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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C. * PHILADELPHIA HIT BY SEVERE STORM One Man Drowns—Damage Placed at $1.000,000 as Gale Reaches 57 Miles. | B the Aseociated Press | PHILADELPHIA. Julv 15 —The wcrst electrical storm in years. accomp:nied by a 57-mile-an-hour gale. spent fts fury over Philadelphia and ~vieinity early today after causing at least one death and property damage expected to total more than $1.000.000. | Many sections of the city were inun- dated under several feet of water. In the Logan section automobiles were | floated away and dwellings flooded to | within a few feet of the ceilings of their frst floors. Business establish- ments were flooded And merchandise | either ruined or swept away. Several subways also were flooded Families Driven Oul. In suburban communities frees were uprooted and telegraph and electric poles were lowered, shutting off tels phones and lights. *City and suburban trolleys were halted and thousands of -automobiles stalled Hall and rain damaged growing crops in_many nearby sections. Twenty families living near Saw Mill Run at Norristown fled to city bulldings when the creek left its banks and in- yaded their homes The body of Evans Young. 30, who drowned in Frankford Creek, was re- covered today. Hospitals Saved by Rod. The Butts Reformed Church at Stanton, N. J. was destroyed by fire after lightning struck the steeple A lightning rod, the invention of Ben- amin Franklin, saved an institution e founded—the Pennsylvania Hospital ~during the storm Firemen said a bolt. which struck the cupoia of the main building. was deflected by an ancient lightning_rod extending above the tower. The flash enveloped the cupola in a sheet of flame. but the tower. containing price- Jess documents and surgical relics, was not damaged. MOTORIST KILLED BY HEAT. Bweltering Wave Covers Rocky Moun- tain Area and Middle West. DENVER. July 15 (#.-One death ! was recorded today from the effects of | Island for safety at 2 a.m. today. | tide |Generaly Fair Weather With | than 6500 Government employes from next two days “are excellent,” the Atlanta Weather Bureau said today. Last night's rains cavered the whole | cotton belt east of Northern Texas, in- | cluding Southern Texas. 1 The rains came jn fime to save | Georgla cotton crops and add theusands | of dollars to farmers’ incomes, but 100 late for ypland corn. “Fall Writes Flee Before High Tide. BEAUMONT, Tex., July 18 (@).—Am unusually high tide caused 100 residents of the Caplen and Gfichrist beach col- onies south of here to hurry to H_rl‘hh preceded a tropieal storm which struck the Gulf Coast., GAPHAI.SHUWERS ; iufi”&’afi"&“fl"é{o’f'l’:‘n.’”?"nx'i}'z&'; h . the North American Newspaper Alli- {ance, of which The Star is a member. | In the first article Fall wold how the {then Senator Harding, returning. jubi- |1antly from the convention which nom- jnated him as Republican ocandidate for the presidency, called him' to his |office and said: “1 want you to be my Secretary of State. I'm going to be elected. & “Secretary of State?” Fall replied. “I thought you were & politician.’ “No,” Harding is quoted as respond- 1 mean it." Played Poker Together. Fall said Harding proceeded to ex- plain that the two were “congenia | that Harding was impressed with Fal knowledge of international affairs, pa Heuldrlv Mexican affairs; -that Harding Tecalled the part Fall, as Senator, had | played as one of the 31 “irreconcilables™ in the League of Nations fight, that Fall knew the Spanish language and. finally. to use Fall's words, “We had played poker together— —" Fall pointed out that a group of Sen- ators hed been in the habit “for a period of vears” of meeting three or four eve- nings a week at various homes for din- ner. following which there would be s poker game until midnight. “Harding reminded me of many pleasant evenings together,” said Albert B. Fall, who will enter prison shortly for having accepted s bribe | while he was Secretary of the Interior undet ‘President Harding, ‘today gave the inside story of his sslection for the cab'net, including the disclosure _that Harding first offered to make htim 'Ser-' retary of State. High Temperatures |Is Bureau’s Forecast. Thundershowers this afternoon | brought at least temporary relief from the heat which caused a death and two prostrations in Washington yester- day and resulted in the release of more ing, temporary buildings. The storm, accompanied by an elec- trical display, checked a rising temper- ature expected to go “high in the nineties” by mid-afternoon. The Weather Bureau predicts “generally fair weather with coptinued high tempera- tures. C. E. Jones, colored. of 1250 New Jersey avenue, died at Freedmens Hos- pital last night after he was overcome while at work on a building in the 7600 block of Georgia avenue yesterday aft- ernoon Two other persons were treated at hospitals for the effects of the heat.' Officials of the Commerce hnd Treas- | ury Departments, who allowed empioyes in varfous bureaus to go home yester en the heat became infolerable, weather conditions later today would determine if the employes would be dis- missed again ‘this afternoon. A maximum of 95 was registered at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, several hours before a thundershower swept the city, bringing-somewhat cooler tempera- tures. The Kiosk on Pennsylvania avenue showed a 3-degree increase over the official high mark. Job Belongs te Coast State. “1t simply isn't feasible, Warren.” Fall told his friend. “You ean't afford to make & man_from a little inland State like New Mexico your Secretary of State. * That job belongs to. same coast State. particularly an Atlantic Coast State. New York has a to..claim it, by tradition if for no other reason. New York has given you an enormous majority. -You can't afford to. overlook that.” “The job belongs to some one from | New York State, Fall added. jokingly. The mercury had reached 9 at 11 | because the politicians there think o'clock this morning, and the Weather they are especially qualified for it Bureau saw no relief in the form of | Don't they see the ships of all the world the Tan | Life Story Former Secrvel.aryv of Interior Describes How Harding Wanted Him 1y Be Secretary of Staté, but Due to Political: Pressure.Named Hughes: stated. “If I may say-s0 without im- | plying the her 5 |and ;vlum way from his many |ties, Harding. was mever do_a single : he get some ‘one else to do, h is safd to | be,_the mark of a good. Executive. | ~“He was an editor. He wanted the { rest of us to_ge out Jike n.felv | whatever he wanted. bring it in and lay ted" articles written by FaH for | it an his desk completed—and then he | ‘would: ‘edit’ it. i~ After Harding’s ion, in seled with Fall at Marion almost daily on_the selection of certain members of his cabinet. % “Some of his selections were 3o at ! varjance with his nature and intentions that how they came to be made, and what_considerations forced them, ni eonsiderable explanation,”. Fall stated, “particularly the selection of his Sec- retary of the Treasury of Andrew W. Mellon of Pennsylvania, when Harding had his heart set on another man, and | the selection of Nerbert -Clark Hoover | for Secretary of Commerce, when Hard- ing was & staunch old-line Republica while Hoover was the production of op- portunities provided and nurtured under a Democratic administration.” 'SUIT FOR DIVORCE HELD LIBEL BY WIFE Mrs. Stalinski - Asks Dismissal of TFormer Husband's Action, Citing Polish Decree. i | 2 e i | Asserting that the muit for absolute | divorce recently filed sgainst, her by her former hueband, Roland H. Rowe, In- vestment Building, was an attempt to embarras her and her new husband in | diplomatic and soclal eircles. Mrs. El- vina Rowe Stalinski, wife of Jan Stalin- ski, former secrtary of the Polish em- | bassy, today asked its dismissal in an | answer filed in the District Supreme Court. | Through Attorneys Frank J. Kelly [‘and - Vernon B. Lowery. Mrs. Stalthski ays her husband knew of the Polish divorce and in an agreement re- nomination. anticipation of his election, )l";un“ " WEDNESDAY. IFALL MARKS TIME AT EL PASO HOM Wishes He Were Physically Able to Dg_) Al Expected _of Prisoner. | By the Azsocisted Press. | ®L PASO. Tex. July 15.—His long fight to escape prison ended, Albert B. Fall, aged and in ill-health, today faced a trip from the mansion he buflt here 25 years ago to a penitentiary at Santa Fe, N. Mex. While his wife and daughters hovered !about, attending to his minutest needs, awaiting the hour of departure to ser the prison sentence resulting from his conviction on a charge of accepting a bribe as Secretary of the Interior. He received calmly and with a fiash lof humor the news that his sentence {of a year and & day, by a ruling of | Attorney General Mitchell, would be | served in the city where he began the | career that carried him to a post in ithe cabinet of President Harding. Regrets Physical Disability. Fall said e did not know when he wonld leave for Santa Fe, but he was in no sense dismayed. He said he even i the_things expected of a prisoner. | “Yes, gentlemen, I have many friends in Santa Pe.” he said as he smoked the | stump of a cigar. “But I hope I won't ,find them in the penitentiary.” “It is a rel’ef to have it all settled.” he said. “Certainly the strain has been heavy. Mrs, Fall and her daughters. Mrs. C. C. Chase and Mrs. Jouett Elliott, al- ternated between indignation at what they asserted to be the injustice of the | courts in which Fall was convicted of accepting a bribe from E. L. Doheny in | leasing of the Elk Hilly naval oil re- {serve and expressions of hope that in prison he wonld find peace. Wife Sees No Disgrace. “It is no disgrace for him to be im- prisoney Mrs. Fall said. “He has done nothing wrong. His name will be ! cleared in history.” Mrs. Chase asserted the “affidavits |interpreting the William Beaumont | Hospital Army physicians’ report will show the injustice and unfairness. we yhave been up against.” he sat in pajamas in a big armchaT| { wished he were physically able to do all | JELY: 15, 1981 . at the 'Ed , Swope New Mexico| Penientiary and he would notify Fall ‘m come to Santa Fe. § MQST: NOTEWORTHY PRISONER. | SANTA FE, N. Mex.. July 15 (#).— | The .New Mexico Penitentiary * awaits its most noteworthy prisoner since the grim walls were -erected in the. ter- ritorial davs of 1884 | Hea Albert Bacon Fall, ‘whose po- | Mtical davs pridr to his term as Sec- | retary of the Interior often were occu- | pied active consideration of the | problems of this institution, which will | now exact from him a one-year-and- | | Redly” enalty: for briberv—or four months with tim&off for good behavior. | A gray stone administration unit is fianked by two long gray stone .cell houses, to each side of which and to the rear -range 30-foot turreted walls fo « huge rectangle. | This prison. located on the outskirts of Santa Fe at the foot of the Sangre |de Cristo. Mountain Range and built [to accommodate 350 convicts. now houses more than 500 men and women. } Modern Equipped Hospital, Fall, because of his ill health, prob- ably will be confined to a ward in the new “hospital. completed a_little more than a year ago by convict labor. It is a well lighted. well ventilated two- story brick buflding equipped with modern - surgical and dental facilities and has an especially constructed unit for tubercular - prisoners. prison brick plant gives em- ployment to most of the convicts, ap- proximately 60 per cent of whom are Spanish-Amerieans. The - prison physician and- surgeon, Dr. Eugene W. Fiske of Senta Fe, who calls three times a week on patients in need of medical care, will have charge of Fall's case. | In the event the Fall family so de- | sires, other doctors will be admitted to make examinations or administer treatment. Special foods are served prisoners who wish to pay for such service. Fall in his earlv dave contributed to the building of the prison as a mem- , ber of the Territorial House of Repre- sentatives, three times as Territorial Senator. as_Associate Justice.of the Territorial Supreme Court. and twice as Territorial Attorney General of New Mexico. HURLEY TO FLY SOUTH Secretary of War Hurley will . fiy’ from Washington to Muscle Shoals. Ala., tomorrow morning to inspect the Government’s power and nitrate plant there The Secretary expects to arrive at Muscle Shoals by 1 pm. to confer with members of the newly appointed commission_representing the states of Tenneasee and Alabama to recommend a plan for operation of the plants. EEN STAR GRANTED DECREE IN- TEXAS. } GINGER ROGERS. It; was revealed yesterday that Cnnger rs, the red-neaded Fort Worth girl whoi leaped to Hollywood and fame shoitly after she won a Texas Charles- ton dancing championship. had been granted a_decree by Judge Towne Young in District Court, Dallas, Tex, Saturday. Miss Rogers. nee Virginia Katherine McMath. told a story of alleged abuse and misrepresentation en th: part of ber husband. She said she married when she was 17..and without - the consent of her mother. Mrs. Lehla Rogers “1 married the defendant, relying on his representations that he was a sober. hard-working man. with theatrical con- nections, and that he did not drink and could make a great actress out of me.” She said they married in New Orleans March 25, 1929, —A. P. Photo. RECEIVE PAY BY CHECK The Controller General's Office i now: paying off in checks. beginning today. J. B. Woodside. special assist- ant to the controller general. explained that the office has adopted ¢he system of paying off by check “because it is more convenlent, we beieve it is more economic and efficient. and then. of course. we do not run the risk of handling the cash.” sxs A3 TRADITION OF, MOUNTIES ATTRIBUTED TO MOVIES Retiring Head of Canadian Police Says Members ““Got Their Man™ ‘Whenever They Could. By the Associnted Press. OTTAWA. July 15.—The tradition that the “‘Mounties~always get their man” was an invention of American moving picture producers. according to | Col. Courtland Starnes. retiring_heed of the Roval Canadian Mounted Police. h them if we could” Col. He added that the per- | sonnel of the Mounties now was equal to that of its earlier days when it earned international fam> for its ex- ploits. | — MADISON APTS. 1739 BYE ST. FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHSD 1 ROOM. LARGE DRESSING OLOSET, BATH. 33330 TO 345.30. L. W. Groomes, 1719 Eye St. E‘N 4 ¢ § “See Etz and See Better” Glasses not only promote better vision. but by en- abling the eyes to see with- out effort, thev avoid anv unnatural, strained expres- sion and disfguring lines. ETZ Optometrists 1217 St. N.W. TORAG G Fall was eximined at the Army hospital here several weeks ago on re- quest of the Government. The report said he was suffering from chronic tuberculosis. chronic pleurisy, arthritis and hardening of the arteries. showers. Barring cloudy weather, the | dock, and sail? That makes them ex- bureau expected a maximum of 100 | perts on foreign affairs. degrees later today. The prospect IS\ For a time after that, Harding re- for gentle, southwest winds, becoming ' peatedly returned to the subject. He variable. ! told several others of his intention, | garding the custody of their children, ! | recognized th: divorce and her subse- quent marriage to Stalinski. -She de- clares she went through all. the Te- quirements of the laws of Poland for | high temperatures prevailing over sec- | tions of the Rocky Mountain arca, | Near Gila Bend. Ariz, where the | mercury_shot to 118 degrees. Robert Siblev, 27, an Oklahoma motor tourist, | OMPANY ~#WRECKING~ . was 103. died from heat prostration | Colorado residents hoped for relief in predicted showers today following rec- ord temperatures. At Leroy, east of Sterling. Colo., the mercury went to 106 degrees, the highest in 41 years. The maximum at Sterling and Greeley A new high was set with 96 : degrees. A heat wave throughout the Middle ‘West sent temperatures soaring yester- day. Weather Bureau for today. Tempera- tures of 102 were recorded at Spring- | field, 111, and North Platte, Nebr. | PROUGHT ENDS IN SOUTH. Beneficial Rains Bring Relief Across Entire Cotton Belt. ATLANTA. Ga. July 15 (®.— | Drought in the South was definitely broken by widespread and beneficial rains last night and prospects for the SPECIAL_NOTICES. HERE WILL BE A SPECIAL COMIGH | eation of M M. Parker 19 g o o rhursday. Sl 16, iR, to conter the E_A_Degree # FRANCIS B. WLLIAMS. Mast: NOTICE OF RESIGNATION OF SUCCESSO! TRUSTEE _TO RIVERSD CORPORATION. Washington, D. A | that pursuant to Section 4 of Article VII of a certain indenture of first mortzage by | And hetween Riverside Apartment Corpora- fion and William H._West. Trustee, dated as of the 8th day of December. 1924, and re- Corded in_the office of the recorder of deeds r the District of Columbia in Liber 3428 securing an \ssue of bonds designated as mortgage 7% gold serial bhonds in the aggregate principal amount $450.000. SAMUEL _J. HENRY 501 frust te Willlam ‘H. West. h Trustee under the aforesaid in fArst mortgage. by an instrument in wri caled the 19th day of June, 1931 FURTHER TAKE NOTICE, that pursuant te Section 4 of Article VII of said indenture of frgp mortgage such resignation shall take effect ‘on the 24th day of July, 1931, IN NFSS_WHEREOF. Samuel J.' Henry, has executed these Dresents ‘and affixed nis seal hereto thiy 19th day of | June. 1931. SAMUEL J. HENRY (L. 8., Trusiee Attesi E. M NOLAND. PROPOSITIONS tive membership in_Conaressional Address Box 3 o OUR_REPUTATION COMES FROM CARE- | on- arrival and r_* | R o in ting. ANI —AC- | Coun oo ‘mev within 1,000 miles gladls auots our rates BRY ASSN . INC. N Just_phone & NATIONAL DELIV- 460 CHAIRS FOR _REN1, SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES, banqueis. weddings and meetings, 10c up per dav each: new chal Also invalid rolling_chairs for rent ar sale UNTTED STATES STORAGE CO.. 418 10th Merr 4 .6OR_STORE OR rable location: corner 10th & E opposite new huilding of Potomac ectric Power Co: entire floer. attractive lease terms to good temant. Call MR. MOTT. Jhst n8es SR WANTED— LOADS To BINGHAMTON, N. Y From ELMIRA. N.' Y To CLEVELAND To BOSTON d_all_points Seuth VAN LI Juiy July Tuly 14 i hily 20 and west | AGENT L, LIFT VAN anywhere 53 TRANSFER & STORAGF CO St _N.W. Phone North 3342-3343 Civil Service Competitive | F.xamination Soon ™ FILING AND_STATISTICK Now 'Classes Starting_at sent demands of civil serviee nd Statistics. it has_become nec- 5 form new classes. beginning This Evening, July 15, esdss and Fridar evenings. from 7 fo 930, o the top floor ot the Tivoli Theater n JOHN K M. BARRY WERBERT F KEYSFR Instructors Heluding spelling. ests. for Ale clerk ahe | Fomputation. | tABUIAtion and mental tests. for statistical completed in due A M AR ndexing. metic routing and intelligence t Applicants graoming 8% Secretaries, Tivoli Theater Building. 3813 14th St N W Columbia 3000. _ ROOF WORK —~of any nature prom aiier By ‘mractical roofe: Ksz Roofins i Company_ Make Your Appeal to vour prospects threugh a Nationa Capital Press printed message This The National Capit "D s Nw ~ Mount for nd capably looked Call us up 113 3rd 8t B W Distriet 0933 al Press Nat_ 0850 St —Evenings Clev i | | GRAVEL CEMENT Sold in small quantities. Ne_order too small.” Sudden Service. J. FRANK KELLY, Inc. | ”mN Ga Ave N North 1343 Lumber —Millscork Paint Coel—Sand—Gravel—Cement | from 10 o'clock in the morning until {1 o'clock in the afternoon and during Employes were released yesterday aft- ernoon from the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. the Bureau of the Census. the Bureau of Naviga- tion, the Division of Publication and the Steamboat Inspection Service, all of the Department of Commerce. and the Division of Supply and Public Health Service, Treasury Department. The heat got the best of Edward Courtney. 33 years old, of the 700 block th no relief indicated by the Oof Second street. and James Green, 55 | at Point Isabelle, Tex. vears old. of the 3200 block of Grace street, both colored. Courtney, who collapsed while at | work at Thirteenth and C _streets | northeast. was admitted to Casualty | Hospital, where his condition was said | to be improving today. Green. treated at Georgetown University Hospital and | discharged, was overcome in his home. CLOUDS HELP CHECK IDAHO FOREST FIRES | Burning Woodlands Nearing Con-' trol. but Sitnation Is Bad in Neighboring States. By the Associated Press. SPOKANE, Wash.. July 15.—Cloudy weather and fast work by an army of fighters brought Idaho's most, dangerous forest_fires closer to submission todas. | though the situation was atill critical / in_Montana and Wyoming. Trenching of the 13,000-acre Hemiock Creek blaze in the Clearwater Forest of | North Idaho was to be completed today | by more than 1.000 workers. Forest offi- | cials_believed only heavy winds or a | new hot apell could put the fire out of | control again. Meager reports from the new fires in | the Challis Forest of Central Idaho in- dicated favorable .weather was helping the fighters. No other new danger areas | were reported. Three hundred men were working in | Montana to subdue the Rock Oreek fire in the Bitter Root Valley and the fire | along Gold Creek Evergiades Burning. WEST PALM BEACH. Fla.. July 15 .—Fire swept seven aections of the Everglades today just as the drainage board of the swamplands had voted to halt all fire control operations because of lack of funds and jurisdietion: The area burning has been afficted by a long drought, and firemen said un- less there was Immediate relief by rains the muck would be rendered useiess for agricultural purposes. BOY SCOUTS T(;VENIOY OUTING AT GLEN ECHO| | Diving Exhibitions and Race Con-| tests to Feature Field Day July 27. Arrangements were completed yester- day by officials of the District Council. Boy Scouts of America, and the man- agement of Glen Echo Amusement Park for a Scout fleld day there July 27. Col. E. L. Mattice. assistant to the Scout executive, will be in charge of the outing Frery amusement at Glen E¢ho will be thrown open to the Seo A pro- geam of events i< being preparéd and will include diving. dasn and distance races in the pool for prizes and various Scout contests later in the afternoon. The pool will be open to the Scouts this time the water sports and con- tests will be staged. During the after- noon the Scouts will be given tickets for every ride on .the grounds. | Will Rogers Savs: CLAREMORE. Okla —Well, yester- dar was a great day for Gatty and Post. It was just an ordinary day for Claremore, but it was a big thing for those boys. They never saw & town like ours. We buiit a real airport in four days just to weicome ‘em. 1 was with ‘em in Tulsa Monday night, and flew over here in the Winnie Mae with them terday. It's the | probably feeling out sentiment. Will H | Hays. afterward Harding's Postmaster General, brought the subject up one day with Mrs. Fall. “Mr. Harding ix tempted.” he said | “to defy the East and make your hu [b‘nd Secretary of State.” “When Mr. Pall sayx he doesn't care {tor the job,” Mrs. Fall replied. “he | means it.” Fall suggested Elthu Root. This was Harding had | asked him there from his ranch in New Mexico. Harding was “not ‘enthusiastic” about Root. “It seemed there was between them one of thoseinaccountable and illogi- cal mutual dislikes that sometimes spring up between persons. a sort of spiritual incompatibility,’” Fall ex- plained. Hughes Got Appointment. Harding eventually felt the political tial nominee, and had come to the idea that. regardless of his own wiches, the Secretary of State must be a3 New Yorker. Root eliminated, Charles Evans Hughes stood out as the most satisfactory nominee. Hughes became Harding's Secretary of State. On August 17. 1920, Harding wrote Fall from Marion, Ohio: myzelf of your counsel and advice. Really. I- very much need to be sur T trust most fully . . . T you to do this at any sacrifice, but I do not hesitate to tell you that I should very much like to have your advice and co-operation through some of the anxious moments of speech preparation and determination of foreign policy. I think a candidate ought to have very little to say about foreign policies, but I find questions are pressing from time [to time, and T want to be becomingly prudent at every stage of the cam- paign.” ’ Fall went to Marion. Ohio. and lived at Harding's house through most of the remainder of the campaign, working out of there on speech-making trips. “‘Harding's invitation to me was char- acteristic, not only as a tribute to me | as his friend—he nearly always over- estimated the abillties of his friends—but in another w: k a ch U Make Your 9 ] combination of the two that make ‘em so great. I'd bet on 'em arcund the world end ways i cross both poles. They said if 1t wasn't for banquets they wouldn't have any time to sleep at all. Smart fellows! pressure zlways ‘exerted on a presiden- | . .. M. I would like exceedingly much | to have you come here so I may avail | rounded by some of the friends whom dén’t want | It takes all But we don’t believe there is looks happy when a tire needs Avoid Trouble insist on U. S. Tires. prepertionately Cash or Credit 2250 Sherman Ave. N.'W. | the divorce and that her divorce 4s legal and her remarriage valid. She asserts that the allegations of | the husband's suit constitute a *gross and unprovoked libel upon her and her | = husband perpetrated in an effort to embarrass them in dip'omatic and social circles at the time of their present visit in Washingtos GROUPS PLAN CRUISE Eastern 8tar and Veterans Organ- izations to Take Boat Trip. Members of four local organizations will cruise down the Potomac River tonight on the steamer City of Wash- ington. The organizations are the Ana- | lostan Tribe, the Bureka Hive, No. 15: | the Electra Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star and the Potomac Post 'bl‘ the Veterans of Foreign Wars. ments for the Analosian Tribe, W. Severe for the Eureka Hive, Robert ‘Thompson for the Eastern Star and F. |R Heise for the veterans. "FILE CLERK EXAM. ASS'T STATISTICAL CLERK (Salary, $1.620) Special Ceaching Ceourses. Al subjects thoroughly cov- and graphs buy. problems, under experts. . Ne Night. $10 (one or both courses): ¥ day, SIS School every day and every night. Large, airy. cool classrooms. Start Thursday—Last chance to enroll BOYD SCHOOL 1333 F Street (Opposite Fox) National 2340 inds of eople to make world. motorist in the world who anging.: Other Sises. as low. Own Terms 1234 14th St. N. W. 624 Pa. Ave. S. E. Free u.-l:ti-:- Liberal = Allewance Yeur Old Ti W. H. George is in charge of arrange- | B 1] In first-class condition. 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