Evening Star Newspaper, September 30, 1936, Page 4

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ADEIN CRAS ASPLANE B Girl, Pilot and Two Camera- men Photographing Train Killed. By the Associated Press. NAPERVILLE, I, September 30.— An assistant photographer left behind through a last-minute decision was the only survivor today of & picture-making party whose airplane crashed and burned, killing four persons. Pilot Oscar Hanold, 28, and his three passengers, Miss Wilma Schuster, 2¢; Howard Adams, 27, and Ralph Biddy, 36, all of Chicago, were burned to death last night when the craft nosed into a nearby field and caught afire as they sought to photograph a speeding streamline train. Left behind because there was no room for his equipment was -John Sedivy, 27, employed by the same Chicago moving picture firm as the passengers who were killed. He had accompanied them to the Chicago Municipal Airport for the take-off. Thirty minutes later the plane, after reaching and circling the train, swerved and fell. Two explosions followed, said Walter Hagemann and Helmet Gratzhoffer, farm boys, who saw the crash. Fire enveloped the all-wooden craft. Naperville firemen hurried to it in a futile rescue at- tempt. Her employers sald Miss Schuester, former model recently transferred from the Detroit to the Chicago office as a script girl, was not assigned to the trip but joined the party “for the fun of it.” Adams, the firm's film director, was & former actor who played in stock companies with Tallulah Bankhead and was once a radio announcer at Cleveland. Both he and Biddy, ca! = man, who claimed to have been first at the dirigible Shemandoah crash tragedy, were married. They were formerly of Detroit. Hanold was an air transport com- pany pilot. l Traffic Convictions I SECOND-OFFENSE SPEEDING. Walter T. Locke, 2800 Woodland | drive, $15. | FIRST-OFFENSE SPEEDING. Avis R. Spitzer, 1000-A Thirteenth | street southeast, $5. | Richard L. Marshall, New York, $10. Robert F. Frye, 1529 B street south- | east, $15. Harry E. Noyes, Connecticut, $5. Cooper H. Heard, 121 Twelfth street | southeast, $15. 1 James Williams, 1311 Sixth street, ! $5. Kathryne E. Conahan, 7303 Georgia avenue, $5. | Morris W. Askin, 1425 Ninth street, | $10, | Douglass A. White, 2804 Fourteenth street, $10. | Frank C. Kraus, 61 R street north- east, $5. Alister R. McKenzie, 2007 I street, $5. Charles F. Hallopeter, New Jersey, 85, John L. Henry, 1766 Oregon avenue, $10. Thomas K. McWilliams, Virginia, $10. Edwin C. Wendler, 4105 Fessenden street, $10. Frank J. Mancuso, street, $5. Milton Blum, 224 Seventeenth street southeast, $5. 4731 Ninth | Frank H. Beasley, 1215 Tenth street, $5. Arthur J. Robinson, 11 H street northeast, $10. A Laurie Moseley, 1609 Riggs place, 15. John M. Brodus, &treet, $5. Clinton A. Harpine, 432 Shepherd street, $5. James W. Jackson, Virginia, $10. Sabastian C. Beneshan, 3030 Wis- consin avenue, $10. John F. Delinski, 3230 N street, $10. 754 Harvard THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Die in Plane Crash Pilot Oscar Hanold (left) and Wilma Schuester, 24-year-old film script writer, and two commercial .photographers were burned to death in suburban Naperville, just outside of Chicago, yesterday. Hanold’s plane crashed during the filming of a speeding streamline train. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. i ONE COAT ENAMEL A MONEY SAVING Maintenance Finish For HOMES FACTORIES DAIRIES ICE CREAM PLANTS OFFICE BUILDINGS It Spreads Far It Works Easy It Holds Its Gloss And1¢ “Stays” WHITE Paint Experience c' I‘ SMITH Co- 2422 18th St. N.W.—Below Ambassador Theater GREYHOUND FARES zverage Save ) to'; the Cost of Other Public Transportation REAKING all records for fow-cost trans- portation, Greyhound fares mow average fess than 17 le for round trips. Luxurious O'Brien Liquid-Lite any on the chemists _have _discovered an enamel different from market today . . in its full bodied. porcelain-like lustre and its self-smoothing aquali It cap be used on any interfor surface. wood. metal, bricks. concrete or over old paint. 30 Yeors' Phone Col. 6088 THE COST OF DRIVING YOUR OWN CAR Greyhound Phone: N: Biue Ridze Phone: Met; YOU MEN, AND YOUNG MEN, CAN NOW OBTAIN A WIDE CHOICE OF SUITS AND TOP COATS, WITH A DECIDED CUSTOM AIR, AT ASTOUNDINGLY LOW COST. REVIEW OUR FALL COLLECTION OF EX- Milk (Continued From First Page.) for the issuance of an order only if an “emergency” exists. ‘The producers asserted the order dif- ferentiated betwen members of the Maryland-Virginia Milk Producers’ Association and non-members. One of the features attacked as un- reasonable was the provision that the administrator of the agreement and order is relieved of liability for mis- takes of judgment. In two earlier suits on the validity of marketing agreements the Govern- ment has won one, in Southern Cali- fornia, and lost one, in Boston, both in Federal district courts. ‘These two sults were brought by the | Government to enjoin handlers—in California of citrus fruit, in Boston of milk—f{rom violating the terms of the agreement. The Washington suit today is the first Instituted agalnst the Government. Landon (Continued From First Page.) Landon said of the existing law: “The attempt to finance these con- tributory pensions exclusively by means of flat pay roll and wage taxes is unsound. * * * In view of the fact that the standard of living of the low-income groups should not be < Save 23 D. C, further lowered it is essential that these new costs be financed out of taxes based on the principle of ca- pacity to pay. * * * “Why should not the needs of ordi- nary government and of social se- curity be recognized as a gross cost and the tax system adjusted to meet the total burden as a regular cost of government? “To do this new sources would have on pay rolls and wages, as provided under the social security act, or sales taxes of various kinds, or an increase in direct taxation on incomes through a strengthening of the income tax, or, what is more likely, a combina- tion of several forms of taxaiton.” Reserve Fund “Unnecessary.” ‘The report sald a $50,000,000,000 reserve fund, which the act would accumulate, was “unnecessary” and “eould hardly hope to survive legisla- tive raids.” Holding that the failure of most families to provide for old age “is not due to improvidence but to poverty,” the study said: “They (legislators) blithely legis- lated on the assumption that more savings in justice should and could be made and they were ignorant of or indifferent to the fact that persons al- ready too poor to save will be made still poorer so that they obtain security in old age. “They decreed that the price of this security at 65 should be the sacrifice of comfort and even health and de- cency in earlier years.” | ‘The report added that “in consider- ing the inadequacies and shortcomings On the Cost of Your Glasses % to 30% TWO 0TICAL SPECIALS @ Distance or reading, white or pink gold filled frames, rim or rimless. @ Kryptok Invisible Bifocals (lenses only). Distance and reading vision in one. Regular price for each, $14.00. Speecial for Thursday, Friday and Saturda Note: Regular fee for erxaminat on these three days. y Only ion omitted 57.50 Your eye comfort and vision depend on the proper eye examination and fit My twenty years’ practic DR. W. Phone ME. 0218 o Eyesight x| “I"‘l WeGil Bids. 4G NW. Copyright 1936. by "Wear Well’ $6.50 This man’s shoe Is superbly styled, and looks expensive. It will take any amount of punishment and yet is “the lowest priced man’s shoe we have ever featured! Come in and see the new Fall styles. Edmonston} 612 13th] 9 AM. to 6 PM. 20 e assures this confidence. F. FINN Specialist Phone ME. 0218 Located ears in MeGill Blds. y Dr. W. P. Finn "Footform” $6.50 A women’s shoe in graceful lines and to- morrow’s styles with unbelievable comfort tucked away in every clever model. Fall styles in straps and oxfords will intrigue the thrifty minded woman. & Co,, Inc. St., N.W. Shoe Satisfaction” to be found and these might be taxes, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936. of the act, full credit should be given to it as a real achievement and as a foundation on which a satisfactory structure of old-age security may eventually be built.” At Work in Office. Landon was at work in his office on State matters when he received news- men, Asked whether he had listened to the radio last night, when President | direction of & merit system, but it4 Roosevelt opened his campaign for re- | effect was to freeze the tenure o election, the Governor replied: “I spent the evening with Mrs. Lan- don.” He said President Roosevelt's civil service order of July, governing selec- tion of upper “proved not to be a real step in the ' on a collar button. present jobholders.” Chokes on Collar Button. The promise -again * Again FREE STATE gave you a fully aged, ripened, mellow .beer in summer! Again the prom- ise has been kept! Drink the beer that’s good ALL YEAR! REINER DISTRIBUTING CO., 1073 31st St. TUNE IN. NEW TIME! ... “THE MAN IN THE BTREET Maureen Clare, 3 years old, of Dub~ class postmasters, | lin, Irish Free State, choked to death Do As Your Dentist Does— when hg cleans your teeth polishes the teeth in a harmless and practical - way that leaves them sparkling — many shades whiter. Free from all grit or pumice, Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder cannot possibly scratch, or injure the softest enamel. Dr. Lyon’s keeps your teeth REALLY CLEAN and clean teeth mean—firm, healthy gums and the least possible tooth decay. CLUSIVE FABRICS AND DISTINCTIVE MODELS. YOU (lax make the CHOICE! HERE is nothing known that will clean and polish teeth so quickly s and leave them so gleaming white | —as POWDER. That is why your dentist, when cleaning yourteeth, asyou know—alwaysusespowder. Asit is only the powder part of any denti- frice that cleans, a dentifrice that is ALL POWDER just naturally cleans best. Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder is ALL POW- DER—100% cleansing properties. This is more than twice the cleansing properties of tooth pastes. Dentists everywhere recommend Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder, because—teeth simply cannot remain dull and film coated when it is used. Dr. Lyon’s cleans off all stains and Dr.LYON’ Fashion Park Suits and Top Coats $45—and More ICTURED above is a8 man who chose hair. The top picture P.howl Thomas client George Benner when he started Thomas treatment. The bottom picture shows him just 7 months later with & complete re-growth of healthy hair. Thomas treatment can re-grow your hair, too. Almost 90% of all cases of hair loss come within the scope of Thomas treatment. Each day more than 1600 persons are re-growing hair, ending dand- ruff, and stopping hairfall by the reliable, proved Thomas method. Let Thomas help you to retain or regain your hair. 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