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THE EVENING WA MARCH 18, 1925. The War Over the Air By Will Irw STAR, SureRelief FOR INDIGESTION o \AC N BELLANSY present site of Union Station Plaz | Later this business was removed to| SHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, Eckington place and Q streets, where SGHUUI‘ PLANNERS a number of warehouses, part of the McDowell estate, now stand :_Mr. McDowell in 1887 married Kate . Millikan of Washington Court House, p Ohio, who survives him. He also leaves a sor, S. J. McDowell, of Flint, Mich., and ughters, Mrs. C. J fcCoy of Dayton, Ohio, and Mrs. Her- bert F. Corn of this ci A brother, James H. McDowell, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Ruf, both of Washington, also survive. Funeral services will be | held at 3 e'clock Friday afterncon from the home. Rev. W. S. Abernethy of Calvary Baptist Church, wil Interment will be in Rock Creek Dies Suddenly The Dawes Plan —of years ago, according to Liza West, who used to preside over the Vice President’s kitchen, was to carry home a box of strawberries, lug along an unexpected guest, and an- nounce a strong prefer- ence for strawberry short- cake. The berries, of course, were thoroughly chilled before they were crushed, sugared and poured over freshly baked, piping-hot, profusely buttered biscuit dough. MELLON AND GLASS CONDEMN SURTAX Secretary and Senator, Ad-| dressing Bankers, Assail Provisions of Law. n. | D, Jrsi) moicE; 6 BELLANS Chapt — i i pter IV—Defense Against Aircraft S | B ool Cleveland Will Be Visited for Ideas. Complatsant and conservative mili- tary authorities, discussing the dan- ger of the acroplane to armles, navies and centers of population, always end up on one phrase: “For | every new form of oftense, we always find a defense” To which a war correspondent of my acquaintance re- plled: “Yes, but It sometimes takes 400 vears.” Sccre- | The riffe 1s perhaps a case in point. Wilson [As soon as we armed our Infantry the | with one-man guns, body armor,|against alrcraft plays the same part me platform here last night the |which had served well for protection |1t did In the late war. Tt pesters | SUpt Frank JN v T comiies me surtax rates In the present against lances, plkes, Swords and|them, hampers them. tends to keep | (omposwed of Dr. Hallou, Municipal Sl i tending to dry up |arrows, went Into the discard. From |them' fiying high. But it is still a| Architect Albert L. Harris and Ernest thelr sources of revenue | that time until the twentieth century, | very imperfect means of protection. | Srshwood. vice president of the Board Mr. Mellon and Undersccretary | the best defense againat a rifle was|Untll we discover something entirely | of Pducation and chairman of its com- Winston of the Treasury, another |another rifle new, the best defense against afrcrat | ice of bulldings,_grounds and equip- at a dinner of the Bankers'| Against the airplane we have at|attack is other aircraft. S P b Sl i ot hmond, appealed to the present two ground-based defenses,| Those ltke Gen. Mitchell, who want | H&RE, and before returning will visi S to put partisanism |both used in the late war—thea united and independent air force, pocioc, LSysang o addition (10 In_ considering tax questions |balloon met and the anti-ajreraft gun. | maintain that in another war— it 1f | Rohester. = 0 0 i approach them singly from an|The first of these may be dismissed |happens—hostilities will hein with a | oo The, Schedule calls for an_inspection \d business basis. The |briefl. Balloons, carrying the heavy |swiftly-joined general-battle in the | 3¢ the &chools in Rochester Monday ad making his first | fabric of the nets, cannot rise mo|alr. If ono side wins declsive victory | oo fOlIOWINE day the trio whil make a South in support of his | high as even a rather poor aeroplane |in this engagement it will hold a| fumel, *fhome of the new schools in D to point out how |can fly. If the avlator knows they|tremendous advantage In any subse- | pijio conciuding the wecond lap o present policies of the |are there, he has but to rise above |quent land or sea action. “The loser's| ;2 i olE D evatax = have been In accord with|the obstacle and drop down on the|eves will be put out” He cannot | "Gia both Secretaries Houston |other side. They are most effective, [spot for his own artillery fire mor |, Th¢ < t 5 , as things atand at present, when run |spy out the dispositions of his enemy. | (% A48 I schoolhouse = construc- | up unexpectedly at night. ' But Euro- Could Not Defend Clties. last week and expects the second trip e o o e e L e b constriucting feroplanes which will | N0t defend his cities, Some of Gen. [on this expedition will be submitted shear through nets. At best, mets|Mitehell's critics, in rebuttal, point|to the Board of Education by Mr. ehsuziiuirueniaists AR . again to the experience of the late|Greenwood at its meeting this after. G (Gaa Meresin .l European war. Both sides had alr-|noon in the Franklin School. - » » NP planes; thousands of them. But there In order to facilitate the construc- | The Air Service, remembering the |was no great battle In the air. Gen.|tlon of the new schools provided in late war, regards cynically the anti- |Mitchell's faction replies, first, that | the inftial Installment of the slgantic |aircraft "gun. A ‘veteran of that|airplanes were comparatively scarce|five-year program, the Distriet Com. {struggle can not picture an airplane |in 1914-1915; most of them were need- | missioners have employed nine archi- working over the lines without its[ed for work of observation or of pro- | tects to assist Mr. Harrls In the prep- decoration of white or black shell|tecting observers; few could be spared | aration of plans. bursts, which never scemed in the|for n “strateglc reserve.’ The outside architects selected {least to disturb it. Not one wrecked | Further, though, it takes the eye|are Nathan Wyeth, Maurice F. Moord [hircraft in a hundred was even par-|of {magination to perceive it, there| F. IL Braoke, Louls Justment, Ward tially brought down by “archies”; aft- | was one such battle in the alr. The| Brown, Waddy 1 Wood. . . Beres. er the first two or three perturbing | great German offensive of March, | ford and the firm of Porter & Lockle. {flights the aviator went his way in- (1818, started with a concerted at-| Mr. Wyeth will draw the plans for be- | different to them—there were so many | tack on the allled air forces. Not|the new cight-room building n Cal. - {more dangerous things to WOIry luntil our airplanes were Dretty | vert street near Connettlcut avenue it~ [about. Anti-aircraft guns and gunfire | generally driven down did the Ger-| Porter & Lockie, elght.room sdditiey |Onlo he had been engaged in the es|have much Improved since 1918. They | mans move, and the blindness of the | to the Bell School; Moore, eight.room | €rain_business here with his father, | and municipalities had developed the |are shooting nch shells now in-|British and French in these circ addition to the Park View School; |= = = nece: for apportionment of the|Stead of I-inch, with corresponding |stances was a main reason for Ger-| Iirooke, eight-room addition to the fields of tax. sources between the|increase in range: they have multi- | many's alarming success in the first| Bruce School; Justment, efght.room Federal and State governments. He |plied their rapidity of fire. But s0|stages of the attack. This was abulldlng at Fifth and Buchanan scalled that the President recently|have the speed and agility of air-|loose and scattered action; military |streets; Brown, eight-room buflding at d spoken in favor of the Federal |planes increased ynen had in 1918 paid lttle attention | Fifth and Sheridan streets; Wood. ernment leaving the inheritance| At the end of February to the strategy and major tactics of |room building to replace the Bright- over.” like the Inexperlenced hunter at the moose. And a bomber using this device could pick for his opera- tlon any point within 10 or 12 miles of his target. The aerlal torpedo, gulded to its objective from an alrplane or dirigible hovering at a| distance, would probably be more ac- | curate and just as fmmune to attack from anti-afrcraft artillery. One is forced to believe, therefore, that the ground-based gun in defense E“)g&‘ [Hot water =~ =] Sure Relief ELL-ANS PRt 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Evervwhers e OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. Six Rooms | Seventh Deep Lots and Paved Alleys Ingraham Wide Streets Northwest On 14th St. Car Line D. J. DUNIGAN, Inc. = 1319 N. Y. Ave. S committee of school planners will begin its second tour of inspection of new school construction In other elties, preparatory to executlig the $19,000,000 five-year building pro- gram, in Rochester, N. Y., Monday, ac- cording to plans completed today by Washington's By the Assoclated Press. RICHMOND. Va., retary Mellon and Senator Glass of Virginia, who was tary of the Treasury in the administration, assailed from March 18-—Sec- |14 Carter However some folks may look upon the Dawes here is no- foreign pl who de Dawes d« the t approve estic plan. FRANK FRANK M’DOWELL DIES AT AGE OF 64 Retired Grain Dealer Was Mem- | ber of 0ld Washington Family. 111 Short Time. MeDOW ELL, people Tosh n st , took the easury committee discovered many American ICE Company FLAT TIRE? MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS Service Charge Never Over $1.00 IF YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS THIS FELLOW AND HAD SORETHROAT THE WAY DOWN TONSILINE The National Sore Throat Remedy SHOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT ALL DRUGGISTS nater for Reduction. After Mr. Winston had assailed both the surtax rates and the inheri- ta xes in the present Federal law, Senator Glass, in his address. declared he favored reducing the sur- tax maximum to 20 per cent, as well s reducing the legislative burden of an of moderate means, and hoped this would be done at the next ssion of Congress. Referring to Secretary »bably the outstanding figure wdministration at Washington declared the Secretary “not rogard the Treasury as a playground for partisan politics. but considers it as a great business in- Frank McDowell, = 510 Quincy street, re nd elevator owpner | thts morning at Wi { torfum, Takoma Pa weeks' illness from kidney dis Mr. McDowell, member of an old Washington family, spent his boyhood | here, going to Rloomingburg, Ohio, |in 1887, where for 30 years he op- erated a grain elevator business. Six cars ago he sold his grain business and moved back to Washington take charge of the cstate left by his ther, S. C. McDowell, of which he s a trustee. He was born at Wil mington, Del. Previous to going to 64 years old, of ired grain dealer lied suddenly hington S ollowing two Mellon as of | “py M. 1267 A i relationship wi I tate tax que tions, Mr. Mel lared the mo ing costs of government in Sta = of the 1 and n des SIS FOR SALE NO. 2231 QUE STREET NEAR SHERIDAN CIRCLE The plan of this house and the location are vers physician’s First dtning room Second: and Third Floors: Six spacious bedrooms gnd two smaller aths. plumbing and heat present and future va 2 an en- rchles” said eld to the States, and added that | thuslastic officer of the alr fighting. Since the armistice. | wood School, and Beresford, eight-room We pepper a target at 10,000 proposal of returning to the |to me however, the general staffs of Europe | Brightwood Park School rine of the sovereignty of the!feet I was skeptical even then:|have given this matter much thought Another step to speed up the schoo! ates could well be appreciated in|merely peppering a target does not|If we fight again every one will| bullding program was the appoint- i |gonvince one who s the late war.|know that there has been a battle in ment yesterday of threc additional remembered how the machines re- |the air assistant engineers to wo c Dual Assessments Attacked. turned constantly from patrol with st Dt SMBoevorithe mmiat s “The efforts of two governments!their wings full of holes and their R A i The Commissioners will ask bids | to tap the same source of revenue in|fusclages scarred, but still in fight-| Many of the points In Gen. Mit-|gor the erection of the buildings mew. | inheritar taxes,” the Secretary|ing condition | chell's thesis are matters of con-|tioned as soon as the speeifications continued, “h resulted in over-| On March 6 the archies had a chance | tFOVersy, not to be approved or denied [ are ready. " Buers efirct Lt lapping systems which impose unduelto show the congressional committee |y any mere civilian. But on threel (o complets the structures ot the burdens upon the taxpavers and a!what they could do against a night |Points he is probably right. First.|earllest possible date. s gaent | dbatemetiin (B the ttack. Virtually they did mothing. | ity or a whole nation cannot be sources of revenue, which m Thelr searchlights did not even find |defended against aircraft except by paratively little to the Federal Treas- |most of the attacking machines. Only | Other aircraft. Second, in the initial ury, but much to the State {one target was touched—and that by |Stages of a war, a_ thoroughly pre- An unintelligent use of the tax-|a machine-gun bullet. The anti-air- | Pared adversary will move massed power may have disastrous con-lcraft forces were not using guns of [&ir forces against his enemy’s main sequences. It is for this reason that|the largest caliber. But on the other | ity or cities; third, since aircraft at- we must come to some understand-|hand, the targets could not shift and|tack With a speed greater than the ing, particularly as regards-high sur-{dip s do aifplanes dodging anti- | traditional speed of the winds, one taxes and in the field of inheritance |aircraft fire. The game remains|Who would defend® his homeland | taxes, by which overlapping and un-|what ft was in the beginning.|must keep a homogeneous, trained fair taxes 1l be eliminated and|‘shooting flying ducks long range | ir force always ready to give the the future welfare and prosperity of | with a rifie. eremy general battle in the skies the country shall be assured. This, . | That is, of course, if the world goes I am confident, can done, and in Design Gliding Bomb. |on competing in building aircraft, as helping to do it and to bring about Again, two devices invented or Im- |t was competing in bullding battle- a better understanding of the funda- |Proved since the war give the bomb-|ships before President Harding and Mental principals involved In tax-|Iig plane, in operations against cities, | Secretary Hughes put through their ation you are rendering the country [If not against armies, a new edge|famous conference. | great and lasting service. We must|on anti-aircraft fire. One is the glid- noi let partisan oF sectional or class {ing bomb. As its name implies, it| prejudices blind our vision or halt|does not fall stralght. It is winged, our determination to achieve what |50 that it cuts an obliGue course. Will be for the welfare of the coun-|FProbably this device is somewhat in- try as a whole. wccurate; but in such an operation as ol gassing a city the aviator could O o afford to shoot at his objective “all et does any one stop to figure :r}l‘;x;’;q unh;}f :zhfm:frr:vr‘s :rxx:::‘ldlgxl;iw(]RK FAVORS PARK | IN SMOKY MOUNTAINS tomorrow and the Federal and State death duties be paid out of the princi P ts of the decedents’ estgte Secretary Urges Purchase by Ten- nessee of 80,000 Acres as First Step. enti, and home. Large front and rear communicating Kitchen I SPECIAL NOTICES. rich ol [‘ ';‘.1 5 ".‘“x' n“».“ v v‘llu’:»'fl, F. LT nx plant e of this Price, $19,000 Good Terms B. HOUSTON McCENEY REAL ESTATE 1653 Pennsylvania Ave. Phone Main 61 Attractive fxt The is esta very ora- ' Stratford Apartments 2010 Kalorama Road TINNING lng G0 A e Froop s to, - St Fhoto North s, N1ght Clevs PAINTING, PAPERUIANGT A rAtttes ChesEe customers, st ow. 9, CONTRACT: Address at GIVEN be stock) THAT 1ders THE of the Exceptional apart- ments of three and five rooms and bath in new five-story building. Ele- vator. Oil-heated build- ing. Refrigerator in <ach apartment. Shower baths. Beautifully dec- orated. Best location in city. One block from car line. ircraft and the Navy,” the fifth | article of Will Irwin's series on the alrcraft controversy, follows tomor- row.) (Copyright, 1925, and Great Dritain' by North Ami paper Alifance. Al rights reserved.) COURT ISSUES RULE | ON PATHE EXCHANGE | Exhibition of Charity Ball Pic- tures Subject of Suit Filed for Injunction. FURNITURE REPAIRED ANT UPHOLSTER. home: Wil go anywhere. Add Star office NOT BB RESFONSIRLE other_than those W A Healthful Digestible Food 1 WiLL, deits, i ANY by myxelf W, 19¢ T CER apit name of GIVEN T r five shares of Tractic Jssued in ¢ has been lost and tha Capital Tract pany by Hallie . Proc. tor for the s 1 duplicate certificate of said sfock In licu of the one Inaf. Ang person having or coming into possession of said certificate of stock is hereby warned t return same to said Hallle H. Proctor PROCTOR. Texas. FULL OR PART LOAD ORK OR WASH., RGH OR WA NATIONAL D! 1418 T, N.W. HESTNUT FARM S Cot- tage Cheese in salads makes a palatable combination with such vegetables as fresh lettuce and tomatoes. apital stock of the company itself? The value Involved is so large and its ownership so centered that it Is conceivable that the collection of in- heritance taxes may check, if not destroy, that unity of policy which has created and expanded that in- dustry, and thus prevent its future prosperity. Of what avail, then, is it to any government if it collects $100.000,000 once in estate taxes i iy lasrisniea destroys 2 oource of Income UPON|State Senator Roy Wallace and State which it can rely for revenue year|g.oiocict Wilbur Nelson of Tennessee e experience we are|that he strongly - favored the pur- or estate, the burden of which either ‘{“Cl et ”‘e““;’_“g':’k z“n"":‘;g ::::kb diréctly: or dndirectly isarfoualy. ats_ [LETIOE & MESORRL BAEE 08 K08 B0 ¥ | turbs. business, distorts investments(>ountains eator s I o hares or [or prevents the growth of industry,|Carclina. The Senator ls 1n charge o is inherently unsound and should be |2 Pill pending in:the Tennissee Legls- | lature to effect the purchase. Sieking Entoha “I am very anxious E g D A e Fuq | purchase the 80.000-acre tract as the | that President Coolidge in his recent | first step to securing a gatlonal park Inaugural address had urged tax|in the Smoky Mountains,” the mes- sage stated. “I hope nothing may turned them to a message to Con- |Project so well started. Three Cooking Zones Hot—Simmering— Warming One burner keeps four ves sels steaming or the whole dinner hot. Fifty per cent more vessals can be placed on the smooth, roomy top, every square inch of which is cooking surface. Convenient Terms EDGAR MORRIS SALES CO. 1305 G St. N. W. Main 1032-1033 WANTED TO HAUL TO OR FROM NEiW D. C.: BOSTON, PITT POINTS. SPECIAL RAT LIVERY ASSOC.. INC MAIN 1460 LOCAL MOY THIS IS T0O GIVE NOTIC Fithdrawn from the pa Clipper. B st Large reductions in rent. Apartments as low as $62.50. Moore & Hill 730 17th St. N.W. ATso THAT TTAVE crahip. of Bergmany entate brokers. Tocated st 8 and 10 the. fatmre me e b conducted solely by Mz, T st r N cLmrer VEN THAT CER- “hares of the epn: of Washington Gas Light Compas : cton, D. Cry Insned in the mmme 1y Fannie Loe Jones, was 10st Drior 1o the Heat of sald Fannie Lee Jancs and ‘serer Gemh fnto the porsession of the: America ecetmn and Trust Compans, execntor of - he -enritd | of the sald Fannia Les Jones.' Anoiesiate | has been made 10 the eaid Washivmrie eion | Vight” Company By id” Amevionn“Seeuats | | { | Justice Hitz of the District Su- preme Court today issued a rule on the Pathe Exchange, Inc, to show cause Friday why it should not be enjoined from exhibiting pictures of | the charity inaugural ball without deslgnating the Mayflower Hotel, Wash- ington, D. C., as the scene of the gath- ering. The court order followed the filing of a suit for injunction by the May- flower Hotel Co., through Attorneys Chamberlin & Smith and A. L Ben- nett, in which the court is advised that the Pathe Exchange sought the | exclusive right to take pictures of During Lent it can be used to great advantage as a substitute for meat. This cottage cheese is now on sale at the best grocery and delicatessen stores in 12-ounce cartons at 15 cents; or we deliver it to you in glass jars at the same pric and T ompany, executor of the estate of said Fa Jones, for the ixsuanre of a_duplica of & len of the ane Toxt reon having L Wanted A For Direct Delivery to Your reby searned n s d Amer AMERI- ¢ to a Trnst Company gress by President Wilson in 1918, in Secretary Work's communication ob- was prompted by several inquiries in- the scenes in connection with the| ball in honor of the inauguration of | Shoe Salesmen & N Home, Phone Ghestrua@®FarmsDairy 1116 Connecticut Ave. FRANKLIN4000 which the war-time Executive served that the higher surtaxes were certain to be destructive to business ivity, and urged that Congress re- vise taxes so that they would not discourage business development. What President Coolldge said is not Republican doctrine” said Mr. | Winston. “What FPresident Wilson sald is not Democratic doctrine. Both are merely the truth. This truth Is not an attribute of ‘any one party but is the possession of all who have studied this question without partisan- ship.” The Undersecrotary assalled the high surtax rates and directed par- ticular fire at the inheritance taxes |in the present Federal law. These | rates, he asserted, take so much of an estate for Government use that its value as a future revenue source sometimes Is reduced to naught and ery frequently is impaired for years to come. YOUNG WOMAN CONVICTED | Miss Margaret Cahill Found Guilty of Larceny After Trust. Miss Margaret Cahill, a young stockbroker, was convicted last night by a jury in Criminal,Division 3 of the District Supreme Court of a charge of larceny after trust. Judge James Francis Smith of the United States Court of Customs Appeals, presided at the trial. The Young woman was remanded for sentence. The indictment charged that Miss Anna C. Powers in April, 1922, en- trusted $150 to Miss Cahill for the purchase of stocks. Miss Cahill, it was claimed, diverted the money to her own use. Assistant United States Attorney Rover conducted the prosecution, while Attorney C. E. Morganston appeared for the accused. SECURITY AND TRUST CORCORAN THOM, V the et OMPANY. President, ex. nie Lea Jones, | cluding one from Gov. Peay of Ten-| nessee, to the effect that the Secre- tary had been misquoted by oppon- ents of the project who sought to convey the impression that Mr. Work was not favorably disposed toward the smoky park. Gov. Peay called attention to “supposed interylews" with the Secretary representing the latter as “hostile” to the project. The Secretary further explained in telegrams that it has been contem- plated that a portion of the great smoky area be purchased by the Fed- eral Government as a forestry re-| serve. This, however, has been | abandoned through a recent public announcement, to make way for its conversion into a national park, PARENT-TEACHER BODIES ASK VOICE ON SCHOOLS Will Petition Board of Education for Recognition in New Build- ing Program. Another Group of Homes Completed —in this rapidly grow- ing community situated in the heart of Wash- ington’s country ~ club | “§PECIALISTS IN I PIANOLAS AND REPRODUCING PIANOS™ district. ] ©-J DeMOLL . EMMONS “5 SMITH These are on Walsh DEM@]LL P}HAN@ @ Street, a fine, wide Washington's AEOLIAN HALL ~ Tiwelfth and G Streets BABY GRAND East and West through Sale Tomorrow Leland $250 CHEVY CHASE, MD, Terms Arranged Like all Leland homes, they are detached and of the two- story bungalow type. Each has generous grounds, for lawn, flower-beds and a garden. If Desired “7 E have taken in trade two very good Knabe Pianos, which go on sale tomor- row for $250. We are also placing on sale six oth_er_ Baby Grands, priced from $350 to $650. This is an unusqal opportunity, and we advise an early inspection, as bargains like these will be hard to duplicate. | e President Coolldge on the night of | March 4 last, and an agreement was reached in which the Pathe corpora- tion was given the exclusive right to take the pictures and to exhibit them in_the movies and other theaters. Under the terms of the contract, it is alleged, the plctures were to carry a “credit line” showing that the affair was held at the Mayflower. In dis- regard of that arrangement, it is al- leged the pictures have been exhibit- ed without any indication that they were taken at the hotel. The com- pany {s about to continue the alleged breach of contract, it is stated, and the court is asked to interfere SHIFTED. lFormer Foot Ball Star Gets As- signment at Harvard. Maj. Charles D. Daly, 76th Field Artillery, former star quarterback at Harvard and West Point, has been relieved at the Presidio of Monterey, Callf, and ordered to Cambridge, Mass, for duty as assistant professor of military sclence and tactics at Harvard University. The new detail was made today by direction of the President, at the request of the Uni- versity authorities. HE FAMILY SHOE STORE has an opening for two shoe salesmen and will consider ap- plications for the position from those who are thoroughly experienced in the fit- ting of shoes. They must be courteous and willing, and ren- der in every case painstaking service in the interest of the customer. Those who feel that they are amply qualified should apply in person be- tween the hours of 9 and 10, any morning of this week with the exception of Saturday. The position offered is permanent. THE FAMILY SHOE STORE 310312 7th St. N.W. CTRY MY MAHONEY, North 4749, » TRIPS rugless syetem f { C.. 1603 R. T WE MAKE W To Baltimo: A NOW IS THE TIME furnace, roof, downspout and gut. | Written guarantee R TIVOLT Zijsses & . If You Have a Good Curle Hair Mattress YOU PAID FOR LONG HATR The reasn. 1t cost more Vien Mioor At 5a Wi riks AT ANCEAN et ONE RREAK IT INTO SHORT HA LET US DO IT PROPERLY. BEDELL’S FACTORY Matn 610 E St. N.W. LET YOUR ROOF reflect _the care of owner. Thoroughly rep and_guar. w. MAJ. DALY OME nt honse painted Recognition of & committee of par- onts and teachers to act as con- sultants in the execution of the five- year school bullding program will be urged by the District Congress of Parent-Teacher Assoclations in a peti- tion to be submitted to the board of education at its meeting this after- noon. The petition was drafted at a meeting of the executive board of the organization yesterday. Delegates to the Natlonal Congress of Parent-Teacher Associations in Austin, Tex., April 25, were elected as follows: Mrs. Giles Scott Rafter, Mrs. Joseph N. Saunders, Mrs. Wil- }liam O. Smith and Mrs Ernest Daniel. | The alternates are Mrs. Kalmbach,! Mrs. Carl Smith, Mrs. Z. D. Black- istone and Mrs. Louise Castell. CALL MAIN 14 FOR ROOF REPAIRING We do the kind of work that you want, Roofing 21 5th IRONCLAD &k, mi iy Drive out this evening via Connecticut Avenue and through Bradley Lane, then one square north on the Rockville Pike to Walsh Street and the EXHIBIT HOUSE furnished by B. Moses & Sons HURIETTH NI w775 w0 0775 109, down At 36th and R Sts. N.W. bal. :nonthly Nearly 200 Homes Sold “&RA WARREN OWNERS & BUILDERS 925 15th St. M. 9770 %} Evenings, Cleve. 2252 Be Somebody qu Your Home Buy Now in CTEANING & STOmS NG & STORIN THE LUWIN Co., G Rear 1418 V St. N.W. _ap6e N. 9160 We Are Good Printers —because our service is as Dear 100% s we can make it. RIGH GRADE, BUT NOT HIGH PRICED BYRON S. ADAMS, gryren THERE CAN BE —npo_better reason for giving us_your printing than the fact that IT PAYS 1o do so. The National Capital Press 5 1210-1212 D ST. N.W. “Cleanliness Is Next to Godliness” Why wear Diamond Rings bedimmed with grit and dirc? Use Jem Kleno; large ottle. B0 et T. HARRIS & CO . okuss T aud D Sts. W, PLERRSI Asks Receiver for Company. Zenobia Parker, who recovered a judgment for $250 in the Municipal Court against the A. and W. Taxi Co., today asked the District Supreme Court for a receiver for the defendant company and for an Injunction to pre- vent the transfer of {ts assets. The company operates 11 caps, it is stated, but the vehicles have been purchased | on the installment plan and the com- | pany has not title to them. Attorneys | W. ‘A. Coombe and E. D. Detwiller | appear for plaintiff, Lectnré-Reciml Arranged. Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Harvey will give an lllustrated lecture-re- cital, “Romance of the Sea,” at the fraternity house of Alpha Chapter, Delta Phi Epsilon, 1606 20th street, Sunday night. Mr. Harvey will lecture while his wife plays appropriate sea pieces. The lecture also will be illustrated with many colored slides. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey have several engage- fents to present this lecture at differ- ent fraternity houses. \