Evening Star Newspaper, September 5, 1936, Page 4

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A—4 «x U . CONSUL DIES N WEXED Y Ashes of Julian C. Dorr to Be Brought Here for Burial. Julian Childe Dorr, 39, American Coneul in Mexico City and former stjident at the Georgetown University Poreign Service School here, died Thiitsday in Mexico City, according tg, word received here. The body was ted and the ashes will be mhb here for ‘burial in Arlington onal Cemetery beside his wife, the former Jessie Theo Manheim of this ¢ity, who died last March. Mr. Dorr was the son of Mrs. Rheta Childe Dorr, widely known writer, who was a special correspondent in Russia, France and England during the. World War. She was with him in Mexico. His father was the late John Pixley Dorr. -Besides his mother, he is survived by_s daughter, Lorita, 10; an aunt, Mrs. Clarke Fisher Ansley, wife of Prof. Ansley of Columbia University, and an uncle Cyril E. Childe, Omaha lawyer. Mr. Dorr had been ailing at inter- vals for some time. His death, due to bronchial pneumonia, followed by only a few hours a report received by the State Department that he was seriously il A native of Seattle, Mr. Dorr went to New York with his mother when a child. He was educated there and lived there until entering the Army in-1917. Coming here after the war, he attended Georgetown and later was appointed vice consul of career and assigned to duty at Prague. Thereafter, he served two years at Naples and six years at Genoa, Italy. In 1931 he was assigned to Barbados, British West Indies. While there he developed tuberculosis and was recalled to the United States for treatment. After spending some three years in the Adirondacks he was assigned to Mexico City. CORBETT TESTIFIES IN GEOGHAN HEARING Detective Who Charged Bribery Attempt in Drukman Case Takes Stand. By ine Associated Press. ALBANY, N. Y., September 5.—De- tective Charles S. Corbett, the first man to report suspicions of “fixing” in the Drukman murder case, left | with Gov. Lehman today his oft-re- | peated story. Corbett testified yesterday at Dis- trict Attorney William F. X. Geoghan's removal hearing on charges of negli- gence, incompetence and questionable associations. The detective has been described by Police Commissioner Lewis J. Val- entine as “eccentric,” by Geoghan as *“erazy,” by a police surgeon as a! “pathological liar,” by Dr. Menas S. | Gregory, New York alienist, as a | “psycopath whose statements need checking” and by Supreme Court Jus- tice Erskine C. Rogers as a “straight- forward and convincing witness.” Special Prosecutor Hiram C. Todd, conducting the case against the Kings County district attorney, placed the 11l and aging detective on the stand to repeat his story of bribe offers and | grand jury irregularities. U. S. INVESTMENTS IN SPAIN HELD SAFE New Minister of Treasury Says Country Will Not Renege on Obligations. By the Assoctated Press. MADRID, September 5.—American interests need have no fear about their investments in Spain, Juan Negrin, new Socialist minister of the treas- ury, asserted today. “I would like to be an American millionaire with' money invested in Spain,” said the stocky affable min- | ister, who has visited the United BStates several times. “We are particularly interested in letting the United States know it | need have no fear Spain will turn | Communist and renege on her ob- ligations.” i Negrin declared the government had taken over “every available fac- tory in every industry in the land” to speed up defense against the Fas- eist rebels. “Any other nation facing such an emergency as Spain faced during the primary stages of the insurrection would have done the same,” se said. “But at the close of the present eonflict the government will do all in its power to right any wrong which may have been caused.” TRINITY COLLEGE’S DEAN 20 YEARS DIES Sister Mary Was Treasurer of : Notre Dame Convent Day School. Bister Mary, born Margaret Hen- retty, who for . almost 20 years was dean of Trinity College here, died yesterday. in - Cincinnati,” where she ‘was treasurer of Notre Dame Convent Country Day School. She had been 8 member of the Sisters of Notre Dame for more than 53 years. Sister Mary, who was 76, left Trin- ity in 1921. She was a member of its first faculty when it opened in 1900 and three years later she be- came dean. She knew every one of the hundreds who attended the school during its first 20 years of existence. She came to Trinity after a year in Great Britain devoted to visiting and studying women's colleges and training schools in Liverpool and Glasgow. Earlier she was stationed at Mount Notre Dame, Reading, Ohio, | where she was educated and near ‘which she was born. Sister Mary became president of Emmanuel College, Boston, when she left Trinity and remained, there until 1928, when she was assigned to Notre Dame Country Day School. Bear, Leopard Fight for Goat. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Bendix Winner Congratulated at End of Race Mrs. Louise Thaden (left), craft plane is shown at right. Race (Continued From First Page.) by Howard in last year's race, nar- rowly escaped serious injury recently in a crash which wrecked his Bendix entrant in New Mexico on the way to New York. First arrivals in the seven-plane speed contest went unnoticed by the huge crowds at the $70,000 air car- nival while they watched parachute jumping—an event which cost the life of L. C. Faulkner, San Diego. His parachute failing to open in the strong wind, he fell to his death in full view of the horrified spectators. Mrs. Thaden won $4,500 for win- ning the Bendix race and another $2,500 for being the woman, unac- companied by a man, to make the best time. Miss Ingalls, whose time was 15 hours 39 minutes, won $2,500. ‘Willlam Gulick of New York took the $1,500 prize for third. George Pome- roy, Washington, D. C., won fourth and $1,000; Miss Earhart, $500, for | arth. Mrs. Thaden's time was the best an, but fell short by 3 hours and 24 minutes of the record mark, set in 1933 by Turner. The death plunge of the 21-year- old parachute stunter, Faulkner, was one of two accidents to mar that event. In a mass parachute jump John V. Buchanan, 25, of Stockton, N. J, suffered a brain concussion when his ‘chute fouled 50 feet above ground. The announcer told the 50,000 spectators after Faulkner’s plunge, “He's probably just shaken up, that's all.” Fifteen minutes later he died. AIRMARKING PILOT FOR U. 8. Mrs. Thaden, Mother of Two, Wife of Plane Manufacturer. Mrs. Louise McPhetridge Thaden, winner of the coveted Bendix Trophy, is now employed by the Bureau of Air Commerce as one of four feminine air- marking pilots, charged with arrang- ing the painting of aerial identifica- | tion markers on roofs or other con- spicuous places in each town and city in the country. Another of these four pilots, Miss Helen Richey, also was a contestant in the Bendix, flying as co-pilot with Amelia Earhart Putnam. George Pomeroy, who finished fourth in the race, is a former local pilot, who for more than four years flew air transport planes between Washington and New York. Mrs. Thaden is the wife of Maj. Herbert V. Thaden, airplane manu- facturer, and has two children, who live in Bentonville, Ark. Stationed in ‘Washington, Mrs. Thaden makes her home at 2024 F street. The first woman to win the Bendix Trophy, Mrs. Thaden has behind her many years of flying and is the holder of & Commerce Department transport license, the highest type issued. She first geined national aviation promi- nence in 1929, when she established a feminine altitude record of 20,270 feet at Oakland, Calif. She also was for a time the holder of the feminine world airplane duration record. Last July Mrs. Thaden established a new world feminine speed record for light airplanes of the second category over a 100-kilometer course, starting and finishing at the Endless Caverns Alfrport in the Shenandoah Valley. She served for one term, beginning in October, 1934, as national secre- tary of the National Aeronautic Asso- ciation. —_— KNOX TAKES CAMPAIGN INTO KEYSTONE STATE By (ne Assoctated Press. ABOARD KNOX CAMPAIGN TRAIN, September 5.— Col. Frank Knox, Republican vice presidential nominee, headed his special campaign train toward Pennsylvania today, with his New England tour behind him. In Waterville, Me, Knox attacked the P. W. A. in a final New England address last night, declaring that public works projects “do not create new work™ and “cannot cure s de- pression.” “Every ‘dollar ® * * comes out of the pockets of the people,” he said. “You should not be fooled by any Governtent industry " had the East-West mark ever made by a wom- | winner of the transcontinental Bendiz race from New York to Los Angeles, being congratulated on her victory by Vincent Bendiz, race sponsor. Blanche Noyes, who accompanied Mrs. Thaden in the 420-horsepower Beach= PRANKSTERS GIVEN FLOGGINGS BLAME | Solicitor Doubts Night Rid-' ers Responsible for Raids in Rural Section. Br the Associated Press. WHITEVILLE, N. C, September 5.—Solicitor John J. Burney said to- day rural pranksters, and not white- | robed nightriders, were responsible | for a series of floggings in a remote section of the county. | Two grand juries have investigated the flogging of five women and two men, reputedly by & “law and order” band, but neither returned indict- ments. Four of the alleged mob victims, Mrs. Bertha Fowler, and her daugh- ter, Inez, and two teen-aged sisters, | Grace and Glenn Fowler, were con- victed on prostitution indictments re- turned by the last grand jury. The solicitor said Mrs. Fowler and her daughter had changed their orig- inal story of having been visited by & band of 25 or 30 men, who dragged them into the swamps, clipped their halr and beat them with leather straps. Burney said none of the victims would name their floggers, although he said he believed they knew who they were. The other alleged victims were Lihue Fowler, father of Grace and Glenn; Carolyn, another of Lihue's daughters, and Dewey Cribb. NOT SO IMPOSSIBLE $75 Damage to $8 Auto Due to Parts Scarcity. GLASTONBURY, Conn. (#).—Dep- | uty Judge Walter F. Foley of the Glastonbury Town Court addressed John Lasky. “How much damage was done to your car?” “Seventy-five dollars,” Lasky said. “How much did you pay for your car?” “Eight dollars.” Lasky explained parts for his an- cient vehicle were scarce. Capt. Alex Papana, Rumanian stunt flyer, shown picking an American flagA in a daring exhibi L. C. Faulkner, San Diego parachute jumper, who was fatally injured when his chute failed to fully open in an_attempted spot landing. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. DEMPSEY “KIDNAPS” BRIDE AT WEDDING | Leads Husband Merry Chase Into New York—Couple Re- united There. Bs the Associated Press. BAYONNE, N. J, September 5.— ! Jack Dempsey, former world’s boxing champion, carried off the bride after a wedding here yesterday, escaping with the husband in hot pursuit. Dempsey had been one of the two witnesses at the marriage of George | M. Perry, contact man for the New York Yankees, and Miss Legoti E. Hoover, former New York show girl. ‘They were married by Acting Recorder Edward Griffin at the West Fifth street home of John Lee, assistant city | clerk. Miss Evelyn Sutherland of New York was the second witness. After the wedding party came from the house Dempsey seized the bride, put her in his car and sped off. The startled Perry and Herman Cantor, a former police lieutenant, set off in Perry's machine. They were last seen heading toward New York. NEW YORK, September 5 (®).— George Perry, a base ball club con- tact man whose wife of a few minutes was “kidnaped” by Jack Dempsey at Bayonne, N. J.. was reunited with his bride here last night—and also with Jack. Airport Devices Installed. Equipment for blind landing and | other safety devices are being installed at Wingfleld Airport, Capetown, South Africa. Left: Crown e Umber the recent war games in Irpinia, Right: Il Duce reviewing th - Prince Umberto of Itulg outh of ap latest type of were present. & as he viewed the might les. izm fleld- guna at the maneuvers.; King Victor Emmanuel and other high government leaders also —A, Photos. from the ground with the wing of his plane tion at the national air races in Los Angeles. < RITES HELD TODAY FOR SILO VICTIMS Mother and Two Children Buried Near Winchester After Triple Services. By tke Associated Press. POPLAR SPRINGS, Md., September 5.—A triple funeral will be held today for a 37-year-old mother, her 9-year- old daughter and a 19-year-old foster child who smothered to death in an ensilage pit. Little Anna Richards fell into the pit, formerly used as an ice house, while she was playing with Willlam Thomas Hood, jr., 6, and his brother, Beverly Wayne, Thursday. Gas given off by fermenting green corn husks and cobs being prepared for cattle feeding overcame her. The little boys ran and summoned Mrs. Ella Melinda Richards, Anna’s mother, and Mary Sine, an adopted daughter. They were asphyxiated trying to rescue Anna from the 8- foot deep pit. Coroner Arthur S. Kolb of Wood- bine said the deaths clearly were accidental and no inquest was neces- sary. He said he had been told the deadly gas given off by the ensilage | was carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide or methane. The three victims will be buried together in the Richards’ family plot at Mountain Falls, near Winchester, Va., their former home. Surviving are the father and hus- band, John Richards, and a son, Calvin, 11, who were working in a field at the time of the tragedy. MRS. MARY COCHRAN RITES TO BE MONDAY Services for Alexandria Woman Will Be Held at 3:30 P.M. in Baltimore. By & Staff Correspondent of The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., September 5.— | Services for Mrs. Mary Norris Cochran, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1936. Z0HEALTH NURSE IN SPECIAL COURSE Maryland Takes Steps to Better Fit Personnel in Disease Fight. By the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, September 5 —Twen- ty of Maryland’s public health nurses are taking a special course to fit them- selves better to guard Marylanders from disease. ‘The 20, all now employed by the State, started Monday on an eight- week course at the John Hopkins Uni- versity School of Hygiene and Public Health. This is the first time such a course has been given in the State. Dr. R. H. Riley, State health of- ficer, sald the course was necessary because of the difficulty of finding trained public health workers. A spe- clal review course, to bring the county health officers up to date in public health methods, is also being given, Dr. Riley said. Dr. W. Ross Cameron, health officer of Washington County, and Dr. J. A. McCallum, health officer of Queen Anne County, are now tak- ing the course. Dr. Allen W. Freeman is director of the course for nurses, the curriculum is designed to reinforce the nursing experience they have had—all of them are registered nurses—with specific instructions in general health work. ‘The nurses will study nutrition, Dr. Riley said, as well as school nursing methods and the control of contagious diseases. They will also be given intensive courses in obstetrical and prenatal work, and in recognizing and controlling venereal diseases. The course will even cover such small but important matters as the instruments a nurse should carry in her little nursing bag. In connection with this, the State health department sent 13 nursing kits to the school today. Other courses at the training school will in- clude instructions in infant hygiene and in education methods of teaching persons to care for their own health more efficiently. JUSTICE MALTBIE URGES CURB ON FREE PRESS Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors Jurist Would Ban Opt-State Reporters. By the Associated Press. HARTFORD, Conn., September 5.— Asserting that freedom of the press has “its definite limits.” Chief Justice | William M. Maltbie of the Connecticut | Supreme Court of Errors proposed last night that newspaper men represent- ing out-of-State publications be barred from trials in Connecticut court. He made his proposal at a dinner meeting of the Connecticut Bar Asso- ciation following its two-day conven- tion here, submitting & “definite pro- | gram” governing the relationship be- | tween the courts and the press. “No good purpose is served,” said the chief justice in a prepared speech. “by admitting the representatives of | individual newspapers outside the State, for they can get all the informa- tion which can be of general public interest as to what takes place in court from the press associations.” { REPORT ON 6 DEATHS IN PLANE SENT HERE, | Federal Inspector Brewster De- clines to Comment on Kenai Peninsula Findings. | By the Associated Press. | ANCHORAGE, Alaska, September Missing Nurses POLICE BELIEVE GIRLS WERE ABDUCTED. LORENA HILLS, LEILA GINETT. Search from New York to the Canadian border was un- der way last night for these two pretty student nurses of the Heaton Hospital, at Mont- pelier, Vt., reported missing since Wednesday night. Miss Ginett, 21, is from St. Albans, Vt., and Miss Hills, also 21, is Jrom Williamstown, Vt. Police Chief George Connors express- ed belief the girls were vic- tims of abductors. —Copyright A. P. Wirephotos. SUPPORT OF ITALY SOUGHT BY LEAGUE Avenol Leaves Geneva for Rome to Confer on Views for Coming Session. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, September 5.—An en- deavor to obtain full Italian support for League of Nations activities sent Joseph A. C. Avenol, League secre- tary general. to Rome today. Avenol planned to confer with Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italian for- eign minister, concerning Fascist in- | tentions for the forthcoming League | session, set for September 21. In addition, the League official was to discuss the Italian contention that Ethiopia, annexed by Italy, is no longer entitled to representation in the League Assembly. ‘The Italian delegation at Geneva who died yesterday at the home of | 5—Hugh Brewster, Federal aeronautics | walked out last June after stormy her daughter, Mrs. Orlando H. Kirk, Braddock, will be held in Baltimore at 3:30 pm. Monday, She was a native of Baltimore. Mrs. Cochran is survived by an- other daughter, Miss Mary B. Coch- ran, and & son, Lieut. Comdr. E. inspector, declined to comment yester- | day on his findings at the Kenai Peninsula, scene of an airplane wreck fatal to Pilot Steve Mills and five passengers. He said his report was | sent to Washington, D. C. | Kenneth Neese, one of the party scenes during debate on war sanctions voted to punish Italy for her aggres- | sion in East Africa. The situation created by the con- troversy, while never discussed offi- cially with Rome, has left the Italian status in doubt. Avenol would seek Norris Cochran of the United States | which found the plane, said the rescue | to clarify the controversy in prepara- Navy. Burial will be in Greenmont Cemetery, Baltimore, T ROBBERS SNATCH $5,000 Fire Gas Gun in Cashier's Face. Fall Injures Head. MEMPHIS, Tenn., September 5 (#). —Two bandits robbed R. L. O'Daniel, cashier for Kraus Cleaners, of $5,000 today after firing a tear gas gun in his face. O'Daniel fell to the sidewalk, suf- fering a slight skull wound when his head struck the pavement. As he dropped, the two men snatched his money pouch and fled in an automobile, Prince and Duce Watch Italy’s War Games party burned the wreckage. He said | he believed none of the party knew | their impending fate and probably | | were killed outright when the phne} hit & ridge Sunday en route here from a one-day fishing jaunt to Russian| River. | Film found in an opened camera in the plane contained only pictures of | the party on the ground. | Bodies of Mills and his companions, | Mr. and Mrs. George Markle, Mr. and | Mrs. Lawrence Davis and Augustis F. | Teich, are at a mortuary here. | Shiny, Oiled Road Resembling Water, Fools Duck Flock By the Associated Press. WILLISTON, N. Dak., Septem- ber 5.—It was only a “mirage” on the dry Dakota prairie that a flock of mallard ducks saw from the air as they attempted to sit down on & strip of shiny oiled highway near here yesterday. A misty rainfall glazed the black top, sald motorists who saw the flock swing gracefully earth- ward for an “unhappy” landing on the oiled surface. tion for the September session, o Men Eat Grass, Save Others. Snow blind, from eating snow, five Indian mem- bers of a surveying party in India are in a hospital in Mussoorie. The men had to fight for their lives 18,000 feet above sea level on the Badrinath Glacier, in the Northwestern Province. They were marooned for three days and two nights, with all their stores of food, water and firewood exhausted. Three of them finally reached a crev- asse, where they ate grass and recov- ered their strength sufficiently to dig | out the two others of the party, who had been buried by snow. Witch Doctor Charms Crocodile. Two native girls, one the sister of the paramount chief, were filling their calabashes with water at the Chile River, South Africa, when a crocodile leaped from the water and buried his teeth in the arm of the chief’s sister and disappeared into the water with her. A correspondent at Maun reports | that a witch doctor spread his charms on the river bank and commanded the crocodile not to eat the girl. Next morning the body was found on the river bank, with the marks of the crocodile’s teeth on her chest. = | Rainbows on Sun, Arches of Fire of Ft rmament 100,000 Miles High, Recorded BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE, Associated Press Science Editor CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, September 5. —Rainbows on the sun, arches of fire 100,000 miles high and 200,000 long, discovered by a new motion picture camera, were the sensation of the final session of the American Astro- nomical ‘Society today. Nothing like them has ever been known. They are not motionless like earthly rainbows. Molten fire runs down both sides of the arch at speeds up to 100 miles a second. The fire appears at the apex of the rainbow, as if poured out of an invisible pitcher. The rainbows were one of several equally spectacular discoveries of this new camera. Another was Roman candle fireworks. Balls of fire, some a3 large as the earth, arched upward 150,000 miles high. There were “prairie fires.” These McMath-Hulbert Observatory of the University of Michigan. They were shown last night for the first time by Dr. Heber D. Curtis, director of the University of Michigan Observatory. ‘They were taken by means of a slit which enables the cameras to photo- graph only the calcium, or calcium | and hydrogen light of the sun. The other rays were screened out. The exposures varied from 20 to 50 sec- onds each, with 11, seconds between frames. Some of the astronomers made the | guess that the rainbows are due to | clouds of ultra-violet light high above the sun. Such clouds would be in- visible because ultra-violet cannot be seen in cooling, they would condense into visible burning gases. Because they are presumably electrically charged the flaming particles would not fall straight down but in the form of arches. RESORTS. OCEAN CITY, MD. HASTINGSHOTEL £, walk. arking Space. Rogerate Rates Farkine "EES: cmAs. LUDLAM. ~ STEAMSHIPS. e service AR T R i iy frostbitten and sick arm and | 2 GIRLS MISSIN; MYSTERY DEEPENS Telegram Adds to Fear Stu- dent Nurses May Be Abduction Victims. By ine Associated Press. MONTPELIER, Vt., September 5.— A mysterious telegram baffled police today as they sought two student nurses missing since their “night off” ‘Wednesday. At the same time the telegram was received, warrants were issued, charge ing Dale Ainsworth, 22, of Herkimer, N. Y, and Fred Otto, 24, of Buffalo, N. Y, with the abduction of Leila Ginette, 21, and her classmate, Lorena Hills, 21. The telegram, which acting Police Chief George Connor said came from Hamlin, N. Y., read: “Honeymooning at Ontario Inn, Hemlin. “Leila Ott.” Connor said the telegram was ad- dressed to C. H. Ginett St. Albans. He | msserted the girl's father, C. H. Ginette, | died several years ago and pointed | out the incorrect spelling of the last name and the strange spelling of the signature on the telegram. Connor asserted if the girls were not located within a few hours a posse | would search surrounding woods on | the theory they had met foul play. | Both girls drove away from the | Heaton Hospital Wednesday with two | men in a car bearing New York regis« | tration plates. John P. Adams, superintendent of | Heaton Hospital, said neither girl “was the type to go joy-riding with strangers or willingly fail to return to duty.” Howards (Continued From First Page.) that surrounds the Lake Valley In- dian Day School, 40 miles north of here. Gesticulating and grunting, Juan said through an interpreter the plane “came from the east about noon with lots of smoke.” He said it flew past, circled over | the school, then swooped down and | crashed. He told how the plane | skimmed some brush and smashed its undercarriage as it struck the ground and turned over. Wouldn’t Risk Tribe Terror. Neither Juan nor Natch Begay, an assistant at the school, nor a dozen other Navajos who were in the vicinity and ran to the scene would dare the results of defying tribal terror over contact with the dead to aid the crushed and bleeding flyer and his wife. The injured couple rode on mat- tresses on the floor of pickup trucks on the hour’s journey to the hospital. Howard, who won the Bendix trophy last year, was on leave of absence as a Chicago airline pilot to participate in this year's race. He started de- signing and building special racing planes about 11 years ago, Can't Stop Wife's Mail. A merchant of Pukuoka, Japan, re- qused to accept a letter which, he suspected, was from a man who was paying attentions to his wife. He was fined for an offense under the postal laws. He took the matter to the Supreme Court, where he pleaded that if all mail had to be accepted, a wife might be placed in an ambig- uous position if letters were sent to her by persons whose attentions she did not want to receive. \Distilleries Agree ToDryWasteand Save Fishes’ Home Upper Potomac and Pa- tapsco Pollution Is Greatly Reduced. Pv the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, September 5.—Frank L. Bentz of the Conservation Commis- sion said yesterday that pollution in both the Patapsco and the Upper Potomac Rivers has been greatly re- | duced. | The Potomac pollution became seri- | ous when the level of the river was lowered so much that the water did not dilute the industrial and civic wastes. Several hundred fish were killed before higher water removed the immediate cause. Bentz said that a series of confer- ences with owners of distilleries and other industrial plants along the Patapsco had reduced the pollution so much that he believed fish would live in the stream. Bass will be planted | in it this Fall, he said, in an effort to | restock it. | “There were some bass in it last Spring,” Bentz said, “but I doubt if | they have lived through the Summer.” Most of the westes in the Patapsco were from distilleries and canneries, he said. The distilleries have agreed to dry their wastes, he said. The dried mash can then be used for | cattle food, and the liquids are driven off in the drying process, reducing the amount of waste poured into the stream. The Forman & Biller Tree Expert Co. Dependable Service Since 1919 Phone Clarendon 567 PIONEER '|J OILBURNER | “The Daddy of Them All” The mechanically perfect | Turner that burns the tie e for our remre visit our id. installed and serv- ieed by James E. Colliflower & Co.. INC. Show Rooms 2703-5 Foyrteenth Street N.W.

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