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HITLER PEACE PLEA PUZZLES EUROPE Order for Largest Army Since 1914 Follows Con- ciliatory Talk. (Continued From First Page.) ministry, hitherto has been known as minister of defense. The tone of Hitler's Reichstag ad- dress and of the closing remarks of Gen. Hermann Wilhelm Goering, minister of aviation, was that “we have made a real contribution to world peace and now it is up to the rest of | Hitler Emulates Kaiser Peace on German BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. Every long and short wave radio was tuned in yesterday in every capi- tal in the world. Statesmen listened apprehensively to Hit!: long speech before the Reichstag. It was meant neicher for the puppets, who call themselves the representatives of the German people, nor for home con- sumption. It was intended for the outside world. It took the European statesmen a long time to digest Hit- ler's 30,000 words, and at the end of it they needed some diplomatic hicgr- bonate. . * k % ¥ the world to follow our lead. Expressions of Germany's interest in | peace frequently punctuated t! Der Fuehrer insisted the M‘Chx'"the compelled to rearm becau;esu;op“n militaristic policies ~ powers. wishes “Peace and Quiet.” “What could I wish but peace and quiet?” “We want to spare the Ger- man people all bloodshed:” “every war means & drain of the best elemen "ShAgERany has nothing to gain from . —LResg were phrases a Europealfwe which tumbled from Der Fuell Hitler said he considered hi obligated “to re-establish Germany's | equality” in arms because not only | have other states failed to disarm, “but also all proposals for limital of armaments have been rejected also cited “the formation of new mili- tary alliances” and “notification that France was proceeding to the intro- he speech. | Hitler wants peace—on his own it | term- -Tus. as the Kaiser did in 1914. eike then, the issue today is one of power, because power brings the right to dictate. He who has it can assign to himself the economic gains that flow from it—colonies and mandates, s o AS markets and spheres of influence. And He | der Fuehrer means to get these for | tically no time. | | Germany by hook or crook. ‘l Hitler is willing to negotiate, but not on the basis of the Versaillgs on Britain. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY This Changing World in Demand for World Terms—All Eyes the tremendous increase of Germany's armaments, there is no doubt that the allies have an overwhelming superi- ority over the Reich on land, in the air and on the seas. Right now the allies are regrouping their naval forces with an eye to an eventual conflict with Germany. The | bulk of the French Navy stationed in | the Mediterranean has been trans- ferred to the Atlantic and will be based at Brest, where Admiral Darlan, the ablest neval officer France has | had ‘in many years, is in command. The British, too, are transferring some of the important units from | the Mediterranean to the home waters, leaving the policing of the Mediterranean almost ezclusively to Italy. Great Britain and France have | leased large tracts of land in Belgium, where they are establishing air bases | 50 as to be nearer to Germany. Avia- | tion fields have been placed at the dis- posal of the British air fleet in North- ern France, * * ¥ x | ‘The Soviets are building super-air- planes, the British and the French | are building super-liners. All for com- | mercial purposes—for the time being, but all potential war engines. Of | ourse, everybody knows that a com- | | mexeial airliner can be transformed |into an efficient bomber in prac- The Normandie and the Queen | Mary, the two 72,000-ton ships, can- not possibly be a paving proposition ‘SHARK' PRAGTICES CHARGEDTOT.V. A Representative Montet, at House Hearing, Hits Land Deals. By the Associated Press. A charge of “land shark” practices was leveled at the Tennessee Valley Authority today by Representative Montet, Democrat, of Louisiana, in a hearing before the House Military Committee on legislation to enlarge T. V. A. activities. Arthur E. Morgan, T. V. A. chair- man, had told the commitee the Authority had acquired two small parcels of land in the Little Ten- nessee River basin in order to compel the Aluminum Co. of America to co- | operate with it in a unified program for developing the entire Tennessee basin. X “That's what the land shark does,” Montet interposed. “I hate to see one of our Government agencies following that practice.” The tracts—one of 1,500 square feet and the other of 12!, acres—are in Graham County, N. C., in an area that would be flooded by water backed up by a proposed dam for the aluminum company. The company already has acquired 80 per cent of the proposed reservoir. Morgan asserted that the Little Ten- nessee is one of the principal tribu- taries of the Tennessee and must be included in a unified plan for con- trol of the Tennessee Basin “or the plan as a whole will be greatly handi- BAG YIELDS $750 NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass., May 22 (#)—Louis De Costerio, s waiter, rushed into a candy store yesterday and ordered 25 cents worth of pea- nuts. The clerk shoved a bag forward and De Costerio deposited his quarter. At home he put his hand into the bag and pulled out $750 in bills. The clerk had given him a bag containing yesterday’s receipts. De Costerio went back and ex- changed the $750 for 25 cents worth of peanuts. ILLINOIS RELIEF MEASURE PASSED House Acts to Increase Sales Tax From Two to Three Per Cent. By the Associated Press. SPRINGFIELD, Ill, May 22.—Act- | ing quickly to break the long relief crisis, the Illinois House today passed, with a 77-vote majority, the adminis- tration bill to increase the sales tax from 2 to 3 per cent to provide funds for the State’s 1,200,000 on relief rolls. | The final vote was 89 to 55. 12 more than the constitutional majority required. The tax increase will be effective July 1. The bill, which had been rejected five times previously as an emergency measure, which would have made it effective immediately, was then sent to the Senate for concurrence in House amendments. Gov. Horner was 29 &2, 1935. EXPERTS 10 GIVE MELLON FIGURES Would Show 1913 Value of McClintic-Marshall Co. Was $6,000,000. By the Associated Press. The Government was to produce valuation experts today in an effort to prove the 1913 value of the Mc- Clintic-Marshall Co. were around $6,000,000 instead of the $15,000,000 claimed by Andrew W. Mellon in his income tax dispute. The former Treasury Secretary | completed his case in his $3,089,000 dispuute yesterday after his last valua- tion expert had become nettled by cross-examination. George H. Blakeley of Bethlehem, | Pa, a vice president of Bethlehem | Steel Corp. and president of Mec- | Clintic-Marshall, whose hbncatmg‘ business, Bethlehem acquired in 1931, testified in Mellon's behalf yesterday. Mellon had a 30 per cent interest in the structural steel firm, which was | valued at $66,000,000 when Bethlehem | absorbed it. | Blakeley's white mustache bristled | when Fred Shearer. Government counsel, tried repeatedly to get him to | describe in detail the yardsticks he | used in supporting the Mellon figure. | Banging his fist on the chair arm to | emphasize each word, Blakeley | shouted: { “Just leave that to counsel,” ad- | monished Ernest H. Van Fossan, chairman of the tax appeals board SOUTHERN PUBLISHERS | MAKE KENTUCKIAN HEAD | Emanuel Levi Succeeds E. K. Gay- lord of Oklahoma at Hot Springs Session. By the Associated Press. HOT SPRINGS, Ark, May 22— Emanuel Levi, vice president and general manager of the Louisville, Ky., Courier.Journal and Times, was elected president of the Southern Newspaper Publishers’ Association yes- | terday. He succeeds E. K. Gaylord, pub- *» A3 chairman of the board of directors for the coming year. W. C. Johnson, Chattanooga, Tenn., News, an of- ficer of the association for 22 years, was renamed treasurer for the eight- eenth time. Cranston Williams, Chattanooga, Tenn., was renominated as secretary- manager subject to election by the board. Election of officers by the thirty- third annual convention of the asso- ciation followed discussion of the pro- posed establishment of a Southern pine news print mill in the South at a closed session. Action designed to secure the most advantageous proposition available on the project was taken with many who have signed advance contracts for lisher of the Oklahoma City Okla- | output from the mill hoping to see it homan end Times, who was named | in operation by early next y Memorial MAY 30th . . MEMORIAL DAY Wreaths OF QUALITY 53.50 and $5 Made of Green Magnolia Leaves, decorated with clus- ters of Wax Sweet Peas, Wax Roses, wax Callas and Palm Leaves. INC- 1407 H St. N.W. capped.” expected to sign it within a few hours. | hearing the case. If the Little Tennessee is adminis- | tered independently, he said, “who- ever so administers it will have co- treaty. His mission, as he under- liners plying between the y stands it. is to assert Germany’s right x::sh::i::ag;m - e o B4 NAt. 4905-06-07 | to equality in every known field. He | eyperts say, they could be transformed cannot ask permission to modify the duction of the two-year term of service.” Erroneous reports were circulated abroad yesterday (not by the Asso- ciated Press) that Hitler was demand- ing the return of Germany’s colonies. An examination of the text of his speech, however, failed to show any | basis for such an interpretation of his | remarks. In his address Hitler solemnly prom- ised that Germany would not unilater- ally alter boundaries fixed by the Treaty of Versai'les. This was his only reference—and it was made by in- ference—to suggestions that Germany | desires her lost colonies. i Denounces Versailles Treaty. Hitler spoke for two hours znd 14| minutes, rattling off words from his | long manuscript at the rate of more | than 100 a minute, in one of the most vital speeches of his career. | He denounced the Versailles treaty and the recent Franco-Russian se- curity pact. He said Germany would enter non-aggression pacts with all| save Lithuania, but closed the door to the Eastern Locarnc pact. spon- sored by France. Along his offer to halt Ger- man rearmament at a level to be de- cided, Hitler again solemnly declared Germany would not by unilateral ac- tion a fixed by the treaty of Versa phasized that for a navy 35 Great Britain's further be in- e Germany of today favors i favors it neither We decry eve ar { 1b] | tion of foreign peoples. Versailles treaty without admitting the allies’ right to dictate to him. * Der Fuehrer proceeded to assert Germany's sovereignty by arming. % % | This done, he is willing to negotiate | can be converted into warships. on the understanding that the final And this the allies can- As in 1914, the allies. rot or will not accept. | the eyes of Continental Europe are and the French navies. riveted on Great Britain. England is to Europe in arma- ments what Maine is to this coun- try politically during a presidential election. If her statesmen decide to throw her weight against Ger= many the rest of Europe will jump on Germany at the slightest provo- cation. T ‘The competition for power has be- gun openly and in earnest. There are still a number of idealists who say that the situation in 1935 is different from what it was in 1914, not so much because of the League of Nations. but because of the Locarno treaty. Even the most fervent adherents of the col- lective security idea speak only shyly about the League. The Manchurian affair three years ago and the Ethi- opian affair today serve to justify the saying that might is right. But even the much-heralded Lo- carno treaty does nothing but to re- peat Britain’'s obligations of 1914. Ger- many, then as now, had no direct quarrel with France. France was in- volved solely by her Eastern alliances. It's the same thing now. The only difference is that it is all much plainer and more binding than 21 years ago. into airplane carriers without much | trouble. ~ Although their construction | has been almost as secret as the construction of a man-of-war, it| | is known that the specifications for | their construction are such that they | With | their | their tremendous speed and | decision rests with him and not with | most up-to-date protection against submarine attacks, both these liners | will be important assets to the British | e Cartoonists must change their style | | in dealing with the 1935 type of bol- shevists. Good-by the bewhiskered | unkempt red. Stalin has changed | this within 24 hours when he decreed ‘rhlldren, a boy and a girl ercive powers over the system as a whole.” ROYAL BABE BORN Princess Ileana Gives Birth to Daughter. VIENNA, May 22 (#).—The former Princess Ileana of Rumania, the wife of Archduke Anton of Hapsburg, pre- tender to the Austrian throne, gave birth to a daughter last night at Sonnberg Castle. Her mother, Dowager Queen Marie of Rumania, is attend- ing her. The Former two other She and Anton were married in 1931. The archduchess is a sister of King Carol archduchess has | of Rumania and of the former Prin- cess Elizabeth of Greece. LAWYERS’ BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON S. ADAMS that an unshaven and unwashed Com- | munist is not worthy of that name. | | Nowadays you see in Russia only well- | groomed men and women | The heads of departments are re- | sponsible for the execution of this {order. And there can be no excuse, |such as “I have been too busy to | shave today.” The boss will accept | no such an excuse. “A good citizen,” he says. “must always find time to | follow” the orders of his chief.” And | Buy Your Coal Now % Uncertainty Ended e The railroads have made new lower Summer freight rates, which with the reduced mine prices previously announced, establishes new low base prices for hard coal—Egg, Stove, Nut and Pea sizes. We are passing all of these savings along to you Act quickly. Such low prices cannot last. Fill your bin while you can make the biggest saving. Remember, these sensationally low prices are on Mar- low’s super-cleaned Famous Reading Anthracite. Call today. Arrange for all you can store. 77 Years of Good Coal Service - s - e e S—— Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 Washington Store G to Be Closed June 1 Six-Eighteen Twelfth St. Between Fand G Sts. Evers Piece of Merchandise Sold Guaranteed by George D. Horning of South Washington. Va. 0 Sterling 1. Reconditioned by Master Mechanics 2. Checked by Laboratory Test Set 3. Road Tested by Company Officials 4. Every Car Fully Guaranteed 5.0ne of Largest Selections in the City 6. Five Locations to Serve You L&l 1114 Vermont Ave. N.W. 1820 13th St. N.W. 1220 1ith St. N.W, 1323 L St THEY ARE HERE 5919 Ga. Ave! Repairing Domestic Damages. o A [Moscow offers today the pleasant the season’s lowest prices 3.5 Sait & Pepper Stock Fine “Germany of today is immersed in the tremendous work of repairing its domestic damages. None of our sub- Jjects of a factual nature will be com- pleted before 10 or 20 years. None of our tasks of an ideal nature can find | its fulfillment before 50 or even 100 years. “What else could I desire but quiet and peace?” | Declaring the present ‘‘veritable | mania of collective and co-operative effort * * * the spiritual property of the American President Wilson,” Hitler said the Versailles treaty pronounced | the death sentence upon “the collec- | tive, co-operative efforts of nations.” In that treaty. he declared, “there was put a classic occasicn according to victors and vanquished in place of equal rights. differentiation between those entitled to rights and those with- | out rights.” Germany nevertheless is willing, Der Fuehrer told the legislators, to sign non-aggression pacts with all European nations save Lithuania, “not because we want war there, but because we | can not enter into a political agree- | ment with a state which disregards | the most primitive laws of human: society.” Nothing to Gain From War. “Germany has nothing to gain from any European war,” Hitler declared, since “we crave freedom and inde- pendence. * * * | “We are ready, through non-aggres- | sion pacts, to heighten that feeling of security from which we also profit.” The Nazi leader refused, however, as he had often refused before, to con- sider pacts re-enforced through ob- ligations of mutual assistance “‘which, from the viewpoint of our philosophy, as well as politically and collectively, | are impossible for us.” | Attacking the “military alliance” between France and Russia as intro- | ducing “an element of League inse- | SPECIAL NOTICES. PA'H.Y TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART oads to and from Balto. Phila and New York. Prequent trips fo other Eastern itles _ “Dependable Bervice Since 1896.” $HE DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CG. ph ecatur 2500 5 PERSON WHO SAW ACCI- | and_Rittenhouse sts. morning | 3 communicate _ with | ANK_R. . 921 Denrike BIdg.? Phone District 4666, WANTED-RETURN LOADS FROM CO- Jumbus._Ohio: St Louis. New Orleans. Indianapolis. New York. Boston; also local moving. SMITH'S TRANSFER & STOR- AGE CO.. 1313 You st. n.w. Phone North LL dent.” 4th of ' May NT_TO HAUL_FULL OR PAR to or from New York. Richmond. Boston. | Pittsburgh and all way points: special rates ATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN.. I 1317 Natl. 1460._Local moving alse. TS TEP ©n 1t sure catch: (TR T SR R S CHAIRS FOR RENT, SUITABLE FOR BRIDGE PARTIES banquets weadings and meetings. 10c up per day each: new | chairs. Also invaid rolling chairs for | Tent or gale. UNITED STATES STORAGE | 418 10th st. 0.w._MEtropolitan 1844 CAN TABLE, § 90c: 5 combs. 0654 by 10 a.m THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE STOCK- holders of the American Fire Insurance 0. of D. C. and the election of nine (9) trustees for the ensuing year. will be held at the office of the company. No. 511 7th Thursday. June 20. 1935, at .__Polls_open from 11 a.m. GEORGE M. EMMERICq. REPAIRING. ‘Mantels—Tiling—Fireplaces. ELLETT “fidaldi" A DEAL FUNERAL AT §75 Provides same service as one costing $500 _Don't waste “insurance money.” Call DEAL. with 25 years' experience. Lincoln 0. “IT SAVES YOU MONEY Planosraph process of reproduction is less expensive and often more satisfactory than other methods. Send us your patent drawings. maps. foreign reprints. etc.. for | reproduction. You'll be surprised at the low cost. Ask us. Columbia Planograph Co. _ 50 L 8t. NE.___ Metropolitan 4801 & K-O-O-N-§” A name to guide you when the roof goes wrong. Thorough. sincere work by |practical roofers making u & clalty _of repairs | signatures. = | ready, for the completion of the Lo- | weapon especially adapted to attack; Despite the “wolf” shouts and the worried expression on the faces of Ramsay MacDonald, Laval, Litvinoft and Mussolini when they speak about | spectacle of having its policemen, | soldiers, waiters and street car con- ductors cleanly shaven and carefully attired. curity” into “the only clear and really | valuable mutual treaty of security of Europe—namely, the Locarno pact™— he said: 1 “In the conclusion of pacts of assist- | ance that have become known to us | we see a development which differs in no way from the formation of the former military alliances.” He said flatly Germany would not | join any general security system which might compel Nazis to fight on the | side of Communism because, in so far as Bolshevism “also drags Germany | within its scope, we are its bitterest and most fanatical enemies.” After his denunciation of the Ver- | sailles treaty Hitler said: | Cites Arms Race. “Not only did other nations not | disarm, but, on the contrary, they completed and improved and thereby raised their armament extraordinarily. * What was done not only ran counter to the intentions of Presi- | dent Wilson, but also, according to the opinion of the most prominent representatives of the other side, vio- lated the obligataions of the Versailles treaty to which they had affixed their For this there was no | excuse.” Germany will not put forward any plan for peace, Der Fuehrer declared, because “it is almost purposeless to advance constructive plans if their rejection may be regarded as certain.” “Had my constructive plan of 300,000-man armies been accepted,” he said, “many worries today would be less formidable and many burdens lighter.” He was bitterly sarcastic in his comment on those who would see in Germany's armaments cause to fear war and in other nations’ armaments reason to hope for peace. Summarizes Attitude. He summarized Germany's attitude on several problems of the moment thus: “First, the German government re- jects the Geneva resolutions of March 17 (the League of Nations Council’s indictment of Germany for rearming in violation of the Versailles treaty). “Second, it declares solemnly that the articles of the Versailles treaty that are not concerned with arma- | ment obligations cannot be renounced | unilaterally by any power. This ap- | plies also to territorial clauses. | ‘Third, the¢ German government would scrupulously stand by all treaties that were voluntarily signed; especially would it fulfill all obliga- tions arising from the Locarno pact PR “Fourth, the German government s carno pact, to agree to an air conven- tion. “Fifth, Germany is ready always so to limit her armaments as others are ready to limit theirs; in limiting Ger- man air armament to a parity with other individual great European na- tions, it makes it possible at any time to fix an upper limit to which Ger- many will agree. Ready to Limit Armament. “Sixth, the German government is ready actively to participate in all endeavors to limit armament * * *. “Seventh, Germany is ready to ac- cept every limitation which means the elimination of the heaviest type of Germany is ready to agree to every limitation on the caliber and strength Made easy Berlitz Method KOONS &84 COMPANY North 4423. 1115 Conn. Ave, NAtional 0270, | of artillery, battleships, cruisers and torpedo boats. “Germany has no intention of arm- ing to the skies. We believe that if the people of the world would unite jointly in destroying all their fire, gas | and explosive bombs, this would be a cheaper affair than destroying each | other.” Other striking excerpts from Hit- ler’s address | “I frequently hear from Anglo-Sax- on countries expressions of regret that Germany has departed from those principles of democracy which in those countries are held particularly sacred. “This opinion is entirely erroneous. Germany, too, has a democratic con- stitution. The present National So- clalist government also has been ap- | pointed by the people and feels itself | responsible to the people. * * *" | “After four years' disastrous l‘nr‘! a dictated peace left us with a situa- tion which can be summed up as follows: “The nation had surplus labor ca- | pacity, it was short of the necessities of life, food and raw materials. The foreign markets available to us were too small and were getting smaller. The result thereof was paralyzed in- dustry, annihilated agriculture, ruined bourgeosie, devastated trade, terrific debt burden, shattered public finances, | six and a half million registered un- employed. * * *” “How much better results would have been achieved if the nations had applied a fraction of their sacrifices (in war) to more useful purposes. Every war means a drain of the| best elements.” — 2 Apartment Buildings Excellent N. W. Location Twelve Apartments Each A Tedueta femial, A amaviments "re ent cellent _condition. ~ General Electri refrigerators. No vacancies In 4 sears, Estate wants to settle. For Quick Sale Prics $67,500 i $7,500 Cash A roal valne oat Teaee a ey retarn: Call H. A. JACOBS, Floyd E. Davis Co. National 0352, 733 12th St. N.W. NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY | INALDI | CoAL Rinaldi's Reading Anthracite Coal now at the lowest prices in 16 YEARS! Egg, stove, nut and pea sizes. Be Thrifty! Be Wi Nouw is the time to save! Spiritnalist AULINE EVANS, DD 500 K N.W. Spiritual Consuliation Daily. Phone for appointment. Met. 6395. * 4 Turn your old trinkets, jewelry A . Kahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET Carefully Inspect —these new homes in Arlington, Va., and you will be amazed at the value given for— 56,950 They contain exceptionally large rooms and are modern throughout. The price includes the front-foot sewer charge. Vaughn & Usilton, Inc. Developers JUMBLE NO. 4 The Electric Shop on Wheels, Inc. 917 N. Y. Ave. N.W. Dist. 6171 Offers prizes of $15_$10 and $5 in cash and twenty S1 trade cou- pons for correct tions to jum- bles to appear in this paper. and best 50-word or less letters giving your ideas on the service our firm offers See jumble. In case of a tie, duplicate prizes will d. be awarde A 9.word sentence Words In correct sequence: Begin—WDAKOERAW End—EOLSFLGDG Following 42 letters compose the sentence: FSNNNNIIIIILLLL WWDDDAAAAKOO EEEERRRRCCTPGG tomorrow's Star for next Clue fo yesterday's Jumble: We e costly trips back to the shop for material because ~ STEAMSHIPS. TRAVEL ON THE NORMANDIE FRENCH LINE—924 15th St. N.W. RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Derintd ATLANTIC CITY.N.J Week-end beachfront rendezvous. Tempting meals, luxurious loungt sun decks, health baths, every seashore diversion! American ‘and _European . Attractive rates. Walter J. MONTICELLO = 'KY AVE. ATLANTIC CITY DECORATION DAY SPECIAL $Q Fri., Sat. & Sun. $! All Meals Included A FETTER & HOLLINGER T ~ RITZ-CARLTON ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. WEST VIRGINIA. » H Martinsbure, W. Ve. ‘Washington. iday dinners. tel. a: 7‘0-=:‘! drive from Modern hotel. excellent Sun Golt, Fishing. |and watches into MONEY at | Entire Sets $2.60 Diamonds, Standard Watches and Sterling Flatware Sacrificed! 50 Colonial Candle Sticks $2.60 or. $15 Sterling Silver Toilet Sets Reductions! When Your Shades Get Soiled, What Do You Do About It? \ and attractive indefinitely, if you'll send them to our “Shade Laundry” for a thorough cleansing. We maintain a special department for the washing of window shades and to get you acquainted with the economy of using it, we offer to Call for, WASH and deliver your window shades for the special price of, each. . . .. I District 3324-3325 ' W. STOKES SAMMONS I 830 13th St. N.W. & Lowest conL Prices In 18 Years ‘@ Prices Advance Monthly Until Fall. @Fill Your Bins With Hessick’s Famous D & H Anthracite NOW. @ Delivery Conditions Ideal—No Ice or Snow. @Every Ton Freshly Cone-Cleaned at Mines. @Every Ton Screened at Our Yards. @®Every Ton Free of Slate and Other Impurities. @Every Ton Full 2,240 lbs. Weight. ®Main Offices at Our Storage Yards Enable Us to Personally Inspect Every Ton Before Delivery. @ Hessick’s Experienced Storage Men Leave Your Cellar Spick and Span—No Dust or Dirt. @Ask Our Mr. Simons About Hessick’s Budget Plan. W. H. Hessick & Son (INCORPORATED.) 14th & Water Sts. S.W.—Opposite Bureau of Engraving DISTRICT 0744 New King hard yours today at of this season. Wise buyers are bill. Just Phone Us— District 8223 1151 16th STREET on King hard coal! Remember, prices start to go up again in the near future. That's why it is worth your while to order today. WILLIAM KING & SON COAL MERCHANTS ESTABLISHED 1835 A CENTURY OF SERVICE TO WASHINGTONIANS coal—King quality—are the LOWEST prices laying in a full supply of our clean, scrupulously sized an- thracite now. They are taking advan- tage of this opportunity to slice a siz- able sum from their next Winter's fuel KA T d 3 2901 K STREET FREE INSTALLATION Control Fits on Either Steering Column or Instrument Panel Music wherever you go! Newest design with many worth-while improvements. Fits on steering wheel or on instrument panel. Stop in and hear one today at any Bailey store. BUY ON BAILEY'S 9 s 14th & P Sts. N. W. 14th & Col. Rd. N. W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N. W. 7th & Penna. Ave. S. E. Sth & H Sts. N. E. BUDGET BASIS