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FESS SEES VIGTORY FOR DEMOCRATS Former G. 0. P. National Chairman Believes Roose- velt Will Win With Money. By the Associated Press. MOODY, N. Y., August 8.—For- mer Senator Simeon D. Fess, Ohio Republican, expressed the belief to- day that expenditures of the Roose- velt administration would tend to bring about a Democratic victory in 1936. “I don't see how the strongest Re- publican without all that money next year can beat the weakest Democrat with nearly five billion dollars at his disposal,” said Fess, former Repub- lican national chairman. Sees G. O. P. Success in 1940. He took the long view toward 1940 for Republican success. “If former President Hoover will continue his wise counsel to the party as in the past,” he said, “he should be the strongest factor in the country in 1940.” His own counsel to the party, he said, was to rely on principles and not candidates. “The party must take a definite stand upon principles—we do not want any one who is for the New Deal or any part of it; we don't want any one tinged with socialism; we don't want any one who favors in- flation,” he said. “It is too early for the candidates to speak out, anyway. Those who have been trying to see how much of the farmer vote or the soldier vote, or any other vote they can muster by pronouncements, now would find they had a victory of the bitterest sort, with certain defeat to follow. Presidential Timber Missing. *“The younger wing of the party has produced no one of presidential tim- ber. The older wing—well, I can't speak for publication.” He repeated charges that President Roosevelt's failure to co-operate with former President Hoover after the 1932 election had “cost this country | ;lear!yAand Mr. Hoover got the blame or it.” ARLINE TIME CUT Hour Slashed Off Central's Sched- ule From Here to Detroit. Slashing an hour from its previous schedule, Central Airlines, Inc., inaugurated a new high speed pas- senger, mail and express service with five round trips daily between Wash- ington and Detroit via Pittsburgh, | Akron and Cleveland. J. D. Condon, president of the air- | lines, announced a fleet of new 8- passenger Stinson trimotor liners have been placed in service. | today “ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, A Very New Germany Sounds Tocsin Stormy clouds overhead form a tempestuous background for these young sons of Nazidom, as they roll their drums and sound their trumpets with a fierce energy—all to show what a swell time they're having at the government-sponsored “Camp of Germany,” where 1,500 Hitler boys and girls are spending their vacations. —A. P. Photo. Robert Henderson, 15, By the Associated Press | CAMP CHIEF OURAY, Colo., Au- gust 8.—Here is the first-hand swry‘ of Robert Henderson, 15, of Omaha, | Nebr., of the mountain-climbing ex- pedition in which William Brode, 15, | of Memphis, Tenn., fell to death from | a cliff. “Bill and T went with some other boys and a Y. M. C. A. camp leader on a climbing expedition to Crater Lake. | Suffered With Weak Heart. | “I didn't know about it at the time, but Bill had a weak heart and they told him and me to stay at Crater Lake Tuesday while the other boys went on up the back face of Lind- bergh Peak by trail. “After the others left Bill and I | decided we'd make a little climb. “We went on a raft across the lake Po]lcemnn Suffers Heart Attack | and started climbing. Then Bill said, Policeman Robert R. Strong. 40. member of the hack inspector’s force, | was stricken with a heart attack last | night at North Capitol street and | New York avenue. He was Lreztedi at the Government Printing Office | first aid station and later removed to Emergency Hospital, where his condi- tion was described as serious. lives at 217 F street. SPECIAL NOTICES. AM _NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS | Eoptracted by anybody other than myself, | GEO! . FARRAR. 4842 Indian lane. * | DAIL PS 'MOVING LOADS AND PART | loads to and from Balto. Phila. and New Ye Frequent trips to other Eastern ‘Dependable Service Singe 1806 DAVIDSON TRANSF] STDRAGE Phone Decatur ~600 WAN“D——HFIURN AD! from any point in the um.ed States. Also‘ Jocal moving. SMITH'S TRANSFER_AND STORAGE CO., 1313 You st. nw. Phone | orth 34 BPECIAL RETURN-LOAD RATES ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 iles; padded vans; guaranteed service. cll moving also Phone National 1460. DEL. ASSOC.. IN N. Y. ave. WANT TO HAUL_FULL RT_LOAD | 19,28 from New York: Richmond Eoston. Y ASSN.. Natl. 1460, RIPE PEACHES | 3™t Quaint Acres. Silver Spring. Colegville rd. 5 miles from D. Detour on Sligo Gpen daily wve.-Avenell rd. till 8:30 p.m. Specials in Printing 1.000 each, business cards. $1 lotter care 50; letterhead: illheads. statements. velopes. Phone Columbia ERVICE SINCE 1900 N. Mantels—Tiling 1106 ELLETT PROPOSALS. FREASURY DEPARTMENT, OFFICE oF Chief Clerk. Washington, D. C.. Aug. 935.—Sealed proposals. in dunhcl!e. wfll mlbuc!y opened in this office 1 pm 19 for furnishing lll lnbor and mlxerlnlx lnd performing all wark for the installation of new radiators and work in- cident thereto at the U. 8. Treasury Bldg., ‘Wash.. . _Attention xs directed to the speciai conditions of bidding set forth in the specification. Drawings and specifica- tions will be supplied free to each con- !rlcu)l’ interested in submitting a pro- . _The above drawings and speci rlona MUST be returned to this office. Specifications and drawings will not be furnished to contractors who have con- sistently failed to submit proposals. One set upon request. and when considered in the interests of the Government will be furnished builders’ exchanges. chambers ©of commerce or other organizations who will guarantee to make them available for any subcontractor or material firm inter- ested. and to quantity surveyors. but this privilege will be withdrawn if the sets are Dot returned after they have accomplished their purpose. Office of the Chief Clerk, ‘Treasury Bldg., Wash.. D. C. aus. 10,12 e LEGAL NOTICES. See signs He | It looked dangerous to me, 50 I stopped | to look for a better way, but when I ! again. |hear any rocks sliding and I don't| | tumbled on down. ! minute. I prayed I could reach him. | | afraid of falling on the slick rocks ‘Let’s climb to the top.’ “‘3ure,’ I told him, and we started. “We got to a ridge near the top. It | was an awful climb. We couldn’t make it all the way up, so Bill says, ‘Let's | go back.’ “He seemed in an awful hurry and | started back dcwn the way we came. | turned around Bill was a good ways down already and I started to follow | | him, Brode Takes Lead. “We had to crawl over rocks that were a hundred feet high, I guess. | They were sharp and slippery. Bill | | wouldn't let me get ahead. Once I| | did and he hurried to take the lead “I stopped to tie a shoe lace and heard Bill call back: ‘You got to be careful here. Boy, if you ever slip here you're gone for sure.” “It was the last thing he said. I looked up and saw him falling. “He didn't say a word. I didn't think he slid. over the cliff. “I screamed. I saw his body hit | one place on a ledge 30 feet down. He bounced off the ledge and then he He just fell straight Henderson Prays. “I sat there and just prayed for a | “I took off .my shoes because I was and over a cliff. The rocks hurt awful, but I finally got to the bottom. I saw Bill there and he looked dead. I could have reached over and touched him, but all I was thinking about was get- ting help. I ran back to the camp and found the others and then they called | | Camp Ouray and started hunting.” HILLMEN SEARCH FOR BODY. Companion of Youth Leads Party to Site of Plunge. By the Associated Press. CAMP CHIEF OURAY, Colo., Au- gust 8.—Weary men searched near Lindbergh Peak today for the body of Willlam Brode, 15, as a youthful companion told with trembling lips of their fatal assault on a treacherous mountainside. The body of the scion of an old Memphis, Tenn., family was believed lodged beyond sight, and possibly beyond recovery, in a funnel-shaped Boy Tells of Fall to Death Relates How His Com- panion, William Brode, 15, Plunged Down High Cliff in Colorado. crevice into which he plummeted late | Tuesday. Robert Henderson, also 15, of Omaha, | Nebr,, had directed mountain men to | the spot after he had been found, | sadly cut about the feet by sharp rocks and almost incoherent, after running for help. | The lads were descending a moun- | tain adjoining Lindbergh Peak, a two-mile-high granite sentinel, when their attention was distracted by a | sound as of falling rocks. A moment | later Brode lost his footing. | Brode's weak heart had caused him to be left fishing at Monarch Lake Tuesday while other members of a Y. M. C. A. Summer camp were taken on a supervised mountain climb. Apparently Brode had been stung | by jests of the other boys about his having to remain near the camp, for he was heard to respond, in a soft drawl: “Some day I'll climb the biggest old | Lill in Colorado.” { Shortly afterward he and Hender- son started out. Whether they reached the top of the height where death came to the youth was not clear from Henderson's broken story. They were descending at a point | | aboui 3,000 feet above surrounding terrain at the time of the accident. | Julien Brode, Memphis cotton deal- | er, and Mrs. Brode, parents of the 1 boy, made an overnight stop in Dal- las, Tex., early today en route here in a special plane. They were in-| formed their son’s resting place ap- parently had been found. MADE U. S. CITIZEN Wife of Nephew of Andrew W. Mellon to Return to Germany. PITTSBURGH, August 8 (#).—Mrs. Gertrud Altegoer Mellon was made a | | citizen of the United States today. A few minutes later she asked !or; | & passport to Germany, explaining she | and her husband, Matthew T. Mellon, | will return there in September. He is teaching American literature at the | University of Freiberg. Mellon is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mellon and a nephew of Andrew W. Mellon, for- mer Secretary of the Treasury. They were married in November, 1931, after a courtship begun while | Mrs. Mellon was a student. She is 26. Mellon is 38. Before Selling Investigate the Prices e Pay for OLD GOLD AND SILVER Jewelry of every description. bridge- work, silver. No matter how ol dilavidated any of 1ore!n|n' ticles might be. you will be aburpnsed at the cash Drlcu nflld y us (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F St. N.W. Phone NA. 3543—We Will Call Catches 400 Rats. A rat catcher of Ayton, Scotland, caught 400 rats in four nights re- cently. Holds Beauty Contest. Calcutta, India, recently held a bathing beauty contest. D. C., THURSDA FRIENDS OF BORAH PONDER % RAGE Decision Is Dependent on Senator’s Willingness to Run. By the Associated Press. Some of the most intimate political assoclates of Senator Borah of Idaho ere pondering whether to put him forward actively for the Republican presidential nomination next year. The decision hinges largely on whether the Senator is willing to run. e has kept silent on that point, but a nationally known Republican who 15 his close friend said today: “If Borah could be assured of an adequate expense fund and a good campaign manager, I believe he would enter all the presidential primaries feeling as he does now.” It is not the first time the Idaho veteran has listened to admirers urging him to make a try for the presidency, but always before his de- cision has been against it. Party Needs Candidate. . Now, at 70, he finds his party look- ing for a candidate who will make the Constitution a ringing issue, but who has sufficient liberal leanings to appeal to the western independent wing of Republicanism. It happens that the Constitution is Borah's faverite issue. He has spoken on that issue year in and year out. No other argument is quite so appeal- irg to him as a constitutional argu- ment. Usually spoken of as a leader of the Republican “irregulars,” Borah actually has stayed “regular” so far | as national campaigns are concerned. He supported Theodore Roosevelt for the 1912 Republican nomination against Taft, but aftdr Taft was nominated refused to bolt with Roose- | velt. In 1932 he declined to go along | with such associates as Norris of Store Hours 9 to 6, Saturday 9 AM. to 2 P.M. Crashing for Clearance! Prices have gone to smash in this final stage of the Semi-Annual Clearance — hitting Clothing, Hab- erdashery, Hats, Shoes. You're missing something if you don't get into this sale. Glenbrook Tropical Suits Were $20 and $25 Imported Irish Linen Suits Were $15 and $16.50 Plain and Striped Sports Trousers_______$5.95 Were $8 and $15 Richard Prince Suits and Topcoats $21.75 Were $30 and $35 Fashion Park Suits and Topcoats $26.75 Were $40 and $45 Fashion Park Suits and Topcoats______$34.75 Were $50 to $60 New Winter Overcoats $35 and $40 Grades Mode Fancy Shirts Were $2 and $2.50. Separate and Attached Collars Mode Broadcloth Shirts Plain and White, Attached Collars. $3 for $4 3 for $4.50 ‘White Neckband Only $1.00 and $1.50 Sport Shirts_____ $2.00 and $2.50 Sport Shirts French Back Shorts Also Lisle Undershirts, Were 75¢ B. V. D. Shorts and Shirts Fancy and White. Were 50c¢ Rockinchair Union Suits, $1.50 Grade____$1.10 The $2.00 Grade reduced to $1.50 Mode Neckwear 75¢ and $1 Grades Mode Neckwear $1.50 and $2 Grades Mode Neckwear $2.50 to $3.50 Grades Hose, pastel and dark Were 35¢ and 50¢ Pajamas—all models Were $1. Silk and Linen Pajamas Were $3.50 colors______ 4 for $1 3 for $4 _$2.49 3 for $7 75 and $2 Mansco Manhattan Bath Suits Trunks and Shirts Reduced 25% $2.00 Grade-- --$1.50 $3.50 Grade AUGUST 8, 1935. Nebraska and Johnson of California in their bolt from Hoover. Talked About 20 Years. For 20 years he has been talked of for President, and his friends at- tribute to him a long-cherished natu- ral ambition to sit in the White House. Now, they are advising him that be- cause of the usual hazards of ad- vancing years, he must run now or never, He has seen enough of politics to know, however, that the costs of a primary campaign are great and the need for an experienced manager imperative. No announcement one way of the other is expected from him in the immediate future. PERCY A. ROCKEFELLER ESTATE IS $9,037,847 Entire Property Is Bequeathed to Wife in Trust for Five Children on Her Death. By the Associated Press. GREENWICH, Conn, August 8.— An estate valued at $6,037,847.26, mostly in stocks and bonds, was left by the late Percy A. Rockefeller, nephew of John D. Rockefeller, filir 7 of the inventory disclosed yesterday. Rockefeller’s real estate was valued at $460,500 and stocks, bonds and other personal property at $8,570,326. ‘The will bequeathed the estate to Mrs. Rockefeller in trust. The five children received no specific bequests, but were to receive the estate in equal portions on the death of Mrs. Rocke- Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and watches into MONEY at— A.Xahn Jne. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 143 YEARS at 935 F STREET | | REUPHOLSTERING in the quality way AT REASONABLE PRICES For a few dollars more you can step out of the low-priced-car class and own a Studebaker-... $848 delivers it, completely equipped . . . nothing else to 1138 Conn Ave DISTRICT 0110 OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAYS IN AUGUST Tée -fiayai £ .9 d/e ofi fijefime “Furniture A Number of Unusually Fine Bed Room Suites At One Low Sale Price Regularly Selling From -$1.88 $5.00 Grade $540 to $595 GEORGE_ROSE. Atiorney at Law. 1812 Calvert St. N.W. N THE SUPREME COURT OF THE DIS- trict_of Columbi; ean Sheers Hart, 62 Plaintiff. vs. Julian Defandant.’ Helen . 5 Co—_;_egnunhd‘zn:-f 57 e object of his suit is to obtain ‘a decree of absolute divorce from the ‘above-named defendant, n the ground of the adultery of the de- dant with the above-named co-respond- $2.58 Grade___-- Last 2 Days Sale of Manhattan Shirts and Pajamas $1.95 and $2 grades__$1.55 $3.50 grade $2.50 grade _$1.85 $5.00 grade _ $3.00 grade _$2.15 $7.50 grade _ $10.00 grade WHERE TO DINE. s FAMILY AWAY? EAT AT Oaise 17th Cafetera &, 724 17th St. M. W. - Ber. H & Penn. Ave. You'll Club Breakf: Not Miss Lunche e". - Them Dinner .. Reupholstering at Mayer & Co. is done in the same high quality way that characterizes all of our transactions. Experts only will do your work and do it in expert fash- ion, inside and out. These are some of the finest Life« time Bed Room Suites on our floors—created at Grand Rapids and unusually distinctive in design —Period adaptations including Adam, Hepplewhite, Colonial and Louis XVI. This is a wonderful op- portunity for the seeker of quality furniture to pick up a remarkable value. ; Other Suites for Much Less day of August, 1635, ordered that the co-respondent, ficien Mokay. The Houston Hotel, 911 E ftreet. Northwest. cause her appearance to entered herein on or before the fortieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holi- s, occurring after the day of the first ublication of this inCtherwise the ause Wil be. pjoceeded with as in Gefsult: Provided. a copy of this order be Dubliched once a week for three succecsive weeks in the Washington Law Re) orter 5nd the l‘v!ninl Star hefure sail y the Court, F. DICKINSON LETTS If your upholstered furniture needs to be done over, come in, se- lect one of the smart new covers and let us tell you how reasonably the work can be done. 4-Course Dmner Choice of Meat of 5"‘“"'5“ ssc (Seal)’ True copy. Test: NK Other Savory D) CUNNINGHAM. Clerk. By R. at, i5c. 85 an h“ it Gerk 15,22 waather Permitting, we Will Tve on the Terrace The Dining Hoom will’ g closed Sate urday for necessary repairs. OPEN ALL DAY SU! 7 IVY 4 Very Special Lot of Whitehall Shoes Sport Shoes, and regular black and tan calf oxfords. Values up to $8.50 e __ A o E] 34-45 All sizes, but not every size in every style. $10 Foot Saver Shoes _-$8.85 $7 to $9 Whitehall Shoes —---$5.85 and $7.85 MONEY TO LOAN. PLAN CORP.. 1400 L ST. n.w.—Credit service; courteous, reasonable. Bromot " Phone Netional 6130 REAL ESTATE LOANS. TO LOAN ON FIRST TRUSTS ON MONEY Tesidences and small business properties. Address _Box .5,1 v. Star_office. If you haven't tried an ice cold glass of Thompson’s refreshing creamy Butter- milk as a pep restorer, these muggy days—you’re missing something. Drink your glass a day and laugh at the heat. Place Extrq Order Card in = empty bottle tonight. ONLY REPAY PER WEEE ©On each $100 «orrowed one of our plans, Leading 100% Independent Leans procured on, first, second and third Washington Dairy THOMPSONS ures. ITANCE. vromotions. patents. DR A HENRY, INC.. 1016 EYE (Where Eve Mcets N LAve) DECATUR 1400 Store-Wide Price Reductions Now MAYER & CO. Between D and E MONEY TO-LO REAL EST, at lowest nrlces. Promnt service. J“Bl L._HEISKELL. 1115 Eye st. n.v. $100 TO $500.000. Free Parking While Shopping Here — Washington Garage, 12th and E Streets. Open a Charge Account Monthly Settlements—or Our Convenient 12-Payment Plan. The Mode—F at Eleventh ¢ A 1341 Conn. Ave. Enjoy bubbling beverages and your favorite foods at this gay 'hone_National 467 PERSONAL LOAN COMPANIES. Operating Under Uniform Small Loan Laws ANS UP TO $300. AN G, Ave, Greenwood 1404, Seventh Street pen 12 Noon to 12 P.M.