Evening Star Newspaper, June 30, 1931, Page 33

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GUNTHER BREWS In hot weather theré is nothing better Try a Baule With Yoar Dinner Tonight —or Order a Case From One of the Fol- g et The Geo. Gunther, Jr., Brewing Co Baltimore, Md. Phone Wolfe 005C Just Think of It— The Star delivered to your door every evening and Sunday morning at 1'sc per day and 5¢ Sunday. Can you afford to be without this service at this cost? Telephone National 5000 and de- livery will start at once. HERE'S INSTANT RELIEF —24 HOUR COMFORT How wonderful your aching feet feel| the minute you put them in a TIZ| bath. Instant relief. You can just fecl | comfort — comfort that lasts for 24| hours—soaking in as ache and pain are | drawn out. Acids and poisons—the cause of pain, burning, itching, bad odors and swelling—ar> _des royed\. Tired muscles revived and _soothed. Tender feet made hardy—ready to| carry you happily on your way. All| drugglsts sell TIZ tablets. Beauty is given @ new significance..speed and ease of operation @ new meaning...in the New Model No. 6 NAVY LEADS ARMY IN AIR PROGRAM Four-Fifths of 1,800 Military Planes Are Completed as Fiscal Year Begins. ‘The dawn of the new fiscal year this week will find the Navy's five-year air- craft building program completed, but the Army program falling behind sched- ule because of appropriation shortages. The Navy program has been com- pleted at a cost $23,000,000 below the original estimates. The Navy now has 1,000 modern airplanes on hand, the last of them having been delivered last week. The actual cost has been approxi- mately $62,000,000, as sgainst an antici- pated cost of $85,000,000. Only part of these 1,000 airplanes is available for immediate combat service, Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, chief of the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics, pointed out. One-third of the number is off the active list, either withdrawn | for routine overhaul or held in reserve. ‘The remaining two-thirds includes a large number of training planes useless for combat duty. | The unexpected economies effected in | carrying the program to completion, Admiral Moffett said, are due to better construction of the planes. Increase in skill of personnel and standardization of equipment also have helped. It is propesed to maintain the strength of naval aviation at the total |of 1,000 planesg by providing replace- ment for planes which may be de- stroyed by accident or condemned as obsolete. This will be provided in pro- posals for the coming fiscal year. | The five-year program of the Army | Air Corps calls for 1,800 “serviceable” planes. The end of the fiscal year to- | morrow finds the program four-fifths | completed. Appropriations for the com- | ing fiscal year, however, were trimmed ‘so low that the Air Corps cannot complete the five-year program during the next year. Another difficulty in carrying out the | Army program has arisen over the defi- nltlon of the meaning of the term “serviceable.” The Air Corps and the| Secretary of War hold that the term applies only to planes actually in flying condition and not to airplanes which are in depots undergoing routine over- haul and repair. Records show that 1215 per cent of the Army's planes are continuously in depots for overhaul and repair purpafes and that consequently to maintain a force of 1,800 planes in | flying condition, the total must be fixed | at 2,058 planes. R years it has been the objective of development activities in Underwood Laboratories. For months the details of its construction, the perfection of its new features, the records of its startling performances have been closely guarded secrets in the great Underwood Plant. But now it’s here...ready to serve you — the new Under- wood Standard Model No. 6. Here is greater typewriter value for your dollars than ever before. All the basic principles that have made Under- wood the choice of the business world today, have been retained — and important features added. The New Model No. 6 is revolutionary in performance be- cause of developments that add to its production possibilities. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1931. By the Associated Press. ST. JOSEPH, Mo. June 30.— Fire Chief Leo Urbanski went out on s mis- sion of mercy and came home with a boat load of par-bolled fish, He gave the 30 fish of Lake Contrary their first taste of cool water in several days Sunday and they went on a spree. PSixty thousand are estimated to have perished when the torrid sun all but th FISH IN HEAT-RIDDEN POND NEARLY SWAMP RESCUE BOAT| (N WEIZMANN RULE St. Joseph Fire Chief Brings Cool Water and Returns With Heavy Load. { dried up the lake near here, leaving & mere puddle of luke-warm water. The beleaguered survivors were treated to fresh city water at the rate of 600 gallons a minute. Chief Urbanski and some of his fire-fighters laid a hose across the mud-flat and stayed out in the boat awaiting developments. Before they could get ashore 150 pwunbd:‘ tut disporting fish jumped into e DETROIT IS SEEKING DOLE BURDEN RELIEF Wants Industries Qutside of cny Yo Assist in Charity for Unemployed. By the Associated Press. DETROIT, June 30.—The city of | Detroit is making a move to place a portion of the burden of unemploy- ment doles on the big industries located outside the corporate limits of the city. ‘The llx‘gest of these industries is the Ford Motor Co. which recently has engaged In a contrcveny with Mayor Frank Murphy over the efficiency of the dole system, which has spent $18,- 500,000 during the last year giving relief to families of unemployed men. The | mayor frequently has criticized in- 'duamu which are not city taxpayers, but which employ large numbers of Detroit residents, some of whom when out of work draw doles. The Ford Co. retaliated with charges of mlsmlnls:- ment of and fraud against the - troit public welfare department, which administers the dole. Tomorrow in special session the City Council will consider a resolution which would request the Board of Supervisors of Wayne County to assume the full burden of poor relief for Detroit and all of the 24 other municipalities in | the_county. | The resolution, its sponsors say, will |pass. Under the Michigan form of county government, city officials and other residents of Detroit have a nar- row majority on the Board of Super- visors. This, Councilman John S. Hall | declared, means that there is a good chance of the county's accepting the turden. Should the plan succeed the cost of CARRIAGE FRAME... increases sturdiness... reduces vibration...in- oures perfect alignment. FIVE-POINT DECIMAL TABULATOR.... creasing speed and case in| LINE SPACE LEVER spasing. BACK SPACE KEY LEVER...Pesitive in operation. KEY LEVERS... touch. STAR WHEEL SHAFT... Assures perfect horizontal alignment. KEY LEVER key, inereases ease of operation. SPACE BAR...Controlled by studs that eliminate waste motion. And many important additional features It’s faster than ever because of the further development of the speed writing principles that for twenty-five years doles in the city next year would be logged off the city tax rate and, to- er with the rellef for the rest of (hn county, would be added to the county rate. This would mean that the taxpayers of Detroit will pay a bit less, while a considerable sum will be added to the tax bill of property own- ers outside the cit; Irish Free State's first domestic loan, flolud & year ago, has brought in $28.- ITHS l’ G LOCAI.II.ONG mmna ‘ CRATING PACKING 8 SHIPPING ARINIS ALLIED vk Liees RUGS FUMIGATED AND svonsnmnum l!lS YOU TREI NVV. PHONE NORTH -3 342 434 OR lHANmD AND STORED Four-Polnt suspension of Provide even more respomsive LOCK RELEASE...In the form ofa have made the Undérwood the machine of champions. The main frame is lower. There is a refreshing new beauty in the ‘new sweeping curve of its lines. A five- point decimal tabulator is in close proximity to the numeral keys— where it belongs. It stands on substantial rubber feet that absorb all vibration. Key levers of new design provide greater typing ease... lighter touch. respond to even You must see the new Underwood Standard to appreciate it...you may see it today at any Underwood Branch...you should see it as the first step toward greater typing efficiency. UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER COMPANY, 342 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. Branches in all large cities The NE W MODEL No. 6 T 1T A SEE 'S w Yor 131“’ . We ‘:ve“ " office arlpt-fl"‘“'"'”w ZIONISTS ARE DIVIDED Coalitions Sought by Backers and Opponents on Eve of Seven- teenth Congress Opening. By the Associated Press. BASLE, June 30.—The Jewish Tele- graphic Agency said yesterday that ihel 2“ delegntes to the seventeenth Zionist mann, whose leadership and policies are bound up with all uu problems facing the congress. Of the delegates the general Zionists or Centrists have 87, the Laborites 80, the Revisionists 50, Orthodox Zionists 34 and the Rudl;a;l:n g, ‘The general ists were reported divided on the question of Dr. Weiz- mann’s leadership. A majority of their 87 delegates, including most of the Americans of the present administra- tion, known as the Brandeis group, were seeking a coalition of all parties incind- ing the revisionists, the opposition to the Welzmann regime, but eliminating Dr. Weizmann and his supporters. How to enable the General Zionists to present a united front was considered at & meeting of the American delega- tion in which the Welzmannisis and Brandelsists participated. SACKETT WINS HONOR Ambassador Made Member of In- stitute of Foreign Politics. BERLIN, June 30 (#).—Frederic M. Sackett of Louisville, Ky. United States Ambassador to Germany, has been named an honorary member of the Institute of Foreign Politics, holding its tenth anniversary meeting at Hamburg. The citation referrec to him as “the worthiest representa- tive of a great people which while confident of its own powers has faith in the strength of others.” Thomas N. Perkins of Boston and Walter P. Cooke of Buffalo also were named honorary members, lly‘.;;lle Towels and Toilet Tissues Prevent Contaglous Discases - ing in Schools, Factories and Homes ‘The Oregon Manufacturers’ tion has announced the invention by M. L. Bowman, Portland, of & mhlne leaning i3 for dry cleaning fruit. Cl accomplished by & series of revolving o oo Vi Invents Fruit Dry Cleaner. PORTLAND, Oreg., June 30 (#).— Associa- SUFFERING ~ FEETI That's [lntc soft rubber First Mortgage Loans When you Invest in these 6% First Mortgages of ours you can know in advance just exactly what the return will be, and that the principal is amply secured. May be purchased in amounts from $250 up. F. SAUL cCoO. 2100 925 15th Bt. N.W. mens—for 31 years, Made by the sur- gical dressing house of MQTHERS—ALWAYS INSIST UPON 3-POINT SAFETY... 1—PURITY . . . Washington bakeries use none but the very finest quality ingredients in their breads and other products. 2—PROTECTION bakeries are regu- llrly. inspected for sanitation cleanlin D -C. partment. NESS Washington made by and ess by our and baking. Health De- In the Bread You Give Your Children ... .! Remember—Union Baked Bread Is Best — Always! 3—WHOLESOME- . Wash- ington “breads are UNION BAKERS. . .masters of scientific mixing who KNOW HOW to make fine breads. NO BREAD SOLD IN WASHINGTON Except That Made in Washington CAN GUARANTEE YOU ALL THREE! 7 ssociated “BAKERS” Local Union No. 118 It is immediately apparent to all Washington mothers that they must buy ONLY locally made, UNION BAKED, safe bread for the sake -of their family’s health and welfare. TO MAKE SURE . . . LOOK FOR THE BAKERY ADDRESS ON THE WRAPPER Regardless of where it was made or in m is. the name and address of any ington bakery! Then you KNOW :JNIION BAKED-—-flu BEST bread you uy Bakery Unions “BAKERY SALESMEN’S” Local Union No. 33 Indorsed by the Washington Central Labor Union

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