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’ . own. This is a great national compact | RETAIL WORKERS CODE IS DELAYED Revision of Draft to Be Con- | didered by Leaders—Ford ' Mas Until September 5. the great bituminous flelds are to go solidly union. A measure of the magnitude of this accomplishment was the statement by John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, that it rep- Tesented “the greatest forward step to date in the recovery movement.” The coal job, however, was not yet complete and not due to be before to- morTow at least. The agreement al- “ready announced was upon the basic principles, and patient labor still was in progress to complete the contracts and the code. Plans for embracing the entire Ap- lachian bituminous coal industry wit'y uge marketing agencies modeled on Applachian Coals. Inc. were being worked out today by the producers simultaneously with their negotiations on labor contracts. Separate Ageficies Likely. While the operators had not yet dis- @losed their plans, it was understood separate agencies would be worked out for commercial ope:ations in Northern West Virginia, Western Pennsylvania and Central Pennsylvania. Appalachian Coals, Inc., and Smoke- less Coals, Inc., already cover most of the Southern West Virginia, Eastern Kentucky and Eastern Tennessee out- put. Appalachian Coals, Inc.. was estab- lished after a test case in the Supreme Court. A district court in Virginia held its formation would be in restraint of trade, but the Supreme Court last Spring reversed that opinion. The recovery act provided for estab- lishment of such organizations designed to eliminate cut-throat competition among different arms of the same in- dustry. The code to govern the bituminous coal industry is being shaped up for | final presentation to President Roose- velt for signing. Meanwhile, it appeared today that N. R. A. officials expect the anthracite industry to submit a pro- posed code by September 1. That word from the producers came several days ago, however. They have been meeting in New York to draft | “ the agreement. The recovery officials | said there was a possibility they had ! decided to delay submission for several | days. It has been understood by coal men that the anthracite producers wished to see the outcome of the bituminous industry’s codes as' well as the code for fuel oil before they completed their agreement. Fuel oil and bituminous coal have been hard coal's principal competitors. PRESIDENT ORDERS REPORT ON FORD’S POSITION ON CODE (Continued From First Page.) | | wages and shorter hours than proposed | in the trade charter submitted by the Natfonal Automobile Chamber of Com- merce. Ford is not a member of this| organization. The Government will not buy any more automobiles from Ford unless he obtains a Blue Eagle. “The Government,” said the N. R. A. leader, “has signified its intentions of buying only from those industries which displayed the Biue Eagle.” Asked by news men if Ford conforms | to the code’s wage and hour provisions | but does mot sign. whether he could | “ get the Blue Eagle emblem, Johnson | Teplied he could not, nor could Ford | put in a separate code. | Asked for his reaction if Ford should exceed the regular code in the maier! of hours and wages, Johnson asserted * that that would not be compliance,! and added: “The only way you can get peopls |long after this sapling from Mount Ver- | to act together is to get them to agree | ~ to act together. It does not make any | difference what is done by an indi-| vidual employer that he does on his among employers, and everybody has | 80t to agree to all the terms of that agreement in order to get the Blue Eagle.” Law Dictates Course. Asked if Ford would be classified as | & recalcitrant, Johnson replied: i “I hate to talk about Mr. Ford in this | way in his absence. However, I havc no discretion in the matter, it is in the law.” _Johnson observed that should Ford | sign the code and at the same time an- | nounce shorter hours and greater minimum wages, that would not violate | the code, but rather “would be recefved ! with thanks | Johnson said Ford would not be re-! quired to join the Automobile Cham- | ber of Commerce if he signs the code. | but that he would have to open his; books to the chamber “to the extent that there is any opening of books.” ‘The chamber has been set up to ad- minister the automobile code. : Johnson, in answer to another ques- | tion, said Ford could not sign t President’s re-employment agreement separately if he comes under the code. | The recovery administrator added: { “However, I have the widest dls(‘re<| tion in the world. The President can | make an agreement with a subdivision | of an industry, but I can tell you now | 1 would not do it.” WORKERS ORGANIZED. 200 Applications From Ford Plant Claimed by Union, NEWARK, N. J. August 30 (®).— Charles Jennings. Hudson County labor organizer, announced today that appli- | cations for membership in the proposed | United Automobile Workers' Union were | received last night from nearly 300 em- ploves of the Edgewater plant of the ! Ford Motcr Co. Jennings said he hoped to affiliate | the proposed union with the American | Federation of Labor and will make application for a charter today. : Motoring Body Hits Government Using A.A.A.Abbreviation The new deal's penchant for abbreviations, which has resulted in “Nira” for the Recovery Ad- ministration and “Three A's” for the Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration, today drew a state- ment of resentment from the American. Automobile Associa- tion, whose “A. A. A.” insignia has been a familiar marker glong the Nation's highways for a quarter of a century. The motor group feels that it has the prior right to the three A's. “Seriously,” goes on the state- ment, “the application of our copyrighted, trade-marked name, which has roamed the highways and byways these 30-odd years to the Agricultural Adjustment Ad- ministration, is causing no end of confusion. Letters, telegrams and long-distance telephone calls in- Roosevelt, Jr., as Bu THE EVENING lifighter TAKES KEEN INTEREST IN SPORT l'N'*»!PAlN. : i RANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT. JR. “Arias de la Reina (left), and the popular young bullfighter, Diego Gomez Laine (right). who showed him the technique of the ancient Spanish sport at the fighting bull ranch near Seville. the fighting cape he used in practicing the cape work. with his host, Senor Don Romualdo Young Roosevelt is holding Later the junior Roosevelt attended a bullfight in Cadiz, where Laine dedicated a bull to him. —A. F Photo. Text of Johnson Speech Recovery Administration Checking Tides of Disaster and Distress in Nation, Declares Admm- istrator at Celebration. The text of Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson’s National Recovery day speech last night follows in full: It is great to see in the Capital of the Nation these gay fireworks, the gala floats in the parade, the outpouring of the people to celebrate this day and leal We are here in the shadow of the Capitol to tell with pageantry and pyro- technics the beginning of the end of perhaps the greatest peril that has ever beset this Nation. What the National Recovery Admin- istration is doing is to check the tides of disaster, distress and deprivation and launch our country on a new era of | It can be done and it is be- ing done. We will do it easily if ever body does his part. We will do it des- perately if any considerable number hold back and try to block us either through lack of faith in the great pro- gram devised by the President of the United States or with the selfish hope | that he can evade taking the chances ithat are his legitimate portion and so profii by the patriotism of others. There | is no corporation rich enough, no group prosperity. { Nation. And it is the Nation's effort. From every section of the country we get echoes of a popular rising to make the program a prompt and complete success. Everybody knows what have gone through. that we drifted nearer and nearer to the precipice, until Franklin Roosevelt took hold the ship and pointed out the only way in which we could be saved. Tree to Be Monument. He has headed us upstream again and non, which we planted here today has become a great tree people will come to this spot to see this ever-growing mon- ument that commemorates these great deeds. I know and you know that it is not all plain sailing. The inspired idea of our President is not self-executing. | It is the people of the United States who have got to put it across and make it stick—and they are doing it. The tedious business of drafting codes, framing regulations. the pointing out of what must be done and what it is not permitted to do is only a part— perhaps the smallest part—of the en- terprise. No, there is even a smaller part than that, and that is in the matter of dealing with those of little vision who can see only the immediate sacrifice and not the long-range advantage of realigning industry, so that not only Will the stars of the four-year depres- sion be removed, but that we shall have a chart which will make any repetition of the hideous experience impossible. We have no cause for worry in regard to tne fellow who thinks he can cut corners and by subterfuge and evasion get his share of the coming prosperity by sacrificing others. That kind of a person can no more stop this great plan than can the income tax cheater crip- ple the revenues that come to the Treas- ury. There will, of course, be provi- sions in the execution of this law that will take care of the man who chisels and shuffles and trys to pass his bur- dens on to somebody get away with it for a time but not for long. The slacker may think he is a smart business man, but he will find that his petty fudging is the surest passport to disgrace and bankruptcy in the world. In Hands of People. The. people themselves, without any incitement from anybody will know how to visit the proper punishment upon the fellow who tries to stand in_the way. He may evade the legal penalties. There may never be a harsh word @he Forning Htar RANcH off in The Star. tended for the administration find their way to our national head- quarters in Washington. ething. the automobile as- sqefation thinks, should be done. available issue. | strong enough to block the effort of the | we | Everybody knows | else. He may spoken to him. But day by day he will | | see the customers past his doors to buy | in 50 years, and farmers are guarding where the Blue Eagle is displayed and | crops. ' where the pledges for which that bird stands are being honored. Amid the turmoil of the substitu- tion of the new system for the old process of cut-throat competition which was the father of child labor, low wages and business destruction, it is perhaps not easy to appreciate how far this movement has gone. It is plain enough in the factory towns where the smoke is rising from chimneys that have heen cold for years. But in citles our prog- ress is not so obvious. There are more people in the stores, both ‘Behind and before the counters. In Cleveland 1.000 people are going back to work each day. ‘The bread lines are shrinking. From these minor evidences we can scarcely realize that perhaps 2.000,000 people have been removed from the ranks of the unemployed and are again self-supporting citizens. Well, 2,000,- 000 people represent, at the lowest esti- mate, $30,000,000 more in the pay rolls every week, a billion and a half dollars more in a year and this money goes right back into the hopper of trade ahd is spent over and over again, which means more work. more comfort, more | happiness. And yet this great effort has just sterted. As the Autumn rolls on you will see that the old gospel of despair, the theory of human helpless- ness, and of our inability to do anything to prevent these ghastly economic de- pressions was a false gospel after all. | The doctrine of the new deal is a | doctrine of action. The plan is simple. |It is based on the proposition that American people can do anything if we only provide them with the means te fight back. Franklin Roosevelt has ddne a simple but a very great thing— |bhe has given back to the American | people the conduct of their own affairs |and the right to help themselves. STAR, WASHINGTON, VIRGINIA BEER BiLL SIGNEDBY POLLARD Governor Also Puts Signature . to Legislation for State Repeal Referendum. o!Continued_From Pirst Page) publishea and will not have to be passed upon by judges was retained. The 18- year age limit was restored after having beeh cut to 15 years by the Senate. A Senate amendment requiring that persons having beer cases pending against them must pay all costs before the cases are dismissed, as provided in the bill, was eliminated. The amend- ment prohibiting deliveries by brewers or distributors on Sunday was amended | to permit deliveries to retailers on Sun- day, but no deliveries to consumers, The issuance of temporary licenses by commissioners of revenue -vill begin next Monday morning. Appiicants will be required to state that they expect to qualify under the act and will be issued a temporary license upon the payment of $5.75, of which amount $5 is for the license and 75 cents to defray the cost of issuance. Such licenses will be issued up to September 15 and will be good until November 1. In the meantime, ap- plicants must appear before judges of Circuit or Corporation Courts and ob- tain certificates showing that they are of good moral character and have never been convicted of violation of the pro- hibition law. Upon presentation of such certificates to commissioners of revenue the licenses will become good for the balance of the fiscal year. License blanks are being printed and will be on their way to commissioners of revenue within the next two days, it was said by State Tax Commissioner C. H. Mor- rissett. Requirements Not Fixed. ‘The bill leaves the requirements for local licenses up to the localities, and since it is expected few of them will have set up the machinery for issuance of these by the time the act becomes effective, they will not be considered in issuing State licenses, and those to whom the State licenses are issued may proceed with the sale of the beverage immediately upon obtaining their State licenses. Dealers securing their beer from out of the State will be required to post either a surety or cash bond to insure payment of the excise tax. Proponents of a lower excise tax said they would renew their efforts in this direction at the next regular session. 24th REPEAL VICTORY. Washington Joins List of States Op- posing Prohibition. SEATTLE, Wash, August 30 (P).— Two-thirds of the 36 States needed to erase the eighteenth amendment from the Constitution were lined up today. Washington following 23 others into the repeal column. None of the States which have voted favored retention of prohibition. Only one legislative district, the ninth, in rural Eastern Washington, voted dry. cn the basis of available returns, The district will have only 2 of the 99 delegates who will meet Octo- ber 3 at Olympia to ratify the decision of the voters. Wet Majority 183,705, D. €, WEDNESDAY, | former associates. Left to right: | examiner, who presented the gift. i Edgar B. Hend rson, who retired July 1, after 30 years with the Interstate | | Commerce Commission, is shown receiving a purse of money today from his | Arja Morgan, chief, Bureau of Informal | | Cases: Mr. Henderson, R. I. Lyon, assistant bureau chief, and Otis L. Mohundro, AUGWST IRETIRED ATTORNEY |BURIAL GIVEN TWO | campaign. “Fhere can be no quenlml | about such a tremendous victory and it is a great step forward for Washington, as it will eventually eliminate much | disrespect for law, aid the President’s | | recovery program and result in orderly | | regulation of liquor sales. I believe both | | wets and drys campaigned like sports- Repeal Strongly Fought. ‘The Washington State Emergency Committee, a retentionist organization, fought repeal. It contended that in the | event of abolition of the prohibition | amendment this State would be without | liquor regulation, except laws prohibit- ing sale of alcoholic beverages to Indians | and minors, until the Legislature meets again in 1935. The State bcne-dry law passed in 1917 was repealed last November by a majority of approximately 133,000. Since the legalization of beer that| | beverage has been manufactured and sold in Washington under regulations passed by city councils and boards of county commissicners. The last Legis- lature failed to provide provisional legis- lation to regulate liquor sales in case of national prohibition repeal. i Elwha precinct, in the Olympic Moun- tain secticn of the twenty-fourth legis- | lative district, was the first voting unit | to report 100 per cent for repeal of the eighteenth amendment in Washington's special election yesterday. The pre- cinct cast its 93 votes solid for repeal. MRS. SABIN NOTIFIED. Washington State Chairman Wires, | | “Overjoyed to Report Repeal.” | NEW YORK, August 30 (®.—mrs | Charles H. Sabin, national chairman of the Women's Organization for Nation- al Prohibition Reform, today received the following message from Miss Au- gusta Trimble, Washington State chair- man: “‘Overjoyed to report Washington has | joned the repeal parade. Approximate | 3-to-1 majority.” The popular vote from 1924 of the | State’s 2,682 precincts rolled up a total | of 316064 wet ballots to 132359 cast | for dry candidates. total, however, had no bearing on the outcome, as delegates were chosen by legislative districts, an election arrange- MISSOURI RATIFIES. The State-wide | Action on Proposed 2Ist Amendment Formally Taken by State. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, August 30 ‘ment which wet the campaign. Repealists contended the district method was put cver by & dry bloc in the Senate, which, they alleged, forced | the Constitution of the United States. | this concession as the price of their the twenty-first State to take such| support in providing for the repeal elec- tion. The asserted repeal handicap, however, was not apparent in the result, for while final returns might switch an isolated district or two from the wet to the dry side, there was no possibility lers attacked d‘““‘!i (#).—The Missouri Constitutional Con- ' vention yesterday formally ratified the proposed twenty-first amendment to action. Two other States, Arizona and Texas, have voted to ratify the amendment. Gov. Guy B. Park told the delegates, who were chosen at the Statz-wide elec- tion August 19, he was “proud to away with national Governor said. CONGRATULATES STATE. Farley Says Repeal Victory “Par- ticularly Significant.” By the Assoclated Press. Postmaster General James Farley to- day congratulated the State of Wach- ington for its repeal vote and pro- nounced it “particularly significant.” He renewed his prediction that pro- hibition would be repealed before the end of the year and reiterated he knew of no State that would vote against re- pe | He referred to Washington, the twenty-fourth State to vote repeal, as having long been regarded as “one of the outstanding bone dry States.” The manner of holding the election, Farley said, gave the drys the advan- tage, and, therefore, he said. the vic- tory meant more to the repealists, JAPANESE EMPLOYERS’ EXPLOITATION SCORED By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, August 30 —Three representatives of 7,500 Mexican workers in Southern California truck gardens. yesterday filed with the State N. R. A Recovery Board an appeal to end what they described as the exploitation of | men, women and children by Japanese empioyers. | Ricardo Hill, vice consul of Mexico; | A. Flores, president of the Union of | Mexican = Agricultural Workers, and D. C. Marcus, an attorney representing | the workers, charged 7.500 men, womer: | and children, engaged in berry picking, | | truck gardening and fruit raising, are | being paid 6 to 15 cents an hour. | | They demanded a hearing to set! minimum and maximum hours and abolition of child labor. The Central | Japanese Association members, Marcus | said, controls about 85 per cent of the truck gardening and fruit raising in- dustry in Los Angeles and Orange counties. | Last July Mexican workers struck and | Marcus said an agreement was reached whereby permanent workers were to| receive not less than $150 for nine | hours and the minimum wage for | temporary workers was to be not less than 20 cents hourly. prohibition,”_ the | LAFFOON TAX BEATEN | | _FRANKFORT, Ky.. August 30 ,,?‘_‘ The administration’s proposed gross re- | ceipts tax bill, bitterly opposed by the | the retentionists could cut in materially | welcome you and to congratulate you Kentucky Merchants’ Association. was on the overwhelming majority of wet and the people of this State on the wise | defeated, 51 to 46. in the Kentucl delegates. “It was a complete expression of popular sentiment.” | action they have taken.” | “Probably before January 1 more | House yesterday. It was advocated by | Gov. Ruby Laffoon in calling the spe- declared J. C.|than 36 States will have joined with | cial session to raise $3,000,000 for un- Herbsman. State director of the repeal ' Missouri and the other States in doing ' employment relief. DALE HARRISON’S YARNS TELL OF NEW YORK LIFE | BEarly News Supervisor of Associat- | ed Press Writes of liappen- ings in Big City. | Dale C. Harrison, early news super- | visor in the New York office of the Associated Press, believes a good news- paper man should keep his hands in the news, and so, in addition to direct- ing news coverage during the *lob- ster shift,” he turns to his type- writer to produce daily whimsical stories of the lights and shadows of life in a big city. Harrison was born in Allegan, Mich,, July 27, 1894, started his writing in Paw Paw, held news- paper _berths with meh COIDulsmb“h! (Ohio) spatch, Dle Harthel pellevelle (IIL) News Jeader, papers at Clarksburg (W. Va), Port Huron (Mich) and | other places and came to the Associated Press in 1918. He has been in the New | York effice for three years after a long tour of duty in Chicdgo. Harrison's chief interest, outside of news work, is music. He can listen to Beethoven all day and can tackle a ! piano with a fair degree of proficiency. . Hares on Increase. ‘Tyrone, Ireland, has more hares than ADVERTISENENTS G RECEIVED HERE Armstrong’s Pharmacy—11th & Park Rd. Is an Authorized Star Branch Office HE purpose of these Branch Offices, located as m they are in practically every neighborhood in and around Washington, is to give convenient service for the placing of Classified Advertisements Copy left at these Branches will be immediately forwarded to the Main Office, for insertion in the first You can easily locate the Branch Office near you by the above sign. There are no fees for this service; only regular rates are charged. The Blue Eagle Warns You Tire prices are going up. Save money. Let Sherwood Bros. replace your worn tires with Genuine Firestones. Act now. N DON'T RISK BLOWOUTS! Don'trisk a smashup by try- ing to get the last few miles of rundown tires. Dri out into s Sherwood Service Station—the same one that gives you such Ask any Diamond Driver Why Every Diamond Cab in Washington Uses RICHFIELD "GOLDEN 1934 GASOLINE -~ | of . affection, HONORED BY 1.C.C. Edgar B. Henderson Present- ed With Purse by For- mer Associates.’ Interstate Commerce Commission offi- cials and employes today paid tribute to Edgar B. Henderson, local civic leader and attorney, who retired from the commission July ‘1, after 30 years of Government service. Summoning Mr, Hendersen back to his old desk for a few hours this morn- ing, his former associates voiced their regret at his leaving and their best wishes for his future, and then pre- sented him with a leather purse bulging with currency. The gift was presented on behalf of | the employes by Otis L. Mohundro, ex- aminer on the staff of Commissioner Mahaffie, who spoke feelingly of the long years of faithful service rendered Uncle Sam by Mr. Henderson, who was an examiner in the Bureau of Informal Cases. Among others extolling the re- tired employe were Arja Morgan. chief of the bureau in which Mr. Hender- son was employed, and R. I. Lyon, assistant chief. Deeply moved by the demonstration Mr. Henderson replied briefly with an expression of thanks and a few reminiscences of his pleasur- | | able_assoctations of the past. Scores of empioyes were assembled in the large room where the informal ceremonies took place. Mr. Henderson is widely known here for his prominent activities in commun- ity welfare work. For 12 years he was president of the Piney Branch- Citizens’ Association and for 14 years he was a delegate to the Federation of Citi- zens' Associations. In the federation he served as chairman of a number of important committees. One of his most active assignments was that of chair- man of the federation’s Committee on Zoning. Coming to Washington from Omaha, Nebr., in 1901, Mr. Henderson became secretary to Senator John M. Thurston of Nebraska. A year later he went to the Interstate Commerce Commission as secretary to Franklin K. Lane, then a commissioner. He had been with the commission continuously since that | time. During his long service he trained many of the men who now are high officials of the commission. Prior to his Government service, Mr. Henderson had been a court employe in the eleventh and fourth judicial districts of Nebraska. At one time he was president of the Y. M. C. A. for the State of Nebraska and head of Omaha’s Associated Cycling Clubs. He said today he has “just been tak- ing it easy” since he left the Federal service two montis ago. He resides at 1405 Delafield place. VICTIMS OF PLANES Capt. Harmon of Army and Lieut. Hill of Navy Both Formerly Here. With full military honors of their re- spective services, two victims of military airplane crashes, both former residents of the Capital, were buried today in Arlington National Cemetery. They were Capt. Ernest E. Harmon, Army Air Corps, killed Sunday night when he leaped from his fuelless plane near Stamford, Conn., and Lieut. C. Phillips Hill, U. S. N., who died in the crash of a Navy patrol plane in Hawaii several weeks ago. Services for Capt. Harmon were held in the Fort Myer Chapel, with Rev. Harvey Baker Smith, of Columbia Heights Christian Church, officiating. | Honorary palibearers, all Army ptlots on duty in the office of the Chief of the Air Corps, were Capts. Ross G. Hoyt, | David S. Seaton, George C. Kenney, | Merrick G. Estabrook. Jr., and Harold |L. Clark, and First Lieut. Samuel P. I Mills. Private funeral services for Lieut. Hill were held at the home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. Phillips Hill, sr., 1828 Wyoming avenue, followed by services at St. John's Church, Lafayette square. Services at the home were conducted by Rev. Edwin B. Niver, librarian of the College of Preachers, Washington Cathedral. Services at the church were led by Rev. Leon Shearer. assistant rector, and Cap¥. S. K. Evans, chief of chaplains of the Navy. Pallbearers for Lieut. Hill were Lieuts. W. D. Rowley, W. D. Pye. jr.; Robert Blick, Philip Morgan. George H. Mof- fett and William Brockman, all of the Navy; William Briggs, Delano Pitzger- ald and Lieut. Hill's cousins, Basil Gor= |don, Henry A. Mustin. George A. Benney and Morris Benney. |SEEK TEMPORARY RELIEF ‘ PONCHATOULA. La., August 30 (#). —Blue Eagle indorsers here are seeking temporary release from their agree- ments because of adversit . The petitioners say they aré unable to perform their obligations under the Blue Eagle because of two recent faflures of the strawberry crop and the freezing a few cays ago of 95 per cent of deposits in the Tangipahoa Benk & Trust Co. A petition is being circulated amonz the Blue Eagle signers asking temporary relief from the code and Federal steps looking toward establishing & natioral bank here. The petition is addressed to President Roosevelt, Secretary Woodin and Administrator Johnson. Petitioners said they were practically penniless. Tbe BANK for the The Morris Plan Bank offers the INDIVIDUAL the facilities of a SAVIKNGS BANK with the added feature of offering a plan to make loans on a practical b which enables the borrower to liquidate his ob- ligation by means of weekly, semi- monthly or monthlydeposits. INDIVIDUAL It is not neces- sary to have had anaccountatthis Bank in order to borrow. Loans are passed within a day or two after filing application— with few excep- tions. MORRIS PLAN notes are usually made for 1 year; though they may be given for any period of from 3 to 12 months. Montbly Deposiz For12 Monthe $10 MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W., Washington, D. €. “Character and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit™ "SHERWOOD NTRI HEATING Thinking About Oil Heat? 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Under this plan you get a guaranteed oil burner,installed, ready for juse. anteed protection against price advances on Sherwood Fuel Oil, which for years has giv- en such great satisfaction to hundreds of Washington oil burner owners. You get a guar- antee of free service for five years, even including free parts if needed: And you may have the burner installed now for a small down payment, with easy monthly installments arranged ou get guare to suit your convenience. Act now. Don’t put up with another winter of shoveling coal and carrying ashes only to get un- even, uncertainheat. Telephone AGENCIES AND DEALERS If you prefer & premisom fucl, try Sherwood Bros." Benzol Ml&tlfi« at its new low price. Premism was ;Hu‘;i INC. Decatur 4181, or visit our show= room, 1723 Connecticut Ave. OIL BURNER DIVISION ESTABLISHED 1896