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INDUSTRY [}UNTRUL} IS GIVEN CONGRESS Roosevelt Message Includes $3,300,000,000 Public Works Program. (Continued From First Page) | ‘were properly designed as the means to cure the great evils of monopolistic price fixing. They should certainly be Tetained as a permanent assurance that ! the old evils of unfair competition shall never return. But the public interests will be served if, with the authority | and under the guidance of Government. ! private industries are permitted to make | agreements and codes insuring fair competition. However, it is necessary, | if we thus limit the operation of anti- trust Jaws to their original purpose, to provide a rigorous licensing power in order to meet rare cases Of non-co- operation and abuse. Such a safeguard is indispensable.” | Can Expend $3,300,000,060. | Discussing his public works program, the President told Congress that care- ful surveys had shown $3,300.000,000 could be expended on useful and neces- sary public construction and at the same time put the largest possible num- ber of persons to work. He continued: “Provisions should be made to permit States, counties and municipalities to undertake useful public works, subject, however. to the most effective possible Tmeans of eliminating favoritism and wasteful expenditures on unwarranted and uneconomic projects. i The President emphasized the need of providing the money to pay interest on and to amortize the cost of the public | works program. He said that it had been estimated $220,000,000 would be | needed for these purposes. He made it very clear that there should be no en- actment of & public works act without making specific provision for paying for it. The credit of the United States, he sald, must be werved.” Committee to Get Proposals. T is expected that the President, if he has not already done so, will turn over to the House Ways and Means Committee the various suggestions which have been made for raising the $220,000,000 revenue needed for financ- ing ‘the public works program. The suggestions included increases in the income taxes, through lower exemp- tions and larger normal tax rates and increases in the surtaxes; “breakfast table” taxes—on coffee, tea, etc—a “protected and pre- | ROOSEVELT’S TEXT IN PLEA FOR WIDE INDUSTRY CONTROL (Continued From First Page.) effective possible means of eliminat- ing favoritism and wasteful expendi- tures on unwarranted and uneco- nomic projects. ‘We must, by prompt and vigorous action, override unnecessary ob- structions which in the past have delayed the starting of public works programs, This can be accomplished by simple and direct procedure, Stresses Need for Action. In carrying out this program, it is imperative that the credit of the United States Government be pro- tected and preserved. This means that at the same time we are mak- ing these vast emergency expendi- tures there must be provided suf- ficient revenue to pay interest and amortization on the cost, and that the revenue so provided must be adequate and certain, rather than inadequate and speculative. Careful estimates indicate that at least $220,000,000 of additional rev- enue will be required to service the THE EVENING Participate in Oratory Meet Upper: Dore Walten (left), director of the Tech Symphony Orchestra, and Dr. E. N. C. Barnes, director of the students’ chorus. Lower: Dr. Willlam Allen Wilbur, provost of George Washington Uni- versity, who will be scrutator of the contest. WORLD BRIDGE TOURNEY CUP GIVEN BY SCHWAB Letter Permanent Chairman of Interna- tional Holding Committee. Designates Culbertson By the Associated Press. STAR, MUSIC TO FEATURE ORATORY GONTEST High School Orchestra and Male Chorus to Appear at Constitution Hall. Music will have a place with oratory on the program of the United States finals of the Tenth National Oratorical Contest in Constitution Hall, Saturday night. The forensic bids of the six young speech-makers for the oratorical cham- plonship of the Nation will be inter- spersed with instrumental and vocal music by Washington high school stu- dents. The Tech Symphony Orchestra of 70 players, under the direction of Dore Walten, McKinley faculty member, and the Inter-High School Male Chorus of 150 voices, under the direction of Dr. E. N. C. Barnes, director of music in the public schools, wil] present the musical program. Y Will Check Accuracy. In announcing this phase of the con- test today, Randolph Leigh, director- general of the contest, also revealed that Dr. Willlam Allen Wilbur, pro- vost of George Washington University, will be official scrutator of the contest. 1In this capacity Dr. Wilbur will check historical accuracy of the contestants’ utterances and will make certain that the orators abide by the rules, which prohibit the quotation of more than four words of any authority’s manu- script or utterance without crediting the source of the information. The program by the Tech Symphony Orchestra will begin at 7:15, 45 minutes before the contest itself gets underway. Selections to be played will include Beethoven's “Egmont”; Puccini’s “La Tosca”; De Libes' “Cortege of Bac: chus” from “Naila”; Kreisler's “Liebes freud” and Gillett's “Passepied.” Orchestra to Be Augmented. In its performance Saturday the Tech Symphony Orchestra, which was found- ed 29 years ago, will be augmented by some members of other high school orchestras. Mr. Walten, who will lead, ?n‘:zb"n director of the orchestra since The Interhigh School Male Chorus will present as part of its program the old English song, “Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes,” Gounod's “Send Out Thy Light” and a sailors’ chanty. Mrs. Mary Garrett Lewis, head of the piano department of the public schools and personal accompanist for Dr. Barnes, will accompany the chorus. The chorus ‘was organized and trained by Dr. Barnes. WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, Ord Preston, Delano’s residence, 2244 S street. RS. WHITMAN- CROSS, retir- ing president of the Instruc- tive Visiting Nurse Society of Washington, was the recipient | of a silver loving cup, gift of { the board of managers of the society, | | at a tea given yesterday to the board | and the nursing staff by Mrs. Frederic A. Delano. The affair was held in the rooms and the garden of Mrs. Delano's residerce, 2244 S street, and was at- | | tended by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. |~ Former members of the board who | had served under Mrs. Cross, together with members of the society’s medical advisory board, were also guests. | . Mrs. Cross has been a member of the | board for 23 years and has served con- | | tinuously and successfully as its presi- | | dent for the past 15. Ord Preston, first vice president of the society, made the | veloper of the airplane, will receive 3 budget and the salaries of | presentation of the cup ~which was| Franklin Medal, highest award of the were debated on the floor. given, it was announced, “in apprecia- | tion of the long and selfless service given both as a member of the board | awarded to Dr. Paul Saratier, dean of | between the and as president.” Mrs. Cross is well known for her civic services | e L3 MAY 17, 1933. Board Honors Retiring L. V. N. S. President MRS. WHITMAN CROSS RECEIVES LOVING CUP IN RECOGNITION OF LONG SERVICE. , vice president of the Instructive Visiting Nurse Society, is shown presenting a loving cup to Mrs. Whit- | man Cross, who is retiring as president of the soclety after 15 years in that capacity. Mrs. Frederic | of the board of managers, is on the right. The presentation Was made yesterday at & tes + A-S ATTEMPT MADE TO KIDNAP COWARD Four Men Frustrated in Abduetion of Actor and Miss Elsa Maxwell. By the Associated Press. NEW , May 16.—The News says an attempt was made esrly yesterdsy to Noel Coward, English actor and playwright, and Miss Elsa Maxwell, Four men, the News said, attempted ict Miss Maxwell and Coward 2 ht:gln State Build- ng fll were frustrated by the Buar John Debrowen, chief of the police force at the world's tallest . RO~ ticed the four flashily-dressed men fol- the" bulding, the newspaper said, and ing, the newspaper heard one of them say: We'll wait untll he “That's Cow: comes down.” Coward and Miss Maxwell, by this time had entered the elevator to visit the observation tower. The building guards were marshaled about Coward's automobile. The chauffer descended first, drove the car about the and returned to a side entrance. Surrounded by guards, the News said, Coward and Miss Maxwell hastened away. The four men soon drove away from in front of the building. S e e State Official to Speak. By a 8taff Correspondent of The Star. BALLSTON, Va., May 17.—C. 8. Van Oot, State supervisor of vocational edu- cation, will address the meeting tomor- row night of the Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation of Washington-Lee High School. His subject will be “Vocational Prob- lems of the Pupils of Washington-Lee.” A. Delano, member in honor of Mrs. Cross at Mrs. —Star Staff Photo. MEDALS TO BE AWARDED BY FRANKLIN INSTITUTE Men Famous in Transportation Affairs and Leaders in Science to Get Recognition. By the Assoctated Press. PHILADELPHIA, May 17.—Men fa- mous in the world’s transportation affairs, as well as leaders in flelds of science, will receive awards in recog- nition of their achievements at the an- nual “medal meeting” of the Franklin Institute today. Dr. Orville Wright, Dayton, Ohio, de- institute. The FPranklin_ Medal also will be the faculty of science, Toulouse Uni- verity, Tculouse, France. Persia has increased its im U on, umbrelles, baby unmmqmm UNITED BRETHREN VOTE FOR MERGER PROPOSAL | | Unity With Evangelical Church ‘Would Involve 700,000 Mem- bers—Committees to Form. By the Associated Press. AKRON, Ohio, May 17.—A vote to | merge the United Brethren in Christ | Church with the American Evangelical !Church yesterday climaxed a session of | | the thirty-first United Brethren Quad- | riennial Conference, at which contro- versies over the general benevolence s Finest Vacation Through the GREAT LAKES to and from the WORLD’S FAIR | "A resolution to unite the two de- | nominations, claiming 700,000 members | , was unanimously adopt- | | ed. The Evangelical Church has already | | acted on the proposition, Bishop Mat- | Pullman car party fro 3rd. MIMIC PLANE WAR manufacturer’s sales tax, with food and | contemplated borrowings of the | NEW YORK, May 17.—Charles M. in Washington. For many ~The Cresson Medal will be presented | thew T. Maze of that denomination || and Baitimore August clothing exempt; increased t~x on 7= - | line and a number of other special taxes. The so-called manufacturers’ excise or sales tax has been under fire bby many Democrats, especially during the last campaign. Its proposal roused much opposition. The Ways and Means Committee will have to determine, how- ever, which of the taxes will be least burdensome and offensive and which will be the most effective in producing the needed revenue. Supporters of the sales tax continue to believe that the Congress eventually will have to come to_that form of taxation. The administration’s bill was intro- duced in the Senate by Senator Wagner of New York, who been one of the Government. This will of necessity involve some form or forms of new taxation. A number of suggestions have been made as to th. nature of these taxes. I do not make a speci- fic recommendation at this time, but I hope that the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives will make a careful study of revenue plans and be pre- pared by the beginning of the com= ing week to propose the taxes which they judge the best adapted to meet the present need and which will at th same time be least burdensome to principal advisors of the President with regard to this legislation, and in the| House by Representative Doughton of North Carolina, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. It was referred to the ldtter committee in the House and to the Finance Committee in the Senate. The measure, since it carries 8 revenue provision, must originate in the House. ’ | our people. At the end of that time, if no decision has been reached, or 1f the means proposed do not seem to be sufficiently adequate or cer- tain, it is my intention to transmit to the Congress my own recom- mendations in the matter. Urges Elastic Taxes. GRADUATE FOUND DEAD WITH GIRL IN ROAD Love Affair Believed to Have Ended in Murder and Suicide After High School Banquet. By the Associated Press. NEWBURG, Mo., May 17.—The bodies of Chester Ormsby, 17, who was to have been graduated from the Newburg high school Thursday, and Lois Johnson, 18, o whom he had been attentive, were found late yesterday near their automo- bile parked on a lonely country road. W. E. Licklider, coroner of Phelps County, after an inquest, said the youth apparently had shot and killed the girl and then taken his own life. A note found in the car read “Please forgive us.” Ormsby held a_ revolver in his hand. His body was lying across that of the girl near the center of the road. ‘The couple was last seen alive when they left a filling station at 3 a.m. yes- terday where they had gone with a group of friends following a high school senior class banquet. At the filling station was Newton Coffman, a close friend of Orms- gy who also had been attentive to Miss ohnson. ALCATRAZ BARRACKS MAY BE ABANDONED Johnson Wires Act Contemplated by United States as Economy Move. By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, May 17—A tele- gram received here yesterday from Sen- ator Hiram Johnson said abandonment of the United States disciplinary bar- 1acks on Alcatraz Island, in San Fran- cisco, is contemplated by the adminis- tration at Washington as an economy measure in the Army expense reduction program. ‘Telegrams bearing Senator Johnson's ligmture were received by Mayor An- gelo Rossi, the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and the 9th Corps Area gendqunmn of the United States Army ere. Army authorities said they had no in- The taxes to be imposed are for the purpose of providing re-employment for our citizens. Provisions should be made for their reduction or elimination— “First—As fast as increasing revenues from improving business become avail- able to replace them; “Second—Whenever the repeal of the eighteenth amendment now pending before the States shall have been rati- fled, and the repeal of the Volstead act effected. The pre-prohibition revenue laws would then automatically go into effect and yield enough wholly to elim- inate these temporary re-employment taxes. Pinally I stress the fact that all of these proposals are based on the grav- ity of the emergency, and that there- fore it is urgently necessary immedi- ately to initiate @ re-employment cam- paign if we are to avoid further hard- ships, to sustain business fmprovement and to pass on to better things. For this reason I urge prompt action on this legislation. (Signed) FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT. PERISHABLE .FREIGHT BUREAU IS ORGANIZED New Inspection Service of Rail- ways Expected to Result in Many Economies. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, May 17.—A new Bureau of Inspection for the handling of perish- able freight has been organized by the Eastern railroads and will begin opera- tions on July 1. Traffic officials met yesterday to dis- cuss operating details of the bureau, which was organized under the auspices of the Committee on Preventable Waste, composed of presidents of Eastern lines. W. S. Jensen, manager of perishable formation concerning the asserted pro-, freight traffic for the New York Cen- posed abandonment of the duclpunsrylml lines, has been chosen as manager DRyacEs + of the bureau. 1 ¥ i Acsmtntng ‘the Condiion of porin: | In rm| e ol lon of perish- SPEAKER IS ANNOUNCED | ceiecaing, Creivai st produce:ter- minals, the bureau’s activities are ex- Representative Flannagan to Ad- pected to result in many economies. Fairfax. Heretofore the carriers have made in- | i dress Services at Special Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, May 17.—Representative | John W. Flannagan of Bristol, Va., will | be speaker at the Confederate me- morial services to be held here on June 1, according to announcement of former Representative R. Walton Moore. ‘The exercises are scheduled to begin at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Follow- ing Representative Flannagan's ad- dress in the court house short memorial services will be held at the cemetery, at which time the graves of all Con- federate soldiers will be decorated with flowers and taps will be sounded. A concert by an Army band late in dependent arrangements for the inspec- tion of perishables. -— REZONING IS PROTESTED Property Owners Appeal to Ta- koma Park Mayor. Special Dispatch to The Star. TAKOMA PARK, Md, May 17— Mayor Frederick L. Lewton has re- ceived a petition signed by 67 property owners in the vicinity of ,Carroll and Flower avenues the afternoon will conclude the pro- |resoning of an mmmfl" u::f L ts for the exercises are |0y Which will include all property o “Corbadorate. Veteruns, snd” Marr e e lera ef ), tersection of these two ares. Gamp, Dnited Daughters of the 0on” | Tme petition states that the town su- 3 thorities are being petitioned to change that section from a residential zone to & commercial zone for the purpose of . | establishing an automobile service and i tion in a part of the town Rockville Marriage Licenses. ROCKVILLE, Md., May 17 (Special) —Licenses were issued here Y | 4, of lard, 21, of We icational purposes that if re- | 1 R Schwab, chairman of the board of the Bethlehem Steel Co. and for many years president of th2 Card Committee of the Whist Club of New York. has do- nated a platinum cup for annual com- petition between ccatract bridge teams, representing every bridge-playing coun- try in the world, it was announced yes- terday by Ely Cubertson. A letter from Schwab accepting Cul- bertson’s invitation to put up the trophy des'gnated Culbertson permanent chair- man of an International Holding Com- mittee. This group will be authorized to fix the rules governing the competition and to designate 2) leading players in each country from whom the teams of four will be chosen. Culbertson also was designated cap- tain of the American team and in- structed to inaugurate the competition RESULTS IN DOUBT Spectacular Night Air Raid Made on Fort Knox in Army Maneuvers. By the Associated Press. FORT KNOX, Ky., May 17.—The first night air raid on Fort Knox, staged as part of the 12-day mimic warfare comprising the United States Army's Spring maneuvers, revealed the effi- ciency of the defending army's intel- ligence network but left in doubt the years she has been prominently identi- | to Juan de la Cierva of London, in- | having |fied with all welfare movements. She x““,fi"‘ of ;he organizers and the first | president of the Washington Council|the multi-motored airplane will be vgll'_" B fuenclesy S leen vice | aiveniIgor AT S\korsgf Bridgewater, ent of e Washington mmun- 3 {ity Chest, president of the Juvenile m by ‘pecasniation” of® the' Potis | Protective Association. a member of the Howard L. Ingersoll, New York, as- | ventor of the autogiro. | Board of the Associated Charities, of sistant to the president of the New York | the Washington Institute for Mental v < Hygiene and many other OrgANiZations | Gecth Medai i consideration of His for the advancement of health and development of the locomotive booster welfare work here. to a state in which it gives valuable | — aid to locomotive performance and rail- road service. RAILROAD TELEGRAPHERS| \FIGHT ‘RED’ RECOGNITION Recognition of his work in developing | this year. $706,000 SUIT IS FILED UNDER “BLUE SKY” LAW By the Associated Press. OKLAHOMA CITY, May 17.—The first of a serles of damage suits alleg- ing violation of the State ‘blue sky” law was filed here yesterday by Bert M. Parmenter, former Assistant United States Attorney General, and others against former officials of the Western Service Corporation, a utility company, now in receivership. The suit asks $706,000 damages on behalf of stockholders wko. the petition alleged, were defrauded of savings by illegal stock issues. Earl R. Emnsberger. former president of the company; T. E. Braniff, Oklaho- ma City financier; D. W. Ohern, former compary secretary; P. A. Janeway, banker; Albert C. Hunt, attorney for} the corporation; the Chemical Bank & Trust Co. and the Marine Midland Trust Co., both of New York, and George B. Pietch of New York, invest- ment banker, were among the 17 named as defendants. — = HUNTERS GO BY PLANE New York to Alaska in 60 Hours Record of Father and Son. JUNEAU, Alaska, May 17 (#).—E. O. McDonnell, New York, and his 13- year-old son arrived here by airplane last night, less than 60 hours after leaving New York, for some hunting on Admiralty Island. They left New York at 9 am. Sat- urday and arrived here at 4 pm. yes- terday, proceeding yesterday to the island, 60 miles away. The elder Mc- Donnell is with a New York brokerage house. 34 ENTER QUILT CONTEST Thirty-four local entries have been received in the Century of Progress Quilt Contest for wi d to be exhibited in the Sears Buil the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago. Local entries, which will be judged by Mrs. Edward T. Brown, Miss Anne Fuller Abbott and Felix Mahony, will receive $10 for first and $5 for second and third prizes. The quilts are on exhibit at the local Sears, Roebuck store. Jed Adams Sworn In. Jed Adams of Texas was sworn in as 8 member of the Board of Tax Appeals this morning by Vice President Garner at the Internal Revenue Building. He succecds William B. Love, also of Texas. bers Raj e LOW PRICES FOR EXPERT RUC CLEANING considered, oo fa W ashisistor 106 Indiana Ave. P. Forest, 25, of Wt ores Bdith Lucs, 19, desirability of Baltimore. s residential property. o last week extended the invita- | tion which resulted in today’s action. The next move will be the appoint- ment of a committee of United Brethren | bishops to work with a similar group from the Evangelical Church. ‘Today's continuation of the benev- olence fund controversy resulted from a protest by Bishop A. R. Clippinger of | Dayton against yesterday's conference | action in deciding bishops and all gen- | eral officers of the church should re- ceive salaries in on “to the {amount of the $750.000 general benev- | ol:nc; fund the church actually re-! cetved. 1 ing steam. Chicago World' trips. c or Be500 "ot 1y the ‘best this sesson. Also v ruises o sy3—every Wed nd Sat: Seturdss’ ASE for Teider, © O47% e H. W. SMITH TOURS 1457 Park Road N.W., Tel Col. 1316, o B. & O. Ticket Office, 15th & H Sts. N.W. . Positivel conducted {our escorted I —— | question of whether the attacking forces | Resolution at Convention Is Re-, WAS NATIVE OF VIRGINIA had succeeded in theoretically blasting | the fort off the map. | ‘The intelligence outposts of the de- fending “Red” army reported at least five squadrons of the “Blue” army's| planes from Dayton, Ohio, bearing down | B7 the Assoclated Press. on the fort, but after the planes ar-| MONTREAL, May 16.—By almost rived \axrlger cover of dxrkness,dflnres;unnnimcus vote the twenty-seventh were pped which prevented = the | general meeting of the Order of Rail- TRed” 0 £ sl 'Red” army's anti-aircraft artillery- | road. Telegraphers Monday turned Jjected by an Almost Unani- mous Vote. | men from seeing the attackers. Former Vice President of Amer- ican Agricultural Chemical Company Was 55. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, Md.. May 17.—Edward F. Daniel, jr. 55, Baltimore district |manager and former vice president of Seventeen searchlights sweeping the air picked out only six of the attack planes, though the gunners could hear the roar of several more overhead. ‘Theoretical shots were fired at the six planes sighted. but whether they were effective or whether the planes suc- ceeded in scoring hits with theoretical bombs awaited compilation of data on the engagement. SEMINARY AWARDS MADE PRINCETON. N. J. May 17 (#).— Fellowships and special prizes an- nounced at the commencement exer- cises of Princeton Theological Seminary yesterday included: Pellowship in systematic theology, Peter Halman Monsma, Grand Rapids, Mich.; fellowship in the history of re- ligion and Christian missions, Raymond | Irving Lindquist, Kingsburg, Calif. first Scribner prize in New York Testa. ment literate, Archibald Roy Crouch of Moorhead, Minn.; second Scribner prize, Allen Degray Clark, Tyeng Yang, Korea; third Scribner prize, Shinji In- que of Kobe, Japan; Hugh Davies prize | in homiletic§ and Grace Carter Erdman prize in English Bible, Raymond Irv- ing Lindquist of Kingsburg. Calif. Benjamin Stanton prize in Old Testa- bear | ment literate and Archibald Alexan- der Hodge prize in systematic theology, Lynn Boyd Rankin of White Pine, Tenn. Ready with |the American Agriculture Chemical is nature’s oldest beauty secret —and it’s olive oil that makes | down a resolution for the recognition of Russia by the United States. | ‘The action of the convention swept | vay a resolution presented by H. J. | | Short of Gila Bend, Ariz, asking the | 500 delegates from Canada, the United States and the Panama Canal Zone to request the American Government to grant full recognition. Short’s resolution said failure of the United States Government to recognize Russia “has resulted in the loss of | considerable trade. Russia has demon- strated to the worid and to the respet- | tive governments she is more than capable in many respects of taking care of her,own people than some na- | tions, and there now appears to be nothing to be gained from refusing to recognize her.” ‘The convention voted against & pro- | posal to make St. Louls, Mo.. permanent headquarters for the organization con- ventions. P.-T. A. to Stage Program. VIENNA, Va., May 17 (Special).— The local Parent-Teacher Association will hold a two-hour program of songs. music and comedy tonight in the school auditorium beginning at 8:15. Willie Green of the original Hill Billies will direct the program. With him will be | Winter Marshall, Roma Deavers, Fran- trap and other entertainers. more than a thousand new Summer DRESSES Sheers, crepes and washable silks in solid pastel shades, light and dark 188 288 SIZES FOR MISSES AND WOMEN nthuse about the wonderful values in this We know you will group of popular priced dresses. in dozens of styles to meet every Summer dress requirement. SIGMUNDS AUCTION CAPITAL ART GALLERY 724 13th Vacating Entire Stock Final Friday and Saturday ground prints and navy 369 498 Short or cape sleeves, Jackets, Co., died last night. He had been ill ! since Saturday with pneumonia. | He was born in Charlotte Courthouse, Va., and first formed a connection with the American Agriculture Co. in 1914 at Atlanta, coming to Baltimore in g'!“fl. mne?lsfiavlces are to be held orrow at 3:30 pm. at Charlotte Courthouse. Elected Theology Pro;enor. COLUMBIA. §. C, May 17 (#).— Dr. John B. Moose, of Chicago, has | been elected professor of systematic and historical theology of the Lutheran Southern Theological Seminary here. the seminary board announced today. The position formerly was held by the 31.:: Dr. A. G. Viogt, who also was n. Palmolsve green UT of the wealth of Nature, the besuty aids thathave stood the test of time are soothing, pro- tective olive and palm oils. And itis these oils that have brought Palmolive Sosp into every corner of the world where beauty is cherished. Buy Palmolive~use it in gener- ous quantities. It is now selling at the lowest price in history— a price which makes it the jdeal soap for bath as well «s face. Absolutely Amazing how quickly the general public recognizes outstanding values in almost everything and how instantly they appreciate STYLE and QUALITY when they see it—this is doubly apparent the moment they try on one of these SCHLOSS BRroOS. & CoO. Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats at sacrifice reductions Tth & H st & AUCTION ROOMS, INC. St. N.W. Premises | Must Be Sold Exhibition Wednesday and Thursday prices that we are confident you will never see again SCHLOSS SUITS Sale Price, $14.75 SCHLOSS SUITS Sale Price, $16.85 SCHLOSS TOPCOATS mace to sl at s3000 sna 350 Sale Price, $14.75 SCHLOSS TROPICAL SUITS mste to s at 420 wna v16 Sale Price, $13.85 ENTIRE STOCK SWEATERS—ROBES—HATS Neckwear—Underwear at Tremendous Reductions made to sell at $30.00 and $35.00 made to sell at $35.00 and $40.00 Bought to sell at $2.50 New Shirts, $1.00—New Nechkties, 45c—Short & Undershirt, 29¢ Why not look—it costs you nothing 1331 F Sgreet 1331 F Street