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BUS LURAY CAVERNS by And R0 TRNSE seen i Gbe.Day Round Trip to Luray $6.00 Pa. oth _st. - R 2:36 .!u..l Chartered for Special Tours W’ullni:.ton-l.my Bus Line Real Estate Lo_as (D. C. Property Only) 6% No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the expense of renewing. $1,000 for $10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or.smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association blished 1881 Llr'in in Washington Assets Over $22,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY, President EDWARD C. BALTZ, Secretary LUNP SUM RAISED 'ASD.C. BILL PASSES Hoover 0 K’s $45,781,002) Measure Carrying $9,- 500,000 Federal Aid. (Continued From First to the $9,000,000 without any strings attached to it. Since the $9,000.000 lump sum was | first adopted in 1925 as a departure from the substantive law establishing a fixed ratio of 60-40 the Senate has consistently contended that’ this was| not an adequate amount for the Fed- | eral Government and has made repeat- ed efforts to obtain a larger amount. Every year, however, up to this time the House has been successful in hold- ing Congress down to the $9,000,000 contribution. While the Senate confer- ees endeavored to obtain a compro- mise on $10,000,000, which, they pointed out, would have required them to go | two-thirds of the way toward meeting | the House in compromise, with the ses- sion rapidly drawing to a close, they carried their main contention that the dispute should be settled agreeing on some figure in excess of $9,000,000. The proposal to lay aside the addi- tional amount for subsequent decision was sald to have been discussed in- formally by leaders as a basis of com- g;omlu. but it is reported that in the al conference the compromise pro- posals were approached on a flat in- crease basis. Approval Is Unanimous, Promptly when the compromise agree- ment was reached Chairman Simmons of the House group, who had been balking all attempts for nearly six weeks to get the bill through, brought the compromise agreement back to the House, where it was immediately ap- proved by unanimous consqnt, after Representative Simmorts had said: “The conference report on the District of Columbia appropriation bill is a com~ plete agreement between the two Houses and calls for an appropriation of $9,500,000 as the Federal contribution during the present fiscal year to the upkeep of the District of Columbia. In the main it is what I consider one of the best District bills that have ever passed Congress.” Chairman Simmons then offered his resolution for a study by a specia] House committee of the fiscal relations problem, which had been reported by Saturday July 5th _— hard, enamel.] surface. MEtro. 0151 BUTLER-FLYNN 607-609 C St. Phone for Color Card The eleetrician devotes most o um Working few to weekly wash, when Home Laundry is as near as your telephone +..a modern plant that will lsunder everything ive you every service powsible . . Call especially .. and make only reasonable charge. Atlantic 2400 tod: PILE-POE is rigidly susranteed to v ant relief from torturing suffering of Blind, Blesding rotruding et Tiching P7 Al acony and pain gone ays ‘or oy "BrommAly refunded. 0L at i les and other good Drug Fill up with Autocrat, m tain the oil level, and don't drain again for 1,000 miles— a thousand of the finest miles vyou ever drove. Nothing is more important than thorough lubrication. UTOCRAT—The ofl that is @ifferent from all others. Beware of Substitutes you need oil, and judge its advantages for yourself. 0? Dealers UART BAYERSON OIL WORKS COLUMBIA 5228 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in the first & day, and ehecks Malaria in three days. Try Autocrat the next time At the Better 666 666 Also in Tablets the House Rules Committee, and which the House approved by unanimous con- sent. This provides that “the Speaker is authorized and directed to appoint a se- lect committee to be composed of seven members of the House, whose duty it shall be to investigate the various ele- ments, factors and conditions which may be deemed pertinent and essential to the accumulation of data and in- formation bearing upon the question of fiscal relations between the Ui States and the District of Columbia and to recommend to the House what amount, in their judgment, the United States should contribute annually to- ward the development and maintenance of the municipality.” Full Investigation Empowered. This committee is also authorized and empowered “to investigate fully the various forms of municipal taxation and sources of revenue of the District of Columbia, and to recommend to the House such new forms of taxation and sources of revenue and/or such changes in existing forms of taxation and sources of revenue as to them may seem just and fair.” ‘The committee shall have the right to report to the House at any time by a bill or bills, or otherwise, the results of its investigations. “The Commissioners of the District of Columbia and the other officers and employes of the municipal government are requested to furnish the committee such assistance as may be needed in connection with such investigations, and the United States Bureau of Efficiency may be reimbugsed from any allot- ment made for carrying out the pur- poses of this resolution to the extent of actual ditures made by such bu- reau for investigations made g3 the re- quest of the committee.” Cramton Raps Senat®, Representative Cramton of Michigan, author of the lump-sum rider, which has been operating for flve years un- der the Holman rule, although the sub- stantive law is still 60-40, said: “The House conferees have performed & long and arduous task and have per- formed their task notably well. They are entitled to the thanks of the House. “Here, in the closing minutes of the session—the Benate having taken the unprecedented position of refusing to pass a continuing resolution in case of an appropriation bill deadlocked—and in order that the business of the Dis- trict of Columbia may proceed in an orderly way, the House conferees have made some concession in the way of an increase in the Federal contribution to the expenses of the District of Colum- bia. The Benate asked an increase of $3,000,000. The conferees agreed to one-half million dollars. It is true that it is a contribution of a half million dollars from the Federal Treasury for which no necessity whatever has been shown. It is simply an addition to the surplus in the District treasury. There is no logic back of it, but the House conferees and the House have wisely ylelded a compromise, because all legis- Jation i bullt up on compromises, even D-vohy they are not always wise. “My purpose in rising is, first, to ex- press my own personal appreclation of the splendid services of the House con- ferees, and, second, to emphasize that the compromise is purely a compromise, not & recognition that there is any basis of logic or justice for the increase. ‘That being the case, it is not a prece- dent; it does Mot mean that in the future the Housé will agree to $9,500,000, or even to $0,000,000 as the contribu- tion of the Federal Government to the expenses of the District, but will continue to safeguard the Federal Treasury.” | An hour before the session ended last | night, Senator Bingham of Connecticut, head of the Senate conferees, got the THE F:VENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1930. conference report before the Senate and it was ratified after a few words of discussion. Glass Refuses to Sign. Senator Carter Glass, Democrat, of Virginia, who would not sign the con- ference report, said: “I merely wanted to indicate to the Senate that I have declined to sign the conference report, since I persist in the belief that the United States Senate, under the Consti- tution, is still an integral part of the legislative branch of the Government. ‘Therefore, I would not sign the report.” Senator Glass, throughout the weeks of discussion over the local bill, con. tended that the $12,000,000 Federal contribution proposed by the Senate was reasonable. President Hoover arrived at the Cap- | itol shortly before the final step was taken on the District bill, and it was carried to him and signed immediately. In view of the fact that, the bill passed three days after the opening of the fiscal year and that the local gov- ernment has been operating technically without funds the following provision was placed in the act: Bill Made Retroactive, “This act shall be effective as of July 1, 1930, and any appropriations and authority contained herein shall have the same force and effect between June 30 and the date of the enactment of this act as though the same had be- come a law on July 1; and the acts of any officer or employe performed dur- ing such period in anticipation of the appropriations or authority contained herein shall not be invalidated, declared ineffective, or questioned solely because of the lack of such appropriation or au- thority during such period.” The conferees left in the bill the clause enabling the Commissioners to retain in the service Dr. William Tin- dall, veteran municipal official, without regard to the retirement law, as a recognition of the value to the city of his large fund of information gathered during more than 60 years of service to the city. The bill carries the $300,000 to estab- lish the new farmers’ market in the Southwest section near the river front. The conferees accepted the Senate amount of $53,000 for purchase and in- stallation of traffic lights and markers instead of the House figure of $103,000. They left in the bill $10,000 for re- copying old land records of the District in the recorder of deeds office. In ylelding to the House on the $3,000,000 for going ahead with the pur- chase of the site for the new Municipal Center. instead of their own figure of $1,000,000, the Senate conferees con- cluded it would be more advantageous to_the city to buy the land rapidly. ‘The House agreed to extend the pav- ing of Owen place northeast from West Virginia avenue to Montello avenue, $4,000. The Senate agreed to restore items to pave Quincy street northeast, Twelfth to Fourteenth streets, $15,700; Vista street, Central avenue to Walnut street northeast, $13,000. The, conferees finally left out of the bill the $195,000 for paving New York avenue northeast from Florida avenue to Bladensburg road. The Senate agreed to put back these two streets in the northwest—Thirteenth street, Alaska avenue to Kalmia road, $15700, and Morningside drive, Alaska avenue to Kalmia road, $23,800. ‘The conferees dropped out $5,500 which the Senate had put in to pave Oglethorpe street, Seventh to Eighth ted street, and also elimiated $136,000 to pave Sixteenth street, Columbia road to Tiger Bridge. The House agreed to leave in Nevada avenue, Rittenhouse street to Runnymede place, $3,000. The House also agreed to Senate amendments dropping these two streets from the bill: R street, Twenty- eighth to Twenty-ninth, $4,200, and Twenty-eighth, Q to R, $10,700. The Benate agreed to restore to the b! $20,900 to pave Iris street from Thir~ teenth to BSixteenth street and the House agreed to extend the pa of Bancroft place east of Twenty-third as far as Thirty-fourth, $11,000. The House agreed to leave in the widening of H street to a width of 56 feet from Massachusetts avenue to Thirteenth street. Under the House bill it would have stopped at Seventh street. The act appropriates $133,000 for this job and authorizes the Com- missioners to make a contract up to $191,400. the lump-sum for resurfacing existing streets with the same or other approved material the Senate agreed to the House *figure of $300,000 instead of $500,000. Traction Agreement Reached. In connection with the bullding of the new bridge on Connecticut avenue across Klingle Valley, the conferees reached a compromise on the question of the part of cost to be borne by the Capital Traction Co. The House pro- vided that any rallway company using the bridge should pay one-fourth of the cost. The Senate struck this out, but in the conference yesterday it was pro- vided that the rallway company should pay whatever amount the engineers might determine as being necessary to make the bridge sufficiently strong for use by street cars. The Monroe street visduct project, which stays in the law, provides $135,- 000 for the reconstruction of the present bridge over the Baltimore & Ohlo tracks between Eighth and Ninth streets north- east to carry the increasing flow of traffic. Nothing was done this year in the appropriation act on the proposal for a viaduct at Michigan avenue. ‘The other grade crossing project appropriated for will abolish the Chest- nut street crossing, placing a subway in the vicinity of Chestnut street or the intersection of Fern place and Piney Branch road. Mosquito War Item Untouched. The Benate amendment of $60,000 to | carry on a war against mosquitoes and | their breeding places was agreed to by the House and left in the !;‘flrle y Salary Allowance Split, ‘The conferees compromised on the Senate amendment regarding salaries for executive officers in the teachers' colleges. The Benate provision called for two executive officers in each insti- tution—a president and a dean. The compromise allowed one executive offi- cer for each institution and gave the more dignified title of “president.” The salary allowance was & split between the House and Senate figures. For expenses of operating schools for crippled pupils, the Senate amendment of $16,400 was agreed to, and for trans- portation of children to tubercular and crippled schools a compromise figure of $19,000 was left in the bill, The House provision that no money for furniture and equipment in the pub- lie schools could be spent by the School By the Assoclated Press. The new veterans relief law, storm centter of the closing hours of the con- | gressional session, provides pensions for those who served in the World War and have become disabled since they were mustered out of the service. [ The pensions vary in sccordance with the degree of alsability, ranging | from $12 monthly for 25 per cent disa- | bility, through 818 for 50 per cent, and | $24 for 75 per cent to a maximum of | $40 for total and permanent disability Under a clduse written into the bl by the House, rejected by the Senn’e and restored to the measure by ti® conferees, veterans, who pay an incom * tax are ineligible to share in the banc- was drafted to meet th views of President Hoover after he had vetoed the Johnson-Rankin measure. Brought up in the Senate, the ratec were increased to a maximum of $60 a month, in opposition to the wishes of the Chief Executive. 4 Meeting yesterday, the ‘conferees re- LAW JUST ENACTED PROVIDES $12 TO $40 A MONTH PENSIONS Veterans of World War Disabled Since Leaving Service Are Benefited. stored the rates to the level of the Sen- ate bill. A letter from Mr. Hoover to Senator Watson, chajrman of the con- ference committee urged this be done. The conference report was opposed in the Senate and the President and the Senate conferees were roundly criticized by a small group of Independent Re- publicans and Democrats These included McKeliar of Tennes- s°e, Walsh of Massachusetts, Cdnnally of Texas, Barkley of Kentucky, and Black of Alabama, Democrats, and ! Norris of Nebraska, and La Follette of Wisconsin. Republicans FURNITURE RENTING OFFICE FURNITURE | 8152 616 ESLAW. i1l | services for the District Milit] House Pages Voted Salary Bonus for Faithful Service By the Associsted Press. The two-score pages of the House of tatives who have jumped at the beck and call of members throughout the ses- sion will continue on the pay roll for the balance of the month as & bonus for their efforts. The House late yesterday adopted a resolution offered by Representative Mapes, Republic- an, Michigan, provi for pay- ment to the 41 lads of $4 per day for the rest of July. The resolution carries out s ractice of the House in recogniz- rn( the work of the boys at the end of arduous sessions. Bceard without lheo? roval of the Com- missioners was m led s0 that either the Commissioners, the auditor or the purchasing officer could approve such purchases. Schools Agreed Upon. The following agreements were reached |in conference on school building and grouna items: ‘The Senate put back $255,000 for a 12-room addition with two gymnasiums at Gordon Junior High School; the House agreed to include a gymnasium in the new Congress Heights School, allowing $130,000 instead of $90.000; the House agreed to leave in $50,000 for beginning treatment of grounds on the Kroptfl’y acquired by the District in the ortheast section for a junior high and platoon school for colored pupils; a gymnasium was included in the new Deanwood School, allowing $100,000 in- stead of $50,000; the Senate agreed to cut out an eight-room addition to the Douglass-Simmons School; the Senate amendment for a site for an eight-room building west of Connecticut avenue was retained, but modified to make it south instead of north of Jenifer street. ‘The House ylelded to the Senate by leaving in the bill provision for rental of quarters for the House of Detention. ‘The House cut the rental item on the theory that the detention home could be housed in some of the property being acquired by the city in the muni- cipal center area. The leaving in of the rental item will avoid the necessity of requiring this institution to move again at this time. It has been forced to move several times since the Fed- eral building program was started. The House yielded to she Senate in leaving in $4,800 for rent of the build- ln“or the Municipal Court. e House yielded by leaving In $241,620 for personal services at the Lorton workhouse and reformatory in- stead of the House figure of $229,700. ‘The House agreed to cut out the provision which would have required the Board of Public Welfare to trans- fer girls from the National Training School for Girls at Muirkirk, 1Md., to the training school on Conduit road. They also left in the bill $12,250 to in- stall fire protection equipment in the National ning School for Girls. ‘With regard to the item for estab- lishing a Children’s Tuberculosis San- itorium, the conferees arrived at a com- promise, reappropriating for the pus chase of land and preparation of plans, $75,000 of the unexpended balance of the appropriation of $150,000 in last year's law. The Senate amendment would have allowed $150,000, together with the unexpended balance of a health school a) ;ropflatlon made last year, and wo! have authorized the Com- missioners to make contracts for the sanitorium at not to exceed $530,000. The House agreed to Senate amend- ments increasing the item for personal from $25,950 to $34,170. ‘The Senate drop the item of $37,- 000 for grading and improv! roadways of Rock Creek Park to the District line. ‘The House agreed to the ‘vaulon enabling the director of public build- ings and parks to operate bathing pools through the Welfare and Recreational Assoclation of Public Buildings and Grounds, but with a restrietion limit- ing the authority to the current year. ‘Water Rate Increases Agreed Upon. ‘The increases in water rates agreed to in conference to provide the addi- tional revenue needed for extensions to the water system follow: For unmetered service, increased from $7.03 to $9.85 a year; for metered RN 5 together iron in t them.” Help your child acquire of rugged hea sinews and good red blood vigor and energy. malt flavor }'j:'\ ) g LEADERS ABSENT AS CONGRESS ENDS Vice ‘President Curtis Misses First Opportunity to Ad- journ Session. By the Assoctated Press. Vice President Curtis missed his first opportunity to adjourn a session of the Senate, and not one of the “big four” Republican leaders in the House was present when the gavel banged for ad- journment in that chamber last night. Senator Fess of Ohio served as pre- siding officer of the Senate while Vice President Curtis was in New Jersey to make a speech. The Hz?)ese was in the hands of Michi- gan members and an Indianian, as far as the Republicans were concerned, while Representative Garner of Texas, the minority leader, stayed nearly to the end before boarding a train for home, Speaker Longworth yielded his gavel to Representative Mapes of Michigan and left for his home in Cincinnati be- fore adjournment became certain. Representative Tilson of Connecticut, the majority leader, was in his native hills of Tennessee to deliver a Fourth of July speech. Representative Michener of Michigan was acting floor leader. Chairman Snell of the House Rules Committee is Europe-bound. Repre- sentative Purnell of Indiana was acting chairman of that important committee, which guided the legislation in the last few days of the session. While Chairman Wood of the House Appropriations Committee was on Ches- apeake Bay fishing, Representative Cramton of Michigan acted as chairman of that group and pressed for the final action on the second deficiency bill, the last legislative act of the session. Senator Moses of New Hampshire, the President pro tem of the Senate, was away, too. e MRS. WINTON DEMANDS DIVORCE FOR NEGLECT By the Assoclated Pres CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 4.—S8uit for divorce from Alexander Winton, 70, veteran automobile and combustion en- gineer, manufacturer, was filed here yesterday by Mrs. Marion Campbell Winton, prominent in Cleveland so- cial and music circles and nationally known for philanthropic work among Indian children. ' ‘The petition which asks alimony and the return of her maiden name, charges “gross neglect and great mental anguish and suffering” during their marital career, which began in April, 1927, They were married at Covington, Ky. . ‘The plaintiff is Winton's third wife, T:“%rlt two having died, the petition sf E MAN DIES OF SHOCK POMONA, Calif., 4 (P).—A firecracker was tossed into the automo- bile of Dudley P. Whitley, 55, yester- day. He collapsed and died shortly afterward. A constable, who said he saw Kyle R. Baker, 22, throw the fire- cracker, arrested Baker on suspicion of manslaughter pending an inquest. July service, increased from $6.36 to $8.75 for 7,600 cubic feet a year, and 7 cents per 100 cublc feet in excess of that quantity. ‘These increases are the rates originally proposed by the House. The Senate had Adopted a plan advocated by Sena- tor Howell of Nebraska, reducing some- what the House increases on consumers of water and making up the difference through a fire hydrant tax on property owners generally, on the theory that property should pay part of the cost of the Water Department in exchange for fire protection. The conferees drop- ped this plan in adjusting the bill. WORKMEN OF WELDIT CO. WELDING THE TAIL ON WHEN IT COMES T0 WELD- ING.WE ARE THERE. 1,000 years ago a man who could cut apart or WELD e manner we do would have been called a devil’s imp and perhaps stoned to death. Whether a devil or angel today we loudly shout, “Come on with your broken metals and let us save yout dollars by WELDING Weldit Co.,516 First St. N.W. Metropolitan 2416 WINGS Ith Give him Bosco to aid In making strong bones, hardy a splendid reserve of BOSCO that Mrs. Winton has suffered from | the great 3-food drink with the chocolate satisfies his taste and his “tummy.” Kiddies love Bosc: digestible. In fact, milk . drink more milk. Three of Nature combined b process, to vitalizeyoungand o o, and it is so easil Bosco helps digest nd entices youngsters to finest foods are the exclusive Bosco elight, to build up, to id. Justaddtomilk, stir and drink, cold or hot. Yoor grocer Bosco ... in 25¢ vacuum glass Jars. WMRS. SCULL €O., Cemden, N. J., Rochester, N. ¥., Dayton, O. TRUSTEES NAMED SEES CUBAN PROSPERITY |UNSINKABLE MAIL POUCH District Heads Fill Four Vacancles| U. 8. Ambassador Encouraged De- Bag Designed for Use on Ocean at Columbia Hospital: spite Present Gloomy Aspect. Liners Meets Test. The District Commissioners yester-| HAVANA, July 4 () —Ambassddor| OCOLUMBUS, Ohio, July & (#).—An day named four new members of the | Hardy F. Guggenheim, in an address | unsinkable ma pouch designed for use board of trustees of Columbia Hospital, | before the American Club's Fourth of | on-ocean liners has been successfully on motion of Commissioner Luther H.|July breakfast today, said that, despite | tested here, its invento: Willlam E. Reichelderfer. The new members are | the gloomy aspect of Cuba's financial Berry and Michael Vukovich, both of Capt. Chester H. Wells, Karl W. Corby, [ and economic future, he saw reasons | Columbus, announced today. Norman W. Oyster and Paul E. Lesh. | for encouragement. ‘The men took the bag to Scioto River They were chosen to fill the vancancies “I will frankly admit the road to|last week and made extensive tests in created by the resignations of Bishop | prosperity is narrow and uphill,”.he | an attempt to lubmergc it, they sald. James E. Preeman, Luke I. Wilson and | sald. “ V?Llfln or relaxation may | The bag was filled with 400 pounds of L. W. Grooms and the death of John E. | mean a falling back into adversity. | concrete and 200 pounds of magazines, ‘Weedon. I do not believe we shall fall back.” but still bobbed on the surfac LARGE RED RIPE Watermelons The favorite Sowega brand from Southwestern Georgia. Every melon guaranteed full ripe and solid. GUASTI WINE JELLY Port—Sherry and Muscatel z Bottles zsc Ripe Tomatoes 3 n.25¢ Juicy Lemons Doz. 29¢ Georgia Peaches 31..25¢ | California Plums 21.25¢ | New Potatoes 101:.35¢ Fancy Creamery BUTTER +39¢ " 43e, / Cut fresh from \‘\5‘"’- Bag {12.1b. Bag{24.1b. Bag the tub \19c 39c 750 E:El}?fif%-lb. In All Grocery Stores and Meat Markets Smoked Hams :2%7¢ IN OUR MEAT MARKETS Fresh Killed . Tender Frying or Broiling C . Chickens ngxcsl-} LB. 37c LB. 21 c LOFFLER’S LOFFLER’S LUXURY SKINLESS LOAF FRANKS Ly 15¢ b. 38¢ Lean, Mild Cured Smoked Hams =2%7¢ In One-Pound Packages or Bulk Pure Lard_ Granulated Sugar. . . . . 10 b 49, 8 0’Clock Coffee . :........™ 25¢ Bokar Coffee Supreme. .. .. ™ 35¢ White House Evap. 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B. C. Saltines. . . ... 10o=cm (g N. B. C. De Luxe Asst.. . .. ..™ 32¢ N. B. C. Brown Edge Wafers. . ."™ 27¢ Fannings 24 * Pickles %+ 2]c Rajah Salad Dressing . . . . 8%-o= $sr 12 Fresh Roasted Peanuts. ... ... 2 ™ 25¢ THE GREAT 3 FOOD CHOCOLATE DRINK easily, makes milk more 12-0z. ble and increases its nutritive l 9c Delightful cold or hot. Jar g value. ¥