of the participated, was held today over the | Duchess of York. In addizion to look- remains of King Ferdinand. ing after her three sons, Lady (‘yn. With a full choir, 50 priests led by ! thia is secretary fou Janies Queen Marie and Royal Family, Regency and Cabinet, Par- ticipate at Tomb. Correspondence of the Associated The modern Eve W1, while Adam s mannikin rather than a man, wri Miss Joan Kennedy, the novel in the Soroptimist «It will soon be a compliment to Jabel 2 man ‘effeminate,’ " she says. She predicts the wife as the wage carner of the future, loafing about the house evenings and Sundays, while the husband wears the apron cial international importance at-| and does the domestic tasks, such hes to the formal dedication next | a8 cooking, washing the dishes and || he jast i unday afternoon of the Internationa £ Heloit thesIRet ting i*cace Bridge, connecting Buffalo, N. ments to America. By the Associated Pres WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., July 30. —Doubt of Germany's ability to meet | the annuities due America under the | Dawes plan were expressed tonight | by Dr. Peter Reinhold, minister of finance tn former Chancellor Luther's cabinet, in a1 interview with the As sociated Press at the Institute of Pol ities. “It s a very great burden, and it is fmpossible to know whether the Ger- man economic system will be able to bear the taxation necessar Retnhold said. “but in the opinion of experts the outcome is doubtful. “The plan is functioning perfectly in every way and I sce no difficulty at present. I personally would not undertake to say whether the German economic system will be able to bear it to fts full extent in the future. Payments Are Hea “I am convinced that every German | government will do all fn fts pow loyally to fulfill the obligations in cumbent on “Germany,” he continued, “must pay America a sum equal to 50 | cent more than the total figure pay- able by all the other debtor countries combined. Whereas the amount pay- able by the associated powers to the | Tnited States is, according to recent | reliable computations, about 17 hun-| dred million mark quired to pay almost 26 hundred mil lion marks or §450,000,000. Must Come From Surplus. | i “The problem is whether the Ger- gan economic system can produce an annual net surplus allowing pavment of the annuity produced under the | Dawes plan. It must, obviously be| paid out of a surplus actually earned | by the nation. It cannot be pald from the Nation's capital. | “The problem is not what Germany | can produce, but what she can earn.” | Earnings, he said, must come from | German industry, which, laboring | under the tremendous burden of taxa- tion made necessary by the national @ebt, might be unable to operate at a profit. It was his opinion and, he added, the opinion of experts, that upon this proposition the ultimate de- velopment will depend. The effect of the Dawes plan. he £aid, however, had been to strengthen rather than imperil German-American friendship. Onercus as it is to Ger- many, it is still the basis of improv- ing conditions, economic and financial, | and since it was originated by Ameri- can minds and was largely financed by Americans, it has tended to assauge rather than intensify the war-rupture. Confident of Appreciation. “I am confident,” he said, “that the conscientiousness and loyalty with which Germany is fulfilling the Dawes plan will be acknowledged and ap- preclated in America.” In regard to the possibility of an Austro-German alliance, Dr. Reinhold ‘would only say that he thought under the proper conditions, it might be effected peaceably. Referring to the treaties of St. Ger- main and Versallles, which definitely precluded such a rapproachement, Dr. Relnhold denfed that the question could be settled for all time by such a dictoral provision. “So far as Germany is concerned,” he said, “I have confidence that with the trend in Europe toward realization of justice in self determination, the unfon betweer tiie two countries could be effected with the unanimous con- sent of the other powers, when the.day comes.” WOMEN IN TURKEY OUST MALE GUIDES Tourists Looking for Beauties in Harem Astonished to Find They Are Escorts. Correspondence of the Associated Press. STAMBOUL, Turkey.—Tourlsts to Turkey this year, desirous of seeing the nearcst harem, have been sur- prised immediately ‘upon thelr arrival. The guides waiting for them on the quay are none other than Turkish women whom the tourists had tmagined still languishing behind lat- ticed windows and in walled gardens. Lecture gulding is the most recent occupation invaded by Turkish women nd their success is such that they are largely replacing men. The girl guldes of Stamboul in some instances represent notable families and all are Moslems. One is daughter of a dep- uty, one a princess of Azerbaidjan and two are daughters of a famous poet. Some are graduates of the American college at Constantinople. The girls have caused police to in- vestigate alleged unscrupulous deal- ings of men guides. Because of their crusade they have been menaced by those whom they denounced. A tour- ist agency, planning to use girl guides extensively, is protecting them. EDISON RUBBER FIRM | SEEKS INCORPORATION: Company Will Carry on Experi-| ments Started by Famous 80-Year-Old Inventor. By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J., July 30.—Organ- ized to ¢ out the newest venture of Thomas A. Edison, the cultivation of rubber, the Edison Botanic Re- search Corporation, today filed ar- ticles of Incorporation here. The principal object is “to carry on and conduct experimental and r search worlk relating to the produc- tion of rubber” from vegetation and | to make objects either in whole or part from rubber. The corporation may also engage in wholesale and retail merchandis- tng and export and import products. Although 80 vears old, Mr. Edison has been busy with experiments with rubber in Florida and has studied rubber culture in New York. He visited Washington this week in con- nection with his new task John V. Miller, his brother-in-law, 18 named agent in charge. The incorporators were: Mr. Mil- ler, Charles Edison, son of the in- ventor, and Ralph H. Allen of Orange, president of Thomas A. Edison In- corporation. The concern has an capital stock of §75.000, $1,000 was taken the Tators. authorized- of which by incorpo- CLOTHING MATCHES. LONDO here are few positions pany their mothers for a stroll in the park must now be miniaturé editions of their parents, according 10 a new Mayfair fad. One mother and her three-year-old daughter seen in Hyde Park were dressed in kneelength, sleeveless frocks of the same material end cut, identical loose coats, silk stockings, shoes, gloves and hats. he child carried a little green silk ermany is re-land F {day in L | ing law by night, Mr. pecia ort Erie, Ontario monies will attend the formal opening of the Intel national ¥ MUST PAY WIFE'S FARC AFTER TRIAL |Sergt. Archer, Making Plea for Divorce, Gets Order. Piano Sold for Trip. By the Associated Prese CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 30.— Judge Samuel H. Silbert ~ordered Sergt. Herman H. Archer to pay the expenses of his wife, Mrs. Anna Laura Archer, back to her home in San Francisco, and took under advisement Archer’s plea for a divorce at the end of the hearing of the case today. Mrs. Archer, San Francisco dance hall proprietor, wept on the stand as she brought her testimony to a close vith the word: “We sold the piano for the money to come to this trial.” Archer, an instructor in the Reserve Officers’ Traininz Corps at Princeton University, sought the divorce on the ground that his wife had abandoned lr;xm by refusing to go to Princeton to ve. Mrs. Archer's testimony gave her picture of the life of a soldier’s wife, the moving from camp to camp, stinted wardrobes, and the scheming to make the pay of a non-commis. sioned officer stretch from one month to the next. “But I didn't mind these hardships,” she said, “it was all a part of the game of being a petty officer’s wife.” Mrs. Archer testified that when her husband returned from overseas after the World War, she was not advised of his arrival and did not know he was back until she heard indirectly that he was at Princeton. She made several ineffectual efforts to go with him there, she said, but was repulsed each time, Archer, who was commissioned a captain during the war, now is rated a sergeant. He was the central figure about whom Richard Harding Davis wrote his novel, “Captain Mack- iin.” Although living in Princeton, he maintains his legal residence here. CHEAP DIVORCE SEEN AS RELIEF FOR COURT Chicago Judge Suggests Couples Be Permitted to Sever Bonds by Paying $5 to Clerk. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 30.—A cheap di- vorce might solve the problem of con- gested courts, one of Chicago's most experienced divorce judges suggested today. “I don’t know but that the laws should fix it so that two persons who are tired of living together could go to the county clerk, pay $5, and get a divorce,” said Judge Joseph B. David in a side remark from the bench, Judge David doesn't give interviews. When he has something to say, he vs it from the bench. “The man cheats the wife. The wifa cheats the husband. They both cheat the children and conspire. to cheat the judge,” he declared. *“And after all, why gum up the courts with fraudulent divorces? A judge hears 40 to 50 cases a day. He can’t in- vestigate all of them. The case is becoming rapidly impossible.” WOMAN AND HUSBAND ARE LAW PARTNERS Arkansas Couple Work Side by Side for Two Years to Ob- tain Licenses. Dy the Associated P: LITTLE ROCK, Ark., July 30.—If ny legal questions arise in _the amily of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Beau- mont, each side of the house will be prepared to argue points of law. For after two vears of working by tle Rock banks and study- and Mrs. Beau- the distinction of being the first married couple to receive at- torney licenses from the Arkansas Supreme Court. They will practice law in partnership. “Going to classe two years was e: hut never monotonous. Threshin; legal questions together helps both.” mont have six nights us Funds as New Year Starts. Yesterday was an unusually wel- come pay day for the members of the Federal judiclary, the jurists receiv- ing in addition to their regular pay checks substantial amounts in back pay. The Federal judges, from the Su- preme Court to District courts, were granted salary Increases by the last Congress, but fallure of the second deficiency bill caused a shortage of funds toward the close of the fiscal year yment of the in- 3 o shade and bag, which were coples er mother’s. To make the effect @ child was kept close to its mother. yea ¥ crease. Since y¥lb the extra pay has been accumulati g on the books of the Justice Depart. Federal Jurists Given Accumulated | | CRACKING OF CO? TO FURNISH TEST OF MATERIALS | Huge Span Across Ya Is Unique in B By the Assoc RALBIGH, in annals of American br a project to load the h ban of the Yadkin Riv cracks, will b: under October 1, State h 7 officials said today. By so doing North be taking a foremost ce in the reat bridges not by way of con structing a large bridge but in the op posite w in the destruction of one, The Swift Island concrete arch bridga across the Yadkin River, the first of several structures | built by commi sion in’ 1921, Unique testing, | conorete | Cavolina will | 1 by t ing of the heaviest load it can s and heavier than that, and dynamited. then gineers Interested. The Carolina Power is building a dam wh water gbove the present by F. Hunter, State bridge d engineer, conceived the idea of test- ing the Yadkin River brid just how big a load it would carr: and to load it until it breaks. | While the idea appeals to the popu- | lar imagination, it is no less of wide | scientific interest, “‘the chance of lifetime,” Hunter enthusiastically said Peace Bridze, connecting Buffalo, N. Y., ICRETE BR IDGE 1 stroyed Because of Dam—Operation ridge History. s applied to mall ches that t the strains ts on small models are frequent n order to wid the applica f concrete; but now o is to he broken to in the drafting room are carefully figuring Guzht to have, assistants prepar mate for the test and con nt correspondence is going on with experts all over the country Craven, bridge engineer for the State highway comn is in charge of the test. h ed States Bureau of Public Roads is co-operat- ir The stand prepar wwelve folks of Aibemarle and Troy d in the In enter of Nation.wide . and they say they be surprised if Hollywood ies appeared to lend color and een romance to the last hours of tha old bri will VETERANS’ FUNDS TO BE INCREASED, ‘ PRESIDENT IS TOLD (Continued_from 000. According to him, less than per cent of the horrowers are paying on the loans and the majority are | showing a disposition to keep borrow- | ing up to the very limit as the ad- vance of time increases the loan val-| ue of their certificates. ) Gen. Hines sald he discussed with | President Coolidge the advisability of the director attending the American Leglon convention in Paris and tha the President readily approved of the | idea. He thought it would give the| general a splendid opportunity to be | on the ground during the discussion of new legislation for the veter They also talked over the expected to be pushed this Winter looking toward the consolidation of the Veterans' Bureau and the Sol- diers’ Home activities. He explained, however, that the bureau is not spon- soring the plan. While he was r luctant to comment upon it he did} think such a congolidation would re sult in a big saving to the Govern- ment. | | ns posal Pays Visit to Sanitarium. While in the Black Hills Gen. Tlines visited the sanitarium at Custer (o} look over its facilities for handling veterans, and the Veterans' Bureau Hospital at Hot Springs. Additional| evidence that President Coolidge is| soliciting information while studying | the agriculture problem during his | stay in the hills, with a view to formu- Jating his reccmmendations to the forthcoming seccion of Congress, is furnished in the announcement to that Senator Capper of Kansas is to come to the Summer White House Monday for a conference. While not always in accord on legis- | Jation proposed for the benefit of the | farmers, President Coolidge has a high regard for Senator Capper, and has always made it apparent that b enjoys his company. IKansas Se ator and editor is an advocate of co- bring to the President some Sugses tions respecting this feature of farm | relief in which the President is known | to be deeply interested. Mrs. Curtis D. Wilbur, wite of the Secretary of the Navy, who is spend- ing the week end at the game lod: has the distinction of being the first lady of the cabinet to Visit the Sum- mer White House. Coolidge brought acquired pets for The company the Chow pup: “Diana,” the new white collie, and the little donlc which she today named “Ebeneez May Start Golf. President Coolidge ing outward evidence of late that he may be considering taking up golf while out here on his vacation For the last three evenings while out horseback riding he has ridden to the nine-hole golf cour: laid out up in the hills about a mile and & halt away from the lodge, where he mounted and walked about the grounds while he has been studying ayout. To those who have in- 1 whether or not he has been contemplating playing golf, he has replied in the negative. At any rate, he inquired of one of the members of his party yesterda about the golf course in the hills, but he added that he was asking out of curiosity and not because of any intention on his part, to play However, those Who are familiar with the President’s tactics say that this is the way he generally maneuvers before he does something out of the ordinary and that his secret visit to the court and higques- tions regarding it caused t#m to out all included “Ti been giv- | the sperative marketing, and is expected to | 3 templating h the contra The Pres today 18 taking day from work. Despite the muddy condition of the Grace Coolidge Creek, he went fishing this morning. Brig. Gen. Hines, director of the Veterans' Bureau, who arrived at the game lodge yesterday afternoon, did not accompany the President, but instead, went to the sanitarium at Custer to over its facilities for handling ibled veterans. It is expected that I leave the lodge this afternoon visit to the Veterans' Hospital at Springs, Dak., which is ed by the Veterans’ Bureau. is ned at the Summer White House that Gen. Hines' visit was merely for the purpose of paying the President and Mrs. Coolidge a call while they are in the Black Hills and that nething of any moment regard- ing the Veterans' Bureau prompted his coming. Iy to he for Hot ope Berlin Street Railway Lays Rails on Wooden Ties. BERLIN, July 30 (®.—The Berlin railway compagy, now rey rtain street#*rafls that have come worn, is for the first time making the interesting experiment of laying the rails on wooden ties. Herctofore rails have been laid on rolled stone foundation on which the asphalt layer was placed. Ex- perience has shown that the vibra- tion gradually caused the rails to be- come loose. Now the stone founda- tion is being made somewhat deeper, the ties are laid on this and ballasted with crushed stone and the asphalt covers ties, ballast and the base of the rails. SEQUEIRA JAILED. on Assault Charge. Brought hefore Judge Mattingly in Police Court yesterday morning on es against him by two little girls, 1 Sequeira, who once delivered es of lectures on Pan-America, sentenced to one year in jail on charge and to pay a fine of §500 or » one year in jail on the other n River to Be De-| playing golf, regardless of | It} 8500 Fine or One Year Is Given| . with Fort Erie, Canada, designed | | to commemorate the unbroken con- | tinuance of peace hetwoen the United | Siates and Canada for a period of 113 | | vears | Tigh officials of tho United States, | Gr Britain, Canada and the State | | of New York will be p nd take | |a leading part in the ceremonies. The | | United States Government will be | ropresented by Vice Presic “harles | { (i Dawes, of State Frank I Kellogg; the British government by |ihe Prince of Wales, his brother, | rince George, and the Right Hon | Stanley M. Baldwin, Prime Minister | of Great Pritain; Canada by the Right | Hon. Mackenzie King, Premier of Canada, and members of his_official household; the Siate of New York by | Giov. Alfred I, Smith and members of his staff, and the municipalities of Buffalo_and Fort Erie by their prin- cipal officials, According these dignitaries will ascemble at I bridze and exchan; |ing which the British i ho es | € s and New tions to a_dccorated pl at the Buffalo termina where the formal ceremor cation will be held. Prince to Make Address. {8 addresses will be made by the | Prince Wale Vice President | Dawe Baldwin, Secretary | | Kelloge, inic nzie King | nl prebably by Gov. Smith. The ex- |¢ s will be opened and closed by I services, and the program also includes the singing of the na- tional anthems of the United States and Great Britain by Jarge choirs. | Following the benediction, the United States delegation will return the call of the British and Canadian delega- tions by nadian s ument Though the bridge will he known as the Tnternatfonal Peace Bridge, to em- asize the long continued friendly itions between the peoples of the wo_countries, its real name is “the Tal) and Fort Erfe Bridge.” It was ilt by compan of that me, of | which Frank B. Baird s president and | | the entire stock is held equally by | and Canadans. It cost | 00,000 supplied entirely by | pital. With its approaches, about a mile long and the over tructure is about 4, feet in length, with a capacity of about | (0 vehicles an hour.. It is the only vehicular b connecting the two | countries between Ningara Falls and Duluth, and its completion marks the realization of strenuous efforts extend- | in: a period of more than half a iy, to provide adequate physical nection at the western end of the ra frontler. Approaches on Historie Both governments showed Interest in the enterprise I the necessary approaches at either end. To supply the Buffalo approach, the United States Government discon- | tinued old Fort Porter as a military post and sold the site to the bridge | company, and the Canadian govern- ment acquired the sfte of the Canadian | | approach by the assertion of the right of eminent domain and transferred it | to the bridge company. The Canadian pproach is on the Fort Erie reser- vation, where the English and Amer- ican troops met in battle for the last time at the ciose of the War of 1812. It is considered a happy coincidence that the commemoration of the long era of peace betwecen the two great Linglish speaking nations should fol- low so closaly the recent establish- ment of direct and intimate diplomatic relations between the United States and its immediate neighbor on the north. The ministers of both coun- tries, William S. Phillips of the United States, and Vincent Massey of Can ada, will attend the peace ceremonies at Buffalo, PASSENGERS TAKEN the offici and their the to program, ttendants of the , follow- Anadian by the York delega- tform erccted | the bridge. s of dedi- siting the Brock | the brid Sites. their deep providing 1 | All Hands Rescued When Liner Goes Ashore, on Ivory Island. By the Associated Press. KETCHIKAN Alaska, July 30.—Ad- vices from Capt. Allen of the steam- ship Admiral Rogers that he is pick- ing up the passengers who left the steamship Admiral Watson, which went ashore last night on Ivory Island, 300 miles south of here, were received tonight by local offices of the Pacific Steamship Co., owner of the vessel. Capt. Allen said that the passengers uld he taken to Ketchikan or trans- ed to the steamship Queen of the same line which left here today for Seattle, On Way to Seattle. SEATTLE, Wash.. July 30 (?).—The | steamship Admiral Watson, which ran aground on Ivory I a dense fog, was carry) gers and a crew of 45. The vessel was on its way to Seattle from Alaska ports. She carried a cargo of canned salmon. Ofticials of the Pacific Steamship Co., which operates the Watson, said the | passengers wera taken off as a matter | of precaution and that they would be brought here by the tseamship Queen of the same line. | For each $50 or | 15 fractionborrowed you agree to de- posit $1 per week in an Account, the proceeds of which may be used to cancel the note when duec. Deposits may be made on a weekly, semi- | monthly or | 1B monthly Dasis as you prefer. Loan $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $1,000 $5,000 $10,000 shink that the President is con- 4 The Bank that Makes You a Loan with a Smile The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and practical and fair —it is not neccessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. Easy to Pay MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H St. N. W., Washington “Character and Earning Power Are the Basis o, Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing application— with few excep- tions. Weekly Deposit For 50 Weeks $2.00 $4.00 $6.00 $8.00 $10.00 $20.00 $100.00 $200.00 MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year, though they may be given for any period of from 3 20 12 months. ng the bridge to the |2 FROM STRANDED SHIP ¢ girl who has Ho may earn e equivalent of §20 a week, but she can do the same, he sup, that they can ‘rub along’ somehow, and lets it go at that.” ARGUE CONFESSION INLEBOUEF KILLING Attorneys Wrangle Over Ad- missihility in Trial of Wicow and Physician. FRANKLIN, La., July 30.- sibility of confessions of Mrs. Ada and Dr. homas E. basis of an argument in their trial on charges of murdering James J. Le. bouef, husband of the woman. The was used as attorneys ex- od their views. Previously the State had sought an exhumation of the body buried as that of Lebouef in an effort better to identify it, only to abandon the at- tempt. and shift its fire to motives of defense attorneys in seeking a con- tinuance of the trial. ‘Another disagreement was precipl- tated when Sheriff Charles Pecot was stify in the prosecution of Lehouet, her alleged lover, purported Bonner Lebouet jury pr v excluded, Sheriff Pecot Mrs. Lebouef and tell everything” she With the fu told of about it, he ted, and asserted she Aid not think the boc found in Lake as that of her husband. e said, he told the court. lied, and told him u‘l)n\lt 12, on Lake Palourde when she sald !‘r\‘:xp hvr:fllmr‘d was killed. The sheriff quoted her as saving ghe and her husband were in rate boats when two men appeared in another cratt and one of them fired twice at Le- uef. ho"u wasn't the doctor, but he have had somebody do it for Sheriff Pecot quoted her as s LODGES PLAN OUTING. Knights of Columbus and 0dd Fel- lows to Go to Beach. The Washington Chapter of Knights of Columbus and. the Forest Lodge, No. 41, Independent Order of 0dd Fellows, will hold outings at Ches- apeake Beach on \ednesday and Thursday, respectively. The Knights of Columbus outing will be for the ben “fit of charitable work among orphan children. e Following grand knights have been named committee chairmen: J Eugene Gallery, tickets; J. E. Burns ogram; W, E athleti F. Martin, public and Mt chael D. Schacfer, prizes. Leroy Pumphrey is in charge of ar- rangements for the Forest Lodge ex- cursion. him, the . McCarth comfort, Cour{ Grants Goodman Plea. A petition to have the court refer his case to Ralph D. Quinter, referee, so that h with his creditors without actually be- ing adjudged a bankrupt was filed y terday in bankruptcy court by Wil- liam Goodman, trading as the Goodye Paint & Suppl: against whom a petition in bankruptey was filed several days ago. The request was granted. The dobts of Goodman and his assets at He i3 represented by Attor Simon, Koenigsberger, Young & Pittsburg Automatic Gas Water Heater During August Only DOWN 5 Places one in your home ready to use. CALL OR PHONE Your Plumber—The Gas Co., or EDGAR MORRIS edit” SALES CO. Dreher today became the : hd James Beadle, the third | knew nothing | may | e might effect a composition | Shoe Sales may Come and Shoe ! Bargain Horizon! or'S, Factory Distributors 1305 G Street N, W. Main 1032-1033 : 3212 14th “Women’s Shop”—1207 F St. “Arfih-l’nnrvcr Shop”—1318 G St. Sales may go~~~ But it'll be many a day before the equals of these will again appear on the rly half their 7th& K 414 9¢h St. 233 Pa. Ave. S.E.

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