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PRIZES ANNUUNBEI] Committee Believes This Year’s Event Will Eclipse All Previous Efforts. Convinced that the firemen’s seventh annual Labor Day parade on Pen.nsyl- vania avenue will be the most elaborate | procession of the sort which ever tra- versed that historic thoroughfare, the committee in charge of the parade! and dsy-long jubilee celebration have | lans to make the decorated parade and the mardi; 3] ively, & joint fete that will rival Philadelphia’s famous Mummers' parade nnclf New Orlelzltu' renowned mardi xm for sheer ga! J. Bargagni or the Wash- ington Pil! Department, parade m: shal, outlined these plans last nig] and announced the prizes which Wlll M offered in these events as well as awards which will be a u:ble in the other functions of the rogram. Fifty dollars in l is oflered for the baby and unue float making the best appearance. The second prize will be $25, while third will be $15. These prizes are offered by The Evening Star. This event, sem Bargagni m- nounced last night, will be held this year in the American League base ball park, an inclosure offering plenty of lhnde for the mothers and babes await- ’nf the start of the procession and the ct of the judges. Last year it was held on the !:lllpse. but the ball park was chosen for this year because it is more centrally hwued with respect to homes. The baby procession will be preceded by a half hour mnoert by the United States Marine Band. Colorful Mardi Gras Planned. A virtual riot of gayety is pllrmed for the night mardi gras, which it is hoped can held at the Sylvan Thea- ter on the Monument grounds. Open to everybody, this carnival will embrace comedy, beauty and eoriginality in the dress of the revelers. Prizes for each of these classifications will be offered. An award will be made to the most comically costumed group, pair and in- dividual. The most heautiful costume also will win a prize. There will be awards for the most attractive man’s costume and for the most attractive woman's costume, and finally a prize will be given to the person whose cos- tume is adjudged most original. Concurrent with the mardi gras, a band contest will be held, with $225 in gold as first Ee rize, while a second prize of $125 will offered. The judges of this event, lltho’ulh not definitely an- nounced, probably will be the leaders of the service blndl stationed in Wash- ington. Sergt. Bargagni said that already more out-of-town fire departments have announced their intention of taking in the parade than last yea total number of participants. Al gether the committee has invited 2,800 volunteer fire departments of six States to be re| nted, and acceptances are being received so rapidly that it is difi- cylt to keep abreast of them. Gov. Ritchle of Maryland has ac- ted the committee’s invitation to f in the parade, and that body is Firemen stationed at No. 22 enrlu company, wh won first prize for the best decorated flut in the Labor day parade last year, have made over 10,000 paper flowers in shown here getting the company’s float in shape. H. 0. Ware, Lieut. W. Trent, R. Basford, Capt. 0. C. Basford and H. C. Burton. VETERANS GATHER - FOR REUNION HERE 80th Division Members to Pay Tribute to Dead at Services Today. Hundreds of the 3,000 World War veterans expected in the Capital for the four-day reunion of the 80th, Blue Ridge, Division of the American forces of the World War, were in the city to- day to pay tribute to two “buddies” and to meet the friends of overseas s, . They will lay wreaths on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and on the grave of Brig. Gen. Lloyd M. Brett, & commander of their organization, in a public ceremony in Arlington National Cemetery this afternoon. ‘The executive council of the 80th now awaiting the acceptance of Gov. Byrd, who also was invited. Following their ride up the Avenue from P!lbe Monument, the two governors will quit the procession to take their places in the reviewing stand in front of the Dis- trict Building. Besides the two exec tives, the roster of District of Colum- bia officials is expected to be well rep- Tesented in the stand. Prizes All Announced. Prizes will be available to the par- ticipants in the parade as follows: ‘olunteer fire department with larg- est number of men in line of parade, with band—Trophy and $100 in gold; Volunteer fire department with larg- est number of men in line of parad without band—Trophy and $50 in gol Best plece of apparatus in line, cluding equipment of volunteer fire de- partment—Two prizes; Volunteer fire company with the most ancient plece of apparatus—Two prizes; Nytalum.eer nremmtmenc °umklm_mn‘ appearance e—Tw s; Best-ap] ladies’ auxiliary of \olunuer fire company or department “Two prises; participating in l&;s'flo%hflu' auxiliary, open to al 0 Best eomedy group in the parade— Two prizes; Drum corps making best appearance in_parade—Trophy and $50 in gold; Band making best lppelrlnce in pa- rade—Trophy and $50 in gold; Volunteer fire department making best appearance in parade, from fown of under 3,000 population—Two prizes; Velunleer fire department making pgemnce in parade, from town un us 10,000 popumlon—m prizes; lunteer department making huc lppemm:: in parade, from town of 10,000 or over population—Two prizes; Volunteer fire company coming long- izes; e apparatus in line Oompmy vlth best comic in parade, open to all—Two prizes; District of Columbia fire company &;eunted with best float in parade— 1 !'um.l organization making best appearance in parade, with float—Two w‘nut commercial flopt in parade—Two 268, Best. cme or business men’s associa- tion float—Two prizes. —e POLICE SEIZE 99 QUARTS IN RAID ON APARTMENT Cache of Alleged Liquor Results in One Arrest—Auto Is Also Held. & fifth-floor aj nt in the 1500 gl:{k of I street m‘yQMy Letterman and afternoon, Sergt. squad seized 99 quarts of alleged whhky -nd n yount man who fur- d his n as Lawrence Willard Dodd. 1000 hloek of Fourteenth street. Police say they surprised Dodd on the premises. He was charged with pos- ses: sion. m‘lr&t‘ of the lpln;nenc house ;fie ad possession of an automobile "‘:nd at the curb, which was alleged have contained 8 quarts of whisky. " ASSOCIATED IN LAW FIRM. Leslie C. Garnett Was Assistant Federal Attorney General. Leslie C. Garnett, former Assistant United States Attorney General, yester- association Division Association will meet tonight at the Raleigh Hotel. reunion head- quarters, to map out the plans for the three days of business sessions, enter- tainments, sight-seeing and merry- making that will follow their tribute this afternoon at Arlington. ‘The advance guard of the raunion was busy yesterday and last night reg- istering the veterans from Virginia, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. There were many little parties of reunited war veterans' yesterday and last night, and many more are scheduled today, out- side ':he prescribed round of reunion events. Memorial Rites to Be Held. Promptly at 4 o'clock this afternoon, the veterans and the invited public will gather in the amphitheater of Arling- ton National Cemetery to pay honor to those of their ranks who failed to return after the conflict. Lieut. Frank Schoble, jr., of Philadel- phia, blinded by shrapnel in action dur- ing the World War, a former president of the 80th Division Association and a leader in the assoclation’s affairs since it was formed in France at the close of the war, will deliver the pring address this afternoon at the am theater ceremonies. Music for the memorial service will be furnished by the Army Band, while the guard of honor of District In- fantrymen will be on duty at the cemetery. The invocation will be pro- nounced by the Rev. Theodore Beck, a chaplain with the division during the war. Col. Earl D. Church of Washing- ton will address the gathering on “The 80th Division.” Lieut. Schoble’s ad- dress will be the next on the program, followed by a benediction by the Rev. ‘Thomas W. Hooper of Culpeper, Va., “the fighting parson,” who had & com- mand in the division during the war, Taps to Be Blown. ‘Taps then will be blown over the ‘Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and wreaths will be placed upon that tomb and the grave of Brig. Gen. Brett by Gold Star Mothers. Except for the executive council ses- sion, scheduled for 10 o'clock tonight at the R‘.lelgh there will be no business transacted today. The first business session will be held at the Raleigh Hotel tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. Commissioner Sidney ’g ‘Taliaferro e veterans to formally will welcome the city. ‘The men of the division came princi- pally from the States of Virginia, Penn- sylvania and West Virginia. The 317th and sum !nnntry Regiments were made up of Virginia men; the !lfl.h and 320th. Infantry. Regimen e aa Artiie nmh lnd lery were organized of West Virginia trogps, while the 3052)1 Engineer Regiment was made up Central Pennsylvania towns. Tha 313th, 314th, 315th Ma- chine Gun ns, 305th Trains, 305th 8 laneous from various points in the three sutu 1,000 PLANES TO ROAR IN BIG AIR CLASSIC Cleveland Expects Attendance of 350,000 at Airport for Un- precedented Program. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohlo, August 17.—The prom- greatest air classic ever held is ised a week from today, when day announced his h the nfl¥| of Carlin & Carlin in the private s, Mr. O-rneu was ,w School. As muormumwsw-mm- Tesented the Gove: “M‘ muu‘ruu also associated uum muua!uwtnmzhmcvma land Pollard, recen the fa- mm Dr. it vic- tor ln the Demmuc primary for the mmlnnlon for the governorship of J. R. Henry, Road Builder, Dies. mately 1,000 plnnu. pnma Natlon's crack zoom and roar through the Nlflmnl Alr Races Aesmnlullul Exposition. jpeed rnmlnnn‘nunur in te between the %0 Oklahoma. glanf VALPARAISO, Ind., August 17 (#)— Jears old, rallroad | from Was born will in Rochester, N. be talan 14 nmap, Wans,, for burial. preparation for the event this year. In the picture are W. H. Hill, W. L. suun, D. of the men are Oy, % K Tomey, Staff Photo. WASHINGTON PAIR COMPOSED, DESPITE IMPENDING FORTUNE r. and Mrs. Francis W. Dumnore Not looked Excited in Face of Possibility of Great Wealth From Invention. Special Dispateh to The Star. everluunlly grateful. I hope it will be $1,000,000. I know right now where we could give half of it away.” ‘The speaker, an attractive young woman, fair in coloring and with a Southern accent, shot an admiring smile toward her rather shy, boyish, dark-haired New England husband. ‘The husband, & slightly built man of dark complexion, at ease in gray sweat- | he smiled back. er and nel flo\llel'l. before an He was toasting his open fire. A furious rain was bnunl in across the gray waters of Casco Bay and lash- ing the roof of the camp. “And lu;:gc:lng it doun't. pan out?” suggested interviewer. Gazes at Husband. Mrs. Frances W. Dunmore kept her’| gaze on the. man whose inventive genius promises to make them fabu- lously rich. The laughter in her gray- ish blue eyes never dimmed. “Then,” she :ld "w;;ll g0 on living haj as we always have.” lg‘;“ymnmore formerly of Haverhll, Mass, who with & co-worker radio Tesearch stands to win not one but many millions prov\ded - ]u;i?ent given in Delaware leral judge is upheld in the hllhz! courts, seconded his wife’s resolution with a Newl dispatches announced the other day that the claim of Mr. Dunmore, Government research .“engineer at ‘Washington, and a fellow worker, Per- cival G. Lowell, employe of a New York manufacturing concern, to invention of the socket plug which hés eliminated storage batteries in millions of radio sets had been found valid in the first whose intuition perhaps saved both their lives, “perhaps I've helped keep you at work.” She gayl! ld.mlu that she made her J spare room at husband give ug home and move his llbon'nry mw the cellar. An instinctive love of the kin of work he is doing, Mr. Dunmore be- lieves, has been the major motive in his career, rather than hope of large material gain. A I the en- vironment in the depuunent where empl |—the United States there, though larger offered him by private interests. Inventor by Instinet. “He's an inventor by instinct,” af- firmed Mrs. Dunmore. “He just can't help it. He's expr.linl l h high- er than himself. t do I mean? Whyt.henhnwbo-lu e intel- ligence, or you couldn’t and I couldn’ “Yes,” agreed her husband modestly. “We cannot claim credit for these things personally. There has to be a higher intelligence or we'd all be dummies.” Both pondered a moment longer on what keeps an inventor at work. “You know how it is,” observed Mrs. Dunmore. '-u & woman gets an idea for s dress she's about ready to bust untli she makes it.” And her husband added: “The ideas come intuitively. But reducing them to_practice takes years of hard work.” Haverhill remembers Dunmere as & boy inventor. His father, the late Frank H. Dunmore, for many years a Haver- hill merchant, subsequently went with a department store in Providence, R. I. ‘The junior Dunmore, who is 38, fin- ished his preliminary schooling Providence Technical High School, then matriculated at Pennsylvania State Col- L?e. ‘where & -in-law was head oy md-maa in 1918, in & flood of wuntulnwry messages. " May Reach $20,000,000. They are only now getting newspaper wmugu of (.h: court decision and the estimates of what it may mean to the plaintiffs, Dunmore, Lowell and the Dubilier Condenser Corporation, to which the inventoes ted a license tounthdru e of the utli; muumr $; ,ooo nuuc 4 Wllhhl:!.zl'l the family as she has always done, expenses just bt ‘hus. to :ukao both -nd: .:'“ on her band's Governmen! At _the end of his month's vacation Mr. Dunmore will return to his job. Having lived with their dream for sev- m] rs the Dunmores are now philo- about it. And though hfi‘x: :l-mmxr of prospective affluence t-escal them, it is' perfectly IDDII’- 2; mmgy do not_measure happi- o, e, 5, LA 28, o bvi deep each other '-’zm comes first, after eight years of married life. A R - A mutual friend introduced patents. ed profluble. but fortune ap- First Code Message. In his Haverhill days Dunmore was tinkering with radio, and he rigged up a transmitting machine and receiving set. The first code message he picked up was a news dispatch saying that former President Roosevelt had two lions on his African expedition. Mr. Dunmore’s earliest practical training was in Greater Boston. After leaving college he pursued for two years .the General Electric Co.’s engineering n. Later he spent six trench sets for the Corporation, Medford ynn before broadcasting began. Dunmore told how he and Mr. !awzll conceived the idea of elimi- nating the storage battery by taking current directly off ut.emun( current power lines. As soung Gove eers lugging heavy storage batteries ong distances to power recelving sets used in picking up mn work on sircraft radio relays, Studied Alroraft Radio. Mr. Dunmore received & BY ARMY BOARD Inquiring Body Investigates Accidental Wounding of of D. C. Guardsman. By a Btaff Correspondent of The Star. CAMP ALBERT C. RITCHIE, CAS- CADE, Md., August 17.—A board of inquiry convened today in the case of Pvt. Robert J. Henry of 501 Kentucky avenue southeast, Washington, who accidentally shot himself through the knee while handling an automatic pis- tol brought to camp contrary to regu- lations by a tentmate. In the absence of the injured man, who was sent home yesterday so as to receive mdlal at- tent the recessed he was received in the line of du w above the kneecap and plowed t! alvve the kneecap and polwed throug! the flesh without injuring the hone. emerging below the joint. Henry was treated at the camp lnflrmlr‘.by Lieut. Walter Stokes, who said the wound was fllgh Richard A. Pearson, owner of thc sutomatic, has been confined to company street for the remainder ol th’ training period. Both Henry lnd Pearson are members of Company A, 121st Engineers. Planned Hunting Trip. Pearson testified at the inquiry that he brought the gun to camp, as he Ehmud a hunting m? ater. He had ept it in & poekeb of hll lummobfle. he declared, until d asked borrow the car. Then, he tesiified, he took the gun from the car into his tent. That same evening he took it out as he, Henry and two other men were cleaning their rifies and exhibited it to his friends. He told the board that before giving it w Henry he took out the clip, but did not look into the chamber, thinking all the shells had been removed. Henry|gn 1';!: the muzzle, he asserted, and .fiu?m m‘m uplodln{ ber m bo-rd composed o{ M:j Julian 8. Oliff, chairman; Maj. Ralph S. Childs, recorder, and Maj. George | we: Allen, medical officer, will go to Wash- ington Tuesday to get Henryn version of the occurrence. The effect of a verdict that the injury was received in line of duty would be that Hanr!l ex- penul‘ would be paid by the Govern- men ‘The Commanding General’s Cup will be awarded to the first battalion Nu ball team this year as a result of a game this afternoon with the headquarters ing nnen! ‘of the 2u'fipmv|uon and his staff are to go to Martinsburg, W. Va., tomorrow morning to witness a dem- Officers of the 121st Engineers held a dance tonight at the Buena Vista Springs Hotel, located about three miles from camp. The music was provided by an orchestra from the ineer band. An enlisted men's dance is to be held Wednesday evening and the Engineer officers are to give a dinner Thursday night. Protestant _religious services have been ai to be held-in camp to- morrow by Chaplain Arthur L. Smith of the Engineers, and Chaplain G. Palmer of the 29th Division. Cathoiic services will be in Waynesboro and Blue Ridge Summit, Pa. ‘This morning was devoted to close order drill, pnck rolling, tent p!u:hlng. display of equipment, battalion inspec- tion and instructions in the care of arms and equipment and the nomen- clature of the rifle. CUBA ACCEPTS CONTRACT FOR U. S. MANAGED HOTEL Historic Site of Santa Clara' Bat- tery Granted Free for 60 Years, By the Associated Press. HAVANA, August 17.—A $4,000,000 contract for the erection of an Amer« ican-managed hotel on the site of his- toric Santa Clara Battery, was signed today by Oov:mmem officials and a British contracting firm. Free use of the grounds for 60 years was granted after which the property will revert to the Cuban government. The Hotel Plaza Operating Co. of New York will operate the hotel under & long-term contract with the Cuban government. Situated in Havana's smart vedado residential district, the hotel will be one of the largest and most sumptuous in Latin America. It is one of the items in Cuba’s public works huudlnc program aimed to increase tourist EDUCATIONAL. 1f you would like to become_self- supporting, we can help you. Begin a course of shorthand, typewriting, bookkeeping, letter writing, spelling, arithmetic and English, A 10 months’ course, day nuion. costs $100; evening session, $50. You would be pleased with the course and never regret the preparation. WOOD’S SCHOOL 311 East Capitol St. Linc. 0038 REWCFJ) SUMMER RATES FREE TRIAL LESSON Berlitz School of Languages 1115 Connecticut Avenue Tel. Decatur 3983 . COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF , | Doy EDUCA’I'IONAL COLLEGIATE : ik i s s 3 P "’fin A t h l 0 l ie Nustrated wate, Bos W, Brooklyn, N. Y. School of Science and Technology Industrial :‘: trical Engineering Industrial ci:-hll Engineering "rost - Intensive TWO-YEAR Courses romits, rai evolu- DRAFTING “A Profession With a Future” Paul J. Leverone, President {0 6 Month Cot Nr'lit Site lll.l eo—Enroll Any Time ves Gontiue Throushous the Fear for free iliustrated catalogue E Sts. N.W. AU y snd T VINE AND APPLIED 4 ART > vense and M Strest @747 Rbode Loland Avenne) MIM Now Classss Now ¥ andBoe i s, ooty Viseeteg e np. oot 4 v . We tonch you to become an asset iu the B.| plant. A special legislative session then PVT. ROBERT G. II‘ENIY. mtluut.h '.=: District National Guard training camp at Camp Albert Cascade, Md.—Star Staff Photo, JITNEY CASE BEGUN _ IN LOUISIANA COURT Street Car Strikers Obtain Order for Hearing on Serv- ice Tuesday. By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, La., August 17— ‘The court fight over operation of jit- neys during the strike of union street car men overshadowed all else today in the controversy between the D“blh: service and the union, which has ex. perlenced two major fiares of violence since July 2. ‘To m the legality of the police action against operation of the “cour- tesy” jitney with a tip, counsel for Chlflel 8. Upton, a_driver, obtained ler from Judge Mark M. Boatner l.n CIVI.I District Court, citing city offi- cials to appear next Tuesday and show cause why the jitneys should not con- tinue. Acting Mayor T. Semmes 1l | Walmsley and Theodore Ray, superin- !endent. of police, were cited. {ree jitney men claimed they wm nn!, chufln‘ fares for service and :s prosecuted illegally for n&kfluuflu ler the city ordinance regu- g ‘While the street cars were running, pedestrians who sought motor car ition were reported picking oul routes by the number of tiny Amer- n flags stuck on automobiles. In the first big disturbance of the strike two men were killed and street cars’ burned in Canal street rioting. In the other the city commissioners ‘were beaten by a mob and four persons shot when strike sympathizers nonma city hall, demlnd.\.n: a repeal of the anti-jitney law. —_— TEXAS TO MERGE PRISONS. | Anfi'qnlted Institutions to Give| ‘Way. to Modern System. AUSTIN, Tex. (#)—The Texas prison tem, whose 12 farms have drained e State treasury for years, is to be mnoentneed and reorganized. itive committee and the State prl.lm board have asked officials of 55 | nitentiary systems how Texas' anti- qn-ud penal organization may best be improved. ‘When adequate data are gathered, a reorganization committee will select the most suitable site for a modern prison will hear the State's needs. BDDCA'I'I’ONAL “THE TEMPLE .SCHOOL, Inc. The Secretarial School of Individual Instruction CAROLINE B. STEPREN, ‘l!' for I;'l{l’“ e Nat. 3258 1420 K St. N.W. Dist. 2480 Aoy © COSTU! ” LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY 1333 F_St. Opp. Fox Met. 2883 | For Practical Results Study at The Master-School| Rerister For Beginners® Now Of Class == Interior Decoration || 8| ing in Interier Decoration and off an_Accredited, Practical and Professional Training C . Exe pert’ Teachers. Individual Instruction. Rudolphe de Zapp, director lum.mu Arts & Decoration, New York 1206 Conn. Ave. North 5236 MOUNT WASHINGTON COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR BOYS MOUNT WASHINGTON, MD. We Will Prepare Your Son for High School o3, Pjopimity, te Mount &t Asnes the Mount Wasn on Gouniry School, the idea! ing and dsy schooi. Reservations Limited Seventy Select Bo; From Six te Thirteen Years Send for Catalogue Sookkeening, 13 w position susranteed New Clisses now Register today g credited.” Est. 8 yrs. 1338 “G.” Nat. ELECTRICAII ENGINEERING THREE ARE ACCUSED OF COUNTERFEITING Prisohgrs Are Held While Ring, Leaders Are Sought by U. S. Agents. Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, August 17.—After many weeks of warning by the Federal Re- serve Bank against the prevalence of large numbers of counterfeit $20 and $5 notes, secret service men brought to book today three prisoners arrested Friday night and accused of operating among stores on Forty-second street, between Seventh and Eighth avenues. Though no estimate was made of the amount circulated, the captors said the sum was large and that many small storekeepers had been the losers. The three men taken into custody, after being shadowed for hours, were de- scribed by the operatives as merely out- lldn men engaged by the leaders of a large band to get rid of the bogus bills. The Government said the gang prob- lbly wtnled 20 persons. H ers were Dominick Fusco, 20 yem old, a waiter, of 440 West ‘Thirty-ninth 'street; Ernesto Valentino, alias Jimmy Demarco, 24, a tailor, of 251 West Fifty-fifth street, and George Raney, 25, bus boy, of 360 Wes{ Forty- third street. Federal Commissioner Francis A. O'Neill held them all for a hearing September 7, Fusco in $7,500 bail and the otheti in $10,000 each. aigned, Valentino snarled, ly don’t you get the men who got lbe money?" Commissioner O'Neill re- torted, “Why don't you tell the truth?” There was no answer. Bail was not furnished. The prisoners declined to | give any information. Secret service men said the counter- feits were poor specimens, though enough to pass most small shopkeep- ers. A number of the bills have been posted in banks in this city to warn customers. The Government agents sald they believed the gang had 40 plates. They said they were hopeful of capturing the leaders shortly. PP A S TWO CITIES WANT MEN | ARRESTED IN RICHMOND Three May Face Charge of Auto| Thett and Burglary of i Alabama Store. By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va., August 17.—Police in Birmingham and Florence, Ala. have notified State Motor Vehicle Com- missioner J. M. Hayes that the occu- pants of an automobile detained here are wanted in those two cities for lheu. of the car and robbery of a store. Birmingham authorities identified the | car as one stolen there several days ago, while the Florence chief of pohce‘ described money found in the machine, | including a Mexican dollar and several Stone Mountain Memorial half dollars. The men being held here are B. C.| Hll’bl.n Miami, Fla.; Paul Weever, Little ., alias Lee Master, Tulsa, Okl ,» and Karl Kirchner, former ship's | cook who said his home is Bavaria,| Germany. Wheeler told Commissioner | Hayes that he joined Harbin after the latter left Florence, Ala., where the | last theft is said to have taken place, while Kirchner declared that he did not enter the automobile until it reached & point near Rocky Mount, N. C, EDUCATIONAL. BLIZZARD BLOWING OVER BYRD'S CAMP Winds Keep Members of Party Inside When Barom- eter Drops to 27.82. BY RUSSELL OWEN, 3 . BY Radio to The Star and the LITTLE AME'RXCA Anhretlfl, Au- gust 17.—A severe blizzard has been blowing for two days, with the lowest barometer yet recorded on this trip and one 5t the lowest ever seen in the Ant- aefe. Al day vesterday the wind whooFed around pes and ventilators, playing . tgem, and it is still blowing intermittently today. The wind has at times been more than 50 miles an hour, with drift snow so lhi(:kulhal it shut off the vision as if by a wall. ‘The barometer started to go down al most straight yesterday and went to 27.82. What this means can better be realized when compared with the barometer during the Miami hurricane, which reached 27.72. Although the wind did not reach hurricage force here, there is no doubt that sothewhere near us, probably out on the Ross Sea, it was blowing great guns. Few men went over the top between the houses yesterday, preferring the tunnel, for the only way to steer was by occasional glimpses of a cloud- covered moon and the direction of the wind. This morning it was easier to see and the radio towers were visible at all times, but the first ones over to the mess hall had to crawl through a hole about 2 feet wide and slide down a long snow drift to the floor level. As usual the temperature has risen and now registers 7 below zero. We have had much more wind than Amundsen had during August and cor- respondingly higher temperatures so far, although it is far from being a Winter resort. by the Copyright. 1829, the S8t 'Louis Post Dispatch. Al H‘nm for publication reserved throighout e worl BAN ON PIGS ASKED. Manila Official Would Bar Them From Homes. MANILA (#)—Dr. Jacobo Fajardo, director of health, thinks that it is un- sanitary for pigs end people to live under the same roof, and he is trying to obtain legislation to stop it. Since time immemorial, in Filipino families, the pigs have had their quar- ters on the ground floor, and the family its quarters upstairs, Dr. Fajardo wants the pigs confined to the back yard. New York Times EDUCATIONAL. Maret French School e September 20, 1930 Comb! the advantages of the best American schools with benefit eguivalent 50 that of a sojourn in Frai Eieht grades for bovs h_School for Stenoinpbic Secretarial Accounting Catalogue upon request Columbia 7078 Columbia Business School 3403 14th St. N.W. NATIONAL UNIVERSITY 61st Year Begins September 28, 1929, at 6:30 P.M. School of Economics and Government ‘This School offers a standard four-year collegiate course in Eco- nomics and Government leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Arts (A. B) and Bachelor of Science ( ment. Corporation Finance. Business Finance. Investments. Business Organization and Ad- ministration. Money and Banking. Money and Credit. Federal Reserve System. ‘The Stock Exchange. Development of Banking Services. Banking Practice. Trust Company Management. Auditing and Legal Accounting. Principles of Economies. Industrial Relations. Government and Business. Public Utllities and Transpor- Ecuuon’ o onomic Geography. Interstate Commerce. Federal Trade Commission. Trusts and Monopolies. nmuh and nmllh Literature, five courses, including Jour- nalism. Principles of Political Science and Government. Comparative Government, two courses. American Government. Municipal Government. Party Government. Amfl’lcln Po]llle-l ‘Theories. B. S) in Economics and Govern- The following courses are offered: Constitutional Law. Jurisprudence and Legal History. International Law. International Claims. International Relations ~and Organization, Roman Law. Modern Civil Law, Ancient History. Rg’nun Civilization and ocern European Histery. Farly American History. American History, 1828 to the present. s “- of American Foreign English History. Latin American History. Economic History. General Psychology. Applied Business Psychology. Social Psychology. Principles of Sociology. Elementary Biology. Criminology. Latin, introductory. Latin, intermediate. Tess than a fali course. on application. Registr, Opent vach day the HOTEL INDUSTRY The man who gives you this opportunity . e hools, and ready to give YOU your start for Success. Robert J. Gross Mrs. Course Complete in One Year Students construct motors; install . wiring, test electrical machinery. Graduates are qualified to enter " “the electrical fisld at once. fireproof r-ulul 0 o0 e Above are just of thoteands: of sradustes. They started where you aré now. Put yourself where THEY Bow ‘with Lewis Traingl, Train Now for YOURS! Earn $2,500 to $10,000 a Y ear There’s no longer any good reason why YOU can’t enjoy the Big Pay, interest- ing life and wide-open future of. Hotel work! Lewis-trained Men and Women are in constant demand by Hotels, Clubs, Apartments, Institutions, Tea Rooms, Schools, Restaurants and- Cafe- terias, We will make you ready, for your choice of the 151,000 additional Jjobs that must be filled this year. Learn quickly No Delay— at this World- Classes Famous School Forming Now The Lewis Method— _ Days lost are Dollare proved by 50,000 stu. lost. Visit or writslus. dents and approved by Day and right leading hotel employers how forming. —save you months, yes humber of s yeers, of time. = You accepted. Gelthe F1 learn the emdire Indus- Book shown iry here under expert Learn how to instructors. Employ. bisger ment Dept. puts you in Jyourselt! touch with actual jobe when you graduate. Call, Phone or . Write for Your *u opportunity. LEWIS HOTEL TRAINING SCHOOLS Pennsylvania- Avenue at Twenty-Third Street