Evening Star Newspaper, September 29, 1930, Page 3

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. Real Estate Salesman One of the old and pro- gressive organizations has opening in house sales department for one or two energetic sales- men, preferably with ex- perience. Plenty of pros pects and 100% co- operation from office, The right man will find this a most profitable connection. All replies held confidential. Addr Box 206-S Star Office INVESTMENT BUILDING tenants drive to their offices and park in their own building. H. L. Rust Company Agents For Rent THE ARGONNE 16th and Columbia Road N.W. 2 Bed Rooms, Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Bath and Reception Room ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION SPECIAL NOTICE: g T BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY any other person {han ARTMAN, 2 18th st. se. BE_RESPONSIBLE FOR A i installations: _terms_on new estimates free. ROBEY HEATINC 61 N st_n.e. Nat. 063. 29° I WILL NOT BE RI BLE FOR ANY debts other than those contracted by my- self. J. GRAFTON POORE, R. F. D. No. 1, Rosslyn, Va 30! LONG-DISTANCE _MOVING — WE _ HAVE been keeping faith with the public since 1 our country-wide service, . DAVIDSON TRANSFER GET YOURS NOW—PURE METALLIC ROOF int at the right price. Promp delivery. KER PAINT AND CO., 1239 Wis- Phone West_0087. _ I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY debts or bills contracted by any one except mysell personally. HERBERT P. GERALD, 1215 Harvard st. n.w. 3 IF YOU ARE GOING TO M TO OR from Phila. New York, Boston, Pittsburgh. Norfolk, or any other. point, phone us and we will tell you how much it will cost and how quickly we'll do it. NATIONAL DE LIVERY ASSN.. INC.. National 1460, 'REBY GIVEN TO ALL THE tors_of George Chakerls cnd James . who sold their “Lincoln Delicates- gen’ éituated on premises known as number | 215 _You street northwest. Washington, D. C. to Louis Stratigakis und Mike Mantzouris, to file their claims with the undersigned. attorney for the burchasers. on oF before October 2. 1930, or be barred from Tecovery thereafter. SOTERIOS NICHOLSON, 1184 National Press Building consin_ave. n.w. NORTH BEACH, MD. ELECTION. Polls_will be open in the Town Hall of North Beach, Md., Tuesday, September 30, 1930, from r_the regis- . 1 pm. to 9 pm. fo! ll‘lt:nn ol( ‘tfl:le desiring to vote in the coming election. s C._R. URRAY. Clerk. CHAIRS FOR RENT. SSITABLE FOR WED- dings. rties, church sbppers or festivals. from l&‘ to 20c per day each; new chalrs TNITED STATES STORAGE CO. 418 inn MERCHANTS' BANK AND TRUST COMPANY. Shareholders’ Meeting. of 3 3 the purpose of considering and determi- ®ing by vote whether an agreement to con- idate the said company and Federal- erican National Bank of Washington. lo- /ated in the Gity of Washington, District of Columbia. under the provisions of the laws of the United States. shall be ratified and confirmed, and for ihe purpose of voing pon_any other matiers incidental to the roposed consolidation of the said Federal- erican National Bank of Washington and this company. A copy of the aforesaid sgreement executed by a majority of the di- Tectors of the Federal-American National Bank of Washington and by & majority of The directors of this company, providing for the consolidation, is on file at the main office . 1435 H strget northwest. d may be inspected e books of trans- ger of stock will be closed October 18. 1930, 8% 13 o'clock BoONpoLFE E. BOLLING. President. mber 18, 1930 RICAN NATIONAL BANK OF WASHINGTON. Shareholders” Meeting. Notice is hereby given (hat pursuant to eall of its Directors a special meeting of the reholders of the Federal-American Na- ingtos Tisions of the shall be ratified confirmed. and for the urpose of VOLIng upon any Other matters Focidental o the proposed consolidation of the iwo €opy of the aforesaid uted by a_majority rectors of each of the two banks, provid- ng for the consolidation. is on file at the ank and may be inspected during business ours. The books of the bank for the transfer of Jiock il be closed October 18, “10%0, at 2 o'clock M. JoEN Dated September 18, 1930 ¥ A % MOTOR VAN RE- 'o0l” Wans for ship- to and from New York. g?‘l\!(PANY. 1140 Fif- POOLE. President. wo! called for and delivered, North_6083-W. WNIN¢ RE! by :nd K!o‘l;'?d reasonably: window WAL;I;F;:“ J. Roof & Furnace cha'irs WORK GUA‘RANT!-ED. A ’ £ [(ONE NORTH 0807. _ % Simmons 7 5 52 NE % Grapes, Juice (To Order) o M st. 1.w., Canal rd., Chain Bridge. T : HiiotT BRoE T IRCOF PAINTING For a solid, d ble, rust resisting job there's noihing equal to old fashioned red iron ore oxide and pure linseed o _Let us apply it NO Hoofing 110 3rd St. &.W. FURNACES CLEANED BY VACUUM, $4.00 m‘l"uk’éfifgfixfi’éf‘"n‘: s, Telephone REMOVED hades from #5c up, installed PROCTER €0. 24 Het.n Phone Vienna “p-3 - Se. Lin. 772 ORISR Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity The National Capital Press !Ilfl 212 D St N.W. Phy tional 0650 Wanted-—Rgt\:m toads ron New York City, Rochester. or New Hampshi Long-distance moving our speciaity. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., 1313 You 8t North 3343 Furniture Repairing, Upholstering, H Chair Caneing AY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th St. N.W, Metropolitan 2062 Jocation 41 years, which tnaures low ime Bwices | cident-prevtion movement is that it is | becoming better understood. The inter- | SAFETY CONGRESS 15 OPENED TODAY ‘Initial Speech of Session Is Made by Radio From Australia. By the Associated Press. | PITTSBURGH., September 20.—Gov. | Lord Somer of Sidney, Australia, opened the nineteenth annual Safety Congress \and Exposition in Pittsburgh this morning with an address delivered from | the studios of radio station VK2ME in Sidney and relayed to Pittsburgh, where it was broadcast by station KDKA. A few minutes later Miller McClintock of | Harvard University and Maj.. Harry | Steere-Clark of Vancouver, B. C., de- | livered “addresses here that were re- layed to Australia by the short-wave |station of KDKA. Speeches Are Made. More than 3,000 delegates from - all parts of the United States and Canada 7ad arrived in time for the international broadcast, which took place between 7 and 7:30 oclock (Eastern standard time). An attendance of 7.000 was ex- pected for the sessions tonight. The president’s address, by retiring President C. E. Pettibone, and one by John Temple Graves II. of the Age- Herald, Birmingham, Ala., were de- livered at the first meeting of members of the congress. Pettibone urged Safety men to endeaver to impress upon the people that “accidents have definite causes—that they don't just happen.” Safety Award Made. “All social progress is slow,” he said, ‘but the significant fact about the ac- pretation of it by many agencies is| developing a deeper interest and sta- bility, and the already known principles and technique need only be persistenly and continuously expanded to have safety become an integral part of every day living.” The James A. Holmes award for out- standing safety accomplishments over a period of six years was presented to the Portland Cement Co. of Allen- town, Pa., at the meeting. NOTED EDUCATORS DIE IN AUTO CRASH| Officials of Two Schools for Deaf | Killed, Woman Injured, as Car Overturns. By the Associated Press. HAYS, Kans, September 29.—Dr. John W. Jones, 70, Columbus, Ohio, superintendent of the Ohio State School for the Deaf, and Warren Bigler, 77, of Wabach, Ind., director of the In- diana School for the Deaf, were killed yesterday, when Dr. Jones lost control of an automobile. Mrs. Oscar Pittinger of Indianapolis, another passenger in the car, suffered a fractured leg. Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Pittinger, superintendent of the In- diana schcol, other members of the party motoring to Colorado Springs, Colo., were uninjured. | Dr. Jones died soon after the car | overturned on a highway nesr Ellis, Kans. Mr. Bigler was brought to a hospital here and died late yesterday. He suffered a fractured skull and two broken legs. Survivors said the driyer lost control of the car when he turned about to | obcerve if another machine was fol- lowing. Mrs. Jopes was expected to start to Colgmbux ‘with her husband’s body last night. A strip of loose gravel was blamed for the accident. The car, owned by Pittinger, turned over three times as it left the highway. All the occupants except Pittinger were thrown from the machine. POSSE STILL HUNTS FOR MURDER SUSPECT Youth Trapped in Mountain Cabin Shot His Way to Free- dom Saturday. By the Associated Pres BELLEFONTE, Pa., September 29.— George S8kidmcre, 20-year-old murder suspect who shot his way through a big posse of State police and Natiopal Guardsmen in the mountains ncar here Saturday, was still at large iast night. ‘Trapped in a cabin in the hills with a compznion, ‘William Dutton, Skidmore opened fire from a window. He wounded two men, William Fox, keeper of the air- mail beacon at Rattlesnake, and J. G. Olmes, State highway patrolman. ‘The possemen rushed the cabin after a round of shots, but Skidmore broke through the lines and escaped in the heavy timber and underbrush. Dutton wag taptured. ‘The searching party, made up of about 75 National Guardsmen and a score of State troopers, highway patrolmen and local authorities, combsd the mountains !.9' the fugitive throughout the night. hey did not see him, so far as has been reported. Skidmore is sought in connection with the recent slaying of a gasoline filling station proprietor in Pittsburgh. BOMBAY WOMAN FREED | Temperance Work Held Not to| ! policy of conquest on the ground of T Jjudge of HE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, “BEATING” HIS WAY TO BOSTON Dressed in the uniform of a Continental soldier and beating a drum of { Revolutionary design, Sergt. Sanford A. Moeller, 53, veteran of the Spanish- | American War, started walking from New York to Boston, where he will be the drum corps of the American Legion there. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, September 29.—Inasmuch | as the victory of Adolph Hitler's Fascist party in the recent elections has not been followed by a specific discription of the “third Reich” he hopes to create on the ruins of the present republic, | many Germans are consulting Hitler's | book, “My Fight,” for further light on the party’s aims. The book, known as “the German Fascist Bible,” has done little to clear 1p Hitler's general statement of internal political aims before the Supreme Court at Leipzig Thursday. On the subject of the Piscist foreign policy, however, it is specific enough to make the readers’ hair stand on end. Fasclst Germany's forelgn policy, Hitler boldly proclaims in the book, will | aim at nothing less than the conquest | of Russia, which he describes as a vast territory of untold wealth, utterly de- moralized by bolshevism, awaiting some one to come in and really organize and govern. Does Not Try to Justify Policy. Hitler does not try to justify this| making Russia safe for religion or cap- italism- or anything else recently be- lieved endangered there. It is reason enough, he curtly states, that Germany must widen her frontiers or perish. He says Germany, cramped within her precent boundaries, and without colo- nial outlets, simply must have more room. “Just as our forefathers did not get the land we live on es & gift from heaven, but had to fight for it, just so will the land which means life for our people not come through an act o(! grace, but only by the might of our victorious sword,” he writes. Hitler seems amused at those Ger- mans who hope by peaceful negotiation | to regain Germany's 1914 boundaries. “Only childishly naive minds can entertain the thought that they can accomplish the correction of the Ver-| sailles treaty by sneaking, begging methods,” he writes, “However, the boundaries of 1914 mean absolutely nothing to the future of Germany. In those boundaries lay neither safeguard | for the past nor strength for the fu-| tu'lghe Fascist leader likewise scoffs ll; the cry for & new German fleet and the return of the lost colonies. Decidedly disagreeing with the former Kaiser's old slogan, “Germany’s future is in her fleet,” he says the trouble with (he‘\ old regime was that it ran after a/ dream of colonies and sea power. 4 Says France Must Be Dealt With, Hitler believes Fascist Germany must move only in directions which do not | clash with those of powers whose post- | war interests naturally are moving| them in the direction of a German alliance — namely, Italy and England. | He says that France, “the natural en-| emy.” will have to be dealt with sooner or later, but that Fascism must put| an end to the German urge southward and westward and turn the nation’s gaze “toward the land in the east.” Concerning the necessity of really | “settling with France sooner or later,” | Hitler writes: 7 | “So long as the everlasting conflict | between Germany and France is car-| ried on only in the form of German| defense against Prench aggression, it never will be decided. | “Germany will lose from century to| century one position after another. | “Only when this is fully realized in Germany and the German nation’s will | to live no longer is nullified in mere | passive defense, but gathers itself together for a definitively active settle- ment with France and With the most far reaching German aims throws it- then will it be possible to call a halt | Constitute Picketing. BOMBAY, India, September 29 (#).— | Mrs. Lukamni, serving a four-month | prison sentence for picketing liquor shops, won an appeal today on the! ground that temperance work does not | constitute picketing. The judges of the | Court, of Appeals ordered the woman released when her claim was proved that she was picketing only in connec- | tion with social wolfare work with the object of inducing people to abandon | the use of intoxicating beverages and not with the intention of closing the | shops. Will Rogers SANTA MONICA, Calif —A Mex- ico foot ball team played for the first time Friday night on our mort- gaged soil. It's the best amateur team in the world. ‘There's not a paid foot ball player on it. It's practically a new university, founded just two years before Co- lumbus discover- ed Porto Rico and thought it was America. Boys can’t tackle as good as our boys, but every one on the team could speak English, French, Span- i1sh and most of them German. Said they didn’t have much time to p: tice, as at their school you had to to the everlasting, and in itself so fruit- " AND WE Want Full Value for Our DOLLARS Because We Get It We Can and Do Give It to You, as You Will see When YO“ INVESTIGATE THE NEW Shannon & Luchs Forest Section OF CHEVY CHASE To Inspect Drive out Conn, Ave. to Bradley Lane, turn LEFT (along the grounds of the Chevy Chase Club) to Maple Ave., then follow our direction igns. study books. Sdid the only thing Yh?; had down there that compared with our universities was the Mex- ico City Country Club. HITLER WOULD CONQUER RUSSIA TO WIDEN GERMAN FRONTIERS |Fascist Leader’s Book Declares France Must Be Dealt With—Wants Italy and England as Allies. less, struggle between ourselves and France, “Always, of course, on the supposition that Germany views in the destruction of France only a means to providing | at last in another direction the expan- sion possible for our nation.” ‘With regard to Germany's ambitions on the seas and her relations with Eng- land, Hitler emphatically advocates a policy that will not bring the Reich into ‘conflict with England, He asserts that history shows that it is stupid to expect nations to act for long contrary to their own inter- ests, and says England and Italy can- not possibly assist in further strength- ening France’s European position with- out blocking their own progress, “Four a long time to come, there will be only two possible European al lies for Germany—England and Italy. Hitler considers this fortunate, say- ing that these allies would be entirely unlike the crumbling Austria-Hungary and the unmechanized Turkey. that fought on the side of Germany in the ‘World War. He derides nationalistic “screaming for a mew navy and winning back of our colonies,” which he says is “twad- dle without one single realization idea.” “Instead of endangering German- British relations with empty dreams of sea power and colonial empire,” he says, “Fascist Germany will break away at last from the colonial and trade policy | of the pre-war era and shift over to the“territorial policy of the future.” ‘The excerpts from Hitler's book were drawn from the 1930 edition. The book itself was first published in 1926, Swimmer 68 Hours in Water. VALETA, Malta, September 29 ().— Arthur Rizzo yesterday set a new record for endurance swimming, having re- mained in the water 68 hours and 11 minutes. He left the water at 4:18 pm. The former record of 67 hours 10 minutes was held by P. K. Ghosh of Calcutta. S 2 Detroit Pastor Given Audience. VATICAN CITY, September 29 (#).— ‘The Pope today gave a private audience to Mgr. Desiderius Nagy, pastor of the Holy Cross Church of Detroit, Mich, During a cordial conversation the Pontiff asked Mgr. Nagy to convey his | regards to Bishop Gallagher of the Michigan city and imparted the apos- | tolic blessing. THE WARNING FINGER of October writes, “Buy Your Coal From Marlow NOW!" Lay in a full supply of Reading Anthra- cite before colder weather steals a march on you. Decide TODAY that you will have the finest fuel and the finest fuel buy. arlow 811 E St. N.W. You'll get both by calling MARLOW. D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, ROOSEVELT HITS TAMMANY LEADERS Governor Demands City Em- ployes Shall Waive Immu- nity Before Grand Jury. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 29.—At the demand of Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, waive immunity before a special grand Jury investigating corruption in the ap- pointment of magistrates. In a letter to the mayor, Gov. Roose- velt called attention to the action of 17 Tammany leaders, many of them city employes, who refused to waive im- munity last week when subpoensed be- fore the grand jury. Contrary to Sound Policy. “Whether they were within their legal rights in so doing is not_the question,” the Governor wrote. “Their action as government servants is con- trary to sound policy. “I am asking, therefore, that you ! advise these gentlemen of this leiter | and, further, that you will suggest to them that they return before the special | grand jury and voluntarily offer to | waive immunity. They should freely answer all questions relating to their official acts.” Mayor Walker said he was in agree- ment with the purpose of the Gover~ | nor's letter and the suggestion would | be_promptly carried out. | " In refusing to sign waivers, the Tam- | many leaders followed the example of their chieftain, John F. Curry, who de- clared he had been “insulted” when asked to sign. ¢ Under Governor's Orders. ‘The special grand jury was ordered by Gov. Roosevelt and has indicted George F. Ewald, former magistrate; his wife, Martin J. Healy and Thomas J. Tommaney on charges that Ewald paid Healy $10,000 for his appointment. Charles H. “Tuttle, Republican nom- inee for Governor, in his acceptance speech challenged Gov. Roosevelt to break the silence of the Tammany lead- ers before the grand jury. NOMINEE INVITES CAMPAIGN PROBE |@. 0. P. Candidate for Senate in West Virginia Will Co-operate in Revealing Primary Costs. By the Associated Press. WHEELING, W. Va, September 29. —The fullest co-operation has been promised Senate investigators of ex- penditures in the West Virginia primary election by James Elwood Jones, Re- publican candidate for the United States Senate. 3 Commenting on Washington reports that Chairman Nye of the Senate cam- | paign funds committee planned tq in- vestigate complaints of excessive ex- penditures in the State campaign, Jones, in a statement late Saturday night said: “All expenditures for my benefit in the recent primary election of which I hate the slightest knowledge, have been fully reported, but I will give my fullest co-operation to any investiga- tion and urge my friends to do like- wise. I feel that an investigation will disclose the utter falsity of rumors of other and excessive expenditures in connection with my campaign. Ball Fan Rivals Tree-Sitters. PHILADELPHIA, September 29 (#).— Bill Sullivan, who started a one-man line ouside Shibe Park Saturday, would rather see a world “series game than eat. ‘He is fasting while waiting for the first bleacher ticket to be sold. He waits in a rocking chair, equipped with umbrella, galoshes, shaving equipment and slippers. He spent part of Satur- day night in jail because & cop saw a fire in the gutter neam the chair. Bill was let out when it developed that not he, but boys, had started it. A complete set of the French paper money issued in towns and villages near the trenches during the World War has been_presented to the -Imperial War Muesum in London. service that money can Coal Co. NAtional 0311 self into a last fight to the finish—only || Convenient Bus Se i A fleet of cars is comfortably in Ken Kenwood bus, runn Circle on convenient schedule, is also available at any time during the 24 hours to all residents of Kenwood upon call. We are hoping th 301 Brookside Drive —the newly completed somely and consistent Moses & Sons. Open every day and evening, including Sunday. Go west of W Bradley Lane, continuing under the viaduct to the entrance to squares to the left, | | Kennedy-Chamberlin Development Co. ‘ 2400 Sixteenth Street rvice Is Maintained not necessary to live wood. The de luxe ing to Chevy Chase at you will inspect GoorgianHome;:hand- ly furnished by W. B. from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. isconsin Avenue on Kenwood, three short city employes are to cease refusing to| 1930: ~——— A3 URGE WATERWAY TO GULF Gov. Bibb Graves (lefl) of Alabama and Gov. L. G. Hardman of Georgia at conclusion of conference at Rome, G: eral Government agreed to develop the Coosalabama River system for deep-water John M. Graham, chairman of the confer- | navigation to the Gulf of Mexico. ence, is in the center. at which representatives of the Fed- FATHER IS HELD IN SON' DEATH Murder Charge Follows Ex-‘ humation of Supposed Paralysis Victim. By the Associated Press. HARRISONBURG, Va., September 29.—Following an exhumation of the body of George Cullers, 26, which re- vealed a fractured skull, Dan Cullers, 55, his father, living just across the State line in West Virginia, was held in the Hardy County jail at Moorefield, | W. Va, yesterday, on a charge of sec- ond degree murder. Cullers is charged with hurling a stick of wood in their home near Mathias, | W. Va, which fractured the skull of his son, who died Thursday morning. He suffered a paralytic attack a year ago and it had been supposed death | resulted from a_second stroke, | The son was buried Friday afternoon and a few hours later Coroner Hooter of Hardy County, ordered the body exhumed. An examination _revealed | that a fractured. skull had caused death, County Prosecutor W. C. McCauley of Moorefield said yesterday the elder Cullers had admiited throwing the | wood, explaining that he had engaged in an argument with his son. The prosecutor quoted him as saying he was afraid of his son and took ‘the best means at hand to defend himself. WHITLOCK GIVES BELL Former Envoy Presents War Relic to Belgian Museum. BRUSSELS, September 29 (#).— Brand Whitlock, war-time Ambassador, who is revisiting Belgium, has given the Royal Museum of the Army the church bell of St. George's village, near Nieu- port, which, was found after German | bombardment destroyed the village. The bell was found by Dr. le Page, head of the Belgian Red Cross, and pre- | sented to Mr. Whitlock. Dr. le Page's | wife was lost with the Lusitani: | Just Think of It— The Star delivered to your door every evening and Sunday morning at 11.c per day and 5c Sunday. ' Can you afford to be without this service at this cost? Telephone National 5000 and de- livery will start at once. {15 at la ONE MAN WOUNDED N JAL-BREAK FIGHT Prisoners Battle- Woodst}ock Sheriff When He Attempts Night Lock-up. Special Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., September 20— | Sheriff Luther Sheetz of Shenandoah County battled almost single handed last night with four desperate prisoners in the Woodstock Jail when he went into the main corridor to lock the prisoners in their cells for the night. The men made an attack on him. Sheetz seriously wounded Dayton Shifflett, York, Pa. awaiting trial, charged with automébile theft, a bullet | going through his stomach and out his back. Despite his wounds, Shiffiett ran a mile and a half before falling ex- hausted on the front porch of a country house. Another prisoner was rendered un- consclous when Sheetz's young son struck him on the head with a furnace poker. Clyde Rosenberger, sentenced to five years for housebreaking and shoot- ing an officer, escaped. Harry Sibert, serving r! year for a liquor offense, also ge. 2 DEAD, 5 INJURED INHEAD-ON CRASH Baltimoreans Die When Two Cars Collide Near Boonshoro. i™ecial Dispatch to The Star. HAGERSTOWN, Md. September 29, | -~Two persons were kilied and five in- jured in the ccllision of two automeag on the National Highway near Boo boro last night. The dead are: Pearce Bernard Dey, | 86, and Virginia Mixter, 17, slepdaugh- ter of Dey, both of Baltimore. The injured, all of whom are patients at the Washington County Hospitz1, are Mis. Sarah Downin, 72; Olive M. Dey, wife of the dead man; Charles H. Downin and Norman Dey, all of whom | are_expected to survive The accident occurred when Garman Ahalt, Middletown, Md., drew the brakes of his car and swerved to the | middle of the highway to avold strik- |ing a machine ahead that had comc to a sudden halt. The Ahalt machine met the Dey car head on. Aagistrate Richard Duffey, acting coroner, gave a verdict of accidental death and deemed an inquest unnecessary. Ahalt and his wife were unhurt, but Ahalt’s mother, Mrs. J. A. Hull, Mid- dletown, was cut and bruised. LYNN, Mass., September 29 (N.AN.A.). —Frank Gosselin of Lynn, Mass, & stock salesman, sold Harlan A. Green, a farmer, of Trumbull, Conn., 1,000 shares of stock at $1 a share, And Green had him arrested on a fraud charge Gosselin took Green aside, turned on a high-powered sales talk, and induced the farmer to put up his bail of $3,000. “I guess," said Green to the judge, “I was a mite hasty.” He found cut later he was right the first time. A State police investigator told him the stock was worth about a cent a share and Green withdrew the bond and had the salesman rearrested and confined, “I guess,” said Green to | khetjuflge a second time, “I was a mite asty.” | (Copyright, 1930. by North American New | paper Alliance.) 24 Hour Chevrolet Service 6I0 H. ST NE LINCOLN 10200 may be washed i$ good for years of service is guaranteed fadeless may be had in various colors What is this remarkable thing shade cloth . . . the shade fab more by discriminating home: It is du Pont TONTINE being demanded more and kers. We make these window shades to order at factory price: May We Estimate on Your Requirements? Don’t Forget the Address 830 13th St. N.W. Our Phone ' District 3324-3325 I W. STOKES SAMMONS NO one ;S position in a better to see the awful consequences of undernour;shed ch”dren than the School Teacher. "I had a boy in my class who showed all symptoms of malnutrition. Every time I looked at the little fellow tears came into my eyes. His bones were almost sticking through his skin and he had no energy to even p]ay much less study. CHEVY CHASE DAIRY Colum “Finally, I went to see his parents and arrangcd to have the child fed Milk for every meal and Milk and crackers between meals—also vegetables. fruits, ¢ bread and butter, ete. He was given rest periods, plenty of fresh air, and slept with his windows open, "In a few months you would hardly have known the child. There was <s much difference between him and his former self as there is between night and day.” Cmm; ‘SAFE Mlu&n_ ,l ‘ L JSor BABIES ,, . i » Wise Brothers CHEvY CHASE DAIRY ‘ Yhone, WEST 0183 Main Office and Dairy Plant 3204-08 N STREET N.W. Five Branches to Serve You < i}

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