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NS5 PLANES BEGIN NEW SERVICE Passengers’ Coast-to-Coast Flying Time to Be Only 26 1-2 Hours by Plan. By the Assoclated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, December 1.—DI- Tect all-plane passenger service between San Francisco and New York, consti- tuting the longest all-plane route in the | United States, wili be inaugurated to- night. ‘The new service, established by Boeing Air Transport and National Air Trans- port, subsidiaries of United Aircraft, will operate on a 42-hour schedule. Train time is 80 to 85 kLours. Actual filying time between the two seaboards ‘will be only 26 hours and 30 minutes, the schedule allowing for an overnight stop at Chicago. Eastbound passengers will leave Oakland at 8 p.m. arriving in Chicago the following evening, and at Newark Airport, 30 minutes from New York, at 4:5¢ p.m. the second day. Stops. made will be at Sacramento, Reno, Elko, Salt Lake City, Rock Springs, Cheyenne, North Platte, Lin- coln, Omaha, Des Moines, Towa City, Chicago, Toledo and Cleveland. The New York-Chicago-San Francisco route is the longest lighted airway in the world and also has the longest net- work of radio telephone and directive | radio beacon stations. The passenger transports will carry mail, DR. LATANE TO SPEAK AT WILLIAM AND MARY ‘Waltei*Page School Official to Give a Lecture on Federal Constitution. By the Associated Press. ‘WILLIAMSBURG, Va., December 1.— Dr. John H. Latane of the Walter Page School of International Relations, John ‘Hopkins University, will be the James ‘Gould Cutler Foundation speaker at the College of William and Mary tomorrow. Dr. Latane will speak on the subject ;"'nu Constitution and Foreign Rela- jons.” ‘The James Gould Cutler Foundation ‘was established at William and Mary, the interest of stimulating interest in government, while Gov. John Garland Pollard was dean of the Marshall- Wythe Schocl of Government and Citl- zenship. Under the foundation provisions cash prizes are offered each year to the man and the woman in the senior class who compose and submit the best essay on some aspect of the Federal Consti- tuuan, to be assigned by the dean o([ Government School. i uw that some speaker is to be brought to the cnmge for a lecture on the Con- stitution each yeu RESERVE CAMP UNITS ARE TO BE INSPECTED Lieut. Col. Leavitt to Visit Col- leges and Schools Companies December 1 to 10. Special Dispatch to The Star. BALTIMORE, December 1.—] the December 1-10, Lieut. R. H. Leavitt, Infantry, Reserve Officers’ tute, A terry capable of eurryln( 10 autos has been placed in service on the Mis- souri River at Phelps City, uo SPECIAL NOTICES. SRS oAy ghiropodiats. 1 mh -ne from 8: to FLORID) oiuulGl.’s Ehapeirutt, Ganwerines; st Fholesale prices while they Tasts 926 Penna. 'rumtrrmu F EVERY DESCRIPTIO] E Be soid st auction o the highest Bidder 10 irsday, Dec. 10th st. n.w. [ dining suites, dressers, chairs, chinaware. etc. etc. UNITED STA _420 10th St. N.W. TES maranals nle o L miesehl Ruction, €13 "Gst nw wmorn 2, 10 m. Ford “Model ackard, Chevrolet, Dodge, Buick, uux studebaker, Sl body types. C. Snyder, IASSIE TO BE SOLD FOR Encine, No. 1431138 c. 5. Left M :q.&)n by party "‘fn “ioes | im f ‘DEC. 10 SIATEE STORAGE GO ING., Will Rogers HOLLYWOOD, Calif.—We have our Notre Dame and Army game here for our amusement; it's broadcast all over our land. Well, Russia hasn’t got that, ‘but you can tune in over there and get your favorite confes- brnldm(!n by Stalin contml You are about to listen to the eight ex-comrades; these eight well known boys are leaving us scon. But they are put- ting on a farewell program under the auspices of the Soviet Republic to try and impress their fellow- citizens that any time you plan a revolution you better be on the win- ning side. From time to time we will broadcast similar proceedings, just as an educational feature. The boy: wum you good-night, and also STRKERS MAY CUT DANVILLE DEMANDS Wage and Stretch-out Fight to Be Dropped if Union Will Be Recognized. Special Dispatch to The Star. DANVILLE, Va, December 1.—A murky dawn today saw virtually no in- crease over Friday in the number of operatives working in the Schoolfield Mills where approximately 800 men and women passed through the gates under a strong military guard. Five roving squads marched leisurely about the three gates which wére open. While the Textile Union pickets were not organ- ized as they were last week 40 union men were counting those who went in. Union men attended a meeting at their hall yesterday. Edward McGrady in | of Birmingham, Ala., legislative repre- sentative of the American Federation of Labor, spoke and said that bringing ldiers pm?w any strike zone was the ct of an Industrial blackguard.” Militia Untt Withdrawn. ‘While H. R. Pitzgerald, mill siden! declined to make wmwiuw m‘zfiqe h'; sent yesterday to Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, it was learned from ‘Washington that he had told Davis h: could not at this time send representatives from the mill to Wash- mediation. There was what William M who meoeedl Davis in the Hoover ublnet, ‘might do. Martinsville militia unit was fl'.hdnvn yesterday on orders of Col. of reprisals were heard as a result of the housing of non-union workers. Demands May Be,Dropped. A development today was the admis- sion by C. H. Garrison, publicity repre- sentative of the union, that demands for_the restoration of the old wage co.mkmflthenchtanthe-um out system will be dropped, provided the union is Judge Turner it of Pittsylvania Oo\lntyhllluudflnlhlflfllpm it police force this week for leylnnhcotmiytobeemuolledw a trained officer. PAN-AMERICAN PARLEY ON COMMERCE PLANNED Dr. Rowe, Director General of Upion, Announces All Republics and 100 Schools Invited. Dr. Leo S. Rowe, director general of o the Pan-American Union, announced today that the fourth Pan-American Commercial Conference will meet in Wm ”?ctom 5 to flt.hle”dllu Or. ly announcing 5 Rowe said invitations had been sent to all the American MO} (). -—'rhmlnna nlrw:lptud here yes- terday in an open-air meeting and pa- rade organized to encourage consumma- . A Thll Ml osaiad GERMANY 70 HAVE DICTATORSHIP SOON Chancellor Presents Draft of Decree to President Hin- denburg Tonight. BY NEGLEY FARSON. By Radio to The Star. BERLIN, Germany, December 1.— Legal dlcmwfihlp under article 48 of the constitution is virtually assured in Germany. At 6 o'clock tonight Chancellor Hein- rich Bruening presents to President Paul Von Hindenburg a draft of the decree embodying the essentials of his pro- gram. President Hindenburg's signing translates the plan into legal form. He i8 expected to promulgate it tonight or tomorrow before Wednesday's session of the Reichstag. Repeal Protest Likgly. ‘The Hitlerites and Communists are expected immediately to launch a re- peal protest. The strong Social Demo- crats, how:er, are expected to refuse to vote in support of this repeal. The emergency decrecs, therefore, will re- main operative. The draft decree embodies 26 out of 28 proposed financial reforms. One of the two omitted is the tax unification law, which regulates the relations of the Reich with the states and municipali- ties—this, some experts say, encroaches upon the German constitution—and this most important problem in Ger- many’'s tax finances now is expected to be settled by agreements between the Reich and the states. The Reichstag will have the opportunity to vote its|| [l approval. Reduction of Salaries. The other omission is the reduction ||| of salaries and pensions of state offi- || cials and government employes, which, | | according to accepted opinion, involves a change in the constitution. This | may possibly be reworded so it can at a future date be passed as a decree || under Article 48. The draft decree, which President Hindenburg is believed to be certain to sign tonight, also contains certain changes in the emergency decree of last July, which involved the dissolution of the Reichstag.. (Copyright, 1930.) Ex-Minister to Peru Dies. LOUISVILLE, Ky., December 1 ().— Charles W. Buck, 81, retired attorney and formerly United States Minister to and he served four years. Licensed to Wed at Marlboro. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER RO, Md., November 20¢—A marriage license has been issued here to Leslie Alfred George Atwood, 31, of Wi and Addie Bell Gib- son, 21, of Clpiwl Heights, Md. ‘When the fourteenth and fifteenth States were admitted, both stripes and stars were added to the flag. It was realized, however, that the addition of a stripe for each new State would soon make the flag too large, and, therefore, cm;grw in 1818 reduced the stripes DIAMOND BACK TERRAPIN Prepared with Sweet Butter a Served Natural or Marylan 72n0 YeAR 040 Wines Style Dinners, $1.25 and $1.50 S A Pennsylvania Ave. at 1lth Street LR Y Livva pac AN, BRITAIN EXPECTS T0 AVERT STRIKE . C., MUiuaY, bia terms for a possible permanent settle- menl will be disc: efforts of the next few days fail to pmduca n mflement, the miners mmd by uno: kh'g“mult b;nen! Vo ore & m'l.le can be declared. The spread-over would substitute a ’o-workuw-hour fol".ntlht lur the -half-he d by the cnl] mmes ch The mlne openwrn the spread-over is their only Settlement Hoped For tolnmrn-t;: o & reduction in wages. In Prevent National Spread of Scottish Agitation. By the Assoclated Press. LONDON, December 1.—Despite & partial strike in the coal fields of Scot- land, where 92,000 workers are affected, British authorities today had hope that a nation-wide coal strike, threatened for today, would be averted. In Scotland the miners’ federation ordered 92,000 members out Sunday morning, in protest at imposition of the so-called “spread-over” scheme of em- ploymsnt, but many of the workers re- turned to their posts for last night's shifts. The government is doing its utmost to keep work going all over the United Kingdom, if only by daily agreements pending resumption of the miners’ fed- eration conference Thursday, when After all is said and done, the fact still remains that the best possible 0 ’ “See Etz and See Better” | Optometrists 1217 G St. N.W. the answer. Cleansing action of smaller doses effective because you chew it. At your druggists— the safe and scientific laxative, Feen-amint FOR CONSTIPATION WINTER’S BEEN FLIRTING around Washington — and nobody knows when he’s going to settle down here in earnest. safe side—order Famous Reading Marlow today. Better be on the a full supply of Anthracite from Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. NW. unn of home products in preference to ted goods. 418 10th St. N.W. ____ Metropolitan 1845. SCRAPED AND _ FII FLOORS PSRATED e wove o dress. NASH FLOOR GO, 1016 30t st i West 1071, "7 Window Shades 95¢ Genulne $1.80 Quality Hartshorn Water, proof. Cleanable Curtains on yor at Qur factory: any sise up 03678 sizes in proportion. Because ic Brand this suie has bech exiended Dwo weeks. No tel hon- orders. he Shade Factory 307 Gonn._Ave. c!l! Vermont, NI Hlflbilg’lhl" All'l llr {X."0.). points South. = Long-distance mov: ’Dl specialty. Smith’s Transfer & Storage Company. 1313 You St Aliled Van Line Service. Ovmtufl'ed Furniture Cleaned. Let us give you an estimate. A. C. Thour Cleaning Co., Inc., 72838 1ith Bt NE. - Lincein 1363-1308 Van Ness Orange Grove. Special—While They Last Sweet Plorids TREE-RIPENED Granges. for 75c. ‘We have just arrived from Florida. Come and see_u: 219 10th St. N.W. Insist on Tree-ripened Fm!t. Furniture chairing North 3343. _ CLAY ARMSTRgONG MILK FROM THE NAtional 0311 WORLD'S MODEL DAIRY Does He Deserve Any L ess lhan Superior Qua|ity Milk extra rich, extra safe? The very best of everything else is laid at his adoreble feet . . . one else must go without. milk? even when it means some But what of his If your baby is not normal, see your physician AT ONCE. .But if he's apparently thriving on his present diet, change to Superior Quality milk and watch the improvement. It is proven extra rich, extra safe by every known scientific test . . . the milk your baby needs. Place' your order with at first! the spread-over has been accepted by the miners. S A s TEMPLE GREETS LEADER LOS ANGELES, December 1 (#).— Aimee Semple McPherson, evangelist, returned to her pulpit at Angelus | Temple yesterday after an illness of | four months. The church was deco-, rated with flowers and & great banner reading “Welcome Home Our Sister.” Mrs. McPherson entered supported by her son, Rolf McPherson, and spoke two minutes. Many of her followers wept. Few heard her brief message, spoken in a weak voice. ‘The evangelist suffered a nervous breakdown last August. Greet Your Representative in Jooott 1, 1930, SIAM’S DOMAIN LISTED AS LAND MISJUDGED Territory as Large as Spain and Portugal Combined’ Supports Population of 11,500,000. While many Americans connect Siam only with the idea of white elephants, beautiful cats and twins, that country is as big as Spain and Portugal com- bined, has a population of 11,500,000 and has natural resources that would Amoradat Kridakara, Siamese Minister to the United States, declared in a | radio address yesterday afternoon in the | “Conclave ot ‘Nations” program of the Columbia Broadcasting System. Siam, one of the oldest absolute monarchies in the world, is the only nation in Southern Asia that is com- pletely independent of foreign rule, The religion is Buddhism, it has no caste system and the King is unlimited in power. He is the law-giver, the execu- tive and the judge. He is not only the source of temporal power, but the head of the established church, the Siamese Minister stated. Congress With Flowers! 1 Your representative the thought from one “on the Hill” will appreciate of his or her constituents. f Don’t let him or her be the exception when it comes to such remembrances. 1 We're booking lots of orders. National 4905 1407 H Street 3 Doors West of 14th St. support many times that number, Prince | Electric Wcldnng sl‘i::‘l'! IA!.I;;I[ you or a friend forgets the i-Freese and » Split l::’ results call to W. STOKES SAMMONS duPont TONTINE Window Shades Do Not Crack, Pinhole or Fray —and if yeu have window shades in your home made from this wonderful shade cloth you may exfend the reign of cleanliness in your home . .. BECAUSE du Pont TON- TINE is WASHABLE. When soiled, a TONTINE shade is quickly and easily brought back to its original beauty with soap, hot water and a brush, It was in 1776 that our fore- fathers cast off the burden of foreign rulers and began the War of the Revolution. The stately beauty of these colonial pieces in mahogany lend charm to any bedroom. Of course, they are typical of the P. J. Nee Co. con- struction, which means the best. The lovely poster bed, the handsome chest and choice of dresser or vani For generations this group has lived in glory and it is considered by experts typical of the characteristic gracefulness and stern beauty of the people of 1776. e & The extremely low cost of this group (there_are sixty-three matched pieces) make it a real value. The price of the pieces illustrated Maple, the wood of refinement and strength, is used in these lovely colonial pieces. The large pieces and the chair, bench and night table, too, are true historical reproductions. *99 Dresser, $39 294, For Seven Pieces The patriotic character of the men and women who bore the brunt of the hardships and sufferings of that time has been the inspiration of a host of authors and artists since that day. There was good furniture and bad furniture in those days, too And not all the furniture of this epic time has lasted to But the best of the period has endured, and it is these pieces you will see in reproductions on our floors. come down to us. You can buy here now repro- ductions of these historical pieces that are no more ex- pensive than the rank and file of plain furniture. Certainly one interested in good furni. ture cannot help but be aston- ished at the prices quoted on these beautiful bed room e $4.9() us today . . . and Chestnut For Eight Pieces Farms Service begins tomorrow moming . . .« | 1235 10th St. N.W. Metropolitan 2062 t:“mh!lfl,m insures low gt!nting m... are at your service for result-getting publicity The National Capital Press Fhone Reorh b price of this group as shown... groups as.shown. _J Selected as the World's Model Dalry Plant and rated 100% by the District of Columbia % Hesith Department. ‘There are in the store now hundreds of lovely suites and the prices are the lowest we have ever offered. It is mo task to find here frniture that meets yobr pocketbook and your taste. Come early, please. 3 r?e‘tlztgé