Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BEER LAY TERNED SPEAEASES DION dairymple. Declares 50,000 Have Already Been Driven From Business. By the Assoclated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, May 23.—At least 50,000 speakeasies have been driven out of business by the new liberal beer laws, in the opinion of Maj. A. V. Dalrymple, national prohibition di- tvector, and many thousands more will e closed when better beer is manu- Mctured. < “Not that the beer being sold at pres- ent is not good,” Maj. Dalrymple said, “but it could be very much better and should be ripened more fully before being put on sale.” Of the 50,000 speakeasies driven to the wall, or forced to be converted into legal beer parlors, Maj. Dalrymple said. 10,000 are in New York City and at Jeast that many more in Chicago. The prohibition director, here on a national tour of inspection, said last night that steps have been taken to prevent racketeering in legal beer by throwing safeguards around brewe:s and retailers, such as the system of duplicate invoices and revenue stamps. Will Fight Profiteering. Maj. Dalrymple, a former San Fran- cisco attorney, said he also had In mind & measure to prevent profiteering by druggists in medicinal wines and liquors. Druggists may buy wine at from 75 to 95 cents a gallon, he said, and retail it at from $5 to $7. He has prepared a regulation, he added, sub- ject to approval of the Attorney Gen- eral, providing that case lots of the wine may be sold at wineries maintain- ing a licensed apothecary on the staff. Tt necessary, he said, he would go be- fore Congress with a request for passage of a price-fixing law. Under the “n:evdv de:l" ;fy ]:rohibmur; Dalrymple poin out, physicians ma ive their patients unlimited prescrip- gions without having to state the nature of the ailment or the length of time for the treatment. Dalrymple said he would fight any attempt to monopolize wine sales or create a new racket from the zale of medicinal liquor. He added that he would fight just as vigorously to rotect legal breweries and legitimate Eesr retailers as he has against the liquor rings. “Have Support of Public.” And in the fight, he emphasized, and his men will have the support the American public. “Under bone dry prohibition didn’t have a friend,” he said. “Ni we have thousands. Citizens who did not sympathize with the dry law, or at least took little interest in it, now want the bootleggers smashed because they are cheating the Government of its revenue.” He declared the stigma of graft must ‘be removed from the Prohibition De- partment. Commenting on reports he had received here that Northern Cali- fornia wineries and distilleries were be- ing solicited for “protection money,” the prohibition director said: Will Turn on Publicity. “Cockroaches die in the light. We will kill off the human cockroaches in this business by turning on them the glare of pitiless publicity. “There is not & man in America who can deliver protection under this ad- ministration. If there has any corruption in the Prohibition Depart- ment—and there has been plenty of talk about it—we are going to get it out. JFrom now on we are going to kill the public belief of graft.” He added that a Bureau of Industrial Alcohol, combining the Prohibition Bu- Teau and the present Industrial Alcobol Bureau, might take over the work of both organizations. e FLEES KIDNAP THREATS Mme. Olga Samaroff and Daughter, 10, Leave U. S. for Europe. MINNEAPOLIS, May 23 (#).—Alarm caused by kidnaping threats against her former husband's children kept Mme. Olga Samaroff from helping open the National Federation of Music Club Fes- tival last night. Mme. Samaroff, who had planned a 4rip abroad, hastened her departure to Europe from New York with her daugh- fer, Sonia, 10, after letters threatened the kidnaping of the two children of Leopold Stokowski, her former husband. He is Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra conductor. She was to appear in & se-plano concerto with Harold Bauef and Ru- dolph Ganz, but was replaced by Ernest Hutcheson. el SENTENCED FOR THREATS Woman Had Pleaded Guilty in Plot to Extort $5,000. SAN FRANCISCO, May 23 (A).—Mrs. Hollie Terstegge, who pleaded guilty here recently to a charge of attempted extortion through the mais, was given & three-month suspended sentence and one year of probation yesterday by Fed- eral Judge Frank H. Kerrigan. The woman was arrested after hav- ing addressed a letter to Arthur Howell of Atlanta demanding $5,000 under threat of exposing an alleged rendezvous with him in Louisville, Ky. Howell is dead and his widow received the letter, turning it over to postal authorities. ‘The arrest here followed. BEER BOND REDUCED KLicense Surety Charge Cut by New York Concerns. NEW YORK, May 23 (#).—Surety companies agreed yesterday to reduce the annual charge for a $1,000 beer license bond from $40 to $30, following upon the intervention of Edward P. Mulrooney, chairman of the State Alco- holic Beverage Control Board. A re- duction of $5 was made in the charge for the $500 bonds. The minimum charge of $20 for the $250 bonds re- mained unchanged. SPECIAL NOTICES. OFFICE OF “THE GEQRGETOWN GASLIGHT CO.” WASHINGTON, D. The al meeting of the BStockholders “The Georgetown Gaslight Company.” for cction of directors and the transac- he of we oW ch other business as may properly come before the meeting. will be held at the office of the company. 1339 Wisconsin avenue “aorthwest. Washifsion BiCaodd aionday, June 5th. 1933, at 12 o' noon. FREDERICK K. HEUPEL. PONGRESSIONAL COUNTRY CLUB ggmbership, 3125, Address Box 240 ce. f)'a W, H. WALDO, DI o the Westory Bldg. 0 E WILL SELL AT EICHBERG'S AUCTION. 74 roadster, motor No. A4058494, on May ; 1033, to cover storage and other chi MAC PARK GARAGE, 2110 D st. WANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART LOAD TO :* special rates. Y ASSN.. INC.. 1317 I movinig_also. ST bl - dervice ainee 1600, Db ster, “Service since vidson's Traniter & B¢ e idson's Transter & Siorase Co. 1117 B LOAD WANTED TO TIM! it reduced rates. Call BLIB Lnrt. afil 20, for prices. 27° s Pl 28, 8. Saving Leaky Roofs! Our thorough knowledge of repairs often puts off the great it of ne Pears. Save our dollars, Consul us frer. KOONS &E5gix 933 V 8t N'W. NG COMPANY North 4423 o | of Commerce and the proceeds of the AR ~BEANING STAR, WASHI REALLY think, consid- ering the amount of taxpayer’s money that is spent for police pro- tection, that I am entitled to make a complaint. . A $6,000 bad check is no joke. Can’t you do anything to get my money back?” Having delivered this speech in a very pompous and dignified manner, Mr. Belmont leaned back and re- [{3 garded the two detectives with great severity. “The bank says it's your signature. Their experts checked it.” - | Mr. Belmont threatened to | explode. “Do_you take me | for a fool? I say I never wrote that check.” “Ever go to speakeasies, Mr. Belmont? So? What ones?” Belmont hesitatingly named several and added: “Last week I went to a new place, These exposures of rackets are print TWO SHIPS COLLIDE DFF VIRGINIA COAST Both Proceeding to Port Un- aided While Coast Guard Cutters Stand By. By the Associated Press. NORFOLK, Va., May 23.—The motor ship City of Rayville and the Sage Brush, both American, were in collision late yesterday 20 miles off Parramore | Banks, on the Virginia coast, it was re- | ported in a wireless message received 3 | Neither ship was in immediate danger after the crash and both were able to proceed under their own power, the City of Rayville to Philadelphia and the Sage Brush to Norfolk. Whether any one had been injured or killed was not stated in the message. The Sage Brush was last reported as leaving Boston May 16 and the City of Rayville left Norfolk yesterday for Phil- adelphia. ‘The message said the Sage Brush is com! to Norfolk with 34 persons aboard, but whether these were mem- bers of her crew or included men from the other ship was not disclosed. No ci‘m.mm.ances of the collision were given. The Coast Guard cutter Ponchar- train was 80 miles from the position and was proceeding there to offer aid. The CG-138 also was proceeding to the Sage Brush and the cutter Mascoutin was standing by at Norfolk ready to put to sea if her services are needed. SCHOONER EN ROUTE TO VISIT WORLD FAIR Queen of North Atlantic Fishing Boats Reaches Toronto on Way to Chicago. By the Assoclated Press. TORONTO, May 23—Amid a scat- tered flotilla of screeching tugs and chugging motor boats, the schooner Bluenose, queen of the North Atlantic fishing banks, was brought into Toronto Harbor last evening en route to the World’s Fair at Chicago. Towed from Kingston, the big schooner was lashed to a little tug and brought into her berth after Capt. An- gus Walters and his crew had en- deavored to give the waiting crowds a | chance to see her unfurled sails. There was only a light breeze and the schooner was taken in tow again and brought to the harbor front, where a reception committee, headed by Mayor William J. Stewart, waited. ‘The captain, despite the discouraging sailing weather, was optimistic about his trip to Chicago, where, he said, the boat might be left until next Spring. No definite plans have yet been made, Capt. Walters said, and he could not say how long he would remain in To- ronto. He spoke lightly of two incidents which occurred while the Bluenose was on her way to Kingston. Once she scraped bottom and while in tow of the tug Grenville the line broke and the banker drifted around for an hour or so until her line was again made fast. BANDS AND DRUM CORPS IN CUP COMPETITION | i QIR | Contest to Be Curtain-Raiser for | College Ball Game Tomorrow. Three bands and three or four drum corps will compete for silver cups to- | morrow night at Griffith Stadium as a curtain-raiser for the George Washing- ton-Washington Coliege ball game. The contest is sponsored by the Chamber evening go to the National Capital civic fund. ‘The program will start at 8 o’clock. Bands already entered are Veterans | of Foreign Wars, Fire Department and | Washington Gas Light Co. The drum | corps slated to appear are Victory Post, | Costello Post, Alexandria Post and pos- | Legion. Any adult band or drum corps in Washington area is eligible. Judges will be Capt. William J. Stan- nard of the U. S. Army Band, Lieut. W. R. Sima, leader of the U. S. Naval Academy Band, and one other yet to be named. Lieut. Leon Brusiloff of the 6th Marine Reserve Brigade and Gun- ner Horace Talbot of the Marine Band will direct the contest. In South Africa railroads are suf- —the register is a phony. (Copyright, 1933.) | Public Schcol and submitted 78 posters. sibly Arlington Post, all of the American | no graeful notes he pens and plays in ifsa racket- Ja mezyE. Grant the Chic Monde. But what has a speakeasy to do with this affair?” Willing was watching De- tective Healy’s face. At the mention of the Chic Monde, Healy raised his eyebrow. “Did you sign anything there, Mr. Belmont? Didn’t they ask you to sign the club reg- ister so they could give you a membership card?” ( “Well,” said Belmont, weak- ly, “T——" “Sure,” said Healy, “a clip joint. The register is a phony. They have a check concealed under it. Tl kick the place over tonight. We always break up a place if we find out they are running a check joint. But that won’t get your money back,” said Healy, enjoying the opportunity of giving advice to a millionaire. “Don’t be a sucker again.” { ed to advise and protect the public. SVITH MAKES PLEA FOR . 5. SHIPPING New Yorker Says Americans Spend Too Much on For- eign Lines. By thg Associated Press. YORK, May 23.—American patronage of American shipping was urged last night by Alfred E. Smith in an address in observance of Mari- time day. As a result of the Jones-White act of 1928, said the former Democratic presidential nominee, “we have put the American flag back upon the world’s main trade routes and created a reser- volr of men and ships available for national emergency.” In addition to the construction of 42 modern ocean-going vessels, he said, a national system of airways connect- ing this country with 32 nations has been established. Too Few Support Lines. Urging support of the country's ship- ping, Mr. Smith said: “In the North Atlantic trade, which is the most active in the world, of the 20 or 25 per cent of the passengers who are foreigners, the proportion selecting American steamers is almost negligible, while of the remaining 75 or 80 per cent who are Americans, more than half use foreign vessels. In short, the German, French and British steamers are invariably selected by their citizens yet Americans are the chief support of their foreign-owned lines-to the neglect of their own. The results of this neglect are not often felt at once, but in the long run they will rise up as a damper on export trade and an actual threat to security in case of war or other national emergency. Bulk Spent Abroad. “We have a half billion dollar annual bill for marine freight and passenger service which the American public pays. Of this amount, fully two-thirds goes to foreign shipping and the bulk of this share, estimated at 85 per cent, is not spent in this country. In other words, upward of 60 per cent of the amount we pay for shipping service in the international trade leaves our country and is spent abroad. Add this sum to our national income, and thou- sands of Americans could be put to work.” “ROSES,” LUMSDEN TOPIC AT TAKOMA GATHERING Horticulturist Gives Lecture on Flowers at Branch Public Library. David Limsden, associate horti- culturist, Plant Quarantine and Control Administration, was the guest speaker at a meeting of the Takoma Park Horticultural Club last night in the| Takoma Park branch of the Washington Public Library. The speaker’s address was on “Roses, 0ld and New,” and was illustrated, and in the course of his remarks referred to the many new varieties of roses being | introduced each year as well as cf the old varieties being reintroduced into commerce. Mr. Lumsden planned and supervised the planting of the Walter Reed Hospital grounds. Announcement was made of the win- ners of poster prizes in connection with the iris show, which clcsed Saturday night, by Fred L. Harries, chairman of the exhibition: Fifth grade—First, Neel Pisher; second, Kenneth Clark; third, Louise Ridgway. Sixth grade—First,| Tllustrated | | | ision was returned for reconsideration | NGUSTRY ONTRL LEASTARTS O Methodists Clash on Plan for U. S. Ownership and Operation. NGTON By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 23.—The closing | session of the New York East Confer- | ence of the M. E. Church was en-i livened yesterday with debate on a | resolution calling for Government con- | trol and operation of industry. | Reyv. Paul Du Bois of Bristol, Conn., | chairman of the Committee on Social | Service, presented the resolution, which | urged that “the people of the United | States, through their elected repre- sentatives, take over all key industries— such as banks, railroads, mills and public utilities~to control and operate them not for the benefit of a_select few, as at present, but for the benefit of all the people, in their dual capacity as consumers and producers.” After opposition resulted, the resolu- to_the committee. Rev. Arthur Workman of Sea CIff, N. , charged that such control “is Russia Sovietism.” Bishop Francis J. McConnell of New | York had difficulty preserving order durl}ng thefdebate, The conference adopted the report of the Committee on Istemauonmfl;{e- lations, which condemned isolationism, economic nationalism, the “buy Amer- ican” and “buy British” campaigns, Japanese militarism and traffic in arms and munitions. This report advised American entrance into the World | Court and urged world co-operation for economic recovery. | WOUNDS PROVE FATAL Oklahoma Policeman Shot in Fight ‘With Crazed Bomber. OKLAHOMA CITY, May 23 (®).—| J. H. Beasley, 39, police scout, died yes- terday of wounds he received last Thursday in a pistol fight with a crazed, unemployed Seminole carpenter Who threatened to explode a dynamite bomb in_the business district. Beasley was shot twice. Other offi- cers killed the carpenter, J. E. Ferguson. Beasley came to Oklahoma City from Terry Haute, Ind., 13 years ago. His widow, Mrs. Myra Edna Beasley, | and a sister, Mrs. Clara Schreiber of Humera, Ind., survive. PIPE LINE TAX SIGNED AUSTIN, Tex, May 23 (P).—Gov.| Miriam A. Ferguson yesterday signed a | bill to tax the intangible assets of oil pipe lines and to increase the oil pro- duction levy to 2 cents per barrel. ‘The taxes will become effective 90 days | after the Legislature adjourns. The present tax on oil production is 2 per cent of the value of the oil, or about half a cent a barrel at prevail- ing prices. INUTE YSTERY Can You Solve it 7~ Dr. Fordney is professor of crimi nology at & famous university. His ad: .vice is often sought by the police of many cities when confronted with par- ticularly baffing cases. This problem has been teken from his case book covering hundreds of criminal investi- U sour wits on {11t takes but ONE MINUTE to read! Every fact and every clue necessary to its solution are in the story itself—and there is only ane,nnw.'cr, How good a detective are One for the Rookies. BY H. A. RIPLEY. &« AY, Inspector, here’s a neat problem to . give your next ‘rookie’ class,” remarked Ford- | ney. “The following incident | happened in the medical de- | partment at the university. “Stewart Brams was thankful the instructor was out of the room when | he arrived late for his first class at| the labaratory. His | tardiness was em- barrassing as he| had never met any of the students, all Mof whom were busily engaged in making experi- ments when he entered. One of the boys had laid his _coat across the table at which Stewart was work couldn’t place to put it. “He looked around the room—all the fellows were in shirt sleeves and wear- ing large white aprons. He examined the coat carefully. There wasn't a thigg in it to identify its owner. Stewart’s keen eye noted the distinc- tive color and pattern, fine quality and splendid tailoring and it was not with- out a shade of envy that he muttered to himself, ‘set him back plenty!’ But, what to do with it! “He didn't hesitate long, however. You see, Stewart has been attending my class in. criminology and he has learned the value of observation. With- out speaking to any one he picked up the coat, walked across the room, tapped the owner of it on the shoulder | and handed it to him, explaining thatl he needed his table. “Now, Kelley, you ask your rookles | how Stewart knew whose coat it was | —but, make sure you know the answer | yourself!” tormented the professor. | DO YOU KNOW HOW STEWART KNEW TO WHOM THE COAT BE- LONGED? Perhaps you have s story or problem you would like to submit to Prof. Fordney. If so, send it to him in care ®f this paper. He will be delighted to receive it. (For Solution See Page A-10.) Rcbert Buck; second, Alline Jones; | third, Ellen Garner. Sixth grade— | Pirst, Jean Goode: second, Cleo Hall; | third, James Clark. The children of the three classes attend the Takoma HOWARD WARNS AGAINST MUSIC AS PROFESSION By the Associated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, May 23.—A note of warning was sounded today by John ‘Tasker Howard for those who would take up music professionally as a voca- tion. ‘This dapper little man, as alert as musical scores as critic and composer, suggests rather that fond parents, be- lieving they have a musical genius in| their offspring, direct them instead to taking up music as an avocation. “I would never urge any one to make music their profession unless they had ability so clearly marked that there wac no question,” observed Mr. Howard dur- ing a lull in proceedings of the biennial convention of the National Federation of Music Clubs. fering some competition from animal- drawn transportation facilities. ‘Why, they would be liable to starve and I'd have that on my conscience.” Racketeers, no longer confining themselves to the liquor field, are spreading | into many other lines of activity, including the poultry, the laundry and the | cleaning and dyeing business. Officials combating racketeering and gangsters in | New York arrestod Waxie Gordon and are hunting Dutch Schultz. ;Wfllmm “Three-Fingered-Jack” White and William “Klondike” O'Donnell are said to be among those controlling the old Capone organization. In Chicago Is racketeering changing with the times? 1Is the law making headway against it? This is the second of three articles discussing these and related Questions. BY NOEL THORNTON. EW YORK (&) —Federal and State officers, pushing their at- tack against gangsters, are en- countering a changing battle- front in the ranks of rack- eteers, Not only have new leaders thrust forward to direct this criminal element in i#ts mulcting of billions of dollars from its victims, but they are carrying their “conspiracy to coerce” tactics into many new fields little touched here- tofore. Began With Vote-Controlling. According to newspaper accounts in the early part of this century, modern | racketeering began with the organizing of strong-arm hoodlums to control votes by threats. The same methods were used to extort bounty from the truck- ing industry, and during the past dec- ade the idea flourished in illegal beer and liquor traffic. Liquor racketeering quickly blossomed into a criminal dynasty of big and easy money, with gang czars in New York, Chicago and Detroit branching but their activities until they became na- tional in scope. “Public Enemies” Listed. Three years ago the internal revenue department took emphatic cognizance of this menace by launching an un- relenting attack at the one weak spot of the racketeers’ armor—their habit of evading income tax payments. Lists of “public enemies” were named. This barrage had its first results in Chicago when Al and Ralph Capone and the Guzik brothers, Sam and Jack, were sent to prison. Meantime a group of wholesale inter- gang murders together with subsequent convictions broke the power of the Purple Gang which controlled the De- troit area. Searching for Others. When the income tax sleuths moved into New York they discovered that gangster killings had eliminated several of the ones they had intended grilling. In quick succession bullets wiped out Vincent “Baby Face” Coll, Larry Fay, Jack “Legs” Diamond and Vannie Higgins. Now the Federal investigators ar making efforts to find Dutch Schultz, suddenly missing from public circula. tion. Ownie Madden, another on their list, is in Sing Sing. Waxie Gordon was seized Sunday on income tax evasion charges. Of the list of “big shots” originally named by the Government, only Wil- liam Duffy, Ciro Terranova and George Demange, together with the missing Schultz and Gordon, remain prominent in New York’s area. Another recent addition to these ranks is Charley Phil Rosenberg, former bantamweight champion. He has just been sentenced to prison on a charge of using racketeering methods in the poultry markets. In Chicago, the old Capone organ- SUIT LONG FOUGHT “Little Cornelius,” Hurt 30 Years Ago, Still Trying to Collect. KANSAS CITY, May 23 (#).—Sooner or later, it may prove possible to settle this matter of little Cornelius falling through a hole in the board sidewalk. Cornelius Scanlon, 2 years old, met with the mishap August 8, 1800. Through his father, he sued the city and lost. Later his father brought suit charging “loss of services” and by 1924 had won a $17,500 damage award. In 1930, however, the State Supreme Court reversed the verdict, so now it's to do all over again. %/e verier Ne Are equipped with Du Pont They were specified by the ac! York’s Tallest Buildings TONTINE Window Shades. hitects and builders of these “monuments to progress” because up to now there has never been a substitute to equal the service, dependability and economy of Du Pont TONTINE Window Shades. They're WASHABLE! Made to Measure at Factory Prices BRI TS e e ST J—0i-/ 325723 STOKES 830-13seNw JI SAMMONS ization is reputed to be controlled by Murray Humphreys, a dapper young man with marcelled hair and a power in the cleaning and dyeing industry. At the moment Chicago detectives are un- able to find him in his usual ha Willlam “Three - Pingered i White, who is now appealing a one-year | dike” O'Donnell, who had a disorderly conduct charge dismissed in February. are said to be two others who Humphreys’ power. ‘These current leaders are the ones receiving especial attention from the various forces investigating racketeer activities in new flelds—which include milk, fish and poultry trades; cleaning. dyeing and laundry industries; kidnap- ing, “outlaw” labor unions and.abuses of the new 3.2 beer regulations. 1 WHERE TO DINE. 50° Sea Food Dinners Served 11:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. coLp SEA FOOD DINNER Oyster Clam Crabfiakes or * Shrimp Cocktail Cholee of Crab Imperial (Hot or Cojd) Fresh Picked Shrimp Salad an Coffee, Tea or Beer Nlcw:n'r’l‘l. French l'rl:mlll 418 12th St. N.W. Dinner Special only Green ppers WEDNESDAY ONLY Tenderloin | 733 17th St. HHETNT T Has always been delightfully it AR B Rl Schneider’s R S RS 4427 11th St N.W, kg prison sentence, and William “Klon- | | AIR TRAVEL | Information ! 5 eservations WORK SUSPENDED ONDAMAT HOALS Small Project Begun Under Hoover Regime Held Too | Little to Be Useful. By the Associated Press. ‘Work has been halted at the order of the White House on the construction of a dam at the Government’s Muscle Shoals property, for which the Hoover administration contracted in its closing days. Action was taken on the basis of re- received from Louis Glavis, chief e Interior Department’s Investiga- tion Bureau, who made a personal s vey of the Alabama project for the ad- ministration. Held Too Small. The dam involved was intended to supplement the power potentialities of the huge Wilson Dam. Construction of such a dam, to be known as dam-No. 3. is authorized in the new Muscle | Shoals law. | Glavis reported that the work being | done was on a dam many feet lower than specifications providing the maxi- mum of benefit. He advised his chief, Secretary Ickes, that contractors were nearly to pour cement in the| lower dam and that its completion on the smaller scale would hamper the full- est development of the shoals project. Ickes took the matter up: with the President and Mr. Roosevelt ordered the Army engineers to halt work on the dam immediately. Investigation Pends. As a result of this order, further con- struction work at the $150,000,000 Muscle Shoals property will be delayed until the new Government corporation, the Tennessee Valley Authority, is ready to go ahead under the provisions of the Norris-Hill Tennessee Valley law. ‘The construction of the proposed dam, now halted, is one of the sybjects to be investigated by the Justice Department. CHICAGO RELIEF CUT 6,000 Families Slashed From Rolls of Social Agencies Council. CHICAGO, May 23 (#).—The Statis- tical Bureau of the Chicago Council of Social Agencies yesterday said 6,000 families had been removed from relief rolls in Cook County during A to make a saving of $98,000 in relief ex- ditures. The bureau said that dur- March the total number of un- duplicated families receiving relief in the county was 203,543. Relief in the county_for March_cost $5,606,043. i for all airline destinations EASTERN AIR TRANSPORT SYSTEM 808 15th Street, N.W. (National 7161) ‘Washington Airport (National 3646, WASHINGTON-NEW YORK EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR A BERIES OF PRIENDLY M How way to get the things in 7th and E CHE FARMS T axvers caves S Bk, Hot wate in Hot 3 Sure Relief. Since 1897. Trial is BeLLANS (2 DIGESTION TRUSS ES Fitted Expertly at Very Low Prices GIBSON CO. 917 G St. NW. soot embed themsel pores of your skin. To y re- armful accumulation mo Liquefying Cream. to a delightful liquid upon contact with the skin and flushes out every particle of dirt and grime, which ordi= nary creams fail to reach. Get a generous SO size jar for d4Sc todsy st eoples Drug Stores. JA-PAL-MO Liquefying Cream B a2 Full Value because its the most flavorful GULOENS .Mustard . Keep Internally CLEAN Feel Good! Enjoy Life More! Duzm&crhkfimlcml:: poisons from the asol promotes good health by stipation and eliminating intestinal tract saf more than a quarter of a cen~ . Hexasol is reliable, safe and pure. Agreeable to take, due to the nicety of its ‘blend. Get a generous bottle for only 60c today at pour nearest drug stors. Hezasol must bene- it you or your money back. The First Thing in The Morning for Health HEXASOL The Safe, Pleasant Saline Lazative to get the THINGS YOU WANT . Some people think that speculation will bring them; others suppose that dreams of the future are realized by just wishing ... BUT the surest life you want is to plan . ahead for them and save systematically in order to have the money with which to buy them. Time spent scanning the horizon is wasted; money put aside out of earnings is the means of turning clouds into sunshine. Bank of Commerce & Savings IN THE HEART OF THE SHOPPING DISTRICT Sts. N.W. ITS PURITY ... SAFETY e SUPERIOR QUALITY World-wide honors, won by Chestnut Farms Dairy in England, and repeatedly corroborated by local Health Department A ue wholly to the proven SUPERIOR" QUALITIES of PURITY and SAFETY in its products. Yet they cost no more than ord y dairy supplies. Chesnut Farms will be happy to serve you. Place your order NOW for service tomorrow! TNUT DAIRY