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HIGH WATER HALTS TEXASRELIEF WORK Hundreds in Lowlands Flee for Lives—Property Loss in Millions. B the Associated Press. WACO, Tex., September 28.—Hun- dreds of lowland families dropped re- habilitation work and fled for their lives again today when Central Texas rivers gave an unwelcome encore to last week's disastrous floods. Property loss, estimated at $5,000,- 000 after last week's floods, rapidly climbed into additional millions, but loss of life was held to a minimum. Four deaths had been attributed to Autumnal rains and record overflows. ‘Thousands received emergency relief as streams and tributaries equalled, in some sections, flood stages attained during the 1921 flood that took 224 lives in the area. In Brown and McCulloch Counties more than 100 families who had moved back into homes ruined a week ago fled today as the Colorado River at Winchell, 19 miles south of Brown- wood, reached a 56-foot stage at 11 am. It continued to rise a foot an hour toward last week's high mark of nearly 60 feet. 2,500 Refugees in Waco. The damage in Waco alone, City Manager W. T. Torrance estimated, will amount to “at least $500,000.” “And that is a very conservative es- timate,” he added, as he conferred with relief officials in arranging to feed, shelter and provide clothing for more than 2,500 refugees. Five hundred Works Progress Ad- ministration workers arranged to take over extended relief problems con- fronting the city. The Waco relief stations were jammed with hundreds of persons as donated food and cloth- ing was distributed by National Guardsmen, Red Cross and other agencies. Fears for life and property at Cam- eron, 35 miles east of Temple on the Little River, were considerably les- sened when Sealey Lampkin, prom- inent farmer and river gauge reader, reported the river had risen but 5 feet since sundown yesterday and would not threaten the town itself. 17 Towns Lose Gas Service. Seventeen towns below Waco with- out gas when the Lone Star Gas Co.'s suspension bridge on the Brazos was washed out. The towns included ‘Temple, Belton, Little River. Moody, Eddy, Holland, Cameron, Rockdale, Rosebud, Lott, Taylor, Troy, George- town, Roumd Rock, Granger, South Waco and Bartlett. The Temple waterworks pumping station was threatened when the Leon | River reached the 21-foot flood stage. Pumps were used to empty the water and the Temple Telegram reported the water supply was not immediately in danger. The 22-foot rise of the Leon River was expected to strike Coryell County late today. Three Forks residents reported sev- | eral homes had been washed down- stream there, where the Lampasas and Lon Rivers join to form the Lit- e FO! BOX OF "OOLS. Monday. at Georzia ,_aves._Call Georgia_8250. Arkansas_aves. ws’r. nd | Lol Ccif Reateteria. o ineton Hotel. Press Clul ‘afeteria. ta: % oth st nw. Reward. Emma F. rd_Columbia 8541 2 BELGIAN POLICE. black and tan. muzzle, tag and collar _ Reward. 1620 Allison st. nw. Adams 0730 BRACELET —Antique. gold, etched in black: engraved M. Deaderick. _Phone . Jackson_1K4; biack. pari Persian” straved | Tfrom | ‘ard _Adams 7064, male: no collar or tag. 3324 Military road h“” BADGE =0l floral design vy Lorena cross Alaskan :,_license Tuesday DOG. male, vely light tan, husky and’ collie: name “Yuki" No. 22464 on Nichols ave. s.e. night._Lincoln_24434-J FOX TERRIER Male. white, black and white face and ears, black spot on back: no collar; mi; al weeks, Liberal re- . Apt. 43._Col. 5910. GOLD WATCH. with biack ribbon. on Co- lumbia road. Saturday night: family piece. Lyberal zeward. Address Box 273-J. S office. LADY'S WRIST WATCH, platinum and white gold, bet. 15th and H and 18th and oTues. Liberal reward. Phone, Pot. 0807 POCKETBOOR. Gark Bive. mear T4t = Park rd., comtaining watch, glasses, foun- 1ain pen, driver's permit. Reward offered for return. Harriet Y. Crandall, 419 Brown st.n.w. Col. 80K1. POINTER DOG. white, with liver color. o1 70 lbs. no_collag; answers to Bl Reward._Call Columbia Halbeiv el POINTER—Brown and_white. female_8 months old.” wearing tes, No. 7000, ward. $100._Retuin 511 24th st. n.€. PRAYER BOOK —Name “Rankin.” Return o_Runk. 1702 Or _n.w._Reward. * REWARD for return of police T punny adopted from Animal Rescue League. Com- municate G, W. Berens, 3010 Legation £t nw TAN SWEATER—At East course, on Sunday. "Reward. 59-. Potomac goll Call Potomac 1759 WATCH. large. aald-h:ed with 1ink chaj lost last Thurs ay between Hamilton a 921_Tower BIdg._: WATCH, gold, hunting_case, Eigin, With ‘white Kold chain and Phi Alpha key and silver 'pocket piece attached. Reward. Address Box_453-H, sm nmc! LR WIRE-HAIRED RIER. _male, brown and black ears. blnck nll.ch at base di tail. named “Kim.” Retu: to cant. Atmy War College. National 87 Reward. Reward e SPECIAL NOTICES. G&—ua‘l‘ CHANCE TO HAVE YOUR RU 5. 0, Rug Washing serlvxc ‘vnz. "sx10, 6x0. $2.50. Adams THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE Tumtis Bunding N iNtion_ will be beld at the office of the Association, 716 Elev- enth Street N'gvu' Thursday, October 8, 6, at_7:30 VIN GENERAL HAULING. GRADING, ating. Will rent or sell open or closed m nable. _Lincoln_6868. > ACCOUNTANCY FOR will hold an ex- ng to obtain cer- THI ARD OF The pisier of Columbia, amination for those wishi Tifi o practice in the District of Co- errufled public accountants on ree (3) days beginning on or about . November 19. 1936. the exact place to be more wecmully an- nounced later. on forms pr cled ety Mo November DARBY, El-cmc Pn‘[v:er Company Building. Wa: nus I H ADE_CAKES_PIES AND fancy breads, nlaln rolls out of my oven to our home when you want, them. Satisfac- Fhune .hcluon 2008-W. OVING LOADS %o and Trom Balto. bhia. 8 uent trips to other East- . “Dependsble Service Since AFE, DAVIDSON TRANSFER & E CO._Phime Decatur 2500, Aa oo ar: and_jeakh 'mdnvo Ey eal ows. S ORBERVITLE 117 T1th .2' se. golp 4063 NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN TH. ‘American Becariy and Frust ‘Campany nas Aefarea's auarterly dividend of 2 per cent gn,its capital stock of &3.400, 000. payable Ortobe 1936, to the stockholders of close of business on Septem- 30 lul CORCORAN THOM. iden . B, DISSOLUTION OF F CO-PARTNERSHI! ity Way partnership traiing as Betty 1:11 “The was _dissolved sel;,te rm were assumed Daid "to c-mgufl P 0t8 st. D.w.. A DEAL FUN'ERAL AT $75 Provides same service 2 oue eomn. 8500 Dflnt waste “insura Call with 25 vears oneruncn Lin- Dlin Rzg0 = Soe of e leresst CHAMBERS world comel P D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER Scene showing the extent of the flood in Waco, Tez., after the rampaging Brazos River broke through levees and made 2,000 per- sons homeless. It was the town’s worst flood. This is a view in the industrial and residential section. tle River. No loss of life was re- ported. The Lampasas River, fed by the Sulphur Creek after an inch rain, started receding today at Lampasas. The public square was flooded, water standing from a few inches to eight feet deep in some sections of the town. No estimate of the property loss was immediately available. A few miles west of San Saba the | San Saba River was rapidly receding. Spain (Continued From First Page.) as Fascist bullets bit into the impro- vised defenses and Socialist slugs tore holes in the onrushing ranks. Through heavy fusillades, the in- surgent forces pushed. Half an hour after the first “forward” command was given, Gen. Franco's units had pierced to the center of the ancient Moorish capital. Alcasar Defenders Freed. Suddenly, from the eastern section, a shout went up. Ragged, emaciated Fascists—besieged, battered and gaunt —emerged from the ruins of the Alcazar where they had withstood dynamite, gasoline and shell bombard- ments for weeks. The Alcazar—1,200-year-old fortress —spilled forth its insurgent detach- ments who joined the battle with trembling shouts of “Viva Espana!” Delirious with enthusiasm over re- lease from their self-made prison to which they fled after government forces dominated sternly the rebellion in Toledo, they charged the defending lines. Between the withering blasts from before and behind, the last Socialist lines scattered and fled. The siege of Toledo, immediate objective in the southern Fascist army’s march on the capital, was consummated. 5 Rushing fearfully, the government forces retired southward over Tagus River bridges and into the country beyond. The advance of Franco's columns from the north cut a pos- sible retreat to the capital. Set Lines for tiudad Real, . Instead, they set their lines for Ciudad Real, provincial capital, 66 miles away. The new governors of the erstwhile capital of Spain's famous royal cou- ple, Ferdinand and Isabella, began immediate consolidation of newly-won positions as they awaited arrival of their main forces and general staff. ‘They found the city mostly intact, despite aerial and artillery bombard- .| ments during the last days of the * | siege. ‘The Alcazar, training school for officers of the regular army, during repeated Socialist attacks, had been shattered—towers razed and the northern wall left a shell of jagged segments. ‘The city’s famed cathedral, which traces its history to a Christian tem- ple in the Visigoth period in 587, was unharmed. Fascist commanders asserted the government forces suffered heavy losses in the bloody penetration from the insurgent spearhead at Bargas, 5 miles north of the Toledo gates. OFFICIALS’ DEPARTURE DENIED. Minister Says Government Will Not Abandon Capital. (Copyright, 1936, by the Associated Press.) MADRID, September 28 —The Span- ish government, taking cognizamce of rumors its leaders were ready to aban- don the capital, explained today that several ministers had left Madrid to visit tHe war front, but that their re- turn was but a matter of hours. Minister of the Interior Angel Gal- arza, acting as spokesman, asserted in a radio address that the government was not even remotely considering abandoning its duty to Madrid, admit- tedly worried by the fall of Toledo, 40 miles to the south. Reports that officials had abandoned the capital, he said, “apparently arose from the fact that several ministers left Madrid to visit the various front Refuge Is Reported. (Authoritative reports from Buenos Aires Saturday said womenfolk of government officials had taken refuge in the Argentine Embassy and that President Manuel Azana himself had asked to be taken aboard an Argen- tine warship stationed at Alicante.) The government today nflchlly ad- mitted the fall of Toledo, issued an Reporter Near Heavy Fightin As Rebels Capture Toledo (Editors motes The jollowing eyewitness account of the capture of Toledo was filed through Tala- vera de la Reina at 6 p.m., Sunday. Part of the dispatch apparently was lost in transit. It does, how- ever, give a word picture of the scene view jfrom outside the fallen city.) BY RICHARD G. MASSOCK. (Copyright, 1936, by the Associated Press.) WITH THE INSURGENT TROOPS AT TOLEDO, Sunday. September 27 (Via Talavera de la Reina, 6 pm, delayed in transit).—Pouring out of Toledo, in ragged flight along the roads to the east and south, the gov- ernment troops are shelling the city as they go. 1 stood on a hill between the Guad- arrama and Tagus Rivers and saw smoke clouds billow as shells from the government guns dropped inside Toledo. Insurgent messengers, coming out of the captured city, told me the shells exploded around the San Vicente Mu- seum. Gen. Francisco Franco's guns then shelled the government artillery em- placements, which were just south of the Tagus. The government left the city’s two bridges intact for their flight before 8000 Moors, foreign leglonnaires and regular and volunteer Fascists streamed into Toledo from the northwest. The rescued Alcazar was a SOrry sight. The north wall was completely blasted away. All four corner towers were blown off. It is hard to imagine how the occu- pants succeeded in escaping with their lives. Insurgent troops who entered the city were under the joint command of Col. Yague and Gen. Varela, who just has been given leadership of the ultimate drive on Madrid. They roared into Toledo in trucks, which for two nights had been moving up close to the city's gates. As soon as they were within the gates, the troops jumped from the | trucks and began wiping out snipers with grim precision. 1 lay in wheat stubble on a hill dominating the city for a time. The fortress-like former capital of Spain was outlined sharply by the glaring sun, and I could see the smoke of battle while a government plane bombed a nearby road. Six insurgent pursuit planes split the sky overhead with their raucous ex- hausts. Occasionally I could hear the crackle of machine guns from above. urgent call for all militiamen to hasten to their barracks and sus- pended the rights of all public func- tionaries of ministries and executive departments. ‘The capital was quiet this morning, but detailed news from Toledo was withheld from the people. The gov- ernment communique said only that Toledo defenders were compelled to retreat to the outskirts of the ecity, but were continuing to bombard the Fascists from the gates of the ancient city. The retreat, the government said, ‘was forced by Fascist advances from Torrijos and Maqueda. Madrid radios hummed regularly with the call for militiamen. Prac- tically every man, especially those in the suburbs, were summoned from breakfast tables by militiamen shout- ing: “Comrades to the front!" Rights Are Suspended. The government announcement that rights of all public functionaries of ministries and official departments had been suspended was not elaborated upon. Another communique said the death penalty ordered for five civilians charged with planning a raid upon the ministry of interior radio sta- tion had been commuted to life im- prisonment. The five included & brother and & cousin of the Fascist leader, Jose An- tonio Primo de Rivera. New reports from the southern sec- tor said the Alberche Valley still was flooded by the release of 40,000,000 cubic meters of water from mighty dams near Tiemblo. The floodgates were lifted last week in an effort to stave off Fascist advances. Government officials labored throughout the night mapping elab- orate plans, while troop-laden lorries, under aviation escort, rumbled south- ward through sleeping villages to the battle zone, a scant 30 miles from Madrid. Report Fascist Defeat. An official government bulletin re- ported the Fascists had pressed heav- ily on Toledo from Torrijos, but were defeated in a meeting engagement. ‘The entire Toledo front was on the alert as the orders were prepared fof a general attack along the 20-mile Fascist line running from Torrijos, north of Bargas and then southeast to the Madrid-Toledo highway. Brunt of the preliminary skirmish- ing was along the eastern Toledo front in the vicinity of Torrijos, wheve the colmuns of the Fascist forelgn' legion attacked. The projected insurgent advance, the government said, boomeranged. ‘The government resistance was a holding attack, behind which the re- inforcements formed. ¥ Overhead Fascists and government planes mzt in serial fights. Heavy barrages of artillery were laid down by the insurgents to break up the troop movement. Two Fascist combat planes shot down one government craft, but the wounded pilot succeeded in gliding to & landing behind his own lines. Several thousand civilian volunteers answered the government's call for reinforcements for the garrison of Madrid. s In a proclamation, described as the most important official declaration since the war began, the government made no attempt to minimize the danger Madrid faced from the advanc- ing Fascist columns. The war ministry admitted insurgents “were pressing strongly ahead from Torrijos” so as to cut communication between the Toledo and the northern and southern sectors. From Cebreros, 45 miles to the east of the capital, came reports that Fascists had taken the village of El Herradon. Far from considering this a defeat, government sources said it was re- garded as an advantage since it weak- ened the defense of Avila. Only one column of insurgents is holding the ancient walled city, the Socialists be- lieved. A survey of the Aragon front from as far north as Siguenza to as far east as Soria showed the government was digging in preparing for a ‘“de- cisive battle.” * REBELS STOPPED AT BILBAO. By the Assoclated Pre BILBAO, Spain, September 28 (By Warship to St. Jean de Lusz, France) —Spanish government war- ships gave this besieged city relief to- day, halting an insurgent advance with a naval bombardment and con- voying food supplies into the harbor. From off the coast, the battleship Jaime I and the cruisers Cervantes and Libertad poured shells into Zumaya, headquarters of the Fascist attackers. Naval gunners, handicapped by & rough sea, dropped exploding missiles into the center of the town which :rpped buildings apart and started ‘es. Two Scandinavian cargo vessels were escorted into the harbor by the cruisers to land guns, munitions and tons of flour and canned goods. A food shortage had consisted one of the main problems of the city’s resi- dents. The naval bombardment brought frenzied replies from insurgent gun- ners whose inaccurate aim failed to halt the Socialist barrage. BASEBALL FANS! While attending the | WORLD SERIES GAMES make this populiar and « Enjoy the ulmost in comfort and friendiiness o Garwanient fo both Besebalt arks . !m Swimming Pool. Gym ond Steam Rooms. Restourents - Bridge Games SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES George A Turkel, Mgr —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. WOMAN GOLFERS SUBDUED BY PAR High Wind Plays Havoc With U. S. Qualifying Scores. Mrs. Austin Leads. BULLETIN. SUMMIT, N. J., September 28 (P).—Patty Berg of Minneapolis and Pam Barton of England shot the outgoing nine in 39 here today in the 18-hole qualifying round of the United States women's golf championship. By the Associated Press. SUMMIT, N. J., September 28.—Par was something like a red-hot coal for the early starters in today's 18-hole qualifying round of the United States ‘women's golf championship. Blustery weather raised havoc with scores, as Katherine Sylvester of Har- rison, N. Y., took the early lead with a 90—13 over par—in the battle among 173 entries over the Canoe Brook Country Club course for 46 places in the match-play competition starting tomorrow. Seasoned campaigners, however, were finding the going much easier. Pam Barton, the 19-year-old British cham- pion, was even par for the first five holes, while Minneapolis’ 19-year-old star, Patty Berg, was one over par for the same distance. Mrs, George I. Austin of Hartford, Conn,, took the lead from Miss Syl- vester with an 87, fashioned from an outgoing 45 and incoming 42. Although 15 withdrawals were an- nounced by the United States Golf Association, the 173 starters made up the largest field in the history of the championship. Prominent among the withdrawals ‘were Mrs. Charles Newbold of Wichita, Kans,; Edith Quier of Reading, Pa. who recently underwent an appen- dectomy; Mrs. Russell Mann of Chi- cago, the former Lucille Robinson; Nancy Pearman of Bermuda; Mrs. Laura Fownes Wadsworth of Pitts- burgh, and Mrs. Norman Goldberger of Hollywood, N. J. . The 64 low scores in the qualifying round—ties will be played off—will engage in match play scheduled to start tomorrow when two 18-hole rounds will. be played. The 36-hole final will be played Saturday. LAWYERS’ BRIEFS RUSH PRINTING BYRON 8. ADAMS New Brick Home 4211 49th St. N.W. A highly restricted community. 4 rooms end 2 baths. Stran steel and other special construction features. Open and lighted. $14,500 Torms W.C. & A. N. Miller 1119 17¢h St. DI. 4464 28, 1936. HOOVER ASSAILS “FAKE BUREAUS” Fingerprint “Racketeers” Held Without Means to Back Claims. Growing popularity of universal fingerprinting for general identification purposes has resulted in a new type of shyster, the “fingerprint racketeer,” according to J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. These racketeers, he warned, are establishing fake bureaus “which pre- tend to protect employers and,.for a heavy fee, to fingerprint organization groups, babies in hospitals and private citizens, offering them universal pro- tection.” “This is being accomplished through glib-tongued organizers and high- pressure salesmen,” Hoover declared today before the International Asso- ciation for Identification at Dallas, Tex., in an address, the text of which was made public at the Justice De- partment. “It is a type of petty graft which is fastening itself upon business and for which there is no necessity.” Hoover pointed out that the rack- eteers’ claims of ‘“universal protec- tion” are groundless, as none of them has access to a universal repository of fingerprints, such as that main- tained by the Federal Bureau of In- vestigation. The F. B. I charges nothing for its civil fingerprinting service, which is open to all citizens, he said. An average of 600 non-criminal prints are being received daily by the bureau and more than 200,000 fingerprint cards of law-abiding citizens now are on file for reference in time of kidnap- ing, accident, amnesia or other con- tingencies. Prior to civil fingerprinting, he said, the criminal who was found dead could be identified and returned to his fam- ily, but many ‘honest citizens, with no fingerprints on file, were listed as “un- known” and buried in potter’s fields. In all the history of fingerprinting, Hoover asserted, there never has been a duplication of fingerprints, nor a successful alteration or eradication of fingerprints, “In spite of all the work and the scheming of crooked doctors, to say nothing of the torture undergone by criminals, there never has been a case in the histoyy of the F. B. L in which a wanted man has been able to alter his fingerprints beyond iden- tification,” he said. By any attempt to alter fingerprints, he pointed out, the criminal “merely brands himself further as a criminal.” He urged members of the association to notify the F. B. I. at once in suca cases, s0 that special attention may be given the man's record. To emphasize the need which the law-abiding citizen has for protection, the F. B. I. director stated that “almost a quarter of a million poter- tial murderers roam America, with 300,000 persons doomed to die at their hands.” An average of 12,000 murders are committed in this country every year, he added. TRIBUTE TO CADMAN NEW YORK, September 28 ().— Plans of the National Conference of Jews and Christians for 1936-37 will be built around the aspirations of the late Dr. §. Parkes Cadman and the forthcoming year has been designated “the Dr. Carman memorial year,” the National Gonference's Executive Com- mittee announced yesterday. Auto Painting haleys 2020 M ST. N.W. Let Haley’s Do It Right! 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It's completely housebroken— ou can keep your home as clean as a whis tle bectuu {herea no soot or black smoke, and few ashes, when use That Better Hard Coal. Fill your bins before the rush—and you can still effect a saving. Phone NA. 0311. 78 Years of Good Coal Service Marlow 811 E St. N.W. Coal Co. NAtional 0311 NEW YORK PARTIES OPEN CONVENTIONS Fearon and Bleakley Lead- ing in Race to Oppose Lehman. By the Associated Press. ALBANY, New York, September 28. —New York State Republicans met in Albany today to nominate a candi- date for Governor to oppose Gov. Herbert H. Lehman, while the latter headed the State's Democrats, meet- ing simultaneously in convention at Syracuse. ‘The choice of the Republicans ap- parently lay between State Senator George R. Fearon of Syracuse and Supreme Court Justice Willlam F. Bleakley of Yonkers. State Chairman Melvin C. Eaton reiterated that while it was his “firm hope, belief and desire that there be one candidate and one ballot,” he ‘was taking no hand in the situation now “in the interest of party har- mony.” The Democrats planned to place their stamp of approval on the re- nomination of Gov. Lehman, Attorney General John J. Bennett and Con- troller Morris 8. Tremaine, after listening to an opening address by James A. Farley, Democratic State and national chairman. Senator Rob- ert P. Wagner will speak tonight, and President Roosevelt will address the convention tomorrow night. A Dbitter fight for the State’s bloc of 47 electoral votes in the national election was foreshadowed many weeks ago when national Democratic leaders in an unprecedented move at the Phil- adelphia convention persuaded Gov. Lehman to seek a third term to help bolster the national ticket. It has been more strongly indicated since then by the flood of oratory lnd PIONEER OIL BURNER “The Daddy of Them AH" SOLD, INSTALLED AND SERVICED BY James E. Colliflower & CO,, INC. Exclusive Representative Show Rooms 2703-§ Fourteenth Street N.W. literature turned loose in the State by the two parties. PFor weeks speakers have gone fmp and down the State in caravans de- fending and attacking the New Deal. Outstanding figures from the outside have been brought in. The Demo- crats have sent 12,000,000 pieces o! literature into the State. Gov. Landon himself has visited New York twice, delivering major speeches at Chautauqua and Buffalo on his first trip and later making rear- platform appearsnces at Schenectady, Albany, Utica, Syracuse and Rochester as he traveled across the State by special train. Chairman Farley recently spent a ‘week in group conferences with Demo- cratic leaders from every county. President Roosevelt, after the cone vention address tomorrow, will speak later at Albany, Rochester and Buf- falo. Both the President and Gov. Landon will address meetings in Madi- son Square Garden in New York City during the last week of the cam- paign. P e R A SR The Hundred Years' War lasted from 1337 to 1453. * || X FRENCH GERMAN SPANISH BATES TO SEPTEMBER ENTRANCE FOR COMPLETE SCHOOL YEAR COURSE ENDING JULY 3, 1937 CLASSES PRIVATE 2 lessons wky. $75 | 1 lesson wky. $85 | 4 lessons wk. $150 | 2 lessons wk. $170 Registration Fee. $10 80-Minute Sessions—Native Teachers Small Classes. 7:45 AM —9:00 PM. ERSY PAVMENTS ENROLL NOW! THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES 1115 Conn. Ave. NAtional 0270 LAST “See Etz and See Better” OO Optometrists 608 13th N.W. (Bet. F and G N.W.) WILLIE GOGGII WINNIR N. CALIFORNIA OPEN & PROFESSIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS THE BEST SWING IVE NOTICED IS THE {Signed) Seil, Pur & Rusby Inc. (In collaborstion with tobecco Copr. 7006. The Axion Pisker Tobaseo COLONIAL FUEL OIL, INC. 1709 De Sales St. N.W. MEtro. 1814 Colonial Dealers Names in Yellow Section of Phone Book Buy a Home at Your Own Price Four exceptionally fine home properties have come into ownership of a local real estate firm regular course of business—and to insure prompt disposal they have been placed in our hands to be sold at Auction All four homes are in desirable neighborhoods. All are in splendid condition—offering a good “buy’’— either {or personal re! lence or investment. Watch for our announcement in Thursday’s Star giving details of properties and day and hours of sale. Thos. J. Owen & Son Auctioneers and Appraisers ‘1431 I Street Natl. 3090