Evening Star Newspaper, August 29, 1928, Page 3

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FLAT TIRE? Call Fr. 764-5-6 Priced According to Distance $§1 Limit Spare Tires Applied 50c to $1.00 LEETH BROTHERS Formerly Main 500 IRVING- HOLMES 3020 Dent PL. N.W. Just North of 30th & Q Sts. APARTMENTS OF THREE AND FOUR RCOMS, RE- CEPTION HALL, KITCHEN, BATH AND PORCH. $40 AND $50 PER MONTH. APARTMENTS NEW- LY DECORATED. IN- SPECT TODAY. e ] e e C. A. SNOW COMPANY 710 8th St. N.W. Tel. M. 7562 1 Call Main 9220 STORAGE CO.__ ROOM NOW-— Wrecking frame bulldiogs at Waiter Reed Inquire Brightwood Branch, Hechinger Co NOW—THOU- dow {rames (rom wreck- d__inquire Brightwood fechinger Co.. 5921 Georgla ave. ICE THAT WE W a ou RTLA) R H. K 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR A debts contracted by one o d mysel! EDWARD nw BUILDING MATERIAL AT WALT i Wrec ma nany 1%5¢ foot, foot: Rainier, Md FOR SALE-CRAR picked. 5 PEACHES for CANNING & - - k3 * * * * - * - * b3 . . . * * . . - - . *® - * b3 * b3 . b3 . . . * . . o . s * . . * * . . . . . b3 . b3 . * B3 . - . “ < . = . * . . . b3 . T e . $ * ELBERTA PEACHES 10,000 BASKETS This Million-Doliar Printing Plant : —i8 &b your serv o sma The MNational C.;p‘i!a‘]‘“ Press Don’t Ta'kq Chances W er sets i BYRON 5. ADAMS PRINTING IN A HURRY ROOFING—by 19 Ira St B W Mais 933, Koons Guttering, Repairs Hoofing Compsn KOON D. . MARKSMAN ISTHRD W NEET David McDougal Gets 292 Out of Possible 300. Ohioan Wins. Ry the Astoctated Press CAMP PERRY. Ohio. August 29. Lawrence Wilkens, Norwood. Ohio, won he group A prone match, the first event of the National Rifle Association for matches here, it was announced | oday Rain vesterday delayed the hooting until late in the afternoon. Wilkins scored a 296 out of a pos- sible 300. to lead the field. James Hurt »{ Indianapolis took second with a 204, while David McDougal of Washington. D. C. last year's individual junior champion. trailed in third place with a 2 McDougal was junior winner at rt, N. J.. this vear. v Ward, Chicago. took fourth in the junior competition with a while Annie Laurie Wells, San An- {0, Tex., finished fifth with 265. | Shooting in group B. Bradford Wills, Chicago. placed first with 204. Others play in erder were James Butter- Highland Park, T, 283; Alfred Wilmington, Del, 278; Robert son. Ohio. 278. cludes ages 16 to 19, group 6. 0. P. SEEKS HEAVY MAJORITY IN MAINE AS NATIONAL INDEX (Continued from First Page) | the Republican party. Judge William STAR. TARHINETON TST 29, 1928.1 | Will Rogers | Says: BEVERLY HILLS —I have found out by the papers w | idge wouldn't run again. His hu- | miliation over his son John turning out to be a saxo- | phone player was too much for him. But wait till he finds out John maybe belongs to a fraternity. That would be the last straw. I don't know anything about politics and noth- ing about ma- chinery, but I do know that since General ~ Motors have gone Demo- | cratic that my Buick won't pull | a hill. Anditis | the same hill that | it used to go up | on high before | Raskob went into | politics. ‘ — e have elected governors, some Senators | and members of Congress, it is-true, but largely because of defections and splits among the Republicans themselves. | Only once has the State cast its vote | for a Democratic President. That was in 1912, when Woodrow Wilson had the | advantage of Bull Moose upheaval in | Even then Wil- | son received less than 3,000 votes more | than were cast for Roosevelt, and Taft | had some 26,000 votes in the State. | Democrats attempt to make light of | the abandonment of their party by | R. Pattangall, twice | | Demécratic candidate for governor, and | when a referendum was taken on the | provision in the Constitution for pro- ition. That referendum resulted in ictory for the drys by a mere hand- of votes. There are wets today insist that certain counties held their votes for days and finally ned in enough votes to offset and s the wet total. But since those days the women have been accorded vote, and with the woman vote, State is declared to be overwhelm- Iy dry today. Early Index. “As Maine goes, so goes the Union,” is a saying that dates back to the time of Democrat and Whig days, before the Republican party was born. It goes back to the day when “Maine went | hell-bent for Gov. Kent” and for “Tip- pecanoc and Tyler, too.” the Whig candidates for President and Vice President in 1840. Kent was elected governor by only a few hundred votes, and the State later went for Harrison nd Tyler. From the time of its ad- rittance to the Union as a State in 820 until this election, Maine had iven its electoral votes to Democratic ! candidates. While the Pine Tree State has failed to forecast accurately the | outcome in the Nation on a few occa- sions, it has been =2 fairly consistent barometer. For example, in 1880 the Democrats won the State election, but | the Republicans turned to and carried | the State for Garfield in November of that year. The Republicans are talking now about carrying Maine in the State elec- tion by from 40,000 to 50,000 majority. Some of the more hopeful are insist- ing the margin will be even larger. Two | vear ago, however, Gov. Brewster, Re- publican, defeated his Democratic op- | ponent only by 20,000 votes. In 1924 ! Brewster won over Judge Willlam R. Pattangall by 37,000 votes in the Sep- | tember election and President Coolidge | had a lead of some 97,000 over John W. Davis. The late President Hard- | ing carried Maine by about 88,000 votes over the Democratic nominee, Cox. Went for Wilson. * ‘There is little in the records of the | last 60 years to give the Democrats hope in the Maine elections. They Yen. Bo' THE NEw Buick SURE HAS ' TAKING WAYS'. . TARES CAKE . TAKES vou THERS Amo BRINGS YOU BACK.. €IC,EiC SALES 1875 14th_N.W 607 W N Service, 1128 Kalorama Read 060600006000 00006000000, * No Connection In Any Wy With Any Other Dairy Organization a : by his wife, Mrs. Pattangall. But when | Mrs, Pattangall announced several | weeks ago she would not vote for Smith but for Hoover, and her husband fol- lowed suit not long afterward, the a nouncement had its effect. Judge Pat- | tangall_has been an outstanding figure | in the Democracy of Maine and both he and his wife have had many followers. | A considerable list of Democratic women | of prominence have come out for Hoover since Mrs. Pattangall made her decision public. * Judge Pattangall was a central figure in the row in Madison Square Garden four years ago, when the Democratic national convention | vakian | vote on election day. CZECH ENVOY HERE SHIFTED TO BERN| Dr. Fierlinger, Now on Leave, to Be Replaced in U. S. by Min- ister to Switzerland. Dr. Zdenek PFlerlinger, Minister here since October. 1925, and now at Prague, on leave is to be transferred to the diplomatic | mission at Bern, Switzerland, and will not return to this city, according to recent official advices It is reported that Minister Fier~ linger is mot in good health and feels that a change of climate will be | of benefit to him. | Dr. Fierlinger for- merly was political took a prominent part in the delib- erations _of the League of Nations following the World War 1t is reported from Prague Dr. Fierlinger. that the vacant mission at Washington will | be filled by the appointment of Dr Ferdinand Veverka, the present Czecho- slovakian minister to Switzerland. And more particularly the Republicans are avoiding any reference to the reli- glous issue in the State campaign, in which Gov. Smith is, after all, only indirectly involved. They hope to hold | many of their Catholic voters. The Ku Klux Klan, which has dab- bled in politics in Maine as it has in other States of the Union in recent years, is not now so strong or so active as it was in 1926 and 1924. Such as it is. however, the Klan is expected to throw its strength with the Republicans in the coming election. A danger that threatens the Repub- licans in the coming State election, and later in the national election, is found in a spirit of overconfidence. Some of the leaders of the G. O. P. fear that thousands of voters, belleving the vic- tory won, will fail to go to the polls and The whole organ- ization, therefore. is laying great stress on the need of getting every voter to the polls. The State chairman, Daniel F. Field, has perfected plans for check- ing up on all Republican voters, see- ing they are registered, and finally that they actually vote, which should bring results. Czechoslo- Twemy-five years at the top—Fatima’s quality is there to stay! = What a whale of a difference just a few cents make LiGGETT 4 Mywrs Tonaccn Cc Order by phone C finthrad m{ )/ 1y 2N (;rca m Cmragc Cheese A dainty and substantial foundation for Summer salads and sandwiches. 15¢ Per Carton Cream Buttermilk Chocolate Milk Wise Brothers CHEVY CHASE DAIFY 9000000000000 000000000000000000000000 0000000000000 00000000000000000 | Telephone S I"'IJ'ST 183 2900000000000V 800000 staged its fight over the Ku Klux Xlan. | Judge Pattangall Insisted that the Klan | should be denied by name in the Demo- | § = cratic nltlonal’ platform. Indeed, he led the fight for the minority report of the resolutions committee on this mat- | ter. o Religion Not Prominent. The religious issue in the Smith-Hoover contest is given no prominence here. There is a large number of Catholic voters in Maine, estimated at 45,000 and more. While the great percentage of them are already Democrats and have been for years, there is an ap- preciable number of Republican Catholic voters. particularly in those parts of the [ §i 1 States where the French have settled. | Apts. 2121 N. Y. Ave. N.W. Wardman Management Frigidaire Equipped Room, Kitchen and Bath with Dining Alcove and Murphy Beds. $50 2 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath with Dining Alcove Murphy Beds. $60 and Every apartment equippad with service closets opening into public hall. This building 1 A Real Opportunity For Live-Wire Salesman Real Estate Firm Must have automobile” and experience in selling houses. one square in Potomac Park (Washington = coolest Incation) and a_ ve short walk to central down- town. In perfect con. " Manager on Prem Main 6850 Salary and Comm n All Replies Confidential Address Box 52-C Star Office We sincerely believe that | you will find the Nash “400” so much easier to steer and handle, so much more comfortable to ride in and drive, that once you have given this luxuriousnew car atrial, you will never be con- tent until you own one. ' Boulevard from the Municipal Golf Links NASH100 Leads the World in Motor Car Value Other Features Salon Bodies - Twin-Ignition motor « High compression + Aluminum alloy pistons (/nvar Struf) « 7-bearing crankshaft (kollow crank pins) + Houdaille and Lovejoy shock absorbers (exclusive Nash mounting) - Nash Special Design front and rear bumpers - All ex- terior metalware chrome plated over nickel WALLACE MOTOR COMPANY Distributors Retall Salesroom, 1709 L, Street, N. W. Decatur 2280 ASSOCIATE DEALERS 8-NASH MOTOR CO. HALL-KFRR MOTOR 00, 1509 16th Street, N. W. 191 B Sireet, 8. B., Washington, D. G NASH-RINKER MOTOR O0. BIRYON N m 3 lfl’,nh‘Lu LN J” fluw-: rginie 8 ALEXANDRIA-NASH COMPANY, 100 King Steeet, Alonandria, Particular People Use MENU PEAS Because they are better Ask Your Grocer JAMES M. DENTY Wholesala Distributor MAGNUS The perfect hand cleaner For Sale by Les Kohler Battery Service 3419 C Jonn. Ave. Cleveland 844 Baby Portraits at 25% Discount ‘; 0 KNOW just how MUCH per % sonality - individuality your baby has, erwood & Underwood art make a por- 4x6 trait of baby it our studlo, view our baby p ts and you'll be convinced that our artist staff $12 ble for baby por- INDERWOOD SUNDERWOOD Personality Poriraits Portraits 1230 Connecticut Ave. Decatur 4100 Wilkins Building 15121514 H St. N.W. Situated in the center of the Financial section of Washington, Veterans’ Bureau and U. S. Treasury Da t. en opposite the one block from Rooms single or ite, each witd unning water. 24-Hour Elevator Service Randall H. Hagner & C INCORFORATED 1321 Conn. Ave. N.W, Ph. Decatur 3600 New Courts Building 6th St. & Louisiana Ave. Fireproof Qffice Building Elevator Service Modern Improvements Desirable Offices, §15 The Munsey Trust Company Real Estate Dept. Or Apply at Building, Room 316 Only 3 Days More to Place Coal Orders at August Prices You'll save money if you buy Coal now. You'll en- joy the satisfaction of having your Coal supply safely stored for next season. And when you order from Hessick, you'll be certain of the best Coal in the wide world—clean, econemical, long burning—loaded and delivered under the personal supervision of men who sincerely want to serve you. EN of vision who gauge their business and home invest- ments ahead of the day's need apprecciate the sound merit of co-operative apart- ment residenc2 and owner- ship. It is not ¢ new idea; over in Europe there are families now living in units of residential buildings which their ancestors purchased more than two centuries ago! M & R B WARREN Pioneer Washinoton Ruilders of Co-Operative Apartments Connecticut Avenue at Tilden Street Phone Cleveland 6084 Tilden Gardens Connecticut Avenue at Tilden Street It is rather the adaptation or an old principle to the con- ditions and requirements of modern home lif3. In Wash- ington TILDEN GARDENS illustrates the practical pos- sibilities of blending artistry and beauty with quality and comfort—all at moderate initial cost and remarkable economy of maintenance and operation. The MODEL APARTMENT HOME is kept open daily until 9 P.M. Furnished by W. B Moses & Sons

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