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THE EVENING LOANS PUBLICITY iSSUE UNSETTLED Rainey Attacks Hoover’s Viewpoint and Threatens War on Secrecy. The controversy involving publicity for the loan reports of the Reconstruc- #jon Finance Corporation flared again esterday when Representative Rainey, ®emocratic House leader, issued a <arning that Senate and House officials may have to answer with their jobs if the loans are not made public. 1 Despite the President's statement ac- eepting a contrary interpretation by &me Senate leaders of the relief bill publicity section, Rainey declared “these Teports will be made public.” Hoover's View Recalled. In a statement on the $2,122,000,000 relief measure he intends to sign today, Mr. Hoover had said: “The possible destructive effect upon credit institutions by the so-called pub- licity clause has been neutralized by the declaration of the Senate leaders of all parties that this provision is not to be retroactive. and that the required monthly reports of future transactions are of confidential nature and must be 0 held by the clerks of the Senate and House of Representatives unless other- | wise ordered by the Congress when in Bessit r | Rainey said “The President’s statement as to the publicity feature of the relief bill is absolutely erroneous. notwithstanding the fact some Senate leaders made statements on the floor of the Senate s the President said. Newspaper Te- porters will be able to get the informa- tion during the Summer by applying 10 the clerk of the House or the secTe- tary of the Senate. Possible Penalties Cited. “If these officials refuse this informa- tion they will be guilty of malfeasance and subject to removal, in spite of the President’s statement. * * * If they are not made public we will have the clerk of the House and the secretary of the Senate on the carpet when Congress convenes again.” Sout Trimble, the House meanwhile was consulting precedents. “I am not much on publicity,” he, commented, as reporters recalled it took | & House resolution to make him publish the House pay roll Trimble was clected to his place by the House Democratic majority and is subject to removal by the same group. Edwin Trayer, secretary to the Se #te through election by that body's Res publican majority, said flatly: “I will not make them public without directions from the Senate.” MICE ARMY OVERRUNS ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL clerk, laws and Three Cats Mysteriously Disappear From Sacred Precincts as Rodents Lose All Respect. (NAN.A).— T way, the mice will d owing to the defection of . church mice are becom- ro Serious problem at St. Paul's 1 than the safety of the foun- out of dark corners of the make startled workmen pails. They nibble work- however cunningly hid- o are liable to frisk sud- denly from behind a pew just as the choir comes in. They are beginning to explore every corner of the cathedral, and nothing in the wav of leather, candles or dignity is immune from th-ir depredations. Night watchmen confess that only ves enable them to pace the floors alone, and whatever e mice may once have shown beings, they have now quite Whether they have anything to do with the spiriting away of the cats has not_yet been proved, but it is a fact that three cats in succession have mys- teriously disappeared _after a few weeks' work at the cathedral! (Copvright. 1932. bv North American News- paber Alliance. Inc. Dr. G. Travers Kevern of Wivenhoe, England, whose wish that his yacht be scuttled with his body was prevented by a gale, and whose remains were taken to Ipswich for cremation, was buried at Wivenhoe without having been cre- mated SPECIAL NOTICES. District of Columbla. 2. 1832, ORDE] of “Article XXIII of the s of the District of Colum- April 12, 1932, be. and the urther amended as follows sentence thereof to read as hat K street. northwest. Sixth Streets, and the Commiss Washinst ‘That Section Police llflz'l]nrl] ners ion: led between Fi west side of e ky fth and h Street. northwest, between limit of the market building n Market Company and 7 line of P Strect are here- lowing: “and _under th s apply to the spaces desig- icle V. of these Regulations: That no market master shall have to_collect any fees as to these vided further. That' H._B. Crosby, J. C. Gotwals, 5iD. C b < R DICTATOR SEDAN. FIRST- n sell. 3626 iatn ne. . 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SMITH'S TRANSFER & STORAGE CO., 13 You St _N.W. Phone North 3342-3343. # Million Dollar Plant —devoted to high-class, distinctive print- ing that gets results. Consult us now. The National Capital Pres: o080 FLA. AVE. 3rd and N. N.E. LIN. Little Roofing Jobs —are dust as welcome as large, ntracts We mnke a specialty of repaid¥ and §o aniwtere “or business, Fet "pracual L TServe. you. us SORS R 933V 8t N.W. 00fing Company North 4423 DAVIDSON TRANS- . long-distance mov- motor _express age. baby car- hore points. JULY 18 JULY 20 JULY 22 AG Veteran Retired BETTS IN NAVAL GUN FAC- TORY 52 YEARS. WILLIAM G. BETTS. Retired July 1 as a master mechanic at the naval gun factory, Washington Navy Yard, after 52 years of service, today was honored at a reception at nocn at the Navy Yard. Betts was congratulated on his long service by Rear Admiral William V. Butler, com- mandant of the yard, and presented with an engraved purse by friends and associates. For many years he was well known in athletic circles, umpiring many base ball games at Georgetown University and the United States Naval Academy. He still umpires at the an- nual policemen-firemen and Shrine games. He is a member of Lebanon Lodge and the Shrine and past grand patrcn of the Order of the Eastern Star in the District. B et = MARK ANNIVERSARY Queen Mary Finds Bridal Bouquet—Wed King 39 Years Ago. Special Cable to The Star. LONDON, July 19 (N.AN.A)).—When the King and Queen recently celebrated the thirtv-ninth anniversary of their wedding, which took place in the old Chapel Royal in St. James' Palace, in 1893, the King, a is his custom, saw to it that the Queen should find a bridal bouquet of white roses waiting beside her plate when she came down to breakfast. His Majesty also chose for his wife a set of jewelry made up of her favorite turquoises. Sees Wedding Dress. Often when she has any free time on the anniversary of her marriage, the Queen drives to the London Museum to visit the glass case containing her wed- ding dress, still wonderfully bpreservrd with its billows of white chiffon and wreath of orange’blossoms. Nearby is her going-away costume, with a tilted pillar box hat surprisingly like those that all the smart women are wearing in Bond street today. 5 Queen Mary, throughout her reign, has rarely varied the style of her clothes. She has been constant, too, to the pastel shades she loved as a girl, and which go so well with her hair and | skin. The Queen is not extravagant and her wardrobe is not nearly so extensive as that of many other great ladies in this country. Her Majesty really wears her clothes, and they are not thrown lightly aside at the latest extravagant behest of dame fashion. Room Set Aside. There is a special room at Bucking- ham Palace for the Queen's personal wardrobe, as distinct from the apart- ment which contains the state robes. Nominally this department is presided over by the mistress of the robes, the Duchess of Devonshire, who is one of the Queen's oldest and closest friends. Actually, however, it comes under the care of the Queen's chief dresser. She is responsible for Her Majesty's ward- robe and must anticipate the Queen's wishes as to dresses appropriate for all oocasions. It is her duty, too, to attend the va- rious dress shows at the three or four houses which make the Queen’s day and evening dresses. She has to report the latest change in fashions to Her Maj- esty, for though Queen Mary very rarely changes the style of her clothes in any important respect, she likes to know what is happening in the world of ‘women'’s dress. (Copyright, 1932. by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.). PALACES IN OLD SPAIN MAY BECOME MUSEUMS Fate of Several, Worth Many Mil- lions, Yet to Be Determined by Committee. Special Dispatch to The Star. MADRID, July 19 (N*AN.A.).—The fate of Spain’s palaces which, with their art treasures, are worth many millions of dollars, is still undecided, but it is probable that the Madrid Palace and those of Aranjuez and El Pardo will be utilized as museums. These, taken in conjunction with the Prado Museum, Toledo, Segovia and Avila will make Madrid a particularly important tour- ist center. The head of the official committee which controls all national artistic treasures, Don Ramon del Valle-Inclan, declares that “it would be a crime worthy of Attila to turn the palaces into scholastic centers, reformatories or hospitals.” (Copyright. 1952. by North American News- paper Alliance, Inc.) SAMMONS MA'Y FACE COURT IN BALTIMORE Chicago “Public Enemy” Sought Following Release From Illi- nois Penitentiary. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, July 19.—Chief of Detec- tives Willlam Shoemaker disclosed last night that overtures had been made to him to bargain for the surrender of James (Fur) Sammons, freed public enemy, wanted in Baltimore in connec- npon with a $47,000 pay roll robbery in 1926. Shoemaker said his men would find Sammons “without any compromises.” At the same time it was disclosed a warrant was found here asking Sam- mons’ arrest on robbery charges, but it was not learned if the warrant charged a crime in Chicago or was in connec- tion with the Baltimore robbery. Detectives had orders from Shoe- maker to search the haunts of the gangster in efforts to find him and ar- rest him on sight. Sammons was freed last week by Judge Edward Shurtlefl at Woodstock, I, who held Sammons’ reincarcera- tion in Joliet Penitentiary illegal after he received full parole from his term for a murder in 1903. 0il in Cedar Stumps. Glenn Parr, Marshfield, Ore., chem- ist, says he has discoverest.a method of extracting oil from white-cedar stumps. IFAIR T0 DEPICT GROWTH OF AUTO Story of Horseless Carriage to Be Featured in Chicago Displays. Special Dispatch to The Star. CHICAGO, July 19 (N. A. N. A) —As the exhibits program of the werld fair develops it becomes more and more apparent that the automo- bile will be in the expositions spot- light more than any other product of this industrial age. The ubiquitous gas wagon, i all kinds and classes, with its essential adjuncts, such as gasoline, lubricating oil, rubber, textiles, accessories and gadgets, will use more display space than any other industrial exhibit. Three of the five special buildings— General Motors, Chrysler and Firestone —going up in the fair grounds will house only automobile displays, ma- chines and tires. It is not improbable that one or two more important auto- mobile makers will erect special bufldings. Obviously, the automobile group of exhibits not only will cover a con- siderable portion of the fair's entire display space but also will be housed in various world fair buildings—the travel and transport, general exhibits, outdoor exhibit space, hall of science and electrical. Visitors will find displays related to the automobile industry in many parts of the exposition. The owner of & machine will be afforded every op- portunity to see the making of an automobile from its beginning and follow the development of manufac- ture through to the finished product. More than that, he will understand the why and wherefor of the automo- bile’s anatomy and inside workings, for the makers of autos are planning exhibits which will visualize the whole process of manufacture in such manner that a 16-year-old boy will understand what he sees and thereafter can put this understanding to practical uses. The history of the automobile will be told in a most interesting way. | Dioramas, movies, pageants and models of the original “self-propellers” will illustrate the fascinating narrative. Contrary to popular conception, the | automobile did not have its origin in this country. Inventors in France, | Germany, Austria and England tackled | the problem of “horseless” vehicles | many vears before the Americans did. The engines used to propel the vehicles | in that long-ago day passed through the stages of steam, street-lighting | gas and electricity long before the | gasoline motor was_invented. It is recorded that the first.mechan- ical driven vehicle was developed by & | French captain of ~artillery, Cugnot | by name, who was trying to apply | speed to moving heavy cannon. In 1769 he had built three steam wagons, designed to draw fleld guns. | His last device was a three-wheeled tractor with a big boiler in front and a two cylinder steam engine over the front wheel. It attained the speed of two and a quarter miles an hour, but | the steam pressure was insufficient to | run the machine more than 15 minutes. |But it was a start toward the very | latest automobile. | race STAR, WASHINGT SDAY, JULY 19, 1932. Where World Flyers’ Hopes Were Blasted RUINS OF PLANE IN RUSSIAN PEAT BOG. HIS is what happened to the plane of James Mattern and Bennett Grifin when they cracked up in a peat bog near Borlsov, in Soviet Russia, after they had taken off from Berlin on the third leg of their around-the-world flight. The flyers are showninspecting the ruined plane. —A. P. Photo. AMERICAN CAPTAIN IN FRENCH | [Dyiotriers FOREIGN LEGION HITS MOVIES Only U. S. Citizen to | Attain Rank—Likes| Llfe and Says He Hasn‘t Seen Sand Dune Since Special Dispatch to The Star. NEW YORK, July 19 (NAN.A)— “The only trouble with these exciting movies about us,” says Edgar Guerard Hamilton of Waterbury, Conn., the only American ever to rise to a captain’s rank in the French Foreign Legion, “is | that they are taken with a lens of fancy | on a film of imagination. The uniforms | and customs are wrong, I have never' seen a sand dune since I joined, and, it a bare-footed Marlene Dietrich fol- lowed us on the march, many of us would enlist for life.” Capt. Hamilton figures that, out of the 25,000 men in the Legion, about 70 r cent are Germans. He explains this by saying that, after the war, there was no place left for many of them to go, and that the Germans are a military The songs of the Legion, he savs. are German and that is the common language of the enlisted men. ‘The official language of the Legion, natur- ally, is French. | Must be Stonemasons. | “The Forelgn Legion,” declares Capt. Hamilton, “is made up mainly either of youngsters with a desire for adven- ture, or of men who want to eat. They are good soldiers and they have to have courage and stamina. Contrary to romance, the soldiers of the Legion use a pick more than they do a rifle. And each of them must be a stonemason. 1 | A really successful machine was a | steam-driven wagon built by William | | Murdock, an Englishman, in 1784—it | {now is in_the British museum. | Oliver Evans. an American, built the first high-pressure non-condensing | engine in this country in 1785. His | engine was so compact and light that | it encouraged several Englishmen to | make four-wheeled steam coaches and prepare the way for the railroad loco- | motive. Evans applied his engine to an amphibious automobile—a scow which | |he ran down the river on rollers | under its own steam power. That was | the first American automobile. By 1833, | just 100 years before the world fair | { will open.” twenty steam coaches were | traveling in and around London. These are but a few examples of the early self-propelled vehicles. All used steam i power. The automobile of today would not have been but for the invention of the process which segregated and re- fined gasoline from crude oil. The story of this stage in the devel- opment of the modern auto will be told in the travel and transport build- ng. (Copyright. 1932. bv North American News- paper Alliance. Inc.) MISSING DENVER GI7RL TELLS OF KIDNAPING Writes Letter From Florida After Disappearing From Home on April 24. By the Associated Press. DENVER, July 19.—In a letter writ- ten to a friend here, Dulces Montoya, 15, missing since April 24, yesterday charged she had been kidnaped by three persons who took her to Florida. The letter. written from 306 North | Howard street, Tampa, said she had been in the care of “some good people.” Police said the letter indicated she had escaped from the persons who abducted | her. The girl wrote no details of the alleged kidnaping. Shortly after the girl's disappearance here, charges of kidnaping a minor were filed in Justice Court against Vina | Jarratt alias Viva Anderson. Detectives said they learned the miss- | outfit ing girl and the Jarratt woman had registered at several hotels here under ' and Doty wrote books about the leilon,;' the grandnephew of an emperor. There fictitious names. Business Draws Britain to Canada IMPERIAL ECONOMIC CONFERENCE TO BE HELD AT OTTAWA. frequently have thought that the Legion emblem should be a trowel. “It is true,” continued the legionnaire, “that the men grow to be hard boiled, | but there are no more toughs among them than you will find in any other The most difficult recruits to handle are the French. They are in the Legion only because they can't get | in the regular French regiments, or have been thrown out and are wanted by the police. They enlist as Swiss. The only man I ever had take a shot at me was a Frenchman, and he was not after me. He was out to lick the, | regiment. “The men” said Capt. Hamilton, “are almost fanatically loval to their officers and will follow them anywhere. ‘Their first and greatest obligation is to | the Legion. They would follow their colonel against any one he chosé to fight. Few Americans in Ranks. “Americans? There must be about 50—not many among 25,000 men. The only other American since the war who held a commission was a second lieu- tenant. He lasted for perhaps a year, but couldn't stand the gaff, although he never got further than the training camp. Nevertheless, I understand he came back to the United States and wWrote some articles. “Another American in the outfit,” sald the captain, “was Doty, the de- serter. That didn't mean anything. We have men desert every day, but mos# of them come back of their own accord. They are not trying to get away. They just have a bit of money left and stay A.W.O.L. Some the po- lice bring back; others, who really want to desert, get away. “But Doty took a rifie with him, which is considered a heinous crime, because in such cases the gun almost invariably falls into the hands of hos-| tile tribesmen. Then Doty fired on the squad that was sent to get him. In any other army he would have been shot. The French gave him a sentence | of eight years, but let him go on rep- resentations from the United States. Released Briton, Too. | “To show thelr fairness, they released | at the same time the Englishman Har- | vey, who deserted with Doty—two of the four cases I know where a man got | out before the term of his enlistment expired.” | paj Capt. Hamilton said that both Harvey He disagreed with Harvey's findings, | & W FORBES country, hard pressed to find markets for her goods and with the dominions showing a tendency to assert a larger measure of independence, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Newfound! heads the British delegation to the parley. W. Forbes of New Zeal !Tflz British imperial economic conference will open in the Parliament Building in Ottawa Thursday. The mother Canada, Prime Minister G. / ! thing will be quiet | frontier posts, | men; officers never. is going to Ottawa in the hope of making business deals with Canada, South land, and all the other units of the far-flung Empire. Stanley Baldwin Other leading representatives include Premier R. B. Bennett of and andySean T. O'Kelly, vice president of the Irish He Joined. | | | but thought Doty's book a square por- trayal of Legion life | A tall, spare, weathered soldier in | his 30s, Capt. Hamilton was educated at the Old Cheshire School, now Rox-| bury. Later he took three years of min- | ing engineering at Carnegie Tech. He was around 20 when he enlisted in the ambulance service. Transferring to the Legion, he was private, corporal, ser- geant, adjutant and second l'eutenant. | He went through a motor school, was somehow connected with the Lafayette Flying Corps and became an instructor. Hamilton stayed in the Legion after the war, partly because he still was young enough to be drawn by adven- ture, partly because he had the feeling that he must justify his elevation to officer's rank by more active service than he had seen Liked Life in Legion. Asked why he continued in the Le- glon, he replied: “What is there for me to do here? I stay partly for economic reasons, but largely because I have grown to like it A captain’s life in the Legion is not 50 | bad. He has money enough to live comfortably in Morocco, four servants and a fair amount of amusement. “Do you know how the Legion is run? ‘Well, headquarters is situated in a large | city.” There is the headquarters troop, and there each battalion spends one Winter out of every three. The Legion campaigns every Summer. There are still tribes which put up a good fight, although in a couple of years every- 1t's like the old Indian campaigns on this side of the water. “The Legion also builds roads, does border patrol and frofitier service This is the hardest job of all. The | frontier posts which the Legion must | build &nd guard, are cold isolated, often at an altitude of 8000 fezt or| more in the Atlas Mountains. One telephcne wire is the only connection witi anything approaching civilization This may ultimately put you in com- munication with a base camp, where | there are barracks. | Learn Languages on Frontier. | “It is when you are at one of these | said Capt. Hamilton, “that you study your languages. Aside | from my early Connecticut dialect, I speak the Moroccan, German. French and Berber languages. St. Augustine | was a Berber. and a Roman citizen. I| wonder whether the peopie of Florida know that. The Berbers were the origi- nal inhabitants of the country they occupy, but nobody knows where they came from.” i The captain reads also Spanish and Italian. As he is on his way back to his command, he expects soon to hive time to learn a little Russian or Chi- nese. He insists that discipline in the Legion is not as rigid as it is in the United States Army. The French, he says, do not like military service and | are not, at heart, a military nation. Their army system, therefore, is found- ed on social justice, and an appeal from lower to higher authority always is pos- sible to a French soldier. It is only the colonel of a regiment who can order a man to solitary con- finement, and he can only put him there for a maximum of four days. Food is prescribed by regulations. even in the case of prisoners. Non-coms rarely hit About the only time a corporal or sergeant uses force is to break up a knife fight. Noblemen Serve in Legion. There is good blood in the Legion. One captain is a prince of Denmark. A certain John Smith died. When his pers were examined and forwarded a warship came for his body. He was are many such stories. Free State. A. P. Photos. | canic ttans Heroes in the World War Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jaeckel. 8 recorded in the official cita- tion, George H. Harries, briga- dier general, United States Army, was awarded the Dis- tinguished Service Medal for exceptionally meritorious and dis- tinguished serv- ices in a position of great responsi- bility as com- manding general of Base Section No. 5. He suc- cessfully directed the manifold ac- tivities at the port of Brest dur- ing the time when troop ar- rivals were at their maximum. He overcame seemingly insur- mountable obsta- clesinco-ordinat- ing and organiz- ing his impor- Subsequently. upon being sent on a special mission to Berlin, in connecticn with the repatriation of al- lied war prisoners, he displayed com- mendable tact and energy. To Gen. Harries is due much credit for the proper care of our combat troops. His vast military knowledge made possible the speedy dispatch of troops to training and combat areas, thereby contributing materially to the successes achieved by the American Expeditionary Forces. Residence at ap- pointment, Washington, D. C. Retiring with the rank of major gen- eral, he now lives at 10664 Dellagio road, Bell Air, Los Angeles, Calif, (Copyright, 1932.) BUSA DRIVER PROFITS Paid for Transporting Own Chil- dren to School. ‘Taxpayers of Carling County, British Columbia, discovered recently they had been paying Nozel Doumont $640 a year to drive his own children to school. Doumont was hired to drive the school bus. attending school. Government PAY CUT! In line with the Government econ- omy program, and to enable my pa- tients to still main- tain proper care of teeth and mouth, I will do my share by making a straight 10% re- duction on all con- tract dental cases for plates, bridges, removable and fix- ed restorations. In addition you are welcome to exceed- ingly reasonable terms of credit. Free exxlractions. free X-rays, free examina- tion. 28 Years of Service My Personal Attention to Every Patient Dr. Carleton Vaughan DENTIST 932-934 F St. N. Over Metropolitan Theater FOR RENT OR SALE UNITED % STATES STORAGE CO. €18 10th Street Metropelitan_1848 PAUL PEARLMAN 1711 G St. N.W. | Of the 16 families in the; district his children were the only ones CHURCH IS GUARDED 10 PROTECT DUCE 1,100-year-old Basilica of San Marco. ROME, July 19.—A church dating back 1,100 years is guarded night and | day to protect Mussolini’s life, This is the beautiful Basilica of San Marco directly, under Mussolini's office in the Venezia Palace. During the daytime a- plainclothes man stands outsige the church scruti- nizing every one Who enters. The scru- tiny is silent unless the visitor is carry- ing a bundle that might contain a bomb. Then it becomes a cross-exami- nation. Inside the church at the back of each | side alsle sits another detective. They sit there for hours on end, with their chairs tilted back against the wall, like | waiting firemen of a hook and ladder company. The light that enters the nave windows is too religlously dim for them to read. Their eyes, too, follow the visitors. If he is obviously a tourist or a wor- shiper, their seemingly perpetual posi- tion does not change. But if he makes a suspiclous movement they instantly approach. . ‘When the church is closed for the night the detectives search every cor- ner on the off chance that some one might have deposited an explosive nest €gg. From then on two Carabinieri po- licemen keep the edifice in view. Be- sides, a heavy iron grill would keep out almost anything but a tank. The church has one side exit. This opens into the archway of the Venezia Palace leading into the Venezia Square. It is through this passage that Musso- linl enters his office building. But worshipers dre not permitted to enter the church this way. The surveillance of the detectives ex- tends also to the sacristy. The parish MANIUPARTY WG, RUMANIA ELEGTION lMussolini’s Office Is 0ver‘National Peasants Take 577 | of 387 Parliament Seats. Defeat for Carol. By the Associated Press. | BUCHAREST, Rumania, July 18— | Final official returns from the Ru- | manian parliamentary elections pub lished today gave the National Peas- ants’ party 1,203,400 votes and 277 out of 387 seats in Parliament. The Liberals polled 400,000 votes and won only 28 seats. The Hungarian party won 14 seats, | M. Bratianus Liberals 13 and Peasants’ | party 12. The rest of the seats were | won by minor parties. Thus Nicholas Jorga, close friend of' King Carol and former premier of Ru- mania, will be unrepresented in the new Parliament. The election law stipulates: that a party seeking a mandate in Par- liament must have at least 2 per cent of all votes cast. M. Jorga's Nationalists did not obtain the requisite minimum. Likewise, Gen. Alexandru Averescu, head of the People’s party and one of the Kings severest critics, will be out, for that party also ran far behind. M. Maniu, too, has had his troubles with Carol and two years ago the dif- ferences led to his resignation as premier. With the Maniu party run- ning so far ahead in this election, it | was reported that negotiations already had started to iron out the differences between the party and the palace. | priest, Don Gluseppe Casamatta, is & man they know they can trust. The church vergers and acolytes are hand picked. San Marco dates back to the time of Constantine. It was rebuilt in 833 AD. | The apse over the altar is decorated with a famous mosaic finished in 844. The altar is directly under Mussolini's office, the hall of the map of the world. ADVERTISEMENTS HRANGH offll ( RECEIVED HERE With a Star Classified Adv. You Are Sending Word of What You Are Wanting to Practically Every- body in and Around Washington. results—and no other means can prove so mHE wider spread the notice the greater the efficient as a properly worded and classified advertisement in The Star. Copy for The Star Classified Section may be left at any of these authorized Branch Offices—to be promptly forwarded to the main office. this service; only regular No fees for rates are charged. In the Northwest 11th and Park rd.—Arm- strong’s Pharmacy. 14th and P sts.—Day's Pharmacy. 1135 14th st—Marty’s Cigar & Magazine Store. 17th and Q sts.—Kenner's Pharmacy. 15th and U sts.—G. O. Brock. 2912 14th st.—Colliflower Art & Gift Co. 3401 14th st.—Bronaugh’s Pharmacy. 14th and Buchanan sts.— Hohberger's Pharmacy. 14th st. and Colorado ave. —O’Donnell’s Pharmacy. 3209 Mount Pleasant st.— Mount Pleasant Cigar and News Shop. 1823 Columbia rd. — The Billy Shop. 2162 California st.— Co- lodny Brothers. Wardman Park Pharmacy. 215 N. Y. ave.— Sanitary Pharmacy. 1st and K sts.—Duncan’s Pharmacy. 7th and K sts.— Golden- berg’s (time clerk’s desk). 7th and O sts—Lincoln Drug Store. 5017 Conn. ave.—Higger’s Community Drug Store. 7th st. and R. I ave.—J. French Simpson. In the Southwest 10th st. and Va. ave.— Herbert’s Pharmacy. 316 41, st.— Harris’ Drug Store. 41, and L sts.— Columbia Pharmacy. In the Northeast 1505 Kenilworth ave.—Ken- - ilworth’s New Drug Store. 208 Mass. ave.— Capitol Towers Pharmacy. 4th and H sts.—Home Drug Store. H st.—The Darling Shop. 4th and E. Cap. sts.—Paul's Drug Store. 12th and Md. ave—Luck- ett’s Pharmacy. 7th and Md. ave.— Louis F. Bradley. 5131 Grant st., Deanwood— The Strand Pharmacy. North Capitol and Eye— Kenealy’s Pharmacy. 20th and R. I ave, — Collins’ Pharmacy, Woodridge. 3500 ]12th st.— Brookland Pharmacy, Brookland. 4th and R. L ave. —John G. Biggs’ Phar- macy. Chesapeake Junction— Dr. F. L. Wight, jr. There’s One Near You * 11th and M sts.—L. Forster’s Pharmacy. 9th and U sts. Hunton’s Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Upshur st.— Petworth Pharmacy. 221 Upshur st.— Monck’s Pharmacy. 5916 Ga. ave.—Brightwood Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Kennedy st.— Lampkin's Pharmacy. 2901 Sherman ave.—Sher- man Ave. Pharmacy. 6224 3rd st.—Manor Park Pharmacy. 1905 Mass. Pharmacy. 18th and Fla. ave.—Bern- stein's Drug Store. Fla. ave. and 1st st.—N. Reiskin. North Capitol st. and R. L aye.— Parker's Phar- macy. 1742 Pa. Krick. 21st and G sts.—Quigley’s Pharmacy. 25th st. and Pa. ave.—Co- lumbia Drug Store, 3315 Conn. ave.—Joll’s Newsstand. 4231 Wisconsin ave. — Mor- gan Bros.’ Pharmacy. Takoma Park, 359 Cedar st. —Mattingly Bros.’ Phar- macy. ave. — Dupont ave.—J. Louis In Georgetown 30th and P sts.— Morgan Bros.” Pharmacy. " 3411 M st.—Moskey’s Phar- macy. 1834 Wisconsin ave.— Haney's. 35th and O sts.— Sugar's Drug Store. . In the Southeast 3rd and Pa. ave.—O'Don- nell's Drug Store. " 8th and Eye sts. —F.P. Weller's Pharmacy. 11th and Pa. ave. — Fealy's Pharmacy. 1907 Nichols ave., Anacostia —Healy’s Drug Store. 13th and East Capitol sts.— Lincoln Park Pharmacy. 2204 Minnesota ave. — Sloan’s Drug Store; F. 8. Boisfeuil- let, prop.