Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1933, Page 3

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SPECIAL NOTICES. 2°m'= st not at Sfi ne. not af W. EDWARDS, _18* T. BOOKS QFENED, ‘SHepherd 5413. % . 8. OR D. C. GOVERN- fraternal organizations Excellent_opportunity to come: _representing, in n goure ., n's oldest and argest dealers for Americ: ins low- riced car. ~Full particulars by calling Mr. OMPSON at WEst 0161, Monday evening, ween and e ANY ONE HA ana rd. s e ACCOUNTANT, closed. kept_audited; EMPLOYEES OF U. ment, members of and labor unions. STANCE,_MOVING BETWEEN ALL tern points. “Service since 1896, Vidson's Transter & Co. Da- Storage 17 ® st n.w. NA. 0960. ‘WHEN YOU NEED AN ELECTRICIAN CALL the Electric Shop on Wheels. Inc. A complete op on_wheels will be sent to your door. hones_WIsconsin_4821. COlumbia_2400. INVALID ROLLING CHAIRS. FOR RENT OR omplete line of new and used chairs; ) STORAG! _418 10th St. N.W. ALL DRY CLEANING LEFT OVER 30 DAY Wil be sold at public auction. DOLLAR DRY CLEANING CO. _ . BPECIAL RETUR LO. ATES ON FULL 1l points within 1.000 uaranteed service: lo- cal moving also. one 1460. NAT. DEL. AS8OC.. INC.. 1317 N. Y. ave. Treasury Department Office of the Comptroller of the Currency Washington, May 20. 1933 Notice s hereby given to_all persons who may have claims against “The Commercial National Bank of Washington,” District of Columbia. that the same must be present to Robert C. Baldwin. Receiver, with the legal proof thereof within three months from this date or they may be disaliowed. J. F.T. O'CONNOI and part loads to miles; padded van: Comptroiler ‘of the Currency. CHAMBERS &, “nétd * is_one of the larg- est undertakers I the vorld Complete funerals ow $65 up. 6 chapels, 12 pario hearses and ambulances, 25 und 17 _cars kers and assistants MOV and HAULING. White su- MOVING 3%, 00" Reas., relisble. ARMY AIR CORPS CRIPPLED BY DRAFT OF FORESTRY SERVICE _ (Continued Frot t been concluded in California. ‘While | ;:gre than 300 combat planes from all | parts of the country were concentrated 8t March Field, Riverside, Calif, that fleld was required to furnish so many ©of its own personnel for forestry camp y that the whole 17th Pursuit Group three squadrons was laid up. . All except one or two planes of eac mquadron were put out of active com- ission, the engines filled ‘with cosmo- line to preserve them and the planes placed in storage. ‘The laying up Déw the group not only seriously interfere with the maneuvers, regarded as of the | ftmost importance in the working out of problems of defense resulting from ess in combat plane speeds lnd; efficiency, but also cripples the first- | line coastal defense of the California a. “eMore than 35 officers from March Peld slone already are in forestry eamps throughout the West, while 15 others are engaged in full-time C. C. C.| sctivities at March Field, where & large preliminary training camp has been es- blished. usxmllnr situations prevail at virtual- ly all permanent Air Corps posts throughout the United States. Seven officers and 12 enlisted men were taken in a single group from the 3d Attack Group, Fort Crockett, Tex., necessitat- ing the laying up of more than a half squadron, and others have been taken ) subsequently. TS, ertal ARMY WL EFFEY S0 SAVN Economy Will Be Made With- out Reduction in Officers or Men. (Continued From First Page) \vs | in accordance with the annual program of training for Organized Reserves. “The Citizens’ Military _Training Camps will be held as scheduled, but with & reduction in attendance to meet the limited funds available. This re- duction will limit all training to can- didates who have had previously at least one Summer’s training in the Citizen\ Military Training Camps. Schools to Continue. | “The Army school system, which pro- | vides schooling for all components, in- | cluding West Point and air cadets, will continue.” Instructions were issued yesterday to | departmental officials and to the nine | corps areas respecting some of the new- | 1y ordered economy measures. |~ While it is possible to figure on per- haps 20 armory drills for the National Guard during the year, the curtailment from a minimum of 48 armory drills provided in the national defense act is the most severe the organization has ever suffered. The reduction in Army drills, paid for at the rate of $1 each, is a budget economy worked out that falls heavily on each enlisted guards- man. Efforts last year to reduce the drills to 24 for the year were defeated |in Congress after a strenuous fight National Guard associations in all sec- tions fought the proposed reductions, | and firally prevailed upon the House | to restore the minimum of 48 drills. Orders were issued yesterday also | to suspend the field training and target practice for the Regular Army in the coming fiscal year, except that recruits will fire such courses as are necessary to become reasonably proficient in the use of small arms. Additional com- pensation to enlisted men for qualifi- cations in arms, an old Army tradition, will be continued during the year only to the extent necessary to compensate, for one year after date of qualification, those men who are authorized to re- ceive the additional pay on June 20. Field Maneuvers Off. Suspension of field training and tar- get practice for the Regular Army, per- haps, is the most serious impairment of military efficiency provided in the new economy program. It means the cancellation of all field maneuvers and target practice for the Infantry and Artillery. ° No change is contemplated in the four weeks’ training period recently an- nounced for the R. O. T. C. this Sum- mer. While the usual training schools for the Army will reopen in the Fall, it was said at the War Department that economies probably would be effected at by reducing the size of each new class. ‘There was no way of estimating yes- terday the proposed reduction in civilian el. It was not believed, how- ever, that the civilian employes in Washington will be materially affected THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, 1 JAMES ROOSEVELT TELLS ABOUT coast, his first vacation since entering the White House. Their craft is the land Me. They will sail as far north as Campbello Island and then the Pres The Cruise of the Amberjack 2d START OF TRIP. With three of his sons as companions, President Roosevelt is making a two-week cruise along the New England | James was with the President from the start and his two brothers, John and Franklin, jr., will join the cruise at Port- | D. C, JUNE 18, 1933—PART ONXE. trim_seagoing schooner Amberjack 2d. sident will return to Washington aboard lin, John and James. —A. P. Photo. the cruiser Indianapolis. The three bO}'s showns above are, left to right: Frank! i i 3 = i vacation he iikes most—tossing about on the sea. He looks very well—cheer- | ful and vigorous, despite the heavy| duties of his office, but I am sure he | will be able to face the coming months with fine spirits after the relaxation the cruise will provide. The Amberjack 2d is waiting after | ROOSEVELT BOARDS YACHT FOR HOLIDAY Greeted by Large Turnout| Along Route, Despite Drenching Rain. (Continued From First Page) _ | President was cheered on to his va- | cation by crowds which lined the route of the 150-mile drive. Even a drenching rain which fell | during most of the afternoon failed to | drive the citizens from the streets in the many towns through which he passed. Speaks Briefly at Quincy. At Quincy, late in the day, he stopped to speak a few words into the amplifiers for the throng that gathered in a down- pour in front of the home of former President Adams. Here he recalled his visits, as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, to the shipyards in Quincy dur- ing the World War. “And I hope,” he added, “ few months we will start bu more American ships.” In ordering his recovery program into operation just before departing from | Washington yesterday, Mr. Roosevelt made available the funds to start a $238,000,000 naval construction pro- T in the next 1lding some am. The narrow streets of Marion were jammed by the Summer colonists and villagers as the presidential motor cara- van arrived. The President went di- rectly to the cottage of Dr. William L. McDonald, whom he visited several years ago after an attack of infantile paralysis. Dons Old Clothes. i where we visited my two younger tonight and see that everything is ship- | both Presidents of the United States— private car when we joined him. There | breakfast. off at last—at least We SOON prothers, Franklin, jr., and John, at the | shape for the cruise. I met father at was a great crowd at the station and | There was some delay in leaving BY JAMES ROOSEVELT. [ shook hands with the train crew, we| ROTON, Mass., June 17.—We're Started. From Boston we came here | G shall be. We're headed for Groton School. Marion and the good ship The route lay to historic Quincy, the Amberjack 2d. We'll go aboard | home of a father and son, who were the station in Boston this morning about 8:30. He was having breakfast | of cereal, toast and orange juice in his a holiday spirit is in the air, for this| is Bunker Hill day. Gov. Joseph B. Ely came aboard while father was at Boston, because I had to buy father some oil skins. A crowd waited for father to leave the train and after he ANERIGAN TRADE DECLINES ABROAD Greater Markets Drop Off, With Increases in Sales in Latin America. ! John Quincy Adams and John Adams. Mayor Ross presented father with a vase modeled of Quincy granite, a very | interesting achievement. Everywhere father received the warm- est greetings. But by this time the day had turned quite warm and we were all looking forward to reaching Marion and getting aboard the Amber- jack. I am pleased with the prospects of the cruise not only because we shall have a merry time, but because it gives father the opportunity for the sort of | After a brief visit he proceeded to two d R iRys Iy st the McDonald dock and in another mo- | Such perishables as milk, butter, eggs and ice were put aboard this afternoon | ment he was on board, away from pres- | {and all is set. The crew made up | entirely of friends of father and myself | have the ship looking fit and very trim. | This is a schooner type about 44 feet |long. Below decks she is very roomy | with plenty of headroom, quite an im- | portant factor as we are all over six | feet tall. Soon it will be time to go | aboard, so I'll wire right from the good ship Amberjack en route down East. Copyright. 1933. Rube Wardell—Reproduc- tion in whole or part prohibited. Business Pick-Up Car Loadings at 564,546 Record Since November —Steel Output Gains. By the Associated Press. ‘The American Railway Association announced yesterday railroad freight car loadings for last week totaled 564,- 546 cars, highest since last November. Loadings for the week were 56,312 | above the preceding week and 62861 | WADSWORTH SEES CHANGEIN U S, LIF :Holds Roosevelt Program |Will Result in Contest on The- ory of Regimented People. idential duties, and soon in the old clothes and sweater he will wear on his two weeks’ cruise up the coast. James, his son, and George Briggs and John Cutter of Boston, friends of the family, comprise the crew with the President. Stephen T. Early, a secretary to the President, aboard a trailing destroyer, is s only contact with official Washing- ton and Mr. Roosevelt hopes that con- tact will be kept to a minimum The first leg of the cruise tomorrow is across Buzzards Bay to Woods Hole, where the President will visit W. Cam- eron Forbes, former Governor General of the Philippines, an old friend. Experiences Recalled. Mr. Roosevelt got a real cheer as he told the rain-drenched throng at Quincy “We are going to start building some more American warships.” He added: “It is particularly appropriate, I think, that every President of the United States should come to Quincy, the birthplace of the two great Adams, as well as a lot of other great Adams right down to the present day. “And I may say I have another recol- lection of Quincy, because when I was a small boy I remember my uncle (Frederic Delano) was here as a stu- Forum Speaker SENATOR ROBERT J. BULKLEY. boys got hold of a cannon and got it up on the third floor and fired it out of a window. “That was on the anniversary of Bunker Hill day—today. So you see that it was appropriate that I should come back on that anniversary.” Mayor Charles Ross of Quincy pre- | sented the President with a granite vase made from one of the ties of the first railroad built in America. run- ning between Quincy and Boston. Professor Named for Honor. PARIS, June 17 (#)—Gilbert Chinard, professor of French at Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, was proposed today for elec- tion as corresponding member of the Academy of Moral and Political Sci- ences. His name was presented by the moral section. BULKLEY D PEAK NFORUMTUESDAY Ohio Senator to Explain Bank Reform Act in Radio Address. How the bank reform act recently passed by Congress will help the Ameri~ can people is the subject of an address | to be delivered by Senator Robert J. Bulkley of Ohio in the National Radio | Forum Tuesday, June 20, at 9:30 p.m, | Eastern standard time. The National | Radio Forum is arranged by The Washe | ington Star and broadcast over the nete | work of the National Broadcasting Co. Senator Bulkley, a Democratic mem< | ber of the Senate Committee on Bank- ing and Currency, was a member of | the subcommittee which whipped the Glass bill, now a law, into shape. He is thoroughly familiar with its proe visions. This measure, the most far- reaching banking legislation since the enactment of the Federal Reserve act, may mark a new era in American bank- ing. In addition to compelling banks of deposit to give over all investmens business, it carries provision for insure ance of bank deposits. Reservations at The Mayflower X Saltz Bros. were the first to sponsor the Genuine Lorraine Seersucker Suit in Washington. X Saltz Bros. show exclusive patterns in Seersuckers not found in any other store in Washington. X Saltz Bros. originated the Double-Breasted Seersucker Suit. (Saltz Bros. also originated the Seersucker Necktie to wear with Seersucker Suits.) X Saltz Bros. sell more Seersucker Suits than any other store in Washington. higher than for the same period & At Mitchel Field, N. Y., home of the by such orders. The ax. however, is year ago. dent at Adams Academy. I recall there 9th Observation Group, airplanes had to be moved out of the hangars and staked down in the open air to pro- vide quartess in the hangars for 1,000 forestry recruits, while a large number of officers of the group were taken out of the squadrons for duty with the ian workers. Only One Officer Remains. In a number of cases tactical squad- rons of the Air Corps upon which the Nation must depend for emergency de- fense, have been reduced to one offi- cer, usually the commanding officer, while all but one or tw‘c planes have Langley Field, Hampton, Va. home 'elyd Bombardment Wing, com- and the 8th Pursuit Group, has been the scene of a training camp for for- | estry recruits, & large number of the| bonus marchers from the National! Capital having been sent there. The squadrons are undermanned and, with a number of new planes to be delivered, it will become necessary to decommis- sior: ships there. Crissy Field, Calif,, reports that in| order to provide for emergency missions | in connection with the forestry camps, including ambulance plane service, its fiying officers have been placed on a | continuous “alert” status requiring | them to be ready to fly on 15-minute | notice. Instructors Withdrawn. | Several instructors in the Flight| Surgeons’ School of the Air Corps at! Randolph Field have been withdrawn | from the school and sent to forestry | camps, seriously crippling the school. | Training camps for the Civilian Con- | struction Corps have been established | on the landing fields of a number of the Air Corps tactical posts, among | them Langley FPield, March Fleld, Mitchel Field, Rockwell Field, Calif., and Chanute Field, Il One of the most serious phases of the situation, in the opinion of Air Corps | officers, is that officer-pilots assigned | 1o forestry duty are losing all flying | training, and if the duty is continued for very many months, will bs unfitted for combat service without taking re- fresher courses, since continuous train- ing is necessary to keep a combat pilot | in condition for duty. Under the present division of dutles | between the Army and Navy, the vital duty of coastal defense is entrusted to | the’ Army Air Corps. It was the pur- | pose of the so-called “five-year pro- gram” to provide sufficient airplanes and personnel to meet the requirements of any emergency which could be rea- sonably foreseen involving air defense of portions of the coast. The Air Corps | never has been brought up to the min- imum strength contemplated in the program as necessary, and is still fur- ther being reduced by the conservation camp service. | APPROVE BANK MERGER Virginia Commission Sanctions Crozet-Louisa Combine. Va. June 17 (P)— : of the People’s Bank of Crozet rople’s Bank of Piedmont, s, into the People’s Bank of Pied mont was authorized today by the State Corporation Commission. The commission authorized the new bank to commence business immediately with a capital of $50,000, operating at both Crozet and Louisa, with the home office at Louisa George R. B. Michie, Charlottesville, is president; W. S. Hildreth, Charlottes- ville, vice president, and Thomas B Behrendt, Charlottesville, cashier, Deaths Reported. Thomas Bridge, 88, 0 h st. Foster 21 Concord sve. oo e B SR Dalton, 64, Masonic and Eastern Lobr. b8, Garfield Hospital Grorse C. Bowie, 35015 Gaye 1558 Me- ridian pi Infant to James and Doris Travers, 23 hours. Sibley Hospital. William A. Hawkins, 68, Preedmen's Hos- 1y Annie Parker, 65, 2404 Va. ave. John W. Leegar, 62, 2033 L X James £ Catter, ‘60, Bt Bitabern's Hos: »ital Rachael Jackson. 60. Gallinges B Josepn B Bandver. 80, Bt Bk Hozp: Maria Porter. B6. 1815 Corcoran st. P. Chaney. 50. 2650 Wis ave. Char’ Hattie Eure, 29, Casualty Hospital, 8tar Home Arthur B Births Reported. ’.f | £ IHL "l;yo gohhsuh. boy. expected to fall very heavily on civilians in the huge quartermaster depots and in the ordnance arsenals throughout the country where the bulk of the; civilian personnel are employed. Plans respecting the civilian personnel, it was .u.ld.uhave not yet been worked out in An economy blow for “old time” en- listed men in the regular Army is the | discontinuance of the bonus of $75 for re-enlistments after July 1. This cus- tom of paying a bonus to “old timers” for re-enlisting has become a tradition in the Army and is useful in retaining in the service many well trained men ‘who might otherwise pocket their “hon- orable discharges” for good. KIWANIANS START FOR WEST TOMORROW| Edwin P. Hill Heads Delegation tol Seventeenth Annual Interna- tional Session. Local officers and delegates to the seventeenth annual Kiwanis Interna- tional convention at Los Angeles, June 25 to 29, will leave for the West tomor- row night from Union Station. ‘The Capital delegation will be headed by Edwin P. Hill, district governor; Asa W. Howard, Roanoke, Va., district sec- retary-treasurer, and Russell S. Perkin- son, Petersburg, Va., international trus- tee. The local delegation will join dele- gations of the Florida and Kentucky- Tennessee _districts at Kansas City, stopping off at the Grand Canyon June 23, where a fellowship meeting will be held. Irving Diener, president of the Alexandria, Va., club will be the prin- cipal speaker. Washington club representatives, in addition to Governor Hill, will include Lewis T. Breuninger, vice president; Edward D. Shaw, secretary, delegates, and Roe Fulkerson, Kiwanis magazine editorial writer, who will be the speaker at the fellowship meeting in the Holly- wood Rose Bowl, June 26, Where dele- gates of nearly 1,900 clubs in the United States and Canada will assemble. ‘The annual dinner of the Capital District delegates will be held June 27 with the Beverly Hills Kiwanis Club as host. ST. GABRIEL’S CHURCH CARNIVAL JULY 10-22 Committee Active Preparing for Benefit Under Direction of Rev. J. M. Nelligan. Arrangements are being made for the annual St. Gabriel's carnival, to be held July 10-22 for benefit of St. Ga- briel's Church, Rev. Joseph M. Nelligan, director general of the affair, announced yesterday The Grounds Committee is busy get- ting the area in front of the church in shape. Other groups, including the Au- tomobile Books Committee, are active also. James W. Gesfford is general chair- man of the carnival. The Grounds Committee is composed of James But- ler, chairman; T. M. Hughes, H. T. | Hughes, J. E. Dailey, J. C. Houston, H. | L Tonneman, D. L. Cronin, John Mal- | loy, P. A. Potts, John Sprecklemyer, E. T. Hardin, E. T. Hardin, jr.; Willlam Broderick, Emmett Broderick, Edgar | Laake, J. J. Preller, L. Diggins, Harry | Luckett, H. L. Torreyson and J. Crow- | der. Mrs. J. J. Preller is chairman of | the Automobile Books Committee. PLANES FIGHT "HOPPERS | Insect Eradicators Sprayed Over Mississippi Delta. | CLARKSDALE, Miss., June 17 (#).— Three airplanes spread a fog of insect eradicators over the Mississippi Delta today in efforts to check ravages of grasshoppers in cotton, corn and bean fields. Crops far and wide have been dam- aged seriously and at the Parchman State Prison Farm some fields have been virtually devastated. ‘The planes were brought to this State from the agricultural experiment sta- tion at Tallulah, La., and are working under the direction of J. R. Hicks, di- rector of the Mississ;ppl experiment station, and Clay Lyle, en of the State plant board. By the Associated Press. American foreign trade with 13 world markets increased during the first quarter of this year as compared with the corresponding period of 1932, although the greatest markets for American goods showed heavy declines. This was disclosed yesterday in a| study of the foreign trade situation issued by the United States Chamber | of Commerce. Imports from about 20 per cent of the countries Americans trade Wwith showed increases. “The values of exports to 12 out of 48 chief markets throughout the world showed increases ranging from 1 per | cent for Argentina to 70 per cent for Poland and Danzig—a greater gam than at any time since 1929,” said the re- view. | Sales to Latin America Jump. “Most of the increases were in sales | Latin American countries, as shuwni the following record: Argentina, 1 per cent; Brazil, 7; Colombia, 29; Vene- zuela, 14; Dutch West Indies, 64 Dominican Republic, 10; Guatemala, Costa Rica, 7; Salvador, 21; Italy, Poland and Danzg, 70, and Egypt. 11. “Decreases in_export values in many cases were smaller in recent quarters. Some of the more important declines in purchases from us were as follows: “In Europe: United Kingdom. 32 per cent: Germany, 25 France, 14; Belgium, | 9: Netherlands, 20; Spain, 32; Denmark, 38; Soviet Russia, 5 Switzerland, 35; Norway, 23; Portu- al, 9. “In North America: Canada, 41 per cent. Mexico, 2; Cuba,(33; Panama, 2. | “In South America Chile, 23 per cent; H ruguay, . | Pe"'111x3 ::hy‘va%n{ 48 per cent; Philip- | pine Islands, 12; China, 47: India, 54; | Hongkong 49; Dutch East Indies, 45. “In Oceania: Australia, 9 per cent,] Zealand, 10. ) N 2 trica: British South Africa, 12; | British West Africa, 18. | Imports Are Greater. | «Imports from more than a fifth of our drie! sources of supply—10 out of 47 suppliers—for the first quarter of | 1933 were greater in value than a year ago, the increase ranging from 4’ per cent for the Netherlands to 304 per cent for Salvador. The value of our imports from a number of these sup- pliers, however, was less than a mil- lion dollars. “Imports from the Philippines in- creased by $4,384,000, or 22 per cent, due to larger receipts of sugar at some- what higher prices. As a consequence the islands have now become our sec- | ond leading supplier. to by cent, the Netherlands 4, Turkey 137, Soviet Russia 9, Costa Rica 43, Egypt 30, Salvador 304, Nicaragua 78 and British East Africa 52. “Imports from Canada, our leading supplier, declined by $18,686,000. or 39 per cent. The value of these imports | was 10.7 per cent of our entire import trade, the lowest mark in years for our nelghbor.” The chief festival still observed at many a rural Japanese village shrine is that for the God of Hailstorms, whose dreaded visitation does the greatest harm to the crops. | glass manufacturers of America an- | '4-H CLUB DELEGATES “Imports from China increased 6 per | By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, June 17.—Representa- NEW YORK, June 17 (#).—Dow, | Jones & Co. today said steel output had | risen another 5 per cent in the Youngs- | 4. | town, Ohio, area, the best increase Ve James W. Wadsworth, Republican, | since gains began last March. Produc- |53id today that President Roosevelt's | tion was given at 51 per cent for the handling of serious emergencies had end of this week, and a prediction was made it would go higher. CHICAGO, June 17 (#)—Edward J. Cornish, chairman of the board of the National Lead Co. announced sales in May were 50 per cent ahead of the average during the first three months of the year. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, June 17 (®). —Output at the three Youngstown plants of the American Sheet & Tin Plate Co. will reach 100 per cent of ca- pacity next week, it was said today. CHICAGO, June 17 (#).—The plate been “admirable,” but that the whole administra t 1 o n program presaged “a change in the entire picture of American life.” “If the school of | thought now at the helm continues to dominate the country” said Wadsworth, for- mer United States Senator from New York, “we shall find ourselves on the verge of a fun- damental and con- stitutional contest that will resolve around the theory of a regimented peo- pler E nounced today production in May to- | taled 7,992,434 square feet, compared | with 4,679,776 in April and 3,015,943 In | Rep Wadsworth. May last year. | ST. PAUL, Minn., June 17 (#)—Fif- | teen thousand men will be given em- | ployment by the State Highway De- artment within 60 days after Federal aid funds become available, State High- way Commissioner N. W. Elsberg an- nounced today. He expects Minnesota | to be granted about $10,000,000. | Discussing the national recovery act, | Wadsworth said he could not see where the constitutional authority comes from that permits delegation of such extraor- dinary powers to the President. ‘The emergency banking laws, the home owners’ relief bills and the farm mortgage relief voted by Congress were described by Wadsworth as beneficlal features of the administration program. “President Roosevelt’s conduct in| taking care of the serious emergencies | encountered by his administration has | - . | menting upon the extraordinary pow- | Services Will Precede Sightseeing | ers granted the President by Congress. : | The United States, he said, should | Trip—Session Adjourns | Wednesday. compromise on war debts. “We ought,” he said, “to accept the inevitable fact that they cannot be paid, reach an agreement on them and | clear the atmogphere at once.” Delegates to the 4-H Club convention | here will attend services this morning in various Washington churches before embarking on a sight-seeing trip this afternoon. Plans call for visits during the after: noon to the Agricultural Experimental Farm at Arlington, Va., and to Arling- ton National Cemetery. The meeting here will adjourn Wednesday. Speakers at yesterday’s rally on the camp ground near Seventh street and the Mall included Dr. C. B. Smith, chief of the Office of Co-operative Ex- tension, Department of Agriculture; O. B. Martin, director of extension for Texas, and Dr. V. B. Hart, Department of Agriculture economist. Approximately 75 members of 4-H| Clubs representing most of the States | and 20 instructors and chaperons are attending the session here. Congratu Mr. Graham— We are pleased to have to the In order to assist in the r KMB;\?SADOP( I HOTEL POOL 40 NOTICE TO Don't take a chance with your eyes; have them examined by our registered op- tometrist now| of any of the banks ai 7 50c a Week! bk e 1004 F St. N.W. 1300 Conn. Ave. 1111 18th HECHT CO. $5,000 Subscription HAMILTON NATIONAL BANK Let’s Go, Washington! NOLAN MOTOR CO. >r———————0 We will be glad to negotiate with any depositor HAMILTON NATIONAL BANK Relative to the purchase of a NEW FORD or USED CAR was an old dining hall and one day there, somewhere in the '80s, there was a lot of commotion because some of the Newest 1933 Chevrolet Coach Regular $636 Model Priced low for Sunday sale New Car Guarantee Terms—Trade Sunday Until Midnight See Mr. Stanley 215 Pa. Ave. S.E. Larn reo| money 2 are i demand 8 Weeks’ Summer Course in Gregg Shorthand and Touch Typing--Starting Monday Review and New Private Secretarial and Jr. Accountancy Courses, 2—9 months, starting June 19 and 26. Operates large agency, openings hourly. Position guaranteed grad- uates. Better Courses—Better _Instruc- tors—Better Positions, small classes, in business 16 years. Boyd Business University 1333 F St. N. W. NAtional 2340. lations! matched The Hecht Co.’s elease of this $10,000,000.00 THE PUBLIC bout to merge with the ‘Today—Open Nights Till 11 P.M. - Phone—Day or Night DL 4100 N.W. Suits of GENUINE LORRAINE SEERSUCKER TAILORED BY HASPEL See Our Window Display of These Wonderful Summer Suits X A NEW SHIPMENT ALL SIZES ARE HERE, 35 TO 46. HAS JUST ARRIVED. ALSO SHORTS, LONGS AND STOUTS. SALTZ BROS. 1341 F STREET N.W.

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