Evening Star Newspaper, May 22, 1930, Page 3

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| eby Tew. 10! Homling loaded vans to storage floor saves rehandling. Securitp Storage 1140 FIFTEENTH ST A SAFE DEPOSITORY FOR 38 YEARS CAASPINWALL . PRESIDENT GULDENS Mustard THIS PARKSIDE HOME ADJOINING 8 THE MOST NATURAL PART OF ROCK CREEK PARK 1S GOING TO BE SOLD BY THE OWNER 4717 Colorado Ave. Open for Your Inspection EVERY DAY PARKING PROBLEMS USE at Home Ne Charze l.r Extrs Passengers Any Distance 35€ City Proper Shopping c;n-,"s ”Per Hit 1.10 jour City Driving, $1.50 Per Hour Where Else Can You Buy a New House § MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN Yet you are in a cool, quiet location on the edge of - Rock Creek Park. EXHIBIT HOME 2910 Cortland Pl To Reach: Drive west on Cathedral Ave. from Conn. Ave. to 29th St. Turn right to Cortland Pl. OPEN UNTIL 9 PM. N, L San shury S we 1418 Eye St. N.W. Nat'l 5901 SPECIAL NOTICE. OT BE_RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ts other than thote contracted by mysell. . P. WALTERS. 314 Farragut st. n.w. IN STORAGE BELONGING To Hall, 1620 R st._n.w., will be sold e ‘charges at Krieg's Warehouse, n.w., June 3rd, 1930, 10 FULL_OR BART LOAD m ton, uel for stor: 616 Eye st. Local moving aiso. AT 10 AM. ON m D AY, MAY 23, 1030, WE sell at public suction, within our”fire; f, warenouse, 418-420 Toth st. nw., used i hol aciption, ‘to pay. storage. oo unpaid, consisting of livin s furnitore. dining furniture. tabes. chairs, beds. dressers, chinaware, glassware, linens. refrigerators. etc. STATES STORAGE CO 418-430 10th Bt. N.W.___ TERMS, CASH._ ANNUAL uu'rma OF THE METROP- glis Building Assocation for the election of directors, and such 8 rly ‘come before the meeting. will tion Wednes- 4th, 1930, Polls open from 2 t0 EDWARD A. TRIPP, secmny . ¢ Painting—Pa; ©ur prices are low. Our class Ol service is High. Edwm S. Ruckr.r i 0333 . pense of a mew roof. "™ ROSE BROS. CO., 3120 GA._AVE. NORTH 0847. Wanted—Load New York. Philadeiphis, Richmon: Va.; Chicago. Piiisaren. Fan and Ac h‘%‘nt&l},‘nh & . Oumbwiand, Me. Smith’s 'I;ll'amfer & ctonfi T our Fooer Lo ADBLy i MCog\mo Al | | promptly and capably by Dpractical roofers. KOONS Boone 119 ard 8¢ s w. Company. - Distriet 0933 Happy Days Are H:re - Again us to ‘perfect 3our Srintine Plabs for "Sprine ‘The National Capital tal Press nal 0850 gu-ufifiasx WCLPI\one /.__Phone Nat o= ur pst, longer; nature fdoked_atter and at the lowest cost. th at. n.W. 3 North 9 | Advertising Association and Don i % | est advertisin GENERAL SESSI(]N Club Management Confer- ence Held Today Follow- ing Election of Officers. ‘While general sessions of the Adver- tising Federation of America ended yes- terday with the election of Gilbert T. Hodges of the executive- board of the New York Sun as president, discus- slons of vital importance to the federa- tion itself extended wdly in a confer- ence on club management. The new_president of the federation will serve for two years ‘and succeeds Charles C. Younggreen of Milwaukee, to whom credit was given for the suc- cess of the expiring wnv!nuofl in reso- lutions adopted late yestere Other officers of the iederltlon elect- ed were George H. Corey of the Cleve- land Twist Drill Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, & vice president, replacing Maj. P. F. O'Keefe of Boston, who was elected & director.. T. F. Driscoll of Armour & Co. was elected secretary to succeed W. Frank McClure of Albert Frank & Co., Chicago. Although women in previous years have served in important posts of the federation, further recognition of their plrtll:iplflon in the affairs of the ad- vertising ornnlnunn was given yes- terday in the election of Miss Jean- nette Carroll of Providence, R. I, 2 new vice presidency created by con- stitutional amendment to provide for the feminine contingent on the execu- tive board. Miss Carroll had been elected chairman of the newly created committee on advertising women's clubs of the federation earlier in the day and Miss Helen Baldauf of Mil- waukee had been chosen vice chairman. Two Officers Re-elected. William Ewald of Campbell-Ewald, Detroit, Mich., was re-elected a vice pruident of the federation yesterday. Joseph H. Appel of John Wanamaker, New York, was re-elected treasurer. As_directors, the federation named Mr. Younggreen, the retiring president; Bennett Chapple of Middletown, Ohi T. F. Driscoll of Chicago, John F. Ben- son and Joseph H. Appel of New York and John C. Martin of the Curtis-Mar- tin Newspapers, Philadelphia, all for a three-year term. Maj. O’Keefe and Lee Bristol of New York were chosen for two-year terms and Don U. Bridge of the Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, and Robert Johnson of New Yoxk for one- year terms. Elections also were held late yester- day by the Public Utilitles Advertising Association and the American Com- munity Advertising Association, groups affiliated with the federation. Irving M. Tuteur of Chicago was | chosen pnnldgnl of the Utilities group, with R. 8. McCarty of Pittsburgh, R. Haas of New York and E. Frank Gar- diner of Chicago as vice presidents, J. R. Pershall of Chicago, secretary, and Howard F. Weeks 0! New York, treas- urer of the associal Charles F. Hnmald of St. Louls was re-elected president of the Commumg D':o"ry of New York remains as secre- Ty. The directors will meet in New York City one month hence to select the next convention city for the federation in 1932, Chicago and Miami, Fla., are understood to be making strong bids and Los Angeles, Calif., also is a com- petitor, ‘although the federation met in the West, at Denver, before .the Wash- ington meeting. "Urges Bigger Membership. At the club management conference today at the Willard, William R. Ewald of Detroit, head of the conference and newly elected vice president of the fed- eration, gave a brief talk on how the individual clubs should exert every en- deavor to increase their membership. ‘The federation has a total paid mem- bership of approximately 20,000 at the present time. Referring to the work that i.dividual advertising olubs -are doing all over the country, Mr. . Ewald said that the cure for advertising evils rests largely with themselves. He mentioned particularly the work of the Better Business Bureau of the federation and the central bu- reau which serves all advertisers as ex- amples of how ad clubs are striving to improve conditions in their business. Research to eliminate waste in advertis- m. w!as all important, Mr. Ewald re- ‘Thomson of the Western Elec- h’!c Co of New York and T. W. Le- Quatte of New York, onegof the vice presidents of the federation, discussed the use of movie-tones in club work at the luncheon, The conference continued throughout the afternoon with infor- mal discussions of all the problems in- volvtrg club management, the relations of individual clubs with the federation and what the federation can accom- plish for the clubs. Two Given Ovations. Secretary of Labor James J. Davis and Representative Ruth Hanna Mc- Cormick of Illinois, who spoke at the closing general session of the federa- tion yesterday afternoon, were given ovations by the delegates, the one for her earlier triumph in the Illinois pri- maries for the Senate and Mr. Davis for his mmediate victory in the Penn- sylvania primaries. Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, taking their elections to the Senate as granted, told them in his introductions that “the Senate was the best job in the world” and then President Young- green caused another uproar by intro- ducing Mr. Davis as the “Senator from Pennsylvania.” Mrs. McCormick spoke in her capac- ity as a newspaper publisher as well as & member of Congress. She said that the Government was perhaps the great- agency in the world and cited the bulk of publicity matter is- sued by various departments and the “franking privileges” of members of rocess of shampooing look like of Congress, But it was in reference to her own recent campaign expenditures that Mrs. McCormick aroused keenest interest. is was when she revealed that she had expended only 6 per cent of her campaign expenses f@ newspaper ad- vertising. When_she announced her candidacy for the Senate, she told-the advertisers, she mailed out statements to news- papers throughout the country. But to her astonishment, many of the editors had returned them, with the accom- panying explanation that being a polit- %cll advertisement they should be paid or. Tdlks on Utilities Ads. In one of the closing addresses of the convention, M. W. Monro, New Eng- land manager of Doremus & Co., told the advertisers that public utility com- panies have many definite messages to bring to the public and have the same right as industrial corporations to do so through the advertising columns of newspapers, with freedom from criticism as to their motives. Advertising through this medium is the ideal method of handling most local public relations problems, he explained. “Nevertheless,” said Mr. Munro, “in many sections of the country, local politicians and more recently national polmm leaders have frightfully criti- cized the utility for buying space in the advertising columns of the press. Just wherein lies the logic of such criticism is difficult to understand, unless it can be explained from the old days when. as I understand, the utility advertising appropriation was termed ‘hush money’ or ‘blood money.’ D TR e that the advertising columns of important newspapers today | are strictly censored, but are open to every legitimate advertiser, corporate or individual. “It is certainly weird reasoning which would it every- body else and deprive the public utility their use,” he said/ “The sooner the utility industry recognizes.its right to use fully Jegitimate advertiging ave- E- | caims the honor of holding the longest GILBERT T. HODGES. Y HOLDS MEETING OF OLD MEMBERS Capt. C. 0. Howard Is.First Among Veterans in Association. The Y. M. C. A, oltodayuvufly different from the Y. M. days of .Indian clubs, dumb hell.s llld punching bags, but 50 long as the pres- ent regime continues, the Washington “y” will not discard the religious prin- ciples on which the organization was founded. ‘This was the assurance voiced last night by Leonard De Gast, general sec- retary, after attention had been called to a national movement to ‘“readjust” Y. M. C. A. religious work to meet modern trends. The announcement was made at the annual ‘“old timers’ re- union” held in the assembly hall of the Central Y. M. C. A, last night. Reminiscences of the days when the Washington “Y” was evicied from an old bullding on New York avenue by tre, and when it was housed in a hall at Ninth and D streets were exchanged by pioneer members. Tributes were pajd to the memory of James E. Pugh and other “Y” leaders of bygone days. Oldest Member. A survey of the group disclosed that Capt. C. O. Howard, son of Gen. O. Howard of Indian and Civil War fame, membership in the “Y.” Capt. Howard, & septagenarian, said he joined so long l’o the association had lost any record his original membership, but that he was sure he joined in 1869 or 1871. Running Capt. Howard a close race for ploneer honors was Dr. W. K. Butler, son of one of the founders of the local assoclation, who recalled when the omnlutlon was in its first building at Ninth and D streets, Huston Thompson, president of the association, himself a member of the “Y" for 44. years, congratulafed the members on their long devotion to the movement. Other OM-timers, Among the old-timers with more than 25 years ot membership were Clarence A Louis Denton Bliss, Dr. Butler, Merrltt ©O. Chance, W. A. H. Church, Walter C. Clephane, J. R. Cochran. Lewis E. Collips, E, V. Crit- tenden, Willlam V", Everett, m ‘Thomas hul.kner, Albert F. C. Edward Beckett, C. Collins Mefll:\m, R. M. Nalle, F. Schrade:, Miles M. C. W. Shoer:aker, Charles S. Smith, Dr. George Otis Smith, A. W. Luck, Walter M. Haven, J. Philip Herman, Kirk Holmes, T. Rus- 821l Hungerford, W. H. Kerr, George A. King, Henry W. Kottmarn, Lewis T. Leonard, Robert M. Li.:bey F. Mc- Clelland, Lee W. Mo~e and Eugene Morgan. Arrangements - .re in charge of a committee ded by Charles Fimpes, chairman, and _ including Charlm Ravenburg, Louls H. Towbes, 8. La Fetra, C. O. Howard, H. C. Metc‘l( N. M. Mlnn!x and R. E. Myers, INDUSTRIALIST HITS TARIFF MEASURE Head of General Motors Exports| Holds Passage Will Retard American Business. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, May 22—James D. Mooney, president of General Motors Export Co. addressing the Western Universities. Club yesterday, said that the Hawley-Smoot tariff bill if enacted into law will increase the cost of living, retard America’s commercial recovery and- tend permanently to reduce the volume of American business. He said the higher tariff will be harmful to the great majority of the Ppeople of the United States, by imposing “additional burdens on burdens which must be borne by the n-lnfl(uatrhlm, the worker and the farmer alike.” “The burdens” he said, “will have no conceivable benefit to any one but a few selected and favored beneficiaries. By provoking other countries to erect similar tari barriers against us, it threatens the one development to Which American industry must look for its principal fufure expansion; in short, the proposed measure commits itself to the absurdity of striving to increase em- ployment by restricting trade.” The tariff might "thrnw literally hun- dreds of thousands of American workers out of their jobs,” he said, though “its aim professes ly is w prabec! our labor.” PROHIBITION PROTEST PARADE DISCUSSED The Crusaders Plan to Have 10,000 Men in Line in October Demonstration. Plans for a torchlight parade, in which 10,000 men will participate as a protest against present prohibition laws, were discussed yesterday at a luncheon meeting of the Crusaders in the Hay- Adams House. Officials of the organization tenta. tively decided to stage the demonstra- tion in October, pgior to a membership drive from campaf headquarters to be established in the downtown section. The Crusaders’ rollfi! of maintaining neutrality in elections involving two or more wet candidates was reiterated by Comdr. John F. Dryden, who presided at_the luncheon. . Robert C. Jones, chairman of the membership committee, reported that more than 3,050 persons had been en- rolled in Washington since the unit was formed less than two months ago. lnflnltrymt«he loone; it w\ll nnd iuelt talking an under- standing public and a well informed tflvemment There is probably no in- dustry in the world possessing more interest, romance and real news than the utility mm O. | be the sole heirs of the dead woman. NGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1930. BEGINS TOMORROW Veterans of Foreign Wars Will Seek Record in City- Wide Canvass. The annual ' Veterans of Foreign ‘Wars buddy poppy sale, personally in- dorsed by President Hoover and lead- ing civic organizations of Washington, will begin a city-wide canvass tomor- row morning. The sale, designed to aid disabled veterans and promote the expansion of the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Home at Eaton Rapids, Mich., is na- tional in scope. With statistics at the Veterans' Bu- reau here revealing a steady annual increase in the number of disabled vet- | erans, all distribution agencies will at-} tempt to make a record sale during S rough. the expedlture of roug| e expenditure of poppy sale funds, the national home at Eaton ids, created for the care of widows orphans of A. E. F. veterans, has been adequately equipped. Mainte- nance of the home is now largely de- pendent on the annual poppy sale. The local sale, sponsored by the Washington unit of the Veterans of Foreign w-n, will end on Mly 29, ESTATE CL CLAIMANTS ARE ASKED FOR PROOF Must *Satisfy Register of Wills They Are Relatives of Woman Lost at Sea. Theodore Cogswell, register of wills, yesterday reported to the District Su- preme Court that he found no will or other testamentary paper among the effects of Miss Helen M. Fink which he examined last Saturday at the baggage department of the International Mer- cantile Marine Oo. in New York. Miss Fink was drowned from a vessel of the company off San Dl!¢0 and her effects are in the commn possession, She is tupposed to have left $61,000 in a Rldn Fink, an aunt, has applied for letters of administration on the estate, but the register of wills in his report advises that sirict proof be required of the relationskip of the applicant and of her brother and sister, who claim to “Information been received,” Cogswell says in his report, “by the register of wills which, if substantiated, wouldoindicate that neither Rida Fink, the petitionc_' Jor lettcrs cf administra- tion, nor any of the othei alleged heirs at law inentioned in the patition are in fact F2irs at law of said Hz=len M, Pink, nor eny blood relation to “er.” Cogswell suggests that a (enemoglul history of the family be requirec the cou.*. — GIVE BAWC cONCERT Overseas Veterans Wi II-~ et Sylvan Thcater. A band concert will bo given by the Overseas Military Band of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in the Sylvan Theater on the Washington Monument Grounds tomorrow evening at 7:30 oclock. The band will be under the leadership of Lieut. Arthu: Overture, “King of Diamon March, “Semper Fidelis”, (Band, Drum and Bul!e Corpl ~elections from “Jack o' Lantern, Caryll Mcoeh, “Thunderer”. Son (£and, Drum and Popular war songs: “Pack Up Your Troubles” be directed by Aut (This number to W. | Leader Alvin I. Lorig.) March, “Stars and Stripes Foreve: ‘The Star Spang’ed Banner." If Your Window Shades Are Made of Du Pont TONT Have Become Soiled . . . What to do? The correct answer is to send them to us for washing at oar modern wi Tontine Window Shades are small cost per shade. No m become—our cleansing proce: bright and new again. Don’t Forget the Address W. STOKES Garen Roses Some of the girls who tomorrow will conduct the poppy llll: for the bealtlll of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. They are: Ivy wn, ce 1d, Helen Luebkert and Margaret Grant, The wreath is for the Tmh of the Un- known Soldier. Will Rogers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.—Every once in a 'Pale somebody '::d ulune State accidently passes a_ aw. 4 New York State has just passed one that makes it unlawful for anyone to stand in‘the roadway and ask for a ing the other lull to take ’em somewhere, ‘They don't care where. You can turn around and go back the other way. A hitch hiker won't care. They don’t know anymore where' they are going than people in automobiles do. ‘There must be something the mat- ter with this fellow Judge Roberts “of the Supreme Court. The Senate him unanimously. He must queer, he can’t be human, (SR e EXHIBITS PORTRAITS Margaret F. Browne’s Paintings Shown at Corcoran Gallery. A special exhibition of portraits, by Margaret Fitzhugh Browne is being chown at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, >venteenth street and New York ave- nue. ‘The exhibition, which opened May 10, will continue until June 1, with the fol- {|lowing hours of opening: Mondays, noon to 4:30 pym.; other days, 9 a. R Sundays and Hemoml -— | INE and They indow shade laundry where given a rejuvenation at a atter how soiled they have ss will make them appear Our Phone SAMMONS old lnu ‘been | mbabwe —including the finest known golden yellow shaded with orang LADY MARGARET STEWART Datale. perfect hishcholnted cox tree center, golden . llle“mllm.‘llkrll- Ophelia, Rapture, For Sale at A. GUDE SONS CO. Frederick Pike between Rockville and Gaithersburg, Md. GUDE'’S GARDEN SHOP District 5784 747. l‘tl’ St. NW. HEBREW BROTHERHOOD. NAMES KAL PRESIDENT Other Officers and Members of Board of Directors Elected by Organization. Norman C. Kal was elected president of the Brotherhood of the Washington Hebrew Congregation 1ast night, suc- ceeding Allen V. De Ford, who auto- matically becomes a member of the board of directors. Other officers elected were: Irving Diener, first vice president; Milton D. Korman, second vice presi- dent; Dr. Bernard A. Baer, treasurer, and Harold Strauss, secretary. Jullus Rels, Henry A. Jaffe, Lee Baumgarten, Burnett L. Baer and Julius Lulley were elected to the board of directors for Summer Dress Special O e @) $11 Delightfully NEW FROCKS Specially marked these mod- ernly styled dresses of Rajah silk —polka dots—2- piece effects —Bolero prints —are unusually attractive at Women's and Misses’ parel—3rd floor. Meyer's Shop ap- BATILE IS WAGED FOR TREATY STUDY Advocates of Rivers and Har- bors Bill Ask Considera- tion of Their Measure. By the Associated Press. A race is on in the Senate between advocates of the rivers and Hharbors bill and of the London naval limitations adjourn- ment, but with the tariff bill due to b disposed of next week Senate leaders agree it will be hard to keep the weary {legislators at their tasks much longer. | There is still talk of an adjournment by June 10. President Hoover has put the weight of his influence behind the movement to dispose of the treaty before the ad- journment of this session. Chairman Borah of the foreign relations commit- tee is supporting this movement. He is ready to wind up the hearings of naval experts, but there is no certainty that this can be brought about at once. Senator Johnson, Republican, fornia, who has severely criticized m London naval treaty, has proposed tha it go over until next session. =He hu the support of Chairman Hale of ths head to toe... Sport Jackets, $16.50 and up Trousers... Flannel, $7.00 and up Schoble Straws, Striped Serge, A—3 naval committee, another foe of the pact. : Meanwhile, as chairman of the com- merce e, Senator Johnson has called day and nl(ht segsions in an ef- fort to iron out the many conflicts in the committee over the. rivers and har- bors bill. ‘Priends of this legislation hope to get it o the Senate ahead of the London treaty. It already has passed the House. There is some talk of a special ses- sion of the Senate to permit it to take up the treaty. This could be under- taken if the rivers and harbors legis- lation is first settled, thus permitting the House to wind up its work for the session. HENRY FORD ASKS PERMIT TO OPEN FILLING STATION Wife Joins Him in Petition for Right to Establish Plant at Wayside Inn. By the Assoclated Press. MARLBORO, Mass, May 22—Henry Ford and his wife seek to open an automobile filling station on the Marl- boro-Sudbury Line, at his Wayside Inn, according to a petition flled with the city council here, it was learned Tues- They have asked the council for a permit to store and sell gasoline &mducu at the Wayside Inn Store, a ndmark of Sudbury Center which was moved to the vicinity of the Wayside Inn by the Detroit motor car manu- facturer. The' council set June 2 as the date for the hearing on the application for a permit. The Choice is Yours This Summer— ® - There is no outstanding preference in colors or materials this season... You have all the more oppor[unlty to make your taste individual and entirely your own ... to vary your wardrobe to suit the vicissitudes of your active mood Meyer's Shop has a splendid selec- tion of smart combinations . . . from popular chocolates and blues, and up $7.50 $4.00 Arrow Shirts, $1.95 and up 1331 F Street “IT IS NOT LIFE TO LIVE, BUT TO BE WELL.” LET A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN ...THE WISE WAY F you're frequently “Blue,” be practical enough to know that most of our moments of mental depression emanate from the body’s “Engine Room” —that miracle of human mechanism—the Stomach and the Intestinal tract. LUS MILK will help N way. Wise Brothers ACIDOPHI- re help you the natural Consult your physician about the use of this new milk of health and instead of the “medicine closet” for some emergency relief measure employ this modern remedial health-habit, which gets at the CAUSE of the compl Nutritious but non-fattening. %’lf U l& t. Delivered fresh daily.

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