Evening Star Newspaper, October 12, 1930, Page 3

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: Tl‘l:s Winter FLORIDA ™= —IT COSTS LESS Fast Through Trains Daily 1:15 p.m. 7:35 DE LUXE 17}, HOUR ashington to Florida goes into effect ember 1st. The Double-Track Sea-Level Route Atlantic Coast Line The Standard Railroad of the South Tickets, reservations, information from 4 and 5 Rooms, Bath GENERAL ELECTRIC $50—855 THE HAMPTON 1310 18th St. N.W. MT. VERNON STEAMER Charles Macalester Under U. €. Government Inspection Leaves Sconth St. Wharl Daily F9.L SCHEDULE 10 A. M. 3nd 2 P. M. Returniog 134 and 5:45 p. m. Round Trip, 85c. Adm Cafe and Lunch Counter on St Mount Vernon Not Open om Su GEORGE GLAUDE [son Says Building of Sea Power Plant Will Take Two Years. | By the Associated Press. HAVANA, October 11.—Construction of Prof. Georges Claude’s thermo-dy- namic power plant on the south coast {of Cuba to supply the island with in- dustrial power obtained from the gea would require at least two years, Andre Claude, son of the famous French sci- entist, said today. The_statement, with the comment that the plant might not be built in Cuba, came in answer to press reports that Prof. Claude would probably have a plant operating at Santiago de Cuba | by February 1. “My father does not yet know if he will use Santiago as the site for his plant, nor is he even positive that he will build one in Cuba,” Andre Claude said. “If he does, the planning and construction of the special machinery would require at least two years, per- haps three.” The Associated Press learned that the professor plans to go to the United States October 31. It is believed he will visit Washington and New York. Asked to comment on the attitude of American scientists who have asserted his plan of getting energy from the sea was impractical, Prof. Claude shrugged his shculders and mysteriously said: to the declarat'ons in Weshington con- cerning the industrial value of our rocess? Without mentioning some laughable scientific errors, which makes me doubt the origin of said declara- tions, I may assure you that it is just another example of bad prophecies be- ing useless.” . All Materials Lowest Prices! $125 Up HOME IMPROVEMENTS ~ PHONE NATNLO 427 TONEBRAKE 820-11* ST..N.W. SPECIAL NOTICES. NTED—VAN LOAD OF FURNITURE OR you have from Washington, D. C.. t any points West as far as aha, Nebr.; 25¢ per mile. See Mr. ULLERY, 633 Tth st. ne. Oct. 15 to 18. _ AWNINGS REPAIRED, HUNG, REMOVED and stored reasonably; window shades, 85c up. WALTER J. FROCTER CO. Nat. 1456. THIS 18 TO GIVE NOTICE TO THE PUB- iic, having bought the Utlity Flumbing and Heating Co., will not be responsible for any debt contracted other than by myself efter Oct. 3. 1930, date of = od JAMES A. DEERY. 2431 st S, H. THIS DATE. severed_my comnection with Co. JAMES M. x4 1 JAMES M. Oct. 10. 1930, the Stevens Dyt VENS, 5513 3rd Shon. e UCKING SHORE FOR RENT ON WICOM- ico River. 50 miles from Washington: abun- dance of canvas back and red head: 3 blinds, 5"boais ‘and decoys furnisned: completely furnished house. 5 bed rooms, furnace. heat. Erice. %00 for season. ' Address Box 30V, ADS Star_office. 2] RN LOADS. WEW_YORK nt, New Hampshire, Asheville h. Long-distance moving our specialty. Bmith's Transter & Storage Co. 1313 You st. North 3343. . MERCHANTS' BANK AND TRUST COMPANY. reby o bursuant to eeting of the s’ Meel given that m pany 1435 H street northwest, in the Cit; ington. District of Columbls, on 0th day of October. 1930, at 2 o'clock, p.m., con- d Pederal- ashington, 10- ity of Washington, District of jer_the provisions of the laws il be of voting tal_to_the ihe purpose inclden said Pederal: r any other matters proposed consolidation of the ‘American National Bank of Wi this company. A copy of a majorit: al-American National majority of of this company, No. 1435 H street nor Washington. D’ C.. and may be in usiness e books of the company for the truns e s e - fer of sicek will be closed October 18, 1930. at 13 o'clock noon.. ROLFE E. BOLLING. 3 President. Dated Septembes 1930 FEDERAL-AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK OF WABHINGTON, Shareholders” Meeting. Notice 15 hereby given that pursuant to eall of its Directors a special meeting of th shareholders of the Federal-American Na. tional Bank of ington will be held its banking house, No. 619 Fourteenth sireet northwest, in the City of Washington. Dis- trict of Columbla; on Monday, the twsntisth ington. District of Columbia. unde! visions of the laws of the United Eta shall be ratified and confirmed, and for purBose of voting upon any other matters ncidental to the proposed consolidstion of the two banks. A of the aforesaid Directors of each of g for the consolidation. ank and may be inspected during business ours. The books of the bank for the & tock will be closed October 18, be PIEIEREA JOHN POOLE. President. ranster of 1930, at Dated September 18, 1930. WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD | to or from New York, Richmond, Boston, Pittsbureh and all way points: special rates NATIONAL DELIVERY AES! INC., 1317 N Y. ave. Nat. 1460. Loc: ‘moving also. . MOTOR VAN Pool” vens for ship- and from New Yorl MPANY, 1140 Fil- ALLIED VAN LI movals anywhere. ments of small lots to SECURITY STORAGE CO! enth street. Decatur 0443, n-Wide Long-Dista: WANTED—RETURN OSTON. oM B 2 'ROM NEW YORK. M PITT! UNITED BTA €o., INC., 418 10th St. N.W. Metropolitan 1845 Hollywood Orchard Out Georgia ave. 2 miles past D. C. line. | Delicious cider, 40c per gal. Bring container. | Furnaces Cleaned & Painted | $3.50—Repairs and installatfons: terms on he new work: estimates ROBEY FEATING CO.. 61 N st. free. Nat. 0635, Sweet Cider—Apples at Quaint Acres Quality Fine—Prices Low On Silver Spring-Colesville I’i,I:(e Furniture Repairing, Upholstering, Chair Caneing CLAY ARMSTRONG 3235 10th St. N.W. Metropolitan 2062 Same location 21 rs, which insures low o5 and. high vorkmanship. 45,000 SEE IRISH BEAT NAVY, 26 to 2; STADIUM DEDICATED (Continued Prom First Page.) to a definite halt to the satisfaction of the officials. ; Notre Dame's climax, distance eating plays this afternoon were Savoldi's sweeps around the ends with Carideo, Schwartz and Clrt. Conley blocking out the opposition for him. The first Notre Dame touchdown in the second period came after the shock troops had played a hard opening period in a hot sultry sun. There was one bad scare for the shock troops in that first period when Gannon tossed a 35-yard pass to Byng, which planted the ball 25 yards from Notre Dame's goal. Navy was all keyed up for a score when Host, Notre Dame's left end, intercepted a pass and robbed Navy of the ball. Salvoldi Scores on 22-yard Dash. A few minutes before the end of the first period the Notre Dame regulars came into the fray and the whole com- plexion of the battle changed. A break for Notre Dame came early in the second period. Schwartz dropped back out of reach of the Navy chargers and threw a long forward pass to Capt. Conley, who stood waiting for it on the Navy's 22-yard line. Byng came charg- ing at the Notre Dame leader and 50 plainly interferred with his effort to catch it that the officials punished the interference by giving Notre Dame a first down on the 22-yard Ine. From here Salvoldi swept around Navy's left wing, his blockers blazing the trail for him, Carideo, Schwartz and Conley WILL COME HERE ueco | time. “You ask me what I have to answer & ‘of Mr. | streams in far places. | Medical School of Stanford and presi- 'D. C. VOTE ESSAYS plucking out the Navy tacklers like so many tenpins. Big Joe went over for a touchdown and shortly afterwards he did the same thing, but for a great distance and far more impressively. Following the first touchdown Carideo xicked off to Tschirgi on Navy's 22-yard mark. Gannon and Tschirgi tried hope- lessly to pry through the Notre Dame forwards, but found it an impossible ‘the | task and kicked back to Navy's 49-yard line. from Schwartz, and skirting the line of | e, he found his team mates scrimmag taking out the Navy tacklers one by one Bearing down hard toward Navy's star- board, Balvoldi charged away free with | Byang in pursuit. The lone Navy end a mad plunge to try to grasp Sal- regulars came out to cool off, an in went the shock troops again. Schwartz Hurls 25-Yard Pass. In the third pericd Schwartz started the further destruction of Navy with a 25-yard !t:;;lrd to Conley, which brought 1 mark. Salvoldi peeled off another run of 18 yards, and Brill followed it uJ with & 15-yard gallop around the end. The ball was on the 7-yard line, and Salvoldi carried it over with Navy play- ers scattering from his path in di- rections. The Notre Dame defense got a severe test and was not found wanting at the end of this period, when the Irish first string operators had retired temporarily. Koken. in trying to throw a forward pass was sent back for a loss, and put Notre Dame in a hole. Jaskwich was hurried in, making s kick and sent it only to Notre Dame’s 33-yard line. ‘Then Navy showed its best demon- stration of a charging game. Kirn and Gannon plunged into the Notre Dame forwards for a first down and these two backs kept up the bombardment until Navy had the ball 11 yards from a touchdown. E Dame crowd. Navy Tries Desperately. Kirn and Gannon plunged in des- perately again and got only a couple of yards. Bauer, on a spinner, got an- other yard and as a last resort he tried a short forward pass and lost the ball on_downs. Campbell and Williams, going in as relief players in the last plriod started s threatening march after Campbell had intercepted one of Leahy's forward passes. ‘Tschibgi for a loss when he attempted a forward pass and Bowstrom punted to Murphy, who was lucky to nab the bobbing ball on his own 4-yard line. Mahoney dropped back of the goal line to punt out of danger, but he re- ceived & bad pass and Navy was through, so he was forced to score a There was a joyful carnival spirit about the university today and before the game started Prank E. Hering, president of the Notre Dame Alumni Assocjation, delivered a short address to the big crowd. Herring was captain of the team here in 1896 and also served as coach for the four years fol- Positions. Navy ). Left end o Bmith House Cleaning Time May We Help? Phone Atlantic 2869 Federal WiEc(l)‘ow Cleaning Professional White Help - Jas, Myles, Pres. * Notre Dame Navy .. ‘Touchdowns—Savoldi (3), after Bafety. nell man_Mr. | Mr. Hackett ) Loyola). 6. —15 ‘minutes. ¢ . Pield judg '(West, Point). “Time of periods More boys than girls were born in England and Wales duling the first three months of this year. | Junior Citizens Sponsoring Contest Here in the compaet wall of sored by the Junior Citizens’ Alliance ! interference assembled around the gal- | of Washington, as a means of increas- | loping Salvoldi. He took it in reverse|ing interest in the cause of national made voldi’s flying feet, but he missed them, | essay contest, which closes at mid- | and the big Notre Dame back finished | night, November 26, will go to the| his streak of 49 yards for a touchdown. | writer of the best essay on “National With that work done, and done well, | Representation the to Navy's 40-yard pestitate to indorse national representa- | | th ito O'Brien, a reserve end, threw, THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D, C., OCTOBER 12; 1930—PART ONE. OIL LANDS "SCANDAL" RECOILS . BEFORE SERE ressive Looking Secre- tary Has Stern Stuff in Both Fists. Gave Up Life of Affluence to Be Teacher and Pub- lic Servant. BY WILLIAM HARD. ‘Though the recent “scandal” about oil lands in Colorado tried to threaten for several hours to aspire toward look- ing Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior, in the face, it took refuge, as soon as m{vm;d under the profes- slonal care of Senator Nye of North Dakota, in declaring that it was really looking at somebody else. There is something in the aspect of Mr. Wilbur that discourages any ‘“scandal” that coils up to bite him. Lived Plainly and Liked It. Undergraduates at Stanford Univer- sity when he was serving as president there longed to find in him an accessi- bility to even small lapses from the campus code. It was in vain. Desiring of them a painful devotion to plain liv- ing and high thinking, he went on being plain and high himself—and painlessly. He likes it. He and President Hoover were under- graduates at Stanford at the same If they ever write a joint book on “Wild Times We Had as Boys To- ether,” it is thought that most of the wildness will have been by Mr. Hoover, from which an estimate of the wildness Wilbur can be reasonably de- duced. Mr. Wilbur started off to be a very wealthy doctor. He acquired a terrific reputation as a_ diagnoser of intricate maladies. By the rich, who have the resources for such maladies, he was much summoned. He was on his way to a luxurious bank account. He might now be an affluently retired personage, devof himself to the one worldly pleasure that seems to attract him, the pursuit of fishes along cted ‘That, however, would not have been sufficiently plain, high, arduous and troublous. 8o he retired from his as- sured chances of being an opulent phy- sician and gave himself to the unre- munerative occupation of teaching the young. This was good for the young, who sometimes, indeed, thought there was too much goodness in it, but it still | did not include all the tribulations that were in the immediate neighborhood | visible. 8o Mr. Wilbur took on the teaching of teachers to teach the young and became successively dean of the dent of Stanford itself. Proved Vigorous Administrator. He turned out to be a vigorous and rigorous administrator. This was de- ceptive of him. He seems the reverse of ruthless. He seems the reverse of assertive. He seems at first all gentle- ness, sweetness, mildness. His 1l i lankiness has no swagger. It has a| sort of gently bending accommodating- | ness. With his quiet smile and his quiet | | speech and his unaggressive stoop, he might be thought to be & sort of long, | attenuated, complaisant jackknife, quite willing to be shut up. The thought would be very erroneous and very dangerous. This is interiorly | one of the absolutely most unbending | of men. His psychological backbone | has no stoop at all. He was master at | Stanford, and in his department here he is master again. It will not be un- | round it. | NITY OF WILBUR SECRETARY WILBUR. fair to hold him responsible for all of his department’s new major policies. If he did not himself start them, he has examined them, sanctioned them, fur- thered them. If there is anything that this man, in addition to not being a crook, is again not, it is a dummy. He cannot, of course, know every depart- mental detail, but on new major pol- icies, those who wish to assail the de- E:nment will be quita right in carry- g their assault directly to Mr. Wilbur. He will thereupon be suavely imper- turbable and savagely pugnacious and leave no stone of counter-assault un- turned and not turn a hair. Formidable Opponent in Sport. He is a formidable opponent in sport as in work. His old comrade, Herbert Hoover, got him last year into playing medicine_ball. They are still wild to- gether. It is reported now that several times the President has been obliged to revise the rules of his tennis-court medicine ball new-fangled game in order to impede Mr. Wilbur in his pas- sion for lifting the ball in his hand to a height some eight and a half feet from the ground and dashing it-down over the net with cruel force upon the heads of his adversaries. The President is said to have forbidden Mr. Wilbur to approach the net within three yards. A limit thus has been established to the ferocity of his volleys, which he delivers with as much cunningness of placement as violence of speed, and with an air at the same time of peacefully and pleasantly offering somebody & cup of t ea. He has been president of the Amer- ican Academy of Medicine, president of the Association of American Medical Colleges and chairman of the American Committee on the Cost of Medical Care. He is scientist, administrator and pub- lic servant. He turned to service from a private career that might have led long ago and all the time to those streams and those fishes. Now he can- not even afford to go to them often, even if often were permitted by duties to be done and “scandals” to an- swered. Duties, unceasingly industri- ously undertaken and accomplished, have been his life. They should per- haps be sufficient answers, but they are ot. His friend, Herbert Hoover, not long ago had to ask 18 distinguished men before he found one who was willing to accept a certain high public post along with all the inevitable perpetual-motion investigations and “scandals” circling | To be & public servant nowadays one needs, like Mr. Wilbur, a very serene soul inside and stern stuff in both fists. (Copyright, 1930.) | WILL WIN PRIZES | to Aid Move for Representation. ‘The $300 prize essay contest spon- | Tepresentation for the District of | Columbia now under way, is attracting | wide attention, it was announced yes- terday. A grand prize of $100 cash in the | for the District of Columbia.” In addition to the prize there are offered 10 prizes of $10 | each, to be awarded writers of meri- torious essays on the same subject. Four speclal prizes of $25 each will be presented to writers of essays which | best answer objections of those who tion. The contest is open only to mem- bers of the Junior Citizens’ Alliance. | George J. Adams, provisional presi- dent of the alliance, explains its work as follows: “Our members lemselves as ‘junior citizens’ in order indicate their political impotency. In all respects men and women of the | finest American type, they find rhem- | selves, because of their residence in | the Capital City, deprived of the most | fundamental right of citizenship. They | are indeed ‘punior citizens’ by reason | of their inability to vote. | “The work of the alliance is di- | rected toward securing representation in Congress and in the Electoral College for persons who live in the District °{J Columbia. We realize only too well that we who are striving for the politi- cal status of an American citizen have | a tremendous task before us, We are “Hold that line,” yelled the Notre willing to work and wait, however, and | in the meantime we are building up ou? | organization. | “The Junior Citizens' Alliance sup- | ports & drama unit and a debating club. The purpose of these groups is to attract new members from the ranks | of the younger generation, provide en- | tertainment for those already enrolled | and, in the case of the debating club, | stimulate - an intelligent interest in | political affairs of the day.” NEW DETACHED HOME IN KALORAMA ... 2324 Tracy Place oit One this Heat, of the exclusive Every soundest section. Five Baths, convenience. values in Open Sunday 1 EDISON STEWART WARNER - RADIO SETS Sold on Easy Terms Your Old Set in T: There are none Better and Few as Good. GIBSON’S 917 G St. N.W. SCHOOL BODY TO SEE | TRAFFIC RULES WORK' John Quincy Adams Parent-Teach- | er Meeting Monday to Be Fea- tured by Demonstration. ‘The Parent-Teacher Association of | the John Quincy Adams School, organ- ized last Spring, will hold its initial | meeting of the Fallaseason Monday | afternoon at 3:15 o'clock at the school, | Nineteenth and California streets. Demonstration of traffic regulations | by officials of the American Automobile Association, arranged for the instruc- tion of pupils at the school, will fea- ture the meeting. A police detail from the eight precinct, assigned to traffic duty near the school, will also attend. A hoys' trafic patrol of 14 picked puplls, charged with directing school students and pedestrians at street cross- ings, was recently organized. In the absence of Mrs. L. C. Stover, president; Mrs. Dorothy Rus, vice president, will preside. Two Die in Train ‘W;eck. H ARCADIA, La., October 11 (#).—Two men were killed in a wreck near here yesterday of the westbound Illinois Cen- tral freight train known as extra No. 3960 of the = 1 Salesman Large, well established fism has opening for a progressive sales- man. Ample prospects fur- nished and full co-operation given. The right man will find this a very profitable connec- tion. Replies confidential. Address Box 466-V, Star Office BAY STATE In-or-Out Four Hour Enamel Agate Four Hour Floor Varnish Rutland Roof Paint Savogran Crack Filler Valspar Varnish HIGHLAND A General Purpose Paint 75cqt. $2.75 gal. Expert Paint Advice Free MUTH 710 13th S$t. N.W. DENES SHALE LAND WORTH 0 BLINS Geological Survey Director Calls Kelley’s Estimate “Fantastic Dream.” Branding Ralph 8. Kelley's $40,000,~ 000,000 estimate of th: value of Colo- rado oll shale lands as “a fantastic dream,” Dr. George Otis Smith, direc- tor of the Geological Survey, declared in a statement yesterday that some of the land has a grazing value, but that “its present worth for oil extraction purposes is nil.” The statement was prompted by in- ferences in Kelley’s published attacks on the Interior Department’s oil shale policy that the lands had been found of vast value by the Geological Survey. “With the great deposits of coal and lignite standing between oil shale and its future market,” Dr. Smith said in the statement printed in the United States Daily, “the date of oil shale utilization becomes remote indeed. High Cost Only Certainty. “It is for these reasons that many of us would not take as a gift the title to 8,000 acres of oil shale land to hold until used for oil manufacture, subject to State taxes for the long period in- volved.” The statement, issued simultaneously at the director’s office here and by Dr. Smith himself, who is in Chicago, pointed out that the present oversupply |of petroleum “postpones beyond pres- ent calculations the e when a new oil industry can be started so far away from the present centers of d:mand as the mountains of Western Colorado and Eastern Utah, especially as the only certainty about that venture would be the high cost of its establishment and operation. Oil shale utilization is stil! further postponed, in the opinion of many fuel specialists, by the possibility that coal furnishes a better source of oil than oil shale.” Kelley's resignation as fleld executive of the Interior Department’s branch office in Denver was refused by Secre- tasy Wilbur, pending an investigation by the Department of Justice of Kel- ley’s charges of favoritism to oil inter- ests in distribution by the Interior De- partment of fmenu on oil shale lands. In his published statements Kelley charged that lands of huge worth were being “‘grabbed” by oil companies with consent of the Government. Value Seen in Distant Future. “Ten years ago,” Dr. Smith said in his statement, “‘a survey specialist on mineral fuels referred to the ‘40 bil- lion barrels of oil locked up in the rocks of the desert hills of the West.' That phrase, ‘locked up,’ best describes the oil shale situation. The oil in the ofl shale is a reserve to be unlocked only in the dim future. It is this deal- ing in futures that makes practical ofl men term Mr. Kelley's ‘billions’ fan- tastic dreams. . . . “Had the Geol zlcal Survey put any valuation on the 4,000,000 acres of clas- sified ofil shale land in the States of Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and Nevada, it would have been on the basis of the present worth of some expected future value and following its experience in valuing coal land the rate per barrel of estimated oll content would have been a very small fraction of the 81 price repeatedly given in Mr. Kelley's statements and inferentially credited to the Geological Survey. “The fact is that at the start the Geological Survey regarded the very extensive oil shale deposits as having a utility value only at.some time in the distant future. The present oversupply of petroleum, ready to flow from the wells of California, Oklahoma eand | Texas into the pipe lines with relatively little human effort, postpones beyond present calculation the time when a new oil industry can be S‘Llrt-kd S0 fl}’ Yo Metal °%; Weatherstrip With BRONZE, the ETERNAL METAL Unlimited GUARANTEE Prompt Service. Let us quote you priee WITHOUT Salesman’s Com- mission or Finance Charges added. Adams 4547 Day, Night and Sundsy Capitol Weatherstrip Co. 1359 Harvard St. N.W. Build NOW! Lowest Prices! Easiest Terms! Best Built Metal GARAGES el type you select. Also Frame, Stucco Garages, tion to the cost. Concrete Block end Terms in propor- GTO GARAGE CONST.CO. 200 K St. NE. Atlantic 4320 CONVENIENT ECONOMICAL. 17LYY ORIGINATORS OF ECONOAICAL TRANSPORTATION away from present centers of demand as the mountains of Western Colorado and Eastern Utah, ly as the only certainty about that venture would be the high cost of its establishment and operation.” . T. S. Woman Suicide in Paris. PARIS, October 11 (#)—The Ameri- can consulate was informed yesterday that Mrs. Ethelyn Leslie Huston of Hol- lywood, Calif,, a journalist, had com- g:twd suicide in her hotel here Thurs- . Mrs. Huston, who was 61, shot her- self in the head. She left' a note to the consulate explaining that her ac- tion was caused by ill health and ask- ing to be cremated. Road N.W. water. HORNED FROG RETURNED Texas Freak Reappears as Sud- denly as It Disappears. EASTLAND, Tex., October 11 (#).— The body of “Old Rip,” Texas' famed | horned frog that lived 33 years in a concrete cornerstone of the Eastland | County Court House, was back home to- | day, beneath the glass of a specially constructed tomb in the rotunda of the new county building. The frog reappeared as mysteriously as it disappeared 11 days ago. Criminal charges filed by the Jocal chamber of commerce officials in' connection with the incident were. withdraw: A-3 WEATHER HALTS FLIGHT Boston Aviator and Pilot Planned Hop-Off to Europe. RDOSIV.IJI‘ FIELD, N, Y, October iu () —Russell N. Boardman of Bos- | ton and his co-piiot, J. L. Plando, were | all ready to take off at midnight last | night for a flight to Europe, but bad ‘weather reports spiked their plans. They had hoped to get off from Bar- ren Island in thelr plane “Americari Legion,” but learned from Dr. James | H. Kimball, government weather expert, that a serious disturbance was reported off Newfoundland. Interior view of a corner of the new Radio Salon of MONARCH RADIO SHOP at 18th St. & Columbia which has attracted considerable attention. Who is the goat in your house? OME member of the family must “go downstairs to turn the hot water on,” unless you have a Self-Action Water Heater. Perhaps it’s father, or mother, or small brother. It doesn’t matter who it is, but someone is the goat. With the new low rates for gas there is no reason why almost everyone should not have a Self-Action Storage Water Heater. The cost of operation is moderate—a few cents a day. The terms of purchase are so liberal that few find the original investment an obstacle to attaining the comforts from always having an instant, abundant supply of hot We allow you $10 on your present heater and make no charge for installation. Five dollars down and the balance in 18 months will put a Self-Action Storage Water Heater in your home. Drop in at any of eur sales rooms to choose your model—or see your plumber. WasHINGTON GAs 62lgofi.m (ompany GEORGETOWN GAS LIGHT CO. NATIONAL WEST 0615 S~ COLUMBIA HTS. BRANCH-3310-14* ST COLUMBIA 95/3 * CLEVES Tune in on Daniel Breeskin over WRC Sat. evening at 7:15 < e did s A R P SN

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