Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FOR CONSTIPATION BILIOUSNESS AND INDIGESTION | QUICK—SURE RELIEF CLAFLIN Optician—Optometrist - 922 14th St. N.W. Established 1889 “UGLY SKIN ‘but almost overnight it was a different story | “Skin eruptions and blackheads irepel others. Squeezing only made imy skin sore and blotchy. I had || jglven up hope of relief when a Inurse told me to get Rowles Mentho {Bulphur. She explained how _its ‘Phenol removes infection as its Sul- iphur clears the skin and the Men- Ithol soothes and heals the sore, lraw tissue. Overnight I looked ‘better. And in a few days my| 'skin was clear.” ! With amazing ease, Rowles Men- litho' Sulphur safely clears the skin. |iIt is also good for dry skin, itching | torture and efzema. Insist on ‘Rowles Mentho Sulphur for best re- jsults. ~ All druggists.—Advertisement. LAW FRATERNITIES 10 MEET TONIGHT Joint Session of 7 Groups to Hear Senator Rehinson and G. C. Butte. Addresses by Senator Arthur R. Rob- inson of Indiana and George C. Butte, | Assistant ~ Solicitor General of the | United States, will feature the season's | first joint meeting tonight of seven | legal fraternities having chapters in the | District of Columbia and affillated with |the National Conference of Law Fra- | ternitles. This meeting, to be held at the Uni- versity Club, will be participated in by members of the alumni chapters of legal | fraternities of Sigma. Nu Phi, Gamma Eta Gamma, Delta Theta Phi, Phi Beta Gamma, Phi Alpha Delta, Sigma Delta Kappa and the international | legal sorority, Kappa Beti Pi. | Chapters of these legal fraternities |and sororitles are established at the leading universities and law schools of the country, including those in the Dis- trict of Columbia at Georgetown Uni- versity, George Washington University, Washington College of Law and the | National University Law School. Hun- |dreds of alumni members residing in the National Capital and engaged in | the legal profession, either in private | practice or with the Federal Govern- | ment, are affiliated with the local chap- | ters. Co-operation is Purpose. The purpose of the Nationa! Confer- ence of Law Fraternities, of which the ocal chapters are & part, is to provide a medium for the consideration of ques- | tions of mutual interest and bring to- gether the different national legal fra- | ternities and sororities periodically for the purpose of collective and co-oper- |ative action on problems affecting the legal profession. The conference was organized in Chicago, IIl, in 1923, its = |first_president being J. Jarvis Butler, Blood Pressure! Do you have difficulty in breathing, | headaches, dizziness, heart palpita- tion? Are you easily tired—lack vitality? These are serious symp- toms—they may point to overburden- , ed kidneys and a poisoned system. which puts you in danger of High i Blood Pressure or Bright's Disease. i But don’t despair. Mountain Valley Mineral Water from Hot Springs, Arkansas, has aided thousands back to health. This natural i relief is prescribed by physicians ln he treatment of High Blood Pres- sure. You can use Mountain Valley i Wlul' at home just as you would at Hot Springs. Phone or write for | additional information. Met. 1062. ' Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Ark. 215 Dist. Natl. Bank Bldg. Parker Pens, Pencils Desk Sets Columbia Photo .. Supply Co. 1424 New York Ave. N.W. Natl. 0619 secretary of the Army and Navy Joint Board and a member of Sigma Nu Phi. A local attorney again heads the na- tional organization this year in Jonas M. Smith, & member of Gamma Eta Gamma. The next national convention of the Conference of Law Praternities, which will be held at Chicago on November 29 and 30, will consider several im- portant reports of standing committees One of the important standing commit- tees is that of the committee on the ter, past chancellor of Washington Alumni Chapter of Sigma Nu Chi, and supervisor of the trust functions sec- tion of the Federal Reserve Board. ‘The oldest legal sorority in exisience is represented on this committee by the vice chairman in Miss Beatrice Cle- phane of Kappa Beta Pi, likewise a local resident. The committee on the bar, which is a permanent section of the National Conference of Law Fra- ternities, was created to consider and recommend measures looking to the ob- servance of the ethics of the legal pro- fession, the maintenance of the high standards of the bar and co-operation with the American Bar Association. | Study Graduates’ Questions. | . ‘The activities of this committee are | devoted to questions affecting students |and those just graduating from their legal studies, those questions affecting practicing lawyers being left to the | more appropriate agencies, such as the | bar_associations. Other local residents who have been assigned offices by the National Confer- ence of Law Fraternities are: Elwood H. Swal, Sigma Nu Phi, former assist- ant corporation counsel, and J. Moyle Gray, Delta Theta Phi, vice president and secretary-treasurer, respectively, of the conference. The following local attorneys who are members. of the fraternities represented at tonight’s meeting, hold chairman- ships on several standing committees of the national conference: Edmund Yardly, Delta Theta Phi; Howard F. Ralph. Gamma Eta Gamma; Ellis N. Slack, Sigma Delta Kappa; Francis W. bar, headed this year by Aubrey S. Car- | | character . 65,000 More Clerks Will Be Required For Christmas Mail By the Associated Press. Postmaster General Brown said today that between 65000 and 70,000 additional clerks, carriers and laborers would be needed for handiing Christmas mail, as well as 3,000 temporary railway mail clerks. Already the Post Office Depart- ment_has perfected plans for a complete co-operation with Santa Claus, St. Nicholas, or what have you, for the 1929 mas season. At the same time the Post- master General said that all car- rier deliveries and window services in all post offices would be sus- pended Christmas day so that the 300,000 regular employes of the department would enjoy Christmas with their families. Postmasters have been instructed to deliver all Christmas matter by Christmes eve. GENSUS T0 GROUP WOMEN IN TRADES Report Proposed Showing Ef- fects of Mechanization in Field of Industry. Just how much effect mechanization has had on the status of women in in- dustry, the extent to which the five and one-half day week has been adopt- ed by industry and complete informa- tion of migrations of industry are to be learned in the 1930 census, it is an- nounced by the advisory committee of the census of manufactures. The census of manufactures is one of the four extensions of the 1930 census authorized by. Secretary of Commerce Lamont and seeks for the first time much data on manufactures and manu- facturers in the United States. Other Fields of Inquiry. The other fields of the census will be, firsi of all, population, then distribu- tion and unemployment. The advisory committee on manufactures will act in a capacity similar to the function of similar committees for the other branches of the census. ‘Women in industry are to be studied again to determine whether mechaniza- tion has brought about shifts in the of workers required and whether the changes have tended to increase or decrease the number of wpmen in factories. In seeking information about the migration of industry, the committee desires to trace the manner in which the demand for skilled labor in various sections of the country has been affect- ed by the changing mgnurncturlng map. Trend of Manufactures Studied. reports that a trend of manufacturing away from established centers and from large cities has béen in progress. Manufacturers also will be asked to give data on the number of shifts per day and the number of hours of la per week, in addition to the usual ques- tions about salaries, seasonal variations in employment and the growing use of power and power equipment. Trapp, Phi Beta Gamma, Ellflbeth Reed of Kappa Beta Pi So- Tity. Mlln H. Brinkley, head of Washington Alumni Chapter of Delta Theta Phi, will preside at tonight's joint meeting and the speakers will be introduced by Judge Daniel C. Jackson of the Depart- ment of Justice. PARKER DESK SET INAUGURATION' OCTOBER 7th TO NOVEMBER 1st Non-Stop Writing the Productive Way . . Ends Pen-Dipping — Puts Lost Two Pens in One @nd *Guaranteed Forever against all defects Removable taper changes the Parker from & Desk Pen to @ Pockes Pen ‘when .m leave the office, or wice on arrival. No other is con- wertible. Parker includes free, a com- ;,‘: cap and pocket clip with every sk Pex. Hence a Duofold pen does for two of ether makes. "Duofold Motion at Work ii ‘«aw:?vé b Pen-dipping has resigned in favor of Non-stop writing, and the quicker your business falls in line with the change the better prepared it will be to meet a competitive world. ‘This swift and extensive trend isexem- plified in the new State Bank Building, Chicago (illustrated), containing acres of desks equipped with Parker Desk Sets. Here a census taker recently discovered that Parker leads any other by 24 %. Desks of the State Bank officials were found to be Parker equipped. Also all of the 65 desks of A. G. Becker & Co., the great investment banking house whose offices occupy 26,000 sq. ft. Likewise from New York’s sky-line to the Golden Gate-- business —Good Busi- ness— Desk has turned to Parker Fountain Pen Sets for a shorter way and a more productive day! Parker Desk Sets bring the Parker Con- vertible Pen with taper for Desk use, and Cap and Clip for Pocket—two pensinone. A Non-Breakable Pen holding 24% more ink than average, size for size. It writes with Pressureless Touch. Instead of an ink-spattered inkwell, you havehereanornamentalbaseinonyx,mar: ble, porcelain, or glass—with a graceful ball and socket sleeve that holds yourgold- pointed Parker ever ready within sight It also hopes to receive an answer to | OCTOBER 28, WIFE OF LEGATION AIDE WINS RACE WITH DEATH TO HIS BEDSIDE| Leaves Her Hospital to Rush to Him, Dying at Garfield. Husband Succumbs to Pneu- monia and Pleurisy Soon After She Arrives. Summoned from her sickbed in an- other hospital by word that her hus- band was dying, Mrs. Luang Dabavadi, wife of the second secretary of the Siamese legation, hurled to Garfield Hospital and reached her husband's | bedside just a few mlhuu-k before he died yesterday of complicaflons which set in after an attack of pleurisy and pneumonia. | Dabavadi, who was 39, years old, had been with the legation here for about cight years. Mrs. Dabavadl had been undergoing treatment at the Episcopa) Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Hospital ‘for a pain- ful nasal disorder. When she received word at 5 o'clock yesterday morning of her husband’s condition, she went im- mediately to his bedside. The young secretary became ill about five days ago and was removed to the hospital shortly afterward. His wife was in the other hospital at the time he was taken ill. They were married in Bangkok, the native city of both, dxld nbuul uu:’ year DABAVADL ~—Harris-] ago the husband brought his bride to this city. They have no children. The wife now is at th2 legation, her physician, Dr. Jossph H. Bryan of Stonelcigh Court, having permitted her to leave the hospital after the death of her hushand. Luang Dabavadi was popular in the younger” diplomatic set here and had 2s a tennis playe arangements are in charge s at the legation. REV. F. H. MARTIN DIES, TAUGHT FOR 40 YEARSl President of St. John's College Succumbs to Seven-Week Tliness. Rev. Brother F. R. Martin, president of St. John's College, an educator in | the Catholic schools for more than | 40 years, died yesterday at Georgetown | University Hospital afier an fllness of seven weeks. Brother Martin had been ir failing health for the past two years and went | to the hospital October 14 and under- | went an operation two days later, from | which he never recovered.' | Brother Martin received his early educatior: in the parochial schools of Philadelphia, where he was born, and was trained for his teaching career at the Ammenndale Normal School, Am- menndale, Md. Brother Martin has been connected | with Galvert Hall College, Baltimore; Rock Hill College, Ellicott City, Md.; the Visitation School, Philadelphia; the | St. Thomas’ School, Scranton, Pa.; the La Salle Institute Cumberland, Md., and at St. Elizabeth’s School at Phila- delphia. He also taught at schools at Paterson, N. J. Mathematics, English and mechanical drawings were the subjects Brother | Martin specialized in as a teacher. He trained James Butsch, Washington's en- trant in last year's National Oratorical Contest. For a number of years Brother Mar- tin_was instructor of military tactics at St. John's College. Brother Martin is_survived by 2 brother, Al Stuhl of Philadelphia, lnd two cousins, Mrs. Benjamin Vincent and Phillip Huck, both of Takoma Park, Md. Solemn mass of requiem will be cele- tisement will gladly prove savings. Read its record gloss is permanent — it Tomorrow’s Special ! Certain-teed Quick- Drying Varnish 95¢z. (Byalldealerslisted here) Price Only Northwest | MAYHEW, 1847 7th Si. N.W. | KENTUCKY HARDWAI 3243 M St. N.W. SAMUEL ULLMAN, 1778 You St. N.W. PARKER H. SWEET, 800 17th St. N.W. | JOBAN F. MEENEHAN, 2010 14th 8t. N.W. W.:J. LOVELESS, 23 Florida Ave. N.W, ‘MAITIN HARDWARE, 1406 P St. W. HOPKINS HARDWARE, 3345 M St. N.W. W."J. CANDY, 1108 18th 8t. N.W. W. W. ADAMSON, 807 N. Capitol St. | streef in only 4 hours Prove It Yourself, with Certain- teed Quick-Drying Varnish Any one of the dealers named in this adver- and why" of this miracle varnish. And, today, it is being featured at a price that provides the home-owner. considerable analysis pasted on cach can. Its high, rich casier—it is as fine a product of its type, made. FLYER IN PARACHUTE IS SWEPT INTO TREE| Pvt. Alvord, in Attempting Drop, Is Caught in Cross-Current. Lands Safely. Caught by an unexpected cross-cur- rent of air while making a parachute drop at Congressional Airport, on the Rockville pike, yesterday afternoon, Pvt. William H. Alvord of Bolling Ficld was | swept into a tree on the edge of the field and swung, six inches | above the ground spectators hurried to aid him. Alvord released himself from the har- ness, dropped to the ground and re- leased the parachute from the tree with- out injury to himself or the chute. Al- vord jumped at an altitude of about 2,000 feet from an airplane piloted by Maj. Harry M. Horton, 4437 Klingle war-time Army Air Corps pilot. Maj. Horton said that the drop had been gauged correctly on the basis of the wind blowing when the plane took off and that during the first part of the drop Alvord was headed for the center of the flying field. A shift in the wind at the 500-foot level, however, carried the parachute several hundred feet out of line. The jump was one of a series of aero- nautical demonstrations which will be given at Congressional Airport each Sunday afternoon, weather permitting. uninjured. brated Wednesday morning, 9:30 o'clock at St. Matthews Church. Interment will be in the Christian Brother's burial plat_at Ammenndale, Md. Members of the alumni and cadet corps of the school are expected to be present at the funeral. Glistening new surfaces / Modern homes are busy homes—time is pre- cious, and duties can’t be delayed by “tying up’’ the use of floors, furniture orwoodwork, for long. Therefore, Certain-teed Quick Dry- ing Varnish was developed by a host of sci- entists—a lustrous, hard, protective varnish that dries perfectly within only 4 hours! o you the “how need of th in -the content makes cleaning Come in }\urll!!nn D. DEL VECCH! N.| ‘Lh'EA HAHI)“AIE. m lhdnnlbvrl Rd. MOORE & CAIN. 2216 4th St. PAUL'F, 'MOORE, a0y 12tn i u FRED M. HA. 1. Ave. i e R R Southeast A. J. BERLI H FR. ROBERT ROB MAX 0" 15th St: GEO. M. CASPEK, 1013 N. Carol Ewing Photo. | while hundreds of | Our Experience Is At Your Service — For Any Paint Work You Plan If your floors or furniture are not in edly some other surface—inside or outside—requires paint attention. All of these dealers will gladly go over these questions and advise you, with- out obligation. store shown here. Simply ask about: 1929.° CHEMISTS RECEIVE REFEREES' REPORTS {New Methods and Unsolved! Preblems Discussed at Opening Session. New methods and some of the unsolved problems in agricultural chemistry were discussed this morning at the opening session of the forty-fifth annual con- vention of the Association of Official Agricultural Chemists at the Raleigh Hotel. Chemists connected with the Federal and States governments of this country and the national and provin- ing the convention, which will last for three days. Technical reports of referces upon | entire morning session among the re- ports submitted were the following: | Water, brine and salt, by C. H. Badger insecticides and fungicides, by J.J. T. Graham of this city; caustic poisons, C. M. Smith of this city; less common metals in soils, by J. 8. Mc- Hargue, Lexington, stock feed adulteration, H. E. Gensler, Harrisburg, Pa.; mineral mixed feeds, by H. A. Halvorson, St. Paul, Minn.; determina- tion of moisture, by G. E. Grattan, Ot- tawa, Canada; sugar and sugar prod- | of this city; . A. Schuctee, Madison, Wis. maple produgts, J. F. ‘Snell,.Québec, Canada: drying, denismetric and refractometric methods, by J. F. Brewster of this city; polariscopic methods, by F. W. Zerhan, New York City, and chemical methods for reducing sugars, by R. F. Jackson of this city. Two sessions were in progress this afternoon, one of the main section and one of the drug section, at whicn va- rious papers on technical subjects were being read by chemists representing State and provincial governments all over the United States and Canada. Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, former chief chemist of the Department of Agricul< ture and honorary president of the as- sociation, will address the conventicn at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning. Sec- retary of Agriculture Hyde will speak at the afternoon session tomorrow. Dr. H. B. McDonnell of the Univer- sity of Maryland is president of the association. The vice president is Dr. E. M. Bailey of New Haven, Conn., and the secretary-treasurer, Dr. Skinner of this city. CHILD HURT IN JOYRIDE. 4-Year-0ld Attempts Trip on Rear | partment today by the American Air- efal governments of Canada are attend- | various chemical methods occupied the | End of Machine. A stolen automobile ride ended dis- astrously for Lawrence Morton, 4 years old, of 1839 Newton street northwest, this morning when he fell from the rear of a machine driven by Newton W. Brown of 704 Third street northwest and sustained a minor laceration of his head and bruises of' the left leg. He was treated at Garfleld Hospital and sent home. ‘The boy climbed on the back of New- ton’s machine near his home and fell off soon after Newton drove away. Lions Club to VHenr Singers. A program of vocal selections by the Mount Vernon Mixed Quartet will fea- ture a luncheon of the Lions Club in the Hotel Mayflower Wednesday after- noon at 12:30 o'clock, Members of the quartet are Elvina N. Rowe, Mathilde Kolb, John L. Mitchell and Arthur J. Talbitt, with Edith Gottwals, accom- panist. is high protection, undoubt- today. Visit the nearest SEE YOUR NEAREST DEALER Deanwood, D. C. F. L. WATKINS Maryland ULLE BROS.. JLLE BROS. Paltssitle ATHEY ON, rel L. JOI Branchville ORIIS: La Plats A e PORIN Capitol His. L. WATKINS, Seat Pleasant DIRIGIBLE MAIL CONTRACT SOUGHT Association Proposes Service | From Baltimore Via Wash- ington to West Coast. | | Carrying of air mail by rigid dirig-| ibles over a transcontinental line passe ing through the National Capital from Baltimore to San Dlego and Los An- geles is provided in a formal prqposi- ton submitted to the Post Office De- ship Association, Inc. through Walter Link, president, of this city. The proposal calls for 1Wo-Way serv- ice throughout the year over a cir-| cult route starting and ending at Balti- | more and Los Angeles. One line of the | circult passes through Washington, | Richmond, Raleigh, N. C.; <harleston S. C.. Macon, Ga.. Montgomery, Ala. Jackson, Miss.; Shreveport, La.; Dallas, Fort Worth and El Paso, Tex.; Dem- | ing, N. Mex.; Tucson, Ajo and Yuma, | Ariz, and San Diego, Calif. The other | line passes through Kingman, Ariz. Albuguerque, N. Mex.; Amarillo, Tex.: Oklahoma City, Little Rock, Ark.; Memphis and Nashville, Tenn.; Louis- | ville, Ky.; Huntington, W. Va; Cum- berland, Md.,, and Washington. Otitlines Company’s Proposal. “In initiating this service,” Mr. Link | stated, “we propose to operate over this | circuit, with airships leaving Baltimore and Los Angeles daily, except Sunday, with a reversal of direction of travel on alternate days. Time consumed between base points, including stops, and in either direction, shall not exceed 3 hours, under normal weather condi- tions " The association proposes to carry mail In either direction at the rate of $3 per pound over all or a portion of the line, and in any amount up to an aggregate | 1imit of 10,000 pounds per trip. No date is set in the proposal for the beginning of service. It is understood that the association headed by Link at present has no airships or ground equip- ment. ‘The route, it is stated, may be re- vised to meet future requirements of the Post Office Department. The route se- lected, it is stated, will afford “a de- | sirable feeder system for a possible future extension of an airship mail line to Latin and South American Stop hurting in one minute! Acorncan’t possibly hurtwhen youapplyaDr. Scholl Zino-pad, because the cause is removed —frictionand pressure of shoes. ‘The soothing, healing medica- tion gives the instant relief for which Zino-pads are famous. Harsh liquids and plasters jd-ore the cause and expose the toes to acid burn. And cut- ting your corns invites blood poisoning. Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads are duaranteedsafeandsure. They I p WOMAN- FIGHTS OUSTING | FROM U. S. PROPERTY Tenant of 153 A Street Northeast Asks Injunction, Holding Build- ing Is Wanted for Another. Alleging that the Government is seek- ing to oust her as tenant of 153 sireet northeast, not because it wants ssion, but only to rent the prop- erty to another person, Hildur I E. | | Malm today asked the District Supreme Court for an injunction against Frank A. Birgfeld of the Treasury Department and Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary - of | the Treasury, to prevent the comtinu- ance of the ouster proceeding in the Municipal Ceurt. The property is in: cluaed in the Supreme Court site re- cently acquired by the Government through condemnation, Tarough Attorneys Fred B. Rhodes and Cooper B. Rhodes, the plaintiff tells the court that Birgfeld is custodian of the property acquired as a site for the new building of the United States Su- preme Court, and when she had sold her property, she entered into negotia- tions with him to remain as tenant until such time as the Government would clear the site. The lease was pre- pared, she states, and, while she hds been willing to sign, Birgfeld appeared reluctant, to do so and has begun ouster proceedings. The court is asked to compel the sign- ing of the lease on the terms alleged to have been arranged Air Line to Europe Planned. 7 Cabls to The Star. "RI0 DI JANETRO, October 28— Establishment of an air line between Europe a1id South America, to be start- ed early in 1930, is being considered by the Lufthansa Co. of Germany, Gito Merkel, director, said here . yesterday. The air route from Germany to South | America would be from Lubeck, Ger- many. through Belgium, France, Spain, to Lisbcn, Portugal, thence to the Cape Verde Islands, Fernando Noronha and i mall,” it Is stated In the proposal, ill eliminate many of the objections entailed in the use of airplanes. “They will be capable of recelving and delivering mail well within the city limits, in many eases directly to and from. postoffice building roofs, and at intersecting points' on either air- plane or rail mail lines, and can make direct transfers without the necessity of grounding, simply by stopping or poising over the desired point of con- tact, and mail may be worked aboard the airships, ready for immediate dis- tribution, Nthcr at intermediate points are small, thin,dainty, cushione ing, protective. Doctors recome mend them. Won’t come off while bathing. Sizes also for Callouses and Bunions. Buy & box today. At all Drug, Shoe and De~ partment stores—35¢. Dz Scholl’s Zmo-pads Put one on —the pain is gonel ON For ENDOWMENT | LIFE INSURANCE PoLicy Issued to Readers of the WASHINGTON STAR NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION! No Subscription Necessary! HE coupon below enables readers of — Policies Sent by Mail! the Washington Star to apply for Standard Endowment Insurance with extra benefits—at very low co: Day for it on easy monthly payments. NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION IS QUIRED! Ne subscription is coupon below. Policies No m:ol\vemenul This offer is 1n nocmal heslth: betwaen If you are not in normal healt standard, insurable risk, theuxio!lou mnnlh for Policy. At aj of these polices will be issu Limit for females $1.000.00. or $3,000.00. to RE, gy A men, women and children, or are not & lease do not apply. only $1.84 a month. Only one ed 10 any one person. Limit for males TABLE of RATES For_$1,000.00 Endowment Life Insurance Policy Purpose No. 1—LIFE INSURANCE: $1,000.00 y-Me 10 your beneficiary in event of your death from any cause whatsoever, excepting suicide. m.w Purpose No. 2—ENDOWMENT: The amount of the Endowment ($1,000.00) is fo vou in cash at age 65. If you die Endowment is payable the face amount of policy is payable to your beneficiary. Purpose No. 3—DOUBLE INSURANCE ACCIDENTAL DEATH: Double the h':: 00, is payable in tated in the policy. t of the policy, or Case of accidentat death, No. 4~TOTAL and PERMANENT Purpose DISABILITY: In case you become Totally Pernlnenl.'lze&ublrd eit fnl| force exactly as if the premiums were regu- larly paid by you. No. SCOUARANTEED CASH, DU ENT INSUR: VMENT VALUESs PA] NDOWM] ANCEand PORE EN‘DO“ These valuable provisions enable ou: a—to convert the b—to borrow on vo licy as stated; p‘—_m cease paying premiums and receive eene paying premiums and receive extended Insurance and Pure Thisia Standard Endo#mest Life Tnsurance, You donot die ‘he FACE AMOUNT WILL BE FAID, TO Y&" face amount will be paid to your bes e the policy for any other form of policy at any time. are living when the policy mature If you die before the policy mat o do not have to exchai into cash as stated; death occurs within the first six months. full ayable the SRR and S3SASSLERLSIRANNRPBIN BBRIRBLREIS: Paid-Up Endowment Insurance as stated; Endowment ot have to licies are issued by the Federal Life Insurance Company of Chicago—the old- s e et Rscusa e Toment ot ol | R iy Shestuities such and which has since continuously operated under such c ssets exceed $12,000, ,000,000.00 in cash benefits. adowment Life Insurance Policies will be issued to amy Life Insurance Company. Ir: or Beneficiaries more t Only one of these Special one person. CO U MAIL THIS COUPON! F————— NEWSPAPER READER! FEDERAL LIFE INSI l“ N. MICHIGAN AVEN! $1:000 Policy [] oot My name is. URMCE COMIEAENY UE. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. 1_hereby request a Special Endowment Life Insurance Pollu offered to readers of the Washington Star on the monthly ment plan, the amount of insurance to be as checked belo s you same 18 el er as a Lej | Reserve 000.00. It has paid to Policybolders MATL THIS COUPON! P ON FOR ENDOWMENT LIFE INSURANCE POLICY I EPT.. BI T [ Virginia VIRGINIA HARDWARE, Rosslyn, Va. SHARP 734 10th St. N.W. and reach. Complete sets, $6.50 to $100. To inaugurate productive writing, see any Parker dealer—get two pens in one. THE PARKER PEN CO‘\H’ANY. Janesville, Wisc Sales and Service Station Smnr Building, New ank City H. LEVY, 3328 1ith St. N.W. FRIES, BEALL & National 1964 Inc. biadied T e e e lmbudulw"m&i']d‘—w—-—filhfi--'-fl'.fi-_ rorrlx nhlw—-% become effsctive if and when 1..1.....& ohl CN-." ‘# aied o3 eppilcant in sovorda: — s of s | ‘Desk Sets #Toprove Parker Ducfold 1 8 pen of ielong perfec, tion, we offer to make good any defect, provided complete pen Is sent by the owner direct to the factory with 10¢ for return postage and insurance. "Bhe Fight to reject -n--mn-n- eooteast the I___