Evening Star Newspaper, July 3, 1933, Page 5

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HORSE SHOW HELD AT FALLS CHURCH More Than 1,000 Spectators See Varied Competition at Annual Event. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. FALLS CHURCH, Va, July 3— More than 1,000 spectators watched the Judging of the second annual horse show given by the White Front Saddle and Hunt Club of Falls Church under direc- ‘ tion of Herbert Powell. The 117 en- tries showed a slight increase over last year. Judges were J. G. Cunningham of Aldie, Va., and Otto Furr of Middle- { burg, Va. Silver cups and plates were awarded for first place with ribbons to the first three. Classes and winners were: 1, saddle ponies, 115 hands and under, ridden by children 12 years old and under— First, Brownie, Shirley Payne, owner; second, Patchwork, A. N. Miller; third, Billy, James Powell. Class 2, saddle ponies over 11.5 hands | and under 14.2, ridden by children un- der 16 years—First, Queen of Sheba, Stanley Green, jr.; second; Sweet Melo- dy, Margaret Hill; third, Busy Bee, Robert Palmer. Class 3, pony jumps, for ponies 11.5 and under, over 2-foot jumps—First, Brownie, owned by Shirley Payne and ridden by Marvin Green; 2, Traveler, Arthur Powell jr.; 3, Patchwork, A. N. Miller. Saddle Ponies Compete. Class 4, pony jumps, over 11.5 hands and under 14.2, over 3-foot jumps, jump- | ing only to couni—F Queen of Sheba, Stanley Green, jr.; second, Busy Bee, Robert Palmer; third, Pocahontas, | Charles Carrico. Class 4, patrons of White Front Rid- Ing School—First, Major, Miss Bernice Howison; second, Billy the Clown, Miss Elizabeth Barnes. Class 5, saddle ponies shown at walk, trot, canter, and judged as a ladies’ saddle horse; conformation, 15; man- ner, 40; way of jumping, 45—First, Jack Lightning, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon G. Owens: second, Harriet Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon G. Owens; third, Kay Boy, Miss Edna Roth; fourth, Little Miss, J. A. Wheeler. Class 6, saddle horses, judged as in class 5—First, Jack Lighting, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon G. Owens; second, Harriet , Mr. and Mrs. Vernon G. Owens; third, Sonny Boy, H. R. Quinter. Class 7, lead in class, open to all| horses shown in show suitable for| hunters; conformation, 25; style, 25;} quality 50—John Barton, Mr. Oyster; second, Kay Boy, Miss Edna Roth; third, Nehi, Robert B. Montgomery; | fourth Post Kid, Charles Carrico. Class 8, hunters’ hack, shown at walk, trot, canter, then jumping 3 feet, jump- ing in ring under saddle to count 50; | jumping, 50—First, Sonny Boy, H. R.| Quinter; second, Questionnaire, Miss | Margaret Hill; third, Kay Boy, Miss Edna Roth. Ladies’ Hunters Judged. i Class 9, ladies’ hunters; conformation, 15; manner, 25; jumping, 60—First, High Hat, Ray Norton; second, Ques- tionnaire, Miss Margaret Hill; third, Home Building New Wing ORGANIZATION GOING INTO DEBT TO GIVE HELP. ‘The visitor to the home. ARRYING on its work of mercy in the face of odds that tax noi only the patience, but the in- genuity of its administrators, the Washington Home for In- curables is being cheered these days by the sounds of steam shovels and air riveters that mark the advent of a “new day” at Wisconsin avenue and Upton street. A new addition that will extend the youngest residents of the Home for Incurables pastime, jigsaw puzzle solving. They are shown here with a young friend, & at their favorite | that have converted the space into a cozy room. And it was because an old lady—a lady who has given some of the best years she possessed to the home—wes “simply sick and tired of seeing these people living in such conditions as that” that the new wing was' undertaken. Mrs. Archibald Hopkins, a member of the home’s board since its founding and | Who has been its president for 33 years, facilities of the 44-year-old institution | is the spirit behind the home’s under- is being constructed as an extension to| taking. When she turned over the first the east end of the home and by No- | sod of soil at the breaking of ground for vember it is hoped that 38 additional | the new structure two weeks ago, she rooms will be made available to folks | expressed concern over the wisdom of whose illnesses demand the kindly at- | burdening the heretofore debt-free in- ug?m fl}‘u‘]‘ only this home provides, | stitution with a building mortgage. eanwhile makeshifts are being re- sorted to to provide for the patients| s ., 1sd to Do Something. who must be accepted by the institu- | , I only hcpe I've done right.” she tion while " | told The Star afterwards, “but I just other patients wait hope-| Ciian't go out there and continue to | see those people living behind book- cases and in corridor corners and even in a bath room without decing some- thing about it. And besides those peo- ple, there are those I kncw about on the outside who ere just waiting pa- tiently for us to be able to take them in. | I felt I just had to do something and | now, with this building and its grounds completely paid for- thout a cent of | cbligation on them. “I've added debt so | | that we could do what we ought to do.” | No public appeals for construction fully for the new wing so that they, too, may be admitted. Those whose needs could not be posiponed are the folks the home has gone to lengths to ac- | R. | commodate. Corridor Is Used. Up on the third floor is found striking evidence of the ends to which the home has gone to make additional accommo- dations. The westerly end of the main corridor, for instance, has been closed off by a hospital type screen to make a Barnyard Animals Most Interesting to City-Bred Children By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, July 3.— City-bred atill looking generation a pigeon le, & live lion. and Mary Ann, the phant at the Druid Hill Zoo, takes second place as compared to the proud peacock,” Nichols says he has observed. He added that “born in the city, many of the children have never been near a barnyard.” “Many children have never seen a live turkey until they go to the zoo, and chickens “apparently are a delightful adventure. There is not a girl or boy I have watched who has not displayed keen interest in the ponies.” the work. Two of the most cheerful and happy residents of the home are its youngest, Eddie and Charlie. They are 11 and 10 respectively, are brothers and although they are victims of a disease that deprives them of the full use of their legs, they are more or less the “life of the home.” At present the boys are looking forward to entering the yelzhmn schg:l for crlpdplzd”‘(:hu- ren in September. They do jig-saw puzzles, chat with the men residents of the home and have great times to- gether riding about the grounds of the home in their wheel chairs. Plays With Puzsles. But youth isn't the only source of happiness at the Washington Home for Incurables. There are patients on the third floor who greet the visitor with genuine smiles. There is the man on the first floor who lies with a broken back, but who patiently puts together the pleces of jigsaw puzzles which, when completed, he pastes together to make gay pictures for his room walls. And he is cheerful. This Home for Incurables that is the whole world to its residents dates back to the Winter of 1887-88 when Mrs. Charles Hill, niece of W. W. Corcoran, the philanthropist, undertook to estab- lish a place for the care of chronically ill persons. Mrs. Hill sought to raise money that Winter and among the per- sons she interested was H. Sidney Ever- ett, uncle of Mrs. Hookins, and Mrs. Everett. With the funds that were col- lected the home was incorporated March 6, 1889, by Mrs. Everett, Miss J. Corson and E. Francis Riggs. Mrs. Everett became fitst president of the home end Mrs. Hill's mother, Mrs. Phillips, was its first treasurer. Tock New Quarters. The home first was housed in two | small residences in Mount Pleasant, and the first resident list includcd five | names. As the home grew, however, it became necessary in 1892 to seek new arters. Funds for maintenance of the home were collected by benefit per- formances of various kinds and, as Mrs. Hopkins herself says, by just plain “beg- ging.” In that year, however, Miss Bes- sie J. Kibbey gave the home $50,000, and this gift enabled the home to lay URGES °HOLY WAR" IN LIQUOR FIGHT Bishop H. Lester Smith De- clares America Can Be Kept Dry. By the Assoctated Press. MILWAUKEE, Wis.,, July 3.—America can be kept dry, Bishop H. Lester Smith of the Cincinnati area of the Methodist Episcopal Church asserted in an address last night before the fifty-ninth annual convention of the ‘Women's Christian Temperance Union. He added the prohibitionists’ best strategy was to “re-establish this cause as a holy war, a battle for righteous- ness in the name of God and hu- manity.” In his speech, Bishop Smith said the movement for a dry America began as a moral and a religious issue and that a revival of such preaching was needcd now. The bishop said advocates of the liquor business have essayed to place blame for evils of the use of alco- holic beverages upon the attempt to hibit their use, rather than upon quor, its manufacturers and vendors. ‘To combat the wets, the bishop said prohibitionists need to bull program of education to reach every group in the land, enlisting the aid of “thoughtful men and women in churches, clubs, schools and colleges.” Denying that the return of legalized liquor would aid business recovery, the bishop said “We cannot drink ourselves mto prosperity.” g: the two chief political parties he said: “Of course, we have been batrayed by both major political parties; we have been sold out, but * * * while the poli- ticlans may be able to deliver up ma- chinery of the parties, they 1 not be able to deliver the r~‘~~<" FILIPINO CONSTABULARY KILLS 13 OUTLAW MOROS |{Two of Band Captured Without Casualties Among Police, in Feud Over Fish Traps. By the Associated Press. MANILA, Monday, July 3.—Notifica- tion was received at constabulary head- quarters here today that 13 outlaw Moros, members of a band that killed eight fishermen in a feud June 28, were killed Saturday in a skirmish with a constabulary force. ‘The skirmish took place on the Island of Patian, not far from the Island of RIVALS SEEKING FUNDS FOR YORK RIVER BRIDGE Newport News and Richmond Con- cerns Trying to Get Money From R. F. C. for Span. tA 3 hflfi‘:ldnmmt::' ween two { desire to bulld a bridge across the York River near the Colonial National Mon- of a chain of bridges be- tween Wi gton and the South. They ‘?m“xmmv' the Inde of jews, Va., and . pendence Bridge Co., which, officials here said, has its headquarters in Rich- Siai. ‘Sosepis D._Arthur, Ir, distriet . . ur, jr., :hnxlnwm for the War Department for e ‘ashington area, has been informed unofficially that the two concerns are attempting to secure funds from the | tim Finance tion, or under the public works E:orsm As the engineer officials here view it, whichaver firm can raice the funds first the bridge. REV. C. F. ARMITAGE AUTO CRASH VICTIM iClermm, ‘Well Known Here Dur- ing War, Buried Today at Elizabeth, Il Rev. Clyde F. Armitage, chairman of the Army and Navy Chaplains’ Com- mittee of the Federal Council of Churches here during the World War, who died in Chicago Thursday of in- éurlf- mfl;ruend edln an dl:m;nobfle accl- lent, was yestere n his birth- place, Elizabsth, IIl. i nent Methodist congregations in New York and New England before coming to this city, had devoted the last years of his life to philanthropic foundations and other church work. He was a di- rector and speaker with the Radcliffe Chautauqua with Dr. W. L. Darby, now executive secreta Federation of urches, for several YCAfter lcaving Washingto r lcaving n_in 1918, Rev. Armitage went to the New York offices of the Federal Ccuncil, and later was connected with the Interchurch World Movement, East Relief, Puerto Rico Child Feeding Committee and other similar organizations. At the time of his death he was connected with the Board of Education of the Methodist Episcopal Church. TWO ARE DROWNED | NEAR ANNAPOLIS Special Dispatch to The Star. Rev. A-mitage, who served promi- | of the Washington | Jolo in the Southern Archipelago. | | I e o AP, for.| ANNAPOLIS, Md. July 3—Two per- | mer councllor of Patian Island, killed SONS Were drowned vesterday at nearby | the filhermex;u :latthe x:i;m c{n an o‘gl beaches. Edward Wooten. 67, resident ' dispute over raps, dispatches sald. of Brentwood, lost his life at Woodland A punitive cxpedition trailed the out- Beach, while Orland Pace, 11, disap- | laws three days before the battle, in peared at Horn Foint. i which two outlaws were captured. There ~ Young Pace, who lived at 41 H street, | were no casualties among the con- Washington, came here with his parents stabulary. \and 20 other Washingtonians. He was last seen at 1:30 o'clock in the after- | missing 5 KILLED AT CROSSING | ingh i"Fnat ™ eered tto Boettcher, life guard at Horn o'clock. Miss Nancy | intimate friend. On this motor POST IN CAPITAL CHARTING FLIGHT Oklahoman Sees Possibility of Circling Globe in Six Days. By the Associated Press. Wiley Post, who circled the globe in record time with Harold Gatty two years 2go, today was charting a course at the Navy for a shot at his own record, this e e “There’s a possibility of six days,” said the stocky Oklahoman, as he dis- cussed plans with newspaper men. His and Gatty’s time in June and July of 1931 was 8 days 15 hours and 49 minutes. Post left his plane, the Winnie Mae, at Mitchel Field, Long Island, and came to Washington for expert naval as- sistance in mwplnf. his great circle course, that contemplates only five stops before a return landing in New York. “I am taking off from Floyd Bennett Pield when the plane is ready and permits,” Post sald. “I plan at Berlin, Moscow, Khabarovsk, in Alaska and Edmonton in Khabarovsk is the Siberian .town where Jimmie Mattern last took off be- fore his disappearance. Asked what may have happened, Post said, “I think there was a 50-50 chance the plane came to pleces on Mattern. ‘The other 50 per cent is that he got lost, sat down and is walking out.” PRESIDENT TO FIND WHITE HOUSE READY Mrs. Roosevelt Busy Preparing Executive Mansion for Roosevelt’s Return. Arriving back in Washington yester- day afternoon from Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Mrs. Roosevelt is today busily engaged having the White House made ready for the President's return from his vacation tomorrow. She arrived late yesterday oy air- plane and went at once to the White House, where she was joined this morn- ing by Mrs. Anna Curtis Dall, her daughter. They will motor to An- napolis tomorrow morning and return by motor with the President. Mrs. Roosevelt will leave Washington tomorrow night for New York, where, on the following day she will see her son Franklin, jr., off for a European vacation trip. She will then return to the White House to remain for a day or so and then start out on another vacation trip in her automobile, ac- companied by Ni Cook, an trip she will journey again to Campobello, ;hlll:’e lh‘:xl'nwndlt:c help hzlr daughter- -law, . Elliott Roosevelt, “get set- tled for the Summer.” Skt *%x A—S5 U.5. FUNDS BEARING BURDEN OF RELIEF | Two-Thirds of Amount Spent in 28 Cities in May Was Federal Money. By the Associated Press. Two-thirds of all emergency relief funds spent in 28 large cities during May came from the United States Treasury. This was disclosed today in a tabula- tion of relief expenditures compiled from telegrams sent by relief officials | to Harry L. Hopkins, Federal emergency relief administrator. It showed that of all recorded expenditures, 67.6 per cent were from Federal funds, 6 per cent from State {reasuries, 19.4 from city and county appropriations and 7 per gnt from private charitable organpiza- ons. Another tabulation issued by Hop- kins showed that relief expenditures per capita ranged from $1.186 in Massa- chusetts and $1.052 in Mlinois to .017 in Maryland. It also showed that Federal | funds spent per capita were from 931 | cent in Illinois to .014 in California ]‘ A total of $29,533,827 went for emer- ! gency relief in the 28 citles. Of this | 819,862,489 was Federal money, $1,782,- | 070 State funds, $5725,396 city and | county and $2,063,872 private funds. i __ The largest expenditures were in New York City, Chicago, Philadelphia, Cleve- land, Los Angeles and Detroit. Total ‘expenditures in New York were $8,545,~ 692: Chicago, $5,348,000: Phlhdt!ph}‘. $1.358,753: Cleveland, $1,067,000; Los An- | geles, $2,068.475, and Detioit, $1.453,967. | The New York expenditures wcre 69.5 per cent Federal, while those of Chi- cago were 95.7. Private agencies spent $1,102,149 1n New York. $204.000 in Chi- cago, $71000 in Philadelphia and $50,000 in Cleveland. SNAKE “BATTLE ROYAL” |GOES ON DESPITE PROTEST |Kings and Rattlers to Fight at | Springville, Calif., as Part of July Fourth Celebration. | By the Assoctated Press. | _ SPRINGVILLE, Calif., July 3.— | Springville is going to have a Fourth 0. | July snake fight. The “battle royal” between a score of rattlesnakes and an equal number of | king snakes will not be stopped by the | law, even though the Los Angeles Hu- | mane Soclety did not protest, Constable | A. P. Hubbe announced today. “Dude” Sutch, who gathered and | trained the snakes, favored the king | snakes, deadly foes of the poisonous | rattlers, to win. | Justice of the Peace M. E. Dewitt ob- | tained & report from the district attor- ney which said the humane law of | Cllg;)rnh did not include the word Tept the corner stone of its first buildiug. m\t PATR'OT'C EXEHCISES ey; Peint, said the child apparently did Sonny Boy, Mrs. J. E. Behney; fourth, | F00m. Behind it has been cet up a bed, funds are contcmplated, Mrs, Hopkins a bureau and the other appurtenances | explained, but it is probable that the of the well-equipped hospital room. The | public wiil be appealed to later in the space is well lighted and ventilated by a | year—perhaps in the Fall—for contri- large window that opens out on the| butions that will pay just the interest home’s well-kept lawns. This “room” | on the indebtedness. provided for one extra patient in the And so while Mrs. Hopkins—who is | 83 years old now—"hopes” she hasn't made a mistzks end plans the home’s | campaign to meet its obligations, the beneficiaries of the instiiution, the men | | 2nd the women who live there, are even | more cheerful than they are tradition- ally as they listen to the sounds of consiruction and watch the progress of Papoose, Miss Louise Herron. Class 10, touch and out, jumping only to count—First, Miss Claiborne, Head- guarters Troop. 3d Cavalry, Fort Myer, Va.: second, Saddle Bags, Mr. Nutter, Fort Myer, Va.; third, Grouch, Mr. Nutter, Fort Myer, Va. Class 11, open to all hunters, outside course; conformation, 20; jumping, 80— First, High Hat, Ray Norton; second, Sonny Boy, Mrs. J. E. Behney; third, Papoose, Miss Louise Herron; fourth, Little Miss, J. A. Wheeler. Class 12, Corinthian; conformation, 10; appointments, 15; jumping, 75; over the outside course—First. Impulse, J. J. Cotter; two, Piedmont, Charles Carrico; third. High Hat, Roy Norton; fourth, Nehi, Robert Montgomery. GREEK PRIEST SEVERELY INJURED BY ASSAILANT Bloody Hatchet Found in Church After He is Discovered With Wound in His Head. By the Associated Press MARTINS FERRY, Ohio, July 3.— Rev. Father Parthenois Colonis, 60, Greek Catholic priest, is feared dying in a hospital, his skull split by a hatchet wielded by an unidentified as- sailant. The priest has been unconscious since a few minutes after he was dis- covered last night on the basement floor of his small church. Police who found him said he whispered he had fallen down a flight of stairs. The officers said, however, they found a bloody hatchet hidden in an earthen- ware crock in the basement and ex- pressed the belief he was trying to shield his assailant. Two years ago, they recalled, Father Colonis was attacked and severely beaten, but he refused to discuss the case. BANK HEAD KILLS SELF Neil 8. Jones Was Also Extensive Real Estate Holder. CHANUTE, Kans., July 3 (#).—Neil S. Jones, president of the Bank of Com- merce here and owner of extensive real estate holdings in Neosho County, killed himself yesterday with a .38-caliber re- volver. He was 54 years old. Business associates said ill health, from which Mr. Jones had suffered sev- eral years, undoubtedly prompted the act. He had visited the bank yesterday, and at that time was so affected by the hot weather that friends had advised him to go home. His wife, the former Lillian Kerr, whom he married in 1903, and an adult daughter, Virginia, were awakened at 4:30 am. by the single shot and found the body on his bad. Dr. Ralph A. Light, coroner, said no inquest was necessary. MAY SETTLE STRIKE Hosiery Workers Advised Not to Leave Reading for Holiday. READING, Pa., July 3 (#).—Possibil- ity of an early settlement of the hosiery workers’ strike was seen yesterday when Dr. Benjamin M. Squire, personal rep- resentative of Secretary of Labor Per- kins, called on officials of the American Federation of Full-Fashioned Hosiery Workers not to leave Reading over the holiday period. Dr. Squire and Fred M. Keightly, commissioner of conciliation of the De- partment of Labor, held a meeting with representatives of 32 Berks County heslery manutacturers and later confer- red with Emil Rieve, national president of the unio: Safe and Sane Antiseptic It is unnecessary to use harsh, irritating solutions to overcome germ infection. Ideal Antiseptic gives you safe, sure protection at low cost. This powerful, pleas- ant tasting antiseptic is absolutely pure and effective. Excellent for throat irritations, nasal spray, bad breath, minor cuts, afte ing and loose dandruff. . big $1 pint bottle for only $9¢ today at Peoples Drug Stores. IDEAL ANTISEPTIC This building, too, was outgrown c1d finally the prescnt tract of 11!: acres avenue. The institution moved into this building November 24, 1924, and now, less than 10 years afterward, a new ad- KANA, Tex., was demolished by a passenger train at a blind crossing near Bivins, Tex., about cancer ward of the home. In the rotunda of the building on the same floor, another “room” has been created by stacking bockcases about a space adjoining other windows that look out upon a wcoded section of the home’s grounds. Here snother elderly wom: patient has added the personal “fixin’ \CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION, | 30 _miles southwest of Texarkan n dition is being constructed to meet | The dead: Willlam Dooley, urgent demands. The new wing, the Charles Tompkins Co., builders, assert, will be completed by November, and with its use the home to be able to continue to serve its patients and those who should come to it for many years more. ANK of AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST & SAVINGS ASSOCIATION | farmer; his wife, Mrs. Mattie Dooley, 33, and their three children, W. L. | Dooley, 11; Arrie Dooley, 16, and | Thelma Dooley, 9. The only survivor of the family was 1§ baby that had been left at the home of a neighbor for the afternoon. A National Bask: Member of Federal Reserve Sytem CALIFORNIA ~¢ BANK of AMERICA - Califorsia State Basnk RESOURCES Cash in Vault and in Federal Reserve Bank Due from Banks United States Government Securities State, County and Municipal Bonds . Other Bonds and Securities . Stock in Federal Reserve Bank Loans and Discounts Accrued Interest and 43,027,857.08 Bank of America N. T. A $32,073,674.51 177,857,866.60 74,747,090.76 15,443,843.88 JUNE 30. Bank of America ACelsfornia Stam Bank $1,583,360.12 _8.429,197.29 6,731,658.56 9,292,867.10 3,778,466.54 1933 COMBINER $85,114,089.00 287,851,793.4 Accounts Receivable Bank Premises, Furniture, Fixtures and Safe Deposit Vaults. 410 Banking Offices in 243 California Communities . Other Real Estate Owned Customers’ Liability on Account of Letters of Credit, Acceptances and Endorsed Bills Other Resources Total Resources Capital . . . . Surplus Undivided Profits Reserves Reserve for Quarterly Divi Circulation Rediscounts and Bills Liability for Letters of Credit and as Aceceptor, 2,700,000.00 463,707,517.78 9,565,807.09 None 38,617,107.55 6,626,107.13 10,169,043.46 1,649,535.47 26,883,903.43 32,540.95 2,325,982.68 405,882.28 10,775.00 55,800.11 2,700,000.00 490,591,421.21 9,598,348.04 40,943,090.23 7,031,989.41 10,179,818.46 1,705,335.58 876,185.451.31 LIABILITIES $50,000,000.00 D ) . 35,000,000.00 12,262,393.45 7.279,379.70 $59,530,434.06 $935,715,885.37 $4,000,000.00 1,600,000.00 §55,390.76 952,009.75 $111,649,173.66 end payable July 1, 1933 Payable . Endorser or Maker on Acceptances and Foreign Bills Deponu{ Savings . Total Liabilities . Commercial e o o o s s 0 0 e s 0 e $876,185,451.31 750,000.00 45,500,000.00 None None None 10,367,327.10 169,424,984.64 545,601,366.42 25,000.00 10,775.00 11,821,361.70 40,565,896.85 $59,530,434.06 775,000.00 45,500,000.00 None 10,378,102.10 767,413,609.61 $935,715,885.37 731§ STATIMENT INCLUDSS THE FIGURES OF THE LONDON, ENGLAND, OFFICE OF BANK OF AMERICAN.T. & 8. A BANK of AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST & SAVINGS ASSOCIATION. .. s Natienal Besk...and BANK of AMERICA. .. ¢ Califormia State Bank...are idestical in ownership sad menegement 1 TEXARI July 3 (P)— v | Five members of a family were Killed | he jety the Homs: Point beach ang wees | was purchased just east of Wisconsin | late yesterday when their automobile | to bathe with other youths at a free beach at the foot of Chesapeake ave- | nue, Eastport. Pace, to his | parents, was afraid of water and was unable to swim. | Wooten was discovered missing at 9 | recovered until 4 pm. Police Justice ! Thomas G. Basil filed a report of death | by accidental drowning. The annual Fourth of July cere- monies of the Association of Oldest Inhabitants will be held tomorrow at | Western Presbyterian Church, on H street betwsen Nineteenth and Twen- tieth streets. + !am. yesterday and his body was not| The patriotic exercises will start at noon, but will be preceded the = ular business meeting of L:’é MYG" tion to start at 10:30 o'clock. IBA | FOR THE FOURTH Breakfast, Luncheon and Dinner ‘Special Di From Noon te 8:15 Alse » Is Carte Service Should the children EAT IT? PARENTS, particularly mothers, are paying a lot of atttention to chil- dren’s diet these days. For it is far more economical and pleasant to keep a child well by feeding him correctly than by nursing and doctoring him back to health. Of course, in case of doubt the doctor should be consulted regarding what a child should eat and what he should not eat. But do you realize that the leading manufacturers of food now seek the advice and approval of the leading nutritional authorities in the country relative to the claims they make for their products in their advertising? In other words, food advertisemerits are reliable sources of informa- tion regarding diet. They are based upon the results of the latest ap- proved scientific discoveries about vitamins, minerals and roughage, in relation to vigorous bodies, clear complexions, sound teeth and properly regulated systems. So read these advertisements carefully. Consult your doctor about them. Very often the advertiser invites you to do this because he has asked authorities, whom your doctor respects, about statements made in those advertisements.

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