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INFLATION SCAR - DELAVING BUSIESS (}'inancia! Circles Awaiting Action of Roosevelt and Congress. — BY MARK SULLIVAN. Financlal communities in the United ‘».smcs and Eurcpe, watching the Gov- “ernment at Washington, are fearful that tho Government may inflate the cur- by iscue of money not protected a gold base. iption of their state of mind would bsa} they are waiting cautiously until sthey can feel sure there will be no g“inflaticn. This relation between finance Band politics, more than any other one Y*actor, accounts for the present phase f business. It is the smspense that qmekes for inactivity, If i n were " f.absolutely certain, $here would be busi- L ‘mess activity taking“ore form. If ad- ¥ herence to the gold:standard were abso- dutely certain, there would be activity gtaking ancther form. P% The answer depends on President- fw®lect Roosevelt. That there will be no ¥ currency inflation under Mr. Hoover is fully taken for granted. . . Mr. Rootevelt and the Democratic @hLL rm. are specifically pledged to maintain, he platform’s lngunge Y any cos The #nervous financial communities do not ™ csevelt’s fidelity to that ledge has been repeated sevelt to financial leaders have talked with him. That Mr. | velt will be a sound money Presi- | .._nent is not to be questioned. Pressure Is Feared. % Whence comes, then, the caution of fhose who still wait to be sure? Part ©f it arises from a wonder whether the { pressure may be so great that Con- ¢ @ress would enact inflation of cur- & Tency over Mr. Roosevelt's veto. To do -:4hnl would require two-thirds of Con- gress. On paper, as a matter of figures, 'thxs is just faintly conceivable. The i mew Congress, es| the House, !elected in a landslide, and therefore 14 brmgmg in many Dbeneficiaries of ‘Political accidents, will contain an un- Biusl inncher of young men, inex- réperienced men, rresponsxble men and i.gccentric men. The total of these, owever, will be less formidable than % spectacular. Fully four-fifths of the hew House will be the average and ¢ familiar type. It is said that every new Representative from west of the ‘Mississippi believes in either free silver or other inflation of the currency. Even &80, the number is small. On the side =of faith that inflation will not take wlace, it is to be remembered that Mr. = Roosevelt will have exceptional power | wver his party. For the reason that he ~will have a very {strnnngo to give or withhold, and for L the broader reason that the party will ¢ wish to show solidarity and capacity, athere will be, for some months at least, 8 strong disposition to follow Mr, sdRoosevelt’s leadership. The net of all is seems to point convincingly against fation. When a nervous leader of the “financial community is convinced of #4his, he gets back to his apprehensions ™py_ancther path. « It may be ad}n;ltgdflth&{,ht‘he’;e L: “gome possibility of inflation thai not wglirect, but comes about through a # chain of causes. The budget is not being balanced. _'There will be a deficit of about two “pillions in the present fiscal year, end- %ing June 30, next, It is estimated therc “will be another of apward of a billion the next fiscal year. To pay these geficits, _the . “Government.”.ROITOWS q};onc) The @Pgument of the mervous that the Gé¥ernmént may borrow o Zmuch as to rise in doubt whether 244 can repa; “followed by Eoula give rise'to mnon Drastic Cuts Foreseen. As to whether there will be inflation by this path,. everything depends on ‘whether the b)dget will be Balanced. | WThat, again, goes up to Mr. Roosevelt. =iIn his campaign he promised to balance fsthe budget by, among other means, clitting_Government expenses, 25 per ycent. This intention he has repeated “to business .men who have talked to whim within a week. Consequently the Mintention to balance the budget is not | mdoubted. But the nervous remain ®nervous nevertheless. They say that cutting Government expenses by 25 per ent is cxtremely difficult. It involves, Pamong other things, reducing compen- | wsation to veterans. They fear Mr. | "Rocsevelt’s party in Congress may not wiollow him in a course so drastic. large amount of %/ There is one present condition which | Bebe wdends to justify suspicion. The present wCongress has made no serious attempt balance the budget. It has laid no ew taxes. It has made no_ reduction | in expenses to speak of. When the | atter of veterans’ pay was before this ongress, it made no faintest gesture mtoward reduction. This record of the resent Congress creates suspicion in AWo ways. It leaves the deficit un- “emedied, and that is portentous. True, the Democrats are not necessarily | A more 'accurate de- | | of Governors of States and distinguished PLANES AND GIANT NAVY AIRSHIP YHE EVENING TO TAKE PART IN INAUGURATION 30 Bombing and 45 Pursuit Planes to B¢ Sent From Langley Field by Army. The inaugural E-Me will be in the air as well as tm the ground. Plans are made for a huge demonstration of Army and Navy planes during the p-nde the great Navy dirigib ldh’l&flfle :tnd scores of fl(hunl' planes While the Navy has made no definite plans for aerial participation, it is ex- | pected the strength of the Navy in the !air on nauguration day will be as great as that of the Army. Maj. Gen. Paul B. Malone, chle( of announced that 30 bomb pursuit planes and 1 airs] flown up from Langley Field to take part in the aerial show that will accom- I pany the parade, and in addition it is | expected that both Bolling Fleld and [the Anacostia Naval Air Station will swell the number of aircraft part. Army Units Listed. Gen. Malone also announced the Army units which wfll march in ms first division of include the Tvemh In antry Forts Howard and Wi the 34th Infantry, from Fort m G. Meade, Md.; the 13th Engineers, from Fort Humphreys, Va.; the 3d Cavalry, less one squadron, and the machine gun troop of the 10th Cavalry, from Fort Myer, Va.; the First Bat- talion, 16th Field Artillery, from Fort Myer, and the Army Band. The Navy Department today an- nounced ships at the Washington Navy Yard during the inaugural celebration will include the two destroyers, Bain- bridge and Reuben James, of the train- ing squadron, which will bring 120 members of the Atlanta Naval Reserve Battalion to Washington to take part in the parade. The Navy Department also announced two squadrons of 18 pursuit planes each would be sent to Washington from the Marine base at Quantico to take part in the inaugural, and that five big seaplanes, being assembled at Norfolk, Va., for duty at Coco Solo, Canal Zone, also probably would be ready for a flight to Washington about that time. Quantico to Send 700. Quantico also will send, in all, 700 Marines to Washington for the in- augural, 400 arriving by ‘train the morning of March 4 to guard the Capitol and 300 to take part in the parade. Another 100 to take part in the parade, will be supplied by the | Marine Barracks at the Navy Yard. The Marine Band also will take part in the parade Marine Corps headquarters also stated seven officers have been desig- nated Uason officers between governors of States, and the parade marshal, for the parade. They are:Maj. A. C. Dear- ing, who will serve the Governor of Kentucky; Maj. A. D. Rorex, who will serve the Governor of Alabama; Maj. A. H. Turnage, who will serve the Gov- ernor of North Carolina; Capt. W. P. T. Hill, a cousin of Will Rogers and a native of Oklahoma, who will serve Governor of Oklahoma; Capt. James H. Nixon, who will serve the Governor of Florida; Capt. Charles T. Brooks, who will serve the Governor of California, and Lieut. Edward J. Trum- ble, who will serve the Governor of Maryland. Col. Sidney 8. Lee will be in com- mand of the Marines who will guerd the Capitol. 18 Bands Accepted. The Inauj 1 Committee slso an- nbunced ‘today that 18 bands and an equal number of orxnnlntlons have en accepted gx in the third and fourth vlsl.m of the parace. The Parade Committee, of which Col. E. M. Watson is chairman, will continue to receive and pass applications for representation in the line of march be- tween now and February 18, the last | éay for epplication. The final make-up of the parade is expected to be made on that day. ‘The places allotted ave all in the third and fourth divisions, since the first two are automatically limited; the first di- vision to consist of the regular service establichments, the National Guard, ROTCdeMTC ‘while the | second division is to be made un entirely guests. A feature of the fourth division, it was announced today, will be the special float on which will ride famous motion plcture stars, including James Cagney, , Joan Blondell, Douglas Fairbanks, jr, and Loretta Ycung. These players will arrive in the Capitai on March 8 on a “better times” expedi- | tion from the West Coast, according to J. L. Warner, motion picture magnate, yand are coming on tl invitaticn of | President-elect Roosevelt, who extended it during his visit to the film colony last Fall. Boy to Ride Pony Here. The Inaugural Committee also an-| Hralled on to take responsibility until | they are fully in power after Mrach 4. | ®At this point, the suspicious argue | ®|hus: “If the Demox were really de- ned to balance the budget, would wait until March 4 before doing g? If they really meant to cut | cent from Government expenses, d they not begn now?” | Such suspiclon is of course a state 1. The state of mind will prob- inve until fullfilment by the s begh Enough nt to dissipate s . may ®come with Mr. Roosevelt’s announce- wment of his cebinei. If, for example, *he appoints Senator Glass of Virginia | ul rvbody will know | 11l not be inflated, | ill be balanced. 1038.) E et opyritat. —e s B/\LL SPONSORS ADDED Patronesses Are Listed ergency Hospital Aid i to- on in who are act Hospital Alumnae b 10 at the S to be ham | y are Mrs Victor Kaufm: George McClellan, Mrs. Natalie mes Mitchell, n surgeon tronesses include Mrs, Ed- Gann, Mrs. Hamilton Fish, Mrs, ng the | nounced today that Toby Cook, 7-year-| old Chula, Ga., boy, who is planning p to ride his pony all the way from his home to Washington, also will be in the\ line of march. A great admirer of Mr. | Roosevelt, the boy rode his pony 250 miles last Fall to be present when Mr. Rogsevelt made an address in Atlanta. | Young Cook plans to make about 15| miles a day, leaving Georgia about the middle of February. ‘The bands and other orllnmtions‘ which have been placed in the parade are American Club Ringgold Brand, | Reading, Pa.; Boy Scout Trc%p No. 65, Atlanta, Ga.; Clinton County Band, Coe Colleze Military Band, Cedar Rapids, | Iowa; -Jefferson Boys' Band, Mobile, | Ala; Loew's Fox Band, Washington; Massanutten Academy Band, Wood- | stock, Va. Wars, Washington; Richmond Blues, Richmond, Va.; Atlanta Technical High | School Band, Atlanta, Ga.; John O'Don- Inell Marching Club, _ Philadelphia Morning Star Lodge, 1. B. P. O. E. W., | Washington; ~War Mother’s = Band, { Washington: John Marshall High School Band, Richmond, Va.: !loly‘ Comforter's Boys' Band, Washington: Coast Guard Band, Washington; St. John's College Band, Washington Third division: Military Order World | War, Military Order Foreign Wars, Na- | | tional Sojourners, Heroes of "6 and | Reserve Officers’ Association, American | | Legion King's Guard of Brooklyn, N. Y. | Confederate Veterans, Nashville, Ten: | Women's Overseas League, War Moth | ers, Jewish War Veterans, Jersey City, | Morning Star Lodge. ' be | with ‘the committee if the owners already been told of rooms which will thousand Urges Early Notification, “There is no reason why rooms that are vacant now should not be listed or believe they can rented in K meantime. It will be much easier for y - uwmmmmnoruuww find & to stay within the range of etbook. No charge is made M us for any service that we give. mlno“uch:chnacmutoembu thousands of Washingtonians to co- operate in making it a success, and I hope Lhey will do so.” bus and air transportation oomplnles report that the movement toward Washington for the inaugural 1s likely to be very heavy this year. Rear Admiral Cary F. Grayson, in- augural chairman, announced the fol- | lowing members of the Ticket Sales Committee who will handle sales out- side Washington: . D. Jamieson, nrma.n H. Bocorselski, Ethel M. arks, Margaret K. Rauber, P. J. Bchlrdt and thl Spl'ill& MONETARY BACKING WITH SILVER URGED Cross Bill Would Direct Treasury to Maintain Metal’s Price. | By the Associated Press. Making silver a moretary reserve was advocated before the House Coinage Committee today by Representative Cross, Democrat, of Texas, as some- thing that would “preserve for us huge markets” in the Orient and the West- ern_Hemisphere. “If we but enable them to get in a position to buy our products by ghflni Some purchasing power to their money,” he said, “our industry and markets will flourish.” A bill by him, pending along with many others on silver, would let the Secretary of the Treasury buy silver at the market price and pay for it with certificates whenever the ratio between gold and silver is less than 14.38 to 1. Because of statements that the United States might lose money when the price of silver dropped, Howard, Democrat, of Nebraska, 1 “Might not that loss be infinitesimal by comparison with the gain in trade?” “Unquestionably yes,” Cross replied. “There are untold millions of mme customers in Asia, America and Central America and they will not build factorles unless they have Yet we it here IM T f he: de] x& that tr-de g nlded hat his bill would pre- vent losses by Treasury because of the provision that whenever the value of the monetary reserve silver dropped 10 per cent below the face valye of the outstanding certificates more silver must be purchased by the Government. He insisted that under his plan it would be impossible for gold to bring a E:emium or for much of that metal to withdrawn from the United States. PASTOR OF 4 CHURCHES REDUCES HIS OWN SALARY Rev. A. L. Boliek of Near Luray Eliminates Pay Until Condi- tions Improve. Special Dispatch to The Star. LURAY, Va, Fepruery 6—Rev. A. L. Boliek, pastor for a number of years of four rural and mountain churches, has voluntarily cut his own salary. Mem- bers of his family refused to comment, but members of his congrrgation say | that he asked them to remain a few minutes after church yesterday and after asking them to have faith told them that until times improved he would do_without his usual payment. Mr. Bollek’s son, Glenn Boliek, is paswr of St. Mark’s Lutheran Church in Luray and he has another son in the mmlstry in Columbia, S C. 'MAN ADRIFT IN CRE CREEK | SEVERAL HOURS RESCUED New Alexandria Man, Attempting to Cross Hunting Creek, Had Only One Oar. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star, ALEXANDRIA, Va., Frbruary 6.— Philadelphia Harmonica | After being adrift on the Potomac River | Band, Philadelphia; Veterans of Foreign | in a rowboat with only one oar for several hours last night when he at- tempted to cross Hunting Creek from Jones Point to. New Alexandria, John Driver of New Alexandria finally suc- ceeded in getting his boat alongside a dredge on the Maryland shore while harbor police and private craft sought in_vain to rescue him. The police boat Charles E. Evans lo- ' cated Driver aboard the dredge two | | hours after harbor a message reporting him adrift. suffering from exposure, out little the worse for his experience. RAILWAY SHUTS DOWN BELFAST, Northétn Ireland, Febru- r (DY lice had received | He was | STAR, WASHINGTO ASSEMBLY TO OPEN [TS SECOND MONTH Maryland Legislators Have Fixed Hearing Schedule for This Week. BY GECRGE PORTER, Staff Correspondent of The Star. schedule of hearingz on their calender, assuring little loss of time during the coming week. Five hours before the House and Senate convened the Ways and Means |Commmec of the House inaugurated the week’s activities with a hearing for |0.hg oppenents of two bills designed to Increase the license fees for r_lum stores. After tonight's session of the Assem- bly, the Prince Georges delegation will eonter with representatives of the vnn- ous incorporated towns over the tion of how much the munici uu will receive for street work if the county road levy is and the money for road maintenance furnished by the State Roads Commission from the gaso- line tax ru:elg:.s The wn(crence WAS arranged by Delegate Willlam F. Keys. Hearings Are Tomorrow. Tomorrow the Ways and Means Com- | mittee will conduct hearings for rep- resentatives of ferry companies who are interested in certain biils, and also for officials of the Board of State Aid and Charities, who will be questioned | concerning items in Gov. Ritchie’s| budget, totaling nearly $2,000,000, for| various State-aided institutions. State Supt. of Schools Albert 8. Cook will appear before the Sen- Itehfinmee Committee tomorrow to in | of Prince Georges County, the commit- tee has mapped out & definite program for each day, although no further hear- ings have, as yet, been listed for the week. Tomorrow night the Prince Georges delegates will confer with Chief of Po- lice .v J. Crowley regarding revision of the county police laws, including the authorization of an increase in the present force from 11 to 16 men. Sweep- ing changes in the present system of police and constables are advocated by some members of the delegation and will undoubtedly be discussed at the hearing. In addition to Chief Crowley, several | other police officials and possibly some constables and magistrates are expected to attend this hearing. The constables and magistrates are opposed to the | multiple warrant bill, introduced by the entire delegation last week, which would allow them only one fee in cases where several warrants were issued as a result of a single incident. Brought County $3,500 Fines. One constable said the county had recelved $3,500 in fines from cases | which he had brought into court in the past four months, while his fees in that time totaled only $200. A re- duction in those fees, contemplated by the bill, would be unfair, he claims. Appropriations requested in :he bud- get for the University of Maryland, and the request for $478,000 for new build- ings at the College Park institution trom the propesed $2,523,000 State bond issue will be explained before the Ways and Means Committee by H. C. Byrd, vice president of the university, O e sy, e e sm House Judi¢lary Committee will hold & hearing on the Jury service for Women bills Delegates of Montgomery xander Goodman of Baltimore City Several other hearings are carded for the week by non-financial committees of the House and Senate. GETS J0B, BUYS TOGS AND DIES IN CRASH Taxi Driver, on Way Home With Presents, Is Killed When Car and Bus Collide. After obtaining a job driving & cab | in Washington, u-rg!rcssler, 38, was killed ln a Philadelphia suburb.yester- day while returning to his former home in Atlantic City with an automobile loaded with presents for his wife and | young children. | Bressler, whose Washington address | was 1214 I street, died almost instantly | when the cab he had borrowed from his |e gluyer collided head-on in Norwood with a bus. The impact demolished the cab and ‘wlth it a baby’s crib and & number of | toys the father was taking home. Bressler came to Washington recently and found work with the cab company. He had lived for the last three months at the I street address while trying to save money to bring his family to ‘Washington. Bressler's body was identified by his brother, Samuel, of Philadelphia. The bus driver, Lewis Pratt of Somers Point, N. J, was held in $2,000 bail pending | action of the coroner, according to the Associated Press. Several windows in the bus were shattered and the passengers shaken, but none was injured. | PAY A LITTLE DOWN WHEN D. C, MOXDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1933. THE WHITE MAN’S BURDEN FOUR STUDENTS FOR "EXAMINATION BURGLARY™ 'Maryland U. Publication Demands Expul- sion of Quartet—Charges “Wholesale ‘Cribbing’ and De By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. COLLEGE PARK, Md., February 6. — Four University of Maryland Students, | W! who, it is claimed broke into a pro- fessor's room in search of midyear, enmlnuon pnnen ‘have been- heqt on probation and reprimanded, announced by officigls of the mtitumn today, as the weekly student publica- tion chmmed editorially for their ex- pulsion, declaring there is “wholesale ‘cribbing’ and deceit” at the university and "en‘mth wl:r;‘hn{mbecome an lccepted act on aryland campus.” h officlals refused to disclose he nlmu of the students punished, or of the professor whose offce was searched, they revealed an investigation by the Faculty Committee on Examina- tion Procedure had shown that one of the students had received treatment at the unive’rflt{nl infirmary at 3 o'clock in the morning for a lacerated hand. The quartet deemed guilty of the bur- glary consisted of three freshmen and a sophomore, the official statement said. They were punished by being given & failure for the semester in the course which the professor taught, forced to apologize to the professor, placed on probation and required to report regu- Za;lg' to the dean of their college, de- nied the privilege of attending athletic or social functions of the university, and required to share egually in the cost of rePlJring the professor's office. In its leading editorial, “The Dia- mondback,” weekly student publication edited by Willlam Needham of Wash- ington, says these measures “are cer- tainly not calculated to curb a vicious and morale-destroying practice of many years standing.” “‘Professors’ offices are broken into with pitiful regularity,” the editorial continues, “Thus far. in the event the culprit is apprehended, he will be faced ——— e Phone NAt. 0830 Reduced Fares O.W. Reupholstering 5-Piece Parlor Suites... Antiques 3-Piece Overstuffed Suites Dining Room Chairs [ J R.F.C. LOAN ASKED FOR POTOMAGSPAN $2,860,000 Is Requested for Charles-King George County Bridge. Sponsors of the long-sought bridge across the Potomac River, to connect Charles County, Md.,, with King George County, Va, have applied to the Re- construction Finance Corporation for a loan of $2,860,000 with which to launch the project, it was reported here today. ‘The bridge, about 9,300 feet lopg with a draw of the bascule type, would extend from a point on the shore pear Pope’s Creek to on the opposite shore, - Total of the enterprise is estimated at $3,365,000. Nearly 500 men would be em- ployment on the ltrmn lpproxlmlu ! years, fi Aln.hurlty for mw.l of the span t in introd in the Maryland General by gton-Wakefleld Ml- morial Bridge, Inc., of which Dr. Hi H. Young is listed as ident. Jo H. Machll lormer cl Meryland _State and Bennett Crain are associated with the corporation, Itu'.hepuueyofumn.lflb make loans for such projects under ;;u-xgxumv.m‘" provisions of the Joan INSULL ENJOYS FREEDOM Former Utilities Operator Given Full Liberty by Gre ATHENS, February 6 (#).—The min- istry of interior announced yesterday that Samuel Insull, former 0 utilities operator, enjo full ufi of movement in Greece and that he is rm to leave the country should he so Greek courts last December 27 fused a request for the extradition of Mr. Insull to Chicago to face charges a::eh followed the collapse of hiis utili- Subsequently the American legation in Athens annouriced that, lctlu instructions from Washington, Mr. sull's passport had been canceled, that time he said he had no mnua: of leaving the country. $500,000 FIRE Explosion Starts Blaze at - Tie- Truung Plant. N- Darling in the New York ‘Herald-Tribune, ON PROBATION Copyright, 1933, New York Tribune, Ine. lege for every freshman olled in this university? If a college man, supposedly here in search of 2n education, can so divert his mind as to search for exam papers instead, his right to that educa- flgn should be forfe 4 CHURCH HEADS ELECTED lpechl DispatoHi to The Star. ‘Md., February 6.—The First S Ed- * 1 Church has elected these officers: ciet 1n LEditorial. with nothing more serious than proba- Ucn and the failure of a single course— !.w; ith only the posaibtlity of more dmil-lc lcflnn “Is that the sort of policy destined to Wl /i the first year of col- drews; trustees, Chester Phair, "Luther Brownxn. mhmmn Elmer Mallonnee; . W. Waters; Finance Com~ Van Diver attributed his escape to E. |the fact that he had ‘The Comforts of the American Home IT IS a well-known fact that, home for home, the American house- hold has more comforts and conveniences than that of any other nation. In foreign lands the modernized dwelling is found only in the better sections of the larger cities. In America, even in remote rural districts, you find the radio, the vacuum cleaner, washing machines, up-to-date heating systems, teles phones and numberless labor-savitig appliances. There is a well-kept look about residence, store or outbuildings with an atmosphere of prosperity and content. Did you ever stop to realize why this is so; how this eonditios was brought about? It is largely due to advertising. Andahg“.d&“ belongs to newspaper advertising. 'a, o \nrJ Huidekoper, Mrs. Herbert Sl()- |N.J.: s Mabel T. Boardman Fourth division: American Club of | Chapman, Mrs. Franilin Reading, Puya;wce;u(l:\ ve;;:nd Acso- | rd Hillyer, Mrs. Victor Cush- | ciation, New Yorl um MOCTBUC | o vers in ter have been on strike Cary T. Grayson, Mrs. |Club, Mount Rainier, Md.. Prin‘e| aymoey g v‘(’el:k in protest against a v S. White, Mrs. William Lips- | avm’s:vsncour;;: Dem(‘:flfléllft C‘\lbm}; wage cut. eomb and Mrs. Eleanor Wine. ashington, Democratic Club (cig] Lo Ao district), Philadelphiz, Pa.; Dating from tomorrow, notices will J : ot Chub of Patiageipbis. o0 DS Doaied ImnilIKing She e ioesitl FUGITIVES GIVE UP Seek Rooms to Rent. lower paid workers of the line, all of Mrs. Blair Benister, chairman of the | ¥IOm have remained loyal to the com- Three of Five Who Fled Lock-|Inaugural Commitiee on Housing and | PAnY during A Hospitelit-, made another appeal to 5 port Fail Return. Washingtonlans who have space for L. C. Cassidy Commissioned. T,DCICPORT. N. Y. inaugural visitors to register With her| oS Col oo George. lmvn tk committee, which maintains offices in the Willard Hotel, to obviate any de. | town University law professor, who Was urday night gave themselves up at the Jail here last night. pe and d for | & candidate last year for the Demo- Foomms o, ccommidate he. thousangs | Cratisc nomination for Senator from i who are expected here for the ceremony | Pennsylvania was commissioned today S They applied for food yesterday at|and celebration. as a captain in the United States Ma- home of John Hodges, in Niagara| Mrs Banister pointed out that at|rine Corps Reserve and assigned as ad- its. " Hodges fed thegn, hgard their| the rate rooms are being registered, it | jutant to the 20th Regiment of Ma- n'\rv persuaded them to give them- appears there will be a last-minute | rines here. Jeelves up and drove them to Jail i bis| an. which will create uncomfortable | "gto. g conditions both for the visitors and | The prisoners had gained the freedom | {fose who seek to sccommodate them. | of a cell block and when a guard ap- ared they threw. a blanket over his ad, locked him in a cell and with his “If the Committee on Housing an< ' h)s unlocked doors to freedom. FURNITURE IS RETURNED Thereafter A LITTLE EACH MONTH WILL DO! WOOL TAPESTRY-FRIEZZA BROCADES AND DAMASKS Also Chair Caneing and Porch Rockers Splinted by Our Experts at New Low Prices Estimates and Samples Given Free.. Write, Phone or Call ME. 2062 or ~icur prone CL. 0430 CLAY ARMSTRONG it - Upholstering Street N.W. Justifying Your Confidence Is Our Success s e . T 0 ) e e S NSRS ) L ary 6 (#)—The Great Northern Rail- e last night announced the virtual closing down of the system. Rallway Stop and think how many of the foods you eat, the tiiings you wear and other articles entering into your every-day Kfe, you first v heard of through newspaper advertisements. You will then realize what a part they do play, or should play, b your daily life. Read the advertisements in the newspapers regularly thoroughly, if you are not already doing so. They mean more to you than you can tell. ‘Women in Novels to-Be Topie. ‘Women of Dickens’ novels will be re- vewed in a program of the business cnd Professional Women’s Club tomor- (0w et 8 pm. et All Souls' Unitarian Church, Sixtaenth and Harvard streets. - | Mizs\Ada Louise Townsend will be the said, “it is vital that Washi T e tare o available he co “mmodetion of inautural “Milk has been uu»"cutuny !mun for l 1 ak cnta et cur A Wiorage in’ Bombe v, India. - g Hospltlllly is to perform its function.’ —_—