Evening Star Newspaper, August 28, 1936, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RYPTTOASK L. S 0 YIELD PRIVILEGE End of Extraterritoriality Sought to Complete Independence. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 28.—The United States and 12 other nations en- Jjoying extraterritorial rights in Egypt vill be asked to give them up in order to complete the tentative indepen- dence to be re-established in that ancient nation. An Anglo-Egyptian treaty is being made public today in London. The broad outlines of the scheme wvere agreed upon last Spring. It is confirmed authoritatively that the next diplomatic step will be for Britain to persuade the United States and other nations to surrender voluntarily the capitulations they have enjoyed in Egypt since it was part of Turkey. A conference for this purpose is the official plan. Must Face Native Courts. Abolitionr of capitulations will mean that the 800 Americans in Egypt plus the annual Winter increase of iourists from here will no longer have right of being tried only by an American consul on criminal charges. | But the mixed tribunals, a special | type of court in Egypt, will continue under the plan already discussed with foreign diplomats. The Anglo-Egyptian treaty, after; many years of political bickering and iutile negotiation, has arisen chiefly as a British desire to pacify at least one part of a troubled world. Italian aggression in Africa, Arab unrest in Palestine, Germany's occupation of the Rhineland and other disturbing factors speeded the agreement. All the Egyptian parties joined in & united front in negotiating with the British for the first time. Students who led the rioting in the Cairo streets last Winter went to the party leaders and demanded unity. Many of the students got their ideas of iiberty in American colleges in the Fear Past. The strange thing about this pact is that Britain did not fear the Egyp- tians as much as outside influences in the Mediterranean area if she continued to withhold independence. The rioting last Winter was mild com- pared with similar disturbances in other countries. The Egyptians as a whole are docile compared to natives in other parts of the British Empire or the Nicaraguans and Filipinos with whom American military forces have dealt. Independence Tentative. The independence for Egypt is only | tentative as “a threat of war” will | glve Britain the right to take over 1ilitary control again. Another strange feature of the treaty is this loose | cesignation of the conditions under | which independence would end. Con- ferees expect that Britain and Egypt | vill agree without any debate when | there is “a threat of war.” | | however, Spain (Continued From First Page.) weeks of conflict, pictured Madrid as the scene of a perpetual Walpurgis Night of red terror, with hundreds of persons being shot down and food supplies running low. Prepare New Trials, The Catalan autonomous govern- trials of rebel Fascist prisoners by new “people’s courts” next Monday. Previous executions have been the re- sult of military trials. The rebels also declared their Thurs- day air raid on Madrid had wrecked government airplanes and hangars, although the government denied there was material damage. Madrid took intensive precautions against another assault from the air, however. Outside of Spain, Fascist Italy com- pleted her adherence to the interna- tional neutrality pact by declaring a formal embargo on arms shipments to either side. The Spanish govern- ment has accused Italy of helping the'1 rebels, and says Il Duce will continue | to do so, along with Germany and | Portugal, despite the pact. Officially, Germany already has de- | clared an arms embargo and Portugal has taken similar action. U. S. Gets Apology. Removal of British troops and Tlanes to the Suez Canal area, under terms of the treaty, will end a long cause of friction. A compromise has been reached in | the settlement of the Sudan contro- versy, which it was feared would be | & stumbling block to the treaty. The | Igyptians, barred from that great| expanse of territory, will be allowed | 15w to send limited numbers of im- 1igrants there. They may take over & share of the administration. . DEATH CLAIMS WIFE OF COL. G. R. COOK Iative of Denver Had Been Ill Long Time at Crittenden Street Home. Mrs. Doris Frederick Cook, 46, wife cf Lieut. Col. Gilbert Richard Cook cf the War Department general staff, cied yesterday after a long illness at her home, 1500 Crittenden street. A native of Denver, Mrs. Cook was the daughter of the late Col. Daniel A. and Mrs. Martha Hardin Frederick. She and Col. Cook were married in September, 1914, at the home of her rarents at Fort Sam Houston, Tex. Besides her husband, she is sur- vived by a son, Gilbert R. Cook, jr., a sophomore at Carnegie Institute of Technology; a daughter, Mrs. Ce Ce Cook Garges, and granddaughter, Martha Hardin Garges, this city, and ® brother, Alfred Hardin Frederick, Los Angeles. Funeral services will be held at 10:30 am. tomorrow in the Fort Myer, Va, Chapel. Chaplain Ralph | O. Deibert will officiate. Burial will te in Arlington National Cemetery beside the graves of Mrs. Cook’s parents. Honorary pallbearers will be Lieut. | Cols. John F. Landis, Joseph D. Patch, Oscar W. Griswold, S. Roland Hop- kins and Charles W. Ryder and Maj. Charles L. Bolte. FOUND. ESKIMO SPITZ, young. male, has harness: icinity Burnt Mills. Md, recently. Silver LOST. in ‘Tramp. Reward. _Call "Wiscons T, on Bunday. August 23 between 0 and 1 p.m. on Capitol Transit bus 4, Sonn. ave. Ellit st. to 18th and -blue chiffon short B 5 etropoiltan 9070.. bty . brown and white.5 months Reinswers “Mike.” Re- URSE—White. near Florida ave 4t n.w: Thursday evening. Reward. ord. Cleve. 538%. OTTISH TERRIER—Female, smal ort_hair: answers to “Chico,” 1l Columbia 9447 ALLET. rict drivi TTE PURSE. containing watch, lost_i vicinity of Fulton and 39th sts. n.w. Re: ward. _Call Emerson . RE-HAIRED TERRIER—Female; vicl 'y Chevy Chase. Md.: tag No. 4048 Satur- ay noon. Reward. Wisconsin 3713-M. SPECIAL NOTICES. EA_H.Y TRIPS, MOVING LOADS oads to and trom Basto- Phle snd sillss, TBeentunle Rervice Biie ST 'DAVIDSON i 50" Phtne Decator Dooo. & = LD DAG! 'YPES. UERREOTYPES. TINTYPES. Qi grints of a0y treasured “keepsake e tures” restored improved. copied (large of " rnfbm 10 1338 P sll) by EDMON: mfid Specialists (p fne copying for n?n;nfifl' Maryland and Dis ermits. Reward. Rals rvine, District 5112 5 i -LOAD RATES ON FULL points within 1,000 guaranteed service. Phone National 1460 INC.. 1317 N. Y. Dixon Farm. s% 257::: bushel; bring At Washington the United States | State Department acknowledged Mad- | rid's “profound regret” that official | mail addressed to the American Em- bassy in the Spanish capital had been opened. It will not happen again, the Spaniards said. Two thousand militiamen of the Madrid government comprised the‘ surprise attackers moving in Burgos. | They were reported near Briviesca, | less than 25 miles away, and Gen. Emilio Mola, Northern insurgent com- mander, moved his forces into posi- tion to withstand the onslaught. Jubilantly, the Burgos government announced restoration of communica- | tion with the rest of the world. Of- ficials here charged they had been cut off by France and England, but had re-established cable service by agreement with German communica- tions agencies to accept messages from Vigo. Send Protest to France. The Fascist junta sent a formal protest to the French foreign office against “the inconceivable immorality of sacking the Bank of Spain.” The protest demanded that France refuse to receive gold shipments from the Madrid government. (Madrid has shipped gold in large | quantities to France since the revolt broke out, presumably intended for the purchase of arms and munitions if the French government could be prevailed upon to permit their sale.) The first step in setting up an army dictatorship if they are successful in capturing Madrid, the Fascists said,! will be “cleansing” of all public offices and immediate trial of all Loyalist gov- ernment leaders. The Loyalist press will be suppressed, they asserted, and then will come the plebiscite on the monarchy. ‘Would End Strikes. « Other steps in the program of Gen. Mola und Commander in Chief Fran- cisco Pranco included: Suppression of the right to strike and “lockouts” by employers. Creation of a political council to act as adviser to the military dictatorship. Annulment of the Socialist govern- ment’s extensive agrarian reforms (parceling of land among peasants). Restitution of all confiscated prop- erty (churches, educational institu- tions, factories and estates seized by the Madrid government). Suppression of Loyalist labor organi- zations to be replaced by Fascist bodies. The Burgos Junta asserted it had decided to punish provinces refusing to join the revolt by “wiping them off the map.” Navarre Would Get Port. If the revolution is successful, the ancient kingdom of Navarre, which " | sent thousands of troops to the rebel cause, would be given an outlet to the sea through Guipuzcoa Province on the Bay of Biscay. It is there that rebels are battling for possession of Irun and San Sebastian. Semi-autonomous Catalonia would disappear under rebel plans and be- come a part of Aragon. Asturias, where hard-fighting miners cause the Fascists much trouble, would be split into new administrative dis- tricts. Possession of seaports by the inland provinces siding with the rebels weuld give them increased tax revenue. ‘The Loyalist troops advancing to- ward Burgos were commanded by Jose Billaries, former governor of Burgos when it was in Loyalist hands. He fled to Santander when the revolt broke out. Made Forced Marches. ment at Barcelona prepared to start | | American Legion Convention banquet | diners. Woody Hockaday, who gained fame here by showering the War Department with feathers a few weeks ago, gave the American Legion a taste of the same treatment last night at Baltimore. Hockaday, who calls himself “Chief Pow Wow,” is shown showering the speakers’ table at the Le- gion’s State Convention banquet with two bushels of feathers. smashed in the fight that jollgwed. Bedlam Is Caused At Legion Banquet By “Feather Man” Kansan Who Startled | D. C. Stuns Diners in Baltimore. BULLETIN. Woody Hockaday was returned to St. Elizabeth's Hcspital today. He was brought back from Balti- more, where he fled after escaping from the hospital Tuesday night. ] g By the Assoctated Press. BALTIMORE, August 28.—Woody | Hockaday, the Wichita, Kans., “feather | man,” got himself a two-bushel bag |of feathers, an Indian headdress, a coat of red paint and a pair of worsted | shorts—and turned the Maryland into a near-riot. Hockaday, self-styled peace propa- gandist, bounded, half-naked, into the | Legion banquet hall last night, scat- | tering white—and wet — chicken | feathers indiscriminately over the At first, Legionnaires figured it was | part of the show. Some even un-| leashed a few echoing “wa-hoos” as | Hockaday leaped onto a table facing | the main speakers of the evening. Frank E. Samuel, Indianapolis, na- | tional adjutant of the Legion, had just | finished an after-dinner joke. i “Eeeeow;” yelled the newcomer, | romping about the table scattering | feathers. The diners’ hair and ice | cream began to take on a faintly| poultry-ish appearance. But, the show | didn't stop. : Samuels, Mayor Howard W. Jackson | and State Legion Comdr. Charles S.| Houck, jr., took a fistful square in their faces. Col. Amos W. W. Wood- | | cock, president of St. John's College, | and former national prohibition ad- | ministrator, fared almost as badly. Then, a gray-haired Legionnaire, evidently figuring things had gone far enough, picked up his chair and broke it around the “feather man's” ears. A half-dozen men hauled Hockaday to the door and into the street. Police swept him away to the station house, where he spent the night “under ob- | servation.” Hockaday, a check-up disclosed, escaped from St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Washington, where he had been confined for mental observation. Pre- viously, he had staged a “feather-raid” on high officials at the War Depart- | ment. With true Indian stealth, Hockaday, also known as Chief Pow Wow, slipped unobserved out of St. Elizabeth’s Hos- pital Tuesday night and disappeared. Arrested after he dumped a mass of | feathers on the desk of Acting Secre- tary of War Woodring, the chief was | taken to Gallinger Hospital, being | transferred to St. Elizabeth’s August 13. | o Maine (Continued From First Page.) decision of Gov. Brann to make that race. Dubord was a candidate for the Senate against Senator Frederic Hale, Republican, two years ago and lost by only 1,200 votes, while Brann was being re-elected Governor by 23,000. There is a third candidate in the fleld for Governor, Rev. Benjamin B. Bubar, a, Townsendite. What effect, if any, he will have on the outcome is problematical. The Democrats are hoping that Bubar will poll ten to twelve thousands votes—and take them all away from the Republican candidate. The Townsendites have some strength up here in Maine. One of their number, James C. Oliver, won the Republican nomination for Rep- resentative in the first congressional district, which includes Portland. Oliver, it is true, was in a contest with 10 other candidates for the Repub- lican nomination. He polled only about 28 per cent of the vote cast, but there he is, large as life, the bona fide candidate of the Republicans for Congress, and the Republican organi- zation is back of him to the limit. Ku Kiux Klan Claims Heard. Barrows, the Republican candidate for Governor, is accused of having been a member of the Ku Klux Klan in the days when the hooded organiza- tion was in its prime. There is a g0od deal of reason to believe that he was, it is said. Dubord, the Demo- cratic gubernatorial nominee, on the other hand, is a French Catholic. How far the religious issue will enter into this contest has not yet been de- fined. So far, neither side seems to have brought it up. The Democrats are reported to have in their pos- > —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. | sible. ~ narrow margin to win his way into | him. Estimates for victory by Re- | he will have nothing favorable to say | | the greatest year the Democrats have | ster is the stormy petrel of Maine LANDON PLEASED -|SEATTLE MAYOR - WITH FIRST TRIP} STRIKE SPEAKER A newspaper _camera was session a photograph of Barrows, clad in Klan regalia. If so, they have not produced it. There is a large Cath- olic population in Maine, but take it by and large, it is overwhelming Prot- estant. It might not be to the ad- vantage of the Democrats, therefore, to raise such an issue. Dubord has been an active organ- izer. He started right away after his defeat in 1934 by Senator Hale to build up as large a following as pos- He had failed only by a very the Senate. He has made friends all | over the State. But it is pointed out, | Dubord ran some 25,000 votes behind Brann two years ago; he is not ns‘ strong a candidate or as popular as | Brann, and he is up against a very determined drive by the Republicans to elect a Republican Governor this | year. Barrows Backed Strongly. Barrows is no whirl wind. How- ever, he is making an acceptable candidate and the Republicans are planning to go down the line for | publican leaders range from 25,000 | to 50,000 in the gubernatorial race. | Those Democratic leaders who con- tend that Dubord will yet win this contest are far less in the margin of | their claims. They will be heartily | glad if he wins by 500 votes. Dubord | himself insists that he is going to win, that he has sensed it in his | travels about the State. Maine has at present two Demo- | cratic members of the House and one Republican. One of the Democrats, Representative Simon M. Hamlin, has | been renominated in the first con- gressional district. ‘The other, Repre- sentative Edward C. Moran, jr., de- clined to run again. He is a sincere | New Dealer, and beyond that he has a great distaste for Gov. Brann. When Brann was selected to run for the Senate by the Democratic powers | that be, Moran could not stomach | going on the same ticket. So he quit. | Up to the present time, Moran has been quiet in the campaign. It is predicted in scme quarters that he | will come out for the Democratic candidates for the House, but that | for Brann in the Senate race. The | Democrats have nominated in Moran's | place Ernest MacLean, Representative Ralph O. Brewster is the Republican member of the House. He has been renominated, and the chances are he will be re- elected. He won in 1934, which was ever had in a Maine election. Brew- politics. He was elected Governor by the Republicans after a bitter fight in the primary a number of years ago. Later he sought to win his way into the Senate, but could not make the grade in the Republican primary. For the last four years he has been a member of the House. He was the center of a bitter row in the House last year, when he declined to sup- port the administration’s public util- ity holding company bill, although he had been expected to do so by the progressives and the administration leaders, Notwithstanding this fracas Brewster seems to be running strong again this year, and the third district, any way, is regarded as Republican territory. Second District Complicated. ‘The fight for the House seat in the second congre nal district is com- plicated by the entry of a couple of independent candidates. The Repub- licans have put forward Clyde L. Smith, a member of the Governor's council, and the Democrats have named Ernest L. MacLean, J. C. Lec- kemby, a Republican, but also a Town- sendite, is an independent candidate, and Raymond Rogers, a Coughlinite, is another. The Democrats are figur- ing, and perhaps correctly, that Lec- kemby will take away more votes from THE BULLIS SCHOOL Preparation for West Point, Annapelis nd_Colles 8-Year Senior High School Day students lunch at sel St extra cost. Out of 56 students taking 1936 West Point and Anapolis czaminations, 32 were successful. Capt. ¥. Bullis, Principal Stiver Sprins, Md. Shep. Course, hool Washington College of Law Coeducational 3 Forty-first Year Begins September 21 :o'ol; .(l;“s-. NW. MEt. 4585 | Preparation. Dayand Even ing Classes; Coeducational Send for 30th Year Book. JAMIN Kansan, Back in Topeka, “Gratified” by Taste of Campaigning. By the Associated Press. TOPEKA, Kans., August 28.—Back home, Gov. Alf M. Landon expressed himself today as “deeply gratified” by his first taste of presidential cam- paigning—a 2,880-mile stumping tour through eight States, embracing three ma jor speeches and more than 50 rear- platform appearances. ‘The Republican nominee reached the Kansas capital city shortly after mid- night, ending a swing to vote-im- portant Eastern States that started eight days ago in Colorado. The G. O. P. standard bearer is ex- pected soon to announce plans for a second tour, this time a trip through the Middle Western farm belt. Aides expected this ‘swing to take him to Minneapolis and Milwaukee for speeches during the third week in September. Tentative plans call for a swing through Minnesota, Wiscon- sin, Towa and possibly the Dakotas. The Governor turned his attention today to business accumulated during his absence and to rest before ar- ranging to attend a drought confer- ence of Governors at Des Moines, called by President Roosevelt. Discussing his first tour, which took him to West Middlesex, Pa., his birth- place, and to Chautauqua and Buf- falo, N. Y, for three speeches, the candidate in a statement said: “I return to Topeka deeply gratified with my first trip of the 1936 cam- paign. Traveling the past eight days between the Rocky Mountains and Lake Erie, I have appreciated the friendly welcome of those whom I have had the opportunity of meet- ing.” In Illinois on the return trip, Lan- don halted at Springfield to pay a personal tribute at the tomb of Abra- ham Lincoln. On his way through Missouri he met party leaders, including Arthur M. Hyde, Secretary of Agriculture in the Hoover cabinet. “There is a very strong sentiment for Gov. Landon in Missouri,” Hyde said. “But the question is whether it | will get counted at the polls.” Before heading into his home State Landon told a crowd inside the Union Station at Kansas City: “I wish I could find the words to tell you how kind and neighborly all the folks have back again. It only comes to show that an American is at home any- where under the flag. And as long as | that is true, we shall remain s united | m people.” | and that their man will squeeze through. Rogers’ vote is expected to be very small, but to come principally | from the Democratic side. The race between Oliver, the Re- publican Townsendite, and Represent- | ative Hamlin, Democrat, in the first | district, is hard fought. Many of the | conservative Republicans—and they | are conservative—hate to vote for any one with the Townsend taint. Ham- lin ordinarily would not be a strong candidate and this year was regardea as a mark for the Republicans. How- ever, if enough of the Republicans re- fuse to vote for Oliver or vote for Smith than he will from MacLean | (F Hamlin in protest against the Town- send idea, the Democratic candidate | will be elected. Certain of the Re- | publican leaders, on the other hand, | are figuring that Oliver will actually run ahead of his ticket in this dis-‘ trict and will win hands down over | Not a Laxative *“The continued use of laxatives and cathartics only aggravates constipation,” says a prominent medical authority. Nujol is an internal lubricant, not a laxative, so cannot gripe. Take Nujol regularly and you will prevent the absorption into the blood of poisons from the constipated bowel. Constipation is dangerous for -nybody.’f‘l?niol is safe for evesy- body. It does not affect the stomach, and is not absorbed by the body. Medical authori- ties approve Nujol because it is 30 safe, so gentle and so natural in its action. Nujol makes up foradeficiency of natural lubricant in the intes- tines. It softens the waste mattes and thus permits thorough and regular bowel movements with- out griping. Just try Nujol regularly for the mext month and see if you don’t feel better than you ever suspected you could. Ask your druggist for Nujol and insist on the genuine. Second Address to Be Given as Newspaper Guild . Pushes Fight. By thc Assoclated Press. SEATTLE, August 28.—Mayor John F. Dore agreed today to make his sec- ond speech for the Seattle Chapter of the American Newspaper Guild in its news room strike against the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which suspended publication August 14. ‘The mayor, who bitterly assailed the Post-Intelligencer and its owner, William Randolph Heart, in an ad- dress Tuesday, said he would speak under auspices of the Washington Comomnwealth Federation at Everett. Hal Dunleavy of the federation said an effort would be made to organize & citizens’ committee at Everett to aid the guild, which struck in protest against the discharge of two of its members. Executives of the Hearst newspapers held firm in their refusal to deal with the guild. The guild, backed by the Seattle Central Labor Council, set- tled down to organizing for a pro- longed siege. Logger Is Sentenced. A 10-day jail sentence was given Harry Weibling, 29, a logger, in Police Court yesterday in connection with a disturbance outside the Post- Intelligencer plant August 14. Detec- tive Lieut. Arthur J. Hill was injured | by a hurled light plug. A strike blockade of the Post- | Intelligencer which has failed to publish for 14 consecutive days, pre- | vented the trans-shipment here yes- | terday of Sunday editions of the San | Francisco Examiner, also a Hearst publication. About 1,500 copies, ordered for Bremerton and delivered to a ferry dock here after being sent north by train, lay untouched on a dock. Capt. James M. Fox, secretary of the Ferry Boat Men'’s Union, said he would not allow union members to handle it. Examiner Boycotted. | At Aberdeen, E. E. Welland, presi- | dent of the Sawmill and Timber Workers’ Union there, said all stores and newsstands which had handled the Post-Intelligencer would be asked not to handle the Examiner “as long as the Post-Intelligencer remains suspended. | The Seattle chapter of the Amer- | ican Newspaper Guild, which called | been all the way to by birthplace and | the Post-Intelligencer strike, and the “Law and Order STEAMSHIPS. NEAN and all Europe—De Luxe ice_on famous express the cmooth Sout ITALIAN LINE. & CARIBBEAN GUEST | week with the Great White | Fieet. 17 _and IR davs. $135 and u. [ UNITED FRUIT CO.. Pier 3. North River. | New York_or your Travel Agent | RESORTS. VIRGINIA. ORKNEY SPRINGS HOTEL Orkney Springs, Va. Only 3'; hours’ drive over splendid macadam road to Washington's popular Moun- tain Resort. Golf tennis dancing swimming horse- back riding bowling Gen- *ile :lientele. American Plan—Attractive Rates. Send for Booklet. Long Distance Tel., Mt. Jackson 30 rs. E. L. Cock N Bryce's Hotel and Cottages (Basye. just before you get to Orkney Springs. 20th year bigger and better each year. Reputation built on and service. Swimming pool. sulphur and iron water All_sports and amusements free Bowling. pool. dancing. tennis, | Saddle horses for hire. Amer- 2.5 day: $15 per week Sky Line Trail” stop wi E WILLIAM R. BRYCE. owners. __ | COLONIAL BEACH, VA. ~ ENJOY YOUR VACATION AT COLONIAL BEACH HOTEL | On the broad P Beautiful, health- | ful, restful a Good food. running artesi from 15.00 meals. Pen Frank D. Blackistone. Owner & Manager. * | OCEAN CITY, MD. HASTINGS HOTEL 23..rim ; Baths. 4 o Farking SPRS: cHAS. LUDL Ocean Ave Near Beach. ooms with Runn rates. Mt BREAKERS R0020%0h fof ans 4 running water and “private bath Phone 76. C. H. TIMMONS_Proo. ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. Virginia Ave., half block to beach and Steel Pj Running wi Private baths. §3.50 up daily wi meals. MONROE HUTCHINS. n View R Pvt. baths. Reasonable r KENTUCK) Tenxn. Ave. ach. 2-Meal Plan. $2.50 up Day. Breakfast to Nogn. Din._ 5-8_A.G. Lovette. OCEAN CITY, N. J. VELT INN. cor, 10 and WESLEY Ave.. Ocean City. N. J. Special low rates for over Labor Day and September. the last of the season rates. $12.50 per week. Excellent tal Bathing from the house. Philip Seerth. Manager. ———— Kentucky Ave. Near Beach NOW I SMOKE *PACK'DAY Smokers Acidity Go in Jiffy with Bell-ans league, said “about 1,500 persons” had Joined since Monday. CAPT. F. H. COOKE Head of Public Works Depart- ment of Navy Yard Was Last Here in 1935. Capt. Frederick Hosmer Cooke, 57, head of the public works department at the Boston Navy Yard, who served periodically in the Bureau of Yards and Docks here, died last night at Chelsea Memorial Hospital, according RUSH PRINTING BYRON S. ADAMS to an Associated Press dispatch from Boston. Capt. Cooke’s last naval service in Washington was in September, 1935, when he returned here to report on the various docks and public works projects which he insepected in Japan, China, Italy, Prance and Gibraltar. He was born in Cincinnati March KODAK FILMS| | Any size, 6 or 8 Exposure Rolls: Developed 2 5’8 and Printed on Velox gopyings 3¢ RITZ STUDIO, 1112 G St. 11, 1879, and was graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1900. He had been in the Navy since 1904. At one time he was assigned to the Canal Zone. Funeral services will be held here Monday. Burial will be in Arlington National Cemetery. Capt. Cooke leaves his widow, Mrs. Olga Faure Cooke; two sons and a daughter. Japan soda makers have combined in a large organization. Wheel Alignment ||a|¢y’s 2020 M ST. N.W. Let Haley's Do It Right! Coal Advances Sept. 1st Fill your bins now with Marlow’s Famous Reading Anthracite—that better Pennsylvania hard coal—and save the difference. It is cleaned and sized as perfectly as is possible by men and machinery in the largest hard-coal break- ers in the world, rescreened by us and delivered to you under the most favorable weather conditions. You will like our service. Order today. Call NA. 0311 78 Years of Good Coal Service Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. N.W. NAtional 0311 WE HAVE CASH IN HAND And a Big Demand FOR APARTMENT DWELLINGS We have immediate funds to invest for several responsible clients who are in- terested in good apartment invest- ments. Small apartment dwellings pre- ferred. List at once with us! SHANNON & LUCHS Realtors Soles Experts in Investment Properties for 30 Years 1505 H Street N.W. NAtional 2345 CORRECTION In the Advertisement of THE GIANT FOOD SHOPPING CENTER —which appeared in yesterday’s Star, in all editions except the noon and the five- thirty the price of Swift's Premium Ham Appeared in error as 9¢ This should have been 29¢ and was so printed in the noon and final editions. DAL PRIGES GOING UP Only 3 More Days of Low Summer Prices FFECTIVE September 1st, coal prices will be in- creased. Don’t delay—you can save many dol- lars on your Winter fuel, if you buy now. Place your order today or tomorrow, delivery can be made in sev- eral days at present prices. Avoid the usual last-minute rush. We guarantee our coal to be the cleanest and highest quality money can buy. Every ton cleaned over modern electric vibrating shaker screens. Phone VACUUM OCLEANED FURNACES 23 50" “itnece arts. Estimate on plumbing and heating. erms. CARL ROBEY_ INC. 302 Weynoal ave. n'e._Phone Hillside 050, PLAINFIELD ORCHARDS. RIPENED PEACHES from our own trees. Groreia Belle, Hale and Elberta. Sandy Boring. Md. on Glenmont-Sandy Spring 3d WM. W. MOORE. Prop. 2o PEACHES NOW RIPE. Quaint Acres Orchards. Thousands of baskets ot CHOICE. 'NED RISE] ttractive prices & rac i te. 20 only 5 miles nor . :line’ am. to 9 p.m. for prices—open a charge account. A.P. WOODSON CO. COAL. .. FUEL OIL . . . DELCO-HEAT 1202 MONROE ST. N.E. NO. 0176 1313 H ST. N.W, ME. 2315 The government troops made forced marches from their base at Santona. Huge army trucks sped the Fascist forces northward to meet the invaders. The Loyalist fighters had met little resistance in & 12-mile march and apparently the Fascists did not expect them and had few troops in the area. Some rebel officers said the Loyalist column was a serious threat, inasmuch as it might necessifate calling for reinforcements from troops now fight- on the Madrid fromt. Hmm!uflou BLDG MET 'u“;r National University Fall Term Besins September 28, 1936 SCHOOL OF LAW School of Economics and Government ettien © . to 7 pm. 13th STREET N.W. Teleobons NAtionsl 6837 Blessed relief has been the experience of thousands whe have used PILE-FOE. This seothing ointment - relieves burning and itching of Blind, Bieeding. Protruding Piles. Promotes healing and tends to reduce swelling. Don't suffer meediessly = . get ® tube of soothing PILE-FOE todsy for susrantesd results. At Peoples tores o2 ather soed drussisian ‘ COLONIAL FUEL OIL, INC. 1709 De Sales St. N.W. MEtro. 1814 # Colontal Deoters Names in Yellow Section of Phone Book | *or Open 818 th D

Other pages from this issue: