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SINGLE ROOM/AND PRIVATE BATH A new hotel on 42nd Street 2 blocks east of Grand Central Station HOTEL TUDOR NEW YORK CITY ATLANTIC CiItY 2-DAY EXCURSION SATURDAY, SEPT. 21 ! $ 25 WASHINGTON Opportunity for a glorious outing at low cost. Leave Washinglon 8:00 A. M. Sat- urday, Sept. 21. Returning, leave Atien- #ic City any fime Saturday, up to and Including 6:30 P. M. Sunday, Sept. 22. e $#3 25 Surday, Sept. 22. Lv. 1:00 g A M. or 6:20 A M. Return- Trip ing Lv. 6:30 P. M. same day. Phone District 3300, National 7370 < BALTIMORE & OHIO RR. GTZENS CIUNCL HEARSRIEHARDSON Southeast Group Is Told Constitution Guarantees Liberty Under Law. Organization, as expressed by the Constitution, was the theme of Dr. E. E. Richardson’s address before the | Southeast Council of Citizens' As-| sociations at a meeting last night in the Buchanan School, Thirteenth and D streets southeast. Stating that one of the fundamental points of the Constitution is liberty under law, Dr. Richardson outlined the development of the Constitution in connection with the celebration of the 148th anniversary of its signing. Safety Campaign Indorsed. The council indorsed The Star's safety campaign. A committee was appointed to in- vestigate the proposed plan for con- version of gasoline tax funds into a general revenue fund and to formulate a plan favoring a weight tax on vehicles instead of a gasoline tax. A motion indorsing the' erection of a National Guard Armory as a part | of the proposed stadium development | at the end of East Capitol street, was pasced by the council. A motion was made to write the | National Capital Parks office asking for the removal of the band shell and THE EVENING barge anchored at the Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge. Recommended for Board. E. J. Newcomb was indorsed by the council to fill the vacancy on the Board of Public Welfare. The following represented their as- sociations at the council: W. A. Murphy and Mrs. George H. Marshall, Summitt Park; M. G. Fincham, North Randle Highlands; C. G. Degman and W. J. Carey, East Washington Heights; G. W. Bare, Lincoln Park; J. J. Mac- Gregor, Hillcrest, and Dr. Richardson and Newcomb, Congress Heights. The annual election of officers will be held next month. HELD FOR GRANDVJURY Man Accused of Hold-Up in Hos- pital Grounds. Accused of having held up and robbed Wendell J. Chesser, 1712 D street northeast, in the Garfield Hos- pital grounds September 6, John Swin- son, 21, colored, 1900 block of Eighth street, was held for grand jury action by Judge Robert E. Mattingly in Police Court yesterday. Chesser told the court he had been visiting his sister, who was a patient at the hospital, and was taking his departure when Swinson approached him with his hand in his pocket, say- ing he had a gun. Chesser thereupon | handed over $169 and fled. Swinson was arrested by second precinct police several days later and was identified by Chesser. Women Ring Bells. London women are taking up musi- | for highway robbery eight years ago. ca) bell ringing as a hobby. STAR, IBANDIT SUSPECTS SEIZED IN COUNTY Cab Driver Tells of Being Tied Up and Carried Along by Pair. Two bandlt suspects, reported to have held up a Washington hacker, taken him captive and seized his taxi- cab for use in a Pittsburgh “numbers” game robbery which failed to ma- terialize, are being held by District | police today for questioning. A “hunch” followed by & Montgom- ery County police sergeant landed the men, Horace Davis, 29 years old, of 2100 block First street, Washington, and Jack Thompson, 18, of Roanoke, Va. in jail. Davis, police say, has been convicted of highway robbcxy]‘ and forgery. On Way Home. Sergt. Roy Snyder of the Mont- gomery County police substation at Bethesda was driving home shortly | before 9 o'clock yesterday when he saw I a taxicab at Four Corners, Md., pro- | ceeding toward Washington with two | men in the front seat. { Snyder noticed the men were driv- ing with a flat tire, although a spare | was on the rack. He halted the cab | and was questioning Davis when he recognized him as a man he arrested | In the rear of the cab Snyder dis- WASHINGTON, D. covered the hacker, Glascoe Bowie, colored, of 1910 Third street, Wash- ington, trussed up on the floor. He searched Davis and found a .32 cali- ber revolver, he reported. Hailed Sunday Night. Bowie declared he was hailed by Davis and Thompson at Fourth and H street Sunday night and ordered to drive to a point on Sargent road, near the Maryland line. Arriving, Bowie said Davis drew a gun and the men then tied him up, explaining they were going to use his cab to hold up a “pay off” man for a “numbers” game ring in Pittsburgh. They drove toward Frederick, turn- ing back to the Capital, however, when the gas ran low. A short dis- Reiseschecks TOURISTEN Reisemark C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1935. tance from Four Corners a tire went flat. Sergt. Snyder said Davis served eight years in the Maryland peniten- tiary. The suspecis were brought back to the Capital. RED CROSS GRATIFIED The Red Cross, through its chair- man, Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, expressed appreciatian of co-operation of the Coast Guard and American Legion posts in relief efforts in the Florida hurricane area. Admiral Grayson praised officers | and crew of the Coast Guard in let- | ters addressed to Secretary of the Sorgfaltige Beral RUCKWANDERER allen Geldangelegenheiten. TILGUNGS-SPERRMARK fur Geschenk-und Unterstutzungs-Zwecke, Hauskauf, Hausbau, Hypotheken und bedinglich fur Reisezwecke. GESCHENKMARK-SENDUNGEN Sachgemasse Beratung fur Anlagen in Ameri Alle New Yorker Bors erster Stock-Excha Verlangen Sie unsere schen Werten. albmonatlichen Berichte. German American Securities Company, Inc. 29 Broadway NEW YORK CITY Treasury Morgenthau and Rear Ad- miral Harry G. Hamlet, commandant. He also wrote to Frank N. Belgrano, Jr., national commander of the Legion, Ppraising Florida Legionnaires. Working class flats being built in London will have elevators, an innova- tion in England. POOR LITTLE CANARY ® KILMIT! :‘e"u”'"t eanary if not_protected by KILMITE RINGS against mites. blood- sucking vermin which weaken canaries and stlence their singing. E RINGS— 10c per pair n G. C. Murphy Sc and 10¢ Stores CALL LINCOLN 5800 We .will tell you why Williams Oil-O-Matic is heating more homes than any other burner made. W. F. HUMMER & SON 802 B Street N.E. Fashion+Comfort=RED CROSS SHOES PHOENIX "Budget Sheers" give you long mileage 79 Like your stockings to be sheer and sturdy at the same time? Sounds impossible—but Phoenix turns the trick with Budget Sheers. Bright young things tell us this hosiery is so nice and clear, they even wear it for evenings. New Fall colors, sizes 8'; to 10%;. (Main Floor. Hosiery.) SATIN GOWNS, SLIPS and PAJAMAS Satin at this price is news any day. And the way the price of satin is leap- ing upward, you'd better take our tip and round up a season’s outfit. The pa- jamas are guaranteed practically ir- resistible with lavish, lovely lace or tai- lored with dressmaker details. Nighties that look like evening dresses, too and beautifully made slips. Gowns and pa- jamas, sizes 15, 16 and 17 in tearose or blue. Slips, sizes 32 to 44. (First Floor, Lingerie Dent.) Buede eoxford with Sotinter & e« 86.50 Suede one-sirap with nide buckle. @€ 5() Patent trim Suede pump at P eniner trim oo Suede with Calf trim ea.. monk side Suede Scores a signal shoe success with $6.50 shoe buckle - $6.50 ‘Shoemakers have re-discovered suede. It's a happy notion, because suede is perfectly at home with dress-up clothes as well as casual sports things. Red Cross highlights the trend to suede with types for every occasion. That’s right in line with our idea of bringing you high fashions in Red Cross shoes with comfort features that make these shoes a joy forever. \ Theroscope Fitting by Registered Fitters MAIN FLOOR, WOMEN'S SHOE DEPARTMENT THE HECHT CO0. F STREET AT SEVENTH e e e NATIONAL 5100 " ~