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SPECIAL OFFER For a Limited ” Time / ‘g Only Our Celebrated PERMANENT WAVE By Expert Operators ONLY GENUINE SUPPLIES USED Open Evenings Until 9 p.m. 3042 14th St. N.W. ADAMS 6700 We can supply practically all the materials for Repairing Your Hom in materials repair paints, hardware, sand, gravel. cement. roofing ma- terials. ele —and vou can buy in any quantity desired. Let us estimate on your needs and prove that Kelly aualits materials cost no more. Free delivery in any quantity. A corps of trained ex- Derts to assist vou in buving. Phone, Write or See J. FRANK ELLY Lumber & Millwork 2121 Ga. Ave. NOrth 1341 You will want to stay at a hotel as modern as the latest achieve- ments in automobiles. 1200 new rooms with bath and radio 19% RELIEF SUMS TOSPURCAMPAIG Roosevelt’s Decision on | How Much to Spend May Be Large Issue. By the Associated Press. | President Roosevelt’s decision on | how much to spend for relief next | year may be a talking point in the 1936 campaign. That decision is the most important now facing him in preparing next vear's budget. Administration officials | already have indicated expenditures | for normal Government activities will | be about the same as this year's. Mr. Roosevelt disclosed yesterday | hat he is asking industry for sug- | gestions on taking up the slack be- | tween production and lagging pay | rolls and employment. He said gen- | eral indices on outside employment indicate that while production is back to about 90 per cent of 1929 levels, the number of persons em= ployed is around 82 per cent and | wages around 74 per cent. | No Definite Answer Yet. | Industry so far has not yet come | forward with a definite answer for this problem, the executive added. H ex- plained that he is asking opinions of individuals, but does not plan a gen- | eral conference of industrial leaders, 3such as the one called during N. R. | As existence. In his recent budget summary the President said: “The prevailing rate | of recovery points to the speedy de- | cline of Federal expenditures for emer=- | gency activities.” He said he was seek- ‘ing to decrease “the spread between | income and outgo.” ‘ The reply of the American Liberty | League, one of the severest critics of | the administration’s fiscal policies, was: | “Beyond a general tone of optimism, | nothing in the President’s comments | justifies confidence that the submis- sion of the new budget next January | will mark a return to sound fiscal | policies.” | Sees Spending Continuing. Noting probable new demands for continued heavy spending, the league | 'added: “It is, therefore, apparent that ! unless underlying policies are sharply changed there will be a strong ten- dency to spend as much in (the fiscal !| year) 1937 as in 1936.” Doubt that emergency expenditures i would decrease next year also was expressed by Representative Bolton of Ohio, chairman of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee. Administration spokesmen say the curtailment of emergency expendi- i tures depends on absorption of the unemployed by private industry. They agree that some of the relief spending will have to continue for years, but : contend the Treasury can stand that , In view of expected increases in revenue. Dog's Family Tree Useful. Police of Prague, Czechoslovakia, have arrested a man who, disguised as an impoverished aristocrat, begged from passersby and displayed a fam- ily tree. The document was officially stamped and sealed, and bore such de- tails as “grandmother, Elsa von Freu= denfels; great-grandmother, Edith von Freudenfels; great-grandfather, Dagoe i bert von Blasienburg.” When the po- No more rough, dry skin! | A stimulating alcohol rub with Spry —the new “‘creamed” rubbing al- | eohol—leaves the skin smooth and satiny. Liquefies at body temper- | ature. Easier to use—can’t spill. | Use it for — aches — pains — sore muscles—sprains—stiff joints —fever—tired feet—cuts— bruises—after shaving. Contains 70% absolute aleobol, U. S. Govt. | . | business in a thorough manner. standard for rubbing alcohol compounds. e 20 g DOUBLE SIZE 49¢ lice investigated they found that this THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1933. JEWELRY AND MONEY TAKEN BY ROBBERS Police Investigate Reports of Home on R Street and Parked Auto Being Invaded. Thefts, with a total loot valued at $255, were being investigated by police today. Mrs. Hermine Kanngisser, 3537 R street, reported that two gold rings and other jewelry valued at $105 were stolen from her home yesterday. The jewelry was missed after a stranger had been at the R street addréss looking for a room. Police were looking for a thief who, according to Malcolm K. Houston, 1230 Seventeenth street, jimmied the door of his automobile near Dupont Circle Sunday night and stole four suits worth $120. Theft of a pocketpook containing $30 from the attendance room in Franklin School was reported yesterday by Katherine Miller, 1609 Thirty-first street. g i Model Plane Record. Released by A. E. Morrod in Coven- try, England, a model airplane reached & height of nearly 3,000 feet in 21 minutes. was the pedigree of a prize dog. Bay Slate. County Will Hold Annual Rat Hunt Tonight Rodents Given Choice of Fish, Steak or Cereal, By the Associated Press. CONCORD, Mass., October 31.— Rats will be on the run in “every Mid- dlesex village and farm” tonight, flee- ing the wrath of citizens who chose Halloween to exterminate the pests. | For six years Middlesex Cdunty citi- | zens have joined in a huge rat hunt.on | Halloween night. It serves a double purpose—kills the rodents and gives the boys and girls something to do | besides ringing doorbells and pulling | pranks. ‘The amateur hunters go about their They lay a tempting table for the unsuspect- mg rats—offering a choice of fish, hamburg steak or cereal. Poison, which causes their deaths within 24 | hours, is mixed with all three morsels. “We lay the three bits down side by side,” said one official. “Some rats are finicky about what they eat, and we give them something to choose from.” Most of the food is put in cellars, storage places, warehouses and other places where rats are likely to run. Opposite Metropolitan Theater You’ll Always Save Money at the Mill End Shop VELVETEEN Twillback, 36 Value $1.50 inches, wide. 9¢c VELVETEEN Suitable for dresses drapes. 50 wide. Yard and Corduroys—wide and narrow wales MERITEEN Fine velvet-like cloth, with imper- Excellent for Pa- | weaves, tweeds, cootings—a big as- ceptible pin wale. jamas, Robes, Spreads, etc. 7 c | sortment. 54 inches wide. Yard ALL WOOLENS Included are plain crepes, novelty 54 inches wida Choice NOW at, yard 98( All Silk Prints and Acetates, now Most Popular Drapery Materials Rayon Damasks and Repps, heavy weight, 50 inches wid 98c grades. Yd Few Pieces of 39-inch width, 3 yds. for $1 54-in Velours, heavy quality and colorful tones—for drapes and uphoistery. A very exceptional assortment in variety; 54-in. width. Per yd Lincoln standards of value to the medium-price field BORAH GETS BACKING OF OIL MARKETERS “Trust-Busting” Declaration Ral- lies Conyention of Independ- ents at Chicago. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 31.—A Borah- for-President move gathered force to- day at the annual convention of inde- pendent gasoline and oil dealers. Rallying behind the Idahoan's dec- laration for “trust busting” as the major issue of the Republican cam- paign, the National Oil Marketers’ Association urged his nomination as President Roosevelt's opponent in 1936. A resolution drafting Senator Borah into the presidential race was under preparation, Paul E. Hadlick, secretary of the association, said. He predicted its passage at the closing convention | session today. The independent dealers are “al- most 100 per cent” opposed to the New Deal on the grounds that Secre- tary of Interior Harold Ickes opened the way for monopolies under the oil "code, Hadlick sald. The convention’s attitude toward Borah was seen in distribution of printed copies of the insurgent Sena- tor’s October 2 letter to Col. Theodore Roosevelt, jr. — REFUSAL OF RELIEF 3 YEARS AGO UPHELD Sam Goldstein, Original Member of Dillinger Gang, Later Freed and Jailed Again. By the Associated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, October 31.—The name of Sam Goldstein, one of the original members of the Dillinger gang, entered Indiana court records again yesterday when the State Supreme Court decided the Laporte Circuit Court acted correctly three years ago in refusing to order Goldstein's release from the State prison. Since that time, however, Goldstein received a parole, was rearrested as a member of the Dillinger gang and sent back to prison, received a second parole, and State police now say the cently for an Ohio robbery is the same one. | The case which the Supreme Court | decided yesterday arose when Gold- stein sought his release from prison in | 1932 on a petition for a writ of habeas | corpus. Sam Goldstein arrested in Chicago re- | AUTHOR HURT ON TOUR PERRY, Fla., October 31 (#).—At- tendants said yesterday the condition of Lewis R. Freeman, injured bicyclist and author, is improved. Freeman suffered & slight concus- sion of the brain and severe body bruises when he was knocked from his bicycle by an automobile near here Monday night. He left Pasadena, Calif,, for a bicycle tour which was to have taken him through South Announcing LINGOLN The new twelve-cylinder car that brings Ford and Crops Damaged. Floods recently caused heavy crop damage in Southern Manchuria. #% A—l11 British Radio. Radio “remote control” has jus been introduced into Great ijlln'. TiGE WARFIELD MOTOR CO. Takes pleasure in announcing that they are the Dealers for the new LINCOLN ZEPHYR in the metropolitan area for the District of Columbia DISPLAY ROOM LOCATED AT 1727 CONNECTICUT AVE. Decatur 4300 and roof-members, with the floor and floor- members, carry the stresses. The first result of this new construction, obvi- ously, is great safety under all conditions. ON SATURDAY the Lincoln Motor Company will present to this city the LINCOLN-ZEPHYR—an authentically modern motor car. It has a 12-cylinder motor, a motor of the V-type, proved so efficient in Lincoln and Ford cars. This engine develops 110 horsepower. The wheelbase is 122 inches. The springbase is 133 inches. The bore and stroke is 234 inches by 3% inches. The roomy body accommodates six peo- ple and luggage. The LiNcOLN-ZEPHYR is, above all things, a new car, new in idea, performance, appearance. But it does share the background of experience, the creative engineering skill that have developed the Ford and the Lincoln cars. It is built in its own specially equipped division of the famous Lincoln precision plant. Workmen trained for years in building the Lincoln bring to it methods of precision they have learned so well. It reflects the Ford skill in organizing production that combines quantity with quality, that gives value at a price. Only thus could a car of such power, size and beauty be offered for so little. Only thus could it represent in its field as genuine a value as the Lincoln and Ford cars in theirs. As you inspect the LiNcoLN-ZEPHYR for the first time, you will be impressed by the sweeping beauty of its every line. It employs fully the principles of aero-dynamic design. Streamlines flow not only from end to end, but from side to side. But grace of line, in this case, does more than express a style trend. It reflects principles of design and construction as new as the car itself. Steel trusses make possible the bridge, the airplane fuselage, the Marconi tower—structures of light weight but great strength. Steel trusses underlie the flowing curves of this new car. Body and frame are one, welded together. Here is a steel bridge, the body, a rigid structure, supported at two points, the front and rear springs. The roof Great comfort follows inevitably. The center of gravity is low; passengers step directly onto the floor of the car; and the weight of all passen- gers is poised between the axles. There is no “back-seat” ride. X Soft transverse springs minimize the “up-and- down” motion, the jounces, the bumps of the road that rob riding of comfort. We have no hesi- tancy in saying that this car, with its smooth V-12 power, offers a new rhythm of motoring. The gliding ride results naturally from its design. " Plan to spend at least an hour at the exhibit. A new understanding of the motor car awaits you. Arrange for a demonstration. Performance is as refreshing as appearance. PRICED FROM F.0. B. DETROIT AVAILABLE IN TWO SEDAN BODY TYPES CONVENIENT, ECONOMICAL TERMS THROUGH THE AUTHORIZED FINANCE PLANS OF THE UNIVERSAL CKEDIT COMPANY Inspect this new -car Saturday at' the Automotive Trade Association Shouy at the Calvert Exhib'v Hall, 2701 Calvert .Street N.W. < A :