Evening Star Newspaper, April 19, 1933, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CHEST TRUSTEES ELECTION APRIL 28 Contributors to Have 95, or Three-Fourths of Number, From Organizations. esentatives of contributors to! fhe. Community Chest will be elected | to the board or trustees of the organi- | gation at the annual meeting of the Community Chest Friday night, April 28, in the auditorium of the United States Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Frederick H. Brooke, chairman of the committee arranging the meet- ing, said contributors will name 95 trustees, or three-fourths of the number representing the 63 institutional mem- gers of the chest, each of which is en- titled to one board member and one executive on the board. Nominations for trustees will be pre- sented by the Nominating Committee, consisting of George Hewitt Myers. chairman; Allen Pope, Dr. John R. ‘Hawkins, Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro and Joseph D. Kaufman. Additional nom- inations may be made by petitions signed by at least 20 contributing mem- bers and presented to Elwood Street, director, before April 28. Election of trustees, according to the by-laws of the Chest, shall be by sec- ret ballot, the polls to be open at the Chamber of Commerce Building from 9 am. until the business portion of the annual meeting. A ballot box will be provided and a_committee of five tellers will count the ballots and report to the meeting the names of those elected. Instftutional members of the Chest will elect their own representatives for the board of trustees. Nominati for members representing contributors were announced today by Chairman Myers | s follows Miss Grace Abbott, Lieut. Col. Henry O. Atwood, Dr. Frank Ballou, H. A. Bellows, Mrs. Harry S. Bernton, Frank A. Girgfeld, Dr. E. A. Bocock. Y. E. Booker, Mrs. Frederick H. Brooke, Mrs. Thomas Edwin Brown, Gov. Thomas E. Campbell, Wilbur J. Carr, John W. Childress, Mrs. Dwight Clark, George J. Cleary, Judge James J. Cobb, Ed- ward F. Colladay, James E. Colliflower, John Colpoys, Mrs. Wilson Compton, Mrs. Coralie F. Cook, W. S. Corby, James A. Councilor and Rev. W. L. Darby. Frederic A. Delano, Charles Elliott, Joshua Evans, jr.; W. W. Everett, Wil- liam J. Flather, jr.; Robert V. Flem- ing. Right Rev. J. E. Freeman, J. Louis Gelbman, C. C. Glover, Mrs. Charles A. Goldsmith, E. C. Graham. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d; Mrs, Cary Gray- son. Rev. Dr. Francis J. Haas, Col. West A. Hamilton, John H. Hanna, Dr. John R. Hawkins, Arthur Hellen, Mrs. Arch- ibald Hopkins, D. C. Howard, Coieman Jennings, Samuel H. Kauffmann, Jos- eph D. Kaufman, Wayne Kendrick, John C. Koons, Dr. James P. Leake, E. W. Libby, T. P. Littlepage, Sidney B. Lust, Arthur D. Marks, Lanier P. McLachlen, Marvin M. McLean, Bishop John M. McNamara, Lowell Mellett, ‘W. W. Millan, Prof. Kelly Miller, Wal- ter Mitchell, jr.; William Montgomery, Dr. Harold G. Moulton, George Hewitt Myers, A. G. Neal, Dr. Charles P. Neill, Newbold Noyes, Mrs. John Jay O'Con-' nor, Eleanor Patterson, Allen Pope, | Walter Pratt, Dr. Luther Reichelderfer, H. L. Rust. j Rabbi Abram Simon, Dr. W. W. Stockberger, L. Corrin Strong. Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro, Cor- coran Thom, S. Percy Thompson, Hugh ‘Thrift, Mrs. Charles Tompkins, Joseph P. Tumulty, John F. Victory, Maj. En- nalls Waggaman, Capt. Chester Wells, ‘W. W. Wheeler, Garnett C. Wilkinson, Mrs. J. K. Williams, George S. Wilson, Lloyd B. Wilson, Mrs. Luke 1. Wilson, Carter G. Woodson, J. Bernard Wyc- koff and Edward G. Yonker. P KITE TOURNAMENT HELD YESTERDAY Model Aircraft League of District Sponsors First Preliminary Contest. The first preliminary contest of the annual kite tournament sponsored by the Model Aircraft League of the Dis- trict, with the co-operation of the pub- lic schools and the District playground departments, was held yesterday at the ‘Takoma Manor Park and Seaton Park The winners at the Takoma Manor Park were Paul Hamm of Group 1, Class A: Ben Banger, Group 2, Class A; Dor- othy Kay, Group 1, Class B; Claude Owen, Group, Class C, and_Thomas Navin, Group 2, Class D. Those at Seaton Park were: Lorenzo Baker, Group 1: James Bruce, Group 2, and Horace Brown, Group all of whom ‘were entered in Class A. Jane Austin, Dorothy Trout, F. L. Harries, Frank A. Frost, R. H. Heald and Charles E. Combs were the judges for Divisions 1 to 9, while Roscoe Orme, J. T. N. Wilkinson, Walter English, Mrs. ‘Tams and A. P. Brent judged the Divi- sions 10 to 13. Further preliminary contests will be held today, tomorrow, Friday and Sat- urday, and on April 29 and May 6 with | the finals planned for May 20. PREACHING WINS MERCY FOR MOONSHINE CONVICT Federal Judge Warns Prisoner to Stick to Gospel—Plant Was Elaborate. By the Associated Press. PADUCAH, Ky., April 19.—“Stick to preaching.” Federal District Judge Charles 1. Dawson yesterday advised R. Adolphus Walker, who since his arrest, charged with operating an llicit still, has taken up spreading the gospel. Otherwise, the judge added, Walker might get a “chance to be chaplain in a penitentiary.” Walker said he would follow the court’s advice. Walker was given a year and a day suspended sentence and Bert Dyer, Jointly accused with him, got six months on probation i The still, which officers said was the | largest ever taken in Western Ken- tucky, was found in Calloway County, operated under the name of the “Cen- ter Ridge Distilling Company.” Around it signboards bore an elaborate code | of rules for employes, even one cau- tioning them to take off their hats | before ladies. DORMITOR.Y BURNED i OLEAN, N. Y., April 19 (#)—Fire :t! £t. Bonaventure College last night wrecked Lynch Hall, boys’ dormitory 2nd oldest building on the grounds. The Joss is estimated at between $50,000 and £75.000, partially covered by insurance. The fire started in the clock tower of ' the three-story brick building. The cause was not known. Students said painters were at work in that part of the building earlier in the day. Because of the Easter vacation, there were few students in Lynch Hall, which normally houses approximately 200 aventures a loss ®f about $1,000,000 on May 5, 1930. g Bank Account 75 Years Old. SAN FRANCISCO, April 19 (#).— John H. P. Gedge's bank account reached its diamond anniversary yes- terday. Gedge, when 15, started an ;ceougt,‘with the San Francisco an-’ ings Union, a predecessor of the Amer- can Trust Co., and yesterday received cong:mhflnm of Fred Elsey, president o!m zhsnk_,s , for having maintained 0‘1: account years. Gedge came here 849, when he was 6 years old. PATRIOTS' DAY EMPHASIZES VOTELESS DISTRICT'S PLIGHT Capital Remains Without Representation 150 Years After Revolution Won It for American Colonies. BY JAMES WALDO FAWCETT. This is Patriots’ day. Throughout the United States it is being celebrated with appropriate ceremonies. It marks the sesquicentenary of the termination of the Revolutionary War, the end of the long struggle for independence. It also marks the 158th anniversary of the beginning of that memorable contest. The battles of Lexington and Concord were fought on April 19, 1775; George Washington proclaimed the re-estab- lishment of peace on April 19, 1783. No other dates in American history are more important. Both anniversaries have particular significance to the people of the District of Columbia, because here there exists a condition of civic disability which is strikingly similar to that which was the fundamental and basic grievance of the Colonies in their differences with the British crown a decade more than a cen- tury and a half ago. Herein the Nation's Capital there is taxation without repre- sentation, the same inequity against which the Colonies complained and against which, when their petitions were ignored or neglected, they at last rose in arms. ‘The source of the problem which burst into action when Paul Revere, riding through the night from Charlestown, roused the countryside to oppose the Redcoat march to Concord Village, lay deep in the aftermath of the French and Indian War. the Western phase of the Seven Years' strife, which devastated Europe and eliminated France from participation in the development of | North America The question was: | Who should pay the costs of the con- flct? Parliament, meeting on the banks | of the Thames at Westminster. more than 3,000 miles from the Colonial towns of New England, New York. Pennsylvania and Virginia, decided that the Colonists should pay. The error of judgment was a fatal mistake. It cost England the richest possession she had ever held. It made democracy the fashien throughout Christendom. It determined once and for all the west- ward course of civilization. It brought into existence “a new Nation, conceived | in liberty and dedicated to the propo- | sition that all men are created equal.” Some Causes Remote. But what was the basis of Parlia- ment’s error? How did it happen that | such a mistake occurred? Historians | testify that the fault derived from ;thei ancient notion that a people may be taxed against their will. or at least without their consent. That idea was| as old as government, and it never had been challenged successfully before. Not even the great Cromwell had been com- petent to win permanent victory in that regard. Fate left the task to George Washington. The chronicle of the origins of the | Revolution is fascinating to read. Some of the causes of separation were re- mote and in themselves insignificant. Henry William Eison says: “The two people unconsciously grew apart * * * and when England attempted to play the part of parent, the fact was brought out that the relations of parent and child existed no longer between the two countries. * * * Quebec had fallen and British arms were triumphant in all parts of the earth, but, withal, the Brif ish debt had risen to alarming propor- tions. The Colonies also had incurred heavy debts by the war and a small portion of them had been paid from the English treasury. There was now a general feeling among British states- men that the Colonies should, in some regular and systematic way, be made to bear a portion of the burdens of the| empire.” The same writer tells how Parliament decided that the navigation acts, the hated molasses act of 1733 and the detested sugar act of 1764 should be enforced, and how a spy sys- tem of customs officers armed with “writs of assistance,” general search warrants, was set up to aid the policy of coercion. James Otis, a brilliant young Boston lawyer, gave utterance to | the wrath of the oppressed, and, says | Elson, “the people took up the cry,| and it spread from the New England | hills to the valleys of the Hudson, the | Delaware and the James. In a short | time the whole country was roused to resistance.” There followed the famous “Parson’s cause,” with Patrick Henry as its hero; the rapid decline of crown | authority, promoted by the Sons of | Liberty and other volunteer societies; | the parliamentary proposal to maintain | a standing army in America: Benjamin Franklin's eloguent but unavailing ap- peal to the House of Commons; the passage of the stamp act of 1765, af- fecting 54 kinds of documents, includ- ing newspapers and marriage licenses; the meeting of the Stamp act Congress in New York, with nine groups of Colonial representatives co-operating to frame a declaration of rights and to petition the King; the first disorders in Boston and in New York when the stamps arrived for sale; the passage of the declaratory act of 1766 and of the Townshend acts of 1767, the latter lay- ing an import duty on tehuglsss‘ lead and other articles used in Colonies; the Boston Massacre of 1770 and the Boston Tea Party of 1773, and finally the irrevocable clash by “the rude bridge that arched the flood,” where the Minute Men fired the shots “heard ‘round the world.” " Losses Put on Colonies. John Fiske traces the same process of evolution. He decl 1 “When European nations began to plant colonies in America they treated them in accordance with a theory which pre- vailed until it was upset by the Amer- ican Revolution. According to this ignorant and barbgrous theory, a colony was a commuifity which existed only for the purpose of enriching the country which had founded it. * * * Laws were made to regulate trade so that, as far as possibl the loss might 1 upon the colonies and 51:/}(11&1/ CREAMED COTTAGE CHEESE TRY a glass of it! Each glass is a Pink Safedge Tum- bler you will be glad to have acom- plete set of. For 1 NAME ] ] ’ hasse | the fact that democracy, especially in accrue to the mother country. * * * Such urd and tyrannical laws had begun to be made in the ref of Charles g oa byulvfldnm less t Hament been passed in this spirit. If these laws had been strictly enforced the American Revolution would Pprobably have come sooner than it did. In point of fact they were seldom strictly enforced, because so lgng as the French were a power in An?e‘rlm the British government felt that it could not afford to irritate the Colonists. * * * It was in 1761, immediately after the overthrow of the French in Canada, that attempts were made to enforce the revenue laws more strictly than heretofore. and trouble was at once threatened. * * * The stamp act was a direct tax laid upon the whole Ameri- can people by Parliament, a legislative body in which they were not rep- resented. * * * When the news reached America there was an outburst of wrath that was soon heard and felt in London. * * * To expect our fore- fathers to submit to such legislation as this was abdut as sensible as it would have been to expect them to obey an order to buy halters and hang them- selves. Charles A. Beard supports the gen- eral contention. “The first task after the conclusion of peace in 1763, he writes, “was the adjustment of the dis- | ordered finances of the kingdom. The debt stood at the highest point in the history of the country. More revenue was absolutely necessary, and Grenville began to search for it.” turning his at- tention finally to the American Colonies. In this quest he had the aid of a zea ous colleague, Charles Townshend, who | had long been in public service and was familiar with the difficulties en- | countered by royal governors in Amer- ica. These two men, with the support of the entire ministry, inaugurated in February, 1763, ‘a new system of colonial government. It was an- nounced by authority that there were to be no more requisitions from the King to the Colonial assemblies for sup- plies, but that the Colonies were to be taxed instead by act of Parllament. Colonial governors and judges were to be paid by the Crown; they were to be supported by a standing army of 20 regiments, and all the expenses of this force were to be met by parliamentary taxation.’ * * * The Grenville-Town- shend combination moved steadily toward its goal. While the sugar act was under consideration in Parliament, Grenville announced a plan for a stamp bill. The next year it went through both Houses with a speed that must have astounded its authors. The vote in the Commons stood 205 in favor to 49 against, while in the Lords it was not even necessary to go through the for- mality of a count. * * * Protests of Co- | lonial agents in London were futile. ‘We might as well have hindered the sun's progress,’ exclaimed Franklin. * * * The | stamp act, like the sugar act, de- clared the purpose of the British gov- ernment to raise revenue in America ‘towards defraying the expenses of de- fending, protecting and securing the British Colonies and plantations in America.’ It was a long measure of more t! 50 sections, carefully planned and skillfully drawn. By its provisions duties were imposed on practically all papers used 1n legal transactions. * * The drag net was closely knit. for scarcely anything escaped. The ministers were aware that the stamp act would rouse opposition in America—how great they could not conjecture. * * The | answer of the ministry to a prophecy of | force was a threat of force. Willlam Bennett Munro, interpreting the “events which led to the breach with England,” says: “The Revolution | did not come because all.the Colonies | wanted new charters or elective gov- ernors or manhood suffrage. Its under- lying causes were economic: they con- cerned questions of trade and taxation. But once the spirit of resistance was aroused, it found, as it always dm.‘ new and broader grievances. The | Colonists soon came to a realization of | New England, had been forging ahead | more rapidly than at home, and in the Declaration of Independence new ideals of democracy, unknown at this period in England, found lofty expression. District Only Exception. It was the events of April 19, 1775, ! which _made the Declaration necessary and effectively meaningful; it was the events of April 19, 1783, which con- firmed its high claims, Today a free people pays homage to | the earnest and purposeful, sincere and | courageous men who drew liberty, self-taxation and self-government out- of the furnace of war for their en- dowment. From cost to coast, from Gulf to Lakes, all Americans enjoy the rights for which they fought—all, $20 two trouser pay $5 .at pukchase, the balance $1.50 weekly. $25 two trouser pay $8 at purchase, the TAR, WASHINGTON, PRESBYTERY HEAR FOUR MINISTERS Annual Spring Meeting Ad- dressed by Retiring Mod- erator and Others. Addresses by four ministers prominent |in church activities of the Capital fea- axym}i“ the R%Tt‘d session today h(;lhthe ashington City Presbytery, which is holding its annual two-day Spring meeting at the Garden Memorial Pres- byterian Church, Seventeenth street and Minnesota avenue southeast. Rev. H. B. Wooding of Eckington Church, retiring moderator and head of the committee on program and field activities; Dr. A. E. Burrows of the Eastern Church. presbyterial treasurer; Rev. R. Paul Schearrer of Takoma Park, head of the Committee on Christian Education, and Rev. Frank S. Niles, head of the Committee on Foreign Mis- sions, made the principal addresses. Other important business on the last day's program will be the election of three ministers and three elders as commissioners to the General Assembly. Six alternates also will be chosen. . Rev. D. Hobart Evans of the Hyatts- ville Presbyterian Church was elected moderator for the coming year at yes- terday's session, while Rev. A. B. Alt- father of Falls Church was chosen vice moderator. Dr. W. F. Eagleson of Sherwood Church was appointed to membership of the Committee on Va- cancy and Supply. Rev. Robert C. Simmons of Northminster Church was selected temporary chairman. Reports of ministers without charges on their work during the past year were read The meeting today was opened by a devotional service led by Dr. Simmons. Rev. Freeley Rohrer and Dr. Bernard Braskamp gave the reports of the Com- mittees on National Missions and Pen- sions, respectively. Ship Fire Under Control. GIBRALTAR, April 18 (#).—Fire which menaced the British steamer | Benholny, causing her to race for port, ! was_brought under control last night. The Benholm reached Malaga safely and was anchored there last night., The extent of the damage was not mentioned. The steamer was bound from Suva, Fiji Islands, to London with a Toad of copra, which caught fire. The British cruiser Leander, whlch{ went to the Benholm's assistance, was on_her way back Gibralta! that is, except those who reside in the District of Columbia. In Ws‘bmglon the laws of the Nation are made by the | Representatives of the Nation. yet the inhabitants of the city are denied their portion of the general heritage of democracy, are forbidden to have any | direct share in their fiscal destiny, are | barred from national representation. | ‘The tragic consequences of that handi- cap touch every home in the com- munity, especially in times like those of the prevailing depression. Hence the campaign of the people of the Capital to educate their countrymen to .their need for relief from their present condi- tion of civic disability. In that cam- aign many of the most eminent in- abitants of the District have partici- pated. Their example prompts further effort toward the ultimate goal of gov- ernment “of the people, by the people. for the peorle” in Washington as else- where under the Star Spangled Banner ""SP‘? OVERLOOKING CENTRAL PARK To attribute the popularity of the Savoy-Plaza to any one feature would be difficult. It is the com- bination of luxurious living . . . supreme service . . . unsurpassed cuisine and the most beautiful ovtlook in New York. SINGLE ROOMS FROM $S Henry A. Rost, Managing Director Fifth Avenve, 58th to 59th Sts, D, WEDNESDAY, Rites Tomorrow RETIRED ARMY OFFICER DIED AT WALTER REED. BRIG. GEN. Bli}VJAMIN T. SIMMONS, | Retired, who died Monday at Walter Reed Hospital, will be buried in Fair- fleld, N. C,, tomorrow. The body was taken from Washington today. Gen. Simmons is survived by his widow, Mrs. Estella Simmonds; a son, Benjamin T., jr., a student at George Washington University, and two sisters, Miss Mary Simmons and Mrs. Mattie Cartwright, both of Fairfleld, of which city the general was a native, INDIAN COMMITTEE VOTES FOR COLLIER Unanimously Recommends Con- firmation in Report to Senate. By the Associated Press Confirmation of John Collier of Cali- fornia to be Indian commissioner was recommended to the Senate today by the unanimous vote of the Indian Com- mittee. Senator Thomas (Democrat) of Okla- homa, who had protested the appoint- ment of Collier to President Roosevelt, withdrew his opposition and voted for the nominee in committee. after having questioned Collier regarding his prob- able future policy. Collier lorig has been active in behalf | of the Indians as executive secretary of the American Indian Defense Associa- tion Chairman Wheeler of the committee expected to press for immediate Senate consideration of the nomination. Lanshurghs 7th, 8th and E Sts. The Optical Department Features Glasses Complete—Lenses, Frames and Examination by a Registered Optometrist Gold filled frames with im- proved pearloid nose pads. Complete with clear, single vision lenses ground just as your eyes require. Preseri tions alsd filled. Use your cherge sccount. STREET FLOOR We've been asking questions. We wanted to know what is behind the big increase in our Ten Payment accounts. 3 out of 5 times, the answer was “a friend told me about it.” And that's just about the finest tribute this thrifty, convenient service could have — proof of its success in satisfying customers. Why? Because it's ity to buy Fine suits suits balance $2.00 weekly. $30 two trouser suits pay $8 at purchase, the ba'ance $2.50 weekly. sensible — an opportun- Clothes out of income. It's economical —costs nothing extra. It's timely — meets present day needs. And because, in addition to these advantages, it bringsyou the greatest clothing valuesin our lifetime. Use it — Bond's Ten Payment Planl 4 APRIL 19, 1933. OFFICERS REPORT ONWORK OF C. A.R. Progress on Various Projects Explained at Second Day’s ‘Session. Reports of special committees and activities were heard this morning at the second day’s session of the Thirty- eighth Annual Convention, National Society of Children of the American Revolution, being held in the National Red Cross Building. Progress on the various projects of the society was outlined to the chil- dren by the adult officers. Mrs. John Morrison Kerr, a collateral descendant of George Washington, told of the furnishing of the Mary Ball Washington bed room at Wakefleld. The necessary funds, amounting to about $1,200, were furnished by the C. A. R. 8he sald only two of the pleces of furniture are originals, the others being reproductions constructed after careful research. A bed slept in by Sarah Tayloe Washington and a crib used by several members of the ashington family are the original ieces, she said. $5,000 for Memorial. Mrs. Josiah A. Van Orsdel, national prestdent, said aproximately $5,000 has been raised for the Harriet M. Lothrop Memorial building fund. The Ellis Island kindergarten, sup- ported by the children, spent $347.40 last year, Mrs. John P. Mosher reported. She said the kinder; en is “spreading | Feel Tired, Lack Energy? You need a good tonic to stimulate your ap- petite and increase your vitality. For more tha quarter of a century Nutraven has | helped thousands of rundown people | to regain trong, healthy body. | A tonic of recognired value in building up the | to take. Contains only purest in- gredients. Don't trifle with your | health. Get a generous bottle of Nutraven for $1 today at Peoples Drug Stores. NUTRAVEN, a Nutritive Tonic abroad the doctrine of America’s desire for fsirness and brotherhood with the peoples of all nations,” through in- to children about to be sent back to Europe. Other reports included statements by Mrs. Thad M. Jones, national treas- urer, of the Tamassee Scholarship Fund, and the Wakefield Memorial Fund; Mrs. Van Orsdel, on the care and preserva- tion of the Tomb of the Unknown Sol- dier of the Revolution; Mrs. Frank S. Ray, on Founders’ day; Mrs. Charles S. Groves on bicentennial activities, and Mrs. Amos A. Fries, on publicity. * Recites History of Society. Miss Aimee E. Powell recited a chro- nological history of the society. Miss Margaret Lothrop, the first member of the C. A. R, told of her eaply life in the historic surroundings made famous by Longfellow’s “Paul Re- vere's Ride.” Mrs. Pries entertained the Jjunior officers of the societv at lunch- eon in the Girl Scout House. The Board of Management was entertained last night at a dinner in the Powhattan Hctel by Mrs. Lawrence Quirolle. Mary H. Gehres, a member of the Gov. Winthrop Society of Massachu- setts, was stricken with appendicitis yeeterday. POLICE DISPERSE MOB Protest Against Japanese Training Ships Stirs Los Angeles, LOS ANGELES, April 19 (#).—Police dispersed a crowd of 20 men ate tempted yesterday to visit the office of the Japanese consulate to .protest against the arrival here foday of the Japanese imperial training ships Iwate and Yakumo. Police, who said the men were Com- munists, later permitted two representa~ tives of the group to speak to the con- sul, T. Satow, but would not permit them to read the petition of &r:umna consul’s the document was left on desk. FLYING ANTS (Termites) Couse 310.000,000 Damage Aunually ork in and Buil GUARANTEED TREATMENT Vacating Unnecessary—Free Inspectlon Terminix Co. of Washi 1102 National Press Bldg. Pbone National 3703 LOW FARE EXCURSIONS Round Trip Pare NEW 1 a [P ADELEIA | §3.00 ., YORK | $3:50 Newark, Elizabeth, Plainfield Sunday, April 23 Lv. Wash. 12:01 a.m. and 7:55 a.m.| WILMINGTON = $Q.75 . v 250 2% B am, Kunday, April 3o ’PIT“'URG" j 56,00 Ly. Washington' 12:01 sm. BALTIMORE $1.25 Saturdays 3 Daily—Good 0d Sundays s1 50 Tor' dams $3.00 Cumberland $2.00 Martinsburg $1.50 Harpers Ferry SUNDAY, APRIL 30. Lv. Washington 8.25 a.m. LOW WEEK-END FARES TO ALL POINTS Go Fridsy noon to Sundsy noon. Return to Mondsy midaight, For Details, Ask Agents or Phone District 3300 12 Hermetically : Sealed Servel Models Priced From $149.50 to $487.50 HERMETICALLY SEALED! to eliminate kitchen repairs THE NEW Servel Crusader ERVEL »e Servel’s simplified refrigerating unit is concealed in the base of the cabinet. No oiling is required now or later. Quiet in operation. No complicated, trouble-making parts; no fans, belts or pulleys, no float valves. A broad factory guarantee goes with every Servel. The cabinets are beautiful . . . flat usable top . . . roomy, waist high interiors . . s handy temperature control . .. plenty of ice cubes. See the Open Unit Model $98 Installed In addition to the hermetically sealed models, Servel brings you this Crusader Model with 4.6 cubic feet of storage space and 1nterior. 8.5 sq. fr. Servel tomorrow. SEE THE NEW WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINES, #49-5° up MAYER & CO. Between D and E Seventh Street ot 3, AR .

Other pages from this issue: