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HOUSE D. G BODY TOGETA.B.C.BILL Subcommittee to Make Fa- vorable Report on Liquor Measure Tomorrow. The Alcohol Beverage Control Board bill, designed to tighten the existing liquor control law, will be favorably reported to the House District Com- mittee tomorrow by its judiciary sub- committee, headed by Representative Palmisano, Democrat of Maryland. After two pmlonged executive ses- sions yesterday® the subcommittee | reached an agreement on the bill.| Representative Dirksen, Republican, of | Illinois, is understood to have been | unsuccessful in having his bill to abolish the so-called “hidden bars,” | tacked to the A. B. C. board measure | as an emendment. The Dirksen “open bar” bill already | 15 on the House calendar, and the sub- | committee is said to have taken the| position that it sheuld be considered | independent of the A. B. C. board | measure. Ever-increasing apposition to the bill prevented it from being called up during the last “District day” | in the House. | The A. B. C. Board bill is intended | primarily to prevent the consumption of liquor in establishments having on-sale ilcenses after the legal dead- line on the sale. This provision is aimed at the practice of some night clubs and other places selling a num- ber of drinks to a customer before the curfew on sale for consumption later The board’s bill also will give it authority to suspend, as well as reveke, a_license. T SPECIAL NOTICES. WA RETURN LOADS FROM DEN- | Indianapolis. Akron, Birmingham. New York and Minneapoits SMITH S TRANS- FER & STORAGE CO. 1313 You st. n.w. Phons North 4 WANT TO HAUL_FULL_OR PART_LOAD 1o or from New York. Richmond. Boston. Eittsbureh and all way points; special rates. ATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN. INC. 1317 Y. ave Ni 460. _Local moving also (AY 1. AT 7:10 PM. WE WILL SI for storage Ford Tudor, encine :: FICHBERG AUL‘HON SALES. ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS Washington Permanent Building _Associ- | atton will be held at the office L3 aw. May 1 19 4 Slection of - amcers open from 10 a.m to 2 HERMANN H. BERG\!ANN Secretar: DO YOU KNOW THAT YOU CAN BUY A new 1935 Buick . completely equipped Qeitvered in Washington_ for $446. at Em erson & Orme’ h_and M sts. n.w.? DR. R. E._ BENEDICT. CHIROPODIST. formerly associated with Dr. W, W Georges t 207 Colorado ‘Bull "sts.” Phone District. 5206, | Hours. 9 to 5 1 SAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART w €requent trips to other Eastern | “Dependab.e Service Since 1896~ AVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE phone_Decatur MOVING ~ AND ~ STORAGE- LOAD _OR | part load to Atlantic City_ Quality Fur- niture_Exchange._phone _ Potomac 7791, HAVE YOU ANY ELECTRICAL REPAIRS | or_wiring Jobs? Call ELECTRIC SHOP ON | WHEELS, District LEAKY ROOFS —Faulty gutters. broken snouting. Let nractical roofers make permanent | 1epairs or replacements. We'll giadly us estimate. Call 933 V 8t. N.W. KOONS ROOFING" JINO CcOomMPANY _ North 44: PHONE US NOW. The Columbia Planograph Company is thoroughly qualified to prodmce your re- | prints of patent drawings. maps, foreign | Teprints and circulars in either colors or | black and white te attention on | evers order. Estimates and suggestions free. Columbia Planograph Co., 50 L St. NE Metropolitan_48¢ LEGAL NOTICES. IN THE SUPRERIE COURT OF ! o Columbia.—In the Matter of | !'ll’bfl' & Ross. Inc. Debtor.—In Bank- | muptey No. 3205.—April 0. 1935.—Notice | to all Bonfholders. Creditors, and Stock- holdegs of Barber & Ross. Inc.—Notice s | hereby ziven to all bondholders._creditors. and stockholders of Barber & Ross. Inc corporation incorporated under the laws e and having its principal office | and ying on a general contracters’ Supplles "Business in.the District of Colun bia. that on tfe 16th day of April a petition was flled in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia by the said Barber & Ross. Inc. acting under the direction and suthority of its Board of | Directors. to avail jtself of the benefits and provisions of Section B. of the General Banking Law with a View of sub- | mitting to all of its bondholders. creditors and stockholders a Plan of Reorganization. It was stated by the Corporation in this Detition that as a result of the general depression of the past several years in the building business their volume of business | had decreased to such an extent that it | incurred hesvy losses in its operations and | Although efforts were made to increase the volume of sales in other lines of busi- ness. it was found impossible to absorb the general overhead expense of Carrying | on_the business and on account of the lack of capital thev could not continue their operations unless they could obtain some relief from the urgent demand of many of iis creditors for payment. The Debtor Corporation was of the opinion that with the present prospect of increase ©of business in the building construction Tines and with the compiete elimination of the several lines taken on for the sale of nousehold appliances. hoth wholesale and on the ins'aliment plan. they can earry on_the business and show a sub- stantial profit by confining themselves to the general building supplies business. | Along this line a plan of reorganization will later be submitted to all the bond- holders. creditors. and stockholders in the hope that such & plan will be acceptable 10 &t least two-thirds of such Bondholders, creditors and Stockholders. in amount. s that it might be approved by the Court and thus permit the Debtor Corporation to reorganize and to carry on its business, as provided for in the amended bank- ruptey law known as Section ©:-B. Based | upon the Debtor Corporation's peuvlon} Justice James M. Proctor of the Supreme Court _of the District of Columbia, ap- inted Wm. L. Browning and Harry lake as temporary trustees. with author- to take over the custody and possession of the assets of the business and to con- tinue its operation under the direction of the ~Co It was further provided in said decree that a notice shall be sent to all hondholders. creditors and stockholders and of the Debtor Corporation of a hear- ing to be held before the Court in the Court House of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in Washineton, D. C., on the 15th d 1 n time. to determine whether or not ke ap- voiniment of the Trustees hereinabove pamed shall be made permanent or shall | terminated and the Debtor Corporation p.m. ors. Polls mm tri it; restored to Dossession. or any tiustee or trustees heretofore appointed shall be re- moved or a substitute trustee or trustees or an additional trustee or trustees shall he appointed by the Court. by publishing notice of such hearing once a week for two successive weeks in one dally news- fln!r publlthed{ and of general circulation ity o lumbia. and b ng & copy of a no- Tice Of such hearink. Dostage Drepaid, ach creditor and stockholder of ebtor ~ Corporation appearing as_ such unon the books and records of the Debtor Cororation. addressed to such creditor or stockholder ‘at his addre: i lvuu upon the books and r!rnrd‘ of the Corporation. WM. L. BROWNING. HARRY ustees. for Debtor Cor oration. ARBER & ROSS, Inc. Cause No. 5. ap30-my7 GEORGE C. GERTMAN & WALTER M. BASTIAN, Attorneys. rrsME COURT OF THE DIS: tumbia.—BRADLEY H. ALLEN. . Plaintiffs. 'vs. The U) 505 —ORDE TION —The oblect of this suit 1 | 1o obtain a decree for - the specific per- formance of certain contracts for the establishment of constructive trusts, for the appointment of a trustee to convey, and for general relief. all being in relation 1o the subject matters of the Bill of Com- moti n lhe plaintiffs. it lay of April, ERED that the defendants. aliences and devisees deceased. cause is. AD. ihie unknown Reirs. of John Mark Burgen, their appearance to be emtered herein on or before the first ruie day occurring one month after the day of the first publica- tion hersof. otherwise this cause will be proceeded with as in case of default: provided a copy hereof be published once & week for three successive weeks in The Washington Law Reporter and The Eve- i Star. longer and other publications beine dispensed with for satisfactory shown. A APWHEAT. Ohiel Justice. A trlleNcno’nl*M lSmOllki T;nc P‘RANK E. CUNNI! . Clerk. By C, ART.."Jr.. Asst. Clerk. 2. STEAMSHIPS. WEDITERRANEAN and all Europe—De Luze service on famous express liners via smooth Southern Route. miTA LIAN LINE. 1 State Si.. N. Y. C. BERMUDA VIA FURNESS—S60 up. round trip. '"th pllVl(e Prequent sailings direct to dock at Hamilton. Furness Bermuds um 34 Whitehall CAl st. N. Y. C. S AND RIBBEAN G! ' t White Feek with the Great Wh UEST t Co., P €740 0r 338 Bth Ave. Tel. Lack, 4-867 THE EVENING STAR, Where Automobile Ran Wild Top: Automobile on the left, jammed against a parked car after a wild run down the sidewalk on Ontario road, where it seriously injured Mrs. George F. Bowerman. Lower: car after it got out of control. (Story on Page 1.) Diagram showing course of the —smr Staff Photo. 10 QUIT BG SuIT Mellon Case Adjournment Sought by Jackson, An- gered at Bench. By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, April 30.—Govern- ment Counsel Robert H. Jackson moved yesterday to withdraw from prosecution of the Government’s $3,- | 089,000 income tax case against An- drew W. Mellon after the Board of Tax Appeals rejected a brief he had | | filed in arguments over eligibility of certain letters he was seeking for the records. The attorney asked for a 30-day | adjournment so he could report to | his superiors in Washington regard- ing & pms)ble successor after assert- ing he “did not feel free to proceed | | with the case in view of statements | from the bench” that his memoran- dum was “false, ill-tempered and not useful.” The board recessed twice during the | day to let tempers cool after heated | exchanges between counsel for two sides and reserved ruling on the adjournment motion “until later.” Attorneys continued with another | phase of the case, leaving the matter of the letters also unsettled. Request Held Not Met. In handing down his decision, Pre- siding Member Ernest H. Van Fossan said the board was satisfied the Gov- | ernment brief did not comply with the request of last Friday for legal| opinion on similar issues and that it contained a “somewhat ill-tempered argument based on the false assump- tion that fraud is charged in the McClintic-Marshall phase of the case.” Van Fossan suggested that the en- tire arguments be stricken from the records and “hoped” counsel would concur. It was then that Jackson pleaded for adjournment and asserted he would “rather have the records remain as they are.” Jackson was trying to get into the records letters between Mellon’s per= sonal counsel, D. D. Shepard, and the Pittsburgh law firm which repre- sented McClintic-Marshall Corp. in its $21,000,000 merger with Bethlehem | Steel in 1931. As a 30 per cent stockholder in Mc- Clintic - Marshall, the Government charges he owes income tax on his share of this transaction, which it claims was part of an unlawful plan to evade taxes. Jackson said in his argument that the Government may | add the charge of fraud to this deal, because it learned only last week that Mellon personally had been acquainted with the reorganization pians. Flare-Up Comes Late. " The first flare-up occurred soon after opening of the eleventh and final | | week of sessions in Pittsburgh. The | Government filed its brief, asserting | that if the board found Mellon was liable for tax in the Bethlehem | transaction, and advice” given by the attorneys “resulted in aiding and abetting in an | attempt to perpetrate fraud.” Continuing, it said the Government | did not believe the board would “per- mit this petitioner to successfully maintain a position so lacking in fair- ness and common honesty,” and added: “It certainly seems that the stren- uous objection raised as to the dis- closure of these communications strongly indicates a deliberate and de- | signed attempt is being made to mis- lead this board into holding that the transaction is non-taxable, when in fact it would be heid taxable if the true facts were known.” Flushed with anger, Frank J. Hogan, chief of Mellon counsel, demanded the brief be stricken from the record as “vicious, scandalous, scurrilous, im- pertinent and malicious.” He said he “denounced the author as a contempt- ible scoundrel and libelor and slan- derer of members of his own profes- sion.” In’ his own 6,500-word brief about the letters, Hogan asserted Mellon personally waived any objection to in- troduction of the letters, but that he believed the witness, Paul G. Rode- wald, was legally bound to refuse them because of the “sacred rela- tionship” of client and attorney. Rodewald’s firm represents the three other former stockholders in Mec- Clintic-Marshall and said they had advised him not to surrender the cor- respondence. WATER COSTS 50% to 75% the | “every act of assistance | 115, COUNSEL ASKS BUSINESS COUNCIL HITS NEW DEAL Southern Industrial Leaders Attack Recovery Plans of Roosevelt. Southern congressional leedeu.‘ headed by Speaker Joseph W. Byrns. | heard President Roosevelt's New Deal | administration viriually “ripped up the back” last night by leaders of the| Southern States Industrial Council, | representing the industry of the South, After an address by John E. Edger- ton, president of the council, and another by David R. Coker, commend- | ing the administration’s cotton policy, | | Fitzgerald Hall, president of the| | Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, declared the administration was apparently trying to “drive the people into State Socialism.” Hall then launched into an attack a threat to the South. At this re- ! mark he was wildly applauded by the council. Labor Differential. “The South,” Hall said, “is prepared | to maintain the labor differential, N.R. A orno N. R. A, | “I propose that the Federal Govern- | ment get out of all private business and stay out,” Hall continued. Another burst of applause cnme from council | members. — “Surely,” he declared, | “private industry runs its business better than the Government runs its own.” | Referring to his own industry, rai roads, Hall demanded a “square deal, | which, he said, had been denied by the Federal Government for more than a decade. The railroads. he declared, are regulated by the Government in all ways, but not so its competitors. | | “Unfair treatment of the railroads by the Federal Government is destroy- ing them,” Hall said. “Without ade- quate transportation there can be no recovery. And if the national defense |is to be adequate, we must have an adequate transportation system.” Referring to the proposed lynching bill, Hall termed it “ab- | surd and inexcusable,” adding that | regardless of congressional action there were certain problems in the South that would be solved just as the people wished. Industrial Strife Seen. He charged the proposed Wagner | 1abor bill with threatening the South | with industrial strife and declared the | Guffey coal bill would paralyze the | Southern coal industry and stnngle‘ the railroads. | C. C. Sheppard, president of the | | Louisiana Central Lumber Co., sup- | | ported Hall's remarks concerning the | N. R. A. and Wagner labor bill, add- ing passage of the latter would be “a sad day for the South.” Sheppard also declared that the | | lumber industry, the second largest | | in the South, could not operate on | | Senator Black's proposed 30-hour week | | | oill. | Marvin MclIntyre, secretary to Pres- ident Roosevelt, was a guest of the councilmen. In Will Rogers style, Harvey Couch, Reconstruction Finance Corp., out- lined the natural resources of the | South, which, he said, had more than | any other section of the country. Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and watches into MONEY at— A.Xahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET The Practical Painting Guide FREE! To Help You Get the Most Out of Paint This booklet has been prepared as a A paintine guide for the house Pain be kept handy ccess with paint u easy—ij This book tells you how COME IN AND GET YOUR FREE COPY Refer to your PAINT BOOK before starting to buy paint. Celebrating our 70th_Anniversary serv-| ing the paint t: ‘Washin, Ask us about our Budget Plan No Down Payment, 3 Years to Pay you know n & simple | president of the Arkansas Power & | | Light Co. and former chairman of the | Expert Paint Advice Free MUTH 710 13th St. N.W. m ONTARIO ROAD PARKED CARS =] 4 30"1 WHERE MRS BOWERMAN WAS STRUCK AND DRAGGED 30FT. TOPOINT X MORE TIME GIVEN F SN COLUMBIA ROAD w HOUSING PROJECTS Exempted From 12-Month| Limit Set for Other Work-Relief Jobs. By the Associated Press. Placing low-cost housing projects in ' on the N. R. A, declaring that it was & “special category,” Secretary Ickes delphia, bade those who suffer from said today they would be exempted from the requirement that all activi- - ties under the $4.000.000,000 work pro- gram must be completed within 12°' months. The chairman of the Works Allot- | ment Board explained at a press con- ference that a minimum of 16 months would be required for all housing de- velopments. The work act authorizes expenditure of $450,000,000 for city housing. Ickes said also that heavy engineer- ing structures, which would require three or four years for completion. would receive funds for the first year of construction, “without any assur- | ance for the future.” ‘The public works administrator. recelvml reporters’ in his shirt sleeves, threw this additional light on | organization of the program to give Jobs to 3.500.000 now on relief rolls: 1. An executive order formally set- ting up the allotment board will be issued “soon,” to be followed imme- diately by the board’s first meeting. State Boards Planned. 2. State planning boards will be formed. to co-ordinate not only non- Federal projects but the entire pro- gram. 3. Applications received by P. W. A. State engineers are to be forwarded to Frank C. Walker, head of the Na- tional Emergency Council, who will receive all delegations sponsoring projects. 4. Heavy engineering structures, re- quiring highly skilled labor, will be built under contract. but all. whether under contract or not, must provide for those on relief rolls first. 5. The work program, estimated to require between $1.500,000.000 and | $2.000,000,000 in materials will have a greater “pump priming” than the old P. W. A. program, Ickes said. WASHINGTON, D. C, PERSONALITY HELD DRIVEN BY GLANDS Tests at St. Elizabeth’s Show They Are Only Power House. TUESDAY, BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE, Associated Press Science Editor. PHILADELPHIA, April 30.—From 300 of the dead médical science has its | answer today to one of its major mys- | teries—whether human personality is just & matter of glands. ‘The answer is no—the glands do not mdke personalities, but they are its power house. They leave unexplained why one person is & genius, another a | pauper. But for whatever talents man | possesses they furnish the “drive.” Dr. Walter Freeman of the Black- burn Laboratory, St. Elizabeth’s Hos- pital, and George Washington Uni- versity, Washington, reported to the American College of Physicians that they explain the drive which makes a scientist spend 50 years studying a mouse or the power of the orator who sways millions. Examined Glands of 300. ‘This answer was found in measuring and weighing the endocrine, or in- ternal secretion glands, of 300 persons who died at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. They had been long-time patients, | their personalities in life carefully | recorded. It is true, Dr. Freeman said, that | numerous personality tendencies were | seen which appeared to be associated | with whether one or another of these glands was extra large or extra small. But he added: “Two important functions, as far as the personality is concerned, may be safely granted to the endocrine system. These are emotional stability and energy and drive. The irritability and thyroidism, in hyper insulinism, in other endocrinopathies are relieved by restoring the normal endocrine balance. “The energy drive is augmented to | a greater or less degree by correcting any deficiency of the pituitary, thy- | roid, adrenals or gonads. Glands Have Little to Say. “Nevertheless as far as determining whether an individual shall be a proud, sensitive, schizoid person; a boisterous, joll: hail-fellow-well-met cycloid, or a moody, pedantic, egocentric epileptoid individual, the endocrine glands the clearing house directed by | the matter.” Ralph Pemberton, M. D., of Phila- arthritis be of good cheer. “A well co-ordinated therapeutic attack,” he said, “usually affords such significant results as in itself to make | search for & panacea unnecessary. “About 80 per cent of persons suf- | fering from chronic arthritis should APRIL emotional instability seem in hyper- | hyper parathyroidism and in certain | suspicious paranoid | individua! or a timid, shut-in, dreamy | would seem to have little to say in | 30, 1935. - Relieves Pain DR. JAMES A. LYON. —Harris-Ewing Photo. various diseases at the St. Eliza- | beth’s Hospital. The thymus gland helps to regulate growth and largely disappears in adolescence. In 32 persons Dr. Freeman found that the gland had persisted into adult life, and that 44 per cent of these persons with the leftover thymus glands were epileptoids—persons with epileptic tendencies. The rest of his 74 thymus gland examinations showed the normal adult | disappearance of nearly all of this | youthful gland. Among these persons, numbering 42, there were only three epileptoids. He says this suggests that a thymus .. C. WILL PUSH UTILTY MEASURES Early Action on Bills Urged | by Roosevelt Will Be Asked. By the Assoclated Press. Early action by Congress on a group of utility bills urged by President Roosevelt in his fireside chat will be pressed by the Interstate Commerce Commission, it was announced by that body following the conclusion of three | important hearings yesterday. | Bills before the committee for hear- ings were those proposing to put water carrier and bus and truck transporta- tion systems under‘ the Interstate Commerce Commission and one to| abolish public utility holding com- panies within five years and extend- ing drastic Federal regulations to operating companies. Earlier yesterday witnesses had re- iterated opposition to the holding company and regulatery bill on the grounds that it was an invasion of State rights and promised to make regulation complex and conflicting. Senator Wheeler, Democrat, of Mon- tana, chairman of the committee, flat- ly contradicted this, declaring State | regulation had for the most part col- lapsed. giand persisting too long may be as- sociated with epilepsy. An easy test can be made of this clue by giving | X-rays to epileptics, for these nysr would destroy thymus glands that had | | persisted too long. | | A new operation for heart dlaene | was reported. The operation hobbles the (hyxold gland, and is the one of a series of similar rapid steps made in the last two years toward relieving the suffer- | ing of heart victims. | The operation was described by James Alexander Lyon, M. D, and L Edmund Horgan, M. D., of Washing- ton. They reduce the activity of the thyroid, one of the body's chief energy producing machines, by cutting down both its blood and its nerve supply. ‘The arteries running to the gland are tied off, and with them the gland’s connection with the sympathetic | the nerves which keep up the automatic action of in- ternal organs. The bland is hobbled— that is, does not entirely stop. The energizing product it pours into the blood stream, thyroxin, is much diminished. The result is an easing off on the work done by the heart. The operation has relieved five | | cases of angina pectoris of their pains. | It has relieved three cases of con- gestive heart failure, a condition when the blood is sluggish. PROMINENT IN CAPITAL. be greatly relieved, and if the bony changes have not gone too far actual | | cure is often possible. | “There is no short cut to this goal, and the patient must be able to sup- ply the necessary pertinacity, patience | and co-operation, especially in long- | standing cases, if he is to emerge on & new plane of health” Clue to Cause of Epilepsy. Dr. Freeman also suggested a new clue to the long-baffing cause of epilepsy. He found it in examining the thy- mus gllnds of 74 persons who died of | \\\\\\\\\\\\ N GATE LEG TABLE JA very wsetul and well /7, | L /// fld I//I/////II// Walnut. built ta Specially priced for it $6.95 RJ.Nee Co. FINE FURNITURE @ 7th & H N.W. | )\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ | Thanks, Washington! | Buyers from every section of the city flocking to these Amazing Price Cuts Name Your Own Terms 325CARS, PRICE SLASHED 3 °33 Ford V-8 Cabriolet. . ..$399 ’33 Pontiac Sport Coupe.. 459 °32 Chevrolet Coach...... *31 Ford Cabriolet. . *33 Plymouth Coach...... °33 Ford V-8 Coupe ’34 Ford V-8 Victoria..... 33 Chevrolet Coupe. *34 Ford V-8 Cabriolet... °33 Ford V-8 Fordor..... 1 X% A Yl 3’34 Ford v-s?; a; D. L. Coupe (s 13469 : ,flF fmm T T 34 Ford V-8« 3 Tudor ‘é : %459 MN*M’F’KW"- S N S 3’33 PlymouthE 3 D. L. Sedan ¢ 1439 ; f M AL e '33 Chevroletg Coupe E 15395 | RRK%"F#W 319 219 395 349 519 395 519 ? 1114 Vermont Ave. N.W. 1423 L St. N.W. 5949 Ga. Ave. N.W. 1820 14th St. N.W. Dr. James A. Lyon and Dr. Ed-| mund Horgan, who described before the American College of Physicians at Philadelphia last night their new thyroid gland operation for heart &il- ments, are prominent Washington surgeons and experts in treatment of heart complications. Dr. Lyon is a retired Army surgeon. Dr. Horgan, | & graduate of George Washington University, has made notable cen- tributions to the science of surgery. i TPANAMAS CLEANED—BLEACHED BLOCKED BACHRACH 733 11th St. N.W hot Summer month their best. Manbhatt Solway Shi many years. smooth handle that is self. collar attached; the also in neckband..... Jockey Shi and Shorts The New In three shades and white, NOW I EAT Cucumbers Upset Stomach iy Wi Bl to Have Your RUGS CLEANED —by our guaranteed method. Oriental or domestic floor coverings thoroughly clean- ed—Re-sized Free. A com- plete rug and carpet clean- ing service. All_goods, while in our care. in= sured for full value without ertra charge. DIENER'’S, INC. 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