Evening Star Newspaper, September 5, 1925, Page 3

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VIRGINA G0P. HAY OVINATE WOMAN 1 e of Mrs. Caples at Roanoke Would Be First for Governor. . September 4is Republicans of t r for the party s cvident that Mrs, this city would re nation for governor. vears been one of Republican women, on the ground e number of prom. State. er secre- he and the s to induce him ination were con hour today. It st before noon that final answer as m Scheduled. ed to orde: after seves out its pur of keynotes, com- 1 and » str ief formal c: ket from namec Henry W, were Anderson prominent Col. Anderson n_the running for Harris Hoge of \der consider or John M slated for A. R named for attor- was ginia ‘is a 1 rolled up ory in the when n s of victory t they have made pla; but the Republi- tly influenced by is of the ques xation, are GOLD RUSH IN IDAHO. e Follows Tale of Finding Quartz Metal by Miner. ISTON, Tdaho, September 5 was on yesterday on Graneeville, follow- t here by George e miner, that he cropping of quartz hill in that vicini ons stak radius . of five hompson’s claim. DS EVERGRE! s put in_first-class Trees name of lost _or _ de- to the Com- aid_bank bus - | Camp may proverly come M. HATLEY. E_NOT T le for any the District PH KAPLAN. S FLEISHMAN, HAT . W. i O W as “Her: 0 D et afore. Vednes- NCE. CO.. ¥aul. Bank Bldg.. EFOR §M N AND INT LOTS TQ i 4 TRANSFER COMP, Naw ion night make_you a oforib] 2 > Main 301 Bedell’s Factory, S0 B St Nw RAND BE SUR ROOF WORK ind ‘thit Kecps g0 that leaky !'o(\!,’ ph ROOFING 119 3rd St. S.W. HAVE THAT ROOF “PAIRED NOW! S e time—we RONCLAD iy hons suin 14 ’hy Not Talk Over With Us i the e ject of FALL 1 BUT NOT HIGH PRICED ADAMS, FiaTen, Two Lasting Profits chirioe Witk iE R TonE i one to you who buov it, ional Capital Press ilva2i D STV NKW. A.| The cattle /| recei 7 | of both se - | to the new institution are Marion Ash- | ERMEDIATE | are roofers. | SHIPPING NEWS Arrivals at and_Sailings From New York Daylight Saving Time. ARRIVED Y Mayara g Aquitani Patria. Pittcburgh . Ryndam holm" | stjord Somme Colon DUE SUNDAY Adriat Minnewa Laconia G i Port Limon. 2 DUE MONDAY Fort St. George Bermuda Sept Mexico " ....... a, Sept Santa Elisa Au . Aug Auy Au pton Hpron anto Domingo. SAILED YESTERDAY Homeric—Southampton £ SAILING TODAY. Leviathan—Southampton Paris—Havre . Nieuw Amst 2.00 P.M 2.00 PV Roticrdan Fort Victoria Motay La Sa vre . Sangamon—Constanza San Franc aenos A Primero—Buenos Aires < 3:00M. | Tosto—Bal 2 300 P Oloncho—P: e 100 PM. | Reliance—H, Seythia—Liverpool Sable I—St. Johns . SAILING TUESDAY stobal 5 0 uerto Corter 11T Bi00 11:00 SDAY 11:00 11:00 11:00 AM.| A A | PN PM| P | 12:00 M 10:00 AN 10 AN 200 P'M D0 A M uitania—Southampto | Martha Washington—Naples Asia—Horta Colombia—Cristobal Carabobo—San Juan San Francisco—Montevideo TEXAS AGAIN FACING CATTLE EPIDEMIC Foot-and-Mouth Disease Outbreak | | Among Herds in Galveston County Is Reported. | By the Associated P HOUSTON, Tex., September Foot-and-mouth di has broken out anew in Texas, this time in Gal veston County, In a territory known as a cattle country. The new break | came just at a time when the Federal authorities in charge of the diseas eradication campaign had about com- | ed the slaughter of approxir v 00 cattle infected in two preceding outbreaks beginning early in A t, | s a result of the fresh infectio the quarantined area was extended to include all of Galveston Coun part of Brazoria County east of the Brazos River and the closed was extended south to Bayou. to be immediately si: would depend, said Dr. Marion Ime Federal expert in char; paign, upon the number found in th vicinity of the new infection. herd in which it had last appe was small, but he indi ed that sev-| eral hundred might be grazing in ad- jacent_territory s long as the new outbreak re. mains in the comparatively small ter- | ritory to which it now is confined, hE} aid, there is no cause for alarm. | == i SEVEN SENT TO SCHOOL * | FOR THE FEEBLE-MINDEDi Inmates of New Institution a:i First to Be Limited to f Men and Boys. The District Feeble-minded, Meade, chased by the Training School for | recently opene | Md., on a tr trict of Columbin, d its first inmates today when | Justice Adolph A. Hoehlin; heard testimony as to the mental condition of seven men and boys. The inms it is understood, will at first be ited to men, but I minded s will be ac lated. | The seven persons itted today ford, James H. Harrison, Jonathan B. | Disney, Edward M. Glick, Joseph Eslin, Edward A. Welsh and Roy | X1 | Dr. D. Percy Hickling, i | alienist, and another physician m#e | | examination of the applicants 2! testified as to their mental conditir The evidence was heard by the j tice without the presence of a ju where insanity | be submitted to a jury ASK SHARE IN $238,000. | Many Apply to U. S. for Unclaim- ed Wool Profits. The Department of Agricuiture h received an avalanche of applications | for the 8,000 of e profits it | recently’ announced was unclaimed on ! |account of“wool sold in 1918. i | Most of these communciations ad- | s, but O. o ; ion, Tex., has a asked the department to turn the | money over to him to buy at $7 an | 9,000-acre ranch, which he| would sell in smail farm lots at $15 | an acre, | “I can do it,” he wrote, “in less | time than it will take for the Demo- | cratic p: to elect a Democratic | Presiden! | His applieation remains pending. The money was collected from dealers under a price-fixing, profit-limtiing rule of the War Industries Board for distribution to sheep growers, | gt i | PAUPER NEEDS $334.64. Yearly Maintenance Cost Figured by United States Survey. | The average American pauper r quires $334.64 a v for his mainte- nance, the Bureau of Labor § l'\u%tu;l of the Labor Department estimates jafter a survey of 93 per cent of the | public pauper institutoins of the coun- | try. Consolidation of almshouses, it | suggested, might reduce this cost. The average pauper, the report showed, lives on 4.02 acres of land. which, with its stock and farm equip- ment, is worth $563.13. The small, widely scattered almshouses in States which provide no central institutions for public paupers were found to be generally ill kept and more costly than the larger institutions. The biggest stamp collection on rec- ord was that of the Turkish govern- ment, which numbered 17,000,000 stamps in all. It was divided into sts and sold. With the proceeds was built cvne section of the Bagdad 1 way. i | | | i ®the y and|j | week alleged must | STRIING HNERS AREBUSY FHNG {Many Having First Vacation in Two Years—Resent Tales of Affluence. By the Associated Press HAZL o Pa., September 5.— Hundreds of idle anthracite mine workers are daily going to sections where fishing is good. Houses deal- ing in angling equipment report a thriving business since the suspension the collieries began. > season for pike, pickerel and bass is in full blast, and the roads to Pocono Mountains are filied with omobiles carrying men who are ng their firs vacation in two not get any acation with pay and of them stick to the joi from ome end of the year to the other. If th want to go anywhere on trips they must report off. The only classes of employes at the col- lieries allowed vacations with pay are executives and oflice ¢ ks. Many Own Cars. Many miners own motor cars or have sons who operate machines, and their only time for much recreation is on holidays or Sundays. Quite a I on motor tours to various sec- of * ‘country, feeling sure that ons per] their ¢ distant points in ment while the mine re closed. Leade the United Mine Work ers resent stories of reported affluence 1mong the men in possession of hey declare that a ccal digger, if he es his money, as much right » own an automobile as any other rkman and point to the v longer. in travel rch of employ- | of common people who ha NOVELIST’S HUSBAND SUES RICH IMPORTER Former Diplomat Charges Aliena- tion of the Affections of Winifred James. YORK, September 5 t intimation that Lionel Ithy English tmporter, sued by Henry de tion of the affections of his wife, Wini fr Jan, a novelist known by the pen name of Winifred James, came vesterday when Lacey filed an answer in the Supreme Court denying de Jan charges. De Jan, who was former attache of United States Embassy at Madrid, Spain, in his counter suit for divorce his w suit for separation, had 3 De Jan was guilty of misco t with Lacey last Spring in New Yo 1In her petition Mrs. De n accused her husband of cruel and in treatment and de answer alleges that Mr De Jan were separated long | > he first met the novel nd that before he became acquainted with Mrs. De Jan her husband had filed a zainst her in the courts of New sking a divorce on the grounds rtion. After their acquaint gan, the importer claims, De D dropped the first suit. Mrs The Lacey temporary alimony by Justice ard J. McGildrick. TRIO HELD FOR SWINGING WAITER OUT OF WINDOW $50,000 Bail Fixed for Actor and Companions Who Threw Man Down Nine Stories. By the Associated Press NEW YORK, September 5—Three ien who are accused of having ob- jected to a Dill presented by a waiter 1l to have swung him out of a ninth- floor window while singing, “Out the Window He Must Go,” were held in 0,000 bail each today in Supreme Court. The waiter, Sol Trencher, was sly injured, his skull ctured and an arm and a leg men are Joseph Pauline, a ville actor; Jack Phillips Harry Case. GOFF SUIT QUASHED. Former Federal Employe Charged Indictment Was Plot. YORK, September 5 (). — inst Guy D. Goff, fo: nt United States attorney, 3. Paul Yaseli, also a former ates attorney. ff had conspired to indictment in 1920, was dis- terday by Federal Judge obtz m 3 Goddar: Yaselli was tried, and found not ilty of the charge that he had udulently aided the sale of the steamship Liberty Land by the Ship ping Board to the Italian Star line. Judge Goddard, in dismissing the charge against’ Goff, who now is United States Senator from West Vir- nia, said he believed “that such of- ficials as assistant United States at- torneys should be immune from ecivil action while exercising the functions »f office within the limits of their wthority.” HOME FOR U. S. EMBASSY Steps Taken Here for Necessary Buildings in Tokio. First steps were taken yesterday by the State Department looking toward construction of a new American embassy residence buildings for the diplomatic staff and employes of Tokio. Secretary Kellogg signed a contract with H. Ven Burean Magonigle and Antonin Raymond of New York for the preparation of drawings and specifications for the proposed estab- lishments, for iwhich Congress has n hi visit the site selected for the | buildings before final decision on the plans and specifications is reached. ‘WILL COST $10,750,000. Electric Company Proposal IWater Power at Louisville. CHICAGO, September 5 (#).—The Standard Gas and Electric Co., owners of the Louisville Gas and Electric Co., last night announted plans for the construction, in co-operation with the Federal Government, of a $10,750,- 000 water-power plant in the Ohio River at Louisville. The project, to be completed early in 1929, is designed as an important link in the Southern and Middle West- ern superpower system. It will be the seventh largest water-power proj- ect In the {'nited States. for e number of miners are | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1929, Under By Lieut. Commander the Hon. J. M. Kenworthy, R. N,, M. P. Correspondence of T tar and New York World, LONDON, Aug. 20.—By the naval program passed by the British House of Commons July 20 a definite lead is taken by G t Britain in ship con- struction over the whole world. Prior to this program the building of the new type of 10,000-ton cvuiser by the various powers as follow Britain... ... = a8 States b s s o wees sias n; Unite s alian govern “ive of the type 10,000 s actually building for ain now were lald down by v MacDonald’s Labor gov iment. When the new program is put in hand, which it will be during| he present financial i March, 1926, the Britis will have buildin proposes to lay each of the next f end of the financial year At first sight it might appe: Great Britain is deliberately aiming naval hegemony. This is not really the case. The alleged con of policy of the Labor gov in_continuing to add to the explained by the Labor themselves, who say they! when the estimates draft, that they were inexperienced, were faced demands from the British ind val war staff n independent majority in of ommons and feared doubtful attitude on the part of the Liberals. Race Is Not Deliberate. Butthough it is victory of the naval chiefs over th chancellor of the exchequer. in naval construction initiated, this is not deliberate, and it will be perfectly genuine, by the “Blue Water” school, known popu- larly as the “Blue Funk” school, when other nations follow suit and embark on a large program of cruiser | construction in their turn. The real policy pursued is simple. It the result of a tinued contest between the chiefs, the permanent officials niralty and their political | porters on the one hand, and the cabinet a whole, including the chancellor of the exchequer, in par- ticular, on the other hand The navy department always mands the greatest possible program it can wrin, ictant treasury. The chancellor of the exchequer and the treasury hiefs resist these demands to the ut- most and atfempt tc off as lightly | possible. This struggle goes on | behind the scenes every year, no matter what government is in ]vu\\rr" in_Britain. | Occasionally the civilians and the | ury win, and, as for example, in the middle of the nineteenth centur the navy was reduced considerably ir 1gth. At one period, some 70 s ago ish fleet had le ectivé strength in sea-going vessels than the French navy of that day.| | And nce was the| { permanent | for the Au o very con. naval | of the | sup- | de- shipbuild from a re- enemy of Great Britain. e e ot Aot s MO it it K 1925 PROGRAM GIVES BRITAIN NAVAL CONSTRUCTION LEAD Nine Cruisers to Be Laid Down During Present Year, With Three to Follow Annually Until a fact that, by the Police Arrest Women for Smoking While on Street. JAMESTOWN, N. D., September 5 (#).—No “perfect lady’’ smokes ciga- rettes on the street, according to the police of this city. This was brought out in the arrest for disorderly con- i duct of Ruth Anderson and Mrs. Wil- Recent Bill. {llam Schwartz as they paraded smok- ate Wiencke today. i smoking on the therefore became . the convenient | s rderly conduct they were guilty bogey to be usedMto frighten the re- luctant taxpayer Into paying the bills | Each was fined d_costs. for naval shipbuilding.” When the |~ “PERFECT LADY"”” DEFINED |0 THIRD REASON WHY YOU SHOULD BUY A SIMMONS HOME DRESSING ROOM AND SLEEPING PORCH: Cedar closet with automatic lights and dressing mirrors. This is one outstanding feature in the dress- ing reom. The sleeping porch is ideal. SEE OUR HOMES IN Takoma Park rman menace appeared across the rth Sea the English were content withdraw - their battle squadron »m the Pacific and to leav: tige and security in the Far East. Today the naval staff declares the center of naval power has shifted to the Pacific. Hence the decislon to construct a great naval dockyard and base at Singapore. Hence the origi- nal demands of the admiralty not to || lay down the comparatively modest | program of 3 to 4 cruisers a| as at present, but the 9 or| 1 year which were seriously prom- | by the British prime minister, . Baldwin, just before the general election of 1923. It was true the Washington con- ference had limited the construction of battleships. But no limit was placed to the number of cruisers Only their size and the caliber of | their guns were limited. This new | type of cruiser of the limit of size and | power permitted by the Washing ton treaty has become the standard of naval strength. The forward school at the admiralty, by nominally re- placing old vessels, wishes to ma tain the present proportion of modern | cruisers on the navy lists of the five principal powers. These are: Great Britain. For Rent (Vacant) 912 14th St. The Main 2345 Painting--Paperhanging™" Homes, Clubs, Schools, Office Buildings, Arartment Houses Harry W. Taylor 2333 18th St. N.W. Col. 1077 s " OFFICES ROOMS For Renl_ WILKINS BUILDING 1512 H St. Randall H. Hagner & Company No. 1321 Conn. Ave. N.W. Main 9700 Race Would Be Strain. 1f the other powers began building Iso, as well they may, it is ob. vious that to maintain this standar. would impose a strain on the Britis chequer which no country could and. For these new cruisers will more than $10,000,000 each, n in commission $1,000,000 a y intain. r is this policy deliberate Ppro- tive. It is partly instinctive and partly the result of a long-standing tradition. The more modern school excuses itself by saying there prob- will be another conference for the limitation of armaments and it is an advantage to go into such a confer ence with strong cards in the hand—in other words, with a defined building 600 Whittier Street NW. Open and Lighted Daily Until 9:30 CYRUS IMMON NEW HOMES g $500 CASH Monthly Payments Like Rent 2421 to 2435 Third St. N.E. Corner of Channing St. WITH BUILT-IN GARAGES 1410 Main H St. NW. 1023 Hardwood trim Oak floors Built-in refrigerator Cabinet ironing board Hot-water heat Large front porches Electric lights Wide front parking Tiled bathrooms Stationary wash tubs Houses Open Every Day Until 8:30 P.M. H.R.HOWENSTEIN INCORPORATED 1311 H STREET NORTHWEST - program of great extent which can be ibandoned as a gesture in order to induce others to agree to limitations. But both the forward and moderate schools of big navyites reckon with- | out public opinion. This is seriously alarming. Even the Conservative party, with its traditional support of the navy, is uneasy. There is a feel ing amongst the mass of the people that no war is possible for five years, or probable for ten, while taxation is h and one of the causes of trade depression. We may well see a re- turn tq the policy of the Conservative party after the fall of Napoleon. In 3 war-weary and exhausted world the Tory squires and landed aristoc- racy who ruled Britain declared there was no danger of war and decided on rigid economies both in the army and navy. They were justified, as there was no European war until the lim- ited War of the Crimea 40 years later. We may well see a similar policy de. | adopted by the Conservative party today, with, of course) the sup- port of the Liberal and Labor parties The present chancellor of the ex- 11 Sold--2 Left Six Rooms and Bath Built-in Garage 6th and Franklin Sts. N.E. Open for Inspection - Story & Co. 7,950 | De Jan has been awarded $75 | Always Rea reaction on Bri tish have t ped heir vorld ns. population anc On these occasions the held { chequer, Mr. Winston Churchill, with | the concurrence of Mr Lloyd George, has sensed this tendency and sees in it his opportunity to obtain the lead- See se devel. | ership of a strong moderate Conserva ea sense dovel |live party wedded to cconomy and ered over the ! the reduction of taxes. together by the| In any case, the somewhat gran i) g o diose shipbuilding program _decided i the progressive|upon after fierce debate in the Brit- ish Parliament does not mean war or t on Public. e is alwa sh public opinic THE 812 17th Street SRR T having | and and consulate general and | ,250,000. Mr. Magonigle | v of agriculture, Britain becomes | and more dependent on sea-borne | supplies of foodstuffs aw ma This depend been luvi 3 by the | d of miner: rubber jand nit which cannot be pro- duced at present within the \'n\lflll’,\'.l When these reactions come the pen- | dulum swings in an opposite direction. Thys we had the naval defense act, when a fixed program of construc. | ion was decided upon for a series | | of years in the latter part of the nine- | teenth century, and which at the time en the Boer War broke out had ced the British fleet in a position f unchallenged supremacy as against | the rest of the world. | "The admiralty cannot Its function is to prep 1 fleet as possible. As it happens, the admiralty is the most deeply in trenched of all the government de partments of resignation by the board of admirals can usually be | relied on to create a panic and by | recalcitrant ministers to submi { There may 1 small minority of | naval officers who desire war. Men trained all their lives to the use of | a_certain weapon seek opportunities | | of making use of their knowliedge an | skill. It used to be an old toast in| | naval messes: “Here’s 1o a bloody | war and a sickly climate,” the idea | be cleared by death and the survivors benefit accordingly. | Potential Enemy Convenient. { The serious and responsible chiefs | | certainly do not want war. But they find it convenient to have a potential enemy. Up to the commencement of | the twentieth century this enemy was | France, who, in her turn, had taken | | the place of Holland and Spain. With | | the increase of power of the German | Empire and the construction of the German fleet, Germany as the nex strongest power. stepped into the ! place of France. Only the student of history in years to come will be ble accurately to appraise the im portance of the construction of the rman fleet as a cause of the great war. The war ended with the oblitera- tion of the German navy as a fight- ing force. The admirally was at a loss for some years as to what policv to pursue. There were those who pointed to the strength of the Amer- ican fleet, greatly enlarged during the war, and pointed to America as a | convenient power against which to | be blamed. | re as strong| R R UL LSRR YR build warships. But this was too much even for the somewhat ill-in. formed and credulous stomach. Also the wealth of America after { the war and the comparative poverty of Britain made it clear that a race embarked on by the British Empire and the United States in ship con.| ruction could only end in three| ways, viz., the outbuilding of England | by America, or the bankruptey ofi Britain, or war. It is impossible to | say what would have happened if the ( Washington conference had not been | called and resulted in the rationing of | ! the battle fleets of the principal naval | i | British td powers. During the few vears of bewilder- ment in the admiralty office following | the war the civilians and the treas- ury managed to hold the sea lords in check; and many vessels in process of construction were serapped and no | new war vessels commenced. But al- | ready at the time of the summoning | of the Washington conference a sub- stantial program of battleship bulld~} ing had been decided upon. I The majority of the big navy school , were not satisfied with America as a conventional rival and they turned their gaze from the West to the East. | Japan had a strong navy. And lhe' Japanese a strange people, | speaking a diffgni language. Japaz ! “waning years” |income of the fortune, the adminis | of a trustee committee since 18! the threat of war to any one. It is rveally a lack of adjustment to the nged conditions following on the ar. ARGONNE 16th and Columbia Road NW. ALL-YEAR LOCATION IN THE RESIDENTIAL HUB OF NORTHWEST, ON HIGH ELEVATION, OVER- LOOKING THE ENTIRE CITY AND ROCK CREEK PARK. APARTMENTS WITH LARGE OUTSIDE ROOMS, SPACIOUS CLOS- ETS, BUILT-IN BATH FIX- TURES, RECEPTION HALLS AND BALCONIES; LATEST IMPROVE- MENTS; 24-HOUR SERV- ICE; MODERATE RENT- ALS. RESIDENT MAN- AGER ON PREMISES. THE ARGONNE 16th & Col. Rd. N.W. SR w ASKS FOR SMALL SHARE IN $11,000,000 FORTUNE Claiming Relationship, Applicant Petitions Court for ‘“Allowance” From Mrs. Flagler's Estate. the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 5.—George C. Tash, 70-year-old restaurant cash- ier, of Red Bank, N. J., yesterday ap- plied to the Supreme Court for an llowance to carry him through his from the income of the $11,000,000 fortune of Mrs. Ida A. Flagler, widow of the late Henry “lagler of the Standard Oil Co. Mr. Tash, who claims to be a ond cousin of Mrs. Flagler, now s inmate of a sagitarium at Central Val- -y, N. Y., is the latest addition to the ranks of relatives seeking or receiving llowances from the $400,000 annual tion of which has been in the In his application Tash said he worked 13 hours, receiving a weekly sal of $20, and didn't know how long he would be able to hold the job. A referee to hear the application has been appointed by Justice Levy. Three of the immediate relatives now receive annual allowances of $10,000 or over from the estate, and many others receive lesser amounts. The M 2115 C Street N.W. New, Modern, Fireproof APARTMENT Ready for Immediate Occupancy Resident Manager 1 Room, Kitchen and Bath 2 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath Sftuated within a block and a half of the Potomac River and the Lincoln Memorial, and adjacent to the public rebreation grounds for all outdoor sports. Iar enough away from the hustle and bustle of the downtown section of the city to be quiet and peaceful, yet within fifteen minutes’ walk of the Shops, Clubs, Theaters and Business District. Convenient to Bus and Car lines and all Government Buildings. Perfect service will be our aim, and an inspection by you will mean ‘a reservation. See Resident Manager on Premises, or Swartzell, Rheem & Hensey Co. 727 15th Street N.W. - . Main 378 CLPTATR e b ka1 ; £ YOUR QUESTION ANSWERED: No. 21 IT ACCESSIBLE?™ At 36th and R Sts. N.W. YES—Dby car line, bus or The Washington Railway service on Wisconsin Ave. | recen much bettered, and when the physical im provements on that thoroughfare are pleted it will be better still The bus service is adequate and satisfac- tory and reaches the center of the city in about 15 minutes Via the Q Street Br direct route to the « trict. automobile. & El s been recently ctric ( auto traffic has a and shopping dis- You Must See These Homes Open Every Evening The Prices Are But $8,500 Up OUR SAFE AND SANE TERMS TO INSPECT: Take Burleith Bus HANNON - & LUCH Members of Of tion of D. 713-15 14th St. Main 2345 Notice to the Public: The suspension of mining in the anthracite coal fields does not affect directly any of the following domestic fue Pocahontas Egg Bytum Egg Cannel Coal Fairmont Egg By-Product Coke Briquettes Logan Egg Run-of-Mine Bituminous Virginia Anthracite We shall be pleased to describe any of these fuels in detail to you and quote you prices, which, in every case, are considerably lower in price than Pennsylvania Anthracite. If you prefer we will be glad to have a fuel engineer call and inspect your plant and submit to you his recom- mendation as to the most suitable fuel. (criFFiTH (O conparaTion )? Main Office 1319 G St. N.W. Franklin 4840

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