Evening Star Newspaper, March 3, 1932, Page 10

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GOOD OIL BURNER NEWS ’ UNITED STATES.| - BURNER - SIMPLE RUGGED EFFICIENT NOW AT PECIAL LOW PRICE NO DOWN PAYMENT ASK US ABOUT IT MAURICE J. LBERT:% NG 1908 M St. N.W. NOrth 0402 Heating Homes for 29 Years DANDRUFF Ends Overnight! There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely, |and that is to dissolve it. This de- | stroys it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordi- | nary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all of | your dandruff will be gone, and two or three more applications will com- | pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. | You will find, too, that all itching | and digging of the scalp will stop in- | stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store and four ounces is all you will need. This simple remedy never falls—Advertisement. | Piles are swollen veins which are sometimes | Broken in the lower end of your bowels. They may cause fistula, abscesses, ulcers and infec- | tion in the rectum. Don't let your piles run on | until you must have s surgical operation. But do not treat them with harsh patent medi- | eines, some of which require the use of hard rubber or metal tubes. For hard things should | pever be put into the tender rectum except | upon the advicoof s phyeician. Ask your drug- | ot for Unguentine Recta] Cones. They bring the same blessed comfort to piles that Unguen- | tine brings to burns and cuts. They sre soft, Elu-m and easy to put in. They quickly re- eve the burning, bleeding, paining, i ching, swelling, bulging piles and revent fection in the rectum. ruggist for Unguentine Rectal what you ask for. —Advertisement. to your WAKE UP YOIR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL | And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go | _ It you feel sour and su world looks punk, don't sw of salts, mineral water, of gandy of chewing um ard expect th to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine et e reason | for your down-and-out feeling is your | liver. It should pour out two of ligpid bile into your bowels d ooddoesn It just decays in bowels. Gas bloats up your stom- g have a thick, bad taste and your breath is fou s out in blemishes. d | you feel dow: Ypur whole | system is poisoned. t takes those good, old CARTER'S LIVER PILLS to get these two freely and make They contain gentle vegetable g when it comes to flow {reely. for liver piils. Ask for Liver Pllls. Look for the - amazing making ‘the bile by name and get | | SHIPS LEFT BEHIND 10 GUARD WOMEN :Dozen Naval Vessels to Stay in Hawaii to Protect Wives and Children. The latest attack upon the wife of a | naval n.an at Honolulu has resulted in a decision by the Navy Department to |leave a dozen vessels, originally sched- | uled to take part in the war games off | the California Coast, at the Hawaiian | naval base to safeguard wives and chil- | dren of the service This was learned yesterday at the Navy Department, where the additional information was gleaned that some 16 submarines and two submarine rescue vessels, now at San Diego, Calif., ready to take part in the war games, will be hustled back to Honolulu, two months ahead of schedule, as another precau- tionary measure. Original plans for the war games call for the ships now left behind at Hono- Iulu to form part of the attacking force, simulating an enemy swooping down upon the Pacific Coast. The subma- rines, which arrived at San Diego ¥ ;lrday, will form part of the defending | force. Will Return to Hawaii. It was planned that these vessels would remain on the California Coast until the middle of May and then be sent back to Pearl Harbor, the Ha- walian naval base. These plans have now been altered to provide that the submarines will return to Pearl Har- bor immediately after the completion of “Fleet Problem 13," as the maneuver embracing the attack upon and defense of the Pacific Coast is officially known. Mrs. J. H. Hope, wife of a machinist’s mate, first class, the latest victim of an attack in Honolulu, is aboard one of the submarines that reached San Diego yesterday. The naval contingent left behind at Honolulu numbers about 850 men. Left behind at Honolulu, because of the unusual conditions, is the U. S. S. Oglala, flagship of minecraft of the Battle Force; four light mine layers, three mine sweepers, one aircraft tender and three submarines, which are undergoing an overhaul period. Admiral Pratt Silent, There are 16 submarines and two rescue vessels in the group that has just | arrived at San Diego and these 18 ves- | sels will return shortly. At the time of the criminal attack upon the wife of Lieut. (Junior Grade) Thomas H. Massie, attached to the sub- marine U. S. S. S-43, Admiral William V. Pratt, chief of naval operations, is- sued his now famous stafement, in which he asserted that American men would protect their women. Today, however, Admiral Pratt was silent on the department’s latest decision to leave a force behind at Honolulu. “Fleet Problem 13" will take place off the California Coast from March 8 to 23. EQUITY RECEIVER ASKED FOR “JUDGE” COMPANY New Jersey Creditor Says $18,994 Is Due for Services and Liabili- ties Total $500,000. | By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 3.—A petition for appointment of an equity receiver for the Judge Publishing Co., publishers of the weekly comic magazne, Judge, was filled in Federal Court yesterday in behalf of Fred L. Rogan of Montclair, N.J. Rogan states that $16,994 is due him for services rendered. His petition was consented to by Hans A. Obst, treasurer for the defendant corporation. ‘The petition sets forth that outstand- notes, accounts payable and other in- debtedness bring the company's lia- | bilities to a total of $500,000 and that, although assets are worth more than that sum, the concern lacks cash and liquid assets with which to meet current liabilities. Rogan suggests that the receiver con- tinue the publication of Judge, which is more than 50 years old. The Irving Trust Co. probably will be THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Principals in “Honor Slaying” MRS. FORTESCUE, AWAITING TRIAL, IS SHOWN WITH DAUGHTER. Mrs. Massie. RS. GRACE FORTESCUE and her daughter, Mrs. Thalia Massie, are pictured aboard the U. S. S. Alton at Pearl Harbor, Honolulu, where they are awaiting Mrs. Fortescue's trial on March 10 as one of four defendants charged with slaying Joe Kahahawal, alleged attacker of —A. P. Photo, POLISH CLERKS STRIKE 100,000 Civil Servants Protest Pay Cut in One-Day Walkout. BERLIN, March 3 (#).—A WarsaW dispatch to Wolff's News Agency said Tuesday that 100,000 civil servants RADIO CO. throughout Poland were on & one-day strike in protest against a decree cut- ting their wages. (The Polish Telegraphic Agency said the strike was called in Warsaw and several provincial citles in protest D. C., THURSDAY, CONGRESS ACTION PLEASES HONOLULU Woman Good Government Leader Comments on Bills Introduced. BY MRS. HARRY KLUEGEL, Chairman, Honolulu Citizens' Organization for Good Government HONOLULU, March 3 (N.ANA)— It is heartening to the members of the Honolulu Citizens' Organization for Good Government to learn that in ac- cordance with their request stated in cables, which went to Senator McKellar February 4, he has had the interest and the initiative to introduce two bills, the rape punishment bill and the pub- lic prosecutor bill, into the Senate with regard to the Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs of the Senate. Our reason for appealing to Col is based directly upon the universanml:- sentment expressed at a previous meet- ing of this organization, and on the outside as well, at the attitude of the territorial legislature at the time this crisis. Proper Responsibility. We desire to say to Congress and %0 American public opinion that there are many citizens here who are capable of doing what is right for the territory at this time: but there are unfortu- nately in the Legislature those mem- bers who are unwilling to assume the proper responsibility. The so-called “refornt bills"—the po- lice bill, the public prosecutor bill and the rape punishment bill, passed by the Legislature and signed by the | Gevernor—are only political subterfuges. | They are paliatives. They do not re- | move politics from the situation; they ! merely transfer politics from one office |to another. These bills are not accept- |able to the best elements in this com- munity. Astonishing Change Seeen. 1t is astonishing by what legerdemain the so-called “business leaders” of Honolulu have now come to the conclu- sion that the ends of justice can be served by appointment of the prose- cutor by the mayor and Board of Super- visors in this Territory, when early in January their desire was to have the against the equalization of the salaries | prosecutor appointed either by the Gov- of municipal workers with those of |ernor or by the Supreme Court directly government employes.) responsible to the Federal Government, THE RADIO THAT TOOK THE NATION BY STORM o The THR set that brought NEW ILLS to radio reception. A set that will give you many hours of extra entertainment, for in ad- dition to the regular programs you can tune in on foreign sta- tions—ships at sea—aeroplanes— police calls and other short-wave broadcasts. A beantiful cabinet of walnut, exquisitely designed. MARCH 3, 1932. that they now ;n:wldlnl for the tment of the prosecutor by the mayor and Board of Supervisors, with all its political impli- cations. Why do the citizens of Hawali have to accept the second or third best from | the Territorial Legislature and the Gov- ernor, when so many hundreds of citi- zens desire the first best with all their hearts? by the Norih A (Coprrish, 108 P Alance: ‘Tae.) American —_—e - LABORITES ATTACK BRITISH WHEAT BILL Fails to Say Who Will Pay Bubsidy for British Growers, Says Amendment Sponsor. of a bill By the Associated Press. LONDON, March 3.—Labor forces in the House of Commons moved rejec- | tion of the Government’s new wheat | quota bill st the beginning Tuesday | of & two-dsy debate on the question | of giving it second reading. | Dr. A Salter, submitting a Labor | amendment, complained that the bill, | while providing for a subsidy to aid | British wheat growers, did not say who | was to_pay it. | Sir John Gilmour, minister of agri- | culture, in a statement of the scheme, of | had sald it provided for no subsidy from the British treasury. The basic principles were outlined as: 1. An increased price for the British wheat grower. | 2. The securing of a market for home-grown wheat of millable quality 3. No encouragement to wheat grow- ing on unsuitable land. . Salter said talk of England go- | ing back to wheat farming was as use- less “as ordering the tide to turn.” ‘The cost of producing English wheat, he said, was about 40 shillings ($9.60 at par) & quarter (eight bushels), as against 15 to 20 shillings in Western Canada and less in Argentina and Soviet Russia. The Board of Trade revealed today that under the new 10 per cent tariff law goods shall not be deemed to have been manufactured in the British Em- | pire unless at least 25 per cent of their | value is derived from British maurlals‘ or work done within the empire. As the boflers are the most part of the heating plapt, they [ arst, even Before the contract |cavation and constryction | butlding. : The boilers HEAT PLANT BIDS ASKED The first major step toward con- struction of & huge central heating plant for most of the downtown Gov- ernment bulldings has been taken by | 14,05, 12OLer PO S plont 1 o o the Treasury in advertising for bids.|in the Southwest section near the new These will be opened March 16 in the | extensibl Agriculture office of the supervising architect Deumm:ntbmmm‘ jidgs Fresh from the Catch Sea food selections at New Center Market are always tempting because of their freshness as if just caught and laid directly on the immacu- late, well kept stands where you see them. The finest and newest of refrigerating equip- ment provides the most modern methods of keeping perishable foods. Quality and Service NEW €ENTER MARKET 5th St. NW., K to L Street named receiver tomorrow, and will thus find itself in the position of manager of two old-time publications, Judge and the Police Gazette. name Carter's Little Liver Pills on the lsbel. Resent a substitute. 35 c at ©1931 C. M. Co.—Advertise- ‘New STEWART WARNER Round-the-World Radio FRENCH CONSOLE 95 will present to you ABSOLUTELY FREE a full quarter-pound of the finest Caramel Pop-Corn you ever tasted, packed in a cellophane bag. ABSOLUTELY FREE with each purchase of Loft Pure Candies amounting to 39¢ or more. There are many kinds of Pop-Corn, but none so pure, fine, and delicious as Pop-Corn! There is some- thing irresistible about this wonderful confection — which has been famous, especially in the West, for nearly a century. Absolutely Free=a full quarter-pound bag of delicious, pure, buttered, Caramel Pop-Corn— with each purchase of P Pure Candies amounting to 39¢ or more. 1107 F STREET N.W. Amazing Trade-in Offer! 10 © 20 Allowance for your old out-of-date Radio Delivers It FREE SERVICE FREE AERIAL CHECK-UP Go straight to the nearest drug store. Buy Mentholatum now. Use it immediately —for quick action! Put just a bit in each nostril to clear your head in a hurry. Rub it vigorously into your chest to prevent or break up ¢ congestion. Radio Service Calls 1 Answered Anywhere in D. C, Nearby Virgiuia or Maryland RADIO 2139-41 Penna. Ave. N.W. Phone West 2968. ...Open Evenings IN TUBE OR JAR L

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