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4 ® MUELLER ON WAY [0 GENEVA PARLEY Chancellor to VReiterate Stand of Reich on Evac- uation of Rhineland. Br the Associated Press | BERLIN, September 1.— Hermann Mueller, chancelior of the German | Reich, who, will make strenuous efforts | at Geneva to force a discussion by the | League of Nations Assembly of evacua- | t of the Rhineland, departed for| tonight. He will head the 2 delcgation in the absence of | Stresemann, the foreign min- av heads accom- | veral department will | wi panicd the chancellor. The party p ai Baden-Baden to consult with | Stresemann, with whom there has | en no opportunity for consultation ce his conversations at Paris with mier Poincare and Foreign Minister 'd of France | Geneva Chancellor Mueller will te the Germen government's | iar attitude that continued occu- | of the Rhinieland by the allies titutes a permanent handicap on | ny's struggle to meet the eco- | ic and financial burdens imposed | v the Dawes reparations plan. He will| D. €., SEPTEMBER 2, 1928—PART K FIREMEN VICTORIOUS IN BLI.COUNTY CELEBRATION THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, COUNTY FIRENEN STAGE CARNYAL Jefferson District Group} Wins Honors at Clar- endon, Va. Special Dispatch to The Star. CLARENDON. Va. September 1.— With volunteer fire department com- panies and nearly 300 firemen from Atlington and Falrfax Countles com- peting, the Jefferson District Volun- teer Pire Department captured the major honors at the fourth annual car- nival and jubilee of the Arlington- Fairfax Counties PFiremen's Associa- tion this afternoon. The Jefferson firefighters won both the prineipal contests of the afternoon, pearing company with apparatus in the | line of” parade. Falls Church firemen were awarded |the cup for the best decorated fire | apparatus for the third consecutive | year, thereby capturing it as their prop- | {erty. ~Arlington Fire Department was | awarded a loving cup for the best ap- | pearing fire equipment. | The fat man's race was won by Wil- | liam A. Goldsmith of Ballston, with J.! Harold Owen, second, and William R.| Biggs, third. Ballston volunteer fire| that the Dawes plan contem- | d that Germany shculc be freed | impediments to & carrying out of | reparation. | bearing of the Locarno trea continued occupation will alsc sed at Geneva.' TURKISH SCHOLAR GETS | HONORARY ASSOCIATION Atdul-Hak Hamid Bey, Known as «Shakespeare” and Statesman, Elected to Writers' Club. CONSTANTINOPLE, (#).—Seventy- eight-year-old Abdul-Hak Hamid Bey, ! “ths Shakespeare of Turkey,” has just| been ‘made an honorary member of the P. E. N. Club, an international associa- tion of writers. he club groups together such figures hn Galsworthy, H. G. Wells, James | Edwin Arlington Robinson, Rob- Frost, Rabindrinath Tagore and ! ent literary men of some 50 na-| hington before the His former wife, a young Belgian fighters captured the tug-of-war con- | test trom the Jefferson district depart- | { ment, who had won from the Potomac | firemen. The time made by the varlous de- partments successfully competing in | he pumper hook-up running contest | was Jefferson district, 57 1-5: Cherry- | dale, 65 4-5; Falls Church. 71 4-5, and | 65 4-5: Falls Church, 71 4-5, and Ballston, 74 4-5 seconds. The parade staged before the events left Falls Church, passing through Cherrydale, Ballston, Clarendon, Arling- ton, Virginia Highlands and Potomac. was represented by nine companies from the two counties. Sergt. A. J. Bargagni of the District | of Columbia Fire Department was chief judge, with Sergt. Joseph A. C. Foaght of the District department judge of the | other events, with the aid of Luther | Strobel, Peter Latterner and Frederick E. Dewey, Z. O. Kines. | Walter U. Varney announces that all | of the fire departments from the two| counties will participate in the pnrnde; and jubllee of the District of Columbia | Monday, after which they will return | to the carnival grounds and assist in bringing to a close the carnival at mid- | night with a very successful affair. The proceeds are for the widows, or- | phans and disabled. .~ Another band | concert will be given by the Falls | Church Firemen, with Frank Carpenter leading. woman whom he married when he was; Ambasasdor st Brussels and who di-| y efferson District Fire Department vorced him to marry an Italian count| ypieer en’s competitions a feature of the carnival at C arcndon. after she h?ldedumkflml yursmu 1;1 uded. vefled Turkish woman in old| Fought, J. A. Becson, J. . has returned from Italy 10| MeKim. Back row: George Bliss, tiams. Lower: Falls Church dopartm pany is in command of Chief E. M. Wi Department presenting cup to Lieut. G. F. A. Bea'es, William D. McKim (mascot) Frank Bliss, John Ford, Ralph Rinker, ent, winner for the thi*d siraight year for the best decorated apparatus. 4. ++ded th> prize for fa Sergt. et Allwine of the Jeffarson dls! sicst hook-up in test of Arlington-Fairfax vol- —t | A. C. Fought of District of Columbia Fire tment. Left to righ—Front row: Lieut. COSTUMES SHOCK , J. L. Beales, Lieut. Allwine, Fred A. Lyons, William C. A 5| 3 | ment after serving in the Regular Army L. Allwine, E. J. Skidmore and Joll;h(;. (“:n:- | ahd as & ploncer i the mining industry. Among the seven who have followed GERMAN WOME 'SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at_and Sailings From New York. 'WOMAN EVANGELIST MAY AVOID LAW SUIT DUE TODAY. i o Aurut 33 N ores—Fort Lumon. August 23 Adjust Claims Involved at | Transvivania—Glassow it gg Lake Tahoe Site. g T i DUE TOMORROW. n Lorenzo—8an Jusn. " 1—Copennagen. August 31 | August 23 | A!llwlll By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, September 1.—Indi- cations that settlements out of court might be made of damage suits growing out of the alleged Lake Tahoe land- fraud deal, in which Aimee Semple Mc- Pherson, pastor of Angelus T2mple, was involved by civil suits. was seen today | in the offer by H. L. Henry, subdivider, | to recomj the owners. | The district attorney’s office an-| nounced that Henry had stated, during | |a conference, that he intended to “ad- just the matter,” and that if the real| estate man did so, no new complaints | would be issued Attorneys for the complainants said August 24 August 22 | Bufiren—Havre .. W o e DR WEDH AY, SEPTEMBER ! their clients would be satisfied if an ad NESD. t were made and would dismiss Homeric—Southamoten August 28 | their civil suits, Munareo—Buengs " A three-hour conference between Slerra Oordoba. . Bremer] Fmr.:eime——Ynmwm, N. B oltaire—Buenos Alres. DUE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER iber 1 |eounsel for Mrs. McPherson and the district attorney’s office was followed by the statement from the evangelist's at- Ljtuania.-Danzle “‘,m’? torneys that action had bean postponed Sixaols—Kingston ‘August 31 | for the present. | Be: ads Séptember 4| The two suits filed charged Mrs. Me- | Sesscles ise M4FU5* M | Pherson with entering into an agree- e goeuensy Criise. Lot a1 | ment with subdividers of the Lake Ta- DUE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. thoe property, whereby she was to re- nia—Bouthampton “Beptember 1| ceive a commission on all sales of lots, pp ... August 28 |and with failure to keep a promise to DUE SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 8. build a “lighthous>” or temple branch | l':)flubnc—uumzr.mvfl'a siee ’23%!#.,‘“:;_‘ huge outdoor bowl on the prop- | ..... September i | vl o oS! G S "HEE SARGASSO SEA NOTED 'rederik penhagen H 1 inampion - gesember 1| AS “PLACE OF BEAUTY”| i:t;}l&%"fl"’. Water Described as Unusually Blue | San Domingo. Aconcag, o and Clear to Depth of 200 Feet. 3 ber NEW YORK (P).—The Sargasso Sea | “sesharist % | 1s pletured as a place of beauy rather | ‘September 1!than a menace by H. A. Marmer of| August 31 | the United States Coast and Geodetic | Survey. The water is unusually blue, due to lack of minute plant and ani- mal life. It s 80 transparent that a 6-foot white disk can be secen clearly at 200 feet depth. Belie! in the existence of greal masses of weed in this sea has no basis in fact, Marmer writes in the United Btates Naval Institule proceedings. The ses has surface weed patches up to 100 feet in diameter and occasionally as Jarge as an acre in extent, which do not interfere with navigation, New Columbian Stadium. BOGOTA, Colombia (#).—Congress has appropriated $50,000 for the erec- tion of a national athletic stadtum in law provides 1ING TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 —Crarleston and Jacksonville. AILING WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 gridenceAlgiers, Lisbon, Palermo, Naples Oristobal, Certagens, | Puerio Colgmbia snd Sants Marta | e Harding—Plymouth, ~ Oherbours und Bremerhaven. MEretanss — Plymouth, ~Oherbours and | B hampten. 1 ort au Prince and Cristobal i frcon ke Sukn, La Gusyra, Puerto Cabello | N ada. Trinidad snd Georse- same m, ia--Bermuds. 1o Ve Grant ~Cristobal and Corinto. 8. BAILING THURSDAY, BEPTEMBER 6 nnals—Vigo end Bordesux |the capital {that $20,000 be set azide each year to | cover expenses of athletes sent to the to national meets in PROBE DEEDING PRIOR TO "SECOND COMING™ Real Estate Tnterests Likely to Seven Families Turn Over All Goods to! Association in Preparation for “Ascent.” | District Attor By the Associated Press. EUGENE, Oreg., September 1.—Their property and funds sald to have been placed in the hands of trusices of ihe “Christian Crusade Stewardship Asso- ciation” and their faces turned toward | the summit of Mount Ararat, where they expect to witness the second com- ing of the Messiah, seven families have left their homes in Eugene within the last 10 days. Investigation of the transfer of real | estate to the association by four prop- erty holders of Eugene has been made by Earl Luckey, chief deputy sheriff of Lane County, working in conjunction with District Attorney Medley, who questioned several families and sald he was told of many promises said to have been made by the cult leaders. ‘The story of & huge building in San Francisco, where the faithful would be OXFORD CELEBRATIN GLADSTONE CENTENARY Christ 100th Anniversary of Matriculation of “Grand Old Man.” OXFORD, England (#). — Christ Church, the college of prime ministers, is celebrating this year the 100th anni- versary of the matriculation of Wil llam Gladstong, the “Grand Old Man. Gladstone was at Christ Church for four years from 1828 until 1831, when he won a double first class in mathe- matics and classics, the highest scho- lastic honor an undergracuate here may recelve, In obgerving the anniversary Christ Chureh again brings to light its posi- tion as the home of England’s political leaders. Like Virginia, and now Ohlo, which claim to be mother of the Presi- dents, Christ Church claims to be the mother of prime ministers. By a cur ous coincidence, the majority of Eng- land’s premiers have been students of this, th: largest colleg® at Oxford Perhaps the most picturesque of the prime ministers at Christ Church was Lord Rosebery, who was here from 1866 to 1868. He made the dramatic boest, while a student, that some day he would win the Derby, matry the Church Observing | rishest woman in England and be prime minister. It was no idle boast, for he lived to fulfill all three Ardmore Carnival Closes. ARDMORE, Md., September 1.-A carnival and dance, under auspices of Bt. Michael’s Catholic Church here for the benefit of the church fund, closed ney Investigates. { ilmmodest Dress at Bathing | Beaches Subject of Attack by League. OF PROPERTY | BERLIN (#).—The German Wom- | en’s Pighting League has been organ- |ized to defend old-fashioned morality | and combat public licentiousness. The lax situation at bathing resorts this housed, rent free, and where food and | Summer has been marked for a spe- clothing would be provided, was told | cial bombardment. to the district attorney, he said. These | “Bathing life today,” says a declara- promises, Medley sald, were made by | tion by the league, “has assumed forms John Andrews. itinerant preacher, who | Which violate modesty and thereby vio- has been conducting services in @ tent. [ late an important part of our spir Just where the ascent of Mount Ararat | itual life.” fits in, the district attorney had not by strong feeling, have been addressed learned. by the society fo the resort officials Medley sald he was told that “those | “‘,’::“,‘fm‘:“:&k’]‘fn“"““ on: bathers ‘weat- who”belleved” were: o 1o Christ re. | M videsprend practice of dancing urn to the earth in celestial robes and | in ‘bathing costume has also come under with Him all would board a phantom | fire " A public appeal has been broad- ark upon which they would ride into|cast asking German women to boycott the heavenly home | Tesorts where laxity is permitted John Andrews has been here’five | In sharp contrast with the purposes ship would take care of them for the rest of their lives in various parts of Germany for the practice of bathing without costumes. Several of the clubs have leased tracts {of beach land near Berlin and the | police require only that their unusual Miss Spain,Deported Wl’l 5 P t,l,. 5 “l!:mh;‘n;: 'r::u:rtwbe 4 alllnhlebvin members E (l/n WS:BS[)OI' 1me |*og oo o ‘Gatholio priests have nds, Wants to Stay cently endeavored to stem the tide of By the Associated Press. loose public conduet, but without NEW ORLEANS, September 1 | marked success On the other hand, the police are be- Miss Spain was deported frgm the United States yesterday. * coming more active in certain quar- ters. A group of middle aged married The 18-year-old Senorita Acuedo Adorna, who represented her nation couples decided to improve their con- at the Galveston beauty contest, was dition by gymnastic exercises. They engaged a teacher and obtained the laced aboard the French steamship ilfirl, which will take her back to town's permission to use the school building. The authorities, however, re- Spal Immigration officials said she had voked the privilege when it was dis- | covered that both men and women overstayed the time permitted by her passport | were taking their exercise together. She sald she wanted to remain in |GIRL WHO INSPIRED {STONE LION ON WATCH uit e dkcoweed chrowing lght on OVER BABYLON RUINS| the painter Raphael's love for the beau- tiful Trasteverina, as the women liv- ing mn the Trastevere quarter of Rome are_called. Beast Said to “Gaze Impassively”| The affection of the greatest of g | painters for this girl of the people. on the Remnants of Dead | Who was his model, caused him. to forget completely his betrothal to Maria | Bibbiena, niece of the famous cardinal he| Raphael produced his greatest master- Lhe | pleces and immortalized the pretty rved | Trasteverina in his various Madonnas Metropolis BABYLON, Mesopotamia (#) Lion of Babylon sl broods ove | by the law, arts and letters and the in- | Formal requests, marked | months. District Attorney Medley said (of the league is the contention of a the people who left here had been told {gmwmg gmup of Germans that the|of Representatives. His brother, that the Christlan Crusade Steward- |cure for immorality is greater liberty. Charles P. Taft, 2d, Is now servmfi as “‘Nacht-Kultur" clubs have been formed | prosecuting attorney for Hamilton | ruins of the once mighty city. © solidly in stone and resting heevily on its haunc the beaslt gaw im- during the 9 years they were together | 8he was known under the nickname jof the “Little Bakeress” because her passivily on the remnants of the dead G e . Garfleld, former Secretary of metropolis. Inthior way & Duker the Interior, now practicing law in rOpOlls, e Pield Museurn-Ox- |, 1t g now becn uscertained that | (e o and Trvin MeDowell Garfleld od | the latter'’s name was Francesco Lutl, {t| Who cume to Rome from Sienna with rd University joint expedition visite | 1ol cenclusfon of the [the ruins at " the |JULIA MAE RAWLINGS RETIRES AFTER 45 YEARS AS TEACHER One of First Three Administrative Prin-| | | | cipals in District Began Career With First Grade Class in 1883. Forty-five years of teaching service in| the District of Columbia public scheols | that led her to the administrative prin- cipalship of the Wallach-Towers build- | present age in education through its, fngs in Southeast Washington was| ended Friday for Miss Julla Mae Rawl- | ings of the Marlborough Apartments, 917 Eighteenth street, when she was re. tired from the school system | Appointed first as a teacher of the, first grade in a group of classes located | in rented quarters at Seventh and G streets southeast July 1, 1883, Miss Rawlings was one of the first three ad- ministrative principa's to be named in | capturing the pumper hook-up con- | the local schools when the combined ['test in ‘he record time of 57'5 sec- | buflding system was first introduced onds and the trophy for the best ap- | here in 1916. The other two ploneer | were Henry | ng prineipal of | he late Charles administrative prinotp W. Draper, now supervi the first division, -and tl Thompean. Cites Progress Here. During her career in the schools Miss | Rawlings taught literally thousands of | the Capital's present-day men and| women in their childhood. Comment-| ing yesterday on her retirement, Miss Rawiings declared the District school ystem has kept pace with the progress of the city's life. She mentioned spe- cifically the junior high schools, offer- ing selective education to students two vears earlier than the former plan of cight grades of elementary work and four years of senior high school study, haracterizing the junior high school as a thing alive to the needs of the broadness.” “I have had a pleasan experience in the schools,” ings sald, “and if T could be 1 would re-enter the teaching prof sion.” Became Principal in 1898. Miss Rawlings’ second assignment in the school system brought a promotion after only one year in the rented class- room, for she was made a teacher of the fifth grade in the Peabody School on July 1, 1884. On July 1, 1891, Miss Rawlings was promoted to seventh-grade teacher in the Towers School, where she remained until July, 1895, at which time she was placed in charge of the eighth grade at the Peabody School. Three years later she was promoted to be principal of the Hilton Schol, which position she held until 1912, when she became prin- cipal of the Wallach School. t and happy born again fes- In 1916 the Wallach and the Towers | Schools were united under a single prin- cipalship with Miss Rawlings in that position. It was from that office, after more than 15 years of constant service, that Miss Rawlings went into retirement wo days ago. MOST OF FRESIDENTS' SONS HAVE SHUNNED POLITICAL FIELD| John Coolidge Would: Add to List by Engaging in Railroad Business. Law A If John Coolidge carries out his re- ported intention to engage in the rall- road business as a profession, he will swell the list of living sons of Presi- dents who have shunned politics to em- brace the more certain futures offered dustrial or commercial fields, Of the 17 sons of Presidents still living, only 7 have ever held public 1office, while of the remaining 10 the law has attracted most. Two are heads of colléges; two are in the shipping in- | dustry; one s an architect, another a | judge, one owns and operates a hotel | bearing the name of the “U. S. Gran | Hotel,” and two others are in retire. | in the political footste] of their fathers, one, James Rudolph Garfield, now a lawyer of Cleveland, Ohio, at- tained the eminence of a cabinet post, having served as Secretary of the In- terfor under the Roosevelt admindstr | tion. This distinction came to him | after he first served in the Ohio State | Senate, and in Federal assignments as !a member of the United States Civil | Service Commission and as commis- | sloner of corporations in the Depart- | ment of Commerce and Labor. | Roosevelt Cabinet Assistant. | Theadore Roosevelt, jr., came close to a cabinet post, having served as As- sistant Secretary of the Navy in the Harding and Coolidge regimes until he resigned to become a candidate for the Republican governorship of New York in 1924. A small part in the conduct of the Federal Government was also essayed by another President's son, Ulysses S. Grant, jr, who served as secretary to | his father during the last vear and a half of the Grant administration Politically active in State affairs won membership in the Indiana House and Senate for Russell Benjamin Harrison, son of Benjamin Harrison, the twenty- third President. who is now a prac- tieing lawyer in Indlanapolis. Stmi- larly Robert Taft, son of Chief Justice Wwilliam Howard Taft, served as Repub- lican floor leader in the Ohio House | County, Ohio, but recently was defeated for renomination for that post in & hot political primary, in which the two Tafts were found to be in different | wings of the Republican party. Tyler's Son Was Judge. David Gardiner Tyler, son of the/ tenth President of the United States, also was politically active in his native State of Virginia, serving at one time as a judge there. 'His brother, Dr. Lyon Tyler, a noted educator and author, in the late eightics served as a member | of the Virginia House of Delegates Four sons of President James A. Gar- | field are still living. while three of the | Roosevelt family are carrying on the fllustrious name of their parent. Two Tafts and two Grants survive, while the other Presidents’ sons include Col. | Webb C. Hayes, a retired Army officer | living in Ohio, and Richard Folsom | Cleveland, a lawyer residing in Boston. The living sons of Presidents were the | invited guests at the Gridiron dinner held here on December 8 1923. when | all responded except the Tylers and | Grants. Calvin Coolidge, son of Pres- | | ident Coolidge, and Robert Todd Lb - | | coln, son of Abraham Lincoln, have | since died Exclusive of those who have been | olitically prominent. the President’s son, who perhaps 1s best known, is Dr. | Harry A. Garfleld, president of Willlams College, who has fust closed the eighth annual Institute of Politics at Williams- | town, Mass. ‘The nearest approach to | political service that Dr. Garfield has | performed was perhaps during the | World War, when he was called to Washington by President Wilson and made United States fuel administrator. The other Garflelds include Abram Garfleld, an architect in _Cleveland; po | of Boston. Roosevelts in Industrial Life. | | the ttracts Majority. Remus case, Robert Taft has held fast to the regular Republican organization in Hamilton County, and was a Hoo- vention He mildly opposed Charles, who was u? for renomination in the primary held the past month, and {:‘c’lped retire his kinsman to private e. Grants Differ I litically. Differences in political alignment also is seen in the case of the two Grants, sons of the war President. U. S. Grant, jr, who is a lawyer by pro- fesslon. but a boniface by vocation, wning and operating the U. S. Grant Hotel at San Diego, Calif., is listed as a Republican, whereas his only living brother, Jesse R. Grant, is shown in Who's Who as a Democrat, with his residence in the Democratic Club in New York City. Little is known of Jesse R. Grant beyond the fact that in his early days he went in for pros- pecting and mining, having at one time been known in the Kilondike. Russell Benjamin Harrison, who not only is the son of a President, but a grandson of a President (Willlam Henry Harrison) and a great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison, signer of the Declaration of Independence and member of the Continental Congress, did not become politically activg until recent years. He first engaged in new: paper work, then went West and be- came a Governmnt assayer at Helena, Mont., and later served in the Spanish- American War and in the Philippines He was elected to the Indiana House of Representatives in 1921 and lately committee in the Indiana State Senate. The one President’s son who followed a military® career was Col. Webb C. Hayes, son of Rutherford B. Hayes, the nineteenth President. He served | with distinction in many campaigns, and was retired with the rank of colonel, ond is now living in retirement on g:;s ancestral Hayes estate at Premont, o Cleveland Practicing Law. of a Democratic President who still lives is Richard Folsom Cleveland, son of Grover and Frances Folsom Cleve- practicing law in Boston. The Presidents' sons whom Wash ingtonians more distinctly remember are the Tafts and the Roosevelts, and John {and the much loved Calvin Coolidge. who died at Walter Reed Hospital July 1924, from an infection in his foot. ‘The Tafts were athletic youngsters. who were always on the go and whose bouyant activities are credited with putting some of the merry chuckle in the laugh of- their distinguished parent. The Roosevelts were easily the most strenuous family that ever inhabited White Hous> and attaches who still serve at the Executive Mansion re- call with pleasure some of the pranks which young Ted and his brothers en- gaged in while occupying the great white pile at 1600 Pennsylvania avenue. 60 DOGS IN ANNUAL MONTGOMERY FOX HUNT Postmaster General New Among Those Invited for Event Held Near Redland Last Night. Special Dispatch to The Star ROCKVILLE, Md. September 1 The annual hunt of the Montgomery County Foxhunters' Assoclation was held near Redland tonight, attended by 150. Each member was limited to two hounds. A supper was served on | the farm of Sewell Duley. near Red- | land, preceding the chase. | The affafr was In charge of a com- | mittee consisting of Clifard L. Howard, | Kenneth Lyddane and Willlam P.| Jongs, and Z. McCubbin Waters, vet-| eran follower of the hounds, was mas- | ter of hounds. Postmaster General| " Miss Rawl- | ver delegate to the Kansas City con-| served as chalrman of the judiciary | Except for the Tylers, the only son | and, a Princeton graduate, who is now | SCHOOL OFFICIALS PLANFOR OPENING Board 1o Meet Wednesday. Teachers Will Hold First Conference Friday. With the first Fall meeting of the Board of Education and the season's initial conference of teachers and school officers scheduled for Wednesday and Friday, respectively, and the return yesterday of Dr. Frank W. Ballou, super- intendent of schools, to his desk in the Franklin Administration Building, the school year 1928-29 is being ushered into the District of Columbia this week Wwhile school will not open for the thousands of Washington pupils until Monday, September 17. the Board of BEducation. which has not met since the 1st of July, will go into its first sessions of the new year at 3:30 o'clock Wed- nesday afternoon in the board room of the Franklin Administration Building. A mass of routine work, including appointments and other details attend- ing the opening of a new school year, awaits the ninc members of the board Charles F. Carusl, president of the board, will preside at the opening ses- sion. The other members, practically all of whom are expected to be present Wednesday, are Henry L. Gilligan, Isaac Gans, Dr. H. Barrett Learned, Dr. J. Hayden Johnson, Mrs, Henry Grattan Doyle, Rev. F. I. A. Bennett, Mrs. Leonore Smith and Mrs. Mary A. McNeill. Dr. Ballou put in his first appear- ance at Franklin- Administration Build- ing yesterday morning since early in July, when he left the city on his va- cation. Although unable to review the full situation in the school system in the half day of open school offices. Dr. Ballou sought to sce as many memiers of his staff as possible in prepa: for his conferences immediately foilow- ing the Labor day holiday to pian the | Gpening of the schools The teachers of the system will' be notified within a day or two of the con- | ferences Friday morning, at which time | the clementary school teachers will | meet with their respective supervising cipals, and the senior and junior nstructors will meet with their principals in their respective | school buildings. ‘This first assembly | of teaching personnel probably will be | called for 10 o'clock Friday morning, it was indicated at the Franklin Building | yesterday. ‘TWO TOURNAMENTS SET FOR LABOR DAY Oxon Hill and Suitland Will Be Scenes of Tilting and Elaborate Attendant Ceremonies. | Spectal Dispatch to The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md. Septem: ber 1.—One of the biggest Labor day attractions in Prince Georges County will be the thirty-fourth annual tour- nament, supper and ball under auspices of St. Ignatius Church at Oxon Hill. There will be tilting for prizes and a special gold medal. Riding will begin at 3 oclock, and the coronation ball, | when successful knights will crown the ueen of love and beauty and her ree maids of honor, will start at 9 .m. There will be a Southern Mary- nd chicken dinner. Another event of more than usual interest will be the seventh annual Labor day tournament at Suitland un- der auspices of the Suitland Improve- ment Association. The affair will be held on the grounds of the community house. Prizes will be awarded winning | riders and the Harrison loving cup 2 will be at stake. Representative Ste |phen W. Gambrill of the fifth Mary- land congressional district will be the | orator of the day. A Southern Mary- {land chicken sypper will be served bs |and for the benefit of the Greater Capitol Heights Fire Department Successful knights will crown the queen of love and beauty and her three maids of honor at the ball in the evening. St. Barnabas Chur ™ at Leeland will celebrate with a fest'vil by e Ladies Guild. There will » two base ball games, involving District Heights. Maryland Athletic Club and Triangle Athletic Club, starting .t 1 o'clock. A chicken supper will be served in the Guild Hall from 6 to 8 p.m., and therc will be dancing from 8:30 to 12 pm. Farmers in Laurel district will make merry with a picnic, featuring a clay pigeon shoot. horseshoe pitching. fried chicken supper and dancing. The annual fried chicken supper of Bell's Methodist Episcopal Church gnmn Springs will be held from 2 * p.m | | | | | | | pring high school | o It is not necessary to have had an Ac- count at this Bank to { Eas;‘}o Pay Mouthly Deposit For 12 Moaths §15.00 Loan $120 $1,200 $100.00 $6,000 $500.00 THE MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Tressury 1408 H STREET, N. W. Bourd Olypic gan T | SRRl gou, 458 MOBVY e sna e |other countries and for the general en- | tonight 1t openea a3t gt and WAs | gesaon's work of sxcavaling the nelgh- | the Shigl tamily, who bullt the palace | merhaven, couragement of sports. well vatronized. boring City of Kish, near the Euphrates | where Premier Mussolini has established | The three Roosevelts have taken their | lcw was among those invited. EagequiboHavage, | Orietobul, Ouliss 8nd | — Mmoot s o et eoemememme | WA P the first, city founded after | the forelgn ministry. ‘plm-‘.:: T %he industrial Mfe of the . - B50—8e8 Juas B ad Vers Orun, D d S 1 f M I B l( the biblical flood, anclent nm-rlpl.lmw"w“”l;m"’;l'::fllu‘:\f“":' aLittia Baker Nation, with Theodore, jr. known as = = = avans. Progreso and Vera Crur \ - | declare od i nd three houses have | iyqung Teddy,” being active in New O 17 epose ultan o orocco ls Dac CIATE. on 1 the greal pyramidal | been found where she. lived. One is | vork financial s And O Your EYES Feel Ti d? Cherhours and Bre On E Q F I Reest mound in Borsippa, In a suburb A:l\:‘:‘l:‘“: baker aliop in Trasterere the | Krehibald being associates In_ executive ee !re‘ S r z PR 5 Babylon. With ils seven stages, this|second wi signed and built for her | sapacities with the Roosevelt Steamship ACHE ® P s n Lasy Street as Fortune Is €storea {82 1o e one ot the possible sites) by Raphael and the third has hecome Coand the Kerr Steamship Co., t\pmm‘-‘ oo i DT . Kingston, Puerto Cor e wer 0f Babel mentioned in | shrine for Raphael-lovers in Rome. | ing two large fleets of American flag Do You Have Trouble Reading With Comfort? oo pierto Castila ENGHIEN LES BAINS, Fraffbe. Sep- | with fine st a1y bogan 10 pemen are o ruins ot B Kesr. said| Mrs, Clem Shaver pest remembered as White House chil- BAILING PRIDAY, BEPTEMBER 7 tember 1.—Moulay Abd-el-Hafd, de-|soliclt orders to have been the palace of Nebu aren, both Charles P, and Robert going | e s, M And Tasion. poted Bultan of Moracco, 14 back on| But his establishment did not proper | chadnezzer, ruler when Babylon was I) & . \ | to Central High School here during the e prance Plymouth and Havre sy street again His vast estates, | and later he curbed his pride and "made | gy the summit of s glory romises to Get term of thalr father in the presidency; | Buffren—Havre palaces, farms, flocks of sheep and| his submission” to both the French! geneath the figure of the lon les| 5 g and the Roosevelts going to Force PAicss Meerhaaen o .| household treasures in northern Africa, | and Moroccan governments so as 1o get | human shape, whether man of e | I Vote for G. Q. P. | Shool during the streiuots period of | once confiscated by the Prench govern- | back his property. His request wasian no one knows and none can tell | Po WFe Koo lheir father's administration. The L - 54 NG BopinampLon . 1x, | ment, have ‘been restored and a guardian | granted and by a decree signed at Oasa- | the significance of the (wo, cxcepl to A pledge card on which she prom- | Talls and the Roosevelts also served e e Piaurc "ana Puerio Colombis. | ppointed to see that he does not be- | blanca August 15 his foriune was re- | suggest that the Lion of Babylon 15| jsed to win one woman voter for in the World War, Kermit Roosevelt SAILING BATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 come profiigate and squander his| lensed from sequestration and lnl\m',t'd;(‘xunlllni the rest of mankind the Republican presidential ticket | first served with the Brilish before the | mone; under an administrator to protect it| % e at Tepublican nation- | entrance of the United States in the war, Theodore, jr, commanded the al headquarters yesterday from Mrs Carinthis—Cobh and Liverpoo! £ Feineyivania.-Glasgow and Moville ‘Although the Sultan lived in grandeur | from its owner. | R ik Hoiosne ad Roter-) e waa always in diiculties, having an | | Moulay Hafld lost bis, job 88, bt/ Basane Squad Ohist Named [ Jement L. Shaver of Fairmont, |26th Infantry and was wounded, and - i onerboutrs, Southsmpton snd | Inome of only $14,000 & year from the | of millions when & Fr \eh protectorate | Bpecial Dispateh o The Btas | RV whose husband was chatr- | their brother Quentin was killed in an Dr. Rose Rogiest B2t T DRy s o Humbure. government, He was one of the war| was cstablished in Morocco in 1912,) GREATER CAPITOL HEIGHTS, man of the Democratic national |airplane «-n-ngymem in the service. conle Gratgs—Geogs; Myples and OUFSUAL. | impoverished, for he was granted 8| He incurred tho wrath of France by | Md, September 1 -W. J. Tlerney of the | committee from 1024 to 1028 Charles P. Taft also won widespread SPECIAL 2 DAYS ONLY A ieviaes and Buenos Alres n, | e of $80,000 and A pension of | endcavoring to bar foreigners from the | Greater Capitol Holghts Volunter Fire| The pledge was on one of the | notice while serving as president of the aan0 Buenoe Aires” " wen | 870,000 yearly, but the decline of the|country and when he was defeated by | Department, hus been selected as as- | posteards circulated among womarn | enational Y. M. ©. A, being the Regular $10.00 il n franc cut his income to one-Afth. Prench troops he abdicated and eame | sistant chief of the rescue squad of the | yoters, and bore the signature of |youngest man ever to attain this dis- 4 . s Y . IR und, Osio ang Copen- | Mouiay Hafid could not afford t|to Prance, He chose Enghlen les Bains | Prinoe Georges County Volunteer Fires) Kntherine U. N. Shaver. The card |tinction. Though both Taft boys are $12.00 Values = s co | purchase an automobile, so when oc-| as his residence because of the close | men's Association. H. L. Léonard, chief | contalns n printed message to Her- members of the same law firm in Cin- | 2 eeme ¢ OUBEODOLE L\ sna purt| casions demanded he was forced to hire | proximity of the race ack and|of the rescue squ-d. announces that| bert Hoover, as follows cinnatl, thelr political alignments are | B ik e e horse shay and travel with his| gambling casino. Bul after the war| after Labor day (1o flist ald cours | I hereby promise to win one |not the same. Charles has boen iden®!- elr eves. A, | harem in that manner, His household | the casino was closed. He has aban-| will be offered county firomen, the a woman voter for you on November [fled with the citizens’ commttee, & re- DR. D. L. ROSE Ontametrish 929 G ST.N.W verpon | expenses were 8o heavy that & year ago | doned his native robes in favor of Ku-|vanced course for those who have 1\|\~‘ 6 and 1 further pledge myself to |form organization in Hamilton Count oo whieian LW ' imsert | ropean coats and (rousers, but,he always ished the standard course and the! see that she is duly registered as & and was elected prosecuting attorney Witk N. M. Jacabien & Son. Est. Nearly 80 ¥rs, the he ventured into business for He ] SAILING BUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 9 Bremerhaven. 10 relieve h.,/-f!mlmm circumstances, | wears a fez, standard course for others, voler. 3 WO years Ago. prosecuted L * Ciwre Co