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Repaint Porch or Interior Floors With my FLOOR and DECK ENAMEL. Built to resist hard wear, it's waterproof, weatherproof, sole- proof. 10 solid colors—g r a y s, browns, buff and oack. Sizes: 1 pint to a gallon. OF PALTIMOR! HOT-WATER HEAT AMERICAN RADIATOR PLANT 289 COMPLETELY INSTALLED IN 6 ROO! Written uarantee Boiler. 6 Radiators. - Larger Plants Proportio : Estimates Free. Day or Night ROYAL HEATING CO. 907 15th St. N.W. Natl. 3803 Night and Sun., AD. 8529 PARKER LEADING SMUGGLING DRIVE Treasury Maps War on Nar- cotics—Pacific Forces Strengthened. Throwing into the Hawaiian Islands area latest and fastest equipment of the United States Coast Guard, the Treasury Department has assigned one of its crack Coast Guard offi- cers, Comdr. Stanley V. Park- er, formerly of this city, to co- ordinate the de- partment law-en- forcement ma - chine in that part of the Paci- fic to halt smug- | gling of narcotics I 4 from the Orient. | . 2 Comdr. Parker, t | Disagree whose distin- guished career as Coast Guard offi- | cer, lawyer, air pilot and investigator Comdr, Parker | equip him well for the unusual new | task, will leave San Francisco Friday |'and soon will have at his command {some of the newest ships and planes | of the American Government. In Washington. where he is well | known, Comdr. Parker for about two | years was- chief intelligence officer be- | vestigators who took the deposition, | Pokker was said 10 have described | Eilliott Roosevelt and a business asso- ciate as “chiselers” because "no ac- | tion had been taken toward the suc- Iceuful sale of Lockheed planes by Mr. Roosevelt and his associates.” At another point in the deposition, | fore being assigned to the San Fran- ! an associate of young Rodsevelt was | ciseo division, where he hes been on | represented as threatening to turn fdut_v for a short time. He formerly | “the heat” on if Fokker did not go | resided at 101 Shepherd street, Chevy | through with the contract. This man | Chase, Md. ! was identified in the deposition only | | He will be commander of the newly | as “Mr. Stratton.” but Elliott Roose- | | created Hawalian section of the San velt said J. W. Stratton, an airplane | ® | Francisco division, Coast Guard, but | snlesman, was associated with him in | : {Dé&nglm'ifafions il Announcements i a.r new styles of ngraving executed in true Brewood manner are moderate enough in cest to meet present-da demands -0 = of more importance he will have his | the sales agreement. { office ashoré as co-ordinator of Treas- The deposition said Tiffany, Fok- ury Department law-enforcement ac- | ker's representative, “stated in Mr. | | tivities in the war against smugglers. | Fokker's presence that he. Mr. Tif-| | New Ships Sent. | fany, had complained to Mr. Stratton | ‘ To strengthen the American forces | that he did not like the contract be- {in Hawaii, the Coast Guard cutter | cause it was one-sided against Mr. |Ttasca will be sent from Homolulu to ! Pokker and entirely in favor of Mr. | 8an Diego and will be replaced with | Roosevelt.” | the new 328-foot Coast Guard cutter | Tiffany said, the document contin- | William J. Duane, named for & former | Ued, “thAt Mr. Stratton had informed Secretary of the Treasury, and re- | him that he had betier go through | cently christened at the Philadelphia | with the contract and that they had Navy Yard. Eventually this ship will | had contracts with other people who | be replaced with her new sister ship, the Roger B. Taney, expected to ar- | rive in Honolulu the last of this year under command of W. F. Towle, Unit- ed States Coast Guard. The Treasury also is shipping to Honolulu some fast 78-foot patrol boats recently com- pleted at New York City. Both the new Coast Guard cutters | are equipped with speedy new am- | phibian planes, capable of landing on ‘BrewaD Engravers and Fine Printers 1217 G St. N.W. PHONE DISTRICT 4868 [ | | | | 2-Piece Suite, includes labor and material. 3-Piece Suite, ineludes labor = 1397 Phone, call or write and representative will cell with samples and give you esti- mate. STANDARD | UPHOLSTERING CO. 913 7th St. N.W. MET. 6282 TRAVEL Bz O ...and enjoy good meals Prices ore reasenable, oo, You ride in Air | Conditioned Individval Seet Coaches end | Perlor Cars. Travel in Safety ond Comfort @nd arrive on time! Go 840, New Low Fares From WASHINGTON To NEW YORK $SASS COACH FARE Fores b Puonst $275 12.00 15.45 1120 18.10 610 Lovisvi 1215 *Plus Pulimen Fere, ne surchprge. All faree shown are TIMORE & OHIO NATURE WARNS YOU An inactive liver is nmature’s warning that it is time for action. siuggishness, and that depressed feel- ing are signs of faulty elimination, known as constipation. Internal clean- liness is the secret of keeping phys- fcally fit. Flush away all poisonons matter from your intestinal tract with HEXASOL, the dependable saline laxative. ' Feel - like yoarself agaim, HEXASOL is a physician's preserip- T esedihia Detrot Chicego Cincinnatl St Lovis ]Pokker affidavit land or water. The planes are ex- pected to be highly useful in the war on narcotic drugs. According to in- formation of the Treasury the system, | against which these swift new ships and planes will be directed, invoives | highly organized smuggling, in which fishermen and native divers co-oper- ate with professional narcotics run- ners to pass opium, morphine and co- caine from the Orient to the United States. Elliott R'oosevelt (Continued From Pirst Page.) been in New York when the magazine article appeared. “My whole purpose in making the ailable yesterday,” was to afford & demonstration of the fact that after all nothing had ever come of the tie- up. Nye continued, “There was absolutely no pressure | | brought to bear on the committee | from any source to prevent develop-; ment of any part of this story.” Nye said the committee had no knowledge of “a very large part” of the story in the Aviation Magazine. Declines to Comment. ‘The Senator declined to comment on Elliott Rooseveit’s denial, but said he would “feel under obligation” to the President's son to release “any- thing he might have to say” to the committee. Young Roosevelt said last night he | was willing to give the committee a | copy of the contract in question, but Nye indicated the commitiee would hold no further hearings because it had completed its report and was out ! of funds. Nye said there had been nothing in Elliott’s action, but said would have been if military 5 |planes had Dbeen sold to foreign | powers. Just before leaving by plane for | Chicago, Nye told reporters he was taking the complete file on the Pokker- | Roosevelt case with him, partly to ac- quaint himself more thoroughly with its details, but largely “s0 I will know who has it.” Whereas the deposition attributed | to Fokker said the President’s son had been paid $5,000 in cash under the unfulfilled contract, Roosevelt said he never received a dollar personally, although $5,000 went to a salesman associated with him. Fokker was quoted as saying he considered the price asked of the Russians for the 50 planes was “no- tably excessive.” “He (Fokker) had been persuaded by Mr. (Elliott) Roosevelt and Mr. Roosevelt's associate, Mr. Stratton, that Mr. Roosevelt had enough in- fluence with the Import and Export Bank and the Russian Purchasing Commission, then in the country, to swing the deal at that excessive price,” the deposition said. It quoted Carter Tiffany of New York, Fokker's American business representative, ss declaring a third party had told hiri President Roose- velt approved the conmtract, but put his foot down on a pian for his son and Fokker to go abroad to sell planes. Fokker, the document said, had wanted Elliott Roosevelt to make the trip “to attempt to sell airplanes to various foreign governments, count- ing on the willingness of high for- eign officials to receive Mr. Roosevelt as the son of the American Presi- dent.” Young Roosevelt, who declared “With regard to all conversations and reported conversations whiech had reference to my father, I desire to state that they are false in their entirety and that at no time did the question of my father's participation of knowledge of the transaction enter into my discussion with Mr. Fokker.” ‘The deposition was made public un- expectedly here last night.” Munitions Committee aides said it' was taken September 12, 1935. There was ne im- mediate comment from 'the White tion that has been used and recom- | House. mended for over a quarter of a cen- tury. Safe, sure and agreeable to take. Get 3 generous bottle, today, for only 60c, at your nearest In&m L i T The 50 planes involved were of the Lockheed Elecira type, Fokker being s sales agent for that plane, in addi- tion to his other Under further had also not liked those contracts, {but had gone through with them | { after Mr. Stratton had turned on the | heat. i | “Mr. Fokker stated his satistaction | | with Mr. Tiffany’s method of ocon- | cluding the contract in the way he | did, involving a cash payment of $5= 000 for Mr. Roosevelt and the pay- ment of a further check of 36,666 | through & brokerage house which it | was difficult for Mr. Elliott Roosevelt | to accept, in view of the President's | dispute with Wall Street at the time. Payment Stopped on Check. “Mr. Tiffany and Mr. Fokker both stated that the check had never | beeri cashed or returned, but that Mr. Tiffany had finally stopped pay- ment on it.” | Elliott Roosevelt's account was dif- | ferent. He said that in May, 1934, he asked to be released from the contract with Fokker. “He wanted me to go through with it,” Roosevelt said, “and I refused and he released me. I believe he has heid it against me, and that may be an explanation of this deposition. | “Some time in May of that year| the Fokker organization in New York | mailed me a check for 36,666.666. I| | notified them I was not accepting 1t | and was téaring it up; that the con- tract was off. I belleve the bank was then notified to stop payment on the check.” He declared the contract had pro-| vided that he was to receive $20,000 salary for one year, with $30,000 salary | for the second year if mutually agree- | | able. Elliott Roosevelt now is associated with the radio interests of William Randolph Hearst, publisher. Pokker, 46, is regarded in aviation eircles as one of the most skilled air- plane designers in the world. &e built his first plane in 1911, tried | unsuccessfully to sell it to England and literally peddied it about Europe ' 'LONG ILLNESS FATAL |88 & girl. on Deal H. S.. FOKKER. —A. P. Wirephoto. before the German governmeént made a three-yéar contract with him for | the building of planes. the | ‘World War began he. bullt fighting | pianes, and the -machines once turned | down by the British became the scourge of the allied front. | He invented the methods of syn- | chronizing the fire of & machine gun with the turning of the propeller, | which permitted the pilot to fire | through the propeller and point his plane as if it were a rifle. He was born at Kedirl, Java, a Dutch colony, but is an Anierican by adoption. He produced the airplanes in which Comdr. Richard E. Byrd flew to the | North Pole and in which two Army | leutenants made one of the firat non- stop flights from New York to Cali- fornia. Georgian loonflnuzgr ’fl”fl_!‘ll’!‘_?lfl\ he had been out of work for a long time and was siek and despondent. ATLANTA. October T (#).—Mrs. Joseph D. Wilson, an emplove of a | paper company here, said todsy she | knew of no reason why her husband, & visitor in Washington, should slash | his wrists. Mrs. Wilson said her husband, un- employed for the last five years, left home yesterday morning with the in- tention of going to Washington to seek employment. Mrs. Wilson sald they had been married 14 years and have two daugh- | ters, 14 and 11 years old. | TO WIFE OF DENTIST rs. Dorothy T. Hopkins Expires in Hospital at Age of 39 Years. Mrs. Dorothy T. Hopkins, 39, wife of Dr. Stephen C. Hopkins, former president, of the District Dental 8o- ciety, died in Episcopal Hospital early today after an extended iliness. Mrs. Hopkins was & former presi- dent of the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the| dental society and was active in its affairs until her final illness. Puneral services will be held at 10 am. Friday from the home, 4910 Hillbrook Jane, Spring Valley, with Rev. U. G. B. Pierce of the Unitarian Chureh officiating. Burial will be in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Mrs. Hopkins, the former Miss Dorothy Terry, was born in Westfield, N. Y, moving here with her parents She attended the public schools in Washington and 15 years 2go married Dr. Hopkins. In addition to her husband, Mrs. Hopkins is survived by three children, Stephen C. Hopkins, jr., 9: Nancy, 13, and Constanece, 10, and her parents. D. C, WEDNESDAY, LOWDEN PRAISES LANDON POSITION Illinoisan Considers Addi- tional Stumping Appear- ances for Party. Bv 110 Assoeiated Pross. WATERLOO, lowa, October 7.— Pormer Republican Qov. Frank O. Lowden of 1llinols, after asserting that the “supreme issue” of the presidential campaign was maintenance of “the American scheme of government,” turned today to the question of ad- ditional stumping appearances for the party of which he often is called the “elder statesman.” Declaring that the Democratic ad- OCTOBER 17, 1936. ministration had “delivered repeated blows 4t reviving confidence in the fu- ture,” Lowden in his first formal ad- dress on behalf of his party's ticket praised its presidential nominee here last night with: “No one has shown & clearer ap- preciation of the imperative need to preserve the farm family and the family sised farm than Gov. Landon.” Recovery, he deciared, had “lagged behind” because of administration policies. “Although the Government seems to have exhausted all possible sources of revertue,” he said, “it is now expending $2 for every dollar it receives. “I doubt if there is & community in the Nation where there is not s legiti- mate demand for labor for all kinds of tasks which cannot be met because the relief rolls stand in the way, * ¢ ¢ “You cannot maintain the morsle of & people by making relief rolls more attractive than pay rolls and just as honorabie” Turning to the problems of agrieul- Thermolyzed Tung Oil Paint o Can Solve Your Paint Problem SMOOTHER ... T.7. 0. paint dries frea of brush marks with en even solid color. MORE LUSTROUS ... Houses finished in this peint oo 4 luche fatl GET REAL QUICK-ACTING, QUICK- DISSOLVING BAYER ASPIRIN See ll Drop s Bayer Aspirin aiec into & gias of the bottom of the it e disintegrating. What happens in these If you suffer from headaches what you want is quick relief. That goes without saying. Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets ive quick relief, for one reason, because they dissolve or dis- lz‘gm almost instantly they ! moisture. (Note illustra- tion above.) Hence—when take a real Bayer Aspiri dissolve Genuine Bayer Tabl Genuine Bay : D.hlfiu‘l“" andGo to water. ‘he time it Bita » gos How eots Work BY STOP WATCH 2 e er Tablet Starts Work BAYER Genuine BAYER E Bold” of pain o few minutes after taking. Glasses happens in your Stomach once. ' 'nn_'n.wl;y’?fliom never ask lor aspirin name sspirin nlon.elp when they buy, but al- ways say “BAYER ASPIRIN™ and see that they get it. Only lw 12 now. OR — two quarter, wvirt: o 1¢ a {:"Ilt: for real BAYER ASPIRIN at all stores in the United States. it. You'll say it is marvelous. : Only 15¢ for 12 Now 2 FULL Dezen a Quarter for presents @ firm deep beouty ditferent from the finish given by other paints. LONGER WEARING . . . 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Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads give you aremarkable triple-action not possible by any other method: (1) They instantly relieve pain by their soothing, Bealing medication and ena shoe pressure on the sore or aching spot. (1) Safely remove corns whes used with the separate Medicated Disks, included in every box. (3) Stop corme before they can start. by ewshicning and shielding sore toes and tender spota from nagging, Tubbing or pressing of shoes. De Luze Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads are flesh color, velvety-soft, waterproof; don't stick to stocking or come off in bath. 12 pads with separate Medi- cated Disks, 35¢ box. Standard White Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads, 25¢ box. Sold at all drug, shoe or department stores. Accept no substitute. Thin, seft, hiening with its soothing medi- cation stops painand cause. Separate Medi- cated Disk to auickly, safely loos d remove corn. Sighted? If you ean see blocks away or have to hold reading matter at arm’s length—you need eorrective glasses. Let the registered optometrist here examine your eyes and prescribe glasses, A great assortment of smart frames to choose from. $0c a week pays for glasses 1004 F St. % No tobacco gets in mouth or teeth. Throat-irritants checked while the ine Turkish-Domestic tobacco flavor is brought you. ture, Lowden asserted “we are in for | ing to the long future this ia the mos an ers of high tariffs, and Gov. Landon | important question of all, affecting no insists that so long as that shall be | only the farmers but all classés of ou true, agriculture must have as large a | people.” measure of protection as industry.” He conferred with friends and Re Lowden praised Gov. Landon's soil | publican party leAders before heading conservation program, declaring “look- | for his Oregon, Iil, home. COME TO GEORGE’S AND SAVE! WASHERS The easy way to wash clothes, msher and dryet Slightly wsed models. 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